HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-06-13 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesar
I ,I
•• -ow oc. error1sm
Orange Coast .College s ·ets_
57 Milli.on B _ond Ele~tion JHUltSDAY AFTERNOON, ~UNE :13, '.1968
:.A.: :X , ""' .x. :.A.: -·,x .
'VOL, '1, llO.. 1a. e l•CTtottr. • •MU
I •
':ti f* ~ -
' .
Coast Police View Gun Controls
.RFK Testimony Bared
All of a Sudden
TheGun WentOff
LOS ANGELES (AP) -"AU or a
sudden the procession stopped and it
was like firecrackers, just pop, pop,
pop, all over the pl~, and smok~."
Such was the scene of the assassrna·
tion of Seri. Robert F. Kennedy pic-
tured for the Los Angele! County
Grand Jury by a 17-year-0ld victim
wounded in the shooting, as reported
today.
Testimony of Irwin Neal Stroll and
21 other witnesses who testified last
Friday when the grand jury indicted
Sirhan Blshara Sirhan, 24, a Jorda~·
ian foc the slaying, became public
with the filin g of the transcript of
testimony. . Stroll, testifying from a wheel ch~1r.
said he was put in charge of guarding
the door frotn the Ambassador :Hotel
kttchen to a podiwn where Kennedy
spoke shortly before he and five others
were shot.
Stroll said as Kennedy passed him
going from the podium to the kitchen
en route to the press room, ''I s!1ook
his hand and said, 'Congratulations,
senator.' He said 'Thank you.' Then he
went through the door and all of a sud·
den the procession stopped and it was
like firecrackers, just pop, pop, pop,
all over the place, and smoke.
"I pushed Mrs. Kennedy -just a
reaction - and everyone in the front
turned around.
"I turned around and saw Mrs. Ken-
Kennedy Letters
Fill Full Page
Robert Kennedy is dead. ltis acc~~
ed assassin still awaits trial. And c1l1 ·
zens and solons alike are talking about
tougher gun laws,
These were the spurs which trigger ·
ed a vast outpouring of various kinds
of reactions by Orange Coast area
readers of the DAILY PILOT.
The volume of mail grew to such
proportions that it is necessary to de-
vote a full page to the Mailbox fea·
ture today. You'll flnd the full page of
letters to the editor on Page 10. Read
your neighbors' minds. They may be
thinklDg the same things you are.
FLAGS TO FLY
ON FRIDAY
Friday Is the day to paint the
Orange Coast red, white and bl~.
Residents are reminded that Jt is
Flag Day again, the day on Which the
Stars and Stripes should be flown from
every home or store, as well as public
buildings. • "
nedy on the floor with Roosevelt Grier
(football player and Kennedy aide)
CQVering her. J.t was like a swarm of
people pushing me out of the room.
"I went out of the podium door. I
said, 'God, I'm shot,' and then my
friends carried me off. I noted I was
shot because of the blood, when the
shooting started, it felt like a kick in
the knee , ..
"Right before g oing in, and
Roosevelt Grier was behind her
because I remember her face, she got
crused like, and she went like this
. . . and they came down and said ,
.. Are you all right?"
"Roosevelt Grier pushed the people
away from her."
"Then the procession went through
-then we went through the door,
Mrs. Kennedy and I and Roosevelt
Grier, and then the procession stopped
again, and then like firecrackers went
off, like six."
Saigo11 Warned
Of New Rocket
Terror Campaig n
SAIGON (UPI) -Viet C-Ong leaflets
warned Saigon's 3 mJllion residents to-
day of a new terror campaign of 100
rockets a night for 100 nights. And
U.S. military sources said intelligence
reports indicated the Communists
were planning another ground assault
against the city
Rockets spared Saigon today for the
fir st time in 13 day1s, but the Com-
munists blew up an ammunition dump
outside the city and exploded a time
bomb in a U.S .• office building 1n Da
Nang, wound.Ing 17 Americans and
Vietnamese. \
U.S. military sources expressed
doubt the Viet Cong could maintain a
I()O..day bombardment against the city
though Gen . William C. Westmoreland
said recently there was no way to stop
isolated rocket attacks. But the Com·
munist Ieanets stirred uneasiness
among the capital's inhabitants.
A Viet Cong "liberation radio"
broadcast heard in Saigon urged Viet·
namese residents ot SaJgon to move •·car away" !ram military. ad.
ministrative and other "war posi·
lions" to avoid the threatened shell·
lngs.
Radio Hanoi, in a Vietnamese
language broadcast to the people or
Saigon, saJd Vietnamae "have the
sacred right to use every method ... to
annihil.ate the invaders."
It said tb.e "invader~cre the
Americans an<1 CilfOO them "our
people's No. 1 el\emy."
ROCKET LAUNCHER TURNED IN TO SAN FRANCISCO POLICE
Elsewhere, However, Few Weapom1 Have Bffn Surrendered to Lawmen
Gun Bills Trigger Debate
Controls Hit Both Law Abi.ding and Lawless
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Ot ... O.lly I'll .. '"" Possession of a pistol turns an adult
heroin addict, feeding a $20-a-day
habit on holdups -and even an aged,
church-going widow. who simply fears
prowlers -into brother and sister
under one facet of Jaw. It depends on how one views the
situation.
Each is a potential killer, but there
may be nothing illegal in ownership of
a weapon, until the individual ls
caught misusing or w r on g f u 11 y
possessing it, as in the• case of a con·
vlcted felon or a known drug addict.
A survey of gun cootrol laws along
U1e Orange Coast, sparked by cries for
more rigid legislation following the
assassination of Sen. Robert F. Ken-
nedy , shows the clearcut yet complex
problems involved.
Opinions by police spokesmen -
from metropolitan chiefs to rookies on
small tOWJ) !orces -indicate that stif·
fer laws camot really be the solution
to murder a.s a political tool.
This contempc>rary Am er i can
stigma, however, may be helping to
focus the attention of many citizens on
their persooal conduct in ownership
and handling of guM.
Since Tuesday, nine persons have
registered guns with the Costa Mesa
Police Department, from a 21-year.old
collegian to a 79-year-old housewife
who owns a revolver 150 yeani old.
Those are. the responsible ones.
"We go by the state law," explains
Costa Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth,
explaining the system w h e r e b y
firearms are registered in the state of
California.
Rifles and shotguns are Jogged with
federal authorities at the time they
are initially sold, always to penons 18
or over, or to l&-to-2l·year-olds who
$7.25 Million Issue
have parental permission, depending
on the area.
Hand gUM are i-ecorded upon
purchase, with the Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investigation, in the
event o1 a need for future reference.
Any change of ownership should be
registered with the local police depart·
ment, in case of subsequent loss or
theft.
This, however, is not a permit to
carry a concealed weapon, which is il·
legal, unless one is so registered.
Such permission to carry a con·
cealed weapon ls difficult to obtain in
most jurisdictions and impossible in
many others.
Newport Beach Asslat811t Police
Otief Merrill Duncan notes, as a
sidelight, that the good would probably
abide with the various proposed gun
control laws, but be cannot see any
(See GUN CURBS, Pa(< Z)
OCC Plans Bond Election
By THOMAS FORTUNE
0t tM 0.llY l"I ... '''" Orange Coast Junior College District
will hold a f1 .25 million bond election
on Sept. 17.
Trustees voted u.nanimopsly late
Wednesday night to bold the election
that U successful would end the
dlstrlct's traditional pay.as-you-go
policy.
The bond issue would cover building
programs on the Orange Coast and
Golden West campuses in Costa Mesa
and Huntington Beach for four years.
~thirds voter approval will be re·
quired for passage.
A second ballot propos!Uo• will bt to
convert an existihg ioin-eent override
now limited to use for' con&truction to
general purpose u11e. Jt would not
change the present tax rttc and would
be meaningless unless tbe bond issue
passes.
The bond lssuo would CO<t dlltrlcl
taxpayers seven to 12 cents per $100 of
assessed vaiuatton the flr&t year and
less thereafter depending on how
many years the board wanted tO take
to pay lt ofJ. The CIUT<llt dlatrkt tu
rate is 54 cents per $100 assessed
valuation.
Orange Ooaat Dl!trlct oflidals have
reason not to be optimistic.
"It'• not going to be easy to get two-
thlrds when the statewide proposition
pass~ by only 56 percent (l!Jt
week)," Supt. Norman Watson ta.id,
,''And. the state Lnue doan 't even go
OD tbe property tu. o
Ne"ertbelul. tru1Me1, actln& on the
recommendatloa • Joint Harbor Area·
Welt c.unty Cltlzent Finance C®l·
mlttee, decided to try.
"We can take a leaf from Max Raf·
ferty'a oampalp book." b..o a r d
member Robert Hwnphrey1 1ug·
Wted. "HIJ plldl ,... dol>'t cancel . '
out (U. S. Senator) George Murphy's
vote. We can say don't cancel out Pro-
position Two."
The f1 .25 million would enable the
district to obtain another f7.106,11Xl In
matching it.ate and federtl funds over
the next four years. This money ls not
available to the district uDlets local
money ls put up in equal amounts.
Trustees accepted the Citizens
Fhran~ Committee's advice that tbty Junk tho pay...,.yoo-go .-..pt. The
board poUcy for Iha fltlt 20 year1 bl now lnadequoto ~uoe of rapldly i...
cr...inc eprolbnent. they rusonod. u
require• today'a taxpay.n lo provide
debt-free laclliU•a for tnoce wtio come
tomonow.
The majority ol building to bt
lloanceclby the bond luuo 1">11\d bt on
tho Goldftl Weot campus In Huntlngtoll
(See BOND VOTE, P ... Z)
----------------~
Mysterious
~ · Slliper IDt-s
Grove Girl
A 13-year-old Garden Grove i:Jrl was
shot under mysterious circumstances
this morning as she walked along a
quiet street on her way to school.
Garden Grove police are conducting
an il'lten.sive investigation to detenW.De
identity of th"e sniper. ·
Deborah Ann Salafia or 12542 Gloria
St., Garden Grove, was walking on
Trask A venue west of Roxey Street
toward the Doig Elementary School
when she wa s shot through the right
arm .
Police believe a vehicle was In -
. volved in the shooting. They said the
wound indicated that a small. caliber
gun was used.
The girl .w8s rwhed to Palm Harbor
Hospital wbere she"il reported in good
condition. Sh"e was unable to B.ld police
in running down the suspected sniper.
The scene of the shooting Is near -the
Garden Grove Freeway area where a
mystery sniper was &ought a few
weeks ago after several truck ·drivers
said their vehlclet had been hit.
Investigation proved the trucks was
hit by rocks, not bullets-.
Police are searching for a green car
driven by a youth which witnesses
said was in the area about the time of
the shooting.
Oraa1e C:out
Weatller
Try as he might, Old Sol just
won't quite get his message
through Friday, forecuter Emil
Kurtz predicta. It'll bt hazy with
early fog and temperatures in
the 70 bracket for the cout.
INSilfll TGDAY-
Fin<me!a! col•mnlat Sylvia •
Porur todaJ/ ••••ii• bolh Prul-dent Johnaon cmd. Congrtu fOf'
delays and buclcposslllg Oller
enactmtnt of Ut.e 10 percent
surm. See Page 26.
~ '..... ,. c-...... &!11 ,...... ..... " CllfMI ,. ........... .. c......,. '' ' ----. • Did.....__ e PT4 '6 --. ..,.... ..... .. ....... hllt • ..... ..... ,,.,, . ......... , ..... ~ .. '""'-" •it ,,.._ ....... »17 ......c.... . ,......... ~ *'
....... ~ 1• .,.,....... '' ,,.. UMllPI 11 ....... ' ....... ,, ........ 21
Miit"' llMcit '·. .... """" ... -.
'
I
I
l
I
•
'
• .
' g DAILY PllOT t rnunatt, Junt l,, 1%3 -'-<!)
Hawks, Dove·s Flock at OCC ·
Birds of a feather don't always nock deadline. Richard 1'.fclnnis, campus thlrd.
1 tocelher. Hawks and doves cohabit at coordinator fat the v!>te, ju.st recently Three referendum items were on the • 'OrUM~t Colleee. • .rflCelvef.~ ns.Wt.r. ballot. The questions and the OCC vote ~IL_~. campus rtsuJU In the mi.· ~ !fbe\V\lllt tor ortlhlent: for alternatievs: ~ ''Cbo!ce 81'1 poll conducted :M.Cearthy .... 1ct: Nllan, 144 ; the late "Wbat courae or military acUon tlllF ttmo tnagazioe s)qW support for }Wbert Kennedy,' ut; Lyndon ahould the United States pursue in ~g the Vielna.qi Wit and aup.. ·lol!iiion, 42: Ro~ald . Reigan. 19: Vietnam?" ~ending it. ·• · Ne1foa,.Rockefeller, .,,;. Ch a.'r 1 e s Immediate withdrawat -139.
1-....,·~ealdenUal preference voting, P~f, J7 : John Lil'u.1aay1 5; Mark Hat-Phased reduction -178. ~ McCarihy won by nve votes field,. 5; F'red Halitead, 3: Geors~alntain -43. . . ; · Rlchll'd Nixon. W.U.ce, the l&te Dt. Mtl)ln Luthe lncre.,e -65.
1
1 f,.!JJie election. wU held April·lt, but Kini.and. Hubett Humphrey, 2 each. Al out effort -168. ~..}lad ii> be, 11181\ed· to Time K~ pl&cod 1JOCondlto McCarthy at course ol action should the i mac" to make • publication In the hationJI student vote with Nixon United State1 pursue 1n regards to the ' . . . ' .. '
ROCKY ROCKS SECURITY -New York Gov.
Nelson Rockefeller, first presidential campaigner
to visit Los Angeles since assassination · of Sen.
Robert Kennedy there, departed from hi s schedule
and walked unescorted across a street if\ Watts to
visit with students at Centinela High School The
mo ve left a dozen jittery Secret Service men and
-New York state policemen in what they later de-
scribed as a "useless" position.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rocky Declares Coast Murder Victim
4.-~ • r· · · " , ~r1can .l'-'ItI~ -..; ,:: • _ ~c·
'&n Be s~v~d' ;~1:ie.'il as Lived, Alone
Nelson. A. Rockefeller said today the
nation'• "cities can be saved -but they wilt not be saved by a gospel Or
00:.nothlng." ~ "' _ T&e New York governor, in the first
or a series of position statements that
. will appear as paid ads· each week in
40 newipapers from coast·to-coast,
said faith "that our cities can be saved
• • ~is one rei.son why I run for presi·
cHrrt."
In the ad entitled "To Burn or Not to
Burn," Rockefeller quoted a slum
child in \Vas hington as 11aying: "I
woUld like my street to look like a
brand new neighborhood with chang·
ed people who are friendly to others no
matter what color."
Campaigning today in San Fran·
ci~. Rockefeller conceded that the
Unlt«I St.ates was a divided com-
m.u.Dity but rejected the notion
America is a sick society.
•11 do not believe this," he said in '.a aPeecb prepared for .t h d COm·
monwealtb Club. "We have reuon to
feel. like a heart.OCOken people. And
tb1S needs beaUng -as our· whole na·
tJon needs uniting.
.. But it is one thing to say that we
are a divided people -which we are.
And it is quite a different, a nd quite a
wrong, thing to say we are a doomed
<peOple -which we are not."
DAILY PILOT .. .,... .....
" ........ ltedl
,,... I '"
. C...M-...... -'"•tol• y....,
CAU'°lHIA
R•Nri N. Wee4
hbllWier
Tlie11te1 Ken-ii
•'110!'
lliell'llt A. Mvt~li'ln• M9llfflrtl Editor ' t
Jeclr R. Ctlrlty P1111 Ni11e11
autllll'P Mlne,.r Mwf'lbln1 Director
Offtct•
Cotta Mtll: »f Wnl llY $!'"' """'°"' .. Id!! Ull w. lllll09,.loU1t'tlnl UIW"t 81.•ftl m ,._,, A ... ftllf
V"I Ttl•"-" SOUGHl' IN MIDWEST
Edwin Chott I ii
~orge Findley Lyone lived alone
and wu buried alone.
Newport Beach police, who \Ved·
nesday identl!ied a 17-year-old Ma-
rine as a suspect tn Lyons' slaying,
today disclosed that the Corona de\
Mar murder victim has beeD quietly
laid to rest.
There was no ceremony. No one
ever showed up to claim kinship to
the 48-year-<Jld insl.U'ance man, found
bludgeoned to death in hi& small
apartment on b1ay 2(),
ltis grave at Fairhaven Cemetery
In Santa Ana is un marked.
Burial expenses were only partially
covered by some S250 from Lyons'
Social Security fund . He Jeft no bank
.account, only many small debts.
Meanwhile today, the hunt for his
swpected killer went on.
Police released a.photograph o< the
suspect, Edwln William Chott III, an
AWOL Camp Pendleton MlU'ine.
Chott, of Perryville, Mo., is believed
to be ln the Midwest somewhere. The
F'BJ is conductlng the search.
"But there's nothing new," said
Newport Detective Sergeant Kenneth
Thompson. "I wish there Wft'e."
Britain Orders Hearings
Over Extradition of Ray
:LONDON (UPI) -8 rllaln today
for.n1allY authorized court hearings on
America.n requesls to extradile James
"Earl Ray to the United State1 to stand
was doing tn Britain before his arrest
at London International Airport Satur-
.day.
HllftffMtM IMch I D lltl llr..t \ trial· fer the killing of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr.
The man stood near James Earl
Ray when the 40-year-old accused
killer checked into a London hotel.
,
Home Secretary James Callaghan
1lgned the order telling London'•
chief magiatrates to hold hearlng1 on
the American government case for ex.
tradiUng the 41).y ear-old fuglUve
charged with the a11asslnatlon.
The bearings and appuls mlgbt last
through the aummer.
Callaghan'• order made R1y liable
for poulble extradiUon not onl_y for
the killing of King in Memphis, Tenn.,
but for breaking out of 1 Ml11ourt
Priaon in 1967.
The order came a1 ScoUand Yard
hunted a shadowy man -or men -
and • woman with an American
"twangu accent to learn wbat Ray
The woman with the twq tele-
phoned the hotel, asking for Ray.
·No Miss Firecracker
Contest This ·Year
The annual M111 Firecracker beauty
contest wW not be held lhil year,
members of sponl<lrlnl HunUngton
Beach Jaycee• announced today.
Repreaenting the clty in the Fourth
or July Parade and celebration wllll be
the Huntington Beach Junior Ml11 1
Karl!n CuUer, and MIN Huntington
Beach, J effye Blackard.
Temporary suspension r 120.
Maintain -51.
Intensify -217.
Use nuclear weapons -29.
"In confro11Ung .the urban er1s1s
which should receive highest priority
in government spending?"
Education -m.
Housing -22. ·· •• ·
Income subsidy -10.
Job training -225.
Riot control -62.
Snack Booth
-'
Big Success
'At Valley Fair
...
The carnival may be bogged down at
the Junior Chamber of Ccimmerce-
sponsored Fountain Valley fair, but
Mrs. Jeannie Lara's snack booth has
registered a whopping success.
Mrs. Larua, organizer o! the Colonia
Juarez Community Center of Fountain
ValJey, reported brisk opening day
sales at the organization's hot dog and
eJl:Chilada stand.
"Everycne has worked so hard,
particularly the kids," she said. :fhc
children have been selling boxes of
chocolates for each of y,•hlch they
receive one free ticket to Disneyland.
Other goodies sold al the center's
booth are sort drinks, refried beans,
coffee and sandwi ches. The profits go
to buy playground equlpment \vtiich
will cost several hundred dollars.
Hard-working C<ilonia friends in-
clude Miss Racheal Escalante. Miss
Isabel Luna, Mrs. Mary Ann Garcia,
Mrs. Edward Vaiela and Carl Lara.
From Page 1
BOND VOTE . . ~
Beach wh ich is not yet rounded out.
"Thia la a conservative building pro·
gram. We are not, for instance,
recommending a new .administration
building," Dr. Watson commented. '
A decision on whether to repay the
bonds over 10, 15, 20 or 25 years would
be made when the..Ponds are sold,
depending upon the. money market.
Business Supt. CoruUan Thompson
sald. '
Therefore, the exact cost per year to
taxpayers cannot be figured. At the
probable fl ve percent interest rate,
first . year tax increases would be
between 12 cents for 10-year amortiza.
tion and seven cents for 25-year
amortization.
Succeeding years they 111 o u I d
gradually diminish do\i.'n to five cents
to one cent.
Los Angeles Police
Kill Burglar, 17
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Police say
they shot and killed a 17·year-old boy
today after he attempted to flee the
scene of a burglary and attacked an
officer.
Officers identUled ilim as Henry
Rees of Los Angeles. A 1&-year-<Jld
companion, not immediately identl·
fiecl, was booked ·on suspicion of
murder.
DAILY ,ILDT S!ltf P'llolt
AT LEAST TtiEY'RE HAPPY -Opening day al Fountain Valley
carnival Wednesday may have been something less than happy·ex-
Perience for some visitors, but at least these two youngsters. are
among the happiest people in town. Danny Arevalos, 7, and Eileen
Lopez, 11, were champion candy sellers fpr. Colonia Juarez booth.
They're holding Disneyl and tickets the sales JOb earned f?r them.
-~Froan Page l
GUN CUIIBS ...
change iri the· attitudes of those outside
the law.
Opinions ~d actlo~s by le_llow of·
ficers suppott.llis thoughts. ,
··No gun permits are Issued in Seal
Beach. In JllY three years here, I've
only Issued one and that was 'to a Ii·
quor store clerk who had been robbed
four times," explained Seal Beach
Police Chief Lee Case .
INSURANCE CHEAPER .
Laguna Beach Police Chief Harry
LaBrow s·aid a merchant wno carries
$1,000 to_ the bank each Friday may
find insurance much cheaper than car·
rying along a gun and perhaps killing
someone someday.
"Need and a good record are the
most important considerations." said
Fountain Valley Police Chief Charles
\V. MichJ\elis, 1'I interview all ap-
·plicants for the concealed gun permit
and if I have. no objection, I refer
them to the Sheriff's office."
··By statute, h~r:idguns are taboo for
aliens, narcotic addicts, convicted
felons and minors," said Jtuntington
Beach Police Lt. Arland Ussher, whe n
asked about beach city firearms
regulation.
Westminster Police Chief Conne r
Collacott judges each applic::ition
himself, usually deciding within three
week s \vhether to grant it, based upon
a background check of the applicant.
Use or carrying of a gun in Newport
Beach is 1Hegal -even a B-B gun or
any other pressure-powered weapon -
unless the individual ls a police of·
ficer, Assistant Chief Duncan also
said, concerning the problem.
NO QUESTIONS
Has anyone owning a weapon in
coastal Orange County turned it in
with no questions asked, as have near-
ly 200 persons in the current progran1
inittated by San Francisco Mayor
Joseph Alioto after the RFK murder'!
No.
A paltry five have been handed over
to police in Los Angeles, where the
late Chief William H. Parker began Jn
1951 a policy of no concealed gun
permits, remaining in effect today.
Sgt. Dan Coo ke. of the LAPD public
affairs ctivisi~n. tol.I the Dt\ILY
J>JLOT hundreds of guns -un-
tracc.:iblc bec:iuse they \11Cre neve r
routinely registered by ov.•ners -arc
dumped into the Pacific Ocean oft Los
Angeles each year.
They were auctioned off in the past,
but Chief Parker ordered a halt to this
procedure after the 1963 assassination
of President John 1-·. Kennedy, whose
younger brother \\'as slain by a gun-
man a \\'eek ago as he too campaigned
for the presidency.
3 CONTROLS EXISTS
Perhaps only three gun controls ex ·
ist in our age.
Sadly, however, one c<.1nnot fill out a
brief for m and receive as a result,
sanity. reason, or simple acceptance or those who do not share the same
vie\vpoint.
W atei· District
A11nex Rejected
Coslt Mesa County Water District
\Valked into U1e annexation arena \Ved-
·nesday where the cities of Costa Mesa
and Newport Beach had failed last
month and met the same fate.
Th.e district asked the Local Agency
Formation Commission (LAFC) to ap·
prove the annexction of 18 acres
bordering Palisades Roa:l on U1e south
and ex.ten:ling across Santa Ana
Avenue both ·ways.
It was the same area that Costa
Mesa sought to annex and part of the
area Newport Beach sought to annex.
Both v.:erc turned do\1•n by the LAFC
after a bitter inter city fight.
The \Valer District had another
formidable opponent, the Santa Ana
Heights \Vater Co. which serves the
area.
app'f :J-ather ~ ::ba'J
a very special pm·chase f 1~om a
famous quality make1· of
GENUINE LEATHER CHAffi S
A GIFT TO TREASURE AND ENJOY FOR YEARS
• Custom quality through-0ut •
Luxurious cushioning • Your
choice of colors from an extensive
aele<:tio n ol, finest leather textures.
from $199
''°"'~;~,·GARRETT f U RNfJll0~~ "'" CAU•
INTERIOR bESIGNERS 2215 HARBOR BLVD.
o,.. M.,., ftm., ;,,, 1"" 646.0275 646.0276
•
"
-
we
DI
w
th
di
p<
pi
I '
'.I
I
]
he
m
tir
th·
tir
op
er
(e
so
an
8.[
th
en
sl!
H<
ar
AI
.. ·---~~-~-------· i -. ---. . -• • = = e = e C(P 311!" >*'!!'f"'.,. w..,., .~ .... ,., ......... ,.. .... _.,..'"'I• w - - -' •
Huntington Beaeh
Dally Paper,
:VO[ 6f, NO. '142, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES :rHUR-SDA Y, JUNE 13; 'I 968 JEN CENTS
•
OCC District· Sets $7 .25 Million Bond Vote
By THOMAS FQRTIJNE
OI Hit D•llY Plitt Sl•ff
Orange Coast Juniot·College District
will hold a $7 .25 million bond elect.ion
on Sept. 17,
Trustees voted unanimously late
Wednesday night to hold the election
that Ir-succesgful would end the
district's traditional pay-as-you-go
policy.
The bond issue would cover bajding
programs on tbe Orange Coast abd
Golden West campuses in Costa Mesa
and Huntington Beach for four years.
' Two-tbird,s voter approval will be re-
quired for passage.
A second ballot proposition will be to
c611vert an existing lO'iii-cent override
noW limited to use for construction to
general purpose use, Jt would not
change the present tax rat<. and would
be meaningless unless the bond issue
passes. •
The · bond issue would cost district
The Morning After?
Steve Tanaka, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Tanaka and Brad
Haskell _(right) 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Haskell catch 40 winks .
after impromptu all ntghter in ·Fountain Valley High School outdoor
bowl. About 150 Valley seniors participated in the Chancellor Club
sponsored "sleep-in."
Beach Freeway Foes Wor:K
Hard at Collecting Names
Preparing for the July 26 pubn.c
hearing of the state Highway Com-
mission on location of the future Hun~
tington Beach Freeway, opponents of
the recommended eastern route con-
tinue to gather signatures on petitions
opposing the line.
From Huntington Beach to Anaheim
crews of 'persons opposing the Orange
(eastern) line for the future north-
south freeway are going into the tracts
and a"sking for signatures.
So far, there may be as many as
8,000 signatures on petitions opposing
the line selected by the state highway
engineer, they estimate. Most of the
signatures have been gathered in the
Huntington Beach.Fountain Valley
area, but a campaign waged in
Anaheim and Garden Grove could dou·
Orange Coast
Weather
ble the amount before the highway
commissioners arrive.
The hearing is schedu1ed for 10 a.m.
in the auditorium of lluntington Beach
High School, scene or two previous
hearings by the state engineers.
The Anaheim movement against the
freeway line is being pushed by the
Citizens Action League, 11091 Wasco
Road, Garden Grove. The petition
states residents' opposition to the
Orange study line on ground s "it is t!l.e
most expensive: it displaces t!ie
(See FREEWAY, Page 2)
FLAGS TO FLY
ON FRIDAY
Friday is the day to paint the
Orange Coast red, white and blue.
Residents are reminded that it is
Flag Day again, the day on whi ch the
Stars and Stripes should be flown from
every home or store, as well as public
buildings.
taxpayers seven to 12 Ci!nts .P.e? JlOO ot
assessed valuation the first year and
less thereafter depending on how
many years the board wanted to take
to pay It oft. The C11ITent district t8x
rate is 54 cents per $100 &$Sessed
valuation. .
Orange Coast District oUiclalJ have
reason not to be aptimistic. .
"It's not going to be easy to get two.
thirds when the statewide proPosition
passed by only 56 percent (last
week)," Supt. Norman. Watson said.
"And the .state issue. doesn't even go
on the property tax."
Nevertheless, trustees, acting on the
recommendation a joint Harbor Area·
West-CountY.?.Cititens Finance Com·
mlttee, decided to try.
"We can take a leaf from Mu Raf.
ferty's campaign book.'' board
member Robert Humphreys sug·
gested. "His pitch was . don't cancel
oot (U, S. Senator) George Murphy's
vote. We can say don't cancel.out Pro-
position Two."
The $1.25 million would enable the
district to obtain aoothtr $7,IOS,000 In
matching state and federal funds over
the next four years. Thia money is not
available to the district unless local
money is put up in equal amounts.
Trustees accepted the Citizens
Finance Committee's advice that they
junk the pay-as-yo•·BO concept. The
board policy for the first 20. years is
now Jnadequate because of rapidly in-
creasing e.urollment, they reasoned. It
requires today's taxpayers to provide
debt-free facilities for those who come
tomorrow.
Tbe majority _.o1-' building to be
flnanced by t:tie"'OOnd issue would be on
'ttie Golden West campus in Huntingtou
Beach which b not yet rounded.out.
'"11tia is a conservative building pro-
gram. We are not, for instance,
(See BOND :VOTE, Page I)
~ .
Cong Vow Rocket Terror
SAIGON (UPI) -Viet Cong leaflets
warned Saigon's 3 million residents to-
day o~new terror campaign of 100
rockets a night for 100 nights. And
U.S. · sources said intelligence
reports indicated the Communists
were planning another ground assau1t
against the city.
Rockets spared Saigon today for the
first time in 13 days, but the Com-
Surely Things
Rig~t Tonight
'At Carnival
Ii>
Things will be better this evening at
the community carnival sponsored by
the Fountain Valley Junior Chamber
of Commerce. •
They couldn't be much worse than
they were Wednesday night-opening
night for the community fair at
Magnolia Street and Warner Avenue
-according to at least one family.
"We were disgusted."
That was how Charles Catron or '7652
Garfield Ave., Huntington Beach, ex·
pressed himself regarding opening
night of the carnival.
"It was a carnival of errors. Our
party or seven arrived at .7 p.rn. and
paid the top admission price of fl per peI"SOil •!I
UNLIMITED RIDING
(That was !iUpposed to gjve the par·
ty unlimited riding privileges at "all
the rides" at the carnival, according
to advance publicity.)
"But by 8:30 p.m .• only one ride was
operating," charged Catron.
Catron told the DAILY PILOT that
he and a friend, Kenneth Tyler of
Newhall, demanded a refund. He
claimed they were given a run-.around
by the Jaycees. "We eventually g(lt
back the money but only after a lot ot
'You'll have to see the carny
manager'," he said.
Contacted by the DAILY PILOT
George Scott, Jaycee president, denied
Catron's gross ride.failure charges.
"It was no big deal. We just opened
one hour late," said Scott. "A couple
of the rides didn't work, that's all." He
admitted "some people were unhap-
py."
Scott also claimed the few
dissatisfied customers' money had
been refunded. Defending carnival
operator Pete Sutton, Scott said, "He
had a lot of bad luck; a broken axle
and a burned out motor."
NO MORE PROBLEMS
Scott saw no future problems with
rides.
Clyde Underwood , Jaycee organizer
or the carnival, attested that there
was a power failure which was COT·
rected by 9:30 p.m. "By 10 p.m., all ll
rides were in operation," he asserted.
Underwoocj added the only persons
v..itG were 1'lused a refund were a
number of "rowdy teen.agers" and a
"few patrons who asked for their
money in an insulting manner. We
refunded 25.30 tickets."
munlsts blew up an ammunition dump
outside the city aru:! exploded a Ume
bomb in a U.S. office building in Da
Nang, wcunding 17 Americans and
Vietnamese.
U.S. military sources expressed
doubt the Viet Cong could maintain a
100-day bombardment against the city
though Gen. William C. Westmoreland
said recently there was no way to stop
isolated. rocket attacks. But the Com·
munist leaflets stirred uneasiness
among the capital's inhabitants.
A Viet Cong "liberation radio"
broadcast heard in Saigon urged Viet·
namese residents of Saigcn to move
ur-ar away" from military' ad-
ministrative and other "war posi·
AT LEAST THEY'RE HAPPY -Opening day at Fountain Valley
carnival Wednesday may have been something less than happy ex-
perience for some visitors, but at least these two youngsters are
among the happiest pecple in town. Danny Arevalos, 7, and Eileen
Lopez, 11, were champicn candy sellers for Colonla Juarez booth.
They're holding Disneyland tickets the sales job earned for them.
Snack Booth Registering
Huge Success at Carnival
The carnival may be bogged down at
the Junior Chamber or Commerce·
sponsored F.ountain Valley fair, but
Mrs. Jeannie Lara's snack booth has
registered a whopping success.
Mrs. Larua, orgiµUzer or the Colonia
Juarez Community Center of Fountain
Valley, reported brisk opening day
sales at the organization's hot dog and
enchilada stand.
"Everyone has worked so hard,
particularly tbe kids," she said, The
.
children have been selling boxes of
chocol11tes for each of which , they
receive one free ticket to Disneyland.
Qt.her goodies sold at the center's
booth are soft drinks, refried beans,
coflee and sandwiches. The profits go
to buy playground equipment which
will cost several hundred dollars,
Hard-working Colonia friends in·
elude Miss Racheal Escalante, Miss
Isabel Luna, Mrs. Mary Ann Garcia,
N'Js. Edward Varela and Carl Lara.
tions" to avoid the thre.atened shell-
lngs. ~ . Radie> ol, in a Vietnamese
language br ast to the people of
Saigon, said tnamese "have the
sacred right to e every method ... to
annihilate the invaders."
It said the "invaders" were the
Americans and called. them "our
people's No. l enemy."
Mysterious
Sniper Hits
Grove Girl
A 13-year-old Garden Grove girl was
shot :under mysterious circumstances
this morning as she walked along a
quiet street on her way to school.
Garden Grove police are conducting
an intensive investigation to determine
identity Of the sniper.
Deborah Ann Salafia of 12542 Gloria
St., Garden Grove, was walking on
Trask A venue west of Roxey Street
toward the Doig Elementary School
when she was shot through the rJgbt
mn.
Police belleve a vehicle· wu in-
volved in the shooting. They said the
wound indicated ihat a small caliber
gun was used.
The girl was rushed to Palm Harbor
Hospital where she js reported in good
cond1tion. She was unable to aid Police
in running dowti the suspected·1niper.
The scene of the· shooting is near the
Garden Grove Freeway area where a
mystery · sniper was sought a few
weeks ago after aeveral truck drivers
said their vehicles had been hit.
Investigation proved the trucks was
hit by rocks, not bullet!.
Police are searching for a green car
driven by a youth which witne~se1
said was in the arei about the time ot
the shooting.
Kennedy Letters
Fill Full Page
Robert Kennedy is dead. His accus•
ed. assassin sun awaits trial. And ctu ..
zens and solons alike are talkini ·about
tougher gun Jaws.
These were the spurs whJch trigger-
ed. a vast outpouring of various kinds
of reactions by Orange Coast area
readers of the DAILY PILOT.
The volume of mail grew to such
proportions that it is necessary to de.
vote a full page to the Mailbox fea-
ture today. You 'll find Uie full page or
letters to the editor on Page 10. Read
your neighbors' minds. They may be
thlnldng the same things you are.
Try as he might, Old Sol just
won't quite get his 'message
through Friday, forecaster Emil
Kurtz predicts. It'll be hazy with
early rog and temperatures in
the 70 bracket for the coast.
Coast Police Chiefs Debate Gun Controls
INSIDE TODAY
Financial columnist S11lvia
Porter today a.isail! both Presi·
dent Johnson and Congress for
delays and buckpa.Jsing over
enactment of tM 10 percent
surtoJ:. See Page 26.
C .. lftl'lllll ' _,., " Cl9MlllH ..... Mlltul 1"9MI " c-1u n N1tl9MI '"'" •• , __ ,..
" Or-C.Wftt)' • DMtl N.ttctt • "' .. --• S'!'tYS. ,...,._, ff
Efl...VI .... " Sit.lit NIWI 1).16
EJ1Mrt11--r .. ,_,, fl·U ... _ I .. ., '*" Mlr11ttt. ''"'' "" Cllll • T11t\ll.,_ u -.. --" Allll LMMn .. WHffllr • MlllWI .. Cll<tftJI Wltlt9 " """", ... _.. ••• w""' -.. --•
l
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Ol 01e 01lly Piie! 51efl
Possession or a pistol turns an adult
heroin addict, feeding a b).a-day
habit on holdups -and even an aged,
church-going widow, who simply fears
prowlers -into brotller and sister
under one facet of law.
It depends on how one views the
situation.
Each is a potential killer, but there
may be nothing illegal in ownership of
a weapon, until the individual is
caugbt misusing or w r o n g f u 11 y
possessing Jt, as in the case of a con·
vlcted. felon or a known drug addict.
A survey of gun cootrol laws along
the Orange Coast, sparked by cries for
more rigid legislation following the
assassination of Sen . Robert F. Ken·
nedy, 4low1 Uie .clearcut yet complex
\
problems Involved.
Opinlcna by police spokesmen -
from metropolitan chiefs to rookies on
small town forces -indicate that stif·
fer laws cannot really be the solution
to murder as a political tool.
This contemporary Am er I c an
stigma, however, may be helping to
focus the attention of many citizens on
their persooal conduct in ownership
and handling of guns.
Since Tuesday, nine persons have
registered guns with the Costa Mesa
Police Department. from a 21-year..old
collegian to a 79-year-old housewife
who owns a revolver 150 years old.
Those are the responsif>le ones.
"We go by the state law," explains
Cotta MeN Police ChJef Roger Neth,
(See GUN CURBS, P1ft Z)
ROCKET LAUNCHER TURN•D IN TO SAN l'RAJ!CISCO POLICE
Elaewhere, However, F•w·WNpomt Hive. a.. Surnftdtind to Lewoten
, )
•
'.
I
----------·---·---~-----------------------------------------------------.11
Task Force.
To Probe
. RFK Ki11 ing
'
From Win S.rvke1
LOS ANGELES -A 1peclal 22·mlll
task force of police· experts tod11 was
named to invesUgate .n facets of tbe
aauulnatioa of Sen. Robert F. Kril·
DMy.
Deputy police _chief Robert A.
~oughton said all leads, no matter
bow fragile, would be cbeCked out. He
aaid tbe possibility thlt the accused
assusln, Sirhan B. Sirhan, 24, did not
aict alone was still being explored.
Capt. Hugh Brown, commander of
the police department's· homicide
divisioo, beads the task force. He will
be aided )>y three lieutenant& and 13
detectives, , all experts in t h e 1 r
particular areas of lllvestigation.
READING ON OCCULT
Meanwhile, Sirhan, who was raised
1n the Greek Orthodox faith in his
nati ve J ordan, is spending the lon g
days in his cell reading up on the OC·
cult.
Sirhan bas been visit'ed daily by A.
L. Wirin or the American Civil
Liberties Union to "see tbat Sirhan's
constitutional rights are protected."
\Virin said the defendant spends
much of his time poring over books on
the occult, the belief that mysteMous
powers exist which can be subject to
human control.
WNDON REPORT lit London, a newspaper said today
an Arab government bas evidence that
Sirhan returned to the Middle· East in
1964 and 1966. ·
'The Evening Standard said this
evidence could open a new line of in-
. vestigation into the motivation for the
Kennedy shooting.
The paper said the Arab govern·
ment, which was not identified, was
forwarding its findings to the United
States.
Britain Starts
Steps to Send
Ray \to America
LONDON (lJPIJ -Britain today
formally authorized court hearings on
American requests to extradite James
Earl Ray to the United States to stand
trial for the kllllng of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr.
Home Secretary James Callaghan
ai~ the order telling Loodoo's
chief magistrates to bold bearings on
tha American government case for ex-
traditing the 40-y ear.old fugitive
charged with the a1111assinatlon .
The hearings and appeals might last
through the summer.
Callaghan'• order made Ray liable
I-or possible extradiUon not on1y for
the killing of King in MemphJs, Tenn.;
but for breaking out of a Missouri
Prison in 1967.
The order came as Scotland Yard
bunted a shadowy man -or men -
and a woman with an American
''twang" accent to learn what Ray
wu doing 1D Bril.Aln before his arrest
at London lnternaUonal Airport Satur·
day.
•
The man stood near James Earl
Ray when the 40-year.old accused
killer checked into a London hotel.
'Ibe woman with the twang teJe.
phoned the bobel, asking for Ray.
No Miss Firecracker
Contest This Year
The annual Min Flrecracker beauty
contest will not be held tbls year
members of sponsoring Huntingto~
Beach Jaycees announced today
Representing the city in the Fourth
of July Parjlde and celebration willl be
the Huntington Beach Junior Miss
K:aren Cutler, and Miss Huntingto~
Beach, JeUye Blackard.
DAILY PILOT
..... .._ ....... c:.ew.•
a.Mr+ N. WeM -TM•u Kwril -T1ie1M1 A. M1~ht11• ---AA:9it W. latft, Wllll1111 ~ ... ~tt H1111tl1111o11 -..di
!Editor Qty fdlllt
" ............ °"*' Sot Ith StHet
M•lll .. >.14,..,r P.O. In: n o tl'4t ottl9' om... ....,.,.. 9-d\1 llllt w. lllbel .....
C... M9M I Jal W"t ltY l!rwt ui,.... a..ai, m ""'"' ·a,,.nw\
..
Fate a.t Stake
De salting P ·lant
Hearing Fr i day
By WILLIAM REED
• Of tt1it 0.llf_/1111 Steft
FaU! of a plp.n to bulld a huge
nuclear power ,and desalting plant on
an artlficial/Jsland otf the coast ol
Jtuntlngt9r}. Beach may be decided Fri·
day and a1m ost certainly during next
week.
BoJsa Island has been a doubUul .
project since revision of cost figures
for the project pegged the estimated
/,.c0st at $765 milllon, up considerably
from the $444 million estimated in
1965.
Friday Secretary of the Interior
Stewart Udall is scheduled to meet in
Los Angeles with directors o f
Metropolitan Water District (MWD).
The following Thursday th e same
directors are to meet again to
"dlscuss the plant's future."
FfX!eral interst Jn the project o(f
Huntington Beach was voiced by Rep,
Richard T. lianna (D-Westmlnster},
and Sen. George Murphy (R-Beverly
Hills), as well as by several other
members of Congress.
All ar.e urging the MWD, Southern
California Edison Co., and Los
·Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty to go ahead
with the project despite increased
costs. '
Calling the project "one of the most
Important research and demonstration
projects of the century," Hanna and
his colleagues urged that nothing be
allowed to prevent ''prompt im~
plem~1ation and development of the
pl~n m . accordance w.ith the original
gwde lines for public and private
cooperation ."
ROCKY ROCKS SECURITY'-New York Gov.
Nel~o~ Rockefeller, fir~ presidential campaigner
to visit Los Angeles since. assassination of sen.
Robert Kennedy there, departed. from his schedule
and walked unescorted across Q. s treet in Watts to
Ul'I Te19111Mle
visit with students at Centjnela ·High School. The
move left a dozen jittery1Secret Service men and Ne~ York state policem E!n in what they lBter de-
scnbed as a "use~ess" position.
Sunset Beach
Boulevard
Plan Delayoo
I·n telegrams to MWD, Edison and
Mayor Yorty, the group declared that
"the basic advantages which pro--
·~ basic advantages which prompt·
ed inauguration ol the project and
Congres.s are liecoming m o r e
persuasive each day as state and
worldwide water problems become
McCarthy Edges Nixon
In OCC Student Voting
Birds of a feather don't alwa:lll flock
together. Hawks and doves cohabit at
Orange Coast College.
OCC campus ·results in the na-
tionwide "Choice 68" poll conducted
by Time magazine show support for
intensifying the Vietnam war and sup·
port for ending Jt.
~ presidential preference voting,
Eugene McCarthy won by five votes
over Richard Nixon.
The election was held April 24, but
ballots had to be rushed to Time
magazine to make a publication
deadline. Richard Mclnnis, campus
Salary Schedule
For Stiff OK'd
Teachers in the Ocean View School
District tecelved good news this morn-
ing.
The district board approved a salary
schedule for certificated personnel
which raised the starting salary from
the current figure of '6,000 to '6,500
and the top salary from the current
fll,475 to $12,628. "
For the top salary step a teacher
must have his or her master's degree
(or a bachelor's degree plus 60 units)
plus 10 years of experience.
The increase affects 495 certUicated
personnel and ~ principals in the
district. Only the assistant 1uper£n-
tendents and superintendent were not
included.
coordinator for the vote, just r~tly
received OC<;tresults.
The vote f6r president:
McCarijiy, 149;.NixOn, 144; the t8te
Robert / Kennedy, 139; L y n d o n
Johnson, 42 ; Ronald Reagan, 19;
Ne~on Rockefeller, 40; Ch a r 1 e s
Perey, 17; John Lindsay, 5; Mark Hat·
field, 5; Fred Halstead, 3; George
Wallace, the late Dr. Martin Luther
King and Hubert Humphrey, 2 each.
KeMedy placed second to McCarthy
In the national student .. '\lote with Nixon
third. ··
TIU'ee referendum items were on the
ballot. The questions and the OCC vote
for aJternatievs:
"What course of military action
should the United States pursue in
Vle\tfm?"
Immediate withdrawal -139.
Phased reduction -178.
Malotain -43.
Increase -65.
All out effort -168.
"What course of action should the
United States pursue in regards to the
bombing of North Vietnam?"
Permanent cessation -174.
Temporary suspension -120.
Maintain -51.
Intensify -217.
Use nuclear weapons -29.
''In confronting the urban cr1s1s
which should receive hlghest priority
in government spending?"
Education -277.
Hoiuing -22.
Income subsidy -10.
Job training -225.
Riot control -62.
Fr om Page l
GUN CURBS •.•
explaining the system w b e r e b y
firearms are registered in the st.ate or
California.
Rifles aod shotguns are logged with
federal a'Uthorities at the time they
are initially sold, always to Persons 18
or over, or to 18-to-21·year-olds who
have parental pennisslon, depending
on the area.
Hand guns are recorded upon
purchase, with the Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investlgatlon, in the
event of a need for future reference.
Any change of ownershlp should be
registez:ed with the local police depart·
ment, 10 case of subsequent loss or
!belt.
This, however, is not a permit to
carry a concealed weapon, which is il-
legal, unless one is so registered.
Such permission to carry a con·
ceaJed weapon is dUficult to obtain in
most jurisdicUoos and impossible in
many others.
Newport Beach Assistant Police
Chief Merrill Duncan not.es as a si~ellght .• that the good Would p'robably
abide with the various proposed gun
control laws, but ha cannot see any
change in the attitudes of those out&lde
the law.
Opinions and artions by fellow of·
ficers support his thoughts.
"No gun permits are Issued in Seal
Beach. In my three years here, ~·ve
ooly issued one and that was to a 11·
quor store clerk who had been robbed
four times," explained SeaJ Beach
Police Chief Lee Case.
INSURANCE CHEAPER • Laguna Beach Police Chief Harry
LaBrow 1aid a merchant wnb carries
•.1.000 to tho bank each Frld.ty may
find l.nJ:urance much meaper the car· rxinc along a ""1 and perhaps kllllnl
1omeorie aomedq.
"Need and a Sood record are the
m01t Important consldeNUons," 1aid
Fountain van.1 Pollet ailel Olar!"
W. Michaelll, "I interview Ill ap-
pllcanll !or the cnncealed ""1 permit
and if l have no objection, l refer
them to the 1herJff1 office." ·
"By 1tatute1 bandgun1 are taboo for
allen!, narcotic addicts, convicted
felons and minors," said Huntington
Beach Police Lt. Arland Ussher, when
asked about beach city firearms
regulation.
Westminster· Police Chief Conner
Collacott judges each application
himself, usually decidlng within three
weeks whether to grant it, based upo n
a background check or the applicant.
Use or carrying of a gun in Newport
Beach is illegal -even a B·B gun or
any other pressure-powered weapon -
unless the individual is a police of·
fleer, Assistant Chief Duncan also
said, concerning the problem.
NO QUESTIONS
Has anyone owning a weapon in
coastal Orange County turned it in
with no question! asked, as have near-
ly 200 persons ln the current program
initiated by San Francisco Mayor
Joseph Alioto after the RFK murder?
No.
A paltry five have been handed over
to police in Los Angeles, wh ere the
late Chlef William H. Parker began in
)951 a policy of no concealed gun
permits, remaining In effect today.
Sgt. Dan Cooke, of the LAPD RubUc
affair! dlvlslon, told the DAILY
PILOT hundrecU .of guns -un-
traceable because they were never
routinely registered by owners ........ are
dumped into the PacUic Ocean off Los
Angeles each year.
They were aucUoned oU in the past.
but. Chief Parter ordered a halt to this
procedure after the 1963 assassination
of Prealdenl John F. Kennedy, wbose
youncer brother wu slain by a cun-
. man a week q:o u he too campaigned
foi: lhe presidency.
3 CONTRQLS EXISTS
Perb1p.1 only thrtt gun coatroll u ·
lll In our qe.
S.d.ly, however, one cannot fill out a
brief f<>rm and receive u a result
sanity, reason, or simple aceeptanct
of thoae who do not abare the same
viewpoint
Rock y Declares
American Cities
'Can Be Saved'
Nelson A. Rockefeller said today the
nation's "cities can be saved -~ut
1:1ey will not be saved by a gospel of
do-nothing." ,
The New York governor, in the first
o! a series of position statements that
will appear as paid ads each week in
40 newspapers from coast-to-coast
said faith "that our cities can be saved
. . . is one reason why I run for presi-
dent."
Jn the ad entitled "To Burn or Not to
Burn," Rockefeller quoted a slum
child in Washington as saying: "I
would like my street to look like a
brand new neighborhood with cbang.
ed people who are friendly to others no
matter what color."
Campaigning today in San Fran·
cisco, Rockefeller conceded that the
United States was a divided com.
munity but rejected the notion
America is a sick society.
Frotn Page l
)
FREEWAY ...
greatest number of people from their
homes; it will have the greatest
number of homes adjacent to the
freeway, and·Jt will not provide access
lo indu strial property."
A similar movement in Huntington
Beaoh is being led by the Concerned
~itluns Council. Larry Curran is pres-
ident.
Both groups have written letten to
Orange County legislators and the
governor in an attempt to .get aid in
opposi ng the Orange Llne.
Both groups are suggesting the Red
Line (Ule central line in Huntington
Beach and the western line in
\Yestrninster, Garden Grove and Stan·
ton) as the best route for the freeway.
The July 26 bearing should end the
bitter controversy over localing the
Route 39 freeway In West Orange
County. During the past four years
more than 100 meetings to discuss the
matter have been held.
Sunset Beach's proposed boulevard
district bad its first airing Wednesday
before the Local Agency Formation
Commisskm (LAFC) but decision was
postponed for 30 days.
The commissioners w.ant more in·
formation on costs, property owner
supPort and alternatives.
The proposed district would be used
to acquire the former Pacific Electric
right of way which cuts the Beach
community in half.
Southern .PacJflc Co., owner:s of the
land, have leased the mlle-long 80-foot
wide strip to Carl.ton Builders of
Beverly Hills. The firm proposes to
build a string of duplexes similar to
those in Newport Beach on the former
Pacific .E lectric right of way in that
community.
Arthur Edmonds of Beverly HiUs
president of Carltoo Builders called
the boulevard district p r o p o s a l
unrealistic. "It would cost each pro-
perty owner between $6,000 and $7 000
to pay for the land and develop it into
a parking area and streets " he
estimated. '
Angels' Schaal
Suffers Injury
B y Pitched Ball
Californla Angels third basemen
Paul Schaal, a resident ol Fountain
Valley, was hit on the head by a pitch
today during the first game of a
doubleheader against the Red Sox in
Boston.
Schaal, a resident 0£ 17154 Santa
Luci~ Ave., in Fountain Valley, was
earned from the Boston field on a
stretcher. He suffered a hairline
fracture.
Reports fro m the clubhouse said he
suffered a bump on ·the head but did
not lose consciousness at any time. He
was taken to s.anta Maria Hospital in
nearby Cambr1dg~ for precautionary
X-rays, accomparued by Red Sox team
physician Dr. Thomas Tierney and
Angels coach Mickey McDermott.
Schaal was batting with runners on
second and third and two out when a
~gh inside pitch by Jose Santiago hit
him. The pitch apparently struck flush
on his batting helmet, which flew off
as he fell to the ground.
more acute." . . · ~.
Original cost estimat.es for the pro-
ject, whi ch would provide enough
water for a population of 750 ro>
persons and sufficient electric po~er
for nearly 2 million people, placed the
cost at $444. million, with the federal
government contributing $72.2 million.
Valley to Vote
On $8 Million
In 'School Bonds
Voters in Fountain Valley will be
as.kl'.d t.o approve the issue of $8
milli~n in school bonds in a Sept. 17
election .
Fountain •Valley School District
trustees approved the election this
week. They were told by Dr. Charles
Woodfin, in charge ot district business
services, the amount requested pro·
bably would take care of all future
building requirements for the district.
Passage of·the bond measure would
not raise the district's tax rate Wood·
fin explained. '
. Th~ $8 miµi on would give the
district authority to issue bonds up to
that atn<>unt to repay state con·
struction loans, but would n o t
automatically increase the di strict's
bonded indebtedness.
Presently the district has $198,000 in
bonds whlch can be ~old, the re-
mainder of SJ.375,000 approved by
voters since 1952.
From Page 1
BOND VOTE • • •
recommending a new administration
building," Dr. Watson commented.
A decision on whether to repay the
bonds over 10, 15, 20 or 25 years would
be made when the bonds are Sold
depending upon the money market' B~siness Supt. Correllan Thompso~
said.
Therefore, the exact cost per year to
taxpayers cannot be figured. At the
~robable five percent interest rate,
first year tax increases would be
~tween 12 c~nts for l~year amortiza-
tion and seven cents for 25-year
amortization.
Succeeding years they w o u J d
gra1ually diminish down to five cents
to one cent.
a very sp ecial purchase
famous quality maker of
GENUINE LEATHER CHA IRS
A 61FT TO TRWURE AND ENJOY FOR YEARS
• Cwtom quality lhr0ugh-out •
Luxurious· cushioning • Your
choice of colors from an extensive
selection of finest leather textures.
from $199
P~OFES~~~.GARRFIT fURNrfl}RE
INTERIOR DESIGNERS COSTA MESA, CALIF. --·-.I'll. -2215 HARBOR BLVD.
6-40-0275 646-0276
, • l
--------- -----
., •
,
l
t
' I
l
r
I
'
r
I
ii s
l
h
t
p
E
~ c
v
" r
n
c
_; ............... ";-...... ~.-.-...... ~.-.-v~~· "'f"-" ... ,,.
•
Lag,una Beaeli Today's Closl•g
EDIT.ION
VOL. 61', NO. 1~2. 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES
I LAGUNA BEACH, CALIF'ORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE :13, '1968 TEN CENTS ..
Chamher ,G-iven Equal Time in Hippie Debate
'
DISCOURAGED BY MAYOR
New Lagunan Berry Fisher
Reds Warn
Saigon of
New Terror
SAIGON (uPI) -Viet Cong leaflets
warned Saigon's 3 million residents to-
·day of a new terror campaign of 100 ·
rockets a night for 100 rrlgbts. And
U.S. military sources said intelligence
reports indicated the CommUnists
were planning another ground assault
against the city.
Rockets spared Saigon today for th'-
first time in 13 days(but ,the ComJ
rnunists ble\v up an ammunition dump
outside the city and exploded a time
bomb in a U.S. office building in Da
Nang, wounding 17 Americans and
Vietnamese.
U .s. military sources e:1i::pressed
doubt the Viet Cong could maintain a
100-day bombardment against the city
though Gen. William C. Westmoreland
said recenUy there was no way to stop
isolated rocket attacks. But the Com·
munist leaflets stirred uneasiness
among the capital's inhabitants.
A Viet Cong "liberation radio"
broadcast heard ln Saigon urged Viet-
nr.mcse residents of Saigon to move
.. far 8\vay·• fron1 military, ad-
1ninistrative and other ';\var posi·
tions" to avoid lhe threatened shell-
ings.
Radio Hanoi, in a Vietnamese
language broadcast to the people of
Saigon, said Vietnamese ''have the
sacred right to use every method .•. to
annihilate the invaders."
It said the "invaders" were the
Americans and called them "our
people's No. 1 enemy."
A~rican officials said intelligence ·
reports indicated the Viet Cong were
massing for another 'ground assault on
Saigon but that they had no indication
when it might come. Previous land
assaults were beaten back with heavy
losses to the -Communists -and heavy
damage to Saigon.
GAVE R&,SULTS 'l
Attornty J1m11 Ltddy
SPlrAKS TO HIPPIE ISSUE
Chamber VP Harry Lawrtnc1
Kennedy Letters
Fill Full Page
Robert Kennedy is dead. His accus·
cd assassin still awaits trial. And citi·
zens ~nd solons alike are talking about
toug her gun la\~·s .
These \Vere the spurs \vhich trigger-
ed a vast outpouring of various kinds
of reactions by Orange Coast area
readers of the DAILY PILOT.
The volume of mail grew to such
proportions that it is necessary to de-
vote a full page to the Mailbox fe~
ture today. You'll find the full page of
letters to the editor on Page 10. Read
your neighbors' minds. They may be
thinking the same thi.ngs yqU" are.
Stock Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock
market churned in near·record trading
this afternoon, backing away from an
initial advance and· settling lower.
(See quotations, Pages 26·27), I ,
School Board Deeds Land
-To City for Use as Park
A triangle of land below Laguna
Beach High School's athletic field will
be turned over to the city to be
developed for park and recreational
purposes.
Trustees of the Laguna Beach
Unified School District adopted a
resolution Tuesday nJght to deed the
property to the city on the proviso it
will be a park within three years.
The city had sought a drainage ease-
n1ent through the property at St.. Ann's
Drive and \Vilson Street for inclusion
in its Park Avenue-Sleepy Hollow
Storm Drainage District.
A resolution of intention to turn over
the land will be granted after it bas
been publiabed for three weeks.
In other business Tuesday night
trustees:
~Adopted the revised b o a r d
policies.
-Accepted a set of Encyclopedia
Britannica •• a gift from Hubert Cor-
yell and a record collection from Fred
Gardner.
-Agreed to employ Barbara R.
Wright as a speech therapist to
replace Marcie Huntslnger w h o
r<slgned.
-Reeommtnded employment ot ad·
rninistratve staffers I n c 1 u d I n g
elementary principals Wllllam Allen,
Albert Haven , Lyle Proctor; lligh
school principal Robert L. Reeves and
intermediate principal David W. Loyd.
others are Owen F. Tait, .assistant
superintendent; Arthur Wahl, Gary
Norton and Harley Lobo, counselors;
J\.lrs. Patricia Nunnikhove n, counselor·
psychometrist, and Thomas Lavern
Dugger, assistant principal.
-Approve payment 1 of $331 .50 to
DarreU J. McKibban for coaching the
new ninth grade baseball team during
. the past school year.
-Promoted Raymond C. Lawson,
transportation director, to the position
of director of transportation opera·
tions and maintenance. He will tackle
addltional duties handled by opera.
lions supervisor William McCOrd wbo
is retiring.
-Accepted resignations ot Top of
the World Teacbers Elaine Barnard
and Joseph Ruisi; high school teacher
Robert Alston, LOuise Walsingham and
Peggy Patterson; high sch o o 1
counselor Otlile Chomlak, Aliso School
teacher Mary Green and speech
therapist Marcie HU11tsi.nger.
-Accepted with pride a graduation
list of 201 senior1.
-Approved a list of 89 clas1ified
(S.. SCHOOL, Pafel)
Woman Tells Council Laguna Streets Not Sale
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of IM O•Ht Pllet Siii!
Monitored closely by the mayor , the
establishm~t had its brief say about
hippies Wednesday night in Laguna
Beach council chambers.
One woman claimed it is no longer
safe for women to walk on the Laguna
Beach streets. otherwise, the session
initiated by the Chamber of Com·
merce was generally bland.
Mayor Glenn Vedder kept a tight
rein on the speak,ers. ,
Hippies earlier }).ad c.ontplained of
police harassment at a council sessioh
dedicated to hippie complaints. The
Chamber presentation took less· than
equal" time,
Attorney James Leddy, a Chamber
director, gave results of a Chamber
questionnaire sent to 400 members. He
said 70 persons, or about 18 percent,
returned the questiormaire.
Leddy said 24 Of those responding
\\'Ould be willing to· serve on a com-'
mittee to work ori the hippie problem.
Mentioning the comment that the
questionnaire was slanted, Leddy said
it was an attempt to produce.facts. He
admitted that part of those responding
were apparently biased but said others
were concerned about individual
rigbts.
No one responding had' Witnessed
police brutality, said Leddy. But 14
said they had seen hippie attempts to
provoke police and 14 felt poliqe ~ad
overlooked · incidents on which they
should have taken action ..
A larger number felt th e i r
business.es had been adversely af.
fected by hippie activities such as
loitering or blocking entrances; seven
had heard loud or offensive language;
10 Mtnessed hippie shop lifting; and
seven rePQrted illegal entry believed
(See HIPPIES, Page Z)
• -cen ax I
-n
City SeeKs
Nearly
·$3 Mi1lion
~% r ~-;. W• ... *"" ·~f.~
The city budget for Laguna Bef!ch in
1968-69 is nudging '3 milllon.
It· is a record breake:T but most
gOvefnment budgets are these days.
More important to the taxpayer, tile
preliminary. document carries with it
recommendation for a 10.8-cent hike in
the tax rate.
City Manager James D. Wheaton
handed councilmen the weighty budget
and his letter of transmittal Wed·
nesday night.
The council now will schedule
budget sessions to pare from or add to
the new budget amounts they feel
necessary prior to expected adoption
July 3.
The budget for the con1ing fi scal
year is '$2,949,293 an increase of
$333,228 (about 12.7 percent) over the
1967-68 budget of $2,616,065. The year
before that the budget was $2,300,809.
A good Share of the increase is for
fire department expansion of men,
facilities and equipment. The fire
department's budget i.S up $131,493.
Wheaton has also budgeted SSS,000
inlo the general fund to increase
employes salaries during the coming
fiscal period. "The amount provided
ma:v be insufficient," he noted.
\Vbeaton noted that the increase of
tax rate to finance the general fund
wa s only 1.8 cents despite an exl
pen<liture increase in that fund of
$236,711.
This was permitted, he said,
because of new cigarette tax revenue
of $65,662, accelerated sales tax col-
lecting revenue and the documentary
stamp tax revenue.
Last year the city had a 71h:-cent tax
Jncrease despite dipping into reserves
for about $100,000.-Because of in-
creased revenues, however, Wheaton
said the reserves have been kept in a
very healthy position and the cash on
hand picture is good.
The budget estimate of increase in
assessed valuation is conservative, It
estimates assessed valuation will be
up less than 4 percent to $52 million.
The actual increase in 1967-68 over
the prior ,year was from $45,740,090 to
$50,805,640, better than $5 million or
more than 10 percent.
The increase for the l)arks and
Recreation C u n d represents an
increase in the tax rate of 7 cents but
this does not include a recreation
(See BUDGET, Page Z)
Superintendent
Given Pay Hike
Or. Wllllam truom, superintendent
of the Laguna Beach Uni!ied School
District. has been given a raise.
Sdlool trustees voted to give Ullom.
who has been with the district since
1964, an 8.7 percent salary increase,
bringing his wages tb S25,000 a year.
The superintenderlt's four-year con-
tract with the distrlCt bas three years
to run. I.
' -
una u
.,
ROCKET LllUNC~R TURNED •IN TO SAN FRANCISCO PoLICE
.El11wMr1, How1v9r1 Few Wupons H•v• a.... Surrendered to Lawmen
Gun Bills Trigger Debate
Controls Hit Both Laiv Abiding and Lawless
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of lht Dlllt Piiot ll•ff
Possession of a pistol turns an adult
heroin addict, feeding a , $20-a.<fay
habit on holdups -and even an aged,
church-going widow, who simply fears
prowlers· -into brother arid sister
under one facet of law.
Jt. depends on how one views the
situation.
Each is a potential killer, but there
may be nothing illegal in ownership of
a weapon, until the individual is
caught misusing or wr on gf u 11 y
possessing it, as in the case of a con-
vic ted felon or a known drug addict.
A survey of gun control laws al ong
the Orange Coast, sparked by cries for
more rigid legislation following the
assassination of Sen. Robert F. Ken-
nedy, shows the clearcut yet complex
problems involved.
Opinions by police spokesmen -
from metropolit.an chiefs to rookies on
small toWn forces -indicate that stif·
fer laws .can!l()t really be. the solution
to murder as a political tool.
This contemporary A m e r i c a n
stigma, however, may be helping to
locus the attention or many citizens on
their personal' conduct in ownership
and handling of guns.
Since Tuesday, nine persons have
registered guns with the Costa Mesa
Police Department, from a·21-year-old
collegian to a 79-year~ld housewife
who owns a revolver 150 years old.
Those .are Ute responsible one~.
Police Task Force Picked
To Probe Kennedy Death
From Wire Strvlceii:
LOS ANGELES -A special 22-man
t.ask force of police experts today was
named to investigate all facets of the
assassination or Sen. Robert F. Ken-
nedy.
Deputy police chief Robert A.
lioughton said all leads, no matter
how fragile, would be checked out. I1e
said the possibility that the accused
assassin, Sirhan B. Sirhan, 24. did not
act alone was still being explored.
Capt. Hugh Brown, commander of
the police department's homicide
division, beads the task force, He will
be aided bi thr<o liewnants and 18
detectives, all experts in t h t i r
particular areas of tnvestlgatlon.
Meanwhlle, Sirhan, who was raised
In the Greek Orthodox taith in hls
native Jordan, is spending the long
days in-his cell reading up on the OC·
cult.
Sirhan has been vislted dally by A.
L. Wlrtn of the American Ctyil
Liberties Union to "see that Slrhan's
constitutional rigtits are protected."
Wtrin said the delendant spends
mucb al bis lime porin&.over boots oo
the occult, the belief Ulat mysterious
pow'ers exist which can be subject to
human controrl.
In London, a newspaper said today
an Arab government has evidence that
Sirhan returned to the Middle East in
1964 and 1966.
The Evening Standard said this
evidence could open a new line or in-
vestigation into the motivation for the
Kennedy shooting.
The paper said the Arab govern·
ment, which :W'l$ __ n.ot iclMlified, was
forwarding its findings fo the United
States.
TURN OUR dOAST
RED, WHITE, BLUE
Friday is Ule day to paint the
Orange Coast red, wbJte and blut.
Residents are reminded thl\t it ts
Flag Day agaln, the day on which the
Stars and Stripe• •bould be flown from
every home or store, 16 well as public
building•.
' '-· •
"We go by the state law," explains
Costa Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth,
explaining the system w b e r e b y
firearms are registered in the state of
California,·
Rifles and shotguns are logged with
federal a'Uthotitles at tbe time they
are initially sold, always to persons 18
or over, or to 18-t.D·21-year-olds who
have parental permission, depending
on the area. ·
Hand guns are recorded upon
purctiase, with.the Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investigation, in the
event of ,a need for future reference.
Any change of ownership should be
registered with the 1oca1 police depart-
ment, in case of subsequent loss or
theft.
This, however, is not a permit to
caITy a concealed weapon, which is ll·
legal, unless one Is so registered.
Such permission to carry a con·
(See GUN CURBS, Page 2)
Orange c;oast
Weather
Try' as be might. Old Sol Just
·won't quite get his message
through Friday, forecaster Emil
Kurtz predii::ts. It'll be hazy with
early fog and tempel'atures in
the 70 bracket for the coast.
INSIDE TODA\'
Financial columnist Sylvia
Porttr ~U 41sails both Pres~
dtnt Johmon and Congress for
dela11s and buckparring ovu
,_tmtfll of tM 10 p<re<•I
aurta.x. St• Page 24.
Cel""'1lla ' Mell' ... " ClilnlflM .... Mwtvll .._.. H c-rc, " ·--.. , __
" or .... -cMr,-I Ot•1'1 Ntlktt. • .,. .. ·-" I ,,. ...... "'"" .. Elllltrl•I I" ... M ktlal N-1>-1• 111""'9111-1 " ..... 21·2' ·-.. ,, ·--.. ,,
Pi,_ C1l1t • 1'•1nltlM .. -C'"a!i:.r1 .. '""'"'' " .. ... .. _, • ...... " ......... , .. " ~•s.ni. •• ........ """ .. -I
J
"
"
.,
• -. . •
Z DAILY PILOT
~oc:c ~Seek .$· $7 Million
"I~~.._ -.t ~ :__._ ~
~ ' _.,,,.-' .
1 College~Sets ·sq;t. l 'i:B n4 El~ction ·-,, .. By TBOMAS FORTUNE
Of IM DOltf f'Mft lloff
be meanl1g1esa wdeis Uio'bond l&&ue + 1.Uttee, decJded to try. ' '
• •
l'il'TIETH ANNIVERSARY -Moeptkini.i. Ji;1\ ;
Bluroclt and gallery diieelDr Tom Eomaa audit the
permanent memorial collection of Laguna Beach
" r • ' ) • AK Association. If will be on . display June 16
through .3l during celebTation Of qie ass<>:cit\t\O!l'S
ftftieth aruiiversary. · · . . " .
Coast Murder Victim
Buried as Lived, Alone
George Findley Lyoos lived alone
and was buried alone.
Newport Beach police, who 'Ved-
nesday identified a 17-year-old Ma·
rine as a suspect in Lyons' slaying,
today disclosed that the Corona de!
Mar murder victim Us been quieUy
laid to rest .
There was no ceremony. No one
ever showed up to claim klrulhip to
the 48-year-old insurance man, found
bludgeoned to death ln his small
apartment on May 20.
His grave ~t Fairhaven Cemetery
in Santa Ana is unmarked.
Burial expenses were only partially
covered by some $250 from Lyons'
Social Security fund. He left no bank
account, ocly many small debts.
Meanwhile today, the bunt for bis
suspected killer went on.
Police released a pbotograptl of the
suspect, Edwin William Chott Ill, an
AWOL Camp Pendleton Marine.
·~ott, of Perryville, Mo., is believed
to be .In the Mid'"!'! ''""""hr· :Ih• ~I )iloPiductlng ~ch. ai
...... BM , there's notblni new," Iii t. ,... .....
Newport Detective Sergeant Kermeth
'Ibompsqo, "I wish there were."
' ' '
•
Art Association
Slates Plans for
Fiftieth Birthday
Laguna Beach Art ASsociation will
celebrate its fiftieth anniversary with
a showing of the as socia ti on' s
permanent memorial collection from
June 16 through 30.
Also on display in the gallery en·
tresol will be the Faculty Show from
the Laguna Beach School of Art &
Design. The uhibit is also to include
award winners from the Festival of
Arts collection.
In 1918 under the leadership of
F.dgar Payne, the-Gallery was founded
and the non-profit association was
organized. The present gallery was
built in 19'29 under guidance of Anna
A. Hills, then president of the Associa-
tion.
During the depression year of 1932,
John Hinchman suggested the first ln·
formal Festival of Arts. The .festival
has since become a tradition and a
aeparate organization.
Another project of the associaUon in
1958 was establishment of the School
ol Art & Design. It too Is now going
concern and a separate organization.
From P .. e l
BUDGET ...
director .
.Such a position had been urged dur-
ing the city council Campaigns this
year .
. . W,heat.on said in his covering letter
that. the budget rru.bmitted would con-
. · . · • tinue existing levels of service. The Press to Preview only increase in service, he stated,
' ' ' l!rom Poge l
SCHOOL was the long needed improvement in
, • o , the lire department. · " , F...,O.:u<il June 24 In his letter, the city manager prod-employees for the neW.JchooJ ·year. : '-.lgU T~ ded the counc il gently about an
-Agieed that al .~'riielght lifting · ..... : , _i..~. earlier ttcommend.ation for qJanging
machine may be klstalled at the school Laguna~ ~ annual P~geant or the the schedule of business llctnse fees.
by summer. The machine will be paid Mast~rs will try the working press on "This report should be reviewed to
for with the help of $1,000 raised at a for size June. ~ as darkness steals determine whether the rates are to be
game between faculty members and across the Irvine Bowl amphJtheater. changed; and if so, how the additional
the Rams football team. The h.igh It is ~he. n.ight ~hat several of .the revenue will be utilized," he wrote.
,5ctwot Lettermen's Club will carry on Pageants living pictures are unveiled lie also advocated letting dog
another fund-raising project next year 'for press photographers. owners pay their own way by in·
to make up .the remaining amount. Don Williamson, Pageant producer. creasing the .dog licen&e fee from $3 to
sa'id six subjecli will be previewed $5. The fe~. now generates '3,IKK> pee
this year. The.Y.' are "Pierced Ivory", year but ratsed to $5 it would geiierate " Accountant Suicides artist 11nknown , "Undertow", painted $6,:n'.I or co;<~ the $6 ,742 the cit)' pays
by Wlrisfoj.; Homer; "Dancers Ad· the SPCA~ ani)nal control.'
~1usting. TttW; SUppe~" by De~as ; ~ In his baftget Jt~tter. Wbeaton said Over Kennedy DeaJb -,"Stained Gian. WiQ.<!oJ.'" rro~ tho "Cali(ornia 11>unicipalities are burdened
'Chartres C...U>edral; ''Young. by' outmoded · financing bases that do
'America." by .' Andrew, 'Yyeth; and not provicl,e enough money to cope LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A young
accountant, whose family reported be
was depressed over the asisaSslnaUoit
of Sen. Robert F. )Cennedy, waJ
, ·~Egyptian ThrO)le", arf:ist unk:n~n. wi!Jl the r~slng costs of doing busine&s.
found shot to death in his father's • · i. _ •. 1 • .,.. From
home Wednesday. . ; • GU . -, Pllfle l
Sheriff's Sgt. Roy Collins s~d'.llle. · ·' 'N: €lJRBS· ·.
death of Gecrge Ja.y .Marx, ~l, &Wit·.·.' · · ..... , . ., . · • • •
enlly was suicide. :l'l'o no.les wen aled. · _.:..::...;,',_,:,.,, ·ul· b al · found ce .weal"'" lli·wu1c t to o t n 1n
· most jdrisdictions and impossible in
DAILY PILOT M.errlll ;:Quncan notes, as a
'
., 1-w:~rs~clf ~salstant Follce
. · &ht;that.th~ gopd would probably
....... ....: ~ ... · Jj 'Wtth tl!t;:·vartoµs ,Proposed gun
I _/ cOiliUj>l.Jaw!, ~t.:he cannot see any Roli•'!.~ Wo•if \ ·l ... C\iance'tfn.#l~ (tt!W,tes'bf th'oae oUtislde
T1i•Mn C..,.il ~ ·~e lllWi .,. •r ., • · • '
E•11t 7-;·.;,.,OpfD1t~aiii ~aet10nl:~by fellow of-
lhe11111 A. M•rphln• .. ·i 'tle«i>~ umrt.lifl'-0\oughts.
Mvotolltf l!Wltot • • ~ « :.~N;-:-~ ~lfllil-«f Issued in' Seil u!:!'=.:~:~1w '.: 1 ·1~{'tlh'ttii'y .,~ .. \'ears here,' l:ve
Jock R. C.rW, ''"'Niuo"· 1 OnlY.,-hisucid.Ont ·iliftd {hat was to a U..
lllMltU ,_... .AMf1111"" 0 1niciw -, . q~ .store .clerk ibo had been robbed
.,.._ _ ..... omc. .~ .fpour'U U~~·~t~r,;,.,. ~!:ed Seal Be~ch
M.lllt ...,._:P.O .... 666 tlW . o ~ .. ~,~~~v . '
JU ,,_ -. 'lNS1lllANCI! CHEAPER
C•• ~?!.~~ tt,..., .. , -~ .. · b~~ 'Beach Police Chief ll!J;~Y ......,. loedlr 2111 w ... n .. ~ LIB(ow -1aid a merchant wno r.m"'s
HWlnlt. loedl:. • '"' •trott , , .fi,000 to the bank each Friday 1 may
fii:td insurance much cheaj>er than.car·
rying along a gun and perhaps kllUDg
' ,.
someone someday. , ..
"Need aod a &ood record ati the
most im20rt'ant conslderaUons," 'ul4
Fountain Valley Police OUef Charles
W. Michaella, "I interview all •l>-
pUcant.1 for thl ~aled CUD permlt
and if J hive no obJeetlon, I refer
them to the sherifrs office.i.
"By statute, bl.Ddauns are taboo for
aliens, narcotic ad4lcts, convtcted
felon s and ,rTifnors:"· ·•aid ltuntington
Beach Pollce'Ll. :Mland Us.sher, when
uked about beach City flre1rm1
regulaUon .
We1tmlnster PoUce Chle:f Conner
Collacott Judges eJCh appUc1Uon
himtell, usually decldlng within three
Wfeks wbetl)!r to cr_ant it, based upon
a background check of the applicant.
Use or carrying of a gun in Newpor t
Beach is illegal -even a B-B gun or
any othe.r pressure-powered weapon -
unless the individual is a police of4
Cicer, Assistant Chief Duncan also
said, concernhJC the problem.
NO QUESTIONS
Has anyone owning a weapon in
coastal Orange County turned it in
· with no questions asked, as have near·
ly 200 persons In the current program
jniUated by San Francisco Mayor
'Joseph Alioto after the RFK murder? .
No.
A paltry five have been handed over
to police ln Los Angeles, where the
late Chief William H. Parker began in
1951 a poUcy ol no concealed &llll
permits, ~m&lnlng in effect today.
SgL Dan Co<Ske, of the LAPD publlC
aUairs division, told the ' DAJLY
PILOT hundreds of guns : -UD4
traceable bec~use they were never
routinely registered by owners -are
dumped IDto the Pacific Ocean off LQs
Angele• each year.
They _were 1ucU(\lled·olf In tlle JIU~
bui q.lef Pllktr !>1111ered -1 h~t to. thl!
· prO<\tduri:afW tlle.1911, u ,awlnaUoo
of Praldeftt John I!; •• K ... oc!J, Wboct ·yowis~r Jm>ihor ·waa OW. by a guli-
man a we'.el: ago'as ht 'ioO campalped
for the presidency. ...
3 CONTROLS EXISTS
Perhaps only three gun controls ex-
ist 1n our age.
Sadly, however, one cannot fill out a
brief f<lrm and receive 11 a result,
sanity, re:uon, or simple acceptance
ot_ those 'fbo do not share the 11me
vtewpoinL
'T
Orange Coast Junior College District
wW bold a J7.2:i million bond election
. on 1"p!. 17,
Truitee1-. voted unanimously late
Wednesday night to bold the election
that .. If succes,\ful would end the
district's traditional pay·a.-you-go
policy. '!be bond,luue would Cover building
programs on the Orange Coast and
Colden West campuses in Costa Mesa
and Huntington Beach for four years.
Two-,thirds voter approval will be re-
quired for passage.
A second ballot proposition will be to
convert an existing 10~-cent override
now limited to use for construction to
general pt:rp0se use. It would not
change the present tu ratt. and would
passes. . .. We can take a leaf from Max Raf-
The bond issue would cost dlstrlct ferty's 4 ·campaign.' book.'' b 0 a rd taxpayers :ieven to 12 cents per $100 of asses&ed· valuatioa--tb&.-Sirit ye.ar and member Robert • llumphreys !Ug4
less thereafter_ depend,ing .on bow . gested. "Jl1s pitch was don't cancel .
many years lbe J>oa.rd-,warited to take ·out (U, S. senalor) George, Murphy's
to pa~ it off. ~TIW current district tax vote. We c~n say don't cancel (Nit Pro-
rate ~ M ·Centi per. ·~ aiseued posiUon Tw0." .. ,~
valuatiop. . .., · . · t. · b Oral)ge Coast Diatnci .af'fi4i.als. tii.~e t \Th~ t°l·~ JUillion Would enva. le the
reason not to be ~sue. dlstrlct to obtain another $7,106,000 in
"It's not going to ·be~eas.Y to get two-niatchiog·state and federal funds over
thirds wh~ the statewide proposition the next four years. Tbls money i5 not
passed by onlJ ·st •perce•t (laat week)," SUpt. -NQl'_man· Watson said. availab~e to the district ~less ta;cal
"And the. state tssue doean't even go money 11 put up in equal amounts.
on the p~ 'tu:." -Trustee_s accepted the Citizens
NevertheleS;t, ~·t~s, actin~ on ,!he Finance ~mmittee's advice !J{at they
.recommelidttion ''JOhil"llarbo/ Aiea-juok the pay.as-you-go concept. The
West C~y ~ Glti!ienJ FineJ!cO· Oom· . ·1>9ard policy tor the first 211 years ls
now inadequa~ bec!lUSe of'rapldly in-
from P .. e · l ;
creasing enrollment, tbey reasoned. It
requires today's ~a1er1 to provide
debt-free facilities fiw-tbos( who come ..1
tomocrow. LAGUNA HIPPIES ... The majority of building1 to be /
financed by the bond issue would be on
the Golden West campus in Huntington
Beach which is not yet rounded out.
made by h.ippies.
The hotel, mote.I owners' portion of
the report cited can c e 11 a ti on s,
panhandling, embarassing beach acts
and sale of underground papers wh.ich
they (eJt COJl~ ~alt.cipuz rnaterial.
me· 'greatest' 'reSpohse ·was from
those who had seen hJpples hil-
cbhii.ing; 58 ha4 seen thla and felt con-
trols were needed. The city manager
said it ii not illegal to hitchhike ii one
stands on the curb and said the state
had preempted this leg&! field.
ELEl'EN SAW SALES
Eleven persons had seen h.ippie
sales or pushing o£ narcotics and 10
felt hippies bad disturbed their family
life. -
Asked to summariie. Leddy said
that aside from hitchbiking, the areas
of greatest concern seemed to be
about littering, panhandling and passi·
ble obscenlty.
James Cavanaugb told councilmen
that while visiting through the
southeast portion of the country, he
had been kidded frequently about
being from "hippieville.'"
He told of an affluent couple who
decided not to vacation in Laguna
Beach because of hippies and the im-
pact on their own children and
esli"1ated the loss might amount to
$1 ,500 or $2,00>. lie said they were
going to Santa Barbara.
lo.fayer Vedder said be" was in Santa
Barbara r~ently, commenting "Your
people might be disillusioned."
A !~year-old South ~a girl said
she thou.pit tbe. qu~tio~e w:as ,
slanted moce it sought only "bad in-
stances" not good ooes.
"This is a conservative building pro.
gram. We are not, for instance,
recommending a new administration
building!" Dr. Watson commtmted.
.. A declSlon on wbetber to repay the
bonds over lD, 15, 20 or 25 years would
be made when the bonds are sold,
depending· upon the money market.
Business Supt. C.Orrellan Thompson
said.
Therefore, the exact cost per year to
taxpayers cannot be figured. At the
probable five percent interest rate,
first year tax increases would be
between 12 cents for 10-year amortiza.
tion and seven cents for 25-year
amortization.
SucCeeding yeais they w o u Id
gradually diminish ·down to five cents
to one cent.
Award Winning Seniors
Laguna Beach t1~h School seniors, the first to re-
ceive the new TbUrston Grant awards, are shown
at honors assembly. The happy seniors and their
awards are (fr~nt raw, left to right) Mary Collins,
D.t.U,Y ~ILOY Sleft l"lltt1
_, . . _, .. .
$1,000; Patricia :rvtcl\1ahon, $1,000 ; Susan Davis,
$1,000; and Jeanette Nichols, $1,000. Jn · rear are
. Laura, Schoenleba,r, $750; Tom Purdy, $1,00<r; Toni
· Tilton, $750, and Diane Dwjer, $1,000.
a very special purchase from a
famous quality maker of
-GENUINE LEATHER CHAIRS
A GIFT TO TIWURE AllD ENJOY FOR YEARS
• Custom quality through-out •
Luxurious cushioning • Your . .
choice of colors from an extenslYe
selection of finest leather textures.
from $199 I . -.
.. PRo~s~~~L.GARRtfT fURN~o~~MESA. CALIF.
INTERl9R DESIGNERS _"'""_"'_ 2215 HARBOR BLVD.
640-C275 6'46-0276
•
• •
I
l.
' ...
'
__________ .... ___ ..,._..,.....,. _____________ O:-.---.-..-.... _,..,...,_ .... ___ ,,....~~-;--:--r-.-• .. , ..,. ~r-·---.--..... -... r·.~-,...,..:-"", .. _~ .,. ....... -:.,-.-. -. -. -. ··. ,~~ . -'-
..
Mysterious -'
Sniper Hits .
Grove Girl
A 13-year-olQ Gard~n Grove' girl was
shot under mysterious circumstances
this morning as she walked along a
quiet street on her way to school.
Garden Grove police are conducting
an intensive investigation to determine
identity or ttie sniper.
Deborah Ann Salafia or 12.542 Gloria
st., Garden Grove, was walking on
Trask Avenue west of Roxey Street
toward the ·Doig Elementary School
when she was shot through the right
um.
Police believe a vehicle was In·
volved In the shooting. They said the
wound lndic~ted that a small caliber
gun was used.
The girl wa.5 rushed to Palm 1-larbor
Hospltal,..where she is reported in good ~n . Slie was unable to aid police
in running do_'#n the suspected sniper.
The scene of the shooting is near the
Garden Grove Freeway area where a
mystery s niper was sought a few
weeks ago after i::eve ral truck driver.,
said their vehicles had been hit.
Investigation proved the trucks ~·as
hit by rocks, not bullets.
Big Duy, Big Flug
Steven Johnston. 5, and his sister , Malia, 3. watch traditional raising
of what is probably largest flag in Orange Coast area as Bob Snyder
(left ) and Tom Riker wrestle lZ..by-18-foot 'nag into position to be
hoisted on 85-foot-high flagpole at B<sJboa Island Ferry entrance on
island side. "It 's a two-man job," said Snyder. They'll do it again
tomorrow morning -Flag Day -just like they do every other day
of the year.
I
Britain C>rders He~rings
. Over Extradition of Ray
LONDON (UPI J -Britain today
fpr.mally authorized court hearings on
American requests to extradite James
Earl Ray t.o the United States to stand
trial for the killing of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr.
Home Secretary James Callaghan
r;igned the order telling London 's
chief magistrates to hold hearings on
the American government case for ex-
traditing the 40-y e a r-old fugitive
charged with the assass ination.
The hearin.l!'.s and appeals might last
through t.he summer.
Callaghan·s order made Ray liable
for possible extradition not only for
the killing Of King in Memphis. Tenn ..
but for breaking out or a Missouri
Prison in 1967.
The order came as Scotland Yard
hunted a shadowy man -or men -
and 'a woman with an American
"twang" accent to learn what Ray
was <Jolng tn Britain before his arrest
at London International Airport Satur·
day.
The man stood near James r:arl
Ray wh en the 4-0·year·old accused
Nixon-Reagan Ti cket'!
TULSA, Okla. (AP) -.!\ gr.oup of
western gover"lors plans to encourage
CaJjfornia Gov. Ronald Reagan lo ac~
cept the vice presidential nomination
on a ticket with Richard Nixon.
.4.rirona Gov. John R. Williams said
Wednesday night.
killer cheched inkl a London hotel.
The woman with the twang tele-
phoned the hotel, asking for Ray.
Costa Mesa Pooch
Finds 15 Extra
-
Mouths to Feed
The Irish are traditionally known to
raise large families. but a Costa Mesa
Setter, Irish of couse. last week
almost overdid it. She gave birth to 15
squealing lads and lassies.
"We called the vet that morning and
told him we had five," said Mrs.
Thomas Kiely, mistress of the brood.
"But by that afternoon we had 15."
The Kiely family moved to Costa
Mesa six years ago from Canada.
They explained their nationaljty this
way. "I'm from Wales." Mrs. Kiely
said, "my husband is from Ireland.
the children were born in Canada and
\\•e're all American citizens."
The l 1h:·ycar-old mother of the litter.
Kelly, sat proudly as her 15 youn,ll:
ones were pawed and cudd·led by
almost as many curious neighbors.
"I guess we·n sell most of th~m ."
Ronald Kiely. 13. said, '·but I'm going
to keep Bourbon. the one with the
white spot."
_Otj, BROTHER, MOTHERI -Ronald-Kiely, lS, and his sister,
Cheryl, 11, pose Irish seller Kelly willt her brood of l~ puppies. Boy,
is she ever a mother!
'
• ---•• _. --.... -.4 --...-... ......... ___ , ___ ....__
Polict are searching 'for a green car
driven by a youth which witnesses
said was in the area about the time of
the shooting: .,
Countian Jailed
For Contempt
Ove r Trust Issu e
Charles R. Billings, 39, of Los
Alamitos has been ordered back into
Los Angeles County Jail tjnlil he
agrees to produce records and answer
questions about a tax advisory firm.
Billings Bnd a former associate were
found guilty of contempt of court by
Superior Court Judge Robert S.
Thomp.Eon earlier this year when they
aUegedly ignored a court order
demanding i·n Io r m a ti o n .about
Amer!cans Bt.iilding Conslitutionally.
Their firm. Deputy A t W>'f n e y
General Lawrence R. 'flapper told the
cour~. advised clienls how to form
"charitable ti-usts.1' thereby sh4fply
cutting income tax paymenbi.
Billings was j ailed March 26 but, 10
day,; later he was allowed to return to
court. He then invoked ·the Fifth
Amendment . which Judge 'nlompson
said could be done only during his
trial. not after bein,e: found guilty.
•
Thul"SdiJ, JtJnt 13, 1%8 DAILY PILOT. 3
Giant rocket laUnched from· Cape Kenned)' today
added tbe instruments to 17 already in orbit.
PRECISION DISTRIBUTION -Artist's rendering
shows Titan·llI space vehicle as it distributes eight
milltary communications s·atellites through. space~ ~-=---=-~·~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
•
Rocket Bearing
Philco Equip_ment
Fired Into Space
A towering Titan III rocket bearing
eight jam-resist.ant military com·
munications sateltites built by the
Phi\co·Ford Corp., blasted skyward
from Cape Kennedy today.
The misskon lo place the satellites -
which wil! relay I.op priority messages
between Washington and Vietnam -
was pronounced a success following
the 10:04 a .m. EDT space shot.
The instrumenL-crammcd satelJiles
were manufactured by the Ph.ilco·
Ford Corporation Space and Re.Entry
Syst.ems Division, Paln Alto. a facility
somewhat different than the firm's
Aeronutronic Division in Newport
Beach.
The 124-foot, three-barreled rocket
leaped off its launch pad at the space
center four minutes behind schedule
with a ground shaking rct.ir.
Two solid propellant rockels strap·
ped to the side gave the three stage
space mac hine a takeoff kick of ne arly
2.5 million pounds of lhrust and moved
the big bird quickly into a hazy !ayer
of cloud.!. and out of sight.
Above the clouds, the orange .R:IO\\' of
a trail of name twice as long as the
rocket glowed briefly as the Titan
angled over the Atlantic, aimed at an
orbit about 21,000 miles in space.
There was a four minute hold to
chP.Ck some instrument readings a half
minute before scheduled takeoff. but it
was the only diff iculty in a smooth,
six-hour countdown .
'·
McCarthy Edges Nixon
In OCC Student Voiing
Birds of a.feather don't always nOck
together. Hawks and doves cohabit at
Or.ange. Coast Coll.elile .
OCC campus results in . the na-·
tionwide "ChOice 'fi8'' poll conducted
by Time magazine show support for
intensifxi ng the Vietnam war and sup-
port for ending •it.
In presidential ·preference volina:.
Eugene McGa~thy ·won by !ive votes
over Ri chard Nixon. , . 'fhc election .was helrt April 24 , but
ballots had to be rushed fo 'Time
magazine to rilake a pubHcatlon
deadline. Rich-arid. Mcinnis.· campus
coordinator £or the vote, just 1ecently
received OCC results,
The vote for· pre'.sid(!nt: .
McCarthy, 149 : Nixon; 144: ttie-Jate
Johnson, 42 ; Ronald Reagan . 19;
Robert Kennedy, 139 ; L yndo n.
NQ Mi ss ·Fi.reeraek er
Contest This Year ' '
The annual Miss Firecracker beauty
contest will not be ' held this' year,
members of sponsorin·g. Huntington
Beach Jaycees announced today.
Representing the cjty in the .Fourth
of July Parade and celebration willl be
the Huntington . Beach JuniOr Miss,
Karen Cutler. and .·Miss Hunti ngton
Beach, Jrffye Blackard.
Nelson Rocke.feller, 40 ; Ch a r le s
Petty, 17 ; John Lindsay, s; Mark Hat-
field, 5; Fred Halstead , 3; George
Wallace. the late Dr. Martir\ Uather
King and Hubert fiumphrey,2 each.
Kennedy placed second to McCarthy
in the national student vole with Nixon
third.
Three referendum items were on the
ballot. The questions and the OCC vote
for alternatievs: ·
"What course of military acti1Jn
should the United States pursue in
Vietnam?·'
Immediate withdrawal -139~
Phased reduction -178,
Maintain -43.
Increase -65.
Alt out effort -168.
"What course of action should the
United Slates pursue in regards to the
bombin·g of North Vietnam?"
Permanent cessation -174.
Temporary suspension -120.
Maintain -51.
Intensify -217.
Use nuclear weapons -29.
"In confronting the mban crisis
which should receive highest priority
in · government spending?"
,Education -m.
I-lousi ng -2'l.
Income subsidy -10.
.Job training -225. n lot control -62. --~-~~~~~~~~~~~~
Success
sweaters
rDad
Winning 1weater1 by
Se1ttle Knitting Mlll1-1ure lo
plHll 1nybolfy'1 lalher. Six button,
Ughtw.e!Qht card!gana-great
for golf, right for morta, terrine fortravef.
A -Mohair 11'1d wool p1nel ll'riP9
c1rdlg1n, 1!~S, M, L, XL
Colors: blut/powder, llmefgrau,
gold/l1rnon, brick/orang•
I -100% Orlon• acrytk:, popular·
llnk1titch,1lzn s. M, l, XL
Colora: powder, dark b!ue,
gold, rust
18.00
ror harO-to-plH•
Dad• ... or .... 1.
Mullen l Bluitt
GIFT OltOEll
VIE vou11 Mie ll/CMA•Gt: + IAHK.&Ml ICAllO O• M4STlll CMAllGE
SOUTH COAST PLAZA, Rtlstol tt San Olego Frwy .. Optn Wffknl9hts 'tU 9:30
BROADWAY ANAHtJM CENTER, Opett WMklllahU 'tll •:l0-£xctpl Tues.
.~
11
•
-I
•
~Fora, Dirksen Predic t-BF-KFamjly
·.HadAutovsy
Plans Rea~y
• . . • ·-
Appr~val of Gun C,urhs . ~
~ ..... ..., ......... ,
Bolb driven In an accident In
SeaW. were Wong. Both were
wol1lflll, both have the same middle lnillal" and the same laat pame.
But ~·1 an "L" of a d.iHerence
in their ffrst names. Liiiy M. Wong
and Lily M. Wong were the drivers
of cars \hilt co!ljded at an. Intersec-
tion. Neither was burl The two
woinen are friends but not-related . • •
WASHINGTON . (UpJ) -House
Republican leader Geri.Id R. Ford
predicted todly· ..Cc11>sre11 would' p•ss
the John.Ion adln.lntatration'• pr<>pos.tl
to OUt.1&'¥' maµ. ord.er sales ot rifles and
Sh~:' I 1. •
Stoa\e·"GOP ;']elder Everett M.
Dirksen also aoltened His earlier ada-
mant oppositlcm·to such legislation but
another. Republican senator, Paul J.
·Fannin (R·Ariz.), denounced the pro-
posal as a "moo.strolls ncm-sequitur
that snatches at our. con.st.ltutionally
guaranteed freedoms.''
Tbe sentiment of Ford and Dlrksen
however coincided with a general in·
creU:e of support for the ad·
rninistfation measure, s t t m a,. i n g
partly from a tide of back-home mail.
At a news confmnce, Ford said At·
ty. Gen . Ramsey Clart and otber aup-
porters of the gun bill have "an ~Uga.
lion" to present their caae to the
House Judiciary Cpmmittee.
"If. they mate the cue, and I
susptet they can, the committee and
Congress will take affirmative •c·
tJon," Ford said. •.
Ford sald the measure has "a good
deal of merit."
Dirksen, who earlier appeared to op-
pose tough, new gun controla, took a
much totter position today althougb he
sWl did not commit him.sell finally. He
did &ay, "There are enough laws on
the -.i:•
Fannin told the Senate: "Some of
our vaunted qttellectuals -men who
•• •
by eom.monly accepted standards
should ,be worthy or respect -have
sudden.fy taken leave ol their senses,
mounted the nearest hobby horse and
collectlvely ridden off in all direc·
tk>ns ."
He said be, too. grieved for the slain
Sen. Robert F . Kennedy "As I grieved
for President Kennedy and his family
and indeed for all men everywhere
who are suddenly and unjustly cut
down in peace flld in war."
"But my grief does not .grant a .
license to utter reckless and ir~ ---ACCUSED OF ARMING' CONS
responsible judgments or advocate AC· Waltresa Arlene Granite
tions which may compound the very
diffictµfy they are supposed to com·
bal" ·
LOS ANGEi.ZS (UPI) -The fSll\ilY
oJ. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy arran1ed
more than 12 houra before he died for
a metlculOus autopsy to forestall the
controymy which su.r"roundM the
death of PresldMt John F .. Kenoedy.
Dist. Atty. Evelle J. Young~ $aid
Wednesday that as the result of the
meeting between the family and of.
flclals the aeveo-hour autopsy was pnr
bably the most painstaking ~ com·
plete ever performed here.
He said members or the Kennedy
family knew be was dying and met
with Dr. 'Phomas Noguchi, chief COUD·
ty medical examiner, for more ttian
two hours Wednesday night shortly
after the aenator underwent iuiC*'Y
at Good Samaritan Ho11pltal.
North Vietnam
May Agree
LA Plane Down in India;
Convict's Fiancee
Arrested by FBI
In Gun Smuggle
'(I'he Kennedy family wanted it
made clear that a complete autopsy be
made," Younger sait!. "They did not
want a recurrence of the muddled ll!,.
vestigetion in Dallas when President
John F. Kennedy was slain 1n 1963."
Younger said the Kennedy1 were
anxious to avoid a "cirCua spectacle"
and decided to hold the Po1t mortem
at the hospitill "because if he bad been
taken' downtown there wOuld have
been people lining the way and
reporters fol.lowing the veblcle.". To Secret Talks
8ix Killed, 5 7 £scape
ATLANTA (UPl )-A prison spoke&·
man revealed today that two guns
were smuggled through a visitors'
rest room pipeline to four convicts
who held 21 hostages in Atlanta Fed·
eral Prisob ·for-2.8 hours until their
Skippy, a three·montk-old 1quir-
rel, sits atop Johnn11 Majgiu'1 head
end the youngster appers wormd
wha.t will happen next. The children
of the Majgier famil-'JI of Chicopee
FaU.s, Mass., have cared for the
squirrel sinct it fell from its nest as
a baby. Skim's diet Ml progres1ed
from milk, via on e11e-dropptr, to
milk and crbclurs to a love for apa-
gh.etti, coffee. iu cream and cake. • John Stanisl•us lost his driv-
er's license for a year and wa s
fined $120 because the story he
tol d police in Smethwick, England.
:--~~-:r an auto accident was off
co'Qr. Police said he tol~ them the
r ~·1er driver "came across the
lights on blue." •
l A cigarette machine at a bar
i;n Jack3onvilU, Fla.. hadn'i
bte-n workjng proptrlu for
4everal days. Senne.man Cecil
Phillips qutcklu found the coua:e
of the trouble when. he openced
~ht machine. A thre«·foot bull
1 snake wa.s coiled i~.
• A Miami judge ordered proba·
tion Tuesday for a woman charged
with putting an eight-inch gash a·
cross her husband's chest with a
single-edge razor blade. The judge
advised the husband: "You bad
beUer get an electric razor." • Ezio Barbieri, 44. once known
as !Italy's No. 1 criminel, will be
manied in a Sicilian p rison June
18 to seamstress Maria Soresina.
Barbieri is serving 54 years for
crimes including armed robbery
and leading 13,000 inmates of San
Vittore Pri-son near Milan Jn a re-
volt in 1946. He has exchanged
letters with Miss Soresina for 17
years from hi s prison cell.
PARIS (ArJ -North Vleinam ap..
pears to be edging toward confidential
talks with the United States on Viet-
namese peace issues, although it is
still conducting a diplomatic holding
operation in the Paris conf~ence.
Ambaddasor Xuan Thuy or North
Vietnam is considering a proposal by
·u. S. Ambassador W. Averell· Har·
riman \fednesday that "both sides
reduce the propaganda outeut follow-
ing each meeting" they hold here.
The public release o£ formal
statements would be ended under the
HaJTiman plan , and spokesmen for
each side would give only a "general
description" or what had been said in
the closed conference room. The eight
talka so far held have been followed in
each case by release of· the formal
statements ot Harriman and Thuy .
U. S. officlala said they found some
encouragement in Thuy's stated
agreement to .study the proposal. In
earlier Je6Sions when Harriman sug-
gestes semiprivate or s e c r e t
discussions Thuy rejected the idea.
Froni Wire Servlcea
CALCUTl'A, Ind i a Pan
American's g)Obe circling Flight No. 1
crashed in a monsoon rain while lan·
ding at Calcutta's Dum Dum Airport
today. Six persons were killed and 57
escaped.
Tbe 7ff1 jet bound from Los Angeles
to New York with a number of
H UMPHREY LEADS
GOP CONTENDERS
PRINCETON, N.J. (AP)
Democratic presidentiaJ candidate
Hubert H. Humphrey has surged
ahead of Republican c ontend er s
Richard M. Nixon and Nelson A.
Rockefeller, according to the Gallup
poll.
The poll organization said Wed-
nesday that Vice President Humphrey
was ahead of former Vice President
Nixon by siz percentage points and led
New York Gov. Rockefeller by three
points.
Sheep -Heart Fails
Man Dies After Emergency Switch
HOUSTON (UP!) -A surgical
team failed today in an attempt to im·
plant the heart of a sheep into a man.
St. Luke's Hospital administrator
Newell France said tbe animal's heart
was used as a last resort in an at·
tempt to keep the patient alive until a
suitable human donor was found.
The unidentified recipient. a 47-year-
old man, was pronounced dead at I :02
a.m. CDT today. The surgery had
began at 11 :15 p.m.
Hospital officials said' the recipient
had been in extremely critical con·
dition and probably would not have \iv·
ed through the night had the implant
not been attempted.
A hospital statement early toda y
said :
"A patient, not Identified, was refer·
red to St Luke's Episcopal Hospital
ror a heart transplant. The patient ...
suffered cardiac arrest on the morn·
lng of Wednesday, June 12, and was
resuscitated with great difficulty.
"No donor patient was available,"
the hospital said.
"At last report the insertion of the
heart of a 125-pound sheep was at·
tempted at 11 :15 p.m. in an, effort to
support circulation until a suitable
donor might become available.
"The patient's condition w as
terminal during surgery, could -not be
reversed and further efforts were
abandoned. The patient was pro.
nounced dead at 1:02 a.m ." #
France said the hospital did r\ot in·
tend to identify tbe patient.
The sheep heart was selected from a
number of species because the size of
the heart is similar to a human'1 and
it was capable or pumping enough
blood to support an adult human for an
unspecified length of time. France
said.
Tbe hospital did not say what other
type of animals had been considered
for the transplants. but Dr. Dentoo
Cooley, wtlo headed tbe surgical team,
had said earlier it might be possible to
use tbe hearts of pigs, cows and
primates because of their size and out·
put.
Storms Soak New Jersey
Record-breaking Rainfalls Reign in East, South
Coutal
...... ...._ tt.Mf ftl ... 1' ...ii WMY d••'
lfl1111/9t1 l'flM"ll bu1 loul '" ""' low
Cklullt i.,i. ft~! Ind M rlv -ftll'\t
'-"·
Y11i.ni.,·1 '-'ll!Jre'I r •ft t • d
,.,...,, .... 1 ... rll61'91lool 01Jt.
W•lwr ~•llv ... Wll '7 c!Hl'ftt..
S""• ~looM, Thin
l'•IDAT
f<l'11 low ,,,,,., •• ?:OI •·'"·•I.I
,..lnl """ ............. J;lt ··"'· a.• ~ low ............ 1:22 J ,1'11. 2.1
i4'eefMI ~ .............. ..
MMft llllMt 11 tP '·"'· S.11 t:tl ··"'• 1.. •IMI s:.n 1.m. kls t i• •·"'•
lMt ••
.111119 11
. "'"' •. Jwlr' '
... .... ,
u.s. s ..... _.,,
TI'IU"*rola..11'11 11111 -tMI Htw Jtr•
.... Wllh I l'Kord r•lnhin Wltllnnlll'I'
Ullllll'llltd fft Ille E•I '"" s.ifl! ,. da"\I, !lo.fl Wll!I It'll ftnliCllViMtar ...,.,.
fl/I Ille "°'"" Wedr!HH'I' '""1cMI l'lltfl wllQ •NI hlM.
........... "" .... , .... tNntlf •If '""' !tit GI/If "' Me•k• tllt ,.1 .. '-
IOM• -~@Oil "-H lltn'I _....,,. ~
fNfll -to "''" lndln. On "• mort Hemtslft,f llllft,H 1111 \.l.J. Wulher auruu 11i.. t lllf
_....,._ 111.ri treuur. 1nhm •t•
Htu.i"' Into -85ltm hlll fl/I '""
Nll4J'I, l)rl1111!"" C~ ...... llH llv-
mfd COf'dlllOll5.
Tiit Mldwt" todl• WM WW° _,..
Clelr. '-••tu .... cotrohll1Jblt. ......
clHr tltlt'-1 1JA"111llod lft "'9 lwfft.
....... Show#I tnd (Of/I/I _!tiff, Ofl
N 11111tr hlnO. ooml!\lltll !tit H'""° -·· MN Mlf Ml! U\IMll •-,,.
...... ""' U"/an,. t,C.
Tet11per•tNre•
Hll~ 1. .. ,....,
Albu-~ " " .._ ... .. " AlllMI .. " ·" ••-e~llelll " " l l1mt rdt " " •• l ou " • 8oolon " " •• Chlt1.o " • " (lllCllWllll • • Cll¥tl1JMI " " " ""'~' • " ~I Mol,,,.1 " • tlell'olt " " ·" Eurek1 • • 'orl Wor1!1 H " ··-•• " """" " • Mono1u1v .. • Hou1t1111 • .. ICOftfll (II\' " .,
L11 V""' " • L9' A1111e1H " .,
Ml1m1 " H
MllWM.lk .. " • MlnftllMlll • • H•w OrlMt!t • " ...
Htw Y..t " .. ••• ·t=."" " • • " .. ......... " • "' ........... H • • • -,. " ·-• " ·" ...,_ " a ·" -<"' • " ltMI lluff " • ·-,, • ll(r.-"' • • St. evlt • .,
S.11,..1 .. " S.11 L•-t Clt\I • • .. ,_ • • S.ft '",_i.e. .. " Slftlt ...... • • ..... , ........ , . " " ... ,. • " •• , .. _ ... • """'"' "' n Wllfllllt"" " • 2.01
·-
Americans aboard had flown in from grievances were published.
Bangkok and was settling down for a Arrested by the FBI and ctlarged
landing when something went wronj! with taking the .22 ealiber and .32 cali-
and it plunged into a rice paddy and ber pistols into the prison was attrac· tive Arlene Anna Granito, 25. fiancee
burst Into names. of one of the four inmates.
Pan ,American In New York -iden· Miss Granito of Newark. N.J .. a
tified the dead as Phyllis Gress. 25, Conner waitress, was picked up at a
San Carlos, Calif., , Pelee Corps hamburger stand across from the
worlrer; Susan Dillingha'm , 14, ·~sno, fortress-like prison and be l d under
Calif.;-"'Norma Lobato Or Belem, fl5.000 bond penj,jng a hearing before a U.S. commissioner t-Od.8y.
Complete results of the autopsy· will
be released in ·several weeks; but at a
n!Ws confe~ last week Dt. Nogu-
chi said if Kennedy had a~ed the
operations there would have been "e,:.
tensive damage" to the brain. ·
Aviation Pioneer
Succumbs, _qt 84
Brazil ; an lnfapt child of James The four prisoners, serving a total
McDiviti. an·American living in Seoul, of 185 years on murder and bank rob-PALOMAR MOUNTAIN (AP)
Korea; F. Hafi . of Ottawa, Canada bery stentenccs, releBsed their host· Aviation pioneer Donald Gordon of
and Barbara W. McDowell, a purser. age unharmed about noon Wednesday Palomar Mountain Is dead at-the aa:'
The sprawling airport six miles after a newspaper, listing their com· of 84. He built and Clew cru~ gUders
northeast of Calcutta has been the plaints on the front page, was deliver· and airplanes 60 years ago.
scene of numerous mishaps over the ed to them in their barricaded room. Gordon, a bache·lor, was found dead j
years though there have beep no ma· The rebellious prisoners, Ivan Dan· Monday of natural causes at his
jor dlsasters there. Most of the iel Neighbors, 25, servinl 120 years ranch. He lived alone, his aviation ac·
crashes · have involved planes landing for kidnaping and murder; Robert W. tivity. ended Jong ago because of J
during -monsoon rains. Gorman, serving 30 years for bank deafness. . ..
Another 24 persons, including the robbery ; Ralpb M. Lepiscopo, 25. Gordon in 1964.was ma,Cie a.ml:mber
pilot, were hospitalized with injuries. serving 20 yea,s for bank robbery or the Early Birds,. a national
airline 11pokesmen said. and Frederick Freeman Leister Jr., organization of men who Dew solo in
Airport officials said many of the in-34 . serving 15 years for bank robbery, aircraft before Dtc~m.ber 17, 1916. .__,
jured passengers were thrown from were placed in "segregation," await· Between 1908 a!Jd 1917, Gordon built
the platlf: and others were pulled from ing possible legal or disciplinary ac· and flew a glider, two airplanes and a
the burning fuselage by firemen. Hon. monoplane at tbe Bostonla _Ranch. 1~~--'--~"-''--~~~~~~~~~~~~~...:_-~~.::..:.c__c_::.__c:::....::..:.=___
I
INTERIORS
"Simply Beunliful Furniture"
IPlENIJl/JO!
Here, in a word, is the
essence of tl1e splendor
of Spen./,.
Imaginative
Decorating by ...
who ... k
OPEN SUNDAYS
12 'TIL 5 P.M.
our own
an swer for those
line quality with
good design ... 3·way hand·tied coil
I..e Alpert, N.A.0.A., springs and custo1n·!11ade marflex cushions Joe Neiggemann
for superb r,omlort ... tailored in
an outstanding cu t velvet for
enduring good !lste
CONVENIENT TERMS ••• OF COURSE I 8' ~nly 144800
1925 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 646·0541
(ll/1 llocfu North el H•w~ IWfl.J
Ol'IN MONDAY & FRIDAY 'Tll 9 ,.M. SUNDMS 12·5
• " • I •
• ----
I
j
I '
' . ...
' .,.
.. ; ..
... ., ,,
"' ...
-. •.
· ...
' ..
.,
.-
"'
•"'!"•
.,
:11r
. " , .~ ., ...
.,.
... · .. ...
...
' .
";•
<
·,
. ...
.'·
.. ..
' .•. -.
. ,,
··~ ·' ..
"' ' '·" .. .,
"·
"'
·"· .. . .. ,,
' '" . .
o•
,. .. ,
••
, .
---:-..... ---... ,_ ....... ,..,_.., _____ .., .... _____ ~'-""''""' ....... ~ ..................... ________ ~~~~~~~~~,---,--.-.,.-.... ,. .. -e..--.~.<1* .. -_ ........... -.-.-· • -4 _____ ....,._
" \
t' LB tnursd(t, June 13, 1968 DAILY PILOT JI
Child-Pinpoints ~e,ed · for Ga
. . ' .
.
Control begislatioµ
UM!tec. , •• ,, lllT••MATIONAL about the gun law."
:Pear Mr • ..Pre•lde11,t, This •Pll!'.!!l to President
C..:'l l just turned e e'Vtn-Joh n 1 o n from M1la
years old.·l woke up e~ly FrOhm.inof'I Glen~oe,
one morning and heard mv lijlno11e'' expresses the na·
"t<i:J grandmother crylng._,J asked tioo'' shock, grief and sor· ~ lier what was wrong. Sbe row following the murder of .:;~Id 'I juot aaw Sen. Keo· Sen.Jlol>ertF. Kennedy.
, .11.edy saying thank you to It also expressed the ~~:,~eryone for helping him desire of man7 Americans,
. :: ;.-')Vm the California primary according to a United Pren
'l·ir-~d shakin& hands. and International survey, to "do
' s'~ylng thank you., But just .something" about t be
"r· !hen he was tyeing there surprising ease with which
. ~ .;~Ioody on the groun·d. • anything from a pistol -
,,; .'~r ·"Tbe next -couple of daya -Uke the one that killed Ken-
1.i· •• ..,was very unhappy. nedy -to a cannon or
• .. ,.1~ ..f:;;1 have a very nice dad· rocket laimctier can be
....... iu. But some children don't purchased. . _
·nave a father llke .. the Ken· The U.S. House of
nedy children. • • Repreeenta.tive~, reporUng
,., ~., .. "Please do something increased mail to cut the
•! •• tra1fi~ In ~01 , Tuesday rt· ,dlles, the UPI survey shO•'-
leote<I • P<OROS•i that w'ould· ed: ha ye baMed the lmWrt o1 , ~ City , c0uncil 9 r
surplus handguns and T~j Wulllngton1• D.C.1 recelVed
tuch as the one ~ kill"' a ~at· to re q u ~r1 e
Pres_ille•! John F. ~y. ..OglstraUO.. of ·~ •AA The House alJo re!siseld 'an . own en of ~ tjpM ~!Of
eUort to regl.ster ' f 11 r • t firearnil,-,. Dealen 1 8'1 so
P.Ul'Chaser1 of ~ ind 'l(ould .1lfave to keep an ln·
other Imported wea~ 1 Vtintory"'IC" all fJ.rearw and
The bouse JudlcJai1 Co11>· animunlUon In &tock. ,
mlttee, lna tie vote,~ , Tbe .M11aacbuaett1 House.
to endorse Johnl0n'1 clll.fbr M.Ood., gave prellmlnarY
a lfan oo mail order ~ _.val to-a blll .tightening
of ail weapona anil 'ail-"~ Alie's already slr\ct
mun!Uon. · . · aul·1'»Db'ol laws. The bll)
The' powerful Na~ll!<r · ""'*"" regortlng to police
fie Association contlmliti ~ ~~feta -IU1 ·sales or guns in
e•ert pressure on ~·, ~ lllllalc~Hl''PJ ~ reporting
but public senUment'lot ~.{:ftO-ctate .... ottk:lali~lll ·out-of·
leglslatlon baa brou.Cbt llC;ff'~ purdl••· ot handguns
tlon iD l'OJDe states aDd. ~<11:~ well 11 "long euns"
.. ~ady covered), makes · . .-. :, ·· .... ~ tDe illegal poaseasion of a '"·~.. e e ~ D dE L '.1firtarmafelonylnstead•ofa .. :~.ur1ta1n s a · noudw~·.t~~ . .::~
'-'" v ,' . ~-~ .... ~.. to include air
•r>I "~• ,..__. ·~jl{Q ... , Ii 'J( ~ cl b , :::..:England Concerned About U.S. Violenb~ ~~.-~~~ p!1.~~~:
. .. .. 1 1 u:-at· a:~~ ..,.r,"'I canes. ~~:;·, ·LONDON (UP.I)· -The between the two nations. matter of traditloi. ite ·J"Jfvrr · Jt ?'.~te"orAkttls·
· "W h d "ff t ~1c1 N .-......... llU•.Uoqa e. -· y., •,.. "'gaunt young man in the tat· e ave a ·1 e r e 0 •1.1 • o ooe may l''"' ... _. • Gen. · Elliot: L. Richard.so ii
_.Jered overcoat squeezed his heritage, different c 1a 51 a firearm unless he first ha.I 11a1d 87 ~t. of r the:
'_.,,·'hand around the small pistol history hue. a Pollce-l1sued permit. Such weapon S" u 1 e d I n·
·-Jn his pocket. He shivered in "One might even fYay, and Ucenaes are not easy to ob-Ma11acbu1etts crime ' come1 _ not entirely facetiou sly, that . from adjoining states. One ~ Febru~y cold. our history has had its Jolly tam. can, for instance, buy a gun
• ~ Then the royal coach car-good fill of violence and Police autborltles have over the counter in New
rying Queen Victoria and murder." cracked down twice in the Hampshire w J t b no ques-
""her consort, the German Not entirely facetiously. last three years -on sales tions asked.
···foreign "princellng" Albert, Consider the 1nerest glance of shotguns and o! small 22-Texas' law Is to loose as
.:.swung out tnrOugh Buck-through the history books: calibre starter pistols such to make rigid weapo111 con-~ ingham Palace gate into the -Edward IV had Henry as are used at athletic trol nearly Impossible. · ,1vl~n. VI tortured, then slain with events. As Lt. J, E. Gunn, acting ~ The gaunt man stepped a red hot poker in the Tower Until 1966, both could be head o! the Houston police
forward and !ired twice as of London following the bat-obtained ttirough mail order department, puts it:
and i; si.ys anyone er 21 or two years . ago. • purposes, but would be push Coner• for cun con·
aDd.Of-&ooclJJJoral ch.ir 11r Pre dent Stanford Fried· de at .t-o ye d . Some n trot legislation. •
whe has lhe ·~eY-cJ:D-: .. y * m said the new move wa~ weapo111, lncludlaS ,¥ 'World Bid. In Salt Lake City,
up to a 2'0-tn~•ter ~ to Ip presery~ pu~c._1art' , Wall JI ia1chlnegUit, 'were Utah, W0Ue'1· sporting goods or , a 391 'nllllniilt:er /rOibt , an,d sanity. lau~ •. ;..,;_.-.;:·~ -". , -~-several cities announced collected in !our days. reported an upswing in tho
No' ..;~' w ~ay 1100 quesUons asked" in· Twenty-three weapons, five sale of hand&uns and am· ' -"'· _-:-"". r l u f ltl t or them rifles, were turned munition to the past few Ugbte• ~wt/ • In 1tie~':8n~:~m:.eos to urn ln to police at Pb,lladelphla. days. Mayor J. Bracken Lee
Some 1 , tbe prold~ , In Chicago, wb.lcb already Tbe Ari.Jo.a Democratic says proponents of a:un
broader c~~Wnl, baa such a program , police forum plans to begin a legislation are overreacting
Jethat .weapo '~-f-•reported 51 guns turned in statewide drive .to cqllect all to asaa.s1lnatJ011!. ''You
Pbll.aUlpbla;;j".t,.to r ·n-t-y :-since the killing of Robert kinds of weapons . The drive can't change human nature
· Nonn•(Alhtob Klln11f 1~ f Kennedy -abouf average begins July 4. Ne a:t week by passing laws."
the caut of ~JHlY bt !or a week. will be "lW'n in gun weet•• Wolf's Loan and Depart· "~'·,t&bte o<.,.~te:Doel' ~ San Frcanclsco May or at Fresno, Calif. Maine con· ment store, one of 'lha
sayt ~en·~ trom Joseph AUoto said any guns gressman Peter N. Kyros largest 1n Houston; Tex .•
thela; G -tl1tlr \~l:nllltaty turned in would not be trlc· urged his conrtltuents to repwted, ''there is no varia·
hardware." .K.JSlallr ·~ ed for crime detection form a 11peopte•1 lobby" to tlop from the ~·"
posed "kJddle dl1al-J:namenti"ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiijiiij ... Unilateral dJsarmament!I
o! all children of the world"
by eliminating toy weapons.
E. 0. Crawford, owner of
a Dallas variety store,
agreed. He said he would
sell no more toy weapons
because they are the "first
lesson" in, violence.
But guns kill. not toy11 The J·Mart dlscOunt house
in Columbus, Ohio, made an
i mpressi ve financial
sacrlflc:e by turning in
'20.<XM> worth of guns to city
police. Said the firm 's presi-
dent, Marty Rosen : "We
know that over the past 10
years we have sold guns
which have been used i n
suicides and by some to kill
thelr nelghbor.s.
"It ha1 preyed on our con-
science for quite some
time."
An Indiana-based chain,
Wonderland stores, dlscon-
Unued the sale o! am-
munition. It stopped the sale
THE IDEAL GIFT
for FATHER
ON HIS DAY SUNDAY
JUNE 14
HE DESERVES THE BEST
TllMS
, .. ...
"" Wiiis
tM
but
and
pts ltl
TO FIT YOUR
IUDlin
1 ·---Jbe coach passed. lie missed tie of Tewkesbury, May 3, houses. "We enforce the state law
both times. 1471. But public figures mustJp;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;:;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimj
-Richard III was said to always reckon to some ex-
bave had his, t~o nephews, tent wtth the "lunatic ! ON VICTORIA
T h a t assassination a l"-
tempt in early "1849 was one
rightful heirs to his throne r fringe."
killed in t:he towei: in 1483. ATIEMPT ON QUEEN 1 '•a:io 'Of seven ·on Victoria's life. A
-~ ;;;: shocked England s t i 11
,.,,."remembered well the
· · :" 'm urder of Prime Minister
,..,~<'! Spencer Perceval in the
· : ;. House of Commons pot •":"•n·:Jf\any years before.
,_ ·.;; ·. Now, more than a century
·r> .. later, England looks oh with
•: :.::•h'orror and .just a note of
;~11 • Condescencion at violence in
'·~ :America .
"~ 1 •• ,.. It is an England whose
police are not armed, in
. which the prime minister
':·· and members of his govern-, .... "ment mingle almost freely
· t-~; engageme?ts in ordinary
. ,,.,.. "ai.ltomobiles .
J·i-.-They are guarded by
...... "Police, of course. But a
·~··;·British police guard in l),o
·' . Way compii·eS with the
···"~'Small army of Sec r et -~' .. . . . . Service men . sutrounf:ling
··· '''he U.S. presidents oo public
appearances.
' ~ ..... ,,, "You must understand."
.:. .. ,:,:gaid one Scotland Yard
... '· 2· tepresentative when asked
.o.·l····about the d i fferences
Henry VIII was
responsible for the deaths,
among others, of several o!
his father's ministers, the
c I e r i c -p hilosopher Sir
Thomas More , and his third
wife, Allfle Boleyn.
DETECTIVES KILLED
On Aug. 12, 1966 gunmen
killed three unarmed British
detec-Uves outside the walls
of London's Wormwood
~crubs prison. The resultan~
outcry rocked a 137·year-old
British tradition.
"Is it time to give the
po l iceman a guri?"
newspaper headlines asked .
"Must our police be left
defe~eless?"
Police authorities refused.
The tradition begun in 1829
with the foundlng of the
London tnetropollta'n pOlice
prevailed. Police have re·
mained unarmed, on the ap-
parent assumption t h a t
lawbreakers are still less in·
clined to carry 'Yeapons
than they would be if every
"Bobby" sported a weapon .
British gun laws, another
lo the late 1950's an
escapee from a mental in·
stitution dragged an eigbt-
!oot steel girder across
railroad tracks shortly to be
traveled by a train bearing
Queen Ellzabelll. Security
for"es dlscovered it -and
him -in time.
Detectives at a royal
garden party caught a
would·be assassin moments
before i!_is p~nned a~tack on
the Queen Mother Elizabeth.
"Fanatics exist in any
society," a high police of-
ficer sald. "It is our job to
conlZ'ol and keep track of
them."
In the meantime , Prime
1VJ.n1ster Harold . W i l s o n ,
bombarded with eggs and
rotten tomatoes and heckled
by students, continues to ac·
cept speaking engagementa.
Prince Philip, widely con-
demned by labor leaders
and workers for bis sporadic
outbursU about alleged in·
efficiency of British
workmen, continues to vis:lt
.factories and public places. ""::;::============================:-<:. ....
·~' ' f
,. ~ .
...
...
.~.. ''l ..
..... •• "R•
,f•• t•: . .. . .. , ~
fl• 'I
... . ....
. ' . ~ ...
,.
": 1 . . ~. .· ...
,-~ '
... ' . . .. . ••
. ,,. '
····" . ., .. _
,. • rf(ll ...
"Artistry in Moving'' Call:
494-1025
for the
BEST MOVE
of
YOUR LIFE
580 Broadway
FABULOUS PFAFFS
106th BIRTHDAY SALE
LIMITED OFFER
88.00 .
reg.199.99
model 18 with b..e
MORE TIIAN A ZIG ZAG -
• now own a genuine Pfaff,
wor ld's top rated sewing
. machine
• instructions included
o 21 year parts wuranty
Sewing Mtchlncs, 809
CAN'T COMJ! IN
a11,.., _ iln>od"'1
for 1 no ol>llption Home
demooSttatioa
TUNE UP SPECIAL
Any make, any model
.. . in your home
2.88
'
• • - -.. ~ ..i.--.......... -------~-------
''Y'' MT. CAMP
IOYS -At• 9· 12
JUNE 23·29
Phone 494.9431
' Now 2 Great Stores To Serve You
H.WSM"'9f Hatl ..... C:....
c.... ....... ......
YMCA DAY CAMP JJOO H-....8'". ~ .......... IMcll .f ........ 541-941!1 ffJ-1101
STARTS JUNI 17
Co-14 -A1n 61/1°11
Phone 494·9431
WARM
WEATHER
SPECIAL!
Optn Mon., Thurs., Fri. Till 9 p.m.
TROPICAL SPLENDOR!
REAL HAWAIIAN PLUMERIA
The famous lei flower. Plant In a hot
dry location in co11t1I ire... Husky
plants.
.
lt•n lffdless lime. Dwarf trffs for
planting anywhere In the •unny
garden. Delicious fruit for cooling
drink•. Some with small-fruit al-
ready Ht .
I Gal. Sin 211
Patio Trees
DWAltf
EUGENIA
~ ..... ,.,...i, ...
I• tns. u .... fttry flf M .................
l'llnttt. .
5 Gal.
Cont1iner 411
Rog . 6.95
411
OIM of th• HrdS..t fl••·
erfnt P"l'•nnlall for C.-..
al orea. Larve Mods ef
purple flow.,• clll Y9Gf
long, PIGtlt lit full 11111.
1 Gill. 119
BWE LILY OF THE NILE
........ splffs
dtntlT94 flowers
MMIMt' -&c.n.t ••••• c.,. ,.,...... .. :-::·&., .. ha·· . ¢
Reg.
1.40
BRILLIANT RED
BOTTLE BRUSH
FOR THE JUNIOR BOTANIST
Landscape screen shrub with all-year
flowering season. Easy to grow in
full sun.
Husky I Gallon68¢
Re9. 1.40
2 AMAZING PLANTS
VENUS Fl Y TRAP-
• rMI gnilnre ~ tNtdi It ........ '"""" ~··t ...... , ............, .. tlMi ...... Leirret fehl .,, ......
t.W. Jiffy ,., wfttl tftlb ht ,_, .. ....
149
FLOWER SHOP
SPECIAL ITALIAN
CYPRESS
FRESHLY CUT
STOCK
~!\ors 98¢
Doz. -_._ -_ ..
RED HYDRANGEAS ........ --BEDDING PIANT SPECIAL
One
G•I.
•
Ht .. fl ewe rt u
r:;;' .. 1ut, lhopetl W.lt.
"•"' 111 "°" thode.
HMYY •l'flllt l 11111t-. ...., w .. 11191'•·
Rag .
l .50
11 ..... -""•H' .... .. , ... ,...,. ., ... .....,,_,_,".
fM ell fllmlMI' -.1ee11t •
l Doi. Only 119
REG. 69c DOZ.
SPECIAL PRlCES GOOD THROUGH SUNDAY, JUNE 16TH
HOURS: MON. THRU SAT:9 AJA. TO 6 P.M. SUNDAYS 10 A.M. TO 5 P.M.
"QUALITY AND SERVICE SINCE 19'46"
2640 Harbor Blvd •
COSTA MESA
CALL 546-5525
I
I
~
______________ ...,,... .............. ._._.. .... ~~~~~-----~-~-~--~-~---~-~----._.-...---.--- --·· u Fa U i *" -....-,r -·"':' ---, -~
J % DAILY •lLDT Thursdaj, Juttt 13, 1968
..
~·~
·'
'
I ···w···
BIG
ONE
LOWEST PR.1.CES OF
save more now on our own Surety cotton muslin and
percale sheets. mattress pads, pillow protectors
long wearing muslin slieets
twin lop or fitted 1.67 bottom requiarly; 1.99
reg.
full fop ·or flti.<f h'ol!om !.!9
atanaard llls4
SALE
1.87
pillow CICJleS ~.. lM9 )'.I'. .87.
Snowy; :whlfe; doeely :woven utilitt,
qilallty; ·great !o~ chtldren'• rooms.: ..
lulNfi .wliite pemale lllieets
twin lop or fitted 1.97 bottom requlcirly 2.39
SALE
2.37
reg,
lull ioROl\'litted bottom 2.69 stoni'!Ctta .(.,.~
pllio"' o:se.'I · ])1'ft ilm P,' ~ .1.17.
F.lne oomS•l1 co.t'ibn iw'Civen 180
threada to 1he llqUCft lndi.
.
Surety acrylic thermal blankets
6.49 twin or full reg. 8.99
Surety F.stron• mattress pads
2.89 twin flat req. 3.99
reg. SALE
full flat 4.99 3.89
queen flat 6.99 5.89
king flat • 8 9 ~ .9 6.89
Estron• fille(!, cotton covered. Fast
drying. Perfect mattress pcotection.
Surety zippered pillow protectors
.49 2l"x27". req •• 59
Sturdi'. cotton; keep pillows c 1 ea n
longer and help retain their shape,
may eo 8omestlcs S4
twin or full req, 24.99
reg. SALE reg. SALE
Machine washable year 'round acrylic. Shrink con-
trolled, nylon bound, soft napped, s lovely colors.
may. co.bedding 41
queen 27 .99 22.99 king 29.99 24.99
Puff effect pattern; hand tied fr.inge. Machine wash-
able cations you never iron. White, antique white.
may co bedding 41
'
1V.C A. y o . (
HE YEAR1
/
'I
'
I
HQllywood bed
quilted slip covers
16.99 regularly 19.99
Bold, flOmboyant, resounding
colors add extra punch to our
Watusi slipcovers. Greens,
browns and blues in puff
quilted cotton over acetate
clear down to the floor; 4-
sided kick pleated flounce.
Zippered bolster covers regu-
larly 6.99 each are now 5.89
may co slip covers 113
Surety no~iron
tablecloths
8.39 52"x70" oblong
reg. 11.00
reg.
6S"x9G" oblong 17.00
6S"x!OS" oblong 21.00
63"x90" oval 17.00
SALE
13.29
16.99
13.29
70 .. round l S.00 11.39
napkins .80 .59
65')', Dacron• polyester, 35')','
cotton. "Come Clean" .soil re4
1 ea s e finish. Embroidered
edge: Gold, avocado, white.
may co towels, linens 30
insulated antique
satin draperies
5.99
48" wide,
72" or 84" lonq
reg. 10.00 a pair
With 57 sizes to pick from it's
a sale bet you'll be able to
drape 'most any window!
These white Eden Roe rayon
and acetate antique satin
draperies are insulated to
help you keep your cool.
Sun-and-fade -proof, wash-
able; little or no ironing.
may co draperies 113
Surety sculptured floral towels
1.89 24"x46" bath req, 2.50
reg. SALE
l 6 .. x26 .. hand towel I.SO 1.19
12 .. xl2 .. wash cloth .70 .49
Wr~ath of Roses cotton, Siamese pink, verdian green,
antique gold, Bristol blue, ice pink, cerulean blue.
may co towels 30
)
I
.. -·
may co south coast plaza, san diego frwy at bristol, costa mesa: 546°932.1, 675-3418 -· shop monday thru saturday, 10 to 9:30
'
• ,
,
... . . . ., . ,_ ... -• • -r. ·-. ------
I
I
-.. 0
!
•
~~~.;::·-;-:;,·~:;:;-=:".:"•o::-"'1f..~·~··!::••!!"~:::'"'=r.:-'"',...?;::.!r''i"lt·""''·"""~~ ..... ·~·""""""""~·"''"'""'"''"' ....................................................... ~---~ ........................... --. ........ ----..... -~ •• I ,. -~~~-..... .--... ,..~-....---.-........,...---------..-.... ______ . ..,._.. __ ....,,._....,,., -----· ...... _
~
Plane
Cra sh
In Baja
By CRAIG LOC K WOOD
CH Tiit 0111, -Piii! lt1H
Bre nnan ''H ev s''
ThutMl.:1, Ju11e U, 1968 DAJL Y PILOT f/li
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOT.IC E LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
.,.. 1M 'OTICI TO c1eo1TottS SU,111:1 .. COUllT OI' TNI IUl"i tlOll CCMll T u: ™• •OTICI TO CltlOITOltl •UPl•I .. '"UI' o• T•• STA.Tl 01" ULll"OltNIA l'Olt STATI Ofl' C.Al..l,..,_fll .. l'OI;
0 fl IUut TilANtl"al IUTI Ofl cAi'.o,OllflA l"Olt T11• COUNTY 0, OIU.•I TH• COUNTY Of' ....... fl«.. ·~1 -•lat u.c.c.• u•• 11u•••• 0.1• ..._ ""'"" N6tlca I• ...,..., ,,,,.. .. !flt C'lldt~ THI C.OUffTY ,,_ OIAMO• IUMMONI NOTICE 0" HfAlllNO OP 'ITIT16N
of DOlllN llll:YICf (OtltllM.ATIOH, Mt. ._ .. ,,.. H~NAH 11:, ,Jll l!!ll'l!ll, JIW.t11t1H V1. FOtlt ll tltOIUTlf OF WILL ANO ,0. T•t ... ltl'O"(I), ""-11\it!Mw .......... 11 111•" ft Al l EilltT M. KLl!llT, Ootc11 .. JOHN ,, "'El_.I! •• Dlf1.W.11t LITTltlt• Tl!•TAM.IHTAilltY
3171 H_,, I~.. N"'"" lfftf\, tel, lllM'\.1 Of THI "ATI 011 l!ollh of 1"111 Af!lll c ... , 1tul
Cov11.., of O.tnii . lllff li't ~tllfof'• lfttl HOTIC! IS MEltE&Y C)IVIEN "' tlle CAllllOINIA It r11t ..... -H .,.,_ r.-•• ,,_ A. Co ... Otc"1t H4. • bul~ ltt11~' It ...... Ill to M MO:de )e tt@<lllO•t of !llfl ~bo~• Mmed tl~CH!!flt •r11!1 HOTICf IS HElt r.IY OIVIN,~T~I
Vl!ltLli D. Oj;tLS!H, -T"-i.•Hh!. llltl llll N<'MOll !tiVll\O tlt!<'l\t .... lfl•t ttl4 YOll t•t l\fttt'f• llr°"ltd HI 11111 • wrll· l&vlNI K. Ct"'"" llll llllld ""9111 t
wfloH Wtl11B1 "°'"' 11 111) illt••"'°""l .. 111 tlec:1M11t i" rtqulrod lo 11111 ""'"" '"'°' •'-••111\11 111 rt-"CH'IH to lllt cwr11W.t111 P«lllle11 •or llrobfk of ir.. Wiii (111111'1 W1• .• .,..,_...._ C-ri' el 01 .... 1. SI•"" of Wllf\ "-nKftl•"' vou:-ri:-.. 111 IM l>fllu of lht'l •'low "'""f'd 11la!11lllf wl:f\ IM tllovt .,.,,.I'd CllKcdtN •lid ... 111'1 C•llfetlllt. • ~ of lllfl Cif' ... OI ""' , ....... "'llllH c.·11rt Of <lrrtl o1 '"" t~ 111tlllelt cout1 111 !Ill l•wJ,t• cr1 Letlt" Tt•1~,_,.!'!.tJt M ~
Tiit P<-m IO llie "1111t.rM It loultcl IO Ol'IHtfll "'"'"'-wllll ""' ~fir•"' tto«-1 c11lllllCI •tiiff llr41 .. llt •~•Ill.II """ lltllri-r, rM.....C. lo wflkfl la liltllO lot
11 JITI H•wtort lllYd , H-1 l~IUI. IOOUC/ltfl. It I/It Uf'ldf<llt~ •I Tf\• Otlltl 111 .. \41 (ourl, wl!Mn TEN llol'r\ 1tte• !"", !w""' N'11Cllllort. 1rld tf\fl lhl ll"W •r.cl
COlll!ho ol er.,.. •. Sl•ft ol c.11w111.. ot l'lcr Attv•M••· "' E, 1111'1 S.rHI. Co1t1 ...... i.:. ... ""' "' 11111 Wfl'I-. JI _..... •• ~ "' ""''""' -...... l\t• lloHfl ... Stlll tt-1\1 11 descrll»d Ill ••-I I MfW, (1ll'9rlll.. Wl'l\dl h Ille •l-Kt 9' wllflln IN 1bow MIMCI CMM!Y, ... wltllln tor J ...... 21. 1 ... , 1t t :» •.m,, In H'lt
Ill I Mll:llllftlltl ~ o1 "" MrYIQll Ml-" lflf Uflde<'l'9<tM ln I ll MllMrt THlltTY 0.Yt ll Ml"+'ICI 11Mw1Wr1. 'touftf-.. llf 0-<trMo>I N.. 1 " Mid
butlftfu ·-11 C>orln "'rvlC• C1rPO<t• ll'fftllllllnol IO IM 01llt. flf Mid dfUOool'll, y..., t•t N rm ,,.JJllooit ll'l•I 1111llu vou <ovrt, t i Ml H. l toffwl r, In ll'it (Jty tf
!Ion • ..., lcllC•l.cl "' SUI H•-· 1 1\fd., wltllln II• l'IMNlml '"'' "" !lrol ~·II~· .. Ill• .. _I,,_ • ..-...... Ole1C1!11t. Mid S.111• AM, C1llftffllt.
H-1 a11dl, CDUlllr ot Ch'lfl"• Slltt Hon ol thll """'"· •lal11l1ff •Ill IHI ludell'llllt lot t lW rno ... y 011111 JUM 1, lNll. ol C1lllH11l1, 0.11toct M1v 21, 1Nt. or o,,-1 ~ 111 1tH1 comelillll 10 W. E, ST' JOHN,
Tl\t by .. 1., .. ,,,, will bf COlllllf"-if<I c11r.1 M. Hofltldott ••Ill"' UllO'I cont•"'· o• wlll •Hh-TO flll! CDUlllY Cllrk.
Oii or '"'' ""' ht "'' e1 Jut~. lffl, 11 ll11t<utrb1 ot "" Will _., ,_ ''"' '"*' ... 11of 9tft\e.w.tl In m.. •11¥111 1. K-
M. Cl U -• f L g tt:Oll A.M. 11 Tl'M h•cll~•'ldefol .,,., 11e$ of ""' 1tion 1i.lt'IM dec-~I -111111. •U Jterlll MIWNft aMll. C e l uu, P I U n a f . D<•not tllfll'M. Alll.htlm, c_,., .,, "..a1111oo & •••M:•• v .. _, 11111 11111 N¥kt" ... ,...,.., ,._,.. "°""' c.at. nue Beach a popular 11 urfing °'"'••· llllt tf--Ct ltler>!I•. A.,.,.,..,,. II L-..... _,.., CMMCI ....... , ... -· T1h ""'ltll • • • So ,.,. •• --II ,. ""' "•V>Sl•reel•). ltt •. ''"' lffwl •"'""' .,. 111111 --llKI "'""""" All-• .., P.titlfol"f, world figure and "Flippy" 111 w.1,,.u ... -. •N ldl!r.,,.,,, ..._. ..,1c.u. ""'"'· C.li"""• 111J1 -'lwN • c_,,.. Wl!Mll 1111 '""' 11111tt "u11111M11 °'"'" co1111 D111¥ Piiat.
. ,,.. l••111ltr1W/I) IOI' .... ll'rH VN/'I l&JI T1I: 0 141 ~ml -''"'~ t .. "''" --""' ...... ~ J-,, " 1:1. "" •n4 H o ffm a n pioneer bill!·Wave "11, •••r IA"11f1M''"' liiec•111• ,,.._...., .. 11111 c ... .,1111t1.
, . 0.,,1.. '-"''.v 1"1:r•""'~1-ci. 3111 p,,....,~ o.,,,,. '"~}• ""•11v "~"'1 • 0.1"' .11111• 1•. 1161. T ICE
r id er from Capo Beach ........ ~"'' ~1'-G .. "'"""'" !!..,di °'""'•· M•' JO~"" J11""' 1J 10 '™ "·6'[ .., "· s 1 "'t~N. Cl<'·-L EG A L NO
recently experienced wbal ~:1~~11~~:". 1, uu __,..L EGAL NOTtCE ___ I ~: ... ~,:·1; •• ~ ... , .. ~·~· ---•A~-"$.•-
ld h b UfO!t< o. 0Mtf'll ·-,,.,.MOI. "~. G ....... ~"' & ~·111 11 •it lf(IT1C:O TO cr.-01To1t • cou ave e e n a T•1n1•t•-e ,.30~ ~,u ~,., . .,, .. r.~=·~~.,. •":--:-101t C"llltT OJ' TH!
t . I '"' !-oende<>I 8•11-Cf llTIJ'ICATI OJ' IUSIN•SS ............ HUI .. c,•~~m·.· tlH t ' SY.I.Tl! ti• C.l•JPOllMIA ,e. permanen Wipe OU . 10'.IJ E. OrtftllHl'ltlfH PlcMttwl Plrm Mimi -oc--Ttl: CtUI 112·11'1 -'11·JIM TH• COUNTY 011 Oil.AHO• R e p 0 r t g M 8 r ., e An1t1ti.... c1111ot1111 T"' """''ti•* 00 ,.,,tbY urtl.., ""'' AltWf!IY1 ,.., 1>111111111 Nt. A·ffMJ "' Ei<N>W Ho. !lJS.H tl>t'r i r• ~111!1 1 lhl>0'1 .11Mf lmjllOrt Pul ll!J'>eol 0.1..._., C...1! Ol llV Flllot, Eatl!~ ti Htlefl !ll11btlll Hi""-Y•
MacClelland : Hevs and 1111b11""" °''"" ,,,.,, 0111¥ "'1o1. buslntn 11 c .. P''"""' 11 1u3 a.11, Ju ... u. 20, ,, ..... J\lly ~. 1"' •1111-61 DKta..e. J<1nt lJ, 1'61 lnM&. Sttftl, ~11, C.llfo•11la, llllOer IM lie NOTICE 15 HEilltEI Y GIVEN 1'e !flt
F lippy w ere try ing to 'cle ar LEGAL NOTICE -1111ou• tl•m 111'"' of ALllAX COMPANY LEGAL ~onCE crto11111n et m.. 111tw "'""" ~' ---=:.::;::_;.:c:.:.:::::: ___ , 111'111' ll'l1t "Id ftrl'I! 1t COft'ltoOMd .ef ""' 11111 111 "'-hnl"' ci.1.,,. 111lftlt 1119 the mountains to San Felipe 11._.,.. to11&.r1111 "'-wt1ost ,,.,,.., 111 11111 ,.._.110 .. Id dlc9dtftl ,,.. ~''" 1o ni. ''*'"
I B · C 'f · h th CallTIPICAT• 0 11 IUllMlll Ind J1ltce1 ef rtll<ltne» l tl II tellltwfi,-. Cl •Tll'ICAT• 011 CORP.ORATION with IM llt<ltUllY \IOllCl\t,,,, 111 #II efl'lco n a1a ali ornta w en e lllCTITIOUI """'' •II: • l'OR TRA!rtlAC:TION 01' IUIUllll "',....clerk of"" l bovt ... 11111i11 COOJrl, or
Cessna they were flying Thi ll!Mlt ,.11-i doll c•rtll'I' ... 11 (Oft. s .. Chl•lff Slollentlorf, ,., :fir.''" UNO•• lllCTITIOUI NAMI lo ~'-"' !Mm, with .... MUIH!Y
developed e ng ine ttouble . ~':'!'.:.. ~1.~.'~,i.!~1.~!..:.111,..u::: "°f: ~~=~,1..-=~~ie:i(l" J'iie, ~~.~oce::i~~q:i~ 11 ~~~T..'.0~ =.t1t~ '°,.,:"' .=:.,~.~ ~.,!": ti!""" llrm ~~-el GOLDE!N DOOR Slrfft, ..... (1111, buall!K$ IO(flld I I Hofr1t Puml!J'lers RO"" (Mort!, 1CS lllftf St,...,., 0<11111, Ctfffomlf,
The engine froze up jm. •EAUTY SALON "'"' 111•1 llld II"" !• Oiled M•v }J, IHI. l•I Co .. \WI w. L,ric:,,111. Allfl\elm, SlJ w Wl'lkh 11 llw 1lac1 "' bull!Ottl "' .... · co""''"" of tM lnllllwh"I .,......,., whose S. (f\Arlei 5119e,,.,'1 nth, Crill Me••• Cilllo•lll~. """"' lt'I• 1rncl1nl~Md In •II -'"''" .co'1~l11!,.. !fl mediately, a nd they began 11•rnt In 1u11 1...i Pl•c~ "' rl5kl<!""' 1, ., JouPll G~""''"' &.ck•' I uc1111.... 11.,,. ,,.me o1 H o M E t:"'!! --1-1~ "' vld ~~r· .. <eo11, w1111111 •1~
g lid in !! toward the beach lollrWt: ,STATE OF CALll'iORN!~. FUR NISH-RS R~NT.O.l co, •'WI 111•1 .. 1 .. 1 ""'"1~, •II•• 1 ....... ,, IH,lb!lc•I!"" of ,,.1, .-"'~•rl L J·-~ • .,., ,,1 I I~ ,. COUHTT OJ' LO~ AN(;• !.ES,''-firm h aitr·--·~ ol •n~ loll "'Ill<> ("• 11•tic•
and checking out possible Ori••.-1<1-w~,,,1· ll~·t~. Colilorni:. ••• 1 On, M•v 11, '"'· ~=··~ n·•. • "'•"'""' rnr•l!•11, • ri··· r•lnc,n•I r•~c~ n• O.i..t '""' "· 1"' •t r I O•!ed J~n· 11. 1%•. IJ'ubl t In """ lo• "'Id c 11111v •ntl ulll!r 1111~1~·~-.1. ·~ '"'""'''; I A"'" t:i•rvru Cl•r• SI eS Or a n emergency a n -R~:.•r! \., J~cli,..,11 ""'~'nlllV IPPf•t,d $, Cll,.le• Sl•~ent1l\rt Gltlll'FS INC., l1'J Ulll"r~IY, S•n .O.~mln,,trnrl• nl "" E.<tllr
ding. 1'hey coaste d along fOI Stolt or C•lll..,.nli , Or•not County; •nd Jo1enn G11t1en ot 11"-t k"' k!'ltlwn lo m• Dl•<>o. C•lll. M I~ 11tw>"e n•metl tlKedt~I
abo"I a m•'le, •nd the n Sp-01· On J11n1 17, 1'61, tlflDro mt", " Nollry to to. IM PttM)fll Wllolt nomt• l rt WITNESS 11'1 ni l'llll 11111 1111 dl 'r ol Mry, .IUcr HllrwY Cl1r1l, .. "ubllc In ind !'Or ••Id 5111 ltv wtw:rlbetl "' 1'ht wlll'lln Instr"""""" "'" 1'61 HJ ,.I,.. llrHI,
ted a likely looking spot. •-1•tt1 It_,, L. J•ck""' t·...::,~mt tdlnow!MIMI hi "" "'11 '"'' •~K~t.a !C.,:,...,..•tr kill 0!'11141., C11H.,.,.•1 lo bt ""' ""'"°" who1t .,1..,. 11 lubocrlt.. -ume. GRAFPS INC., Ttlc Ul•I ~1t But the likely looking spot tt1 10 the wimin 1 tru t ,,.. w11 ... ,.. mv h•rld •nd 1111• 1t11t>11 11or111UM1 1.cr1t1rv Allto'"" ,., AlllNllkt•llrl• "' ,.,.. 11"'
Proved to be a soft s pot, and 1cknowlltl•M ht ••eculM ....... :::.. • (OFl'IC\Al Sl!ALI ITAT! OF CALl,OltNIA, Pl>IH ...... °'•"" ,.,.,, o ...... Ill!$!, (OFFICIAL SEAL! M, a. KtlleY COUNTY OF OltAMGIE II Mty· IJ, Jiii trld JUM '· I], 1Mt tlMI
FILM PRODUCERS IN HAWAII -Greg 'M•acGillivray and J im i:reem a n , O rang.e
County s urf f iln1 make rs le ft Monday for Honolulu on a ser ies O<f sch e dule d
showing~ or their c u rr e nt s u r f f ilm ''F ree a nd E asy." Greg ~nd J im pla.n t o
spend t he next three w eeks sh.ow ing a nd .fi hr~ing o n O ahu , w ith .an occasional
side trip t o some of_ the outer is la nds. While 1n France, Greg, Jim a n~ M a rk
Martinson p lan to t eam u p with Gorky Carroll, and the quartet then w ill h ead
into S p ain and Portug'11.
the a ircr aft's w heels s ank °'""" v. u11 Not•"' Put1•1<-:C•l~...,."1' °" 1111. '"' "•Y 11' ~ •• A.O. 1wa.l---..,-,,,--,..,--c:c::::=:---
e nough to flip t he c ralt over Nol•"' "ubllc -C•lllornl• r~~:~:~C:....tr bllo" mt • Nol•"' ""bUc ... •l'ICI '"" u ld LEG AL NOTICE · b k H ff d llrl111:l"'I Ollkt In "'ff-0( Counl\I i nd Stilt. rtildl"" h•r•I", dlllV'l--------------on its a c • o m a n an o,,,..t '"""" P bll ,.M 0 c , 0 11, ,.11o1. C01J1m1u1onf!d •rid 1wo•"· --•llY ••· R-*11
MacCle lland w e re securely My Comm1u1"" E•lllr.. M u •'•net J ~:7'u ;:• 1 ... ' '°"" ••••M 1t11p11 •lorli l<ll!d k11<1w11 10 m• to C•11T1P1CAT• 011 1u11N111 M1rch 11, ltn •Y 11 ' ' ' bt tl'I~ $1(rt11"' 91' 1M ~llK>r1!1011 11111 lllCTITIOUI NAM•
seat b elte d ins ide, and s us -llub11111ed O••no• c.,.,,, 0111r "1101, LEGAL NOTICE ••tcllh<il !ht wlltlln 1,..1.._1 "' b.11•11 Thi unde,,1..w ..., ttrllfv ft• 11 con-tain ed no inj·uries. Ju,,. u. 11, ''""'July 4, 19" 102,.u or tno corPOr•ll"" ltll!rt!11 r11mtd, •"" 1111Ctr.,. • bu.lnu1 11 1e$ .......,, P•tltic •ck-lecl9eel lo,.,,. l!!tl wdl cH-•llM Cot1t Hwv .• L",,,.. ludl. Clllfot"l1,
T he plane, however. was LEGAL NOTICE NOT1c1 TO c1•01To11s •XK1111d ""' ....... ""*' •r.e 11ct1flo<ls lfrm ... "" of THE
d IU,IRIOlt COURT Of' THI' In wn ..... Wllerftlf, I l'ltvt f\e•"l'fthl ••I MA(HIHIE SCENE 1nd 11111 111111 ltt'lft Is
a n gerously ne a r the w ater ITATI 011 CALIPOl.N1A f'OR mv i.i.rld •nd •lllxf'<:I mv ottkJ•I ... ,1 ""' com,...!:<! "' n.. 1011ow1,.. Mt'111<1. wllMI! P·Jll4H THI COUHtY 0, OllANG I lltv •"" V••• In It!~ cfrtlfl<•lt llrol tbovo 11.,,,. In lull 1...; •Itel "' rHlll~..ai lo 11
T lnE DANGE R OUS Cl'•TIJ'ICATI: 0,. •UU Nl'll "'· A·tfHI w•llt..... l'Ollow1:
h T 'ICTITIOUJ N.IMa Etlll• ol Mji"' I!'. Smllh, 0KtllfKI. {OJ'PICl .O.L SEAL! C•rl •W. HeH<'f, Hl4 Ouedl W1v, 'T' e y kne w the incoming hi urw:1t rol1ned "" cert11Y -••• co11-HOl lCE ts HEltEav GIVE N 10 IN! 1to1•JI• c . l(M• L-•u"' !'le•<"· c111tornl•.
tide Jd s'nk th plane dvcllno 1 boJilntH o! 1n' En•I COIJI c•tdltorl el ll•f 1bo\lt n1ml'd dtctd•nl Hol•rv Public -C~lllornl1 Onlecl MtV 11. 1'61. , WOU I e • Hl11hw1v, CorON del Mi•. ci 111onol1, 11'1•1 i ll P••Mna ,,.,,1,.. d i!mi •••!nil 11\t .-r+11Cl<11I Ottlct 111 • Ci r! w. Hot"'r •
and t hey a tte m p ted to move unde• IM llc!UlO\lt. firm n1mr <1! THE u.kl lltcf'd1nt •tt rHUlreCI to t+I• ll!em, Or1n1• Counl\I Stall Ill Ct lltor11l1, Or•11tt C.-"'! Part II of Venture On the -.
't LJ f t tel th GOWN SHOP Ind ""'' Wld firm 11 cem-w!ltl tM lllCl\M"' VOllCl!en, In IN olflci MV Cnrr>mlHIOOI! 1 ... f,.. Of\ MIY 11, lNI. bef<I"' me, ~ Neill,..,
l • n or una Y e y were -of '"' 1o•-1..,. H'""''· •hoH: of 1"'9 clel'tll ,, tilt 1bove 1111111111 ct111rl. or Juhl 1, \ft.II Public 1n 1N1 1or 111d s1111, "'IOl!lthl
unable to eve n budge it. "'""' 111 lull '"" n11u 1·..t '"l!ltnc• .,. "' ,,,,..,, 111em. wll'!I 1111 111C1111•Y llubllotoect er.,... Cot1t 0111, l'llol. ,_. .... C1rt w. Helftr •-" 1o mt M
M Cl II d USC 11 loltowa: VmH:l\e,.,, 111 1111 llndt11l1ned •I "" Tr.19' M.IY la-30 •!Id June ,, ti, "" '!0241 ~ I'll• """"" whose "'""" 11 111bscrlbed a c e an , an _ex-.kill11 c. Fullen •r.d E11srbtth It. DINrlme"'· C•od•r Clllltm ... 11..,.11 IO ,.... wu11111 lflYrVtl!tllt '"" IJCll-ledt·
rootball gre a t. r a n m ore ~~~c.: ... 5:.""••d 1tNd, '0™'• "1 ....... • H•tio...1 I •""'"' A111 .. c:1111011. 110 LEGAL NOTICE '"'"' ••Kiiied "'-"""'·
than eig ht miles t o the ttny 011et1 June 5. 1"9. ~: ~.~:"1';i.c!'"!: ::i~1•11,:r~~; (Ol<FlCIAl SEAL!
fish ing Communit y Seeking ~.:!.1:'i~l'~ii!"11"" U<ldlfl llftltl In •!! m•Horo 01rl•l~ln1 In ftOTtCE OJ' TRUITll'S SALi ~~,!~:';~~Ille. IJ!jf1Wnl1
Dahlquist's Surf Surfing
Scene ttlf l!l!•lt of olld dec«lenl, wlltll11 11• TRUST NO. '121 Prl11tlo1I OHICI Jn he lp. Air t e m p e r at u r e 510 • "' C•llfor111•· O••nt1~ '"""Iv: l!lflftth• •II•• ..._ 11r1r nubllc1t1on ol lllts 011 Jutv s, \ffl, •1 •1eve" o'clock A.M. or111111 countv
h d h 20 d 0" June !. 1~, bdo,. mt:, • Ncl•"' Mil Flral Am1rltfft Tlllt l~IU•ftr\Ct .. Trutl My Commies;..,. E•l!ll•u
overe a t t e 1 e g r ee Public In """ 11l• w111 s111r, r>e•M1111t1" 0~i~d M•• '°· 1161. Comi>e11Y. •• 1r111tte, &r 1uccene• tru1!ee M•v n. ,,111 mark as he came into the •PC1t•reC1 Jol'ln c. """""i nd E11 .... t1t111 It Crcc~e· C•tlre~• M.u....;1 ••n•, or 1ublt1tur.a 1rvi.1ee. IY ,,.. cert1111 °""" Pu~nih<"d 0,,,.,. c,.,.11 D•lll' i!l\lol • . I h Futtori ~_,, lo me In bl th-"''"""' A N II I II ~I nf Trust flKUletl br 001t l5 L. WHITE, M•v Tl, lll •rid Julll ,, 13. lt611 tel41 Trek Continues
Surf ra ns are invited to
contin ue on Ron Dahlquist's
lrip through No rth Africa
· and A sia via p art ll o f his
travel diary.
~ FEB. 16 U nder Way
~ .. : to l\1orrocco
:.:t.eft L isbon early. arrived
Madrid, now ' e n r ou te to ~&sailanca. J\1ore b a d
wt'a ther. P la ne jum~ and
~ J!l!.-::ks , • , Rolle rcoaster1?
• l "n r e al.
~ F E B. 17 Agad lr , 1\1orr 0t"co
:: Moming spent looking for
:-1.li'aves. Little surf. no sun .
~-They send me on to A gad ir , ;:350 miles south of Casab lan-~a. Situation predictab le: no ~Si.in. no waves.
F E B. 18 C a sablanca
• ·Crev.' came b a ck. woke
m e up. and told m e the)' b a d
loc ate d fair surf an d weird
c olor s. 1\1ud d y water ne xt to
c le a r l\'a ler, hlue, brown.
l\1Ute an a q uatic
m;osalc.
T he n "'t filmed In old
1\1edlna . Ho m a n v.·aste,
ftlth and 1 I c k n e s 1
e ve rywh er e. Stre e ts n ar·.
ro\\' a nd crowde d, sm e ll
o\'e rpowe rlng.
FEB 19 Casabla nca
•Offshore s! Blue sky!
\I/aves! But no surfin~. \Ve
\\'ere headed north to a
place "'here the surf was
supposed to be better. We
arrived to find a n erra tic
break. and some surfers
"'ho had been living there.
Maintaining.
-We r eturn to do some
more shots of surfers o n
horse d!'awn carts a nd
myster ious M oroccans in
i\P<>ded jala b as. Corn c an be
piicked in film cans too !
T he group leaves exotic
M orrocco after s e v e r a I
discouraging days of no
surf . . bad weather. and
perpetual storms. We next
catch up "'ilh Ron a nd the
surfers in M adrid. whe r e
they experience a crowded
flight during a f u l I -o n
rainstorm. From M adrid on
VII a ge S O U ti n g for wllow n1mn "'' Wl)\('rlbttl "' "'' w11t11n Au,;r."tt!.. 1" .,. •11 lltVTlfttrleCI wom111 •ftd reair6ed!!--"--------~---
assistanc e and cold w ater. lllllrumtlll •nd •di-I~ """' ••. Iv: Mltft••I ("0rnc:MO Oclol!er }l. '"' 111 !'look 1411. Pf!I• HJ"' L EGAL NOTICE KU!td IM ........ Oltlcl•I lt.-conll ol °''"'' '°""'v· Rome, Athens , and then S ign lang uage and will (OFP 1c1AL SEALI ~~~~~:~ !i'~ ~i:f'' c111ft<rn11 "'" ~urw•11t to 111.1 crria1nl ------~,-..c------
f T I A · t C ] .nrower secured "ffeVS" eight JOWC!ft E. O•vlo of tfte i bovt ~•med llKeCll"n! Nollet <if\ Oel•ull t1!d EIK!lon t~ 1cll I Alt-4.'lt rom e VlV 0 ey On . ~v Nol•"' Publl<·C•Hlo•nl• "•tllllllft '"' l'rtffl ft, tl'lereuMll' ~eto•dld Mtrc f\ !, 1m Jn NOTl(I TO (ltl!OITOlt l men a nd tWO fis h ing boats "rlnc!p•I Olflct In u r lilll lllft ltrett, Sook 1534. ~It :Mt fff Otllcl1I lte<ordt ol IU .. l!illtlO• COURT OP TH• In Ceylon we next p ick up . h ' h O..•nge (<11J111\1 c 1 M c 111 111 n•H o, • .,,. C1111n1v. wm under 1r>d ou•:w•n• to 1TATI! OP C.l.Ll,.OllNIA 11011
the narrativein a h otel with w IC set o ut quic kly. to the M' comm1n1on E•n1r~1 T~~,•J-41.-;2~·1 ' "' ' M11d ottd ,, T•u11 1e11 11 •ub11c 1uc 11tw1 TM• couftTY•O,. O•ANGI
site of the cra sh . Junt 11. n 10 ,..,. c"'"· l•Mv1 1110nt, or 1r.e u"11et1 "'· •·tm 1 8 na m e out of a J a m es Bond "i*ll1i'itd or.,,.e Co••• 0.1.., Piiot, ._':."'b~'~: 01•Kul1rc 1 0 11 ,1101. s11ttt ol .1.merlt1, 11 '"' m•ln we" en· E•••tt o1 lt.UTH 1, M<IRIOE. 01ct1\.
tale. , .then our b us driver Flippy saw the two boats Ju ... •· u , 10, ?1, 1u1 •n41 M•~ 23~ XI • .,:•J11::~ ,,~;. n6: ' !GUI 1r1nc1 10 "" F1,.1 Ame•l(•n '"'-eo. com ing wit h all those m en l111ur1ric:1 .. Tn.tl (!lmPfnV bull!l\11<1 NOTICE IS HE •E•Y GIVEN "" "'' arrives ... his name: Jam es LEGAL NOTICE *~'"" •' IN! sou1'1tht co1111r 01 F11m cree1nor1 "' 111t •bow """'" <1Htdlll1
B d , ~ 1 0 ta · hi standing up looking a roun d LEGAL NOTICE """ M•\11 sir"'' 111 "" cuv "' s.1111 An•. ""'' •lt ot•S0111 t1tv1.,. <llll'M ••1!1111 ""'
on a. r or r e a · u s1g a nd h e tho u"ht it might b e 3 11•31121 , ....... C•lltornl• 111 "''' r11no, nti. •NI 1111,,t•t s•l• <1«ec1H11 .,, '"",'"° M 111e 111~.
guy, a real ClaSSiC. , , the to ClltT11'1CATI! OP I UllHl.Sli ._.... convtVell I~ fnd l1flW l\tlcl """"' D<'!td ...i with Ill.I "ttl'lllotY ......,.;Mu, I~ tl\t ollfu
Parnelli J ones ·of Ceylon lootin g p a rty .. He sp r ang up t<ICTIT ious NAM• c1111Ttl'W::.l,TI OJ' aus11111.11 Tru11 1~ 11\t .. rcoenv' situotH 1~ 1t1e at"'-'"",,,."'""'•-H1n11ee1 tnu'1,"'
r · d T' ' o ' ''' .•. o l'h:Ul\..rs ,-1,... N•l'll• C~lv '"" .61•1& dtKrl""d u 1 to ottgarot lhem. wllf\ Ill• ~ecotsa"
1 • rom his ~lace un er the "' "" crs """ .ioe• c~• v ..... ~ c""· L•t 01 ct T••tt "~· ?l"t. •• '""w" .... •-u•r.ers. f1l lh• undttf!ene<t •t 111 • .oH•ce• .,... F E B 25 I I dvclll!ll 1 bu~lll~! Al. !t?J w. llllceln TH E UNDCRS!GNEO dCI r.-rfbf tt rlllv "' -·• '" WE" > ••••TT 115111 • p aJJe ... t e On y Sl'f8de fOr lAv• .. Antl>rlm, C•!llc•nl•. V"~er Iha flt· lh•I hp ls ton<!Uclln~ t busl11t :>S .r 1,l? • M•o •lr.ftttltll In Booll 11. P•9t 7S QI ""' r ~•fteYI ~.. c + V•D' Dlem a n'I" Loif&c \~ d1 t d I k d 1111oui llrm "'"''"' Llncolll B••cf\ Mehl!• M•vwt!nd Sl•Mt. S..nl• Ant. C•lllo•~I•. Ml1(•l1...,"0111 M'PI· r.-co•dt ol Orsn~• E. • P"11id~lphl•. Whll!I••. •11:•~1:·
Ce I some S a nce, an 00 e M•nor and 1,,,.,1 .,.111 nrm Is comnoltd 01 ul!dt:r th• fltl!llco., tlrm 11•"'• iof T.O.Bll c ·11~1v, Ctlllornl•. •<l'ltcll Is "'' Pi><(• el bo1l~s • Y On out. He didn't know .whethe r the 1e11ow1no llef'i.Ofl, wrio., 118me 111 11111 CHEMl(Al COMPllNY •nd 11>~t ••Ill S.ld .... will II.-m•O• wlll'IClul tov•11sn1 undttsl~~<l<I In •II matters C11'11l11!111 •o
V D• ' • lod I """ ol•ct of rn!dl!nc.t 11 ••tallows• ll•m I• corr>POlell ol lllt l1>llowlno .,,..,,., or worranlv, ••Pf'••"'" .., lm•ll..,, •J 10 lllf: '!!llllr "' •aid dr.cetlitnl. wllf\!11 J!~ a n 1e m a n I ge S a to run or defend the plane. Ml rQl rP.I T•'rtor L•"'"'· 305 • Llf!do ~ ... m .. 1~ 11111 '""•lac• "'rt1l<!f'11c• "" 1111t • ....u1111on or """"'i.-~11cn "' """""" •"•• ttoe 11 .. t PLibllt•Uon of ll!fi
small place right on t h e F i n a 11 y l-1 0 ff a m a n •••·· l•lbot, C•lll. h •• 1ouow1, to·wll : ••ll1fY ""' ••m•lnlM ••lnc!NI Jum -r10llc•. ' D1leC1 JUM 4 IHI 5"'ldClll lt•v Wltton, lGIJ H, St•I•, .... mt llOh HWrtd tw .. Id Ottd ol Trull 0.tf'd .JM• 21. '"*
waler j.n Colom bo. We've r ecognized Brenn an 's M•nr•r~t TiY1or L•vln• Ntwbu••"· tl!dltM. •o wll : ... ON.JG w1m 1111e...,1 Iller""' Arlllu• a. Mcllrldt •net
bee n I o o ki n g f o r gene 0 S fo m s e at d s11t• o1 c1111ornl•, or1.,., covntv: WIT NESS "'' "•nd "'" 17!h <11v .i ''""' Ju 1111r• '°· 1'61 •• ••ovldld k'I u lt! •<11h "'· G1rrr.., ... r U r e on June • '"' bttort m• • Hol•rv M1v, ,,,.., nott '°''"''' wllf\ '-· d"'"" •nd ~•· C,,.E•1<:11lfll'I ol IM Wiii
11om etblng to surf .•. the stoic ally ben eath h is ever-,.ubllt in ~..:.. 10,' .. 1" 51,1,; Pf'•1.o11•flv s. It. WILSON .....,.. 01 "'' t r111te1 •rid 1vch 01,.., o1 ""' 1bov• n•mlll d1ett1e11t
UllU I s to a d e (.'ount11 Visitor t 1 h t •P<1e•••d M1r1aret T1v1or L1vln• known sT•TE o,-1HD IAH"' '""'' •• m•• h••• boln 1t1v•111:'<f tw ''"° Wl'lL • l'llTZ. • a ry. • • n W p resen S raw a . lo ""' to bf "'' ier..,,. whoot ~ • .,,. I• COUNTY OF WARR ICI( I u ownor •nd holder 01. ••Id ""''' with In· Alf•,.,..•• Al Ltw, didn't find (he WOrld 'S bi!r· 1ub1crlbe-tl ta the W!lhln ln1lr11m•nl 1nd ON TH IS 11th d&'r el M1v, .1..0. INI, 1t<e1!. 11 oro'rldld I~ tfld Dffd Oii Tru1I, lHOJ a. lllllltfel.itil
«e st surf, b"l the water is l-l awaiian surfer M a r k WEAR Y GRINGOS •cknowtee11ee1.,,,.. •• .,...1111 ..._ ••m•. btlore "'"· M•"' '''~"'" "•u•, • Not••v f>•trd: J""" 11, 1u 1. ¥1'111111•<. °""'"'"'' h " {OFFICIAL SEAL) "ubl!c In ~NI lor !M_ u Jd Coun"' •nd Fl llST .O.MEIUCAN TITll!' Tt h Ctltl 'ft-Git 80 degr ees, a nd t he locals Sed lak will be s pe nding Uiiin g rope a nd manpow er O•m~ ... v. Ulf sr•te, •Midi.,,,,.,,~ ... dulY com111rn1_.11 1N~URAHCI!" Titust •IM'r111's fl!' C.l•K 1111n
Showe d •• muc h ln l•r cst the Mexicans assisted lhPir Nn11rv ,. .. 1111( -c1111or11!• ""~ ,.....,r11. --·1.., ·-··"" s. tt. cOM,.AHY I Pub11111ee1 o.,"". Cotti 0.1.., "'1.it . "" mos t o f the s u mmer r,;.,,;.,,.1 oi11ce 1~ u111 ..... t ... .wn 10 1111 "' 11o ""' ••r111n llY ALAH A. ICHO)( M•v n. JO '"" J<11'1f! '· IJ, 1'61 t114t In the sport t hat v.·e let one north-of·the-border amigo!'! Or•11q1 countv wf\o·e 111m• b tubsc•Jbt' ro 1111 w;1hrn in· A-.-.;11on1 s.c .. 11"' ------
11 I ' competing in O range in r ightin" the upturned MY c~mm;solflft r: •• 1... l,1,., .. ,.111. ~!Id •rl:n~wk:dold to ml "'"'1 "ubll-~-1 Or•n~• ·c ... s1 OlllV l'ltot, LEGAL NOTICE
re ow give t A tr y. Cou nty. T he 3-A rated "' More~"· 1tn ,.~ •·e~ut"" Ill,........ J ....... 11, 20. 11, 1tt.I tt3·'-',----0 bvious ly a n atura l. he c rafl a nd srcuring it high Publl1f\M Or~flll· co~s! D•llV Pllnj. IN WITNESS WHEREOf. • ~ ..... + ltlSOLUTION 01' TH l Ha\\'3 iian S u rfin g Assn . and dry None lo soon 1·1 Jun•'· 1J. 1a, n, 1~1>1 01411 "e''""'o 1t1 m' 111...i •"" ~u;~"" m~ 111·1 L EGAL NOTICE i o•Ro o rs su11•1 v11011s 0111 stood up on b is flr 11t \\'&\'e. . · · • 11c1ft1 ,.,,1 th•· d1• ... ,. •e•r 1n 11111 oRANOI couNrY. c.1.i.1rro1tfll1.1i
a nd rode r ight In. p erfor mer ho pes to e n M proved. Jioffman 's s h irt. set L EGAL NOTICE cer1111c11• 11,.1 •bo ... w.i11~"" NOT•c• 011 TiusTi i ·s IALI' MlY 1•. ,..,
ter the u p com ing San as·d d · g th · g M•"' '~"'tr" P•u• u1111 l•l'!Cfft °" mo11on "' SuP-ervl'°" &1k1,, d11tv He stood up eviery lime . Cl l 1 e urin e m ovin was su,.l!itto• cou1tT op THI' Nor,,, Public o.. Jul¥ u. 1m, "' 11:00 A.M .. Hcondld •nd c1rr1ee1, 1111 · 1011ow1,,.
T he n he st a rte d d oing c ul· emen e contest. beginning lo float a w ay on t TATI o" cA1..1rso•111A rso111 "'" '""'m1''i.... ·~"1''' 1tEL1Aa1.E T1TLI! coMPIHY 11 dul'r 11tno-N11"" w11 •cloo•M:
the incoming t ide. THI COUNTY OJ' ORANOI l'ubu: l~~= '"'"' D•llv Pllol •DPClllllH TtlJ1~ .,...,., •"" PtJfSUlnl fl! WHEREAS. lt>t•• 11 • """ for • o(tf backs a nd getting locke d H•. A4'111 ·~i o.ed of Tru•I ••tc111.a .., LORR.ltHE L . .noo •I m. °''"" c-1r •1.._.. Tying the last bowline MOT ICI OP HEARING P•TITION Ju ... ,, ll, XI,,,, ltO 11.EIOERT .• l'lll ••led _...n. Tru1tor, T1m1ln•I l11lldl"' ..... Nll Cf I• 1v1ll1bll
In. He was getttni:: so good SU RF FILM B lh h. 1<01t "Ro••TE of' w11..1.. ANo l'OR TIC E 1n t1w.r et LIHCOt..H SAVINGS AHO thlrttor, •"" that the producers w e r e renn a n r e w up IS arm s LITTERS Tl'ITAM•HTARY LEGAL NO LOAN .o.ssoc1•'r10 N. • corno••tlon, •• WHl!lt.EAS, 11!1 D@tl1r1111...t .,,, •••• a nd crashed lo the sandy E1t••• e! c"'itLTON T. IARI EE . 1100 ••11•Ud•rlei, ••corMd Octob.r n , 1t65 111 ,,_,,., St•vk:t's "•• P<ntnffid 11~' thinkin g about h iring him d k h · "Ph O know" os CA ll:LTON lAVLOllt aAR!'IEE, "·JIUJ llook 1'll, P1•e 61. of OfUcl1I Record• I" cover '-!It• d1tetl MIY H, 1'M, I It• ..
on a n d dro pp ing one of us. AT LAG UNA ec -s o u ting : a se ne 11"' knDW" •• CAR L TON IARB EE, c111T1,-1CAT1 Of' a u11Nl!51 '"" ou1ce cf Ill• c1111111Y illteairde• o1 ......... 1 ••ck••• for .. Id •Ill '"°' ••eo is Over." DKPIS•d. l'lctlll1u1 1'1<1'11 N1m1 O•t "'e (<11Jnly, C~lllor11l1. WILL SEl t •tlerrf'd to !Mreln •• P.M. 1111 , lll retl
Someone s ugi.reslr.d put-NOTICE IS MEltEll.Y GIVE N lh•I THE Oto!OEltSIGHEO do h•""" tltlllv AT Pl.Jal.IC .O.UCTIOH TO HIGHEST )I-~. • Two tired gringos b itch -lllL!AH o. 1.0.lt &EE h•• lllH llereln • 11'1•1 ... I• cond11cll11<1 • bo,iof~" ., '"' fl!ODER t'OR '"SH (PIV•blr •I 11 .... of HOW, THEll-EFOR E. BE IT lt ESOLV·
ting som e suntan o il o n his t .. a~una Beach H i II! h hiked b a c k to the bord e'r Htltl"" fo• P<o1>•t1 o1 Will ~"" 1or G"c• Ltr11. c•1•• M•<•· C•l!ln•nl•, ~·I• in 1•w1 .. 1 mon•v o1 1~· un11eci ED 11111 1t1l1 '°''" or 5"Hrv1..,,.. -
V.'8 X and ending 1!1 ft y , . lu11•11c• Oii L•l!tro T1sltm•11!1,.., le ""'l· 11N11• II>• llc!lllOU• Orm """"' ol ~l•!••I •I!"" !tau!h m•ln 111l•811U to ttil• Mrtb'r •1111'0"t ~11d proPCIUI ~1ck•1•, tn-SChOOJ auditor ium ha s and eventually aS!i!Stance. '"'"~'· rrltrel>Ct to Whlcf\ k m•<le ter NDrcMm CAmo•nv ·"" lh•I •• r~ I.rm I• , .. 1 .. 1v C<IU•I ....... 1 .. 11>1 (ii• rl ~•nl• ctuolln• "" term• cl ltlf lf•ll contolnM
fur ther la bor-m a n atem cnl while !hf' friend Iv fishermen •u•th•• 11••1icu1•"· nn11 11t.1 '"" ""'' •'Id com110..., "' th• 1011ow1"" nt"""· -re IA11•, s1e1• or C•N•1W,.r1 "'" rl•"'' 1111o ~"" tt.!"1"·, , ,, •• , ED • ., .,.. dispute~. l)('en hooked as the. Sill? ror . • ll!t Cf ol flet•h>9 Ille 1•"" f\•s ...,,., •r• n•mt !n lull •"II eiftt ef •~ ~--c• II lnt·r-·t t"'""11'C! h """ MW ll•ld bv !I IE I l'URT>I It '"" .. V 1"" or San Felipe struggled to lcr Jul• J "" ., t ·)CI • m "' 1 ..... !11/lows !<>-wit· u ...... ..ikl Oetd "' r .. ,.1 Ill ""' ClrOCl•rlY O•n••fmpnl "' lt••I "rcoerl\I 5'!rvluf bO!
FEB ,7 C I •ne ft'rst Au,tral•'an s1or l · · o.' · · · , .•. ·_ , · w "--10,, , ,, , , c , , 0 , ,, , ~ •uthll•11e.;1 •nd <11rec1...i to mittY 111 . . e~· on • , · • satv~e the expensive plane . «M.1r1room ot P1r1men1 Nn. 1 1)1 1•111 "'"""' •• i....... • •. •l111~1•d ," '""' oun • e. r•n• · • •"' ...,.,.,.,.., who h••• lndlu1et1 •n1111..-n l 111
A G P . 1.1 I be h . th •r d court, 11 tfll H(>(!h !'lrOltdWt~. 111 lf\1 Cltv Newburp~. !11dl1no. C•lllo•n•, ~trlb!!<I I f. Id Ill hoP I H'lf ••Olloled ltlll t oya ana we found 1ng l m o s ow n in e e came d own an low-a1 ~int• An•. ca111 .... n1•. WITHE~s ""' ~e...i !hi• t11h d•' 01 A L!1u~ald '''''' 1" •nd to 1t1e ~ • .J 1 0
some good w aves ... nice lit· United States. e d t at plane eight miles o.,,. J11..., n. 'HI. ...,.,,, 1"•· 1o11nw1r1o 0•11trlbtd •••1 "'OP''''' I E 1t f'UitTMEillt ltESOLVE D 1""' lhl• , ' W. E. ST JOHN. CoUfli'r Clerk ,, It, Wlloon Loi ta tf fr1d Ho. 1101. •t sllow11 "" llriolullOll t1f 1H,1b!l1hfd lllCI 1 wwtr: lot' tie beach with good rights Current wor ld surfing a.round rocky points, up HUltWITJ, HUllWITZ & 1tl!M111: STATE OF IHOIAN• I • m•P rtco•-In !'look si. P•q•• •""' two •ucceu!ve weeli• •~ 1 _.,,per .,,
and lo tsa outasight scenery! champo'on Nat Youn g ,·, h ills b uild in g road s where •• """ 11• couHTV OP WARl lCK 1"' 11 of MIM:•ll•MOUS Mtp., records °'•-••I d•C111111en 11111111 °""""'or • .,.. • ft.we«f lttcll. C•Mf. ON THU 11111 "' o4 M1Y, .... D, '""· a. ..... C6<1f!l'I', ...... •••ctl "' ltrld Cot1I o.u, Pllol Tho !1st '1Jt>Mcotlon ...
But friction is developing feature::! in the film , "The necessary and p o u r I n g T11 ,,,__ btlor• mo, ,,..,... C.llMt~ P•uL • Not•rv btfllt • -"°" "' Loi n or Tr1el l'M . ..,1rtt1 """"' s11911 bt ""' Wu """ ._.
be' th . I I lh ft I to Allw111r1 ftr P•lll~• , PUOWc Ill •rid tor IM uld Cou111\1 •l!cl 1101. 11 lhOwll It! t m•• recordd 111 '"" 110 II• 1 btfcre lhl ••I• fOf rtco-fpl ween e movie peop e Hot Genera tion." seawa e r on e so spo s 1111111111'11<1 0•1r>1• cont 01111' "''°'· s111t, rn1111.,. 111er1111, du.., coottn1u~ ~ JT, 11-1 ' 1nd 10 of •nd cot1•io!'.,11.,. of ..,_i,.. Titt
and the s urlers •• , the. ______________ _:p".a:::c:k_::th:•~m:::_~d:o~w::::o:·-----i·'=-c=.-'="~'~";'c'~·;-'~.;::.-o;-;:;:;;:;;;::-c"c"c..,=['"" ,_,,, ""°""'IY •-'" s. illt. M!1«111"""" Mt••· •1CC1•11• ef pr .... , DlrKtor o1 rtu1 II•-"" s.rv1cn 11 .1 ... . WllSOll known lo 1111 lo bt ''"° •••IOI! Counl\I, 111• Nrctl Nll!t 5olllllfi11l1rt11 iulhorl rf'd l'O m•k• llH:fl further td-
mov1e people w.ant t o film L EGAL NOTICE Wflol• .,.,... 11 wblcrlbed •o 1111 w1tf\1" .i """ 1<111citnl to '"' s.outr.i:Mt•rh' 11"" ,,..11,.,mtnlt ,, '" 111C11 .. ,.,, to 11vt
com in g a nd going seque nces lllt1<ume"'· '"" •dl-1tc111ee1 tft "" ,,..1 .,, Let to 01 .. 111 T•~ct Ho. 110i. ""''' wld• 1""°'"'' to 1111 P•OllOHd 1~11,. 11-JllJlt ~ txecutetl mt ~...... oarlltt.ll~rtv Ol'lcr!beol II tol..,ws: !'IE IT f'UltTHElt. llllESOLVEO lh•I Gii
in r ickshaws or 0)( carts. • . Cl!tTtl'IC.l.T I Of' I USI NISI IH WITNl!SS WMEREOF, 1 f\•v• h•ff'· P.@lllMlll<I II ,,., 1'111111 $r>Ulh~r1v •• c"': Jui. \S. lftll, rt ltlf hollr "' f:llO o'clodl
This w hole picture is g-oing nor Dads on D.ather's day.' ••• J'ICTtTIOUS HAMI 111110 lel mv hlrd •nd 1lllrl'11 ... , nlll· ;;.~ ~:.:tt!d ~io~::I :::·~Cf.!;~.·; ~n~·' p ~·' ,, !ht ~II"' 1118<• nf ""' So•~" I be I b r• ri Tr.e undtrllf"t'd "" cerll!v ... ~·· en ... cl1I ..... 1 •lit <' .,. ,..., ....,,. In 11111 H-rthf-.1.ri. In • •lr•!•M t'"" lo • of krPf .... llorJ of Ill&'"""'" of er ...... II o one grea oost to duel!"" ,. b<lllllHl "' 111, Monr111111 .1.\lr., Ctrtllk•t• 11"' .~""' wrllt•~. """~'· "'"' rt"iim b!'lll• k•"" 11• 1,.., ,,,. .. 1,11 Coull!• Adm1111s1r.11 .... •1111111111. JU
Io ca i transportation in-(i Dads d Id [}a& CMI• M....,, cemornl•, """'' '"" oc·I M,,... co11o-..11 Pwu1 E 1 57 '""' 1<o-,. ,,.. ,..,., EO'St~•,.. t.rr 11h s,c•-111 s1~1. ~"'" •"•· Or young an 0 llllOu• fl•rn ,._ of TIGIEI I AGS •l!d Hol~rv p,.:•1, cl~., of ••lo! lf'l tfl t~•f!C• lr~m :Vici Ctll!..,.1111, Mlllttl .,Olltwk In 11:•11!, will
duslry. If ~'e relied on ox-""''"'I" lirm is ~•rd 111 111, 11:1i1ow I M• c•.,,m -1en ~v•l••t .!f111 N·rth 11• M' w· .,.,. •. , 51 ,,_, """" •ec~l•l!d •1'111' ll>"llld 1W ""c i. k et
carts to get to the surf we'd IM ~·-•· wnoH n~""' 111 11111 .,,., Jutv it. 11t.1 .,,. ""°'' Ettt .... iv ,0.,..,"' ••Ill u • •lh 11111 !'lotrd °' s.."""1"""· '""' '"" •11 1t1th
d d Dads d Dads pl1 c•• et •esldlna 1,. If lollows ' i!lutilll""<I °'"""' C.,.$1 Di lly '°'lot, 11\l'l'l(t Soulhw•s"'rlv •lfoM I II t IO bt dtllvtreCI lo 1111 (ltrll ol !hit &°"rd be fOO ]ate !O Catch the an gran an new ltOI•• !'1r1-r •rid Shlrle¥ Ir•-· Junt '· ll, XI. )I; IUI 111·4'11 ICllJl'"°llfflfr "M Ill ill~ lat ta lo 11\t el Slli!lfr.,1-1 In lt llCIM 5el ol 111ld
SWel\. They're slowe r tha n a lU Amelf\V1!, B1ib<>I h!•nll, C1lllornl1. ot1lnl •llf bl'tl ... nlM , Allmlniltr•llon l ulldlllt.
law d fishing 01letl M•• n. '""· L EGAL NOTICE Wtllcl! ot'ld L~•ttl'ltlld 1E1l1t• Wll S.lll ·-•II lh-lfl N •n•;r:Uld bV ""'
tim e exposure! T l1e next and Dads·m· -an . lt119~r 8r•d ... , Crlllfd br "" M••ltt G•ouncl u..se OIOlrlrnllll of lt .. I p,_ y s. .... 1c11
lh . • h I d Slllrlev &•adftl'r aAR nl 1' ltSt tXeculM IW n.. •NI Ille Dlr.ctor "' A.,l1tton, •n<I •1vl1w-
1ng w e r e SC edu e fo r is Sltlt .,, C1llfHnl1, o ...... Ceu11ty : IN TMI SUl'l l109: COURT Of' TM• 1:...~ tt:;;.....M .• ,· ............. , .... "" ""·,.... Coll""' Adl'lllnlotr1llvt Ofl!c1r
elephant rid es .. , whoa~ Dads and sailing' Dads and °" Mty H, Im , bef<lr1 ""· • Mel1ry IT.I.Tl OJ' CALl,.OI MIA 111 11'10 L CloW i rld Lucl1111 C. Clow, ttusbllld tor -1 tnd r.:OmmtnHtlon It lll!t
NEXT m..:oEK _ I NDIA. ~11bHc rn i nd for l/lld Sl11t ......... 11., POii THI C:OVllfTY OP o•AN•I' """ wfh', " lolllt 1-n11. ,, '""'·tor t!;! ":ttr~-·~-; •1 ,...•c-"11:o ,_,.... R-II• ............ Slll•ho'r Me. A·Sfltl 11!1 ''""of n ., ........ , .... 1 ... M•• IS, IE 1/ ,.Uillt~Elt illtl!sOl.vf:ci 11111 •• -.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,J Dads d • ar.tdntf' --le ..,.. lo bt -H tlOf\J NOTICI OP Al'AltlH• 0" lf5' Ind e11111.W NllY U, 1111, ~ Ml ' .....,,eling • an f'<lmpmg wl'lol• ., • ..,.., '"' oubK,I_ to lttf' Wll'!ll11 lll!l lTION TO ll!ASI ltl!I LTY J11nt lf, ltSt ln I""" O•S, llttt 17 1ff le• .. HdiHf II Ofl f1M With t'lle Cllf• flf UQV' '-""11 lnirtu-.nl 11\d •<k-lecMH lllfr t•• tn '"' M•ll•• Of !Ill IEU•I• el C1rl It °'Oki! ltoeorch !Ills ....... el S-rvlwn •nd tl\IH bl
'
-., • • 0 .. 1v1lllbll "''" .. ' •rid In tfl<I ofllcu "' tn.I
to Tel·Aviv in Israel via
'
.·
I See by Today· s
Wanl Ads
e A beautllUI walnut spine!
piano. Nearly new!
• lbtft'• an 18' custom
built off ahof't Oui8f'I'.
Glul hull. mahopny
deck. l.nadfd wtth e>t'tl'U!
Only one of 1 kind: ?
• C..&r1i*'-dNm1JJHI, trlm-
mln•s, dirt. You Mme it
Bia John ia>tll haul ii! •
• ,,..,_,..., ltlllff! 11 cut,. little
19.'K Ford pick tfP, V8 ena·
IM -Body In Jood lbape.
l'Cll"" ••ml. Jenn1on •I.., ll-•• C1•I R11n•r 111• l!:s~·· l11ltrtll uftd<'f '' d ~ OIPolrlm4tlll al ltt•I Pl'OPlrl'I' S(,.,le•s •I
Dads d b• (OFFICIAL SEAL) khnlOI!, 0.-C,AHd. tut• bftn •Ul•Md lo Ltwl~ H. Qunmlr• an vaca: 0 ltcs,lli' C Know Holle• 1, hfl•e~v ,,,,., lf\•I C. !t•v""""'I l ti. fl o 11mlrt nu•bl"" •"" tU Horlll SvU"""'P. Slretl, S.ln!f A.,., ~nl!•• l'~bl!~ -C•lllo•nl• Jnf\ni•n F.••cuto• nl lh• •~Id l'!liltlr. ~.,1 :..';;', .:Clri"' •~•~II.~.· •n ~t•lo11,,....."t C•lflot11I•, lor IA!l>tCllOll bv l11h11tilt d
D els "•lnc...,_I Olltc1 In flleel h~r~(11 • vtrlUtn oell~o11 ••••l"I '"' le<! Oct<'""' 1! 11MJ •II~ "'""'·~ 1"'11"'· '"' ""tv v1r1tbl• l•cl(lr '""f(f and b,..,,.,.;,.,g a o ...... ~ Ceur.!'r •II o•6er '":tl'rlrlM Ille lt••lftll ~I •h· dA II" u "'; 1n ...... '"°· ll•o• IO ,bld will~ 11\t brmu• If w oAld,. "'' lJQUJ J Mv (em"'l"k'l!I E••l••J •r•I O•l•lo •~ol••f"'• .... ,,,..,1 •1'1111 lllll N•v.,.... ' ' 0 • (ou11tv ol Ort n!!t bv !ft' 1uccr•~fol .,, .. J ty 1 1%1 ·-..... JI~ ... ()tl!rt~I KCI' •. IOlt•. ~ltcllOfl mtY •IVl,lw bi5" 111111rt
and hlking.• Dads llutlf!1.::.C, 0.~11t• '""'' 0•111' J\ll• jttl, lO.,, /I t :Ji:t A.M .. "' 1"~ 111' If\• lea•,~'J lnl~r:lt .:::::!~.,",,',0'..,•"~ -IN ltn1111d•I 1b!Ml\I 11\11 ""''lfnc.t
•
'
l )Cl ""J "' IJ 11161 = :'lt'IOI' '""" "' ""' Sl•I• ol (111!111tnl1. "' ....... tl'lfl•d """ ,_, .,.-en .... ol ,,,. ·-... llOl'lfl.ld1"9 "''' """" rtf I V ' • """ • •1'111' 'or tllt COll(llV of Or1110• Oe••rl"""I L ...... lllle L. B•tl.dftl .• I'll•"""' -11· butlfl9', t hl• ..... 9' S4IH1Ytw•
LEGAL NOTIC E 1 tt\freol. l/"_11lht'I •lllli'OlfltM •t !ht """ bV 1n •ult-' tee~ tefl(Vll'lfll.., rftlfY.ll lllt '"'"' to '•lltt •nv t nd •II
d if 're -Olt<t -~ el "'Id Hllllen, lltrtwllll. bldl I ncl to wtttw:frtw i11t _,,, "'-an you 1--------------1""""' Incl wllrr• l ftV .... _ l111tt11led "' Slid Mlt wltl "' mlOt. but "'"'°"" lllH. ••• ll·MJU 11!1 .. ld e1f1ll l'lllV lf)Htr •l!d eb!ICI ,. '°"-"'bf -rr•"""· Ill-•.,. 1m11n11t1. AYl!S: SU,.illtVISOJt'S OAVIO L. 11~ Cl'lTtflllCAfli OP IUSINlll 11111r..-.tl"' fJf u kl "llllOll. !tfl nlllll 1111•, IOUIUlon• Of .,.. IAKI!•, ALTOM I!. ALLIEH. WM, a Dad we f' l'ICTITIOUS JIAMI Rt l•""« It htrt bV mltlt Ill lllf u kl tumbt•llCfl, to ''' t'lle obH11t1or" Hlll;STEIN ,,,. WILLIAM J,
••• • Tiit u"""1ltllld dolt e.ttllfV lie 11 COii-HlltlM fll" lll•lhor H •llcuJ1r1 11 It !ht slC'llftld 1W 11ld Oetd <if Trvd , fHs, llHILLlllS.
llu<fl!lt 1 lluflMH 1t ,.,. lllkefltll, "'""' t M tOl'lfln-tf 11!1 ~......i dll"" •nd •--... ~ .. -T:"o':.. ·~ MOES: IUllE•VISOltS NONI
Old Crowlfaveler
for Dads going places
C•l1 MtH, C.ll!Ot11!1, Ulllltr !flt lk • llnl. of -~ ~ 11 AISl!NT: SUtl'EllVl$0•s C. M. llflwl 11111'1 -el MAJOlllWAY S1ld rH I 111111 II Jlll/lted Ill 1111 Ceul!-Trvtl, "fATHfilltLY. T•AILEll MANU,-A(TUl lNG •llCI lhll ... flf 1..91 MHIH. Shilt II Ct llfll'ftlf, 111111 ""' I Hlf'!lelt,., ~~\IW ftl~: ITATl 0 " CALl,O•NIA J 1•
111d fltm Is _,_. " tl'lf fe!llNIM b dttcrlbet •tel~ to.wit: Tru11, IY"'"""'" 1 .. _...." 111 COO NTY Oft O•AHGI I
--· ....... MIN If\ fUH 1N 111K1 Of iAI n,. llul1411!f ll'ld lot loc1!M 11 "" eblltllillrY -" ... t h:.,',••;.; I, W. I!. ST JQtlH, c.vnty Clon. 11111 -rltl"'"<• 11 11,.hlllll'wt; in1 Wnt J'llt-....C. Av-. IAI llll'ofllhlr• UIClllM tflll '""' • 9'llctll Oltt el ti. llolrd cit ..,..!Yfle<t 11111~0 •lllfloltitr, '" 1fltl lllo<t, A ... ,,i... C1lllotf111. 1'111111'1 M rtlcu .. rll' lllllltnl"'" • "'''""' ,.°", 11:,:1*\..;! llf O.•-c-rty. C.NtOt~. f1tr9bY
CMI. Mllf, Ctllft'lll•• llnulllt.d t t fo~! Thi -I U !wt Dehll!t •nd °'""'"' tor ' 1 Wf ct<tl"' !Mt mt 1ti.ov. •nd ~1111 O•l;d Ml•,,. !'Nil of Lot I l locll ' ot trld 1n~. CO\lft!Y 91 Not!Cf el Ootl•lllt •rid -' tlfCllOll te lnelllflcto w•1 duly •rid r111111l•1lv ldo91M
Pl'lllltl lt•"':l•be< LOJ A11<1e1t1. Sl•lf er C•Htarnl•. 1 e•<1w .,.. Utlde•~ltlltd ta 1111 111d •r~ tw ""' wild ao.r• 11 , '""'"'" -11 ...
Sl•ll er C•ntMnl~. O•A..,.. (OU11h-: CIJ ""' rttM "° WI "" ~ .... 1 ... ' ·~·~ ~llV le ltlbfv .. Id lltll!t•llOM ~· bffll I tMrtol hlld on ""' Utt> O•Y of Ml'r .......
On M•Y 7', '"'· bnt(r• ,..., • Ho,,rv lnc•lt<I on ltHl 11i 1 tJ teef el let f , .. _....,..,. 11111 """' '""" lllret ""'"1"' •1111 ••IHd IN • vN11t-111 voi. .. wild ll~f\11<: 111 """ to• 1•td 51•••· ll'IMl<loli... allld< J of Tri(! 1n1. ,. • .,. •l•iJ!otd ,1nct re<orrwt!IDll. '"""'d """"'"'" 1ff'1tl'11!. •Wllttd 1111111• ltl!llllll.,,.. kl!llWn M II'• D•lf)Oj JllM II, 1m e>ott; Jl"'ll I, ltfl. IN WITNESS WH!!tl!:OI<, t ......
lo bt lho .,......,. wllm• .,...,.. k 'llbtcrl!J· W E. ST JOHii RELIA&LE fllLE COMllAl'IY ,.,,..,,,.., ttl 1111 l\tlllf °"" 1111 llll• U••
..,, lo "'°' wllf\lft 11111.-i •nd '°""""' (lotrt: Ind Cler-rl Olld fN1tet ' .. y If Mlr, IMI. tc•i-~ M t•t<uled 1111 -OI l.lloil $Wtrlo! '""'' &v L1"' W1~ro tll:.&LI (01<,-ICl l L SIEAL l IY lll Y ,tu·-1111 0.IVIY AMlollfll $Kt1!..., W, IE. ST JOHN
Jtill.NI! E. 01¥1t "'911l1Jkl, l •t"IY •rid ,_,.,.... 4"1-T C-"' (lot1t .tfllll ••«flcft
Not•"' llUOllt . C11J1.,.,,11 Sulll ... C:tfll1-'•' 1w.. 11..-M.,,,. °'•"" CMtl 0111¥ P\ltl, c111n. or !flt klnl "
"rlnclNI Oflkt I~ .... ~-''·· NM u ... JI, ,,.. 111Mf '-""~ "' er..,.. c-w. Ot-1119• C-1\1 u. ........ c:........ ..... C.lltel'N•
"'' teml'>lftlClll EDI•.. T•h 1.11u .,...,., K'icla L'ik• to ,., M*• l . '-'"'~ Dlflltv J"'lt ,1. lt,. ... ..,. .., ._... ...................
,111111111111 Oronet' C"&ol,t C•I"' J11lnt. ~1""9 Or.11101 C.d l •I"' llllef, Jlullll""" °"""" '""'' D•tl¥ "1ltl. --------------·M-'-'•'--'-·-•_•_,._,_ __ ._ .. _, ... ___ N_~_•_,Jl.tllt 11. ,,, 1t. ,,.. ~ '"..., • Aik 'Andy ' ~ )\Ml" u. '"' ~ .,,...
• __ ,__ __ ,.._
'
' ------------·----~-~r~•-• -. -. ' .. '
.ff DAILY Pfl.OT
-McConnell·
.AP Pointed
i,..Treasure_r.
Wayne E. McCoMell Jr.
bu been ap~olotea
traasurer o t Runti.ngtOn
Savings and Loan Aasocia· ' ' . . tlon, P-re&.ident Robert L.
Lynch an:nol1llced.
, FOr the past seven years
: McCOMell was a supervta-
,.ing senior accoiµitant ln the
J.04 ~ngeles offices ot Peat. ~ Marwi~k. Mitchell & eo., a
n.etiofial certilied public ac-
coun'6ng firm . '
lie· will serve as controller
; of 4.hc 'association, .Working
.. in Lhe headquarters office in
HuAiin&ton P a r k and
cOQrdinating the activities of
.:the as,ooJ.ation's other of-
._fjc~s .in Bell-Maywood, Cos-
,1• Mtsa, Studio City, Soutb
Gab<; and Wllshire-Higblaod
. ·-... • •
')"Olar Mon~s Wol'lh , . . ' . '• . . ...... ,
Co ng ress Share
' . .
""! t ---· ...... 4-~
Pre sident, . ' . Blame for.D~m·~l. t (l~S aga . ' •. tt• \:<,i ,, ( .\' ' ..
•
By ~YLVIA )'ORTER
' . . N"l' ,!hi.I 1he . Income •urtn Oo'1jy ,Ji becomhlg
law the ' House o t ,
Rej:>tesentatlvet. Ls e.itpecled
to a,eprove. it next week -
ti>~ d>;y .cfo.r.. Judgment hAI
COtrie. \ r I . ~ ••
(I) This !µis bee~ am,qqg
the .mo~t diSgraceful (itrCa\
perform.anceS in · mOOei:n
U.S. eCotiom!c liistOi'y, with ~ White House a n,d
Cohgre"' sharltig the blame.
WE RAVE , tho clur.
thr,at oi a lite 1968-early
1969 economic I e t d 0 w n
brought about · by a credit
squeeze wb.lch mJ&ht ncvet
have developed had 1axes
.been increased in time.
An:t now on tcip of au this .
we get the tax.Jncreai;es, •t
la.st ! ·.
If this is ''fine tuning" the
economy via the N e w
~cooomics, even a .con-
vinced supporter 'of · the
. theory m .a y be · un•
~ d erstanda~ly .. disillusioned'.
and di6heartened. .
vestment locent.lves. should
be kept' Whefe tliey are;
Federal .spendini &hould be
curbed : ~it should be
made more: expensive -and
less aVailable ; ,a balanced
budge( •h®kt ·be a goal.
' THIS IS ·a ration.al
ecoriomjc p o ·i i c y . Fun·
•dameritally. an it· says is
that .we JhoU.ld ·t'.ry to U$e our
heads to -Control o u r
economic desflny .
Tbe New EconomJ c s
WQrked ;m~gnifk:eri~y whe~
ttie aim_ w~ 1timW.tion. In
"
"'areas.·
. LEGAL NOTICE I
(2) THE TIMING or .ilie
tax incr;eases.. a full 21,i
yeari after *Pey ·should have '
been voted, an astou:nmd&
l !,ft : years after .Pr.eSJdeht
,rohnson actually requested
them and a ··shocking lQ
mOnths after the President
began to tight for them -
has seriously undermined
the value of the "New
Economics." If it takes this
long to put on restraints
when they have been so ob-
viously. Called for, th~ theory
can;t work. Excellent.a!" tb.e
theory is on Paper-, hunian
failure destroys it in Pric. ,
iice. '
• Tbe New Economics,_ I
su)>mit as I haYe •ub~itted 41' alo,ng, · ~Akes _baslC
sense. is s~ple atid iti,
theory superbly workable.
In essence , it holds ;
fact~ ~!th' ~~ inco~e tax ----.,-'-------+--------'--
(•lllTll'ICAT• 0, SUSUCISS
l'ICTITIOUS NAMI
'Thi l/l'ldefiltnecl don ctrlllV I 1m con-dvcTlflt 1 blislneu 11 11lf Pomon1 Slreel,
(!'411 MeM, CJ ll!M'nll , 1,1fldti !ht llC·
tllio11s lfrm N ,...f of MAR ll;ANE CO. 1"4
lh~l uld 11..,, It comciosed of the follow·
l"'il Pf'f"5Qll, whose ,.."'e In tv!I 1nd piece ot m 'cltnce Is 11 lo!lows:
' Wltll•lf' E. ll:1MY, UIOf &10-. U
Mlr101, C..lltor1>!1,
D1t..r: June 13, 1'61. w1m1m E. 11.1.,.v _
Stile of C1llfornl1, Or1"'1 C-tv: On J~ tJ, '!ML beto,.. ,,,.. • Nolarv
Publlc' Ill Ind! tor Alcl $Ille·, Hrlollt\lllf ·-·~·Wllll•m E., 11.1....,. 1r.l'OWft tom•
1o bi fftt --.mo. nalfle 11 1ut..crll> lld lo • Ille wllllln l"5trum.m 1f'lcl
Kknowte<lrted hi ex-culld 1111 lllfle.
!OFFICIAL SEAL)
JalolPfl E. Devis Not1rv Pu!1H...C1lllornl1
PrlrKl"1 Office !n
Dranoe County ,
Mf CommlulOll EKPlrtt
;' . JUM J1 , lf70 fullftlhed , 0.-111111 COid Daltv ,-11ot,
J1111t 12.' 2(1, t7 •!Id July 4, 1ta lc.JWI.
"LEGAL NOTICE
-•' ........
C111Tl,ICAT• 01" lUllJillSS
l"ICTITIOUI NAMl
T/lfo \lllC!erlllnecl does certlfv hit Is con·
cluct!nt I Dl.lslne.S 11 114 W. ''"' Stl'ftl. '°''' Men, c1111om11. under '"-fie-, llllOU1 firm Mme of Sll>w•n and 1111!
,.1c1 """ !1 <:orn!Ml$N °' ftll totlOwlllll ,.e._, Wl>oM n11M 111 full 11111 Pl1ee of
tHl<lenct I• II fO!lows:
J1mes A:. Hool, 411\li 31th Slrttl.
Newoort Be1ch,
• Da!o:d: J\IM 11, 1"8.. Jamts It. Hook St~te ol C11ffornl1. O•tl'llle County: · 1 o., Mtlf n , lMI!, before ,,,., 1 Nott..,.
Pubtlc In 11111 for 111111 Sl.te. P1:1'10n1llv
-~ired Jtinn It. Hook kMWll to IM to llt f!\t l!e•son ~ ntme Is suti.crlbed
,. ftll Wlthl" lnttrument 1nd 1ck._IDlll9-
f!d ~ 1J1ttUted 111e 11me.
!OFFICIAL SEALJ
lt0$lllll C:. ICncn:
Not11"f' Publlc..C1tlfomf1
Prlnc:IPll Offlu In
Dr1ntl CouMY
My C:Omrnlu ltn E1tPlre1
J\llV 1. "lt68
l'ubflllioed Or•-COii! D•llY Pllol,
Ju.,. 11, 20, 21 1nd Jutv (, lt61 10114
LEGAL NOTICE
(allTl,-ICATE o,-BUllNESl
FICTITIOUS NAME
''TM 11ndenl11ned oa certlfV they •re
q,1w:111c:11ne ·1 bo.ltlntU •I 3006 Ne-rl 1Jlvd .• fiewllOtt Be1d'I. C1lllorril1. un.:ltr
lllt 'l<lkm l!rm ft~ ot c;EllMAN
AUTOS 1nd tNI •llcl firm II comoosecl ol
the IOllOWlne Pl•toM, """°'' n1n'llM. In 11111 •!Id P1tcfl of l'fl!ct&nct 1r1 I) tollDwi:
C:ltut Abel. 9'71 CtlefldUll ,
Wulml11tt.r. C..ll1Wnl1
Tllto Vin ll"9en. IOlll W61111y AVfflllC.o API. No. A, We1lrnl111ter,
C1ll!Ornl1
D17"' Ju.._ 12, lHI 9fiU'1 AMI
, Ttieo V111 Ll1111ero
State t1f C:1111on111, Ortnt e COUnfY:
On JUM 12, 1"4, bo!Ore mt, I Not1ry
f .ullltc 11' Ind for Hid Sitt.. Hrsontl"'
IPi>tlrtd Cltvs Abel and Theo VII' Lll!Pft
kl'lllWn to me to be Ille i>e.--...tllllt
ftlmet are subtcrlbtd hi the wllhlft 1,..
11rvrnl'l'll •nd 1dcnowled11ed llwt' e1tecu!t>cl
"'-umt.
tOP:FICIAL SEAL)
Orrr>aft V. Utt .
Noltfll Puttllc·Cal!torn!1
Prlt1clPtl Office 1n
DrlMI COllnlY
My CommlHfQll E-•l•ll Mtlrcft 17, ltl1
Publlsllld 0..tnet C:111sl DlllY PllDl,
Jutie 13, 20. 27 •"" Jub (, 19'1 Htll-"
1.EGAL NOTICE
(3) ay delayillg the tax
boosU so long, you and t are
ending up with a nightmare
combination of conditions-.
We have tht . price-wage
spital which a timely tax su,rch~gi was . supposed . to :
prevent. We have the brutal -
credil 1'squeeze. w~ich pro._,
perly timed ta~ hikes-were
supj)osed to , m a k e un-
necessary. 'We have. the
dangerous deficits in our
domestic: b u d g e t and
balance of payments wbic:h
tax increases Were S1lpposed
to moderate.
WHEN THE economy is
sluggish, unemployment is
rising and profits are slip-
pi n g , f i s cal-monetary
policies should be gear1!d
wward stimulating activity: ·
Specifically, income tax~!
should be cut; investment
incentives shOuld . be en;
couraged: Federal Govern·
ment spending should be ex·
panded; credit shOUld be
made inexpensive and readi·
ly available: a major budget
deficit should be acceptCd.
When the economy
responds and pefks up1 fiscal-monetary p Q 1 l c .j e s
should be mbderated . to ,
maintain a balance;d growth. ,
When the pace of growth
becomes. too rapid and -in·
flationary, fiscal-monetary
policies should be ·geared
toward restraining activlty.
Specifically, inco mt. taxes
should be raised; at most in·
Non-trading Day s Give
Clerks Rest They Need
NEW YORK (AP) -WaD William Cordo, a partner in
Street paused to catch its Eastman Dillon, U n i o n
breath Wednesday as the Securities & Co. "Simply
because they'll eliminate ad-major stock ex ch. an g es ditional paperwork.'!
halted trading in ail.. erfOl't t9 "They'll be pai;tic.UlaJ;I)'.
help membtr tirmS ell~ 'out helpful from the standJl:Clint .
trom 'the ' inoul'!taln ! ·Of· of 'getting those 'n1.·i1LO?
paperwork in their .back of-things done th&t were pllsh·
fices. ed aside when the staff was
"These days off , will too busy," said a·spokesrilan
help,'' said Ira S t arr , for Merrill Lynch Pierce
associate office manager of Fenner & Smith, Inc:. "Now
H. Hentz & Co. "Our people they'll have the time to take
are hurting. They're tired. care of them ."
We have clerks putting in as The heavy volume pro-
many as 85 to 90 hours a b!ems led the major ex.
week With the li.ve:rJ1ge changes to shorten a
overtime running at 30 number of trading days by
hours a week. How long can an hour and a half late last·
they keep this up ?" year and again early this
The stock exchanges and year. There a r e ap-
t he over-the-counter market proximately 1,000 brokerage
decided to shut do w n hou ses in New York.
Wednesday, June 19 and 26 "Those short days put a
and July 5 to help ease tile damper on things," Starr
paper avalanche resulting said, but added that s.ibce
NOTICE or~.wNTION TO from record trading. April 1, the first trading day
c a 1ATl s1 cua 1TY INT•••sT "The nontrading days will announcement of a Vietnam (he. l 111 -6117 U.C.C.) I .. 'd
HoT1cE 11 tier.tiY 111v1n to "" be or defJnite va ue, sai after Presid8nt Johnsott's
C:rwdlton °' Vl!RLE D. OHLSEN, Dt&-1·-----------o;;;, t' l . VI to torri >, wllo$e tiu11""1 1ddrfl' 1s 111311 announcemen o t. e am
Jt•vmo"" w1.,, A~11111m. Covtitv or w,-l1t!OUs1. oun.1T bombing pause. ' ' i h fn & s
Orlt1ll, stite of C•lllOl"nl l , 11111 I 11curf· ITURE Im "' lnftr.,f Is •bout lo be cre11M IW Deb· FURN have been going at a ost
ttor tnd f'I~ lo DORIN Sl!l.VICE heij bJ ( " CORPD1t.r.TIDN. Securt'd P1rtv, wl'lose 111• un eva e ra es .
M1~n •ddreu ll 3n1 Newo>0rt '""'" CARPET Transac:tionll on the New :c~~1;~· cou~tv "' or,,,.e, St••• York Stock E x c }I a n g e r~e Pt<>t>ertv 1~ wt.1c11 111e s.ec11r11v 1,.. 8ff SOFAS $169. soared to a daily average of -..est w111 be ctMled Is. In • •11b'll•r.t111
ioortiot1 o1 ll'lf eoi11111m1nt, °' D•bhlr It ... sut. 14 million shares in April t~ver1111 o•eo,rtv -1oee1.ci ,, )111 F.ORTREL CARPE•·ING and May from 10.08 inillion NewPOl"I l !"td., Nt""'°rt lelth Ind I'
.kJll..eu ~-., 00r1n Servlc• CO•fl0!'1• S 95 for all of 1967, Volume ·on ,'1~ 1hlrfft1tt 11KUrltv ~•111K1loll w111 .... t .tl • . . the American Stock EX·
tie C011tumm1tt'd on or '"" '"" ht cl•., J J K·~1CKIRBOC""" · ·he g bed a daily .,. J~IY 1Ht, 11 1~:ot A,M. 11 ,,,. •• • :n 11\S« c n e reac
<11>11e"'*"' 811111;. 1o:is E. Dr111111"'°'"' 4001 lllCH ST .. if.I"· average of about 6.S million,.
""•Mlm 111 lntllllmtfltt. '"'.._. '''""" a MlcArllw) 1..: April and 8.14 million In So 11r •• kl'lllWn to t111 kcurtd P1r1V. S45.a40t .1.11
;! '::" ;";! ~.:~=-1t~:r 'i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiii;.M~ay~.iiiiiiiiiiiimiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiii l!'''Ohlslf>.Phlrll Com"""' llll I.iv-[
mOllcl W1r, A,..Ml1t1. Or11111 County.
Gll!forn\1.
DATED: June 5. 1'61, I SecurM Ptrtv
00 11.IN SERI/ICE C011.POl.AT10N
I Y: ermt M. c ....
tY: J•ek 8. Dolton
°Tl'lf lf!Cfr""°""t &Ink
iois r . ~""tt"'°'" Allthflm. C:tllll'>rnl• l•cr-' Ne. ll»-H • .,.,,,,ltMd °'"'"*' C11111 0111... l'11e1. Jlll)t ,,. 1961 lo:!Mli
• " ••
LEGAL NOTICE
LEISURE· RECREATION
INDUSTRY ...
PLAY ~ND PROFIT
Today Pleasure Trav~I. and Recreati on is th e.
tlli~d largest indostry ·in our country1,Today's.
ma rket represents $60.Bill ion and is expected
to reach $90 Billion by. 1972. The impressive
growth trend is encouraged by shorter work
weeks, lengthened vacation periods and an
increase in the sports .active population .
Write for your complimentary copy of our
latest issue of "Investor's Digest" and·learn of
the many attractive investment opportunities
in the leisure·recreation industry.
LESTER. RYCNS & Cc.
-1rUI I• C... Hipwff ~ °" Mlt, Cl' .... ~:11.M3IO
fjl[Mltlts N[VI' v61111 STOClt t llCM#.HG( "•~·"'-te•tl Site• [qJ,.nt• • "'"'""c•n Siert t.,~•~I•
N1m~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Addma; __________ _
cuu of 1964,, we cai:ne close
to euniinaiinr the g a p bet~een Our perJ~rmance
and potentilil. But the Vi1!t·
nam war escalation starti)lg
in mid;J96,'; pushed our
economy from balarlced to
unbalanc_ed prosperity, gave
us the a~detl problems of a
Lawmakers to Limit
Mutual Fund Charges
WASHINGTOJ'I (UPI) -
prict-w.age· h inf 1 a t ion. The ·Senate : Banking . Com-
danger.ous '4omestic a n d mittee · reported tentative
balance of pay-men ts agreement Wednesday . on
defiCits, •oaring interest provisions to put a ceiling on rates, s k i I J e d labor shortages. charges made by mutua l
As far back as early 1966, fund operators.
a tax increase and curbs on Oiairman John Sparkman
non-war spe~g were call• (D·Ala.) told...-newsmen the ed for, But 1t was an elec":" . .
ti on year · . aqc:t fresident , cof11_m1~tee . reached al:!'ee-
Johnso.n· hesitated; Thi s ment on two major aapec:ts
gaVe the wage-price spiral a ~f an administration bill to
heai:lstart while the Federal impose new controls on th·e
Reserve tried to combat it growing niutual funds in~
via tight money, dustry. He 'said be lioped the
JN JANUARY, 19 6 7 ,
Johnson finally did .request
a surtax. But now Congress
responded with contemptu·
ous indifference. Inflation
got a firmer hold while the
credit squee;e was compell-
ing a slowdown.
lri Au111st, 1967, Johnson
became fully awaJ,"e of how
seribus the sit1,1atioo was
and he began to fight hard.
But this time Congress
countered with demands far
spending c:uts first and the
buckpassing game g o t
worse and worse until the
br e a.kt h rougll with a pa~~age; of , a. 10 . percen~
surt~· and. $6 biijjon of
Spending outs .·_· -4 . so in June, 1968, on top of ·
a spiraling cost of living and
wage inflation, historically
higb interest rates and a
weakened dollar, we get the
tax-spending restraint&.
EVEN TODAY, while it's.
coriu;nittee would approve
the entire bill next week.
Approved was a provision
that would limit a fund from
still being written, the saga Broker Named
of 1968's . tai legislation
seems almost Wlbelievable. Galloway M. Cheston
Years from now, students of Fullerton has been
will conclitde this c:ould not appointed registered
have happened in th e representative for the
world's ireatest financial Newport Beach oUice
power and we must have of Good.body and Co. .been kidding. -=..:..:.=.:::... ___ _
Doctors Rap Johnson
On :Fees Projection .
SAN .FRANCISCO -The
California Medical As&ocia-
tion has taken is sue with
President Johnson's charge
in hii health message to
C9n~ss that pbysicl'ans'
fees will increase 180 per.
cerit during the 10-year
Period 1~75;
An edit6rjal'in the current
(June) issue of California
Medicine,. CMA's official
scientific ·journal, c:alls the
P.r es i dent'S projections
"truly lnqr~ble." .
The. doctors feel that
the government statisticians
ulif4irly, added anticipated
increases In the use of
medieal services to an ex-
pected increase in the prices
for these ttrvices.
"'While it is expected that
prices for phy s 1c.ian s
services -that is, fees -
will rlse in response to in·
creases in the c:ost of living,
infliti:On and Other factors ,
the· predicted greater use of
those ser\:i.cei ought not be
considered a factor s.o far a:s
fees are concerned," the
editorial pointed out.
"The total cost for in·
creased amounts oI services
is, one thing, fees f'.{uite
another. Incredible as it
may be, that part Of the
President'& message seems trulf incre<lible," the doc~
tors concluded.
•
\
HAVE. WHEELi
WILL TRAVEL ...
With Hulual'a 'll'RICE Vacallon Atlu
a>d Guld• Book. Pict up your
oopy~.
MUTUAL SAVINGS .... ~·· ....... .,, ......
, 2867 'E1stCout Highway • ColONA D1L MAa, Ctli (,9262~
Hydrofoil
Gunboats
Face Duel
•
'P~ ·1'owet.
SOLID STATE
GARAGE DOOR
OPENER
• f-urty t .. rMttreef fOf Me ....
• Ata yow Pr't9efrt Oii,.._ ·-Sl'fCIAL THIS Will 0111 YI
SEE US LASTi
We'll beat any
discount houM price.
.. -. t
' ,. A . ~ '
C~'-~~~~~~~~~ Ttlcphon•61l·l010 -""" ........ INITAL&.AlfOH AYAILAILI
state., Zip Codt ~ • .._Jlil. COUll:ADO ti.WV.•~ UC.tr. t ll" 642·14+0
1651 PLACENTIA, C.M. . ' ~
--
'
•
..
I
\
,
5
' f : : ' ' ' I ' : ' ' ~ ' l l
• '
• •!I
DAILY PILOT I Z
'fhursday's Closing Exchang~ Lisi Prices ~ · .Comp.lete t
, I • New York Stock
•
~eric~n Stock Exch~ge Closing
-----~ ---_ _._ -----------~---.. --..... --------·----~
·r
I
,~
'8RIG!IT IDEA -Marlo Thomas finds out her
bright idea wasn't so great after all on HThat Girl,"
tonteht in color at 9 an Channel 7. Marlo's ~ecision
to have her boyfriend's 111other S!"'nd the weekend
.._with her as a bouseguest, turns her ~omance to ne,r
-disaster when Ula nosy woman arrives.
-TELEVISION VIEWS
Black America
Shown Clearly
By RICK DU BROW
'IOLLYWOOD (UPI) -"Black Journal," •
significant monthly series dealing with news and
cultural happenings in America's Neg1o ... commun-
ity,.had it debut Wednesday night on NatiDnal Edu·
cational TeJevision.
It was· the first arrival of three network series
this summer that will examine Negro life in the
United States and the racial isiue. The others arc
"Time for Americans," which debuts on ABC. TV
June 27, and "Of Black America," which begins on
CBS-TV July 2.
THE HOUR-LONG "Black Journal," broad-
cast coast-tCH:Oast by NET, aims at providing
"'Negroes and whites with a continuing view of what
is going on in Black America, from politics to busi·
ness and from education to the arts." The produc-
·tion staff is integrated, the reporters on the pre--
miere :were Negro, and so was the very good air
chorman, Lou House.
And aside from an excruciatingly poor satirical
sketch that ended the program -about several
whi te television executives discussing how lo use
Negroes on the borne screen -the debut was solid.
even impressive, with a feeling of film and cine-
matic emotion as well as content. The final sketch
....-the only showbiz in the hour -was based on a
fine idea by Godfrey Cam-bridge, but was executed
in a heavyhanded manner.
THE REMAINDER of the program was sharp-
Jy edited by Lou Potter, a Howard University grad-
uate. With A H. Perlmutter as executive producer.
-it got off to a strong start, showing the widow of
!rtartin Luther Kin~, an impressive speaker in her
own right, addressing Harvard's graduating class,
and mentioning the "reflection of the violence our
media celebrate."
There then followed informal discussions among
paduating Negroes at Harvard, and also at More-
bolue college in Atlanta.
And some of the heated difierences of views
emphasized lhe good that television might have
dime over the years in showing Negro America the
11'3y ii is beginning to now. For what we bad
Wednesday night was, simply, people, not stereo-
type<. People wbo differed the way all of us do .
And one thought of how much television could have
destroyed stereotypes, and with it fear.
THE WEDNESDAY broadcast also offered a
brief rundo"'D on the black press. And there was a
~rt on the poor people's campaign in Washing-
ton, D.C., as well as a fascinating segment about
a fashion line called "New Breed" clothes. This is
a firm that features the African look, gets involv-
ed in Negro affairs and, in fact, was partly financed
by the sale of stock to the black community. There
were also sequences about Negroes in the news,
the Black. Panther party and a Neg_ro jockey.
IC there was one curious aspect, it was that
"Black Journal" -just like most television -
seemed preoccupied chiefly with glamorous, af-
fluent or big name Negroes. One hopes, however,
that this is one place where the situations of more
ordinary blacks will be brought into· focus.
Dennis the Menace
I " " I "'
~
• ~ -
••
• • C)
-I I
JUDGE PARKER.
I CJ.NT! I TOl.9 111'1
IAOlllER I'M VISITING wrrn rAN~S FAMILY!
MOON MULLINS
~ 1. , . • 1
' .
" •
' I I
I : ~
'AISS PEACH
' '
WHAT YOU
DOIN' UP
TllERE?
EIU1llllG
A BRIEF
MOMENT
Of PEACE
AN'
SOLITUDE
' 1 ..
THE ~U~ET IS ONE
OF THE MOST
WONDERFUL-
~~WltAL
PHEN OlllEJJONS
THERE IS ...
By Ken Bald
By Harold Le Doux
YES! IWll'Y THINKS HI!>
AATHEl CAN 6Ef ME A.10!
FOR THE 511a.\MER' WITH T'ME
THEi\TH 6ROUI' 1HERE!
Iv Ferd Johnson
WHATS VER HUl\l\Y?
... ' , .
' ) ' . I ' . • • ' I
""-.t " 't ' •
I '
By Al Smith
!!EFOREHE WENT
DIDHE SAY ~ING AeollT
~:~:WED•
By Mell
EITHER. THAT;·
0$1. IT'S SOME lllND OF
AOVE12.TISiNG-
SWNT ••
I
f
1-1) ·' i
. By Frank Bolla
GERTAINLY ••• YOU'~ 8EN,THe
')(lUt.16 No..AN 1 Sl.WIPEO INTO
IN lHli HALL 1HE OTHER PQ'I
• •
THUR )C/•Y
JUN[ 1S
I \ 1 ri I•, (
' --
'
' • Ill ._ • ~ °"""' I
l:IO D ID (J) 1.-ttl llOl '.'G/4
111 t11t Nlllrt." Mull'd 1114 Ml-',
by two u11lcltntffltd m111 1ft« •
ihtt with lllnpr E11!11t Morulf
(SU1111 St. Jamtt), dtlct!Yt s,t.
Ed Bto'llll (Don G1How.Y, trltt te
~p111n to Chief lrould• thal Elaine
l:GO. "" '" ...... (C) (60) Jtff'/ WU not rtaPOnalbli. {R) '
Dunphy. . Q iDl (J) ........ , (C) !!Ill
Cl Hlldllf·lrlMllJ """' (C) (60) ''Blr411l loaJu and Baxt1r," S.,
Q .... AISll S11w. (C) (90) rn.1ntha flndl tfllt Mii I wttdi
01111 .Iona. Ot)'toft Alltll, Letll can btcom1 1 Soll "\dow. S.m1n-
Mb1.1lu ind Vlt CalSil' 1111111. Jonu tlta Iliff lt1r pow1rt to h1tp 011r\1
playt 1 cornmtR!at inno1.1nctr ·who lmprov1 1111 aoJI 11m1 ind the
lnvltas JOUlll mtn to 111 f11tndl7 1111H worU too wtM, (R)
CaMdl, on I OM·WIJ tlektt. SIM m Miff lrltt!R (C) (90)
1nd Dayton do 1 111wa docurn1nt117 Q) 1°"111 Klncl (C) (30)
on thl Mltcilvt llrtlc1. flD Off·l1111p: "'Dot PtiChlttrltL •
D Ill O'Clttll Mcwl•: "W1tdl H. Frtd Klmb1H, Who cl1lms to ""'
Sailor!" (com•dy) '61-John Mill· 1nlm1I( mlndl Ulks to 1drt11
Ion, Vert D17, Mujorl1 Rhodu. On Aillll Moonhud's frtncll poodlt.
hit weddln1 d17, • 11l1or ind hi• m Dr1•1tic llftll
brld•'• f1mll7 r1e11lvt lele111111t
from hit comm1ndln1 offltir. del17-1:00 fJ 9 (I) l1llHldlJ fftcflf MIN:
· 1n1 tilt tmldlna blelu• ol 1 pi· (C) "Tiii ltcrtl lmsloll" (draml)
t1rnlty questlo11. '64-Sllwut G11n1w, Rtf VIII°"' m Marine loJ (C) (30) Mlcbr Roolll)', Edd Byrna. Heruy
OJ Patty DaU (lO) S1fv1. Thi nplolti ol 1 h111dfu! ol
ED Wltlt'1 New? "Mlsslo11 Control." convicted ulmt111ls who ltVt Y11p
A look 11 tha m1nned aptu fllahl &11vl1 fof t111 Alllld e.1u• In Wort•
complu In Houflon, Teua. War 11 11• rnc1lad, (R)
ID• -Q IDl W TlMt ""' tt> <!Ill "OOPDYPAHIMCAIFSS." Don Holli•
1:30 D MIC Mm S.Vlu (C) (60) Ill' 1ccur1l1l7 for1e1sb dl•stl!I
0 Thi lroowr a ... (C:) (30) wh•n Ann M1rl1 lnsistl that hil m Hut! (30) mother ba her ovtmlaht 1uNt. <19
Q)1McH111'1 JllWY (30) mTrlll M¥tn'bn (C) (30) fD M1kln1 t11t Mott. at Mttvrltr.
"Your Phllot0phy for Mtl1.1rlty." A tD Tllllfn hit H1I Merlmtflll
panel of rttlrtd people cllacuu the looks at ~•nes from "Coney lal•~
TIHd to build 1 phlloxiphJ ~' of th• Mind" pll'lormld hr Thi
stnlor cifu:em. (R) Company Thutr1, curren.tty runnl111
ill Nolkllrt 34 (C) 11 tilt Robertson Playhou•.
@I) NodM di £drlnl
7:0011 CIS Evtnlnt lkwt: (C) (30) 9:30 D 9@ Dfirntt: (Cl (30) "Thf
Willer Cronkllt. Pyruliid S\lrindle." F1idl7 1nd G1•
0 F TflOp (C) (30) non work out ol th• Frauds Divf. m I LIVI LllCJ (30) iion to break up I money·mlklni
&J 8illi11n'1 bl111d (30) $Chemt. Vifflnla GTIU ruests. (R)
fl!) Slcr1Mdl fill
ID Lt C:.111 Vitia D @ CI! P.,ta" P\KI (C) (30) m TrlVll (C) (30) .
7:30 1J 9 (j) C:i111rro1 Strip: (C) {90)
Marshal Jim Ctown must have 1
fE DEBUT ltldil! My lfldlll
1unm1n eon'o'icted of robbery 1nd 10:00 CJ @(}) hln M1rt11 Sllor. (C)
find 1 Wf'/ to redi1ect • l1ei1h! cir (6o) Guuts ar1 Jimmy Sttwtrt.
loaded with 1nouah dynamite to Geor11 Gobel, Shtcky Gretna 1nd
lt'lel tilt town. H11 situation be· Wlsa D'Ouo. (R)
camu crltlcal when the aunm1n Is 8 alor11 hllllll 111111 ~ (60)
lrlld ind tn ltintrant c1llld Mo· Q $usptnM TbNbl: (C) (60) "Th•
baetie blames the marshel tor caus·
Ina him to lost his chance tor Robrioz Rina." Juli• H1rrl1, Robe.rt
work 011 in lmportint cattl• drive. Loaa:ia, Julie Adams star. An omits
(R) f1mlly rina brlnas toceth1r 1 proud a ~ @)Danie! 100111: (C) {60) rovtr •nd a spinster lthoolludllf.
"A Mitltf of Blood." Daniel Boone The 1in1, 1mciated with 1 Iona:»
ries ol tngediu, causes ~•voe In must persu1d1 1 beautiful youna:
woman (Adrienn1 H1yes) ~ leay1 the lives of the two peoplt.
her life of IUJ.UI)' to sutteed her 0 T1111pe (C) (60)
iyin1 lather a 1n lndlan chief. {R) m la~ Ldll11 ""'1 (t) (30) ,
B EXCmNG! PLAY m•-·~I~ (30) * "L£T'S GO TO THE fll R&D Rwiow RACES!" MOR( BIG .
CASH WINNERS! GET U>.30 m ,..., (ti 1301 Bill '°"""
FREE ENTRIES AT VON'S
IJ Lit'• 8-ti 1111 ._ (C:) (!O) 11:00 II Dmn O'moct Rlpllrt: (C) (30)
0 @ (]) Sectnd Hundrld Y1111: Jeri}' Dunphy. '
(C) (30) MNo fJpe1ienc1 Neces· 0 Thi 11111 Ho• Ntn: (C) (SO)
sart.'' Lu~e ta1ptnter puts his rep. Geor1• SarNlers.
utatlon on th• l!n• Whtn h1 a:ou 11 The Wllterwt (30)
to nrll as 1 ulnman on commls-D Nm: ('C) Baxter Ward.
fion !Gr 1 lhad7 house·lidln1 firm. 0 Movlt: (C) "Ptlrl ti Ille 111111
(RJ Padfk" (romance) '55 -Dtftnll
0 Mllllon $ Movie: "llJ Colllin MorA;1n, V1r1lnl1 Maro.
Radle!" (m)'ltert) '53---0livli dt
Havll!and, Richard Burton, Audr17 m lei Crt11t (C) (60)'
Dalton. The heir to 1 considerable ID Movll: "FM Sttpt ti .......
fortune attempts to discover ii the (adventure) '57-sterlln& ~
woman he loves b 1 tchtmer ind ll:JO f) Mowle: "'TM 111 HI ....
1 murder1u or true lo her decl1r1-(dflma) '50--Elizabeth Tl)'lor, Vin
tiGnt of love, Jollnso11. m Tnrtll er CoftMQuenca (<:) (30) D ~@ De TllliaM .. IQ m""' M••R (60) 0 Movie: "W• ., ... ...
tii) F11tYrt: "Secrets ol thl Witch" (eitv.nturt) '48 --
Cll11m." A look at !he dwput uvt Wt)'ne, Gall Rossell.
111 th• world 1s spelunkeni dncllld 0 @ (I) "'1 lllMf ... tel
Into M. Ber1er'1 cav. In Grtllllbie,
F1111Ce. 12:00 m * ""' <C>
II) N111n C:ltl Mlllkll
12:30 m All-NIPt Shir. "Bride el ...
1:00 a lollpa (C) (2 hr) Monster," ''tolonel Effin&h1nf1
R1ld," "Mr Dr•m 11 You~,. 1'ilil
''Tht GllOSt Goa West"
'
u il'/J m "' """' "'" ic1 (30) "Tonio'• Mother.'' Sister Ber· m Actlo11 Tlleltrt: "No Mins
Vices."
trllle's visit to th• llHPJ vlllaa:e ol
Espen11u1 Is 1n upsettina eKperl-
1nce for both the nO¥iee and roung
TGnio who mlstake1 Slsle' B1rtrilfe 12:45 0: ~ovle: "WOJld W'rlttout Elld"' (sci·hl '56--Huah Marlowt, Miner tor hit mother come bact from Gltu, Rod Taylor.
hpven. (R) m•....., <CJ iao1
fJi) P111lna: "9 lultlr: "Notat on
th1 Flrst Two Strinp, n lnstrutto1
Frederick Noed tuthes 1ti.1d1nt1 to
pl17 10T11ethlna 111ar • composl·
"""
FRIDAY
J
DAYTIME MOVIES
l:JOD"llosllMl 111 lhl Dad'" (dr1·
m•) ••t-Gree1 Gerson, Wall• Pld·
"'" CJ "HldlOll'I llJ" (1dwn!ur1) '40
-P1ul Munl (C) "A M11 Cllled
PtW' (dr1m1) '55-4Uch1td fodd.
l :OIOM°"'' "Tho °""' ·-(aci·fll '57-Cr1i1 SIM11s, Wllll•m Hopper.
D Mavlt: "Th Unf1lthfll" (mJt-
ttryJ '47--ltw Ayres, Ann Shlr1·
di n.
Q-(t)
11:00 8 "1111111 Tralflc" (myat&IY) '31
-J. Ctrroll N1!!11. "'Cteo1t111W"
(corned)') '29--Th• M•rx Bro1hn
1%:JO m "Chit More TolllOITO'I'" (com-
etfy) '46--Ann Shuid1n. .. Nl&M
Vall Nl&1rt" (dr1m1) '4t--ltod•
le~ Ctnrford.
1:30 m.,... Clnllnll" (dr1m1} •3g.....
£rlc. Portrr11n, J11111 Duprez.
4:30 a '"Ml1lpool" (mystery) '49-
Gtn• Tiunq, Rld11rd Conti, m "D111t" (dtlmt) 'S7-S.1 Min ...
811111 ~•ilh.
Complete Printing Service
Top Quality -"Fast Service
1111·111M111!18
642-4321
2211 Wiii lllboo Blvd. Newport B11ch
-.... ________ ____.. ................. _ ...... _....-..... ....__ .... .......__.._ ....... ,. ............... ·--.:.. ...... -. ·• .,;, --~-·~-....... ·~·~· ~ ... ~. ·~··~--
•
'OH, POI' -..+-Things have never been so good for Lee Townsend
who gets a full hospitality treatment from Oe!t) M'rs. Jim Anen
·and (ri ght) Mrs. Townsend . The trio is getting in a tropical mood
for a Hula Ho.liday, the sea.son's finale for Riviera Club's 'Guys
a~d Dolls Section me~~ in !-h~ o.ulrigger restaurant Saturday
night, June 22. Mrs. R1lch1e WilJpn IS UTanging the :Cest!vities.
Fiftiet h Annivers a ry
Show Commei:norates ··,
Gallery's Founding
It's a golden anniversary, but it doesn't commemorate a wed·
ding.
In stead it marks the formation of Laguna Beach Ar t Association
Gall ery in 1918, under the leadership of Edgar Payne.
The present gallery, history reveals. was constructed und er the
guiding hand of Anna Hills, then associa tion pres ident. on bluff pr op·
erty secured thanks to to the generosity of Mr. and Mrs. Howard G.
lieisler.
\Vhen the denression slowed art sales in 1932 . .Joh n 1-linchman
came up wi th an idea for the fi rst informal Festival Qf Arts . The festi·
val. havin g stitrted with the association, later became a separate organi·
zation.
Another project which began with the associati on in 1958 wa s
the establishment of the School of Art and Desi 2n, also now a separate
body.
·ro comm em orate its found ing. the association has sent 300 in·
v1tations to city leaders, life members and donors to their Permanent
~1emorial Collection.
This collection includes the work s donated to th e g a I le r y
hroughout. its 50 years of existence. Also to be shown will be a Faculty
Show from the School of Art and Design alon g with a selection of award
winners from the Festival of Arts collection .
a .
~. t.
'
. -JEAN iCOX 4M-"4'6 Tllur'MllJr .W.• )\ IN .,_ Pi ii II"
Guys, Dolls
Ha.ii Hula
Riviera Club's Guys anq Dolls Section will say
goodbye lo the season Saturday night, June 22 with a
Hula HolldCJY in the Outrigger iestaurant ..
The event marks the first party being planned by
Mrs . Ritchie Wilson,· who took over the leadership of
the section 'from former chairman Mrs . James Beasley ..
. Assisting her in arrangements for the event, which
is open to all 2.50 Riviera Club members and their
guests, are the Mmes. Jackie Allen, Daniel Huston and
Wally Taft, who will help her plan all section activities
during the coming year.
According to Mrs. Wilson, Hawaiian garb or in ..
formal ~apo attire wiU be equally appropriate. tor par·
ty-goer1, and a prize will be presented to the ·"best
dressed Hawaiian couple.''
Cocktails will be served at 7 p.m. and music by
Jerry Schroeder's Trio will in$.pire dancers in the
crowd,
Tickets are $8 .50. Further reservation information
may be obtained. by calline-Mrs.· Wilson at 494--5188 by
Thursday, June 20 •
.Future.activities being plaMed by the group's new
chBJ.rman include a Septemb'er gathering which will
follow 1 Mexican or beach party theme.
_,
.J '
..
•
The shwing will open with a tea from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday. June
16, and will continue to Sunday, June 30. Hours will be noo n to 5 p.m.
wee kly except Sunda y, when hours are from l to 5 p.m.
Big 'Steak' .
In Future. for Business, Profesional Women
A barbecue on the patio of Mr . and Mrs. Maurice Van Dyke's
· Temple Hills Drive home awaits members and guests of Laguna
Beach Business and Professional Women 's Club begining with a
happy hour at 6:30 p.m. Thursd,ay, Jµne ,20. Gutinary experts
readying themselves for the event are (left to right) the Mmes.
Belly Flower, Robert Kellogg, Van Dyke and Robert Gill. Otbers
on the committee are the Mmes. Emily Strick.er, Delbert Th>ul·
man, Burl Lovelady and Albert Cornelius. •
If You' re Whipped, It's Better to Switch Than Fight
DEAR ANN LANDERS; I am a
n1id d!e-aged man who works in a
s1nall bu t successful compan y. The
boss is a jet-propelled . high-powered
executive who is subject to a lot of
pressure. I sympathize with the guy
but I am beginning to think he it a
sad.isl. \I/hen thin gs are going smoothly he
is the sweeteSit guy in the world. When
fthings don't g'b well he is unbelievably
brutal. I happen to be the boss' Num·
ber One whipping boy and it is getting
me down. When he beats on me l beat
on my famil y. I reatiu this is unfair
and 1 hat e myself for It.
1 joined the company five years ago
with high hopes for a brilliant futur e.
The mony is excellent. but I'm begin·
ning to wonder if it's worth it. La st
December l l'!penl two weeks in I.he
hospital with a bleeding ulcer. Yest.er•
~ . . . . .
day ·I got my third migraine headache
in a month .
ts it possi ble to fight this problem"!
U so, how? -MORE SICK TIIAN
WELL
DEAR MORE: The belt WIJ to
right thJ1 problem ls wtth your pen.
Write 1 letter or rttl(nattoa. No job Is
worth ulcers and mtrralne. I have yet
to tee • Brink's money wagon In 1
rnneral proce111lon .
DEAR ANN LANDERS; I've been
'
going with Richie fw two yean. We
have been engaged and dlsengaged so
many times I've lost count. We-argue
constantly about religion, friends ,
which movie to see, which TV channel
to watch, where to eat and every kind
of nonsense you can think or.
Rich and I don 't get a.tong with each
other worth ,a darn, but we don't seem
to get along without each Other, elttler.
I keep telling myself marriage wHI
sol ve our problems because the.-e will
be more time to settle things properly.
What about It? -V.C.
DEAR V.C.: There al10 wtU be
more time to right -which ls pro-
bably what you'd'bt doing .
The basic · JngreClleflt for a tut·
cesaful marriage ll frte~hlp. Where
there 11 tontlaual htckerln& and argu·
ln(, there can be no frtendsbJp. Tell
Rieb "(ood-lfye Ind (ood lutk" Ud
resolve to baae yollf next aeledlon on
what you can 1hare1 DOt 1"hat yoa can
ncbt 1bout.
DEAR ANN LANDE;RS: I,. am 15.
My siste r Ellefl is 11 months younger.
· Ever si nce r can rerilember we have
gotten exactly . the. same things -
a.llowan c,_, same prlvile~es. same
c11rfe w. Every time t ltet 1!1 new dress.
Ellen gets one. When I •get.a new pair
of 1hoe1, 10 does EUen'. ,.
Mom used to buy us JdenUca1
c\ovies. People thought we were twins.
Wh..,en we'd get dressed in the morni.ng,
Ellen would put on her dress Wte mine
and I'd chan ge Into something "else. 1
hated it.
I have a sister 17 and we get along
fine. I know It is wrong but I find
myself hating Ellen. I cry a. lot
because I 1et so angry I don't know
What else to do. Can you help me ! -
WET PILLOW
DEAR W. P.: Nobody wants to be-1
carbon copy of someone ebe.
Stop hating your alster. Jt'a your
mother who made the mtsiake. And
don't hate her, either. She made the
mf1.Ue out or lpor•nce. Go tCt your
mother today aod tell her you are
l~1ulng a declaration nf lndeptndt.nce.
No more tlothe1 alike. Purtue ti.II·
fere nt lotere1i1. Ir EUea It ,In th
orchestra, be In the band. If Elleo ts
011 the 1eboot paper, join the yUrbook
allff, If your slater ln1lst1 on hnltatlas
you , there Is nothing you cao di.. Bat
rest assured you will be the real
McCoy and she will be tbe lmltadfn.1
When romantic glances turn to
warm embraces Is it love •
chemistry? Send for the booklet ••LoTe
or Sex and How to Tell the Off·
fereoce," by 'Ann La nders. Enclose a
long, stamped. self-addressed en·
velope and" 35 cents in coin with your
request.
Ann Landers will be glad to help you
with your problems. Send them to hel'
in care of the DAILY PILOT. enclOI•
ing a stamped, seU addressed en•
velope.
I
-.-u, 11!>8
WE DIG CLAMS I -Clams by the bushel are the
epicurean delight awaiting members and guests of
the Orange Coast·Yacbt Clu b ".'ho ~U share their
dinner on the beach lit Dana Pomt with members o(
Bahia Corinthian and Voyagers Yacht Club dur-
ing a two-day cruise next weekend. Making !Ure of
Mesa n Cou pie
'
Engagement Disclosed
The engagemeut of two
-Costa Mesans, Jean Kilgore
: and Rlchard L. Hall, has
-been announced by the
:: bride-to-be's parent.a:, Mr.
: and Mrs. Clarence Kilgore
-.of Bellevue, Mich.
Mias Kilgore, who
'craduated from the Harley
Hoopttal School ol Nursing
in Flint. Mich .• is currently
employed at Pa1m Harbor
General Ho1pltal, Garden
Grove.
f Het" fiance, IOD of Mr1. i Edward G. Hall of Lu
-Vegas and the late Air ;. Force Maj. Hall, l 1 ~ employed by Bell Broadway
; Martuary, Cotta MtllL He ;.11 a craduate of Orange r ,Coast College and Collfornla
College of M o r tuar y
~ Science, Lot Aqelet.
--JEAN KILGORE
Br"-lect
GEORGI
GIRL
•
-
f
•
. t=
(·
GEORGI GIRl ORIGINALS
CLOTHES & GIFTS
1425 COAST HIGHWAY
LAGUNA BEACH e 494-9100
1 .......... .,,....., IMll • .... tWt
GET HIM AREO UP •
· WlllllO gMllorGnoduatlonorF-1Doy?
-ll>outaomtthlng he'll use and oppr9Clllt
ti I-long, IYtlY doy.
Z!ppo'ln 10 ktrll gold ftlled , $22.50.
Qlrorntft-Zlppo, -lor monogrom, 15.95.
Contoll-cllpe Into pocket, $7.85.
--•• , •. 95. /
s~!! .
U FASHION ISLAND-~IJIO
NEWPORT CEN
l
'• -
an ample supply of the tasty tidal creature& are
(left to rig.ht) Commodore and Mn. F. K. Glea!On
and Vice Commodore and Mrs. Lorin Wei11. Fe~
tivities get under way with a race to the deltina·
tion at 11 a.m. Saturday, June 15.
Yach.t .Clubs Turn Tide
For Clamfest-ivities
Digging up plans for a fine
clam bake are members of
the Orange Coast Yacht
Club, and members and
guest. from Bahia Corin-
thian end Voyagers yacht
clubs who have been invited
to participate.
Activities will begin at 11
a .m.Saturday , June 15, with
a cruise race from Crystal
Cove to the Dana Point
breakwater entrance, site of
the Clamfeot.
Participating boaU will
take advantage of 90-day in·
terim anchoring privileges
extended by tbe Harbor
Commi1!ion for the two-day
event.
Festivities will Include
dinner on the beach, featur-
ing tbe culinary artistry of
master clam chef Vince
Gurley, and presentation of
raoe awardl. Quantities of
lresh clams will be flown
from New England for the
occasion and abore boat&
wUI be provided for Ille
more than 400 expected to
attend.
Turner-Heger Nuptials
Recited in San Diego
Horoscope •
I
Aquarius: Study 'Bargains'
B7 SYDNEY OMAIUI
'!The wlH man cootroll
bl• clettlny •. , Altrology
point.I the way."
ARIES (March 21-Aprll
Ill): Pleaoant it the -d
for today. You &et your
witb: to rew Biid enjoy
company ol fine people.
Earlier, try to complete
balic project. Then you wUI
oparkl• tonight.
TAURUS (April 20-May
Volunteer
Notes
:Ill): A m b 111 o o 1 ire dlvldllll'a nperlence wi
bl"'1!&1Md Biid caa be prove valuoblt aid.
fldDlled thrOIWll ....,llcU SAGmAJUUs <Nov. 22·
mlde tonlal>C Be wttb Dec. 21); cat<b up OD pa•t
ARIES lndlvldiill for an re11po1111bWtiet. Obtain hint
open door to opportunity. from SCORPIO ineuage •.
Favorab}e word received Be telecti.ve in ·deciding
from one in authority. whom to call or see. Some
GEMINI (May 21.June are merely intent on making
3:1): VacaUoo planning, go11ip, wuUng time -y9u
traveling 111• 1poWgbted. deserve better.
Utilize lnlulu~ lnlelled. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-
Meanl trust 11\Dich. Piece · Jan. 19): You could receive
topther bits ol ill(ormaUon. pa7ment for paot service.
Del«t trends. Got a-on Sturdy VIRGO me ... ge.
pulse of public. Check poueaaion1. Better to
CANCER (June 21.July finish than to begin project.
SUMMER SERVICES
22) :· Dig deep for source Be aware of cod.I -know
material, eipeclally where what goes out, comes in. f!n1nce1 are con<en>ed. Be AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
fluible .. -acattorlng 1.11): New beglnnlnp, added
fOl'Cel. Finl.ab what you freedom sbOwD today. P~
llart. Get accowita in.order. ple are attracted"? you and A volunteer with a First Aid certificate ls neecl-e<! to aulll day camp activilles Jn PeterJ Canyon
from June 17·21, according lo a · cllredor of Girl
Scout..
• · waut your oplnioDI. Be LEO (July ~Aug. 22): frank. U for1bright, you Sain
Permit m~. partner to new allle1. Streu ortgina· ~ re::ti~~~~ lity. _i. 1bere always it a coiistant and growing need
for driven lo lransporl crippled children and
adult., clerical help and swimming aid., lo assitl
pallenta Jn therapy pools. Anyone interested in donating time and 1ervice
l1 ailed to call the Volunteer Bureau weekday&
from ti a.m. to noon at 642-0963.
hint fr o m C A N C E R PJSCF.S (FOi\. 19-Mara•
meiiage. Don't be in too 20): Puzzle P1ecet could fall
much of • hurry. Q)ect into place. Secrets .are
legal aspects. revealed. ~ou ·know who Is
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): on your aide, ~o la not.
Wakb ....-.m Some Separate real friend from
routine matten may. get out fair-weather variety. Be
VB IS A COMMUNITY CHEST-UNITED
FUND AGENCY
discreet;-quiet . thin of kilter. Check buic task•. IF TODAY WI IS 'youR One who perform• tel'Vlce may not be physically up to B I R T B D A Y you are
par. Be prepared for extra dynamic, fond of trawl and
job. change. You ~e ext.remely
Orangewood Council
Acclaims Area Leader
LmRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2'l): active and would make fine
Roman Uc interlude slated reporter, teacher. Signifi·
for tonight. Earlier, give at-c~ current cycle could, if
teDtion to children, creative 1mg1e, lead to marriage.
eodeavor1. Harmonize fa.rnj. G E N E R A L T E N •
ly relationa:. Vacatioo ac-DENCIES: ~cle high for
Honorary member1bip in
the 0r .. , ... ood Regional
Council ol EpoUon Sigma
Alplla lnlemotional sorority
and Fountain Valley'I Beta
Gamma chapter ba1 been
presepted to Mn. Marnette
Peek of Huntington Beach.
Well-known for her many tivttie1 favored. Penonal ARIES. Special word to
efforts in bebalf of the com· magnetism 1aiting i1 bigb. ~RA: ~ 0 m Pl e_t e ad·
munity, Mr•. Peet has RrV· SCORPIO (Oct. 23 • Nov. Jllltmeut in domeatic area.
ed on tbe board• o f 21} : Acceat on security,
-Children's H o 1 p i t a t of property. In plaoolng action, 'l
Orange County, Children'• tan long-range view. At· fo ~1' P,.11
Home Society, City of Hope, tention center1 on parent. ,,JJ·,-Jl"¥
and Disneyland scbotarsrup Be considerate. Older in· ~"JI '
and Civic awards.
She holds honorary life RE.OPENS
memberships In the Hun-Youth Bid ="-SATURDAY, tington Union Council of JUNE 15th
Parenb and Teachers, the
Little Mermaid GtJ.ild, Hun-Grand Sia S..ndyC•rlson isback;
tington Beach, and the Ebell m with partner Mari Graves
Club and Assistance League ••. to offer you many
of Long Beach. A course of bridge lessons fine lin .. of
She is a member of St. far high tthool and college "Intimate Apparel"
i'fary's Hospital Guild. Long students is being offered by and Corsetry
Beach; St. Jude Hospilal the Woman's Club of Hun·j ~-------~
Guild, F u 11 e r ton : d1e tington Beach. I Da •bit 111 01h S::tturday •
Freedom Foundation : DAR; Lesson registratio n will R~gls.ter for door prlns tool
Wanderlust Club; Eastern lake place between 10 a.m. '--------~ and noo n tomorrow in the Star; Midway City Wo rnan's clubhouse. Providing in· Club, and Garden Grove Business and Professional struction will be Mrs, W. H.
Woman's Club. Creed, children and youth
Mrs. Peek has donated the chairman for the club and a
use of Peek's Fa m 11 y qualified teacher and life master. Colonial Terrace Room ~ Classes will be conducted
well as volunteering her own each Monday and Wed-
home for philanthropic teas, nesday from 1: 15 to 3 p.m.
Sp•c:i•li1i119 i11 "D" Cupl •
M"11eclorny
Gr•du•I• Co•l•fi•••
Ma11 rilru Sat t ta '
"81 Cornfortabl• in Yo11r C11p1"
St. Paul's Epi1copal
Church of San Diego was the
letting for the marriage Of
Roxanne Elise Heger and
Brent Elwood Turner.
HONORED fashion shows and lun· sheath dress and carrytna: Mrs. M•rnette Pffk cheons. for four weeks beginning
yellow roses. Monday, June 17, and ad· f~~; Tim Harrilon of Berkeley ditional information may be
waa best man. s L u obtained by calling Mrs.
Cll!OD C. Rankin Barnes,
the clergyman who married
both the bride'• parent.I and
1i1ter, dmnized the dou·
hie ring ceremony.
A receptioo fOr :!Ii guests ecretaries ining P Creed, 847·3445· toot place after t h e A class for area Girl ~
250°1. I. 17th . C••t• M ...
M MIU •AIN SQUAAI
ceremony in the· home ol. the Bahia Chapter, National Miss Con st an c e Scouts and their mothers
bride'• parents. Mrs. J. B. Secretaries Association in· McCauley, president 0 ,111wp;ili;ta;;k•;p;l;ac;e;ln~A~u~g~us;t;. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Plta11e '42°54JO
Slator of La Mesa, the stalled new officers in the Calirornia division of NSA ,
bride'• grand moth er, Irvine Coast Country Club installed the off i c er s .
assisted. The bridegroom's today. Assisting was Mrs. Del
grandmothers. Mrs. Stewart Incoming leaders are the Beard, first vice president,
S. Smith of Anaheim and Mmes. Floyd I. Fleming, California divisio n NSA and
Mrs. Elmer Schrader of president; Ruth Rosebush. Bahia member.
The brlde i1 the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs . Vernon
Heger of San Diego. Parents
of the bridegroom are Mr.
aod Mrs. Robert E. Tumer
of Coeta Mesa.
Given in marriage by her
fat.her, the bride wore a
etreet length white lace
dress with long 1leeve1,
wtUte Spanish manUlla and
a bouquet of yellow rorses
and white cam&.tiona.
Lebanoq, Ohio were present first vice president; Elenor Entertaining was th e
at the we<lding. Evans, second vice pres· Newport Harbor chapter or
The bride.is a graduate of ident; Wayne Thuestad, the Society for the
San Diego High School and recording sea-etary; Mary Pre s er vat ion and
i1 atteDding California State A 1 b e r t , corresponding Encouragement of Barber
College at Long Beach. The seaetary, and Eileen Pbin· Shop Quartette Singing in
bridegroom is a graduate of ney, treesurer. America.
Costa M ... High School, at·;jf.~~===============~111
Mrs. Jon Graber, the
bride's sister, waa matron
of bOIJOI', wearing a yellow
Hadauali
Mra. Jack Chapman, 549-
1379, mey be contacted for
location information ( o r
ff.arbor Chapter of
Hadassah. The club rrieets
at 8 Jt.m. every ttlird Tues-
day.
tended Orange C o a s t
College, and la attending
CSCLB, where he is stu.
dying to be a teacher.
The newlyweds will live in
Belmont Shores.
BRIGHT
lli• DAILY PILOT II'+•••• fh "'w' cov•raga li9hf, tight •11cl
br!gM. -••d y.tir hem•to-
M itlo11 di lly tncl •nfoy tli•
The Mardan Associates
Announce
"BENEFIT ART SHOW & SALE"
Extended One Week
SISTER MARY CORITA
RITA LETENDRE
GEORGE BAEHR
Many Other Ovt1tandln9 Arti1t1
Siik Sc....,, -Sculpture
Cer1mlc1 -0111 -latlk1
At Specl1I PrlcH_..
'-' W1 •r• 9r•t•ful for your w•rm
raspon1• to our Vlee~end
FIESTA DEL ARTE
$1.00 Donation ::::_,
J uno 10 th ....... Juno 14
!vtnlnp 7 .. 10 , .....
695 Weat 19th Strwtt, Costa Mui
Al PN•1• Te n.
MA IDAN ilOUNDATtOM SCHOOL
POI CHJL.DllN WITH LIAllNIN• DISA.111.mll
' •
Large Sizes
I
00fl't '"
caught
•stilft-leM• H
'8ry 1Ummer
days. Keep _, __
Half.Slza
Shop for •
''"' .. 1~.
from $9.00
,
[
SIIIS
• 4\i -24~
SI ·46
' Effa
I Nor'sHALF·SIZE SHOP
taos Newport Blvd.,
Cosl1 Mesa
"~ block north of 1 I th Strwtt"
Hou .. : t :30 .. 5:30,
F'1day to flOO
• BB
'
SALE
ahep al h1111 for custom
rHpholllery fabrics
z.99. 7.49 yd.
reg. 4.00 to 9.00yd.
A large selection of fine fabrics from one
of the nation's finest mills awaits your
choice. Come In and choose from 62 decor-
ator colors and 1..C fabrics that will look
elegant on any style furniture.
During our Ann ivemry Sale we will ,..
upholster 1 stand.rd tilt, 2<ushlon 6' sofa
for $1 09.00, •tandard club chair $65.99.
shop at home
Just call your n,.rut toll-free May Co
ind a decorator aons.ultlnt will come to your ·
home wilfl 1 complete llioc!ion of lobrla.
No ditrge or obngatlon.
mty co r>upholsttring 11
iv.c .A. "Y'. ,. c 0
may co soulh ooul plazo, san diego freeway at
brlslol,ccota :.metoa; 546-~321, 675-!418-obop
mon. 1hru aat. 10 a.m, lo 9:30 p.m.
•
' '
•
•
Newport Harbor Today's <:losing
EDITrON
~OL ol', NO. '\42, 3 SECTl6NS, 36 PA(;ES NEWPORT BEACH, CADFORNI>: JHUR$DA Y,.iJUNE '.13, 19~ :rEN CENTS
OCC District Sets $7.'2.5 · Million -Bond Vote
By moMAS FORTUNE
Of ttle D•Uy Pllet fllff
Orange Coast Junior College District
will hold a fl .25 million bond election
on Sept. 17.
Trustees voted unanimously latt.
Wednesday night to bold the election
that il successful would end the
district's traditional pay-as-you-go
policy. -
The bond issue would cover building
programs on the Orange Coast and
Golden West campuses in Costa Mesa
and Huntington. Beach for four years.
Two-thirds voter approval will be re-
quired for passage.
A second ballot proposition will be to
convert an existing 101,i-cent override
now limited to use for construction to
general purpose use. It would not
change the present.tax ratt. and would
be meaningless unless the boI!,d issue
passes.
The bond issue would cost district
·taxpayers seven to 12 cents per $100 of
assessed valuation the first year and
less thereafter depending on bow
many years the board wanted to take
to pay it off. The CWTent district tax
rate is 54: cents . per $100 assessed
valuation.
Orange Coast District officials have
reason not to be O{>timisUc.
"It's not going to be easy to get two.
OAU.Y .. IL.OT Plff1PMM
SERIOUS TIME DESCENDS ON CORONA DEL MAR HIGH SCHOOL ~JIADUATES
Seniors Reflect Mood of ConttrnP:lat1v1.M1turity During C1rtm0ni1& ------....,..-,=:•~· -~'"'°·<!'.' • •·· · · · ,,,u· ....... L-..w! · " ,,, •. "''' ..,,_, ~ .,;,"";>'~ W' .4S.' 'llf.: ~~~.. UQ.......... ,'i=;>'T'il' ~I
Saigon Warned
Of New Rocket
Terror Campaign
SAIGON (UPI) -Viet Cong leaflets
warned Saigon's 3 million residents to-
day of a new terror campaign of 100
rockets a night for 100 nights. And
U.S. military sources said intelligence
reports indicafed the Communists
were planning another ground assault
against the city,
Rockets spared0 Saigon today for the
first time in 13 days, but the Com-
munists blew up an ammunition d4mP
outside the city and exploded a time
bomb in a U.S. office building in Da
Nang, wounding 17 Americans and
Vietnamese.
U.S. military sources expressed
doubt the Viet Cong could maintain a
100-clay bombardment against the city
though Gen. William C. Westmoreland
said recently there was no way to stop
isolated rocket attacks. But the Com-
munist leaflets stirred uneasiness
among the capital's inhabitants.
A Viel Cong "liberation radio"
broadcast heard in Saigon urged Viet-
namese residents of Saigon to move
"far away" from military, ad-
ministrative and other "war posi-
tions" to avoid the threatened shell·
in gs.
Radio Hanoi, in a Vietnamese
language broadcast to the people of
Saigon, said Vietnamese "have the
sacred right to use every method ... to
annihilate the invaders."
439 Seniors Get ·uiplo#taE
At Corona del Mar High
Corona del Mar High School launch-
ed its filth graduating class· in com-
mencement exercises held Wednesday
afternoon In the school quad.
Principal Leon Meeks told the 439
seniors, their parents and friends that
he has great hopes for the 1968
graduating class.
He said the graduates "fiercely
desire to shoulder their share o! the
work. I say the establishment can and
should use their help."
Lindy mare and · Emmett Roaitt
Kennedy Letters ,
Fill Full Page
Robert Kennedy is dead. His accus·
ed assassin still awaits tria1. And citi-
zens and solons alike are talking about
tougher gun laws.
These were the spurs which trigger-
ed a vast outpolll'ing of various kinds
of reactions by Orange Coast area
readers of the DAILY PILOT.
The volume of mail grew to such
proportions that it is necessary to de-
vote a run page to the Mailbox fea-
ture today. You'll !ind the full page of
letters to the editor on P~
spoke.on lighting candles.
"What is ttlls darkness that exists
within us?" Miss Blare asked. "Why
should we fear to involve ourselves in
each others problems. Perhaps if each
one of us lights one small candle."
Raitt mourned the untimely deaths
of Dr. Martin Luther King and Sen.
Rober t F. Kennedy. He saw a.move·
ment toward a negative society, living
by the code "What you do not like -
destroy."
He said, "At this hour our nation
needs more candies. More gWdina
lights as represented by these men."
Laurey 'Kramer and Cllfiord Sniitb
were recognized as class valedic·
torians and Susan Jackson • s
saJutatorian.
Sdhool Trustee Lloyd Blanpied Jr.
told the graduates they are at a
threshold that ushers in vast op-
portunity for free choice. "So far in
yodF lives thresholds have been thrust
upon you. From now on you will have
to choose," he advised.
Ile bequeathed to the graduates the
21st Century. "You will be the leaders
who turn over the calendar 2,000 and
set the tone of the time," he said.
Coast Murder Victim
Buried as Lived, Alone
GE"orge Findley Lyons lived alone
and was buried alone.
Newport Beach police, who \Ved-
nesday identified a 17-year-old Ma-
rine as a suspect in Lyoos' slaying,
today disclosed that the Corona del
Mar murder victim has been quietly
TURN OUR COAST
RED, WHITE, BLUE
Frlday is the day to paJnt the
Orange Coast red, v.111te and blue.
Residents are reminded that lt is
Flag Day again, the day on which the
Stars and Stripes should be flown from
every home or store, as well as public
buildings.
...
laid to resl
There w81 no ceremony. No one
ever showed up to claim kinship to
the 48·year-old insW'ance man, found
bludgeoned to death in his small
apartment on May 20.
His grave ~t Fairhaven Cemetery
in Santa Ana Is unmarked.
Burial expens,. were only partially
covered by some $250 from Lyons'
Social Security fund, He left no bank:
account. only many small debta.
Meanwhile today, the bunt for h11
suspected lciller went on.
Police releal;ed • photograph o( the
suspect, Edwin William Chott m, an
AWOL Camp PMdleton Marine.
Chott, of Pernvtlle. Mo., is believed
to be tn the Midwest somewhere. 'The
t 'BI is conducting the .earch.
"But there.11 nothing new,'' said
Newport Detective Sergeant Kenneth
Thompson. "I wish there were."
'
U .. t T
SOUGHT IN MIDWEST
E-win Chott Ill
thirds when tbe statewide proposition
passed by only 56 percent (last
week),'' Supt. Norman Watson 1aid,
"And the state issue doesn't even go
on the property tax. 11
Nevertheless, trustees, acting on the
recommendation a joint Harbor Area·
WeSt County Citizens Finance Com·
rllittee, decided to try.
"We.can take a leaf from Max Raf.
ferty·~ campaign book," board
member Robert Humphreys rug·
gested. "His pit.cl\ was dqn't cancel
out CU. S. senator) George Murphy's
vote. We can say don't cancel out Pro-
position Two."
The fl .25 million would enable the
district to obtain another $7,108,000 in
matching state and federal funds over
the next four years. This money is not
available to the district unless local
money is put up in equal amOU11is,
Tr111tees accepted the Citizens
Finance Committee's advice that th!,Y
junk the pay-as·you-go concept. The
board policy for the first 20 Y'4!S Js
now inadequate because or rapidly m ..
creasing enrollment, they reasoned. It
requires today 's taxpayers to provide
debt-free facilities for those who come
tomorrow •.
The majority of buildibg ty be
(See BOND VOTE, P1fe Z)
Ass·assination Told
Waiter Saw Trigger Pulled, RFK Fall
LOS ANGELES (AP) -"He kind of
motioned around him and stuck the
gun straight out, and nobody could
move. It was-. you were frozen; you
didn't know what to do. And then I saw
the first powdering or plastering when
be pulled the trigger, the first shot.
Mr. Kennedy fell down."
In these word! a young •tudent.. and,..
part-time waiter told a Los Angeles
County Grand Jui-y of the assassina·
ti.on of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
A transcript of the proceedings last
Friday, whJch resulted in a murder in-
dictment against a 24-year-old Jorda-
nian, Sirhan Bishara Sirhan, was
made public today when it was filed
with the county clerk. ·
Vincent Thomas Di Pierro testified
that he was in the kitchen of the
Ambassador Hotel when Kennedy
entered, en route from an ele<:tion vic-
tory speeCh to the press room.
He· said he saw the accused and a
pretty girl st'.anding on a tray·stacker.
clutching a pipe with his left hand and
with his right hand heid to his
stomach.
"I saw him get down off the tray
stand. And when I went to turn, the
next thing I saw was him holding the
gun ... "Then came the fJ,ring.
"I heard five distinct shots ... there
could have been more." Actually there
were eight.
"The next thing I know, I had blood
all over my race and my glasses. And
then tile man, one of five others,
besides Kennedy that got shot in the
head. fell in my arms. And then the
other boy that got shot in the thigh, he
fell on top o{ me and they pushed me
down. They fell on top of me."
Question: "Did you see what hap-
pened to the senator before you went
down?
Answer: 0 He was on his way, fall-
ing, be w~s falling down. The first
shot, he kind of reared back, very
very sharply .•. Both hand! went up
like that. He was kind of on an odd
angle. He was just about to shake
hands."
How did the crowd react?
"\Veil. the sw;eect turned almost im~
mediately and after all the shots were
fired, he was trying to escape. ~ .and
pe'ople were trying -were hitting him
and cursing at him, and it was utter
confusion. I mean everyone was trying
to kill him."
OC the girl with the accused, Dl
Pierro added, " ... he looked as though
he either talked to her or flirted with
her because she smiled. He said he did
not see the girl after the shooting.
She was clad, he said, in a polkadot
dress. Police have t)een seeking a girl
in a polkadot dress for questioning-in
the case.
~LL.'f PIL.OT ltlf! .......
NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH GRADS FILL DAVIDSON FIELD 'INFIELD'
Parents and Friends Watch Caremonies from F ltld's Packtcl Stands
Harbor Commencement
••
Sees 519 Seniors Leave
Commencement e x e r c i s e s at
Davidson Field Wednesday afternoon
closed out the high school careers of
519 Newport Harbor High Schoo\
seniors.
Hundreds of parents and Criends
looked on as a long line of blue-robed
graduates picked up their diplomas.
Three stldents who r e c e J v e d
straight A s throug!lout high school,
named co-valedictorlans, s h a r e d ·
speekillf dutieo.
Georgeanne Hamia. splDTed her
classmates to "face head on our
resetl'nsibillty to o~selves and to the
world. We must act out our concern,
not sit back complacently and think
good tboughtJ, '' shfL said.
Wendy Isbell warned f e 11 o w
graduates against forsaking hapPiness
for a profitable Job. To find happiness,
she advised, let there be .. an inner you
that conformity Or non-conformity can
never touch."
.,
Pessimistic about the past but
seeing hope in the Cuture, David Vierl-
ing said:
"People may say our nation is
crumbling under a wave or change.
But It is not crumbling. It is living. It
Is pulsating. In the paSt. man has
changed his surroundings but not
himself. Maybe our generation can
make changes in man."
Spoke Principal Charles GodsllaU:
.. This enUre class has eemed the
respect of the community fC7r a Ill•
stained hlgb level oc perfonnancfl. Not
one of them bas to be in tbfl lhadow or
another."
School Board Pr..tdont 'l>on<ld
Strauss told the graduates, "The world
wo.a't go to pot except through ln·
difference."
He said to the pattnU, "Get ln·
volved and stay Jnvolved ln the tbin&s
you really believe tn."
Orange Coan
Weather
Try as he might, Old Sol just
won't quite get his message
through Friday, forecaster Emil
Kurt: predicf.I. lt'U be hazy with
early fog and temperatures in
the 70 bracket for the coast.
INSW E TODAY
Financial coh.imnilt SyLoic
Porter lOdaJI a.uaili both Prtii-
dent ·Johnfon ond Congress for
delays and buckpcsstllQ ovn
e110<tmt1it of the Jo p<rctftl
1urtM. See Paoe 26 • -MltNi ..... ·--.. __ ...,. ·--..... -·-·--t:,";.:'.':' ··-----
" .. ..
I " .. ,,.1, n.., .... • " • n ..
I DAll.Y I'll.OT
• • • ' • • -. -. • J .• ··-' ' . GOif . . . , ' . "' •
Hike in Dog
Fees;, ·Other
Boo st s Due
Newport Beach dog owners . soon
will be paying S2 more a year for
licenses for their pets.
City councilmen have agreed to
boost the annual fees from $3 to $5..
The action is ooe of several aimed
at raising needed municipal income
witbout ballooning the city property
tax rate.
City Atty. Tully Seymour has been
instructed to prepare ordinances and
resolutions required for final council
ppproval or the revenue-rai sing meas-
ures. J\.1ost will be returned to the
council on Jllne 24.
A.s tentatively approved by council·
men th1J week, the include:
-Dog Lloemes: The 13 I<> $5 hike
is expected to generate about $10,000
In additional revenue.
Pier Permit•: Fees will be doubled,
from $50 to $100 for new permits, and
from $25 to $50 for traru;fers. Addi-
tional yearly revenue is estimated at
$2.125.
..
• •
• .
Tou-rney ·B e qnes i
l·
' •
.Yes; ,
uld tlie city could help by chipping in
$10,lm. The Newporter Inn would
guarantee anoth.er $10,000: the Irvine
Company, fl0,000; and Orange Co unty
governmeDt the rest. ·
Councilmen rt.acted pOlitely to the
-proposal. But Howard: Rogers won·
Wired : . -
"Would· It be legal for the city to
play a show biz angel?"
City Attorney Tulley S e y m o u r
thought not.
DAILY ,ILDT Stiff .......
..
"111tlnk It would be perllouily close
to. being a gllt of public fundl to a
private eoncero~~'i..be"sald.
"In addition' lo<thO' Jelfl-<1uellloo."
sold_ Co)tilcllmb. llobeit. Sbeltdlt,
"maybe thla _is something for our
Gools and Ob}icUve1-<0mmlttee.'
: "rm ~i 'about µt.at." , . .
Seymour wu iristructed to 1tuly the
legal aspect further. He did aod
reported ,Pack ~ . tlle councQ. at its
budget aenlon ~ay JUght. His
' linli itiuitg/ . : .
"It would be an illegal uae. of the
city's credJt."
"" ~"llJ!aybe we __ can adopt ringing
· resolutioo. of aupport," Shtll<>n l<>ld
the disappolilted Tobin. •
"I'll purau,. other we.as for ~lnancial
sumrt," Tobin said, "and cotne back 18.tei Car the· proclamaUona:."
Mayor Doreen Marshall, with a
friendly amile, wiahed him luck. on
behalf of the entire councl).
Pol~. Gl.ves 1'Jews
W~apons Control
Trigge,rs Debate
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .. O.ltr '""' .....
Possession of a pistol turna an adult
heroin addict, feeding a $20-a-day
habit on holdups -and eve11. an aged,
church-going widow, who aim.ply fears
prowlers -into brother a11d al.liter under one facet of law.
It depends on how one views the
situation.
change in the 'l.tUtudea of those outside
the law.
Oplniom and actions by fellow o!·
!leers support bis thoughts.
"No gun permits are issued in Seal
Beach. In my three years here,· I've
only issued one and that wu to a li·
quor store clerk who had been robbed
four times," explained Seal Beach
Police Cblef Lee Case. E ach is a Potential killer, but there
may be nothing illegal-in ownership of
a weapon, uoW 1be individual is
caught m1Juaing· or wrongfully T h Sc
po11eaaing I~ as in the -of a con· eae ers Ore
vtci.d fildh"or~ tmawnl!rlig addict. ~ , . -
A 1urtey o( }llD' coiitl'o!1aw1 along I S } 'Hik the Orange Coast, sparked by cries for n a ary e
more rigid legialation following the
assassination of Sen. Robert F. Ken· B tJ OCC
nedy, show~ the clearcut yet complex at e at
probleIDI involved.
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of TM D•llf ,lllt Stiff
Opinions by police spokesmen -
from metropolitan chiefs to rookies on
small town !orces -indicate that stif· fer laws camot really be the solution Orange Coa&t College instructors•
to murder as a ·political tool. holdout !or higher salaries at both
This contemporary Amer l can Orange Coast and Golden West col-
:!\farina Park Leases: On execution
of any new lease at city~wned trailer
park site, the monthly fee will be $30
above present rates, which now range
from '95 to $130. Estimated additional
revenue ls only ~.
Plallllillg F-: Varying incre .... ,
and some decreaees, have been rec·
ommended by Planning Director Er·
GRAND PROCES.SION PROVIDE~ COLOR, MOVEMENT AT ESTANCIA EXERCISES
Graduates March Along Various Pathways to Seats In Twilight Ceremonies
stlgma, however, may be helping to Ieges paid off Wednesday night.
focus the attention of many citizens on A 001ntingent of 00 ter.:hers batue.1
their perscmal conduct In ownership the school board !or 2'11 hours before
nest Ma)'« Jr., who has been in· :;'~ ~::'." ~U::~~·fu.:"'.'.! Water Company
wW be about 18,000 y<>arly. ::.!'.
.i...Motlo• Pl-.. : A general In· Prot~M,;':Dela y crease ln the cost of various permits ~ ~~
111!1 ll<:.ellfOI recjuirf!(,,JM local!!'" Ms ,.,,. IMoutf bf the city is lijleci.d to b •K •<,t. •
In aboolt '3,500 in ..... municipal .. , .. ., • . a "'.Anllexat1on
entaes a11:1ually. · ,
Councilman Robert Shelton pointed Lait minute' opp0clUon fro m
Oat, af'tler lawmakers tentatively voted residents o! the area and the Santa for the new feft, that they are all ~ on tJle rbtng cott of city arerv-Ana Jtelgh~~ Water Co. caused a delay
.1oes rwqulred by lic«lse holders. ,in'. Costa MeJa's pr_opoaed :W.acre an·
· City Manager Harvey L . Hurlbm1 nexiltion oii._Pallsades Road and
dted • an example the mun.Jct: Newoort Boulevard.
POI llllmal control pro.ei:am. Next yeor--·--·' "' "' Co lt .wi1J coet $:1) 000 to ~rate be said .... -.; Th&--~•I· Agency Formation m-
whlle with tbe1JncreUed fee; incom~;-1nissl0il (LAFC ) delayed decision .oo
from dog licenses wnr total i'ess than lh;e_ ~~ger for 30 days after hearing
$25,000. opposition spokesmen.
The fees boosts are in addition to Speaking for the water company
COWl.Cil-tndorsed increases in the was William H. E;pplnger, a direct-0r.
city's hotel end motel bed tax and new Jle said some of his shareholders ob-
overtime parking fine schedulefl, ject. to· the annexation and that 20 of
Water District
Annex Rejected
th!'' company's ~ customers are in
tl}e_;.Jller~er area. ~sor C. M. "Cye" Featherly, a
commission member, muddied the
waters· with tall( of the Corona del Mar
Freeway in the area. The adopted
freeway route is north of Palisades
Road and the annex will not be al·
Costa Mesa County water District fected by the future freew-ay.
walked Into the annexat:ioo arena Wed· The annexatloo . Is in the unln-
nesday where the cities of Costa Mesa corpor~ted ca~gory ~-~use less tha!'
and Newport Beach had failed last 12 1 eg1stered ~ten U\!:ed in the area
month and met the same fate. ~ .. ~n. th~ .actlo~.to;~n~ by the cfty
The district a«ked the Local A.genc:"y. ... ~1ra~.1nitiateif: ,.,. . .
Formation Commltslon (LAFC> to,..:. ,epsta .Meia City Manacer Arthut-R. ~ r ,McKenue pointed out that of the prove tbe ~XM.10!1 of 18 acres · $154,000 In assessed valuation in the
botdering P~ Road on the south annex area, only owners of S00,000
and utlending across Santa Ana worth objected. The law requires a
Aft.nue bottl ways. protest of more than 50 pei' cent of·o!
, .,. ·the asaeesed valu~tion .
DAILY PllOT
-"""t-'" a.bert N. 'W•N -n. ... ~" .....
n-.....:.~~in•
JmitH f. C.Ui111
. . ,. , . Ci,ty /i110rney. .lloy ·.Jun e. said. there
. ~ere ·but nJne reeiitered. voters ht the .: ·arettal the-tl~·qfthe ·annexation:.
' ·.Th~ 1 anDex~y~· d i.-"L" shaped and
1 .extends trom·iU8t-fiorth of Mesa Drive ~ on Newpoff·tO~'San~·Ana Avenue on
' . Pa'li.1&de1.. .. • r • . • •
Included. in1!>~.l!l:I'~ ls the PalisJld"
Rtstaurant Md Tennis Cllub and
Henry!1-1testa~ant on Newport.
.....,.... ._..aw 1111nor -· · ....__
J1ck R. Ctrl.y ·r111I Ni11• .: ~-. , ,... -rwB"e 1 ........... ~ MwwtlsN Dlndlr -1 -, • • • • .., ,,,, u~"::..°"'11"". BOND" VOTE
8¥11111 M4m1t P.O. I•• 1171 tZ6'1 : • ~ • • •
OtMr Offkt 1 flr'l&n<:ed·l>Y the bond issue ~·ould be on
co.11 MeM1 ,. w111 a., strt.t the Golden \Vest campus in Huntington ~.._...m..._. .. ._..
Mvrltlftt*I 9"<11: a Jlfl 11r1e1 1 Beach Which is not ) et rounded out.
•• •
''1'tis ls a conservative building pro-
gram. We are not, for instance,
recommending a new admin.istraUon
building." J;>r. WatM>n commented.
A decision on whether to repay the
bonds over 10, 15, 20 or 25 years would
be made when the bonds are ·101<1,
depending upon the money market,
Business Supt. Correllan Thompson
&aid. .
Therefore, the exact cost pee. year to
taxpayers cannot be figured. At the
probable five percent intertst rate,
first )'ear tax Jncreues would be
between~cents tor l amortiu-
tlon and s en r 25-,Year
amortiza ion.
Succeedin& years they would
gradu~lly dlminilh down to five centl
to one·ceat
I
and handling of guns. trustees relen~d.
Since Tuesday, nine persona have Adoption of salary schedule that wlll
registered guns with the Cos ta Mesa give instructors a 5.6 percent ralse
Police Department, from a 21-year-old was hailed by spokesman Dr. John L.
collegian. to a 79·year-old housewife Jensen as "a great victory."
who own' a r~olverJ.50 yWs old. Supt. Norman Watson, responding
Students Stand, C~er -'"";" "\Ve go by the state laW," explains bitterly to teacher demands, acted as
At Estancia Graduation Costa Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth, if he resented their going over his
explaining the system w her e'b y head to the board. "Now We're in a new ball game, firearms are registered in the state or ·with a new pitcher, and trying to play .
The Estancia High School class 0£
1968 stood as one and cheered.
Principal "Floyd Harryman had Ju st
declared the 369 seniors graduated in
Wednesday night ceremonies a t
Davidson Field.
Na vig ation Aid
. .
California. . with new rule-s," he said at one point.
Soon the red-gowned graduates were Rifles and shotguns are logged with His compromise proposal for .a $500
picking up their dij>lomas to the flash fed eral authorities a t the time they across-the-board pay Increase was
are initially sold, always to persons 18 soundly rejected by both the in·
of parents' cameras. or over, or to lS.to-21-year"lds who structors and the board. ~
Smiles went from father to son, have parental pennission, depending Instructors from both the Orange
daughter to mothet, to friends and on the area. Coast and Golden West campu51!
classmates. ·; Hand guns are recorded upon argued that a flat increase instead r
Janis Gissel, In her valedictory ad-purchase, with the Bureau of Crltninal percentage increase works against
dress, said, "Today:-the world presents IdenUCication and Investigation, in th e teachers who have been longest witll
us as young adults with tremendous event of a need for !uture rererence. the district.
social pressure. Freedom often leads -Any change of owners.hip should be They. said they thought percentage
to confusion and uncertainty. registered with the local police depart-increases had been agreed upon.
Storm Becom~ "We must define our ideals and con-ment, in case of subsequent loss or Dr. \Vatson acknowledged they had
. victions and make sacrilices to uphold th eft. a month ago, noting the salary
. them. Every day our principles are This, however, is not a permit to schedule for next year was agreed
T T • tested." _ carry a concealed weapon, which is il· upon too at that tilne . Subsequently, eaJM1l eIDP.~l :· Linda Genis, salutatorian, said, "We legal, unless one ii so registered.. he said, a minority, volunteer group r ~.... .,_ ... 7 must build onto our~iety, not tear it Such permissioo to carry a con-from Orange Ooaat CoUege decided to
The storm'".bf protut over th~ast down. The Columbla1 U n 1 v e r s i t y cealed weapon i& difficult to obtain in hold out for m-0re money.
Guard's proposal to remove three aids students were just overgrown three most jurisdictions and impossible in Instructors complained. that their
' year olds throwing tantrums because many others. salary negotiators did not have
ti> navigation in Newport Beach they didn't get their way." Newport Beach Assistant Police authority to strike a bargain for the
waters subsided. today to a tempest in Principal Harrylnan called the Chief Merrill Duncan notes, as a . entire faculty even tbou:gh they had
a teapot -·or will when the Qbjectors graduates ''poised, productive and in-sidelight, that the g_&Od would probably developed a cert.tin autonomy. Jn.
read the Official government Light telligent people who have just begun to abide with the · various proposed gun · structor Ed, Burl(e said Dr. Watson
1.Jat:.i tap their own resol.U'ces." co ntrol laws,_ but.he-cannot. see ~y 'had presuined tha~ authority.
Objections by official agencle1 -in· ~:;:::;:::;:::=:=~:=:=:=:=:=:==::=::=::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~============~-eluding the Harbor Department and
Orange County Board of Supervisors
-not to 'mention certain yacht clubs
-that tbe Coast Guard proposes to
eliminate the Newport. Harbor en·
trance buoy and two "Quo" buoys in-
side Newpo rt Harbor ate based on a
complete misunderstanding of the
Coast Guard's proposal, according to .. Lt . Cmd.r. William J anicke, chief o[
the Aids to Navi~iltion Branch of the '
11th Coast Guard District. •
The Coast °Gi(W-d's proposal was to · i
ellminate "Iigffl.ed bell buoy No. 2 af! · .. _
Newport HarQor and nun buoys 2 and ...
4." . ·.
The gove rnment Light List locates
lighted bell buoy No. 2 1 in miles off
Newport Pier -commonly known to
Harbor Area yachtsmen as "C" mark .
Nun buoys 2 .and t are the unllght!!d..
blloys in the .ocean near Balboa and
Newport pier! -commonly known to
YB;Chtsmen as -A and B marks.
"The re has never been any thought
of removing the Newport entrance
buoy (an unnumbered black bell buor
\vlth flashing green light It the
Newport entrance) or th~ lwo nu"n-
buoys Inside N~'J)Of't Har~,'' said
Cmdr. Janicke. · ,
...
The Coast Guard offic,ill.;uid the
reasons for removing -.1lfe._ oulaJdl! _
buoys "are strictly econor:Jifca.1",, ~
. . ...
di.pg that · th8y. 1erye DOi .. P'rtJcular
safety needs. . -• · '"' ·
Janlck-.uld.the l:ooot Guard would
have no objection to J.BiCht clubl plan·
ting tbe.lr own perm.anent marks in
these or other areas. '
The present No. 2 and 4 buoy1 off
the piers were formerly spar buoys.
The Coast Guard recently replaced
them With red conical buoys.
The confualon apparently arose over
the fact that the red nun-buoy chaMel
markers lntide Newport Harbor are
also numbered 2 and 4.
•
..
.:J)a'J
•
a ve1·y special purchase from a
famous quality maker of
GENUINE LEATHER CHAIRS
INTER!~ DESIGNEllS _ ...... ,_... ........ ....
'
A &IR TO TRWUR£ All> ENJOY FOR YEARS
'
,.,.
• Cuatom quality lhrough-OUt •
LuxuriOU.S· cushioning • Your
choice ot colo/s from an ex~ive
selection of finest leather texlures.
·from $199
2215 HARJOR BLVD.
646-0275 646-0276
. '
=
•
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
.,,..,,..,.., J-U, !Ml NI.CM ,_ I)
'
' Progress Illuminated
City Shines
0Fl Birthdc3y
I
Fifteen candles may not be a bltze.
But they're enough to ·u1uminate the rapid progress of a citY
incorporated just 15 years ago come June 29.
And Uta t's why Cost.a M~sa residents are preparing to celebrate
their city1s birlhdfi.Y with a reception on Sunday, June. 30, at the
Costa Mesa Goll and Country Club. .
1 Tentative plans call for a citywide golf tournament, capped by
a 6 p.m. dinner, priced with children in mind. The program will begin
at 7 p.m. and will include talks by Mayor A. L. Pinkley and Chamber
of Commerce President. Jack Hammett.
Former mayors who have been. invited to the doings include
Claire Nelson, '54 to '58 ; John W. Smith, '58 to '60 ; Arthur H. Meyers,
'60 to '62 ; Pinkley, '62 to '64 and '68 to '70; Robert M. Wilson, '64 to
166 and Willard T .• Jordan. '66 to '68. Costa Mesa's first mayor, serv·
ing from ·t-953 to "1954, was-the lat~ eharles W. TeWinkle.
Weriler Escher. public relations director for ihe South Coast
Plaza. is chairman of the 15th ariniversary celebration. the theme of
which is Whal Will Costa Mesa Be Like in Another 15 Years?
I
•
"
MANY HAPPY RETURNS -Preparing to toast the future of
Costa Mesa are two former mayors and their wives, Mr. and Mrs.
Claire Nelson (left) and Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Pinkley. Jn addition
to being a former mayor, Pinkley also is the current maybr 'of
the city which will celebrate its 15th birthday this month with
fe stivities in th~ Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club.
Reperesentatives of business, industry, education and other
fields wiU be on hand at the crystal anniversary party to peer into a
crystal ball and make predictions for 1983.
League Opens Door · to Creative Art
No 'Beatin_g ~~out the Bush'
Keeping the door t o
-creative art wen and awing-
+ ing ~ i'!"the ·goal lof the
Costa Mesa Art League.
"
An d &ee ing that nothrn g
inhibits this goal will be
Mrs. Richa rd F . Ingram.
president, and hr,r
board members for the
coming year.
Pledged to aid the presi·
dent in her endeavors will
be Robert Moody, first vice
president, and the Mmes.
Anthony N. Toto. second
vice p re s i d e n t ; Paul
Friebertshauser, recording
s e c re t a r y : Hans D.
Li n hardt, corresponding
secretary; Alex E . Miller.
treasurer, and William R.
Ludlam J r., parliamentar-
ian.
Other board members are
John Burgess, John P .
Thorley , and the Mmes.
Grayson McCarty. Richard
O'Keefe, Thomas Beckwith,
Arthur .J . \Vill iams. Charles
B. Luebbert, J . P. Puf· "
fi nbarger, and Lila
Mci ntyre.
Works hops ror learning,
1nonth\y programs featuring
distinguished artists a n d
!eachers and almost con-
1inuous exhibit~ by mem-
bers in various galleries and
'(,;
I 1)1 '·"' ·'
•
public buildings keep door. ---'
stops firmty m place.
•
'
·'Here we go around the~mulberry bu sh, so early in the morriing," is a phrasr
fro1n a popular nursery rhyme, and though members of llhe Wednesday Morn "
ing Club of Costa f\.1esa don't un dertake the task described in the rhyme in their
morning sessions they are nevertheless brif!lming with energy and ideas to help
them through their various philanthropic, social and culturar activities. Steer-
ing the club in the coming year will .be (Lecft to right) the Mmes. Ben Brouwei-,
third vice president, Philip Evans, financial secretary, and Edward 8 . English,
pre6ident. ·
Opening more doors ia the
Holiday Art Soiree <Help a
Student) w.hich this year
r aised tl.000 which· was
distributed among college
students. Bruce Richards.
James Hopton . David A.
Stipes and Gary Price; and
high s.chool students. the
Misses Lisa White, Karen
Sesma, Carolyn Wyman and
Tamara Materson.
SKETCHING A NEW YEAR -Drawing up the out·
lines of the coming Y.ear is Mrs. Richard F. Ingram,
president of the Costa Mesa Art League (left).
Watching plaris take shape as the new president
describes them are .(left ID right) Robert Moody,'
.first vice president, Mrs. Anthony Toto, second vice
president, and Mrs. Paul Friebertshauser, recording
secretary. 1
If You' re Whipped,· 1t' s Better to S.witch Than Fight
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am a
middle-aged man who works in a ' &mall but successful company. The
boss is a jet-propelled. high·powered
executive who is subject to a lot of
pressure. I sympathize with the guy
ANN LANDERS
but I am beginning to think he is a
sadist.
When things are going smoothly he
Js the sweetest guy in the world. When
things oon•t go well he is unbelievably
brutal. I happen to be the bos1 ' Num ·
ber One whipping boy and It is getting ·
me down. When he beats on me I beat
day I got my third migraine headache
in a month.
Is it possible to fight this problem?
If so, how? -MORE SICK THAN
WELL
on my family. I realize this is unfair DEAR J\.fORE : The best way ta
and I hate myself for it. fight this proble m 11 with your pen.
I joined the company five years ago-Write a letter of resignation. No jeb 11
witf\ high hopes for a brilliant future. Wl'lrth ulctrt and migraine. I have yet
The money Is excelleht but I'm begin· ln see 1 Brink'• monty wagon In 11
ning t.o wonder U 11.'t wort,h it . Last funera't proce11lon.
December I 1penl two weeks in the
hospital wi th a bleed.ini ulcer. Ye&lN'·
"
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I"ve been
going with Riehle for two years. We
bave been engaged and disengaged so
many time·s I've lost count. We argue
const.anlly about religion, friends,
which moVie to see, which TV channel
to watch, where to eat and every kind
of nonsense you can think of.
Rich and l don't get along with eJch
other worth .a darn, but we don't seen\
to ~et along without each ottler. either.
I keep telling myself marriage wtll
solve our problems because there wlll
be more time to settle Utings ptoperi)'.
What about it.? -V.C.
DEAR V.C.: There aJ&o will be
more tlmr. to fight -which Is pro·
bably what you'd be doing.
The basic lngrtdJe.nt for a soc·
ce11ful marriage 11 frte~d1hlp. Where
there 11 continual blckeril!C and argu"
Ing, tbere can be ao · frtend1hlp. Tell
Rieb "lood"bye and food tuck" and
reaolve to ba1e your next selectlon on
what you can 1bare, not what yon can
fll'.ht about. ·
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I am 15.
My sister Ellen 1J 11 JMflths younger.
Ever slnce I can remember we have
gal.ten etactly the 1~e things -
allowance. same privileges. same
curfew. Every time I feta new dress,
Ellen gets one . When get a new pair
of shoes, so does Ell en.
• 1.1om used to buy Uli Identical
clothes. People thought we were twins,
When we 'd get Qres&ed in the morning,
Ellen would put on her dress like mine
and I'd change Into something el&e. I
hated it.
I have a sister 17 and we gel along
n'ne. I know it Is wrong but I find
myseli hating Ellen. I cry a lot
because 1 get so angry I don't know
what else to do. Cari you help me? -
WET PILLOW
DEAR W. P.: Nobody wants to be 1
carbon copy of someone else.
Stop bating your 1l1ter. lt'1 your
mother who made the mistake. And
don't hate her, eltheL She made the
mistake out of t1oorance. Go to your
mother t.oday and tell her you art
l11utnc a declarallon of lndependr.nce.
No more clothes alike. Pur1ue dlf·
ferent lntere1t1. If EUee Is le th
orcbettra, be In the band. If EUea 1:-
on lhe school paper. join the yea~
1t.aff. If your 1l1ter lnsl1t1 on lmltai141
you, there Is oothlna: you e;an de. ;
rest assured you will be the ·
McCoy and 1he wtU be the tmitatloa. ~
When romantic glances turn lo
warm embraces is It love tr
chemistey? Send for lbe booklet "Lofe
or Sex and How to Tell lbe J;>lt..
ference." by Ann Landers. Encl OH 1•
long, stamped, self·addressed 'f•
velope and 35 cents in coin with )'OClr'
request. ff: Ann Landers wlll be glad to help
with your problems. Se nd them to
in care of the DAILY PILOT, encla..
ing a stamped, self addressed ••
velope. +
I
•
DAii. V PILOT
WE DIG CLAMS! -Clams by tbe bushel are the
epicurean delight awaiting members and guests of
the Orange Coast Yacht Club who will share their
dinner on the beach at Dana Point with members of
Bahia Corinthian and Voyagers Yacht Club dur·
ing a two-day cruise next weekend. Making sure of
Meson Couple
~·Engagement Disclosed -.. The en1agefuent of two
Costa Mesans, Jean Kil&<>r•
and Richard L. Hall, has
beeii announced by the
brlde·t~be's parents, Mr.
and Mr1. Clarmce Kil&ore
of BeDevue, Mich.
Miss Kilgore , who
graduated from the Harley
Hospital School of Nursing
1n Flint. Mich., is currenUy
employed at Palm Harbor
General Hospital, Garden
Grove.
Her fiance, son of Mrs.
~ E dward G. 'Hall of Las
Vegas and thei late Alr
--
• Force Maj. Hill. ii
employed by Bell Broadway
Mortuary, Colla Mou. HI
II • 1nduote ot Oranp Coast Collep IOd Olllfoml1
Colle1e of Mortuary
Sclenc:o, Loa Alllelos.
JI.AN KILOORI
lrld ... lact
• -
'
GEORGI
GIRL
GEOR.GI GIRL ORIGINALS
CLOTHES & GIFTS
H25 COAST HllOHWAY
LA6UNA BEACH e 494.9100 ............. ,....., ..............
GET H1M FIRED UP.
Whal to glvo for Gradultlon or F1th01'1 Dav?
How lbaut-lng ho'H -IJld 1111>rocl1to
,•U year tong, 8Ylf'1 day.
Z1ppo In 10 karat gold ftllod, '22.l!O.
Chtomeftnllh Zlppo. IPIOI for rnonogrut, 1&91. eoo.ul-. cllpo Into poont, S7 A , --.•1•.95. ..
s~-~
11· FASHION ISLAND-644-IJIO
NEWPORT .CENTER
'
• an ample supply o! the tasty tidal creatures are
(left to right) Commodore and Mn. F. K. Gleaaon
and Vice · Commodore and Mrs. Lorin Weiss. Fes-
tivities get under way with a race to the destina-
tion at 11 a .m. Saturday, June 15.
Yacht Clubs Turn Tide
For ·clamfest-ivities
Digging up pl-ans for a fine
clam bake are members of
tbe Orange Coast Yacht
Club, and members and
guests from Bahia Corin-
thian and Voyagers yac~t
chlhl who !lave been Invited
to participate.
Activities will begin at 11
a.m,.Saturday , June 15, wtth
a cruise race fro m Crystal
Cove to the Dana Polnt
breakwater entrance, site of
the Clam.fest.
Participating boats will
take advantage or 90-day in·
terlll\ and!or!J\g pr!vlleges
extended by the Harbor
Commission for the two-day
event.
Festivities will include
dinner on the beach, featur-
ing tho cu1inlry artiJtry of
master clam chef Vince
Gurley. and presentation of
race awards. Quantities of
fresh clams will be flown
from New England for the
occasion and shore boats
will be provided for the
more than 400 expected to
attend.
Turner-Heger Nuptials
Recited in San Dieg6
•
Horoscope • I
Aquarius: Study 'Bargains'
By SYDNEY OMARR
.. Tbe wt.e man cootrolJ
his dfttlny • . • Altrology
polntl the way."
ARIES (March 21·Aprll
19): Pleasant i1 the word
for today. You &et your
wllb: to relu; llld enjoy
coml>anY of fine people.
Earlier, try to complete
bulc project. Thon you will
sparkle tonlght.
TAURUS (April 20-Miy
Volunteer ·
Notes
20): Ambltlon 1 are h!ChJl8hfed Ind can be
flllfllled 1llroUlb contact&
made toalat>t. Bo with
ARIES lodlvldual for an
open door to opportunity.
Favorable word received
from one· In authority.
GEMINI (May 21-June
:II)): VacaUon pllOl1lng,
!raveling II apolllghted.
UW!u .ln\lUUve Intellect.
Mean1 truat hunch. Piece
together bit.I of information.
Detect treada. Got flncer oo
pulse o! public.
SUMMER SERVICES
CANCER (JW!e 21.J\lly
22): Dig deep for source
material, especially where
finances are concerned. Be
flexible without scattering
forcea. Finlsb what you
start. Get accounta In order. A volunteer with a First Aid certiftcate ls need-
. ed to u&ist day camp activities in Peters Canyon
from,· June 1741, according to a director of Girl
Scouts.
The"' always ls a constant and growing need
for drivers to transport crippled children and
adults, clerical help and swimming aldea to assist
patlenta ln therapy pools.
LEO · (July 23-Aur. 22):
Permit mate, partner to
take lnitlative. Sit back and
be a keen ob1erver. Obtain
hint from CANCER
measage. Don't be in too
mucll of • hurry. Qi.eek
Anyone interested in donating time and service
ts ·asked to• call the Volunteer Bureau weekdays
from 9 a.m. to noon at 642-0963.
legal a1pect1 . .
VIRGO (Aug. 23.S.pt. 22):
W.atdl po1setsions, Some
routine matten may get out
of kilter, Check ballc tasks.
One who performs service
may not be physically up to
par. Be prepared for extra
job.
VB IS A COMMUNITY CHEST·UNITED
" FUND AGENCY
Orangewood Council
Acclaims Area Leader
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Romantic interlude slated
for tonight. Earlier, give at-
tention to dlildren, creative
endeavors. Harmonize fami-
ly relattoni. Vacation ac-
Uv!tl.es favored. Perional
magnetism rating 11 high. Honorary membership 1n
the Oranaewood °-iteglonal
Councll of Epallon Slim•
Alpha lntematlonal sorority
and Fountain Valley's Beta
Gamma chapter baa been
presented to Mrs. Marnette
Peek of Huntington Beach.
Well·known for her many
efiorta in behaU of the com·
munity, Mrs. Peek has 1erv-
ed on the boards o f
Children'• Hosp ital of
Orange County, Ch1ldren'1
Home SOClety, C1ty of Hope,
and Disneyland scholar1hip
and Civic awar.ds.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 • Nov.
21) : Accent on security,
property. In p1amililg action,
take Jong-ran1e view. At·
tention centers on parent.
Be con,1lderate. Older in·
Youth Bid
Grand Slam
She holds honorary life
memberships in the Hun-
tington Union Council of
Parents and Teachers, the
l.Jtue Mermaid Guild, Hun-
tington Beach, and the Ebell
Club and Assistance League of Long Beach. A course of bridge lessons
She ii a member of St for high school and college
Mary's Hospital Guild, Loni students 11 betn1 offered by
Beach : st. Jude Hoa pllal the Woman'1 Club of Hun·
Guild, F u 11 er ton : lhe tington Beach .
j Freedom FoundaUon : DAR : Lesson registration will
Wanderlust Club ; Eastern take place between 10 a.m.
W and noon tomorrow In the Star; Midway City oman's clubhouse. Providing In· Club, and Garden Grove Business and Profesalonal struction wlll be Mr1. W. H. Woman's Club. Creed, children and youth
Mr.11. P,eek has dOnated the chairman for the club and a
use of Peek's F a m l l 1 qualified teacher and life
Colonial Terrace Room u maater.
well es volunteerlng her own Cluses will be conducted each Monday and Wed-home for phllanthroplc teas, neaday from 1: 15 to s p.m.
dividual'1 experience can
prove valuable aid.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dee. 21): Catch up oo past
responsibWttes. Obtain hint troni SCORPIO message.
Be J&elective In deciding
whom to call or 1ee. Some
are merely Intent on making
goaslp, waaUng Ume -you
deserve better.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22·
Jan. 19): You could receive
payment for put service.
Sturdy VJRGO message.
Check poeaes'sloo1. Better to
finish than to begin projecL
Be aware of coata -know
what goes out, comes in.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): New begillllings, added
freedom shown today. Peer
pie are attracted to you and
want your opinions. Be
frank. II (onhrlllbt, you gain
new allies. Streu origin.I·
llty.
PISCES (Feb. JP.'March
20) : Puzzle pieces could fall
in·to plaCe. Secrets are
revealed. You · know who is
pn your aide, who is not.
Separate real friend from
fafr.weather variety. Be
discreet, quiet within.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you are
dynamic, food ol. travel and
change. You are extremely
active and would make fine
reporter, te.acber. Signifi-
cant current cycle could, if
single, lead to marriage.
GENERAL TEN·
DENCIES' Cycle high for
ARIES. Special w<>rd to
LIBRA: comp 1 et e ad·
justment in domestic area.
( Ji0 ~t.Jl JU 'jt4f1
RE-OPENS
SATURDAY,
JUNE 15th
Sandy Carl1on is back,
with partn1r Merl Gr1v11
•• , to offer you meny
fine lines of
"Intimate Appar1I"
and Corsetry
D• Ylllt •• thl• lmirffy •
l•tltNr fw ll••t ,,t .. Mel
Sp1el1lt•l"t. I" .. D" C11p1 •
M1tf1eto111y
Gr1cl111t1 Cort1ti•••
Me11 ltn s.t t M 6
"It Comfort•blt 111 Your Cupt"
Sl. Paul's 'Epl s cop a 1
Church of San Dle10 was the .wn1 for the marriage of
Roxanne Ellie Heaw llld
Brent EIWOOd Turner.
HONORED fashion shows and lun· sheath dress and carryfng Mrs. Marnett• Peek cheons. for four week.a beginning yellow rosea. , . Mondl.y, June 17, and ad-
Tim Htrrtlon of Berkeley dltional lnkirmatlon may be w~::~i:·for 35 IUHls Secretaries Lining Up ~::~~r!-:.: Canon C. Rl.nltln Barnes,
the cleruman who married
both the bride'• pwenta and
sister, solemnized the dou-
ble ring ceremony.
took place after t h e
certmony in the home of the Bahia Chapter, NaUonal Ml s a Constance Scouta and their moth.tr•
bride'& parent&. Mrs. J . 8. Secretaries Association in-McCauley, president o f'~iwlll~tll:~e~pla~ce~ln~A~Ul\ll~~l~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ Stator of La Mesa, the stalled new officers in the Callfornia division of NSA,
The bride ls the dMJghter
of Mr. and Mrs. Vtrnon
Heger of San Diego. Parents
of the bridegroom ar11 Mr.
Ind Mrs. Robert E. Turner
of Costa Mesa.
bride's gran dmo the r , lrvi.ne Coast Country Club inet.alled the off Ice r 1 .
aaslsted. The bridegroom's today. . A.sslsUng wa1 Mrs. Del
grandmothers, Mrs . Stewart Incoming leaders are the Beard, tlrat vice president,
S. Smith of Anaheim and Mmes. Floyd r. Fleming, California division NSA and
Mrs. Elmer Schrader of president; Ruth Rosebush, Bahia member.
Lebanon, Ohio were· p~ent first vice president: Elenor Entert&lnlng was the
at the wedding. Evans, second vice pres-Newport Harbor chapter of Given in marrt.a1e b1 her
father, the bride wore a
lireet lenath white tac:e
drtc1 wttb long 1letve1,
white Splllish mantilla and
a bouquet of yellow !'Oles
and whlle carn.tjona.
· 'lhe bride ls a graduate ot ident; Way 11 e Tbuestad, the Society for th e
Sar! Diego High School and recording 1ecretary; Mary Pres er v • t Ion and
is att.eodlng cawornta State A 1 be rt, corresponding Encouragement of Barber
College at Loq Beach. The secretary, and Eileen Phln· Sil<>p Quortett1 SlnP>t ln
bridegroom le a 1?aduate of ney, trNsurer. America.
Mrt. Jon Graber, the
bride's sister, wu matron
of honor, we•Ina a yellow
Coste Mesa Hllh School, ll·~=================:;-1JI tended Orange C o a s tll
College, and is atttnd.ing
CSCLB, where he 11 1tu.
dylng to be a teacher.
Mn. Jack Q\apman, MQ. 1
1379, may bt contacted for
locatton 1nformat106 f o r
Harbor Chapter of
Hadasatltl . The club meeta
at 8 p.m. every third Tues·
day.
The newlyweds will live in
Belmont Shore1.
BRIGHT n., OAILY PILOT ffltktt th
ntwt c1.,1r•1• llt hf, flthf 1114
l.rltht. k11 y•wr h•111tfo-
ettl lflon cl1l1y 1114 •nJ•y th1
lllW\. ---
Tiit Marclan Associates
Announce i
"BENEFIT ART SHOW & SALE" 1
Extended One Week I
SISTER MARY CORITA
RITA LETENDRE
GEORGE BAEHR
Many Other Ovtatanclln9 Arti1t1
Siik Scr .. nt -Sculpture
C1ramlc1 -Olis -lltlk1
At Sp1cl1I Pr! ...
W• ere ttatefwl fot your werm
r11pon1e to our Week•n~
'!ESTA DIL ARTE
$1.00 Donation ~-'
Juno I 0 th"""' JuM 14
E""l"ll 7 te 10 p.m.
'95 Wttt 19th St-, Colli -
Al,. ...... '• n.
MAlDAN .OUMU.TtOM SCH00t.
POI CHILDUN WtTM WININe DllAllUTill
I
Large Sizes
... ~ ...
cau1ht
·Shift-'•·· ..,
lasy .ununer
Qys. Keep _._ ...
Half.Sl1•
Sit°' .....
9reot •I~
-$9.00
,' ,
\
Effa Nor'sHALF·SIZE SHOP
1805 Newport BIYd., •
Coste Me11
"~ bloek nor1h of 11th Slr1tt"
........ 9:JO .. 5:30,
. Frlclay to 9:00 BE
. . . . . ... . . ... ·~ .
SALE
shop 11 hOllt for custom
rHpholaltry fl•rlos
.2.99. 7.49 yd.
reg.4.00109.00yd.
A large selection of fine fabrics from one
of the n1tlon's finest mills awaits your
choice. Come In and choose from 62 dee.or·
ator colors and 1-4 fabrics that will look
elegant on any styl11 furniture.
During our AMlvtrary Sale 'Ht will ,..
upho lster 1 atandard ain . 2-cushlon 6' sof1
for $109.00, stuldonl club chslr $65.9'.
shop at home
Just c.all your nearest to11·free May Co
and a decorstor consultant will come to your
tiom1 with a cornplttt 1tltctton of fabrics .
No cllarg1 or obnoatton.
moy co rtl/j)holsttring 1 I
2\4 ..A. "Y'. ti c::: 0
m11 co south cout plaza, PD diego freewa,y al
briatol,ooota ...-; 546-9321, 876-3413-obop
mon. 1hru cal 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m.
, .
Costa Me.Sa Teday'1 Closing
• ,,... . '.EDITI ON N.Y. Steeb
'
voi:. 61, NO. 142, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES THURSDAY, ~UNE 13, 1m TEN CENTS
'
OCC District Sets $7 .25.-Million Bond Vote . .
By TJIOMAS FORTUNE
Of Hie Oliy l'lltol Slaff Orange Coast Junior College District
wiU hold a rt.25 million bond electi(m.
on Sept. 17.
Trustees voted unanimously late
\Vednesday night to hold the election
that if successful would end the
district's traditional pay-as-you-go
policy.
The bond issue would cover b}Jilding
programs on the Orange CoaSt and
Golden West campuses pi Costa Mesa
and Huntington Beach for four years.
Two-thirds voter approval will be re-
qUired for passage.
A second ballot proposition will be to
convert an existing 101h-cent override.
naYi limited to use for construction to
general purpose use. It would not
change the present tax raU. 3:1ld would
be meaningless unless the bond issue
passes.
The bond issue would cost district
taxpayers aeve9' to 12 cents per $100 of
assessed valuation the first year and
Jess thereafter depending on how
many years the board wanted to take
to pay it off. The current district tax
rate is. 54 cents per $100 assessed
valuatioo.
Orange Coast Disttjct officials have
reason not to be optimistic.
"Jt's not going to be easy to get two-
Assass-ination Told •
Waiter Saw Trigger\. Pulled, RFK Fall
LOS ANGELES (AP) -"He kind of
motioned around him and stuck the
gun straight out, and nobody could
move. It was -you were frozen ; you
didn't know what to do. And then I saw
the first powdering or plastering when
he pulled the trigger, the first shot.
Mr. Kennedy fell down."
In these words a young student and
part-time waiter told a Los Angeles
County Grand Jury of the assassina-
tion of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
A transcript of the proceedings last
Protests Halt
Mesa Heights
Annex Plans
Last minute opposition from
residents ~f the area and the Sant~
Ana Heights Water Co.-~aused a delay
in· Costa Mesa's proposed 34-acre an-
nexation on Palisades Road and
Newport Boulevard.
The Local Agency Formation Com·
mission (LAFC) delayed decision on
the merger for 30 days after hearing
opposition spokesmen.
Speaking for the water company
was William H: Eppinger, a director.
lie said some of his shareholders ob-
ject to the annexation and that 20 of
the company's 2024 customers are in
the merger area.
Supervisor C. M. "Cye" Featherly. a
commission member, muddied the
waters with talk 0£ the Corona de! Mar
Freeway in the area. The adopted
freeway route is north of Palisades
R<>ad and the annex will not be af-
fected by the future freeway.
The annexation is in the unin·
corporated category because Jess than
12 registered voters lived in the area
when the action to annex by the city
wa$ initiated.
Costa Mesa City Manager Arthur R.
McKenzie pointed out that of the
$154,000 in assessed valuation in the
annex area only owners or $30,000
worth objected. The law requires a
protest of more thail 50 per cent of of
the a ssessed valuation.
City Attorney Roy June said there
were but nine registered voters in the
area at the time of the annexation.
The annexation is "L" shaped and
extends from just north of Mesa Drive
on Newport to Santa Ana Avenue on
Palisades.
Included in the area is the Palisades
Restaurant and Tennis Cllub and
Henry's Restaurant on Newport
Friday, which resulted in a murder in·
dictment against a 24-year-old Jorda-
nian, Sirhan Bishara Sirhan. was
made public today when it was filed
with the county clerk.
Vincent Thomas Qi Pierro testified
that he was in the kitchen of the
Ambassador Hotel when Kennedy
entered, en route from an election vic-
tory speech to the press room.
He said he saw the accused and a
pretty girl standing on a tray-stacker.
clutching a pipe with his left hand and
with his right hand held to his
stomach.
"I saw him get down off the tray
stand. And wheh I went to turn, the
next thing I saw was him holding the
gun ... "Then came the tiring.
"I heard five distinct shots ... there
could have been more." Actually there
were eight:
"The next thing I know, I had blood
all over my face and my glasses. And
then the man, one of five others,
besides Kennedy that got shot in the
head, fell in my arms. And tqen the
other boy that got shot in the ~lgh, he
fell on top of me and they pushed me
down. They fell on top of me."
OCC Instructors
Win ~ala~y !ig!':~
' . -
Orange Coast College instructors'
holdout for higher salaries at both
Orange Coast and Golden •\Vest col-
leges paid off Wednesday night.
A contingent of :JO. teachers batUeJ
the school board for 21h hours before
trustees relented.
Adoption of salary schedule that will
Kennedy Letters
Fill Full Page
Robert Kennedy is dead. His accus-
ed assassin still awaits trial. And citi·
zens and solons alike are talking about
tougher gun laws.
These were th~ spurs which bigger·
ed a vast outpouring of various kinds
of reactions by Orange Coast area
readers of the DAILY PILOT.
. The volume or mail grew to such
proportions that it Is necessary to de-
vote a full page to the Mailbox fea-
ture today. You'll find the full page of
letters to the editor on Page 10.
Los . Angeles Police
Kill Burgla r, 17
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Police say
they shot and killed a 17-year-old boy
today after he attempted to nee the
scene of a burglary and attacked an
officer.
Officers identified him as llenry
Rees of Los Angeles. A 16-year-old
companion, not immedjately identi-
fied, was booked. on suspicion ol
murder.
give instructors a 5.8 percent raise
wl.1 hilled by 1pokeaman Dr. JObn l ..
Jen· sen as "a great victory."
Supt. Norman Watson, responding
bitterly to teacher demands, acted a~
if he reseDted their going over his
head to the board,
"Now we'r e in a new ball game,
with a new pitcher, and trying to play
with new rules," he sald at one point.
His compromise proposal for a $500
across-the-board pay increase was
soundly rejected by both the in·
structors and the board.
Instructors from both the Orange
Coast and "Golden West campuses
argued that a flat increase instead of
percentage increase works again~!
teachers who have been longest with
the district.
They said they thought percentage
increases had been agreed upon.
Dr. Watwn acknowledged they had
a month ago, noting the salary
schedule for next year was agreed
upon too at that time. Subsequently,
he said, a minority, wlunteer group
from Orange Coast College decided to
hold out for more mone y.
Instructors complained that their
salary negotiators did not have
autho"rity to strike a bargain for the
entire faculty even though t hey had
developed a certain autonomy. In·
structor Ed Burke said Dr. Watson
had presumed that authority.
T URN OUR COAST
RED, WHITE, BL UE
Friday is the day ~o paint the
Orange Coast red, white and blue.
Residents are reminded that it is
Flag Day again, the day on which the
Stars and Stripes should be flown from
every home or store, as well as public
buildings.
thirds -· Ille slalewldo propodtion
passed by only 56 percent (last
week)," Supt. Norman Watson said.
"And the state issue doesn't even go
on the property tax.'"
Nevertheless, trustees, acting on the
r ecommendation a joint Harbor Area.
West County Citizens Finance Com·
Llittee, decided to try. •
"We ca n take a !eaf from Max Raf· f~rty's c4mpaign book," b o ar d
member Robert Humphreys Ill(·
a:ested. 11Hls pitch was ·don't cancel
out (U. S. Senator) George Murphy's
vote. We can say don't canCel out" Pro-
position Two."
The $7 .25 million would enable the
district to obtain another $7,106,000 in
matching state and federal fund! over
the next four years. This' money is not
available to the district unless local .
money ls put up in equal amounts.
Trusttes accepted the Citizens
Finance Committee's advice -that ttiey
junk the pay·as-you-go concept. The
board pollcy for the ·first 20 years is
now bladequate·because of rapidly in·
creasing enrollment. they reasoned. It
requires today's tupayers to provide
debt-free faclliUes for those who come
tomorrow.
·The majority of building to be
(See BOND VOTE, Page I )
GRAND PROCESSION PROVIDES COLOR, MOVEMENT AT ESTANCIA EXERCISES
Graduates Ma rch Alang Various Pathways ta Stats In Twilight C1rema:nles ""'-~~~~~~~~~~
Students Stand, Cheer
At Estancia Graduation
The Estancia High School class of
1968 stood as one and ckeered.
Principal 1-'loyd Harryman ·had just
declared the 369 seniors graduated in
\Vednesday night ceremoniei1 at
Davidson Field.
Mesan Honored
By Mater Dei
Paul Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vic-
tor Clarke, 2928 Ellesmere Ave ., Costa
Mesa, has been named Outstanding
Student of the Year at Mater Dei High
School.
Clarke, a straight-A student and
valedlctorian of his class, has bun
awarded a Ford Foundation four-year
scholarship valued at $10,000, a Bank
of Am erica plaque ;;i science and
mathematics. a letter o f• com-
mendation in the National Merit
Scholarship program.
Al so a California state scholarship,
the Southern CalifQrJlia Edison Award
for Scientific Achievement and the
Al bertus Magnus Science Club award
as Science Student of the Ye ar.
Soon the red-go1Yned graduates were
picking up their diplomas to the flash
of parents' cameras.
Smiles went from father to son,
daughter to mother, to friends and
classmates.
Janis Gissel, in her valedictory ad~
dress, said, "Today the world present!:
us as young adults with tremehdous
social pressure. Freedom often leads
to confusion and uncertainty.
"We must define our ideals and con·
victions and make sacrifi~ to uphold
them. Every day our principles are
tested."
Linda Genis. salutatorian, said, .. We
must build onto our society, not tear it
down . The Columbia University
students were just overgrown three
year olds throwing tantrums because
they didn't get their way."
Principal Harr1man called the
graduates .. poised, productive and in·
telligent people who have just begun to
tap their own resources."
Stock Market.
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock
market churned in near-record trading
this arternoon, backing away from an
initial advance and settling lower.
(See quotations, Pages ~27).
Saigon Warned
Of New. Rocket
Terror (:ampaign
3AIGON _(UPI) -Viet Cong leaflets
warned Saigon's 3 million r esidents to-
day of a new terror campaign of 100
rockets a night for 100 nights. And
U.S. military sources said intelligence
reports indicated the Communists
were planning another ground assault
against the city.
Rockets spared Saigon today for the
first time in 13 days, but the Com·
murllsts blew up an ammunition dump
outside the city and exploded a time
bomb in a U.S. office building in· Da
Nang, wounding 17 Americans and
Vietnamese.
U.S. military sources expressed.
doubt t.Pe Viet Cong could mahitain a
100-d~y bombardment aga.lllst the city
though Gen. William C. Westmoreland
said recently there was no way to stop
isolated rocket attacks. But the Com•
munist leaflets stirred uneasiness
among the 'capital's inhabitants.
Orange Coast
Weatker
Coast Police Chiefs Debate~ Gun Controls Try as he might, Old Sol just
won't quite get his message
through Friday, forecaster Emil
Kurtz predict.. It'll be hazy with
early fog and temperatures in
the 70 bracket for the coasL
,i
ROCKIT LAUNCHE R TURNED IN TO SAN FRANCISCO POLICE
El...,.,.., Howwer, F1w WMpon• Have Bein Surrendered t• Lewm•n
I
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Ot the 011t~ 1'110! Sllll
Possession of a pistol turns an adult
heroin addict, feeding a $20.a-day
habit on holdups -and even an aged,
church·going widow, who simply fears
prowlers -into brother and sister
under one facet of law.
It depend& on how one views the
situation.
Each js a potential k:ill(lr, but there
may be nothing Illegal in ownership of
a weapon, until the individual is
caught misusing or w r o n g f u 11 y
possessing 1t, as In the case of a con-
victed felon or a known drug addJct.
A 1urvey of gun control laws along
the Orange Coast, sparked by crM!1 for
more rigid legislation tollowJng the
as1asaination of Sen. Robert F. Ken· .,
ncdy. shows the clearcut yet complex
problems Involved.
Opinions by police spokesmen -
from metropolitan chiefs to rookies on
small town forces -Indicate that sUf·
fer laws cannot rtally be the 1olution
to murder as a political tool
This contemp0rary A m e r I c • n
stigma, however, may be helplng to
focus the attention of many citizens on
their personal conduct ln owner1bip
and handling of guM.
Since Tuesday, nine persons hive
registered guns with the Costa Mesa
Police Department, from a 2l·year-old
collegian to a 79-year-old . housewife
. who ow1U1 a revolver 150 year1 old.
"We go by the at.ate law/' erptaJns
Costa Mesa Police Ohler Ro«er Neth.
(llee GUN CURBS, Pal< I)
INSIDE TODAY
Financial columnilt S11lvia
Porter toda11 oa1aill both Preli·
dent John1on and Ccmgreu for
dtf<J~· <m4 butkposring .,,.,.
mactmt11t of the 10 pcrcnat
iurtox. Ste Page as. -, --" Cll•lllloll ..... -·-.. C-la .. ••ttNlll .... .. ,_ .. Ol'-.t CWlty I ~-""'"' I ,,. 1• ·-I ....... ...,. N ·-~ ..... .. --lt-lf t•"'"l•wt .. ·-11·11 ·-... u INdl l!IMllthi ...,,
""' Cll• • ·-n -,. ........ .. ... ,_,. ., WM ... • ...,_ .. --" -·-•• -·-.. -I
-
I
l
lhursdU, Jllllt ll, 1968
-'
SERIOUS TIME DESCENDS ON CORONA DEL MAR HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES
/ Seniors Reflect Mood of Contempl•tlv• M•turlty During C1rtmonl11 ~-'-~~~~~~~~~
' -Mesa Youth
• 439 Seniors Get Dip~omaE
Finds Drugs At Corona del Mar High
Turn Tzimm Y Corona del Mar High School launch· he has gre~t hopes for the -t968
Marijuana is bliss, according to ed its fifth graduating class in com-graduating class.
mencement exercises held Wednesday He said the graduates "fiercely practiced potsmokers, but a l5-year· afternoon in the school quad. desire to shoulder their share or the old Costa Mesa boy today has an upset d ~ ~cipal . Leon Meeks tot. the 4u:r work. 1 say the establishment can and stomach and a police record to_Show-sew ors. th el.I' parents and friends that should use their help ...
for his initiation. Lindy Blare and Emmett 'Raitt
Officer Norm Kutch sald he watched spoke' On lighting candles.
the boy walking along Santa Isabel Tri"p the Light · "What is this darkness that exists
Avenue at Newport Bou I e var d within us?" Miss Blare asked. "Why
Wednesday, clutching one ha~ d should we fear to Involve ourselves in
sectttively to )!is side -the very pie-FantastiC in each others problems. Perhaps 11 each
. ture of apprehension. one of us lights one small candle."
Kutch radioed ahead to Sgt. George Raitt mourned the untimely deaths
Lortori, who drove his unmarked car Mesa Rec Class of Dr. Martin Luther King and Sen.
by and saw the youth drop something Robert F. Kennedy. He saw a move·
into a patch of roadside grass. ment toward a negative society, living
From Page l
BOND VOTE • • •
It's one thing to stomp around or by the code "What you do not like -
pirouette ecstatically In the sheer joy destroy."
of dancing -like that comic strip He said, "At this hour our nation
beagle Snoopy -but did you know needs more candles. More ·guiding
there's a science to it? lights as represented by these men."
An eight-week s~ries of classes in Laurey Kramer and Clifford Smith
body C<Jntrol, 'ba!lcA exercises, im· were recognized as class valedlc.· fin~~~¥ the bond Issue would be on .-.Pl'.Qv~tioq an~ , iDterpretatiori is torlans and Susan Jackson a s
the Golden W~st campaf1n Huntingi)n · scti'edUled .fiiis ·~miner by the Costa salutatorian. B~ach. which IS nol 1yet_"t~ out. Mera "Recreation Department. School Trustee Lloyd Blanpi~ Jr. !fh~is ~onservati e.bu:d~ng Pl9-~·l~v&~s for youngs ters told the graduates they are at a
gram. We . are not. •fdr . 1~stan~c. · 4' anif·5 ·•rs sc6f 3Uled ~Vednesday or threshold that ushers in vast Op· re~Of!lm~~ding a new adm1n1stration Fridays from 10 to 11 a.m., with portunity for free choice. "So far in
b1uld1ng, Dr. Watson <."Omment~. Elements of Modern Exercise from 11 your lives thresholds have been thrust
A decision on whether to repay the a.m. to nOon, for enrollees 7 to 10 on upon you. F:ron1 now on.you will have
bonds over 10, 15, 20 or 25 years 'vould \Vednesdays and 11to13 on Fridays. to choose," he advised.
be ma~e ._when the bonds are sold, Registration for Uie $5 fee ~ourse He bequeathed to the graduates the
depending upon the money market, beg1nn1n~ Wf(inesday J uly 10 and Fri· 21st Century. "You will be the leaders B~s.ineaa Supt. Correllan ·Thompson day July i.2: fs aclieduled June 20, 6 to 8 who turn over the calendar 2,000 and
said. ·p;1r1... {l,!ld_Jv.~ ~I ,~. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m... set the tone of the time," he said. Tflerefore, tbe exact ~t per year to , m. fourth t-ioot offices at the Civic
taxp,ayer,s caMot be fiiured, At the Center. ~ ,. "
probable five percent interest rate,
first year tax increases "'ould be
between 12 cents for 10-year amortiza.
tion and seven cei:tts for 25-year
amortization.
Succeeding years they w o J I d
gradually diminish down to five cents
to pne cent.
Water District
Annex Rejected ·
Coste. Mesa Cotmly \Valer Dlstrio~
walked into the annexation arena -Wed·
nesday where the citi~ of Costa Mesa
and Newport Beach had failed last
month and met the same fate. ,
Was Little Car
Really D1·opped?
A band of marauders roaming
through. a bowli,ng alley parking lot
lifted a Costa Mesa man's 1ittle car in·
to the air lite Wednesday and then
·dropped it, tliji ·victim told police.
· Christopher'. Dudley ,Young, 25, of
1048 Mission Drive, told. investigators
·he could tell becaus'e ·the wtieels were
s·Jightly bent~. ·
Patrolman. nave Young took II
report, but said he could sec no ap-
par'ent damage and marked the case
closed. early .today.
Service Staiion
Cheated of $82
A Costa Mesa service station was
cheated ·oot of $82 by a handsome,
long-haired youth \'iho bought two
tires with a stolen and forged check,
police said today.
Howard La6ky told de te c tt ve s
\Vednesday that the check passed at
his Humble Oil service station at 1854
Newport BIYd., turned up recently
with Newport Beach police.
The check· had been stolen from Ann
J\1. Nicholson, of 405 Newport Ave.,
Newport Beach. last month and taken
in payment two weeks ago at the sta-
tion, Lasky said.
The district a5ked the l,.ocal Agen~
Formation CommissiQD. (LAFC) to ·IP·
pn>ve the annexmion, · of 18 · acres
bordering Palisades Road on the south
and extending acro1s Santa Aria
Awooe both ways.
From Page l
DAILY PILOT
c ... w .... Ctifthni\9
A•Mrt N. WtM Pllllll,,.,.,
Thorn•• KM¥il ....
Tt.011111 A.. M11r,hino
M9nqllll l"llltw
J•cli: It. C11rlty ,,,1 Ni1101t eu.: ..... Mio,..._, Afvfrtl11nt DlrKlor Coft--lJO W•1t lty Shoot
Mtillitt A44r11t: P.O. 11~ 1160 t2626
' Otk., Ofnc11
......., ... di: ttll w ....... lavtw .... ~ .. 'tll1 12'J l' .. ttl "~~ leldl; M lll'I llnlt
G.UN CURBS .•.
·ex}ilaining the 1ystem whereby
,firearms are registered in the state of
Call{ornia. ·
_ runes and shotguns are togged with
federal authorities at the time they
Me initlallf sold, always to persons 18
or over.; or. to 18-to-.21-year-olds who
.hi.ve pa"renlal perm1ssion, depending
OD tbe area. •
11and guns are recorded upon
.purchase, 'wlth the B~au of Criminal
ldentific,a.tion and Investigation, in the
event o{ a heed for future reference.
Aey change of ownership should be
registered with the local police depart-
ment, in case or subsequent loss or
theft. :
This, however. is not a permit to
carry a c6ncealed weapon. which is IJ.
legal. unless one is so registered.
Such permission lo carry a con-
cealed weapon is difficult to obtain in
most jurisdictions and Impossible jn
many others.
Newport Beac?I Aesl.stant Police
Otief Merrill Duncan notes, as a
sideilght, that the good would probably
abide with the vartoua proposed gun
control laws, but he cannot see any
change in the attitudes of those outside
the law.
Opinions and actions by fellow of·
ficers support hl1 thoO.a:htJ,
"No gun permits are issued In Seal
Beach. In my three years here, I've
only issued one and that was to a u.
quor store clerk who had been robbed
four ti.mes,'' explained Seal Beach
Police Chief Lee Case.
Laiuna Beach P'ollce Chief Harry
La.Brow 1ald a merchant wno C11Tie1
$1 ,000 to the bank each Friday rnay
find insurance much cheaper than car-
rying along a gun and perhaps killing
someone someday.
"Need and a good record are the
most important considerations," said
r~ountain Valley Police Chief Charles
W. Michaelis, "I interview all ap-
plicants for the concealed gun permit
and if I have no objection, I refer
them to the sheriffs office."
"By statute, handguns are taboo for
aliens, narcotic addicts, convicted
felons and minors," said Huntington
Beach Police Lt. Arland Ussher, when,
asked about beach city firearms
regulation.
\Ve stminster Police Chief Conner
Collacott judges each application
himself, usually deciding within three
\;reeks whether to grant it, based upon
a background check of the applicant.
Use or carrying ·of a gun 1n Newport
Beach Js illegal -even a B·B gun or
any otbet pres1ure-powered weapon -
unless the inclivlduat la a police ai-
flcer., AsaiJtant Chief Duntan also
sald, concm.llla: the problem.
llas anyOne owning a wea:rn in
coastal Orange County turne It. In
with no questions asked, as have near-
ly 200 persons in the current program
initiated by San Francisco Mayor
Joseph Alioto after the Rf'.K murder?
No.
A paltry five have been handed over
to poUce In Los Angeles, where the
late Cblcf William H. Parker began in
1951 a policy of no concealed gun
permits:, remaining ln effect today.
•
Ken~,edy_ P.~oh~L Set Up
' ' -· Speci<J:l Police . T--tisk Force Appointed
' ' From Wire 8enicea.
LOS ANGELES -A special 22·man
tuk.(orce b( police expel't$ today was
n1med to investigate all facets of the
assas&lnatton or Sen. Ro~rt F. Ken-
nedy.
Deputy poljce chief Robert A.
ltoughton •-1.d au leads, Jl:O matter
how lr&&ile, would be checked out. He
said the pos1lb1Uty that the aCcu!ed
a.ssusin, Sirhan B. Sirhan, 24, dJd not
act alone was still being explored.
Capt. Hugh Brown, comm~nder of
the police department's hofh.icide
division , heada the task force . He will
be aided by three lieutenants and 18
detectives, all e~ris . in .l he 1 r
particUlar· are<1;1 of ·lnvesUgatton.
Meanwhile. Slrhan...-wbo-wa.s raiud
in the Greek Orthodox faith ln his
native Jordan, la ipending the long
days in his cell ~ding up on the 9(:·
cult. ·
Sirhail baa been ·vial(ed ·daily by 'A.
· L. Wirln . of tJie Am~lcan Civil
·Liberties Union to'"see 1.hat Sirhan'r
constitutional rights are prOtected."
Wirin 1ald the defendant spends
much of his time pcirinfover-books on
tile occuJt, the belief that mysterious
powers exf'st which can be subject to
human control.
In London, a ·newspaper said today
anAr.ab1government has evidence that
Sirhan returned to the Middle East in
1964 and 1966.
' The Evenint .Standard said this
evidence could open a new line or in·
vestlgation into the motivation for the
Kennedy shdoting. ·
The paper said the Arab govern·
rilent, '>vhich was not identified, was
forwarding its fi,Ddings to the United
States.
Me~ Seeking
Work Given
Harbor Conimencement
Working Over Sees 519 Seniors ·Leave
' -
A Costa Mesa man ~'ho · went out
looking for a job got worked over.Wed·
nesday, after he reluSed to do
Janitorial service, police said today.
Richard E . White, 24, 0£ 3005
Coolidge Ave ., told police he was
assaulted by the manager of a shop at
3333 S. Bristol Sf., in SoUth Coast
Plaza.
Commencement ex er c i s es at
Davidson Field Wednesdafi afternoon
closed out the high school careers of
519 Newport Harbor· High School
seniors.
Hundreds of parents and friends
looked on as a long line of blue-robed
graduates picked up their diplomas.
Three students who r e c e i v e d
straight A's throughout high school,
named co-valedictorians, sh are d
speaking duties.
The manager, however, told in· Georgeanne !-Janna spurred her
vestigators White became sarcastic classmates to "face head on our
when he turned down hJs job ap-responsibility to ourselves and to the
plication, since no ftelp was needed. world . We must act out our concern,
. and tore up one of the firm's business not sit back complacently and think
cards, throwing pieces on the noor. good thoughts,-. she said.
The manager said he followed White Wend)'. Isbell warned f e 11 o w
into the mall Outside, demanding he graduates againit lorsaklli.g:happiness
come back and pick up the litter, at for a profitable job. To find·happiness,
which time a scuHle began. -•she advised, let there be "an inner you
White told· police he was slugged in 1hat conformity or non-conformity can
the mouth and suffered a cut lip. never touch."
Pessin1lstic about the past but
seeing hope in the future, David Vierl-
ing said:
"People may say our nati,on is
crumbling under a wave of change.
But it is not crumbling. It is living. It
is pulsating. In the past, man has
changed his surroundings but not
himself. Maybe our generation can
make changes in man.''
Spoke Principal Charles Godshall:
"This entire class has earned the
respect of the C<Jmmunity for a su-
stained high level of performance. Not
one of them bas to be in the shadow of
another."
School Board President Donald
Strauss told the graduates, "The world
wOn't go to pot ·except through in-
differenee."
He said to the parents, "Get in·
volved and stay involved in the things
yqu really believe in."
DAILY PILOT llMf..,.,
NEWPORT HARBO~ HJ'GH GRADS FiL'L DAi.lfDS,ON FIELD 'INFIE~D'
Parents and Fri..,d1 Watch Ceremonies from Field's Packed Stands
J./-app'J 5-ather ~ .. J.'Ja'J
a very special prnchase from a
f ainous quality maker of
GENUINE LEATHER CHAffiS
A Glfl TO TllfASURE AND ENJOY FOR YEARS
. • Custom quality through-0111 •
Luxurious c\UlhJOning • Yoor
choice of colors from an exteMive
selection of finest leather textures.
PROFESS~~~: GARRETf fURNfll}o~~ MESA, CALIF.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS 2215 HARBOR BLVD.
-.. _ -.... -6'46.0275 6'46.0276
\ •
Reeds
BY
WILLIAM
REED
•••
In the Wind
Kathy Gibbs is a 16-year-old
student at Marina High School
who a graduating this week. Her
Mot~er, Recreation and Park Com-
mi ssioner Norma Gibbs, points out
that it is an unusual graduation.
Unusual in that Kathy has been
in high school only three years and
ha$ an excellent record academic·
ally. Seems that a few weeks ago
Kathy .began counting· up her c~~
dits and discover~d she had plenty
to qualify for graduation.
'PROUD OF STUDENTS -Se_nior advisors Mrs. Polly Hanna and
Chris Gilissen of Huntington Beach High School show cheek symbol-
izing $100,000 earned in scholarships by graduates.
When the list ca1ne out she
\.vasn't on it and lodged a protest
to school officials who protested
that she was only a junior'. A can-
vass of the records and Kathy was
on the list vf graduates.
Huntington High Y outl1 s
.Win $100,000 in Grants
* \V"ith her academic achievement
and completion of high school in
less than four years she might well
have been in line for top school
honors had it been known that she
was about to graduate.
Norma says Kathy is not going
awciy to college next September
but will take classes sorhewhere
around Orange County. "She may
be the most brilliant mind in the
family," says · Norma, "but after
all she's only 16."
The commissioner, who once
served as mayor of Seal Beach, is
a teacher at California State Col-
lege, Long Beach and presently is
working on her doctoral degree. I
guess it's a case of "like mother,
like daughter."
* High school officials point out
that come next Monday it's school
as usual for more than 6,000 high
school students. That's more than
the usual enrollment for the tradi-
tronal semester classes. -.
Holding the classes in the sum-
mer offers the youngsters an op-
portunity for enrichment, advance-
ment and makeup if necessary.
It also is year-round use of the
expensive schools the taxpayers
have purchased. Because of state
aid the summer program also is
self-supporting for the most parL
Graduates J:l Huntington Beach
High Sctiool described by one oi tpeir
advisors as "good apple pie American
kids" have achieved the impressive
total of $100,IXXl in scholarships.
Senior advisors Mrs. Polly Hanna
and Chris Gilissen have served as
Whu 'SrfaOlarsldp
Kathy Irwin, a senior at Hunt-
ington. Beach High School, has
been awarded an $800 indivi·
dual master instruction scho-
larships by Califoornia State
College at Lo,s Angeles.
Fountain Valley Seniors
Win Scholastic Honors
1\1embers of lhe Founlain Valley
High School graduating class have
been honored for variou~
achievements throughout the school
year.
The medallions and rcrtificates,
presented during the recen1 Coronet
Awards banquet. were awarded to the
following students:
-Ar!S •~ C•~!t1 Ml!'d•lloon Al1n Kronz_ Ce•hfiutes l!obforl H1nn1, Lindi Plt!•riOn, ll<>dA Ollvie•i.
,..9~' ~~~e:~'i~~A~l~~Jv .t.~,1~~!. C1•llflc1t•~ phi!
-Bu~ine'\J E<1uc~!lon. Me<1111ocn Connle Powe•. C~'Tihcol•! Jn,<• Crow~. P1trlcl• Jnlm1on. Vic~! !lino
-f'npll•h MH111Hnn. IHIW HOl'ldA. Cert+lklltJ ~.,... ~·· K•"· KAlhY Cl••~. The.i ll(fOH.
c.rl111~:r:~'"Jo1>t.,,•niu;"r. ~~~111°0'ci:~:n~ iC.:,.'::ti
McC•nn, -G!•I•' A1n1,nc AJ5<!C la!lon MPd•lll.,,,. 5us1n J~nn, Cttl!llc1te1 Me>n~ M""•e, Oonn• Prtle....,o. ,\.\~•11t1,~~·110P"tiv1ictl Edll<:•lion Meod1lllon, LIM•
Wo•d~n. Cerli!ic"1es Mv•n• Cox, KMllv C••wford, lllll>l\d~ Scllw••!1.
Ju-;., ~c~~a~,:t,~~1~~~·, i!~~ o~~t:'~3oo~~:'.'''l!I
51;;,,e r,,~,~~~l~f-,~M~/~~-c~~=v "1,--;,:';:c,~.•~t!llc•t"'
-Girls' Service MPd11ilon. l•url• O!lul.-1. Ctr1Hlc•!t! Jfn _..fl<lfor.on, "•"' J!lt!"""'" M•,.h• T<11to,.:I.
-50CIAI .S!uoltJ Mechlllcn. Jtn Al>dt''°"· Ctrtlllc•tt• Kt!llv Bromnwr. N•nc:v Slle•m•n, O!IC!o ~ .. -51ud•nt Govtrnmenl Med•lli,,.,. M1 rol\• Tutl1!1"d, Cfrll!lc,,te1 Jan An~rson, RCf\ Mvtr•. Llurle Ottu~•• -Home Economics Ml!'d•lll...,, L•urel llun<1e. Cer!i!lca!eJ Cllrl"J,.. Johnson. Kllhv N11lkervl1. Mic-le taoo~oro. -lndlustd•I Arlt MPdallion, Shellev l(Crn. Ce•liflcetts O•ve CMn-111, Gocll. Qogtr Mor•h. -Jou•n•ll•m Med11ilon, Sob 8rv•nt. Ce•tlllcaln
Jt_::.i ~~~,%~11~!111"~~~11~··~:,~~'""11romme•. CerliJk.ies Sieve Bl!Vt!dtv, lt1cn1rd Ftncel. Ile• l'owler.
E ~.c~~~t•uc:~11111u1t~u•i\:r1c M&d~~l::::;er. Chrb~~'I~
Hl,,KMleld, llOI" Mvtr1. -Vocal Musi~ Modat!lon. Jo1ellh E•lc-so". Cortlflj~te1 IUll B•lldford, ~trv! Mur,,ocll, Jpr NAt'&n c. -cY•' Pllv•k•I EdUCAllon Mt'dal/lon S!tWtrl GDd"'-911. CertUka1e1 J&mes G•ev, P111 Q(cf. Terry Thomftt.
-Tl!e11/' Arll Med111lcn P1m John..,.,. CerHflc•1e1 1\llY (ODii, lte.-F_I.,.,., Hel"I Ml•w~H. ~ SCll<!llrlll ~ MedtJllofo, P1u1 kt. C&rtlflcJI~! l<alhv 8r.........er. Nen<v Sl!e,....n. Mar I t n e ~11•ff•son.
SHOl> SHAPE -M.iss Shelley Korn may look like an 11nlikelr can-
didate for Fountain Valley 1{igh's Coronet Award in lnduslria Arts.
But judges \Xeren't deceived by the comely senior·s natural ~ssets :
the girl can [ool. Miss Korn is pictured here with certificate winners
Roger Morris (left) and Dave Chenowe!J'!
I I -1. -__ _______)
counselors to these students since
their freshman year.
Their interest and pride in the
graduates is ·obvious -and so if; the
effort they {>Ut forth in helpi11g secure
the many scholarships.
Behind-the-scenes work in obtaining
scholarships and financial aid toward
college starts toward the end of the
students' junibr year.
Advisors aCquaint the collcge·bound
students with the colleges a n d
universities they are interested in. in-
cluding small but impoftant factors
like weather .3-hd social climate.
Students are encouraged to apply to
the school "they choose, and if. ac-
cepted, whe·e1s begin to churn to ob-
tain ttie financial means for them.
Mrs. Ha11na and Gilissen ap-
proached buslhesses and service clubs
for possible ·student help , as well as
exploring wh'at the schools wouk1 offer
likely candidates.
PJ"i.ce tags ·on the aid offered ran~e
from $50 and $100 to $2.0.000 -the
total cost of educating a young man a!
an air force or naval academy.
The service academy scholarships
to Glen Bonacum and ,Dale Thorton
and two athletic scholarships to Stan-
ford for students Al Perlee and Greg
Snyder were ihe largest awarded.
-. -
----Boy, Girl ·ot )'ear
Ma r ina
Marina High School seniors r.ii
Hltston and Pat Bentley have been
tabbed girl a.nd boy ol the year for
1967-68.
Lii is fini shing her term or office as
representative to the Ca I i for n i a
Association qf Student C o µ n c i I s
District 21.
She has also served as Com-
missioner or Fine Arts. secretary of
the District Student Leaders Council.
and me111ber of the Anchor Club and
school band.
~!er l.3 grade point average predicts
success at Northern Arizona Universi-
ty next fall .
Pat is the current Stuck>nt Body
President and president of the service-
oriented Ke y Club. He has pitched o.n
the varsity baseball team tfte past
three years and participated in
ba sketball. ..
A <;alifornia Scholarship ,Federation
sealbcarer. Pat has-a 3.9 grade point
average. He plans to attend Pomona
Colle!!e.
Man y W in Honor s
In Valley H ig h's
Graduatin g Oass
l''ountain Valley High Schoo! seniors
graduating with honors include:
-South Coast Women 's Club Mjss
Teen.Age Citizen. Laurie Otsuka. :
-tluntington Center B 11 si ne s s
Student-of·the-Year, Pat Johnson,
third.
-Orange County Ac ad (' m i c
Decathalon· Associ·ation, C a r la
Virostko. top six.
-Fountain Valley Junior Miss,
Pam Johnson:
-Allianre F'rancaise. UC!. Pam
.Johnson. honorable mention ....
-Ten Most Outstanding California
Youth. Los Angeles Times, Pam
Johnson.
American Chemical Society,
~!eve Beverly.
-Fountain Vallev Woman's Clu b
Drama Scho!ar~hip. f!eidi Maxwell.
-Di strict Scholarships: Sa I l y
Martinez. Bob Sayre .. Ian Anderson,
Chris .Johnson. Cheryl Breault.
~ UC! Honors at Entrance, Paul
Rice.·
-c:arden Grove Beauty College
scholarships: Sheri Walls , Kay
Thursday, June ll, 1%8 CAIL V PllOT 3
.. ... -·: ·t.~9.-<. -~ -~-::;--":"-
------
'El.ite'· HonoFed
BOY QF YEAR .
P at . Bent ley
•, .,
GIRL OF-VEAR
· Lix Huston
R eading C-linic Slated
At Meadow View SchQol
·rhe secOnd summer r em e d i a I
reading program will be held .June 19
through July 24 at Meadow View
School in Huntington Beach.
Sponsored by Chapman College, it
will serve as a training program fflr
teachers of remedial reading while of-
fering insti:uction to c:hildren from
grades one through nine. ·
Details are· available by <.'ailing
Willia111 Woolbright, direetor, at 847-
6153. Teachers in-terested in the six·
~cklund. Dorothy Fournier, Susan
Rnwe. Lynda Butts. Leigh Wellong,
Wendy .Joh nson, Deborah Sullivan,
Kathy Wood ..
-Westminsler Community Hospital
(iuild Scholarships, Cathy Crawford
and Tont Stewart.
-Westminster Elementary ·PT A"
scholarship Bob Sayre.
graduate unit coli:rse also· should talk
to Woolbright.
Another program, caUed the reading
clinic, will combine efforts of the
F'ountain Valley School District. arid
the School of Education at C·al' Stat.8
I.,ong Beach. .
'nhis clinic is set for July 8 through
Aug. 2 at· Newland sctiool. ·
Le gion to Honor
Beach Policemen ' ' ' Police Chief John H. 'Seltzer and
three Huntington Beach oflicers· will
receive citations Thursday night by
the American Legion Post 133. ·
. Officers James F. Mahan and Floyd
L. Stafford and Detective Gilbert E.
Veine will be cited as "Officers of The
Ye.ai:_." ~n annual award given by the
Legion Post.
Chief Seltzer Will be commended for
"outstanding leadership" in opetating
I.he local poUce department.
-Marinello-Comer Beauty School
scholarship, Judt Ann Hoffmann.
-------------~------~.-.~-------,.,.-
Success
Sweaters · rDad
'
Winning '1Weater1 by
Se1ttle Knitting Miiis-sure to
pl••• 1nybody'1 flth•r. Six button,
llghlwltight c1rdJg1r11-grut
for golf, right for reaOr11, t1rrl1lc forlr1v1I,
A -Moh1ir ind wool panel 1trlpe
· c1rdig1n. alz11 S, M, L,Xl.
Colort: bl11e/powd1r, l!me/grass,
gold/lemon, brick! orange
I -100% Orran• 1cry!lc, popular
. llnk1t!teh,1lznS,M,L,Xl.
Colofl: powder, dark blue,
gold, rvrt
18.00
•
Fo1~p1 .... °"""···QM. """'" .. llultt
GIA: O~Dflt
US[ YOU~ MJ.I' EZ/CHAllGIE + IAMKAMll:l(:,t.11:0 (Wt M.UTEllt CHAlltGI!
SOUTH COAST PLAZA, Brtstol .tt S.il Diego Frwy.', Opt!! w~ 'tll •:
BROADWAY ANAHEIM CENTER, Open Wetknl9hts '01 9:30-lxttpl
\
•
•
•
:
'
.,
. -... • . . . .
ti DAllY mor
RFKFamily
.
Approval.of Gun Curbs
HadAut~vsy
Plan s Ready
,~..,. .. ....,.-: ....
Both drivers in an accident in
Sea.We ware Wong. Both. were
women, both have the same middle
lnltlal aM the same lut name.
But thU.'1 an "L" of a diUerence
in their lirsL names. Liiiy M. Wong
and Liiy M. Wong wen the drivers
of cars that collided at an lntersec--
tion. Neither was hurt. The two women are friends but llO! nlated .• •
WASHINGTON (UPI) -House
Republican 1eMer Gerald R. Ford
predicted todl.y Coq.gress would pass
the ~on. admi.nlstration's propoaAI
to cutlaw mall order 11les of rifles and
sh·oteuos.
Senate GOP leader Everett M.
Dirben also softened his earlier ada·
mar:it opposition ~ auc:h legisl.ition but
another Republican senator, Paul J.
Fannin (R-Arii.),~deOOWlCed the pro-
posal aa a (•monatroua non-sequitur
that snatches at our constitutionally
gu~ freedoina... ~
'nle sentiment· o/ Ford and Dirksen
however co1DCded with a 1eneral in· crease of support for jhe ad.
rniJ:V:stratlon measure, s t e m m t n g:
partly from a tide of back-home mail.
At a news conference. Ford said At-
ty. Gen. Ramsey Clark and other sup-
porters of the gun bill have "an obliga-
tion" to present their case to the
House Judiciary CommJttee.
"U they make the case. and I
suspect they can, the committee and
Congress will take affirmative I C·
Uon," Ford said.
Ford said the measure has "a good
deal oC merit."
Dirksen, who earller appeared to op-
pose tough, new (lm controls, took a
much softer position today although he
sWI did'not commit himseu finally. He
did s..ay, '1'bere are enough laws on
the books."
Fannih told the Senate : "Some of
our vaunted intellectuals -men who
by ~mmonly accepted standards
should bt worthy of respect -have
suddenly taken leave ol their senses.
mounted the nearest hobby horse and
collectiveJy ridden off in all direc·
Uons." ·
He said he. too, grieved for the slain
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy "As I grieved
for President Kennedy and his family
and indeed for all men everywhere
who are 5Uddenly and unjustly cut
down in peace and in war."
"But my grief does not graot a
license to utter reckless and ir·
responsible judgments or advocate ac·
lions whieh may compound the very
difficulty they are supposed to com·
bat."
ACCUSED OF ARMING CONS
Waitr.ss Arlen• Granito
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The family
of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy arranged
more than 12 hours before he died for
a meticulous autopsy to forest.au the
controversy wnich surrounded the
death of President J ohn F. Kennedy.
Dist. Atty. Evell e J . Younger said
Wednesday that as the result of the
meeting between the family and of-
ficials the seven-hour autopsy was pro-
bably the most painstaking and com-
plete ever performed here.
He said members or the Ke nnedy
family knew he was dying and met
with Dr. 11lomas Noguchi, chJef coun-
ty medical examiner, for more than
two hours Wednesday night shortly
after the senator undet-went surgery
at Good Samaritan Hospital.
North Vietnam
May Agree
To Secret Talks
LA Plnne Down in India;
Six Kilkd, 57 Escape
Convict's Fiancee
A1·rested by FBI
In Gun Smuggle
ATLANTA (UPl )-A prison §pokes-
man revealed today that two guns
were smuggled through a visitors'
rest room pipeline to four convicts
who held 21 hostages in Atlanta Fed-
"The Kennedy family wanted it
made clear that a complete autopsy be
m.ade ," Younger said. "They did not
want a recurrence of the mui;ldled in-
vestigation in Dallas when President
John F. Kennedy was slain in 1_963."
Younger said the Kennedys were
anxious to avoid a "circus spectacle"
and decided to hold the post ' mortem
at the hospital "because if he h"ad been
taken downtown there would ha ve
been people lining the way and
reporters following the V(lhicle."
Skipp11, a three-month-old 1quir-
rel, sit& atop Johnnv -Ma;~, head
and the youngster appna worried
whiit will happen next. TM children
of the MajgUr familll of Chicopee
Fall3, Mau., have cared for the
squirrel since it fell from it.! nest as
a baby. Slcipp11'1 diet ha3' progTtsstd
frtJm milk, via an eye-droppn, to
milk and craclur1 to a love for apa-
ghttti, cofftt, iu cream and cake. • John Stanislaus lost his driv·
er's license for a year and was
fin ed $120 because the story he
tol d police in Smethwick, England,
after an auto accident was off
color . Police .said be told them the
other driver "came across the
lights on blue." ' •
A cigarette machine at a bar
in Jacluonvilte, Fla., hadn't
bttn W01"kina Pf'OPffllf for
sewral days. StrvictmarJ Cecil
Phillips quickl11 found tM cause
of the trouble when ht opened
the machine. A three-foot buU
snake was coiled inlide.
~• ....................... .i • A Miami judge ordered proba·
tion Tuesday for a woman charged
with putting an ei~ht-inch gash a-
cross her husband s chest with a
single-edge razor b1ade. The judge
advised the husband: "You had
better get a n electric razor." • Exio Barbieri, 44. once known
as lla1y's No. l crimina.l, will be
married in a Sicilian prison June
18 to seamstress Mana Soresina.
Barbieri is serving 54 years for
crimes including armed robbery
and leading 13,000 inmates of San
Vittore Prison near Milan in a re--
volt in 1946. He has exchanged
letters with Miss Soresina for 17
years from his prison cell.
PARIS (Ar! -North Vietnam ap-
pears to be edging toward confidential
.talk.1 with the United States on Viet-
namese peace issues, .although it is
still conducting a diplomatic holding
operation in the Paris conference.
Ambaddasor Xu.an Thuy of North
Vietnam is considering a prOj)(lsat by
U. S. Ambassador W. Aveiell Har·
riman Wednesday that "both sides
reduce the propaganda output follow-
ing each meeting" they hold here.
The public release of formal
statements would be ended under the
Harriman plan , and spokesmen for
each side would give only a "general
description" of what had been said in
the closed conference room. The eight
talks so f.ar held have been followed in
each case by release oC the formal
statement.! of H.arrinian and Thuy.
U. S. officia.Ls said they found some
encouragement in Thuy's st a t e d
agreement to study the proposal. In
earlier sessions when HBITi.man sug-
gestes semJprivate or sec rel
dlscu!Sioos Thuy rejected the idea.
From Wire Servicet
CALCU'ITA, I n d i a Pan
American's globe circling Flight No. I
crashed in a monsoon rain while Ian·
ding at Calcutta's Dum Oum Airport
today. Six persons were killed and 57
escaped.
The 7G7 jet bound from Los Angeles
to New York with a number of
HUMPHREY LEADS
GOP CONTENDERS
PRINCETON, N.J. (AP)
Democratic presidential candidate
Hubert H. Humphrey has surged
ahead of Republican con tend e r s
Richard M. Nixon and Nelson A.
Rockefeller, according to the Gallup
poU.
The poll organi'lation said Wed·
nesday that Vice President Humphrey
was ahead of former Vice President
Nixon by six percentage points and led
New York Gov. Rockefeller by three
points.
Sheep Heart · Fails
Man Dies After Emergency Switch
HOUSTON IUPI) ~ A surgical
team failed today-in an attempt to im -
plant the heart of a sheep into a man .
St. Luke's Hospital administrator
Newell France said the animal's heart
was used as a last resort in ar. at-
tempt to keep the patient aUve 'Until a
suitable human donor was found .
The unidentified recipient, a 47-year.
old man, was pronounced dead at 1 :02
a .m. CDT today. The surgery had
began at 11 : 15 p.m.
Hospital officials said the recipient
had been in extremely critical ron-
dition a>d. probably would not have liv -
ed through the night had the implant
not been attempted.
A hospital stateJllent early today
said:
"A patient, not identified, was refer·
red to St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital
for a heart transplant. The patient ...
suffered cardiac arrest on the morn·
Ing of Wednesday, June 12, and wa s
resuscitated with great difficulty.
"No donor patient was available,"
the hospit.al said.
"At last report the insertion ol the
heart of a 125-pound sheep was at·
tempted at 11 :15 p.m. in an effort to
support circulation until a suitable
donor might become available.
"The patient's condition w a s
te rminal during surgery, could not be
reversed and further efforts were
abandoned. The patient was pro-
nounced dead at 1:02 a.m."
France said the ho-spit.al did not In·
te nd to identify the patient.
The sheep heart was selected fr om a
number of species because the size of
the heart is similar to a human's and
it was capable of pumping enough
blood to support an adult human for an
unspecified length or time, France
said.
The hospital did not say what other
type of animals had been considered
for the transplants. but Dr. Dooton
Cooley, wbo headed the surgical team,
had said earlier it might be pos sible to
use the hearts of pigs, cows and
primates because of their size and out·
put.
Storms Soak New Jersey
Record-breaking Rainfalls Reign in East, South
Calltort&l•
tOUTHEll.N CALIFOltNIA -'-"¥
,.1Wn4e1' •"" FtldoJ1' 11111 l•N nllhl
ttlffllllll u rl, "'°'"I"' toul•I ie...
t"loulllncst. "'"' fftlld't .......... tu,..
~-· LOS .ANGELES ,t..NO V1CINITY-
l-c;lo\Hll 11>rou11h rnlOmon>lnt
111111.-but mo.UY • .,....., ThunoUv .... "
Frlff1'. l-nNr 62, 111911 Tllv"'°'1'
n. ttnti•MIEOtATE lilALLEYS-MOs!IV
c;lffr flltllt1 •"" ,...,..., d•l'I -.rough
Fr_., but 1«.11 "''' mor11ll>f lo+ l(Jllllltf' -11-. Low JO Ill U. 111911
Tll11tMll' IJ Ill ft, MOl,INT,t..JN "lllEAS -C1t1r n\911!1
.... """"' "·~ "'"""" ,,..,.,., l.lttla
OI-111 N-mPtr•turt.
l ltTl!ltlOlt ,t..ND DESl!ll.T lteGIONS
-MtttlJ' t int 11l+Plll ..... """"" dl1't ,..,....... .. rldl1'. Loo:al WUIT'r wlllllh
t ft-1 tNI •• ~. L-" '9
6S _...-vt lUWI Ind " 19 n .......,. ... u.e, .. 111+t1 °f1111r'1411' • '* " -VI...,.. • I+ IM '°""'' n!llYI. UJll .. l:lllNAHOO VAl..Ll!Y~
dN, ............ Mil -41)'S flwWlfl • ......, llu1 ..,.., INll'Nlll ..,. lflf '°"" dWlll. ...... » to .. "''"' """' .... ,,,.191o .. IAN el!ltHAltOIMO VAl.LfY-MOll•
tv Cle9r nlttllt • Mil _., 4111'1 ~ """" llr,tl -lorl+f "tll'
_,..,, ... "'"' ~-l-'° to .. Mttl TlNndl1' ., to tt,
IM#lltlAl. AHD CQ.ACHIELU VAlr
lE~ .., l'll'ffllt ll'ld lllllllV
fl'11 l'llrw9ll Pr'Nf1', Ltuol ""'" wt,. .,,.,_ .. .....,,1,..., '--
" " n, fWt'I Tllurtd'Y' 1M to IDS.
._,. (altftnlll -""""' tilplff ....., 8'llr ..,.,,. mtmlMI _ .............. r.tdffcM-
tt -~ ~ ., LM .,_let tM ......., ...., .....,,.,,. t.I burf!H
• ....,,. ftrll(Mlll ' • .,...,.iw. -,,, ._ ... ._., ,.,...... '"*'· "" low .....,, -....._, " .. u.
Coastal
MlllllY t~r .. 111111 11111 Wllll1 d•ft
"''-" l'rk141v ttvl loe+I ltl9 1ftlf \o'<O
tl0\ICl1 !tie "'flll .... H flW ....,.,. ....
""'"· 'l'e1-h!t"Cll~'1 lt-r•!llr .. ' I ~ t l 11
"--• 111+11 OI M te I low el H.
Wtttr ftnlHr•tu•t w11 U !IHl'Mfo.
l'•IOAY
l'lrtt low .............. 1:11f '·'"·-I I
"'"' !llrlh ............. ,:If'·"'· l.f "°""" "" ............. •1» '·'"· ,_, lotCOftllf l'lldll ••••••• -• • • • • ...
'.. ll'-Hi#.-.."', ldtl 1:t1 '·'"· S.. It'-' S:.ct •·"" kb l its •·'"· .... .. _ ... __ -..,..,. •. """
,Jilflr+ 1r Jlllr a "'" '
f
V.S. Su•-rw
Tllunderttorrn• "''' _._.,. Hew Jtr· 1tw "'1"' • r«n rtW+n w...,...,.
CllllllflvH If! 19-IEt H tl'ld Jou!!I 10-
<1•1', 11111 wllll IHI fe-roe~ SMw
"' ""' 1torms W"'"'"'4>" ,rtidloQW ......... 11ot1 lfld llt ll.
S,.wned. "' ,..,,.,,., """'kl t 1r ,.....,
""' Gull "' ""'•le+ ""' ...... IOn'llJ lode1' 10lktocl tllt H\ltf'!I MHelt'11 wl!!I
'""" -19 1'11rN lftclll-.
Ofl "• more 11r+mltl111 llOtt." ""
. U.S. ...,.,"'"' llvrMv 141r.., 1 t11r
-l!llr, 111111 '"'Ml"' IYtlftll W•t
""""' lllltl ""' ••19"' "'-" +I ""' M l+Ol'I. brlMI"' CNttt '"" lft1 111>-Ml<I t+llf!I.__
TM ~ IOOlr ... itrttM 11'111
tlnr, """"'"""" ~ortllllt. ft CIMI ..... ,,..,,ll•d Ill '1111 ~ ... ,, S'-rt IM ad ......,, Cl!\
"" ._, ~1111. ..,,...... "" ~
•t. • t
Wipf .,. fllll aollfOll ......,. U1P
4'MNJ nMr U11hlll. l.C.
T"'"perature1
·Alb\!_,,_
AIK.h0!'•'9
All•n!1
8altfnfl1W
8lun1rdl
.. M
80SIM
ClllC•'9 Clnc:lnnttl c1e ... 1 ... e1
°""~·
Oa ""''"'' Oetrolt
IEUl'Tlll "llrt WOl'1'1 ·-~ ··-H-"ilU . _ ...
Kflns•1 Clt1' l.•s Vet11 , __
Ml1ml
Mllw1vk"
Ml-IHtft
New °'1111M ,._,.. Yottr
0..1 .... ...... ' , ... 11.-...
"'4!90.W. -· --·-°" "" '""' ··~ -· SI. Loi.iii .... _
s.11 L.1111 Cltr
Sin OI ... ltn f'rtnc-.
S.nt1 Aft,f '-"'' .. ,...,. '-'"" , ....... ,,..,.,,
W•1!1"'9l+11
Nltll \.-'rK.
n " '1 SI
t1 6J .~I " . 1J SJ .Ill ...
u ~ .Joi
IJ J6 Tl •• It Jl Tr •• " . IJ 52 .el • • . " fl 51
n • ... . .. " .. • • " " • • • • " . .. .. ·"' " u ,,. .. . . " . " H .. l • llS .,
ILi SS .II
'8 D .i. ... ., . .. . • • . " " 11 • • . ..
" " •• . " " '" ,., " " '" n ., " ,,01
eral Prison for 28 hours until their
Ame4cans aboard had flown In from grievances were published.
Bangkok and )Vas settling down ror a Arrested by the FBI and charged
landing when something went wrong with taking the .22 caliber and .3'l cali·
d "t t ed · t · ber pistols into the prison was attrac· an t p ung 1n o a rice paddy and tive Arlene Anna Granite, 25 . fiancee
burst into flames. of one of the four inmates.
Pan , American in New York iden-Miss Granito or Newark, N.J., a
tified the dead as Phyllis Gress. 25. rormer w.aitress, was picked up a_t a
San Carlos, Calif.. Peace Corps hamburger stand across from the
.worker ; Susan Dillingham. 14, Fresno, fortress-like prlson and he Id under $25.CKX> bond pending a hearing before Calif.: Nonna Lobato Of Belem. a U.S. commissioner today.
Complete resuJts of the autopsy will
be released in several weeks, but at a
ne ws conference last week Dr. Nogu·
chl &a.id if Kenned,y had survived the
operations there would fiave been "ex-
tensive damage" to the brain._
Aviation· Pioneer
Succumbs at 84 Brazil;·, an inlant child of James The four prisoners, serving a total
McDJvitt , an r\,merican living in Seoul , of 18.S years on murder-ana bank rob-PALOMAR MOUNTAIN (iP)
Korea; F. Hali, of Ottawa. Canada bery stentences, released their host-Aviation p-iooeer Donald Gordon of
and B~rbara W. McDowell, a purser. age unharmed about noon Wednesday Palomar Mountain is dead at the age
The sprawling airport six miles after a newspaper, listing their com· of 84. He built and flew crude gliders
northeast of Calcutta bas been the plaints on the front page, was deliver· and airplanes 60 .years ago.
scene of numerou! mishaps over the ed to them in their barricaded r oom. Gordon, a bachehir, was found dead
years though there have been no ma· The rebellious prisoners. Ivan Dan-Monday of natural causes at hi!
jor disasters there. Most of the iel Neighbors, 25, serving 120 years ranch. He lived alone: his aviation ac·
crashes have involved planes landing for kidnaping and murder ; Robert W. µvity ended long ago because of
during monsoon rains. Gorman . serving 30 years for bank deafness.
Another 24 persons, including the robbery; Ralph M. Lepiscopo , 25, Gordon in 1964 was made a member
pilot, were hospitalized with injurie's. serving 20 years for bank robbery of Uie Early airds, a national
airline spokesmen said. and Frederick Freeman Leister Jr., organ ization of men who new solo in
Airport officials said many of the in· 34, serving 15 years for bank robbery, aircraft before December 17. 1916.
jurejj passengers were thrown from were placed in "segregation," await· Between 1908 and 1917, G<lrdon built
the plane and others were pulled from ing possible legal or disciplinary ac· and flew a glider, two airplanes and a
the burning fuselage by firemen. lion . monoplane at the Bostonia Ranch . 11~~--=-~....::...-'-~=-~---==-~~~~~~~~..:::::::c:::=-::.:..:::.:...:::::.::::::::...::::::.:::::...-
INTERIORS
"Si mpl y Beautiful Furniture"
IPlENIJllJO!
Here, in a word, is the
essence of the splendor
of Spain ...
OPEN SUNDAYS
12 'TIL S P.M.
Imaginati"e
Decorating by •. ,
Loe Alpert, N.A.D.A.,
Joe Neiggemann
our OY..11
answer for those
who seek fine quality with
good design ... 3·way hand·tied coil
springs and custom·made marflex 'Cushions
for superb comfort ... tailored in
an outstanding cut velvet for
CONVENIENT TERMS .•• OF COURSE !
enduring good taste
8" onlv •44800 ,
1925 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 646·0541
( r 1/t Mods ~ el Newport llY,.)
OPfN MONDAY & fllJDAY 'TIL 9 ,.M. SUNDAYS 12-S
fhursday, Junt ll1 1968 DAILY PIUIT S
Polities Goes On ---
Kennedy Signs Come .D~n
4·Named
Phi Beta
Topsj~turvy World Right Side Vp .
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
The ilgn on the campaign
headquarters door reads
"Kennedy for President."
But the chances are
remote that a ·Kennedy
name will be on t h e
Democratic ticket in
November, either for vice
president or president.
It's· been only three days
since the assassinated Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy was
buried near the grave of his
assassinated brother, John.
Staff members, dismantl-
ing the Kennedy for presi-
dent headquarters. have not
yet had a chance to remove
the sign from the door.
Inside the suite of offices,
the once-busy phones are
AREA CODE
DIAL
'DIRECT
IT'S TWICE
AS FAST
And you save money
when you call station.
to-stati on ... on out.
of . state calls, even
~more after 7:00 PM
or anytime during
the weekend.
.-@
Pacific Telephone
DENVER, Colo, (AP) -
our arbor .area John · Thom11 Zhnme.rman
students have been named emerged from his dlm,
idle, the desks almost emp.. any CfOP combination now to Phi Beta Kappa, national topsy.turvy world Monday
ty, the volunteer workers in slgbt. and prompUy gofslck.
gone, a "Sock It To 'Em, scbolastic honor society at His world had been topsy·
Bobb , -Even though the late s•--• d U · ·1y Y,' banner bangs limp wuuor ruversi • turvy because for three from a carton, and a few senator had repeatedly sug. Honor students a r e weeks, his only vision had
professional staffers go gested a Kennedy-McCarthy Richard Willlam Tezak, son been through strange-look·
about the business of closing coalltio'n to stop Humphrey, of Mr. and Mrs .. William P, ing glasses that made
shop. there was no such thinking Tezak, l75 Costa Mesa St., everything he saw appear
In th K ed Costa Mesa; Diana Susan kw The professionals go about e enn y camp now. Diehl, daughter of Mr. and upside down and bac ards.
Despite the discemfort, ty ot Colorado, has been
the }9-year-old Zimmerman nearalghted aince he was
Was\l>le¥ed because bll ex-born prematurely, tipping
· perlme~. had been t-ultfui. tbe ilcales at SO.ounces.
The itudy, and a; 211.t-FOr his latist tests, be
month stint with right side wore glassn with periscope-
up, but reversed, glasses like prisms mounted on
before that1 were aimed at tbem.
first.hand· view -through tho
odd svectacle1 -wblle Zin>-merman k l!'p ti hll eyes
closed -showed such sena-
tions a1 wa'.tchlni.one'1 o'wn
feet appear to be ap-
proacblil.g, and lnstlnctlvely
reaChlng to. :meet • prof ..
fem · handshake with the
left band,
learning bow mind e!ld body "It feels like I'm walking
reacUons adapt when the upside down," he said, A
eyes see thlnis as they are--------------------
not.
Eventually, he said, it is
hoped the pilot studies will
learn to help the mind and
body -possibly witb the aid
of hypnosis -conquer
vision defecll. Zimmerman,
a freshman at the Unlverai-
their business a s pro-Kennedy ~ople have Mrs. Henry c. Dlehl, 141 His world· had beeil dim
ff!ssionals always do , seeing resented man'y of the things Harbor Island R 0 a d , because the glasses aUorded
.to it that files of the cam-which McCarthy said &bout Newport Beach. Also, Ellen only a narrow, barely light
paign, endE1d, by a gunman's the late senator. McCulloch Mayer, daughter 7-degree field of vision,
bullet in Los Angeles , be Soundings of poUUcal pro· of !.fr. and Mrs. Samuel compared with normal
preserved and the thousands fessionals iDdicated that the Clyde McCulloch, 2 1 2 1 vision of about 180 degrees.
of letters of condolence be bulk oC the Kennedy Windward Lane , Newport The nausea came when be
sent to the family. · delegate-support would go to Beach; and William Carl took off the glasses andl------------------------------
The professionals a 1 so Humphrey, with perhaps Schleiter, daughter of Mrs. found bimseU dizzy and
know that death ends human some scattered few an-M. x: Scbleiter, 1212 Pem· disoriented at seeiDg things
life, but not the life of nouncing for McCarthy. broke Lane, Newport Beach. rlght side up again.
government or of politics. l;;;;;;;;;;;-;=========;:;;::=:=:=:=;::;:;:;;:::=:=:=:=:==~"1 And that there have been II
political calls for S e n .
Edward M. Kennedy, the
last surviving son of the
Joseph Kennedy family, to
nlake himself availabfe as a
running mate to Vice Presi-
dent Hubert H. Humphrey
for the Democratic ticket.
Some friends of the Ken-
nedy family have even
wondered whether t h e
senator from Massachusetts
shouldn't seek the number
one spot himseU.
That sentiment comes on-
ly from friends and well·
wishers, such as R e p .
Clarence D. Long (D·Md.),
a Humphrey su pporter, and
Armistead Boothe, (0-Va.),
who supported Robert Ken-
nedy for president. Both
suggested a Humphrey-Ken-
. nedy tiCket for November,
No suCh talk is coming
from any .member of ~the
Kennedy family or an'y of
those close to it.
One person who was very
close to the late senator and
also is close to the senator
from V.assacbusetts said he
would be "amazed" if
Edward Kennedy ended up
on the Democratic ticket.
He labeled any Humphrey-
Kennedy ticket as "very
unlikely."
Another associate o f
Edward Kennedy labeled all I
the talk as "pure specula-1
tion, understandable in the
circumstances, .but specula-
tion."
SAVE20%
****** Scats Ahor. for
man and boy!
Famous Sc&ta apecially priced jll!t when you
want them for lhip-and-lhore 1W1UD« fun..
Cmhioncd inside and out {ot IUfe.footed.
wmfort. Meo'• and boy's me.. 390
blen Pftft or plCi& bNc. •
GALLENKAMP
BankAm•rlcard -Master Ch1r119
'
HARBOR CENTER • 2300 HARBOR'BLVD. • COSTA MESA
"The senator," this top
associate said, "feels a deep
sense of re,sponsibility to tbe
children, "to Ethel and to the
family. Beyond • t b-a t,
nothing. I don!t th.ink he has
devoted four seconds of
thought to his · political
future. He bas gone to
llyannis Port and doesn•tl~============================~'I
know himself what be will
be doing tomorrow or the
next day."
Th.is close associate of
Edward Kennedy expressed
doubt that he· would be
available for the vice
presidential nomination.
"And certainly," he added.
"it's speculation u n ti I
Humphrey is nominated and
decides upon a running
mate."
Top Republicans a 1 s o
speculated w h e t b e r a
:Humphrey-Kennedy ticket
was in the making and were
gloo my over the chances of
beating it in November with
Trio Given
Full Tuition
Three high school seniors
from the Orange Coast area
have received full tuition
scholarships to Marinello-
Comer Schools of Beauty.
They are Judy Ann Hoff·
man of Fountain Valley
High School, Sandra S~e
Hahn of Huntington Beach
Jtigh School and Ardelle
Bellovich of Westminster
High School.
All three will attend the
newest of the Marinell o-
Comer schools located in
Garden Grove. ·
LET'S BE FRIENDLY
Hunlinalnn Beach
Visilor
847-5153
Cos!a Mesa Visitor
642-2472
So. Coast Visilor
494-0579
Harbor Visitor
642-3535
rt you bave new ndgb'bora
or know of anyone moving
to our area, please tell u1
so that we may eJ:tend a
Crlendly welcome and help
them to become acquainted
In their new surrounding&.
Bonnie Parker
received 7 money bags
from Newpo.rt 8,each today.
Was one of them yours?
Make Bonnie Parker your money-making pen pal. Hert 1Bonnle Parker Money
Bags" are the envelopes people who like to save by mail send to Glendale Federal
in Newport Beach. They're a convenient and easy way to save at the nation's
second largest Federal ••• and the only Federally chartered, supervlsed and
Insured savings association In Newport Beach, Get-your own supply
of ''Bonnie Parker Money Bags" by retu rn mail,,,postage paid
both ways, Ttiey're much more dependable than messages In bottles.
Glendale Federal Savings
•nd Loan Altocl•tlon / Msln offkle: Ghndale '
2333 E. P1cllrc Coost Hl1hwoy
(•I M1cArthur Boultvlrd)
Newport Beach
Phone: 673-1550 --
'I
Adv•rfi1.d 1~cltl1 good thru Juno 20, 1961,
•nd thi n com•• 1umm1r ror1101. I lf th1 big TV
boy1 uptown c1n do, 10 ct n •o.l,
.....
" " . '
GARDEN HOSE
Choico of fit tnd 1hort or long •nd 1klnny,
(You fi9u ro It out •••ctly, I flunkod ovon
tho old m1th.I Of firlt qu1lity yJnyl
with br1u couplings,
5/1"125' or
l/z"xSO' 199
PATIO BROOM
Ji. now liroom
•w••P• clo111, end
to do tom• of tho
lllW ft• l•WI, but
th1t'1 tho w1y it It. sac
Thirtty, m1•••
ciulck work of
1pill1 tnd 1uch.
IUnt11 clo•n
in I Jfffy.
PLUMBER'S FRIEND
Plumbori rooll y
htto It. C•n't
ll'Onoy if Joo
Hom•ownor
doo1 hit own
tlld ...... .
SUNDAY 10 to 5
It'• timo for w1odint 1 cli1glr11, pl1nti11g,
i nd tll th1 rott of th1f ht th. Got
yoursolf 1om1 new f1ol1, ind It'll m•••
tho •ork go 01M1r incl f11t1r, llJ1r, lior,
your ptnh 1r1 on fir1.l H1rdwood
. h1ndlot, Midi of tfurdy 1omothlng
., 1thtf'.
19
ea.
SHOVEi:'
RAl(E
Ol
HOE
PREflNISHED
MAHOGANY
PANELING
Ctllfornt••• mo1t popul1r Color 111
¥·t•oo¥1d profini•htcl p•n1ling. 6011 up in
• minirto1, tlYOI Y•trl of Wlflllffi •nd
1njoymont. lkindt like• 1ood boHlo
~~l~··~~B 2••
Sheet
3/8 INCH
FURY DRILL
Full lo•d 1pood to 1000 RPM, J 1col11 J/I"
911r1d chuck tnd key. Miko nice
F1th1r'1 Dey gift.
711
Unfinished
24 Inch
Pullman
Comploto with •v1f
Ink, mocl1t11
f1uc1t, •nd
pl•nt-0111. Fini1h
In your choico of
1ttin1, 1ntlquo1,
or whttov1r.
DISAPPEARING
CLOTHESLINE
Av• LJnes,
Nothing 1moll1 10
fr1th or f11l1 10
9oocl 11 1un°Gri1d
cloffio1. I So, t•
bllY you•111f I
tun. I Th i1 1110 N ll1
tw1y wh111 11ot In
111•, ~olda pl111ty
with, 1lro119. I Ugh.I
1898
)
l ; •• .
,
'
...,. ___ .. __ _ . -
-I DAILY '1LllT
l~arns f;ome~h , Hippies Head for Hills U.S., Russ Si gn~ Consu]a1· T1·eaty
'
WASHINGTON (UPJ) -
The u.S,-Sovlet comular
there's 0 a damn good conYenUon, first bilateral
chance" Icarus will hit the treaty between the two na-
tlons since the Russian
revolution, was f'Ott?Ulll y
con clud e d today In
ceremonies In the East
Room of the White Jlouse. BOULDER. OOkl. {VPl) dlunk (If rock about' a mile ca of flOwer power. tra.v~ls ·around the 1un Scientists aren't loo con·
-T b .. world, aave for ml· in dilmtter thet speodl its ScleDtilbs •Y Icarus pro· every 409 days, pag&ing .as cerned· a.bout the occasion,
orado a.nd Tibet, ,will come Ume drcllng 1be 1 u n bebly won't even disturb tbe close at 17 millkln mllea and &Mhougb if Icarus should
to _an abrupt eod thl.s between the dill of_ Mars leaves 1n a gypsy teacup as far aw.ay as 18.1 mUlioo happen to M:i1rnble onto the
wMkf.nd. · ·am Jupiter. · when It sweeps past the niiles. · earth -and 1 l m i I a r
eartb. ======~~~~~~~====== "We think Calirorb11 will -
So say hundreds ol. Npples The wandering asteroid earth. lt won't even reflect The la.st time it passed the meteorlte.s did so millions of
pouring into th.it mu.high passes earth once every 19 enouch sunUgbt to be earth ·W·as J.n 1949 when it years ego -it would hit
"abelter.11 Uyoudoo'tmake years and it is due for an ob&erVed by the naked eye. was di6oovered by the late with the force of thousan4s
ht JrCene in Boulder or· extremelyclosepa11Friday ScieotistJ will track it by . Walter Baade at t2le Mount of ·multimegaton hydrogen
Tibet ttus weekend, they atternooo. Scientista figure riadar as a furtber check on Palomar Observatory. · bombs.
-..,, )'Ct! won't '"bi alive to, lt will come within four Einstein's theory of rela.tlvi-The radar tr.acking will · Now, hippies have ·oothlng
make it anyplace nut miWon miles of 5a:1J Fran-ty. , enable scientiats to dleck a~ainst scientists, but they
weekend. c isco'1 Haigbt~Asbbury · ·Icarua ia·.a minor planet, Eiootein's theory wh ich &l'e·heading f« Boulder by
• 'lbll whole gk>omy ootJook dia(ri(:t, give« take a mile. probably the fN.gment or a predicts eccentricities in the·bwidreds. The word bas au. be tz-.ced to Icarus, a He:i#lt-Albbury is the mec-once sizable planet that orb~t. beea out for months that ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-' .
slide into the soo, there will
be vi o 1 e n t earthquakes,
there will be a violent
change in all of aoclety and
· maybe even Atlantis will
rise," saicl '1Doa.," a shaggy-
. haired native of M1ami
among tbe leaden in the
rush to Colorado. · 0 Sales and
=vE=EI¥=•1:~---=•• PMI ,..,_....,., 'There She Scorpion Crash Revealed Your OMEGA ServiceCenter
e DIAMOND SPECIALISTS
e REMOUNTING & DESIGNING ·---.......... .........
"Either you behave )'OUl'IOlf or ·rm goinr to i>elt
you one IDd report JOU to Civil Aeroll&lltlm."
Poor People March
AroumJ Ag Building
' WASHINGTON (UP!) -
Poor people's campaigners
marched around the
A g r iculture Department
building today, like Gideon's
Police Hold
110 After
March Try .
PRICHARD, Ala. (UPI)
-Police arrested 11 O
personB Wednetday a ·n d
declared a dusk to dawn
curfew after a
pred<lminanlly Negro group
of 225 persons art.empted to
march on city hall.
The gro up c. :\fronted
police in the midd:.e of a
Negro re&ldemial ar :a. With
the temperature 6tand.L'l.g at
96 degrees, the marchers
tried first to circle waiting
police and then marched
towards them, l 1 n a 11 y
halting -· police, reln· forced by mobile law en-
forcement officers, moved
in. ·
One of the leaders, Jerry
Pog ue, suffered a small cut
when he walked into a police
bayonet. Pogue later kicked
at offJcen when they at-
tempted to take him away.
Hoe was struck on ttie head
and sprayed with a disabl!ng
chemical.
Riot Police
Patrol Paris
army around Jericho, ap-
pealing for a more liberal
federal program of food · '
distribution to the hungry.
Maintaining a round-the-
clock vigil which began
Wednesday . afternoon and
continued tbrouCb. a rainy,
stormy night, m a r c h e r &
kept up their spirit, by
singing '1Ain1t Nobody Gon-
na Turn Me Around" and
other familiar songs of the
Negro freedbm movement.
Dawn brought clearing
sltles and a bright sun, and
the line of marchers, which
had dwindled to fewer than
100 during the rain-drenched
night, w.a.1 swelled to an
estimated 300 or so by fresh
arrivals from muddy Resur-
rection City.
They carried s .i i n s
saying: "We Want Free
County by County Food For
the Poor People o f
America" and ' ' Fr e e
Federal Food Stamps -i!
'ntls is a-Free Program
\Vhy are Some States Selling
Them ?"
Tbe main body o !
mardiers held a continuous
rally on the froot steps o(
the main agriculture depart-
ment building at 14th Street
and Independence Avenue.
Smaller grou ps w a 1 k e d
arowtd .and around the
building.
Security guMds kept the
front door locked a n d
department employee, M'·
riving for work between 8
and 9 a.m., were admitted
throueh rear and aide doors.
WAS, Miss
America'
Blaiherg
Improving
CAPE TOWN, Sou th
Alrioa (UPI) -Phlllp
BWber&, the w or Id's
longest strViving h e a r t
transplant patient, w a s
111Ugbtly improved" today
in his fight apIDJ!t hepatitis,
a hospital spokesman s-aid.
A rned.kal bulletin issued
by Groote Schuur Jlospltal
said ttie 59-year-old dentist's
con<ition bad changed very
litrtle.
"There has been n o
deteriooation a n d
posslbly a s I i g ht Jm.
provement," the bulletin
said.
The h o s p i t a 1 disclosed
\Vedne!day night that
Blaiberg had hepeHtis and .
sald he was "more than
holding his own."
Warhol Off
Critical List
NEW YORK (AP) -Pop
artlst Andy Warhol, shot in
his studio June 3, was
removed from the critical
list and is improving steadi-
ly, a hospital spokesman
sa id today.
The Columbus Hospital
spokesman saJd Warhol was
removed from the intensive
care section and given a
private room.
PARIS (UPI) -Patrollng
riot police armed with sub-
machine guns enforced an
lll)eaSy peace in the streeta
of P'arls t.od.ay. The city was
quiet in the wake of a ne~.
Johnson Lauds U.N.
For Nuclear Treaty
outbreak of studed-led UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. gave him the standing ova-
rioting against the govern-(AP) -President Johnson, tion before and after that Js
rnent of president CllWs in a surprl1e vWi to the customary when a chief of
de Gaulle. United N at 1 on a, con-state speaks to the
But in several provincial gratulated the Gener al assembly.
ciUes Wednesda) n i I ht Assembly Wednesday on ap-A few hours later, the
Fnnchmen -m o s l 1 Y proving the treaty to check assembly adjourned Its 22nd
students -defied the De the spread of n u c 1 e a r session which began Sept.
Gaulle cabinet'• bU11ga1nst weapons and prom I 1 e d 19, recessed Dec. 19, and
public demonstrations. At vigorous American ellorts returned April 24 to deal
most placel police ignored to de-escal&te the nuclear with the nonproliferaUon
the ralliel hut in Strasbourg arms race. treaty and the U.N. effort to
they used tet.r gas bombs to Johnson told the assembly end South Africa's control
drive 1evera1 thou san d in a 12-miDute apeech that over South-West Africa.
&tone·hurllng ltudent.s back the nuclear nonprotlferatlon The nuclear treaty, first
into the university com-pact was "the molt lm-presented last August by the
pound. • portant international agree-United States and the Soviet
A dozen ltudenta were ar· ment in the 11eld of ldsarma· Union Jn the G e n e v a
relted amd a ftw were ment since the nuclear age Disarmament Committee.
sllgbtty injured. began." binds signatory nations with
De Oaulle'1 p_ re m I er • Jobntoa entered t h e nuclear weapoos not to
Georges Pomp6CIOU, went on assembly hall ahorUy after transfer them to other coun-
tele*°D Wednelday nigtlt the delegates approved the tries and naUons wl{hout
am! told Freoc:ll ?Olen the treaty 95-4 with 21 ablten· such we~pon1 not to acquire
DIMon't m.11: -DO"# in 111 Ucm. A 1 b 1 n J a, Cuba, them.
--. -WM 11nlch· Tamanla and Zambia voted Joh n a on eoo&r•tulaled td .a 117 .. ,,_ of -no. '1'111 noolullon of ap-"all wbo bavo cootrtbuted to
f dw• .,i-., w II d pron! """""'10Ddtd 11111 lhll hlttorlc tv1nl" He uld
--, J d t 1 I h h ud Ill ...... tlcn and ntllY the United Slallt Would ~.'' He Mid cam. Ail ..... lJ u IOCID Al p011I-"move r1pldly11 to open tbe
-1rltd lo tab Id· lllL Ir11ty for 1lpatur1, alp It, ....... at WI to -, AbDll llld CUba bo7cot· seek. 11netorlal NUDcatlon r-••".,. l'a ..,..._~ tlle ,....._I'• llltld>, ·and tcrupUloutly carry It
party." \ ..-1 ll>o<e who bean! him oul.
\
MEN'S
CASUALS ..
OXFORDS
& SLIP-ONS
9• ................. . -. -.,, -.. •r••L Csahctulla ...............
!.'MARCIUS"" SANDALS
Ah lfftfttr 1tppen wftfl n1bbtr
tire toles, "A H•W. s.clal."
Choose
from
Hundreds
of Shoes
for Your
Summer
Yacafton
weiie f '!!lJed
tlieefl/ot
SummuHJ'!js
HUNTINGTON BEACH
5198 ltlln1•r
ot Sptl ....... '
847-9125
OVER I 0,000 P. RS ON DISPLAY • • •
Complete Gift Department
90 Day Accounts -No Carrying Charge
Bankamericard or Take a Year To Pay
Now 2 GNGt Stores To~ Yo•
HAllOl SHOPPING HUNTINGTON CENT£l
CENTfl BEACH .& £DINGER
!JOO HAll:IOll: ll¥D. HUNTINGTON IEACH
COSTA MISA • 545·9415 192-5501
Opn Mo"" Thura., Fri. Tll 9 p.111.
OPERA
SLIPPERS
Ideal Gift for "HIM." Easy comfortable wear.
Moccalln !De style. Crwpe soles, Handsome
prlllt llaln9. c-In black or brown. Pamper
"Dael" with a pair of these slippen.
96
FATHER'S
DAY
NEXT
SUNDAY
•
FOR SUMMER FUN AFTER GRADUATION
WOMEN'S
SANDALS ·
INCl.UDING ITAUAN IMPORTS
29~
.lost ...
88 •
GALS
AND GUY'S
HURRY TO
SHOE
MARKET
FOR SUN
AND FUN
SHOES
HUNTINGTON BEACH .
10051 Atlam1
·~ (Next ,.. &tv-<>n Drug)
962·9178
"JHE .,SB.VE YOURSElf" WAY JO S VE MONEY ON
''
•
I
Asse111bly Gets Budget
Reagan Wants Cuts Back
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -
The Assembly received its
b~~get commlttee's $5.72
b1U1on 1968-69 spending pro-
gram today with a strong
plea from Gov. Reagan to
restore some cuts that were
made.
The Assembly plans to
vote on the budget Monday.
The Assembly Ways and
~eans Committee approved
Its version of the budget by
a unanimous vote Wed·
nesday. The committee's
budget ls about $20.6 million
higher than Reagan's
original budget and '25.6
FATHER'S DAY, SUNDAY, JUNE 16th
Kirk Jewelers
mlllion higher than the
• Senate's version .
But Reagan s h a'r pt y
criticiud the budget com-
mittee's educ at Ion sub-
committee for cutUng '9.3
million in University of
C a l l f o r n 1 a agricultural
research funds and
threatenlng to cut aiiother
S7.4. mllllon unlest new stu·
dent fees are elimlnated.
Reagan said sub-
committee Chairman Win-
field A. Shoemaker (D·Lom·
poc) was trying "to
emaoculate UC'a agricultur-
el research program."
Model Says
Jim Didn't
Push Rer
'Memorial Ballot'
For RFI{ Favored
SACRAMENTO CAPl -A
s ubstan tial part o(
California's tragedy·burden-
ed Democratic National
Convention del egati on
favors a f l rs t -b al 1 o t
memorial vote for t h e
assassinated Robert F. Ken-
De4Y ·
That's one finding of an
~ssoclated Press poll which
a l s o uncovered. little open
sentiment a m o n g the
delegates for either of t h e
two surviving presidential
candidates, Vice Pres.ldent
Hube-rt H. Humphrey or
Thursday, June l3, 1%8 DAICV PILOT 7
save*25.~~
REAL §IPPIN' Wlf igKEY ·~
IN~OAUDN§·
now features
Accutron~
11 Republ lcans and
Democrats alike, who are
interested in maintaining
the university's role in
building California
agriculture as well a s
California'-s role as the
p r edornlnant agricultural
state in the nalian should be
shocked by the action,"
Reagan said.
BEVERLY HILLS (UPI) ll'Jnnesota Sen. Eugene J.
E Chin McCarthy.
by Bulova. -va Bohn-' the The survey. reached 113
fashion mOOel fow1d lying persons, about two-thirds of
injured Oulside former pro the in members. The rest
football star J I m m y "Were una"B.IJ:able or out of It is not a
watch.
Brown's a partment window -~·t~at~•:,,· ==---------~~!:.::_:::..:.::_:::.::::..=:..:.:::..::=::;:;::;::;::;::;::;::=::========== said \Vednesday Brown had
It is the most
accurate
timepiece in
the world.
Complehl Seloct\on of
ACCUTICON WATCHES
from 5110.0~
He al so accu sed
Shoemaker of a "blatant
Power play" in trying to kill
new UC fees.
Commit t ee Republicans
voted for the budget to "get
the show on the road," ex-
plained A s 11 em bly ma n
Frank Lanterman (R-La
Canada). But Assemblyman
Don Mulford (R·Piedn1ont),
said he will try to restore
the UC agricultural funds on
the Assembly floor.
nothing to do with her in·
juries.
The 22-year·old model told
newsmen at Cedars of
Lebanon Hospital that she
fell from the balcony of
Brown;s dwelling Sunday
night while trying to avoid
peace officers summoned by
neighbors complaining or a
noisy quarrel.
Accutron's tuning fork replaces
the outdated balance wheel that's
0 found in all watches.
In other action Wed-
nesday, the Assembl y
Revenue and Taxation Com-
mittee delayed for one week
a vote on Reagan's plan to
cut income taxes by $35
million nert year -using an
unexpected surplus in the
tax's revenue from th.is
year.
"I fell as I wa s leaving the
apartment over the
balcony," said Miss Bohn·
Chin, who is recovering
from head bruises and a
shoulder separation. "Jiml
hasn't done anything to
me." j
Brown, 32 , greatest rusller
in the history of pro football
before sWitching to the
movies, was due in Beverly
Hills Muneipal Court today Stop by so we can tell you more. Start·
ing with the right time of day.
Come Ba~k!! Jim
TILL
t r.M,
OPEN
MON.,
THUlllS.,
Fil. -,_ 8ANKAME~IWll. master Crierge TERM$ TO FIT TOUlll
-IUDGn
2 Great Stores To Serve You
' :-Horbor Shoppin9
Center
2300 Hwb111r 11,d.
Coita Mna
545-9485
H•tl!tffo11 C.......
IHch & Ed/n9Cf
H11nth19ton hoch
892-5501
-
Quentin Will Forgive All
SAN QUENTIN (AP) -
San QuenUn prison officials
want Jim McFall to return
to the instituUon -so he
can leave with a clean slate.
McFall, 24, was convicted
of auto theft from Rumbold \
County ln 1966, paroled after
serving one year of se n·
ten ce, and then returned as
a parole violator.
He walked away from a
minimum security ranch
outside the priso n walls Fri·
day night.
Monday, the California
Supreme Court reversed his I
conviction and ordered a
new trial.
Humboldt County Dist. At·
ty. \Villiam F. Ferroggiaro\
expressed doubt Mc Fa 11
"'·~uld be tried again since1 evidence would be hard to
1 asse1nble. .
Escape from San Quentin
could mean a 10 year term, I
bul Associate \Va rd e n
James P ark said officials
aren't interested in pressing
such a charge ..
Sears Yam Departinent Sears
i
• • tnvttes you to
Learn
THE ART OF
K11it ting
t
••
• Enjoy compliments from your friends on the
original hand knits you'll make
• Have the pleasure and satisfaction of making
gifts for others
• Our helpful, experienced instructors are eager
to expand your appreciation for the Art of
Knitting --
Course :
..
I, BASIC TECHNIQUES ····-···-··$5
II. INTERMEDIATE
PROGRAM --·---.$5
ill. TEEN JUNIOR BAZAAIL$5
IV. CHARTING and DESIGN_$10
V. BOUTIQUE CLASS ~--$10
• Cla.sscs sta1<C Lhe week of Sept.ember 25
• Enroll In our Yam Department by phon e or in
the store
ILACK & DECKER
FATHER
POWER
BIG . .FATHER'S DAY SAVINGS OF FAMOUS B&D POWER TOOLS!
);4.INCH DELUXE
VARIABLE SPEED
REVERSING DRILL
Drill, ,1cr•wt Iii• unu;r•w1 at any
1p••d. W1tfi affachrntnh, a ••rn·
pl•ft wark1kop In lt1•lf. Mo1t
popular of all p111w•r ta111l1.
h4111t1.i u.201.z
U-207·2
Blacks Oacker
1A' DRILL ·
:grv 2999
SHRUB
& HEDGE TRIMMER
Umltad Tlrn• Offar! lnc lud•1 trlrnrn••·
D••p trlrnm•r blada poc k•h pr111vld•
111uick, •••Y cutting.
Outdoor lighting you
never thought you could afford I
A quality ayitem you install yourself •..
in minU1as, with complete safety.
Jrlo permits, conduit or dluln1 necemry ... Just plu1 in!• Ul 1pproved,
12-volt aystem 1b&0lut11y shockproof, dllld·uftl •These low·vol!J1e sds
1r1 tompllll with 6 ltr11 tuled b11ril li1hts •nd color l1n11s (2 1mWr,
1rHn, pink. blue, 1nd wllile), 100 feet of weatherproof ubl1, l11nslormtf
with oa-off nltdl, fl'OUnd stlbs ind nll b11ckets • Use ttlb utltinc new
li(hiiftc from AMF In 4on11S 11 WlyS throu(hout th• year' for security 11td
ootdoor btluty.
MODEL #550
6-light system
6 LITE SET 5995 w"' DI•..,. ••••.••••.••••••• ,
•CAMPING
• NURSERY
• P,\110
A Truly Unique Advance
In Portable Lighting
71/l SAW plu1 EXTRA BLADE
•J.130-3
SAYE $3.11
NOWOl<LY 3299
Deluxe dual-action
FfNISHING SANDER
w .. $1~.0J
NOW $24"
R•mo'• tn•torial f••t with 111rbital acti111n. Sh ift
I• 1trai9ht-llnt •cti111n fa r finl1h work. 20 1haat1
of p1par, Yariou1 t rih, incluil•d.
Ul40K
J 6 SAW with SIX BLADES
Wl\111 Oller u ft.1 II• llllfll lntlull 2. tor rou 1h lijOld, 2. tor llnOOttl wood, l tkll tor
CMl'M Md ftllt llMlll. rLUI llllf1 wr1~c ~.
H1ndJ pl11llt ~ouell lloldt 11[, VtrHfllt llW 1111•11 1lt1l&llt. cunHI
Ind Krtll CUl'I I~ I ll mtttrllll.
ltMll N•· 11JI
WA$ SJJ.11
NOW
1777
WEBER.
BARBECUES
Porc:elain
Finish
4 Colors
To Choole From
THE AWARD WINNING
EVEREADY SWIVEL UTE
S]95 COIDLDS
Ll•HT
lotf Ulll
ALSO CHECK OTHER ITEMS
* Case Pocket Knives
*Hand Tools
* Gerber Carving Sets , ~ .... ,.~
* DeWalt Power Shops
• .
I
-·---· . -.. •
S O~V l'!lOT'-----
For The
Record
1st Dlstrl~t Race
Duggan Mailers
Ruled Not Illegal
'
+ SANTA ANA Two
brochures mailed by suc-
cessfuJ First D i s t r i c t
supervisorial c a n d i d a t e
Patrick Duggan did not
violate the state El~on
Code, the district attorney's
office ruled Wednesday.
The ruling was made by
Assistant District Attorney
Everett Dickey atfer a
week's study.
The investigation was ask·
ed for by two unsuccessful
c andidate s for the
supervisor's post, Janice·
Boerand T o m Larsetl.
They finished third and '
fourth in the race which will
be decided in November by
a run off between Duggan
and leading vote getter
Robert Battin.
Frost-Proof side-by-side SPACE SAVER! '. "
Divorces
0·1vo...c11 f'ILl'D
_.,n.,. K. Flld'le1' vs Arthur 0, Flldltf
Anni K1r Unt vs R-ld L la11e Bel1V Loulte Phl111" vt FltvllJll
B@n!ley PhtmPS
PhYll!I ThomPllPll Yl Gearve A. Thompson, Jr.
C1ro1Vn Kl1111tl Jl/'5111 vs Robert Hof• fm1n Justis
Larsen said he accepted
the district attorney's
decision "with regret."
gan employed to hold any
public office," Larsen s.aid.
Dickey said one brochure
carried a return address of
"Democratic United, 1402 E.
21st St., Santa Ana" and the
other has the return
"Reptiblicans United, 1402
C-th-dnt Emlly Dnls VI Dol'l1ICI Rlliitl 1
.. ~::~: """ ,, .. e. '"' Pretty Fair E .. tries
"Here a man has stayed
·within the letter of ijre law
yet he violated what. I con-
sider to be good taste, ethics
and integrity. I have sincere
doubts about the qttalifica·
ti005 <Jf any man who would
use the tactics such a& Dug-
E. 21st St., Santa Ana".
Dickey said the 21st Street
address is Duggan's home.
He is a registered
RepubUcan and a former
member of the Republican
County Central Committee.
::!.':'.f ~.::·"~.":,,~:"':: :.~:u Mrs. Julia Czyz of Cost& Mesa shows a sel'ection
8I,.':a~~ G•lll w1kltr vs WllH•m 11.1c,,. of her wall hangings, some of which she will enter
mond w11c11r · in th e home economics divisioll of 1968 Fair and Paull J. J1coll$ VI Robert J, Jacobi Jeanette L1vern1 o·Nen vs M1c11ee1 Exposition in July. Mrs. Czyz also will demonstrate
si:~:~:~io:s.0~~::!. "' 8111 A. er~ns the art of making wall' hangings as part of the
Wiibur Gene Osmer VI Helen M1rc1le Fair 's daily home economics demonstration pro-o.mer
l onone Helen Leldedttr VS Lato Lewls gram. The fair run s from July 16-21 at county fair~
Ltldeclc•• d -c t M YOU WITH THE CIGARETTES
Pt•rl May Sevel"I VI Robert Grin! grOUO S lll OS 8 esa.
Severe -"----------------------Lindi A"" P1lltt!tr YI Donald Edward
Pelletier
G•vle C. Jol!Mon VI Marvin L JchnllOfl
Dl•nl E. JohnSOtl v• Thoml' L
J°"lllOfl . Meryl E. Clem VI M1rlon e1111-Clem
Myrn• L Clllmberlln vs Dtyl• T.
Chamberlln . S.ndr1 L Spires vs Lenw 1-1. Spires
Judith Ann Tunnell 'IS Cieor1e R. Tun-M" MerlM A. Hollenbeck VJ J1mn II..
Hollenbe<;k Lel1nd D. Woolstv VI Eunice L
WOC>IJtV
Pfl:IQY Sut GWlll VJ Wll11rd l. Gwin
R1!pllenf Leigh Mu!l!n VJ Donlld
.Maurice Mullln JeHr1v Edward Andertofl VI Judith
Ann And"''°" Marvaret v , Mankins 'IS Carr M.
Menk Ins Ca~fne H.. 'McL1119hll11 VI Martin J.
McLtU11h1f11 Marvarel L FUimore 'IS Edwtrd H.
Fiiimore
Allu LH l?kh!son VI Steve Arnold
Etchison Wayne Lou\e Turin' v1 Ooroltly Ann
TurleY Eva Je1nttl1 MtlontY VJ ODNld F,
Maloney Kennell! w. Wtlers v• Merit A. Waler!.
!rm• Oorl1 NkGul•t vs H1111lcl W1rr111 McGuire Lena Ho.khr1 VI Alexender F.
Hoelulrt tie verM 1. 11.tclne VI Marvin 8 ,
Racine
Lindt Carol 81oeth Vs Robel'1 Jon
8\oelll -Jfllnf L. Trotlllo VI Arthur G. Trullllo
Lult Zemtl,,. l.1ur1 P. Z~me1
Ro11alcl 0, Marmtr Vt Sheron IC.
M•rmer
E II ta beth """"' Vint.rt Vi RIOUI Charles Vlntert
Fire Calls
Wnlmlmhlr J:n P.m. w~nndlr. rflcue, '571 J-
nricri Av.o•
l?:'XI •.m. Thursdlly, r••eue, 1672
Tflo•PI! Ave.
Hunlln•IOll 8MCh
A:ll 1>.m. Wednesd1Y, medlt.11 1ld,
19910 Vermont LIM
3:20 11.m., f11edlc11 1ld, 15'11 Dund1lk
C.M SUI l1ac:lt
11:•111.m. Wednnd1y, fT11h 11~, 9url'l-
!n; Tree Une
l:DI p.m.. rnc:ve. IOllthbcund San
Dlevo Free11111y 1111111 of 81Y
8oulev1rd (Mii Mna •:~1 p.m. Wedntscl1y, •••H fire, lm
P!1centl1 Ave.
6:1).1 p.m .. !else alarm, 19111 Street Ind
Pomona Avt,,.,.., 1:19 1>.m •• -rtment !!re, 76S Shellm•r Drive, Apt, ?, $600 116m1oe 7:3'1 p.m~ lr•lh fire. JQ21 El Camino
Or1v1.
Pilot Visitor,
IOU" .,.. cllftOU~ Moncier• • II. Fr'day1 tor Kmlol tlasi.es ot fHlfl t•ede 11ve1 end abllvt or ot~r oi·· 11nlietl1111• of .t le11I Thi! ltt ...,_
"I !n!tresltd 11roup1 may t.111 Mr. R ct> 11 1tM1 DAILY PILOT
DEATH NOTICES
SATrERIBWAITE
Ruth H. S1"1rtnw11i.. 1580 Monkrev
Ro1d, Se•I Beach. Survlvtd bY sons,
J<>l!n H, end Robert 0 . SlttermwalltJ btothero, Wlllltm tnd Lee Roy Cum-ming~; ,i.ten. Oo111!!1y Roe. Ltllf'I
StenltY 1n0' Ett>el Crisp; t!>d ~vtn
g••n<ICl!llC!t9!1. Servlce5, T II u r s d I v ,
10:30 '·"'·· Petit Famll1 Colon\11 Funtrll home,
RICE
Mt~I I". Rlct . "511 61, pt 153' Pa<lflc.
CD<.1rt, AMllelm. 01te p1 l!elifh, Ju,... 11. Survived by hvsblind, ~n II.Ice. p1
t!le lloml; IOflo Ne'-!, ol Ntwf>Ort
8e•cl'I; title••· He~ W1Llece. Mlclllg1n, 1nd GtrM'I Harnien.-, Ohlol
thrH-half sis~. MollY Hayn, Mlrv Burrell 1nd Wln<ll Bennett, 1!1 ol Ohio;
thrH htH brothers, Allred. Arthur Ind
.Albl'rl Hayes, 111 of Oh!o; tnd fin grandchlklrtn. Services. 10 1.m .• Fri·
d1v, June 14. tn the ~ Palnw Chaotl
ot 81ckt·K1ulbAr1 Morluery, 1611 W,
La Palma Ave., An11tielm.
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del Mar OR S.9450
Costa Meaa MI 5-NU
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa Mesa u 8-3433
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery e l\lortuaq
Chapel
350t PaciOc View Drive
Newport Beach, California
'44-%700
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
ROME
'11111 BolN Aft.
We1Cmbaaetr • W.s.525
SMITH'S MORTUARY m Mall SI.
Bantf.n(to• Bt•el
••• anyone ever tell you whit you are?
Road Crash Victim You're a negative, skeptical know-it·all. You cough
your brains out, you're afraid to take a deep breath,
'You're scared stiff of the consequences.
Convicted Murderer But let someone tell you about a reniarkably pleasant,
unique, private QUIT SMOKING program administe'r·
ed by specially trained pyschologists and behavioral
scientists, and you in your -infinite wisdom figure its
got to be a gimmick, a fake and a phony.
SANTA ANA -A Santa
An~man who died Monday
as e restilt of injuries suf-
fere in a traffic accident
has been revealed to be a
convicted murderer.
Records show that Frank
M. Laurent. 31, was paroled
recently after serving a
state prison sentence for a
stabbing death of ·an El
Modena service s t a ti o n
operator in 1956.
The murder case was one
of Orange County's most
Two Traffic
Victims Die
celebra~d as "The Dip I
SUck Murder" because the 1
only tangible clue on the
scene was an oil measuring
device.
Laurent and Willi a m l
Kirby. then 20, were sen-1
tenced to ure imprisonment
for the murder.
Laur·ent and Jesus
Ramirez, 23, of Santa Ana
were arrested Saturday on
charges of attempted rape,
assault with a deadly
weapon. assault on a police
officer and kidnaping, police
reported.
The paif's arrest followed
a high speed chase \vhich
started in the industrial
area of Garden Grove. I
There Laurent and
Ramirez allegedly kidnitped
Your smoke-curled eyebrows elevate bec~use we say
you can become an ex-smoker more easily, more quick-
ly than you evet dared dream ••• without using will
power, pills, pacifiers, hypnosis, gimmicks, and with·
out overeating· or walking the walls backwards.
According to you ... because you tried and failed to
' quit on your own ... one has to suffer. Fact is, you
don't suffer when yo u learn HOW to quit properly.
We· dare you, We double dare you to take the first pain·
less step t<>Ward becoming an ex-s moker.
Call for Free Initial Consultation
American Council on Smoking & Heallh
TUSTIN _ Two young a Midway City woman, 25.
women died Wednesday as The ·chase ended in Buena
the result of Orange County Park "When the pair's car
trc:.ffic accidents. overturned at a construction
site.
Smoking Control Centers
ORANGE COUNTY
Central Towers, Union
Bank Square, Orange
Phone 835-4202
LOS ANGELES
6565 Sunset Blvd.
Hollywood .•.
Phone (213) 464-7422
Helga Otineru. 23, of El During the pursuit poUce
Toro, was killed when the at one point had stopped the
car she was .driving went suspect's vehicle when it
out of control and hit a tree sped off again.
on Laguna Road n e a r '"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiooii;;;;;;iiii;;;iiiio;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiii;; Orange Stceel in Tustin. r
She was dead of multiple
head and initernal inj uries
upon arr~val at Sant ( Ana
Community Hospital, the
coroner's office reported.
Norma Plckering, 20, of
Anaheim, died Wednesday
night in the Orange County
Medica1 Center as the result
of head injuries incurred
last Saturday when she fell
from a motorcycle in a
carport. The cycle had
smashed into a car as Mrs.
Pi<~kering was trying it out.
Two Routes
Awarded
To An· Cal
SANTA ANA -Th e
California Public Utilities ·
Commission Tuesday
awarded two new routes to
Air C·alifornia.
The air l ine wa s
certificated to fl y between
Hollywood-Burbank and San
Jose and Oakland a n d
0 n tar i o In tcrnaitonal
Airport and Sa n Jose and
Oakland.
Jn the same decision. the :
PUC awarde d the
llollywood-Burbank, Sa n
Jose , Oakland service to
Piaci:fic Southwest Airlines,
which means that for the
first time in the history or
lhe two intra-state car:riers
they will be competing
directly on the same route.
Air California , which cur-
rently serves San Jose, 1 Oakland and San Francisco 1 from Orange coom.y. ap-.
pli~ for the Hollywood·
Burbank and Ontario route,
on Marcll 5 of this year.
A Gift that Dad orThe Graduate •••
As rugged as the
man who wears it!
II
TISSOT PR·~
Self-winding Seastar
With Us d1'tinctive racins-llt)'le wat.cbband to round
out the true 1portaman lmqe, the Tiltot Seaatar ia a ~_..
real be-man'• watch. Sell-winding, it winch it.ell while ffjit
you wear it.,.automal.ically cbanainl U. dl:t.Meh ~
. midnight. The 17 ·jewel Ti1110t movement ii protected.
fromlhocb (both lateral and wrtiad) and from.water
by a MJ6ged, m~-looki.nr cue. Factory-teat.Id
tor 7 day1 to &Au re Limekeepinf dependability
the Seutar J1 lhe perfect watch for the 1porb-car
driver. roller, pilot, skipper or any mah on the 10
thlt wanta a watch lo keep "soinc" with hiro.
TERMS TD FIT YOUR BUDGET ----
' ~
' ----
32 INCHES WIO[
Model FPCD·l 59YH
THE "GEMINI 16"
198-lb. Si1e Free1er
e FLIP-9UICIC ICE IJECTOk
e JJ.I LI. SIZE MEAT TENDER
e REMOVABLE EGG SERVERS
• aunER COMPARTMENT
e YOU'LL HEYER DEFROST AGAIN!
NOW
JUST
EVEN LESS
WITH TRADE!
-.
Side-by-Side with Automatic Ice Maker!
e Na Fill-Ha Splll
lc.e0 Maker Don It
AJl-Awtematico.llr l
e Adju1tabl• Shelves
e 1,,J cu. ft. with frwJer
tlMlt Midi •p fO 14, lb1.
·• FN1t-pn1of. yo11'll
netft defrost Cll)aln!
e 21.5 lb. llw mHt tinder
e 111 Whit•, A.voe.ado,
CappertoH
Pl111 n""ln1r dl•r'M i. ~nMct
to .. 11r "'""'11
EVEN LESS WITH TRADE!
Mtdtl l"PCD·lnVAN
Frost-Proof Refrigerator~155 lb. size Freezer!
e Fto1t0proof, yolf'll never
ddro1t OCJOln !
• 155 lb. sin bo"om frffwr • ,
con•enlent! -
• Meat tender hald1 up t•
9.9 lbs.
e Twin ~abl• hydratort
hold up ta 2J.4 qh.
e l11tm co'"partment
In the door!
EVEN LESS WITH TRADE!
Budg~ Priced Built-In Style
DISHWASHER
e Supff S11rge W.Ulnt
Act~
• Dual Detff .. "'
DllfNllHr e Na H•d IUnslfHJ . ..... , .... e 9•1itt Openttlo11
• 15 1.-.1. S.nl1t91
tAHAMJ
5 YEAR W·ARRANTY
Fren. frtgldcdrw & Chfterel Morars
1 year Wlll1'hty fw re,otr of ony defect wlttiout
cha.rte. pl" 4 year Proteetlu Plo.11 !parts anlyl
for fundslil11t replec.eM11t, f•r •Y dehctfve part
11 t'1it Metter, P"lnP ad WGNr cli'culatlnt 1pM:m.
TELEVISION •APPLIANCES
• • • "' ,.
w •
LE MSS9
WESTCLIFF MORTllARY m E. I'llb SI., Colla Me11 .......
WESTMINSTElt
MEM~~PARI:
PSA applied for the same
service WorUy thereafter
and protested Airl
Ca1ifomia 11 proposed g:r.:..;~~.\!« •. t:d Now 2Greatstor:::.:"::' 411 East 17th St., Costa Mesa .. -::-:""'::-""':""'::':~--~--~~------------J : .. =· ~ Burbank -• • "'""' Daily 9-9-Saturday 9·6
1
4 .
Monaaa.":•ltry
lllOI -, ·--511-171$ • ,..~
Afr Celifomla plans to In· 646-1684 ·
.. ..
! llJchtt betw ee n
ir1o and San Jooe and ~. INTEGRITY AND DEPENDABILITY ~NCE 1947 ~ andln wlySeptember.1'---------------------------1.._ _______________ .;;&. ______ ..:,.J
'
'
'"I:.,....,-~ --~~--,_.,=.,._=,,_....,,.,,,..,,...,.....,..,._.,..~-.'" .... ---.. '"· --.'".'"."'".-.------""t"...,..,.,....,.....,..,.,.,.,-..,..,, .... "".,..,,,_~ ~..--"'--': : -~ --r-.••, --.~-':-, ~~'"'''o~~"':"'!...,·-.e~." ..... _::,.,....,_~,..., .. .;~~,_..,,;..,!! •
I '
. -. R~ASSIGNED -Ens.
Tllomas Gam)>le, USN,
sob of Mr. and Mrs.
NQ,0)8n Gamble of 607
Vi.lits Bonita, Newport
Bii!_ch, has been as-
siCIJ"d to Saul!y Field,
Pansacola, Fla.; for
filfat instruction. The
e!?'1gn, a graduate of
NeWport Harbor High
SOtool , 1961. was a
sOCiology ma/· or at the Ufli verstiy o Oregon,
g(aduating in 1967.
' •
••
I
•
T~ursday, Ju11t 13, lM DAILY PILOT f
News of Coast =-Men-in Se-rvjce
has graduated from a u.J
Air Force Technical ~cl\ool,1
Sheppard AFB. ·Tex. . !
Center Lackland AFB. Tex., of Valencia High School,
for specialized achoolin_g as P l a c e n t i !.A, a t tended
a "j;oudlY p0~man. _ :_ 'Y""ullerto.G JwuQt ()oil•&•
Airman Jones, a graduate befor~ enterlng the aervlce.
Pvt, Gary H .. Rinde, U.S. Chapparal Lane , Hufttiniton Ronald W. Levitt, USN, son
Army, son of Mr. and Mrs. Beach has been chosen .of Dr. arid Mrs. Jack Uvitt
Howard Rinde of 609 Aldean "Guardsman of the Month"
Place, Newport Beach has by members of, the National ot 1711 E. Ocean Blvd .,
been as&igned to aviation Guard unit, Headquartett Balboa aiid Enilgn Simeon
school at Ft. Rucker, Ala. Co., 4th Battalion, l&Oth Baldwin, USNR, son of .Mr.
Pvt. Rinde, a graduate of Infantry, S«nta Ana.-, and Mri. Simeon Baldwin of
Newport Harbor High The sergeant, a student,at lS59 Clift 'Drive, Laguni.
School, 1961, a t t e n d e d Gol~en West College i! ~ Beach.
Orange Coast College before a data proee!sor for Sil?l;al 1 Both men are members of
entering the service. Oil and Gas Co., Eong Training Squadron ZI, the
Ensign Simeon BaJdwln, Beach. ; · sec_ond squadron in Naval
USNR, son of Mr . and Mrs. p t 1 Ge (1 E 1 Aviation history to reach~
Simeon Baldwin of 1359 Cliff t usMC .cf rie c' ~· mark. The squadron flie•
Driv.e.. L~gu~a Beach, is , Drive,' C:sta Mes_a, h:n~ the Gr~·a_n S.2 air.cr~ft.
participating .m a ceremony ass1gned to the First Bat> Cpl.· James W. Hunt Jr.,
commem~rating l _O 0 , 0 0 0 talion, 4th 1'!arine Regi. USMC, of 177-E 22nd St:,
c ~ nsecutive acc1dent-fr.~e ment., 3rd Marine Division-, Costa Mesa, has bee·~
flight hours at the Naval Air in Vietnam. assi~ to Vietnam with
Station , Corpus Christi, Tex. the !rd Battalion,' Zltb
He is a member of the Two Orange Coast 'm•o Marine Regiment, 1 s t
Training Squadron Tl, ·the participated in Cf'remoni~s Marine Division.
second squadron in Naval at the Nava1 All' StatJ,on
taUon, 9th Marine Regj.
ment , Vietnam.
St>!! Sgt. Way .. !I-Bunt,
USMC, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clair Bunt of 1490.1 Jackson
St:; Midway City. has been
assigned' to First Marine
Division, Vietnam.
The sergeant la a member
of the First Marine Division
Band, attached to Head ...
quarters Ba~lion, First
Marine Division.
Airman George ~A.
Parker, of 4117 Calle Juno,
San Clemente, bu been
assigned to Williams. AFB,
Ariz.
The airman, a jet aircraft
maintenance technician is
assigned to a unit of the
Tactical Air Command. aviation history to reach the Cor_pus Christi, Tex., ,com. ' Pvt. l.c Gary E. Winnen,
mark. The squadron flies me'tnorating 100,000 con·· USMC, of 19382 Cindy Lane, Airman Tesla E. Lutes
the Gruman S-2 aircraft>. secutive accident-free flight Huntington Beach, has been Jr.', son of Mr. and Mrs. N.
hours. / assigned to Headquarters· L. Cooper of 16252 Eagle
Sgt., Harry L. S~ronf, of They are . Radarman. 2.c ahd ,Service Co.,' 3rd Bat •. Lane, Huntington Beach,
The airman, a gradUllte ofl _
Martna High School, has 1
beeg assigned to a unit of
the Aerospace Def e n..s. ·e,
Command, McClellan AFB, Calif.
Airman I.e. Jobn E.
Juatiet, son of Mrs. Richard
K. Justice, 9882 Westhaven
Circle, Westminster, ha'.s
been assigned to Tuy .. Hoa
~.Vietnam.
Airman Justice, a radio
operator. ls a· member of
the Air F o r c e. Com·
munications. Service sup·
porting· tbe Pacific Air
Forces.
Airman Brent E. 'JOJ!el,
son of Mr, and Mrs. Robert
L. Jones of 9745 Brookhy
Circle, Huntington Beach, .
has ~en i.ssigned .to 'the Air •
Force 1,'echnical Training, . ' ...
·To the VDten in the .
~4t_h Congrflsfonal District •
"Bill"
T·EAGUE .
Says
·THANK YOU
' ! •. '
... 1 '.'for.y•u;> vote .ind you r confldtnc• in the p
ctplCs we:.share. Ite't•'s ~gin now to work for our
2n~ victory in November." --
. Biii T4ague, ·12765 Bi'Oolehur1t, Garden GroV.
.. . • •(7141 539-7701.
·-'. ... '
~-s-E-N-S-A-T-1-0-N-·A~-L : $;~·DA y· OFFER!
, .
-I
I
' I
HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO BUY FINE QUAL-fTY NAME BRAND
FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES AT LOWES:t PRICES tVER OFFERED! . ' ' ' . -
15.9 CU. FT. SIDE·bY·Sl.DE
FRIGIDAIRE ''Frost Proof''
Frigidaire AIR · CONDITl~NER
AMAZING!
• ' ' , .
.
' ' ' ' ' • . • <
' .. • • ' ' • • ,
• ' ' ~
' . • • , .
' ' • ' ' .. • ..
,. .. ..
" " " .. • • • • ' ' • ' ' • •
.
REFRIGERATOR
ONLY 32" WIDE
e 100% FROST PROOF! You'll
never defrost again I
•Side-by-side convenience!
Including 198-lb. size ·vertic al
freezer!
• Full-width hydrotor keeps
produce fresh and crisp! e Acrylic enamel on exterior,
easy to wipe cl ean!
e Extra large door storage !
A·l2MK
110 Volts-Plug in anywhere
•Chassis alides out
•Magnetic front pane l lifts off
for access to filters
•Washable air filter, easy to clean
COOLS
UP 10
_6.00 Sq. Ff.
11,500 B.T.U.
IMPRESSIVE SLEEK LINES, FINE QUALITY, FOR MODERN DECORS, WA~NUT FINISH! SAVE 160 IF YOU BUY NOW!
3-PIECE CONTEMPORARY BEDROOM
I
. .
FREE DELIVERY!
LEONARDS
t
. -· ,. ,,.
'""' ,w·"-
' ,,,, ..
e MATCHING Nffl ITAND
ONIT •. 39,11 e MATCHING CHiil
ONLY •st.II
by ''BASSETT''
A truly impressive bedroom ensemble. Sleek
91om1tric lines. Fine ·quality & 9racious
amounts of storage area. Mo'dem desi9n
-that relates happily to any decor. Appointed
in brass hardware accents.
e HUGI 72" DRESSIR or TllPLI
9-DRAWIR DRISSIR
e HAMID MIHOR
ettEADIOARD (QUllN OR
FULL SIZll
LEONARD$ DEPARTMENT STORE JIOJIRS:-DAILY NOON 1'.IL 9 .P.M. e SAT; & SUN. 10· A:M. to 6 P.M. '
I
WEST LA. BURBANK EL SECUNDO TOllAHCE GARDEN CRDYE R.OWi.AND HTS. HUNTllTON. ICH.
i.43 S. llftl1d1 141 N. Ylcl1ry II. HI II. S"'lldt Hiii C1111hir 12111 llJthr II. 11444 I. 5" In. 1Hll'lucl 11¥1.
•·l4t• ,,,...11 h.1.i111 ll ... ,, Jt 1·• tff.11!1 141 .. lt ..
' ' >;I
•
APPL, 1Y BRANCH
LAWNDALE
114H lfllltil'lm IJ1I.
. llt-llll
YOUR
CHOICE:-""••12" . • •••••• . .-.. -
TRIPLE •••••••• • ••••••• AC('UIRI tM ...... " ......... .
BUILD£R·CONTRACTol llANCHES
REDONDO ICff,
.. 242$ liL'kl II.
1rs.e2n Tf!·S!H
, •
•' ..
WESTWDDO
• 1111nw. ,... 11. •
1fMllf UJ.4511
\
l
)
•
----~--- ------. ---.... -~ ----
Je • D"1LY PILOT
R-u-bert Kenne.dy .
And the Rosary
To the Editor:
Tbt captJon U'l'lder your fron1 page
picturt of Senator Kennedy (June 5)
carried some misinformation. which t
would Like to set sb'aight. The rosary
held in his hands in the picture was
not presented to him by a priest. but
by a bystander and eye witness to tht
assassination.
AS" a television viewer who watched
the entire tragedy unfold berort my
unbelieving eyes, I can attest t-0 the
following sequences of events sur-
rounding the afor~mentioned rosary:
Shortly after· lthe shooting, Terry
Drinkwater of CBS-TV located one o(
the rirst eye. witnesses to the crime
1nd interviewed him on camera. This
. I
~\(,~
•1w~ '' ••••I• '"" run•, ~•d?"
'I f'h1d Rope'
To the Editor:
··1 find it very difficult to pray in
thi s situaLion . It seems to me we have
all prayed a long ti me about situations
like this. yet have donl' little or
nothing to change them . Maybe we
thought prayer was magic. Jesus~ and
decided we didn't need to cooperate
actively with you in working for a bet·
ter world ."
This prayer by Malcolm Boyd
speaks to me today.
Yes, we need a day of mourning but
mourning without a sense of rededica-
tion is empty and meaningless and not
comforting at all to a family whose
grief spans the years.
VIOLENCE HAS always been with
us . Yet 1 find hope ln the ri sing tide
against violence; and there is hope in
the young but it is time that we , the
silent majority, begin to speak out and
.ict out our convictions instead nl
paslively listening to t!he vocal and ac-
tive minorities. Let us not be afraid of
sacrifice as we dare to stick our necki:;
out into a country and world strug-
gling for direction . Let us adm it and
work on the div ision among us and the
hostility within us so that this country
can indeed be in reality what, we say il
is in word. God is not waiting for our
prayer! th at He do something: He is
'Waiting for our love and loyalty tn
follo w the directions He has already
given .
WHAT NJ::Ens TO be done is no
easy taik. but. ttie alternative throu gh
apathy is destructiO'tl of all we hold
dear. More of us must be willing to
really give, even our lives and money,
for what we believe. Anything less is
not enough . Please don't join in prayer
unlesii we are willing to join hands in
hard costly work. It does no good to
call upon GOO. unless we are willing to
listen to His call unto man .
As much as I feel some of lhe hur t
and pain of the Ken.nedy famil y. I can
not tielp but adm ire the strength and
glor y within their li ving. an example
for us all . May the love of God and
their love for each other sustain the
family of Senator Kennedy and may
His love mOtivate us anew.
REV , RI C H M 0 N O C.
.JOHNSON
President, Ha l'bor Council of
Churches
(Sun Cotttrol
To the. Edit.or :
As I .ii:o throu~h these rh1rk dav.~. I
reflect on the foOowing facts: ·
We have laws to insure the lia fef\' nr
our automobiles. highways a· n n
pedestl'ians to minimize the possibililv
(If theft. injury and-or death. Othe'r
re.strictions for 1he ownershin and use
of a motor vehicle are driver's license.
sales slip, registration fees and in·
surance. Yet, we have no restrictions
on the sale and use of deadly weapons.
In accordance with the recentlv pass-
ed bi ll. I tru11t that Congress will work
lo improve the secton on gun control
to achieve. the desired aimi; of both the
late Senator Kennedy and Presi dent
.Johnson. One does not l?ive aspirin In
cure a can ce rous grov.1h.
I 00 NOT SEE \\•here 11 stricl .eun
control htw would prevent a purcha1tr
of such an item , nor would It be in-
frinrina on an Individual's ri~hts.
Neither would such a law elimin11 t"
crime or poUtica.I assassination ·but
any law which would diminish by even
1 percenl any or both of these two
evils would be well worth while .
As • memorial to each of the thrf'e
men who have been f o r c i b l v
eliminated from the human rflce rcir
repnuntfng the conscience or lhfs na.
tion. t 11t each and every elected and
11ppointed iovernment official and
each and !!very private cltlun to go
fonrard. UNITED, to achieve the
gnat American drtam for each and
every one or our renow countrymen ••
quickly, as efficiently, and as com·
plde.ly 11 possJble.
[ wiU rtlt IJSured when our nation
moums HI dead for dyin.-frnm ''old
ase." and not mortal conftict. UntU
!hat tim·e )'OU and (have I lot lo do.
MAXETT'A MOOR!!!
, \
was a young, good-looking man, with
blande hair and moustache and wear·
lng a Ught blue coat. He te11tifi~ to
Mr. Drinkwater that immediately
after the shooting he placed a rosary
In Senator Kenpedy'~ hands and gave
him a blessing which (he said) as a
Roman Catholic he was allowed to do
when no priest was present.
AT THE TIME of this interview it
was unknown whether Mr. Kennedy
was 11live or not , so the blonde
gentleman's testimony was of great
importance, for he said that when he
placed the rosary in Mr. Kennedy's
hands, the Senator squeezed his hand
and the beads, which brought much
relief lo everyone.
Later, the blonde man's testimo ny
was verified by a film clip of Mr. Ken.
nedy lying in the kitchen. being com·
forted l:iy the good people surroundjng
him. At the very end of this clip, a
man's light blue jacket covers the
camera briefly, disappears. then reap·
pears on the viewer's right again.
Then. for the smallest fragment of a
seconCI, part of a pair of hands appear,
seeming to hold something. Then the
blue coat fills the screen as the man
moves toward the Senator. obviously
bending toward the stricken man Bs he
does so .
IM l\1EDIATELV, thi s gentleman's
testimony popped into my mind. so
when the same film clip was replayed
at a much later time, I looked for this
minute appearance carefully. and
close examination showed that the
hands held a rosary, or be·ads of some
kind . And as the li ght blue coat was so
1 identi fiabl e, it couid have been no one
else.
This genlleman·s tes timonv wai::
repeated very. very late in the
coverage in a capsule version, but to
this date I have not heard or read of
this man. ana hi s act of extreme lov·
inJ?: kindness to the fallen Senator.
I believe the actions and goodness of
this unknown friend in time of need
should not go unheralded. As a rinf'
public service. r feel·that the DAJLY
PILOT should seek out this man and
make his name and deed known to fht'
world . for as Tennyso n wrote. "Kind
hearts are mnre than coronets."1
LEE C. MILLAn
T'1r n1t/.horit.ot.ive Nn.t.inn(I/. ObsP.rv-
t>r repnrl.ed th.at the crucifix 1.11(1$ t.hnt
nf n 17·year-olrl Am.bn.~sadnr busboy.
Juon Romero. who had just sh-0k.e1l
h.ands with Senator K enned!I a Jew
1noments before. th.e shooting. This
i.~ t.hP. Observer·.~ account of tvhnt
followed:
"Senator Ke-1111ert11 11oul lny 011. Iii.~
hnck 01i I.he floor. n ponl of blood
forn1in9 benenth his henrl. ./u(ln Rn-
m.ern drnpperl to his knee.~ nnd held
th'. .~enntor·.~ hend. nff t.he floor.
" '/"n } hon1P in bed.' .l11n11 snid to
hhnsclf. '/'111 rlrrnniing. I 111n1it to
bf'.. rlren1nt11.g.'
"But lie 11J11s11·r rlrr.(ln1i119. 'Anrl.'
soid .lua11, 'Mr. Ket111edy 11J(IS I.here,
bleerling, nnd he was trying l.o say
.~ometlting to 111e. •
"The busboy put on P.nr lo 111.P.
u1ot17uJed man'.! /.i'!JS and h.cord h.in1
whisper. 'It is all right? J.~ euery·
one okay?'
"'I told him yes.' soid Jtwn. 'I
said everything would be nkoy.'
''From his shirt pocket the youth
1vi1.hdre1n tlte crucifix t.hat hi.~ fat.her,
f/(luin Raniero. hod give,1 l1ir11 lJ/. his
conji.rniation in t.h.e Rnmnn Cnt/10/ic
Cln1rch . /·It f olded thr fl11nnto1".~
h.a.n.rl.~ flVl'r rJ1e cruci(i.r. nnrl .. ~ni.rl,
'Hold 011 tn tliis. Hold on, onrl it uJi/I
be (Ill rig ht.'"
-Editor
Nol All Americans
To the Editor :
How long must the United States in·
sist on pla ying games concernin.c:
wherf! hostilities should be taken care
nf ? How Ion.Ii( will American$ be. sub-
Jected to losiiig their lives while plediz-
iniz thf'ir entire beings to the serv1ce of
thi~ cou ntry? How Ion.Ii( will ii lake
before our government reali1.es thP
wnrst enemy we ha"ve is within the
borders of our own cn unt.ry? l~ow lnn.c:
v.·ill we cry aboul incidents that we
could have stopped if our eyes o,1•err:
opened lo the fact that not all
.4,mericans are Americans?
110\Y l.ONCO Wll.1 .. riot s and great.
men being assassinated carry on ln
this so.called "izreat nation?"' \·lo"'
long will it take before the tears dry
for so mething 'ft'e Indi rectly caused hy
our unawareness of nbvious problems?
How Ion~ can th is country remain free
and democratic whe n we have 1111ch a
seriously lacki ng goal co nccrnin,R:
where we should stop a war? How lon,R:
will ii take u~ to isolate ourselves Ion .Ii(
enough to slop 01Jr Internal cullural
lags? How lon11:?
FREDERICK 0 . BALLANTINE
TV S11rllelllance
To the Editor:
Police su rveillance: by TV can1era~.
~uch a!I i5· opposed by many
Newporlers., 111ight have. prevented
an-Other n3ti onal tr8gedy l had they
been used in Lo~ AngeJes on June 4.
8. L. G.
To the Editor :
Dots 3nyone. think that any willful
murder would nal haave been com·
milted if there were no guns in the
world~
T. HILLMAN
CO VER SUBJECT -The late Sen. Robert P. Kennedy as portrayed on
I.he cover of the current Time magazine. Before his death at age 42, Ken-
nedy was a Time cover subject five times. and was included in two others.
one a family portrait of the Kennedys that appeared in July, 1960,
the other as one of several presidential hopefuls in 1967."
Lertieni' Cnurf.1
To the Editor:
"The time has come In register
guns." That is the call that. is being
heard throughout 1he country . Without
goi ng off half-cocked. lei us look at the
so.called gun problem. First. how
many pers011s are killed annually with
guns: Twenty thou sand! Cars kill
50.CXXI plus , Narcotics caused physical
and mental damage t.n more than bolh
of them together.
We ha ve existing gun laws that spell
out what should happen to the
violators, yet. criminals are pam-
pet«I. codd led, and condoned by the
cou~ts. I am not attempting 10 pass all
th e blame on I.he courts because the
people th emselves are partly to
blame.
'fHE PEOPl.I~ have al\o\verl the
courts to iii-Owly take away the rights
of the law-abidfug people and give
more to the criminal. We have allowed
this by voting for the candidates who
appointed these judges. Am I wrong to
believe that the criminal's righ ts end
where mine begin?
Should we register gun s see ms to be
the basic questi on. Som p people have
said yes. howeve r. I feel that answer
is erroneous because we have had
narcotic laws. yet, narcotics are
ava ilable nearly an ywhere , even in .
grade schools. If we were to pass a
gun registration law, who would abide
by it : The aver.age citizen would. but'
not the crimina l. He will continue to
have his tplns surreptitiou sly. I-le will
steal them . or buy them from the
dealers in stolen property.
EVERY DA'' dozen s of guns are
stolen in California alone. Multiply
that by the 50 states and then by 365
days a year and the figure arn ou nt s to
a large amount of money when these
guns are resold to the criminal ele·
menl. Where does the criminal get the
money ? Does he have a job and work
for it? No! ~le ~teal$ from one citizen
to buy a gun so that he can rob and
often harm another citizen , ?,iake l?Uns
nearly impossible lo get and the cost
per gun will climb: hence . the black
market. Then the criminal muSt steal
more to buy one .
The American citi?.Cns will be asked
to register his guns. or turn them in
because of th e so.called threat to
society . l-lowever. we are forced i by
Supreme Court decision l to employ
admitted Com munisls in our defense
plant.<;. I ask you. which is more of a
threat to our society. the ·guns. or the
Communists ? We may need our guns
one da y to fight those same Com·
munists.
monument iii the world to peace and
sa nit y.
Surely it has heen God 's repealed
message and warning that it is wr"ng
to kill . wh ether it be that of one or the
killing of multitudes. Let us heed the
message and put aside our pr_ide in
might and replace it with love arid
understanding.
Prayer is oot. the askin g of God lo
fulfil11one's wishes, but to listen and do
His will.
A
LUBA GORBONm'F
Kenned!/ Lam
To the Editor :
At this time of disbelief and
hopelessness, let us do that which
Robert F . Kennedy would have wished
done. I propose a "Robert F. Ken ned y
Law" which would make illegal any
s-ale. to the ge neral public. of those
weapons wtiich are manufactured
solely for the purpose of killing.
At the same time, we must legalize
the manilfacture and sale. to responsi·
ble adu lts. of non-lethal type weapons,
such as tranquilizer gun s. which are
now inconceiv.ably outlawed as being
dangerous! This type of weapon i~
more than adequate for those persons
~ho feel t.he need of self-protection.
These can immobi lize a criminal until
legal aid is secured .
WF: A1liST PREVENT lhose wi th
JUn s from bei ng the ir own judge and
Juries . We have taught our children
that the U.S. condones murder and
violence. for they do not lake these in·
struments of murder from peoples'
hancls. It may be long before statistics
show the results , but Jet our children
know that this government. and il<;
people, have a profound respect for
human life !
·Let the television and movie violence
remain unreal drama-s in o u r
childTens' minds . Onl y wtien they see
real guns in the hands or assassins,
and the spi lled bloOd of the ir victims.
and the anguished tears or their
parent, do they real ize that this is ac·
tually a way of life.
GERTRUDE FARBER
Are We Le•• 611111.y?
To the Editor :
Thursday's news reports told of five
men who had met violent death . , ,
four from Southern California who
died in Vietnam. and one from
Ma ssachusetts who died in Los
i\ni;?:eles. The fam ilies of Sg t. \Vart'I.
Warrant. Officer Rosar. S~I. Powell,
Private Teague and Senator Kenned v
deeply mourn the senseless loss Or
their sons and husbands. A.s thousa nd s
or families iii Vietnam and th.e U.S.
are lamenting senseless death's.
The potential for violence lies in all
or us. The man who killed Senator
Kennedy expressed it direc tl y. The
rest of us pay for ki\Ung in Vietnam .
Are \11e an y the Jess guilty?
RUTHE QUINN
• , Look at More ~'t~
Than Symptoms
l "
Tt1 the Editor :
On June 3i Sen. Robert f'. Kenned y
WIS atrociouslf gunned down by an
a s,assln ·s buUets. Thal night. the
guests on the .Joey Bishop Show can·
sistcd or men who knew, worked with
a nd beUeved in Senator Kenn edy . Gov.
Ronald Reagan was aJso on. They
began the show by discussing this
latest of tragedies to hit the. Kennedy
family and the nation. They went on tn
discuss what they thought should be
done about our gun laws, our poor peo-
ple. and our starving 'people (a fact in
whic h the general public does n't seem
to want to believe).
AF'l'ER WA1'CHING this_ show I
tame to the concl usion that the
,i\merican people ha ve a great many
needs. We need to know what ls gQing
on in this country and where, We need
to know who the candidates for pt1blic
offices are. We need to t<now the
issues. We need to know v.•here our
fellow man stands on the issues and
the cand idates. We need most of au to
get involved in our society to make Jt
a better society.
There is only one way to mee t these
needs. individually and as a na-
tion . That one way is through the
senses. We can use our eyes to read :
books. m a g a z i n es , and the
newspapers. We c.an iil so use ou r eyes
to watch TV news. We can Lise our
ears to listen to the world around us.
WE NEEO TO HEAR. what other
people re ally ha ve to say. We can't
just shut out what others are saying
and think about what we're going to
say next. We ca n use our sense of fee l
by try)flg to put ou rselves in the shoes
of others to see how they feel. We.
have to use our voices to ,express our
IJ11l1e nrd Voice•
To the Editor :
During these last terrible days, peo-
ple on the streets. in the offices and
supermarkets, and at the kitchen table
ha ve insisted over and ove r again that
these act.s of violence and terror are
not representative of American socie·
ty . We need to assure ourselves that
the soc iety is nnt sick; that we are. not
all responsible for the traged y that has
com pou nded itself in our midst.
\Ve are the majority'; the solld and
somewhat stolid citizens of every com·
munity in America . Our values have
not changed. and they have served us
well.
RUT WE JIAVE been guilty. We
have been guilty of not making our
voices heard and our presence felt in a
time when the malcontents and the
maladjusted loudly challenge the
values and the order by which we have
found it possible to live and without
which chaos and madness abound.
Let us reaffirm our f a i t h i.n our
"square'' way of li fe, Let us again
assert ourselves and assu me our right-
ful places in society. Let us once
again demand proper respect for au-
thority in our homes and schools : for
lawful and orderly processes in our
communities and our nation .
MRS. ROBERT RICHEY
'Prepoxt.e rot1s'
To the Editor:
II is preposterous the hysterical way
Americans revel in their delirious love
affair with themselves, especially now
that the glorious Americ3Jl way of life
is revealed as the glorious American
way or slaughter .
While the Jeaders scream (or a
cessation or violence amongst the
citizenry and demand obedience to Jaw
and order, they themselves are
organizin g, a d v o c a ti n g, pro-
pagandizing, enc ou raging and prac-
ti cing violence on a titanic scale
overseas. No weapon is too terrible.
and no victim Ion helpless. jusl so long
as it. furthers the cowardly aims of
Am Prican atheist capitalists \\/hose
thievin g hands N>ach out all ovr.r the
world lo gra h off everything of value
for themselves.
COL IN NICIIOL
Whal Co1111tr11 Nee1b
To the Editor:
What thi s countrv needs is not a new
gun law bul a new 'supreme Caurt.
J . S. KLENK
views. We have t.Q let our politicians
know what we want done and hoW we
think it ought to be done. 'Illis we can
do by going to the polls and voting for
the e8 nd idates we feel will get done
what we want dont . We can also Write
to our lawmakers and teU them-how
we reel. •
I think, in getting to know ell or
this. we have to begin with ourSe'fves.
We have lo know where we stand, in-
dividually. befo re we can ge~ invt!lved
with our country. Once we know how
we feel, we will be able to unde'tstand
others' feelings more easily. "'
IN CONCLUSION. I would like to
say that in solving such problel'M.aS;
our gu n laws we have to loo k at mte
tha n just the symptoms. We also need
to look at the ca uses. We can't jfl st
ban guns because people are mii'rder.
ing other peop le, We have to ta~ Gie
guns away and find out why theu peo·
pie are kill in'g. It wHI take a great dta I
of effort on our part. but we wil( hive
a better society to live in. Let's"cJOn
up our country and live in it, while We
still have some leaders. •
BARBARA HOWliiY
,.
Readers Write; -,
The DAI LY PILOT receiv;d::
such a volume of letters from ~
its readers follo wing the ass·as-.'.-
sination of Sen. Robert F. Ken· . .
ned y that an entire page is de··
voted to them today. •
Comical
To the Editor:
-'
Propo•al, .,
'
The San Francisco mayor's silly cii !\
for people to turil"l n. their hand ogufls
ca me during the shock of Sen. ·KOO·
nedy's assassination, and could n'Ol
have been better timed to help pOO-
mote the hue and cry for a new gun
law. His proposal was so flat and com.
ical tl'Jal anyone could propose ~a
parallel to the mayor's dim wit : :Fo r
instance, all husbands should tu(n
themselves in to some 'kook so that
their wives would be deprived of tbe u~ual protection afforded them by the
marltal contact. Make sense? .:
1'HE NEED Jo~OR a new gun laY.<
(aside from mail order) is like, !Qe
need for a hole in the head , and il is as
nothing compared to the need of a· neW
jmmigration law that would Keep
cre.ep~ lik~ Sirhan ~ul of the eouiitr~
Th1s 1mm1grant brings to mind other
a lie ns who have killed Americans. Oo
you remember Zangara, who tried in
kill Franklin Roosevell but goofed aii'd
shot Mayor Cermak of Chicago iit-
stead ? ·-
ALL 'rH E GUN Jaws in the worfi.i
would not have prevented last week's
tragedy, and any new gun law restriC-
ting the American people cou ld also
lead to further legislation to the wrorig
hands that would disarm the citizen Cy
and make us a nice patsy ff"lr :a
tota litarian regime . It has been ltone
you know. · ·~·
S. G. UN'iltNE .
San F"ranci.~co Mayor Jost.pl/ Jl /.io tti
reported ''better than PXpected1' rf.
spo11se wlien 40 assorttd guns u1rf.r
t.11r11ed in. }Je e.:r:tended. I.he turn-i i
period from. July 4 to July 11 . ..,,,.. '.
-Ed1t~1·
K llli1111 h Killit11J
To the Editor : -•
The tragic de~th of Robert Ke nne~
has bee.n described as unneces~art
fooli sh and viole nt, My heart. aches f~
hi m and his fa mily. But do not the S:i?
same adjectiv es apply to the 30.000
boys who have already died in \".ift -
n.am ? I can see-no difference ex~t
that they .are nol all "KENNEDYs:!;
T~e people _ of America have .g.o.t In
decide NO\Y If lhe,\' do or do not want
violence in any form.
We CANNOT condem n 111<mstrOsitv
"f?VER Tl-IERE '' because it is 10.orio
miles away and ,!?O into mournin_e. for
one man kflled in a moment o-f" in ·
sanity. "
1:he politici ans will have :~ou
bel1evf' there ls a difference Out kill·
1ng is kj/lin,!? and dyin,!? is n'na! fat' a Ken~edy or a Jones or Smith, Ask -the
family v.•ho already "owns one"
\\I .. ~.11 . ·.
'
1'Hf'.: MA Y(lR OF San Vranci!>co ha!>
asked all women in their city lo tak e
all of the ituns in the homt and leave
them at the police department to he
destr oyed. I consider that as R
se nseless act. l·le has panicked and ex-
pects his whole community to panic
wit.h him. What will it prove ? Will all
the gu ns of the hoodlums, crooks. and
criminal~ be turned in ?
If the undes irab\ei; wtlre punished
harshly by the courls when they
viola ted the existin~ gun laws, I.he
word woulri gel. around and less viola·
tlons would occur.
'These Values Are U1wcceptable'
I urge everyone lo v.·rite his rnn·
gressmen demanding more severe
punishment Of violators instead O(
making excuses for them .
The President has organized a con1.
mil tee ·lo le:arn the cause of violence in
the U.S. A committee is not needed.
the obvious reason IS because the
cootl!i encourage it with their Je:-
nif'n cy.
PATRICK B. BONNER
1tfora tori11ttt 011 Killing
To the Editor:
What does ii amount to, to fl y n11gs
at half mast, designate a day or
mourrUng and such? A truly worthy
tribute lo Robert F. J\ennedv's life. 8n
trag.ically cut short . would ·be to call
tor a moNtorium nn all ktllinR in-
de.finJtely. Thus his life shall not have
been sacrificed In vain but become a
To the Edjtor :
During thi s ...,, e e k of In.
co mprehensible anguish and Intense.
Lragedy, all of tile citizens of our r,am-
m11n lty are pain(utly questlonin~ the
roundatl ons and direction of our socie-
ty. Many of us mourn the deep
personal loss of Sen. Robert f'. Ken -
nedy ; many more mourn the crtatlan
and continui ng existence of an in -
vidiou s environment which harvests
an apparently insatiable ministry of
Idealized hate. The vortex of fni Stra·
tJon and impc>tence envelopin.it us all is
vividly characterltrd by tile plaintive
question : ··But what can I do~·•
I. OF SUBURBIA, respond witti !he
coov icllc:>n that the collective con -
science and energy of my neighbors
can make a difference. 1-towever, It
\\•ill no lon~nr be adequate for the
American middle class to ,strivr for
brotherhood by si mply rende.rin,R: .
begrud~ing monetttry assistance to the
•
less fortunate~ of ou.r population. It is
IJ1e middle class whic h has: grasped
the role of establishing nur society's
approved standards and values of life
-living. and ii is therefore. the mid ·
dle class which must answer for the
spiritual and moral embarrassment in
which we presently fun ction.
TT <>CCU RS TO J\1f: thal the
significance of life is premi!it>d upon
the accordatlon of inteRrity and
rf.!ipect to the sovereignty of eacll in-
dividual. In my judgment we, the mid·
die class. In our itcurry for pr~lige.
stittus and wcaJth. have ooither
achieved nor in any substanti.at man-
ner planned for a · socia Uy sensitivt'
awareness . lnstead we have. buried
ourselves in the oallous 11uperriciallty
of 11elfil'h mal.erial contentment.
J\fV INDICTi\fENT ex l.P.nds lo tho.~e
living in sumptuous comfort who so
w\ltlnf!ly expend such great enerRY In
b1fl~er ly challenging the amounis .of t.h~tr lax liability, an~ .Yet, \vho""·;o
ury.iformly meet the crisis of bigotry
with apathy, and worst", with .,C.
cept~nc~ an~ even encouragemen!~T.t1
our 1nsut.uu ons wh.ich are ostensl ~y en~aged in promoting fellowship. but
wtuch_ are ~o oppressively iilvolved'i n
the d1ssem1 nat1 on of their own ~ilf-
1,rofess cd truth s lhat little tlmf! is -)efl
lo reasses~ their memberships' 111• ler~~mmun1ty relations. To 0 111 ;-
pohllcal leaders who so gliblv a;,.
nou_nce lh at the nlos1. sacred . loun·
dation nf . nur American civ!Uza lioQ-js
I.he sanct1tr of property ri ghts. To all
of us who .. in varying degrees, hold clot
to our children the apex of financial
ac1unen. r11Lhf'r than a ccmmitment'Jo
In tellectual and moral wisdom. Thf'ie valut>~ are unaC'ceplablc. ~
None n( us wi ll forj(el the events;of
lhf' rtcr:nt past: m:i .v our con11cie~{'~ nE'v~r let us forget what thosl' eve~
11lgn1fy. We can do better. -:.-.:
THOMAS W. S~PE
l
·•
"
"
.. ~
'
' . '.
'•'
-------~-----------------------..,,,....,..,...,.,,,.......~,,...,,...,.-='""'T~=.,..--~.
• ~ -·child Pinpoints Nee,d for
.. ' .
JJNJTtD "11 e:5i •NTElNATIONAL about the gun law." traffic tn guns, Tue1d~ re· clUe'11 the UPt survey show-
~~e8' Mr . President, This appeal to President jected aiJ>roposal ~t >Would / id.
..... •·1 just turned eleven Johnson from Myta have ba'Med the U:Bohft, of '1 The city council of
years old. 1 woke up early Frohman of• • G 1 enc o e. 1urplus handguns alKI rUleir, Washington, D.C., rtctl\'ed
one 1norning and heard my Illinoiae" exprenes the na· such as the one that i1lled a> propocal to re q u Ir e
.,.grandmoUter crying. J asked tion's shock, ertef and sor-President John F. Ken~Y·' registraUoa of sellers· and
h'r what was wrong. Sbe row following the murder of The House also refuse~ BJ' ownert of all 1ype1 or
, ~id 'J just saw Sen. Keo· Sen. Robert F. Kenned,y. effort to register 1; r t firearms. Dealers a 1 so
. -nedy saying thank you to It al!o expressed the purchasers of · these nd woulil h• e to keep an in·
,.1;everyone for helping-him desire of many Ainericans, other imported wea}'O • ~ ventory on all firearms and
. win the California primary according to a United Pren The houie Judie CoID·. ammunJtton In stock. ·
.... and shaking hands and lnternattonal survey, to "do mlttee, in a tie vote, nd Th~!.~assachusetts House
saying thank you. But just something" . about t h 1e to endorse Jobnson'I call foi Mon<UQ" gave prellmh\a:ry
, :then he was lyeing there 1Urprlsing ease with which a ban on mail ordtr ~ulu 1· app,~val to a bill tlghtening
-·:bloody on the ground. anything Lrorn a p(stol -of all weepom and,..·am· that f~te's already strict
~·"The next couple of days like the one that k1,lled Ken· munition. aup cfontrol laws. The bill
-was very unhappy. nedy -to a cannon or The pQwtrful National ·Rl· ir.qllir'IJ tePorting to police
.: ... ~·1 have a very nice dad· rocket launcher can be fie Aasoclatloo conUnut1 to chlefl -11. fales of iUJls in
... :dY! But some children don't purchased. exert pressule on Coniress, nlu:nk:lpalities, the reporting
have a father like the Ken-The U.S. House of but public sentiment for g';!Jl . to 1 state officials all out-of-
nedy children. Representatives, reporting leglstatlon •as broucht ac.-'1 state purchases of handgWls
. up1eas~ do something increased mall to cut the tlon 1n some states and (ii well as "long guns"
~...,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:I' ~dy covered), make&
.,
' "
..
....
5 POINTS SHOPPING . CENTER ~ •• ~~~:i~r..::~~~t~~d·~r:
Jn)ademea:Dor, and extends
MAIN AT BEACH •
tJ\~ appy atherS · ay
His Big Day Is Sunday, .lune 16th
~ dotlnltlon of "dangerous
.ftapon° to Include air
~lflt11 brass knuckles, clubs,
knives, l>ombl,. sllngsbots,
tear gas Md sword canes ..
How well it will work is
·quertionable. State Atty'.
Gen. Elliot L. Richardson
' IlB TMu~af, Jul'lt 13, 1%8 DAILY Pll DT 11
Control · Legislation
so.Id 87 pettent of 'the ... unil11teral disarmament which have been used tn In Chica10, whlcb alreadj
weapon s u s e d In of all children of the world" sujcldes and by some to kill has such a pro&,ra_m, Police
Massachusetts crime c9m~. ,by eliminating toy weapon: Uleir ntlP,bon. rworted 51 guns turned in
from adJOlnlng sfates. One E. O. Crawford, owner of "lt has preyed on our cOn· since the killing of Robert can, for ln1tance1 ·buy a gun a , Dallas variety store, science tor quite 1omt
over the toun~r in t{t)Y ..,reed. He 11ld he would lime." · Kennedy -about average
Hamp,shire w 1 t b ho ques-soU no more toy weapons An lnd.l&na·based chain, for a week.
tions asked."' ' 1 beccluse they are the "tlrtt WoDderland 1tore1, dlacon· San Francisco Ma 'Io r
Teias' lqW U so loose .a1 lesson" In violence. ti.nued tht sale or am-Joseph Alioto said any gun! to make ·rJlf weapons ton· But guns kill, not toys. munltlon. It s opped the sale turned ·tn would not be trac-
trol ne,.rly upposJi,ble",, 4 The J -Mart.discount house of tuns two years ago. ed for crime detecUoll
As Lt. ~~ .. II!· Gug_B, acttng In Columbua, Ohio, made an Presldent StanTord Frled· purpose1, but would be
ht\lld. Qf ,the· H.1>uston , pollce i m p r e s s I v • financial man a aid the new move was d e s t r o y e d • Some 72
department. puts l.t: ·. .. 1acrifice by turning to to help preserve public sale-weapons, including a World
"We enlorce thti state law $20.000 worth of guns to cltl ty and sanity." War 11 machlneguo, were
and U sa)'s an:Yone oVer il police. Said the firm's pres • Several c(Ues announced collected in four days.
and of gobd moral 'ch_aracler dent, Marty Roaen: "We "..no que1tion1 uked" In· Twenty-three weapons, five
who has the money ean buy know that over the past 10 vitaUons fOr citizens to turn ol them rifles, were turned
up to a 20 mllimeter cannon years we have sold guns in their firearms. in to palice at Philadelphia •
or a 395 milimeter rocket ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiim;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~mm launcher." Ill:
No move ls underway to
tighten the law.
some say the problem Is
broader than controlling
lethal weapons.
Phltadelphla a t t o r n e y
Norman Ashton Klinger said
the cause of murder may be
"the ethic of violence" he
says children learn from
their toys -their "military
hardware." Klinger pro-
posed "kiddie disarmament
~£/U
THE IDEAL GIFT
for FATHER
ON HIS DAY SUNDAY
JUNE 16
•HE DESERVES THE BEST
"' !flt ... ...
nllll
tllt lltst
lld am n1
I •tyl..i br
/~~
loldly INICllllMI
HIM!lomtlY ltrltd mn
. HARRIS
.BERMUDA ..
Shorts
$600 & s700 Travel Bar
GRADUATION TIME
BIKES ARE FUN
AL L SUMMER
TIAMS
TO PIT YOUR
IUDCOIT
.. -Pressed for life. A wonderful
, .. assortment • of plaids and
·, • ch ecks. Buy now, su mm er will
... come. Sites 28·40. ·
. ' .
COLORFUL
Neckwear
Dad a lways needs new neck-
.: wear. Check our new low ~,prices\ for top quality. As-
' .',~orted petterns and colors.
. '
MANHA TIAN
Shirts
,'· .. FROM s500
.~Zip-clean fabric s, no ironing,
guaranteed to 1t•y white.
"A'51orted color• •nd patterns.
·Short sleeves,
s139s
Royals hire Trav-L-B1r hold1 2
bottles, Complete with <4
cups, opener spoon. Top
grain strapping.
ENGLISH LEATHER
Cologne
FROM s200
A unique •nd un ivers•l tollet .
pr•p•r1tion, The sc•nt i1
definitely m • s c u Ii n e, yet
pleasing to women.
SPORT COATS
Blazers
FROM $35 00
Solid colors for the new
colors and deiign in trousers.
Solids with the new pl1id1
and checks. Pla id co1t1 with 1'.,!f.o~~
solid color t rouser,,
: FREE GIFT BOXES
YOUR PURCHASES WRAPPED
FREE FOR· MAILING
THE MALE-BOX
.. ··· M E N ' 5 W E A R
·· .. 5 POINTS SHOPPING CENTER, HUNTINGTON BEACH-a47-0516
FABULOUS PF AFF'S
106th BIRTHDAY SALE
LIMITED OFFER
·88.00
reg. 199.99
modef 18 with base
MORE THAN A ZIG ZAG
• now own a genuine Pfaff,
\VOrld's top rated sewing
machine
• instructions included
·· • 2l year parts warragty
Sewing Mad>inos, 809
,
CANT COME IN
o.11 your nearest Broadway
for a no obligation Home
dcmomtrllioo
,
TUNE UP SPECIAL
Any nuke, any model
..• in. your home
2.88
--·------------_ _. --
300 Bikes to Choose From!
17071 MAGNOIJA AJ WARNER
142·3m · 545·0377
C~AFT
CLASSES MON.-FRI. 9·9
DAILY 9-6
~WARM
'WEATHER
SPECIAL!
Now 2 Gf'eat Stores To "Serve You
"''"' , .. ,,1119 c .....
1100 HdN ltH. c .........
141°9411
H~11tl•ft0111 Cillt""
hadl & IWl11tw
Opon Mon., Thurs., Fri. Tiii 9 p.m.
TROPICAL SPLENDOR!
REAL HAWAIIAN PLUMERIA
Th• famoua 111 flower. Pl1nt In 1 hot
~-.., locetion In coast1I ere•t. Huaky
Beers seedless lime. Dwarf trffa for
planting anywh1r• in the sunny
gard.n. Delicious fruit for cooling
drinks. Som4t with small fruit al·
re1dy set.
I al. Size 2•s
Patio Trees
DWARF
EUGENIA
la1ellut f•r e forMOI l••k
I• Ritt. u .... ""Y ..-I•
,.110 orn1. Ru l 11ic:•
plo11h.
5 Gal.
Cont•iner 498
Rag. 6.95
498
5 GAL.
Reg. 7.50
REAL BEACHY!
Statice, Sea Lavender
BRILLIANT RED
BOTTLE BRUSH
FOR THE JUNIOR BOTANIST
Landscape screen shrub with all.year
flowering se-ason. Easy to grow in
full sun.
Husky I Gallan68¢
R19. 1.40
2 AMAZING PLANTS
VENUS Fl Y TRAP
A rMI ,.,.1,.,. -wmll If fffff•,,
s..ltf\le .ie11t .11tH1I ... Mt11ltfvlty
'' flle t•11cll. Lenn fold up, then 1111°
hl4. Jlffr ,.t .... .... ,_ .... ., ..... 149
PLOWER SHOP
SPICIAL ITALIAN
CYPRESS
FRESHLY CUT
STOCK
~!\.,. 98¢
Doz. -_,_ -_ .. ....,H,.. ··-RED HYDRANGEAS BB>DING PlANT SPE<IAL
Ono
Gal.
,,
H19• fl•wer1 e11
~ 1tlc•lr tlto,.d 1lin1ll.
,. ... , 1. '9" lhldtt.
"""' 1prl119 ' 111111•
.,.., bleomen.
Rlfl. 1.50
111111'--..... ""'
•H tt. c•l•n •f tt.
Nll!Mw -"91t leW
.., ............... Me•111.
3 uoz. Only 119
REG. 69c OOZ.
SPECIAL PR !CES GOOD THROUGH SUNDAY, JUNE 16TH
HOURS: MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. SUNDAYS 10 A.M, TO 5 P.M.
· 2640 Harbor Blvd.,
,.
"OUALITY1 AND SERVICE SINCE 1946"
COSTA MESA
CALL 546-5525 ·
> •
,,
Jf DAILY PILDT Thury<!IJ', June 13, 196&
• 45th
LOWEST PRIC·ES OF
\'.
save more now on our own Surety cotton muslin and
·percale sheets. mattress pads. pillow protectors
long wearing muslin slieets
1.67 twin top or fitted
bottom regularly 1.99
reg, SALE
Juli top or fitte(J noftom 2.39 1.87
standard ~ize
pillow cases pr. ~.09 pr., .JJ7,
Snowy while, closely woven utility
qualit')'. great for children'• rooms. ·
luxury white percale sli~ts
twin lop or fitted 1.97 bottom regularly 2.39
reg.
full lop or fi tted bottom 2.69
standard. size
SALE
2.37
p illow: cases pr., 11\39 pr., 1.17 .. ···~ ... Fi n e c o mbe d c a tio n :wa v'i!n 180
t~eadi ta the equare lnd i,
Surety Estron• mattress pads
2.89 twin flaf reg. 3.99
full Jlat
queen flat
Xing flat
reg, SALE
4.99 3.89
6.99 5.89
8.99 6.89
Estron• fillea, cotton coverea. Fast
drying. Perfect maftress p'otect.ion.
Suiety zippered pillow protectors
.49 21 "x27", reg •• 59
Sturdy, cctt on; keep pillows c I ea n
longer ana help retain thei r shape.
m.;y· <o a omestfcs 34
Surety matelasse bedspreads
19 99 twin or fuU reg, 24.99 •
111•
BIG
ONE
Surety aaylic thermal blankets
6.49 twin ~r fuU reg. 8.99 reg. SALE reg. SALE
Machine washable year 'round acrylic. Shrink con-
trolled, nylon bound , soft napped. S lovely colors.
mO')'. ca bedding 41
queen 27.99 22.99 king 29.99 24.99
Puff effect pattern; hand tied fringe. Machine wash-
able cottons you never iron. White, antique white.
may cc bedding 41
•
J
Hollywood bed
quilted slip covers
16.99 regularly 19.99
Bald, flamboyant, resounding
colors add extra punch la our
Watusi slitx:"overs. Greens,
brawns and blue s !n puff
quilted cotton aver acelate
clear down lo the floor; 4-
sided kick pleated flounce.
Zippered bolster covers regu-
larly 6.99 each are now 5.89
may ca slip cavers 113
Surety no-iron
tablecloths
8.39 52"x70" oblong
reg. 11.00
reg. SALE
6S"x9G" oblong 17.00 13.29
6S"xlOS" oblong 21.00 16.99
63"x90" oval 17.00 13.29
70" round IS.OD 11.39
napkins .80 .59
65% Dacron• polyester, 35 %
cotton. "Come Clean" soil re·
lease finish. Embroidered
edge. Gold, avocado, white.
may co towels, linens 30
insulated antique
satin draperies
. 5.99 48" wide,
72" or 84" long
reg. 10.00 a pair
With 57 sizes ta pick from it's
a safe bet you'll be able to
drape 'most any window!
TheS. white Eden Rae rayon
and acetate antique satin
dra~ries are .insulated to
help you k eep your cool.
Sun-and-fade-proof, wash-
able; little or no ironing .
may ca draperies 113
Surety sculptured floral towels
1.89 24"x46" bath reg. 2.50
reg. SALE
l 6"x26" hand towel 1.50 1.19
12"xl2" wash cloth .70 .49
Wreath of Roses cotton, Siamese pink, verdian green,
antique gold, Bristol blue, ice pink, cerulean blue.
may ca towels 30
'
may co south coast plaza, san diego . frwy at. bristol, costa mesa; 546-9321, 675-3418 -· ' shop monday thru saturday, 10 to 9:30
• • •
\
.. _______________________ .....,......,.__,,.....,,........,..-::~n-::;~-------~ ··-._...,,.,..., --... . . .. ........... ~ .............. .. . ......
-'
' •
,.
JODEAN HASTINGS 642-4321
T!Wn*lr, .I-12. It" "' ..... II
•
'
~-
MAKING VACATION PLANS -A1tbough many Assistance
League projects continue on a year-round basis, the pace
slows a bit in the summer, and looking forward to summer
fun are ,Oeft to right) fttrs. Hugh Stut.!man, Mn. Robert
Wilkin and Mrs. C. RObert Hubbard. Mrs. Wilkin, past presi-
dent and cl1arter member, extends a warm welcome to the
former provisionals who · gained active status during the
league's concludine: meeting of the season.
PUT SPARKLE IN YOUR LIFE -Bubbling with plans for the second annual
benefit cocktail party sponsored by the Huntington Harbour Republican Wom-
en's Club are Oeft to right) Mrs. Robert Heisler and Mrs. Glen C. Mahoney.
chairman and co-chairman <>f the event. In addition to raising campaigri funds
the evening of fun 'will honor club members !or their n1an y hours of service.
Special Entertainment
Cocktails Uncorked
For GOP Benefit
Fun. food and fToli c are being promised 1nembers and gue51s
attending the second annual benefit cocktail party being sponsored by
the Huntington Harbour Republican Women's Club.
In addition to zesty, 'unusual hors d'oeuvres and cocktails, danc·
ing to the music of Chuck Gates and the Danceables will be provided
beteween 6 and 9 p.m. Frid~y. June 21 , in the Meadowlark Country
Club.
Serving as chai rman of this year's benefit is Mrs. Robert Heisler,
who has announced special entertainment will be provided by the Har-
bour Zone Beach Beauties who will try to answer the eternal question :
Do Blondes Have More Fun ~
, Taking part in the skit, in addition to Mrs. Heister. will be the
Mines. Robert Belr, Marie Boddom, ruchard Davies and Jack Edgerton.
A musical trio, accompanied by Mrs. Elmer Tague, also will present
selections.
Graduation Closes 'Year
Graduatioru; were emphasized duri.ng the
concluding meeting of the season for the Hunt-
ington Beach Assistance League.
Provisionals graduated to active status,
new provisionals were welcomed and newly
elected officers and chairmen assumed their
duties under the watchful gaze of wise old
owls in graduation hats which centered the
luncheon tables.
A total of 15,87Q hours donated to com·
munit.v service were counted by retiring chair·
men and of these 2.468 were served by provis·
ionals who now gain active status. They in·
elude the Mmes. Roy Battershill, John Carri·
veau, Wayne F1anery, C. Robert Hubbard, Al·
bert McCoonell, Robert Parker, Robert Sey·
bert, Hugh Stutsman and Ward Theisen.
Mrs. Jake Stewart was awarded the title
Queen of Hours with a total of 238 hours of
rolunteer efforts in many league projects.
Taking office are the Mmes. Norman
Warner, president: James Sayer, F1oyd Hair
and John W~tt, vice presidents; Glenn Dys.
inger, corresponding secretary: Sam Ferg\i·
son, treasurer; Melvin Penhall, district social
service; William Russell, thrift shop; Gilbert
Turnbull, public relations; Richard Crouch,
house; Sally Farquhar, Regional Council rep-.
resentative: Robert Wilkin, alternate repre·
sentative; Richard 'Burgess. hospital; Andrew
Yeiser, speech center; D. R. "Parse~. hospital
liai90n and Miss Lea Hood, recot"dmg sec re·
tary.
Appointive chairmen include the Mmes.
Harry LeBard. parliamentarian: Low el 1
Spangler. amenities; Wilkin, bylaws; Vernon
Langenbeck, convention; Jack Bramel, Girl
Scouts: Alice Freema n, scholarship: William
Lamb, Coordinating Council: Ferguson, bude:·
et: Crouch, bulletin, and Battershill, hospital.
Assisting as hostesses will be Mrs. Robert Sutton, Mrs. Norman
Chu and Mrs. William Harrison.
Throughout the evening prizes, including water skis, a blender,
ping pong tabre and rotisserie will be given away to those attending.
The club, comprised df 280 arrea women, already has budgeted
almost $3.000 toward area and national campaigns and the Huntington
Beach headqtrarters.
EFFORTS REWARDED -Presentin_g scholarshi p scrolls and gradwa-
tion caps to the league's scholarship winners is Mrs. Floyd Hair. chair-
man. The awards were earned by Orange Coast and Golden West collej!'e
students /left to r12ht) Janice Garringer. Nancy Johnson, Leslie Moore
and Tuni Christiano.
Special guests at the meetine: were T'e-
citrients of the four $125 scholarships award·
ed annuallv to colleee students. Janice Gar·
rinl{e r and Toni Chri,.ti.llno. Orani;ie Croa!:l Col·
leee students. and T,eslie Moore and Nancy
,lohnson of Golden West College Were bene.
fi ciaries.
If You' re Whipped, It's Better to Switch Than Fight
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I am a
middle-aged, man who works in a
small but successful company. The
boss is a jet-propelled, high-powered
executive who is subject to a lot ol
iressure. I sympath.ize with the guy
but I am beginning to trunk he ig a
sadist.
When things are going llmootnly M
is the sweetest guy in the.world. When
thlng11 don't go well he is Ullbelievably
brutal. I happen to be the boss' Num-
ber One whipping boy and It Is getting
me down. When he beata oo me l beat
oo my family_-1 realiu thi11 11 unfair
and I hate myself for it
I joined tbe company live }"!ars ago
witti high hopes for a brilliant future.
l'he money 111 e1cellent but I'm begin-
ning to wonder ff it's worth it. Last
December I 1peint two week1 In tile
ho<pital with a b~ ulc«. y.,..,..
" ' .
day r got my third migraine headachf'
tn a month.
Is it po.ssiblP to figh1 this problem ?
If so. ho~·? -MOR E SICK THAN
WELL
DEAR !\!ORE: The bctl way to
ftgbt tbl1 proble m 11 wltb your ~n.
Write a Jeuer of re1lg1atlo1. No Job la
worth alcer1 and mliralne. I bave yet
&cf' 1« a Brink'• money waron la 1
'uneral precet1fon.
DEAR-ANN LANDERS: I'v• been
R:oinJ: with Richit for two years. We
heve been engaged and disengaged so
many limes I've lost rount. We argue
constantly about religion. friends.
which movie to see. wh.ich TV chanqel
to watch, where to eat and every kind
ol nonsense you can think oi.
Rieb and I don't get along with each
other wortb .a dam, but we don't seem
to get along wllhout each otber, either.
I keep telling myself man1age will
solve our problems because tJun will
be more time to tettle thine• properly.
.... -..,_ •• -..... ~ .. ..._ •• -> ..... ..__ .......................... _._ ......... __ -------------..
What about it? -V.C.
DEAR V.C.: There also will be
more Ume to fight -· which 11 pro-
bably whal you'd be doing.
The ba11lc lnrredlenl for a sue·
ce11lul marriage 11 friendship. Where
there is continua! bickering and argu-
ing, there can be 110 friendship. Tell
Rich "«ood-bye and good luck''. and
resolve to ba1e your next ~lectlori on
what you can share, not what you ca.11
flgbt about.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : 1 am 15.
My &liter Ellen is 11 months younger.
Ever since l can remem~ we have
gotten eiactly the same things -
allowance, same prlvileges, same·
curfew. Every time I get a new dress,
Ellen get11 one. When I get a new pair
Of 1hoe11 to doM E11en. '
Mom used to buy us identical'
clothes. People thought we were twtn1.
When we 'd get dressed in the morning.
E·lle n would put Cl!' her dress like mine
and I'd change into something else. I
hated it.
I have· a ~ister 17 and we get aloog
fine. I know it is wrong but I find
myself hating Ellen. I cry a lot
because I get so angry I don't know
what else to do. Can you help me 1 -
WET PIW.OW
DEAR W. P.: Nobody wants to be a
carbon copy of 1<1meone e11e.
Stop baUnr your 1l1ter. It'• your
mother wbo made tbe mistake. And
don't hate ber, either. She made lbe
mlltafle out of trnoruce. Go ta your
mother today ud tell ber you are
lt1utnc a declaratJon f!f Independence.
No mol'f.I clotbe1 alike, Panae dff.
ferent interests. · If Ellen f1 . in Ute
orcht1tra, be In the haod. U Ellea if
on the school paper, join tbe yearbook
1laff. If your titter lntl11&1 on imltattn1
you, lhere It nothing: yoa can do. Bat
rett 11aured you wlll be the real
McCoy and t he •Ill be tbe lm.Jtatlon.
When romantic glances turn to
warm embraces Is it love ar
chemistry? Send for the booklet "Love
or Sex and How to Tell the Off·
rerence," by Ann Landers. Enclose •
long, stamped, 1elf-1ddressed· e~
velope and 35 cent& in coin with your
reque st.
Ami Landen w111 be glad to help you
with your problem&. Send them to hu
In care of the DAILY PILOT, enclos;.
tng a stamped, &elf addressed el)o
velope.
(
, ,
•
WE DIG CLAMSI -Cl81lll5 by the bushel ate the
epicurean delight awaiting members and guests of
the Orange Coast Yach! Club who will share their
dinner on the beach at Dana Point with members of
Bahia Corinthian and Voyagers Yacht Club dur-
ing a two.day cruise next weekend. Making oure of
Mesan Couple
Engagement Disclosed
T.h• engagement of two
Costa Meeana, Jean Kilgore
and Rlcllord L. Hall, ha&
been announced by the
bri~·fO.be's pare..,, Mr.
and Mn:. Clarence Kilgore
of Bellevue, Mich.
Miss Kilgor1. who
graduaWid. from the Harley
Hospital School of Nursing
in Flint, Mich., is currently
employed at Palm Harbor
General Hoepital, Garden
Grove.
Her fiance, son of Mrs.
Edward G. lrul of Las
Vegas and the late Air
Force Maj. Hall. i a
employed by Bell Sroadway
Mortuary, Colta Mesa. He
ls a gradi.mte ol ·Orange
c-t'CoDegeend California
·eouege of Mortuary
Science, Los Angeles.
. --JEAN KILGORE
BrldMlect
GEORG.I
GIRL
' GEORGI GIRl ORIGINALS
CLOTHES & GIFTS
1425 COAST HIGHWAY
LAGUNA BEACH · e 494-9800
~~~;;~;· .. --
GET HIM FIRED UP.
Wti11 tc glwforGraduatlon or Father's Oay? S How about tomethlng he'll ._ and eppnciato
all )'Mr long, aw<y dly.
Z1pj)O In 10 kllrotgoldfillad, $22.SO. °"""" flnllil ZJi>po, spoc:o for monogrom. $5.95.
c-A butone, Cllpa Into poCl<et. '7.85.
-bulOno,114.95. ,
l l FASHION ISLAND-6#-1110
NEWPORT eEHTU
• •.
-~---------------...,-~-~----------•
•
Horoscope~
Aquarius: Study 'Bargains'
an ample supply of the tasty tidal creatures are
(left to right) Commodore and Mrs. F. K. Gleason
and Vice Commodore and Mrs. Lorin Weiss. Fes·
tivities get. under way with a race to the destina·
!ion at 11 a.m. Saturday, June· 15. ·
Yacht Clubs Turn Tide
For Clamfest-ivities
Digging up plan& for a fine
clam bake art members of
the Orange Coast Yacht
Club. and members and
guests from Bahia Corin-
ttilan iand Voyagers yacht
clubs who have been invited
to participate.
Activities will begin at 11
a.m.Saturday , June 15, v.1th
a cruise race from Crystal
Cove to the Dana Point
breakw8.ter entrance, site or
the Clamfest.
Participating boat. will
take advantage of ~y in·
terim anchoring privileges
extended by the Harbor
Commission for the two.day
event.
Festivities will include
di.Mer on the beach, featur-
ing tbe culinary artistry of
master clam chet Vince
Gurley, and presentation of
race awards. Quantitie-s of
fresh clams will be flown
from New England for th
occasion and shore boa ts
will be provided for the
more tban 400 expected. to
attend.
Turner-Heger Nuptials
Recited in San Diego
By SYDNEY OMARR
.. 'Jbe will man controls
b11 destiny • . . Astrology
polnll tl1o way."
. ARIES (March 21·April
19): J'leaoant I! the word
for today. You get your
wish: to relai and enjoy
company of fine people .
Earlier, try to complete
basic project. Then you will
sparkle tonight
TAURUS (April 20-May
Volunreer
Nores
SUMMER SERVICES
A volunteer with a First Aid certificate Is need-
ed to1 assist day camp activities in Peters Canyon
from June .17-21, according to a director of Girl
Scout.,
There always is a constant and growing need
for driven to transport crippled children and
adult&, clerical help and swimming aides to assisl
paUentl in therapy pools. .
Anyone interested. in donating time and service
Is asked to call the Volunteer Bureau weekdays .
from 9 a.m. to noon at 642-0963.
VB IS A COMMUNITY CHEST-UNITED
FUND AGENCY -
Orangewood Council
Acclaims Area Leader
Honorary membership in
the Orangewood Regional
Council of :Epsilon Sigma
Alpha lntetnatJonal sorority
and Fountain Valley's Beta
Gamma chapter has ·been
pre1ented to Mn:. Marnette
Peek of Huntington Beach.
Well-known for her many
efforts in behalf of the com·
munity, Mrs. Peet bas serv-
ed on: the boards o f
Children's H o s p i t a I of
Orange ·eounty, Children's
Home Society, City of Hope,
and Disneyland t:ehoJarship
and CJ.vie awards.
2:()): Ambition s a.re
hlghligtlltd and can be
fulfilled throu1h contacts
made tonight. Be with
ARIES Individual !or an
open door to opportunity.
F<a.vorable word-received
Jrom one in authority,
GEMINI (May 21-June
21>): Vacation planning,
traveling is spotlighted.
Utilize intuitive intellect.
Means trust bunch. Piece
together bits of information.
Detect trends. Get finger on
pulse o! public.
CANCER (June 21.July
22 ): Dig deep for source
material, especially where
fl.naoces are concerned. Be
flexible without scattering
forces: Finish what you
st.art. Get accotlllt6 in order. LEO (July 23-Aug, 22):
Permit mate, partner to
take lltitiatiw. Sit back itn~
be a keen observer. Obtain
hint from CANCER
message. Don't be in too
much of e bW1'y. Qlec.k
legal aspects. VIRGO (Aug. 23-llept. 22):
Watch Possessions. Some
routine matlt.er$ may get out
of kilter. Check ha.sic tasks.
One who -performs. service
may not be physically up to
par. Be prepared tor extra
job.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Romantic interlude slated
for tonight. Earlier, give at-
tention 'to children, creative
endeavors. Harmonize fami-
ly relations. Vacation ac-
tivtties faV'Of'ed . Personal
magnetism rating is high.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2Z -Nov.
21): Accent on security,
property. In plarmllig action,
take long-range view. At·
tention centers on parent.
Be considerate. Older in-
Youth Bid
Grand 91'am
She bolds honorary life
memberships in the Hun-
tingt.on Union Council of
Parents and Teachers, the
l.Jttle Mermaid Guild, Hun-
tington Beach, and the Ebell
Club and A6sistance League
of. Long Beach. A course of bridge lessons
Sbe is a member of St. for high sthool and college
Mary's Hospital Guild, Long students is being offered by
Beach; St. Jude Hospital ~e Woman's Club of Hun-
Guild, F u 11 e r t o n : I.he tinfton Beach-. . Freedom Foundation; DAR; . Lesson regts·tratlon will
Wanderlust Club; Eastern take place between 1~ a.m.
Star; Midway City Woman's and noon tomorr~ tn ~e
Club, and Garden Grove clubh~use. . Providing m-
Business and Professional struction '!1~ be Mrs. W. H.
Woman's Club. Ct~d, children and youth
Mrs. Peek has dOnated the cbairz.nan for the club an~ a
use of Peek's Fam 11 y qualified teacher and life
Ollonial Terrace Room as master. .
well as volunteering her own Classes will be conduct_ed
home for philanthropic teas, each Monday . and Wed.-
St. Paul's Episcopal
Chilrch ot San Diego was the
letting for the marriage of
Roxanne Elise Heger and
Brent Elwood Turner.
HONORED fashion shows and lun-nesday from 1.15 to~ P:m. sheath dress and carryfng Mrs. M•rnette PHk cheons for four weeks beg1l1111Dg yellow roses. · Monday, June 17, and ad-
Tim Harrison of Berkeley ditional intormation may be
was best man. s L LJ obtained by calling Mrs.'
A reception !or 35 guest. ecretaries ining P Creed, 84?-3445. took place after t b e A class for area Girl
dividual's experience can
prove valuable aid.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Catdl up on past
responsibilities. Obtain hint
from SCORPIO message.
Be selective in deciding
whom to call or see. Some
are merely intent on making
gossip, wasting time -you
deserve better.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-
Jan. 19): You could receive
payment for p86t service.
Sturdy VIRGO message.
Oleck possessions. Better to
finish than to 6egi.a projeCt.
Be aware of cost& -know
what goes out, comes in.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): New beginnings, added
freedom shown today. Peo-
ple are attracted to you and
want your opinions. Be
frank. If forttlrigbt, you gain
new allies. Stress origina·
lily.
PISCES I Feb. 19-March
20): Puzzle pieces could fall
in-to place. Secrets are
rev~ed .. You know wt:io is
on your side, who ls not.
Separate real friend from
fair-weather variety. Be
discreet, quiet within.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDA Y you are
dynamic, fond of trawl and
change. You are extremely
active and would make fine
reporter, teadler. Signifi·
cant current cycle could, if
single, lead to marriage.
GENERAL TEN·
DENCIES' Cycle bigb lor
ARIES. Special word to
LIBRA: complete ad·
justment in domestic area.
' rt~
JUNE 15th
Sindy C1rlson Is b•ck,
with p1rtner Marl Gr1ve1
••• to offer you many
fin• lines of
"lntim1te App1r1I"
•nd Corsetry
Sp1ci•li1in9 In "D" Cup1 ~
M11t1ctomy
Gr1d11•f1 Cor51ti1r•
M011tlns.ttte6
"11 Comfort1bl1 in Your C11p1"
~ Jt 11P ~'INTIMATI ~ APPAllL
2~0·1. I. 17tti • Cosf'CI Mesa
hi HILLGRIN SQUARE
"'9M1 M2·5430
Canon C. Rankin Barnes,
the c1ergyman who married
both the bridie'1 parents and
siJter, solemnized the dou-
ble ring ceremony.
The bride ii the daughter
oC Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Heger of San Diego. Parents
of the bridegroom are Mr.
.and Mrs. Robert E. Turner
of Cost.a Mesa.
ceremony in the home of the Bahia Chapter, National Mis s c 0 n stance Scouts and their mothers
bride's parents. Mrs. J. B. Secretaries Association in· McCauley, president o 'rr•w~i;ll;ta;k;•;p;l;aciie~iin~A~u~gu~siit.~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Slator of La Mesa, the stalled new officers in ·the California division of NSA ,
bride's grand m o t be. r , Irvine Coast Country Club installed ttie office rs .
assisted. The bridegroom's today. Assisting wu Mrs. Del
grand.mothers, Mrs. Stewart Incoming leaders are the Beard, Cirst vice president.
S. Smith of Anaheim and Mmes. Floyd I. Fleming. California division NSA and
Mrs. Elmer Schrader of president; Ruth Rosebush, Bahia member.
Given in marriage by her
father. the bride wore a
street 1ength white lace
dress with long sleeves,
white Spanish mantilla and
a bouquet of yellow roses
and white carnations.
Mrs. Jc;n Graber, the
bride's sist.er, was matron
of hoaor, wearing a yellow
Hadassah"
Mrs. Jack Chapman, 549·
1379. lnay be contacted for
location information for
Harbor Chapter of
Hadassah. The club meets
at 8 p.m. every third Tues-
day.
Lebanon, Ohio were pre!ent first vice president; Elenor Entertaining was t h e
at the wedding. • Evans, second vice pres-Newport Harbor chapter of
The bride is a graduate of ident; W a Y n e Thuestad, the Society for th e
San Diego High School and recording secretary; Mary P r e s e r v a t I o n a n d
is attending Calitornia State Albert , corresponding Encouragement of Barber
College at Long Beach. The secretary, and Eileen Phin· Shop Quartette Singing in
bridegroom is a graduate of ney, treasurer. America.
Coste Mesa Hig'h School. at··=;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:;-·111 tended Orange Co a s tll
College, and is attending
CSCLB, where he is stu-
dying to be a teacher.
The newlyweds wW live ln
Belmont Shores.
BRIGHT
Thi DAILY PILOT mt.11 ih
nlWl CO ... l fltl light, tight i nd
btight. R11d your hem1tow•
lelition d1ily 1rHI 1njoy lh1
Large Sizes
• The Mardan Assoc:iates
... , ..
eiauttht
"Slifft..i...• -
lary MIMf!Mt
H ya. IC~ _, __ Announce
SALE .
shop 11 home for custom
rHpholstliy fl~ries
'
I "BENEFIT ART SHOW & SALE" Half.SI" --· ''"' •*'""'-
2.99-7.49 yd.
reg. 4.00 to 9.00 yd.
•
Extended One Week
SISTER MARY CORITA
RlfA LmNDRE
GEORGE BAEHR
Many Other Oulst1ndlng Artists
Siik ScrHns -Sculpture
Ceramics -Oils -l1tlks
At Special Prices
W• •rt 9r1t•ful for ~ur w1rm
respons• to 011r Wt•kend
FIESTA DEL ARTE
$1.00 Donation !!.-:.,,.~,
Juno ID throuvh Juno 14
Evenlnp 7 to 10 p.m.
695 WMI 19th Streat, Costa Mou
Al PN 2 126a T•,..
...... N POUNDAnoN SCHOOL
POI CHl~llN Wini LIAININ• DllAllUTln
-. •
'
--. -----
"""" $9 .00
~ :~~:
\ Effa .
Nor'sHALF-SJZE SHOP .
1805 Newport Blvd.,
Costa Mesa .. "\.\ block north of 11th Street•
Hour., 9:30 ht 5:30,
Friday ht 9:00
-. .
A large selection of fine fabrics from one
of tht n11tion's finest mills awaits your
ehbice. Come In ind choose from 62 decor·
1tor eolors ind 1-4 febrics ttiat will look:
elegant on any style fu~niture.
Curing our Anniversary Sa le wt will r.
upholster 1 standard 1111, 2-cushion 6' 10f1
for $109.00, standard club chair $65.99.
shop at home
Just call your nearest toll-frtt Mty Co
i nd • decor1 tor ~ultant will come to your
home with a complete selection of fabrics.
No chtr;e or oblioetion.
may co reupholstering 11
~ .A.'Y' ·C 0
mey co aouth cout plua, .. n diego freeway al brlato~coo1a mesa; 546-9321, 675-34ls-.hop
mon. lhru .. L 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
.. ·-. -----· •• ;--, ------·~·~: ...... -....... ,_, ... , ..... ,_, ·-: ,,.,,,,..,., _, ,,, •• ,,,.,,,,~·==--··==.,,, .... _ .... _,.,._, "2"'"'"·2""' !""'',!!'""!""'"'""'""'0,""''"-"-""""==.·-~.·'C;",•"C>.-"":r-;:r-::--: -;--~-----;--; ---=---------;--. -: .. ~:-.. .. . . . ..
HOW SWEET IT IS -Miss Mable Williamson (left), instructor. examines
1ome of the prizes to be awarded to winners in the Cake Decorating contest
sponsored by the Sweet .Arts Club of Costa Mesa. Mrs. Charle.s Jones (center)
won in the first series category and Mrs. Charles Rayhawk (right) was sweep-
stakes winner for her special birthday cake.
Cake Decorating Contest
Winn.ers Taste Victory
Culinary and art istic
talents were combined for
the annual cake decorating
contest sponsored by the
Sweet Arts of Costa Mesa at
the Frosting House.
Program
Sponsored
Ladles' Auxiliary 3536. to
the Veterans of Foreign
Wars; Costa Mesa. has plan-
ned a fashlon show next
Saturday, to benefit the
cancer research program.
Refreshments will b e
served and door prizes will
be drawn. Peek's Family
•Terrace Room,
Westminster, will be the set·
ting from noon to 4 p.m.
Tickets BJ'e available at
the door for 'l or may be
Qbtained by calling Mrs.
Warren Hampton, 546-1182.
Two Bands
Sound Off
.A,, streel dance w i t h
alternating bands will Uven
Fountain Valley's Founders
Day celebration between 8
and 11 p.m. Saturday. June
15. in the high school
amphitheater. under the
sponsorship or the South
Coast Junior Woman's Club.
Mrs. Maurice Donahue,
chairman. has announced
that there will be a ~ent
admission charge. Featured
bands will be The Other
Four and Unknown Fron-
tier.
Don't Give Up
DAVIS
Probably Has It
/1111 10 g1vt 1011 "" itit• n/
1h1 1yp1 o/Lt1mo11J brt1ntl.1 WI
<tiff}, IJ!I tlllt fiJ/tJ ti /tW
of thtm b1/nw.
HfNRfDOH
HfRITAGl
DRfXfL
JOHN WIDDICOMI
DIXON rowotRMAKtR
HEif.MAH
IRAHDT
KINDEL
DAYIS CAIJHU
WOOD"'AR.C:
KAlASTAH "'"' _, _
Yow/•"""'' ;,,1MM JtPgtt·
,, wil H ffPPJ '" tUJist 1""·
I i.. 1.,.H.,. ""• flJf
1975 Long IMch Blvd.
c-.t2MS......
..; LNt ..... llwl~
LON• llACH
Phone 591·1347
r
Both students and club
members competed in the
event judged by Dick Par-
rish of Costa Mesa, Mrs.
Raymond Wulff of Costa
Mesa and Mrs. E. F.
Vandenberg ol Anaheim.
Awards were made to
first. second and third place
winners in each category.
First place winners included
Miss Regina Rich of Hun-
tington Beach. junior group;
Mrs. Charles Jones of Foun-
tain Valley, first series: and
Mrs. Yoshikazu Watanabe
of Costa Mesa, second
series.
Other first prize winners
were Mrs. Robert Green of
Costa Mesa, doll : Mrs.
James Goussy of Santa Ana.
birthday; Mrs. Dick Cox of
Huntington Beach, wedding:
Mrs. Paul Troegner of
Newport B e a c h . an-
niversary; Mrs. Gcussy.
children's: Mrs. 'ton y
Alcala of Costa Mesa. holi·
day : Mrs. Rona1d Bemis of
Bellflower, baby shower;
Mrs. Cox, novelty; Mrs.
Bemis and Mrs. Charles
Rayhawk of Fountain
Valley, advanced, and Mrs.
Burdette J amison of Costa
Mesa, other.
Earning special awards
were Mrs. Joe Morgan of
Santa Ana, who produced a
replica of a ghost town in ic-
ing; Mrs. Rayhawk for a
special birthday cake which
also won her the
sweepstakes trophy : Mrs.
John Rice for her picture of
tuft pointing in icing and her
Mother Goose story; and
Mrs. Pete Tatum for her
wedding cak~:
More than 62 cakes were
entered in the contest.
BOB'S Ol'fN DAILY
BARGAIN CENTER
1812 Newport Bl., Costa Mesa
Ph. 646-71'7
Quality Brand Names
Lower Than Discounl
If Y•• D••'• ~ n.,. Men, c ••
h1 •1141 s.. ,.,
Y••iwlf. ;......---~
Father's Day Suggestions ..•
AFTER SHAVE or COLOGNE • BRUT -JADE
EAST -OLD SPICE -ZIZANIE -ENGLISH
LEATHER -C~~~OE AND HAWAIIAN SURF
MEN'$ LEATHER WALLETS
Bro"'" or Blick , ••••••• • • •.,,,,
DIAMOND TIE TACK '20 00 14K White Gold •••••...•••. ,, 11,,, 4,.50 •
MEN'S SOLID GOLD RINGS
Bi, Slectio" et 6r,etly R.•duc1d Pric11
1 13.50 "'
GARMENT STORAGE IAGS (One WMk Only) 99
54" Holch 16 6 •rmeft1$, Quilted Pl11tic. All c<1lof1. C
KITCHEN TOOLS (OM WMk Only) R91. S'c 19'
Fork • Spoo" • Spetul1 · l•dtl Stt•ifl Spoo" II
Pot1to M•1ller • Pie S1rvt• • ll 1ck
HANDf HAIR DRYER, Mini with C•t•
Fot T•1~11 e• 140.,,e-Hot or Cool Air-Gu•r.
ARllD EXTRA DRY DEODORANT
N•w Aflti P•r~pirot"f . •,., •• ,, •• , ••.. Rott. 1.1,
MASKING TAltE-A .... rk•n T•JM C•.
~ "•60 y1rd1 -LIMIT J •• , • , , •• , ... R.e9. '''
77t
ILECTRICAL SWITCHES 19!.
l ·Woty • Sile11t • Si119le1 • CorJ lwitch•1 • Surf1c• ~
Llrt• Switchot1 • DouOI• Ovfloth. S1c:~1h -V1lue1 to 1.25
McMILLAN OUTIOAlltD MOTOR OIL 41
For 2 Cyd1 frtfiflotl · S1w1 • Mew1r1 •. lltf. tic C u ... a > '
'5H IXTZNGUllHUS .... $15.H S 10 95
Am.ric•11 la Frenc•. C•11t Gu1rd ot11d U11d1r. •
wtit.n l10. Appr1,,1d for lootf • Cer 1r H-•· •" Ch.,..i.
cotl1 1r E11ctric1I Fir11 • R.•clt1r911hl•. lrtclud11 F1rll Tenlr
with lr1clr1t1 1n8 Gu191.
SNl.LLliD HOOKS eM LIVI IAIY LIADIRS
' to P1clr191 -LIMIT J ••••••.•••••• , • , , • Pie•
'
r11urs11ay, JUl't 1,, .1968 DAILY PILOT IS,
· Grenadans • 1n a ·Tizzie
Governor
JOHN T. PICKERILL, M.D.
Wears Skirts Anno""'•'
Th• Opening of hi• Pr•c+i,e
By JOY MILLER
NEW YORK (AP) -Dr .
Hilqa Bynoe, a practicing
physician and mother of two
teen-age sons, says that
"women are happy all over
the Caribbean" about her
crnwn appOintmenl as the
first woman governor of a
British Commonwealth
suburban housewife a n d '·We have much to offer,
doctor In Trinidad, working For example. I'm looking
at my medical practice and
looking alter my family :· out now at the harbor here
June· 17, :1968 ..
31582 So. Coast Highway
South Lagune
~99·1389
$ons Roland, 16 and JJl St. George's -the capital
Michael, 15 are very proud _ and it's oae of tbe most
of their mother, Shll said. beautiful in the world.,.
She is 5-£oot~11i and ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ weighs about 160 pounds -1<' "all good solid weight, solid
bone structure." country. f
She was sworn in as
governor .or Grenada. a 133
square mile islaild ·in the
British West J n d i e s '
\Vindwards.
'·The men were con1-
pletely with us on this ap·
pointment," she said in a
telephone interview Mon.
day. Anyway. men don•t
really discriminate a~ainst
women on the islands. she
said, although few women
have risen very high in
government.
A state banquet
celebrated her new job.
"The appointment, a five.
year assignment, was made
on the advice of the govern·
ment," she explained. "The
executive power is in the
hands of the elected govern· 1
ment. I, like the queen of
England. act ·on the advice
1
of the ca binet."
Her first official duty will
be to open a conference to I
· establish a common market
among the Wl::dward and
Leeward Islands. · I
Grenada, With a popula-
tion of about 89.CXXl people .
is largely agricultural, "but
in recent times we have
been developing tourism."
she said.
··or course, there are
very few men like my hus-
band, to give hi s wife a
chance." she said of Peter
Bynoe , an ex-RAF flying of·
ficer and an architect,
whom she married in 1947.
"Don't misunderstand."' 11~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::., II
Clor" ' mujic
0
0
~~W.6r.P'4t
In Joe'1 1p•,i•l 1•u,e, e piqu•nt hor1 d'o•uvres.
49c LI.
(!JJ~~
Tender cube1 of beef m•rinet•d in burgundy
win• encl •xoti' herb1. 1.H LI.
'Ulll.U[,~ ~
BREAST .................................... , ........... 1.19 LI,
LEGS ............... -....... _ .......................... _ Ste LI.
THIGHS ................................................ 5'c LI, she added quJckly. "I am a
very typical f emi nine
woman, not at all
masculine. 1 like clothei;,
and all the frivolity and all
the fun of being a wnman.
No. I don't wear miniskirts.
they are for the young, but I
do wear my skirts al>ove my
knees."
The 46-year-old governor,
who was born in Grenada,
said ttiat before the ap-
pointment "I was a typical
STUDIOS
Headquar!:irs for
beginners on all
instruments.
Summer classes
now forming. ~~LIDO CENTER
I 794 ..._,_,, llwl. 3433vtA UDO
C.n W... Ml •·0606
si:i'rreis l 99to699
'Ret· 2.50 to 1.00 · · · · ·
1 .. 11 ...
SANDALS
sA1LE6 99
THONGS by
Howard of Colorado
ITALIAN BRASS HEEL
THONGS
Rog. $6.00
SALE 499
Ret. 7.00 , ... , . , ........... ,
SPECIAL GROUP
CHILDREN 2S & aovs· SHOES
1.10 ,.
16.00
. ,
1. 4-PC. BEDROOM SET
2. LARGE HOUSE DESK
3. OCCASIONAL CHAIR
4. CORNER TABLE
' 5, LARGE TABLE LAMP
6. PADDED BAR STOOL
7. TABLE LAMP
I. SET PILLOWS
GOOORICH COUNTRY
CASUALS
SALE I .DO to
'·" 449 TO 599
INIWP€>RT BEACH .. 67J..6360
'
l'tll'ZES PURCHASED
''°"' &Al.SAM'S fURIUl\IRl
rd _, July 13, 5 P·"'· Aw• 9U
FOOT FLAIRS
11.00 to It.OD
SALE
12.99
.. 16.99
GEPETTOS
DELMAR
FLATS
R .. 1.00 I, 9.00
S,.cJol .,_,
JOYCE
SALE 16.DO t•
19.00
13.99 •• 16.99
.. 1599
§99' 699
Sl'ECIAL GROUP
GOODRICH
CANVAS
FOOTWEAR
4.7s to 9.oo SALE 199
•
...... ..._,....._._ ... ~ ........ .,._ .. ...., ~ ~ -----··---i...------- -------_________________________________________ ;...;. __ ~.
-·--r---·---,-----------.-------·--------·---~-·-~---------------------,...------------------.. ----~---... ·-·· -·~-.... -
'
I
I
-
•
Jf DAJl.V ~!LOT -· Juot ll, 1968
P~T-lJnit-s G·raduate -to Summer Activities-
1rt1•ter'• ~: • -*""*' te f'"f'!Jalrl V•llllv, Hunllntloll 8Ndl.
OC..11 Vltw. SHI ktat .,.. Wu!•
mlntltt' kMel 411tlrkl """""'"°*' -Mlr.ttleN wm .,... Ill !flt DAIL y
P'ILOT ttc11 WMk, l11f0mllllllol lfWlt '
M ,._..,.. Pn' Mo. WUllerrl P'\I~
lrHO l<lftlt l11ti., '°""tell! V•fln 11'1
t '·"'· l'flo.Y ter NllullOll T"'""' .. V.)
FY Council
Mn. Cay Moorbig
Preoident
REPORTS: HMold Dalgle.
b u i I d i n g educational
leader ol Harper School
ins~led the Superin-
tendent Parent Council of·
beers at the annual in·
stallatioo luncheon in Villa
Sweden. They are the
Mmes. Ronald Murphy,
presi dent ; Douglas
Meyers and W i lliam
Kowaleski, vice
pr<$idonh ; Jerry Matney,
corresponding secretary ;
Cheater Venning,
treasurer; Wllliim Diehl,
hl1tor l 1n; Barney
Mc L alJ&l!!in, pul>lid!y,
.and James E ll ena,
auditor. Mrs. R. T .
Harney was clted aa
Woman-ol·the·year by the
council, in recognition of
her service as pa-st presi·
dent of the Council. past
president or two sdlool
units and v.1lo ·will next
year be a teacher in a
Foonlain Valley soboo!.
Special gue s ts wer e.
Oannicbael and Kemp,
arehitects for .all the
Fountain Valley Schools. am Mn. F'rance s
Donovan, !d>ool board
Pleasure, Fun Doubled
trustee. 1be Do n ova n
award, a perpetual trophy
presented to a acbool wlth
the mast members in at·
Lendance at council
m.eUngs during Ille yoar,
was ~ed to Nleblas Scboo!. .
Fulton PTO
l\lr1. Gerald Hlx
President
COMING UP : Bowling
league will begin Tues·
day. June 18, in Kona
Lanea. Ar.eyone ·interested
jn joining may call Mrs.·
Gettald Hix at 847-424.l.
REPORTS: Sixty ·one
students· will re c.e i v e
diploma& during the fi nst
eighth grade graduation
tooigllt. Invocation will be
Double the Fun is the slogan adopted by Nieblas PTO members who will man
a tiki and skull head booth at the Fountain Valley Founders Days tomorrow,
Saturday and Sunday. Anxiously awaiting the tw in 'bill of fare is J ackie Price
who gives a moment-of sympathy to Stacy and Tracy Ulrich who are a little
too young to enjoy the celebration.
glv~n b:Y lilo Rev. Johnle
Crumpler. Sev-enGb and
elgbtlt grade dloru1 will
eotertain. Guest spe&Hr
is JOOn Hm,>er, Fountain
Valley school b oar d
trustee. Outstanding boy
and girl awards, rewankd
for all around activities
and scbola5Uc . standings,
will be presented by Mrs.
Hix, PTO president.
Eighth grade will present
an oil ·painting to the
sd>ool. Edward LaveUe ,
b u 11 d I n g educational
leader will present tile
griaduation certificates ...
Memory b o o k s for
autographs o( teachers
and classmates will be
given students at gr1du.a-
tion J>@"'ty following
graduation.
Goldenwe$t PT A
~trs. Jerry Sntherlaad
President
REPORTS: New and old
board members hosted a
ilallad l uncheon for
teachers and staff today,
under th e direction of the
Mmes. Franklin Brum·
mett, Ralph Feather .
J9m~ Mclean and
Ridlard Gibbs.
Lamb PTO
Mrs. Peter Barbolak
President
COMING UP: Bake sale for
bike safety begins today
. . . Classroom parties
tomorrow, under t h e
direction of Mrs. Jam es
Crotwell, room mother
chairman.
McDowell PTO
Mrs. Jimmie Brown
President
COMING UP: Summer film
program, sponsored by
Fountain Valley Parks
and Recreatjon Depart-
ment and Pl'O, begins
Tuesday, June 24 , through
August 16 at 3 p.m ... Stu-
dent cttizen&lip awards
woce pre:M!nted this morn-
ing.
Meadow View PT A
Mn. Jay Smith
Presklent
COMlNG UP: Board hOS(ed
lunctieon for teachers to-
day. . . Library will be
open from 1 to 3 p.m.
Tuesday and Wednesday
beginning Tuesday, June
25.
REPORTS: PTA sponsored
the eiighth grade gradua-
tion party ... if interested
in donating books to the
school library, you mey
call Mrs. Cerl Thomle at
847-5918.
Newland PTA
1\-trs. Vern Dart
Presid£nl
REPORTS: Leading the
PTA for the cominc yeor
is Mr1. Vern Dart, preli-
dent, who hal been active'
in PTA and Girt Scootl !or
over 20 yeK"C. A1111tlng
Mrs. Dart .ere ttie Mmes.
Forrest Jdm&on a n d
James McBeatbl v Ice
pcesldent.s; W 111 am
Bwc~y. secretary; Cllf-
ford Vearrler, treasurer;
Zvt 0or .. qn, historian,
and WilliaJtl H e b e r t ,
parl.Lameotarian. A l v i n
Fi<cber hM been electod
auditor. Ci ti1e nab i p
awenk were preseated to
Duane Smifll, S u a a n
WIWilme, Bobtiy Memtt
and John Wagner, room 1;
Sherri Wynne, P a u 1
Kerchentout, Jeff
Rodriguez and Kathleen
Gallagher, room 2; Jamie
5eabern and Ricky Brown, room !; Carol ,.1ulligan
and James Zwack. room
4; Scott St.erk and Lynn
R.oehrd. room 5: Mina
Lackman and D a v i d
Levell, room 6; Patrick
Ahern and Vicky Regules,
room 7; Amy Carathers
and Denni..s McElveny,
room 8; Terry De.Annond
and Kathy Alle1ldorl.
room 10; James Barilhvt
and K a r y ROl5eberry,
room 11 ; Randy Dimeo
andRebecce.R e g u le 1 1 room 12; Jimmy Sooney
and Lisa Anderson, room
14; Booita Bryent and
Clll'is Trela, room 20; Cin·
dy Crouse and J o h n
Sweeney, room 22; Mike
Braun and Ellie Kid!:,
room 23; Dan Braun and
Louise Callens, roooi 24;
Kathy Alvarez and Bob
Curperus, room 25. . .
Awards aloo were
presented to K~y Egbert
and Randy Mills during
eighth grade graduation.
Tamura PTO
JI.Ira. R. T. Harney
Presid ... t
COMING UP: Eighth erode
graduation tonight. PTO
will ho6t reoeption for
pa!'ents. friends a n d
garduat... . . Outgojng
and incoming b o a r d
luncheon at noon Mooday,
June 17, in Kona Kai., Hun-
tington Bead>.
REPORTS: 1be M m e 1 .
Bb'ch Matthews, R o y
Rowland, James Bender,
Jerry Todd, W a y n e
IW1lon and T. L, Towry
and their budbeods were
chaperones for ei61ltil
grade graduation dinner
and OOnce last night ...
The Heit« Villa Lobos
award wu presented to
Joyce RDwland and G,.tel
Weiss, wt.> had each earn-
ed part fl their ex~t5e to
go to Arrowbear Music
Oarnp.
Past Services Hailed
Mrs. R. T. Harney (center) proudly displays !he Woman-<>f-tbe-year certificate
which was given to her by the Fountain Valley Superintendent Parent Council
during installation ceremonies. Speaker Is Harold Daigle, building educational
leader at Harper School ~d with !hem iJ Mrs. Ronald Murphy, new president.
:}pf ti
~ ~) .··
f "' '
if :l ::
IJ .. ,.;. a.~ ...
'Tools of the Trade'
Session on parliamentary procedure will be conducted at 9 a.m. Wednesday,
June 19, iii the Huntington Beach Recreation Center for representatives of the
Huntington Beach· PTA Council. Readying the event are (left to right) Mrs.
Richard Miller, council parliamentarian and Mrs. Joseph Ditte, second vice
president Members of Fourth District will assist.
Flood of Trophies, Ribbons Carried to Worthy Recipients
(!dlltlt'1 Nolt! A ,. .. deYDl-ed ta
Catt Mel.a, Nl!WPCW1 le•dl •nd Lt-
9\IM IHdl p1re11l·lt1clltr °"'1nl11-
tior. wl11 IP~tr 111 Ille OAILV PILOT
•di w.ek. lnlormt11on mu'! be re-
Clllwd bY Ille ooclt l OeNrtrneril, "'
by rnelllnt or dellvtrlM CCIPY 10 M ... co.r.t Sml!h, ltS2 Cent1H1 Pltce.
Hft'POl"I kaclo, tl'Y J P.111, llrtdty for
~°" Thurldtv.J
Canyon eTA
Mr1. Dennl1 Mlller
President
REPORTS: A special award
was presented at the
faculty luncheon to Mrs.
•
Addle Marchand,
secretary, far her
assistance to the PTA.
L e s 1 i e Ferguson, prin·
cipal, on behalf of t.he
faculty presented Mrs.
Dennig. N'Jlle.r a trophy in
reco.gnition for her
outstanding work. . • , .
Daffy &pple sale took
place Friday as the last
fund-raisinc project for
the year.
Costa Mesa High Staging Baccalaureate Tea
Worting on final plans !or tbe baccalaureate tea
nm Sunday at 5 p.m. are (l~_Y';;rlght) Marlene
Bell and ToOl lAIDd of Cotta Mi"' Hieb School and
''· (
Mrs. Ralph Boegel, publicity chairman lor !he PTA.
The librlI}''• patio will be !he Httlllt !Dr !he !es·
tivltl8$.
•
. ..
• ••
College Park PTA
Mr1. Burleigh Burahem
President
REPORTS: Eod of the year
parties took place today
for all, classes ..••.•
Potluck supP£r honoring
hu s bands of board
members was successful.
CM High PTA
Mr1. Omer liner
President
REPORTS: BrW'lch hosted
by Mrs. Omer Isner serv·
ed as a thank-you for
board members and a
welcome to the n e w
board. Lee Beckett and
Duane Keith discussed
plans for the com-
ing year .... Jane Pren·
dercast and Dan
Shaw were presented $100
acholarahips along with a
apeclal award to John
McGowen, principal, at
the awards banquet.
E$tancia PTA
ltlra. Mark Goodyear
President
REPORTS: Dr. Le I end
N ewe om er. superin-
tendent; ·and Dr. Willlam
C unningham , new
superintendent of t h e
Newport-Mesa Un If 1 e d
Sdlool P!stric~ and 140
teacbtrs were iuesti at
the board's hmcbeon to-
day.
Lindbergh PT A
Mr1. Robert Vlrcalk
President
REPORTS : Sixth grade
awards assembly to o k
pla« today. . • .
Boot1helves for 34
classrooms were built by
Bob Bou and bis ad·
vanced. wood a.a.ea at
0..-cit! Mar H18b.
PTA provided lh1 lundl.
Rea PTA
Mn. Ke!~ Kello"
Pr<sldeat
OOlolJNG UP: Ba a rd
meeting Tuesday, Aug. ZJ ,_
in tb£ home of Mrs. Keith
Kellogg.
R E P ORTS : Committees
were formed to prepare
activities for the coming
year. They are the Mmes.
Don Jackson, Vern Mollan
and Eugene Hebert, proo
gram; Gib Fernandez,
J ack Richard.son and John
Kelly, ways and· means;
Robert Blackburn, Marlon
Hartley and M. D. Grosz,
budget; Robert Sankey,
J ohn Clark and Paul
Massey, standing rules ...
PTA will participate' in
the continental breakfast
in September.
Sonora PTA
Mrs. Donald Mollica
Preaident
I n s t allation ctiairman.
Honorary We member of
the year will be an·
nounced. Hostesses are
first grade room mothe-rs,
Mr s. KenneUt Hazen, Mrs.
Joseph Parrino, Mr s .
Charles Muto and Mrs.
Richard Platte.
REPORTS: Eighth grade
picnic took place Monday
at Santiago Park. Ar-
rangements were made by
the Mmes . James
Moultrup, Thomas Rico,
John Prendergast, George
Johnson, Philip Biegel and
Wayne Striley. Assisting
were John Seymour,
Orville Ambul'gey, Frank
Dettner and Lew i s
McAdams. The president-
elect announced t h e
following chairmen the
Mmes. James Burnett,
Wil,on PTA
Mrs. Fred Simpson
President
REPORTS: Children Live
Through Vision a n d
Understanding was the
theme of the May general
meeting . Hugh
L e atherman, principal,
presented first place spell·
ing bee ribbons to Devid
Thayer sixtn · grade ,
Micliael Walton, fifth
grade, and Larry Nelson,
fourth grade. Chor u s
groups under ttie direction
of Don Erickson and Dave
Wilson provided the en-
tertainment. Kindergarten
S•tudents sang and
presented an audio visual
program.
REPORTS: Mrs. Ronald
Lackie installed officers
for the coming year at the
annual luncheon in the
home of Mrs. Clyde
McKay. Leaders are the
W.mes. Donald Mollica,
courier: Henry Bourget, .,..,,..,,.. .. ,.. •• ..,.,..
room mother; V icto r
president; Robert
Wolverton, Walter
Clark'e, parliamentarian;
Leroy Taube . mem·
bersh i p : Raymond
Martin, hospitllity: Ivan
Lowry, tradlrfl stamp;
Walter Hoffman t. n d
Thomas Holland, h o t
The Tee
Tattler Hempstead and Ri chard
Riley, vi ct presidents;
Denni.I Monge and . Karl ..
R o m a h n , se<":retaries;
Burch Pickett, treasurer,
and Louis .He l .me.~ e 1,,
lti$!orlan.
lunch; Frant Ja n c e k , •-•-••• .. ••II
St. John Aux. .. ....
Mrs. Victor Clarke
·health: tbomas Matheus,
popsicle ; Reno Pierotti,
library: Robert Schmidt,
·uniform : J ohn Hart I,
Robert McCormish, and
Emil Deyden, ways and
·means.
President Victoria PTA
COMING t,JP : Schad!'. llllf.' '.. Mrs. Fred Woodwortll
forms will be sold Crom President
9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. CO G
Aug. 8 aod 9, in .the icliooi MIN UP : Mn. Al Hem-
hall.,. M eeti ng is mer, safety chairman
tonight at 8 in the school will bolt a block mothera
hall. The Rev. Anthony meeting ln her home at McGowan will install the officers for the coming 9::.l a · m · Wednesday,
year. They .,.. tho Mmes. JIM!e 19 .•• Sixtb grade
Robert R<id, president; 11<.&ting party tomorrow.
·Jooepb Devlln, vice pr~•-REPORTS: M. m b. r.
!dent; Paul Doutt and
Charles Ne d off .
secretaries, and Herman
Sch elstrate, treasurer.
Acttne parliamentarian
Mn. Georce Doubled .. 11
hosted the teacher•
IWJCb<on today ••. Book
cases for the library were
built by Jolm Bill and Joe
Oplennon.
Toastmistreue•
Surfside Clubhouse In
Huntington Beach ls the
meeting place for members
of Las Olu Toasbnlsb"e!lis
Club of HunUngton Beach on
the aecond e.nd f-o u r t b
Wedneldo! at 7:30 p.m .
--
· -· · --· ·~·-·-·-·-·--•-• ___ .,, -•e-•sa""p-; """!'--.. , .......... , .. , °"'""~"°' .,,,..,F ..... -•-·~•""i'"'°""'£t""""E'"'·"£"'Z"",..<;:o0";;r¥"~"">:~•r:.J'•~·...-'>:::=-::;-.:;·=:::;;---;-.;.• __ ..,_
TbursdlY, June 13, 1968
R &. D . FURNITURE ANNOUNCES THE ...
• rCLn en;zn
al its -COSTA MESA STORE! •
. , .
-.
$100,• WORTH OF SPANISH & MEDITERRANEAN FURNITURE TO CHOOSE FROM
·ORANGE COUNTY'S SPECIALTY STORE OF "OLD WORl.D" SPANISH AND
MEDITERRANEAN FURNITURE. THE FOLLOWING ITEMS ARE SPECIALLY PRICED
•
~ FOR THIS GRAND OPENING SALE ONLY!
OLE', PRESENTING THE
CASTILLE
DINING ROOM
For thoM who desire antique Spanish et its
finest. H1!'4I is 11 ·96" heavy hand crafted oak
fr11me with· rich luxurious velvet. In choice of
gorgeous eolora._ -).... · GRAND OPl!NIN• ' SPECIAL
17th century Sp1nilh buff1t, hutch, din·
in9 table with ch1irs. In period pecan.
GRAND 91'ENING$319 00 SPECIAL o
LOTS · OF
FREE PARKING
IN REAR
0ur r-•-
Dluc-1 Price ,$Jt9.00
I TERMS AVAILABLE! I
$298.00
s.1.,+.d to 11111t th1 11101t di1crirnln1tfnt ••1••-w. h1 v• 1111tch1d thl1
90191ou1 t.41dlt1rf1111111 I ft. Sof1 111d Lov• S11t with •olid 01k tri111.
MAl(E YOUA DREAMS OF SrANISH DECOR COME TRUE. H•r• h 1 hu91 72" c1...M
Sp1nlsh Dr•111r with mirror, 2 hu91 m1tch!n9 Co111111od11,1ki119 •is• h11dbo1rd with Cortn
Shi•ld d1cor.
Ch·k· •• ,, ...... ,,,.;.,_ s24300 OUR YEAR ROUND DISCOUNT PRICI $34t.OO S228 00 GRAND OPINING SPICIAL e
OUI YIAl·IOUND DISCOUNT PllCI $J69.00
•U.ND onNIN• SPICIAL PANTAITIC.-\LLY PllCID AY
· LIMITED lj)UANTITIES ONL YI
Tall Decorator T1ble Lamps-Antique White & Gold-Avocado Wh ite & Gold $18 00
l .. ular $5t.t5 GRAND OPINING SPECIAL o
Gl111 Top Gold Leif Occasione1 T1bles
.... 1ar $4t.t5 GRAND OPINING SPICIAL
WorkJ of the Masters on C1nv1s-set·in hand·c1rv1d frames
... .-$4t.t5 GRAND OPINING SPECIAL
Occ11ional Ch1ir1 Custom Qui~ Loo•• Pillow S1at and b1ck
.... 1ar $1t.95 GRAND OPINING SPECIAL
$19.00
$17.50
$38.00
ler9e Eerl'f American Cl ub Cheirs vo1 ... 1o sno.oa OUT THEY GO
Top Brand Kin9 Si11 lo\c Spring and M1ttress-IO Year Warranty
l .. ular $1H.tl GRAND OPl!NING SPICIAL
Sp1n llh Decor Oinin9 T1bl1 & 6 M1tchin9 Che ln
R ...... $Ut.OO·
Gold Leif Spanish Gless Top Ci91rette Tables
....... $Jt.t5
•RAND OPINING SPICIAL
GRAND OPININ• SPICIAL
$45.00
$98.00
$78.00
$12.50
SPANISH&. MEDITERRANEAN
FU-ll .NITURE
• 1844 . NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA (only)
OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TIL 9 P.M.-WED .. SAT .. & SUN. 'TIL 6 P.M.
,
. -_____ ......... _ . ._ ______ -·-----~----------~~----~~--~--
I
I
I • ,
I
I
• • •
'
I
t
Ja DAILY ~ILOT
. .
lu<Jli1z
, . . ,. .. ...... ...,. ... ,,....,
Juli• A11-'r•ws
"The Sound of Mvtlc"
T .. lfllt o-O.ty
l:JO ,..,
EXCLUSIVE
AREA RUN
PAULREWmAn 'lh• s.a.i W.Df HARRY fllllll '
......
" ..... ...
FAVORITES
M.ff.11•1 •11111 l.c-•I ,.,,.,. .w,. pel.le ,..w. th• DAi l Y
PJlOT ~rri•• .. _ .I th• -'* ,..,..1., col11m111 '"' ,.....,.. ._..n.1t1. •• ... .,
• ._!Ml"" M Ht. U11fk4
St-
•
•'1!te1;c.,. rw-1• n1EATI1U'1
!549¢
................ ,..2 ... ,..
.fic1'""'' Aw•f • a.<"• ·-lftf SU11"rtlnt Acttr l"•ul NEWMAN "c .. 1 Hofltl ....... • c.1.,
AINI,., "•P'IUllJol "Welt Ultttl .,_. .. e Col.,
lft COl.Olt
''lite J.1191• ......
P'•I.,. U•ll-
"ilock ..... rd'1 Gtt.1t"
Students
.See Bard
For Credit
The three producti<1n1 at
the San Diego G1 ob e
T h e a l e r ' 1 Shakespeare
Festival will be viewed by
members of 11 unique sum-
mer class in EngUsh being
offered by University Ex-
tension at UC Irvine,
starting Tuesday.
Members o} "Shakespeare
on Stage" will combine
weekend attendance of "As
You Like It", "Hamlet" and
''JGng John" witfl study and
classroom discussion o f
these and other plays by the
Bard. And they may earn
three units of credil. 'I Said
'
DAILY P'ILOT 1t•lt P'MM
Slaoddup ' • • • The six . week class will_..,;
meet Tuesdays and·
Thtll'sdays at 7:30 ·p.m. on George J-laddad snarls a warhing to Nancy Well s in a dramatic mo~ent from
the UCI Campus. the comedy "Born Yesterday," which opens a three·weekend run Friday at the
Instructing wilJ hf> Dr. _ _:W:_<'e~sl'..'.rru'.'.·'..'.n'.:s'.'lc'.'.r_:C~o:'.m:'.'.'.:m'.'.:u:::n:i.:;lYc_:T.::h::e:•t::•::.r_:i:::n~th::.:e~W:.:..:•::.•t::.rru:::·::.n_s.:.le_r_C_e_n~l-e_r. _______ _ .Edgar Schell of Laguna
Beach. a'ssistant professor
of English at UC I and an
authority on Renaissance
and medieval drama. Dr.
Sc hel l writ es on
Shakespeare for literary
journals and has given
public hearings from his
dramas, together with his
Wife.
As the OO!y fun ctioning
replica of the playhouse in
w h i c h Shakespeare pro-
duced his plays, the Old
Globe was buill in 1935 for
the California Pacific World
Exposition in Balboa Park.
NJr,nONAL GENERAL CORPOA.\TION
Foc··1 .. ·som cDAST
"-AZA TitaATllS
S111 °"'C• r,_.y 11 lristol • 541·2712
Jim Brown-Lost 'Innocence.'
From Football to Movies
By \1ERNON SCOTT
l!OLLY\VOOD !UPI) -
On the gridiron. Jimmy
Zebra." ''Dark of the Sun."
"Kenner," "The Split" and
''Riot."
Brown was one of the NOT ALL WORK
grea_test football play~rs . In But it wasn't all 'vork.
civil rights he . g a 1 n e cl Brown was quick to
respect for his drive for discover t h .a I 11ollywood
Negro economic power. In plays as hard as it toils. Ile
Hollywood he became a joined the Factory. a
swinger. private discotheque with
MATINEES
DAILY
DOORS OPEN 12,30
.. COL~O·':,--,,-:-'J ll ..._.... NOW ... -;;; .. And it was in Hollywood membership c-0sting $'250 .
·that he hit the news again He also was a · familiar
Sunday when a beautiful 22· figure al the Dais;: ~nd
year-old model "·as found Arlhur. two other swinging
lyi ng injured beneath the ni ght spots for the beautiful
balcony of his apartment. people.
"'Ork. Brown has been ac·
Live in the Negro industrial
and economic union and a
strident worker for civil
rights. Still the flashy life
was altogether different !or
the man who rose to fame
surrounded by muscle-bound
athletes. He tooled around
HolJywood in a new Mark
Ill Lincoln and attended
"in" parties.
Al•" llrl'"I """ C-'Y Albtrt FINN•T
''To111 JOflff" e Color
JIM FONDA • c.....-
"lorefoot 111 Ht. Pork"
lllKtimfflt""" Fer Adultf
FOUNTAIN
VALLEY
: ........ ,., ·-962·2411
A• Unlullnrr11 Wer1411
Ch1rt"'" Hl!5TON e Ctt.I'" ""°"" 94 ..... Apes" °"""' C. SCOTI e Cl ...
SHOW TIMES. DAILY
PLANn l • 6:45-10:30
FLIMFLAM 1:15·5·1:45
Pl US
201H CENJUft'1. FOX
JW"U!I
CliARrroN
~ESfON .
GE:O. C. SCOTT ;"
"TM fll111 Flo111 Mo11"
IOTH PICTURES h1 COLOl
Charges were d r o pp e d A non·drinker, Brown wa.~
a gainst him Wednesday. a frequent dancer at the
The pro football hero -night spots. fle never was
who holds the National Foot-mentioned in the gossip col·
ball League ground-gaioing umns, though he wa~ f:re·
record with the Cleveland quently in the company of
Browns -is not the sa1nP. attractive young females in
wide·eyed innocent w h o a group.
made his film debut in "Rio His closest friends among
Conchos" only three years the movie fraternity are Lee
ago. Marvin, Warren Beatty and
At the t ime, the Tony Curtis, none of whom
powerfully built Negro sat 1:i are noted for their quiet
apart from the Hol lywood lives. He al so is pals with
scene. watching warily snd comedian Bill Cosby and
learning what he could. basketball player B i 11
But with his decision lo Russell.
quit football for a run time Asked .about his family.
acting careew Brown bc,l!an Brown said from time to
!o see th~ li~ht -the time he would bring them lo
HollY"-'ood l1mel1gh1. . California to join him soon,
Suddenly, .he was in de· adrung. "At the moment,
mand. The pictures tumbled our roots are still in
one after another. ''The Dir· Cleveland."
ty Dozen,"' "Ice Station In addition to his movie
VE RY HIP GUY
As one friend s a i d
recently, ''Jim has bP.come
a very hip guy. He 's
anything but the archtype
Jumb athlete."
During the last seasons
\Yith Cleveland, Bro\\'n sLlr·
red controversy "-'ifh c1J1n-
ments about treatment of
Ne.itro players.
11e was quoted in an arti·
cle in Playboy magazine as
saying that black athletes do
not socialize "'ilh white
players for one reason -
white women.
"It's a major factor why
black and white players
don't socialize. be c au s e
sooner or later they are
going to be in some situation
involving women . 'fht> black
athlete who is desirable to
white women is going to run
into trouble," he said .
-NY Opera Season-
For LA Annolinced
The repertolr< for the IS.
performance return engage.
ment or the New York City
Opera Company; beginning
November 22 In the Dorothy
Chandler Pavilion, was an·
nounced by John A .
McCone, president of the
·Music Center 0 p e r a
Association ol Los Angeles.
The company will open
the season with its
celebrated production of
"Le Coq d'Or" by Rimsky·
Korsakov, followed b Y
Gounod 's ''Faust,"
Massenet's "M..anon ;" the
double bill of Leoncavallo's
"I Pa g 11 a cc I" a n.d A.ssoc\ation takes pleasu,r•
M a s c agni's ''Cavaller1a I in returning this fine com·
Rusticana ;" the West Coast p'any to Los Angel~. 11
premiere o f Ginastera's McCone added .
'' Bomarzo;" Offenbach's:---------~--
''Les Contes d'Hoffmann "
and Puceini's "L.a
Boheme."
"This y e a r ' s pro·
gramming represents the
New York City Opera Com·
pany 's gr .ea test
a chi eve m e n t s in-pro·
duction," said McCone.
" 'Bomarzo' was added to
the repertoire last March 14
with international fanfare.
The new productions of
'Manon ' and 'Le Coq d'Or'
have been haj.led a s
masterpieces in J operatic
staging. 'Les Contes d'Hoff.
mann' and 'La Boheme'
both received br i lliant
receptions during the Com-
pany's premiere season in
Los Angeles last November.
'Faust' presently is in pro-
duction," said McCone.
''The Music Center Opera
Long Beach
'Caligula'
Auditioning
Auditions for "Caligula,"
the second production of the
new Forum XI Theater in
Long Beach, will be held
Monday, Tuesday a n d
Wednesday evenings of next
week.
The tryouts will be con·
ducted at the theater, 835
Locust St.. by director Ellen
Kenworthy. A cast of 10 to
12 men and ·two' women is
required.
"Caligula" is scheduled lo
open Aug. IO. The theater
currently is presenting "The
Odd Couple" on Friday and
Saturday evenings tnrough
J une 22. NOW
EXCLUSIVE
1st RUN
SHOWING ~do Crossword Puzzle
I
-·-·· --
Hit No. 2 "FOR A FEW MILLION MORE"
Clint Eastwood, A1an with no name
BAlBOA e 673-4048 e 709 E. Balboa Bl.
• On The B1lbo1 Penin1ul1
• Now Showing • Exclusive Are1 Showing •
Matinff W.ctnesd1y, S1turd1y and Sunday
• Curtain 1t 2:30 -Not Continuous •
2 Evening Perform1nce1 -6:30 and 9:30 G
M1tln .. Price1-Adults $1 .7S-Child to 16 7Sc
-Evenings Adults $2 .50-Child to 16 $1 .SO----------------
llLAX IN OUlt I OCJllHG CHAii LOGIS TO Sii
GAlnY •••
VI HANCE
llADIANCE
•
.1
FIRST RUN
PAULDEWmAn
'The Secret Waraf
HARRY FRIGO .
T[CHNICOLOR
AovEN TURE ON TH! 111GH-SE°j&-
Rlch••• !tJ~ "CHU BASCO"
Wilt Di1"•Y"
"Happiest Million1ire"
Tennessee Williams' Finest .••
"A STREETCAR
NAMED DESIRE"
Thu".· 11111., 1:)1 1.no. Thi~ llel """'''"' C.tll Mn• GoMlder•4e .•.
"Adventures in • Piper 819"
fM .• s.11 .. l :lO, J"4 Stw:p Theotrt -N..,,.rt kec.h
Ce11trol lo• Office -lte..,,.Clrio111 ._.._ 1 lll
Make a Date to Attend
5th ANNUAL
YOUTH CENTER
CARNIVAL
to be held at
.COMMUNITY YOUTH CENTER
5th & lris:-Corona del Mar
Sat. and Sun.-June 15 & 16
12 Noon to 10 p.m. -Fr•• Admission
GRAND PRIZE
5500 Savings Bond
DONATION $1.00
Tktffl eYollobfe fro111 °"' !toy 111 511111-llewHtt ,,,..,,."'
--PLUS>---
Dr•wing Every 2 Hours for
GIANT ANIMALS
ACROSS
l Clearin g In
tht woods
6 Support
lo Grand-··
14 Make more
active 15 African lite
lb Beginner
in a field 17 Accept
formally
18 Btauty parlor
t mployee:
2 words
20 Conformable
lo social
convtntion
21 Stroke
in loving
manner
22 Upper rocket
!ollgt
23 Ointment
25 Football
play
27 Cook eggs
slowly
JO Otlroil bill
tlub
31G ivl'1ssent 32 Oettcling
device
33 Smallest
Can. p10·
' vinct: Abbr.
3b Gti dtd
37 Gambling
game
38 Cross 1
river 39 In \hr know:
Informal
40 Ftmin1n t
,~.
41 Ftowtr part
42 State
44 Coarse and
imp udtn\
45 Reed ptn 47 Kick
48 Flustl with
SUCCl'SS
49 Female
animal
50 Grove of
willows
54 Roman
liturgy:
2 words
57 Fell sun hat
58 Shade of
blur
59 Maple
9enus
bO Harangue
bl Ice mas~
b2 Report
of 1tctnt
tvents
b3 Professor i!I
McGill and
John HO!lkins
DOWN
l Joyful
2 Fash ionable
beach resort 3 River or
England 4 Hun9 in
suspense
5 Within;
P1tfix
b Felt
compassion
7 Ve~sel
8 Hebrew
judge
9 Rool1n11
malrrial
10 Experienced
person 11 Form of
chloasma: 2 words
12: Maple le11f
Gardens,
for one
ll Virtuous
l'I Common liquid
21 Earlier lhan:
Prefix 24 Hopped
beverag e
25 Kind of
cloth
2!. Extraclive
of red 11lgat
27 Te1 1tr's
concern
28 Kind of look
29 Collet
maktr
JO Sensible
r v!dtnce 32 Certain com·
positions
34 Historical
ptriods
-...... ---~ -------·-··
h/ll/68
15 Ca~ally
37 River in
Burma
38 Plumage
40 Weigh t·
Ii fters ,
t .g. 41 For
43 RMk 44 We:ipon
45 Well-known
person:
Informal 4' Hav ing wings
47 South
Africans
49 Stilt of
19it11ion 51 Spoken 52 After
the lim e
appointtd 53 Liyer ol
articl es
SS Haslen ed 5, Form
of l'I
Down
57 Moreover
12 ll
AREA CODE
DIAL
DIRECT
ITS TWICE
AS FAST
And yau save money
when you call station.
to -station ... on out.
of . state ca lls, even
more after 7:00 PM
or anytime during
the weekend,
Pacific Telephone":
·'
-~~------------"i'"'!-!!'l!"!'0,.__~...,,,.=-==::"'.',....•7,•j.rr;:•~.• r-.--=-~-~-·------------·.-.-,--· ·--. -·.· :· -·,· ......... ~-··-·•• oso JSPQOCQSQ SP# $d j,S r •• sq ~;s 4.-••s . . ' I
..
l
open Thursday evening
•one·stop' shopping
a.t its finest!
. open Monday 'Iii 9
~ OUR SHOPS HA VE SPECIAL WAYS
' TO MAKE THIS AN EXTRA SPECIAL ...
•
.. . " ..
' '
~;ON OUR MALL FRIDAY AND . SATURDAY
'
* TOP POP ART CONTEST
Drawings of fathe" by their son• and daughters , , , on
di1f>ley for awarding of prizes
* BOYS CLUB r~: HARBOR ARIA
Selling flag• for Flag Dey, Friday, June 14, end every dey-
complete Ht contain• 3x5 American Flag , 6 foot staff, state
flag , halyard, metal mounting bracket end screws , • : ell
in e h.avy cardboard Hlf storage carton , , , $3.95.
-
• * 3•u ANNUAL BOOK SALE
Conducted by Marine" Lions Club , to· ra ise funds for ear-l
rying on their worthy ectivitie1 ,
. ··~
. -. -. • --
. ..
_., .. -.. -· -· ....... ·-
-...
. . .. . . -.
. -· -
l
•
I
I
' I • I • I •
•• •• k
) ••
~ •
g
d
~
%
' ' • ~
t
d
' '•
Ill ..
••
II ..
Id .. ..
*Bank of America* Sav-On Drugs* Rion Hardware* Robert Berkley Men's Wear* Dick Vernon Ladles Wear* Veta's lntlmat~'. a
~i ,.
Apparel* Jean Dahl Women's Wear* La Galleria Fashions * Charles H. Barr Jewelers * Westcllff Shoes * Humpty Dumpty C~. :!
dren's Wear* Hickory Farms of Ohio* Port Edward Restaurant* Cobblers Bench* Paper Unlimited * Westcliff Plaza Barberi : ~ * Playboy Hair Stylists* Dr. Lou Roy Elder * Montgomery Cleaners * Darrell's Dedrick Tux Shop* Bakers Westcliff Camera Shop ..
Market Basket · I
"" ' ~ .. r ,.
.=.':"'. PC
•
,
---·-----·.L----•'-•..._•_ ------------------------~-------------------------............
zo OAILV P!Lor
News of Orange Coast Servicemen on Worldwide .Duty
will be commissioned a itf'· as a member or the 10th
C<lnd lieutenant and receive graduating class at tbe U.S.
a bachelor ol science ... t .,. -.e Air Force Academy, Col o.
Spec Four E-4 WUUam U
Blackmaa, U.S. Ar m y
Reserve\ son of M,r. and
Mrs. Thomas E. Blackman
of ?'Jl Beryl Cove Way, Seal
Beach hAJ been cited for
meritoriou1 service a n d
performance as a gunner
with Mortar Platoon, Com·
pany E, 3rd BattaUon. 7th
lnfantry, 199th Light Infan-
try Brigade in th e
distinguished action against
a hostile force in the
Republic of Vietnam. Spec 4
Blackman, a student at
Golden West College, will
report-klr further duty at
Camp"RoberU.
Airman Gary ft., Mlltb,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Ortlieb or 855 St. Clair St.,
Costa ·Mesa, has b e e n
assigned to Air Training
Command, Randolph AFB,
:Bt1FFVMS'
•
Tex . The .airman. a
graduate of Costa Mesa
High School. and Orange
Coast College, 11 a
photographer.
Airman David D. Jacbon,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
T. Jackson of 21342
Greenspray L a n e , Hun·
tington Beach, has been
assigned to Air F o r c e
Technical Training Center,
Fairchild AFB... Wash. A
rescue and survival
rpecialist, the airman is a
graduate ot Bonita.......Hig~
School and attended Orange
Coast -€ollege :before enter·
inf the service.
Force Technical Training
Center, Cbanu~ AFB, lll.
Airman Miller, a graduate
,of Garden Grove High
School, 1•. attended
Orange <;bast CoUt:_ge before
entering the service.
Airman Randy Miller, son Cadet. Ll. Col. Dale 8 .
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E . Oderman, 21, son Of Mr. and
Miller of 10142 Birchwood Mr1 . Sf9.11Uel Oderman of
Drive . Huntington Beach,· ~15 Roxbury Road, Corona
has been assigned lt1 the Air •. del Mar, is a member of the
•
lOth graduating class of the
U.S. Air Force Academy,
Colo. A major in astronaut·
ics. he was named to the
Dean's list for academic ex-
cellence. He will continue
his graduate studies at Pur·
due Unlvtraity, )Yest Lafay·
Lauren« W. Mitchell Ill,
100 of Mr. and Mrs. Laur· ence Mitchell Jr., ot 33782
El Encanto, Dana Point,
South Coad Pl"""
1.,111mu /or Ilia
So~ltU1ie.i.M .. ,.,,.."
8b-eet aa• Aft.er I Drfllltl
Cell.a ... &a&
~ •• 20
lfhf91 .... s-. oi.,. ,,.._,., c... ...
· 4-RE · ... ' . •'
FATiiEPJS DAY ' Buffums' has a big selection of grooming aids for men.
~ ' .
GIFT "·
EXPE'RTS Let our experts help you choose a scent he'll really go for!
•:'>.'(." .._, '
WIN A HONDA register nO'll at any Buffunls' Store for Men
Give h im br isk British Sterling
after shave a.nd cologne
A 1118'C'llline bll pleasant hgrance for Ile
nian wtio wants• little more than usua l.
Clear glass bottle with rich silver shoulder al!d
-•i>ed lop. Alter shave: 4 oz., 3.51; 6 Oil.,
ut. Cologne: .4 oz., 5.DO; 6 oz., JM.
... for llen
• •
'
Famous "Jade East" fr om Swank
is now in new "Flaakit' bottles
Sol!lelhtnc new l?Cll! tllt make r of one of lhe 1n0st
. I popular ocen~ sold today. The same ~ne fragrance
in an e1<cllingnew bottle. 4 oz. after shave
a!ld .4 oz. cologne, 5 .. 11
Sime lar Mell
•
'
• "Powertools " from Dunhill of London;
a new groom ing s t at egy for men.
For the man who wants to look elegant, feel elegant,
be elegant. Dunh ill Instant Lather Shampoo , •• powered
strictly for a man's hair, 3.DD Dunhil l Instant All·Day Hair Groom
.... not a hairspray, but specially proteinized to keep hair neat
and-,;;anageable, I.DD Dunhill After Bath "Masseur" ••• an
invigorating refresher that glides oo, 1.50 Dunhil t Spray Tate
••• finely micronized to help protect against perspiration, 1.50
Dunhill Instant Face Bronz er ••• lasts all day, ye t washes
ott instantly with soap and water. Helps con<iition skin, •.st
Dunhill Shower Soap ••• ~oisturizes and lubricates dry
skin. Man-sized, 2.5D Dunhill All-Purpose Spray Refresher
, •• uniquely more than an after-sha ve but not qui te a
cologne , 5.DO Dunhill Deod e. ,·;geared to protect against
peispiratioo odor all day tong, 2,50 Dun hill Pie-E lectric
Shave ••• sets HP even !lie !ooghest beards fol smooth, 'fast
shavin& action , 2.50 Dunhitl After-Shaw and Cologne Travel Kit
, •• han~some, ltaiqllool, mpillable tonllliflers, I .DI
Stole b lleR
"Bravura" cologne and after shave
fo r t he man who 's a ma t ador ai heart ''
,
Adll!nlurous, miting, very nly. '°1ll9Ma"
comes in a unique bottle witti la!ge woodeft cap.
Alter shall!: 4 or. an, l.li; ! oz. lliile, l.ll.
Cologne: 4 ot. size, I.It; 6 Cl. size, 1.eo
Store fol Men
.............................. "" .............. "'"'"'"" ........... 1111 ......................................... ~~~~~~ ... ~"""~--~~--.---------~----------...--.
Th,nd<y, .lllnt U, 1968 DAILY PILOT %1
OCC Duels Nation's Elite iiJ IRAJ Heats ·Today
'
Another Joh for Mr. Clean
MOST LOGICAL REACTION -Don Bosch of the
New York Mets makes up for some lost time with
this head-first dive back to first Wednesday ni~ht,
just beating relay (ball in air) from outfielder Willie·
Davis. The latter made spectacular catch of ball
and attempted to double Bosch off first, with Wes
Parker (right) of the Dodgers taking throw. The
Dodgers were· apparently a second late all night
as they dropped their third straight game to the
Mets,_2-1.
Unhappy Arrival
OCC Crew Trek East
Drysdale Reign
Severed as Mets
Marred by Death of Dad In Clean: Sweep
LOS ANGELES (AP) -When the
It seems like ba"d things always hap.-
pen to the good guys.
Take the case of Orange Coast
College publicist Don Jacobs, who
thought he was getting the trip of a
lifetime as a member of the OCC crew
party which flew to Syrac_use, N. Y .,
Tuesday for competition 'in the Int.er-
collegiat.e Rowing Association regatta.
Guys on the team realized how hard
Jacobs had worked to gain public
recognition for their many ac-
complishments and they responded by
digging into their own pockets to
subsidize his air fare.
The gesture deeply moved Jacobs
and he was eagerly looking forward to
watctiing his adopted team perform
against the top four-year schools in the
nation.
Too, he would get a chance to visit
his parents, who live in nearby
Geneva. He hadn't visited their home
since 1964.
But the anticipated happy arrival
turned into a tragedy.
While Jacobs and group were en
route, Don's father was mowing the
lawn, looking forward to the reunion
NCAA Meet
Under Way,
Troy Tabbed
BERKELEY (AP) Ger r y
Lindgren who may be the best U.S.
runner at long distances, tries for the
first leg on a third straight double vic-
tory at the NCAA Track Cham-
pionships this evening.
Southern California is a prohibitive
favorite to defend its team title.
The three-day meet began with most
of the day's activities given over to
qualifying rounds for final events Fri-
day and Saturday.
But the final event on the program
is the 10.000 meters in which Lindgren,
a 5-foot..a, 120-pound sertior from
\Vashington State, is a heavy favorite.
"I feel pretty good for once ,"
Lindgren sald, "but I've got some real
tough ones to beat."
Saturday, Lindgren will attempt to
complete the double by winninl' the
5.®meter crown.
witlt his son -now only a few hours
distant.
But Mr. Jacobs dropped dead while
cutting the grass and of course Don
didn't get the bad news until he ar-
rived in New York.
Don is one of the guys in the
background who does a whale of a job,
but seldom gets the recognition he
deserves, He pours uncounted, unpaid
WHITE
WA.SH
Ol•Nlll WHITI
man hours into his work -that of
releasing information about the Col-
lege to the news med.la.
He is a loyal supporter of OCC
athletic teams and many times he's
m<&de ghastly bus trips with those
squads to make sure he got accurate
results relayed promptly to interested
papers.
And he financed the costly dining out
en these frequent trips from his own
pocket.
Guys like Jacobs don't deserve
mistreatment or misfortune . But
cruelly fflOUgh , they're the ones who
seem to get most of it.
Tandy GIW1, former University
of California basketball 1tar and
assistant var1lty ba1ketball coach at
Corona del Mar, la ending bis
boycott of marrtagt:.
The ZS.year-old bachelor 11 due
for a June 23 wedding In Atlantic.
Iowa, marrying Pat P e 11 ' t t ,
Transfer of 6·5. Bond Nichols from
Long Beach Poly Hi gh to Huntington
Beach should make the Oilers pro·
hibitive favorites lo win the CJF large
schools basketball championship next
year.
If there was one thing that would
• make the Oiler attack do u b I y
·a!Vesome. it was the presence l>f a
reasonably tall lad to play the post.
And now coach Elmer Combs has
him.
With starters Roy Miller and Mike
Contrera• back for duty from Hun-
tington's 1968 CIF runnerup team, the
Oilers loom a.a the team to beat ln '69.
Los Angeles Dodgers' Don Drysdale
took the mouhd to face the New York
Mets, he had a lot of things planned.
He was looking for his eighth
straight victory and his eighth shutout
of the year Wednesday night.
But, more important, he was hoping
to snap the Mets' hold over the
Dodg¢rs and make the game a good
going-away present for E. J . "Buz.zie"
Dodger Slate
J\/nt ,. Dcd .. '1 •t Phlladei~1. ,,ao p.m ICFI l'-'Ol '
JUIM 15 ~ •I Phl!adell>t!Ja 4:30 11.m. ICFI l'-'O>
JuM U Dodaen at PhllaOll~la 10:30 a.m, ICFI fMOl
Bavasi, his general manager for 13
years.
When Drysdale leit the mound 8 1/3
innings later, all his hopes had been
shattered. The dreams Of victory and
a shutout had disappeared and, one
batter later, the Mets had a lead
which they held foc a 2-1 victory and a
sweep of the three game series.
The Dodgers closed out their home
stand and headed for Philadelphia for
the start of a 16-game road trip.
The Mets grabbed the glory from
the 31-year-old right-bander in the
nintn as Art Sham sky singled and J. c.
Martin sliced a game-tying double to
left~eoter field.
"Don has been under a terrible
strain -he had to be, piiching six
stralght shutouts -and he wasn't as
fast as usual tonight," Dodger Manag-
er Walter Alston said. "And of course,
we didn't give him much of a
cushion."
The Dodgers managed only one run
against the Mets in the three games
and it was slightly tainted.
Nl!W YOlll( LOI ANct•L•I
••r llrll/ ••rllrM
&o.dl. cf l 0 0 0 Parlle<, lb 4 O 2 O eos ... u. Jb • o o o W.Dtlvls. cl ' o o o
Sharnslcy, If ' 0 2 0 GabrltbOll. If J I I O
S.1ma, pr o I o o F"1ll'lty, If o o o o (.Jo,.,.,, It OOOOllV-.Ph IOOa
Mlrtl", lb • I 2 1 Haller, c • O I o
Grete, c • O 1 l F"alrty, rl J o o o
Swcboda, rt l 0 l 0 IC.So-rtr. di 1 O o I
StaVfr, pr 0 0 0 0 R.Ballty, lb l O 1 0
AQH,M 0000PcPo¥1ch.211 20 00
Colli""' 3b 3 O O o Verullt1, " l o 1 o
lludlek, :lb I 0 0 0 Orvld1lt, I' 2 0 0 0
Wel1.u 2 o o o llHIJnl'ham," o o o o
Ch.,.ln, l'h I 0 1 0 Brew.r, • O O O t
H1r.-.1s«1, •• 1 0 0 0 Ryan,p 2000
ICralM-'• Pt! 1 O O O
A.JlldtlOll, • 0 O 0 o
ll;.T1Ylor, JI 0 0 0 0
Tc1af1 lJ 2 ' 2 Tol•ll JD I ' I N-Yortr. • , • .. COil 000 002 -2
los AnMlel . .. . .. .. . COil 100 t00 -1
OP -LOI Al'l!;lele1 1. LOii -fkw York ,, Lo.
Anvele• '· 211 -M1rllfl. s -Ory1dtle.
II' H II Ill aa JO
Ryan 7•11 1>
A.JKUcln (W,1-.1) 1·213 0 • • 0 0 11.Tll'lor Ill 0 t 0 O O
Drndale ~ •ti) 7 2 2 2 2
llllllfllhlrn o 1 o o o o
lll'PoO'tr 2/300001
WP -llnn. Time -2:». Atlt!ld._ -''·*'
Jn th at race, he will face Oregon's
Arne Kvalheim, who beat Lindgren at
two miles earlier this year although
Gerry came back to take a three-mile
duet. Unbeaten use,
Final scratches were made in
various events and they included some
surprises along with the expected
withdrawal of Kansas' Jim Ryun in
the 1,500 meters and Tennessee's
Richmond Flowers in the hurdles.
WJllie Turner ol Oregon State
withdrew front the 200 meters to con-
centrate on winning the 100.meter
crown. Emmett Taylor of Ohio
Univeraity. defending 440 champion,
withdrew from the 400 because of in-
juries.
Daw Patrick of VUlanova. a strong
possibility 1n tile 1.500 whlle R)'Wl
builds bis strength back in Arizona
after 1 bout of mononucleosis,
~ from Ille 800.
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -St. JOhn's of
New York, rich in pitching and led by
a bold, tobacco-chewing cafcher,
Ralph Addonizio , will challenge No. I·
ranked Southern California tooighl in
the top game of the College Baseball
World Serles.
USC and St. John's became the only
remaining unbeaten teams in the
double-elimination NCAA finals during
a long Wednesday night session.
Addoniz.io 1tole a 3-2, 12-i.nning game
from North Carolina State. First he
stretched an ordinary double into a
triple with a head-first slide under !he
tag.
After taltlng time out to wash the
dirt from his eyes in the dugout and
obtain a fresh chaw of tobacco, Ad·
doniz.lo astounded NC State and the
crowd by trying to score on an ocdi-
nary third-to-fint groundout.
He made it wttlt a headlong 1llde
away from the tag, reaching out to
touch the plate with hi.a hand as he
went by. use overcame a 4·1 first-inning
deficit and beat Oklahoma State 6-..5 11
left·bander Brent Strom struck out 11
and pve only three tlits, Dne a home
nm by Wayne Weatherly. In hiJ eigbl
lnoings of relief.
Bucs Battle Navy, Cornell, Wisconsin
By DON JACOBS
01 lllt O.Hy l'IMI llttt ' SYRACUSE, N.Y. -Orange Cout
College 1Wu up against three of its
traditional Eastern rowing powers to-
day In the opening round (){ the
Intercollegiate Rowin1 Association
championships.
Qualifying will be run in three heats
with action atarting at 3:15 p.m.
Orange Coast College will run in the
third heat.
OOC will be in tough with Wisconsin,
Navy and Cornell, teams which over
the years have dominated the IRA.
Wiscoo.sin has won this JV division
three times and will be after a fourth
to cap the lonf coaching career ... of
Norm Sonju, who will retire thiJ year.
Oomell over the years has been even
more impressive. The Big Red won
the m.A from ISM through 1958 and ln
1961 and '82.
These records haven't awed OCC.
They have posted a sign which reads,
"The only difference between eastern
oarsmen and western oarsmen is that
we have a tan." And they appear to
to believe it. They are lOOfie and they
appear ready to row.
Sh'ould the Bucs not win their heat,
they will not be out of competiUon.
A series of Utree repechage, or re-
quallfying heals, will be held Friday
starµng at 3:15 p.m . Winners of~
three heats will also make the finals,
which are 1oheduled fO!' 4:30 p.m. s.turday. .
Old Guard Choice-
•
Over Yo·ung Lions
' ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UPI) -The
new motto here is lQOk out for the
yoong llons but the smart money wu
still r l ding on Billy Caaper, a
member m the old guard,. when the
150-man field teed off today in !he lint
round on tlle , U.S. O)>e~ goH c)!MI'<
pioosh:ip. · , ·
Casper, the teacUn,.monex~winner of
Ute year and WlDDer oL f o u r '
tounwnents on the i:e~ tour so far
this season, v..ill be· 37 in two Weeks
and Ule oddsmakers believe he will
have his third open 'tiUe by that time.
They have installed him a 5-2
favorite, as solid a choice as has been
ever named for lhis annual golfing
classic, with defending champion Jack
Nicklaus pegged·.the second choice at
3-1 and Arnold Palmer and Gary
Player bracketed together at t-1.
"I'm playing the best golf of my
career~" offered the relaxed Casper,
who came here-straight off a victory
at Indianapolis, "And I'd rather win
this tournament than any other one I
know. I feel fine mentally and
physically and I'm ready for this
coune which I realize is & difficult
one."
All the competitors, including
Palmer and Nicklaus and some of the
young lions like Tom Weiskopf, Bob
Lunn , Marty Fleckman and Lee
Trevino, realized the same thing after
finishing their final warm-ups over the
heavily-trapped, 6.962-yard, par 70
Sports in Brief
Oak Hill Country Cub course.
"The golf courae bl ~atuiful but I
don't like the sand traps," declared.
Palmer.
He wam't •alone. There are M traps
on the COUl'tie 4Dd every player
remembered to include bis sand
wedge amtilg ~e 14 clubs in his bag.
With the sand t>etng so much a fac·
tar, another member of the old guard~
47-year-old. Julius Boros. also was
given a d~nt cliance. Boros, one
the six former: U.S. Open champs in
the field, generally is considered the
finest sand player in the game today.
But the young sluggers on the. tour,
"kilfs" like Fleckman, Weiskopf, Lunb.
.and Treviilo also were drawing con-
1iderable suppor,t among that segment
of the gallery which glories in follow·
ing the potential winner.
Fleckman led the field after the
third round in last year's U.S. Open a~
Baltusrol in Springfield, N.J ., but saw
his chances go down the drain with a
'final day 80.
"I said I didn't think he could win
last year and It turned out I was
right," said Palmer. "But this is a
different year. If he wes in the same
position again coming into the final
round I wouldn't be so sure he couldn't
win. He has the experience now he
didn't have then. Yes, I think any one
of those young fellows, guys like Lunn,
Weiskopf or Trevino, could win."
The kids Palmer was talking about
all felt the same.
Detroit Adds Mathews
To List of Injured Stars .
DETROIT -The Detroit Tigers,
who placed veteran Eddie Mathews on
the disabled tist Wednesday, are going
to the trade mart on their Toledo farm
club for a replaceinent.
MatheWs, undergoing treatment for
a herniated disc in his lower back,
joins ouUielder Al Katine on the
disabled list. Kallne, recovering from
a fractured right wrist suffered when
he was hit by a pit.ch in Oakland two
weeks ago, returns to the active roster
Friday.
But Manager Mayo Smith said it will
be three weeks before Kaline will be
back to full strength.
* * * BROOKLINE, Maai. -The start of
lhe $3%,000 U.S. pro tennl1 ~ham·
plon1hl1>1 w11 waslttd oat Wedne1day
aa a heavy downpour ft o o d e d
Longwood's cra11 courts.
The ftnt four matches were
postponed until today aad the windup
of the tournament rttcbeduled from
Sunday to Monday. Defend.lac ch am·
pion Rod Laver of Corona dt:I Mar and
Au1de Ken Roae'fAll, tbe No. ! 1etd,
wUI not play until J'ilday. ·
" * * SAN JOSE -Tracy Smith of tlle
Army, with an ea1y win in the 5,000.
meter run, will be shooting for the
10,()()().meter title at the lnterservice
Track and Field Championships today.
Smith won the 5,000 in 14:23.2, com·
pared with his hest ol 13:40.2. He uld
wind, lack of competition, and no
crowd hurt bil effort.
BECKENHAM, England -
P rofessionals have taken command of
the Kent Tenuts Tournament -flr1t
gra11 court eveat open to both pros
and amateurs.
The quarter-,,11al round of men's
competiti on will have a definite
Au1traUan flavor with Fred Stolle,
Roy Emerson now of Newport Beach
and Lew Road,, all AU11le pros, and
Spain'• Andrea Glmeno, another pro,
all moving In witlloat dropping a aet.
Two amate:an, Marla Bueno of
Brazil and Mn. Margaret Smltb Coar&
of Australia, al10 won. Ml11 But:no
downed Patti Hogan of UCI 6-3, M
and Mr1. Court btat Valerle Zlegen·
f1111 of San Diego 6-3, M.
* * * NEW YORK -Olympic sprinter
Henry Carr will be doing hl1 sprinting
in a di[ferent National Football
League backfield next season.
Carr, a defensive back for three
seasons with the New Yd'rk Giants.
was traded Wednesday to Baltimore
for Barry Brown, a linebacker.
* * " HOUSTON -The Los Angeles
W0Ive1 handed Hoa1toa Its third con·
tecutlve 1hutout Wednesday night 11
they whipped the Stars Z.O 1n a North
Amerlcaa Soccer League came before
3,061 fan1 ln the Aatrodome.
* * * COLOGNE. Germany -Jupp Elze
fought for his life today after a
1alfant, but losing bid to win the Euro-
pean middleweight boxing cham•
plooahip.
St. John's Clash -
Texas ellminat.'3 Brigham Young
(7-0) on Larry Hardy's one-hitter, the
llfth In Colleg~ World Series hl•tory,
and will face NC State.
OSU meeti Southern I!Hnoia.
u'SC'a veteran coach, Rod Dedeaux,
ls worried about his pttchlng '¥~au1e
rlghl-banders Jim Barr, 10-2, uo Bob
Vaughn, M, have hid arm troubles
the past month.
LefUe1 Bill Lee and Strom have car-
ried the club In excellent tathion to a
lZ..2 record in the span, and they won
the first two 1ame1 here. In fact, Lee
is 6-0 the past month with a 1. 4.3 ear.
..eel run average, and .Strom -t-1. ,
Dedeaur may try Barr, o. go with
John Rockwell, normally a short relief
man. He m.1$;11t use Vaughn, who
started the district title game.
1 Jack Kaiser, St John's coach, baa
no such doubt.. lle'll ate.rt Rick
Schwartz, a le(t-hander who shut out
hard·hillinl New York Unlveraity 1-0
in Ile dittrlct title 1ame. He Is S-2
with a O.M ERA.
Tom Sowln&kJ pitched four 1hutout
relief Innings for Kalrer to get b.ls llth
victory, l'WlllUlg his acorele11 lnniDg
llrlnf lo C2. He has pveo up JUAt lwo
111111 ln hiJ 1ut 118 lnulngs.
Coach Dave Grant saJd he feels the
Bucs are ready. The boat they bor-
rowed from Cal, instead of Syracu#,
lJ a good one and has been movmc
well in practioe. '
The Bucs row In a "big time let-
ting," a ~yard channel lined with
overhanging maple trees and the giant
Syracuse boat houses.
There are also big time mosqultoe
that appear strong enough to Clll'ff
away a whole shell if it strays olf
course.
In the varsity segment, UCLA -.
which has six former OCC crewm•
aboard --:-will compete in the heat to-
day wilh Booton Ulli...-.!ty, Prln°"'
loc, Brown and Nortlieoll.en!.
GLENN WHITI
Sports Editor
Montreal
Searching
For Stadium
MONTREAL CAP) -Major league
baseball has expanded to Montreal but
Montreal isn't quite sure it knows
where to ptit the game.
Lucien Saulnier, chairman of the
city's Executive Committee, said Wedo
nesday that the city bas not com·
milted itself to building a domed
stadium for the National League team
wbich is to begin playinf here nm
season.
"The City made no commibnent
regarding the stadium," said Sauliiier
"and cannot make one until certain
economic feasibility stuWes are com·
pleted."
Gerry Snyder, vice chairman of the
Executive CommJttee and the JllSU
who represented Montreal at the Na ..
tional League's expansion meeting in
Chicago, had indicated then that the
city would build a' 55,000-seat domed
stadium to house the team. UnW the
stadium is built, the team is supposed
to play in a park located on the
grounds of Expo '67.
Warren Giles, president of the Na•
tional League, said he would in·
vestigate the matter. 111 want to talk
to both of them (Snyder and Saulnier)
directly before making a comment.''
said Giles.
"It was our understanding that they
would build .a domed stadium, but I
would not want to comment on the
matter of~ci•lly."
Saulnier said he was not Implying:
that Ute city administration ts opposed
to such a project
"We are anxious to move u quickly
as possible," he said. "However good
business practice dictates that we
know exactly what our needs will be
and how they will be met."
Internal strife also is bothering the
Infant Montreal franchlse. Snyder an..
nounced at a press conference Tue ..
day that he had been eased out of the
club's operation by its financiaJ
backers.
"I have nothing to do with the club's
business anymore," said Snyder.
Angels Try
Once More
BOSTON (AP) -An old ell])AulOll
say1 everybody talks about tlle
weather but nobody dots anytbblf
about it
In one seDJe, the California An,.:11
a.re going to do aomethlng about the
rain they've met on. the current road.
trip.
Seven Angel 1ames havt been ram.
ed out on !ho trip Including 1Jno
doublebeaden.
But after today's 1chedu1 e d!
doubleheader, rain or shine, the
Angel• are going homo lo llJnllY
Anaheim. where only one came bu
been rained out in two years and thrM
months.
In today'a twin bill, Angels Jlna
McGlothlin, M , and rookie Tom
Murphy, 0.0. were to meet Jose Saa.
t!ago, 7-3, and Gary Bell, 11-2.
-----------~--------------~---------------···•hh'tt1 •'QOtittti 0 #CP?S •••• ,-:,p -g ES ·gg' 037 ???Sb'!"
I
T
---------------------------·~-....... ----.. -... ----....... --~-----·--------------------·-------.... ----------------
~ %% DAILV PILOT Thur$d«)', J1111t lJ, 1968
-Costa M.esa New Southlano Bowling Capital?
By l!ARt GUSTIEY
ot tM Dtltw ,., .. ltwft
Is C.OSta Mesa the bowling capital or
Soud!em California?
The Southern California Bowling
Writen seemed to indicate at least
tilat last week when 11"1 uamed three
Costa Mesans to their 16th annual all·
1t.a:r team.
"I can't even remember a city the
size of Los Angeles having ttii:ee peo-
ple on the SCBWA all-star t.eam," says
Di Stoeffler, general manager of
na es 1n Cost.a Mesa.
Marina,
Connell .
In Wins
CoMell Oievrolet • n d
Marina were victorious in
Connie Mack b aseb all
Wednesday night, but Hun-
tin·gton Harbour was held to
a 1·1 deadlock by Brea.
Com:iell's Victory was a 6-1
no-hitter over San Clemente
po51ed by tile combined
.pitching talents of Wayne
Schrader and Joe LePage.
Meanwhile, M a r i ri a • s
Dave Clungresett.er posted
his second 7-1 win in league
competition, this t i m e
against Mission Viejo.
Clungresetter had beaten .
Huntington by the &am•
se-0re earlier in loop actiQn.
Huntingtoo Hartiour's 1·1
tie with Brea was halted
after the regulation seven
innings because of darkness.
LePage struck out 10 in
six innings for Connell
Chevrolet. SC's only tally
came in the seventh on two
walks and an error.
Victory gives Connel 1
Chevrolet four wins in as
many tries.
W.arina hold& a 3-0 league
mark by v i rtue of.
Clungresetter'1 five-hitter.
Steve McDaniel11 doubt-e
with the bales loaded in: the
sixth to score two runs was
the clinching hit for Macina.
k_.. •'I' lllnhlts I: M E
N.lu lg., VleJo 000 000 1.-J I I M•rlna 10) OID X-7 I
Mlrlllll UI Al .ll M 1:a1
Wir11tk, I' I . ' . Cemobfl , 2b o n o
Aodtn«O, :lb ' 0 0 ~r·"cf J~ , t i =.11'0 ~ , 0 CIV"'lll•eHttef, P I D 0
Mvnllw, rt I 1 o o
.
The three honored Mesans were She carries a 204: ave.rage at Kona
Stoefner, Roy WU son and Bobbie and has posted 702 and 724 series and
Soldan. high games of 279 and 278.
Stoeffler, who captured bowling She started as a beginner at Kon a.
headlines all over the tfs. last Wilson, long a standout Mesa bowl·
January 4 for his historic back-to-back ing fixture, was the winller of last
300 games, also carries a 218 average summer's West Coast Match Game
and during ooe league stret~h recently Elilaj!iations-; a nationaJly ,fame'd
·posted 26 coosecutive series over 600, tqumament held from . M,ay to Sep·
Mrs. Soldan has competed in many tember at 'Kona' on Mohday nights.
West Coast championship pro bow~n Wilaon rolled eight ' 700 series at
events. She and .another Costa Mesa on,.a last year -including a 781 .J.-
woman, Mrs. Mary Badstubner, won d has a 217 average.
the California state doubles tjlam-"I think those two ~e only a sampl-
pionsrup last year. _ing of the really outstanding bowlers
we have in th.is town," Stoefner said.
"Three moi:e good ones are Fred
Be!'Ml, Al Hurst and Larry Scb0et1·
!elder."
go, it's No. 1. Bill Maglione of Palm
Springs, for in&tance, motors to Costa
Mesa every Monday night during the
E}lims months.
pass through its ~GOr~ dui'ing tts peak
winter season, using its 40 lanes. And
over 1,000 dilldren will sign up for
Kona's Youth Club th.ls summer.
On the other side of town, Mesa
Lanes general manager Jim. Hogan
reports a growing interest in the sport.
And the pride of Kona Lanes is Mike
DW'bin, the touring pro who was nam-
ed the PBA11 ro9kie ot the year last
year.
Stoeffler, a former pro baseball
player, says the Elims are largely
responsible for tbe growth of bowling
"We have more adult leagues
scheduled for this summer than ever
before," he says. "We'll have about 20
of them this summer."
Kona's popularity has ,steadily
grown during the past years, since the
inception ot. the Elims, The. big tourna·
ment begins with 120 bowlers and is
steadily pared down to the eventual
champ over a period of four months.
interest in Costa -Mesa. , .
"We get , the best bowlers m
Southern California at the Elims and
people see tb~ese high scores comi~g
out of the tournament and get m-
terested."
Mesa Lanes bas 20 lanes.
As Southern California tournaments
Kona 4anes, now 10 years old, will
have upwards of ·l ,000 bowlers a. day
Hogan added that his youth program
is expected to reach its highest point
ever this summer.
CIF Considers Grid Playoff ·
I\ I•
E~pansion to 5-A Division
Back some 16 or 17 years if a high
scbolo boasted an AAA football champion
it was really something-like the top of
the wori.d in the CJF.
Later, the top powers were worked into
the AAAA playoffs and now there is talk
about a AAAAA football playoff.
This corner talked to the CIF Com·
missioner, Ken Fagans, and he replied to
questions regarding the possibility:
"Yes, the CIF office is interested in a
possible 5-A playoff, but a lot of study
.vould be required before we could go into
;omething like that," Fagans explains.
.,.... .... ---""'
ROGER
CARLSON
11We'd need at least six or seven strong
!eagues to have that type of grouping.
"We wouldn't consider playing it year to
vear by invitation. We tried that one time
ind it didn't work out. The schools didn't
like it because they wanted to know ahead
of time what group they'd be in," he con-
!ludes. ·
Sounds like a good idea if it can be
worked out. Some fine fwtball teams find
themselves completely outcl:is~ed in the
AAAA piayoffs.
Others, like the Mater Dei team of a few
seasons back, couldn't get in the elimina·
lions despite a 7-1 record that included
seven shutouts.
Fagans was queried on what his person-
al thoughts were on the possibility of as
many as three teams qualifying for the
playoffs from a single league.
The Commissioner replied, "I think it
can be justified when a particular league
has a Jot of powerful schools. The Moore
and, Angelus Leagues are example.
They probably should have more teams in
playoff consideration than a weak league."
them a chance to field a couple of tearris
from each league and •perhaps pick up a
couple AA leagues like the Irvine and
Crestview -plus a couple second place
teams from the Foothill and Pacific
Leagues.
* * * Fountain Valley is due to break out
with more major sports achievements
witb enrollment due to swell to nearly
Z,800 in tbe fall.
The Barons were undeniably the
best lo the Irvine League in wrestllng-
they won Irvine titles in varaity and JV
-and made nc.ises Jn track, too, during
the 67-&8 campaign.
. With the varsity finJshlng second to
Loara and the Bee team winning the:
loop championship; It appears track is
on the way. The Bees were undefeated
in dual meets.
The fact that th e Huntington Beach
School District imposed its rulings of
"no discus" on the Barons in a league
that has the event didn't help coach
J\.latt Leonard's forces.
Every varsity event in track was bet·
tered in the schoc.i record books this
past season.
Other titles came in JV basketball
(14-0 in Irvine League competition), and
Bee and Cee footba11. ·
* * * Sum reer basketball is just around the
corner with UCJ's program involving
Estancia and Ma.ter Oei and the Hunt·
ington Beach's schedule including the
Oilers along with Marina, Fountain
Valley. Costa Mesa, Westminster, Corona
del Mar and Newport Harbor among
others.
The Huntington affair gets under way·
Tuesday and the UCI business starts Mon·
day.
Summer league basketbaU used to be a
c~se of some pretty shabby basketball -
with the emphasis strictly for fun.
Not anymore. These clubs are out for
blood with the only experimenting done by
the coach.
* * * Fl.mlna, rf o 111 f 1 "'t~.'l'.~1• 311 1i ' , l STRIKE IT RICH -Strikes were the order of the honors were Roy Wilson (left), Bobbie Soldan and
Dick Stoeffler. Their respective averages are it7,
204 and 218.
The 5-A playoffs wouldn't hurt any of
the smaller powers either. Instead, it
would give some of the other good teams a
running chance at CIF glory, only on a M11Mor1 v1tiz.1n R " 1:•• day at the Kona Lanes as a trio of Costa Mesans
slightly lower echelon.
If playoffs could be expanded from AAA
to AAAA, it could be done again.
Kids Like to Thought: Why not figure on 12 teams in
1 S i i were selected to· the Southern California Bowling ! g t ~ Writers Association All~Star team. Gaining those i : i ; _ _:_:_:_::.:c:.::::.::.:_:_:_:;:_ _____ _;"-. _____________ j;;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::=
~ I ! i
Long Beach Poly baseball rc-otCrs
tacked U!J a huge sl-'n In left field to
urge their plawers to do in "Savannah"
at Cerritos College in the CIF cham·
plonshlp game.
Savanna's Andy Blelanskl -led ~ l 0 0 the playoffs with U1e top seeded four
'A k A d • drawing byes the first week. s~ h 1nn1"" • M •
s.... C1emef'lte ooa °'° 1-1 o 1 Connell ~rvoltl 101 1n1 X.... 1 1
"""'II Ch..,•~11 (~ M Ral
a . Ll11nerl, lb l l 1 1 :::~~~°"' H 1 1 1 ~ LePM!e, d-o 2 o 1 2
Sea Kings
Win Trophy
Corona del Mar High
Titlist Chapman
Adds Spice to Metro
S n Y The balance of the present AAAA ,j~~~~~~~:~~=l~e_a~g~u~e~s-~w~o~u~l-d~-~c~ontinue as usual -giving m
Rebels turned the tables on Poly, 5-1,
and It J1 presumed that Poly and Its
students are now quite aware of Savan-
na's proper spelling.
LtPl><O• :lb l 0 0 l SnVCltr, 2b 2 II 0 -a '~ln2b 1111000 Fee.,...., J 0 1 Wllbr,M 1 Cl j0 ~ • " 2 1 0 Sc~r141tr. Pod ,j 0 1 0 Toltll 6 1 6
san cteMtnt1 n I
. Al • SMpr.fd, P l Ill
Oter.ba119h. 'lb ' 0 ~m,11 l Cl
• lb 2 0 • ti 2 0 J«wf, If 1 0 Allen, rt 2 0
Ht-, lb 1 o' T_,c: l &avlt. c • 0 Symons. If l o
M flll I I • • • • 8 g • • g g • • ' .
School, which opened the By RAV PLUTKO
1967-68 athletic year by Of ,,,, D•ttr PHot s1a11
finishing seventh In football.
sprinted to the wire to cap-Alrthough the 0 r a n g e
ture the Irvine League All· County Metro League enters
Sports Trophy. · ju_st i~ second week ~f the
Costa Mesa placed third in still infant c a m p a 1 g n ,
the final tally with Estancia there's already been some
and Fountai~ Valley right spice added to the ranks -
behind the spots four and marked by the arrival of
five. NCAA (Small Co 11 e g e
Division) baseball kingpin
Chapman College.
Chapman, which j u s t
returned from its sweep of
the World Series in Spring-
field, Mo., m a r k e d its
debut in impressive fashion
Wednesday night with a 9-7
Baseball Standings
Detroit
Baltimore
Cleveland -Oakland
American League
Woo Loot Pel.
38 ro .655
32 24 .571
33 ·26 .559
28 30 .'83
't:I 29 .482
:Ill 28 .481
26 32 .448
2A 30 .#4
GB
National League
Won Lost Pct. GB
st. Louis 3S 2A . 593
San Francisco 32 . 't:I .542 3
Atlanta 30 27 .526 4
Lot Angele1 32 !9 • 5Z.''i • Cincinnati 28 28 .500 51!
Chicago 28 29 .491 6
Pltilad<lphla 25 26 .490 6
New Yotk 't:I 29 .482 61!
Houston 23 32 .418 10
win over Cal State
(Fullerton).
Action picks up again at 7
p.m. Friday when Golden
West College bids for i;s in-
itial credit sign on the year,
testing Long Beach City CoJ.
Jege at Boysen Field in
Anaheim.
D•tllM Countr
Mltl't Ltll.,. Ttll'll wl!Ptl,01
S.ni. An• 2 t O 1.000 -cnapm1" 1 o o 1.000 'h
Orar.11t Cot'! 1 I o .SO'.I 1 Golclffl W.,I 0 G I .000 1 Lo"9 !leach Cl!'f o 1 o .000 1~
Fullerl'Dn St. o 2 l .ooo 1 Wtdn1M11r'1 flt1un1 Cto.Pm •n 1, Cal Sl•te (l'u!!er!OI\) 1, on1v llllT!t scMl:lulecl l'riclt'l''I Sditduh GOldtrt W"9 vt. LOlll ae1dl 11 llO'l'1f!I l'leld, 7 ~.m.
D llOWN ....
~ ""' Old Tlmt P1'91
Boston
New York
Oblc:1go
Calllonila
Wam!ngton
is n .431
2A 32 .429
• ....,. .. fl-lh
OPiand 7, CltYll&M 1
o.trelt t. Mll'I-'-1 Cl'l!Uto 11 NIW Yori!, ralll S.11lmol'9 11 W11l'll11tf011, r1l11
C.llfonlla ., ....... fllll
5
51!
lO
10
IO
t 2
12
1%\0
13 Pittsburgh 22 31
w ....... .,... ·-ltl Clli«to ._ CllM;l-11 1
$1ft Fr..c:ltce .c. PH'ltbvr9h 2
"1111n11 '· SI, L01tl1 1
.415 10 Ann!versary Sale
1968 COUGAR
T"81'1 OlllM' Ml!WlttO!i fMtrrltt .WI If Dlllrolf fMda111 t.n
Oaa.flf ""•" ""'l If.Cit~ IMcDPwell .. fl Cllfflllmla 19..-t M tlld McGIOll!lln 5-4) 11
New Yori; 2. ~ Af\Ot'IK 1
~OUtl!lt' 1t "Mll~h>ftlt, tal~
T9dt~ .. ._
..... (k!ltllto 74 MOC! .. II S.2), 2 °"'' ,_ tefNdV!fd, PrlM Y'I ........
Clntl...,eti (Ckllllntfll' 1.i) 1t Cllkato llt•bfttef ...
"lttibu ..... (IUM!ftil J.71 ,, Sa" l'rltl(lllQ tPe..-v .,,
. ' .
N-Yorlt ti Olkl•nct, 11l9ht
WaMll'll-'' CaUfomla. llloht •11tll'llOU at MlfllltHll1, 11~1 Ottnilt If ·Clllufo, nl9hf
e.ton .r O."'laiwt "l"'I
$1. Lolllt !Carlton I•)) 11 Alll!lll (JOl'w'I-"3l,
PlltM HOU1I011 rwn.,... ~,l " ""'111oe11t111a f&l'lclrt u 1. nltf\1
OlllY """"' ~.
Johnson & Son
LINCOL .... MlltCUIY.COUOAl·DI ALll
600-700 w. eOAST HWY. NEWPORT aeH.
' !541-7151 UZ.o911
. --
SAVE UP TO
5700
Jiii ............ , wttti ... ,., .... .
ef • -., ...... , .,. ..... , ... ,.
..,_., .... fA $41 ... 1 .. 1
n. S.t11Mfr ef s,.tl. C. l..n"
I
' • • • •
IT'S NOT TOO LATE TO •
THINK ABOUT FATHER ON
FATHER'S DAY-·-
FATHER'S DAY; SUNDAY, JUNE 16
Perhaps a mitt so he
can p"lay bal~th
Junior-
Or a tennis racket
so he can play tennis
"\Vith Mother-
Or a pai'f of cross
country shoes so he
can run a mile and
a half a da y -
Or a Bicycle so he
will have something
to i·ide when Junior
borrows the car-
' . . .
Or a pair of handball
gloves. There is nothing ~:
better than handball to
take off those extra .... " ..
.., pounds-
·~ Or a pair of tennis
' sl1orts and a new tennis
shirt •.. Tl1e kind that
need • • no rromng •
Or a new pair of
..
~ .· • . · . .
tennis slioes-• ,.
Or a pair of swim trunks '
... The nylon kind that ·
dry in minutes. ..
And most important of
all ... Let him know you ~~
love hi1n ... It doesn't
• cost a cent. •
-..
-···~-... ---~ .......................... .._. ........ ~-~ ~_............-. w -· -........---------_......-----~~----· -------···-·,. ... -... -.. --.. --,.
"
,.,
' .
Sports
Age nda
For TV
·' TODAY
8 p.m. (5) CL -BOXING
~ Hedgemon Lewis vs.
D o u g McLeod. welter-
'Y'~i~hts. Dick Enberg, Mick-
'fl·· Davies at Olympic ring·
<11<.lc. •
FRIDAY
5,30 p.m. (40) F -COM·
MENTARY -With films
:.from various sports events.
8 p.m. (7) CT -PGA
GOLF -Film clips of first
two rounds. interview with
leader of U.S. Open play at
Oak Hill CC, Rochester,
N.Y. '
9,30 p.m. (5) CT -COM·
J\.lENTARY -F ·i Im clips.
interviews, preview o f
tomorrow's Cinema Han-
dicap at Hollywood Park.
IO p.m. (34) F -LUCHA
LIBRE -(Lucha libre de
~exico.)
SATURDAY
-. 11 a.m. (4) CL
-BASEBALL -Detroit
Tigers at Chicago White
Sox. Curt G<iwdy, Pee Wee
Reese, Sandy K -0 u f a x
mikeside at Ccimiskey Park.
Raincheck game to be an-
nounced.
I p.m. (7) CL -PGA
GOLF -$190,000 U.S. Open.
Chris Schenkel, Bill Flf!m·
ming, Bud Palmer, Henry
L<lnghurst, Byron Nelson
mikeside at Oak Hill CC,
Rochester, NY., for final
holes tod·ay and tomrrow.
% p.m. (II) CL -TRACK
MEET -NCAA Cham-
picnship. Bill Welsh, Chuck
.Benedict, H.D. Thoreau
trackside at Berkeley.
4 p.m. (S) CF -COM·
MENTARY -''Road
America," with a u to race
film clips from 1966.
5 p.m. (%) CL -
HOLLYPARK -$50,000
Cinema Handicap. H a r r y
Henson, Gil St r a t to n
trackside at Ho 11 y wood
Park. Inglewood.
5,30 p.m. (7) CT -WIDE
WORLD Recap of
Memorial Day ¥J0 at In-
dianapolis., Show . reduced
from 90 to 60 minutes due to
coverage of U.S. Open. Was
set for last week but gave
way to coverage of Ken-
nedy's funeral.
9,30 p.m. (34) F -BAX·
EO -(Aereo de la semana,
de Mexico.)
FATHER'S DAY
l!N (21 CT -SOCCER -
W·ashington Whips at
Baltimore Bay6. J a c k
Whitaker, Mario Machad-0
mikeside at Memori a l
Stadium.
I p.m. (7) CL -PGA
GOLF -$190.000 U.S. Open.
(See 1 p.m. Sat.)
4 p.m. (40) F -COM·
l'r1ENTARY -"Sunbreak
Fantasy."
s,30 p.m. (13) CT -COM·
J\1ENTARY -Tom, Anne
Malone with clips a nd in-
terviews.
9,30 p.m. (5) CT -CAR &
TRACK -Race clips and
Detroit new car tests.
More Sports
Page24
£v•ry week M"4CO s1lisfln rno••
th•n 10,000 t1•nsmls1ion problems..
You &d fre e towin1. a free road·
ehl!(;k, fast, etrlei•nt servk-st times in just one day. And with
AAMCO, your t,.nsmiulon CM be
prot•eted by Oller 500 M l.400 Cen·
ters co.e1t to eoast.
£vtry rnl'lllta 9"d • Mlf, -·
Ona prDYK .•• ,
COSTA MESA
1741 ....,.,. •• '"'''"
G•rden Grewe
"'1 .. ,.. -... tM. ..........
Santa Ana
m 1. "'"' SI. . ... 147..UI
\
l ttursdl)', Jut1t 13, 1%8 DAIL V PILOT %3
mou
Lowest. priced of the mid-size wagons with down and out opening tailgate.
No need to go broke getting into a new wagon. Your
Plymouth dealers have over 1000 wagons ready to go .
100 options to choose from ... includ ing the auto industry's
lowest oriced wagon with the down and out tailgate.
*Manulacturer's suggested retail
price for a Belvedere 6 cyL Station
Wagon 4-door 2-seats including
Federal Excise Ta x. suggested
dealer deliYery and handllng
charges. Transportation charges.
accesso1ies, optional equipment .
state and !ocal laxes add itional
Two seats, three seats, paneling ... you name it. ..
We 've got it at a price that leaves something in th e
budget for a great family vacation . Little wonder
that Plymouth sales are up 20% this ye ar!
. Drop in today and visit your local Plymouth Dealer ... the money you save might even pay for your vacation.
ATLAS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUT.H, INC.
, Just three blocks South of San Diego Fwy. .
2929 Harbor Boulevard. Costa Mesa, Calif. (714) 546-1934
•
-----~ --~ ----·----____ ......___ -----·-•.• * •.• - ---- -= ... --~---·-· ----------·-; ·-·-··-··~----·-·~·~·~•"'"'~··~·
l:ll!:':P":>'_., ...... ;o""I""....,. ___________ __,_---,-..,.... • .......,,.........---------._..--~~......-~~----· ••
%.f DAILY PILOT
BUD TUCKER
Line Split
For Friday
Civil War
Hollypark
Entries
•• LOS ANGELES -I! you are interested In harness
. ...,.acing, yoo will wish to learn of a syndicate which Is
· about to dominate your sport.
In Ptfexico City, the smart ._.., ________ .,._.,. ____ .,. .. """'
money likes Chu C h u
Castillo. In the border towns
a n d Los Angeles, J esus
Pimentel is the favorite.
: .. The {">UP was formed amona:\.several Southern
Califom1a sportsmen with the pu.rChase of four i-r.ear-
old fillies. The syndicate, which is called Twilight
Farms, bas already had one winner at Wolverine
Raceway touching oU great rejoicing within lbe com-
bine and fear among the rival horse owners of the
'A'OTid.
· lt1embers of the syndicate include Buzzie Bavasi, 1 .Pres Jeuine, Bob Kerlan, Marvin Shapiro, Bill
Worthing, Ray Pepp and Tom Staiger. At the outset, the
foregoing are only names but when you le~ moi:e
about them, you will understand why the syndicate is
dreaded.
Pfes Jenuine is the general manager of Western
. Harness Racing Association. His experienc:e in this fi eld
makes him a natural to do the purchasing. In other
· . words, Jenuine is a judge of flesh. Horse, that is.
Furthermore, Jenuine has been known to get out of beiJ at 4 a .m .• to exercise horses. 'Ibis takes 11 certain
kind of individual but it is necessary that the horses get
· their early morning work. .
. ·It is a dead cinch none of the other syndicate
: members will get up at 4 a .m . Some of them are not
. even in yet.
Bob Kerlan is • prominent doetor. in •thletic
circles. He is renowned and re1pected as a bone
man and looks .1fter the Dodgert baseball team.
Other 'teams, in all walks of sports, tend their ailing
to Kerlan for care and treatment.
Kerlan't 9reete1t work was in tht celebrated
S.ncly Koufax cate. Kerlan got Kovfax 's •rm in
shape to sign a million dollar contract with • n•
tional television Mtwork.
Kerlan will be invaluable to the syndicete. No
1yndicate horse ever figures to go to the pott with a
limp. . ·
. That's the llne for the 12-
round ba n t amweig h t
elimination bout June 14 at
the Fonun which is rapidly
shaping lip u a Merican
"Civil War."
Pimentel ia the No. l
ranked bantam, and has
been · for the most part of
four years, but he bas yet to
box in Mexico City where
Castillo is a hometown
favorite.
"I've got a lot of Criends
coming up. from Mexicali."
says Pimentel. 0 and the
people know me well here so
I'm not really worried about
Castillo getting a lot of _sup-
port"
Castillo's supporters point
out that while the Mexican
champion doesn't h ave
Pim en t e I's sensational
knockout record -58 kayos
in 66 fights -he has beaten
two of Je'sus's conquerors.
Twenty-three year old Chu
Chu bolds victories over
Jose Medel and Y o s b i
Nakane, both of whom
dl!cisioned Pimentel.
........ 1 ... ,, J-14 , ......... ,. .. D4J
Ckar & ,,.,._,.,, ., .. , 1••5 l'.M.
ll'llUT It.ACS. I 1/16 ... ua. J & ~
Y(!lt Did fl'l&idlnl bl" ... Ill C11Jfol01ll . .... ~ ......
Gnt1Y It-(J TNllll1) IU
,._!er ShDt fM Y-U 121
Cosll Dtl Sol IJ Gorlull!JJ 10107
"Nw;Yel IW MMmllU lit
RecoNlli~ CW MMllrfln) 112
Torrid IJ SilllfT'I l1J
0~ IM V111!n1uoi.) 121
Cui 9Moli (W H1rrtsl 111
Tlke 1 Tri. ID Pl<trul 112
SECOND lllACI!. t l11rlonln. f Wtr
old !Ullet, C11lm'"9. ""'"" l6JOO TOP cl1lmiM PtlU IU.GOI.
Jotty Dml ff Mecll111)
Fltrv Yenut (0 H•ltl
Gr~nd Old Namt IW """'°'lll!Y)
F1Ut.vme HDl>H tl 'Inc•• Jfi Ott t1dlle !J Sellen)
Miu 0..lllelle (J Trul!llol
Cent~ l1l<;on-, IJ Gllf0Hle1)
H;ow Rulli CW H1r .... n f
Altoot NeHve tW H1rtl51
T"" Fltni 0..,-CW Hl•!..U)
l•okef's llll' IF Ger11I
"' '" "' "' '" "' "M •» '" "' •112
THJlllO llACE. S N r1-i. 2 YUr
Oki rrlliden COiia & .oelcllnfll. P\11W """· I I"" Ccbr1 fl G!!lle;onl 111 w .... retore Ar1 T,_ IM Y-•I 111
$on11 OI trellNI CD YILl-r) 111
Wlndsl;oV IF Glr!I) 11113
SQlld lotoct.: CW H1,...,ri1 111
Noni.em Rebel (0 Pierce J) HI
Abdlc11or /J Gonulfr n 1111-j 1110-,11 0 YntllY cw Mliti<':rney) Ill Ma~ar (L P11'1Cay Jr 2) 111
Flrit Oulr IE ~lne l 111
Metltor!OUI IM Valenl'llela) 111
Aopllc.llor IJ Lamberl) 111
ll'OUltTH lllACE. 6 "'•kllltn. Fi1118
.. ""'" J 7"r Didi & ... A.lie ....
lllCH. Purw llCOI.
Slnvoon !W H;o111dt\ 114
Prkw;et,1 Pel CJ L;ofnbert) 111
OuH,. Wit IJ Selk,.l 116
Free S.mi>M (L Pll'IC;oy Jr! 111
~ R01'1le CJ Gon•alerl •1!4
Fleet Duchi!u 111!1
Dovecote ID Vel;o1<1uoO 111
f'll"TH llAClf. I 1/16 mlles. • w1r
old1 t. UP. Clalmh'l9. f'llrot s.1500. Tap
cl1lmlntl lltlce SllXlll.
Kholl Sell (J Umberl) 111
f llln' llwrilon (Cl l'l•tCfl 116
11..,cr,11a11 w1r tJ GDn.tlllt'rJ J111
SHeftl Trwl !W H1r1tdtl llt
io.U1>t Fl-11 CM Y11!11l lit
l lW Nltfll CL l'lncal' Jrl II'
SIXTH uce. ' fv~ J -· olG 1111\et. AllowlncK. l'llr" IJ'SOll,
llllcolli $Cf'OOI l"ICUllY.
T_.,.,. wir. (M v-.1 1•
Crnl1I OucheQ CL Plnur J r) 111
!Wll' LotelM CO Piere.ti 117 C0.11~1• (J Selllftl H•
DD<!'! Doub! /M !W l!Nhor11•"I 120
MilN:dll IW M1.....,nl 11•
R°".i COO. ID H1M) 120
Nill,.,le CF Gerul 11\0ll
SEYl!!NTH llACI!!. ON "'lie "" IM
turl. J rt•r ol6t I. !IP. AlloweM.el.
Purse lll5DO. Oolplllou d ~Nwon111 .......
Mod<er. IW H.lrtKl<I 116 ""* !J Gontllel) Jl11
Fiff>I or Flllihl co Plertt) 116
S1Jnte• IJ Setler'IJ 1tt
CM Ot Foo;v1 CJ L1...0.r1I Hl
TrMler Ric ID Hell) 119
O\oe'r Tllt COU111tr CL Pl11t1r Jr) 121
sr .. r oUMI ~ H1rrl1I 116
R!JMlnt WDnh ~M Yalenrutll) H6
Wild Ace (W Mahomer) '"
EIGHTH llACE. 6 fvf'~ Fiiiies
I. m..rn J rnr okb & 1111. C.Llultltd
lllOWll'la!I. PUrlt $10,QOI. V.S.S, Ntw
JeneY.
Srranv El'ldffvour IJ GllflulonJ 11111
Fr1nclne M. (0 Pleri;el 116
A·A Pll!H.10111 Son IW Harr'h) 1U
A·ll.ck flr!tcllel tW H1r11ct.) 112
My LIM ~M Ya~r) 122
llinlie'I Pell (J Umber1l 11,
I ll 0t J1"' IW Milhc!'neYI 111 Z~1 """lie fO H1111 12:2
CiDhe1 CL Pina-, J1I 1:!2
A-M. E. Mltlerkll 1r11ned l!'nl,..,,,
NINTH IACIE . I 1116 mun Oii Ille
h.1r1 4 "fft olds I. ""· Cl1lmlnt.
Purse llOOO. Too cl•lmlnl pric.t
110.COO.
~rt We•e You 10 Vell_,I lll
E'-dotl (A, MHMl 11•
El Ch;oP1rr1! CD Pluce) 116
.... P•P• tM Yenef) 122
Arc E'11 Clet II IM V11e<1tuet1) 11'
Sf\ ... ., ln11l1n (R CllT!ffl) 113
Grafld Slim Mlle !D H1U) 116
Rull11! Thumb CW H1r11dll lit
Ai·Mol! Zlvue CE Me-Gln1) 11'
lt.-R. 5. Coler 1r1lne-G Mlrv.
, . ·Marvin Shapiro is l>resident of Westem Harness
.' Racing Association. He ts also billed aS the, "largest"
manufacturer of ladies coats west of Chicago. The
"large.st" label indicates that Shapiro. makes coats for
fat women. which is good for the syndicate. In other bouts on this in· • .,. • ..,....., .... .,,,, ..... ,.._,.. ___ """"-•""""'"
Shapiro will make the blankets for the horses. No
self.respecting combfne· sends an animill·to .the winner's
circle in a crumby looking blanket.
;iugural fight card, Jose
(Matltequilla). Naoples, the
No. 1 welterweight oon·
tender, is picked over Leroy
R.ace Results
Bill Worthing is prribably the syndicate's most
famous member. As a basketball star at Creighton
University, Worthing once made a long shot ~ith one se-
cond to go in the game to give his team a victory over
Adolph Rupp's great Kentucky squad. As a m atter of
fact. the defeat is still regarded at Kentucky as the most
heartbreaking loss in the school's history:
Roberts of Philadelphia and ,..., _______ co_,..,,..,,,..,""'••11:1-•!ll
Worthing will be in charge of teaching the ~rl of
d rama in photo finishes to the Syndicate's · dnvers.
Worthing's on1y drawback is that he will not be able to
accompany other combine members to Kentucky to
purchase horses. ln that sta te, there may still be a war·
rant out for his arrest.
_Rap Pepp, no relation to Willie, is a former
c•tcher on the baseball t•am of the Univer1lty of
Southern California. Those who remember Pepp say
he was one of the finest young men ever to wear the
tool1 of ignorance for the Troians.
Mexican lightweight king
Arturo Lomeli is a sUght
choice over M a r c. u s
Anderson, the No. 7 rated
junior lightw~ight.
Tickets remain In all
prices for Friday's show.
which starts at 8 p.m . They
are available at the For~.
Alexandria Hotel, all Mutual
and Music City agencies.
CATFISH
BITING
HOLLYWOOO l'AA:K RE\ULTS ScralcMd -11\Q MY1l1rv• Forthwith, WEDNESDAY. Jl!NI! n. 1ttl Hl11<lv 0.1<me-r, E1s1er 1111•. Cl•lr • 1"111 ll'llllST RACE. 6 lurlofl91. l I. ~ Year FJFTN R•CE. 1·1/1' miles. l ,ear old maloen•. Clalm lna, P11r"' M'IOO. okl• I. up. c11lmff!t, P11rie '"'°°°· SJ>lln<R,.. fJ s.eneri) s.oo 3.00 2.Ml 'D~Mlnl (Plned1J •.OO 2.60 2.10
King Kildlfe jM1hOl'neYJ ,,IQ 3.40 'Turn to Peac1! tV1ne1) J,20 7.60 Curr• Soy ID H1lll J.00 ComPlele Control (J Arterburn) l .10 Tlme-1.10 l/J. Time-l.U.
Scn11the4-wtwr1 V11. fulur1 Kln9. Scr•ldled -DeKlmo Kini.
Road Pll. Plaeatvl!lt, Klnt'I Sii.ciaw. SIXTH RACI!. 6 lurlonQS. l Ytlt old
finl-. Allcwances. Pvrk' 56500. SECOND lllACl. ' hlrklr<l1, ~ .,... ~r lo>C !Plnc.tYI 12.00 •-«> l .40 olds ........ C.l•lmlno. Pu .... I.SD. Chen! Is fl Gllllfl't1 l .60 J·OO Prosaic One IJ Gonulezl Alilti ~ (W karmall) .60 U,60 ).:xi j IO ,,_ '•O Amtkl!'nl rw H•nnetJJ n .to 6.20 ··--· · LI TOr1UQI (PlnctYl 2 . .0 No $ctlld'lfl.
Tlme-1.IO j /j . SEVENTH llACl. ' ru11M<11 ~ Yflr No kr11clles. alG lill!ofs. AllowtN:es.Purot S6scl0. Prom11r De llverv (A lned•) OAILT DOUaLI!, 2·StlnttM &. 1· 10.60 5.60 3.00
l'l'Hllk OM, Plkl Ul.H . Wini« P1l1Ce fJ S.tltr1) l .«I 3.IKI l'utlleG Up (0 l'"lerce) 2.60 THllllD I ACI!, S fur1"111'l· 1 'lffr old Time--1.10 1/S.. m11lo~ 1111i.s brert n C1lltornl1. No Scrtlclle1. Cl&lm!na. P11rH 1'1000. Curr1H1~ LllS 0 L•n',btrll EIGHTH IACE. 1·1116 miles "" l~e ~.OD s.~ ~.l>CI lur1. i VN• aids & up, Cl1uilled Ouee11 Stieb.loll JD H11!l 6.00 l ,l>O AIM>wli'K.11. Puri. $15.COO. PebOI• M•lcl ( Gar>u!ul I.OD Pedr1r.~o (Plncay) 5.tel l.!Jl 1.40 l !m+-.St. Trav1!1n11 Dusi (Pitrct] ,,60 l.00 Screld'led -jwee1 ClndY·Jo, Tlmtc Amtcrioo'1 Finey (J Se ler11 J.00 T,.;_,, Olilrr ... o, Tllftl Oe. B•lbol Ti_.,...1.4) l/S. Rose, Get.w;oy OllitM. Yellow River. Na Scratc:he1'.
· Pepp·;s now associated with a fireho1e com·
p;any which maket· him a valuable fMrl of th. com·
bine: Every syndicete rtffdt a good hole man.
Horses, after all, have to be wash"'. Tom and Frank Rhodes FOIJllTH IACi:°6 turl'"'~·· 3 .. 4 NINTH lllACE •• Nrlon!ls. ' .... ,., okll l'flf Dld meloens. ClalmJ119. PurH & UP Cl1 lml1111 Purse $5SOCI
Research on Tom Staiger produced very little. of Huntington Beach werl!: UillXI. c;~r;,. 1Pir>c1v\ 1.CiS •-EO 1.20 Ruler Swtt11 (Gonlllez) 1.10 l .)0 l 1(1 J'At!end \E Medin1l 1.IO J.8D
Nothing, in fact. This leads you to believe he is in
the. syndicate for the obvious re•ton. He probably
put up most of the money.
among the leaders of an ca1;1orn11 Boy 1s.11en) 'oo J.«:r Aero111n1 w Hlrtldr.l • •.w Kini al P-·s (W H1rrl1) I.Ml Tlf'l\~l.l 11,.
assau1t corps of anglers at L;;;;';;'-iiii;;"';;'·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"~';;";;';;";;";;·~ .. iiiiiiii;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiil Irvine Lake last week. I'
From the foregoing, you will readily recogn~ze ~h e
power of Twilight Farms and agree the or.gan1zat1on
will shortly d ominate the sport of tiarness rac;1n ~.
All of which brint?S us to Buzzie Bava~i. You a re
•. doubtless wondering, if you have read this far, why
Bav::isi was left until last.
Bavasi is president and part owner Of the new Na·
tional League franchise in San D~ego. Prior to that.
Bavasi spent more than 15 years as general ma nager of
.the Dodgers . .
Bavasi's back~round and past history make hlf!l the
one serious weak link in the syndicate. The group~will be
wise to \vatch him carefully.
' ·· The moment a hor~e p,ets going good for the syn·
:· ·dicate, Bavasi will trade him. c.,n .. 111, 1NI, SOY Tr!IMIM, llOC.
Lake manager Russ
Cleary says the Rhodes
duo was among a group of
successful catfish anglers
last week . Olannel cats as
hefty as eight pounds, four
onces were recorded.
The heaviest trout of
last week was boated by
Ben La brose of Downey,
who hooked a two-and·a·
half pounder.
Charles Bates of Fon·
tana bagged a seven-and·
a-half pound largemouth
bass on a purple worm
near the dam.
Staffieri Replaces Morgan
North Stars Change Roster
By RAY PLUTKO
Of Tiie 0.11'( 1'11.t St1fl
Sunny Hills High School
became the first prep camp
-and probably the last this
year -to bless the North
All-Star cage roster with
two of its players as coach
Russ Hawk reported the
change earlier today.
June 22 Orang!!: County
North-South g a m e at
Orange, Coast College, but·
he was forced to relinquish
bis berth due to a family
move to the Eallt Coast.
As for the workouts by the
North, Hawk expressed a
high note of optimism today,
"We're a lot better at this
stage than I had ever an·
ticipated. I thought we
would come along slow, but
the kids have been doing a
great j ob and everything
seems to be falling in
place."
Joel Morgan of La Habra
had been selected as one of
the 10 pla~rs to play in the
Hawk filled that vacancy
today by tabbing Mike Staf.
fieri, a 6-toot-1 backcourt
acc. He joins C r a i g
Childress, also Crom Sunny
l!ills.
IMPORTANT
ANNOUNCEMENT!
lf ""' fll'W accarmls cl~part·
ment cannot ope n yOtJr new,
insured Merc ury Savings
account in less ti1ne than it
takei you to drink the cup of
ooff•• w.. provide to all of
llflJf IOoetl,,.
WE WILL GIVE YOU:
AtlOlhcr cup ol ooffffl
Mercury wants to -
keep all of our . ·
savers happy.
• FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOXI
For Mercury Severt melnt1lnk\1
1nlnimum b.al•ncc of $2,000.
• Mercury Snin1s' 4 1f.tflfi+
policy auurws you the h g est le&al
r•t• of lnternt f0< Insured 11Yln111.
• Funds earn interest from det• of
1ecelpt. Funds received by the tentti
of the montb earn Int.rest from tti.
f11'5t. Interest compaunded d1lly-
bonu1 1ccounts 1vail1bl•.
MERCURY SAVINGS
Mid /OM QtOCi•llol't
... Mlot: 8114 Klott AYI., 811111 Pri
... --Ol'I KMft.,.. UllODll
7112 £d ln1tr ""'" H•nth1rto11 lottll
Aaos1 from Tllo BrOldwtJ $tloppk11 Ctrtltr
NOW UNDER CONSTRUCTION AT HUNTINGTON BEACH
T!iE NEW MERCURY SAVINGS BUILDING
' ' .
I
2
/'
BRIGHT IDEAS FOR
FATHER'S DAY BY
-ARROW_,;_
Come see our complete collection o( Father's
Day specials. Herc arc ju~t two that any Dad
would appreciate.
ARROW King Collon Pcrma-lron sport
shirts in a colorful selection of plaids. Classic
button·down collar. fS.00
Handsomely embroidered &port shirts in
ARROW Dccton Perma-lron .•. the luxurious
blend of 6S % Dacron• polyester, 35% cotton
for the best in durablc·prcss performance. This
scason"s new fashion colors to choose from .
~opular Trimway collar. $5.00
DuPont R.T.M. fJJ.J.l
From~ tl'<.~te shirt oornpall)<
IN COSTA MESA IT'S
O~ PART Me.NT STOit£
1116 Newport Blvd.
OPEN t :JO TO 6 MAJOlt CltEDIT CARDS
FRIDAY IYE. 'TIL t ANO CHA.AG! ACCOUNTS
PARK CONVENIENTLY JUST A F£W
STEPS FROM OUR REAR ENTUNCI
--...
'
Coastal G9lf Roundup
Off the Area Greens
s-1...,.1.
ln a low net tourney on
Saturday in men's club ac·
lion, llal Scbreuer toqk
honors with a net 63. la se--
cond was Bill Rltter with ~
followed by Art Brownell
(68), Gary Haooon (68), Jim
Hitchman (70) and J-Ierb
Martin. Jim ~tiller, Dick
Boucher and Ned Trahan -
all with 71.
A partners best-ball is
scheduled for Saturday and
Sunday ·Will feature a mixed
couples event.
Jtleadowlark
Meadowlark men's club
members are r ea d y i n g
themselves for a trip to
Fallbrook Country ClUb on
June 15 and 16. Applications
are available at the golf
shop. They will compete in a
"Meadowlark Sweep-
stakes."
July 4, 6 and 7 are the
dates sche duled for
Meadowlark's 23rd annual
invitational 54-hole medal
play cb~mpionsbip.
Over $2,000 in prizes will
be awarded. The tourney is
for members of SCGA and
SCPLG A or by invitation of
the committee.
Starting times will be
assigned by ru·ghts with five
classes included. The cham·
pionship flight is scratch
with the other four flights at
handicap within the flig1lt.
Entry fee is $20 which in-
cludes green fees. Entries
close June 21.
Cos·ia /llesa
The .Jaycee Junior Golf
qualifying round at Costa
Mesa Golf and Country Club
is slated for June 17.
The event is an 18 hole
medal play tourney over the
Los Lagos course with tee
times commencing at 10:30
a.m.
All boys residing in Costa
AMERICA'S JllO. l
SAFETY SPECIALISTS
RAYCO
CUSTOM-LINE
• FUii 6 Ill TIEAO
·COOL, QUIET IU##I#'
·MOUNrED flEEI# MINUTES
·llFE OF TIEAO 'UAIA#TEEI
AUl#H IOAO HA/AIDS
"'"' ..._,
fhw Silt R1$1llcec Oki Slzt Prin
Mesa, age 17 and under, are
en couraged · to
participate. The f i v e low
qualifier• will be sent to the
state fmals at Apple Valley
Country Club, June 24,'
courtesy of the Costa Mesa
Country Club.
An entry fee of $1.50 will
cover the cost of lunch and
awards. Greens fees are
dOJJated by the club and the
City of Costa Me sa.
Interested parties should
call 540.7200 for further in·
formation.
Women's club action of
Funny Cars
In Spotlight
At Raceway
Eight experimental stock
cars (funny Cars) will take
the spotlight Saturday night
at Orange County lnterna·
tional Raceway.
The eight funny cars will
square oU in round robin
elimination competition.
In addition to the funny
car show, a special National
Hot Rod Association style
street eliminator bracket
will round out the evening's
acceleration contests.
Three new funny cars will
be unveiled Saturday. Doug
Thorley, Long Beach drag
driver. will pilot his new
1968 rear-engined J avelin.
J ess Tyree of Fullerton
will drive his 1968 Pontiac
F irebird .
The Fiberglass Trends
Corvette, already with a 175
mph speed logged, will be on
hand with owner Marv
Eldridge at the wtieel.
The first race starts at 8
p.m. Tickets are available
at OCffi and at all Wallich's
Music City stores.
.• -:,,
Friday at the Los La~,.
course bad Merrilee D~n
winning the first flight ·a
"Three DUnd Mice" e t
with a 102-24-78 (54). ~ry
Evelyn lmler's 93-18·75 '56)
tied AJverne Forrester's .. fl· ..-
18·74 (55) for second ptaee.
Bev Battistoni won the .J;e.
cond fiJght with a 101·26-75
and Shirley liawkes to0k the
third flight with a ll*79
(54) .•
Kay Ailis won ·Mesa Ll~da
course honors with a ll'l,~l·
76 1451. •'
W.en's club action over :the
weekend at Los Lagos , kad
Bob Steach taking low gfoss
with a 73 while Bud H~Dry
won the low net title with an 86-~-M. Ted Berner (71.9.
681 was second and Qick
Miller (82·13-69 ) followed.
The blind bogey was
shared by Don Alfreds.
Durwood Dartwright i nd
Frank St. Pierre at 77. :
Women's club actiOn; on
Monday over the Los 4 gos
course had Hazel Webster
winning with a 9(1..14·76 171
in the first flight. The event
was a "Most Pars on Par 3s
and Par 5s".
Second flight winner .wa s
Merrilee Dungan's 105-24-81
(8) followed by Rita Kern's
107-25-S'l (6) and Pat
Leonard's 101-25-76 (6 ).
Shirley Cummaro won the
third fligtjt wiUl a 120·36-84
{6)· followed by Elise Stipes
at 118-35-83 (5).
Maxine Assmus won Mesa
Linda honors with -a 111·42·
69 (9).
Entries for the inaugural
Costa Mesa fr.en 's Golf
Championship scheduled for
June 30 have been steadily
filling the entry sheet.
The event will be 18 holes
of medal play with flights
irom 0 to 19 and over. Entry
fee is $10 which includes
greens fees. buffet awards
dinner and prizes.
' '
7.00/6.SOxtJ 7.00/6.50ll13 14.95 1.92
7.35/6.95•14 1.00/6.50•14 15.10 · 1.93
7.75•14 1.so.1• 16.15 1.11 RAYCO 4· PLY
1.25•1• l.llb:t• 17.20 2.35
l.S5x14 l.50x14 Ztl.35 t.511 100% NYLON CORD IODY WHITE SIDIWAllS
7.75115 1.10•15 1l.1i U1
1.15.115 7.10ll15 19.30 ' 2.38
1.4511:15 7.60•15 20.35 t.54
lw. SiAMelb $2.50 lea. Ne tnde 11'1 nqund, s14·~~65:~3~:::~E~
WHITE SIDEWALL -
$1 .93 F.E.T. EACH TIRE
MO EXTRA CHARGE FOR INSTALLATION · NO DOWN PHMENT • MANY MONTltS TO PAT
REPLACE SKOCK AISOR8Eits
EVERY 20,000 llLES •••Oft SOOMR
R11ycosD1116/~ctt.t
S61ck A6s116111
2ra.12!~ ..
101 .. uuu
FallOl4 C1t1~l1111 E111llllll'lll Sllock Ah«._
11s. T1117 ldd -*'.-t and 1t111Hity le'' ,. cs, F • 1-.htf, min ,A1W•t.1nr,
.... Rr)oct's lr•illl'll 1t11tlt1hts lmbH u.i.-
GIVE YciuR CAR LIVING ROOI
lt'.AUTY Alt!) COMFOllT
Royco Casto•
Fittli S11t C1r1rs
1995 .. \ .....
f\ll.1.T IUUl1.fl
100 ... IT (O~\
ltO NOISE! 110 UAK~
ltO POtrE'R LOSS! ltO FUEL WASTE!
R1yc1S.t11
R11/i1nt M1lffn
9!.~, ..
'O•llG1TtA""-
All Rarco mlllt1ttt art built ~ s1 v1 y
p1! Pfittd liw e1,, Blc, V11~. CNI
stet I 1ht!1s, t~t1us iYe hbular llorw des i
"' l!Oiw ... "o letks .. ..11111 • P-r L
I lGW ·:.~.~l MGISl ~ ;~,+;;;;;;=..i~~ ll
INSTALL FAMOUS RAYCO BRAKE LININGS
::~~~·:~::::::.::· s15ss
Mc ul~ It ,....., Tllorf tftiol Mot, •oW ....
11111 -'tl\tfo-h ,.._ ~"' .,,.. .....,._
r.11.,.,. v .. tt1 ,. ..... ,...,.., _ c... .-'liliN., _ .. ,_!loot -
.u .......... _.....," .... -tll'CG ""Q. Utel.tlll1tl Wiii -.... -... • ·~--.. ----~------· ---· -····-._ .... ,11 ..... _ ·-·-·
2860 Harbor Blvd. -Costa Mesa-540-0170
(Between Baker •nd Ad1ms
Stctf'b o,.n I•·"'· t. 9 , ••• MIMI.• M. e Ott.r hp 'Jll 6 , ••• CIM1a41 .. W . .J
All •AIOI Dll mMl'Alff A .. at?MTJllllft I ca t MOaD to " ti Cl'AIM AC(.OUlll'
• __. .... \!f'Zf ••"'tW----·.,.....·•'< ·••.,..=• ..... 4 c • 4 • -.----..----·---..--------~,........_. -.... ------.......
~"!6 ~
DAil y PilOT 2S
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE L EGAL NOTICll
IAll 1'M NOTICI TO ClllDITO•I IU,Il !Oll COUtT Of TK; IUll'lllOI COUllT O( ~
NOTICI TO CllOITOR.S IUPll.IOlt COUtT OI' TN I ITATI 0 !' CALll'Ol .. IA l'O• JTATI 0 1" CALl,Olllltll"'Olt
Plane
01' l\ILJ( f l t. .. 111111' TN I COUWTY 011' OltANOI TMI tou•tT Of Ol.Alt91 (SM. lltl -l ltl ~.C.C.I $TAT ¥ ff CALllllO•NIA 1'01 W I NUMl l l 0-IWI ..._ A~IM
Crash
NOOClll 11 ht. ..... 91.,.11 lot h Ct-.!llOfl TNI COUNTY OI" OAANOI SUMMONS HOTICI CW HEA•tHO Of" l'ITITION
ol OOlllH ,.llYtCI COll.l"Oll.AT!Ott, • i'K. A-J,.,.. HAHHAtf II, l'l'f"ll'Ell, l'llh•Uft Y1. FOii l'ltOa.t.TI Of" '#Ill AHD l'O& Tr11'111«fqr{1l. wl'llM ..,.._, &ddrU$ II l.t'l•Joe ol AllfltT H. IClllST. o.cu .. JOHN ... l'Fl!ll'lll, Dtltetliklll LfnEllS TISTAMIHTAllY
S1'1 H.--t lhHI., ..._., IQCJ>, to. l'IOl'LI Ofl TMS STATI 01' t:1111e Ill Jr-A.,_I COM. 1lo1
C-ty Df Or-.·51•1• 11f C.lltor'"-• ll'wll HOTICI IS Hfllf8Y GIYIH '9 ffW CALl ,.OllHIA le tM ,.....,. --Get.-.,,_ 11 fr-A C:• o.u....i I bulP; lr .... ftr It _.,. '9 M l'l\lot '9 ~l"lllGf"I ti )flt 1Clo"' n.tmtd ~I ...... 1 HOTICI! IS Hti11111V GIYIH 'TMf Vflll.f 0. OHlSfH, Tr111111• .. C1), 11111 IN "'MM 111¥1f'lt tllltM ... 1111~ IM YIU are ,,_.,... cllnct.I tio ftlt I Wrl,_ i,..wlftfo IC. C.;rrlt111 1111 fti.oi 1'fr•I~ 1 """-bll'llMH lddAtt It HU lllY"*"lli 11141 ~I 11'"1 r-lr .. '9 Ult ........ 11'11 1'"41"' Ill ,_ '-tl'f C4mllltlM ""tllll !er l'robete Df tM WfH " 1111
In Baja W1Y. A111hllm, County ol Or11>11, Still o1 wltn 1t11t ~.., ~" 111 1119 lffflCll ti lfW 100¥t n.tmM 1lll11tlff wltl'I !I'll •DOW• "'""" OlcHl!ll 1..-w !fie C1tilotn1t. ot 1111 t 1t1• of tM lbcwf fllllllttl tollfl fl' Clil.t. fl/ !ti. 1lil0¥I 9111ftlld cwn lft lfll IMlllftCI of LIHlrl Tillll'l'lf'li.l"I' lo ltllt
The ltf-rl'I' lo bf tr1n1i.r.ci t• iou1111 lo .,,Hftl "*"· wllll tM lllCftMr'I '"°"" ..,1111M Kllon ..,_,,, "1tn1t.....,. 1'1tltioMf', reftr111C1 1o wlllcll 11 Midi lot ~t 31?1 Ntw1>11rl ll\IG,, H--1 11.oi, -"'fl. 10 ll'wl vncl4or1'9 .... 11 TM 0Hlc1 '" tl kl Court, wlll'lln tEH cllYf 1lhlr ! ... l\tr"'-' oertltulan efld 11111 tM "IM •N CO.,nty OI °''"'t. S1111e·o1 C1lltwlllll. of"" "'"'°' ........ 1e1 I , 1111'> str .. t. C..I• MN"lc1 ... '°"' OI 11'11• Mlm"""I· " ...... Id 111•C• ot l'Nt1rlnt1 ;.... ........ Ill• ...... Sa~ •r-ty 11 dbe;rfbo!d In •-•I Meu. C1lltort11<1. Wlllcl'I 11 ll'Nt •!•(• ol ... n111n tl'Nt •bo"* n•m-O (.OUnlw. o• •llhl11 tor Jun.t n. , ... , •I t :)O '·'"·• 111 tt... •11 I 1utulln!l1I -!Ion of lllf u..,lu bu$1MU of IM uflclu1l1Md '" I ll <Mlttfl tHllltY lllYI Ir MNH eilllwlltr•. tOUr1r'10m of Of,Hrlmflol' He. ' of uhl bu1l1Wn known If Dorin ~NICI COrl>OI'•· Hl'l1lnlnt1 to ll'Nt Hl•le of •~\d dll(ld~"'· Vou ''" l'l~rR¥ notll!llll ~I \lf'llfoM "°"' court, 11 IOI N, ltMfW.), In 1111 (l'Y of ll!lfl 10\CI llM;ll'ld 11 ll'1 Nt•POrt &~ .• •ll!lln sl• mQftll'I• Iller t111 llrot Pttbllu• <(I lllfl 1 wrU!Jn r101t011~I,.. Pi.•fl1111, ,.lcl $11111 it.•1. C1lllornl1.
NtWPOrl l•~l'I. COUn!y ol 011.,.., Sl•ll llO!I of 11'11• nolltl. 11&lnllll Wiii lokf fl>Clpmel'll 111' 1nw monew 01lld Junt ~. ! ....
Of Tirl DlllY "!IOI St1fl ot (e!ll,.tnl1, Oai.d MIY 1), l ... , or GllM-.tem11noff In ltw nim11&lnt •I W I! Sf JOMN
By CRAIG'LOC KWOOD
B , .• n n a n " A ... ' ' ' '"" bulk• I••"•' ... wlU ~ to11Wrnm1 IHI (i,•• M. H<IU~k!.... •rl1lnt -eo<>tr~rt . .,. w!ll •o•ly.. .... CO\lftt'• Cr.irk. '
• Oii IW' •ll•t ..... lot d•y ... JUI¥, , ... , ti E•KUlfl• ol the-WI!! COllPI tor ...... '""" r111.i Ot<'lllM.cl In """ ••M• II. K-
Ma-Cl ll d r I tr 10:00 4.M. •t n.. lncl-n&otnl &~flk. nos ol IN 1.bclw n1tnff' fK«Hnl COl'f\Pl&lnl. "' N,rtll N1.._t 11\riii . ._ e an • O ~ • ., II n a E 0.111ttll111r111, it.""'Mltn. County of lllrWlll:I R • l'rllllc•• Y" ''"' _.. 111o9 ""'In of .. 1H_, .. _,. klcll. CtlN. fl.Mt
Bea•h a popular surfln< °''"''· s1111 o1 c111twn111. ·~· •1 L•• -tt•1 fflahtr __ ,.,. .. , ... 1111 cem-T•h '*1n1 ,,. ' • · So l1r ~• •-n It !lw tronslerff(i\, ltJ •· Ill• StrNt 11t.IF!ll ar fMi --· Jwlo """"' Att.....+ flf .,.ttt.....,,
workt firn•re. llnd "Flippy'' •11 """'~n ••11"M• 1nc1 •dd•-•1 l.Gl!d .,.,lc .. 11 ~. C••ffnll• "'a' 1M¥1111 111 "",., .. ..+111111 tlM "-llml't •ueu"*' °'""' c:o.11 0,,11,,. •11t_11 ~-!11~ Tr1n•ferorf1) for .,.. "''"' ~fl 11n T1h 1110 S*Wl 11111<1 I• tll/1 --fer .. lliot t Wl'lllM Jllf\'I t. 6, IJ, 1ffl tn..,
Hoffman pioneer big-wave ... 11. •••: 1111_,,. ..,. •••"""' •llffl" ,. ""'"c-111111. Oorln C""'•lnY l'ICO'-l!M, ]"1 l'uftlltl'llcl O<'llMI c ... 11 01llw Pllol, 01tN J-10. IHI.
rider from Capo Beach, -""' e1v.i .. N__, efftl'I, °''""· w. ... .10 •ncl Junt •· 1,, ,., 1... ,.,.., w, E. ST JOHN. c1or11 C1llt0tnl1. 9,. Mlrkt Y, IC-recently experienced what 0111C1: J_. i. ,.... LEGAL NOTIC E °""9tv c1e11t
Could ha... b • e n Verlil 0. Ololt:-,.I NOLEI , flllSMON I WAI Nlll • a Tr1n1ler" f14t»4 MU WlltN~ ..,....,,,,.-
• ( Tiit llld_..,.,.,I link Clll.TIFICATI 01' IUllNllS 11¥Wlt' Hiii&, C1lfw1111 Mlli
permanent Wipe OU . IWJ E. °''""""""" l'ktlllwt lllr111 N...,. T•h n n 1 11!-IUI -111·11M R e p 0 r t s M a r " e At1o1Mlrn, C•llto<nl1 The unde<s'9ned .... l'llr.itw U111ty h i AltvMJI lllf "'-'•tiff ~ Eu row No. llJS.H 111111' 1,1 CDNlucllM 1 El<P61'1 -ll'M'<l'1 .. ulllill>t<I 0.1-CNll Daito "ilol,
MacClelland : llevs 8 n d "uft"'""' °"'""' c .... , 0111w "1to1, 111111...u •• co-.,1r1111r1 •t 1113 0.11, Ju"' 11. tt. ,, 1nc1 JulY '· 1... 1w>-a JUflf 13. It.a l6'f.41. St·~·. 11 ••• , c1111orn1.. uncle<' """ fk·
Flippy were trying to clear LEGAL NOTICE -1,u1ous 11r ........... of 111.l"11x COMPANY .------""~,0-'CC.:.=----•nd ll'Utl illd f!rl"I It c~ el """:1 ----------------the mountains to San Felipe "·tM" 1011crw1,... .,.r.....,.. whose ,....,., In tuM P~lt
in Ba1'a California when the Clllt!P-IC•t l 01' IUSINISS '"" ltl<ltet DI •nlMftc• ..... lallltwo. Ml· Cll Tll'ICl•T• 01" COll'O••TION
Cessna they were nying ti>f' u...te~s·!~:;;·~~ ~.~':': ... !1 c-wit's. Cl'lt rlH s1 .... enGDri, ltt South ll'Dlu~:::":flif,~oi~ :~:.::1ss G1>tll"• 1 butlllfH II l)H Vlt l.ldo, F(lrmot• Avenue. Lo.I .. ,.,~let. C11!f. THE UNOERSIGHEO C011"0 ll,1.TION
deve\onod engine trouble. Ne .. l>Ol't lle1c11. ca11t0tn!1, _,. tl>f lk· J_,, Guller<tt aecker. 111l Otllr clOn llerettr c1n11Y 11111 ii 11 «Wlucll.,.' I'~ llllou1 firm n~Me DI GOLOl!N 000R Streel, llree. C11il. blnl!Wtt lottlecl ti Home l'urr1liltwlf"I lien·
The engine froze up im· 9EAUTY SALON Incl tl\lll .. .., flrm 11 D•led MIY ''· 1.... l•I Ca .• UM w. Llncoln. Atloli'Hl!M. $11 w .
d . d h be ...,,,l>Glld of Ill• follow!"" ""on, wl'lllte S. Cl'tlrlel Sl•oetldl>rl · lttl'I, CO.I• M•t1. C1llfornl•, uncll• 1111 m e 1ateJy, a n t ey gan "1m1 l"l\l!l 1rodplictDfrllld<inctllll Jatffol'tGut11rr1rlec:k1r OdUIGul fir"' n1rn1 (If H OME
g lid ing toward the beach lollowo: STATE OF CALIFORNIA, FUll.N l6HERS RENTAL co. •ftd ll'Utl 1tlG
d
Robtrl L, Jick1<1n. 433 L I~ Pir~ COUNTY 01" LOS ANGl!LES, u . llrrn Ii comtlOted of th• lollowlll9 to•· a n checking OUt. possible Orl•e, NewPQrl !etch, Cllllornia. On MIY !1, ltM, before ml, I Nol1ry "'r1llon, wll(ltt DtlnclPlll plln ol
0 Pul)tlc In Incl fCf 1tlot Countv ""' Stole, ~ .. I I lollo sites for a n e m ergency Ian• •1ec1,:~~,,1?·. ·~.,,· ·~ ~·~·11• ••·•·rect s. c111r1t1 SIH•ndctrf ""1 ne .. • •• wo: .,.... ~ ~ -· ~ --~ OltAll'F$ INC .. '"' U"l'll•lll\I', Stn ding. They coasted a long (Or St1I• ol C1lllornl1. Orinoe C0<,ont~: •"" JOSffh Gulttrret 8Kktr known lo me 01.,.0, Cit!!.
about a mile and \hen spot· On June t7, lfM. tw!o•• me, t NollN to tw ~e Pt•lfln.:.i 7"°11• ! n•m•; •.:_: WITNESS lh h1ncl thl1 !hi daY ol Mt~, • Public In Ind ''" ••Id Stole, 111,...,..11._, IUIK(rl Ill lhf !h" "' ,.......,.. · • 1'41. led a likely )OOking ,pot. •PPe••f'<I R-rl L. Jtck"°" kno .. n !o ...., ICk-ledeld to mt lhll !hi¥ t~KVltd !C«-lte Se1U ! 1>e lfll no ,,,., ,,,..., GRAFF5 INC .• But the likely looking 'pot ,!t 1o :'!~""' w,,,," •,•m• 11 •utt«rlt.. WllMH mw 11ar.a •"" •••l. 11.11,. 11~kio~. ,_,,,._ """ W " n•trument '"" (OFFICIAL Sf.Al l -•• ••
P roved io be a soft ~pot . and 1ck...,wledffd ,,. •~l'CUlfd ll>t 11mo. STATE OF CALIFORNIA. (OFF ICIAl 5£AL! M. e. Kellew COUNTY OF ORANGE . u .
LEGAL NOTICE .
LEGAL NOTICE
'"'"""'' NOTtC• TO ClllOITOltl IU .. l!RIOll COUlltT 0111 T .. lf tTAT• 01' CALll'OllUA 1'0. TNI COUNTY 01' OaA ... I
Na. •·"'9U
~llllf ttl Her.In l!ll1t l:tflh H1 ...... y, o.c .. ..o.
NOTIC.E IS HEllEaY GIVEN M lilt crt<lllon ol ll>t 11tow noft'led dec:-l
11111 all fltt"°'IS Playl"' cMlm' •Nll'll! ""' ukt dllC"°""I ~rt '"""ln!d II lllf fftlM• with ll'lf PllCnlo',.. VGIKl'ltfl, Ill tM olllc.1
ol lf>t cto~ of l!le •bflvf tnl!lttd cour1. er
!fl """"'' '"""· wlll'I ll'HI ne<ftl""" VGIKl'lfrs, 11'1 lltf urodt rtlflned Ill 1111 l1w olllc• e! .... 411ar,..,, Alie-H1N1'1'
Cl&••· 10S l'tM Slrwl, °''"'~' C.lllornl1, ..... ld'I Is !hi ,lace ol butl ... H ol 11'>• unokrol1ned Ill Ill m1lhlrt Mr1tlnlnt II>
!hi n l11t DI Mid Meld"''· within· ~"'°"'1111 Iller 11'1 fltll llUllllc.lloll ol llllt nollcr. tlthld M•Y '12, 1KI. AllCI He""Y Cllrk AdMlnl~lrelrl• of 11'11 1!:11111 DI !I'll •bnwt n•mH <IKldlf'tl
Alic• M1rw111o Cl•rtl. HJ l'lrtt Urn \,, °"""'•· CaNl1r11n• T•h 11141 Slt-JfJt A""'"" Ill ..... lllb lrllrl• 111 ,,. l'lf l'ubllOMG Orin.• c .. .i O~!"' ~llftl, Ma• 7l. )I 1nll J""' I, 13, IHI 11 ....
. FILM PRODUCERS IN HAWAII Greg M•acGillivray and Jim ~~reen1an . O r ange
County surr film makers left 1\'londay for Honolulu on a series m. s cheduled
showings of their current surf film ''Free and Easy." Greg and J1n1 pla.n to
spend the next three weeks sh.owing and .fif~ing on Oahu, with ,an occas1ona~
side trip to some o{ the outer islands. Whi le tn France, Greg, Jim a nd l\1ark
Martinson p lan to team up with Corky Carroll, and the quartet t hen will head
in to Spain and Portugal.
the a ircraft's wheels sank "·-·II v. ,,.. Not•N Pulll•<<•11to•,.11 ~ _, ,, , • • , 0 ..,.. .. _ "" "•lrte:l~•I Oll!c• !ft "" mt I .,., f¥, .. 1161 . LEGAL NOTICE enough 1.0 nip the Cr aft OVer Noll"' "uDllc · Ctlllornll Los Art1tlet (°"""' l>elor• """ I No!lrv Pulllk l" •n<I for 1al(I "'lntlN I Olllce In County Incl H•I•. •HIGl1111 ~ .. In , dulw l----------------on its hack. Hoffman and o.,,,., eouni.. ......oc (M'lf'll\nlofle<t ""' twci•n, --1"" .,.. ,..mn "®lllMCI Or•.... C(l,Olll O•lh' "llol. MacClell.and were securely M• c ......... 1u 1on E•ol•.. MIY :io •ncl ,;.,,.. •· u. ,., lffl ,44 H ••H 11111"" 11or111unc1 k-11 to noe to C••Tll'ICAT• OI' 1u1~1s1 M1rd'I 11, ltn boo ""' $«~!•.., ol Ill• COfl>Orallon 1!11! PICTlflOUI NAMI
seat belted inside , and sus-•ut>11s11ec1 o•-• CN•• 0111'1' 1111o1, LEGAL NOTICE ~·1e11•M !I'll w11111n 1"'1.-t .. bell.Ill 'l'ht -oer111nec1 11ee1 certHY 111 i. -.. tained n o in).UrieS. June 13, 7', 11 Incl JulY ~. 1'41 !11»4 ol lhl CWICltallon lttfl'tl" Mmef, •n<I Guctl ... 1 bu1IMU 11 !OJ Nortll "lcfflC 1cll.no'#ltd9H It 'lll' ""' •ucll .,..._.,ia,, COltt Hwv.. L•111t11 l~1cll, (111 .. ,..11, The plane. however, was LEGAL NOTIC E MO'l'1c1 TO c••o1To11 t•Ku!ed ""••m•. ..-, 1t11 11c1111out 11 ........... o1 TNI
d th IUl'llllOll COUIT 011 TH• In wn ..... Wl'Hl-reo4. ' "'"'""'""'"'wt MA(HINE SCEHI .,,., 11111 uld """ Is angerously near e water sT•T• 0111 CALll'ORNtA l"OR mY "'"" .,,., •H!•...t '"' offlc111 ...,1 !hi ~Id If -to111tw1ne ffl'SOll, ,..-.
1"·»11' tl'lt COUNTY 01' OllANGI IN• ""' ttlr In 11111 c1t11fk:1t1 llfll 1bo¥1 ""'""' In lull at'MI •'-C• of ,_.lcllncf I• I• T IDE DANGEROUS ClltT!lltCATE O' I USINl'S NI. A·t"JI wtltt.... 101..,_, PICT ITIOUS NAMI E•l•f'f-ol ..... ,., I!. Sffllth, O.Cu llcl. !OFP-ICIAL SEALl Corl w. Holl~•. "" °"'"° w.~. They knew the incoming Tht Undt•th1Md "" c•rtltv w• ••• ((ltlo NOTICE IS HERE8Y GIYEH lo fl'lt llo1ellt c. w...... l L•1un1 •••ell, (1tllor .. 11. fd Id · k th ( G\lelltlfl t butlntt1 •I 117' E11! Ca.11 l!dltor r tnll bo¥ med ~ t Ho11,., Puttllc: . C•H!er !• tlllld Ml• 11, 1 .... l e WOU Sin e p ane HIPl'lw1w, Cor-del Mir, C1Hforl)ta. ~ .. ell i:w:,..,...1 l'll~l"91c1:1~o •••ln,r tt:. ~rll'ICl1t1I Olllc. In Cirl W. Hotl•r
and they attempted to move uncl~• th• 11c1111....,, ll•m ~.; ... ~ 01 THE wld decedenr ••• .... u1re<1 to 111. 1~em. o •• ,.., Count. s11i. 01 camor..i1, °'•"'' COllftl'I': ·Part II of Venture On the
"( u f [ ( ( th GOWN SHOP Ind lhtl Mid llrrn It corn· w!lh 11'>1 necen1 ... \>Ol,/CMrt, In 11\e oll!t• Mw (Cll'l'IMln.loon E•Plret °" Mir 71, 11&1, bffore ""' 1 Ntill...,
Dahlquist's Surf Surfing
Scene
I • n 01' una e Y ey Were P~<I o! ll'I!' lollowlnp H'"""" """°'' of 11'11 er.Irk of the 1llove .,.111111t1 COllrl, at Jut¥ I. 1"9 Public 1n Incl for u ld Sltle, H•Mlllllw
unab le to even b udge it. n•m•• In lull ind Pl1ce1 or r1.•ldenc1 ••• 1o "''''"' tnern. wlll'I tlle ,,..,,,11,. l'i;ttll,t1M 0,.1111• CNtl 01IW Pllr>I. ·-·"Id Corl w. Hefler knew" hi "" "'
Macctelland. .n
.'
·USC •1 '~•'",~"c. voud·1e•s, te "'' underol•""" 11 1111 Trv•• M.,. .,, Jll "'" June •· ll, 1... ~ be tl'HI "'"'° w""°' ...,,.,. 1t 1uti.crlllld • , " Fulton """ Ell11bo:tl'I II!. 0.N rlment, Crocker CUiien• N1ilontl fo ~ within ln•lrumen! 11'11 lt~-lldl!· footb a ll great , ran mOTe Fullon, ~ll S••Werd ltOllG. Coron~ <ltl 8enk,. W•llO!l•I ll•nklnp A.\tOC:l•l!on. •lo LEGAL NOTICE et! 1'11 •••tu!ed 1111 llfflf,
th · h ., h · M•r. C•llldrnlt. Nnrll'I lltaMIW1w. Senti Ant, C1llfnr~I•, !OF Fl(IAL Sl!AL1 an e1g t m 1 es to t e u ny DMed .JirO:'t>:tt.19: F"ltnn wttlcl'I 11 •h• o1ft c• a1 llll•lne" M 111.:l ---,-0--,-,,-,-0-,-,-,--',.,c,-,-.,-,-,-,-,--I 1-1. s. W•l•M
fishing Comm unity Seek ing John C Fulton underol<1Md In I ll fl'IAt~rt Hrl1lnln• In TltUJT NO. '1tf NolAl'\I l'ul'll!c • C1lllornll
help. Air t e m p e r a tu r e !I~ ~u;.·1~1,or1~:;. o::.:; ~."~'Na""' ::.,;,~1·!~,.~1 ,,:;1~1.~1e~~:1'1~~u':!.'h~; .~\; Fl~ J:~.~1~~!'8;.1~! ~.~:::,.:;~~· t,:.,~; ~~~"~:·~:~• '"
hover e d at the 120 degree Public in •nd ior 11IG sru1. i>er:ianatlw ""'~!:.O Ml•'°· nu. Comp111. •• 1ru1tee, o• 1uccet.or fn11t.,. ~ ... C,,~;;~ll>n lbtpl,e•
m ark as he Came into the •P1t•Atf<I Joi"' C. Fullen Ind l!llJl bell'I ~. (roc•er Chl1ent N1Hon•I l•nk, or IUllllllV!ld trUllH, l)y tnll c•rtiln ~ l'ub!l1hetl Otlf\PI COlll 0111\1' •1111!, . Fulton know~ to mt "' be Ille Pl!'"°"' A Hl llcN\l l ll"klM of Trutl e•t CWlfCI lw OORIS L, WHITE. ~y ll, .10 •rod Jvfll 6, ll, 1... flll-4& Trek Continues
Sur£ fans are invited to
continue on Ron Dahlquist's
trip through North Africa
and Asia via part II of his
.~ travel diary.
·-F EB. 16 U ndf'r Way
to J\f orrocco
~ Left L isbon early. a rrl\•ed
1\tadrld, now en route to
Casabla nca. M or e b ad
w eather. Pla ne jump~ a nd
b ucks , , • R-0llercoasters!
U nrtal.
F E B. 17 A.it:a dlr, Morroccn
Morning srent looking for
'M•aves. Little surr. no sun.
T hey send me on to Agadir,
3.10 miles south {l( Cas ablan·
ca. Situation predicta ble: no
s un. no \Yaves.
FEB. 18 Casabla nca
Cre:w cam e b ack, woke
mr up. 11nd told m e the~' had
locat ed fa ir surf a nd we ird
color&. ~f11ddy \.\'a te r n rxt to
c lear watPr , blue , brnwn,
\\1lite a n a qua tic
m osaic.
The n we filme d in oltt
J\1e dlna. H u m a n \.\'a ste,
filth and s l c kn es 5
e \'erywh er f'. Streets n a r·.
r ow and crnwded , 1m e ll
c verpowt rlng.
FEB 19 Casa hlan ca
Qffshores! Blue sky!
\Vaves! But no s urfing. We
were headed north to a
place where the s ur! was
supposed to l)(' better. \Ve
~arrived to rind an erratic
break. and some surfers
wh{l had been living there.
Maintaining
We return to do some
more shots of surfers on
·"tiorse drawn carts and
• mysterious Moroccans in
hooded jalabas. Corn <'an be
packed in film c ans too !
• The group leaves exotic
Morrocco after s e v e r a 1
discouraging days or no
surf ... bad weather. and
perpetual storms. \Ve next
catch up with Ron and th<'
.t'Urfers in Madrid. where
they experience a crowdf'd
Ojght during ~ f u 1 1 -o n
rainstorm. From Madrid on
to Tel-Aviv in Israel via
VLllllgf! 8 h O u l i n g for wkos1 "'"'"5 ••• •ubK•lbed to tll• ... 1t111n A"ocl•lfon , ~n unm•rtltd women •rod fecarded:l---------~~~~---
ass;stance a n d cnid water. 1n1trumtn1 •"" aclrn<twledfH ~ ••· 11..,, Mlc~••I o·0ono11nn Oc:•-r 1l. 1N1 In 8Q ••n, P•et M1 o1 LEGAL NOTICE KUted ...,.-~.,..,. AHhlenl Trvil Offlt•r nnkl•! ltl!«t"'' al Ofll'tPe County, Rome. Athens, anrl then Sign language a nd will IDFF!CIAL SEAL\ e~eculo• DI 11>o w+u ca111crn11 1nc1 ourou1nl 1o ""' ttrl•lnl--------------
1 red "<f " · hi J<lsei>fl E. O•v!• el lf\t ,.,.,.,.~ n•"""' a•c~~~~• Nol kt of Oll1ult trod ElttllOll to ~II 1Alt .. J9 from Tel Aviv to Cey on. power secu ,-evs etg wot•"' Publlc·C.lllnrn11 Fr•n•lln '"cl l'••lllt.ll"' •h~r"""°'' rttaroffG M••cl'I 5. 1 ... In NOTtCI TO c•eo1To1ts
In Ceylon we next pick up men a nd two fishing boats ~;~~: .. C::~' in ,., Etti 11111cs~"';.. " ~~ ... ~~·~::.'w~ ::..i'::1~::a1 !~:'.~~ :! :~:,'-E11b0,it c~~~::.:rA ~~~
the n arrativein a hotel with which set out quickly lo the M• c ...... m1111011 E••lr~ ;:~·~Ji • '" • .,, ••Id °""" o1 Tru11 11!11 at .wn11c •utl\on TH• cou NTY o!' oRANOI
J B d site of the crash. June 11. 1t111 AH1tneYi.., l •ecvt11 ror c11h, 1•""'-'1 tnoM• o1 tn. Unit~" 111. •·JtMt a name out of a ames on F . Pu1>111"""' o •• ,..,. '°"''' OAllY Pl1r>1. Publlol'lllCI 0,.,.,~ CN~t l'>•llv ,.1101, Stft!es oi 4mer1c1. 11 ti.. rn•ln we1t .,.. E1t••• DI lll;UTH a. MclltlDE, Oec:e1.,.
tale ... then our bus driver lippy saw the two boats Jun••. u , 70, n , 1,.. ,,,.., M•Y ,3, :io .nc1 Ju ... •· 13• 1 .. 1 t(IUI •••nee "' IN F1r11 Amtrlun Tiu .. .o. coming w ith all those men •nsu••na &"" Trust Comct•nv bulklln~ NOTICE es HEllEllY G•vEN hi "" arrives ... his name: James LE GAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE 1ac11ed 11 "" -th•111 co•ne<" o1 FH111 cr.01ior1 "" 1111 •bctv• ,..nod 11Ket1en• Bonda! For real. Outasighl standing u p looking a round. '"" M•ln strfft>o 1t11111 c!l'I' o1 s.n•• At1o1 ..... , 111 N•lflnl 11 .... 1n1 c1&1m1 ••••NI""'
guy, a real classic .•. the a nd he thought it m i ght be a c 11111 .. 1c .. :~~'; aus1N1ss, "·•o• ~!~1~:~: ,~11,•:;•,;~"~="~i:iZ: ~_:·: !:.:C:. ==~=~ :1.:;i,,"1n ':'. :!:ic.
P.rn.lll. Jone& of Ceylon looting party. He s prang up ..-1cT1T1ouJ NAME cr.11:T1111c11r1 o" aus1N•s1 tf\l!t 1n. . .,. "'"""" st..,,reot 1n 1111 o1111e crtrk o1 '" ,.,.,.,.. .,,1111111 court."'
i h . I d th t~t unduli9ned doe• c~•llfr ill<! I• c.,.,. l'lcl ut-,..,,. "''"' Count• lnC! Sl•lt dP<crlbed '" IO "'"""'' the .... Wit!\ ll'lf .....:_,... f'ER 25 rom IS p ace u n er e Gudl"tl • butl""" •• ,.,, w l.lna>!n THE IJNOElllSIGNEO dO l'l•••lw c1r!ll¥ lot "'al T'rtc't "'1. UO\J•!' sft<lwn Ofl -.hen."'·'"' ll!Mlllrlll!l'fl!ICI ., tlN otflctt
_. . . plane ... the On ly Shade forf A"~" An~~olm. Colll(lrnli, Ul'l(!!j. 1111 lie· 11111 M Is CM<!Ucl!no • b111lflf1' •t 1631 f M111 •ec<1rGld In I-f?. page JJ ol ol Tl'lflr All<trne,1 WELL & FlllTZ, UJOJ
VA n Diema n 's Lodge some di"stance. a nd looked 1111°"' firm ,.,,,., of Lincoln 11,...ch M!ll!ll• Marw-s1r11r. s.n•• An•, c1111a•nl•, Ml1c~111neau1 M•P•·."'C'Ot'd• al Or1n110 I!. Pl'll!.lt1e~hl1. wMrtf<!r, CelJfornl•,
C t M•nor '"" lh•I 1tld firm 11 c-..ed al under ""' llct/lloin llrrn nam• ol TAl lT Counly. C1llfornl1. . '""ldt It llM> ~l1ct ~ llullt'llU ol llM>
• ey on o ut. He d•"dn't k now whethe lhf lollowlfll! H .. on. Wl'loH ......... In tull CH ~M!CAL COMPA NY I ncl "''' ••IG !•Id ult Wiii be mldf wlltlout '-"' uttderoltntel In ,,, mltt•ro 111rt11n1 .... TO r: llncl 1tl•tt ol teslcllnct It 11 101_,, firm It comPOtfll al !fie loltowln.t HflClft, or w1rr1"ty, •• .,,.,..led or !mPlled, i s lo tM otl•"' of ••lcl dec:Mlnl, wltl'llft ti•
V an Die m a n's lod ge ii; a to run or d e fe nd the plane. M••••r•' '•"'°' 1,.,..,1,.., w Lindo"""""•"''"" 1n 1u11 1nc1 Pl•c~ o1 re1IG•"c• 1111 11111. ,ou1111ot1 ,, 1111:um11r1ncn to n'IOl'lll• •lier ,,,. t1r11 ...,e11c1t1on ., tlt1'
s mall plac~ ri~h t on the F · I I H ff Av• .. r..11;1o1, C•llf. I• 1• ,.,,_,, te·wll : 11t11tr tn• r~m11n11111 11r1nc1.,.1 ,..,.... d"" nol!c~.
w a t('r in Colombo. We've i n .a d YB 0 a m a,n 0111<1Jutlf 4,lf61. Sl'Ntlclon .... Wlloon, 101, N. Slllt.onili.fl<!h'ucured by wlotlO•ed al tr11st Oiled Mtv n, 1K1 nd recognize r e n n a n s M•re•r•• T•Yl(lr L•wln• wowburp11, 1n<1i.ne . 10 wn : 11.1111.Xt with 1n1"''' 1111<-it.rlt!ur e. M~8•1Gr • b e e n J 0 0 k j TI g f 0 r f l d Sl11t• of C~ll!ornl•. Or•noe Counlv: WITN ESS m¥ h11nd !hit 11th ''' el from Jtr1t1•rY ?0, 1961 •• prow!ded In 1•IG llulh A. G1rrlonn,
hi
~enerous or m s e a e on June 4, 1,69, ttolore ,..,, ~ Nol~•· M1w. JtH. """ 109rtw ... 1111 frri;, cll••D/!1 1n11 ~.. Co-E•tcoto•' o• '"* w111
som c t ng to s urf. •. the stoicAlly beneath his ever-"ublk in ~nd ror ,.1., si•tt. 11.,..,n•llv s. rt . w1 LSON pen''' or 1111 Trv•~e """ such olhH or !h• •1>o~• """'Id doc~tnt
USllff) Story, , , and \\IC Cflllfl'" \lisftfJr h l IPltl'l•!d M1r9M~! T1v1Qr Le\lln• know" ST Al!' 01' INDIAWA ) tUMI •• MtW hive bern •dv&nced by llW' Wl:IL & "lllTJ, present s traw a . la m• IO be lh• P••>ar> Who!• ~ ...... !• COUNTY OF WAIHUCIC 1 II nwnu '"" hold•• ol .... 1d """· with In· AH•mt'f Al L•w. d idn'l find the \~!Orld's h if?:-sullSCtll>ed lo !he wl!hln lnitrumenl •nd OH THIS lllh G•• DI M••· A,D, lffl. llf•~t. 11 onovlded In ••Id Ottd of Tru1t. U.M1 I . "1111.11~•1'11•
gest i;urF, but the wa trr Iii llav,.aiian surfer Mark \\1EARY G RING OS •cknowledeP<I •l'I• ••ecut.G rht "''"'· t>e'"'' '"'· M•,.,. c11111rn P•vl, • !'lottrY 0111<1 : JuM 11. iKI. w1ut11••· c 0111ar"11
!OFFICIAL SEAL I P1,1bllt Jn tt'MI for 1111 ••Id Counlv 1n<I F•llSt ANIE lll l(AN TITLE Tel: IUJI •N.fJ4J
AA degrees, a nd the locals Sed lak will be spen ding Using rope and manpower orm•h v . u11 s1.t., reo1d1 ... tMre1n. c1u•• comm1111-.1 1Hsu•11HCE • T•US'l' .aHll'Mt• ""C•l•K•lw•
'h."'ed so m••e h •'nlercst the Mexicans assisted their No11,... Public -c1morn11 •rod '""°'"' Per .... 1111' •P""''"" s. 11. COM"ANY "ubosl'll!d or • ..,. c1111t1 0111¥ ~HM. ,. mo.~t Of the SUmmer "•lnc!Oal Ot!lc• In Wll!lllft known lo ,..... to be t"" p~rlfln lw ALAN A. l(NOIC Mt Y J), JCI Incl Jun• •. !), Ifft •11-4&
in t he sport that V.'e Jet one north.()f-the-border ami2os Or•ng• Counrv w11ow nam~ It tub.col~"' tl'lt within In· AUl•l•nt 5~cre11rv
f it i •1 l c ornpeting in Orange in righting the upturned My comm1 .. 1on E~PI•~• urument, ,..., 1cknowied11"" 10 ""' lh•I Pul)11•11•<1 O••nG<t C011st 0111.., Pltot. LEGAL NOTIC E
c OW g 1'e I a r~'. ('ounl)'. The 3-A rated M~•ch 71, 19n "" ... ecutM 11>o '"'"~· Jun• u. 70. "· nM ..,..,l--------~==~--Ob\'ious ly a natura l. he crart and securin.it: ii. hii:h Pulll!11'11'd O•&n~e , ... ,, 0•1"' ,.lltlt, IN WITNESS WHEREOF , I h•v~ llllOLUTION 0,. TH• .
d I Ha\vaiian S urfing Ass n. and drv . None 10 soon. it June•· 1l, 10, n. 1\161 01~ ""••unto .et '"' h~"" •nn •Hl•ed "'" .,.. L E GAL NOTICE 10A1to 0111 sul'E•v110.11. 011 i;too up on h s first V.'R\'(', f h t . tlc l•I .... 1 , ... d•¥ and •t•r In 11'111 ---ORit.NO• COUNTY. CALlll011N t4
and r ode right in. per ormcr opes o en· proved. Hofrman 's shirr. set LEGAL N OTICE C•rtillc•lt 11r11 •toov• wrltt•n. Notte• OI' T•usTIE'I u1.t "''' 11, ,,..
ler the upc om·1ng San ·d d · th · M•"' C•""'" "1u• •11111 a,11..., 0n mo11on "' s"'""'•.or ••t'!". 'u"'
H t··• 1. ai;1 e ur1ng e moving w as wo11"' 11u1111c "' 1~-1 e Ii U\P\I Up C\'ery lme . ('I ( \ be SVl'EltlOlt COUltT 011 THI On Jul¥ 11. lffl, 11 11 :00 it.,M., secon<llCI •ncl t ittled, le-" h cmcn e contes . ginnin2 to float away on STA'l'! OF CALIFORN IA 1'011 M• Commlulon 1~"1'" ll~LIAILE TITLE COMPANY II duly Rosof\rtlon Wll adoplld:
T he n e st a rte d doln~ CUI· the incoming t ide. TNI COUNTY 01' OllANGf: Puftli1~~ 1~~~= (Olll Ol lh' .. u.,,, ••POlntld ff\l!lff undtr Incl PllflU•nl lo WHl lll!AS. lltlr• 11 • """ fl>• • 11t1 backs and gettin.it: locked N• ... ....,,. , ,. , Ht tl't.., 01e<1"' T•ltll e~~uted ..., 1.oa11111NE 1.. •'-11 tM °'•""t Coun1>o •1,...,.. Tying !he last bowlin(' NOTtCI 011 HIAltlNG l"IT!T!Oll ....... IJ, . J . I l ll EIDflllt, • tn1rrlld -n. Truttor. Ttrmlntl au110ln.t •ncl ••Cl It •••!l•ltlt
In. He was teUJng so good SU RF FILM Brennan threw up his arms ,o11 .,,014T1 0,. w11.1. AND 110• L E GAL NOT ICE 1,. 1 ...... ef LINCOLN SAYINGS 11No tM•flor, ""' lh AI the producer s v.·erP . Lln l:tl Tllt•Mt:NT411 Y LOAN ASSOCIATION. I CO!'llOfltlGn, •• WHEltEAS, .... °""''"'en' el .....
, . ;ind crashed to thr. sandy E•l•ll of c,e.RL TOW T. 9ARll££, ''"' eent1ld•r1t1, recn•<1ed Oclotte• 22. IHJ In ,........,"" Seo-vic11 1'1•1 ••nenled """"' lh1nkln.it: a bout hlrin.it: h im deck shouting : "Phase One -nown •• CAlllLTON TAYLOR 8AR8EE. .. ... u IJooli: Ill), ..... ''·"' Ollld•I ll K(lrdl In C'OW•r !.Iller dttt<I M•• u. 1tM, • ltlSI -On a nd drnppin,e: .o nr nr u ~. A 1' LAG UNA Ol\(I k""wn •• (Atll TOW llAR!IEE , Cl!llll"ICAtl D" au JI NI IS Ill• olllt• of ,... County Re<:orGtr ol ••11t><t:1.t! Ill Ck fl' fOf ltld t ill ,"°" "'"
S
_, js over." Of<:PI"°" Flcllll1Ht1 Firm N1Mt 0••"11• Ccvnty. CAlllornl1, WILL SELL reftrred la lflllreln •1 ... M. II,,, l"1rt1I
om cnnt su~gr.st e.. p ut-. h" h NOflCE IS HERE8V GIVEN Tllo! THE IJWOElllSIGNED doll her•bY' t,•111• AT ,.U8LIC it.UCTtON TO HIGHEST ,,.4
ting liOm(' su.nla n oil on hl5 Two tir~ gringos 1tc • LILL IAIW o. ~•1118E£ "•• fl!H Mrtln. lh•I II• I• cont'lu<lltlP • hu•lnet• "' 7"1 &IOOER FOR CA.Sit (OIVt blf, II llmf' ol NOW, THEIEFOll !. IE IT ll ESOLV· La g u na Be a ch H I g h hiked b a ck to the border IH'lltlan ror Prollet• or w111 •ncl le• Groce l•M, Cost• M,..~. C•lllnrnl•, t•le In 11w1u1 .....,,...., ol lhe United EO 11111 lfll1 a.,.ra al SuPINf-. -.,, WaX a nd e n dinJ,? 8 n Y lu uance ol LPl!et1 T!:lllMftlllr'I lo "~II· Und•r tM llcllllou• llrm n1rn• ol Slfl!:ll 1t th• ~!fl m11n ""!tone• IG Ille MrtbY IPP•Ov• Ukt PtOll'Olll .. cktl•· I""
School c111ditorium h a s and eventually assistance, 11 .... ,,,, .. 1erenc1 10 w11tc11 1s ..,,,,.. lo• wort11ern como111¥ 111d 11111 ••Id 11,,.,. is Cou~ty (""" Hout• In tnt City of !.Int• cfudlno -le•mt o1 "'' """' C011t1lned
further Ja bor·managem c nt Whl"i lh j • d i f" h TI furll'Nt•.-1tlltul1r1. i ncl 11111 the l!rn1 •ncl com_..., /If lht loll-ln1 111r1,,.., wn ..... A111, Stile of C1lllcrnl1 11! rlol'lt. tlllf, 1nd lllerllll. dls pules. b een booked a s I.he site for e e rien Y ts erme 1111ct cl ll•••!11e th• 11mt ·~1 bltn M• ""'"' 1n 1u11 '"" 1111c1 flf re11denc• 11 1 .. 1 .. 111 QK!YtYtd 10 •""/\OW' i..w ttv " · eE •T ll'UllTH~• •EsOLveo 111•1 11t1t or San Felipe struggled to fnr July J, 1'61. •' t :Jll •.m., I" "'' IS fotltlws, lo-wit: und•r Nici otlCI al Trvtl 1 .. "" 1trOP1rtt o., •• , .... nr of •t•I l'roPlrl'r SeNIC .. ~ F l~B. 27 Ce~·ion r he first Australian ~urf· .~alvage the expensive plane. ~:,:11:0:-;,0~ N~i:'~';':.n~ ... Z:: i! ,~.ii~~ N::i..~~"~, ~~;1.:1.•""n, 1011 w. s111r, ~~~~~·.~1~~ ~:c~i':~1".~ Ol'•n••· s1111 "'· ?.f?:::~:,:: ... ~~'fi:e:'9!ll'!.~,'!.'::
At Goya Pana we found in~ fi l1n tn be s hn°"'n in the They came rlown and tow-"' sin!• Ani. c1111orn11, wtTWF.55 '"' h•nrt 1111, Uth e1Y o1 A Lt811hotd E • 111 t In '"d to the thereof
i;ome good wave~ ... nice li 1-U n itrd States. ed th'at. plane eight m iles o~'"" Jun• 11. 191,1 M••· 1""· 1°11-1 .. , c1etc•lt1ed '111 "'°""""' •£ 1T "Ull!tHER •esoLVEO 11111 1111t '' w £.ST JOMN, Counl\' C~r~ 5, It. Wll~On Loi tO ol 'l'••c• Wo. ll'l\1, •• '""wn ~n Resolution be •ubllsl'led one:~ •week 161' Ue beach with i::ood ril!h t.~ Cur rrnt v.•:ir\d .~urfint! around rocky points, up Hu1w1Tt , NU1tw1Tz a t1 EMt:1t SlATI!" OF 1wo1ANA 1 1 mAP ••c111a1<1 1n 1100-J1. P•oet' '"" ,..., iucce .. ive -•ki 1,. 1 -•Pi11t• e1
and lotsa outasi"hl scener'." h · N \' · hill~. building roads where'•H 1'ftG t•. COUNTY OF WARRI CK ! " 10 or MIKell•neou• Me••· •Ko•d1 o11tner11 tlrwt111on '" 11111 County, 0r • .,., ~ c· a mp1on al o uni; I.~ N•-t ••11e~. <•~I. ON THIS 111h <l•V GI M~w. Ao. 1'611. °''"" C1111n1Y. •nll • PttCft el l1rod CNll OllW l'llol Tll• 1.1111 """'klllon ...
But fl'iction is deveto11in~ fpature::I in the film, "The nrcessary and pour in Ji: T•I •JJ·NH bok>•e me,""""' c11h~r,n "•ul. • Wot••• Ml"' • -110!\ "' Loi '3 of tred Ho . .,ut•ld l'Hl•o&J 111~11 bo ..,1 ieu !Mn , __
belween the m ov1·e people seawater on the ~oft spots to "'"•..,..t• 11' "11111"''' Public 1" •ncl hi• '""' ••Id '""""' ~nc1 1701• •• 1'>awn on 1 """ •PCOrded 111 t1tn n o"'" bttore """"''"" r11t1l•I lint r.~neration.'' ,.u11111111tt1 Ori""• c ... ,1 0111'1' ,.11t11. st~••, r'11dlnt lfltt'~ln, dui. _,,,,.1 .. 1.......:1 eoo11 J?. PH«s ' •nd io o1 •ncf comldl!rtl!O!I of 11..,,....115, TPll
and the surfers • the pack them down. J11nt 11, n. 1•, it61 1011-a •"" ,_,,., ....... u .... "'""''Id s. 11. M1""'11.11-., M<tp1, •f!CO•dl of Dr•nee o 1rec1or e1 •••• "'-"" s. .... 1c1a 11 ,..,
. .-------------------------------Wll!lllft kno•n lo m, to t>.. ll'IP 0"1on Coun!w, 11kl •••eel bel"" lolJll'leasterto •Ulltorhed It ,.. •• , iutll llH'lhf'r _.. m ovie people went tn fil1n L F.GAL NOTICE -· ,..,.... 11 •w1>1cr1bed 1a th• w11111n a1 11>G 1dl1cen1 •o"" Sou!J'M'•~'''"' u ... .,.,11_,,11 •t ,,. nec11w"' 1a ,1,,..
coming and going sequenc es 1nt1rvmen1. •l'MI 1c1t.no-Aoltdoed to..,. •h•t e1 Lot l'O flf 1t1<1 '••ti NO. 1101, mor1 wlOe e•-ur• to.,..,,_,.,, .,11, • •·JIJU l>e executed !Ii< Mmt. l'tnlcu!.lrl\I' Htt•lbe<I 11 tollowi: I E It FUlttHEI RISOLYIEO ti.et t11
in ricks haws Or OX c arts .• ' Cl'lltllllC4TI 01' 1usi:.iSt IH WITNESS WHElllEOI'. I ........ ........ llHlnnl .......... most Soull'H!•"' ,cor: Jui. u . , ... , •' ""' ""'" DI 2:• D't1Dclt.
This whole p1"ci••rc ·,·, <01"nc Fi D d f; th , d ,,,,1,,0 .. , ''"" un•o M!! ,..,. l'l•nd '"" 1tli>l!G mv llftl· "'' cf wia Loi l'O; tl'lf!ICt Soull'I '' :Joi ,. M 11 IN "'"""' Pl&c• DI ..,. ..,.,~ -or a s on a ers ay. v (I , I ncl I I'll 00'' EA•I J1 ,...,, lo • Plllnl: tl\enc9 ..i,. I °' IN c tt °' °' 1 t be . ' b I Th• vnderiloned do ce<tJlw -..... CMo l ~ \ti .... "'" • •••• .. t I he "' I ... lthl llM " I Ufltl'\l IOl'I lllln ·-A n one gre a oost n ••• d!Jctlllll • 11uirn<eu 11 1111 Mor>•O\'I• A .... 'I cer11t1ce1e first ·-· •• 111""· =~•. :;:•.,.in~~,.,! :0.,111 31• a.· ,0 .. "" County A6m!l!l1lr111n11 1u11r11"', JI!
di 0 ca I 1rtr ansporta tion in-"or young Dads and old Dads . ~t'i:. i::::· ... ~~1o;i1;,1GE':''~A~ ~~ ~:ir:,...,c::~~ "•ul e11t s:i ltt~ 'l:" '° ""'~·,, Etllt;= t:i:.,.,:~c~-::; .. =·lo ~n~~y ".:n
us try. we relied on (IX· J1 th1I .... 1c1 ll•m h cPrT>-.d o11nt 1011c,.,.. M• commlnlon ••11•1111 :;;'NerJ.'lr 111• .O.· west 51°7'eo; kt be rec.iYld •nd Nflllll a., 1111 Cll!rtl fll
carts to get to the surf we'd Ina ""'"""'· '"""'te ,.,,..... In 11,111 ""' Ju,.. 1•· lf41 1111 .,_r £ei11trW ,0..,.., "'u1c1 t.ot 90; 11111 eo..ra 11 S...-Vl.ori, '"" •l'NI •11 llhh ' d d D ds d Dads 11l•c~i of •nldence ire '' tollowtl : PuftH•l'IH Of•M! C01ot O•llw Pltol. ttlene.t 5.Glo!Mrteslf•,.. ,.....,. 111 1 to be dell.,.tld 10 1111 Cll!rtl fll l!llt &G1rot IJe J.QO la te tf'l Catch thC' an gran a an new llOlltt lr•<IMf 1ncl Sl'lltte.. 8r/ldowr, Ju ... ~. IJ, 19. 11, IKI tJt..41 .!.oulhtll~flt' H ... Of Mltl Loi t(I tC !t1<f f//I s..tnrl"°'I lft Jl010m 3111 al &114
s_well. They're slower than a 1u ,,,,..,h..,1t, a~tl>OI 111~nc1. c.mornl• ICll"t o1 betinnl.,. 11c1,,.1n111r111on 1u11111n •.
d D d . J d fishing otted M•• ,,, i.... LEGAL NOTIC E Which ••Id L~•'lt""ld E•ll•• w•~ o!:.~':.11 ::':'~: "=·='.,. 51~:;:
time exposure ! ThP n ex1 an a s in aw an . R""'' llr•d~· -cr•1•et1 "" 11'11 M~llH GtOUncl 1,.,.,..,, ll'NI 1111 OJrf'C"" Of Avl1llon, •ncl ...... , ....
thing we're scheduled ror j5 "' .. 5111•11>v •r""""' '"" n 1 d•~ M1' 11. ltJt, •nc:uted 11'1 Tl'll"' iw 1111 c-"' 11<1m1n11trlfl•• Ofllc•r St•I• ol Cl!llornla, Or•no• C"untt: IN TNf: IUl'lllJOa COUllT 011 TNI IN!,.. Com~1nY, •• ...__, ancl 8''111 for r._i ff111 re.:""'mtndfllon ht llllt
NF.XT WEEK -INni •. a an a all Puhllc In And lor 111ld St•••· Hr'IQfllltv P-0 11 TNI COUNTY 01' OllANG• '"" wll•. It lolnl •••lllnll •• , lessee. fOI' tlc1bll lflltr Ille _ .. 1 .... ll'Hlreol. elt>phant rides ... whoa ! D ds d sailing' D ds d °" Ma• n . 1N1, t>r•o•• m•" • Hot""' 1T•T1 o" CALll"OltNt& '" 4110 E. Cltl• encl 1.11eni. c . Clow. l'lvsttal'lll aoera .,, Svffrvl1at1 ,, -•• ••11e<-
-'' I\ ·-·""' • .,,., ll••d~r '"" Sl'llt~ NI. A·lfln tl'll •~rm of 5, ...... bnlnnln.t MIY u . I E IT FU"••• aE~"' YEO 111•1 ulot oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii---.1 ds d ' l!l••~~er knovm lo m• kl be m. HfMMll NOtlCI 01' MIAlllNO 0 11 HJt 1ncl tndl ... Mlw 14. l't1\, recor-""" C • o traueling Da an camp•ne1 whoo, n•mt$ "" IUbKtlbfd ltl ""° Wltflln l'f TITION TO L•ASI 1t••1.t Y JUflf lt. lt" In lloolt, 0 6J, l'•tl 11 flf ~~:' ::.~··~ l~:!.~.,;:•~lllf:-il'l:rl-Ill
,Y' ll'b l"ilfUm•"' Ind tt•l>O"'~td 11\ey ••· t,, ll'Nt Mtl!'r ol lht Ellllf ol C1tl II. Olflcltl •Ko•G1. "''Ii.bi. """••I •ncl In lfl• ofllttt (If, ...
.. '
I See by Today · s
Wan! Ads
• A beautiful walnut spinet
piano. NMr l)' nev.·~
• There's an 18' C\JStom
buUt off &hon! Cnl1!1Pr.
GIAM hull, mahoJ?'11n,y
deck. z..o.ded wtrh ~'<1raa!
Only one of 1 ldnd: !
e G~ clNnup~ trim·
min~. d.Jrt. Ym name Jt
Big John wtll haul i11
• 11'1"t'l"'J !Jlifti-n CUii' 111111'
l!l'W Font pick up , VJ: •na·
ine -Sody In good shapP.
..cull'd th• 1n""". J<>Moon •l!Mt •-11 Ct r! 11••11•• TM lot1tt't lnt1r11I w-r 111\d ~·• DeNflmlfll al •••1 ~fOPlrl'r 51tv1Al 11
Dads and vacan'o {OF FICIAL SEAL! Jolmloft, Or.ct•ted. h•• bffn IHltMd lo L .... 11 H. ou ..... I•• 515 Nerlfl SYC.mott ''""'· s.1111 ....... llMf'llt! C Kne~ NOl!(t It ,,,,_. 1IW.:f! l~•I C, ll••mond •ntl LllClll 8. Out1mlrt. hu11wtl'>d •rod Celllornle, tor ln1111Cllot1 tw fnht!'tlled Not•"' Pullllt · (1!llet"l1 J~nl<N' E~K\jlor ol tll4' Mid etl1!1, 1110 wlhl 11 l&tnl 1tNnt1, llY '" 1ul1n,.,.nl Ntlltf. Tiii .., .... Yl rlib!.I feeler tullllCI
d b , D d Prlnd 111I Olllce In lllM Mreln 1 w•llltd "tlllot1 11r1Jt.,. fM dllM Octobtf" fl, UO t nd rtettrdtel lo lllcl will be ""' lllflut ,. M -•Id tu IM an oanng a S ~~·t::,;..~~::.. E•o!r~I •n order 1u111Ctrlll.,. ~ lt111.,. ol lfl• NO\'ttnber U, IN' ln !loolt; ..UO. P•PI CGUftlY Df Orlf'IOI lw ltOf lllCCfHllll ,, ..
,'1_.,, 1... '"' tJl•ll llfrllf\1111• t11urlbld1 •nd 11111 iu "' OttlC,l•I It.Cord•. -'· lllldlon ,,...,.,1.., lit btMcl 111 ,1,.
and hiking• Dads Publlt....i Or•~•• C(lotot O•lto JulY Jtn, 1"'' 11 t ;.111 A.M., In 1111 su-'"' "uff • •nttr•.t ,......., "" lllreln -"" ""'1":1•1 •blNtv •l'ld 1111~1.-~~ 11ertor COur1 fll the ll•N flf c1111orn11. In moon1111Mc1 In"" Ill• bft11 •••"-"""' "' of tM _., In at!Ml\lt.lf"' 11111 "'" "'
M•v ,l, lO '"" '""' •· n , 1... ._ •ncl •or Ille County ol °'"'" Oe-Nrtl'Nnt t.ort1lflf L. l ••llltrt, • """1"" -"'"'· IWI""°". Thi• 10.111 o1 klH....,_..
L EG., N OTICE ' ille,llf, 11.lt Mlfl •HO!"ltd 11 !I'll llmf 11'1 •n ••ti•-' •Kllll'dM C'OflCll""""' •nerw1 tM rte~• 19 ••IOC:I 1...., ....i •II
d if you're 1~ •1'11 •l•t• tar ""A•lftl of ••Id 11tllkln. ...,..,..1t11, .... _., lljltl ll'ld te ~!9tclr-1111 ll'GMrl'I !rem an ~ l l'ICI -~ anw ...,.,_ lnl,rt1!NI lft S.141 ...... •Ill bf MIM. """ wt,._, ltl lf. ' '
••• l'·.11Jt1 11\f ulG ••llhl mtY •-•• •l'NI ottlfCI to C'.OYlflllll or w•tr•""'· ••II'-.. '""'"IMI' AYll!S: SUl'll!ll VISOllll OAYIO l .
Dad ell :. Cllllfll"l(Atl 0-IUSINf:tt 1111 1r111111 ... ol llld Hllllttn. '"''c11.... 111.... -•1ttlot1. 1111:; ,i:: IAKll!a , AL TON E. •LI.EN. WM. a ,,r, ,, llllCTITIOUt NIIMI: lltfl•'1111Ct k "°''tll'r ml4tO le th# 1•1d t""'br•ftC<'f. !fl NY ::;' t l 'ne. H111STll!IN ll'ld WILLI-J, ••• Yl'1 • Tll1 unn ....... -_, c•r!Hw ... k ,.,. llfflllon "" Iv•"'-• ... "CYll•• •1 ... n,. ~ llY ••Id OHfl "'", "MILLll"S.
duel! ... 1 lllllJtleH al 11,. Plec•nlll, '"'"'' Incl COMlllOM el "'9 ltf~ cl'la•ltl i nd ~M-of ""' lN•'" • ...i HOES: SUl"lllVISOllS NONI:
Old Crowlraveler
for Oaci'; !Ping places
'°''' ,,.,. ... , (Ill torn••· lllMIO• tho lie-i.w. ol "" wum """'" " .. i. Dftd " AllSENl ; SUl'EllVtJO•s ( M. llllou$ fir m ,..,... 114 M,1.JOIWAY ltlO tltl "''•'• 11 •!Iva""' 111 .... C-ff\l!I. , l'fATHEllLY. TllAILEll MANU"it.CTUlllNG •I'll tt.et lw ft! LOI Allt•ltt. lt•ll ol (•lttorn!1, •ncl TM l enf'lkllr'I _., ••l4I .. ~ t STATE 01' CAl.lFOIHlil I " Nici firm If ~ ..i IM ......... h dlou111M ._fell..,_, loowlt; '""'' ... "'ton Ill • bttKll If IHI COUNTY 01' OllANGIE l .,,.a.. . ...._. ,...,,. In 11111 •ncl 1lllC• o1 IAI TM .... lldlM •"'Ill lol ICIC1llcl 11 !llf lbll11!11M 1f'CVl'IOll '",.' '1' ~ ..... ' I. W. I . IT JOHN, C_,... c'1ttt •11111,... riH~f 11 11 f(lllowl~ '"' Wiii FlorfN:t A.._. LO\ tllflfelOt~ ufCVflMI lflll M "" -1 elftClo (11111 ol tltl INN el 9u!MfYI-. l"l'llli. 111.1111t1btr, * I'"' l'ltc1, A-Its. Ctll"'"'I•. _... Hrtkvl9rlt' lll'lcltrtltne4 • wrlrt., Ottl&reflon 111 el Of"-• c_,.,., C.1119ntle, '-""' (oo~ ....,_, C.11•111•. dt1<rlbtcl 11 toll•••: TIM' ""'"' U tltl Olfeult 11111 Otm.M ""' ltit. """' wrltllfl Clf!llY lltot 1111 elllUI •N ~I'll Oeftd M.lw tt. IW, ot Loi I lktc;tt I DI Tri(! lf?I, (-ty of Hetl(1 ol o.l1ull Incl rtl l'IKllPl't lo lle,,olulto!I Wtl otvty 1M rtot11tlrW ... tell l'hllll ll1"'91bf>• ln .,.. ... si.i. ol CeMlotnl1, U UH "" l,l!ldtrtltnlcl II NII M141 ...... In' lllt .. 111 ._, ti • """ .. ' -" ...
Sf•'-ol C1lllOl'nl1, 0r ....... (-•w1 (fl) ,,,. tlttll to \IN lilt ••rlt:lftt ., .. .,"" ,, wtlllY Mid ebllt•"-IMJ """ ""'"" ... IO ... "" l•fll dlY., MIY. n .... 0... M•• )!, 1'41, btfo/'• ,..., I Hol•l"I' lllc.1lllO!f lft ll'lt: 1•11 JI fffl of I.of t rtcer""" 1f'ld matt ll'>ltl lfll'H ~ ..... NJMI lw t 1111111~ ~ " Uhf f'llllWC Ill I N tor Nici SllM, --.tllo .ktelt l ol tr1el lf2f, ,_...,. •l•IHfcl tll'ltt -f1tklfl. IMrcl """'"'' ~l'Mflf • •-•M ~l'lllla lt~""9~.lf' --'°! mt 01!M """' 11, lffl 0-11 : 1-1. 19'1. IN WltHl&ll WHl a lOf", I 111 .... ta Ill 111111trwn """°"' ,.....,. I• J.Utllcrlbo W. l . ST JOHN lt!LIAll..f tlTLI COMl'ANY ""Wnto •Pl mY lllM lnl -I !Ilk 11111
""' Ht thf Wfllll~ lft1lfUffl...,I lftd (-ty (ltl\ 11'11 Clo<fl 11 11tot TrvllM cllY el M•Y • I ....
•dl-llcl9id I'll l ltcllled 1111 ....... °' ulcl s-tot c-1 •• LI•• Wiiien (SE.-,L I IOl"FICIAL l l ALI llw II•' Ar~nlflltt OIJtilY Aitlilonl 1..c,.i.,., W, I . ST JOHN Jos~ I . 01vl1 Mlftllfk1, l 1rcla y '"" T-!"'1111• 4111·1" C-IJ Cit/'' 1flf H1!ffl(lll ND11•W ~Ubll<. · C1lllll'flll lllfif -Cl!lllftlfll1I alf9, l'vbllil'IP'cl Ot•-CNol 0~1"" l'llol, Clfotk ol !I'll ..,.N Ill l"•IMlpl! Ollf<• In .. J, S"""' Sf,. J'"" 11. 19, ,,, INt 101MI "-«YllCll"I of OrlNf c.u.ilt', Ora11t1 Counlr L• Allt..... CaMtr.....i1 *ll CllllOl'lll•
MY c .... mtnlon l•ltlrn Tll: UUI ,,. .... , K t' d. L' k t .... M•btl L. C11lll•, Dll'illlf
.&.. J•-JI, lf1'1 """"'*'' flt •11<•!tf' I 8 0 .t.L 111.....-flltl....,,. ~H•l'fft Of•• c"""' 011i. f'11n1, l'IJMl'lh«I °'•"" c...1 e1111r J11i;,1, 'Ask d • ., •11bt1.nw .or•-i c....11 011"' •11111, M•~ n . JI! """ Juno 1, 11. 1w tOWI Ju"' u . 13. it. 1... 111141 An y' JUM '· u . '"" ttMt
----·--------------····••&=••==· ·--1 = • 5 ee··s 'S te·1·
J
I
•
:If• DAILY"'°' n •• , • .,, """' u. 19'1
Your Money's Worth Skie• Not Friendly McConnell
~ppointed
Treasurer
' Wayne E. McConnell Jr.
):w beea appointed
treas\U'er o f Huntington
Savlnp and loan A>socla-
tion, Praident Robert L.
Lynchannoun<ed.
.President, Congress Share
Bl.ame for DismalTaxSaga
llXXll-1-t--<-
9501-+--+--+ Airlines Battling
For New Routes
For the pa5\ ffYen years
McConnell wac a s:upervis· log senior accountant in the
Los Angeles ofllces of Peat.
Marwlct, fltitchell &: Co .• a
national certified public ac.·
counting firm.
He will serve u controller
of the as&ociation. wwking
in tbe beedquarters office in
llunl:in(t.on P a r k and
coordln.ating the activities of
the •sociation's other of·
fice.s in Bell-Maywood, Cos.-
ta Mesa, Studio City, South
Gait, a.od Wilshire-Highland
•areas.
LEGAL NOTICE
C•llTll'ICATI 01" •UltN•l' l"ICTITIOUS MAMI The .lll'llllnl9ned do.s <erll,.,. I •m itc11t-dwdl1W • bull-11 17lf .,_ St,_t, Ctillt Mnt. C1llfaml1, 11~ IM flc-
tlftells f'lrm Nn'M O'I' MAil lt.t.HE CO. flld
tflel Hid firm b awnl>OHd O'I' ltle folli)w.
1111 i>el'lOrl. \fl/l'IOH "'mt In 11111 •1111 'lttl
t1' f'Hidef'ICI II •• fol'-1: ' w rm1m 'E. A1M'1', ,.._ a1c1i. Lt Mlrtdt, C11ltornl1.
Dtll'd' JWN! 13, lHI.
w 1m1m f . 1t1.-
St9'-O'I' C1IUornl4o, Orl"ll C-'Y:
C)ft Jvn1 IS, 1MI, btforll me, 1 Moll,., l"i*llle In 11111 for Hid Sith!, Pt....,,..lty
,_,.. w11111m E. •1M"1" ~-ro.me
"'I be fhl ""'°"' '""-"'-k MlbKrlb-~ "' h within lnllr\lmefll ,,,.. •d.-ledt-ed ,.. •~tcUtwd ,.,. Ml~. (OFFICIAL SEAL)
~ E. Dlwl1 Hof•,., l"lltllk-Clllfornil l"rlnc:lp1I Olfke In
Ori"" Coutltr Mr Commluktll 'fltl"I...,
Ji.w 21. '"' ~ublWoed Ortfttt C.oltt Dilly P'llot,
JW. 11. 20. 27 1nd J11tr 4. 1HI ln:MI.
LEGAL NOTICE
~Cl!llTll'ICATE Ol"·•USINl!IS l"ICTITIOUS NAMI!
The lllllllnl1111d don Qlrtlf'f hi II c:on-
dvc'll<11 t ""'1""1 11 7U W, 161'h STl'ffl, C11111 Mftl, Clllloml1, under tl>e f'I(·
t1"11111 firm n1m. ol si-1n 11111 !!>el i.ald firm 11 ~ of "" follow!"'
--· \lllfloH n1m. In fllll Ind llllCI DI <Mlclengi b II foflowl: J1rnn •· Hook. ~llV. ltlll StrHt, Nt•POrl &e1ch.
Dtted: Junt 11, IMI, J1mn. •· Mealc Sllle ot C•lllofnl1, Or1nee COllnlV :
On Ml, n. IHI, ~· m., 1 Nolt,., l"ubllc In Ind "'' i.alcl Stilt, HnoMlly ·-1·~ J1rn1S •. Hoell krlO\llln "' '"' to M fhl perlOll '#hoM "'m. It tubtcrlbl'd IO fhl wllflln lflllrvmtnl Ind 1ck,_led9-td he fKK\lted h .. IM. (OFFICIAL S'E.t.Ll
Aot.elle C. Kllllll Motl,., PubQc-C.IHomlt
Prl~I Office ln
"'-~ Mw (OfT'mlHlon E~•l•n
Jutr I, "" l'ublla/led O<IMt C01o1I Dt l!W l"llol,
J..-ie 11. 20. 17 Ind JulY 4, IMI 1027""
LEGAL NOTICE
ClllTll'IC.t.TE 01' IUSINESI PICTITIOUS NAME TM undtn.ltr.ed do -Tllv lhev trt
ClllldlKtl"' I butlMM II JOOCI N--1 llli>cl .. N-1 8MCfl.. Clllfonll1, ilnCltf
mt llC"tlolls llrm "'IM of GEllMAM AUTOS 11111 11111 Hid ll<m 11 cornPOHd of
tlw fo.llo\fl/I"' ,..er-. Wllole lllmft In flltl 1NI ~IKfl O'I' rn~ ,.., 11 tollo..,: Cllut Abel, HTI C111ndul1 ,
Wnfrnlrt1ler. C1tl10rnl1 Tl'!«> Vin Llr111111, llOJI Wortflw
Avenut. API. No, A. Westmlnttf,r,
C•lllornl11 01ted: Junt U, Ifft
Cl1us Abel
Tl'llG Vtn LI~ Stitt of C11lfornlt, 0<111111 Count.,:
On June u. Ht.I, bttort ,.,., I Nohnt
P~bllc In 1M for Hid Sl1t1, HflOM1 ....
·-•rl'd CllUI Atlll •nd TllM V•n Llnten ~-n 10 fM to be IM .,...._ \11/llmt
"•"'" ire wlllc,li..d ta the wllllln ITI' 11Nment tnd 1cknowledted 11'1.w e11ecvli!'d
"-Mme. tGFFl(IAL SEAL)
Onntll V. Utt Not1ry Pubtlc-C1llff'..,l1 Pr!nd1>1I Otllct In Or1ntt CounlV
MW Cotnmlulon fllPlrft
M.l{dl 11. 197:1
•vbllt/lecl Ortfllt C.ol1t D1l1Y P\~,
J-U, 20, 11 Ind July 4, 1'1611 107MI
LEGAL NOTICE
By SYLVIA PORTER
Now that Ute income
surtax finally is becoming
law the House o f
Represerrlativea 11 upected
to approve it next week -
the day for judgment has
come.
Ol Tbil ba1 beep among
the most disgraC'ef\11 fi1cal
performances tn moderrl
U.S. economic hi.stor)'. with
the White House a n d
Congress sharinJ the blame.
(2) T.RE TIMING of the
tax increases, a full 2¥i
yeai-s after they should haVe
been voted, ao astounding
l ~ years after President
Johnson actually requested
them and a shocking 10
months after the President
began to figbt for them -
WE 1RAVE the clear
threat of a late 1968-Hrly
1989 economic 1 e t d o w n
brought about by a credit
squeeu which might never
have developed had taxe1
been Increased in time.
And now on top of au trus,
we get the tax incr.ases, at
la.st!
U tNs iJ "fine tuning" the
econotny via the N e w
EcooomJcs, even a con-
vinced supporter of the
theory m a y be un·
d erstandably disillusioned
and disheartened.
The New Economics. I
submit as f have submitted
all along, makes basic
sense, is simple and in
theory superbly workable.
In essence, it bOlds:
has seriously undermined WHEN THE economy is
the value of the ';New sluggish, unemployment is
Economics." U it takes thi1 ~ing and profits are slip-
long to put on restraints p.1.n g, f i s cal-monetary
when they have been so ob:-·~ policies should be geared
viously called for , the th'e<frY toward stimulating activity.
can't work. Excellent as the Specifically., iricome taxes
theory is on paper, bum.an should be cut; investment
failure destroys it in prac-incentives should be en-
tice. couraged ; Federal Govern-
(3) By delaying the tax ment spending should be ex-
boosts so long, you and I are panded; credit should be
ending up with a nightmare made illerpensive and readi·
combination of cenditions. ly available; a major budget
We have the price·wage deficit should be .acc!!{>ted.
spiral which _a timely tax When the e c ol:i om y
surcharge was iupposed to responds and perks up,
prevent. We have the brutal fiscal-monetary p o 11 c i e s
credit squeeze which pro-should be moderated to
perly timed tax: hikes were maintain a balanced growth.
supposed to m a k e un-When the pace of growth
riecessary. We have the becomes too rapid and in-
dangerous deficits in our flationary, fiscal-monetary
domestic b u d g e t and policies should be geared
balance of payments which toward restraining activity.
tax increases were supposed Specifically, incomt:: taxes
to moderate. should be raised; at most in-
Non-trading .Days Give
Clerks Rest They Need
NEW YORK (AP ) -Wall William Cordo, a partner in
Street paused lo catch its Eastman Dillon, Union
breath Wednesday as the Securities & Co. "Simply
major stock ex c h a n g e 5 because they'll eliminate ad-ditional paperwork.''
halted trading in an effort to "They'll be particularly
help member firms dig out helpful from the standpoint
from the mountain of of getting those m i n o r
paperwork in their back of-things done that were push-
fices. ed aside when the staff was
"These days off will t90 busy," said a spokesman
help," said Ira St arr, for Merrill Lynch Pierce
associate office manager of Fenner & Smith, Inc. "Now
H. Hentz & Co. "Our people they'll have the time to take
are hurting. They're tired. care of them."
We baVe clerks putting in .as The heavy volume pro-
many as 85 to 90 hours a blems led the major ex-
week with the average changes to shorten a
overtime. running at 30 number o! trading days by
hours a week. How long can an hour and a half late last
they keep this up?': year and again early lhls
The stock exchanges and yectr . There are ap-
the over-the-counter market proximately 1,000 brokerage
decided to shut d o w n houses in New York.
Wednesday, June 19 and 26 "Those short days put a
and July 5 to help ease the damper on things," Starr
paper avalanche resulting said, but added that since
, MoT1ca o;"'~"W111T10M To from record trading. April 1, the first trading day . l c1t1ATI sacu11Tv 1111T•1t•'T "The nontrading days will announcement of a Vietnam , 1'-.. ,," -•111 u.c.c.1 NoT•cE 11 ....,,Pbt' 11wen "' t11e be of definite value," said after President Johnson's f:I':\~ .:.,v~~!n~-_:,~EH~ 'm'ili0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0~ announcement of a Vietnam
Al'Yrnond W1y, MtMlm. c_,.,. O'I' WAllEMOUSIE OUTL•T bombing pause, ' . t h i n g s Ortfl!I•. '''"' O'I' C.llfornl1. ""'' • MCllrl-NITURE "'ln'-•n.t 11 •llouf"' bl CTut..:1 "" Deb-FUR have been going at almost
-•NI 1r1n!W fO OCAIN SEAVIC:E unbelievable r11tes." CORl"OllATIOH, Securtd P1rtw, -aM 'I" t1u11n1u 1CICl•n1 1. Jill Nnpart a1....... CARPET Transactions on the New H-1 ae1dl, CounlV Of Or11>11t. Sltlw "'ic.t11orn11. FAS $169 York Stock Ex ch a n g e ~ ~rn"~w,~:1:~. 1::;-,s:ii:_1::n1'i~ 8ff SO , soared to a daily average of ""'°"' ot ""' e11u1-1, o1 Dltblor •••· ""' 14 million shares in April ~= 11=."' Hi:--.1oc11::.,J,1 !~ FORTREL CARPETING and May Crom 10.08 million
bvllnetl known I I Ottr!n Ser•fCI Con>0r1• 5 95 for all of 1967. Volume c.n
t1t;. 1fe1rn11d 1eeur11y t••t11K11on wm .... ,,ts • the American Stock Ex-
bel a•••11nnm11ec1 °",,..•fief 11141 hi 111¥ J J KNICKERBOCKER ·-g hed d ·1 °'' JulY 1 .... 1, 101or A.M .. ,, Tht · · Cuen e reac a a1 y 1~e1M1nt a1n11. i02s E, Or•""'"°'~· 4001 lllCH ST .. N.t . average of about 6.5 million ,
A"-lltlm In \r\sl1IUl'>tnti. Clll'-,61...., & Ma(AnMr) • A ·1 -• 8 J' 'Ill ' ,. '"' " ,....,. • .. "'""' ""'· ·545-140t In pr! ••ru . ' mt Oft tn :.:. ~=-="= ·:""!r:-~·":e:.:::r~~i:iiiii~~~~~~g;;.~M~•~Y~·===== ... iiii=i ••e~ , Qt,IHf>-P'lll•n c-w. nn ll•w-
.-1111 w1y, Alllllelm. er-'°""""'· C11!torn.11. DATED: June 1. ,,..,
SKllACI "'"" DOfllH SEllVICIE COltPOAATION av: Erm1 M. Cl••
llY: Jld! •· Oebool ~ lnd1e1!1dtnl link ll)J5 E. Or1n1lll'lo<M AlilMJm, c111tornl1
Ekrow No. l!SS.H
P11bll'11td Ortnt1 <:Girt D1lh< Piiot,
J-lJ. INI IOJMll
LEGAL NOTICE
LEISURE· RECREATION
INDUSTRY ...
PLAY AND PROFIT
Toda y Pleasure Travel and Recreation is the
third largest industry in our country. Today's
market represents $60 Billion and is expected
to reach $90 Billion by 1972. The impressive
grnwth trend is encouraged by shorter work
weeks, lengthened vacation periods and an
increase in the sports-active population.
Write for your complimentary copy of our
latest issue of" Investor's.Digest" and learn of
the many attractive investment opportunities
in the leisure-recreation industry.
LESTER. RvoNs & Co .
-w1· /: .. ,,..·'.·" -... eo.. ~::'.-:.
-C..-0..Mlr. -T...,_.: .,,.._
.. °" .... Nl'W vo.-11 STOCM PCM.t.HCC
Jl!Mitir. C..st Mecl bdit• • Am•rbn !lt .. k &lflMC•
N1m•---------------
AddrtH------------
City•-------------
St1te, Zip Cod<
...
vestment lncenUve1 should
be kept where they are;
Federal spending 1h0uld be
curbed: credit should ht
mlde more expensive and
less available: a balanced
.budget should be a goal
TRlS IS ,a rational
economic p o I i c y , Fun-
damentally, aU it 1ays ls
that we should try to use our
heads to CODtrol o u r
economic destiny.
The New E con o m I c s
worked magnificently when
the .aim Was s.timulation. In
fact, with the income tax ---------------------
cuts of 1964, we came close
to eliminating the g a p
between our perfOf'mance
and potential. But the Viet·
nam war escalation starting
i:n mid-1965 pushed our
economy from balanced to
unbalanced prosperity, gave
us the added problems or a
price-wage i nil.a t 'i o n ,
dangerous domestic a n d
balance of payments
deficits, soaring interest
rates. skilled labor
shortages.
Lawmakers to Limit
Mutual Fund Charges
' '· WASHINGTdN (UPI) -extracting more than 20 per-
The Senate Banking Com-cent of its charges in the
mittee reported tentative first year of an investor's
contractural paymeiits. agreement Wed~sday on According to the provisions to put a ceiling on Securities and Exchange
charges made by mutual Commission (SEC), many
fund operators. funds now employ "front-
0\airman John Sparkman loading" techniques where
(D-Ala.) told newsmen tbe more than half of the in-
As far back as early 18,
a tax increase and curbs on
non-war spending were call-
ed for. But it wu an elec-tion year and President committee reached alfee-
Johnson hesitated. Thi s ment on two major aspects
gave the wage-price spiral a of an administration bill to
headstart while the Federal Impose new controls on the
Reserve tried to combat it growing mutual funds in-
via tight money. dustry. He said he hoped the
committee would approve
vestor's monthly payments
go to fund charges in the
first year.
The ' ' fro nt-loading''
reduces the amount of in -
vestor equity in the fund.
The committee also agreed
that a fund should not
witttiold from payments
more than 64 percent of its
charges in tbe first four
years of the contract.
IN JANUARY, 1 9 6 7 , the entire bill next week.
Johnsoo finally did request Approved was a provision
a surtax. But now Congress that would limit a fund from
responded with contemptu-----------
ous indifference. Inflation
got a firmer hold while the
credit squeeze was compell-
ing a slowdown.
In August, 1967, JohD!on
became fully aware of bow
serious the situation was
and be began to fight hard.
But this time Congress
countered with demands for
spending cuts first and the
buckpassing game g o t
worse and worse until the
b r eakthrough with a
package of .a 10 percent
surtax and $6 billion of
spending cuts.
So in June, 1968, on top of ·
a spiraling cost of living and
wage inflation, historically
high interest rates and a
weakened dollar, we get the
tax·spending restraints.
Another major provision
agreed upon would limit
fund sale tb.arges. on in-
dividual shares to 5 percent
of the share's face value.
The SEC says most funds
currently charge as high as
9.3 percent a share.
still to be resolved by the
committee is how t o
determine a fair manage·
ment fee charged by funds .
The SEC has requested
le&islation. requiring
management fees to be
"reasonable.'' It then would
be up to the SEC to regulate
the charges. ··
By JOHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK (AP) -In
happy times the major
airlines share the skleJ like
busy 1 peaceful butterflies,
but right now they· are com·
peting like haW'ks. '111e sides
are not rriendly everywhere.
This week an attorney for
American Airlines told a
hearing in Washington that
in the Pacific area Pan
American World Airways
had a ·•sorry record of poor
service, poor promotion,
and high fares and profits."·
In this airlines business,
wtiere executives. often
share siqtllar views and
mingle socially at the Wings
Club, such blasts are rare
and e1.plode only in the most
heated atmosphere.
BIG TERRITORY
The next day Pan Am
referred to a UM of other
airlines, including Am~r1•
can, that it sa.id wished to be
cut in on the big Pacific ter·
ritory, and strongly in-
dicated that the result would
be to drive Pan Am out.
The big fuss will last so
long as the Civil Aeronautic
Board C<>ntinues hearings on
routes between the U.S.
proposals to restructure air
routes between the U.S.
mainland and vast area~ of
ttle commercially expanding
Pacific.
At the ·moment,
Northwest, Pan Amertc:an
and United Air Lines have
authority to fly 'these routes.
But a CAB exajflliner has
recommended that Eastern,
Trans World and Western
airlines also be permitted to
carry passen-gers there.
"How could you doubt that
Pan American would be
driven out?" asked the Pan
Am attorney. And in the
same hearing he asked that
Pan Am be granted new
rights in what appears to be
Eastern territory.
MANY REASONS
This tremendous interest
in restructuring routes. not
only in the Pacific but in
much or the world, comes
from a complex of reasons:
security, expanding
economies, pbp u I a tj on
shifts, new aircraft, the
need for competition to keep
prices low.
The security argument, of
course, is one that the na-
tion isn't likely to ignore.
Military men feel that not
only must air routes be
maintained to Southeast
Asia but that they must be
kept strong throughout the
PacifJc.
But the Pacllic'1 com-.
merclal pt'OSpeets are much :
more lnter~ing to the
airlines. :
Japan is now the largest 1
trader with the United
.St.ates. The Korean economy
is expanding. Indonesia, a
potentially wealthy nation,
seems eager to exploit Its
resources. All this means
business for the airlines.
NEW AREA
A remote prospect, but
still one that is very serious-
ly considered, js China . 1£
that nation opens her doors
to air travel, as have the na-
ticmis of Eastern Europe, a
vast new area of almost
unlimited potential could
develop.
As, these poslbilities grow
the American populatio~
shifts westward. More of the
nation , therefore, is given a
Pacific orientation, making
possible the development o[
a growing tourist business,
not just to Hat's.ii, but tn
lands many l,\iousands of
miles beyond .
The jet airplane also has
made much of this possible.
And in the future, the jet
will play a big role or
another kind. Because of the
enormous cost of j et s ,
airlines must develop bigger
businesses, larger routes,
than they now have.
COSTS RISING
The Boeing 747, which is
due to be in operation be£ore
1970, will cost $20 million.
The Concorde, a British·
French supersonic jet due in
1971, was expected to sell
for $18 million but likely wiU
cost more than $20 million .
In the mid-1970s, when the
biggest plane of all, the U.S.
supersonic airliner, is ex-
pec'ted to be ready for com·
mercial use, the cost of one
plane will be up to $40
million. Small airlines won't
be able to afford it.
As a consequence, the
scramble is on to enlarge
routes. Failing to do that,
smaller companies are ex-
pected to seek merger5 with
each other or with laxger
operato.rs.
And so the Pacific has
become a battleground for
the airlines. After the hear-
ings the CAB goes inio
studious hibernation, with
no answer expected Ior
months,
'EVEN TODAY, while it's
still being written, the saga
of 1968's tax legislation
seems almost unbelievable.
Years from now, students
will conclude this could not
have happened in the
world's greatest financial
power and we must have
been kidding.
Broker Named·
Galloway M. Cheston
of Fullerton has been
appointed registered
representative for the
Newport Beach office
of Goodbody and Co.
Hydrofoil
Gunboats
Face Duel
SEATTLE (AP) -The
Navy's exp er i m en t B 1
hydrofoil gunboBt Tucum-
cari will leave Friday morn·
ing for San Diego to undergo
tests in C<>mpetition with
another. the Flagstaff, built
in Florida by Grumman
Aircraft Engineering Corp .
Huge Overhaul Center
Planned for Jumbo Jets
Doctors Rap Johnson
Oµ Fees Projection
SAN FRANCISCO -The
California Medical Associa-
tion has taken issue with
President Johnson's charge
in his health message to
Congress that physicians'
fees will increase 160 per·
cent during the 10-year
period 1965-75.
An editorial in the current
(June) iJsue of California
Medicine, CMA's of(Jr.ial
scientific journal, calls the
Pr e's'i dent's project.ions
•·truly incredible ."
The doctors feel that
the government statisticians
unfairly added anticipated
increases in the use of
medical servici!s to an ex-
peeled increase in the price:,
for these services.
"While it is expected that
prices for p h y s 1 c. i a n s
services -that is. fees -
will rise in response to in·
creases in the cost or living,
inflation and other factors,
the predicted greater use ol
those services ought not be
considered a factor so far as
fees are concerned." the
editorial pointed out.
"The total cost for in-
creased amounts of services
is one thing, fees quite
another. Incredible as it
may be, that part of the
President's message seems
truly Incredible," the doc-
tors concluded.
The Tucumcari, designed
and built here by The
Boeing Co., was launched a
year ago at Bremerton,
Wash . Her commander is
Lt. Martinn Mandles o(
Tacoma, Wash .
The Tucumcari recently
returned to service after
repairs or hull damage
received when she hit a log
in Elliott Bay off Seattle
May 1. Five sailors were
treated for minor injuries
after the accident.
The tentative schedule
calls for the Tucumcari to
stop the first day at Vic-
toria, B.C., then at Newport.
Ore., June 16; Humboldt
Bay, Calif., June 18; Morro
Bay, near San Luis Obispo,
June 23; Long Beach. June
25: and arrival at San Diego
June 28.
NEW YORK (UPI) -Pan
American ·World Airways
has announced it will build a
$ 57 .5-million maintenance
center at Kennroy Interna-
tional Airport to service the
line's new neet of jumbo
jets and supersonic planes
that will go into service
within t11e next three years.
Kennedy was chosen as
the site of the p I an e
overhaul center after a
year's intensive study of the
merits of this city's biggest
airport and those in six
other cities, the airline said.
Plans call for coosttuction
to start this summer with
completion by 1970. The
center will employ 6,400
persons, the airline said.
Pan American sa.id it also
plans to start construction
of a companion $60 million
maintenance center in Los
Angeles, which will share in
the overhaul work on the
Boeing and Concorde I Seacoast Builden Supply has the
.
HAVE WHEELS
WILL TRAVEL •..
With Mutual'111 FREE V&c:&tion AtlM
and Gulde Book. l'lck up your
eopyloday.
MUTUAL SAVINGS .........................
, 2867 Eut Col.St Highway• C:C.0NA DIL MA-, Cllif.9262)
Tclcphooc67~·~010
-OPJICI I ......
••:-!IJ L ~ l lWI. • PASAOUA. tAUr.111•
' -
perfect gift for Father's Dayl
1'-~
SOLID STATE
GARAGE DOOR
OPENER
• Fully gvffllntMd for one ,..,
• Fht: your pr•Mnt o•tllOtl --,,,,, __ ,,
SEE US LASTI
We11 be1t 1ny
dlKOunt houM price.
INSfALU.TlON AYAIU.ILI
642-3490
1651 PLACENTIA, C.M.
supersonics and the Boeing
366-passenger jumbo jets .
The airline has on order
25 of the jumbo jets, to be
delivered lat~ next year; 15
Boeing super,.~nic jets, to be
delivered by late 1970; and
eight British-French Con ·
cord~ supersonics, to be in
service by late 1971.
P871 American said the
Los Angele; maintenauce ·
11enter was needed because
the Kennedy complex woultl
not have space for growth :
after 1980. 1'he airline did
not say bow many person3
would be employed at tlie
Los Angeles center.
The new Kennedy
maintenance complex will
consist of five buildings, the
largest t,200 reet by 450 feet.,
It will be adjacent to the
pre~ent Pan American ,
ma1nte.ance center of fi>ur ·
buildings, Which wiU un-:
dergo a $1 m 111 1 on :
modernization. :
Business
In Brief
• •
1-----~ CLEVELAND I UPI! -i
Work Wear Corp. h a 1 :
bought Apollo K n i t l I n g '
Mills, Inc., of New York.:
which has S2 mllllon In an·
nual salts, for an un· •
di!:~:s:!!d amount of cash.
NE\I{ YORK (Ul'I) • -
Gulf & Western Industries,
Inc., baa agreed in prlnclple
to buy 40,000 shares of i
P_anaoolor, Inc.. developer
of a new flexible motion pie·
ture projcctinn system for j
$20 a share and obtained
warrants to buy 200,000 1t1:'
ditlonal sbart:s.
J
' "
~ _:J ·-• ._ .. -....,........--.......... •·-.. --!• • s;;s:v :;a:•a C •fif •t • =•ee t uµ;•z, •t ••••t • ••ae '(I I) lifl"""_...__ ••<w•.-••-i·•·~-,-~;-~p,-...,1-·~au•~·~•·,.... ..... ~ ...... ~-'TT~.,......._ •
•
Summer Rentals? They _Could Be
These are some pretty exclusive cliff d~ellings. They're
in Mesa Verde National Park, Colo., and they're estima-
ted to be 700 years old, not exactly in the same class as'
the charming bungalows all along the Orange Coast
you' II find advertised d a i I y in classified ads
of the DAILY PILOT. But, you know something? We'd be
almost willing to bet you could rent these Indian relics
. • • -
for the summer if they overlooked the fabulous beaches
of the Orange Coast ... AND, if you placed your ad
where people are looking . This is no cliff hanger. "Buy-
ing" or "selling," the market is in the DAILY. PILOT. Dial
642-5678 and we'll drop you our direct rope ladder to
'the Classified Advertising Department where a court•
ous specialist will help you with your "smoke signal"
--·------------~-------.-....--= = • • .. ---•• • --•·• ... • • re·•+•-= e w d&'+ote ·u -t&'m-r I -=
I
f
•
.... ~~~~~~------··--~~ ·---oe.----------..------"'T'""'""9'-·-·~c.-.-~-·----------~--............. ~-.-.... -.--..... -..... -~---· ... r• •
L
•
•
BRIGHT IDEA -Marlo Thomu llnils out her
bright idea wasn 't so gteat aft.er all on uThat Girl,''
tonight in color at 9 an CbaMel 7. Marlo's decision
to have her boyfriend's mother spend the weekend
with her as a houseguest, turns her romance to pear
disaster when the nosy woman arrives.
· TELEVISION VIEWS
Black America
Shown Oearly
By RICK DU IRDW
J!OLLYWOOD (Ul>I) -"mack. Journal," •
significant monthly series dealing with news and
cultural happenings in America's Negro commun·
ity, bad it debut Wednesday night on NaUonal Edu·
cational Television.
It was the first arrival of three network serier
this summer that will e:Xamine Negro life in the
United States and the racial issue. The others ar1
"Time for Americans,'" which debuts on ABC-T\
June Zl, and 0 0f Black America," which begins' o
CBS-TV July 2.
THE HOUR-LONG "Black Joiirnal," broad-
cast coast-to-coast by NET, aims at providing
"Negroes and whites with a continuing view of what
is going on in Black America, from politics to busi-
· ness and from education to the arts." The produc-
tion staff is integrated, the reporters on the pre-
miere were Negro, and so was the very good an-
chorman, Lou House.
And aside from an excruciatingly poor satirical
sketch th.at ended the program -aboqt several
white television executives discussing how to use
Negroes on the home screen -the debut was solid,
even impressive, with a feeling of film and cine-
-matic emotion as well as Content. The final sketch
-thEl: only showbiz in the hour. ~ w~. ~sed g_n a_
fine idea by Godfrey Cambridge, bu(·wai executed
in a beavyhanded manner.
THE REMAINDER of tho program was sharp-
ly edited by Lou Potter, a Howard University grad·
uate. With A. H. Perlmutter as executive producer,
it got off to a strong start, showing the widow of
Martin Luther KinJ, an impressive speaker in her
own right. addressing Harvard's graduating class,
and mentioning the "re.Oection of Ule violence our
media celebrate."
There then followed informal discussions among
graduating Negroes at Harvard, and also at More-
... house college in Atlanta.
And some of the heated difierences ol views
emphasized the good that television might have
done over the years in showing Negro America the
way it is beJinning to now. For what we had
Wednesday rught was, simply, people, not stereo-
types. People who differed the way all of us do.
And one thought of bow much television could have
destroyed stereotypes, and with it fear.
THE WEDNESDAY broadcast also offered a
brief rundown on the black press. And there was a
report on the poor people's campaign in Washing-
ton, D.C ., as well as a fascinatinR segment about
a fashion line called "New Breed' clothes. This is
a firm that features the African look, gets involv-
ed in Negro affairs and, in fact, WEjS partly financed
by the sale of stock to the black community. There
were also sequences about Negtoes in the new s,
the Black Panther party and a Negro jockey.
If there was one curious aspect, it was t~t
"Black Journal11 -just like Most television -
seemed preoccupied chiefly with glamorous, af-
fluent or big name Negroes. One hopes, bowever,
that this Is one place where the situations of more
ordinary blacks will be brought into focus.
Dennis the Menace
. '
(''" ~~'· / . . . .. . .. ,., ''r''. ~·. ,,. w 011• •• ' , . ' . ., . .
' ... ·.-.... • •
1
~
PEANUTS Iv Charin M. Schub
1"11llli1lm---~. f"?O"~'.:"':".:"-:-:-=""..--. ...------~~ .. -----~ Ip 8 I l CAN'T llEl.J~ IT! WHAT A tlimR ei.cc.>.. M~ MEOWlJC HA• efB4 ~ ll TIE llHHTR'(! ILllAT~ lJ
!J .. l'
JUDGE PARKER
I CAN'T! l lOLP M'f
MOn+Ell: I'M VlsmNG
wmt D.NP'IS FAMILY:
MOON MULLINS
TUMBLEWEEDS
. . I ..._,,, .... r-,.
"
' I ..
MUTI AND JEFF
~ISS PEACH
CAN I
"l'A\.K
Wl"l'll
lllM A .
MINUTE?
''
ENJO\'ING
AllRIEF
MOMENT
OF PEACE
AN'
SOLITUDE
I
f '.
I WAS Q.UGHT MD SENT 10
WHAT WAS WPHEM1$TICAU.V'
CAU.l!!D A 'WORI( CAMP.' BUI'
MN<E NO MJS'TAtre ABOUT !T-
IT WAS A Pf'ISON AND l. WAS
A .JAlLl!'IRt>/
ly Harold Le DoUll
ly Tom K. Ryan
W!!Al's
VER
HURRVP
' .
' ~ I ' . . ' " I • ,,..._,,....I' I /"V'-t' .. I ' ' ' '
\
ly Al Smith
i~E SU'6ET IS ONE EITHER nlAT;·
DriHE MOST
WONPcRFUL..
NAiUll-A L
PHE~Oll10JON5
01' IT'S SOME K1~1' Of'
APVE!l.TISING-
STIJNT..,
THEl'E IS ...
"1ELLO,MI%'. DEERE-
COUlD ll~E
>00 FOO A
N.®ENTf
By Frank loll•
Cf:RT,A.INI. Y ••• )OU'R.E 8EtJ, THE
'}OUN6 MAN I 8U¥.PED IUTO
JN 1HE HALL 1HE OTHER: M)'l
• ~""" .. ~ ..... ~-~-=c_;e;t:-_ -~~ •' •• • .&-' .... ~ w· ....... •·•~ ...
-·-.. ~-T H URSOt,Y
JUNE lJ
1:11D0 (I) htoO.< (C) (IOl '•IO
ill th• NJ&ht." Muued 11111 k11te11
., two uflldtnliflM int11 1tltr 1
11111 wft!I llntet El1lne Mor11u
(SuNn st. Jamas), dtttcfrN Sit.
£.d lf'OWft (Oon Gallowl)') ltlt1 to
upl1ln to Chief lronsid1 t111t £lil11t
w11 not ruponslble. (R) 1:oo & "' IC -CCI (IOl ""' D il1l rn -••« CCI (3~ :;"~.....,. ..,... (C) (IQ) "Birdies, Botltt tnd Baxter." s.
....
-
--rMnthl llnds Ui1t ""' 1 witcti ·-·-·~ ,_, Dnll Jorla. Dl)toll Mltn, L e111 become • loll widow. Sama11o
Mbulu Ind Vic C.mr CUQl. .lo th1 usu htr powtrs to help Durlft
pltp 1 commtrcl•I ennounetr who Improve his 10ll 11m1 and tta
hwltu }'OUl\I men to .. lritndb' 111111 works tQo wilt (R)
tan1d1, on I OM·Wl1 ticket. Strvt m Mtn' lrltfill (CJ (90)
ind OartQn do 1 ,...., documtntllY CB to.Ina Kind (C) (30)
oa tllt 11ledlvt lll'Ykt. fD Ofl'·R1mp: "Doi P1Jtl\l1trbt.•
O Sb: O'Old Mft: "Wltdl It. fnd Kimb1ll, who cl1lm1 ID !'Md
S.11«!'" (co•) '61-Jolln. Y•U· 1nlmlll' mind&. Ulb to •clJta
1on, Ytr1 °"· M•rforit Rl!odtl. On Asne1 Moorehud'I Frandl PQOdlt.
his w1ddlR1 d1y, 1 a llor ind Ills Ill Dri•ltk Serial
brid1'1 hmll1 r1e1iw t.lqr1m1
from his comm1ndln1 officer del•Y· t :DO B 9 ([) nurW7 N'4frt Movie:
ini thl wtddlna b.uua of 1 Pl· · IC) "Tlll S1Cr1I lnvlllon" (dr11111)
ttrnil)' ~udloll. '64-Stewart Gra naer, Rat Vlilo11t,
ID Mari• 1or (C) (30) _ Mickey Rooney. Edd Brrnu. HtftlJ
G) PlttJ D11b '(30) Sliva. The exploits of 1 handful ti
fD WUf• NIWf "Mlalo11 Control." convicted trhnin1l1 who S1Y1 Yu10-
A look at th• 1111nntd sp1ct ffl1hl altvl• IM th• Allied uu11 ln WorW
complex In Houston, TtU$. W11 II 1r1 muled. (R) mo...,... u @rn ..., "rl' <Cl u~
1:31 D lltc Nin s.n1c. (CJ 160l Cl Thi .,..,,. .... (C) (30) m• ... <301 m 11dta1t'• ""' 1301
UD M1kln1 .. Mott If M1hlrlty:
''Your Pflllosoplly for M1turlty." A
ptnel of rttirld 'PIOPI• dl$cusa tllt
need to b11lld 1 phllosophJ lo
senior dtluM. (R)
Ill•-3' CCI
7:00 D CIS Evt11lnl: N'twr. (t) (30)
W1lt1r Clonkl11.
fJ f Tf911111 (C) (30) m I LM luqo (30) m 11111p1'• 1a1."' (3o)
fD Slcrl•lltt fllt
11!1 LI CHI Yldl
'"" IJ Ill [I) """"" ""'' (C) 190) Marshal Jim Clown must hn• 1
"00POYPAHIMCAlfS5." Dan Holli•
1er 1ctur1ttly for1t1st1 d!sast•
when Ann Marie tnllN that hit
mother be her overnlaht 111nt. (R)
@ Tnt Advtntln IC) (30)
ftl Th11trl l11t: Hal Marfentttll
looks at )Ctnu flom "Coney lsl&M
of t!le Mind" perlormtd by 1'111
Company Theatr1. cuirenUy runni111
at tile RobertJOn P11yhoust.
U1 NocM c1t EstrHI
t:JO 0 ID @ Dra1111t: (Cl (30) "Thi
Pyramid Swindle." Friday ind 61~
non W<>rk out of the Frtuds Divi-
sion to br"k up 1 money·maki•a
sc.~eme. Yi1zini1 Greu autsts. (R)
0 @ (J) PIJton P'11ct (C) (30)
(() Tr1vel (C) {30)
Em DEBUT lndl1! Mr lndil!
tunlllln convicted of robbery ind 10:00 l!I ~ 00 DN11 M1rtj11 Show: (t)
find 1 WI)' to ndirect 1 liei&hl c11 (60) Guests 1r1 Jimmy Stewut.
loadtd t1dth 1nou1h dynamite lo Geor11 Gobfl, Shtcky Green• •nd
IMI th• town. His 3lt1J.1tion 111· Wisa D'Orso. (R)
coma altitll when the 1unm1n ii
fretd trld 111 H111111nt u lled Mo·
bneUt bl•mas the m1rlh1I for u u1·
lna ll!M to lose his th1nt1 101
work on 111 Important c11tl1 drive.
(A)
D 0 00 ......... ., (C) (IO)
"A Mitter of Blood." Danill Boon•
must pmu1dt 1 beurtllul you na
wom1n (Adrltnnt Hayts) to l11v1
h•r lire of 111Xury to succ1ed htr
dyln1falh1r11 111 lndltn chltf. (R)
1!1 EXCITING! PLAY * "LET'S GO TO THE RACES!" MORE BIG
O Cieor11 Putn1111 Nns "> (60)
Q Suspef!M TIM1tr1: (C) (60) "Tht
RobfietZ Rina." Julie Ha rris, Rob1rt
Louia, Julie Adams star. An orna\1
l1mily ri111 brin11s together 1 J>fOIJd
rover and a spinster schooltucher.
The rina. 1uociated with 1 Iona st-
riu of tn1(l(!ies, eauses havoc. in
the livts ol the two peoplL
0 Tempo (C) (60)
m J1ct; L1th1111 ftr'll'I (C) (30)
m Fnoritt ste11 (C) (30)
tD RlO Rniew
CASH WINNERS! GET 10:30@ Ntn: {C) (30) Bill Johns.
FREE ENTRIES AT VON 'S
IJ Lit'• le " till ltlCIMI (C) (!O) 11:00 O Eleven O'Clodi Report: (CJ (30)
0 (jj) Cil s.ond H~ f1111: Jerry Dunphy.
(C) (30) "No Elp11i1nct Nteei· 0 Th• 11111 Hellf N ... : (C) (30)
ury." Luke C.rpenttr pl.lb his r•P· Georme Sanders.
utatlon on tilt lint when he aots 0 TIM Westemtrt (30)
to work 1s 1 11!wn1A on commls-O News: (C) Baxter W1rd.
slon for I lh1dy lloust·sldint firm. 0 Mo'ril: (C) °'.PNJ1 If tilt Solltl
(R) P1dfic" (retm1nce) 'SS -Denni• G Mllllttl $ Movil: "MJ Clllin Mo11an, Ylralnl1 MtJO. RKW' (myslery) '53-0li'ria di
H1vl111nd, Rlchtrd Burton. Audrey m Les Cr1ne (C) (60)
Oi lton. Tiit heir to 1 consld111bl1 ID Mowlt: "Five S'ttJll ft Dl11pr"
fortune tttempts to d!ICO'Vflr if th• (a<tvenlure) ·s1-St11llna H1ylf111,
wo1111n ht lo'l'U is 1 achem11 ind ll:JO fJ Movie: "1\1 Ii& 11111,.,...
1 11111rdl"u or true ID !\tr dtcl•t11· (d ) ·=o· b •• T •·· ''' tlons ol lo¥t. rama ....,-Ill '"' 1y .... ,
Johnson. m Trdl • c....-{C) (30) 0 ~@ Tiii T1111l1ht 1111'1 (C)
CD""7 M~.(60) 0Movil: "Wille If 1111 ...
EF11t1r1: S1or1t1 of th• Witch" ( ,_ t ) •43 _ J01111 Chum." A look 1t tht delpul: tn1 ~u • ..-n ure
I .. I.
""
·L--.. ~... Wayne. Gill Russell.
" '"' IS 1111 ..... ~ ~.......... D rA! /Tl (-.-11-i..... .... (Q Into M. Btrrw's Caw in Gmiolllt, lW l'LI ,_, -..
Fr1nc1. 12::00 m Joi l"yftt (C)
II) NIIMI Citl M.iul
1:00 O lo1in1 (C) (2 hr) 12:30 m All·Hi111t Sllow: "Bride of rflt
Monster," "Colon&! Efflngh1rn'1
Raid,'' "My Omm Is Youri," 11141
"The Ghost Goa Wnt." m Adio• ni.n: ""° 111•
V~s."
0 @ (}) TM ftyin1 Nun: (C)
(30) "Tonlo'1 Mo1tler.'' Siste1 Btr·
trill1'1 visit to th• sleepy vmaa• of
[sp111nz1 11 1n upsettin1 experi·
111ce tor both the MPl!ct 1rrd youn1
Tonio who mlsttku Sister Bertl'llle 12:;45 0 Miiie: "'World Witlwlut Ell'
fllf his mothir com1 bKk lnim {tcl·ll) '5&-H111h Mtrlowt, f'llllCJ
h••Ytn. (R;) GtltS. llod Taylor.
m -CCI (30) 1,001J "°'"' "Tiie .... ~ "'""" (SCl·li) '57-Cri ia Sl1¥t111, W'Ulllm fE) Pll)'in1 the lulUr: "Notes on
tht First TllO Slllnp." lnstrut101
Frederick Mold teaclMs studenll to
pl1y to mtlhina near 1 t0ml>O$i·
""·
FRIDAY
DAYTIME MOVIES
1:30 0 ........ Bii hr (d11·
111) 141...:.0r• ilflOfl. Watter PW· ....
D "ffldlorl'1 Id' (1dvtntu1t) 'tO ~•UI Munl. (t) •A M•R Cttltd Nlr" (d111111) '5~ic:l11RI Todd.
Hopper.
O Movie: "'T1lt Unl1tttitur <•
tery) 't7-L.1w AJr•t. M11 Shirl·
din.
&Nm (C)
11:008"11lt11l Tr1Tnc" (myllf.IJ') 18
-J. Ctm:t!I H1lsh. "Cect11111b"
(camedy) '2'-Th1 MUJ lrvtblra.
12:30 m "(1111 Mori Tol'llOrtOW" (ciim-
edy) '46-Ann Sherld•n. "NICM
lfl'lt. Niafif' (dr1m1) '49-11*t-
lc• Crawford.
1:30 m "Tiit c.tdlnll" (dr1mU .,,_
Eric Portml11, JUl'lt Ouprez.
4:30 I) "Wllirtpoll" {m)'Slltf') '4t-
G1n1 Tltrnl)', Rlch1rd Conlt.
m '1Hn1" {dr11111) '57--Sll •U•
Bri111 Keith.
Complete PrintlllCJ Service
Top Quality -Fast Service
''ii·111M"'mi
642-4321
2211 Wut 81lbo1 Blvd. N1wport Beach
......... ---.. ·----~----..--.... -.... --.... -...... .-...... -...... --............ ""'---........ ~.,,,~---.-~ .... ~~ ,.... . ..... ,,
••
TriurMI 1 Junt U,. 1%8 DAILY PO.DT
Everyone Has
Something Th.I
Somaone Eke Went..-· TBE BIOOflST SINGLE MARKETPLACE ON TBB OIUNGfl COAST-PBONfl DJUCT Hl-H71
--y~-c... Sell 11;-
Find It, T r..1 •• 11
Wiiii a Want Ad l •
•
HOUSES FOR SAL E HOUSIS FOR SALi I HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSU POR &AL I HOUSll ~011 IALI I
Gonoral IDOO Gonoral IGOO G ... ral 100f> I ·G-..,.--,.-1--·--,-DOO-l;Gener;::=a;-I -"----;-;IGOO;;;;; 1-<:ot-ta_Mooa ____ l_l_O-. Ntwport lloadl 1200 !!!!.".~~ --.!.~ i;!9una lucN 17115
HOUSES POR SAtl HOUSES fOR -SALI HOUSh POR SALi HOUSES FOR SAl.1!
-·m;m;r.---1··•r~·1i"'· •··;;;,··=·,.··-.. ··;;i;r.,··· I •··;;;·.,.,;;;··,;;·"a'"·'"rr•·•=--.:.~. I :.::;:.;,===;:::.:1 OCEAN VIEW -·-· NEWPORT Helfh•• s edrm, * Pool Time!! OLDE BARN sm.E WBTCllff THE wru FIGHT IHflATIONI LUXURIOUS Location -Loc•tionl '" batbJ, doublt • .,.,., Lrr • Bdrm "Boll& Park" AllUqualed A c.batmll>c, ... DUl'LEX HOME FMM HIGH UPON 'llfE Fabuloua new custom < & "' loan. $21,000. 642-QJO home. Hu !Ove!f btd .,..i :;:, .:";. ~ :::'. 1 POOl HOME 4 BR 3 bllhs 2 atory. APPl'OX-YOW' ~e to mat.ch up this Have )'Ob bean looking Jor BLUFFS. 11 u g e 18' x 24' Jamlly room Ju.st completed Newport .l:lfta. 1210 10X28', cov .... patio, lob ot 'aabled root 3 Bltrtsoor ... 1 ... lmat~ly DXI *I. n of big l\v• fAbWoua buy featuri11&: 5 an almost now, modern, beained ceiling family room, by BOB cux;G. atrlking beau hldlep'a. Gara&• ii all . , ' .,_.,
LLIXVR'l AT lJ:fW C'OST.
&autilul 15'x32' Swimmlna:
pool, three btdrooms, 1%
bath! plus family IWrtl
home. Built for modem liv·
in;: -decorated ln exctllent
taste. Tomorrow may be too
late -be ~ proud owner
of this one. HURRY!!
ONLY $38,"l'".:il.
lng, l$x27 master bedroom BR + a huge family room 'luxurious, quiet, one-tt"'""" large fireplace and sl.kllng new papen, luah earpetlrig ""~ l{0l.R': S br, -i%. parutltd ind 1tn1Jcot txcel w09d panl wallt, Old ea.
th ···pl do ~-t '"· " L tt ... I I . . '""'Y"' ~~ -'---brick""'· 2nd "°"'' wl ="" ace wnstain with 2~ luxurious batl'ls, 1.11· duplex nome? We round tt dool'S to each o uoc P'ti•Oll, .-ie 1u11r1t o OC1Uon1 Juat ba, Har pr, 'JS' lot. Room recrttiuarial area •ht~ not BR't S29tlGO l4ildoo IUl1
tamUy rooin 26' x 30'. A most tra moden1 kitchen wltb for youi You will enjoy tbe one oL v.'hich la complete})' ~ bloclc from l'Jtb ~ay for 11'1 pool, EZ nnancU\lr bein& Ulled u a carace. ~ • • , ,
unusual blp'. bullt·ln oven & ra.na:e, spac-fireplace in the large Itvlng protected to close l)ff the or Mesa V~o QN!1try ~ltlb. Hduced to 133,900. By owoet Heevy lhake l'O'lf. Adults j YA OK ious llvinl room compl,ete room: the formal dining ocean breeze. The kltcben See "Shirley'• open bow;e" 324 El Modi!na, 543-7954 only bat• 119en lhb fine CofMlot 1 Iv · lfSO
with fireplact, w/w carpets area, kitchen built·lnl, two is used brick with ihuttered m01t attemoans at !!taut 'AVAIL tmmed. QI.tr Haveo 3 "lathe and • pluier'' bomt ~ n m .. YA Appraisal &: drapes. A choice conven-kids bedrooms &: ~ sepa· cabln~ts and has dtstuna.. CJrcle near Mesa 'Nerd e Br, 2 ba. &: 2 Br Ocean vu plen~ ot TLC (Tender Im· LIVE IT .,;, ~
$36,200 :,\,.,":"":, ne=-:,':'°:: r.;::-=·~~';'~: ~~ ::;th"! "':!;,~a= c':l1':8.. RHlty 546-5810 Inc Apt $19.508 540-'n.!!_ :!.,, CU.~ -r:.,':'.''f: ":. ~~ ~~ir: II
Newport needs some paint .\ cl~ enc.l05td parking for boat. ful carpeta, draPH, waahtt-1500 Adams at aa:bor Hirbo;. Highlands 1235 dowfl, _ lerior mt.Int~. En.joy J
at up but what a value at '33,· trailer or can. Jooxne oU dryer and two ~IDn (Near ctn~ma Tbeatre) USI'ER REALTY b.uct heated pool.a, plt!ODQI,
9')(1. WW aell niA <r VA. one ii $17'0. BoU. \\o'OUld included. Dol.i>le cooct1:te I ~~'!!'!!!'!'!!!!!!!!!!'!!!! Loveb' Famlb' Home 16612 Beach Bl, HB M2..fi633 pool aftd danctni at )'OUt I
bring S360 PE!t' month. di-Ive, worltahop and nxim Meta Verff 1110 4 Br, 2tOO sq. ft. ~.950. Recipe 11rlvate"club, REALLVUVE I·
\'\l I 0\\llll l ~I Ill\ Ill\\
for boat and trailer atorage. --'-'-'-.;...'-'----'-'-' Owner. 642--0346 • • • • • AT MONTICELLO! Pl,9'50. I
THIS AMAZING H 0 ME OWNER Movinr tnUlt aeU. for htpplneu Heart of Ne•pon II...._
!. t \ I t l 1' , 1 CAN BE YOURS for ONLY ·Large 4 BR 2 batb, Double lack &.y 1240 "Ii"ake a 1pacloUs 4 BR, 2~ atte. Walker a: Lee-~
$24,500. fireplace , new c a r p e ts , ----'------BA home, add all the "nice-546-1210. ' • 1 1003 .Bak~r. C.M.
20t3 WESTt:w.r'F DRIVE
646-mi Open i:\'es.
PR.IV A TE party wlstie, to ti " I · I blend I built • lnL S p a c 1 o u s oeU lovely home, Back Bay es to a ve It ISP ce: ATI'R.. low 2 BR .. u ... _ badcyard. Located on quiet well W:ltb nice location 6 · er · • -
Costa Mesa
% ACRE* R-2
$26,900
Best Buy-View Home
3 BR, 2 bath, hdwd Doors,
dbl gar, spacious yard and
covered patio, $25,960.
Harbor View Hiiis
Corona del Mlir
Lusk • butlt tiomea locatet'
1n the Southland'• most d•
si.rable • talclnal:ini a.rea.
Scllools &: Calif. hvin"
Campus just mom ents
away. Sensfbly priced troq
cul-de-sac, No down VA or area. 92'x122' lot, 3 Large convMienCe to beach A: shop-condo.; adj. to clu~f! '
low down nt\. Full prlci! ~·sited Br. 2'n ba, living plna; for the Unal touch, No. 1: Leisure, World i.q,
only $216,500. CALL LARRY f'tn, deo, pool $60,000. bl~nd all iniredients A add Hills. Ownl!r 837-T'38
540-UM Heritap Re a 1 S48--lTn a happy family. For further Kt:NTALS ,
Estate Lovely 4 BR 2~ BA. Loan det,aus, call owner. 847.aHO HOUMI Pumllhed
/<
111~W
Newport
1t
Victoria
646-8811
Corona d•I Mir
3 BR, 3 bath, large pool,
large lot, brand new elec
·kitchen, $54,900
33SS Vii Lido. 67S-2723
Eves: &i6-19'J4
(Optn ~]
$34.900 ro $48,900
LUSK HOMES
Diffi.'tlons: MacArthur Blvd,
from Padlic Coast Hwy. or
Nt::wport Fwy. Tum on San
Joaquin Hills Rd.. then
follo.w liins ro model area..
2414 Vista Del Oro
Newport Beach
SDlit level
'1D" Plan
3 BR, 2'11 baths
Evenlnp Ca.II 67U.116
OCEAN VIEW .
Lovely Camea Sharia Home
with 3 Bedrooms, 4 baths
large swimmln& pool
family room & dbllna: rm.
finished garage w/storap
owner's family bas grown
LARGE Sl4fo FHA LOAN, Bal $28,QOO. Make Ofter. Eves&. weekends.
$163 Mo. pa ys a 11. Owner e 54g..mo iELOW MARKIT
Sh~1t 3 BR. le fame rm. Eiatbluff 1242 3 BR 1%. bath, ~ec. blt·tn R
In Mesa Verde. Deluxe ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;~I .l 0, epll/drps, dble iaraae. carpeting & drat>is; ex. • l~e fto'Ct!ct lot. $995 total
pe•lly manlcwced y" d YOUR CHOICE mo" In· no closlni ""°'"
F'rpJ. in fam. rm. Sep. utiJ. Fashionable Eaatbluff only $14,950 with payments
rm. $25,750 Big, bold, beauUtul s BR, 3 of S155 per month includina:
I Take Trades baUi, heated pool, hiih faah-taxe11.
R1nt1l1 to ShJ,. 20C1JS !
EMPLOYED Woman would
like aa.me to share ber ,3 ~
~edroom h<m1e wJtb I
1vallable a:arar:e in n-
change tor Uiht bouseke~ ~
ing plua oom.inal rentaJ~
Rele~s requested write
Dally Pilot Bax P·l49. J
Evenings) ~. l~o~n=e:=:o~f~a:=:Kiiin:Cdri!~1~~
Wllllng To
Do Some Work?
This 2 bedroom, 1 bath home
11 ln need of paint and small
repairs, but well worth
$15,960. Huge comer lot that
ha..s a fututt value. Put yo
money to work.
~s Spanish style home
•Tile Roof
• Ovttaized dbl garage
and they m!: looking
for emaller home.
$'14,500
• Carpt!ts -Drapes Call:
MlHl5iO REAi.TO~ Ion -move In tomomrW. 1 f
ME.5A VERDE 3 BDRMS, 2 $52,900. ~
baths. Family· room. Obie,
B r I c k fl.rtplace, covered
pat lo. Shutter!. Electric
Garage door. Sprlnklen:.
Nea1· Qlurches, School &::
OR
FEMALE Teacher1 de1ire 2
th.Hll"3 room mates I lhtre la· 1 ijiijjiijj ocnfmt hm Sept~iey i. $67 1
11iage Real EstJte
eroadmqor Resale -better than new. Most popular 4 LEASE OPTION
e Blt in Bar Jim OJbb
Loaded with cug!um features
-transferred must sell, Al:l
for $34.5CC.
Solid tamll;y Uvin', S BR, S
beth. View, large patio, ~·
low price of $42,MX'I
Delancy RHI E1t1te
2828 E. Cout Hwy., CdM
Come Up With C11hl mo. 67J..6886 ,
AND 51.eal thia near new l Gm.L To &hare 3 be'.
Bdrm. plan with fonnal Din. . . / Library and Golf Course.
$30,5 00 . 549-0835.
Owner/qent
shake roofed Glen Mar 4 BR BE.AOI APT. -
Rm, Fam. Rm, Brklst. Rm, 3 'BR home with 1 % ~~·
and 2 '"tire places. Offer • • • . new carpeted, gas bW.lt·m.!
~ Ph., 6'14: 1133 · carpeted, draped & wilb. 6'J3-<li95 ~ 5:3'.I
673-3770 loveb' kitchen buUt·lnl, Only EMPLOYED lady deliret 1
$54 503 tn kitchen. On a large lot. C Sell" 4 BDRM or 3 and den, 2200 I~!!!!!!~~'!"!"!!!!!!~~ I $24,000 F/P. or 2 same to share 3 bdml·
• ·' • • .. ·' "· · • • •• • • • • • ' Wilt lease option at Sl 75 per
Mrs. 1-larvcy n10nth -first & last month areer .11n~ r 3 BR 1% baths, l6x20 fa mily sq.ft on Country Club Drive Coron• .d•I Mar 1250 Pac:lftc Shores R.eal,ty home w/pooJ.. 962...SUl
536-~I E'yea. 536-3240
l•r,+iiiw + $500 option money. Total
price t20.~.
Excell~nt opporturu Y 0 room with fireplace double $43,500 Owner. 546-361.T
7682 EDINGER currently license:ct Salesman garagl!, sh!ngltr roof beauu. I=========~ Choice Location
8424455 OPEN EVES. ttlo have ~be1. ~~slNU ldlo en! \er ful yard. Low dow~. N•wport Bt1ch 1200 50xl.18 ft R-2 Near Beach DOLL HOUSE
Coldwell, Banker & Co. ~ COATS ............................ 1. ie s~1a 1z~. e . 0 ex· Rltr. 646-3928 Eve. 642.-0185 ---__ .. _ ' chaniinr. Working m com· NEWPORT HEIGHTS & Bay, 2 comly I-tomes plua Super clean I aharp 3 BR 2
2?00 £. Coe1! Hl~hw•'f &
HtwP«I leKll. C1lll<'lrnl1 WALLACE 1,,,..,.,'.,' .,•= .... •.,.".,.'.'!""~..,•I REAL TORS
4 BED11.00M---.546-4l41 -$l9,450 (Opon Evonlntlll
"'"" "" th;, "'' '"'"· 16 u ... -$97 500 Ult& of shade trees, big lot, ft••-1
2 bailis. Won't be around Newport Beach
long at thU low prict. St54 BAl_,B()A PENINSULA-Just
per month includes taxes! a few short steps to bay or
beach. S.l bedroom and g.
bachelor. All apt.!!. have pri·
Ea.stside Special
Cu.!l:om home on corner lot.
like new. Vacant &. ready
for new owTie1-.
$23,950
3 BR & POOL
Ea.stskie corner lot. Vacant.
Submit dcwm .
S31 ,SOO
PERRON REAL TY CO.
18th & (h:an~e 642-lm
vate baths and kltcllen f.acil-* BY OWNE>R *
ities, 100% ,furnished. No J will sell this week my 3 Br.
vacancy factor. 23% net 2 bath home. Reduced to
2043 WESTCLIP'F DRNE spendable. l\"lr ... O'Brien. $28.750. Family room. new
646-ml Open Eves. Eve.Ii, 547-1875. carpeting, large (t!f!Ci.'d yard
DELUXE OFFICE on cul de sac, within walk-ing dlstan<.:e cit Npt HJgh,
1000 SQ. Fl'. CARPETS -elem, Jr. 1-ligh & \\'estclllf
PRIVATE RESTROOM and 293 E. 17th St. 6464494 11hopping, Extra storage
kttchen facilities. Only $195 cm area. Terms Oextble. 439
mo. Year lease. EX NG Cambrli:!ge ~It c M
STORE ROOM COSTA MESA And spacious custom home 646-6545
mercial • Industrial -land . *LACHENMYER HIDEWAY maids QUal'ten, $58,500 !inn bath home, excellent carpets
end hi&:h vslue Residences. Privacy in a little V.'orlcl ell Shown exclusively by: throughout, beautl.ful dlcbon-
People with exchange train· Costa M11a 1100 your own. Lal'Je panelled Delancy Rtal E1tatt dra lawn. Tra111;ferred own·
big preferred, Real Estate living room • Mas~r kltch-2828 E. Coast Hwy, CdM Pr must &acrUice at only
selling olfen: a challenge to Victoria Mesa en for on1y $Zl,!EO .. 10% 1,,,=="67,,.3..,·3"'7"7,.0..,..,=,,. $20,SOO.
quaillitd men & v.·omen who Homes dO'NTI m<Wes you in. SWEEPING View of Harbor Paul Jones Realty
think creatively and fol' 646-7171 e 546-2313 Huge 2800+ aq', 4 ~. 2"' ba, 847-1266 Eves, M2-MM
those wbo desire hi&h in 16 NEW HOri-fES OPEN EVES wet bar ln lam nn, cuitom No Down to Vets • Low d" ••. ~. 30--t-n . come status. We will show "· .,. -,., "· .,. decor thruoot. $61,500 Owner
you want to do and how to From $24,950 64&-6414 OPEhl DAILY 1--6
do lt. Paul Stuart, Realtor, Valley Road at Victoria. 3 BR, 2 BA. older, view Sharp 3 BR 2 bath adult OC•
CdM. Ca\l 675-H170 for appt. (Just E. of Brookhurst home. oo Pacific Drive plua <:1WI~ home near lhopplna,
up on blu!J) new 2 BR, 2 RA apt: Ov.<ner school.a & Douglaa, FHA OK
l.Jdo size lots, f~ simple 6~91)1 $24.SOO.
In this Specious Yani. •. or land· Hjgh above itCa lev~I. Berth for your Yacht PERRON REAL TY CO.
party in the i.ai'l.e ,ePar"ate Bullt·in ek-c:trlc kitchen. at yoor own lront door. Easy O\VNERS' 3 br. home. Keep 642-tm
Play rm, next to the. over-Convenient to shopping (.."et\· ac:cess to the Bir Bay Crom 6'4 ~ int., no loan coil $14$ --~=~ =--siz~ hc-ated pool. 3 BR. ter, near schools. 3 and 4 this OlaMel location. Older n10. $18,500
hdwd flOOI"! thruout. AU cm BDRMS .. 1 & :J sty, Fire-: Z..story home with room to _l'"-28=·~900===*~-~""".;,,2951=
comer Jot -O\VNER r.1uST places, carpelin&. dl'aperles, build. Pier & Float, $55,000, ELEGANr Small 3 BR Country atmosphere 66x1.40'
SWIM & SUN
SElL-a real value at $31,. fencina, landscaping, Burr White, Realtor $39,500 316 NarciAh'US R·2 lot, custom built 2 BR
500. Michael Kay, Builder Owner 673-66JJ & den, frplc, hdwd Ors, en-
8Uff While, Reallor Phone 6'12·2821 Eve• G4i.s100 2901.N•wpoN•WJ>O" e",.",'vdh . cameo •111hlands, ipactou• 4 ~~s~~~;rRElL,~y br, 2 ba. On canyon, $36,500, Buy A New Car .,,,...,,. Ev•" 6,,....., OWNER .,,...,, 847-8531 Eves. !J68.U78
WILL share my elepnt
waterfront home, Man SS-«>
yrs. $150 Mo. 67~1
N•wport Beach 2200
EXZC type 3 br hon!•, avail
6122 to 8110. compl equlp.
S700 total. 642-1730 ,
Balboa
EXEC Ba,yffont ~. 5 hr, f
ba, Pier &. !loll, eompl
equtp. Avail now to 6/30, A
thrn O?fn 1rom 9n. lteU
ratu to respolllible party.
Owner 673-"139
V1c1tlon Rentllt'
HAVE Beaut. tum, Ocean.-
front atud}p Apt. Playa <iii K~~" i20a wkly, Ju n. i!
15/Sept IS. Also Mo. 6 )Tl)'
rates. 673-43'10
A'ITRAcr 3 BR beach house
In B1lboa. Furn. Avail Jtme
1~. $150 wk. 67&-5660. J
RENTALS i
Hou1t1 Unfurnlahtd ~ 1200 SQ. IT. ·BUSY THOR· in Newport. A rambling ~=~~~=-.-~..-
OFARE -LEASE $200 ~10. ranch home with shake roof, WANT 6 BROKERS
EVES! KI 'J-1875. 3 large bedroom, 2~ baths, Forming rroup !or new
family room and two magnl.. branc:h ofJlce lnterestl!d In
2901. Newport Blvd,
Newport Beach
6754630 Ev-es: 642-2253
WE Will. AD?.-UT
It need1 !Dme paint and min-
or repatr but $14,500 Is a
good price for s 3-bl!droom,
2 btlth home. Just a Iew
blocks from sb:lpping.
with tbe oavlng• "' fol> 3 WE( W!U. TRADE Up ========I A RARE FIND
BR, 2 ba Gem. LaJ"iC lot-FA v a RING YOU IN _L_ldo_l_•_1·~---•351 4 BR 2 bathli, new W/W Ca?'-General -
fenced yard -walnut pan-N E WP OR T / LAGUNA. Bayfront Lido Isle ~tin&'. patio wttll BBQ -ram-I ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1
elin1 -fireplace It. bit.in Fam1ly movln& to aru bu 2 Story, 4 BR, 3 BA, 2 ldlch-Uy room, built·ln oven I I/ fi 4: ........ 1 All ... ,~ wurking on lncome proper-c:ent ... q-aces. .W.. & ty, Apl•, Comm'l, >.creag' e, mol'e lor an unbelievable
kitchen -alt teatures which fine Colonial home. An:adia, ens, best side of bey. Could range, fenctd yard. Open to I I
adds value to this bargain· S/ A O a k 1, marketable be Converted to duplex. •II terma. 122,950. R E NT A L PROPERTIE$
293 E. 17th St. 646-4494
$37,500. Exchanges,
1
etc. lKl %
1
com·
mlt.!lon , per ec.t coop plan. :~~. s 'p'RR!NGIN" G All .. p l I .. conf;donllol.
-· \Vrite to Box M·l48 Daily
priced property. $77,SOO. Available also on Watch the boatll come with· R, D. Slatu ltulty WANTED lor lt.un"ilWr 4
Asking $22,500 Newport Bay 3 BR; ~ be, ln 20· ol lront window. Spo.oe-347.3519 Yearly. \Ve are rapkll1 Burr While, Realtor 1, ... ,;,, $27,000. 675-439'l taculu v I e wl 01 .... u, TERRIFIC IUYS gelllog bool<ed .. f'or lllll> Owner/A.gt. Bkrs invited acrou from Balboa Bay mer, and still have ml.l\Y N-Easts id e locaUon, quiet 7251 ..A.REALTY Pilot.
You Asked For It
sl.l'1!e:t. hardwood Door!, 3 • .;:. 2901. Newport Blvd.
bed""m" """'"' drlv., • "ANYTIME" Home or lnyeslment Newim• "'"""
WHAT IS ~ING? Club. 20x20 Booul room specialt , quests from our repeat cl~ e Blk to ooetln a: channel BY OWNER (can be Uled ••master BR. ents. J.LSO we are dellPtt-
double car garage, wood Bd 7682 EDINGER 675-46JO Eves: 548-3134
OOrntn ttreplace lovely 2 Mlst•r nns. Profe11lon1I Zone 842-4455 QfllEN EVES
•You awn the land Phone for appoh:ltment or family room}, O.Oice of ate~ In need ol Yeady. e 3 l"an!utlc Bdrms. 673-9412 3 & 4 BR.s. $25,500 a: up. R.ntah,
yard ·g• • $19,950 ~th good with Ba~hs 4 BR. 2 bath larae kitchen & . ONLY $22,500. Don 't miss
t rms Room for the Iamily to roam family room double garage. COSTA MESA-POOL this immaculate 3 mt 2 bath
e 211ea .• 2 "1>k•. OUTSTANDING HAFFOAL RIAL TY ~ ~·~:"\:t';.i_ Ioe. e Combin. 1ar/fam. rm. VALUE 8Tto Warner 842-4405 RENTAL DEPT.
(' I · rfh & ( In this spacipus 5 bedroom -Prime East l'Jth St. area. $120.00 mo.-Paya All home wHh all extra a. 0 eSWQ Y 0, 3 bath back bey home. Cul: 121,500 _ ''"'"· MODEL HOME CLllAN • 3 Beautifully """""' & e SmallAdowng•nt S>itsr~;, 3 BR, 2 ba, Taflie, rebii. 3 BR, 1~ B~~ewly dtc., Ta· 67J.3663 new crpts, recently rl!model-cant View uvu1e. By Owner,
642-7777 de.sac no traffic street -Leon Vib.rt, Reiltor lovely bedrooms, covcred dra~, cavertd patk>, large
$.39,500. Easily financed. S48-.ffi88 anytime patio, fireplace. hardwood yard&. ln excellent reslden-BY °""11er, cuatom Baycrest
4 BR. rumpus r o o tn
(convert. to 5 BR or pool
room) 2'iia l:llll.thll &: lar1e
fam. rm, 2 ~a. 20x40 pool
w/jacuul $12,500. 2 0 0 0
Andior Way 642..ZMJ. or
led, ~· lot, iood fin. Jmmed-$20,000 Tfnns. 96S-J965
Cotta 1Moa 3100 190-I Harbor Blvd., C.M.
Open Eves.
646-7171 546-2313 .,. ... _ .................. I floors. WllAT A BUY. Eves, tial area. SUbmlt on down -
OP'Eli EVES. 3 UNITS 5414097 FfWVA terllll oonsld&ed.
THE ~EAL
EST ATER,:;
WANTED
CALL 540-1151 (open tvae)
Heritage n,eal Estate
2 BR.I each, S praae1, good -8'l OWNER.
location. $2'1,flOO ·terms.
Well1-McCa rd11 Rltrs. 1.·1.,1,~~iii·.il,ii!."!il~""l!!'·!liiiiii•i!,._..i!!!,.il1:~~~ ne; ~~~ mm.od~~
mo Nowporl Blvd., c.M. "BliiACH DllPLEXES kin•""'" 2 both" ct1»1n 548-Tr.!9 Eves. 644--0684 BE U -sinks), Fireplace; I a rs e
RMI Estate Sales People. $311,900 to $51,500 yard, quiet street near 'May
..,_,.,,
s 11i•~r.~T~,.-n-.~,,-,-,~b1~.-
Loon
iate oci:upa.ncy. $<t),IXX)
R. C. GREER, Realty
3416 Via Udo 673-9300
lllilders Home
fiOOO sq.ft. 4 BR & mald.'a
5 be, 3 car av. l~i lots.
Unusual feature1. Must gee
to appreciate. Brokers wel·
come. ~ Vla lJdo Soud
642-1615, Evu f15.18B9
No Down P1ymentl
Veterans .. see this sharp 4
BR In Glm MIU' homes area.
Owner just completed dec-
orating. Only $23,500 too!
Vacant -Immediate pone5-
slon. Low down pe.yment for
FHA buyers, too. Try us!
COu.EGE REALTY 546-5880
WHY NOT GET ON THE Co. & Catholic &: AU.
BAND WAGON? l aycrest Lotl H schools . $2aOQ Down. BK,.
Over 25 Yitan in Ideal eustom builcUng site in BEACH OME Loan. 976 Denver Dr.
3 er, n~ !lath, covettd patio
20xiO pool. tamily nn, frplc,
elect bltnl, crpts, drps. Prtn-* SACRIFICE! dpala only, Ml-0355 For quick &ale. Vacant la s
R.E. Salesman Wanted. Orange County cholsclt resldmtial erea. 3 BR, 2 bath!, luge llvlna i4~2090 or J-866-3389
YCAU!g EnergeUc Real Es· e Full page adverttsina 91'xll8'. Not lease hold! rm, fireplace, dbl pra1e, BUY OP THE YEAR.
. br on 50' Jot. Best buy on REDUCED To prlce of lots! I.JOO. $4,!Ql dn, $37,IXXI.
Low dn., E-Z tenna Lovtiy Owner ~. 675-2447
S BR 2 Ba bc.ne on 2 loll nr. tale ~e1man to work tn e Inter office teletype Tnily a barJ:aln, offered at $13 900
modern, ag.,....sslve office. • Tralnl.ng pro~ $25,500! ckort~ WUliamsoo Rltr $17,350 · ~enc.-e ·~ necessary, e Jmurance _ Ruth P1rdoll, Re1ltor 673-4350 OPF.N, EVEs. Lea.vine town. Must StU! 3 -~" • M th ben r·•· i~ w,,.,,,·u D·. "'-'?.5200 "'l!!!!!!l!!!!f!!!!f!!!!!!!!!f!!!!l!!!!!!l!!I B<lnn. Color tiled b•th on Broker training available. any o er e '"" """ • ....... ~ i n-1and8c kl Liberal Commissions -Pro-CaU 6464494 -For interview Three . bedroom plus family oa15 e aped t. New M ... V1rde -4 Bedrm. room In excellent condi-water heater. Jn excellent
fit Shari"8 Plan. BALBOA ISLAND F1mlll Rm. DI-Rm. -tlon. Pt-ol•ul<•"I Jandsca-con<L 6JJ9.9727 Owner. :m9 t\-1. M. LaBORDE, Realtor ··• .... President Pl 2al E 17th St 84&«IS6 Illness forces.sale olthla l:>U· umput Rm. , Ing end outside lights. All ·
· · plex nea.r Bay. 2 J!R 1 balh $24,000 thia for only $23,500. Ov.-ner BY OWNER • $24,SOO, 3 br, REAL ESTA TE + 1 BR. I bath. Good mital Covered pat Jo. Built • in!!. leaving arta and wants fast 1% ba. Full cpta & drps,
Independent friendly office area. Owner lives out ol Paneling, Convenient loca· escro.v. lndscpd, xt.ra yard tor boat ha~ opening for associate area. • vrry-anillous to sell. tion. 540-1720. JEAN SMITH, and/or trlr. X I n t location
with .!Orne lmowledge ln land Rltr. 646.3928 Evr. 642-0185 TARBEU. 2956 Harbor REALTOR W. of HarOOr. 54&--'JSlJ, •Inc om, prop"tleo. Top *LACHENMYER ~==~~~ -842-0721 all 6.
bay • ocean. Can use as 2
aptt, nn. to bid. Prk. rear
U1 flat Owner 613-2719
OCEAN VIEW, F@e Slmple
custom horiie, 3 br, lrg den,
lovtly garden. $54,S<X). For
•PPt call THE OWNER. 642-
3064 Eves. It. weeitends.
BY Owner. Harb or
Highlands. 3 Bdrm, 2 ba,
lovely ~tlo. $3,COO under
mkt. velue for quick .ale.
~.000. 646-0647 or 646-5118 Commt,.Jon. Dania R<ally ~ DAVIDSON Realty 400 E. 17th, C.M. &41>1'0$ By Owner/Pool Home
Co., C.M. 64:z..6560. $22,500 Famlly Expandint i&il Reduced to $29,450, immac. WATERFRONT, 62 BaJboft
TWO HOUS ES 6 >T old 3 BR beach home .. ',i!~ b::~~ 1;1:n-P1 :~:: lohn macnab 3 ~R, 2 BA. Haa cYerythlna ~~'to! ~~:~a:i!!
Near Bay. ~an • mod. Re1dy to iol!! C d I .u ~ nt tlnanctnc. 546-9205 ~._OU-I CAYWOOD REAL TY lhake roof. Make offer. orona • m.r 1,,..,BR.=-~1,,,,-.,Ba,-''=.~ .•. -.N~·I horacs, or? U a.mt.
... _l<" ••1 -R.Jlr. 2750 Harbor 58, CM R-2 lot with m1gnUIC1!nt ' 711 • """"""' ew I ~,o,;,;.,;.~~~-~~~ •&<> 1:111\ .,..,.., w ...._ __ t ll""' _..._ · hur• yd qui-' .-J OCEAN View/Fee simple 3 -• ...,... wuu • "-Vd.a -~i · 546-5Kiib Eves. 56-5142 Vlr.v ol Harbor Peninsula "'~" '• ~ •""'"'" &Ibo& Real Estate Co. N.B. 548-1.2!!0 ' $18500-IOOd trm1 Ma'v Br, lara• family room of.
-~ 11• •NK S •ys SELL" le Catallna li1latld, s:w.900 · ' . " •• --i by prl. -·· 154,IJJO. 'TOO E. Balboa Blvd., BtlboJ ~__.... ~ " lat I-Carnation St. ttade. Own/ast 54&-6.SM) IJ'I~ r Y
673-4t40 BUILD YOUR OWN P!>lynealan ParMtise! I Call for appt. HEATED pool, 3 Br, "11 pr. M'IJll Sell! SU-3064
FERRED Excllln• home m llovH Sl1o~ 3 bedioo«ll, I botho 642 .. 23S 1% bl. Cl'l>tl. ii ""1· ,Sl(JO LUXUllY O>ndom • Blullo 4 TRANS -es. Ivan Wells• Son cu11om Pool. blt·lns, $54 ,900 down. $1!5 mo. 5tS-36%!, br, 3 bl, bekP.v mrkt val at
AnldoUs to stll: ~· 4 BR builders. oHer you archi-YOO OWN T!IE LAND 5fS..6Q68 • m.m Oner lrtbaf. call
Huntlnston llooch 1400
5 IR 2 STORY
Walle to CathoUc acbool a:
church, 5 min to Doualu 1
Freeway. Sell Gt no down
or lakfl over ~'4 % loan.
BRASHEAR ~EALTY
847·8531 Zves. 96S-l17'
ONLY $19,l!:iO 3 Bdnn1, 2 b'i
room, frplc, htd'NOOd firs
kitchen · w/bltna, family
room, trpk:, hrdwood nn:
newly PBlnttd In l\nd out
Dble ilJ', fncd yd. Cloce to
1Choo11 utd oblp'a. 96>.4!91
FOR SALE BY OWNElt-
Eo.,, Cano Yant. Pool. r.,.Jc. om rm or Dtn. 3 Bdrm, ,.
Bath. Kitche11 din. area. bit.
lu. 191 ... U
WALK lo Bflach 3 Br. 2 Be
dfnlnaroo1J!.,llrtpl1ce
blllns aw-121 ,95 0 .
ll6l-<5S5 '" Ba., cothechal con. Uv. tectu<•l plannJna, lop qual. -the .... beach .,.. WESTCUFF °""" .... alt ~ -
din • ram. "°"" -·"· ·-• ,,_. HOME GC!-4000 $2<,9JJO, umitn< Dike 6 nn., aep. · • wo an .. .ip, """'="· <.C--' ..... -saiHiiOCiDhiYfiiihir I Immaculate 3 BR ln ·~tOVll Col~ \ BR., him. rm. EL!XiiANT 88.)"mw condo. 3 Muat Sell! Pruttae Atrium plus o'slze nunpua room. Roy J. Ward Co. 646-1* S.Mtp•ople Wiflf9cl In' conditlon. L.uge llvtna In:nac. ar» Walnut St, tee. BR., 2 lavtab bathl. hint. I Bll. Mike Offer
Bell loca-nr. IChoal. l""CHECK THESE Full ,,.. port tin>'-....,.. rm. 211 botho, covered ,.. Ownor 5§.1602 J146,1931 Pools, fOll, ete. F'te Jand. 5:141 Git..., Dr. to.Im
Delta R<al E;ltato MMCll ./V A·nc -•••••• !22,115G "-.... ,.qttlr'ld, ""' tJo, ""' buy In town tor ~On!y~,:IS'l~,llOO~Owrj:'.;!!!'!",.:m.<Sl&~=1 'vViAiiCANT;A;;;::;;;;;;;-';;iiT,f;..-E;
MESA nR.DE 4 BR. J Batb /l,OXI On •••••••••• 21 ,950 honn:i -.«k. GR AH 4 M $34,500 P:,..rv •• pu1J wm pq: 13 B.DR.M, 2 be, 2 'f>'tiOI 2 car • BR, 1~:",;l!· 5'.i,. GJ
otnlna, Fam111 nn. Pool /10% Dow1' •••••••• lS,&00 REALTY, 14'9 Rlvl!f1lde Lioc:i REALTY Inc.equity ~ e. Pl11'i pool, M1pttlce~t. Prln 1 ... 1 •_,.:. ·~9:
Open, $C3.l50. * ~ /,R,,,'f lot •..•••.•• , •• ft.!00 Aw.,aearPoltotflct,New· 3400Vie Lldo 673-SSJ>·PJ' ·•· M"11ll· 133,500. Own•r, c_, _.,,.,.
_ _;CHA1t;::::::G::":..::m:.:_ __ 1"M"'1fli=::..;;;111;;;;.crv;,,,..;.. __ >ta-_2"._, port 11uc1>. OWLGE ,.,.,, .. 111 Id oow.1 '*'IM2 D1al 6IUm "' RES111:rs
• I
Laguna Beech 1705
A V1ry Sptilal H-
for roti who m eearchlq
f.or the unusual. Has chu-
acter .l l&-11Ung appeal, One
or a kind In north end on
ocean lide ol hwy. 1 blk
from nice beach and lusb
Hde pooJ1. 'ItuilUna view ot
ocean, h.1111 I: dt)f Htbta. 2
br, suu-den, l ba • lure
beach shwr rm tbzu dbl
1ar. Modern brtght kl.tcti,
oov lllltio .wJqi frpl. w/rott.
st'Tie. UY nn IJPStaln bu
18' aeml-circ window I frpl
&: opens to 3 ~eeks an s
levels, Piiv ent every room +. +, + A a rn.yriad of
flower1 as. well. Rf!duQed to.
d1y to $~,'JOO. '"" llmple
wilh 1oW int lrl.Nltrrable,
no -polnt loan. Bkr 4.9t-75'18.
BUJLDP!ftl; CLOSE OUT
Our losa 'ta )'OUr ptn
REDU!'£1> TO SEIL
Only •• • left . s an. l!i Ba
· Elec kit -blt•lnt ~tral'via.c. tile ·COQnttr tops
P-1< Qcftri View
J'OW)W ''OPl!:li HOllSE"
. SIGNS
uP .SU!OflT TO
.ARO! BEAcil ltGTS.
!J>LqtaBtad!
. 'l'O wat :NllwWt '"· ~ l'!nlncJac
DISIRAILl-
HOME
2 BR., 1 BA .. Larr• lfv • ':"!
Hrwd • floors, Cptd., DNP.a
1arb.d..i.&p, aarap, water
!um.
ADULTS ONLY NO P!'l'S
RATE; REASONA81.E
Acn>u from ~...,, Club
215 Mesa Dr. Ph 54M'JOi
1 BR. stove • rtfris. P\1
patio & yrd, Adults,~ <11•
ly. 1115 2575 B Santa Ana AYe· ll38-03U . f
2 BR O:lndominJum. SllO mo.
Uoe ol pool. !
•TJ.e62 ,
Pm fuzn. ·3 BR. 1 BA. t;.
)'d., oo Irvine. stnaD tarn. I
only. $1116 mo. IHI-If"• I
DD.UXE 3 BR bomt wllb ~
pOOl; .Vall ?IL W.. POQ:1
n•>. Inc. pcol aal'T. ~ a BEDROOM. Larp ~ard. Weatakit. G 11 ~
It<; 41 ~ ..
BNn Condo. I iii I llo. •I
$285 mo. Yl'I>. Pool. A..U
lmmed. tff-2911alltr1 N,1
Newport No1tt1 n1~ • 1Blt6DID.I-I
,,,..,alil LY
~ new CUit bJt bocne
~h>btul.land-...
sweeJlnl ootan ¥lftl from
~.,, ., .. -)leclctll ,...
llo, ii _, l>ttmed u. na, P.mo 1111 -mMtff' .Bil w/._ nn a Dell' al 1Cbooa1
t>l••led ·-l JR. s ... -Wllat. -,, -"'1"' w11 -1o m..ma -... m ~t' lot. 1111,iiio. 0 w D o r Tilt QUICkiill: ll!U CA1'.I
49WIJ1 Ext. Ill&. ' Tl!E QUICKl:ll "!00
•
-' .~ ...... ~ ~ -~~-~------~----~-----J-'---~-~-------~-~·--------· ................... -... a ........... --..... --·--·· ... ·--........ --... ------··~·-' ...... --.. a---------·-·-···--5 ..... a .. ·--
• *' -.,. •• -.;t • • .. • • • ~-----·----~-·r-.,...,-------~ ·-,,-;or-;r~,.-;CXC;:'"C""':"'?'?""'""'"'""""'"=""'"',,.. ______ ~-~ ~ •• ,., •• 1.o. ,., •• .._ .••• ·1 •• • -1 ......... ,..._ .... -4 , _~,.-.···"·'· •• ;.".::--•. ~ •• ::t ;..,-.,x ,: •"'\ ..... •.-•.J'.._"Y<J£,,.,::F" ., ... _...-.,=•,• ...... ·--·--
DAJlV PILOT Thundiu, June ll, 1968
ANNOUNCEMENTS
1nd..liQIICES _ l" . .J!ALS_ RENTALS RENTALS REAL ESTATE, IUSINESS end BUSINESS end
DAILY PILOJ, --~~nhhe!', Apto. Unfvrnliihed ; _ Aplo. UnfvrnlihM Genorol ,FINANCIAL -flNANCIAL
I
•-6200 _..:.;~-----l p.,..,n•I• 6405 INDEX: Coron• ~-~!~~!Cost•=-~·~M~-~iiiiiiiliS~IOOii;i Ront•I> W1nted sm1;_;;,.;;;;;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;; .... Opportvnltl• 6300 Money Wonted 6350 ____ F __ _ -CLASSIFIED OCltA!< Voiw o ""' down >J I Arnerl<1's SHORT TERM LOAN C
-lk. 2 -bo up. Ph" lrg llARBQR BUSl!<EM Womu on.to 1 San Die9o _, Excll!MI 0. ..m -pa"""""p llalc looting 1.,_
•4fldeck. Cucst room &: a.. Bdrl'I} Un1um Apt, Colllf. r.'-..tv Food FrancftlM to perlOll with Public Rel&· Offe!n:d to public by S450 ptt mo: Jea.w/bu,y OP-, Mt•a. Newport, Corona del ~ --· 1 tlons bacJqrround. P~uanl Btlbol Power Squ1dron ~tMm * 6'J5.07'51 GREENS "Mar, HimUnaton ~lt w. ~ :-na.~tn tht ''Nutvllle USA'' worldn& condltion1. A&e oo Elementary PUoUA& Courses Lairuna. Up 10 S"IR ~ ,...~ ........ "P~ll' I ,, ... _.,... Every Monda)', Sta.rt.Ina
S Fo LE •.. 10,111 ,,.,.. -BEAUT. Oceanvlt>w 3 BR, 2 ~ •--..... .._ IQ &A bf.rrltr. _......_. N HOUSE· RSA ,,·,,,.,,.,,.-, ........ "'' M 2 ~le, molnl ~'. BAOfi!l.oR-. UNf'URN. Gara&c or c1r po t_I '1'"!'.P.-ot •C{n """~;' PM, June 10 ewport Har-.. .... -.. •,,.. ~...,.... • ~ SAt planted to A-vo-$25.COJ at 10 I 10 for 1 yr '--O b -W
OhlilAl •. ' ........... 1• INDUJTllAL ""°"••rt ....... trlc wash /"-· A ii from $100 neceUIU)'. &C-«1118' &ftw 5 )'IX~:-Come. to' •• __ _,,. ia.' ...,. Yaeht u' ,..., • ~ C:OIT.t.. MllA , ............. n• fOMMIRCIAL•INT •••••. ;. '* re . er w71!1'. va p.m. ' , ~ frett with :_geuidf\11 1 ,. & ORANGE "'cO. ;,n.-w.W by 1 lptetlC\I r Ave., Newport Beach
Ml.I.A OIL MA• .............. 11 .. NOUSTRIAL AL ....... ""' Au.c 1st.. $290 lease. 67~ Ind .. bide ..... ~~ ~m ~ Ck:Mn View lots vtJued at
Ml .... V.EltDI! ..••.•....•.. 1111 ~Dn .... , .............. 't" 3 BR Ho"'"". ' • .,. Jl90 m·o. I . 2 • ~ "eD·.... Eitec. Sffkl"I n~ ... -• .:.... ..-w.1...-....th t•.::.:,. OUol'lnl o tHled-~,......... 110,-. with completion .. OR, 10t your convenience cot.t.ro• ,AltK ............. ,11u 1tAt1cH•1 .. • ............ 61M ......:: &..c ,, ruw. _..,..... _,. ~..... .,,.. -Every TU~. , 1t&rt!ng 1 "EWf'OllT •••CM ........... 12'1 CtTltUI OltOVlll .............. ,,. "-. ~I r.m .. 1 • U"''""'-"' 1-IOUSE for 9 ine1Dber Jami-llUll and tuted b bond 499-3&t4 HllWP'OltT HJ10Hn .......... 1111 'c1t1A111 ..•.•......... 6tt1 _..,n1c • ""'l""' ... ff r vrw~. 1'<r vn.i.~-,., 1 9 in • many new counll')I tranchlse baeked, by well 1 Y · _ PM, June ~ £n&l&n School 1•t.11DA COVES ,,,,, ...... 12u uic• 11.s1No1t 11 ......... 6JOt 6Ta--S126 tleat~ Pools. Oilld ~ v ~r w ter moa "-·year. estate homes alrudy build .. ,,,. 50 year ol' _._,;.,....o &NNOUNCIMENTS 1~--• ~m D N • Nl'#~T· IHOllEI ........... 1221 llESOll'I' PllOPl!ll:T'I' .. ,,,6261 BcgJnnln&: Sept 1968 Can • ... • ., ........ "" ~ ...... --~ r., ewpot. IAYClt&ST .................. 1m OltANGI co .... •O,.EltTY ..• m1 2 BR. g•ttkner, drapt"s. Cen1er, AttJ to Stinripini -· ' · ln thll 1rt1. Close lo e,oll •-•Ml plant, one· of the •nd NOTICES Beach, in Catetorium. No
tAYSMOltl!I ............... 1m OUT OP STATll ,..OP, '" .... tJ• ··-··· lo'r•pl•-.••• ~. ··•t•• NO .. t. allowed fum hse all year. QiJl c:ourae. For N.nher Worm•· l;:;,-t of !'" type .. ··--• lslr ti oo•r• 1Hott•s .............. 1m 111ouNTA1N a o•s•lliT ...... ..i11 ''"" .. -...... James Helfrich ni 833-l234 ..... ..... lliC auvance reg a on nece. wl!S Clll'F .. ., ....... tut su•o1v1110N u.No .... U12 ...,id "1'lf'I 675-$95 27tt1 Pt!tera>tl Wa1 . •I ffar-:. UOn frl:eau~all Walter Frick Found (FrH Ads) 6400 llU'Y· Enroll at clau; if"""
HA••Olt NIO·tU.ANOS ........ rm •EAi. l!STAT• Sl!a"llCI! .... '2H ..... -· bQs' I Adami. O>atl Mn.. ext 202 with: U.S.A. -v ~!','~',•!~~.:~~~.:::·.::::::.:= ::Ei '.:!~::• ·:.::::::: .. :: FOUND June 4th ln Shore-~sl1!~. pOOne 5'8-137{ or ., 546-<m'll ' ROOM Wante-4 on Ba1boe. Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. F wn -.. stom o•~ ~
11oST•t.UFF . , .... • ...... un BUSINESS d ;.:;:;::::;,:!;:;::__=::::::_.:;::;;/•• I land b i .... I I .... W k ,..,. W OW' company o cu cliff.I, OIM; small grey &: 11tv1NI TE1t1t.1oc• ........... :1tt1 •n . ---s Y s .. ~ e a...,., tt ~ · 01apraan A\le, now opera+i .... 11Ucceasfully .......11 SINGLES ADULTS COltONA DEL""" ............ Int FINANCIAL LEASE :? story, l'lt'ar bto•ch or month Cbnta.ct by phone Or-an;e. cant. • ........ white maJe, part ...,..,...e. • 11o1.•0A Pl!NINsuu. ......... 1• 3 BR, "u BA, Blt·lns, lam. Ad. ulta Only coll {33-9690 · ln Santa Barbar•. Solvang, about I year old {ve..., cute), Me-et Orange County's
l l ACOl(IA'f ................ l>M IUlll)lll!IS OP'POltTUNITll'l ... ..,... D --In tlv T eel Ol' by mWl1;"='·~2$2~J,~,,.,~·~·~w~· knd~~·~5.'M7~~(7 ~ ·-·· Somls Calif ., I I 11ov 1su.1tos ................. 1• 1us1M•IS waNTEO .... 4lH rm. wltrplc, fenct'd yd, l:.u-im a e enants 2901 Pacific Coast Hwy ",.,sno, ....... • · If not claimed by June 13th, n cest peop e at Santa
LIDO ISLE ............... 1111 IN\IEITMl!tiT °"""11N1ffln .. "'" ............ , .. .-.. ! car •Ar""'"'· for Pre.stir• AddrHS Loo .,._h H 1 1 _ Four ne w tranehlaed stor'ei will gl\le to 1ooc1 home. 61> Ana's deluxe ballroom IAllOlo ISi.ANO ............ 1W IHV•STMINT WANTIO ...... uu --....... _ --g °" . e en Lo'ltro)'. 2-1/3 ·j(lltf t 12) La v ... MUNTINOTOflt 81!ACH ....... 1411 MONIY TO 1.0AN .......... Utt 9624WO. • llU 0 open soon: I e • 3527. * OROIESTRA • HUNTINGTON HAttaou• ..... 1110S Pl!llfONSAt. t.O•NS .......... m.1 ----------1 MARTINIQUE WANTED houw -winltt {l) Reno, (1) Phoenix and FOOD &: COCKTAILS
lw P .. t Aantc. ...... IJ:,.rt Miahac:e
DIAL DlllB_CI' 84%-Stla
I
I
! 1
! I
I
I
"OUNT•'" .. \IALt.aY .......... 1411 JliWEt.ttY t.DANS ......... UM 5 BR., ptnelf'd df-n, din. rm. G S Sept. 1 to June 15, cont yrly TWO and 113 •er•• •oc••t .,.,ua0ons underw"v in LARGE YoWli fawn colored WED THURS FRI se1o1. " ..................... co1.u.T•1tA1. t.01oNt ........ Ull ned . ARDEN APT -· ~ do G s•-he~ u . . . SAT. IUHSlT •~CH ............... IUI ll'l!lot. ISTAT• lOAJllS . .,. u.. Scree pabo, ~ • r Pe Is, • be!l.is to $200 mo. J BR or 2 land on busy tho-"'"filfT olhtt prime areu. g ennan •n:P n,a we DANCER'S CORNER ,
01o•oEH 01.ova .............. 1,,, M01tT01oo1s. Trwt o..-.. &Ml drape-s. bJrna. $230. ~lo. BR &. den. Un.tum or semi .,· •--·-Ano. eo'.:::'"''A••· mannered. Owner or rood I L.Ofll:w·~:N ................. ~= MONl!Y WANTllO WI 96J..25i8 Patkttke SWTOWJdinge ~ ._ home, Vic Colloge Park. 1438~ s. Main at Edinger St .
• A11: ... ............... ANNOUNCEMENTS c,:,..:...-~--~--I FU NISHED BACKELORS tum. College teacher. Xlnt is only m-1....-undevel~ Self aervlce,.cash Ii: carry, SANTA ANA ·-·~ lltANGa COU!orTY ............. u.. .-. . R f 528-6):)7 ..,.,. ~ 546-0991 j i>'U";>.JUQ : ouT OF cOUHTY ............. 160:S ind NOTICES S BR. 2 ba, fam nn, Pl'tSl1ge UNFURN l BR. 2 BR. 3 BR u s. · boulevacd In this area. Ap. dignified. busineu Of your INTEREST
OUT OF STATE ................ 14GI area. t!i(l mo or lease with, "bath• ••allablo 30' to 40' Sailboat going to pot praised at un.cm. Price, own that will retum much CHAMPAGNE and white
11 5TANTON .................. 1611 FOUND tl';rfll ~~I,, ... :."..,. ... 6¥t ...... -..._ ., ~ EXTRAORDINAIRE• wESTMtllSTl• ................ 1,11 1.01T . i ... .-........ .-: .. t opdai£ ~•J Carpels, drapes, gar""• thru neglect! I will Jtw $54,000 net to estate. Water higher than averaae net muted male cat, yellow · M10WA Y CITY ................. u1' Pl!ltSONALS ............. ...s ._,.. abolll'd &. m•intain bo Im-and all "Wltie• •••'labi.. year1.. income. (Solvang eyes, ru.st eolored nea COi· For Discriminating Couples u.NtA ANlo ................. 1621 1oNNOUNCl!Mt:Nn ........... '"I 4 BR 2 baths $195 per month 18th & S..nt1 An1, C.M. ... >J or SI I • P ti trf SANTlo AHA MOTL ............ \•» •••THS ·• · ........ N ... i..11 Rt>!erences. 673-7178 aft 5 ,,A,, A...,.. f'.,, =~A.. maculate: cond. in exchange 108 ft. frontage For further store netted $20,<XXI first tuU Jar. N.B. ~741 llnng e:;_,_,':: es· P
1
• OllAHC I ·... . ........... ,.Im FUNl!ltAll ............... 6411 D'ft>-u.J.J ~ fo · ) Id al f pl OU gs. v1q;1118l &: uniqtle. TUSTIN . .. ................ 1i..t PA10 01tTUA1tY ............ 11 PM r we. ~7083 information phone 542-9533. year • e or cou e or ~ MO. old blk labrador THE GROUP
NOltTH TUSTIN ............... 1'4J l'UNiltAl OlltECTOltS ....... '4U RE~·~ Em lo d Courte'"' to brok family operation becaµ.se the trl ..... El s ANAHl!IM ............ 1'51 Ft.GRISTS ....... ,,.,.,, S17S. PACIF1C Sands, 5 BR SILVER ''-'~1:£.' p yed Lay ~~ en. re everfawmon dent. cn4J776-6!Ml (21J)OL 7-6M<I SIL\IEltloDO CAJllYON ......... l•U CAllO OF TM.UOC.S ............. '41• wishes room, pvt bath. SEE Ad\I. under 6210 highly specialiud nature of in CM Musi identify .,.._ LACUNA-HILLS ............... not IN MEMORIAM · ... '. ......... '"' cpts., drp6.: nr. schls. &-· our business requires a min-· · ' r .anchises Available 1
I.ACUNA IEloCN .............. 11os CEMITEltY l.OTS .............. " f)ch. lst/alst req. 96'l-741'i Con\I. So. Coast PI a z a. "Newberry S p r gs'. $) 646--0139 NEW t.AOUNA NIGU EL ............ 1101 CEMITl!llY CllVflT1 ......... "411 GATE 546-2362 Berkson acres." Call owner S4l-$40 imum of employees. _:_:_:..=-:::.-~---~-! SPAPERS, out of state SAN CLEM.,..TI! ........... ~tt71t CEMETEltY CltYPT' ............. 3 BR, l~ ba, ne .... · pnt Inside, PRESCRIPTION ch I J d. s &. foreign; m"<7117lnes, Eng., SAN JU loH CA,ISTltANO ...... 172' CltlMATOltlEI .............. ,. eves & wknds. I f d 200 Bl k --CAPISTRANO IEACM ......... 1tu MEM01.1At. 'AJI K~ .......... .,.11 bit-ins, drps, avail immed Rooms for Rent 5995 ==------1 Ca.sh investment of $14,950 gasses oun oc Germ., Ital., Span, French, ~!:~n'J"~ .. : ... ::::::::::::::~~!: :~~T~~": se11v1cE··::::.1:::: ~~ _1_1_80_._..,_-_m_•_a1_•_<_,.i ___ , Apartments _...;.:;,;;...;.c,;......;....;._.;c,;~! Like Elalnor• 6202 provides a tumk:ey opera-Golden Rod, CdM, 1 block China, Russian; also adult
OCEloNSIOE ................... 1151 TltAVEt. .......... -MU TO\VNHOUSE 4 bdrm , dlx, PLEASANT room for young ;:.;::.::.;-=:.::.;::.:.;;:.. __ ;:::;:::I lion which indudes opening from beach. ii1,l-J696 ' magazine• &-paperbacks.
SAlll 011EGO .......... 1n1 AIR TRANSPD•TATJON ...... "'4t I A ";.. 'rl BEACH H0Us£ + APT · FOUN b · '~ N lllYEllSIDE COUNTY ......... 111111 AUTO TltANi,.OltTATIOM .... Mii club & pool, $14.5·$160. Bdrm . pt wor ..... '6 gi or man. Hun-. mventory, f9Ulpment and D; keys on c ain, vic. ....,,,, . Harbor , CM 648-8583
HOUSlS TO IE MO\ll!D ...... UOll Ll!CAt. HOTICES ...... "" ti~on Beach. Kitch f' (I on fiw lots. Fnrlt treff, $25,-··-plies A thorou .... train-of Cheyenne &-Lansing BBC c.0Nr>0M11ot1uM ........ 1tse CE1tMAH a TUTOltJNO 6fft 67~3722 or 968-4337 y,, · 6" Family Membership. DUPLEXES FOlt IALI! ....... 1'71 SERVICE DIRECTORY ----------1 Near schools, freeways privileges. $55. mo. 847..fi640 (OJ -Good term!, ing program and. continua\ Lane, cOsta Mesa. Call & Will pay transfer tee. Mov-
APARTME!rl,TS FO• SALi .... 1m Foun_tain , Vall41y 3410 Walking dlstsnCe 10 OCC after 6 or weekends promotional and operating identify. 544)--1781 i""· Fee increased J"ne !-
RENTALS loCCOUNTlflll) ' .... '* l:OA ACRES d ' ·~ ANSWE11i1No sr1tv1c11 . ~ 988 El C•mino S15 UP wk W/kitchen $25 ....... gui ance. A m 1 n Im um FOUND, Vic. of Albertson's Must s e 11 immediately-
Houses Furnlsh.d A•,.t.rANC• 1tEP1o111:s,, Pem •sit 3 BR. With bonus room. A 1 # 1 C t M up Stud>'• Ap•-. 2376 N-... All or Part, neer Rancho amount of operating capital Mkt., c-a n .1 M·•, Mak• off••. Wri'te Box M ,~ GENER.AL .......... 2'0ll AIPNAlT, OU• '"'" ....... •SM Located at 17198 Santa p. OS a •SI ~ ".. Calif Go<xl 1 VIVU ....., ... ... ...-
REfllTA t.S TO SHloal! ......... :IOOS :~~~ ~.';A~::S.·TWi.' etC: ,S:-Cl r FV For rent or NE\\' 2 BR, 1% BA with port Blvd., C.M. 548-9755 . · wel • iodine is also required. black, min. male Poodle call Daily Pilot
'
IRYINE ...................... 21>11 •••YSITTINO ........ UH a a, . . 11 35 Ad 1·-~. ROOM f ~..lrl-spring, cabillll, from S500 • ld•nolf.. 644-1498 INTE ,..,o/TA MESA .................. 210CI ROAT MAINTl!NANCI ....... cuss lease. 8-12-4449 garage. . u ~ ........ S, ' or )'OWIX, w.,.-~ a.ere. LOCATIONS ' AVAILABLE uy• RESTING old pictures Me~! ~~i0~,, ............... i i 05 11t1cK, MASONltY, .. c. ...... wt -"";.::;_ ____ _;_..,;._I dii:ls. blt-ins. Private ptitio -' girl; home prtvil.: Hunt. Agent (714) 67S.2132 IN: Los Angeles, Redondo FEMALE German Shepherd & pri\late papm. of JudJ!e.
COLLEGE PARIC .............. tlU BUSINESS Sllt\llCIS ..... : .. 6561 ~.!gun1 Beach 3705 gardener. 2619 Santa Ana =Bc=h".="'"==1952="=89'2-==-===I!=~ Grand, Lak• El•'""-'67 u N 3l293 Vi w From 1861 thru ea-
1
•• 1900's NEWPORT REACH nae IUILOlilllS .................. ,n• ~ '"°° .......... Beach, Balboa Iala.nd, La· . c. o. . c. . ....,. NEWPORT HGTS ............ Hll CA'(l!IUNQ "15 • Ave. See after 4:30 19th &: Whittier. 548-9804. Dodge City, Gunnison, Colo.
NEWPORT s1o1011:i::S"""'""•· .. 2:nt CASINETMAic1t10 .............. m:i M 0 NARC H BAY AREA • 537-0380 • Mot I T f Crt 5997 guna Beach, Costa Me1a and l·LAR"'-=G~E;_b~l•k-'-'m-al~---pood-~1,-. I Salt Lake City 673-8316 CdM ~~~s~o:~~11:Es·· .... :::::::::: .. 'l'ZU g~~~~;E:._··::::::::::::ll: Bi::AU Golf. &-Mln View· ;;-:--'-'~·-,·='-'.·. :=:;-.'"-:::;:J:M.:::ou:::n~t.~&~0~1~11~rl'.!._~6~2~1~0~ I other prime areas. " ~f!S~CLIFFY ·.::::::::::::::~ ~~~';.~ftT1tl.i.Utm~_:::::::·::~ 3 BR & den, 2\.1 ba, <:PIS, SPACIOUS STUDIO 2 Br. $5 per night on weekly basia NEWBERRY ---. 80 ViCinity of Cinthia and ~~l~A~;,:th J une!
IH IYE RSIT '"It ........... ttu calt,ET Ct.lANINO .... MU Drps, trp\, pool. S250 rJlO, 1% ba. crpts, drps, elec bit-and up. 2384% Newport &er••. ho'·-•• ~ ........ • B"• all If you ha\le the required WiJ90n. t .M. 646-UTI • tonight! t.VINI! ........................ :nn CAR,ET U.YINC a 1tEPAl1t Ml• Adults. 496-1243 betw 16-5 pm ins. Nr. schls, shops, tree-Bl d c M 1:Ao °"""' ""UIJ'""U J funds and caJ'J quallly lo own <n41 635-5651 (2131 OL >5377 ::~~ :~JFF ................. ~: olliAPEttlES ............ -· . we way, 5"9-0412 eves and wk v ·• · · ,,......,,...,, or part. Level land, pump &: nd LONG-HAIRED Chihuahua. Franchises AvaUable ~~VINI!' TEll~~·:::::::::::·n45 ~~:~f/~~0~11tvic•·:::::~:::·:ffl Summer Rentals 3995, ~·n~d='~· ~~~~=~--REAL ESTATE well-has been in allalfa. 90 a operate a "NUTVILLE Brn. Gold collar. S.A. Hgts. 81o~~~! DEL ........... :: ElECTl.ICAt. .. _ .......... "41 1• General man made lakes in area, U.S.A." store, call for per-540-4934. Announcements 6410 ~~o"o i,~'L'eNos .. ::::::::::::::::lr, ~:~k~:t:N~.~-~~~~~~.:.::::::::!: INTERNATIOr:!ALLY Pul>-L SPL,ITBRLECpVEL d fish raising, alfalfa growing, :f~':i lnSat~,~, ·D.w•.re'c"'to'r.y. Na-I ·c~ALJ~~COC,..-Kl~tt-,-n~foon--d-v7k-. 1-----".....:.....:;...._;:.:.;c:1
, .. ao• ,,. •No ............... , ... FlooRs ....... . ............... 1 lished 3 story redwood_ & rg 2 & . ts, 1116. Income Proporty 6000 ti 1 Id a1 f .~ School ~. s Coast Health Club ~ ~ ........... ~ '"''''' '''''"' , recrea ona . e or 12131 -~Exton•lon ill Kill1.,rook .Auuut HUNTINGTON ll!'loCM 2400 , •Tc. ..... '67 glass house, 4 BR, sur-bltns, Nr shp'g cntr & schls. • ...... ~ FOUNTAIN \IALLl!V .::::;::::1411 o0a,110EN rNC ,,,,,· ........ ..-dod b tr 2885 M ,_0 '°""'°l HOME & INCOME by Ownr trailer park. Prl~ reduced! 0 writ bout If wks old. 546-6441 6/14 SEAL BEACH ................ _,.50 N•a:At. sl!a: ......... un roun y ees., oce11-n en ........ .............u. ,...,11 847 =•• · & r ea yourse to GltloOING DISCING .... E• d /' ,, t 4 ,.,... owner -...nu eves FOUND·, •mall, black, 1-g-lONQ aucM ............... tiOO • ........... _. view, near Wood's Cove. 590 .. c . epres mve , opp y. vu ~:::;~,::;iuN'.':.:::::::::::::~ g~s/N THUMa'·:::::::::::::::~:: Diamond st., Laguna Beach, Newport Be1ch 5200 BR, res. & 10.2 br Apts, _w="=k=on=d='=· ====== NUTVILLE U.S.A. haired kitten, vi c.
WESTMINSTER u11 GUN SHOP .................. 110 J 23 s 1 14 11650 IN_E~;;~~~G!.-:f.~l~poo~l~.;~;"'~o~ld~.~E~'~id~•~6~75-~J39~31 !·~=~~~~~-~·==~§ NATIONAL SALES EastbluHs. 6#--0164 MIDWAT CITY :: .. ::::::::::::2,1• MEiot.TH Ct.U~S. .............. 672' une -ep. . . NEW """dprnnf 2 BR. 2 BA • • 1nt.u 6240 SANTA ANA HEIGHTS U30 HAUllJllO ................... 7ll 4!H-3532 .... ,...., HEADQUARTERS ANYONE JOit an oppossum? coASTAt. ........ 2100 HOUSl!Cll!loNINO ............. i1u ====~--------across fm WstcliU Plaza, Bu1inus Rent1I 6060 OWN"BS 830 E. SARAHA AVE.
Hospitality is Our Motto
FREE SAUNA WITI-I
SWEDISH MASSAGE
Open wkdys 10 1m-ll pm
Sund8.l's 10 am-8 pm
132 E. 18th St. 642-5090
LAGUNA 11EACH ·::::::::::::::1105 INTERIOR DECOll:ATIHO ...... Jn PR£VATE room, bath & re-' 1665 1-•m• 11= '2tltl 14·2. I . Ii""' : 642-7951 lloOUNA HIGl.IEt. ............. m1 INCOME TAX ............... •141 •• ""'""' A U It W d LAS VEGAS (7021 135-0852 iAN CLEMENTE .......... 2110 llliOH, Orn11Mnl1I, lie. ........ '1H frig, priv entrance. 6 wks 0'239. • • PRIM.E Retail Location . pt. n I en,te Lost
Funer1l1
6401
6412
SAN JUAN Clo,.ISTlliloNO 212S IRONINO ..................... 6155 t t 6/18 •2tltJ I CdMI-========== STO',r 17 x 40 6-20 Units, Jirst class. BEAUTY SHoP for r•nl C:APISTRANO BEACH ... ::::::Ult INSUU..TtNO .................. ''H s ar . <f Iota . I' '"""' DANA PO••T 17H 1Nsu1tANCI! ................... ,nt 6Th-5170 eves. Newport Shores 5220 1873 Harbor, cr.1 646-6654 Excellent condition, Npt. fully equipped ready for 1 WESTMINSTER RlvEasfbli coUNTY .. ::::::::· noe ~~VESTlOATING, o.iect1v. ... 1no Bdi., Costa Mesa, Cor· continued business. Operator LOsr: Man's gold brace et
VACATION aENTAlS ......... 1ftt JE':;~~=~A~EPAill· e.tC:.""'""= MOBILE home on Colorado SHOP For lease $135 mo 640 il type watch. Great sen· CONDO.MINIUM ............... ttse t.ANDSClo,IHO ' ........ 11 River, Completely I urn. DUPLEX 3 BR. 2 ba, cpt.s, sq. feet. Ideal location. Npt ona de! li-tar area by Pri w 1 stay. Sl50 mo. 792 timental \lalUe. Vic Villa MEMORIAL PARK
DU P't.l!XES FU1tJ11 ............. tfJJ t.OCKSMITH .':::·.:::;::::::·mo Renl wkly or w~kends drps, bltns, washer/dryer, Bch. 675-5453 party. Write Daily Pilot Center SI. CM 548-4476, or Nl)Ya or Bob Bum's Npt. Mortu1ry & Cemetery
RENTALS MASONllY, a111c11: ............ 61H 4.,2129 · trg patio. $225 mo. 642--0603 &x P-146. 642-3107
H U I . h-.J MOVtNC & sT01taoE ............. ...,... -===--=======I Bcb, Sal am. Reward! Complete funer1ls
ouses n urn1s .u PA1HT1Nc, P•Hrllln11.,, ...... "so Office Rent1I 6070 BUSINESS and -Cl.MIR.Al . . ................ noo ,AINT1No, 11tn1 ............... ass 2 BR Furn, on SEASHORE Coron• del Mar 5250 ----------1 FINANCl'L Reil Estate Loin• 6340 644--2836. from $245
coSTA MEia .................. J1• 'ATtos ........................ '"t Dr, NB. $175 wk. 6i~1700 or ..•. , LAGUNA BEACH "' FEMALE cat. Dark .,....ey. Cemetery lots MtSA OEL MAil .............. 1115 PHOTOOl!APHV", .. ' .......... 11 Pri. rno••y lol l'ft' .-2nd , ... MES.4 .¥!1l01! ................ Jiit PLASTEl.IHQ, ... kit, llff•lr ...... 633-4863 after 5 Desk spaces available in But. Opportunities 6300 R.E .•. '.., from 11500 "' and wnt yellow collar,' . from $130 COi.i.IOi! ,.AltK .......••••. SllS PLUMllNO ···-············"'' ....,..,, ti 'd Lot ' ' in lod En Nl!WPORT 8EAC:r ............ J2tl ,0001.1! GltOOMINO .......... mt l(Cl"\IT ALS rs· ... -newest otfice building al mi . s m m 0 v Ing c es dowment Care NEWPollT NOHT ............. 221t Poot. 1r1tv,c11 ............ •m F • ~ ~ prime location in downtown ESTABUSHED vending Jack Smith Co. since 1949 Balboa Penn 10 Eastbluil. Everything in one beautiful
NEWP'OllT SNOltl!S ......... ,mt POWEii: SWl!l!PIN• ........... l'U Apts. urn1ahed· u,. . . t H B r ·-·s43 8381 ·-IAYSHOl.IES ................. ms PUM, s11a:vrc• ............... '"° ort• Laguna Beach. Alr coMI· rou e .. ~a. ew , .. s. • Reward. cau 644-1017 puoce means less cost.
DOYER SMORES , .............. mJ •ool'tNO ...................... 6t$t Cotti Mel l 4100 tioned, car""'ted, beautiful per montb. Net good return. ========== LOST Sm Blk T•n & while, No traffic problems.
WESTCLIF" . . ............. UH RADIO, •-in. I!!< .............. -----------1 ,. M t T.D. UNl\IEltSITY PAJIK ........... JUJ RIEMOOl!t.INO .. REPAlll "IO ON TEN ACRES paneled partitioning. T w 0 Investment lrom $360. Call or gagff, • • 6345 min. German Shepherd ans 14801 Beach, Westminrter
RVIH'I!' ..................... -.. nn :cEMOOI LINO, l<ITC HINS •···6941 $25 Wk. Up 1 &: 2 BR, Furn & Unfurn entrances,· rear leads to 53&-l360. to N"·k1. Rew-~ 125. "A' 531-1725 893-2471 RACIC•BAY .................... :nu ISSOllS SHAltP'l!N .......... 6HS 1~=~~--------1 $80,000 Seasoned TD on 160 IT>. ..... ........ Elo5T •LUFF .................. 1242 SEWINO ............. ., ...... ""' • S d' & B lrom $150 mo. Frplc• ( Pti/ Municip.J pa rking lots. S50 FOOD T 1 0785 llVINI! TEltltAC• .... -...... nu S&WINQ MACHIN I ... ,Ailts 6Ht tu 10 tlch apt&, Patios I Pools. TeMis. Con· th 1 Add 0 fZO -rea money magnificent Oceanview lots ..,,=·~,..,----,,-~~'I -,
co110NA oet. MAJl ........... :tt51 Sl!PT1c TANKl. s-...s.. 11c .. 6ff5 • Incl Utils &. Phone serv. per mon or space. maker SS.IXXl will handle. actively ..Uing at 17950 UJsT Black smooth haired Cemotery Loll
RA LIDA .................... 1• TAllOltlHO · .. .. ............ ,,,. • Maid "-"ce • 'IV ••all. tnt'l Bklst. 9 hole Putt/ SS for desk and chalrs. Add See "' to buy °" sell van ••ch·, d"• 2 -. Str-g
6411
aAY 1st.ANOS ............ -... UH TEltMITE CONTltDL .......... ,tn .;>e1v1 G llO b . h · .. J'g "" Cockapoo. Between Garlield LIDO !St.IE ................ W1 TILi, C1nrn1c ................. 6fH e New Cafe Ir: Bar reen. f.or ~ess ou~ ~n-Counselman 'The Re a 1 owner with $600,000 i~ & M u HB Re d 11AL1D.l 11u."D .............. »U Tit.I!. t.lne'-'rn 1 Mlrtl9 .... _.,.,s 237 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 sw.enng service. All utilities: r-1ate-·~nn .... agno a, war · NEWPORT WE5T .............. 1l71 T1tE• Sl!lt\llCI .... , ........ ''" 6 Newport Blvd. 548-9755 I ho = '° -·-•m•nt 20~, d I' c 0"" t ~ -after 5 PM HUNTINCTON 81EACH ....... MOii Tl!t.EV1$10N, ll ... lrt. l!lc. ... 6NS (l\lllcArthui; nr. Coast Hwy) pa.id except le ep ne. <O;> "(< ..... £ ..... ,,.... HUNTINOTOM MAll:IOUlt -... ws UPHOt.ITlltT ................ '"' WALK to market 22nd & Npt DAILY PILOT DRIV&-In restaurant j n returns an Du a I 16o/o. -N=UR=-==M=o=n= ... =ch.:.= .. '--y-. -B-,,-,k
FOUNTAIN Ylot.t.l!Y .......... MU Wl!t.OINO .. .... .. '"5 No ...,,,, l adult I n-N •t ·---· 'ty d . high gross 499-3844 seAt. REACH ............... MH JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ,,.. • · QI. e NEW l BR. crpts, drps, 222 FOREST AVENUE ....,...1,;u Cl omg · --;===~~== miniature poodle, not clip. GloltOEN CttOVE .............. :M71 $82 mo. 646-3750 bit-ins, refrig, gar, $150. LAGUNA BEACH Askini low down. 7:30 -9 SAFE 12e~ RETURN ped, no tag, name "Bran-t.ONO llEACH .............. ISOll JOI WloHT•D. Min ............ Jtoll ... ,,.. al 'PM 67"'~ " DltloNGI! COU NTY ............. uot JO• WloNTEO, WMI• ........ JOtt $79.50 1 BR, clo.~e to shops. Avail July 1st. 673--6635 494-;NOO AM or ter ~ · .3-UoN• $5565 llrst TD on magniticent dy", bllnd. 49'3--3895
SloNTA loJlllo .................. ,.Ult J08 WANTED, d Q · 1;;~,;:;~;;~;;;;;::==-·1 ---..,;ji'~~-fj'"--r-Ex I 0c · I wE1T.MINSTl!1t ........•....... u1 1 MIN a woM'l!H .........••.... 1uo owntown. ne quiet persoo. FOR RENT YAOIT Sales ....,. .,. ce · eanv1ew o\, pay ab 1 e
MIDWAY CITY ............... 2'16 DOMl!STIC.HEl' ............. JOH 548-3402 Balbo1 5300 A.:;_,,x. 450 Sq. Ft. ca""'ted new sill & power & b4crg. $55.65 mo incl 8% dul! in 3 $AHTlo ANA HllOKTS ...... ,,.JUG AOENCll!S, Men ............... not 1•r•~ •r-
THREE Grave sites in The
Good Shepherd Cemetery. '
Located in "A'" section, al
prevailing price. If in--
terested, write P. 0 . Box •
521, Grants Pass, Oregon '
97526
Tr•vel 6435 I ____ .::;.::.o I
COASTloL ............... JJOll MllP WANT•o, ""• .......... mt Nicely lurnished bachelor &-drapes, air-eond, Xlnl water loc. All/part. yrs. S7,!f.IO sale to good lAOUNA atACH .............. J7t5 loCl!NCll!S, Wem111 ........... not BALBOA Peninsular yearly !"ER'S BLOG w ·1 Box p 147 Da•·ly Pilot ownor ~ ... now compl ,;.g FLYING lighl •'rcraft to LAGUNlo HIC UllL ........... ,.,,.., HEl, WANTED, w-...... 1'00 apt. $65. 132 w. Wilson MAR.~ . n e • . ..... .., e.... .... SAN Cll!MEHTl .............. sno JOll-MI• aw..,,.,, .......... noe · · * 54S-9STI * unfurn deluxe 2 bdrm $165. 1515 WestcliU Dr., N.B. improvements. 4~ MAN'S light brown wallet Wuhington, DC, 6/23rd,
A fisUul of keys attached to
a sailor's knile, vie W. Bay
Ave., NB. 67~5828.
CAPISTl.loNO .. , .........••.•.. :nu AOl!NCll!S, """a w._ .... 1m ~=~=-~~~-~I A du J ts, no pets. 613-1014. I ~ I 0 6310 lost in Costa Mesa Park 1 7 6 Sh C.A,ISTllANO ll!ACH ......... :nJO ICHDOt.S. IHSTltUCTION .... 1100 * $140 u 'l "d Cl 2 . Contact Mrs, Ralnlo 642-4000 nvea.mein ppor. Bring yoUr TDs to Trust Saturda An inf ., 2802 re . I . &r ex;p, 646-2618
OAHA 'DINT .................. 174t JOI Pltl!.PAlt.ATION ........... Jtlk1 ti. p.a1 . ean eves, or 673-1990 Deed Center wber• tho y. Y o. 548-SERVICE D RECT coNoOMIH•UM ...... , .. ,_,. :JtH THl!ATl.U:AL _ .. ., ............ 7Nll BR. furn. 1 Blk. K-Mart. PRIVATE otc in suit. Cpls & ATTENTION I ORY ~~;:~~·~;:;~~"·.::::::::·= M~~i~A:~6S~~ODRE Ms.-0187 962-1636 Lido Isl• 5351 ~~~-M~~ Go~d~~~~7;r· • DEVELOPERS It l~j~se%:d~:. ;~i~.9 :..p::"..:':::•:;n::•::l''----'640:.:.::::5 B1by1itting 6550
Apts. Furnished FU1tJ111TU1tE ................ 100C1
1
;;;N;;;•;;;w;;po;;;;rt;;;;lle;;;;;•;;;c;;h;;;;;;;;;4;;;2;;00;;.l3 BR .... $250/mo yrly lse 2 c.lm'I., 1 indust., 1 w/li\le INVESTORS to 6 Sat. Ph11i43-838I 'WILL pick up car of your
GENE ltA.L .................... g;;:~: :~~~~~'::~~ ·:::::::. ::~ 1, 3 BR ,. .. S325/mo yrly lse qtrs. Costa r-.lesa. * 80 LEVEL ACRES * 90"!. Loins t1$60,000 choice in Europe, for
COSTA MESlo .................. 4181 ITOltl •Q.UIPMl!JllT .......... eo11 ./ WILL lfASE Adults -no pets Owner. 646-n30 Ideally located in hiib-dry or niore. SINGLE FAMIL~ privilege Of driving this MESA \ll!IU>l ............... •nt CAFE, ltESTAUltANT ........... u Brvant Wiesl, Rltrs. desert (no smog ......}-.)ems, aummer, ship in fall. Pvt. HEW,ORT aeloCH ............ 42ft BAil •etUl,Ml!NT , ............ 1a1t ·~ I""" Bay Mortgage Co. 646-41i65 MIWPORT HEIOMTl .......... t tll MOUll!HOt.O CDOOl .......... IOlt 675-272.1 Eves. 646-7974 lndustri1I Rent1I 6090 wonderful dry-air!) just 18 ply. OR 3--83l6
:~~fcoL~~Fs~~-~~.~.:;;;,7;;;·::i: =~=~~T~::1.:uc·TiOH'::::::::: / ADULTS ONLY -"',;;.:.:.;c~;_;__,;_._.._,I milea East ot Barstow Money Winttd 6350 Fly to C•t1lln1
UNIVE1t11TY '"A1t1C -······· .. en APPt.IAHcu ................. t1M July • Aug, • Sepf, H_ untington Beach 5400 M-1 new bldg on street front (where gttat el(pMSion bas --~-------1 Daily fli"'hls from Orange 8ACK alo Y ............. ., ..... tl4' ANTIGUll ' ................ -... 1111 W t.-17 .., EAST ILUFF .................. ,241 SEWIHO MACH!NI! ............ tut ux\J m Newton ay, CM. uo:t already begun!) INTERESTING old pictur:e1 County Airport to the a.irport
CCHtONa OIEt. MAit _ ......... •UI MU11CAt. INSTl.UMl!HT ...... till • NEW • L RIOUS • & 18 of1 Placentis. n45 mo 90 man • made Lakes in &: pri\lete papers of Judge. in the ....... .., ~· IAL80A ................... .QM PIANOI & OltOANS ............... FURNISHED APT. RESORT UVING _.._, ,,......,.,...., RloY !SU.NOS ................. use ltADIO . ....................... 2 BEDROOMS -2 BATHS & up. Agt 833-():5M, Own area! Idea] for res 0 rt From 1867 thru early 1900's ~· ,....,,HOLJCS LIDO 1si.1: . • ............... 4"1 Tl!Ll!\llSIDH ................... ms 4 NATIVE GARDENS 675.ll88 · de v e I 0 pm en t. alfalfa Dodge City, Gunnison, Colo. tuA.v Anonymoua
••L•DA 1su.N1> .............. ass Ml·FI & IT•••o ............... 1111 Waterfront/Loe 6 POOLS.SAUNAS.JACUZZI Salt Lake City 673-8316 Harbor Area. Phone 673·1724 :g:~~~r~o:A~~:~" ·········::: ~::i~.1t:.~~11::~.~MiMT''' ·= BOAT SLIPS H HlJRRY! One Lett. 200l fl, growing, fish raising, etc. CdM. P .O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa.
SEAt. •EACH ........ ::::::::::t4H Mo1•Y su• .. 1.1E1 ......... :::~.... Channel Reef UNJINGJON modem ottlcc, shwr, P"'T-... opportunitll!s boundless! ~ON• REACM ................... s,01tTtNO GOQOS , ......... Qot HB S36-350l This is a rare ottering, af. PROVEN Marine Products M"t Dyn1mic Friends
:>11ANOE cou1orTY ............. .u. ''"ocuu.••· scopas .... -.. uH 2s•s 0 Bl C M · · · "th te 11 ru OAltOlN 0111ov1 .............. 4'Jt M1sc11:1.u..N•ou1 ............. '60CI " cHn vd., d GARDENS fording the investor a great 11C1Y1 sold Worldwide. Need w1 s r ng qua 1 es.
11111nM111sr1:a: .................. 11 MISC. WAMTl!.O ................... ,. 673·1788 Lots 6100 tutu~! Personal cimnn· SIOOM to expand prod. & • 839-4990 • .. IOWAY CITY ................ "61' MACH1N'l!llY, trtc. ......... , •. t1tt l.AJITA AMA ................. '4Ut LUMRllt ... , ................... tJSll !!""'!!!!~!!!!~!!!!""'""'!!!!"I Tennis. r.,;le.rtainmenl stances force this sale;. will aales. Pay back 24. mths NOT Responsible for any
SAJllTA AHA HllOMn _,, ........ STOltAOI ...................... 1171 8 35 TR.LR. a l B BO s Costa Mesa ~u a]t or part. cau owner: with bl liiterest plu• anuity. debts t...t my -·-. John R. fUIT IJll ............................. •UllOINO M.&llRIAU ....... t7it x ean r. l A-CHICA & HEIL ~ ... w ...... .,... .. COA.lTAl. ....................... ,. IWA's ...... ,, ........... •m Prefer middle age adtllts, ADULTS 847.u14 Rl 847.a;«) E\lea./weekends. HeadingPublic.213-3T.2~13 Duttenhoter. ~OUNlo BEloCM .............. ~711 PETS and LIVESTOCK nr. Hot• Hoop. 548-7421 17=7====::==="!:='-":======""..!,:====o===== ..... OUHA tilOUl!L ............. •Jtf ' 2 BED R 0 0 M u N I. ut1 CLEMl!HTI. -............ •n• ••Ts .o•NnaL ................. J • l IN AU.. BUY ONE OR J, Bua. Opportunitiu 6300Bu1. Opportuniti .. 6300 Bua. Opportunities 6300
DAllA ~INT .................. 41tO CATS ..................... ; .... ..,. Corona del Mir 4250 FURNISHED 1 block to s 50' 307' ~ Ith " \°".;;."";::;;~=====================:.:::.:.::.:::::::. TltlfLllX, Ill:. .............. ··''" DOOi .......................... N'JS I----------poin . x ea-.; .. w p vate COtlOOMUuuM ................ 4fft Hott••S. ....................... KM ta stores, avail. approic residence.
ltENTALS ~1v1sTocK ................... ..., LUXURY 2 BDRM. OCEAN 6-26. S125 per month. Call
Apia. u Iv I hod CALIFORNIA LIVING VIEW, Md POOL. othor ownu 642-2835 0, Key " R-4-CP
..... .,.L ... ~ .... ~.~--~ .......... :~::ri:· POOU ·:::;:::::::;:: Xtras. Ju~ 15 to Sept ). 7101 Ellis "D". 842-3303 LARGE 67' )( 300· wm1
COSTA ¥114 .................. tltt PATIOS ........... -..... _ ..... HU Adlts only. S.tOO mo .67l-427.! 2 Bl' D l: I . RESIDENCE, parcels I.rt' :::tl"O"a:~~CM""'"'"'"-···•11t lowtltNOS ...................... lflt 1 P x. poo ' pnvacy, all near K mart & Harho.r •=•~""'"_ ............ !HI \IACATIONI ,.,,., ............. em UNIQUE bech. apt. elegant Y ~ts, df1lll, t stry, gar. Like . •• ....... ,..nit f ~" nr bch ,,,,..... ahonn\ng center. Mr. Pat. "' f'OI! IHDltlS ........... snt TRANSPORTATION um. ~..... • • '"" nu $1 35. Avail July l, ,.,. WU'TCllF• ................ SUI IOATI • Y&<om -$107 Mo. utll pd. 6n-1304 84" ""~1 mon. Ph. 646-7523. H1vaas1TY ,Att.K • nn ............. =-~.:.C'==~~----~ I
tAO:lloY ........... :::::::::::9141 ~1~:"~iu1iiii:"i '"""""" :: Bolboo lil1nd 435$ TOWNHOUSE. 4 bdrm, dub un &I.UP• ............... SKI IPl.10-SXI IOAT ............ ..
COJtOtlA OIL MAA ,.,., ...... Wt IOAT TltAtc.•1tS .. :::::::::::tm & pool. $145-f160. 675-3722 or .... yt.IOA ....................... .,.. •OAT MAINT•MAMC• _,......... 2 BR patio nr No Bay ~ •337 ISLAlllDl ................. AM IOAT U.UNCHINO ............ MM • ' • . !='~=='======='I UDO w.a ............... ., •• ,Qf1 MAltlNI! l!OUIP, ............ MM July $125. wkly, Aug. $150. 293 E. 17th St. ~ ~'tr:.,!!~111l...:cM··· .. :····:= aoAT 1L1P, MOO••N• ........ ff;)il wkly. Min 2 wk1. 235 Opal Ligun1 Be1ch 5705 1 ___ E·'~"-·~"~"-965_7 __
ll'OUNTAllll VAU.•Y _ _. '""5111 •DAT S•ltVIC•l .............. MU * 673-3690 '*
IU.t. IEACM ...••... ::::::::..,. =~ ~~::~~ :::::::::.::::::: ----------!LARGE 2 bedroom 2 be un-l BARGAIN ! =:A·~~1mv:::::;::::::::: '1sH11•0 ao.a.n ............ , •. ,.. Huntington Beech 4400 fur. •Pl. completely rt'dec-C.M. TRIPLEX LOT UtOl!lll OltOV• .......... ,, .... ,. 80AT M0¥1Mtl .................... $94&0! Owner M-4-m
tn1TMt11t1n1t. ............... Mit ::_:~s~:,:To:0 .... -.. -· ... = QUIET & BEAUTIFUL 0~1«1. has large deck with B~ MIOYll'AY CITT ................. Mii ''''"'' .............. ,,. Vll'W, ca~ted &: dreprd, "'"'a ocean view lot, No. UM'TA AMA .... "' ........... .,. 1-Cam-847 2125 1 ·-·"'" 112 ~ h ' t UJfTA ,,,. .. Miieffii""""''" .. •t.YUI• LUSONl ............. flll !U!U "'""' • stcrvc ... riet W•lk lo town ~u .... : ......... ; arc .
TUlTllll -· ........... :::::::::1661 =~t.,• :::t:f .... ~ ......... = RENTALS & beach. Sltfi on 1 yr ltase. plan incl. 494--6216 Owner COASTAL ........... _ ........ S11t ., •• -........ . U.MllA ••.u:" .............. ,,.. BICYCt.u .. .. .............. ms AptL Unfum!shed No children or pets. No L.UUfll& ••oulL ,,., l!LIC'TltlC CAU ............... brok 9"
CLaMure ::::.:.:·::.: •• '.'.mt :g;g~i:~':u ............. : <Ge'.!!!_!!!!_1 ____ ~52000~1§;;=~"'~· ~Cal=,:'~'=""':;:;·=;::;:
lo\ll AIAN CA,ISTJIANO ...... mt AUTO ••t¥1C'IS. ·~·.n ·::~ ..... .: nera 2 LOTS. 1 acre l't, $1400 ea. "°'"" .,, ·· .......... &Ht AUTO TOOu a aou1, ........ •n• Condominium 5950 REAL ESTATE, rutLlt. TU.VIL ........... "21 RENT Haw11.Uan Paradise Park
General ~~::." -~~ .. :::::::;::;::: • 3 Rooms Furnltu·re $300 Delux~ 3 br, 2 ba.. all tubdivisl<¥1-, Puna district. "'~-. ...................... T1tucu ............ -......... ,,.. 525 Month ('lee:, xoo 1q. 11. p001, dbl Phone d1y or tve 962..{766
COlfOQMIMIUJll ,, ................. -'"" .,.... . ............ nl• ar " ... __ c-..~ I I 10 A-So. CaJU-'a. -UTAUWAlllTft, ••••••••.• lffll lllUl'OltftOAllTOl ................ g. crp .... ,,.. "'""'' n ... ..,.. Ullll ... •OOlltl .o« •UT ........... ,.,,, N'DtlT Ult.I ............. Mii rtn.4, OPTTON TO BUY &ck Biy. 24'.ll UtUverslty Down; SS per mo.. $195 NI
tOOM& IOAltD ,,. ........ ---umuu. CU.UKS ......... •u NO d-it Or, lnlo 646--26""' --' L ••-·• I Tll!LI. T•A.l\.llt. couwn .,,, U.C• CA••· •oos ........... ,.,. cyv»• 0.1.c. 1:::7:="=-~:..:=~·~=----I .... ct. . .:NICWte t. 3316 w.
OUUT HOMIS '"' &UTO ..... W lin ................ fill H .f .R.C WATCf ...., .. TV ... Jrd St., L.A. 213: 623-5101 .MllG. lll!HTAU 8'ff ._UTOI .&#T•D ............. ,,. F R • I 1-euOWI 00
u1to.w• ""'"llRTY ........ • ••• CAU . ...................... urnlture ent1 J the 1et YoU find In ·the Pt.ACE )'OUt wan& Id wbm!
Acreae-6200 -
Solve 4 Simple Scrambled WOTd Puzzle for a: Chuckle
0 ttorrono-lttters' of rf1.
lour 1erornbled words be-
low to fDfm four simple WOtds.
IQUEYIT
I I'
ICOXIT
'.111'1
'
MYLAN I
t-_ -r.l ',:..:,;l'~I -,..-I Name of a Hollywood on-
:::~====:Jit·:!,!11 tiqJJe shop: "Den of-."
rlTDOR
1
... INTNl.MIE.tfor lETTftS rrrrrrrr1
11·1111111
•
&USl~IU it«OP.!.lt.TY iO# loUTO LUii .................. fil• 517 w 19th c M ~1 Ou.sifk'CI Ads-theck the ·~ ... ~--DAILY ·-................... .. ~ ., ,....... ....... .... .... CAAi ........................ 15611 w. tncl.: A~bm n1-2lm -· m PiWr c1;;-.a:d1 512-5678. _s_C_RA_M_LE_TS __ A_N_S_W_E_RS __ IN_· _c_LA_S_S_l_Fl_C_A..:.TI:.:..:.O..:.N......:9...c0..:.3..:.9_
!t ' ~. • ) • •
l
BABYSITI1NG, E~erlenced
mother, new home. Near
Springdale & Edinger St.
8425097 eves. o--~-MOTHE'R of 2 w1 n t1
playmates Vic o1 Pomona &-
20th. * 548-6512
BABYSITfING my home,
schl chldrn-$12.50 wk with
lunch, Mesa Verile 545-4284
BABYSITTING my home wk ,
days. Huge fncd yrd &
Refs. * &'6-2385
CHllD care in my home.
Mature woman. R~uonable.
W, Costs. Mesa area.646-3504
BABYSI'IT ING fM sch age
chldrn ill my home. Nr bch
&: prk. Wkly. 675-2529
Brick, Masonry, etc.
-6560
BRIO<, Concrete, Carpentry
Custom Cabine~. Small jobs
OK. Free Eat 962~5
Bullden 6570
REMODEL, rep1ir1
phunti'1.. painting, elec.,
carpentry, resid., commerc.
room add. Reas. 67f).3038
8u&ine11 Service 6562
Secret1ri1I S.rvlcet
0.-ange County Bank Bid:.
230 E. 11\h St. Suite. 21l
Costa Me&1
Call Vicki • 642 -1485
!mt.GA'S Secret'! Service
rBM Exec Typ, dictation,
resumes, reprts, min1eo,
642·3707'.
C1rpenterln1 6S90
REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS
CABlNETS. Any ..ize job.
Z3 yrs expcr. 54S--61l3
• Carpentry • C.tilnN •
e Bl!-ina e Alt~ratlons e
• Repairs • R1:•1l 646-9583
' ............ ~·~-·~--..... -.....,,_..--............ --........ --~~~~~~~~-~--.. -..... \""""" • •••• :;pu-u--;.......-,.-'"T .. •-•~••"t>.,. .... ,,, . .,..._..,..,.
I'm The Kind Of
Woman Who Gets
What She Wants ......
• • • Because I'm The
Kind Of Woman
Who's Smart Enou9h To
Use DAILY Pll.OT
Classified Advertisin9
Believe me, there's nothing dround our home anymore
that isn·'t being used -because the minute I discover
something is no long er needed, I sell it, while it still
has maximum va lue , through an inexpensive DAILY PILOT
Classiliod Ad. That way, instea d of a clutter of things
we don 't use, I have the extra cash that lets me have the
newer things ... the "extra" things my whole family
enjoys. Here's what I mean.
The cosh I got for the good clothes and trys the children
had outgrown bought me the decorator lamp I'd been
wanting. The mu si cal instrument no one played paid for a
big part of our portable stereo unit. The power tools
redei:orated our daughter's room. And, just for the fun
of it, the good chair that just didn 't match anything
anymore took my husband 11nd me out for e fabulous
dinner at the fanciest restaurant in town.
Go through your home. Make a list of di the worthwhile
things you find that aren't being used. (You'll be surprised
at the number you turn up the first time.) Th~n, dial
642-5678 any time between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. and
give your list to a friendly, experienced Ad Writer. That's
ell there is to it. It's inexpensive too! It can cost you as little
" PEN NIES A DAY!
Well, now that you know my secret -isn't it time you
got stll rted toward better, easier, happier livin9 with
DAILY PILOT Classified Ads7 Start being the lind
of woman who gets whit she wants today!
Call Now 642-5678
.Q.$17,fSTAR GAZER'~<i• .. 1
MIU Br CLAY k. POLLAN ~ ~ 32 M Yow Doily Adi.my Guidt };f. ~r. ~ ~dPo,.An.. Y Actordin9 to lh t Stott. od. u~~
To develop me ssoge for.Friday, 25.lJ.36
read words correspordlrog to ........,..be"' 1._su1 ol yt:Alf Zod« birth $i9n.
•
SlltVlCI DIUCTOltY JOIS a Piiot.CY NlJOIS a IMl'L
* * * * * * ocl'..;:e.;;.porho=:."'_1"' __ ..;:U;;;SO;.: I '.Heliijjp:.Wiieiinl9d~,iiMii-iiiir2ii200iiiiHiie~lpiii;Wiie~nlell,;;;iiiiM~'"'~"~n~200~ ........ w-7300
,!°"lnll"I I'
Wt need young men 1.8 and over to learn
the ~u --· U you are
ARGUS"
Work Ne1r Home •
FEE PAID
• PAINTING • lnlcri« I< Exterior. Free cttimatct.
flHaonahle.ratea. 648-3015
* PLUMBING '* .._, .... "Re-
Eleetric Sello'l!r Qeanlng
All work 1ua.ran. 64:2-65&1
GRADUATING
{r9m
HIGH SCHGQL or J.C •
Gal Frid-.y. Work 1or 'Z men.
8l SH will do .•••• To ICO
Exec Secy for Prts. 1"lne
boa in bMcb ofc ...•• $850
and want a steadv Job: one where you can
make your
Jr Steno. Bl( opporlw'llty b' ~
Hie\' )'OW\I &al. • • • • $G1
Recept. Really front otftce., ~
PLUMBING type 60 • this I• It. , •• , $400 '
W!>MdYe Wont? Wheddy• Get?
S,ECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
REPAIRS REMOOEL CAREER Loan Proceuor. Strona: 1al ,,
~
NATURAL IO-N SWAl',ERS Sewlna 6HO and better yourself as Ume llllOS on,
Specl1I llate ;.;,r; come in and talk to os. We ol!er
5 11-·-5 Hmn -S lluckl Alteretlons-642.SUS GOOD STARTING SALARIES
tor local ifOUP· VA. To $C60 :
Exec Secy. Pluah job for 'Z 'J
yean exJ)f'ri~~. • • , , ~TS J
OVER 200
FEE PAID
POSITIONS •u1.1•-AD MUil IMClUDi Ne•t, aocun.te, » yrs. exp. ' •
.... YOUI. "'*" llNll• ..._., ~ ..... ., .tftrtltl .... Alto FM Poaltlont
• l
,. ARGUS EMPLOYMENT ,
1-wrwt -MW .. trWt. ... WMt ,.... --Ill tT-. ~AID VACATIONS,
1-MOTHINCJ H>111 we_ ntAOEt ONLY• TILE, Ceramic 6974 lJDAYS,
l'HONE 642-5'71 . NS " S Te Plln Your Tr1der'1 '•rldlee Ad *Verne, tbe 'l'Ue Mu ~ _l~N """· '""" """" ~ E See ua at 1919 S. St.ate Colleee Blvd., Anaheim BEAUTY Salon. 6 llltiOns, REDF.CDR. 4 BR. 2 Ba. v• No job te ll(l.U. 8 30 • p M ~ d throu•h Fri
b 1.. Lido Will I •-·· H •-• paleh. ......,.-... w er from : A.M. to , _. ., mon ay ._ day
CONSULTANT AGENCY"· -' ~ W..tcllft'. NB St&-7196 !
laf E. lTtb St., S.A. 547.f336 ~
"· esta yrs area. can • -se, unt u.;u., ..... i.. :4T l!l5T/M&--02(lj
In! rn. """ "'" 110.000 $8,000 oquit>: WAm" W>111,1,"'==~~· ~·==== SOUTHERN COUNTIES See Belt> Bruce at
... '"' R.E. "' wb&t·ba,,.. San Geb. Valley aroa • .,.., JOBS a EMPLOYMENT GAS CO"PANY • '
)'OU. Bkr. 548-ml Owner (princ. ontyl 54.8-8962 Job W1nted Lad 7020 rvm m• fl
HAVE beaut improved vac WANT: Boa~ 20• or under ' Y An equal opportunity employer. t6~ C-xec
lot ieehyr Cove Lake Tahoe with trailer. Have 3 bed· SABYSI'ITING &. 11 g h t "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Agency tor Catlffi" Girl.I '•
Nevi.da side. Sll,IXXI clear-room ho.Tie, large yard, housekeelJlni. LI v e in !! -410 W. Cout Hwy.,•N.B. '
Want HSI!· Unil!!I -Airplane Westside. Full Price $19,500, prelerr«I. c.au 642-7643 ( Loc•I manuf•cturer h•s By appoint. 663931 '
• TD'1 or! for @q. 675-5726 ?Quity $3,COO. U 8-8124. NURSING CARE ln private e IJpenfen lmmedl1 te openings for: .~
Z View Acres Laguna 34' Sedan Cruiser (1956). home. 548-7223 and leave Help Wanted , ~ S TraUet or mobile home W 7•-'' Bear.;u. om e improve-Planked hull. Will trade: or .. ..mber to ~I. e Producti'on ___ o_m_e_•------'-"'I '' · ~oo 1243 I experlen~ prefe~. Ex-menta, income••• . ,. TO, clear lots and possiby HOUSEWORK wanted. cellent benefits.
COO equity. For. TD's or r small boats. Reference&, e:xperle.nced. Test Tech.
Owner. 494-465.l, 49'-4957 (n4) 548-4192/s.tS-5039 646--lO'lO after 4 ptm . Apply in person
Trade Jor income tot nr new
yr round contrsctors own
beaut l BR, 2 BA, lake vu
home Big Bear Lake, 2 shrt
bl.cks from town. 5f8-.6301,
HAVE: Guar. Home--Trade-
plan on DELUXE 4-PLEX
w/owner'1 J BR unit. North
Costa Mesa. FOR: Your
home. Agt. 646--88ll.
DELUXE Condo, 3 Br, 2 ba,
Ail elec, ~ eq. ft. pool,
dbl. pr. Finest in Newport
Back Bay/income or TD'1,
Pr:tnclpelli only. 646-:!6?0
0..EAR --C Units 1um.
ocean view, Y.. blk. Npt.
pier, bei;t rental area. $58,·
500 take srn. Me in trade.
ll'6Y.. C.ourt Ave., 6~
What do you think of OlW'
"TRADER'S PARADISE"
Drop us a card. Oaasifled
0.pl, P.O. Box 1'75. Daily
Pilot, ·Npt Sch, Calif.
* * *
'6.5 Yamaha 250 CC, Street
tnOOel, good cond. $300, will Domestic Help
trade for Dune Buggy or
7035
jeep, in good condition. 535. LIVE INS
4400 536-ll.64 Employer pay11o fttS
· George Byland Agency
4 Income units on 21st St. 111; B E. 16th, S.A. 547-0395
in Costa Mesa. Trade for CblnHe live-ins. Cheerful
house or tru11 deed&. In-Permanent. Experirnced.
come $402.50. Owner Far East >.!4enc:y 642-8703
• 54~.
7100 · Trade 15' 9" Lonestar so Afl"cl-. Men
PH plus trailer. Like new
"" A"-'1oc .... 1 ,.,.. ..... ,.. Coast Employment
up. Boat Value Is S960. AGENCY
646-8640 RESUME SERVICE
TRADE C•l property N.8., Santa Ana Profl Bldg.
ocean view for home or lot 1670 Santa Ana Ave.
Honolulu with view & foli· Cost• Men 642·961 ~
age, either side of Univ Hr1 8:ll am -5 pm Mon·Fn.
dist. ftt simple, S48-6986 Help Wtnted, Min 7200
21/2 Acres Level Lind
NEAR VICTORVILLE
Trade for late model
"side door" van. 962-7349
SELL FAMOUS
KNAPP SHOES
* * * •Your own buaineu -Full
or Part·tlme
-------· ---. -•l.Jbertl on the spot com-
EXPLORER
MOTORHOME CORP.
4000 C1mpu1 Drive
Newport leach
YOUNG MEN 11 to 2S
Experienced or not. Learn
said with a guarantee. If
)'OU can qual\f)' I can oHer
you:
• $155 per WMk Hlary
• A "•w Cadillac e Man•g•rnent Training
We furnish everything except
desire to make money. Ap-
ply 1500 Adams, Suite 30.l,
O>sta Mesa 11-4 p.m. daily.
SECURITY GUARD
• Wir•men
• Drawln9 '
Checker ·
Expei'l1nc1 necesnry
in checking electro
mechanic1I f1bric1-
tl on dr•wing1_ '
We ate •n nttblishecl
commerclll firm with
llberel fringe benefits.
Only people with at
leHf six months IX·
porience should apply
to
PARAMETRICS
929 laker StrHf
Cost• Miu
549-2221
Care er Opportunity
Jain todll.)'1 fastest arowin&:
profess:ion·Mutual Fund sales
SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY """'""'
Exclusive Newport Beach
community needs private
IQU'd fll work krqular day1
and holD'I. Prefer retired
peace otticer.-S.luy $400
ptt month, unilorm provid·
ed. Please write letter out-
llnina: yoor experience Jo
Dally Pilot Box M-150.
No experience necessan-
We train ~ full or part time
Mutu1I Fund Advisors, C nt C 6600 • -•No depolit or investmerlt eme , oncreta G•rden1n9 66IO * Free bonu• l t.naursnct
Bkx!~= ~'!!.... ANTHONY'S .:: ac1ual aampltt
owing 4 removal. "2-1010 Garden Service
Inc.
Npt 8 . 1603 Westcllff, 642...6422
S.A. 1212 N, Broadway,
Leadlni Import Doeler 1 ___ ..:><c.7..:-8331~---Floon-Walks-Patio& a: Ex· 646-1941 CONTACT
W A:LLY ERVIN posed Rocks. Expert COMPLETE CLEANUP
workmamhip. 642-8514· LAWNS REPLACED . Knapp Bros. Ha• ()9eftlng for quallfled SALES
Auto Salesm11n r REPRESENTATIVES
Rea1. monthly care. Prun. ~~ Work, ·4J;ypn.~, ';frig. Landscapinz. Exp. h«--
No job too amall. ~ ett. ticultwisl
Shoe Mf11. Corp. ·-~~'t9t!...,. Detail Man • Leid.inc i n d e p e 111'.1 e n t
Service Writer , 1pedallsts dealing in over
Lot Min 100 mutual fundl, expanding D L in Or~e County. This ban H. STUFLICK 548-8615 -~-":..· -----1 Expert J1p1neH 1---==,..;LI"--
Los An~e1, cant.. 900'D
OONCRETE, block, Spanish
We, wroua:llt iron, wood I
&lum. roofs. Lie; &t5-6107
Licensed -Quellty
Cement work. 839-5006
G•rdening IRANCH
Cut l:"raS1, edging, trimming, ltEPRESINTATIVI
weeding ln the !lower bed1, Y•Wl&' penon can prorre.a
b.Y month. Free estimates on bis OW1l abUlty to • n:aan-
e1n ewl1 lmpertl opportunity to enter
196&· Harbor, C.M. .146-9303 d\gnilied proteulon&I selllnit:
Shop Tr1lnH1 full or part time Investment
___ _:548-::::::::5182 agement 4>08ition. We will
Chllcl Cirti 66l0 Cut '= Edge Lawn auiat this pel'IM with our
---------1 Malntmance, Llceru.ed. formal training PfOll'atn,
Three young men, bigh exp not neceuaey, we train.
k'hocl arads, aervi~ com· s.t7-6621. Mutual Fu nd
plete. Apply 1n peraon 9 am-Investors Inc. 2100 N. Main,
11 am Diceon Electronics, 1..:•..:'":;;"::.:.An=•-----
SPEOlAL Summu Day Cwt
Hot balanced meals, anackl.
State lie. 2% to 6 yrs, 7 am-
6 pm. $18 Week. Clavis
Montessori Sc:hools, 1525 N.
Santa Ana, C.M. 64&-3706.
HANSEL & Gretel Oilld
Care $15 Week. 2656-A
Newport Blvd., C.M. SU..2134
Contr1cton 6620
e ROOM ADDmONS e
L.T. Conatruction
Family rooms, kitchen or
unitl. Single story or 2;
pllllll custom designed. For
estimatn & layout. phone:
• 847-1511 •
Licen1ed Contractor
Re1idential -Commercial
Maint &: Repairs. Free Est
673--2129
Remodellna • Additions
J . G. MacBeth, Uc.
e 67Xl628 •
548-411QB, 5'S-58'lO aft 4 PM group bmefita ' u eqult·
able salary.
Generel Servi-6612 PACIEIC FINANCE
PROFESSIONAL wind 0 w 7019 WESTMINSTER
Cleaning Fr~ eat. Business WESTMINSTER
resld &: coost. Cry3tal win: Equal opportunity employer
dow c:.ieaning. 548-8737 Janitor for
6730 Senice Dept. LrITLE GlANT TRUCK
Hauling. 6' heightb, 10' bed. Prefer ~tired man but not
~?'.! Jn:e it I haul. Reu. required. 8 hrs. day, 5 days 11 ° 642-4030 week. Good pay & binge
./ lfAULlNG . Trash pickup benefit.. Contact Don ruse.
Trimmtnc. Anything 1• we do l!nr, Suvict Manager. Uni.
it all. Exper work. 54~2792 verslty Oldsmobile. 546-5f{J(I
Garage Oea.nups, trlmmlng1, between 8 & I! .
dirt. You name It I Haul.
Big John 6424030
CLEAN Lots, garages, etc.
Tree removal, dump, tkip,
backhoe, !Ill , grade. 962-8'1'5
Ironing 6755
Fiber9lass
Lominatan
Want money! ' All the
work you can handle! 2
ohitU.
lnc. &H Terminal Way,
Cotta Mesa. No phone calla
please.
Service Station
MECHANIC
Full time. Must know Scope
tune, brakes, front enda,
Clas.a A Smog «rtUlcate,
a:ood nle1man, neat in ap-
pearance. See Oyde 2590
Newport Blvd., C.M.
Young Men 18·28
Salff promotion ,kl'bl avall.
Large int'I. corp. no.coo tit
year. Management opportu-
nities, Call 10 am • 2 pm.
539-1183.
~-----Boys W1nted
Busboy &
Dlshwash•n
J\111 and Part nme
Day and Nllht Shifts
Over 18.
Apply in per90n
808'S BIG BOY
154 E. 17th St.
C.OSta Mesa
E1rn While You Le1rn
M1 jor Appliance Repair
Wrlli!: Equlmatrix C-51-N
322 4 Geary Blvd.
S. F. Calif., 9\1118
Auto Trimmer
Additions * Remodeling MY home n hr. Family iron-
Fred H. Gerwick, Lie. ing, 1 p e c I a 11 :r. I n g ln
Gr•nt Flbergl•••, Inc.
416 w. Enclnit.u Rd.
agts 12 to 14 evenln11:1 and
Saturdays. ApPly now for
aummer work. Work with
circulation field managtr.
Will train. Transportation
furnished. Phone 54&-8697
WANTED Boys for after
achoot work and Saturdays
We will train rlzt,t boy1 for
circulation field 1 ale a ,
PrMou1 training helpful bul
not nece1aary, For full In·
fonnatloo phone 54-8697
Experienced on I y. Take
charv;e of Trim Department.
Company beneliU, vacation,
1tee.dy employment. 673--6041 * 549-2170 pants/shirts, 2 dy min. San Marboe:. CalU.
(TI4l 744-2675 Call Miko S40.0170
C1rpet L1ying & -"";-uu"ii11m<e&.-m'°'ilM'ii:so l==-=-----~= Repair 6626 * tRONING & mendina ll.50 HELP w a n t e d AUTO
-------"::;::...;:.;:;;;;. hr. C1JJ after noon, bring ME:TAL MAN
No Experience
Necasary! APARTMENT MANAGERS hanaeri. 646-8l09 percentare
interested in bids 0 n basil. Orange Co u n t Y ' 1 LOT MAN Mu!Jt have clean California
driving record. Apply
YELLOW CAB CO.
196 E. 16th St.
replacement carpeting? We Landsc•ping 6110 I a r i est independent.
are uper. in this field. Call I ---'--""-"'---= Emplayee ll'OOP bendill.
546-4478 eves. Lie. em. GAYNOR'S LANDSCAPING Call manager &U-tl943
With IO'P" mechanical expe.r·
ience ' detail e>eperlenct.
Scee John or Joe.
NEWPORTER MOTORS tracton. ' GARDENING SERVICE WFSTERN Men's hair .tyl· Costa Men
G1rclenin1 66IO
JijNnete Gardener
Exper .. complete yard
service. Free estimate•
• 548-7958 •
RELIABLE : Re•s.
w/Orlenlal care. Oe-arHIPB
& odd jobl. Vincent .
64>-0326
REASONABLE Ptol'euional
garden Ing. landscaping
bauil.na, lOf\I" experience.
'99--3452 or 838-117&.
CUI • FJd&e Lawn
Maintenance. Licensed.
548--<dOS -5'5-1570 aft 4 PM
LAWN SERVICE $15 MO.
Dependable. Profeuional.
WeekJy ~e. 962~19.
1'10W1NG, F.dlln&:, vacalawn.
Gen1 cleanup. 1fauling.
Odd iok. * 54U955
JAPAl<UE GARDENER
Maintenance llJ tbe month.
Good ...... -5*-1'151
LAWN le Qtd'en ~
a.nee. C•nop ... Sprt.y • l't'f'
liltr.t Com'l A Reli. 962o-7349
• MOWING, edlinJ i clean
11p. Monthly rates. Frtt
f'llimate. Ca.ll 168-19'J1 *
State licensed contrctr, Ing c h amp ion wants
ResldenUal -CommerciaJ gentlemen models for tuture 2036 Hari>or Blvd. COUNTER HELP
Yard Oea.nup Free Ell competitiont. Call: Mr. Ron
No job lo big. 893-3581 54S-917t
REAL ESTATE. Shouldn't acan. hard working young
YoU be aenlng the hotteNt men for day i night shills
area • Huntinrton Beach? at Tht Doryman Fish &
Piperhanglng -PROF. Serv, Sta. Mechank: Call Phil McNamee for appl. Olips Restaurant. Good pay
p 1 1 6ISO Guar. &: % de1l. Tom Sbarp V\llqe Real Estate me1l1, avail lmmed. Apply _•_n_t_n_,1,_ ___ ..c:.;.:.: I Union 2201 E. Cst Hwy CdM 962-44n 546-3103 today noo w' Ocean Front,
REDEXX>RATE: We do ~O~R~>-~=~~-~-~ * College Students NB.
evhy\hlfv: Painting, in & SERVICE Stat. Attendant. Full .I:. pt.rt·time needed. WANTED: Young man part·
out; custom drapes; custom Exper., fuU time. 1697 Dayievei. 1 weekenda. ear-Urne altemoon1. General
ca.rpets: wail coverings .1: Pl•centla Ccor W. 17) C.M. cJH.l\in bt=lper auto body shop. Must _,_ pet I le 11;en't clean-i..v, ea•~ drl-"o U-n••· ~ coordination. 20 yr1 MAN or boy to work In drtv. In&· No Up MC. 5ft.)f25. 11-...... · ·-""'
exper, f~e est, sa~ea to In, oookin& e:irp.. pref. Call ust tut .l willing to
)'OW" door. Lk I: lnl. Res.' 9:30-U.17J..6180 DELIVERYMAN, phydcally wOrN. Good pay. Call fat" Comm. ftt; tun A PU'l·dme: 11 A appt. Mr. Lord, flutlor-Auto
MODERN DEX.'ORATORS MAn!ot~S:C~ '::.:or over. Own car + inluf, '£\t.' ... -,;,:;;;,· ,.:.61-:;',.:.'°':;13:.,,....,,...,...,.,.~ iii-..:;;:-r;;;'36-;;;;951l;;;;-;;;-;;;:l===""3-~'"55~---enlna:1. Apply after 4 PM,
1
YOUNG Marl, studmt 20-3$ 1920 Harbor, CM. _ .... _ ...
WALL Coverlnga '= in-PARKJNG LOT Attendant --~=;_.;:,.;;~---I n~ for worit: in c:ottee
1tallltlonl. See N1mpiN at M Ov 11 AWJ • * FRY COOK *, bar CdM. 35-40 hr. wk. Good born,. Tioc.+:s . roll • Vinyl en. er ' at Experienced. Con1act Mr. saliuy call 9-11 am 6'13-3855
Olll M7-1659 before a ,.m., Reli>en & Let Parkini Lot. Zbnmer, Blue Dolphin Rea-for appt.
Schwartz. DISHWASHER, 4 d 1 y 1, 2 taunnt m-4004.
INTERIOR Is EXTERIOR nlahll, Set Ten')', H._Time DEl.JVERYMAN, to wort aa
Paintlni· Free esl.hrtate, Dell, 49l5 E. l?~ '!!!__ late u 4 AM. Full A: part.
Uc A Ins. Spec:'-1 next 00 ~ENCED GARDEN· time. Own car + Insur.
days. ('all CHUCK !KW314 ER in Hunttncton Hut:lor Aplltf after T PM
PAIN'mlG aod p-. 11 .... .., lviJ -·MT-.-,,..,1_9:IO_H_-~;.;;..Bf=vd;;:.,c..;CM:::__
you etll i:nt we boib brnetit. FRY COOK ........ q. Driver eart;, AM new.apepn-
ExclUllv1 but'DOt exptr1alve, perience. Start JlOO • wtttt. delivtr)' O>rona del Mar
Try me and .ee. 541-31!1 fhone ~4'.1 art1. Need 1t1tfon WtJ·
PAINl1NG, exterior, Interior OE:LlVERY Boy f\ill Time M or equal. Approx. S235
lie. lnl. 17 Jtl exp. ,Free eat, 13 • 3S yn ~. lth clr mo. ~
MM.US. ACf'Ollfti&l,I ~. AIN.Y;:::c::..;;31)1:;.;.I .. " .. -=;;_:ll;;.vdc;:..NB~~-CHAllG==E:..:.""'='.::""'='c.:ad::.:.-::;;;·
~
AfOncln, Women 7300
llooltkteper, f <C. $600
Auto ... delinble; nil MC.
.a.ch .-ea crow* Cl. Urt-....i _..
Tr1lnee,' eff1ce · $300
Type ""'"'""'· C.M. loe. J, R. Pitree AatOC. A1mcy
18115 N_..-port., C.M. 64Ur.kl
awtGE m
PRODUffiON
ASSEMBLY
WORKERS
No experience
necess•ry
1
1,
APPLY
1917 Pl•c•nfia Ave.
Coste Meu
Cashier Hostess
Neat-appearing, 18-40, no
e~per ~saacy.
ApP!y in per90l"I: ~
Bob's Big Boy
154 E. 17th St., C.M.
Radio· Telephone
Dispatch Girl
25 to 40 yeani, Muat know
1.ocal area. Apply in person
YELLOW CAB CO.
186 E. 16th St.
Costa Men
BOOKKEEPER
F\JLL CHARGE
To auist CPA • Tt-ea1. of
substantial Corp. N.B. Some
typing • receptionist duties,
25 to 40. Salary open. cau
Mr. Mltchell 642-1626
MASSEUSE WANTED
Age :ll-32. WW train. Salary
open. Full or part ame. Ref-
erences and no police r-ec-
on!. ApP!y In person.
132 E. 18th St., C.M.
MOTHER'S helper for •um.
mer. Hi-school senior or col·
lege student pref. Own
trans. Mon thru Frtl"! to 8
PM. $30. wk, 6'75-4776 bet 3 1
&: 7 PM
MATI.fRE Woman wanted tor
cblld care 12 to 6 PM.
Tran.sp req. Start 6117.
CdM 6'15-2514 aft 6
BARMAIDS .•.•
.•. and GO.GO
DANCERS
S300 per week
638-5483 or 633.9763
ASSISTANT bookkeeper· ol· J
fiee manager for medical of.
lice. Must be able to work
weekends. Salary open.
CALL: U I· 7'171
HOUSEKEEPER • IJve-in. ;
.Assist present hllkr. Con· 1
valeacent mother &:; 3 1 c bldrn, 12, 3, & 1. 494-6297,
54S.UOl. ext 233 ~.
WAITRESSES. Exper only ~
need apply. Denny'1 Coffee
Shop, !flOO s. Cat ""tiwy., I
Laguna Bc.h, No phone calla .....
WOMEN Exper. In make up
for HAIR HUNTERS
SALON in S.A. le N.B. 1 644-1484 10 to 5 Mon thru Frt 1
HOUSEKEEPER • 4 -=hool
children, 5 days, 7:30 to
5:30. H.B. area. Ref a,
540-3801
DRY Cl..EANING Counter
Girl. N.B. A: H.B. areu.
Call 541-9550 before noon
MAKE Enda meet. Part Ume
wk. H:-111 optional. Mn.
Bailey·540-1932 952-371S
SALESGIRLS, B e t we en
25-45; exper. only, Apl'opOI
Shvp.: ~2 For app't,
BAR-MAID wanted, nl&hll; . over 30. Apply 1n ver.oa.
3208 W. Cout Hwy, NB
WAITRESS over 71 for ffo(.
brau. Wlll consider tralnff.
Call M&-9920
WANTEO FUU.. TIME
MAIDS for MOTOR HOTEL
in L&l\llll Beach. ~
Pfr $'Z hr l'W'· CUdrJrmr
aeM« for ut&b Co. Mn.
Brown 540-1932, H.B.
BABYSITTER Mon lbru "1 I
• 2 boya. Must have t"lttr.
Ct.11 aft~-M2-2'm
PART-Time tile derlt s-acm
• Saturdl)ta Call Mni. 1Ae ....
-..mw_,.,
• tn COiia llt11,, phoM
s&.M4-Tpnl<9pm
liPIRATOltS'.Gud Poy
1* Monrov NB &d-211111
BARMAIDS: NIGHTS
Apply 210 5t\I 61., llB.
----------~-------·-== = e =---• -----. ---• a •·-• -•-• •-. n a = r a a 'a • • en
l"'I""' __ ....... ____ ._....,........-......... -~---~ .......... ~~......-~ ...... ---...... ---....... --............... -....... ----~-----------
1
I.
l
I
' .
. '. -...
l
I
I
I
•'
'
--------·-
Theres more than one way
to make your own money!
:Jusf for fun , you ml9lit fry +lie little -do-If.
'yeul'Mlf kit suppRecl ebove. But pl•••• don't
try+. spend the money your meke this wey.
If you went to try to meke the kind of money
which 11 reelly spencleble, try cloint It this
wey. l'lck UI' yeur phone, -clial 642-5678 encl
1ey, "l'cl hk. te piece e Went Ad, pl1e1e."
Wli•f lilM ef • W•nt Ad? How about 1ell0
1111 .. Ille of tli•s• nice thlnti yeu ne lon9er,
use? Tliey may !:it 9atlierln9 ausf In your
home, but someone else wenh them encl wlll
put them to 9oocl use.
Your DAILY PILOT Want Ad can cost ••
little •• $4.50 . Think of your profit If you
1olcl 1om1thin9 worth much moro then thetl
Don 't delay. Make that spencleble moliey,
A DAILY PILOT Want Ad will 9et It for you
fed.
DIAL DIRECT-642-56 78 Say ''Charge It''
FROM NORTH COUNTY PHONES DIAL 541-1221
DAILY PILOT . Want Ads Will Work for YOU
-
-T
.... ·--... --~~---"I""! ...... """',,_ ________ ~,....~------.-...... -----..... -..... """'--..,..,.._ ..... __ .. I';
115 & EMPLOYMENT • JOllS & EMPLOYMENT .........,.----1 . MERCHANDISE f OR
SALE AND Tl\ADE
MERCHANDISE-FOR
SALi AND TRADE
th.....,, -13, 1968 DAILY PILDt SS
MERCHANDISE FOR
1
:.IERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR TRANSPORTATION 1 TRANSPOllTATION
SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE
elp Wanted He'P Wanted
Women 7400 Women 7400 Furniture ------"--~
Fvrnlture IOOO
•. •. SALE A ND TRADI . -& y......,. 9000 Minne 1 .. 1,. ·fiD
IOOO Furnltvro IOOO Mt ... 11an...,. 1600 FREE TO YOU ,,... ""_
U VOLT "I D" MariM Bit-
Electro-
M~hanical
• Assemblen
E.>q>erlencec:I only.
Computer AIMmbly.
-APPLY
Marshall
Communications
2230 S. Ann; St.
Santa Ana, Calif.
540-2120
An equal opportwrity
employer
SECRETARY
EXPERIENCED: Execu·
tive typewriter &. short-
lland. Exceptional Krowth
opportunity!
-APPLY-
Marshall
Communications
2230 S. Anne St.
Santa Ana, Calif.
540.2820
An equal opportunity
. emplcyer
Intermediate
Steno-Cleek.... __
Shorthand 80. Start $436
Senio r
Steno Clerk
Shorthand 100. Start $469
Food Service
· Worker
4-10 p.m. Start SJJ3
Apply imrnedlately
range Coast College
2701 Fairview Road
ta Mesa 834-Sm!
Hostess-Cashier
llractive, vivacious bost-
ss to work 5 er 6 nights.
xperience. preferred but
t necessary. Good In·
ome potential. Call for
appointment.
Bob Burns
Restauront
~4-2031
BABY.,.TI'ER, thru summer
vacatloo : Newport Beach
arl!<t . 5 Days week. 675--3856
Ev{'~.
PWONNR
CIERK
Rnponsthlf. woman for
,.,.,,, OU!cc JIOliliqi> ...
vo!ving payroll, twtna,
Jllln&: ,1c. Pereonnel u~
ptrlence preterTtd.
Apply Peraonnet
•.:. , 10-4. M.on thru Fri
< ROBINSON'S
FASHION ISLAND N~WPORT BEACH
An equal opportwtlty-
employer
Applications Beint
TAKEN
FULL •• PART TIME
EMPLOYMENT
Permanent onl)i
no students
HA mt Coo.let cotfec tbl, s:iO:
2 batch covtr tad tbl.I S2!li
e1 ; 2 nautical lampl, bk>ck
with chaln SM ea; bklnd
bunk t.d IJ'time& 50; '° pl
rock aoquarlUJQ, ult or
treab water, Mtotb ldlde
$6S; kits more. Sac r If
because ot death. 346-00'ni
"'mlture r~ from dil-
play studkls.. mad.el bomea,
decorator• cancellation.
Spanlah le MedlteITanean etc.
RD fVRNITURE
1144 Newport Blvd., CM
every night til 9
Wed-, Sat. & Sun. 'tll 6
MOVING! Beautiful rattan
round sectional, 8 slrandl,
round r:lasa table ;JOO. Mar·
We coffee table, small
items. 22lll Holly Lane, N.B.
O>r Irvine. ~6 '
642-8501
.FUR Sale 12' s ec t io nal
eel~ aola. Afttt 9 am
2270 Pac:Wc • .A-ft., Apt C
C.Mr ·"'-~-..· -
Age1 lll ta 48 -Liberal va-=o"'ElCO=-=RA-TQ=l\=·"'s-,A"tin.,.--EI,,,-,.
catioo pay. Merit raises, ·Pill ~om solid w a In u t
employee dLtcountl., tive day dln. tble.-Pu_ieiet cond: ask·
woek. App!y Monday, Wtd-... $306. ~13'5 ""'""""· nead~. Thursday and Fri·
day, 9::11 to 4:00. Offlca ·Equipinent 1011
F. W-Woolworth
0 H CESTE'l'NER .Mlmeagraph 23 0 arbor Blvd. N~ 120. Xlnt cood. $150 °'
~A MESA best oUtr:. ~. 633--0922
' /• ..
Reltet·, R.N.
44-f ~-Fvn Jime R.N.
Mj<!' A.M.
Apply in person
No Phone: calls please
Huntingtori Beach
Convalescent Hotpital
187'92 Delaware
Hwttinglon Beach
STWO!LEGAL TRAINEE
(:aguna-BiiCh -a tfol'i"fi:Y needs'
assistant tor his probate
secretary. Must be seU-
starter, will.i.ng to accept
responslbilil}I & ha.ve ex·
ce.Uent typing skills cm IBM
Executive , S/H S0.90 WPM.
No legal experience
necessary. Will train. Start
S400 per month with
MERIT INCREASES. Reply
Bax M-143, Daily Pilot.
PBX Oper1tor
E.'(perienced, mature. Perma-
nent part time SundllYI thru
Tues. PM hours. apply in
"'""" Sheraton Beach Inn
2ll12 Ocean Ave.
Huntington Beach
BABYSfITER, Exper. for
sweet girls 3 & 4 yrs. 25 hrs
per wk. Edinger & Spring·
dale HB are.a. 846-9235 alt 6
PIANO lesson11. yoong, ~xp.,
teacher, new in area. Grad.
Sherwood Music: S c h o o I ,
Member Mu11ic T!!achers
ASMX. Prlv. lessons !or ta~
G•i-'agi,.~119 1022
. -CARAGE SALE
23751 LandlsvJew • El ·roro
837-3865
Sat·& Sun 11 AM lo 4 PM
EVERYTillNG MUST GO!
Over 100 itema priced trom
Sc -SOc. Vases, shirta, bar
glasses, purses, knlc-lmacs,
cups, stuffed animals &:
many more ~o choose from:
Cotfee table $15 3 end tables
S8 each. 3 IMl'IPI $7.50 to SlO.
TY=-chair ·$12.50. Geld i<lla
and chair $65. White ex-
tension pole shelvea S2(l Con-
lourl'd leather-chair $40. 5
piece. dinette witb 12.. ex-
tension $4fl. 5 sets bar
glasses {6 to a set) $2.
Sleeping bag $8.50. 3 piece
luggage set $17.50. Rattan
bar $15. Antiqued bookcase
$10. Antiqued commode
$12.50. 8 piece set MeJmac
dishes $10. 6 ft . day bed f.?).
M~·-~Y more Items too
n~ tt>·m~tion.
DANISJl dlnina room set. 4
cttalrl, oiled 10lkt walnut 1n.
cludH hutch. C.OSt S800, ask-
ing $300. K'irby vacuum with
attadiments S55 Ladles gall
clubs with bag and cart $15.
Wate,.,lda, cost $50, sell fllr
$15. 3 bikes, $10 each. 2 good
mirr.'" S6.IXI I $4.50. 2 4
~'""'~ !"·"' ..... • • speake11.n • $3.50.
M eous 4lervln1
dis · ,. l~. efc: 958-1980.
10070. San f'abkl Court.
F~ -Valley Near
BI'obkhft'St &: Elliir
MUGS, bottles, p I c t u re: s
record•, drapes, bowling
balls, K"Uitar, dresser, desk,
logl!I, brlckll, plant.I, Much
More! . f::A.~ .ART JN. N o:vliA'.l.Jl'.N:s1cARP"1'
MuRA:a. niura, Fri. &
Sat. Garage at 10034 La
Rosa. F.V. South of Slater &
West of Los Jardln es .
"'"-""'
FUl..LERET'TF'...5, Earn up to thru tE"ens, Su~ O!!nton 367
$8{) v.·kly. pt Un1e, over 21 M11.gnolla. CM 548-8494
i\Jrs. Edwards 545-2975 or SWIM LESSONS, y OUR
546-57>15
WANTED: GObO Gu dryer
Call aft er 5 pm
4~-* caU c:onect.
11.JRQUOISE Cold Spot bot-
tom freezer. Llke new
$165 .. 841-5384
POOL. Private & Group.
HOUSEKEEPER, motbe.r-Reuanable. Red Cross In·
lei;s home 2 children ages 5 1tructor, Mn. Bee. 54>-1498
& 7. Live-in. Call 673-3121. after 5
Ci:i\1'. -scn=o~LASTI~=c~ns~-c~~-1-.~ill
G. E. refrl g, dble door, crou
top freezer, xlnt. cond. $75.
2151 lrvlne, N.B. 646-4519.
R E F R I G S : We1tlnghse,
lrsl (ree, S85: GE, $45. Botb
2 dr. erou tap. 548-l«li
ll A B Y SI TT ER & lt. tutor your elem ldil child in RCA Alr conditioner, 9,700
housclceepina, 3 schoolers; basic lllbjecta. $2.50 hr, BTV·ZlOV $50. 962-00S7.
own trans. Call after 6. 543-5044.
"'1-<023 SCH==OOL=-,Cblldr=~en°''1-va-c-1t!Oif= An...... 1110
OCCASIONAL Babya!Ue:r rntes. Oillcoat !G--Leucm t?n'E~G old ictum
needed. Able to live-In when Typing School. 548-2859. 1'13 P
out ct town. limo old chUd. Del Mar, C.M. ~vla;,n :~-~a~ J=~~
Re"-642-4910 or &l&-&161. r.1ERCHANQISE FOR Dode• Qty, c-. Colo .•
HAIR-STYLIST SALE AND TRADE Silt !Ai.. City 613-1310 CdM
La Cr!iffurea 673-(186 F 1~· IOOO h 2 ~Newport Blv., N'pt. Bdi~ urn,..,,.. Sewlnt Mee IMI 11 0
1 'Y~o=UN=c=-'--.....,--.. -'--.,'-u~.t-st1 RATJ'AN Liv. rm. a dtnflte.
w1tb lia"lll houldce.eptnr, 1 film,, lftcl. lunpa, .tc. Xlat
momlna per we.tic. 54Ml9.1. condltaoal 67M10C
e .t'ART·TlME 8 .PROVINCIAL So.fl ID e.";X·
Rattu.rant be\p, allO c:ellent condi~ $115-
·-·· . AUCTION DOBERMAN, ftmai.. ........ 1111< ao.tlng c1--20$ ...,,, tin. -I ' --"'~'-" Fri., Juno 14, 7:30 pm -ml "' papan· 2 -Ofttml " publlc °" yr uncondltlonal .,.._.. I
NeWAUKdfumlture.Whlte old. Ge~tle •I~ l•fbothwerSquaclron Rte· $107.10 Spedal NJe ,
MEDITERRANEAN Fnnch ""'"""'"" bedroom ..... w•t<h .... ....a .f''.U~ Eltmtn~ Pllodn~:; $49.50.
SPANISH Nta; Itta alto 1n Ch, r r )', ctnl' 968-3285 atttt't"• cry _ y, S a: Marine A Batt!l'J' Shoppe
.: MahQlany, Maple, Divans l ' , M. June 10, Newport Har-..,;2430==W=·="°"="="="'=· N=. B;:·;;i. loveeee.tl. hldabedl. occa1. ·= ll)S :u'*°r Yacht Club, 't20 w. a.,. -:-
:Ji a~ chairs, bunk bc.<ds, com· (.2) 1 WK. old pupplt'· ~ /1<-ve., Newport Beach Boat Slip Moorlnt flOM
•l • l ' modes cocktail tables win-far huntlna. Germ11W ~•li0 OR. for )'OUt corwtnlmce f "';. rnt.LUN ll!~ a-~ dow che.ta, sewing ~cb. hair I ! Soft mouth,~ Every 'r\J.'9da.y, ttardna 1 WANTm IO JeaM by Bal.
. N Sho ine11, ~lltS o( dnwtrs, fttt • to cood home1 only. PM , Junt 11, EIWQ)'I Schoo.I, :~r ~ar~ :.u~ f
ew Wroolft Samples desks, swag lamps, pie. 962-1133 6/14 Irvine A:.CUft Dr.,-Newport pieronB&lboalllandorUQ'
Will Soll Any Ploco lndlvldu1lly luru, mattreuell, TV's, WANT Good homes tor pun Beach, in Cahtorium. No neari>y areu:. Bonus fot
stereot, powermowe-r.-"'Uke white. blu~yed kittens, advance reibtraUon nee~
new'' refrigerators, stoves, part Siamese. Alto 5 other Mr)'. Enroll at cla.u; It any rental. Ca.II collect: 21.S: l
wubera, dryers and MUCH a 11 t ' d c ol 0 r klttena. queltfioDt; phone 548-137ol or 693-028l 2'13: 693-.5312 8' Carved Um divan, lg matching chair with
beautiful i.brlc<; 5 pc hexagon dark oak din·
ing set witl! lilack or av<X!ado framed chaif's
& vinyl cu.shions; 5 pc bedroom •el, 9·dr Mr
& Mn dreeser with lg framed mirror, 2 lg
commodee & matching headboard.
MOR£! 536-2091 8/lol 673-1855. BOAT SLIP I
ft. '64 00 tor 30 lo 40' sailboat r Wl!lilY'S AUCTION 4 _SHORT "'" " Slamtat C1bln RS~:.~";."".~;:,; 1:1-25 * 642-9'01 f
kittens. S wkt 2 Tabby, l HP 1/ DESPERATELY In ,--' -, i0'75% Newport Blvd.. , &'re Y' 1 SI a m es e. ..._, OHdM"a'· UAmer.BoTand. nllll -Bdilnd T . Bl•• M .,,_ 6f-321J 6/l4 ·~ r. . a ey. ttom 11.ip er skie tie. Reuonabll! !
ONLY $429.95
<$895 va1u.i 1
ony 1 "4· a,... Ster-foam.,Full)' equip. inc:, 23' al~ ~1780 alt 5 pm '
Coata. Mesa 646-8686 KITI'EN 1 mo ol~ l>Jf.~~ cc, DJ, OF, L anch Hse· OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 part perslan ~u't eye, ~ ~--~--_i _ -n...,., • ': .NEWPOfJ.T . resk!ent needs
• • -"~ • , &aic ..... ~ ·_f..\fv.f(.'l C01'¥1. b!)Jt° )Hp for 3{' eruiaer. l Wlf1' Plastic chrs w/ot. :tlr!!"bite, blk. W"ll_.Yt~· -AA·~~·, •PJeaici'pbo-. 641-s.B
tomM S50: 3 bland "end tblll ~ 54&-413"1 &ns 16' dmYSl..ER Lone Star «> • -or TERMS as low u S3 Wool<
No down .:_ UM our 1tOni charge pl1n I 1 coUee tbl UO; . 4 pc br (21 5 WKS male ldtten1, part hp Johnaon, nivy 1 0 p , But• y 1cht
I sel, b~ ~: w1r11t dlr, Persian, re1I cute! 14492 traJJer. $1850. 1966 mode.I, Charters 9039 Approved Furnitpre gold ~ : ~ige ~r SlO: s ah a r • Lane • H .B . Sharp! Weit Coaal Yachts ---------~~~sofa~: twin m_al-897-6937 6114 lJ.13 W. Coast Hwy Npt Bch. SCRAM LETS
(No Fancy Front -BUT Quality V1lu11 Inside) $15: girb ~e. ~~ 5~ PART. dalmation, champM>n N e wport Arch e 1 • 1
2159 Harbor Blvd., Cotta Mesa 541·9660 English bike Sl5; Elgin 7% grandfather. Female 11 wkl. Marina. 642-7711 ANSWERS
Open 9.9 Daily -Sund1y 11·5 hp motor $35: bed aJ)r'etlds Lltile Siasy needs a home. JUNE Special. Boa.ta hauled,
12 Yun same k>cation -sama owner. SJS 3 plaatie bar ¢1s $25. 548-8832 eves. fi/14 bottom &ttUbbed & painted,
1 I 675-0!66 HAVE five cute kittens, long $1 .80 per ft. +paint&: :d.nc. Equity -Toldc -Manly -•. ~ ~ 1..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.1 haired, crey, tortoiae, and All ether maintenance + Torrid-ANTIQUITY. Name ( '-~ . ' SWIMMING POOL blk. 8 wkl old. engine work, see us! of a Hollywood antique '
========='o-=====""====l1s Ft Pool Fillet. s~ace KI 5-147.5 6115 Newport Dry Docks 675-1505 ~; "Den ol ANTIQUl·
M i I I t 8125 Sk ' M On the Bay at 20th St. us Cl ns • Binoculars Scop" 8550 1mmer, atntenance Kit. PET Rabbit, brown A: white, ;;:;--;;==:'-:--=-,~-·I• CHAR'!"ER THE FINEST • FREE Ground Pad. cage included; to family 18' cusroM built aft·share
$149 C I G~ -~-ROCK N Roll Band Equip. TASCO 3 x 9 Veritable .88 wfc hi ldren over 8 .... ru s_~r._._ ~ hull, S73-25l~ • 675-2-400
Rickenbacker amp, guitar, SCOPE $15. 64&-2904 atter 6. SECARD POOL 673-2453 ··: ... ~Gt .' :~ ~~L-;p,a .d e d
Fender reverb, % price. 534-4458 anytimt-323 S. Main, Oranie 2 LOVABLE Grey ~-.'!Dtlexf;fUI ·~~n to loat Storage
53S-419'l • 532-1992 striped kittens, 8 wttks, ~ppredate. The only one ot
FENDER Jaguar Guitar. Sporting Goods 8500 e FA ne e d a o o d ham e 1 its kind. 839-0027 DRY Boat Stcrqe for
Brand new, Custam finish BR.IC SALE • 892-5302 6/14 14' CR.FSI1..INER Skibird, 911 Consignment sales, Up to 40
w/dlx caSe. Orig pre $450, Fsn:~~.!k1s. ~~;~ ~~7F:M~~:~,P~.:.M M~ cat and Jour pret· ~~'::i :· ~~~~ l~H~~~o:~;wy~
sacrif $2'15. &U-0582. Direct, Ui:ed boards also. Vast .eLectioo of knit fabrics. ty kittens, ~ males and 2 3ll1 W. Col.SI Hwy Npt Bch. 642-mt
MUSICIANS &: Groupe-All cheap. We inst.all new Open DAILY tn public lim· fema1es.-tramed and wean-Ne'WpOrt Arches M a r i n a I=========::.!
Rehearsal room, Npt Bch. removable fins In your old lted time only during in-ed. 642-2790. 6113 6U-71ll Mobile HOl'Mf
Day CW" ni~. bourly rates. board. 642-1607 vet1tory clearance. 1WO Female puppies need a OWNER MUST S
OR J-4370 SUR FBOARD JI a wail, 9' 11)", Costa Mesa Knitting Milla good home with lioY~ care. ,.... ELL PARKLANE D a u b I e Ex-
SAXAP.:HONE, _ B _El at _.!!:c~;. great c<ind. $45. 9'l9 Baker st. Coata Mesa 1 Chihuahua 1 Poodle -'Jjr:· ' l'ellows & Stewart, 0~ pando. 2 Bdrms. A~, Sopra~. {C\lrved slY 1 e} . -6'1J-t028 alter 5:30 M.ao-KoD~proJ;"tor -M..e. ricr:-Y-8-0011 -~ ~ -' ~wt 1t1 .-~l~t-:i:· ~I--porcli tr; ildrtiJii. 'Excenent
"'w,lullprice $175-646-2174 -Kodak • TO Good"'--, ' · r w: au-. · es. g. -conditim ·$5600 -Corne·r
8600 IT_1<lV"ie camera. 804 . . '"'-"''"' 2 cute. abort .. ~. ~ Udo Nerd, N.B. spa~. ~ PM
ELECTRIC Guitar Miscell1neous Instamauc Kodak camera. hair kittens, 1 black &: •ht.· 26, BARTENDER On 4 h
Gibson S..325 $275 for best of· 850 Kcdak slide Jrt>jector. one grey tabby. 8 wks. w eel 10 x 51 SMOKER 1958.
fer. 673-5980 DRF.SSER -French Provin· Light &: screen Cost $400 675-0f77 6/13 tandom trailer, sll!ePfl 5, In c I u ding e xtr a I J
clal originally bought at 11 1 .....,., · • ahawer. O'ul&es 2fi mph Well Rea!l<lllably priced.
--Sloane. Sacrifice $511. Record Be or .,.~. New CycJo-SERVEL Re.lrlgerator, top equip. Owner Jeavlng at.ate * 642_.ua
Pi1nos & o~!~n~130 playertradlo $15. Wet suit& mas.sage pillow w I b e at Croes treezer, dble door. 543-1131 ~
& surfboard. Kltcheii ware. control. Cost $150, eell for Works fine. 21~1 lrvlne, N.B. -~~.~~~~~--12 x 55 EXPANDO, 2 Br. * PIANOS &: ORGANS * Many household ltemi.. Mo. $75. 54()...1961 1 646-4519 6/14 45 Slip for Rent trailer with awning", pl.a,
• Largest stock in so. Clllif. · MUST SE" 1-1 · --67>-1393 h 642 1no * 209'-40"70 oU.Player ptanoe -;;;~ OR 3.IJlS ...._. "" ns, UNIVERSAL Luggage car· 2 FRISKJE Kittens must ========='Io~"°;"=·=*==·====• I
l!XXI rolls to choose from • rier, fita nearly all makes of have home by Thuraday. S1llboat1 9010 ELECTRIC CARS 9250 * Ter~. Terms ·Tttm1 * Pool Jables .· cars. Triple chrome.. plated;. G:oinr on vacaUon.·<i4i-.a400 ==='----'=-"
'
ash...__c ..,;.,.. '.nano ar trade $fS 'l-a Id if;" l,aDJilV~f'IU)j ;,;.,.g_, PM • • 6/13 FOR SALEIFAR EAST
•UI" J~ .,. . New t.repoaeased S99.BO special $14 .95 each. · · 1;.c'"'~-·e-·-,,~-~~--
grand pilllo for new spinet up. Tennis, Champion JOHNSON & SON 2 y~ Old maJ~ German Plue:r Design AA 3 1 '
FieJd'1 Wholesale Piano Co. Quality $34.50 up. , ~-ln·Mt"""""" ~l!.i __ aood with c:tilldre11 . Trimaran/Sloop SS riggi!'4f.
12072 Brookhurst at Chapm&ll Call frlt)k 900 W:C~ ~ · ':>ti-9t9'J 6/15 Teak inter, Volvo Aux, head,
FSI'ATE SALE
Sacrifice! Electric Car.
• 548-6828 •
MotorcyclH Garden Grove tU4\ 638-mO 538.0311 N.•w-. Boa<:h ' .· ••• -. n1"' Kitten• wet.!Md,.. It sl.ps 6, Uke new, 3 mo old, _. ~ ~ -;-._""("'.\ 4 Ready to 18il away. Only ! SprinCJ Sale I FIREPLACE set ss._wet 9:111t DE€0RATO!\.-. ~-~~ ~ Will da~·~ver $14,800 FOB West Col.It. ~ BULTACO 175 cc. S2T5 Of
Used Baldwin Spinet '695. $7, auto CO?ler $4, girls bike appro:t. l' X 2' deep. Dark . . ' 54S-t6l5 6/15 Write CPO Box 339, Naha, trade for cu. 5J6-9167 IO
U.. n-•~"-Tho S6, _boya bike S7. drapes S2 oak Can'ed door•. Ideal, .... -. Okinawa AM·l PM. Aak for Da•e No. s D&'U...... mu, 01 "' a.a_ hi t 1700 Hammond Orga.na $195 up. 7 ea. d crank · l Y Pe entrance hall or lamp table -c nery, e C. • 1-4-. -.6=7-w~. -W-.~P-ott-,-,-F-1-0-.1 •17
Spinet, c.amole, S~ A: e~~on~~S5tl,$l5~awr~t.ter :,c·~·V'f' ·~"''"''· S~ ~kk No. ~t Encl cabin, full bunk & 1966=-BS~A-Th~,.,.-,--~.-.-6611~<:<:-I
Upright pianos,~~-bin 115 * E.Ao.?:.t ·\i.-;~·.•Joi''>!~ W/pl.ate ne.r, cockpit cushiON, Genoa., Excel. coodlUon. Best otter.
duced. $195 up. mac e · '"° :..! • ~ ~ ·. ~ . ,' · , 1 % yrs : $85(). 0.B. bracket, Bowpulpit 962~, 21851 Kalowa IA
WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO 3 PIECE Sectional, 2 enii ~c:r$75. OR B28-82s4 , \ runnin& light, st.lety gear, H.B.
l!KJI. Newpart, CM 642-84114 tables, dinette table w/l . 1 . · PE. $ .and LIVESTOCK cockpit cover. $1350 or offer.1 'H70~N7D~A~~65,-450=-coc=°'ba,_p-, I
ext, 1 arm c h at r . IBM Eicee ~er: ~I ,.... •. · 1 642--7611 screen '1,000 ml. Must aell
NQW-HERE---the new-Westinghouse refrigerator. 9tandard-mr.i1~tlee"~•-W '· '.4125 32• Black Islander,........ •..ut. ar .._.ofter 673-6512 s\q;eraow1ding T-~' 2ll E. 16th Place, Costa sciiith fllrGii. 200 JWc~ ~··· i ',., ..-· ..,.,., ....,.,
642 __ , "'""""'U>;• .. , Sh h ra l O plnkd, deck, Buda eng. Both Ham mend Spinet organ Mesa, """""'r"" 1 Rem i n rt on A i i u~~ ep e • or separate. Beat ofier,
-the finest yeV FOAM RUBBER, cut to 1tze. Underwood, portatiel, Uke , rii<>n~ old, aood with 673-1761 aft 6; ail June
YAMAHA '65 56 cc, Dlrt or
St.re.et ~ clean. SAC. $65.
673-9412 SCHMIDT-PHilLJPS CO. Uph supplies, fabric 1, new, $35 et1. St a n,d:a r14 cblldren, goad watchdos:· 14 • zm Bristol, c. M-
1907 N. Mlin 0 20th ~a\l&8;hrde. Fact. , auUet. typewriters I~ $15,. .All. in '. ~·~ ' =srii:o SA=ILBO=~A~T~~,.7\17'~Col-. -0>~.1 '6'1 HONDA 90; many extru. f :&nt!. Am t;OW pre:. A-1 '.roam ~C very ·&ood ~ .~d~ .4 eJ'DIALE <.Ul...Lolr.;..· White Mod Wed tor dirt A 1treet. & U h ! t S I C 311 bl . Id: Sac. $3995. W.extru, al.pa $300. 644-1458 p 0 s ery upp Y o., -Ml W tod 8610 & u e. 6 mOI. 0 ' very U , end toilet, bug0<=<x:kpit Decorator's Delight E. 5th St.. s .A. ~1181 •<· '" alfeotlon•to. $1';. Call ..,. 17141 73&-0385
INTERESTING. Old prlvatl! WANTED 1097. GRAND PIANO • insides
A·l, outside needs your
help! $59!1.
MUSIC CITY, C.M. * 540-2165 *
STORY I Oark walnut con-
te:mpocary console. Rental
return. SA VE SlOO!
GOULD MUSIC COMPANY
2045 N. Main, S.A. 547-0081
LOWREY Spinet o r g a n,
v.·a.lnut. sustain I: Hawaiian
guitar. $395.
GOULD MUSIC COMPANY
2045 N. Main, s .A. 547-0681
PIANO Wanted, Private par-
ty wanta to buy piano for
casti. 543.9335
papers cf Judge, from 1867 Beagle pupa ARC, ooe male,
thru early 1900'1. Also One female, from $50. Xlnt
photos. Dodge City, Gun-Pedigree. Thorne 548-1726
nisan. Colo., Sa.It Lake Cl.I}!. Furnltur•Appll1ne91 DALMATIANS
673-8316 Color TV'~Stereos * AKC
KIRBY Vacu um cleaner & -TOOLS -642·1937
a ttac hment •. Pay ott 531-1212 or 193.0555 1---~----~
balance of $53.40 or small TOY Poodle, male:, white, poym'""· C.tdit d, pt. $$ CASH $$ t•alotd, •hots, AKC, 4 mo•o.
535-7289 We Pl!l' cub for: Make otter. 962-6585
TAPE Recorder Panasonic I Furniture I Appliances FEMALE Col.lie. White &
Sterea: kini size: bed & I Antiques I Toala Sable. 6 moe old. Very Af.
hdbrd S85; GE. clock radit' ON ITEM or -recuonate S3S 962-1097
AM/FM ; Portable TV ; COMPLETE HOUSEFUI. GREAT Dane pupplea, e:xc
Swing set $5; 847.ft630 Call 547"'748 or 827-8271 stack, 9 wk1 <Md. 6'ff>..1160,
HOSPITAL Type bed, spring 646-2733 after 6:30 p.m.
&: ma t tit your twin fr&me. FREE TO YOU Poodle puppies, mnle,
Clean, good cond . $ 8 5 FREE dirt haul 637 apricot, AKC . S60 · $70
642-3121 eves n.."-u ,:_YoUM · • .e 54Q-4!g! • PIANO Walnut spinet, near 1~~-------..., ... -,..,,....,.,a esa. -----new $375. If. 0. Layout, all or part; 646.3339 6/JS LOVABLE Toy English Pua,
546-1304 or 893-5526 !111.!ICd .. ca~tr1rldnge ca~s, loho•d· BUCK Male kitten, 7 wetkl femlll~,~~ ~780ll., $25.
mg ies"' es: misc. 1 P and black mothe cat. Needs .....,...,,
8205 I: garden eqUlp. 675-29:µ. good heme St&-3870 6"flfl-~M~l~n~l1-tu-,,.-P~ood-"l.,--
16' Ocean Skill, 75 hp
Evinrude:, elec. start.
Raytheon DE '126 Fam•
thometer. 673-4370
2-4' Jolly Roget> fiberglass
aloop 1Jee ps 4, crulslng ex.-
tru. $fl.OJ ~1094 eves.
HOURLY RENf~
RHOD&S 19'a •
FUn Zone Boat Co., Balboa
SACRIFICE -must sell Cal
20. O::ompl n.cinc &: cruisln1
aear. ~UU
14.' SAIL Boat, jib, g~ny.
main $300. 928 E. Balboa
Blvd., after J pm
14' INTERNAT'L. Like new
dac: ea.Jls, glb. Trailer. Sac!
-movlni: to Valley. 54~ 44
13' METCALF SAIL BOAT,
DACRON SAILS. S 3 0 0 .
~3673
LIDO 14-$750
With Tn.iler. 873-1829 Eves.
1964 Triumph '.le» ex
Excellent. Street. Dirt
$375 * 646--8049
'65 Honda
:n; oc 1425 ..,_
'67 Suzuki 80 CX:
under 1(0) mi. Xlnt cond.
S300 * 673-0tl9
SUZUKI 2,000 mllea
like new. $380
• 6'JS.6210 •
Auto Service
& Pam 9400
Moore'• Automotive
100-;. Fln1nclnr
Av1ll1ble
Cbmplete Automotive Repair
• F.ngine • Tranamlslion •
Brakes • Tl.me-up • Air Qin..
dltioning.
Open Monday thru Sat &.I
125 Rochester (rear}
O:ista Me• ..,.,.,.... SONY TV ELEC dryer Sll.5, hkt a bed B E A UT l FU L K i tte:ns 8 wkl. AKC. Aft. 5 64&-3'1'90
$115, dbl bed set SllO, rc:kr calicos, tigers 8Dd blues. 6 GER.MAN Shepherd, black
Headquarters ~!1: ,!!;· S::~ ~-~~~ and 3 wb. 56-0076 6114 male 4 months. $35: 96')-2701 P_owe __ ,_c_r_u_1 .. _rs __ 902_0 Trailer, Trev.I
TRANSISTER PORTABLE.Sl :U:::P~H~O~LST~":;:R;.IN~G::'.'c_:;'.50;;:~2 11 FP'fiRE'ITYErTYLL<>ng;on;:jhliiilii,<;tdjijb1"'1"k H 1130 '62 MERCURY 26'; aleepa g
9425
... H a.a-a. L • .,.;i. · kltt H sebrok 0 -';.;,..=------'-car t ome "'"'' f'C · (European craflamenl en. au en. --galley, bead a: halt tank on. RENTALS
AllO Uaed Free e•t. del. pickup, 215 F44-0164 6115 HORSES BOARDED b 10 bn an new 225 HP
Portable!. low boys, con!!Oles Main, HD "Berny" 536-MOO ll WK. Old puppy, Ccck-Ter. Back 'Bay are& • 17• Or· G~ Marine l!!tll. New c.an.
TIU VEL TRAD..ERS. Molle
$29.95 UP TIRES: 1 set of 700xl3, rle:r loves ch i Id r en . chard · off Santa Ana. Pad· 'tal. Needs vamish. Only
WHITE WAU.. 4 ply niw 673-88'24 6113 dock • Shelters. $55 pr. mo. Sfi,OOQ. May trade Io r
Full price S65 646-2174 ' BE.ST Of litter. Ftutty male: Call 642-0981cMYIor540-9525 mialler boat. Slip space: No. NEWPORTER TV
2027 Harbor Phone: ~u
NEWPORTER TV
Sony
Headquarten
TV· RADIO STEREO TAPE
ffiFI
AS LOW AS $109.95
Other madels $29.95 l up.
Low boys, port111ble1, conaolet1
Boata • Home • Autos
::Dl7 Rt.rbor Blvd. Ph 548-8Sll
s AL ANT 1 accordion, 9. kllten. Reddish black, buU ~Ev=•·~-===---~.'Se.:~~~=~~~
Hobie wrfboard. Good con· and wh.lte. ~-6/1~ GENn.E GELDING, •lam Uy
1968-14' NorthWest cotdl,
ee:lf-contained, atttt111 •. new
condition. used 1"a than
500 ml. $1225. 56-ntll ditWin. 673-3178 ALL wfllte part Perman kit· horse for kkta, be.sinners A-$2300 FULL Price -20'
10' GORDIE O;mpetltlon ten•, Huntington Be a c h experts, $ll5. 962-3752, ~~n~ ~~ -=~ Trucks t.500
Surlboard. Beau•cond. $65. area. 536-0136 6/14 TRANSPORTATION b)'draullc control _ fulll ---------1
53&-1195 FEMALE Cat, che11tnut col>-Bolts & Yachts 9000 co•ers ~extras_ will trade FREE LAS Vl!GAS
FOR. ale 4.(lavor retrlger-or, 1e11tle nature, expecting ---------1 on c.i 25. 6TS-f713 2l3: VACATION WITH A
ated drink dlspen!ler. Self-kitten•. 546-0272 sn3 STEAL IT 1 S91...(J151 Chev. Pickups
contained. • 548-5325 JO WK male p/Siamese: kit· 26' Double-ender Whal• bt, 211=, -ow==-=--~--u-d<p-., %-Ton %-Tcin
2% Acres..fl'fOO.Good vJew ten. Shots. Muat find home. hull in ~~pe. $ll5. llHPt 4; 1lrin ICl'ew; SIS, Automatic, -4 lllftdL y_.
BRECK NOJT REALTY Oilld allersk. 6424942 6/14 • • ~ Roder, ... ,...,. eoYen-cboice ol four. We'ni not
e ~ e 7 WK Old pupp.ies, very A S..alt 1962 25' ~ Xlnt C1,lld. Oflu!1 MS-.m in the truck tiudne-.. let'a ~ ~I: vi:t c:" e'!: 9 x 12 ORlENTAL rug Never playful. Mother p&rt Cockl!r, Seuklf. Xlnt cond. y_, lo ' . Co -ftoont "99 to SI•
ueed . $85. Alao 12 " is. nt5 father Doxie, &l6-400: 6113 ml. Sips 4. Encl. htad plley Mlline ... ,,~.-9035 ELMORE perlttt. 6?.>.11H3. l3800orol!tt S43-.U34 and 6 s: 9 $4.5. 56-42:1.1 4 KITTENS 6 wt old 1 Jlllrl -. nantQLilS Boat Matmal.
HI-Fi l St«eo 1210 SURF'BOAR.DS:3'6"$45;9rt Persian l Siamese 9 Mon21' ORUISm, NJy ~ f'Boe.tmold.a~.«101.
..;,;,.;..;..;;;_;.;.;.;.;.;;_._;=.;; $50 COOD COND 548-DiG S/lJ ped, moorlng. Xlnl cond. retAn, Ca.Ubiat. 4 Pl white 1530) 8.-dli BlYd .. Wttmrwtr TOYOTA
1961 Solid lt1te •ltteo llke '893--0893 <lf ~1 ORANGE TabbJ K i t t ~·o 1 $3500, Da)'I ~ Eva &ti cote; 100 )'$. 1 Ol. 50" Phone *"322
new contol~I model. ;ne SONY 5" TV with BATTDlY •ant good homt. Cal 11:::;54Hmc==~=---:==-doth, 100 yda. p. mat. '15 OQ,"V " T, I qt, P\J, m.~r ~ ~m dep~ CHARGER new, full plice 5e-.fi193 6/U Of~ Boat .... !' .. 10' ..... , M•t MU. $800 « ol1er. "' -ml,• -O'lood-.
·-~n74 HALF Siamf' kittm to--' ~ )'Vd, on u• water, lfT...afT -. °""' 135--nlll -.. 1e "'""'" Newpc111 Beach. a>c per tt. AU Mll1le tieetl'onlcl tr!t hitch., ready f«' camp.
MEN'S Bike SIT.SO. Boy'a home. 5M-IUI 9113 50-m aoW et a ob 411codoc. er. A ~ -.,. IB E. St«m •· chane«, 1'M tuner,
amp A ... ~, mllltl.f'ex.
~ dKk:, llDt speutr.
Mike otl.tt. nJ.01.94
StlnaraY n7.SO 646-3680 FREE ldttaui to kind borne. MtlSJ' SJ:Ll.I 'e Ow-25• ate• btlcft )IOll llll)it 18th, .. CM, 50-IC-
EXERCYCLE $100 '316 llolaw..._ H.B. 611.! a;EAN. $4400 " ...... "'-M .... ltllatt..,...... 'M »mJlllA'i!ONAL, 4
Bar-Maids. Over 21. 5691163 6'f'\.609t &n.o'J39 HORSE fertUiztr. 20C5 Tult1n ftt. IJ0.4.3'1G JaO W. Oout lfw1, N.8. wheel drt\'e. * $W11i
THREE ID •all power II Ycur Ad ln our cla11t.nedt'P Ave., C.M. • w l·*,.-,SA""CR=IF=!-32=:-. '°Tw,-.,.ln-=o'"i--·1 TWO,ou,Jboard cnotors1 5 Hp. "* 546-Cllt *
19'1 Slnaef' w/wa1n cabtntt.
Local 8f!l"t1ee fUO le•Vlnc ana.. Autoimatlc Zlpq,
buttooholca. bUbd 1-ml.
cwtf'Calla d e. No attach
nee. Guarantee OK. $.U.15
-cuh ot St.JS -.Mk. c&u I ===-=-=-,:-=-:-:: -· amplifiers RCA type Ml Som4'0l'le .•UI be iO<ltdnc Jar Fll..L omT RndJ to ao ln)'Wbmlll $15. and t Hp. $300. NMrly t!ISS J'ord, % ton Pickup, 6 APPUCATIONS betng tl\kt;D DIVAN •/~ cba!r,
IOI· motel mald11, fwl time I 1n lllnt cood., leu tNn
T'..01 Ntwport Blvd, CM. 2 yra oJd. $115. 5f8.etl92 _;;St"'-oat'-_JT_TO_'_EM_l ___ 42111 __ • .,;__<a<:b_. _._m-o!ISl ___ , _u._Dlal __ ...-_____ """3n t;/14 Prico ru.IQl 61MllZI , ---·-'14-12-'-821'1-----, ey1-. d-. -
-• I
-----------~---------~--~--------------------· --·-----------·-----
I
!
.... ~~---~·---·---------...---.._. ___ -------------·--...------------... -------------------------·-----------•
DAILY ~tlOT
USED
CAR
SELL
OUT!
1951 CHIVlOLfT
9e1 Air. V8, •vto., PS,
R,.H. IUOJ 7111 1299
Vt, .iuto., PS, RIH, •ir.
ISSX 1171
FULL '2199 PRICE:
, •quipp•d, RIH.
FULL 1799 '~-----· S9t D11. 522.94 Mo.
1961 PONTIAC
Gr.111d Pri•. VI, .1ulo,
PS, •ir. !JNJ 110)
PULL 11099 PRICE:
196.f PLYMOUTH
.f Or. W.t9on. VI, •ulo.,
PS, R&H . !TWV 161 I
~ULL 11299 PRICE:
1964 IUICK
\II, 1uto ., PS, RIH, •ir,
!NNG 1•5 1
FULL 11499 PRICE:
BUY ON
IEACH CITY'S
EASY CREDIT!
•If you don't thin~ you
h.1v• •nou9h equity
•if o+h•r d••l•r1 h•v•
••fu11d you t••dit!
,•If you h.t¥1 jud tl•rled
011 • "'"' iob
All CARS IA.SID ON
16 MOS.
ON .&PPll:OYED CREDIT
V• MIU SOUTH
OF THI SAN DllCOO
FlDWAY
•
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
96001mporlod Autoo 9600 Used C.rs 9900 UHd c.,. 9900
ATTTBfl10N . . . B f ••s;~;;;N·~~~;;;•: oyota uyers . • • NEW TOYOTA TRADES • •
JIM SUMONS TOYOTA : • WAGON CIH :
now his the lar9est Inventory of brand new
1t61 TOYOTA COUPES AND SEDANS
sarviced and ready for imm1d1t1 daliv1ry in
both four speed tnd autometic tran1mi11ion
modals.
In addition to the bei t de•! and greatest selec.·
tion ••• Jim Siemens Toyota •lso offers guar-
anfaad service satisfaction in the naton's "'"""
est end best equipped service cenf1r.
Before ypu buy • new Toyota enywhere , , 1 check our price end terms.
FINANCINCO NO PROILEM HEH
Jim Slemons Toyota
0,-S•Hcly 11 A.M. te 6 l'.M.
417 W. WARNER 540·1512 SANTA ANA
''Where you get the best de1/ and efter 11le1
!!!!!!!!!!!!~service!!'!!!' !!!!!!![!!
• '63 CHEV.::::'""· $1075 •
: '64 FORD ~.~:./'"'· $ J 37 5 :
: '60 CHEV. ~:~·PS. $775 :
• '65 FIAT ~·:;;. . $775 •
: '66 BUICK ~:'.~;·~::"· $2075 :
=· '67 DATSUN ~·~ ... $1675:
e '66 FORD !.~',s. $1775 e • •• : '64 PEUGEOT ~s":. $J075:
• F'" L" Yetot Yacettlo11 wltli the p•rcHM of a11y • H"., U'"1 Cor • e WRITTEN 1 YR. WARRANTY • • e $50.00 ON. PYMT., 0 .A.C. •
'62 FORD &ooolin•. 9:~ AUSTIN HEALEY : ELMORE MOTORS : .
""'· v .. y good ,..,,i;r;on FREE LAS VEGAS • TOYOTA •
~~;,_~' Dm-cll St. C.M. VACATION WITH A '•"'•'°•,_•, .·~·.· ••W"•'"'"'•'°'·· ....... JJ.22 : '5!1 A. HEALEY Sprite. Bri·
'51 WILLYS 4 ""'hl. drive tish racing gr('{'n. $48 dn &
Pickup. $400. $-18 per mo OAC. Imported Autos 9600 lmFc;.rted -Auto1 9600
548-2&10All"5PM ELMORE
9510 KARMANN GHIA
;:;:i:::_ ____ ..;;:.;.:: I 15300 Beach Blvd., \l.'stmnslr
'6Z SCOUT 4x4, ~I top & Phone 894-3322 '61 V\\' KHARMANN GlflA
h U • h •· Good ---• =~==,...c.:..:.=--1 Xlnt cond, orig owner, $1 ,000 a , w w • l.'lIJ\J· 1957 AUSTIN Healey 6 cyl., or <iler. 842-5704
Pri ply. $850. 494-{>165 $4.50 Ask' Bob 6'7>27C* 1..:c~.m~po~,.;;:;;~=::95::2::0 I ~:;:·~C~A~·~~U~.N~· ~=-I MERCEDES BENZ
The Ultimate
in Camp•rs
'67 Ford "250" %. Ion camp-
er Special. !lOOO actual miles,
V8, automatic, air condition-
ini;::, custom c1b, stereo
'67 DATSUN Sf.'dan, of spd,
dlr, loaded, paint & engine
in beautiful shape, al l
leather interior. D r i v e n
locally only. $125 cash dels
Oran~e County'~
L.1rgesl Selection
New & Used
Mercedes Benz
Jim Sle mons Imps.
Warner & Main St.
OPEL
OPEL "67 /'68, Spt cpe, 4 on
the fir, used 1 wk. Fctry
guu & scrv-policy. $1800
1679 Placentia, CM LI 8-3414
RENAULT
'63 Renault CUa-velle • S
Botti tops, -D::cellent!
546-1150
SUNBEAM 1 heavy duty springs & or 1ake older tradt. Pymts
APt'. ..speciaLhea\ll' . .duty: _ S3lfl6 aft l PM. 494-9TI3 oc
-tifes, e~trA. gaS tanks, iquip-·0
6
7""':....:.36c,1'Fc,..,' ------1 ::======== FREE LAS VEGAS
ped with 1967 Tear Drop 10 '66 DATSUN Sport pickup, 4 '61 Mercedes ·190 SL VACATION WITH A
ft cabover camper complete spd. Like new. Popf)y red mint cond. stereo, AM·FM,-'65 SUNBEAM hardtop G.T.
with double stainless steel paint. Big I ires, leather in-new motor, 2 tops, new Original midnight b I u e
sink, ice box, move, rear ter. Truck in perfect cond. paint & reconditioned leath· Room for the kids. $37 ~
step b\Jmper, easly sle<!J>s 2 $9!l cash dels or some! trAde er. SZ~. A.ft 6 646-1176 llDd 537 per mo OAC.
adults and 3 children. This (car or boat) Pymnts $36.96 '61 220 S Mercedes Benz new ELMORE
un it is in like new condition. mo. After] P.M. l!Y 4-9773 clu1ch, trans, in I er i or,
lmmaculale in every detail. Sunroof. $1250. 673--0:119 aft 5
Sold new for well over $6000 FIAT 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
Vacation Special st $4795. ---------
Down payment It. terms to FREE LAS VEGAS
fit your budget, up to 5 years VACATION WITH A
to pay.
BOO Longpre
Pontiac
13600 81'.'ach Blvd., Wstmnslr
Ph. 89'l...£.655
196=> FORD Econoline hvv
'67 FlAT &50 Cpe 2 to choose
-Like new. The hot 011e from
llaly, $47 dn & $47 per mo
OAC.
ELMORE
duty c1Un1>er. R/H, butan·e 15300 Brach Blvd., Wstmnstr
sl-OVP, icr box, sink. wlr, Phone 894-l122
sl<'reo pak, new tires. $1600 I:===~~=== * ..........
'6.~ V\V Camper, excellent
condition. 53.000 mil<'s.
$1350. * 673--4923
9600
• Spot Ca.sh tor Imports
\Ve pay more for any import
regardless of ychr, make
or condition. Try ut. before
you 1eJI. ELMORE
MCYI'ORS, 9625 G a r d en
Grove Blvd JE 7-6630
'
JAGUAR
'll.1 XKE Roadster, c~ShC'IJ
""tiite. black interior '$1995
6'f2..8449 af1 4 PM -----MAKE A MEMO to aather
up toys you no longer need,
sell them for cash wifh
Oassilled Ads. Dial 642-5678
today!
'65 Mercedes 230 SL, Low Phona 894-3322
miles, new cond , S450D. l-~F~R~E~E,:.:;-L~A~Sc:V~E"'G~A~S-I
Original owner 6n.4851
MG
•m TO
l 0 MAlT
VACATION WITH A
'64 SUNBEAM Hardtop. Man·
drin maroon finish. Llke new
cood. $35 dn and $35 per mo.
ELMORE
• "· •• ,J • • ... -..... ·---··-· .. • I o' ' • •""" • --~
...... ~ .. ~ ...... .s~·~ ~ • .. • "'1. _._. ~:...:.:::....-: •••
/I ,I
New Cart .' noo New c ... 9800 Ntw Ctrs 9100 New C1r1 9800
'
Stodt No. 196
• All monthly poyments based on 36 months with y, down
Brond New '68 BELVEDERE Brand New '68 BARRACUDA
$2471
'<ordtoo. Olduct our bit
.... I" .. iowanoo from . lhl1 low, low price.
Stock No. 336
'"'ludlnci t•~ Md llCll'loe Md 1"'1!retf
$2262
2 Door Sedolo. "1"hl1 rod: bottom er!OI leH _,,
tr.O.ln
Stock No. 274
11\CIUOI"" !<!)( lnCI lkr11•
....t In-I
'65 Fury
Furv VI . .tu!Om.tk, r.tdlo. ""II·
tr, i>Owt• slNrl!l1. ,613'
51388
'66 Mercury
CllltnM. VI, •lllom•11c. rll<llO,
hHttr. -r ltttrl"•• ... 1111
CONOtT!ONING. Hltll
51999
'67 Cadillac
V.. .tulofn.lllc, AM-FM, -tr
lfSer~ -brml<n • .,,lfldlows, l"AC· TOlllY Atlll CONDlltOfrflNG, l..endlu to.. ,...,.,,
55222
SAVINGS
'66 Triumph '63 Dodge 440 '63 Plymouth
Tlt4A Convl!"tlble. Wire 'NllNll, indlvlou11 rur •1tto>e111lon, ••dlo.
l•M
52222
AulOl'N!lc. radlo, hfl~, -s~rrl119. i6HS
8e1Ye0ere 2 Dr. VI, 1utorneUc,
r1dio, Miter, i>0wer 111!erl119,
FACTORY Atll CON01"1"10NING.
/6111
5795
'64 Chevrolet '64 Plymouth '67 Plymouth
hT10.1l1 h1rd'loP. VI. 11t1om1tlc, 1 ... r1tud1. Aulorn1tl( tr111Sml1·
radio. l!e11f:<", -• 1twrlnv. .. 6Jl1
51333
'65 Imperial
C!"llwn. 1 Or. H."1". VI, 1u!O<T\1llc,
-• ""'·· br1kes. w1-.. sut, FACTOlllY Al" ... I. N/C.
Wlrtlt'lv. 164Jt
52666
51222
'66 Ford
1 Coor J9'<11~ Autom.tk, rMllo,
l!e•'''· H3ll
51222
MUST SEE
THIS ONE
Service-Parts
and Body Shop
Open
7:30 -ll :30 p.m. Mon.
7:30-5:30 p.m.
Tues. thru Fr i.
All A4+et11ilff un pH 1111H •Ill •tttfl 10 p.111. w..._,, J•M 12tt1.
-·-·---------·.~·-·"·~=~-~~•-==~aoooo==••==-.s~• .. =•.,a,.aoeooaeao=o'"'=-====•:wao==•~.=•=-oeo== ... ==•=-=•"""••=-••==•== .. •=oao,...,.,,..,., .... ., ...... .,.,. ........ , .. ., ......... .,. ..... ,., ....... , •• ,.. ..... a..,0•011&;~&~1
Come To T'/ae
SPORTS · &
IMPORTS
Thursd11, Junt ll, 1%8 DAILV PILOT 35
at HUNTINGTON CENTER
June 13 to 22
Over 50 Cers On
Display On-The Matf
TRANSPORTATION TRANSl'ORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
' r=;;;~~::~~9~IOO:::N~e~w~C~a~rs:::::;;;:;:;';IOO;;;;Ne;;;;w;;C;•";;;;;:;;;;;;;;';IOO;;;;=;l.Ne~w~C~a-rs~~iii'i~tll~~~o~Ne~wiC~e~rs--~~~9~IOO~~N~ew;_;~~·~re~~~~9IOCl~~JIN~ew:;;;;c;";";;:;;;:;;;;;';IO;~;;;N;ew;;;;c;ars;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;';IOO;;;;;N;..w;;;Ca;;;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';aoo;~I
THE LARGEST TOYOTA FACILITY ANYWHERE ~'""'"'i
NOW AT OUR NEW LOCATION 35 YEARS ~
TOYOTA "THE HOT ONE" '""~-c-,-~
GIGANTIC
ANNIVERSARY
SEE THE HOT ONE
THE '681/2
~
WOULDN"T YOU :;!
RATHER IUY i COST+ SALE TOYOTA
' 4114010 FINANCIN6 '/• /t AVAIUILI
front UrO,.• eo-.tr't
OU.a Bl&i: ~ ........ .......,,. .. ,.,.... YOU• IUICK
O• OPIL
All Cal.,.. & lqwl,1n111t
Amwko1 Car TntHs Ac~
SIN~! 1933
During Our Anniversary Sale E~ent
I
FREE
LAS VEGAS
VACATION
J Dop , 2 Nltlth
OPEL COUGAR-MONTEGO -MERCURY
SALE lN OUR HUGE STOCK CAN
+ $50. SERVICE & PREPARATION AND
5% SALES COMMISSION .. "'"
HACIENDA
HOTEL
·~a Special Deluxe '61 lADml
2 D'OOl 2 Door Seden
a I ILMO•• 1 • MOTOU
McP:ADDfN
Wtndihield w11hf~. l .l . lighh, Se•t
b.Jh, He•ter, •tc."Order yourt now , '"' .. SPECIAL BONUS .. '"'
With ew•ry new end u1ed c•t 1old durin9 ou• Ann iwersery
s.1 •• beautiful chrome lu99e9e cerri•t •••
$45.00 Value , , , FREE!!
..... 01. To~ot~• t ~ro··~,.
Alt ptymenh I/] dow11 for 36 mo. OAC
All prfct1 plu1 t•• & lie. USED CAR
All C_.. S•blect Te Prler Sale LOCATION & _Job.nsa~_so ~ CRfDIT or financing llTERMATIONAL TRUCKS
--~ '. , --ft_~-15300BEACH BLVD. no ,problem here -leeclo-llyd, -•-M•lo,.&,, ~ 842"-6631 -·_--across from the bay club
--900 we.st coast..higllwa11 -•
newpoTt beach
WESTMINSTER TERRY BlJICK INC. 642·0981 546·8287
NIXT TO
K0.MAlT 894-3322
SINCE 1933
MAIN OFFICE
5th & Walnut HUNTINGTON BEACH 9900 Used c • ..-9900 Used Can
SUNBEAM
67 SUNBEAM Tiger, 25,000
. mi, PERFECT S H A P E •
842-40U
TOYOTA
Free Las Vegas
Vacation With A
'66 TOYOTA
Toyota Sedan. Th~ most
sought atter economy car
built today. Arlie white with
contrasting interior. Auto-
matic trans .. radio, heater,
etc. Up to 30 m.p .g. with 90
h.p. doing the job. Six to
choose from as low as $1595.
plus T & L or payments as
low as
$62.00 On paymt & .
$62 per mo. O.A.C.
lncluci:s Tax. Lie. & Interest
ELMORE
TOYOTA
15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
Phone. 894-3322
68 112 TOYOTA
NEW SHIPMENT
JUST ARRIVED
GEi OUR DEAL TODAY
TRIUMPH
FREE LAS VEGAS
VACATION WITH A
'63 TR3 B. Rare TR model
Only 250 built. $32 dn &: 132
per mo OAC.
ELMORE-
15300 Beach Blvd., Wstwrutr
Phone SM-3322
VOLVO
'68 112 VOLVO
NEW SHIPMENT
JUST ARRIVED!
GET OUR DEAL TODAY
~e.M.lemU
• IMPQRTS
1966 Harbor, C.M.
VOLKSWAGEN
VOLKSWAGEN
Nobody hos
better used VWs
!hon VW.
536-6588
'65 VOLKSWAGEN DI x .
Loadf!d, low miles. one
owner. Pearl grey, locally
owned. $150 ca.Yi dels or
tr1.de. Pymnts $36.86 mo.
Aft 10 494-9713 639-3611
Autos W1nted 9700
WE Jil..\:{ • · .1 . ·W• Ctve~them the Volks· C~SH wagen 16'{>61nt Safety and ·
Performance in s p e c tion.
That's why we can guaran·
tee 100% the repair or re,
placement of all tnajor me·
chanica.l ~. But. not every used VW gel'I this
inspection. Only VWs sold
for ll5ed cars &:: trucks jusl
call .\JI tor free estimate.
GROTH CHEVROLET
by authorized dealers. Like Ask !or Sales Manager
us. 18211 Beach Bl.,
•engine •transmission Huntington.Beach
•rear axle e front axle as-Kl 9-3331
semblies •brake s~tern ---.W~1.~11-8~0-,--
• electrical systA:!m
'67 Volkswa9en Your Volkswagen or Porsche
$1699 & pay top d0Uar1. Paid for
'67 VW dlx, dlr, sedan. One Includes 53 HP 1500 series or oot. Call Ralph
owner Safari beige, big "all callfornia Safety 673 .. 1190
radio, extra 1 pe a k er 1. Equipped." Radio, heater,,l z========
Special rugs . wbite side full ~I, Includes clean up UHd Cars 9900
walls, 12,000 actual mlles. and delivery.
$175 dels. or older tr1.de.. BANK FINANCING NEED pi. CAR?
CLOSED SUNDAYS
'67 COUPE DE VILLE
4 to choose from . Full pow er,
air conditioning, new car
warranty. Priced from
$4,795
ALLEN
Oldsmobile-C&diUac lnc.
1150 So. c:oast Hwy.
Laguna Beac h 494-1084
'66 CADILLAC
Sedan de Ville
2 to choose from. Priced
from
$3,895
ALLEN
Oldsmobile-Cadillac Inc.
1150 So. Coast Hwy.
Laguna Beach 49-1-1084
'67 EL DORADO
2 to choooe lrom. Full power,
air conditioning. New car
Warranty. Priced Jrom
$5,995
ALLEN
Oldsmobile-Cadillac Inc.
1150 So. Coast Hwy.
La~una Beach 4!»-1~
Pymnt1 $46.86 mo. Call after CAN''f BE ~·IN ANCEDT
a .... ·LA•..; a 11, 494-9713 or63'-3611 ~ WBankruplY •R•P•"""loo?
tWL WllO '67 VW. radio & heater 11650 Q ~ •Bad Credit? • Dlvorced7
or best offer. 4~1514 after ~ •~tilHary e New in Area?
IMPORTS _1~P_M=~~~~~-o Makr P1yday Paymentl '' ~ ~s McCARTHY MOTORS '66 VW Panel. 64 Corvair ~A. " 1420 So. Main &:: Edinger
'63 CAD Convl. Burgundy ext
wtwht lop & wht leather
inter. One own er. tuli pwr,
air cond. Best offer. Mu.st
sell. 53&-1844 aft 6 PM
'64 CAD Sedan de Ville, full
pwr &. air, leather, la11dau
top $2250 or best otter.
84&-0058
646-9303
HEADQUARTERS
ELMORE
15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
Phone 894-3322
TRIUMPH ·---'FREE LAS VEGAS
VACATION WITH A
'&I TRIUfl.WH SPITFIRE.
Powder pulf blue. Absolute
like new . $31 dn and $31 per
mo OAC.
ELMORE
engine Sand tire 1-split ~ .... ..JJ' (2 blocks N. of Sean)
seats-wood p&nelling. MUBt ' t Santa Ana Ph 542-350'I See! 494-2225.
'61 VW 65 eng rctly ov erhaul· 549.0303 -673· 1190
ed, 3 extra whls & tirea. 1970 HARBOR ILVD.
Good cond. $ 7 5 0 lo If er 1zz=C=O=S=T=AzM=l=S=A::::li::::li 548-3501 aft 5 pm
. ., s Q u •RE s• ci< 196B Volkswagen
\'ARIENT $1900 or belt of-$1B89 FullP •
"'· 615-0<42"' S<B-n67 -nc:e 24 Mo . 24,000 Mi Guar. Wlnd-
'65 VW Station wagon, model .shield Washers, f u 11 Vinyl =~===~-==:::;
1500S; low ml .. xlnt oond. Interior, Cllitslde Mirror, '60 SUNBEAM Alpine red,
$J495. 774-1492 (Anaheim). Heater, Defm;ter, as well new top, new paint $800. ·52
'66 VW F11tback, xlnt cond.; u cleanup and delivery. Corva.Jr Monza, Ivory, auto.
blUe w/blk. inter. Orir. $2°' Full On. P.1yment R&tR, juat overbauled $700.
owner $1,600. 642-6210 Eve. includes Tax & Lie. 847--0705 * '60 V W<Bug) '800 $62.36 mo. bank flnan. ========
yellow, clean & good Ask •bout our
condition. 644-1504 $202 Dn • 36 mo O $<16.25 + ·ss=o--.vw=.-,•'hl"te'",-...:~~1.~,-.,-.1 1 final .payment for tiUe.
'68 Cpe De Ville Save $1500
Show Room New Turquolae,
pad I top, air/cond. leather,
lilt wh. 544-3476
'59 Cad Sedan de Ville, full
pow, fac. air. Good tires.
Sl50. 847-!H73.
·95 CAD De Ville Convertible
fu ll power. factory air. Pri.
prty. S27!ll. 8.f6-00"l9
CHEVROLET
15300 Beach Blvd .. Wstmnstr Under dash lhelf, xlnt cond. T &M MOTORS
1957 CHEVY 283. 4 barrel,
4: 11 pos.itraclion, 3 apeed
hurst, haye1 clutch. New
leather interior & chro me.
Gages included. Mike of-
fer. 64&6109
WlLl. Tntde '61 Olev. sta-
"Uon wagon in good cond.,
for pick-up truck. 536-m'l &
uk for Gary
Phone 894-3322 lll95. 675-6382 Eve, Specializing · VW 6 Porscbe
VACATION WITH A --;64 VW -Xlnt cond. !Q1 GARDEN GROVE BL. GARDEN GROVE '67 TRIUt.tPH Spit. MK II few added extns .. i'
hardtop. Bc•utlful It blue w/ $995 * 675-3838 192·5551 or S34-22M
matching hardtop. • Local -... -vw=-~eon-.-.... -.-... --..... -, ...... ~."6"5'""vw""'""."'"'""
onti owner. $50 dn & $50 per brks, en}l:lne, paiirt, pri prty ·m CHEV. Bel Air Wagon.
PIS, P/B, air. cond.; tinted
£lau; good cond. $795.
m-<516
mo. OAC~ 11000 lo mi. 646-1036 SHARPl~UST SELL ELMORE ~RDloo:; THJ~,~~!Kll
• 5'8-1591 * Reduced to $1050 'til OfEVELLE Convt. Eit·
lraa wtr~ wheels, prf/aum·
mer driving. Mtat sell
1138-4981
15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
Piion• '91->322
FREE LAS VEGAS
VACATION WITH ·A
"fi6 TRIUMPH Spit. p to
choose. All ln pert. medl
rond. 35 ml per pl economy.
$40 li1' and S40 ~ mo OAC.
ELMORE
15300 Beech Blvd., W1tmnstr
Phone 1194-3322
61 TR 3.
S3(XI or B~ OFTER!
"""" llOOd 812-2418
·66 T1UUMPJI Spitfire
Xln1 cond ! 2 Tops, 22,cnl
miles. Mu!lt .ell! 642-&t52
~RGE your want ed now.
.62 VW fBull PRIVATE PARTY Excell~nt condition 64~9076
$8!6. • 642-3981 • '86 Volkswagen radio ancl vw beater, 2 dr sedan 1300 'titi • New tngine, tn.ns aeries A-t condition. Wiii
CHEVY ~ala '63·, 327 stick,
h1rd 1op, xtnt r.t'Wld, oril{
O'l>'Tltt 54$--0120 bUI, 83S-4J22 l500 •rd take over help linvice or accept trsde '56-BuiCk-Good-Cond.
psymoota. 540--00fil '""'== It!. Houn daily after 6: 30 ll.50. 548-592t ~',c"cc·==~----
'GS VW l300 Model XI.NT call l.l7-.3865 Stlt or Sun '63 RJVIERA , excel. cond. all '&3 OJE'V. Bel-A.tr Wagon;
l'OND. $12001 Owner.· after I am lJ He arter 8 ......... , with air IUJ:;O. 962-7933 Yery clean: pwr. iteer .. $915 * 673-9567 .... -546-9260 Or 837..s!IJO pm
VOLKSWAGm '61, blue, 'M vw Excellent condition CADILLAC '63 WAGON, Pow IS & B .
sood cond, ori& owner, t12$. O'lrome 'tfbeela, new Uret.J---------RAH, vet')' clean. Oriainal
543-7017 stereo tape. Sunroof, and CAO '6.1 Eldorado Con•. FUU _..., __ ,_·_6_1Mm _____ _
'59 vw Bpart Sedan, rib. otbtt extras. Call after 6 equtp., dlx feature•. f1ct atr, 'e8 Cht>vy n NoY& Suplr
MWl1 patnted,, new Um. A· Pm * 96&-1210 Vogue titn~ fO~ m.l,_$2095 mport, 321, :t.O hp, r/h.
t ~! 546-T86& Qvw Priv prty 64&-1713 $1400. l>rl• prty 673-940'Z
'12 VW camper 1500 enc. MUST·SELL! CAD 't;J Park. A\141, Cl'ffm 195fl OiEVY Waaon, oeed1
Rebuilt ttlN. A./H SACRiflCE $1150 puH, tu.IJ 'equip., $1llOO or engine work, but runa. Good
$1150 * m..ow • ~ • beat otter. aft 6, 495--4864 ttrn $125. 6'2..oB90
t.'
Free Las Vegas
V•c•tlon With A
'66 CAPRICE
DESOTO
'66 CHARGER 4 9J)eed. 383
Excellent cond. WUI 1ac $220
'66 Chev C&prl;e Coupe. Hon.1 ;°'="''°=to~H~'',' ·=54>-0=:01::66=== duras maroon with contrast-I·
ing blk interior and blk Ian-FORD
dau top. Air cond, ps. auto ---------
trans. Plus all the G.M. ex-'63 FORD Galaxie ~ V8, 2
tras. This automobile is ab-dr., hardtOp, Power steer·
solute1y lhowrpom fresh. Ing, auto., Radio, heater .
Btu~ Book says $2650.00 Our Very good condition. Leav-
Special this weekend $2375. ing for Vietnam $200 & take
plus lax &: lie. or paymts as over payments of $42.62.
low as 646--0411 eve! after 5 pm or
$89.00 On Paymt & aU day Sat .t Sun.
$89.00 per mo. 0.A.C. '61 FORD, FAIRLANE ••5(Xl''
Includes Ta~. Lie. & Interest V/8, power steering, radio,
ELMORE heater, automatic trans.,
dlr., 10,970 mile11, 1till hu 4
TOYOTA ye&n left on 5 year war-
15300 Beach Blvd .. Wstmnstr ranty. Blue wtmatchlng
Phone 894-332'.2 Int. WILL FINANCE. Ask
for Jerry 642-0029
MUSTANG
'66 Mustang Convertible. V8,
automatic, power steerinR
and top. Good condition.
$1000. Call aft 4 pm, 548-3507
'66 BLACK BEAUTY 6 cyl. l
owner E!!:cel cood. ln every
way $1595 or belit ofr. 548-
6161.
'66 MUSTANG, 6 cy\ auto
tranl, new tires. good cond.
11650 or oHer. 847-3010
'65 MUSTANG, 6 cyl, auto,
nu Goodyear radial tires.
U295. or best otter 546-6500
OLDSMOBILE
PONTIAC
FrH Las Vegas
Vac•tion With A
'67 FIREBIRD
'67 Pont18c Firebird "400"
Coupe. Ni~st in Orange
County. Flashing red with
black contrasting bucket
seats all, G.M. acc. incl lir
cond., custbm trlm option,
P. Str., mag whls., adj.
!lhocks, wide ova\1. Tnlly a
gorgeous-automoblle. Spec·
!al This Weekend .
$3275.00 ,.,.:...,.
Includes our written 1 'Yf'
warranty
FREE LAS-VE-GAS ELMORE
VACATION WITH A TOYOTA
'63 OLDS 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
Hardtop Cpe. popular jct fire Phone 894-3322
Hardtop Cpe, Popular Jet-=~~~=~~-~=I
tire. Bucket seats, Console, '66 LE MANS. A-1 cond, 8
power steering, automatic. cyl. Must seli. Orig Owner.
All xtras. $400 below Blue c=Ask=in='g=l1=900=.z833-==1S64==-=1
Book.
$575
ELMORE
TOYOTA
RAMBLER
Free las Vegas
V•catlon With A
'66 RAMBLER
'67 EL CAMINO ~eluxe, big 1934 FORD Pl.ck Up, :;g AB
6, 1td, dlr, radio, heate~, VB q, welled lelt front fen·
tinted glass, ww, exotic der. Body in iood sha~.
gold. Speedometer shows • truck ls let need
10.000 miles. Uoder war-minor eng ::.rn.:· to be 1: 15300 ~~eB~~~tmnstr 2 Dr Sedan. Stick ahift with
ra~ty. Like new. 1175. dels ruMin cond. $22S. S49-J567 •iiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiii-iiiiii radio, weather eve heater,
or trade. LH.r.·, low pymn\5. --"'-==-='--'-"-'"'"' Aqua with contrasting inter· arter l, 494-9n3 or 639-3617 '62 FORD Fairlane 4 dr, V-8 '66 OLDS TORONADO ior. A real milage maker.
,62 Cbev Super Sport, new automati~. pow~ 1teerlng Full power, air conditioning. Blue Book says 11455 Our
complete rt'built 327 eng., factory air condltloncd. ~· Low miles. Price this weekend $1196.00
dual quad~. lsky cam & eellent running coodlt1on. $3,595 pluit T & L. or paymls 18
lifters & slick•. Son in Viti! $600. 543-8257 after 5 pm ALLEN low as
nam have $1800 in car will 1961 RANOfERO 6 Cyl. Oidsmobile-Cadlllac Inc. $44 On paymt &
i.l!ll for $850. ~1588 or 1harp body $450. ~1 llSO So. Cout Hwy, $44 per mo, OA.C.
646-2486 Laguna Beach 494-1<84 Includea Tax. Lie. l Inte:eat
·ss "°"'"' • ..,. """"'· ..,,1 JEEP top, air. Pwr brk1, 1tr l ---------
wndw1. TUt wheels, nr new '65 Int Scout. Mu1t 1ell im, 4
titee: &. brkl. Oean thru..out. whl drv, R&tH, $1200 or off.
Pvt pty. $1005. Hun')'! 531 • Catalina. Laa; Bch.
499-2349 1.;,"'~"~"'~·====== '67 CHEV Caprice, 1 owner
10,500 mi. PB/PS, air, etc. LINCOLN Bought 9 mos·1ZO $4400. AB.I __ .::;..:._.:._.:._ __ _
1 yr full warranty to go. '57 UNCOLN Premiere, very
Price $3150. 847-8804 clean! Good running con·
,62 CHEV I psi Riff dition . PS!PB, R/H, $280. · m 1; • """ Knox Piao C M xlnt tires; clean cond. IU" e, · ·
Askin& PX!. 646-2531 S48-9li90
CHRYSLER MliRCURY
MUST S•ll 1964 otds. F8S ELMORE .
Cutlass, air cond, pow, S.
M a ke o ff er. 642..2113 TOYOTA.
494-3620 weekends & eves. lSJOO Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
'65 F-85 Station wagm, V-8 1 ~~=Pbon=~'=OK.-3322 ____ 1 eng.. auto., air<0nd. Pwr. ·54 RAMBLER • ata.tioa
steer. 25,000 Ml. X1nt cond. wagon, 330 dlr, rad 1 o ,
Ori-Owner $1900. 6'14-00lO heater, automatic. White e.-
'63 Cullau c 0 n v e r t i b I e te.rior, fawn green interior.
Perteet condition. S 9 7 s , Juat spent $290, on engine.
494-5089 Car in perfect shape! Take
trade or $150 ca t h .
'65 OLDS F-85 deluite, rib Payments $29. mo. Call
new tires, lo mt. * 642.fJ696 after 11, 494-9773 or 639-3617
PLYMOUTH
'64 Chrysler New Yorker 1964 MERCURY Colooy Park '65 Satellite, 4 spd, xlnt cond.
Salon, lbaded w/e?CtrllS. Station wagon. Full pwr $1200. or $150. &. take over
$1695 or best otter 546--6506 AM/FM. like new cond. """""=~'";;;":·,;'=1>-;,1;;072"'===~ --·· ·-Best offer take•! prl owner ...
'68 JAVELIN VI I, '
automatic trans., Dlr, radio,
heater, whlte tires, all white
vinyl Interior, Maroon ext.
Ollly 8,00J miles on 50,000
mile warranty. Will finance
and take trade. Ask tor J«-
CORVAIR 1~-=-=::.:1----~
----1965 Mtt'Cllr)' <!01ony Park
FrH Las Veg11 V•catlon With A Wagoo full power, air cond.
many extras! * 545-1955
'64 CORVAIR ... eo ... :. Mon" Coov. __ M:;;.;U;.;S;.;T,;_A,;_N..:._G __
Sparkling 11ilver met•llc .66 M\lltang ConYertlble V-1.
blue, white top, auto trans, auto power steerlna: I:
R It H. Fresh, pert l pretty. poW~r top, aood coodlt!«i.
Special th\1 weekend on.l.Y Call after 4 pm * 5CS--3S0'7
S995 plu1 TI Lor pymnts l--''-~'---'----ai low 111 '65 MUSTANG Corr, .• One
$37 On p1ymt & Owner Xlnt cond, oew
$37 per mo. O.A.C. Fireatone 500 ttte1, Auto,
Include• Tax, Lie. ~ lntere1t • many Xtru. 11500. 4173-nll.
ELMORE ·n MUSTANG 6 eyl .. •tick,
$1$50, Wiil COMkSer trade.
TOYOTA '"-'"' Alt. 1 PM .
15.'D'.I Beach Blvd .. W1tmnstr '66 MUSTANG 2 • 2, 289
Phone. ~3322 ena:lne, air, pwr 1trn1. $1900.
494--11!1 alter 5
PONTIAC ty ..,_.,,,
ROY CARVER Flawless RamWers
PONTIAC Alt onodeb. "l"horouab'f' .,..
tailod. Dopooulal>I" Ill•,
31125 H~ BL, o.ta M-economical.
Kl 6-4444 Holiday Rambler
°""'9 Cwnty'a Excluidn 1969 Harbor C.M. 642.ecm
Delle" tor ftoU. • Rolw lllld '63 RAMBLER Amer1can
BmtlJ. Sedan . Smooth avnbeMI
4 S.l'EEDS ""•• 330. °""""'b'•· Sol•·
SPEC' •usT s 1. bey $496 " • 11 •• ,
"' Rambler, 1968 HMtlar 81.-d.
HIGH PERFORMANCE 1965 AMBASSADOR. OrJr
CUSTOM CARS -•---• ~ LARGEST SELttrlON lN °""""• ~· ~. ~ pc.
ORANGE ooumv ~NEW, k'e ~
Selected Auto '63 • DR cv.1om T1 o
Center Rambt.r. Mmt ..u. "" "' bffr oiler. 540-($64 t~ /f•o1>o! BJY<l. 53'!-'616 ========I
6:J Monza with air cond. '65 MUSTANG V~, el.Iver '64 CAT~INA 4 d r '
Flrtt $250. Leavtna 1ate, bl __ , -• 1 -wt••• 1 -. Ex-I T·llRD
e 548-4860 Evenltlp e ue ex._ ~ owner, .,... ~ ...... ._ ===;;:=.~;;;=~ 1.ltlOO~~·~ngWlll~:,..i<"""i'::-:'J =lllJO=,,· =-~'°'ol_t_,>~PM,__ 11960 T.BDU>, Red, ioodto CORVEllE FOR Sul• 1965 Ford 'MPONT. LcMamV~;""" Ideal 2nd '"" $345
---------1 MUJTANG corwt. MAKE _ ll'Ut._ne-w Un!I, RIH, new cuh/trade lor aallboat. 645.
'67 CORVE1TE c 0 D •• t' t OFFER. w...4449 pBlot'. $1100. m-2951 -7632 -
4211390 hp YeUoi\'t w/wh.lte '66 MUSTANG Conv. Hl-pe:rf. '&l GRAND PRIX '57 T-BJRD, Must Sell! S1'150
, top, ii.cm ml. Xlnt. cood. m HP Fully eq. $1580. 276 SIM or otfri:r. 833-1441 ext UlrJ
6'f3..()715 Slttks St. &t&-6244 6'15-l623 or C!l9-1141
' '
·' ' ;
~~AU.Y PU.OT EDITORIAL PAGt.;
•• • --·
Public Support Nee ded
Tbe urge to conduct the public's business in private
continues at the local level In Calltomla.
While elected official> are subject to I.be Ralph M.
Brown Act requiring transaction of business in public
(personnel and cel'latn legal matters excepted), advis-
ory committees and commissions of local government
have remained free to meet and act io private.
Assembly Bill 202 would end· this ~ractice. The
potential for actions not in the public interest is too
g~eat for tolerance of this kind of secrecy in public af·
fairs. .
Yet a large and vocal element or public servants
in the League of California Cities is pressuring the As-
sembly's Governmental Efficiency Committee to kill
the bill. They apparently like the idea of advisory
groups working out of public view.
Unfortunately, this reaUy means that an important
part of the decision-making process of local government
takes place out of public sight. And no matter how
good the decisions may be, this is bad business and
bad government.
Questioned about their _opposition lo AB 202, city
officials in the secrecy camp will, of course, put forth
the best of motives -"greater efficie~cy of ope_ra-
tion" being foremost. From the standpoint of keeping
Caesar's wife beyond suspicion, however,. it's a poor
practice. Most citizens would p.r e fer a httle less ef-
ficiency if they know it will keep their government hon-
est.
Here o·n the Orange Coast, ~ewport ~each, Foun-
tain Valley and Westminster city councils have ex-
pressed opposition to AB 202. Costa Mesa hasn't had
the bill before the council. Laguna Beach. has taken
no official stand and Huntington Beach has ignored the
bill.-.Santa Ana has opposed it. . .
or government In a free society should make their
voices beard in Sacramento as well as in local city
councll' chambers. AB 202 should become law.
Time to Bend Our Brains
From a DAILY PILOT news story of June 5:
j'More than one-third of Orange County's 1.3 mil-
lion residents are under 14 years o( a~e, the average
age of Orange Countians is 26, and families a.r:e getting
richer every year.
"These are a few o! the statistics with a rosy
hue in the fifth annual Orange County Progress R~
port."
· The report is filled with fascinating information
about the county's spectacular growth and general weU-
being. But even as we take pleasure in reading of our
progress we should also ponder the warning from real-
tor David Collins, particjpant in a panel discussion on
poverty at the poverty conference at UCI last Saturday.
"T~s county has the potential of being a massive
ghetto on the west side," he said. "All the.se houses built
at once will get old at the same time, as they did in
Watts."
Collins, chainnan of the Orange County Chamber
of Commerce Task Team on Social Environment, had
other food for thought:
-"We have an image here in Orange County of
being a hotbed of bigotry. The image is distorted, but
we aren't doing anything to change it."
-"County residents notoriously vote for candidates
who promise to lower taxes. Let's see where your val-
ues are. How much did you spend last year on taxes
on your. home that go for schools and civic improve-
ments? And how much did you spend on your vaca-
tion?"
• •
·Only the press, acting as watchdog for the citizen,
has opposed the secrecy advocates so far .. It has done
so through the California Newspaper Publishers Asso-
ciation as well as in editorial commentary.
It's time we all recognized the problem and started
"bending." as Collins put it, our high concentration of
trained brains to come up with viable answers-short
term as well as long.
MA.i...C.:.::.1 ~
.
Public-spirited citizens who recognize the risk of
corruption inherent in unwarrante<! secrecy at any level
Why the-Grad~
Don't Go Back
t was spending the weekend ln a
wealthy city in the Southwest recently,
and two of the leading citizens com·
plained that 11our young people aren't
com.in& back hei::e after college."
"After they've been away at college
a few years. they don't want to come
hack here and settle down," said one.
"Even though they may have the best
business opportunities here, through
their parents and other connections. I
can't understand their reason, when
they kJ1pw this town needs young peo-
ple so "'badly ."
What could t say to him? I knew
the reason, of course. since I visit
dozens of colleges and universities
throughout the year. The young people
don't want to go back because they
can't stand the atmosphere of their
home town, when It is smug and pro·
vlncial.
TRIS JS A.N atmosphere the older
citizens cannot feell the way a fish
doe& not feel water. If you have lived
·in a specific environment all your _lif~.
it is not an j•envlronment" -1t Js
what you call "life." But to the young
people it is suffocating, unreal, and
unutterably dull, both in spirit and in
substance. This is why so many
gravitate to large, cosmopolitan com·
munities.
Having talked to college student ~
about this subject. across the whole
country, here are their chief objec·
tions to going back to the town or
city they grew up in:
It is deadly conformist. in its think·
ing. feeling and acting.
It is static in Its beliefs, and reac·
tionary in its activities.
It lives by cliches and platitudes that
bear no relation or relevance to the
3)th Century world.
JT IS TOTALLY self-delusive, think·
ing itsell to be the repository of all
virtues, while wholly oblivious of its
defects of vision, imagination. flex-
ibility, tolerance. and soc i a I
responsibility. It Jacks verve, humor, Insight, and
most of all. a capacity for genuine
self-criticism which alone c o u Id
change it in the future.
The virtues it pays homage to are
riches, respectability, power, and ac·
quisitiveness : it has little, or no, use
for the energies of the mind and spirit
unless they are harnessed to con·
ventional civic goals. This. right or
wrong. is what many of the brightest
and best college students think of the
communlties they come from . If they
are right. they should not go back: if
they are wrong. how did they get these
notions?
This what the town fathers should be
asking themselves. instead o f
scratching their heads and sighing in
perplexity.
. Spanish Themes i n '68
This Is a big year for book5 with
Spanish themes. James A. Michener's
"Iberia," a huge, personal, rather
t>ld·[ashioned yet sparkling aceoun_t of
this autllor's travels and observations
oo the peninsula over some 35 years
has been one or the most :successful
books of the CUITellt season. Now
Simon & ~buster Iii introducing ''Or
I'll Dress Yt>u in Mourning," b.Y
Larry Collins and Dominique Ll1·
pierre, tbt American-French team. of
Journalists whose first collaboration
a couple of years ago was the v«y
successful "Is Paris Burning?''
THE NEW BOOK is a new look al
Spain, or a look at a new Spain.
ostensibly Utroogh the career and
destiny of tbt yt>ung, unorthodox,
sl"nsatlonally successful matador
Manuel Benitez, known as ''El Cordo·
bes." With hi& unort.bodox style in and
out of the ring, he has become the
Idol of young Spanl.ar<b. Like the
Beatles, or a Bob Dylan in another
culture, his style and fl.air is not
quite understood or appreciated by
an older geoeralion of Spaniards.
The authors emphasize that the
1tury of this lmpoll@rished Andalusian
---as Geery.,--~
Olar Ceor1e: r think it Ii awful that so much
empbula ii placed on sex in the
movies and it see.ma to me you
coald do 10methln1 about this in-
lllud Of •utlni your apace In
your colwnn u you do.
FURIOUS
Dear Furious: a... I don 'l !mow what I can
do about empbui• on se1 Jn the
movlM. Have you complaJned to
the u1her?
youth who reached the summit of
glory few Spaniards will ever know,
stresses the changes that have been
sweeping over Spain In the 30 years
since the outbreak of the Civil War.
The book. already published in France
to glowing f'E'Views, takes its title
from Manuel Benitez·s words to his
sister when she protested hl:i appear·
ance as a torero: "Don't cry, Angelita.
Tonight, I 'U buy you a house, or J'U
dress you in mourning . . . "
A COLLECTION of 21 critical
pieces. literary essays and reviews
written over the past two decades by
Mark Scharer appears as "The World
\\'e Imagine: Selected Essays." Pro·
Cessor of English at the University of
California at Berkeley, novelist.
c r i tic and biographer (''Sinclair
Lewis : An American Lile"), Scharer
lucidly diacu~ and analyzes taleflts
from Charlotte Bronte to Trwnan
Capote in this widely rangi ng survey.
The tiUe piece traces some interest·
ing connections between rour Amer.
ican writera. Gertrude Stein, Sher·
wood Andenon. l'. Scott Fitzgerald
and Ernest Hemingway. SeveraJ . en-
tries here, too, on Sinclair Lewis: hls
work, his critics. plus an enlightening
pen:onaJ essay on "The Burd~s ol
Biography" fFIJT'al', Sln!ius ; $6.95 ).
"JACK LONDON and His Times,"
the Wlconvtnlional biography by the
author's daughter, Joan IA>ndon, or1-
gtnally published in 1939, appears in
a new clothbound edltion with a new
Jnb'oduction by Joan London, from
the Urtiversity of Washington Press.
A unit in Washlngton's Amerteana
Library .... 1 .. 116.95).
Wiiliam Hogu
Ho w· To T ell
If Y ou're
Under Thi rty
Today's column Is by Russell
Baker of the New York Times.
WASHINGTON -How to tell if you
are un~r 30:
1. You overhear someone telling a
friend that there is going to be a beer
bust after the campus riot. You think
he means that the police are planning
to arrest the rioters on charges of
drinking beer in an unlicensed
establish~nt ; to wit. the dean's of.
fi ce.
2. You just naturally assume that
chicken has always tasted like
warmed·over C'ardboard.
3. You do not know how to crank a
Model T in such a way aa to avoid hav.
ing your arm broken.
4. If forced to define a "honky
tonk." you would guess that it is a
secret Chinese society formed for the
purpose of keeping Negroes from
mo ving into Chinatown.
5. fF S0~1EONE asked it you had
read "The P umpkin Papers," you
would reply "I haven't been able to
stand Dickens since they mllde me
read 'A Tale of Two Cities ' in high
school.'' •
6. You have never seen a woman
wearing a snood .
7. You are not certain what a family
vault is , but you figure it's probably
wh ere your parents keep the money
for your next year's tuition.
8. Betty Hutton, Barbara l;tutton;
they're all the same to you. Nobody.
9. Eduardo Cianelli could be a new
tenor at the Met. the hottest designer
to come out of Florence since Pucci.
or possibly the fellow who preceded
Pope John XXllI.
10. You have never seen the blue
eagle.
11. YOU CANNOT remember
Maurice Chevalier before he started
making farewell tours.
12. Your idea of a r oadside joint Is
pulling into a Howard J ohnson parking
lot for a marijuana cigarette.
13. Somebody says "peach fuzz .''
and you automatically think he's talk·
ing about a good-looking lady cop. It
never occurs to you to think of your
friends enjoying a roadside joint. and
to yell ''Cheese-it!"
14. You are embarraS$ed when you
bring some £riends home and your
parenl'i try to show they're not so an-
cient by saying thinks like. "That's the
cars pajamas!" "Boop-boop·a-doop."
"Your father's mustache !'" and "Let's
make whoopee ."
15. YOU DAVE ALWAYS assumed
that sex was not discovered un til 1952
and not legalized until after the
Eisenhower administration.
16. You are not encumbered by the
embarrassing memory that you once
thought ti.ii fins were attractive.
17. You are certajn beyond iill doub-
ting <Jf the follow axioms:
(A l The money wl\I never run out.
IB) Science will very soon now
discover the secret ol eternal lift.
IC ) Rock 'n' roll can never die.
(0) Hair makes the man.
IE ) Science will very soon now
discover the secret of eternal youth.
(F) Fun is havinc your own ear.
((;) Wrinkles happen only to other
people.
fH) Science will very soon now
di5eover the secret of eternal fun~
. ..
"He's been wearing it so long he thinks it fits."
\ ~"-b~r~ Hutnphrey'..11-.fir~~1~ -1'1'~-b~"! __
A Bad Year for the 'Iris~
WASl-llNGTON -Several surveys
Indicate that the largest portion of
Robert F. Kennedy's support will shift
to Vice President Hubert H. Hum·
phrey. probably assuring him the
Democratic presidential nomination.
The vice pres ident. under conditions
which seem to be materializing, would
not be required to make any deals on
the vice presidency or compromises
on the Vietnam war to gain the
margi n needed to put him over.
That is not a very realistic assess-
ment. It leaves out of account the very
compelling argument that Humphrey's
greater problem is to be elected Presi·
dent once he has won the nomination.
He will then need all the unity he can
comman'd. in the t>emocratic Party,
for the clear lesson ot elective politics
in 1968 is that it Js a b.d. year for the
ins.
VICE PRESIDENT HUMPHl\KY
will therefore wish to give his can-
didacy the look of freshness as well as
unity, and it will readily have OC·
curred to him that a Hubert H.
Humphrey·Edward M. Kennedy ticket
might gratify the national mood.
Senator Kennedy's funeral oration at
the bier of his slain brother com·
mended him to millions of television
viewers as a compassionate man with
a sure sense of proportion and deep
devotion to his family and his own
personal responsibilities.
He will have to ask himself if those
responsibililies are now so great as to
preclude thinking ;:ibout any political
advancement for some time to come.
It certainly will also occur to Senator
Kennedy to ask himself if he is
prepared, at 36. to become vice presi·
dent and eftn President of the United
States, to which positions he could
aspire now because two of his brothers
had bee!) murdered.
THE DRAr..tA OF Senator Ken·
nedy's dilemma is thus superimposed
on the Shakespearean tragedy of the
murder of his brothers as if we had
been transported in time back to the
dark days of early Englisfl tdstory.
If Humphrey is to be the
Democratic presidential nominee his
problem is not .ione a vice presiden:-
tial nominM but how otherwise he is
to creat. an atmosphere of change
from er improvement upon the
Johll.son Administration.
This involves the question of the
Vietnam war and what new formula·
t!<>n of policy he is willing or able to
make which would beckon back to the
fold those who have left it to follow
Senators Kennedy or McCarthy.
Otherw1se that fatal political af.
fliction , opposition to the ins, may
catch up with Vice President Hum·
phrey as it has with a number cf
senators, s<>me of whom are volun-
tarily retiring and others who were
retired by the voters.
HOW FAR HUMPHREY will be
willing to go in liquidating the Vietnam
war is probably at the heart of the
matter. Political conditions have now
been created making very difficult a
resumption of full-scale bombing or a
further escalation. The Paris talks, tor
all their frustration and delay, have
helped 00 create an atmosphere of
resignation about the war, even
among some who have supported it.
If the war now has to be resumed en
an ascending scale it may return to
the forefront of the issues of 1968 and
create· special problems for Vice
President Humphrey. They will be
special problems for him because it
may then appear that no one con-
nected with the Joh n son Ad·
ministration could bring the war to an
end and at least a Republican Presi·
dent might have a different approach.
IT IS WELL TO RECALL that the
leading Republican candidate for the
nomination, Richard M. Nixon, has
not''yet outlined his refined thinking on
the war. He planned to do so and post..
paned his speech when the Paris
peace talks began. Nixon has thus re·
served for him self more flexibility
than Humphrey has.
Possi bly the nomination or Senator
Kennedy as the vice presidential can·
didate would be enough to create the
atmosphere of newness, conciliation,
and sympathy which the Humphrey
campaign could use.
Suppose, however, that Senator Ken.
nedy should decide that the way of
consistency and duty lay in his support
for Senator McCarthy. That would
create another set of conditions.
It is enough to conclude for the mo-
ment that if Vice President Humphrey
is to be the nominee for President he
will need all the help he can get to
counteract the present indisposition o!
voter s against those who ho1d office.
Poor Will 'Walk Abroad~
To find out why the poor complain,
Robert Southey wrote. "come walk
abroad with me." The poor who com·
plain in the nation's capital will walk
abroad themselves on Wednesday. The
effectiveness o1 the demonstration is
In question, for the Poor People's
Campaign is in deep, deep trouble.
The March on \Vashington was plan.
ned as a "massive and militant'' non~
violent demonstration. So far ii has
been more militant than massive. The
Washington p res s, according to
William Raspberry, a Negro reporter,
"has if anything been too kind" in
reporting the troubles or Resurrection
City.
The top leadership of the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference was
absent during the early days o{ U1e
campaign. Even after they did arrive,
some of them spent bad-weather
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
What does It take to stop th&
Indiscriminate sale of guns ? Do
More people have to die just be·
cause anyone can buy a gun for
no money down and a dollar a
week? The KcMedy and King
tr~edies undersc:ore again that
we must not 1top caring for our
fellow man.
-MRS. R. C. B.
1'ltl ... ,_ ,...... ........ .,,-.,. "" -•IY ..._."'Wit--·,_.
.,... "" ,..... • ......, .... 0.ly '""·
night& at a nearby motel, to the
distinct annoyance of those bedded
down in the muddy shantytown near
the Washington Monument.
THE BIG DEMONSTRATION was
to have taken place-over the Memorial
Day weekend. But from the beginning
Resurrection City was plagued by
hooliganism, lllltlanita.ry conditlons ap-
proaching squalor. boredom, aimless
demonstrations, chil11ng rain, and an
increastn1 dlsartay among those wtio
were supposed to organize.
WMt wu to have been a "new city
of hope and love'' became a sloppy
Jihamblea. The Rev. Jes.lie Jacboo,
one of the more effective early leaders
and the first manager or Resurrection
City, wa1 reassigned to Chicago after
a run·in with the Rev. Ralph David
Abernathy, successor to the Rev. Dr.
Martin Luther King , Jr. as SCLC
leader. Sarne say a personality cult
had begun to build .around Jackson.
Bayard Rustin. who M.lc:tured the
August 196.1 March on Washington. on
June 7 dropped out as coordinator of
lhls year's march. The specific
agret.ments begween Rustin and the
SCLC leader1hlp, in Raspberry's
phrase. were "rejected. publicly and
gracel.es1ly." RUJtin w.11 replaced as
march or&aniie:r by 4f..year·old Sterl·
lng Tucker, executive dlrector of the
Wathin&ton Urbain League. Tu.cJi:·er I•
beln& ullated by David P. Rusk. th•
27-year .. !d son ol secretory ol Slate
Dun Rust.
THE FAMOUS CIVIL rights march
on Washingt:on five years ago Surpris•
ed observers by its general at·
mospbere of friendliness and good
manners. The march next Wednesday
i8 some~·hat the same in design. After
.a morning of entertainment at the
mooument, the demonstrators will
move to the Lincoln Memorial for an
afternoon rally. Tucker pledges nG
acts of civil disobedience or separate
protests on Wednesday by the Poor
People's Campaign.
Although it may be a let-down -or
even a disaster, should real violence
erupt -the Poor People's Campaign
cannot be cou nted entirely a failure.
The Senate has passed a $5.5 billion
housing bill Some progress on jobs
may be expected. But Congress so far
bas e_roved remarkably aloof to this
year s march,
' •
--ilili-
• Thursday, June 13, 1968
The editorial page of the D4ilt1
Pilo& aeek.t lo inform. and attm.
uJote reader• bt1 presenting thil
newspoptr'• opiniom and com-
mentarv on topica of inUrei&
and tigrtlficance, bt1 proWUng 4
forum for the erpre1rion of
our readcn' optnfonl, and bt1
presenting the divtr•t ufct0-
points of informed obs'"''"
and ipokeame" on topics of the
d4r •
Bober! N. Weed, Publlafler
I
]
w
y1
th
cl<
pl
rn
M
Q\
P<
m
St
"' Su
tis
p
M
I
ha
PI
I
CO!
·~ ret dlt
qu·
Th
Pll
Pr
fa: