HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-07-09 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• ..
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 9, 1968 1 oc ___ ._ ........ _ ..... _ .. " .. ,_ ...... _ ... ----..· • Jet Age Growth F_ore~ast
'.Airport Sites
·Al RPORT SITES -Pereira report today called for new regional
airport at one oi five sites (left to right) Los Alamitos, "Bolsa Chica
Beach the LTA base, Signal ·Peak of San Joaquin Hills or El Toro.
Pres.,;! county airport was considered too limited,
' ..
Orange County Future
Airport Needs. Unveiled
Orange County has a staggering job
ahead if it is to meet its air travel
challenges, tlhe· Board of Supervisors
was told today.
The challenges will come in the
form of people who want to fly
airplanes, said a bulky report f:ro!ll the
nationally known firm of Pereira &
Associataii -50 million demands for
iarlines seats from Orange Countians
by 1985.
T)le Pereira report made these key
points:
-Orange County needs a "regional"
airport about the size of the present
Los A1ngeles Internatio nal Airl>Ort,
\vithin five years.
-The present county airport cannot
do the job.
-The county has five other potential
regional airport sites·, inclu<ling a bold
land·and-sea complex on Bolsa Chica
State Beach in Huntington Beach.
-Orange County Airport is ·fast ap·
prO<K:bing full oapacit1\nd some type
or traffic restriction is almost man·
datory.
-Full attention should be given to
development of a new broad..rscoped
giant of an airport at Gamp Pendleton,
an "international'' airport handlinog
supersonic (SSTJ transports of the
future. -Immediate planning should begin
for interlocking series of small airports
(S.. AIRfORT PLAN, Page 9)
Newport Waitress Beaten
On Head With Wre11ch
A 19-year--0ld Newport Be a ch
waitress w-as in satisfactory condition
today at Hoa.g M·emorial Hospital after
she was brutally beaten by a man
wielding a foot-long v.Tench. .
Held in N~ Bead! city }ail to·
day on a charge of assault with a
deadly weapon the susipect, Riobard
Lloyd Rhodes, 29, of 2726 Drake St.,
Costa Mesa.
The young "'Oman told police she
was coming home from V.'ork dlortly
Girl, 7, Dies
In Fiery Crasl1
LONG BEACH (UPI) - A seven· year~ld girl was killed Mond~y and
her pareni, injured when theu" car
was hit broadside by another vehicle,
police repOrted.
before midnight Monday, when an
assailant jumped out of tier front yard
bushes just as She stepped Crom her
car.
He beat her on the head several
tin1es with the OOx wrench he was car·
rying, police said. \Wien she started
screaming, her father came outside
.and ttle man tried to get away.
The girl, stunned but able t<l w-11.k,
stumbled into the house .to call police,
while htr· faUler went after the at·
tacker. ·
Rhodes allegedly jumped into his
auto, parked neari>y, but slammed it
into a fence before he could esc.ape.
PoUce 'found him sitting behind the
steering wheel of the car when they
arrived. He was not injured. The girl was taken to the hospital.
\\-'here a spokesman said sbe is sul·
ferirlg from cuts ()n bqth hands, face
and foretlead. . Poliet1 ·srud Rhodes · whose ·right
Wrist ill bound in a cast from· a prior
accident, i11 to be amligoed Wed· nemy al whicll Um• b6i1 will be sel Sandra E. Miles, daughter ot Mr.
and Mrs. Leroy E. Miles Jr. of Long
Beach was killed. Her father was
treated and released from Long Beach. Steel Talks Pushed
Commuolly H0&pital and her mother
was reported in "guarded" eondltlon. ' · Pl'M'SBURGll (UPI) -· w~· cir
The Miles car exploded. and burst m· meetings sUll '1:~ed in 'aecrt " tOp to ·names after it was hJt by one · negotiators for Ute ba$c ste.el i us try
drlven by Rodger James Young, 21, and th'c Urii\ed. Stee)wofken ·unibn
.tationed aboard the USS Chicago, al (USW) stepped up efforts today to
the intersection of Broadway and · r&aeh a contract agreement.
Roycro!t A"Venue. , . Qnly 2.1 days remain bttl'ore the
Young, who aUegecUy ~ ra.n a 111op present contract expires Aug. l. The
Mgn, ¥• booked by police on '1JSpi· union's traditional polic)' bas been "D<L.
cion or-manslaughter. IJ contract, no work." •
-=·,.., ... -
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I
Mesa Massage
Parlor Owner
To Close Shop
Charges against a Costa Mesa
massage parlor owner whose club was
raided by vice officers will be dismiss~
ed Thursday · When she and two
employes appea'r for trial in Harbor
District Judicial Court.
Mrs. Afsar Mahjoubi, 41 . o( Long
Beach, now charged with keeping a
disorderly house. has given up her
massage parlor license in a yoU·ruiJ·
m y ·b ack· an d-l'U·rub-yours ar·
rangement.
Barring any change in city position,
liowever, the two remaining defen-
dants arres~d in the raid on the Costa
Mesa Health Club, 132 E. 18th St., will
still go on trial.
Karin H. Campa, 26, of 7892
Rockwell Ave., Midway City. and
Alicia Mendez, 28. of Compton, arP.
charged with residin,g in a house or ill
fame and free on $190 bail each.
One woman, Jessie L. Cox, 2!. 0£
7681 Joel Ave .. Stanton. pleadell in·
nocent with them ,· but later· changed
her plea to no cont.est and is now on six
months' probation. for soliciting for
prostitution . Miss Cox allegedly stripped to the
waist and gave Detective Frank
Upham a topless massage during th~
vice raid set up for a $5 extra fee.
The Cox woman then offered to
drastically alter her body-rubhing
technique for a $2{1 fee, Upham
reported, at which time she was plac-
ed under arrest.
Police confiscat8' her business
license durin g the raid. accordinl! to
the City Attorney's office and iirs .
MahjOUbi has agreed to relinqulsh it
for good. ·
Mercury Rises,
And So Do . Tides
Orange Coast residentl appear to be
caught between the devil and the deep
blue sea. That Js, the higfi tern·
peratures of a mid-summer heat wave
are expected to continue, while in the
Newport harbor area, seven foot high
tides will again Oood the street!
tDalght. lliglleot tide will be reacl1td at
9,55 tonlgllt.
1'her9 will be some varleble clouds
tonight and tomorrQ\\' momin1, but all
in it[ 'We'If Rive the the kind of
weather that's made CalLComia "1'C<ln
and 1oldco.
ISEli U&ES J, 8 ~D. 9) )
ABDUCTOR HUNTEO
Thomas F. Scholfield
Marine Kidnaper
Hunted in Seven
States by Poliee
MARYSVILLE, Calif. (UPI) -A
husky young ~arin!l, who ~oped to
escape the United States with a kid·
naped toddler 'BS his safe conduct, fled
today from a seven-state police search
after freeing the tiny girl unharmed.
Thomas J. Scholfield, 2'l, armed
with a rille and a pistol and considered
"dangerous:· disappeared after his
wife returned the abducted child to
her home .
Th{ Mafine priva,te and his wife,
Loretta, 20,· held little Vicki Lynn West
for 12 hours. The two-year-old was
unharmed and told her mother : "We
just went bye-bye.'' .
Mrs. Scholfield wa11 charged with
kidnaping and jailed in this farming
"town on tbe "·estern edge of U1e Sierra
Nevada. She told sheriff's deputies her hU5·
band jumped out of their «1tolen car on
the ouUkirts ol Marysville and ned on
foot as she drove to the home of Mrs.
llelen \Vest to return the child . Tu.; tousle-haired youngster was still
wtarb1g theJ>athrobe in Which abe waa
abducted. "l'm very glad to see my baby," the
relieved mothe said after abe was
reunltei.l wtth her younger daughter.
"I didn't really expect to."
51\crif! Gtiry Miller of Yuba County
5aid Scholfield, a Camp Pendleton
Marine w i th a lonR juv-0ntle record, p (S.e MARINE; Pilce·ll
..
·~
Marines Take Vow
To Hold Hill 689
SAIGON (UPI) -U. S. Marines
fighting in trenches atop Hill 689 vow·
ed today to hold the peak until the last
attacking North Vietnamese was slain.
American commanders N!ported 350
killed in the hill fighting near · Khe
Sa nh and other heavy battles along the
DemiUtarized Zone.
Both sides were said to be lookinr:
for a "symbolic" victory in the fight
for Hill 689, tWo miles west of aban·
donll'd K!Je Sanh.
Combat in the five-day batUe was so
close that at one point Marine
defenders fired antitank guns to blast
North Vietnamese infantrymen from
shallow trenches hacked out ot the
rocky slopes. American planes bathed
the 2,000·foot mountain with napalm
fire bombs .
The military value of Hill 689
diminished sharply last week when
American forces destroyed and ab.an·
doned the main Khe Sanh fortress to
assume a more mobile posture along
Uie DMZ where North Vietnamese
troops were believed ma~sing for a
new Offensive in South Vietnam's up·
per tier. Th.is may be coordinated. with
a new assault on Saigon. "We are going to move off this hill,
but not until· we have defeated the
North Vietn~ese," Maj. Raymond
Davis, commander of the 3rd Division
~;rines defending Hill 689, said Tues·
day. Davis described the North Vie~·
namese as poorly led by inexperienced
officeM. UPI Correspondent R a y m o n d
Wilkinson, reporting from Hill 689 Iate
Tuesday, said at least 70 North Viet.
namese in a constantly reinforced unit
of about 400 have been k.i11ed since the
fight erupted. last Friday: Wilkinson
described Marine losses as light in
hurling back waves Of charging Com-
munists supported by mor~r and
rocket fire .
The U. S. command sai d the oth~r
North Vietnamese casualties were in·
flicted in battles just north of ]fill 689
and around Gio Llnh, a major artillery
and supply base ea.st or Khe Sanh. U.
S. losses in these battles were placed
at seven marines killed end 30 wound·
ed. ' On the Saigon front. U. S. ATmy
'troops ol lb• !,Jrmo!>ile 18! cavalry
Division reported killing 34 North Viet·
namese or Viet Cong lo flgbUng 15 fD
19 miles south....,! of IM c..,ital. Foor
Americans were killed and 13 Woondtd
in one enpgement against Com.muni.it
IOl'fes poaslbly poUed for a new a.ttack
on S~~'f'· 1
U. S~ir Force 1!52" hit U... jungle's
-•
around Saigon with a new round of
saturation bomb runs today. American
headquarters reported 140 milsions
against North Vietnam Monday and
the loss of an Air Force F4 Phantom
jet, but communiques said a Jolly
Green Giant rescue helicopter picked
up the two crewmen.
Tlhe U. S. command Slaid .8Uied
forces 6>Weeping the Saigon . Putskirt.s
have seized 1,714 rocket B ·and
mortars mnce June 18 when the Com·
munists· ended a second wave Of at.o
tacks on Saigon. The arSf!nal included
266 rockets capa~le of hliling' Saigotl
from a distance of seven miles.
Correspondent Wilkib90ll, reporting
on tile 1-Iill 689 fight, saJd North Viet-
namese forces almost smMhed Into
the center of the outpost when bar.
riers were removed to readmit a
Marine patrol at night.
"The gooks jumped into our trench
lines, but we took some antitank
weapons and blew ttiem out," Lt. Lar·
ry Perry of Dallas, Tex., said. "We set
up a hasty defense position and heal
them back, but we killed 1lt'leut 18 in
our own trenc::bes."
. ~c Earl 'Berdwin d. PedGca. Olllf.,
Joined Perry in the trencti warfare.
Oranlfe (;oas&
Weather
Goodies in store from the
meteorological mailbag include
a gradual drying trend with hot·
ter days. No precipitation and
highs in upper ?O's expected.
INSWE TODAY
UC regents to 1tudy Thvrtday
reciprocal teaching, mritUng
agreement with uct mtdieal
tchooJ, county mtdiccll untct.
PIJ{I.-7.
CltlltflYI.. f ~la-~ c .......... ,
Dellll ..... 1 ......... " ,.._ , .. ,,
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149"11 11..0., ti A-~ II
Molli.tr M
MllnfHt uar ;
•
! DAll.Y I'll.OT
Sirhan Put
In Another
~ounty Jail
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sirhan
Bbtiara Sirhan has been secretly
-Mllsked 14 a c:tll in the Hall ol Justic.,
wbere be will face trial on charges of
murdering Sm. Robert F. Kennedy.
A coovoy cf patrol cars manned by
111Wen deputies from the Central Jail,
completed the move Sunday, Sheriff
P...,. J. Pltche!s announced Mooday.
Tbe !_..minute move was'° secret not
even Russell E. ParS'Ons, Sirban's at·
t.amey, knew about it. ,
"We knew it was coming," said one
of Parson's aides, "but the time was a
secret even fr<llll us."
"The transfer waa accomplished in
e routine manner and "·as part ol an
over-all previously sched~led program
of security for tbe -inmate,""Pitchess -
Aid. . . .
Tbe 24-ye.ar~ld J o r d a n 1 an im·
migrant's new 6-by-3 feet cell is on the
13th floor in the Hall of Justice.
'The Hall of Justice's jail quarters
have undergone a CQmplete renova-
tion, accelerated because of the Sirhan
case. Sirhao's cell is in en· isolated
corridor with no out.side windows and
no other prisoners. It is equipped with
a bunk fixed to the wall, a toilet, wash
basin and a 12-incb circULar mirror at-
tached ro tbe wall.
A Jargu security area for visitors
e<ljolns 111e cell. It ha< bacs and sliding
doors and a 20-by-3().lnch window in
one wall. Sirhan and visitors can look
at one another through the window and
talk by telephone.
"This WIBY there's no chan« of pass-
ing anything," said a sheriff's aide.
Nixon Doubts
Polls Will Aid
Rockefeller Bid
By IBE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Former Vice President Ridlard M.
NLwn says M is ccddent his primary
victor\es will lead to the Republican
presidential nomination. even· should
public opinion polls favor rival N~lson
A. Rockefeller.
Public opinion polls involve only
"about 3,000 people across tJle coun-
try," Nixon said in Springfield, N.J .,
Monday, and he said he doubted
Republican National Con v e n ti on
delegates woold be swayed by them.
"I tiave the same llbing going for me
that Eugene McCarttly a1ls ," said Nix·
on referring <to primary victories.
"'But I think that t!he Republican Party
will listen to the people and I don,'t think the Democrats will."
N l x on had said earlier tJ1e
Democratic convention 11 will go tile
w'av of the bosses" end Vice President
Hubert H. Humphrey will get t he
nomination despite D e m o c r a t i c
prim.-y victories !or McCarttiy and
the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
Californ)a Gov. Rcnald Reagan,
me-aowhile, brusbed aside new talk by
GOP presidential aspirant Rockefeller
olf a Roclreleller~Reagan ticket.
"I've made my position very plain,''
Reagan said at an airport news con-
ference in Sacramento. "I'm not in·
terested in the vice presidency a t all."
Rockefeller had said in San Fran-
cisco the possibility oC suoh a GOP
ticket is "wide open •.• I don't think
that any combination should be ruled
out or 6bould there be a freezing or
llllY situation." ..
Reagan refused to comment on ttle Ne:w York governor's stat.ement the
Oallfornian is a more serious presiden-
tial a>Dtender than he admits.
"There's no sense commenting on
'flil.at tlis opinion is," Reagan l).aid.
On the Democratic side, Humphrey
told more than 2,000 underprivileged
youngsters in 'Vashington he is com·
rnitted to seeing that all young
Americans get "all the education they
pn take" end adequate food and hous·
1ng.
DAILY PILOT
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CAUPOllllA .
Rebert N. Wees.
PvbllWr n ..... , r:e,.,u
Elllllof
Tho11111 A. M11r,.h!ri1
Mllllelftl IOUor
Jock l . Curl•Y P111I Nittttt
........ "'-"" Mwrti.lnt Dlr1tW
Offjc•• c:.te Mesi: nt Wld a1y lln!tl
..,... 9Mdll Zill w ... 1 .... 9olllmlrC
LetlM ••··•~= m .,or1ti .. ,,_
ltlilffi8'1 I lllCll! • llfl Jtittt
TlltSdq, Ju~ 9, 1968
•
_Gunman. Surrenders r .
' . • Aussie Promised Chance to 1Fight in V.i.¢.tnant
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -Gun·
man Wally Mellish, wbo beld his
shotgun bride and their baby hostage
for seven days While pollce kepta cor-
don around him, SW'rendered today
after he wa1 promised a chance to
Ug9;1t in Vietnam.
Mellish, a 22-year-old former mental
patient and convicted car thief, was
taken to lngleburn Army Camp to see
if the army wow.ld have hiqi ..
Mellish's 19-year-old bride and
childhood sweetheart, Beryl Muddle,
was taken with her 11-week-old son
Leslie to her parents. For the time
being the police did not enforce a war-
rant for her arrest for !ailing to pay a
$42 fine for proatitutlon. 1 Mellish ended his bl:.arre holdout
after talldng ror nearly three hours on
the telephone with the Rev. Clyde
Paton, chaplain at Long Bay Jail.·
Mellish's chief condition for SWTender
was that he be given a chanc~ to serve
Los Alamitos
Fired Chief
Files Appeal
Los Alamitos Police Chief Donald A.
French who was fired June 28 by the
city manager has filled a written
notice or appeal.
y,•Jlh Australia'i forces in Vietnam.
Carrying. his baby son, the young
man emerged from the house where
1iO had bOlil off polt.e ior """ days arid llix boun wltll u ar....i ol lwld
.......... two >Ule1, lllld • llliolpl
lllld threats 14 lcll1 bla ...U. and cbllil If
!lie police rushed him.
'lbt youni wile followed him !rom the bouae.
Mtllilh ljarted --· to -Min MOlddla lllld the baby a WM1t a10
-poltce 1bewed up at the houto 14
que1tlon him about some 1tolen car
parts. The police put a cordon around
the house, but did not try to rush it for
fear the young man would carry out
his threat
P<illce Commissioner N<irman T.
Allan arranged a wedding ·for the cou·
ple, with the bridegrpom holding" a
shotgu n, last Wednea~y alter Mellish
arreed to surrender. Though the com·
mllsioner threw in a wedding feast of
st.ak, curried musiu...ms end ri~
pudding plus a ~ wedding r!ni,
Mellish reru11ed. to give up. ;
Allan-ailoiumed;rver to-Mellish 4't
armor plordo1 rifle wlllcli Mollllb -r.· clomudtd to "IDW bbD equal to
poliee " I '1'!11--............... 1r I cenaondb1U..New~~ Polle• AasodaUOll foe lli1'1>1Ylnc
.weapon, but be malnta1aecl"the · · C
man -dn't •tart 1bootlll1 u 1ol>I u
hewubumcnd. :
"Mr. Allan'• =w. ""' -nwlfded," Now Wala .llnmitr
Robin Aikin 111d after MtWsb<1 sur-
render. "There w.111 J>e general relief
that the siege resultild. in no klls ol
lile., I don't think too many people will
now be concemed. by some ol tl>e
more unusual aspects."
Mellish and h11 wife were taken to .a ·
field headquarters set up during the
siege. Their baby appeared fit. Of·
• ficers recovered the weapons from Ut·
side the house. ·'
Attorney General Renew~
' Appeal for Gun Controls
WASHINGTON (AP) -Atty. Gen.
Ramsey Clark renewed an ·appeal for
federal registration of firearms today
despite the administration's setback in
the House.
that registration would be "of tremen,
OOus help to law enforcement" by pro-
viding identification of the owners Or
guns used in crimes.
EYE-TO.EYE -Mrs. Delores Ferrell, Sawdust Festival publicist,
seem sto have no qualms about "Pepe Laguna" despite glittering
eyes, chartreuse hands and orange-yellow feather rnaribou coat.
Operating Pepe is Paul Rayman, theater manager.
French was fired by city manager
James M. Smith who charged him
\vi~ "continuing ! l nan c i a 1 ir·
responsibility, accentuated by
numerous insufficient fund checks."
Smith, who also hold11 the post of ci·
ty clerk, said he 'Yt'ill set a date ror
public hearing on French's appeal
after he studies the cit)' council
schedule.
Sen. sfrom Thurmond, (R-S.C.),
brought the quesUon up at a Senate
juWni.le delinquency subcommittee
hearing on ~ firearms registration
and licensing bill urged by President
J ohnson.
Thurmond asked Clark jJ he still ad-
vocates national registration in view
of what happened in the House Rules
Committee Monday.
At the Rules Committee meetiug
members obtained e. pledge from R4W.
Emonuel CeU.r, (D·N.Y.), to oppose
any attempts to attach registration
and licensing pravisions to another bill
to ban interstate sales of firearnis,
either by mail oc over-the-counter.
The effect of the bill would be to ex-
tend to shot.guns and ril!es the restrie-
tiorts provided on 1ales of bandguns·i n
the recently passed crime control bill. "Yes, I do," Clark replied. He said
Laguna Invader
Puppet 'Pepe' Prize Publicist
The council sit.! as a personnel
board !or such appeals.
French bad denied Smith's charges
saying. any insufficient fund checks
were written more than two years
ago.
A citizens committee !or tbe
J'Wistatement of French has been
formed with Donald Philby, a former
member of the city's personnel com-
mission as chairman.
5 Jailed in Sweep
On Wilderness Camp
MONTAGUE, Calli. (UPI) -She<-
i!f's deputieg and g8me wardens held a
wilderness camp roundup Monday and
it resulted in the arrest of five
persons.
Celler, chairman of the Hou,e
Judiciary Committee and in line to
head House cooferees in any negotia-
tions with the Senate on gun control
legisJ.ation, said he made his pledge in
an effort to save the long gun bill.
Clark, in his testimony before the
Senate comrnJttee, rejec~ a sug-
gestion by Thurmond that any
registration of firearms S'hould be Jeft
to tt>e states and local governments.
If you see a little fellow with
chartreuse hands, gLittering eyes and
yellow orange fur about Laguna
~ach, have no rear.
He's not part of the rumored hippie
invasion. He's not even rrom outer
space. lle's· "Pepe Laguna."
And, Pepe Laguna is the advt.nee
man or more properly the advance
marionette for the Sawdu st Festival.
Created especially for the six-week
art show in Laguna Canyon, Pepe and
his operator will browse about the art
colony to herald the shows "Hansel
and Gretel" and "Beauty and the
Beast."
'"Hansel and Gretel" will begin July
12. Both shows are being staged by the
New York Marionette Theater and will
be held alternate weeks.
Paul Rayman, manager or the
marionette company. also announced
a ~ecial showing July 13 &t 2 p.m . at
the Fairview State Hospital in Costa
Mesa. It is to benefit retarded children
at the hospital and is sponsored by the
Sawdust Festival.
From Page 1
MARINE ...
and his wife took the child after bin-
ding Mrs. 'Vest, her teen-aged brother·
in-law and her five-year-old daughter
with torn bedsheets.
The abduction climaxed a night of
drinking by SchoUield and Mrs. West
at a roadhouse outside Yuba City, the
$heriff said. lie said the Marine and
Mrs. 'Vest, \Vho is separated from her
husband. had a "dating" relationship.
l\trs. West said Scholfield hoped to
flee to Canada, apparently to avoid
service in Vietnam and because he
believed he had stabbed a man to
death in San Francisco "a couple or
days ago." However. San Francisco
police said they had no record or
Scholfield or such a killing. .
Two Mesa Youths
Accident Victims
T\\·o Costa l\-1esa youths sulte~d cuts
and abrasions Monday ""+Jen hurled
from their motorcycle when it collided
'4ith a car making a left turn in the
d0'4'Tito\vn .aroo .
Ohris A. 11ill, 16, of 2033 Republic
Ave., and his passenger. David l\.
Stckes. 17, of 867 Darrell St., \4'ero
~ated privately after the evening ac-
cident.
Police sa.id Ronald R. Rondeau, 31.
<if 1379'l Pine St., \Vestminster. "\\'as
turning left from southbotmd lanes to
\Vest J7th Strret onto Babcock Street
in front of llill's northboo.nd motorcy·
cle. )le v.·as unhurt.
Actress Guilty
MIAMI. Fla. (AP) -Denise Darcel.
blonde French actress who won fame
with sexy movle roles in the 1950s,
was found guilty today of shopli!Ung
..,S worth of frilly underwear.
Municipal Judge Arthur Jluttoe
1entenced the ctiesty actress to 36
days in jail or a ~ tine. t
Other children in the area may at-
tend the showing. The price of ad·
mission is one, toy· in good condition.
The collected toys will be distributed
·to children of the hospital at a
Christm&-s in July program bein·g held
July 25. It is sponsored by tile Costa
Mesa Chamber of Commerce.
Conviction Upheld
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The court
martial conviction of Pfc. Ron.aid
Lockman, 24, a Philadelphia soldier
tried in San Francisco for refusing to
serve in Vietnam, was upheld Monday
by a military review board.
The five were arrested on charges of
illegal possession o£ drugs but about 15
others fled the hippie hangout on
Bogun Creek.
Siskiyou County deputies went to the
campsite near Iroo Gate Dam with a
search warrant-and confiscated
various substances believed to be il-
legal drugs and a quantity of mari-
juana.
"National registration would be
much more-efficient and far, far more
effective," Clark said.
However, he sald he hoped the
states would set up their own systems
fOf' lictnsilig gun ownerl. He said Ule
adminjstratioo. biH is designed to en-
courage this but the federal govern·
rnent must act il the states fail to do
60.
During the Sawdust Festival, daily
show times for the marionette pro-
ductions will be 3, 5, 8 and 9;30 p.m.
Show times Saturdays and Sundays
will be at 2, 4, 6, 8 and 9:30 p.m. with I
an added 11 p.m. show on Saturdays. ,--------------:============--------------, Mrs. Delores Ferrell, public rela·
tions director for the S a w d u s t
Jo"'estival, said there wjll be a press
preview of "Hansel and Grebel'' dur-
ing e press party from 5 to 7 p.m.
Thursday.
On opening day, Friday, all the
families o( Laguna Beach policemen
have been invited to be guests of the
Sawdust Festival at a 3 p.m. show.
The firemen's families have been
given the ss-me invitation at the
premiere showing July 21 of "Beauty
and the Beas:t'' at 2 p.m.
Sterling Hayden's
Son Denies Draft
Evasion Charge
LOS ANGELES fUPJ) -Christian
Tlayden, 19, son of actor Sterling
Jiayden, pleadej innocent Monday to a
eh::irge of draft evasion and v.•as
o.-dered to stand trial Sept. 24.
He entered the plea after U.S. Dis1.
Judge Manuel L. Real denied without
comment a n1otion to dismiss the in-
dictment whi ch chai:ged Hayden with
refusal to report for induction.
llayden's ·attorney. Hugh Manes.
contended Congress had not formally
declared war in Vietnam and that the
United States inter;vention was a viola·
lion of the United Nations charter.
"I quite !rankly was prepared for
it.'' liayden said of the dismissal.
"The odds were very much against
n1y motion for dismissal being ac·
cepted. I'm just as detennined to car·
ry on.''
Manes said he would challenge the
legaLily or the "'·ar during Hayden's
jury trial.
Public Grabbing
Pageant Tickets
Latest \4'0rd from Laguna Beach
Festival of Arts is that all tickets for
the Pageant or the Masters up through
July 21 tire sold.
All Friday. Saturday and Sunday
night performances through the con·
c\usion Au gust 24 are also sold.
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only has it!
!Cl ••• ' .. -· -. -
"We make no bones about it " • • •
)ff!J'(f!j;'
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Deep Steam Carpet Cleanir\g costs more
than the old shampoo method • , •
However, the Deep Steam Carpet Cleaninc Method removes soil from ·both
the fibers of the carpet and the carpet backln11. Since no brushing or
scrubbing action is used, there is no distortion of the carP\!t pile. The
powerful extraction action of the Deep Steam process lifts mal\ed pile to
"like new" appearan~e. . \
The need for frequent professional cleaning Is reduced beca use th\ deeply
imbedded abrasive dirt particles (that cut carpet fibers) are remov91!, and
there is no detergent residue left in the carpet to collect dirt. During the
Deep Steam cleaning process all the carpet fibers are coated with a special
soil retardant. 1
"It's simple logic ••• You profit l n the long run when you use Deep Steam
Carpet Cleaning because your carpet will be cleaner than ever before
possible. It will stay clean longer and wear lon11er because. you used Deep
Steam Carpet Cleaninc ••• " '
WHEN YOU
WANT THE
flNEST-CALL
FltEE
ISTIMATI
Business fliana ger Robert Leppert. •
repor1<d 14 the DAILY PILOT that OD· RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS
1Jy $2 tickets are still on sale . Leppert
'said th•re was a "tremendous surge" 0ui: 2ht Yeir of Service In Ora.,. County
of ticket buyers during the past four· da~~~::~~o111er factor Is the brand 2950 RANDOLPH CQSTA MESA
new red and green b•nnen gaily PHONE R~LJ43 .. ' '"c.._n ZlnTlthell ~~ rtylng In Laguna, to herald the art ~· 1 • rpecUlcular. ~ '-~~~~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~~~~.;.;.;;.;~.-.~--~~~~~.~~...i
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Dnniiugton Bea~h DAILY PILOT Your Bometowa
~. -EDIT.ION -Dally Paper
v o r. u ;-No.164, 2 SECTIONS, 26'~PAGES TUESDAY, JULY 9, 1968 TEN CENTS
Bolsa Eyed as Airstri·p · Site~
'
• • Ir an 1sc ose
Toddler Released . ·~
Kidnaper Search ·
---
For Leathern~ck ·
Covers 7 States
,ABDUCTOR HUNTED
ThomH F, Scholfield
Girl, 7, Dies
In Fiery Crash
LONG BEACH (UPI) -A seven·
year-old girl was killed Monday and
her parents injured when their car
was hit broadside by another vehicle,
police reported.
Sandra E. Miles, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Leroy E. Miles Jr. of Lopg
Beach was killed. Her father was
treated and released from Loog Beach
Community Hospital and her mother
was reported in "guarded" condition.
The Miles car exploded and burst in·
tc> flames after it was hit by one
driven by Rodger James Young, 21,
stationed. aboard the USS Chicago, at
the intersection of Br<>ad.way and
Roycroft Avenue.
Yooog, wtio allegedly ran a stop
sign, was booked by police on suspi#
cion of manslaughter.
MARYSVILLE, Calif. (UPI) - A
husky young Marine, who hoped to
escape the United States with a kid·
naped toddler as his sale conduct, fied
today from a seven-state police search
after freeing the tiny girl unharmed.
Thomas J. Scholfield, 22, armed
with a rifle and a pistol and considered
"dangerous," rusappeared after his
wife returned the abducted child to
her home.
The Marine private and his v:ife,
Loretta,~. held little Vicki Lynn West
for 12 hours. The two-year-old was
unharmed and told her mother: "We
just Went bye-bye."
Mrs. scliolfield was charged with
kidnapin( and jailed in this farming
town on the \\.'este:rn edge of the Sima
NeVl!le.
She told sheriffs deputies her hu s-
band jumped out of their .stolen car on
the outskirts ol MarysVille and fled on
foot .as. she drove to die hon1e Or Mrs.
Helen 'Vest to return the child.
The tousle-haired youngster was still
wearing the bathrobe in which she was
abducted.
••I'm very glad to see my baby," the
relieved mothe taid after she was
reunited with her younger daughter.
"'I didn't really expect to."
Sheriff Gary Miller of Yuba County
s8id Scholfield. a Camp Pendleton
Marine w it h a long juvenile record,
and his wife took the child after bin·
ding Mrs. \Vest, her teen-aged brother·
in-law and her five-year-old daughter
with torn bedsheets.
The abduction climaxed a night of
drinking by Scholfield and Mrs. \Vest
at a roadhouse outside Yuba City, the
sheriff said. He said the Marine and
Mrs. West, who is separated from her
husband, had a "dating" relationship.
Mrs. West said Scholfield hoped to
flee to Canada, apparently to avoid
service in Vietnam and because he
believed he had stabbed a man to
death in San F1'Rllcisco "a couple of
days ago." However. San Francisco
police said they had no record of
Scholfield or such a killing.
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BOLSA CH ICA SITE -Among locations suggested for new Orange
County regional airport is this unique design on Bolsa Chica State
Beach near Huntington Harbour. Approach would be over marsh-
lands owned by Bolsa Chica Corp. Gray indicates noise zone.
Bold Khe Sanh Biii
Marin es Vow to Fight
Until Last Red Slain
SAIGON (UPI)~-. U. S. Mtrilles
fighting in trenches atop Hilt 689 vow·
ed today to hold the peak until the last
attacking North Vietnamese was slain.
American commanders reported 350
killed in the hill fighting near Khe
Sanh and other heavy battles aJong the
Demilitarized Zone.
Both sides were said lo be looking
for a "symbolic" victory in the fight
for Hill 689, two mile& west of aban-
doned Kbe Sanh.
Combat in the five-day batllc was so
close that at one point Marine
defenders fired antitank guns to blast
North Vietnamese infantrymen from
shallow trenches hacked out or the
rocky slopes. American planes bathed
the 2,000.root mountaiJJ with napalm
fire bombs.
The military value of •fill 689
diminished sbarply last week when
,American forces destroyed and aban·
doned the main Khe Sanh fortress to
assume a more mobile posture along
the DMZ where North Vietnamese
troops were ' !>elieved massing for a
new offensive in South Vietnam's up·
per tier. This may be coordinated with
a new assault on Saigon.
"We are going to move off this hill,
but not until we have defeated thtJ
North VietJJamese," Maj. Raymond
Davis, commander or the 3rd Division
Marines defending Hill 689, said Tues·
day. Davis described the North Viet·
namese as poorly led by inei:perieilced
officers.
UPI Correspondent R a y m o n d
Wilkinson, reporting from Hill 689 late
Tuesday, said at least 70 North Viel·
namese in a constazitly reinforced unit
of about 400 have been killed since the
fight ~rupted last Friday. WUkinson
described Marine losses as light in
hurling back waves of charging Com·
munists suppot1ed by mortar and
rocket fire.
The U. S. command said the other
f-lorlh Vietnamese casualties were in·
llicted in battles just north of Hill 689
and around Gio Llnh, a major artillery
anel .supply base east of Khe Sanh. U.
S. losses in these battles "Were placed
at seven marines killed and 30 wound· ed. . •
On the Saigon front, U. S. Army
troops of tfle Airmobile Ist Cavalry
Division reported killing 34 North Viet·
namese or Viet Cong in fighting 15 to
19 miles southwest of the capital. Four
Americans were killed and 13 wounded
in one eng~gement agai1,1st Communist
forces possibly poised for a ne~ attack
on Saigon.
U.S. Air Force B52s hit the jungles
around Saigon with a new round or
saturation bomb runs today. American
headquarters reported 140 missions
against North Vietnam Monday and
the loss of an Air Force F4 Phantom
jet, but conimuniques said a Jolly
Green Giant rescue helicopter picked
up the two crewmen ..
o ·range County
Must Act Now
Orange County has a staggering job
ahead if it is to meet its air travel
challenges, tile Board of Superviisors
was told today.
The challenges will come in the
form of people who w.ant to fly
airplanes, said a bulky report from the
nationally known firm of Pereira &
Associates -50 million demands for
iarlines seats from Orange Countians
by 1985.
The Pereira report made these key
poin1s :
--Orange County needs a "regional"
airport, .about the size of the present
Los Angeles International Airport,
within five years.
-The present county airport cannot
do the job.
-The county has five other potential
regional airport sites, including a bold
land·and-sea complex on Bolsa Chica
State Beach in Huntington Beach.
-Orange County Airport is fast ap·
proa<:hing full capacity and some type
of traffic restriction is almost man-
datory.
-Full attention should be given to
development of a new broad-tcoped
giant of an airport at Camp Pendletcn,
an "internatio,nal" airport handling
supersonic <SST) transports of the
future.
-Immediate planning should begin
for interlocking series of small airports
(See AIRPORT PLAN, Page 9)
Sterling Hayden's
Son Denies Draft
Evasion Cha rge
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Christian
Hayden, 19, son or actor Sterling
Hayden, pleaded innocent Monday to a
charge or draft evasion and \vas
ordered to 1tand trial Sept. 24.
He entered '!!he plea after U.S . Dist.
Judge Manuel L. Real denied without
comment a motion to dismiss the in·
dictmen.t which charged Hayden with
refusal to report for induction.
Hayden's attorney, Hu gh Manes,
contended Congress had not forma1ly
declared war in Vietnam and that the
United States intervention was a viola·
tion of the United Nations charter.
"I quite frankly was prepared for
jt," Hayden said of the dismissal.
"The odds were very much against
my motion !OT dismlssal being ac·
cepted. I'm just as detennined to car·
ry on."
Manes said he would challenge the
legality of the war during Hayden's
jury trial.
SPECIAL REPORT
Two frill pagi:s of maps end
stories on Orcnge Count11 avia·
tion wilt e found on Pages 6
and 9.
Sirhan Put
In Another
County Jail
LOS ANGELES (AP) -SlrMn
Bishara Sirhan has been secretly
whisked to a cell in the Hall of Justice.
where he will face triaJ on charges of
murdering Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
A cOrwtly of patrol Cars manned by
seven deputies from the Central Jail,
completed the move Sunday, Sherill
P-J. Pltchess announced Monclaj'.
The 14-minute move was so teeret. not
even Russell E. Panon.s, Sirhm's at.
torney, knew about it. .
"We knew it was coming," said one
of P<ll'son's aides, "but tile time wu a
secret even from us."
"The transfer was accomplished in
a routine manner and was part of an
over-all previously sdleduled program
of security for the inmate," Pitc:hesr
said.
The 24-year-old J o r d a n i a n kn·
migrant's new 6-by-8 feet cell Js on the
13th floor in the Hall of Justice.
The H-aJ.l. of Justice's jail quarters
have undergone a complete renova·
tion, accelerated because of the Sirhan
case. Sirrhan's cell is in an Isolated
ccrridor with no outside windows and
no other prisoners. It is equipped wii.h
a bunk fixed to ttie wall, a toilet, wash
basin and a 12·inch circular mirror at·
tached to the wall.
A larger security area for visitors
adjoins ttie cell. It bas bars and slldi.ng
doors and a ~by-30-lnch window in
one wall. Sirhan and visitors can look
at one another through the window and
talk ~Y telephone.
Mercury Rises,
And So Do Tides
Orange C~t residents appear to be
caught between the devil and the deep
blue sea. '[)lat is, • the high tern·
peratures of a mid-summer heat wave
are expected to continue, while in the
Newport harbor area, seven foot high
tides will again flood the streets
tonight. Highest tide will be reached at
9: 55 tonight.
Recreation Board Weigh s
There will be some variable clouds
tonight and tomorrow morning, but all
in all we'll have the the kind of
weather that's made California green
and golden.
TWO YE.AR OLD VICKI LYNN WEST IS BACK WITH MOM .AFTER ABDUCTION
.AWOL Morino ThrH'~ 19 KHp Tot H Guoronlff of Sm" Conduct Ovt of United StotH
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-Bond Issue for Parks
Discussion of plans for fuUilling the
park needs of HunUngtcn B:each
through a proposed bond issue
highlights the agenda for the 7:30 p.m.
meeting Wednesday of the Recreation
and Park C-Ommisslon.
Commissioners meet in council
chambers or Memorial Hall, 5th Street
and Pecan Avenue.
The City C-Ouncil has ordered steps
taken toward submitting two bonding
proposalJ to the voters on the Nov. 5
general election ballot.
One ot the proposals will be a $.1
mllUon issue to finance a new central
city library. Advance planning on this
lsaue has been completed by the
library stall an<! board.
While the reerealion commissioners
have made a stud..)' or the general park
needs. a study of a proPos~I for· a new
central c1ty park And golf course has
nol been completed.
Needs arc currently estimated at
,about $14 million. The deputment Is .•alW!i tho dtt COUDdl lo rabo lta tu
rate from the present 11 cents per $100
assessed valuation to the maximum o('
~ cents allowed by city charter.
If the-Yate Is raised, the commission
estimates that about S4 million of the
park building program could be bandl·
ed through current taxes, leaving
about SIO million for a bond lssu~.
'Rte bond money wouJd be used to
complete the acquJsition of the 625
acres the department feels neeessary
for the future population. ,
A large portion of the amotmt Of
land the city ne<ds lo acquire -Id be
in the Central ci.ty area, near Talbert
Avenue ·and Golden West Strtet. Plan-
ned ia a goU course, large city park
and a natural area totalling as much
as 300 acres,
Devefoplng the boodlng propoal lor
parks may re<fulre 'Several meetings
or the commbaion this month. The
proposal must be submitted to the
council early in August Jf It is to be on
the N ... mber blllot.
Oraa~:£-
Weatller
Goodies in store from the
meteorological mailbag include
a gradual drying trend with hot·
ter day5. No precipitation and
highs In upper 70'1 expected.
INSm E TODA.Y
UC ngenta to 1tudu Thur.tdat1
reciprocal tt:achino, tnrining
-qgretmnt with UCl medlca.l
school. couniv medical center.
Pog< 7,
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I DAILY PILOT
Boulevard
District
Opposed
.
Oppooitklll to the lonnatlon to a unf.
quo boulevard dlstrlct ill Sulllel llooch
was YOled todoy by tile Orange County
-ol Supervl&on.
Superviaor1 did agree, however, that
1tepo libould be taken to acquire the
former Pacific Electric rl&bt-OC-way
property ill Sunset Bea<h for •-•
parldn( for the mlle·long county own-
ed booch.
'I'bo board opposition will be
transmlttod to Ibo LoOll Alency
Formation CommlNlcn (!AFC) which
mull act on lbe boulevard dlllrict
qu..UOn Monday.
Harbor Di.<trlct Director Kenneth
Sampson said 120 park..lng space.
could be developed OD 1he right~f-way
ii Ute county acquired the properly
during the 1ame period. He 1ald
revenue from the parking spaces could
be used to defray the cost along with
possible state and federal &rant.I.
lf the boulevard district was form-
ed, the county would be obligated by
law t.o pay 25 percent of the cost of the
purcba.wJ and maintenance a n d
estimated '500,000 for the purchase ·-·
Nixon Doubts
Polls Will Aid
..
And Awag We Go
The signal tbiat everyone was loaded up and ready lo go bnlllght glee-
ful cheers Monday, as some 70 youngsters started out for camp. 'They
will spend one week at. Camp Norris, owned by the Boys' Club of
Pasadena, at Barton Flats in the :San Bernardino Mountains.
Rockefeller Bid ·A G l R
By Tm: ASSOCIATED PRESS ttorney enera enews
Former Vice President Richard M.
Nixon seys he ii COflident his primary
victories will lead to the Republican
presidential nomination, even .!IK>uld
public opinion polls favor rival Nelson
A. Rockefeller.
Public apinioa pollJ involve only
11about S,000 people across the coun·
try," Nixon said in Springfield, N.J .,
Monday, and be said he doubted
Republican National Co n v e n t i o n
delegates would be swayed by them.
"I have the iame tn.ng going for me
tbat Euceoo McCarll>y abs," wid Nix-
on referring to primary victories.
"But I think Iba! the Republican Party
will lilten tlO the people .and 11 don't
think the Democrali will''
Appeal for Gun Controls
WASHINGTON (AP) -Atty. Geo.
Ramsey Clark renewed an· appeal for
federal regiJtration of firearms today
despite the administration's setback in
the House.
Sen. Strom Thurmond, (R·S.C.),
brought the question up at a Senate
jumiile delinquency subcommittee
hearing on the firearms registrWon
and licensing bill urged by President
John.son.
head House conferees in any negotla.
tions with the Senate on gun control
legislation, said he made his pledge in
an effort to save tile long gun bill.
Clark, in his testimony before the
Senate committee, rejected a sug-
gestion by Thurmond that any
registration of firearms should be left
to the state5 and local governments.
"National registration would be
much more eUicient and far, far more
effective," Clark said.
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Gunman Surrender.·s· • ' ' ' ' •
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Aussie Promised Coonce to Fight in Vietnarri
SYDNEY , . AU1tralla -(AP) -Guo·
man Wally Mellish, who held his
shotgun bride and their .babyJuistage_
for seven days while police kept a cor·
don around him, surrendered today
after he was promised a chance to
figbt in Vietnam.
Mellish, a 22-year-<>ld fonner mental
patient and convicted car thief, wu
taken to Jngtebum Army Camp to see
if the army would have him.
Mellish'• 19-year-old bride and
childhood sweetheart, Beryl Muddle,
was taken with her 11-week-<>ld son
Leslie to her parents. For the time
being the police did not enforce a war·
rant for her arrest for !ailing to pay a
$42 fine for prostitution.
Mellish ended his bizarre lioldout
alter talking for nearly three hours on
the telephone with the Rev. Cly~e
Paton, chaplain at Long Bay Jall,
Mellish's chief condition for surrender
was that he be given a chance to serve
$8,896 Check
Aids City's
Beach Costs
A check for $8,896 has been dropped
into the coffers Of the Huntington
Beach city treasury to help pay for
lifeguard and malntenance services on
a sectjon ot private beach north of the
m_unicipal pier.
Dropping the check in the slot was
the Jluntington Beach Co., owners of
about four miles of beach from the
pier to Bolsa Chica State Beach.
In each of the following quarters the
company will be paying the same
mnount for the services it contracts
frorr the city.
The beach has been open to the
public for many years with heavy use
during the swnmer. The private owner
will pay to the city a total of $35,586 in
1968-69 to keep the uses of the sand
safe while swimming in the 11urf.
Eventually the company plans to
develop much of the shoreline. A $2
ntillion apartment complex is being
completed on the sands near the pier.
A parking lot has just opened and a
concession building is under con·
struction on the private beach.
A.ctress (;uilty
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -Denise Darcel,
blonde Freoch actress who won fame
with sexy movie roles ill . the 19508 ..
\vas found guilty today ol shoplifting
$35 worth of frilly underwear.
with Australia'• 'forces tn Vietnam.
Carrying his baby son, the young
man emerged lroµi the house where
he had held off police for seven day1
• and six hOW'S with an arsen~ of ha.rid
grenades, two rifles, and a shotgun
and threats td kill his wile and chUd 11
the police rushed him.
The young wife followed him from
the house.
Mellish started threatening to shoot
Miss Muddle and the baby a week ago
when police showed up at the house to
question him about some 1tolen QAr
parts. The police put a cordon around
the house , but did not try to rush iffor
fear the young man would carry out
his threat.
Police Commissioner Norman T.
Allan arranged a-wedding for the cou·
ple, with the brldegrOOm holding a
shotgun, last Wednesday after Mellish
agreed to 11urrender. Though the com·
missioner threw in a wedding feast of
steak, curded mushrooms and rice
pudding plu.s a $2(l wedding ring;
Mellish refused to give up.
Allan also turned over to Mellish •n ..
armor piercing rllle. which Mel\llh had '
demanded to ·"make him equal to the ~ ::.
police." ·The cOmmlssJOner· w a, ... ;
censured by the New South Wales •
PoUce Associ ation for supplying the -
weapon, but he malntained the young
man wouldn't start shooting as long as • •
be was humored. , ".
"Mr. Allan's patience ha~ been , ·:
rewarded," New South Wales Premier -...
Robin Askin said after Mellish'& sur·
render. "There will be general relief
that the siege resulted Jn no lols of
life. I don't think too many people wtll .,
now be concerned by some of the
more unusual aspects." "
Mellish and hlJ wife were taken to a
field headquarters 11et up during the·'
siege. Their baby appeared fit. Of· ·
ficers recovered the weapons from m.
side the house.
Westminster Planners OK ·.·
···' .,.
225-unit Apartment Bid ..
A use vm-ianee permit which allows
Barton Pitt's Aptek Development Co.
to construct a 2'l5-unit apartment on
4.7 acres between Springdale Street
and Garden Grove Boulevard, east of
Melanie Lane, was approved by a 4-1
vote Monday by Westmin.ster plan·
ners.
The variance allows a three·story
building where a maximum of two
stories is permitted.
Speaking for property o w n e r
Herman S. Motter, Pitts -a founder
0£ the Long Beach Never·On·Friday
Club -told the planners that the
apartment would be designed for adult
occupancy. The-Tenant median in·
come would be approximately fl 1000,
he claimed.
CommiSsioner Howard N e w m a n
voted against the variance.
Jn other matters commissioners ap-
proved :
-Recommendation that council zone
five acres of excess freeway land at
the San Diego Freeway and Garden
Grove Boulevard to ~neral busfuess
(C-2).
-Conditional use permit for the
operation of a rest home by Forrest
and Ruth Schikendanz at 7561 Benton
Ave., a single-family residence (R·l)
district.
-"Home occupation" in a gari;ge at
14351 Purdy St., an R-1 zone, by John
A. Mortin for the purpose of
automobile res¢oration, 1 1
-Operation of a pre.5chool nursery ,
in the Methodist Church of the Good' ·
Shepherd, 15500 Van Buren St., an R· ·~·:
1 zone.
New officers for 1968-69 are Joseph
Drey, chairman; Tad Fujita, vice
chairman. other com mis s ion .
members are Harold Lorton, lloward
Newman and Angelo Treantos. • ·
5 Jailed in Sweep
On Wilderness Camp
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MONTAGUE,-Calif. (UPI) -Sbe<·
i!f's deputies and game wardens held a
wilderness camp roundup Monday and
it resulted in the arrest of five .
persons.
The five were arrested on charges of
illegal possession of drugs but about 15
others fled the hipple hangout on
Bogun Creek.
Siskiyou County depuUes went to the
campsite near Iron Gate Dam with a
search warrant and confiscated
varlous substances believed to be i1·
legal dtugs aod a quantity o( mari·' ·
juana.
N 1 x o a had said earlle.r • the
Democratic convention ''will a:o the
•Y of the bol&es" and Vice President
Hubert H. Htnnpbrey will get tile
nomioation despite D e m o c r a t i c
primary vkt:ories !or McCarthy and
the late Sen . Robert F. Kennedy.
Thurmond asked Clark if he still ad-
vocates national registration in view
of what happened in the House Rules
Committee Monday.
However, he said he hoped the
sill'les would set up their own 15ystems
1
.
for licensing gun owners. He sai(i the .----------------:==':-====--===::---------------,
California Ci<lv. Ronald Reagan,
mNOWhlle, bru&hed aside new tialk by
GOP presidential aspftnt Rockefeller
of • Rocilefeller-Reag.an Ucket.
1'J've made my positdon very plain,"
Rescan Mid at an airport new1 con·
fereooe in 5acrameoto. "I'm not in-
te<ested in Ut< vice presidency at all."
Rockefeller bad sald ill Sao Fran-
cilco tbe po11ibility of &uch a GOP
ticket is "wide open ..• I don't U!.ink
that any combination should be ruled
out or should tbere be a freezing or
any situation.'' ..
Reagan refused to comment on the
New York governor':; &latement the
Cali!ornlan is a more serious preskten·
tial contender than be admits.
"There's no &e11Se commenting on
Vt'bat bit: opinion ii," Reagan w.id.
On the Democratic side, Homphrey
told mon tbian 2,IKXI underprivileged
youngsters in Wesbington he ia com·
m.itted. to seeing that all young
Americans get "all the education they
can take" and adequate food 311d bous·
in g.
Humphrey appeared al a kickoff
clinic of the Vice Presideflt'1 Summer
Youth, Sports and Rec re-a t ion
Program. lie said 50 more clinics will
be conducted this summer in the na-
tion's largest cities. ..----------.
DAILY PILOT
" .............. ~
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The11111 A. M1,-,hl11•
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'
"Yes, I do," Clark replied. He saia
that regislration would be "of tremen·
dous help to law enforcement" by pro..-
viding identification ol the owners of
guns used in crimes.
At the Rules Committee meeting
members obtained a pledge from Rep.
Emanuel Celler, (D-N.Y.), to oppose
any attempts to attach registration
and licensing provisions to another bill
to ban interstate sa•les of firearms,
either by mail or over-the-counter.
The effect of the bW would be to ex-
tend to shotguns and rilfes the restric·
lions provided on sales of handguns in
tlle recently passed crime control bill.
Geller. chairmun of the House
Judiciary Committee and in line to
Council to Study
$1 Million Loan ·
For Westminster
'VesUninster city councilmen tonight
consider bids on a $1 million city loan
which v.'OUld carry the Pressed
municipality through the dry income
months of November and December.
Bids will be opened today at 3 p.m.
Included on tonight's agenda is a
public hearing on two zone change-an·
nexaUon parcels, 11 acres on the east
and west sides or Magnolia street
north of Edinger Avenue to single·
family residential <R-1) and local
business (C·l) and 58 acres at Edinger
Avenue and Magnolia Street to single-
!amily type (R·I ) ooning.
At present. the properties are coun-
ty territory. No opposition is expected .
Council meets at city hall at 7:30 p.m.
Sniper Wounds
Girl in Street
HAWTHORNE iUPll -A 13-year-
old girl was wounded by an 'apparent
5niper Monday who sped a.Jay in an'
automobll! followln& the attack at an
lntersecUon.
Christine B. lJeacock of llawthornc
was wounded in the erotn by a small
caliber bullet, sherlli'1 de put le s
reported. She wa1 ln satisfactory con·
dltion at Gardena Memorial Hospital.
DepuUe1 1aid the sniper wa. a thln
m111 about $.ye an-old with dark hllir.
He wu drivlna a 1953 or 1954 blue
Ford.
AuthoriUe1 said there appeared to
be no motive !or the attack on Miss
Heacock as ahe walked down 1 street
with a friend, Pat.tie Woodrome, J3,
HawillornL
administration bill is designed to en· 1
courage this but the federal govern·
ment must act if the states fail to do
so.
Los Alamitos
Fired Chief
Files Appeal
Los Alamitos Police Chief Dooald A.
French who was fired June 28 by the
city manager has filled a written
notice of appeal.
French was fired by city manager
James M. Smith who charged him
with • 11continuing fin a n c j a I if.
responsibility, a c c e n t u a t e d by
numerous insufficient fund checks."
Smith, who also holds tbe post of cl·
ty clerk. said he will set a date for
public hearing on French's appeal
after he studies the city council
schedule.
The council sits as a personnel
board for such appeals.
Jo~J'Cnch had "denied Smith's charges
saying any insuffic ient fund checks
were written more than two years
ago.
A citizens committee for the
reinstatement or French has been
formed with Donald Philby, a former
member of the city's personnel com·
mJ ssJon as chairman.
FolUltain Valley
Man Htu·t in Mesa
A Fountain Valley man waa injund
in Costa Mesa Monday "When an old
hearse backed into him as he knelt to
inspect another customer's car at the
tire shop where he is employed.
Dale L. Boyd, 23, or .16458 Evereat
Circle, was treated at Hoag Memorial
I-fospital for cuts and bruJses suffered
when he v.·as knocked into the second
car.
Mark \Y. Lorentzen, 19. of 1521 Ruth
Lane, Newport Beach, said he couldn't
see Boyd when he began backJn& the
station wagon registered to a San J oa·
quln Vall•y mortuary out ol bis pork·
Ing spot.
Ford Brawn, of 134: lDdustrlal Way,
said be we.s ttanding next to the v1c·
um In th• Young and Lane Tiro Shop
lqt al 15911 Newport Blvd., hilt wa•
knocked out of the way by Boyd wlion
be fell,
has it!
"We make no bones about it ,,
• • • . ' Deep Steam Carpet Cleaning costs more
than the old shampoo method • • •
However, the Deep Steam Carpet Cleaninc Method removes soil from both
the fibers of the carpet and the carpet backlnc. Since no brushing or
scrubbing action is used, there is no distortion of the carpet plle. The
powerful extraction action of the Deep Stum process lifts matted pile to
"like new" appearance.
The need f~r frequent professional cleaning Is reduced bel:ause the deeply
imbedded abrasive dirt particles (that cut carpet fibers) are removed, and
there Is no detergent residue left in the carpet to collect dirt. During the
Deep Steam cleaning process all the carpet fibers are coated with a special
soil retardant .
"It's simple logic ••• You profit In the long run when you use Deep Stum
Carpet Cleanlnc because your c11rpet will be cleaner than ever before
possible. It will stay clean longer and wear longer because YQU used Deep
Steam Carpet Cleanlnc ••• " ·
WHIN YOU
WANT THI
PINIST-
CALL
RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANiRS
Our 21st y.., of Service In Or11199 c-ty
Pltll
ISTIMATI
2950 RANDOLPH COSTA MESA
PHONI 146-3432 PN111TellAroa
C:.11 Zlnlth 7.oolff
I
I
I
I
.-
Lag-11na Bea eh Today's Oe1lag
•• EDITION
VOL 061', NO. IM, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES i:AGUNA BEAtH, CALIFORNI/; :TUESDAY, :JULY 9, )968 ,
Sites Airport una rea
AIRPORT SITES -Pereira report today called for new regional
airport at one of five sites (left to right). Los Al~mit?s, Bolsa Chica
Beach the LTA base Signal Peak of San Joaqwn Hills or El Toro. Prese~t county airport was considered too limited.
Fair Gmne for All
Saddleback Too Rich
To Get State Funds
By moMAS FORTUNE
Master Plan
Proposes 5
Locations
Orange Courrty has a staggering job
ahead if it is to meet it.s air travel
challenges, the Board of Supervisors
was told today.
The challenges wlll come in the
form of people who want to fly
airplanes, said a bulky report.from the
nationally known firm of Pereira &
Associates -50 million demands for
SPECIAL REPORT
Two ful l pages of maps and
stories on Orange County avia·
ti<m toill e found on Pages I
and 9.
iarlines seats from Orange Countians
by 1985. .
The Pereira report made theae key
pomt.:
'•
• Ir
Of fM O•h" Piiot Sl.tf
Because it is a rich school district,
Saddleback Junior College District will
not get one cent in state building fundS
the next couple of years.
next Monday at a Senate committee
hearing.)
Barletta said Saddleback's failure to
receive a share of·ttie '65 million state
bond issue passed in the June primary
will not slow up the district's building
progra-m.
-orange County needs i. "recloDal-11 ...
airport, .about the size of the prelent -·
Los Angeles lnternatJoht Airport,
within five years.
Board members had been tcld to e.x -
pect fl million. But Monday night they
learned the di.strict cam e away empty
handed from the state bond issue
carving table.
"Well if you don't mind my saying it
'I told you SQ,'" Trustee Hans Voge l
remarked dryly to Business Manager
Roy Barletta.
"Yes, that's true," Barlett.a said,
"ln case you people in the audience
don't know it, we're a rich district."
Vogel continued. "And we're fair
game for anybody, Orange Coast in·
eluded."
(He referred to the seat tax dispute
with Orange Coast Junior College
District. Another encounter is set for
Council Hears
Chamber Plea
For City Help
"lt is proposed that tile City af
Laguna Beach cootinue to take ad-
vantage af the unique capabilities of
its Chamber of CaJllmerce ta serve as
the city's public relations agent."
This is part af a statement in the
chamber· propasal which as~s ~,800
in city support for the cammg fiscal
year. Councilmen are scheduled ta take up
the matter of financial support of Ute
chamber at a Wednesday night study
session.
The chamber proposal may be in
trouble If recent council comments are
any criteria.
After being asked last week for $270
to buy an advertiseme~t in a
magazine. councilmen took time out to
rap the chamber verbally.
Mayor Glenn Vedder siaid, "I think
the whole council is quite unhalt'Y
about the chamber of commerce
disposal of the $35,IXX> last year."
lie noted the district still has $9.5
million in local bond money which
should carry it through site acquisition
and the lirst five years of building.
But he and resigned Supt. Jtck
Roper had expected to stretch the
money further by supplementing it
with state aid funds. They had told
board members to expect about $2
million from the state bond issue on
the premise new junior college
districts have the greatest need.
But newness of district did not
figure in the state calculations.
Relative wealth was the mea5ure us·
ed.
Saddleback, with $28,000 assessed
valuation per student class hour, rank·
M. itoo high on the scale to qualify for
aid.
Orange Coast, on the otller hand,
wi,th only about $5,000 assessed valua·
tion per student hour, will receive 68
percent of the funding it requested -
$3.8 million oot of $5. 7 million asked
for for the next two years.
"Even if we were to triple our
enrollment we wouldn't get anything,"
Vogel observed.
"That's true," Roper agreed. "It
again points out the inequities of what
it would mean if we hOO to pay a seat
tax."
Saddleback, opening to freshmen on·
ly in the fall, will send all its
sophomores and vocational students to
other junior college districts, most to
Orange Coast.
Although present law says Sad·
dleback, as a new district, is ex-
empted for three years from paying
$300 per transfer student seat t2x, a
bill ls pending in the lkgislature to
change this.
The bill. authored by Assemblyman
Kenneth Cory CD-Garden Grove) at
the behest of Orange Coast, calls for
$150 seat tax payment to be made by
new districts.
It passed the Assembly and will be
heard Monday before the Sen.ale Local
Government Committee.
-The present county airport cannot
do the job.
-The county baa: five other potential
regional airport sites, including a bold
land-and-sea complex an Bolsa Chica
State Beach in Huntington Beach.
-Orange County Airport is fast ap-
proaching full capacity and some type
of traffic restriction is almost man·
datory.
-Full attention should be given to
development of a new broad..gcoped
giant of an airport at Camp Pendleton,
an "international" airport handling
supersonic (SST) transpor1s o£ the
future.
-Immediate planning should begin
for interlocking series of small airports
(See AIRPORT PLAN, Page 9)
Harold Hughes,
Mr. Festival
Of Arts, Dies
Mr. Festival of Arts died Sunday.
Funeral services for Harold "Hal"
Hughes, 72, of 1570 N. Coast Highway,
Laguna Beach, are to be held at 11
a.m. Wednesday at Pacific View
Cemetery.
Hughes title was clerical assistant.
He had been with the art spectacular
more than 20 years. But, his reputa-
tion went beyond the title.
Said Verner Beck, a Festival direc-
tor, "there was nothing he couldn't or
wouldn't do. Yoo didn't need to ask
him to do things. He would do It
without being asked. Everybody got
along great with him. He covered all
the bases."
Hughes died at South Coast Com·
munlty Hospital.
He is survived by his widow Gladys
of the family borne; a daughter, Adele
Bowman of Dana Point; a brother,
Euen U. Hughes of New Jersey, and
two granddaughters.
EYE-TO.EYE -Mrs. Delores Ferrell , Sawdust Festival publicist,
seem sto have no qualms about 0 Pepe Laguna" despite glittering
eyes, chartreuse hands and orange-.yellow feather maribou coat.
Operating Pepe is Paul Rayman, theater manager.
Laguna Invader
Puppet 'Pepe' Prize Publicist
If you see a little fellow with
chartreuse hands, glittering eyes and
yellow orange fur about Laguna
Beach, have no fear.
He's not part or t.he rumored hippie
invasion. He's not even from · outer
space. He's "Pepe Laguna."
And, Pepe Laguna is the advance
man or more properly the advance
marionette for the Sawdust Festival.
Created especially for the six-week
art show 1n Laguna Canyon. Pepe and
his operator will browse about the art
colony to herald tbe shows "Hansel
and Gretel" and "Beauty and the
Beast."
'"Hansel and Gretel'' will begin J uly
12. Both shows are being staged by the
New York Marionette Theater and will
be held alternate weeks.
Paul Rayman, manager of the
marionette company, also announced
a special showing July 13 at 2 p.th. at
the Fairview State Hospital in Costa
Mesa. It is to benefit retarded child.re'n
at the hospital and is sponsored by the
Sawdust Festival.
Other children in the area may at·
tend the showing. The price of ad-
mission is one toy in good condition.
The collected toys will be dlrtributed
to children o! the hospital at a
ChristmSIS In July program being held
July 2.S. It is sponsored by tile Costa
Mesa Chamber of Commerce.
During the Sawdust Festival, daily
show times for the marionette pro-
ductions will be 3, S, 8 and '9:30 p.m.
Show times Saturdays and Sundays
will be at 2. 4. 6, 8 Mid 9:30 p.m. with
an added 11 p.m. show Oh Saturdays.
1ttr1. Delores Ferrell, ·public rela.
(See PUPPET, Pare%) He referred ta the money allocated
the chamber for the 1967-68 fiscal yeo;r
to promote the city. The city has given
the chamber the beefed up support
($35,000) for the past two risca~ years
to support the goal of prom?~& the
city and attracting effluent visitors to
the Art Colony in tbe off..season
months.
Council Split on Recreation Di·rector
This year's chamber proposal for
$39.lm details a nine point promotion
program which eccounu for Q>,900.
Other costs listed are direct labor and
eq>ense, $13,655; ofl-ice 1upplies and
ser.rlces, $3,600; capital expM&e, PX>;
and olllce overhead. $1,345.
The proposal states:
''lt ll firmly believed that tttls pro.
gram will prove to be a sound in·
wstment in building a better business
cllm&te for Lagun&. Beach and thal it
will genttate sufficient lncrea$ed tax
income alone to more than pay lot
ltfflf." (. .
Cculcilman Joeeph O'Sullivan may orful discussions tn the CO\D'se of thei
. bo the nrlllg vote wben the dty coun-evening.
ell takes up the h:1ue of hiring a full Both Councilmen Charlton Boyd 8nd ·
limo recreation director for Legima RQy Holm aftooil!y favor employment
Beach. ol a lull time dlrocWr. Rlcbard Gold·
A DAILY PILOT poll of four COUD· b«g and Mayor G!onn Vedder are In
cilmen today showed the llsue 111>111 favor ol holdlng orr unU! a later date.
down the middle. Only O'Sullivan Boyd told tho DAILY PILOT. "By
couldn't bfl reached for comment He all means we should lose no more time
ii on vacation. In hlrlng a highly quallfied fun time
At a 1tudf session Wednesday nl&ht, recreaUon dlrtctor." De uid the first
the topic o hiring a full time recrta· 1tep should bfl a meetlnc with
tion dlrector will be takel\up. The wal repre1entative1 ol all 1ge groups, in·
it looks now, there could be some co· , eluding young people, f1nce "some daf
---------------------
thlo town will hopelully be • town or
young people."
At this meeting. according to Boyd ,
an inventory of all available facllitie1
could be taken, to llelp thei city
determine what Is needed. Boyd
bellevea the program should be UD·
derlaken within six months.
The prime quaUficaUon of a director
should be an affection for people. This
aJfection and respect' Should then bfl
,.turned by th~ple. 1cconllng lo Bod. \ ~e ahould 1lso b e tralning In the
ar, ol stelal problems, and be ex·
perlenoed In the n>lo of a fllll time
recreation director. Boyd said, 1•we
don't need a •hlaUei and sweat shirt
man."
The director, according to Boyd,
••Should be one that can field and act
on problems that arise In recreation -peorl• problemJ."
'" f .. t the city mull pay 'lli>et 1, ,...
quired for that kind of qualllled man."
He cave •15,000 11 a starting flgure.
lo contrast, Goldberg 1ald , "'I'be cl·
ly Is not In a financial pos!Uon to hh"o
(Seo DIRECl'OR, Pa,. I)
N.Y. Stoek.s
TEN CENTS
. .or
Gunman
Ends Siege
In Sydner,
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -Gun·
man Wally Mellish, who held his
shotgun bride and their baby hostage
for seven days while Police kept a cor·
don around him, surrendered today
after be was promised a chance to
fight in Vietnam.
Mellish, a 22-year-old former mental
patient and coavicted car thief, was
taken to Ingleburn Army Camp to see
if the army would have him.
Mellish'& 19-year·old bride and
childhood sweetheart, Beryl Muddle,
was taken with her 11-week-old son
Leslie to her parents. For the time
being the police did not enforce a war·
rant for her arrest for falling to pay a
'42 fine for prostitution.
Mellish ended his biiarre holdout
after talking for nearly threfl hours on
the telephone with the .ReV, Qyde
Paton, chaplalil at Long lla:J' Jail.
MeWsh's chief condition for sunender
. w~ that he be given a chance to serve
with Abstralia's forces in Vietnam.
Carrying hJg baby son, the young
~ emerged from We · bouae where
lie bad held off pilllce for ..,..., days
aJd 'Six hours With an arsenal of band
grenades, two rifles, and a shotgun
and threats to kill his wife and chlld if
the police rushed him.
The young wife followed him from
the house.
Mellish started threatening to &boot
Miss Muddle and the baby a week ago
when police showed up at the house to
question him about some stolen car
parts. The police put a cordon around
the house, but did not try to rush it for
f~ar the young man would carry O\ft
his threat. ,
Police Commissioner Norman T.
Allan arranged a wedding fOI" the cou-
ple, with the bridegroom hold.Jog a
shotgun, last Wednesday after Mellish
agreed to surrender. Though the com·
missioner threw in a wedding feast of
steak, curried mushrooms and rice
pudding plus a $'lO wedding ring,
(See GUNMAN, Pafe !)
Mercury Rises,
And So Do Tides
Orange Coast residents appear to be
caught between the devil and the deep
blue sea. That is, the high tem·
peratures of a mid-summer heat wave
are expected to continue, while in the
Newport harbor area, seven foot high
tides will again flood the &treeta
torught. Highest tlde will be reached at
9:55 tonight.
There will be some variable clouds
tonight and tomdrtow morning, but all
in all we'll have the the kind or:
weather that's ma-de California green
and golden.
0r ....
Weadler
Goodies in store from the
meteorok>glcal mailbag include
a gradual drying trend with hot·
ter day1. No precipitation and
hlgbs ln upper 70'• expected.
INSmE TODAY
uc n11<1111 to studr Tll•ndar
reciprocal teaching, training
agrtemtnt with ucr mtdk:GJ
school, count~ mt'dk:cl c"'"1.
POflt 7, -._. • -" , ...... ..... --" C-OQ " --• ,_ .... " .... ,_ • --• ,, ............ " -·-.. --,,.14 -1•1t ,_ 1t--U = • ........... , .. ,,
" ·--" ........... .. -... " ---.. --· • ....... .. --" --• --.. • \
Murder.
In Newport J
A 'll'GUhl-bo murderer ID Newport ,
Beech bu Wt • nbtice at the borne of oa intended victim.
A N'wport Beach secretory, In h<'r
early 30s, returned home Monday
&om 1 weekend trip to find a man's
..W., card on beT druser. Scribbled
on tbie back ol the cud was the
me•Nfe, .. I wU1 kill you. 11 ,
Notbint was m..lulng from the house, nor was lt disarreged, she told poijce.
Apparently the same man, trying to
make sure his notice was found, called
the woman later Monday at work and
wed cryptioally, "Did you get my
m .... get" and bung up.
Nixon Doubts
Polls Will Aid
Rockefeller Bid
By mE ASSOCIATED PRESS
FOrmer Vlee President Richard M. ~ixon says he is coofdent his primaty
victories will lead to the Republican
prendenttal nomlnat1oo, even lhou1d
public oplnton poU. fM'or rival Nelson
A. Rockefeller.
Public opinion polls involve only
''about 3,000 people across the coun-
try," Nlxoa said In Springfield, N.J.,
Monday, and be said he doubted
Republlce.n National C o n v e n t i o n
delegates would be swayed by tnem.
"I have tbe same tNng going for me
that Eugene McCartfly ah1, 11 11ld Nii·
on ref'erring to primary victories.
'.'But I think that ttW! Republican Party
will listen to _the people and I don't
think the Democrats will." -
N 1 x o n had 1atd earlier the Democratic convention .. will go tile
way of UH! bosse1" and Vice Preatdent
Hubert H. Hmnphrey will get the
riomlnation dt91>lte D e m o c r a t 1 c
primary vktortff !0< MCCartlly and
the !au Sell. Robert F. Kennedy.
Callfom.. Gov. Ronald Reagan,
meanwhile, bru1hed aslde new talk by
GOP pre11denua1 uplrant Rockt!eller
ot a .Rockefeller-Reagan tlcket.
"I've made my po1ltion very plain,"
Reacan aa1d at an airport new1 con·
ference in Sacramento. 11I'm not ln·
lerested In the vice prelldency 1t ill."
Rockefellar had nld In Sill Fron-
cilco ... po111bl1Jty ol 1ucll 1 GOP
ticket 11 "wide open ••• I ~·t tlllnk u.t any combinaUon ahould be ruled
out or lbould there be a treeztni Of
an_r situation." .. Reaean ref\!Hd. ·f() comment on the
Ne~ York governor11 statement the
C&Uf«n1an i1 a more 1ertou1 pre&lden·
tlal OODtender then he admltl.
"There'• no MDae commenttni on -t bil opjaion ii," n..1111 said.
On the Oemocratic side, Humphrey
told ...... thu 2,000 Ullderprivtle(ed
YOW>fllera In W-stmi he ii com-
mitted lo seeln1 1llat all young
Ameriean1 set ''all the education they
can take" and adequate food and hou1·
1111.
llAlmpbrey -ed at a ltickol!
clinic of the Vice Preskt.M1t11 Summu
Youth, Sporn and Recreatio n
Procram. He Hid 60 men c!Wcs will
be cooduclod tlU Mllm« Jn tho na-
tion'• lar&est dtie1.
Burglar Enjoys
His Sweet Tooth
A burllar with a swot! looth enlortd Top of the World School tn Laguna
Be«b, police learned Monday.
Lt. Robert McMurray •aid that the
thief entered a sliding lunchroom win·
dow and comumed two candy bars
and u let cream bar at the scene.
Also believed miJling in t h e
weektnd burglary w11 a five-pound
NCk of com meal amt cabl of meat.
DAILY PILOT
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l8m M. WeM -The11111 IC1nil ....
T1ttw111 A. M•rphll11
MeMtlrtl Efltw
l1Q1rtl P. N1ft
"""""' IHdt (Hy ltdter J1clc a. ~ P111I H!11e11 1v11nn1 MeMlll' A-1wwrt11tne Dll"l(tlr
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O!llw Off1..,
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-
Saddkback to Develop Colkge Mmter Plan_:
. -'!'we architectural' (lrms wt re hired
by Saddleba<k JuniO< College District
trtmees Monday n!gbt to master plan
college building needs for the next 20
Y<U•· The architects are to receive $15,000
for the study which will consider
population growth, enrollment pro-
jections, education t re n d s , oc-
cupational needs, financing methods,
and ultimllely look at mulUple cam-
puees.
Dr. Leary's
Son .Facing
1Jury Trial
In other acUon, trustees :
-Heard a report that a $i8,000 car·
ryover balance peiilliU them to sart
the new fJscal year wl.l:b '200,000 ln
reserves.
-Agreed to borrow S150,00l to oarry
the district thl'-Otlgb the first payroll.
-Authorized formaUoa ot a student
body organization.
-Tabled a proposal to contract out
a student book store operation be¢ause
they fladn't had time to study it.
-<reard a report llhat tile shells are
completed for five of the 14 i.Dter!Jn:.
campus bulldingt, and that sod grass
JI Dl)W being laid. '•
-Accepted bids on fll,!a W«1h of
classil'OOm furniture to equip tfM: ntw
buildings. ,
-Were Introduced to eight gjrto.
chosen 11 eoni and cheer leader..:
Board members were most ap-
preciative that the meeting witb tbl
girls was oo t1leir agenda.
Attorney General Renews
Appeal for Gun Controls
WASHINGTON CAP) -Atty. Gen.
AN ADDED ATTRACTION-These young members of Laguna Beacll
Civic Ballet Company will appear at Festival of Arts gmund! In pre-
sentation of 11Festival of Nations." Sunday shows will run July 14,
21, and 28( featuring dances of aeven counGies in naUve C<>llume.
They are top row from left), Pam Sims, Merilee J:lagnK:!ln~
Terrie Le1lle. Bottom row (from left) are Mary Catherine ,
Damal'9 Bllllletl and Loulle Frazer.
A July 30 jury trial has been
scheduled in Laguna Beach municipal
oourt for the son of I.SO evangelist Dr.
Timothy Leary.
John Busch Leary, 18, has pleaded
innocent of the charge that be was
under the influence of drug1 last
November when picked up in Laguna
Beach. ,.
Young Leary is to be represented at
his trial by .U.Orney Gtorge Chula. He
is free on $315 bail.
Ramsey Clark renewed an appeal for
federal ugistraUon of firearms today
despite the adminlstration'a setback in
the House.
Sen. Strom Thurmond, (R·S.C.),
brought the question up at a Senate
juvenile delinquency subcommittee
hearing on the fir~arms regi1tr<ion
and licensing bill urged by President
Johnson.
Thurmond asked Clark if he still ad-
vocates national registration in view
of what happened In the House Rules
Committee Monday.
Celler, chairmnn ol the House
Judiciary Committee and in Une to
head House con!erees 1n any negotia-
tions with the Senate on gun control
legislation, 1aid he made his pledge in
an effort to save the long gun bill.
Clark. in hi& tertlmooy before the
Senate committee, rejected a sug·
gestion by Thurmond that any
registration of firearms should be left
to the states a11d local governments.
"National registration would be
much more efficient and far, tar more
effective," Clark said.
Laguna Festival of Arts
To Present Special Show
He was arrested. June 26 at 1215
Roosevelt Lane on the strength of a
warrant isaued in November.
Police bad gone to the address to
talk with John M. Griggs, 24, an
employe of the Mystic Arts World, a
psychedelic shop. Grigg1 ion, Gerry,
5, was seriously ill at the time, bellev·
~ to have swallo"Ved Ute dangerous
psychedelic drug STP.
"Yes, l do," Clark replied. He saia.
that registraUon would be "of tremen·
dous help to law enforcement" by pro-
viding identification of the owners of
guns used in crlmes.
At the Rules Committee meeting
members obtained a pled'ge from Rep.
Emanuel Celler, (D·N.Y.), to oppose
any attempts to attach registration
and licensing provisions to another blll
to ban Interstate nles of !ii:earms,
either by mail or over-the-counter.
However, he · said he hoped the
st.ates would set up their own systems
for liei!nsing gun owners. He saiQ the
administration bill is designed to en·
courage this but the federal govern·
ment must act if the states fail to do so. fl
f'rom P•• 1
The F11Uval ot Artt will have ·1
ipeclal 1how on hand for the flr1t
thrH Sund1y1 of the famed summer run. •
Tba ta1un1 Beach CMe Banet
Company, recenU7 named a national
honor company by the National
Aaaodatlon for Ragfonal Ballet, win
pre11nt "Feltival of Natlons" on the
Fffttval srounda on July 14, 21, oad
21.
Slxteen dancer• In colorful costumes will perform 1tyllzed verllom of the
dances of Czecboalovakia, England ,
Italy, France, Spain, Auatrta and the
Unit.<! States. '
The Laguna company ii the only one Jn Southern Calllornla to win the tltie
of National Honor Company. Sevetal
of the perfonner1 have been lnvited to
join IUCh pruUge Cl'OllPI •• the Stut-
tgart Opera and Cblcago Opera Rallet
Companies. One ha1 been u1tgned to
the New York Ballet and another has
played with the Ruth Pajle lllterna-
tional Balle~
Young Leary was picked up initially
by police wt Thanbgivlng evening
after a housewife in the JOO bJock of
Templ' Hills Drive Complained of a
youth on her porch wt>o wa.s acting
strangely.
Young Leary wa1 placed. in pro·
tective custody at Orange County
Medical Cellter and later released to
his father .mo waa: staying .in Laguna
Beach at the time with his new bride
Rosemary, 3.1.
The effect of the bill would be to ex·
tend to shotguns and rilfes t~ restrJc-
tions provided on sales of hand guns in
the recenrtly passed crime control bill.
f'rom Page 1
PUPPET ...
GUNMAN •••
Mellish refused to give up.
Allan also turned over to Mellish an
armor piercing rifle which Mellish had
demanded to "make ~ equal f() the
police." The comrnlssioner · w 1 1
censured by the New South Wales
Polke Association for supplying the
weapon, but he maintained the yoUllg
man wouldn't 1tart 1bootin111 long as
he was humored.
lions direct-Or for the Saw du st "Mr. Allan 's patie~e has been
FNM P .. e J
The 1enlor Leary, a former Harvard
psychologist, left Harvard in 1963 after
his experiments with LSD exceeded
the boundt 1anctioned by the 1chool. Festival, sDid tnere will be a press rewarded," New South Wales Premier
preview of "Hansel and Gretel" dur-Robin Askin said after Melllsh's &ur·
DIRECTOR .••
a lull time racreation dlrector right now."
"We lleflnltely -I _,_ area," commented Goldberg. "But
there are a Jot of thine• we could UH
U we bad the bud(eL Priority ti what
comtl. Recreation 11 not number one."
He continued, "I'm very •rm·
p1thet1e to the idea of at some time
havtna a full time recreation director,
but It might DOI solve all our pr ..
blem1."
Roy Holm, Jn -ent with Boyd
that 1 full time recreation director 11
needed , 1ald, "There'• no que1tion in my _mind." He 11ld the only problem
mlfbt be with the Umln1. According to
Holm, the first step would be to sign a
joint powert asreement between the
city and the school dillrlct.
FOOTING BILL
Holm said that the city of Laguna,
with a population of 13,000, ii footing
the recreation bill for a community of
27,000 (the &realer Laguna area), be
said that it is quite unfair.
The city of Fresno had the same
problem as Laguna, alon~ the lines ~f
recreation, according to Holm. The ci-
ty iiened a joint powers agreement
"""1 """ tlJO)' have me of the awblf-
ingest recrM.t1on program• in Callfor·
nia." He added, "They have a great
recreation director, too.
Public Grabbing
Pageant Tickets
Lat.eat word from Laguna Beaeh
Festival of. Arts is that all ticket• for
the Pageant ol the Master1 up throu gh
July 21 are 1old.
All Friday. Saturday and Sunday
nllht performances throuCh the con·
ch11lon Auau1t 24 are also sold.
Bulines1 Mt.naa:er Robert Uppert
roportod to the DAILY PILOT that on·
ly '2 tickotl .,.. 1till on 1111. Leppert
laid there wa1 a 14tremendou1 1ur1e''
ol Ucktt buytn duri•I tht p11t lour·
day holld1y.
Ptrhap1 another factor i1 the brand
new red and sreen baMers gaily
nyJnc in Laguna, to herald the art
IJ)tCtacular.
Leaders Picked
For Nig11el Fiesta
Chairmen for the iecond annual
Flolta Del Nlcuol have been 11loc:tod
at LaJun• Nl1uel. The Item II tan·
t.lUv1!y scheduled !or Sip!. 21 •t
MOM?ch Bay Plaza .
Chairmen 1elected are Nancy lliet·
II, daCO!'Otiono ; Wilma Bl-seme
and food -•; Linda Fortuno, fair
ICUvitlel; John Wiiloo, )'OUth IC•
tlviUtt; Lee Andmr, enlKtalmntati
Pat Blrkttt, publlclty; !llloWlloft Fll'lllld Jr., orlw and county 1tort1; Jeff Parlu, tr_.urtr.
• 7llt llHt.l ii belnf 1pon1orsd by th• ~;~l~Commuolty
ing a press party from 5 to 7 p.m. render. "There will be general relief
Thursday. that the siege resulted in no loss of Conviction Upheld On opening day, Friday, all the lile. ldon'tthinktoomanypeoplewill
He'• boplnf that the school dlltrlct famWe& ot. Laguna Beach Policemen now be concerned by 1ome of the
(with utaU r-ooo) uldhei WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tbe court have been invited to be guests of the more unusual aiped.s." foot~~' aln: ~t"the pr::.nt um: martial conviction of Pfc. Ronald Sawdwt Fe1t:lval at a 3 p.m. ahow. Mellish and hi1 wife were taken to a
they are "free loadine" off the city's Lockman, 24, a Philadelphia 1oldier 'The firemen'• families have been field headquarter• set up during the
proaram. . tried in San Fr111ci1co for refusing to given tbe 1111me invitation . at the siege. Their baby appeared fit. Of.
"A city of 13,000 shouldn't have the! serve in Vietllam, wa1 upheld Monday premiere showing July 21 of "Beauty ficers recovered the weapons from in·
recponslbllity to provide recreation for -=by;:::a::mili::·::·::tary;:::::'e::Vl::. e::w::bo;:::ar::d::.=====an=d=the=B=e=ast="=•=t=2=p=.m=. ======='l:de=th:e:h:o:Ul:e:. ======::.., a community of 27 ,000," he 1ald. r
"We need a different procram in
that Jt wouldn't be merely opening
facllltle1," be 1ald when uted u to
what t1nd of program he'd lite to see.
•unit man doesn't need to be a whis.
tie, nreatshlrt, bueball captain kind
of a cuy," Holm added.
"Laguna should Miiie for nothlng
but the abeolute -:· he said. Mayor GleM Vedder, althougll
wl1hlng to withhold hll comments un-
til the meetlnR Wednesday niJht, did
say he h again1t the hirin« of a full
time director. He added, "If Y0\1 have
a mediocre man you have 1 mediocre
proiram."
ALL C AGREE
AU tour of the men a~eed U there is
going to be a full time recreation
director, his salary should range
between $12,000 to $15,000.
The present part time dire<tor.
Norman Borucki, t11 being payed
$4 ,MO. Hls total budget Is '23,494 , of
which $6,000 goes towards materials
and supplies.
City Mana~r Jamet D. Wheaton
told the DAILY PILOT, he opposes
hiring a full-time recreation director.
He 1ald re1ult1 count and added . "No
one can do a better job than ls
presently being done."
Boruckl believe• that noUling can be
done until more facllltles are attained .
Ht 1tated, "The elementary child has
a tremendoua chance to take part in
the program. The teenaeer doe1n't
have much to do, but he turns to the
beach."
He 1aid, "Unless an over-all plat\ Is
undertlken to filtU?'• out what 11. full
ttme recreation director could do, the
hlrinf of a man would be • w11te of
Um1.1
Laguna Federal
Slates Exhibit
Of Art Masters·
They called 1918 • Sood year
bectU1e ln July when the Lapa
Beach Art AssO(laUon put on 1ls first
exhibit, it drew over 2,000 visitors to
old Tow'n Hall.
This monlh, Iha A.looclaUoe II
celebrating It& 50th aMivenary.
Naturally, th• best way to do that ii "'
put on onotlltr utllblt
eelns 1tassd at tho Lasuna F:odtrai
hvtn11 and Loan h •a dq qarte r 1
pllery. llltl o.-A VI., ti I ••ll•ctloe
o! palntlnll Hlocted lrom I b I Pmn-MIDlorlal CoU..Uoa.
Am••I !ht Art Col-muter• npmlllted ii l'rank Cui>non, called
has it!
"We make no bones about it II
• • •
Deep Steam Carpet Cleaning costs more
than the old shampoo method • • •
However, the Diep Stum Carpet Cleanln& Method removes soil from both
the fibers of the carpet end the carpet backing. Since no brushing or
scrubbine action I& used, there is no distortion of the carpet pllt. The
powerful ext11ction action of the Deep StHm process lifts m1tt6d pile to
"like new" appearance. . '
The need for frequent professional cleanlng ls reduced because the deeply
lmbedded 1b11slve dirt particles (that cut cerpet fibers) are removed, and
there Is no detereent realdue left In the carpet to collect dirt. Durln1 the
Deep Steam clunlng pr.ocess all the carpet fibers ere coated with 1 apeciel
soil retardant.
"It's simple logic ••• You profit in the long run whtn you use Deep St11m
Carpet Clnnlnc because your carpet wHI bt cleaner than ever before
posalble. It will stay clean lon1er and weer longer because you used Detp
Steam Carpet CINnlng ••• "
WHIN YOU
WANT THI
,INllT-CALL
' •
RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANER·s
011r 21st YHr ef Servlct In Or1ng1 Ctullly
2950 RANDOLPH COSTA MUA
""' llTIMATI
'·
tho doan QI Laruna .oriUtl until hi• PHONI .... 34•• ,,...,, Tell Am -~~ --~-11z1 Tho lliltr,1~ xi: Fedora! ii ------------------....:-:;;;.;:;;;":;:;llh::.;.;7.off=.:;6:.._ __ """I' _ _,
oplA d1irllll • ~ I
L--------------------••-••------------------------~------__ _,, ___ _
I
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UPI Ttlt,,.,.
TWO YEAR OLD VICKI LYNN WEST 15 BACK WITH MOM AFTER ABDUCTION
AWOL Marine Threatened to Keep Tot •• GuaranfM of Safe Conduct' Out of Unlttd Stat11
'
ABDUCTOR HUNTED
Thoma s F. Scholfleld
.
Johnson Travel Tax
W>),SHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate
Finance Committee today all but kill·
ed my chance of passage of President
Johnson's proposed travel tax this
sessioo.
.
Marine Kidnaper Sought
After Releasing Toddler
. MARYSVILLE, Calif. (UPI) - A
husky young Marine, who hoped to
escape the United States with a kid-
naped toddler as his safe conduct, fled
today from a seven-state police search
after freeing the tiny girl unharmed.
Thomas J. Scholfield, 22, armed
with a rifle and a pistol and considered
"dangerous," disappeared after his
wile returned the abducted child to
her home.
The Marine priv-ate and his wire,
Loretta, 20, held little Vicki Lynn West
for 12 hours. The two-year--0ld was
unharmed and told her mother: "We
just went bye-bye."
Mrs. SchoUield was charged with
kidnaping and jailed in this farming
town on the viestern edge of the Sierra
Nevada.
She told sheriff's deputies her bus·
band jumped out of their stolen car on
the outskirts o1 Marysville and fled on
· foot as she drove to the home of Mrs.
Helen \Vest to return the child.
The tousle·haired youngster was still
wearing the bathrobe in which she was
abducted.
"I'm very glad to see my baby," the
relieved mothe said after she was
reuniteJ with her younger daughter.
"I didn't really expect to."
Sheriff Gary Miller of Yuba County
said Scholfield, a Camp Pendleton
Marine w i t h a long juvenile record,
and his wife took the child after bin4
ding Mrs. West, her teen-aged brother4
in·law and her five-year-old daughter
with torn bedsheets.
The abduction climaxed a night of
drinking by Scholfield and Mrs. West
at a roadhouse outside Yuba City, the
sheriff said. He said the Marine and
Mrs. West, who is separated from her
husband, had a "dating" relationship.
Mrs. West said Scholfield hoped to
flee to Canada, apparently to avoid
service in Vietnam and because he
believed he bad stabbed a man to
death in San Francisco .. a couple of
days ago." However, San Francisco
police said they had no record of
Scholfield or s~ch a killing.
SAIL TO SOUTH AMERICA;
ENJOY JAPAN ON THE WAYI
How? Sail on a Mitsui OSK passenger
liner. You'll be in Japan the moment you
step on board. Kimono-<:lad hostesses,
special flower arrangement and folk
dancing demonstrations, tea ceremonies.
and the finest Japanese (or Western)
cuisine are among the pleasures of Japan
you'll enjoy. All this while you're sailing
south through the Panama Canal and
visi ting exciting port~ of call including
Curacao, La Guaira, Rio de Janeiro,
Montevideo, and Buenos Aires.
You 'll have the excitement and enjoy-
ment of two trips for the price of one •••
as low· as $324 economy class one way.
Round t rip fares are available, too,
If you're planning on a trip to Japan see
about MitsUi OSK's direct sailings from
San Francisco and Los Angeles. Call your
1ravel agent today!
MITSUI DSK LINES
Safety Information: The SS Argent ina
Maru aAd MS. Brazil Maru ar'-' registered
in Japan an·d meet International Safety
Standards for new ships developed in
1948.
~
' .
. ... -
Marines Take Vow
;They'll Stay on Hill UntilAllRedsSlain
~ .
' SAIGON (UPI) -U. S. Marines
fighUng in trenches atop Hill 689 vow·
ed today to hold the peak until the last
attacking North Vietnamese was slain.
American commanders reported 350
.kllled lo the hill fighting near Khe
Sanh and other heavy battles along the
Demilltarized Zone.
Both sides were said to be looking
for a "symbolic" victory in the fig.ht
for Hill 689, two miles west of aban-
doned Khe Sanb.
Combat in the five-day battle was 10
close that at one pob:t Marine
defenders fired antitank guns .to blast
North Vietnamese infantrymen from
shallow .trenches hacked out of the
rocky slopes. American planes bathed
the 2,<m-foot mountain with napalm
fire bombs.
The military value of Hill 689
diminished sharply last week when
American forces destroyed and aban·
doned the main Khe Sanh fortress to
assume a more mobile posture along
the DMZ where North Vietnamese
troops were believed massing for a
new offensive in South Vietnam's up·
per tier. This may be c.oordinated with
a new assault on Saigon.
"We are going to move off this hill,
but not until we have defeated the
North Vietnamese," Maj. Raymond
Davis;-.commander of the 3rd Division
Marines defending Hill 689, said Tues-
day, Davis described the North Viet·
namese as poorly led by inexperienced
officers.
UPI Correspondent R a y m o n d
Vlllkinson, nporting from Hill 689 late
Tuesday, said at least 70 North Viet-
namese in a constantly reinforced unit
of about 400 have beec killed since the
fight erupted last Friday. Wilkinson
described Marine losses as light in
hurling back waves of charging Com·
munlsts aupported by mortar aod
rocket fire. "'
The U. S. command said the other
North Vietnamese casualUes were in-
filcled in battles just north of Hill 689
and around GJo Linh, a major artillery
and 1upply base east of KhJ Sanh. U!
· S. losses in these battles were placed
at seven marines killed and 30 wound·
ed.
On the Saigon front, U. S. Army
b:.oops or tOe Airmobile Ist Cavalry
Division reported killing 34 North Viet·
namese or Viet Cong in fighting 1.5 to
19 mil<t IOlllb-t a( lbe capital. Foor
Americans were killed and 13 woun~
in one engagement against Communist
forcts pooalbly pol1ed tor a new attack
OD SaJgon.
U. S. Air Force B&25 hit the jungles
around SaJgon with a new round of
saturation bomb runs today. American
headquarters reported 140 misliOnJ
against North Vietnam Monday and
the lost of an A.Ir Force F4 Phantom
jet, but communlques said a Jolly
Green Giant rescue helicopter picked
up the two crewmen.
Sirhan Moved Secretly
To New I ail Facilities
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sirhan
Bishara Sirhan has been secretly
whisked toe cell in the Hall of Justice,
where he wdll face trial cm dlarges of
murdering Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
A COMl'Oy of patrol cars manned by
seven deputies from the Central Jail,
completed the move Sunday, Sheriff
Peter J. Pitchess announced Monday.
The 14-minute move was so secttt not
even Russell E . Parsons, Sirhan's at-
torney, knew about it.
"We knew it was coming," said one
of Parson's aides, "but the time was a
secret even from us."
'"!be transfer wae: accomplished in
a routine manner and was pert of an
over..all previously sdleduled program
of sewrity for the inmate," Pitcheu
said.
The 24-year~ld J o r d a n la n im·
migrant's new 6-by.a feet cell la on the
13th fioor in the Hall of Justice.
'nle H.all of Justice's jail quart.era
have ,undergone a complete renova~
tion, accelerated because of the Sirhan
case. Sirban's cell is in an iJolated
corridor with no outside windows and
no other pri90llel'I. It is equipped with
a bunk fixed to the wall, a toilet, wa!h.
basin and a 12-inch circular mirror a~
tached to the wall.
A larger security area for visitors
adjoins the cell. It bas bars and sliding
door.O.and a :10-by.3().lnch window'ln
ooe -.U:. Sirhan and visitors can loot
at one anothe!' through the window and
talk by telephone.
Mom Urges Pueblo Rescue
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Th e violated their territorial waters. One State Department in nsponse to a
mother of one of the crew members of seaman died as a result of wounds. statement by RUJk at a J une 21 news
the USS Pueblo stood before the State Mrs. Hayes joined the Rev. Paul conference that "If anyone wants to organiZe a committee to remember Department today and said she would Lindstrom, Chicago area coordinator' the Pueblo, I am a charter member of
rather see her son lose his life in the of the committee, at a news confereoce that committee."
course of a rescue attempt than die to charge Secretary of State Dean The Lindstrom group wanted to
slowly in a North Korean prison. Rusk and the administration with present Rusk a framed charter
Mrs. Warren E. Hayes of Columbus, "vascillating and incompetent" action membership in the.lr committee. They
Ohio, was one of a small group of the on the Pueblo case. were unable to get· au immediate ap-
"Remember the Pueblo Committee" Mrs. Hayes is the mother of Lee pointment with Rusk but 1aw Wtn-.
that called at the department to renew Roy Hayes, 26, a Radioman 3rd Class, throp Brown, a deputy asalstaot
their demands tor stronger action, in-who was taken prisoner in the Pueblo secretary.
eluding the use of force if necessary, seizure. She brought along another Mrs. Hayes and Lindstrom said 389
to get back the intelligence ship and son, Scott, 13, who carried a placard American servicemen were 1UU held
its 82 surviving crewmen. reading: "Mr. Rusk -please bring by the North Koreans from the Korean
The ship was seized Jan. 23 by the my brother home." w~ ... and that many more died in
North Koreans who claimed it had Lindstrom led a delegation to the prison. ' • I
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TOMORROW
ONLY,
--. '\ Wednesday;July 10th
All Baffuma' at.oles: will be.open from 8:00a. m.tc>6:0(r p; m :
Don't miss out on the biggest·YBltteaof the year.
u IDS'
llewport C11~ :: tl FllS!lit11 ls~_• -~·ml • , 11111., 111111., Fi. JO:QI 111931Ok•11:!111111 l:llj
·" ~
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'Beard a Serea•n'
FB Joins Hunt
For Young Girl
...................
AUltft f-r of Hollywood bu a
clualc problem. Mor 'l'Orkilll
n6U!f two yeu1 Ill bit yard build·
Ills 1 111-lool cablll ·~~Oller dlieo¥and Ibo boat w 't l!t
out the driveway. ''It looP a1 i1 .
the only way we can get it out is
to have a large crane lift it over
lhe house," he 1aid. •
P•ulo L<Vln<, 20, of Norllo lro""'°""'
• ringlP -.. ''""'" ,,,,,, ""' 1>1111 "°""""' ilo l.ollf JIM, Vlflllom.
BM -"""'"""' 111111 o mlllloal Ql'""I' oallfd HJl'flftdl ,,,,, llftd lhf
Bvbblf .....,.,,,... 11 ..... lllf f'OllP -
caught in an mnbush. Olhlr !M!llblPI
of the group totre also wounded, it
was announced. • Llltenillg to polil:• cllls over I
lransbtor radio, three 16-year-oht
Police .. Explorer Scouts from Los
Angel~s beard someone had , been
robbed bl a bllllk Pll'ldnl Jot two
block•••!)'· lloft S. Miiier, W1yno
Kint an4 r~ fief•" cbuod dawn I 11i1PICI. dllannod blm ot a loed·
ed si.collber pistol 8114 bold him
for pollu. Jllltd on ""*'"" o!
roblilrY wu "-'' O. wi.111, 23,
a Mar\nf. •
A ;anttor in MinMapolf.s, M'ift.ft.,
am.fno lo oPOn o churoh for ••lldav """"'· '""""'"d • ""'b""' Nl>v ... u.. frO!ll it.pf. HOlpit41 ouUionli<• 14id
th' bcb~ is in oood hialth. Po.
Uee are attempttng to locate the
motMr.
• J1.,,.. G. GrHnwood, 53, of Clill-
wood Beach, N.J., spent four years
building a boat that would take him to Btnnuda. He was back home in
four deys, a victim of seasickness.
OrHn'fiood and his son James R
26, 1t1 ofi last week bound for Ber-
muda, 700 miles away. The two re-
tumod to the Keyport Yacht Club
aft.or discovering that the father
w11 unable to overcome hi• IOI•
•lckntos. • Two policemen won a foot race
1t Ibo Hamilton County Coun in
C\nctnnati recently. Patrolmen
Doll Jones and Al Stotts spotted a
famlltar face looking in ... a man
Ut~ said was wanted for armed
robbery. They chased him through
th• corridors, do,vn stairs and out-
1ld1 the court house before they
c1u1ht him. Arrested was H•rold
I. W1lk•r who was wanted in con-ntcUOll with a $226 holdup.
.,-........
COii.RY, P1. -Mort 11111 \60 Police 1114 w1-. lolJIOd today In a
·--"' .... '"""' OOllllUY•ldo -bin for J.l.y-.old Xor•n
C-y.
Kiarto JJ>PIVenUy was abducted u
sho -lwlpn( -h lo the yon! ol ber bomo llnt mlltt west of Corry, poUco oald. .
TM Giily cllMI pcUce hive ar• 1aulf
marks in the grass near a half-empty
basket ol washing.
Tiie IUl'Cb waa widened to lncludo
Gypsy Drivers
;\Vreck, ·Burn
Licensed Cabs
N!lW YORK !AP) -8111<1• ol mon
swm Uroup two aectlons o f Brool<lJJ> llloPdl1 ancl baited at le11t U ~eoaed tuicab1. Severt cab• were
Mt aflr• an..r th• driver• were
-out. '"""'' woro wrecked ontl ~ ..
J>QUoo 1114 Ult wave ol ltrrorlot a~
!Jiclu, which tool< ~ durinl o 1ix-boll' period _.,14 to bl tl1e work
ol ""'1 cib driven Mforod by new
taxi legi.i.tlon w!Uclt WOl)I loto offtct
Jut11. 4 "°"'9or-ol4 bol' ptosorlw neoivod
flnt do-buml from ..,. ol tho
fires. Police arrested one alleged
apsy driver 8;nd .charged ~m ~th
orfmiQal mischief ni connection with
1111 lnokltnta . OfP1Y caJH; art those which may bl
summoned by telephone but which
may not cruise the streets for fares.
Qty ordinance permits only cabs with
J)Oilce modtlllOlll lo pick u v
PISM'tJlfl on the 1treet.
Tllo attadu which occurred in the
Bodlord-lltuyveunt al1d B,......v!Ue
NCl!<lol ol B<ooldyn be can at 3 :40
p.m. At the !noldonta eonUnuod PoUce
ordlred ualta ol tho loUgb T..Ucal
Patrol rorce to tb• scent.
(}ypty clbl oporate tu11ly In Ul•
slum sections w1l1r1 mq Uc1 n1td
tulcD rt1u11 to enter or pU!k up pu...,.. dUI to the lnoldonc• of mu,....,.. Moot ol tho clty'o 8,000
J""1 albl are drlv11t by N1p-oe1.
T e.acher Killed
By Mailed Bomb
LORAIN, Ohio (AP) -Daniel J .
Ronek, ra teacher who would have been
24· today, received a 6-inch-long, cylin-
drical package in the mail Monday.
The package exploded in his hands,
killing him' The mailman who delivered the
package described it as being 2 inches
in diameter with a met.al screw cap at
one end.
lt was enclosed in heavy, dark tan
cardboard and weighed 8 ounces to
oae ~, ac:~g to the mailman,
Horbort HII"<tllli·
'l1le pacloa11 had been forworded
from OoiumbUI, Hord!n& oaid. and th•
Colmnbus address on the package had
been scratched oot.
Harding said Ronek often received
mail forwarded from Columbus to the
home wbtrt Ronek lived 'vjth his
mother •nd an uncle,
Neither Ronek'1 mother, Mrs. SUsan
Hronek, nor hi• uncle, stave Br11nen,
were at home when the blast OC·
curred.
POIStal authorities joined police in
the investigation.
empty or abondoDld bulldln(1 a1 tor -
••five ..U.. from the Coenoy Itemt. 4
helicopter cltclod 111 ov•• wider oraa
in an elfort to find tbl prt
PoUoo uld !Cir•• 1tapp14 out 1o
h ... up the waa abooll u a.m. -day. A obort tlmo lllor ber motller,
Mrs. Jamet Cooney, blU'd • ICNUD.
""'· OoontJ lllPPod oullldo bu! 1bl could not -the pl. Ibo IOlfdled
tllt lmmedlote 1r11 with tlle blip of Katon'o two _,, ..,4 when 1111
l•llod lo ftnd the lirl Iha oolloll polJeo.
A nalfhbor, llllil a., J. Hlrvly,
Mid MlrCUrl ollo bllfd M -drl .. away from the net..,__ tbl
time X.O• cno..pp.red.
lflrclMrt 1Jr0118bl lo bloodltotmdl
but follod 1o Ibid ..., lraoo of tbl sirl by n!~ Tllo FBI ·Olld II ••
Joining lo.
-pollee 11ld thl)' IUl)>lcll4 1111 girl WH k>inlpod but 11114 tl>oro ., ..
llOthinJ to lodlcMt th• a eor hid boon in the .,,. Gt th• Ooonty rarm •ton• P""""ylWI~ U9 .at Iha llma obi
dl•tl'Pllfl<f.
Polioe '6id, how•vtr, they Ht up roldt>IOC~I Oft l'Oldl ""'OllDd!n(, the
area ol the CoofttJ ,.,,,, whid. •It.I
on 10 &erOI six llliltl oataklo of Corry,
Io Erlo COllnty.
Bill "" \Nee of tl>o lbort, bl-·
1.tcled cir\ wearini a 1>1110 blcu11 ond
rod Joli!• could be ~-
llllN,OllCIMINTS -National Guord !rOOPI pau a IUlr4 tower u they 111ter London, Ohio, Cott•<·
tional Institution early today following a night of
ru.turbances dtrring wbidl four fires were touched . . ~
UPI f' ... llife
off and two prisonor1 wero shot. AccordlnJ to
S11perllltendont E. B. Ha1kilu, the Jnmatn were P""
U!sting low wages, poor food variety and parol•
procedur~
Seven Arre8ted
In 3-hour Riot
In BOtSton Area
Ohio Guards Bin~ Prison
4 Fires Set, 2 Inmates Slwt in Disturbances
BOSTON (UPI) -Bondi of youthl
marched Monday night on a three·
hour spree of window smashing, rock
Ulrowin' and minor loot.in& in the
1outh end 6eciion, on the trinse of the
Ro.-bury N•iro 1hetto'.
There were 11v1n m11t1, mo1Uy
for 11nult and battery. F o u r
policemen wer1 iniurtd, none 1eriou1~
ly.
Police 11ld 7G plii.t i!Atll wlndow1 ln
?Ji bullne11 e1tabUihments wire
1ma1hed. At l110Cl1Uan'1 P•partment
Store on W11hlnston !!treet, ellllt
plate l(lan windows and two door•
wor• br•~Oll and a fq stoned. The
llamOI wero quickly exUncul-.
Betwoen U 000 and 11.000 porson1
jammed th• Corlfr pl.ty&rotlltd for a
band oooeert by "'1oky ll<>bllll<lll and
th• M.Jr1clt1, auth0titifl1 1akl.
Capt. Franclt PovUn, olllctr In
charge of the-police detail at the
loll but Ibo fl'oplo stayld."
1con1, taJd 9ftli ~ conctrt 11th• band
LONDON, Ohio (UPI) -About 260
Olllo Natloaal Guard troops rinsed the
Londoll Corr..U.ntl lnllituUon here
today foliowin( O nl1(111 Of dltturballoos
durin1 whU!h four !Irt1 wort touched ott tnd two prllon1r1 were 1hot.
A 1pak11m1n NJd 1U l,690 Inmate•
were Jn their dormitories •nd qulet.
John McElroy, flrlt a1sJ1tant to
Gov. Jam11 A. Rhode1, Rid th1 1uard
wao aollvotod at tho requ.,t of M. C.
Koblantl, d1ltf of the dlvi1lon or cor-
r..UOlll .
In addition to the SUanl un.1U:, about
IKl Ohlo Hlrhwe_y Patrolmen were al10
ordered to the medium 11curity
prltoot. The dl1turbanct &tarted Mondly
m.orninf wh1n 700 convict.I staged •
11~ 1trik1 in the tn1Utution'1 gar.
ment 1bop. Inatitutlon Supt. E. B.
H11kkY 1Uct thl1 tnJUal di1turbanc1
wu brought under control in the early
afternoou. H• liter ordtred all prlaon
guards out of four dormitories wten
they became targets for coffee mugs,
coffee pots and other objects hurled by
the inmates. 11Th1 crowd didn't mov1 out ot the
playground after t!te concert," he
said. "The poliee began to move thlm
out and many broke off in the ltr..U •
into groups and started tbrowtn&
things."
Koblentz then aslred the governor to
The bands of yooths marched onto
Columbus Avenue, Washington, Tre-
mont and Ruggles Streets, throw!n&:
rocks rand bottles in some cas••·
"We moved the crowd off in four dtf·
ferent directions and halted all tratftc
in the area," Devlin said. "Whtn )'OU
C0111id1r there wert; ooly sev1n arr11tt
oUt ot a crowd that size It 11y1
sometOUng for the way police hlndltd
the situation."
There was scattered looting, mo1tly
or liquor stores.
Camp Bus Crashe1
BANNING (UPI) -Two per1qns
were admitted to San Gorgonto Pa••
Hospital and 23 othen gi""1 llrlt old
Mondlay .after a bus carryina tT un·
derprivileged youths to a 1ummtr
camp plunged off a mountain ht1hwq,
alert U.. National Guard.
J{ukln1 1a.id the pr1Joner1 were pro-
teiitlnc low waees, poor food verlcty
and p~ole board probl1m1. The
wcrker11t the garment factory, which
1uppll•1 clothln& to 111 Ohio In·
stitutlons, earn 81h cents an hour.
Althoueh most of ttie workers
returned to work later 1n the day, 20
iirlloner1 were conllned to ltolaUon
c1U1.
Whlle the remainder Of the prilOMt"s
were belnc taken back to work,
anoU1er 200 Inmate• roturntn·a to the
JnJtitutlon from WDrk on the laclllty's
3,000.lct'P farm learned what had oc·
cotted oO>d bo1an 1houtlnl( end brtak·
ine :wtndow1.
Five Ohioans Die in Fiery
Crash With Trailer Truck
WALSJ:NBUllG, C.Io. (UPI) ·-
Five Ohloan1, tncludtnc • four-year·
old boy' WITI killed when I camper
van •truck 111mi·trail1r truck plll'ked
at tbe side of Inter!tate 25 about four
miles north of Walsenburg_.
Dead are Dr. Roy A. Klinger, 50, of
Baltic, Ohio : Carol Dapoz, 24 ; Chester
A. Dapoz, 27, and Barry R. Dapoz, 4,
all ol SU&ar C..Ok, O!Uo, and l..,,Uer
K. Zimmerman, allO Of Surar Creek.
InJurod In th• fiery cra•h Moad•Y
ond Uoted In se"1ou1 con<Iltioo at
.Huerfano Memorial Hospital 1 t
Wal!enburg are Michael R. Kllriger,
17, of Baltic, Ohio, the driver of the
camper van; Katherine C. Klinger, 51:
and Kathy E. Klinger, 16, also of
Baltic.
Baja Storm Dissipates .
We noticed other
banks simplifying
their service charges,
and we were suddenly
struck with
Predicted: Drying Trend Higlilighted by tlie Sun
CalifoMda
V1rl1Dle WI• 111tltf 1111111 IM'fllflf
llol/'1 *-!flt ...... "" ... '' ~l!Olt
111 ~ •""-tod1y Incl tomorrow.
Vlrl1ble d1111d!MU but tnOlltf lllfl~f
d1n todlf 11\d '°"'°"-wtlll 11"11
Cl'll-lft ttmptr1tw..
Yntwd<IYI """""''""" tel!Hd ff'Wl'I I 11\tll el 71 i. I tow of '3, Wllff
twnHf"llvre 5'.S.
'l'e111Pft"<lt•r•1
Allci'lor11t
All1nl1
8•~ersneld
•IJm•ttk .. ,,.,
·~"'
Clncl11n11U
CllYtllnd
Dtnffr
Del MolMS
Detroit
Eurffl
11-'ort Worth "-.....
Honolulll ._...,
1(1nwt City
Lit Vftll
LOI Al!ltla
Ml1ml
MllW11JkH
Mlnnc•t10Ht
New Otle1n1
N•w Yorlt 01~111111
·~ .. P1:t0 ltallft
PNllOlllHl11 ......
Plltlbuf'tll
Port!IM
-"~ JIN l!wfl .... t~~ ..
S.lf 1.1•t CflJ'
S.11 Dl"°
S.ft Fr111CIJCO
S.nll AN
$1nf1 l1tblr1 ..... ==t WttlllMIOll
.... ""',,.. . .. .. .... .. .... " .. ....
'" " ~ .. . , ''
17 .. .11 tt ., ,01 ~ ~ '~; :t ..
" " .... .. ,. .ti
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F. i:
;t ft _,,
R H r. r,
'II :: .. " " .. ., " .... .. . ~ ll -~ .... ....
ff .. " .. n " .. " ,: ~ ....
this great idea:
Our Flrst•Rate Checldai Account
If your minimum Write alt.the checks
balance is you want for
0·$299 ___ Qpermont.h
$300·$499 $1permonth
$500·plus Fne
' --
VNIVIUITY PAIK OJFIOllt 1~ CaJnr'Dri"' Jrvint
' .~
I
ti
-~ -~·--~*"'"''• ..... ~-.. ·.-~ ..... -. ••••• J~-..... ·• ··~ . . ... ·-> •• ' •• ... ......... , ·-----'
Teens Scrub Floors, Look for Kittens
.
••You will note that the harder y~u work the luckier you get/' ad-
vises a lign greeting )'OUll(ster1 aeel<tng jobs 1rom the Laguna Beach
Youth Employment Bureau. .
Beneath it, thumbing throuaJI Iler voluminous files Illa Mrs. Jean
McManus w&o has headed1be bureau through its seven years of existence.
Tbe bureau, which Is alftliated with the Youth Opportunities Center
in Santa. Ana fills from 50 to eo jobs a week and now has about 500 active
applications from youngsters seeking work.
"At least 50 percent of the applications are from kids coming from
out of state. Quite a few are without means of support and there simply ari
not enough jobs for them,'' worried Mrs. McManus.
Mrs. McManus, who admitted. the summer influx of young :people ·
has been going on for . quite awhile, said she doesn't ever recall seeing so
many so early in the season.
"A lot o1 them are nice college students," she commented, but added
1he does meet many "hippie t~!'."
"M'ost of the employers like clean, well shaven boys, but I do send
out some long-haired t)'pes. Some employers don't ~are if they are good
workers. Others object violently 1 so I always ask them first ...
Some hippies, she added, .are excellent workers. "I haven't had any
real complaints to speak of." '
All but about 25 percent of the jobs are pari-time and include small
tasks such as cleaning, baby-sitting, restaurant work, gardening, motel
work and construction. · I
Qt course there are unusual calls. One job she filled was for 1 woman
who wanted help :finding her Jost cat.
The bureau does not take applications from youngsters under 14,
however many adults also come to Mrs . McManus Seeking employment.
More boys than girls are looking for jobs this summer, she noted.
Usually the pay is about $1.50 for hi gh schoolers, $1.75 for teens out of
school and $2 for harder work including construction, housework and
gardening.
11 1 think we all want kids to get started on the right track, making
their own money," she explained the rewards of her work.
JEAN COX 494-9466
T-491, J111)' t, IHI LI , •• 1)
I
PUSHING HER WEIGHT -Patti Del Re from Los
Angeles ·wanted to spend her summer in Laguna
Beach and was willing to work for the privilege.
Through the Laguna Beach Youth Employment
Bureau she was able to find a job cleaning and
scrubbing for the Americana Hotel. She attends
University High School in West Los Angeles.
DIGGING FOR FUNDS -James Chambers from Alexandria, Va.,
does gardening work at Canyon Animal Hospital in order to earn
enough money to return home. While in the Art Colony, he and his
buddy have found shelter on 1 friend's patio.
.A SWEET JOll -iinmdt Lu1t, who was graduated from La-
guna Be8¢ Higb Sc)lool three years ago, was able lo find a
fulJ.tlme job. tbrQugb the Laguna Beaeb , Youth Employment
Bureau. serving cutomera with her employer, Jean Cbarton,
owner of L'Eacale where· the former Scoop Deck wu located.
Sbe bas been enjoyint her job dishing out ice croom and food for the past month.
Can This 'Linus' Discover ·Happiness on a
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l wa1
especially interested In your reply to
the mother wh'ose I-year-old Jlllilted
on dragging ber faded, worn-out
blanket nerywhere. You said, "Leave
h'er alone. $he'll give Jt up when,. she's
r4ady. I've never beard of a child tak-
ing a b1by blank.et on 1 honeymoon."
Well, Ann, atict around for a few
more years and you mlght beer Of it.
Our son Johnny is...15. Kia baby blanket
fell apilt 1e1r1 1gt (be dragged it '
around until there wu nothing lelt).
The be developed a dandy rubstitute .•
Johmy twist.I the cornen G( hi.s
bedaheeta into i hll'J> little Po~. and
Of course the abnll wur out In .no
time It all.
I un not complaining because 1p-·
parently th.ls twisting has filled an
emotionol ....S. Jobney bu alway•
ANN LANDERS ~
b~iJ. who llt'm"· once mentioned JDln'ial• to 1 woman. I've bad 32 af.
f.aira in tbe Jut three yeara and four
tum-downs. I'm not lwJdlome, not
a ·sre•t talker and I never mlde an
&dive pitch In my Ille. My rec«d o!
coaq~lla la prool that Amerlc1n
been a wonderful ton, a fine ttudent,
mechanically Inclined and good in
athletics. He is a tbougbtfUI boy and
never caused us any trouble. Perb1ps
letting him drag his bllllket all those
years and now twUtint _the 1betts
have given him tbe aatilflCtion other
kids !ind in dng rocinf and brelklnf
the law for "kicb." .
If, when Johnny marries, be wants
a baby bLtnket to take on hi1 honey·
moon, I'll bQy blm ..... -WOULDN'T TRADE '
women·1rt tbe m01t acgreslive, au·
DEAR WOULDN'T: Y-_,,.I bwijry fem1le1 In the world. Wilen I
ud -b1ve paid olf. I WI .. more Uvtd In Eunipe I dldn'I get ont·
poreoll Ull 11. Too -.._ are,, !bird the pi'opoaiU..,. I '1et in C.ll·
...... ·--11D11 ftldo • !omll.
-lie 1_.. -De *""'"' Now ·Whit do you 11y? _. .. ._ ,,_ ad_, -• TRANSATLANTIC
' • DEAR TR,ANI: I 11 7
DEAR ANN LANDERS: YOllr co~ Mnefeatllen. If 7" -er mldt 1
WM oo tree !ov• la oddltionAl proof ~ lo 1""' Die, ..., """' Ille lam·
that JOU alw1.71 tide witb the womea. dnuT y_. need ......... 11 ee
Here's b°" lt loots -• mall ·J!Ci}nf ddq -by d111 .. ee1 b1•e u 18a1r
of v1.... ., ....... lier ....... i... _..
I •m 30 101r1 et •If, 1 -eel
•
------~--~-----------·-~· ---------~---
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I r..i wltb
lntAreat tbe leU.r from the legal
secretary who rt:!Uled to notarize
papera unless abe bad aeen the parties
1Jgn.
Good for her. I, too, am inflexible in
tb1a regard -10 inflexible , Jn fact,
that I've been referred to u 0 tbat
scr1wb1U." But It paid off,
Recently we handled 1 deed. I .
notarized the signature• of an five
heira. A lawyer Of queationable
cb1r1cter stated tb1t all t 1 v e
alpturu bid been lfllxed by ooe
person. He even lined up 1 phoay
haodwrlUng "expert" to support hll
ch1rge1. The fool wu l1ughed out of
algbt. Sevt.ral witne11e1 said, "That
acrtwball would never notllrile a
siplture 1be didn't wltnua with ber
OWll '111" -... !hit ended ll -
trrlCA, N.Y.
DEAR U.: B°" nlmlllag .. flail
aome.M wbo IUcb to tlae nlet nem
In Ille ,... of rldlnle •. Tllere .. ..
macb com,......lllq, .,._, ad
brealdac tbeee q,,, I ..a m:y -to 1" for Htbl a nae example.
Ia alcobolllm 1 dlleue? How can
the alcoholic be treated! la there a
cure? Read the booklet "Alcobolllm.
Hope and Help," by Ano Leaders.
Enclose 35 ce.nta ill cotn· with )'OUI' re-
quest IDd • Joni, atamped. 1111-d·
dressed envelope.
AM Llndtra will be ·gild lo belp 7oa
with your problems. Sehd them to b•
In cere of Ille ·' DAILY PILOT,
encloolnf. 1 ll&mped, sel!-
mveklpe.
•
I
--... ---.... ---~· -... -·· ... . . . . . . ... .. ... _ ..... --· ...... . . . . .... . . . .
. ....
Horoscope
Pisces: Don't· Bow to ·Pressure
WEDNESDAY bu11 wltll "°'"'~·
JULY lo -· •lllll, Lator.,,. ltl-tobulelMuH.
•1 IYDNBY 0"'41111 You -do mudl tit. od· .uuu (Mareb 21..\)lril -llllblUona, •I'm 1.
II): (l.i ..... ObUJIUOM ll1vo faith.
GUI al •!11 Hrl7. Later, GEMINI (Mu 21.Junt
... 1a1 ..UvttJ OCtU1ll7 11d1 :IO): llt1POftllbll!Uo1 oould
wll"' b\!llntll lnOOmt II COllOlct with lroYll dolln1,
conconed, M ... 1 11111 11 Ch .. t I-llllUI. lie
comblnatlon of WOJ'k and 1ur1 you know tbl truth
pl17, 1 clay wlllcb lelll your •bout ,,....,,.,, "°'""" ol
ver..UUty. ._tt. Hz ii damudlq,
TAURUS (April 11>-M•X. . llll'lvo for bola-.
:Ill): Durhll momlnJ, urly CANCER (J""' ll.Jld7
afternoon bour1 )'OU may bl :D)• You can le& ...... to
It's a 'Steol'
1111...W dilenwn1, but II ,._
qYlru cooperation fr o m
...... partner. Probe Mop
-10 beYODd ·~~lQill Jn. dkloUoftl. llett.r le· llDllb
l1lao to begin prOJeclll.
LllO (Jul7 23-Aug. 22):
Toallbt, )'Oii foce· *"'' WlllcJi 'J(OU bad pUI off,
dallyod. Whatever you do ,
.do II with enthuslum, MW
peaee with ooe who oppeaed yrm views. Key ii· Wn1
p:rutlve .and intereated.
VlllGO (Aug. 23-Sepl . .It):
Whal -you do today brines
.
--... u111. & sure )".O'lf' ac\iom are
JIOllttw. C>ttmwtit, 1 • u
001114 flJld th• -... CMdiDI tho rallltl. Com.
IPPD .... 11 your er••*
oily. - .
·LlllllA ·111oP1. 3'-0ct. Ill:
Good )Ullar .. Poet IOlllPt
colnc:ldes wlth. romt11\ie kl•
terttUt •Cf4:•V• ·eJMltav.-1, ~· re1q-lcU9'!1 an Ultod. Remember, responsibility
.... haoll·lu·baod . ,. 11 b
freedom.
SCOllPIO (Oct. ~ov. 21): ,..,.., boco.11!• COii•
ceqtrai.d. Your Y1ew nar·
rows to 1peclllc , .. i. KllOw
truth when you encounter IL
Means be realistic. Don't be
Cards Aid Projects alrald le cenfront ehollettgo.
Jl thorough, )'OU 1ueceM.
SAGl'ITAIUUS (Nov. 22-
Dtc. !1): CemmuMeation1
connected with relatives ap·
14.ar to dominate; lllxcbang•
Miii. OllDILL GUITA,SON
Wiii 11 .. 1~ ••• C•I• MHO
Vows Spoken
By OCC Co~ple
Newport Kll'llar ~.. Coota Mela, u Ille 1on of
Church w• Ille,.... al tll• Mn. llelln llolm <i Sooth
af1«noon W o d 6 t I I ti. 0;:-iorm« J,lia1 Murch
Norma-amt M...._ ••d wore a t1* art-.. empire
Ord<ll P.a........ Tho 11no,.... OPC1 cNp<I tnln
Rev. J8-G. · 81 a In• · wt1l11•• apptlquo of ch1nUlly
perlonnod "" daublo rinC loot Oii 11!1 beU 1leevff.
ceremmy. lied .,.... m)Cf cry1tal
The brldo 11 lllo dau..,_ !...., formed Ibo corwn of . ---·Ill. I.lid ol Mr ..... l\lrl. lloward .... eamecl. bridal boµqu11
Murd! ol a-AM. aed o f caocadinc pbalaenp!J
ber hulban4. • refldoDt o1 ardllcil 8 I beorl lockJt
Civm to her by t h e
brideeroom.
lier llller-ln-law M r 1 •
,,,_Murd!,mtl.ronof
hl!DIW, wore a ltrwwben'Y Pnl< '"P' omplre 1111 gon
ml earried • cueade of
llCbl 11111 dork pint , ...... -· Gowned 11rnilorly -· tho bridoanalds Mrs. n.niel
Tl10 public 11 lnYitod !O
"•teal" tata ~ ·°'*' lt<>Odle• In 1dd1Uon . to 1
dollcioul Ju-• -· ... -Valley w ...... ,
Club apomore a mMJ.IPDi•
mor oord and llllTIH porty
on W-ocloy, July 17.
Coot ,... ... "'*-• " bridle. ...,.,...., illn rum·
my, Olftlftl, chell, ~•b
blo and -laljlo ......
will bo .I.Ill per -Ind
... bo""6t will -pNl)o ot Jl:IO p.m. ta th• f'tto of
Mr1. Al ~borf I ,._ -V•lley-1.
Aceoptllll NOO<WUoftl fw
MRS. MAHA,,IY
CHtl M111 Hem•
L. Jundanlu of li'ullortnn ---------
ond Mr<. o. J. 8tud1b1br
al Pl1...,.1. l'loWOI' flrl
•• llecky t.ym Mll'ch.
SANDI lllOWNlllllGlll
:ro Mlrry
'nl• brldollroom . otioN hi•
lnthar a.n-1 a.\oto!son
• tu. ~ ma. Ulh1r1 WWI Jundanian and
'l'lloaW W. 1uBudloo of
Coota w-.
Shoppers:
Hear This
Mn. Lallo VM1 J)yb Slloppin( ..r1y Will be
played lie • r c 1 n pro-m1mber1 and cuetU of tb• ce•wa_J in h cbrpch Wt1Unin1tor Woman'• Club
--rill corn-who will bo attendinl I
ODd -JladloH. Cl\ri-In July buaor
'Dlo rocoptlon followed ln ~ with llolr rllullr '""""""'hill. maotlnJ ot 7:.a p.m. 'J'hura. T rotli Told c..n:~:::.:,,~!'!t'.:.: ~1/u1~~!.11th• =
Oruea Coaot con.so. Iler w-.
B Parents huobliod, w11o ..,,, 11 al-Sorvlnl 11 clwlnnon of Y · teadiDI 0 CC , croduoted the -ii Mrs. Frlnl<
lrom \llbclr1 Hlch Scllool , Millor, and Mr1. R1ymmd Tho bttrotl>ll el llndl lnutll Du.ta. Wolfrom aed Mn. ~Ml!
Kay lrown1borler and Jor-'Dlo coupil pllll to mid• Hen_,. wlll be lo chal'J•
l'l' JI, LarMl -....,._ In Collll Mou. of refrothmmtl.
,,_ ut Jn hor P!oN !or nwiiil>ero to ot-dwtnl a ,..._ P y tend t111 Fe1Uvll of Atta In
perontl' homo. Alumni Club LaJulll -00 Friday, Ml# Ir-raw ii tllo July 211, will be COll1(lloted
dautlltar of Mr· one! Jdrt. Orwic• County cha"'9r o( under tho dlroclloa of Mn. ~ Br-Sor of tho Coil!olie AlWMI Club iJ Edwin Ale1111der. Arll ..i
eor-dal Mar lod bor hOllin( IU aflllilleo to ' tr11t1 Section chalrm ...
filnoe 11 the lflft Of Mr. mid iummer weekend July 2.8-28. A dinner ct.nee f or
Mrt. ll«>tR Lar""' of Blll· Tho Jolly Ro&er llolol in meml>ero and SUoola will
ltl(ll, Moel. Aooholm will be the 10ttin& take ploc4 In tlle Loo
Tllo brldo..ioct II on Friday fer 1 dllDCe . Alami101 NoVlll Air st-.
alumna of Ooruw de! Mor &pon, cont.all 0 re on lalurclly, July :Ill, ..i
llllll kl>ool IOcl will _,. l<!hodulod for d 1 y I l m e .,....,... tlio ooclal -II
OllJlor1llo -ColloJO It recrtlllon oo SalllrdaY wit)! Mn. llonll4 Aaldr-. Lon& ~eadt fn September· a banquet and d8flce plan· W'ho Is cha1rmen of tM
Tiii ,,.,,_ --II 1 ned for the eveniJ!C. A King careuoel Seodoo. pad... al BUlillP lliil!I and Queen el tho f..Uval 'nw club reoantly donalo
Sctloo1 and attended CSCLil. will be selected. • baby crib and """ o>tt·
He now is a serge~ in the Reservations, due July 16, tress to h Ord• CAMltY
Marine CCX'p& stationed at may be made with Miss Welfare Department, Mrs .
Olmp p-. Jacq11tijne Lampber; 771-Jolln Wiper WU In c:MrJe ~ couplt wtll marry m1.:034~4~. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;o;i;f ;ii"'i;ir;;;"';;ili;;e;;;m;;;entsi;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I June. II
jijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
I.O'S BE fRIDIDLY
Hunfinalon Beach
Visitor
~41114
fl
I See by Today's
Want Ads --.:~~(,,,~~ e Yoo GU.,_. be:tt« • .... """' ...... -••d ... _ .......... _
$50.
• Mt. lnt.tftpr ~ Studio
nea a ..,. brtene~ !n
mak1Joc ...W.!
• ,.,_ ""' con -..., OU' dale: bn't ~
-••• Jim'• --• n.t )'OQ can let • prcl• -~,.., -hOw to,,.,.. ti9l'IUIPQm°•
• '"'8t ......... _.. -...... ..n 121 '!!+.1
1 .. 1 ••• , F I • ....
IUIOI
Ille 11-........ nwa l>o -'by ..........,, Jull 11,
'" Mr1. 1.eurtnee Z,,,.n, c:haimlan, ..... • • d
Mr1, J-JJlljt, IC·•I. Allo> 1arvtns on Ille eom·
mlttle •• lie M m • 1 .
Cborl., .Uldll, -V. p114r,.., _,. Gary, ~Am1U,Cl1r1ac1
SUwmOSI, RObe:rt Pecha and
~"'"~ .. -will "-Ill l• ... -· r-l•c lud• <JiildNn'I ll o I p 11 11 al
0..01• Cowlty, c h 11 d
Guldanco C111"c ol Orup
OountJ, Mar:ch ol. l)hpes,
Orange Dt1trJct
1cho11r1blpa; RehablUlaUon
Coater l<r Crippled Chlld,ren
..., A d u It 1 ; lluntingtoo
Botdt Uniai lll4!h Scboo1
~ acilolanbipa and
DMdy-families in the area.
PlllDll to purcba1e
m_..ta for layettes which
will bo made by llo sewing
-1<r llle Morch of nm. have been .,,._ noUnc:ed, md the annual
... Jor the Mardi of Dimes
Ball t.e been moved up to ,..,,_.,, '
•Po~ y~·:,.::. :!!~~ :: Newporters Sailing
bo frank Ind also cOl!lld-Aboard lb•· SS Monterey for · a trip to lhe Soulh
orate. Pacific are Mr. and . Mra. Richard R. Leilch of
· CAPRICORN (i>ec. 22-Newport Beach. Leitch who bas won the Architect..
Jan. lJ): You r 1c 1 iv t of-tbe-year award tor iwo years, and his wife will
benefiil of tflorll, intlu4iU stop at Papeete, Sydney, Honolulu and olher ports money. This is a day when of call.
you gain saUsfactloo. Keep --''----.,,-------------balance. Realize you gain
what iJ earned. This is time
when you are vindicated.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Cycle moves up. You Meetings Scheduled
ly 11, at 8 p.m.
Newlyweds Exchange
Wedding Rings, Vows
ca11 safely take initiative. The second anntwrsuy of
Meet people. State views. Divorce. Anon, .a club for
Be independent in thought, people Vr1to are divorced or
4ctioo. Oria:inal methods are obtaiiing a diVU'ce, will
pay off, suet to principles. be celfbrated with a dimer
Be uriique rltber t b a n duce Saturda)', July rT, in average, -a "rlal _J ___ _. s PIJCP (Feb. IS.March •~ -uy r--. an-
11>): lie cllscreel Get needed lo Ano.
rest. Pret1ures ~· obvious, A ceoerll meeting will
but you neea not bow to take place in the uneom
\hem. One you are clOse to Savings and Loan building,
mQ be ill pr_ldicamant. Be $anta Ana on Thursday, Ju.
Activities for the month
also will include a potluck
swim party, a picnic et
O'Neill Park, an outdoor
d.i'scussion at Santiago Park,
a beach porty, a Saturday
night' get.together and
discussion groups.
F or additional inlonnetion
write P.O. Box 52, Tultln,
9:W>MIM -sdlnl WWI
..i rlnll durlllJ a
eeremony oonductild ill the
Immanuel BaptUt (Jiurdi,
NonN!k, by ... -· otll Pendertnft were Pamela
J-Platt and Ml<lllli! Jon .wllff•r o I llllllllllstion -· 'l1ll bride. dqbter "lilr. and Mn. Ernest C. Platt <i
Ncrthrld&e, n1 Jiven ln morrllet 'by i. fall_..
F0< lw weddlas ll>o
•lecle\l 41!1 omplr1 llylod
floor 1onCll .-. " -_. ... IOlow!th ·-and eleev11 of C!hanUlly
1 .... ll« <hlpll lonllh vell
fell from a 1Jora ol. IOod
pearl• and .,. -• 'lltllll 80>11 bolontln1 le h ----ll'lm-
med with white Ol'dlids and sympathetic without be<:om-. -'-------'-'-----------lt4ph1POti.s streamers. . dl 1 1 •. d
92680.
Att:.ncting her slster as _m_g_ne_e_e_s_s_ yn_•_0~ __ e . _ 1
mlkl of horror wu Miss
Bo1D1 Platt who wore a
plnk crepe gown with a m111t-cNJif headplece and carried
a boUquet ol. long-stemmed
red rroees.
bett man, Md I I I t 1 ft I
Juettl '""' Daivld MUr, I.Gull Armotrons. T t m
Jester .... llalrick Mohll-
Bridesmaids 'M!r'e t b 1
Mil"8 Ellen Evans, Su91a11
Donati and Kat.hy Herron,
"'"1t Ibo btlll<licl'• •isle<,
Mill Candi Mahaffey, 1erv-
od • Junior bridesmaid.
Thoir --..re pale pint and tbl7 Heb alrried a •inllo rod roae. Shelley
Ooane, no.er Pol, was a~
tlrod In Pole pint lice trim·
mod wtll • pint -and IN WU"t a makting bead-
i.1. "'-1·1 brotller. \;:::~
Followtn1 the Cl!'tmanY
men than 200 1u11t1
au.nttltd at 1 prden
~ In Ille home ol tho
bridie11'oom'1 par1nt1, Mr.
and Mro. Lt,!ftlley el
pi...
llllUI ~ oorved.,
ll••ttnctx>n .
Tho brido -nded Huo· Uncton Beam lllcb School end p · brid•a:room
pr111111nUy ie etttn dlnc
Oranp eo.ot Coll•IO. .,,,.
MW~ plan lq -th•if brm\• in Oalta M111.
• Fashlon Island ~ P1i9ne 644-2800
..
hit ,,... of fJll feahfon• ~•• '" pleceL
leparatl plecn-vutt, Jackttt, 1klrte, culottes,
lhlrtt t, aot u ac:untt or put tot•th1r to
lteeom• the OM big look. lo •NY to have whtn
you -· And -:o::r· lao-wlth llNQER' fobrl11 ond 1 llNQIR 10wi"11 lftHhlnol
llNCHR' , .. ., PU ... Colorful $ 3ee ,..,., ---..... ,.,..
-·--.. ·-cl. --.. -..., k.., tho~ y
"""" .,. 11'1 .. .... 13¥1 t••·
--·""' ..... 14• wldo.
..,_. , ...... """"''"'tat-$298 .............. ,e.elhefwlth~ld ee1"""8&ttt111Wup~
, .. -~ -· ,_ ..... ; yd. ehephen:I cheek: '8'ft rayon, 44Y.
.....a; ...-ruU: -,.,.., 10'.4
Nttlllf114" wf#
n.1i ,,,.}N,_.,,_11.,_ SI NC IR: loda1!'
SINGER
-GA~DJN ~~ove iiiii 8831 Chapman
Ol'lllHJ• C.."!Y 111-51M010
ANAHllM-111 N. LMN
Anaheim C""'r 535·1126
HUNTINGTON llACH
Ecfttiter .r le•h
0Hlltlll111Jt011 C:•lll•r lt7·1041
COITA MPA-2300 Hfttr
HcaitMr a .. ,., Mt-1101
COSTA MESA
llrlltel • l•llflawer
s.11111 Coast Piao H0·26SS
.l ' "
L
•' • • • .. • f . _,. .•... . . .. . ... -......... .
~, Customers to Get
Fast Service Soon
-
Have cwtomers yelled
11Faster service" once too
often?
Well, they're going ta get
it. One of these days they're
golng to be receiving their
bllls fa.ster than ever ,
thanks to a new "electronic
scanner" that reads marks
or figures entered o n
documents by route meter
NIW,Olf llAC.H -•' t~• ••In-
t. l•kl••o U4• 111--OI. l ·llSG
ENDS TONIGHT
Ac ... My Wl1Mf'
"CLOSELY WATCHED
TRAINS"
"DON'T JUST
STAND THERE"
STARTS WIDNISDAY
W d DHN J. •~YID '.AYNE UAnSSEN _.._. ______ ..
olw
SHORT SUIJICT1
he. SMw Shim ':41
Ce11lhu1•11S
S•Mi.y hM 2 p.M.
NEW BAlBl,tA
·THEATRE
GAIETY •••
VIUANCE
RADIANCE~
men, sales clerks, and
others. ·
The new tool ls an
1'0ptlcal Scanner" with an
electronic eye w h l c h
'operates much as the
human eye -except what lt
reads is turned .into. bn·
pulses that activate elec-
tz'()nlc equipmeQt -which, in
turn, prints out invoice or
other data.
ENDS TONIGHT
John W1yn•
in
"THE GREEN
BERm"
STARTS WIDNlSDAY
Hunted •• Haunted , • Welftff
-.Lilt• le11t1 ef PNJI
ROOlf M1/iAll WIHl l;V/ffl
CJt ~ aul:ft!(la amt
olw
... ,.. c. Sc.tt ,,
"THE FLI M FLAM MA N"
Continuous
Daily from 2 p.m.
Held Oftf St• It #11101 _.k, e11til•
l11t .lulr 16. Celltf1111eu Wff .•
Set. & S1111. fTe111 2:30. NltltttJ
lllews ':30 It t :JO. _,. . ..._
W•ll D11111Y'1
"NATURE'S HALF ACRI ..
·-~
I
I
--------
e POSITIYILT INDS TUii . • P•t•r S•tlers il'I "THI PAR Tl"
I .-
ALSO P•ul N1wm•11 i11
"THI SICRIT WAR OF
HARRY FRIH ..
f[llJ!.(lXJ(. IJfl£r ~
lllQllJ. Ylll.QI -BfNOl lllQI ......... , ........
.-. C*trC... -c.-r.-
. ' . ,
.• '.' . ' •' 'A.i-"t{.'t ~~,~-~t,?.J'.Xi:1 ·
· Cl Ki.. r.-~ i...., '"'· :w..u ....., ,__,_
0 Goodness, I certainly don't care for thia •new imap'
your hair atyliat rs given you!"
Water Supply Lack
Hurts A rea Growth
What's the reason why
some communities never
grow?
Lack of adequate wa,ter
facilities is often the largest
single factor, according to
W,a}lace T. Miller, managing
director of the Cast Iron
Pipe Research Association
in Chicago.
A survey taken by the
as sociation's Community
Assistance Bureau shows
what happeru: when a com·
munity's needs outatrip its
water facilities:
where the water supply ts .
weak and cannot provide
proper service.
3) Modem living con-
veniences in the homes are
also placing a rising burden
on water facilities, so new
housing tracts will b e
located where the · water
supply ls adequate and
modemhtd.
The bureau recommends
that the citizens of com.
munities that bee these
problems talk to city of.
ficials or inlUaie" action in
which ithe shortage of water
facilities can be solved.
Veterans
Policy
Lashed
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Sen Strom Thurmond (R-
S.C.), says vtterans soon
will lose benefits under tht
GI education bill unless in·
1titutions they attend com ..
ply with the Clvl! Rlght& Act .
Thurmond, 1aying t h e
V e t erans AdmlnlstratJon
plans to announce the new
policy soon, denounced the
move in a Senate address.
"I have information that
the VA ls to announce in the
near future that veterans·
receiving GI blU education
and tralnlng assistanca -will
no longer be allowed to at·
tend a school which has not
signed the statement of
compliance With the 196'
Civil Rights Act." Thur·
mond said.
Thurmond 1aid the policy
would be "unfair to veterans
... , unfair to edUcational
institutions , , • , (and) an
extension of a pattern of
coercion In the use of tu.
payers' money."
The Civil Rights· Act
forbids payment of federal
aid to institutions that failed
to meet federal an·
tldlscrlmination standards
but the GI allowances are
paJd directly to the veteran,
not the institution, Thur·
mond said.
"This procedure would
certainly indicate the Con.
gress had no intention of
trying to dictate to the
veteran where he should at-
tend college," Thurmond ·
said.
Card Notes
Anniversary
... , .. ~··'
UPI ni. .....
Which l s S horter? 1) Since the town's growth
is stunted, its property
values cannot grow and its
taxation base is restricted.
2) Industry today requires
more and more water and
avoids establishing n e w
plants inc om m v.n i ties
Class Slated
In Fencing
Mary Stewart a Chicago hotel receptionist, seems to be wondering who h.11!1
'lbe design for a com-the-shorter skirt. Is her mini-skirt shorter or is the kilt worn by Carl Me:-
memorative. post ca r d Mahon a Shriner who is a member of the Zem 1.em Kilty band ol. Erie Pa.
honoring the 25th an-About 1125,000 Shrlners are holding tbeir annual convention here this week. niversary o( the Women _::=:::.:..:.:::.'.::::..::::==:..:::.:...=.:=:!'....::.:::...C::.:::...c ___________ _
NATIONAL GENERAL COIWOll'A
Fiixism •rtstOt •tSun"°"' • 54e·271
LAST TIME TONIGHT
20"lll tunlY·RI .-.
clwdJoN
kESIDN ~
TSCHNICOLOft' ·•·---plu1 Yul lrynl'l1r in•
''THE DOUBL E MAN"
"MAN•-1:11-41:11
"HAPPIUT"--4:01 -4 1:41
* STARTS WIDNllDAT *
C.irtt ... n hlty tre111 1 :JO
NOW AT POPUIMI PlllCl:J --~ ~ /~'=~
Coming July 17
PORT THEATRE
c.,.. .....
"SUPERIOR
ENTERTAINMENTr'
'
alUlll -~ ., ....... ~ -
I -
A fencing expert and a
modem dance specialist
have been named to the
pbxslcal education lacalty
at Cal State Fullertoo,
They are Dr. Araminta A.
Little, associate professor,
Los Angelee, and NetUe L.
Moni6on, ltcturer, Para· mount.,
Dr. Elmer L Johnson
d>ainnon of the physlcol
edu"811on department, -.id
M111 Uttle Will teach
courses in dance, while Misc
Morrison will initiate a
coeducational fen<lng pro-
gram and heh clene1 Jn
tennis, badminton a n d
women's physical con-
dlUoning.
-wu made public last week by Postmaster
General W .Marvin Watson,
'The five cent card will be
ilsu<d with lint day
eeremonies at the Marines'
Memorial Club :In Seo Fran-
cisco on July 26. AW.stant -.i.. G...,..1 Ralph
W. Nimolson will represent
the Poot Olilc<i Department
at the ceremonies.
Co-1 desiring lint
day eancellatioru: may sub-
mit o rder• to· the
Portmaster, San Francisco,
CallfoC1lia 94101, with r<mit-
tance to oovtt the oost. It
!llould be oddrersed First
Day Cancellation• five cent
Women Marine• P o s t al
<Md, ond ahould be po<t
marked no later than July
29.
Crossword Pmzle
ACROSS
l -PfON 6 L1rgt l'OOll
10 APPrlll1nds th• ...... '"P, of 14.0 ii-
WOllll'llsll
15 UUllrtd
16 Fltt 1scspe
17 Evtrfl'ten ....
11 laftdtr .
19 Go4den or · youth zorfn'k ... , 0 tlll t2 Afrlc1n country
24 lay of Flllitj ftltures
2• P'ltct of business r·ri:·•i 27 o lowtr 30-Arbor
31 Havlftg
the 1111•
""' 32 Frlvolous action
J7 Pt1tlc
conttactfoft JI Ea:1clly
dtll•ltd
4G Si;,"bol of .. "'""' 41 lottOll· '""111ng ftsl!: 2 words 4S Far frO*
netll1lblt
44 Habtrdntt-'
ery ltt• 45 F abtlcs •Ill.
~ .... 41 a, for one 51 Frtnch -"""' 52 8111111 ,. __
2 words
5l laatdl1ttlJ r;oc•dlng
" r•••i
61 fi1=.c
r."" '2 Hlnfn1
tufflx I D1vlat1
63 Ect111I: fro11 th"•
COllb. fon. vtrtlcal
64 COllt upoa t U.S.N. Ind "'' ... ,. R.C;I.
'' Kind o itot VIPs
66 Bini 10 Plact tf
67 luslnHs •lsery tran11et1ons ·11 Set In
opt ration DOWN 12 lone IJ Movt
1 Scoops up fvrllvtly
with tht 21 Neth1rland1
tongut city
2 First n1tur1I 23 Jinn
nu11btr 2S Plied l One of 27 Minute
CtlUMbul1S i•rtlclt ··i· i' .... 4 la t t roup of
watchful anl111ls
5 ·~tata-" Eavndrops: 6GYtUJll 2 wards
7 Jap. 34 Tl•t or day
•ountal11 3S Attlvtd
~~9/68
$6 lfakn last
by KOMIDY 38 Slagt In a cycle 3t Ramshacklt
struclurts
4? lrtak
43 -Chapel
•6 Iron -· 47 Gath1r1d In a tfOtlP ~I Btal off
49 Ralst the spirits of 50 Food
product
SJ Vttelablt dish
'5 Fe11lnln1 ....
56 Scottish Hlghlandtt
S7 Canine
sounds 60 Fi red Point
of tl•e
Military Separates
T wins for First Time
S.tephen and Greg
Conawey, identical 21-year·
old twins who have "always
done everything together,"
according to Greg, are
separated for the first time
in their lives.
"steve is already i n
~any," Greg said today.
111 leave Saturday for Ft.
Le""1s and from there go to
Vietnam'' . ' The boys, sons of Mr. and
Mr.s. George Conaway of
2607 Bunya, Newport Beach,
were born in N~ Beach
and attended achOOls in
Costa Mesa and Santa Ana.
Theywuegraduated
from Orange Coast College.
Both were lntei-ested in
track and water sports.
Both had identical grades in
military flight school, and in
advanced hellcopter flight
training at Ft. Rucker, Ala.
Their military service is
separating them because
under Defense Deprtment
regulations, two members of
a family don't have to serve
in a war zone at the same
time.
Greg has been assi"gned to
the First Cavalry Division in
Vietnam. He hopes t o
become a commercial flyer
when he retW'ns.
'Steve thinks he'll become
one, too.
Group Meets
In Newport
The state board 0 f
governors of. the Oalifornia
Engmeering and Grading
Conlilactors Assn. will meet
July 12·13 iat the Newport.er
Inn in Newport Beech.
The weekend session will
include meetings Of the
board 1llumnl and members
of the state-wide Highway
H"""Y Chapter, heeded by
Donn 0 . Michaels o f
Newportlleoch.
The meetd.ngs will begin
Friday at 4 p.m. with an ex-
ecutive session, followed by
a cocktail party. SetW'dey's
activities include general
meetings and a cocktail per·
ty, hosted by the EGCA °"""So County chapter, aod
dinner dance.-
Lynda Swayed LBJ
W riter Tells Why He Bowed Out
NEW Y 0 R K (AP) -
Columnist Drew Pearson
says in a magazine article
that questions by Lynda
Bird about why her husband
had to go to Vietnam pro-
vided-''the final clincher"
lo r President Johnson's
decision to retire.
Pearaon writes ln the CW'·
rent issue of Look magazine
that Johnson and his wife
asked Secret Service men to
awnken them before Lynda
Bird arrived at the White
Hoose at 6:30 a.m. after a
flight to the West Coast to
see her husband, Marine
Corps Capt, Charles Robb,
off to war.
Pearson says the Presl·
dent confided to a friend:
"We didn't want her com-
ing into the White House all
alone, So we left word with
the Secret Service to notify
us 30 minutes in advance. . .
LYING IN BED
"We we~ awake and
lying In bed belore tile
Secret Service.called, I pull·
ed a palr of britches over
my pajamas and we went
out to tl'ie South Gate to
meet her.
"She was pale as a ghost,
She talked to me about what
a flne boy Chuck wae:, ln the
pat tense, as . if be wu
never coming back.
And Lynda Bird sald:
"Daddy, I want to ask you a
quesUon. Wh1 do we have to
flght over there when -so
miny people wero opposed
tD the war? Why do we have
to send 200 boys over there
in Chuck'• company when
atm'• so mud! ~ltlon here at home to the war?"
Thal Dilht, Johmm ...
nounced hi> decision to
withdra.w from the presiden·
lial pkture.
CALLED HUMPHREY
That morning, Pearson
sa;>&, Johnson called on Vice
President H u b e r t H.
Humphrey and showed him
two ~ltemative endings for
his speech tllat night -one
just a "peroration f o r
peace" and the other an·
nounclng his withdrawal.
Pearsot says Humphrey
tried to ~rsuade Johnson
not t4 withdraw, but the
President was adamant,
Pearson quotes Johnson
as having said:
.,The time is getting short.
We've got to get peace in
Vietnam. And I th.Ink that
with me bowing out the
other tide ts ·mori likely to
negotiate.
"There's another thing.
I'm tired. I'm getting old ..
All Ult men in my family
have a record of not living
much over the age of 60. I'D
be 60 thJs summer. I've had
a heart attack. My health i.
pretty good. I think my
chart is as good as yours.
Dut I'm not sure I could Uve
out another term. And that's
not the 'WY J wam to end
my life."·
NO COMMENT
Aides of Hwnphrey In
Wl$hlngt00 11ld he would
have no -comment on the
magazine article.
Pear1on wrote th a t ·
Johruon told Humphrey he
had Intended ....,...lnl his
wlthdrnal In his Jan. 17
State of the Union addrHs,
bu\ mlllllld Ibo t e • t -
-· raid bo f1rat IC-
eu.sed his wife, Lady Bird, of
!Ulng ttie !ext rill her to •
beauty parlor, but later
discovered the stip of paper
near the phoDe in bis White
House bedroom, Peanon
relates.
Pearson writes th a t
:a~~r~ wr;;~~ai
last November and showed
it m a few close friends.
Six men had tcaled. tfMt
iron paling fence around the
White House last year intent
on killing Johnson, Pearson
says, and 12,000 letters
threatening his life bad been written.
The columnist s a y 1
Johnson once confided:
"What's the U'.!le of being
President when the country
is divided, when t h e
<:<ingress won't pass a tax
bill, when the dollar is ln
jeopardy, and when the
press distorts everything
you do?.
"I think I could get
·renominated. I think I could
get re-elected. But tb1
atockho ld ers are
dlssatlsfled. Pertiaps we
need a new preaideut. ''
UCI Awarded
$236,000 Pact
UC Irvine boo •-dell a t23S,000 .-to Ille 0.
K. Coyle Co., of La Habra.
1o ,.tend tbe rlnC mall to oonDect Dew iacedtmtc
bolldlnll ond for -port .............
,,,, 0oyi. ~--"""-· -1ow..,... __
for ... pcojtCI.
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)
JI-..,-
Botelho
Succeeds
Wellman
a-al ,.. ...... Oo. " ~---J. s. <iltaa> BaM!hO, budCtt
db_.., flo M:Ollll B. R. w..-.. Ill Onllp dl\lllka •• ,..... .• ·--hu-,... ....... ..--...-i mvirp-otWt*ra
Clllloinla TalepilOllO Co. In
Loo o-. ...,. .... , ..
ntlrlal 1l:dwwd W. Vodden.
BoWbo'1 IUCCMIOI' M
-Tollpboao'• bodsot -II Donald J.
p...._ DOI lbecu • r • • plaat admlnhilral« •
..... la: • J •• , •• ,
--6-al ol Callfanlla, tramlerriaC to
Calllorala from tba
H-allaa Telopll"" Co.
whore ba -lied from 1151
lo 11161. ' Wellmu, -a Loa Alomltoa
noldtM, .....i tba Orange
ana M dlvlotoa maaager
'lbll tbr~umn series
II clolilJ!ed to help you apply
.. -tu lacreue, pro-l*V end In way< wblcb will
mtnim!M itl,.impect OD your
pll1dlect er prollU. COD·
lilllllllC lrom yest«day:
-U J'lll'• already poytng
Ill esUmated tax for 1968,
JOU may have to file an
amended 4eclaratlon and
ra.be your Htimated tax
~ti to reflect'tbe new
111rehari•· This awlies to
paymentl a.pd dec1-faUons
ol esUmat.ed tu due Oil "' a1t<r Sept. 16, 1988 -and
the law intends that the 711.t
percent surdlarge for '68
lhould. he picked up In your ,,.,.... .. ., two lllltalments
due Sept. 11, '18 and Jan. 15, -· "' .. mllllnllou, II your estimated tu for '68 is rais·
ed by .,. IUl'Charge lrom
fl,000 lo fl,076, f37.llO of th• ••a f7i is due Sept. 16, lllM and '37.llO, ,.... 15,
llllt. u-tba ..... -·is
no penalty for un-
dorpayment of ..umat.d
lax If .. --paid .. ot I-80 porceot ol the
required estimated
poynienla. 'lbUI, In 1his OX·
mnple, pe)'lllenU of not
more than '98 ill each in-
-(80 percent of
FAVORITES
H1flo111l 1M !.c1I r11d1t•
1hl, poll• prov1 th1 DAil Y
Pll.Of cMlft ••--' th•
-• pepul•r c.1•111111 ••ui
ft.+."" •"'•ll•"I• t. •11y • .,...,.,., lit ttie U11tM
St.t•t.
... •
1\ltllllJ, :..11. t, 1'61
No.tin
I
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I
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the auto race.
1968 hH beln another banner year for General
Motors. Increased auto sales and an e$tlmated 1968
profit of $6 per share (even after the 10% surtax)
make the profit pk:ture for this leadlng corporation Im-
pressive. MaJorstyllngchanges for the 1969 Chevrolet,
and the development of the revolutionary Pontiac
Grand Prlx, could enhance sales even more. These
factors, plus outstandlns management, eam General
MQtcn E. F. Hutton's recommendation as a toP-&rldl,
k>nR·term Investment for both arowth and lncome.
Read the full story In E. F. Hutton's stud)' of the
General Motors Corporation. Just mall the C®pon to
pt your copy. No obHgation , of course.
atr·-----Stltt•---ZlpCode_
T"""""'°'-----------Bu'""5sl'l1onto----------
IE. F. HUTTON & COMPANY INC.
:M:UTU
•
ASSETSOV£R
M25,000,000.oo
. --. ... . . . ..-
INGS
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Tuesday's Closing Prices -Complete
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TotJdoy, Jo~ 9, 1968
New York
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Everyone Hos
'l; Something Tho!
ii~· Else Wont.-'J'Bll 8166ES'J' SINGLE 111.utlCB'J'PIACB ON T&E ORAl\'GE COAsT-P&ONE· DIREC'J' 84%-5871
You Can S.R It,
fi nd It, Trodo It
With • Won! Ad
~SES FO,R SAtl
~··· 1000 >'fMMACUlATE-
S BEDROOM
fJ:ir the 1arae" or srow·
1111 lamlly. 2,600 """""
!eetl ' !><d>J, -""'"" r'OOltll, llP&cioU•'family room,
l all ekctrtc kttthen with
~ llrff a.nd large
1puitty. BeeutU'Ul carpeted
and draped throui'hout, lov~
ly ..... pool o1.. yard •
jll1de ot ownen:hip land-
~· Offertd at $36,500. .~i your own home on
.Q!ll?rutl'al'llee trade plan.
~· . .,*3 WESTCLlFF DRIVE
646-'TTU Open Eves.
'.-~DUCED $2750
~ anxioWI to &ell th1s
W~. 2~t years old, 3 BR +
hlii.~ leCOnd story rec. room,
'large rear yard, OOilt·in
~ + intercom.
.;;·only $29,750
Newport
ot
Victori1
$18,950
.:f."Blt WesWde home, interior
JeCefltly redeconlted. Hurry . on this one!
642-1771
Anytime
. . -.
HOUSES FOil SALi HOUSES FOR SALi!
Gen1r1I 1000 Gener•I 1000
,;;;V;;l;;EW::;;;;;;;;H;;;9;;M;;;E;;;; Ro~e~ :~~ND
JUST LISTED but a Unle pa.int wW make
· It "Home SW.Ot Home.': Panoram.ie Ocean Vit!W from Vacant and wW RU FHA
trmt TeT1'8.ce, Liv rm le Ind VA and pay )'OU!' coftl
Ma.ster Bdrm. BeautUully to allow tor pllintin.c. Mod•
landscaped court yard and em 3 bedroom, :J be.th.
patio w / e)QJ)ll)UlVf' moun-Hardwood Doors fully .,.... lain View. R.Hdy to move. Jn, 3 Bdnn + Dining rm, peted. Sacrlllct!-
$44,500.
Mrs. Harvey
~ Colaweu, !lanker & Co.
ut1 £. C-1 HltllWIW NewH11 holdl. Califtnlla IU t-m1 Oil J.2tM
Medit1rr1nPn Ch1rml
Oia.nning old brick garden
entrance! O 1 iv e trttt!
Wrought iron gates! Vaulted
beamed ceiling! This unus-
ually attractive 4 BR 3 bath
home near Dover Sbores has
a Contemporary Mediterra·
nia feeling. Luxuriously dec-
orated! Forma1 dining room
& panelled gamt: room. On
a great big be-autifully land·
scaped lot tor privacy, plus
a separate ·children's yard
with a big playhoUlse. Not
on leased land! Unbeatable
for $69,750!
Ruth P1rdoll, Realtor
lsa5 Westcliff Dr. 642-5200
COSTA MESA OFFICE
S29 Harbor mvd.
568491 Open 'till 9 PM
7682 EDJNGER
842-4455 or 540-5140
Professor's Home
No Down • G.I.
EXTRA LARGE LOT • 3
nloe size bedrooms, 2 full
baths, enclosed patio, bullt-
lnl. Eves. 968-J505
19 orncr:s
Orange County's Largest
-..ra rr-.:;. W-
293 ~. 17th Si. 646-4494
WANTED Will buy a luxurious
~al Estate Sales People. Ocean View home
WHY NOT GET ON THE in exclusive Cameo Shores
BAND WAGON? Evenings Call ~lCBO 3 Bedrooms A: family room
Over 25 Years in spacious dining room
Orange County Rea I Estate mcloscd sw1mming pool e Full poge adv"ti""& with beautiful
• 1n"' '"'" •d•type .Salesman night lighting e Training program prlced to move
• Insurance at $79,COJ with 20i3 WESrCUn" DRIVE
• Many other benefits Career excellent term. 646-T111 Open Eves.
Call 64644'4 • F" lntemew Opportunity ~ta~bb Patio Kitchen
How 'Bout This $18,8001 Experienced in se111n&.VA & Eves: 673-18&4 Center Hall Solid home, Dmd value! 3 FHA Homes, plenty of Door
bedroom, 2 baths, dining time, & training available, VA• No Down
area for entertaining • cov· financial help to qualified. FHA LOW DN
DIVORCE SALE! Back Bay
area home. neat & clean &
within walking distance of
the water. Owner fon::ed to
sell 3 & family l'OOm with
minimum-care yard, but
room for boat. trailer etc.
LI.sled at Ul.500.
College Realty
VILLAGE 2 lux exrtsa 3 Br,
2 ba, atrium .. lC ft ceilings.
3 lush gardens, mirrored
closets, glam spacious
entertaining $26,500. Exe. in·
wst. Nr UCI 833-0JOt
owner.
Irvine 1238
'""' patio for summer part--Free Ins. BonU!I plan, and • s~ooMS ...... _ .. ;,... IRVINE fes. Mature shade & trult ~ J:>Vn. -...,,'" .... U"6 ----------
3 BR. 130 ft wkle lot. Open 1-
.f. m ,500. 19-KI Whlttil.'r.
549-IDl2
mes. High blOCk fence for oth·er co. benefits. One f roam in master suite, 2 tun, _________ Village l, 2 BR Spanish,
Orange Countys largest ReB:l baths utility room work I green belt location, nr. UCI,
complete privacy. Unbeat· Estate organizations. Con-shop 'in 2 garage. '0n1y 2 Mesi Verde 1110 shopping & recreation. $24.-
able at the price. 544).1720. t.act Harry Boggs Mgr. years old. BY Owner Mesa Verd<! 4 Br 500. By owner. 291-4373 or
TARBELL 2955 Harbor 19 OFFICES 19 OFFICES · ••2-2741. °' Coo ty' 1 ,,_ t 2 Ba, !am rm. 2 brick frplcs .... REDUCED! Orange Countys Largest ange n s ....... 6es bltns, new shag crpts thru-========
Extra """"' 3 BR, pluo 2 HOME & INCOME out N•w paint, ploy1>,,c. Back Boy 12411
bath Lido home. Street to S27.950. 549-2713 after 6 pm LUXURY 3 br, 2 bath condo,
Street location near Club. $74.34 Per Mo. In;';;;' SUn.=c-==c-c=-frpl , pool. golf, tee land.
'"J\vallable July 1st. Furnish-293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 it's '11 it will cost monthly 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 OWNER, Republic 2400 sq. Owner transferred. $32,500
ed or Unfumished, $5-1,$0 "iijiijjjiiijjiiiilli"ijiijlll -i"'~jjl to ll . th! tsta di JUST NEW ft. 4 BR. 3 Ba.; din. rm. & By Owner. 642-33n Luxury al low Cost (Furnished). '111111 ve tn s . OU n ng tam. rm, zm Canary Dr LIDO REALTY Loan Company Me.a v,,... Troptv<. 2 & 3 But with Y'"' h•lp • good· 144,IXXI Opon D•lly 545--0981. Lovely 4 BR 21' BA. Loan
$29,995
ExtCUllVe home. Walk to
beach. 3 BR 2 beth, patio
entry, aeparate livina: room
w t t b fireplace, ae~te
level 16"'x24 den with wet
bar, private bath. Ranch
style kitchen w1th pess-
thrnugb bar &: TOO MANY
CUPBOARDS. Eatin prea
in kltdleri + scp1rate fof'.
ma1 dining room completely
tenced, earpeted & land·
SOtped. Vacant -mO\/e in
today. IT 1lla Real Estate
NEWPORT WEST
2 story GI no dn. 3 BR 12X18'
fam rm, fonnel din rm,
14x30' aw. patio with BBQ
& wet bar. Owner trans-
ferred.
BRASHEAR REAL TY
847-8531 Eves. 536-7000
Hardwood Roors
3 BR & den, covered patio,
alley access for boat or
tra.Der. Out of state owner -
mumt sacrifice. Only $2'1.500. '•ul JoMS R11lty
847-llllS Eves. 842·51K4
3 BR. 2 Ba l!nl sq. ft . Facing
park. $32,000. By owner
536-(,()70 See this functional 3 BR + 3400 Via Udo 673-8&30 BR apartment. walks to will IT CAN BE DONE. Ther========= Bal $28,(XX). Make Otier.
f1lmily room borne with all ~---.. Liquidation shows, churches and shop-mental attitude maintained Newport Be•ch 1200 ===Own=o:"=•=54=H81==':7:: ----------t
electric built-in kitchen, 2 5 BR + F1m Rm MUST SELL ping. $39,500. by an organization determln-Coron• del Mir 1250 Fount•in V•llty 1410
baths, stall shower, ~e + 3 Baths. steps to Ocean, 3 BR & den • 2 large baths • COATS es lts success. When Y°';1 list King's Place
living room with used bride Owine\, Pools, Tennis ct. & with us to sell your busmess 5 BR, 71~ BA. St,>arate fami-~·-, fenced yard com-Recreation erea. Street to· all electric kitchen WALLACE or property, you can rest as-~Y ~~hdstylebhome in Little Corona ly room. Fully carpeted,
..... ~ St kl MU fully carpeted sured that our attitude WILL qwet es1ra le area. draped &: fenced . Near plete 'With sprln]ders. Noth-t. A ST SEE, $39,950 fill landscaped & fenced REAL TORS BE that IT CAN BE OONE. 3 BR, d~lng rm, Fplc, kit-Ju.st a few steps from this grammar, High School &
We ftner in this top location CAYWOOD REALTY near school! & beaches --546-4141-And Wo Need L'•sl•'ngs chen w/quarry tile, blt-ins, unusual b:ime. Charming !I -Only $71,500. Owner will 6306 W. O>ast Hwy. fr shl . led ("--E nook red tl I/ BR Spanlsh Hacienda + freeways. A REAL VALUE hel t N B &is 1290 c Y paui .... t"'9"'' veninp) Ca.n use one saleman to grow ' cove. pa o, enc Guest rm & bath on larger at $26,500. Now 6~ 'Ai Jnt.
'. •: ~ BR Repo11H1ion
: UNDER $31,CXKI! We're not
I kfdding here's a 9 room
'1 hfAlse, 3 yean old with din-
®• *~ t•ffi~§ .. .,.,s~~p~~.~E~~rng T~H.M;A;d~B~oker ~~b:g::::. "~."i'..'51,~i'~Rr.;~ ~~::,·;~,'"~:~: ~-·~----Eastbluf1 Realty, 644-1133 3 bedroom, 2bith residence. 222 W Wilson, CM 642-6817 (Nr. N.B. Post Otticel I :!~~~:"'~~~~ _i2''=';,"'°:-:=· 96='·=16=7=8====I
003 B C "'~ ~·" maint., pool, clubhou.se. Ad· 1~~~~~~~~~: I Ll·"-with .. BEAUTIFUL 3 Br. So. of •
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1 aker, .M. <Piii"''""' jactont shopping center. v111g room romanuc BEST Buy in Bluffs Com·
..,.__ fireplace, built. in kitchen, Just Listed unity, 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 car highway. By Owner only. We1tmlnst1r 1612
'1.ng room, 3 baths, 2lSO sq.
f t. , Only 1 kran cl about
•#T,900 at 6.6% 1ntel'e9t, 10%
*1t. HUITY!
"''"""" owner. $18,450 inc. all tln and Reasmable 6~36 ~-h •-· "~ CONDOMINIUM qu ty carpe g custom Older Home on large lot gar. 5 min. to beach or re.;.16" was er, ""'"er . .,.,,......, _.__ 2 J t h •-C Hl hl •-• · • 4 LUXURY 3 BR
john macnab to move in. 548--0S87 ... -..t"", .es, aar garage. us on Balboa Blvd. $29,950 a.r....,.. 2 min to Village ameo g an .... , sp c1ou
move in and relax! A STEAL Shopping Center. z min to br, 2 ba. On canyon, $36,500, Family room + huge play
room covering entire 2nd
floor its super sharp Ir:
only $27 ,OC!O. Nothing down
to veterans. Low FHA
Terms.
College RHlty 546-5810
--isoo Ade.ms at Harbor
:.."iNea.r Onema Thee.bet)
DAVIDSON Realty
DOVER SHORES $11,950
Immaculate Home w ith an 1 BR + built-Ina. R-2 lot.
outstand4n& V i e w ol the Room to build.
&de Bay. ll Bedrooms and Rltr. 2150 Hart>or SB, C.M.
Honeymoon Cott19e maid'• room, ~ be.Iha, owr 546-5460 Eves. 548.8584
·"· $20,900 4,IXXI ... It. Boautllul!y dee· E .ti. 2 s
• moot -big orat.d. llCI ng tory ~ yvd, fruit trea1 and For .ale J\Jm. er Un1\arl. Ivan Wells' model home
aGwen: galore. Delightful with view. 2 -Story living
Cih'ered patio, tree swim-Call For Appl nn, dining area, tam rm, ot
!fling pool, kifli-me bed-642..S235 BR 3 bl.. BlG' now &: move
,bPne, formal d1niDs: room, I '!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! In before school st.arts. pieture windows oYerlook r Roy J. Ward Co. 646-1$0
~:"'.W.. ,,.ro, ll'ilt ...n Newport Heights OCEANFRONT
'WU'ELL -VIEW PENINSULA PT. Beot Buy (lli!~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; l o.llihtM 2 bedroom, 2 both, .... ling 2 BR, Fpk, 40 ft.
2 BR 1% bath, large spacious at only $17,250. $155 mo. in· Squeeze Your $$ CdM High. spacious. green OWNER 613-4423
rooms with ti.replace, dish-eludes all! eurroundings. Pool. $33,900
washer, freshly decorated and buy this 3 BR llh be.th Ownl!f 644-1552 · Lido Isle
$152 PITI. Recreational area home. ·Near churches Eut-1;;;-o;-;;==...,..,-,,-,~-;;;;..O'-.;.;.;.:_ _____ I
with large pool. 2400 Elden, side, Costa Mesa $21,500. CHARMING eduJt Bayfront F1mily'1 D..-am
Unit #13. Drive by & call George Williamson, Rltr. ~e. 2 BR, 2 bath, frplc. Oversized 50' garden cor.
Newport 673-4350 OPEN EVES. Kitchen 1 deal for eh-w/5 Bdrm, din, 5 ba, fam rm
It COSI'A MESA OFFICE t er ta in in g. Boat slip 2 fplcs, worknn, boat ~
Vidorla 2629 Harbor Blvd. v 1 E w available $31 ,500 Owner room for pool. $1<ti,CXX> 545-9491 Open 'til 9 PM 67J..5966 R C. GREER, Realty
646-Hll Harbor View Hills OCEAN 1'om dining room •1"~"~".mn,;::-""'' ... ~uly=,.::-, "".;"'.•1":.,-; 3416_::;: SAT. :9300
(Open Coron• del Mir lovely prden kitchen. 4 Vlew CUstom Condo. 3 br. 2 2 BR, den Fum1shed
Evenings} large bedrooms & 2'Ai baths. ba lun. 2,COJ sq. tt. 2 stry ia 675-f.234 ~~~~~~~~:=: J Lusk built homes located Delt1 R11I Ett1te w/poola, golf, etc. Loan t>eJ ll8 V Quito
-"NEWPORT BEACH" in the Southland's most de-6f6..441.f $29,300. Offer! 673-4356 a:irable Ir tasclnatlng area. Huntington Beech l-100
C + 3 Baths, $33,700 Schools A: Calli. Irvin11I---------2200 SQ. ft -4 br, 2'Ai ba,
Ranch modem-bit-ins. campus Jurt momenta Co1t1 Me11 1100 Frpl, 41'. Family Rm. Dbl. Lovely Exec Home
Beautiful area· HURRY! away. Sensibly priced froni Ga -Pool • walking dist REDUCED TO $41,950
1351
LISTER REAL TY
16612 Beach m. RB 842-6633
1707 * Monarch Bay * S. Coast's finest exclusive
beach community bldrs off.
er 8 new 3 Ir: 4 bdrm homes
with magnitlcent Ocean and
Island Views.
$52,(XX) • $96,000
400-2850 499-»18
-:-3 BR HOME hl&h and secluded. Doubi.e tot, $55,(XX). '.,;' • fireplace, fBmily room, alle'f Balboa Real Estate Co. ~·OCEAN VIEW · $25,900"
,::NORTH EAST CM entrance tor boat or trailer. 700 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa Huge 2 Bdrms, 2 ba, 50x127
$34.900 to $48,90!) l k' f l to schl's -playground & 16x38' heia.ted/filtered POOL L1gun1 B11ch 1705 LUSK HOMES 00 Ing Or UXUrf city !lb. Own" • 642--0936. 5 BR, 3 bath•. -'-----=:1
Prtihlwood Doors, large yard iAJl this plus 1 bedroom a.rv:1 ORiole 3-4140 Fireplace. Below market!
1M with access to rear for bath guest hoo.se. $26,500, I '!'~:""!~""':~!""'"'t'!!!!" HOME 642-4090
:boat or camper. VACANT. 10% down or FHA tenns. 3 BR, 2 ba, blt-lM, dining ----"C...:--'--
lffimedlate possession. 646-7171 e 546-2313 rm, Jplc, huge covered ••· $18,500 potlo, dbl g..-. Wolk to
-W1ll .. McC1r dle Rltn. prlv/club & s w Imm I n I
•1oiMllO Newport Blvd., C.?{, pools. Low down pmt FHA . :"HF ~EAL • E~T A TE!"S w.,7729 Eves ~ Fortin Co. &42-5000
.. : Beautiful Dupl•x
,~ By City Pork
Near' du-che1, ~ and
'M:lmel\'a club. nu ts must
, at $29,500, CaD ROIT·
MAN co. 1<r ·-t. .ias=.
.,
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~
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I • -
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5 BR, 2'Ai BA. Separate famJ-
lJ room, Fully carpeted,
draped &: fenced. Near
""""""· High &boot • freeways. A REAL VALUE
at $26,500. Low 6~ % int.
842-2342
SALES ASSOCIATES
85115 spilt. Mana1:ement
opportunity. Double your
Income. Call for appt.
HOME 642-4090
DIAL direct 642·56'78, O\arge
your ad, thlen lit back sod
listen to the 'lhooe rin&I
•
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
Dlrectiona: MacArthur Blvd. OCEAN VIEW / Fee simple HAFFDAL REALTY HANDYMAN SPECIAL!
from Padlic Coast Hwy. or MONTICELLO HOMES 3 Br, large family room "Homes to Match Income" This olde house has seen bet-
Newport Fwy. Turn on San H11 IT otlered by pr! pty. Must 8740 Warner 842-44<6 ter days. Imposing 2-story,
Joaquin· Hills Rd., then for only $1(Wl.50 a month sell! $49,500. 642-3064 few bl/from Beach. Sprawl·
follow signs to model area. (principle & interest). 2 BR LUXURY Condom _ Blulf.s 4 $99.50 ing 3 BR. & den, 2 ba, 22'
H1rbor Hi -Close By & den or 3 &: 4 BRs, de-BR, 3 BA. Must sell' ~ TOTAL COST Liv/rm, Blt-ln R Ir: 0 ,
Large family home with sep. ~':i: ~~t:th ki~nhe~~ transl. $36,500. call own: to qualified veterans. 4 large ~~~~'. M~O:~ ~
an.te living room, 3 bed· pools. Part ot Newport Har-eves aft 5, 644.{f;09, BR.s electric kitchen many Cst Hwy. 494-0Jn.
rooms (2 are k 1 n g size), bor area. "5, DEN, 4 BATHS" extras or low FHA terms. --'="====--
family room with fireplace, l60 LE.xtNGTON LANE Llbrary, 6 ~new 3 USTER REALTY 842-6633 .RAMSHACKLE
covered patio and beauttful. 546-1210 car, bit-Ins.-$49,950 CASH TALKS RANCH HOUSE
ly landsc:aped yards. $2!1,!l501~~:'ii'iiil:iil'i:'iii:iii'Jii~~l;:;;;;""'H~OM~~E~"2~-4090~~= 3 •"-2 b Early Calif ranch lttyl!, en -lO'M down. Ii .,..., a. $14 ,950. $127. estate size kit, exterior wood
546.2313 646-7171 CONDOMINIUM-FORECL MOVE In! Neu new 4 BR., mo w/su bst. down. 962-4219 pl.ank, hvy shake roofllnes,
0 E OSURE. Ab&Olutely the best trpl., new cpts. nr. beach. PLACE )'OUr want ad where Ige picture windows, 3 BR,
pen VI'.: buy & best fin a n c I n g $21.IXXI. Open weekends; 3,:), they are looldni -DAILY den, 2 ba. mod/kit. MLss!oo
THE ~E AL
E S T ATERS
available on any propf'rty. 62nd St. Owner 675-01.44 PILOT classified 642-5671 RJcy 494-0731
F 0 UR BEDROOMS, 2 ---------
baths, brand new carpets,
freJh\y painted &: prime
location. FULL PRICE Oi~-~~--~~~--1 Fantastic Volue ly 121 .000. 10% ..,.,.,, "" 2nd CALL 540-1151 (open
!.oho...., cuclstom Newport Beach eves) Heril&lf! Real Estate me ose to tututre boat -~
marina. Over 2000 sq, tt. of BY 0 W NE R : Clmbl"ldgr
Iarire bedrooms, family model. College Park. 3 lrg
room, shake roof, aJate en-br, 2 ba, xtra ltg fam rm, 2
tr)'. 2 fireplaces and 2'Ai uaed brick trpls, cpts,drps -
bl.th!, J ust reduced to lndacping. A Rustic Bl.'auty.
$35,0C!O with Jow down. $27 .900. 540..7957 or &»-25.17
A "RTNO" BY Owner; 3 BR., fam. rm., •"'·•SPRING •poc. liv; rm.• yon!. Me"
• to-Del Mat, FHA, 11.'rms,
•"" •RE ALTY io1.soo. ,.~= 2 u ,
•• ANYTIME., 67M>OO " 4 •BR. Ill !><, crpt, "'1>. Newport Heights """"" tlrL .18x36 poo1.
$1.900 and T.L.C. 4 bedroom Halecrut •re a. 545·7323
2 bltb home could. be d\ann. OW!M!r.
tng with IDl1'le pamt and 1m-1'M"o"'vrn="'c"'<..,B'°r."'2'°'ba""'1rg=,.rn=·.1
aitnatton. Larte tenced yard peitlo. $20,900 316 Ram<ma
op a quiet ltl'ttt. Low Pl. 5'8-4731 owner .
F.H.A. tmn1 available.
Colesworthy & Co.
642-7777
1SCM Hartx:il' Blvd., CM.. °""' .,,..,
F1REEDOM HOME tor aale
with 3 year lease-beck •t
$1.25 mo. 646-90U
BY OWNER Must~ 4 br. 2
be.. farn rm. bltns.. trp1e, la.
Ind tot. $23,950. 5<5-8582
I '
~--••• 1 ·-· ...... ...-.. ,.._ ....... . ... -.. . ... , . -. ... ·~·· • .._:),, ........ '.lo_
I
I
I
~-
~e .wport
VOL. 6f, NO. 164, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
· . . .
·.
Harbor
• EDITION •
NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNI>;
' N.Y. St.eeks
JUESDAY, ,J Ul:'f ,, 'i968 TEN CENTS
5 Airport Sites Proposed
Master Plan Report Sflys County Strip Inadequate
Two Yaehts Left
Orange County has a staggering job
ahead if it js tO meet its air travel
challenges, the Boani of Supuvi:sors
was told today.
The challenges will ·come in the
form of people who want to fly
airplanes, said a bulky report from the
nationallY· known firm of Pereira &.
:\ssociates -50 million demands for
airline 1ieats from Orange Countia!ls
by 1985.
Nixon Doubts
Polls ·wm Aid
Rockefeller Bid
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ji'ormer Vice President Richard M.
Nixon says he is cooident his primary
victories will lead to the Republioan
presidential nominati-0n, even should
public opinion polls favor rival Nelson
A. Rockefeller.
Star Daiicer,Mi-sty Battle
HighSeasin TahitiRace
Public opinjon polls involve ooly
"about 3,000 people across tfle coun·
try," Nixon said in Springfield, N.J.;
Monday, and he said be doobted
Republioan National Convention
delegates would be swayed by them.
"I tiave the same thing going for me
that Eugene McCarthy ahs," said Ni.J:.
on referring to primary victories.
"But I thiDk that the Republican Party
will listen to the people and I don't
think the Democrats will.'' Doug Starh."Weatber's SW Dancer
and Ed Spauldiug's Misty, the only
two yachts still at 1ea in the Los
Angles to Tahiti race were still bat·
tling 40-knot winds and high 1eas Mon·
d·ay but both expected to arrive in
Papeete today.
Carroll D. Hudson, Newport Beach
han1 radio operator (WB6RMA) pick·
ed up lhe latest report on Star Dancer
and Misty by way of a ham radio
operator aboard ttie SS Monterey,
bound for Bora Bora. The Monterey said both yachts were
proceeding to Papeete under sail.
Rough seas prevented the transfet" of
fuel from a Frencb freighter to Star
Dancer after tile 36-foot yawl had rud-
der trouble,
Starkweather told the Mooterey that
he was steering all over the ocean but
had made a landfall six miles north of
the island of Mataiva and expected to
arrive in Papeete today. Sta.rkw~atller said ihe had withdrawn
from the race because his rudder trou·
ble had caused Mi&ty to come about
and come to Ns assisti.nce.
Misty was also nearing Papeete
under sail but it was not known
whether n was still o!fl<ially in the
NCe. If so she stands a cbance of
beating Oltiriqui on corrected time.
The other four yachts in the race -
Henry Wheeler's Atanji, To~ c.or:·
kett's Salacia and Jacob Woods Chlr1·
qui finished Saturday. Fu 11 er
Calla.way'& Rapture finished Sunday.
Star Dancer had been having rudder
trouble for nearly a week before her
steering finally went out 5aturday. A
French freighter went to her aid and
attempted to transfer fuel so that Sti.r
Dancer cou!d continue under power.
But rough seas prevented the tranSfer.
Starkweather said it was easier to
steer the boat under sail than under
power.
Stock Jtfarkeu
NEW YORK (AP) -Blue chips
showed increased strength as the
stoc k market held a good gain in ac·
tive tradi ng late this afternoon. (See
quotations, Pages 16-19).
The Dow Jones industrial average at
2 p.m. was up 6.91 at 919.?q.
The market rose from the start.
, Gai ns held a margin o( somewhat
fe wer than alO over losses.
Henry \Vheeler's Aranji was the
overall corrected time winner, follow·
ed by Salada, Rapture, end Qµriqu1.
unless Mi.sty beats her time. Oliriqui
gi""° Misty almoot tllree days. ·
* * * African Yacht
Leading Field
In Transatlantic
TRAVEMUENDE, Germany (AP)
-The South African y a c h t
Stormvogel, skippered by Cornelius
Bruynzeel, took the lead Tuesday in
the field of 33 competitors racing from
Bermuda to this Baltic port.
The \Vest German naval tender
\\l'esterwald, escorting the vessels
across the Atlantic, r e p o r t e d
southwesterly winds had he 1 p e d
Stormvogel to cover 260 nautical miles
in 24 hours.
The 'distance between Stormvogel
and the German yacht Rhe, believed
to be the last in the fleet was 350
mites.
Stormvogel was ahead of Kiaola II.
skippered by John B. Kilroy of·
Newport Beach, and New York's S. A.
Long in Ondine, which recenUy won
the Newport to Bermuda race.
The bulk of the boats. competing in
classes B and C, had covered 190
miles during the last 24 hours.
Mercm·y Rises,
And So Do Tides
Orange Coast residentl appear to be
caught between the devil and the deep
blue sea. That is, the high tern·
peratures of a mid-summer heat wave .
are expected to continue, while in the
Newport harbol' area, seven foot high
tides will again flood the streets
tonight. mghest tide will be reached at
9:55 tonigllt. . .
There will be some variable clouds
tonight and tomorrow morning, but an
in all we'l1 have the the kind · or
weather that's made CalifOrnia green
and golden .
N i x o n had said earlier the
Democratic convention °will 10 the
way of the bosses" end Vice Prelideat
Hubert H. Humphrey will get the
nomination despite Demo c r a t.i c
prlintly vi<lories !..-McCartlly and
the late Sen. Robert F . Kemtedy.
California Gov. ROnald Reagan,
meanwhile, brushed aside new talk by
GOP presidential aspirant Rockefeller
of a Rockefeller-Reagan ticket.
"I've made my position very plain,"
Reagan said at an airport news con-
feren~ in Sacramento. "I'm n-0t in·
terested in the vice presidency at all."
Rockefeller had said in San Fran-
cisco the possibility of such a GOP
ticket is "wide open •.• I don't tblnk
ttJa.t any combinati<ln should be ruled
out or should there be a freezing of
any si tuation." ..
Reagan refused t-0 comment on the
New York governo r's statement the
Californian is a more serious presiden-
tial contender than he admlts.
"There's no sense commenting on
\\"hat his opinion is," Reagan said.
On the Democratic side, l-Iumphrey
told more than 2,000 underproivileged
youngsters in Washington be i5 com·
mitted t-0 seeing that all young
Americans get "all the education thtiy
can take" and adequate food and boos·
ing.
Duncan Praises
Newport Beach
Police Force
Newport Beach Assistant Police
CJUef Merrill Duncan, departing this
week to become police chief of the clty
of Orange, Monday called the Newport
force "the best law enforcement agen-
cy in Southern Ca.lii-0rnia."
Duncan's praise for the department
came at a Newport Harbor Clamber
oC Commerce luncheon where he was
presented a certifJcaUl of appreciation
for his three years witb •the city.
Duncan accePted. the award with
thanks, and added ·he is leaving •
departmen\ that has "probably the
brightest group of 'law' enforcement of·
ricers in Southern C.Ulornia."
Life.guard to Mexico
Council Grants Reed Week Leave of Absence
Newport Beach'• director of marine
safety will bo packing up his Orst-ald
and ll!eguard manuals for a trip to
Altata, Mexico. this fall.
City councilmen Monday nlght
granted Robert Reed a one-wetk leave
or absence with pay to assist the Me~
ican seacoast co mmunity 1n
establishing a lifeguard service.
Reed's service was requested by
Newport B11ach physician R a u t
Rodrl~ei, • member o( the Callfornia Partn~ for the Alliance r o r
Progt"4!SS.
The PartDtrl}Vtl buaUJt•s and pro-will be Al Irwin, aulstant director of
feaional .ea, who wort Jrivatelt on athletics at1UC Irvine and a member
pro~i~'.p!lm .. t ~I of Reed's llleguard training staff. progr . • . Irwin will be paying his own expenses
Dr. , odrigiln, aaldng city council'• °" the trip. permbsion to borrow.Reed, noted tl\&t Newport Beach City M 1 n a g e r
AJtata. J~ated in the state of ,SJnaJoa, ~ ltarvey L. Hurlburt urged the council
has no physiclaiis; no,nur1b· and no · · to'app,rove Reed;~leave of absence.
first-aid 1tations. The co~unllY. has 1 • "1 woukl:like to recommend that as
a population of about .3, • ,which a I~ gestur.e to our .Mexican
sometimes triples on . ,. m'm1e r neighbors; the city authorlie Chief
weekends. · • ~ dlMi 'wlit off at city ex(lrenae to t
Going with Reed to help set up cci·~ as,.111 j his Mexican cominunlty ,'' ~·1'1
bination first-aid, ureguard faclli~ stud;
_ ... ____ .•.•.. 4
• ' The Pereira report made tl)eie key
points: ·~.
-Orange County needs a ''regio"bal"
airport, about the slu· o( the presfint
Los Angeles International Airport,
within five years.
-The pre~nt county air.port cannot
do the job.
-The county has five other potential
Tegional airpo(t sites, including a bold
land-and-sea complex on Bolsa Chica
Loadi1a9 Up
State Beach in ffuntington Beach.
-()range c.ounty Airport is fast ap-
proaching full capacity and some type
of traffic restriction is almost man·
datory.
-Full attenUon,,should be given . to
development of a new broad-scoped
giant of an airport at Oamp,P'endleton,
an "international" airport handling
.s upersonic (SST) . transports of \he
future .
DAIL'/' rn .. OT ...... IW ...... ..,.
About 70 boys spent an anxious l\\:o hours Monday morning, wonder·
ing how all of them were going to make it to Camp Norris for a one·
\Veek outing. The Boys' Clubs had arranged for two buses to.Pi~k them
up at tbe Boys' Club of the Harbor Area at 9:30 a.m., but at 11 a.m.
the second one hadn't shown up. Three directors came to .the rescue
one! loaded the spill-<1ver from one IJl1J into two villi, and their
luggage into a pickup truck. And they were on · their way.
Ami Away We Go
The signal that everyone was loaded· up and ready to go brought~·
fuU:beers Monday, ao ·some 70 youngsters •tarted out for camp. They
wlll spend """ week at Camp Norris owned by the Boys' Club or
1 Pasa dena, at Barton Flats in the San 88iiardlno· Mountains. t '
-Immediate planning 1hould, begin
for interlocking series of small airport.a
IS.. AIRPORT PLAN Pue il
SPECIAL REPORT
Two tult pa.gta of tn(IJ>3 and
stories on Orange Countv aviao
tion will be found on Page I
and 9.
Mesan Held
In Assault
On Waitress
A 19-year-old Newport Be a ch
waitress was in satisfactory condition
today at H-0ag Memorial Hospital after
she was brutally beaten by a man
Wielding a foot-long· wrench.
Held in N""PQ<t Beach c~y jail lo·
day on a dlrarge of assault with a.
d1'adly weapon the BU!!>OCt, Rl<ilard
Lloyd llhodes, 29, of 2726 Drake St.,
C<>sta Mesa.
The young v..'Olllan told police she
"'as coming home from work dlortly
b~f<ire midnight Monday, when an
assailant jumped out of her front yard
l;Nshe.s just as She stepped from her c?.r.. . ; . .
·He Deat hei-'on the head 'several
times with tDe )Jos. wrench he wu car·
rylng, police 1ald. Wilen libe atarted
ocreammg, her fatlle!' came -Ide
and the man t?ied to get away.
The girl, stunned but able to w.alk,
stwn·bled into the house to call police,
\vhile her father went after the at·
ta~er.
Rhodes allegedly jumped in1'> hi•
aut-0, parked nearby, but slammed it
into a fenoee before he could eacape.
Police found him sitting beMnd the
11.eerlng wheel of the car when tboy
arrived. He w.at not injured.
The girl W81 taken to the bo9111tal,
where a spokesman said she Is suf-
fering from cuts <in both hands, face
and foreilead.
Police said Rhodes whose right
\Vrist is bound in a cast from a priof
accident, is t-0 be arraigned \Ved·
nesday at which time bail will be set.
Rites W edneSday
For Lenna Loy·
Services for Mis. Lenna Loy, whose
home for 30 yean was the landmark
Irwin apartments on West OcMn
Front, Newport Beach, will be held
10:30 a.m. Wednesday at We&tcliU
Mortuary Chapel. '
Mrs. Loy died Sunday at a con·
valescent hospital after a lengthy ii-.
lness. She wu 85.
Survivors include a son Martin A.
Poleson of Omaha; a daughter, Mrt.
Julia Westerfeld of Sacramento: flv1
grandchildren and 11 g r e a t •
gr"11dchildren.
The Rev. Herbert Jobmon of thP
First Methodist Ohurch, Oo&ta Mes<'
will officiate at the services.
Interment will follow at Fairbaveri
Memorial Park, santa Ana.
C:ouc
Wea&•er
Goodies in store from the
meteorological mallba1 include
a gudual drying trend with hot·
ter days. No prectpltatlon and
highs in upper '10'1 ezpected.
INSmB TODAY
UC nJipntr to 1tudw Thoridop
rtdprocol taac:llitfg, ltdltdllg
agrc.,..,.t toll/I UC/ --~ .... q, ....i1ca1 .-. Pot/• 1.
" It • ,
" 1).141 ,.,,,. , .. ,. • .. • .. ..
... _.----·-·
2 OA!lY I'll.OT Tut5dly, July 9, 1968
History Vintage Wine $3& Per Day
.;
<
Mesa Adventurer pza.,.. More Expeditions
-~ '
Dying Wind
Slows Race Newport Okays ~
HllU>ry 11· ~ 1ilno to • Coit."
M-esan whole Scot6.1h clan crest bMn:
winged 1pur1, but ~e own feet bave
trod 1he path ol 11>• past all OY<r the
we~ world wtth a revtirent relish
for fad and legend.
F. Rd>ort Johnston, 'II, ol 2339 Cor·
nell Drive, has been a sclentlst.
treuurt h u n t e r and movie
photognplltr for decades and still has
_plans, for men expecJltions:
"We 11bow 10 nN<ii. but wo know 10
little @out ancieat hbtory,11 says the
man Whose mJnd. was prodded by a
&harp Ind.Jan arrowhead he found in
the Ozark Mountains 68 y~ears ago.
He has shot more than 100,000 feet
of molloo pO:tun film -..... ol It
uneqllallod Jn m"'*"' and oploadOI' -
and Is now giving much of It to
universities, m\.lltuma and libraries.
"Wherever Jt will fit best/' be ex-pta!no.
'111e )'O&l'1.hoY• been-II not always
kind -at !Not crammed with od·
venture for Johnston and his wife
Mildred, wOO heve ~ called home
by tragedy &evtrel tlmea;.
RAISE GRANDCHILDREN
Most rec:ent.!Y, ttie couple was
notifi..ad in Genoa, Italy that their son-
ln~law and daughter had died almost
simultaneously, leaving them three
young grandchildren to raise.
"But I suppose many are a darn
sight worse olt than we are," laJ'•
Johnston, whote, travels in research
a:nd exploration ha-ve led to his reputa-li<>IJ. OS The Flying Man.
A termite and pelt exterminator by
trad-e, Johnston has done University ol
California entomology studies in tl1e
jungles of Latin America and hunted
the lost tl'Nsure ol Lima, Peni.
The $65 million fortune Iles burled
on Cocos Island, in the Galapagos
dlaln, the wealth Of a church, seized
by plral.el and hidden to ironically
turn men into devils with p-eed.
"It's queer what gold does to peo-
ple, 11 san Johnston, ex:plalrung there
has been a murder or an attempted.
killlnl QD. each of his five expeditions
to the Costa RJca·held idand.
The treasure baa its own bloody heri-
tage, going back to 1820, when it was
loaded aboard the veasel Mary Dyer,
for shipment to Spain as the pirate
Bonito prepared to seize Lima.
HURLED TO SHARKS
Once under way, howe v er ,
passengers were hurled to the ablrks
and the '65 million WIS buried on
Cocos and later covered by a landslide
too doep foc anything but leydcaUllc
mlll!ng equipment.
Tiie raturnlnc Mary Dyer wu tl>en
&CUttled, one day oot of Li.ma, and the
pirates returned in longboats to aay
they had been caught by Bonito and
the treasure taken, but found an ironic
fate waited. _
Bonito had seized Lima -proving to
be a just liberator -and dealt pro-
perly wilh those who sought to blame
him for Ult piracy and murders of the
Mar~. J hu made more thin eo ·
tripa 1ato Mutco, dlacovering
..i.i-a(. poulble Cllin--
IACKYARD ADVINTURI -One can't exacUy see the joy of
pl'Olpective motherhood on the face of Susie, a desert sand tortoise
held by Costa Meaan F. Robert Johnston, but It mU.t he there. Susie,
in a not too common occurrence outside the wild state, is about to become a mother.
setUement and even BrlUlh influence
at one n.mote place.
P<rfect ll&llaese sculpture ol 1,300
B.~. II found in anothor place in LaUn
America and, deep in tbe South
Pacllic, be has vilited a low, flat ii·
land covored with fine pea "9vol and
one huge arch.
No one knows who built the graceful
arch, weighing lbousaads ol pounds,
or why.
"Time means nothing after the firat
1,000 years," says John1tou, who
views history like an Iceberg: what lit-
tle we have ls only a hint o! what bas
been and. may never be explained.
The Flying Man -who generally
travelJ by freighter when his wife ac·
companie1 him -lllo filmed ma&g
grounds of a colony ol hugo flam·
lnpe1 1n Muico'a Yucatan penlnlult,
for Walt Disney.
Forty years ago, he shot what ts
probably tM .only complete motion
picture o( the seCret and now-forbid-
den Indian snake dance, performed
near remote Holtavilla, New Mexico.
Despite his extensive travels by
pl1ne, boat. jeep, horse and foot
between here and Panama, w:lth many
trips to other bizarre and uotic
places, Johnston baa literally always
l>ematbalnt.
"U)'ou'li lllll bt u Cood u 11>1 peoo
pie you're wllb and abide by the rules,
you'll get everythlna you ask tor," he
explains.
Johnston was educated at Colwnbla
University IDd makes no 1polo~s for
hla atUtr.KM toward the atudent ac·
Uviats who toot over the campua there
earlier thla year.
''There's no excuse for this ln a
clviURd society," growls tbe veteran
adventurer, "U I'd been there, I'm
afraid I'd have been a bit rough on
them."
Johnston is. a member CJl the elite
Adveniuri> Club, bu lte111rad and COD·
trlbultd to the televWon program "f
St&rcb f.,. Adveabu'e," and bu wri·
l.elD maay artlcle1.
Ht waab next to P>otograph a Uny
hummingllird wlll twin tails etch! in·
che1 long in the jungles of Costa Rica,
but hlJ pest control work IDd,.,other
duties may get ln the way.
"It's just a dream," he &ay!I, "then
are so many things to do. You've got
· lo kill a few termites, see that the
grandkids are okay and all thal"
Even so, the mu whose Jile bu en·
compassed mon adYOU!ure and travel
than that graated·lll,!' leD ollleh bu a
deep tblnt lo -· --and mow-more .
r.foHonolulu
. .
Jim Amess' sg.root catamaran Sea
Smoke WIS atilt leldlng the 3rd bien-
nial Miltihull Transpacific race 1i1on-
day, but progress ot all Of t.be seven
boat fleet was slowed by diminlabing
windl.
Sea Smoke waa 700 miles from Los
Angeles and her nearest competitor
was 70 miles astern.
B.efore the winds subsided, lmi Loa,
skippered by Vic Stern of Seal Beach
Yacht Club, blew out her three-ounce
splnnaker and hiid to hoi.st a chute of
heaviu material. The llghtwel&ht
chutes .are better ln llgbt airs.
The tr·imaran AuJ'liga, skippered by
BGb·Cameroo, Silver Gate Yacht Club,
S&n Diego, had a baakstay let go but
jwy rigged a new stay before she lost
her mast.
Several ci the multihulb monitored
a radio <:all from Miss Peggy Slater,
sal!ing alone from Les Angeles to
Honolulu, who reported she was 1,00>
miles Crom Les Angeles and ex·
perlencing no difficulty. Miss Slater
departed on her K-43 Valentine Satur·
day, June 30, five days ahead of the
cats.
Boat-for boat lineup of the mult.ihulls
was in this <rder: Sea Smoke, Lani
Kai, M.anu lwa. Auriga, Polynesian
Concept, Glass Slipper and Imi Loa.
Latitude and Longitude positions:
AURIGA -28-27N-127-55W;
GLASS SLIPPER -27-12N-126-51 W;
!Ml LOA-7/.17N-126-30 N;
LANI KAI -2B·ION-128-07W ;
LANI KAI -28-10N-129-02W:
MANU IWA-lH16N-128-07W ;
POLYNESIAN CONCEPT -27·
ION-127-28W ;
SEA SMOKE -28·18N-lil0·16W.
Thief Nearly
Caught in Act
Newport Beach poliet today are
looking for a startled burglar who was
nearly caught ln the act.
But not before he made off with a
$250 diamoz:id nec:klaet and '465 jewel-
ed watch from the home of Wllliam
Botana, 1537 E. Ocean Blvd.
Botana told police he was driving In-
to ht!I gara1e Sunday night, when he
heard something crash inside hls sup-
posedly unoccupied house. He said he
noted the backyard gate was closed.
He went Into the hou!le, foun'd" a
bathroom mirror broken and then
discovered the watch and necklace
missing from a suitcase opened up in
the front bedroom. '
1
New Movie Fees ~
Despite objections from the Newport
Harbor Chamber ot Comme r(e,
Newport Beach city councilmen Mon·
day nig-ht approved stiffer fees for
movie and TV companies using the cl·
ty a!I a backdrop.
Filmmakers on l()!::&tlon ln Newport
will now heve to pay f100 for a license
plus '3:i a dey.
The old rate was a nat $35 a year.
The dui.mber's executive board
feared tile Increased rates ml.Cht lead
to a "periny saved and pound lost," ~·
cording to cbember President Leon
Meeks.
Movies and TV programs filmed in
NOW!>Orl Bead! &m<lUD! to a lot ol lree
publicity for the city. With the new
fees, produc:ers mlgbt go elsewhtte,
Meeks said.
Councilman Lindsley P a r s o n 11 ,
himsell a movie producer just return-
ed from shootlng on location in -Mex· ico, argued otihe rwise.
~ .. ' ~ "These new fees are quite..-
reasonabte com.pared wtttl. what other :
cities are ctiarging," he told his col~·
Ieagues. The council ,approved the new :~
rates ·unanimously. ;
At 1 Monday luncheon, chlmM?":
directors wen told that Beverly HWS ..
cba'l'get *200 a day. orange Count)''
Harbor Director Kenneth Sampeon'..;
said his dlstrlct charges rummem .. ~
l50 a day for shots ulinc hartlcr
backdrops. ·: . .
A compromise solution put tortb at •
the lunclleon by cilamber director.~
John M~cnab failed to sUr comment
When presented at Monday night's
session.
"I feel We should encourag e
booafide movies and TV series to
make their fllms in Newport Beach,"
Macnab said.
He proposed waiving fees for
bonafide films , but charging for com-
panJes producing commercials.
PrincipalEndsBusy Year.
Leading LA City Sc1wol ~
Another sd\ool year has en<ied for
Dr. 'Thomas C. Dyer, school principal.
He won't forget this one.
Dyer, e. Newpor t Beach resident, is
priii.cipat of Roosevelt High Sctlool in
Los Angeles where this spring 150
students walked off of campu!I and
engaged in a brief clash with police.
Dyer was caught up in the middle of
the "brown power" revolt that shook
four eastside Los Angeles high schools
in Maroh .
CAUCASIAN STAFF
Roosevelt High School ls 80 percent
Mexican-Amer~an, 10 percent Negro
and 10 percent Jap111ese with a
handful of Whites. The teaching staff is
predominantfy Caucasian.
Reflecting at ttis Newport Bead\
home, 2451 Marino Drive, on the trou·
ble, Dyer said lhe tried himsell and ad-
vised his teachers not to overreact.
He believes tbe restraint they used
.had a cooling effect GD the students.
"Most ol the studenta, I felt, kept a
very level head about the whole
thing," he aaid.
We had a high degree of absen-
teeism fer awhile . The young people
didn't kn6W qUife how to handle it.
"At t.lie end of the semester tilings
\\'ere quite nonnal and we had a nice
ccmmencement."
The 56-year-old principai said the
lasting effect of the "blGW out,'' as the
students called it, is an increased in·
terest in education amoog adults of
the Mexican-American communities.
GRIEVANCES
The studerit w al ko u t1 and
demonstrations spotlighted grievances
including not enough M e xi c a n ..
American teachers and too many
students. per class.
The walkrut from Roosevelt was
sparked from out.side. Mlllt.!.t young
men, including some who 91lled
themselves Brown Berets, ur&ed. the
students to walk off campu1.
When the students maissed et the
fence one noon, Dyer ordered the gate
open so no one would get hurt. About
150 swdents went tl!roogh but 11le ...t
n!turiled to the sd!ool bu1Jdill4!, Many
• er those who Iett returned. the same
day.
Some of the student leaders came to
film and he talked to 11lem for lllree
hours in bio office. Telling -. ho
had Ileen workiog ID< tbem all along,
but it tlakes time and money, he got
them to temper their demands -
knock out swimming pools and esk for
better reading instruction.
Then he invited a congres11man and
a member of the board of edUC(lt.ioo to
speak together with tf\e walkout
leaders at a school assembly.
· has itl
Snowbird Racing Entries
Deadline Set for July 26
Newport Council
Considers Street
lmproveme11t Law
~;~~~s are now being accepted in
i~wl".ll·' Harbor'a largest small boat
,_ in the .,...14 -tbt 8DDual Flilht of lbe Saowl>lrdo July 28.
.Entrant& must sign up before 4 p .m.
~ ot the Newport Harllor of commerce dfice, 1800
"est Coast Hlghway, or at any of the
Ioctl )'aCht clubs.
While there l! no maximum or nUnimim age limit, entrants under 21
D!Ult: have waivers signed by their
p'irent.s
:sponsored by the Commodores' Club
0¥ the Newport H-arlxlr Chamber of
Oommerce , the race will begin at the
Billboa Pavilion at 1:30 p.rn . Depen-
dlb.g upon wind oooditions, the race is
: .
DAILY PILOT
Naarwt ....... C•w•
-H.W...i -n.,." K•11 -Tll•l'l•t A. Ml1f'Pht.• .-..MlfllW
Ja,.lllt f, Colll1t1 ......... ... Cltt ldlllr
Jack R. Olrl.f P•\11 Nlttft _.,... MiMtlr """"'" Dlr'KfW .... ,.. ...... °""9
2211 Wetl hi.... llYll.
Mollt.., .Y4r.u: P.O. In 1171926'1
OIW~
CoUo .... 1 DO w, .... , Sltttl L...-.... 1.,....._ ........ ~ ...,., -... '""'
expected to lut .from two to f'Our
houri. 'lbe race i5 collfined to the
h..00.area.
At the conclusion ~f the race, all
skippers and co-pilots will be treated
to hot dogs and punch.
Several trophies will he awarded to
winning parUclpants. Among the
award5 are: The Albert SOiland
Perpetual Trophy for the overall win·
ner; the lnslee Perpetual Trophy ror .
the first girl to complete the race; The
Harry Welch Perpetual Trophy for the
youngest boy to complete the race;
and the A. B. Rouselle Perpetual
Trophy for the young .. ! girl. Special
tropbi .. will alJo bt given to the first
morried couple to finish and for 11le
eldtlt Uipper.
Would-be. Killer
Has New Format
To Alert Victims
A would·be murd11·er 1n Newport
&acb bu lelt a nolico at the home of
.. lntmded victim.
A Newport Beach secretarr,.in her
early 30s, returned home Monday
from a weekend trip to find a man's
caWnc card on Iler dresser. Scribbled
en Ule back of Ule card was the
nles~e. "I will kill you."
Nothln& w11 ~ from the
houae, nor wu it di1an1n1td, 1be told
polico.
ApparctJ,y tho ,.., DWI, lrJlnl to
malil nre !iii Dotie. wu found, called
Iha _., later Monday al work and
uktd ~ctlly, "Did you pt my
muapl' and bun1 up.
Conviction Upheld
WASHINGTON (UPI) --, The court
martial Conviction of Pfc. Ronald
Lockman, 24, • Pbil.adllphia soldier
tried Jn Saa Fr111cllco for relulin1 to
serve in Vletlwa, wu upblld Mooday
by • mllltary ........ boanl.
Owner• of commerclal property in
NtWJ>Ott Belldl who ara ploonlnc to
build on tb.e land may haw to include
.-and oidtwalk improvements in
their plans.
The Newport Beach city council is
considering an ordinance to require
bu.Uders to instali lidewalks, pttert:
and curbs .and to dedicate ltreet rl1ht
ol way. Council will hold a hffrinc oo
the propooed ordinance July 22.
AddJUons to ex.istlng buildings of
n1ore than 25 pereent or the current
tloor ares. would also be included.
The city m·anager would be able to
waJve the improvement requittmenu
(or one of six reason!!, il the ordinance
Is approved:
-the required Improvements are In-
cluded in a bud&tltd clcy proje<t or an
approved assessment dlttricl
--the terrain ol the property makes
construction ol th111 improvements
unnecessary or impracUet.i.
-the properly is bltn1 developed for
non-commercial un.
-a m11jor street realignmt.nt or
grading chqe is being pllDoed by
the city.
-the jl<Operty bu no vehicular IC·
ceu rlgllt& to 1llo adjacent olretl.
-the city decldll 11>11 the requirld
improve.-for th• pr-1JI and
th• !IHI around lt could bllt be COD•
structed throuCb •• I I. I I Jiii D t
district.
Public Grabbing
Pageant Tickets
Latest word from Lal\UIO Beach
Fellivtl a( Ario II that all tlchll for
1he Papaat ot tht Mu!tr1 up thrOlllh JU13 :n an 1Gld.
All Friday, Saturday and SW>day
nilht ptrformucto lhroulh tho ooo·
ctllllon Aucuat 24 ara t110 sold.
" • • •
Deep Steam Carpet Cleaning costs more
than the old shampoo method • • •
However, th'e Deep Steam Carpet Cle1nin& Method removes soil from both
the fibers of the carpet and the carpet backing. Since no brushing or
scrubbing action is used, there is no distortion of the carpet pile. The •
~erful extraction action of the Deep Stealft' process lifts malted pile to
'like new" appearance •
The need for frequent professional cleaning Is reduced because the deeply
imbedded abrasive dirt particles (that cut carpet fibers) are removed, and
there is no detergent residue left in the ca rpet to collect dirt. During the
Deep Steam cleaning process all the carpet fibers are coated with a special
soil retardant.
"It's simple logic .•• You profit in the long run when you use Deep Steam
Carpet Cleaning because your ca rpet will be cleaner than ever before
possible. It will stay clea n longer and wear longer because you used Deep
Steam Carpet Cleanin& ••• "
WHEN YOU
WANT THI
PINIST-
CALL
RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS
Our 21st Y Hr of S.rv ice in Oran9t County
Pllll EmMAn
Bullineu Manacar Robert Ltppart
reported to the DAILY PILOI' that Dn·
ly '2 tickets aro still on 1tle. Lapptrt
Wd there was a "tremendous lllrlfl"
of Ucltet buyers durtna the past four.
da~e~~::~nolher factor Is the brand 2950 RANDOLPH COSTA MESA
new red aod groen b1111>er1 1ally1 PFIONI! 14•3432 f...., Tell Area Oyin1 lo Lquna, to hertld the art • Coll Zlnlth 7'°"6 1poctacuW'. I '-~~~~~~~~~~""li~~~~~~~~~.....;.....;.....;~~~~~~~.j,..--'
' -. ~·,. -,. .. -.~.~ . : ·. ~· .· .. -
• ' ..
' • ~ < < •
.. . -. <
' ..
I l
I I
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.............. t•~..-... . . . ... .. ..
Good Grief! • • • It's Charlie's Mom
By PAM•LA HALLAN . ... o.y .......
The !mace of America .. the !Ind of opportunity bas crown dim,
overshadowed by political and economic stereotypes Imposed by a demand·
Ing world.
Yet for a young Hungarian Immigrant, America symbolized the op-
portunity lo realize the dream she bad for her children.
Touched by-the glamour of the film world, she wanted only one thing
• •• to put them in show business: •
America <lldn'rdlsappolnt her. Mrs. Gordon Green of Newport Beach
became a stage mother.
In a sense her aspirations were natural. Her family had been pr~
ducers in Hungary and she bad been close to her stepmother who was an
actress. But a career in Europe was never conSidered. It had to be in
America.
"They take care' of children here," said the petite blonde in her
Hungarian accent. "They have very 'strict'rules. It was not so in Europe."
And as though hesitant lo disappoint such unwavering faith. late didn't
make her wait very long for her dream to come true. Her daughter was
dlscove~ed after dancing 'ballet at the Greek Theater with a group· of
other children. An agenf chose her out of all the others. Al1d at the age of
6 she made her debut. · ~
When Mrs. Green's other two children were born, the agent signed
them, too. Today her oldest daughter, Anna Capri, is 21 , has a well estab-
lished career, mainly on television, and was a Deb star in 1964. Her mid·
dle child, Rosemary Nanasi was recently seen in the movie "Hawaii.''
SUDSY DEBUT
The spotlight now is on her son, Peter Robbins, 12, who made his
debut at 8 months in a soap commercial and is about to begin filming a
new series, "Blondie'.,...in which he plays Alexander.
But he is best known as a voice ... the voice of Peanuts character
Chp.rlie Brown, whose TV specials have made him a star.
"Hundreds of children auditioned for the part,'' recalled his mother.
"But Peter's voice was original and husky. At that time he was already a
prof~sional."
Learning to be a professional does not come overnight. Peter was
conscientious and studied hard. He got into the habit of learning not only
his own part but everyone else's.
"Sometimes he'd ask me ... 'why do the big people miss their
lines?' and I would tell him that big people have Jots of worries. BecausP
he was young and had a fa ster brain and no worries th e director ~xpected
more from him."
Good habits and hard work brought him success, but Mrs. Green
hasn't noticed any change in his personality. Jn fact, she describes him as
a trifle shy and rather modest about his career ... a little bit like the
Charlie Brown he plays.
"He loves his friends. His friends are everything to him. And he
loves baseball and bis dog." Snoop>:? No . , . Misty.
EDUCATION STRESSED
He goes to school like other little boys, attending a Catholic school
in Newport Beach when at home. Education is one thing that is VMy im·
port.ant to his mother, who sees to it that he gets good teachers when he's
working.
"Some professional children are not educated beyond high school,"
she said, shaking her bead. "Their mothers are only interested in malting
money. I want my son to go to college."
Her attitude is not indicative of the usual concerns of the stereotyped
stage mother. But Irene Green is not typical.
"My family comes first!• she said. "I cook and 1 clean and I do
everything I am supposed to do .. I don 't have beautiful hands and I often
feel tired. But my children are healthy. Cleanliness, fresh air and good food
means good health."
NUMEROUS PRESSURES
Mrs. Green has come a long way in her 16 years behind the scenes.
She has grown in maturity and experience and has come to realize how
difficult a stage matlter's life can be in terms of time and pressure.
There are days ,spent arran~g wardrobes and schedules, readiqg,
script changing and hours of keeping the child occupied when not filmillg
since children aren't allowed to run around rtudios alone. "[n the back· of
your mind are the unwritten letters, the unpasted scrapbooks, the wutiing
machine that needs fixing and the errands to run. ·
"It is a hard pressed life. You get very nervous. But I am lucl:y to
have a husband who is cooperative." she said smiling.
"I don't have very many friends because I don't have time. But J
have become very close to my family. I don 't have much fun . But m.v
greatest joy is seeing my children be happy in their work." -
Her life is her career. But there are moments when she is still ., just.
a mother."
"It still hurts when one of my children is disappointed. My daughte•
used to cry and say, 'Mother, I want nothing else but to be an actress.'
She didn't give up. I think disappointments make good ~ple ."
Mrs. Green's own life has not been without its hurdles. Her first
marriage ended in divorce and she had one daughter to woi'ry about.
"My middle one. She was so sad. She always felt leftover," said th,.
JTIOlher, looking wistful. "I suppose it was my fault. Now she is married
She loves people so much. I think this is a much better life for her." . .
DEEP FEELINGS
Mrs. Green's deep feelings for her own children tnake her angry wit~
American mothers who "throw their children into the streets and neve;·
know where they are." She a1so believes in the early teaching of ct-Jldren
the difference between riglit and wrong and telling them the facta of liff
when they ask.
"If not they wiU ask someone else who may not have the righ t
answer,'' she said.
"I come Imm the old country. Perhaps I 1~k people. But I be-
lieve in honesty."
Mrs. Green ls proud of her Hungarian ancestry, but she is alao proud
of her adopted country. And though her talented cb!ldreri could bavo made
it anywhere, she still believes in the old image of America.
"ThiJ country gave them the opportunity to do thiJ .. I am very
grateful."
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
T--.r, '""° f, !Hf Ma.c.M ,._ U
ON THE 1'\0UND :_ Thal millbty slugger Snoi>py
is up· and Charlie Br;,wn is on t6e mound. Well, that
isn't exacUy the situation at tlJe neighborhood ball
park but'Peter R<>bblns, who is: tlJe voice otCharlie
Brown. does enjoy pltchlnf.
•
...,., ....... ., . .,... .......
TALENTED TRIO -Mrs. Gordon Green of Newport·Beech has three
children, and, all three have launched· careers m· show business. Pic-
tured left is Rosemary·Nanasi who is frequently seen in commerciaJ.1
and was in "Hawaii," her sister Aiina Capri, who's appeared' in num-
erous television shows since the age of 8, and .Peter Robbihs, whose
three movies inClude "Moment to Moment," '0I'icklisb Affair" and
11 And Now Miguel." He also is the voice of Charlie Brown and Alez·
ander in the new "Blondie" stries.
I'
BATTER UP ~ Baseball and dogs are what Pet.er R<>bblns likeo best,
next lo bis friends, that is: But that's ooly natural· when you're 12
years old and live in Newport Beach. Catcher Steve Mllrowilz and
umpire John O'Hara like bueboll too and spend loll o! time at tho
ball park with Peter and a bunch of other guys.
Can This 'Linus' ·Disco·ver Happi·ness . on a Honeymoo·n?
DEAR ANN LAND§fts: I was
specially int.ereltl!d In your reply to
:he moth~ whose 6-ye'ar-old insisted
on dragging her faded, worn-out
blanket everywhere. You said, "Leave
her alone. She'll give It up when she's
ready. I've never beard of I child~·
ing a baby blanket OD A bOMJ!llOOD.
Well Am stick eround for a few
more Jean &nd you mi&bt bear Of it
our aon Johnny ii 15. IUs baby blenket
ren apart year1 ago (be dragged il
around unUl there wu not.bing left).
The he developed 1 d1Jl!y IUbsti.tu~.
,Johnny twista the ~rnen of his
bedsheets into sharp litUe peats and
of cour1e tht 1heetl wear out in no
tJme 1t all. I 9111 not complainina: bec1u1t ~P
paronll,y 11111 twletinc bu filled an
omollm11ll eeod. Jollnny llaa alwa7s
" ...
'
ANN LANDERS ~
been a wonderful '°"· 1 tine student,
mecballieatly -and IOOd In adlletia. He II a lliouthtlul lloy and
never caused u1 &Icy' trouble . .Pettlaps
letting him cng hit blooket all tbose
year• and now twtlllnS the 1heets
have given him the 11~f1ctlon other
kids find In drag ractng and bre•ltlni
the law for "kick1."
lf, when Johnny manitt, he wanll
a baby blanket to' tab on his bon!I.:· m-, I'll bey b1m ..... -WOULDN T TllADIJ: .
DEAit WOULDN'T: Y-tlltllll
......... bft ..... lft. I wllli aort _.. ..... ,... __ aare
"'""" ·-trivial l1dots ....... olleald be ......... -Do •n1lla1 blullell ...... and twllllaf .Peets.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your ·COi·
umo cm free lave it addJtlonal proof
that yoU alwl)'~ side with th• wome11 .
Her•'• hOw it loob trom 1 mete po!ilt
ol '"""· '""' '°,..,. ·-.... _
~~~Loi.ti&~.··~-·-··-----------•
bachelor who · never once mentioned. maniage to·a woman. I've bad 32 af.
fllrl in the tut three year1 and four
tum-dowm. I'm . not handsome, not
a ar-t talker and I never mlde an
llCl!ve pltob In my Uh. My record of
conquetll II pr<XJf that American
wam.111 are the mOlt 8"feHive, fP·
bun..,. lamalet In the •crld. When I
ll...t In Eur<>pe I didn't 1et one·
llllrd the ~-I l'I In Call· fonda.
Now what do you 1&1t
TRANSATLANTIC
DEAR TRANS: I 1ay
hentfe1tl11en. U ,.. aevtr made 1
l'ltc• la yoar We , "'" -• die -· ilowo1T Y--pro-OOly -lldq -aay dame -llave aa affair
11 • IOll lier lludard1 low eaeaiti.
DEAR ANN LANDERS> I read witb
lntm'est the letter from \be legal
oecretary who refused to notarize
papers unless the had Htn the pakies
1lgn.
Good for her. r, too, am-lnnexible in
lhll re1ard -oo lnllellible, In t.ct,
that l 'tre been referred to u "that
ocrewball" But It paid oil.
~ .... bandied a cleed. I
nolarlAct llt 11~1 ol all five beln. A 1a..,.,. ol questionable
cbaractor llated that all 11 v e •llJMI-• had been afllxecl by oae
penon. He even · uDld up a phony
handwrlllns "••-" to support his charges. The fool w11 laughed out of
dpt. Several wltne1ses 1ald. "Tbal
screwball would never notviJe a;
llgnaturo 1ha cllclolt wltneu with her
ft'll,'ey1t" -.md ... IDded it. -
•
!JTICA,-N.Y. '·
DEAR U.: Bow -., to llad
aomtffe wlto 1dtb t. ale rahs ena
hi Ille f~ce of rldlcale. Tbere It oe
ma .. to_.,.illiis, be.adlal ud
bre-1 tlleae days, I ilofl my bouel
to yaa for ldllq a n.. eumple.
II alcobolilm .a dlaeue? B°" caa
the alcobollc be ire.tedl 11 tllon a
cure! !!tad• the booklet 'Alcoholl1111,
Hope &Dd Help, 0 by Ann lAindera.
Enclose 35 ctntl in cokl with :your reo
quest and a tong, stamped, 1eU·ad·
dressed envelope.
Ann Landers wW be glad to belp you
with your problems. Send tblm to her
In care of Ille DAILY~ 111c1oatn1 a llompeci, 1111 ..........
•
, . , .. • • •
DAl\.V PILOT Tutsday, July !, 1968
Horoscope
. ... • • . . . ' . -
Pisces: Don't Bow to · Pressure
y.IEDNESDA Y
JULY 10
By'SYDNEY OMARR
ARIF.S (Moreb 21·Aprll
19): Gtl blllc obUgation1
out ot way early. Liter,
aocial activity actually aids
where bu1ine11 lncome is
-concerned. Me1n1 thl1 Is
combinaUon of work and
play, 1 day which Jefb: your
versatility. •
. TAURUS (April ro-May
20): During moming, early
afternoon houra you may be
It's a 'Steal'
Cards
MRS. ORDILL OUSTAPSON
Wiii Ruldt In Coot• Mou
,,,. public 11 ln\ited lo
"•teal" tarts and other
goodies in atition to a
delicious luncheon when the
FO\mtain Valley Woman's
Club rpcmor1 a mid·aum·
mer card, and games party
on W~, July 17.
Coet for tbe afternoon of
brldfe, oritt>oil. l1n rum·
Vows Spoken
By OCC Couple
my, caDlltll, "cheel, tcrab-
ble and o1ber table 11mes
will be $1.25 per penon and
tile -·will lake ploco at
12:30 p.m. In the ptto of
Mra. Al Krutenbera 1 P'oun·
IMn Valley lane.
Accepting reservtltlons f()('
Newport HarbOr LuMie/411
Church wM tbl 1ceJM ol tile
afternoon w t d d l n I of
Norma-ann Murch a n d
Orclell P. Gustaleoo. The
Rov.· Jamm: G. Blaine
performed tll'i ·doublt ring
ceremmy.
'!be bride .. !ht dtual>M
o1 Mr. and Mn. Howtrd M.-ol Santa Ana, tnd
her bmband., a res1de:nt ot.
SANDI llROWNSlllROIR
To Marry
Coeta Meta, u tbe IOft of llln. Helen HQ)m of South
Dakota.
The former Miss Murch
wore a all: oraanza emp.lre
line IOWD and chapel tl'lin
with an appttque or chantilly
Jae• on the bell 11leeves .
Seed pearls and cry11tal
leav11 formed the corwn. of
her aboulder l<nglll veil, ond
the canied a bridal bouquet
of cucadJut phalaeupb
orchid! and a heart locket
given to htr by t h e
brldegroom.
Her lister-in-law Mr 1 •
Tbomu Murdl, JMtron of
honar, wore a strawberry
pink crepe empire Une gown
and carried • cucade of
llCbt Mld dark pink carna· -· Gowned 1bnilarly were
thobrldeemalds Mr•. Daniel
MRS. MAHAFFEY
Cotta M11a Home
L. Jundanlan of Fullerton ----------
and Mn: D. J. Sludabaker
ol. Placentia. Flower 1irl
wae Becky Lyno Murch.
The bridegroom m-bli
brother Charle• Guatafton
u hlt best man. Ulber1
"'" Jundanlan and
Tbomu W. auBuchoo of
c..taM-.
Shoppers:
Hear This
llln. Le1Ut Vao Dyke Shopping early will be
played the or 1 an pro-member• and guests of the
Cftllonal tn the church Westminster Woman's Club
deoor&Ced with carnaUons who will be atteoding a
and white gladioli. Christmas in July bazaar
~reception followed ln along with their regular
the urch hall. meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thurs·
Troth. Toi d . btlde ls• graduate of day, July II, u, the Sigler
Colt.a Meta Hilh School and Park Community Room, Oranc• CiOlllt College. Her Weftr1l.k:leter.
By Parents =:1· o~ ."';ac1~.~ ~~ ·1a ~~~
from Vlbm-g High lidlool, Mill<r, and Mrs. Raymood
Tiit belrolhal of Sandi South Dakota. Wollrom aad Mrs. Kenneth
Kay Brown1berler and Jer-The couple plan to reside Heggl!FtrOm will be in charge
ry R. Linan we dS«iO&ed in Costa Mesa. of refreehmeota:.
durln1 a dimer party 1n her ~ for members to at·
tend tbe Festival of Arts in
parent&' home. Alumni Club Laguna Betdt on Friday,
Min Brownoberl't' 1" the July 26, wlll be oomple<ed
dauatrter of Mr· and Mn. ,..,___ "'-··_. .J.A undtt the direction of Mr•. K-Br...-ger of v•w•ge ~~1 ~-pter of I --• Arts d Corona del Mar and her the Catholic Alumnf Club Is Edvr'in A exa.uuer, an
flance 1J the 100 of Mr. and hosting it5 affiliate! to a ()>aft! Section chairman.
1unutier weekend Jilly 26-28. A dinner dance I or Mr1. Robert Larsoa of Bill· m-•-~ guests will
M The Jolly Roger Hotel ln eun.oc1• _..,.
tnp, oot. Anahei·m will be the setting take place in the Los
'lbe bride-elect Is an Friday for 1 dance. Alamitos Naval Air Station
alumne of OM-one del Mar Sports contesU a re on Saturday, July 20, and
H1&ti School and will enter scheduled for d .a y t i m e arranging the aocial affair 11
C:allfornia State College at recreation on Saturday vr'ith Mrs. Donald Andreason,
Loni Beadl l'n September· a banquet and dance plan-who ts chairman of the
1be future bridegroOm ts a ned for the everUg. A King Caroue:el Section. ~ at. BiU.tngs Hig11 and Queen of the festival 'It.e club recently donated and attended CSCLB. will be seiected. 8 baby crib and new mat-
He now .iJ a sergeant in the Re.servatioos, due July 16. tress to the Orange County
Marine Corps stiationed at may be made with Mi ss \Velfare Department, Mrs.
Camp Pendleton. J9Cquel:inf: Lampher, 776-John Wagner waa in charge
fte ooupte wt.11 marry tn 1 -.;034~4~·---------oi;if;;;mi;irri;111i;;iig;;;em---·---"il June.. Ii
I.D'S 8E fRlllDLY
H1ntlnaton Beach
Ylshr
'4U014
Cts11 Mesi Ylsllor
'4U014
So. Cod Visitor 4'40519
Hnor Ylslor
..USH u,.. --..,.bOr.
.. lmoW ol --""'
• --pltUt WU DI •MWD11Jatllld• tf•111' .......... tnd btl!> -le...._ _.intad
• --l1lrl'oundl ....
I See by Today's
Want Ads
"<~d:,....""'9-e YrN CM rest bPtter Oii thl•
,
J<ing slu mattrNI an d
boll:'. f!ll)rings. Priced under
$50.
e An Interior Dellgl'\ Stud)o
nMdl .. tirl tntlft:ltied kl
maldna florals!
• wtltft )'Oll CUI t1k9 that
C!lr that l.vl'l rurmtnr
tight • , , Jlm'I """1r -e 'rbat )'Ol.I can 1f't a t>rofes-
slonal tad!. )'Ollr chlldtta
how to twtm ti.s tummer.
• 'l'Mt m].rinJ[ OWTICf't flrt
tcllinl a Mll eirtablh.tV't'I
llundromtt • • • l'le'ttinl
S1300l
bw:y with correspondence.
mesaag~, calls. Later, you
get down to basic Issues.
You CUI do much to ad-
vance ambitions, a J m 1 •
Have faith.
.GEMINI (May 21 -June
~): Responsibilltles could
conflict with travel desires.
Check 'finar1clal status. Be
sure you know the truth
about expense!. Member of
opposite 1ez 11 demanding.
Strive for balance .
CANCER (June 21.July
22)1 You can get answer t.o
financial dilemm~. but lt re-
qulre1 cooper~ lrom mate, partner. Probe deep
-go beyond 1uperficial ln·
dJcaU<W. Better to finish
tllan to begtu pr<>jectJ.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Tonight, you face ilcues
which you had put off, .
delayed. Whate ver you do,
do It with enthusiasm. Make
peace with one who opposed
you r views . Key 11 being
creative and interested.
VffiGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22):
What you do today brings
Projects
the lundleon, ~cti must be
made by Saturday, July 13,
are Mrs. Laurence . Erwin,
chairman, 982-3806, a n d
Mrs. Jamee LWy, &42-2fi61.
Also 1ervin1 on ttle com·
mittee are tbe Mm es .
Charlot Aid<ill, Robert V.
Peterton, Emery G 1 r y ,
Frenk Amat., C 1 a r e n c e
Stewmon, Robert Pecha and
Krulreuberg ..
Propoeed phllanttwopi ..
-will beoefil In tile coming year I n c I u d e
<JW1dren11 Ho1plt•l of
Qronge County, ch 11 d
Guidance cumc ol Orange
•
Ooonty, Marcil ol Dimes.
Orange Dis t rict
scholarships; Rehabilitation
Center for Crippled Children
and Adu 1t1 ; Huntington
Bead! Unim High School
diatrrt aoholanhips and
needy families in tile area.
Plans to purcha s e
m~ls for la.yett.M wh ich
will be made br Ille Sewing
Section for tile Ma:cll of
Dimfle have b e e n an-
nounced, .and the annual
-for tile Mord! ol Dimes Sall bas been moved up to
February.
Newlyweds Exchange
Wedding Rings, Vows
Exchanging wedding vows med with white orchids and
aod ring! dur ing a stephaootis streainers.
ceremony coru:lucteCi in the Attending her lister as maid of honor wu Miss lmmanuel Baptist Church, BozOe Platt who wore a
NorWalk, by t:.be Rev. OW pink crepe gown with a mat-
Pendergraft were Pamela c:Dng headpiece and oanied
Jean Platt and Michael Jon a bouquet" oi. long-stemmed
Mahaffey of Huntington red roses.
Beadl. Bride€maids were t h e
'Jibe bride, daughter o! Mr. Mis see E!Jen Evans, Su tan
and Mrs. Ernest C. Platt Of · Donati and Kath y Hemm,
Northridge, wa1 given in while the berledict's sister,
marriage by her fattier. Min Candi Mah.affey, serv-
For her wedding she ed as junior bridesm&id.
selected an empire styled Their gowns were pale plnk
floor length gown cl white and they each carried a
peau de so·ie with a bodice single red rose. Shelley
and sleeves ol , ch:antilly Coant, flower girl, w.-at-
lace. Her obapei length veil tired in pal-e pink lace trim·
fell from a tia.N. ol seed med witlh a pink bow and
pearls and she carri.ed a She wore a matcfllng head-
l''lhite Bible belonging to the piece.
bridegroom whiOO wa.s trim· Daniel H0efflin served as
almost immediate results.
Be 1ure your actions are
po1JUve. Otherwise, you
could find the COIU ex·
ceeding the results. Com-
mon 1en1e Jg your great
ally. .
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22):
Good lunar .aspect tonight
coincides with romantic in~
terests, creative endeavors.
Some restrictions are llfted.
Remember. responsibility
goes hand·in·balld w i t b
freedom.
. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21 ): Forces become con·
centrated. Your view nar·
rows to specific goal. Know
truth when you encounter it.
Means be realistic. Don't be
afraid to confront challenge.
If thorough, you succeed.
SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Communications
connected with relatives ap·
pear to dominate. Exchange
ideas. Don't be afraid to Newpo' rters Sailing speak your mind. Key is to
be frank and also coosid· Aboard the SS Monterek for a trip to the South er ate.
CAPRICORN ID 22 Pacific are Mr. and rs. Richard R . Leitch of
ec. · N rt Be h L · ch h h •• tect Jan. 19): You receive ewpo ac . e1t , w o as won Lue Archi -
benefits of ef!orts, including of·the-year award for two years, and his wife will
money. This is a day when stop at Papeete, Sydney, Honolulu and other ports
you gain satisfaction. Keep _o_f _c_all_. ----------------balance. Realize you gain
what is ea.med. This is time
when you are vindicated.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18 ): Cycle moves up . You Meetings Scheduled
can safely take initiative. The second anniversary of
Meet people. State views. Divorce Anon, a club for
Be independe nt in thought, people who are divorced or
action. Original methods are obta.INng a div«ce, will
pay off. Stick to principles. be celebrated with a dinner
Be unique rather than dance Saturday, July 'rl, tn
average. •L. G I -~ ~ •--PISCES (Feb. 19-March i.11e a axy rl:.)'\aura111., OCA1·
ly 11, at 8 p.m.
ActivtUes for the month
also will include a potluck
swim party, a picnic at
O'Neill Park, an outdoor
di'8CU.!5ion at Santiago Park,
a beach party, a Saturday
night get-together an d
discusaion groups. 20): Be discreet. Get needed ta Ana.
rest. Pressures are obvious. A general meeting will
but you need not bow to take place in the Lincoln
them. One you are close to Savings a.nd Loan building,
may be in predicament. Be Santa Ana on Thursday, Ju·
For additional information
write P.O. Box 52, Tustin,
9'l680.
sympathetic without becom------------~-------
ing needlessly involved.
best man, and sea t in g
guests were Oal\dd Mair.
Louis Annstrong, T i m
Je6t« aOO Pia.trick M>:ihat·
fey, ti>e benedict's brother.
Following the ceremony
more. tha n 200 gu e sts
assembled at a glrden
reception in the home of the
bridegroom's parents. Mr.
and Mn!. Lyle Mahaffey or
Huntington Beaoh.
Beil newt of fall fa1hlon1 comes Jn pieces.
Separate plece1-vam, jackets, 1kirtt, culottes,
1hlrts to act as accenta or put together to
become the one big look. So easy to h1v1 when
you 1ew. And 1ew easy, too-with SINGER•
f1br ic1 and a SINGER' aewing machine!
SINGER' fancr Flin9. Colorful s39 pl1id1, lar11• and small checks, eo-
•rdin1t1d to aolids. Bond1d to 100'/1 d
1c1tat1 backing -they keep th1ir Y
1h1p11 are easy to aew. 12111 tex·
lurid ac1tal11 81/1 nylon, 54H wid ..
SINGER' Twist. Shepherd and tat·
t.raall check a get together with solid $ 2 98 coordinatn to eew up all-to01th•r
Fall fa1h ion1. Solida: 1()()t/1 rayon; vd
ahephlt'd chick: M•t. rayon, <M•/1 ' •
ant•; tatt1raall: ID'/I r11yon, 10'/I
acetate, 14" wide.
The ntweal pettems, cOlor-coordlnated J:l1'P9r1, thread,
buttons, tape are at your neareat SINGER CENTER.
Plu1 111 the e11pert aewing help you may need!
Ml1ti Mta/w,_,_ It mt I I NG I Ill tod11rt•
. SINGER -~ ;,,;> .. ••
1-GARDEN GROVE
::!! liiiii 8131 Chapmon S: Ora!HJ• County Plaza 530-4010 := · i ANAHEIM-515 N. Loara ~
Anaheim Center 535· 1126 ~ ~ ~ HUNTINGTON BEACH ~
:; EdlnCJ9f at leach i;
Hutnlntton Center 897·1041 I
COSTA MISA-2300 Harbar liC
Harbar Center 549· 1105 ~
COSTA MESA E':
lristal & Sonflower ii
Robinson's Newport • Faehlon Island • Ph9ne 644-2800
South Coast ~:...:4~:~~:_ ~
I
(
-
•
(
I
••
Costa ... DAILY PILOT __ Mesa Today's Cl•lng
EDITION N.Y. Steeks
VOL 6f, NO. 16'4, 2 SECTIOlllS, 26 PAGES COST A MES.(, CA(IFORNL.li .:TUESDAY, ~UL Y t, 'it68 TEN CENTS . '
5 Airport Sites Proposed
Master Plan Report Says County Strip Inadequate
AIRPORT SITES -P ereira report today called for new regional
airport at one of five sites (left to right) Los Alamitos, Balsa Chica
Beach, the LTA base, Signal Peak of San Joaquin Hills or El Toro.
Present county airport was considered too limited.
Record Protest Group
Mesa Verde Residents
Win, New T1·act Denied
Faced with the largest protest
crowd in city memory, the Costa Mesa
Planning Commission Monday voted
against a proposed subdivision which
\VOuld chew up a goU course and choke
up a school.
A deferment of the required rezon.
ing application and tentative tract
map was expected, but the crowd.
estimated at about 600, apparently
swayed con1missioners' minds about
the 1natter.
The R. A . \Vatt Co .. of Buena Park,
owner of Mesa. Verde Country Club,
had asked postponement of the items
to a later agenda, in an effort to revise
the Wally Gayner development of 91
lots.
Due to a variety of problems sur-
rounding the proposed develop1nent
and its effect on the entire area. the
city planning staff agreed with the
owners th at a delay would be ad-
visable. The Mesa Verde 1-1 o m e ow n e r s
Association campaign against the sub-
division, however, was a model of
organization and generated so much
heat -with more to come -that
commissioners took definite action.
HEARING MONDAY
results lo the Me sa Verde Country
Club golf course itself, a conclusion
basically in agreement with the city's
own study.
As originally drawn, the subdivision
is shown in two kldney·s}l.aped parcels,
jutting into the fairway f r o m
geographic positions on Lanai Drive
and Gisler Avenue.
APPLA USE RINGS OUT
Bursts of applause sporadicaUy r ang
out as other association members
made their points and mapped out
their objections to the project, citing
facts and figures. They say:
-Too much traffic will b e
generated, notably on Lanai Drive,
Gisler Avenue, Country Club Drive
and Mesa Verde Drive, as well as on
smaller area streets.
-:_Lots suggested for the project are
only 6,000 square feet. Costa Mesa's
minimum size, and would cause pro·
perty values in the surrounding arcii
to drop. Existing lots are up to 12,000
square feet .
-Based on average estimates, the
subdivision would pour 275 children in·
to the area -some six classroomsful
(See VICTORY, Page!)
Orange County has a staggering job
ahead if it is to meet its air travel
challenges, the Board of Supervisors
was told today.
The challenges will come in the
form of people who want tq.. fly
airplanes, said a bulky report from the
nationally known fir1n of Pereira &
Associates -50 million demands for
airline seats !rom Orange Countians by 1985.
Mesa Massage
Parlor Owner
To Oose Shop
Charges against a Costa Mesa
massage par1or owner whose club was
raided by vice officers will be dismiss·
ed Thursday when she and two
employes appear for trial in Harbor
District Judicial Court.
Mrs. Afsar MahjoubJ, 41, of Long
Beach, now charged With keeping a
disorderly house, has given up her
massage parlor license in a you-rub-
my· back · a n d-I'U-rub-yours ar-
rangement.
Barring any change in city position,
however, the two remaining def en·
dants arrested in the raid on the Costa
Mesa Health Club, 132 E. 18th st., will
still go on trial.
Karin H. Campa, 26, of 7892
Rockwell Ave., Midway City, and
Alicia Mendez, 28, Clf Compton, are
charged _with residing in a house of ill
fame and free on '190 bail each.
One woman, Jessie L. Cox, 24, or
i68l Joel Ave ., Stanton, pleaded in·
nocent with them, but later changed
her plea to no eontetrt and is now on six
months' probation, for soliciting for
prostitution.
MJss Cox allegedly stripped to the
waist and gave Detective Frank
Upham a topless massage during the
vice raid set up for a '5 extra fee.
The Cox woman then offered to
drastically alter her body·rubhing
technique for a f.ll fee, Uphan1
reported, at which time she was plac-
ed under arrest.
Police confiscated her business
license during the raid, according to
the City Attorney's office and Airi;.
Mahjoubi has agreed to relinquish it
for good.
City Council members won't get the
rezoning application and tentative
tract map to make their final decision
until the Aug. 5 meeting. only setting
the public hearing next Monday.
Mesan Held for Wrench
Mayor Alvin L. Pink1ey noted this
Monday night, to save the throng the
trouble of returning next week, when
there will be no opportunity to speak
on the items.
\Vith Norman French, of 2865 Strom·
boll Road, in command as committee
c h air m an . the Mesa Verde
Homeowners Association marshaled a
variety of a'.rguments against the Watt
Co. subdivision.
Keith Neal. of 2005 Lemnos Drive.
described potentially d i s a s t r o u s
Stock Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -Blue chips
showed increased strength as the
stock market held a good gain in ac·
live trading late this afternoon. (See
quotations. Pages 18-19).
The Dow Jones industrial average at
2 p.m. was up 6.91 at 919.51.
The market rose from the start.
Gains held a margin of somewhat
fe wer than 200 over losses.
Attack on Newport Girl
A 19-year-old Newport Be a ch
v.1aitress was in satisfactory condition
today at Hoag Memorial Hospital after
she w.as brutally beaten by a man
wielding a foot·l<>ng wrench.
Held in Newport Beach city jail to·
day on a charge of assault with a
tieadly wea,>an the suspect, Richard
Lloyd Rhodes, 29, of 2726 Drake St.,
Costa Mesa.
The young woman told police she
was coming horile from work 5ttortly
bef-0re midnight Monday, when an
assailant jumped out or 1her front yard
bushes just as she stepped from her
car.
He beat her -on the head several
times with the box wrench he was car-
rying, police said. When she started
screaming , her father came outside
and the man tried to get away.
The girl, stunned but able to walk,
stumbled into the house to call police,
while her father went after the at·
tacker.
Rhodes allegedly jumped into his
auto, parked nearby, but slammed it
into a fence before he could escape.
Police found him sitting behind the
steering wheel of the car when they
arrived. He was not injured.
The girl was taken to the hospital,
Y.'here a spokesman said she is suf·
ferillg from cuts on both hands, face
and forehee.d .
Police said Rhodes whose right
wrist is bound in a cast from a prior
accident, ls to be arraigned Wed·
nesday at 'Mtich time bail will be set.
CMCWD Weighs Land Sale
Physician Gets Another Chance to Buy Prime Parcel
A special meeting ol the O>sta Mesa
Co.my Wow I>Utrtct Is llCbeduled
tonigtt, on the eve of court action by a
physician libo claims Ole CMCWD bat
been discrlmlnatory LO a land deal
with him.
Or. Norman K. Beals Jr .• represen.
ting King Manor & Convalescent
llospital, Santa Ana, will get another
chance to buy the property .at ttie 7:30
o'clock meeting tonight. tr the sale shoul4 be agreed upon,
aclioa. K'heduled at. t •.m. Wednesday
In Departmait 19 of Superior Court
will M cancelled,· according to dtrec--
ton Of the water district.
They 11.y Dr. Beall ""' repemdly failed to come up with the money for a
9.34 acr~ parcel Of prime land at
Brooldlurst Street and H a m i I t o n
Avenue, although the sale had been
agreed UPoD .
Several weeks ago, the CMCWD put
the property up for sale again, teadtng
to an injunctJon obtained by Dr. Beab,
prohlbitin&' .ate of the land for two
weeks.
The Santa Alla pllyllclin says tho
CMCWD Is un1a1r; but d!rtctors of tile
organization d:iaacree.
"That'• not true," taid Mayor Alvin
L. Pinkley, a long .. tJme director.
saying Dr. Beals has been given a
number Of chances to come up with
funds for the land buy.
He said Dr. Beals .Is now o.lfering
$250,000 lq caah arxl. the balance of the
awn>xlmate!y '316,000 !'"ice. in-
dud!ng addl110Dll cos11s and legal fee s.
within a year.
The Pereira report made these key
Po!n!s :
-Orange County' needs a "regional'"
airport, about the s.lze of the present
Lo9 Angeles International Airport,
within five years.
-The present county airport cannot
do the jDb.
-The county has five other potential
regional airport sites, including a bold
land-and·sea complex on Bolsa Chica
•
•'
Slate Beach In Hunttngton Beach.
-Orange County Airport Is fast ap-
pr08thing full capacity and some type
of traffic "'strtction Is almost man-
datory.
-Full attention should be given to
development of a new broad~coped
giant of an airport at Qamp Pendleton,
an "international" airport handling
supersonic (SST) transports of the
fulure.
-lmmediatie planning should begin
roe !nt«lock!ng .. rtes of small aln>ort&
IS.. AffiPORT PLAN, Pue ii
SPEClilL REPORT
Two full pages of tna)M at1d
stories on Orange County avia-
tion will be fou11d on Page 8
and 9.
Nixon Doubts
Polls Will Aid
Rockefeller Bid
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Former Vice President Rk:hard ·M.
Nixon says he is ccddent his primary
vi"ctories will lead to the Republican
presidential nomination, even dlould
public opinion polls fiwor rival Nelson
A. Roclrefeller.
Public opinion palls involve ODl,y
0 about 3,oOO people across the coun·
try," Nix Oft' said in Springfield, N ,J .•
Monday, and he said he doubted
Republican National Con v e n ti on , delegates would be swayed by them.
... "'I have the same thing going for me
.,,,.'that Eug_ene Mc:Carttiy ah~1" 1ald Ni.1.·
'. on referring to primary ·victories.
':But I think that the·J!eplblicla Paty
l. ,. ,·. DAILY PILOT P'llOltt llJ Lff f't Yllt
Loadi1i9, ,l) p .
About 70 boyS' spent an anxious two hours Atonday morning, wonder-
ing how all of them were going to make it to Camp Norris for a one·
week outing. The Boys' Clubs bad arranged for two buses to pick them
up at the. Boys' Club of the Harbor Area at 9:30 a.m., but at 11 a.m.
the second One hadn't shown up. Three directors came to the rescue
end loaded the spill-over from one bw: into two vans, ind their
luggage into a pickup truck. And they were on their way.
Ami Aw•9 ·we Go
The .s!gl}Al that everyone was Ioad~u and ready to go brought glee-
ful cheers Monday, as some 70 youn ers sta.Ud out for camp. They
will spend obe week at Camp N owned by the Boyo• Club or
Pasodetla, at Barton Flt!s in the San ardlno Mauiitaln.s.
l
-
will listen to the people and 1 don't
tblnk the Democrats will.''
N i x o n had said earlier the
Democratic conveD.tion .. will .go the
way of t:h1! bo6ses" a4d Vice President
Hubert H. , Iiumphrey Will get tile
nomination despite D em o c r a ti c
prim·ary victories for McCarthy and
the late Sen. Robert F'. Kennedy .
California Gov. Ronald Reagan,
meanwhile, brushed aside new talk by
GOP presidential aspirant Rdckefeller
of .a. Rockefeller-Reagan ticket.
"I've made my position very plain,''
Reagan aald at an airport news con-
f erence iq Sacramento. "I'm not in·
terested in the vice presidency· at all.'•
Rockefeller had said in San Fran·
cisco the possibility o( sum. a GOP
ticket is "wide open ... I don't think
that any combination should be ruled
out or should there be a freezing of
any situation." ..
Reagan refused to comment on the
New .York governor's statement the
Californian is a more serious pusiden·
tial contender than he .imita.
"There's no eeose commenUna 1111
what bis optmon ii," Reagan Rid.
Two Mesa Youths
Accident Victims
Two Costa Mesa youths suffered cuts
and abrasions Monday ...men hurled
from their motorcycle when it collided
with a car making a left turn in the
downtown area.
Obr!s A. Hill, 16, of 20.'13 Republic
Ave., and bis paSISenger, David A.
Stokes, 17, of 867 Darrell St., were
treated privately after the evening ac·
cident.
Police said Ronald R. Roodeau, 31,
of 13792 Pine St., Westminster, was
turning left bm 1outbbouDd lanes to
West 17th Street ooto Babcock Street
in front ol. Hlll's nortbbound motorcy·
cle. He was unhurt.
Orange
Weatlier
Goodies tn store from the
meteorological mailbag include
a gradual drying trend with hot·
ter days. No precipitatlon and
h!gbs In upper 70'• •xpecled.
INSmE TODAY
uc re11<1111 to 1111t1u fhurador
rcciproccl tcachino. ttolo"'9
ogrt"""'t with UC/ 1llCdlcol
1chool, COUttfr tncdicol """'· POii• 1.
'
=---.. _._ :=::.--. ·--T-= -..... ........
,J
--
" " • ,
" ,,.,,
l'"ll 1•1t " ,, • " ..
TUOld'Y, July 9, 1'1611
History Is · Vin-..ge Wine
'
Me1a Adventurer Plana More Expeditions
lrf.:.:t.~
Itlstory It vln!oit wlDe lo a Coata
,tt-esan wboee 8c'Ottllh claa crest been
"lnged 1par1, but whole own feet have
trod the poth ol lbe put all over the
wuten world. •lth a reverent relilh
for laet Pd lofeod.
F. Jlobert J-on, 78, al 113311 Cor-
nell Drive. baa been a ac:ientlst,
treuure h u n t e r and movie
pbototni>her for decades and stlll lfu
plans lcr more expeditions.
"WI know IO much, btit ft bow 10
little about anctmt hbtcrJ," 11)'1 the
man wboH mind .... !ll'Oddad by a
:sharp Indian arrowhead he found 1n
the Ozark Mountains 68 ye.an ago.
He bas shot more than 100,000 fet!t
of motion picture fllm -some of it
unequalled in m1otery IDll apletldor -and ii now pvlq much o! It to
universities, muatum1 and. llbrartes.
"Wherever it wm fit best," he ex-
plains.
The years bove been-If not always
kfnd -at Iea&t crammed with ad·
venture tor Johnston and hl1 wile
Mildred, who ha,.ve been called home
by tragedy several times ..
RAISE GRANDCHILDREN
M06t recently, the couple was
notified in Genoa, Italy that their son-
in·law and daughter had died almost
slmultaneously, leaving them three
young grandchildren to raise.
"But I suppose many are a darn
sight worn off than we are," 1ays
Johnston, wboH travels 1n research
and exploration have led to hi1 reputa·
tion as Tiie Flying Man.
A termite and pelt exterminator by
trade, Jobuton he.1 done University of
California entomology studies tn the
jungles ol. Latin America and hunted
the loat treasure of Lima, Peru.
Th• tea mllllon tort ... liH 1'.lrled
on Cocos Island,· in the Galapagos
chain, the wealth ol a church, seized
by plratos and bidden to ironically
turn men into devil.I with greed.
"It't queer whit gold d<ie1 to peo--
ple," says Johaston, explaining there
has been a murder or an attempted
kJlllng on each of his five expedition&
to the COila Rlca·held island.
The treasure has its own bloody heri-
t.a&e, going back to 1820, when it was
loaded aboard the vessel Mary Dyer,
for shipment to Spain as the pirate
Bonito prepared to 1eize Lima.
HURLED TO SHARKS
Once under way, how ever,
passengers were hurled to the sharks
and the '65 million was burled on
CocOI and later covered by a land.slide
loo deep for anytblog but hydraulic
mlnlnf equipment.
The returntiig Mary Dyer was then
scuttled, one day out ol Llma, and the
pirates returned in longboats to say
they had been caught Qy Bonito and
the treasure taken, but found an ironic
fate waited.
Bonito bed aeized Lima -proving to
be a jwt liberator -and dealt pro-
perly with thooe wllo sought lo blame
him tor the piracy and murdeu ol the
Mary Dy«.
Dol.K.Y PILOT hlfll .......
BACKYARD ADVENTURE -One can't exacUy see the joy of
prospective motherhood. on the· face of Susie, a desert sand tortol.se
held by Costa Mesan F. Robert Johnston, but It mwt be there. Susie,
In a not too common occurrence outside the wild state, Is about to
become a mother.
settlement and even BriUsh influence
at one remote place.
Ptriect B&llnese sculpture ol 1,llJO
B.C. u found In another place In Latin
America and, deep In the South
PacWc, he hu visited a low, fiat J.a.
land covered with line pea gravel and
one huge arch. No one knows who built the graceful
arch, welghing thomands of pounds,
or why.
"Time meaD.1 nothlng after the first
1,000 years," 1ay1 Johnston, who
views bl.story like an iceberg: what lit-
tle we have 11 only & hint of what bu
been and may never be explained.
The Flying Man - who generally
travel.I by lraigbter when hil wife ac-
companies him -also filmed mating
grounds Of a colony of huge flam·
infoe11n Mexico's Yucatan penlnlula,
for Walt Disney. '
Forty years ago, he shot what ts
probably the only complete motion
picture of the secret and now-forbid-
den Indian snake dance, performed
near remote HoltaviUa, New Mexico.
pie you're with and abide by the rules,
you'll get everything you uk for ," he
explains.
Johnston was educated at Columbia
UnJveralty and makes no apologies for
his aUltude toward the student ac·
tlvttta who took over the campus there
earlier this year.
"There'a no excuse for this in a
clvtllzed 1oclety," growls the veteran
adventurer, "U I'd been there, I'm
afraid I'd have been a bit rough on
them."
Johnston ls a member of the elite
Adventure Club, has lectured and con-
tributed to the televlsloo program "I
Search for Adventure ," and hu wrl-
teen many articles.
He wanta next to pbolograph a tiny
hummingbird with twin talb eight In·
ches long in the j1.mgles of Costa Rica ,
but his pest control work and other
duties may get in the way.
"It's just a dream," he saysj ~·there
are so many things to do. Yoti've got
to kill a few termites, see that the
grandkids are okay and all that."
Dying Wind
Slows Race
To Honolulu
Jim Amiss• &a-foot catamaran Sea
Smoke was 1till leadlna: th• 3rd bien·
nlal MJttlhuU Transpaclllc race Mon·
day, but progress ol all of the seven
boat neet was slowed by dimlnl&h.ing
wind.I.
Sea Smoke wq 700 miles from Los
Ailgele1 and her nearest competitor
wu 'io miles astern. ·
Before the winds subsided, Imi Loa ,
sklppered by Vic Stern of Seal Beach
Yacht Club, blew out ber thre&oounce
1pl.nnaker aod had to hol.1t a chute of
hea\'.ler material. The llghtweJgbt
chutes are better in light airs.
'I'he trimaran Aw1ga, 1klppertd. by
Bob Cameron, Silver Gate Yacht Club,
San Diego, had a baskstay let 10 but
jury rigged a new stay before she lost her mast.
Several of the mu!UhuUs monitored
a radio call from Ml&:s Peggy Slater,
satUnc alone from Los Angeles ·to
Honolulu, who reported she was 1,000
mUes from Los Angeles and ex·
periencing no dUficulty. Miss Slater
departed on her K-43 Valentine Satur-
day, June ro, five days ahead Of the
cats.
Boat·for boat lineup of the mulUhulls
was in this order: Sea Smoke, Lani
Kai, M..anu Iwa, Auriga, Polynesian
Concept, Glass Slipper and Imi Loa.
LaUlude and Longitude poslUons:
AURIGA -2.8·27N-127·55W;
GLASS SLIPPER -·2'/.12N-l.20-i7
\Vi
IM! LOA-27-17N-12&-,10 N;
LANI KAI -2.8-ION-128-0'/W·
LANI KAI -:18·10N-129-02W:
MANU IWA-27--06N-l:i8-07\V;
POLYNESIAN CONCEPT -27·
ION-127-28W;
SEA SMOKE -23·18N-130-16W.
* * * African Yacht
Leading Field
TRAVEMUENDE, C:.rmany (AP)
-The South African y a c h t
Stormvogel, skippered by Cornelius
Bruynzeel, toot the lead Tuesday 1n
the field of 33 compeUtort racing from
Bennuda to this Baltic port.
The West Gennan naval tender
Westerwald, escorting the vessels
across the Atlantic, reported
southwesterly winds had h e J p e d
Stormvogel to cover 260 nautical miles
in 24 hours.
The distance between Slormvogel
and the German yacht Rhe, believed
to be the last in the fleet was 350
miles.
Rerideat• Vnlaappy ..
~· '/lo~· .... ..,,
Widow Gets ·OK °' ... ,
>Q --•.. -.. ,
~· ..... ....
·To Move Home .,, .. •
An SS-year-old widow won the truttal
move in a plan to 1111 her property but
continue Uvlng In her old house Mon-
day, when the Costa Mesa Planning
Commission voted approval or a
permit to move 1t
Resldenll or the new netchborhood
may not Wee It, but the home Mt1.
Ethel Struve has octupled at 1908
•larbor Blvd., for 28 .vearit ii JColnJ to
a new locaUon 1t 256 E. 22nd St.,
unless )tt&-City Council decldes
otherwi~e.
The Planning Commission voted 3 to
1 In HcOmmendation of 'the house
moving Monday, but commissioner
Robert Beck cast a dissenting vote.
Mrs.· Struve, a r etired
schoolteacher, ts ne,11:0UaUng to 1ell
her lot to the nearby Dean Lewi~
Imports auto agency. but relocation of
the house is a condition of the sale.
Mrs . Struve values the old structure
at 880,000, but her prospettive
nei,qhbors say it is not good enough for
their area and they don't want It
there.
The city planning staff. however,
says ti,ere should be no objection as
loni as buildin1 and safety conditions
are met and the exterior of the house
refin11hed nicely.
During a meeting draw.n out by a
lengthy hearina: on staunchly opposed
rezonin g ol Meaa Verde Country Club
Rosary Services
Set for 23-year
Mesa Resident
Rosary will be recited for Wllllam
A. Gloza, a resident of Costa Mesa for
23 years, at 7 p.m. tonight (Tuesday)
and Requiem Mass wlll be celebrated
9 a.m. Tbur1day, both at St. Joachim
Catholic Church.
Mr. Gloza, retired as a self
employed painter for 52 years, died at
the Veterans Hospital, Long Beach,
Monday at the age of 79.
He served as a bugler with the Field
Artillery during World \Var I.
Survivors include his wile, Frances
of tha home, 525 Fairfa:r Drive, Costa
Mesa; a son, Mathew A. of the home:
a brother, August Gioia of Fla.;
sisters, Frances Foss, M a r g a r e t
Rucinski and Elsie Soczyk, all ol Ill.;
and three grandchildren.
Full military honors wlll be ac.
corded Mr: Gloza at graveside, Good
Shepherd Cemetery, Hunt Jn gt on
Beach.
Bell Broadwa.y Mortuary are In
charge of arrangements.
property tor a houatnr deftloprnent, ;i
comml1aloner1 alJo nconuntDdtd • ie;,.
-Denial or a request by Theodore ~
H. Lane to rezone his Trade Wlnd1 ~
Trailer Ptrk, 2191 Harbor Blvd., from i~
rteldentlal to commerctaJ-proftlllonal ~:;
use, tor tuture development ~
-Approval or I request from Robrvt ~
L. Wish , Ml Biker St., for a larce ~
tree 1tandin1 1lcn adveruatnr hb .: "'.. ..
Moat liquor aton at that JocaUon. ~
-Approval ol. an amtndment 10 the ..;.
city's animal ordln&pce .,. map
showing whtr. nisll!enta may teeP
pels and livestock and ID what DUln·
bers or varlelies.
-Approval of a variance application
to allow Richard A. Stwell. of S022
Madeira Ave., t.o build six dwelling
units on his property, making a total
ol seven at that locatJon.
-Denial nf a variance to allow con-
struction nf a six-car garage at
Roberto's Auto Trim Shop. 2.033-35
Harbor Blvd., which would have
t1.lmost cut the required offstreet park-
ing area in half.
-Approval of a conditional use
permit allowin't Susanna M. Denton, of
367 Ma~olia St., to teach piano in her
hol'ife fi ve days weekly by appointmut
only as a home occupanon.
-Aoproval of a conditional use
oermit allowing Michael Genco, of 61.8
\V. 19th St., to build 14 automobile
storage garages in a commercial zone
at that location.
In addition . commissioners con-
tinued three other items, one ol them
a hotly opposed conditional use permit
application for storage of impounded
and damaged vehicles at Harbor Auto
Body Inc., 957 W. 17th SI., In a
manufacturing zone.
Owners of adjacent apartment units
described the shop as a junkfard and
said their investment 1hould be pro-
tected, even though apartments are
not meant tor that zone.
Me1·cm·y Rises,
And So Do Tides
Orange Coast residents appear to be
caught between the devil and the deep
blue sea. That is, the high tem-.
peratures of a mid-summer heat wavt
are expected to continue, while in the
Newport harbor arta, seven loot high
tides will again flood the streets ,,
tonight. Hi ghest tide will be reached at
9:55 tonight.
There will be some variable cloud~
""tonight and tomorrow morning, but all
in all we 'll have the the kind of
weather that's made California green
and ,golden.
J.i..too hal madt more than fiO
1riPI into Muttoi.~J1cov9rJng
evidence of a pOlllJll Qilneee coa*1
Despite his extensive travels by
plane1 boat, jeep, horse and loot
between here and Panama, with many
trlps to other bb:arre and exotic
places, Johnlton bu literally always
been at home.
"U you'll juat be u food u the po ..
Even so, the man whose We bu en-
compassed more adventure and travel
than that granted any tan otben hu a
deep thirst to see, upertence and /r-------------:===========-------------. know moJ"'
Owner Demands Decision
On Gas Statio11: It's No
A Colla M-property owner who
claimed repeoted clolays bf the city in
procesllllr b1I ..-01 l!ll>U...Uon
were costing him •t,000 per month
heard it rejected by the city Planning
Commission Monday.
Francis X. SboMI, <I 1321 W. Park
Lane, Santa Ana, demanded a decision
one way or the other at Monda y
nigtlt's meeting and 1<>t it, 3 to 1
against his proposed service station.
Shoen wants four acres of industrial
property at Newport Boulevard and
Baker Street rezoned f'or <:0mmercial
use, but the Plannine cbmm.isgion bas
not agreed oo this amount.
Commisliooer H . .J. "Jimmy" Wood
suggested Monday that Shoen reront
only 200 square feet and he agN-ed,
DAILY PILOT
c... ..... CtllWlki
lloliert N. WeN -n.,..., K•nil -n ... , A. M"""lati ·~Mltw
Jock R. c.rt.y Peil Nl•..,.
9w:MU MiMIW' Mwl'tl•lnt Dlf9d ... ---JJO Weit ley Streit
Mtllhtt Ailr"1: P.O.••• 1560 f2626
OtW Offkt•
....._, a.cti1 21'1t W ...... ...._.NI
._.... .. •<111 m .._I A-
......... e.dli "' ... """'
but Asai-I City Attorney Rol>ert L.
Humphreys Nid this would creat.e a
new delay.
Legal not.lees would have to be
published, requiring another month in
the process, then it would be another
two mootbs before tile rezoning would
be in effect, if it was approved.
Shoen -who has previously com·
plained of getting a runaround in his
dealings -would then have to apply
fr>r 1. conditional use pennlt for the
station to operate in a Cttmmercially
zoned aret.
So, he a&ked for an immediate vote
on the Jll"OP06a1, and next week can •P·
peal the recommendation for denial to
the City Council, w11ich could reverse
the vote.
Planning Commission Chairman
Nate Reade, who operates a service
station, voted against the recom·
mendatloo. for denial Monday, saying
be thooght Shoen bad a rlghl to
develop tbe land as he chooses.
Fountain Valley
Man Hmt in Mesa
A Fountain Valley man was lnjurtd
in Coata Mesa Monday when an old
hearse backed into him as he knelt to
inlpect another customer'• car at the
tire ibop wbm be Is employed.
Dalt L. Boyd, 23, <I !MM EverOll
<ltde, wu treated at Hoq Memorial
Hoopltal for c:uta and brulae1 111flared
whan be WU !mocked illto tho lecood
car.
Mark W. Lono1uo, 19, ()( l!IZ! Jluth
Lue, Newport Beach, aaJd he couldn't
see Boyd when be began backlD1 the
staUoa waion rtliatered to a San Joa·
9uln Val!e7 mortuary out of bis park·
mg spot.
Ford Brown, of 134 Industrial \Va.y,
said he was standing next to the vic-
tim Ill lbe Younr and Lane Tire Sbop
lot at 15911 Newport Blvd., but w11
lcoocked out o! the way by Boyd when
1'e fell
,.,.... P .. e J
VICTORY •••
-and nearby Balearic School is
already scheduled for double sessions in the fall .
DEVELOPERS SURPRISED
Action by the Planning Commission
Monday caught developer1 oI the
Country Club property by SW'pl'ise
since they were confident of at la•at a deferment.
Hugh Halderman, engineer ior the
Watt Co., saJd he was unprtpared to
~o into a detailed account of the pro.
Ject to state their case for commission
approval, because ol precisely this
reason.
Plans tor revision are now being
studied as the result of a series of
meetings wlth the homeowners and
city planners, and Halderman sug.
gested the commissio n approve the
zone change, pending submU:slon ol a
new tentative tract map.
Halderman also told the Planning
Com mission the key 'to the matter Is
proprietary rights -as long a1 the
R.A. Watt Co .. owns the golf course
the R.A. Watt Co., can do what Jt
pleases -provided the development ls
not incompatible with the surrounding area.
He saJd the residential project Is
certainly compatible with other hous-
ing developments in the neighborhood.
OPPOSES REZONING
The Mesa Verde group -which op.
poses rezoninJ of even a 1quare foot of
the golf course -dlurree11 saying
the rum ii wrong in thl1 vein of
thought.
Gray Edgerton, of 2935 Elltstnere
Drive, said the firm doe s not have a
proprietary right to do what it chooses
with the property when the outcome
"'ould be damaetng to the sUrroundlng area .
This Is apparently -the main polnt of
the conlllct: the R. A. Watt Co. con-
tends • Sood development wll1 be an
advantace and the homeowner, AY ftO
development at all will be lht ad· vantage.
P«!UOOJ bearln1 bundrodl ol
alpaturts calllna for njtctton of the
goU courae development w01 be
praoented to lht City CouncIJ Ill the
neat few weeks.
The Watt Co. and Gayner could
come through with new 1ubdlvlllon
de1lfn1, blltd on their confmnces
with area residents. who made a
variety of suggestions and appeal to
the council for approval.
only has itl
" •••
· occP ~ Deep Steam Carpet Cleaning costs more jt6«" than the old shampoo method • • •
However, the Dffp Steam Carpet Cleaninc Method removes soil from both
the fibers of the carpet and the carpet backing. Since no brushing or
scrubbing. action is used, there is no distortion of the carpet pile. The
powerful extr.actlon action of the Deep Steam process lifts matted pile to "like new" appearance. •
:ine need for fr~ue~t profe~sional cleaning is reduced because the deeply
1mbedded abrasive dirt particles (that cut carpet fibers) are removed and
there is no detergent residue left in the carpet to collect dirt. Du ring the
Deep Steam cleaning process all th e ca rpet fibers are coated with a special soil retardant. ·
"It's simple logic ••• You profit in the long run when you,use Deep Steam
Carpet Cleaning because your carpet will be cleaner than ever before
poss ible. It will stay clean longer and wear longer because you used Deep
Steam Carpet Cl11nlfll •• ," .. · . ·
WHIN YOU
WANT THI
flNIST-
CAl.L • RUG & UPHOLSTl!RY CLEANERS
<>ur 21st y .. , of S.rYict In Ot•ngo County
2950 RANDOLPH COSTA MESA
fltlE
ISTIMATI
Th• property in quesUon -19.S
acres -it now &Oneel for 1nsUtutlonal
and recroaUooal u11 and the owners! PHONE 146 3432 From Toll Aroa
want It l'IZO!led to 11n11a family "------:------':""---------_;C:;;a:::ll.:Z:;;l::;n:::lt::,h.:7,:-069:=;6:.._ _____ _J residential me.
"
L I
-
r---... -, ..
I j• '
: .•' . . . .
• 1,
\
BY
WILLIAM
REED
•••d• ...
In the Wind
Caught the cl .. lng night of "Pet-
rified Forest" at the Barn Play.
house at 2110 Main SL Saturday
night and found the play very well
done and the theater ruined.
.. The group has added pads to the
seal3, carpets to the floor and a
windbreak between the theater and
the door. The members have even
sealed the bees up in the attic and
· ellmlnated all the rustic from the
'!heater.
However, the plays get better
·and better so I guess the playgoing
set will continue to pack the place.
JVew, lnuige Sought
City-Chamber
Group Formed
In the clty'a quest for a new image,
a joint city government-private en-
terprise committee ha1 betu formed
in Huntington Beach.
The alx-man comm1ttee la the result ct a meeUng between councilmen and
directors ol the Chamber of Com.
merce.
Those selected by the city to serve
were Mayor Al Coen and Oouncllmen
George McCraclten and Ted Bartlett .
Chamber directors H. C. Matheny
(president), Bill Wood and Steve
Holden also will serve.
Chamber of!iclala poim.ed out how
the goals of the chamber and the
city's t.argets are similar. Some of the
goals are community involvement in
problems, a program to increau the
the Anaheim ceMer, but could be pet.
temed afier th• Victorville and
Baker1fleld ceoter1.
13 New Pools
Being Built
In Westminster
Thirteen private swimming pool
permits were issued durillg June,
We5tm1nster planning director We.rren1
L. Cavanagh reported.
* ". Caught the closing night recent-
.iy of "The Odd Couple''· at the
Forum IX in Long Beach featuring
Joe Karbo in a lead role. Joe's per-
fonnance was outstanding, probab-
ly his best yet on the local boards.
· A group of young singers called
1'Deseiet Youth," with Wes Hoov·
er of 19532 Trenton Lane, Hunting-
ton Beach, as president, sang re·
. cently at a birthday party and im-
. pressed all with its ability.
· tax base, and Implement the mid·
beach development plan througllki<oJ
g0Vf.l1lmeot and private eoterprlse
cooperation. Another goal is to provide
for the cultural and recreational needs
of the community while recognizing
the social concerns o! ecooomically
depressed areas, hippies and drugs on
community environment.
That makes 89 new \Vestrnlnste~
poola since Jan. 1 and.126 pools for tfe
1967-68 fiscal year, at a total valuatiqn
of $330,093 Cavanagh pointed out.
Valley School Chiefs
f'1o decision has been made on
specllic projects the chamber might
assist with. However, the chamber felt
that with a civic center already
selected , the chamber could initiate a
study of the present city hall area as a
possible co nvention center.
ln addition SI single residealce
building permits were issued in Jane
fOr a $1.5 million monthly total. Jrour
hundred and: eighty four new houses
have gone up since June 1967 making
the 12·month figure $12.5 millio1.
Comt1aring agenda notes are Fountain Elementary School Dist~ct's
newly appointed leaders. Mrs. Ernest H. Rufer is a recent appointee
to the truste es' personnel commission and William E. Crane re-
places John Harper as a board. member,. Harper resigned following
his election to Fountain Valley City Council .
' It's a fine group of singers a~d
one which should be heard. It will
-be singing at various functions
Leaders painted out that such a con-
vention center would not be similar to
around the coun~ Junior Teen Club
Commercial • industrial growUi
slowed in June to three building
permits worth "55,975 matched •gainst
the c.aleod .. year increase ot 31 or
$1 ,769,649 and 49 permits s~c~ June,
1967, estimated at $2.7 million.
'Potpourri' to Cook Vp
Nursery School Funds
. Driver training, according to A • • • B • New Temple Slates "Potpourri," a cookbook combining
·high school n!!icia!s , was taken by CtiVIties egm I the favorite recipes of the fnends and
3 399 student. this past school year. Sabbath Services members of the Community Methodist
The behind·the-wheel instruction is Th sd N' h Church, 6662 Heil Avenue, Huntington ~financed by the state. The driver Dr ay . Jg f Rabbi Genbon Fi6her 1will lead Beach, goes to press July 15.
:education program (classroom in· Temple Negev in Sabbath services this The book will sell for $1 .50 per copy
·struction) is r~uired of all stud-Junior Teen Club activities begin Friday , July 12, starting at 8 p.m. in with all profits from the sale going to
· ents for graduation and is financed Thursday at Johnson Intermediate the Peek Family . Coloni21 Terrace the scholarEihip fund of the church's
Con11nwlity Methodist Church between
9 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. at 842-4461.
Boys' Club Sets
Water Instruction by the local taxpayers. School with a rock dance from 7:30 to Room, Bolsa Avenue lilld Beach nurst•ry school.
Behind the wheel training is not 9:30 p.m. Admission Is 50 ctnbi. Boulevard. The scholarship fund helps pay tui· Summertime means water time for
· required, but is taken by most stu-Temple Negev is a new Reform con-tion for disadvantaged children enroll-the Boys' Club of Laguna Beach. With
• DAILY PILOT 3
Valleyites
M . . runta1n " " I
Young Look ·
The residents ol Fountain Valley.,.
helping the cJty matntaio tu youflllul
Jmage.
A recent census revealed that the
average of Valley citizens L!I 21.5
years, four years younger than the
Orange County average of 25.5.
The largest single age grouping was
the 10-14 years bracket with 4,198
persons, or 16 percent of the com·
mun.ity total of 25,755.
Valleyites 14 years~ and under com._
prise 41 percent o( the population. Lest -
the teeny-boppers feel too secure, it
ought to be pointed out that tlte
highest concentratim in the Westmont
Tiara tract is the I to 9 years set.
Males slightly outnwnber females
12,950 to 1z,m but the girt. are slight·
Jy older 21.9 versus 21.l years,
Fountain V a 11 e y ranks 12th In
population of the 25 Orange County
cities. During the past year the city's
population jumped 26 percent and
leaped 388 percent since 1963.'
Little League
Dance Slated
The third annual Little League.
dance will be held Jilly 12 at the
Garden Grove Women's Ovic Club•
Chapman Street and Gilbert AvemJe,,
Garden Grove, at 8 p.m.
Featured ban<bmen are the Los
Chicos, former Little League ball
players. There will be entertainment
and door prizes.
Tickets for the "stag or drag" can
be purchased from any team. mother
or at the door. Next year's officets
wµI be elected at the dance.
Six Violin Students·
Pass Examination dents, according to the district. Sponsored by the Westminster gregation in the cowrty. For more in-ed in this nursery school. Without this the warm water comes instruction in
Huntington Beach High School Recreation and Parks Department, formation, contact Jerry or Dotty ass istance, many of these children four different water sports. Six West County violin studenU ~(
\had 786 students taking the driving scheduled activities for the junior high Bleiweiss, 839-4M3, or VrTite P.O. Box would not be able to attend pre-school Highlight of this summer's water Professor Rene. Bregozzo of Costa
training, Westminster 8051 Marina school age youngsters include another 3837, Anaheim, 92.803. instruction, a school spokesman said. sports program will be classes in skin· Mesa have passed the practical ex·
1,040, and Fountain Valley 768. dance, July 18 from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.; There are still openings for the up-diving and spearfishing, under in-ainination1 Of Trinity College of
I h I ear In the Pre School structlon of "Shorty" Fenn and Jim Music, London . The examinations ·* Newport Dunes trip, July 25, 4: 30 to K k k S k com ng sc oo y . Id U I th 0 g 08 OWS y lo pea · program. Expected enrollment will be DiPippo, certified diving instructors. were he recen Y a e r a D e Students completing the pro-9 :30 p.m., $1.25 ; and a third dance ll:5 children, 11 of whom are In addition, there will be daily in· CoW1ty Center in Costa Mesa,
grams may not ~ ready to apply Aug. I . "How the Eye OperUes and Optical scholarship children. Afternoon struction in ocean swimming and body Those pllS6ing with honors were
. lor a license without further driv-A final dance will be Deld Aug. 8 lliuslons" is the Ulpic for the 8 a.m. sessions of the nursery program are surfing. ~8';~~~ll~y.~ W~~~~ ~ ~ ing exerience, but they certainly followed by an Aug. 15 bus excursion meeting Wednesday at the Sheraton· held Monday, Wednesday and Friday All activities are open to boys, ages
. do not need much more and often to Disneyland, $4. Bea.ell Inn of' the Huntington Beach from 12:·30 p.m. to 3 p.m. eight through 17, wtio hold mem· tano, Kathy Robinson, Mark Sm.it
_ surprise mom and dad with their For more information call the Board of Realtors. Speaker js J oe F'urther informatiOn about the bership in the Boys' Club. Yearly dues and Charles Oldfield of Huntingtm ·s~kill~·~·~·--~~~~~~~---d:e~pa::::rlm:::•:nt:_:at~89==3-45.=:l:l~,~~~~~-=K=08:ko:;:..:w:•:ky~.~~~~~~--~, schcclmaybeobU:m:•:d:b~y:c:on:ta::ctin:'~g:._:•:':the::..:Cl:u:b:ar::..:.•:$:1.:50_. _____ ~-Be-a_ch_.~------~~~
, ..
.
' .
' • ' •
SAIL TO SOUTH AMERICA;
ENJOY JAPAN ON THE WAYI
How? Sail on a Mitsui OSK passenger
liner. You'll be in Japan the moment you
step on board. Kimono-clad hostesses,
special flower arrangement and folk
dancing demonstrations, tea ceremonies,
•nd the finest Japanese (or Western)
cuisineareamongthe pleasures of Japan
you'll enjoy. All this while you're sailing
south through the Panama Canal and
visiting exciting port~ of call including
Curacao, La Guaira, Rio de Janeiro,
Montevideo, and Buenos Aires.
You 'll have the excitement and enjoy·
ment of two trips for the price of one •. ,
as low as $324 economy class one way.
Round trip fares are available, too.
If you 're planning on a trip to Japan see
about Mitsui OSK's direct sailings from
San Francisco and Los Angeles. can your
lravelagenttoday!
MITSUI CSK LINES
\'-Safety Information: The SS Argentina
(, Maru 1P1d MS. Brazil Maru ar~ registered
I t tl in Japan and meet International Safety
\,; . "'\ Staridards for new ships developed in
( _· ~-'/ 1948.
~·~~~ .. \
TOMORROW
ONLY,
Wednesday, July loth
All Buffums' stores will be open fr<m 8:00 a. m. to 6:00 p. m.
Newport Celter
t
' Don't miss out on the biggest values of the year.
u
Jl fas!lilll l!land • ~%200 • •
•
IC , ..... Ill D9IJf ._ ltlfn
Albert F .. i.r ot Hollywood bu •
cl••llc problem. After workib&
nearly two years in bis yard build'
l"' a 30-foot cabin cruiser, Foste!'
discovered the boat wouldn't ·lit
out the driveway. "It looks ·as if
the only way we can get it out_is
to have .a lar11 :~e ·lift it over
lbe houH.''.i...,,.ut. .... ••
Paula L<vin<, 20,.of NortA BoUJIU'OC)d,
a rift{ler knotn a Bnmdi Pnt'f/, hq.s
!><"" toot.,t4<4 '11 Lona Binh, Vi<tnam.
She toaS appearing witlJ a mUlical
group colltd "'Brandi PnTV and the
Bubblt Machin<?" toll<n Ult group ,...
caught in an ambush. Other membm
of tht group totre al.lo wovnded, it
was announced, • Listening to police calls over a
transistor radio, three 16-year--old
Police Explorer Scouts from Los
Angeles heard someone had been
robbed in a bank parking lot two
blocks away. Ror.ii £. Miiier, Wi1yne
King and Paul St.ti1n chased down
a suspect, dl!anned him of a load·
ed 32-<:aliber pistol and held him
for police. Jailed on susp1oon of
robbery was ·Kennie 0 . Wh itt, 23,
. a'Marine. •
A ;anitor in Minuapolil, Minn.,
arriving to open a church for
'Sunday .seroices, discovertd a
newbOm babt1 on the front
steps. Hospital authorities said
the baby is in good health. Po-
lice are attempting to locate the
mother.
-'Beard-'ll Screa11a' ,
FBI Joins Hu t
' . • BJ Wlre 8enJce1 ' empty or a~ bulldlng s far
'•CORRY, Pa. -More>than 160 pbUc:e as five mlles<tro~the Cooney h e. A
·ind vol-• Jol"'4 tOday' In . a helicopter ~!Al) even wide area
aeorcll lbrObsh the ~ COlllltfyll~• · : in an ellort_to iJild. the girl. . ..., 'btre for" U.•--<>ld Karell. ,. p ll • ., : v __ t--' to Cooa,1~ \ ~ , o ce 1-.r.. ~en s "l'1"""" o
KMu apparently\ was abducted as bing up the wash about 11 a .m.
she -h4Dlinl-h in the yard of cloy. A short Ume lat.r htr·-:oeal\ her hoine three miles west o! Corry, Mrs. James Cooney, beard a ...
pOUet .. Id. · Mrs. Coooey stepped oullide but e Jrtie orily clues poiice have .are scuff could not .see the girl. She search mara in the ,,_ near a hall .. mpty ~ imDiedlite area with Ille help
bastet ol wublni~ -.J(aren"s tw-0 brothers and when sh
'nl• search wa1 widened to locl114"· 'failec! to liad the girl she called police.
• · ' A,nolgbbor, Min Betty J. Harvey,
Gypsy Drivers
;wreck, Burn
Licensed Cabs
NEW YORK (AP) -Bands or men
swept through two sections o f
Brooklyn Monday and halted . at least
13 licensed taxicab!. Seven cabs were
set afire a!ter the drivers were
ordered out, others were wrecked and
overturned.
Police said the wave of terrorist at-
tacks, which took place during a six-
hour period, appeared to be the work
of gypsy cab drivers angered by new
taxi legislation which went into effect
July I.
A 10-year-old boy passerby received
first degree bums from one of the
. fires. Police arrested one alleged
gypsy driver and charged him w~th
crlminal mischief in connection with
the incidents.
told ~hers she beard an auto drive
away, (r:oln the neighborhood about the
Um~ Karen disappeared.
searchers brought in bloodhounds
but failed to find any trace of the girl
by nightfall. The FBI said ii was
joining in.
State police said they suspected the
girl was ktdnaped but taid' there was
nothing to indicate that a car had been
in the area of the Cooney Farm along
Pennsylvania 426 at the time she
disappeared.
Police said, however, they set ur
roadblocks on roads surrounding the
area of the Cooney Farm, which sits
on 50 acres six miles outside of Corry
in Erie County.
But no trace of the short, bespeC•·
tacled girl wearing a blue blouse and
red jeans could be found.
Seven -Ar1·ested
In 3-hour Riot
In ' B~ton Area
Gypsy cabs are those which may be BOSTON (UPI) -Ba-s. Or youths summoned by telephone but ,vruch ""'-
may not cruise the streets for fares. · marched . Monday .night .on a three·
City ordinance permits only cabs with hour spree of window smashing, rock
l1ce ed ll. t · k : throwing and minor looting in the Po m a ions 0 pie u P soutlb end section, on the fringe of the passeagers on the street. . The attacks which occurred in the Roxbury Negro ghetto.
Bedford-Stuyvesant and Brownsville . There were seven ~ests, mostly
sections of Brooklyn began at .J:40 ; lor~ as1a,u~t ai;td. battery. F ~ u r
p.m. As the. incidents continued police · Jflic~m~ ... ~ were l~Jur~, none ser1ous-
ord.ered umts of the tough Tactical "Police sald 7S J,>late glass windows in
Patrol Foree to the scene. . . . 26 · busin~ss .e.stablishments were
GYPIY c_aba operate largely_ m, tbe snlasbed: At Mc.cieuaD.•s Department slw;n eections 'Nhere many li~ensed Store on' Washington Street, eight
tancabs refw:e to enter. or pack up plaU: glass windows and two doors
@¥.JCD(en due to the ~d~~~e of ,,,were broken . .it}st .. ~: . .(ire started. The muggino:. )lost .or Ae. city s !,000 flames were ·qweiJ1 extinguished.
gypsy cabs are dr1ve:g b~ ~~groes. Between U,000 and 15,000 persons .., ~l~,.. jammed the .Ctatet'"filayground for a
band concert by. Smoky Robinson and
the Miracles,' authOrities said.
Capt. Francis .. Devlin, officer in
charge or the police detail at the
left but the people stayed."
EINFORCEMENTS -National Guard troops pass
guard tower as they enter Londo~. Ohio, COITec-
t al Institution early . today following a night of
turbances during whiclJ. four fires were touched
UPITWllM
off and two prisoners were sh<>t. According to
Superintendent E. ·B. Haskins, the inmates were pro-
testing low wages, poor food variety and parole
procedurest
·phio Guards Ring Prison
·~ 4 Fires Set, 2 Inmates Shot in Disturbances
WN ON, Ohio (UPl) -About 250 .:ilcrt thc-National Guard. ~risoners were confined to isolation
Ohio N 'onal Guai:.d troops ringed the Haskins said the prisoners were pro-cells .
London Correctional Institution here testing low wages, poor food variety While ~e remainder of the prisoners
\l: • -. . and parole board problell'\5. The were being taken back to work, today fo)\owing 8 night of disturbarices v.crkers ·at the garment factory, which another 200 inmates returning to the
during ~ich four fires were touched supplles clothing to all Ohio in· institu1ior1 from work on the facility's
off and t o prisoners were S~ot. stitutions, earn BY.i cents an hour . 3 000-acre farm learned what had OC·
• A spok sman said all 1,590 inmates Although most o! the workers c~rcd and began shouting and break·
were int eir dormitories and quiet. returned to work later in the day, 20 ing windows. John cEiroy, first ass1stant to
Gov. James A. Rhodes, said the guard
was activ'~ted at the request Of M. C.
Kob!enfz, hie( of t;he divisidn of cor-
rections.
In additi~n to the guard units. ebout
50 Ohio liil!tl way Patrolmen were also
ordered td the medium security
prii;on . 1 ·
Five Ohioans Die in Fiery
Crash With Trailer Truck
WALSENBURG, Colo. (uPI)
Five Ohioans, including a !our-year·
old boy , were killed when a camper
van struck a semi-trailer truck parked
at the side of Interstate 25 about four
mi.Jes north oC \Valsenburg.
all of Sugar Creek, Ohio, and Jennifer
K. Zimmerman, also o! Sugar Creek.
By M1'~ed Bomb
LORAJN7'~cdo,,fM>) -Diiniel -J . • Ronek, ia teal:h~r whO would have been J•m•s G. Greenwood, 53, of Cliff· 24 to.dat,.received a 6-inch-Iong, cylin·
w.ood Beach, N.J ., spent four years drical. paCiage in the mail Monday.
building a boat that would take him The package exploded in his hands,
tO Bermuda. He was back home in kilijng' him.
scene, said atte~ the concert "the band
''The crowd"• (lidnit move out of the
playground after · ttie concert," he
said. "The·poliee began to move them
out and many broke off in the streets •
into groups and started throwing
things."
The disturbance started Monday
morning· whM 200 convict.! staged a
sitdown strike in the institution's gar-
ment shop. Institution Su.P,L E . B.
Haskins said-th.is· initial cfiiturbancc
was brought under control in the early
a fternoon. He later ordered all prison
guards out of four dormitories when
they became targets for cO[fee mugs.
coffee pots and.other objects hurled by
the inmates.
Kobleiitz then asked the governor to
Dead are Dr. Roy A. Klinger. 50, of
Baltic. Ohio; Carol Dapoz. 24 : Chester
A. Dapoz. 27, and Barry R. Dapoz, 4,
Injured in the fiery crash Monda y
and listed in serious condition al
liuerfano Memorial Hospital a t,
Walsenburg are Michael R. Klinger,
17, of Baltic, Ohio, the driver o! the
camper van ; Katherine C. Klinger, 51 :
and Kathy E. Klinger, 16, also of
Baltic.
four days, a victim of seasickness, The mailman who delivered the
Greenwood and bis son James R. package described it as being 2 inches
25, set off last week bound for Ber-in diameter with a metal screw cap at
muda. 700 miles away. The two re--one end.
turned to the Keyport Yacht Club . It was enclosed in heavy, dark tan
after discovering that the father cardboard and weighed 8 ounces to
was unable to overcome bis sea· ..... one pound, according to the mailmiln,
sickness. Jlerbert Harding. e The package had been forwarded
Two policemen won a foot race
at the Hamilton County Court in
Cincinnati recenUy. Patrolmen
D•n Jones and Al Stotts spotted a
familiar face looking in .•• a man
they said was wanted for armed
robbery. They chased him through
the corridors, down stairs and out-
sid e the court house before they
caught him. Arrested was Harold
E. Walker who \Vas 'vanted in con-
nection with a $226 holdup.
from Cokunbus, Harding w.id, and the
Columbus address on the package had
been scratched out.
Harding said Ronek o(ten received
mail forwarded lrom Columbus to the
horn~ .w.hete ,Rop.ek Jiv~ 'vittJ his
mother and an uncle. .
Neither R.onek's mother, Mrs. Susan
Hnnek, oor his uncle, ,Steve Breznen,
were at home \Vhen the blast oc-
curred.
Postal authorities joined police in
the investigltion.
The bands or youths marched onto
Columbus Avenue, Washington, Tre-
mont and Ruggles. Streets, throwing
rocks .and. bottles in :some cases.
"We moved the crowd off in four dif·
ferent directions and halted all traffic
in the area," Devlin .said. "When you
consider ,there were only seven arrests
out of a crowd that size it says
something for the'way police handled
the .situation."
There was •scattered looting, mosUy
of liquor stores.
Cantp Bus Crashes
BANNING (UPI) -Two persons
\Vere .admitted to San Gorgonio Pass
Hospital and 23·others given first aid
MOf!!j•ay after a bus carrying 57 un-
derprivileged youths to a summer
ca~p plunged Off a mountai n highway.
Baja Storm Dissipates
. Pred.icted: Dry~ng . Tre~J.4 :#iglilighted by the Sun
Temperat11ru
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DM~rr OH Mol""s
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PNIMl!llflll Pllefnhl
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lltapld City
RM 91vff ·-Se(r--
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We noticed other
banks simplifying
their service charges,
and we were suddenly
struck with
this great idea:
Our First-Rate Checking Account . .
If your millimum Write all the checks
balance is · you want for
0·$299 ___ $2permonth
$300·$499 $lpermonth
$500·plus Free 1).'j I 'S(
·~:l 11 k
UNtVEISlTY PAIK OP11CI: 18022 CuJwr ·Pftw. ll'l'iD• ,
'
-. ~. -.
•
~Outer ltlm~golia
Russ Missile Bases Set
LONDON (UPI ) -The
Russians have set u p
missile bases in Outer
Mongolia within striking
range of Red Chinese
nuclear ceDters and U. S.
bases ln Korea , Japan and
Okinawa, defense reports
said today. ·
The rocket sites -some
of them on wheels -have
been installed quieUy with
the consent of the pro-
Mo11cow regime ln Outer
Mongolia.
Outer Mongolia signed a
20-year defen se agreement
with the Soviets two years
ago. The pact was aimed
again.it Communist China,
to deter Peking fro1n move5
again st the Mongolians.
Earlier military reports
said the Soviets already had
moved troops and armored
units into the vast Mon&olla
plains. The new reports said
the missiles are poking
skyward in the nation's
remote eastern areas.
They could strike in-
dustrial aod nuclear centers
of Communist China'.s north.
Missiles sited on Soviet ter-
ritory already have Red
Otina's nuclear ~ters in
Sinkiang Province under
co Ver. the reports said.
'fhe U. S. bases wiUtln
range of the Mongolian-sited
rockets Ue about 1,500 ntiles
away. Mo.st of them already
were covered. The accent
appeared clearly on Red
Chi1la In this lai!est muscling
of the Soviet ballistic shield.
Peking has been ch2.rqing
for a year that the Russians
were reinforcing t h e i r
borders with Communi1t
China.
The new reports said °"
missile bases have been
placed in the area Of.
Choibalsan. an isqlated•and
sparsely inhabited territory.
Frencfl,Politics Reach High :
Feve '\Pitch in Paris Meet
PARIS (API -Political
activity reached a fever
pitch in PW today as the
time for an expected
Cabinet shuffle approaehed.
Premier Georges Porn·
pidou, who may or m~y not
form the new government,·
confened with Fore i g n
Minister Michel Debre, and
with Culture Minister Andre
Mairaux. Pompidou then
had· . an appointmeQt with
President C h ~ r 1 e s de
Gaulle.
Pompidou met w i t h
Gaullist deputies in the Na·
tiona1 Assembly.
None of these comings
and goings clarified, for tht
Moscow to New York
Flights Satrt Monday
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
American travelers used to
t:he coffee, tea or milk
routine and in·flight movies
won't have that pampered
f~ling when they fl y the
new Soviet-operated a i r
serYice between New York
and M'oscow.
Girl v.natchers will notice a
slight tendency to
plumpness and plainness in
the stewaniesses. too.
But aside from small
details like those. there pro·
bably will be little distinc·
lion between flyi ng the
Soviet Airline AeroOot and
the American half of the
s e r v i c e , which Pan
. <\merican wilJ provide on
ZGe·,as:;enger Boein,I!' 707s .
Service begins July 15
"i th Aeroflot using the 186·
pzssenge r nyushin 62.
E-ach line ·will make one
stop on the 4,90G-mile route.
Aercflot in Montreal and
Pan .<\merican jn
Copenha.gen. w i th no
passenger pickups at either
city. There will be two
flights a week each way
during the summer. and nne
a V.'eek in winter. Pam Am
said its flight to Moscow will
take -about 10 hours and 35
m inutes.
The State Department an ·
ncunced ~1ond<ay that final
agreement had been reach·
ed on the service. which the
Soviets first agreed to in
1961. but which got bogged
down in cold war ill feelings
Md American red tape.
First class fare on tlle
service will be Sl.109. round
trip. 'I1he tourist price will
be $815. and special group.~
can ge t.a rate as low as $357
per person.
AeroOot. operated by the
Soviet government. is the
biggest airline in the world.
Last year it carried more
l!ha n 43 million passengers
over 300,000 miles of rootes
-mostly inside Russia .
JuEt how good it is £r()m a
safety standpoint still is not
known . The Russians do not
publistl accident statistic!!.
Comm unists
Try First
Transplant
BRATISLAVA .
Cz.echoslovalda (AP) -11ie
first human heart transplant
operation In a Ccmmunist
country was under way to-
day Jn the cardioturgicaJ
clinlc ol. the hospital in Brat-
11lava. the news agency
OTK reported.
The operation waa being
performed on a woman
under SO years d. age, Whfl
was chosen by Or. Vladimir
Havair. and the donor was a
man under' tO, _wtio suffered
a serious head injury in .a
f&B frc>m a window. CTK
a aid.
Tho p1Uent hid lleen
waiUnc for the new heart tar 1everll weekl, the acen·
cy added.
The names of the persons
involved wert n o t lm·
mediately known,
There havt been 24 olhtr
heart tcanrplant operations
performed in tbt world and
f~• on 1till alive. ~
But t.he Ilyushin 62 had to
meet U.S. sa.fety standards,
plus noise rules. before it
could be accepted for use on
the. air route.
Aeroflot jg short on frills.
There...are no in·fl ig ht
movies. Caviar and vodka
are menu staples. and the
Soviets p r e f e r their
stewardesses more on the
plump side.
But the Ilyushin 62 looks
as sleek and efficient as any
:\merican airliner. It flies
500 miles an hour. and
sports the high, T -shaped
tail favored by many Amerl·
can jetliners .
Ex tradition
Appeal . Date
Set July 29
LONDON (AP) -James
Em-I Ray's appeal against
extradition to the United
States will open in the
British High Court July 29,
his British lawyer said to·
day. The hearing i!I ex·
pected to last at least two
days. ,
Ray. charged w 1 I h
assassinating Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr .. made a
one-minute appeptnce in
Bo \V Street Magistrate's
Court today on tht two
charges on which he \vas ar·
rested June 8 at London
airport. using a forged
passport and carrying an
unlicensed gun.
Chief Metropolitan
l\1 agistrate F'rank Milton
Mder~d him held i n
\Vands•.vorth Prison f or
::i:nother seven days on the
twn charges. Ray said
nothing.
Milton. who last Tuesday
ruled in fa vor of the U.S.
government's e.."tradit.ion
petition. asked defense at·
torney Michael Eu g ell e
when the appeal would &e
heard.
Eugene replied that the
High Court had agreed to
start the appea.! hearing Ju·
ly 29 ~!though the appeal
itself has not been filed
formally.
Ray's lawyers are prepar·
ing an appeal contending
that King's assassination
was a political crime. an of·
fense that ii. n o t ex-·
traditable under British J;,w.
Rural, Cit )'
Poor Not ed
BERKELEY T b e
Univeraity of California's
agricultural expertS a r e
planning programs to aid
the rur.tl Mid urban poor.
James B: Kmdri~k, UC vice
presidf:nt....,ncu.Jtural ICifll·
ces, announced today.
U C ' a Agricull\ral Ex·
tension is pilnning ex·
pansion d.. its home advilor
prozr.am to work wi1h In·
dian1 .a.nd. miJIWlt farm
groups throufhout the it.ate,
and Ibo wldl Ille poor In Ito
cities. if funds ve made
av&lllbl1.
preRnt, how De Gaulle will
line up tus new C3binet in
Ule wakie of tile Gaulliit !IUC·
cess In the legis'l.ativ-e elec·
lions last month. '
There were persistent
discussion., in the preu; o.nd
on the radio -POSSibly in-
spired from high leveU! -
that Pompidou may step out
and Maurice Couve de
MufviUe may fill his post
Couve de Murville. who
served as foreign n I 1ister
for 10 years, has been
finance minister sintt May
31 when the Cabinet was
shaken up during t h e
student-striker crisis.
Today's high-level con·
sultations come on the e v e
of the regular w e e k I y
Cabinet meeting, which pro·
bably will be the last with au the same face! around
th~ table a"t the Elysee
Palace.
The National Assembly
meets for the first time on
Thursday. De Gaulle has in·
d.icated he will have his new
Cabinet ready to announce
when the assembly bas its
officers and committees in·
stalled. Th.is should come
before the end of the week.
Thus by Sunday, Ba!!tille
Dc:iy, it should be publicly
known whether Pompidou
will ride with De Gaulle
down the A venue d e s
Champs Elysee -as he has
for the past six year! -or
whether there will be a new
man beside him in the
presidential limousine.
31 Killed
In Mideas t
Gun Battle
CAIRO CAPl c--The Egyp-
tian government reported
lodQy ltlat Israeli artillery
and tank fire killed 31
civilians and wounded 58
during Monday's gun duel
across the Suez Canal.
A military communique
said several hou1es in ttie
hzavily pouplated district ci
Etarbeen. Jn the city of Suez
were demotiEhed when the
Israelis laid down lhree
separate barrages lastin~
more than two hours. An
Egy,ptian soldier also was
reported wounded.
Israel said the batUe
started when the Egyptians
raked Israeli positiom nortb
of Port Taul'iq with artillery
and small arms fire. The
fighting spread along a six·
mile frnnt. the Israeli .army
reported, until a cease.fire
was arranged.
Israel also reported
Jru'danian gunner1 ·fll'ed to-
day on an Israeli patrol that
wa1 diggin& up two .an·
tivehicle mines apparently
laid by Ar'ab saboteurs near
the Jordan River .
The army sald the Israefu
fired back and thett were
no casualties.
The clash alnn& the canal
was the firsi since June 23
and came as Emtian
President Gamal ,. b d e 1
Nasser was in MMCQW con·
ferring with top SoViet ol·
fid ab.
Four Killed
I In S. Korea .,
SEOUL !UPI) South
Korean 1oldim killed four
Nortb Korean tnliltrator1 to·
day tn two bcief firefight&
cU.maxinJ an all-night
manhunt for t ti e Com·
munlsts. military 1pc>kes·
men .said .
Two tnfiltrMM"s were kill·
ed in each of tht clashes, ,Z
mlles north of Seoul. No
South K o r e • n casualties
...,. "'por\jlll.
Recently th e Ru ssi an s
copleted a rail liite runnlni
all t;;1e way fr0tn Moscow to
con1pleted a rail Un.e running
another rail link with Ulan
Biitor, both by p a·s s Ing
Chinese territory.
Earlier estlmites b y
defense txperls s a I d
Rus:lans had 'arrayed .about
4.S· divisions be:wecn the
Urals and the Chinese Iron·
tier. It fitted the bitterness
of the ll'OY"hlg feud between
the two giant Red nations.
In November Russ i an
troops showed up in Ulin
Bator,. 0 u t.e r Mongolia's
capi\al. to take part • in
re v·o I u ti on anniversary
celebrations . At that time
Soviet antiaircraft rockets
were reported belnt moved in. .
This followed. the. signing
in February, 1966, of .a
"treaty of friend 1 hip ,
cooj>etati<1n .and m u t u a. I
assistance" v.•Hh . evident
proviJions of military aid in
the event of Bn &rmed clash
with Red China.
There have been un·
confinned reports that six
Soviet . divisions .are· sta·
tioned on Moogolian toil.
One was said to ~ an
armored diviaion. T h e
Russians were also said to
have sent in ildvisers to
train a~ r eor gan iz e
Mongoli~ forces .
Van Thieu
Will Meet
. With LBJ
SAIGON (UPI) -Presi·
dent Johnson and South
Vietnamese President
Nguyen Van""Thieu will meet
for about two days in
Honolulu "around July 20:·
Thi"eu's office announced to-
day.
Thieu .said Monday he wag
seeking an ''ur gent''
meeting with Johnson to
discuss peace moves .and
military strate&y in the
Vietnam Wai.
Thieu's off i c e said
Johnson "welcomed:' the
meeting proposal.
The South Vietnamese
leader· had planned a two·
week U. S. visit later this
month but 1aid the danger
of' threatened new <Mn·
multist attacks across the
country made the two-week
trip inadvisable. Thus. he
said. he suggested the
Pacific Ocean meeting.
To day's announcement
said. "The date of the
meeting has been agreed to
be around July 20, 1968. and
the duration of the metting
"'ill be aOOut two days."
South Vietnamese concern
a boot U. S. peace moves
'4'as expected to be 1 major
topic of the two-nation sum-
mit.
Thieu's fellow SouUI Viel·
name;,;e leaders have not
been quiet in their skep-
ticism and suspicion over
the American·North Viet·
namese talks in Paris.
negotiation!! desirned to cool
down the war enough to
pertnit a full dress peace
conference.
Just moments before the
HonoluJu meet in Jl llll·
nouncement came f r o m
Thieu's office, South Viet·
nam·s Senate today, called
for an all-out continuation of
the war against ttie Com·
munists. The Senators said
the goal must be complete
victory.
10 Killed
In Arabian
Air Crash • ••
BEIRUT (UPll -A Saudi ~
.\rabian Airllne1. Convalr s
en route to an American oU ;
camp crashed Morniay night ,
in tn Arabian desert. killing -
all but Me ol ttie l l per!IORS f
aboard, airline off i c i a Is +!
reported today. "
The airline said the twin-J
eqg:ine plane crashed eight u
miles 1outhwest of Dharan r
on the east coast of the Ara· l
bian Pt ninsula. S
Seven passengers and all ·l
three crew.members were f.
killed . One pas!le.ng@r IW'· 6
vived. a spokesman fer the
a.irline Sa.id.
'!;he aircraft WU flyfJI&
from Bahraln Isl.tod fJI th<
Persian GuU to the Dhar-'l
headquarters of the
Arabian·American oil Com·
pany (ARAMCO ), t be
apokesman aald.
The.re wm no hnmed.l1t1
tnJ!C'atlon whit caused the
era.sh or who wu aboard.
1~:~1 . ./'Jf'/ 9, 19,;a , DAILY •llM f
. '
' • • '·
•
,.
•
' .
I ' .....
'
r :i ' ' '.,
J
,
l
---. .
•
..
r •
• l •
~,!.~v"*-or . .
l Crime,.
l . Sentence
SAN FRANCISCO (vPI)
- A Jlllll who drl'vta a ear
wi>il• drunk llllf wilhoul a
drlven He.,.. · 111~ be
sentenced fer ·e1111or viola-
tion,. but not beth, ~I
~. lo Ille CaJJlonda · Stlpreme ·Court. .
Tho ........... -
down M...., In Ibo -el David 0. ffa11&, o I
Seer~ -, ••• -1o11c111· -,_, aullll' "' ...... ., *1vlll&
w.Htl a •Pl •it llcanM and drl,.,., .... .....
Tbe-.111 ...... ,lbll u.,,.. lie ......... 5
... ...
tJiat drl,,.. .. -·••a
•inllt <tlmlnol oet -·~-· ... ._ .......
---·----. ' -
TutldtJ', July 9, 1968
'
.. I~ .-Your ,lr~h.J ·of.-
0,•9'1•
Couli,IJ·
.M ... lcf
The -
co1o'rfu1
• ' • I • ' Sound of
RADIO ,
KOCM
103:1 FM
.. -
'. , ' arn1n ' SAN FRANC~CO (UPI) California's laws on D)3ri· juana. He was convicted last! W · • · $ Marijuana Salesman A"ppeals Judge's Ruling · ~
•· . , .. -Marijµanra s_a le s ma a juana .area coniti:tutional, December. ~ '. "" SUperior Court J u d g e
, , ·
1
, • .. • "Mtlkon l~elkonJan was free .. · Melkonian, 34, MUI Valley, Joseph Karesh a 11 0 wed'.
Kem County July %1,.lW, It recenu~. in Borre Io , on bail today pending appeal ' "flS sentenced Monday to Melkanian to. post bond
n&lattred 7.1 and killed 13 Sprincs. 1ol. hJ.s .conviction and a five years to life lm· rather than await the out•' persons. ' • The Bonea:o quake April I , . .. · . A rnb:m a8ershock'R, Aue. .wu ctn wed io .,wn san j u d. &.•..;-,' r u I i n g t h ,a t; pr1S0n11Je1't for sale of man· come of his ,appe al in prisQn.~
22, J9:52, was center«l in Die&o <:ou.oty a.n4 wat fill
Babnfleld' ..._ k,illed. two , u ·far away u Laa Veaaa,
penOM .iWiou&h jt caufod •Nev., and Phoenix, Ar.ii. nee~ damap .~• The f.hoeloi dl~pla<ed long
the city: , •· · ... · ~ qu.ieJCW ;.faulte in , tbr-.:
Richlet Ulil Uif'~nl counl;e< "llJ!d bilndreda or
series of •m.tll Sbocks is'not miles.fro}U ,itl epicenter. unus~ ~~ So 'u th e-r;n "Expectations of warnr
Califorl'i'.a:: ' · · in&• are very nmote" for a "W' ~.~such shocks big · q~. Richter said,
befare.aJC! ·We still are ,Sue Referrlni to the Botrec•
for. a tar'e quake. As 1 qUake, . be aaid ' 't ,h •
while' th.ls would mea~ one, forelhock .wu about two
wtlh' a mo&niiu<I• or & ·Md niimit.t1 llofore, !bat
wt had one OC that size ·all." · •
. Council Lifts. Limits
~ c On PQlice Gun Use
' Portrait
Freedom party, who conJ
tended the Jphn Birch Socie·'
ty: 1!brou1ht out" tbe larce
crowd.
Sent to Jail
of a ;happy saver.
n
CITY COtJNCILM.\N WILUAM I. ST. CLAIR
810 St. Cfalt wa~ c,J.ectta ·to the Ci'ty Council of Costa Mtaa Jn April '68. A
product Of tllt·Cotta Mw/Ntwport Beach :tehool lystem, 'Bill'& ca.~er has raftaed trom blrbfrlnl tO sales and manatcment v.:ork, constrUction cnlitteer•
ins an4 rtal t stU. Hl\Utmtnts. A.Gtivc in Boy Scoutina, A&ttri and -tht
Atriericua Lqlon, :lilt is also Orante County :B!Ood c;hairrnan !or th•
Aniettc:aa Jtect'Crws, a dirtetor Qf Costa Mesa Tomorrow, Jnc. and a member
ontit....,fkitions Commitlte or the' Costa Mta Chamber' of Commerce.
BUI MYt; •>(1.;,, who Juts 10111 ~ l'OlrttrMd about tlit i uture .,. thdl of
Cott• Nes., ,,.)wlf 11nd comfnt ttnfroliONs .•. /'lit Atlptdsecu,.. my flllllf'tl by
JMt1111 •"'"''Ill Wilshire Fttkrol Stt'llints, wMre tltey ·work/or 1M by ftV,..
Int tltt lt(llw11 IN""d rolt fXWihle."
Futta ttett¥H by th• 10th of the month t•m from th• lit ... •fttr the 10th ftOtn the dltt of reui pt.
5% '*"'* 5V. % when c&rnpoonded d1My 1nd h•ld for 1 y,t1r.
Sntnca tneurttl to $15,000 by tht F•dtr•I Slvinp an!f loin rnsut•l'ICI Corpor•· tloft.' • • .
~ lim .,, 1xtr1 tA % °" 1 36·month C•rtHicete Account 11'1 muttlples of •1.000.
1833 N•wPort 80ullftrd n11r H1rbor • Coltl Mui, -Cllltotnl1 •642·4111
' .
• I . NIGHT •nd DAY SERVICE·
' . ' ; , • • f ! II '• ' tiJO A:M. TO f:ao P-IA--$ATURDA0Y 10 AM. TO 6 P.A!.
FULL 4·PLY
NYLON CORD ,
Safety·J~
• Duragen• rubber delivers
long, troublefree mileage
• 4-ply nylon cord runs cool,
protects against blowouts
• Curv-control tread design
provides safe traction
• No trade-in required, all
tires mounted free
Plus S2.l9, S2.21
F•deral E•ci1e Ti x•
Size~ 7.75Xl4, 7.7S~l S
tubeless bl1ekwa11s for
Ford, Chevy, Plymoutti,
R,mbler, Must1n1.
Plus S2.3S, S2.36
Feder'I Excise Tax•
Sizes 8.2Sxl4, 8.15xt5
t"beless blackwall s lor e .. +ck,
Olds, Pontiac. Chrysler.
Oodae. Mercury, Plymo.,th.
Use General's AUTO-CHARGE PLAN
No inoney down, easy monthly payments
' · Add $} f~r whit1w1lls.
Introductory Oller!
JATO
SiJPER-100
GOLF BALLS
9 New Duralon· "cutless" cover . l assures long, cufofree life ONLY
.: ... N.!w energi_zec:l '"P8" center 685 for great d151:1nce · ·-
• Urtr1 hig~ tension windin& Ptl'
· {L..lmlt ori1 001. ,.,. Customer) dor.
All Weaiher
SPORTS JACKET
s~.ci•I $199 pric•I
• Perfect jacket for
sports !ans, sbrdtl'lts.
hunters. outdocirsmen
• Rainproof, 'llilldprool
•inyl
a 1~ ~low wr.ty eelel'
COAST GENERAL
I
AMERICAN FLAG 'SET
Cool flow, spring vented
CAR CUSHION
•Provide s ai{ventilation,
comfortable support ' • Pa tented saaproof,
sn11Proof sprint
innerfiller
• Lone ~arine fiber,
choice-of popul1r colors
ONLY s12s
AVERY GENERAL
TIRE SERVICE
16941 BEACH BLVD.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
From
Fashion
Island
Newport
~each
,.
H°"'• OHie•: l..M An••lh I
COSTA MESA
540°5710 . i' Piion• 847°5850 l'-------------'---------'11• ·-· ="' 646-5033
'--~--~~~~~~~~""l"'~~~~...,...t ,,
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I
Tutsd.ty, July J , 196& D.IJL Y PILOT 7
' RecoFd
-•rc•f '°Cf.'J Pact •
·fl'egents to Stud)·
r
For the
•
' . .
Med School Plan • ----:"·-·-· ---...... _ -
' ..
' Cairo •, Uni ted Ar(b
.~ ..
A Hdpn>cll t.Jchln& 1nd
pi~c&feac t eemen.t
between UCI-Califoroia 'Col·
l•&e of Medicine and Oran1e
~ Medical Cellttt will
Republic, to analyze cosmic
ray eQUssion data from the
second ,pyra·mid of
Chephren. The data will
show U there , are un·
discovered voida: ~to be tun-
~' ' '
... be J)reaented to UC regents
S . -F d--~-. ttiey meet ThlD'sd&y tate un 8· -and Friday In Berkeley.
• • . ; The Medical Center ts
S • , . h £ -reJS!aci.na: Los Angel ea Coun-OUg t or· ty . G<Mral Hospital .. Ille
· .. · pnmary clinkal b"auung
N S h 1 ground for the medical ew c 00 schoOI. The county ;.. to
· · · benefit by hlvlne medical e ·A p t"S T R A N O _· · . lac.ult)'. care for patients and
Ca .. b" Uni!'.. ·~--i b"llll Interns. ?1 lnO 1~ .;)1;111,JU • In another action, tne
Distrlct trua:tees Moo.day regents Will consider ·pro-·
n~~t a·a:reed lo apply for posed · faculty increues of
_ •tt · funds to purchl!lstr S400 · ti!) '9,700 per nine
·elein.ent.ery IChool "sit.es in :.months for beginning assis .. . . .· tent profeg.sora on up to
ne~ into-. , ' .
Regenia .abO willbe ,asked .
to approve, tbe s.l.te. foe a bi."oruedical library_at Irvine
to be comj)leted in 1m. and
to eatabUsh a California Col·
~e of Medicine Fund with
an original corpus · o f
$600,000 from unused en·
dowments.
Cap9 Board
Picks Chief Lacuna Nillld .and .MisSlon s~.ooo increue, $22,800 per
Viejo. nihe mooths for full pro-
Thomaa J. Winget, Sail f~sS«s at the t(!p of the ~y CAPISTRANO -Thomas ~uan CapistraOo bankef,· .1~e. Winget, Sa ·n J 1.1 an
wu reelected to Mn• •.. ln a more bizarre matter, Capistrano Banker Monday
L • rtgents wW be asked to ap-was eieCted pteSide"nt of the
'
anotner year as board pres1· ~ove a computer cootracl Dapistrano Unified ·School
""""111t911 •••• dent. th t · sha o · lty" District Board of 'l'ftlltees_, -..:
•::111 •.m. """"'*".,.· •r•$11 II••· ts" The two new schools are . WJ in ms n1verl ' Wing~t is senior vice presi· Marriane
Liceases
LAS Vl!GAI. Nev., -M1rrl•11
lice-IJ•Ulld here lflt.lllde: DEMl!ltS-ICHAl!l'ER -June n ,
Albert Rlll'MO Demits, .60, 1nd Vtr1 E lllnor Schiefer. .Q. botll flt
WHlmlN.lef". CLEVELAND<OLLIER -JUM !J,
M•,.,,. Alan Clevei.l'ld, 11. tll "'un-·tlntton l11d'I, Ind l1rblrt L.
CoUltr. lt. of Cool• Mtil.
GATES·DEHNERT -JUfle 23, J1mH
C. Giles, 71, 1nd Dorothy J~n
Dthfllrt, 37, botll of H!H'llf!>DIOll
801c~.
GR!EN~Oll:OON -Jlolnt 2~. Thomls
H. Grotn, .C, <If Wetlmlml•'· ""' l(olel1 V. GordOn, 31, of S.nl1 Ant.
11AMS-llAMS -JUnt U, Ohll<1 II
tltms, ~7, of PomGM, r1m1rrl<d
J'•~ M. ll1m1 • ..0, of Hunllnoron
Mims Avt.
l :ll P.m., •escut, 111 c111tttrnl• A..... expected to be needed by dent of the Orange Cou nty
S:olO p . ..,., lr1sll llri!, .m Let1!'10• 1970 E h · '·--d B k
10:00 P,m .• ur lfre, LYnn '"" ~tire'! . ac 111 P.141Un::: to ac~ Co AID an .
11:11 P.m .• tr1:11111re, asn °'rM" Dr1v~ commodate 700 student& .in ·unty Also renam~ to~ board l ::Y 1.m. TW$d8J, 5tructu111 11 .. , 1111 ·r
Sh"ett '"" °'-crades k I n d e r c a r t e n .' for one-year terms were San
wll1n11.,., throufl fifth. ~ ' · ClerMntie veterinarian Dr.
"'""' •. m. Mende,. ,,.111 ""'· ~"' Sets R d J '"" Edw1rdt ,,,. n.e Laguna Niguel Kbool ' . ecor Robert Beasley:, vice pre1111· ''~.,1,!:j;;.·• t r•ss tire. M••'*1• 1M will be located near the 1 dent and San Clemente
''~. P.m. 11re 1nvesli1111o11, 11212 c1111r South Orange County Civic ? SANTA ANA _ Orange housewife Mrs Joann Doud·
u:3'J i .m. ~-=~~ ,::-,1,rm, °''"'' = V~ ~out.ton -an: ¢ounty AlD·Unlted Givers nasti!:r~nd.s will ~ ~pplied A~tnut •"' 11111 1fr'111 ey •~way, an ~ISOCiation hu made a
1:J111.m., ..,.,.,,,..., ,1r1, :J0.37 Flllmon the M?s&loo,.Viejo s~l will eco"rd high p'ayn\ent of for purchaae ·of elenientary
,,:iv• .•. m .. ••sollnt W••hdnwn, mi be built j~ south of t.he l,0'72,?l! to local and na-school sites in Mission V.iejo
sr1s101 s1. Mission Viejo golf course. 1 h aittl d ll .and Laruna Niguel. r:: ";~· .. '';.,'!'-~1~ir~5tt~r"~:!s..11 New ho us l n i develop-.;:des~ . an we are Mission VJejo school will
Dri.,., menl.!· south or tbe goll l T•-· fun•-pai·d .by AID be built just ~outh of the golf 2:33 t .m., 1t1Mme11t fire, :J002 l'lllmer• U11:11C UA t
A.ve. course are in the Capistrano epresent -n~lbutions by course, while the· aguna I:~ p.m., 1r1$h 11re, lot7 B•k•• st. ...., " Niguel School will be near
DEATH "'OTICES n:u P.m., 111st. 11trm, Gr•u Lint sc~~l ~id. San Joaq~in r.dividual ernployes and .... _new South Orange Coun-
1• '"" 8•kerN~::!, •uclt ICuu..,l system already ha• ts from lJlaJ)Y companies 1,1n:::
HEMMER s:n 1.m ......... ~ •. 11N1 n .... 112 w. several schools in the Orange Co1.1ntY1trom May ty Civic Center.
"1 H~m1r. 'lllf eon11n1n1,1 Ave.. t:~oe.~~~1~~~'rvr1· fl,.., 120 247'1 st. northemCaMlssion Viejo area. J, 1967 to April of this year.;:::::::::::::::::::::::::====::::<,!
!each.
ce:s11 Mt$•. D•te of 1tt1th. Ju" 1. The · ·pistrano District I With this pay m en t ,
surv1vec1 ""'w111, v1r11n1•1 ..,,,, "11'" pf'l··t 11 ,,. ""t"torll exp~-to borrow ·an Dr eou~· AID h BRIGHT Gene; C11uollter, 1(11 Fr1n<e1. 111 of 1.fJ .. O """~ angfl "':! 8S COJ-
tllt Plllm., ""°'her, Mr1. M1r11 H..,.. estimated $900,000 from the ~ t d nd di d fht DAILY PILOT m•k•t its
""· v111,,· ,1,ter1, M... L11111n r-·r1 ''' ·-·-MMMI''""' ec e a sper:se over I h . h ' ----ta•· f 't h d •~ 000 ll ntw5 cowtr•o• ;, t, fit I " Hltclleedl. S•n M1rc111, '"" Mn. L.111., Fr'd.111 for ~·-of flttll I "" Dr st e pure ase an ,....,,., to . we are agen-
•
• ~--.
.. ~J --·-. ..... . .... .r -
•'I "'
•
Quality knows no stalOQ.
The whiskey that pours yoo a bett.rdrinl:: inJanuary,pam')'Oll ~ !xm:r drink in June.
It'• called Sc.gram'• 7 Crown, The.Sun•One.
M•• l tnl'lff", Visit . Sf!rYkt1, Th11rsd1J, :~~.i'~:l 3':t '111st ~o:=-:; improvement,. eniizleerini eS during its 13 years Of bri9lif. k11d your homtfOwl ·51• s 1 ''
lO:lO '·"'·• Wetlm!nllt<" Memorl1I 1"1r-•I lnltresttd ~-..,,, ctll Mt. c•~• and -·~-~. fe .. , I-.. 1diti•11 <il1ily llMil •njoy tli. • Chll>91, wflll Rtw. Gr•h•m Smllll <If· 1tidi 11 ... DAILY PILOT. uo.., •Mill\C\;\ ~ration. ·. ntwt. ../I $'!. 1/Z P'lat
l!cl•llnt. "'1111 mllll1rv "°"""'· Inter· ---~~-------------------+"-----------,~=======::::==::==-~----------------------~---------~----,.,fnt, Westminster Memorl•I ~1rt. --·
Dl•ttff!d bv We1tmlnll'er Mtm0rl1I
ll1rll: Morlul N .
HUGHES
~~w1rll 51•-rl Hu.hf•. ll7fl N. Coa5I
~lfhWIJ. no. 1. L1tun1 l eec.11. D•I• °' M•lh, July 1. Survived' I»' w!~. GL#ICl'fs,
"' ""' h!'inWI .-.u11Mtl'. Mrt. Allele 8owm111, DI,,. Poltn: bralh1r, Even V.
"'llthH, Ntw Jtfll'f, Ind l'Wll trll'ld·
~•uoht1r1. 5lrvlee1, Wedlle.M11y, n
l .m .. Ill IM ChAHI " P1cllfc Vltw. 1~1erme11I, Pi<lflc View MerMrl1I
l'Ark. Directed tov P1c!llc View
Morlul N. GmBS
ChArles H. Gibbs. 316 E. C/le1tnuf SI.,
S11nt1 Ant. Survived' I»' 5(11>, Cl11rlf>1 £.
Gibl!s; d•llthter. Mra. Dorl1 Gllll111
1l1!1r, Mr1. Madtllnl lla:it: Ind llVll ~rtndchlk'l"". servlct$, WtdMM1v.
1G:)O 1.m., Petk F1ml1J Ctlonll l
Funer11 HOl'l'e.
FONTAINB
Leslie Fonl1ln1. lflll1 Orrtv Pleet,
G1ru.e11 Grovt.· SUrvlvlll •tw wllt , !:tit
A. FonltlM; C1111•hter. M". Corinne Lunzt ri 1nd two1•r1 nllc h llllrt11.
Memor"l•I n rvlc"' Thu""''' • 1.m.,
11 tlle F11Jtll Comm11nl!V Unllrd Church
of C~fl1I, G1r-dtn G-. F1ml1J , ..
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mt11!, Good Sh•P~t•d Cem•leN.
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110 lrotllw1v. Colla MHI. CHURCH
Churtll. 1n11n1 d11111hftl' of Mr. t nd
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PHk F•ml!y C11!0ftlal l'U!Wf"l l HCll!'"· BELL
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sl1t1rs. Ltflle l(lrbv 1M l!vl !11:111ts. StrYICtl will bt held !n Miiton. Wnt
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BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del Mar OR 3-945fl
Coata Meaa Ml 1-uu·
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
itO Broadway, Costa Mell u a.34IS
fACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK Ceme~?:t: Motialry
350I Pacific ~~ .. Drive
Newport Bodi, Calll•-
MUlll
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL Jl'UN)l:llAL
ROME
!IOl llolll Ave.
Wetlm-IP-ml
\1 .E
lilt ~ ettli ~ .
-
~ ~ ;.
0 Interest from .the !st of l!IY month
on funds received by the I 0th.
f} Interest from date of receipt afier .
the 10th.
@) Interest to date of withdrawal on
funds left 3 months or longer if
account remains open until quar.
ter's end.
:,~ y/ If 1(£t:°,
. T'S TIME TO CHANGE
Trans! er your account TOMF-.-
Easy to do ... just call or· come in.
WHERE you save DOES make a difference.
ASSETS OVER
MU,000,000.00
MUTUAL SAVINGS .... '-•A• lll••I ATI ••
CORONA DEL IMAR
SMITH'S ltlORnJARY m Mala SL
Hanllo(IM -L&._.., W&STCLIFF MORTUAllY
1%1 &. 17111 St., Cotta Meta
11111#
.,
Wl!:rrMINll'D MEMO'RIAL PAU
Mortuary • Cemetery
C9'1pel1
t•t fl~•~•. Wettmleller
A1·172' • 111-1411
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2867 Eut Coast Highway • T~ 675-.SOlO '
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Tuttd11. Ju~ 9, 1968
Growth of SouthlancJ Demand·s More Airports·
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URIAH GROWTH LOOKED LIKE THIS BACK IN 1950 •••
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REGIONAL NEEDS -Four-county area will need at lea6t five oper-
ating "regional" airports study says. Larger sites on map indicate
Los Angeles Internationa'I and 11.ew 5ite in Pal mdaie area. Smaller
circles are Burbank, undesignatet;i aite in Riverside-San Bernardino
county area and one somewhere 1n Orange County.
World of Future Brings
4 New Kinds of Airports
In the futur~llc '\o\-Wld ol Pereira A:
Associa~. new W.ms ho.ve been coin·
ed to describe new conditions.
There will be, !or example, new
kinds of airporU. they say.
Pereira's p1armer5 have categorized
tomorrow's airports into four groups.
They are:
-JuternaUonal airports. designed
for global traveler' flying supersonic
transports and other exotic craft.
Tbey'll be bigger and different in
purpoSe than today'r;, "international''
airports.
-Re&:ional airport.I, serving a
radius of about 2.500 mlles with planes
as big as the "air buses'' that dis·gorge
500 passengers at a time.
-l\fetroporls, for a limited range of
about 400 miles. using airplanes tht.t
take off and land very quickly, called
STOL for short takeoff and landing
craft.
-Geaeral al'iadoa fa c J 11 t I e s.
divided into business airports for
small company.type planes. a n d
<:l:irpark.s for private pilots out for a
good time in the air.
In calling for new kinds of airports.
Ute planners are asking tor a segrega·
tion of planes .according to their needs.
It makes no sense, they say. for a
small Piper Cub to be competing tor
air 1pace at an airport "-'here a huge
jet is warming up for a tran.scon·
tinental flight.
be about ten minute!. And they should
serve &reas no farther than some 400
miles away. For Orange County
Airport. that would mean a con·
tinuation of its current flight 5ervices
-with some important differences.
ONE ATOP UNION STATION~
The planners say metroport airer.aft
should take off and land in a small
amount of space. There is talk, for ex·
ample. of building a metroporl atop
Union Railroad Station in Los Angeles.
Many of the airplanes suit.able for a
metroport are still on tile drawing
boards. But a few craft ah'eady are in
service, such as Twin Otter Beaver
prop planes already fl ying commuter
service from Orange County to Los
Angeles International.
At any rate. Orange Co u n t y
Airport's role in the future probably
would fall somewhere between a
regional airport and a metroport -.;,
"super metroport." one technician
termed it.
The next step up is regional
airports. with planes of a range
stretching to New York or ~1exico Ci·
ty.
. One is needed for Orange County.
and the planners put forth five sites .
Finally. tile giant of them all Is
ll sted, .as an international airport. big -
ger .t.11d more complex than an:v faclli·
ty ~·et built.
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SPREAD LIKE THIS IY 1968, GETTING READY FOl ••• 1993, WHEN GIAN:T AIRPORT IS NEEDED WHERE SHOWN
50 Million Air Passengers by 1985
Five men sitting in a Santa Ana
board ·room thi& morning got a con·
siderable shock when a long .awaited
report Y/la.S dumped in their laps citing
thE predicted growb in Orange C:Ouny
air passengers.
The quintet, forming the county's
Board of Supervisors, now must try to
digest the significance of ttie fact that
air passenger demand will increase
from 780,000 this year up to 50 million
by 1985, according to the report.
Super
How c;in 50 million ~le take com·
mercial air flight.a in .and out of the
county by 1985? What fa<:ilitiea would
be needed, where would they 10 and
how would they be paid for?
Just as impressive is the conclusion
of the Pereira 'e nd Associates report
for the Los Angeles region as .a whole,
commercial air passengers by 1985
will total a quartet' of a billion peope
annualy.
Air cargo for Orange County can be
expected to grow from its current
almost insignificant tonnage to 177,<XXI
tons -in 1985. •
To prO'\lide the bodies for Utis
Onvellian .activity, Or;mge County'a
population is expected to triple in the
next 25 years from its present level of
1.3 million to 3.9 miltion.
By 1933, the county will be the tenth
largest population center in the United
Super Cost
Pendleton Eyed for International Ai,.port
The intern-ational airport of tomor·
row will be bicger than an~thing yet
built, almost twice the size of Los
Angeles International.
It will be super costly, for airplanes
su~h as the supersbnic transport
(SST) and' other craft bound for world
destinations.
~..-a' good pl.ace for suCh a grand·
daddy airpOrt in Southei4t California is
at Camp Pendleton.
That is the f<lrec.ast and conclusion
of the Pereira Associates report on
aviation needs for Orange County.
Acreage at Uie 'military ' base is
5ingled out as the "single optimum
choice."
BEYOND TODAY'S CONCEPTS
The forecasters point out that si~ •
selection for the international airport
Of tomorrow carries .a significance
which extends far beyond the county's
borders.
Camp Pendleton offers the ad·
vantage of drawing air customers
from both Los Angeles and San Diego.
Planners say the internationgl facili·
ty of tomorrow should be within
"reasonable driving time" of the ma·
jority of Southern California residents.
They peg this driving time at about
80 minutes, noting that "direct
freeway access can be developed as
well as future rapid transit links to all
major urban hubs."
Ln the Pereira aviation plan, such an
international airport would be limited
to planes capable of worldwide
service.
The traveler off to Paris or Tahiti
\\'OUld depart from Pendleton. The
man bound for New York would leave
from smaller airports.
OTHERS CONSIDERED IN DESERT
Other sites considered for the giant
field include land in the Ant.elope
Valley north of Los Angeles. and in the
desert to the east.
But they are outside the path of
greatest urban clusters.
The forecasters point out that the
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• INTERNATIONAL
AIR PORT 4.eoo acres
•REGIONAL
AIR POAT
1 .. 800 acres
•GENERAL
AIRPORT
200 acres
HOW MUCH LANO TO BU.ILD AN AIRPOR T
Giant of Giants Is PropoHd N•w International Airport
Pendleton site also means departing
planes would fly directly we st out over
the ocean, clear of land.
A nwnber of sites withLri Ute Camp
Pendleton land preserve were ex·
aminej in the study.
"Most of these sites \\.'Ould have
minimum interference with existing
?vlarine Corps facilities," the planners
say.
In other "''ords. it \\'OUldn't be
necessary to close down the base in
order to set up the airport.
"It is believed," they conclude,
"that an optimum site could be found
so that buffer zones could be used for
military training activities."
GIANT BY ANY STANDARD
ln size, as already noted, the
Pereira organization figures the new·
type international airport will grossly
overshadow all of today's airports.
Bare minimum, the report says. is
4,600 acres -and far better to
calcu1ate it at 7,000 acres.
Oi'ange County Airport, for com·
parative purposes. has SO!) acres.
The rtport puts it this W11Y,:
"The international airport. as ma}'
be expected. is al the top of the scale
in both level of service and area re·
quirement.t It is envisioned as the next
generation of airport, beyond the
service capabilities of the ultimate
planned for Los Angeles lnterMtional.
The parallel 12.000 foot. duaf-runway
system pro\•ides t\vo simultaneous in·
strument appreaches "'ith a combined
a.nnual operations capacity of 800,000.
"Area is provided for maxin1um
terminal facilities. auto park.in: and
circulation based on the runway
capacity and projected passenger load
factors.
"Ad-equa te are<1 is included for
maintenance faciliti es for aircraft of
,Jumbo Jet .and SST magnitude: for
cargo service ; and for air conimuter
tMctroport) areas. as \veil as an ex·
pansion contin gency. Clear zone and
buffer tone Areas have been indicated:
U1e first being acreage required r .. ·
protection a ;:ainst obstacles in 11
aircrelt approach and dcp?1·ture p!!
as defined by the FAA. and the sccon:i
being additional acreage which must
be assigncj to land uses compatible
with aircraft op:?r;)Ue:1,
"An overriding!)' import.ant aspect
of an optimun1 international or
regional .airport site is inclusion of a
buffer area, under irrevocable control
of the airport itseU, wh.ich Ls properly
located and of suf(icient size to pre·
vent future encroachment of activities
Yrhich might hamper and perhaps
curt.ail air operation.
"Unless this policy is carried out.
the des.igned operation.a.I capacity or
the alli>ort will never .be reached. The
cost of remedial action f i v t or t e n
years tater wGuld be an almost in·
calculable waste."
States. according t(I the Pereira
estimates.
Part of the formula in determining
county commercial air tr.a.tfic by 1985
stems from figuring the growth of Los 1
Angeles International (LAX).
Projections for LAX indicate that
dl"mand will reach about .a quarter
billion annual passengers in 1985, or 13
tim:?s the present level.
Air travel is expected to rise con·
ccrrently, wit.h more and more
pa~sengers "coming out of the
ll.·cadwork." as air convenience in·
creases, and travel times and fares
d:.~·l·ease.
OVERSHADOWED
T·he already r;henomenal growth at
Orange County Air{Xlrt in the past cou·
ple of years is enough to cause seriou.s
deliberation. In 1966, for example, only
65.!'lOO passengers flew in and out of
lhe field.
In 1967. one carrier in its first year's
operations to San Francisco carried
29S.OOO pas~2ngers.
The follo\Ying are some of the
as.:u1nptions underlying the Pereira
staff report on aviation needs:
1. Orange County's share of the total
regional demand.for air transportation
is somewhat m::re than its share of
th e total reiional popuation. It works
out to 14 percent instead of 12.2 per·
cent.
2. E_y 19&5. Orange County's share of
the total regional demand for air
tr;:.ns.:ort.ation will reach 21 percent.
Jn 1967, this total demand was
estin1ated at 2.5 million. broken down
as. follows :
International -200.000.
Medium range·transcontinental
1.:5 million.
Short haul -950.000.
In 1971 the d~mand will double. and
by 1975 will double again. to reach 10
mill:cn.
By 1978. ten years from today.
Orange CoUnty passenaer demand will
reach the level served by LAX in 1967.
AS BIG AS CHICAGO'S O'HARE
Ar.d by 1900 the passenger demand
will equal that of the busiest airport in
the United Stites todty -Ch icago
O'Hare. At tl1e end of the 17·year·
frn·c:-r,~t perio::l. 1;1ey cJncludc that in
1985 Orange County will generate 50
million air passeng~rs.
milUon air p.asscn2ers.
TI1e 50 million demand Jn 1985 would
be divided by Wday·s route segments
as follows :
Ilitcrnational 3.9 million
Medium range-transcontinental 26.S
million .
Short haul 18.6 million.
Thete ni.:mbers alor.e show a de·
mand for a wide choice of service. the
report says:not no1v !.vai\able 1vith:n,
or really c<1nvenient W Orange County. Airparks for sports pilot:! should be
located along the inland rim o{ Orange
County in generally remote are.u.
Land will be less valuable. and the
cost of storing small planes there "'ill
in turn be lower for the light plane
owner.
Voluntary Action Short-term Answer to Noise
RESTRICTED TO SMALL PLANES
The. UM of alrparks wouJd be
reltricted to noo·scheduled nights.
pilot .tmtructiOn and recreation&.! ltYUtl. oa IUDWl)'I up to 3.IXMJ fee t
lanJ.
BUlinfq airports should be closer to
arbmarea.s, forn on· I c ht du Jed
itinerut bullneumen oil on a com·
Jllll1 lrip. Runway 1"ngthl would ._ from 3.000 1o e,ooo rm ·
• 11etn1por11 are • ny linlc In the
alidblC acaJe of airport wes "
fOl lll!ll by .. pla.lmer'lt -:.t.11-'DloJ tboUld be IOIKI: In Ille •~ at ,..ba ceater1 , yet not dimJpl the
--111e1 aerve with In· .--..... aad uhauot /olloot. ~lime ... mea-r would
The short range answer to curbing
aviation noise at Orange County
Airport lies in self·impostd constraints
among commercial airlines.
Voluntarily, they will pol l c e
themselves to help make life more
liveable ror Harbor Area llomcowners.
The ton& range answer, defined 8!'1 ~yond the 11ext five years. ls to move
the nolse elsewhere, ii it can be done.
Pl.rtially at least, aome noilie will
dlaap~ar If a new. re&ion11 airport Is
built la accommodate the bigger and
noiay je_ta.
'lboae are acm e of the conc::lusiof15
on the future of Or.a.n1e County Alr·
port in a Joni awaited avlation 11.udy
Just completed by Pereira At A.110-
datn.
Th~ plannin& !!rm estimates It will
take perhaps five years ~o build .a
regional facility. even undtr a crash
program.
Whal do residents btneath lhP.:
Orange cOunty Airport !light pall> do
in the meanUme?
Pe.relra's men say v o I u n t 1 r y
restraints can be iollowod at the
airport successfully. ?bey poiot to .a
similar p:roif.un already 1n effect .at
\Vuhio&ton NatJonal Ai11>0rt in the na-
tion's capital.
The procram ol sell-enforcement by
airlines won't. make the immediate
sit-uaUon 1et .a.ny bette~. But Jt lhOuld
help mp It !rom aetUni too much
worse in the next Uve )'Nl"S. they gay.
'1111< pl-. 1111 rour •t.iii trutt
cJnoogr cla1 airlines alread~ are
following volunt&rily at Waal\inston
National. They are:
l. Limit the non.stop dJ.s~e from
\\'i1icl1 air~lanes can dep1rt-and arri~.
2) LI.mil tht number ol scheduled
commercial landings ~hour.
3) Li.mil the hours of operation, ban·
ning ni;l1ttime ru~ts.
4) LhiUt tile kinds ol pianos allowed
to use lhe !ie.td.
All thase steps have proved eUeCtive
in WIShington , they 11y.
The planners state that efforts to
impose obUgatory refU}ations on the
l'irlincs -includlnz penalties for
violators -u.nl,v lead to len&thY ~t.t.s over tnforcement a n d
junsdlcllon. ·'
But the 13 conunercial airlines using
\Va!J!Jr4 ton Nationa l are voluntarily
adhering lo the constraints. to just
about everybody's satisfaction. ac·
cording ·to the report.
The planners believe airlines a t
Orange (...:>unty Airport should be eve.n
more willJng lo poU::t thems:lvt:!s.
They. know the restrictions witJ last
only until a largtt field is built
elsewhere for mort extensive opera·
lions.
More
The Pereira staff lists tnmples of
restrictions at Wa.sbinglon. an:!. ~UI:·
gest timJl&r ones can be neroUatt-d for
Orani< Coun\y.
!'or u.np1". how about placlri1 •
limit ol IOO mile& oo non·slop ID&bta
coming in and coina out of flhe county!
That means no fli6i1t sl.arling
farther away Ulan San F rancisco ~1\1. land 1t Orange C o u n t y .
Li.kewise, departures wouJd be llm.lted
by the same distance restrictic··,
Nei;t, the number of s~:1~duled
llithta per ho<a-could be Umlted Al Wuhiniton~ 40 fll&hts an hour ·are
allowed for commercial planes and
the ll airlines have divided uP the
allotment amoni t.hemsel ves.
Nighttime lliJhta could be restricted
-as they now are between 10 p.m.
and 7 a.m. ·
And cert.a.In aJ.rcra!t could be iimpJy
banned from u1in1 the field, iuch a1
(See NOISE, P1 .. tl
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SIT• 11 IN IAH ·~QUIN HILLS NIAil LAGUNA llACH
Mldw1y !IJtwooit New,..,i, L-. "' IMM L ....
TUIS4N1, July t , 1'68 Dol!LY PILOT
llT• 11 LOI ALAMITOS NAVAL Alll STATION
,_ .Airport NMr· INI Inch 11 In UrMn ArH, H"""'
FIVE. Sl~J.s. ~-R COUNTY'S . REGIONALAIRP~RT.
Pereira Reporl-·Give_1 -Proa, Cons of Suggested Locations
S· Sites for Airport a Regional
. ' \ .
How Report
On Airport
Came About
Thia 11 the ·problem -and tile eb-
jtcUve -which 11 examined la ibe
report 1ubmiHed ~ the Oru&e Couty
Board of Sapervl1or1 today by WlWam
L. Perelr1 &: "-•IOclate1.
Oran-ge County Airport t9day is suf-
fering most of the same problems
other airports are su,ffering: jt has
become congested by the enormous -
and generally unexpected -increases
in demand for sd:leduled air aervice;
and it U totally tmable to cope with
further huge in<;reases that cati' 00\V
be fareseen for the future.
11he practical necessity of. improving
the facilities, l! Orange cbunty is to be
r esponsive to its e C o n o m i c op·
portuniUes i'n the Air Age, comes into
conflict. with. resistance to further
gro'A1h because Ql the deleterious ef.
feet of jet noise on the surrounding
community, particularly .those ,.reas
to the ~th lying under the departure
zone.
'lbese opposing interests are
particularly shalp in Orange Cow>ty:
the former because of the great
economic vitality of tills area, and the
latter ~· ol the hljiji volue and unique character of reildeOtial areas
a.{(ected. by noiae in upper Newport
Beacb.
Pre111ed for dec161on.s on tile im·
mediate need !or more air carriers.
more lchedul..t fl!Chb, man t.rmlnal
space, more automob'1e partiDI wea,
and the tnevltable contilluanoe ol in·
crtased demand In h tu.tare, the
Board of Supervt.on.late last year a1>-
pointed a .WI commtUee -ldenttlied
as tile 0.-OOUoty Ml-Plan of
A1r Tr~tion Commttt ee
(OOMPAT Comrnlt\00) -to """ tlle ~1em. . I . , 1be commilee 11*"1 Willlam L.
Pereira a. Allodatn to Hrff 11 •
c ... u1-. and determined thlt the
problem$ ol Orange · Cow>ty Airport
could be reeolved,only l>y" Mtabllahing
the destiny ol lllat airport in a 1'-oad
framework of. an air tramportltiOn
1yatem plan for the ....,,. U I -e.
and that lhll OYerall COUlll1 plan llld
to be conceived wltlill .,. eo11tixt o1 •
reetonat newor:t.
Acc:ordlllllr. the commi1IM ........
lneaded to ... -ol Soplnborl !hit PbaM I ol u vma11 air
tramportetioll p!a9.. Gd7 be
uncle-lmmtdlatol1 ,end -the dest!l!1 ol Or .... CoulllJ Alrpart be
,11... vrlorl\1 .-... w!tllln lhil
l'lalO l 1111<11 11\.ordor to ·--Whell>er t -Id be --., ... -t olte~ to e'!P'JlllOll 1"1'• posd>I~ I
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SITI 4: IOLSA CHICA llACH ONI POSSIBILITY
Unique Plan Would Combine Sea and ~and Aclvanta ...
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SIT• 11 IL TOllO IAI• COULD II CONVlllTID .PRllENT EL TORO
lut W...W ll....,ire ll11n..-.ment ., llunw1y1 .. Thi• Cenf11uratlen Not Satisfactory, Plan1\9r1 Sty
Something Mu·st Be Done • Ill 5 Years
' · ' (Ceetta ... ~ Pap I)
an<! &rparks for local tralflc and
pri\la:te flying.
5 MONTHS IN lllAKJNG
The Pereira rei)ort, five ~th• in
the !Daldpg, ls chiefly concerned. with
pointing out Orange County's air defi·
ciencies and its prOl>B.ble needs . The
answers, it is conceded, are harder to
come by. For in!tlnce, no mehuon of
financing the· multi-million dollar ex·
pend.itures outlined is made in phase
one of the study.
Poasibly the key element of the
report is Its insi.stenCe that a re gional
airport Wm have to be in operation in
Orange County very soon, possibly as
early as five years. nus regional
airport would send jet travelers in all
· dirtCttons, but range of this particular
type o! air facility would limit flights
~the domestic routes er to, ray, Mex·
ico City or Hawaii.
· FINiilNG SITE HARD
Finding a site !or this regional
airport was anytlb:ing but easy, Pereira
executives concf!ded, and each. of the
five altes ttiey ruggest bu drawbacks.
None i~· likely to be adopted without
bitter fightJ !ram nearby reaidents
and land owners.
'The five sites are:
Bolla Cbica: Imaginative and dar· in&, thJs airport concept callJ !or ex-
tension of two runways from ttJe
center ol flit ·three-mile Bolla Chica
Slate Beacil Jnto flit oecan. Tho lend
porUon of flit airpo!'l site would be Ill·
ed for all airport and terminal Dffds
and tht runway e.1tenslon · into the
ocean would minimize noise problem•
on the ground, 1!le report UHril,
Why Bolla Chica State Beach!
MAN·MADE ISLAND
Pereira englneen: 1a1d they ~
the poull>lllty ol buildlnl a man-m1de
illand for an airport but loand It In·
leulhle becaUM of flit MDOW1I ol llDd
required for flit airport'• 111111*1
!acilittes. So, they looked to a com-
bination land and Ma lite, muc:h llke
the lllternational airport 1\ Hong
Kong.
In order to construct this type of
airport. ·however, they needed a
shall.ow coutal 1btlf that extended in·
to the ocean some distance. The best
coutaJ 1llell with the -our· roundln11 In Orange COunty 11 at
Bolaa Chica.
Two obvious problems prennt
themselves -securing· the It.ate.own-
ed land. at a Ume when public beach
factUtJe1 are Vf!rf llmlted, and tht
totally predictable uproar fr o m
owners of luxury homes in nearby
property, pruGiy Wldevlloped ex·
cept for utanalve oil production.
Tbo land la 1 ... ud marshy aud bes
boon conaldered lllltable for dredclnl
and development u a rtl!detl.tial
marina.
By 11parattnr pcalltl runwa71 ex·
t.ndinJ !llto the oceen It would be
possible to mate a imrina offithore
which could ollHI Ibo Ion ol Illa\
pot .. llal Inland.
Abo, ouch 811 elrport would hive the
unique .Svanta11 Of .bllnl a major
trlJllPONUOn center, lnmcoan«Ung
flit llr Ind (round ll)'llllml with
bl,lllapetd watorcan ol the. future
1uc:ti ., llyVololla.
1be economic potential Of tbe1e
laclllUIS II Will .. the pOtonUll for
P<ivete cllvalopnent of u1odeted
land UHi by a linlJ.e landowner may
mli<a lhll alto one ol Illa eulesl to nn.... u a n(laDll llrport, flit
report.a ay1.
El Tin• Tbe buoy runways ol the
El Toro Marine Corp< Air Station oller
1ome pc>111blUUes aa a rtsiooal
airport, but not man)', •ccordlnl to
th• Parelra roport. Huntington Harbour. ' On the plus aide Boln Chica has an 'Dle El Toro lite 11 ~ble u a ml·
approacb ~'over relatively few Jor airport tot civilian pu1a11n:, but
homes and occupied land and pr<>blbll . not without a complete redesign ol Iii
resolves the noise problem• more 1 • entire runway system.
!ectively than my ol the other ali11. BADLY LAID OUT
LAND VNDEVELOPED Fllndan>n\llly, tbl airport ii badly
Tbe lite Involves a portion of flit laid out llld ll1lffen ft"'1l HY8"'
· l,llOlhcre Bolal Cblai Corpor1Uon'1 \opOIJ'OPl!lc lntorfll'tDCel wlllch would
limit Ill ... for bllh .. 1 ..... ol lrllfllc
OI 1 ropooal airport. Tbe only ac-
NOISE SOLUTION POSSIBLE ••• ceptable lutnmeol apiiroecb ..,. ii
from the IOUtb, n1ct11lt1tln1
dowawincl hntlnp. Dlpartm't1 .r.
(C..1111 ... From Pa .. I)
stretch versions of jell 'AUdt carry
extr~ nwnbers 'Of pasaengers,
The planners concede t h 1 t a II~ Airline'~ ~d limply iJ•
· nor• 1bt .wggested realrl.ctlom. But
they maintain that the program works
elsewhere and there'• no reuon why
it couldn't here on an interim buis.
The proposed restrictlom are l'imply
that --:. propotal:s to serve as
guUlellnu le< airlines 11ainJ Or1nce
County Airport to ..... up with their
ownoetol-.
Will ........... , --and other lfOU:PI aroused lAtely OV«' avia·
tlon noise be satisfied 'With the Pereira
l'OllC!uaionl?
'1hlt aadoubted\1 depeodt oa tile el·
fectlv-• o( sell~ am'"'' the
. alrllnl•, pl• ... oPeo4 'llfth -~ any rellonll ol:port II buUt. ,
ft ollo depends on lllo ,,Olin-ol
llll1IOr Aioa relldellll tn put uP with
jet ""'" for .11 1eUt \botr Jmme41ae l\rbre. ,.... two tblnp-cl-: 'Ille DCt'1
ml 11milor Jett -deltlned to
_)Mp" f111as. Per•a'i 11111 ... · hive
hot roc:onmldded ~ 'blcl: flit
ciin•t -ol counl.1 CQmmerclel OQll'•\kllll, . .
'.""4 .. mitt« -""'~ .... ...nlilllJ put Into ellaet durinC lie
SO<allei! Interim period, at lout -• 1......n, to tho wast to ovoid tmllln
-commtr<lol 1vlaloa _, to the aorth aud lhil c:ross-tnlllc: COO·
ineYlllll!e durinC -.period: d!M -"d -··· ~--~-·~ In tac~ wMle . ..-al\lni .tho con-won~ --a w•Yw-• ... ~ ol a re(lonll a1rpart, flit Anotblr lllljar deilcleney of the lite
plllJIJIOn recommended the ~ 11 that Iii uM .. a rtponll alrpOrl
ol Or&n1e Counly Airport fld11U11. with bl(b vol1UM1 of tra!11c would
They 11et mo1<1 ·termini! _.. lfortllM a llrp uu dellped lbr
parldnJ, ._owd_cer10 i.ctUU11 aod urban ..... DI. Tbe,cr-C new
better _...... loadlDf ptm, pl"' comm~• ol Mllaloit Viejo and
the revampina ol t<dmlcal equipment. Leilun World are •lrudy::::;.
All -r •• 0 mm •.• a. d Jm. compollbll.-tllo alrPort at •
provetllla -er lo ,.... OI lotlCll TIM only way the -could •bl -tlaa l<r Intractable llrport oallllllo for .., .._to ro,llODll
-· 'lllO)' ~ ...... !hot Oranp alrpOrt -be to -lop " totllJy Oolln\y Airport will be Improved, then ..,, n111way 1y1tem pnerally parallel
be conwrted Into a ll\IJW lac:lllty II to 111e -Ana Freeway.
plau for a ..... n,llmll airport· fall M1r1ee Air r-,1 SUll Cllled LTA ~uie !ilio-1 -Iba\ °""''" (for Ha World w ... II ... ; U(htor-Oowlt7~ w111-bl tho-· ,,__ __ ,, lhll -eoald bl
11'• ultlmall -· Tba7 dte ""-~ !!~' '"'=-alrPGrl0 otltlatlco lo ll>ow It lllnplJ coaldn't --lnlad._ wlill a
hlndle 1r1111c Ii>' 1• no matllr wllet •mailer llrport .,...tlaa 1\ ~
II -Ii> -lt up. . , Oranp Coua\1 ~ .,,__ plen-ln!lalld, b)' _, mod• r •to · ... "'1·
..--at.prw..i, the airport TIM l ,IOIMcro ledlll1, now qed fir canbe~loUN1111l\trote11 bll..,urtraluln(ao(ltel!nf,WGUld ·-~.for~ lllnllar to -not, bl 1er(I ~· tn HHJ{ for Oii aqw: 1llln( the 111111; !her "'1· llrport lite. Min lud .WOldd be'~
. Tllo ~ ol tho IDftr<f!)n wl1I bl quh!I ""'" the . MJobdoi. ll'Yllll ... llllon falololf ...i Jlndmr J1iwe 111a1 dllllrlel eoinplu.
.... quiet; -sc11; aud """ lo Tbe alt ledlllJ 1114'• dUf od· eporelo"'tlrm--....... v911Plt_lnim_flww~•
... ... .. -.J
-P"Ximil1 to urban coocentraUons
In tho ... ter of Orure C01111Jy,
ONE-m o1'TIE'(--·
A H(IOnli airport 'with a parallel
runway ll)'ltom could be developed
i-With a one-mile olloet from flit
exlatlnJ 0.en(e CDUll\y Airport to
permit limultaneou1 J n 1 t ·r u m e n t
operation• at both airports. AddlUooll
land. would be acquired from the
lrvlno complex south ol flit LTA Bue
to permit lull runway exteDJlm to flit
San '1>1o10 ,.,.......,_ .
1be nnjor dellclency ol this site Is
the departure potlorn. Wblle 1l1ll ii an
improvement over the ~resent Oran1e
County Airport, in that It I! farther to
the north lt "'vertheleu could alf«t
the University of Callfomia, Irvine
and areaa of exlltine and potential
N•kl.,,UOI development In Newport
Beach.
Loi Alamlloo Navll Air lltotloo : The
site may be suitable for a regional
air.port but 1t would be deslrible to re·
Orltat the runway syttem 10 that
depertur.1 -.Id be otralgllt out to
the aouth over open land 1n fut Seal
Blach Weapons StaUon.
There ari three ter1ou1 deficltncles.
Fin\, departur" to 1!le •outh would
rtach an altitude that would conflict
nt~ the coaitllne wtttt the approach
cottldor ol tile Loot Beacll Airport.
PllESIUU8 DIFFICULT •
Second, the .,.._... or urban
devtlopment would be difficult to cope
with ewn 11 rumr•YI ere noallped.
Third, the airport la DHr the
'11'11\ern adp of 0.-Coomly and Iii
ms-Ht HrVice area would overlap
lhll ol the Lone Blach Airport.
llH J ... 11111 Rllll. AlthooCh !Irle
qullllttlu ol -would hive to be moved to dtvelop a nmway qatem 'in
th1o !main, thla could be .. ad·
vmtas• In developlnl· a mulU·level ac· cew and termlnal c!n:ullllon l)'ltem
Wblch II dettreble In recl'"'al aliport
dellp. The Ille ii In the pntl)" rolling
.-al blllt --~ del Mar end u,...-~an·oa lnlne ran-ob.,Jlmd. . •
1bil airport would hen tho least of.
lie\ oa mry _, arb1 n
....,_ In· tho ·-tr· but It
.... "'"· • decldid -.. 111"n
lead -""" Ille muter plea. o1 111e,, lnlne Oo. would bl lolalir dl-4.
Iii dolld-lnYOlve mliolenen
nm lbe. poPlll.U. -· , of tbi ._ty, ana ._ptiOD or 1terlllia0
!Ion of llrp -delUned II< ... -.1 dlYll,,,_t.
NOT !llDmONE1> ~ dllflc:llncy not m-In the Por<lre ::;r:rt' Ii .... lblllO Conl-PIDf Jtatll. DOW• ... etaecl partlon
ol the -llaDcti --ol . the ~~ rolldoatlal Ui4 1'ciliiiilil
commedll llnd In Ille Unit.a 81ei.I.
,.,,, atlOmpl In -• Jet Cport
here V"1 lDoe1:I' woald -..... -•bit _.... -... lrvlne
--..... a •-4,. L ._
Company unless the a l r p o r t ' 1
economic a~eta are considerable.
Mlitroport it a new type oi sug·
gested alrport-1ubject-to regulaUon1
coDC8rning aircraft Poi1e level Umlts,
houn atld frequency of operation, ·
which make its presence compatible
with a location near the center of .an
urban concentr.ation.
A nu?nber ol specific metroport si te
locations .are suggested, pending final
selection o! a regional airport aite.
They will make up a network of
flcl~~" piov!ding a feeder sel'.vlce to
regional alrporu and flit lnilrnaUanal
airport and also p<ovldtng direct
service to clUes within a 400-mlle
ran1e:
Sugfested sltes include Fullerton
Municipal Airport, a p r o p o s e d
AnabeJm airport. Mile Square in Foun·
taln Valley. Meac!Owlark Airport,
Orange County A l r p o n 1nd
~ano.
OTHER METROPORTS
Other metroporia sites would be
developed in other areas of the county
as land uses are crystallized and the
repooal aiIJ>ort site Is selected.
G_.-11 (private llylng) airports
and airparks are planned with .Orange
County Airport· being the princlpll one
for busint:s1 and commercial Oyblg.
Others include avallabl~f space at
Fullerton Airport, Loo Alamitos, 11 not
selected as a r~gtonal airport, El Toro
on the same buiJ, and Mission Viejo.
Airparks would be de.veloped on 1111<1
which can be '· dedicated ' far recrea•
Uonal we 10 !hit the coot will bl
nominl!. '!lley mould bl usocleted
with club lacllllleo, dtniDf and
overnight lodgln1, and supported by
fixed bue opera!«• wllo Will provide maill-ud -.ctlanaI pro-grams.
S.:wrat potential <ea ce 1u1 .. 1ted
on the fringe s of the, eventu&t urban
area. Irvine Lake ii ooe such site.
Other poteotills .,.. In the Senta Ana
canyon aru and Cllvelllld Nadmal
ForeaL
PHASE . 011 . Sl!MMA.RY .
In •UIDJIWT tiie · ptiue One report at.ates : . ' -soppart the future development of
• ...ior -lnlernatlonll a1n>9rt at
Comp -14 ...... ille Loi
Anieln • Oi:anre Comity • San Diep -opollten areu.
-Ballll a..,, re(llnal.alrport In Illa
bast loc:-· in 0.111(• Coua\1,
coal)lleUoe to be no liter tlwl nve
,.anfroelDOW.
-,-Jln>illte lc\IYllJ et the .in-!
Oran(• Coun\1 Alrllort durln( the ...
\erim period 1"1ti[ I n6W I0,11-
ailplrl ..... be put Info -•Uan.
-Adopt, a !CID( t-P.1fa for the devalopm'"t of ,._a1 alrporU,
atrparu 111<1 111•tropona.
. But the moat dllllcult QIMtlon II left _....._ed -bow to Pl1 . for Ille
.ir1>11ri dilwlopmen~ Preaum1i14' thla
will bO c0vend In !he Pll-Two -
tloa di! the '-'"
I
.!
.. . .. • -. -
-J8 OAllY PILOT Tutsd~, .hlty 9, 1968
National League Pitching Test·s AL's Power.
~ll-Stars Vie on Astrodome's Synthetic Turf
\
LUIS TIANT
AL Starter
Wilt's Trade
To Lakers
Is Official
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -W i It
Chamberlain of the Philadelphia 76ers.
greatest offensive player in the history
of basketball, has been traded to the
Los Angeles Lakers for Archie Clark,
Darrall Imhoff and Jerry Chambers,
the 76ers announced today.
The annooocement by the National
Basketball Association club confirmed ·
last Friday night's Associated Press
' report the deal had been con·
: summated.
The announcement was held up pen·
ding contract settlement with the
players.
Philadelphia decided to unload the 1·
foot-l Chamberlain aft.er reaching a
salary negotiation impasse.
Already reportedly the highest
: salaried athlete in the w o r 1 d •
Chamberlain is believed to have asked
for a three-year, $1 million contract.
He reportedly made in excess of
$250.000 last year.
While the Lakers hope to mold a
championship team out of three
superstars -Ohamberlain, Jerry
West and Elgin Baylor -the 76ers
: received a so lid guard in 'Clark, a
.. sturdy defensive center in Imhoff and
a potentially good forward in
Olambers.
The three Lakers give the 76ers
depth that, was lacking last year and
cost them their NBA title.
· Jack Ramsay, the 76ers' general
ilanager for' three years, has been
4amed to succeed Alex Hannum as ' eOacti. HaMum resign~ after the
1967-68 campaign to go with Oakland
ot. the rival American Basketball
Association.
.' Although the trade was closed as
e&rlr as last week -or possibly
'earlier -it was not immediately an-
nounced because or the difficulty in
coming to contract terms with the
players, The Associated Press learn-
ed.
HOUSTON (UPI) -Pitching and
power will clash head oo in tonight's
major league AU-Star game but befOTe
the last ball is thrown It may be the
Astrodome'1 1ynthetic turr t b at
decides the winner.
Th< National League Is ll 711 to 5
favorite to wrap up its sixth straight
victory in the annual classic whJch
begins at 5: 15 p.in.
The senior circuit's hopes rest
squarely on the broad shoulders and
i;trong arms Of the likes of Don
Drysdale, Bob Gibson1 Jerry Koosman
and Juan Marichal.
The power advantage goes to the
American League whlch boasts a col-
lection Of sluggers that has accounted
for 183 home runs in the first hall of
the season.
; Four of its stJarters, Car 1
Yastrzernskl of the Red Sox, Frank
lloward of the Senators, Willie Barton
ot the Tigers and Harmon Killebrt1f of
the Twins have collected 12 homers
and 175 RBI'1 among them.
But the slte of.the nationally televls-
ed game could have as much to do
Tonight -TV
Chmanel 4, 5 p.m.
with the out.come as the players.
Most of the American League
players never set foot on the synthetic
Astrodome grass until Monday when
Ule squad held its first workout.
"It's beautiful. I just hope they don't
hit any ground balls at me,'' said
$.hortstop J im Fregosi of the
California Angels, who pretty well
s~med up the reaction Of most of the
A TOUCH OF NEW ENGLAND -Harvard University's crew glides
f acr06S Newport Beach's Bad: Bay in a Tuesday wort_out. The~-eaat·
ern oarsmen are working out locally before competihg in the Olym·
Player Strike
Supported
By Chargers
ESCONDIDO, Calif. (AP) - A poll
o[ 17 San Diego Ch:irli:er veterans
shows that members o[ the American
Football League team might support
e.ny strike by players in the National
League.
Eight players contacted by a
newsman Sunday from the Charger
training camp here said they would
support a strike. Four said they would
not and five wet;e undecided.
NFL players threaten a strike Over
a deadlock with team owners on
pension benefits. Players seek $100,000
from each club for the pension fundt
AFL pla¥er representatives are
scheduled to meet Friday in San Diego
to discuss whether they will support
their NFL brethren.
"If the NFL gets the money, we
would get the money, too," said one
player who expressed perhaps the
typica attitude of one side.
"U we strike, we s a c r If ice
thousands. The owners 11 a c r i f i c e
millions."
GARY MAGNER
INKED BY JETS
Ex·Orange Coast area football great
Gary Magner ended a long bargaining
period with the New York Jets Mon·
day .and signed a contract with the
AFL club.
M·agner, e. star lineman at USC for
the pas.t three seasotl6, was New
York's fourth round choice last
February but was deadlocked until
Monday over contract provisions with
the club.
Magner, a 240-pounder, played with
Mater Dei fligh and Orange Coast
College before going to USC.
He reports Thursday tO ·.the Jets'
pre-season camp at Hoktra University
on Long Island.
Green Bay
May Cancel
All-Star Tilt
Bad Bonnee for LA.
MENASHA, Wis. (AP) -Any Na·
tional Football League players' strike
that causes a long delay in opening the
Green Bay Packers' training camp
could lead to cancellation of the
College All-Star Game Aug. 2 in
Chicago, Packer General Manager
Vince Lombardi said Monday night. Stars Are Seeing Stars
As Wilt Goes to Lakers
You gotta believe the Los Angeles
Stars are seeing stars today . . .
wondering what they're going to do for
)>aid customers this year when the
Am er i ca n Basketball Association
' fields its first-ever squad in the City of
'Angels.
The Stars1 formerly the Anahei1n
Amigos, had high hopes Of selling their
product in .a dense population area
such as Los Angeles, despite the fact a
··················-
WHITE
WASH
,,,, ............... .
out the price or a bag of peanuts to
watch a bunch of ABA clods plod
around the court when they could go to
!he nearby Forum and w a t ch
Chamberla in. Jerry West and Elgin
Baylor devour the opposition?
Sat '111 Q11een
Larry J t·hnaon and bis 16 rellow
travelers rrom Newport Beach Ten-
nis CJub are back from tbelr journey
to l\'lmbledon, where tbev 1aw
favorite son Rod Laver Wtn the
singles title for the prestigious net
tourney.
"Open play rcaUy made It a
tremendous spectacle,·• John a o 11
re\'eals. ''And It was great to see the
amateurs knock orf the pros. I think
open competition will magnify tennis
popularity and Interest by teverat
fold."
Coach Phil Bengtson said a delay of
only three or four days, however,
would not endanger the game, only the
chances of some Packer rookies.
The comments came at e. news con-
ference a few hours after negotiations
between NFL players and owners
broke down in Chicago.
Lombardi, one of the negotiators for
the NFL owners, said the training
camp would not open until a set-
tlement had been reached. Camp had
been \Scheduled to open Wednesd;;y,
"We've always put great emphasis
on physical conditioning with the
Packers, and we are not going to put a
team on the field without it being in
prime physical condition," Lombardi
said.
Bengtson said it would take 21h to
three weeks to get the pro football
champions ready for th e All-Star
Game, which. opens the ~cker
season.
"The rookies will be hurt more
than tile veterans," Bengtson said.
"We will havt less chance to look et
them ."
"They will begin reporting Wed·
nesday, but we won't have any prac-
tice sessions/' the coach added.
,Am~rican League•a player1.
Oriole third bueman B r o o k s
Robinaon f,ot down to 1pecifics when
he noted 'the ball is quicker ••. it
seems to pick up speed coming
through."
· A man with RoblMo~a reflexes
might be able to make the adjustment
to the unusual conditions at the
Astrodome infield but there a.reo't
many Robinsons on either team.
Any American leaguerJ are likely to
have some problems afield.
The Natiooal League's well rested
pitching staff plus the expanse Of the
Houston ballpark figurea to negate at
lei.st some the the American League's
power potential. ·
The Astrodome has been known as a
frustrating place for a long ball hJtter.
Don Dryadale Of the Dod(ers (I~)
will be the atarter for 1M National
League and Luis Ti.ant of the ln·
dlana UWl wW a-t 1be call f0< the
American League.
•a,11.Y PILOT ...... '7 L"' Hllllll
pie trials later this week in Long Beach. The Harvard contingent is
quartered at UC Irvine and has been workinf out with Omige Coast
College, also a trials entrant. ~1•·•~1 ••
Drills With 0£C
Harvard Crew Works Out
At Lido, Stays at UCI
By EARL GUSTKEY
Of IM D1lb ,~ '"'" The strangest things occur in an
Olympic year.
Like the sight of Harvard
University's crew rowing up end down
the Lido Channel in Newport Beach,
for instance. '
Harvard, preparing for this week's
Olympic trials in Long Beach, has
switched its base of operations from
the Charles River in Cambridge to UC
Irvine.
The Crimson is quartered in a dorm
at UCI and is U"Sing the facilities at
UCI's boathouse behind the Newporter
Inn.
Harvard has been working out in the
Lido ChaMel with Orange Coast
College's oarsmen. OCC is entered in
both the eight • oar and four· oar
division at the trials, beginni.Dg Friday
at the Long Beach Marina.
It's an implausible alliance. The
spt>ctacie of a 22-year-old Calilonrla
junior college matching sb'okes with
the nation's oldest institution of higher
learning tweaks the imagination.
OCC coach Dave Grant described a
scene in the channel Monday morning.
Grant and H'3I'Vard coach Harry
Parker were talking in an observation
boat.
'"We looked up ed saw that the two
shells had stopped in the middle of the
bay and there they were -all of them
just talking to eadl other. It sort of
made all the hard work seem
worthwhile ."
Harvard is a prime candidate to
represent the United States at the
Mexico City Olympics this fall.
To do so, it'll have to defeat two
other, top-rated contenders for the
Olympic berth -the uniwrsities of.
\Va.shlngton and Penns y l ya n i a.
Another rated challenger is the Vesper
Boat Club of Philadelphia.
Ve sper won the Olympic trip to
Tokyo in 1964 by nosing out Harvard in
the 'M trials.
Parker has hopes then won't be a
repeat of that episode.
"Vesper is .always tough but I think
this might be a down year for them,"
he siays.
"They don't appear to be as strong
as they were four years ago."
On the other hand, Harvard looks
like a good bet.
The Crimson hasn't lost an in·
tercollegtate race in five ~ars.
"I don't know if I've ever 1tea a
cre'v go as fast as Harw.rd." Grant
said. "They are really an incredible
crew. Parker is an excellent coach -
they don't come any better."
On Wednesday, Parker will move
hia 10-man crew out of UCl'a dorms
and into another one at Cal State
(Long Beach), where most of the
visiting crews are quartered.
Six of Parker's oarsmen are New
England-based lads while four of them
are "imports." One is from Sacramen-
to, another from Salt Lake City and
two bail from Ohio.
NFL Owners
Sound Alarm
For Strike
CHICAGO (AP) -National Football
League owners sounded the alarm but·
ton Monday night.
Art Modell, owner of the Cleveland
Browns and president of the NFL, an-
:nounc~ that "pro football faces a l<>ng
and disastrous strike" and then called
for a full meeting of owners in Chicago
today.
Mod.ell's statement came after the
NFL's Players Association said it had
failed to resolve its disagreement with
the owners wer player pensions.
The players are seeking additional
pension funds before the 1970 deadline
desired by the owners.
Both groups met on the outskirts or
Chicago Monday but reached no con·
clusion.
Meanwhile, Modell issued a stat.e-
ment that said, "Despite having
granted 21 demands of the players'
union, pro football faces a long and
disastrous strike on the sole isaue ol
grantillg R<nsion beneOt. In 1968 to
players, who on the average, wtU not
be eligible to receive Sudt benefits un·
til the year 2,CMX>." ../"""
The players' stand, he-ld by John
Gordy of the Detroit Lions who also is
president of the Players' Association,
is that the owners cannot contract for
.any .amount of money concerning 1970
••wtien tbey do not know what the
aituation will be then."
DON DRYSDALE
NL St1rter
Key Confab
To Resolve
NL Woes
HOUSTON (UPI) -The Natiooal
League is expec.t.ed to reluctantl)'.
follow the American League into 1
divisional realignment and settle the
question of Montreal's futuTe as a ma·
jor leag.ue city Wednesday during a
joint meeting of the two baseball
leagues.
The NL owners will meet in
separate session Wednesday morning
to decide whether to follow the sug-
gestion ot baseball's executive council
and split into two divisions of six
teams as the AL already bas done.
Fotlowing that meeting the AL will
convene and the two leagues finally
will gather under the same roof to
thrash out last·minute details such as
the siu of the schedule °'nd playoff
dates. The AL originally vOfearor a
156-ogame schedule, followed by a best;
of-five series among the division win·
ners, but is expected to compromise
with the NL on a 162-game schedule,
whiCh is currently in effect.
The NL already has voted to add
San Diego and Montreal next season,
and that in itse-lf is one of the
headaehes faced by league owners.
The Montreal franchise exists only
on paper with no adequate stadium, no
general manager, no scouts or any
other administrative personnel.
It is within the realm or posS:ibility
that the backers of the Montreal fran·
chise will yield to pressure and con-
cede defeat, thereby throwing the 12th
NL spot open to one of three interested
cities -Buffalo, '.Milwaukee and
Dallas-Fort Worth.
The two-division setup, originally re·
jected by NL owners but virtually
forced down their throats by AL plans.
would be geographically balanced if it
were to follow the other league's pr°"
cedure.
New York, Philadelphia. Pitt.burgh,
Cincinnati, Atlanta and Monb'eal
would be placed in the East and San
F rancisco, Los Angeles, St. Louis,
Chicago, Houston and San Diego will
comprise the Western Division.
Schaal Hopes
To Return
FULLERTON -Paul S c h a a 1 •
California Angels third baseman who
suUered a fractured skull when bean.
ed 25 days ago, hopes to return to play
by July 19. ·
Sch·a.al, who said he Is still bothered
by dizziness and a hearing reduction,
had planned to return Thursday
\\"hen the Angels open a seven-game
home stand.
"I guess it's because I was too op.
timlstic that t1m so discouraged now,''
Schaal said,
He said Monday that du r i n 1
workouts "the dizziness is there most
of the time -at least when I'm mak~
ing the quick moves whJch are more
or less normal for a third baseman."
Schaal's batting average is .212. He
llad a six-game hitting streak when
beaned by a pitch from J ose Santiago
in a game .at Boaton.
"My timing i111't good,'' the ~year.
old athlete said. "I'm also riot seeing
the ball real well.''
professional group called the Laktrs
alto performs 1n that region.
True, the takers went to tbe Na-
tional Bastet.baJI Association cham·
plonshlp eerie• and finished, second to
tbe BoelAln CelUcs In a highly •uc·
ceuful JtS7-e8 campaign.
Johnson's wife Carole -.·111 l>f'O-
bably never roriet her last day 1t
\Vimbledon. Seated ln the box next
to her wa1 Qu~n Ellzabeth U.
• PJans are already under "'ay to
take a (l'Oup of fans W Wimbledon In
'89 and Johnson 11y1 tbe NBTC will
hook ap with aflcloa1do1 ta Chlca(o
and New York, bopefullY to fW tbe
plane.
Ram Camp to -Resemble Ghost Town
8ut Stu1 otfici&la felt the.re were
enough feu to go eround. And
pertiapo there were, aUhougb I could
newr lmap a guy wimtiog to spend
his buc.U on the ABA wbtn a bot NBA
..... -ln !be ~locale. . Now, ever, 1lbe future does Indeed
look dJm for the Stars.
· Todly lhe Labr1 were bcldlng a jnp. coal.,...ce --umal>ly to t2ll
!be "1>1'14 ocrJclally that lhty )Jed alp·
i!d Wilt Chamberlain.
• Just this weekend a Star• olllclal said be had comid<rable dolibt tbal
:Wilt was going to L'ie Laltors, then od·
ndtted that If he did, "we're in CrOU·
ble." • And In troo6ie ht b. Who wouia abtll
Word From Emer1011
Roy Emerson of Newport Beach
wrote a note home concerning court
conditions at Wimbledon during the
rainy period : "It was very very sur,·.
pery ••• t fell over a dozen times n
one match."
·Emerson sllde!I Into hLs shots
anyway, so the wet conditions were
especially hazardous for the newly
algned pro. Roy took turns cooking
with room m.ate.s Alex Olm«So, Fred
Sto11e and Warren Jacques In their Cbe!J!ey quarters. I"
The Los Angeles Rams' pre·season
training comp at Cal State (Fullerton)
Wat supposed to have 'looked like a
beehive.of .activity Wednesday but in-
stead it will more resemble a ghost
to"'·n.
\Vednesday was the day 21 rookies
were to have taken Ute field for·thilir
first workout.a but because of lbe Na,·
tiooal Football League's o w n e r s
"lockout" mandate, the rookies will
larg•cy be conllned to thelr dormitory
rooms.
Locked in a bargainin& stnlglle with
the owners, the NFL player$ bad
threatened. a strike. Takl.ng the in·
itiatlve away, tht owners then s~l
16 tralnlng camps will be shut down
until the dispute is settled.
The DAILY Pll,(YI' ltarMd this
morning that a .setUem&nt might be
reached today or Wednesday In
Chicago where tbe owners •Dd
players, lt's rumored, may meet. ·
M St.staod.s, however, coach ~orge
Allen's coachiq will be limited to the
blackboard.
"Most ol the rookies bad their plan<
tickets or were oo their way wbeo UM
lockout order was issued, 10 w1 feel
obligated to bous1 them until tbJa ii
over," a Ram IPOkesman 1akl.
''They'll be llving here but they
won't be aJlowed on the field. The
closest they'll set to football will be •
chalk talk or two."
· Ai>en said Monday ht plans to bring
halfback Tommy Mason along more
quickly thao he did last year, when he
bad ttie fleet halfback alt out all the
exhJbltion teeson to protect his
surgery-scarred DH•. Allen said this
year Muon will play in the fourth,
fillb and sixth practice pmH.
In the same vein, he also nported
that Dick Bass, Who bu similar),)'
skipped the uhibltton games the put
two years, wiU do so again tb1s tea.son.
Milt Plum, tho ll·yeor·voteran
quamrbock obtained from Detroit,
will be Allen's holder on field goals
and conventona thia year,
Plum is expected to play much more
in the exhibition season tbls :yqr than
BW Munson did Jast year .
Roosevelt Grier, the huge tackle
who he!ped rubdue the late Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy 1 1 alleged
asausln, was orlglnally 1uppo1ec1 to
roport Wadoelday but pbooed Allen
Monday, told him he ws under 300
pounds, and the Coach gav. hJm
permission to report With the re1t of
the vets next W ednesd.ay.
Grier will be tmlng the •chilies ten.
don Injury that kept him out ot all the
re"1Jar 1easoo la.st year. r
'
LIONS' SHARE -Westminster High.School's Ljons
will be .well represented in Saturday night's s~on(i.
annual Senior Bowl football game 'aJld. these· two
grads will be in the starting lineup. Rick." Breeze
(57) will man a defensive right tackle post, while
"teammate Charles Meyerett will operate a t offen-
sive . left gu~rd. Breeze bas tabbe4 Orange Cpas~
coµege as his future grid hoine, while Meyerett baa
yet to single out his choice. Kickoff is 8 p.m. at
Long Beach Veterans Memorial Stadium.
11 From Orange Coast Area
-'
Boswell Names First Units
Bill Boswell, coach of the Orange
County AU.stars, says his club is set
for Saturday's Second annual Senior
Bowl football game. and today remov-
ed the "tentative" status from his
starting offensive and def e.n s iv e
lineups.
"We are coming aloag pretty well at
this stage Of the workouts," confided
Boswell ... In fact, I'm just going to
S tarting Offense
OllAH•• COUNTY AU.·STAllS
... ,, PS.ritr Wtl. khMI
lf-Jo.y Sllv• 115 !olU Grande LT--Rl)'mond Hunt 1U Huntlnuton Seaci'I
LG--Ch.arln MeY1rtll 1111 Wnlmllllter C-G'" H1nHn 705 Wnlm~uer RG-J1d Giiton 220 S.n!1 AM
RT-Chris Vilt 133 wn1m1n11er
RE-Frid Mllllr 200 Gard1n Gravw
Qll-Mlt:• Tamtv11u 17' M1rln1 RH-Wart Smith 180 An1llef1t1
FS-DaYI ludllloll lts Slnll AM V1ll1v
FIC-Steve Hiil 110 Slnll AM
For CIF Stars
work the kids in light pads foc the rt·
mainder of the week. We've had our
last scrimmage."
As for injuries, Boswell reports that
outside of the normal bumps arid
bruises, the entire roster will be
available for duty Saturday when his
club opposes the Long Beach City
Stars at Long Beach Veterans
Memortal Coliseum.
No less than 11 players from the
Orange Coast area will be in those
starti.Iig units, while Santa Ana's Steve
Hill will be the lone player expected to
see double duty.
Hill will open as a flanker on offense and then operate at left safety when
the Orange County team is on defense.
O!ferusively, quarterback M i k e
'Tamiyasu (Marina), tackle Chris Veit
(Westminster), tackle Ray Hunt (Hun.
tington BeaCh), guard Ch a r Je s
Meyerett (Wertminst~) ~d center
Yule's Effort Awarded
With Co-captain Nod
By RAY PLUTKO
6f tM n.lly f'lltt Slaff
Lanky John Yule hasn't quite shaken
a rash of injuries that have plagued
him over the last week, but the former
Coron.oil del Mar prep standout hasn't
lost any of his touch on th e hardw~.
In fact his efforts over the past week
have earned the 6-foot-8 ace co-captain
honors for the CIF AAA Southern Sec·
tion entry in Wednesday's inaugdi-al
All-Star clash with the Los Angeles Ci·
ty entry at the FOrum.
"He's the type of boy ~at you can't
keep down," confided BUI Armstrong,
Compton HS mentor and currenUy
pulling the reins for the CIF con.
tingenl .
"Yule's still hampered somewhat by
ruised ribs and bllaters, but I'm cer·
tain he'll be ready to go full bore by
Wednesday." .
'The ClF Stars will stage their final
workout at the Forum today and
Armstrong feels his club is more than
prepared to pick up the booty in this
inaugural event.
Yu1e will be utilized at a forward
position joining Larry Morris (M) of Oompto~ and Marlna!s Mark Soder·
berg (s.3) in the front line.
Running the backcourt for the CIF
---stars will be Aviation's.fau1 Westphal
(&.2) and Monrovia's Mike._){endall (~
10). l
. We can do a number of Wngs
defensively with that starting unit."
said Armstrong, "but our plans call
for a straight man·f.o.man defense.
There'll be no fu11 court of ball court
pressure. . "That woulbe playing ri~ht into their
hands with the type of club the City
has so we 'll try and make them play
OW'' style of game is much as possi·
ble." Westphal, the free -scoring
WARD RETURNS
TO RACEWAY
· Art Ward, a funny car driver· who
captured top eUmlllator l!Onors al Ille
recent Nitro IJJomplonthlps at Orange
County IntmJatlonal Raceway, will pit
hia "A•tlination ll11 COrvllt agalnat tbe "Sam.peon" Dodge Dart of Rich
Hamm0ot SOturdo7 at OCIR.
Ward, from Denver, bas hit eight
HCooda Dal ..i 1115 m.p.b. In previous
trips to OND .. County.
NAMED CO.CAPTA IN
John Yul•
marksman w}lo was named player of
the year this past seasoa in the CIF
was named co-captain with Yule. '
\Vestphal will be calling the l holl for
the CJF in the backcourt oUenslvely
and when he has the notion. his fU per-
cent accuracy from the field should
more than account for his share of the
Poirits. '
However, it mafbe Soder be rt who ls
the key to a credit sign by the CIF en.
try as he's drawn the defensive
assignment on the heralded Ron Riley
(11-8).
. Soderberg, who just two weeks back
announced he'U be playing at the
University of Kentucky come faD, will
have to stop the best the Cltj'hu to
offer. . •
Riley Was named pl'a.yer of the year
while peppering the nets for Jordan
HS and he waa lbt No. 1 target of USC
mentor Bob Boyd In the recruiting
department. Boyd got hls man .
"Riley's the type of player who can h~ you Jtislde ud uten go to the cor.
ners and do just the same." said
Armstrong. "Soderberg will have hiJ
wort cut out for blm, but he'& been
doing qutle a job ln pr1cUc1 and ht'll 'be ready."
Game time ts set for 8:30 p.m., wllh
ii 7 p'.m. tell matA:blng the CIF AA and
A Stars providlnf for ' stellar double. header.
~
Greg Hansen (Westminster) have all
won starting assignments.
Matching those berths defeilsively
will be end Rick White (Marina}, e11d
Steve Galvan (Mater Dei), guard Lar·
ry Snay (Mater Del), tackle lijcbard
Breeze (Westminster), tackle Bob
Purnell (Huntington Beach) and right
safety Bob Wickersham (Huntington
Beach).
Starting Defeme
CHU.NGI COUNTY A1..LolTAlll
""-f'llYW Wit. ~ l.f.-llldl; White 201 Me~
l T-llobtr1 Pu111t1I i10 Hl'llllftlton I HCA l.G-MldlHI Illa. lU Slfttl-
ll:G-Ltrrr SMY 100 Mlltr Del
RT-Rld\lrd lllftn ~ Wntm1nal'lr llE-$!t'ltl GllYI~ U• Miler ~I
Lc;....Rldt OKll;frt llQ S.1'111 An• LI-Jim Jolln11111 171 .Arllhtlm
RC-01 ... MIU 155 A"'htlm
LS-Stw. Hiii' 170 lfflll ""' ll~ WldltrlM!n 171. tfllllflnllofl -.a.
Sports
Clipped
Slwrt
,,._ ... Wires .t AP /UPI
"
The' labor di!lpute between the Na·
tlonal Football League's owners and
players may result in the cancellation
of the Ram·New Orleans -gaine
ICheduled for A11gUsl 1 at Anaheim
Stadium.
Ram coach George Allen lndicated
lbal.much Mooday wbm ho uld H lbe
dispute im't letdld at leut a week
before tbe game, the exhibition. opener
will be called off.
"I won't co8cb a team tbat lan't
totally prepared," Allen said. 1'1 won't
take that kind of chance on injuries." ... ... ..
BOSTON -Bral1'1 famed Pele p•I
oa a duzllof aD·ll'Olllld dt1play aad
scored tht g:o.-abead coat Monday
nlgbt 1D leading S.ntot io a 7·1 ex·
hlbltlM HCCer victory over the Bo1ton
Beacons before a Fuwa1 P•k erowd
el ll,f3L ,
Time ud •I"'-'• Pele *llll>led pall
&be defeDH or bit Ilda leamm-. wttla
plnpobt -u Ille Brulllua domluled Ille aetloo· la oeorlal lllelr
tevellfi llrall(lt vldory el tllelr Norill
Amerka• tour. .. ..
CLEVELAND -Tom Weiskopf,
who won tho S125,000 Buick Open Golf
ToW'nament Sunday, enlisted. in the
Anny Reserves 'in Columbu1 Monday.
Prior to Ille Buick Op«i, Ille 25-year-
okl prO ·said he wa1 Wormed there
was an opening in a Columbus unit.
Weiskopf too11; _ his pbyslcol In May
here and wu clusified IA.
Jolnlng a. reserve unit J!H!ans
WelstoPf won't serve two yean active
duty, but six moothJ, besides belnr In
the ready reserve for the next six
Y..,s. ms obUga-would include a
Wtilkly reserve meeUng irl ColumbUs.
Weiskopf plans to compete in the
SD>,000 Gttaler Milwaubo Open In·
vltaUonal tbil weekend. .. ... ..
HOLLYWOOD -J....,. 1-. •·we-fbl bostt la Ille ima aDd
• bom1 ttl-.... actor la Jattt
,.ean, 11 dead at IL
Be ee.i -.Y al Ida home a11er a .... -..
IDdrl1Ho, wlM dolealed lo• r
wlle..-iil .......... -1•
UU.qlt liM 11· neift!Clll •-•· .. ... f .. for Ille IHle.
'
Tutsday, Jull' 9, 1'168
Orange Coast Area Anglers Strike Jackpat
.Eleven Orange Coell area deep sea
fl•hermen picked up hot actlon for
marlin, llilfllb, dolphin and
l'OO<terfish durlnJ angllng ventures In
La Pu, hja c.ntornla. ·
Included among the group Were
Charles and Tom Forkner of Nnrport
Beach; W. E. Holnies, Siil Clemente;
Claude Scott, 0-lt Woodlord and
Blll Ellers, all from Newport; Harvey
Somers ol Balboe; Dala Grant and
Deaa Wie1e ol Coron1 del Mar.
-. Tom Forkner accounted for the bl,..
gelt catch -a 17&-pound marlin.
introduces a new tire designed for Calttornia
Freeways and Highways
lleac/ what Pornelli soyt:
"The neW California "ISOO" Ure1 an
real wlnner1 ••• I know becaun I
put them throurh the paces.
"Firestone officiala' asked me to teat I run these tira at 126 m.p.b. on thelr
deaert track and then ,;ve my opin·
Ions. After iooldng at the California "600," and the re1ult.a of Firestone'• extensive tatillJ', I ktae• th• telt
would be a breeltl I
"M:r actual aver•1'81Peed on th• 126-mlle run Wh 119.89 m.p.h,I The t ut.
est lap waa at the c1r'1 top speed-between 186· and l•O
m.p.b. The tlrea performed evtn betlft th•n I expected.
"'It w•• • 1mooth quiet rid• ••• the tlrea held firm In eurw:s
and aharp turns. The California "500'1" really kept their CObl.
I'm .ure the1e Urea could. take ewn more puni1hment than I
r••• them!"
THE NEW
....... ~iNllB ..
specially designed
with California
in mind
FULL 4·PLY
NYLON CORD
NO MONEY
DOWN.
Tt1ke Montlls
To Pay!
•·Accurat. within ON8
POUND fmm.10 to 40
•
a tire with class • • . inspired by Californians!
Firestone designed the new California "600" to meet the ' 11pecifie
demands of roads and driving conditions in California. F,rom bli ...
terlng highways and crowded freeways to the l!llippery mountain.
roads and rough aide roads, this tire baa what it takes, and then
some.
Th'e qualities Californians need in a tiri? are built into the CaJI~
fornia ''600." Controlled steering at any speed, 11harp comerlnr,
quick stopping even on wet pavement, and proved endurance, make
this the tire for you! '
DOES IT COST MORE? ••• YES, A LITTLE MORE!.
IS IT WORTH MORE? ••• YES A LOT MORE!
HERE'S WHY •••
• 51rori1 4-pfy riylon cord botfy
t a1ily llondt up to punl1hln9 rood
1hocks 011d hi1h spotcf fla11in9.
• 5petdwoY1fNYtcl con•trvctJon
roclw•• htcrt ltvllct..p end "'•k••
It • cool rurinln1 tire Qf •ustairiad
hi1h lpttdt.
Addltlon1I b1ll1
•1,00 each
• Collfoml• "SOO'' 11 ...... whfli
FfretlOl'IO SUP~·TUJI N ltiMr ....
•• ,,,. i.,.. "'11 .....
• l••l•d and pnyocl lty t ...... Ms
ef mil•• of pvril1hment on· •
bll1ta rln9 hot tt •t track, tho
Cellflmlo "SOO" h• IMon
torhff'H hovr eftot '-"' •"Mr ... COfttlltltM-•,. .. •ftr '121 .... p.la. -t• ti•• n extra .... ,.1" -'
••ftfY,
COSTA MESA · NEWPORT BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH
16171 leach Blvd. 847-6Clll 475 E. ·17th St. 646-2444 •
IOTH STORES MONDAY · FRIDAY I A.M. • t P.M.
• •
I
' I·
Foothill,
Tro y Rip
Ri vals
Foothill and Troy, UC
Irvine summer I ea g u e
ba sketball's number one and
two teams, ripped Sad·
dleback and San Clemente
Monday night at Campus
Hall.
Troy took San Clemente
apart by a 77-44 count and
"-,,..,,. .... w L .. •• 1<00111111 • • "' '" '~· ' ' '" u• E1l•n<I• , ' •• '" Ma~• o.I , , •• ,~
11.VIWI P1rll ' , ·~ m
$1n C...,_t1 ' ' '" "' S«klleblck ' ' •• "' F11llertofl • ' ·~ "' Foothill was 30 points better
than Saddleback with a 78-48
tally.
San aemente was able to
hold Troy to a 16-14 bulge at
the quarter, but !ell back by
11 rat the hal!.
A JS.point spread in the
thlrd period ended any
hopes or a San Clemente
second-half comeback.
Mater Del and Estancia,
with 2-1 loop records, ~lash
tonight at 7:15 in the feature
clash with the nightcap a
battle between Buena Park
and Fullerton.
NICE FAT ONE -Southpaw Bill Frey (left) ol Con-
nell Chevrolet serves up what app~ars to be a nice
"fat one" right down the pipe in this third inning
Conni-e Mack action Monday, while West-Grove's
Dave Carlisle waits with the lumber. However, it was
~
a fu tile evening at the plate for the West·Grove
entry as they collected. but a scratch single off Frey.
who also struck out 10 batters. Connell posted 5-2
win for its 14th straight win in outing played at
Fountain Valley High School.
DAILY f'ILDT l"ltlto a, Ly .. ~11111
~ llr O.lrten Fooltlltl 20 ,, 20 ...... .......... 14 11 " ...... '""'!It tn1 .. " •• " Grimm • • ' • .... • • • ,.
LowelM! • • , • Edwtr<h • • ' "
Monarchs Rampaging Connell Rol"ls
Pfft.ln1 , , ' • , • ' " Snr*r
Gill ,
Orrwltt ' HaU9tn ,
Tol1F1 "
, ' • ' • ,
" "
• , • n
Key 'l'rio
For Clash To 14th Consecutive Win
ktN h OV1rl'" S..n CWmente 1• I lo 12-4-l
Trov '11 11 'll 11-77
Sen Clerllnl1 (441
Bl'nltmln
Alll'fl
Gt111den
Chrf•tensen
Lom11Ar<11
Mlld1e!I
Birnell
MCDl nlel
'To1111
1'"0 •T P• Tl" 0 0 1 0 O O I O
' 0 ' • 5 • 3 19
3 I I 1
II .I • .I 'l 2 II 6
1 'l 1 A
ll 11 lJ ...
Deep Sea
Fish Report
HEWl"OllT IDIYIY'• LM•ffl -11S
11111llr1; U 11bacore, HI banlto, 1JJ
b&U. ~ lllllbul. (ArT'I a...Mlllll -HI
111111eB1 4 11blocore, l llti rrtcuda, 311
bar!lfl:I, I .. bpi, I FllNbl.rt.
LOtf9 Sl!ACH CPtclllc 5-tt'lthintl -1u 1..,1e.,: » yellowt1n, 1.~n
ullco blH, 74 bonito, 1 etrr1cvdll, 1
h1llbut. l .. lmMll l"lerl -116 11>tlen:
m bin, " bonll~. l /\111but. 81r11e, ~
9 "91e,,: 11 blrr1(:Ud1, IS l::otllto.
fJ11clflc S"'1f11llh•11I -117 1t111l!n; JJ
1!blcore, 1 &trr1cl>dl, 1,$71 b9ss. 1S6
bonito, 'l htllbul.
HUHTtNGTOH SEAC H -1 tntleril
'l1 bonito, ~ blu. Btrte. » 1111111!"1; 17
blrr1cu<11. 211 bonito, n t-u. 11 lltllbul. SAN 01500 (I"!. L111t1) -216
11191tr11 tt vellaw1111, U6 111Ncore, 36 w111i. IN blu, 711 ClllCO bau, 24
bonito. Clm"'11I a11c~) -4 1nvlers1 'll v1llowt111, 226 bonito, 6-1 blrr1CUC11,
:10 bin. Sl!AL SfACH -61 11111ler1; 73
bonito, Ml 11nd bau . CB1r11el -"6 111tler1; 6 blrr1cud1, 24 bonl!a, 4 ~and ben, 2 htllbYI.
SAN CLEMEHTI! -100 11111k-r$; 51J .... ,. 275 bonito. 1 lllllbul.
OCEANSIDE -U6 1n11lefl/ 122 ber-
flCudl, 496 bl11, 144 bonito, I wlllM
-blu. 21 1'11llbut. REDONDO Uf 11111llrt; l
Vtllawt1U, 2] b9rr1cudt, Sit t t llca t..u, 205 bOllllo. TWo 81r9H, 1\J
1"911'1; 4'I NI..., bllu, lOJ llOll!to. l:il mt ckerel, 421 rort cod, 2J f\allbul.
Three graduates of Mater
Del High School will be in
uniform Tblll"sday night for
the second annual B i g
Brothers AU-Star football
game at the Los Angeles
Memorial Coliseum.
Ironically, all three will be
lineman in the clash with
the Los Angeles City Stars
and the trio is being counted
on heavily.
Tc:ckle Jim Ber g (6-1 .
215), tackle Carl Hernandez
(5-11, 212) and c en t er ·
linebacker Eric Patton (6-
2~, 220) will be those man-
ning the front line for co·
coaches George D e n a
(Servite) and Lou Cvi-
janovich (Santa Clara).
Patton, rated by his high
school coach Bob Woods as
the best linebacker i n
California', is headed for
Notre Dame and much of
the attention will be cen-
tered on the Scholastic and
Catholic All-America selec-
tion.
Woods also has praise for
Hernandez as well. "His
best defensive night was
against Servite. He caused
five fumbles and spent the
entire night in th e i r
backfield.''
By ROGER CARLSON
Of lltt' DlllY Piiot Sti tt
Connell Chevrolet made it
14 in a row Monday night,
with a 5-2 decisdon over
West-Grove in Connie Mack
baseball action at Fountain
V•Uey High School.
Other loop action had
Hunting!Dn Harbour dispos·
ing O{ Kauffman & Broad
Marina, 3-1, at Golden West
College.
Unde£e ated Connell
Chevrolet was led by Bill
Fey's one-hit p it c h in g
performance while striking
out 10 batters.
West-Grove's only scoring
threat came in the bottom of
the second inning when the
Cormell defense broke down
and allowed the Josers two
base runners via errors.
Ruly Membrila and Dave
Carlisle each contributed
successful squeeze bunts to
get both runners home and
the hosts took a brief 2-1
lead.
Connell settled down after
that, 6corfng twice in the
third and adding s in gle
tallies in the filth and
sevent.h.
The two in the third were
the rest1lt or walks to Frey
and Doug Campbell coupled
with Bob Warbington's
single. '
Another tally in the fifth
was the res:u.lt of Bob Lln-
nat's steal oi second bas e
and Joe LePage's timely
double.
The final run of. the game
came in the seventh when
Campbell reached first on a
fi'elder's choice and
L e P a g e ' s nin·producing
single.
Connell had opened up the
game in the initial . stanza
witn a score when Bob Lin-
nert came home on a passed
* * * Score "' 1111111191
At Corona del Mar
13-4 Vault in All-comers Meet
The all-comers track and
field meet at O>rona del
MaT High School w a s
highlighted by a 13-4 pole
vault in the high school
division Monday afternoon.
Open division action had a
5:09.2 in the senior 's mile
and a 1 :56.4 clocking in the
880.
Complete suihmaries:
~ -l.MYrr•v2.0vtrlon1Strldtf' • I mlito Cf'OSH:OUnltY -1, Wfi! ;. Sanford 2. ll tt l ICMJ. Tlmt: 11:•1,2.
Miii Wiik -l . Overron CS1rlcll!-s•1 ?. Ch•rrv re.,,.., 3. F1rr1r ICdMJ. Tlmt: 7::16.,.
ro HH HH -1. Ml tShlll ICM!?. 11.J.
100 -1. k.Pflt IVPI 2. Ashcr1ff ICOM1 J. Riie~ HOO. Tl""'l: 10,1.
110 ....; 1. Strtl'llln (C1I Sit!• Full\ '· SHltOn:I tStanfOl'd) 3. Tt Vlor IPCC). Time: l:S6.•.
1tol.H -l. Hlnolau ISA. VJl"'l 2. Mr'ihlll +CMl J. t111r1ml1 {C<IMi. Tin,,_, 16.1.
Senior Mil'!! -1. Garman 'l. BHtlr J. KIV. Time: 5:0'/.7. Miit -1, Menn \Tustin) 2. &eel ICMl 3. Cal'l!\Otl (BVU . Tl"": •::M.t. 270 -1. Rllev (NH) 'l. C1111tr 3. Conn1l lV IC•I Western) Time: U .3. HJ - 1. ~nllam 2. Rlllr J. H~rt. Ht'~ ~~0·Riley 2. Hert ], ConnclY. Dl•t8nce: ll ·J. SP -1. VanO!!<lrifl CUCI) 2. Powe" !Fullerton) J, M¥1Fllll. O~tana.: .c.!· ·~ . C»i~u1 -1. V1n Dfl!rill IUCll,, o,;11nct: u .1.11. PV -1. S!llons I nd Ml(fllt!n.e, N~ 1hirr:I. H~h1:· 12-6. Hltlh Sett.of 110HH -I. Slt lonl. !Es!\ 'l. Morris-~1 fCdM) J. F1rr•r ICdMl. t i!Tlf': 21 ,t,
100 -l. Hsu1 IWtsltrnJ '· GorOon CE1!) 3. Ml!Mln ISCI Tlmt: 10.J. SIO -1. H11$S 1w .. 1ern 2-9t<:1'1~1 (Wfllr!f"lll 3. J mnnino1 +MDI. Tim•.
2;D7 • .5. 170LH fflr11 1'1Hll 1. Ree11r 2. Reeser 3. Kr~I (CdM\· TW»e: 14.•. 120LH /Uconcl ""!) . Avervt (Mir) 2. Har t11ndet (Merl 3. H111n (Mir). Time: 14.9,
Mlle -1, Cl1rpcat fTu,llnl 1. Rech!ll I RA) l. Pridmore (Wt$1trnl Time: 4:•1.0.
7.!D -1. Galibi (FV) 2. H~s1 (Wetttrnl 3. Gordan, Time: 23.f. ~G -• StolllH (CdM) 2, Gordon 3. Rl!l>W(SC~ CWt11e<"nl. Time: 57.1. 1l2D -1. Btnllev 2. Curlin 3. Erb. Time: J:ll.5.
HJ -!. H1raml1 ICdMl 2. Merton
<SEJ ~ 51~~1~h1H~~0~1~.t;1·2. Andet>~'' (SA Valley) J. Kl!<ll, Dl111nce: 21·•. SP-1, Power1 !NH1 2. Minix ICMJ J, Fr~ IWtsi.m). Dliltn(t: .51).,V., PV -1. AnderlOll ISA Vtl~Y) 1 11t rnur1 1 SotQmOn. Heillh1: l :J-.1.
J111tl8" Hit~ 110 LH -.Avltl"(f (Merl 2. H!'l'n...a<1 fMerl 3, Reellf' (CMI. Tlm.e: 14.7.
1oO -I. Hem1nde1 (Marj 7. A~ervr ,......,., J. Bar,..n Cllng,ln) lmt: 10.1. 660 -1. RMI tC<IM) 2. Haun (Mir)
J. Farr1r ICdMl. Ti~: l:J9.7. Mlle - 1. Htun /Mir) t . L011981>fl'Q8" CL8l 3, 8l11to!' IWtlktr) Time: 5:1.ll.1. no -1. a.rrt1t CC<IM) 2. t..oncono /RAJ. No lhlrr:I. Timi: 26.f .
1320 -I. R-t. V~I (RA) 3. Oiewlt IW"lmlnstll"l. Tlm1: 3:"8.3-
HJ -1, Mol'rksel ((dM) 'l. 5. fllfo rar (C<IM ) 3. 8, F1rr1r (CdM). Htlll~I:
S·2.
LJ -1. Fll'Tt r ICdMI 2. Morrl11el CC<IM) J. Rltfl1rdson CCdM), Dl•ltnc:t :
1~5.
SP - l , o~. (E111 'l. Rlchtrdton CC~l l. Sims (CMJ. 0 st1not: lS-3. Discus -I. Rlchlrcf!.on (CtlM) 'J. Serowv (C<IM) 3. 51rt'l1 ICMJ. Olsllt1a: 15).0. -.
PV -1. Utsler. N11 sk:Ond "" ltllrr:I,
Hck11'11: '°'· ....
o wcond or th1n1.0~M: t -4.
IOO -1. a. .... tt (OW) 2. Folllrl l$A V•llnol. No third. Time: lt.•. 2a -l, Fomn flA YtllfYJ 2. 81rntll !CdM). No tnlrd. T ime: :IO.O.
Baseball Standi1igs SPECIAL AN NIVERSARY
1968
NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE w L Pct. GB w •• Pct • GB St. Louis 53 30 .639 Detroit 55 28 .663
Cincinnati •2 39 .519 10 Cleveland 47 39 .547 91>
AUanta 43 4-0 .518 10 Baltimore 41 37 .538 191> San Francisco 42 42 .500 11 1,~ Boston 42 38 .525 lllh Pittsburgh 40 41 .494 12 Minnesota 39 42 .481 15
Philadelphia 38 40 .487 1211? Calitornia 39 43 .476 15\> Los Angeles " 44 .482 13 OakJand 39 43 .476 15\I
~York 39 43 .476 131: New )'ork 36 " .456 17
Chicago 39 45 .4&1 14\:: Chic.ago 34 44 .436 181h Houston 35 48 .422 18 \Vashington 30 " .390 22
Mo•day ·1 Result s J\Tonday'a Results
No fames scheduled, ~10 games scheduled.
Ttclay'I Games
AU.star Game at Houston
Today's C.amea
All-.)tar Game at Houston
WMllttlkJ'• Games \\'edne1day'1 G1me1
No game• tcheduled. No games scheduled.
~-Johnson & Son
LINCOLN-Mll CUIY..COUOAlaDIALE•
1000 W. COAST HWY., NEWPORT BCH.
• [.541-7751 :·M2.otl1 1-· M [f ~CURY .'
ll~~(t)tN
-
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
SALE
9 Continent•! Demon1tri1tor1
C oupes & Sedans
FROM 3000 TO 6000 MILES .
ALL WITH LEATHER
INTERIORS
ALL FULL POWER
ALL WITH AIR
CONDITIONING
ALL WITH VINYL TOPS
ALL UNLICENSED
ALL WITH !0,000
MILE WARRANTY
SPECIAL PURCHASE
Thr11 '67 Cont1nent1l
Conv1rtlbl11
'A ll Full Power
AU H1v1 Air co,d.
All Ht•• U ndei'
1100 Mll•t
All H1v1 50,000 M ie
W 1 rr1nty
bail after reaching Uie base
paths via a free pass.
Huntington Harbour's 3-1
victory over Kauffman &
Broad Marina was sparked
by the· aix·hit pitching of
Jerry Horvat end G i 1
Banagas along with some
timely enemy errors.
liuniti.ngton got rich in the
top of the fifth inning when
it scored twice on the
strength 0£ a walk and a
bunt single.
* * *
PRECISE
ATlllYRS
PRECISE .... ,
0
OMEGA
Offltt.IL WATCI\ MEXICO Gt'lllPICS
@9
Stlf.whtdll'C SMNatotr' C-Tc
•Ith S.tt<"-sln1 1:attnctw. Un.
&11u1I 1:u1hloft .. l'llPM lltllnltn
11tHI 1:111. WM9111rwof" 0 ., ...
Wh'-1'1Mkllllll ltractJ91, , , l H .... i.. __ ....., __ _
• • ~-
T• A Y .. Te hr
SANKAMtRICAftD·
MMT•ll.C,.ARCla
2 "'"',,.,.. ... '""'" H1tt:oor sr.-1111n1 C'lr. "vntlntton Ctr.
1JOO H•rbor 11\'f. 9lldl & I'd~
Cc.I• ~e H>IM11\9111ft a.ch
su.taJ 1'24101
Oiwtn Mfft, Tllurt. ~rl Tiii t
-cdM Water Poloists
Seek Repeat Honors
By EARL GUSTKEY H~), Dennls Galvin (UC!),
l\lch Eaton <UC!), But
Stoner (!Jl>C), MIU Albright
(CdM Hi#>).
Coast Clippers : MI k e
Wiison (OCCJ, Dirk Mun·
tean (NewpOrt Ililh). Pout
Hughes (0CC), Dave
Whitaker (Cos.ta M e s a
High), Dave DeGrasse (Cal
Poly SLO), Steve Golian
(Cal St. Full.), Eric Lin·
droth (Newi><>rt HI g h ) ,
Ralph Cross (OCC), Mike
O'Gara (OCC), Jim Hill
(Estancia High), Br ad
Shoemaker. (Newpor t
Hi#>), Ou-ls Oliver (OCC),
Doug Redwine (OCC).
Of .. _,., ,.. .. ,,.,.
Corona del Mar 'A' team:
Bob likeru (San Jose St.),
!'at McClellan (UC!), Ferdy
Massamlno (UC!). Mike
Martin (UC!), Bill Leech
(UCI), Eric Oarson (BYU),
Pat Glasgow (UC!), Mason
Philpot (UCI), Steve
F1am>er (UC!), Jim
Mcllooald (UC!), Bob Nealy
(UC!).
SECOND RAC•. 4 furlongs, 3 \'Nr
old br'M In C.Ufornla. c111ml1111, Pur11
MOOO. Clalml1111 price '5000.
8 1111'1'°"9 (M Yanez) 114
R-v1llon (l Plnc1r Jr) 111
Getaw1r Man (W H1rm.tzJ lU
Mu"'h (E Medina ) 114
Mister R!Oe1boul (A Volent\11'11) lU
Klflll Of Tiie W!nd (W Mll'IOlntY) 114 GYP1Y Rov8" (O,Piet'U ) l l4
Rosie's Comet to Hall) 109
Solld E"41e flll. Pineda) 114
Warrior B<lb IJ Gon1111e1) 170
G1l1rt~n (S TrevlllOI 109
THI RD RACE. ,S.'IJ fUtlOnSll. 2 vtar old
m110en co111 & lltldlnas. Clelmlnv,
Pu~1 $4000, C!1lml~ price $10,000.
E11!ern Idol CW Harmott) 111
Stormie Oscar (M Ytn~J 117
01Ughtfvl summer (D PltrceJ H7
Chrlsn111 CJ Stlllrsl 117
Wesi.rn AbbeY (J P1klm!nc) 111
Ont Rrf Nflrfh (R York) 117
Mr. Nottti It.. Pl"CIY Jr) 117
Chlet'1 8uJty tW HerlK~J 117
W11 Wllll1 Windup (A Pineda) 117
Tap E11l1 CD H;Jlll 117
Hollypark
Entries
•M '" "' "' '" '" ... ...
"' "' SIXTH RAC•. m furl-•.! v~r old
11me1. Purw tiOOD. Allow•nc:t1, HDr11
Holt~ Rot1ry Anni •
Curr1 Mylll'r'I' IM Vinet) 111
A-011m1>1Y1 Gocldft1 IW M1hornerl ,,,
Serlct ID Htll) 120
Pnw1 11 Girt CW H1rttd;} 11'11
Eaogle1 Ptl IA PIM<111 11'
M••lor~• TI!et'ftf IJ S1Hfl1;) no
Pelli. Owl (W HtnNIZ) 120
Miu You Ml<llY (M VtllnM!ll) 11'11
Gr111d Old H-(D Pler"ul l.:!O
B-Tl\e Kllcllre Ltd\' IJ Lambert} l?G
Cornml111rv CJ Gorualel) 11'11
Holld1r Hoslts1 IR YOfk ) l lt
Sl!Yl!NTH RACE. ' flltlon11. l ve•r
old llllle•. "llowanc:t1. 1"11'1111000.
Frtt Sample CA Pl111dll "' ·~ ... 81br l • Cl Pincer Jr)
Pee J1cket (J Sfllt'r•l
8ftl1 Lo,.ln1 (D Plerct)
Flr•f Dance (II. Blanco\
Arner!oo Round (W Harm1!1 l
8ttUtllu! Dr•em (J L1mblr!)
AnY1 11.obtrl~ (W H1rrl1)
·~ 'W '" ,~
"' EIGHTH RACI. 1\.'o m!IH en ff\a
turl, 'Vtlr CIOI .. UP. Cl1lmln1. PUrlf s1.soo. Tap cl1lmlr11 price U0.000. Ctl'l-
rlt1tll Valley Ltwyltl'I WIV11•.
Sheldrtl!;t CW Mll'lal"mlv)
A-Ott! Of F-.01 (J L1motrlJ
B·Rotd Hot IM Vinni
Mtlni.tieel •.
Compnodor ID Plff'tll
8-HuUlull Kl1 CE Mtdln1)
C·French Fox IA Plnedll
R11nnl,,g Wcf'11s (M V1len1vell)
A·Sec\lrlty Chtd: fJ lamblrll
C·G~•' Prelendtr (D HIP)
Moc:ltff" IW H1rl1Ckl
A -t... Ri»e rr1lnM t ntrv.
8 -R. S. Coler frtlned entrr.
C -D. Portoer tr11ned f'l'ltrv.
•n '" "' ·~ ...
"' "' "' "' "' >n
CUSTOM DELUXE
AUTO AIR CONDITIONERS
9·5
3 DAYS
ONLY
FREE INSTALLATION
WHY WAIT? CHARGE IT! Ull OUl CONVINllNT CllDIT
IUT wnH NO MONIY DOWN
• 24 IGITH GI 24.180 MILE WIRlllTY •• •n DIWI. 24 IOITHI TO PIY
• 18 PIYIEITI 'Ill IEPTEllER I
HHIY LIMITED QUllTITIEI '
JUST "Charge It'' at K-Mart Auto SAY
IUINA PARK WESTMIN510 COSTA MBA SANTA ANA
5815 Lln .. ln i\vt . 154411 -h 11..t. 2200 H1rllw Bl..t. 1400 1c11...,.
ot V1lloy Vltw I •t McFadden .1 wn-
1t ·-126·5100 192-2088 541°2082 546-7832
I
•
•
\
... All on a Summer's · Day
'rhe Queen of Hearts will serve up tarts
(in addition to a delicious luncheon) when
the Fountain Valley Woman's Club spon·
sors its Mid-summer benefit card and
games party at 12 :30 p.m. Wednesday,
July 17, in the patio of the Al Kruken-
berg home. In true nursery rhyme tradi-
tion, the public .is invited to attend the
function which will be a Hst.eal" at $1 .25
New Officers Ready to Whirl
Preparing to spin into..:a .busy year are new officers
•f the G3rden Grove Branch of the American Asso--
~iation of University Women , which includes many
1embers in the Huntington Beach and Fountaiit
l'lilley areas. Organizing for the season ahead are
0 !t to right) Mrs. Bernard Brown and Mrs . George
per person. All proceeds from the bene--
fit will swell the club's coffers for use in
the many philanthropic projects carried
on during the year. "Queens" in charge
of the afternoon include (left to right)
Mrs. James Lilly, spade; Mrs. C. E.
Stansfield, heart; Mrs. Richard Gillwn.
club, and Mrs. Laurence Erwin, diamond .
Gill,_vice presidents;.· Mrs. J, C. Martinez, treasur·
er, and Miss Nell Farrow, presidimt. Membership
is· open to anr women graduates ·Of an .accredited
college or university and information may be olr
tained by calling Mrs . Richard Buscbnell, 839-6033.
Where the Ploy's the Thing
For the first time two awards to students.interested
in drama have been presented by the Huntington
Beach Playhouse. Mrs . William G. Susman, a cfiar·
ter member of the group and wife of the president,
offers encouragement in tilis fteld to Pamila Reed and Frances Van Horn (left to right), Huntington
• 6ClaJ
JODEAN HASTINGS 642-4321
TUllllleY, .lltf' f, 1Ma M• ,_ 11
Beach High School students. A party mr members
of the cast concluded the performance of "Petrified
Forest·," and rehearsals now are in progress for
"Sir Slob and the Princess" which will be present-
ed by and for children ne~ month.
Can This 'Linus' Discover Happiness on a Honeymoon?
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I was
especially interested in your reply to
the motber whose 6-.year-old insisted
on dragging her faded, worn-out
blanket everywhere. You said, "Leave
her alone. She'll give it up when she's
ready. I've never beard of a child tak·
ing a baby blanket on a hOneymoon ."
Well, Ann , stick around for a few
more years and you might bea~ Of it.
Our son Johnny is 15, His baby blanket
fell .apart years ago (he dr.ag~d it
around until there was nothing Jeft).
The he developed a dandy BUbstitute .
Johnny twists thi corners of his
bedsheets into sharp littl! peaks and
Of course the sheets wtar out in_no
time at all.
I am Dot complaining because ap-
parently this twisting has filled an
emotional nee~. Johnny bas always
ANN LANDERS ~
'
bee n a wonderfuJ son, 1 fine student,
· mecbanically. inclined and good in
athletics. He is a thoughtfu1 boY and
never caused us any .trouble. Perhaps
letting him drag bis blanket all those
ye1rs and now twisting' ·the sheet.a:
have given bim the .aati.sfadlon other
kids find in drag radht ud breaking
the law for "kicks."
If, when Johnny marries, he wants
a baby blanket to take on bis honey·
moon , I'll bUJ him one. -WOULDN'T
TRADE
•
DEAR WOULDN'T: Y oar Insight
and wltdom have paid off. I wish more
parents bad It. Too often children are
naued •bout trl'Vlot tlllnp wblcb
1boeld be lporod -lib olr•lll•I
blukell uoand ...r IWl!a& lbeeto.
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' Your col·
tutuf on &et. love ii additional proof
that you alWlJS side with the women.
Here's how tt loob from 1 male poblt
of. view.
I om :.! 10an ol are, • eonlitmed
•
l
bachelor who never once mentioned
marriage tO a woman. I've had 32 af.
faire in the last three· years and four
hrrMtowns . I'm not handlome, not
• great talker and I never made an
active pitch in my lift. My record ot
conquest& is proof that American
women are the most aggressive, teJ:·
hungry females in the world. When I
lived In Europe I didn't get one-
thlnl the proposltiODI I fel in Cali·
fornia.
Now what do you say?
TRANSATLANTIC
DEAR TRANS : I ••Y
bonefeatben. If )'O• never made a
plleb la ,_ Hie, bew come lllt 111rn·
dowuf Yoar record proves only ooe
tltln( -aay dame cu •a•e aa affair
II Ibo Mii bor -dud• low ........
"
DEAR ANN ~ERS ' I read with
interest the Jetter ~rom the legal
secretary who refused -to notarize
papers unless she had seen ttie partiet sign.
Good for her. I, too, am inflexible In
thit regard -10 lnflexible,_ in fact,
that I've been referred to as "that
screwball." But it P.,8.id oU. ',
Recently we handled a deed, I
notarized lhe signatures ot all five
heirs. A lawyer Of qu e'ltionabte
character stated that all f iv 1
1lgnature1 had been aHixed j>y ...
pmon. H~ even lined up a phony
handwriting "expert" to ' ruj)port blJ
charges. The fool wu laughed out of
sight Several witnesses said, 0 Tbat
screwblll would never notrarize a
signature 1he didn't wiineu with ber
own eyn" -and that ended it, -
UTICA, N.Y.
DEAR U.: Row refrt1bln( to 8""
someone who atlrU &o die ndea evU
Ill Ibo la.. al ildlcale. Tllen lo io
macb compromlllll(, bondlq Uc!
breumc -doyt, 1 daH m:, 11oulac to yoa for aetlln& a tlae uamp1e. J ' ' Is alcoholism a di.Hue? How cin
the 1lcoholic be treated? ls there la
cure? Read the booklet "Alcobolislo:,
Hope and Help/' by Ann IAnde~
Enclose 35 centl in coin with Your re--
quest and a long, atamped. Mlf.lilf ..
dressed envelope. ~
Ann Landero will be glad to help n•
with your problems. Send them to her
In care of tile DAILY~ .P.IL011 11telosinC a stamped, &eli·aaareuea.
.. vo1ope. I
'
.f
I '
r----------------------,.,-----------------------------------~ ------
•
MllS. OllDELL GUST--·_,•'--
·vows Spoken
By OCC Coup·le
:Ye;a:t 8-W I 0 a
Cmrdr. ... air -"'Cbt ..... -..... 1., • »· I Jlmlll a S.
Ot*A p _ -a.s. ..._ G... B l a i ••
l!*IM I .. .._., me
ca ;,. __ ........ ..
Ill. .. _ ... Jin. ...... . _,,,_ ___ _
Horoscope
. .
Pisces: Don1t Bow to Pressure
we»eDAT
..U.T 10
9yit&&i .... a-{M di D....,nl II): Giii ... 7 sz 5
.,,. ti. -...,_ las. willl w6rQ •• ., .. ..... . ii
WWW 1 J1!w lllil ii
• Pl fw rt1 '-': _.
--·~--,_ WI st;.
UClllll IAjd .-.
»): ---~ ......,. ..... ,...,..
It's a 'Stea r
..., Wil1I: UWJfli I e tas.,_ --·---Y•cmi•~ .. -
'9'W!lt: -·-?-, a i •I. --~~!I~
•J: a J yew.. C111111!W.
.... ,:.. trawl daifts.
Died: f ial ~ • .... ,.._,.._
.._. np " 'rr fll.
'+I =-el is • EC
Striw•W •
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-..,. -.-.. hi!" u. an Jin. la: EiiOt: F.zwm..
dwii m st"31111L a • 1:1
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my. c:ill-.. sr» Sica mca. 8'::illrt Pfti:a md
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1!:J1 ~ a &e-,_. ti1 ,,,, •1 !!l2f" i s r I 11 t ~
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A-• ..... "' _., .. ai;y--Qi ieh•. Cll:lir d. ~
scb:Asi:ir4: Pd&!Mli!M•
C-..:!ir~~
ad Ad•lt s : ~
Bead L:..0. 11¢ Sd>oci
~--mm.-,.,.,..,.ft ~ 'ibt lil'U--
Pb.s » p'l.TC~.i.SC
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Se:D!:::m tt h lErO ct
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Ciitlt b' C:ir laG--ct. d. D=ti
3aJI ha ?:Jeel o:J'('~ ~ 'a
t lU :::a: ' •
Newlyweds ,Exchange
Wedding Rings, Vows
FY+~~~
..S. r!zgJl ~ ll r i DC a
ditl51CG)" ccCrw:vd ll! b
Ie•••sH ~ <lrd:..
~by lbr Rn-. Om
P t o• ~ PmDil!l.A ~ Pim ud .. !Wet Jcm
med -...-<rebls -cirp· ·iiiO'ml m t"Z::lllrn...
_\C:Mdiing he ~ ii!
ma! or ~ 'Set!' lf-!!-
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pcl c;:;ea.~ z r-••• '"""' . -a bxJquft el keg strZ,..,.,C
beA: !:lZ:L. .acid 1 e a t i !I i
fi!iiM!$5 _. llllQi lria'".
Lccil Acmbwg. Ti a
Meetings Scheduled
... • ti. llZpftry •! "'""''re:t• -:-..! ..__
~~t!:.t'
),fisses F.Ee E 16.?$.. 5.'.:S3I
.hs2r n! P=rl --~-Ube eft 1·5 b;ub:t. ~~~
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I . tu Yillllr ..... .,_ __ 'Jt' I
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•
Shoppers:
Hear This
Slqlpinc -..;JJ be .,.,,..._I amt pall ol 1be
W_..,tmtn' womu·s Club
wbe wiB tw ., .... line a
a.;m.w. bl Jul7 tm.u:r-
alaae --,_m CT CiD£ • 7:JD p.m. 1'1mn--
daJ'. My 11. ill 811! Siller
Piii; °""1Duni1Y Room.
I See lit lodi(s w• Ads -..::bd~;;;:~ e Y•c.. .-....._. ...
lri:mq: SliP I M@W •••
\icl!l ...... 1"nr:iM. -*' -• .,, i..-Dalip ....
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pmriis z::d ft CZ!"'"..edi a
wti:e .. tw' &i* I IO Im
ii idtf::www 1l't.::!l w.at ~
,
Dom:> -&:.,,,,--= wtill-b lfledirt"1 sis:er.
Kin Ca::di )b'".afiroJ. R!'T-
ed -j:ic.r btidesnOI
1b!ir ---polo pio1r. &:id ~ ~ caried a
~ :-..! ,..._ ~ ec.... fJonf" t:".i.. .... &-
~ "' ;»i ;Ci l"'2 =-
....i -• ,ck --a wen a. mri~ taead--p;oo..
Damti BDd!D 9'rwd as
F~ the ce e:::Gt1!
~ f:n: l!ll 1wes t a
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J riflCiw f::si b ~--f::t~ocn·s patsas... lit.
w! lln... LJit 114 • ..,
B• :t*C-Badl. The ~ ... .,...., Rm-.,._ __ ~
~ .be bri d e &r••=
Jot c:a::s::dy i$ a ! t '! ZI d i ~ °""""' Caa£ ~ -teo!Jwds pm ao -~ lmmr • Cmta lilrsa..
• F...r.l:n IS"1d • Phone ~2a::x>
- -al r.111u1i;.., ...... i. pi-.
1.,n0o pieC91-¥tlb1 jackett. akirtt. cul••
-looct•ICHlltlotpullogo ......
t I I -h OM big 5ook. So euy to hawi whM
,.. -· Md -:":!?• toi>-with llNGElt" Wwics Md a SINGER a.wing 9ftechiMI
••nu• ,_, Fii ... ColuM $ 398 __ ........ _ ...
a t · t '3 ..._ lorldH to 100¥. _........,._...,.__ ,...
....... ...,. ...... l'Jtllt ... __ ............ _
-....... 4 ... .... --..................... $298 ......... ~ hi 7 I •• RL w.: 1CIDlilla .,.. ...
t I I .. ~ Mio ""°"' 44¥. ,_
• tidtlnalt: ..... ,.,.., 1~ ....,w ...
,... ....... .....,11'11 teor6Mtitd ...........
......._-... .. lllJC*I'--SfNGEl't CENTU: .... ~ ............. ,.~ .... ,
.._. _ _,.,___lr•llNCllt...,,.
SINGER
-&ARDEN GROVE
-1831 Chapman
O.m91 Coult l'laa 530-4010
ANAHEIM-515 N. L1-
A11l11._ Clllter 535°1126
HUN11NGTON IEACH
E•1ger • l••Ui
, .. "11fw .Clllter "7·1041
COSTA t SA-2300 ..._.,,
HuL1r ~Dia 549-1101
COSTA MESA
•hlol Ir S1•flow•
S1 IL .C1 11 "'-540.26U
L
'
Wendy Hinrichs Bride
'
Of Michael Callaghan
' Weody Ann lllarlcbl wa1 Jagbu durblC a cenmony
performed by tbe Rev. Ger·
ald J. Moschet. ·
lier husband'• partnts are
Mr. and Mr1. Jame1 A.
Callaghan of Sacramento. •scornd to tbe altar of s~
Catherine ol $1erta Church,
Laguna Beach to 6.cbange
VOWI and weddinJ rings
with M.lcbael Thna11 Cal·
The bride is the d.lugh-
lflr of Mi'. and Mt1. Howard
Hinrichs Gi Emerald Bay.
Given in marriage by htr
father, the bride WOl'e 1 'full
length white 1atin gown cov·
ered with cbantllly lace and
lasbioned with a tiered back.
Her fingertip illusion veil
Wu captured With a white
satin bow and 1he carried a
bouquet o( nosegays, baby's
breath, elegants and carna-
tions. She asked her sister,
Jill Hinrichs to be maid ol
honor, and her sister, Tra·
cey Hinrichs, to be a brides·
maid. They wore full length
dotted Swiss dresses trim-
med with daisies. A yellow
bow crowned their illusion
veils.
'
. ' •
P•llMr l'Mtll
MRS. M. T. (ALLAGHAN
San Fra,..cisco Home
The bridegroom asked his
brother, James M. Calla·
ghan of Sacramento, to be
his best man. Ushers were
~ohn Ponsen of L a g u n a
Beach, Lee Schussman of
San Jose and Gary Parker
of Sacramento.
Mrs. Ponsen, the bride's
sister, assisted at a recep·
tion which followed the
ceremony in the Hinrichs'
home. Among the 200 guests
were Mr. and Mrs . Robert
P. Biehl, the bride's grand·
parents from Leisure Wcrld.
The pew Mrs. Callaghan
is a graduate oC Laguna
Beach High School and the
UniveMity of California,
Berkeley . Her husband is an
alumnus of the 1ame ltJli.
venity.
Following a honeymoon
trip to Mexico, the newly·
weds will travel back up the
California coastline to San
Francisco where they will
make their new home. He
is attending graduate school
at San Francisco State Col·
lege.
Medical Group
Every se~ond Tuesday of
the month members o f Or-
ange Shores Medical Assist-
ants' Association assemble
at· 8 p.m. Location may be
obtained by calling Mrs.
Marjorie Humber, 644-2273.
In the Air
Miss Anne Marie
Dlouhy, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph J.
Dlouhy Sr. of West-
minster, b e g i n s a
career as a stewardess
for Western Air Lines.
The graduate of West-
minster High School
attended California
State College at Long
Beach and G'olden Wl'!:st
College.
July Plans
Announced
A OGst:a Mesa wedding i1
being planned by PMricia
Lynn McOoy «nd DennU R.
Motscihenbadier in tile Fir.rt
United Methodist <hlrch.
Miss McCoy it t h •
daughter of Mr . aod Mro.
John McCoy cl. Oak Park,
Mid!.. Her fiance's parents
are Mr. and Mrs. NilH
Motsdhenbacher ol Cost:t.
Mesa.
The couple plan to be
married July 'l:l alter the
benedict-elect retum1 from
ttls period 0( service ab'Jard
the USS Oanberra. He is in
ttie U.S. Navy, and is an
alumnus of Corona del Mar
High School.
Tile future bride is a
gr.adv.ate of Berkley High
Scbool, Berkley, M±ch.
I LAST WEEK! I
PHONE COLLECT
213-728-7283
FREE ESTIMATE
CHARGE IT!
~
\ , ..
~ .. ;;
n ;-
" ,
~ c.
Reduced!-Save 203
on drapery cleaning
on all ealls received thru Sat., July 13
REG. 1'° NOW REG. 250 NOW
I'll WIDm
wnRMd_, l ~gm 2~~TH
.. ,,.... -a' .. t'... S't•9'1o"t
Pri~ iflduclea taking clown and rehanging. 48 hour service .
Penneys exclusive new proce11 deons all types of draperies
beovlifully, draperies thot could never be deaned before
( ev.., beauty pleots al no oxlro charge) . Mokes them look
a.cl feel almOtt ~kt new.
PENNEY'S CLEANING SERVICE
.t...,,.riM • Mclsp...,.fs • blal)kets • dtcolQtor plllow. • Qccent "'91·
Tuesda7, J11b •, 1968 DAILY OILOT JS
Who Wears the Pants? LEGALN<mCE LEGAL NOTICE
New Trend:
It's a Draw
81 Jeaa Sprala WU.01
NEW YORK !AP) -Vive
ii difference? That'• old
fashioned. At leut among
ltt avant (ank 11111 i. tile
year c( unisex,
Thot ..... Id baUh ol tht
leXfl8 OV9!' who ifl tht
household wearc thl!I panta:
ha. come to a draw. Both
do, the same style, in·
tercho-bly.
McnoV'll', h really
t.ogethernen couple bave a
commm supply ol lhi.rt&,
jackets, jewelry, neckties
and bats. They lhart the
same hairdrHSer and, while
party-hopping, carry their
combe and cigarettes in the
same handbag. A divorce
woold leave one or the other
without a Uline to wear,
"Wl>Y should they try to
&eµariate us .o!" pondered
Cary Grlilnt whose screen
image has made millions of
women happy that men
were men. "We should all
just smell well and enjoy
ourselves."
Cosmetics is a means ol
unifying the sexes, said the
actor in ennouncinr that he
had become a boa r d
member ot a eosmetiC9
!inn.
JUl!lt a few 4lyg earlier
designer Rudi Gernreicb
told bu)VI at his fall
knitwear eollection tMt thl
skirt was dead. Despite ef-
forts of others to resuscitate
the rommtic midi, the
Califu.mi8n jmigted t h a t
clothes for men and women
were now convfll&inl.
"It ia tile only praotical
thing for our contemporary
way d Hie," 1aid Gemreich,
dressed in a belted tunic and
belled trousen like those on
his manikins. Still the knit·
ted costumes spelled out tht
difference in girls a 1
significantly as • ehrunken
sweater,
Gernreich, lest it b e
forgottlen, pklneered unisex
fastnons b y introducing
bathing trookl for women
five yea.rt ago. .•
Yet women lltlarted it all
by 1hopp tn1 i n
ha.berdameries for men'I
jeans, 1weater1 and ties.
Notirw the trend, designers
1et aOOut rescaling men'•
bat:hrOOetl, nightshirts, even
military uniforms, to suit
tne female frunework.
In an effort to be in-
dividu81 , men turned to
Nehru jackets and cos.sack
shirts, But the ladies an
buying these too.
"Which necklace are you
going to wear, dear. It
doe:Sn't ma ke any difference
which one I wear." is a
preparty e<:1nversation of a
New Rub's Rug
A Favorite
~~ ' 9092
SIZES 6.U
'"' 11f ,..; .... 11f....,"f'_
LEGAL N<mCE LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ..... '"' .. __. MOTICI TO Cll•OtTOltl
ClltTl"ICATI OP •usiMltll IU .. ltltlOll COUltT O" TMI: ITATI
PICT"IOUI MAM• OP CALIPOaMIA P<Ml 'T"-uMera11..-i .._. nrlltv .... k Olfto TM• COUNTY OP OIU.Me•
She'll Oip for ~.e high rise ~::~"',:,~·1~~1~~4 uN:'~~'. 1111 .. ., ~.~-:1•Luc a tTTA band collar of this swinging 11t1-11rm n.1m. .r w •• ...., •• '•etc.., ""''"'LEO, .... k-.. cu.•lll
Id B t 01rect Me1n.1uox Cenl•r 11'141 MetlllffX PA .. AL£0, 11M k-11 CU.llll L. • mmer · reeu o sew c1nr1r _ w1rrM'1 F1ctory c 1rK1 1nd """"'LEO Md u cu.It• PA"ALto, (even on a summer af· 1111t ••Id""" 11 com-.d .r 1111 follow· DKHHll.
) . . Int roenonltl wh-111-($), In fvll 1nd NOTICI II' MEaE•Y GIVl!M ft IM ternoon Jn cheery gingham, 1111ceci 1 (If m;ld1r>Ct I• 11 1oucnn: c,e1111nrs .,, "" 1bo'A "'"*" 111c...ren1 bonded knit for 11ummer w1rret1 D~t>rtll lonntr, m N. S1111t1, ~1 111 "($Ml 111v1"' c111m1 n1111s1 ,.,. ' Ortltl't. C1lllM11l1. .,.Id dtcedtnl l rt re<11.1lrtd to !lit 11\fm, back to SChOOI. Dllld June 27, IHI. wllh IM MC9111fl' -..cll1ra, Ill lhl otllCI
Sl1!1 el C1lflornl1, °''"'' County: 1111111 cltrll 1111111 111cr<t1 et1t1lled court, or Printed PM.tern. 909'l: 0n JulV i. lfff, bt•or• ""· 1 Nnt1roo to ,,_, 111m1. with IM MC.1H1fY'
NE\\'. Girls' Sizes 8, 8, 10, 12, :::~c.~n :,':,,!:; J=eif'~~~.:;":!! ~·~i:.:" ;~e-~·T~.·~,T,:N"f~V.
14. Size 10 takes 1% yds. 35-to m• to be 1111 "'Miii Wll-.,.m, 11 MU C1llfofn!1 Auenue. South G11e,
l·n 1ublcl•be<I to Ille within ln1trumirnt 1nd C1lllornl1 f02M, wl!lcll 11 ltw Pll<• flf · 1Unowrw.ld ht 1x.culed 1111 .,...,., bu1tnn1 ot tM wlldlrsltnld In 111 min.-.
SIXTY FIVE CENTS l·n (Ol'l"ICIAL Sl!ALl "rt11nrrtt to 1111 nl1N ol "'" ~·· • JoMph E. 01ul1 wl"'ln 11~ montM '"'' 1111 ltr11 ,.,Ollu.r coins for @'ach pattern -.,.,,,..,. "ubllc-C11...,,n11 non o1 11111 no11a.
"•lndP•I Offlot I" 0.ltd J-U, 1 .... add 15 cents tor each pat· °'"''' counrt c111r, K1111lftfl "''~"" tern for first-class mailing Mv comm111111r1 •~~,. Admlt1l1tr1tr1x June 21. 1'7' Of Ille E111r1 Ill tlWI and speeial h a n d l i n g ; "u1111111td o .. ..,, coe11 1>111'1' "11o1, Ju. Aberle "1"*" dlc•nt
otherwise t h i r d . c I a s s l'I' 2• '· 1'· n. ,,.. 11lWI • ..,, "'· •11-n, At!-Al L•w, delivery will take three LEGAL NOTICE "'' c.1,_.. •--~ Se d •• -----~ __ ---SWiii G1te. Cll...,..1 tnll WCT;1\S ()II" more. n ...... MOTICI 01" TllUSTt:•·· SAL• Tel! 12111 Mot-mo\
Marian M-artin, the DAILY "' "* "''*-fw "'';Tl!*''""' ' AM IJ 0 Putnltllld Or1 .... "''' OifloJ'"=1'111f, PILOT, +l2 Pattern Dept., .!:K~u~ ':;.!:· ~'~ ·"';;.vt'!~ : J....,. u '"" JvlV ,, '· "· ,,.. 111Ut.
232 West 18tb St .. New York, DMd 111 Trv11 d111t1 Jul'I' n. uM, m .. 1, LEG'L NOTICE
NY 10011 Print NAME lly THOMAS A. COX ANp KATMLl!EN l"l
• • • • M. COit, Plu1btnd Ind wlhl Ind "'cionted --------~~~~ ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE Jutr )0, 1"5 111 1oo111au • .,.,. su o1 Of. 1• THI! su .. ea101t couJtT op TM•
and STYLE NUMBER. 1tc!1I lltCl)t.n In 1111 oftlct ol ltM ITATE OP CALl,OJIMIA .. Olt
ll.conNr ol Or11191 OMrf'r, C1l""'nt1, TI!"' COUMTY OP Oll4Ne•
Ch tt f 11,,... lo 11<ure '" lr.ffblednen.lft 11¥0r ACTION MO. t• ... oose one pe ern ree -Ill UN ION •ANI(, • C1llfonll1 COf'PDl'll!on AL/Al IUMMOMS clip coupon in new Spring-will Hit ,, .ur.ltc 111Ct11111 lo hltMll blO-lllO•l!llT G. IELOUD ... lllnllff. YI. M.
Summer ~t~n Ca\alog. dtr tor c1&11 !l'AYA&LI! AT TIME OF SMALi!, c. W. PltelCOTT, ANO ALSO r~ ~oe:a SALi! IN LAWPUL MONl!Y 01" THE ALL OTHl!a "lll$0NI UNKNOWN 100 styles, all sizes. Send 50 UHITEO STATES) II 1111 Wnt ffllr•n« CLAIMING ANY JllGHT TIT L 1.
Cents. II U~lon l1nlr. 11 JOI South Mtln Strlet II ESTATI!. LIEN Oil INTl!lll!ST IN THl
L• '1111 A\fl!ll/t !~ 1111 Clf'I' ol °''""' IP!d lll!AL "llOl'l!llTY OESCJtl•ID 11111 THIE .,, C1111nty Ill Or•""· Sl1l1 t:I C111forn11, 111 COMl'U.INT AOVl!lllE TO THI! "U.IN• New INSi~ SEWING r11111, 11111, and lftrtrpt CO!>Vt¥"" to'""' TIFF'S OWNEJISKI" Oil ANY CLOUlt Book -shows you how to -lltld by It """' Nld Die.I I" "" ON "U.INTIPF'S TITLI! TH•llETO. ProHrlY •llVlhl r" file Clf'I' ef C!!lll svi:o Hl!JIEIN •AS DOES ONI St'W it today , Wtar it tomor· Mu1, In 11ld Cllllntv Ind St1!1, desc:rlb-
1
THROllGH ONE HIJNDlll!D, lnthnlUlr
row. Over 500 pictures. Only ~ ... =~l!L t : 0~~"ci~~'t· 0, lHE sTATt: ~, fl. Tiii Wi ii lt•.OO fffl Ill l ot MM of CALIFOllNIA le lh1 1bov1 111mllll ---o==-c~7 7==o---I N!'wprrl Mt11 l r1cr, In !tit <11'1' !If COS· Otltlll"~nl!: LEGAL NOTICE II M.,1, counf'I' ol 0flP!llt. Stilt ol You lrt htr.iw dlrl'CIH lo "" 1 wrll-
C1llfarn!1, 11 "' "''" ..corded In book '-" pl~1dl"9 In rt11•onN lo tM wrlllld
1---,-.,-,c. TO CltlDITOltl J 1101 l el M1Ktlllneoui ...,,.,,, '" 1111 tom11•~lnl ol "" tbl!UI "''"" 1lll~tllf
IU,l lUOA COUltT Ofl TMI "otflct ol flle noun!¥ ...,_.det ol Mid wllh !ht tltrk Ill 1111 1bo'n tt1tlllld Cllllrf count¥, In 11111 ,~ tnllllld ldlOll "'-"' STAT• Ofl CALIPOllMIA f'Olt 'AllCEL 1: rgi fn!lf l'OU In Mid court, with!" Tl!M
THI COUNTY o .. <MlA••• Tiit E11t 6:1.00 '"' o1 1tw Wnl 1M.OI feel divs ll~r 1tM 11rvla en yeu Ill "'" 11ln
Me. A-C... of Loi MM OI' N.-.""1 MIN Trtel, Ill •llmrNftt, If NfVld wllhl" lhf 1-.. 1!11111 Ill MYlllTA E, HEWl!TT, I lle 1111 c!f'I' Of Coste Mill, Cflllfltl' ol named CIPUftlY, II' wllhln TMlllTY ..,. If
k-n 11 MYJITA ESTELLE Ml!WETI, Ortn•lf, Iliff of C1llfofnl1, 11 "' ll'llP teNHI ti~.
OlcHled. ritG<'dtd In book s DIOI l el You lfl lltf.et' nolllltd _, unln1 -NOTICE IS HE•e•Y GIVEN " the MIK 1llaMOUI MIPI. Jn "'' ornca of .... -flit • Wf'ltllft m-11111 .11 ... 1-, M" crtdllof1 Ill "" '"°" "'"'" Mcedtnl Id -~· ... "''' 111 .,...._ htvlfltl clllrm •t•ln.t ""' countl' rKOrlllr t:1 11 u1unf"f, •lllntlll w111 tak1 luotP,....,1 fol' '"" "*"" u ld Neid'"! 1,. ,._1rtd 11 lilt IMrn Stld Mlt wlH be IN'<ll. lut wHll·•.t Ill' d~...-61!.,..ndottl lft fhl wrlllHll
wtlll ~ ntel'lllfY Vlll/Clllfl In 1111 1111~ cov.n.11nl or w1rr1111Y, '""''11 « lmPll!!'d, «'f'Mtllfl!t 11 11111"' "'°" Cllfttrld, or wlll
o1fhlclll'k111 lttl •bow: et11'11tt11 cwrt ., '"'rdfne tlllt. ,...-···:'on. or -1P11V to IM oourt tor '"" 11111• rtlltf to ~I """' with "" lllttl;.,., l;UITlbrlncH . lo ,.., """ ••lnc!NI -ol dlrn1Plded In lllt ..... 111t11 """"111111. ~rl fo "" ~._, cl• e 11tr1 .. Id "OI•, ""''Id "" H id °*· to wit: Y1111 ,...¥"'"' -""In Ill In •ll'll'llrf
L-iiri""' .. MYln AtlorMVS .. , MJ,000.0I, wllh 111111'111 lrtnl """"' 7, 1"5 • l llY 1111""' _..,, wl"' 111t -
L•W ·.. 0 .Clll , .... H.._, •1tc11 II 11'11 /ltl II •14"-,tr """"""'II Ill Hid 111tn1 or l'lll1 1n11 -k.tdl ...
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u' • · obl"'·ll-H<:ured !!ttre'!v. hereftlfO<"-. '""•""' 1~ 1111 c~unf'I'"' °'""''' St~ts"' ~=~·~";:!1 wn'I •••cutltd 1nd Otllvtrld lo 1tt~ lfflde••l~OCd C•!l"'rn11. 11rt1cwl1r1¥ desc:•lt-ed .. el if11 bovt 1 """'81'1 Oec11r111oft II D•!ault end t-lol..,.._.
llLl:lll LO.:.I .;=::':"" !Nnd for Slit, ~~ 1-1:81'1 nol~t nl .... il:Cl!L h Thi llSI H fflll ol 1111
MYEllt' ' brt!•dl Ind lltcf..,.. 0 ~auH ""° w"I NO I"! /f/l 1111 'IOUlll JO fttt ol IM p 0 1 1191 d!f'1l1ntrd It "II .,.Id ,,_rty lo "1111"' norlh '50 fllf of 1111 wnl cnt-fltlf of ""' -~ ... c.. Cll"'""' ""' llld ofll!Hll-Ind lf>lrtalltf, on MlfCll ..,,ifhwnt ltUlrtl!• ., "" l>tlr""9•t "°"'""""' ftr •'~tclltlr 27, , ... , t:::"" ~l.llld to 11.,': -rter (If SKtlllrl ,J, T-'111• J ll\llh.
""brttlltd Or1,... Ceut O•llf' "tlol, nonce 111 look us. ; "2 ol Oto r"'" 11 wnl, 1111 •1r111rdlno I••
J111'1' J, '· 1', 2J. JM MM ;.~!;[ci:'~ Ill Hid fll:tc:::.r'I Olllcl, =c~Wl11'1, Ill the CllY ol Hunll"'IM
lllAL1 "A1tCIL II: Till NII 21 ~ 11 1119 OINd: Jul¥ I , I.... Wftl 710 tnt o1 ... IOV1'fo JCI lft! Ill tr.. AJr'j woman with • well· UNION IANI(, """"~ ... , "lhl _, ~~" .. ""'
ill ~ .,_,.,. 11 111d TnnMt, ~~t 1urrttr ol 1111 ~d froomed bathroom W ~ C:l:ltTl .. ICATI Ott IUlllilhl •v Ardtn~ Lllldl, 111u1rttr 01 Sl<"~n 17, TOWMllll J IOUlll. pleased with this cable rug. fl1CT1t1ou1 NAM• Alfl!IOri1td 1+tn.11or ,..,., 11 wn1,"" ••rNrof•"" ''" '"'
I , 1'111 ""'"'lltMd di certll"I> w. ,,. -A'*"' l 4l!O. Mttldl"" '" "" C11't' w11 M"""'"'"" 'Ibe cab e-stit.ch 11 IO easy MtF"' , IMI,.... ,, • w111 lflll """· °"'''*"' Otfktr ktldl. to krBt ThJs rue and se~t. c°'i. Mnt, c.s11wn11, ""*' "" ""' "* ... IM, 111 ....... n11. ' , a lllloln """ ,..,,,_ of IK•LL Y'I "llfllllhtd Or-C•lt Diiiy "llel, "°"' nu an ,..._,. ""''""" 111111, ...,._. cover, a prized set. Make •uTCMl!ll SHOfl 111111 1111! ... 111 fl'"' 11 JulY '· u. u..,.. nfWI ¥W .., tNHr .,.. _...,, "" •""'""'
the rug any 1ize ind fit for ~ .. " "" "'tooirint ",._· """'°'' llOlll!illtT o. •l!Louo win _,.. "' 111e 111me1 It! ~n '"' '"'" II '""9~ 1r1 c.utt ..,. .,. ,.llllf *"""""' 1n 11'11 ~ 1ny room. Pattern 7408: " fllloWI: 5•-'nt ft.-....... ....it: 1'llfl "be "1""'"" "'''""'
d. U Slltldon 0 . 1nd Jllft Kl""°'trldl. •U ...,,...., I lnW plllntllf h the .... flllirtM ef ... w llf9Mi'ff tree ons. •ro.c1w1.,, eos11 Mnoo, c.1111r1111. C 111 "' ..,,..11 .. ......
FIFTY CENTS <coins) for °""S:.":..!'o~"'J,,.....1ria PUJll.:.I c!hTNl!ss""' "-"' ..... -w.j"""
each pattern -add( 1$ c~ntts 51, .. .,JC!"~r:,-:;,i:,,.. Clyl'lfyi & ._w"':':. V+ '.:t1t. c-tr c11r11
for each pattern or firs · °" NM 11, 1-. blllrt IM, • ""''"' TRADE 1r1 w1nw 1. """' clN1 mailing~ ~~1 =r:J.."':...,""o ... !.~~·.c::=~~ ,w .. n~=:u. handlnc ; otha-w1st wm.1-kMwft '9 "" N IN lhl __, wtlOti One ef the •~ 1M ,,,...,.., •I.ft
ci.. delivery will take ~~:: ==.: =:., -:=,i: ' .... ,,.., ;:..-:, ~ =: •
three Wetb or more. Send "" -· molt "' ... '"' ,..lfttl... ... ~I OMI --~ 'lie B -~ ••-DAILY 10,re1c1A1. ••ALJ c111t111 1ft or.,.. c.unty .....,.. • ,.._.... w n. I r~,. Mf'll JMIPh I . 0.¥11 , •Alt•* PILOT 1 O 5 Needlecraft ,...111"1' "w~11c-c..111or"i. r.... ...,..tl!H Or"•• Cillt O•llY l"llilt. ,.._
Dept., Box 163, Old Chellea ~.II(':-~~· '"' cdWJ99'j''P'ffW-~ ~!' ~ ,,. ,,,.... S·-~-New Y-k N Y M'~1"., 1""',. -·--'{h O£fLY PILOT \.M.lVll, VI ' ' ' Jl,IM ti, 1''70 1211 -.. , ... _.,., -• ,..
toou PrUK No,.., Addre11, ,..,,.... °''"' ,.,,, °''' ""'· ' ' I ZI,, hnen N'lfftlber, J-lt.U•Jlltott,.f,IMt ,,._., ,. •• ,..., ...._ •••• n w •• +
LEGAL NOTICE
• I
! I
I I
I
I r
11 DAil v PILOT Tlltldly, Jv~ •. l'lbll
TYCOON -Ralph ~oey, above, narrates a docu-·
mentary on the life and career of publishing tycoon,
Wllllam Randolph Hearst, tonight on "It's a Nice
Place•• at 9:30 on Channel 2. fncluded. in the one-
hour special i1 a tour of the Hearst Casile at San
Simeon. ~mia.
TELEVJ!!llON \11E11'8
Daytime TV
Not for Men
By RICK DU BROW .
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) ~ Pity the poor man who
bu to .taY borne during the day for one ~ or
another, and tries to watch network teleVIston .
DAYTIME VIDEO is definitely not a man's
man's world. In fact. except for a handful of shows
-and local movies -one wonders exacUy whose
wor.ld:it is. Any fellow who finds his wife watching
most of these programs is liable to start asking
himseU: "Is this the girl I married?"
Probably the best general viewing for grown-
ups duriag daytime .netwo~k hour~ -not count-
ing the weekend public affairs entnes -are NBC.
TV's "Today" show and ABC-TV's Dick Cav~tt
program a daily 90 minutes of talk and enterta1n-
menl ~d some of the soap operas, despite their
lack of humor, are very professionally done, and
frequently more realistic than the heralded prime-
time outings. But look at the rest:
IN THE 196Uf SEASON, ABC-TV will follow
the morning Cavett show with reruns of "Bewitch-
ed" and such incredible game aeries as 1'Treasure
Isle " 0 Dream House " "The Newlywed Game"
and1 "The Dating G~." In additioq, there will be
the soap operu "General Hospital" and "One We
to Live," and the daytime mystery, "Dark
Shadows." CBS-TV meanwhile, will go into the morning
with reruns' of the Lucille Ball series, "The B~ver
ly Hillbillies," The Andy Griffith Show and the Dick
Van Dyke situation comedy.
THE 'AFTERNOONS o! CBS-TV rely heavily
on the soapers that carried the network's daytime
ratings for '° long, among them "Love of Life,"
"Search For Tomorrow," "As the Wold Turns,"
"The Guidin Light," "Secret Stonn," "Edge of
Night" and ~e newcomer1 "Love ls a Many-Splen-.
ored Thing." After all these comes the stone-age
humor of "Art Linkletter's House Party.''
NBC-TV which has come up strong on C~
TV's .dayt.Un°e ratings recently, has done it in. la.rge
part with those game shows that defy descnption.
They include "Snap Judgment," "Concentration,"
"Personality" "The Hollywood Squares," "Jeo-
pardy ., "EYe Guess." "Let's Make a Deal,"
"You 1Don't Say!" and "The Maleh Game ."
THE NETWORK also has one of the better
soapers "Days of Our Lives," a strong ratings-get-
ter as ~ell as "The Doctors" and "Another World."
' The mere listing of the game shows leaves one
in a state of wondennent that there are so many
persons who willingly waste the precious time of
their lives on such utter trivia and unadulterated
nonsense. Any man who catches his wife watching
this stuff faithfully ha scause to see a marriage
counselor.
THE CHANNEL SWIM: ABC-TV's weekly
movies in the coming season will include "Dr.
Strangelove," "Zorba The Greek ," "Gat Ballou ,"
"Suddenly Last Summer," "The Cardinal" and "Is
Paris Burning?" ... same network, in November.
offers an hour special, "Hemingway's Spain,"
tracing the attachment to that country by author
Ernest Hemingway through four books he set there :
"For Whom the Bell Tolls," "The Sun Also Ri ses ."
"Death in the Afternoon" and "Dangerous Sum·
mer."
Denni• the Men.ree
·~· 1·• ~
PEANUTS
WILLIE MUFFET
l TOOK 1M05e Ga.0 C'DMf'tUIP5.
All~ 1 6AVf THEM lO THf5 MAM. rr
•S STUPID-AN() PISHONf5T.1
... AND I KNOW ·YOU FOOTBALL FANS '''
WILL BE SADDENED TO LEARN THAT STAR
QUARTERBACK, WERT PH\fTZ, WHO SUFFERED
EYEBROW SPASMS AND ... r--r-:~~---
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
r». PISAPPOOITEP IN ONE T'HINCS.,
fHE1LA •• TWAT VOU PIPll'T TlU. ~ ,
A&OllT THE PKO&l.EM. YOll'VE 15Eal
~AVIN6 WITW 'lour MOTHER'!
MOON MULLINS
MUTI AND JEff
"41SS PEACH
'SNAK!:·EYE ISWAN'ItD FOR FRAU!l
~ m;JACKING, ~PLUNDER,
BANDITRY, EXTORl'lON, ~i.Q~
SWINDLING, HOMICIDE, HL&:l\Ml\IL1 S!IAKElXMll, KIDNAPING, LOOTING,
PILLAGING. PLAGIAR'i; EMBEZZLING;
AND SUNDRY OTHER
NAUGHTY NO·NOS !
n:EWAIW
• 1:>~715
DSA.D CR.ALIVE'
TllERE 15 NOBoDY
MORE STABLE
TAAN ME!
llOY,
IT'S
su~e
EXPENSIVE !
IT Dl!f'l!NDS~·I~ ')tU
ONL'f C~ Fa< THREE
MINUTl!S, IT'S NOT
'JOO BAD"'
~-
By Biii Brewer
By Gn Anlola
By Ferd Johnson
--· llOW IM AN EXTRA THREE BLDCKS
-M TOPl>Y'S .. .>. -~"'
By Tom K. Ryan
ly Al Smltli
'Zlllllt' 1(ellye
'RIDING $TAeLE
lyMel
TUESDAY
JULY I
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U.S. dllltrt " tt llJD.
euc..w ..
8 GABRIEL'S EXCITING * "GRAND PRIZE RACING"
Gel Tickets ot O..ltrl
1nd Win Up to $500.DO
tMllll .......... .....
I C.lforMI St-. hit: Ill 1117. (I)
D llll IJl""" Ill CIOI .,., '°' ......... DltldlJI .... .... ~ • ..-..let ...... ... -.... ,_ .... ..,_ ..
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'"""l,Cll-~--
8 ROUER GAMES-llft! (C) * T-llRDS n. DETROIT
*" Blolldell.
__ ,.,.._ .. _
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dtrt., ~llClllt Priet.
D~IJl---111
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· Liit W.niln&," "Feur Mettw1, • 11 111111 (lOl "Thi CllWI,.. llld .. ,...._ t1
UII NET PltJfl1111: '1hlrt1111
~1111 rtt-Tlll Mp." (II) ., .. _ 4211d Sffwt. ..
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d11t1t 111 illtll'llltlollll Ml httffd
by Rvtlit11 Mlllt 11tr Rttdolf Nur· I• II MW: "Yllt ... -I~ .,., IM VilMM Mlllri• um mr Wtbrw 1111 t ,. .. thlll. Ml) '35 -Mtr1t 0Ml'lf!, fndrit ""'"
WEON fSOAY
DAmME MOVIES
OllllM: ""'w., Ill" <• tff)') 'II -Moflt F,..,..i., I•
N1lso11.
81 ••111!1*..n
·-IC!
ll:ttD .. ..._ lllJ .....-(lfrllM) '40
--Q1uo.tt1 Co1Mrt. R17 Mlll111d..
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"'""'' IRICI Clllit. 4='8 8 (C) .,..,_ ..... tilt ....
• (C) """1 " ...... ,..... .... (iptdkvllr) 'M--N111 SIMI.
(.....mn) '55 -•• ""*· ID '"nt Alre1!1rn ef lll1it
........ "*'1' t-.i 'U -.,.... (4ttN) '44--frMric lllwdtii
Ulh.... ... ...
• JOB PRINTING
• PUBLICATIONS
• NEWSPAPERS
01'1• Of Thi i.,.."t f•clfltl•• 111 Or111tt C..1'tJ
' P iL_'JT ~)R I NTll'-JG
nn WDT llAUOA &ft. MIWPOIT D4C.M
4
II
---------------------------------------
. I .. \ ' • " I • . •
Castomers to Get . .
Fast Service Soon
Have customers yelled
''Fa&ter service" once too
often!
Well, they're going to iet
it. One of these days they're
going to be receiving their
bills fast~r than e v e r ,
thanks to a n~w "electronic
scanner" that reads· marks
or figures entered o n
documents by route meter
MIW.OIT I WH -.i th ••l"'-
to. leMi.•• Uff lole -Ot. 1-1110
ENDS TONIGHT
A.c ... •y Wh1Hr
"CLOSELY WATCHED
TRAINS" ., ..
"DON'T JUST
-STAND THERE"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
'l&l:JOHN _I a ~YID n'AYNI WU15SIN _.._.._ ...... I
oho
SHORT SUJJICTS
h1. Show Storti 6:<4S
Co11th110111
S111doy fn>m 2 p.m.
NEW llll$l
THEATRE
709 EAST IAllOA BtYD.
BALBOA PENlNSULA· &13~48
GAIETY •••
VI HANCE
RADIANCE A
I
men, ·sales clerks, and
others. •
The new tool is an
''Optical scanner" Vt'lth an
electronic eye w h l c h
operates much as the
human eye -~xejlpt what it
reads is turned into im·
pulses that activat e_ elec-
tronic equipment whi ch, in
turn , prints out invoice
other data.
ENDS TONIGHT
John Wayne
in
"THE GREEN
BERm"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
H11nted .. H;i1111ted ., Wanted
-.Like Butt• of Pr97I
ROCcffldXJll!ll MllJOCHVll!i
t{'1I --~tT!lll.lilf. :!OIH
·'~
GeoNJe C. Scoft ,,
"THE FLIM FLAM MAN"
Continuous
Daily from 2 p._m.
H•ld OYet' 5th & ff11.al Wffk, e11d·
l11t ·July 16. Co1ttl11110111 Wed., ·
Sot, & 51111. from 2:30. Nl9htty
sllo~ 6:30 & 9:30.
"NA.TU.E'S HALF ACRE"
·-~-
_EDWARDS
"
'
Veterans
~I Policy
.. <".& ,\: ·~. :::r;;or-~~ ~-'I~ .. '·::::;~]· fj .
~IC. ... r .. ,.,... ,,. ..... ., lw... IKI. W..a.r .;,w.-
"Goodness, I certainly don't care for this 'new image•
rour hair stylist has given you!"
Water Supply Lack
Hurts Area Growth
What's the reason why
some communities never
grow?
Lack or adequate water
f-acilities is often the largest
single factor. according to
W·allace T. Miller, managlng
director of the Cast Iron
Pipe· Research Association
in Chicago.
where the water supply is
weak and cannot provide
proper service.
3) Modem living con·
veniences in the homes are
also placing a rising burden
on water facilities, so new
housing l ll"aots will b e
located where the water
supply is adequate and
modernized.
Lashed
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~
Sen Strom Thurmond (ft..
S.C.), says veterans 1oon
will I011e benefit!: under the
GI education bill unless fn.
stitutions they attend com.
ply with the Civll Rlghll
Act.
Thurmond, saying t b e
V e t erans Administration
plans to announce the new
policy soon. denounced the
move in a Senate address.
"I have information that
the VA is to announce in the
near future that veterans
receiving GI bill education
and training assistance will
no longer be allowed to at ..
tend a school which has not
signed the statement of
compliance with the 1964
Civil Rights Act," Thlll' ..
mond said.
Thurmond said the policy
would be "unfair to veterans
. . . , unfair to educational
institutions ... , (and) an
extension of a pattern of
coercion in the use of tax-
payers' money ."
The Civil Rights Act
forbids payment of federal
aid to institutions that failed
to meet federal an·
Udis crimination standards
but the GI allowances are
paid directly to the veteran;
not the institution, Thlll'·
mond said.
"This procedure would
certainly indicate the Con-
gress had no intention of
trying to dictate. to. the
veteran where he should at-
tend college," ThW'mond
said.
UAILY .iLOT JZ
A survey taken by the
.a s soclation's Community
Assistance Bureau shows
what happens when a com·
munity's needs outstrip its
water facilities:
The bureau recommends
that the citizens of com-
munities that face these
problems talk t.cJ city of-
ficials or initiate action in
which the shortage of water
facilities can be solved.
Card Notes -•
1) Since the town 's growth
is stunted, its property
values cannot grow and it.s
taxation base is restricte"d.
2) Industry today requires
more and more water and
avoids establishing n e w
plants inc omm unities
NATIONAL GE .... E1'Al COl'IP'()f!A
FD~WSOUTH !A. COAST
11....0. •t Suntlowef • M1-21t
LAST TIME TONIGHT
2DIH COOl.fl'f·~ .....
ckARlroN
~ESION.
plu• Yul lrynn•• in
"THE DOUBLE MAN"
"MAN"-2:15 •1111 6:50
"HAPPllST'"-4:01 •n4 1:45
* STARTS WIDNl~DAY *
Co~d Ny tr.111 l :JI
"SUPERIOR
ENTERTAINMENT!"
Anniversary Which Is Shorter?
Oass. Slated
In Fencing
Mary Stewart, a Chicago hotel receptionist, seems to be wondering who hN
The design for a com-the shorter skirt. Is her mini-skirt shorter or is the kilt worn by Carl Mc·
memol"Qti.ve post card Mahon a Shriner who is a member of the Zem Zem Kilty band of Erie, Pa.
hoooring the 25th an· ·About '125,000 Shriners are holding their annual convention here this week. niversary CJi the Women~~~~~'-~~~~~~~~-"-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Miardnes was made public
A fencing expert and a
modern d a n c e specialist
have been named to the
physical education loculty
at Oal St<Bte Fullerton.
They are Dr. Araminta A.
Little, assoc?a,te prolessor,
Los Angeles, and Nettie L .
Morri&Qll, lecturer, Para-mount
Dr. Elmer L. Johnson,
dlainnan of tile physical
education department, said
Miss Little will t e a c h
courses in d<:1.oce, while Miss
Morrison will initiate a
coeducational fencipg pro-
gr.am and teach classes in
tennis, badminton a n d
women's physical con-
ditioning.
last week by Postmaster
General W .Marvin Watson.
'The five cent card will be
issued with first d a y
ceremonies at the Marines'
Memorial Club in Sen Fran~
cisco on July 2S, Assistant
Postma-st« Genere.1 Relph
W. Nicholson will represent
the P05t Offlice Department
•t ttie ceremonies.
Co-1 deairlng first
4'Y canceUa«ons may sub--
mit orders to the
Postmaster, San. .Franci!icO', ·
California 94101, witb remit·
tance t.o rover tM cost. It
sllould be addressed First
Day Cancellations five cent
Women M..uines P o 1 t a I
Card, and lhould be post
merked no later than July.
26.
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 -prob9 6 Large rOClfll
10 Apprehends
the 111ean-
''• of 14 .0ld·
womanish
15 Utilized
16 fire escapt
17 Ewergreen .....
II Wandtr
19 Goddess of youth
20 Tlack Jitet o flclal
22 African
counby 24 Bly of Ftll'dy
features
26 Piece of buslnes;;
'"""' 27 Follower
30 -Arbor
31 Having
the SUit
score
32 Frivolous action 37 Poetic contraction JI Eaactly
dill•lted
!O Sy•bol of
sturdiness
41.Botta. d•lllng Rlh: 2 words
0 far from
negllgihlt
44 HU.rdalh·
try 11e•
45 Fabrics wlll .
open mesh 48 Tta, for ont 51 French
llllPftSSiontst 52 Beetles .5-4 Reserve bid:
2 words
51 lm111tdlatel1 ...... , ..
5, Br1Wtl)' .........
61 Hindu guitar •z Feminine
suffix I Deviate
63 Equal: from tht
Comb. form werllcal •4 COllle lfPOll t U.S.N. an d
the stage ft.C.N.
65 Kind of ..n: VIPs
''Bird 10 Plact of
67 lmlntss misery
tr1n1act1on1 ·n St! In
DOWN
l Scoops up
with th• tongue
2 First natutal
nu111btr l One of
Colu111bus's
ships
-4 M1dt
watchful 5 Agitate mew 6 Give up
1 J1p.
111ountaln
Optrlt!Oft
12 Bone 13 Move furtively
21 Netherland•
city 21 Jinn
25 Ptl1tl'
27 llnutt
ptrtlcl•
!I Moo • I 9 Group of
anl111al1 31 Eavesdrops:
2 W«ds
34 Time of day
3S An lv•d
~/9/68
36 Makes last by economy
31 Stagt In a cycle
39 Ramsh1cld1
structurts
<4Z Br1ak
<41 -ChaPtl
46 lrofl -47 Gathered In a group
<48 B1at off
<49 Ra lse,th t
s_plrlts of
50 Food
product
53 V191tabl• dish
55 Fem lnlnt ....
56 Scottish
HlghlandH
57 Ctnlnt
sounds
Ml Flx1d point
of tlmt
Military Separates
Twins for First Time
Stephen and Greg
Cone.way, Identical 21-year-
ol.d twins. who have "always
done everything together,"
according to Greg, are
1eparated for the first time
in their lives.
"Steve is already J n
Germany," Greg said today,
"I leave Saturday for Ft.
Lewis and from there go to
Vietnam."
The boys, sons of Mr. and
MrB. George Conaway of
2607 Bunya, Newport Beach,
were born in Ne~ Beach
and attended schools in
Costa Mesa and Santa Ana .
'They were graduated
from Orange Coast College.
Botti were interested in
track and water sports.
Both had identical grades in
military fli ght school, and in
advanced helicopter flight
training at Ft. Rucker, Ala.
Their mJii tary service is
separating them because
under Defense Deprtment
regulations, two members of
a family don 't have to serve
in a war zone at the seme
time.
Greg has been assfgned to
the First Cavalry Division in
Vietnam. He hopes to
become a commercial fiyer
when he returns.
Steve tt1inks he'll become
one, too.
Group Meets
In Newport
The state board o f
govemon of the California
Engineering and Gradlllg
Contractors Assn. will meet
July 12-13 iat bhe Newportec
lnn in Newport Beach.
The weekend session will
include meetings ol the
boM'd alumni and members
of tihe state-wide Highway
Heavy Chapter, headed by
Donn 0. Midi.eels of
Newport Beacfl.
The meetings will begin
F riday at 4 p.m. with an ex-
ecutive session, followed by
.a cocktrail party. Seturday'1
ad!tvities include general
meetln~ and a cocktail par·
ty, hosted by the EGCA
°"8rige County chapte<, and
dinner dance.
Lynda Swayed LBJ
Writer Tells Why He Bowed Out
NEW YORK (AP)-
Columnist Drew Pearson
says in a magazine article
that questions by Lynda
Bird about why her husband
had to go to Vietnam pro-
vided· "the final clincher"
for President Johnson's
decision to retire.
Pear.son writes in the cur·
rent issue of Look magazine
that Johnson and his wife
asked Secret Service men to
aw&iken them before Lynda
Bird arrived at the White
House at 6:30 a.m. after a
flight to the West Coast to
s:ee her husband, Marine
Corps Capt. Charles Robb,
off to war.
Pearson says the Presi·
dent confided to a friend :
"We didn't want her com·
ing into the White House all
alone. So we left word with
ttie Secret Servi~ to notify
us 30 minutes in advance.
LYING IN BED
"We were awake and
lying in bed before the
Secret Service called, I pull·
ed. a pair of britches over
my pajamas and ft went
out to Ule South Gate to
m'eet her.
"She was pale as a ghost.
She talked to me about what
a fine boy Chuck waa, in the
PQ6t tense, as if -be Wu
never coming back.
And Lynda Bird said:
"Daddy, l want to isk you a
quest.ion. Why do we have to
fight over there when 110
many people were opposed
to the war? Why do we have
to end 200 bays over there
jn Chuck'& company When
tbere.'1 IO much opposition,
here at borne to the war?"
'lbat nlght, Johnson an·
nounced. his decision to
withdra.w from the presiden·
tial picture.
CALLED HUMPHREY
That morning, Pearson
S"a·Y'J, Johnson called on Vice
President H u b e r t H.
Humphrey and showed him
two alternative endings for
his speech that night -one
just a "petoration f o r
peace" and ·the other an-
nouncing his wiUJdrawal.
Pearsoo says Humphrey
tried to persuade Johnson
not to wittidraw, but the
President W&ti adamant.
Pearson quotes Johnson
as having said:
"The time is getting short.
We 've got to get peace in
Vietnam. And I think thlit
with me bowing out the
other slde is more likely to
negoUate.
"There's another thing.
I'm tired. I'm getting old.
All the men in my family
have a record of not living
much over the age of 60. I'll
be 60 this summer. I've had
a heart attack. ·My heo!th !J
pretty good. I think my
chm. is as good as yours.
But I'm not sure I could" live
out anotber term. And ttiat's
not the Wf/'/ I want to end
my life.''
NO COMMENT
AldH of Humphrey In
Washln~ 1akl bt would
have no\ eomm.t OD tbe
maguloe ll'ticle.
Pearson wrot. t b a t
Johnson told Humpbny b•
had Intended -•clJlc bis
withdrawal In h11 Jan. 17
Stale of the Unlon addrtU,
bul mlllQI the l e I l.
Johnson 1aid he ft.rat 1c-
cused his wife, Lady Bird, of
taking the ~xt with her to a
beauty parlor, but later
discovered the slip of paper
near the phone in bis White
House bedroom, Peanoo
relates.
Pearson writes th a t
Johnson first wrote out a
statement of withdrawal
last November and showed
it to a few close friends.
Six men had scaled tlle
iron paling fence .around the
White House last year intent
on killing Johnson, Pearson
says, and U,000 letters
threatening hi.s life had been
written.
The columnist s a y 1
Johnson once confided:
"What's the ute of being
President when the country
is divided, when the
Congress won't pass a tax
bill, when the dollar ia Jn
jeopardy, and when the
press diistorts everyt:bing
)'OU do?
"I think I <Otdd gel
renominated. I think I could
get re-el~. But tb1
stockholders are
dittatis:fled. Perhaps WI
nted a new preeident. •1
UCI Awarded
$236,000 Pact
UC Irvtoe boo •-dod a $Z311,000 -l fo tilt 0. I
K. Coyle Co., of l.e Hlllra,
to u:tend the ring D>ell to
connect new o&cedemlc
~buildlap -i ~--park londoooplnl. '
'•'
Th• COylo """-lral low among 1ewn bidders
l<lt ... proJect.
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JI DAILY l'IUIT
Botelho
Succeeds
WeJlman
0-ol ~ Co. "
Calll«nlo -~ J. S. (staa) B ~
dlnctor,lo-E.R.
Wellmla Al Ill 0..C0 dlvlllm ..._.
Wellman bu --molod lo vlco ~ -
_.o1m-alW..mD ~T~Co.ID
Loo GllOI, nplac!nf the relaiac Eclwvd W. Vodden.
Botelbo'i aucoeaor M
-Telophcme'1 bucllel
-II Donald J . Pessoa, nortbeni area
ptant ectmtnlstrator.
Bciteltlo ls a 14·1 eat
..... --o1 CaUfcnia, 1r...i.mnc to
Callfornl• from the
H-aiian Telepbooe C o •
-... he -kod ,,_ IJl51
lo 1954.
Wellmon, a Loo Alamllol
nolded, HrVed ttie Oraoge
aru • divilion mma&:er
GINTIL PICKS HEW ORANGE MANAGER
J. $. -h I!. R. Wollman
llloce Wt OcfA>ber, when be
M<Wlled -dud., alt<r MniDC 1be Ea1t Long
Beach division a t t s
cli'fi1loa manager toi tw~
:i-s.
He was assistant dirtctor
ol public rtlia!OllO from 1960 to 1911$ ....i actually beiao
his Geoera1 Telephone
Ye111' Meaey's Worth
How Surcharge Affects You
By SYLVIA PORTER
(SeeudlaaSerlel)
This tbfee.columa 1erje1
II delilDed to belp you apply u. new tu incfteae pro.
p«1;y and ID ways wbicll will
-'"''" itl lmpoct on your
pa,dleck or profits. Con· linulnC from yest«day:
-U you'e alzN!y paying.
m eitimated tax for 1988,
you may have to file an 8meoded declaration a!ld
raise your estimated tax
paymeotll to reflect the new
alacbarge. nu. applies to
payments and declarations
ol fftimated tax due oo or
alter Sept. IS, 1968 -and
ttie Jaw '"'"""' that the 711
pereent surcharge ~or '68
ebau1d be picked up lD your
remaining two instatmenls
due Sept. 11, •ea and Jan. 15,
1969.
As -. ill\llltntion. if your
estimated tax for .'68 ls rais·
ed by ttie IUl'clwge from
'1,0001o fl,1115, '37.50 of lhe
extra '75 iJ due S<!>l 16,
1918 and Jl7.50, Jllil. 15,
1111111. Under tile law, ttiere iJ
no penalty for un-
~eot of e<tlmated
tax if the imtalmenls paid
""' at least 80 percent of the required estimated pafUldlta. Thus, in this ex-
ample, pa,rnem. or not
more th&D P> in each in-
1talment (80 percent of
FAVORITES
H1flo111I 11Nf I.col r11d1r-
thlp ,ellt ,,..e the DAILY
PILOT .. m" MM ef ffi• _,. ,.,.1,, cof••r11 1114
f11hl'" av•lf1W. to •nv
11-1p1por bi the Unlhd
St.t ...
No.tin
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the auto race.
1968 has been another banner year for General
Motors. Increased auto sales and an estimated 1968
profit of $6 per share (even after the 10% surtax)
make the prolil picture for this lead Ina; corporation Im-
pressive. MaJorstyHng changes tor the 1969Chevrolet,
and the development of the revolutionary Pontiac
Grand Prix, could enhance sales even more. These
factors, plus outstanding management, earn General
Motors E. F. Hulton's recommendation as a top.grade,
long-term Investment for both growth and Income.
Read the full story In E. f . Hutton's study of the
General Motors Corporation. Just mail the coupon to
get your copy. No obllption, of coursa. ,..,,,. ___________ _
AddlWIS-----------Clty _____ ,S1ato___..._~p Code___
Buslnessf'IQW _________ _
E.F. HUTTON a COMPANY INC. •... . -·
OVER THE COUNTER '
NASD L11tlnp fw Monday, July I, IMI
NIU TU INGS
' '
ASSETS OVER
Mas,000,000.00· • ar.-81tAHCH OPP1CU --·Cowfno Ga1ndal1
.£.-... --
-A·
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Everyone Has
Something That.
•
...................... ,.,,, ............ _ .. •
• "i-r.--p -.-.-
• . . •
,l'BE BIGGEST SINGl.E ~PLACE ON l'BE ORANGE COAST-PHONE DlllECI' 84%.$87•
You C..n SoU It,
find It, Trade It
With 1 Want Ad
.,
•1MMACU~ATE
' 5 BEOROOM
ldtM tor the large or gn'IVi·
11 irl£ tamib-2.600 square
1J feet! 3 bath$. fcnnat dining
~ room. spacioas family room,
+I an eJectrk: kilchen with
breakfast aree and large
' j pUlJ'Y. BeautifW carpeted 1 a.Ill draped throughout, love-
HOUSES FOi! SAL!
0.ner•I 1000
VIEW HOME ·
JUST LISTED
Panoramic Ocean View Jrom
front Terrace, Liv rm &
Masttt Bdrm. Beautifully
landscaped court yard and
patio w I cicpansivP mou~
rain Vi~. Ready to move-
(n. 3 Bdrm + Dining rm,
$44,500.
Mn. Harvey
HOUSESFORSAL& HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSESFORSALE !HOUSES FOil SALE HOUSE$ FOil SALi! I HOUSES FOR SALE
G ... r•I 1000 General 1000 GoMr•I 1000 General 1000 Coot• Mose 1100 N-rt Hgts. 1210 Huntington leach 1
RoUGH AROUNO-"P d' f d;; Vi t • MelCI ' Your Frloncls GI NO DOWN THE EDGES lri ISe OUR C ono Wiii Look UP-To You 0wnermov .... Sh"J!cl""'3
but • little ,.mt wW make Ten Room f; Homes in tbh 3 BR, 2 beth home BR 2 bath, cul-d~aac strttt
it "Home S\\.fft !tome." Lush Landscapag Is an·under-Mansion Gst ¥' 16 NEW HOMES on a hi&t k>t. Fple, Pfltio, lute lot, shingle roof, com. statement fOr this BAY· I ~,., , __ ... ,. .. .....t dedrl Vacant and will ~U FHA 5 ~rooms • 6 Baths Low dn. 6~ % 30-yr 1ol.n dbte a:a.r on alley. Needs a Pet°" .., ... "'"""~·
and VA and pay your· costs CREST HOME. 1 VAN It'• too beautiful to leave, bul From $24,950 little paint for bright as bullt·in R&O, la~ ~
10 allow for J>llinting, Mod-WELLS BUILT FOR Tl!F. much too large lot two of us. tea 11 Valley Road at Victoria new. In a private OYmer-csrpets, ~~pe·~~!SO ,
ern 3 bedroom, 2 bath. EXCLUS'IVE. Lovely DEL (Juat E, of Brookhurst ship area. $25,900 -MaXe low man-et. _., •
Hardwood Ooor1 fully oar-PISO entry hall, spacious 2-story, Spanish tile roof. OV· Ml.4 Vli;ta Del Oro up on biutt) otter. down payment. Move in acf)'
petec1. Sacrif!C'C! living room, formal dining er 4400 sq ft. Elegant formal Newport Beach Udn siie lots, lee 1imple GRAHAM REALTY, &tS-2414 ti.me. ';:• •
room & 12'x18' family room home with 180 degree Ocean R U I ' overlooking court.yard and View. Above main Corona GN St ng land· H1gh aboye at~ ll!!vel, (Nr. NB Po8t Offi~I $29,"5 ~; ~ .I ly patio, pool s!ze yard •
pride of ownership land·
J1 scaping. Offered at $36,500.
' $Pnlt )'Ollr own home on
, t61f guarantee trt1de plan. ~ 7682 EDINGER
pool. Three sparkling baths dcl Mar beach. corner lot, Blulfs very populur Bcuilt·ln_ 1'11o"'trihoc !'itchen. Some View E:i<ecuUve home. Walk tq
3 ''" ••-·•. l•-e sunny 4 Bedrooms -2 full baths onven1en s ppmg cen-... ..... 3 BR 2 bath ..... i;.. and four large bedrooins, --. -• ter, near &ehoola. 3 and • from tlliB 3 BR, 2 bath home v.:au.. . · ---""':
one with desk and built-in patios , " .••..•••• $149,500 liJ'eplact, pool plua BDRMS • l & 2 ty Fire-on a high lot. fplc, patio, entry, aepurate living ~
bookshelves, MODEL AU. lovely open feeling, 1
1 · ; w i t h fireplace, se~td EL.OCI'RIC FJUGIDAJRE ntar new with many xtru . p ac~s •. carpeling, draperies, dble gar on alley w extra level 16%x24 den with Ille~ Coi•.,eu, Honker & Co. 842-44.15 or 5'(»UO .. ~· :=:.. ':!:l:=.. Professor's Home te l t..ilsl OR ~1'00 I~===:::::= I No Down • G.I.
GNat t rouble fr" feflClng, landacaplng. perldng. Pride of ownership bar . t beth R.aqi:h ~~~::~~cs:;! family home _ $30,995 Mlch1el Kay, Builder area. Owner wantt to sell styie P~~~=n wilh ~
Ph. 644-l ll3 . Phone 642-2821 Eves 642-5106 now. $25,900. • .. -.. ~"-..._._ •-TOO •• ·«-• wmmer days. Separate dill-GRAHAM REAL TY u uu .. l>'• <MI" "' MN"' D
dl'en's play a.res. Every de-SHRUNK (Near NB Post Ottice) CUPBOARDS. Eatin ~; 20t3 WESTClJFF ORNE
7711 Open Eves. Mediterranean Charm! EXTRA LARGE LOT • 3 ~--· ·'d brl"· .,~,, nice size bedrooms, 2 full ..,1.1o11.nul11g w '-"' ,.,_ ni
ltt'le fee.tu~ for modem liv· · -Only the nee has hrunk 646-2414 irl kitchen + sepa.rate~~lf
ing. Com[ll.elely block wall $158 PER MONTH tl\la coZ:. attractl:e, 3 ;;, mal dining room compldll;l:i entrance! 0 I i v e trees! baths, enclosed patio, built-
Wrought iron gates~ Vau.lted ins. Eves. 96S-3505 19 OFFICES --REDUCED $2750 fenced • Profess~CJr!allY land· Owner tram;ferred • says &ell cottage. Size, quality, and AV AIL 1-mmed. Qill Haven 3 fenced, ca.rpeted & laaiJ
caped. PRJCED TO SELL NOW!! 'l'hM!: bedrooms, 2 appearance re J?i a in the Br, 2 ba. -& 2 Br Ocean Vu scaped. Vacant -mo~ beamed ceiling! This unus-Orange County's 1 "-est ually attractive 4 BR 3 bath ......,"
..
~r anxious to sell this
AT $59,500. No financing beths, larp tittpla~. built-same. Near South Coast Inc Apt. $49.500. ~'t'.l.!__. today. .,.., •
problems -Cilll Today!! . tn kitchen, 13'x20' covered Pla.za. 2 Baths fenced yard BY ONner; 3 BR., 1 bath: at· ll · Wf.e.k. 2~) yeers old, 3 BR +
l\lige Sf!COnd story rec . room, Me rear ya.rd, buUt-in
stereo + intercom.
.:":'Only $29,750
Newport
••
home near Dover Shores bas
a Contemporary Mediterra-
nia feeling. Luxuriously dee--
orated! Formal dining room
& panelled game room. On
a great big beautifully land·
scaped lot tor privacy, plus
a separate children's yard
with a big playhouse. Not
on leased land! Unbeatable
for $69,'r:iO!
Ruth Pardoll, Realtor
1605 Wes1 cWf Dr. 642-5200
.-J-il;
NO DOWN VETS-
$1 ,200 DOWN FHA
... .Corona del Mar
"" " 219' JASMINE
"""'"'!For this shake roofed beauty!
' nus warm, fresh 3 Bed-
room, 2 beth home is
adorned w i t h g1eaming
hardwood floors, romantic
~place, and sparkling ki t·
clien one block frOm scflool
and close to &hopping. Own·
er transferred with q u i c k
possession.
~-;;.~;Open Daily 1 • 5
:: ~ of Highway in 200
Steps to beach 3 BR 1%.
i bafb. 14 x 31 living room, ~ firlplace -f family room.
-ins, lg_ dining area, ser·
porch, quality earpeta
apes, dble garage. Low
l<;p~m .. Vacant. C>.vner e.nxi-' .....
: ' :NtF. 646-3928 Eves. 4!M.-9n j ·:*LACHENMYER
I'. : • $18,950 '. ·~ _-:.~.
·~ .1 3~BR Westsidl!! home, interior
r, ~tly redecorated. Hurry t, 9'li this one! t ' 642-1771
;r: . " AnytirN
i· . tH:=:-;:;~
COSI'A MESA OFFICE
2629 Harbor Blvd.
545-9491 Open 'till 9 PM
Luxury al Low Cosl
See this functional 3 BR +
family room home with all
electric built-in kitchen, 2
baths, lltall lhower, large
living room with used brick
firepl~. fenced yard com-
plete with sprinklers. Noth·
Ing tl?\e!' in this top location
-Only sr.n ,500. Owner will
help on terms .
2::iJ ~. 17th St. 646-4494
WANTED
Real Estate Sales People.
WHY NOT GET ON nIE
BAND WAGON!
Over 25 Years in
Orange· County e Full page advertising
• Inter oilice teletype
• Training program
• Insurance
• Many other benetita
Call 646-4494 • For interview
How 'Bout This $18,8001
Solid home, sound value! 3
bedroom, 2 baths, dining
area for entertalning • cov·
ered patio for summer part-
ies. Mature shade & fruit
trees. High block fence for
complete privacy. Unbeet-
able at the price. ~1720.
TARBELL 2955 Herbor
REDUCED!
Extra sharp 3 BR, plus 2
bath Lido home. Street to ,
Street location near Club.
Available July 1st. Furnish-
ed or Unfurnished. $54,!rJO
(F\lrnishedl.
LIDO REALTY
3400 Via Lido 673-8830
......-----~ SBR~im + 3 Baths -steps to Ocean,
Channel, Pools, Tennis Ct.
Recreation area. Street to
St lot. A WJST SEE. $39,950
CAYWOOD REAL TY
63ll6 \V, Coast Hwy.
N. B. 548-1290
Evenings Call G-16-lffiO
Real Estate
Salesman
Coreer
Opportunity
Experienced in selling VA &:
FHA Homes, plenty of floor
time. & training available,
financial help to qualified.
Ffe.e..Ins. Bonus plan, and
other co. benefits. One of
Orange Countys largest Real
Estate organizations, Con-
tact Hilrry Boggs Mgr.
19 OFFICES
Orange Countys Largest
293 E. 17th St.
~n Company
Liquidation
MUST SELL
3 BR & den -2 large baths
all electric kltchen
fully carpeted
Will buy a luxurious
Ocean View home
In exclual.ve Cameo Shores
l Bedrooms &. family room
iq>acious dining room
enclosed swimming pool
with beautiful
night lighting
priced lo move
at $79,0CO with
excellent terms
contac1;
Jim Cobb
Eves: 673.-1864
HOME & INCOME
and enclosed patio, brand ti.replace & shi:xerooc. Pri~ tr., well kept Near &ehool6. Cor Broolctatt'St & "='
new wall to wall carpeting. just ttduced 1o $25 500 FHA $26,750 or ! 646-3079
Excellent location, near ele-5* % Joan may be' ~ed. 96244n · · · 1
1lla Real Estate
:,";'~~~~.~: Burr While, Reallor Balboa Co••• r21s ~
Si.4% FHA loan may be as-\ . WATERFRONT 3 BR 2 bath Hing Your Bikini,-~
wmed and $158 per month 2901 Newport Blvd. private pier &: float. $50,500. just a tew blocks from
would include tMes! Tty Newport Beach lTI4) 529-3709 after 5 PM beach in this little 2, _
$1500 down. 615-46JO Eves. 6'13.&D beauty wi1h rdriBe~
k 1237 stove, dinette, carpe_~~' DIVORCE SALE! Back Bay 1.U;;.;;n;.;i•.;;•;.;rs;;i"ty:...;.P.;;•.;.r-'-----I ~ included in. .
area home-neat '-clean &: VlLLACE 2 lux exrtu 3 Br, Sll,500 Pri~. Try Yi
Y:ithin walking distance of 2 ba, atrium .. lC ft ceilings, down payment. '~'-,•
the water. Owner toreed to 3 lush gardens, mirrored Pacitie Shores Realty -
rot3 WESTCLIFF DRIVE sell 3 & family room with closets, glam s p a c i o u s 536-8894 Eves. 546:.J. ..
646-77ll Open Eves. minimum-care yard, but enterta.iffin&' $26,500. Exe. in-
Patio Kitchen room for boat, !railer etc. wst. Nr UCI 833-0304 . Listed at $23,500. OYlller. Center Hall °'"'" Roa11y ""'Sim 1..;.._...______ 2 "'°"' GI no dn. 3 BR . ~
YA• No Down l3;o;B;;Ri'."'1ao=tt:-w";i-,de~1"'ot:-.;;Ope:..::n:;:l· Irvin. 1231 tam rm, formal din
FHA . 1.JYoN DN 4. $a>,SC.O. 1940 Whittier. 14x3ll' Ct:N. patio with B8
549->m VINE &: wet bar. Owner .
4 BEDROOMS • Dressingl -=========::"I IR ferred. ~ room in master suite, 2 tu111 ~ · Village 1, 2 BR Spani!:h, BRASHEAR REALTY '. baths, utility room, wor k M green belt location, nr. ua,
shop in 2 garage. Only 2 esa Verde 1110 shopping fl recreation. $24,· 847-8531 Eves. S3Y11Q
years old. BY Owner Mesa Verde 4 Br. 500. By owner. 297-Wl er Hardwood Flociif:
19 OFFICES 2 B f 442-2741. !
Orange County's Largest a, am nn, 2 brick frplca ========="' 3 BR & den, covffl!d 1?!-~ bltns, new shag crpts ttiru-1240 all.,-access for boati'·or
out New pa.int, playhse. Bick Biy traDar. Out cl state oW¥r i
$27,950. 549--2713 after 6 pm LUXURY 3 br,.2 bath condo, mt.e ..mtioe. Only $22;?ld,
$74.34 1'er Mo. l"°'o';;;;Sun=.c-;;==--==--'"'" pool. go•. '" land. '•ul Jones RHltJ.': I
it's all it will cost monthly Z93 E. 17th_St 646-4494 OWNER, Republic. 2400 sq. Owner transferred, $32,500 M7-ltll5 Eves. 84~~
li . thl ""' a· JUST NEW ft. 4 BR. 3 Ba.; din. rm. & By Owner. 642-3.ln 3 BR. 2 Ba 19» sq. ft. F-",.;...,, to ve m s ou , n tnP. lam m 2722 c Dr -~ ..
Mesa Verde Triplex. 2 &: 3 But with your help &: good-$44,0ix:' ~n Da.ilyanS4~8'T . Lovely 4 BR 21f.i BA. Loan parts~" ~,(DJ, By °"'.fl~
BR apartment, walks to Yrill IT CAN BE DONE. Thel==="==""''=== Bal $28,000. Make Otter. ...,..,,.,,v ~ows, churches and shop-mental atti~u<l~ maintain~ Newport Beech 1200 ==Own=="=•="="="'='== --------
1
.;.
4
·.·°'·r"""".t l
pmg. $39,500. by an organaabon determin-Corona del Mar 1250 Fountlfn V1lley U
COATS es. its success. When ym,i list King's Place
•
·& with us to sell your busmes.s , -·· Jy •·-or property you can rest u-l..UO'e n•.uch st;yle home in
WALLACE sured that ~r attitude WILL this quiet & desirable area,
REAL TORS BE that IT CAN BE DONE 3 BR.. dining rm, Fplc, kit-
5464141-And We Need Listings: chen w/quan-y ttl~, blt·ins,
,. (Open Evenlntt) Can use one sa.leman to grow nook, cov~red patio, ·encl/
Uttle Corona
!ltlt I' \I L· \\ 11111
~I \11\111\\
CHOlCE CONDOMINIUr.f
3 BR, 1~_, BA. 1200 SQ. ft.
Carpeted, drapes. Outside
ma.int., pool, clubhouse. Ad-
jacent shopping. c" n t e r .
From ov;ner. $18,450 inc.
refrig., washer, dryer. $3.!W
to move in. 548--0587
all landscaped & fenced
near schools & beaches
freshly painted
ready for move-in
full price -$32,SOO
terms may be tailored
with the organization, · -· yard, ,beautifully landscaped. I "'!!"!""'""'~""'!!!!!!""'!!!!!!"I• · Estate sale at $32,500 Of.
sMoo FREE AIR T. H. McArdle Broker '"" '°"""""'
Just a few steps from this
unusual home. O\arming !l
BR Spanish Hacienda +
Guest rm & bath on larier
lot. Be surprised, $39.500.
R. L. Str ickler, Rltr.
5 BR, 21Ai BA. Separate ~
ly room . Fully ~I
draped & tenoed. N.U
grammar, High School -.l
freeways. A REAL V Ai.tie
at S21i;500. Now ~%. % ~·
842-2342 ' -: .• '
LOVELY 3 8r. 2 ha witb1~
traa. Patio, ]8J'ie l'ot;.
$26.500. 962-1678 ..• BR RepouH1ion
DER $31,000! We're not
.,.. here's a 9 room
f; ~se. 3 years old with din-
41 ing room, 3 baths, 21!iO sq. ' ,. tr.· Only 1 loan ol about
SJ'T,!:00 at 6.6% interest. 10%
; -down. Hum!
,. C'<llleg• RHlty 546-5880
·· 1500 Adama at Harbor :., -_:{Near Cinema Theatl!r)
" '.j!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'l!"~!!!!"
J oneymoon Cott19e
$20,900
-lte' most spectaculv big . ''*"' ;vd. ""'' ..... and
qOw.n ""'°"· Dcllghtful . ' ~vered patio, tree swim-
·".ftiing pool, king • siu bed.
1 flxn'rul, formal dining room,
_ ~ window5 overlook
lht park-like yard, split rail
fence.
TARBELL
;:_ ·: 3 BR. HOME
"' :-.·NORTH EAST CM
:, ffll:rdwood floors, large yartl
lot with acC'l'ss to rear for
• •boat or camper. VACANT.
1 • :Iinmediate possession.
•: -$18,500
:. ~w.111-McC•rdl• Rltro-
. ·'1810 Newport Blvd., C.M.
~8-7729 Eves 644-0684
f\ l A l l ) ( 11
1093 Baker, C.M.
john macnab
DOVER SHORES
Immaculate Home w i t h an
outstanding V i e w ot the
Back Bay. 3 Bedrooms and
maid's room, 3'ni bft.tN, over
4,CWXI gq. fl. Beautifully dec-
orated.
For sale rum. OI' Unfum.
Call For Appt
642.8235
Newport HeilJhlS
VIEW
Delightful 2 bedroom, 2 both,
high end seduded. Double
fireplace, family room, alley
entrance for boat or trailer.
All this plUA l bedroom and
bath guest house. $26,500,
10% 00..Vn or FHA 1enns.
646-7171 • 546-2313
THE ~EAL
ESTATER .S
to buyers request
Eastblu!! Realty, 644-1133
CONDOMINIUM
DAVIDSON Realtv 2 BR 1% bath, large spaciou.s • r room• wiih fi"'P'"'· di•h· $11, 9 SO washer, freshly decorated
1 BR + built-ins. R-2 Jot. $152 Pm. Recreational area
Room to Wild. with large pool. 2400 Elden,
RJtr. 2150 Hamor SB, C.M. Unit #13. Drive by & call
546-5460 Eves. 548-85&4 Newport
ExcitinlJ 2 Story Vic~:,;.
Ivan Wells' model home
Yr'ith view. 2 • Story living 646.8811
rm, !lining area, fam rm. 4 (Open
BR 3 ba. Buy now & move
in before school starts. Evenings)
Roy J. Ward Co. 646-1550 I~~~~~~~~~=
OCEANFRONT
PENINSULA PT'. Bes1 Buy
clarling 2 BR, Fplc, 40 fl.
lot, $55,()()().
Balboa Real Estate Co.
700 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa
ORiole 3-4140
3 BR, 2 ba, bli-in.s, -'dining
rm, fplc, huge covered
patio, dbl gar. Walk to
priv/club & swl mm'ing
pools, Low down pmt FHA.
Fortin Co. &12-5000
SALES ASSOCIATES
"NE.'WPORT BEACH"
4 + 3 Baths,' $33, 700
Ranch modem • blt·ins.'
Beautiful art'a -HURRY!
"OCEAN VIEW • $25,900"
Huge 2 Bdrms. 2 ba. 50xlZ7
Fireplace. Below market!
HOilfE 642-1000
Be1utiful Duplex S BR, 2% BA. Separate fami-85/15 split. Management
r . .., By City Parle ty room. Fully carpeted, ClP11X>rtuni~~t
1
uble your ~ -rJee.r church.es, lbopping end draped &: fenced. Near ncome. ,,_. or appt.
,~en's d ub. 'Ibis is must gramn1ar. Hlgb School &: HOME 6424090
see, at $29,SX>. C.U ROTI'-freeways. A REAL V ALOE DIAL direct 642·5678, Qwge
MAN a:>, fur appointment. &t i:26.SOO. Low 6\4% int. your ad, U1'eD sit back·and
; • MIU222. 842--2342 Uaten tn tlle "lbone rin&! ~~r----------··---------·-------~~ . ' ~" l . .
I•' -1
I
" j~_;; ,-
' .• -~· ... . ---
-·-"
..,...
11-•
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT I
WANT AD
673-6510 near Blue Pacific. Chu·ming GRAHAM REALTY, 646-2414
3 bedroom, 2 bath residence. 2Z2 W Wilson. Cl\l &12~817 !Nr. N.B. Post Office) 1 ... ~.,..!!'~~ .... "!'"!'~!!!!!"'!
Living room with romantic BEST Buy in Blutf& Com· BEAUTlFUL 3 Br. So. of
fireplace, built· :in kitchen, Just Listed unity, 3 BR. 2 BA, 2 car highwt.¥· 8 1 C>.vner Clllly.
quality carpeting and custom Older Home on large lot gar. 5 min.· to beach or R.ea&ooable ~
draperies, 2 ce.r garage. Just on Balb:MI Blvd. $29,!M harbor. 2 min to Village Cameo Highlands, spacious •
move in and relax! A STEAL Shopping Center. 2 min to br. 2 ba. On canyon, $36,500,
at only $17,250. $155 mo. in-Squeeze Your $$ Cd.M High. Spacious, green OWNER 673-4423
eludes all! surroundings. Pool. $.33.900
COSTA MESA OFFICE
2629 Harbor Blvd.
54$-!:N91 Open 'ti! 9 PM
1351 and buy this 3 BR 1% bath Owner 644-1552 · Lido Isle home. Near churches Eut·I ====--~-~ ---------1
aide, Costa Mesa $21,500. CHARMING a<lult Baytront F1mily'1 Dream
George Williamson Rltr home. 2 BR, 2 be.th, frplc. Oversized S>' garden cor.
673-4350 OPEN Ms. Kitchen. i ~ea l tor en-w/5 Bdrm, din, 5 ba, fam nn
l"!!!!!!!!!!'!!'![!!!!!fl!~!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!i'I t e r tat n l n g. Boat slip 2 fplcs, workrm, boat &J)Qce
R. C. GREER, Realty
P v I E w ::e $31,500 0 w n er room Jor pool. $11'.6,0CO
H b Y' ff'll . . SACRIFICE-Must Seil • 3416 Via Lido 673-9300 ar or 1ew I s OCEAN from dmmg '°"m & '""'' be!"'' July 20. Bay OPEN SAT & SUN
Corona del Mar lovely garden kitchen. 4 View Custom Conde; 3 br 2 2 BR. den Fumished
Lusk built homes located large bedrooms &: 21,i baths. ba hm. 2·000 aq. ft.: 2 s~ 118 Via Quito 6'15-42.'W
in the Southland's most d• Delt• Real Estate w/pools, go11, etc. Loan mi
lirable &: taacinating area. 6464414 S29,300. Offer! 673-4l56 Huntington Beach 1400
Schools 6 Calif. JrviniJl----------12200 SQ. tt • 4 br, 211.s ba,
Campua just m om e r1 t s Costa Meta t 1 oo FrpJ, Lg Family Rm. Dbl. Lovely Exec Horne
away. Sensibly priced from Ga • Pool • walking dist REDUCED TO $41,950
$34.900 to $48.900 L k' f L to IC'hl's • playground .l 16x38' heated/filtered POOL
LUSK HOMES 00 Ing Or UXUry <ity lib. Owoer · 642-0936. s BR, 3 both!.
Directions: MacArthur Blvd. OCEAN VIEW I Fee simple HAFFOAL REALTY
trom Pacific Coast Hwy. or MONTICELLO HOMES 3 Br. large family room "Homes to Match Income"
Newport Fwy. Turn on San Has IT ottetro by prf pty, Muat 8740 Warner 842-44(1)
Joaquin Hills Rd., tber1 for only $108 .50 a month sell! $49.SC.O. 642-3064
follow signs to model area. (p rinciple & interest). 2 BR LUXURY Condom . Bluff5 4 $99.50
H1rbor Hi· Close BY ~x:enoo°Jt.! &:ki~i!~· P~t BR, 3 BA, Must aell! e>wn'er TOTAL COST
Large family home with ~ vate club with twin heated trans!. $36,500. Call owner to qualified veterans. 4 large
arate living room, 3 bed-pools. Part ol Newport HU"-e.ves aft 5, 644.ai09. BRs electric kitchen many
rooots {2 are king ... size), bor "5, DEN, 4 BATIJS" extras or low FHA tenns.
family room with fiteplace, 160 "f1'xmcTON LANE Library, 6 yrs new 3 lJSl'ER REALTY 842-6633·
covered patio and beautiful· 546-1210 car, bit-ins-$49,950 CASH TALKS
lY landscaped yards. $29,950 HOME 642-4090 ~ bdr, 2 ba. $14,950. $_127. 546~~~13dclwn. 646-7171 ~. 0 ND OMINIUM-FORECL MOVE In! Near new 4 BR., mo w/subst. OOwn. 962-4219
Open Eves. OSURE. Absolutely the best frpl., new cpts. nr. beach. PLACE )"Ollr want ad wbere
buy & best I i n a n c in g $28,000. Open weekends: 351 tt.ey are looking -DAILY
ava ilable on any property. 62nd St. Owner 675-C144 PD..or clustfled 642-561B
F 0 UR BEDROOMS, 2 ---------
Westminster 1612
LUXURY l BR-;
Family room + huge ~
room covering entire ~
floor its super shaij &:
onil' $27,$0. Nothing PQwti
to veterans. Low !;Ill
Terms. _
LISTER REALTY.,;
16612 &adl BJ, HB w:ait.
Loguna Niguel 1707 ., * Monarch Boy *
S. Coast's finest ex~
beach rommunity bldrs: °'"
er 8 new 3 &: 4 bdrm hom?.
wllh ..._cent °"''" tij! Island Views. · -•;:;; $52,00:> • $$,!XI) J
4"'2850 -
L19une Beach
HANDYMAN SPECIAt,--'! :
This olde bowie baa seen k~
ter days. Imposing 2-storj,
few bl/from Beach. Spri"'4-
~g 3 BR. Ir. den, 2 ba., 2:1'
Liv/rm, Blt-in R. 1r =.--,o.
Relrig, dshwasher, ~
$25,$0. Mission Rlty 9ti i .
Cst Hwy. 494-00TI. .:.,i
RAMSHACKJ::E , •
RANCH HOUSE • :
Early c..J.if rlln<"h 61ylt,:..,,
estatl!! size lot, exterior wooil
plank, hvy shake roolli~ ••
lge plchlre windows, 3. B~.
den, 2 ba, mod/kit. Missi~
Rlty 4~ • THE~EAL
E S TATERS baths, brand new carpets,
freshly painted & prime
location. FULL PRICE ON-
fantastiC Value '' 121.000:. 10% -down "° 2nd CALL 540-llSl (open
Lugeho cuclstorn Ne:'~rt Beboach .ves) Heritage Real Estate
,.@ . STAR GA'ZEK1<~
..-s l,tJ' .CLAY J. POLlAN
me ose to u.itutre at ·-marina . Over 200) sq. tt. o1 BY 0 W NE R : Cambridge
large bedrooms, famil,y model. College Park. 3 lrg
room. shake roof, slate en· hr, 2 ba.' xtra Irr fam rm, 2
lry, 2 fireplaces and 2'Ar uffd bnck trpls, cpts,drps -
baths. Just rf!duced to lndscping. A Rustic Beauty.
$35.950 With low down. S2T,900. ~7957 or ~25.11'
•• "RING"' BY Owner; 3 BR. .• fam, rm,, •"' •SPRING •pa<. llv. rm. & yanl. M•H
•
IQ. Del Mar. FHA, terms,
• ""•REALTY ii•,500· °'~"" 2" ,
•• .. ANYTIME:' 6'IO-';OOO 4 BR. l~ ba. crpt, drp, Newport Heights hnlwd n.... 18"36 poo1.
$1,900 and T.L..C. 4 bedroom HAl~st a re. a. 545-7323
2 bltf'I home c:ould bcl charm-owner.
lng with some paint and lm-1'M~O~VIN=~G~<~B~r-. ~, ~ba-"'-,anJ~,
Aaination. 1Al'le ltnctd yard ,atio. $20,900 318 Ramona
on • quiet atrttt. Low Pl. 54M73t owner.
F .H.A. ttnns •vail•blc.
Colesworthy & Co. FREEDOM HOME tor sale
with 3 )'Ur ltate-bfw:k at
1125 'IJKI. &t&-9041
641-7777 BY OWNER M\llt sell. 4 b<. 2
::1. ~" i:-,_..., -..... )/.. ""':' Nlft. Accordi11• to tit. $Jon. od. 23 m
To -lop"""°"' for Wodnesdoy, readwordlJC01 1'eSpOl'd~to~ of yow' 2.odioc birth. .
1 Y~,. 31 "" ...
J~ ,, ........ .,.._.
3J"" .,,.. ·-,.,_ .......
"'" 3SMol '"'" . """"' "°' "°""' 7W-,, .... ''"-........... 310f ...... tbitliaa ... ,,,_ .._
""' 41\Vwta ,. ....
11 ldMI .. _ 71-., ........ 4211'• "'" 13"' .,T_ ""-14 Oen,. 44M<o;e. 74 .. ffolrs """' ....... 7~·11,...... ...
""""' ~~~ -~~~-,, "" 11Y01o11I a u.a www ...,)IANJ
1fW" 49Y-79Yout ,,_
ri4:--' 80~1 21 ~ I i Yau ' "'°' '"-·' ~-:!% ..... ·' .. _ t~ ' ~f;,'C' '5To : ......... ff~ ; 21,., 51T....,. .
'"" """'" llS«rtll i ,,_ 5'$fwt ~&::. )C) lholkt!Mt ...
N<0<nl I 1904 Harl>or !llvd., C.M. ba. lam rm. bltna. hole· Jr, --------"---°""'~----· __ , flld lo<. $23.9'0. -
@Gool ®•d-f) 7/10 ,
' I, -, • " •
--------------------~--------------------~---------·
• t, " ' -
•
-" -. -------. ---.-.... --. -. -- -~ -. ·: -·-~ : --. --
'DAILY P'ILOT •
KENTAU 1<cN ALI RENTALS Genorol UAL ISTATI IU$1NISS w
1705 H-""1111olwil Ila 11 ~ ,,,..._ Unhm-lfAI. ISTA'l'I • Ganorwl FINANCIAL
li~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~l Summar'Rontola 2910 Condominium 3950 Coofo MoN ' 5100 Butlnffl Rantal 6060 .Mount. It 0-rt 6210 Mol'lfllll, T.D.'o A-15
BACK Ba,< Br. lam""• LITTLI SHOPPIE AMNnON COULD You -,7%to""e" Magic Isle ' patio + balcony. E>o:ept. HARBOR ~ Oarooa de! Mat a..... DEVELOPERS It tor 3 to 5 ,..,.. .....,.... b~
Spc:nd a bewitdling week In rec. lacll. Teena.ctf1: ok. Parklng. $115 mo Incl ut111. INVESTORS tst TD on improved R.E1'f ..., :::.,~an;t_..:..= .~; ,"!1;'3 6<><m! GREENS ~~it~~lirtN * 90 LEVEL AOIIll* 1•1146-="'oou======
-· tor -... car. 1a ,. Aplo. PuraWtM RlW:roRS m-1662 IdffJI» localad la hlat><lr> -,w.-. 6HO
:" -AY>lao,Cllalloo. &ICRE!DR, • UNl'UM. -<no--1--~------·THE GREEN ALJ10ao1ect-11a1.....,. Cooto-. •100 from $100 -dey41r•l L•v•I 10%
LEAVES ....,. .1or -. llld. 1'IL Office Rental 6070 lend. pump a ...u .. "'°" rnt.,...·on'tlf.IDI ht ro: 2 · "" •·-· While Re ltor S25 Wk. Up 1 • 2 a s aotu1. LAGUNA. 1ucH ..... Jout !' ""* bot a1 ... 1-nn. -"" "° ;~::OF SUMMl;R ' 111111 ' I • Stud>! a·--l'IJRN. a 111mlRM. ON roau.· AVENUE -<where """1 ... acrea land worth l<O.IDI. ~
...,,U thi> oul>tulding .~ 2901 N...-Blvd.: e lad UtlloA',_ .,., Baa'*' ....... Olild Ciro ll«k _,. evellable to ,._bu"-clybesw>ll Mr. Ada1n1, Bl<r. -~I W""" Wltad<ly1 Got? .,,.,
·-1o1 mtuat«I 2 b1od<a N..._ B..im e Maid -• TV nd. Oloter, .-.i. to Sbetol!llll -.. ,.... . omc. ~ at 90 man • made Lal<n In 131.500 NEEDED .. .,,.... by SP'ICIAL CLASSIFICATION POR ~·: I
·-famed Victor H-. 615-<&lO Ev.•• ..,_2253 • Ntw Colo A 8or No pets allowed -location lb down-• anal ldaa! "" resort lat ID. d<luxe Dllplex, ap-NA1"11AL IOltN SWAPPERS .;;: j
O>ol sreen la"'ll sttJidded, • • '!11 Newport .mvd. M8ftl 27DD RttatoD w.,, at Ba. ~ BHch. Air ccnd'-~ 0 ~ •..:!m..alf~ ))l"OWd J= Please Spadat Rate ·1;;
1
... th fine ~Id trees add to .~TALS B&\1.JT., 1 lewl'-2 11\, 2 llor 6 Adami. OD.ta.,_, · ..._ Cllt'Peted, bMutlful ~ti boundleu. caU Art • f73..TGO, I H,_-1 tll9a -S ltucb .,,.,
·the rustic grandeur ot_tflil H prden patkil, 2 BA. AVID 5IHIS1D p&heied PIJiltionlna:. Tw 0 ~ ts '!a-... al. 6'13-:9181 •uLP-Al' MUl1 1Na.UDl
LARGE 3BEDROOM,DD{, OUlel Unfurnlaherl July 15 See M&f, 409 A. =~~e n:~adl f fGtdinc:,.n:eab°~;l·AN=NO=~u"N~C~l~M~l~N~T"'S~-I l:::1'::'n~.~ ~ C,.-;'.:..::;;·~: ~BATH HOME. Coste ,.. itOO t:ord. Cltt. Excellen~ pUk . like llll'-Munciiiu ~ i:u. m future! Penmal ctrcum. •nd NOTICES t-ftOTMIN;H0,.&642l67i ONlYI .. \
~ ' BA.<:;llELOR Apt. Ideal fw round.lnaa fer adult.I requtr-per month for Sl*Ce. Desk atances force th1I Ale; oth-Found (Frw Ada) 6400 T• P&ace Your Trader'• Paradbe Ad '"" • : , temporary trl-level floor S mt. 2 bath. .fam. nn, worti:tzw woman or Inc peace ,A: quiet. · and chalra available fw..$5. f'l', smaller parcda avtJJ.1 ____ .._..._.._ .... ;.. v, ,
l '1'16n. features 3 well • Pf'O-cptalcirJ*i dble pnp I: ~. $65 util pd. No Diacrimlnatire Tenantl Busioetl. boan llnlWerinc ablt below market value. FEMALE Brown A white HAVE: ; mt, ctm' I: pool a.EAR -4 Unitl ~
j lpl)rtioned bedrooms (l ~ flt>lc. $J.85/mo. OUkftra pti.54W328aft5 1, 2 I: 3 BDRM. APrS. aervlce 11Yallable for $10. Oall owner: 147.fl640 Eves/ amall doe. Vic 19th A home, Banni n g $21,000 ocean view, JAi bllc. ;Np(
l "fhvate bath) and an e»-OK. Olll nave M 7 hre lBRtunr POOL.NOom.DREN' AU utilltiel paid except weelcmb. Pt:ln'IJml, wttb flea collar. eq. $14,100. Want: home, pler,~t~area.$58~
;_,1y la:ge Uviog room 5<0-11S1 Berl .... Real ~-MARTIN"l"'UE .,!eobooe. • 642-&220 ....i-. 1ond"' 1 R. ""°take ""• • .,. In trade. 'I ~~plete wttb red bridl: Eltall!! • -mo T . DAll.T PILOT IUSINISS aMI •==~~----~ Roll M.)w'I Jr. 5«84181. 2006% Court Ave., 673-d
I 1'eVlh fireplace, ....iv. 2 BR.· ·pril -llS-81'4S before """ GARDEN APT$, :m FORES1' AVENUE PINANCIAL FOUND ~ • white =c-=-=-~
,-...t oeai-~ ~ ..._..: . ge, • ~.. 1 BR 1'lmilbed n.-i-, aD ,.... LAGUNA ·BEA."'-' male eat v1c Elleentft"e A Trade: '65 VW, av....., -~ -_.,.., . .,_ re!rl . ~ ~··ASanta.W,cCJ<. -~ -· M ~,rort1 Knotty pine den, with ' ' & • utilltie1 paid. $110/mo. P~ Call Mrs.. H-.. ~ ,,,_.,.,~., 494-!H86 But. nltl• 6300 ~1tca.im., es. Verde . areen, Empl r.xtiaust, new
... .t •-'~ tranc ii Tropical se~. for e.dulta. »-It.. ,,,~ .. im r ~-~ -546--<filS -""..... FOR ·vw ti~· ·' vae ou~r en e 1 Blk -. II"' M ""·-v -1117SantaAm,Aptlll,C.M. Newport leach "•"-· ' ~· faailable for quiet ooncel-544-4780 . o. Z7' OO'ITAGE T raile r . NUTVI L GIRLS Clasa ring, s.A. glassdunebu£gy.Call 962-
.. trat.ed study. Family room Utilities fumlahed $65 mo STEVENS VILLA 43Ut6 •ICJ ft. eteb office. L E, USA Valley Hi Vic Sear's prklng 0395.
with walll and beamed cell-3 BR, 2 BA. Bit-ins: DoubJe &t2-S359 .rter 4 PM NEW • LUXURIOUS Thriving buaineu area, with COMES TO lot. C.M, Call A )dentlly,
"'&""* ..:::t• ::.":::; . ~i. F=.~~ >;::: 1 a • BDRM. APTS. =.;.:'~"Hi;i,':;ays IAUOA ISLAND 1,...._,,,,_...,,,=-,=-=--=-l:..!t,_lew sA::. L ;,,~:
1 !iWN, ftocr' Of Daturiil bMck; Avail Aue 1st $175 mo. Newport INch 4200 From $100 Meath Mr. Gottwald SM. female Blk A Tan ments, tnc:ome $'1'100. $243,-
.r'ihd separate wood bumhlg ~7022 Carpeu, draPltl,.aD built· (213) 6ZJ5l4 8-ll am. Amet1ca'i JDOlt ad.ting l'll!W German Sbephel'd. Vt e , 000 equity. F<ll' ID'• er ?
I . place add dignity ·• uro. 4 BR.1% BA .I WI'' iruc 38f~v=.~· NoJ;~ wk. days. foodable .. ~'.'1~~ .. •. -Su .... =::rt " Ellll • .,., v. Owner. tlM-63, 491..fi967.
to your leisure and ~lgh Ave., Costa Mesa y &A-l:DUI; · MD>lCAL SUite pertia.lly DOMt,llM -.iu .. -1=~-~~~~~-10.EAR dlx: Apple Valley &
dining bounl. * 5iMOG8 * 1 BR W IW Cfll'pet, drapes. turn Dover Dr attl Ample ceulull,y open.tin& lb Sol-ST. Bernard lound ln Corona Hesperl.a Iota. Value $11,000.
, -c: ADULTS ONLY Blt-n. $90.. Adults. No · · • vane, Santa ·Bartle.ra and del Mar. Please ca 11 Trade fOr mna.ll JOin& busl-
! tiOtaide llhoWer to waah off 3 Bll.ROOMS 2. be.tm. Walk J ly A S f peta. 2188 Maple._548--1089 ~-!:!: r1::~ Freano, Cillforn1a. Also in 613-5876 aak tor Nancy. neu 0nnp ety or prop, '~ beach sand, a basement ~ !!. b 0 0 •• • $150/mo. a • ua. • e~ I No~ lffch 5200 Lilbcl'8*Jtv I·-front ol. Lu Veps, and M>Oll to open FOUND White mal.e kitten nr stock, equities, e~. 613-9&76.
I' • · 3 ~· _,...., •· -•· • to Reno ond. San""""-N~ u•-Sc'ool ,ju'_.. ,... extro •t•m~ FURNISHED APT. !lee. Dr'• ....... . ........ '"~ • ·-· • 5 BR. 3 BL Bock Bay; 12,·
· ~ garage to store ,... .,__rt .. ch 3200 2 BEDn~-2 no-NEW aounclpi<of 2 RR, 2 BA ........ 2,IDI aq. ft. M4-2'DI "' _ __ L~·--==,_,,· ,..· ._,..,,...-=-= IOI 11 lot: val $39,500; lllf>(ll • ·f.uto & boats. Al'KI an R..2.kit ·--rv ~ -,pft • ._ ~ b, • .:Wstclitt P!ua, between U pm.. .... T,-.. ...-puts you in .,._..,icrrrEN A"--i..ian. Vldnl-equity. 'l'rlde for vacut lot,.
·r' to ....... ,... Mure. AVAILA·~·-.... •L•t~-w!~!1Tron!SLIPS/L01 1tltli --w. --a hJah1y -• _, __ , --um -..... DUA • Alr..Conclltlontd bad, ~ 10 operate store ty Alta vim Way • Glen-boat, JDc:lbU heme, CV, TD'•
· · , Ins OCXi. c.rpe,., c1ra..., Cha I R-..i am. Offl-1t Dook s-lhat ~ .. , -.~ ~-~ ..,.... •9M11l1 °"""' 646-1"111. • • greeri lee.ve1 ot summer bk-Im, 2 car earport. 3 ea, llft9 ...-..._ •-....au J.,_ ..... i:;.~=o.;...,,~---~ 11 =-=-=-,.,...,..=-== I ....., .. lo autumn Ool-2\1 hatbt, $250 mo,.. ie-2525 OcNn llvd.. CdM Corona tlol Mar 5250 with ...u.t -. ..,. -the llnt ,_., BL<»<DE Cocloer n am• d 13' 5" Ski boat With 35 HP
!--, but this home will ntv-AVAIIAm.p: NOW 6n.1711 ox end telephone anawetaa: <Sotwha 1b:n lixlMd Vlf!t ''Taffey'' lb Ba)'Cl'ell .... Mere ml trailer. $ID~ ~«""be available at this low t BR, 2 Ba. Clll'prls. «trs-, lel'Vice. $3),0JJ net' tn tint )'Ml'). July 4. 6t&-6511 Will tnde b' D cc Honda
· ~ of $42,500 -ever agaJn! gtt-IDI, $200 mom leaae. +. BEAUTIFUL Waterfront ..y The Mutual 91da. MM¥ prime areu avanatiie FOUND male miniature poo-&:rambSer of ume ftlue.
''; 494-8833 ' 673-366! Eves: 548-6996 -Apt. 2 Br· patio, bciat dock ~ °'1 -V P:.3 E. Cout Hwy, OIM now, die. OWnet mUllt ldeatit;y, 962-'1689. t ,;.t_;., LOS PADRES Bay a: Beach Realty,~. wkly -~et rental 0:, ~ Call I AN. to 5 PM 615-4010 Balboa hland location. ii in-897-1298 i,,,.,,_...,,..-.,.-.,... ..... ,...,,-wrt"""i.r-.
it ·"'' REAL TY ~~1!:_1boa Blvd., NB 'f{lnter leue. 3403 Finll!J' ON TEN ACRES ~~ iEft~ atalled and retldy to IO· If FOUND Bicycle boy'1 Hun-Like new. 0>st $166.50 will II ... 895GlenrieyreStreet ~u•i•.&:..48Rolfam 675-4039 lol2BR,FumolUnfumClllenalr-....._._ ..... .-__ YoU~.~-.f9r•ppoint· tington Har b~u r. ~-'for rood ooodition
' Laguna Bee.ch nn., 2 .fireplaces, pool .\ from $150 \.vnw\l\IUal. ,_._._ merit and )>el'90naJ.1ntervSew 213:4311746 iltandenl typewriter. M6-
i maintenance. Immaculate Corona del Mar 4250 mo. Frplca I Pri/ A: desk space + aeCretarlal any da.v 10 e..m. to 6 p.m. 98!1;.
cooditiao :In Ba Patios I Pools. Tennis . Con-lel'Vicc u needed. $25 I: up. 642-Zlll MALE Siamese kitten. Vic * * *
lex .. For Sall; 1975 per month, 2 ~i: GARAGE APT -Newly ~~ldst. 9 bole Putt/ 1870 PLACENTIA, CM WANTED I I Victoria & National, C.M:.
.C:HA.R.M:ING Duplex" & gUest . pets. ReelQ-.-6'2-5200 decor 1 BR. Swedish ~. 900 Sea LaM, CdM "4-Xlt 642-0127 Reliable party to ~tock 646-~
4 Income units on 21.4t ~
in Com Mesa. Tradt~ ~
house or trust deeda.;..._
come $402.SO. Owner._: * 549.(1133 *' j
4 CHAIR deluxe IAi'b«.,
Shop Top loc., North,.c;iJ4.
shop'g Ctr-Trade for ::ae+
soned" TD O." gold n~·
gets! College Rlt;y ~
Have lovely Npt Bcb ~
Br. + fam rm 21iS ba home.
Fee-View. $47,5oo val. WaJlt
2 O'l' 3 Br. corido. ~·,am.
home local area. ~
Have: 3 Store~
Banning • la! • ll•>.<lf.'. .:,.
$25,400. Want: home, F.
income, land, ? R. •
Myers Jr. 548-2181. . .... ,
TRADE Import or Domel-
tic ear fer lllPPl'OX...JQ.ft
inboard boat. South ~
or Japestake lftfen'fd bat
not nessc. Phone &16--93US
ask tor Dick ~ )
What do you 1.bJnli \of Ol8'
"TRADER'S PARAD~
Drop ua a card. ~
Dept, p .(). Box ~it,~ Pilo&. Npt Bcb, ;
* * ..,_ .. , ,,.,, I
llo"' I
seRviCt 81lecr&ij4, ·~ge, 2 blka beach. 30i AVAIL. Aug. ht;· 3 BR., 2'h bltln bttalcfut bar, beamed (Mae.A':rf;lmr m". Ccast: Hwy) SECREI'ARIAL SERVICE and collect money from re-SMALL Boy'1 Bicycle vie. ANNOUNCEMENTS
_L.ia, Corona del Mar. Shown Ba, O:'pts. A: drps., bltm, ceilings. $155 mo includes Modem otfices, carpet!, air volutlonary new COin oper-i:·c;,...,.,,:::'.:'.~Ln=·=· H:JI=. ,,..._=::::; ic;';"~df,NO~~Tl~C~E~S;....-.;jii Cement, Conerete ·MCI) ~"' Pool ~ utill -·yr lse. &G-8133 « cond k""'~ From $65 ated Snack vendors. No lif. appt only, Owner 2'13: 64l-is9s....,., Mo., l eaae eves&wkenda6'5..333) $175. 2 BR Corona High. monfu~Countys!'.: sell.Ing. .L .. "l Cemetery Loll 6411 EXPERT CEMENT W~ . 1 WLJ:.~ lands. Patio, lndry, Adulta. F'-tlm · w Lott ..v · ~.... FURN Lge Bachelor Unit 673-4132 Eve&-wttkenda. Bldg. 230 E. 11th St., Costa ll•\ e m estem GRAVESITE For a ale , Reasonable Price1, 41Pl' ~;;:NTALS Newport Sl)pNt _ 3220 $125 mo. incl utils. (Age 2 BR,lbethcottage$180mo. Mea&G.1485. states. (Handle• national-BROWN Alligatw billfold In Pacific Vlew Memorial Contractor. Work~ ·J~:..HoUMI Fuml1hed -wer 40} Delency Rlt;y. 2 ~--~·t 1 Ind .... 1 l;y advertt.ed snacks and phone booth next t o Park. Free Estimates ..• , , NEWPORT SHORES on 1eaae, Delancy Realty """""'""'""" • ..... .., candy ban.) Excellent ln-9nf•lt to Share 2005 2 BR• Oen.on yean: leeae 6'f3..J770, 673-37'10 with living qUU'ten. CM come potential for slx bra. Albertaon'• mkt, 19th A Ml-0935 CONCFt.ETE. block, Spani.Qi ~ $100 mo, 642-3430 h Owner 646-2130 wt&ty ~ $1250 to $4990 Harb. Rew. 642-7890 tile, wrou:gbt iron, wool Ji i ·\f:.11MAN With 2 br & 7 yr old ---Huntington le•c 4400 Huntl!!J!on le.Ch 5400 I d I I R I 6090 cub. plua references and LOST -Green parakett. L•I Notices 6450 alum. rools. Lie. &45-5lll'1,:'
1 • • n will share my duplex Back Bty 3240 FURN. Duplex, 1 bdrm. and -n udr a enta dependable car requlred. Anlwf'l'I to name "Kenue" I Will not be 1~e fl:e FLOOR S.Walk1-Pati6s1 ft
; ·~~th same. 646-2769 aft 5 pm p.rage 1 blk frOm beach 2 A 3 BR. a.pk., carp., • For per8Jnal Interview. it found pleue call 646-9555 any debt& other than my Exposed Rocks. Ex p:t ~ t i ~t. Mesa 2100 .~Re~. s::-~~ $140_mo.536-n46 ~~~:: bltnl; pd, r:!~~=~ :=e=ber~as, and L~~~13:4EAL POINT own.RobertS.T.MarlcM CWhori<mltdc ... " ... ip.642-8511.L JO
!' ; ~· . . . . . .Goll:Jert C1rcle Call owner. FREE Utilltiel, furn apt. $120 & ti.so Mo. 962-%109 mo. (213) 434-5082 TRANS -~ s!AM&CJE, female. vi c SERVICI DIRECTORY ..,,
'
,,,BDRM, e~ i:,~o .. afDve NA.,_,,.._ .. _.· _ ·nor beach, px>I. Yriy or .NJrrro ,.....,....., 2 -·dop!a.. DISTR.IBuri:NGCO. +-" CM -·•
1 &'. retrtg ... ··:yant. $11?. Call . ~ -.· ' -' ··WkJ.1\ 536-Jm 5.16--1366 Pa'&.•;;: W:i,;. mo. Loft •· 6100 590 N. AZUSA AVE. Harbor le Hiwwton, · · Appliance lepaln SPECIAL Summer D..,.Cltt
I "613-0183. Coron• dol Mor 3250 . * ....,,, LO s COVINA, CALIF. 91m Phone -l664 P1rfl 6510 Hot balanc<d m..i., ~ ~· Lqun• Inch 4705 OC£A11 VIEW J SPARE TIME INCOME LOOT: Blk female Cock-a-poo 30" O'KEEFE A: Merritt State He. 2% to 6 yrs, b-,,.
' ~!"On• del M.•r 2250 ·'FOR LEASE NEW fu:mished 2 BR 2 BA, Westminster 5612 .., .. «Nlo Booming new field, refilling pUppy. Flea C'Ollar. Vic range, white. Exe concL $35. ~0~::~~8~~.· m:'!/:.
• 1 BR, elec blt·ins, crptJ, all i!lecb'ic built·inl. p~ 80 x 135 le•el , •••• , _.,.,.,., and collecting money from Irvine & Santa ltabeL &73-<tllil -mt!,
: FURN. 2.BR., frpt, /FA~; cbl. w/pool, $2:lt mo. ramie view ove:rk>oktnr Ali-LARGE 2 bdrm, cptl:, drpa, Ill x 12> level •••••• -$17,000 new high quaJJty coin 548-3955 Santa. Ana, C.M. 646-::::::j, ~ .,-!'PP~i_ w ,,'!v:_ cup,, .G.H. Robertlon Rltr. 675-2440 BeAcb $185 49'J-3755 blt·lna. Lauodr)' A pr. $115 70 x 101 •••••••••••• $10,CXXI operated dilpensers In this LADIES Gold Omega watch Auto R•-ln 6530 Contraeton a.21 .
• t ,-~ ..... w~~paid;" pa . .:;:·1':':'' KU ., · · 10090 McFadden 847~2413 Underground util •term• &reL No selling. To qua1l1y w/gold band. So. Cout -r-~ 11.1.a u•r'"' 3 BR, 2 ha, blt-im, crpta, Rt1'4TALS R Nattress Rltr. 642-1485 you must have car, ex-Plaza, Westclitt area: Fri· Jim'• Repair Service • ROOM ADDm~!
: Be h .2705 ~~TR~6n!sio L. Apts. UnfumJ1hlcl Laguna INch 5705 cbanp n!l.ereneel, $900 to day Ample reward. 64&-4766 Complete ftP&lr L.T. Construct .~;, ,
.-.Legun• •c 60x80 Oceanfront Lot $33'.lO cub secured by in-' automotive . mechanical Family rooms, kitchen: 'br 'I • ~ d AV AIL Jal1 lotb. 2 Br. frplc. Gener1I 5000 * WALK to beach &: town * (Balboa Peninsula) ventwy and equipnent. Few LG. Blk. dog/white stttak E 17* CM &IMi5li1 uni.ts. Single sto,..., c 2: -NI~Y 1um 2 Br & en, -pp1 c 1115 2 BR 2 BA v-large apt •-·-w-~"y con net ex-on cheSt. ~ No. 3337, 3.124 146 · ..., · · "J t. , ' 1y --'--y I I • a ar. • RENT ""J 1748 E Oceanfront Street ,....,...,. ~ ... ,, •"""" plane custom desi~iFor
1 . ~w n:=c. ear Y eue. * 64&-0J.u * with viM1/ from private deck, ~II de cellent income. More full Lincoln Wiy. CM i1'IU'""'IV'" Garage atalll for rent. eetimates & Jii.yout, pbQJlll
,. 'Jteaponsible party. 152 Hilb 3 Rooms Fumnure built-ins, carpeted & drap-or tr• time. For penooal in-HO!ats. air compreuor A :"Dr. r.., B. 494-3222 Huntington Be1ch 3400 $25 _Month ed, la:ge r.!ri&. ell newly 537-0380 tervi<w, aend ,...., addl'e11 p 1 6405 acceuorlea. """""' • 84"1511 • l ~ · · decorated. No children or PARTIAL Ocean v:tew; Cur· and phone number to Inter-er10n• I ...._1 ( 6550 Licensed ContractOr J '~ uinmer Rent~l1 2910 FREE RENTAL BOOK FUlL OPl'ION TO BUY pell, no one tmder40, please ona det Mir. Choice o'aize Stat.a Dlat. Co., 1811 West * DRUMMIR * Ba ... ,. ft "I Residential -Co~ ',~:_' AGE · _,_...... ard Drop In and Browse No deposit o.Lc. Quiet bufldtng. .$185 mo wtth lot N-•-··'-". Lov-i.. Katella, Suite 221, Anaheim, I Would Hice to ntt for 1 Maint &:: Repairs. Fre~Ei ' en~ y ' WE HAVE SOME HF RC b v1 lalDCllU"\I ...., ,..,..., 928)1 M"~·be ""'er 21 ol be able to __ ,, child °' ~by my 6~ ~-' • 111 b~ to beach • • • • ca le&garage .Mgrf94.aiM ._..._,,--ob-•~. ~ -· .,. ........ ..... ........ ...., ·=e,view, i:ie~ps 4. ;iOO Fumlture Rent1l1 '""' vi.1-wi n.e....... UNIQUE FRANCHISE handle Standards, Blues, home, days or night& tor Additions * Re~
wk 494-5873 or 494-3903 517 W. 19th, C.M. MS-3411 LO:!.!!!'~!" It"!::!! LAGUNA BEACH, sweeptna For men &: women with mgt Buggie, Honky-Tonk I: Rock. working Mom. 642-70il Fred H. Gerw:iek.~· , ' · · 1568 w Lncln, Anhm 1'14-2800 --~· ~..-view d ty impl'OW!IDeDl:I. bnu.. No • train Accompany piano player. .c.::;::;::,.:.:;;;;,.c.-~--1 613-6041 * ~ NEWPORT BEACH 1 BR, ' Sl.'J5 mo. 494-7891 $10,00o. 494-«iCB Broker a ... ...,-. exp, we ' Call 6'7S.360:i before 8:30 pm. BABYSIT My borne days er
•. •aleeps 4, 1 blk to Ocean 00 Offl!ftd by hltemattonal evet N Htg Bch ViC PATIOS e Patio °"1'"29
• ..... '1682 EDlNGER Costa Moa1 51 Ront1la Wonted 5990 2 LOrS "' Santlaao, NB Y""'8p Fair. 115,IDI to SINCERE THANKS Edw~~· • ~..: •• ,..;.. ..... Room Addltloos, "•. t .,ft. Bay. '50 per wk J....,-: _ _,_ .... _... or -~ -.. ~ -......... t""'--•-fri nd ...... • __.. ....., ~ i ~-1272 842-4455 or Si0-5140 ~·. ~...... 11-· ~' ...,,....,.. 11•v•• opens retail toallmyne.....,.... .. CX'. e I 89'1-a«iZ 642-5952Days-E'fe-Wl!Qi:le ~ BLUE LAGOON, beach level, i BR, 2% ba, :J lltry, l yr L!~G!!1~"h.~:· YOUNG Lady with multiple lirnple. 646-8566 lttre lb anoc wlth this fam-tor thelr conslderatkm dur· BABYSrITER exper" 18 year Remodeling e Additlcal ~ pool side, 2 BR, 2 BA, newly new, 1 blk IChl~ 5 min walk walldng distance to 0CC ~=: s~~~: Citrvt Groves 6175 ;:;;:,im FJ°:i.m!~ ~~ :Y tt;, ~::.my husband, old., G,\\111 1ran8p. $1. bour. J. G. MaeBeth, UC..1 f .,tum. Avail July lS.30 I: Aug bch. Lse S2S> mo i o 988 EL CAMINO penion needs an unfuml!bed • ~UNDROMAT ~-•t•-L--' Mrs. Roy E. Jone1 Referancet. 673-4620 eG'ffi..5628 e • ..,.
I &-Sept 3. 499-3837 quall!led ""''" 96&-1130 Apt # 1 Coate Moaa bedroom h ~ ~-~= "' :i'.i•• • one ouse or apart. Prepaid Interest 12 yrs at 788 W. 19th Costa RENOWNED HINDU Bebysitting, my me, Carpet CINnlng vvP
l 2 Bdrm 2 Ba. Steps to 1 BR. apt., cup., drps., elec. AVAIL. July 10th; 2 BR., IDl!S]t with fenced or encl-Now'a the time to check the Mesa, netting fJ.300. 1.nng SPIRm.JALIST permanent or occas\onlL ~~It oceean. See at 310 E. bttM, frpl. patio, sm. '/d., new cpta.. drapes, b!tna. oted yard. ad Huntingtl:ln tu: sttmtkn Md allow for leut, nit couple. Owners Spiritual reflrdings 1 iv en Corcoa del Mar. 673-25'2 Mesa CIHnlng Servi•
,• ~Ave. Balboa gar. $135 Mo. 847-5306 Adults , no pets. $125. 548-Beach location preferred. Aelecting a good properl)' retiring. LI 8-S&JO, 7 ·AM· daily. 9 AM-10 PM Sat-Sun BABYSIT Any age, m:.r Wme Floon1, windows, ~'A ~ l "BR Furn, en SEASHORE $159: 2 BR. townhouse, carp. 6769 Reuonable rent please, am such as this young 6 acre 6 PM. included. 1311 N. El Cam~o 75c per hour upholsery. Free at .Jt.elS. ~: Jitr, NB. $175 wk. 675-1700 & drapes, bHns, frpL Close NEW deCO'I' 1 & 2 br near ~~~ incomeph. ~~ navel grove, care iB handled FOR Sale by owner M Fabric Real. San Clement. 492-7652 • 546-2838 • den ti al 4 corrmtel'C)o
i, .,(633-4863After 5 PMJ tt>beach.962-8'.Z62 Eves. OC'C $125 & $145 Call tor noans. bylocalresident,Fullprice Shop, WestcliH a re a . FLY TO CATALINA ial, ~ ~ ALBOA Lsland; attr. l BR. appt: 54&-5019 Business woman needs 1 Dr only $34.500. Submit dcrwn in Profitable businesa est. 8 DAJLY FLIGHTS FROM Irick, MalOnry, etc.
6560
Gardening ,x,
••: :ow (sl-. 6); avail. JuJ3, Laguna a.ach 3705 11= 2 8 .. _.1 -unfum Apt, CM, Newport, principal or interest and sell· ~,,_~.,A~ o:AL' =u alt ORANGE CO'"""'"" •Tu _ ~ ..,.. r-...... ; ""'• ._.ee:s; ""l'"• Corona del Mar, Hunt Bcb er will cany back balance 6)'1'&· .,...,........., .nor•J er u•~i .. V=~ • ~· Mg., Sept. n4: 499--2316 MONARCH BAY ARE A drapes, bltns. No amoklng, or Laguna. To $100 mo. Car at S~%. For more tnfonna-pm, PORT. Catalina -egas BRICK, Ccncrete, Carpentry Jio\PANESE GARDENER ~ OR 2 br apt.. ~· 1iS Nk LOVELY OCEAN VIEW , 3 no peta. Baby OK 675-4859 or carport necessary. tion pl:tue call K. W. SmaU ESTABLISHED v t n d J n g Airlines. • 5f6.6612 Cui tom Cablneta. Sm.ti! jobl Malnt le deanup. Re~.
• be.y or ';1:.7.:;6 A $150 BR il den, 2 BA, cps. Drps, II Your Ad in our classlfiedsT 642-0086 •tier 5 p.m. Eckhoff & AslOC., lr.c. ~t. H.B. w. :rew bra. * * FULL membership OK. Free Est. 962-6945 ~~ 1:~:n r a Y ;I •
i,. ·w·eel<SOCK. * rr TO 'EM! .~I, "!:·~'!»bemo. 1 Someone will be looldni tor 1 BR Bach Studio w'oth 1818 w. Chapman Ave, per month. Net rood retum. Newport Beach Teml1 Club. llusln-•--Ice 6562 -aui.ul:I ,_..""'3 tw 10-5 pm :It. Dial 6U-5678 1 25 Orange Calil lnve1tment from $360. Call Best oiler. 644-073.5 * * -·.. STUDENTS workinc thielt , • garage, or yr old • · 536-3360 , way thru cellege, 'iiJee j ~Untington Beach 4400 Huntington Beach 4400Huntlngton leach 4400 engineer. Beadt area. Sept W-2621, Eves-wlmd1538-5m • ALCOHOLICS AnoR,YJ'llOQI PROFF.SSIONALmecbDraf-Bros. 1ndsc grdnrs ~
., «Oct 1. Box Pl57, Dally Atrl'OMATEO Bua i n e 1s HarborArea.Phone673·8'7:U ting I: Dlginte1"i?W time lawn care.646-4200 ,. : •1~, ··:~: Pilot A 6200 Make living %hr work per P.O. Box 1223 Costa Meaa. avail. Hrl,y rate buia.
r. • • .cruge da.7. small iDvest. fl5.5622 OYNAMlCFRIENt>S u" .-... PAIN11NG, E xt erlQ;r, ~ FURN: F<>r divorcee A: 2 .,.........,.,,.. • · 11 • .._ I eli'il.'O~}A-l&~~s·. "'e chldm. 1100 mo max. 2·1/~ ACRES PARKINGLotSw•ep l "• With oterlln• qi>alltl .. lor Public Stenographer t""' lie..... ,.._..,.. ~I,.' JJ CMareLUtilpd.646-4965' ;J Service. 14 hours month. thoae whocare.53S-3341. XEROXAMIMEO Free est. 548-53215.
646-6440 aft 5 PM Acowtlcal ceiJ. • ~ 1.....,..mmpllB..-blcdW'onll'w:ir.for•Cllto!lii. RESPONSIBLE !amily ot 4 TWO and 1/3 ..... vacant Do You Need Modola? 2.10 E 11th St.1 CM RELIABLE: Rt..
want 2 BR hou1e, rffsoo-land on busy thon:lugbtan MUBT 8ell, cute ~beach gift (213) 428-0044 Call Vidd. • &12-1485 w/Orlental care. ae ·=·=~WO::,:: [SJ~ able lff!ie. Refs. 400-2!'19 : ::a ma": =e:i:s ::im.ts:iorM:~:»olfer! Announcemenb 6410 lullden 6570 ~ joba. Vinet
1
t •
..,.tofonnfour.,.wmk. Ill Guest Homes 5998 boulevard in this aretr. A'P-L' tt H tth REM<>DE4 repair• GEN'L Clean·up, tree
1
$0 ,cll I prolsed at $60,IDI. Prlc•. I·-Wonloll 6305 158 •-H ' p1-· -•~ -•-PRIVATE Room 1<r am-$54,00 net to emte. Water -llosplllllllY h <»r Motto '" ,....._, -.. """"1. grading, ""'"
I II I I r ' bulatory kidy, Good food. and all utiJJtie• available. FIUE SAUNA wrrn carpenttY. resid., oommerc. lawns. Mul'g. Reas.
• -• • _ • Nice surroundings. 548-4753 108 ft. frontage. For further Convalescent Home SWEDISH MASSAGE room add. Reu. f75-303I GARDENER
REAL EST ATI Wonnation -512-1533 Wanted. WW leaae or 0po.i wl<d>a 10 am • 11 om REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS Reliable " Exp_..,,. IT,, E·Y I . o. .... , c...rteoy "' b<okm. ..... -lew with -· 10 am. g ... CAB!Nf;l'S. All1 me job. 615-495>
I Ii I r 10 LEVEL Ac. COLORADO option. Esta!>. or unc:ler 519 E. Broadway 23 ~expel'. 54U'll3 • JAPANESE GA -;~·;::;:·:;:~· =::: Income Property 6000 RIVER. N' BIG RIVER .,.....,,, .... ok. Dr".,,. Long Beach (213) 4.11·1111!1 C•rpO,nl••!"I 659G 8"vl"' Cleanup, .., I dev~. Rlvenlde .°"'111J. 1nt ........ Write Box M , • 1 • '·' • i.,. sn-1!134 att 'II>= J ISPICH. I · ' NEW INDUSTRIAL $1.990. 1100 cln, lll -154 DotlY Pilot. • Punor111 · "'" •·'Cl""'1t>o! e ca_,.• ~ "--·• • • Yot/11 llOllGt lf1 Iha alder 615-IOl'I LA. 2134674133 •m-•Al-• '"'! ~·m~
Ii I I fwllaww who .. _ .~It ~ Choice Sani. -'locot1on, • . • ·-~ • Reul ..... MUiien...... Bay ~·"'" ....... .... ... , 1 t ~·~·--R .. 1.E11• .... M 6340 wmM1NmR ·~~· --........ -1 .. _.._.._,,_,_..,,_9 mrds. n.' -·onn need enan --Out of Stole Prop 620I ~ •
lr-=------.tt.t..i..-WW.....,, ............ of • BORROW ... YO..Equtt;y MEMORIAL PAltK c-.·c-11e '600 LAWN SERVlCE $15 llULlll ' I "'"'i:T.;..;;..-9.7% on equity alter,..... 'e&HOUSE Trir.56xU'wldr, ~ble ~leal<P1'1
:' • I I r I I ~ ~,s_ .... ~ .. -·. '11o.'til'r~ ldn& l'li% "'""·Full price "1.Uo .... .,,......,, Privai. 2nd llfol1&. money Mortuary" c-tery CUSTOM PATIOS • w-~ ..., _ lll0,000. For w....,,."'" po<dl; pump houle, 2 wtth, l>ee rppnltal. No ol>llc· Complete luMfall Bloctr wan.. Aloo ·~..,.,.;..,.,..1 • .::..::~~;;:;::..;=:
...... tall K. W. SmeD with 500 pl. ayatem;oa h!llsldt, Atro ,,.,,, $24$ aawlna A .._.i.. W.1"10. cat. A DliO 1-·
I. ~~-tlll'!'. r r r r r: ~ r r •cldteff " ........ IM. ""'ahlded 100 . • lot., =.:;:,,.-a:::;:: c..-..., .... ~ -all ...... Sii ~ Ill , . ~ ·~~ ~ ----- -!.: -• maw. a.a.,... A... mL &om Gl'«r'a F..., sattl --.. Co. Inc ,,.,,, $UO No Job too ....u.,... .n. LOW cosr
• Onnp, CallL Dom, Arklmu. °"""''"'• ., ' ' lnd1ldeo Endawmeot Cln IL mJFLIQC 518"1615 J~Wiasj I I • I I !Rf 51!-"'21.--~ ir,mCMh.0.....96Wlll i:n'l?,,l'11JJ11t.,eo.ta.::t =:.,:'..:",!;,""""" CEMENTw«1<P,t1oa,walka ..=.m:~-SPM
- --• ' • ' • • • • Sl'ORE .,-., ...... IS YOUR AI> IN a.ASS:• TOP ~ No tn!llc -A dr!VOI lrol,eat. -T MOWING,~
·-----lmmoc.; 4t10 ... It., ll!O = ~ ~ .... lot,.,,.. °""" llSlll a-. w-11.1 ...... -Quollty Gtll1 cleuap. SCltAM-LITS ANSWEI IN -CUSSIFICATION tOJt Mo.BalboaWonct-.,. ---. fM.to11-M<-loa ~im ---Glim Ot1c1Jo11a. * 5ai111
G
_,
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t •=••us••,•••; U¥£¥4+z••csy ogss ;ca a a ;sz o s caeo s ViF•C: 014 ""'*
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Summer Rentals? They Could Be
These are some pretty e~clusive cliff dwellings. They're
In Mesa Verde National Park, Colo ., and they're estima-
ted to be 700 years old, not exactly in the same class as
the charming bungalows all along the Orange Coost
yo u' II find advertised d a ii y • 1n classified ads
-·
of the DAILY PILOT. But, you know someth inq? We 'd be
almost willing to bet you could rent these Indian rel ics
-'.
'for the summer if they overlooked the fabulous beaches
of the Orange Coast ... AND, if you placed your ad
where people are looking. This is no cliff hanger. "Buy-
ing " or "sell ing ," the market is in the DAILY PILOT. Dial
642-5678 and we'll drop you our direct rope ladder to
'
the Classified Advertising Department where a courte-
ous specialist will help you with your "smoke signal"
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Twtdlr. Jui./t.1968 DAILY '8.DT
SOMETHING NEW-SOMETHING DIFFERENT 11 NOW 11
I.__ _P_l_L_O_T_P _E N__.;...~_Y_P _I N_C_H__,;,..._E R____,lt: ::1·\ W~f I
3 l ine·s 2 times 8 2°0 Norttic~~,!:2~7:4.,.,210 Jwt Say: "CHARGE IT!" .
s SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY JOSS & EMl'LOYMENl JOBS a EMPLOYMENT JOSS & IMPLOVMINT JOIS & IMl'LOYMINT JOIS & EMPLOYMINT
G nlonl"I 66IO H1ull"1 1-,1-----.----6730 lronl .. 6755 Piperha"li"I Hot, Wantod, Mon 7200<ioln Wonted, Mon 7200 Holp Wonted Holp Wonted PP~.ll~n~tt~"'~==:-::~~"~s~oliiii~iiiliiii;;i;iii~iii;iiii;iiiii;i;i;i~iiii;~~iiiii~~l·_.)!W~•~m~,..~n:...."".""~27~400~ Women 7 Holp Wonted 400 w-7400 . Export J•P"n ...
Ga~:'"" cu era... , trimming,
eding iri the .Oower beds,
b IDOl'ltb. Free estimates.
548--5182 ot 646.Q384
apanese Gardener
., complete yard
·ce. Free estimates
~ ,... .... • 54&-0rn
~-·· s. .. 1... 6612 IJt Swedish Ma111ue1e
Efrn.OPEAN TRAINED
'11. 327-41.45_Palm Springs
I
PILOT
LITl'LE C!ANT TRUCK KEPHART'S eu.tom -:
Hauling. 6' heig'bt, 10' bed. bu moved to 130 E lT, Suite PAPERHANGER.. Will paint. 1
Yoo name tt I haul. Reas. T, CM. Open Mon-Sat Fs. ml .!VJ~ '1' SCHWF I 0 ck!; Big John 642-4030 ...:..:..:..CC..:.'""--'-'----0 .,... lllY · AR'"' ~~==~-----------~· I MT-1659 ., HAULING Trash pickup L1ndsc•ping 6110.p '-==~N~C-and-P-.-.. -,.,.,-.-. -u'
Trimming. Anything -we do Jt all. ~r w A-'• •=-s..-GAYNOR'S LANDSCAPING yoo caU me we both benefit. .&;oA..., "'"'"" ~ '"" Exclusive but not expeosive.
Cl..F.AN Lot.I, &'.lf'ages, etc. A: GARDENING SERVICE Try me and see. 541--JlST
---al d a1d State liceosed contrctr. "'"""' rellD'Y • ump, ·p, INTERIOR • EXTERIOR ha_._ ... __ Re!iidentlal -Commercial o.:r.nut:', till, grade. 962-3745 n..'-t' ~ u Yard Cleanup Free F.at ..-.... ma: . .r•>= es mate.
No job to. bi&. 89.l-3.581 Lie. A: Im. CHUaC 54&-5314
CLEANING • inside-out.
· Painting, rug cleaning wall
wa&hing. Frei! est. 646-5103
CORRAL'S Lndacpa: &
Rototilline Serv. Free est.
(Have own equipme nt
962-1'164
NOW!
NEW!
* Paperhanging * Expert
548-1444, eves.
Paint~, Windov.> Wa.shlna:
20 yn exp. HOW'ly ar job.
Refs. 543-2mO aft t PM
I WON'TBe und trbid!
Inter, exter. Satisfaction
guar. 49'l'-ll$1 after 6 pm
e PAINTING I FENCES e
lntttlor a: Exterior .... ""
Plumbln9 6890
e 24 HOUR SERVICE e
Plumbing • repairs, remodel·
Ing. Electric 11ewer clean--
ing. All wort par. ~1«>7
Rornodot., Ro,olr. 6940
REMOOEL .. REPAIR
Carpentry • Paint • Platter
& Concrete. Dk:k 6'2-1797 .
6960 Sowl]lp
I ARorotlon>-642·5845
Neat, accurate, :Jl yrs. exp.
TILE, Ceramic 6974
EXPERIMENTAL
MACHINISTS
Orange County
We need Hydro-tel ind DeV\ieg jig
bore machinists.
Contact Jim Zampeili
(714) S46-I030
:13SS HoriM!r Blvd., Cosio MoH, C•llf.
Missile Systems Division
Atlantic Research
CORPORATION
A Division of the
Susquehanna Corp.
U, S. Cith•1111lli, R.•111111lr•d e An E1111111I Oppertunlty E"'P1•v•r
GOOD BEGINNING
for
Young man interested in news
career. News Department Copy
Boy at the DAILY PILOT
Billing
Clerk
Experienced. Substan·
tlal typing required.
Permanent, aoocl o~
portunltyl Call or
•pply:
Cla-Val Co.
17th & Pl•centi1
COltl Me ..
S48·2201
EXPERIENCED
COMMERCIAL
TELLER
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK
309 Main St.
Huntington BMch
536-1111
An equal oPPortufllt;y
employer
BEAUTY OPERATORS
TOP OPPORTUNITY
In busy dept. 1ton aalon.
Salary + commiaslon. Ex·
celknt bentfitl, inc. libl!'r&I
---------I arore dUscounts. MARJNEIJ,0.COMER
ITT JABSCO
Billing Clert
Alsiat lfWP Vi order pro.
cess:lnc mt billlne. Prefer
ane dericlaJ. ex:perlenCe,
~ with Friden com-
putypers, though not. re-
quired, Good benefits and
pieuant w o tit In a mnm. .......
Grad. perf.
Apply
ntE MAY CO.
Sooth Coeal Plaza, C.M.
Seamstresses
Exper .for 1•il loft in bed.
1rea.
TOP HOURLY SALARY
Power m1chine expr:r, in any
field valmlble.
HANNA SAILMAKERS
861 W. 18, CM 548·3464
P1rt·Tlme W1ltr ....
Equal Opportunity Employer Day or evening llhift. Apply
18-25 yrs. of age. in person betwffll 11 a: 12
High school graduate. 1415 Dile Way, nom, or 6 ' 1 PM except
Relief & Sll1d
Preparlfion Cook
Experienc•
Full time
Excellent benefits.
Apply Pononnol
10 -4 Mon. tbru FrL
ROBlllSOH'S .
FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BIACH
An """" ............ employer
ASSEMBLERS
Electronic Componenh
1l\eR openil!gs ~ I
months rttett experience
in elf'CuUtic component
UMT1bly operaticu. ,..
qualify YoU must know
eolor codq: and: band --_,_
Vt.it
DANA
L•boreforlft, Inc.
XRCAMPUSDR.
IRVINE CALIF.
(Near Orange Co. Airport)
An equal oppommlt)'
employu
PENNY
PINCHER
Sh h · ·t· ti ~--t u_ Moo. To Mr. Hence Chini. arp, sow w 1a ve. _,. • ..-..1a N"'l)Ol1: Harbor Y.cbt
*Verne, the Tile Man • Good hours, all company benefits, Pho"-: 545-1251 Club, m west Ba.v Aw.,
CU1t. work. Install & repain. future for right applicant. N.B.
No Job too small. Plater SALES Girls needed ftr ADVERTISING patch. ~aking: abower CaU PersoMel Manager for appointment. G rep.tr. '47-1957/845-0206 M2-4321 . NJCNY atore opening aoan Sales girl tor permanent part ~DBS & EMl'LOYMENll---------;--------:.!"~~ho~G ~ ~ ".""'. Tueo tluu Fri.
I
Scene pleasi wrltl: Sanfcrd l.:tl: 4.st. Salary •. plus com-
Job Wanted, Ledy 7020 Local manufactu~r has Roeenf Id 115 N'-'-~ mi~. MUST either hav!'
EXPERIENCU>
NEW ACCOUNTS
CLERK
UNITED CALIFORNIA
CLASSIFIED ADS
WITH A
NEW··LOW·RATE
I M b I H e .,..,., ........ ,. cla.uif1ed or display expet'-F/C Bkkpr.s.ey need• wt lmmodi1to oponlnp or: 0 •1 e ome Beach """3. lnclude phone 1.,,.., !'bone lor .. pomt·
time work eYf'I, wkends. "n'jufm'i;btt~OO<iioliRA-l·~m~,n~t~. gtn~<~>;;6">~1606~.--C001t., RE, hotel ....... n. • Wiremen . • BOOKKEEPER •
nel exp. Allo PBX or (a Qutot 1 • Pl ofllce Dana Radio-Telephone ~=ing. &33--035< "" • Wo ..... ost1bll1hocl rpenters Point ueo, ll s H ...... 50. Dispatch Girt ~-----~-~~-I commercl•I firm with neat, some recep. duties. Sal z to 40 )IMn. Must know
J1panese School Girl llber1I fflnr. benefits. open, Mt. Mla:e f96..12!'l6 local arta. Apply in peraon
Domestic Work, Uve-in with Onty peop e with •t A few openin91 !Wt.MAIDS. . . • YELLOW CAB CO.
American family. 646-0384 le1st six months ex· left for s k i 11 e cl · · · and GO.GO 186 E. 16tt'. St.
IANK
2112 w. c .. st Hwy.
Newport flo1ch
646-2431
An equal opportwlit:y
... ploy<r
TYPlST PART TIME or 548·518'2. perlence should ipply craftsmen! DANCERS Coata Meaa
WANTED Bllbya:lttfnc: a: light te II b Ii ~~ :;:;'.~ S.crtf1ry-Glrl Frld1y Good_.,. lor ~-
bou!eYIOl'k ?.1atUtt woman. Exee ent ene 1h. ----------IPleaaant Npt. Beacb office. ...~-..
Notr""""""8tk><>. ~ PARAMORICS LEGAL SECRETARY Xlnt opportunity, Int.Ill-tllrl mt.rnt.d m........,. ......... __ ial work. PoesibWt)' al
CARPl:l' aeaning. F1oor Apply In person Shornl<llld I twina: gcnce & initiative esaentill. \vQrk1na into tun time.~
stripping. Waxing, Walla, 929 laker StrHt Min 1 yr. CaJif. exp. Life Insurance exper, type ferriibly ahor1hand. OID
Windows washed. 531-4567 Cost• Mui Ex I Salary Open. St8-T756 eo, call betw 911 fttkdays Cot awointmerit 518-lTlT
-
3 LINES
2 TIMES
$2.00
I
Job Wonted S49·2221 p orer Executive S..rot1ry 1..-..... ..,_....,or ...,..79 N_., Bff<h.
Me &. W 7030 Assistant to ~sident Short· Wanted Att dift W
. n omen -'1--------band 100.llO. 'l)<plnf -· Biiiing Clork·Typlst Amblti.:. -..,°'!'::1117•
1 ~~ ::;~ ~~.0~~ cAREER Motorhome ... ~.t:":crot•ry ":'~"Jn::'.°·.!.~: ~':.. °' ::,..:.:. ~.:;:
IN THESE CLASSIFICATIONS!
Furniture
Office Furniture
Office Equ ipment
Store Equipment
C1fe, Rest1ur1nt
B•r Equipment
Household Goods
Appl11nces
Antiqu.s
Sewing Mlchinft
Mu1lc1I Instruments
8000
8010
8011
8012
8014
8015
8020
8100
8110
8120
8125
Pl1nos & Org1ns
Redio
Television
Hl·fl & Stereo
Tape Recorders
Cameras & Equipment
Hobby Supplies
Sporting Goods
Blnocul~rt, Scopes
Miscelleiieous
8130
8200
8205
8210
1220
8300
MOO
8500
8550
l600
e EACH . ITEM MUST BE P~ICED e
e No Item Over $50 • No Commercl 1I Firms •
e No Copy Changes • No Abbreivlations •
START MAKING
MONEY NOW!
CALL
642-5678
ASK FOR YOUR
DAILY PILOT 'AD· VISOR
AND YOU MAY CHARGE IT!
r.n.d, ·-· A ftb. Avail OPPORTUNITY! C • Legol background'°' Admln-"""· St"1 13'16 1"" mo. pVt -159, • -. hll
Sept. 1. 536-1346 J oin todays futest a:rowinl orporat1on iatratlve Partner Newport f96.M61 lot Awt. time $124. No upertenoe
DAILY Houaework $2,25 hr. profession.Mutual FUnd &ales Beach .._w firm. 540-M00. Office M.1n'ager-Full neceuary, For prompt -..
liable. ...,, "-""' No"""'"""" ... , ... ,.,.. jMO (-pus DrlYe SALESLADY Ch1rgo llookkHper Iniductorr .. ,....,.,. ea11 ....
53&-iifm we tralil. full or part time .UV-•••• Full (lr pert time. Exp .. JR llelail appliance experlenc@. 'Miltney 5"-8550
Mutu•I Fund Advisors, Newport B' each ~ JR. PElll E "'"' Shop'. IBM <tll ...... Solarr, '600 TELLER, P•rt Time Dom11tlc Help 7035 Inc. Call for Appt. 968-31ll F.V. piul. -· E.xt>erlenced 1>teferred '
HOUSEWORK Wanted from Npt B. ltm Westcliff 64Z-642'Z CLEANING Lady 2 dy wklfi Mt. Brown 543-3439 ~BANK OP AMERICA
M by tM day, flS . Good S.A. ~!N-8331. Broadway hr day. S2 hr. n>es a: Frt. MEDICAL Rttepti<:miat. Exp 181191-Mlin It.
experienc=-. Sil-9311 « ..., EMA Dependable, own tr a n 1 • kl collection, billlna:, typing HUDUn11oa Beach
8'&-79?1 --=====---POR N Refa. &13-6544 1 om • medic a 1 147.3541
LlVE INS
EmploYtr pa)"I fees
George Byland Agency
CUSTODIAN YACHTBUILDER WANTED 8 ab y 1i 11 er terminoloey'. 4% day wk.No An tqUal opportunlt)'
OCEAN VIEW Immediate openin1 in the reliable, full 'time, Own ~-... ~, .. toPMbe &JTallPd. employ« SCHOOL DISTRICT Orteot 'lor man with baok-~ rroorid u lortman of lara:e trans. Reta .cau alt ' pm. , Part Of' fUU· tfm• UVW!-
106 B E. 16th, S.A. $47-0395
Chinese llv~trui. Cheerful
Pennanent. Experienced.
Far East Apncy 842-8703
Salar)' $485. to $?£Kl. U.S. Yachtbuildlng ......,._ 842-22'41 HAIR STYLIST in b6byait tor 3 small Minimum qualUicationi ....,.,,. .a.-.i •• tn Peraon .., ..... pany, wbo 11 expert ill ALL DR'S Otfk:e part ti me , ~ d\ildrtn A: bou.lekeep • .......,.
U.S. Cltizenahip, 8th ~ phues of glu1 tooling, di~ Medicare, Medical b.illit1g. Let Coitfurel mo. Permanent, refs, re.
education, &. 1 year WO ael, cabin-. etc. Top ... Exp required rood typiat. 3300 Newport Blvd .• NB quittd. Muat llkf ddl.dre. expe1-. preferably janitor· "J' ....,_, .. A .. ""78 ~-•' Own ~-· .... 21 .. CM portunlty and slary for 673-9220 .,.... "'""""' lor ·~.,.:rs ........ , · . laJ. Apply in person t a.m.
to 5 p.m. •t Peraonnel Com· riaht man. Send resume to E X P E R . W om an ;
mission Office, 1972 war. Box Ml.58 Orange Coast housework, by day. MllSt OFFICE
ner St., Hund:naton Beach Pilot, Confidential. have referencet. 171-3542
Holp Wonted,_ Mon 7200
Young Men 18-28 before -4 p.m. Jubt 19th. belOl'e noon
Sales promotion jobs avail. SALES INTERIOR Desttn Studio
I.Arie lnt1. corp. no.<XXI 1st ·M REPRESENTATIVES needs girl interested in
Yffl'. MaN.1ement opportu· CvvK Leadlna: l n de Pendent making norall. C&ll 54&-QOO
nUies. Call 10 am • 2 pm spedlli1t1 dealing in o•er for acipt.
539-ll83. Experienced brealdut l 100 mutual tundl, expandlna: ===~~-~--1 IWlCh. Must be fart. ExC'fi.. In Oranet County. Th1a ii .n BEAUTICIAN, mature, with
SERVICE Station Mechanic lent money and opporti» 0 pf 0 rt u n 1 t y to enter following if po13ible. ·Good
Full time. !:xper!rnced in tty, Apply in per'IOI\ only. dignified profesaional RIUna: b:. Josephine's 690 W. 19th, tu~U'pl, brakes Ir wheel S rf & Sirto• full or part timt Investment '-'CM'-!42_4!1.;_6 ____ _
alignment. Gu•rantee + U In exp not neceuary, we train. e rnY CX>OK e
comm.illioll for qualified 5930 Pac. Cit. Hwy. 547...am.. Mutua.1 Fund 2278 Npt Blvd., Coeta Me11
man. Apply Lagima Oievron Newport Beach lnvHton Inc. 2100 N. Main, Phone 642"4815
604 s. Cit Hwy, Laguna Bdl Santa Ana 1 ---'-=:....:.:_::"'--~ --------COCl<ror~uneryschool BookkMper-Account1nt SUMMER EMP'LOYMmt' 9 AM to 1 PM. Call &tte:r
thru P Ii L. Experienced re-BOAT MECHAN IC Prof-Football Team nee& u . * 142-1313
quired. Prtfer man over 50. Experienced with dleM1 neat appearing, 11greuive I -SALES--=, ..,..:....:....:d:.:m:.e=l2=-per--h,,
Establlshl!d commericial and otMr marine installa· young men, AP' 17 to :z2 guara11teed to start. Over 21.
Mfa:. Send resume to Box tlons. Jft{. 838--2:i60 .. u AM for 546-5?f5
M-156 C/O Daily Pilot. JenMn Marine Corp. -'"""'=· ------
Fry Cook s:-. %16 F\cher, Costa Mna SElRVICE Ra.Hon man, lube LYN 3-11 Qiarp Ntwwi Top -r• l lt et'h day llhift a:ood pey. Brlatol Cbm. Hosp.,
BOB'S OOFFEE SHOP n;,_.a'a off ' UO! W. Hemlock Way, S.A. 1409 s. El Camino Real New Import Car Agency pay, ,,....._ya. . no 1a1
San Oemente G'l-tl53 Now taking ap?Iicatlona for pumping, Viejo Union Serv, PIT $2 br a:uar. ~ Service & Parts Mgr. 261n La• Paz Rd, Mission Brusb customer lerV. H-4.
2 SERVICE Sta.lion At· Import Car Mechanics Viejo, 837.4126 F.V., Mn. BroWn 5t0-Uf32
=~~.!,. fulci.!:; Lot & Dot1ll Man YOUNG Mal! part time, 2-3 Blind Stltdt ()per.
604 So. Coast H..,.,, , ~--Contact Mt. Clen CoUey tn. dailJ, ~ Ir Clilant Gmnent manufacturtr l5SJ Bch ··# ..._.... 3100 West c:oa.t Hwy. work, Mutt have drtw1' Monrovia N.B. &G.lllm.
Newport Beed! llcENe. ~ 31st St. Newport BABYSI'ITER a MJ borne or
SERVICE Stlltion attendant, WATER DISTRJCT ~m 1..:: .. .::•::dt:_______ )Wn. $days.
full I part time. Exptt. onlJ Fi Id M · t Person-SDlVJCE Sta. Attendlnt ___ _:.54M31;:_:::::_5 __ _
Apply •I 26171 La Paz Roe.d, f IUD erwance Miaslon Viejo, l31..t826 nel. No .. x per le n c e median Inclined, Do lube l Mlinicurist NMCIM
n e c e 11a r y . Excellent ="'='=-===='·=W.=In=I=·== 6'UIOI ~ERGETIC, ~ man in-pe,y-bentfib. Apply No. 3
ATLANTIC RESEARCH
in Cost• Mesa
hu the following Immediate
1dminlstrative openings:
Administrative Secretary
Engineering Secretary
Both positions require abort-
han4 and tVJJinf 1frllll plUJ
1kill1 in related fielcb.
Security Assistant
Must be experienced In DOD
industrial aecurlty procedtll'91
including document control,
peraonnel aecurlty, and ..,..
dor/1Ubcontnctor Ballon.
Accounting Clerk
Typing and !().key addlnf ma.
chine ak!lli plua uperlenct In
accounll payable.
Contoct J im Z.mpolli
(714) 546 8030
Mlnlle Syste1111 DMslo11
tettlted tn blact a: ...Utt Monard! &7 Plua Suite .a.-ncf•. Wemtrt 7100 MOOILS ~-•• ---"I .... No ""' nee (213) -.• ~-~·-~··-•· ·~ 102. llootb LafUna I am» I -
Atlantic
Research nm. baals. 540-1'03 ... Ste -..._ ., e WANTID e
Bl11'CHER, Expor, fllll -· ;., ruu.=~Tlme,..--pool-..,tlons,..--. --~t A GIWIDMAI -
can Loll-· Q)"'"'"' lie.-.. 4'yo durinc fall m fl ausmr -.. st,JA&un• Bcb •winter No. 1 Drliolteldl'l, i66 Lxec _.., n. DAILY PILDr
DON'T sfw I awa)', pt No. 2 ltOCk l delfwry. "-Y AaeDCJ for CarHr Girla Qt....,.. W1ka. kft
alck t.alb ior • wta a dctt"rmtned bJ eXptritocoe. GO w. eot.e: llwJ., N.B. ...,, -a .a.t. i.d'
Carporatfft
A Div. of Tho Susquohtnna Corp.
mt. Hort.or . lhol. C... MIN
Art .,., .. ,,,.,...,., ._,...,... DoJ1.r Piiot -.Wt S.. "-"""· 4115 E J!th It .. By,...... ~ nowt ti
MHt'JI O>N~M~-~~~~.!..tir ... !!!l!l!!!!l!!!l! .... ia!.~~~~~~f '• .................... ~
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DAILY 'ILOT Tuesclq , Ju(y, t , 19'1
TRAHSPOllTATION
9900 UMd C1rt
TMNSPOllTATION TllANSPOllTATION TllANSPOllTATION TMNSl'OllTATION ~"'-'"="------------·--u-,.-c----·-·~-~~--
u...i c.,. -~ C.n •n ·--~ 9900 Used Cart ,
TllANSPOllT ATION
·~UMdCen
TllANSPORTATI(!!( ,1.
CONNELL CHEVROLET'S USED CAR CENTER SPECIALS '·
'./
;·.
'66 CHEV ELLE '67 CHEVROLET
-4 Donr. VS. t;ulomatlc, power stttrins.
a.Ir cond., erml~ whit~ w/red inltrior.
(NID6m>
Deluxe sport van. Automatic, ra~ hetlter, 3 seats, red and white with
deluxe interior. (TYV530J .
'1695 . 52495
• -'65 CHEVROLET '63 RIVIERA
1.1allbu auper sport convertible. V8,
automatic, power steering, radio, beater.
tahltlan ~with white vinyl bucket
seats. (N l
51695
Hardtop c<>upe:. Automatic, air cond.,
full P')Wer, radio, beater. ermine white with red lee.ther trim. (0KK960)
~1 '895
'66 MUSTANG '64 CHEVROLET .
Hardtop coupe. V8, automatic, power
steering, radio, beat.er, white with red
interior. (VCU160)
!Ai ton pickup. 8' Fleetside, V8, auto-
matic.. radio, heater, cusL cab. (R28417)
51795 51595
'67 VOLKSWAG.EN '64 FALCON
2 DOor sedan. Radio and healf'r, red
with white vinyl interior. (TUR475J
Futura H.T. coupr. VS, automatic, power
steering, radio, heater. (TOT758)
$1695 51295
'65 MERCURY '64 CHEVROLET
Montclair hardtop coupe. VS, automatic,
power ateering, radio, beater, low mile-
ar:;e, ermine white with blue Interior.
(RVM685)
Impala. V-8, a u.Lo_m a t ic.-power
steering, radio, heater, silver blue tu-
tone. No. 691A
51795 5895
CONNELL
2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA
=546~1283 ~~ 546-1200
..
'64 PON.TIAC
Grand PrJI. ve, autom1Uc, power steer-
in(, elec. windows, R&tl. Danube blue
w/whlte vinyl roof. (NQ1'710)
$1195
'66 MERCEDES
200
4 Door sedan. Automatic, power steer-
ing, ah' cond .• R&H, Shadow grey w/red
leather interior. (S ZV238)
$2495
'64 RAMBLER
Classic 770 station wagon. Automatic,
power steering, radio, heater, blue with
blue interior. (MPN106)
51095
'64 IMPALA
Super Sp<>rt (:0Upe. ve, automatic, pow-
er steering, R&H, willow green w/beige
interior. (No. 777 A)
51395
'66 CHEVROLET
Sport Van. Radio and healer, green and
white tu-tone with deluxe vinyl interior.
(TGT221) ' $2195
•
'65 PLYMOUTH
Fury 4 Dr. Sed, VS, automatic, !.actory
air conditioning, ivory with blue inter-
ior. (HQU599J
51395
'62 CADILLAC
Sedan DeVllle, Factor)' air cooditloni~.
automatic, full power, radio and heater.
{ESR505J
51195
'68 CtfE9ELLE
Malibu. Automatic, radio, heater, pow-t r steering. (VIM 691J
52895
'67 CAMARO
327 VS, automa tic, radio, heater, power
steering. (ULS1851
52495
'66 CAPRICE
custom coupe. 327 V8,1automatlc, power
11.et?rin.g, factory air condltionlns, radio,
hea.t.f!r, like new, No. P1624
52695
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYM•Nl MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE Halp Wa~ Sci..ls-lnstTvctlon 7600 __ SA_L_E_A_N_D_T_RA_D_E __ SA_L_E...;..;A;..;N.:;.D_T_RA_D_E_1._SA_LE_AN~1:_RA_DE_ SALE AND TRAD!
Women 1400 SWIM'.~ by • pro. Furniture IOOO Furniture 8000 Cam•r•1 & Equip. 1300 ~l1neous 8600 FREE TO YOU
'67 EL CAMINO .. ..
Cullom. VS. automatic, ptiWer 1!.ttrln1, ~ -.
radio and heater, ermine white, (V4292S ).; •."II -' ,,.
" . , /
•·-I =:::::::::::::::::;_:::::;ft~!
'64 CONTINENT AL . '
Full power equlpmrnt plus factory air
conditioning, leather Interior. (0UR489) • ·~i'.
52295 : .. :::===· -· ;J
'67 FIREBIRD ·1,
Hardtop CQUPE', 4 speed, power steering,
radio, heater, Verdoro green with black .r.:
bucket seats. (UOF972J · '; · ;·,
'"
:===::::::;·;, .:, . . ' . '
'65 CHEVROLET
Monza coupe. Factory air conditioning.
Automatic, radio, heater, ermine white
with blue vinyl bucket seats. No. R1582
51295
'i'.• ·.
.. .
-====: , .. "
'64 BUICK -
Skylark 4 Door. Automatic, power stttr·
ing, radio, heater, g0Id with saddle interior.
(WXF135)
"'
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,·:. : . . ' . " . . . • --· •' -" . :
• "' •"I
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
TRANSPORTATIF.
FREE TO YOU
Bo.ts~& '!.•~ts ~,~
11 Ft. Prefarmer GIRLS fessional )'Olli' pool, Mn . ;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; MUST SELL Nikon F, Pho-HEIRLOOM._G_wo--C-a 1 e , 1--------...,-
Bee Rear 5<>-1498 1•0 PLA YF1JL and well-trained. Attractive sf.ii 1B .l tNt!I t1D ==·==· ===== Spanish/Meclitt. Showroom Sampl&S tomic, with Nikkor lenses: heavy solid oak.many com-LOVABLE Tiger kitten, 3 month otd , gre} and white display n!'W proc:Jur:t9. Trim 28mm 0 .5, 43 to 8&mm f.l.5, parlments, hidden drawers, colorin~. Also, paff.Saimese 1 . k
., Twilit, tn major Dept. •ores Agencies, Men I 8' Wood carved arm divan, lg. man's chair; 85 to 250rnm M.5, ottier ac-$110 or offer; Surfboard, wks, all sho1s. Unmrual male kitten, would 1 e a
:. in local.,_, Must be above Women 7550 beaut fabrics. 5 Pc hexagon d.ark oak din. set, cessori<>S. Ovt:!r Sl.000 worth 8'4", good concl $25; desert coloring. Also, Pll.l"l·Siamese goof borne and a yard 10
Islander Deluxe MOdel
very good C."Onditiorl ."~Iii~d·
ing wstom snap ~:Cov .
er. Big wheel till· ~er.
$!Mll. Phone 642-~ ' pol bl k ko.ttn "'2 2002 7/U pl•Y in.· 642-2857 7110 averap pel"!lm8lit7. se, w/ ac or avocado framed chairs; 5 Pc BR or equipment for $600. Phone car cooler S2; chest of s . ...., -
& chann. No expel' neces.. ARGUS 1et, 9-dr Mr. & Mrs. dresser, lg mirror, 2 8.10-2616. drawers $4: old Jr. en-FREE FREE 7:00 p.m. ~~·
sary. 4 bn dally. ExceBent WORK NEAR HOM& commodes, paneled headboard. GER.MAN, All auto. mO\lie cyclopedia $3: L ion e I Kil·tf!!'I, black and wmte Tent 7' x 7' with canvas
~. Call for eppt (218) camera: zoom lens. Pd. Microscope, xln1. S 10: female. Cu1e markings. floor. Torn fronl, bu t
""' 375-fMS. Ask for Laura. Med a11t tr $312 VALUI! $195 -FULL PRICE $429.95 over s:m, M'll S150. Perr. Gilbtt Chemistry set, nrly Ready for nrw h ome . suitable for beach. elc.
Accountant $600 or terms is low as $3.00 week 673-49511 comp. S7: chldm's books 646-2888 · 7/9 646-2388 7/!l
JULY special Boab "rited,
bottom scrubbrd & ~ted
Sl.90 per ft ... paint ~Zjnc:
All (}fher maintcnariit· , ,
engine work, see us. ~,
Newport Dry Docks 615-1500
• •
• • " • ~
•
•
Wu len's
Newport Buch'•
newe1t .nCI most
e1citin9 Canton-
ese restaurant now
acc1ptin9 applic1·
+ions for:
Jr, •-no $433 llOLIDAY 8 l5c -S25c: Few. LP records, C"'YON K'oll-•. "··ot. xlnt PETS and LIVESTOCK ..,. It.ems Sold indt'v1'dually -No Down _ mm Movie .... d t bl t ~· '" ~~ L • Rocpt $400 C · h bl · I mi.ono .we: a JUS a . e au 0 mousers, ma!•. stri"""' l.r. ------· -•111 Use Our Store Charge -No Fancy Front ;ime-ra wit •·in ight 11 s ~· Cats 8820 Bldn Bunny $500 ml!'ter S20 8J3...0085 sun screen ; 1 n g e r calico I ~:hite w/black tail
Debvrren $303 but -QuaHty Values Inside! ----upright vacuum, needs belt 49-1-Bi:iS 711 j ::.:.,=_-S_al_•_A_CF_A ___ CF_A
S SlO; folding chr5 lOc ea. """==· :cc-==--::--== 1 -lntern•I Audk to $15M Approved Furniture. 2159 Harbor, CM porting Goods 1500 Laguna Bch. 494-1701 eves & CUTE Frei' klttcrv> lo good Cattery as a unit or
Jr Ener EE to $700 PINBALL M IU 550 wkends. home. :"">83 Knowell Pl., individually. 962-U59
.U-mt Trn.. to $600 D•ily 9-9 , 10.5 Sund•y • 548-9660 , 1 ac ne ·.5a:bot I iiii00iiii00iiii00iiii00ii•I Costa Mei;11 642-8479 aft ""' sailboa1 no oars er Mils $40 11
On the Bay al 20th."Ai
lfi' BRUNS\\'ICK Fih6ytass
boal 35 hp Evinrud~
cond. Lrg wtieel trlr:;:;r;i.ec
star1. S950 548-8257'.-liter
4:30 pm ;···
Cl•ims Adjust $565 ~;;~;;;~~~~:~=~~::=~~~IJ&t;.hd'"~;gooc1:;"°"":•:·i_i:on. SWIMMING POOL 3. 1111 D~ 1825 Plumber Jrn to $5.00 592-5733 18 Ft Pool, Filter, Surface 3 LITil..E Kil1ens. 2 all GERMAN SHEPHERD Sailboats :~10
Pry Cook $2.43 hr Appll•ncH 1100 Pl1nos I Org•n• 1130 SURFBOARD 9.4 .. Hebbir 6 Skimmer, Maintenance Kit. black. l black wlwhite PUPS W-0-W-1--.~ •.•. --1
ARGUS EMPl.OYMENT
CONSULTANTS AGENCY
:lM3 We5tcliff, NB 548-1796
1634 E. 17th St., 6.A. 547-6336
-· -· -· --FREE Ground Pad. markingS. 9 wks. n I d _ WASHERS $29.95; dcy~rs 1 S , I "-'-1 mo. o!d. Xlnl Cond., no :i months old CA' ~ 1.....,;,...!.. Pec1a -$149.88 ,....,,., 7/ll v~ ,.,,.
S35: Freezers $75; Retrig:, e 'wE tt ' >·d=;=""=1=7'=· ·="='-=""='=== SECA·RD POOL B"'UTIFUL ., . .._ AKC REGISTERED Top raeer . eomf~ coppertoot & Avoc.; Guar. o er our greatest1-UR ~ pers1an, ta<> Champion Blood lines •
540-1095 stock °' new & used pianos Miscellaneous 1600 323 S. Main, Oranp by, maJe cat, need& 1 good Bred for cruiser · Hurry ·!I
S 532-1992 ho 6~ •o" fl < \llCM'l 'I lal!t! 544). GE Po r I ab I ~ dishwas;he.-& org11.ns · I I pecial Sum· -. me. '~"" a Q\JRlity & Temperament ~
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE ·-e Food W1itretH1 I I t I mer Sale prices! PIANO $200. 2 b1kB S15 & $7 . .,.,..~~~~!'!'!!""~I p.m. 'T/9 All Shots & Worming 14' Fiberglass sloop,.~ ~:U: ~ :Jr~r. ~~7;ld • WflATEVER you arf! look. II Cbairs SI ea . Guitar & amp * AUCTION * KfITENS . Wuld like a lov· Pedigree with each PUP safe & fast. New saus::1.59s. :: • Cocktail W•itres1•
: • Oi1hw•1ht:r1
~ • Busboys !: e Cooks
~ • Bartender• " -..
~ ~ .,
Pt.EA.5E APPLY
9-12 and 2-6 Daily
REUBEN'S
251 E. Coast Hwy.
Newport le•ch
~ •• ~ ,.
~
~
~ ... .. ~ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim :: .
:'•
~
Host"'
Food & Coc.kt1il
Waitrea.ns
~ Sharp, fresh. all Amt>ri-
can type gir\1 over 21
to compliment Xln1 ~Ur·
roundingl In Ill! new San
FnnciAcan cuisine ret1·
,.., t.rant.
Furniture 1000
Furniture returned from di&.
play 11tudios, model homes,
decorators cancellation.
Spanish & Mediterranean etc.
RD FURNITURE
1144 Newport Blvd., CM
f'Ve!ry night til 9
Wed., Sat. & Sun. 'Lil fi
G(X)O King bdnn &et , SlOO;
l9" RCA Col.vr 1'V '150:
Goll club". i!'ood bt'ginner'1
8e't $60: 962~~~~~
SOFA Originally SBS'l. Mike
offer. Other Items.
•961~ ..
KTNG MaftrPY & box gpri~
$45. Crib A ma!1ress $25
"'1-2\m
Marble lop <'Otfee 111.ble
60x20. S45. 2 Area ru.i;a.
ing for • we have it & at a SJO. roll bed llW/l.y w/mal-U you will 11ell or buy j n g p e r m . h o m e . 837.asffi EVC'S. aft. 6: 30 Pl\! I >oF:c"o.o"';;;°";;;';."°'~;;-1 .:°";·:.,· ~o::;:
AntlquH 1110 price you wiU pay. lre.s!! SlO. 2 corner cab. $lO give Windy 11. try w/responsi'ble t Am JI ies Wttkf!nds after 9 AM 12' SNOWBIRD. Rei , for -~~-~----WAR.D'S BALDWIN SnJDIO & Slfl. Steamer llilnk. Call Auctions Friday 7;30 p.m. 533-3797 7/9 ---M'°"A"LA"M=!IT=E---1 \11a1rr! Needls sa~i. 50.
OO'ITY 'S ANTIQUES HIOl NPwpor1 , CM 642-843<1 after 5 pm, S49-l200 w· d ' A I' B 5-:1.~ ·.•. ~ 1n y s UC ion arn BEAUTIFUL F'emale Kit:IL11& 6 MO. BEAUT BLACK .... Reopening al lMfil B{'R{'h PIANOS & ORGANS FOAM RUBBER. cut lo size, SNOWBIRD ... Bl d S
"'
Uph I. f b I Behind Toay'1 Bldg. Mat'l 6 wks. old. Hsb1im & v•can· WITH SlLVER MARK1NGS, No. 561.•...,.lnt v .. tanton. . 7000 USE supp 1es, 11 r c s , __ ., \V II . • NEW & D naugahyd('. Fact. outlet. 2015% Newport, CM 646-8686 ed. Free too loving family GOOD BLOOD LINE -'-"""''" e equip. $400,,,
Sewing M•chines 1120 Spinets, ('Oflsoles, grand Low pre. A·l Foam Fabric Pool Tables 6#-0141 7/ll PAPERS. $150673-3007 * 673-8182 ..... -...
pi11.nos from S399. Organs & Upholstt:!ry Supply Co., llt ONE l 1 r I• Se rvel 'MAR="n=NCRE=°'sr=-,,KENN==E"LS"' SNOWBIRD Fib£>
1967 SINGER (3) fTeighl
damaged for S l&.88 ,
Autom1ti~ Zig-Zag stwing
me.chines. New warranty
OK. Bunon holes, blind
hem1, overcasts ~le. No al·
tachmmt1 needed. For S5.
New eligfltly 1 cr at c h rd
~abinet with machine, while
they tut. Teml9 Sl.25 wk.
on apprvred credit. call
52&-G616
from S795. E. !;th St., S.A. ~U81 New & repossessed S9'J.50 reirigera!or, nteds some Great Dane, Lab Retriever & sets of sails. trlr,
WALi.i CHS • MANNrNG'S 1·P~I ~C~T~U~R~E,--=r~R~A7M~E up. Tennis, Champion repairs. Yours for the takinrz Beagle puppies, AKC. OJt. 642--0117. 642-343C ~e.·
MUSIC CITY MOLDING. Over 1000 feet. Quality S34.50 up. this Sat/ Sun on!y. 646-4660 standing blood lines. steady 3~oo So. Bristol sro takes al\. Many sha pes. C•ll Frink REG. Collie-Sabi~. Spade temperament. 546-0989. Power Cruisers <\·;~
So. CoAsl Plaza • 54()..2165 31670 Jewell St. So. Laguna -===5~8.03l I v.•/dog. To good home on),y. AKC Sable-Collie p•-•, '·~ _ --===== -,. 16' OWENS Votv~m' ·out 4~2780 M' W •-• 8610 2852 E 11 ~ s mere (Mesa 4 wks .. champ. aired. cont. lrailr . ....,._ , _
THE ART OF USl-IER now __ .. _<_. -·-·-----· -Verdel C.M. 7/11 $SO & Up. 642-7318 ,.,., "' NOW HERE -the new
Supersoundlng T-200 alter S p.m. 646-7~;:,:.
H11.mmond Spinet organ open. H11.tch coven aM SS CASH SS FREE F'or th!' digging 1 OLD ENGLISH s HE E p
-the finest yet' other drcorritor 11 ems . Brazilian PepJ)('I" Tree & 2 DCC, 1 yr old, male. S21XI Speed-Ski Bcit) ~10
SCH.l\11DT-PHILLIPS CO. 417-291h St., N.B. We pay. cub for: Hytiiscus 11.bout 5' e.i, 2 palm 644-1175 11f1rr 6 ~ ·-· ---~
1907 N. Maln O 20th F'ind ii fil'!!\ al Raeili's ~ A~ture ! TApplllances trees, 7' a45-41119 1111 6 7111 SILKE\• T . AKC 1.1'5" SK !Bn111 wit!'I J!,' HP ... n\Jqucs "' oo I eA'ier PIJP$ Mere and tr111lrr S4oo!"...\)1t11e Santa Ana O:i6ta Mese Jt1\·elry & Loan ON ITEM or _ 2 LOVEABLE fl'malt kittens Oiarnp stk, m I!!. -S 1 25,
1125 OJl(!n 7 dyl!, lllli;t NNprirt COMPLETE HOUSEFUL. 4 mOfi. need good homes. lem!s-$175. 67~1 "'ill trRdr for Jn; cc9>ftda
-Conn deluxe. !h{'lllf'r organ, \dovmlown! 646-1141 Call 547.£748 or 827-8271 1 c11 lico & 1 blk Ar wtrt. AKC BASSET PUPS. ~7':'r of 811 ~ .~!ue. * DRUMMER * 32 ped11.ls, n.111 pt!l'('USSion. GREAT Bookt' we II t m \VANTED 5 or 6 ft. Sofa bed, &16-!055. 1110 Tri-colored, Rl"a<;OO. 54().8638 ..
'~! • Kitchen Helpers
e BusbOys
SIO & SJ5. 61>574:\
S OFA, 8 FT. $7S
Xlnt cond. ~1-5361
Mu:;t bP' OVf'f' 21 & bf" 11blt U!tf'd 11 ~ atudio organ. Save World set. Also ba""ain. I St.ACK l h't -• SACRrFlCE! 14' ~ki fxiiir; 7~ ~ ~.11 ... Ok if n<'cds upho stcrins . w 1 • young ....... TRANSPORT'TION hp mtr. Xln l'. s-• "'-, ,,, lo h --~, ~,.,,~,. Blu·•. .,...,...,, ~ u · new organ war· En<~"lo~·,, -1 & J<. I _,,, -~ · t o "' ~ ,.., ....... "" '"' '" " .,._ '"-" ""' JU>11SC1nable. Call 548-4'153 e .. .....,e. p...,~ a1amese ogoo ---trade. 1138-76."ill : ... .,;. Buggie, Honky· TOnk .l ranty. LT 4-9360 home 968-2570 eves 7/10 Boats & Y•chts 9000 -----4.--
Rock. Acrompany piano Gould Music Company ·==,.,·=· ==-=~ ---------l;o==,,-=---,-c--
player. Call 675-3606 belnrt 2045 N. l\1ain, S.A .. f147-0081 UPHOLSTERING -S79.50. l FREE TO YOU PUP p Y To Rood ho m r . S850 18' LA:lnf'"Star. Open Mririne Equip. ~35
• ..,. pc. !Europran cr11ttsmrnl Mother smnJI Co ll ie . E · .. _ -----:,...,,.., Office Equipment 8011
G~ER Mimeogr11.ph
No. 120. Xlnt cand. $150 or
bf.st off@r. 8J6....8669, m.-0922
:.,.. p.m. Baldwin wl(JnU1 spinpl Free t'fl't de\ pickup 215 &r:>-3436 7/11 Alum. '.'13 HP V'U'lruuc. 75 \\-'Arr heath racftilf tel ALLEY WEST 6 PlEX:'E Slingerland drum piano. 4 Yeal'!I old. Like Main. JIB "Be~y" 5.,,, ',,.05 FREE St. Augustine grass Ele<'. iil&rter. Tand em S100 H th RDF' s.,1o;.·, ~. Good Cand., must aell nt'W S54S. .,.,...... cut & rollf'd. Yoo pick up. SIAM.ESE Malt killl"Tl 6 trailr. Many x tr as ~ · ra . '"1~.
ll06 w. OceR.n Front immPdlately. Ole1p 673-"431i Gould Music Comp1ny s· RO\\'BOAT With '!i hp ou1-646-38'11 7/9 Tn<J('I;., Ms &hots. \Viii deliver &16-0196 * evt's. 54.1""776 ~·
, BffiINNERS Gui1ar S15, " .-.. .,,.,.,, ,,... .,...,....,...,.. TO Good home, lovable, . "'' CN 1p oor1ng"3"v36 Newpcrt BMch 2()\'I N ... ,,,,,. S.A .. "'. 1~~ ~; ......... ~ & 4 llff' jackl"ll. "i)'(j;;;dho;M,I W,bJO: 1=~63>-~1~"5~~~--_'7~/10 ,._, FIBERGLASS R"°-1 18 I Sl.-M , -..,;,,.,-
' G. •r• Sile I022 nevl!I" used. Tndudr~ CMt'. ~~--~----i.mall !errlrr mix. 6 mos, F'RElE for lovmg care: Tea 'T'ra\.'f!ll"r fiO hp Johnson, ~
: REAL ESTATE. Shooldn't Pitdi ptp 50c 83J...«l8S ~1Rde to ordf'r -af'l)' color, housebroken 892_7m6 119 <:up Poodlt'. No ctnldrn. dudr trlr. Xlm cood. $1200. Wat1rrd: :'>1noring Oftllllp
' r.ARAGE SALE Thurs, F'>i, Television 1205 Df>corator ~aprs, Cllndlt's It _ ' • ~117 Aiftr ~ 711 £4E;Lt2$
1
fl)f 19' Owm1, BAl.bo..-.•v, 1 )0(1 be tellhlc the hott•st I Blr. E·.....i k' le "';-t...,
JI'. M f~H~:1e9;:.~~ -~=~;=~=''=1""'=1=1"='=· =Z7=6=A=l=bon=-Pi1nos & Org1ns 1130 ~~:J.e~~" flCm, Good Ao:;; :::rrir~5~;:~g ~~ ,!:"~ =· .:;~ 7b~O·!~.bl;ock~~:. I~~~~· ~=~i<rN:: • 67l-R.i9.l •Q
1 982--Mn 546--e!OO -f'OD c.-& w-Wurlilttr Spilll"I 67'3-4!£.8 S.20: Stove w/Cflller grill ')J:L-si>Ck"M;;;;;<;:;;-:o; l~"'-~·~1566~""'=.:::--::::=7/9 pon MRrlnt Engine Worlu. 801t-Y•cht ' \>~
, Appliances 1100 ,. ..... ~M.~·•y, ·"·~. l . $20. 764 W. ~ SI., CM 1 ALL Black Mama cat Ir l _ ___.. 2llJ8 Lafayeu• NB.~. Ch1rter1 ~39 .., ,..._..... ........... H "'It"" 1w-k old) -pl··"ul KENMORE v.•a!tJpr -'""'""1 ...--=:,-,=c--,,--.,....,..,-c--= ~ I Sdt11t1 ,,..ruction 7600 • v•cuuMS • Wlln"l wood. ve,., rood i-Fi & Stereo 1210 RADIAL ' ARM SAW. 8" .... ~.. .,. ..,., l'-t . 962-51.. ·11 -R ~ .. , ... .., • CHAR ..... "' " gray kitttn. 642~ 7111 ti~-&" f'PP&lr. -..i MY· "•· unauuu t. TER THE Fiiiilf:sr $10 up. ~ A pm1. oondltion. SJB5. 548-4753 STEREO 1968 tolkt lllte, He11.vy dur,. ltlrh apeed S'P.i. me. 719 V-3 f!!'lg, nttds paint s:m Nev.' 40. Kt'lch~•.•
SCHOOL OtUdrm'1 vacatian
nle&. Qilla:ie.t 10.U!s.oo
TyplDc Sct>ool. -~· "' Dt!°Mar, C.M·
THE QUICKER YOU CAll.
THE QUUXER YOU SW.
,
Rt-a~on11blr. Corii5t V•cuum -PIANO Wanted, Private Pfl.r· coru1ole model. Uke new, 541)-l97'9 5 MA1~E P000~.&181 AOORABLE PuJ'P.•. 263 E. 21st. 646-4647 673-TJl7 e ro.2.iQI.'
ll'\ F.. 17th. CM, M2·Lr,(i(I ty w1nb to ""1 piano for BAl•nct $19.35 or small SO•'A Bed $45. md .. bits, 2 mos 0 646-107t '!i9 O\\"ENS Crui11er 29', lv.·in S1lllng lesians, .ii' 4P»
nJl.L i ne elrrtric stove. cash. 543-.\U!i payrnenls. Cr+dit Orpt_. !or S25, tbl lamps $5 ch11lrs FREE To YQU. Broken con-7/11 185 enR" .. dble plan!( hull Rra!IQnl hiP Nll{'S! avK for
Au1om111ie ~111nln1t timer. 8 CONN .Jee. orpn: modf'n! $3.)..1289 SlO each 833..(fi/!5. crete. 64&-Gill ?/fl :1 llAU" Terrier, hall poodlt> f'ul\y equip. S6250, Li ll-~12.i6 t'hlrtrr \~·ffi.1'l 548"'2
lt"Vrl butnrr rontml. ioo. 11ylt1; 2 m1nu1.ll: xlnt ron-CABINET Model MAcn•Ynll RCA 1V, Black A whit• with F'R.F.E To yoo. Gulna pip. Pt1P1'. 6 Wb okl to good 4t -
M6-$.19 dltl«i. ~2990 j, Hl-r i. $3$. 54&-~ Bland , lllce MW,~ &T.}-..'"i020 9lllnt' ('l!l&'t&. M()..6734 7/1.2 homes. 54&-21•7 7/11 White ~epblll'ltJ'!' Dlmw-Une SOCK IT TO ·J.
I
• •
I .... ,,
ir• •. ..
....._. -.• -------
lltANSPORTATION TllANSPOlt·TATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOR TATION
• Y ocht Compon '520 lmportod Autoo 9600 UMd Co" 9900 ·'C:Mrtwa 90H C.mpon ts:io -1....;;=c.;;..;;.._.....,;.;;.:.: OPBI ROAD NEW~ ............. I VOLKSWAGEN CHEVROLET
•: CAL 24 SAlLJNG SUXP\ rt., not. ~er. SlffPI S1---------
;; $25 PER DAY OR s~ to ' wfdl ice box, t.ble, '66 VW DELUXE '5' Chevy lel Air •
;• PER WED<. 1142-'r.121 FACTORY DIRECT .,.,..., uoumo .. ,....... UlADED! 26,000 mlln on II or d top, Y-1, outomatlc. ~ °' $24.15 or $450. Call apcedometer. lkloas:;ed to OwMd' by police otHctr. ~ Flahlnt1 IHh 9040 \ SALE 642-M0.1. little 'ole ICbool teeehr.r in Oriitna.I paint, bn>nJie and ~ SU Cttaente. Take n~ white. Runa like • dodl! ~ 2&' ~RT flllhlnl boat, bait New u ft tuUy equipped Dune l~I• 9525 cub dels, dlr, or ti:a4e. Tab $15 cdt, pay b&l Dl. ~ =· 1:;!.:su:,~~r~r:oe OPEN R0.4.D chuaia m<Q11 BAJA BUGGY BUILDERS P)m11 $36.86. Call &fter U, ptr mo. Call a~r ~. 494· ~· -==¥=====":":;=. waJJt.thru ho&&le ~u. Ei1;ulp-Completed Bullif!I A: Acco-494-9773 or 639-3617. ~99'1,,__,3,,ccr_,,,.,""'=31ll-l.....,~-~1 ·~1 • lie HOIMI 9200 ped, to IO anywhere )'OW' ~Used VW Part. '66 VW 1300 SEDAN. Rldio '62 QIEV Wqon. Xlnt cond
wandetfuat t.akea )'OU. Moun-WJ06 Lapna Cl.D.YGD Rolld w/s/YI vtty clean. Must $695 cash. 12 • 5 Sat OC' Ill S
i.; M ILE Homa -10x50 1 BR, led Oii Chev., GMC or Ford, Lquna ~ ot-ll.IXI eell immed. $1275 675-3072 wkda)'I. 543-3035 ~ frm.tt kitchen, nr Hoar lbp, auto tran1, VB, power lteer· f!Yes. "·•'"1 "CHEV=°'.'N"' ... =a"d;"ltll=-=...,= .. ~ 13.~ 1162-2523 all~ "":"~~LAST lmportod Autoo "4111 lmnlae., orig. cond. ~ -~ Ml~.8ikoo 9274 $5478.45 WE IUY VOLVO P'rn!d. '"' ,.._,
Sil': ~f.f.IESA, F'""--MlNl_B_IK_E""-' l30 s. HAllllOR BLVD. ANY CLEAN '68 VOLVO CHRYSLER • .. • Pam . R•paln SANTA ANA 531-1655 5 Ha-CM e 548-3007 LA Tl MODEL G"1' YOUR LEADERSHIP '63 CHRYSLER, FUil '•I-"~=-===;:; I OPBI ROAD SPORTS CARS. DEAL BEFORE YOU BUY w b""bt ,.,,., lmmao. b> ~ ,;,.forcycl• 930o fl l lkle ' out. 111 W. nil st. ''---'~'------FACTORY DIRECT ..... Go~!: J;.J.. "'"' •..,;• ""
. .: ~'67 HONOA (50) SA" WI\ ,UUIO SA<JRIFICE. .... ;... .,..._
• " "" AoruaJ Mllco. u; AUTO CENTER Inc IHPORTS '61 °"""" 2 door, air.
,A ~ LIKE NEW! ( 198t Newpon Blvd. S29lill5. 673-2176
;:: Wuf. take SSS cub <Rl1. or We bub..da camper with let o.ta Mna 642-8460
; tradl ~. Paymmt1 box, stove, link, %t pl wat· • Spat Cash fer Imports 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646:9300 COMET
': $llg'-f*' mo. Call attert' U. ~--~ : p.J ~~ We P9Y more f<r any import '66 VOLVO 4 D. Automatic. ~ fi'4m3 or 6JS.3617 •';JQO.l"Q Mblrt'I · regard.lea of )'eU', make Radio, WIS w a 1 he t ·
: 1'1°"l'"s•!t-, 0SK1"""0Boa"'at""""wl"lh"'°"3S'°""'HP= 1 It 1 built b' )'OU:r light du~y or condition. Try U1 before beautitUl cmd! P r i v a t e 'fi2 MEJ\CURY Comet. auto.·
:: ~. and trailer. Im ~ ton or "-ten truck. Its YoU sell. EL MORE owner. 393 E. 11 SL CM. R.&H, 2 doer. s:;oo. 548-51166
;: ,.~~·Will trado tcr,.."' :;:!.!,tt· loor • hu lo" 01 MOO'ORS, 15300 Bead> Wvd., _,,._ .. _16'6-'-c~==--CORVAIR
•• HC111Ua Scrambler d. ·a.me --. ·1WO LEFT Westminster. 894-3322. 1• 59 VOLVO ----------1
: vaale. 962-7M9 $ $450 '62 MONZA 4 spd, on the
'.• HONDA &rambl" ,.. "'· 875.49 --~~!_5~~!'~ __ ,::":':o.n:::"::· c:·:M::. :::"'"":::2535:::! !Joor. Good""' :... coitiplete rebuilt motor ~ 130 S. HARBOR BLVD. _ $l!i0 536·8541 -~ lhlg,-100 miles. Set up tor SANTA ANA 531-4655 ,66 DATSUN t600 A.utos Winted 9700 ~'63""""C°"O'°'Rc-V;;-:A-;l~R"G"'""'=nbri,,-,.,.-
:: dirJ..~ two ~ &'!!VI· $375. Nm.I ROAD . Roadster, 4 apd, dlr, In per. N_. 0 .S. tlre & ena: Q. H •
... ·~ ~e 642-3403. vrm WE PAY •795 .... ~ E. n11 st &t6-4647 • , feet ftpe. Top liJui new. • ~ ~= CU§'J". FuU..race ·~ BSA Racing bronze-plush black ••iito• • ·-b;k,, l40001n-FACTORY DIRECT -torlor ti , Tak Id D LLAR
• Wit,. MOO .ell $1000or best SALE : tnd~ ":;~Cash, ed~ts'. TOP 0 :: °'""· f9'1-U51 eves 1-Pymta $49.86 mo. After U, ~· ·Sl'~ 650 CC dirt New .•. The fabulous 101Ai 494-9773 or 63s.3617. FOR•
·: }ike. $250. 823 Towne, ft ., 6 slttper, an OPEN
'· Xosta Mea. 6'6-1257 ROAD acluslve. Lo.ads of JAGUAR ·
<. '53 ~.Gill.JARS Motorcycle, ltorqe Ir equipt to 13,ke the 1---------1 l25Ct $100 Or t>Yt offer. big family to those far away '61 JAGUAR 3.S Sedan, :::• e 67J...60'l6 e place1 with Ford, Chevy, power, auto, wire wheels
GMC or Dodge %. ten. Auto kwlr mile1, aria. owner. S15QJ
USED CARS
CONNBl OIEVROOT
CORVETTE
'63 CORVETI'E 2 TOPS. '66
eng. • body. Many Xtru!
Must aell. Best o ff e r ,
Tl-4-4110 or ~1301 uk for
Chuck.
'59 CORVETl'E. CI e a n •
sharp.. Nfl'N titts. See to ..
predate. 646-1773.
196?' TRlUMPH Borneville tran1, VB, camper !ipecia11====875-="=-=""=== I 2828 Harbor Blvd. 2.c+:> ml. Best olfer takes. suspension Costa Mesa 546-1203 DODGE
615;267"1, "'"· ,,,_,.., WE HAVE ONLY TWO! MERCEDES BENZ WE BUY -------[
./ lllONDA 911. 1964 modo! $4600 '64 OOOGE DART i° "':," :/,':.,,., * 130 s. HARBOR BL llD. ANY CLEAN B;r '· '""· radio, "'""'"·
• T'f_~er, Travel 9425
STbRAGE, Trallm, boabl,
etc. $7.50 per mo. Work
apace. 642-28011: M8-32S1 ' ~ JS' TRAVEL Trailer. Good.
• Sleeps 6. $450'. Dey1. 5Z
.; Fairlu Dr. Costa Yeaa
·:
14' TRAVD. Trailer $40. wk.,
eu rettir, atpe s-&. '9&-.3989
or 494-1191 Mn. o.nter
,• Truckt 9500 ~: '65 DATSUN ~ T. dlr. pick
up. Sky blue. Th1A is the
·, ... ~ hone cl the truck -~ri. $125. Cash or trade. PY.ruts $36.BG mo. 494-9TI3 or
' 'f'S-31l17
SANTA ANA 531-4655 LATE MODEL ::~':."~·:.::
OPBf ROAD SPORTS CARS. or 1125 ""' d•lo. Pymu
FACTORY DIRECT
SALE
' '.
Top Dollar To You $31.86 mo. Call llfttt ll, ...
Golden w .. t 9113 or 6.19-3617.
AUTO CENTER Inc FORD
FORD '62 Galu, 500; lt!H,
pwr. 1te«, • brakes; ex-
ceptlooall,y clean! $4 5 o.
548-61116 323 Canal SL,
fllewport Beach
'65 FORD LTD 2 Dr., auto,
pwr. brakes .I: steer., R/H,
tintd a\UI, fact . alr; q .
<>'MM!I'; x1nt cond. 67J.-23!M
'ii3 GALAZIE 500, 4 dr, black
352 ens.. RIH, cruiiM>
ml.lie Xlnt cond. $975.
540-4364 or 835-1637
'63 FORD Gal 500 2 dr H.T.
MERCURY.
'62 MERC R/H. New tires Ir
brakes. Oean. 1 owner.
$595. * 548-312'7
MUSTANG
FINEST WAGON
ON THE ROAD
lllAND NIW '61 CHRYSLER
TOW.N.& COUNTRY WAGON
Loadod wltli UlrQs Power llHrlot
lit Ya ""''"• Power lira•" A1rtaacrlc u,,,, wk Redlo • N-er Pio M .r ... Tinted Wind1ldefd ,,.,: •ny Mor• l11•11ry L:.
Whlre side walls
Stoc~ No, 672
'68 PLYMOUTH
l'~rY Ill c-t. Vt. 1ute .• •.1tH.
-· 1fet,rlng & !!t•~tll 'ACTOtl:Y Alll: CONDITION ,,._
l'•d. ""'"" -"°'
$3095
'64 RAMBLER
$799
'"11 l'llfY 2 Or-K. T. -'"""*le.
rltdlo, """"' -•'"' .• ' ....... wsW, l'ACTOll:Y Alll:
CQHOITIONING. a.I. l'tcl. Ww1'9'1h'. 1501
$3325
'64 BUICK
llldra. VI, Mltamllk. t'Klo. lpffler,
,_, 1t.t<'lnl & t:rlk•a. tunirv -· .. ...,
$1388
DAILY PILOT
'66 CHRYSLER
H-rT 2 ~ H.T, \II, tuW!MI~ t•dlo. "'91..-, _, • ._. ....
...., -.rlllltlo!!. ,.., mo
$1895
'65 IMP!RIAL
C...-2 Or. H.T. Vt, evte,, ft&H, "-' .._,,._e$..,,OOW_,.,
l'ACTOll:Y Alft COHO.
I'«! . ....,.,.MfY' No. '°'
$2555
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l
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, ARY PILOT EDITORIAL Pt\GE
Khe Sanh: Still a Symbol ••
••
'
• ' 'Ibe United States government 'isn't very reassur-
IJ>( wben K Hnrtl that tbe now-famed Marine Base al
Kbe Sanb no longer is nec111•.ry to freedom'• cause.
'
Emb.uied Kho Sanb 1UA!y will find ilsell Into
proud Marine hlstory along with the other mighty bat.
tlea that tested and proved the skill and courage of the
United States Marine Corps.
It was only three months ago tbat the world wa1
being told of the strategic value of Kbe Sanh, and whal
a major victory it W11S for the Marines wl\o fought and
held It.
Now we are told that the 1>4ttem ol war has
changeCI: in three months, that allied troops have more
mobility now to counter infiltration and· so, our gov·
Mnment says, Khe Sanh is valueless as a military
llrongpoint It is being abandoned.
Somehow, it must be 1mall comfort to the Marines
whe foullrt there and oo the families of those who died lb..-.. .
Motorcycle Dangers
Five persons ditd in tratfie accident& in Orange
County over the Fourth of July holiday.
Three of the five were riding motorcycJes. Two of
them were teen-agers, one 17, the other l~.
In Orange County, there are about 100 automobiles
on the road for every 3 motorcycles. It does not take
much of a 1tudent of statistics to see the terriblt odds
one assumes when he chooses the vulnerability of a
two-wheeled vehicle as his means of trarisportation.
Last weekend's deadly record is not 'necessarily an
indictment of the skill of the motorcycliita involved.
What it doea graphlcally point out ia that when a motor-
World's Giants
In Common Bind
~The American Communist party
Cindi itlelf in a terrible bind. It must
1;,u... tho M"""°" lino against the New
Lett while participating in protests
and demonstrations which the New
Left supports.
~'.Gus Hall, · 1enerat secretary of thP
party, condemns tbe new radicalism
fl ''bourceola" wbiW Mt ch a e 1
!a'""1l, aatlonal secretary of youth
"1fatn. bouU of Communist
fi..i.ohlp lo youth riots. Hall'•
d.ctaratkm it a dutifuJ echo of what
hu. alrudy appeared in Pravda.
MolC'OW don not like the New Left
heel.Ult it ii anti-eatabllshment and
rejects the dlctatonhip of the workini
clan .. wen as the capitalist
managierlal class.
SUCH AMBJGUITY extends to Com·
munist policy in a broader field ,
nua1ia la pursuing better relationships
ftl:itb the United States at the same
tline slpln11 in a public ceremony. an
1greement to continue military aid to
North Vietnam.
Russia agrees to discuss limiUttlon
nf nuclear armaments with the Unite ..
S;.ites at the same time strengtheni~'"
rnilit:-ry and economic support fer·
Egypt in full knowledge that th"
United States would probably suppor'
ISTael in • future showdown.
VET OUT of these conflicting in
•"cations· the conviction grows herP
that Rus5ia no less than the United
States 'wishes for a relaxation of in-
ternatJonal tenalon and conflict 10 a,o;
to devote mora resource• to domestic
·• .. ob1ems .
MolC'ow ha11 an urban problem, too.
'he inner core of the city. Until now
I.Qt clty planner11 have concentrated on
!i4ililing housing complexes m t h t'
rtinges ol. the city. If RUIMliJ is to con·
tlnue to 11upport Cuba, supply North
Vietnam with arms, rebuild Egypt's
army and set up an anti.ballistic
missile defense system. the mayor of
Moscow will hav• to wait.
A MEASURE of the problems tr,.
great governments face can be found
in the fact that even when the $30
billion drain of tbe Vietnam war is
stemmed there stlD will not be enough ' to go around. Nor will Russi11 have
enough. merely by cutting back
foreign outlaya, to satisfy demands for
improvementa in the standard of !iv·
ing.
Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey
was recent.J,y astounded to find that en·
ding the Vietnam war would probab!~
release only S5 or S6 billions. At leai;:•
half of the $30 billion will go fo r
rebuilding stockpiles and reserves in
American defenses which have been
drained off in the Vietnam war. Ta"
cuts will be demanded by 1 tax·weary
11ublic.
When the demands against what wit'
be left are added up, they greatly e>'
ceed the net reduction which would b"
'1.ltributable to the end of the Vietnanl
Nar,
THE PICTURE we see behind th "
confrontation between the Unltl"~
cycle is involved in an accident, Jt most often means
either diat.11 or vtry 1ertou1 injw-y. With the protecUoo
and cuahlorilng of a 20<JO..pound automobile, a passenger
or drivtr ln a car ha·s far better odds for hJs life and
safety if be II lnvolv,ed In an accident.
Unfortunately, many motorcyclists do nol appear
lo be awar.t of these grim odds. Many of them are
young, 10 young, and the thought of death or perman·
ent dllabllity is , aucb •a DeeUng thing thal th0y, have
really never been aware how cfose the)'. are to the end
of their lives when they are in the saddle of their ntw
possession.
Further, in this day of affluence, almost any young.
ster can afford a light·weigbt motorcycle even whife
he still ls In hlgb school. .
Somehow those who literally put their tives in their
own hands muat be made aware of what they are doing
-made aware that ev.ery ride could easily be their last one.
Warning in Order
So.called convenience products sometimes can be
hazardous, espeCially if they are housed in an atrosol-
spray container. Oven cleaners are one example. An·
other is the substance used to put a qt.µck frosting of
ice on cocktail glasses. The dangerous ingredient in the
latter produce is fluorocarbon 12 {dichlorodifluorometh-
ane). which even sounds dangerous.
~-:ii.
The Federal Trade Commission next week will hold
hearings on whether manufacturers of quick -freeze
aerosol-spray produ.cU should use labels warning c!on·
sumers of the dans:ers of the product. Call it govern·
ment interference if you want, but it clearly is in the
public interest.
...................
·~ Tl\EN I MI> iO PA'{ A ~T t.\'J1flE_ ~£&.:
Some Relief
States anrl Ru.~sia al so many poinl!'i in
the world is two great nation~
floundering in an over extension of
their foreign commltment1.
This is the underlying fact which
P.lves rise to hope that the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, followed
,,ow by talks on nuclear disarmameril.
viii lead to~ creative change in thP
·orld's great power relalionships.
That change, if it comes. would no•
remove all frictions nor rollisions of
· nterest but it would render them le.c:~
11minous and he I p to create the at-
·nosphere in which domestic im ·
·•rovement in both great countrie.~
·ould move forward.
If, in the process, some local Com ·
n1unist parties, like the American
hranch. find themselves in confusion it
··ill do no harm.
Rirch Entry Draws Volley
Unsettling View of Parade
To the Editor:
To anyone who ha11 ever seen films
of uniformed Hiller .tormtroopers
marging through Naz j Germany
bearing the standard of the imperial
eagle rampant on a laurel wreath, tbe
shocking 11pectacle presented by the
legions of the John Birch Society in
the Fourth of July Parade in Hun·
tin,!rton Beach must have been disturb.
ingly reminiscent. Eight hundred
uniformly black and white clad
superpatriots, the martial drum beat,
and the black wreathed standards,
combined with ruthless organization
and unlimited financial resources.
created the nightmare thought that it
could actually happen here.
It is worthy of mention and in-
dicative of the local power of this
group that. despite official rules
against political advertising a n d
distribution of literature. the slogans
on the· Birch float were plainly
politicAl, literature was handed out
a nd political netitinns were circulAfed
within the nffirb1I p::irade as~"rnhl:v
area bv uni(ormert Bircher~ ~1ithont
hindrArice fmm offi cials.
ARE THERE any. who. after view.
ing this spectacle. can doubt where the
real internal danger to American
democracv lies?
Not certainly so much in A handful
nf disllirited anti pathetic Americl'ln
CC\mmunist consnirator~ as in the
organized and ruthless ri~hl win~ ex-
tremists. who would twist and pervert
both the meaning of the national holi-
da y of independence and the memory
nf the brave men who have died in
defense of that independence to pro-
mulgate t.heir own par tic u 1 a r
p;:iranoiac brand of fascism.
Letur1 from rtadtn art tDtlcome.
Normally writers should convey their
mt"Ssages m 300 words 01' less. Tht
right to condense letters to fit space
01' eliminate libeJ is reserved. All let-
ter1 must include signature and_ mail-
ing addreu, but namts will be with--
held on request.
Xerox Corporation for sponsoring their
outstanding television program, "Of
Black America," Tuesday July 2. This
excellent intep-ation of historical '1)d
psychological factors contributing to
the Afro-American's identity and self-
concept together with its low-key nar.
rative by Bill Cosby offers the kind of
mass·media usage for which our iocie-
ty so desperately cries.
A great educational service to our
community would result from an in·
creased pubUcity being given this
series (six more to follow ) in order
that the greatest possible vi ewing au·
d.ience be prepared for an authentic
and valuable educational experience.
Further, I would like to suggest that
those readers who found the first pro·
gram of the series valuable ~ccept
responsibility for indicating theIT ap-
proval botb to C.B.S. News and to
X"rox Corp. thus providing the posi·
tive re·inforcement wh ich will assure
further such eUorts. This kind of com·
mercial program obviously depends
upon public response and there are
certain to be some highly vocal
persons angered by public display of a
few historical skeletons. One need only
recall recent text·book controversies
as evidence. This anger must be
countered.
MICHAEL G. CROW
Instructor In History
Orange Coast College
sight of a policeman as he writhes and
squirms because the ACLU 11 wat.
ching him while he, in tum, aima hi.a
closed circuit TV camem onto Oriyige
County and beyond ••. to the Land of
the Free.
CHARLES F, PIERSALL
The editorial did not say the ACLU
beliepes in a philosophy of guiLtg.un-
til-proved-innocent. It said the. tvm
"police malpractices committee''· UlO$
unfMtunate 11nd tended to prejud"e
the situation.
-!:ditor
cr...,klng DoU?R
To tne Editor:
ConCeming the gun law. I am whole.
heartedly in favor of registration of
guns and have written my senator
saying so.
But, in my opinion, better reJUIU
would be accompUshed by cracking
down harder and swifter on those who
misuse guns.
The majority of the people are with
them tor fair play (or law.abiding
citizens, although I wish more cl them
~ould speak out.
Wlto Wins War•
To the Editor :
Winifred F, Tober (Mailbox, July 2)
arg1.ted that guns have small value
against nuclear bomb!! dropped. kom
the sky. Bombs, missiles, artillery,
nor naval gunfire do not win war11.' It'•
tile man on the ground with the r~
that wins wars. .
The allies bombed Germanf..~<&nd
France flat. But who got the job dbne?
The. man with the rifle.
Our Navy bombed and shelled
Guadalcanal, lwo Jima, Tarawa,
among other places, tor days on end.
But who got the job done? The inan
witih the rifle.
.Re_d Line on a Blue Story
It is well that we carefully note tt\.e
size and power to which this sickness
within our community has grown; for
eternal vh?ilance ls indeed the price of
liberty. With the spectre of organized
civilian armies marching in the
streels and operating oot within. but
on the dark edges of. political proces~:
how much longer until we hesitate
before dating to raise our voice in pro·
test?
LET US, therefore, take heed and
see that we are actively dedicited to
the preservation of the American
democratic institutions which others
would destroy under the cloak of
patriotism.
"Tht Block Soldier," part two in tht
series. can be seen 11t 10 o'clock
tonigh.t on Chonn$t 2.
-Editor
Not JN4 Yet
To the Editor :
CONVERSELY, tlle Ja-d l d
not achieve victory at Pearl Harbor
because they didn 't follow up 'with
men. They did a chieve victory at Ba·
taa:n because Of. men 9n the ,ltOWtd
with rifles. • '·
One ol the interestina chqilin i
lrio Pei's new book, "What's in :
ord? ," hu to do with "the langlla)?•
' r colors," which most people think i!t
international: for ins.lance, black as
I he color of "mourning," red as a
symbol or "dancer,'' green for "tn·
vy,'' bkM for "depression," and yellow
for "oowardl«." .
None GI thil 11 true outlidt the
Eftlllah·apelkin& ,...Id. In Chirla and
Korta, ••.ii tht oolor of mournl:nc.
In Rulli&, nd -I« heoaity one!
Ille, not dm,... or .i.1...,.. In Italy
and a.m_,, ane ii yt!low ''with en· •1."aot ___ _
..... ft ARE "Im t1te Nd" wt
..,. • 4'61:ttt -.I td' ._ ''in the
..-• i. le bawo mODI)' -'Illa lo Italy
111 wGt ... 'l'POlltlo. In Gormon1 • . ._ 11-"""' 11 llol • aod -· but
a py --It ..-u uWnded
nsbmd. Aad wbm we fed "blut,'' .. "'-* ...... sr-J,"; ,;feelin.s
...... -"' "' --• Germon, ... ....,.-.,
"'E\W cw:swte tbj9dll1 Dr. Pei
pa1111o-. an -llo --colon
bJ -n-W111t II red cal>-baea" ... lo ·-....... lo tile
o.nn.. ...... Ille$ -·•·" to .. tt.tiw. A.cl.., t'bllck .,e" JI a Wua
cy. '" tho a.-. wllo llao cal Ille
..
.ing ol spades not Lhe "black kin g.
but the "green king .''
WHAT WE CALL • "blue 1tory0
' ir
EngUlh, ii calfed "green" in Frenct
and rlang ttlere i15 abo called "gree1\
,---Bw e..,..e ---.
Dear George: M1 boy friend Is ataUoned ln
Alaska and I wonder what he
woukl Uke for his blrthday?
SUE
DMr Sue:
Never mind th•t -send him
tome cookies lite eveirybody else
dooa .
CONFIDENTIAL TO FAYE
DUNAWAY : Don't take tht role
-who's lnUnsted in a cun
moll? (I hope this doesn't reach
you too Late: 1bt autolnt maU
tel'Vice .lln't 10 Sood here •inet
we got tbe new warden.)
!Write lo G<orge, Uvlnr proof
that advice Is cbMP. TU:t ad·
vantage of his pOrt·incom• tu
doadllne nlet)
f
·neuaee." But a "green old man" in
iain means a rooe or reprobate.
.ther than an innocent or gullible
11e, as it would in English. And our
e>lil'e wagon, the "Black Maria."
ileCOmes in Austria "p-een Henry."
changing not only color but sex, too.
Seemingly, a specific ( u I tu r e
:nodifies our visual lenff, or at least
our correspondence between ldeag and
colon:. 'n>e samt also 11eerns to be true
ror our aural tflflst -the soundc are
heard diflerently by different peoples.
The "smack" of a ki1!is is heard by
the Portuguese u "mua." n. "mip-
snl:p" of ldssors sounds Uke "krits·
triU" to the Greeks, "1u4u" to the
Ohinne, "crt-cri" to tbe Italian&, "ri·
qul~riqui" to tbe Spanlah ,and "tttre·
tem" lo the Partu-.
111E BARK of dogs. the ringing of
phones. the CTash ol trays, the ~ang of
IU"'· the sound of wave1 -all are
htvd ill vaious wa11 by people who
spoilt dilterent longuea. In France. for
~. tha cat'c purr ii rendered as
''r-onron," and the pit'• oink u "oul·
oui."
Surely pain is a universal feelio~.
but evtn wbtn peaple d. different
lauguaaet are b.urt, tbey don't say
"oudl'r -but "ay" or "aio" er "jaj
"boi" or ''ltai." H o w would an
inl<matlonli Jancuare" beliD lo cope
wUll U-1
Let us see that· democracy does not
exclude dissent, that power does not
Pxclude morality, and that freedom
riots not exclude compassion. FRED W. VOSS
Pralae fer P"Off"•'"
To the Editor:
Public acclaim ia due the C.B.S.
News 11ta.ff for produdna: Mtd the
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
r think J would like to start a
newspaper across from the
DAILY PILOT called, "The
Daily Intelligent.•·
S.E.A.
Yollr editorial (Daily Pilot, July 1,
1968) bellowed beoau.se 1be American
Clvil Liberties Union (ACLU) wants a
Police Practice Center. You label thi.15
an "insult," and proceed to accuse the
ACLU of "irritating" the police by not
using "pretty" phrases. thereby bruls.
ing their tcmder sensibilities..over the
possibility that they, too, are subject
to error.
Pollet malpractice is ugly, not pret·
cy ; if it exists It lhould be squashed. If
it does not exist, where is the harm in
either advising or giving information
to persons who may or may not have
valid grievances? In short, when did
you .tctopt the notion that cltizens
should be kept in the dark about their
legal rlghta?
SUCH THINKING 1mack1 or the
Register, not the Daily Pilot.
But my principal quarrel with you 111
that while admitting that the ACLU
sUinds ready to commend the poUce
for gOOd works, you contradict
yourseU with the unfounded charge
that the ACLU believes Jn a philoso~1
of "guilty-until-proved-innocent." The
ACLU ls predicated on precisely the
opposite ldOI •nd you know il
Certainly mn otharwise sen11lbl1
newsp1per cam cl~ lta ruder1 a
mort cogent presentation than such
drivel and I challenge you to do 10.
especla.tJy alntt you admit to a con-
cern •bout certain poHct raid11 and the
...-y duhlou policy U..y rellect..
II ts aol ye UM ao we at't attll Ir•, ·
11 we lh>d It Iii..,, to -c Iba
The Germans bombOd Enl!IM>il .for
months, yet there were survlvon ~·
ing to defend tneir hmleland, Md they
were unanned.
There will never be an .atomic war.
U all the belligerents start usit1C;the
atom; there will be no survivors. And
who is gcing to be foolish enoap to
start something if they can't st.ay alive
long enough to finish tt. No, thua wUJ
be no .atomic war.
It was the citizen soldier who won
the freedom of this country and,,,God
forbid, it may be the lot in the not too
distant ruture for the citizen soldier to
def...i tllOt freedom.
LOREN T. SA WYER
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