HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-07-08 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa~ I
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Mesa Cy~Ifst~. 17~.
Dies After Crash ' .
With Caria Newpo ..
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Po lie" man Pleads for Gun
Twenty~nine-year·old Jerry Ellington held police at
bay 90 minutes Friday in Chicago's Cook County
Hospital, a!ter seizing a gun from the holster of a
policeman on duty there and threatening to kill
UPI T•l#llOI•
himself because a girlfriend rejected him. P.olice
Sgt. Jess Valle tried to no avail to get Ellington to
hand over the gun. Police finally subdued him by
rolling tear gas canisters into the room.
Mesa Teen-ager
Dies in Newport
Cycle Accident
Funeral arrangements were pendin"'
today for a Costa Mesa motorcyclist,
11, -diEd ol -iniums after col· liding witih a oar in Newport Beach
Friday night.
A passenger on the motorcycle
luckily escaped with only a cut finger
and injured knee, attor<ting to a Hoag
Memorial Hospital spokesman.
The dead youtb RS identified as
i'homas Sturges Blackman, son ol Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Blackman, 212
Wellesley Lane, Costa Mesa.
Sailor Cyclist Jailed
'After 100 MPH Pursuit
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of Ille DIHJ i-ott Si.ff
A sailor who apparently feared get·
ting a traffic citation in Costa Mesa
led police on a siren-screaming chase
through five cities Sunday at nearly
100 miles per hour before wrecking his
motorcycle in Orange.
Ralph M. Herron, ZJ, of the USS
Canberra, based in San Diego, was
booked into Orange County Jail on a
variety of traffic charges after being
trt;!ated for minor injuries.
lost Herron e.t the Dyer Road oflramI?.
but units spotted along the freeway
ahead where read)' to pick up the
chase.
The petrol car's engine bad also ap-
Pctn!DUy blown a valve during the high 1
speed maneuvering.
California Highway Patrol ofiicer
(See CHASE, Pare Z)
Held as Hostage
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:·u·eard~ Sex; Play
Professor ·Quits
Cal~ Fullerton
2 l(illed,
2Wounded
In Robbery
TOWSON , Md. (UPI) - A gunman
8'1ot two pen;ons to death and wound-
ed two others early today in the hold·
up Qf a sandwich shop in a suburban
Baltimore sh<>pping cen~r.
DAILY PILOT
MONDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 8, 1968
VOL.,,, NO. UI, I SICTIONS, :JO PAOl!S
Near DMZ, Saigon . '
Police said the, iooman, a ne3tly
dreosed 111¥ B"i>ou,! ilO ~I old, Ion:•
ed two employes end two customers to
11o· 1n·a ""'!> on tile flOO!\l'l!l\ fir~ at
least •lx \Nll•ls Into lhe uii!iiJy pock<dr .'
bOdies. I
R~s .~hre_~,t.~µj~.
...
• • • ! ' •
New Offensives He apparently walked out Uie door
and ~!ended into a crowd leaving a late
movie.
Joseph l3. Reilly, 18, · a summer
employe, di-ed oat the scene. His friend ,
J ames Burns, w1bo had stopped in the
shop to wait for Reilly, died seven
hours later at St. Joseph's Hospital in
Towson.
'Th-eat:ed at the ttospital for gunshot
\VotJnds and released \Vere Mrs ..
Vanzula Cooper, 30, a waitresl:i, and
Baltimore County police cadet David
Storl.
Police said the gunman walked into
Harley's srandwkih shop in the Yo.rk
Road shoppilig center about 1 a.m.,
ordered .a cup of coffee, and "'·aited for
se\lleC\al customers to leave.
Then be drew a .38 caliber revolver,
t-c:>k $169.49 from tlhe ca9b register
and oas~ box and ordered his foor vie·
tims to lie down.
'Beard' Figure
. Quits Faculty
A Cal State Fullerton assistant pro.
fessOr of drama connected with
performance of "The Beard" and ap-
pem-ance of the San Francisco Mime
Troupe on campus ha6 resigned from
the faculty.
A college spokesman said Dr.
Geor.ge C. Forest was offered reaP:-
pointment but left the college to study
guerrilla theater.
An Associated Press wire story said
Forest's resignation was demanded
months ago by State Sen. James Whet·
more (R-Fullerton), but the college
spokesman said he doesn't believe that
is true ... " .;.;. ...
Whetmore called for the resignM!on
of Drama Department Chairman Dr.
James Young and faculty advisor of
"The Beard" Edwin Duerr, be said.
SAIGON (AP) -Savage fighting
between U,S. Marines and North Viet-
namese near the demilitarized zon e
pointed up Monday the threat of a new
enemy· offensive in the far north,
In addition to enemy pressll!e near
the zone dividing Vietnam, the
possibility of new attacks on Saigon
raised ~ the prospects that the allies
may face heavy fighting on two fronts.
President Nguyen Van Thieu an-
nounced he was postponing again a
visit to the United States because of
the threat of a new enemy offensive.
U.S. and South Vietnamese officials
are l\nown to feel the enemy will try to
make good on warnings of new and
n1ore intensive attacks in South Viet-
nam.
A U.S. military spokesman reported
Marines killed rot North Vietnamese
in two battles Sunday and one last Fri·
day.
All the fighting centered around Gio
Linh, an allied combat base near the
eastern end of the demilitarized zone
and about three miles south of the
zone.
Backed by planes. artillery and
tanks, the Marines reported they kill·
ed 67 North Vietnamese in the Sunday
fighting. Marine losses were given as
five killed and 17 wounded.
Fighting near Gio Linh raged all day
Friday and the Marines said they kill·
ed 134 North Vietnamese while taldng
losses of five dead and 64 wounded.
Planes and Navy ships have been
pounding the northern three miles of
the zone, where the North Vietnamese
are dug , in, and communications
Jeading down from the north in an er-
!ort to check the flow of men and
weapons·.
In the past eight days, U.S. Air
Fon:e B52 Stratolortresses alone bave
' dumped 5,000 tons ol bombs In tho
zone and just to the north.
There was little action elsewhere ex-
cept around Saigon, where South Viet·
namese troops launched another of the
sweeps that officers believe have been
a factor in stalling off new. enemy at·
tacks on Saigon.
Striking 25 miles northwest of
Saigon, the South Vietnamese · un·
covered a weapons cache containing a
bazooka-type rocket launcher, 130
pounds of rockP.ls , ammunition and
claymore mines. "
Less than three miles .from this.
operation, the Viet Cong sent · 12
mortar rounc1s into Kbien Cuong,
capital of Hau.Nghia Pro~~. woun·
ding nine civilians.
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CDM SWIMMER
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SETS NEW MAR1( .
Toni Hewitt of Corona del Mar.shat·
tered her American record for tbe,200-
mele< butterfly with a 2:22.0 oloclling
over the weekend at the Santa Clara
International swim meel
Miss Hewitt was one secoild off the
world standard held by Ada Kok of
fiolland .and lowered her U.S. mark by
1.6 seconds. She scored.a double vie·
tory in the prestigious international af.
fair, coming back SU.nday to win tha
100 fly with a lifetime ~st ol 1 :05.8.
_See sports, page 21, for complete
details.
Orange Ceas&
Weather ·· Police said the ~ was riding
li e cycle wellbound on E. Coast
Highway about l :30 p.m. -.i he at·
tempted to mBke a left turn onto Jam.
boree Road.
He collided with a car driven by Lin-
da Jean Delaney, 21, of Narcissus
Ave., Newport Beach.
Costa Mesa Officer Matt Collett lost
the JUSPect in homeward-bound beach
traffc on the Newport Freeway when
bii engine apparently blew a valve
during the pursuit
California. Highway Patrol Officer
Gerald King was almoat matching
speeds with the fleeing slllor, but was di~ in the opposite direction by
CO!lftlslllg radio traalc describing the
cbue.
Mai;-ine Kidnaps Baby Girl
Although the Ulliputlan rain
storm over tbe weekend falled
to dampen the spirits of beach
invaalonary force there is still
possibility early morning sprln-, ·"1
kle accompa nied by sunny ~ •
noons. lligbi tOday near 76. , The woman driver and* baby in her
car were treated for mJoor injuries at
Hoag and released to tbelr home for
an observetion period, the hospital
said.
Police said the woman wu not cited.
1be motorcycle passenger wbo
escaped with only a cut wiae identified
as Rd>ert E. W"1rgDer, 17, of. 2001
Kewunee Drive. He al.Jo WM treated
ond released from Hoag.
A family spoke5"'811 l8ld :the deed'
you1h would have been a senkll" tl:lis
fall at Costa Mesa Hlgll School. The
boy WIS admltt<d to Hoag with crit·
Jcal heed llljuries, and died lhe next e, .
Officer Collett said -the shase began
about 5 p.m., when he saw Herron
swerve ooto the dirt shoulder of
Newport Boulevard at 21slStreet and
parss three can on the right.
Fllppinf m the red light. lllCI mn,
Officer eonett gunned lhe Cl!llne of
the new patrol car, at which tiine Her-
l'(lft Jooked o•er hlJ lhoulder 1Dd oped ott, northbound.on the boulevard ..
Hon<llCll>[><d by lrlfllc while Herron
was able to weaVe in, out . .and Mound
th.c alower cat11 the patrolman finally '6\
MARYSVILLE, Cali!. (UPI) - A
two-year~d girl \Wl.s abducted at gun-
• point from her mother's arms tciday
by a man wtiO said he would use the
child as a hostage. to aid his escape
1rom die Uilltei! Stales. .
Sherljf Gary M!Uer of Yuba County
said an all 1IOlnte bulletin has been
Jasued for ~omq F. Scofield, a 22·
year .. id AWOL Marine.
Mlllor Mid ScOftald aocl hlJ :ZO.year-
old wile, 1-, ld(!Qped uttit Vlcltl
Lynn Welt ofter telljng her tnoGler,
Elleo Murie w .. t, "Wo need lhe lllby
for sale conduct Out of the Country."
The sherUl said Mn. West knew
SColield and Identified him as Ille kld·
naper .
Mrs. West said Scofield told her that
he killed a man in San Francisco. But
San Francisco police said they had no
report of Sll<h a kllling.
Th•re wer• reports lhlt Scofield
may be beaded J'or Canada but M!Uer
11ld: "We d<lo't lcnow where he mlibt
b " . •• Scofield was r~ported armed wlth a
rjfle and .22..allber pistol and wu
considered danprou1.
California HlChway Patrol ~ead· T"' In Saeranlento 1aid Scollekl
was wanted for armed robbery, kld·
naplng and auto then. The patrol aald
CHP stations throughout Northern
California had been alerted but lb.at no
roadblock1 were erected.
A patrol spolfesman llld Scofield
also took '2 from 'Ille ptaH ol Vlckl'a
mother.
The pair ,..., "1>0l'led tnvel!na In a
blue 11165 Doclf• t>ert bro-door Mdan
with a allghUy clama&ed rllht front
fender and a missing gasoline oop.
Scolleld w11 dewlbecl u a-5-11,
brown hllred lllCI with the name \
"Tom" f'ttooecl ... hi• left lboukler.,
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INSmE TODA 'if'
Th•re'• hcrdl~ ,an v t h11 n D
wrong ®out The Odd Cowpl-',
ctlrrent production at '* La• guno B•och P'4y_li01IS<, Pfg• If. ...... .._
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Z DolllV PllOT
All Facts Now • Ill on
By WIU.lAM REED or•""',..,"""
Tbree w..U-. boloro the ii.to · Bllb••)' CoJmn1ulon coma to Hun· ~ -lo ..... ol the lulunl
am&l(lclll Beach Freeway but !ew
Ire liWai Idly by awaiting the day.
Several years of studies · by the
highway eogtneer1 8Dd monthl of
fOSOar<h and study by dtlzeol groups
Ind by the citiea of Weat Oraage Coun· '1 culmlnalAI on July 211 wili the public
_,., 1t Huntlog1on Btach !Ugh
Sdioalaadllor!um.
Johnson Ends
SucceS'Sful
'Little Summit'
SAN SALVADOR (\JPI) -Pre&I·
dent Johnton left for home today win·
ding up a weekend "Little Summit"
meeting with the pres\denta of the five
Central American republics.
Aboord the praldeatlal jetliner with J-. hit -and doughier Lucy were 9>e prelidenU of Nicaragua,
Costa Rica, Honduras and Gaatemala
who will t.Nrvel to their re1peet1ve
capllau aboard Air Force 1 as
JohnlOn'a pelts.
'!be preaUl<nllal plane Ull<d into Ill'
air from San Salvador'• Iaternottoool
Airport at 9:59 a.m. (EDT), after
brief protocol ceremonle.1.
The host of the summit meeting.
President Fidel Sandlez Hernandez o!
El Salv-ador, bade goodbye to each o'
the preaJdenU. 'lbere were no,,. airpor~
gpeedlel. . •
First stop of Jcbnaoa'.1 .. .....,.run''
home will be 1\l.omlcUll, NICangua .
_.. Preoident -Somoz.-Jr., will leave tbe J*fy, There will b<
brief airport ceremonle•.
01ber It.ops will be made at Sar
Jose, Ooeta .Rica; S'"1 Pedro Suill,
Hondiuwl; and ~la City ,
Guatemala 1o dl'O!> oa 111e preildenu
of thOle oountrle&. Bn.t airport
ceremonies are scheduled at each.
Johnson left San Salvador with the
cheers of tens or t.OOusandl or
Salvadoreans still ringing in his ears
after a vreekend coosidered by
observers to be a trtumph or personal
diplomacy !or the presklent.
A few in the crowds of El Salvador
tossed eggs, paint and curses o!
"Johnson assassin!"
But tens of thousands of citizens or
U1il t:my coffee-producing nation -in·
eluding women in rags and children
with hunger·n"Ollen bellies -poured
into tile streets in a weekend of love
Cllld reached out e forest ol hands for a
brief touch of Johnson's fingers.
1n tbe ollidol part or a lint u. S.
presidential trip to Central America,
Jobll9on told the president. of El
Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, }Jon·
douras end Guat.em·ala Sunday night,
"Our meeting has been fruitful
became it bu been responsible." He
bad leot them $65 million for develop.
meat Md ed\l!Cation aDd pushed their
economlc cooperation.
'lbe llix·natim 1ummlt had gone so
well that J <hlson lhocked all their
1ecurity f<rees by announcing he was
llyiog -. home, oopilal by capital,
in bis Mr Force One, en route to the
LBJ ranch in Texu.
But amid the oandlellt glitter of a
Sunday night farewell party, it was not
the leader1 but the people v.tio
Jmn.soo. recalled when telling a
friend:
''1hese ere wondt'rful people. You
CID see lt lo tl1'ir eyes iaod feel It In
their hands.
''Talk about 11impaticol' !bat's
'\l.1let the wa-d means.''
Rice Revolution
MANILA (UPI) -Agrieulture
Secretary Orville L. Freeman said
Sunday t h e Phlllpplne-developed
"miracle rice," a high-yield variety,
hat stimulated a food revulution in
Alia. He called the new rice "the most
significant development of t h e
decade."
DAILY PILOT
....,.._ --............... i..... .... ........ ..........,
CALIJOllllA '
Rekrt N. We9' _, ...
n..at K,,,.n -Til•1t1•1 A. M1rphl11• Metllllllll ......
J•c• a. Cuti.., P1ul Nl11111
.......... ~ Mwrtlalrl1 Dlrec:IW
Offlce1
C. MIMI llle Wellf l4J lttllt
....... llllCM 2111 w ..... .......,.. """"" -...c111 m ,._, ,._
llsl .. :W1•t1ia;w
Na.'.....,. -~ .. ....... ... ,,. ,,,. ............. t:r : E'=:'t.: :...•" •• , ~ ., ... •••••,:;ti;7. ... ·~ =r---............. ... .. :..T":.---. '. , •• ·t1'4t ....n a bW Meal' J '°"'71 £t:rz:r:a T::-!!i ..... ....,.... 7 ,." ••• • _... ....
hCioN ""' ...... •• et NewNrt IMctl. ~ •ti,._. IW Of"
rlw 11.M ......., ., !NII ... -"'" .,, """""' s n "'-•.n ......,,_ .
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The racu are In. Report, on la<tuol
daja concornin1 three study ""''"' and an alternate Une have ~ submitted
to the varloua city couocill ond to the
commis>lon by the rto.. blpway
engineer.
The resultl of the reports show that
from ~ engineering standpoint any oC
the three ·main rout.et under study
could be buildabl• and all would be or
about equal price and 5ervict to the
motori1t.
Thfl eollre issue could well boll down now to ... of communlly elfoc1a one!
'Love' Adv ocates
the opinion of homeowner• oo where
tbe freeway should 10.
The political bpdie1 have taken their
irtandl. lluntlngton Beach, Fountain
Valley and Garden Grqve stand for
adoptloo or the Red (~al) Line.
Westmin,"ter is for the Orange
Ceutern) Llne. So are the County Road
Department and state h i g b w a y
engineer John LegUTa who ha1
recommended adoption of the line to
the commission.
Stanton wishes first of all tbat no
liue be adopted until the route to Ille
Misty hippie wedding In San Francisco's Golden Gate Park united
two supporters or the love generation Saturday. Francine Nelson:, 18,
or F1orida, and Thomas King, 22-year-old Californian, led a group
of hippie.clad friends through Haight-Ashbury to the wedding scene,
where the Rev. Leon P. Harris, pastor of All Saints Episcopal Church,
bound them in holy matrimony, which he called "reverent and digni-
fied." After sealing the rites with a kiss, the couple ran, dancing,
through the grass.
Aussie Gunman Smashes
Furniture to Heat Food
SYDNEY. Australia (UPJ) -A gun·
man besieged by police for 5i:t d.o.ys to-
day smashed fun:Uture into kindling to
heat food for himself, his lihotgun teen·
aged bride and h.,. baby.
The crash and bal'>g ot 1plintering
chain and tables flooded through the
windows of the suburbari house sur-
rounded by police.
Down the street 100 yards Police
Chlef Norman Allan tr1d aides huddled
in a trailer and tried to figure a way to
separate Wallace .. Wally" Mellish , 23,
his shotgun, automatic rifle, pistols
and hand grenades from his wife
Beryl, 19, and her son, Leslie, 12
weeks old. Mellish has threatened to
ldH them 1! police come any nearer.
Critics who argued police -should
charge in lest other gunmen get
similar ideas,got &!!!munition for their
plea. Jn Auckland, New Zealand, a
woman painted her face black, slung a
bandolier or bullets around her chest
and, waving a shotgun, def!ed police
surrounding her house. Her husbood
and two 1"""' children """ belle""'1 in the house, police in Auckland said.
In Sydney, police sald that maybe
they could only wait to telephone
Beryl and uk her once more to help
them subdue Mell1sh. A phone call
hardly helped Sunday.
Mn. Mellish, forced to marry :t t
gunpoint at the start of the siege, told
the Sydney Daily Mirror by phont: "J
didn't know he was like thf1 when I
marrltd him.''
l\1ellish unde~·ent psychiatric treat·
ment during imprisonment Io r
burgl&!'y. The d~e began when police
Went to Ule house of Beryl's pareotl,
Paterson Cahn
PATERSON, N. J . (UPll -Police
cut back the site Of patrols in the
Puerto Rican &ecUon of Paterson dur· Inf the night • tho .,., calmed for
. the rant Ume lincti disorders trupted
11ve nJght, ago, leading to 107 amsts.
Two investigations Into charges or
police brutall(t during tlle week ()f
tirebombkl.11 and vaodaliam were
-lo begin fodat. ,
f\lrs. and f\frs. Mick Muddle, to ques-
tion Mellish about some burglaries.
Mellish consolidated his hold on the
household after driving off the first
policemen with shots. Using his tbreet
to kill Beryl and Leslie, he even forced
the police chief to witness the shotgun
wedding (Mr. and Mrs. Mick Muddle
gave their consent to the match) and
later forced Allan to hand over the
automatic rifle and 200 armor-piercing
bullets.
From Page l
CHASE • • •
King said he picked up Herron's trail
at 17th Strtet in Santa Ana . but the
suspect's burly Harley.Davidson bike
was pulling away fast.
"I gave pursuit \vide open,
periodically giving my location and a
description of the suspect," said Of··
fleer King.
Herron turned oU the Newport
Freeway Mt.a the Santiago Boulevard
offramp out Of King'~ sight, at which
time a patJ'{)I car officer radioed that
Herron was southbound.
Think.Jng he meant' southbound on
the freeway, Ofiicer King slowed,
roared through e center aJslc opening
and sped south again until hearing a
new broadcut of Herron'• location.
Punuing officeis 1&ld the Navyman
tried to tum off Santiago Boulevard
onto Tait Avenue at too hlgb a speed
and the big motorcycle careened o[f
the roadway, spilling him In the dirt.
Herron -who bad clutched a wad of
weekend clothlng between h11 knee.1
during the chase -was treated fOr
cuts and brusle1 at Orange Cotmty
Medical Cen .. r and booked Into jail.
He ii charged with exce11lve speed.,
many UDAie Lane chana:e1, and
reckle11 driving and wa1 i11ued a CHP
citation for the same oUenus when
Officer King arrived at the scene.
The chase passed throua:h Costa
Me>a, Santa Ana, Tullln, Oranp,
Villa. Park and back lrrt4 Orans•
•lain . ••
Huntington Freeway
north of Lampsoo Avenue (l.h"e
northern boundary of the present
study section) ii delermlped. U a ljoe
must be selected now, Stanton wW join
Wertmln1ter 1n a1klnf adl>J>tlOO of tho
Orange (Eastern) Line.
Jn the batUe of peUtions, all forces
seem about evenly divided now. The
Coocemed CiUzens Council, picking up
where the old Hunttngton Beach
Citizens Freeway A.uoclatlon le!t of!,
has gathered somewhere between
5,000 and 10,000 1i~1 asking that
the Orange U... DOI be adopted and
Holiday Traffic
Death Toll Far
Below Forecasts
By United Pre11 Intf:r•atlonal
At least 618 persons died in traffic
accidents during tbe 1 o n g Jn .
dependence· Day weekend, but the toll
fell far below preholiday estimates of
700 to 800 fatalities. California led the
nation with 45 traffic deaths.
The lOZ.bour holiday period, which
began at 6 p.m. local time Wednesday,
ended ofllclally !art iiildnight but pro-
cessing of repol'll ol. fatalities slowed.
the holiday death count.
One of tbe worst holiday smashups
occurred Sunday night as millions of
motorist. across the nation hurried
home from their Jong weekend. Six
penons died in a beed~n 1 colllsion
near Winfield, Mo., wflen one auto at.
tempted to pass a line of can on an in·
cllne.
A National Safety C o u ft c i 1
spokemian, although encoaraged by a
casualty toll below last year's, pointed
out t.hat last year' a Fourth of July hoU·
day death toll of 732 set a record for
aay summer holiday.
He said the fact the tolls foe the past
Uutee holiday periods: have been below
the predlcUon suggests "perhaps therfl
lll4Y be a general reaction to various
safety campaigns under way."
A United Press International count
showed at lea.st 616 persons killed in
traffic accidents during the holiday.
The breakdown of acci d ental
deaths:
Traffic 616
Drownings 208
Planes 19
Miscellaneous 112
Total 955
California Jed . the nation with 45
traffic deaths. Ohio reported 42 and
Texas 39.
Only Alaska, Hawaii. Vermont and
the District of Columbia escaped the
holiday period without a traffic death.
13 UCI Profs
Get Promotions
Thirteen UC Irvine professors have been promoted to higher status for the
1968-69 school year.
PromoUons a r e determined. by
fellow faculty members.
Advanced from associate prolessor
to full professor are Caspar W.
Barnes, electrical engineering; James
J . Yeh, mathematics: Gordon L.
Shiaw, physics, and Lewis A. Froman,
polltlcal science.·
Moved. up from assistant t o
associate professor are David Isaacs,
electrical engineering; Peter S.
Odegard, music; Lauri D. Thrupp,
med.Jclne: Calvin S. McLeughlin, Clif·
ford A. Woolfolk and Daniel L. Wulff,
molecular and cell biology: Stanley M.
Munsat, philosophy; Myron Bander,
physics. and Norman M. Weinberger,
psychobiology.
recommending the Red Une (which
has tho fewest number Of homes to be
taken).
ln W ectmln1ter, where thfl Red
(Ctntral} IJne takes more homes than
does Ule Orange (Eastern) Line the
petition signing hu p r o d u c e d
somewhere between 5,000 and 10,000
slgnatW'el urging adoptJoo of the .
Orange (Eastern) Line.
Both groups chUm they havfl
signatures !rom the other cities and
likely both will have about equal
arguments on why the free1' .. y should
go one place or anotber.
The coinmiaalon wUI hear the
argument• and recolve the petltlono
bes1Mlng at 10 a.m. <111 July 211. Within
a couple of month.a the comm.i111on
likely will select one of the llnei, thua
touching ol! appeall to· lhfl governor
and to the Legi1lature, or it wlU ~ait
unUI a line ll selecttd for the nlfxt 1eg.
ment to the north of Lampson Avenue,
hoping that selection will be virtually
unanimous so that a pattern can be set
for the southern ceament.
' Wheeler's Estimate
U.S. Could Survive 1st
Nuclea r Strike by Russ
WASHINGTON (UPI) -HGrowing
Soviet strategic nuclear forces" pose
the biggeGt threat to the United States.
But this country could survive a first
strike and destroy Soviet cities w d in·
dustrial centers.
On the other hand, if the United.
States struck the firs.t blow, it could
not knock out sufficient mis&iles and
planes to prevent }81'ge-scaie retalla,
ti.on.
'Ibat is the assessment of Gen.
Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of tbe
Joint Chiefs of Staff, as given to the
Senate Preparedness Investigating
Subcommittee in April and rele&6ed,
1n heavUy cecsored form, during the
weekend.
Summing up this country's posture,
Wheeler said: "We have tbe military
capability for any level of warfare
which, if applied fully, could today
destroy any nation as a viable socie·
ty."
He said the joint chiefs "do not con~
sider that the deliberate initiation of
the strstegic nuclear attack by the
Soviets iii likely; however, the
~ibiltiy ol nuclear war through
escalation or miscalculation cannot be
dismissed."
"Further," Wheeler said, "the
United states cannot safely discount
the pog:sibillty that Soviet leaders
might laun<IJ a pre-emptlve strike ii
they consider themselves inextricably
involved in a mejorConfrontation over
crlti~ objectlws." ·
Discu991ng what might b'!>P'n i! the
United States was hit first with nuclear
weapon&, Ule ge.ner..al aaid: "We· could
not prltftnt tbe Sovieta from launching
their own mittsiles and getting at least
a certain number of their aircraft off
the fields and en roote to the United
States.
"We have, of course, the same and
even a greeter capability to retaliate
in the event of a Soviet first strike. So
we are talking here in tenns of
relative damage, I think .•.
"One of the reasons that I have sup·
ported the antlballirtic missile as
drongly as I have is in order to lower
the levels of damage against the
Uni.te4 States, !Deed with this situa·
tJon, where it &I literally imJ>OSSible to
buy sufficient forces at the present
level of tbe arms to destroy the enemy
strike capability bet-ore it is launched
against the United States."
Public debate over the advisability
of begilming an ABM system -
estimated to cost upwards of 340
million depending on the kind built -
has resutted in a tentative decision to
proceed.
In releasing Wheeler's testimony,
subcommittee chairman John Stennis
(D-Miss.), said in a statement:
"Despite the agony and Immediate
urgency of the war in Southeast Asia,
in the long nm the balance of strategic
nuclear power is the ~fense problem
which is of the greatest and most over·
riding importance to this COWYtry.
"If we should lose an engagement in
South Viebla.m, we lose a bdtl.e; if we
should lose the entire campaign, we
lose a war; but if we fall hopelessly
behind in the strategic nuclear field --" we can lose our national existence."
U~I T.....,..,.
Operations Successful
Singer Jimmie Rodgers, releas~
ed from SL Vincent's Hospital
in Los Angeles following third
brain operation since Decein-
ber accident, appeared for first
time without bandages. Doc-
tors thought the operation was
a complete success.
Pair Arrested
On Drug Charge
Two 21-year-old men were arrested
on suspicion or marijuana possession
Friday after Laguna Beach police
responded to a complaint that a rifle
wail being brandished at Cress Street
and Glenneyre.
Police arrested Larry Paul sturges
21, of 1826 Tradewind Lane, Newpori
Beach, and John Ront Wakula, 21, of
648 Beach St., Costa Mesa.
Lt. Robert McMurray said officers
.alle~~d the.y found two plastic bags of
marijuana ID the pocket of a coat lying
in the men's car and found a .22
caliber ritle on the back seat.
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Huntington Beaeh -
DAILY PILOT Your Hometown
EDITION Dally Paper.
VOL 6f, NO. 0163, 3 SECTIONS, JO PAGES MONDAY, JULY I, "J 961 TEN CENTS
'
W reek Ends Chase
Sailor Leads Police . Through 5 Cities
They W~ren't at Honie
A Navy F8A Crusader jet crashed into two homes
in Grand Prairie, Tex., Saturday as its pilot strug.
gled to avoid hitting a populated area before he
ejected and w~s killed. The families living in the
two homes were away at the time of the crash.
The tail assembly of the jet smashed into one house,
and the other home was destroyed by fire caused
by the crash.
Freeway Facts Now All In
Decision Up to State After July 26 Meet
By WILLIAM REED
ot Ille O.My Plitt llafl
Three weeks remain bef~ the state ~Iighway Commis:sion coriles to Hup-
•ingtori Beach "tO hear of the future
lluntingtoc Beach FreeWay but !ew
are sitting idly by awaiting the day.
Several years of studies by the
highway engineers and months or
research and study by citizens groups
and Qy the cities of West Orange Coun·
ty culminate on July 26 wit:h the public
Gets $169
heariilg at Huntington Beach High
School auditorium.
. ,Tbe;f~~·ln. Reports on factual data. ConoerDlng ~ stugy routes an{!
an alternate line ba.ve been submitted
to the various 'dty ·CoUncUi and to the
commission by the state highway
engineer.
The results of the reports show that
from an engineering standpoint any <>£
the three main routes under study
could be buildable and all would be of
2 Killed, Four Wounded
By Neat Hood in Holdup
TOWSON. Md. (UPI) -A gunman
shot two persons to death and wound·
ed two others early today in the hold·
up of a sandwich shop in a suburban
Baltimore shopping center.
Police said the gunman, .a neatly
Development Unit
Se ts First Meet
A l~man committee charged with
i1nplementation of a policy plan for
development of the mid-beach are-a of
liuntington Beach meets for the !irst
time Wednesday nighl
The new committee is to be con1·
posed of the nine-member U~an Lane!
Institute Citizens Steering Committet>.
lhree councilmen and three planners
Councilmen Henry Kaufman, Jack
Green and George Mt:Cracken have
been named to the committee b,\'
Mayor Alvin M. Coen. Planners
Robert Bazil, Richard Tom and Roger
Slat.es represent the Planning Com·
mission.
dressed man a·bout 30 years old, fore·
ed two employ{s and two customers to
lie in a heap on the floor and fired et
least sL"< bullets into the tigbUy packed
bodies. •
He apparently walked out the door
and blended into a crowd leaving a late
movie.
Joseph B. Reilly, 18, a summer
employe, died at the scene. His frieOO ;
James Burns, who had stopped in Ule
shop to \\'18.it for Reilly. died seven
hours later at St. Joseph's HosPital in
Towson.
Treated at the hospital for gunshot
wounds and released were Mrs.
Vanzula Cooper , 30, a waitress, and
Raltimore County police ~t David
Storf.
Police said the gunman walked into
:tarley's sandwich shop in the York
1oad shopping center about 1 a .m ..
Jrdered .a cup of coffee, and waited for
;everal customers to leave.
Then he drew a .38 caliber revolver,
'C-Ok $169.49 from the cash register
'lnd cash box and ordered bis four vi<:·
.ims to Ue down.
about equal price and ser.vice to the
motorist.
The entire j.ssue could well boil down
_now to one of community effects and
the opinion of Jtomeowners on where
the freeway sh:Ould go.
The political bodies haye taken their
stands. JJuntington ,Beach., Fountain
Valley and Garden Grove stand for
adoption of the Red (Central) Line.
'\Vestmin11ter ii; for the Orange
(See FREEWAY, Page 2)
Police Jail 15
After Youths .
Report Beatings
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Fifteen
person5 were in police custody today
after four youths told police they were
held prisoner at the Black Congress
Hall in south central Los Angeles a!lil.
beaten by members of a mili.tlant black
power group.
Officers were taken to the hall by
Jerva Harris, who said a bullet tired
from the building mi56ed his car as he
fled the meeting.
Three youths who said they had
been held prisoner !or two hours by
members of the organization heaaed
by black militant Ron Karenga were
found beaten. Tyrone Waohlngton, 18,
Felix Pullum, 19, and Gregory Sewell,
19, wer.e treated and released at Morn·
ingside Hospital. Harris, who also wa s
beaten. said be would see a private
physician.
The four said members of the sect
had·pistolwhipped them and used them .
as Karate "dummies."
Fifteen suspects, one a juvenile.
"'ere arrested on suspicion ol assault
with a deadly weapon.
By ARTHUR R. YJNSEL
Of ""9 D•Mr Piie! Iliff
A sailor who apparently feared get·
ting a traUic citation in Costa Mesa
led police on a siren-screaming chase
through five cities Sunday at nearly
100 miles per hour before wrecking his
motorcycle in Orange.
Ralph M. Herron. 23, of the USS
Canberra, based in San Diego, was
booked into Orange County Jail on a
variety o! traffic charges after being
Savage Fight
. tDMZBrings
Offensive Fear
SAIGON (AP) -Savage fighting
between U.S. Marines and North Viet·
namese near the demilitarized zone
pointed up Monday the threat of a new
enemy offensive in the far north.
Jn addition to enemy pressure near
the zone dividing Vietnam, the
possibility of new attacks on Saigon
raised the prospects that the allies
may face heavy fighting on two fronts.
President Nguyen Van Thieu an.
nounced he was postponing again a
visit to the United States because of
the threat of a new enemy offensive.
U.S. and South Vietnamese officials
are known to feel the enemy will try to
make good on warnings of new and
more intensive attacks in South Viet·
nam.
A U.S. military spokesman reported
Marines killed 201 North Vietnamese
in two battles Sunday and one last Fri·
day.
All the fighting centered around Gio
Linh, an allied combat base near the
ea11tern end of the demilitarized zone
and about three miles south of· the
zone.
Backed by planes, artillery and
tanks. the Marines reported they kill·
ed 67 North Vietnamese in the Sunday
fighting. Marine 1osses were given as
five killed and 17 wounded.
Fighting near Gio Linh raged all day
Friday and the Marines said they kill·
ed 134 North Vietnamese while taking
losses of five dead and 64 wounded.
Planes and Navy ships have been
pounding the northern three miles of
the zone, where the North Vietnamese
are dug in, and communications
leading down from the north in an Ef·
fort to check the now or men and
weapons.
Jn the past eight days, U.S. Air
Force B52 Stratofortresses alone have
dumped 5,CXX> tons of bombs in the
zone and just to the north.
There was little action elsewhere ex.
cept around Saigon, where South Viet·
namese troops launched another of the
sweeps that officers believe have been
a !actor in stalling off new enemy at·
tacks on Saigon.
Striking 25 miles northwest of
Saigon, the South Vietnamese un-
oovered a weapons cache containing a
bazooka.type rocket launcher, 130
pounds of rockets, ammunition and
claymore mines.
Less than three miles from th is
operation, the Viet Cong sent · 12
mortar rounds into Khien Cuong,
capital of Hau Nghia Province, woun-
ding nine dvjlians.
Thieu's statement announcing his
postponement of a trip to Washington
reported "reliable information. on_ the
preparation by the COmmunJ1t ag-
gre'!lsorS for the renewal of their of.
fensives in various areas."
The 7:30 p.m. session will be held in
'ie administrative annex of City Hall,
'h Street and Pecan Avenue.
I The mid-beach area incliJdes the old
J1nmercial area downtown and ta.kes
1 much of the old city. The plan
:!opted by the City Council callJ fur a
·mbination of commercial, reslden·
'll and munidpll development.
Nuclear Strength Compared
Sex Education
Course Studied
A course of study plan ~pro-
posed course in lamJly life _ te-J'
education comes bef<We tlM o(.
the Huotlngtoo 8-tt UiJlon J!llh
Sd>ool OlstrictJor adoptioll tonlpt.
Tru!ltts meet at 7:~ p.m. at
dis1rlct htadquart«s, 1902 17!Jt Sl,
Huntington Beach.
Trust~ will hear also a report
from the district"• Citizens Advisory
Committee whJch Is making a study of
the distrlct's building needs wtth 1n
rye to recommending a bond Issue
election, for Nove.mbtr.
"
Wheeler Says U.S., Russia Could Survive 1st Strike
WASHINGTON (UP() -"Growing
Soviet strategic nuclear forces" pose
ttie biggest threat to the United States.
But this country could survive a first
strike and destroy Soviet cities and in·
dusQial cent.en.
Oil ti!• other band. if the United
States -ck tlie first .bl.,., it could
not loiock out IUl!lcieut -and plalles to prevent iario-teal• r<Wla·
tloo.
That Is the assessmt'nt .of Gen.
Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the
Joint Chief• of swr. as g1ve11. to the
Senate Prepare<tness JnvetU&eUng
Subcomml!tes ln April 1<1d released.
in heavily censored form, durtnc the
v.-eekend .
Summtnc up thfs c:ounlry'I posture ,
\
Wheeler said: "We have the military
capability for any level of warfare
which, Jf applied fully, could today
destroy any nation as a viable socie·
ty."
!·le said t~e joint chiefs "do not con-
•ider that the deliberate initiation of
the strategic nuclear attack by the
-la liitly; bowover, tl!e pooelbl!Uy of n11<Iear war 1hrougb
esoaJation or mls<:aJculiltion cannot be
dlnnined." -
"Further," Wheeler aald, "the
United States cannot 1afely dlscoU11t
the posslblllty that Soviet leaders
mlgbt launch 1 prn-empllve strike U
they c""'lder !hemlOI ... Inextricably
involved In a major c:onftontatioo over
critical objectlvos."
Disc ussing what migl1t ha.ppen if the
Uni ted States was hit flnt with nuclear
weapons, the general said: "We could
not prevent 'the Sovleu trom launching
their own missiles and getting at lea~t
a· certain number or their aircraft oU
the field• and en route to the United
States.
"We have, ol cOurae, the same and
even a greater capability to retaliate
in the event o( a SOvtet first·sttite. So
we are talking here ln terms ol
relative damage, t think ...
"One ol. the reasons that I have sup.
Ported the anUballisllc minlle as
stron1ly as J have 11 1n order to lower
the levels of dam1ge against the
United States, foced with U\ls sltua-
(See NUCLEAR, Paie JJ
lreated for minor injuries.
Costa Mesa Officer Matt CoUett lost
the suspect in homeward·bound beach
traffc on the Newport Freeway when
his engine apparently blew a valve
during the pursuit.
Cali!ornia Jlighway Patrol Officer
Gerald King was almost matching
speeds with the fleeing sailor, but was
diverted ln the opPostte direction by
confusing radio traUic describing the
chase.
-Opera,...,._
Singer Jimmie Rodgers, releas-.,
ed from St. Vincent's Hospital
in Los Angeles following third
brain operation since Decem·
ber accident, appeared for first
time without bandages. Doc-
tors th~ught the operation was a complete success.
Police Arrest
Westminster Man
On Assault Rap
A Westminster man was jailed early
today after the severe beating of a
frail, mentally retarded mechanic who
wondered what the suspect was doing,
tampering with a car at h i s
employer's garage.
Louis P. Mk:haels, 39, of 13752
Miloon St., was booked i$ Orange
County Jail on suspicion of assault
with intent to commit murder after in·
vestigators found him in a bar.
The victim is in satisfactory con.
dition at Westminster Community
Hospital today wtth serious injuries.
Police said he was literally beaten to
.a pulp.
"He was unconscious and in severe
shock when we arrived," ! aid
\Vestminster Police Lt. Jack Essex.
The victim stumbled to a nearby
tavern after the beaUng and Police
later received a tip that Michaels was
at the same bar and arrested him
there without resistance.
Michaels was scheduled for ar.
raignment in West Orange County
Municipal Court today.
Investigators said the victim found
Michaels tampering with a car 1t
Smith's garage and said be was going
to call police, at wbich time he was at·
tacked .
Police said th e victim was beaten
only wJth fists and that no other
weapon was used.
Planning Board
Meets Tonight
A pfoposcd "adults only" 225 Unit
apartment complex to bt constructed
between Garden Grove Boulevard l.nd
S(lrinld,le Street eas~ of Melllli•
Larle; ln whit ls -.. --(C-1) toning. blgllttal* IOftllh!'o -·
da of ·tlie Westmlllllor ~ Ccrn·
m.Jsslon. • ,,
Plamer1 also c.01-'det: a COll(llltonl.1 use pett111t !or F......t Scltkmlofts to
operate a rest home far foUr1 e1derly
persona in an ex!Mln1 llncle iamlly
type CR·l) reskt.,,.. at 7511 llentoo
A'te.
The commlMion meets 1t 7:30 p.m.
at city bell.
Officer Collett said the chue began
about 5 p.m., when he saw Jlerron
swerve onto the dirt shoulder of
Newport Boulevard at 21st Stree~ and
pass three cars on the right.
Flipping on the red lights and siren.
Officer Collett gunned the engine of
the new patrol car, at which time Her·
ron looked over his shoulder and sped
off, northbound on Ute boUfnard.
Halldlcapped by trallle whlle 11erron
(See CHASE, PalO Z)
Johnson Ends
Successful
'Little Summit'
SAN SALVADOR (UPI) -Presi·
dent Johnson left for heme todey win·
ding up a weekend "Little Summit"
meeting \Vith the presidents of tbe five
Central American republics.
Aboard the presidential jetliner with
Johnson, hls wife and daughter Lucy
were the presidents or Nicaragua,
C.osta Rica, Honduras and Guatemala
who wlll travel to their respective
capitals aboard Air Force 1 as
Johnson's guests. '
The pr~idential plane lifted Into the
air from San Salvador's Jnternationel
Airport at 9:59 a.m. CEDT), after
brief l)rototol ceremonies.
The host of the summit meeting.
President Fidel Sanchez Hernandez of
E l Salvador, bade goodbye ta each of
the presidents. The.re were no ~
gpeeches .
First stop of Johnson's "shuWerun"
home will be Managua, Nicaragua,
where Ptts.ident Anastasio Somoza
Jr., will leave the party. There will be
brief airport ceremonies.
Other stops will be made at San
Jose, Costa Rica ; San Pedro Sula,
Honduras; and Guatemala C 1 t y ,
Guatemala to drop off the presidents
of those countries. Brlef airport
ceremonies are scheduled at each.
Johnson left San Salvador wiU1 the
cheers of tens of thot.isanda of
Salvadoreans still ringing in hh ears
after a weekend comtdered by
observers to be a triumph of personal
diplomacy for tlhe president.
A few in tlhe crowds of El Salvador
tossed eggs, paint and curses of
"Johnson assassin!"
But tens of thousands of citizens of
this tiny coffee-~ing nation -in·
eluding women in rags and children
with Wnger·sW<Jllen bellies: -poured
into the stnets in a weekend o.f love
anrd reached out .a forest of hands for a
brief touch of JOO.Oson's fingers.
ln the officio) part of a llr6! U. S.
presidential trip to Central America,
Jobn'IOn · tnld the (lttlidents of El
Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Hon·
-· and Gualemala Sunday night. "Our meeting bas been !ruitiul
becaute it bas been J'eSpODsible." He
had leot tthem $65 mllllon for develop..
men! and ed-and pu&IJed their
economJc cooperation.
The aix·nation summit had ione so
well that Jdmson shocked au their
security forces by announcing be wes
flying tl1em home. capitJal by capital,
in his Air Force One, en route to the
LBJ ranch in Texas .
But amid the oandlelit glitter of a
Sunday nigtl:t ferewell party, it was not
the leaden · but the people wto
Johnson recalled when telling a
friend:
"These are wonderful people. You
can see it in ttJeiir eye:s and feel It in
their hand1.
' 'lt'eadler
Altbou&h !lie LUUputian rain
atorm over tbe weekend failed
to dampen the ll)>irlta ·of beach
inV11ionary forte there 11 still
poulblllty tarly mornlna oprtn-
kle accompanied by sunny 1fter·
noons. Hlgha today near 75.
INSmE TODAY
Thne'1 1'ardf¥ an., i k' "o
· "'""'II obolll TIMI Oclcl Covpll',
curnnl production cl flMr La.
Q1IM Beach Plafl"-· Poll< 11. -·-. ==----. .....,... .... ·--·-''" C,lfl ·~, ......
.... ...-. ,, . ----.. ........ c.itr • '' . .,..,. ,..., ,. 11 ......... n.1• • ...,.. 11-M ,. ~,:: .... , ....
n " tt.11 ,...... ,. . -. 1J ......... " ...........
'
•
Z DAil Y PILOT
13 Studying
New Sy.stem
Of Learning
'J'hirteen Go~en We& instructors
are belni paid '675 each this summer
to experiment with • 1ystem1 ap-
proach lo learning.
S)'lltm1 ap..,-, Dee ol lnslruc:·
tioD Wlllllm Shawl explained, m11111
lo set i..ning cbjtclivu and then
devise a course of study to achieve
them.
The pro11"am1 developed by tile in·
.. 1tructon will be tried out with
1toofllla In tho fall. 'l'llt Instructors
and what they are doing are:
Miss Edith ~Ugh and Miss Ruth •
Hunter -a aelf·teught remedial
En&li&h coorse.
Ro.coe Lancaster - a .elf-taught
general cbemJatry course.
Mrs . Pugy Staggs -supplemental
enrichment course in A m e rt c a n
history.
Lee Rost:h -supplemental enrich·
ment course 1D poUUoal ,ICience.
J.;ru, North and Eldoft Durham -
independent study in tectlnical draf·
ting.
Robert Schiffner -supplemental
film exposurt ,t\1 reinforce art history
study.
Warren Peterkin -supplementaJ
audio exposure t.o reinforce music ap-
preciation study.
John Wordes -supplemental ex·
posun? to reinforce fine arts study,
Angolo Segtlla and John Wadbams
--computer uae for ma4bematic1.
Dona1d Genet -computer use to
atudy buaine• admiolrtration pro-
blem•olvillg mettlods.
From Pqe I
NUCLEAR . ." •.
tion, where it le literally impassible to
buy sufficient forces at the present
level of the arms to destroy the enemy
strike capability before it Is launched
against the United States."
Public debate over the advisability
of beginning an ABM system -
estimated to cost upwards of 340
million depending on the kind bullt -
has resulted ln a tentative decision to
proceed.
ln releasing Wheeler's tesUmoay,
subcommittee cbairmmi. John Stennis
(D-Ml•.). laid Jn i statement:
"Despite the agooy llJld immediate
urgency ol tbe war in Southeast AMa,
in the long nm the balance of strategic
nuclear power is the ~fense problem
which Ja ol the greatest and mo1t over·
riding importance to this country.
"ll we should lose an e9gagement in
SouUI Vietnam, we line a bt.ttle; i! we
ghouJd lose the enJire campaign, we
lOH a war; but if we Call hopelessly
bebmd in the strategic nuclear fiel~.
we can lose our national existmce.11
Chamber Calls
Special Meeting
The city-chamber economic develop-
ment commlttee meeta tonight in the
new office.1 of the Huntington Beach
Chamber of Commerce to take a clol!ie
look at a re&0lution uking the City
Council for poaitlve support O{ in·
dUlltrial development and touriam.
The meeUng will be held at the
chamber office, 18582 Beach Blvd. and
begins at 7:30 p.m. The council com·
mlttee is composed of Councilmen
George McCracken, Ted Bartlett and
Mayor Alvin M. Coen.
Chamber directors are l~oward
Matheny, C. E. "Bill" Woods and
st.en Holden. The committee is
formulating a policy statement design-
ed to put th City <l>uncil and
Qmnbe:r in accord on industrial and
tourism deyelopme.nt.
DAILY PILOT
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Monday, Ju~ 8, 19fo8
Held as 'Hostage
AWOL
Kidnaps
MARYSVILLE, Calif. (UPll -A
two.year-old girl was abducted at gun-
point trom her mother's arms today
by 1 mu wbo said he would use the
child at a hostage to aid his escape
from the United State•.
SherlU Gary Miller of Yuba County
said an all polnll bulletin !\a• been
iuued for Thomas F. Scofield, a 22·
"year-old AWOL Marine. .
Miller Mid SColleld and bls 2G-year·
old wife, Loretta, kidnaped UtUe Vicki
Lynn West after tellln& her motber,
Ellen Murie Weal, "We need the baby
th tr " for safe conduct out of e coun y.
The sherl!f said Mrs. West knew
sCoflold and ldontllled blm as the kid·
naper.
Mrs. Wetl sald Scofield told her that
be killed a man 1n San Francisco. But
San Franclaco police said they had no
report of aucb a kllllng.
There were reports that Scofield
may be headed for Canada but Mlller
said: "We doc't know where he mlght
be."
SCofield was reported armed with a
rl!le and .22-caliber pistol and was
considered dangerous.
California Highway Patrol bead~
quarters tn sacramento aald SCofield
was wanted for armed robbery, kid·
naplng and auto theft The patrol sold
CHP staUOna throughout Northern
California had been alerted but that no
roadblocks were erected.
A patrol spokesman said Scofield
Marine
Girl
. .
also took '2 from the purse of Vicki's ' mother.
The pah-wu reported traveUnc 1n a
blue 1965 Dodi• Dart two-door ndan
with a alilbUy damaged rllbt front
fender and a mi11lna auollne cap.
Scolleld wu described as about S-11,
brown haired and with tht name
"Tom" tattooed on his left shoulder.,
'Beard' Figure
Quits Faculty ·
At Cal, Fullerton
A Cal Slate Fullerton ualltant pro-
fessor of drama connected with
performance of ''The Beard" and ap·
pearance of the San Francisco Mime
Troupe on campus ha• reaianed from
the faculty. ·
A college spokesman 1a1d Dr.
George C. Forest waa offered. reap·
poi.ntment but left the college to ltudy
guerrilla thoater.
An Associated Press wire atory said
Forest'• resignation waa demanded
months ago by State Sen. Jame. Wbet-
more (R-Fullerton), but the college
spokesman said be doesn't believe that
is true.
Whetmore called for the reslgnMion
ol Drama Depariment Chairman Dr.
James Young and faculty advisor of
"The Beard" Edwin Duerr, be &aid.
Policeman Pl.eads With Distraught Suitor From Page I
A sex act was simulated during
perfOrmance of the controversial one•
aot play. Forest was In "The Beard'~
z.udience and defended the play in a
Jetlter.
Twenty-nine-year-old Jerry Ellington held police at
bay 90 minutes Friday in Chicago's Cook County
Hospital, after seizing a gun from the holster of. a
policeman on duty there and threatening to kill
himself because a girlfriend rejected him. Police
Sgt. Jess Valle tried to no avail to get ElliJJgton to
hand over the gun. Police finally subdued him by
rolling tear gas canisters into the room.
CHASE • • •
was able to weave in, out and around
the slower cars, the patrohnan finally
lost Herron at U1e Dyer Road offramp,
but units spotted along the freeway
ahead where ready to pick up the
chase.
He later served as contact man for
lhe Mime Troupe, origil111lly ban<d by
court order from appearing on cam-
pus.
From Page I
FREEWAY ...
(east.em) Line. SO are the County Road
Department and 1st.ate h l g h w a y
engineer John Legarra who has
recommended adoption of the Une to
the commission.
Stanton wishes first Of all that no
line be adopted until the route to the
north of Lampson Avenue (U'te
northern boundary or the present
study section) is determined. If a line
must be selected now, Stanton will join
'Vestminster ln asking adoption of the
-Orange (Eastern) Line.
In the battle of petition&, au forces
!eem about evenly divided now. The
Concerned Citizens Council, picking up
where the old Huntington Beach
Citizens Freeway Association left off,
has gathered somewhere between
5,000 and 10,000 signatures asking that
the Orange Line not be adopted and
recommending the Red Line (which
has the fewest number ol homes to be
taken) .
In \Vestminster, where the Red
(Central) Line takes more homes than
does the Orange (Eastern) Line the
petition signing has pr o d u c e d
somewhere between 5.000 and 10,000
signatures urging adoption of the
Orange <Eastern) Line.
Both groups claim U1cy have
gignatures from the other cities and
likely both will have about equal
argument&-on-wby the freeway should
eo one place or wt0ther.
The commission will bear the
arguments md receive the petlUons
beglnn1n1 al 10 a.m. on July 26. Within
a couple of months the comml11lon
likely will select one of the lines, thus
touching oil appeal& lo Iha 1ovornor
M>d to the Legislature, or It •ill wait
wiW a line is selected for the next ses·
ment to the north of Lampson Avenue,
hoping that selecUon wtll be virtually
Wllnimoua so that• patt•rn can be set
for the southern segment.
a .
Fountain Valley Couple
Hurt in Beach Crash
The patrol car's engine had also ~P·
parenUy blown a valve during the high
speed maneuvering.
California Highway Patrol officer
King said he picked up Herron's trail
at 17th Street in Santa Ana, but the
suspect's burly Harley·Davldson bike wa.s pulling away fast.
OV Board Slates
Meeting Tonight
Trustees of Ocean View School
District meet tonight in the first of two
special sessions called this month to
replace the regular sessions.
Dominic and Elizabefll Garofalo of
16351 Rosewood st., Fountiain Valley,
are in serious condition at Huntington
Interconunun.ity Hospital today after
suffering multiple injuries when the
(.'<lUpl~'s S·mall car collided with a
large1· vehicle Sunday night in the in·
tersection of Warner Avenue .o.nd
Magnolia Street in Huntington Beach.
Driver of the &econd. automobile
Carl P. Writer, 47, of 1861 Simon
Ranch Rd., Santa Ana, wu uninjured.
Writer's wife, Mrs. Rl.ta V. Writer ,43,
was treated for minor injuries at Hun·
tington Intercommunjty and then
-released.
In another Sunday accident Joe Con·
treras, 17, and Robert Mancha, 18, of
Norwalk s:uffered ser10U11 head injuries
when Mancba's car apparenUy went
out of control on Goldenwest Street
near Mansion Avenue and crashed into
a telephone pole.
CoDtreras and Mancha were taken
to H u n ti n g t o n Intercommunity
13 UCI Profs
Get Promotions
Thirteen UC Irvine professors have
been promoted to higher status for the
1968-69 school year.
Promotions a r e determined by
fellow facu1ly members.
Advanced from associate professor
to run professor are Caspar \V.
Barnes. electrical engineering: James
J. Yeh, n1athematics; Gordon L.
Shaw, physics, and Lewis A. Froman,
political science.
Moved up from assistant t o
associate professor are David Isaacs,
electrical engineering ; Peter S.
Ode gard, music; Lauri D. 'I'hrupp,
medicine: Calvin S. McLaughlin , Clif·
ford A, Woolfolk and Daniel L. Wulff,
inolecular and cell biology: Stanley M.
Munsat, philosophy; Myron Bander,
phytics, and Norman M. Weinberger,
psychobiology.
Coin Suspect
A Piggy Bank?
PORT WASHINGTON . Wis. (UPI)
-The Secret Service ls watching Den·
ni1 L. Uranis, 37. TI\eY think he 's a
human pJuy bank.
Uran!s was arrested Saturday,
Ozaukee County authorities aald, after
trying to sell a man 11 defaced. pennies
for $250. 'Ibat'1 1 federal offense.
He put • mint mark on the copper
coins to make them look more
valuable to colleetors, authorities said,
but apparently awallowed them before
lh•Y could get a good look.
X rays dJsclosed a "metallic ob-
ject," 1omethlng like a roll of pennies,
In Urania' •tomacll, olllciau aold.
~
Hospital.
Two others in the car, Gilbert
Bresulla of La Mirada, and Abeland<J
Berroterran of Anaheim, were given
emergency treatment and released.
Weekend Beach
Turnout Small
''Bonnie" lies over the ocean. That is
tropical irtorm Bonnie which was
centered U1is weekend some 300 miles
off of Baja California.
And there was little love lost
between disappointed l-Iuntington
Beach sun bathers and the weather
that darkened coastal skies.
City lifeguards reported one of the
smallest rurnouts of the summer
season, 28,000 beach goers on Satur-
day and 48.00'.> on Sunday.
The combined rescue total for city
and state lifeguards for both days was
19. Three pairs of parents got
separated from their offspring, said
city guardS.
"There were no major incidents
\\'hat so ever on the st&te beach," ad·
ded state li!eguard supervisor Jack
Buck.
"I gave pursuit wide open ,
periodically giving my location and a
description Of the suspect," said Of.
ficer King.
Herron turned off the Newport
Freeway onto the Santiago Boulev~rd
offramp out of KJng's sight, at 'vhich
time a patrol car officer radioed that
Herron was southbound.
Thinking he meant southbound on
the freeway, Officer King slowed,
roared through a center aisle opening
and sped south again until hearing a
new broadcast of Herron's location.
Pursuing officers said the Navyman
tried to turn off Santiago Boulevard
onto Taft A venue at too high a speed
and the big motorcycle careened off
the roadway, spilling him in the dirt.
Herron-who had clutched a wad of
v.'eekend clothing between his knees
during the chase -was treated for
cuts and brusles at Orange County
Medical Center and booked into jail.
He i& charged with excessive speed.,
many unsafe lane changes, and
reckless driving and was issued a CHP
citation for the same offenses when
Officer King arrived at the scene.
The chase passed th.rough Costa
Mes.a, Santa Ana, Tustin, Orange,
Villa Park and back into Orange
agaJn.
The meeting is at 7:30 p.m. in the
boardroom, Warner A v en u e and
Beach Boulevard, Huntington Beach.
The agenda calls for the: annual elec-
tions of officers and may call for
discussions of plans for double
s~sions or relocation of student$ in
crowded. schools.
Trustees normally meet the first
and third Mondays, but have elected to
meet the second and fourth Moodays
this month only. Next meeting ta July
Qi.
CDM SWIMMER
SETS NEW MARK
Toni Hewitt o! Corona del Mar shat.
tered her American record for the 200·
meter butterfly with a 2:22.0 clocking
over the weekend at the Santa Clara
International swim meet.
Miss Hewitt was one second off the
world standard held by Ada Kok of
Holland and lowered her U.S. mark by
1.6 seconds. She scored a double vic·
tory in the prestigious internatlona] af·
fair, coming back Sunday to win the
100 fly with a Wetime best Of 1 :05.8.
See sports, page 21, for complete
details.
0
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Laguna Bea eh Yoar Bome t.ewn DAILY PILO T __
VOL ~f. NO. :163, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PA?ES
rec
Held as Hostage
AWOL Marine
Kidnaps Baby
At Gunpoint
MARYSVILLE, Calif. (UPI) - A
two-year.Qld girl was abducted. at gun-
point from her mother's arms today
by a man who said he would use the
child as a hostage to aid bis escape
from the United States.
Sheriff Gary Miller of Yuba County
said an all point! bulletin has been
iSsued for Thomas F. Scofield, a 22·
year-old AWOL Marine.
Miller said Scofield and his 20-year-
old wife, LOl'etta, kidnaped little Vicki
CDM SWI MMER
SETS NEW MARK
Toni Hewitt of Corona del Mar shat·
tered her American recOl'd for the 200-
meter butterfly with a 2:22.0 clocking
over the weekend at the Santa Clara
International swim meet.
Miss Hewitt was one second ott the
world standard held by Ada Kok of
Holland and lowered her U.S. mark by
1.6 seconds. She &COl'ed. a double vie·
tory in the prestigious international af-
fair, coming back Sunday to win the
100 fly with l llfetime !best Of 1:05.8.
See sports, page 211• for complete
details.
Lynn West after telling her mother,
Ellen Murle West, "We need the baby
for safe conduct out of the country."
The sheriff said Mrs. Wert knew
Scofield and identified him as the kid·
naper.
Mrs. West said SCofield told her that
he kllled a man in San Francisco. But
San Francisco police said they had no
report of such a killing.
There were reports that Scofield
may be headed for Canada but Miller
said: "We don't know where be might
be."
Scofield was reported armed with a
rifle and .22..caliber pistol and was
considered dangerous.
California Highway Patrol head-
quarters in Sacramento said !kofield
was wanted for armed robbery, kid-
naping and auto theft. The patrol said
CHP staUons throughout Northern
California had been alerted but that no
roadblocks were erected.
A patrol spokesman said Scofield
also took $2 from the purse of Vicki's
mother.
The pair was reported traveling in a
blue 1965 Ilodge Dart twe><loor sedan
with a sligh.Uy damaged right front
fender and a missing 1asoline cay..-
Scofield was described as about 5-11 ,
brown haired and with the name
"Tom" tattooed on his left shoulder.,
Wheeler's Estimate
U.S. Could Survive 1st
Nuclear Strike by Russ
WASHINGTON (UPI) -"Growing
Soviet strat.egic nuclear foreesh pose
the biggest threat to the United States.
But this country could survive a first
strike and destroy Soviet cities and in-
dustrial centers.
On the other band, il the United
states struck the first blow, It could
not knock out sufficient missiles and
planes to prevent large-scale retalia-
tion. That ts the assessment of Gen.
Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, as given to the
Senate Preparedness Investigating
3 Women Hurt
In 2 Separate
Laguna Wrecks
Three women were injured in two
separate Laguna Beach auto xct~nts
Sunday.
The weekend traffic toll in the Art
Colony also included two dead deer
t.hat had ventured onto Laguna. Canyon
Road. ,
Police Lt. Robert AfcMurray said
Darlene L. Nottingham, 31. ol Garden
Grove and Gail C. Carey, 7.8, of Santa
Ana were injured at 3:17 a.m. Sunday
when their car left a curve in Ult Big
Bend of Laguna Canyon Road.
McMurray said the car apparently
struCk a boulder after leaving the road
and new through the air. Both women
were treated at Hoag Memorial
Hospital and later releNed, aaid
hospital authorities.
Patricia Am Wilson, 29, ol Pomona
suffered minor Injury S<Dkr al·
ternoon, McMurray nkt, after bet' car
struck the rear of a cv driv.n by Roy w. Olsen, 61 of Santa Ana. She waa to
1ee her own doctor.
Both cars were eastt>ound on
Laguna Canyon Road. M<Murray llOld
Mn. Wlbon appatt11Uy gloncod awoy
lrom the road ancl 1Cr11Ck Ol1tD'1 car.
McMurTay said the two deer were
struck by c.ars a little befortl 2 a.m.
Sunday -· they dan.d onto the can-yoo road.
•• "
Subcommittee in April and releued.
in heavily censored form, during the
weekend.
Summing up this country's postlll'e.
Wheeler said: "We have the military
capability for any level of warfare
which. if applied fully 1 could · today
destroy any nation as a viable BOcie·
ty."
He said the joint chiefs "do not con-
sider tbet the deliberate initiation cf
the strategic nuclear attack by the
Soviets is likely; however, the
poosibiltiy of nuclear war through
escalation er miscalculation cannot be
dismissed."
"Further," Whffler Nid, "the
United States cannot safely discount
the pos6iblllty that Soviet leaders
might launch a pre-emptive ltrlke if
they. comider themselves inextricably
involved in a major confrontation over
critical objectives."
DlscuHillg what might h'l'!'<n ii the
United States was bit first with nuclear
weapans, the general said: "We could
not prevent the Soviets from 1auncb1n&:
their own missiles and getting at least
a certain numbei-of their aircraft" oU
the lklldJ and en route to the United
States.
"We have, of course, the same and
even a greater capability to retaliate
in the event of a Soviet first strike. So
we are talking here ln ~s ot
relative damage, I think ...
"One of the reasons that I have sup-
ported the anti.ballistic mlnlle as
strongly u I have is in order to lower
the levels of damage against the
United States, foced with this situa~
Uon, where It ts literally imPQSsible to
buy sufficient torces at the present
level ot the arms to destroy the enemy
strike capability before It l.s launched
against the United St.let."
Public debate over the 1dvlubillty
ol beghming an ABM system -
estim.ted to cost upwardJ ol 340
million depondlng on the kind built -
has resuHed in a tentative decllion to
proceed.
In releaslnf Wheeler's tnti"""'l'.
subcoaunltt.e cholrman John SWmil
(D·Mla.), Hid ln 1 otatement:
"Despite the agony and immediate
urgeocy ol !lie war In SOlll!leut Atla,
In the loll( run the balance ol rna1'glc
. (See NUCLEAR, Pace t)
)
' •
EDI T.19N
(A~UNA BEACH, CAUFORNI'.( MONDAY, JUCY I, '1968
s .m -
~ DAILY PILOT ........ ,._,..,_
ENTERTAINMENT, TOO -Along with all ~real
restaurants comes great entertainment. The 'free ·
people'·' of Laguna Beach have also supplied enter-
tainment as well as food. A guitar and flute prove
to be the backbone ol the mlni-muslc festival. Hips
ex-pect 101000 fellow hippies to show up for a July
20 lov~in on the beach.
)'..
Free Folk 'Fill Up ai Fee~·in
Laguna;s 'Es tablis hme,nt' Eyes Hippies· Fro 'lfl. A~e
By TOM GORMAN
Of Ille Ollfl' Pli.t S,_,,
The Establishment looked down
lrom above.
Tile Free Peopkl looked back up.
It was the feed-in at the Ma.in Beach
in Laguna. More than 140 hungry
people came for some free food. They
ate asparagus, cabbage1 tomatoes,
oarrot.s, corn, rice, watiennelon and
other fruits.
While they are, a nwnber of the "EJ·
tablishment" gathered above, on the
bluff of Heisler' P.-k, and observed
proceedings.
The hippies didn't mind. In fact
some took OU1 binoculars and looked
back at them, 50 feet above.
The feed·in started two weeks ago
by four hungry people, .according to
24-year-old James Edward Marlin III
going by the name Hermes Try.smegif'.
tus.
"There were four hungry people.
Lifeguards Have
Easy Weekend
The Pacific Ocean was renamed
"Lake Laguna" this past weekend by
local lifeguards.
There were on1y 6 rescues in the
combined two day crowd of 14,000.
Oalm surf and no rips accounted for
the few rescues. Water temperature
was a chilly 62, wh.lte the air was a
muggy 75 degrees.
The only major incident ocCUITed
Sunday when a Tustin boy fell throcgh
a carport roof on Moss Street. Bill
Hutchins, 11, of 1872 B Ave. suftered a
broken arm in the fall.
they got together, pooled their money
and this feed-In thing began," he said.
It has since then compounded to a
140-person event On July 4, they had a
holiday crowd of 250. ' ·
Hermes and his associate, Kurt
Reed, 21, proprietor of Things, a 1
Laguna hippie shop, financed the feed-
in through contributions they have
"found" in a glass jar on ~e counter.
It reads, "All money found in this
jar will !Jelp to leed the hungry people
ct Laguna Beach."
For thEdr July 4 crowd, they spe11t
$35. Usually '6 can do for a group of
70.
Are they worried about free-
loaders? Said IIermes, "This is my du-
ty to my fellow man. This is original
Chrlstiani1.y. We're here to help the
hungry people."
What does the feed-in mean to hip-
pies, besides free food? Rick Lanson,
a resident of Laguna for seven years,
told the DAILY PILOT thot 1he feed·
ins ere a means of unifying the hippie
community.
"We're trying to make a paradise
out of Laguna, not 1 Halght·Ashl>ury.
My parents think the way we're tt-.Jnk-
ing. They see we're on the right track.
Now if we had a little organization, a
little unity, it would be a lot better.
"The purpose of this feed-in is to
form a nucleus, so we can have
organization, unity, and com-
munication with ether people."
Mike Schulman, from New York, is
2.5 years old. He's been to San Fran·
clsco, but, according to him, "I've
been nowhere until I've been here."
He explained that the police "har-
assment" in the Bay City wes much
worse than treatment ln Laguna.
.. I heard about Lagwia from
another guy in Frisco. He tw.ked about
how great it was down there."
• ' BUCKET BRIGADE -With
the Hfree people" holding · a
feed-in at the Main Beach in
Laguna, they have one main
problem -sandy food. But
some of the eager eaters are
quick to explain that. the sand
is full of nourishing mtneralJ.
Thieu Asks Johnson Meet
Vietnam Chie f Wants to F ina Out What's Going On
SAIGON (UPI) -President Nguyen
Van Thieu ot South Vietnam today an-
nounced he wants to meet President
Johnson somewhere 1n the Pacific in
the next few weeks.
Thieu said ht wa.its to talk with
Johnson about milltary matten and
"problems relating to Ule peace q.·
plora~ons 6Dd joint defense effort,, in
the pre1ent 1truggle."
He cave no details bot South Viet-
namese leaden have not disguls!d
their 1keptlcl1m about the value of the
U.S.-North VletDameoe 111U In Paris,
-·""'· -at -· down tile war enough to permit • peace con4
ference.
Thieu uld In a communique he
wants to meet Jobn&on for •·a few
days" to d11Ct.1ss "impOrtant and
urgent matters."
Thieu al.so 1ald he ls po<tponlng a
two-week visit to the United States he
had planned tor 1ater this month.
The com.mun1que said the threat of
fresh Communist attacks on Saigon
and other point.s in South VJetnam
made the U.S. visit inadYisab1e now.
In a weelcepd Interview with United
Preu ln(ernadonal. Vice President
Nguyen Cao Ky ·sald be believH th• •
Communists will launch the major at·
tack on the capital Within the nut two
monU\I.
Ky p<edlcled the battle W<M1)cl he
,..n against whit he called -.
guerrilla we Of snipen aDd one and
two man bands lodged llirousbout
SOiJon.
J
Thieu's communique said: ''!There
are many Important problems wbi~h
necesslta\fl .a direct excb!-Dge f1l. vlew1
between the national leaden, and can4
not suffer a tong delay, eapect.ally pr~
bl~ relating · to the pea~ n-
plaratloD1 and Joint dtleme eUoru in
the present struggle."
The Saigon ngl!M has been Itss
thin avid In' Its 1upport f.., Ainer!can •<rotl•tor• going II*> ,pnllminary
peace lllU with North VietnomeM ol·
llclall· In Patio. Ky 1ald' Jn the
-kend 1nterv1 ... that lbe -COii· diilcm Saison tmlots ..,... In Uy If!·
tlement it a total Nortt\ Vietnamese
wlthdr":"il from South Vlotn11n. Ile
predicted ""1 acreemiDt"llOuld UA a IODl,·lolC llmt. -' .
Dally Paper
TEN CENTS
ase
Sailor Leads
Law Over
Five Cities
By ARmUR R. VINSEL otllle 0.1'1' , .... , ....
A sailor who apparently feared 1et-
~I ·a ~ic dtaUon in Costa Mesa
led police on a siren-screaming chase
through five c1u .. SundaJ at nearly
100 miles per hour before wrecting his
m,otorcycte in Orange.
Ralph M. Herron, 23, of the ·USS
Canberra, based in San Diego, was
booted ioto Orange County Jail on a
variety of ttaffic charges after being
treated fer minor injuries.
Costa Mesa Officer Matt Collett lost
the suspect in homeward-bound beach
traffc on the Newport Freeway when
bis engine apparently blew a valve
during the pursuit.
California Highway Patrol Officer
Gerald King was almost matching
speeds with the fiet,ing sailor, but :wu
diverted in the opposite direction by
confusing rad.lo traffic describing the
chue.
Officer Collett said the chase began
about 5 p.m., when he saw Herron
swerve onto the dirt ahoulder of
Newport Boulevard at 21st Street and
pass three cars en the rigbt.
Flipping on the red lights and siren,
Officer Collett gunned the engine of
the new patrol car, at which time Her·
ron looked over his shoulder and aped
off, northbound on the boulevard.
Hmdicapped by traffic while Hmon
_... ible 1o weave in, out and MOund
the slower cars, the patrohnan finally
lost Herron at ttte Dyer Road offramp,
but units 1polted along the freflrll)'
ahead where ready to pick up the
chase.
The patrol car's engine had also ap..
parently blown a valve during the high.
speed maneuvering.
California Highway Patrol officer
King said he picked up Herron'• trail
I t 17th Street In Santa Alla, but the
1uspect's burly Harley-Davidson bike
wa.s pulliDg away tast.
"I gave ~suit wide open,
periodically giving my location aod a
.description of the suspect," said Of.
fleer King.
Herron turned oil the Newport
Freeway onto the Santiago Boulevard
offramp out of. King's sight, at which
time a patrol car officer radioed that
Herron was aouthboWKI.
Thinking he meant southbound on
the freeway, Ofiicer King slowed,
roared through a center aisle openiDg
and aped south again unW hearing a
new broadcast Of Herron's location.
Pursuing officers said the Navyman
tried ·to tum olf Santiago Boulevard
· onto Taft Avenue at too high a speed
and the big motorcyc1e careened oil
the roadway, spilling him in the dirt.
Herron -who had clutched a wad of
weekend clothing between hJs knees
during the chase -was treated fOr
cuts and brusies at Orange County
Medical Center and booked into jail.
He is charged with excessive speed.,
many unsafe lane changes, and
reckless driving and was issued a CHP
citation for the same offenses when
OUlcer King arrived at the scene.
The chase passed through Costa
Mesa, Santa Ana, Tustin, Orange,
Villa Park and back into Orange
again.
or .. f e
'Wea•er
Although the lJlliputian rain
storm over the weekend failed
to dampen the splrilt of beach
lnva1ionary force there Is still
poaliblUty early morning sprin·
lr.le accompanied by sunny after-
noons. Hight today near 75.
INSm E TODAY
There'• MnUw 11" wt" I" o
""ong obovl Tht Odd C<Hlplt',
current production at the L>
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J DAILY PILOT MondlJ, JulJ 8, 1968
Dozer Ends Building
Structure Giving· Way to New Playhouse
,
No 1-ii there a building at 608
Leguna Conyon Road.
'Ibo dty-Burt Building fell to
Ibo ground Friday morning under the
Jn14ur1ng of an indiscriminate bull-
bulldol.er.
1be Burt Building was used as
storage ·and/or office space by the
Fellivtl of Arts, lbe Laguna Beach
Sdlool of Art end Dellign, and the
Lyr!c Open Assod.atioo ol Orange
Oounty.
'lbe three organiatiolll were at one
time on e 30 day notice. Two months
ago, 8CCU'ding to city fuanager James
D. Wheaton, the groups were put on 24
hour notice, in'. onler that construction
ooWd begin as 100n as po9Sible on the
aew Laguna -. Plll)tlOlue.
Alexandra anzrchill, dhairman of
the board of the School o( Art and
Design, told the DAILY PILOT, "The
scboot ·IJ glad to bear the· playhouse is
going to start constnlctioa after four
years of false stiarts."
In the meantime, ttie School has no
where to go. It has Josi space for one
class and bas round "inconvenient"
locations for two' other classis. But
Big Art Job
s-l ofllcioll _:.i-·..u beve PILOO', "Wt didn't e"*'1 tl>IJ to bop-
to put up with wbat they have until pen at tile ~ ol Ille Pageant."
they can · begin oonatruction on the1r But he added, "We have no com-
own new hillside buildlng, which the cl-plaints."
ty has Indicated will be a part of U1e The FeeUvtl is hoping tn u .. the city
lrvine Park Complex. And, con-parking Jot across the street for its
struc::tion can't begin until they have parking needs.
the money to finance il USED BOTH
NO DATE SET Tile Lytjc Op<l'8 A-lion ol
As ol nght "°"· tile ~ for tile Orange county . uaed -olllce
besinning of conatructlon is not in quarlera and storage. 'lbe opera bes
sight. &ince moved iW stored items to a
While the Festival Of Arta did Jose w.arehouse in the Cao,.on. The new of.-
storage space within the building rice is temporarily located at 222
beea~e of the demolition , their main FOl"est Ave. l\frs. Vebna Sun, ex-
concern bas to do with the loss of ecutlve director of the 0peRI. AS6ocia-
parkling. tion, said that the move e:ame as a
Don Willimnson, the producer of the "surprise." "But," she continued, "we
P.age~t. commented, "The Pageant bave not missed a step in the opera·
depends on volunteeM. The least we ticns."
cm do ia to supply parking facilities." The Opera A&aociation, w h i c h
Moving COltumel and equipmmt, ac-employs one full time worker and ac-cotdi.n« to Wllllameon, was "quite a cepta the secvices of up to 10 volun-
trial. We couldn't do it wry logjcelly." teen, bes made no pennenent reloca·
He-said that alter the Festiw.I, they t1on plam.
will undertate • "logioal assessment The Iaguna Beach Playbouee knows
ol the aituatioo." wl>en they ... going to &o. thougll.
EQward Fernsten, board pr~ 'Rieft seems to be IOIDe comtructioa
ol lbe Fe1ti"81, told lbe DAILY llOinc ou et 60ll Lacuna Clanyon R<lOd.
Examining 850 different works 0£ art £or the 14th
Annual All-California Art Exhibit were these three
art critics. From (left to right) they are Richard
Haines, Adele Bednarz and Jason Wong. From all
works, they chose 207 pieces to be on display at the
Laguna Beach Art Association Gallery July 12
through Aug. 25.
'Safe' Fireworks
Spark Brush Fire
"Silfe and sane" fireworks in the
haDds oC a nine-year-old boy fitarted a
1 in acre brush fire in I.iaguna Beach
Friday. afternoon.
Fire Marsbel J ames Presson said
the blaze burned grass and brush on
the dOWDbill side of Madison Place
between 1008 and 1034. No houses
ewgbt fire. Pree&on said it was
fortunate tbat ice plaot was growing -the-. The fire marshal said the youngster
was lectured and turned over to his
parents.
Talks Start Again
In Detroit Strike
DETROIT (UPI) -Talka resume
today in the nation's Ion g e st
newspaper strike, now in its 236U1 day.
Representatives oC the Detroit News
-and Detroit Free Press and the strik·
ing Mailers Union, scheduled a
meeting to iroo out differences over a
mediator's settlement guidelines.
'J. be mailers previously rejected tbe
recommendations, which included a
$33 wage hike package, already ac-
cepted by other striking unions.
DAILY PILOT --c:.l-1o
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Edllor
tlief'fl11 A, M1lfplli11e
"'-lll'lf Edltw
l!:lcli1r4 I'. N11I l.ff'IN lliNcJI; City Editor
J1ck a. <Art., P111I Niu1rt lvtlntM ~ Mwrtlllnl Olrtdlr __ ,,_
MellMlt ~ P.O .... 666 92611 W,__A._..
Ottiw Offic11
c.tt M..: •• .,., .. ., ''""' ...._,._,,:nu w. a.n... ~
111 .... ...m:.•• llnd
207 Art Works Chosen
For All State Exhibit
Three art judges are breathing a lot
easier this wee.k.
From 850 worts of art submitted by
artists all over California, they bad
the formidable tall or choosing *JJl1 to
be display<d at the Itth Amua1 All·
California Art Eihlbll at the Laguna
Beach Art Association Gallery.
The All..cautornla show, sponsored
jolnily by the Festival of Arb and the
Laguna Beach Art Assocla1ion, wlll
run concWTently with the Festival,
from July 12 through August 25.
The three jurors for this major art
event were Jason Wong, diredOr of
the Long Beach Museum of Art; Ade1e
Bednarz, a La aenega gallery owner;
and Los Angeles artist Richard
Haines .
An acrylic "EOS" won a ~
purchase award for Lewis Beken of
Los Angeles; the t:J50 purchase award
went to Ronald Puslch of Hollywood
for his acrylic "Mary"; and the $200
purchase award went to Jay Maddox
of Anaheim for his unUtled sculpture
Week end Rain
Dampens Coast
In case you missed ll, it rained dur-
ing the weekend. Just enough in most
places along the Orange Coast to spot-
up all tile dirt on your car nr get ~e
dog's paws wet when he's put out lD
the morning, but rain all the same and
in July yet.
Laguna Beach residents w e r e
hardest hit with a deluge of .13 oC an
ind\ during the last 24 ho\U's. Second
wettest was San Clemente with .11 of
an inch. Huntington Beach recorded
only .01 of an Jnch during the same
period. Meanwhile, the N e w p or t
Harbor area remained dry, no rain at
all was recorded during the last 24
boun.
Banker Reports
l'heft Front Auto
A Glendale banker returned to his
car in a Laguna Beach m\Ullcipal
parking lot Saturday evenlllg and
dilicovered that about $1 ,100 worth ol
clothing and other p e r 1 o n a I
possessions had been stolen. PoUce Lt.
Robert McMurray A.Id the thief fore·
ed open a windowing to erW tbe car
or Everett 0. Tate .in 11n Ocean Avenue
parking lot.
Taken were suitcases, clotblng,
cameras, a telescope, a stereo record
player, a radio and diamond ear rings.
or resin and chrome.
Honorable mention awards of '50
apiece went to Lester Henry of
Norwalk for his ceramic "Growth":
Robert Partin of Orange for bis oll
"Voyage"; and Winifred W. Smith of
Newport Beach for her acrylic "4
Squares in a Surface."
The Gallery, 31.Yl Cliff Drive, Is open
from noon to 10 p.m. Admission is 50
cenbs for adults and 25 cents for
studen\5 with I.D. cards. There is no
charge for children if accompanied by
an adult.
Lag unan Files·
Assault Charge
A Laguna Beach man complained to
poUce Saturday that he was knocked
to the floor by another man and his
throat stepped on.
Police are investigating the com-
plaint o! Warren H. Yeakel, 4.7 an in·
terior decorator of 590 N. Coast
Highway, apartment 1.
Lt. Robert McMurray said a witness
cried, "leave or you may kill him" and
the assail.ant, who was at the time
stepping on Yeakel's throat walked
out.
McMWTay said the attack ap-
parently followed an. earlier disagree·
meat about the price Of material that
Yeakel had sold. McMurray said
Yeakel Js seeking a complaint against
the alleged 1 assailant.
.,,..,. Page I
NUCLEAR .•.
nuclear power is the defense problem
which is of the greatest and most over·
riding lmportan<e to thil country.
"If we should lose an engagement in
South Vietnam, we lose a battle; if we
should lose the entire campaign, we
lose a war; but Jf we fall hopelessly
behind Jn the strategic nuclear flel~,
w ..i can lose our naUoneJ ez.i1tence."
School Furniture
Destroyed in Fire
NEWPORT. T...,. (UPI) -A $1
mlWon ware:houJe fire destroyed
thousands of pieces of tchool furniture
Sunday and an oU1dal NJd the111 was
a .,po.sslbllity" that some school open·
lngs 1cros1 the country would be
delayed as a result.
t ~. y __ _____:.· =----~
DESTRUCTION FOR PROGRESS -This was how
the old Burt's Cleaners building looked like from
the in.aide peering out after bulldozers when to work
Friday to destroy the old struclure and make way
for the new Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Site is at
608 Laguna Canyon Road.
C.A. Haskin s,
Former Laguna
Banker, Dies
Retired ~er Chari~ A. Ha&kins.
86, died Satw-day afttt an apparent
heart att:aek at his Laguna Beach
home.
A former vice president Md board
chairman of Security First National
Bank in Laguna, Mr. flask.ins, 183
Crescent Bay Drive, had been a resi-
dent of Laguna Bea.:h since 1~.
SerW.ces ere to be held at 3 p.rn.
Tuesday at Pacific View Memorial
Park chapel. Rev. Dallu Turner,
pastor of the First Presbyterian
Chw-ch will officiate. Interment will
be at Pacific View.
Born in Zumbrota, MiM., Mr.
Haskins had been a resident <Jf
California for 46 years. He was a
member of Masonic Lodge 137, the
Shrine and the Sco«!ish Rite in HaYTe,
Moot. He was also a board member
for South Coast Conununity Hospital.
A past president of the Glendale
Optimist Club, be was a member of
the Laguna Beach Optimist Club and
the Executives Club.
Survivors include his widow, LeEtta
of the family home; two sons, Charles
and Willimn, both of Newport Beach;
two daughtel"6, Mni. Helen Howell o(
Newport Beach, and Miss Virginia
Haskins of Glendale; and f i ve
grandchildren.
Laguna Co1npany
Wins Ballet Honor
The Laguna Beach Civic Ballet
Company bas been named a National
Honor Company by the National
Association for•Regional Ballet.
The Laguna group is the only one in
Southern California thus hoool"ed, de-
spite attempts by the other ballet
groups in the area to win such recog-
nition .
\Villiam Habich, president of the na-
tional organization, said the Laguna
Company has "distinguished itself in
artistry, and in consistently good work
toward our highest ideals for regiooal
ballet"
• Students Told to Check
Fall High School Classes
Even though the first day of school
is still more than two months away,
it's not too early for the high school
students to confirm their schedules.
The reminder was issued by the
Laguna Beach Unified School District,
jn anticipation of the last minute rush
by students to change their courses.
Jn order to .avoid the last hectic days
before school begins, the Laguna
Beach High School is going to make
available a counselor every Tuesday
and Wednesday during July and
August, for both new l!itudents and
students wishing to make program
changes.
New counselor Richard Hollister
reports many students taking summer
school classes will need to make
changes in their fall schedules, and
th.ls should be done before school
begins September 10. Any seniors in
doubt about graduation requirements,
students who wish to make changes in
their programs or new students com-
ing into the district are asked to take
advantage of summer counseling.
In late August, (.'(lmpleted falJ
schedules will be inailed to all high
school students. Hollister asked that
Pair Arr ested
On Drug Ch arge
Two 21-year-old men were arrested
on suspicion of marijuana possessi on
Friday alter Laguna Beach police
responded to a complaint that a rifle
\vas being brandished at Cress s&cet
and Glenneyre.
Police arrested Larry Paul Sturges,
21, of 1826 Tradewind Lane, NeW]Xlrt
Beach, and John Roni Wakula, 21, of
648 Beach St., Costa Mesa.
Lt. Robert McMurray said officers
alleged they found two plastic bags of
marijuana in the pocket of a coat lying
in the men's car and found a .22
caliber rifle on the back seat.
any questions or conflicts discovered
then be brought to the office before
Scpt<mber.
Bess Reilly
Funeral Rites
Slated Tuesda y
Fwieral services will be held Tues·
day for Bess B. Reilly, Laguna Beach
resident Z1 years.
Mrs. Reilly, of 616 Thalla st., died
Saturd~y at South Coast Community
Hoopital following surgery th.is past
week. She was 83. •
Rosary will be recited tonight at
Laguna Beach Funeral Home chapel
at 7:30 p.m. Requiem mass will be
celebrated at St. Catherine of Siema
Catholic Church Tuesday at 10:~
ia.m., interment following at the Holy
Sepulcher cemetery in Orange.
Born in BrookJyn, New York, she
moved to Laguna Beach in 194t, to be
with her daughter, Elizabeth Peper
Ferguson, and her granddaughters,
Lorraine Peper Newport and Patricia
Peper Truman, all of Laguna Beach.
Also surviving are her two sisters,
Mrs. George E. Eddy and MI'!. Edwin
Al Molloy, both of L<Jng Island, New
York, and four great-grandchildren.
Another Tourist
Mission Bombed
NEW YORK (UPI) -The fo<rlh in
a series of bombings at foreign tourist
missions blew out doors and,wiuklws
Sunday at the Japanese Natlooal
Tourist Organization near St.
Patrick's Cattiedral.
Two persons were sligbtly injtu"ed in
the explosion at the offices on 50t.h
Street just off Fifth Avenue, crowded
at the time with Sunday s1rollers and
churchgoers.
0
OMEGA
-----._ '125 ··-·-
YOUR WATCH~:.....,,~--:::--:---==
Rlnp Cltalltd FREE
• Clelnttl • Oiled WN=.;"~'~"'~w-•_t -~--
• Adlllttod •• ~:..~. Sl.99 $5 99 SI ==,-'=~--52.-49
Mlssh,. oi..-.. $4 99
COMPLETE :::Re<=,,....,=..::'""'.::::..-__:='"-'
J.,..lry Dosl9nlnt
A Spedoltyl
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Now 2 Great Slores To Serve You
HAUOI SHOff1N• HUlm ... TON CINTll
CINTll tu.CH • IDINMI
JJtl HAllOI llft. HUNT1N•TON llACH
COSTA MISA 14f.t411 ltJ·llOI
Open Mon.. Thur1.. Fri. Tiit f p.m.
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mw•
TO
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lOUI
I UDMT
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l
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2 Killed,
2Wounded
In Rohherri
TOWSON, Mel. (UPI) - A gunman
shot two persons to c!Ntb end.-..J·
ed two othen early _, Ill the hold·
up or a Nndwidl shop in a IUburbl.D
BalUmore !hopping cenller.
J>.>llce said the gunman, a DNtly
dressed man about ~ ~s old, fwc..
ed two employes aqd r..-o customers to
lie in a heap o0 tbe floor and fired at
least st< bullet. !Dto the tigJl.Uy packed
bodies.
He apparen.Uy walked out the door
and bleoded. tnto a crowd leaving a late
movie.
Joseph B. lJ,eWy, 18, a summer
employe, died at the soene. J& friend,
James Burns, who had stopped in the
shop to wait for Reilly, died seven
hours later at st. Joseph's Hogpital in
Towson~
Treat«! at tile hospital !« gunshot
wounds and released were Mrs,
Vanzula Cooper, 30, a waitress, and
Baltimore County police cadet David
Start.
Police Nid the gunman walked into
Harley's sandwich shop in the York
Road shopping center about 1 a.m.,
ordered a cup of coffee, and waited for
several customers to leave.
'Iben he drew a .38 caliber revolver,
took $169.49 from tile cash register
and cash box and ordered his fool' vie·
tims to lie down .
'Beard' Figure
Quits Faculty
At Cal, Fullerton
A Cal State Fullerton assistant pro-
fessor of drama connected with
performance of "The Beard" and ap-
pearance of the San Francisco Mime
Troupe on campus has resigned from
the faculty.
A college spokesman said Dr.
George C. Forest was offered reap-
pointment but left the college to study
guerrilla theater.
An Associated Press wire story said
Forest's resignation was demanded
months ago by State Sen. James Whet·
more (R·Fullerton), but the college
spokesman said he doesn't believe that
is true.
Whetmore called for the resignation
of Drama Department Chairman Dr.
James Young and faculty advisor of
"The Beard" Edwin Duerr, he said.
A sex act was simulated during
performance of the controversial one·
aot play. Forest was in "'The Beard"
wdience and defended the play in a
letter. ·
He later served as con.tact man for
the Mime Troupe, orlginolly borled by
court order from appearing on cam·
pus.
~Love' Advocates
U'I Ttlfffllf9
Operations Succe••ful
Singer Jimmie Rodgers, releas-
ed from St. Vincent's Hospital
in Los Angeles following third
brain operation since Decem-
ber accident, appeared for first
time without bandages. Doc·
tors thought the operation was
a complete success.
Poli~e Arrest
Westminster Man
On Assault Rap
A Westminster man was jailed early
today after the isevere beating of a
frail, mentally retarded mechanic who
wondered what the suspect was doing,
tampering with a car at h 11
employer's garage.
Louis P. Michaels, 39, of 13752
Milton St., was booked into Orange
County Jail on suspicion of assault
with intent to commit murder after in·
vesti·gators found him in a bar.
The victim is in satisfactory con~
dition at Westminster Community
Hospital t:oday with serious injuries.
Police saia he was literally beaten to
"' pulp. ''He was uncooscious and in severe
shock when we arrived," s a 1 d
\Vestrninster Police Lt. Jack Essex.
The victim stumbled to a nearby
tavern aft.er the beating and police
Jater received a tip that Michaels was
at the s&{De bar and arrested him
there without r esistance.
Michaels was scheduled for ar·
raignment in West Orange County
Municipal Court today.
lnvestigaton said the victim found
Michaels tampering with a car at
Smith's garage and said he was going
to call police, at which time be was at·
tacked.
Police said the victim was beaten
only with fists and that no other
weapon was ustd.
U'IT .......
Misty bippfe wedding In San Francisco's Golden Gau. Park unlttd
two supporter• of the love generation Saturday. Francine Nelson, 18,
of Floifda ind Thomas King, 22-yelll'<>ld -Callfomlan, led a group
of hlpp!M!ad frlenc!J through Haight-Ashbury to the wedding scene,
where the Rev. Leon P. Harris, pastor of All Saints Episcopal Church,
bound them tn holy matrimony, which he called "reverent and dl~nl
fted.'' After sealing the rites witb a kiss, the couple ran, dancui1,
lllroUgb the grus.
, I \ \o
-·July .. 19()8 DAILY -I
2 New Red Offensives Feared
Fighting Breaks Out Along DMZ; Saigon Awaits Attack
SAIGON (AP) -Sav1ge D&hUng
between U.S. Marines ond North Viet-
namese n~ar the demWtarlzed zone
pointed up Monday the threat of a new
enemy ottenslve in the far north.
In addition to enemy pressure near
the zone dividing Vietnam, the
posslbillty of new attacks on SaJgon
raised the prospects that the allies
may faee heavy fighting on two fronts.
President Nguyen Van Thieu an-
nounced he was postponing again a
vWt to the United States because of
the threat of a new enemy offensive.
U.S. and South Vietnamese oUlclals
are known to feel the enemy will try to
make good on warnings of new and
more intensive attacks in South Viet-
nam.
A U.S. military spokesman reported
Marines killed 201 North VietnameS'e
Johnson Ends
Successful
'Little Summit'
SAN SALVADOR (UPI) -Pr<sl·
dent Johnson left for hame today win·
ding up a weekend "Litt.le Summit"
meeting with the presMients of the five
Centxal American republics.
Aboard the presidential jetliner with
Jobnson, his wife and daughter Lucy
were the presidents of Nicaragua,
Costa Rica, Honduras and Guatemala
who will travel to their respective
capitals aboard Air Force 1 es
Johnson's guests.
'Dhe presidential plane lifted into the
air from 8aD Salvador's lnternetlonal
Airport at 9:59 a .m. (EDT), after
brlei protocol ceremcoies.
'Ibe host of the summit meeting,
President Fidel Sandlez Hernande:z of
El Salvador, bade goodbye to each of
the presidents. Th.ere were no airport
speeches.
First stop of Johnson's "shuUlerun"
home will be Managua, Nicaragua,
where Prt!sident Anastasio Somo:za
Jr., will leave llhe party. There will be
bri.ef airport ceremonles.
Other stops will be made at San
Jose, Costa Rica; San Pedro Sula,
Hond\ll"8.IS; and Guatemala City ,
Guatemala to drop off the presidents
of those countries. Brief airport
ceremonies ~ scbeduJed at each.
Johnson left San Salvador with the
cheers of tens of '111.ousands of
Salwtdoceans still ringing in his ears
.arter a weekend cmsi.dered by
observers to be a triumph of personal
diplunacy for the presklent.
A few in tlbe crowds of El Salvador
tossed eggs, paint and curses of
"Johnsoo assassin!"
But tens of thousands of citiietJs of
tlWI tiniy ooffee"fJl'Oducing m.ti<>n -in·
eluding women in rags and children
with lhungef°-swollen bellies -poured
into the streets in a weekend of love
and reached out a forest ol handis ror a
brief t.ouch of Jcimsoo's fingers.
In the officio! part of a first U. S.
presidential trip to Central America,
Johnson told the presldenbl of El
Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Hon·
dounls and Guatemala Sunday night,
"Our meeting has been fruitful
because it has been responsible." He
had lent them $65 million for devel<>p-
ment and education and pushed their
economic cooperation.
:Aussie Gunman
Smashes Chair
To Heat Food
SYDNEY, Australia (UPI) -A gun-
man besieged by police for six dt')'S to-
day smashed furniture into kindling to
heat food ror himself, his shotgun teen·
aged bride and her baby.
The crash· a® bang of splintering
chairs and tables flooded through the
windows of the suburban house sur·
rounded by police.
Down the street 100 yards Police
Chief Norman Allan arid aides huddled
in a trailer and tried to figure a way to
separate Wallace "Wally" Mellish, 23,
hi& shotgun, automatic rifle, pistols
and hand grenades from his wife
Beryl, 19, and her son, Leslie, 12
weeks old. Mellish has threatened to
kill them if police come any nearer.
Critics who argued police should
charge in lest other gunmen get
similar ideas got ammunition for their
plea . In Auckland, New 7.ealand, a
\\o'OO'lan painted her face black:, slung a
bandolier or bullets around her chest
and, waving a shotgun, defied police
smTounding her house. Her husband
and two young children were believed
ID the house, police In Auckland said.
In Sydney, police said that maybe
they could only wait to telephone
Beryl and ask her once more to help
them subdue Mtlli.tb.. A phone c:all
hl.nlly helped Sunday.
Mn. Metiish, forced to marry at
fUllpolnt a< the start ol the siege, told the Sydney Daily Mim>r by phone: "I
didn't know he wa like this whea J
married him.''
in two battloa Sunday Ind -Jut Fri· day.
All the fighUng cent.rod around Glo
lJnh, an allied eombat base near the
eastern end of the demilitarized zone
and about three miles aouth of the
zone.
Backed by planes, artillery and
tanks, the Marines 'reported they tUJ ..
ed ft1 North Vletnamese tn the Sunday
fighting. Marine losses were given u
five killed and 17 wounded.
FlghUng near Glo Linh raged.all d1y
Friday and the Marines aaJd1hey tm-
ed 134 North Vietnamese while taking
losses of five dead and IC wounded,
Planes and Navy ablps have been
pounding the northern three miles of
·the zone, wbert the North Vietnamese are dug in, and communications
leading down from the north in an ef·
fort to check the flow of men and
weapona.
In the past eight daya, U.S. Air
Force 852 Stratofortrenes alooe have
dumped 5,000 tons ot bombl in the
,,,.. and Juat ro tile north.
There w&1 little action elsewhere ex-
cept around SaJgon, where South Viet-
namese troops launched another of the
sweeps that officers believe have been
a factO!' in stalling off. new enemy at--
tack.!! on Saigon.
~g 25 miles northwest of
Saigon, the South Vietnamese un.
covered a weapons cache coniaJning a
bazooka.type rocket launcher, 130
pounds of rockets, ammunition and
claymore mines.
Less than three miles from this
operation, the Viet Cong sent · 12
mortar rounds into Kbien CUObg,
capital of Hau Nghla Province, woun·
ding nine clvlllans.
Tbleu's ola!Mnent -.cine his pootponement ol a 1rlp to W1ahlngton t'flPOl'ted "reliable Information m the preparaUon by the Communilt 1g0
gresrora for the renewal Of their of·
fenslves in various area1."'
Some thougM Tbleu wu reludant to
leave the country for fear that hi1
rival, Vite Pre1ldem Nguyen Clo KJ'
might pull off a coup wblle be i1 gone.
The statement &a.id, however, that
Thieu "has proposed to the president
of the United states a meettnc for a
rew days somewben! In Ille Pacillc In
forthcoming weekr'' to discuss "many
important problems." ·
lnformaots said Ille "'"tint pro-
bably will be held In Hooolulu oome
time before the ond ol JW,. TtJea bod
plaooed to visit Pres!deot Joluw In
June, thenbad~tbo1rlp"*
thia mooth.
·All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
THB PENNEY STOR.Y
PEN NC REST®
Electric Fans •• ;
"Never any
argument
from
anyone"
as powerful.as they are portable
By ROBERTA NASH
We rcccivtd the follow·
jng un.1olicited letter
from Ca1ifomia:
Dear Penney's:
I am really aatidied "With
the service I get at your
1torc. I have a friend out
of the 1tate who sends
things from the Penney
store where she lives.
Sometimn she Knds the
wrong size and I go to my
Penney 1torc and ex-
change the things. There
is never any argument
from anyone-they arc so
cooperative.
Mrs. H.O.
TCICIAYI
• 1/12 HP motor deliftrs up to 4600 CFM, 1000 RPM
• 3 olr speeds; top mounted rotory switch
• 3 balanced 20" aluminum blodes
• Removable plastic $afety grill plus carry handle
•White baked enamel finished steel
Deluxe 12" oscillating
2-speed table fan
. 15.99
Deep pitched pl.,tic blocles for quiot oporo·
lion. 1/32 HP motor circulates 1000 CFM.
Chromo plated gra!1 white .....,,.1 finish.
Roll-about fan stand
for use with portables
$'i0
Doluxe ''"' ,tone! adjull from 8" to 53' holiiht.
Sturdy stool m.m.1oatunt gold baUd -1
finish. large rubber tt...i-..
'Mellllhll!lderweot pcychiatric treat-1...-----------------------------------., ment dUring impri.sonnient f o r 11
burclary. 'Ibo t!ege boc111 wl!en police
went to the home of Beryl's parents,
Mn. and Mn. Mick Muddle, to ques-
tion Mellish about_. bur&larlea.
COST A MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
.IHerl:tor Shoppln9 Ctnt•rJ ,IHuntin9ton Center) .IF .. hio• hlandl ,
• •
..
E..-Wh"", of Sul>urbln Val·
ley si.t1on DMr Loui.sevllle, Ken·
tucq, tilled a 4~-foot raWesnake
in 1111 becliyard. Leu' than one
bour llller, he llllle<l a copperhead
mab In 1111 -yl!d. Both kinds of ..at<es are amoo1 the deadliest •
Newest in ftQhfOn. fl tM outttt wom
by a itttle Vietnmmae girl. S~ mod--
els the latest in camouflaged fatigue•
in the Village of Moc H~ t1Do milt•
from the Cambodian border. SM. ia
tht: daughteT of a South Vietnamtse
Arm11 off.teer.
Mooda1, JuiJ 8, 1968
More Expected
Oregon
Under
Pl\INEVJLl.E, Ore. (UPI) -Weary
lireliglllen who trailed tllousands or
acres of firu in the tinder dry central
Oregon l!mb«IaOOs du,illg th e
weekend !aced the tbreat today o!
more out.breaks.
TwG large blazes continued to bW'n
oo priY>lely-and state-protected
pine forest.s on ·Squaw Back Ridge
near Sisters. .
A fire on tile nartb. side of the moun-
tain W'8J trailed at 2,200 acres, the
st.ate forestry department 1 a i d .
Another bla2e had covered 11800 acres
·on the south side ol the moontain and
. was burninc out of control at last
re!)Ort.
Spokesmen for both I.he state and
Russian Court
Gives Oakland
Man 5 Years
MOSOOW (UPI) -An Ame1ican
was sentenced today to five years im·
pa::btt::aneat f'OI' smuggling haJbish and
cinoncy into Ille 5oYlot Union.
D8'e Reed Warren, 32, o£ Oakland
was found guilty and sentenced by a
court in Tashkent, capital of the
u~ Republic; an American
·~ llPOl<...,an said.
Warren w• expected to appeal. e '1lbo court -Warren runty or
A peacock recenUy brought an smuggling 2189 grams (5.25 pounds) of
interstate bus to a halt on a busy -. h.ubish into the SOviet Union as well super~ghWay near Coming,, Calif. u bringing tn 100 roubles itlll) in
The bird crashed through the wind· . . . shield of a Continental Trallways Soviet currency wtthout declanng it.
bus and knocked the glaases off PoUce officials testified Warren had
driver Kenton M. G•y•, 39, of Sa~ admitted tbe drug-smuggling charge.
ramento. He brought the Seattle to Conviction carries a sentence of
Los Angelea ln1' to a safe atop on three to JO years.
~nterstate 5 wtth only DllDOr inJ!U'· American consul Samuel Fry new to
ies. to one passenger. The bud Ta!hi.:ent from Moecow to act as an
penshed. • observer at the trial. A Soviet lawyer
hired by Fry represented Warren. Three revolvers and an automa· An embassy spokesman said the tic pistol were turned over to MOn· court specified warren • 5 im·
trose sheriff's deputies by a grim pritonment was to be served in a
looking pair toclly. 11You can get penal colony fOf' fureigner11 .
into bad ha bi ti plaYinl:th guns," It wat the first time such a phrase
admonished RoMld t, 6, and ha,, been used by a court in the Soviet
his sister, &a~re, 4, of nearby Union and its meaning was not im-
La Crecenta. The watch offtcer mediately clear.
solemnly wrote out receipt& and Warren has five days 1n which to ap-
kept all the gun1 ••• all cap pi,. peal
tols. • ...............................
/! A·n armed man ~emataded
1· money from the night cl.erk at
l a motor inn near Richmqnd, r. Va. The clerk handed over about
1 $100 from a Ca.!h drawer. "That
i.s not enough," the gunman
protested, OJ he backed out the
door and fled without hi$ take.
' • Five veterans have kept a ren~
dezvous at the top ol the 75().loot
Prudential Tower in Boston. They
had made the date two years ago
while serving together in Vietnam.
Their reunion 11tickets '1 were the
quarters of a dollar bill, carried by
four, and a strip of tape to stick the
pieces together carried by a fifth.
LM Baluno, 24, of Concord,
thought up the dollar bill angle,
kept one piece and gave the others
to Stephen Mahoney of Everett,
Stephen Harvey of Stoughton, and
Rodney Julian of Brook.line. John
Ferolite of Marlboro, brought the
sticking tape.
Gun Law Backers
Slated to Testify
WASHINGTON (UPI) -House
backers of a ban on all interstate gun
sales were going before the llouse
Rules Committee today in an e[!ort to
set their measire up for floor action
th.is week .
Some opi>oneots also were among
the 15 Congressmen scheduled to
teist.ify Oil the legislation this session.
With this in mind, Democratic
leaders tentatively programmed the
bill for House floor act.ion later in the
week. Meantime, the Senate Juvenile
Delinquency Subcommittee planned a
resumption of its own hearings on Gun
Legislation today. And the full Senate
Judiciary Committee, which has twice
deferred action on the administration
bill, scheduled another try at a
\Vednesday meeting.
WJth Congress seeking to adjourn
before the pc>litical conventions in
August, many more delays would be
fatal.
Blazes
Control
U.S. forest service said temperatures
climbed into the 90's this morning with
humidity going below 15 percent
More dry lightning strikes were ex-
pected tG r aise the toll of scorched
pine stands.
More than 800 men fought taes in
ponde<osa timber stand& and grazing
lands in the Oohoco National Forest
durlog the weekend alter hundreds of
dry lightning strikes ignited the
timber.
But lire trails held during the night,
a U.S. forestry service spokesman
!iai.d. The largest blaze covered 3,500
acres about 20 miles east of here. Two
other !ires covered 380 acres and 315
acres, respe(:Utely.
In the Deschutes National Forest,
where more than 200 lightning sbikes
hit during the weekend, all the fires
were reportedly in the mop-up stage.
A spoke<man aald all the flres ,..,..
either controlled. or out.
The 850 acre Pine MOWltain blare,
which for a . period Saturday threaten·
ed the University of Oregon astronom·
ical obeervatory, near Bend, was trail·
ed and only 10 men were petrolling
today.
Th.ere were a total of 24 fires at one
time in the Ocboco Natiocal Forest, a
6pokesman said, four of them man·
caused.
The largest, the Snow Basin fire,
crowned in 200-foot jumps Sunday and
fire fighters were evacuated !rom its
path. It was repc>rted under control at
3,500 acres· today.
Youth Kills Man
After Reported
Sexual Assault
CLINTONDALE, N. Y . CAP) -A
man State Police identified as a Cub
Scout leader in ?i.tanhattan was shot lG
death neac this Ulster County com·
munity by one or five bGys be alleged.
Iy Iw·ed to his cabin and sexually
molested, the State Polire reported to·
day.
A St.ate Police 6pGkesman .at the
South GW.ns Falls staUoo -lilied the
victim .as Carmine DiBiase, who he
said was .a Scoutmaster tor Troop 45
ln Manhattan •
A scout spokesman said he was
unable to check the information im·
mediately. State Police at Kingston
said DiBiase was employed as a
printer in White Plains.
The South Glens Falls Station said
DiBiase was wanted !or att2n11rl.ed
sodomy and sexual abuse charges in·
volving a 10-year-old and two 11-year·
olds near Warrensburg in Warren
County on July 2 and 3.
DiBiase picked up the five boys in
New York's Van Courtlandt Park
Saturday State Police said, and told
them he was a scoutmaster on his way
to pick up equipment here.
At bjs cabin~ about a mile and a hal(
fro.m here, DiBiase took out a .22-
caliber rifle and tired a shot to
frighten tbe boys, police said.
Polire said DiBiase then took
clotilesline and bound the !ive boys -
four are 13 and one 14 -and then sex·
ually molested then1.
Then, according to police, DiBi ase
untied the 14.·year-old and told him to
cook dinner. The boy picked up the ri·
fie and shot DiBiase in the stomach,
police said, and DiBiase died wrestling
for the gun.
Lighting Fires Possible!
Dr y Lightning Stor1ns Tlireaten Timber Stands
Californlo
ce .. tel
u.Jit v11l1blt wll'llb flitlll tnd motn-
Mt" '*'" be<Mll"' -~rly I to 1,J
bots 111 IN •I..,._ l'OOI,, 11!d t..
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v.s. Su111111•rw
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llOI\. """'' l!'IOllMt'!Ol of tcl'tl d ¥ti•
uabl9 ¥!,.In l«HI tit.,. """' ""'""" In ptt¥1eut fNA -l•I 1tle11llon It
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~· 111111 '''" .., "" Horl!lwlll. A ftw KllllwM ~n
d.wnMMCI tM wt1'9nl l.edti... 1111
Mlu ll1lf'PI v1tln' '1ld flle llDtlll«n
Grt1t Witts.
WlnctJ ,_ " SI "'It.I I'll' "°"1 .u1htd
l\11i.1or..,. K.._ Notti\ 011tot1 SundtY
1111111. H11t1'-t 111 Ind! lfl dll""~
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Aner """'' d~ Iii' r1111 In 11\f El fl'1.o 1tt1, !hi 1.19 Gt•ndt llMlltd OYlf'
ltl lllM1, 'tVllM -flff'llOM 1'e
""1c1111t 111t1r hiwMt 11111 n11111111 u~ '·~ ., .. cotton crwa.
'
r ..... peroture•
Albi.tciue,.ue ......... "-Alt•11l1
IH•~fle1d . ,.,,...~
··~ lloS!on
ClllC•to
Clncl11111tl
Clevellnd
°"""'' D11 MOIMt
Delrv/I Ell~I
l"on Wortll F,.,.._
Helt• ..
Horioilllu
HOUiton
IC-• Cftr
l. .. ""'' I.It Mttlcl ......
Mltw.llkM
MIMfel'OllS
H.w <>rlffl\1 Hno vn o"""' .......
fl'lto llotl~
fl'flllMle~ll -l'Jtbf)i.lf'tlfl ........
Aloltid (lty
lltd l tvff ·-SKtl me<'llo
SI, LOUii
$1111111
.$4111 Ult1 CtlY
S111 D-.. S.11 ,.,..lltli<•
S.,llt AM
1-..t• .. tlllrt ...... .........
'""""
"1911 L-P're<. " " • • " '" " " " .. .. • .. • .. .. n • " .. .. .. .. ..
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Jei, Rips Peaee of Snhor~
Skylw.wk CrQ$hes Into Elegant Ho1ne Killing Girl, 13
CHICAGO (UPI) -BeAj&mln
Mt<JteH and his eon Billy, ll, had ltft
the house early in the mornlng to play
golf at the coun4ry club. Mrs.
'-1a.sters was mowing the lawn of
their north suburban home in Glen·
view.
The M86ters' daughter Cynthia, 13,
was lbe only one ln the bou.se, a
f78 ,000 two • story brick.and-frame .
structure, when UMI jet &masbe<I to
earth Sunday.
lt WH a little after 9 o'clock. About
a mile souther.isl of the Mast«s home
at the Glenview Naval Air Base,
Reserve Lt. Williafn T. Reinders, 32,
on a routine monthly Olgbt, lifted hi!
A4B Skyhawk jet into the air.
Within minutes , the plane began los·
lng pc>wer. Reinders, attached to ·the
VA.-Tl7 Attack Squadron, radioed the
base that he would try to return. But
be could not handle the single-engine
craft. lie ejectod and lo an !oltant tile
piano l.U from' the •kl' and Jnto port
o( the Muten' home lo the soil,
rich, peaceful auburb.
Cynlllla, who bad just completed the
7th grado at Glenview Junior Hlgh
Schooi ,.. .. killed. Her charred body
waS found on the nrw floor near
the 1UA porch, whore 1be jet hi! belort
landing a&alnst an embankment in the
back yard and exploding in ftameii.
Relndet"I, wh-parachu1'o dfd not
open, was thrown Into a weeping
willow tree near tbe house 'and su.f·
ff:fed a broken arm and leg: He was
taken to tbe G.reat Lakes Naval
Hospital in lerious condition.
A neighbor, Mrs. Thomas Roupas,
said she and her busibmd were having
cof£ee.
"We beard a plane," she said. "1
aaid to him, 1.My God, that plane's
fiylng low.• It came rlght down over
our Muse. T'hen a loud boom.
"We ran out aod. saw the whole
house In names. I ran iDto the yard
and beard Mrs. Masters scre&mlng
that her daughter was still inside ~e
house. Seven! neighbors tried to get
inside, but the flames drove tbem oU."
"Did the plaM hit. a hollff?" the
pll<>t asked one of the doieM of
neigbbGrs who had gathered at the
Masters' home.
"No," a man rei)lied, sparing the
dazed lieutenant the tragic news. But
it wts not long UDtil he knew what had
happened.
The plane, which was destroyed, riP""
ped oH several limbs of a tree before
er.ashing. The sun porch and garage
were de6troyed1 and all eight rooms in
the house were heavily demaged by
fire and wMe.r.
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
--
•
COSTA MESA
(Harbor Shopping Center}
\
Misses' voile separates
spell summer r~mance
let tht mogic of whispering soft voile show you off in style! Whether
it's a picnic for two or a barbecue with the gang, this luscious, easy
care Docron• polyester/cotton voile adds a romantic mood to the
setting. Choose muted print in pink or blue. Sizes 8 to 16.
Fully lined overblouse and
jamoicas radiate a feminine glow.
Sleeveless top sports cowl collared
neckline; jamoico shorts have regu-
lar waistband. Choose either' at
this low, low price! 2 99
• ea.
Shirt and ankle pants duo needs
little or no ironing. long sleeve
shirt features flap pockets; tapered
slacks hove back zipper. Botk ore
fully lined , .. and priced for savings!
3.99 ...
-
HOOINGTOfl BUCH llWPORT BEACH
(Huntington Center} (Fa shion Island}
.\
r
, I
'
I
I
I
l'"""'Q'"-V_ll_ll_N_l_E ___ _:il:!11:..:P:...:•:.:;U::::l•terlea11l
J f§1 t _, 11. ,fil ,
= .jl~ l .
-
"J'm not chuing you, Mi•,_I'm jo1rginr.';
Laguna Has Plans
For Young Guards
Even boys ages eight
through 12 can make the
li!eguard S«ne this summer
in Laguna Beach.
Youngsters with a yen for
the beach can find com-
petent instruction in all
phases of beach lore, and
water safety as members of
the Laguna Beach IJ!eguard
Sea Cub Program.
Tbe boya will learn first
aid, water tafety, elemen-
tary lifesaving, surfboard
paddling, mat and body
surfing and elementuy skin
diving techniques under the
careful tutelage of John
Cunningham and Ji m
Herdman , swnlhertime
lifeguards and teachers at
Tb u rs ton Jntermedlate
School. T h e emphasis is
plaeed on having fun
Starting on Tuesday, July
9, at 1:30 p.m., at Main
Beach HeOOquart.ers, and
continuing each Tuesday
and Thursday until August
13, the five week program
lasts from l :ll until 3 p.m.
Youngsters inteNsted in
the program are urged to
sign up on Tuesday July 9 at
tbe Ma..in Beach. It is
emphasized -~at prior ex-
perience is not a prere·
qui.site for the Sea Cubs:
CdM Tells
Honor
•
Society
The lfooor Sodety for
om year bU beeti oellcled
by eor.na de! Mai llljjl
Sd\Ool. n.o.. -•II who JJ11J be
In the -b-IOClety In the fall 1rt Peuy Adami,
Susan Anderoon, Fleldle
-· Debonl1 Bell, Vickie . Bklcl:,.Pamela B 1 a 1 a c k ,
JaJDe< '!<f:dl)11111, S I ' v e Susan 1 Ab<lerson·, 'Fletcher
Ohristopher Cooper a o d
Mariame Cox.
Others "are Steven Crooke,
Margaret Dye, Kenneth
Ewell, Laur a Ferguson,
Gene Fisher, La!,X'ie Fuller,
Cindy ~Oarlan, Lore n·e
Graser, steve H..vtley, Doug
James, Henry John son,
Norman Johnson, s t e v e
Jump, Kathryn L)'Ddi and
Dorottly MacMille.n.
Also, Robert McClellan,
Pamela McCullough, Jane
/Miller, Kethein Munroe ,
Richard Nri!ser, Gary Net-
tles, Carol Olander, Kevin
O'Leary, Michael Reehl,
Jan Rinaldo and Cynthia
Speyers.
Jim Stoner, David Terry,
Sharon Thompron, .Angela
ToEti, Judy Twilegar, Wen-
dy Wiallrer, Deen Wiese and
Bob Williams.
Urban Crisis
Meet Topic
BERKELEY - A working
committee was formed to-
day to plazi a major COD·
ference of California
educators on how to deal
with the urban crisis and its
rural counterpart and to
assure equal access to
education at all levell:.
The meeting, called by UC
President Charles J. Hitch,
i n c luded representatives
from 13 educational associa-
tions and from nearly all of
the state's public and
private schools and colleges.
The committee will confer
at length with leaders of
minority groups and seek
nationally prominent ex-
perts to join in the three day
conference planned for the
fall.
Hoag .Aide
At Meeting
Steven D. Schumacher,
supervisor of the depart-
ment of radiology at Hoag
Memorial Hospita l in
Newport Beach will attend
the 40th annual convention
the American Society of
R a diologic Technologists
this month in Los Angeles.
Formerly cardiovascular
technologists at the
University of WashJngton
Haspital, Seattle, Wash.,
Schumacher has held office
in~the California Socle· ty cf Radiologic
Tee ·-ologi.sts and t h e
of th erican Society of
Radiologic Technologists.
,...-. . --w-. ·-~ ~----... ~ ...
Mondly, July 8, 1968 DAILY PILOT 9
-.. ~
It's been awfully tough an other cars in lmpa1a's field this yw. Yolf can
understand that. What can other dealers say when aomebody wants the
roomiest car? (That'san Impala 4-Door Sedan. According to theAulomof iv.e
New Study1 the bi1 Chevrolet is roomier than any other car in its field.)
What can they aay to questions like 11Where's the ignition warning
buuerj the Hid~A· Way windshield wipersi the Audi-and-dry rocker
paneh; the Magic-Mirror acrylic lacquer finish; the Body by Fisher
quality?" (Only Impala's rot them io its field.)
And what can they say when somebody specifies a speed wamin1
indicator, or light monitoring 1ystem) Or wanb the lowest priced full-sizt
sport coupe, £or instance) (You see, put tine you first keeps us first.)
What else cu they say? Help! ~
Nobody can help.you like your Chevrolet dealer . ....._..,.
-
bl get the biggest
ywar-end acMngs just wMre yau'd expecr IOo
lf~/111~
TO YOU IN HELPING US CELEBRATE
THIS FESTIVE OCCASION
Help us celebrate our 47TH AHNIVER8AllY of aavinga service in Orange county.
You are cordially Invited to alt for:...free charcoal p0rtralt, courte1Y of Anaheim Savings.
Visit any ol our three offices and a renowned artlll will sketch y0ur p0rtralt, or If yOU prefer. atop by IJld watch the artista at work.
Join us for a<:up of COllO!I or punch Ind while you are here", Why not apen a new aavlngo occount or add to y0ur aavlng1, we will be happy to trllllfer yOUr occount,
II you are unable to Yillt ua In P1110n, phone or write Ind we will gladly aend yOU
lnlormatton to Of)en or tranaler y0ur aavlngo account
FREE CHARCOAL PORTRAIT
JULY 1st thru 10th
• I ANAHEIM SAVINGS
ANO LOit-N ABBOCIATION •
ANAHllM I IRIA I HUNTING ION -
tt1W.Uflo01n-. 7101..,_llW. "'tt ........ •ftlll:J.1N2 .IAMl71 LI ..... •
OFFICE HOURS, MONDAY thrv THURSDAY t -4 -FRIDAY 10-6
,.n OONYUnlMT~ "'M&.I tG0.4l1'ioNa
• ..
1
• •
•
I
I
Your Money's Worth
How ro Minimize Tax
~ • ...,... NOle : ..., .. , flt.,..... fief.I and -·1..tes , for wiu, taw ~ ----. I f.ct fll -~ .... :!:' :: :;: : .:"!~ua:.:: := complied in collaboration
•"NY"lll'IL ,.._... eel11111 1.i1t with Leon Gold, chief tax ~ ,.,.,.._, wwlllR9 "' _ .....
.,.. L.-. ....., Ollef tu -' "' "" expert of the Research a-di tMllMt • ~en-. w-.,..._ 111 • .........," .... ," Institute of America.
""" "'IW!r -. MlllllNa Y-Tax ___ .. It •IM Miff. -If, al aD individual,
Of course you a r e ,your rttular income tax for
thorouShJ.y aware that your 1M8 comes to less than S'734
paycheck ml profit. ooon on your 1991 tax return
will bt hit by a 11 percent \mlcb you will Ille next income tu surcharge, to be appli'ed from April 1, 1968 April, you must find your
for indlviduab end trom tuttbarse 1D oUjcial tables
Pr•••tetll lt9 V.U JUI. l, 1991 for corporation• supplied by the Treasury
Bart K. Brown, 30, of and to llllt through June 30, and add it onto your regular
Corona de! Mar has 1969 •·-You ~u1r d •· ..;,_ m•••• Iha! 1 be -.... are .-,, e w use bten appointed vice ·--tile tabl Ibo gh president in charge of surcharge for the mllllons of fl even u •
sporting goods manu.. calendar year individual aepalate mulUplication of
facturing, purchasing taxpayers will actually · be your tax by 7V.. percent for
and industrial relations only 7'11: percent for l~. 1968 might come out to a
of W. J. Voit Rubber BUT YOU'RE the rare ex· few pennies less.
Corp. He joined AMF ceptton lnde<d II you ....., Voit as a research and the fine pointll of the new · -IF YOU ARE amon·c
development depart.. law at thiJ stage and bave the calendar y e a r · in-
ment technical assist-even the vaguest notions dividuals with regular taxes
ant and in 1965 was about bow to minimfze the of f134 or more, when you
transferred to sporting impact of the tu incruse prepare your 19N return,
goods sales as Southern en your pocketbook or casb you must figure out your
California district man-register. sur<harge for youroelf by •aiiigi;ie~ri;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;H;;;er;;•;;;• ;;;lllerol;;;i;;~o;;;r';;';;;ar;;;;;e;;;;;keoily multiplytn,e your resuW" tax • by 71> percent for 'Ill, and
add that Olllo your rel'J]ar
0
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e You mn ftlh imd lld. iD tbi8
'If Trtmua 2-1(1) HP
Mercury wtbol.rdl
e 1980 Jquar Mark IX wilb rtcht hand drift. A nomt
impxt with • lel'Vlct bl.1-
tory a1nce aew!
• Whttt-)'OU can ftDd baby
tumlture to JnP8l'e that
room for the new iarrlval!
e Htte '• a beautifUl Ever-
ette oolld nlnut -···IOOd---
tax.
Al .m illuatratioa, aay you
file a -joint return and show • tu ol "73 lltlore
figuring 1lle aurcharp. A
1urchar&• of 7~ percent.of
'673 would be $611.48. But
1~ce your replar tu: ii
btlow f™, you nillll use 1be
tables. The Treuury table
applylnc to you II no. s
(married ·per .. w er IUl'Vlv·
Inc -fllnf • joint return ). nu shows a
aurchlr1e of '51 applicable
to a ~ of '573, Civing you a
final tax ol sm.
But you say you are a
married man with • regular tax !or 19111 ol $2,500. Your
surcharge fa 7V.. percent of
$2,500 or $117.50. You must
do the multfpl.JinC yourself
beeaUte your tax is at the
f73' or more limit.
-II" YOU ARE a low
bracket lndlvldual taxpayer,
Interest from the 1st of any lllOUlh
on funds recdyed b)' tho lOlb.
Inlcrest from dale of receipt after ·
the 10th.
Inlerest to dale of withdrawal on·
funds left 3 months or longu if
account remains open until quar-
ter's end.
j If11ot:
. T'S TIME TO CHANGE
Transfer your account TODAY!
Easy to do •.. ;ust call or come in.
WHERE you s:ne DOES make a clifferenco.
& ASSET'S OYER A • '-• ._.00 '(I~
MUTUAL SAVINGS
.... a.eato a•••••A,.t•to
CORONA DEL MAR
"1lll>7 E119t Com mpw., • T• ~ Q5.'°10
..
-am-1mllll:-lllll•<oior•••1t11111s••..,,••'"d•P"'1*WA.CJe •mat
yoU are eithtr exempt from
th!s surcharge or you pay
leis tball the full amounL
There Is no surcharce for
slngle lndlvlduals w!l!l fl,000
or less of taxable income;
married couples with $21000
or less; heads of household
with tl,500 or less.
-If you have an income
just -above these amounta, a
special lranlition provlslOll
will prevent a audden tu.
hike ""for' you. Thia provision
graduaDy removes the ex·
emption as your income
rises beyond the exempt
level It applies to a single
taxpayer with a taxable in·
come between $1,000 and
$1800; a married taxpayer
with an income between
fl,lm and $3,760; a head of
household with a taxable in·
come between $1,500 and
$2,780.
You will find these lfmita·
tions an1 the "not.ch" pro-
vision worked Into the of-
ficial tu tables so that you
won't have U> do your own
figurine to arrive 'at your
surchare•.
AS AJtl Wustratioo. say
yoo are slDile and your tax
from the regular optlooal
tax tables -and before the
surcharge -comes to $211.
Your IUl"Charge is in the
new surcharge table 1 (•·
tngle person. other, than
btacl ol h<Nlehold, ml mar·
rled penon llling a seporate
return). 'lb.ii will show a
11U?char&e due of flO lndead
ol tbe $15.83 which would be
due on a straight 7.!fr per·
cent. Your final tu. ia $221.
-If your pay u subject to
withholding, your withheld
amount will generally be in·
creased by roughly 10 per·
cent.
As an illustration, say you
are married, earn $200 a
week and have four ex·
emptions. Your weekl y
wttllh<>ldii>g will b • in·
creued from $23.20 to
$25.60, cutting your take·
home pay by $2.4-0.
MANY OF YOU may bt
under·withheld for 1968 and
have to pay an additional
final tax or get a smaller-
tban..exPected refund when
you file your 1968 return in
1969. The reason is that
while your withholding is in·
creased by about 10 percent,
it applies for only about hell
of 1968. This produces
roughly a 5 percent increase
in taxes prepaid through
withholding this year -or .
2~ poblts less than than 7~
percent surcharge for lhe
year 1968.
-If you are ~ individual
who files • declaration of
t1timated tax, you wfil have
to reflect the surcharge in
your payments or declara-
tions due on or after Sept.
16, 1968.
]f you are basing y~ur
estimate on your prior
year's taxes, you must in·
crease it to reflect the
surcharge in order to avoid
penalty for underpayment of
tax.
Next: More key fUlde1 on
applying the 1urcb1rg:e.
Pll.IR PROMOTED IY ATLANTIC RESEARCH
Earl Newton lilly F. Auvanohl ..
Atlantic Promotes 2
Assistant Managers
Two Harbor Area-men
have been promoted to
a!sistant general
maniagerships with t h e
Missile Systema Division of
Atlantic Research Corp.,
Costa Mesa.
Earl B. Newton of
Newport Beach, formerly
director of the program
management department, is
now assistant c e n e r a l
manager for 1y1tem1
eng{neerlng and manage·
ment, responsible for ad-
min11tration and technical
direction of all division pro-
grams.
A graduate of t b e
Javelin Keeps Pace
With Race
By CAl\L CARSTENSEN
Keeping pace with a well
e s t a b llshed competitoc,
espedally a def e nding
champioo, is no easy assign-
ment ln any area ol sports.
Yet this precl!ely is what
American Motors Corpora·
tioo's new Javelin has ac·
complisbed since going rac·
ing in the 1968 TrMs-
American S e d 1 n Cham·
pionship 1eries.
In the five races since it.t
competitive debut at Sebr·
ing, Fla., in March , J avelin
h81S matched defending:
Trani·Am titlist Mustang in
piling up manufacturer'•
championship point!.
Doting from Sebrlng's 12·
hour endurance run, Javelin
and Musting each have ac·
cumulated 22 points on the
basis of a 9-6+3-2·1· point·
formula for finishes in each
event.
Javelin's racing team, as
does its faotory·supported
competitors, enters two cars
in each Trans·Am race. Yet
only the car highest in the
standings at the finish is
awarded points.
George F o 11 m er , of
Arcadia, 'vho finished se-
cond at the recent Trans·
Am at Brid-gehampton,
N. Y ., and Peter Revson, of
New York City, are the
Havelin team drivers.
' The seGS'Oll Follmer and
Re vson hive placed
'61 JAVELIN -New SST, lint time entrant in Iha sporty cir field tltla year, ho!~ ill own In Trans-American Sedan Champion.ship series. street modal OI
SST comes with wide rally stripe and 343 Typhoon V-1 engine.
. i ,
-·""~I, 1961
-A-
DAILY 'ILOT
Value Brochure
Griswold Controls o f
Cos~ Mesa has published
ill eight-page brochure
deseribing the application ot
a u t o m • t I c now-control
valves in hydronic systems.
For a copy of the
brocburt, contact Griswold
Controls, Box lSXl, Costa
Mesa, 92626, and request
Bulletin F-322 .
Main Speaker
WUllam J . Boylhart, of
Newport Beach, president o(
the Los Angeles hud·
quartered advertising agen-
cy Boylhart, Lovett and
Dean, lnc., acted as co-host
and principal speaker at the
annual c:onftrence of the
Transamerica Advertising
Agl!D(.y Network last week
in San Diego.
Tran same rl ca is an
association of 3 1 in-
dependent agen<:ies •
·---. .._.----·... -·..... -;.-,· .,.....
'
' Monday, July 8, 1968 DAILY l'ILOT 11
Monday's Closing Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange LiSt
•
•
\
---------------------
--
!,I Nll.V !Jl.#f,_ ________ M_ood_11_. Ju_~_a._1_'168_
•
.Orange . Coast Daily Pilot Readers: Special INTRODUCTORY OFFER brings you as much as ..
'
I I I • I I
I
I
iC Pays in addition to an other coverage you have-Including Medicare
iC Pap up to $10;000.00 tax free cash for
each hospital stay
iC Pays an cash direct to you (not to doctor or hospital)
it Pays you cash benefits that Increase each year ... to a
maximum of $130.00 -A-WEEK ... at no extra cost to you!
iC No age limit-no medical examination required
SPECIAL LOW RATES! EXAMINE POLICY IN YOUR OWN HOME-MONEY BACK IF NOT 100% SATISFIED!
ACT NOW-YOUR ENROLLMENT FORM MUST BE MAILED BY MIDNIGHT, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, OR IT CANNOT BE ACCEPTED
On• out of two lam.ilia will have tomeane in the hospital tbit
year! It could bl JOU -or 90m• beloved member el JOQr famil1
tomorrow •• , next week , , • neJ1t month. Sad to 1ay, ~ few
famlliee hav• anJWh•re near enourh covera!fe to meet toda7'a
10arlnr ho1pital coata. TheH co1t1 have tripled In j111t a few 1hort
year1. They an eJ1pected to double arain In the few JUH ahead.
Stop for a momenL Think how mueh a long et.ay In th• hospital
will cost you or a loved one. How would you ev•r pay fOT costly,
but ne«IUrJ, X-ra~ doctor blll1, drup and medlcin11! What
would )'OU do with your paJ check 1topped, but ll•lnr upen1e1
1tlll rolq on the ••me•• ever? The umt nnL, phone, food, all
th• day-tcH:la7 expen1t1 that n•nr atop.
What 11 the averare bread-.rinner lo dot W• belieH •• hav•
the an1wer ln the famou1 Pn1ldentlal Extra Cub Plan that
••• ,..,. yow $1 oo.qo • w••• fftx·frH
ca•lt wfte• you 90 fo tit• ltosplfal.
Mow, Pnsidrt1tial'1 economy plan •Mhln7oato•iortldl proo
teetloa. Mail the Enrollment Form. We will 1end poa the aetual
poliCJ' to look over at home. No ru1h. No agent will eal1 er _phon•
you. Take 16 daJ• to decide. Show U.. poUcy to a friend, a family
actriMr ftr•t. You 1oH nothinr if JOU don't want th1 pollCJ'. Bat
if JOll fl. want It. you're entitled lo Pl't:lidential'a IJM<-ial low
n.tn de«rlbed below. So low, 7oa'll fond 700 ret protedicn at a ~that'• jult a fraction et what JO'Q'd expect to paJ.
Your co.,. .. ,..,,,, IMNDM •cit year -
et .. extra eOlf to youl
Your ea1h 1-neftta autolnatlcaD7 rlM JUI' after 7111'· You ret
ptact ofndnd so JOU don't have to worry about rillnr costa. .Your
protection automatleallJ inat .... '8.00 a ,..i: each ,..ar. Tbe
ftnt 7ear roa ret 1100.00 a week. Yoo pt $108.00 a wMk In the
Mcond Jear. $106.00 a week in th• Udrd year. Sl09.00 a ftek In
the fourth 1ear. BJ the•lev•nth ,..,., :rour poJJey will be worth a
full '130.00 o we.le in benefit. payment.I ••• at no lftertue In
~oat to JOU I Thi• ,..nerou1 cub reaen• protection wDI belong to
you for u lonr ••JOU keep the poJkJ', Toa can .. Uaat Joar
in1uranea will bt worth much _,.than th. pnMDt ''tao. nloe'"
of tbe poliCJ. CatalnJ7, our increa.Md pa7J1lenta to J'OQ wilJ help
kap paet with rllin&' e°'tl-and best Gf all,.,
• , • JM lecreoll"I .. ,,.,,,,come te ,. .. .,_no utnt ..r.
'l'ot1 lfllf ,., tire nplM low '••tldo.,lol _,_,
What othn Plan protecta )'OU Ilk• thl1 todaJ1 WW eUttr Plan
k•P• protctinr JOU apimt rllinr livinf colt& In U. JUn
ahead wtthoat lncreulnr JOUr pnmluma And tht.t'• not all.
Thi• IJ*ial Prntdtntial Extra Calh Plan (#HP l!L-1067),,.
nAVS up to s10.ooo.oo CASH"" --., r 1' I lllnen. mrt1n1 the veryflm day In the hoepl:tal.
ftAVS $100.00 A Wl:EJ< CASH-tt ,... ,_ o fuD· r,, I time r'llltered num whtn you coma home
from the hospital-up W S() WMkL PAYS $1,000.00 EXTRA CASH for --.
ftAVS Up lo $2,000.00 CASH lof OC<i-.01 .. of r1' I Nmbl or .,.,..;lht,
PAYS $100.00 A WEEK CASH ... ""' "-""· when you to to tfl• hoapital, n1um1n1 l>Ofh
husblnd .1nd wife htve been ~led In the
family Pfan With Mstemity.
PAYS Upto'5.ooo.oo_,..,, .. _, ..........
ptttl for HJ' IOCidlnt or illnns wtten You .,.,
enrolted In the f1mlly Phln.
ftAVS )IOU ceah benefits that tncrea.. •1eh 191r , r",, I to t "1axlmum of $130.()().-A-WEEK ot"no' n1n COit to )'OU ' 0
•
NO ... nm1t-no medical •x•min•ticn ,equirecr
IF YOU ARE 65 OR OVER
YOU WILL COWCT
IN ADDITION TO MEDICARE
Wh7 are 1mart fotQ over 85 now bast.tnln1 t.o protect
themeelvea with the Pn1ld•ntial Extra Ca1h Plan in additioit to what Medicare •ill do for them T
ETm thourh Med lcan i1 a l'feat boon to lotka onr
65, it will not, of eour11, P•J •ll the bill.I that quickly
pile op ae a ruult of Illness or accid1nt.
a.,ardleu el your ... ,,..., •1111 "''"
addlflonaf health profectlo•.
• We han dft1pad tllla plan u t.h1 iMJ)OrlllJtt adclitiott
to what roa Neein from MedlcaN -or anJ other
beatth llllurance :rou mar ban. R.mem.ber, all ebecka
wftl ht 11nt dlreetl7 to you (not to th• doctor or ho1-
plt1I), lo aiTe JOU that .. extra" help jolt when JOU
netd It rnoaL Uae the tu-free cub any way JOU 11t ftL
And Joa will be 1lad. to know Ut.e ehecb will be w,
Ofte1l ln. addition to what JOU rectin from Medicare
Pruidotlal P•JI FOii $70.00 a ,..k ••• EVEN Foti
100 WEEKS if ...... '71 Yn ca .....nte u MllllA-u
11 ,IJ00.00 /rw lfllCA-ilbte•• w irlivrf •"-" A-o1pitalU1dl
• • • , • .,. yov $ J 00.00 a wee Ir CASH
tor • re9f1fered ,..,... •f home.
Yea. ift •ddltlon to the 1100.00 weeklJ checks we Mnd you du rinr
)'oar boap!W 1t1y, we pay you an enn 1100.00 a week if the.
doctor says you need a full-time re(i1tar1d nurse to take c1r1
of 1ou at home.
How eomtortlns It 11 to know that-after four ata7 In the hos-»lta!, it J011'n beeu there tln"" .,. •r lftOre, you can rt.tum
Mme to NCUperata and Jtt not be a bardea to 7our loffd ona. Y .. , U rour doctor a)'9 JOU. need a ftf{1tered nurae full tlm1
within 6 da79 afttr 7ot1 eom• homt, ••'ll Hnd JOU check• for
llDO.DO • t11Nk-for u Joq u 70U ftHd thli na?M-enn ap to
10 ••tb. It'• Ilk• haTjq a n11ne of •&,000.00 cub to drn on
when J'W nffd IL Tbue Mnelltt clto 1norean aaeb ,...r bJ" fS.00 a
WMk. Another exeepUcmal featun poa hen with Prald•tlal •••
••• ,,,.,, you $rOO.OO • wHfc co11t mot•rnlty .. ...,It,
Ordinal"J hoapltal ln1vanee may take can of part et :rour o-
pen1e1 whm you 10 to the ho1pit&I to have a baby. But what
policy can JOU think tJf that rivet rou ca1h to buJ all the thincs
you need for the new t.byT !low, if both hu1band and wife an
tnmrtd in the wonderfuJ Familv Pio" Witl Motn"Ritr for the
mW. period of the prepaney, JO'Q ret extra cash lo ue an7 .. J JOU wanL U a P"trn•ncy, childbirth or nen mltearrlap
puta you in the boapit&I for one day, ftve day1, 10 d•JS-u l01tg
., K1u11orv-yoa ret 1100.00 a week for evel"J daJ of your
conftnmMnt, •P to 100 week1.
All flt••• adderl c••h ••••flf1.
Yu, la addition to $100.00 a week fOT holpita!iaation or
$100.00 a week maternity btneftt.s and $100.00 a week for a rtr·
i.tered none at home .•• you pt all this:
A4W ~ llntlb: $1.000.00 cuh to your family If death omin
wiU.in 90 daJS from anJ accidental injury. Think of how lwldJ
the euh can be In thaw of lou. It can tlke cars of burial tJ1pen1H
without bvdeninr your loved oneL
AiMetl talil "9db UptoS2,000.00uah for actidtntal loeeofllmbl
er fJtllrht. when tha Jou oceun anJt,izne wiUt.in 90 dan of UMi ~eeidtaL The Joa el a limb or ""9icht it a tanible thinr. Hoth-
mg_ an replaee the Joa, lnit a Cheek for fl,000.00 or SZ,000.00
will brine pat.r peace of mind durinr the period of adju~L
A--.._ a.-nthr Pomlb Pl'", •• ud """ ellildren wt.11 be eoTehd too I Praldmtial pa79 up to S&,000.00 ur
-,_-· ... lo Ille ...........• t .. tomllt, ._,,,.... diclW, or aw .Un il1nea or biJVJ I 'Y .. J01I w:lb ncelft '6(1.00 caah. ~ atttt ,...Ir;-for ..... , .. lDO ... u . it '"' T f'J.
We,,.., your ,..emlwm1 •h• Y" are,.., •W•
A1 a lpetial t'lln1idtratlon to yw -if JOU are h°'pitalised ju1t s
•eeks or more, all pmniumt that eonM due while you an 1tlll In
UCENCED BY THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA --------'ii';'·'''t'ii''l·'i#·*'·'i''';*M'*';'·'i''''_:_ _______ _ collPl.m ANO MAIL WITH TOUR flllST THE p ESI MOliTll'S P1tM1u1. 1 tNCLOSt $ ir= R DENTIAl LIFE INSURAllCE CO. OF AMERICA .............. _,...,,,_ . ~ 11401 ROOSEVELT BLVD, PHllADEIPHIA, PA. 19154.
Appli cati on lo: The Presiden lial Uft lnJUronce Com111ny ol Amtricl, Cllluao, Ill, f0< The Presldent~I Hospilol-llurso Pi.ti.
NAME (Plea .. Print) ==~·----;r.;;r------=r.i=.-----...,.,,,-----M11$ f l,.t MiHft lnllltl li1l
ADDRESS ___________ --.==.-:-----------
s 1>'fft or ltD • CITY _______________ :STATE ______ ,ZIP ___ _
DATE OF BIRTli __ =::---=-----A'GE _____ SEX MaleO fomalo D Monlh Dir V11r
OCCUPATION;::-:----:--:---:----..,.--.----------------
1 also lmoby 'l'l!il for covora11 for tho membe11 of my bmlly llsltd below: (00 NOT include """' tllot _, -J P1use list additional dependents on sepll'lte Plfl.
NAME (Please Print RELATIONSHIP .
I
IRT>t
SEX Month ear AGE
2
3
4
5 ------01-lnctlvlduoif•)OnlJ""• Oll-•---11-OIH' ____ _,
Oa JIG cany otlltr i-•~• willl lllis Company! Pf "Yn" plmo Qst policy -.s.1 __________ _
To thobtslolmyw.tedl'andbor•l ntillltr 1 .... "" po11011 listed abM,hM _mu..t..,......,i.,H11 orlft-·
.,.. •I undoma.d tliat I, and.,, perso n listed abM, win bt ..,.red andtr lllls P~iiy.for any lojlryor-llwtllilllbt-
lort a. £fftclift Diii of Ille P~lcy but not unlil It ms betn In '°"'for a COllli""°"' period ot • 121 Jlllll; m tMt tlllt Ney
111111 not bt In force 111111 tho !Heclive Dalo -Iii 1111 Polley ~
·'-----~----'~~~fOl~~~lllltft .. ~~._ .. _,_,.. ________ ... __
I
tll• hospital after thi1 pttiod wil! be paid by Pnsidential. And
JOUr protection contirrues a1 if you were payinr the premiums
1our1elfl Then if you lea•tthe hoapital and muat return for the
lame condition before JOll have re1cmed full norm1J aclivitie1
for 90 cla)'I, Presidential will again PAY ANY P RE MIUMS
WHILE YOU ARE IN THE HOSPITAL-TO A MA XIMUM
OF 100 WEEKS pe r contlnement! Thi1 means you pay no pre-
mium1, yet your full protection remains In force -vo" coilt1ct up
to ~!O.OOD.00 frw t!tU'h c01t,fiMTM11tl
1HfS UMITID fNAOUMJNJ OflfA fNDS SOON
Amazlq Low •at•• -Money.aack Guaronfff
Yoa can now hav• 1our ftnt month'• protection at the 1pecial low ratet listtd below! But you muat act immfdia.tt1l11. Your re-
quu t for tbl1 wonderful Income Protection Plan mu1t be mailed
on the conYenient !orm below NOT LATER THAN MIDNIGHT
of tb1 dat. In the Enrollment Form.
Thi1 midnight u piration boor oonMt b• e%teJtdt1d. If 1our
enrollment form i1 malled later. it ~1111ot b• 4Ce•pted.
rite .. ore flte ONLY excfu1lo1t1I
Your Pre1identiat po.licy coven 1very conceivable ki_nd bt 1iek-
nen or accident except condition• cau1ed by war or •n1 act of
war ; mental diaorden; inU>xicantl and narcotic s; pregnancy
u cept u provided onder the maternity benefit provi1ion; and
e.1:pen&es resultinr from any 1iclcne11 or injury you had before
the El!'ective Date of your policy ••• during the ft r1t 2 year1 only.
Thia la1t item is a real help if you alrcadv haYe a health prob-
lem. If you are aick be/ore you take out thi1 policy, you will etill
be cover1d !or that condition after the policy ha1 been in effect
for 2 yeara. Of courae, meanwhile eYery n•w condition i• i"'mti-
diat.111 covued.
How can flteM kr90Jn low rotes buy to much?
You can buy ordinary ln1urance at any time and pay the rerular
rat.ell, if you wish. But Preeidentlal .can now provide you and
your entire family 'With 1100.00 a week tu-free lncom1 Protec-
tion at 1pecia) low rates only ~ause we enroll a laree number
of people at on• time -dinet b11 mo.ill Thi1 hlrhl1 efficient
"Mau Enrollment" method cat.a cotta to the bone -•fld th1 eo.v· iltge ... e ,., • .,. to row/
Male your clecfdon corefully
Tlilnk how costl7 a ho1piti.I conftnement will be. lmagin• paying
tor tboae indi1pen1abl1 x·ray1, doctor bill1, medieine1 and druga
that are not covered bJ your present in1uranee.
Would JOU be abl• to atrord the quiet and privaey of a privatt
t'GODI and a privat. nurse, 1hould you ao deaire? Or a telephone
to keep in touch with loved one1 ? Or the r1nt&l of a TV nt to help
pa11 th• lonelJ bour1T Who would pay your bills that keep on
cominr in at bom1? Many folk1 hava lo1t their life 1avinp, their
car1, even th1ir bome1 tryjnr to meet 1uch expensea. And no one
knowa whoM turn it will be next.
Wiiy you mtllt act hf ore fM deadline dote shown 111
fhe e1t1ollme11t form -fulf • few day1 from fodll'f
WhJ mu1t JOU act btfon the deadline? Because, a1 mentioned
above, we mUlt. receive rour Enrollment Form tM 1a1l!4' time o.e
.U t.W otMn in order lo put on to you the 1avinp that come from proceuing manJ,1 J>0hcie1 ot one t i)tU,
We mail JOU the pohq u IOOn ae Wf receive the Enrollment
Form. Wben the policJ auive1, oamine It in the pflvacJof 7ou r
own home. Take all the time JOU need. It'• a Tel'J thort document,
and 7_ou'll be pleuantl11urpriaed to discoYer there i1 NO FINE
PRINT. Then -1how it, if yov Wh, to 1omeott.e 11ov tnut. Per.
hapa JODr laWJlr, accountant. or banker. Sett.er 1till -1Mw ii
Ca ~r own iM#rcmu .'"•K .. , .wn t.\ovg.\ M mo.11 "'11 wU b1
to0rkiJf.,V fn-not.\er mltlra~ cowtpan11I If he it a personal
friend. be bu rour best. inter.all in mind. So JOU ean btlleYe
1'im whn be tcllt JOU ti.re i1 no better bargain •••ileble an7-
wMN -at cn7 price I
MHey IMHlc 1wranr.....,n ane )'N cllo1t .. yOlllr mind
Enn after J011 mail rour Enrollment Form below •.. aven after
J'Oll a: amine the policJ la JOUr own home and talk it over "1th
anyone Jon wUb •.. even after all thl•Joo are 1till freti to retum
the policJ within 15 day1 •"-d e~ p tilti:t)' rov paid will 6e ,..,_
/t1.w.did ct 01tt1. There will be no obhgation whatever.
Meanwhile, all during the 15 da71 you are making up Joor
mind-JOu'll be protected by Sl00.00-A-WEEK e.xtra ca1b benl<'
ftta jutt a• it JOU had alrudJ ea id "yu." That'• r ieht, you will be
fully eovered all thi1 time for an1 accident which puta you In the
ho9J>ital, evm if 1ou ftn allJ decide to return the policy.
Honnr, after 1ou've IMn the P9liq fot 1ouraelf, JOU will
MD"elJ aeree that thl1 11 a trem1ndo\i1 Yalce and you'll want to
centlnu• thl• SlOO.OO·A·WEEK extra ca1h protection under tha
Plan that'• be•t for )'OU .
,LAN 1-INDIVfDUAl(S) ONLY ,LAN:
lf 7011 went to cover yourself -or JOl11'3elf and one or more
adult. dependent. (incl udinc your 1pou11) - then thl1 i1 th1
Plan for JOU. Each person mu st be 18 or over, and 1hall pay (per
person) tll• rate applicabl• to his or her q't.
TlltSE All TOUI LOW um .................. ,., . .. ... ...... ,... ....... ..
Are at !nntll"'911l Monthly .._...lum
11-39 •••• , •.• only SJ.9!5
4<M9 •••••••• -~ 14.9!5
!5().,,, .•••••• «"Y $5.15
'°'74 .••••••• onf)' '6.9!5
75 and owr •.• on!y Sl.9S
SAVE SVEN MOJtE (up to 20%1) bJ payinc at querterly, h"lf
)'eat or rt•rlJ takf,•nt with policJ.
l'l.AN N-FAMILY ,LAN WIJH MAJflNIJ'I'
This plan 11 for tlle faml)J that 11 1tlll p wlnc. To tlM total cf
the raont.hJ1 pmniam for tM adults to bl h11ured, ju1t add S&.
Thia entitle& JtQ to all mat.emit.)' bm1fttt. It ai.o toTen all 7011r UIJftaniad, deptnd1nt children bttw.en the act• of I month•
and and•r lt ,...,. who Un at•Hme. Futur. cl•pendtnt childnn
will bf covered wMn Ul•1 reach I mon\h1 o! are and wi\hout &nJ
additional charp.
,LAN aJ -FAMILY '1AN WIFHOUT MAJIANIJ'I'
Thia plan ia f• tile familJ that i• .. lonpr rrowlnc. To the
total of the monthlJ prttnlum for the advli. to be ln1u red, Jut
add $1. TltJ1 enen all Jour 11nmerried, ct.pendent children be-
tfttll the..-of I mont.b.1 and and•r 19 run who liT• at hen&.
~ "'-...... .......,. """*-.,._ .... (ftet ,.., ............ et ~111 ... ._ -._ '"""""' ,.. wtll _.,_ lo ,.y. • .. • 1 11 ••.;---..,....,.. ,,_ ..... .,..... ......... o..c.
,._ ....... "'""'9cL ,._ ,.tt a.ft --M $Mt!M Mc.vto llf ,..... IWl.c:h ., "" .-. ,.. ............. -°' ........ "'""' ..... .--w •'Y If ....,_ ......... W a•lbR""-·•· ....... Ml ... llOlicM .... ~ .,..,........... -,,,._. __ .. __
TDRll n&Cl.OUll Attllllelbl (N••._..ri wm caJL) Cet
,_,. .-..u..& '-..tftt. • ..0 ••r wh.11. ,...r tnt-Lla'• ..,.._I -U>U. fll• JO'll dtocea. lxm bn.,.. --.. _,. Vs ~111 t • ,_,...., wlD bt ~ht,..
mnt 8Cl rtPl ..... 9 t•1Mr, -.m 1ft •frf'f aa_ettWat,t or .... , ""TOO un .. ..., ~ •t--. t'OCIC. nat'• •'b ....... ,.. .. Id...., -.. ,.,.. .,.U.:tn.r ....... ....
THESE 22 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Tell ye11 liow ,,,,/d•nllol'1 COST 0' 11VING INCOMf JI•
rlACEMINT HEALTH AND ACCJOINT rtA.N ''"• ,..., ,,..
11r•teffio" yeu n••tl -of oma1/n1lr low toltl
1. How ftNCh wm ,.,,. po11c:y P'1 me whln I 10 to the holpltaf? Thi f1,1H 1mounll You 1•1 ptld SIOO.OO·A·W!EK c11h ,,,.ry slnlle
wook. Md It 1!1rt1 th• .-ery first ••r you •r• In th• llo1pll1I. (II
)'Oii •r• ..... IS, JVU ••• ptJd $10.00 1 WH k. '" t ddltlan lo •nr Medlee,. btntfJt1 )'QI.I rK elv..)
2. WIN I Ille ll'kl If I em holpltallzld for IHI thtn e fvll WMll?
'fou eerta1nly will ••• ro11"'l•11 1111 whether rou 1rt In th• l'IOl-
plt11 for 11 1llort 1 tlmt 11 one dtr .•. or 11 lon1 1 tl1T11 11 1 week, monlll, y11r or more.
s. Don this "'" P•t mt from the flrlt dly of holpltlllutloft? ¥11! You •K tlve lull c11h btntlill ol J I00.00 1 week 1t1rtll'lf: lht very flrlt day you 1nl1• !ht ho1pll1I, Tnt cov1r111 be•l"'
when w1 •Ktlve your fin.I premium -th1t 11 the d•r you tr.
""''"d for 1nr 1ccid1nt1. Slckn111 COYtrllO 11ta:ln1 30 dtp
1rl1r th• 1ff 1e1fv1 0111 of lh1 POiiey.
4. How mucll do I rec.iv. tOf' 1 hcl1twld NurM 1t Hom1?
5100.00.A·WEEK for up to $5,000.00 1ft1r you h1v1 bHn ho.,
pltati1td lor 3 d1y1 or more, 111d your d«.tor his you •mplor •
futt·tlmt rt1!11efld nurse within 5 d•rs 1fl•r you ••1v1 th• ho•· pil1t. Ttn 1111'$ from now JI wl11 h1Yt 1ner11std to $130.00 1 week In bon1rl!1 ... 11 no t lllft cost to )'DUI
•• An lfw9 '"' Kddlntal dellh benlfltlf ,. ••. Sl,000.00 C•lh 11 p1ld to your ••l•I• when dttlh OCCUrll
1nr !Im• within 90 d1y• of '" 1cc!d1nt.
&. WIM I M p&ld edrt If 1 loN 1 Rmb or l)'ftl&hll
VH. Pr11ld1n1111 P1r1 $1,000.00 fo r complete 1ccldtnt1! 1011 ol
Ont hind or one foot or •ll hl of ono ey•; $2,000.00 for lo11 of
both h1nd1 or bolh ft U or 1l1hl or both •Y•• , , • when dllmtm•
btrrntnl occu,. •nrtlme within 90 dtys of tht eccldtnl.
7. How mud! l6o we raceWt for pncn1ncles!
It )'OU h1v1 lh• ftmltr P'Jt n With M1 t1mlty, )'OU r1c1lv1 $1 00.00.A·WEEK lor etch 11rt1n1ncy, childbloth or ml1t1rrl111
lh•t ro1ull1 In ho1pl111 conflnt mt nt when both hutbt nd i nd wile •ro t ntolltd under thl1 pl1n for lh• 1ntlro peritld or pro1n1ncy.
8. 1uPllOM I em paid btMftl:I for lllJ 1kknn1 or Kddtnt. Whit MPf*'ll Ir I em IClln llolpitlllnd for the NfM condition?
Don't war'/, Vou 1tlll coll.ct Sl00.00.A·WEEK far 1 !0!11 of 100 •••kt. An If you ht v• 1lre1dr ro1um1d full normll 1e1Jvltl1s for Ju st 90 d1)11, 11'1 con1k11rod t new canfinemont, t nd you ct n cor.
lecl far'" tddltlon11 100 weeks. Of course, t nr""' condition 11 covered lmmodl1t1Jr lar 1 full JOO w11ks •
t. How ma, I UN I~ "'""' p1ym1nt1t Vou mor u10 lhtm In t nr w1y you wlll1 -lar ho1pll1I 1nd doctor blll~. rtnl, food, hou11tiald •~P1n111, er t nyttiin1 1111, Thl1 11 t ntor11r up lo you.
10. ""' I epp!J If I 1m _, 151
Y11, )'OU mty. rolks 1ny 111 lrll Wtlcom1 to t POl1-lhtrt It 110
•&• lfmlll Mombors over 6~ t ro pt ld $70.00 1 ;.Hk plus 111 Mlldl· Clrt btntllll,
11. C1n I collect from !"rw.lffnt111 tvtn If I UIT)' ou. 1nsuranci1r
0 1 courat. TMt pltn will p1y reu In t ddlllon to wholtYtt )'DU m•y rtct lvt !tom t ny othtt POllcftt, lncluclln1 Medlt t•t lor folkl evtr 65.
l.t. Wtly do I n.d !hit l'Te&ldtntlal l'\en In Mdltlon tD '"1 .._
• hotpltll tnd hultll lntur1roc:1r •
Whllt hot Oll•I Collt ht v• trlplod In •tctnl )'ttrt, Ytry ,..,. peapl• h1v1 lrlpled their ln1urane1. The ch1nc1s 1r1 cnt In ltYtn ll'itl
)'DU will need mon1y to t1ko c1 .. ol 111 your othtr t•PtntH, II
w1U •• your ho•plltl bills. 'l'our Prt1ld1ntl1I chtckt ire 1u..ried
to you br •Ir mi ll lo uso •• you ••• Ill,
13. Wh.t beMfHI do m, •tl&lbll, d..,c!•nt cblldttn ,.i:l
If )'DU choo11 1 r1mlly Type P'l1n, your dep.nd1nt 1!11lbl1 ch!l-
dttn, •&•• 3 monlht lo undtr 19 y11rs, would rtc•lvt Ml'4 of 111 the c1sh btn1fll1 of the Pltn (••t1udln1 Walvtt ef Premium),
14. Mn I Md Muni dependent chlldrlfl to ft'IJ pollty 1hr It la ,....,.,
,. .. , lftdttd, II you fltv• 11\t FAMILY P'LAN WITH MAnltNITY
Just !IO'lllr u• when thtr 1r• J rN>flth• old 111.:1 thty .. 111 b• ~
lrtd wilhou1 •vldenco ot ln1vrtbltlty i nd Wl!houl t ny tdditlontl cht r&L
15. Wll "'1 l"M~-Od ..... CMalled becluM I hlYI too fftlll)' delma?
No, t1..rlnll1l1 notl Pr11idt nll1I 1 u1rant111 ntvtr to c1nctl r,"' prottcllon '-<:1u11 1011 hlJYI too m1n1 cl1lm1 er bff.1u11 v Id·
v1ncff •••· Wt 1110 1u•••nl•• n1v1r 10 relu11 10 ren1w reur pollcy unttst !ht premium It not ptld btlO•• !ht t nd ef the J I•
"' 1r•C• period, er unr .. , r1now11 11 decUntd on 111 policits
•f th I type '" )'DUr •~II•• 11111. (Of cou"'· If dtcopllon Is Utl'd
Ill maid,,. tpplk.t!loft, lho policy mt r bt ln1lltctlv1.)
11. w 11 ft'IJ t•tw M ......,., n I rrow older or H 1 ti.w too m1 .... cltlmt? .. ,
No m•tt•r how m1ny c!11mt you htvt . or r•r•rd!e11 el how 1en1 )'DU kttP your policy, your r1!1 will 11m1ln !ht ••mt 11 It w11 !or rour •&•when you 1ppll1d. Prtsld1ntl1I 1u1,.ntttl nt vtr 10 t dJusl Ibis ••t• unlo11 tho '"'' t r• 1dju1Ud en 11! pollcltt vi lh11 type Jn )"OUr enllrt 11110.
17. Wl'llt "ltOt °'"""' b7 thl• po/Icy?
Tiit vnl)' condition• !!01 covered 1rw lllott c1ustd ~ mHitil dis• Otdoni; lnto•lc1nt1 t nd n1rcotlc1: t•pen111 "1ull1n1 from i ny
1kkn1t1 or '"jury )'OU h1d btforo lh• poller Eflt Cllvt 0111 {dur· ln1 !ht fi rst y11,. onlr): I t! el w1r. E ... El'IYTHINQ ELSE 1$ CDVER ED-lrtcludln1 P<•&n•ncy wh•n both hu1b1nd 111d wllo
h1v1 bMn t nrell.-1111 lht rAMILY Pl.AN WIT H MATEl'I NtTY Tor lh• •ntlrt period of P,.&n•rter.
11. Whit ,,. the ,_.uw.m.nt. fair mtmbltVllp In .,.. If the l'TftkhntiM l'ltn1r
You mu11 !!01 h1vo ltffn ,.fu11d eny httllh. ho1plt1t or I/ft lni ur. •net ; tlld, lo ~uttllp durlnn thl• 1n10Hmon1 Ptriod wou muu tflnill btlort tr1lclnJcM. of Ille dill In the tov11ctn. '
It. Wl'IJ It thla °"" IOOd tor a llmltN time only?
8ec1vt1, br tnroTHna 111rtt n11mbtr ol 111opl1 II the u m1 lln'lt
undt,..,llh\a. pooc111lns t nd poller l11u1nc1 c.a11.1 c1n bl ktiri
•I • mlnlmum-•f'ld ... un "'' '""" t1Yl"f1 on to you .
20 ....... h ............ """-.... ~ .. )olni111 ~ -... 1t11t1 etlnlllment ptriodr
Y11, tl>tr11 ctr11lnr, '"· A v1ry lmpor11111 one It lhtl you 1110 11(1{
nffd lo complete • r11ul1r 1pptlc1Uen -\v•t your brlel Po•m In
th& lower ltlt h1nd cor,..r of thl1 p111. A 10. dvrln1 thl1 enroll·
mtnt Pt~ titer_• '" ftO Olhtt •.ciulrem1nt1 tor •lli lbl!lt _
trtf no wthtlr1 er rwtttklht• •ndor1•m1nt1 c1n .,. put19" rourPOllc)'I
21. CM 99IW mtmhn ef ft'IJ fem!IJ ti-I actvmttp et lhit 1-•11 _, ~
~:i:,,. '°j'f" ~ c1n mftt ll'lo ,_ '"ultomon!• 1i1ttd ufldor
'
DAILY PILOT Newpor·t Harbor .
Yoar Hometown
VOL i1, NO. '163, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
COMPUTER DEMONSTRATORS -Jim March (left) types instruc-
tions to computer as Bob Davis reads next step off of flow chart.
Boys are volunteer lab assistants for_ summer school computer
mathematics course at Lincoln Intermediate School, Corona del Mar.
Telephone connects terminal to central computer.
Ele~troni~ Age
Top Students Use Computers
Balding theore_licians are not the on-
ly ones able to use a computer.
Eleven and twelve year olds are
being introduced to the electronic
marvel in a summer course given by
Newport-Mesa Unified School Districl.
Top mabhematlcs students from
throughout Newport Beach and Costa
N ewpo1't Store
Figm·ine Taken
She was no soonel' hired, thran
somebody else snatdhed her iaiw.ay.
Store JI13D.ager Donald E. Bridges
complained to Newrport Beach police
that a $100 figurine o£ an attractive
female w:as stolen from tihe front of his
shop at 110 W. Coast Highway over ttie
weekend.
1be .almost life·sized figurine was
holding a placard "1hich r e a d .
"Enter." .Sbe was dressed ill a short
ski.rt and yachting cap.
Bridges .siaid his cut-out model
vanished after someone undid two
steel binding sblap& holding her to con-
crete stanchions.
Stack Market
NEW YORK (AP) -In a vi orous
rally after a four-day lay-oU, the stock
market made increasing progress late
this afternoon. Trading was active.
(Quotations Pages 10-11 ).
Bobbie Brooks, up a fraction, was
boosted to the top of the most-active
ll$t by a block of 227,500 shares.
Held as Hostage
Mesa are·brought together at Lincoln
Intermediate School, Corona del Mar,
where today they used the computer
to verify .answers to problems.
This mathematics elite is of students
wbo have only completed fifth, sixth
or seventh grade.
They never get to see the computer,
located in Los Angeles, but it talks to
them through a "magic typewriter."
The students ring up the computer
in Los Angeles by telephone and then
teletype instructions to it. The com·
puter searches its memory for the
correct problem solving procedure
and types back the answer.
The computer course is paid for by
federal grant, part of the $72,762 space
science learning program. The grant,
which runs through next Jan. 31 , is
renewable for another two years if
federal funds remain available.
Eighth grade s c i e n c e and
mathematics students at Lincoln used
the computer during the spring.
The Newport.Mesa District, through
its fed eral grant. is one of many users
buying time <ln the central computer.
Cost is about $300 per month.
Paul McGil.licuddy, who teaches the
summer course, says in another 10 or
12 years he believes school districts
will own their own computers. It will
be used for instruction in the daytime
and payroll and other accounting pro·
oedures at night, he predicts.
He said students normally tire of
sheer computation but using the com-
puter they get a tremendous un-
derstanding ()( a f«m.Ula by plugging
in various quantities for variables aod
getting instant answers.
"We now have a waiting list for
classes next semester," he said. "Lab
classes are being scheduled during
lundl periods."
EDITION Dally Paper
NEWPORT BEACH, CA[IFO RNIA MONDAY, JULY 8, '1968 :TEN CENTS
Chase Ends • Ill Crash
Cyclist Leads.Police Through 5 Cities •
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
ot ,,.. DllllJ 1'1191 ... "
A sailor who apparently feared get-
ting a traffic citation in Costa Mesa
led. police on a siren·screaming chase
through five cities Sunday at nearly
100 miles per hour before wrecking his
motorcycle"ln Orange.
Ralph M. Herron, 23, of Ille USS
Canberra, based in San Diego, was
booked into Orange County Jail on a
variety of traffic charges after being
Newpq,rt's
Lifeguard
Eyes Mexico
By BRUCE BENSON
Of 1'111 O•Mr l'lltl Sl•ff
Newport Beach city councilmen
toniiht may ask their chiet lifeguard
to pick up his beach towel and slip off
to Mexico for a week.
The Mexican seacoast town of
Altata is booming with weekend
tourists, and they need someone to
help tflem set up a lifeguard service.
Bob Reed, Newport's Marine Safety
Director, is being eyed for the job.
The request for Reed's services came
from Newport Beach physician Raul
Rodriguez, a member of the California
Partners f<lr the Alliance for Pro-
gress.
The Partners are business and pro-
fessional men who work privately on
projects that complement government
development programs. · · ~'•
Rodriguez .and the PµQters have
asked Reed to help set up some t:lnd of
modem llleguard program. It -Id
include tlle teaching of first-aid and
resuscitative methods.
Newport Beach City Manager
Harvey L. Hudburt tonight will
recommend to councilmen that Reed
be granted .a wee-k's leave with pay !or
the project.
Alta.ta is a town of 2 or 3,000 whose
\Veekend tourist population soars to as
many as 15,000 in Ule summer season.
The great majority of t h e
beachgoers are Me,Ucan tourists,
Rodriguez said. The nearest doctor is
located in the Sinaloa state capital of
Cualican, some 30 miles aw-ay.
Reed told the DAILY PILOT he is
interested in the challenge.
"I would hope that eventually, we
could have Ulem send up some of their
personnel, at 1Jheir expense of course,
for training here with our department.
Two or three a year would give them a
good nucleus of personnel," he said.
Rodriguez said he sought out Reed's
services after meeting him a'bout a
year ago, and visiting Newport Beach
lifeguard headqu.-s.
"It was on the strength of that,
knowing how well organized they ..are,
that we contacted. him," Rodriguez
said.
CDM SWIMMER
SETS NEW MARK
Toni Hewitt ()(Corona del Mar shat·
tered her American iecord for the 200-
meter butterfly with a 2:22.0 clocking
over the weekend at the Santa Clara
International swim meel
Miss Hewitt was one second off the
world standard held by Ada Kok of
Holland and lowered her U.S. mark by
1.6 seconds. She scored a double vie· •
to1y in the presUgiou1 international af-
fair, com.Jog back Sunday to win the
100 Dy with a llfetime best of 1:05.8.
See sports, page 21, for complete
details.
.
1reated ror minor injuries.
Costa Mesa Officer Matt Colletl lost
the suspect in homeward-bound beach
traffc on the Newport Freeway when
his engine .apparently blew a valve
during the pursuit.
California Highway Patrol Officer
Gerald King was almost matching
speeds with the fleeing sailor, but was
diverted in the opposite direction by
confusing rad.Jo traffic describing the
chase.
Legion Lease
Officer Collett said the chase began
about 5 p.m., when he saw Herron
swerve onto the dirt shoulder of
Newport Boulevard at 21st Street and
pass three cars on the right.
Flipping on the red lights and siren.
Officer Collett gunned the engine ol
the new patrol car, at which time Her-
ron looked over his shoulder and sped
orr, northbound on the b<luJevard.
Handicapped by traffic while Herron
was able to weave in, out and around
Newport Council
To Study Action
An Amru'i~an Legion lease on
baykont property 'and the much
disoossed tidelands fee proposal are
expected to be sent to special com-
mittees at tonight's Newport Beach
City Council session.·
Legionnaires of Post 291 at 215 I5ttl
St. are seeking renewal from the city
for their waterfront property at 215
15th St.
Councilmen ~e expected to defer
acti911 and refer the matter to a newly
fomled Goals and Objectives Com-
mittee.
Mayor Doreen M311Shall noted that
the lease "~-"l'!<ta\<~· ~"""
and thert!'s no urgency about making
a decision."
Also on the agenda is tihe proposed
tidelands fee plan. A specially ap·
pointed City Council committee ap-
pointed to study 1he matter will .seek
council permission to continue their
probe.
Councilman Lindsley Par.6ons, a
member of the tidelands committee,
ha& only recently returned Crom an ex-
tended business le,ave.
The committee is expected to confer
sometime soon with marine. gasoline
operators and others p<>tenUally af-
fected by a levy on tidelands users.
Other tidelands committee members
,,,_ Ed Hirth.--Sholtoil:
Mesa Motorcycle Victim
Succumbs to lnjµries
Funeral a.rrangements were pending
today for a Costa Mesa motorcycli&t,
17, wllo died ol head Jnjuri<ls after col-
liding with a oar in Newport Beach
F·rld:ay night.
A passenger on the motor'cycle
luckily escaped witti only a cut finger
and injured knee, a-ccording to a Hoag
Memorial Hospital spokesman.
The dead youth was identified as
Thomas Sturges Blackman, son o{ Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Blackman, 212
\Vellesley Lane, Costa Mesa.
Police said tbe teen-iager was riding
t~ cycle wes.tbound on E. Coe.st
Highway about 9:30 p.m. 'Whell he at·
tempted to make a left turn onto Jam·
boree Road.
He collided with a car driven by Un·
da Jean Delaney, 21, of NarcUsus
Ave., Newport Beach.
The woman driveT and a baby in her
car were treated for minor injuries at.
· Hoag and released to ttleir OOme far
an observation period, the hospital
said.
Police gaid the woman was not cited.
The motorcycle passenger who
escaped witil <lnly a cut was identified
as Robert E. Wagner, 17, of 2001
Kewamee Drive. He also was treated
and. released from Hoag.
A family spokesman said the dead
youth would have been a senior this
fall at Costa Mesa High School. The
boy was admltted to Hoag with crit-
ical head injwies, and died the next
evening.
Showers Keep
Visitors Away
DIES IN CYCLE CRASH
Me111 Student Thom111 Blackm11n
Holiday Death
Figm·es . Drop
By United Presa latf!rnatlonal
At least 616 persons died in traffic
accident& during the I o n g In-
dependence Day weekend, but the toll
fell car below preholiday estimates of
700 1A> 800 fatalities. calllornia le<! the
nation with 45 traffic deaths.
the slower cars. the patrolman finally
lost !Jerron at U1e Dyer Road offramp,
but units spotted along the freeway
ahead where ready to pick up tbe
chase.
The patrol car's engine had also ap-
parently blown a valve during the high
speed maneuvering.
California Highway Patrol officer
King said he picked up Herron's trail
at 17th Street in Santa Ana, but the
(See CHASE, Page 2)
Red Nuclear
Advances
Pose Threat
WASHINGTON (UPI) -"Growing
Soviet strategic nuclear forces'' po1e
the biggest threat to the United States.
But this country could survive a first
strike and destroy Soviet cities and in·
dustrial centers.
On the oUter hand, if the United
States struck the first blow, lt could
not knock out sufficient missiles and
planes to prevent large.scale retalia~
ti on.
That is the assessment of Gen.
Earle G. Wheeler, chairman o! the
Joint Chiefs of Sta!I, as given to the
Senate Preparedness Investigating
Subcommittee in April and releued.,
in heavily censo red form, during the
weekend.
Summing up this country's posture,
Wheeler said:" •·we have the military
capabiUty l or any level al warfare
which, if appli..S lul\Y, eould todoy
destroy any nation as a viable &Ocie·
ty.''
He said the joint chiefs "do not con~
sider that the deliberate initiation of
the ,strategic nuclear attack by the
Soviets is likely; howe\ler, the
po.ssibiltly of nuclear war through
escalation <lr miscalculation cannot· be
dlmtissed."
"Further," Wheeler said. 1'tbe
United States cannot safely discount
the poS6ibility that Soviet leaders
might launch a pre.emptive strike if
they consider themselves inextricably
involved in a major confrontation over
critical objectives."
Discussing what might h&ppen if the
United States was hit first with nuclear
weapons, the general said: "We could
not prevent the Soviets from launching
their own missiles and getting at least
a -certain number of t6eir aircraft <let
the fields and en route to the United
States.
"We have, of course, the same and
even a greater capability to retaJia(e
in the event of a Soviet first strike. So
we .are talking here in tenns of
.relative damage, 1 think ...
"One of the reasons that I have sup-
ported the antiballistic missile as
strongly as I have is in order to low~r
the levels <lf damage against the
United States, fDCed. with this situa-
tion, where it is literally imPoSsible to
buy sufficient for<:es at the present
level of l;be arms to destroy the enemy
&trike capability before it is launched.
agaiMt the United States."
Public debate over the advisability
or beginning an AnM system -
estimated to cost upwards of 340
million depending on the kind built -
has resulted in a tentative de<:ision to
proceed.
Oraage
Weather
Marine Kidnaps Baby Girl
Showers and overcast skies kept the
weebod be.ac.b crowd to 1 sparse
98.000 -1•, Newport Be a ch
lifeguards report..S today.
No rescues were lokged. either day
as a flat surf lapped the shores.
The 102-hour holiday period, which
began at 6 p.m. local time Wednesday,
ended oUlclally last midnight but pro·
cessing of reporta o! fatalities slowed
the holiday death count.
· Although the LllllpuUan rain
storm over tbe weekend !ailed
to dampen tbe 1plrft1 ot beach
invasionary force there ts still
possibility early morning sprin-
kle •ccompl..Died by sunny after-
noons. H1ghl today near 75.
MARYSVILLE, Calif. (UPI) -A
two·year-e>ld gtrl wa5 Jbducted at gun-
point from her mother's arms today
by a man who llid ht would use the
child •• a holtage to aid Jllso·escape
from the United States.
Sheriff Gary Miller of Yuba CA>unty
1ald an aU point! bulletin bas been
blued for Thomas F. Scofield, a 22-
1ear-old AWOL Marine.
Miller Nici Scofield and hiJ 20-year-
old wUe, LGnttl, tidnaped litOe Vicki
Lynn Wert after telling her mother,
Ellen Murie Wet~ "We nt<d the baby
tor '1" conduct out of the countr)."
The sheriff said Mrs. West knew
Scofield and identified him as the kid·
naper.
Mrs. West sa1d SCofield tokl her that
he killed .a man ln San Francisco. But
San Francisco police said they had no
rep-0rt of such a killing.
There were reports that Scofield
may be headed for C4nada but Miller
said: "We don't know where be might
be."
ScoCield was reported armed with a
rute and .22-callber pistol and wac
considered dan&erous.
California Highway Patrol head·
quarttrs in Sacramento said SCOfiel~
'
was wanted for armed robbtry; 'k.ld·
naping and auto lhelL The patrol said
CHP 1tation1 throughout Northern
CalUornla bad been alerted but that no
roaclblocu wen erected.
A patrol rpolce1man sold Scolltld
also took fl from the purse of Vicki's • mothtr.
The p8lr W&I rcpDNd trav.Jlng In I
blue 11166 Dodge Dort twO<loor oedan
with a 1Uplly -.«ed r!Jht front
!en<ltt and a missing 1aaollne cap. .
Scofield W&J des<rlbod u about 5-11,
brown h1lrtd and with the name
"Tom" tattooed on his left 1hou.ldtr ..
The air temperature t'06e to about 66
degrees both days, equaling the w•rm
66~egree ocean temperature. The
crowd bre•kdown was an estimated
40,000 people Saturday, an<! 48,000 Sun-
day.
Burton Replaced
LONDON (UPI) -Richard Burton,
who got into •n ar1Ument with film
director Tony Richardson and walked
oU die att \)! the film "i:,&ugbter In the
Darlr," 1flll be repl•ctd in tho pro-
duction, Woodlall Fllm Productions
. ~· sald hlday.
-
One of the worst holiday 1mashups
occurred Sunday night as millions of
motori1t! across the nation hurried
home from their long weekend. SIJI
persons died In .a bead-on coWslon
near Winfield, Mo., when one· auto 'at-
tempted to pass a line of can on 111 In·
clli>e.
A National Safety c 0 u n cl I
spokesman, althouib encouraged by a
casullty toll below last year's, pointed
out !bat !&It year's Fourth of July holi-
day doath 1A>ll ol 732 set a record for
ltlJI summer hotiday.
INSIDE TODAY
Thtrt'1 hardtu an 11 t h I 11 g
wrong about TM Odd Ccniple',
curr1no production at tM Lo-
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e1111Wt111i11Mmt II ~ • It ·~ •i,1 ,,_M 11 "'"C:•"' ..... • .......... ,, ....... "
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'
•
t DAILY I'll.OT M-, July 8, 1968
4th · Party · Ruled Out
But McCarthy CouLl Support Some~ne El.se·:
WASHINGTON (AP) -sen. Eugene
J. M<Carlhy ..,. ·flatly be would not
bteom.-an Jpdependent presidential condldote II be IDies the Democ!\ltie
namlnatloft -... that he oould sup-
port. a fourth party drJve by someone
elH.
McCarthy allo Indicated SUnday he
may obandoo bis annoan<ed hopes of
going to Paris to learn fln~hlnd from
North Vielnl.mue diplomMI the pro-
. apecta for settlement or the Vletn1m
war.
"If I thought that my going was
going to Interrupt or lnlerfere with
CUIT'ent peace negotiationa," be 1aid,
"I wouldn't go."
The Minnesota senator again refus·
ed to say he could support Vice Presi-
dent Hµbert H. Humphrey u the
DemocraUc preJJdent1aL nominee and
aaid be could support a fourth paity
drive under specltlc condttions.
Such support would be possible, he
said, U the Independent ticket "was
1ubetantial, had good leadenhlp and
was presenting the right choice to the
peop1'r, ...i If -ol Ibo .... two parties wu presentlng W'hat I thought
was a choice that anywhert from a
third to a · haH of the people of thh
eountry want to make in ltea."
But McCarthy said with no reserva·
tlons he would not be the candidate
heading such a ticket. Earlier he had
said be would not "lead" a fourth par·
ty effort.
HumphreY,, meanwhile, said he
\\-'OUld support McCarthy if the senatx>r
became the Democratic presidential
nominee. But the vice president said
he believes he and Republican Richard
M. Nixon will be the candidate. on the
November ballot.
"If it's Mr. McCarthy, if I have the
choice between Mr. McCarthy and Mr.
Nixon," Humphrey said, "there isn't
any doubt· that I will support Mr.
McCarthy."
McCarthy was interviewed. on NBC's
"Meet the Pre1r" and Humphrey on
ABC's "Juuea and A.Mwers."
Republican Nixon MUd he will have
the edge in November because the
Democratic eoaventlon "will IO the
-ol the booses" and HlllJl!llv'ey will
be nominated "over 1he objeclion of a
nlajority 'of the Del1lOCl'<lll< voten."
Nixon mid 1he Democra4:1< majority
sentiment was shown in heavy
primary votes for McCartby and the
late Sen. Robert I". Kennedy -and
said be, Nixon, outpolled all the
Democretl in the prinl'aries. ·
'lbs. former Republicaa vice ..-es!·
dent made the comments in a Miami
Herrald interview.
In otlher political developments:
-New York Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller, GOP pre1idential bidder,
•lid the Jam.on admin.J1tretioo.'s
"Lack of a national transportation
policy is a driag on the ec0nomy and
an aggravation to everyone. As presi-
dent I would deal with tbia mess as a
matter of the highest urgency."
-'lhlrd perty pr<sldeotlal candidate
George C. Wallace Nid it now appears
he will be oo the November ballot in
every state except Ohio, 6Dd 8lld be
will continue to fight to get <m Qllo's
ballot.
Thieu Asks Johnson Meet
Vietnam Chief Wants to Find Out What's Going On I
SAIGON (UPI) -President Nguyen
Van Thieu of South Vietnam today an-
nounced he wanta: to meet President
JohMOD aomewbere in the Padfic in
the next few weeks.
Thieu · said be w1nta: to talk v.·lth
Johnson about military matters &nd
"problems relating to the peace ex-
plorations and jolnt defense efforts in
the present struggle."
He gave no deta.lls but SOuth Viet·
namese leaders have not diJ(Uisec!
their skepticism about the value of the
U.S.-North Vietnamese t.al.la in Paris,
sessions aimed at cooling down the
war enough to permit a peace con-
ference.
Thieu said in a communique he
wanta: to meet Jobmon for-"a few
Police Jail 15
After Youths
Report B~rings
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -. Fifteen
-were Jn police CUllocly today
after four youttis told police they were
held prisoner at the Black· Congress
Hall in 90uth central Los Angeles and
beaten by members of a militant black
power group.
Officers were taken to the hall by
Jerva Hmis, who said a bullet fired
from the building missed his car u be
fled the Dieeting. .
Three /ouths who Hid they bad
been Ml prlsooer fc," two bolll"I by
members of the orgadlatioa beaded
by black milltant ROD Karenea litre
found beaten. Tyrone Wa&blngtoil., 18,
Felix Pullum, 19, and Gregory Sewell ,
19, were treated and released at Mom·
inglide Hospital. Hanis, who allo was
beMiln, said be would see a private
physjclao.
The four said members of the sect
had pigtolwhiPl>ed t!Jem and used them
as Karate "dllmmies."
Fifteen suspects, one a juvenile,
were arrested on IUSpicion of assault
with a deadly ftapon.
Restaurant Robbed
The gods of fortune were smiling on
one man and frowning on another over
the weekend when a burglar tore open
the rear door of Mel's Chioese
restaurant at 1505 Mesa Verde Drive
East but took nothing, owner Kam F.
Yee told Costa Mesa police.
DAILY PILOT
"!!v-i"'-!"°"~· .. •1ett 111 .,........
Cl • -:"lo:! .. :::·:=::.. )IMto = ...... Y'*' ..... • J!!!4 ;:, ....... -:; 'liiii,: ......... ..... -1-21sm4J.....i rs ,.,. _,. SAfASd'; ~1itii~&5 pc; 1 ..... . wo.• C*' -... ., ........ INdto Ciiis ... II? Lffi W _.. 111r 11.n _.,,, .,, _. ... ,_... .... ,~.13 ....... i .
~
daya" to discuss "important and
urgent matters."
Thieu also said he is postponing a
two-weelt: visit to the United 'States he
had planned for later this month.
The communique 58.id the threat of
£re1h Communist attacks on Saigon
and . other polntl in South -Vietnam
made the U.S. visit inadvisable now.
In a weekend interview with Uniter!
Presa International, Vice Presiden:
Nguyen Cao Ky said he believes the
Communists will launch the major at·
t.ack on the capital within the nest tw<1
n1onths.
Ky predicted the batUe would be
won againa;t what he called int.ens~
guerrilla wie .... of snipers and one and
two man bands lodged throughout
Saigon.
Thieu's communique said: "There
are many important.problems which
necessitate a direct exchange of views
between the national leaders, and can·
not suffer a long delay, espedally prcr
blems relatlng to the peace ex·
plorations and joint defense efforts in
the ,present struggle.''
The Saigon regime has been less
lhan avid in its support for Am~rican
riegotiators going into preliminary
peace talks with North Vietnamese Of·
fici als in Paris., Ky said in the
weekend interview that the main con-
dition Saigon insist& upon in any set-
tleinent is a total North Vietnamese
withdrawal from South Vietnam. He
predicted any agreement would take a
long, long time.
207 Art Works Chosen
For All State -Exhibit
Three art judges are breathing a lot
easier this week.
From 850 works of art submitted by
Rites Planned
For Daily Pilot
Circulation Man
' A mlUtary funeral service is
scheduled Tbunday for Alvin E. Hem-mer, 48, a DMLY PILOT circulation
department district manager who was
fatally stricken Sunday with a heart
attack.
The retired U. S. Army sergeant
first class, of 2039 Continental Ave ..
Costa Meaa, died about 7 p.m. at Hoag
Memorial Hospital, Newport Beach.
The Rev. Graham Smith. of Vista
Community Church, Vista. will preside
at the 10:30 a.m . rites at Westminster
Memorial Park 'lb\D'Sday.
Mr. Hemmer spent 2314 years in U1~
army. in ·the medical aupply field. and
had been employed by the DAILY
PILOT for more than two years, work·
ing In the West Newport area.
Mr. Hemmer leaves his wife
Virginia, a son Allen, 21, who la also a
DAILY PILOT dlrtrict manager, a
daughter Kay Francll, 8, hlJ mother.
Mrs. Marie Hemmer, of Vista. and
sisters Uly M. Benner, of Vista and
Louile Hitchcock, of San Marcos.
The Hemmer family traveled widely
during Mr. Hemmer's military c~reer, ·
in which he spent duty in Japan, Iran,
Formo1a and the Philippine Islands as
well 11 in the United State•.
He was wounded in South Pacific
combat during World War II and held
the Purple Heart, as well a1 many
other awards and citations.
2 Youths Find
l..A>st Propeller
The seven-foot long wooden p-o-
pelltt of a Costa Meea resident was
returned to it.I owner to4r.ly after
Newport llffdl poUce found two teen-
age boy• toting It ~ the &lreet.
The propeller disappeared over the
Fourth of July from a supmnarket
aft.tr Gunnar Haug, of 361 17th St..
aatd he }eft it outtide while he went in·
side to make a purchase.
He returned five mkJutes later, and
found the •100 propell<r gone, he told
police.
OIBcen UM! next clay Hid !My llW
hro youths IUU1n11he prop llonc the
boulevanl, beaded in tilt 1eoeral
direcUon ot Haua'1 re&idence.
They said !hey hid re"lf llbout the
milllnl prop In the DAILY PILOT,
aDCl wtre wlnfinl: their way to Gun·
nar'1 to return it.
Police dlsmlned the youths, and
delivered the property themaelve1.
artists all over California, they had
the formidable task of choosing 2'17 to
be displayed at the 14th Annual All·
California Art ExhibLt at the Legilna
Beach Art AsaociaUon Gallery. •
The All-Callfornla sholf, sponsored
jointly by the Festival of Arts and the
Laguna Beach Art Association, \vi ll
run concurrenUy with the Festival,
from July 12 through August 25.
The three Jurors for tbil major art
event were Jason Wong, direct.or of
the Long Beach Museum of Art; Adele
Bednarz, a La Cienega gallery owner;
and Los Angeles artist Richard
Haines.
An acrylic "EOS" won a '500
purchase award for Lewis Beken o(
Los Angeles; the $350 purchase award
went to Ronald Pusich of Hollywood
for hi! acrylic "Mary"; and the $200
purchase award went to Jay Maddox
of Anaheim for his untiUed sculpture
of resin and chrome.
Honorable mention awards of $50
apiece went to Lester Henry of
Norwalk for his ceramic "Growth";
Robert Partin of Orange for his oil
"Voyage"; and Wlnifred W. Smith of
Newport Beach for her acrylic "4
Squares in a Surface."
The Gallery, 307 Cliff Drive, is open
from noon to 10 p.m. Admission is SO
cents for adults and 2.5 cents for
student.I with I.D. cards. There is no
charge for children U accompanied by
an adult.
13 UCI Profs
Get Promotions
Thirteen UC Irvine professors have
been promoted to higher status for the
1968-69 school :year.
Promotions a r e determined by
fellow faculty members.
Advanced from .associate professor
to full professor are Caspar 'V.
Barnes, electrioal engineering; James
J. Yeh, mathematics; Gordon L.
Shaw, j>bysics, and Lewis A. Froman,
political 1clence.
Moved up from assiltant t o
anoclate professor are O.vid Isaacs,
electrical engineering; Peter S.
Odegard, music; Lauri D. Thrupp,
medicine; Calvin S. McLaughlin, Clif·
ford A. Woolfolk and Daniel L. Wulff,
molecular a.ad cell biology; Stanley M.
Mun1at. pblloaophy: Myron Bander,
physics, and Norman M. Weinberger,
psychobiology.
Crash Kills Six
WINFIELD, Mo. (UPI) -At least
alx peno111 were killed Sunday night
ln a bead--on collision near bere -when a
car attempted to pa11 a line ol autoS
on a bllll.
Two other persons were ln/ured
seriously in the crub. Pollce 1a d all
the victim• ....., from St. Louil or
nearby IlUnols communlt1es. ~
Policeman Pleads With Distraught Suitor
Twenty·nine-year·old Jerry Ellington held police at
bay 90 minutes Friday in Chicago's Cook County
Hospital, after seizing a gun from the holster of a
policeman' on duty there and threatening to kill
himsell because a girUriend rejected him. Police
Sgt. Jess Valle tried to no avail to get Ellington to
hand over the gun. Police finally ·subdued him by
rolling tear gas canisters into the room.
From Page 1
CHASE • • •
auspect's burly Harley-Davidson bike
was pullirlg away fast.
"I gave pursuit wide open ,
periodically giving my location and a
desCrlption of the suspect," said or.
fleer King.
Herron turned oil the Newport
Freeway onto the Santiago Boulevard
oUramp out O{ King's sight, at which
time a patrol cac officer radioed that
llerron was so uthl?ound.
Thinking he meant southbound on
the freeway, Officer King slowed,
roared through a center aisle opening
and sped 1outh again until hearing a
new broadcast of Herron's location.
Pursuing officers said the Navyman
tried to turn off Santiago Boulevard
onto Taft Avenue at too high a speed
and the big motorcyc le careened off
the roadway, spilling him In the dirt.
Herron -who had clutched a wad of
weekend clothing between his knees
during the chase -was treated for
cuts and brusies at Orange County
Medical Cent.er and booked into jail.
He is charged with excessive speed ..
many unsafe lane changes, and
reckless driving and was issued a CHP
citation for the same oUenses when
Officer Kin g arrived at the scene.
The chase passed through Costa
Mesa, Santa Ana, Tustin , Orange,
Villa Park and back into Orange
again.
Cong to Seek Volunteers
If V.S. Won't Quit War
PARIS (UPI) -The NaUooal
Liberation Front (NLF), polilica:l arm
or t.hc Viet Cong, warned today it will
as}.\ help from international volunteers
if the UnJted States refuses to get out
of Vietnam.
The warning by Le Quang Chanh, of
the NLF's executive committee, wi..s
released in Paris today through North
Vietnamese sources.
On Drug Charge
Pair Arrested
Two 21-year-old men were arrested
on suspicion of marijuana possession
Friday after Laguna Beach police
responded to a complaint that a rifle
\Vas beirig brandished at Cress Street
and Gienneyre.
Police arrested Larry Paul Sturges.
21 . of 1826 Tradewind ·Lane, Ne'o\"-port
Beach, and J ohn Roni Wakula, 21, of
648 Beach St., Costa Mesa.
I~t. Robert McMurray said officers
alleged they found two plastic bags of
marijuana in the pocket of a coat lying
in the men's car and found a .22
calibei' rifie on the back seat.
Quang Chanh delivered the state.
ment in a speech lo the International
Congress of Jurists on Vietnam
meeting in Grenoble Sunday night.
The statement was released as the
North Vietnamese de legation to the
Paris talks on Vietnam called a nev.•s
conference. pr~sumably for more pro·
paganda against the United States.
A North Vietnamese spokesm·an said
at the conference the Cammunilts
have captured four strategic hill! in
the Khe Sanh area and were besieging
r.nother where the North Vietnamese
saJd privately several allied com.
panies and possibly a battalion were
surrounded.
The spokesman listed the captured
hills as 845, 832, 471 a nd 552 and said
hill 589 was encircled. The numbers
are based on the altitude of the hills in
meters above sea level since few if
aiy have names.
Saigon dispatches have reported
U.S. troops holding other hills in the
area including 881 north and 881 sout':1
but military sources said tl!ey never
heard of those mentioned by the Com-
munists and said they serious ly
doubted any could be called "i-1.
portant strategic pos\tions."
The next session of the Paris talks
was licheduled for We~esday.
0
OMEGA
Yoiir Omeao,
Saki &: Service
.A.Qencr
-·--··-ln.n SIH
.. I ftrlefy ·-
-Mlssl1t1 DlanlCll!ds
Rtpl~. frtm
.._ ...
IU1'11on11Q
'"'"" $111,. -4111•~
....... tla.. Jowolry Doall"lnt
A Spocl1ltyl
•
Now 2 Great Stores To Se"e You.
HAUOI SHOf'PI... HUNT1M•TOM CINTR
C:INTll llACJt I IDINOU
lJ• HAllOI ILQ. HUNTtM•TON llACH C~A MIU 141-9411 (91·11111
Open Mon. Thurt., fr(, Tiii 9 p.m.
I
-... -ll'Ol'll .,, ---
, .....
TO
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SUD•rr
, I
•
Mesa Your Hometown
vo t.:. ~r. NO. ~-61, r SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
COMPUTER DEMONSTRATORS -Jim March (left) types instruc-
tions to computer as-Bob Davis reads nex~ step off of fl.ow chart.
Boys are volunteer lab assistants for summer school computer
mathematics.course at Lincoln Intermediate School, Corona del Mar.
Telephone connects terminal to ceotr~ compu,ter.
Ele~troni~ Age
·.Top Students Us e Computers
Balding theoreticians are not the on-
ly ones able to use a computer.
E'leven and twelve year olds are
being introduced to the electronic
marvel in a summer course given by
Newport-Mesa Unified School District.
Top mathematic s students from
throughout Newport Beach and Costa
Holiday Deatl1
Fig1u·es D1·op
By United Press Jnternatlooal
At least 616 persons died in traffic
accide nts during the 1 o n g In-
dependence Day weekend, but the toll
fell far below preholiday estimates of
700 to 800 fatalities. California.led the
nation with 45 traffic deaths.
The 102-hour holiday period, which
began at 6 p.m. local time Wednesday,
ended officially last midnight bu't pro-
cessing of reports of fatalities slowed
the holiday death count.
One of the worst holiday smashups
occurred Sunday night as millions of
motorists across the nation hurried
home !rom their long wt!ekend. Six
persons died in a bead-on collision
neaf Winfield, Mo., when one auto at-
tempted to pass a line ol cars on an in·
cline.
A National Safety Co u n c i 1
spokesman, although encouraged by a
casualty toll below last year's. pointed
out that last year's Fourth of July holi-
day death toll of 732 set a record for
any summer holiday. ·
Held as _Hostage
Mesa 3re brought together at Lincoln
Intermediate School, Corona del Mar,
wh~re today they u.sed the computer
to verify answers to problems.
This mathematics elite is of students
who have only completed fifth, sixth
or seventh grade.
They never get to see the computer.
located in Los Angeles, but it talks to
them through a ''magic typewriter."
The students ring up the computer
in Los Angeles by telephone and then
teletype instructions to it. The com·
puter searches its memory for the
corre<!t problem solving procedure
and types back the answer .
The computer cours.e is paid for by
federal grant, part of the $72,762 space
science learning program. The grant,
which runs through next Jan. 31, is
renewable for another two years if
federal funds remain available.
Eighth grade sci enc e and
mathematics students at Lincoln used
the computer during the spring.
The Newport-Mesa District, through
its federal grant, is one of many users
buying time on the central computer.
Cost is about $300 per month.
Paul McGillicuddy1 who teaches the
summer course. says in another 10 or
12 years he believes school districts
will own their own con1puters. It will
be used for instruction in the daytime
and payroll and other accounting pro-
cedures at night, he predicts.
He said students normally tire ot
sheer computation but using the com-
puter they get a tremendous un-
derstanding of a formula by plugging
in,.yarious qu.antities for variables and
getting instant answers.
"We now have a waiting Ust for
classes next semester," he said. "Lab
classes are being scheduled during
-1uncb periods."
EDl 110N Dally Paper
MONDAY, ~U[Y 8, '1968 • :TEN CENTS
Chase Ends • Ill Crash
Cyclist Leads Police Through 5 ,Cities
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
ot 1111 O.llY P1ilt tMoff
A sailor who apparenUy feared get-
ting a traffic citation in Costa Mesa
led police on a siren-screaming chase
through five cities Sunday at nearly
100 miles per hour before wrecking his
motorcycle in Orange.
Ralph M. Herron, 23, of the USS
Canberra, based in San Diegtt, was
booked into Orange County J ail on a
.variety of traffic charges after being
treated for minor injuries.
Cos~ Mesa Officer Matt Collett ,lost
the suspect in holneward-bound beach
traffc on the Newport Freeway ,when
his engine apparenUy blew a valve
during the pursuit.
California Highway Patrol Officer
Gerald King was almost matching
speeds with the fleeing sailor, but was
diverted in the opposite direction by
confusing radio traffic describing the
chase.
Before Pl.an~rs
Officer Collett said the chase began
about 5 p.m.. when he saw Herron
swerve onto the· dirt shoulder of
Newport Boulevard at 21st Street and
pass three cars on the right.
Flipping on the red lights and sire'n .
Officer Collett gunned the engine of
the new patrol car, at which time Her-
ron look~d over his shoulder and sped
off, northbound on the boulevard.
Handicapped by traffic while Herron
was able to weave in, out and around
Red Nuclear
'Advances
Pose T~hreat
Residents Slate
WASHINGTON (UPI) -"Growing
Soviet strategic nuclear forces" pcv;e
the biggest threat to the United States.
But this country could survive a first
strike and destroy Soviet cities' znd in-
dustrial centers.
Fight on Tract
On the other l1and, if the United
States struck the 'first blow, it could
not knock out sufficient missiles and
planes to prevent large-scale retalia-
tion.
That is the assessment of Gen .
Earle G. \Vheeler, chairman of the
J oint Chiefs of Sta{r,-as given to the
Senate Preparednes·s Investigating
Subcommittee in April and reletsed,
in heavily censored form, during the
weekend,·
Summing up this country's postUre.
\Vheeler said: "We have the military
capatillity for any level of warfare
Vlhich, if applied fully, could today
de~i:roY any nation as a viable socie-
ty."
I-le said the joint chiefs "do not con·
sider that the deliberate initiation of
the strategic nuclear attack by the
SovieUi is likely; however, the
possibiltiy of nuclear war through
escalation or miscalculation cannot be
dismissed."
Hundreds or residents opposed to a
housing development \Yhi ch would bite
into the Mesa Verde Country Club golf
course are expected to turn out for the
Costa ~1esa Planning Commission
meeting tonight.
Chances are slim for anything
however, but a tabling or the zone
change request and tentative tract
-"maps S'tlbmitted by the R. A. \Vatt Co ..
owners of the private club, in the 7:?.p
o'clock session.
Developer Wally Gayner and the
\Vatt firm want to reconsider their
planned 91-lot housing tract, based on
bitter reaction by area homeowners
and advice bv the. city: Planning
Department. •l'l r I '
If the Planning Commission agrees
to table the matter for the present
time, dissidents m ay stilt speak
against the 19.5 acre project If they
wish.
Four primary points of concern are
listed as reason for giving the owners
and the developer a chance to revise
the project in a staff report prepared
to the commission:
-Traffic problems may arise,
specifically on Lanai Drive, which is
proposed for extension along with the
development of one of two clumps of
housing jutting. into the goU course
itself. perhaps carrying as much 500
cars per day.
-Quality. price and lot sizes in the
proposed development are also ques-
tionable, compared to those In the sur-
• rounding area and could have a
deleteriO\IS effect for the entire area.
-Loc8tion of the tract within the
go![ course could slow the pace or
play, create a hazard due to wildly
smacked balls, and could hamper the
flow of the course itself.
-Size of the 6,000-square-foot lots
versus the houses is also too small.
which would leave too little play area
and probably send children marauding
out onto th'\' c;ourse.· t • ~
Flyers sent oiit to ~.000 area homes
by the militant Mesa V e r d e
Homtxiwntrl Al1ociatlon say the
homes w9U1d bring In 273 ·cJ:illdren , to
burden Balearic School, where double
sessions are ·already set. ~
The· property m ust be rezoned from
I & R, institutional and recreational
use, to R-1 , for single family homes.
before any possible development can
take place.
This is the request submitted by
Gayner and the Watt Co., but it is
doubtful the Planning Commission will
take action on a recommendation to
the City Council tonight.
"Further," Wheeler said, "the
United States cannot safely discount
the possibility that Soviet leaders
might launch a pre-emptive strike if
they consider themselves inextricably
involved in a major confrontation over
critical objectives."
Mesa Motorcycle Victim
Discussing what might hc:ppen if the
United States was hit first with nuclear
Succumbs to Injuries
weapons, the general said: ''We could
not prevent the Soviets from launching ~'uneral arrangements were pending
their own nllssiles and getting at least today for a Costa Mesa motorcyclist,
a certain number of their aircraft off 17, who died of head injuries alter col·
the fields and en route to the United lid:ing with a car in Newport Beach
States. Friday night.
"We have, of course, the same and A passenger on the motorcycle
even a greate~ cupability to retaliate luckily escaped with only a cut fin·ger
in the event of a Soviet first strike. So and injured knee, according to a Hoag
we are talking here in terms o! ?\.femorial Hospital spokesman.
relative damage, 1 think .. , The dead youth was identified as
"One o! the reasons that 1 have sup· Thomas Sturgc:. Blackm·an, son of Mr.
ported the antiballistic ·mis~ile as and Mr:;. Wayne Bl~kman, 212
strongly as J have Js in order to low~r \Ve:lesJey Lane, Cost.a Mesa.
the levels of damage against the Police said U1e teoo..ager was riding
United States, f&iced with'this situa-the cycle westbound on E. Coe&t
lion, where it is literally impoosible to Highway a'bout 9:30 p.m • .men be at.
buy sufficient forces at the present tempted to make a left turn onto Jam-level of the arms to destroy the enemy
strike capability before it is launched boree Road.
against the United States." He collided witih a car driven by Lin-
Public de~OV,U._tbe".adv.isabilitf·-·-da Jean Delaney, 21 , of Narcissus
of . beginning an ABM system -Ave., Newport Beach.
es~ated to .cost upwm:ds of. 340 The woman driver and a baby in her
million depe~g on the kind ~~tlt -<.w were treated for minor injuries at
has resulted tn a tentaUve dec1s1on to d 1 ed t ~ · home f proceed. Hoag art re eas o w..,lf or
an observation period, the hospital
said.
Police said the woman was not cited.
DIES IN CYCLE CRASH
Mesa Student Thom11 Blec:kmen
the slower cars, the patrolman finally .
lost H~rron at tl1e Dyer Road offramp,
but units spotted along the freeway
ahead where reifdy-to pick up the
chase.
The patrol car's engine had. also ap-
parently blown a valve during the bigb
speed maneuvering.
California Highway Patrol officer
King said he picked up Herron's trail
at 17th Street in Santa Ana, but the
(See CHASE, Pogo 2)
Police Await
Test Results
Iii Mesa Death
Results of laboratory tests on
evidence in the murder case involving
the wife 9f Costa Mesa City Coun-
cilman George A. Tucker should be in
police hands sometime this week.
In the meanUme, Mrs. Irene M.
Tucker , 37, of 1642 Minorca Drive, is
in the Orange County Me dical Center
psychiatric ward for· examination by
two state mental health experts.
J udge William Speirs last Friday ap-
pointed the psychiatrists. one from
Fairview and one from Metropolitan
state hospitals, to examine Mrs.
Tucker and report their findings July
22 in Superior Court.
Mrs. Tucker iS accused o{ the knife
slaying of Mrs. Harriett Westphal, 68,
or 1646. Minorca Drive, after an ap.
parent next-door-neighbor incident 10
days ago.
The Orange County Sheriff's Crime
. Lab staff has so far been unable to pin
down identify of the death weapon,
although a tray of kitchen utensils
from the Tucker home - including
butcher knives -has been intrJcately
examined for blood traces.
Pair Arrested
On Drug Charge
Two 21-year·old men were arrested
on suspicion of marijuana possession
Friday after Laguna Beach police
responded to a complaint that a rifle
was being brandished at Cress Street
and Glenneyre.
Police arrested Larry Paul Stu"tge11.
21, or 1826 Tradewind LaJie, Newport
Beach, and John Roni \Yakula, 21, or
648 Beach St., Costa Mesa.
Lt. Robert McMurray said officers
alleged they found two plastic bags of
marijuana in the pocket of a .coat lying
in the men's car and found a .22
caliber rifle on the back seat.
Monitor Satellite
In Assigned Orbit
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Explorer
38, a satellite designed to monitor
mysterious radio signals from space,
now is in its assigned circular orbit
around the earth.
The National Aeronautics and Space
Administration shifted the spacecraft
from its elliptical "tranifer" orbit ear·
ly Sunday. All that remains is to stop
the craft . from spinning so that its
antennas can be extended.
Orange Coas&
Weadaer
M;arine Kidnaps Baby Girl
The motorcycle passenger who
escaped with only a cut was identi!led
as Robert E. Wagner, 17, of 2001
Kewamee Drive. He also was treated
and releaised from Hoag.
A family spokesman said the deQd
youtti would have been a senior this
fall at Costa Mesa High School. The
boy was admitted to Hoag with crit·
ical head lnjwies, and died the next
evening.
CDM SWIMMER
SETS NEW MA RK
Although the LllllpuUan ra in
storm over the weekend failed
to dampen the splrlta of beach
lnvasionary force there is still
possibility early mornJng sprin·
kle accompanied by sunny after·
boons. High! today near 75.
MARYSVILLE, Cslll. (UPI) -A
two-year .. ld girl w•s·abducted at gun.
point from her mother's arms today
by a man who said be would \lie tbo
cblld as a hostage to aid h!o NCape
from the United States.
Sherill Gary Miller ol Yuba County
said an au polntt bulletin has been
issued for Thomas F. Scofield, .a 22-
year .. ld AWOL Marine.
Miller said Scofield and his 2()..ycar-
old wile, Loretta, kidnaped little Vicki
Lynn West after teUlng htr mother,
J<;Hen Murle West. uwe need the baby
/or 1,.Ycooduct out oftlle couotr~;"
The sheriff said Mrs. West kllew
Scofield and identified him as the kld-
n•per.
M .... West said Scofield told her that
he killed a man in San Francisco. But
San Franci!tco Pollce said they had no
repart of such a killing.
There were reports that Scofield
may be headed for Canada but Miller
said: "We don't know where be miaht
be."
Scofield was reported armed with I
rlOe and .22.~aliber pistol aDd was
considered dangerous.
California Jlighway P atrol head-
quarmrs in Sacramento said Scoflel\
"
.. .,. --
was wanted for armed robbery, kld-
naping and auto tbefL Tbe patrol said
CHP stations throughout Northern
Cslllomia had been alerted but that no
roadblockt were erected.
A patrol spokesman said Scofield
also took $2 from the purse of Vicki 's
mother.
The pair wu reported traveling ln a
blue 1965 Dodge Dart two-door 1edan
with a sllgbUy damaged right !root
fender .and a missing gasoline cap.
Scofield was described as about 5-11 ,
brown haired and with the name
"Tom" tattooed on his left shoulder.,
St eele llflll'Jceu
NEW YORK (AP) -In a Vigorous
rally alter a four-day lay-otf. the stock
market made increasing progrfjss late
this afternoon. Ttading was active.
(Quotation• Pages UHi).
Bobbie Brooks, up a fraction. was
boos~ to tbt top or the most-active ~t by a block of 227,500 shares.
Toni Hewitt ot corona del Mar shat-
tered her American record for the 2QO..
meter butterny with a 2:22.0 clocl<1Jlg
over the weekend at the Santa Clara
International lwlm mffl
Miss Hewitt was one second off the
world standard htld by Ada Kok of
Holland and lowered her U.S. mark by
1.6 seconds. She scored a double vie·
tory in the prestigious internatfonal af-
fair, coming back SWld07 to win the
100 fiy with I lJletime best ol 1:05.8.
See 11port.1, page 21, for complete
details.
INSmE TODAY
Thcre11 Ptardlg a"~ t Ja in g
wrong about "l'1lc Odd c .. pl•',
CVM'mt production , at tho Loo
guna Brach Pla(/hOUH, Page JS,
,,
•
'
I DAILV PILOT
. 4th Party Rule'd Out
But MCCarthy Coul.d Support Someone Else
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Eugene
J. McCorillY "'' llatly he would not become u independent presidential
eancUdlte if he k>l;es the Democratic
'!KCDin•tlaa -but that be couJd IUp-
port a fourth party drive by someone
else.
McCarthy also ind.icated Sunday he
may abandoo hll announced hopes of
going to Plril to leam flrlt·hand from
North Vletmmue dlplo-. the pro-
people, and If Del-al the other two
parUes waa t>resenUng what 1 thought
was a choJce that anywhere from a
third to a half of the people of this
country want to make in li68;"
Bltt McCarthy said wjth no reserva-
tions he would not be the candidate
heading such a ticket. Earlier he had
said he would not "lead" a fourth par·
ty eUort.
Democratic eonvenUon "will go the
way ol lhe bosses" and Humphrey will
be nominated "over the objection 0( a
inajority of the Democratic votert."
Nixon Nid lilt 0em...-majority
sentiment was shown In heavy
primary votes for Mceartty and the
late Sen. Robert F, Kennedy -and
said he, Nixon, outpolled all the
Democrats in the primaries.
-spectr for Httlement of the Vietnam
war.
Humphrey, meanwhlle, said he
would support McCarthy if the senator
became the Democratic presidential
nominee. But the vice president said
he believes he and Republican Richard
M. Nixon will be the candidates on the
November ballot
'lbe former · Republican vice ire11·
dent made the comments in a Miemt
Hera.Id interview.
In ot!K!r political developments:
-New York Gov. Nelson A.
,
"U I thought that my going was
going to interrupt or interfere with
curTeo.t peace negotiations," be said,
"I wouldn't go."
The Minnesota senator again refus·
ed to say he could support Vice Presi-
dent Hubert H. Humphrey as the
DemoCratic presidential nonllnee and
aa1d he could support a fourth party
drive under specific conditions.
Such support wou1d ~ possible, he
said. if the independent ticket "was
substantial, had good leadership and
was presenting the right choice to the
"If It's Mr. McC3rthy, if I have the
choice between Mr. McCarthy and Mr.
Nixon," Humphrey said, "there isn't
any doubt that I will support Mr.
McCarthy."
McCarthy was interviewed on NBC's
"Meet the Press" and Humphrey on
~C's "Issues and Answers."
Republican Nixon said he will have
the edge in November because the
Rockefeller, GOP J'fesidenUal bidder,
said the Johmon administration's
"lack of a naUonal transportation
policy is a drag on the economy and
an agg,r.aYation.to everyone. As presi-
dent I would deal with this mess as a
matter of the highest urgency."
-11hird party presidential candid&te
George C. Wallace Yid it now appee.rs
he will be on the November ballot in
every state except Ohio, and eei.d he
will eontinue to fight to get on· Cll.io's
ballot.
Thieu Asks Johnson Meet
Vietnam Chief Wants to Find Out What's Going On
SAIGON (UPI} -President Nguyen
Van Thieu of South Vietnam today an-
nounced he wants to meet President
Johnson somewhere in the Pacific in
the next few weeks .
Thieu said he wants to talk with
Johnson about military matters and
"problems relating to the peace ei:-
plorations and joint defense effort.a in
the present struggle."
He gave no detalls but South Viet-
namese leaders have not disguised
their skepticism about the value of the
U.S.·North Vietnamese talks in Paris,
sessions aimed at cooling down the
war enough to permit a peace con-
ference.
Thieu said in a communique he
wants to meet Johnson for "a few
Wails in Mails
Over Mailing
Of Post Cards
There were wai.ls in the malls at the
Coit.a Meaa ·Civic center today.
One came on one or 200,00> color
postcards purchased by the city and
community groups, to commemorate
Costa Meaa'1 15th C r y 1 ta 1 An·
niversary celebrated the last weekend
in June.
"ThiJ bu 1ot to be the most
rid.iculot11 squandering or our tax
dollars you've thought of yet," wrote
Guy L. Bennett, Of 1180 Atlanta Way,
In a bet.vy, firm band.
The City Council some weeks ago
allocated funds ror ill share of the ap-
proximately '5,000 total !lb, ptlcing a
Sl.800 limit on the eipendlture.
The other beef concerned the Costa
Mesa Golf and Country Club, pictured
prominently on the postcards, which
were malled five-in-a-packet , to 16,000
ctly re1idents.
Norval W. Craig, of 574 J oann St..
which lies adjacent to the course, said
lllnY toll bolll hove -... thr.e windows in one week and asked for
recompense.
Restaurant Robbed
The Codi of fortune were smiling 9n
one man and Crowning on another ove r
the weekend when a burglar lore open
the rear door of Mel's Ch.lne11e
restaurant al 1505 Mesa Verde Drive
East but took nothing, owner Kam F.
Yee told Costa Mesa police.
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days" to discuss -".important and Thieu's communique said: ''There
urgent matters." are many important problems which.
Th.ieu also said he is postponing a 't t two-week visit to the United States he necess1 a e a diresi exchange of views
had planned for later this month. between the national leaders, and can·
The communique said the threat of not suffer a long delay, especially pro-
fresh.. Communist attacks on Saigon blems relating ' to the peace ex·
and other points in South Vietnam plorations and joint defense efforts in
made the U.S. visit inadvisable now. the present struggle."
-rn a weekend interview with United The Saigon regime has been less
Press International, Vice ~resident than avid in its support for American
Nguyen Cao Ky said he believes the ne«otiators going into preliminary
Communists will launch the major at· pea'.ce talks with North. Vietnamese of.
tack on the capital within the nei:t two ficials in Paris. Ky said in the
months. -weekend interview that the main con·
Ky predicted the batUe would be diUon Saigon insists upon in any set-
won against wh.at he called.intense' llement is a total North Vietnamese
guerrilla use of snipen ·and one and withdrawal Crom South Vietnam. !Ie
two man bands lodged throughout predicted any agreement would take a
Saigon. long, long time.
Cong to Seek Volunteers
If U.S. Won't Quit War
PARIS CUP!) Th~ National
Liberation Froot (NLF), political arm
of the Viet Cong, warned today it Will
ask help from international volunteers
if the United State11 refuses to get out
of Vietnam.
The warning by Le Quang Chanh, of
the NLF's executive committee, wi:s
released in Paris today through North
Vietnamese sources.
Riies Planned
For Daily Pilot
Ch·culation Man
A military funeral service is
sch.eduled Thursday for Alvin E. Hem-
mer, 46, a DAILY PILOT circulation
department district manager who was
fatally stricken Sunday with a heart
attack.
The retired U. S. Army sergeant
first class, of 2039 Continental Ave ..
Costa Mesa, died about 7 p.m. at Hoag
Memorial Hospital, Newport Beach.
The Rev. Graham Smith, of Vista
Community Church. Vista, will preside
at the 10:30 a.m. rites at Westminster
Memorial Park Th\D"sday.
Mr. Hemmer spent 23lii years in the
army. In the medical supply field, and
had been employed by the DAILY
PILOT for more than two years, work·
ing in the West Newport area.
Mr. Hemmer leaves his wife
Virginia, a son Allen, 21, who ls also a
DAILY PILOT dllitrlct manager, a
daughter Kay Francis, 8, his mother.
Mrs. Marie Hemmer, of Vista, and
alstera Lily M. Benner, of Vista and
Louise Hitchcock. of San Marcos.
The Hemmer family traveled widely
during Mr. Hemmer's military carter.
in which he spent duty ln Japan, Irar;i ,
Formosa and the Philippine Islands as
well as in the United Statea.
He was wounded in south P1clfic
combat durlng World War II and held
the Purple Heart, as well 11 many
· other awards and citaUons.
School Furniture
Deslroyed in Fire
NEWPORT. TeM. IUPI) -A $1
mJWon warehouse fire destroyed
thouaands of piecM of 1eh.ool f\Jrniture
Sunday and an of!icial said there was
a "posslbWty" that some 1ch0ol open-
lngs acroas the country would be
delayed a.s a result.
Poodle Palace Hit
Quang Ch.anh delivered the state-
ment in a speech to Ute International
Congress of Jurists on Vietnam
meeting in Grenoble Sunday night.
The statement was released as the
North Vietnamese delegation to the
Paris talks on VJe<nam c&l.led a news
cooference, presumably for more pro·
paganda •·a:ainst the United states.
A North Vietnamese spokesman sald
at the coDference the Communists
haw captured four strategic hills in
the Khe Sanh area and were besieging
another where the North Vietnamese
said privately several allied com-
panies and possibly a battalion were
surrounded.
The spokesman listed the captured
hULs as 845, 832, 471 and 552 and said
hill 689 was encircled. 'The numbers
a.re based on the altitude of the hills in
meters abovl Ha level since few if
aiy have names. .-J
Saigon dispatches have reported
U.S. troops holding other hills in the
area including 881 north and 881 sou.~1
but milltary sources satd ttiey never
heard of those mentioned by the Com-
munists and &aid they seriously ~oubted any could be called ''i'I.·
. port.ant strategic positions."
The next session of the Paris talks
was scheduled for Wednesday.
Carlton Stevens
Funeral Slated
Services for Carlton E. Stevens 75
a resident of Gosta Mesa for the Pasi
12 years and native or Orange County
will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday ai
Melrose Abbey, Orange.
Mr. Stevens died at Hoag Memorial
, Hospital Saturday after a lengthy JI.
lness .
He had becm a professional baseball
· ptayer in the Pacific Coast League for
the San Fr1ncl1co Seals and an
employe of the Standard Oil Co .
Survivora include his wife, Martha
of the home. 331 Wake Forest Road,
Costa Mesa ; twon sons, Carlton of
Costa Mesa and Allen; a sister Patty
Coffin and five grandchildren .
Interment will follow at the abbey.
Fullerton Barber
Arrested in Mesa
A Fullerton barber was arrested
early Sunday after police who checked
why be w11 rwnm111nc in the trunk oC
his car at a Costa Mesa bowline .alley
claimed they discovered martJuana
and a CUD in the vehicle. ·
James W. Mee, 21, was &potted
CIUtslde Kona Lanes, at 2899 Harbor
Blvd., and patrolmea chocked to ,.. 1r
the vehicle was his own. due to a larga
A bur1lar who rorced open a Ollnsy number of car bur1l1tie1 In the area.
rear window stole tools aad equlpmtnt The vehicle did belon" to him. said
worth 185 Crom Amour's Poodle offi cers John Stoneback and Fr•nk
Palace, 1540 Newport Blvd., victim Jordan but -they believe -so 'dld a
FoMie J. Arnold told Coste Mesa ..... 38 callbtr nvol•er and two rllarl-
poUce Sunday. Juana clgarett11 found Inside. I
Policeman Pleads With . Distraught Suitor -Twenty-nine-year-old Jerry Ellington held police at
bay 90 minutes Friday in Chicago's Cook County
Hospital, after seizing a gun from the holster of a
policeman on duty there and threatening to kill
himseU because a girUriend rejected him. Police
Sgt. Jess Valle tried to no avail to get Ellington to
hand over the gun. Police finally subdued him by
rolling tear gas canisters into the room.
Fro1n Page l
CHASE •• • •
suspect'& burly Harley-Davidson bike
was pulling away fast.
"I gave pw-sWt wide open ,
periodically giving my location and a
description of the suspect," said Of·
ficer King.
Herron turned off the -Newport
Freeway onto the Santiago Boulev ard
oUramp out o( King's sight, at which
lime a patrol car officer radioed that
Herron was southbound.
Thinking he meant southbound on
the freeway, Officer King slowed,
roared through a center aisle opening
and sped south again until hearing a
new broadcast of Herron's location.
Pursuing officers said the Navyman
tried to turn off Santiago Boulevard
onto Taft Avenue at too h.igh a speed
and the big motorcycle careened off
the roadway, spilling him in the dirt.
Herron -who had clutched a wad of
weekend clothing between his knees
during the chase -was treated for
cuts and brusies .al Orange County
Medical Center and booked into jaU.
He ls charged with excessive 11peed ..
many un.tafe lane changes, and
reckless driving and was issued a CHP
citation for the same offenses when
Officer King arrived at the scene.
The chase passed through Costa
Meu, Santa Ana, Tustin, Orange,
Villa Park and ba~k into Orange
again.
207 Art Works Chosen
For All State Exhibit
Th.ree art judges are breathing a lot
easier this week.
From MO works of .art submitted by
artists all over California, they h.ad
the formidable task of choosing 207 .to
be displayed at the 14th Annual AIJ-
Californla Art Exhibit at the Laguna
Beach Art-Association Gallery.
The All-Calltornla show, sponsored
jointly by the Festival of Arb and the
Laguna Beach Art Association, wilt
run concurrently with the FesUval,
from July 12 through August 25.
The three jUl'ora for thb major art
event were Jason Wong, director of
the Long Beach MuSeum of Art; Adele
Bednarz, a La Cienega gallery owner:
and Los Angeles artist Richard
llalnes.
An acrylic "EOS" won a $500
purchase award for Lewis Beken of
Los Angeles; the '360 purchase award
went to Ronald Pusich of Hollywood
for his acrylic "Mary"; and the $200
purchase award went to Jay Maddox
of Anahelm for his unt!Ued sculpture
of resin and chrome.
Honorable mention awards of $50
apiece went to Lester Henry of
Norwalk for his cenmic "Growth";
Robert Partin of Orange for his oil
"Voyage"; and Winifred \V. Smith ol
Newport Beach for her acrylic "4
Squares In a Surface."
The Gallery, 307 Cliff Drive, ls open
(rom noon to 10 p.m. Admission ii 50
cents for adults and 25 cents for
students v.•ith I.D.'cards. There is no
charge for children if aceompanied by
an adult.
13 UCI Profs
Get Promotions
Thirteen UC Irvine profeasors have
been promoted to higher status for the
1968-69 school year.
Promotions a r e determined by
fellow faculty members.
Advanced from associate professor
to full professor are Caspar \V.
Barnes , electrioal engineering; James
J . Yeh, mathematics; Gordon L.
Shaw, physics, and Lewis A. Froman,
political science.
Moved up from assistant t o
associate professor are DaVid Isaacs
electrical englneeripg: Peter S '.
Odegard, music ; Laurl D. Thrupp
medlclne; Calvin S. McLaughlin, cu1:
~~~e:~1:°:!~~1Ti1oe~~~~~:
Munsat, philosophy; Myron Bander
physics, and Norman M. Weinberger:
psychobiology.
0
OMEGA
Yowr Omega
Sales & Service
Agln<J
fl•• 2 Great Stores To Serve You
MADOI SMOPPIN• HUNTtN•TOM CIN'Ttl
CINTll llACH & IDINMI
lltt MAUOI ILYD. HUMTINITON llACN
COSTA MDA Ma.t41S tfl•llOI
o,on -· Thura., Fri. Tiii ' p.m.
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I
BY
:WILLIAM
REED
Reeds. • •
In the Wind
The Fourth of July is always a
work day around my home because
usually it's an extra day to get
done some of the chores which re-
main from last weekend.
Thursday the work went on as
usual and after a long day of dig-
ging and laying bricks there was
the traditional barbeque and later
the fireworks.
Actually working on this holiday
is a tradition handed down for a
few generations iit the family and
one I detested as a youngster.
Thursday, remembering how I
hated to work on this holiday as
a youngster, I asked the boys if
they knew why we work at home
on Independence Day.
* "It's because this is how we be-
came independent and fre~," my
son George said without hesitation.
George is 10-years"ld. "If the
pioneers and the people who fought
ln the Revolution had not worked
so hard we might not be free and
independent today.''
"Flags-are fine an~ wo~derful,
but it took sweat to build this coun·
try and by working on our home
on the Fourth, we are reminded
that it will take a lot of work in the
future for us to keep our country
free and strong," chimed ~ Steve
who is three years older than
George. .
"Christopher, who at 7 ts n?t t~
interested in working at any tune,
said that he didn't know about all ·-
this country and freedom business,
-but he did know that a fellow could
eat t\vice as much chicken and pie
after working hard all day.·~. As
usual, the girls were busy cooking.
* I've never bothered to explain to
the youngsters why working On our
home is ·a Camily tradition for the
Fourth, but there are some things
I guess you don't need to tell the
youngsters.
It's sort oC as George pointed out,
"If a guy grows up proud oC his
home because he worked to m ake
it nice, he's not afraid to be proud
of his country and is willing to do
what he can to make it better -
every day, not just on a holiday."
Art Workshop
Winners Listed
Children's art WOl'kshop winners
were announced by the \Ye stminster
Recreatioo and Parks Department
recently.
\Yinners !or still life '"ere first
place, Kim Schrieber; second place,
Schriebe and third place, Cynthia
Crouch.
-Sea scape winners were , first place.
Chuck Lubchenko; second place, Toni
Poper, and third place, Joy Encticott.
Black and whites wiMers were, first
place, Ki mSchrieber: second place.
.Jeff Hefley, and third place J oy
Endicott.
A new children's art workshop, co-
sponsored by the Art Association and
the Recreation and Parks department
will_}>egin Jn September.
Pilot Honored
Jack Dupies Me1norial .Fund Se t
A merqorla1 !und baa been establlsb·
ed tor Jack DupJes, Huntlngton Beach
mM who was killed ¥'btra ..a..,Los
Angeles Airways heUcopter he . was
piloting craShed in Paramount last
May 22. All 23 aboard were killed.
Also a Jack Duples Sportsmanship
Award will be given to a graduating
12-year-old Li.ttle Leaguer . w b o
displays the best spartsmaD6hlp and
desire to play the game.
The winnioj: boy's name, his team
name and year will be inscribed on a
perpetual trophy. The Little. Leaguer
will allo receive a small plaque
Mr. Dupies was vice-president of the
Ocean Vlew Uttle League of which his
son John, ll is a. member. It was said
his interest in LitUe League baseball
was only second to flying.
Mr. Dupies' widow, Jean;""' I 11
presently coinpleting her husband's
term a.s vice-president.
Besides his widow and 1~-year-old
son Mr. Dupies left daughters Mrs.
Jacqueline Butler and Jerolyn, 19. Those wishing to conlrlbute to the
fund should contact Jim Gilford at
847~6.
Automotive Division
Golden West Offering
Course in Smog Control
The automotive division at Golden
\Vest Junior College will be or!erlng a
three-week course in smog control
licensing as part of their .automotive
evening cour11es in the fall.
The five automotive courses will be
taught in Golden West's new '392.00J
trade and industrial training center
presently under construction.
The smog control class wil1 prepare
Named to Post
Ma I co 1 m Blaty has been
named marketing information
director for Dun & Bradstreet
Inc. in Huntington Beach !or
Orange County. He has resided
in Fountain Valley for past five
years and has worked for the
organization since 1961.
Red Cross Class
On Water Safety
. ·' A special Red Cross course to train
,vater safety instructors how to teach
swimming to mentally and physically
handicapped persons will begin today
in Garden Grove.
The Orange County chapter or the
American Red Cross will sponsor the
course to be taught evenings at Virgo
Swim School, 12851 Brookhurst \Vay.
People who qualify to teach the han·
dicapped will be asked to volunteer to
put t h e i r new talents to work at
various places in the county.
students to take the state smog licerM!le
examination. The class will be oUered
September 11-25, Oct. 2-16, and Oct. 23
to Nov. 5, on Wednesdays from 7-~o
p.m.
Other automotive courses are eir
conditioning, a nine week course to
meet Wednesdays from 7-10 p.m.
course beginning Nov. 20; auto brakes
and front end, a semester course to
meet Mondays from 7-10 p.m.;
transmissions, a semester course to
meet Thursdays from 7-10 p.m. and
tune up, a semester course to meet
Tuesdays frOm 7-10 p.m.
Registration !or all evening classes
will begin Aug. 19 for persoos whose
last names begin with letters A-C.
The rest of the schedule will be Aug.
20, D-J, Aug. 21, K-Q and Aug. 22, R-Z.
Open registration for all persons will
be Aug. 28 and Sept. 3.
Registration will be held in the
College Center 6-9 p.m . For additional
information call. the evening division
at Golden West College.
Costs Going Up
For Maintenance
Of Bolsa Chica
From the north side or the IIun-
tington Beach municipal pier lo the
bluffs aloog Coast Highway and Bolsa
Chica State Beach is a strip Of beach
ovroed by the Huntington Beach Co.
The beach has been open to public
use for many years and is cleaned and
patrolled by crews of the Department
o! Harbors and Beaches o! the city.
Cost !or providing lifeguard services
on this strip during the period J uly 1,
1968 to J une 30, 1969 is $21,463, Beach
maintenance costs will be $14,123 dur-
ing the same period. Annual total is
$35,586.
Eventually the company plans to
develop much Of the ~horeline. A $2
million apartment complete is renting
now and a large parking lot has open.
ed between the pier and t h e
apartments.
Weshninster Sets
Dance, Jazz {;lass
Westminster Recreabon and Parks
Departmoot will sponsor a modern
·dance and jazz class on Mondays and
Tuesdays for girls age 10-14. The class
will be held at \Yillmore School ht\',in~
ning Monday.
Fee !or the 10 lessons is $4 and
registration can be made at the
Recreation and Parks Department,
14381 Olive st.
A Tree, A Presideltt
Past preslden!J of Spring View School parent-lac-
ulty organization have begun a presiden!J' grove
,.:ent tree planting ceremony, Ed Bragg, Max
~ •. ol white birch trees on the school groUnds. In a
Bonanni and Mrs. Ward Theisen plant their trees.
Looking on ~ Spring View principal Leon House.
FINAL COLLEGE
SIGNUP SLATED
Final registration !or fall day
classes at Golden West will be held in
the College Center, Aug. 22-30 from 1""4
p.m.
The college has advised area
students to make immediate contact
with the Admissions and Records Of·
!ice in the administration building, as
early registration is running !ar ahead
of a year ago.
A record of 3,000 students are an·
ticipated in the fall, according to John
Buller, associate dean of admissions
and records.
Reservations for program ad-
visement and orientation will be made
after a student has filed a letter of ap-
plicatioo ,
Any high school graduate or any
other person over age 18 is eligible !or
admission if the applicant meets
residence requirements and is not on
academic suspension from any other
college.
M~1. J11ly tl. l~ DAILY PllOI S
Salary Increases
18 Beach Positions
Pay $15,000 .or More
As of July 1 there were at least 18
city positions earning $15,000 or more
annually due to a salary increase ap.
proved by the Huntington Beach City
Council.
City Ad~strator Doyle Miller will
receive fl'T ,684, which will be a raise
of $1,306.
City Clerk, Paul C. Jones, who was
elected to a thlrd tenn of four years
will be receiving $14,412 annually.
Others getting ralses i n c l u d e
Brander Castle, assistant city ad·
ministrator, from $1,567 to $1,686
monthly; Frank Arguello, director of
finance, from $1,422 to $1,567 mon· uyy, and James Wheeler, director of
public works, from $1,813 lo $1,004.
Police Cb.le! John Seltzer was
boosted lrom 11,457 to $1,845 while
Vincent Moorhouse, director o f
harbon and beaches was rasied from
$1 ,457 to 11,606.
Walter, Johnson , city 11brar1 an
received a raise from $1 ,290 to $1,355
as does Norman Worthy, director of
the recreation and packs. Olin
Cleveland, building director, will go
Crom $1,3.55 to $1 ,422.
Don Bonfa who officially becomes
city attorney Monday will begin •at
$1.770.
Henry Hartge, deputy of public
works , will have a new tiUe, city
engineer, when be begins earning
11 .567. Pre'<iously be earned 11,493. ·
All Penney Store1 Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
'PEN NC REST® .
THE PENNEY STORY Electric Fans ...
"Never any
argument
from
anyone"
as powerful as they are portable
By ROBERTA NASli
\Ve received !he foll o1v-
ing unsolicited letter
from California:
Dear Penney's:
I am really satisfied v"ith
the scr1·ice I get at your
store. I ha1·e a friend out
of the state 'vho sends
things from the Penne y
store \Vhere she l i\'cs.
Sometimes she sends the
~·rong size and 1 go to my
Penney store an d cx-
~hange the things. There
is never any argument
from anyone-they arc 'o
cooperati\·e.
!\lr5. H .O.
U••VCUR
EN NEY CHARGE
ACCOUNT
TQCAYI
. .
• 1/12 HP motor delivers up to -4600 CFM, 1000 RPM
• 3 air speeds; top mounted rotary switch
'3"bc1anced 20'' aluminum blades
• Removoble plastic .safety grill plus ca rry handle
' White baked enamel finished stttl
Deluxe 1211 oscillating
2-speed table fan
15.99
Deep pil<hed plastic blades for quiet opera-
tion. 1/32 HP motor tirculates 1000 CF~
Chronl* plated grill; white enamel fir'lish.
~·
-~----=:::::::::==:-
Roll-about fan stand
for use with portables
'10
Deluxe fan itond adjust from an to 53" height.
Sturdy 1IHI frame feotum gold bakod onamel
finish. lorgi rubber ttrod wheels.
COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
!Harbor Shopping C1ntt rl ,(H11nfin 9ton Cenfttt I F11hlon hl•nd I
\
•
f IWLY PU.OT
~ ........... ..,~
\ .. . .
~ 'Nhli., of Suburl!ln Val·
Jey ·stall<m near Loulsevllle, Ken-tud!Y. tilled a 4~-loot ratUesnake
In Jb!J backyard. Less than one
hoar, later, he killed a copperbea~
..,.. In bl1 fn>Dt yard. Both kinds
of OMl<eo ore among the deadliest. •
NeWest in faahlox ii the oatfit worn
by a litUe Vietnamese girl. She f7lOd..
ell the latest in camouflaoed fa~•
in tht Village of Moc Hoa, two miUI
from th< Cambodian border. Sh< u
the daughter of a South Vittnamese
Army offiur. • A peacock recently brought an
interstate bus to a hal.t··on.ra. buay
superhighway near CQ.miD£. ~8lif.
The bird cruhed ll!rouJ(h tlie 'lilnd·
shield of a Continental Trell1\'8YS
bus and knoclced' file glass~ .oH
driver Kenton M. G•ye,_39,·of Sae:
ramento. He brought the Seattle lo
Los Angeles bus to·a safe stop on
Interstate 5 with only minor injur·
ies to one pauenger. The bird
perished. • Three revolvers and: an automa·
tic pistol were turned ov~ '° :Mon--
trose sheriff's depaties· by a grim
looking pair today. "You can get
into badhabitsllla,yiq'lritb ,"
admonished ........ ._t, ~d
his sister, l1rlpre~ 4, of nearby
La Crecenta. Tbe watch officer
solemnly wrote ·out receipts and
kept all the guns •• , all cap pis-
tols. •• ~ • .;.o.,. .................. .
f
A·11 arnied man demandtd
1 money from the night ckrk at
a motor inn mar Richm011d,
Va. The clerk handed over about
$100 from a cash drawer. "That
is not enough," the gunman
protested, a.! he backed out the
door and fled withou& hil take.
Five veterans have kept a ren·
dezvous at the top of the 750-foot
Prudential Tower in Boston. They
had made the date two years ago
while serving together in Vietnam.
Their reunion "tickets" were the
quarters of a dollar bill, carried by
four, and a strip of tape to stick the
pieces together carried by a fifth.
Lee Belt.eno, 24, of Concord,
thought up the dollar bill angle,
kept one piece and gave the others
to Stephen Mahoney of Everett,
Stephen Harvey of Stougbtqn, and
Rodney Julian of Brookline. John
Ferolite of Marlboro, brought the
sticking tape. ·
M-, Jul1 8, 1968
More Expel!ted
Oregon Blazes
Under Control
' PRINEVJU.E, Oi:e. (UPI) -Weary
f~l&bters who trailed thousands of
acres of fires in the tinder dry central ....
Oregon timberlanib ·during t b e
weekend faced the'· threat today of
more outbreaks.
Two large blazes continued to burn on privately-owned and state.protected
pine foresta oo. Squaw Back Ridge
near Silters.
A :ate on tbe north side of the moun-
'tain was trailed at 2,200 acres, the
state forestry department s a i d •
Another blaze had covered 1,800 acres
on Ute JOutb side of the mountain and
. waa buruiDg oat of. control at last r<jJort. .
Spokesmen for both the state and
Russian Court
Gives 0-akland
Man 5 Years
MOSCOW ·(UPI) -An American
wu sentenced today to five years im-
pr-.ent f<r lllllligling hashish and
curtency .into the Soviet Union.
Dale Reed Warren, 32, of Oakland
wu found guilty and sentenced by a
~ in T&1bkent, capital of the udieki.t.an Republic, an American
e.-.Y opokesman said.
W-.m w .. expected to.appeal.
'!1lo court found Wan-en guilty of
1..Uii&i;ng21119 grams (5.25 pollllds) of
b:Uhilb iDto the Soviet Unloo, as well
as~ ln 100 roubles (fill) in
Soviet eurreucy without .S.C:larlng it.
Police officials teltiflld Wclrren had
admitted Ibo drug.smugglin g charge.
Ccmviction carries a sentence of
thi-eeto lOyeats.
American consul Samuel Fry flew to
Tashkent from MOiecoW to act as an
obeerver at the 1rial. A Soviet lawyer
-ey Fry represented Warren. An eml>assy spokesman said the
court specifted W .arr en• s im-
prlsomnent was to be served 1n a
!""W colooy for f<lnlgnen.
It waa the first ti.me IU<:b a phrase
baa been wed by a COlrt in tbe Soviet
Unim -&Dd itl meaniag was not im-
mediately cleor.
Warren bu five days in which to ap-
peal
Gwt Law Backers
Slated to Testify
WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -House
backers of a ban on alt interitate gun
sales were going before tbe !louse
Rules Commttt.e today In an effort to
set their me&11re up for floor action
this week.
Some opponents also v.•ere among
the 15 Congressmen scheduled to
testify on the legislation this session.
With this in mind, Democratic
leaders .tentativdy programmed the
bill for House floor action later in the
\Yeek. Meantime, the Senate Juvenile
Delinquency Subcommittee planned a
resumption of its O'W'J1 hearings on Gun
Legislation today. And the full Senate
Judiciary Committee, which has twice
deferred action on the administration
bill, scheduled another try at a
'Vednesday meeting.
With Congress seeking to adjourn
before the political convention.!! in
August, many more delays would be
fatal.
U.S. forest service said temperatures
climbed 1Dt.o tbe 90'1 lhia mor~g with
huinid:ity going below 15 perceot.
More dry lightning strikes were ex-
pected to raise the toll of scorcbed
pine stands.
More than 800 men fought fires in
ponderosa timber stands and grazing
lands in the Ochoco N3tion.al Forest
during the weekend after hundreds ot:
dry lightniDg strikes ' ignited the
timber.
But fire trails held during the night,
a U.S. forestry service spokesman
sald. The larges! blaze covered 3,500
acres about 20 miles east of here. Two '
other !ires covered 380 acres and 315
acres, respe<:tively.
In the Deschutes National For~t,
where ·more than 200 lightning s~es
hit during the weekend, all the fires
w~ reportedly in the mop-up stage.
A 1poke8man said all the·fm 'were
either controlled Or Out:
The 850 acre Pine Mountain blaz.e,
which for a period Saturday threat.en·
ed. the Universit)'.of Oregon astromin·
ical observatory, near Bend, wu trail·
ed and only 10 men ~ patroµirlg
today. ' .
There were a total of 24: fires at one
lime In the Ochoco National Forest, a
spokesman said, four of. them man·
caused.
The largest, the Snow Basin fire,
crowned in 20().foot jumps Sunday and
fire fighters were evacuated from its
path. lt was reported under control at
3,500 acres today.
Youth Kills M.an
After Reported
Sexual Assault
CLINTONDALE, N. Y. (AP) -A
man State Police identified as a Cub
Scout leader in Manhattan wa.s shot to
death near-this Ulster County com·
mwrity by one of five boys he· alleged.
ly hared to hia cabin and sexually
moled:ed, the State Police 1'ep0Itled to-
day.
A State Police spoke1man at the
South. Glens Falls station identified the
victim as Carmine DiBiase, who he
said was a Scoutmaster for Troop 45
in Manhattan.
A scout apokesman said he W·as
unable to check the information iin·
medblt:ely. State Police at Kin gston
aaid DlBiase was employed as a
printer in WhJte Plains.
The South GI.eris Falls Station said
DiBiase was wanted for attempted
'sodomy and seiual abuse charges in·
volving a IO.year-old and two 11-year·
olds near Warrensburg· in Warren
County on July 2 and 3.
DiBiase picked up the five boys in
New York's Van Courtlandt Park
Saturday State Police said, and told
them he was a scoutmaster on his way
to pick up equipment here.
At bis cabin, about a mile -and a half
lrom here, DiBiase took out a .22.
caliber rifle and !ired a shot to
frighten the boys . police said.
Police said DiBiase then took
clothesline end bound the five boys -
four are 13 and one 14 -and then sex·
ually moles ted them.
Then. according to police. DiBiase
untied the 14-year-old a11d told him to
cook dinner. The boy picked up the ri•
fie end shot DiBiase in th e stomach,
police said, and OiBiase died wrestling
for the gw:i.
Lighting Fires Possible!
Dr y Liglitning Storms Threaten Timber Stands
Calltonda Tenaperatures
V.S. Summar11
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I •
Sk'yhawk Crashes Into Elegant Home Killing Gir~ 13
C!UC1GO (UPI) -B • o J a m l n
M~ lltld hll ton BWy, JI, bid left
tho boule early In the morulng to play
10W •\ the country ~b. . Mn.
Masters wu mowing the ,lawn of
their o6rtb auburban bome iD cten: . .. view. ; .
The llllllter1' da111bter pynlhia, 13,
WU ~ ool.Y, ODI Jn: lli!I bOu.,, a '78,000 two··. story brld;-ao<Hram•
struct e, wneu the Jet' t: to
earth &wlday. . •
It was'a ultt./ alter t o' • AbOuf
a mil solftheut of the ~· bom.e
at the Glenview Navall Air Bue,
ReseriJe Lt. William T. Beind1rs, 32,
on a rbutioe moulhly !Hgbl, lifted hll
A4B S~yhawk jet Into the air. · • -
Wltlfin mJnut .. , the P1* began 106·
ing power. Relnder1; attached to -tbe
VA·72T Attack Squadron, radioed the
base lh•t he wo1114 try ti! return. But
he coUld not handle the single-engine
craft. He ejected and In on lo1tant th•
piano fell !tun tho oty and Into port
of the Muter•' home In the aolt,
lich, peaceful suburb.'°
Cynthia, wbo hid !\* completed the
7th grade at Glenview Junior High
. ScbOol, '!''!' 0!<p1ed. H11; charred body
w11 found oa the fll"9t Door near
the oiui porch, -.. tile jet hit befort
' landln!( against au emboollmeDI ln the
baok yard ap ellPJod!iil In flames. ·
n.1~1. WbOll par1cbule did not open, was.;. tbroWtl into · a weeping
willow tree near the house and IUf·
fered a broken arm and leg. He was
taket> to the Groat LaUI N1val
Hospital in~terioul condiU.on.
A neighbor, Mrs. Thomas Roupas,
said 6be and her husband wen having
coffee.
"We ·heald a plane," she said. "I
said to hi~, 'My God, that plane's
flying low.' n cam• rilM down over
...-hous•. 'lben • loud b&om. :
''We ran out and saw the whole
house in namee:. l ran into the yard
and heard Mr1: Mastera scre&mlng
that he; dau~ wu &till inside tbe
house. Several nelthbor• tried to pt
ms1<1o, bu\~ flam• drove -oU."
"Did the plarie hit I bOUH?" the
pilot asked ooe of . tl>o doHnl of
neighbors who bad gathered at the
Masters' home.
"No," a man replied, JParlng the
dazed lieutenant the tragic new1. But
it w&s oot tong until he knew whit had
happen<!d.
The plane, w!Udl was destroyed, rip-
ped·off several limbl of a tree before
crashing. The sun porch and gvage
were deotroyed, and all ettht roomJ In
the house were heavily dMnaged by
fire and water.
All Penney Store~ Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday ,
•
•
Misses' voile separates
spell summer romance
Let ,i.; ~;,of whl1pering soft ..,;1o show you off. ;n styltl Wholhtr
it's a picnic for two or a barbecue with the gong, this luscious, easy
care 0oaon• polyntw/cotton voile adds a romantic mood to the
Oltt;ng. C1-mutod print ;n p;nk or, blue. Siios 8 to 16.
ACCOUNT
TCIDAYI
--
fully lined ovorblouoo and
jamaicas radiate a feminine glow.
Sleeveless top sports cowl collared
neckline; jamoica shorts hove regu·
lor waistband. Choose either at
1his·fow, low price! 2. 99 "'
Shirt and ankle pants duo needs
little or no ironing. long sleeve
shirt features flop pockets; tapered
slacks hove back zipper. Both are
fully lined .,. ond priced for savings!
3.99 ...
I
Afltf 11'1trll dlff of fflll 111 Ille II '''° •~•• JM ltlt Ortllllt w!lltcl ovtr
lh lltllllt. *•IM ton. "''""' to .,.l allto "'-'' '""'* Ind rllllllflt Lt~
MllDvH "" '°" cron. -· .. " """"'' • .. .. (Herb~~~~~p=ACenter) :~~o~ :.~~ ~Tl= J
.ot.'!..------~-------,----4,
' •
I
Monday, Jjjl} S, 1%8 OAJL V 'ILOT S
•
Paris Police ,Seize ·School
.
PARIS (UP!)-Pollc·e throug!lout the summer, or dWinC the w"kend, 1Choo1 1 .medl~-·
before dawn today seized until major cbangtc were aources a.a.Id. HoweYet\ U'D'lld poUee
the Univorsity of Paris made in the polici .. ol tile At one po!Jlt, studeall· :-die bulldiiic -a
medical sdlool, the last ma· school. were makiot: m o l o t o v str\lC,IJe.
Jor-Parll building held by The new· seizures followed cocktails and fl<hlolli'DC n.:".!'.c .,...llMI 17 youtllo,
rebel studenll 1Ince May. the !all of the Sorbonne to1i othijjiariijwj. -----~toiijjii_iij __ the __ iiiijinc~lijjiw·-'°""jj-priiiij1"~. iij ..
Police al.so seized three police and ousting o fl~
o c c u p i e d u n i v ersity students from piost other Jc
buildings at Toulouse. Only tmlversity buildings they . ~
a few ICattered university had occupied during the
buildings -around Paris and May revolt.
'"" . The government appeared
··Prtptn for
I a... fMtvr. •••
1o1-1e proVIIK.'ff still remained anxious to head off the start School f Bu •
occupied. . of a "critical university" 0 siness
The four·stnry marble-summer school -wtllch ~
T°""111"
• S.c1'9t•rl•I
!rooted medical building on was designed to serve as a ~ ~ .
the Rue Des Saint·Peres in forum for discus6i.'on of
the heart of tile Paris Latin educational and political
Quarter fell without .a strug-reform.
gle. Medical llCl!ool occupants ABC SHORTHAND
e MM~I
111 .. r•11•
• te.kle'•p1111
e D•11t•I
Aui•tl111
Yc>un« do ct ors and had awaited the arrival of
medical students in the the police since Friday. A 118 W. 5th Phone -~bu~il~di~·n=g~h~adC_:~v~ow"'1J~th~ey~ip~la~n~to~put~u~p~a~stif~· f~f~lgWn~·~g~~~~S~1~n~t1~A~n~1~~~S~43-~1~7~S3!o~r~S~4~S~l~72~1 ~~ would hold out there resistance was abandoned• , •
AFTERMATH OF FLOOD -El Paso resident starts to clean up after record flood ovtt the weekend.
Thousands ot residents were forced from their
homes with damage running into millions of dollars.
$4 MiUion in Damage
U .. I T1i.a.ot11
Some 40 homes wore detrtro:yed and hundreds of persons were evacuated in Juarez. At last count, five
deaths were rel""1ed·
Five Dead in Texas Floods
EL .PASO, Tex. (AP) -
Torrential weekend dO'wn-
pours of up 1D 6.25 incbes-
almost as much as the aver-
age annual rainfall-claim-
ed five lives and caused
widespread flooding in El
Paso and Juarez just across
the Rio Gnmde in.Mexico.
An estimated 40 homes
were swept away by fiood-
wate:rs in Juarez and 125
persons were evacuated. The
rainstorms, t e r m e d ·the
worst since 1913, caused en
estimated $4 millioo in dam-
age at Juarez.
Flood waters temporarily
halted the int.emational
street car line which runs
between El Paso and Juarez.
Several cars were stranded
on El Paso streets and the
car barns were under water.
El Paso City Engineer
Charles Davis said it will be
several days before an as-
Sietllml!Dt can be made of
flood damages in the city.
Rafael Reyes, 41, of C8llu·
tillo, died when his c~ skid·
ded on a wet El Paso street
and overturned. Four others
_died in Juarez d'uring the
downpours -one youth was
-killed by a boll of lighlniilg
and three other persons drowned. '
Asst. Police Chief Ted Vo·
gel said 45 persons wen
evacuatied from their ·homes
in El Paso by police Satur·
day. TM.lcks from nearby Ft.
Bliss evacuated se_y~ial doz·
en more.
Dozens of homes were
damaged as flood waters
three feet deep swept low
1ections of El Paso and
rocks and silt rolled down
from Mt. Franklin.
Silt piled up two feet deep
in some stmes and-the El 1
Bas_o fire department was
kept busy Sunday pumping
wa:ter from store and home
U.N. Charges North Korea basements.
"U we don't get any more
rain, we'll be in real good
Shape," Police Ll R. C.
Moelle< said late Sunday
night. "W"e are pretty well
cleaned up now. We 5till
have. some peoPle who
havt!n't returned home be· With 22 Truce Violatio11$
.PANMUNJOM , Korea
tUPl) -The United Na-
tions command today ac-
cused Commuriist N or th
Korea oi vi<>lating the truce
line with South Korea 22
times since June-26 and said
it wias "a premedit.ated plan
of violence and intnl'Sioo."
Maj. Gen. Gil b e r t
Woodward, tile U.S. Arm y's
Jmior UNC delegate to the
Ko,reian Armistice Com·
mis&on, made the cll.arge at
the 2'nnd m<eting of tile
Commission at the truce
village of Panmunjom.
Wood.ward aJso accused
North Vietnam ol equipping
i~ anned forces "fer out of
J>l"'ll')<tion to that reqUired
for defeme."
Red China's Nuclear
Force Ready by 1972
STANFORD, Calif. (UPI)
-By 1972 Communist China
will ·be deploying nuclear
armed missiles targeted on
U.S. cities, a detailed study
for the government in·
dicates.
Par ad o xi cally, this
nuclear war cap ab i Ii ty
might reduce the chances of
a confrontation, according
to the report, prepared by a
group of leading China ex-
perts.
A draft of the unpublished
report has been circulated
.. among government offiCjals
.
Viet Cong
and made available to UPI
Sunday. It was prepared by
a 13-member team o f
researchers at the Hoover
Institution on War, Revolu·
tion and Peace at St.anford
University for the U.S.
Arms Control and Di!:arma-
ment Agency.
The gNup included top
ranking experts on the
military, political and
economic afiairs of Red
China. Dr. Yuan-Li Wu,
author of a •number of books
on the Chinese economy,
was the. project director.
The experts said the
capability of waging nuclear
war against U.S. cities will
d persuade the Chinese that Mur ers they are safe 1rom attack.
Thus, they may be willing to
A M • agree t.o some arms control rmy a J 0 r steps such as a "no fiist
use" pact with neighboring
· SAIGON (UPJ) -AU. S. countries.
Army major was captured Having to devise controls
and murdered by tile Viet for their own w i d e I y
Cong Saturday on a road 135 dispersed nuclear missile
miles norbheast of 5.ai;gon, a . system, they will be aware
military 9P0kesman said of the risk or accidental
today war. This could lead to
T1he name (( dte major, a establishment of a Peking-
senfor U. S. army adviser Washington "hot line" to
to the Sooth Vietnamese a v o i d unintentional en·
forces in tbe provdnce of counter, the report said.
Binh Thuan, was withheld The ' ' h lg h feasibility
until relatiws bave been scenario" predicts that 1972
notified. will be "a year of crisis in
The sPokesmaD said tf\e domestic and foreign rtla.
m·ajor .and hils interpreter tions for Communist China.
were driving along Route 2 The new great leap, like its
on ttleir w.ay t.o the scene cJ. predecessor, ends in a
a battle when their jeep waa shambles. Feelings o I ~.~~ -~·t 10 30 frustration in domestic af. am:uu:wocu ~ : a.m. Saturday. fairs and an oppressive
The interpreter was woun· sense of inescurity l n
ded, escaped and returned foreign affairs run high. 11
to the nearest village where ;:;:====:--.====-I
cause their house5 are still
M·,m_ Gen. Pak Obun. g. waterlogged. Quite a few -, ltreets haV1! been blocked
Kuk, tbe Commuiiists' chief h;, _zp\J(f and debris but '"
delegate, rejected the have them.all open now." ~ge and had some ol his Skies weT"e still cloudy
own. He said UNC troops over EI Paso and Juarez fired 6,500 rounds of em· munition into Communist today although the rains had
t.enitory on nine OICC8sions stopped. The Texas Experi·
in the past 10 days. mental Station near El Paso during the three-day period
He also Ja!id a UNC ·agent recorded-6:25 inches -'only
he identified ias Yoon Yong· one inctl Je5s th.all El Paso's ~.a South Kon!/an, sneak· annual rainfall.
ed into North Korea .and "The ground here just
was captured June 28. can't absorb 31f.z incites in 24
Woodward told P:ak all. the hOO!"s," El Paso Mayor Jud·
North Korean iatru.s10lls son Williams said. 1
were thwlarted. The heavy rains caused
"A clooe loOk at llhe pal· ··11eavy flooding downs1ream
tern of recent North Korean on the Rio Grande in the vi·
acts .~ ~<ileooe atong ·~e cinity of Presidio.
~truhtanzed Z o n e I~· "The Rio Grande is way
dicat.es tihat North Kocea is out of its banks around Pre·
po561'bly f o 11 o w i n g a sidlo " Sheriff Rogelio Brito
prem.editlated p 1 an ol. said.' "Most of the overflow
violence a n d intrmiion," water is in about three
Woodward said. mile6 of good farm land
W~ also said North growing cottoo and canta·
Korea bas an armf of loupe."
345,000 men equipped with The sheriff aaid the 'nood
sophistioaited weapons that was causing a $1-million 10&1
at"e "far out of prnportion to to crops around Presidio.
that reqliired for defense." '!be Rio Grande reached
Woodward acC"Used the five feet abqve flood stage
Communists of building up at Pre5idio Sunday after.
their military streflgth in noon but no home! were in
viota.tion of the annistice danger and highways re·
agreement. mained open.
you get
highest BANK rates
with
BANK safety
and
BANK availability
when you
move your savings to
UNlllUB ----. t-itWP01!7' \
· _r NATIONAL /•. 1 ·~,_ BANK_,l~ ....... ;-... /. ..
Itch leM!ll iMWlif It $1!5,000. ll•W F.D.l.C.
AH Penney St-Open ~ Night Monday 11wWofi s.tuiclaJ
I •
'
Save on Penncreste lmf>«itrial
washer/ dryer combinations!
lmpo~ai washar handl11 big ·16 lb. load capac-
ity! Six programmed cyde selections with automatic
dolayed blaach and ·fabric ........,. injection, fiv•
~ ..... .-p&us ..... sa.-•l1ttion. Ptuo-
,_. "llgiitlctl ""'aumd. ..... or Clpplttaw.
Imperial IOI elwl1L"llc __. .,_ kataw
automatic dewrinkt.ng, tfiem.o.ffo drying, .....
cofain warft -top and cir-. Pius 1111111 I I
lighted bad!gosd ...i·--lldit. .....
orqp1rlc:IM. -
Orig. 229.95 Orig. 209.95
NOW$2Q8 NOW $178 '
No down payrnent ..... uso P•nney1 Tim•
Payment Plani
TODAY I
Imperial electric electronic tensor dryer
Orig. 179.95 ••••••••••• NOW '158
2 speed washer/
2 temp dryer duo
Waohor has 3 ....I! temparaturos lcrluH
ar 1mall loads. Choose gos or electric
'c!tyor with famous thonno'flo drying.
Awikwble m white only.
2~-·""' Orig. 184.95
' NOWt'i68
2 temp gas dryo<
Or.ig. 149.95
Now•121
2 temp electric dryer
Orig. 119.95
NOW'I08
a -team Of Viet·
n=d American
troops w sent to the scene QUICK
7 -NIEHT LOCATIONI lllMNI --COllll'IY AIWORT OfTICE. ,,,, ,, ,. ,c.m,. It lltfMlltt, JllWl'Ol1 luch. ,,!540-2111
IAYSIDE OfftCE .••••• ,,,,.ltysift It,_..._,~ ludl, .. M2·1141 1,----------------------------------------COl..Lal ,. OFFIC£. ..... •utwood • ~-. r111 ........ 111.aoo
SWffn' MILU OfffC( ••••••••••••.• ···"-""'ft .... MlrtDll ••• 111'72'0 of tbe am Sh. C.tc.h •P ~11lckt, •• l•co•I
1be seardt team found .......... k••' ynr c•mptd, COM•
the major's b:>dy. He bad ;.,..i.•n•h'• lt•m..._ Hfti" M
be<n -ID tbl bodt Of the """°DAILY PILOT.
he~ ,.
SUPlRIDR «JIC( ••• , ............... It..,...,,...,.. ....... MZ-1511
\lllWltSrrt WfJC( ·-· ltl& ChlPllllll: II Stitt Centet. , ......... 111"4MO
MIJCUff CIFflC( .................... °""· ,..,._ ........ Ml..Jlll ............ ., ........ .....
t'
NEWPORT BEACH
(Fashiafl Island)
HUNTINGTON BEACH
(HU!ltington c.m..)
,'-\
• .. , --. . • .
" .. .
..
..
,I
••
..
' '. •• •
••
' .
.. • .. •
.8 D.\11.V PUT
QU • ly Phll lnterlmcll Row Boils
On Recall
Petitions
SAN FRANCISCO '(UPI)
-Secretory ol Stoto Frank
Jordan has been .accused ol
p)ayUlig politics for
·111at.ements he made per·
tain1ng to the efforts of a
statewide orgarUaUon
recall Gov. Rqnald Reagan.
NOJIC)' L. Parr, Son Fran·
<ioco, -ol tbe
R«all --Committee, Sundoy wroto J<Nan a
lllrollgl1 worded le I I e r
reopoojlng to bi.s otatemerrt
that some peT90n.I bad been
tricked into signing petitioos
to recall the eovernor.
Min P.-r de man cte d
Jordla fttract the state-
ment.
"YGll don't -to andentand-I HAVE igDorecl
llim -be· .wllll llaa't -away.•
"You Mpttsent the peo-
ple, Mr. Jonlao, not Rooeld
Reagan," Miss Parr's letter
said.
Assembly V otes A id
To Summer }61JPlan
The Reoall Reagan Com·
m.ittee is seekling 1.6 million
signatures on petitions in
order to f'Ol'Ce a special elec·
tiOn to te9t Reag.an'a sup-
port. H he lost the ell!(!tion,
a new govemor would take office. About 7 5 o. o o o
sigoaturta already b av e
been obtained, close to the
780,414 :minimum required
by state law.
SACRAMENTO !AP) -
Assemblymen have voted
iso m111laa In aid for
·-In poor Calllornla 11<bool diltrlc:U, -'5 mlDlon the1 hope 'will put
big city younpton Into jobs
thil summer instead of
riots.
Both measures were 1ent
to the Senate from the
Auembly in a aeu.lon which
luted more than 1iI hours
Sunday and evea foaDd tbe
No Trials
In Minor
Road Cases?
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Those dolmnlnecl -le
\riJo demand and get a jlD'y
trial for minor traffic of-
fenses such .u overtime
parking wooJd looe that
rig2lt under major legisla·
t i o n overwbelming'ty en-
dorsed by tbe Auembly.
Prcponen t 1 aay the
legislation would apeed up
and improve tbe judiclal
process where it really is
needed -in major cases -
and elimJnate thousands of
court cases a year which
basically amount to harass-
ment of the judicl.al 1ystem.
OpponeW: 11ay it fs the
first step toward eroding a
basic American right, ttiat
of a trial by a citizell 's peers
in criminal cases.
Proponents had the better
of it Sunday, as t be
Assembly voted 58-1! in
fawr of the bill, seDding it
to the Senate for the first
time after &everaJ. years of
efforts by backer.!i.
lawmakers voting against a
lunch break.
The unusual w ee kend
meeting helped clear the
lower house file and enhanc-
ed chances of a~ourning the
sesaion -now ln its 27th
week -by the target of Ju-
ly 19.
Most _attention Sunday
focused on 1be emergency
job program sponsored by
Democratic Assembly '
Spe~er Jesse M. Unruh of
Inglewood, although t h e
edilcation bill was larger
and likely to have more im-
pact In coming years.
Un.ruh's bill w o u I d
allocate '5 million to be
spent between now and Sept.
15 when the tummer beat
will have cooled and schools
reopened. Only youths 15 to
25 would be eligible and the
programs would be ·under
strict state and l o c al
supervision.
'!be aim, Unruh said, h to
keep oU the -• ._ .•. obod< troop for the oon-
nagrations which b a v •
nrept American cities." He
noted the state •peodt
mlllioas of dollars to hetp
build yacht llar~rs uaed almost completel1 by well
off whlto people, and that ii
is time to help "the people
who are not beautiful peo-
ple, who cannot raise funds
to send a lobbyiat to
Sacramento."
A bipartisan coalltloa of
58 De m o cr a t s and
Republicans pushed the bill
through, while 16
Republicarui opposed il A
foe, GOP Minority Leader
Robert T. Monagan o f
Tracy, said it probably
wouldn't llelp the young peo-
ple, and all the act
amounted to was "trying to
buy them off for a few
weeks in the summer."
J..-i last ..... t -be bad received "aumeroug"
complaints from persons
wllo -'l>ey bad been tricloed into signing tile pett.
tims -allegedly being told they were e. request fbr
lower taxes.
Rodgers Leaves
LA Hospita l
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Jimmie Rodgers, released
from St. Vincect's Hospital
after a third brain oper ad.on
for injuries suffered in a
controversial accident Dec.
1, aeya. he will try to find out
"exactly w h a t happened
that m.,u."
'Ibo latell operation, to In·
ttalJ a oteel plato In his l'kulli was a complete auc-
ceu, Rodgers said Sunday.
Mea t Unions
Plan to Merge
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Two meat -prooessing
unions, representing about
500,000 members, convened
in separate Sout h ern
Callfornia meetings today to
consider a merger officials
say is needed to strengthen
each union mxl eli'miniate in-
fighting.
The merger of the United
Packinghouse W o r k e r s .
meeting in San Diego, and
Ule Amalgamated Meat Cut·
ters, meeting here ha been
approved. by uni.on officer s
and tentatively bat been
scheduled to go into effect
Friday, pending approval. at
the two conventions.
Here's a
At Newport Balboa Savings we stay strong
by keeping strong reserves. These be.ck us
up in any situation. Your personal reserves
work the 111111e way for you. Your Newport
Balboa Savings account keeps your little
trooblee from becoming big ones. You don't
haft t.o look for the first way out of a bind,
:yoa do not have to pay up to 18% int.erest per
' ;vw for credit, you deal from strength. And
J'lllll wwuut jmt naturally grows and make.
J'llll lltlollltl' .n the time.
Ow <Urnnl rol• of 5.00% ii an annual
yitl4 of 5.13% when compound<d
"8tf an4~/oroMycar .
El Ranc'J!o tra vels with you to the comers of the world! . ' This week we bring the enjoyment of tklicious foods
and enchanting diMaea of ••••
Four free recipes ••• authentically
Portuguese ••• yours for the takiDK at ·our
service meat COUt'ltera ••. • and 1pecial
prices on foods you'll be using for them I
'
ROASTING
•
Chicken ............. 4 9~1
Fresh! Big! Tender · ••• get our recipe for "Stuffed Roaatint
Chick.en" ••.• and serve it with Lancers Portuguese Wine •••
5th ••• '3.98. Make it a happy mea!I
Beef Liver ......... 5 9~
Young and tender ••• we have Ute recipe for cooking it in wine I
.With it, serve irnPorted Mateus Rose Wine •• , 5th , •• $2.59.
Sardines ......... 31o,1°0
Marie Elizabeth ••• skinless, boneless ••. imported ••• No. 1,4'
Olive Oil ........................ : .......................... 49' Spinach. ~~~5.~ .2 bunch .. 25'
Surprise everybody ••• s~rve them Portuguese Green Soup_? Imported .... Pompeian • , • :¥2 pint ••• Portuguese use lots of it f
Superior Honey ..... : ......................... 3 , .. •1 00 P·n·ces in tffect at all 1tore1
Mon., Tut1., Wtd., July 8, 9, 10
Clover, Orange, Sage •• 12--oz ••• try "Fried Bread" for dessert!
Black Pepper 39'
Schilling'1 ••• 4-oz. , : ·: ~ ·~;~~~~·~;.y· i~' P~rl~j;i·~~~·~~~ki'~i!
Mazola Margarine ...... ; .................... 3 .... $1 00
Use it in place of the butter ao many recipes call for! ARCADIA: Sunset & Hunlington Dr. (B Rancho Center)
Tomato Puree ................................... 3r .. "J 00
PASAlllllA: 310 Wes! Colorado Bll'd. • SIJU!H PASADENA: Fremont & Huntington Dr.
IUNTINUDN BEACH: Warner and Algonquin (Just East of Hunlington Hmour)
ltll'!Mf IEAClt 1717 Newport Blvd. • 2555 Ea~~uff Dr. (Easfbluff Villa1e Cenler) Prorre,.. •• '. No. 21/1-=• ••• used liberally in Portu&'lll I
place to save
Statement of Condition
AFTER PAYMENT OF 90TH CONSECUTIVE DIVIDEND JUNE JO, 1968
REsoURCES LIABILITIES
Cash ond Govtmment Bond! • • • • $ 1~835,061.00 Savini' Accounts • • • • • • • $ 8~011,815.00
Fedml Home Loon S.nk Slod< • • • 1,371,900.00 Fed!ral Homo l"n S.nl Advancu • • 12,741 ,500.00
Loans on Real Estate • • • • • 90,645,707.00 Loans in Process of Completion • • • l,142,932.llO
loans on Real Estate owned Other Liabilities-Esans • • • • 864,9ll00
for Dewelo pmtnt . . . • • • 949,893.00 DeflllN Federal Income Tax . • • • 228,128.00
LOlns lo flcili!Jte Salt of Real Esflfl 691,783.00 $ 99,989,301.00
loans on Saviors Accocmts • • .. • l,l!lil,483.00
Real Es!Jte Purchased for l""sfment • 691,D89.00 DEFERRED INCOME
Real Estate Acquired bJ Foreclosure • 449,321.00 lOln F1111nd Prtpaid lnlerut • •• $ 287,419.00
Office Buildinf and Equipment. • • 1,926,099.00 Pmfil on Siio of Rul Esflle • • • • 553,999.00
Accrued Interest Receinble • ... 551,777.00 $ 841,lllOO
F.S.LI.~ Secondiry Rolern • • . . l,017,865.00
Pr1paid Expo"" • • • • • • • 109,534.00 CAPITAL AND RE.SER\IE!I
other Resources • • • • • • • • 414,018.00 Gl/111nlle Sloe~ R-Ind Smplll S 10,013,812.0D
iuo,844,531.00
Our l4 % bonus c:ertificat<1in111Ultipla of $1000, currently
""" 6.26% per """""' whm maint<liMG for a -· .
$110,844,53100
•• • N ewport.K~~A~2! Savings ee
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Founded In 1936
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Mondu. ol<i.~ 8, 1968
Palisades School Lists ·semester Honor Roll
Students of Pa 11 s •des
School in Capistrano Beach
who earned recogniUon for
• :r. c.e 11 en c·e citizenship,
scholarship, lcbool service
and p e r t e c t attendance
rttelved eertiflCate awards on the llna1 day at ochool.
Principal Jolln Crain has
releued the names of the oullta.dlnc ,...,._, as
follows: .
~ -Ktlt!w' lnl'lem, Jullt
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T enew
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Mercedes-Benz . . . ' 220Diesel:
so "over-engineere
you may still be
riving it in 1988.
® Some Mercedes-Benz Die-
sels' just won't quit. In the
32 years since Mcrcedes-
Benz invented the Diesel-
powered passenger car, over 500,CXX>
Diesels have been made, and 87% are
still running/ One owner in Stockholm
recently started bis suondm illion miles.
The newest Mettedes-Benz Diesel
is the 220 (si'k:alled because its engine
displaces 2.2 litei>). It costs $4,580,"
and from the million-dollar way it !ooh
and rides, many people believe itshould
be classified as a luxury car.
An unconventlonal economr car
man who buys a Mettedes-
Benz. But bv no means does
it tell the whole story. Here
are some more examples:
A ouporlor braking 1pl11n
Many ordinary cai> still
use old-fashioned drum
brakes.
Today's 180-mph Grand
Prix racing cars use disc
brakes. So does the Mer-
cedes-Benz 220 Diesel. And
not just on the front wheels,
but on every wheel. Drum
brakes are cheaper, but tests
prove that disc brakes pro-
vide the most precise brak-
ing poosible-at ""1 speed.
So Mercedes-Benz engi·
neers insist on 4-wheel
''
•
Mettedes-Benz says the 220 Diesel
is an economy car. Yes, an economy car, ·
beCause it could save you ~re money
in ihe long run (say, 100,000 miles or
more) than the flimsiest lltde economy
car you oould buy.
The 220 Diesel is so economical ii
doesn't even we gasoline. It sips inex·
pensive Diesel fuel at a miserly rate,
yet has enough power to cruise at 80
(where the law allows). This amazing
powerplantdoesawaywithcarburttors,
spark plul!', and other paraphernalia of
the conventional gasoline engine.
disc brakes as standard f.,,_..,, ahe-Ll'•f"stDkselpomlog.r ... (!9:i6J. &ocl<~: aJ.e worLi's ,,...oiael ...... (1968~ Bochlry M....,.,.&n.. ·
equipment. With 421.1 •
But the engine is not the only
unconventional thing about the new
Mercedes-Benz 220 Diesel. The whole
car is "over-enginecred."That's the way
one critic put it. He was right By con·
ventional standards, it is built to far
more e:=ling standards than ordinary
motor cars.
What elM 11onr•nglneerfng"
can mun to you
The remarkable longevity of the
Diesel engine is one good example of
bow "ova-engineering" works for the
'
square inches of braking area, ft's vir· vents the ca~ from leaning on hard
tually impossible to outrun the 220 tums.Witbouti4thecarivouldwallow
Diesel's brakes. (or the sprinl!' would have to be made
10,000 body welds
Most o::>ny_entional cars have a sepa-
rate body and chassis, held together
with bolts. After a while, the bolts can
work loose. On a washboard road, the
ratdes can be deafening.
Metced.,..Benz~liminatedthebody
bolts. In their place are over 10,000 in·
dividual welds. Result: a structure of
irpmense strength and rigidity. After
50,000 miles or so, you'll wooder if your
220 Diesel will ever rattle.
A polonlod -Ion
O>nventional sedans usuaJly have
a little device called an "anti-sway bar"
nestled in the front suspension. It prf;"'
so still that the ride would be ruined).
Mercedes-Benz engineers took this
idea one step lunher. They added a
second anti-sway bar at the rear, part of
the 220 Diesel's new-and patented-
independent rear suspension. This al·
lowed the Mercedes-Benz engineers to
make the rear springs softer, 'too. Result:
a vastly superior ride, but still no mush,
sway or wallow-aren in hairpin turns.
11Fatlgue-proor1 .....
Take a day-long trip in some cars
and you'll wind up feeling like a damp
\vashrag.
The Mercedes-Benz 220 Diesel is
engineered as much for human comfort
as it is for mechanical efficiency.Ortho-
peclie physicians were consulted in the
aesign of tb,e 220 Diesel's seab so you11
have proper support on cxoss-country
tours as well as short bops to the super~
market. When you 6.m. slip into one of
the 220 Diesel's carefully-oontoured
seats, it may seem 6nn, but once you
get used to it, you'U never setlle for
"mcnhmaUow" suts agai-.. Merced.es-
Bcnz engineers have respect for your
backbone.
Clip coupon ror broclllrr9
For more details on the 220 Diesel
and 6 other Mercedes-Benz models,
send today For your oopy of the ln:e 24-·
page oolor brochure (roupon at right).
Better yet, visit our showroom. See
and drive the new 220 Diesel. Find out
boW1t feels to drive a car built to be
the best-not just the best seller.
14~ lllOJIOIO
'""" 121,711" to MMe"
The legend 0£ Mercede.-Benz Die-
sels has grown to Brobdingnagian P'°'
portions. There are some people who
finnly ~lieve Mercedes-Benz makes
~!l but Diesel~ Not true. In bet,
. M es-Benz buUcls a wide range of
gasoline-powered models, from the
• ......,,.-6()()"' the thrifty 22o .'(.: car
very much lile the 220 Diesel, but with
a regular gasoline engine-for !""Pie
who are diflident about the virtues of
the Diesel engine). They include:
600 Grand Mettedes •••••• $22,472°
300SEL Limousine........ 9,489•
28QSE Coupe .. .. • .. • • • .. 9,262°
280SL Roadster • • • • • • • • • • 6,568•
280SE Sedan • .. • .. .. • • • • 6,3.36°
250 Sedan............... 5,150"
230 Sedan............... 4,631•
220 Sedan ............... ~.446·
• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • •
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(7; . ('I .. .... r
·~
• • • • • • • Jim Siemon• Importl, Jae.
: 121 Weft Waner Aveaae
: Santa Au, c.uttndl tr7t7
• Pi-....I die &.e U,.go, lulkolor
brochure lb.It cells all ahcNt Iba MW cm
hmlMamla-8-.·.
N""''-----------'"
Add...~~.....,~~~~-
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DAJl Y PILOT • 7
AIR
C-UFO-Ul • ...
111011 m
Ulflllall
8111111
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11111 DU • ILll:lll
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9M fllllCISCO IAT Ufl .
AIR CALIFORNIA
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I DAILY I'll.OT l
Mesan Gets Jail Riot
.
Five for Holiday
' For The Place ·in
Horse Meet
Action Sought Child, 4, Killed by Auto
Record On Prisoners A four.year-old boy was
killed by a car Sunday to
brlng Orange County'1 traf·
tic toll for the Fourth of Ju·
ly weekend to ffve.
Billy J, McFarland, 31, of
Orange was not held.
Thomas Blackman, 17. of
212 Wellesley Lane, Costa
Other holiday tr&Uic vic-
tims were :
EL TORO Bob
McDonald of Costa Me11 Meetiags Ued with a Santa Ana .girl
MOWPAY for the honor of placing in
c .. 1111M1i.rs , .... _ .. "' cor .. -• more events at the El Toro
Rftf ""''""'"'· HAI .-i.rtior .,..... S t • ., • Q I H c..11 ~. •:• '·"" tao1e1 uarter y orse ln ...... lc:IM*. ,,.,_., l!~lc:tro rw,.iot.r hit No. ,,., l•kodr. 1i.o. Show lut weekend than any
Mlollc.. • "'' ""'°" •iw.. <•1• other competitor. Miu. 1.li •• Jl'I. 0.:1c: ~"" ~ ... ~.!:;. He won one first place,
~ ~ 1i]': a--., one third, a fifth and two
~ "';""..:!, ~~~ sixth place awards.
v.1...,, 1:• 1..lft. The Santa Ana girl, Nancy 0r~1'::..,~~ ~ ~. ~ Shanahan, however, took the
eo.~~· ~ ......,. ,.._ "· s~ow's uno~ficlal title of _top
Odd F11ivw. ... 11. ''" ,..._, rider by winning three first
11Yo11 •• eo.11 iliMtA. 1 "·"" place ribbons as well as one VFW .... 1*. VFW IWll, Y(lfttewft . ·
... --. H1Mt111t• -..di. • 1.m. second and a sixth. TVISOA'I' • C•M ~ ciTY 1~ c&1oni.1 Five other South Coast
KlkNn. Jlt w. '"" st .. co.1• MIM. riders won first place rib· • ;:~.b...tft . ._. ., 01~ Y.M.CA bon1 at the base. In novice c::: :::"E=:. r:,·ci.,~:"ttw. jumping, Laurie Gage of
1"5 H•rtior llvd .• Coat• ,,.,..., 12 Newport Beach was the win·
c:·,.,,_ 1tot•rv Ch/b-Nortll. c'"'' ner, with Lisa Attlessey,
toWM Gott ind cw111rv c1ut1. 110! also Of Newport Beach, win.
Golf courw or'"'• COit• Me11. 12:10 ning the green jumpers ~ .. Mtr x1w1111& c1u11, v1111 division. Jane EssUng of '~· 353' E. CN1t Hl,nw1y, Hun"~gton Be••h took top COl"ON Oii Mtr, 12:10 1.m. w.n """' ,.._rt H1rt1or 1<e11.... »• club. place Jn down and out jum Vl111tl 11111, 1" M1rll\I, lllbol •
111.11nd, u noo11. ping. ,
Hu111J"'h:WI lffdl Jtol1ry Clu~. FOO.Ir Wlollh rnl1ur1nt. 1'421 lc)U Marcia Rankin of Laguna
Ch1e1, Hvntlftllhlfl •tam. 12:15 "·'"· Beach won the pleasure Hunll,,.hlfl hid! Krw ... 11 Club, MUl'l-
tlnehlfl 1uc11 tounlfY Clvb. m 11111 riding class, and Glenn
st .. HvnH11tlDrl 1ffdl, 12:11 -."'. Thompson of San Juan ,......_. H1rWr °'""'lrt Club, VJILI
.-.ur1 .... 1w ,,.,..,.. 0r1 .... Htw-1 Capistrano placed first in
eeedl, u i1s ''"" 'AA .. h 'din (0111 rMM 1Ctwe11t. c1u9. ~11n llU\Oa orse fl g.
Rnllour1nt. 1'11 Newport •~ .•
Colf1 Mftl, 12:1J 11.m.
SANTA ANA
Complalnto will be !Ollght
»day against prisoner• in·
YOlved iD last Fridey morn·
2 Youths
In Blind
Program
Two Orange County youths
are among seventeen blind,
college bound students from
throughout the ~tate who
have b e e n selected to
participate in a 6-week col-
.lege orientation program at
the University of California
at Santa Cruz beginning to·
day and ending Aug. 16.
Patricia W. Wright, 1223
Riviera St.. Anaheim, and
Russell Hubley, 1 2 5 9 1
Sungrove Circle. Garden
Grove, were selected by the
California Department of
Rehabilitation for
scholarships to this college·
credit program. Gourses in·
elude training in how to
navigate the campus with a
cane, shorthand braille for
class notes, and transcrip-
tion of study materials.
Fire Calls OCc t P• k Students selected for the 0 IC scholarships were required
to be legally blind, high
N Off • school graduates plannnlng . ew 1cers to enroll in college this fall.
1 All participants must have
Orange Coast J u n i o r been recommended by their
College District trustees high school principal for the
Wednesday night Will chooseL..;p:...r_o;:.gr_a_m_.--;,,,..----
one <>I. tihei:r number ta leadr Adv.
Pilot l'iritort
them tmoogb the next
school year.
William Kettler, of Hun·
tington Bead:!, is eon1pleting
a one·year tlenn as presi·
dent. Other board members,
ROOert Rumjilreys, of c..ta
Meara, Worth Keene, of See.I
Beech, ond Dooold Hoff, of
MidWay Qty, all bave serv·
ed. as boM'd ·president in the
past.
The fifth .iat is vacant
wi1b retirement of Newport
Beach trustee W a 1 t e r
1-·
Young GOP
•
Hunts 500
e'iinge · Count)-Y o u n g
.dtepubllcans are looking for
500 new members.
New Chapters of the coun-
ty Young Republicans club
are being formed, and the
parent organization h a s
begun a membership drJve
to recruit 500 new volun·
STRAND teer• by October.
~"' 1. Slrll'ld. 1021 '!"., •· Anllr...s Anyone between the ages Ill.ct , knl1 AM. Su..,,wd 11'1' .......
Lucv1 111ulll'ltw{ Ldtll• flln'I 1rtnc111 of 18 and 40 can i"oin by con-or1nc1cto11c1,_ " lr•ntll. ~ 11,.,1 "41111 '"" M~. Llni:ll 1roco111 lnftl«, tacting Mrs. William Mero, Myron s1r1nch 11~111r lottNl"'l ·c1""'; • 'd t 1...i 11w ere111r ldttn. l.tf'wlc:H, second vtce preSl en , at :,wF-=:.11 ~. FllTlllY c'* 2100 E. Whittier Ave., La
STEELE _H_a_br_•_·-----~.,-1
ltablr1 It. S!Mle. 1502 0r • ._ AYt.. DEATH "'"""'l"ES f..~fY't<IMl~.wt'l.'."'o.t.. ~~jl!'ll!~~~y at! J'WV.a '-
~ifier~~~·S:1\y '!':.:~u,:,"~•,; -----------
Mrt. Slrll'I Mlmldl. 111 of Cosl1 Mftl; RYAN llllfl', Mn. MldtlYfl DIY'fl, Llk9¥f00d. ~rvlCll\. Tl>ftdly, t PM, 811\Z Felltll>t D. 1ty111. 1'11 L1""'50n AYI., ~-· 11•• • ~ ,_,, ~ Gtrdlfl CO/Wt. Sllrvl'llll 11'1' lluiblnd, .._,~1rv, _....,....,, ..... ' A 0 •·•· • wtth Rw, HtrWl't J......,. ol'tlcl1t "'· J1mn1 -'-tblf"t • lllCI ""'"' · lnllmwnt, F1lrlltYtr1 MllTIOf'fll P1rk. l'lYlfll dlvlhler, JK'lWl'fn ,., .. ,_; 11rn Mor1u1ry, dlrector1. ~ Leon lit .. A. lellle1• __ •_l'ld ltabfr'I 1"1...-1 1l1ter, ,,_ ,..,..,..,. ROSECRANS St<vkts, T"""4t1Yr~O AM, Pitt F1mllY
Colonl1I F"'""'1t "-· Cllr1 LoulM ltmKr•M. Jill72 C.lle
N111nl1, C111l.tr1111> 111cl'I. 0.11 of
llft"', July 5. Survl'IN= •-· Mortimer F1t11· 1111wr, • Huu•r· boll! d c111\11r1no1 111tr, JeH, ~· al' KtltrMtOO. ~IMn.
AM, f:',.,.w.g,,::~ .~~hie vi.':.' I~
!";;;"'~ Peelflc VI~ MemOrltl llll'k. 01 by Pt<llk Vlft Mortulf"I',
STIMSON
HEINE
OutM /I. ~. 1'\-'02 fllfglllt St., G1rdt~ GtcNe. SurvlYed llY P1'1flh, Mr1. A""l11 Heine; bn:iltwr, 01rrell
J. Heine; sl1ttr. $uren11 m111rr11I
trtndPlf'e'l111, Mr. uid Mfl. D. J. 0•
ykfM; Plhi'MI 1r1nd1>1ftfl!S, Mr. Ind
Mrt. I . II. Heine; •re•t-tr1l'lllmothlr.
Ml'I. AIW\I Schrloc:lt. Strvlce1 Wert
hl'ld Sund1y, 2 PM. "'" F1mlty c~ lorilt l Funtr1I HDllW.
'I Was Forced
To Face Truth
About Myself'
IXCUlllYl1
By MRS. ANN LEVY
N. Cunoa ,A.,.~ Loa Aaplee
A• told'. to GloriG Jfur1MU
M llK C:t:tluaiv•
~lt•cl letter
"When my husband jok-·
In.ab' referred to me u his
'pl111h pony' I wu forced1
to face the real truth. It bu'.
been ju1t ten weeb since l
walked into your Beverly
Hill• salon and weighed in
at 172¥. pounds. My lat.est
progreu c h e c k showed a
total lou of 30 pounds andl
.fO inche.s, but you have l'iv-
en me much more •.• a
warm and friendly atmos-
phere with people. who are ae nu In el y interested in
helpinr -me with my prcr aram."
* -Your reducing program1 fs the easiest and fa11teati way to lose t h o s e extra.
pounds and unwant.ed inch.I
es. I've tried dieting many1I
timea. but just couldn't
.eem to keep the weight1 oft. In eight weeb I loat
25\4. inche• and 15\4,'
pound1. Everyone at the'
ulon: bu been very helpful
and encouraring, and havel
liclped make reducing tun.!
I look forward to my visits
and feel bett.er every timei
I leave ~he salon." I ·Mr1. Mardell Doty,
W)'119a.le At11., Tuj ungci
* "Your me t hod is the
DESSl!:RT quickeat way to lose weight
M1rlorv IE. Dftwl'f. nm 1111om1 I h t · d A"~ G1n:r"' G-. surv1v«1 llY """ ave e v e r r 1 e , .• I bl"lft 11n1•1r<t; >1111. P1v1c1 M. 0t:n•M1 Jcnow, <---u•e I've been on' ci.u..,ttr, Mt•lorv; -vrindc:hild. ~ I
Gf1ve11a 5ff'l')~J. Tuescr1v, 11 ""'· •' many of them When I had 1 V1 ll\t1l1 M_._, ll1rt, l 11r&.lnk. • •
Dll"Kllll " PHI!; F1ml1Y co1onr11. to buy a size 18 dress a
i+ome. , couple of months ago, I de-:
WY cided to atop in at your
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corou de! Mar OR U45t
Cotta MHl Ml II-UM
~L"'a,iJ.1'~~.i\..1°''11',-='. salon on the way home, You
w.111;11n CNiPf'I Morl\llr1, u....a•. guaranteed me to not only'
LEGAL NOTICE loae weight but Jnches too 11
l'\•e lost 20 pounds and 35
inches-from a 1ize. 18 tol
a size 111 The beat moneyj
I ever !pent. P.S.: My hus.1 band 1topped playing carda,
Friday night.a and il!I taking
me out again I" ·
BELL BROADWAY NOTICE 01' $ALI! OF ltlAL MORTUARY f'llOl'•llTY AT P'llllVATI SALi ........ lit Broadway, Co1ta Me11 su11111:10• cou•T o,. TH• U 1-3'SS STATf 01' CALIFOllNIA ~It
THI COUNTY OF OltANGE
In !I'll Matter of 1he E1!1t. of HELEN PACIFIC VIEW M. WASH!IURN, Dece1Kd,
Nolle• II MrellY 11IVlfl ,.,,, the -MEMORIAL PARK Hrslenfd win 1tn ,, ,,,,,,,, ..... Oii o• Ceaete-e Morta•-•U•• '"' 11111 d•v "' July, 1 .... ,, 111e °" •.J --l!ct ol' her lllorMJ llENNET Cl.AN, IUJ Clltpel Wllshlre a~ .. Sulk o . lttttlv Hllll, I
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P--ine View Drive c1111oor1111. c-"' ot Lo. .-,..,, ..... s11t1 ~ of C1l1forn!1, t. flll llltllnl 11'1d !lest &ht· Newport Bellcll, Califon.ta "'' 1ncr 1u111.c1 to conltrm111011 1w uhl ••.1 !'711 """"'*' C_., 111 "" rltllt, ttl .. 1fld I"' _.. ltll!1I °' 111<1 0tee111t1 11 "" 111'1'11 ot
""'" 1MI 111 lhe rltht, tl!le 1MI lnle,.._I
PEEi. FAMILY ""' "" 11t1tw of 11111 ~'*' 111s 1c· llUll"fd ti'/' _,Ilion of law or Ott.trwlMI, COLONIAL FUNERAL other "'--or In 111dlflofl to rhll llf 11ld
ROME lt(.t11H, 11 !he t1mt of lfffltl, In IP!(! fo
111 "" ctrll!n rt1I ..._," 1/flllttd In Mt Bella An. the C°""h' llf Or•-· Stile 91 C1lffoflll1,
--· ~... Ill MM lllrtlcl.lll•f'I' llltcrlllld " li:lllOws. ~t: n'--• --5l"9k r11111tn« houM, '-SN flur,,,.,m, r '""" ,.,,._ C11flor11l1, Loi 2', Trld 1111,..~,nn•'I MOllTIJ • •y 1•1. r1rc11 No. '7.(IU.Ol, eoo111; 17• "''' -1t Ill MIK. ,,.,,.. lfl Or1"'1 (-TY, llfl llalll 8&. Ttm11 ot 111t Cllfl 111 ltwtu1 INIM'f ot II~ -
IM Uni"" St9tes en C'Oflfl""llll!I f1f Mle,
It' Nrl Clli'I -IMllnct ~ b¥ '°°"
...... MCVl'M 11'1' Mal'"-or Tr1r11 ~ en l ""' 11-rt'f M Mid. fll'fl lff Cllll ol
-I llld fl llt ftoolltd Wl!l'I &id. WZITCllPI' llQ.RTtJAJlf llft tit oflt,_ fo 1111 In -1t1"1 IMI win
---IL, ~ -lie l'I(., ..... •I "" ......... ""1<• " '"' -..,. ....,_ ~ time lfttr Ille 11 ... 1 ~llutlon ~"'°' 1r>d
•• II I """""' dl!t ti 1111. Ufldt"l..-.cl '""""" II I "'"' .. nlKI llf'IJ •!'l •" bids. OlfN J-X.lfft. WEft'lllNITEJl Vll'll~11 I, AfflOlof ~-... • p·.t.-ll!HtUlrla of~ Wiii llLl:IJIM'Aoll!UI ,.,._ of Mid ,_1119"1,
.. .....,. 6 t;• f'lar7 ::,•:.!.:.u.: ........ """ ...
Cliopoll =· ... Cl~·· l9l1 a.a. .• ..,, tr .::..OC...,,111.
llJ•nll • •Jiil ~ etr.... C.O.•t Otllf l"li,,t, Ju.
Mr1. Glady& H ca.th,
Rathbttrri A ve.,
1
'.
Norf11ridqe
* Gloria Marshall has
h elped thousand1 of wom-
en regain their youthful, l
alender figures. The above ·
is a samplin1 of the hun-,
dred11 of letters 1he ha11 re.
ceived, telling of how &he
ha 1 completely revamped
h~r patrons' lives. Declar.
ing, "I haven't met a worn·
an yet, whoaefirure I
couldn't Improve," MI 1•
M1t'r1hall invite. you to lff.
for yourself how 1he can
11uarantee a loyeller new
fiRurt quicklv and 1a./1lv
without pills, strtnuoua t.X•
erci1e or starvation diet.
Call now for your compli-
mflntary treatment and fic-
~re analy1ta.
irlg's riots in tfle Orange
Cowtty jail, Sheriff's officers
reported.
Thomas L. Weymlller of
Orange Wf&.S dead on arrival
'1968 uo County Traffic
Death ToU
1967
9%
James W. Todhucter, 52,
of 59m Lle&e Drive, Hun-
tington Beach, who was kill·
ed Thur.liday When h t 1
ni ~torcycle went out of con· Some 300 prisoners broke
145 windows, 33 lights and
six emergency Ught fixtures
during a five-hour
disturbanCe, deputies said.
'&t Orange County Medical ----------troL ,
Tustin Youth
Given Honor
Center. The boy wai; struck
by a car WhJle crossing the
Orange-Olive Ro ad in·
tersection in Orange.
Mesa, died Saturday al
Hoag Memorial Hostpial of
injuries s uffered lo a
motorcycle accident Friday
night in Newport-Beach.
1.. .. uane A. Heine, 4, Garden
Grove, who died Thursday
ot injuries received when be
was struck by a car Damage wes e5timaoted at
'2500.
Officers said the driver,
The u p r o a r reportedly
began witti the exploston of
"firecriackers" made from
match heads.
P.atrol deputies were call·
ed in to aid jailers in q~ll·
ing bhe outbreak. T h e
troublemakers were
separated in l<>wer floor
tanks and some used to
clean up ttie debris.
Sgt. Sam Middl'etoa said
pereons responsible f o r
causing the riots heve been
identified. and evidence will
be presented to the distfj.ct;
attorney's office today. !
Walk Tours
On July 13
Orange C o u n t y con-
servatiDnists will have a
chance to picnic then take
walking tours of the Santa
Ana riverbottom in
Riverside County July 13.
The guided nature tours.
sponsored by the Tri-County
Conservation League, will
begin at the entrance to
Prado Park at 5:30 p.m. and
6,30 p.m.
TUSTIN -A Tustin Stu·
Fullerton have been award·
ed S 1 O 0 0 scholarships
presented annually b y
Beckman Instruments. Inc.,
to children of employes .
Douglas Thomas Peart,
senior class president at
Tustin High, and Karen
Jane Robbins, class valedic·
toria n at Troy H i g h ,
Fullerton, were cited for
academic performance and
leadership. They are the
c.hildl'.tn of Mr . and Mrs. L.
T. Peart of Santa Ana, and
the Robert O. Robbins 011
Fullerton.
'Sing Out Set
F'or July 26
SANTA ANA - A groop
of 146 youths from the Far
East wftlo will appear -in
"Sing Out Asia" at the
Anaheim Convention Center
JuJ.y 22 were o If i c ia 11 y
welcomed this week by the
Boan! ol Supervl5on.
NIGHT and DAY SERVICE
9:30 A,M. TO 9:30 P.M.-SATUllDAY 10 AJA. TO 6 '.M.
this ad :ls for
,overweight won1e11
' without will power
I I
3. Oo you .. ~ ..... crou ... c1 lrritoblt, ., .ru,..
1i1h ancl lethargic when you'r. bcrttllng t9
lose wejght?
yet D 2. 0. you try plllt, di.ts, exercr .. ,_ •while,
enly N have pounllage r.tum •• ...,. 01
yu tllp from rigid routine?
•• When you DO loM weight, 11 It olwoys from
Y"D
the "wrong" places?
yet 0 ••D
if you've answered "yes" to any of these questions, read on •••
Now, at last, you can lose pounds and
inches quickly and safely this one abso-
lutely guaranteed way: and, you can do
it without starvation diets, pills or stren·
uous exercise.
The Gloria Manhall Syal.em i1 a ~IMllllitM program of
complete figure and posture improvement combined with eXJ?ert
fnatruction on every facet of beauty. Tc;> our knowledge, no other
~irht reducing eystem can, or doee, offer our 1ervices. We
have developed a variety of machines to bani8h tv~rv correct·
able figure fault. It i1 a relaxing, quick and ""1f way to lose
those extra pound1 and inches. We can help you regain and
keep a trim. poised, youthful 1hape and at the same time release
muscle tension.
App-ranee Affects Personality
Overweight i1 not only damaaing to health but too many
pound• make & woman appear years older than she is. Every
woman knows that her personal appearance does affect her
personality. Overweight can change a normally vivacious wom-
an into one who is depressed, irritable and unhappy. The more
dissatisfied she becomes with herself, the more 11he i8 likely to
overeat. She gets less and less exercise and loees the energy to
lead an active life.
You ca ii look lovely as long aa you live. Taday, it is easier
than ever to look like a ne\v won1an. We will take care of the
diffi cult part. Call today for your free treatment and figure
analysis with no obligation. We will discuss your figure prob-.
lems with you and show you how we can guarantee reaulta •••
remember, it'1 ftever too Tali to be lovely.
Results Are Guaranteed
E very patron receives a WRITTEN GUARANTEE thal
•he will reach her predetern1ined dress size within a apecified
period of time. If the promised results are not attained on
echedule, Gloria Marshall will furnish additional treatmenta
until the guarantee js fulfilled at no further cost or obligati<>D
to the patron.
How Con We Guarantee Results?
A personalized progress chart ia JJrepared ao that each time
you vi11it the salon a traine d counaelor can guide you toward
your speci fic goals. \Ile keep a constant check on your progress
toward a lovelier figure. In this way, you reach your de.!lired
goal in the shortest time •.• a.11.d for the least expense.
How Much Does A// This Cost?
The 8bndard price for treatments is $2.00. You are clearly
told the number and frequency of treatments required to help
you reach yaur predetermined goal. This way you know exactly
,.,·hat your 1elf-improvement is going to C08t :you , • , there ar.
no extras or hidden charges what.soever.
No Disrobing Necessarv .•• We Are NOT A Gvm
CALIFO!lNIA'S LAT'tGEST FIGURE CONTROL SYSTEM
FIGURE
CONTROL
SALONS
Daily 9-9; Sat. 9·5 • BankAmerica1·d and Master Charge Welcome
NEWPORT BEACH
430 Pac:ific: Caast Highway
2 Blocks East of Balboa B•y Club
642·3630
SANTA ANA
1840 W. 17th Street
543.9457
'------------"" L &. .. ,,. 1111 ... ,. ,
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I<.
I
rQ'-V_E.;...E_l'll_lE ___ _;•:;;11~P:..=•U:::l•ter'4ltMll CdM Tells
Honor'
Society
Monday, J,ly 8, 1968 DAILY PILOT !
·capo Junior H.ig)l Awards-Given J fFi· I! -,, .ill
-ii[_ If ·
Twednty-slx different area5 t,.~ 0,!.~ ~ 1= ~.,:r=.,~= :;:: ~~t1.P~ 111~~~ ::'J: ~%r ~':-t.":'~.!'~•"'-of 1tu ent excelll!'Oce were ic1ne, c 11r11 KMrnty, 1•11 KJneAt~. Mav 1t1 ... EIHnllauir. Pn!IO, Tam hir.r.i, <foflll "''' ,..,. Jot ....... -•o11 °"'....,., 1wi Kktcelll. noted wben the ·~::r body Mclr!M, Tolrf RHdlall. 1111 Stocld1rd P•ui. O.Pltlr1, l lMa U. MunrM, Cwlt. M•111 IM""""9 Mil lrlM ,.,,.,. . Md RM Tllrffd911L Ttrrl lttW, CMr... ,....,.,_, iew.t .......... -H 111 ey ...... I~_ ....... l""*'""'-of Capb:trano J · High .._.._ l ..... un--..,..,. .......,., MourP111119, Jiii lrM-T-Hfftdtr-. ~ lttOtrt-..,_.,, ,.1111 carm1i.. 0,_ .._; .._. ew-S c h .(I 0 1 • s • a J, .u a n -"""'-o~ ..... C\'11tN1 Hu .. ,.,, Nlctlota. v~ Kutdler, .... ..... s...... ~mi. AMII Sl.t· W¥. CIM¥' ..,.,... ,.....,. OitMM¥. . ~ LflliM Kl...,., ""'*' -l rlllktntn. SMtwft PMfMfto Debr1 = ltldl ,._..,., kmllil lmllfl.. ( ........ Hiiiery, Get' \.~ ic.f1e ,
'111., Hmor •-~-•y 1,_ Capistrano, g:ithered for the S.Mr1 MoDre, 11,,1 1i.~. cvnltlt• A11t1rn, l.orM T1v1or, CIM't' It•,._ "" . k'llll'I Tretter, l"•ltY ,,_., OetOte ll•m. M llWNM, ~le,._ Clnft' ~le\ v• 19874 school a Ward I Hiiiery, ..cond plec .. incl IM•Ntll =:1:;;, J.i:. P"'; "-llCJ Htnderioll MIMro,·Clfld'f 9-fftd 0eotwe Vtlell. llMTllm and MelNI J1mi.-.
next year bas been selected -embly o.o~"':'. '=' ,_,. -T-MIMlc _ "'"*",.. """"· Dw•Yfiil T~~ ~~~~ .._. ... • r -.111 a. Dwell. .. C CY111Me HI...,., 91111 .... Dor-... by Corona del Mar High 1..,. '""' • ~1: ,.,,., Ht,..tldi. Jci1w1 FrnMff, T•raM l'Mf. s.ttl't, o.....ii a-. c.,11 ,_..r,
Sdlool · '1'...-.lpll W a 1 lje ~ J, ,,~:,·•· "*'•i, ,:.~ -o.~~~ f::'•~ .. "V:..';·, =~rH::!: ~T!t ~a:.'. r':1~ D~.,•= fM':: ~·=· J:J,•.;1~•:1d!; . Spencer ha• ret....a the tl'lldoll, Ind lwln H. rt. II 0, ". KA!hrvn Slllrtt, 1(1ftlrY11 ~· Llrtt-H!'*lt. '°"9¥, DtllMY. Clrol lhrtf11d, c ...... tc•m ·Hlfll""'-... TlnlitlilM
ThoH 1tudenta who will be following ll!t of seveiJ.tb and ~= ,.,,_ _ ey111111• Huie,.,, ~i...~A,,:.,.i.ck..;.. ~ J:.":: ~J:..~-~~"!:"'Tiii ~.!:a_~ ZI,.. ~ in the senior h011.ort IOClety · eighth grf(iers wbo were ;,,'""" Llllllfi.-. r..,._ IJWM, """"-,.,.,. .,. ,.,,. ""-. ~ Dlllrll .....,. .,.. brlll LJAo-.
honored-LDl'M T1v1or, l.91111 1ur11111m, '"''"" l'I• Am -CflUck l"ltld Mill 1oit! Nl'*Y -llldlanl °''*"" L"11 ..._ -l.lrN Tw.., in the ran are Peagy Adami, """"· N9!1C1' Cl"""' Jantt G~ Sulhtrlll!d. '°'*'"· Nikki ClllmMk .,.,. Di.ti. ltlr .... lldltlr, ~ 0,.,..... ~
Cit! ............. -S.nd¥ link. OtDble l.o'rlld. Jo °" Dl,olflr;, Iambi Art -lfllrt11' ... .._. Torn KIM, ........ lllldlu. DelrM ·-· 1111111 c..... Susan Anderson, Fletcbe Nikki C.,....,,.k. "* CIKNY, ,_, Slnlth, Connlt "°9im111. """' Mn ,._ <•·~· ... ,.. HI....... C•t• ....... -"""' a-1. lll'l'NIW. V111M ..,._, l.allr .. I."""*" °"" Ot ......... .llo.t °'""' <Yfttllll HlllffY, Ntwrllrt, KtlllY Sllllntt, Vl<klt C..... o.Mtr, Ciro! l!n...t, LIM .. llcodl ft II... Dtlltlll Slndltl 11141 Fllwll b1I tart:. C-11 .. ,..._. llld Dlllr1 ~' Deborah BeU,. Vlc::tie L"ht · .1orc11n, KtttlrJ'11 Lodi .. Tr.c' ,,,.. """' "'' ~....,. · w1ff Slll••L 01rc11. • Au'1111.
Bia k P I B I I a-.ta.11911, cw.thtl ,.,... Cll'Mh' $d-. -S.1Mfr1 ll1Jllt, .HIM! Hlllln -Ernest Pkk. &llldr• l"IM -,. ... .,. 0.llM,, ~• .........., -NM* ._.... llld HlllCt C , ame a I a C Jt, lltJTlltllo l911r1 SI--. Mltltm Glbion, Mlrl!11 h ktr, 01rul Wrtlorl, Moert, llobl" 11!,_lt, K1fe Stlmll 11111 fltml"' 9"" lruao luttv111. Ct'*"' • • r-
J B-~ S t Trofttr, TtrlM W1t1111, 11(,n IUtlllrd:-. J\1111 OrOWll, .Girt Cl.WV SNrk~:,,__ , , , 16fltl ... IH .... lllllllll -Deb9rth .......... -Mtr11 Mlol-., 1!*11 ames 1-.JurD, e V e J..., Wl'-'! Kif\' , .. ,... llobbll Alltll, Mtrtlll Hldllllt. Chrl1 kMtMY, C•M1ftlC.-la!NI -Mlrl-Wlllte, ANI Rodr111Jtt, SUMI! kott, Hllbol'll. TrKY ~ CIPdY ·Susan Ander1on, Fletcherl-"~':!!.,....~=-·~J .. =•~11h~~°"'!!!"·:_M=""'~'~'....:":i--=:'-"' .. ::!-.=...:c::1"':!..!:'':!!"~'·~"::'M~-T!.'.""'='::.· !:"'!!"!.."'™==:~"'::-~·~"':!"!!M:!•::.· ....!!"~"'=':.'.!'.:-:·..:'::'"'~.!°'"-"""":·..:v:::"::...''-":::'::"'::..:""":::..-::::.::.__=---<llristoii>er Cooper a n d
Mafianne Cox. ,
"l'm ........... 1. • .;.-v · -~ you, ,., I'm joning!'
Others are ~teven Crooke,
Margaret Dye, K e n n e t b ·
Ewell, L a u r a Fer;u.on,
~e FJsber, Lltrie Fuller,.
Cindy Gadarian, Lor e. n e
Gruer, Steve Hu:tley, Dollg
James, Hem')' Joh n 1 o n ,
Norman Johnson, S t e v e
Jump, Kathryn Lynch· and
-·I~
Laguna Has Plans
For Young Guards
' Dorotliy Madllillan. , •
Al.oo,' llobert '~elllm, ,
Pamela · McCulloo.gb, Jane
Miller, Kedlein M u n r a e ,
Richard Netsser, Gary Net-
tles, Carol Olander, Kevin
O'Leery, Michael R,.hl,
Jan Rinaldo... and Cynthia Even boyg . aaes eiibt
throua:h 12 can make tbe
.... lifeguard aceDe; thiJ summer
in Laguna Buch.
Youngsters with a ye~ for
the beach can find com·
pet.nt inotruction in all
phues of beach lore, and
water 1:alety as mftnbers of
the Laguna 1leach Llfegaard
Sea Cub ProgrJD!.
'!be boys will learn first
aid, water safety, elemen-
tary lifesaving, surfboard
paddling, mat and. body
surfing and elemenW'y skin
diving techniques under the
carelul tutelage of John
Cumingham and JI m
Herdman , 1upimertime Speyer&.
lifeguards and ~acb~rs at Jim Staner: Dl.vid Terry,
T h ,u r s t o n Intermediate Sharon Thompson Anaela
School. T he emphalil is Toot!, Judy Twil.P.., Wm-
placed on having lun • dy Walk<r , Dean Wle,. 111<1
Starting on Tuesday, July Bob Williams.
9, at 1:30 p.m., at Main
Beach Headquarters, and
continuing each Tuesday
and 'nlursday unW Augu&t
13, tbe fi've week program
lasll lrom I :30 until 3 p.m.
Youngsters inte,.ested in,
Ule program are urged to
sign up on Tuesday July 9 at
the Main Beach. It -is
emphasized that prior ex·
perience is riot a prere-
quisite for !lie Sea Cubs.
'
Urban Crisis
Meet Topic
BERKELEY -A working
committee was formed ~
day to Plan a major con-
ference of California
educators on how to dial
wltli !lie urban crisis•mf it..
rural counterpart and to
assure f9U&l access ·to
education at all levels.
The meeting, called by UC
President Charles J. Hitch,
i D c hided representatives
from 13 educational 11socla-
tioni and from nearly all of
the • state's public a n d
private schools and colleges.
The committee will co"Dfer
at lengtll with leaders of
minority groups and seek
nationally prominent ex-
perts to iRin in tho three da7 , ,
conference planned for tbe
fall.
Hoag Aide
At Meeting
Steven D. Schumacher,
supervisor of the depart-
ment of radiology at Hoag
Memorial Ho1pltal in
Newport Beach will attend
the 40th annual convention
the American Society of
R a diologic Technologists
this month in Los Angeles.
Formerly cardiovascular
technologists at the
University of Washington
Hospital, Seattle, Wash.,
Schumacher has held office
in both the Calllornia Sode·
ty of Radiologic
Technologists and t h e
of the American Society of
Radiologic Technologists.
th
111111ilJl'!fllf
••
It's been awfully tou1h on other cars in Impala's field this year. You can
undentand that. What can other dealen 11y when somebody wants the
roomie1t car? (That's an ll"pala 4-Doors.dan.Accordina lo theAulomolioe
NtuJ1 Study, the bi1 Chevrolet is roomier than any other car in its field.)
What can they 11y to que1tions like "Where'• the ianition warning
buuer; the Hide-A•Way windshield wipers; Ihe Aush-and-dry rocker
panels; the Ma1ic-Mirror acrylic lacquer finiahi the Body by Fisher
quality?" (Only Impala's 101 them in its field.)
And whal can they say wh.. somebody specifies a .peed w1mill(
indicator, or li1ht monitorin1 sy1tem1 Or wants the lowest priced full-size
sport coupe, for instance? (You see, pultin1 you firs! ketp1 us fint.)
What else can they say? Help! ---
Nobody can help )'DU like your Chevrolet dealer....._-.
I '
~-
t -
}~ . '
. "' . . .
"lbu get the biosl•st
,..__, --jult where you'd upecr '°'
•
tt IJJ'tm (Ill m1tltttJJ!
TO vou · 1N HELPING us CELEBRATE
THIS FESTIVE OCCASION
Help ua celebrate our 47TH ANNIVERSARY or savings eervice In Orange County.
You are cordially Invited to sit for a free charcoal portrait, courtesy of Anaheim Savlnga.
Vlllt any of our three office• and a renowned artist will sketch your portrait, or If you prefer,
stop by and wstch Ille artists at work.
Join us lot a cup of coffee or punch and while you are here ... Why not open a new
llVf111111CCOunt or ldd ,lo your savings, we will be happy to transfer your account.
If you are ulllble to viii! ut In person, phone or write and we will glldty eend you
lnformotlon to open or transfer your ll1ilnga account ,
'
FREE . CHARCOAL PORTRAIT
'JULY 1st thru 10th
'
ANAHEIM SAVINGS
~ND L.CAN ABBDCIATICN
NIAHllM I llllA I HU;mlllllOil -11?W.Ulll0tnlw. 1108.._llwd.. 4t1 ... .... f'llllt-101: JAM171 ... .....
OFFICE IOIOURS: MONDAY thtu THURSDAY 9. 4 -FRIDAY 10-l
PRU DDllflllllNT MUllM AT ALLI LOGllllHI
!'~::...-~..:...---r~~-----~----~.--~~~~-~-----,,-..:.~~~..:...~~~~-~"""".~i;"""-~------~-7c.--"--~~-:-~~
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History on March
POLICE CHOPPER-Aircraft
Division of llughes Tool Co.
lent helicopter to patrol beach
and parade route.
•
Tfie ennuel Huntington Bee~h Fourth 'of July Peredo is neerly
es old es the century is long ..
In the '6t yeers since the first block long merch of Independence
Dey celebrenls dregged belk ing horses up muddy Mein Street from
muddy Oceen Ave nue, tho festivity hes thrilled millions of oldsters ,
youngsters and everyone in betw~en.
The 1968 perede, the lergest so fer with over 2,700 pertici-
pants, treated 150,000 Beach residents and visitors to o three dimen·
sional picture page of American History.
Gaily 'decorated floats brimming with chanting lnClians or per-
haps courtly ladies an·d gentlemen from America's colonial period
im:hed along the two-m ile downtown route.
Spaced among the eight divisions were milita ry and civilian
bonds, equestrians bridled or bedecked in silver or Spanish lace, the
clowns, the fire engines, drill teams, celebrities and a police chief.
J oh n Seltzer, Hunt ington Beech Police Deportment chief .. hes
been in 31 consecutive Independence Doy parades .
''You should hove. seen my first," he seid slyly. "It wes 1937
and we hod only 7 men in the deportment." Now, Seltzer added, he
feels unde rstelled with • .1968 deportment totel of 127.
GOLD f!RAID -(Left to right) Army Lt. Col.
Charles E. steele, Mrs. Steele, Brig. Gen. James A.
•j " . r/ "•\~+ .. ~ a:'~
YOUNG FLY FLAGS -Youngsters with a big dose
of patriotism are (fro!lt row) Gordon Lawitzke, G;
,
Feeley, USMC, Mrs. Creighton Cook and Capt.
Cook, USN, review ·a military contingent.
·'> ' ••
Gerl, 6, Becky, 3, and Marcie Cox, 7, who think:
it's a great day to wave the F1ag.
•
.t .... ...... .. __
TRAl''IC ADVISllll -Busy Oeean Avenue and Main Street inter-
section b clln!ct..t by Lt. Paul Darden (left), OUlcer Marty O'ReUley
JOHN BIRCH PARADERS -Approximately 1,000 members of the
John Birch Society, dressed in mourning, startle paradegoers with
their sUent procession. Crosses bear the names o[ U.S. 3ervtcemen
killed in action In South Vietnam.
and IWIDe stt-JOIC!ph Funcltes. . j • I f , • '· ,
I
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Yo ... Money's Worth . ,
How to Minimize ·Tax
Promoted•• Volt
Bart K. Brown, 30, of
Corona del Mar bas
been appointed vice
president in charge of
sporting goods manu-
facturing, purchasing
and industrial relations
of w. J. Voit Rubber
Corp. He joined AMF
Voit as a research' and
development depart-
ment technical assist-
ant and in 1965 was
transferred to sporting
good,s sales as Southern
California district man·
ager.
Ed"'°"" MOTii --.. ..,,_ ... ...,..,... ......... I feet of ................ Mt ... ~ _ ......... ,.., .......... .....
.,.,.. ........ ,,_., c•l1tm•l•t
lYMI ...,._., ...rk1N "' ~111111 Wiii u. ..... ·dlllf tn t9fft of Tht ._.... ....... ., NMtlu. _,.
.......... 11111'1 ........... lft
tlfllll -....: t. MIMN" YfW l1JC ........... ~ .....
Of courte · YCJU; a r e
lhorouCIJl7 ..,... that your
poycbe<t · lllcl profits soon
will be hit by a 10 percent income tax surcharge, to be
applied from April 1, 1968
for individuals and fr~
Jan. l, 1968 for corporat.1001
and to last through June 30,
1969. •
Thia mean« that th e
surcharge for the millions of
calendar year individual
taxpayers will actually be
only 7;2 percent for 1968.
BUT YOU'RE the rare ex-
ception indeed if you know
the fine points of the new
law at this stage and. have
even the vaguest notion&
about how to mlnimfze the
Impact of the tax lncnaae
on your pockethO:Ok or cash
register.
Here, therefore, are key
I See by Today'.s
Want Ads
'-l:::i~:,...."'=~ e There is an opening for an
energetic yomg man who,
11 tnt~l'Mted in black and
white -~ print-
ing.
e YOU can ft.sh and lki in this
,,. Trimaran Z.100 HP
Mm.'Ul')' ootboard!
e l9llJ Jaguar Mark IX with
riaht hand drive. A recent --·-h!&i tory a1nce new!
• Where you Ct.n find baby
tumiture to prepe.re thlt
room for the new arrival!
e Here's a beautiful Ever-
ette aoUd walnut upright
....... ~ "&ctioa and .tone.
laeta Hd lllidea !or you,
compiled IA collaboration
with Leon Gold, clilel tax
expert oI the Re search
Institute of Amtric•r
-H, u all 1Ddlv14ual,
yO\D" reCU)er income tax for
111&8 comaa to lea thao '134
on your ltea tax return
wtrlch you. will file next
April, you mua:t find your
lllA'CllO<ie In olllclal tables
aupplled by the TrMaury
lllcl add It onto yciur regular
tu.,You ce required to U1e
the tablea even though a
se?aratie multiplication of
your tax by 7"1: percent for
1968 might come out to a
few pennies less.
-IF YOU ARE among
the calendar y e a r in-
dlvidua!J with regular taxes
of '734 or more, when you
prepare your 1968 return,
you must figure out your
sui'cbarge for yourself by
multiplying your regular tax
by ra percent for '68, and
add that onto your regular
tax.
As an illustration, say you
Ille a 111&8 joint return and
show a tax of .. $673 befofe
figurin& tbe surcharge. A
IUl'charge of 7* percent of
$673 would be $50.48. But
since your regular tax is
belOw $734, you must use ttie
tables. The Treasury table
applying to you is no. 3
(married persons or IW'Viv·
ing apouse filing a Joint
return). 'Ibis shows a
surcharge of $51 applicable
to a tax of $673, giving you a
final tax of '724.
But you say you are a
married man with a regular
tax !or 1968 or $2,500. Your
surcharge is 7¥.z percent of
$2,500 or $187.50. You must
do tile multi'plying yourself
because your tax is at the
$734 or. more lim.il
...: IF.YOU .ARE .-low
bracket individual taxpayer,
~ -.-/ -~
0 Interest from the 1st of any month
on funds received by the 10th.
Interest frOm dale of receipt after·
the 10th.
Interest to date of wilhdrawal on
funds left 3 months or longer if
account remains open until quar.
tcr's end.
\ ~ ~ I"l' -flA+-T ,,ut,,_,
-T'S TIME TO CHANGE
Transfer your account TODAY!
Easy tq do ••• just call or come in.
WHERE you save DOES make a cliHercncc.
ti
MUTUAL SAVINGS ...... ..... ............... ..
CORONA DEL MAR
.
-~--Olllalldollodll•••J'-.l,C'drandl.1!1111
,,
you are either exempt from
this surcharge or you pay
less than· the full amount.
There is no surcharge for
single lndivldua!J with fl,000
or less of taxable income;
married couples with $2,00li
or less : heads of bou.sebold
with $1,500 or less.
• -If you have ao income
just above these amounts, a
apeclal trapsitioo provision
~ prevent a sudden tax
bite for you, 'Ibia: provision
gi-adu.a.Uy removes the ex-
emptloll as .. Your· income rlle• · beyond the exempt
level. It applies to a single
taxpayer with a taxable in-
come between $1,000 and
$1800i a married taxpayer 'fl:ltb an income between
$'2,000 and $3,760; a head of
household with a taxable in·
come between $1,500 and
$2,780.
You Wlll"find these lfmita-
tions and the "notch" pro-
vision worked into the of·
ficial tax tables so that you
won't hll'Ve to, do your own
figuring to . arrive at your
surcharge.
AS AN illustration,, say
you are single and your tax
from 1he regular optional
tax tables -and before the
surcharge -Comes to '211.
Your surcharge is in the
new surchaige table 1 (s;
ingle 'Person, other titan
head of household, and mar·
ried person filing a separate
return). Thi& will show a
surcharge due ol $10 in.stead
of the $15.83 which would be
due on a straight 71h per-
cent. Your final tax is $221.
-If )'our pay is subject to
withholding, your withheld
amount will generally be in;
creased by roughly 10 per-
cent. ,
As an illustration, say you
are married, earQ. $200 a
week and have four ex-
emptions. Your week l y
withholding will b e in-·crease<S from $23.20 to
$25.60, cutting your take·
home pay by $2.40.
Y.IANY 'OF YOU may be
under-withheld fOr 1968 and
have to pay an additional
final tax or get a smaller·
than-expected refund wh~n
you file your 1968 return 1n
1969. The reason is that
while your withholding is in·
crea.sed by about 10 percent,
it applies for only about half
of 1968. This produces
roughly a 5 percent increase
in taxes prepaid through
withholding tbis ·year -or
21k points less than than 71h
percent surcharge for the
year 1968.
-If you are an individual
whO files a declaration of
estimated tu, you will ha~e
to reflect tbe 5urcharge m
your payment! or declara·
tioos due on or after Sept.
16, 1968. .
U you llI'e basing y~ur
estimate on your prior
year's taxes, you mu'st in·
crease it to reflect the
surcharge in order to avoid
penalty !or underpoyment of
tax ..
Ne:rt: More key fUlde1 on
1pplylng tbe 1urcbarge.
•
' PAIR PROMOTED BY ATLANTIC RESllARCH
Eu! Newton Biiiy F. Auvonehlno
Atlantic Promotes 2
Assistant Managers
Two Harbor Area men
have been promoted to
as st s tan t gen er'a 1
managerships with t h e
Missile Systems Division of
Atlantic Research Corp.,
Costa · Mesa.
Earl B. Newton of
Newport Beach, formerly
director of the program
m'anagement department, is
now assistant g e n e r a 1
manager for · &ystems
englheering and manage-
ment, responsible !or ad·
ministration and technical
direction of all division pro-
grams.
A graduate ol t It•
Universities of Texas and
Michigan, h• joined the firm
in 1962 as assistant project
manager.
Billy F. Auvenshi'ne of
Corona del Mar will take
over as assistant general
manager for oPerations. He
will be in charge of quality
assurance and the manufac·
turing department, ol which
he was formerly director.
Another University o f
Texas graduate, he joined
Atlantic Research Oorp., a
division ol. the Susquehanna
Corp., in 1967 from Philco.
Ford A~ronutronic, wtiere
he was p~ manager at the
Anabelm facility.
Javelin Keeps _Pace
Witlf Race Champion
By CARL CARSTENSEN
Keeping pace with a well
e s t a b llshed competitor,
especially a defending
champion , is no easy assign·
ment in any area of sports.
Yet this precisely is what
American Motors-Corpora·
tion's new Javelin has ac·
complished since going ra~
ing in the 1968 Tran!l·
American Sedan Cham·
pionship $tries.
In the five races since it.s ·
competitive debut at 5ebr·
ing, 'Fla., in March, Javelin
has matdled'd e fending
.Trans-Am ~tlist Mti<tang In
.piling -up manufacturer's
champioll6hJp points.
I>M;ng from Sebring'• 12-
hour endurance run, Javelin
and Mustuig each have ac-
cumulated 22 points on tbe
basis of a 9-6-4-3·2·1· point·
formula for finishes in each
event. ·
Javelin's racing team, as
does its factory-supported
competitors, enters two cars
in each Trans-Am race. Yet
only the car highest in the
standings at the finish is
awarded points.
George Follmer ,. of
Arcadi~. who finished Se·
cond at Uie recent Trans·
Am a t Bridgehampton,
N.Y., and Peter Renon, of
New York City, are the
Havelin team drivers.
The season Follmer aod
Revson have placed
Javelins second on two oc-
casions, third. in two other
t!Vents and fifth in the Tri:iis·Am group at Sebring.
Since the three-hour
Tran.s·Am race at Tulsa.,
Okla., May 12, ·Javelin has
finished no lower than third
among the factory sedan'! in
the over 2-llter category:.
'!bat ·span covers four
.races and Javelin has total-ed ·20 inanufactUrers points
to lS f0< Mugtoog. 1" tho
ovttall seasonal standings,
Camaro tops lbe list witth $1
points to .31 lor.Mustang an4·
22 for Javello. Both Camaro
and Mustang ~ave run one
more race than Javelin. * CHRtSLER· * PLYMOUTH
SETS SALES MARK .
Ch r y 11 le r-P lymouth
Div~ion today reported that
sales of 86,431 new cars
gave it Its best June, best
quarter and be6t six months
in history.
It marked the third con-
secutive quarter of record
retail deliveries and ex-
tended to ten the Divisions
unbroken chain of record
sales months.
In the first half of calen·
dar 1968, just concluded, the
division exceeded its
prevlout best performance
for a like period by 62,547
units with Bales Of 494,763
Plymouths, Cllryti:lers and
lmperlals.
' Sharp Named
Sales Director .
All>11 Sharp of Newport
Beach, fonnerty vice prest-
de.nt of American Plant
1,Protection Co. bu been ap.
pointed director ol oales for
-tt>e ·Wllllam J. B u r n s
-inlemationalDetoctlvo
Agency for so.utbern
c.utornla, Arhona a • d Clork County, Nov.
Aerojet Tiirns.
Loss to Profit
LOS ANGE;LES (UPI) -
Mrojei..a--al Carp. today
announced eam!Jlgs ~ f
$4,088,000 for the six-month·
period eoded Moy 31.
'lllls ~ to • looo
for the same period 1 year
ago of $4,832,000. Sales for
the period thla ,..,. -· '2!9,tlOl,000 compand with '218,106,(X)(). ,
IWl.V PIUT J J
Everything Rising
•
Economy Enters
Inw New Phase
BJ JOHN Cl1NNll'F
NEW YORK (AP)-
Spoaklna, ecocomlcolly, tbl.-
montb may be remember a1
much more· than t b •
midway point In a booming
but troubled year. A year or
ao from oow we might atao
recall It as the beglnoing of
a new economt'c phaie.
As this economy enters
the second ball, or the new
phase, ct1nsumers are spen·
ding heavily and debt is ris-
ing. Joblessness is only 3.5
percent of tbe labor force,
but credit is costly, prices
and wages are rising, and
taxes ar.e rising too.
Although the defects and
needs of the urban
economies are bel.og ex·
posed as nev~r ·before, the
problems and imbalances of
the rural and f a r m
economies are great also:
farm exptn.ses are high or
rlsl:ng, while prices received
are slipping.
OUT OF BALANCE
In general, the economic
boom, oow more than seven
years old , is so badly out of
balance that prices are ria·
ing at the rate of f°'"11' per-
cent a year. And many of
these rising household cost.s
are Where they can't be avol~ed: in rents, medical
and dental care, f o o d ,
clothing.
Already the economic fn.
dlcators, ttiose statistical
arrows that point to futuu
events, have bf:gun to tilt
downward, anticipating a
slowdown because of a pro-
mised '6 bllllon cutback in
government spending and a
1(} percent surcharge on
personal and corporate in·
comes, scheduled to begin
this mouth.
Gradually, as money ia
taken out of the economy,
the rate of unemployment
should begin to rise, perhaps
reaching more than 4 per-
cent of ti:te labor force in the
next m month! or so. Thia
ts one Of the painful ironlea
ol any slowdown.
SPENDING
' Wage increues likely will
continue at a rate of 6 per·
cent or so for a matter of
months · but wtll become tn-
creaoingiy dllllcult to ob-
tain. Comumer apending
may drop even though,
hopefully, price increa.set
will moderate and credit costs drop.
By eii'Iy next year it may
well be a hrand-n w
economy -perbapa even
tbreate~ with recession -
-... that will per.Ut the .....
preoldoat to Issue with some
decree of crtdlblllty that old
hattlecry: Lot .. be(lq.
'l1lore II a good chance the
new president wllr find hi.I
cOnstituentl clamoring for
more expansiveness in the
economy, for JDQJ'e Jobi, for
lower taxes and perbapt
even for a bit more govern-
ment spending.
Although this may be a
new phase of the economic
boom, or even the end of it,
the excesses and defects of
the past seven years aren't likely to be forgotten. Fun,-
damental changes are being
considered.
CRITICISM >.. the great speculative
binge in the stock market
shows signs of ending,the
stock market ibelf appear•
to be facing a Jong period of
examination and criticism
of its methods, in put the
result of excesses.
Beginning this week in-
vestigators will probe Into
the commiaalon 1 y a t e m
under which brokers are
paid. · Later the trading
habit.a of mutual funds
might be scrutinized. One
result may be to expose to
thfl public metlods which
the 'financial community
lonf hlll felt to be private.
Actions of the Federal
Reserve Board, a semJ-in ..
dependent agency of govern•
ment that can ratae or lower
interest ratea and therefore
slow or apur .the econo'?Y,
seems also to be attracting
critical attention.
REcP!SSIONS
The Fed, which played
major roles in directing Ule
economy over the length of
the present boom, was ac·
cuaed this week by Sen.
Wllllam Proxmire (0-Wis.),
of deependlng r~saions for
30 years and with often fan ..
Ding inflation.
Descrlbi.n-g a. forthcoming
reporj. by the Senate-House
Economic Committee, Prox-
mire said "this r e p o r t
breaks shar ply with
Congreas' trldi'tional 'handa
oJf tho Fed.' It tell& the Fed
to adopt a conl'tlnt and
moderate monetlry policy
and inatructa them to tell UI
whenever fhey depmt from
it." ..
Whatever the net reaulb:
of ecoaomic policy aver th•
next aix months, or tbe ex ..
amlnaUon of It over the past
seven year1, tbe ~ ue
becoming clearer · that a
pbae ls ending.
Class Consumer Market . ' '
New Bait for Companies
NEW YORK (UPl!-The
first thing the head 61 a
diversified. company needs
to know is that market.I are
compo!ed of people wh~
have more money to spend
today than ever before in
history, aays John Hampton
Hickman, new chairman of
Seilon, Inc., of Tofedo.
Hickman took over 8ellon
this spring from Edward
Lamb, the Toledo in·
dustrialist who waged a
spectacular proxy fight a
few Years ago to win control
of Selbleting Rubber Co.,
then aold off the Ute
butlt!011 and created Bellon out of the remainder of ·tbe ·
company.
11The class market hu
become a mass market for·
the first ti.me in history,"
said the youthful Hie~,
who left a Wall Street
career with McDonnell &
Co. as a specialist iD in·
ternatlonal financial oPera·
tiona (be studied Chlnuo at
Yale 11 prepuation to
1peclaliJa In A1ian linanco
and business) to tab over
Bellon. .
••ni.e ' manager of •
dlvenlflod companr lliould
trim 1lill ""°" lllcl set hla course In the Ugbt of thla
facL He should put Ille com-
pany Jiao oper.-lo take
odvanta&e ol thla """ blCh prol!L rapid growlh elm~
C<IDlumer merket, let.viui
tile older, Jowtt p r o fl t
marg!D ht.i-to eom-
panles bettor able to lumdle tbem.u
II lb!. -M II H1<11m1n , u,. c1ubl""' about
Ille io.., 'lerm. ~ of
mlll)' of a. COIJilamonlal
"""' put toflJthor npldl)' .In Amerlcan &uslne• tadiJ,
he Is .. "I don't belleft Ill the COil•
v e n t t o n a I coacJa:nerate u-r. whlcb Is. ol Euro-
pun orlpi," .ha aald. "I
believe a divenlfled cor·
•· · ·· "n ought to have a
definite unity, el4h!t' of pro-
duct coMpetibillty, techoieal
and managerial capahWty
or ~ltous financial op-
portunities."
HlckmM said J a m e 1
Ling'• "redeployment" ta~
tics by whlch a nmnber of
the companies acquired by
Ling·Temco-Vougbt, Inc.•
subsequently are returned
to autonomy with a subltan ..
tial minority of p u b 11 •
shares is a recognition ot
the fact th&t a tfgbUy COD•
trolled conglomerate may aoon run :irto dangefou1
managerial problems.
Hickman has 21\0ftd very
fut oinct tulng "v ...
Soilon. Ho sold off the com•
pany'1 OOHixtb lnterost In
Copolymer Ru b b e r la
Chtmlcal Corp. of Baton
Rouge for $5.5 mllllon. Since
Sellon no lontfer mlllUfac·
tlln!a tires It no longer needs
a big IUl'Plf of Syll1hetiC
rubber. Ht _,... two can.dlan
dlvla!Olll In the . ...u,· and
cable and metll f·• ·D c • bualneu, He began ar-
rangiment to e J,c ha n 1·1
common stock fO< outatan-
dlng J'"fornd .. He lllOVed Selloci s ThoniooOn .., ..
llarves11nf m a c h I n e r 1
btMlnen from Loi1ide•a to
Nebr•ta and merfo!I II
with the V"'1 priitldilo
Locltwoocl lll'm llllClilner1
division, which JDllbl a
potato -amonc -lhiDll· Ht also llM lltl In motlcn
a 1'rtdtplo1ment" al
Locltwood, 1!1 -.........
ctot ol the c-wtll be told lo tbo public. Alld be
1"11 complelod lomo ...,,
11"-'Dfarnipn..cs.
What w!I Sellon baJ from -...... u "Tm not 111n 1rh1t
bmh] II ... 'D baJ llat of Ollt thinS I am surt, wo Will
lhlnk of ·-la thl high marcin elua meat
first of ~ ",. nld. .
•
I
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I
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.Orange Coast Daily Pilot Readers: Special INTRODUCTORY OFFER brings you. as much as
'
I I I • I I
•
I
~ Pays In addition to all other coverage you h.ave-lncluding Medicare
~ Pays up to$10,000.00tax free cash for
each hospital stay
~ Pays all cash direct to you (not to doctor or hospital)
Pays you cash benefits that Increase each year ••• to a
maximum of $130.00 -A-WEEK ••• at no extra cost to you!
~ No age limit-no medical examination required
SPECIAL LOW RATES! EXAMINE POLICY IN YOUR OWN HOME-MONEY BACK IF NOT 100% SATISFIED!
ACT NOW-YOUR ENROLLMENT FORM MUST BE MAILED BY MIDNIGHT, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, OR IT CANNOT BE ACCEPTED
. On• out. of two tamilies will ha•e someGne in the hospital this
year! It eoukl be 10• -or som. belo•ed member of yoor family
tomorrow ••• next week, •• next monlh. Sad to 1ay, very few
families ha.,. anywhere near enO\lrh co•era11e lo meet t.oday'l'I
aoarinr ho1plt.al co.U. Theae coats have tripled in just a few 1hort
yeara. They are expttt.ed to double •rain in t.M few years ahead.
Stop for a monwnL Think how much a lone 1tay in the hoviital
will cost )'OU or a lo't'ed one. How would you ever pay for costly,
but nectSUl'J', X-ra71, doctor bill11 drugs and medicines? Wtiat
would you do with your pay check atopped, but living expentes
1till roinc on lhe same u •ver? The nme rent, phone, food, all
the day-to.day upenaet that never 1top.
What it the average breadwinner to do? We believe 'll>'e htv•
the an1wer in the famoua Preaidential Extra Cash Plan that
' • • • ""1'• you $J 00.00 •week fax·fr••
,..,. whe" you 10 to the hospital.
Naw, Preaidentit.1'1 economy plan enables you to enjoy this pra-
ted.ion. Mail the Enrollment Form. We will Hnd rou the actual
policy to look over at home. No rush. No agent wll call or phone
)'OU. Take 15 days to decide.'Show the policy to a friend, a family
adt'iser f.r•t. You lose nothing if rou don't want the policy. But
if you do want it, 7ou're entitled to Pruidential'a 1pecial low
rate1 deacrlbed below. So low, you'll ftnd you get protection at a
prier. that'• jult a fraction of what you'd expect to pay.
Your co.,. hflefift lnctNM eocft yNr-
at no extnr colt re yovl
Your c;.a.sh btnclita automatically rise Jear after Jtar. You ret
peatt of mind so you don't have to worry about rlainr co1t1. Your
proteciion automa\ically lncreaHa $3.00 a week each year. The
tint 7ear you ret SJ00.00 a wttk. You ret $103.00 a week in the
KCOnd year. $10&.00 a week jn ths third year. $109,00 a week ia
the fourth year. By the ele•enth year, your policy will be worth a
full 1130.(J() a tt•t1k in benefit p1yment1 ••. at no increaM in
coat to you! This ~neroua cash reserTe protection will belonr to
you for as long as you Jr:eep the pelicy. You can 1H that your
insurance will be worth much more than the present "fut ••lue"
of the policy. Certainly, our lncreaHd payment.a to 101:1 will help
keep pace with risinr costs -and best of all •••
••• Jh• lncr•asing hneflfa come to you crt no ••fra cost.
YN dlll poy rite ...,,ular low l'r•1identlol. ,,.mluml
What other Plan protect.I .JOU like this today? What other Plan
keeps prote.ctinr you ara1n1t ri1inr liYing toall in the years
ahead witboat inettuing your premiums? And that's not all.
Thia 1pcci1I Presidential Extra Caah Plan (#H~ 181.-1067)., •
nAVS Up to $10,000.00 CASH fot ffCh aecldtnt or r,, I illnus, atartin& the wry first day In the hoapilll,
ftAVS $100.00 A WEEK CASH-if you need a full· r,, I time rq:istered nurse when you come home
from the hospital -up to 50 wetks. PAYS $1,000.00 EXTRA CASH for .c:cident.I death,
ftAVS Up lo $2.000.00 CASH lot occldonhl loss of r,, I limbs or eyesi1ht
PAYS $100.00 A WEEK CASH !or each prqnsncy, When you go to tlM ho1pit1if, assumlna both
husband •nd wilt have been enrolled in the
Family Pl•n With Mtternity.
pAvS Up to ss.ooo.oowhen a ct1ild aoes to tne hos· "I PIUI for •ny Keldent or illnnt When you •rt
• enrolled kl the F1mlly Plan.
ftAV$ YOU cash benefits that lncre1se etch year, • r-" I to 1 mtximum of $130.00.A-WEEK,, .it nO extra cost to you
N 0 egt llmlt -no medictl examinetlon required
IF YOU ARE 65 OR OVER
YOU WILL-COLLECT
IN ADDITION TO MEDICARE
\\'hy are 1mart folks over &5 now hastening to protect
themselve1 with the Presidential Extra Cash Plan in
11dditio1t to what Medicare will do for them?
E~en though Medicare is a great boop to folki over
IJS. it.will not, of courae, pay 'fll the bills that quickly
pile up u a result of illne1s or accident.\
•e1ardle11 of your 09e, you stlll need
oddltlonal llealtll protection. 1
We ha•e de1lgned thi1 plan u the important &dditioll
to what JOU receive from Medicare -or anr other
health in1urance JOU may have. Remember, al checks
will be 1ent directly to you (not to the doctor or ho1-
pltal), to give you that "extra" help' ju1t when you
need it mo1t. Use the tax-f~ cash any way you aee ftt.
And you will be rlad to k~ the checks will be big
one•/ In addition to what you recei•e from M~icare,
Prealdentlal pays JOU $70.00 a week •• , EVEN FOR
100 WEEKS lf necua&l'JI You ca" T'tcaiv• at m11efi. a1
17,000.00 for tu.la iUn••• or inj11rr 10.U"' lto1pitaliz1dl
••. 'ay1 yow $I 00.00 a w••k CASH
for o r•iltt•red nurte af ltom•,
Yes, in addition to the Sl00.00 weekly c:hecks we se:nd )'OU Ou ring
your hospital 1tay, we pay )'OU an extra $100.00 a week if the.
doctor aa)'s you need a full-time re(istered nuru to take care
of you at home.
How comfortlnr It is to know that-after your stay in the his·
pita!, If you've been ther• three 4ay1 er more, you can return
home to recuper1te and yet not be a burden to your loved ones.
Yes, it your doctor 1ay1 you need a regi1teffi:I nune full time
•ithin 5 days after you toma home, we'll eend you checks for
1100.00 a w•1k-for., Jong u you need the nuree -eYen up to
SO w1tk1. It'1 like haYlng a reMrve of ,5,000.00 cub to draw on
when you nHd it. TheM beneftta allo i"ereue each year by .S.00 a
week. Another exceptional feature you have with P.ruidtntial ...
••• 'GY• yov $100.00 o w••k ca11t morernlty hneflrs
Ordin•ry hospital insur ance may take c:are of part of your ex·
pen1e1 wheft you go to the hospital to heve a baby, But what
policy can you think of that Jrivea you cash to buy all the things
you need for the new baby? Now, if bolh husband and wife are
intured in the wonderfW Famil11 Pla.Jt Wit.la Maternit11 for the
en.Ure period of the pnrnancy, JOI.I ret extra cash to use any
way 7ou want. If a pnrnancy, childbirth or even miscarriage
puts )'OU in the hospital for one day, five days, 10 day1 -at lang
al "11ce1111rv -JOU ret $100.00 a week for ever)' day of your confinement, up to 100 weeks.
All tlle1e odded cadt 1Mneflt1.
Yes, in addition to $100.00 a week for hoapit.alization or
$100.00 a week maternity beneftta end $100.00 a wee:k for a reg-
ia:t.ered nurse at home, •• you ret all this:
AcNH C-. IN:Mftts: $1.000.00 cuh to )'1)Ur family if death oecura
within 90 days from any accidental injury. Think of how handy
the cs.1h can be In tlm1 of losa. lt can take care of burial expenses
without burdeninr J'O\lr lo•ed onea.
Alllkd cadl ....aez Upto$2,000.00cuh for accidental lou oflimb1
or eynlrht when the lou occun anytime within 90 days of the
accident. ~ loea of • limb or eyesight is a terrible thing. Noth·
ing can replact the 10113, but •check for $1,000.00 or $2,000.00
will brine great.er peace of mind durinr tbe ptriod of adju1tment.
AdW Ulk lnllti Chooee •itAw Family Plan ••• ud 10ur
children will be COTe1'ed tool Pl"Hidential ,.,. up to $6,000.00 atiJ
time your 10111111t.tr aoea to tha IMIQit&I ••• for touila, •PJ!ft·
dicltia, or •nr et.Wr Uh&eP or inJllrJI 'Ya. JOU will neeift '60.00 cu~ week .tter WMk-for u many u JOO w.ek•, if w rne17,
W• pay yaur P"•mlunt1 wit•• )'•u •r• nor •Ille
As a special tonslderatipn to YOQ -it J'OO are hospitalized just 8
wetb or more, all premi11ms that come due whilt' you are alill in
UCENCED BY THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA -------1 COlll'Lm AMO MA~ WITll 'fOUI nm ---------1 I MONTH1 PREMIUM. I lllCLO$l $ ir.= THE PRESIDENTIAL LIFE INSURANCE co. OF AMERICA I I ... N ......... ,,..,.,...,,_ ~ 11401 ROOSEVELT BLVD, PHILADELPHIA, PA. 19154. I
I Application to: The Presidential lttr tnsurance Company of America, Chlca10, Ill., for The Presidential Ho$9itll.fturse Plan. I
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I MISS f,,.t Mld4le 1nh111 l•M I ADDRESS------------;:;:::~,,.,------------! -·-•# CITY-------------~STATE. _____ ~DP ____ _
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DATE OF BIRTH----;;:=--=---=--"'GE. _____ SEX
Mo""' 011 Y11r -M1leO Fomale 0
OCCUPATION.::-::----:--c---------------------
l 1lso ~reby a~ly for COYtr1p for thl members of my f1mily listed below: {DO NOT include .,.. ttiat """1 lbovtJ Please list 1cld1t.onal depeOOenU on separate pqe.
NAME (Pleese Print) "" uF Bl
RELATIONSHIP SEX Month ,,,., AGE I
2
3 ..
5 --:& \ -_,, 0 I-~f(s) 0ntr "" O D-f.mify Ptan Wftt'I Mn.mtty
Do ,oU Cln}' ottter insurance with this Company? (If "Yes" pleast list policy rMimbrrs.) ___________ _
To 111t best of my lu!owltd11 and beliel neithor I, nor an1 "'"°" listtd -· have been relused •Ill 11n1t11, ~ or fill...,..
-• 1-IUnd INt I, and'!'! person llstod lbovt. will bl cawerodandlrtl!isPotiCy.f•u111lniurror.-1(Wl)llodbl-llln., Elledlll 0.ft of tht Potoq but nol until it hit bttn In ..,.. for 1........,.. plliod ti"" 121,.... llld 11111 fllis Ney
.. 1111111 lo flm lllfil tilt EtltctiVI Dltt -Ill tilt l'allcy Sdlodllll. J
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the ho1pita1 after this period will be paid by Presidential. And
your prot:ection continues 11 it you were paying the premiums
yourself! Then If you leave the: hospital and mu st return for the
same condition before fOl.I have resumed full normiil activitiea
or 90 day1, Presidential wi ll again PAY ANY PREMIUMS
• WHILE YOU ARE IN THE HOSPITAL-TO A !tfAXl!.fUfll O~ 100 WEEKS per confinement! This means you pay no pre-
m111ms, yet your full protection remains in force -you. collect up
to l~0,0()(}.00 for 111el\ confix111Wntl
THIS UMl11D IN•011MINT O,,IR INDS SOON
Amcrzin9 Low Acrt•• -Mon•y.aock OuarantH
You can now have your first month's protection at the 1pecial
low rat.ea listed below! But you must act immedi.ahily. Your re-
quest for this wonderful Inrome Protection Plan must be mailed
on the convenient form below NOT LATER THAN MIDNIGHT
of the date in the Enrollment Form.
This midnight expiration hour can11ot be eztendi:d. If your
enrollment form is mailed later, it tcnnot bi: aclJflpled.
JheM or• the OHL r ••clusionsf
Your Presidential pGlicy co•era every conceivable kind of sick.
ness or a«:ident except wnditiona caused by war or any act of
war; mental disorde:r1; intoxicanta and nan:o\ica; prepancy
except as provided under the maternity be:nelit provision ; and
expenses resulting from any sickness or injury )'OU had before
the Etfective Date of )'our policy, .. during the t\rat 2 )'ears only.
Thi& Jut item is a real he:lp il you already have a health prob-
lem. If you are: 1ick 11•/ort you take out this policy, you will 1hll
be covered for that condition after the policy has been in effect
for 2 years, Of cour1e, meanwhile every 11ew condition is imme·
diatelv co•ered.
ffow con flteM bargain low rates b'vy .tjO much?
You can buy ordinary inaurance at any t ime and pay the regular
rates, it you wish. But Presidential .can now provide you and
your entire family with 5100.00 a week tax-free Income Protec-
tion at special low rates only because we enroll a large number
of people at one time -dir1ct b11 mail! This hirhly efficient
"Maas Enrollment" method cuts cost1 to the bone -a"d tltt 1a v-
itlg1 a.rs pa.tHd 011 to )'Ot1!
Moke your decision carefully
Think how costly a hospital confinement will be. Imagine pa)'ing
for those indiapensable x-r1y11 doctor bill1, medicine• and drugs
that are 11.ot covered by your pre:ae:nt in1urance.
Would you be able to aft'ord the quiet and privacy of a private
room and a private nurse, 1hould you so deaire:? Or a telephone
to keep in touch with loved ones? Or the rental of a TV aet to help
paaa the lonely houra? Who would pay your bills that kee:p on
coming in at home? Many folks have lo1t their life 1avings, their
cars, e•en their homes trying to meet auch expenses. And no one
knows whoae turn it will be nut.
Wlty you mud ad befot• rite deadlln• dote sllowfl In
the enrollment form -lud o few day1 from roday
Why D'llllt you act bdore the deadline? Because, as mentioned
above, we mu1t receive your Enrollment Form th1 10.riui time u
all tlte otlter1 in order to pua on to you the savings that come
from processing manv pohcie1 ot one ti111e.
We mail you the policy as soon as we nceive the Enrollment
Form. When the policy arrivea,exemine it in the pflvacy of your
own home. Take all the time you need. It's a very 1hort document,
and you'll be pleasantly 1urpriaed to disco•er there is NO FINE
PRINT. Then -th.ow U, if JIOU wYlt, to 1om110?1.1 vou tru1t. Per·
hap.11 your lawyer, accountant, or banker. Better 1till-1Aow it
to WDMr cnim i"hrClltu ma it: •• •v•"' though M ma11 tit'll well 111
w01'kiitg /OT' anotlter i1t1arca"" com.pa.11v! If he Is a personal
friend, he bu your best interest.I in mind. So )'OU can believe
him when be tells you there is no bett«!r bargain &Y&i\able any.
where -at uy price!
MOeey bode: 9ucrrolrtee-Jn ca• you cha• .. your mind
Enn after JOU mail 1our Enrollment Form below, •• even aft.er
JOU examine the policy in 7our own home and talk it over with
an1t;1ne you wiah •• , even after all thi1 you ere still free to re tam
the policy within 16 days and flV!'J' p•nn11 11ow. paid wiU II• ,.,.
f1'7ul1d a.t fnl.CI. There will be no obhration what.ever.
lfeanwhile, all during the 16 days you are making up your
miad-yov.'11 be protected by $100.00-A-WEEK extra cash bene.
ft ta Jul\ u if you bad already &aid uyea." That's right, you will be
.J'ullJ' CO'IWred all this time for any accident which put.I you in the
hoapital, even if you finally dttide to return the policy. · ·
However, after you've meen the policy for yo urself, you will
1urel7 agree that thi1 is a tremendous value and you'll want to
continue this $100.00-A-WEEK extra cesh protection under the
Plan that'• belt for you.
PUN f -IHDIVIDUAl./SJ ONlY PUN<
Jf JOU want to eo•er yournlf -or yourself and one or 'more
adult dependent.I (includi ng yaur apouite) -then this i1 the
Plan for you. Eich person mu.st be 18 or over, and shall p1y (per
person) the rate applicable to his or her age.
.------------\.-_.ti E:nJOlllMnf Monthly l',.mlum
TMESl W YDUI LOW llATES ..................
.. I all& ...... .....................
18--39 .••••••• only $3.95
40-49 ••••• , •• only $4.95
50-59 ••.••••. only 55.95
60.74 ........ only $6.95
75sndover .•• onlyS8.95
SAVE EVEN MORE (up to 20%1) by payinr at quarterly, half
1ear or yearly ratu., eent with policy.
l'UN fl -fAMllJ PUN WITH MATlllllTY
Thil plan la for the famliJ that I• st.ill rrowinr. To the total of
tba monthl1 pmnhua for the adv.Ill to be ln1ured, Just. add $6.
Thia eolltl• you to all mat.emlty bt:nel'ita. It also tovera all 10ur
unmarritd. dependent. children between the aru of 3 months
and under 19 ,...n who live at home. Fut.ure dependent childttn
will be cove Nd when Ulq re1cb S months of •rt and without any
additional charp.
Pl.AH flf -fAMllY PUN WITHOUT MATlllllTY
Thia plaa b for the f.amE17 lbat i1 no lonpr rrowlnr. To the
tot.al al the monthly pmrifum. for tha adulll to be insured, jUAt.
add $S. Thia ~rt all J'O'lt 1n1me.rr:led, dependent thlldrtn be·
tweitn the aau of a month& and undu 19 :yean who ll•e at,hom •.
NOT!; TM f'ltvtlr MO!ltl'llr '1tnll11111 thown ._. (fot ,.our "" •l tl<M or t'lloot~ fl lltt N-low '"'""kl"' )'Oii wlll contin• to P'J: It will Mt ........ ~ ........ ,..,... ,._ - a .. lllrKMt" the .... OllCI
,.. .... .........._ )'6W rMI c.....,..., • 11:t1tns.i blotlvw of "-"""" .,
.... eflef'I ,_ eiMltict ,.._ Ult -........ "' Hllll'IC.cl "" -bwt ""' " ._. 11-e ..-.a ... "' Au ..... ., II' ..... .n -" polldtoa ef 1M1 '-... ........ ..... '-.. ,.--:--.. _..__, .. "'° .....
TDClllJllUCJOU8t Ad1191dbf (N••lesman will ca!L) Cd ,.r -.,.u..t ,.,. ta• Uie aa9 c.dar wtlll JOUt ent IDOfttla'• ,mnlu. ..,...q .. &Mpt .. JOUdtooat. Ramtmhat,)'ft 111Rt\
.. NllllJMett ..Udell er J'Olrf monq will be f'l{unded. But J'Ol.I
must ad rislit .,,,., ~t.r, once JGU niter an ~idtnt or
lkkm-., kl• TOO LA.TB to h1 protection at nr cwt. Thai.'•
::.:.:. .,.. 1" .. Kl Wa.7 -lrf.,.. an)'thlnr unexpeded
ft
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THESE 22 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Tell yeu It-'r11lJ•ntia/'1 COST Of UVIHG IHCOMI Al·
'lACEMENT HIAt1H AND ACCIOEHT 'LAN ,1..,., you I/le
prolefllon you 11eetl -01 a1"or/ng/y /ow rotr/
l. How much wlll lnJ pollcy Pl>' m1 when I 10 to the tlolpltalt Tht full •mou"U 'fou ,,. p1ld SlOO.OO·A·WE:EK c11h t vtry 1!n•I•
Wttk.. And It •l•rt• th• v1ry 11,.1 ,.,. you ••• In lh• ho1plt1J. (If
you ••• ovtr 65. you •rt P•ld S70.00 • wvtlt,, In •dd!tlon 10 1ny Mtdlure be.nir11t1 you rec•lv•.l
2. WIN I be peld H I am hasPitallzld fur .... thin I full WMll?
Ycil ctrt•lnly will ••• "1••111111 ol wh1t1!1r you '" In th• llol·
plt11 lor •• 1hort • tlmt 11 o"' dty ••. or 11 Ions • tlm• 11 • wttk. montl!, rtir or mort •
3. Doll ttlk !"Ian ,.y mt ffam lhl'nr.t dlf of haspltlliuHoft?
Y•1t You rirc:•lv• lu•I C•1h hntllls cf $100.00 1 wttk sterlln4
lht vtry llru d1y you •nter !ht hotpit1I. Th• cov1r•1• t111ln1 whtn w• rtct!vt your lirst pr1mlum -!hit 11 lht di)' you 1rt covtrtd for ,,.,,. 1ccid•nt1. Sltkne11 cov1r111 b•sln1 lO dltl
1fttr !ht tfftct1v1 d•I• of II•• policy.
4. How mudt do I rcalve tor e ltetrlstlf9d NUfll •t Home?
$1 00.00.A·WEEK lor up lo $5,000.00 lft•r you h1v1 bHn ho ..
f,lt•lltfll lor l d1y1 or more. ind your doclor h11 )'Ou emplof 1
ul!-tlmt r.,llttrtd nu,.t w!lhln 5 H}IS •fttr JOU lttvt Ill• hell· pll1I. T•n Y•l•I from now It wll1 h1v• lncr111td to $130.00 1 wt•k In b•n•llll ••• 11 no ••I•• 0011 to you!
5. An there .,, Kddantal dnlfl btMfllsf
Ytl. ll,000.00 Ulh II Pi1111 lo )'OUf Hl•lt whtn dt•lll occu,_
•ny II"'• wltl!ln !10 11•)'1 ol tn 1tcld1nt. s. wm 1 be Plld ertr• H 11ose a nrnb or eyeslsht?
Y11. Pl'91ldtnti1/ pl)'I $1,000.00 lor complff• 1ccidtnl1I 1011 of
On• hind or on• loot or 1i1ht of On• •)'t: $2,000.00 for 1011 ol boll! h•nd1 or both IR~t or 1l1ht of both •Ytl ••. whtn d!smtm• btor"'•nl oc:cur1 1n~lmt whhln to dip of lht •cc;ldtnl.
7. How ml.ld'I do wa. reaM far ~inf
" )'OU h•Ve ,,.. f1mll)' P(tn -With M1ttrnlly, )'OU rirc•lv•
SI00.00.A·WEEK for t•ch P••&n•ncy, chlldbh1h or m11c1rrl•1• lh1t rt1ult1 In llolplt1I conflntmtnl whtn both hu1b1nd •nd wl •
••• •nrolttd uncflr thl1 pJ1n for tht tntlr• ptrlod ol p,.en1ney.
I. SupPOm I .,,, PIHi benelltl tor '111 lkltnau « accldant. Whet
h•PPl"I H I am apln bosplta1Lred fur the 11me condition?
Don't •Off)'. You 1tiU collect $100,0Q.A.WEEI( for• lottl o' JOO •••kt. And If )'OU h•vt 1lrt1dy re1umed full r.orm1l 1ctlvlllt1 for
Jul! 90 d1ys, h'1 C:On1ldertd I new conf!ntmtnt. tnd JOU ctn eel·
Itel lor tn 1ddltlon•I 100 Wttkl. 01 cours1, 1n1 MW condlllon 11 COVtrtd lmmtdl11tly lor I f\ltr 100 Wttkl .
'· How ""' I UM thtM ben1fit ,.,.mentsr Yo" "'•l' .,., th•"' In 1ny w•1 JOU wllh -tor l!o1pllll •nd doctor bUlr. rtnl. lood. hou11hold t•ptn111, or 1n~hln1 tlle. fhl1 11 t ntirtl1 up to you.
10. M1y I IPP" H I 1m -651 'ft1, you m11. ,olki 1ny •a• ••t welcomt to •pply-lht•• 11 no
111 11"'111 Mtmhn ov•• 65 trt p1ld $10.00 1 Wt•k plu1 1U Midi·
c1r1 btntlil•.
11. C•n I collect rrom P'rnidantltt -H I urry othlr ~ncer
01 covuli. Thl1 pltn wm p.t)' you In •llditlon lo wl!1!""'' )'OU "''Y r•c•lv• from •fl)' olht1 pollc;l11. lncludlnr M1dlt•r• lo• folk1 O~tl 65.
12. Why do I Mecl this P'rald.nt11I l'lln ln.•ddltloti lie ""I ..,._.
llaspltll •nd ltt•lth ln1unnc•r
Whitt ho1pl11I coth h1v1 tr\plfll In •Ktnl )'tlfl. Vt ry flJW .,.oplt
htv• trlpl~ lhtlr ln1ur1ncJ. Tht ch1nc11 lrt on• In 11v1n th1t
JOU will nttd mon1y lO t•kt c•rt of tll ,our Olhtr t•ptn1•1, 11 wtll 11 your l!o1plt1t blltl. 'l'our Pr11IC11ntltl cht ck1 tr• ru1htd
10 )'Ou by 1ir m1il lo u1t 11 rou 111 111.
13. Whit benefits do mJ ell1lbll, dependent chlldr1n ptf
If )'Oii Chooll • F1mlly Typt Pl1n, JOU• dtptndt nl 1li1ibl1 chil-
dren, 1111 l monlht lo und•r It 1•1r1. would 1Ktlvt 501' of 111 th• ulh llln1lh1 ol lh• Pl1n ltuludlna W1lvt1 ol l'r1mium).
14. May I '6d futwe .,....,., 'hildrtn to ITI)' policy tfhr It Ja
~-· 'f•t, Incl.ell. If you l!tv, lh• FAMILY l'LA,. WITH. MATERNITY.
JuU.notlly ut Wl!tn th•)'••• l month1 old 1nd !ht)' will '" c;o,,. tr.ct without IWlcl•nc• ol in1ur•billl)' •nd wilt.out •n)' 1ddition1I
ch1rre. •
15. Win"''••~-"""""", be unuli.d bK.luH I hew loo IN"f ct.lmt? No, d1Unlt•ly notl l'•••kl•nti1I 1u1r1nt111 n1v1r to cenctl r,"' orolirc:tion beC•u1e )'OU h1vt too m1ny cltlm1 or beclUM o id· ~•ncfll •••· W• 1110 su•r•nl11 n•v1r to rtlUM to ,...,_ y0ur polky unlH• lh• pr...,Ju"' Is not Pilid btlort !ht •nd ol tlM ll•
II•, •••ct ptrlcNI. or unl .. 1 ,.,....1 11 Oecli"-d on 1n pollclH
ol lhll type In 10"' •ntlr• Sitt•. IOI eou,... It dirc:tplion ii u1MI In malllnS •ppllctlion. th• policy m•J bto lntll•tllvt .J
lf. Wiii '"1 rltel be rilled u I "°" older w H 1 have to. m111J dllm1l
No "'•tltr !low m1n1 ct1im1 you h1v.. or ••1••111111 ol how Ions
,au k11p )IOUr policy, )'Our ••I• wUI rtm.tln th• 11mt •• It ••• lor )'OU• •&t wtltn )IOU a,pplitd. l'r•tldenlli!I 1utrenl"1 n.,.•r to
1dlu1t !hi• r•tt u11l111 tile 11111 '" 1dju1ttd on t ll polic!11 of thf1 If!" In )'Our t nll,. 1111• •
17. Whlit 11 not OO¥Wld iiy this pooc,r
:fl!• only condllion1 not COV••td .,.. tho11 c1u1td by; m1nt1I di•· on:lt,.; l"tO•lunll •nd n1rcotlc1; •X~n111 rttultln• from 1ny
1lclln111 or Injury )IOU hid Mio•• !ht poUcy Efftdlvt D111 (dur-lns th• IL,.1 )'111$ only): •ct of w1r. EVERYTHING ELSE 1$ COVEREO-lndudlrit p'9Sn1ncy Wh•n bolh hu1b1rtd •nd wlft
hi.,. bH~ onrolltod In th• FAMILY l'LAN WITH MATERNITY for !ht 11111,.. ~rlod DI prefnlrlC)'.
II. Wtllt .,.. the Nl!'lir.m.nt. for IMmbanNJ In -er Iha --· Yov mini not hnt bHn r•lu11d •ny M1ltl'I, hoo1plt1/ er lift \"1ur• IMt: •nll. to Quellly Wrln• !his enrollment Ptrlod. )'OU mutt tnroll btfor1 f!'lldnlpt of th• d•I• In !ht.coupon.
19. Wfly ls this~ aood for a llmlted Hme only?
8.c:1u1-. by enroTllnc • ,.,., numbtr ol peoplt •I lh• 11m1 tlmt,
undllrwrllln .. P<OCff•lns •nd pollcy le1u.""' co111 c1n bt ktpt
11 • rnlnlmut11-•ncl we c•n P'N UllM NV+nft on to 1011.
20 • ....._ the tlWlnrl. .,. ....,. -.. adventaen • )Mnirc
rr.eldenti.t "'"• tflll enrvllrneM ,.,..,
Ya-. tl!tre urt1!nty 1rt, A vtry lmport•nt ont 11 th11 )'l!U ff l'IOt
nud to compl•tt 1 rq:ul1r •ppUc1tion -Ju1t 10ur britl larm In
IM lower l•lt-ll•t'ld corntr of thlt Ptae. Alto, durlfl& thl1 enroll·
ment Ptriocl llMf• .,.. l>O olll« t.,qul,.m•nt1 for •ll•lblllt)'-
•M no ''W•lw•f1" w r"lrldtwe ondort""•nh un h put on '°"' polkyt 21. Cn .,_. IMfnlren 8' trfJ 181'1'11,, taka MvM!tap ef lt111 apedtl .... ,
""· tt '°"J •• lhtJ ctn m•ll 111• '"' r1"Qulr•mtnl1 li1tff 11ndir Qi>tttioft I •
22. How do I pt the pollcJ for •••ml"t tlOlt wtttt money.tiecll --J111t fill out )'Our brltl 1lflfOll<Mnl lorrn ind m1H h wJth )IOU• llf11 lftO!IVI'• Pftll'llutn 111 TM l"l't•id•nll•I lift ln111r1nc• Compeny
ol ~ 11'°111-11 a1vt1., Pllll•Hlphlt, '•· 191$4.
• Tiie Pmh11ntl1I Extra ln~me Plan
The rr.slctenlill Ute IMllf'lnte Compeny of Amenca (Horna,omcr.
Cflklto. llllnol1) CMtln fvfl lepl """"" for U1e prottctloft et el
poOeyowN~ Mid k UCENSID eY 'nt£ STAT'[ Of CAUWl..
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Fashion ·r Goes
To Festival
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PAGEANT OF FASHIONS
-What to wear when visit·
ing the Festival of Arts in
Laguna Beach? T·his queS·
tion is easily answered with
the help of Buffunl's, Fash·
ion Island and three lovely
models. Perhaps daytime art
browsers will want to vie
with exhibits for attention
dressed in leather fas hions
like (above, left to right)
Oaro1 · Cade of Huntington
Beach and teenager Jan Ri·
naldi of Newport Beach.
Carol is eye-catching in an
antique leather tunic pon·
cho with a side buckle clos·
ing worn with matching lea·
ther. slacks and over a pale
blue wash-able crepe turtle·
neck shirt. The same leather
is worn by Jan. Her A-line
skirt is topped by a leather
sleeveless ·vest which she
wears over a turtle-neck
wool sweater. Model Pat
Straight &f La~una Beach
(at left) looks !Jke a living
picture as she gets ready to
make her entrance into Ir·
"~ Bowl for the P-ageant
of· the Masters wit h escort
William Martin, former La·
guna Beach mayor and a
f~stival director. She wears
an embroidered lace short
evening dress fashioned
with long slender sleeves of
fluted organdy and sashed
in dove grey velvet. At right
she studies a mosaic of "The
Last Supper" in a white wool
knit pleated skirt with a
navy jacket striped in red.
STYLE EXHIBITED
Warm, sunny days are sure
to be enjoyed by art lovers
touring the grounds during
the festival's six-week run
Friday, July 12, to Satur·
day, Aug. 24, and organdy,
such as tht! grey and white
fashion s worn by Jan
Rinaldi and Carol Cade (at
left, left to right) are sheer
summer perfection. Jan, a
senior at Corona de! Mar
High School, chooses a de-
licate white organdy shirt
to wear with its dirn4J skirt
or grey and white polka
dots. Linen and organdy is
Carol 's dress and jacket
costume. It features a
white organdy shirt and
charcoal grey pleated skirt
and may be worn with a
plae grey sleeveless jacket.
Ready to do lots or hiking
around the festival's park·
like setting to see all the
displays and many forms of
art including paintings,
ceramics and even jewelry,
P at Straight and Jan (at
right, left to right) choose
comfortable pant suits.
Following the path of her
favorite Guru, Pat tops her
white linen pants with a
sharp yellow tunic jacket
styled with the popular
Nehru collar. Her yotlng
companion looks sporty in
a glen plaid haberdasher
pant suit which includes
sailor pants anC:l a Nehru·
l·acket worn over a yellow
ong sleeved turtle • neck
shirt,
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MRS. CARLAN TAPP
Long Be•ch Hom•
Walking Billboards Las Olas Hawaii Selected
Fashion · Fits Politics Buzzing For Honeymoon 81 J!!AN SPRAIN WU.SO•
NEW YORK I/IP) -A•
pretldectlal camp.alp ago, an overslud button. a
bruit banner or a paper
hat was enout:h for a can·
d.ldate wishing to u 1 e
t.shiona for his message.
But thlt year, women are
expected to be walking
blllboardll, adYerOslng their
political allegiance1 from
the bands of their hats to
the bow1 on their toes.
As candidate! have en-
tered the arena -or
withdrawn -v.a r io us
a.spects of the feshion in·
dustry h a v e frantically
begun -or stopped -pro-
duction of head scarves,
fabrics by the yard, aprons
for kaffee klatches,
mid.ihemmed hostess gowns
and miniskirted doorbell
ringing drenes, a1 well as
an assortment of Jewelry in·
eluding rings, pins. charm
bracelets, cuff links and
earrings.
All bear either the in-
signia, initials or portrajts
of the man favored for the
highest national office.
Some are figments of
enterprising m"erchandisers.
A lingerie manufacturer
who had produced a line of
white ni&ht gowns with the
initials of eand.Jdates across
the fronts had to withdraw
bis LBJ number and hastily
sul.lsUtute an HHH version!
"To keep h11 name before
the public in every way,:• &1
pop ut collectOt' M r s .
Robert c. scull put it,
boosters of Sen. Eugene J.
McCarthy recently opened a
boutique in New York called
McCarthy'& Mart.
Among the McCarthyana
are '100 campaign buttons
for evening' wear studded
with diamonds, rubles, and
sapphires, as well a s
recorded poetry.
Not yet ready to come off
the Bunsen burner is a
boutique in Washington,
D.C., for Hubert H.
Humphrey tc be called The
Pharmacy because the vice
president almost wound up
filling prescriptions in a
drug store.
In nonpartisan fashion,
enterprising Frankie Welch
ope~d the Campaign Flying
Boutique, so.called because
she delivers her P.fod4cts at
almost a moment's notice
by air freight.
Alter having designed an
H·line hostess dress for
female supporters attending
theannouncementof
Humphrey's candidacy,
Miss Welch w a Ii im·
mediately consigned t o
create an official .dress Cor
the N a t i o D a I Republican
Convention.
By brochure women sup·
porters of Richard M. Nix-
South Laguna Selected
on have been offered ,a 820
dacroa and cotton hostess
dreu of red atd blue wltb a
Nixon thunderbolt Insignia
emblaioned across t h e
!ronl
The Gov. Nelson A ,
Rockefeller c.amp favQJ's
paper fashions b e c a u s e
hemline• may be adjusted
'with scls1ors to suit a lady's
fuhlon fancy or her age, a
1pok:esman explained.
Hour Marvel
A buu seS6iO D w I th
members expressing their
likes and dislikes prior to
the beginning of a new term Carol Lynn Norton of Cos·
will be contlucted when ta Mesa became the bride of
members of Laa: 0 I a 1 Thomas WiWam Rimmer Toastmistress Club of Hun· tington Beach presents an during an evenin1 ceremony
accent on progre11 .at 7:30 Jn Christ Lutheran Church,
p.m. We:tnesday, July 10 in Cofta Mesa.
the Sur . .::ide Clubhouse. ' The Rev. Luthar Tornow
Mrs. Calvin Olcott wilt perrormed the dauble Ting
present a workshop oo nupti~s for the daughter of
duties of the working 'cbm-Mrs. 'Donald Trunick of
mittee chairmen and Mrs Palos Ver'des and Philip C.
Joseph Nebelsky w r 1 i Norton '!f San Di~go and the
preside in place ot Mrs son of Mrs. Wilham Henry
Rowan Adama; who is _a .: ol'Huntin~on Beach and the
delegate at the internationil late Mr. Run mer.
convention taking place 14 -Given in marriage by her
Canada. father, the bride selected a
Area women interested.in sllk organza over peau de
obtaining more information sole gown and English il·
regarding Las o 1 a s , lusion veiling appUQued with
dedicated tci vocal1t1't1on, chantilly. She carried a bou.
inspiration and poise, are quet of phalaenopsis, baby's
invited to contact. Mrs. br~ath and lilac shaded
Nebelsky, 962-4548, or Mrs. stock.
Gary Giles, 545-2671. Miss Terri Mu1vihill of
Tri Deltas
Preparing ,
July Menus
The home of Mrs. William
P. Campbell will be the
lunctieon scene Wednesday,
July 17, w be n Newport
Harbor Area Alumnae i>f
TUstin was m a i d of honor
and Miss Mary Hirschman
of Brentwood ,and Miss Col·
teen Posson of Reseda were
bridesmaids.
They donned light blue
floor length gowns and held
bouquets of baby's breath
and lilac shaded spring
flowers .
-Delta Delta Delta gather at
11:30 a.m.
The benedict asked Fred
Boyd of Huntington Beach
lo stand as best man.
Usher1 were Willard Mears
and Charles Norton, both of
Costa Mesa. 0 t h e r at-
tendants were D a v i d ,
Douglas and Dennis Henson.
MRS. T. W. RIMMER
N•wport Hom•
Newlyweds Honeymoon Couple on Honeymoon
Ti"ckets are $2 a n d
reservations may be made
with Mrs. Paul Du Bois, 548-
3535, before July 13.•
Costa Mesa Golf and
Country Club was the set·
ting for the reception.
Among the 150 guests at·
tending were ·Fred Greta of
Havilah, the bride ' s
grandfather; Mrs. Jessie.
Norton of Costa Mesa. her
grandmother, and M r s .
Louise Blanchard, t h e
bridegroom's grandmother.
Hawaii, the newlyweds will
be making their home in
Newport Beach.
In Pacific Northwest
Wearing a traditional
tiered lice goWn featuring a
cathedral length train, Nan-
cy Ellen Vick exche.nged her
wedding vows wilti. Carlan
Jay Tapp last Saturday.
The bride, daughter of
Army Maj. (ret.) and Mrs.
Gilbert M. Vi'ck ol Hun-
tington Bead!, was given in
marriage by her fattier.
Conducting the double ring
Cere mony in the
-Westminster Presbyterian
Cllurch were the Rev. Dale
Robinson and the Rev.
Wendell Greenley.
Miss Nellana Tapp, the
bridegroom'• siater, served
as maid of honor .
Complementing her shock·
ing pink A-line crepe gown
was a bouquet of Jong-stem-
med r o • e s . Bridesmai'ds
Mrs. Diane Wyz:ard and the
N.:isses Marga{et Williams,
Beverly HJcks and Trudy
Messmer w o r e identical
gowns of pale p i n k and
carried rose bouquets.
Flower girl Dawn Wyzard
wa~ attired in pink dotted
&Y.'ISS.
Attending the bridegroom,
son of Mr&. Jay E . Tapp of
Long Beach and tfle late Mr.
T·app, was Robert King best
man. Ushers were Richard
Brown, Kenneth P o 11 y ,
Robert Harvey and Willi"am
DUART'S
CAP-OF-CURlS
PERMANENT
8. 7 5 111 tlit Stlon
It's the look cf
•ow! Solt, boun<y
curls •• , so easy
to manage, so
very feminine
Vick, the bride's brother.
Dean Wyzard wae ring
bearer.
Following a rec.eption in
the church hall, t h e
newlyweds departed on a
-ding trip to tile Pacific
Northwest .aod when they
return ttley will make their
home in· Loog Beach.
Assisting during the recep-
tion were the Misses Gayle
McGowen, Lynn Argue and
Ela!ne Adkins.
The bride jg attending
California state College •t
Long Beach, _,. she Ir
majoring in home
economics. The bridegroom
attended Long Bead! City
College and CSCLB.
Special guests at the wed-
ding were Mr. and Mrs.
Earl M. Weaver of Houston,
Tex., the bride's godparenUi.
'and Mr. and N'.rs. Earl
Thomson of Holliday, Mo.,
ttie groom's grandparent&.
Business Women
Mrs. Dolores Cronin, 536-
f!Hn, will take calls regard-
ing membership and meet·
ing location of the Amer-
ican Bu.sines& Women's As·
sociation. The clubwomen
gather the third Wednesday
of the month at 6 p.m.
• • • so ,very
YOU! Price
include<
style en·d
cut.
In our Studio, stylisls will
create this curly, pr!tty
look for you. Permanent
and cu~ 13.50.
Buuty Salon, 801 •
phone: Huntinllon Beach: 892-3331
1'/ewport 714 &44-1212
-
A lawn wedding at her
parenta home was selected
by Bonnie Ann Brown and
Kenneth Eric Charlton of
Newport Beach.
They exchanged vows and
ring& before the Rev. Dr.
Morris Robinson of St. Mark
Pre s by t ericm Church.
Parents of ,the newlyweds
are the Elmer L. Browns of
Santa Ana and the A. F.
Charltons of Riverside.
The bride donned a sheer
9326 SIZES 10Y,.22Y,
"" 1lf ...,; .... 1lf .... -r~
Sew it in ONE HOUR one
white dacron embroidered morning, wear it in the
gown. Her fingertip illusion afternoon! Just two main
four-tiered veil was topped pattern parts -polish it off
by a dacron bow encrusted with bright binding. Hurry.
with pearls and she carried send !
a dozen red roses in a white ruffled basket. NEW Half Sizes 101h. 121h,
Miss Jane Ann Charlton, 141h, 161h, 181h, 201f.t, 221h .
the benedict's sister, was Size 14 1h (bust 37) takes 2 ~
maid of honor and Robert S. yds. 45-in.
Currier was best man. SIXTY·F IVE CENTS in
Ushers were Lawrence E. coins for each pattern -'
Brown, the bride's bi-other, arr~ Hart and Steve Web-add 15 cents for each pat·1
ber. tern for first-class mailing
•--: ... :-he · and special hand 1 in g ; n:wia-uug at t reception otherwise t h i r d · c I a s s were Sandy Smith of La
Jolla at the guest book, Jane delivery will take three
Brown, and Kathy Webber. weeks or more. Send to
Marian Martin, the DAILY The newlyweds are honey-PILOT, 442 Pattern Dept.,
mooning in South Laguna 232 West 18th St., New York,
for the summer and will N.Y. 10011. Print NAJ\.tE,
m.ake their home in ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE
Mrs. Ronald Ward is
chairman and committee
members are the Mmes.
John Hewitt, Glen Askew,
Do u g I a s s Ne wcomb,
Campbell and Du Bois.
Kids Like to
'Ask Andv'
Guest boo k attendants
were Mrs. Mears and Mrs.
Charles Norton.
The former Miss Norton is
an alumna of Newport
Harbor ffligh Schi>ol and at-
tended California Western
University. The benedict is
an alumnus of Huntington
Beach High School and was
a student at Orange Coast
College. -----=---=---=-=-=
Sale*
ELLJEN
CARTE JR.
LADIES HABERDASHER
226 MARINE AVE.
BALBOA ISLAND
*Annual Summer Sale
ELI.EN
CAR.TEIR.
LADIES BOOTERY
219 MARINE AVE.
BALBOA ISLAND
Pi~bur.gh w~ere t b e and STYLE NUMBER.
bridegroom will enter---------------::~rf~~~llon University CLEA
The bride is a grt.odu~te of
UCLA and attended UC,
Santa Barbara and Irvine.
MRS. CHARLTON
New Brid•
Her husband attended
Northwestern University
where be affiliated with Phi
Gamma Delta and
graduated magna cum laude
from UCL '
.----Optn Evt ry Sund•y I f:wtning ____ .,
PERMA, TRESS
. BEAUTY SA~ONS
•---WITH OR WITHOUT APPOINTMENT --~
Ordin1rilly
25.00
BRECK
PERMANENT WAVE
l rtclt'1 F•bu1•u• "S•,,_. .. Ptrl'l'I -Yo11 c.•11 1 s 95 bt _. of ytur lrtdt Conhotltd Ptfll'I ..
yo11'll .... tlt1 dlff1nct qu1lity rn1lrt1 .. ,
Ctrnt in lod•y t r to .. i11 with or wilhtvf
1ppeiflhn•nl.
COlr.l,LETE: STYLED CUT -SET -& STYLED C0"'410UT
lllCK COUPON lllCK .... Th• ....... .... ... ..... ........ • ...
Mt INCk 'lur,.u ,.,..,.,,.,.t wan .thr
.... -* wt!Mrt-' ' ' "'"' tf s. ... ,,,... ,......
•AlOEN $l0Yl
ANA~EIM
HUNTINGTON
IEACH
COSTA MESA
I
Or111gt Ctu11ty Plt1e
Et1lg1t. Ct11!1r
l•ll lro11U1w•lt Ct11ttr
1221 N, Eudid
S ftoi11h C111ltr
Spri11d 1i1 C111t1r
H1rbo• Ctnl1r
IJ0.4710 ,,,_,,,)
Pit 1·7116
Pl 2-l&Ol
VI 7·1061
tt7·1Stl
kl •·0757
Our Floor S•mpl•• 1nd Demon1tr1tor1, of courul
Th•v were uMd to dtmon1lr1t1 to c:u1lom1rs tM
superior qu1llty of SINGER• products. Now, to dttr
tMm out, we'N 1lalh prfcff. ·
Sale Ends July 13th
BUYROW DD SAVE:~:t.
SINGER* sewing machines Including famous TOUCH & SEW* sewing machines I
CHOOSE Conaolul Deak Modelal Portlblul
SHOP EARLY for beat selection. Some on, of 1 kind.
IUINA PAIK
t JlO 011 Th. M•ll
TA 1·7110
COSTA MISA
2)00 Har~•' llff, kl,,,,,,
H,,_.,., C.11tw
ANAHllM
115 N. laoro
SJS-11 ~6
An•hti1¥1 Ct11tt r
HUNTINGTON
llACH
Lli111or •+ •••th
••7·1041
H1111fl111te11 C.11ttr
'·
SINGER
GAIDIN 4HOVI LA MllADA
tt J I Cho11rnt11 11024 S. lll\f'Wt ilt r
1)0·4010 LA 1·1112 °''"'' Ctu11ty 111•1• l 1 Mlroit Ct11tor
SANTA ANA COSTA MISA
Dow11tow11 lridel & S1111n•-r
lOS W. -4ttr. St. 140·26))
1(1 J.Jt41 South C•••+ ''•••
•
-.
ACHIEVEMENTS BLOSSOM -Gardening enthus-
iasts who are members of the Huntington View
Garden Club, Huntington Beach, honored new of-
ficers and award winners during an installation
luncheon. Deciding on the proper placement of her
Horoscope
Libra: Don't
Wander ·Afield
TUESDAY
JULY 9
By SYDNEY OMARR
"The wise man controls
his destiny ... Astrology
points the way."
ARIES (March 21-April
16): Full moon accents
career, ambitions, ability to
ful£ill obligations. The r e
should be communication
from relative or c I o s e
~sociate -this helps you
make vital decision.
Study m a n e u v er s or
associates. Find the reason
why. •
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you are at-
tracted to medicine, a r e
capable or helping people
solve their prQblems. Cur-
rently, you can suc.:essfully
wait for beneficial results.
There is no need to rush.
GENERAL TEN-
DENCIES: Full moo n 'posi-
tion ind.icatfs that irnport.arit
persons may be considering
retirement.
achievement award is Mrs. V. R. Tomlinson (left)
who is being advised by Mrs. John J, Mahoney,
president; Mrs. William G. Roberts', secretary, and
Mrs. Richard W. Edmonsen, treasurer (left to
right).
Gardeners Plant Now
For Busy Fall Season
New officers 1 h ~red
honors Mth award winners.
when members of the Hunt·
ington View Garden C 1 u b
conducted an installation
luncheon in Marina High
School, Hurrtington Beach.
Serving during t.he coming
year will be the Mmes. J ohn
J . Mahoney, president;
Ernest Franklin, vice presi-
dent ; Rich ard W .
Edmonsen. treasurer, and
William G. f.obe r ts ,
secretary.
An aohlevement award
was presented W Mrs. V. R.
Tumlinson, and C 1 yd e
Womper of Fountain Valley
was given the green thumb
award for his knowledge of
gerdening and planting prG-
blems.
Dark during July and
August, the club will resume
its lecture series in the fall .
Plans for a garden tour and
a flower show also are being
made. .
The Huntington V f e w
Garden Club is a branch of
the Woman's National Farm
and G a r d e n Association
which has members
throughout the U n i t e d
States. In addition to co.
ntributions to a Mexican
orphanage, the three
California clubs presented a
scholarship award to Golden
West College.
Ta l!nd aur wha'1 lucltv far vau In ·-------... --... ----------manW and lo~, arMr Svdnev Ol'l\1rr'1 bac*ltl "SKJ'tt Hints tor Men Ind warm-n." ~ blrll'ldatt Ind jO Cl!f\IS
la Om1rr A.l!roloev Secrels, l~f DAILY
P IL0'!"1 Box 32..0, Grind Central Sta--11(11'1, New Yafk, N.V. 10017. What's Doing
MARY DAY, 642-4321
. .
r.t!Olldu,. Julr 8, 1968
Catholic Nuptials
For Linda Small
St.s. Simon and Jude
Cacholic ChW"ch was the 6et· tine for the morning wed-
ding oI Linda Rull! Small,
daughter ol Mr. and Mrs.
Theodore R. Small of Hun·
i.tngton Beach, and Terence
Wiltiam Newlin, son of Mr.
and Mrs. N. P. Newlin of
Glendale.
Performing the double
ring nuptials was the Rev.
John Gini.
for her role u flower girl.
Atked to stand as best
man Wu Douglas Newlin of
Montrose, tbe bened.ict's
brotiler. Usherln1! gu-to
their seDts were Davtd
small d. Santa Ana, the
brNk!'t b~ber ; Vincient
Newlin of La Crescenta, tile
beaedict's cousin; Loren
Brucker, Ontario, and Den·
nis Marzen and Fred Vogel,
both of Seattle. .
About 150 friends and
relatives congratulated the
couple during the reception
in the Huntington Con·
tinental Clubhouse. Mrs.
Small atitended the guest
The new Mrs. Newlin
selected a floor length cage
style silk organza gown with
alencon lace at the bodice
and on the train. A floral
headpiece caught an English
silk illusion cathedral length
veil, and she carried orchids
surrounded by baby's breath
and stephaootis.
book. . •
The newlyweds will reside MRS . TERENCE WILLIAM NEWLIN
in Santa Ana following their Lak• Tahoe Weddinn Trip
honeymoon at Lake Tahoe. •-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ .. ~·;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;, Miss Domalee Grosh of
La Canada was maid of
honor, while Mise Maren
Small .and Miss Mary Helen
Newlin , th e newlywed's
sisters, were brid~·maids.
They donned daffod i l
yellow gown.s with matching
yellow veil! and hats. All
carried bouquets of Scottish
belles , spid er chrysan·
tbemtJins and fern.
Miss Julie Lym Becker,
the bride's niece, wore a
white eyelet pinafore over
an ankle length yellow dress
The bride is a graduate oflr
Crescenta Valley H igh
School and attended tbe
Universitf of California,
Santa Barbara and tbe
University of Washington.
The bridegroom is an
alumnus ol St. Francis High
School, La Canada and was
a student at the U of W
where he was a member of
the varsity football team
and Beta Theta Pi. He will
at t e n d California State
College at Long Beach for
his senior year.
Newlyweds Honeymooning
• 1n Malibu First Home
Susan Duffield, daughter man. Ushers were Tom
of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall D. O'Mall~y, Dennis Genova,
Duffield of Newport ~ch, Theodore A b b e y and
became the bride of John Marshall Duffield Jr., the
FrMcis GE!briel, &oo of Mr. bride's brother.
and Mrs. William Gabriel of T))e Balboa Bay Club was
'New York Clty. the setting for the reception.
Our Lady Quff.n of the The bride is a graduate of
Angels Church was the set· M a r l b o r o u g h and the
ting for ttie double ring University of Santa Clara. She attended Occidental and
rites. ttie University of Southern
The bride wore an ivory California. Her husband is
taffeta gown covtted with an alumnus of Fordham
organza and lace and held a p r ep a rat 0 r y School ,
bouquet of butterfly orchids Fordham College and Law
FIND OF THE WEEK!
PRETTY PARFAIT
You'd nMtr guis. It, but you can put thne'
elegant parfait glasses right In your freezer.
The design Is a hand-etched version of th•
vtry old Bohemian vine and wreath pattern.
Simply beautiful and ours a/one/
Set of eight,$Lt5.
lankAmericard-Master Charge, too
s~~-~~
NEWPORT CENTER M-4-1180
18 FASHION ISLAND and stephanotls. • ~ I
I Id ~"oo. Miss Francy Du fie , the The newlyWeds are honey·\'----------------------2
bride's sister, w;u; maid of mooning in the Pacificl----------------------
honor and Miss M a r Y Northwest and Canada and
Shirley, Miss Terry Greeley• will make their home in
Miss Donna Medley and .Malibu upon their return.
Mrs. Frederick Wetz e 11 ;:::==='======:::;I
were bridesmaids.
'llley wore yellO'W cotton
dresses and held ~egays
of orange and yellow carna·
FIRST, FAST
TAURUS (April 20-May
20): Emphasis placed on
long journey, also o n
journeys of the mind. Means
your basic philosophy could
undergo change, perhaps
due to different en·
vironment. Domestic aif·
justment is imminent.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20): Best to check papers,
leases, a greements. You
may lack required element.
Be cautious. Now is time to
get files in order. Some who
make promises may not be
in position to fulfill them.
'Tenpins'
To Topple
TOl'S SM II--ltHlybraake tiona. ~ti~~=·f/i''r·1eec11 .... J06eph F.a.vre wu best
Who t1ll1 you firlf about the
belt 111 /oc1I n1w1 7 Check ii
out. lt'1 nearly 1 lw1y1 th•
DAILY PILOT.
Sears
Costa
Mesa
CANCER: (June 21 -Ju1y
22): You desire beauty,
harmony, but today there is
opposition. Play w a i t i n g
game. Listen and observe.
Obtain hint from GEMINI
message. Check partnership
agreement.
LEO (J u I y 23-Aug. 22):
Full moon position stresses
work, health, basic details.
Pleasant surprise is due
from one who appears ultra·
shy. Be discreet. Play cuds
close to chest.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22):
Accent on dealing with those
at a distance. Means this
could be busy day where
calls, messages are con·
cemed. Stress original ap.
proach. Don't feel tradition
is necessarily right.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Might be wise to stick to
familiar ground. Don ' t
ws.nder too far a f i e 1 d .
Something of importance
may occur· Clbse to home
b a s e. Know this and plan
accordingly.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21 ): Minor disagreement
with friend should not be
blown out of proportion.
Stick to facts. issues. You
could benefit from special,
social gathering. Be friend·
ly, gracious.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Money is _em-
phasized. Full moon falls in
part of chart dealing with
fina-ncial gain. If thorough in
approach, y o u emerge
definite winner -go to it.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-
Jwi. 19): Full moon in your
sign today coincides with
chance to cement relations
with key people. Stress
personality. Be dire c t ,
forceful. Display confidence.
Cycle high. Go alter what
you need.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Whal ~viously was
secret could be exposed.
This t'Ould work in your fav·
or if diplomatic. Don't force
issues. Those you want to
impress will come to you.
Your cycle ts moving up.
Ao evening of bowling will
provide entertainment for
members of the H o I y
E u c h a r is t In stitute,
Westminster, following a
short business m e e t i n g
Tuesday, July 16.
Plaru; for the event were
announced by Mrs. Antooio
Rodrigue, chairman, during
the group meeting con-
ducted recently in t h e
Knights of Columbus Hall.
Convention reports were
given by president, Mrs.
Michal Reid and Mrs. John
Hill; Mrs. Au~tin Aker, an
institute member, was u-
elected to her third term as
grand director during the
Sacramento convention.
Hostesses for the social
portion of the even i ng
meeting included the Mmes.
Hill. Wilbur Martin. Roland
Champagne , Thomas
Becker, Gerald Cennamo
and Tony Margis.
For a set that holds
week to week, add the inner
body and bounce of
Up~
L'OREAL:
UPllOLD -notase~ not a permanent, but
a wonderful new L'Oreal lotion that our stylists
add to bring as much as 8 weeks of extra
beauty, body and bounce to your hair.
All it takes is just ten minutes more than your
normal setting time-yet Uphold will save
you houra of coil!urc up-keep.
Phone for an appointment, and try Uphold
next time you come in. 10.00 ood \2.50
Be•uty Salon.
Manicure• •
-RecrMllan Ctnler, HuntlnAl!)fl,1_..,.:;::;:!;:;..,.:C.:.:.:..:;,_;:_.:,_:::::,.b,=========dl BMdl, 1 P.m. r
Les 0191 TM1tmlltn11.i Club ~-~~~9T::-.e~ 7~~~.~. Clu "'
ov..-....n A11•~--llffr lll'MI i-------:::::=""-::::::"------..., Sctloal, Cal"'! Mesa, t p.m.
W=it.ill'I OIVll"" el' JlillliW (ft( -l.ao;>ttl 11 evtolltble by t1lllr111 Mr1. Jim Z etlll,., 142-1:131, 'l•m. Ptc•eftw CMJttr,. 11ll•r111'1
All'lllM ·~ lflfnNff 9"41 M•fcll•I -f.acallan II .,,119blll trv catll,. Mn..
DoMld Pwk1I, "'J'°"°' I '·"'· '"":r.soAY TOl''S 00 el' v11ffllwtwi ... ell -
CommllftllY Mtll'lodlll Church. HUn-tlllCl!on IMCh, t;:JO t.m.
C..te Mtae L~ Jtwy Hwr -"=~ .. .:.-r..i=,.,·,:~iCi.· ci.~
-Newi>orter Inn, -· Soultl C•d WMvtn' hllll -S.nl1 ,.,.,. Public Lltw"1rv. 1 p,l'I\.
aallle CM-el' HltltNI Setnt11'1t1 AuoelllMll l11flrllatlllltl -Lac.II., h
tVtfltblt by CIUlnt Mn., SlllY f'ltm. in.. •~. •:3111 p,m.
TOPI Menl~ _,,,,,.. -WOO!lllnd khool, !1 NteJt, ) D.m.__ Trlm·Yllt TOPS vii ti WellmlllllW -Flnltv khoal, I p.m.
Tor.s Mln'Y Mak ... -PtrTY 1c:11aa1, H't'g~';.~":i1:~;.;i·_ C!rclt \1-Sffr~. Hlfrlf'1:;. 8~,'·~l1M 1'
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LOCl11an 11 1vell1ble bV t1llln1 Mn.
Wllll•m G11!1v1n. '62-413', I p,m.
Amtrlc1n Utlell ~urH11ry ef L"Ynt ...," -L""'" .. rrJi~ p.m.
f'•llfllll Vlllr/' HYh ff Nllll>le• TOPI Cllltl -RecrNllon Cl'llltr. Hulnlneton 8ftell, 10 1 m. •1111en• Fr1c11r Lu!Kll-Ch* -720 WbBtv Avf,, l11lbOI, naon,
rl'nM CDVntv S1111111 ·--Dolt Sc!\aal, Glrcien CrOYt, •_P.m. __
I
Buffums·
DD
Elizabeth Arden face treatment
is much more than just a facial
Al Ellllllolll Anltll 11,., in Buf-
fums ' Red Dool T1eatment Room will
help yi>u discover deli~tful beauty
secrets. You'll haw a face t1eatment
and emeree with a luxurious new
111akeup as well as a radiant feeling.
COlllplete ueatment, with makeup 11.•
Beauty Studio, PISCES (Feb. 19-March
201: Review desires. Some
things you thought you
wanted may now appear ~-------------------------------'
rl fashim Island • 644·2200 • Mon., llluls., fli. IO:OO bl19:30 Diller days 10:00 HI\ 5:31 nonetHntlal. A void 1 n y
degree of aeU-deception. N ewpo1t Center
----~ -------·----------~---
Only
Sears
a beautiful
Vignette
Portrait
of your clrild
for only
fora
Jlmited
time
_only!
each adclltion.i child 99e
• yO'll' selection of poses
• any child up to 12 yean
• no appointments ••• expeit
photographer will tab ple-
tures whlla you wait
LOCATION: 9,.,, 1.,.f.,,.,.. DfJlf.
S..n-Cotl.I Mui la Sovlll Cooll Plua P-MI-
•
f""'. w t :f• ,:"'< ,
DAil Y I'll.OT
•• -.. .. . . -' '
Who Should Foot the Bill.s?
DEAR ANN LANDERS: The other
evening my husband said to me, ''Did
you take your pill. dear?" I replied, '
"Yoµ mean ()UR pill, don 't you? After
all The Pill is a family alfalr." Hfi
lqoked at me as If I haQ taken leave ot
my senses.
My husb111d is typical of Uie newly
liberated male. To my way of'thinking
the American husband never did ac·
c:ept. his share o!· responsibility in
regard to sex and pregnancy. Now
that we have The PlU the husband just
plain doesh't want to be bothered with.
ariything. The only thing lln his mind is
did SHE remember to take HER Pill
or not?
Several months agll l read ·an item
about a birth control pill for men .. So
far as I know THAT pill has never
been perfected. And you can be sure it
won't be since most medical research
is done by men and they will shunt the
re~ponsibjllty off on the female as long
as possible.·
ANN LANDEl<S
you -so atop tryilc t.o make It 1
family alfalr, Lldy.
, DEAR ANN LANDERS' Our 16-
yur-old dau&hter just started to date.
Last night she · came in at midnight
(the agreed 1cwrew) and invited her
.d.atl' to. coinf in to t~
Her (ather and I sat up and visited
with them until 9:30 a .m. Was thJs
proper? He ii 1uch an Intelligent lad,
we really enjoyed ourselves. How,
however, I wonder if perhaps we
should have asked the young man to
leave earlier. But how does one do this
without being rude? Should he have
left on his own? Please tell us what ii
correct. -TIME FLIES
, to remove prune pita la company pro-
ved you d'on't eat out much:You said a
per1on tbould put the whole prune in
hlJ mouth, Ht around the pit and
then tramport the pit by spoon to the
platf, I
I don't know where you eot this
crazy idea but it'1 wrong. My mother
taught us to put Ille prunes in our
mouths and, when no one ls looking,
spit the pits into a napkin and put
them on the plate.
One of the things I admire about
you, Ann, is that you are big enough
to admit it when you are wrong. I
hope. you will do so this time. -PRO·
VIDENCE Pictured aboard the SS Lurli ne prior to sailing for
We women are partly to blame
because we have let the men get away
with it. I remember last year an un-
married career ~irl wrote and asked
DEAR TIME: How Qlce that you
daucll.ter baa sucb hrterea!f.ar frtead1,
but DO boy abould sit around antU 3:31
a.m.
DEAR PROV: J ,hale to Ille lldet Honolulu are Dr. and Mrs. Robert Moore of Costa
•ialut year Mom, kt apl&tbaf pits ID· Mesa. Dr. Moore is president of Orange Coast Col ..
lo a uplda ud 1Beak.lll1 them oa to I
tbe plale b ool my Idea of Jood mu·i;;;:=e::ge=.====;============, ners.
MRS. RICHARD f:, RAINES
H11w•ii•n Honeymoon
" you if her gentleman friend should
share in the cost of The Pill. !She was
...... , reluctant to ask him because she
' ~ "didn't know him well enough to talk
~ about money.")
So please, Ann Landers. will ynu
help me in my crusade to liberate the
female by printing this letter?
FRAILTY THY NAME.
DE'AR FRAIL: When a woman
takes a plll lt'1 HER pill, whether It's
an aspirin, a vitamin, or what have
Yi>u 1hould not hive 11ked b.lm to
leave ; your daughter should have
shown him to the door -at about
1%:30.
Have an unde.rstandinC for future.
date.s: Home by midnight aad the boy
leaves by 1%:30. And may I 1ugge.1t
that you and your husband vl1lt wlt11·.
the lntere1tlng younc m•n tome Sun·
day afternoon?
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Yo u r
answer to the woman who a1ked ho}Y
Historically Kept 'Under Your Hat'
Do you feel ill at 'ease ... out Of It?
Is everybody having a good time but
you? Write for Ann Landers' booklet.
"The Key to Popularity," enclosing
with your request 35 cents in coin and
a long, self·addressed, stamped en-
velope.
Ann Landers will be glad to help yo u
with your problems. Send them to her
in care of the DAILY PILOT, enclos·
ing a stamped, self-addressed en·
velope.
Some T.hing~ Were Always Hidden
Santa BarbcJra Home
Chosen by Newlyweds
i'~rom ancient Egypt to the curls of men's wigS CovereC has become a major in-The rteail wig business in
modern discotheque, from the back and shoulders and dustry. It's estimated that the United states n 0 w
clay, papier rnacbe and goat floated down over the cbest. 10 million women in this grosses close lo '400 milllon.
hair to ttle ultimate refine· . One of the most in· country alone now wear
of tod · I t " st I ol •-· I Hairdressers have had lo ment ay, wigs a ways .eres ... ng Yes co ..... nia wigs, an increase ·of more ha.ve been with us. days was the "bag wig:" for be re-educated in the handl·
After honeymooning in y e 11 ow chrysanthemums. Wigs have been found on men. The lone hair at tile than 900 percent in just ing of w.igs. Once reserved
ENTER NOW!
341h National
CHILDREN'S PHOTOGRAPH CONTEST
You can win a
12,500.00'
Shopping Spree in thi.s store !
CONTEST SPECIAL! 7 for 4 95
One BxlO and sii "·alltl·!'in-
(TMATS MORE THIM Yi OFf 111[ MCUL.Alt l'tltCEI)
Hawaii, 11ewlywed Mr. and Formipg the other bouquets Egyptian m.ummies, and back of UJ.e wig was tied in-seven years. Once the ladies for c u st om er s with
Mrs. Richard c. Raines will were blu"e bachelor's buttons history states that t he side .a black taffeta bag, saw Jackie Kennedy wear a "problem hair" or for en· Huntington Be.mch
establish their first home in and baby's br~th. Colleen greatest temptress of the usually with a rosette of wig with aplomb, fh e tertainers, wigs and wig· 892-333 J, Extension 283
Santa Barbara. O'Brien, the bride's cousin, ages, Cleopatra, wore an in· black ribbon for decoration. , fash.ion took off like a dressin·g now accounts for Mon . & Fri. 1 o a.rn. to 9:30 p.m.
The former pat r i c i a was the ftower girl. digo-coJored wig, made or In England ahd F rance. rocket. :ore than ,h~lf . of most Tue1., Wed .. Thurs. & S.mt. IO a.m. to b p.m.
O'Brien, daughter oe Mrs. The bridegroom, son of hair filled out with rope, to this style was cafried to 1...::;::;;:;;;_ _______ _:::::::•u:::t:;.Y.,:•::h-Op:z•::....:::"::"":::::•:::ss::., _ _!!===~=================' ~1arjorie o •Brie tJ of Mrs. Barbara Raines and help charm ?.fare Antony~ such an extreme that tbe
Newport B e a ch , and Arnold Rain"es of Boston. (The c u r re n t Cleopatra, bag eventually covered the
Edward CYBrien Jr. of San ~ked sturt Robinson to be Elizabeth Taylor, is said to wearer's entire lhoulders.
Francisco became ·Mrs .. his best man. Ushers were own more than 50 wigs and The exaggeration at least
Raines during a double rltig LarTy Heglar, Don Brown, hairpieces. had Ule virtue of. protecting
ceremony performed by the Br~ks Escherich, .R tis s · There is evidence that tne the wearer's clothing from
Rev. Dr. Charles Dieren· ~ilds, Warren W rt g ht , cavemen wore wigs made of tbe pomade and powder of
' '
field in St. An drew 's Mike Metcalf and Dillon. animal skins; Greek actors the wig.
P resbyterian Church, Assisting at the reception wore wigs o n s tag e ; Milady'!i baO'dres.s re1ch· Beauty Salone
Newport Beach. in the Newport Beach Elks fashionable ladies of Rome ed even more preposterous
COME IN and BE PAMPERED Given in marriage by her Club were Mrs. J a c le: and Carthage were much extremes in tbe manY tiered
uncle and godfather, Jack O'Brien, Mr. and .MJ;s. Gail addicted to false hair, .and "fontanges" of Louis XIV's
O'Brien of Costa Mesa the Anderson, the bride 6 aunt '1perukes" beca·me an court. And, Marie An·
bride wore a silk orPnza and ~cl~ and m_ike O'Brien, everyday article of coS'l.ume toinet.te is remembered for
empire gown with venise the bri.de s oousin. . when Louis XIII of France the yard-high "head" she
Joce accent.s. Her illusion Special guests atlending adopted the usage in 1624-. dictated lo fa5hion before
veil .was caught to a venise were Mr~. ~a<!! Hanson, The f..ashion for wigs she lost hers. English and
lace cape, and formin~ her t he b r l de s g r ea t · flourished at the court of colonial women folklwed the
bouquet were or c h 1 d s , grandmotber and M r s . Louis IV and was brought style. altbougb they never
stephanotis and baby's Ste Ph en Bu rt , t h e over to England by Charles carried it to the ex'lremes of
'
,,_ .. ,.,. .,.,,,. ,_,_,_.,.,,,_ ,,,,,.. .......... ~_.,,_w,,--._,"'w,.·. ""' ,..._,,,,,,
breath. bridegroom's sister from fl , who began in 1663 to af· the French court.
A-trs. Michael Dillon was Wiscon&iil. feet a large black wi g. In colonial days, the wig
matron of honor, while Miss The bride is a graduate of Charles may have been the was an important badge of
Francy Duffield served as Coronia del Mar High School first English monarch to social rank and to defy the
maid of honor. Bridesmaids and ttle University of adopt the custom, but it is fashion must have taken
·were the Misses Leslie California, Santa Barbara said th at Elizabeth l owned some courage. Nowadays, it
Wheatley. Robin Luckett, where she pledge;d Chi some 80 auburn, orange and seems no women wants to
C1yda Burger. L i nd .a Omega. Her husband also is gold wigs to cover her thin · defy the fa shion, because
O'Brien, the bride'.g co usin. a graduate of UCSB where ning hair. wig-wearing has become as
a nd Barbara Tanner. he affiliated with Phl Delta The .fashion .attai ned its natural as putting on
A.ll v.11re yellow . .\-line Theta. He is an alumnus of greatest development under lipstick.
goY.rns with venise lace John Muir High School. Queen Anne. when the long Since 1960, wi.si-making
panels. Honor attendants ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii&iOiiiiiiiiii~I carried nosegays of yellow
and "·hite dai sies with
FV Republicans
1'-1c0o\.\.'ell School, Foun·
tain Valley, is the setting
for gatherings or Fountain
\1alley Republican Women's.
Club, Federated, on the
third Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
Emblem Club
Gathering for business
sessions and programs are
members of Newport Har·
bor Emblem Club the sec-
ond Tue6day at 8 p.m .. in
the El.ks Lodge. Newport
Beach.
VISIT US
Before
th.
Stork
Visits
You
M Your c. ... ,., ...
M1t.r11lty
W•rtlr•M •f
""'" ...
• • •
FINE BAKERY
~d-t~<Jll~
D•lightfu/ly mois• ind soft, this round lo.tf
bre•d i1 1 favorite with the kids 40c
eAeuet&«(&~ae~
Puffy little rolls 1prinkl•d with chedd1r
chee1• & onion bits. A dinnertime f.mvorite .
6 lo< 35c
~ ?T.d't'utc/JtUdJ/&
Our f.tmous d1nish coffee c1ke foppecl
with plump delicious cherri•1. 17c "·
WIN A llRTHDAT CAKE, flUI
II your birthd•y i1 in August, Sept•mb•r or Oc ..
tob•r, 1fop in •ncl fill out en entry .. , • decor·
.tt1d 2-l•y•r c;•k• to 5 lucky people e1ch month.
?
with YOUR OWN CUSTOM
HAIR COLOR
Clever people, Roux ! They've produced a
push·button dispenser t hat lets us custom-blend
hair colors "·i th t he most subtle nuances-
and duplic atC> them every timr ~·ou co me in !
, .. you1· O\vn hair color.
\V ith Fanci·lone, the t int that covers gray
completely, with a oompletely natural look.
And conditions as it colors. And doesn't
wash out. l s th.e1·e an v other ti11.t l
CREME HAIR TINT
Tint, S~"'"""° •n<I Set'
ANYTIME $5.75 fMOST CASlS I
COSTA MnA, CALIP. COSTA MIS.l, CALI,. COSTA MUA, CALI,, OIAN•I. CALI,. 11" I . ll't~ 5trte!
Mertl lr (fl!ttr ·--l2GO H1rtior I I"°'
k ·Mlrt Pl1rt ,_.....,. 716 w. !ft~ 51!'ffl
"'"""-"'1.Jl2t
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\
CATHY'S
MATERNITY SHOP
.... c:..--11• .. ,,.. It. '£.~LIDO CENTER NIWPOtT llACH, CALIP. POUNTAIN YAWY. CALlf.
11'31 ...,..,,01i. .. vm ... c.nttr
SANTA ANA, CALIP. SANTA ANA, CALIP.
1»4t W1tl'"l1111<tr • 1:15' "10. FtlN'-
Tewn Ctnltr F1lrv1"* Ctnltr
POUNTAIN YALLIY, CALIP.
.W1 l~l1111tr 11 lluc:Ull
Pl!enl tiU.-1 '""""" ,Pl·nlD "'*-~11 Vtlllr t.nttr Pl'lllnt SJl·:IGU --644-1111 • 3433 VIA LIDO !NEWPORT BEA'CH 673·6360
I ),
--~--~-~---",..;;.~-..... -----------l "' ~~----------------i---------------~------
•
•
TrMd Life G•arutee
G.......,teef A1ala1t : A.II !al!uru ot the tln ruult-lnt: from 11onnal road bu-
anl& or dtieea Jn maltrl&I or WOTltln.aMhlp.
Pat How Lons: For tha life of th• OTlfinal tread.
WJI•' Sean Wiii Do: :Re· pl.Ir nall punctares at no
cb&r•e Io n,se of f&ll ure, Jn .eJ11Ch&n1"• for the Ure, r:eptace. It 111hurlq only
"'' r,raportlon ot. CllM"l!nt rtS:U ar aell101 ptlct pJ1111 • Fideral l:1:c!9fl Tu th&t n p""enU trud u1ed.
•
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Tire ·Purthue
Indadeo:
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nre Rot&tloa :Evea
1,000 Mlle.
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Check ot Jour
Wheel A.Upment
Now AvallaMeatSean
STEEL CORD
RADIAL TIRES
Tna4 We•r-Oat Gaaraatee
Gnnaletl A1U.1t: T rtad wur-out.
l'•r ••• Loes : Th• num· Iler of month• 1peeitled.
What !111111 Wiii J)e: In e:t~hang1 tor the Urt, re-place It, eharrJ•r the cur-
re1t regular 1d11nr pl"lc1 plut F ederal l::tcl .. Tu: leu the foUow1q &llO'W'· ance:
ll111Ul.1 .i11.,uee Gn•ra•ttflll "' "' " 7T to Ml
M"""1, Joly 8, 1968
.93 Month Guarantee
SUPER GUARD . . . . . .
..
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• Guaranteed to wear for a fWl ' 33 months
• Extra-wide tread Jives you a bigger "footprint" on the road
for better traction and·quicker stops
Built with four full plys of rugged nylon oord ·tO give y-0u faJI
greater safety and more dependable perfonnance than the aver.
age of new-car tires. Contour safety shoulders· for easier steer•
ing, smoother cornering. See this greaf new tire at Sears todayJ
Tubeleu BlackwaU.· Tubeless Whitewalls
SIZE T~•d&-,. •. z ....
Price IZ
6.50x13 17.95 1.81 6.50x13
7.75x14 22.95 2.19 6.95x14
8.25xl4 24.95 2.a5 7.75x14
'l.75x15 2~.95 2.21 .25x14
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No ·Money Do'IVll 'When.Yo~'lluy'Yo;ur·TJres at·Se9rs on Credit
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and old Ure
• New tread d.-.n and new tread wear Indicator-. .8" n&ITow whitewall
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• ate Mld dependable aervict alway1
SIZE rm;: tV!:• .;.
Tabele11 Whitewall•.
i.Ai1• 11t.ti 1ili 1M
t .lhil 117.N ti.II I.II
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' .. ,btl 'JWW..M , • • • • • • . II.ti .... t .TI J'.S.T,'
. ' " . ' I • Grater mllaJe, deeptr wider ..... '
• 119'' ~··"'-'Jiu.vier
• l"ew ccnloUr' Mtftt 0
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NoTndeo~~I
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'
AND Now · ..
SEARS COVINA
Automotive
Service
.Center
Is Open!
l
Drive in today and
take advantar• of
the complete ilU';V'"
ice offered by thia
ioooem Auloo>otlvt
Center ..
Arrow Bl1hW'i11 at
A.-A.0.
'
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-.... _..,, .. ----~ -·•-.--.... ----~~·--~ •-T -~--------· -. " .~~~-~~~~~...,~·-~~ ... ,..,....~,.....,~,..~·.,~.,.~""" ... """'"'"'""'"..,."'" .... ,..,...,,..29,. .. ., ... , ... .,4 .. ,,,,.,,.,.,.P•4%4""'""'"" .. '•-.t~••-!!"'U\~JS\!""~-"'•·!"'""tt.,,,..,,~.•·••="l"e ~: .. ~-1•1"'!!.a.~t'"'!!.•Z•-""'t•t•.c .......... ,..,,..,, .. ~~··
' ,
I
l
j
)8 DAILY ~110T
t1 ••··~···· -. ... . jtp;,,,,,, : -Not J ·-Weak Link
!: Peeks :
'Odd Couple' at ·Playhouse ·
.~ . •• : .. ....,. ..... ' Funny, Scores Effecti vely .
C. Tbe Gree• Bereta, in Pana· i• .vision and Tecbnioolor, is be·
: ~ing held over at the Mesa F Theatre. Film fans enjoy this
~ exciting motion pictutfl that
: • tells the story of the army's
: ~newest branch, the Special ..
: :;.Forces. . " ~ = With the cooperation of the
! -State and Defense Depart-
: =lnents, the picture was shot
: :t)n locations from Fort Ben-
, ~.iing, North Carolina , For t
-Rucker in Alabama and the
·.\laval Missile Center, Point
Mugu, California.
J ohn Wayne stars as the
colonel who hand • picks and
personally trains the men who
1,1.•ill perform tasks embracing
many phases of war. Jim Hut-
ton, . .\ldo Ray, Raymond St.
Jacques and Luke Askew are
some of those trained for
fighting, serving as espionage
agents and· soldier-diplomats.
By TOM TtT\IS
Of .. OlllY ,..., ....
Let u< begin wltll t!>e
pennise tbiat Neil Simon is
A m er i c a's tu n n l e·s t
p)ayMight ml -"Th< tldd Couple" is the funniest
of his pla~c, then go from
there to the -Laguna
Playhouse where a com -
pletely stargeworthy pro.
duction of this con·
temporacy C001ic classk: is now oa disptay.
ThU is one ol Ole more
'foolproof comedies on the
circuit. The lineti alone are
enough to bring down the
"THIE 000 COUl'LIE"
A comecl'I' by Nill Simon, dlr9Cltc1
by D•vld M•rlow, · ledlnlut dlrK10<
P1ut Tofl, t011\1me1 Dy Ll11 Slirette,
Prfitflted Thun.a..n ll'lrOVllll S<.lll4ey1
u"11t July 11 It tlw LltlHNI 11'"-fhouH.
Jlt Oi:e-.n """·• L1D11n. ••1C11. TH• CAJT
Otctr Mtotison ..... , ... ChtrlH Sl!\llL
Fell• Unter .......... PllH lnt1r\111dl *"' .................. llob D'l1ldcro
Murr1y .............. Gtot!rtf Riker
Ray .. , . .,,., ••... Robin Eftllm.n
Vlllllle .............. •..• Alln Hirt
Gwenclobn ... ••••• P1lrlcl1 ~ ceeuy ................... S.llv llrown
house without the added
mlarity of skille<I c!Jarec-
teri:r.ation which the Laguna
production has in abun·
dance.
Aside, for the moment,
from the mismatched ,pair
of mariW 1o6ers Vr11o com-
prise tile leading roles,
Laguna's "Odd Co up I e"
scores m o s t effectively
because of its complete and
total depth. There is not one
weak link in ~e entire cast
-one reason, perhaps,
being that auditions pro-
from Sbermea Oak• f« tbe who is not British, ap-
ro1e <4 the slovenly Oscar, parently has learned a great
g i v e s it all the Iree-deal of the dialect from
swinging, blatant1 physical /Miss McQuade, who is.
comedy at h.is command. He ""Fui.L BLOOM
is at his best Oll his double Although the r a p p o r t takes, overreacting lo · ndi
roomie Felix' neat little between Shull and Interla
ob:ser"Mtioos. is not easily established in
the first act, it comes into
SUBTLE CONTRAST •full bloom in the next two as
On the other hand is Phil both warm up mz.s terfully
Jnterlandi -who has a ' to their task. The scene in
slight edge in that he makes which Shull goads lnterlandi
people laugh for a living ..-into smashing a teacup is
as the pris~y. wispy Peltx: (one .»f the runnietit or the
Playing the role i.n S<>fl, play. .
subtle contrast to Shull, and , David Barlow's dire<:tion
stand.in& · about a h e a d stands to be applauded for
shorter, he makes an ex-. iis l'reedom and nuid.ity,
cellent foil for the latter's \essential in a vehicle of this
bombast. 1sort. His only discernible
I n d i v i d u a I a c-flaw is in allowing Shull to
com p Ii s h m en t in an · cup the telephone receiver
ensemble effor.~ is brought under his chin w h en
c:.cross beautifully by the ostensibly talking into il,
four poker players -Robert which is more distracting
Engman, Alan Hart, Geof· th'i!.n the covering of his
trey Riker and B ob mouUl would be.
D'IsidOro. Each has his own .. The Odd Couple" is
distinCt character. but none cle<:!rly the funniest show of
is allowed to rise above any the year at any county
d the others. theater -the c I o s e s t
The flighty Pigeon sisters, challenger being ;'Barefoot
a pair of English birds who in 4tle Park," another Simon
inject a touch of aborted product also done a t
romance into our heroes' Laguna. It runs two more
lives, are well interpreted · weekends, Th u r s d' a Y s
tiy Patricia McQuade and through Sundays, at tile
Sally Brown. Miss Brown, playhouse, 319 Ocean Ave..,
. Uaguna Beach.
Six Named
As Scholars
duced some of the county's Six students from top comic actors vying for David J anssen co-stars as a lead roles·who subsequently Orange Coast area have
War correspondent. Irene Tsu accepted bhe chairs around been awarded President's
appears as a lovely Vietnam-the 'poker table. Scholarships fo r study next
fall at the University of ese singer and Craig Jue is a WELL BALANCED California. pr e s id en t
•·scene-stealer" in his role as The result is exceptionally Charles J. Hitch announced
an orphan. The Green Beret.I well balanced theater. piling today.
·is based upon a best-seller of laughter upon laughter at a Scholarship recipients are
the same title. the audi~ its f u 1. I Place, Costa Mesa; Patricia
pace thats.lows on~y to allow David P. Goggin, 241 E 16th I
Shai-ing the screen at the measure of en~oyment. nus A p · kett 1884 Monrovia
C Id Cl.I one is loaded with belly N. 1'c5 co' sta Mesa. Ga1'1 I ~'lesa is oun own, an ex · doe not t k o • I
· 1 th t laugh!, and it s a. e · Ah~mada 1512 V e r a n o ing film in TechruCil or a long for bhe cast to realize Pl ce lr~ne · Robert Frost ,
Puls a man on the moon . Rob· tttis and OOld for the in-a • • '
........ , act.i 2849 C'hateau Way,. Lagllna ert Duvall, James Caan, Mi-, evlww ie.re . 00: Beach; Nancy N, Laurie,
ci1ael Murphy. Steve Ihnat 11he Sl~~ti<>n .1s 50 fu~ny 235 Victoria, San Clemente;
and Joanna Moore top the because it Mi. qwte plausi ble and Richard A. Tiberi, 110
-two men 1~ ttle throes o( w Paseo de Cristobal San c::st that reveals the action divorce sharing an apart· · ·
behind the story of the race ment in a "marriage" of -=C=i~e=ment=•=·======~
financial convenience. One r to the moon. is a completely uninhibited,
COMING SOON: Look to hulking, cigar c h om p i n g LOCAL
11,c Lido for the marvelous slob; .amd j:he other is a com· No otl!1r n•w1p1p1r t•ll1 yo11
' J Li dd' t nior1, '"'"f city, 1bout wh1t'1 n1usical movie Thoroughly pulsive c ean nes1> a tc ' 9oin9 on in the .,,,,.,,r
El spr.aying the air and mop· Or•n'J• Co•lf then the DAILY l'ilodern Millie. Music by -ping up every five minutes. PILOT.
mer Bernstein and Andre Pre-: -~Qw~':.'l~es~~Sh<J"".'.!l'.:·_'.im".'!'por~l~e<I~========== vi n, showing in Technicolor,1·
here is a spoof of the fads and
foibles of the 1920s.
Julie Andrews, Carol Chan-
ning and Beatrice Lillie are
al their very merriest best.
J ohn Gavin, Mary Tyler
J\.1oore and James Fox I e n d
terrific support to make
Thoroughly l'ilodern Millie a
Jilm to see!
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
l CDns litutiDn
6 Pro --10 Furl
14 Musical
drama
15 Black
lli Lacking
Don't Just Stand Tbere is ! 17 s:~~tst
the screen comedy that CO·' In drgrrt
stars Robert Wagner and lB Oakland or
Mary Tyler Moore along with I Ouawa · 19 Ilona -Glynis Johns and a new, 5-20 Dlscontint:
fee t-e leven redhead known as ancr from
Barbara Rhoades. This unus-ust
UJ I laugh-maker bows out to-, 22 Pow'r sourer r.1:irrow eve along with Close-23 Sound i~
i .. · \Vatcbed Trains at the Lido. thr ni?ht
24 Utensil
I (
Dlllll WATSON
MESA MA TINE ES are very
popular with Harbor area
home-makers because they
provide a mld-week, afternoon
break ffiim daily duties with·
out interfering witti the even-
ing assignment&. The pro-
grams are every Wednesday
afternoon, rtarting promptly
at ooe o'clock, opening with
free refreshments.
FREE PASSES to the Lido
or tbe Mesa will be mailed
toda1 to David Garinger,
9152 Gettysburg Drive, Hunt-
In,...' -· Dale Mitchell, 31f8 Bilnnuda Drive, Costa
Mesa. CartolJ V. ,Foy, 2237
Golden Circle, N e w p o r l
--Betoch and S. A. Ogle, llOI N.
. }Jay l"roo!. Balboe Island.
You don't need cub to en·
Joy the fin< llJmJ at the !Jdo
and tlle 111.... u.. your
-Bubmerlcahl .,. your Mas· . ..,. Cbarf• cant to open the
door1 to more fun at the mov·
1... );
•
25 Cl's m1 ilir ...
address:
Abbr.
28 Otd salt
29 Coin of
Europe
30 Vrgrtablt
33 Disagrttably
moist
35 Offspring
38 Word DI fa1twt1I
40 Or not
41 .Not ovr1 ly
wordy
42 Look!d
for one
45 Oisrasr
4b Numbtr
47 Wattr
reduced to
solid
statr
' 3
"
33
31 •
.. ..
•
•
_.,..._-..-~.
48 Bind In
marriage 50 Side
sheltered
from wind
51 Airplane
52 Man Df
the clolh
5~ Walk alon~
57 Spr lnkh!d
around
"l Station1r's
un it
bl -ticket b3 A thing
found
64 Bein11 different i1 ldtnlily ,5 Man of
nob It rank
'11i Dtvourrd
li7 Fa cial
ltalurrs
68 -··Ind crafts li9 Kind of
rte Drd
DOWN
1 Rral rstate
broker's slgi
2 F"rnclng
wr1p:on
) Souchon9,
p:rkor,
rtc.
4 Genus ol
btars
5 Doc ument
conferring
pri~ltt9t & Per!odit ret urning
1 Awa it
submis1iYfly
'
Saturday's Puzzle SDlvrd:
C A H S 0
8 Cariy II'/
'"'' 9 Ont or
anothl!f ID 011trator of
51 AcrDss
11 Compile
litrrary
lfllttriat
12 And
ll Wild limt: Informal
21 Lrapin?
amphibian
22 Robson or
Rushmorr
24 U.S. author ZS Conform
2& Ser 5Z
Across 27 Hamburgrt ingrtditnl 29 Nuts
JO llladt bf
WDfd 0
moulti
31 Br subst · qutnt to
l 2 Trlt···: 2 wcrds
" '
l4 Boxing
dtclslons:
Abbr.
J& Tosspot
)7 Drgrtr: Abbr .
39 Wat ctleo fu1llvrly
4) Outside:
CDmb. for'" 44 Stitt DI
owing
49 ·--·lln1
51 ·····Bay S2 Unlikt
all ot~trs 53 Ftlt sun hat 54 Paper
source
55 Have
conlldrncr
5& Tranquillity
57 Bum
58 List of
pe rsons
59 Through
all timt
liO Contr1 vr nt
liZ ·--·--· cul pl
11 13
EXCLUSIVE
SOUTH COUNTY
RUN
THE
'GuBN
Bmmrs
w.mi\ JdSIBN ·--· ------· ALSO SHORTS
Continuou1
Dilly from 2 p.m.
" CLOSELY
W"'ATCHED
TAAi~&
'LS O
-R.i..rt w .. -Mory Trier Moore
S•tfl'tH rw
Mmre Alltlhtnc"
In lkw ltstt •:41
c .... Sff. "•"' 2 ·"'·
Trini Lopez ou:e=-·F""'"a~~n"
• iACOAST At Greek 'T·heater _ ...... -:0:.~:~;
,Two Shows
Set Dates
The "Trlnl Lopez Show" Frank Gorshin, Remem-
openg tonight at'ttie Greek bered for his portrayal of
Theatre in Griffith PJrk, "The Riddler" on 'TV'1
combining the talents ot two ''Batman 1 series,: th i s
internationally fa mo us brilliant performer numbers
eotertainert. every~m Kirk Dougla;s
It stars Trinl Lopez, the and Burt Lancaster to
T e x: a 1 • b o r n S i n g er Jolson and Karloff among
whose acclaimed recordings his uncanny impressions.
and supper c 1 u b. ap.. Conducting for Gorsh.ins
pearances have made him musical numbers will be
orie of the most sought-after Buddy Freed.
NOW OrlN NOON
Pt.US CO-HIT
WALTER MAnHAU I~
"A 6UIDI fOR
THI MAIRll D MAN"
Two productions will open
i'n Long Beach late this
week, the "Sound of Music,"
by the Long Beach Civic
Llght Opera ai;id "Concerts
in Ole Grove.'' highlighting
the San Fr~co Com-
mittee Players.
young stars in the en-The two-man stow is the
tertainment world today. third attraction ot the Grif·
Hi s Greek ~rogram will in-fith Park amphitheatre's
elude many· of }lis popularili~16t~h~a~nn~u~a~l~s~e~a~soo~.=~:::::=~~~~~~~~ songs: ,."Gran&rl.a.' "Cu-eu-
mi-eu-eu Paloma," "If I Hal
A Hammer" and ;,Kansas
City." David Shriver will
conduct the Greek Theatre
Orchestra for Lopez.
"Sound of M\.is ic" opens
Friday, July 12. CUrtain
time is 8:30 p.m . Tickets
Special guest star for the
show, which will be at the
Greek through Saturday, Ju·
ly 13, will be the inimitable
may be purchased by c~lling colffti•
(2131 438-7097.
The thi'rd "Concerts in -th~
Grove," are scheduled for
Thursday, July 11 °through
Saturday, July 13 at 8:30
p.m. in the Soroptimist
House Patio at California
State College at L o n g
Beach.
Members of the players, a
branch group of the original
Sen Francisco Committee,
will employ improvisational
acting techniques including
political sattre, commentary
o:n current events and ex· temporaneous comedy .
Tl!CHNICOLOft*·O.m:---
PI•• Y•I ary...., Ill
''THE DOUBLE MAN''
"MH" -1:15 & 6:10
"Hopftlnt" -4:05 & 1:41
ul'Whole
G/Vew'World of GEntertainment!
TONITE thru FRIDAY NITE
ttON STAGE U.S.A."
Thi• W11k 6t•rri~11 ••• 1n P1r1on
~.~~~~ .. ~~-~.~
GEORGE GOBEL
.THE SPICE RACQ
PAUL DESMOND-GUEST MC
Shows at 9:15 ind li PM-On the TOMORROW\.ANO STAG[
In we•k• to come ...
KAT STAllll, PATTI PAGE, PHnus DIU(ll, llU D~NA
EVERY SUNDAY
COUNTRY MUSIC JUBILEE
• Hu\ S..nNy StlfFlng
FLATT & SCRUGGS
FArDDIE HART
JODY MILLER
NOEL 1ooa·s Ind htt BAND
DON ELLIOn -au£ST MC
Shows 1t 3, 5 incl 7 PM-On the TOMORRDWLAND STAGE
*** Disneyland On· Par,ule
7:30 PM
A Merry, Musical Promenade throuf11 the
Masic Klnsdom slarrins Mickey, Pluto, Goofy
and all yoo1 Disney Character Favorites.
. EVERY NITE at 9 PM
Fantasy in the Sky
Tinker Bell's flight sisnals lhe stall
of a Sl'@Cfa<:ular Aerial Fireworks DispJay
•• *
~ J,ppt"ltll l~IOllCl'>olll tnt Mlfk. K,ntdOM • .
TEDDY IUCJ\N[t. THl MUSTANGS . 1Ul:lHOUSt r1vr + 2
T'1[ '.\iDS or TH[ IUllCOOM. THE CllRA WARD $INGEI$
lllL ELLIOn I. 1'HE OlSJfmAHD DATC NITERS
Ttll KAGEi TWINS• THC IOYAl TAHITIANS
fMl AMUUCANA llASS allCI 111111)', llllllJ Merel
ror, l'tt1 t11Ki•I ¥tlllt •11 te en1111 111 ttt1 11e1t1'"1nt .••
DISNEYLAND AFTER DIRK TICKET BOOK
ln<htdll U111111!011 ..nd tfty l AU•l~!i.,,I of Yovr C"'k'
Adult $4.00 Junior '"·'" $3.00
tU 15 ..,1y,1 115.111 v1Ju1)
A~t•l••ll """I l'M Onty
Offft '4111,·TIWu . I •M lo 12 Mldnlla-Frl. & Sit. I AM lo l Alil
· Disneyland
~NEW IALB/tA
~ATRE
HOMI o; tO«iNO CMAll lOOU
I I 10t ~ST IAl.IOA BLYO. ' I I BALBOA rEIUllSULA· 573·4041 ~
1" " J
,, •
GAIETY •••
H .... •ffr !SHI & f111ol Wffk, end•
lat hly ''· Co11tln1101n; Wed.,
Sat. & Suw. fr911t J:JO. N~titlr
.i.o.., ':JO & t :JO. -··-Wiii OllMTI
"NATURE'S HALF ACRE"
JI ' 0 z " r
FUTUIE STAm 1:00 • 6:10 & 10:00
Doi Laur tl*W. Ill. Wlrl
PHONl 673~260
EXCLUSIVE
FIRST RUN
SHOWING
DlllD LWDllll...:lHE OEVl[S BRIGADE"
ifWAM HOIDEN ·CUfF ROBERISON · VIN!l EIJWARM --....... all.II.,...... --~
SECOND BIG HIT ~
A wttoi. ..w ll"ft• I• -...hire!
"A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS" Clint Eastwood
RA~(l \',l'I ~ · llf L'(.P lf{1f
"lled•uled" _
PtWIO>o t.tbl'!!.i .... t._,,,_
& -·--.. -·-------·-· w .,,... •• tMIOUI 'llm • "" Dlf•• "'""· ALSO tD .... snwr R llUlll
(8 PME WU BCE a~
•
..
~'1 0 NO t.i
•
.... 1111 .. "-; Ill !60) ""' °""""· ·-~ -CC)(30)
·-- -(Cl Ct0)
1
si.we·s ll*ts tOlliaht m Abbt
l1M, S.lldy llnin1 llon Qr, Kt4ft
•nd DMu, and lot! Men. (~ OSll......, __ _
.,-....,_ .. {1itQntur1) 'S&-Rhon·
d~ Fleminr,, Altlrdo Mont1lb1n.
m ·-.., cc1 C30>
tDMM1.,_ (30)
fl) Wiit's ,...,
., [fttrt S..111•
1:30 0 DIC 1W1 StMu (C) (60)
fJ Thi ''°"' Sltow (C) (30)
...... ,....,. (30)
CD McHIM'1 Nwr (30)
m 5"dru111: (C) ''WtvlS Acrou
tht Padlic.H David Prowitt \'bib
with Dr. Robert Munk and his col·
1u1ues 1t 1111 ScriP91 OcM11et-11apltic l11stiM1.
1E1 Noticitft >4 (C)
I
.. bofll·MllttC --" !lit: ""' Mtude tM W MIJhbor <ltritrt
Hefftt) M .. wl$11u ..... -.iN
·tufll lftto • IMNw. ilo 117J (J)"' .... _, CC) mi "111111 • '"·" s.t. StllM ,.... wWMel ff .,_ II 1 ftc·
..,, flrt M 'wlllctl I ~II 411d •
... AtWlr, "'-HtiMtt Piil (R}
·-CC) (!OJ ..... r-: "Th• NiJOll Candi· licy." Communif1 1tf1l11 newsmtn
LIG McElrey, POlltlctl oblt!w11 and
rtpr•nltliws from ttlt Hilan ot•
1aniution commtnl on tN pro1rtu
ol tht k>r1ntt Vice Pr1Jidtnt'1 C41111·
ptil~-. ., ...... ,~ .. --'
t:JO II am Ft•llr Atftir: (C) (30)
ITntle Blif buys tlll children an
•Quarium ltl•t 1par'.:s 1 domtslic
eriSJI. (II)
o Ill> r1ir.,... "''" cCJ '"' C.101)'11 iibuth: Joe RoUi's ltttmph
lo dalt Mr; Or. Roui arid M1uh1
h1v• an lntimfl:e dlnn11; Slev111
calls on Norm1n and Rill.
Q) TIMI lltfl*I {60)
fll) NET Jt1n1I: (C) "D1rwln.'' A
11·cr11tion of Cl'l11!es O•rwin'1 hi1·
torlc W1111e in l~S to th• Ga li ·
PllOI lsl1nd1, • n1tur1I laboratory
of M lution. in tflt equ1tori1t ZOM
of tltt Ptcific.
........ -.i .....
'"" •• [i] _..,, (C) (60) ., ...
liflf.' iJUtt Reynalda 1{1q 11 I
lllltllinl U:D6S• writtf wllo posa: (30) H • pmbli111 deMr f0t tn iMiM
" --___ ......__
I ,,., f) CIS ·-· -(C) Walter C""'kitt.
CIF ,,.... (30) kMlll: at vice in 1 Midwell: city. Ht ,.._,!'-'.:Y
IMnu from Russ Ftiftt (J1r11ts Mac· 11· m I ,_ '"' (30)
........... (30)
Arthur), an horitst pollc•m•n who
tterttlr sua.stecl tht m111zl111 11 ·
ticlt, !hat 1 brut1I police lltllttn1nt
mi ......... hi Rwltw (C)
Im LI 111111 \ledl
n1mtd 811n6on (Gertld O'Lo111hfin) 111:::::::::::S;-:=:.
is 1 ~'Y fi1urt In ttlt 11mbtin1 11 rina:.
''""Qt(J)-· (Cl (60) Marsha! ~llon lldts witlt 1 youn1
Indian bfM (Todd Annstronl). sue·
OUIO{ 1o ltit drifll 1r1ndf1tlttr
(Riclt1rd Hiit) IS cltief of the
Wlcltitls, in I di1put1 witlt In OP·
pressivt lncli1n 11111t (GtM £vana).
It leads kl Dillon's IUIPlflSion IS
m1rsh1t and • murder dl1r11 when
ht tnd the brm 111 !rimed fot 1
killin1 on tile ruervllion. (II)
0 TH MtMtw. (CJ {301 "The
MonslrGUS MonkH Miii!." Thr111
11tou!s ttlrture D1VJ, Micky, 1ndl Peter. planning kl staal their br1ins
and uu them in thtir Gwn personal
1ejU¥enliiG11 project. (Ill
e '°'"" v.,111: <C) <SO> "Ri· ¥i9ra to Ro1111.''
0 Ill> 00 ...... • ''"'" (C) {60) ''Stone Ate S1!1ri." Samson
IMS on trial fQr his 1il• wllen SU·
perstitious tribttm111 believe he iS
0 ID Cil I S,,: (C) (60) "Thi•
Guy Smlffi." RobilllOn .,.4 Scott
post " \llellioninr fisllenntn 11 1
mountain rnort wtlilt 1tt1mptin1 lo
lttJlt out 111 entmy trtnt and find
lhtmHIWls ftcinr 1rr1st on mu1d1r
el11r1u. Larry Thor, Di1n1 Muld1111
1111st. (R)
....... ,.... ,. .. (C) (30)
8 (W lJ) TIN Iii Ytlley: (C)
{60) "Shadow of 1 Gi1nt." Nick
and Heath hne trouble with Stlh
Campbell, tt11 le1tnd1iy marshal
who is l11dln1 1 P!Wf huntin1 tht
tllr11 Slrydtf brothers: Tlfeir Ooubt1
tbout lht marsht l art rulired
""h•n he orders a ch1r11 In the
f1c1 of d11d1r ·1111 from a G1tlin1
a:un. J1mes WMmore iuest1. (R)
0--(IO)
m Jld! ltthaM Ntn (C) (60)
e Tlltn fllllill«
"moenf' (pos.18Slld by iwil spirits). tO:lO dt ""'9: (CJ (30) Bit! .lohn~ (R)
C) Mltlioil $ MM: "Mell II Etlf· "OUtn: S.1 In A111tt;kl;, (C)
n,...,. (dr1ma) '60-Jtffrey Munter lntIOduction lo the Slflt~. Dr.
GORDO
; '
JUDGE PARKER
Pl.EAiE, i..Er .. l:E HELP NO, !JHEILA!
YOU WITH THE l'ISHES, YOU ,\NP ltANPV
MRS. PARl<ER! IMI ~6!
"'. ' John 8HSton hosb th• u n•. re-David Janssen. viewin1 tr1dition1J ind dl1n1in1 11· -m Trwtl! er llllMllUtillees (C) (30) liluda on sex 1nd morality. He is
director of the Cleveland Health OJ r.,, 11111111 (60) Mustum ind c!inietl pmftSSOr of
eEl Mfflnl Thiqs Gr1W; (C) "P,l1nls
ror Dim Platts." Thalassa Cruso
prevenHve medici1111 of the Cast·
Wutern Reserw Medial Scllool.
offers ltints tor ltle Indoor 1ardenw. 11 B :00 V.• O'Clld hpoft: (C) (30) fll Coftlim J C.llCiorMI .ltrry Dunphy.
D Tiit 11111 Moir ,.._ fCl (30)
Georit Skinner. 1:00 0 Tiit ca..n,icllls: (C) (60) "Th•
Gildld C.ee." Intruders break into
tile Nemesis he1d11u1rters and stul
1 file on Richard 81rrett.
0 Movit: IC) "ltdy In IM 0.1'.:"
(music.al) '44--lo:in1er ROiiers. R•J
Milland.
D Tiit Wlll:M111rt (30)
0 .,.,, c<> ,,,, ''"" ""'· ir;:=M=O==O=N==M=U=L::::U:--N=S
0 MOY!t: (CJ "TIM Monti Carle IL-
hlry" (oamedy) 'S7 -Vittoria De
Sica, Marline Dietrich. m Mtlll flO)
eil) RM!bow Quttt: German-born
Mirtha Schl1mm1 Joins Pete See·
111. Pelt silowa tile versatility ol
the banjo end M1 rth1 1ln1s German
m L• c.. fC> 1&0i
m Movie: "lllolt r ...... (wtsttrn)
'56---Kent T1ytor, Mirian C.rr.
ethnic lOllp. 11:30 fl Morit: "fht Good M11111or Min"
II>'-'-
l :JO 18 9 (I) Tiit llltf ltln: (C) {30)
When stunt man Chuck C&sty (Don
Meeow1n) Injures hi• batk, his 1irt·
friend (Joan Blondell) tells Lucy
that she could m1k1 some u sy1 money by posin1 as 1 man ind
takln1 Chuck'• plltt In t soent the
(oamed~) '50-Jlck C.rson, Lola AJ.
bri1ht.
D QI 00 Tiii TMiPt ._ (C)
II Mowil: "Coldtll loY' (drama)
'39-Williim Holden, B1rb1r1 St1n· ""'· 8 (J]J (I) Joty l i1hop SllOW (C)
nHt d1y. (R) l.1:00 II JM l""Jfte (C)
o Ill> m '" """' cc> '"' ''fht Hi[iMy-Dlckory·DGclc lliid:' A 12·30 GI Owt11 Li111ih 1aid Is almost e1ncelled wflen Sgt '
Moffitt l•mt of his brottltr's duth. Ill Adttll "'*': "Tiit Bit Tip·
(II) Off.~
m Mtrv lriffln (Cl (90)
m World ti Woll'llfl IC) C30)
&II A111tt " Mtllltflltr
TUESDA Y
12:55 CJ Movit: "Contrab1nd Sp1!ft" (Id·
Ytnlufl) 'SS-Richerd f "'"'". A1111u~
AimH.
B McwJ1: ''Tiit OlllKtivt" (com·
1dy) "S4 -Alec Guinntss, Joan
Grtenwood.
II Co•111111ity lallttl11 lo1r•
0-(C)
Jl:OD O ''WKt" (weat1m) 'S2-William
Elliott. """'* Worlft" (dr1m1)
'3S-Cl1udet11 r.o1bert.
Jl!JO m "It's LM I'• Afte(' (comldy")
'.17 -Btttt Cllri1. "nit ltdltlor
Paltf' '57-Don Murr.y. ~
l:IO .......... ltlt" (Jl!)'ftllJ) ·~ Ii
1:30 8., 101 IMIJllll' etntflolo. Jim Drm. ""Mr Mleh11ls. f
.,, • ;loll...._ .... Jouf. 4:•. '1fl .. ,...,.. (comedy) ··1-If
d•n. Al!bort .. Coltlllo.
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUn AND JEFF
a .... ....-••••> '9f-o IC> "lllrmltt • .. ...... J
EtTol ~ ..... -• ..... ...,.. (ltntlSJ) '63-Chrlltllpll• L:,__.J:.U.LJ.1---=
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iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
e JOB l'RINTING.
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Of
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l.k:I TIM ..
FOC
CUSTOM.
FOJO
SOMt:'TMI~
COOl.1 FOR
ttA\llll..
UH·"
.MA"i&a
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LOOK RIDICULOUS .
By Harold L.. Dou
~ HA.Vi AH APPOINTW!NT wmf
Mr. MCMANAN gour TME SUMMH
THEATR JOl,,ANP THEN TH! TWO
OF ·YOO HAVE A. LUUCHiON PAT&
YOlllP: ~p MIP ICATHB!lfl Aft 50
llNOEltoTANPl!rik!i .. 50 '!fiONPe«fUL,.
RANP't' ! I A.Lfl\06T FEIL AS
1MOMH IM ~Jrf OF 'tell' FAMILV:
W4TM t,u.\ PlrJVS !
•
By Ferd Johmon
WHY ?
'lbtJIRf: CLOSl'll
10 iM& ICEIOX
1'~N l AM.1
HOWCAN'I
DESCRIBE YER
BEWITCH IN' EYES,
THEM PRETTY
LIPS, THEM CUTE
DIMPLES, THAT
RADIANT GLOW!_
I CAN'T BELIEVE
YOU'RE MINI!
ON THE OTHER
HAND, WHO COULD BE
l>\ORE DESERVING!
ALL MINE!
By Al Smith
-·-_, __ ..,._ ..... _ T·I
·~1\I
-::::::: -
SUPF051! MY PftAC.TJa IS UM~O "l'O fAR5, N05e AND
'l>IROAT , llUT ONI! ~N.f! DAY
A PATIENT WAI.JCS IN Wl'Tl:I
Ml.S l!N'T!Re llOPY .. ,
--~--,---
,,.· '<' • ·""'.w .. , .. . . , .. •. \ ,..,
'
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Ir
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•
DAILY PILOT
GAMBLE -Burt Reynolds, above, stars as a mag ..
azine writer on ''Premiere" lonight , in color at 10
p.m. on Channel 2. Posing as a gambling dealer, he
goes to a ~idwesl city for an inside look at crime·
and vice gathering materiaJ for an article .
TELEVISION VIEWS
New Format
For Teevee
By RICK ·ou BROW
HOLLYWOOD I UPI) -The abolition of vio-
lence in popular enlertainnwt1. such as television--
is hardly likely because, as Mae West once put it:
"Virtue has it own reward but has . no sale at the
boxo¥1ce." Well ; in many cases, anyway.
BUT THE ABOLITION of wholesale brutality
and unmot ivated sadism is only the negative aspect
of the antiviolence argument. The big question, of
course, is: What do you use inste'ad? Conflict, with-
out doubt, is the essence of drama.
Yet there are many kinds of conflict, most of
them more dramatic than the use of guns and fists.
And just as important as the ~n.tiviolence crusa.d.e
is the new need for network officials to take a posi-
tive step in the entertainment area:
TO ALLOW, instead of the standard cynicis.m
criticized. by Carl Sandburg, genuine feelings ,of
optimism, pleasure, anger and style when write.rs
want to ex press them -which is often.
For this goes to the roots of an attitude toward
the nation itself. Where optimism and pleasure (not
the laugh·track kind) and styles are discouraged.
the nation gets a very mean, nasty, distorted and
cynical view of itself.· One need.n 't be a Pollyanna
but there are beautiful thi ngs happening too, and
sig nificant things, and there are real people and
matters worth exploring.
THE NOVELIST Thomas Wolfe once wrote: 11 lt
is good to eat, to drink, to sl eep, to fi sh. to swim,
to run, to travel to strange cities, to ride on land.
sea and. in the air upon great machines, lo love a
woman , to make a beautifuJ thing."
This is the expression of health, exuberance, of
juices joyou sly flowing in a man who loved !Ue.
When is the last time you remember getting that
kind of feeling from watching a televiSion enter·
tainment prog rani? Who wouldn't rather be Wted.
up than put down and thrown into the gutter again?
IN "THE DECLINE of pleasure," Walter Kerr
wrote : 1'We are all of us compelled to read for
profit, party for contacts, lunch for contracts, h?wl
for unity, drive for mileage, gamble for charity.
go out for the evening for the greater glory of the
municipality, and stay home for the weekend to re-
build the house.''
Where, indeed, is the pleasure·? Well, there ts
little doubt that it is often hard lo come by in the
very uptight circles of most of middle-class, subur-
ban America. And if that is the case, then tele-
vision might do well to seek it out in other age
groups and other social levels throughout the land
-using writers and producers and directors from
.these places. Surely we cannot be satisfied with
brute force and cynicism as our chief outlets.
ENTHUSIASM ABOUT life Is beautifully con·
tagious. I remember, years ago, reading these
words about New York by H. L. Mencken : "If only·
as spectacle, the city is superb. It has a glitter
like that of the Constantinople of he Comneni. ft
roars with life like the Bagdad of the Sassanians.''
I was already living in New York when I read those
word s. yet it mad e me look at the city with fresh-
ness and a new ~ense O'f thrilling adventure.
Not long ago, thete. .W'5 a young lady here in
.....,Hollywood. who trained hard to b~ome a prof~s
sionaJ dancer. One day she went blind. But despite
her affl iction, she still loved to dance.
Denni• tlae Men~e
I
• •
•
•
Monc!Q'; July 8, 1968
0 .. -
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ears
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D.lllY r!LOT II
Toni Hwitt Smashes U.S. ·swim Mark
Did Announcer Cost CdM Ace ,a World Record?
. '
By GLENN WHITE °' "" 0.ly ... ...,. 11
Did .. announcer'• cwenl&tK Oo.t
Corona del MM''I Toni Hewttt a world
record ln the women's 200 mets' but·
terfly Saturday at Ill• Santa ciara In·
ternationa.l l'IWm meet staged In Santi
Clara?
'nle fellow on the mike, the father of
• Santa Clara swimmer, encouraged
the crowd to applaud and "bring
home" rwi.mmen who accounted for
tow-world rec«da durine the two-day
&how.
But when Miss Hewitt w:as steaming
In towar<I a pooslble clobol atandar<l ln
Ibo 200, Ille 1ent balldlln& Ille an·
nouncinl WU dormant and dlcln't
name • world mark was in the mak· inc until th• laJt 10 mews. And by
then it Wll too late,
"If J'd have beard some noi se from
the «owd there's a chance I'd bave
gottm the record," lhe junior at Cor·
ona del Mar High said afterward.
''I felt strong throoghout the race
and you'd be llllr]ll'ised wtiat the chee·
ring of 5,000 people can do to give you
a lift dlat last 100 meters."
Miss Hewitt streaked out in 1 :09.5 -
1.3 secoodl lutor tl>u her llilt 100 ct
tit• '87 race wtiiob pmluced a w«ld
and Amor1can record oL2:23.8 In the
outdoor national.I.
Ada Kok of Holland oublequently
reduced tbe world standard U. 2:21.0.
Miss Hewitt was clocked ln 2:22.0 at
Santa Clara.
She had baeeMKI through
the prellins in a nift); 2:24.S to become
the fastest qualifier by s.i:i seconds. "I
figured I'd do about 1 2:27.0," she said
later. "But when I found out bow fast
I'd gone, I felt I had a good dliuioe at
breaking my American record.
"It was a 1etdow:D ~ I 1Nmld
that Ada had decided Mt IO C ........ ,''
she added. "I was rul1y -..
l«WU'd u. ""1mmlng beside h« ."
Now theie is no chanc. the two
greats of women's b11tter0,y action wiU
collide until the Olympie Games In
Me~co City this October. 1
Wu Hewitt bounced baek Sunday U.
win tile 100 fly , recording a· pertoaal
best Of 1:00.S to touch out Diane·
Giebel for the gold medal.
Mis.1 Giebel tUtned tbe distance in
1:06.0.
The ())rooa del Mar speedster w11
' 1ut alter ao meten, but movld ......
secoad OD the turn and -.. -..
Miii Glel>ol with 10 moten U. 10.
In the 200, 1he forled -.i at Ill
meters then tUrCed 1Dto a eom-
mandlnC lead at tho 150 nwk ·with
"Miss Giel>el again trMl!ng. Miu
Hewitt turned the lut ilO in :18 Ila\.
World rnarb aet Satunlay tncluded
ClaudJ.1 Klllb's .400-m~tfr individual
medley (6:05.•), Greg 1'uckillgham'1
400 indo (4:45.1) an.I the Sant• Clara
twim club's 400 fttiestyie ftlay team
(t:Ol .0).
All's Quiet at NFL Training Camps
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
1bere was no activity today, and no
announced plans for future negotia·
tion.s betweeo ownen and players in
the troubled National Football League.
All was quiet.
The San Fraocisco 49ers were
scheduled to welcome 30 to 40 rookies,
but the camp remained closed follow·
ing an agreement by all NFL club
owners to tmtP<>ne the start of all
camps until thil dispute with the
players is settled.
Com.missioner Pete R o z e 11 e .
meanwhile, said Sl.a'lday he would get
h1 touch 'wttti John · Gordy, Players
Associa.tlon president who requested
that Rozelle step in and help solve the
pension problems, which are standing
in the way of a settlement.
In Gordy's statement Sahlrday
night, the Detroit Lion guard said the
Players Association is )Villing to meet
with the owners at eny time and ex·
pected a meeting witttln three days .
There was , however, no word Sun-
day that such a meeting was
forthcoming.
Agreement by the owners not to
open their training camps was an·
119Unced Saturday by Arthur Modell,
owner of the Cleveumd Browns and
OCIR Pioneered It
High School Drag Races
To Be National Event
A special high school team drag
championship event pioneered by
Orange County Raceway h a s
magnified Into national proportion
with Ford Motor C.O. taking over the
program .inaugurated by OCIR general
manager Mike Jones and his staff
earlier this year.
Ford, which bad put up part of the
,,,,,,,,,,., ....... .
WHITE
WA SH
•••••••••••••••••••
prize pot for the Orange County spec-
tacle, believed the project was
worthwhile and auccessful enough to
be expanded.
So, this fall there will be divisional
championships at Jones' oval with
winners from the Southwest section
competing. Thal grouping includes
Hawaii, Utah, Nevada, Arizona and
Oalifornia.
Assuming that program clickll, the
Dodgers Gain
'Ray of Hope'
At Box Office
LOS ANGELES -The Loo Angeles
Dodgers appear destined to finish in
the second division for the second year
in a row but they're still tile box office
champions of baseball.
Walter Alston's men were in seventh
place and were trying t.o break a six-
g.ame losing streak when they took the
field here Sunday.
But the 20.484 who showed up to
watch the Dodgers nip Cincinnati, 6-5,
Dodger Slate
Julf 11 Dod,.,. II All ... !• S:DG p,m, KFI 16'CIJ
Jwty 12 Doitteno :t Att-5:DG p,11'1. KFI IMl Jul'l'l) Dod111't1111Atl•llll 11:11t.ll'l,KFl('CI)
raised Los Angeles home attendance
to l ,00'7.CMJ7. So the Dodgers are the
first team in the majors to reach the
one·million mark this year.
They've averaged 23,421 for ttieir
first 43 home dates this year and. at
that rate, will draw more than
1,800.000 for the season.
event will be enlarged to national
scale and each of the iseven division
runoff champions will be invited to the
U. S. finals which will probably be
staged early nm summer at ln·
dianapolls.
A lucrative set or prizes will be up
for grabs in the county run this year
\Vith th·e industrial art.a department of
the race winner's school getting $1,000
for the purchase of equipment or to
use for scholarships.
Also, the department will receive a
428 cubic inch cobra jet engine. The
~ runnerup school will get a 300 cubic in·
eh motor.
A 6-cylinder engine goes to the third
place team's institution and a 4-speed
manual transmission to the fourth
place ouUit.
In all, Ford is investing $2 million in
the program - a mighty substantial
vote of confidence.
Jones makes no bon es about his
pl easure that tbe OCIR production
ha~ mu.sh roomed to tts current sta·
tus.
"We really had to 1weat our first
r ace out,'' he confide1. "We started
working on It two month• before Jt
wa1 actu ally beld, yet we didn't get
written endorsement from the Board
of Education and Coanty Council till
the day be(ore competit;lon was
1cbeduled.
"Therefore we lo.t a lot of on-
campu1 pubUclty from participating
schools who would not mention tbe
event without sanction from those
two bodies.
"We were really pleased la have a
good turnout by the scbool1 (!5 com•
peled) considering all the problem1.
We figure to get 3$ or 40 the next
time around," Jone1 reveals.
"And I'll 1ay this, the crowd that
came out (1,600) was the most
entbusla1tfc group we evec had.
There wa1 so much emoUon In·
volved becauae or comp et It Ion
between 1chool1. They even bad
cbeerle1den at the track."
Villa Park won the Initial show with
Western of Anaheim second and
Laguna Beach third . The victors in·
vested prize funds in a he Ii arc welder.
Jones won't take credit for being the
brain behind the high school team
drag championships. "It was an idea
that has been tossed around by
various racing people for a long time,"
hP. points out.
"But most of them rigured there
were too many roadbk>cks -that
edueaUon people would balk at the
idea of supporting such a thing. We
(the staff) were talking about it one
day and slm~y decided to go t.o work
on the idea.'
From Jones' initiative comes new
opportunity lor YO\lth.
president of tile NFL.
Lou Spadia, general manager Of the
49ers, reiterated Sunday that no
training camp functions would get
undler way at Santa Barbara, Calif.,
until an agreement is reached.
He said some of the rookies were en
route to the camp at the time of the
decision and that the club will house
and feed them and give them physical
examinations. But there will be no
workouts. he added.
The Lions had been scheduled to be
ttie next team to begin training, on
Tuesday, with the others following dai·
ly.
Gordy was the aecond person tO ask
Rozelle t.o step into the dispute.
The first was Jack Kemp, president
of h American Football League
Pla.yere Association.
"The AFL players are not involved in
the negotiatioos, but Kemp said the
players are sympathetic with the NFL
players' cause.
The Buffalo Bills' quarterback said
if Rozelle didn't become involved,
AFL players would request federal
mediation.
The commissioner said he would
contact Kemp.
GLENN WHITE
$ports Editor
NOT ·EVEN CLOSE -It looks close, but St. Louis'
Julian Javier was out by three feet on this second·
inning rundown at San Francisco Sunday afternoon.
Making the tag is Giant pitcher GayJord Perq, who
UPI Ttltllllthi
started the rundown. Umpire is Bill Kibler and first
base coach is Dick Sisler. St. Louis beat the Giants
2-0. ',
•
After Pitchers Bombed
Rig Seeks Armored Suits
CLEVELAND IAP) -There's a
slight possibility Californi!l Angel Man-
ager Bill RigMy will preacribe new
uniforms foi:: his bullpen corps-steel
hieilmets and .full battle dress.
And the relief hurlers could use: the
protection. Their norm.al defense
A ... e l Slcte
Jvl'I' 11 Mlt!J vt kt.Ion 7:SS P·"'· IO.\PC 17101
JWl'I' 12 Al!fr11 YI 8otloll 7:51 P.11'1. KMPC 1710!
against American League batters -
f·astbaUs, curves, 1Jliden arid other u -
sorted pitehe6 -doesn't aeem to be
getting them anywhere.
Sunday's twin bill against the Cleve.
land Indians is a case in point. The
Angel hurlers gave up 15 nms on 29
hiU in the two gamec. Despite this,
Callfornia managed to split the dou·
bleheader, wiming 9-7 ol1'r abool1>ing
an8-3def<>at.
Of the 1~ run&. 10 were allowed by
relief hurlers. They also gave up 14
of tltle '29 ruts. What may be worse,
howev«, i.!i that the bullpen men are
beginning to &how 1lgns of consistency.
In the last nine garn•, not lncluding
George BruMt's route.going shutout
Saturday, relieV«s have ambled in to
the mound 25 times.
They have then proceeded to give
up 10 home ruos, 34 other 86sortied hits
and 33 runs .
Jim McGlot.hlin , 8-8, didn't need any
help from the bullpen in losing the
opener. The U.~-otd right·hander,
provided with a one.run lead by hil
t.eammatet, gave up four na in the
bottom of the first, three of them oo
Duke Sims' home run.
In the nightcap, the ~ls were
lnezing along with a 7·1 leOd in the
eightb w11on Sammy Ellis, -bad ro-
placed starter Torn MIJll>hy in the
filth, loaded the bases and gave up
a two·run single to Jimmie Hall.
;..In! 0•""' C•lllom!: ........ 100 ma lllO -1 1 e C19vtl:rtd . , ..... , «ID OIO Jl!ll' -I U I
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P l •P'ld s:1rr1no1 Tlent, ttomo 11) tftd FrMhln.
W -Tl1t1!, 11,.j, I. -McGlothU11, '"4. Hit -Clevtllnd, Slll'la 191,
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• ...... 111111 .. . • • .. .. • .. •• •• • ,. 000 «D -,
Veteran outfielder Len Gabrielson
won Sunday's game with a tie-break·
ing pinch single m tht lixth inning.
However, Gabrle\JOl'.I collided with
shortstop Paul Popovich making I
game.ending catd\ of. a foul fly by ttle
Reds' Tommy Helms.
Gabrielson sufferf(I an injury to his
ribs and ..... taloen u. a hoop(tal lo< x.
rays. It's PoSlibte he woo't be
available Thursday when the Dodger&
return to act.Ion at AUanta.
Billie Jean Praises Open Tennis
•
' CIJKIMMATI lMAMalU .. , It ltil
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•
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -
Mn. Billie. Jean King, Wimbledon
queen for the third time, had the last
word Mo~a~. as professional and
amateur tennis stars left the scene of
the first open AU·England cbam·
p;onal\lpc.
11The Brllish are right," 1ald the
professional star from Long Beach,
Calif. "They call m all players. mere--b player1, competing here for money
prtia. Yet ln othel-places, some ..e
1UU called amateur• and play in the
Davit Cup. ."W• AN lift In the tame boat. W• aD
make our iflling by playtng leonit.
Open b!nola hes proved 11oelf. and I
hope the whole world will come to
follow Brltaln'1 examp1t: and call all
compeUtort players."
The Britilh told aU Wimbledon com-
peUtors they would Cf>mpete for prize
money or JU1t eipense1, Ju.st as they
liked. But they """' all !Mmed
players, and the words pros and
amateur• did not appear ln the
Wimbledon proJrarns.
Of the "53 llOO prlu 1110111J 11 stake.
roughly haii' wu not pUI out bec1us• moat of tlte amatean _,ask for it.
~--..-~---...-~ -----·~-----·-__ ,__,..&, ___ -----
'
They had not been liven perm.l11lon
by their national usoci1tions 1o play
for money.
Profesatonal! took tome tumbles as
the amateur• raised their game and
scored upsets. But in the end the pros
dominated every tlUe except the nux.
ed. doubles.
The organlura paid out the full
prize money for tbf: men's lln<a nn.t
-St,llOO to the winner, Corona del
Mar's Rod Lav.r, and '3,13) U. Ton,y
Roche , the runner-up. Lave( won the
ftn1l 6-3, ~. 1-2.
Mn. Kini picbd up Ille womon'•
'
llral prise ol s1;1100 alter b•r 9-7, 7.5
victory ovt:r Australian amateur· Judy
Tegart. Mls1 Tecart bad chosen to
play for expenses only, ao the second
prlu of SI,060 went back inl<I the pot.
Two Australian pt'os, John Newcom~
be and Roche, wan the men's doubles
and split a lint prl .. of $1,921. They
defeated fellow AUatr11Ja111 Ken
Rosewall and Fred SU.Ile U, M, 11-7,
lt-12, 6-3.
Mrs. King Ind her profos1ional COi•
league, Rosemary CP.S.tlt of San Fran-
cilco, shared Sl,200 by wlnninl Ille
women'• double& title IOI' the second
straight year. •
Gres Fink, 1or1ner c.r.... dal Mar
High fWll who ..., !"'.!mt ID< use,
picked up • 1hlrd ln \be ncord lnak·
IDC 1,500 fl'Malyle ..ttb a 17:•.2.
Mulco'• Gut 111 rm oEcbovarrla
8tuMed j)CLA veat 1111to Boaton for
vtdoey and a world · ..cold wllll a
16:28.1. Burton wu HCOl!dln 18:4'1.L
Famed Mark Spllz of Santa Qara
lived up U. bU pnaa cllppllils by wto-
ning -ev•nta lo Abe meet 'lllllch attracted compeifton from Peru,
Fran«, Czechoslovakia, Jepm, Mex ..
loo, Canada, South Africa. o.nnauy.
See P"I• Z% !er Meet -•
0
Laguna Ace
Breezes
To Crown
SANTA BARBARA -'5mllln' Bill
Toomey, the genial part.time teacher
from Laguna Beach, accompllahed the
goals he set for himself by winning hi1
fuurtb straight national A A U
decathlon championship in weekend
competition here.
Toomey eesily handled the ap.
position t o nail the unprecedented
fourth consecutive crown, which waa
his foremost embition. And, he went
over 8,000 poinU (8037), a aecondBry
objective.
Thus he has earned a berth on the
U.S. OlympiC team.
Actually, there wasn't much to
motivate the 29·year-old Lagwia flash
when Russ Hodge dropped out of. com..
petition after two events Saturday.
Toomey wound up the first day with
4,271 poinU to hold • 499·point bulg1
over Tom Waddell, his neare.t com-
petitor in the 30-man field.
Waddell faded on Sunday, however?
finishing 17th. John Warkentin Of
Fresno State placed runnerup witti
7,370.
Toomey will move into high altitude
training at South Lake Tohoe in llnal
preparation for the Olympic Games in
Mexico City three months henoe.
ttHVlh OI !tie SUt111 e:rt.otru dotultll111i: no Mtltr Hwrdl9• -JoMslon. 1~11 ;1 POll!hJ C..rvfller1, 11.1 r.1; M:1qulol'lod. h .1. It 1 mllt•m:· 10. VO; PIU I .6, Mii• T_.., .S.0, I w:r'nfltll\o 15.1, \h, ~1nne1. is.'t 121: irltnM tt, 15
1211 Gotdllt•g, 1i,s. 197: Httn•11n, u.s. 1971 •rnum:ker. 1).7, 1 , o •H1[t. 1 .. 111J01 w:1111, u.J~ n J WMldtll. \6,3, n11 llUtk, t.S, 70J1 f\lcir.t,
11.0, MO; ICe nwurd, 17.2, "451 Bun!, 11.2,
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tlt · l'lllMI 11f-t '111 W!Klof!l'.llkef'I llf.7, I"' Akfr1ch, J lf-t, tu1 W:11t1, 11!" ""\ r.lt qulorlcl .I '"' llol• Vtlltl -ClnJIMri, ~. 112l1 S_,.li. l~ ··cl Clr\111'11'•· ll»O. AS; O'l'i•r .. fJ.t, tfl l 111111. tJ. , 61G1 Stucki, H·~·t,· GI• V•ww -C:f\/ tr},_ 1~. ll'll l tnMtt, !lo Fl', 10QS1 Iii.Iii 1.t-S , 'IW; Buck, 1-JIJr.. :i.;1 M•l-CIUI • 1).1 711 mtlolr ' 1 s ' h21 -• IJ.5~'321 ~·r-•nlln,. 11-'le:; 1a-1 WIMIT\I .,. ...i): .... ~I Ald,ICft~ If.I.,,, 721; Goldbtr .. 12-Jl.'I, r.m;
Joh111foll, 11••• J}" P:uW, 11-~. 1«11.ftrr:tt, 11 .... 115.<..Etnl! 1-W.. \ ll:nn11Mro1..1~-l'lol 21 l'ilfTllll\o 11-, 6 I "'" , ).g, '30; IMl!ll1 1 1 Ull1 Wal, 11... '301 IC..,..rd, ll-0, S.U1 $Nekt. ll>CI,. S.01
Mtnl:owUr, llMI, S.01 lrbfl, N , Mli O'H-1~ 2'61 l'illllt. no hrh1hl, 1;. w.ocieu, 1111 htl9ht, 1 J1~111n -P•ulr. 71,..10 1111· '1'00!!Wfl', 20W. I041 w:11n, ns-1, 1si11 Wn 1, 1+1.1, Sli l'illbt, 1t'M. J..e1
ean1111Mr. 190-0. ns1 W:ddell, 1• ... m Wurtentln, u .. 11. 1111 s11111, 111.11, 1211 Buck. IM-4 7Ui Mll-
C1ulond, 1t1-o .. 1J111 Emtloilr"'! •. ..1•1-t, i'OI; W~meker. 111·10, l'Ol1 l>:rrun, l1S-1, .,,/ ~. 111-t, 1331 llen~ll. 167·6. "'1(' EU!•, 16'-~, "4J• Johtll~'"" 6J3; Mtf'k"ll{. '2·2, '2$; Hlrmlll• 1... , 610-j CITUllll "· 156-1. 6021 Kr11,.,.rd, 1.U.1. 5"1 H1r1,
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UOO Mtt.r Run -8\lck, •:M.6. 7nl Emlllrtur,
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i':11i11111"' .r::ir.o. '.563il1111t1.~:3'.21i .Mii wnlj • . 01 Eltl1, l:Ci.6, I wt~, 4:'3. ~~ 1ntm1k:r. l :S0.2. 11 W•ltfl, •:51.1, i " 1:52.1, 4'111 ~tUIY. S: ... M'tf Curvthtr'L 10S. 'H1r1 5: i.t; K w: , 5·:111'1 .I, f :2:1.1. ~1 1 l~ldt, 5,.:ti; ~ Hunntn1 5:J .1, F!ntl 5corft -1. 8J'ii T_...,. 15 rldtrt) I I. J«111 W:rll'"'I" (F r e 1 n t JI.), 13701 1 ~" ••!!.!!" "lllrl! "'" ,,.., 1' ':I: --~~II C•.lll~'r1,'nili~l fH..:Tlldl: ~fi"lc &:J
CIVIi), f1U 1 Lt in Mltl!llOLllll CS.,. J-. St.), 70lf,
I. 1111 Wtlsll IFt-,lot Arn of l.1.J, ""' t , 'I'~ l'tVIY (Porllurw:I, Or1.1 • ..01 lO. S.m C1rulller1 Slot
I-CCJ 11111 '1 . Ool'I Ellla INorfTlo'll, Oll•.1· 67111
1 uni rt IMtrr ti TC) #111 I•. GtotDt P-~I•• e~'" '""'l' d HW H••""'", "'" 1141 (W.. I. "67~ $. Rlck W'°'melttl ~Orak• ur V.), ~I '-MIJ:I lftrmM (Grtftd '· Dow'• CIVIi), '56oll 10'. '1'om Wj'*"ll llJ. S. ArmYl1.6'";1 11. ~lk: Q.urr:ll l'1':f'l~.O l.~Uiil lt.~-Mtr ... iwlb Bouk:I.,., Co.lo), SI . R~ ~rd IS1"'9 '"'"· "'"'· t '"· m "' "' •I. li™ %1. JOll HllDI 1!1CO St. 1 I 21 fPOl'tltlld. ore.I. JKl1 o. runct• A INortllt••ltrn TC), .w»1 z. T•ny O'l'i•re (Ale"'"·
Olllol, ~I •· JOhn Sl\ldll 11'\lttllo, Colo.), IUl1 f7. J~ Llbtl l•I" ltrlllur Club), sm1 21. Jo!'ln , .. c• APll, C:llf.l1._~I /W11tld,..... lf'llr VHlll , )0, Jlult ,,_ Strldltrl) WU, .. • two tyll'lfl).
F oyt. Winn~r;
Turbines Flop
In USAC Race
CASTLE ROCK, Colo. (AP) -Andy
Gr.,.telli-deslgned Lotua luriJlnes
made their rold racing debut bore
Sund1y. Deop!te tile cheerlD& of 17,llOO
!&111 -Ille larg..t crowd ovw ID
Wi!neH a m-ract.oc eveot lo
Colorado -tlte llffk rod wtiistim
provided another dlsl\lpollltment lor
Mr owners md drivers.
A Dock of fut ll'ordl, pocod by A.
J. Foyt'a winning Coyote, swept tile
first four placn In the Rocky Moun-
tain tao at Conlineotal D Iv l d a
Raceways. me qi the U.S. Auto Club'a
Nattonal C!iamploosbip aer1 ...
Fer brlln1 drivers Art PoUU'd of
Medford, Ott., and Joe Leulard of San
JoH , caut., the race was tbt begin-nil11 of an education 'lllllcll -they
hope -will cuimloate in a racln& llio>
t«y.
Pit cnn on the turbioe can work4
ed inlo Ibo ..,.1y mornlnf "-' Sun-
dq oo bralcea ayltema after the quaH·
l'Ylnl mind SatlmlaJ'. ,,,. lour·wheol
drive turbtnts bl.ve no engine braking.
and the drlYWS punished Ille br-OD
.,. 10.lunt :&.Ill milo -
,,
(
•'
i'
~--~---~---·~~--...... ro. ..... ------------................................................. ~----~~--............ ~
-~; 1
~lt<fto llJ !Mil 5all!Cll"'
Pru~omme · Cap~es Fans,~\
Prizes at Nitro Drag Show I I
I' •
By TOM GORMAN more smo""1 beautiful cll'S, Still, the actioo ct!ller<d •
and more noise, smoke and around Prudhomme•1 · nms,
Ooa Prudhomme owned" ey~·burnlng fumes. the , f.ute6t being 7 .1 7
the place tut Saturday A'lOl!g with the cus, t:M.y 1etonds It 220.11 m.p.h. His
night at the Orange County recelv~ an added attraction She I by Super Snake
International R a c e w a y , In the form of Bob Heren· outlasted the Ctr 15 cars,
scene of ·the Nitro Q:iam· deeft•s aerobatic exhibition and hts victory tn tbt final
piooships. and the "Mad Motorc~Ust" run resulted 1n a wUd roat
After being named the top Ken Brown .or Costa Mesa. of approval from the crowd!
fuel driver of the )'1!at by iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij
automotive editors a n d
writers, Prudhomme went
on to take top spot in the top
fuel elimimtiom, winning
the $1,<XX> top rpize.
Winning in the F u e I
Altereds cz.tegory was Gary
Reed of Montc lair, driving
his Groundshakers Jr. His
feat earned hlm $000. He
had a top time of 8.01
seconds and a top Speed of
197.80 m .p.h. .
Art Ward 's Assassination
II took first in the funny car
class; he also took home
$1 .000. His top speed was
1811.28 with his fasU5t lime
being 7.89 seeonc1s.
,~ONES TIRE SERVICE
NITRO CHAMP -Don Prudhomme, sheathed head to toe here
in hi1 fireproof driver's 1uitt won $1,000 Saturday night at Orange
County International Raceway where he won· the tratl's Nitro
Championships in the top fuel elimination category. He raced
through the quarter mile in 7.17 seconds at 220.58 mph. He de-
feated 15 other cars to win the event.
But the 8,300 race fans
were watching Prudhomme
all the wray. Hi s winn~ng
streak started when he was
named the recipient of the
Mike Sorokin Memorial
Award, given to the best
driver in the top fu el
category, with consideration
given to both skill and
sportsmanship. He proved
he had both Saturday night.
New Bride AL Stars, Tired Hurlers $10,000
Mistake
The award, and tile Mike
Sorokin Memorial Safety
Fund , has been initiate,d to
promote safety in the sport.
Sorokin died of injuries he
received at tile Raceway
l~t December 30 wbcn the
clutch a~bly exploded at
nearly 200 miles per hour
and cut his car in half.
Wins Open c· he k ... . c in Goll Title at 'The Dome'
READING, Pa. (AP) -
Somer.oe -lo Mrs. Susie
Maxwell BfJmil'lg: •'You
&m't look "' ect Ilk• • llltl
who has juat won the
ireltiee title oi w.xnen'•
golf -the U.S. Women'•
(¥n <Jmnptoiublp."
The tiny, lrazel.,yed bride
of seven weeks paused and
then replied: "It's hard to
~e you could win a
-when you play
tlJe last thr-ee hole1 the Wl&Y
I did. M~ tis ii v.tiy I
don't feel elated. I feel
tortuoate to brve won."
Mn. Berning won fxlp
prir.e ol $5,(Q) in the l&tb .,,.
nual ~ &.mday with a
final round par, -71
over the 6,232-yani-Moeelem·
Springo Goll Club """""' !« • 72-bole Iota! <i 289.
She pcevailed by 11ree
'11roloes (JVfC blonde Mickey
Wri&ll~ the !olr Ume m-
tional quem, v.tJo made a
bela4led but futile charge et
the llJilound wime< fJOm
Incline Viu.g,,, Nev.
MiH Carol Mun, the
vet.enm pro from TOW'loll,
Md., canled a linal 38-37-75
and wound up tied for thrd
with Marilynn Smith of
Jupiter, Fla., v.tJo ahot a
final rowxl 3&-37-73. They
-had 72-total! « 295.
HOIJlll'ON (M') -The
American Loque All·Stan
11<11 their first lode al the
A1bod0111e's synthetic turf
l<!<iaJ but ~ Diclt Williama . pn:bibly W 8 I
pceoc<1Jllied ourveyinc IU
somewhat overworked
pi\dWJnc etaa. .
Every one ti the AL'•
seven hurlers worked either
s..turdioy <r SUnday -means that whoever gets
!he .-Wig nod •Jlainsl !he
--ill -n-!ay'• All· Star c'8rllsli'c will be working
with a maWmum Of two ., rest.
Delniit'a Demy McLaill. a
16-game WiJ;lmr and 1he
JogioaJ. st.rti.ng dkice, went
the route beating Oakland
Sunday ..... bad cliequelllied
hims<~ _.. tllat, lll)'ing
there qe no ~ be coo1d
pitdt Sw>dlie' and .,.... bo<:k
Toesd:ay, '
"My first reip:msibility."'
said Mcl.Jajn, "is to the
Detroit 'Jl8en, ... 1elltimeol
-by "" ~·r. Mayo Smith, who happens to
be one of WilliMns' coaches.
Mel S\OWemyn d New
Y«k aloo pltd>ed a com-
plete llOJ!le Sundlay but did
oot rule himself out. "I
could pitdl on illnlnc « ao
on Tuesday," be taid.
Thre& o-AL pitdlers,
Tommy J<lln of ~.
Jciln "Blue Moon" Odom ol
Oal<laod and Clevei..l's
1A1i& Ti.ant, also ..rortced oo
Sunday and lie rom&ruDg
two mernber~ ol. the staff,
Sam Mdl>owolt of the In·
dians end B<>C!iton's Gary
Beu, bo6i -ed Saturdoy.
l&anager R e d SdJoen.
dienst of the Na t ional
SU.rtera Set
HOUSTON (AP) -lllp~
bu.den Doa Dryidale of
i..1 Aafele1 and Lala nut
of Clevelud were aamed the
startlnf pltdter1 Mond1y
for Tltetdly alPt'1 Major
Leape AD-Star bameball
c•me.
Dryldale, tbe NL •tarter, ii•• a lt-5 won-lo1t ncDrd
and 1.37 earned run ave'race.
nut 9f the AL ba1 1 lf..5
record and a 1.%4 ERA.
League has a well-rested
s1laff and wu expeoted to
name Don Drysdale, Los
A n g e I e s ' reoord«tting
rigtit-Nnder, u hts stlarting
pitcher.
Burns Hill
Drysdale, -pitdled 58
213 sc:orele.s< innings lnak· GRAND BLANC, Mich.
ing Walter Johnsoo'1 'record (AP) -Tom Weiskopf de· earlier this terason, last worked Friday nigtt end scribes golf a,, "a game of
will bave hJs stamard bee· mistakes, whether they
days ol rest if Scl.'l'Oendienst come early or late."
-to uoe him Tueoday. PGA tour rookie Milre
Injtries have forced two , Hill's mistake came late and
<Dqea on h NetiOnal it cost him 1 shot at the Leatue 1quad-.and will-make.,.. 1125,000 Buick Open at War-
a ttilWter out at San Fran· wick Hills Sunday.
cisco':: great Willie Mays. Hill missed a five-foot putt
Pete Roee oi Cincinnati, for a par oo the 18111 green
chosen to start tn the out-and Weiskopf backed into
field Ufered 1 broken the championship. Both ttwmib ov!r the weekend players W"eTe tied, eight
and will be out ot action f'U' strokes under par for the
a montti. Sd>oendienst natn· tournament, when Hill's putt
ed Qric8go•c Billy WilliarM s~d by the hole on the left
to fiU Rose's spot but side.
fig\fts to ~ the &tarting "It was just a terr?ble
nod to l\byll, -W1IO the putt." said Hill, of nearl>y
·four«i highest vote..gettel' Jackson, Mich. "The minute
MnOng the NL's outfielders. I bit it 1 knew I m.Jssed it."
Cincinnati's Leo Cardenas The bad hit cost Hill,
' was dw>sen to replace Gene younger brother of tour wt-
Alley d Pitmburgti, who is eran Dave Hill, fl0,000,
oursillg a shoulder injury. That was the difference
Santa Clara Summaries
between Weiskopf's $25,00)
first prize and the $15,0CXJ
that wmt to Hill.
Rod Horn. another tour
rookie from Overland Park,
SANTA CUltA -Sumrnarlfl of~ Ll'M Vld11l. scsc. 1:06.t . A, ci.....i11 Kan., finished third, two
S.nt1 c11r1 lnlmYtlMll 1,....11111ona1 Kolb, scsc. 1:01.1. s. lhlran StouOH. strokes behind Weiskopf'•
1w1mm1,.. !Tlfff lund1J: FAC, 1:07.'-• h d · ·
M ter the fund has been
established t h r o u g h a
pe~entage of the proceeds
from the annual "Nitro
Championshi ps" and by con·
tributions , the Raceway can
act upon any conditions
which pose an unusu&I
threat to drag race drivers.
Proposals will be solicited
f To m m a n u C acturers,
associations and any in·
dividuals WfiO because of
their experience and fields
of endeavor are m o s t
capable of reaching a solu-
tion to the problem. A con-
tract will be ;.warded to th at
person or finn offering the
best proposal. Hopefully,
through the establishment of
this fund , Mike Sorokin's e".J: will no! have been in ~I
The Ni-tro Championships
featured 16 car fields in top
fuel, fuel altered, and funny
car classes. With a line up
like that, one rJrepares ~ himself fur plenty of noise ,
·~:;~b~~::~" ,·
More Ammo
For Liston w-·· loo.-tft' '"""'11 -'· "" ,,,_., ,..,..,....... wrttrlfr -i . Mlrtt e1g t-un er-par WlJUUDg .to-
Pdtnon. Ardtn HUii Swim Cllltl. 5'>1n, scsc, iU. 2, Oolle lh11se11. tal of 2.80. SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-C1""1d1HI, Calif., l:llO,I. 1, Jin H.,.. lklrtord, T1x., Swim Club, $1.i. J, Jol'in Bob L and R k ,.., s.n11 c 1ar1 swim c1u1t, 1:eo.,, l. F1rr11o AHSC, n .t. "' Miil• M1t.1r11. unn oc y The next time Henry Clark 11 L•...s. Gust1v..,, scsc. l:ll0.6. "' scsc. 51.s.s. Ron WelQ. PrlMtton. Thompson, both making lat< goes stalking the Big Bear p Mlrloll Lt't'. Caflldl, 1:01.1. J, EMiie H.J., A<1i.llc Aun .• JI,,, , wm..1. i..111 "-'· 01 •• ......, c1ut1. W-'• i.soo-nwt1~ _ 1, """ 51.,.. charges, finished in a tie for he 's going to be armed with tt
1:01.2. ,,,_.. LAC. 1t:1».1. 2. v1dor11 1e1,.., fourth at 1.83. more ammunition.
Men'I ICIO-!Mlf<' frteslylil: -1, Sat AHSC, 11:1,.J, J, Pim ICrUM. Fort "I 'm g · g t tak 'l.orn, Philll" 6M.on, llffd\, Ct lll., L1~Nlil:, Fl.I., Swim Auocl1tlon GRAND ILANC, Mich. (AP! -om 0 e a
SJ.I. '· Don kholll:,,.r, scsc:, S4J. l. 11:1'·'· 4. Ell11be#I Morrl1, Sftden, 5tore1 1nd Pflre "'°"".,. in 111e 1ns,ooo week's vacation and then
Mldlel RDUUMU P'rllKI Joi 7 ' 11:21.7. s.. Ml•I• T-11 Rlftllrtt. Mell• lulck °"""' II Wtrwlcll Hlll1 Goll ..... tr . t . h d .. 'd R.,.Htl Kickier, i_,._ A1191~1 Affl1111c' lco, 11:21.t. Covnw; Club, Hr M-36-72: run WJCe as ar , Sa.I
c11.111. M.L s. ic ... willft. .p111111~1 "' rMn'• ,..._,.,.. -l. G11111armo Torn oflkOltf, 12s.aoo 1111 the 23-year-old Clark after u.o. Eci'le-Yirrl•. "W~1"'· 1':2'.I, -111 ~ .. 1~•u'!!!!:. ll5•f0, !! tile Bear. Sonny L1'ston r.c:ord, ~ rttetd 1':M.I b'f Mlkt '"""" .,.,, •••
Tragedy In France
Womtn'• ioo.-tM" 11Kk1tro111 -'· llurton, IH7. J, Mlk• 1ur1ott, AHsc, Sob Lllr!ft, "·112·• '"· stopped him Saturday at
Sub for Gurney
KillRd in Race
f.111111 Tinner, C111111t, ''''·'· J, IC1ren 1," 1 ' -'"' • ••c '' n • , Rock y Thomi"5on. •S,l ll.jl 2'J •Muir, $0Uth Alrlc1, J:J•.2. l, KIY! : •' ' '~ ' : ~ ' Jllll111 lorn. '4,'Jtl.6' 2tA 2:47 (If the 5eveflth round in
" '' T • W -• ' ' ,.... Sob IC1Y, SCSC. 17;1t.'-I. RI""' Hut-Johnny Pott, SA,2'1,6' "' • · •com • ...... •'" "'g' """ ,...,c, 11:11.J. Ltt Tr•vlno, M,ttl.6' ,., a nationally televised bout
!:11.t. '· ,...., W1"'°"' scsc, J :M.S. w-·1 ~r brfftflt,..,,1 -1. Frink llttrd. p ,J75 a s h d d f
&, ltflldlcle ~. ,.,.nt9, l :ff.J. 1(1tll't' J1mbon, SCSC. ,, •.•. '· J1n Frfd Mlrtln, 13,US tts SC e ule or 10.
M"'1"• :IOO-mtter lt.._11111roke -1, HMM, SCSC, 1:•.•· 3, T1mer1 O't'nlc~. Let Elder, Sl,JTS t&6 "J just COUidn't get going J1ck Or11fv. Rid Slltldl Triton, s.11111. Mt•lw, 2:'9.1. ,, o .... ~lleld. Bolt Murph'(, 12.JTS m and I wlSn't strong Wllh., 2:11.J. J, Rl't' RIYll'CI, scsc, OrlnH County, CIHI.. Swim Club. Ste...1 SPrl't'. 12,S75 186
2:1).J. 3. Frid H1ywood, SCSC, 7:1S.S. 1:511.1. s. SUZY,_, SC$C. 1:50.t. JGllnn't' si ......... 12,575 2U enough." added Clark. "But
'· G•rv H111, PhllllM "' ''"·1. 's. Womtn'• ~ """'"" ..... .,. -T.,,., t'ur, 11,•21.so :111 I think I can beat him ." Hltdl 1¥9, SCSC, 1:11.1. SCSCA !Nm: hll't' WtllOfto Jin He~ Rod "uOIHftl, $1,937.Jll 2'7
Men's ~. brriitstroru _ 1, "'· Lrrw1 ¥1411!, Lind• ~11.._ ,,M,4 ~~.·•.,•.·...,-.'·,,'."".!..'° ,",', The rugged Liston. who
ROUEN, Fran« (AP ) -
Jo Schlesser, a jovial 40-
year~ld Frenchman whose
whole lile revolved around
a!io racing, became the
fourth driver to Jose his life
this year when his new
model Honda crashed and
exploded in the Graod Pri.J:
of France rr.ce Sunday.
He got ttis ride at the last
minute when D-.i Gurney ol
Corona del Mar dectded that
DEA.TH MARS
GRAND · PRIX
COTATI, Calli. (AP) -
T!le tlDa1I of the Golden
Gat.e Grand Prb: r1ce1 at
CGtlll -....., claimed the
lltoo <i amateur driver Mike
Wri,1111 of Loi All<il.
Tbe 32-7UN>ld Lockheed
tlcba.lcal artilt and racer
lot tb: ,YNl'I WU proaounc-
... -<i head bt.iuriel Suo. *'I llt Sanl& Roo1 l4emorlal
Ftll pe MllllOt, IM•1~ J:7t.3. 2. 1r11n \!mrrkln mi. ~1. 2• scsc • ,.... ~' ~ was a pro when Clark was
his Eagle was not ready tO Job. scsc. 2'31 ·'· 3• D•w 511ug,,., L.tt'·..,'~ ~.!ffs.c .!.l:k ~~,,."' ~~ ... ·:=·~·1~,,;'." ~!: only 8, won bis seventh SCSC. J:)S.t, "' Nabullk• T1•ud'll, •:4',,. ' . . . ' Jim Colbrrt, $1 .f1 m retU:.rn to the Grand Prix J1""' 1:>&.G. s. Kllud 11rt11, rMn'• -.,,.."" rn.dt.., n11v -t, DNn Rffr .... 1 271'1 211 straight -all by knockouts
• Gtrrnan~, 2::1&.1. SCSC A Mm, !Frtd H1vwood, Sol'll, R. H. Slktl, il..Jff.t i ="' ,_ he •~-t to C 1· circuit. w_ ... , 1...,,.11,, "-""1tY _ 1, 111,.n .kill. ktlol11ndrr. •:Ot.I. 2. scsc Terrv Wll<Dll. 11..m.,. - s .... ,.,, """ ass us
Jim Clark, one of tile T .. 1 lhwttt. c-*I Mer, c.11t.. : ';-~~~in!' c~~'~·~·~1~i!;. ~!."H"!r.;'·~a Ht Cll!iY for the second Ume
1:ts.1. i. "'' w.,11e, P'AC, 1:N.1. 2. ""-•:11.2. "'""" Z1r1t-1o. ll90.lt m three }'ears ago. lt'eatest racers of all time, --------------"'~~~-~----~~--·-~~---::.:.::.:...::..:::.:_::::.::_ __ ~
was killed April 7, on the
Hockenheim circuit i n
Gff.many. Mike Spence was
killed dwing the In·
dianapolis trials May 7.
;::::~t ~a:·;:-i J;;:
ed June 8 while making a
re~e nm over the
Hossfeld Motmtain circuit in
Germst1y.
Schlesser, a vettran of
rallie'S. sports cer com·
petitions and Fonnula 2 and
Formula 3 races in Europe
and the United States. was
making hio lint try ill •
Formula 1 raet col.lllting for
the World Dri ving Cham.
pionship.
Baseball Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pd.GB
SL Louis S3 30 .639
Cincinnati 42 39 .519 10
Atlanta -48 40 .518 10
San Francisco 42 '42 ,500 lllh
Pitt.burgh <l-0 41 .494 t2
Philadelphia 38 40 .487 12"2
Los An geles 41 44 .482 13
Ne\v York 39 4.1 .476 13 '12
Chicai:o 39 45 .464 14 ~2
Houston 35 48 .422 18
l ..... Y'I fl-"'
Norw Y-II. l"fl!tldtk>hle • C~lc•.., ._10, PlttllM'Oh 1·1 ""1llnl1 J.,, Houston 0.1
SI. Louil l. 5.,. Fr1nicl~ • Cll'ICl ..... 11 l. LOI Antelrl f
lvnll•Y't ·~"' l"flll~llll .. ,, H-Y..t; ~
Chk1t1 J.ol, Plttsbur911 '"1 "°""'" S. Aflent. ' St. Louk J. S911 l"rlflCh<ll I
L• M9tltt •. Clnc:"-11 J T-n 01..,.,
NII ''""" od>rdl!IM. ,_...,.. .,_
An.SJ1r G-.tt --A_.kl,, w.. ,.. .. llontl Lt11ur
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Detroit
Ci<veland
Baltimore
Boston
Minnesota
California
Oakland
New York
Cliicago w .. hing1on
W L Pct. GB
s.I 28 .663
47 39 .547 91\
43 37 .538 191\
42 38 .525 111\
39 42 .481 15
39 43 .476 151\
39 43 .476 151\
36 43 .456 17
34 44 .436 181\
30 47 .390 22 , . ..., .............
le""""9 t. HM York I
WWllM!Oft I, CfllctM 4 Olklllld o&. Drlroll 1
C•lllornt. L C""l•lld I ••1'orl o&. MllVlftot1 J ,.,,,.IY'I Rnvlh
"'"" York ,_,, h fflmor1 1-3 ~ ... Ml....,...ll W ClrwllN .,, Cll!IWlll1 ).t ~ .. ,, 0.klllld u
Oll<tt111 4 W1•1nt!Ofl J 0 1 l...,lntosl
TNt)"'I .. ""' Mio M..... .ld'ledUMO. ,._.,... .. _
SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY
1968
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
SALE
9 Continental Oemonstrefors
Coupes & Sedens
FROM 1000 TO 6000 MILES
ALL WITH LEATHER
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ALL FULL POWER
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CONDITIONING
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ALL WITH 50.000
MILE WARRANTY
-When You Buv The lat T ire'1t Our Low Pric...._
SIZE , ................ T.tteleu Wlltt.welb
lit TIRI Znd Tiii lit Tiii 2114 Tiii
•11o.so.1 l 14.60 7.30 17.55 8.78 1.71 7.00· I}
7.75-14 16.40 8.20 19.35 9.68 2.11 7.75.15
8.25-14 ---
1.15-15 18.85 9.43 21.80 10.90 •.»
1.55·14 21 .95 10.98 1.45-15 23.55 11.78 •.»
All pric1t plu1 f1z1.-.ch1n1JI •Thi1 1iz• only-<$ ply r•t1d
NEW lJRE GUARANTRD RETREADS
ANY SIZE
'NHITEWALL
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,...,.. Hwn: a..._ te t ..-. ~ ttwv ''"'' ........ , ........ ,. .... -"' P1-54CM343 e 646-4421 = u bOW" after his bouDcled Into the llr llt .. llnl tum and crubed -·-bank. · Tbe fdfure IJIOr1I CIT
- --bandll7 by -· u, ... , ..... ... ___ _
That left • place open in
the race for the new V-12
model RAX12 Honda which
was entered in competilion
for the first Ume. Joho
Surtees. the regular Hooda
driver, tested the car ln
England lMt week but gave
the oplflioo that it neede d
more adjusC.mect b e t D r e
being put into a race.
Scblener •kidded coming
out of • curve, on tbe track
made 1lick by rain, and the
magnesium bodied cac roU-
ed up an emb.tnkment and
exploded.
0..l'r ·-K..,,,.,..,.,
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•
V 2049 HARBOR BLVD.
. J at Bay. COSTA MESA .
1 I
' l
. -........
BUD TUCKER
LOS ANGELES -
Mwnbllngs ol the Monday
Muse . . . ·
DEPT. OF THEY TELL ME .. ,
The books regard the Na·
tional League u a strooger
favorite ttian the posted
prlcee indicate . • . The
feeling is the National! have
tile pitching and Houston's
Astrodome Js not exacily a
bitters' paradise.
Aa a matter of fact, one
eoWd do worse than taU the
appropriate odd! and bet the·
N atiooai. League to win by a
shutout • ~ • Tbt idea behind
this is ·the tbree arms the '
Nationals have going for
them in Don Drysdale, Bob
Gibson Mld Juan MarichaJ •.
The striking N a t 1 o n a 1
Footbail.l League players will
open strike headquarters
near all training sites .. ,
Those are picket tine1 few
will dare to cross.
If the public relations men
have ariything to say about
it, the expansion teams of '
baseball wtll be in no rush to
name field managers •..
Speculation on the
managers is en excellent
&OUl'ct of ink and basebaH.
has always been better than
any other sport in capitaJiz.
ing Oil IUch things , • , in·
cideM.ally, Joe Adcock is no
longer regarded u a ture
thing tlJ piklt the Seattle
Pilot.. .
* * * DEPT. OF HO HUM
• . . Pro football Ownt:rl
begrudgla&J.y gave In to
player demand!: to be. paid
for exhibition game1 . , ..
At no time, bowever, cDd
tht owner1 live eoa-
1lderatlon to permitting
tht public to view the con-
lest1 without charge:
Jimmy ED,11 will defend
bis version of & b e
br:avyweti-ht ebam-
pionship ag:aln1t Floyd
Patterson ... When Patr
terson w11 champion, be
defended agal111t a parad ..
of bums •• , Now he jolDI
tht parade.
* * "(( DEPT. OF ONE MAN '&
OPINION ..•
The strike of National
Football League players will
not amount to much , ..
One reason is that tt.e
players' demand& .are not
unreasonable. particularly
in the area of pension funds
. . . Even if t.he NFL
players get what they are
asking, they will still fall
short of baseball's pension
be~fits.
It is a-lso difficult to im-
agine the Jroposed Olympic
boycott amounting to much
... It is al-most -impossible
to see what the athletes
would gain, either as in-
dividuaJs or ~ a group ...
From mw on, however ,
tlhere may always be a Har-
ry Edwards.
He v.ill not come out and
say as much, but Vin Scully
is giving serious tllought to
quitting .as Dodger broad-
caster . . . Scully is weary
of tile road 81ld says he can
make as much money mak-
[vtty wHll AAMCO ••tl1fln -
lh•n l0,000 lnMmlMJon p1abl1111-.
Yov 1•t ''" towlrc, • ,,... ....,_ c~.tt.k. l••t. doci•nt Hrvlc.........-..e
1101, in just -•1. A-wlttl
MMCO, your lr•nsmltaion Cftl • pro tected ~ lll'llllf' 500 AAMCO C-
iera ca1rt ta ci>nt.
[yery milll,lfe ...., 1 .... -
an• fl""" ... ,,
17d.....,... ....... ,"'
G1r4eft G,...e .,....,....,_,,... __ , .....
Santi Ano
nt ....... R.. ... • .......
•
Inc commerda!J ••• One of
the thin&• that mist¥ bav1
otan.d Scully -· .. that SUdy Koufax olmO&t
malchea bis salary workin1
one day a week.
If Buddy Blattner leaves
the Ange!J to broadcast for
the new Kanaaa City club, it
will bo atlll anolher tal<nt
raid om Southern California
teams ... MOit of the ex -
ecutive people have come
from the llodle<• UH! An·
ge.LI _ • • It ii a fe:aither in
thll cap ol the two or1aniza-
ti001, but one they would
just M aooa not have to _,,
* * * DEPT. OF RA HA • , ,
Tbe trainer told the
ewoer tbt ltorse waa
ready and advtaed a
alzeable ••cer. The owner
bet a HDIDe and tlae
animal d-e1'1)1p1d a
1tri•• cue fll ~e 1low1
.... lhdsbed • ld&llly
dlaUDCtlYe la.It.
Arter tbe race the owner
went to the tralDer and
said, "The way to cure
dlM bwn ii '9 pat a Ut&:
piece of lead Ill. lda ear."
"Bow," tlte tra.laer ask·
ed, 0 wollld I s:et a piece ef
lead in Ma ear?"
uWltb I phtol," tl:te
.w1er repllff.
* * DEPT. OF ISN'T IT
ABOUT TIME? .••
That Charlie Finley IUI·
gested more rad i ca 1
changes in the AU-star came form&t.
That tbe guys who count
orowds at soccer game•
took courae& in mathemat-
ics.
That the pklyft'a who did
not get .. 1ectec1 for tile All·
Star game admitted they en·
joy the time off.
* * * DEPT. OF POETRY
One, of ta. hlp!ipll el
the year,
All-Sier time '""' It
here.
A time t.o root, a time to
ebeer,
A time fqr TV to sell its
beer.
Off The
Greens
Me•• l' erde
John Adams and Perry
Stephens teamed up for a
net score of 60 to win the
best ball of partners event
Saturday.
Huntington
Beach
The men's club cham-
pionship gets under way at
Huntington on Sunday with
first round action due to be
completed by July 14. Eight
lights covering 64 com·
petitors are slated for ~
championshifis.
Bill Bayless .and Jim
Lewis took a five and four
victory from Al DeMy and
BiH Ball for the Hi-Lo title
on Saturday.
19th Bole ~
~
•AFECCI
INSURANCE
fwspecial
6000 STUDENT
DISCOUNTS on
10lH Family
Allfo lnsur111cr,
Bob Paley
.... -!•lei
INSURANCE
474 E. 17tlo ST.
COSTA MESA
6424500
Rustlers
'Scent'
Top Spot
B1 llA Y PL UT KO Of .. ....,. ..........
Golden Wett O>nege mov-
ed back into t110 M-1-u• buebo!I pennant
race Sunday u the RustJ.ei1
.li:Wept both end.a of. •
doubl<lt.-r, Jlofeatlnc Col
State OoU.ge (Full-)
and Santo Ana C.U.p by
identical ~ &core&.
In fact the win OVft Santa
Ana knocked the Dons out o!
first place, while th e
Oni-c-ty Meer. w.-=--~~{-Slll'lt•AM 6 2 1 \II
W•nh l"lr1MI I I 1 1\11
GoldHI W11I • I I I l-e..dl (.lty I 6 t J
C.I Jtll~ t r I 6
Rustlers climbed to within
two games of the top perch.
•• ••
Mondar. July 8, 1%8 DAILY '1LOT JjJ
Soeeer Great
P el,e Motivated
When Behind
By GLENN WHITE
OI ... O.lty l"I• ll•n,
LOS ANGELES -If there
11 one thing that motivates
world soccer iaeat Prle to
demonstrate his greatnec::s,
It'& being behind on the
acoreboard.
So It was in the 1958 World
Cup finals against Sweden
when the young Brazilian
great saw his mates fall
quickly behind, 1-0. The lad
then' 17, took the ball and
threatened Swedish defend-
en till he reached the jtoal
area. Then he slammed in a
shot to tie the score as
Brazil went on to win the
cup.
And so it was Saturday
night at 'Memorial Coliseum
as Pele paced a Santos ex-
plosion that turned a t-0
deficit into a 4-t lead and
eventual 4-3 victory over
Necaxa of Mexico before
12,418 fans.
wrap up the agenda.
Pele had missed two open
shots the first half u the
two forces fought to a
sc0ttless deadlock for 4S
minutes, largely due to e'l·
cellent play by goalie•
Gylmar of Santos a n d
Antonio Mot.a of the losers.
Then Necaxa broke the
snarl ir'I the 56th minute as
Javan Marino lobbed a ball
over Gylmar's head to mate
it 1-0. .
At the juncture Pele took
over and 1S minutea later
Satltos was!n command, 4-1.
Pele, salaried at $250,IOO
a year, showed hia high
priced wares ilraply after
mate Oberdam had equallz..
ed the count, 1·1.
The super star drove for a
shot , h.ad it blocked, then
recovered to slam in the re·
bound effort to give Santos a
2-1 edge in the '5th minute.
Meari.while , Ward's
Pirate& remained right in
the thick of things as the
Bue& came back under the
lights for a S-4 win over
Long Beach City College -
having dropped .a 2. O
decision to Chapman College
earlier in the day,
Bags Albacore Flag Victory kept S a n t o s
un~eaten in s1J: st2rts during
its tour of the' United S:Stes.
Pele and his mates face
Boston tonight, Cleveland on
Wednesday and the New
York Generals on Sunday to
Two minutes later it wa1
Pele again, weaving through
the defense and somehow
o u t m a n e uvering three
challengers to move in front
of the net. Then be quickly
pasS<d to Tooinbo and Ibo
latter connected.
OYlpman, two-time defen·
ding champion, claimed ttie
lead with the win over the
Orange Coast College entry,
but it's a rlim one 11 Santa
Ana ia one-half game behind
aid the Plr-112 oil tile
pace.
Hank May {left) holds the fish he caught Wednesday which earned him the
Pacific Anglers flag for the first albacore catch of 1968. It's the second straight
y~ar he's captured. the penn~t. Skipper Bill Calhoun of the Hany Panky poses
with May;
Don Neugebauer'& two-run
triple in the first inning
sparked the Rustlers' win
over Santa Am, w h i I •
pitcher Jim Demue's triple
was tt1e key hit 6n 1he initial
triumph over C.al State.
k-., 11111-••• hi Jl•M taO OIO 1oo-.l I 1
Golden WHI IJO 700 20ll-t It 2
.......... , tll
Mltlll, d
Elder, n
l"lnei. rt
MllUHMYtt. II
McGuekln, lb
C•rter, ai
Cornell, lb
Cl•Yi.en, 1t
Dtm1s.e .•
Jper.(;11r, ' Tot111
*
A• ll H ll•I
' , t 1
' 1 J 1
' 1 • • J 1 2 a
J • J 2
4 I 0 f
J I I I
J I 1 I
1 1 l l
J • • •
111 1J4
* . " . W•rd'l •lrtlll (lllO 000 ~ 4 t
(.h1i!lmlll HID 100 00~-2 I 1
W1,_.1 l"lr.,_ Ctl Aa a M aa1
' a o • J • 1 •
' D 2 I 2 0 I 0
J • 0 0
1 0 0 •
SMOKING
GOLF BALLS
TOKYO -~ ;.,_
terested in golf balls that
tcail smoke when hit off a
tee? 'niey'tt tuWOSed to
1mprove your game.
An enterprising
Japanese ha5 invented
golf balls that emit red,
blue or yellow sm<1ke
when struck to enratle the
player tio keep an eye on
. his drive or bis CRJt-of-
bounds sllot.
11be balls resemble
regular goV balls except
fw a tiny hole irt ~
center. A tiny sperk set&
off the smoke.
The inventor guarantees
they're not dangerous.
They· sell for 50 cents
each. 'llbey come in three
colors but are good for
one shot only. Olhltt', Cf
F!oru, 2ll
Jenltl111, II
ll1i1ty, II
~•lbert. rl
Kipper, rl
lla~n. lb
w1,Mla. lb
lf'l>PI, lb
P11mer. <
D•lebolll. <
O!Jnkelllt1'9tr, I
Toi•'-
* *
3 a o o
1 0 • 0
' a I 0 1 • • 0
' 0 0 • J 0 0 •
JI • ' •
* ltlf'li " 1111111111 • • •
Pro Soccer ·
Standings
Golden Wul XIO 011 lD0-1 U J
$.lntt An• 020 010 OOll-4 • 2
~Wfff(ll
~rtu, d
Eldtt. n
MCGud<ln, llfl
Cl1uaen, u
PiMS, 11
Ne119eb.1>u , ?b
lttY''' IT C•rter, lb
Camell. lb
Al a Ha.al
5 t J •
J I 2 I
l I I I o o a 1
J J I 0 J , J ,
NOa.TH AMloltCAN ll!AOVI
WISTaa.N (:ON .. llllNCI
1"1cHlc Glvlll..,
W L Ta• '"O"GA
S•~ oie.e 12 ' • 11 122 '' •1 o.a•l•nd • ' 5 ,. " l2 1•
LM Anvel'' 7 ( I 1& t1 U lt v· ..,r J1•1•nuJO
Gull Glvl1lon
W L TI~ ,"Gl'GA
l(ins1' CllY 10 5 J ?9 " 3' ,,
S1.Loul' 17•2ln21~
I
°""''"'' 1>11 l9KI, C
M•Plfl,, -,
To!fli
5 0 2 J . ' ' ' ' . • • • a _ J l
' o a o Hou•1"" 6 9 J 2:1 4' Jl 26 ,
(I I U I D•ll•I a 11 I 17 2' II 11
IAJTEIN CO.Nl'l"ilN(.I I * * *
l\nnet,1 ...........
, ••
... AC11DM•TllTS
D• *DOO" '""'-·--•utelC:LY TILL TDU THI
IXACT CD•DITIOM
0, l'DU .. CA"
.... ,...
~ A!l•~llc Dl..i~1911
W l T ,, ,"Ol'GA
All•nl• 11 ' J 26 1a1 JI If
w1,.,ln1'"" I J ' 1' .. 1& 26
N,wYork S•917"'Jl 1J
lh!!lmor• 1 t 2 n n 11 2•
C~!C•go
Cllvtl1nd
tor,,.,10
O•lrolt
l•-• 01w111..,
W L Tll"l"hGl'•A
I J I Jlll0453'
I ( 1 lll/IO J2 M
7. 1'7&.121«1
•lllltOH1'9
HEWS '#H4T WE OtfCJC , .. . '-.. ---.1.~...-... -_ ... -~ ...... --....-. .. ·--~_ .. ___ ,, ..... -.. -.. ---.. ~---_ ... _ .... ..,.,. ___ _
HERE'S WHAT YOU fl'«> OIJf • , • ·------·c.---.. .. ..-."""---··--......, .. _ .......... ..........._
Hfltf'S HOW rr WOKS ••• -)--.... ..__ ..... _ ... -.. ------..... -.. -............... -... ..._ ...... ,_ .. -. ......... __ _ .. ,_ ... ,--.. ·------.. --v .. --..... .-... ......... _ .... __ __... .. _.,, -i..i-,_.. .... .,. ____ .. _ .... ._. ___ ...., __ . --· --ltt1• 4 kp-,._, .,,..,., .._ ... _.,.1 ...
........... ---_...,,,, ........... .. ----·
Al Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Sotu;ql
EXTRA TRACTION TREAD
..• EXTRA LOW PRICE!
FOREMOST® RETREADS
NO TRADE IN NEEDED!
PA-El TIRI GUA!tAN1R
IUAllANTll AIAINST F°AJLUlll
~ p111ntMs wety fon&most • llN ......... lillf•rH .. __ ..,,, IUll'll'I-
........ ,. u.. ........ ·-me. period ..... fir ...:ft Ur9. H tM tin fllll dut· iltc tM .-.nW S*lod, Nhlrfl k Wiit!
)'Olll" 1119,..._ c.tJfictiW •rid ~· will, .t. ltl llflllon. fl) ,.1191r tht u,., f21
"'Jli.c. II wH:h • -tlr• •• Ill 11 .... ,-OU .,. lmmeodi.t. ,.,und. If we r.pltc4i th9
Ur. fwl111 tM tr.. 19tPi.cem.tr&t pwlod,
ttwr. " no.~ If -...,..,..-ui. tlr. lfl# tM tr. n1111Qi1nttlt pertod, you 119)'
IO'lfl • 25,. .._ tti.n th9 c11"9flt _.uni
llt'le. flll u.. tar. lncludlrc u.. f"9nt E11-c1 .. Tp .._ S'llnithe llpfnlt t.nu,.
chart fat ct.t.111).
IUAllUITEE AUINIT
TllEAD WUllOUT
l"9flftl)'l p,..m.. ..,..,. F~• Urt
lnc•tPI ttle 72 Mt'ln) •1•lnM tn1ll -•r-
9111 tot tM .,,ti,. 1u1r111tH 1f'9rlod. You
ti.nlflt •• followli If yovr Ut1 -ni out
durl111 the first h•ll of the 1u1t1nle•
period, roturn 11 with your cuar•nlH ur-
tlilut. Ind P9nn9)'1 will NPlfU ,-our tlr•
with • MW ti,. (the ch•rp for thl1 wilt b9 '°"" fJlf tM cumtnt Mllil'll Pfk• lncl11dl111 f~nil IXclM TU)1 If )'Ollr llro -rl out
durl111 tM MCond 11911, tM ch•r,. wilt b9
75% fJif the cvn.nl Mllitts price ln<:lllClllll
fMenil ,bCIM Tl•.
T1tlM 111'1r•ntn1 do riof. •PP!)> ta -ll'ltl'Clll Ull of !Ir.I. ............ ,_ ..--........ --.... .................. _ ........ ..... "" •• ,1 .................. , .. .....
....... ,., ............... 1~1• ..... ..... ,.,w .............. 1 .... 11--
All Penney tires
mounted free I
LONG WEARING FOREMOSP . ' RETREADS ON SOUND TIRE
BODIES ••• PLUS 18 MONTH
GUARANTEE WITH 9 MONTH
FREE REPLACEMENT
650-13 BLACK TUBB.ESS PLUS
31c FED. TAX
WHITEWALLS ONLY $2 MORE
10.44 ..... tubel•• p1 ....... ""'·
Wh"9wall1 only '2 -
s1,., FID. TAX
725·14 ". " •••.... 35¢
775-14 ........... ·37t
SIZI ND. TAX
n~-·~ ......... 37'
,, ·"·4 llack tube!.. ,1 .. fed. ""'·
Wh-alh Oltly 12 _,,_
""" FID. TAX SIZI FID, TAX
125·14 •••••••••••• 39¢ 560-'' .. 32-
llS.ll ••• ; •••..... 39¢
. ~.44 llock tube!.. p1,. fed. tar.
Wit-II& ""ly '2 -.
.... ~ l'ID. TAX SID FID. TAX
15$..14 •••••••••••• 4C)C 141--11 •••••••••• 40¢
Not_iust a reline ...
Complete Reliant brake overhaul ............... ,.., ......... _.._,.....,. _
.aoyl C.-ill tadoy fare -pl IS ..... ..... lair _, ......,....,.,1xusa ....,. .... ..,. .. .... ,,,,,, ...... ....
e "9Wlc1 al ....... eyliRil• ............ ._
................ , ..... u
• .... .,.. ....... $ , .. .. .......... ...._ ..... ..
• Plff.,,.eclju.......,Mir•.t'·t.ing
HUNTINGTON BEACH
29••*
. ....... a Ii ' .... h:ta4wi an•p•cb
....._ass' It.._..._. ..•..•..... ,, '39.88
\
NEWPORT BEACH
I
(F1sliion lslond)
•
--·--·-•----L------·-------............... __ ---·----------
I
. ' '
1
I
I
I
I
I
I
·~
------------. ~ -.
Zf DAllV •llDT t.l...tay, July 8. 1'68
GOlflNG
WITH A~ pa.1;,u,i,
HOW TO JUDGE THE DEPTH
OF YOUR CUT ON SAND SHOTS ·
• A b11ic prlf\cipl1 olpltyfrom
11nd his to do with the 1n1le of
the clubfact when it cuts into
the bunker. Once you learn how
the 1n1l1 of the clµbface deter·
'mines the depth of the cut , you
• will be better able to execute
the shot you need 1t 1 1lven time.
For in1tlinc1, on 1 shot from
I aood llo In the sand you will
Wint to make 1 1h1llow cut.
Therefore you should "open"
•
or lay back your clubface, since
~his-will avoid cutting too deep
into the. sand (illustration #1) •
On shots to d islodge a slight·
ly buried .ball (illustration #2),
you should go to a square club-
face position so as to cut well
beneath the ball.
However, on shots with a
buried ball (illustration #3),
you must close your clubface so
that you will get maximum pene·
tration into the sand.
' e.e ........ n. ..._~ •
RACE ENTRIES
Hol~ P1rll -•lw for TllHdly,
July t, INI. Sl•IY·tourlll d•'I -fl .. 1 '°'' l:.U p.rn. Cll9r & i.11.
Pl•IT llACE. l·l/1' rn lla 4 _,
ltdl &. ~ Clllro\lne. P11rH MAOO. Top
d9Jrnfnt Price a .200.
Golden WICI IW H1rl1tkl HI I(""' CiouMbo"I 1111 Yorli.I IU
CMMr Cl,. IA Piiied.i) 1:111
SWHI WIMi. IE Med,.,,) 115
Sl•ll• Of Gold IM Vinet) 11~
t'm H!Dtl ft< G1r11) )llll
'f.,lmo IM V11tP11wel1J 120
8l'Ol'lf'/' (D Vtla"IU!tl lU
So1111111 C1v1r1er 1w H1n'l1l 111
Tum To PHce (L GllllM1>) 12'
SICONO •ACE . .5-1/t fllr111!P. t
Ye1r oldt. Cl1lrnln11. ur .. U.000. Top
o;111rn1ne price 112,sm.
C•n"'r 91konr (J on11 Li l lllt
N1lllln Dell'llll (J SelltP .. l 11!
FlttY Venu1 IM V1loinu,,.111 117
DeetWooe1'1 Own IW H1l'!Tllltl 11'
Time Tripper rJ Trullllol 1ot
aun au1,_r cw M1h<>.....,I 11'
Goldtn Kn IL Gllll11111J n o
S.rn'1 Pt'-(J P1lomlnDl JU
Flt5'11no Sl'lltP CA V1f1111Uelll lot
81,Mul Bob 10 V1t11<1vel) 111
Wakl Kul1 IL Pinc.Iv Jrl 117
Mr. Enollllll" CC Whitt) 11'
THIRD RACE. S.1/2 lur1Dnf1. t YNr
okl -Iden tU!i.. c11rrn11111. Pura
M,000. c111rn1... Prk• 110,G(JO. SHI
llffdl Tour Club.
lll1m. IA Plrltde) 11•
E-t 51\en& fJ ~Hen} H•
!!Ive Srnd<e (L Pl....:111 Jr\ 11'
Lltlll De RMCI IM V1~1uell) 114
A1111le Musi ID Pltrwl 11•
CltHlC lltbl' (W H1rrltl 111
,..,... Ml\9 (J Gon11~1) 111
llu,..• Tl~ (W H•rllclr.) 116
r ... 1 S'-" ll GllllO•n > 116
MIH PltPl9det. (M Y~MI) 11•
5WMt Clf!OV-Jo (.t. Vale.i111el1) 11'
AMI Mtr11 /J Trullltol 11'
AL SD ELIGIBLE
OVcMH Ell~ (W Ma~Ol'MY) 11•
O(lf)t 0-{M l"IMI) 116
Momtfirs Stolen (0 Hill) 11'
P9t19M Mtld IA PIMdt) 11'
Abbe-,-Kay !) ~llers> 11,
FOl'ever OVrJ (0 Pierce) 11'
POUllTM RACE. ' lurl.,..aJ, 3 & •
W1r aid maiden coU1 & 9eldlntJ t>red
In Ct lllDf'l'll1. Puri.e M,500.
Doubled Up fl PlPICll' Jrl lU
MD!f'I Ire (W Mah<>rntyl lU
.l·P•mll IW H1rrl1) 11•
Fleet Rldt !.t. Pllledtl lU
Whl!'1 Up (M Y1ne1l H•
S1nd Mar11: IW H1rl1ck l 110
Rtdlo !Ill (J GMtllt!I lU
A·Kln9 vf P1p1'1 (W Horri•) 11'
Sun llu""'r IM V1ttn11ie!1) 1u
Tuk M !loll (l Gllllo1n) JU
l<.!"9 Klld1re CD Htll) 11'
A-J Jonltn lr1lntd rntrv.
P1'1H RACE. ' lurlOll91. 3 w1r
old tut""-Cl1lmlnt1. Purw $1.000. ToP
r.l1lmlnQ Price 110,D!l'J. M•n~•tt1n
'leKll LIOlll Club.
Ml11 c-..r fW Mlrtldl) 110
Remoblu fJ Sl'lltPnl 11'
Gedmevtl (J Gonz:1lt1) 111
Harwr'1 Urcl\111 IR Bl1r.co) 112
5119 Mtt. Rule {Ill C.m1>11) 1211
Fahlert (W H11Tl1) 1:111
Cl!Utrlfl fR Voll<) 111
C1uobe IE Med!n11 l u
Snsll E1ole (A Mon•e<ol J<llO Miu M.uslul fW ,,,...,.._,,, 117 p,._, DeHverv fNI Y1Mtl 11'
Mlk~dtll !D Pl.,.qJ 1U
ALSD ELIGIBLE
Plff11 RlcktY (A Plnl'dt) 110
SIXTH lllAC•. • furlMlll. Fllll" &. ml,. l l'ffr old$ & I.IP. Cl1lmln11.
Pu,... M,000. TOP c11lmlno prlc1 11..500.
Aulllon Club.
A·!ltbu(lla (F Glrt1l Jlil'f
A·TlrtY IJ l 1mbertJ 115
PtyS To SI"' fW H1rrn1fl:) 1:10
Rtre Qu1lltv CD Htlll 112
So W1r (R Walt1c1) lU
Sunll'f Clker (R Blt nco) 112
Polly Pie IL Plnuy Jr> !I•
Go Stf<tdy CM V1le111uelt) 112
Clover Tl ...... (M YtMI} 1U
Devil's Rule !A Pl.fled1l 111
llMU!lf11I Min IR Yori!} '"
Fl'lln1 Dot IJ Selit;r1) 170
IEVENTH RACE. 1 furlMOI. ! ~tr
old:i. Allowtnees.. Jlune J1.000. Sin l'~mellldt V1lllY lllfflt'/' kltnl.
BQJ!tr •ob (NI Y1neu 114
Olrll T. R. (J Ltmbef11 114
C.nMrllu..., lllo.d fl GllllHnl 120
H1rrv Cot>en (W Mlhorneyl 120
Unque-ndwl~ CA Plnedl) lU
Fl'lln11 ltrt CE lkd!,..J UO
•IGMTM lllACE. 1-3/t mlltt M Ille
turf. l'IUles & IMrH l VMf olds &
Uf>. lleYWlv Hiiis H"tldl<1p, Purse
lXl.000 IClded. Grou W ,4111. To wl,._
,,...,. S20,IOO.
Pll!\I Gol II {Ill Yort) Im
Nev1d1 love (M Vener) 112
Cour1eeouslv IJ Gonu!etl lit!'
Amerlvo'1 Ftncv fJ Se!lerl) lH
Cipher IS Trevlnal lOI
Setld·Cn.k II IW Mlhor,,.y} 10f
Toward (A Pl,...) 110
Pink Plte-on fW Httrl$l U1
.t.·Prlncttinesl1n (l Plnc11' Jrl l:Jtl
A·Of'St•t \.1w Cl Pl...: .. v Jr) 11'
Jl(lft'lbtl fJ l1mber!! 110
"""· Joe F. ID Hall) 101
.t..J w M11onev tr1lned tnlrv.
NINTH RACE. 1-1 /H rnllo:s. l Yt~r
ol<h & 111>. Clalmln!I. Purw M.«IO.
TOP clt iml"ll prln 1,1.200.
P11>1>1 Sltve< IM V1ltn1uel1l 1H
Scot.en~ (J Arterburn) 11'
Tlvon HI York) JU
Ptfll9ill0 IW Malla<~) 112
Rosll•!r IE Medfn1) 11'
Dl1>iorm1He IL Gllllotnl lU
Don !lob Jdl~ CA Plnedll 115
Liiiie Red Mlfl {fl lll1nc~l llJ
Goofy ($ Trevino) 11?
Chi<1u1t1 lltlda (J Trvlllo) 1il'f
TamlriUI ID H1111 117
Cardinals
Nail 7-0
Triumph
Fountall.n Valley continues
to roll on undefeated in the
, Nat.lonaJ Ba.lebi.ll Ooogresa
m ~ County l..Oague
after challclng ~ its eevecth
straight win on the cam·
poign.
'!be Oardinals blanked
Pl)'Centla, 7-0, behind Ille 18·
rtrtke out performance of
Jim Slagle at FOUl'.ltain
Val~ l:l!igil, Sooday.
Co s t a Meta'• Comet&,
meratl't\fllle, loet .ag.aJn, this time 8-3 to West:mimter.
Slagle, winning pitcher in
all seven dthe Oard&' wins,
bas struck out 87 m tbe ..,.,,.
In the first round against
Placentia, he cooled a like
number of 18 batters.
In ilmiti.ng ttie Placentia
nine to ttiree hlts, Slagle •
earned bis secoOO sb.itout .in
tlbe last four starts.
Fountain Valley's offense
came with three runs in the
six·tlh and three more in the
ei,ghth e:fter opening up mat·
ters in fille f!rst stanza wih
a single tally.
Dick Hefler homered with
none out to get the sixth in·
ning rally sflarted and then
Craig Gliass doubled home
two after Dave Spiller and
Ron 1lonas made it safely
via an error and e siogle.
The Oardimls ""'PP"<i It
up in the eighth When a
single, walk and error load·
ed tlhe bases and Barry
Wiallace came through with
a hot smash to secood.
Founbain Valley ta k e s
ti·me off from the loop wm-s
to travel to San Bernoardino
Sunday to battle Sant.a Ana
in the opening round (I{ the
All·Sootnern Oalifornia Na·
tional Baseball Congress
Tuumament at 11 a.m.
Sc-. ltY lnnllltll . ' . Pl1cenll1 OIXI 000 ~ 3 1 Foun!tln v111..., 100 003 Olx-1 1 0
'ou1111111 Vllltl' Ill
AO • " ... W1111,1, .. ' ' ' Wlllte, d ·:lb • • Heller, lb • ' ' SPiiier, lb • ' ' Ellff, c • • • T"°'1111. rt • ' ' Clllv1rrl1, 2b-Cf ' • • C111'11>totU, cf • ' • Gl1ss, • • ' ' Sl1tl1, • , • ' TOltlt u , ,
Sports TV
Schedule
TUESDAY
' ' ' • • • • • ' ' ,
S p.m. (4)CL-BASEBALL
-Major League All·Star
Game. Nationa1 League All·
Stars vs. American League
AU·Stars, from Astrodome
in Houston. Sandy Koufax,
C urt Gowdy, Pee Wee
Reese, Jim Simpson, Tony
Kubek, Gene Elston mike·
side.
8 p.m. (S)CL-SKATING
-Detroit Devils at LA T·
Birds. Dick Lane at Olympic
trackside.
3,30 p.m. (13)CT -OUT·
DOORS-"Challenge of the
Alps," husband·wife team
sca1e a 1200 foot sheer gran-
ite cliff. ·
ANNOUNCEMENT
J ohnson and Son are now conducting their annual
enniversary sale. This is a bonafide sale conducted
with dignity and applying to every new and used
automobile in inventory.
This sate has become an important annual offering
cf O range County's oldest establ ished Lincoln~
I Mercury Cougar dealership.
It is worthy of your attention.
JOHNSON & SON
900 W. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT BEACH
642.-0981
• •
Deep Sea
Fishing
Report
Baseball's
Top Ten
Jlttctilnt
U Dtc:l1lon1)
Jollfl, Chlc.901 ,.(I, 1.000; Mcl1l11, Oe!"lll, 16-2, .MY1 l15t\er Detr11l1 5-1, .IJJ; Wrl9M, C1Hfomt1, •i. .1~; T11n1, Clevel1nd, 11-5, .n1.
-
Midway Drops · Key 'Clash
By ROGER CAJWION ................ ~at)'-· golden.opportu11it1 to
Wrlually -up t h • Dlltrl<t 21 NttioDll Dtvbloo
CRIWD • It ~Offiid & &-3
doollloo 1" .,. Fullerton
Doclpt'c .. 'Sundo7 111"1t
Mi<l""'l' a~ bad ...... 10
atralgbt aod bod • 2~ game
* * * _.,_
Mld"'•Y CIW Ful~ ·-·· .. w. McClr1fter, d
• MI too .. tt:it..-3 • s
OM ..... aDD-f 1, o ..... " ... j 0 I 0
, 1 1 0
• • 1 • lmllll, .,.
Jim Hoet11. •• Wiier, c
l{t!fw, "'
"· McCtrtrlly, ~ JaM H-n,. .. -·· ....,,. ~If
Dldl1cli ... , ...
* ---*
' ' 1 ' 4 • 2 •
, • 0 0
, I l 0 , . . .
1 • 1 0
I 1 I I
• • • 0
• s ' 0
*
• 'I oot m ...... 11 1• o
..... ,' 2 ....._, no-.. • " .. , Mlrlln, r ' ' • • Mlllnoff. " • • • • P1ul, cf-.. ' • ' • l(lfle, If ' ' • • Cllrt, .. • • • ' .. ,.., ... • • ' ' Stlffon:l, rt • • • • 'l•kltr, 2b • 1 1 1 B~nc:INlnl, rf 1 • •• • FOl!tr, :Ill ' 1 • • T011t1 • " " " * * * "--.., w. ...
o 'I Tu1Kn 010 no ei,_. 10 J ··-000 000 cr»--t • 1 -.. .. • " ... Mlrtln. • • ' ' • Mlllnoff, 1• • 1 ' 1
Kl"9, H ' • • • Cl1rt, n , • • • 111non, rt ' • • • P'leldlr, 2b ' • • • "•!W· .. • • • • 9 1111d\trd, d • • ' • .llilvv. ' • • 1 • , ... " , , 1
lead .... , the Dodgtn prio<
1" Suodoay'a claldl.
NewportHai;bor 1 1
American Legion blLsebaU
1*M split two league en·
counters ovetr the weekend
I<> nm Its loop output I<> • 4-1
reoord in tlbe N•tionel D~.
Setmday at Te W ln k le
Park In Oollla !&58, the
Newpcrten: lost 1111 8-2
decision to 'J\llti.n, but Olllle
back Suoday oftemoon 1"
blist<r Son-Low I<> th• IUoe m 11-3 on 16 baoe bits at the
-·· dlomond. N~'1 !&flit win -
led by Jell Mallnolf, who
W"1t four.for-five with two
RBI'1 -and Mike Paul'& two.
for.five dioplay, lnduding
four R:B['IJ.
'Ille in""6en 1(.'(l'ed twice
In h !bird, !11th and
ae""1111 innings oanctwlcbtd
around a fivt·nm outburat
lnhro..ihhm•.
Dan Clark and Dave
Bart<>n -thlneJ ml!«
N"'IJlOl'I In Ille !Ourth wllh
ilng\el and Rieb Fie-and
Gary F-added two
mare Singles oJong wi11> Ron
Millrttn'• '\Wlllk;
Mallnolf then unloaded a
A colorful, fact·filled boot about the
1968 Presidentl1I Election process .••
tally sheets fOf home use as you witch
the Rel>Ublican and Democratic natlonll
conventions ... tally sheets for Electiofl
0.y ... history, fltb, fliur.,,-.
d!1rb ... 0VlfY famUy lhould hM aoi
this eltctlon ynr. I
Stop ID 111 your Im ClfJ ••
wltbOll obllptloo ••
"Adulb,pl .....
:~ MERCU~!~!!! ·=---71 2 [dllpr Awl • ll!Onolt..._ _.,.,. ..... -l'llt 0.,Edqer, ....,. Beldli Oll(oott.-~
-· tor ... by bit of Ille ltamll.
Tum KlJll -the by In
-the fillll aDd oeventh
-· a. ltd otf the f1fth
with a riple aod ocortd
later whea Clark aquened
him home and 11\en Clime
back in the teVentll with a
single.
He eventually omne home
on Clark's triple.
Paul was the winning
pitdler, .brllnt tho last 1!1
imings to get the Vft'dict.
He 1tnrl out live tn the
WITll TllS COOPON WITll TIM CGUPOM
OFF*
low•nllM,...._ol, GOODYEAR
"ALL·WEATHER"BATfERY
OFF
"'••rd IM pucUM of. 4 WHEEL TIRE
ROTATION & BRAKE ADJUSTMENT
.._c•rtalMnltJMdprkti er .............. ,...
I or •on 19rrnt MNrtlled price er npla
JZ lOlt -Was prica, ..takMver 11 Jower
• Pmno1.11 Coody1U qa1nr, ..... _ ........... ....... ......... _ ........... ...
~----• Rol•le 11\ 4 wheel• • lnll*:tl ftotlt wfli"1 bftl'tl!ttl
• lll•p«t ..:eu• 1e1l1 •Add lhzld.11 •..e.d {no U..tlll
• Adfutt ltrll• I 1-t
lW:-~ .. --.......... ---~ ..... --11.-
-. . BIG BONUS COUPON
82DFF*
BIG BOIUS COUPON
•
_.,,...,,,.,GOODYEAR
SHOCK ABSORBERS
Hr~t ..nntiled priu • replar Ml.liar price,
fot • ,.k whldtinH ii low•
OFF*
towud. tlae pso:ila• of a
BRAKE RELINE
•Delo• "Super Cu1hlon" •bock1 n:1tore HW--CU rld1
• High•t quality replacement .bDCkl ••1il1bl1
• '\w mnwat ... nrtleed price w npl• ..W., pdcie. wldc:bnw ii lower
Cir.DON hmm 1111 .. :I Gn•t SafetJ • .,..
• Ec:cmo-Linloa: • 0.E. Quality Ual.nt•
• Pteinlum Muter-BallDCtd
Quality Liain1 """--=.: ...... _ ........ ......,....,.n.•
•Give better control, end fronl·111.d dip
lml-...... -.... ........ ........ ....., .... ,,.,21 ...
JULY
SPECIAL!
BRAKE AND
AUGNMENT SERVICE
Savi Now During July. ••
$
Our 1pedalists will do all
this work .•. 11dju1t brakes,
Add brake fluid (no IXtra
charge) ind test; in.Jpect
front' wheel bearings;
align front-end; correct
camber, c11ter ud tot-in.
Any U.S. •uto
plus port..
Add $2 for
torsion bel'I.
Add $Zit
disassembly
•nd rea1sembly
of self-adjust1n1 brlktis is -·
Take Jf)lUcarwhere lhef!K/l1111S are!
BBODVEAR BERVIBE
B.,.ORE8
EDINGER NW BEACH Bl VD., ACROSS FROM IUITllGTON SHOPPltl6 CfNTBI •
HUNTINGTON BEACH-PHONE 842-4495
MON. TO THURS. 8 A.M. 'TIL 6 P.M. FRI. 8 A.M. 'TIL 9 P.M. SAT. I A.M. 'TIL 5 P.M.
t •
• .i .....
L
..
in
11
11
d
d ,.
•
.g
i
t. •
•
.....,,....,1.1961
Tre111ors· Didn~.i Ro~k Boats LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICI Ofll llfTIINflC* TO ....... 1111 lMI &AL.S Ofll
ALCOtKlllC llVl1tA•11
JllAI fl, lNt
·Newport Sailors Pick Up Trophies at Santa Barbara ::~~..1~::::: :.:. ,,....,.. .... , ...............
~· IANTA llAlllARA WINNER -ReleaBe George sturges' COlumbia-50 sloop
from Newport Harbor Yacht Club waa the Ocean Racing Class B winner in the
~CYA Summer llegat!a at Santa BarbarL
New Loran Receiver
Eases Navigation
A new "A" and "C'' loran
receiver which red u e e s
loran navigation a 1 m o s t
Busy Time
Slated for
1-14 Oass
literally to simple chart
work has been introduced by
Benmar Divia.ion of Com-
puter Equipment C o r p • ,
Santa Ana, manufacturers
of Bendix Marine products.
Rialoa II
Battling
For Lead
TRAVEMUENDE,
Germany. (AP) -With a
good tail wind and spin-
nakers ballooning t h e
Transatlantic yacht Nee
saw America's Kialoa II and
tho -yacht G<rmania
VI battle for the lead Mon·
day.
SANTA BARBARA
While landlubbers w e r e
bounced around by a dally
seriec of earth tremors over
tile Ione Foul111 ol July
weekend, s a 11 J n g end
pawerboat skippers here tor ttte S o u t h e r n California
Yach.ting Asaoclation
Midsummer Regatta went
-their bobby of col·
lecting ba<dware to take
home to their respective
1rc:IPIY oases.
'lbe action -on land oo
tea -started Thursday
with the Itllam Trophy
predicted log race for power
boat& from Palos Verdes
Point to the a.an.el 19lallds
Yacht Club at Oxnard.
Winner of the event was
vet<rm predicted logger
Frank C. Ruppert of Long
Beach Y•acht Club in bls
Reveller VI. Ruppert fini$·
ed the race with the
remarkably low percentage
of error of .636. Runne'r-up
.:was Harry Palmer's Crest
from H~oo llarilour
Yacht Club with an error ol
1.513, and tl>ird was Lou
G a ndelman's Temptation
from Del Rey Yacht Club
with a.n error of 3.33'2.
The Class B wiI!ner bi the
predicted log cont!:st was
Frank J. Ruppert of West
O:tast Yaoht Club with an
error o£ 12.710 in bis COrk
II.
Salling octlvity on Thurs•
day was confined to santa
Barbara Yacht Oub and
Channel l&lallds Yacht Club,
Venlma Yocht Club and San
Luis Yacht Club -the other
two host clubs for the SCY A
classic got into the action on
Friday and Sa1llrday. The
regatta ended Sunday.
In additton ro the
earthquakes, the ~ther
was not of the best for the
windjammers as overcast
skies and light w in d !I
prevailed most Of the four
days.
Newport Harbor Sailors
picked up their share of
trophies at the event.
In the Sir Thomas Lipton
Trophy race for the Interna·
tfonal star Class, Matin
Burma.m's aiattemox from
San Diego Yacht Club was
the winner, but t b re e
Newport Star skippers were
among the first live in the
22·hoat fleet. Oiuck
Lewsad<le< ol NYHC was
1hlrd, Barton Beek waa
fourtll and Bob Davis was
ntth.
George Sturges'
Columbia·:IO-Release from
NHYC won C1aot B Ocean
Racing, ond Jack Bibb ol
Balboa Y acbt Club w .. the
winner in the K-40 Clatc.
STAR (22) -aiatterboz,
Malin Burmam, SDYC; (2)
Kaninachen, Charles
Lewsadder, NHYC; ( 3)
Inchmaree, John Bennett,
SDYC; (4) Hanna, Barton
Beek, NHYC; (5) Sllady,
Bob Davill, NHYC.
VICTORY (9) (I)
Hy9fa, R. D. Walker, OYC;
(2) High We, Ed Miller,.
WYC; (3) Avante, Ugo,
Sbaraglia, WYC.
OCEAN RACING A (2) -
Malaguena 111 Bill
Ravenscrott, SBYC.
OR·B (11) -(1) Rei .... ,
G<orge sturges, NHYC; (2)
Alpha, Theo St.,,.,_, St.
FYC; (3) U?Mline, Norman
Dawley, SBYC.
OR.C (9) -(1) Papoi>se,
Cliff 'l'ucker, LBYC ; (2)
Sundowner, Ed Sundberg,
CYC; (3) Adios, DI ck
Mcctune, CIYC.
.OR·D (3) -Sl Brendm,
Brenden Stumm, SBYC.
CAIAO (B) ( 1 )
Persephone. George Grifith,
LA YC; (2) Tetua, Art,
Walker, CBYC; (3) Happy
Warrier, Y. Burm, SBYC.
K-40 (5) -(1) Vela, Jade
Bibb, BYC; (2) Tioga, Jolm
Bugay, SBYC.
K-38 (3) -Daneda1 I>Ave
Felllstein,DRYC.
CA!rM (4) -St. Q<oix,
Ray Oonnen, SBYC.
GEARY·18 (17) -(1)
Nugget, Ed Gonloo, SBYC;
(2) BolOOms Up, Austin
P<eples, CB Y C ; (3)
Hygtena II, Craig Schmidt,
SBYC; (4) Rogue, Bill Lip-
pen cot t, SBYC; (5)
DeAlbllto, Gary G o r do n ,
SBYC.
MERCURY (19) -(I)
Frenzy, Doog Baird, Fresno
YC; 12) Tilt, Ge<>I'ge Pat·
t<m>n, CBYC; (3) Duet,
Lloyd Greeno, CBYC; (4)
Radiant, Jack Ne.rdrum,
SBSC; (5) Daimyo, Auot<n
Ly~,<JBYC.
SNIPE (18) -(1) Hall
lk'eed, Tom Nute, MBYC;
Tahiti Communications
Dan Platt. PVSC; (3) El :'%i:"" '' r11t HM\-...,._.
Diablo Rojo, Bob Smitb, ~·:1 ~~ .....
VYC '""'"~"' to •uc~ """''loll. 111t ~ DA·y SAILEll (•) (1) ll9Wt •• ......,1111 "' "" °'-"'-' "' ~ -Alcftllc kwr1M COfltnll fw ._
W . ._,. ~ T A. n--··sait iw "-"' " 111 MOllolk: --.. • :JUI.I """"~· • ~ • ~ I« 1~1 flor ,,_ 1111 SFSC; (2) Mucha Gusto, M. •• to11ow1 : """
0 Dunm,_ SFSC ~1•~r11 • w-.:::, • {IOHA ,IOI: l"UILM: IEATINO ,LM:n WCilliA!ram28M~3F)arVIA~1 hSBalYlc• • .,"'::: =:_i;r.,'° ::1 .. ~ .. ~,::
... """"• • .,., wtlt ''" ~ ., lllt ~ Su Lais Yacht Club. of A1eoho11t eirwr.,. '""''°'· wrt11111 •
NAPLES SABOT (3) •v. .. "" .... ,,. ,, .... .,._.
-... ,.. flt'll -'-'· •l•lfftf ....... IOI' Gemeless Peter Powell Hrii.1 " •rov1e11c1 ~ iew. Tiit ~i-
t...* •• ,.. -llnrlJed fOr ,.. .... " .... CBYC. 111111c .,.., .... TM form el -HlqflM
EL TORO (5) -(1) No""..,..,.!!-o111.-''°'" "" ott1o1 • 111e ''"*"'· name,~ Seagu-, Seq YC; MAAY L. P1Ke
(2) No 5151, Je51e Spngue, t11~::U 0r1"" c°"' 01tno l'r11t, Jlllf' Morro Bay YC. n1W1
5-0-5 (16) -(1) Foir LEGAL NOTICE
Dinkum III, Dennl& Surtees.1-=-------Palto Alto YC; (2) Boat Al NOTICI 01' T1:USTll'I SA&.•
McC<nniclc;, Sli'SC; ( 3 ) NOTICE 11 He':'e:a~o1veN: (2) Fiddle Sticks, Benny Queen Anne's Revenge Bob Th1f an Tl'l11rld1.,, JulY J5, IHI It IN Mit~-U, CYC • (3) Amft-i-1 lla\lr of 11:00 A.M. 11 !tie lftlln llW"ll'ICll y.n; ' • ......,., Matbesroo, PAYC; (4) No. lrontlne on E1tt E"" $1rwt, ~ Habri. Bix BiJJby, ABYC: (.f) no .-7 Art i.ew· PAYC· (5) c_,,. of 0r'""• s111e of c1u1om11 ., "·~· H ~ I lS, ' !ht: L• H1br1 Cltv Hall IDo:•'-1 •I,.,· I! name, ... _,,~ or nun g, Inshallab Al A 11 en, Er1t1 srrmet, .1w ... 1c1, F111:1t CH#ATEii LMYC; {5) Honey Bee, Lee Co :.....i.~ft!. YC FINANCIAL CORPOll:ATION, , c:o... '"'-""" ABYC r.w:ui..-i • .or'lrlon, II T/'111! .. undtr D...i d Trvtt ......... ~"Y""'n• • Chanel l1la11d1 Yacht Club In 1t1t a•lgll\ll •mount o1 u.i.aoo.eo u! ENTERPRISE (8) -(1) DONALDSON TROPHY KUlllCI by MILTON c. OAll:NELL AND CYNTHIA L. OAll:NELL. H11Sbi91111 Ind Left Behind, Jim Hoffman, RACE (Predicted tog) _ Wl1 fl •nd ~ on Deem.Mt 2'. 1ff1 ~c (2) W · •--• JI n Boak .,.,, P'" no llf 0111d11 rt-. .n:n.1 ; QIPUwuu, m (1) Qls1 A: Crest, Hatty of °''"" c~. C.tlfornl1, of 1'flldi
Griswold, ABYC; ( 3) Pelm«, H HY C; (2) ~"~I~~J1:f~:'.C:~~~r:_11~.,:
Lemcheu, William Winkler, TemptJation, Lo u Gan· BtMflc:11ry, by rt•son « cllf1u1t 111 '"" •·nyc d ,__ DRYC (3) Sun .,..,merit or Mrtwm1nc1 ,,, :iOUMfklna /\IP • eu1wa1, ; DY HClll'td Ille .. , Ind nG!IC9 of *'tu# Ind
DRAGON (13) -(1) Gey B Bob Albany LBYC· a...t1c1arv-1 111ct1on to u-to ti. 11t111 • • ' the Pf<IPertr hffelrlbltow dlkrlbld. ,...,.. Maid, Steve Cumin, SBYC ; Class B : Jay-Kay-Bee, 11'111 bnf! •«oroHd •• PraYlclld rw-.,. II•
(2) Poseidan, Allen Frost, Henry Bashore CIYC· (2) •nd mi:ire 111•n ll'lr~ mon1t11 t11vrno ' ' tltPsed I(~ IUCh rtcord1tlon, '#111 lllf It SDYC ; (3) Tia.mat, A. E Strau-5ea IV, Dan Strauss, pUbuc tuctkln 1o 111e h1e11ett bidder w
Slnger, SMYC; (4) Blue CIYC; (3) Aisa My, Bob t'n'i"h.i":i.~lt,)n~~! :a;::..":
Fox, Morris Landon, SDYC. Benton, CYC. ult, Wltnaut w1rr'""" 1~ flf"""""'
FINN (31) ( 1) OK DINGHY (4) -Bom ;:_ ~~~i :::;.ion•:',_.~
StraWben'y, Bob A n d re 1 Bora, Ted S p r i n g e r 1 ::..-: .. i::' ~~,t.,1n ~nd ~ ~~
SDYC (2) BSD Pa I G....., SCCYC; (2) Pez Amarllla, °''""' s111e « c1111orn11: ~ UCYC~ (3) sp'.eed u F~: Eric &tadley, OBYC. Mi~ 1~n:: c~~ ~..:.,,~ °:!
n..-on.-.....-.son, NHYC ·, (4) KORALLE (9) -(1) No Mown on • m1P .tlllrtof ,__. 1" ~ ·-... N Nam s~-G Boak ,, P•HI '' ....... M1Ktl--. No Name, Jack Mueller, O e, icYai • M•"' rlKOI""' o111rct or.,.. Co\llltV.
Ol.v-•--• YC·, '5) ni.1 Fowler L:ahakJa YC· (2) Far 1t1t PU•-of NYl"9""' ...... -.. eU14A1 ' C¥U t 1 MC\lrtd try Mid Dlld of Tl'\ld lllc1iildlM Alpha, Gerald Desmond, PM, Kart H e 11 s tr om , i.n, dll .. 11 ..., ...._ "' .. ,.....
ABYC. ~~~) PMiniVY' 'CMeter, Pete ~~";.1:-~iti..,. flf ,,_ ,,..
ch ct b .o;JllCI ........... , • FIRST CHARTER Ventura Ya t u CORONADO-l5 (l2) _ (l) ~~N.t,.~~~L coRPOftATION.. _ •
PHRF·A (8) -(1) Scared Velero, Bret Page, KHYC ; l!IY J. It H1rr1-•
Reblitt, ~Finger, CIYC; (2) c.e~r, Al Hanner, Sl ~Hor,.., In l"•c:t (2) Soo!l>loD, Jlol1 Price, _,_, • bl!-N
Venturia YC; (3) Marni BYC; (3) No name, Rod comubl"" w1~1~1o1':"-...:= K~, S 0 0 d y Greenbe""', Mortell60n, CIYC. "•Id!, C1llfol'fll1, J11W 1, 1. 1s. IHI 11~ ~" •• CORONADO • 25 (4) -"---------
CYC. atiel Marshall, Long Be<ldl LEGAL NOTICE
PHRF·B (9) ( 1 l Naval YC; (2) Chief Novod·i----------Stmmvogel, Er;Ji; Fluyter, ky LBNYC '
Gen Lru Ill vors ' . AOVl!ll:Tlll!Ml!NT l'O• ••DI CIYC; (2) ny , LID0-14 (8) _ (I) To Not1c1 11 hlrtbV t lwn 111e11111 ... "'11
Do ~-SMYC (3) Tl'UI'-of 1111 0.•11111• Coll! JUll!or n """""°Y• ; Hel'ass, Tummy Leweck, Collete 01,1r1c1 of 0r111t1 C®ntY. Nata.aha, James Beroaw, CBYC· (2) M;oty Mike h1r1ln1fttr rel1rr11C1 to 11 tl'll "Cl'jliMr"
Ye • , Wiii r.alYI \Ill to. b\11 not lttw ffllft-3:0I SB · ltilhnan SSA · (3) Tica P.M .• We0ntldlv. July 11, IHI. -lid
RllODE•19 c8> _ (l) .... ~~ ·R . • KHYC • bid• for the •w•rd °' Sll1"1111fld o.nw.1 .,.. ll".lUJUr\l OSlllg, • Conllrvcllon. Med'llnlc.tl 1nd l!!tctr1ol
Fleur de Lis, Dave Jones, CHALLENGER (3) -(1) Contnoch for ALTERATIONS TO DATA
1 n-Bo Ge Cl!NTEll:. Or1nte Col1t Call-. SFSC; (2 U'l/11 n, ne Blue Bell, Howrard Scrog-511Ct1 bid• th•U be reat¥td 1n "" omc.
Steiner, SFSC·, (3) .,;,.,. SlBYC of It'll Owntr. In the Mm!nl1tr....,,. IY""I • 8ulkll"9, Or1111111 Coli! Ctllltt. f7t1 Barnacle, Bob T a y 1 or , F11rv1-ROid. eos11 MIN. o..-
SBYC. LEGAL NOTICE countv, c.111arn11, and 111111 b1 _...
1--:==-==:-=:===-=,,.--l'nd Pllblldy rfff •loud ,, 1111 ·~ =MPEST (6) (I) NOTIC• 01' Tll:UST••s U.L.• 1111ec1 tlmt.
l.z:J Tll:UST NO. 614' Wark lncllldff ~ell119 of I bulldl119, Pollux, Mrs. N. A. Harman, on JulV ,., 1'61, 11 tleY11n cfcladl. AM. E•ch btc1 mull contarm 1nd ii.
SOCYC·, (2) SU-Plum Finl ....,....lun Tiiie 1n1ur1nct ln.:I Trull rtlPOMIY9 lo lhl1 lnYllllloft, 1111 •llnlo
o-• ComPlny, .. '"'""' or '"'"'"°' '""'* 9"C:ll1CllloM 1no 111 oll'ler __.._ or .ubttllutld lrvl!ft. by the urttlll Dlld Caiiln of 1111 Contrld o-t. .,.
of TNI! txKVi.d try KENNETH Ii.. -on tilt 1nd -ID PVbllc: i-l'IDn
SVEOEEN Ind ELAINE G. SVEOEEN, In Mlcl oll1C11 of lhl OWMr, llld If
11111111111:1 11'111 wl'9 1llcl rffardtd J1nu1rv Wl!111m E. Blurodl; Ind AQ«llM,
10, 1N7 In 8QOlt •14t, Pttt DI of OtflClll Ai'dlltech, UJO ll111td1 Orlw, Ci:tr-dtl lttcords of Or1nlill coun!Y Ctlltarnll i l!d Mar. Ctl!lornl1, W fllll1 bl ebtlf!Md at • lfll Offlc1 Ill' llMI Ardlllecl lt'f dlPOlltlfl9
Intematlonal-14 C 1 ass
Sailors will have a busy six
days starting July 15 as both
the West Coast and National
championship regattas are
scheduled in S o u t b e r. n'
California.
South Coast Corinthian
Yacht Club will host the
West Coast Championship
Regatta which gets under
way July 15 at Marina del
Rey.
It is the new Benmar
automatic tracking loran
receiver Model ATL-730.
Once the desired loran sta·
tion is selected -whether A
or C, the ATL-730 syn.
chronizes and tracks the
master and !lave signals
automatically a t\td con·
tinuously, and displays the
time difference in large
digits. The navigator simply
reads the nwnber and plots
his position in Ule routine
way.
The West German naval
tender W esterwald reported
from the COUI"5e that Kialoa
II, skippered by John B.
Kilroy of Newport Beach,
Calif., bad passed the Dutch
)"Betit Stormvogel to take
the Ieed in the fifth day of
racing.
Ham Operators Praised
1M.1nu111I lo !hit cert1ln Hatlct « DI--•to.00 (ten 1111i.n1 tor 1Mf1 11f di l1ull ind 1!11ct11111 to 14111 thlnundtr ,. Glfllril "'-11111 SNdflclt'llM. n.11 eordld Mlrdl 29, !Ml In Book USJ, P1t1 ~II w/11 be !'lfullllld onh' 11 Ille flfll
:ICM '!' Ottkltl R~• 91 Ot•-CounfV, 1,. ~rnld c-le'9 tnd Jn tood Cl:lfto
wU/ \ll'dlr Ind Punu1nl to uld Ond al dlHClll within tr ... "YI 1f1tf ,,.. llld .,,_ Trult Hll •I Pllbllc 1uctlon tor e11l'I, 1119 l1wf\ll monw al I h. United S!1tw. "' t.abor· •nd Mltefl•ll llond .... AmlrlCI, •I !ht mtln Weit entr1nce to l'irtormtnct lloncl wm bl """I""' fl
Five races are scheduled
for the three days, July lS.
lfr17. Trophies at stake are
the West Coast Plaque for
the series winner, take-
home trophies for the first
five places, and the Hearst
Trophy for the first boat
from other than the borne
lleet.
The National Cham·
pionship Regatta is schedul·
ed July 19-2.C).21 at Alamitos
Bay with the Alamitos Bay
Yacht Club as host.
Trophies for this !leries in-
clude the Founder's Trophy
for the series winner, take-
+ ,.bolil.e tr'oplms for the first
• ~five, the President's Trophy
·tor the entry from the
longest distance, Hwnphrey
Bogart Trophy for the firsl
woman, either skipper or
• crew, Sherwood Trophy for
the high scorer In the first
.Jour racea.
other features of the A'I'lr
730 include Wuminated st.a·
ti.on indication, independent
master and slave controls,
and a fme delay tuning COD·
trot which is precise t.o
within one microsecond, and
a selection of four A stations
plus C.
In addition, the ATL-730
provides a full complement
of "human engineered" con-
trols for manual operation
to enable an operator to
utilize even the weakest of
loran signals.
Complete inCormation on
Shortly af terwards
Germania VI radioed that it
had overtaken Kialoa II.
The Westerwald reported
that all four leading boats
were within 20 nautical
miles Of each o t h e r .
We:sterwald's p 1 ac i ng s
were: 1. Kialoa II, 2.
Germania VI, 3. Ondine Ill,
skippered by Swnner Long
of New York, and .f. st.onn.
vogel, •kippend by C.
Bruynzcel of Zaandam,
Netherlands.
The leading boats were
now about 790 miles along
the 3,SM miles course.
Sponsors of loog diBtance
yacht races can take a les-
soo in communications from
th• 3,571-mile Loo Angele6
to Tahiti race.
With escort virtually ptt·
eluded because o£ the dis·
tance, ham (amateur) radio
operators have done a yeo-
man's job in keeping the
yachting world advised of
the progress ol the race.
The commm.ieattons st;a.
lion is aboard Jacob
Wood's ketch Chiriqul and is
manned by Lyle Nelsoo.
W60FF maritime mobile.
Nelson rounded up the po-
sition of the other yachts by
the regular ship..t;o..slllp ra·
dio aboard all ol the booil!,
and the1l transmitted the
positiom and other mes-
sages to the mainland where
it was picked up by sewnl
hams .
Official receiving station
for the Tahiti race was Ray
K. Car!A!r, Long Beach
(K60BA), but .....-al othtt
Southland hams also moni·
tore<! the broadcl6il!.
other Long Beach hams
in on the network were Sam·
the unit can be obtained by------------------------------
writing t9 Benmar Division,
Computer Equipment c.orp.,
3000 W. Warner St., Santa
Ana. Benmar is the sole
manufacturer of the famous
line of B e n d i x Marilic
product!, representing more t
than 20 years service to the
marine industry in loran
systems, automatic .pilots.
depth sounder's, directio;
finders, radiotelephones and
radar systems •
Ille l"lnl AmlrlCln TLlll llllUflllCI Ind Con!rtdor ulecllcl.
I LeB (WB6FJC) ---1 Trv1t CCl!TIPllnY bulldlnt hxll!llCI It 1111 WAOI! ltAT•S:
ue OW 111-.i 111U'the•il c:orn1r of l'lllh 1nd .M•!n Punutnl lo ll'le L1bor Codi di lfll St1N John Lovci (W6JFY). itrnt1 In 1111 ct!Y d San!1 Ant, at C1Utornl1, Soulhttn C1ltfor1111 llulldlnt n--U D. Hudson of New Calllaml1 111 lh•t rtaM. 11111 •nd lnllr.-lt •nd construction T ,1 d 11 c°"""
'\Jal-ZV • conv..,llCI to ind now l!eld 11ndtr Oetd of cllli llulldlnt 1nd C011Strvctlon Trldn port Beach monitored the Tl'lllt In lhl PfGPt:rfY •111.11114 In !hi Council ot or1ne1 CounlY, 1111 uld ~
Detwork -~ ai'ded in _51.,,. CwnfY Ind Sl1l1 clnalllld n : of Trv.l'MI ,.11 llCltl1•l1*1 ,,.. _ .. auu .._, ,... T"9 SllblHsehald lnllrw.I In ~ to l'rtYl lUne rill of .,., diem -fW mess.-from "· -wl Lot '° d Tr1ct Ho. J51t .. ""°""" on 9ldl cnofl ar IYPI' a11 _.,,,,.... lllldlcl ,. t>..... "'"" ,..,.., I MIP rxordld ln llook 121, PlllH 11 nKlltl! 1111 contr1ch wl!ldl WILi bl Way of "phone pa~h ." H ...,; • to 21 lnl;tutlY11 of MIKtlllMOUI M1111. IWll'dtd ,,.. l\ICCfUful blclcltl'$1 llld llltle Son handJed the ham f1et· rKanlt d Or1nt1 County, C111forn11 Ptt¥1Hl119 r1lel 11r1 conl1I"" In Mld cr11ttc1 by 11111 cert1ln $Uble1w d•lllCI SPK!tlcetlant •clat>ltd by 1111 8-rd, •IMI work on the recent Ensena-July 1, lNO between sunny Hornt,, 1r1 11 111~ below: da race. Inc., 1 C11Uarnl1 corioor1t1on, Micco Any cl1utflctllon llGI int~ •nif CGl'Jlarll!Clfl. 1 Nevl<ll CllfPOl'lllon. below Utltd lhlll bt Hid ti Ille curr..e
W1rd O.WtoPment co • Ctlllaml• w1te r1!ft lot !hi •PP•ctble trldl 9lllt ·• c11u1f1utlon In ..n.ct Wlflt Wll ..,.
120 Boats
In NHYC
Regatta
contlll'ltlon.. H1rr1111111111 Devtlapment nilld Trldt• Counc:tll. ff IWf ""' ....,
Co., 1 C1llloml1 CGr!lor•llon •nd H... bllow 1r1 nat curr.,,1 or 1r1 ,...., ... W ttr De\'91apment Ca. ,1 CtllfomJ1 car-&Ibo!' "fftmtnll durl"' the Mddllll ",,.
por1llon. •• Lnsor 1nd T1rlln HGlllll, ot C01'15!rucflon time, wcJ1 ,....l•llN 11111
Inc. lei-Ind l'ICordld Jutll 2', bl COtllklerft I Nrf <ft !hi blltlw ..... 1t111 In Book sno, "" m d Otfk:laL r11H. AnY llNl!h. weH1re, 'llCl!llll, ..,..
Records fl/I Or1nP1 COilnTy, Ca llloml1. rnatkln or alt!tr btneflb 111111 bt Ill ..
l1kl 111• wm be mtclt without <OYlntnl cllllon to lf\1 bllaw M11ed .w111 llClll& ~
or w1rr1ntv, t•11rtn!'d or lmpllltd, 11 to ..,..,!ten m1Y be tmPloYtd In ~..:J
lllt 11111, POHIUIClll Ill' 1ncumbr1-to with Slc!IOll 1m.s ol "" Cllltomll
llllttv lllt l"ll'l'ltlnlrtg 1rlnclNI IUfl'I clue COclt. • ..
(II Thi natt MCVrft by Wld Oeec1 ol 0\1rtrme 111111 be N Fa
Trv11 to Wit: 111.000.00 wrlll lntel"l•I HrtonMd Ill e11C111 ol "" rlllulw ~ tram JuM )0, 1N7 II provlcltd --•nd II lhl r•ll for """"!M ..
In 11td nal1 totet~r with fen, d'l1f9n cr~':.i1';.";."'~in bl tit llotrden ~ ... One-hundred and twenty ind lllPtnllt of 1111 Trv1tff •ml •ud'I In !hi co11tc11v1 btl'llllnl111 "l'IMlll'll boat.!I in nine Class e S °'"'' ium1 is m1v h1V1 btln •d¥1ncld •P1lle1blt to "" Nl'llatllr Cl'lft'• try Ille GWMr u1cl halcler flf ulcl noll, c .. idflclllon or l'fH If -"'-participated On i n S i d e Wllf\ lnt1r1ll, II llrll'f'ldld Ill Mid Detd ln'\Plond on lllt praitct • · N H bo of TNst. It t1i111 bl m1rwHtorv -1'11 .... courses m ewport ar r 01i..1: J111Y s, 1m. 1r1ciw 1o wt1am , COl!h'ld 11 ...,..
Yacht Club'• Independence F1.,1 .1.m1rtc111 T111t •nd uPon 1111ubcol't1r1ctol'I u11111r """·,. lnsurtnce •nd Tr111t Co. 1111 not ltn tl'l1n 1t1kl ..,,.,., •~IQ"' Day Regatta Saturday and 8y Altn A. Know: ••In ol Nr cll1m ··-lo •ti _........ Sunday A111111nt s.cre11rv lfNlk!Y9d 1n 111e tlllClltlon If 1111 CMlrlcL ' l'ubnthtd Newport Kirbo!' N1ws-Prff1 CAlll'l:NT•llS .....,, .... Result.!1 or the out.!lide comt11ntd w1lh 0111Y P11o1. N--1 c1"'9fller .............................. .. classes were not reported Buch. C•llf. JulY s. JulY 1111111 JulY n. T1b11 _, ..... 1Ptr1tor ........... s,19 lNI. 1150-dl. Mllrwrttht .......................... S.21 by NHYC, Foremen 50C Hr !lour 11'1111'1 ltlln fti.M9t
Following are the results LEGAL NO'nCE ::'..!1:~1~~1111r~UNtYllld. •xc11t
of the inside classes: NOTICE OP Tll:USTll:Of'IAL• Cl!MINT MA.IONS LEHMAN 12 (9) (1) Ne. ,.,.,. c-t Mlson, i1o1111111 ....., ..._.."" • -0'1 J111Y 17, IHI. 11 1:00 e'cloc:t P.M.. mldllne -r•lllr .................. S.O. Red Baron, Chris Colby ..,-, , 1 ·-• .... c Ctment Ml'°" JourMYm1n ......... '·" , 11 1111 "' r1111 cen t r .._r ,.,. 011r>' Fore!Tlln $lk ptr hour 1bav• ~ NHYC ; (2) No. 241, Bill tv Court Hou1e, Jn !hi CllV of S1n11 A111, rett
NHYC 3) N l"n C1llfarnl1, LAWYERS TITLI GUAll:AN-l!Ll!CT!t!CIAHI
Symes, ; ( o. ~. !~ s~~=Yy,:_.;:11=~ ~"r.:!i!~ OIMl'tl Forlmln .................... "" John rtaskell, NHYC. Tr t rnlldl' by ELIIABETH DAii.NELL, fGl'lft'"n .......................... J.Sl
Aranji Beats Salacia
In LA to Tahiti Race SABOT A (21) -(1) Blue 1nU1\lllft°llrrled -n Ind rwcerdld IMY ~~1" W1re111M1 ............... 6.71
• Angel, Mark Gaud lo lD. lH!. in 11oo1r.0 '" ,P"' ... '" ~,°"",-•"' 011ii.r .......................... 1.t• ' Recorcll of tl11tB -•T• -"" 1• lllON WOIU(lll:S
Crews of four of the six
yachB in the 3,571-mlle Los
A:ngeles to Tahiti race were
whooping It up on tlie be'ach
at Papeete today as tbe oth·
er two struggled to finish,
First to finish at 28 aft'er
midnight PM' Saturday was
Henry Wheeler'• .f7·foot
ketch Aranjl from Newport
Beach but flying the 1burgee
of the Lahaina (Hawliil
Yacht Club.
Tom Cockett'• caI-48 sloop
Salacia from Newport Har~
bor Yacht Clul> -the -race tfavorlte -wu second
to !iniSb at 1:111 a.m. Satur·
day.
Jacob Wood'16t-foot ketch
Chlrtqul -the scratch boat
llnlabed at noon PDT Satur·
clay.
Finish time ol Fuller Cal·
Jaway'1 Colmohla'4itl 1toop
Rootun, It. Frandf Yacht
Club, waa 'not -, hut at
~-Satun111 Ille .... Olll1 110 mile& tmn the finish
with an 11-20 knol wind.
Doug Slltltweatll<r'1 Co-
lumbla-31! nwl. Sllr Due-
•. ha dlaabltct witll nid-
.. J «
der trouble Saturday !lome
500mfles from Tahiti and Ed "'"·-· Spauld!ng's Misty turned
and ~ent to her assistance. Im~"'
There was no direct re·
port from Tahiti Sunday, but
a ham radio broadcast from
the SS Monterey, inonitored
by Cam>U D. Hudsoo of
Newport Beach, said the two
yacht.a could be beard cm
ohlp-l<Hblp 'l"adio reporUn1
they were about 300 mlle1
lrom Tahiti.
Star Dancer WU proceed-
ing under power after re.
ceiving fuel from a French
freighter. Mbty was pre-
sumably conUnulng under
salt
The race fleet apparenU,.
never got into the expected
doldrums near the equator.
During the latter staceo ot
the race the leaders were
reporting 3),10 knot wtndl
wlth green -comblnl
their decU.
It was "Presumed that CotJ-o
ditions 1uch • tbeae caused
Stv DUlC!lr to iolt 1* rud-der.
"RST TO TAHITI -Henry Wheeier'1 Arall)I confounded the experts by beat-
ing Tom CorkeU'1 Salada to Papeete In the 3,$71·mlle Los Angeles to TablU
race. Aranjl was also the overell handicap winner. Aranji'• crew was Dan
Elliait. sallingmamr; BUJ Ully, navigator; Fnmk P--, Rici< Ram!!!-,
Dan Woodl wl Robert Clart, Ill of)lowpo<t. 1
NHYC· (2) Westerly Cliff tlven to teeure •n tndebllclnel1 In l1YOt ,,,_, ,, •• wo--Jll ' 1 of GLENOALE FfOEltAL SAVINGS ANO nt "'' ·~~· ............. . Wilson, NHYC; (3) Too LOAH ASSOCIATION, 111 u1111tc1 St•lff ~':,=;!1,kron...,w=:-.-·itiiii·~
Much, Charlie Thompson conior111on, by rHson of 1111 bnlcl'I of ci.u1nu1ion WHt'YIMd. 1 ctrllln a1>11t1110111 HCUrld """'"" llll'llCI u.•0.1'11:1 NHYC. d .tildl w11 --Mlrdl lS. 1MI. In L•bartn. ,_.,.,, or ain1trvcnon •.• '·" SABOT B (13) (1) 8ooli: uu. p-.,, of ••1d Of'fldel OPtrllGl'I Ind ltlldel'I al JM'ot\ll'l'll"C .... -Recor$. Or1nge CounlY. wlH 1tll •I 1lect!1c toa!t. vlt1r1tlon m•clll"" .,_. Mach 3, Dave Eastman, Public t11Ctlon to 1111 11101M11 blOCltt' fef 11m11er mtel'l1n1~11 "'°" not ""'*"' BCYC: (2) Chunkier, Terry ulll 11y1ble In llwful ,,_..,. of 1111 c .... rtled 11en1n ................... .t.11
T-•-, BYC·, (3) V'-en Untied *!'~ of Amtr0kl 11 111111~ Oil WtldlfNn . . ..................... "' ~ iw .,.. 1 1111, w1,,_, COWflln or w.rr1n., tx· Foreit11n :JOc ...,. flour _,. ft'lln _....
St M ,_. NHYC Pl"l'Mtll or lfropUtd, ii lo Hiit. -"'" c .. u1nc1non ..,.....v1..,, eve e1:11nger . • or MCll!nbrlttC~ tlll lnltful c:onwnd ID Of'lllATING INOINl!•ll:I ...
SABOT C (12) -(1) TJ, :!ci"°: !j',!1~1~'!J':~1111"";!fio.!r,:: 0.-1 ................................. . Ringo Wagner, NHYC·, (2) Jbld ,,., 1o-11 Groo.i111 1 ............................ c.n dllCI' ,,_ • w ; ;.,,..,. i .............................. J." The Green Phantom, Tony Lof a 1nc1•n11nd1Ylclld 11:n 1t1ttm1 ~ • .............................. 1.tt p NHYC (S) N 6 -In Lof 1) qf Trtct No. S3l1. Inn. C11V Gr-. s .............................. lit erez, : o. WIN, of CHI• Miiii c=eiintt of °''""' '""' 0 ,._ , ........................... ,, . s.n
Vt kl Call NHYC Oil Cllltwnll. •• lhown Oft • -'°""""" 15t Jiii' '*" """ "*' ....... C • · • nconllcl In Booll lfS. -M Ml ti c11a1nc1tldl\ wPWVlllllL LID0-14 A ( 10) -No. « m.a1111_, ....... ~ " PA1NT111:s 2981, David Ullman, BYC· °'11nt• Countv. C1ntorn1e 11111111r """"' 11rnlff ............... w
C' Fii' !I'll M"9I of • .,.,,.,. ~ ,,_nevm11! 5Pr1' ................... t.M (2) Upset, Al Perez, BY ; ll(VrM .,.,. .. id Dt9d "' Trwt lflWlll111 ••"• TUon •
(3) Lowly Roman' Ro'••d tMI. cl'll ..... IM I Xllll'IM' ti ... TM-I'~ I nd l"llttn ., ••.••• ,..,,,., lM
MUI ..,._, M 11'1'1'1 ...... tfll NnM Cit ..... GIMrll F--·"°" ....... .,_ Lohman, BYC. Olld of Trwt, IRter11t Iller-... """'""9Ynlln ,..,., • Lt~14 B (t3) _ No Ju,1u.:u. 111 U11111kl ...-1ncJ1111• at ,,.. r11111 ,_,.,_,.,., ..,..,. .,.,.. J.,nwrrntt1
VV" • MCWMI by u l• Dtecl ol TM! W["' I~ rtlo 2414, Phil Gla1gow, BYC· ,..,,, ""-from 0e<1mbtr 1, 1H1, 11 SNll!f' M•TAL WOtKltt •
(2) n-• Baron, T 1 rr 1• In Mid nato 1nd by llW '"'wlded. '""' Mtt•I w0t1uir ................. c.a ~ OW: NM tt. IML ......... llllflllW ....................... .... Moran. LrYC·, (3) Julie II LAwv-1111:1 r1n.1 eu.t.UJnY ,_, ... .._. .......,_. ...., . ' COMPMY, T""* llOl1 Fttd Toepel, VYC. ., •. A. BLU:ll-4, Viet ,....... Tiie 0.-ntlfWI .. llrl\'I .... ti ,..
KITE A (2t) (1) Atto1t How•"' o. Woloo" 1tcn"' '"' 11111 111 tilds.," woi..,,, Aul. l«nl•N lrreeullr/lret. If l*""'Mflft IR ..,.,, IH Andelr.:, Pat Sc r u Cf, 1 _.. ., 1t1 "" ......., C.llKloi ,....., .fllll
NHYC·, (2) D··•e, ~ ""*",.. or_. c.. DllW '"""· • ...,... ..._ 1fflftt a -.n ..,.. .. w wi.. vnu IUM M 11'111 J....,. 1, a. ,.. 117M1 --.
Dal&h, NHYC; (3) Spectre, 10A•o .. nu"'u
JafuI::""'c'"lBYC. RRST, FAST = = ... -B (21 -(1) In· =-~~
delatl.gable, Carol B e e k, Whe t1ll1 Y•• fl...+ ...... '*'• '" N«fMf'I £. W11Mn ' B!YC (2) Volar WJ.nal M.t '" lec•I Rewt1 C1ieck It Slcnl1rv. '°'"'If Tn."". • ; \ OW M't, If• ~ ..... .. 0.._ INf.: a;• ".M. .-.:;, 1• I ~.~a~ m. DAtLY ""°'· & 1rP=°'-;'~ """
' -.
l
• • • ···~· .. ,. ..... ., .. '' .. ; .. . . ... . . . -. . . .. . .. . . .. .. . . . ' ._ ' . . . . . . ' -.. .. .
ff DAILY l'ILOT
HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES l'Olt SALi HOUSES FOii SALi HOUSIS l'Olt SALi -HOUSH l'Olt SALi HOUSll l'OR SALl>j· -------
Daily Pilot· Cleuified
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Goner al llOO Genorol ;;;;;;;;;==;;;;I
VIEW HOME
JUST LISTED
1000 o. ... , •• 1000 Genoral 1000 Coot•-1l OO Ntwpert INch ••
Panort.mic Ocean v~ from
fron t Tf'ITl.ce, UY rm A Hou,.......Re9ul•tion1-Deed1in91
, Muter Bdrm. Be1utifully
e""Oftlt AdV4irll•N 1hould oheotl their •• ••111 and report lmmtdl1ttl1 .,...,. landscaped eo.rl yard and or mltolaulf-.tlonL THE DAILY PILOT uaumaa ll1blllt)' far an'Orw er.ly to pado w I vipanslve moon.
tna ad.ant et tw1bllahlrtt tha advart ... mant corractly ona tll'l'IL tlin View. ~ady to move.
In. 3 Bdrm + Dlnin& rrn, DEADLINE FOR COPY AND KIL~ll 5:30 l'.M. ttla di.)' ~rs publklatlon, axoept for $44,500
W
0
ea1tand Edition and Monday afdfona whan slMJne tlm. t. l :JO P.M. Friday. Mn. H~
be aure to may a raoord of tha kill n"mbar 9lvt1n you ~Y yeur ad takar aa
YOU MUST HAV• KILL NUMl8ftl Whan kllllng an ad baolluta of tiulck raulta,, ..,..,..
verification of >"">"" oall.
Eva')' aftort la made tt klll .,. col'T90l a ntw ad ttllt has IHon ordared, •ut wt ca• Cohlw.ell; Ballktr & C..
not 9u1rantM to do to until the ad ha• appeared In the PIPI'· • 1. e..t """"' ......... ...-.c.i1..,,. ..
DIME·A·LIN£ Ada art at.tlctly caah In advanoe riiy m,all ar at any aM ef aur attioea.1 .,..,.·~·~-... ~·"'! .. ~-~~NO phone •rd•"-
Tha DAILY PILOT raMrvta ttta. right te cil .. tty, edit, een10r or retuta any advar-POOL HOM£
t l1amant. and to change ttl Ntaa and Ngulatlona without prior notlc.. • $231500
Advertl•ra may plac. th•lr ada by t.laphon.. Unbelieveeble • tour bed-
DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 room•, two ba,,,., glont covered patio leading to
beautilUI landscaped pool WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540-1220 .,. .. 16'x18' •vtn• "'°"\
Huntington llMch 540-1220 L19una ltach 494-9466
• Phones Are Open 8:00 a.m. -5:30 p.m.
9 lo Noon Saturday-Closed Sunday
CLASSIFIED COUNTERI ara tocatod .. followt:
2211 WHt lolbaa ......,_., N.,,,.... ~ JJD Watt..., ltreat, C.... M..._ Jet
~Street, HllfltlttttM IMcL PJ: F..-...._, ....... IMcL l:JO.l:JI bupt. s.t. & S...
Mall Addrt•: aox 1m, N1wport •••oh. Callr.
HOUSES FOR SALE :::;::~ ~~:::,.. :: g:..,~11:~°':111v1ca = Gl!Hl.llAL 1• N PO COSTA Ml!:SA n• aw llT ... ,. •• IJ utt ILl.CTlllCAL .....
MliSA DEL ....... UIS Wl!STCLlll'P IH:lf 1.QIJll'Ml!HT lllllTALI UM
Ml.IA VERDI. llll UNIVlllSITT PAllK ttD ll'IJ•ICINO UH .... CIC IAT G441 "L.00111 .... COLLI.GE l"AllK 1,•,.,1s U.'T ILUI'" tM1 l'UllHACI llll'Allll, llf. 6U• NEWl"OllT ll!M:M NiEWl'OllT Ml.IGHn Ult CORONA DIL MAI nt1 OMOl!NING 6'11 IALIOA .. OINlltAL llllVICQ un
rt MLIOA COVIS Ull IAY ltl..UIDI QM •UD1Ne. OllCINO 4'11
lt9Wf'Oll1' SHOlllS 1211 LIDO llLI. 4111 GLASS UN i:tlY'Clll!IT 1m IAYIHOlll!S lttS IALIOA ISLAND OH 01111.111 THUMI '"'
.-• ,-1 HUHTl•GTON ll!ACH ...... GUN 111101" 6711 oo .. .,a SHO l!S ,~, ... l'OUHTAIN VALLIY ~II HEALTH CLUIS 67M
Wl.STCLIJl'F 1.:: Sl!.l.L ll!ACN *M MAULING ,,_ MA1t•011 HIGHLANDS ...., LON• IUCN .,_ MC)USl.CLU.NIN• •1»
UNIVl!llStT'I' ,..I.Ill( lJU OllANOI COUMT'I'' 4611 INTllW.1011 Dl.COllATtMe '7J1
lllYINI! ltM OAllOl!N OllOVI. 4'11 INCOMI. TAX ''" IACK 1•Y It ..
••• T.'U•• >M5 WISTMINfTl.11 411t lllON, Ol'llU'llld8l, I.hi. '1H " MIDWAY CITY 41U llONINO 05' llVINI Tl.llllACI! 1,',..41 SANTA AN• 4'M lNIUL.1.TUte 0'9 COllONA Dl!L MAii IALIOA ,.l.NINSULA lMt I.I.NT.I. ANA Nl.llMTI .... INSUllANCI! 1711
•EACON IAY t.MS TUSTIN ..... INVl.ITIG.l.TIN .. ~ 67• UM COAST~ 471f JANITORIAL ,,,. aAY ISLANDS > U.OUNA •l!ACN 479 11.Wl!LIY 111!,Allt. ltc. io1e1 L100 ISLE Hl SALIOA ISL.AND IUJ Ll.GUNA NIGUl!L 41t1 U.NDICAPINe "1t
HUNTINGTON ll!ACN 1111 SAN CLl!Ml!NTI 4111 LOCKIMITN ._
HUNTINGTON H.llllOUll 1415 DANA ,.DINT 4141 MASONllY, llllCK ..,.
FOUNTAIN VALLl"Y 141t Tlll,.Ll.X, tie. 4flO MOVING a ITOllACJI! 6141 IEAl. IEACH 14M CONOOMINIUM •M PAINTING, P-.tlMliltll '*
IUNll!T IE.ACM IUS RENTALS ::~~J~NO, ..... ::::
GARDEN GllOVI. 1111 A U fu • h d ,.NOTOGllA,.HY .. ,.
LONG IEACH 1HO ph. n rnll 8 "LAITl!lllNO. ,lldl. 11-lr 4111 LAKl!WOOD lSJt Ol!Nl!RAL HM ,.LUMalNG , ...
OllANGI! COUNTY 14M COSTA MllA Siii ,OODLI. OllOOMINe , ... OUT OF COUNTY Uaf Ml!SA VlllDI! Slit OUT 01" STATI 1* Nl!WPORT ll!KH t20f "OOL Sl!llVICI! ffll POWEil JWl.1!,.INI ''U SftNTOll UH Nl!W,.OllT NIUGHTI 1111 PUMP SEllVICI. •tto
Wl;ITMINSTlll 1•11 Nl!WPORT SHOllll JUI llOOFING ,,,.
MIDWAY C1TT 111' Wl!STCLfFI' J2M RADIO, R..,_ln. l.k. •tM
SANTA ANA 1'" UNIVERSITY ,.ARit sm lll!MODl!LING • II.PAIR ,, .. SANTA ANA NOTS. 1"9 IACK IAV n• OllANGI. 1•H I.AST ILUPI" Jltt lll.MOOILINO, IUTCHINS 4HI SdlMrt 1ri.r.1t11 4'55 TUSTIN 16-lt CORONA OIL MAR SHO SIWIHG 1960
NORTH TUSTlll 16U IAt.aOA Ult llWINO MACHINI REPAIRS 1,,2
ANAHEIM UH U.T !SU.HOS tut 51 .. TIC T".NKS. 5"llrt. 11&. "'' Slt.Vl!RADO CANVON USS LIOO ISll Slll TAILOIUNO ff7t
LAGUNA NllLS 1111 HUNTINGTON llACH ,... TEJlMITI CONTIOL 6172
LAGUNA aEACH 1115 l"OUNTAIN VALl.l.Y hit TILi, (4f•mlc ,,,.4
1.AOUNA NIOUIL un ••LIOA !SU.ND JUJ TILlf. t.l11•lwm • """" '"' SAN CLEMl!NTI! 1111 Sl!AL .SIACH J4H TREI. SIRVICI 4tll SAN JUAN CA,.ISTRANO 1711 t.ONG llACH SSll
CAPISTRANO l lACH 1721 OllANGI. COUMTY Ult i~~~t~~~=T 11'"1rs, lk. =
DANA PCINT 1711 OAROl!N OllOVI 5'10 WILDING "'S ~=~~~~g. :: =~~~~N~1~ :::: JOBS • EMPLOYMENT
SAN Oii.GO 1775 SANTA ANA MM JOI WANTID, "'-1W
RIVIRllDE COUNTY lM IANTA ANA HllOHTI SIM 101 WANTED, Wemt11 1•1t
NOUSl!S TO II! MOVED 1ffl TUSTIN S'40 JO• W.MTED,
CONDOMINIUM 19M COASTAL 1711 Ml!N & WOMl!H mil
U .. LIXES l'OR SALi! nn LAGUNA llACN J7W DOMESTIC Hl!L' 1tu
APARTMINTI l"DR SALi 1'11 LAGUNA NIGUEL sm AOINCllS. M• ntt
RENTALS l.M CLIMl!NT1! mt NILf' WANTl.D, Mtll 71'1 SAN JUAN CA,.ISTil:ANO sru AGINCll.S, w ... 1t11 7ltt HouNS Fumish.d DANA "°'"" 114' HEL,. wANT10, w-1111
GINllAL Hll REAL ESTATE, 10.Ss-Mttl • w-, ...
RENTALS TO SMAlll. 2ltS G I AHNC111:s, Mtlt • w-ns• COSTA MESA 2llf ener• SCNOOLS • INSTRUCTION 760;
MESA OIL MAR 2115 TR:ll"LEX, etc. Mtl JOll PIEPAttATION "Oii
MlSA VERDI 2111 CONDOMINIUM '"' TNl!ATllCAL 1'ttO
COLLI.OE ,.ARK 2\U lll.NTALS WANTED ml MERCHANDISE FOR ::::g:~ ::ts~" ~: :::s :~~:::T :! SALE AND TRADE
NEW,.OIT SHORES tt2t MOTELS, TRAILi.ii COUllTI S"7 "UllNITURE Mii
IAVIHORES tt1S GUEST HOMES sm OFFICE FURNITUlll .. ,.
OOVER SHOIES tt21 MISC. Rl!NTALS Int OFP'ICI EQUl,.MINT 1111
Wl!STCl.IFF 2131t INCOME PIOPl!W.T'I' 6M STORI! 1.QUl,.MINT 1111
UNIVERSITV ,.ARit tti1 aUSINllSS ,.IOPllTY 6t54I CAI'!", ltlST.1.UltAHT 1114
llVINS" 2"' TR.IJLl!ll "ARKS '°5f IAR IQUIP'MINT MU
I.I.CK •AT nw IUSINESS llNTAL INI HOUSIHOLD GOODS lt2I
E.l.ST ILUFP' 120 OP'FICE Rl!NTAL .. ,. OAltAGI SAi.i lt22
lllVIHI! TEllRACI n.U INDUSTRIAL PIO,.lllT'I' .. H FURNITURE AUCTtoN 1125
CORONA OEL MAii 2'Jf COMMllillCIAL 4tll A,.PLIANCl.I flit
IALIOA 2lll INOUSTRIAL lllNTAL 60H .MTIQUll tilt
.SAT ISLANDS tlJO LOTS 41• SllWINO MACHINIS llH
LIDO IJLE 2lJ1 llANCHIS '151 MUSICAL INSTIUMl.NT llU
IALIOA IS~.NO 2lSS CITRUS OROYU "1S ,.IANOS & OllOANS t1M
HUNT1HGTON •EACH 240I AClltEAOI Otf RADIO ' 12M
P'OUNTAIN VALL.EV 1411 LAICE ELSINOlll' 6H2 TELl.VlllON l21J
,, .. L ll!ACH Uff RESORT 1'111:0,.ERTY nos tll•FI • STEllO Hit
LONO IE.I.CH UGI OIANGI: CO. l'ltOP'EllTV •m TAPI. lll!CORDl!Jll PH
ORANGE COUNTY JHI OUT 01' STATI. ,.llO,., 1• CAMlltAI • IQUIPMINT &lOI
u..NTA ANA MU MOUNTAIN a DISERT •JH HOllV SU, .. Llll Mtf
Wl!STMtNSTEll 1UJ IUIDIVlllON LAND 4212 l"OllTINO GOODS llM
MIDWAY CITV 211' lltEAL ESTATE SERVIClli 111' BINOCULAR.I, SCO,l.S WI
S.ANTA AN" HEIGMn 11Jt fl.I!. EXCHANOI. 11JI Ml5CILU.NEOUI tHt
CO.I.ITAL 17tO 111:. I!. WANTEO IHI MISC. WANTED "It
LAQUNA ll!ACN ,,., BUSINESS • d MACHINliR.Y. I.IL .., .. LAGUNA NIOUl!L 1111 n LUMalll &151
SAN CLEMENTI 1110 FINANCIAL STORAOI. 1775
Sl.N JUAN CAPlSTllANO 2111 IUSINS.SS O,.PORTUNITll!S Ult IUILDING MATlllAU 17641
CAPISTRANO alACM Ult IUSINESS WANTED ,,., SWA,.S OM
OANA POINT n., INVESTMENT OPPtrtU111tl11 llll ETS d LIVESTOCK llYEllSIOE COUNTY lMO 1NYE5TMl!NT WANTID llU p In
VACATIOH Rl!NTAU '900 MONl!V TO LO.IH IUI PETS, QIHllAL llDI
CONOOMIN IUM HH ,.l!RSONAL LOANS nu CATS ..,.
DUPLEXES FURN. '911 JEWl!Llt'!' LOANS 1))1 DOGS llU
RENTALS COLLATERAL LOANS lJ1S HORSIS IUI
ltEAL ESTATI LOANS U4t LIVESTOCK ... Houses Unfurni1hed
G!N!!:IAL 3C101
(OSTA MESA JIOI
MIS& DEL MAI J\tS
MESA VliRDli )111
COL.LIGE "Allt JllJ
Nl.Wl'OllT Iii.I.CH UOI
Nl!W,.ORT HOTS, 1211
NEWl'Oll!f>SNORll Utt
IATINORES nu
DOVEll! ~ORI.• JUJ
WESTCLIFF :11:11
UNIVEISITV PAlllt l1JJ
lltVINE nJt l&CK IAT Jt ..
Ii.I.ST BLUFF ll~1
UtVINI! TERltACI :114!
CORONA Dl.L """'" ml IA\AOA 1:31t
IAT ISL.ANDI mt
LIDO llLE llll
&ALI OA ISL.A.ND JllJ
Nl.W"'OIT WIST 1371
l'l~.TIN<"i'TON BIACN MM
HUNYINOTON HAlttOlll l-.S
'171't"' YALLlfV 1411
~'o:.,.11:~.rov. ~~
LONG 1!1..1.CH UOI
CNtMOI' COUNTY :Utf
SANTA ANA "11
WllTMIHITlll XU
MIOWAT CIT'I' MH
SANTA ANA Hl'KiHT'I MJt
COMTA.l ntt
MORTG.l.Gl!S. ''"'' DNlh .,., CALIFORNIA LIVING
MONEY WANTED IJff NUllSllll.S "11 ANNOUNCEMENTS SWIMMING POOLS ....
•nd NOTICES ""Ttol ".,." AWHJNOS FOUND IPrM Aftl UM
LOST 14111
PEltSONALJ UM
ANNOUNCEMENTS 1411
allTHS 1411
FUNERALS 1411
,.AIO 0.SITUAltT 141J
FUNl!RAL DIRECTORS ''l' FLORlJTS f4ll
CARD OF THANKS "1'
IN MEMORIAM ''" CIMETl!ltT LOTS Ult
ClMETlltV CllVP'n Ult
CRlliMATOllll!S 011
MEMORIAL PAIKI Ull
AUCTIONS .C•
AVIATION IEllVICI U»
TRAVEL 6•Jl
All TIANSPORT ... TION ....._
.. UTO TllAHSPORTATtoll '441
llGAL NOTICES '4!t
OIEIMAN I TUTOltlNO 6dt
SERVICE DIRECTORY
ACCOUNTING 6111
ANSWERING 1e:11v1c• 4ff$
Af'Pll.IHl'I! 111!,.AlflL ,..,... 'I'~
AP .. ltAISINO un
ASPHALT, Ollt U 1f
AUTO lllPAlllS •SM
AUTO, Seat l•lh. T ..... El' 6~
V.1.CATIONI "11 TRANSPORTATION
IOATS a VACHn
SA I LIO.ATS
POWl!I CRUISllll
5,.EED-IK• IOAT1
IOAT Tll&ILl!IS ao .. T MAINTINANC•
aOAT LAUNCHING
M.llllNI. EOUIP,
IOAT ILi,., MOOllltC.
10-T SERVICllil
IOAT ltlNTALS IOAT CHARTER
PISHING aoATS
IOAT MOVING
I OAT ITOltAOI
IO.IT1 WANTED
AlllCllAirT
FLYING LESSONS M011LI HOMES
MOTOR HOMIS
llCVCLlf5
ELECTRIC CAii
MINf lllCIS ... ~ ......
MOTOICTCLll
MOTORSCOOTlllS
-••1• "" "" "" "" -"u "" "" -"" -.... -....
"" .... ...
"" "" "" "" ...
'"' '* ...
""
with artistic flagstone fire-
place. Walldng di&tance to
all &iw)pping. pon't rniss an-
other day tot enjoying this
finr 11.n\Dy hom4!· Won't
last. Only $23,500.
2M3 WESI'CLIFF DRIVE
MG-mt Open EvM.
Maditarr•nean Ch1rml
Qlanni.ng old brick garden
entrance! 0 I Iv e trees!
Wrought iron gatee! Vaulted
beamed celling! '1'1is UDUI·
uaHy attractive 4 BR S bath
home near Dtwer Shores has
a Contemporary MediterTa·
nia tee!.ing. Luxuriously dec-
orated! F<rmal dlninc room
& panelled game room. On
a great bl,g beautifully land-
scaped lot for privacy, plus
a separate children'• yard
with a big piayhooff. Not
on 1eaaed land! Unbeatable
for $69,150!
Ruth P1rdoll,
]6(6 WestcliU Dr.
john macnab
IRVINE TERRACE
One of the Ve!f'Y few homes
in this area wilh a 1eparate
family room. 3 Bedrooms, 2
baths, 2 fireplacea, apacioua
yard. $52,500.
Call for Appt.
(7141 642-8235
881 Dover Dr., Npt. Bch.
Professor's Home
No Down -G.I.
EXTRA LARGE Im · 3
nice size bedrooms. 2 full
baths, enclosed J>&tio, built-
ins. Eves. 963-35(6
19 OFTICES
Orange County's Largest .
-Farr~W-
293 t:. 17th St. 646-44.!14
4 BEDROOMS
4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, bllilt·ln
kitchen, 2 car gange. IM·
MACUUTE. A BARGAIN!
Only $16,500.
COSTA MESA OFFICE
2629 Harbor Blvd.
545-9491 Open 'til 9 PM
Corona del Mar
South of Highway in 200
block. Steps to beach 3 BR
1~ bath, 14 x 20 living room,
fireplace + family room.
blt·ins, lg. dining area, ser·
vice porch, qua11ty carpets
& drapes, dble garage. Low
down. Vacant.
Rltr. 646-3928 Evet. 494-!mJ
*LACHENMYER
Excitin9 2 Story
Ivan Wells' model home
with view. 2 • Story living
nn, dining area, fam rm, 4
BR 3 ba. Buy no• & move
in be.tore school starts.
Roy J, Ward Co. 64fi..1550
DAVIDSON Realty
$153 PITI
Assume FllA loan. 3 BR +
family, 1% baths near
schools f.M,900.
Rltr. 2'F.!(] Harbor SB, Q\t
546·5400 Evt-s. 545-4941
OCEANFRONT
PENtNSULA PT. But Buy
darling 2 BR. Fptc, fO ft.
lot. $55,000.
BAiboa Real Estate Co.
700 E. Balboa Blvd .. Balt>0•
ORiole 3--4140
U.OUa... ••ACM JJN IAOUNA MIO.VII ttf7
SAM CL8Ml•ft '711
IAIVSITTINO tSH
IOAT MAINTIN.lltCI dll
&UTO Sl!IVICl:S • ""'•1'1 AUTO TOOLS & EOUI ...
TIAll.1.1, TRAVEL
TRAILERS. Ulltlt'I
CAMPl.ltS ••• 1 .. ~~!!!!!~!!!!!~~~ .. :: $22,950 .....,.... "" .......,.._..... "" DAMA POI"' 17.e
COMDOflllllfrUUM atH
f'L.8Xll UNfqt•llL atH
lllClt, MAM>NIV. etc. .,..
I USINlfSS SlllYICIS "61
IUILDl!ll d7t
CATERINO: un
CA•INITMAIUNe 6Jll
CAltPIENTlltlNO "'" ltlNTALS CIMENT. c-'119 UM
CHILO C .. RI, L.ktll.. Ult
CONTllACTOll ",. ~ 1'11 ... 1.htd
MMaUL -C.l.ll PET CLUNINI Ult ·--........ -41tt CAlll'IET \.AVINO a llf'Allt W'M
•n•D11AP••1u ....
Tl UC KS
JllfPS
DUNE IUOOll:S
IMPOITID 11uros S,.OIT CAltS
AMTIQUlfS. Cl.ASllCS
II.I.Cl CAii, ROOS
AUTO I.VENTS
AUTOI WANTID
NIW U.ltS
AUTO LIASINe vs•o CAils
HAVE YOU LOOKED FOR
THE ·HIDDEN DOLLARS
IN YOUR lo:IOME LATELY?
ttll tSu VA ot FHA lovd;y 3 BR, 2 !:: ba, pool st:ce yard, carpets,
''" frplc, blt-lns, near Oran.at
'17• Coast Collcre & C.M. Hlgh. "" "" MIZELL Rea1ty 54S-2208 .... ,.,, 3 BR, 2 ba, blt-lm, din.Ina
,,.. rm. tplc, hup CO\o'«ed
patio, dbl gar. Walk to
priv/club .\ •w f mmlnr
pool.1.. 1..Clw down pmt FHA.
Forl1n Co. 642.-6000
Corbin-Martin
BUY OR SRL
REAL ESTATE
615-llli'l
SALES ASSOCIATES
85/J.5, split. Manq~eot
op-port\ll:llty, Double JOUt
........ c:.u """""' l!OMll-
Don't let Your Wile PAllORAMK VIEW Real Estate
Salesman ... !hit ---.. ot Bae!< .... ' Saddl.....X. )'(JU &re ready to buy. An 'J1Ua quallt)I 4 BR + formal
appealln1 YOUNG HOME dlnlnc room In Dover Sho.· Care«
in perfect lutt. UnbM.t~ tt ta your answer to Pl"ff-
val"' Or • >'OUR am. ... li'rinr. Hllh pile w/w Opportunity,
ROOM EASl'SIDE ktcaUon, Cllll'tll A cu1tom dn.pe1 all Experifflced tn M11inC VA I:
near St. Joachim's Cb.Jrcb electric kltcbeo 4'. d.11hw~ rnA Homes, plenty of floor
and JM")dllal achool. Hure er, put.like yU'd complete time • t:rainJna' avall•ble,
muter bedroom •Uh prt.. with autorna!;Se IPrtnkllnt ftnaiiclal be.Ip to quallfted.
vate· be.th. completely car-tYSteln, lovely paUo. Lowest ~ ln&. Bonus plan, and
peted home in neutnll Sold priced home Jn d'le area at other co. beneOtt. One ol
cd~. Modem kitdltn with Miy '52.500 • 109' down. Orsn&e County• tara:m Rea1
'dishwasher and dlapoul. H\llT,Yl Estate cra:antutklns. Con-Sptinkl~. overalie dOuble tact Harry Bou's Mgr.
garage and enclosed patio 19 OFFICES
"'1th bird. aviary. ITS A <>ra:np 0Junt)o1 L1r1nt
BEAUTY FOR. ONLY
S28.~ • Hurry! I
I' \I I • \\ 1111 i
~I \I!\ \JI\\
N I ..\ I l ' I "
1003 Baker, C.M.
4 YEAR OLD DUPLEX -· E 7th """l.J( &» .1 St. "' $17..SOO 1,....,...,....,,....,...,...
E\tminga Call • 64&-4579
Ten Room
Mansion
5 Bedrooms .. 6 81th1
It'• too beautiful to leave. b.lt
much too large for two ol 1.11.
2-stol)', Spanish tile roof, OV·
~.~ C.: =:', 'i.': CONDOMlllUI(
bedrooma and a. cmtom
bath and Ja..rwe dining area. 2 BR 1 ~ bath, larae lpllclaul
Two gan,rea, Located in a roonui with ftreplace, disbo
good area near everything. washer, trethly decorated
'Ibe -owner will Wheel and $152 Pm. Rec:rt:atton&l am
Deal on the down peymenL with lure pool. 2400 Elden,
Ltve. in one and rm!. the Unit #13. Drlve by It call
other. Newport
•t
Victoria
646-1111
er 4400sq1t Elegant fonnal <X>STA MF.SA oFFICE (Open
home with 180 degree Oce&n 2629 Hart>or Blvd.
View. Above main Corona I :545-:::"::.':":... ... ~()p<~o~tlll::,;:•~PM;:i~~';;~~~E~v~•~n~ln~g;::•) del Mar beadl, comer lot.Ii
3 ..,. • .,.. •• ""'" """"' REDUCED $2550 VIEW Of BAY patiot ............ si<•.500 AND OCEAN
Will buy a lwrurioul
Ocean View home
in exclusive Cameo Shores
3 Bedrooms It family room
spacious dining room
enclosed swimming pool
with beautiful
night lighting
pricro to move
at $79,CQJ with
excellenl terms
contact:
Jtrn Cobb
Eves: 67J.1864
2% years old, 3 BR + huge 1bit mqni:ticent vie.w -prop-
second story rec. room, el1Y bu just been reduced
!arge rear yard, built·ln is,cm. Built on l level& to
stereo + intercom. t&M I u 11 advantaa:e at
Only $29,950
Newport
at
Victorl•
646.1111
(Call
Anytlmt)
Patio Kitchen
Center Hall
YA-No Down
FHA · UJW DN
wa.tchl.n1 sail boatt, ~ Rt1
and glorious Catalin•. A
mu.st .ee, breathtakin& • JI.
boun • da,y. $45,IXX>
2043 WESTCLJFF DRIVE
646-7'711 Open Evea.
16 UNITS
17°/o Net
Spendable
Low Down
4 BEDROOMS • Dressing PRfME LOCATION • Com-
room in muter sUite, 2 full pleh!ly furnished, private
baths, utilit:Y room, work baths. No vacany factor.
shop in 2 iarage. Only 2 Eves. 547-1875
yean old. 19 0Ff1CES
19 OFFICES
Orange Councy's l.a!'gest
Orange County1 Largest
293 E. 17th St.
293 E. 17th St. ....... ..
Victoria M-
tton.s
ll NEW HOMES
1-dn. 6!1"' 31).yr ....
"""" $24,950 Valley Road at VJct<li9
<Juat E. ot Broakbunt
up en blutf)
Lido liu lots, fee simple
land • Hilh above te• level
Bullt·l.n tiectrie fdtchen.
Convenient to ahopptnc cen-
ter, near ICboolJ. :s and 4
BDEUU -1 & 2 sty. '1re-
places, carpetlna, dnperlu,
fendna:, lanchcl.pln&.
Mlchlel K1y, Builder
Phone 642-2821 Eves 60-5106
4 Bedrooms •
2 Ba. $19,950
No down paymenl to VA buy.
en BDi \ow, low nu tem\I
to otheri, See the latgt cor-
ner Jot With room for boa.t
and trails-. Fut pos.seuion.
546-2311 646-7171
Qptn E-.
THE ~/EAL
E~·r1·\.TER'·
looking for l.uxury
MONTICELLO HOMES bu
it for onJy $108.50 a month
(principle l interest). 2 BR
.I: den « 3 ii: 4 BRa, de-
luxe built-in kitchen, pri-
vabe dub with twin hea.ffd
pools. Part o1. Newport Hll'-
bor .,.._
100 LEXINGTON LANE
546.1210
FANTASTIC BUT TRUE.
Assume existing J01:U1 & pay
mly $144 per mmth I: in-
HanCJ· Tet1
Enjo> ......... -_ .....
tics from )'OW' protediad
lanai in thia camped ·
front cottaae. 2 Bil. lW.
bath.a -patio w/~
R-2 zoning • LOW DOWN.
Good iovettmeat •t kit wllae
at MT .!!00
Burr Whffe, ·1e1Uor
2lOl Nowport Bl>d
Newport Beach
615-taJ Eves: go.ms
Newport Sllons·
-Vacant
Popular "A" lrome ~
h:>me. Extra Wp family
room 1 block tn:rm. pd and d __ ,...,,.,
1ow cost. $22,500, move 1n
tomorrow with 10% down;.
646-7171 546-Ull
OPEN EVES,
Tl-{ E ~J !:: ~-..._.
E.<;;,TATF,P
cludes tax ea -5% % in-BEST Buy in Bluff• Qn..
ttteet. FOUR BEDROOMS,
I unity, 3 BR, 2 BA, 2. car 1% batha, al bi t-in s, gar. 5 min. to bea.cb or
covered patio, tully harbor. 2 min to Villap
carpete d , immaculate! Shopping Center. 2 min to
landscaped sprinklers front c.dM High. Spaciow, erttn
" r-ear. Also will Q)lllidet' FHA • VA terms. C A LL surroundings. PooL $.13,9tl0, Owner 644-1552 540-ll51 (open eve a) 1-~~~~~-~-Herltage ReaJ Estate CHARMING adult Bayfrmt
( iOiiiiiiii;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;iiiiiiii;;;;; I lx>me. 2 BR, 2 ha.th, fr]:tk.
Loc•tion, Loc1tlonl Kltchen ide al for en-
Fa:bulous new custom .{ and t e r t a i n i n g. Boat al.Ip
fam rm + fonnal din, rm. available $31,500 0 w Der
just completed near 17th 67'3-5966 fairway of Mes a Verde I 's"A~CR""'r~F~1CE-=-~M~.,,-,,....s=.~u,.....·I
Country Club. ~ almost trade before July 20. Bay
daily oo Maui Circle just ofJ View Custom Conde.. 3 br, 2
Mesa Venle Dr. It's a b hm 2 ~ a • ,vuu sq, ft. 2 stry, sh~lace! w/pools, golf, etc. Loan ba1
College ReaJty 54&.58&> 129.300. OUer~ 673-1356
BY 0 W NE R : Cambridge
model. College Park. 3 lrg
br, 2 ba, xtra lrg fam rm, 2
used brick frpls, cpts,drps -JUST NEW 3 BR. HOME lnd.,,,lng. A R"'tk Be•uty.
But with your help &: good-NORTH EAST CM $27,900. 54-0-7957 or 8JG...7537
2200 SQ, ft • 4 br, 2% ba,
Frpl, Lg Family Rm. Dbl.
Ga • Pool • walking dist
to achl'a • playground ii:
clty lib. Owner . 642..()936,
LUXURY Condom· Bluffs, 4
BR, 3 BA. Mu~ sell! Owner
transf. $36,500. Call owner
e.ves aft 5, 644-0509.
will IT CAN BE DONE. The Hardwood Doors, large yard BY Owner; 3 BR., fam. rm.,
mental a ttitude malr!tained lot with access to rear for spac. liv. rm. &: yard. Mesa
by an organiiation determin-boat or camper. VACANT. Del Mar. FHA, terms,
es its .success. When you list Immediate possession. $24,500. 549-2352 2 13 : B No B 'Id l 1 withU&IDWI-""''"'" $18,500 ., ....... uy w UI ii er ~:a~~~:.~:~~ Wells-McC•rdl• Rltr1-t BR. 1% ba. crpt, drp,
Here 's yoor opportunity to BE that IT CAN BE OONE. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. ~~stfl~ rel~~
purchase a newly remodel-A d W Need Li ti '·"~·~7729~~~~Ev!!!!!!!"!!'!6#-0684~ ... ed 3 BR home on an R4 Jot. n • 1 ngs 1~ owner.
Room for 3 more income Can use one sal~~n to iI'OW WANTED 4 BDRM •• Den nu carpets,
"5, DEN, 4 BATHS"
Library, 6 yrs new 3
car, bit-ins-$49,950
. HOME 642-4090
Newport HgtL 1210
tmita: in tflc future. Terrific with the org1uuzation. dr t ~ BOD 2968
lnveirtment . s211,cm. T. H. McArdle Broker 1;~ E~~"c~~J=· M~~· St~ ~M. 545.9878 trom this 3 BR, 2 bath borne
COATS on a high lol Fple, patio,
Some View
BAND WAGON? 3 BR. 130 ft wide lot. Open 1-dble gar on alley w/extra A 222 W Wilson, CM 642-6817 Over 25 Years in f . $21,500. 1940 Whittier. &IS-parking. Pride of ownership
~~t~~i~ Harbor View Hills • F1]U c;::ea~~~~in& M~~ING 4 Br. 2 ba lrg yard, ::.~· ;:::i~ wants to tell
-546-4141-Coron1 del Mir •Inter office tdelypa patio. $20,900 316 Ramona GRAHAM REALTY
(Open Ev1ning1) Lusk built homes located • Training Proiram Pl. 5484738 owner. (Near NB Post Office) ~~.;,~""!~~""!~""I tn the South1and'• most de-: ~suran~ b ti FREEDOM HOME for sale ~2414 -Fantastic Value airable Ir l'llscl.n.atinc area. any 0 er ene_ 11 · with 3 year leaw-back at AVAIL Immed, Oiff Haven 3 ........ School• ii: Calif. Irvin• Call 646-4494 -For mtemew .,..,.. ............. ~'l B 2 ba Lar~ C'Ustom Newport Bell\.'U •.u..> .. ov ino-""' r, . & 2 Br Oc@an Vu
home close to ft.ltutre boat campua just m 0 men t 1 ''The World I ·B"'Y"""O"WN=E=R~M~u.,..,..,.~u~.~.~b-,.~,, I Inc Apt. $49,500. ~7"14!
away, Sensibly priced from =======""'==I marina. Over »'.Xl sq. ft, o1 $34 900 to S48 900 at your Feet'' ba. tam rm. bltns. frplc. 1&. =-
large bedroom~. family LU.SK HOM.ES H bo VI H'll CdM tnd lot. $23,950. 545-8582 B•ll•• Coves room, shake roof, slate en· . ir r •w I 1, I===='=====::
MeN Verde 1110
1115
WATERFRONT 3 BR 2 bath
private pleor " noat. $50,500.
try, 2 fireplaces and 21.<2 Directions: ~acArthur Blvd. 4 + + family rm, dining
baths. Just reduced to from P•cific Coast Hwy. or rm, wet bar. Immediate Oc-
tlS 950 ·th low d Newport Fwy, Turn on San cupancy, $5,COl down. ·~Wl .. ;;;a.. JQ&quin HHla Rd., then BOYD REALTY
OWNER, Republic 2400 sq. (TI4) 529-3709 afl.e!' 5 PM
ft. 4 BR. 3 Ba.; din. rm. II I :"='=='='"""'=i::;"'=:f
tam. rm. 27'l2 canary Dr ,,u_n_i_v_or_•_lly,,_P_•.c.rk...;.......;1;;;2o;;37:..i
$44,COO Open Daily 545--0987 '1 -• • NG follow signs to modd area. 3629 E. Coast Hwy, CdM •SPRI - ------.,~,,,.
•::;•REALTY Just List!J DAVIDSON Realty
••• .. •"""'"'ME" Older Home on large lot NORTH Cost• M1 ..
JU, ... ~~ on Balboa Blvd. ;29,950 Large 4 BR, formal dining
6 DELUXE 3 BR $$ room + family room. Nee.r • Squeeze Your C•thollc O.urch. $31950 UNITS LIKE NEW and bey thl> 3 BR 1% bath Rib'. mo"""°' SB, CM
Coll•g• Park 1115
IMMAC 3 br, fam rm, 2 ba,
dbl frpl, elee bit-ins, full
cptl & drpJ, nr achls &
shops. $24,500. 546-048 .tt 5
Vll.J..AGE 2 lux exrtu. ! Bl',
2 ba, atrium,, lC tt ctillngs,
3 lush gardcnl, mirrored
closets, 1lam apac iou a
entertaining' 126,500. Exe. ift.
wst. Nr ua 133-aH
owner. ======• %. Ar:n completely fenced home. Near churches East· 546-5460 Eves .545-5142
with block wall West Bluff side, Costa Mesa ;:n.soo. Ntwport BHch 1200 lnrlne 1231 ~~~~~~--~~~~---'.;;.;;.;:! area. S82S mo 1iicome. George Williamson, Rltr. OCEAN VIEW / Fee simple
642•1771 673-4350 OPEN EVES. 4 BR home, on I y $21 ,750. 3 Br, large famiJv room
Wow I
Hdwd firs. neat la.ndscap--1
Anytimo REDUCED! "" & ,...., 5%% loan ttke ott""" by prl pty. M"'t ~--3 B over· Vm or non·veta a!Jke.1 ,_,="='~"=-"$54~,900'-"'._roc..c,.-.cc,""_
Extn. ... -.. t' R. plus 2 Call now! MOVE In! Nev new 4 BR.,
bath Lido home. Street to O:>llege Realty 5'6-5880 trpl., new cpta;. nr. beach.
Stre-et loc1Hon near Club.I""~~~~!!!~~~!! $21!,000. Open weekends; 351
Available July ht. Furn.i1h-SOCK IT TO 'EM! 62nd St. Owner S7r..ot44
~~"'!"!'~~~!!!!!!!!!!!""I eel or Unfurnished . .;&i,950
"R I N R te '"'"'''""''· ura ot . emo LIDO REAL TY
;19,950 ls all you need pe.y 3400 Via Lido 673-8830 tor thll Jun'lor ~attte. 3 bed· _ _ _ _ __
room&, flreplaee, double car ~+F.J;i;'""
pnif:. Cose to U.C.l. and + 3 Baths -steps to Ocean
bad< bay.' Not leasehold. ChaMel, Pools, TeMis Ct:
Colesworlhy & Co. ~·l'°"MU~~ci:'.":.,.:g
642-nn CAYWOOD REAL TY
tro1 Harlxr Blvd .. C.M. 6306 W. Coast Hwy.
Open Ew~. N. B. 548-1290
~ How 'Bout This $11,1001
SoUd home, .ound vaJuc! 3
bedroom, 2 bath.~ dining
&rM tor ~ter1alning • m•·
t!ttd patio for S\S1UMJ' part-
ies. Mature lhade A fruit
trees. HIP block t~ for
complete prlvaey. UnbNt·
able at the price. 540-11~.
TAlllELL 295S Harbor
$ BR, .ni BA.. s.nte fNnl·
l1 """"· Nly ..........
"NEWPORT BEACH"
4 + 3 Baths, $33,700
Ranch modem • bit-Ina.
Bffu:tilul attll • HUM.~!
"OCEAN VIEW • 125,900"
Huga 2 Bdrm•. 2 ha, 50x121
Fittplace. Below rnarkeU
HOM!; &U-4Cttl
VIEW
drwped • fenced. Nev OCEAN from dln.lnJ room a
rra.mmu, HIP School A lovdf ranlm kitchen. 4
treewt.)'S. A JtEAL VALUE laJil:e btodrooma A 2~ bll.tbt.
at S26.ril». Low ~ 1Xi Int. O.ft1 Rut E1t1te --·
....
.
\
IRVINE
Vtllare 1, 2 BR Sputllh,
EJ"ttn belt location, nr. UCI, "-Inc k ....... tlon. $)!,.
500. By owner. 29'1-4.113 or
4U-2741.
tor qui.ctr., errident reaana
PILOT WANT ADI! &a-5&'11
I
..
MIL f m.OT
HOUS l!S P Oii.SALi! HOUSES FOR SALE I RENTALS RE"TALS RENTALS ' RENTALS REAL ESTATE I SINESS and
FINANCIAL sick lay 1240 Fovritaln Vall"" 1410 .Hou~ Furnl1hod H"ouoo. Un!\ornl1hod' Apto. Unlurn!1hed Apta. Unfurnished Gener•I
Q( BAY tn CountJ tot.. 5 BR, 2\.i: BA. Sf!par< ft.mi·
.dol'. BY OWNER $22,:iOO. 3 1y room. F)ill1 carpoted,
I TBR·· born. 'W\th detached draped • fenoed. Near
Summer Rent1l1 2910 Corona dll Mar 3250 GOner•I 5000 W-ln1tw S.12 Loll 6100 e..,. ~-6300 _ .... ..;; __ .. -"lt---MOI-"'
cuaa:e. Larp lf!P&rale yard KTammar. HJcb Scbool l
~a. ideal. tor bo&t or ftftwayt, A REAL VALUE
. ft'tller storage. 5"'"' \oan &t $38,500. • Naw 61',. int.
.: i.an be u.surne<l.. C 1 1 I gu..2342
~ ~-2-2146 after 6 pm. ''LOVEL==v"""'s""'&'"'~"'•"i.,.,--wilh"·:;:-.. c:-.
;a. RY S br, 2 ta.th condo, tr-. P1ti0, iarwe l ot,
~, i'pl, pool. aoU. lee lt."4. $215,500. ~ ~.c: er tranal~. $32,5001-========= t": Y Owne:r. ~ Wntmln1ter 1612
COTI'A.CE, ericloacd y1.td,
'""'"', l"" blki to beach, oceo.n v\ewi alttpe -4. $100
wk. 494-5813 or t!».3903.
NE.WPORT Bl:AQ{ 1 BR,
aleep& 4, 1 bl.k to OcetLn
& s.y, S60 ptt wk July.
6'2-IZl2
BLUE LAGOON, beach level,
pool 1lde, 2 BR, 2 BA, newly
fun\.. Avail July 1>30 & Aue
18-Sept 3. 499-3831
AVAIL.July 10th. 2 Br. frplc.
drps, •PPI Gar. $166. * &t&-0111 *
Huntington laach 3400
FREE RmrAL BOOK
Drop In Md Btow:ie
WE HAVE SOME
RENT
3 Room~ Furniture
$25 Molltll
nJU.. OPTION TO BUY
Ne. depoait o.a.c.
H.F.R.C.
Furniture Rent•I•
517 W. 19th, C.M. 5'48.J481
™8 W.1'>clll, Anbol T14·2800
RENTALS
Apts. Unfurnished
-· -LAJ!GE 2 bdrm, epta, drpa, NtlU VIEW LOTS
bl1-lns. Lauodr)' • aar. Sill '"-"""
10090 McFaddm 847-2413 *J x 135 level , ..... Ut,$00
LatuN Beach 5705 IK> x ~ ltve.I •••••• $11,tm
""'"'--------liO x 101 ............ fl0,000
• \VAU< to ):>tech & town * Underground util • terms
2 BR 2"'BA Vt'l')' 1.ar&e apt R Nattrfl1 Rhr. &fl.I.SS
wllh viow from private deck,
bullt-ln1, ca.rpetl.'d & d1'p. 60x80 Oceanfront Lot
ed. 11.t'i'e rt:l'.tig, 1ll newly (Balboa Penlnirula)
decorated.. No children or 1748 E. Ocellnf'rcnt Street
pets. no one under«>, please S.ll 9r tr•d•
UNIQUE FllANCHISI IHTEREBT
For nwo • womcD, wtib i:nlt EXTRA<>ltDINAIRB
abWty. No .,.,, "' b'alo. ,.,.. Dlxrfmloalllls -,
Olfa..t by laternatkmal or -I -• ftofpo •
Yanf&p Fllt. 115,000 to -Oriplol • ....... 125,000 laV1t ..... .-0 THE GllOUP
atora tn tu:>c with thla tam-tTl•) nMNl W.S) OL 1.-
0l.m O:>. Jim Owena, 5f6..4&n Franchi .. AvUlible
*DRUMMER*,
I :!f!••IY • BR. 211 BA. Loan LUXURY l IR bal $21.~. ~eke Oller.
Owner • 548-8810 Fam.Uy roani '+ buge ~Y l OR 2 br apta. Furn. ~ blk
hay or bch Sl25 & $ l50
week. * S13-7542
. 7682 EDINGER Cot ta M .. a 5100
842.4456 or 54()..5140 ~~ii!!iiii!!iiii!iiii!!iiiiiiiiiiiiii
Quiet building. S1G5 me with l~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"':;:'~.()JSO;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ cable ii: garage .Mgr 494-26MI~
Atrr'OMATm 8ualn e1 1
Make llvina Wtr work per
day, smaU lnvm . 615-SC2
MUST Sell, cute beach sift
lhop. See! Make oaer!
!;48-1914 AM or aft 5:~
Mdlt be OYel' 21 A be ablt m
bandl.I Stand&rd1, Blutt,
B ..... , tbtit>-Tri A""°"·
A«ompany ptano playrer.
call 67>J606 ... ,.,.. 3,Jll .... : 1 . room covei1ng entiri 2nd
" toron• del Mir 1150 Door tts , wper sharp &
r
only 127,\lliO. Nothing down
''The World 10 """""'· L ow FHA
2 BR F'uro .. on SEAfilJORE
Dr, NB. $1Th wk. 615-1700
(633-4863 Alter 5 PMl
4 BR, 2'11 ba , 2 .stry, 1 yr l!!IHARBOR new, l blk schl, 5 min ""1k
heh. L.se $2!K> mo to
LOV!1Y .2 br tba.viow apt Citrus Grovft 6175 BuL Wo-~'
with garage. No 1l~. 1M1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I m-Sl~ It)(). 4.%-78Sl-, I• Prepaid Interest
Rent1J1 W•ntlld 5990 Now'a the time to check the
------------tu 1Uuation and allow for
YOUNG Llldy witb multiple telecting A &ood property
sclerosis and well behaved such as thi1 youn11: S acre
German S tie p h e r d COOi· navel grove, ~ \1 bandied
pank>n needs an unfumlshed by locn1 l'Hident. J\ill prk.-e
one bedroom house or apart-only $34,500. SubmU down in
ment witb fenced or encl-princlp.'\I or inte.rcst llnd aell-
630S RENOWNED HINDU
SPIRITUAWrl'
Splrltual reMttnp s 1 v t n
d&Uy. 9 AM-10 PM Sat-Sun
included. 1311 N. !l Camino
Real, San C ement. 49'J..7'52
"-~ ot Your het" Ti:lsTEll RE~L TY
• 1rbof View HUit, CdM 16612 Bndl Bl, HB '842.&1
BAt.BOA lllsnd; attr. 1 BR .
apt lslp1.,. Ii); avu.11. July, At11 .• 1S@Jt· n~: 499-2316
-"'l'I"!"" ""'· 96S-l73• GREE NS l QR. 2 Ba New carpets,
Conv1le1cent Home
Wanted. Will leate or
huy, PT'e!er leak with
cptlon. E!!lab. or under
conaructlon ok. Dr's are
lntere1ted. Write Bo• M
154. Daily Pilot.
i • + + 1...n. ""· dining • ~" .rm, wet bar. Immediate Oc-S.nta AM Hgta. 1630
.-. ey, $5,!Xll down.
., 80YO REAL TY HANDYMAN SPF.CIAL!
'L" 3629 E. C.oaat: Hwy, CdM
~
Thil <:Mt bou:st bu &eell •bet·
ttt days. Imposing Wtcry.
few bl/from Beach. Sprawl-
-aIDeo Highlands, spaetou 4 ~ s BR. I: den, 2 ht., 22'
'!' 'br, 2 ba. Ort C1Ul)"tln, $36,'j(l(I, Uv/rm, Blt-in R le 0 ,
OWNER 87'"""23
R<trig, --· -~ ~ ~ $25,$0, Mission Rlty 985 S.
•• t· Balboa P9nlnsula 1300 ait Hwy. ~n.
i BAYFRONt OUPLEX laguni· ... a.·" . 1705 f tr~ . Pier &: Slip, beautjtuJ. nr · ' · -~ ~·custam..bU 4 ·1c .l bdrms
" -stcne fplcs, private sandy. ~ ~1 beach • d~ lot, $200,<m
~ R. C. GREER, ""1~ t .t ..... 6 Via Lido 673,,9.lll
!;'.~ ~ldo lilt 13S1
:" 'EXCEtlENT VALUE lf!:..llf!f" f·<! ~ Bd, 2 \w., family rm, beeu-•494·1177 ; • :".Wul priw.te welled-in fron t ~ ~-· ''patio w/BBQ. 45' Jot ~w1cy ~BAY • Attractive !· exposure_ $63,500. 3 bedrm bmne overlooking
,...,. • R. C .. ~I Real~ the perk A tennis courts,
::" 6 "v ta udo · ib.m> ECluded patio, ~
:, . OP.EN SAT A SUN playroom w/FP -· $49.500. il;: !. 2 BR. dee~ · ~.:._ US Via QuitO . 675-4.234 r.~ONARCH ~y ·.A charm·
G ~.. · _ mg &: spe.aous new home
. Huntington Be•ch 1400 with large inner patio, heat-
ed pool, tile l"fltry, formal ,., VACANT dinlltg rm. "'"'"""' family ~·~· rm, ·4 bednns, 3 baths •
~ -.,.: ' $62,500.
,.;.-,,, fALS
Houwt Unfurnished
Genor1l 3000
N~ Vie\v. $185'mo. * &73-n1s *
1 $J\. tpt:.; c~ .• drps.; elec.
bltns, frpl, patio, s.m. yd.,
gar. $135 Mo. 847~
• $159; 2 BR. toWnhollSe, carp. C&CEGE PARK & drapes, bl!M, frpl. Oose
3 Bedroom Home • 115il. ba,!hs. , -="=""'="'=·=96U262==="'='"'=· = Bel.utiful yard · DO pets. $200 J • ---
monlb on lease. L•gun• Buch 3705
67J.6568 Eveni35s &: Wk-Pnds
Coate Meu 3100
4 BR, 11.4 BA. Fireplace.
Fenced. Nr schools. Obie
gar. Redecorated inside $175
mo. See aft JHly 1th.
968-2467, 6--8 PM
3 BR, 2 RA, Bit-ins. Double ~· Eelw;ed back yard.
Oose t~ achools. No pets.
Avail Aug 1st $175 mo .
61&-702!
DUPLEX 3 bdrm, 1 % ba, E.
. side. cpt5, ltrpg pat i o,
bltins, 240 Cecil pt $165 Ml
2-2222
$100 2 Br. encl. yd. gar nr.
everything. No PETS! 165
E. 2l5t SL 1-758--0328
1 BR. newly paiMOO patio, yd
care, S90 lie, adults, no pets,
543-1(9!
3 BR, 2 BA. Carpets. dnlpes.
Patio. Garage, $170 mo
548-3536 919 Joann St. C.M.
MONARCH BAY ARE A
'LOVELY OC;EAN VlEW. 3
BR & den, 2 BA, cpts, Drps,
trpl, pool. J300 mo.
adults ..00.:1213, betw tG-5 pm
con·domfniUm 3950
SACK BAY 4 Br. faro. rm.
patio + balcony. Except.
rec. Iacll. Tttnagen Dk .
$260. 64Z.-7603 642-0017
.. ~NTALS .,
Apb. Fumi1Md
Cott• MeH 4100
-$25· Wk. Up
• Studio I: Bach apts. e Incl Utill &: Phone Rl'T.
• MIJd Service . TV avail.
• Ne-. Cafe A: ·Bar
2376 Newport Blvd. 548-9755
Tl• CO'ITAGE T r a lle r .
Utilities furnished $65 mo
642-5359 after 4 PM
BACHELOR • UNF"URN.
from $100
lncL util.
1 -2 I: SBDRM.
FURN. A UNFURN.
Heated Pools, Oilld Care
Center, Adj. to Shopp Ina -
~No -pet.I allowed
2700 Peteraon Way, at Har-
bor 6 Ad11.ms, Costa liofesa.
""""""
Excellent, park -like sur-
roundings for •d\IU.s teQulr·
ing peace & quiel
Discriminative Tenants
1, 2 & 3 BDRM. APl'S.
POOL. NO CHILDREN
MARTINl9UE
GARDEN APTS.
18th &: Santa Ana, C.?t1. ,
Call Mrs. lfenderson 646-.'1542
ln7 Santa Ana, Apt 113. C.r>I.
STEVENS V1LLA
NF.W • LUXURIOUS
1 ii: ~ BDRM. APTS.
From S130 Month
Carpets, drapes, all built·
ins. Adull5 only. No pets.
384 Avocado, 0.1 642.2864
LARGE 3 BR. APTS,
Near ICbools, freeways,
welklng dislance to OCC
988 EL CAMINO
Apt. #I Cotta Mesa
09!.'d yard, Qtd lluntington tr will carTY back be.lars:e RMI Est•t• Lo•ne 6340 lkach location preferred. at 6~'f.t. l"or mol'e lnfonna-
Reuooable terll ,plea.w, am tioo please call K. W. Small BORROW en Yciur Equ:lty
on lbcf'd income. Phone Eckhoff & Au oc., Inc. Ptiv1te 2nd Mortg. money
5.16-4937 il no ans. Ph ~'lf.!5 l81B W. Chapman Ave. Free appnlsal. No obli&".
Business wofnan tiecds 1 Dt Orange, CaUf. ALSO
unfum Apt, CM, Newport, 541·2621 , Ews-"6cnds 53&-5971 90% 1st' TO' loan!! lo S71,500
Corona del Mar, llunt &h l!!~~~~~~~~~1 Servin1 Orange Cnty 18 yr1.
or La,gwi1, To S~OO [!10, Gar Acrff,.,. 6200 SatlSt r Mortgage Co., Inc.
or carper! necessary, •-l16 E litb St., Cmta Mesa
6''"'1<Ml6 .otl" 5 p.m. 2 1 /3 ACREr 642-2171 545-0611
1 BR Bach , Studio witb • U TOP $$$$$$
gar~ge, for 25 yr old 'JWO l:lfld 1, 3 acres vacant For lst Tnist Df'eds
eng1nrf'r. Beach area. Sept land 00 bully tllOroughlare 644-1043 an)'11mt 644-1043
er Oct 1. Box P157, Daily in Santa Ana. Bolsa Ave. Mo
Pilot is only major unde~ped rfglfU, T.D.'1 6345
5995 boulevanl in this area. Ap-COULD You Ulle 1% illtere11 Roomt for Rent 1 t 3 s ---------I pral~ lit $60,WJ" Pr Cf, or lo yeen secured by
BEAUTIFUL Rm genllf'man.
Hornt'y atmos., f)ftt:io, Bar·b-
cue. 510 Santa Ana Ave. NB
ISO 6'1Hl361
$54,00 nrt to estate. Water 1st TD on improved R.E.?
and i\ll utilities available. 64G-9041
la! ft . frontage. Fer lurther ========='
information phone 542-!tl33 Money W•ntH
C.OUrtesy to brokers.
Misc. Rentals 5999 10 LEVEL Ae. COLORADO
---------·I RIVER. nr BIG RIVER
GARAGE, Single car. Vic devel, Riverside Oiunty.
Tustin &: 171h Storage cnly. $7,990, StOO dn, SllO mo.
Also room for cider ledy. 675-S017, L.A. 213 467-2JlJ° 642-2890
11w.
fl Y TO CATALINA
DAILY n.IGHTS J'ROM
ORANGE COUNTY" AD\.
PORT, Catalina • Vep1
Airlines. • $46.4612 I
* *" FUIJ.. rnernj)er..,
Newport ~ach Temia CIQb.
BeM otter. MUm * *
ALCOHOLICS ADoQ)'m(liUl
Htr bol' Alft, PhoDt riHht
P.O. Box 1223 Colt& M~
Announce"""" 6410
C_.t H901th Cl1b
Hospitality la Our iUltP
FREE SAUNA WITH
swmISH MASSA~'.
Open wkd.>'• 10 .. ~ ~
Sunday1 10 11n4·~
l !'l E. 18th St. ;:a:::
Funw•le.. :·~12
WESTMINsili
MEMORIAL fA•K Moc:.:.'!.: f!...~ lrom'24J~ c-.ry ,_,.,,,
from $130,•·•J. Ind-Entlowm-'.din
Everyddna: in .. blailft,,J
place meana lea eait. .. i
No traffic ;problem&.'"'' 1 ' ' . .-,'I flOOJ down TURNER ASSOCIATES : l 4 large BRa 2 baths 682 No. Coast Blvd. 1 Newport BHch 4200 1028 EL CAMINO DR,
3200 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;
V Yearly Leases
Interest an U1,t'.m 1st TD; 2
yr. tenn. Secured by •
Rcrft land worth $40.WJ.
Mr. Adams, Bier. 494-6650
$37,500 NEEDED Secured by
lsl rn. deluxe Duplex, ap-
proved ~asebold. Please
call Ari Giovinetli, 613-7420,
673-91R7 iam. Beach. w~
531-1725 ..:au. !: ;·. / ~ =~ Laguna Bead! <n4) 494-1177 Newport Be•ch
: · ·~ .., Walk to Catholic RAMSHACKLE ~ ~~.. School &: O!Utth RANCH HOUSE
~'~:·~-/ 5 min. to Beech It Early .Calif r anch style, on
• • '• Freeway estate size lot, extericr wood
~ BRASHEAR "REALTY plank, hvy shake roclline1,
1'. -8'7-8531 Eves. 536-7000 lge picture windows , 3 BR,
!~··.: $995 MOVE-IN den, 2 be, mod/kit. Misskc
.. Rlty 494--0Tll.
• · . No closing costa. 3 BR 2 ht.th, LOS PADRES t · •, -60 x 100 fenced lot land.scap.
, .... , ed, carpets, drapes, elect. REAL TY
1--ooilt-in R&O, dining ""'" 494-8833 ; ... ~ Private bath oft ml'l.ster BR 895 G\e!meyre Street
' ;:;-. dOuble garaie. S159 per Laguna Beach
{Pst
LEASE'/ RENT
Newport Bee.ch • starting
• at $225 per Mo.
2 • 3 • 4 Bdrms available
Upper Newport Bay area
man)' with gre11t Views
2414 Vitt• del Oro
l 1: j· mooth including taxes. !=====.===== !".,, l'll!rnljQJIP Laguna .Niguel, 1707
!», °"' Brookhunt & Getficld * Mo11ari:h lay * OPE~:o~..111 ~'9~ P.M. , ·;• .. .9624471 ~546-8100 S. Ccast's ·tinest vcclus.ive ~··""' beach commwiity bldrs oU-,l~~~Ph~.64~4~·~1~13~3~~~ ~ B'k' II er 8 new 3 & 4 bdrm homes ~ Hang Your I in with magnificent Oa?an and i~ just fl few blocks .from the Island Views. AVAIL Aug 1st, oor Unit fac-
beach in this little g BR is2: 000 . ~ni: 000 ing J?OO'· Ca.il)e\s, drl'lpes,
..__ ·tti f · to • ......,, bit-ins, 2 car carport, 3 BR, ut:auty W1 re ngera r, 400.22i0 400-3048 2lf.t baths, $250 mo on lease. : stove, dinette, carpets &:1---------AVAILABLE NOW '1':~ · . ourta.ins incll.lded in ~Duplexes For Sale 1975 " -· YOUR '-~--------2 BR, 2 Ba, carpets, drps, ·' • • · $ll,500 price. ••; • · gll-inll, S'200 mo on lease. ~ -· down payment. CHARMING Duplex & guest 673-3663 Eves: :,.i&-6966
Ii Pacific Shores Realty cottage; 2 blks beach. 301 Bay & Beach Realty, Inc. ~'tl':"i•· 53&8!l94 Eves. 546-1322 Iris, <;orona del Mar. Shown n .. •L-~ 81., NB
1 Bdrm Unfum •••.•..• i 135
1 Bdrm Unfum • .. • • • • • 150
2 BR Unfum • • .. • • .. • • 200
2 BR Fum . Bayv;cw .. 300
3 BR Unfun:i, Lido
Bay front . . . .. . . . .. . 250
3 BR Furn ......... ... 325
LEASE/OPTION
3 BR, Npt Shores . , .. , ... 250
Burr White; Realtor
2901 Newport Blvd.
NC'WJ)Ort Beach
67S-4630
~Will LWF
ADULTS ONLY
July • Aug. -Sept.
FURNISHED APT.
2 BEDROOMS -2 BATHS
Waterfront/Loe
BOAT SLIPS
Cha1111el Reef
2525 Oce1n Blvd., CdM
• 673-1788
Deluxe 3 BR. f150, Respon&-"
Ible adult..
540-0154 Ml 6"692'l 541h'l481
AVAIL. July 10th: 2 BR ..
ANNOUNCEMENTS
and NOTICES 5ERVICI DlltlC101Y
new cp~.. drapes, bltns. NEW INDUSTRIAL •
Adults, no peb. n25. 548-SM. temale B1k &: Tan Garq:e ata1la tar •t. Found (frot Ado) 6400 Auto Repairs
6769 Choice Santa Ana location. Mount & D ... rt 6210 German Shepherd. VI e, Hoisl.t, air. com~ 6
CLEAN 2 bdr bll·inis. Ne w Leased 2 tenant buildings.I---·-------Brook.burst Ir Ellil. F. v. l=='=cc="'°"=="=·=gu;cio==· i;:'=I
carpets. Adults $135 mo. Will relum a S(l('ndable o( A TIENTION 968-3674
Laundry ()46.7285 9.7% on equity after serv-ELOPERS & =ST=._,"'"1,.---arn-..,.~foo-nd~in-C~o-rooa-· I _Ba_by,_ol_tt_ln..:l::... __ _.~"''-50"' · · Icing 7~% loan. Full price DEV .
NE\V decor 1 &. 2 br near $$,OOl. F 0 r information INVESTORS d~ Mat. Pleue c t 11 I Would like to care fer 1
OC'C fL!S &: $145 Call lor please call K. W. Small with * II> LEVEL ACRES* 673-5816 ask for Nancy. tmall cbild ar belly my
appt: 546--5079 Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. Ideally located in biglHlry FOUND Whitt male kitten nr home, dl.)'1 or ~ tor
KIDS, PETS WELCONE! 1.818 w. Chapman Ave. desert (no smog problems. Newport High Sc hool worJdnc Mom. M2-70G
2 BR. walk lo shops $120 mo. Orange, Calif. wondt"rful dry-air!) Lt v t I 646-4201 BABYSITTING Yoir home.
O\lo'ller/Agt 675-4392 541-2621, Eves-wknds SJS.59TI land, pump & well on prop-KfITEN, Abyssinian. Vicini-Mon • Fri. Prefer OJ q e
1 '"~~~""~""'"""""I erty. Just 18 miles East of 1 Al v· w l G'-$150;'·2 BR., spotlss; crpt., ! ( " 1 Y ta 1sta ay ... o-dli1dn!. Xlnt t.cqroand.
bl N rook· STORE or office space. Barslow wnere grea ex· ncyre. 494-670'1 56-3632 ~pe!;. lns. O ti mg, pansion has alre11dy ~n!)
no pelll;rBaby 9')iill19 J~f~~I~ f~~ 00 man -made Lakes in BLONDE Cocker n a m ' d BABYSITI'ING
--"Tatfey'' in °a•-rest artl. =========ol area! Idea! for r t 1 o r t u..r--My Meu Verde home. Days
h 200 II I• July 4. 646-6518 ,...... -Newport Beac 5 Busi ness Rental 6060 de v t Io Pm en t, • a .a I.,,===-,--=.,.-,----·~• ----.---·-----growing, fish rai1ln1. etc. FOUND male miniature poo-1----------1 ~. Yearly Leases STOR.E Building. Parking. 66 ... opportuni ties bo\lndless. die. Owner must identify. BABYSITI"ER exper.18 ynr
U fu •135 ll frontage. ~ Newport This is a rare off&rlng, af· 897-1298 old .• cwn tran1p. U. hour . 1 Bdrm n rn •... •'• • • 'f Bl d "'° ~34 Referancti1. ·~ .
1 Bdrrn Furn .......... 150 -~·'-·-~-~-"-----! fording the in vestor a great f t • p· I . co Lost 6401 BABYSIT A.try 1i&e, m,y IJIDe 2 BR Un fum .......... 200 Office Rental 6070 u ure. ersona cir m· .,._ .... L.-·-
300 ----------1 stances force this Allle; olh-'"" ..,.A ........-2 BR Furn, Bayview . • LOST Blk & wht perty ®lor e 546-2838 e
3 BR Uof"m, Lido LAGUNA BEACH er, 1rnaller parcels avail-" k toy poodle. Vk' Mayfair Bayfront ........... 250 ON FORES'J.' AVENUE able below mar et value. Mkt. 17th St, CM. 113
3 BR Fum ............ 325 Des~ spaces available In Qill owner: 147-6640 Evell Needs lhotl. 5 49·116 0, Irick, MHonry. ek . 65'0 LEASE/OPTION newest df!ce building at weekends. G42-ll5l. ~B'!!EA~U'!!T~IFU~L!!!!;,,,,w~ .. ",",.,",.","t I 3 BR, Npt Shores , . . .. • 250 prime location In downtown BBUUsSiitNiiEESS"s>;1;;nud0---1 ~~~------
Apt, 2 Br. patio, boat dock, Burr Whit8, RealfOr ~"_a c'!:~~.Ai~~~j ,_F_l_N_A_N_C_l_A_L ____ B~~ ~tel" ::okl t~
' b I -• ~--~a 2025 W, O<U"""" vu .• ~,QI"; Y llpp UUly, vwuc •~ ;
, --. . 383-6991) AVAll... Aug. lilt; 3 BR .. 21,1:
:;~.~ Oo You Need Room? RENTALS Ba. Crpts. & drpe., bltns, ' · w ... ..._ ...___ foc .,..,,, 4 Pool. S250 Mc., I eas e ~i!:... e uave u..: ,.......,"' .~--· HouMS Fumish.cf 642-1896 t Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Doubl.e 1------~-----=----~-t .,. Fireplace. 2,fHJ square feet. Rentals to Shere 2005 3 soru.1. newly dee, Ne\.\.'J)Or1 t 75 x 170 ft . lot.·Deep pile!----------Hts, 715 St James Rd. MI
wkly -rummer rental oc. paneled partitioning. Two Bus. Opportuftities 6300 AlbertBan'1 Jllkt, 19th 6:
winier lease. 3403 Finley 2001 Newport Blvd. entrances: Frontage en Harli. Rew. 642-7890
675-4039 Ne.,.,•port Beach Forest Ave., rear leads to Distributor L OST S EAL PO I NT
YEARLY; 1-BR., furn.; 1 675-4630 Muncipal parking lots. SS0 SIA.llfiSE, female. V i c
--Sertlot 6562
PROFESSION.AL mecb Draf-
~-out. minded 21-30 to shllN' 2 ~ I " carpets and drapes through· RESPONSIBLE Bach, broad-2-2222
'· • '• apt w/same Box Pl59, Dia.. Newport Shor•• 3220
bk>Ck to beach. NEW 90undproof 2 BR, 2 BA per month for space. Desk Ability • Harber &: Hamiltcn, C.M.
'
-·~3 Att•• 5 ~, 1 and chairs avr.ilable for $5. .,..,.,., ·~i=• ting · --avail, Hrly rate buis.
u" : Iy Pilot ,.,......"" ... ,-,. across fm Wale ill Plaza, Busll"ll.'6S hours answering opportunity ..-.. _.. owt
I66S Irvine ~$200, &t2-service available for $10. LOST: Blk female Cock·l·PDO Coron• del M•r 4250
54~9504 .
I~===--~-~-NE\VPORT SHORES ! BAOIELOR Apt, male $70 2 BR&: Den on years lease ~:t mo, 585 Gleneyre, Apt 2, Sl90 mo. 642_3430 FURN Lge ·Bachelor Unit
.. , 1682 EDINGER Laguna Bc.h, aft 5 SIDl, Tues ==-=-======= IDS mo. incl utils. I Age
0239. All utilili" P•id "'''" * DISTRIBUTORS * P"Pf>Y. Fl" "°""'· Vi< BUILT IM -yearly $130. 1Ai telephone. Irvine il Santa Isabel.
blk to ocean &: bay, has DA ILY PILOT 548-3955
Public Stanosraphtr
XEROX 6: MJM!X>'
230 E 17th st., CM
Cl11 Vicki. e tG.14815 • ...... ~.-8424tii o Prn EVES. B•ck Bey 3240 over 40) Delancy Ri iy.
l ·:< $22,950 Coot1 Mtta 2100 ---'-----'73-l770,
patio. '7>-1453 22'l FOREST AVENUE $25 000 TO LADIES Gold Omega watch
LAGUNA BEACH ' w/""" band. So. Coa&I
E11t Bluff 5242 F LEASE 3 Bdrms, F'amily SHARE Apt lg · ~-.: VA no down • FHA min 1 BDRM, encl. patio, stove .. e. pnv. room. ~:,:-~ c:kr.m. 3 ~R 2 baths, aa.rge & retrig,. yard. fllS. Oill Rm, Ref. S200 mo. 2'l53 bath, entry, refrig. South ot PRESTIGE Town Homes ~~ :.~ living room, Palos/ Verde 673-0183. ~d2~~18~rcle Cal! owner. ~l=ii=w=''=·='='3-6=""===== I For lea~. 2 br & den & 3 br. ~.•.:-· stone fireplace, w w carpet-3 BR furnished house avail with 2 ar 2% batnft. Gold ~ .:~.. ing, drapes, built . In. range immediately $175 mo. Agt. Coron1 del Mer 3250 Huntington Beach «OO Medalion all el<'C. Your own f~,' & ove n, landscaplJll &:: S46-U41 -------FURN. Duplex, 1 bdTm. and key to pool. 2-car gar. Rent i·~ "" fericed. Mov~ in today. BEAlfI'. Oceanvit"w 3 BR, 2 garage 1 blk from beach starts at S250 me. 845 Ami· ~ .. .:. · If L•gun1 Be•ch 2705 ha., 2 !:"'pie, mai nt/pool, $1 40 mo, 53&-7146 •go Way, Npt. Bch. ~r.y_:·~ refrig, wa.sher/drycr. Ava.ii
~-eor Brookhunt 1r Garfield NICELY tum 2 Br I: den, Aug. 1st. S290 least'. 673.G635 Lagun• Beach 4705 Corona del Mar ~~ :-.~ 962-44n 54&-8103 newly l'edec. Yearly lease. MAKE A i\tEMO io &atber -"--------!~~· NO DN TO vm "'5ponslbl< party. 152 High up ..,,. you •• , ...... """· NEW '"mish<d 2 BR 2 BA, ~ Dr• Lag B. &h3222 sell them for cash wi th all electric built-ins. Pano-
~ .,_, .. Sharp 4 BR Dutch Haven, For Deily Pilot Want Ada. Classltiea Ads. Dial 642-S6'18 ramie view cverlooking Ali-~';: carpeU:, drepes, ~tlo, di-'Dial 642-56'1~ today! ao eei.cb. $185. 49).37SS
~ ·-. ccndn 1 a w n, cul-de-sac
3000Gener•I 3000 Gener•I 3000 ~-:.-·~ atreret. Priced right at onb' Gener1I
;•: • $23.500. -----------------...,..,--~--------
;~-P•ul Jones RHlty
lltt.•i:.' 847·1266 EVl!I. 842-SSU
~,... ~: :. $99.50 l TOTAL COST
~ to qualified vetenna. 4 largt
0 BRa electric kltcben m_~
~ extra.II or 10'w FHA tenn1. ! l~ISI'ER RElo\.LTY' 842-66.13
Room for Trailw
or yoor boet. l.cv'tl)' oome:r'
C 3 BR 2 hllh + den.
! HAFFDAL REAL TY
g "Home to M.aieb lncome"
8740 Warner 842-44Ui
CASH TAUCS ,
] bdr. 2 be., $14,950. $UT. mo .,,.,., a.:iwn. 962...wi
3 BDRM, bnted JXJOI. ~
int d.14'\ 1£8 lft!llmar il hf
IChl. Ownn 536-fm.
3 BR. ' .. )900 ... tt .........
park. $32.000. By owntr
~
Solve a Simple Scrambl ed Word Puzzl• for a Chuckle
0 hol'l"OnOll i.nera ol th. .• fOl.lr ·acraMbl.d "WOrda be· Jow to IOrm four·iltnple words.
ITEXTfN I' 'I -. l i· I . .
lltUP,.OM . I .J~ll'I
'"'IFUM11 l · j · I' , I I A hu1bcnd'• 1o,,,.,,,. "My ' ,.1 wllit has a closed m;nd, I wish , I I could soy thot for her -.•
HYNWIN l \ I~· 1 I I. ·I' !~:t£~~~1E!
Ill YOUR Al) Ill a.ASS!-• 'ii!u~slfllfltS·JN I' r r r r I
FIEDf Someone 1'fll b9 ~ =-:: :m.r:: .._, • ~~N~~~ l£11(tS I I I I I I •
•
i THE QUllSl'!R 'ltiiJ CALL, ~ .T.. '
THE QUlomt You-a:u., _s_c_RAM-__ Lm __ •_-_w_a_1N_c_LA_s_S1_F1_c_A_n_o_N_8_600_
' --------
5250
~-~~'::!
ON TEN ACRES
1 A: 2 BR, Fum &: Unfurn
from Sl50 mo. Frplca I PrV
Patios I Pools. Tennis . C.On-
tnt'I Bldst. 9 hcle Putt/
Green.
900 Sea Lane. CdM 644-2611
!MacArthur nr. COllst Hwy)
n7S". 2 BR Corona H.lgh-
lands. Patio, lndry. Adull.!!I.
673-4132 Eveg...weekends.
2 BR, 1 beth collage S190 mo.
on lcMe. Delancy Realty
673-3770
Lido Iola 5351
SPAOOUS 2 bd r, den, 1%
be, crpta, drapff, adultJ no
..... 1265. 673-7502.
Hunting!"" laOch 5400
NTCE • Quiet 2 Br. duplex
Patto, ~· Adults. $130. * S4U337
UNn.rnNISlfF.l> l bdrm.
apt. UJ)ltaU-.. Include• stove
It rt!rlg. 536-85.23
BUSIEST marlre1flMlt In
town. The OAJLY PILOT
Claalf!ed MetlM. SA•e
mime,, time I ettort. Look
DIJl'llf
4~·9466 ____ 1 $SO,OOO Plaza, WestcliH arH; Fri-1,B;.u'-l"ld'-t'-'rs-'-____ 65.._7.;.0
Newport Beach day.Amplereward.646-4766 R EMOD E L. r•Palr•
4.'\2-56.5 sq. ft. each c!liCf'. PER YEAR SM Brwn dog 2 mo old. La.st plumb'r., Jl91ntlnso .iee.,
·Thriving business area, with seen 7/4 Jollowing 2 ajrls. carpentry, resid., conunerc.
pruidng. Utilities pa.Id. Vic Little Bia" 0. Reward! room add. Reu . f15.303I
Division of Highways If .YOO warit to get into your 642-1355 REPAIRS * ALTDtA"TiOiis
Mr. Gottwald own business, have direct I ·LG=.--=e"lk-. -c1og="1w"w"'1'"",-.str<=ak'° CABINETS. Any llz.eJoh.
(213) 620-3514 8-11 am. seUing experience and have on chest. lA No, 3331. 3124 23 yn ~r. 5&8113
wk. days. ability to hire. train and Lincoln Way. CM M6-4015 Ca-n-~nt . .,_ --A~;,-.c~.-n-d~;,c;-0-no-d~-1 keep men enthusiastic, we ·r-...,., ~"'
want to talk to you, p I ""5 Offices & Desk Spece •rson1 • """' e carpmtry e C.bJnetl e
with cent.ral. secreta·n11, 2cr· OJ.r Rppmved p r 0 J( r a m DYNAMIC FRIENDS fl 9It-ina e Alten.tlmil e
ox e.nd telephone answering eliminates canvassing. Our With sterling . qualltiet for • !~pain • Reul ~
aervir.t. factory training eliminates those who care. s:&.3341. • ~
The Mutual Bldg. gambling. 1brec ch 0 1 c, Cement, Cencrete '600
286.l E. Coast Hwy, Cd~1 ercas left. For information Do You Need Models? . _
Call 8 Ai\! to 5 PM 6754070 l2'131 ~ LlcenMCI -l'!l. • .n....
COST A MESA • BREA
ANSWERING SERVICE
caU Factory Represents-~··r ti••. SERVICE DIRECTORY Ctmmt work. ~
Mr. MacMacirin 879-9950 Offers a.ir conditioned offices Announcements 6C10AnneUncementa •· .'410
& desk space + secretarial 1-S~P~A~RE=~,,~ME=,~lN-OO~M-E-• • • • -.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-... , ..... '-.·I
terVfcl! U ~d. $25 It up. Booming new l.ield, refilling • ' · .,f • 1870 PLACENTIA, CM end collec:ting money fro m
642-0127 new high qUa llty c o In • GRAND OPENING SPECIAL~; •
SECRF:l'ARlAL SERVICE operated dlapensera 1n thl1 •
Modern otrJces. carpets, air al"1!a. No &e:Jling. To qualUy •
cond. parkirig. From $65 per you mU5t have car, ex·
month Ontngc O:>unt,y Bank change rclercncet, $900 to •
Bld&· 230 £. l7tb St .• CMta $3300 ct1!h lec\lrtd by ln-•
. Mesa &tZ.1485. ventory and equipment. Fevr •
--0---~~~-~1 houn weekly can net ex-•
2 Comm«c:itll, l lnchlM, 1 ceUt'!lt income. More lull
with U•ing quarten. CM time. Fer penonal in-• _awn...===640-='1="'=====! terview, send name, addrtn • .. and phone number IO lnter-
lndu1trl1I Rentef 6090 State Dial. Co., 18U Wm •
-·-Katella, SL!lte 221, .Anabtlm, • a:io sQ. Ft. In modem a. Calli. 92$)1 • crete bufldlrw P.1-2 zone S300 F'OR Sal b F mo. (213) 434-5082 e y owner -•bric •
Shop, Westclltt a r e 1 . •
Lott 6100 Profitable buatne.u est. I •
--------yn. 6tfi...4St4. 5*-15U lfttt
PARTIAL Ocet n vtew: Cor· 6 pm: 8
ona del Mar. Cbo~ 0'1lic ESTABLISHED v a n d la I •
lot Nar leasehold. t.o.clY route 11.a. ar'ff. Few ln. •
tren. 613-2010 tlealtor. per montb. Net eood rwhlm.
.Tuly 8-&-10 .. 11 on\y
with this coupoii only
,,
•• .. ,.
'
TWO for , the price of ON&:·:
on ' . '.
· H1111blafen, Cokes, Frieo • Hot ~
IURGR PANTRY
1734 Newport Bl•d.
Jut above 17th st. •
Ooota Mta
I
LAGUNA BEA.Of, ~Ing Investment from $311(), Call •
view, cl ty 1m.......,.en•. 5.1$-3360. • We feat ure only the belt!
• • • • •
• • ii • • • • $10,900, 494-05(8 Broker DAILY Pn.o:r WANT p • c ... C1l•...Alt#i11 Chelc.11Me1h0 1bc1ltler Miik ........ •
SOCK IT TO 'EMI BRING IU:SULTSI • -~LIL.&.!!.JL.IUL.L.ILll:.L.L.ILm:.LAJloll.;;,i•
-• '
' j
I
t
I
I
!.
1
' ' J I
'
l
--
-. OAll.V Oil.OT
.. -. , ..
--~-~--~,---- --M-, Juli • "'' .· . .. S ICI DlltECTOltY
e '4 ·HOUR SERVICE e
Plu.Tabln&' • repaln, remodel·
i.nl-Electrtc MWtt cltao--J:rc, All ..,.. l\lllf'-646-ltn'
llomodel., 11.,.1,, '"°
REMODEL A REPAIR
CUpcntry • Palnt • Plaster
A Qincrete. Dick 64i..lm
69'0
WhMdya Want? Whl<ldyo Get?
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FO•
NA TUllAL IOltN SWAPPERS
Special llate
Alteratlono-642·5145
Neat, accurate, ~ )'r5. l'Kp.
TILE, C.romlc 6974
J 11--5 ., .... -J lludu
llULll' -.\D MU•l INCLUDi
* Veme, the Tile Man *
CUit. worif, ln1tal1 & ttopaln,
No jot) too 1mall. Pluter
patch. Lr:akln& • b ow fl r
repair. MT-1951/846-0'206
1-Whrl -"'..... •• ".... t-Wllll yw .... ... tr ... ~YOUll ..,_ 111111• _.,.. ..._,. llnlt 9' ..,..Ill..._ ~OTHING FOlt SALE -r1tADEl OHi.Yi
PHONE 642~71
T• 'lace Yeur Tr .. ~1 '•ratllM M JOIS & EMPLOYMENT
Exc:ellent 31' C1bin Chllser
1960. sJps 6, l\lo'in v.8'11 11u1n
pilOI flt(". Value S-11 ,cn>.
Want \'acant lot oi· ????
6T3-2t31
DL.X Balboa dplx 'l hr", bltn
K. furn almost nu, cpt11,
drps, [rpl, patio, Jnt.'ll yd,
Blk ocean. Trd ~ Orange/
LA Co. unils. 642-i29'l
l,IJXI Acres North Otlif
Rancb. Timber, rarmJand,
hun1ing & lishin~. WANT
local property, TD's or sub-
mit. Davis Rlty. 642-7<1Xl
z, Vi~ Acre11 La & u n a Job W1nted L1dy 7020
Beach.. S o m f impl"l'.W&-'
menu, income STIOO. $243,-F/C Bkkpr-Secy nttd11 part
cm ~uit,y, For TD'a or ? time wort eves, wkend•.
O...,..ner. 494--tllil, 494-4957. Const., RE, hotel It person· -----'---""'--I nel up, Abo PBX or
CLEAR dL'c Apple Va.lley I: Hostes:iin&:. 833--035f, eYK &
Hesperia k>t. Value Sll,tm. wkends
Trade for small going buli-ICARP·,:-',C:::.:ET=-~a~.---.-.~,,.,..=--
neu Ora.na:e Ct;)' or prop, ..trlppin&. Waxing, Walll,
=i2o!QWties, etc:. 673-95M, WlndcMis washed. 53l-«i6'7
~ """ 1 U . !u JOBS & EMPLOYMENl ~ -n1u m.1.--------~ ~an view, % blk. Npt, Domestic Help 7035
pler, beat rental at'ff!. s:.&,-1;;;.=----'-'----
500 IAke Im, hse in trade. IJVE INS
20061it Cotrt Ave., 6T~ Employer pa.ya teft
~ Income units On 21st St. ~e Byland Aj;ency
.IOIS & IMPlOYMl!'fT JOU & IMPLDYMINT
EXPERIENCED
IN, THIS WORK?
Th foremost monufacturer
of automatic valves and con·
,troh has a permanent posl·
tlon for yo11.
Day Shih
• Turret Lathe Operator
• Radial Lathe Operator
• Drill Press Operator
Swing Shih
• Turret Lathe Operator
~ Engine Lathe Operator
• Radial Drill Operator
• Screw Machine Oper.
• Production Machinist
JOIS & IMPLOYMINT JOllS & EMPLOYMINT JOIS & IM,LOYMENT JDIS & IMl'LOYMIN1
Help Wo-, -1200 Hel, Wo-
w-7400
llW PlAllT
FAOORY
EXPANSION IN
ORANGE COUNTY
Provides
Dept. Oponlnp
MEN ARE NOW BEING
rNTERVIE\VED, HlREJ)
AND TRAINED TO fllL
GOCX> P05mONS wmt
TOP START!NG PAY.
$512. mo. & up
lf ctua.litied and ac:e~ted go
on the pe.yroU this week.
Both skilled and unskilled
ahouJd apply •1 experience
ilm't necessary. and Wt &re
an ~ual opportunlcy em·
ploytt.
MINIMUM
QUALIFICATIONS,
• A .. 20 or over
• HI. tchool 9rad •r
equity,
• Oranve County
resident
• Mechenlc1lty lncllnod
• Able te lf•rt work
now
We alllO have 3ood
aummer jom.
In~ and accepting
applications Mm. I. Tul!L
Coll
ASSEMILERS
Electronic Components
ThHe OPfnlnP reQUinl g
montbl-r«ftl.t ~nee
ln electronlc comPCIQtnt
auembly optratlona. To
quality )'OU mll8t !mow
color codlna: and band
aolderl.nl t'tehniqiaa
Viait
DANA
L1bor•torr ... Inc.
2401 CAMPUS PR.
IRVINE CALlF.
iNetr On.np OJ, Airport)
An equal op;portunlty
«nlt]O)'U
EXP ER.I DICED
NEW ACCOUNTS
CLERK
UNITED CALIFORNIA
IANK
2712 W. Coa&t Hwy.
Newport S.ach
646-2431
Help Wonted A...,d .. , -&
Women 7400 w--------
Billing
Clerk
Exrnencect. sub.tan-
''• typint requirM.
Perm•n•nt, good o~
portunltyl Call or
apply'
Cla-Val Co.
17th & 'lac1ntia
Co.ta Mau
541-2201
An f"qual opponunlty
•mployer -~
BEAUTY OPERATORS
TI)p OPPOR'ruNITY
In busy dept. .tcre NJon.
Salary + commission. Ex-
cellent benefit&, Inc:. liberal
store discounts.
MARINELLO-COMER
Grad. pert.
mt~~co.
South Coe.at Plua, C.M.
Seamstresses
Till· J
I ::Q .
LIZ REINDERS
PerionMl Aotntv
4500 Compus Dr.,
Newport Beach Aaoa
from Orange Countv
Airport.
Pllo!w 546·~11 1
for Oranr County'1
most exc:idl,. busineu. ·
MINE! Recent uperl·
ence. Will enjoy to,;,
commission, a part of.
the action and opportun-
ity, I've laJd the IT'OUnd
work, now you make us
both money.
Recent
luslness Grads
' ' •
,, 4 CHAJR deluxe Barber
Shop Top Joe., North C.M.
Shop'g Ctr. Trade for "aea-
~oned" TD o; gold nug-
gets: College Rhy 546-5880
Have: 3 Store Commercial.
Banning -leased • $60,000.
Equity $25,400, W In I :
home. ttsidrn1ial ln~,
land, ? ? ? R. Rosa Myel'I
Jr . ~Z181
in Costa Meaa. Trade for 106 8 E. 16th, S.A. 5"41-0395
hou.w or ITUst deedt. In. Chinese live-.ins. Cheerful CALL OR APPLY
KI J.9219, ext. 23
Ask for Mr. Hill,
Penonnel Department
WANTED
S ECR ETARY/BOOKK&
EPER to lhatt flrni:abed
Ex:per for sail loft in beach .,..,, Havf" aeveral excellent •.
HAVE: 2 BR, den &. pool
home, B • n n i n I $21,00D
equity $14,700. Want:
home, residential. inmrne,
land or ? ? R. RO!ll Myen
Jr. 548-2181
\'\'hat do you think of OW'
"TRADER'S PARADISE"
Drop us • cud. Oa.ssi.fted
Dept, p.o. eo. 1815, Dol1'
Pilot, Npt Bcb, CaliJ',
*
come $402.50. Owner. Pennanent. Experien«d. * 549-0833 * Far East AgMIC)' 642-8'1m
TRADE Import or Dome• tic CtU' lor approx ~ft Help W1nted, Men 7200
inboard boat. South Coast M ·
or Jape91:ake preferred but anac«
not nesec:. Phone MG-930.1
uk for Dldt
Have lovely Npt Bch 3
Br.+ fMn rm 2~ bl. home.
Fe-e-View. $4T,500 val. Want
2 or J Br. cmdo. or am ,
borne: loc:RJ area. 6424971
TRADE aeti!IOOl!d lst T.D.
plua 2 M-1 )obi tor Costa
Mesa home. Total .ciuicy
$12,0CO. Brd<er, 646.8226
* * *
BKOME
A
, STORE MANAGER
Earn ov«
'$10,000 yr.
SERVICE DIRECTORY S.ERV'n;s Dll(ECi 'ORY
Openinp lnc:lucle Santa
Ana, Anaheim, Oranp,
e.osta Mesa, La Habra,
Garden Grwe.
Cement, Concrete 6600
EXPERT CEMENT WORK
Reasmable Prices, Loc:al
Contractor. Work Cuar.
G1rdening 66IO
Expert J1pan ...
G1rdening
CUt grau, edging. trimming,
weeding in the flower beds.
by month. Free eatima1ea:.
548--5182 or 646-0384
Tremeodowi expansion pro-
gram oHen: immediate
placement tor ambltioul
men looking for advance--
men! with one of Jhe na-
tk:m fa1le1t &rowing appli·
ance chains.
CLA-VAL CO.
17th & Placentia
Costa Mesa 548-2201
An equ•I epportunity employer
EXPERIMENTAL
MACHINISTS
Orange County
We need Hydro-tel and DeVlieg jig
bore machinists.
1---------1 ""' -"""'"*"· iand operate her o w n
MohileHome
Carpenters
A few openin91
left for skille~
craftsmen!
Ex .. llenl benefits.
Apply In ,.rton
aecretan.l aen'icoe. Top pay
lO hours weekty, for me.
Balance al time to own
busineSI ef:forta. Mmt be top
notdt and ~e. M<1.-
jor .tlitt ........ °'""' M918. 546-tll O, evn
&ti-1171
·GIRLS
Attractive sirl lit I: owr to
displtiy nl!'W produc:U, Trim
Twist, in major Dept. llon!I
in loc:al a.re.. Mu1t be above
average penma.llQI, poise,
I: charm. No exper neces-•ry. 4 hra daily. Excellent
I aalary. Call for appt {2131 Exp Orer 315-6648. Ask for IA.ura.
Att,octlve Women
Ambitious, jOOd persooaliQI.
M t h Uae ol car, over 21. Some o or ome ""' ..... ,....... • ...... ,
pArt time $59. a weoek. Fu.II Corporation time Sl24. No experience
necessary, For prompt in·
troductory intf"nliew c:a.ll Mr
TOP HOURLY SALARY
Power maehine exper, in aizy
tield~e.
HANNA SAD..MAKERS
training po11ition1 for
young ladies with 1ood
oldllo,
861 w. 18, CM 548-MM Glrf Friday
ADVERTISING
Sales girl for pennanent part · ~ H A R P ! S K A lt f I
thn• work. Tues tml Fri. SHARP! \JH YOU!' h...t.
1:30 ·4:30.Saluy,phu;mm. Ya. cu ba 100 '11 rOll'M
m1ulm. MUST eithw have :younr in 1pbit. l80ll
elaaified or di.splay exper-
ience. Phone for eppoint-
ment. (714) 646-1606.
Radio-Telephone
Dispatch Girl
25 to 40 yean. Muet know
local area. Appl.Y in person
F/C lookkeepers
(3)
One must have .-ctron·
le background $M0
YELLOW CAB CO. Another mu1l llaw co11-
J116 E. 16tt. St. 1truc:tion background!
Costa Meaa and need to work perma·
~Off=i-ce~M~o-n-0-,.-,.....f~~.~11~1 nently. <I placed 3 girls
Char.. BookkHper within thb: com~nJ and
Retail appliance experience. they are all happy and
mM 402 equjp. Salary S600 well p&ld.) $600
plus.
Mr. Brown 548-?439
MEDICAL Receptionist. Exp
in collection. billing, typing
Third. Multi plant epera:-
tlon. Capable of working
with the treaaurrr who
is female and hu ~n
...
..
.,
Free Estimates ..•. 642-9496
CONCRETE. block, Spanish
tile. wrought iron, wool ii
alum. roofJ;. Llc. 565107 J1.,.n• .. G1rdener Earn while 4000 Campus Drive 1_Wh_;""-=-'""'.....,....=:. __ a ome medical
terminology. 4% day wk. No
Sat. Salary lo be arrangde.
896-0>83, 10-6 PM
there forewr. Profit ·-• -
F L 0 0 R S-Walks·Patioe k
Exposed Rocks. E x p e r t
Workmanship. 642-8514
CUSTOM PATIOS &:
Block walls. Also ~•
sa~·ing & removal. 842-1010.
CE.\IENT Work, all typee.
No job too small. Free est
H. SI'UF'lJICK 548-llil5
ExJ>er.. complete yard you IHnl
aervice. Free Htimate1 ,..."" • """"' $520 mo to start
;;M;;;ow=1N"G".-,"""=";,"g"', .--.-,a1-cc,wn-, I
Geri'l cleanup. Haulilig.
Odd Jobi. * 5"48-6955
Gener1I S.rvlca 6612
Rapid increaeM:. 5 day
week, all promotions from
wtthin the ranks. Meril,
boous, reti~ent piazi.
Contact Jim ZampelH
(714) 546-1030
3333 H1rbor Blvd., Coat• Me11, Calif.
Missile Systems Dlviston
Atlantic Research
Newport Beach
SALES
Telephone Girls
$100 WEEK
Experienced or no1 -full
or part time. AiJPly 9 to
4, 1500 Adams. tuile 303,
C.oata Me.a..
LEGAL SECRETARY
Shorthand & typing
Min I yr. Calif. eicp.
Salary Open. 548-7'!56
Executiv• S.cretary
Assistant to President. Short-
aharing. S600
Secretaries
One to vie• president t)f
international aalea. Dic-
taphone a m111t. Newly
created poaltion. Plu1h
offices. $500
CEMENT Werk patios, walkl
& drivel frl.'e est. 5Jj;..8917
UC Swedish Maasut 1 e
EUROPEAN TRAINED
n4 3274145 Palm Sprinp
Applicants llhoukt be 11 to
:r> yea.rs cl a~. Collegt> i11
helpful but not necessary.
Must be higti achoo! grad-
uato,
CORPORATION
A Division of the
Susqueh1nn1 Corp.
REPRESENTATIVES
Leading indep enden.t
apttialist1 dealinf in over
100 mutual fundl, expanding
in Orange Cooney, Thia la an
opportunity to enter
dignitird profe21sional aelling
full or part timl! Investment
exp oot neceuary, we train.
547-ai21. Mutual Fu n d
Invellol'I Inc:. 2100 N. Main,
Santa Ana
TELLE R, Part Time hitnd 100-120. Typing 10-80.
EX'pericnc:ed r,:referrc'1 ____ 54&-09 __ 38 ____ , Next • bilinguaJ (Spu·
IANK OF AMERICA cm1.0 Care-hskp. 12~ pm. ishl. Heavy ,work load.
U. S. Citii•n1hip R•q11ir•tl e An f1111el Opporh111ily fmpleyer 6730
18691 Main SI . Mmt have own c:ar. Perm.
Huntington Beach Good conditions. CaU' for Export sales experienee.
847-3541 details. CdM 615-?'>14 $500
Child Core 6610 Houllng ........ _____ _
Call Personnel
St'EClAL summer Day Care
Hot balanc:P.d meals, snacks.
State lie. 2% to 6 yrs, 7 am-
6 pm. $18 Week. Oavis
Montes10ri Schools, 1525 N.
Santa Ana, C.M. 646-3106.
LTITLE GIANT TRUCK
Hauling. 6' height, 10' bed.
You name it I haul. Rees.
Big John &12--4030
• TR 9-9950 Mr. Eddy
Sunday ealls accepted
An equal opportunity Ex•cutive S.cr1t1ry
P.mployer Legal background for Admin-GOOD BEGlllHNG Agencies, Women nG0 e BOOKKEEPER e i11trati11e Par tner Newport
./ HAULING Trash pickup L I I h for Quil'l l -girt oHic:e Dana Beach law finn. 540-5400.
Trim . A h' ..... oc• m•nu •ctur•r •• mtng. nyt 1ng. we uv • __ _.1 t • f
it all. Exper work 5"45-2'192 1mm9U" • e op1n1n91 or: Young man interested in news
ca reer. News Department Oopy
Boy at the DAILY PILOT
Mlsr EXEC AGCW'V Point erea, 11. S H, type so. SALESLADY
J U'I. I ~1. '''"' ,...,,p, doti". s.J FUJI ,, part tim,,. Exp. JR
EMPLOY1ER PAYS FEE open. Mr. Migge 496-l2S5 &. JR. PE'l'I IE DreA., Shop'. Contractors 6620 ./ HAULING. Trash pickup. e WI
Trimming. Anything we do remen /lit ._._._ «M BARMAIDS. • • • Call for Appl. 968-3111 F.V. Secretary e .,,.,,g · •. -.......,
o-c~'t 1 .. 1 $41S · · · and GO.GO BEAUTICIAN, rn•rutt. with
e ROOM ADDITIONS•
L.T. O:nR:roct
family rooms, kitchen ar
units. Single story or 2;
plan£ C'U!ltom designed, Fer
estimater; 8r layout, phone
it all. Expeor work , 545-2192.
CLEA.N Lots, garages. elc.
Tree re/TM)yal, dump, skip.
backhoe, till, grade. 962-8745
W• ire en ftt•bli1hff
commerci•I firm with
liber1I fringe benefih.
Only people with at
l••1f six month1 •X·
peri•nc• 1hould apply
lo
18-25 yrs. of age.
High school graduate.
Sharp, show initiative.
.x-;,.,,ary ...,.1 ••••
Secretary/Insurance •• $450 DANCERS following if possible. Good
d"r+; 1'yplst ......... , $4Z> S300 per week loc .• 106f"phint!'s 690 W. 19th,
• 841-1511 • Hou1eclnnin9 6735
0.EANING -inside-oot.
Painting, nlJ: e:leAning wall
washing. Free f!tM , 6tG--510.1
Good hours, all company benefit.s,
fu ture for right appli,ca nt.
Oeffi typist . , . , .• , -... -$350 6.~-5483 or 633-9763 CM 642-8316
APPLICANT PAYS FEE J•paneH School Girl WAITRESS' Graveyard shift
Secretary/legal ..•....• $500 Domestic Work. Uve-in with only.
Secretacy/~g . S500 American famiiy. ~ Cottage Co11f'f' Shop Licensed Contr.act<r
Residential ~ CommerMal
Maint .l Repair&. f'l-ee Elt
673-2129
Call Personnel Manager for appointment.
642-4321 Secretar)'/Bkkpr ..•• to S500 or 548-6182. 562 W. 19th St. Costa Mesa
Secretacy ••. ····-· ··••• 1433 I ·SA=l~.ES~. -.. -,,-tim~,-$2~..,-,,h-r. FRY Cook ~30 yn. 2218 Npt
Adclitione: * Remodeliftc
Fred H. Ge:rwic:k, Lie:.
lr..,lnt PARAMETRICS 6755 FOREMAN M~icel back~ ··· · $.175 guaranteed tirt ltaJ"t, Over 21. Blvd. Coata Mesa.
Billing Oerk • -• • • • • • • • $340 !>46-5745 642-4875
410 W. Coesi Hwy., N.B. e WANTl!D e MODELS SKILLED
AND ~1 * 549-2110 ffiONJNG In my homt.
Ne-wport, Cos.111 MPM !Irr"-,
You rurnish hangrrs. E.x-
c:ellenl work $! per hour,
642-KH!l
929 lak•r Street
Cost1 M9u
549.2221 UNSKILLED
YACHTBUILDER
Immediate ope:ning in ltle
Orient !or m•n with back-
grociod as foreman of large
U.S . Yac:htbuilding com-
pany. who ia expen is AU...
phaM!11 or glaM looling, die-.
M"I, c:abintry, etc. Top op.
portunily tnid slary for
right man. Send 1'6Ume to
Box Ml58 0rang1! Coea1
Pilot. Confidential.
Call Betty Bruce, MS-3939 A GRANDMA! ~$81 No exp nee (1131 "428-!JM4
\--;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia:. PATIOS e Patio Covers
Room Additionr;, Uc.
642-5952 Days.Eve-\Vlmds
Remodeling • Addition.
J. G. MacBeth. Lie.
esra-5628 •
C1rpet Cle1nln9 6625
Mew Cl ... ning Service
F1oors, windows, carpets, &
uphoJsery. Free est. Rf'Si·
dentla l & commerc-
ial 54R-4 l.ll
KEPHART'S Cui.tom ironing
has moved to 130 E JT, Suilf"
T, CM. OiM'n Mon-Sat
CAREER
OPPORTUNITY!
Join todays fa!llPsl grov.·lni;:
Landscapin 6810 profession-~uiual Fund !!Illes
g No Pxper1pnc:e necessary-
GAYNOR'S LANDSCAPING W" train -toll or part time
& GARO~ING SERVICE Mutual Fund Advisors,
,Stair lic:l!nsed contrctr. Inc.
ResldenliRI -Comml'rriB.1 Npl B. lf.0.1 Wf"stcliff 642-&tl2
Yard Oeanup Free f:St S.A. 1112 N. Broadway
MEN NEEDED NOW
TO f'll . .L VACANCIES IN
NEW DEPARTMENT
OPENINGS DUE TO EX·
PANSION IN OUR OR-
ANGE COUNTY DIVISION.
STARTING SALARY
$120
No job to bi~. 89~3.illl 547-83:11
per w"k & up
IMMEDIATE EM PL 0 Y-
MENT Jo~OR THOSE WHO
Q U A L I f' Y COMPLETE
.108 TRAINING AND RAP-
ID ADVANCEMENT.
G1rdenin1 66IO REXAIR INC. CORRAL'S Lnds c p~ &. ---------
STUDENTS WOl'king tlW'i r Rototillin,; Sforv. Frl'f' ,~1. O(tANGE COUNTY DIV.
way lhru rollegP. Allen jHave own equ i p m, n 1 BARTENDER For information call
Bros. lndsc grdnrs C'Omp. 962-4764 Monda,v & Tuesday
la""1 care. 646-42m 774·7251 Appl,y in p!"r50n
PAINTING, Exter ior . R-ll & 3-{j
terior lie:. ins. l7 yni t xp, P1perh1n9in1 ~1on. lhtii Silt SF:RVICE Station Meehanic:
Free est. $ 41-5 l 2 s . Painting 6150 Full tim,. Experi'nct<I in
Acoultical ~11. tuneupa, brakes .l Wheel
PAPERH ANGER wm p•;,1, REUBEN E, LEE •lignmm1. G""""'" +
REL'iABLE : Rea1 . Sample1 . Floc k 8 -commi'lsklfl for qualified
li/Or1erttal car". Clean-ups F o i Ill-Vinyl. SCHWARTZ 151 E. Coaat Highway man. Apply Laguna Olevrt111
A: odd jobl. Vin c: en t • 347-1659 Newport Beach 604 S. Cst Hwy, LAguna Sch
As11istant Ht>:~e-
TV
* REMOVER *
AGES 19 lo 35
Eveningg 6·10 p.m. 1'hi~
job ~mov"s you from
your TV t1.nd pays you
. $3.80 HOUR
CAii Mr. J11ckl!IOO, A?9-9951
Young Men 18-28
Secys • aeveral ..•• to $600
OMV ................ to 1501
Al.-cl Ok ............ tO $425
Auto A/Rec ••.• •• • • · -. • S400
Medical -Front & back • $400
R.oopt/Bkkp< ......... , $400
ServiCt' Ca9hier •••• •• S3.iO
Gen'l OfliCt! •••••••••• $346
Typisb ......... --• .. .. S325
Trainee -many • .. . to S300
ALLSET AG~CY
~37 W. 19th, C.M. 64 2-6752
~~T~i!y.~-~-. ~~~~~~I
Medical Recept ••••••• • $35'.l
S@ct"etary .......•.••••. $450
Oerk Typi!!I • , ....... , $458
A/R -PayroU .......... $350
Gen' I Ottltt .......... -. $346
Billtng Clerk ......... • $340
MANY OTl-JER LISTINGS
f'9l· N('\ll))OM, C.M. Ml).485.4
17931 Beach. H.B. 847-9617
1042 W. 17th, S.A. 547-&$81
Help Wonted
Women 7400 6GG PAINTJNG and Paperin1. If BookkHper-Accountant
GUftL Clean-up, trre iaeno , you c:a~\.mr we both hf"nefit. los;;ElR;;;;V;;ICE.,.--,,,-.,"ioo_m_on~l~ubf> thn.i P "-L. Eicpc:rienood ~ Sales promotion joba avail. DISABLED vt!ter"UI need• ~ aracflng. 1prinkler1, Excllllive but not txpmsive, & It medl day sh'f1 . good quired. Prcler man over !JO. Large inl'I. corp. SlO,<XXI lsl homt care by youag lady
la .. hlul'1; Reas. 64&-5M8 Try me and Jtef!, 541-3151 "'n" Sund' fl 1 • F..'tablishcd commc-rlc:lal year. Man>!ml!nl opporh1-whO c:an drlw my Renault. " ,...,,, •yJt o . no gas nltit!s. Call 10 am -2 ,_ ,,ll ""'3 ~GARDENER rN'f'ERIOR & EXTERIOR pumping, Vit.io Union Sl>rv Mfg. Send rt~ume to Box ~1S-US3, ..... ....,,... .. ""'
Jlliia.I* • Experi~ _Paintinflt'. F'rtt estim11.le. 261TI La P11t Rd, Mi1s~ M-15.'; C/0 Daily Pilot. P/T S2 !Ir ruar. Fuller
-:lni•=;;fls.f!l52;o,:;;:;.;;;<;:;;;;;;;o:I Uc. • IN. CHUCK S4~14 Vi,.jo. 837-4826 Fry Cook Ex.-. Gll-l'ERAI. HELP Brush cwtomer aerv. H.8 .
: o...~ PART 11JME MONEY F V M B •-1•-e JAa\NESE GARDDfrNG * • "'..-rh11ngin1 * SERVTCF. Station auendanl. BOB'S COFFEE SHOP Sl.50 HOUR · ·• rs. rown ~ .,.v
<Stoup, IMldsca~ Expert full l part limf'. Exper. only 1409 S. E"l Camino Rl'!lll AGES 21 TO 30 Blind Stitch Oper.
-1004 a.ft ?p.m . -=-""'-""'--,~"~"~·-'-'"~·--I a pply at 26171 1.a Paz. Road, San Clemente 492-l35.1 Call Mr. Hentlf!ft m 9-S!lil Garml!nl manufacturtr l!iflO
SER.VICE S15 MO. Pa.inlin1. Window W1shinc MissM>n Viejo, !07--18'26 2 SERVICE Station At-Monrovla-N.B. 642-2666°
... _...._~~ 20 yrs txp. Hourb or job, SERVICE S!a. -AiiffldMI trnd1.nt1, PRr1 l full Um•. MAN needed who enjoy• BABYSITJ"ER -MJ bomt or
_.,,....... JtefL 548.2920 alt 4 PM mechan indined, Oo lube 6 Exper. Ray Clrt!y Olcvrori wm en •mall tum about a. )'Wtl. 5 chyi.
6Eilllll1Awl ./WON'1'Beundtrbld! oil changt. 6't2-1717. 604So.Coe.•tl4wy,Lagunt 10 !rs per wefk. Prefer 1 ~==~........,~~'~----.~ Inter, ~r. 511tlJt:factionl ·D-'"_Y_"-_-_----·I Bch Saturday. Located Upper HSKPR.-O>ok, dtlld cart.
-
-• t PM ., .. r. 497-Uf>I alter 6....,. ......., cu..v1 DIME•.\, ====----Bay .... •-U In • 1V -• ....., •--..... l.INES ENERGE:MC. J00111 man in-.-..-o•w ve: • nn •• -.iary.
• PA1nt~-/£'F'1~,.~rn • lor jus; ~nl~ana ~. ~ ten!sted !rt blllclt & white ~B"trrCHER===-,"'Expor=--.°'MI"""I"tm-,-.· I Refs. H.B. atta. $35-1241
OFFICE
ATLANTIC RESEARCH
in Corie Mesa
has the .followin g immediate
administrative openings:
Administrative Secretary
Engineering Secretary
Both positions require short-
hand and tvpinl? skills plus
skills in relat~d fields.
Security Assistant
Must be experienced in DOD
industrl11l security procedures
including document control.
•ptNODAel. .. s~utily1~ ven·
dor/subcontractor ha1son . ··
, AccountinCJ Clerk
Typing and IO-key adding m•·
chine skills plus experience In
1ccounts payable.
'co.toe! Jim Zampelli
(714) 546-8030 .
Missile Systems Division
Atlantic
Research
Corponrtlon
A Div. of The Susquehonno Corp.
33:13 H1..W., llvd., Cosio Men
..,.._..""' '" "' ..... =-photorra.phh-printlnr. J\JU Call Lou t!M-4410 420 Thalia Manicutltt N....il A• •1111•1 .,,,.,t1111i.._ •111,1 ..... ,
,....7817 --...... ~ bM\s. H.--1403 lt.l..qUl)I 8dl \ --..!-=-=~--.;.·i.-------·-"·-·-·----r·
., • '· }
I
•
Marketing aPc:rP.tary -
Technical background a
mu1L Executive p::M!lition.
~
Account Exec ' ·
Image builder with lots
of aavvy. Top mgmt (No
dream world. Iota nf
work.) Were building a
solid agency.
Civil EnginHrs
Regi!lt!!red. Know Or·
an1e County 1tandardl.
Chief mec hanl~aJ
<BSME) and manage:-
m,nt as well u 1tronr
ttthnic:al.
'IT.CHNJCAL 1.Ml1tant to
president. Mtthanlc:ai • ;:
engineer experienced 1u-• '
pcrvisory, re1earc:h. C.~ ;• ..
able of communicatln«i
! ttthnic:al lingo to lay-! men.
BSME (Jnstrumf'ntation
b11.c:k21"ound)) to 28.
Proven performance Wt
sales. Must have madr
$15,000. This mfg rep
company hires nothing
but the best. ..
ror you who wanl mo~
profitable positions, le
secretaries, e ngineer&, •,' etc. and If your present
career lack.I challenge.
send reaume to or ~JI
for I PPointmcnt:
LIZ REINDERS
PtricmMI Agency
4500 Cam.pt41 Dr.,
Ncwpqrt Btach A.cro11
trom Orcncic Caunt11
Afrporl .
Pllo!w 546·2111
.':..il!lll!!l!!t!~~~~!:::I~~:::::~·~·~·..;;,·~··.,...,;-.·;..,·.·;.., .. ..,~·~·;._~__:--.:.;_:__::_::::::::::--~~--• ... -.._. __ .. -----
. --~ ·-. . . -.. ____ .-. ,.,. . ~~~
, ' M~, July a, 1968 Dl!ll.Y I'll.of 1 .
JOIS & EMPLuVMENT MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADI
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADI
MERCHANDISE FOR
.SALE AND TRADE
TRANSpORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRAN$1'0RTATION .;.T=.;;S;,;.PO..;;.;.;.;.;T;,;..;.;=-I.;.;' ".;;.A.;;.H;.;S,;,.PO.;;.R;o.l;,;.A.;.;T.;.ION=-I
SpHd Ski loots 9030 Comperi 9520 lmpol'lod A-9600 'l"I°' Wo...... 9700 U* C.... '900 -~----· ----He!W•nttd
~ l!fJIJ OHi .. "'ulpmonl •I011 ~~~---FREE TO YOU -~·-·----
~ CESTE'INER ,.~ HEIR.L.OOM G\ID C 1 1 1 ,
No. 120. Xlnt eond. '150 or bMvy IOI.Id 01k,many com-
b!tt offer, m..8669, ~ partmentl, hlddtn drawers,
'II LONESfAR Mu"111& Ski OPfJI ROAD MG ···-· ·---·-... 4 50 •• a..., .... , ...
PLAYFUL and well-trained, llb'tt, new hll, run lc!lta.
3 montb old, lttY and w:bltc top A Ude curtina, trlr, A·l
malt kitten. would 11 'r • • eond. Owner leavln&, llerif
,IOOd hOftw and • yvd to ruo ca.SI " take.OWi' "isu
pt., ia." 60-Zl$t 7flll b&!, pmnli $58.67 mo.
WE PAY·
FACTORY DIUCT 1~ ~i,.:, .. ~ml aouq .. TOP DOLLAR t EXPERIDlCED I COMMERCIAL
, TELLER
U+TED CALIFORNIA
IANK ~ Main SI.
l--l-11uu::;ntfilngton S..ch
S:JUl11
$llO or olfer; S~nt.
G•r• S.le I022 r<", aoot1 ....i 125; d...,, SA?~ Tla-1-0-10-4.-C E. C9r COOkf' S2; chtll Cl
drawen $4; o'4t Jr. tn-19, CM. Keninore wubet, cyeloptdla $3: L lone J
tum, prdftl tooll ~ ...... 11 0 ~--u~ ll Ml~, .......,., ; ..,...16~, iut"" 1t I en 1 I I Gllber ~ 1et, ru-1,y
d\sbe1, Hou.t.y ornaments, comp. $7: cbldm'& bookl
I ~brl<>-a=~·--~----~-· l5c: -$25C'; Few LP records, SELLING Ew:rythina:. Baby mi...oo 35c: adjualabl.f: &ulO
turn, like new, ~of m~. 1un scrte.n $1; SI n c e r
1933 W..U.ct, tn b6dt.' (1111 uprlgbt vacuum, needs be.It
MIXED I mo, pup 1Ai Labor-64&-:M88
ador Retriever, 'Ai German ·'
Sh<ppud. l<W•bl• Ond Jn. Marl .. Equ ip. , 9031
teU!gent. ~ousebroken. Call -----· · 546--3634, U&9 Donet Lane. 2'S WATT heath radk>· tel.
C.M. 119 $100. Hfflh ftOF SSS.
FREE • ewa. 56IT16 •
Tent, T' x 1' wltb ca.nna •--t Slip Moorl:. 903,
$10; foldtne chn lOc ff. l========IAppll•-1100 t..euno Deb. _ton • .,.•
Jol/o Mon, Wom. 7500 W-ASllERS~---129-35-; -...;;;; I•",. ........ ,.. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
135; """" 175; Jtdrlr., SWIMMING POOL
Ooor. Torn front, but -·-lll!--r-
1uit&ble lor beectl, ~tc. *'30AT SLIPS* -'
646-2388 719 Power boats up to 22'
FREE -$1..50 per n. fi42.-.920l
KiUftl, black and white wanted: Mooring or slip
Wu Ben's coppertone i. Avoc.; Guar. 11 Ft Pool, FUter, Surface f~male. Cute mark Ing •• (or 19' Owene, Balboa Ba,y.
Read1 lor new b o m e · e 675-8593 e 54G-l~ Skimmer, Ma.lntenanc. KJt.
-. VACUUMS • FR.EE G""'°" ·Pad. 64&-2888 '"I-========
Newport Beech's • "•west ind most
txciting Canton-
' ts• restour4nt now
;cceptin9 applica-
tions for:
110 up, ...... l potlL $149.JI
Reuonabl.e. \."out Vacuum SECARD POOL
S33 E. 17th, QI, 642-1560 323 S. Main, Onnp
BEA.1.Tl'IFUL %. persian, tab-
by, male cat, needs a 1ood
home. &Th-4.235 aft g
'" • FULL size electric stove. 532-1992 p.m.
Automatic 1tt.rtin( timer. BI '!!!""!!!!!!I!~!"!"!"!''""""" DACHSHUND, 0CX:: grad. 7
1 .... 1 """"' ""'""'· "'· * AUCTION * ,,... old, aoot1 w1lb "'""""'· 646-9539 tt )'OU will aell at buy nll!ll!dl love It: affection.
FRIGIDAIRE Ex c e 11 en t lfve Windy a try 54s..art9 T/9
condition S50 549-42lt alter 5 ·Auctions Friday 7: 30 p.m. KITI'ENS • Wuld like a loY-
PM Windy's AuctionBarn lnr per m . home .
• ~oocl W It ., W/tl'fl"""..nhle fa m 11 ie-s a resses GAFTER'S .l sta ... er'i stove Behind Tony'• md&. Mat1 ...,._,.,
e ., ocktail Waitresses UOO. Very good co n d . 20f5'iii Newport, CM M6-868S 3J&.3797 719
• ~• h h ""7-ONE lar're .Servel IS Wll •ts .....,.. <U.J KD"fMORE Washer works
• bo refrigerator, needs some us yt porf ..... 1-$5(1. Black walnut 7
;
k A I• 1110 ~~ ,.. ...... Yours fortbejaklnJ; • · oo s __ n__1qua -'-wer -'--k, JOxOO", P'rfect . _ ~ un this Sat/ Sun only. 646-4660 e 1rtender1 OOTl'Y" rnnQUES noo. 2 story wooden doll ~ tu~ SIAMESE Male kitten 6
Boat.Yacht
Ch1rter1 9039
e QiA.RTEft. THE FINEST
New 40' Ketch
673-2517 • 675-2400
Sailing leuons, 40' sloop
RealOllable rates; avail for
charter 646-9550 543-2592
CAL 24 SAilJNC SLOOP
$2) PER DAY OR $150
PER WEEK. M2-7523
Fishing Bo•t• ·
26' SPORT lishin1 boat, bait
tank, bead, bunks. Sacrifice
$1800. 547-4855 alter 5 PM
WE 1=18'$====·==-=="I . FOi We bull di. camper with kc PORSCHE
.box, stove, aitlk, Z gal wat-l ·P-ORS--CH-E--,-18--~--,..-
er tank, 5 gal butllr'le, all ... ..,.,
standard feature• included. w/blk ID~ Am I J m '
Jt'• built ror )Wr U&ht duty Chromes. Pirl!llill, headen.
t,; ton or 116. ton t:vck. It'• $l650 Prl party. 53&-0290
USEt ·CARS
CoiNBl OIYIOlfT
ooly 8 It. kinJ I has \GIJI of 2828 Harbor Blvd. ........ TOYOTA eo. .. M•.. 546-1203
TWO LEf"J' --::-::::-::--I:======"""'' I $8•75.49 '68 TOYOTA U1ed c.,. 9900
830 S. HARBOR BLVD. GET YOUR LEADERSHIP NEED A CAltf
SANTA ANA 531-4655 DEAL BEFORE YOU BUY CAN'T BE FINANCl';DT
-OP"' -ROAD fjeu LewtA· ........... , ."'"'·-· U. e Bad Cred.it! e DtwreedT
e MWtary e New tD ArMT
fACTORY DIRECT IMPORTS . ~ArfH~ ~'OrO:S ' SALE IOI So. llbln l Ed-
1906 Harbor, C.M. &4&-!m3 (I blocb N. ol Sean)
New , • ,. Tbe fabulous l OIA. TOYOTA Santi Ana Pb 5G..J50'I ft,,! ,Jeeper, an OPEN
ROAJJ exclusive. Loads ol
storage &: equipt to take the
blg family to those tar aW-.y
places with Ford, Chevy,
HEADQUARTERS
E• P'f'.blE
TRIUMPH
GMC or qodge %. ton. A~to 15300 Beach Blvd .. w.runnstr
trans. ~· camper special Phont ~3322 ..........
WE HA VE ONLY TWO!
$4600
130 5. HARBOR BLVD. e 1o;o TR.1A l61'i
SANT A ANA ' 531-4655 E.xl:t>llent coodition CADILLAC
-----O~EN ROAD Private Owner. 499-2967
;; PLEASE APPLY Reopening at 1(8)) Beach hoole $20. Garden lounges, mog., bas-.Hots. Will deliver
Moloile-9200 j 9-12 ond U Doily Blvd.,,..._, 8'8-700ll ::.Cpa~78 '8Cb. 8'ic-o-63> 7'25 T/lO FACTORY DIRECT
~ s.winv Michlilel 1120 Pool Tables MALE POODLE s x 50 1000 N ..... , "'" .. SALE I=======
'66 Triun1ph SpiU!re
$1400 or oUer, ZS,000
mi. Good cond. 546-4729
'67 EL DORADO. Uke new.
Fae. warranty S t e r e o .
AM/FM. New tires. AU
pwr. Leather. 673-ti635
'1:': REUBEN'S· 5 moo old 64""81 "''" w/•wniog. 1 18 50 · VOLKSWAGEN 1967 Singer Touch-0-Matic New It repossessed $99.50 ~ Conlole, due to illneSI. Up. Tennl.s, Champion FREE To )'OU. Broken con-="=8-8Tl=='=======I You've never seen a unit llke1---------
"'S1 E. Coast Hwy. Automatic, Zig-Zag, butt'on-Quality $34.50 up. crete. 646-6731 7/9 th1& before. The AU. NE\V 9 '65 YW ~ tllewport Beech holes, blind bll!ml, overcasts Call Frank ELECTRIC CARS 9250 ft. with automatic toilet as •-...~i ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii etc. No attachments needed. 531-031 I PETS and LIVESTOCK standard equipment. Fca· $1099
r• Guar atill rood· $38.66 or NEW ~. uatd once, 8 lures found only in the ex-
:1 $4.75 rilo. Call 526-6616" REF'RlG White, xnt 10 mos Cats 1820 fl., not cab-DVer. Sleepe 3 pensive sell-contained units.
e Hosten Ion new UOO: TV oons, mahog, 2 CHOICE female Hirnlayan to t with ice box, table, THREE LEFT • food & Cocktail 1967 Singer Repdsaess llf!W tube 125; NEW Port etorage, iasumec payments $'877.33 Console, Zle-Za.g, button-.___ b kittens. Olamp. alre. Sh:lts. I ;,Waitre1e11 holes, blind hems; over-puunu oom · AM IF M Rf'&IOMb}y priced. 494-2J?6. of $24.75 oc $450. ca.11
, cuts, many fancy stitchea w/stand s100: 548-8270 ~f 5 642-3403. 130 S. HARBOR BLVD. ~ (
'S5 CAD Conv, immac, nr
new tires, full \lwr. Looks Is.
runs great! $375 54~15!H
CAMARO
'68 CAMARO Olevelle blue
w/white competUlon stripe;
6 cyl. 3 on floor: R/H, l ,OCXI
m l. $2,150. 6'5-4914
CHEVROLET
sharp, fresh. all Ameri-etc. ro.25 or $6. mo. Guar.1'°'P"M====---c,,.,-..,-Dogs '8825 SANTA AtilA 531-4655 ,66 V!N DELUXE dn type glrlA over 71 still OK. Call 523-0690 FOAM RUBBER, cut to 1ize. Mini BikH 9275 CAMPER: Stove, sink & Ice LOADED! 2G,OCXI miles on 'f,6 CHEVY Impala hard top,
1q1 compliment xtnt llW'-=========I Upb .uppllet, tab r 1c1 , GERMAN SHEPHERD · 1----------bo S300 ~ off sport coupe, dlr, exotic
DODGE
'64 DODGE DART
BSe &, auto, rid». beater,
dlr, Selwa help. llt1111 llU
brud .. -wW take tn4e
.. 1125 -..... PYmto $31.116 mo. Cl.U llfta''u, 49t-·rm ·or~7.
FOID
FORD ·a Galaxy 500: R/H, •
ptrr. ltHC', A: brakes; U•
~ dean! $450.
5'M09IS 323 Ca.Ila.I St.,
N""°"Bucb
'61 f' AlRLANE 500 Sport
Coupe V-8. bucket aeatl.
$750 Truman Pntt. St3-24T9
'63 FORD Ga.I. 500 2 dr H.T.
Crull, Pwr, S&B, air, Ml-I
Xhrt! $1~. 546-7435.
MERCURY
'ti2 MERC R/H. New tirn "
brakee. Oean. 1 owner.
$595. * 548-3727
METRO
'61 METROl'Ol.ITAN
S499
MUSTANG
'65 MUSTANG ·
$.1199
PON11AC
-··"'-· all San MESA MINI BIKE x. or er. spcedometf.'r. Belonged to '""'• black pl!Jlh interior. 'V'-" ...... "'s m new naugahyde. Fact. outlet. PUPS Fishing boat 12' with motor. little 'ole sdiool teacher In 4 SPEED Franciscan cuisine res-Musical Inst. 1125 Li:;w pre. A·l Foam Fabric 3 months old Sa.le!• Parts • Replin St'l5 268 Costa M St A t V-8, automatic, power
, l ~ 2267 Ho·bo• CM • "°3007 ~ , P San Clemente. Take $175 ''"n·ng, low mil••· W1ll taran . I: Uvuuastery Sul)l!;ly Co., 311 AKC REGISI'ERED • • .,...,... B • Kitchen Helpers * DRUMMER * E. 5th St., s.A. 83$-1181 Champion Blood line•' t.-ash dcls, d1r, or trade. ta ke oldl!I' tr.de. Pymnta. SPECIALISTS • Busboy• Mu.Ube over 21 &. be able THE ART or USHER now R.-t ·for . Motorcycl.. 9300 '62 ECONOLINE Camper. Pymts $36.86. Call after 11 , $46.86. t94-9773 or 639-3617 HIGH PERFORMANCE' ha-~ St-··-~-81 -r-:c --~---~--·I Loaded! Real Clean. Great 4M-977l or 639-3617. CUSTOM CARS ,, to , .... e 1111U0nr.;, un, open. Hatch cover. and Quality Ii Temperament 1964 IMPALA Super Sport ps,
Buggie, Honky -Tonk &: othe• d--10• 11 • m', All Sb & W . HONDA Scrambler 305 cc. surl wagon. $900 54fr9657 58 KARMANN Ghia. Good pb, Auto. Ai• cond. Perlect LARGEST SELECI10N IN n ..... · • · ' "'"'"'" ' ot• ormmg Complete retiullt motor less I " f d bu • nA.Jl.,.., n.ccompany piano tl7-29th St., N.,8. Pedigree with each PUP 60<l rans car or or une ggy. cond. Call after S pm. ORANGE COUNTY j:l;.?'e;:~ 675-3605 before Find it first •t Raciti'• I 837-3885 Evea. aft 6:30 PP.f ~ l!, "!~:· ::ar:P ~~s~ Imported Autos T9 S ~=~ff~! ~$(It rk' 00-6182 Selected Auto -·.
Apply in person 8·5
ALLEY WEST
2106 w. Ocean Front
.Ne\OlflOl1 Beach 6 PIECE Slingerland drum Ctista Mesa J eftlry &: Loan Wee~nd~~~ AM ="""="~'-"'=·~3403_._=-o=· I SC R AM-l E lot heh.ind ~Ce n~ ~:, ·~mCH:!. ~;~;·s:il~ :i~ Center
set. Good Cood., ·must tell ~~~l)8l8 !.~ 6 MO, BEAtrr BLACK CUST •. Full-race '65 BSA $1500 * 646-2tn wkds°ys. 54g...3035 Ln12 Harbor Blvd. 537-t646 ·
irru:nediately. Oieap 673-8436 street I: shaw bike, $4000 D-ANSWERS RFER 61 VW Bw $450
WANTED 11 GREAT Books We 1 tern WITH SILVER MARKJNGS, vtst. M~ aell. SlOOO or best SU ·~ ' '67 Chevy II 327, 4 speed. IOY CARVER GOOD BLOOD LINE -8712 Knight.! Circle, Hun-H t 0 ,
ab rty t I k • & 0 ll30 World set. Also bargain citer. 497-USl f!Ves F un , gauge1. ean. PO .... aC Rell le pa o rea oc _Pianos __ rgans --~. __ · i.;.P;,AP~ERS~-~mo~:,;673-::;;~3007;';,=o l7si<Timn.iiPH'f.'ili'uiirt Extent -Forum -emur-tington Bch • 548.0019 e "'"' --• -•1-mo-y •-------Encyclopedia Rt l Jr. '56 TRIUMPH 0 0" CC d'rt Wh' M~~ -~-------llf]U .. ..,. ""' '"' uvin ,.... MAR"'"'',_.,..,.,. K""""'~r., ......., I mny -v.v 'n ,, . .,, '56 &. '60 VW 'g ~ by I-=~=,~-~=~ -Harbar BL, Com .... Voluti., .......... new coin o""'r-•. Spect'al Sale I ·~Ll="~'~"'~·==~~=-. . ...... n~• ,,.,,,,~ b'k •~ 823T Ah band I 1 M • ....,,, •62 NOVA HDTP I ,,__. ,,.. • 0 Great Dane, Lab Retriever&: 1 e . .,..JV. owne. :us 1 a men :. Y private party. Dune buggy C'" . .,,-•. 1695 . ., • .,_ • .;,.. K "6'"4'444 ated Snack vendors. No • WE •"•• -·· gre•l••t UPHOLSTERING -$79.SO, 2 Costa Mesa 646-l.Zi7 wife has a cloS"ed mi.nd I __, """2-73 "' '"' vu u • .. u ..... BM.gle puppies, AKC. Out-· · t ~·~~~:..· :,~"':='',';~=---1=========: IOnmp ....._., ts:ebillft s~Jing. •t-k ol 0 -, & ,--• p'---s pc. (European crafl.amen) bl. . .. G!LLIARS M... -•-wish I coold aay that for berl· -v · · w t ..... ,... '""" "'·"" standing ood lines, lteady "" .... orcyoe, '56 VW $225 Dt<!r fll:I' l\oDa • -~ First time m es ern & -•• _ ol s-;al SUm· Free est, del, pickup, 21S ,...,,...... n.... ... __ off MOUTH " --States. (Handles national-~· .. --.... -Main, HB "Bemy" 536-6405 _temperament. 546-0989. ~ noo VI ..._t er. . • 642-2':55 • CHRYSLER Bently.
ly 'dv'~-~ '"'"·· ,--' mer Sale prices! tvV 'IE ~-• 7 • 67l-G026 • \&IE BUY =-=-~~~=~== ·-·~ ~ 1 k d -~ col CV~ """'' """ ~=. .. --==~ .~ ....... -'62 GRAND PRIX candy bars.I ExceUent in-• WHATEVER )'OU are 00 . Ma e to viuer -any or, wks.; fat Ir tlUS)', happy It: '6T•Y·A>r\4HA ](fi,., I ANY CLEAN '63 CHRYSLER, Full pwr
come potf.'ntial for slx hrs. ing for -we have it 11 at a Decorator grapes, candles & healthy ! US-420. SM-1880 SCRAMBLER S4~ VOLVO air bucket seal!!, lmmac. m.. Auto, V.1, Xlnt. cond.
wee"'' work. S1250 to $4990 price you will pay. other accesso.rles. 892-343S ,..._,I Ml 6-1332 * LATE MODEL -$800 "' WARD'S BALDWIN SJ'UDIO AKC S•blo Collio pupo, * ....., side &: out. 764 W · NUI St. cash, plus references and AUTO Wasl>cr $25; Refrig '68 VOLVO dl":leadable· car required. lall Newport, CM 642-8484 $20; Stove w/center grill 4 wks., champ. sired. I HONDA 90, 1964 model SPORTS CARS. CM Call 54M753 •fter 5:30
Fe.I-pt'r90nal interview. PIANOS & ORGANS ~-7'64 W. Zlth St., CM $S0 It: Up. 642-7318 'rum xh1t. n~ * Top Dollar To You GET YOUR LEADERSHIP '57 CHEV. Nomad; full pwr., GOING !Mo 911'Vicel '67
sedd name, address, and NEW & USED GE Electric ~ ~. OLD ENGLlSH SHE E p * 837 Golden West DEAL BEFORE YOU BUY lmmac.,; orig. cmd. $650 -GJ'O, air, auto, ps. tttno,
pbooe number to: Spinets, coosole.11, grand Kitchen sink unit, $50. Cycle ocx;, t yr old, mile. $200 Auto Service ·AUTO CENTER Inc "'f41l L~· Fl.RM. 213: 964-3303 R/H, red w/blcil: v.t. Pert. TRANS -WEST'ERN pianos from $399. Organs tir « ~•" lll94 6«-1175 alter 6 SACRIFICE, leaving are1. oond.' S1SOO cuh, b&I 156.4.1 'o•=-RJBUTIN~· e ..,. ~ · & Parts 9400 1984 Newport Blvd '67 O:iryaler :,i door, air. mo. &16-9191 ~· trom 1'195 TRANSPORTATION °" M 642-8460 • 590 N. AZUSA A . WALLICHS • MAfrnING'S RADIAL ARM SAW. B" --CHEV 377-375 HP abort block ta esa luonRTS $2995. 67~2776 'Sl BOONEVILLE mnv. New ~VINA, CALIF. 91722 MUSIC CITY Heavy dul)t. High speed $75. BNh & Yechts 9000 e Spot CaM Jor Imports ITV .. "'-" _.. • ......_
ORGANIZERS 3400 So. Bristol ~-~19~"=~~~-~ ~r::~s. ~;~~=· ~:11m~ We P•Y more for any import CONTINENTAL ~t~t1':""'".&A5'.:;:
lnvestigate the rapid growth So. Coast Pl11za • 540:-2165 7' DING HY all fiber glaes '1SH &. Ski XI' Trimaran 2· Heads ported &-polished rcgan:ilcss of year, make 1966 Barbo!·, C.M. MG-9300
& immediate income for I•-""""""""""""""" I $15. Good ~=· ~:. h~ai~er~t·ru1P~°:er~ with Isley· 1pringr; &: re-~~ cond~~.n. T;{' L ~ ~~r~ '66 v.OLVO 4 D. Automatic. STUD BAKER tholle who can recruit, train NOW HERE -the new skis, Ii.le preservers. ~wheel ta.iner1. S27S. 548-0072 MCYl'ORS, 15300 Be•cb Blvd. RadWl_, WIS' w a• her
& .....,.anize others. Ex-sales-Supersounding T-200 liOTPOlNT dishwasher. $35. ..,.11 1-... .. trailer. 2 extn. W tm'--i ..._ .. ......, bealllitul cood . Pr Iv ate 'SS S'IUDmAKEJt; nm
... -.. ·, p-I•~. ·~9895 Hammond Spinet ora:an 8' 6" Dana Surfboard. S50. 2 """"" Trailer, Tr•vel 9425 es u1:1 er. ...,,_, owner. 398 E. 17 St. CM .
'67 CONTINENTAL Sedan
Loaded. $4295
642-1450. 548-4326
.. .. ~ -· "'""'·""" '""" !o• NI•. · CORVAIR """"' """" -d'y or eves. -the flriest yeV IUitll!'S -14. 549--0!!54 $1.S each. 842-3020 aft. S pm, ANGLIA 1-5=1=8-=1696======= --------="="=·=1115=.=00Z.=2142=====1 SCW.fIDT-PHILLJPS CO. -~--,-SI'ORAGE, Trailers, boats, 1•
REAL ESTATE. Shouldn't 1907 N. Main o 20th RIDINbG ~· h~ h~11·6""130nt 18 .F'I'. ouli>oe.rd cabin cruls-etc. $7.50 per mo. Work -----·---Autot W•nteel 9700 '64 CORVAIR
you be selling the hottest Sa nta Ana coat. rit1.:ue-s. size l..-· er. Two 35 h.p. Johnsons, apace. 642-2001 I: 548-32fil '66 FORD ANGLIA
area I Huntington Beach'! 536-2335 afler 6 PM excellent ocean fishing boat. •66 Shasta Traile,.. 2 dr, dlr, &p0r1 d1x sedan. WE BUY $599
Call (or appl. Village R. E. FOR SALE Wurlitier Spinet FORT PLAYHOUSE Absolutely immaculate, l l 'Ai ft. Like new! $725 LOADED. Look s new! (2) ANY CLEAN
962-44.n 54&-81~ piano. Mahogany, cherry, • STIJRDY! SS5 Don't mlss this onr -only 973 Arbor St. 646-J45li toned paint, white bottom
walnut wood. Very tood • 962~ • Sll~ tncludes trailer.. blue top. $85 cash dcls, will LATE MODEL 1 -==~-~-c---,=~ 14' TRAVEL Trailer S40. wk., I condition. $385. 548-475.1 4 NEW l£uvPred doors 6 ft 8 536-6651 1ft . s. fine:. ba1 111 $31.86 mo. after
Agoncios, Men --------1 =~-~~-~~ •" ""'•· •lpo ~-.,._3989 ... -·~36 SPORTS CARS WonMn 7550 PIA..~0 Wanted, Private par· in by 9 in $30. 54!J.....4Zl4 after JULY special. Boats hauled, or ~1191 Mra. Chanter 1• 4 "' •·• or """" 17· •
---------ty wants to buy piano for S pm bot!Dm .scrubbed & painted, Tap Dollar To You ARGUS ''''" 54~9335 11.90..,. tt ... point • """'· Truckt 9500 DATSUN Golden Wool
WORK NEAR HOME CONN .ioc. -•·. '"°""" Misc. W•ntecl 1610 All olbtt m•inl'""'"' .. '-'""'--.'--------------IAUTO CENTER Inc -•-.;.;;."---'-~----· won: '65 DATSUN IA. T. dlr. pick '66 DATSUN 1600 "y~; 2 m•n"•b; xlnl con-SS CASH $$ "'""' ' "'"" < _,_ • tho l.9M N,wport Blvd.
$390 ditlon. ~2990 Newpor1 Dry Docks ti~lSCli op. Sky .,Jue. ,, ... LI Roadster, t 1pd, dlr, ln per· Costa Mesa 642-3460
Jr. Secy ...... · · =======-==-I We pay cub for: On the Bay at 20th St. work borse ci the truck rect shape. Thp like new.l'°'=-c=,.------
Purchsg Secy 100/60 BOHMER ea: fand· = ./ Furtrltura I Appliance• t7' BURCHCRAIT Cabin. 40 market. S1 2S. Cub M trade. Racing bronu.-plush black WE PAY · · ·
.... , , . , ..... $52$ Priv. ply. 1 emple ./ Antlquea: ./ Tools hp eltt m.rt mtr, 1rg whttl Pymts SJ!i,86 mo. t94-9773 or interior, new tlres Take old-CASH
Gal Frid•y .... to $3461 ~°'=·La=•;,,",,"'=·='""=""'=== ON ITEM 0, _ 639-3617 · er trade or $185 Cash, de ls. uoo 1 trlr. G. C. equip. $550 or Bk~Pr/S.cy · · · · · ~ Televiiion 1205 . COMPLETE HOUSEF1.JL. best'ofter. 545-2011 '67 FORD, %. ton pickup, P)'mll $49.86 mo. After LI,
Internal Auditor to 15M Call 5'7-67'3 or 871-8271 17 IT. Runabout boat. •60 auto VS, custom cab, R&H, ~'=94-=9=7T"'3=o'=6JS.=36=!=7.===I tor uMd ean a-trucb just
Mktg Research ·· to lSM WANTED 5 or 6 fL Sofa bed. V-8 eng, needs paint $300. Orig own, Sl950 962--83il caU ua tor rree estimate.
Chem Engr MS 10,il~ °" tt """' -•otcring. 263 E. rut . .,......1 FORD""'" i ton""" bod JAGUAR GROTH CHEYROlfT
Cost Acct deg. to • • Reaaonable. Call 548-4TS.1 OWNER ~--·. M.,1.,,11 F -II rood llhape Sf60. :If--. INotlt Ha,& R.IMlt' VTC>ll'<'-646-2887 '61 JAGUAR 3.8 Sedan, Ask for Sales Manapr
ARGUS EMPLOYMENT Tvi, WAIHi•I, 36' twin !ICrew cc. Good power. auto, wire wheels 11711 Beach m .,
CONSULTANTS AGENCY FREE TO YOU <0nd-113". &12-3559 J _______ 9_5_10 low mll.,, orig.°"""· 1!500 HunHn&ton S.•ch
3'.Ml Westcliff,NB 543-Tl96 ..... GaAIOU :i.o•~••LEf-al<kltt-· '590WDlSCruiaer29',twin ~sn , Kil-3331 •~ "" ... pl k bull 1952 WILLYS Jeep Oiev. 327 1624 E . 17th SL, S.A. 547-6336 fREEZDtS ·DtfDtS-IAIRS 4 moll. need good homes. llii eag .. db'e 111 · engirie with Ole't'} 4 1peed
1 calico It: l bilk I wht. Fully equip. $6250. LI 8-S2S6 trana. Extras too numeroua Sch_!ols-lnstrvdlonJ~ '46-1005. 7/10 Sailboat• 9010 to mention. Over $7000 in-
USABLE 3 pie«" aectional ------Vftted. 548-0072
SOIOOL Olildr«l'• vacaµm beige trezle, first come ~ WOWI
ratea. Oillcoat 10.Lea!on It. 1169 Donet t.ne, C.M. CAL.XI $2900
Typing School.. 548-2859· 173 546-3634 719 ~ racer • com.tortable
Del Mar, C.M. J ~~~~~~~~~~ Js~!Afr.O<~~ • .-;wi.;t;;;tt,o;,....;;;;gg~cat~.· J crube!' -Hur?'Y • thia
MERCHANDISE FOR Hl·FI & Sterto 1210 female, part ttMQeee to gooo I :=;-::"""=·1=1u_1"!.,.546-_17:u_s.,,.....
I _;SA~Li:!E~f'<~N:!!D~T!iRA~~D~E-l'"';;;;;;';,;';;;-;:;c;-:;;;;:--1 borne 968-2570 eves 1110 11' SLOOP. New 1tandlng I~ STEREO 1968 eolid state. rigging It: outboard. SleePf! 2
9520 c.mpen
Fu~niture 8000 --1, modol, !Jk• n-. F1tEE 4 mo old Wiemara. ·-•• 1 I v S650 1\aclng Sabot SUS GOING To Europe, Must sell Balance $79.35 or small ner puppy, ema e. er 1 · .
OPfJI ROAD
FACTOilY DIRECT
SALE
Fura.iture retumed lrom dL&-..,..,,..., ..... ,.._,,,it "'~. lnteUige1t. 6'2-4513 eves. 548-1487, 642-3192 . .......,. '612205 MeT"C'!dn Benz new
Pl"" studio&, model bomet, .,,.....,... ... ...,..,.. uqn. 01 -14' F'ibe •---I .. 1 New 11 fl fullY equtl'l""' dutch, trw, t n t e r Io r , "" cruceDatkm. 535-1289 7 MO. d black le hM rg.,... s oop, c • OPEl'f ROAD cbauil mount SUnroof SJ.250 t.HX!
S:::T;.tdlterranean etc ---·-had ahota, to tood borne. safe .l fut. Nr.w a.U.. $595. walk-thru h'-....lR car. Equ.tp. • . 6 . 19 aft 5
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. efery night til 9 • w time 719 • 6'15-610'J • auto rr.m, VS, power It~· 1 ========== Wed .. Sat. It: Sun. 'lil ti 28mm 0 .S, 4.1 to 16mm f3.S, · • ·,,=, -SN=owe=71RD=.~.,-,-d.,.y-l0<-lng A: brakes, duals.
SPANISH/MEDITT :~~:t.:e~o: ~ ~~.~n~cf:~~ hter! Nffds iaJla. NO. WHILE THEY LAST
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MG
'68 'MG
Will Buy
Your Volklwapn or Pondw
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673·1190
MANY WOND1'::RJ'UL OP·
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Turn back to "Bu!lnell Op.
oortunlflN .. N<IW'
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$150 536-8541
'63 CO RV A IR Greenbriar
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S795 2i3 E . 21st St. 646-4647
CORVETTE
'63 OORVETl'E 2 TOPS. '"6
eng. " body, Many Xtrul
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COUGAR
'68 COUGAR AM·FM Heater
Low mileace $3,SOO. msmo
or 6754222 Eve•.
DODGE
'63 DART 6 C)'I ntM .....
Make ode-. 1009' fin avail
MT-TU4 M6-0421.
.
RA MILER
'66 RAMILER
Sl099
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'65_ RAMILEI
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VAUANT
'65 VALIANT sm
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Liliina. dlntnf room and 830-3i16. . • . TO Good bome, lovable, SNOWBIJU> F1befalaa c:r.z, t 130 S. HAltlOR BL VD. --"'°" u 13. wk. n ,~ · o ""ol ..n•. "'" aootl COfttf, SANTA ANA 531-4655 r.-.. 9-9 dally. J.~ sun. llM ""'''"""' aux. mot, lf2..41l7, ,.._ . "-:i:O:i:==== -.-• Sportlnr Good. '500 _......,_ 119>-1111< 119 -
: Approwefl --~".""l""Ht~,1 Btc=-kl-mal<, LIDO 14, #ltsi. Dunolunln .9525
: Fimtiture ·=';\d."Xi.1' Cmd°':'.. u .;;;::"' .;1. .,..s 11am.. -,, ... ""· ""'· ""1311 IWA suoor ButU>llRS
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l""'4
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SOI'.\ Orlglnally !8"· · M•.. ...W bo-, , . h - -• I wtllt e SACRmCEI 14' o!<t .,.l 7\, :IOlllO La.,... °""'" ....
oll<!r. Olher ,,..., OUtUltd Adi-Diii to-· • DollJ Pllol -M• · bp ptlr,_ltllt!l .$111Lar, ~ 8'e<h umGO
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•
' ~ ~ ~ ---~--~~~---·-------......... -.. --------·-----
· lli'Qrrs 1969 HAllOI
''lt'e ••ee
642-6023 COSTA tllU
nae c~ we A•-"-"
• •
•
I
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•
-~~---,--~--~ . --... -~ -' •
.....l.t\D,'Y PILOT EDIT81UAL PAG~ 'Mind if I try for a nibble?'
Recall Reagan? No!
Gov. Ronald llMgan may have disappointed '°"'"
of thou caHlornlans who -him lnt<i ihe 1ovemor-
obip of the nation'• largest s\8le In his first try for
public offi.C'e.
Ho has made many mistakes, but probably no moro
than many another freshman iove.mor before him.
Most certaiDty, he has not erred to the extent that
Californians would go to the lengths to formally recall
hlm from olfice.
Yet the threat of a recall movement is being used
as a political weapon against him. Only about 130,000
more signatures, of the 780,000 required, were needed
at last reckoning to put his recall on the November bal·
lot. This would -no matter what the later outcome
ol the voling -embarrass him in the Interim at the
presidential nominating convention at Miami.
The right of recall for Calilornia citizens was put
Into the state's constitution as a last recourse against
corruption by, or in, the. administration of an elected
olllclal.
No charges of corruption in any form have been
leveled again!I llMJan or those be has appointed to
administer the atate s affairs. On the contrary, there
is every reason to believe that the administration has a
remarkable number~( men of integrity.
The recall movement is motivated solely by politi·
caJ differences with thf: stance Reagan has taken on
various issues. None of these differences warrant a
move to recall him, much Jess embarrass him by the
fact of a recall election based onpolitics.
Abuse of a "right" is the surest way to Jose it.
Tb.e attempt to recall Governor Reagan is clearly
an abuse of the citizens' right to relief from a corrupt
administration.
Many signers of the recall petitions are now com4
plaining that they were duped into signing. They say
they were led to believe it was a petition to the governor
'Propaganda' Is
Now All Bad
ln Ce y Ion, which is the world's
\argeat exporter of tea, there is a
group called the "Tea Propaganda
Board." Thll is turely one of the few
honest names remaining In the pro·
motion -..d. publicity field.
The Propegmd.1 Board spreads pro.
paganda about tea -such as the re·
centamouncement by scientists at tile
Bi.o-Cbemieal Division Of the UnJversi·
ty ol. California that, after 14 yeara of
reaearch tiley have found that tea
drinking actually reduces the in-
cidence Of ewebr1l coronary throm·
boeia.
OP' COURSE. IF scientists
ellewhere reported that tea drinking
laereued h incideoce ol some other
ailment, we would not expect the TN
Propaganda Board to p111 aloag that
bit Of information. It ii frankly and
openly a bira&ed agency, not pretending
to be anything but.
The word "propaganda" bas fallen
Into disrepute in this century, and pro-
pagandistl call ttiemselves by a dozen
different names -information
specialists, promotion experts. public
relatioos cotnelors, and 50 on . Yet,
the origin of the word "propagandla" is
not only innocent, it is positively
wreathed in piety.
MORE THAN 3011 years ago, ill 1622,
Pope Gregory XV established a
·'college" consisting of a committee of
Cardinals of_ the Roman Catholic
Church, baviog the care ·and oversight
•f foreign missions. This was known as
:oagre11Uo de prop1f1nda fide -
i.:ollege for propagating the faith .
To "propagate" simply me&n1 to
~pread or d i a semi n ~ t e ; Wtd
"propaganda," from that verb, at first
meant mer~y to spread the faiUi, to
disseminate the creed of Catholicism
among the heathen, by preaching and
writing. There was no imputation· or
_gross bias or baH·truthl.
BUT, AS RELIGIOUS enmities grew
more fierce, and as arguments
beoamt more Jntense, "propaganda"
came to m&an any piece of verbal azn.
munition that one side might throw at
another. The word gradually became
discredited, until today it is impossible
to use it in i~ origillel sense. All
"propaganda" ls bad in our eyes.
tt is refreshing that such a backwat-
er of the English language as Ceylon
however. 1hould continue to use t be
word in its proud and non-derogatory
sense. The tea Propaganda Board is
spre(l.ding the creed of tea drinking to
t h o s e infidels who prefer o t h e r
beverages. It disdains calling itself by
some softer, more euphemistic, name.
If it ever becomes tlbe "Tea Pro.motion
Board," we will know that the coffee
people balv"e it on tbe run.
Cantankerous, Charming
Bertrand Russell is as oandid, can·
!ankerous and charming as before in
l.he second volume of his memoir£
""The Autobiography of Bertr.an
Russell. 1914-1944." ...
Now 95, Lord Russell wrote most 1,
this several years lgo, but withheld i
rrom publicationn while the princip:
figures in it were alive. It follows la~
"ear's reminiscences of his childhoo:...
1nd youth, a world-wide literary eVent .
A little more sketohy than the first.
•ind relying heavily· on letters to an1'
'"Orn an extraofdinary c a s t o:
ha,racters (Joseph Conrad, T. s.
"\lot, Bernard Shaw, Albert EiJlstein /
l corroborate ttie recollections, the
:cond volume bears down heavily and
often marvelously on the aristocratic
:1Uo.sopher·scientlst..agitator's m o s t
::tive years Of public life and in·
!1ectual 1cr0batics.
VOLUME I CLOSED with Russell
h!:•vin& h1J wile after publication of his
celebrated ~'Principia Methem1Uca."
We pick up with fir~t World War when
Ruaaell was jailed for h1I peciftat IC·
UvJUea and suppOrt of tl1e No
CGmcr!pllcn F~. We continue
-19" w!Mn, tomporarily no !oncer • poClflst, ht rot.urned to EocJan<I
ltDm America '" IUpport tht com-,_. aphut Hlllm'.
He was dluppoiated lD post-revolu·
....,. Rualla, wlll<ll he mllod In
1• """ found c. bt filled wHll "cniol·
.-~-.. G~e.er"•~•t-~~
------·-------~
•
I
:, poverty, susp1c1on and persecu-
::in. Lenin, whom he met at the
me dinppointed him intellectually
'M .......... _"' fl .. m_, ._.., IH .. IMt.
•• 1111ttic·Ll"'9, .,_, 411 1111.1 St.ft.
tussell went to China, Which he found
:xtremely civilized, yet ripe for revo·
1lltion. He was welcomed there as a
·second Confucius."
L«d Russell is merciless in hi s
criticism O{ American society in the
late '30s and early '4& when he taught
at Chicago, UCLA , and finally at the
College of the City of Nj)W York -
··virtually a 11tellite of the Vatican"
at the time -which fired him after
public outrage erupted over his book,
··Marriage and Morals." This aug-
gest.@d that fidelity was not necessary
in most marriages.
RUSSELL WAS dragged into court
over th.is affair. The prosecution
bNnded hY work ''ltcheroua .
libiclinoUI, hu1Uul, venerous, ero~
maniac. 1phrvdisiac. irreverent. nar-
row ~ minded, wrtrutbfW and bereft of
moral fiber." The old gentleman la
ironic and witty as he recalls this
''typical Arae.rlc1n witch·hunt" staged
before .a judge, "1n lrh1hm'8n ," who
decided against him ·at length and witb
vituperation.
Ru ssell dlsrusse' bis love affairs
frankly -with Lady Constance
Malleson, better known u tbe 1ctreu
ColetU O'NeU (ht call'! lorcet thtil'
fir at night together, tor 1 German
Zeppelin cr111led in fllmes across the
road): w:itb Dara Black, who became
his second wife, and Patricia Spenct,
wllo bee-his third.
WYl,l,IAM 1100Alf
and LOl\'1ature' to reduce,f.roperty taus. (Misrepre-
aentttioo of a petition 11 a llony, punishable by a lino
ol up to '5,000 and a prilOll tonn oJ up to two _roars.
The same sentence can be applied to anyone fllin& a
petition that knowingly contallls fwo signatures.)
Local signen who wish to withdraw their signatures
may do so by saying so in writing to County Clorlo WU·
liam St John, Court House, Sante Ana, or to a registrar of voters.
Thole who have not signed 1hould reject the peti·
tion as a misu.se of. the democratic process.
Nixon vs. Humphrey
No matter what one's personal politic&) leanings
may be, the present prospect of a presidential race be-
tween Richard Nixon and Hubert Humphrey has ita
disturbing aspects -disturbin,g In terms of popular reaction to the "system.••
A great many voters in the Democratic Party clear-
ly feel that if Humphrey is nominated the wishes of tho
rank and file will have been thWarted. And a large
number of Republicans are sure to feel the same way
if the party wbeelhorses nominate Nixon, regarded by
many as having a ''losing" image.
The same disturbing questions are raised almost
every four years when the non-political American be-
gins to realize again how his presidential politics it
organized.
Then, amidst the clamor and razzle-dazzle of the
inauguration, he forgetl it until the next electibn.
There are many things wrong with both the nomin·
ating system and the electoral college in American
politics. But those who want a change are going to have
to light a sustained battle -not an every-four-year one.
High Court
Gi ves Police
A Break
'FBI Has Honored Limitations'
U 1 p-oup of youths pace back and
forth before a store window in an
American street at· midnight, cari an
observing policeman stop them .and ' . search them for evidence they .are
planning a felony? Or must he wait
until a briCk is heaved through the
window to act?
Recently the United St a t e s
Supreme Court, 8-1, Justice Douglas
dissenting, held the policeman need
not wajt. In the case before the court,
one man was carrying a loaded gun ,
resulting in srrest, conviction and ap·
peal.
The appeal was based on ti\e Fourth
Amendment, which say1 the people
shall be "secure in ttieir per1ons.
houses. papers and effects," ~d that
no warrant shall issue but upon
"probable cause . . . ·particularly
describing Ule place to be seized.''
IN AMERICA SINCE tho beginning,
and in.most ci"villzed societies, peace
officers have been stopping and
searching what are ungrammatically
called "suspfcious" per' on s ,
particul.arly at night. As a practical
matter they cannot conform to the let·
ter of the Fourth, because a .warrant
meeting UM cooditionl is not. im·
mediately available.
1be11 ltop-IDd..earcll ea.es i.v.
been what we call reasonable, ., Iona:
u they have not been used te harus
an indi.Vidual or group when no bona
fide cauae foe 1U1picion n.lstB.
Doubtless the proceee: has been to
sed by the police in mtiny cases.
.uvenlles out too late at night, and
.alely Negroes in groups, have been
accosted in the theory they .are up to
mischief, when the officer has no clear
·de1 wtlal mischief he expects.
BUT ANY WELL-MANAGED police
.orce carefully ihdoctrinated in law
and ria:ht.s can minimize such abuses.
though this is difficult where a
disorderly situation already exists.
The Supreme Court in .a se.ries of re·
cent decision11 has been stern in im·
posing restraints on police and pro-
secuting .authoritie s under
Amendme.nta Four, Five and Six.
The public officers have bitterly
CtJmplt.ined of these restraints, and
while the restraints have made some
difficulty and even an occasional
miscarriage of ju!Jltice, they have ill
general ,...,... the quality ol law on·
forcement..
BUT A POLICEMAN on 1 night beat
~ In a position dlfterina entirely from
that of a-detective wbo hu been work·
ing up a CIR .against a 1u1pecl RJs
ll(e and the lfves and property of
other• m•y be in the balance tn .a
period or a few moments.
Qllef Juatiet-Warren wrote the
decision holding that search of
1u.spects Is legal when "1 reasonably
prudent man In the circumstances
would be wuranted in the belief his
.safety and that of otheri is Jn danger."
It would perhaps be better If the
amendment couJd be amended by ad· t1nc such clause, but .amendinc the
Constitution w.arn't meant to be tasy.
Mea""'111<, it ii In effect amended by
thi• lnte.rpretation, and it ii Lmllkely to
brlnl an intolerable or ewm ap-
eclable tniarCtmtal Ill ... "pollca t::::atfty" ty'n\110t1~.
Hoove~ Rebuts McCarthy
By J. EDGAR HOOVER
Dlrettor, FBI
ll has been-alleged by 1 prominent
candidate for the Presidency of the
United States that the FBI under my
leadership operates autonomously and
without proJ)er control. This charge, of
course, is not true, and it denotes
either a contrived effort to mislead the
public or a woeful lack of knowledge of
our governmental system of "checks
and balances."
As most informed citizens know,
there are definite limitations upon the
FBI. its authority and its operations,
all of which I consider moat essential
and which the FBI has meticulously
honored over the years. First of all,
the FBI, as the investigative arm of
the Department of Justice, is directly
anJwerable to the Attorney General.
He is promptly and fully informed on
all aspects: of this bureau's activities.
Our administrative and investigative
•peratlons are subject to his control.
FURmER, THE Bureau of the
Budget keeps close tabs on the FBI
just as it does on other federal agen-
cies, and we must justify and account
for every cent of our appropriations.
Likewise, the General Accounting Qf.
fice reviews and audits our ex-
penditures. FBI operations and in·
vestig1tions come under close scrutiny
of the House and Senate Ap-
propriations Committees.· They study
our requests for appropriations and
k~ow exactly where, when, and how
the FBI uses its allotted funds ln the
discharge of its duties to serve the
public. In addition, Congress exercises
control over the scope of FBI authori·
ty. With the exception of a few
Presidential directives a n d in·
structions issued by the Attorney
General. laws passed by Congress are
the S<>le source for FBI authority and
jurisdiction .
Despite what may have been im·
plied, the FBI does not serve as
"poli ce. court, and jury." When this
bll!eau Investigates an alleged viola·
tlon of a federal law within its
jurisdiction, the facts are presented to
a United States Attorney without com·
ment or recommendation. H e
determines whether the matter will be
prosecuted. In cases brought to trial.
the federal courts and jurle! have a
firsthand opportunity to judge if the
FBI has met its obligations with pro·
per regard for the constitutional rights
of the accused and all olher parties in·
volved. Where convictions result and
are appealed, this critical review con·
tinues on to the highest courts of the
land.
AND FINALLY, FBI operations are
under constant scrutiny ol the news
media and the public. In our free
society, where freedom of the press ii
not only cherished but practiced. t.he
alert and inquiring press upholds "the
right of the public to know and to be
informed.
Therefore. considering this array or
control points and limitations, charges
that the FBI operates autonomously
are utterly ridiculous. Now , if there
are those who disagree with the FBI
policy of vigorous enforceffient of. the
ltiw, protection of law-abiding citizens.
preservation of the rights of all people,
proper punishment for g u i.J. t y
lawbreakers, and the protection of.our
country from subversive elements and
illegal forces, then let them admit this
rather than make erroneous allega ..
tions which cannot be supported by
facts.
THE FBI HAS ALWAYS met Its
responsibilities and discharged ita:
duties without fear cir f a v _o r ,
regardless of criticism and attacks,
whatever the source. This must con·
tloue to be the policy of the FBI or any
other federal investigative agency
under the rule of law. Consequently,
all Americans should view with
serious concern the announced in4
tentions and threats by a political can·
didate, if elected, to take over· ind
revamp the FBI to suit his own
personal whim s and wishes.
The allegatioru ref erred to bv Mr.
Hoover were made by presidfl1'tial
candidate Eugene McCarthy.
-Editor
America Is More Musical
Things a columnilt. might never
know if he didn't open hi& mail:
Americana are becoming m o r e
musical. We now have more than 44
mill:ion amateur mWiicians, compared
to 2() milUon in 1910. One in every 4.6
persons play• an instrument. More
than twice as many play tne piano as
the guitar -23.~ million to 11 million.
But, alas, the number who can still
*1un a uk.elele has fallM in 10 years
from 1.1 million to a hall million.
tf you have trouble telling boy teen-
agers from lir! teen-agers, you'd have
even more difficulty with oysters.
These bivalves a.re ambi.sexu1l -that
is, they ch&nl'I tex several times dur·
ing their lifetime, him this year, her
next year, him again another year.
EQUAL RIGHTS are only hearsay
to the women of Morocco's mountain
tribes. They arise at 4 a .m. to grind
grain and work until long after dusk.
Their husbands, however, plow in the
fields only from 9 a.m. until noon and
Ulen knock off for the day. Despite
their long hour a of labor, few Moroc·
can women ever seek divorce. An,
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Those lntellectuala who 1dv1Jed
us last February. that we should
get out of Vietnam because we
cannot win have been very quiet
recently. Perhaps they have.
lea.med that there is more to
fightin1 • WAr than cool calculat·
inc 1econd 111essln1.
-H.B. McD.
-
other man they married wO'llld expect
them to work just as hard.
The United States will never really
run out of potential 1p1re to park its
automobiles. One-third ol its total land
are.a is still forested.
Quotable notables: "Money is like a
sixth sense -and you can't make use
of tbe other five without it" -
Somerset Maugham,
FEW PEOPLE r..UZ. lhe welgtit of
rainfall. -It Is estimated that a four·
inch rain will drop nearly two million
tons of. water on a seV1!n-square-mile
area -enough to make 1 fair-sized
lake.
The gadgets science c r e a t e s
prim~rily for the battlef i e l d
sometimes find peaceful uses, too. An
example is the beal4 emi1Uw infrared
scannJng equipment developed to help
troops Jn Vietnam detect enemy
movements at night. It is being
employed by University of Michigan
reM!arr bers in forest fire detection
and cootrol and to trail and count
wtldllfe herds.
Toward one tongue: Fr enc ll
language purists are alamted at ttie
rate with which their countrymen are
taking up English aod Amerlcan
words and expressions. Among them;
Surprise party, ·sweatu, camping,
drugstore, pickpocket, s 1 n d w l c h ,
gangster and baby. But, of course, the
trend works both ways. Long aa:o we
took from the French such words as
garq:e, chauffeur, credit, large, beef
1111<1 creem.
EXPLODING KNOWLEDGE, Many
mJddJe ... ged men feel like they'd like
• to 10 back to e<>lle&• and start alt 0V11r C ltmJChtnolbtabadldea. FOllr
• mudt Wcll1111tkti h• ltt'-
cumulated ti ince 19'.25 u waa known
from all the years of history that Went
before. And our present known fUnd ot
data is expected to double w4bin
another 11 years.
Worth remembering: Advice sCri.h-
bled on a Hotel Edison menu: "Learn
from the mistakes of others: you can't
live long enough to make then{ aD
yourself."
Jittery: What makes our civilizlj;i.on
so nervous? Each person may have
his own reaso n, but to cahn them
down Americans now pay $241.S 'mil·
lion for tranquilizers each year, '.fJ'7J
million for sleeping pills. and '.fUlp
down countless thousands of gallon. of
hard liquor .
Tidbits: Gorillas often suffer from
chapped hands. Americans throw
away a million empty baby food jarl
every day. The flashes of fireflies m-.
mere))t love sig nals to help them find
each other in the dark. The dollar bill
in your pocket is 75 percent cottOn.
lt wss J01Sh Billings who obseryed,
"No man Ls rich who wants anyinore
than he has got."
-----
Monday , July 8, 1968
The 1ditorial poge of the Dcfl•
Pilot stekl to inform ond 1tim-
ul4te readers bt,t pre.tenting thil
1'f tDSpoper's opiniom ond com-
mcn~111 . on topics of inttrest
and 11g7uficance, b!i providing 11
forum for the ezprt s.tion of
our re~rs' opiniona, ond b
pre.senttng the diver1e oU1f"
points of fnf0117l.fd obt eroen •
and spoke1mtn on topics of the do~.
llobert N. Weed, Pubi1J1i.r
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