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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-07-15 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa: ' • . ' • an er r1a our Ill e I " . .. .. . ' 1-Mesa Moving Van Agent 1~· DAILY PILOT Held on .Call Girl Hap MONDAY AF.TiRNOON, JUL-Y 'IS, ]961 1.oc W\.R.••llRYION .. MPMU '• ,Too Fat to Fly ·Colorado's Gov .• Love Florida beachboy George Francis did such good job of raising r his tame pelican LeRoy that the l().week-old bird now has a slight weight problem, hitting the scales at 11 pounds, and can no longer fly. LeRoy has to hitchhike on George's shou1der. Endorses tabor Dispffle Figure's Nixon Backers ilomeBlastedbyGrenade Have Control Of Delegation A hand grenade hurled from a pp,ssini;: car into the sandbagged Huntington llarbour home o[ a trucking company owner who supplies paper to the strikebound Los Angeles Herald-Examiner caused $500 damage Moving Van Man Charged With Call Girl Pitcl1 A hefty Costa Me9a moving van line agent was jailed Saturday after a shapely girl from the D i s t r i c t Attoflncy's office said he made her a use·the-bed·before-we-move·it pit Ch during a job interview. Donald E. Martin, "39, o[ 3023 Murray Lane, was booked on suspicion Of soliciting for prostitution as a result oi the interview at Republic Van Lines, 1340 LOgan Ave., Saturday afternoon. Martin posted $315 on t h e misdemeanor charge and w a s released. pending his July l 8 arrDignment in Harbor D ls tr i c t Judicial Court, investigators said tod;iy. Mrs. Janice Rhodes, 24., was sent to Martin's firm for a job interview after the district attomey•s· office was fed infonnation alleging tbe suspect was attempting to set up a prostitution operation. .. She told Costa Mesa detectives that Martin asked her to cDmc in a bikini. then explained that part of her duties wo11ld involve going to bed with prospective moving cU6'tomers. ~trs. Rhodes said . Martin, who Weighs 345 pound1 and stand1 five feet nine inches tall, prOmised. ber ~ for each customer who samp!.ed her charms in the course of business. Martin, however, to}d police after hls arrest that he only wanted women employes to entertain clients toclally and denied the sex engle. Police -_aid he also hed a comment in regard to uking the interviewee to appear in a brief blklni. "ls tt a crime to want to look at htr ltgs?" they quottldt Martin as 68Yln&. x • ,( <., / late Sunday night. r-.1r. and Mrs. Lee Brockman and their t\vo children were in rear bedrooms 0£ the home at 16641 Bolero Lane when the thundering blast hurled rock landscaping in all directions like shrapnel. Brockman told the DAILY PILOT today he had sandbagged the yard - one of five h0ffies he owns -in expectation of violence due to his role in the bloody, eight-month·long labor dispute. The victim said he has been moving his family around among the five homes in an effort to save them frOm harm, due to a string of incidents inv<1lving his trucks and personnel. Brockman said he has been shot at twice .and his trucks damaged due to his continuing to service the Herald· Examiner despite the strike by units of the Los Angeles.Newspaper Guild. The Hearst · newspaper has been involved in the labor dispute since last Dec. 14, with scores of incidents ranging from mild curses to the shooting murder of a non-union emptoye. Huntington Beach poUce said today they are not certain what type of explosive was used in the attack on Brockrnan's plush home, but that il appears to have been a grenade. Rape Charged To ·Beach Man A 1-lunUngton Beach man l .. riday was ordered to stand trial Aug. 21 on charges o! molesUng and raping 111 11· year-old neighbor girl. Lee Roy Manis, 24, of 20082 Sherwood Circle, is charged wtth forcible rape, statutory rape, assault with intont to commit rape, crimes against ctilldren. sex perversion in· volving • chlld, burglary and kldnap- ing. Police said he entered the ho~ of the llLUe Sir! ear)1 In the mom1n& o! June 22 and used a lmlfe !O force lier to 'submit 'to hi 1dv111c•t. Mull b6' pleaded not guilty and not pllty by reaJOll o( inlanil)'. From \Vire Service' DENVER -Colorado Gov. John A. Love former head o( the Republican Governors' Association, to d a y endorsed New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller for the GOP presidential nomination . Love threw his suppart · t o Roc kefeller even though he said the New Yorker was a definite "underdog" for the nomination. Love said Rockefeller faced "rf.lther long odds." Love is a member of COiorado's 18· member delegation to the National convention, which is only three weeks away. Supporters of Richard M . Nixon have most of the votes in the Colorado delegation, possibly as many as 15. Another of the delegates favors California Gov. Ronald Reagan. Love said he was "hopeful" that his publlc stand for Rockefeller would influeoce some Colorado delegates and PoSSibly some' delegates Crom other states. HVE J'OR REAGAN Gov. Reagan picked up the lion 's 1hare of delegate strength at the Utah Republican state convention in Salt Late City durlnl the woekend . .Reagan, a ttated non-candidate for the GOP presidential nomination, plcked up rive of the state'! eight delegates. Two delegates firmly ln the camp or Nixon were elected. The eighth delegate, state vice chairman, Jan;ce Romney, the 1lster·1n·law of Mi<:higan Gov. Georl• Romney, ts olllcla!ly undeclorod, but probob)1 leaning toward Nixon. Memwhllt Gov. Rockel'eller 1ays he should win the nomination on the fourth or fifth ballot. A lop llluten&nt o( Nixon say• on the *" band tllat •tllt former vice Piui-wW wlll on an "oarl,y" bollot. wltll the second balot the target. Both ~· ~oftd flwt Nixon, (Seo POL11'1CS. Pa .. l) Death Toll Rising Five in County Dead From Auto Accidents · Two persons were killed in weekend Huntington Beach traffic accidents and two other countians died of injuries suffered earlier, one of them a Costa Mesa boy knocked 82 feet by a car last Thursday. A fifth victim died almost instantly Saturday when l.1e suicidally rammed his car into another vehicle to climax a string of tormenting personal problems, but his will not be listed as a traffic death. The dead are: .John Kleckner. 57, or 512 E. \Vilhel mina St., Anaheim. Phillip L. Luna, 4, of 16082 Gold Circle, Huntington Beach. Eric E. Pauley, 6, of 2128 W-allace Ave., Costa Mesa. Robert Manelaa, 17, of. Norw&lk ~ Richard D. Maples, 19, ·01 La Habra. Huntington Beach police s a i d 115 Death Toll 95 1968 County Trarnc 1967 Kleckner was dead on arrival at Huntington lntercommuniy Hospital Friday, following ra three-car collision at Warner Avenue and Edwards Street. PASSENGER IN CAR Kleckner was a passenger in a car driven by Barbara Mattison, 29, of the same address. who was injured. along with Mrs. Gene Meiners, 2.8, of 15571 Swan Lane, driver of the second ear. Police to Seek Mtu·der Warrant Santa Ana poUce will seek a murder complaint today against Earl Roy Lyon, 24., of La Habra, wDo was arrested Friday night in the shooting death 'of Raymond C. Ruiz, 23, of 2523 The Luna youngster boy was killed Sunda'f when he awarenUy trotted out of a drainage ditch in which he bad been playing and struck the side 1of a passing car. ·-The fatal accident i n v o 1 vi n g motorist Janet I. Fleming, 17, of 6611 Abbott Drive, •luntingtoto Beach, occurred on Edwards Street about 70 feet north of Lennox Drive. s. Baker St. Investigators said they will al~o discuss with the district attorney the possible involvement o( Lyon's wife, Judy, in the shooting. She lJ alleged to have banded him the gun. Alllo hit by the same atug wblch killed Ruiz was Rudolph Guzman, 25, of Santa Ana, who was struck tn the right arm. Police said RulJ and Gusman were walilng by the apartment where Lyon'a ai1ter, Donna Sheppard lives. They Wert laid to have IOtteD into an , ~t with her Ind the -I lblloweif when •he a1Jeledl1 called ber ' brother Into the picture, ... ; Death also came SUnday to the Pauley boy, who was struck by a car last Tburlday-on. VkMria> Street near Wallace Avenue and thrown 82 feet, landing on bis head. He ',had b.een in critical condition at Hoag Memorial l·lospltat ever since. · Police said the boy ran into the path ol a car driven by Judy A. Wood, 25, ol 8171 Seabll:d Circle, llunUngton Beach and she bad no time to even 1pply ber bN.kes. FOURTH. FATAurY Tbe foUrtb fal&ll~ wu uiat of the Manclia boy, who WU tltawll !tom lib car July 7 at Golden West and Mansion 1treeta ln Huntington Beach, , alter it struck a power J)ole-, . Coroner'• deputfu 1ald·tb1 -·01 )'OWlg !lhpit& wlll not. bo lllled u a traf!ie totalJI)', alllloUlll .he uaod •an l automobile', ~'af-tbe obvtoualy ' (See llOAD DEATllll, Pa .. S) I I Armed Deputies Guarding wurt · In Panther Trial OAKLAND (UPI) -Armed deputies guarded the courthouse today as young .d.emoostrator1 converged for the murder. trial of Black Panther leader Hi,ey ·Newton, accused· of killing a policeman. Newton, 26, a handsome yoWlg mllltant, · has pleaded innocent· ·to charges he shot and Killed an Oakland pol.iceman dw·lng a street gWl battle last fall. Eight months of legal maneuvering and public campaigning to '0'Free Huey Now" followed the arrest of the founder of the Black Panther party. A final pretrial rally Sunday drew 1,500 supp<>rter1 of .?fewton to a city park"! Many of til.s backers -Negroes, (See NEWTON, P11e %) Oraai• Wea&ber It's back to normal for the Orange Coast as those lovely blue skles in th t early morn- • ing and ev~lq are hidden., by mornin1 and nllht · overcuL It's allo all&btly·cooler; INSIDE TODA.Y I J DAILY PIU>T Mond'1, Ju~ 15, 1968 . ~-~ig~n P~t on Alert for Cong Terror Raid$ SAIGON (UPI) -National polfco impoted the aecond full·Scale attack alum oa Saigon In a -1< today wqen 1D1elllleoce reporta .lndJc.ated a noon hour lerT<>r raid. None developed but the city remained extremdy tense. u. s. mllltari' ........ lald • Via! 0.. ··-dUIQp 1011114 JI .... .....t al lialp coal.llnecl _.,,. llQIPlles to o..taln a unit ol !!Ill men lw a prolonpd period. A 1lmllaf eeche diacovered near 1rue, the old '-'1aJ capital 400 miles to 1be norlll,. I t'I••• p ... I . ' ·could equlp a • battallon or :SOO lo seize SupcraUtlon Mountain , a Viet Communi1t.s. Cong stronghold in the Mekong Delta Despite the Saigon alert, Defense near the Cambodian border l3l miles Seer<•·-· Cl.Irk CUI. lord b .. an a aouthwest ol Saigon. • • -' • 'lllo 5ail0D alarm WU onier.d U round of top-level briefings with U. S. squads or naU,onal police .ln battle eear military and dlplomaUc o!Oclals, stopped hundreds of two · m an tltlcuWq tbe Peota,goo'1 . pll.m to motorbikes and searched them for bell up tbl'Soutb VletnameM Arm.y. we.apQos and bombs. Two terrorists War commulDqUM late t o d a y r tiring lrom a motorbike shot and reported no raajor ' bltUes, but front killed u American soldier tut FrJday rej>orll said American hellcopters In U10 Cholon District, trligerlng a flew eeveral re1upply mlsslona ror U. almllar alerL S. aa4 South Vietnameie troops t:ryblg lniormed allied intelligence sources Opens Tuesday sald a majoi CoinmUnlst' offensive against South VJetnamese population centers could be expected any time, and tbeto repo11$ produced oome invulon fears . The weapon.1 cache found 15 miles west ot Saigon contained two wheel· mounted heavy machine . guns and 1.125 sticks of TNT. The arsenal aear Hue was p.ued with roctetl, automatic rifle ammunition .and mines. Reporting from f.be Superstition Mountain front Monday, freelance correspondent Doug Warren told UPI allied forces had killed 16 Communists in five days oC aporadlc combat •re said there were no allied casualties ln the force of about 900 S o u t h VletbamlH Raqen and Amerlcaa Air Cavalrymen. Warren 1ald U. S. troops advanced to a pagoda near the base ol the mountain and found sleeping bags. basket., pots •nd pans and a supply o( ·beer. U. S. ofUcera said Viet Cong were lpparenUy fleeing deeper into underground tunnels to escape the •dva.~g allies. The U. S. coDUMDd aald American pilots new 121 miJsions qilnlt North Vietnamese targeta 1D lhe Panhandle area just above the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) Sunday. RettUning pUota re-r.orted ''walking" bombs aCl'Oll a railroad bypass 22 miles northwes:t of Vinh, a big supply tranS1hipment point in the area. ' : u. s. air force 11&2 jets new lour missions during the weekend aga1nst the Mu Gia Pass ~ North Vietnam'• main funnel into South Vietnam 0:vu the Ho Chi Minh Trail through Laoa. Warrant Out ·~ . -' NEWTON •.• liberals and student activists - claimed the case is a te st of whether a black militant can get a fair trial in a ·Plenty of Entertainment In Mesa Vice ;~ .. northern court The prosecution charges Newton killed patrolmu John F. Frey, 23, and wcrunded· a second officer in a gun batUe jU1t before 1tmrlse Jaat Oct 28. Police said Frey stopped the guspect'1 car for a routine t:Mffic violation. Newton's sympathllers c. h a r g e Oakland police were out to "get" Newton and other leaders of the small, aggressive Black Panther party. They term the shooting "Inevitable" In this city where clashes between blacks and · lawmen are routine. Newton was arrested when be otaglgered Into a hoapital with a bullet wound in the abdomen · a short tlmc after the gun battle. UPI Tt"""'lt Sheriff Frank Madigan t o o k extraordinary precautions to prevent llni11er•al queen disruption of the trta1. Newsmen and the few spectators who can crowd into Judge Monroe Friedman's seventh floor court room were to be search.ed by deputies. Armed guards were posted inside and outside the courtroom and on the streets below. The precautions came as caravans of young "Free Huey" demonstrators prepared to converge on t h e courthouse from San F r a n c I s c o , Oakland and Berkeley. , At Sunday's park rally, N~wton s successor es Black Panther chie told t 500 whites and blacks they o ld attend the trial if they wan Earth's entry in the Miss Uni· verse contest won again this year, this time winner is Mar· tha Vasct>nceUos of Brazil. She was chosen from 64 beauties in Miami Beach Saturday night. Viet Peace Talks Still Dea dlocked After 2 Months despite a judge's order that on a limited number of spectators would be PARIS (UPI) -1'he Nor l h permitted.~~etnamesc today said there has been .. no progress in Vietnam talks with the United States and there is no sign of F fll.iP .. e hope there will be any way out of the ' two-month-old deadlock. POLITICS "The fact is that up to this hour, ' ' ' the official. talks have made no despite his apparently overwhelming lead currently, is not likely to get a first-ballot victory. Rockefeller said on a Sunday television interview (ABC-Issues ~d Answers) he believed the convention would go "lo about four ~nllo.ts, perhaps five , with nobody get.~1ng the ne<:eSSaty plurality on the ftr st but Mr Nixon being ahead. \ ,;On the second, Mr. Nixon starts losing votes to both (Gov. Ronald) Reagan and myself," he said. "On. the third there's a motion in all dlrecti~n§ a~ on the fourth it stmis moving toward me." The determining factor in the nomination, he said , will be the Republican party's ·desire to win t11e election. Meanwhile Nixon's convention floor manager, Rep. Rogers C. B. Morton (R·Md.), said in a UPI interview that Nixon appears to have more than 700 delegate votes locked up. But Morton shied away from predicting a first-Oallot victory even though only 667 votes are needed to nominate. "I think with the nu1nber of favorit e 60ns, it would be risky to say that we do have enough tc win on a first ballot." he said. "I am not predicting that. I am predicting that we will "·in on an early ballot after we get the favorite son issue out of tile way." DAILY PILOT .....,_.... C....M- H•'"""" hecil W,.IMI ..... w---·-CAUPOIHIA keMrt N. W1ff --Til•111•J K•••ll "''"' T1it1M1 A. M1rr,hi111 Mtfllllflt ldl or J1cli: k. C1rl.y P11I Nln1D. tut1Met IMll/llfl< Alh'wtlllnl Cll'llltlt om,,, Colfl MIU: • W9" ••v Sir.t """"""' 9Ndl1 un w ... ,.,.. ....... ,., L•t•M ··~~Ill lU •1rt1/ AWtlllf tMltllllMI ...,., -"" """' • • progress, they have not moved an inch and there is no glimmer of hope," Nguyen Thanh Le, North Vietnam delegation chief spokesman, told a i1ews conference. "American officials arc advancing false arguments that moves are being made in Paris, that there are hopeful signs. that there are 'straws in the wind' and what have you," Thanh Le saie. The North Vietnamese delegation previously has said there has been no movement toward the talks' goal of cooling down the war enough to permit a peace conference -but it has never put it so bluntly. A week ago chief U. S. delegate \Y. Averell Harriman reported no progress but to 1 d newsmen he remained hopelul and felt there was a "straw in the wind." No, said Thanh Le. He blamed it all on the United States. The deadlock since the talks opened 1-~ay 13 "is entirely due to the obstinate rerusal in Washington to order an unconditional cessation of American (11irl raids on North Vietnam," he said. Thanh Le told the news conference that Hanoi believes "the United State~ has decided to intensify its war of aggression in Vietnam ." Stanton Officer's Com·t Trial D11e Stanton reserve police officer Allen Christian was to go on trial this a~temoon before Superior Judge Karl Lynn Davis on a reduced cijarge of involuntary manslau ghter. Chief Deputy District Attor ney James G. Enright moved for U1e lesser charge ttUs morning when trial began before Judge Davis. The officer was previously charged with strl'.light manslaughter. Christian's attorney r..t at th e '" Kurillch of Fullerton asked for a court trial, waiving the right to trial by Jury. Christian is charged In the death of Paul M. Aguilera, 19, or Stanton on Feb. 9. Aguilera \Vas shot when he allegedly fled Cilrisllan and another officer who were quesllonlng him about a narcotics olten se. The reserve officer wa s indicted by the Grand Jury on Feb. 14. H& claimed he did not Intend to kill the youth but fired a Warning 11hot when Aguilera failed to stoP after belna warned three Umes . The shot hlt Aguilera ln the neck as he fled down a darkened alley. Scheduled to 1ppear as a witness is Jerry Naranja who wa.s With Aguilera when they were stopped b7 officers in the early mornln1 h<!uta. • ' ,. -~ Slated for County Fair Raid Case "" ""' ,.,, "" A bench w<rrant has beeft ·isau~for Entertainment running from a rodeo to a fiymphony orchestra, from hme shows to barbersflop quartet!, from marching bands to a beeuty pageant will be on hand for Ormge County Fairgoer• this week. The 1968. fair which opens Tuesday on the c.osta Mesa fairgrounds and continues through Silnday will be the site of almost continuous entertain· ment from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. Beginning Tuesday at 9 a.m. is the Junior National Horse Show followed by FFA and 4·H agricultural exhibitions and judgiJlg. In the afternoon from 2:30 to 3:30 the preliminaries for Miss Orange County Tommorrow Beauty Contest will be held. Finals will be that evening at 8 p.m. . ALSO APPEARING Also appearing on opening day is the El Toro Marine Band , at 5 p.m., tile Oplimist Youth Band 0£ Orange County at 7 p.m. and with the Popcorn Theatre Marionettes at 2 p.m. The Festival of. Nations with its 150· person cast will highlight the fair's entertainment on Wednesday, The Festival will bring authentic cultural music and dances to U:ie fairgrounds amphitheater at 8 p.m. The morning horse show, and animal judging will continue through Thursday. The Optimist Youth Band ol Or<.nge County will again-perform on the parade grounds, this time at 5 and 7 p.m. Wednesday. On Thursday, the Pageant of The Flag will be presented by the Sea School Ma.rines from the' San Diego Recruit Depot at 2:30 p.m. in the amphitheater. Later on Thursday,. the Kingsmen, n:rtional champions drum and bugle cor'JlS and color guards wW perform at 6 p.m. on the parade --· The Baroershop Quartet Coolest that night from 8:30 to 10 p,m. will conclude the Thursday schedule. Friday afternoon, the Pageant ol the Flag at 2:30 and the Kingsmen at 6 p.m. will be making repeat performances. That night at 8:30, Nlno Tempo and April Stevens, along with the Back Por<h ~j<rity, will be performing at the fair amphitheater. 'I'be Tempo- Stevens act will feature songs tbey have recorded i nc luding "Whispering," "Sweet and Lovely,"· and their modem version Of "Deep Purple." The Back Porch Marjorlty, a four· year-old singing group, has played night clubs, TV programs and made several records. The 100.person cast ol the Sing·Out· \Yest-End vocal group will present, Sunday, at 2:30 p.m. its program "Up With People" in the fair amphitheater. Tempo and Stevens along with the Majority will return again at 8:30 to the amphitheater. FULL AFTERNOON The Sunday fair schedule will fill the afternoon Y:ith the sounds of marching bands along with the Boys Clubs' variety show at 2:30. The bands, Glengarry HighliKtt Band of West Covina and the El Toro Marine band will perform at 4, 5, and 7 p.m. at the parade grounds. That night at 8:30 in the amphitheater Glen Campbell, emcee or the Summer Smothers Brothers TV show, comedian Frank Welker and the Sugar Shoppe vocal group will conclude the Fair's entertainment schedule. UPI T....,. Cal Be ... tv KHlell Fonner Miss California Jeanne Venables, 26, along with two other persons, was killed Sat· urday when light plane in which they were flying plung· ed. into the Colorado River. Miss Venables was 1964 queen. Americans Start Paying Higher Tax on lneome WASHINGTON (UPI) -Americans started paying higher federal income taxes today. President Johnson's long-sought 10 percent surcharge -designed to :hise $11.6 billion in additional revenue by next June 30 -went Jnto effect today. the arrest or the ooly one amon=ur women picked up in a Costa • massage parlor vice raid who h . :yet to work out her affairs wlth the 1',w. Alicia Mendez, 28, of Co~. failed to appear for jury trial Jn Harbor District Judicial Court ltist 11ull'sday, at which time her charge of residing in a house ol. ill fame ftuld have been dropped. ~ Charges of maintaining a disorderly house were dismissed on moti<>n of the prosecution in the case of Mrs. Afsar Mahjoubi, -0, of Long Beach, and Karin H. Campa, :IS, o! 7892 Rockwell Ave., Midway City, when t-ioe y appeared before Judge Ca.tin Schmidt. ,. They, Miss Mendez and Miss Jefsie L. Cox, 24, Of 7681 Joel Ave., Slan{oo. were arrested March 25 at the ~ta Mesa Health Club, 132 E. 18Ut til., which Mrs. Mahjoubl has since c!<ted in agreement with the city. > Miss Cox was the central neur4 in the case, since Detective Frf.Dk Upham said she took oil her blouse;t'or $5, then mtde anottier otfer for a 'F.J ree . ~ 1 All four women were taken '1to custody on the vice charges, and ?liss Cox was booked on suspicicpi • of soliciting for prostitution, plua lwo lesser charges. • ; She subsequently returned to court and changed her plea to no contefr on one violation, rather than fight all three charges. A court spokesman last ~ traid erroneously that Miss Cox pleaded no contest to the original char~ .. of soliciting for prostitution. ' She sictu·ally pleaded no conteSt to Oosta Mesa City Code section ae& - which prohibits a variety of tbinca - in<:luding indecent exposure, lewd acts and obscene language in public places. Ha11oi Scoffs at Johnson The tax is retroactive to Jan. 1 ror corporatJoru; and to Ap-11 1 for individuals. Tile increased withholding from paychecks of • "'·age earners starting this week actually will not meet the obligations of many taxpayers. 'The Cox woman asked that ·:the DAILY PILOT set s1ralgbt tbe .. ract that it was charges such as the a'Qove that she chose not to dispute witJi the city. ~ 1:• Asia Development Scheme Some firms were enc our aging employes to increase their weekh' withholding to avert an unexpected bill ~t tax settllDg time next April 15. Staff Added At Saddleback ::: TOKYO (AP) -North Vietnam today scoffed at President .Johnson's billion dollar plan for the postwar development of Southeast Asia, calling it "bait" to perpetuate the American presence in Saigon. The Communist party news.paper Nilan Dan said the Communists would "build a 1ife of plenty" for the North and South Vietnamese people after the United States is defeated. "The Vietnamese people h a v c clearly realized that the billion dollars promised by Johnson to the people in Southeast Asia is but a bait," the party newspaper said, "The stick-and· carrot policy of tM United St.ates is golng bankrupt. The stick has been broken and the carrot is rotten." \V. Averell llarriman, the U.S. negotiator at the Paris talks with 1\1orth Vietnam, had last \Vednesday renewed the president's of fe r to underwrite a postv.'ar development program in which North Vietnam could particiapte. The V~et Cong press agency, in a communique broadcast by Hanoi, From Pag~ J ROAD DEATHS. suicidal nature.of the crash. Investigators said the yo u n g husband and father tried t o hang himself SatW'day at his parents' home, but fouJed up the job and came running into the house for help. liis wife Donna, 19, cut the rope , at "'hich time Maples ran out and jumped Into his car, veeriag it headon into another vehicle three blocks away and Injuring three occupants, one critically. Police and fire units en route to Maples' attempted $uick1e scene were diverted to the traffic collision, where they round he had succeeded on himself and nearly taken another UJ'e. The three other vlctlms had to be pried out of the tangled wreckage. Former Governor Of Oregon Dies ALBANY, Ore. (UPI) -Elmo SmJlh, a former Oregon governor and publisher of one dally and 1everal weekly newspapers. dJed here this morninr of cancer. He was 58 • I denied American and S o u t h Vietnamese chmges ol atrocity in a Viet Cong raid that left 88 persons dead June 28 in the coastal fishing village of Son Tra, 55 miles southeast of Da Nang. The Viet Cong said tJ1e attack was a "patriotically led rebellion b y Vietnamese held in an American concentration camp." Son Tra housed about +,000 refugees at the time of the Viet Cong attack. "Puwet Sou.th Vietnamese criminals running the eoncenttation camp for ttle American,," were the only ones killed, the broadcast said. U.S. headquarters reported 7 3 civilians ~nd 15 members of a South Vietna·m_ese pacification team killed in the jlre-dawn raid. President Johnson, in signing the tax package June 2.8, said Congress had "fuUUJed an important responsibility" in enacting the bill. He said the measure -which also ordered $6 billion in federal spending cuts -would cut $20 billion from the fiscal 1969 deficit. $200 Million Park Legislation Signed WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Johnson today signed into Jaw a bill doubling the federal outlay for ne\v parks and recreation land to '200 million annually for the next five years. Saddleback College in Missron Viejo, continues to add to its profes~nal staff with the employment of,.:an assistant librarian, a g u i d a P., j: e counselor and two more instructotS. The junior college, which will open Sept. 23, now has with the addition o( the two new instructors 25 <1f an anticipated 30. "· Appointed assistant librarian · is Dorothy Kathleen Spidell of Orange, currently a librarian at Orange Public Library. ,;,, The new guidance counselor j~ Dr. Mary ~f. Beets, who has been .. an assistant professor at San Diego _§\ate College. ·. Tile two new instructors are Vi~']d. Zeldorf of Costa Mesa, airt.·>..ne stewardess instructor, and Wayfti'J, ltorvath, art instructor. , WATCH & JEWELRY t· REPAIRS! 0 OMEGA Yotiir e>meoa·t:--: Sale& & Strvicf'·· A~llC!I :, ~f Alt WORK FUii Y GUARANTEED' ,,. \ii .r ~'";~' .;; I ~1· I ~.·.· ~··.i ,.,,.,\~ ~li;: YOUR WATCH\\: • CIHMd • Oiled • Adluotad $5!!~E "':'?Cit-Wlllle au Wiit PEAkLS RE-STRUNG OlllGS Sl2£0, ,,. Nlul111 DI..-. fl...,,f!WI -----·-.. ' FREE Sl.99 S2.4 9 99 -S4. Jawalry Doalfnl"I A S,.Claltyl . Now 2 Grtat stores To Sem y.,. MAUOI IH°""Ne MUM11N•TON CIMTll CINTll llACM & DINMI UM HADOl kft. HUNTINGTON IUCH COSTA MIU. MMUI ltZ.lllt Open -· Thurs. fr!, Till 9 p.m. • • "'' .:.:·::.; ' .. --· fNlft ••• ··-'•I• .. ~. '" .. ... , .. Dlll>4illl • ' • -_ .. .,_Sil.I. • , ............. -: _,,,.. °""' ·-.. .,. """' '" .. ~ ' --1 ... TllMI :~ TO , "' . YOUI ui.. "'"" ~ ... " • il"'1can t North •halldle ltarbed I pllota ,,._a west of nt pi>tnt 'w lour .aga1nat :tnam'a m ovu La~. .. .. ... , . ~ " ... ~ ... .. ~OZ for ~~~": b,f;°i 1'_w. ,~on, rill in rt l"5t acge ol ~d oi:dorly 1 of the • Afsar b, and IC-ll Wi.ey <:attn ' Je(sie tanjon. ' (:4;ta Ul 6t .. c~ed ' iur~ In u~~ ' •120 •• < n tito d ?iiss i<fl 'i of la WO • • • 1 court ~on lhl all ~-.id ded no ·g,,. of test to tlB6 - llCl - rd acts ?laces. 11t -:the .e•;fact aqove ttli the ··•. :'J• •"· ". Vl&jo, i~q~al o(,.,an 1 ni:: e t •T•. ors. I open '.ion of <If an '" an · is raage, Pub~c l~ Dr. !n.-an ~\ate if/,~~ rift!''J. .· .. 1·· .. • I '" "· .~. '•!• ,. ' ..,,, ...... -· .. , ~. ~. '" ··' . , .. "' •• .. .. •• ... ..... .i . ..... .•. I I I • •• • • YOL 6f, NO. ·169, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAG ES He's Too Paunchy Florida beacbboy George Francis did such good job of ra1s1ng his tame pelican LeRoy that the !~week-old bird now has a slight weight problem, hitting the scales at 11 pounds, and can no longer fly. LeRoy has to hitchhike on George's shoulder. Two l{illed in Huntington Weekend Traffic Crashes ' ' Two persons were killed in weekend Huntington B!acl\. traffic accidents and two other countians died or injuries suffered earlier, one of them a Costa Mesa boy knocked 82 feet by a car last Thursday. A fifth victim died almost instantly Saturday when he suicidally rammed his car into another vehicle to climax a string of tormenting personal problems, but his will not be listed as a traflic death. The dead are: John Kleckner, 57, of 512 E. \Vilhelmina St., Anaheim . Phillip L. Luna, 4, of 16082 Gold Circle, l'luntington Beach. Eric E. Pauley, 6, of 2l2U \\lallacc Ave .. Cos ta Mesa. Robert l\Taucha, 17, of Norwalk • Richard D. l\'Iaples, 19, of La Habra. Huntington Beach police s a i d 115 Death Toil 95 1988 County Traffic 1967 Kleckner was dead on arrival at Huntington Intercommunly Hospital Friday, following -a three-car collision at \Varner Aven ue and Edwards Street. PASSENGER lN CAR Kleckner was a passenger in a ca r driven by Barbara Mattison, 29, of the same address, who was injured, alon~ with Mrs. Gene Meiners, 28, of 15571 Swan Lane, driver of the second car. The Luna youngster boy was killed Sunday when he apparently trotted out of a drainage ditch in which he had been playing and struck the side of a passing car . The fatal accident i n v o l v l n g motorist Janel I. Fleming, 17, of ti611 Abbott Drive , lluntingto11 Beach, occurred on Edwards Street about 70 feet north of Lennox Drive. Death also came Sunday lo lhe Pauley boy. who was struck by a car last Thursday on Victoria Street near \Vallace Avenue and thrown 82 feet. landing on his head. He had been in critical conditiOn at Hoag Memorial Hospital ever since. ' Police said the boy ran into the path ol a car drixen by Judy A. Wood, 25, of 8171 Seabird. Circle, Huntington Beach and she had no time to even apply her brakes. ' FOURTH FATALITY The fourth fatality was that of the Mancha boy, who was thrown from his car July 7 at Golden West and Mansion streets in Huntington Beach, after it struck a power pole. Coroner's deputies said the dea.th of young Maples will not be listed as a traffic fatality, although he used an automobile, because of the obviously suicidal nature of the crash. lnvcstigatol's said th e y oun g husban d and father tried to han g hin1self Saturday at his parents' home. but fouled up the job and came running into the house for help. llis wile Donna, 19, cut the rope, at \Vhich time Maples ran out and jumped lnto his car, veering It headon into another' vehicle three blocks away and injuring three occupants, one critically. Police and !ire units en route to Map les' attempted suicide scene were diverted to the traffic collision , where they found he had succeeded on himself and nearly taken another life. The three other victims had to be pried out of the tangled wreckage. Seal Beach Slates 26-item Agenda Seal Beach City Council meets at 8 o'clock tonight to consider a 26-point agenda. . Councilmen meet at City Hall, 201 8th St. f>genda items include an ordinance establishing swimming pool !ielbacks. and agreements with the Olamber of Commerce and the Orange County Harbor Disb'ict. ,,.-www wzo a 5 • • Your Hometown Dally Paper i:AONDA Y, :JULY lS, '1968 TEN CENTS Haroour Home BomDea-- Grennde . Tossing Linketl to LA News Strike A hand grenade hurled from a passing car into the sandbagged l·lunticgton Harbour home 'Of a trucking company owner who supplies paper to the strikebOund Los Angeles llerald·Examiner caused $500 damage late Sunday night. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Brockman and their two children we.re in rear bedrooms or the home at J66U Bolero Lane 'Yhen the thundering blast hurled rock landscaping in all directions like Peace Talks Deadlocked, Hanoi Says PARIS (UPlJ -The N or th Vietnamese today said there has been no progress in Vietnam talks with the United States and there is ;10 sign of hope there will be any way out of the two-month-old deadlock. "'The fact is that up to this hour, the official talks have made no progress. they have not moved an inch and there is no glimmer of hope," Nguyen Thanh Le, Norfh Vietnam delegation chief spokesman, told a news conference. "American officials are advancing false arguments that moves are being made in Paris, that there are hopeful signs, that there are 'straws in the wind' and what have you ," Thanh Le saie. The North Vietnamese delegation previously has said there has been no movement toward the talks' goal of cooling down the war enough to pel'mit a peace conference -but it h8s hever puf it so bluntly. A week ago chief U. S. delegate W. Averell Harriman reported no progress but to I d newsmen he remained hoP;Cful and felt there was a "straw in the wind." No, said Thanh Le. He blamed it all on the United States. The deadlock since the talks ope ned May 13 "is entirely due to the obstinate refusal in Washington to order an unconditional cessation of American (air) raids on North Vietnam," he said. Thanh Le told the news conference that Hanoi believes "the United States h~s decided to intensify its war of aggression in Vietnam." "The U.S. refu ses to stop bombing. It keeps puttin g out h ope f u I statements in order to appease the :?rowin g protest movement in the United States and in the \YOrld again st the bon1bings, ., he said. United States Defense Secretary Clark Clifford and Chairman of th e Joint Chiefs Earle \V·heeler have been sent to Saigon ''to give n e '" instructions for the stepping up of ttie war of aggression," be charged. They will also try to strengthen the South Vietnamese "puppet army-full of U. S. neocolonialism," he said. Thanh Le said President Johnoon's agreement to meet Souttl Vietnamese President Nguyen Vian Thieu shows the Uni·led States will continue dealing \\'ith the "band or traitors in Saigon and keep re(usin g self-determination for South Vietnam." Sunday's statement by Secretary of State Dean Rusk about American policy in Vietnam, he said, "shows that the United ·States wilt obstinately refuse an unconditional halt" to air rakts . Endorses McCarthy NEW YORK (AP) -Eugene II. Nickerson , who was the late ~r:. Robert F. Kennedy's choice for Ule U.S. Senate, declared his suppart of Sen. EUgene J. McCarthy for president today . 1hrapnel. Brockman told the DAILY PILOT today he had sandbagged the yard - one of five homes be owns -in expectation of violence due to his role In the bloody, eight-month·long labor dJspute. The victim said he has been moving his family around among the five homes in an effort to save them from harm, due to a string of incidents involving his tr·ucks and personnel. Brockman 1ald he bas been shot at twice .abd his trucks damaged due tO his coMinuing to service the Herald· Examiner despite the sb'ike by units of the Los Angeles NewspaJ>er Guild. The Hearst newspaper has been Involved in the labor dispute since iast Dec. 14 , with scores of incidents ranging from mild curses to the shooting murder of a non·union employe. Huntington Beach police said today Deputies King Court 'Panther'· Trial Heavily Guarded OAKLAND (UPI) -Armed deputies guarded the courthouse today as you ng demonstrators converged for the murder trial of Black Panther Jeader Huey Newton, accused of killing a policeman. ~.ewton, 26, a handsome young militant, has pleaded innoCent to charges he shot and killed an Oakland policeman during a street gun battle last fall. Eight months or legal maneuvering and public campaigning to "Free lluey Now" followed the arrest of the founder of the Black Panther party. A final pretrial rally Sunday drew · 1,500 supporters o! Newton to a city park. · ~fally of~ bis baj:::km .-Negtoes, libera"h and ductent aetivlsts - claimed the case is a test of whether a black mllltant can get a lair trial In a northern court. The prosecutJon charges Newton killed Patrolman J ohn F. Frey, 23. and wounded a second officer In a gun battle just before sunrise last Oct. 28. Police said Frey stopped the suspect's car for a routine tra£fic violation. Newton's sympathizers c ha r g e Oakland police were. out to "get" Newton and other leaders of the small, aggressive Black Panther party. They term the shooting "inevitable" in this city where clashes betwee n blacks and lawmen are routine. Newton was arrested when he staggered into a hospital with a bullet wound in the abdomen a short time after the gun battle. Sheriff Frank Madigan t o o k rxtraordinary precautions to prevent Police to File Murder Charge In SA Slaying Santa Ana police will seek a murder complaint today a gainst Earl Roy Lyon, 24 . or La Habra. who was arrested Friday night in the shootinit death or Raymond C. Ruiz, 23,, of 2523 S. Baker St. Investigators said they will al so discuss with the district attorney the possible involvement of Lyon's wile, Judy, in the shooting. She is alleged to have handed him the gun. Also hit by the same slug which killed Ruiz was Rudolph Guzman, 25, of Santa Ana, who was struck in the right arm. Police said Ruiz and Guzman were v.·alking by the apartment where Lyon's sister. Donna Sheppard lives. They were said to have gotten Into an argument with her and the shooting followed when she allegedly called her brother into the picture. disruption or the trial. Newsmen and the few spectators wbo can crowd into Judge Monroe Friedman's seventh floor court room were to be searched by deputies. Armed guards were posted inside and outside the courtroom and on the istreets below. The precautions came as cara,•ans of young "Free Huey" demonstrators prepared lo converge on t h e courthouse from San F r a n c 11 c o • Oakland and Berkeley. At Sunday's park rally, Newton's successor as Black Panther chief told 1,500 whites and blacks they could attend the trial if they wanted - despite a judge's order that only a limited number of spectators would be permitted. "'''' ........ IJ11iversal queen Earth's entry in the Miss Uni· verse contest won again this year. this time winner is Mar- tha Vasconcellos af Brazil. She \Vas chosen Crom 64 beauties in Miami Beach Saturday night. Americans Start Paying Higlier Tax on lnco1ne they are not certain what type of explosive was used in the attack on Brockman's plush bQ.llle, but ·that il appears to have been a grenade.. Brockman said be has b e e n protected by a fulltime bodyguard hired at $3,000 per year, but he was not present Sunday night when the bomb exploded. Hearst officials said officially today that Brockman has been aupplying their publicaUon with newsprint !or tpree years. ' Y ALLEY YOUTHS SA VED FROM CLIFF Two Fountain Valley youths· were rescued Sunday by the Valley of the Falls Rescue Team from a m.foot high ledge above Big Falls in the San Gorgonio Mountains. Rescued were Tom and Jay Lloyd. 13 and 14, "'°"of Mr. and Mn. Philllp Lloyd, 17803 Santa Gertrudel Ave., Fouotain Valley. The boys were unhurt and are at.tendiDg a summer camp in the area. Stanton Officer Goes on Trial On Lesser Charge Stanton reserve police officer Allen Christian wu to go on tl'ial this a~emoon before Superior JUdge Kar l Lynn Davis on a reduced cbarie of involuntary mam:laugbter. Chief Deputy Di<trlot Attomey James G. Enright moved for the Jesser charge this morning when trial began before Judge Davis. The officer wa1 previously charged with stralCbt manslaughter. Christian's attorney r..t at t he w Kurilich of Fullerton asked for a court trial, waiving the right to trifll by jury. Ctuistian is charged in the death of Paul M . Aguilera, 19, of Stanton on Feb. 9. Aguilera was shot when he allegedly fled Christian and another officer who were questioning him about a narcotics oUense. The reserve officer was indicted by the Grand Jury on Feb. 14. He claimed be did not intend to kill the youth but fired a warning shot when Aguilera failed to stop alter being warned three times. The shot hit Aguilera in the neck as he fled down a darkened alley. Scheduled to appear as a witness is Jerry Naranja who was with Aguilera when they were stopped by officers In tbe earJy morning hours. Study Meet Set For Westminster A special study session of tbe \Vestminster Planning Commission is to be held at 7:30 o'clock tonight at City Hall, 14381 Olive St. Commissioners will study t h e Planning Commissioners Handbook, a possible "Public Facilities Zone," a sign ordinance ainendment and a proposed policy statement. -OrBB:A.ui Wea&ber Rape Chru·ged To Beach Man Joh Interview • Ill Bikini WASHINGTON (UPI) -Americans •tarted paying higher fed•ul Income taxes today. President Johnson'• long-sought 10 percent surcharge -decigned to ralso $11.6 billicm In addJUonal revenue by next June ll -went into effect today. It's back to normal for the Orange Coast as thoae lovely blue aklea Jn th• early morn- ing and cvenlni are bidden by morning and nl&bt overcasL lt'1 also slightly cooler. A Huntington Beach man Friday was ordered to stand trial Au g. 21 on Mo ving Age1it Accrued of Call Girl Pitcli charges of molesting and raplng an 11· A belty Costa Mesa moving van line year-old neighbor girl. agent was jailed Saturday after a Lee Roy Manis, 2'l. of 20082 h n.ai.. girl ~ the D I t I t Sherwood Circle, Is charged wltll ' •..-.. "~· 1 r c forcible rape, statutory rape, assault Attomey'a office said be made her a with lntttK to compilt-rape. crimes use-the-bed-before·we-move·lt p 1 t c h against children, sex perversion Jn. during a )ob interview. , volvlng a child, burglary and kidnap-Donald E. Martin, 38, or 3023 infl, 11'urray Lane, was booked on suspicion Police sald h~ entered the home of of solicLUng for prostitution 111 a result the Utile lllrl early In the morning of or U>e lntervltw at RopubUc" Von June 22 and used a knffe to force her Lines. 1.'HO LOgan Ave., Sattaday to ttlbmlt to his adv1ncts. Manis has aftemoon. ]llMded not guilty and not guilty by Mart!n pootod 131b on t h • reuoa ol JnnnJty. mJsdemeaoor cbarge aod w 1 1 I ' released, pendltfg hi& July 1 8 arraignment in Harbor D 11 tr 1 c t Judicial Court, lnve1Ugator1 aaid today. Mrs. Jmice Rhodes, J6. wu Milt to Martin's firm for a job latemew l/1<r the district attorne.)'1-office WIS• fed lnfonnation allesJ~ the 111spoct was attempting to 1ety. up a prostituUon operation. She told Colla Mesa dttectlvt1 tilat lllsrtln •Ued lier to come In a blltlnl. tileo ...wned tllat port of btr duties would lnvolva· &ollf to bed with prospective movtn1 CUl!omtn. Mrs. Rhodes sald Martin, who weighs MS pounds and stands nve leet nine Inches tall, promised ber'2$ !or eadJ c:altomer who aampled her chanm in the course of business. Martin, l19wever, told police alter his aITeSt that he only wanted women employel to entertain clleuta IOclally and denied the &ex angle. Police said he also had a comment ln regard to~klng: the interviewee to appear In a-!>rlef blldnL "ls It a crlms to wont to look It her 1'!11?" they quote<! Martin as uaylnc. ,\ •• The tax is retroactive to Jan. 1 for corporations and to April 1 for individuals. The increased withholding Crom paychecks of wage earners startlng this week actually will not meet the obttgaUons of maoy Jupayers. ' Some firms were en cou r agl n g employes to Iner-!!!etr ,...kly willlljoldlng to 4Vl!H iif'iiiiexpect,od bill Ill tax "'tUlng time !M!lt April 15. Pn.!ldtnt Joh111on, In signing fbe tax package June 28, said Coogress had "fuUWed an important respomlbWty" In maotiD« tho bill. He satd the rneuure -which also ordered fl! billlOll In federal lp""dtnc <W -wwld out Q) btJlbl from ... fiscal 1189 clollciL I INSmE TODAY The United Statta often givts tlie Soviet Union 1omething to think about aa Rwsion 1hip1 wctch tM t'l10M1lvm of the potHrful U.S. Sizlh Fl«I m Iii• llediW1Tcm<an. Page 12. ·-' -' -.. .. _ " ··-• -·-n ._. .. .... --.. ...... " ......... ' ·-• """ -n --' S.Ci.t ,...., .. ·-' -·-"" ·~'-.. _,, ..... ·-.... , ........ JWI "" c. .. ' ,...,.,.... n 5.1~"'!' .. -• n =·= • " • -.. .. ,. I D~IL v PILOT Colorado's Gov~ Love Backs Rocky ~WlleSeqleu D£NVER -Colorado Gov. John A. Lme former head of the Republican Governors' Association, t o d a y endorlld New York Gov. Nehoa A. Roclteleller. for Ille GOP prelidential nomt.- Love threw his support t o RockefeU:er even though he said the New Y.orker was a definite "underdoe" for the nomination. Lqve said Roe-faced "raiber 1001 odds." Love is a member o{ Colorado's 18· member deleption to t.be NaUonal convention, Which ls only three weeks away. Support<n of Richard M. Nixon have m01t of the votes in the Colorado delea:aUou, possibly as many ... 15. Aoother of the delegates favors CaWorIHa Gov. Ronald Reagan. Love said he was "hopeful"· that his public stand for Rockefeller would influence a"Om~lorado delegates and J)o61lbly some elegates from other Mates. Gov. Reaga !eked up the lion's ahare of. delega d.rength at the Utah Republican state convention jn Salt L&ke City during the weekend. · Reagan, a stated non-candidate for the GOP presidential nomination, picked up five of the state'~ eii)lt delegates. Two delegates !lrmly 1n the camp ot Nixon were elected. The eighth delegate, state vice chairman, Janice Romney, the sister-in-law of Michigan Gov. George Romney, Is officially undeclared, but probably leaning toward Nixon. Meanwhile Gov. Rockefeller says he should win the nomination on the fourth or fifth ballot. A top lieutenant of Nixon says on the other hand utat the former vice president will win on an "earlY" ballot, with the second ballot the target. Both sides agreed that Nixon, despite bis apparently overwhelming lead currently, is not likely to get a first-ballot vJctory. Rockefeller said on a Sunday television interview (ABC-Issues and Answers) be believed the convention \'-'ould go "to about four ballots, perhaps five, with pobody getting the neteMiary plurfllty on the first but Mr. l\b:on be.ing ahead. "On the second, Mr. Nixon starts losing votes to b~ (Gov. Ronald) Reagan and:my1eJf..-he said. "On tbe third ther(• a motion in all directions and on the fourth !\ aWrts moving toward me." • · The determining factor in 1hc nomination, he said, will be the Republican party's desire to win the election. Meanwhile 'Nlxoo's convention floor manager, Rep. Rogers C. B. Morton CR·Md.), said in a UPI 'lrrterview that Nixon appears to have more than 700 delegate votes locked up. 3rd Swimming Lessons Slated The third in a series or swimming lessons begins today at two pools in Fountain Valley. Sign.ups for these lessons will continue through Saturday at the Los Amlgol Pool •I Heil and Newhope Avenues, and unW Sunday at the Fountain Valley Pool. Lessons are held every 30 minutes at the Los Amigos pool, starting at 10:30 a.m., and at the Fountain Valley High School site at 9:30 a.m. Instructions are given at various 1 eve Is, including Mom and Me , beginning, Intermediate and Swimmer. For further information concerning lessons at Los Amigos Pool, caU 8.19· 2911, and Fountain Valley Pool at 968- 1578. DAILY PILOT H ............. ~ ~•Mrt N. W11tl , M l!.iwt' fh•m11 kll Yil .... lh•111•• A. Mur.-lli111 Mtl'lll1"1 Etl!or Alli1rt W. l1t11 Wlll11m R11d ANOClttt H11r11L~1klft flN<b l!•IW (Uy Ecmor H ...... • .... Offtw JOf Ith St;11t Mallhit Alhlr11•1 P.O. In 7f0 ,2,41 0ti..r omc11 ...... IMCIU SIU W, ...... """"ttf ~19 MIMI D w.I a.y llrwt ''"' ... ...._1 m ,.,"' •·•- I, MOflday, July 15, 1968 Miss Boys' Club Holly Sue, named Little Miss Boys' Club Friday night by boys at· tending L~ttle Sister Night at the club in Huntington Beach, en- joys fleeting moment of salute from brother George (eltf), but brother Steve (center) expresses typical attitude of boys toward 1iiUe ststers. Children's parents are Mr. and Mrs. William Reed of Huntington Beach. Opens Tuesday Plenty of Entertainment • Slated for County Fair Entertainment running from a rodeo corps and color guards will perform at to a symphony orchestra, from horse 6 p.m. on the parade grounds. stloWs to barbershop quartets, from The Barbershop Quartet Contest marching bands to a beauty pageant that night from 8:30 to 10 p.m. will will be on hand for Ormige County conclude t.he Thursday schedule. Fairgoers this week. Friday afternoon, the Pageant of the The 1968 ·fair which open& Tuesday Flag at 2:30 and the Kingsmen at 6 on the Costa Mesa fairgrounds and p.m. will be making repeat continu~ through Sunday will be the performances. site of almost continuous entertain· That ni ght at 8:30, Nino Tempo and ment from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. dally. April Stevens. along with the Back Beginning Tuesday at 9 a .m. is the Porch Majority, will be performing at Junior National Horse Show followed the fair amphitheater. The Tempo- by FF A and 4-H a g r i c u 1 t u r & I Stevens act will feature songs they exhibitions and judging. In the have recorded includJng afternoon from 2:30 to 3:30 the "\Vhispering," "Sweet and Lovely," preliminaries for Miss Orange County and their modern version of "Deep Tommorrow Beauty Contest will be Purple." held. Finals will be that evening at 8 The Back Porch Marjority, a !our· p.m. year-old singing group. has played ALSO APPEARING night clubs, TV programs and made several records. Also appearing on opening day is the The JOO.person cast of the Sing.Qut- El Toro Marine Band, at 5 p.m., the \Vest-End vocal group will present, Optimist Youth Band of Orange Sunday, at 2:30 p.m. its program "Up County at 7 p.m . .and with tile Popcorn 'Vith People" in the fair amphitheater. 'Ibeatni Marionettes at 2 p.m. Temp.o and Stevens along with the The Festival of Nations with its 150· Majority will return again at 8:30 to person cast will highlight the !air's the amphitheater. entertainment "On Wednesday. The , . -~ ...,.. Festival will bring authentic cultural FULL+ AFTERNOON music and dances to tile fairgrounds The Sunday fair schedule wiU fill the am·phitheater at 8 p.m. The morning afternoon with (he sounds of marching horse show, and animal judging \Vill bands along with the Boys Clubs' continue through Thursday. variety show at 2:30. The bands. The Optimist Youth Band ol Orc:.nge Q.lcngarry Highland Band of West County will again perform on the Covina and the El Toro Marine band parade grbunds, this time at 5 and 7 \via perform at 4, 5, and 7 p.m. at the p.m. \Vednesday. parade grounds. On Thursday, the Pageant of The That night at 8:30 in the Flag will be presented by the Sea amphitheater Glen Campbell. emcee School Marines from the San Diego of the Summer Smothers Brothers TV Recruit Depot at 2:30 p.m. in the show. comedian Frank Welker and the amphitheater. Sugar Shoppe vocal group will Later on Thursday. the Kingsmen. conclude the Fair's entertainment nWonal champions drum and bugleschedule. Hanoi Scoffs at Jol1nson Asia Development Scheme TOKYO (AP) -North Vietnam today scoffed at President Johnson's bllllon dollar plan for the postwar development of Southeast Asia, calUng it "bait" to perpetuate the American presence in Saigon. The Communist party newspaper Nhan Dan said lhe Commun.lsq would "build a life of plenty" for the North and South Vietnamese people alter the United States is defeated. '·The Vietnamese people h a v e cle-arly realized th&t the billion dollars promised by John<on to the ~le in Southeast Asia ts but a bait,' the party newspaper said, "The stick.and· c3fl'Ot policy ol the United Stales is going bankrupt. The stick has Men broken Md the carrot is rotten." W. Averell Harriman, the U.S. negotiator at the Paris talks With Nor1Jl Vietnom, had tut Wednesday renewed the pr~3ideot'1 offer to '• unden,•rite a pootwar development program in which North Vietnam could parUciapte. The Viet Cong press agency, ln a communique bra.idcast by llano!, denied American and S o u t h Vietnamese chQI'ges of atrocity in a Viet Cong raid that left 88 persons dead June 28 in the coastal fishing village of Son Tra, 65 mlles aoutheast or Da Nang. The Viet Cong said the attack was a "patrlotlcally led nbelllon b y V1etnemese held in an Americ1.n t'Onct.ntratJon camp." Son Tra housed .abou t 4,000 refugees at the time of the Viet Cong attack. "Puppet South VI e tn am es e ttlmlnals r1.1nning ttie concentraUon camp for the Amttlcans" were the only ones ltilled, tbe broadcut said. Saigon Police Alert ·City -for Terror Raid SAIGON (UPI) -NaUonal police impOSed the second full-scale attnck alarm on Saigon in a weektoday,when intelligence reports indicated a noon hour terror raid. None developed bul the city remained extremely tense. U. S. military a:ources said a Viet Cong munitions dump found 15 ·mlles west of Saigon contained enough supplies to sustain a unit of 150 men for a prolonged period. A similar cache discovered near Hue. the old JmperW capital 400·miles to the north, could equip a battalion of •100 Communists. Despjte. the Sairon alert, Defense Secretary Clark Clifrord began a round of top-level briefings with 'l!· S. military and diplomatic offie1als, discussing• the Pentagon's plans to beef up the South Vietnamese Anny. War communiques late today reported no major battles. but front reports said American helicopters new several resupply missions for. U. S. and South Vietnamese troops trying to seize Suj>erstition Mountain, a Viet Cong, stronghold in the Mekong Delta Warrant Out In Mesa Vice Raid Case A bench warrant has been issued for the arrest of the only one among four women picked up in a Costa Me5a massage parlor vice raid who has yet to work out her affairs with the law. Alicia Mendez, 28, of Compton, failed to appear for jury trial in Harbor District Judicial Court lc:..St Thursday, at which time her charge of residing in a house or ill fame would have been dropped. Charges of maintaining a disorderly house were dismissed on motion of the prosecution in the case of Mrs. Aisar J\.1-ahjoubi, 41, or Long Beach, and Karin lI. Campa, 26, of 7892 Rockwell Ave., Midwc:.y City, when the y appeared be for 'e Judge Calvin Schmidt. They, Miss Mende<: and Miss Jessie L. Cox, 24, of 7681 Joel Ave., Stanton, were arrested J\.tarch 25 at the Costa Mesa Health Club. 132 E. 18th St.. which Mrs. Mahjoubi has since closed in agreement with the city. Miss Cox \Vas the central figure in the case, since Detective Frank Upham said she took off her blouse for $5, then made another offer for a $20 fee. ' All four women were taken into custody on the vice charges, and Miss Cox was booked on suspicion of soliciting for prostitution, plus two lesser charges. She subsequently returned to court and changed her plea to no contest on one violation , rather than light aU three charges. A court spokesman last mont~ said erroneously that Miss Cox pleaded no contest to the original charge of soliciting for prostitution. She cx:tually pleaded no contest to Costa Mesa City Code section 420S - which prohibits a variety of things - including indecent exposure, lewd acts and obscene language in public places. The Cox woman aSked that the DAILY PILOT set straight the fact that it was charges such as the above that she chose not to dispute with the city. YOUR WATCH~ • CIHntd. Oiied •Adlwttd -near the Cambodian border 170 mUes southwest of Saigon. The Saigon alarm was ordered as squads of naUonaJ police in battle gear stoppe(l hundreds or l w o • m a n motorbike• and aearched them for weaponS and bombs. Two terrorists firing 'from a motorbike shot and killed an American soldleri last Friday in the Cbokln Dlstrlc~ trlggerlng a similar alert. Informed alll.S tntelllitJice sources said a major Comnnai!jt offensfve against Soutb Vietnamese population centers coulil be expected 'aD)' time~ and these reports profuced some invasion fears. \ 'The weapons cache found 15 miles west of Saigon contained two wheel· mounted heavy machiri; iuDs and 1.125 sticks of TNT. The ~enal near Hue was filled with rockets, automatic rifle ammunition and mines. Reporting from the Superstition Mountain front Monday, freelance correspondent Doug Warren told UPI allied forces bad killed J61Communlsts Jn five days of sporadic combal }le said there were no allied casualties in the force of about 900 S o u t h Vietnamese Rangers and American Air Cavalrymen. Warren said U. S. troops advanced to a pagoda near tbe base of the mountain and found aleeplng bags. baskets, pots and pana and a supply of beer. U. S. oUJcer1 aa!d Viet Cong were apparenUy fleeing deeper into underground tunnels to escape the adva..,clng allies. The U. S. commaDd aald American pilots new 121 ~siona again.st North Vietnamese targets in the Ptmhandle area just above the Demllitarlud Zone (DMZ) Sunday. Returning pilots reported "Walking" bombs across a railroad bypass 22 miles northwest of Vinh, a big supply transshipment point in the area. U. S. alr force B52 jets new four missions during the weekend against the Mu Gia Pass, North Vietnam's main funnel into South Vietnam over the Ho Ch! Minh Trail through Laos. Parking Lot Plans Before City Council Final plans for a beach parking lot extending from the Huntington Beach pier to Beach Boulevard comes before the City Council sitting as ttte Parking Authority during the 7:30 o'clock meeting in Memorial Hall tonight. The plan calls for construction of a beach parking lot to provide parking space for about 2,500 OaM in an area row having only 800 spaces. Cost for the total project Js estimated at abc>ut $2 million including extensive landscaping of Pacific Coast Highway which now is being widened to four lanes by the state. The project is to be financed by Ul'I TtllPhlllo .. revenue bonds and the city staff has estimated the project will return not only the cost of construction, but a handsome profit as well. Cal Beauty Killed Fonner Miss California Jeanne Venables, 26, along with two other persons, was killed Sat· urday when light plane in \Vhich ·they \Vere flying plung- ed into the Colorado River. Miss Vena bles was 1964 queen. Taxicab Permit Before Council An application by George J. Vallevieni, owner of Fountain Valley Cab Co., for a permit to operate in the city is one of three public hearings by the council tonight. The adjourned meeting of U1e . council begins at 8 p.m. in council chambers of City I-Jail, 10200 Slater Ave. Other hearings are on w e e d abatement and a zone c h a n g e application by the Larwin Co. askihg a change from agricultural to multiple family residential on land at Talbert Avenue between Brookhurst Street and Ward Street. Success of the parking lot venture has been called the key to the further redevelopment of the old, blighted downtown area. Valley Youths .To Enjoy Dunes Youngsters 7 to 14 years of age who like swimming and boating ci\n have a fun day at the Newport Dunes on Friday, if they sign up today. Fountain Valley Parks and Recreation Department has made arrangements for buses a n d supervision and sign-ups are now under way. Buses will leave from the Fountain Valley High School parking lot at 1:15 p.m. and return to the same place at 5:45 p.m. The Newport Dunes has available for the children rentals of boats, paddle boards and other equipment for their fun. 'The Parks and Recreation Department will offer, free of charge pop and potato chips. Those desirin g food may bring lunches or money for the concession stands. Deadline for the trip is 5 p.m. on Tuesday. Registration must be made at the Fountiain Valley City liall, 10200 Slater Ave. Blanks may also be picked up at any one of the seven city elementary school playgrounds. 0 OMEGA Yo1er Omega Sales & Service AQenq • FIEE Sl.99 $2.49 $4.99 Now 2 Gnial Stores To Serve You HAllOI ......... HVNTIN•TOM CINTll CINTIR llA.CH • IDIN .. I 2111 MA.al Ila. H•NnM6TON llACH COSTA Mn.A ......... ttWM1 0,... -· Thv .... Fri. Tiii 9 p.m. ., • .- -,_,""""" ··-""°""Sits lrl .... letlr .,. ... .. _ ........ •111-llQ .,._ 111.S,. Wllfl~ frOfft llJI, --... -... -- TllMS TO , '" YOUI ...... I I l I I ' Laguna·· .. Beaeh VOL 6f, NO. 169, l SECTIONS, 34 PAGES " DAILY PILOT ,,,.._ •r T9111 Owm111 SOMETHING OF EVERYTHING -Two teen artists added variety to the Canterbury Fair. Bonnie Belknap (left), and Kris Brennan sold merchandis~· ranging from paintings and collage, to necklace and earrings. ' • . ' •• • · • PURSES HIS BAG -Dick Kronman made the scene at the Canter· bury Fair, and his hand-made purses and belts proved to be a big hit with the women buyers. Kronman was one of the more succes&- ful exhibitors, making over $50 on Saturday. Two Pedestrians Injured C1·ossing Street in Laguna Broken bones are mending today after a 67.year-old. Laguna Beach \\·oman and £our.year-old neighbor girl \\·ere struck by a car in a pedestrian accident. Elderly Gigi Remold. 469 Oak St .. \\'as carried 219 feet on the hood of the automobile and suffered 6 ever a I fractures or the rJght arm and leg. UtUe Michael Logaa, 300 Oal: St., was thrown 38 feet and suffered. a broken right leg. Bcilb were report.<! Jn latlslactory Steele Jf.,.keU NEW YORK (AP) -The m t marl< et sagged\ .u,llQy t\lis a(ternoon in fairly eeUve trading. (QuotatlOlls, P<ges 22"23). , · The niarket w ... higher in •early tradinl but backed ...,,ay and was a bit lower I>)' m j d r. d'.,a y • Looie• outmJmbei'od-gaiall lby orouoil JOO issues bl· late !deillilp-. \ condition.at South Coast Community Hospltal, South Laguna. Police said the acCident occurred shorUy alter 9 p.m. Sunday nJght at the C<111er ol Glenneyre and Oak streets. Driver or the car, Robert s. Brown, 36, of 1425 Skyline Drive, told poUce he did not stop sooner following the impact because he was afraid if he slammed on the brakes be would cause !urtller lnjury. · No complaint was issued but 1he matter will be takeo up With the District Mtorney, a police spokes mu said. In anotb<r Laguna 8-h accident, · Terrance Fitzsimons, :ma Zell Drive, suffered facial ·cuts and a fractured jaw when bis sports car struck a utility pole at Otlqulta Stnet and . O>oot Hlgbway omly SUnday mornlni. •He /"9 11 repotU<I In ul!JlaelA>ry <i>iidl\fon .' ioday at Sooth Co a• t eommiiiillT.J1osp1ta1. EDIIIOR ; rAGUNA 8EACR, CALIFORNI>' hlONDAY, :JU[Y '15, T96. . om as on· Hippies Must Conform Traffic Violaters Need ID or Cash in Laguna Persons whO. are going to break traf(ic laws in Laguna Beach had better be prepared to properly identify themselves or pay cash if they are from out· of state. For hippies that means carrying the Establishment's l.D. cards or coin of the realm. Four who didn't over the weekend were arrested for double parking, walking against a red ligbt or dangerous riding. James R. Muecke. 19, of Knoxville, Tenn., stopped Sunday night on South Coast Highway to let out passengers. He was ticketed for double parking ood since he is from out of state asked to post bond. Muecke, unemployed, could not. He was arrested. Jeffrey A. Levesque, 18 and new in to wn walked against a red. light on Sunday. He had no identification to prove he now lives in Laguna. He was arrested. Lee M. F'elton and Sheldon J . Tu rkel, both 19 and both from Omaha. Neb., were riding unsafely Saturdt.'Y in the back of a pickup truck, sitting on the sidewall. They did not have the money to post bond and went to jail. Levesque si.ibsequently bailed out v.•ith a friend's $5. The other three went to municipal court for sentencing today. Normally, for this type of violation, Still . Underdog ~judge fines them $.5 or $10. If they can't pay UJeY work the sentence off in jail at $5 per day. Laguna police said 29 persons were in custody on a variety of Ch8:J'ges Friday night. The procedure is Laguna Beach's su bstitute for vagrancy laws, no longer on the statute books. ;'It is our on ly means of eontrol, '' said Lt. Robert McMurray. "It gets rid of a few." Neither he nor PoUce Chief Harry Labrow would guess how many hippies there are in town. "It's impossible. They're roaming a 11 around," Chief Le.brow noted. Lag..na Teens Art Festival Co.lorado' s Gov. Love ., Proves Success .' ... . .,... -. . Endorses Rockef ellet ' ! . :-' ; • By TOM oGORMAN Of "'-DlillY ,li.t S!-11 L~guna B;each ·teens mede the art festival scehe last weekend, and the way tnings turned out, it may be the start of someth!ng big. The Laguna Beach Youth Council sponsored an all-teen art festival last Saturday and Suodfly. called the Canrterbliry Fair. Since it was the first all-teen art festival in Laguna Beach, no one was ciuite sure what to expect in terms· of acceptance by adults and number of sales. Rob Kronman, president of the Youth Council, said, "The F·air was a big success . There w e re approximately 100 separate sales, amounting to about $450 in total value. "\Ve think this shows the teens in this community are indeed talented. We had a disappointing crowd , but those that did come b o u g h t . Apparently they liked what they saw." Exact Cigures won 't be disclosed until a Tuesday night meeting of the Youth Council. More thao 20 of Laguna's most arWtiC teens showed up for the two day event. Merchandise included hand· made leather pW'ses and belts, jewelry, cast marble, paintings and (See CANTERBURY, Page 21 1''rom \Vlre Servlecs DENVER -Colorado qov. John A. Love former head of thli Republican Governors' Associalion: to d a y endorsed New Yor'k Gof. Nelson A. Rockefeiler fo r the GOP presidential nomination. Love threw. his :Support t o Rockefeller even thougti he saMl the New Yorker was a l definite "underdog" for the noniination. Love said Rockefeller faced "r~her long odds.'' Love is a member of Colorado's 13- member delegation to the Nation al convention. which is only th ree ~·~eks away. Supporters of Richard ~1. Nixon have most of the votes in the Colorado delegation, possibly as many as 15. Anoth er of the delegates favors California Gov. Ronald Reagan. Love said he was "hopeful'' that his public stand for Rockefeller would influence some Colorado· delegates and possibly some delegates from other states. Gov. Reagan picked up the li on's AN ~'CLIANER..UP)'Elt -Jt was an elhaqitlng two-days ·at Cantel'bury.,FB& with nvor lOO'sales being ""'°rde« Bill the mO.t tirjng experlmx:e!proved.to.i;I clean ' up; as i-artlnJamie Barron will attest. i share of delegate strength at the Utah Republican state convention in Salt Uoke City during the weekend. Reagan, a stated non-candida.te for tl1 c GOP presidential nomination, picked up fi ve of the state's eight delegates . Two delegates firmly in the camp of Nixon were elected. The eighUt delegate, state vice chairman, Jan;ce Romney, the sister-in-law of Mfchigan Gov. George Romney, is officially undeclared, but probably leaning toward Nixon. Meanwhi le Gov. Rockefeller says he ~hould win the nomjnation on the fourt h or fift h ballot. A top lieutenan t of Nixon says on the (See POLJTrCS, Pngc 2) Sawdust Seeking $1,000 to Gain Access to A:t·ea There was a definite cash flow at the Sawd ust Festival this past v.:eekend. but it wasn't between cus to1ners and artists. An emergency meeting of the Sawdust Festival exhibitors was called in order to raise $1 ,000 cash so that an access to the grounds could be opened. The new access, a bridge spanning a flood C011trol channel, is fenced off and cannot be used at the present time. The Sawdust Festival would like to use tile bridge as a gate between Laguna Canyon Road and Broadway access road. The Flood Control channe) lies between the two roads, and is fenced o(f to prevent accidents. The bridge, ir opened, would enable customers to go directly from the Canyon Road to Vo'le festival grounds without having a detour around tflc channel. At the present' time, they have to walk a block down the road to go over another bridge. Before the Orange County Flood Control District will open the bridge, they have requested a $1,000 cash deposit and s:J00,000 worth Of liablUty to be supplied. Hal Pastorius told the DAILY PILOT that at the special meeting flOO contributions •were given by the artista in order to meet the required $1,CMXI. The deposit ls only a loan, .he emphasized, and the Artist. will get back their contributions. Flood control officials will go to the site today to look over the technical problem• ol. opening the gate. It may be, said Paslorlwl, the fesUval could do the labor. But be added, the Flood Control District may have to send out a team, in whlcb c111 the111bor would be ·~ed. to the festival. "So," putorius nl~, "lhJngs·may cet more expensive yet." Today's Closblg TEN CENTS o ·me Bombing Linked To Strike A hand grenade hurled from a passing car into the sandbagged Huntington Harbour home of a trucking company owner who supplies paper to the strlkebound Los Angeles Herald·Examiner caused $500 damage late Sunday night. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Brockman and their two children were In rear bedrooms of the home at 16641 Bolero Lane when the thundering blast hurled rock landscaping in all direcUons like shrapnel- Brocltman told the DAILY PILOT today he had sandbagged the yard - one of five homes he owns -in expectation of violence due to his role in the bloody, eight-month-long labor dispute. ·The victim said he tias been moving his faniily around among the five homes in an effort to save tbem from harm. due tp a string of incidents involving hil·fruckl and penon.aet. Brockman aald •bu bewahOt at twice aml his trucl6 damaged due to his continuing to service the Herald· Examiner despite the strike by units of the Los Angeles News paper Guild. The Hearst newspaper has been involved in the labor disput~ ~in~e last Dec. 14. with scores of 1nc1denti; ranging from mild curses to ~he shooting murder of a non-union employe. Onl y 2 Rescues Mai! Weekend Only two minor rescues man:e.d tht! s~renity of the peaceful Pacific at Lvgwia Beach this weekend. An 18·foot inboard-outboard boat. skippered by Joe Gadineo 0£ West Covina, washed onto Bird Rock as result o( a dead battery. The four occupants and the boat were on tileir way after minor repairs to the craft were made. Among the 22,000 windblown beachgoers on shore, there was only one rescue by lifeguards and ttl3ot was on Sunday. Only other incidents were the atTests of hippies who persist in sleeping vn the beaches. For those who remained aft er a warning by the night p~trol , arrests by the police were made. San Clemente city and county beach- es attracted 36, 700 for the two days. There was at total of 2" rescues there, however. 'Ibat ill about average ac· cording to San Clemente lifeguards. or .. ~e Ldb :.· Weatber JL's back to normal (or the Orange Coast as those lovely blue skies in the early morn· Ing and evening are hidden by morning and nlght overtast. It's alao slightly cooler. INSmE TODA l' The United States often gives the Soviet Vnfo" something to think about as Ru.ssian ihips ioatch the maneuvcra of t11e J>OtD<rful U.S. Siz111 Fl"t In lh< Mtdttfrranean. Page lZ. . ... ' -' _.., •• -.. -• ....... -• Clhtttlllll ...,, ·--... , .... .. .._ .... ~ ' ,_, " Sytwi. ,.,_ n .., __ ' .... c...... 14 ·-' SMl9i ..... ,,..,. . ....,_,,.. .. _,, .... -... ---..... c ... ' T......... JI -.. -... .. :i ":':' .. ·-• " --• -.. --.. I . ' I 2 DAILY PILOT July 17 Set For Hearing On Sawdust A July 17 date bai been .. 1 uP lor a public hearing on the appeals made ta the City Council from· a plaDning commi55ion dtd1lon to allow the Sawdu5t Spllnlefs festlv.al location at 348 N. CoUt Htpay. Two appoall bave bten !iled with the council within the JO-day period immediately follow1ng the planning commission's decision. The first appeal was by William Salyer, an owner of prope rty within 300 feet 'of the proposed location. Salyer's appeal was made at a time 110 tllat th• pubHc bearing will bt held July 17. Sinct tho hearing 11 set !or July 17, the art exhibit cO\lld begin operation only about one week late!' than expected (July 12) i£ the appeal is denied. J.M. Valentine has als<l appealed the decision . He submitted his appe,al July 10. one day before the lo.day period v.·as up. Hia appeal wiU also be beard July 17. Had an earlier appeal not been made, the date for the public hearlng would have . betn set for August 7, considerably delaying the start of the art show. This is because or legal requirements. The Sawdu1t Splinters received th·eir name from a newspaper story which told of a group of artists splintering away from the Sawdust festival. '111e splinters lert because of a pr~sed llaht lihOW and other · Jd&ological re11on1. Americans Start Paying Higher Tax on Income WASHINGTON (UPI) -American• started paying higher federal income taxea today. President Johnson'• long-sought 10 percent surcharge -designed to raise •11.e billion in additional revenue by next June 30 -went into effect tod•Y. The tu ia retroective to Jan. l for ccq>or&tiOlll and to April 1 for indlvtduall. Tho increased -'•lthholdlng from paychecka of ,,...,. N[ners starting thU week ~tually wilT not me<\ the obligaUO. of .many tatxpayen:. Some firm1 were enc our aging employes to increase ~their weekly withholding to 1vert an unexpected bill £4: l.lx setWng tlme next April 1,. President Johnson, in signing the tu: p1cUge June 2.8, &aid Congress had "fuUllled an I m p o r t a n t rapc1a1lbllity" in enacting the bill. He said the measure -which also ordered '6 billion in federal spending cuts -\VOuld cut $20 billion from the fiJcal 1169 dellclt. From Pqe l TEEN FAIR ... metal sculptures. "Everyooe. including the Youth Council, WU IUll>J'ised by the high quality of wort done by th~e teens," said Kronman. "Our initial goat ol the Fair was to chuse the image of the Laguna teen, from one tbat smokes marijuana to one that is as artistic as his adult counterpart. We think we ha ve achieved our goal. "In fact, so excited are we over the re sult of the Fair, we would like to make this festival an annual event," said KroMlan. ''Everyone had a great time. The whole community Of Laguna is going to benefit from the art festival. The teens have shown their ability, and the sales have proven it.'' DAILY PILOT --c.iw-lo Relttrt N. Wee4 ......... Th1111111 K11'il a•"' Th1M1t A. M11r,hl"1 MafllllM EdltW Rlt~1nl P. Nill ......... 1MCa C1tr E4111tw J1tlr l. C.fey l'•~I Nl1M1t ...... ,.._. ~ DndW' ----~ ...... ...,._ P.O .... 66' tZ6U m ..... ..... 0..,. Offk11 C..NI Mltl1 :alllt'l ... t 1ltY ltr..t ........,. llldll tltl w ............ ,,.. """ ... ia.dl: • lllt lll'Wf MO!ld.y, July 15, 1968 • -• Saigon . . Police' Alert City for Terror· Raid SAIGON (UPI) -National pollce imposed the· second flllJ..ecale attack alarm on Saigon in a week today when intelligence reports indicated a noon hour terror raid. No ne developed but the city remaiood extremely. tense .. U. s. military sources 1a1d a Vie t Cong munltioDI dump found 15 miles we1t of Sataon contatned enough supplies to 1uatain a unit of 150 men (or a prolonged peri~. A 1lmilar cache discovered near ltue. the old imperial capital 400 miles to the north, could equip a battalion of ·too Communists . Despite the Saigon alert,· Defense Secretary Clark CWford began a round of top-level briefings wlth U. S. military · and · d.JpiomaUc officials, discu11ing the Pentagon's plans to beef up the South Vietnamese Arm y. ·From Page l POLITICS •.. \Var communiques late to d a y reported oo major batUes, but front rePorts iaJd America n helicopters flew several resupply missions !or U. S. and South Vietnamese troops trying to ael.ze Superst1tJoa Mountain, a Viet Cong stronghold In the Mekong Della near the Cambodian border 13l miles southwest of Saigon. The Saigon alarm wu ordered as squads of naUonal poU.. ln battle gear stopped hundred& or t w o • m a n motorbike& and aearched them for weapona and bombl. Two terrorilts firing from a motorbike shot and killed an American aoldler last FrJday in the Choton D1atrlct1 triggering a similar alert. Informed allied lntellleence sources &aid a major Communilt offensive against South Vietnamese population centers could be expected any ·time, and these reports produced _some invasion fears. nie weapons cache found 15 miles west of Saigon contained two '.wheel· mounted heavy machine CWll and 1,125 sticks of TNT. The arsenal near Hue was filled with rockets, automatic rifle ammunition and mines. Reporting from the SupersU~ Mountain front 'Monday, freelanc' correspondent Doug Warren told UPI allied forces had killed 16 Communists Jn five days of sporadic· combat He said there were no allied casualties in the force . of about 900 S o u t h VietnamesB Rangers and American Air Cavalrymen. Assemblyman .Badham Sued H~• Too Paunelay other hand that the former vice president will win on an "early " ballot, with tile second ballot the target. Both sides agreed that NU:on, despite hts apparently overwhelming lead currently, is not likely to get a first-ballot victory. For Divorce Florida beachboy George Francis did such good job of raising his tame pelican LeRoy that the l~week.old bird now has a slig~t weight problem, hilling the scales at 11 pounds, and can no longer fly: LeRoy has to hitchhike on George's shoulder. Rockefeller said on a Sunday television interview (ABC-Issues and Answer&) he believed the convention would 10 "to about four ballots, perhaps five, with nobody getting the necessary plurality on the first but Mr. Nixon being ahead. Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R·N"'POl'I Beach) today laces divorce after bis wife of 17 years filE.d suit Friday in Orange County Superi<lr Court, charging extreme cruelty. Death Toll Rising Persons close to the Badhams, however, said to da y that incompatibility due to his absences and ~fering aims and interests generated by his legislative career Five in County Dead "On the second, Mr. Nixon starts losing votes to both (G<w. Ronald) Reagan and myseU," he said. "On the third there's a motion in all dlrectlons .tnd on the fourUt it starts moving toward me." have precipitated tht breakup. . Mrs. Ann Badham, 36, who married the 38-year-old Republican 17 years ago in Newport Beach, was one of his key campaign workers for a n assembly seat. From Auto Accidents The determining factor ln the nomination, he said, wlll be the RepubUcan party's desire to win the election. Badbam, who s erves the 7lst Distxict, has had three two-year terms in the A!sembly and was reoominated in June for a fourth term without opposition. Two persons were killed in weekend HunUngton Beach traffic accidents and tWo other countians died of injuries suffered earlier, on e of them a Costa Mesa boy knocked 82 feet by a car last Thursday. A fifth victim died almost instantly Saturday when he suicidally rammed his car into another vehicle to climax a slring of tormenting personal problemi, but bis will not be listed as a traffic death. The dead are: Jo·hn Kleckner, 57, of 512 E. \Vilhelmina St., Anaheim. PhlWp L. Luna, 4, <lf 16082 Gold Circle, Huntington Beach. Erle E. Pauley, 6, of 2128 \Vallace Ave., Costa Mesa. Robert Mueb1, 17, ol. Norwalk • Richard D. Maples, 19, of La Habra . Huntington Beach pollce s a i d 115 Dealb Toll 115 1918 Conaty Traffic 1967 Kleckner was dead on arrival at Huntington lntercommuniy Hospital Fride.y, following .a three-car collision at Warner Avtnue and Edwards Husband Brained With Bat in Fight A 42.yf:ar-old Laguna B each housewife hasn 't much prospect or qualifying for the Angels, especially - her 26-year-old husband might say - after what she d1d to him v.·tth a baseball bat Sunday. The woman was placed under citizen's arrest by her spou se after she crowned several hours o r exuberant predawn marital discord by crowning lllm with a Louisvi lle slugger. She went to Orange County Jail and her aching husbAnd went to the family doctor, according to Laguna Beach poUce, who booked the suspect on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon. PendJng legal and e m o l i o n a 1 developments · today, the schedule could be open for a rematch by evening -perhaps a 1<>-called lwi- nigbt double header. Staff Added At Saddlehack Saddleback Co llege tn Mission Viejo. continues to add to its professional staff with the employment of an asslstanl librarian. a g u l d a n c e counselor and two more Instructors. The junior college, whieh will open Sept. 23, now has with the addition of the tv.'O new 1Dltructor1 25 Of an anticipated 30. Appointed •••lstant librarian Is Dorothy Kathleen Spidell of Orange, currently • UbrarJan at Orange Pubtic Ubrary. The new guidance counselor is Or. Mary M. Beets, who hl.s been an u&l1tant professor at San Diego State eou.re. 'Ille two new instructors •• Vl cy ?tt. l'Aldorl ol Coota Mou. a Ir l l n e 1tewarde11 Instructor, and Wayne J. lforvath, art instructor. Street. Kleckner was • passenger in a car driven by Barbara Mattison, 29, of the same address, who was inj ured, along '~'Ith Mrs. Gene Meiners, 28, of 15571 Meanwhile Nixon's convention floor manager, Rep. Rogers C. B. Morton CR-Md.), said in a UPI interview that Nixon appears to have more than 700 delegate votes locked up. Swan Lane, driver of the seeond car. F }'f • D The Luna youngster boy was killed ace l tmg Ue Sunday when he apparenUy trotted out 01 a drainage dltcb in which he had For High School been playing and struck the side of a COUNTY SCHOOL PREXY Clay Mitchell Clay Mitchell Heads County School Board The couple has three children, aged 11, 13 and 15. Stanton Officer Goes on Trial On Lesser Charge passing car. Laguna Be,ach High School may get The fatal accjdent invo l vin g 1 5 18c""hoollllUntrgu.st-·. wo"ll be o•ked ll So L h I · t J t 1 Fl I 17 ... ~., °" Clay Mitche of uth aguna as mo or1s ane • em ng, , of 6611 Tuesday night to take' action on Abbott Drive, J1unti ngtoi, B<:'ach, re c 0 mm end at i 0 ni by Schools been elected new president of the Stanton reserve police officer Allen occun·ed on Edwards Street about 70 Superintendent Dr. William Ullom and Orange County Board of Education. Christian was to go on txial this [ l h Le Dr. Business M~ager Edwin Hind that It will be a first tenn as president a,,'ternoon before Superior Judge Karl ec nort of nnox 1ve. '"" Lynn Davis on a reduced charge of Death alro came Sunday to the the high school be renovated. for Mitchell , retired Air Force major involuntary manslaughter. lf tbe recommendation is eccepted, who has been on the county school hi At Pauley boy, who wu struck by a car the school board will call for bim; for C ef Deputy District torney Jut Thursday on Victoria Street near the painting of science buildings inside board since 1962. James G. Enright moved for the Wallace Avenue and thrown 82 feet, and outside, and tM repairing of d('l'lr Mitchell was vice president <lf the lesser charge this morning when trial landing on his head. He had been in frames; the re-roofing ol the gi Ii' five member board last year. He began before Judge Davis. The officer critical condition at Hoag Memorial gymna::iium and auditorium; the traded posU with A. E. "Pat" Arnold was previously charged with straight Hospital ever since. palnUng o! the inside and outside of manslaughter. Of " ... ress, who moved down to vice Chris"· ' ti M t th Police said the boy ran into~ path . the auditorium and the painting of the ""3 ~ I.HID s a orney a e w ol a car driven by Judy A. Wood, 25, of outs ide ;of the ma.fn class r 0 0 m president at Thursday's an nu a I Kurilich of Fullerton asked for a court 8171 Seabird Circle, Huntington Beach buildings; <ind th e renovating of the reorganization meeting. trial, waiving the right to trial by jury. and she had no Ume to even apply her library building including heating, The county school board has Chri stian ·is charged in the death o[ brakes. ligh tin g, carpeti ng and painting lnslde. responsibility in several broad areas Paul M. Aguilera, 19, of Stanton on Also at the 7:30 meeUng, Assistant of education but has Utt.le direct Feb. 9. Aguilera was shot when he FOURTH FATALITY Superintendent Owen Tait will report authority over local school districts. allegedly !led Christian and another The fourth fatality was that or the on the Foreign Language Program in officer who were questioning him Mancha boy, who was thrown from his the ele.mentary schools and the about a narcotics offense. car July 7 at Golden West and District'• tesUnf illd r, ad 1 n g March of Tun' e Radi·o The reserve officer was Indicted by Mansion street& in Huntington Beach, program. the Grand Jury on Feb. 14. He claimed after it struck a power pole. he did not intend to kill the youth but Coroner's depuUes said the death o! Commentator Dies !ired a warning shot wben Aguilera young Map! .. will not be listed as a Former Governor failed to stop alter belng warned three traffic fatality, althougb he used an Of 0 D NEW MILFORD, CoM. (UPI) times. automobllt::, because of the obvJously · regon ies Funeral services will be held Tuesday The shot hit Aguilera in the neck as suicidal nature of the crash. ALBANY, Ore. (UPI) -Elmo for Westbrook Van Voorhis, known to be fled down a darkened alley. Jnvestteators said the you n g Sntith. a former Oregon governor and millions of radio listeoers as the voice Scheduled to appear as a witness is husband and father tried to hang publisher or one daily and several of the March (){ Time. Jerry Naranja who was with Aguilera himself Sa.turda y at his parents' home, weekly newspapers. died here this Voan Voorhis died Saturday in New when they were stopped by officers in but fouled up the job and came morning of cancer. He was 58. MiUonl Hoapit.al at tbe ege of 64. the early morning hours. running Into the hou se for help. I~======='=============::::::::=================::::: 11is wife Donna, 19, cut the rope, at \\'hich time Maples ran out and jumped Into his car, veering It head on Jn to another vehicle three blocks away and injuring · three occupants, o n e crlUcally. Police I nd fire units en route to Maples' attempted suicide scene were diverted to the traffic collision, where they found he bad· succeeded on hlmseU and nearly taken another We. The three• other-vlcUma had to be pried out of the tangled wrecbge. 2 New Directors Named to Board Two new board dlrectOta wtre added to tho Sawdust r .. uval Satunlay. Dion Wrlgbt and Mc.ry Patch, the new secretary, will join llx other& already on the board. n>Oy are: Hal P01torlu1, president; Ed Van Deusen, vice prnident; Ed Kn~. treMurt:r; · DolCfta Femlli Maraya Taurlello and Bob Younc. . A ninth •pol on tho bolld II 1WI vacanL 0 OMEGA YoMr Omt"oa Sales & Seroice ~ -.. ftcff4GIQ "'•tcllt• frorr! 1125 '". ••t~ ....... .. _ '--" .. -· ... ,,_ 1111. 1'1111br ...... "-IUl °""" --"" -... -- 8200 Million Park Legislation Signed Now 2 Grut Stores To Serve You , .-----. WASHINGTON (UPll -Prelldent John1on today •lined lnlo law a bill doublinl tllt federal ouUay !or new par!cs and reere1Uon land to '2IJO mUllon annually for the: next five )'ears. HAUOI SHOf'PtNe HUNTINeTON CINTtl CINTll HACH & IDINe11 JJtl HAllOI II.YI. HUNTIN•TON llACH COSTA MISA _ 14M411 ffZ-IH1 Opon -.. Thu"• Prf. Till 9 p.m. • TllNS TO '" TOUI IVHIT , -. i ~ I 'I I ' -· 1 I I' I I . -- EYES ON TOMORROW -Orange County beauty contestants for the tiUe of Miss Orange County To- morrow are, from (left to right, front row) Donna Lee, 18, Mi ss Newport Be,ach; Nancy Jean Allison, 20, Miss Fountain Valley ; Linda Harvey, 17,·Miss Westminster; Susan Nail, 19, Miss Seal Beach; Carolyn Morrow, 18, Miss Yorba Linda; (second row) Lisa Co141Jey, 17, Miss Anaheim; Terri French, 18, Miss Garden GroVe; Melody Wright, 18, Miss San Clemente; Marti Telles, 17, Miss Brea; Shelly Pulver, 19, Miss Fullerton; Kathleen Nielseii, 18, Miss La Habra; (third row) Linda Marie McEvoy, 18, Miss Buena Park; Jeffye Blackard., 17, ?wilss Huntington Beach; Kerry J. Abrahams, 18, Miss Tustin; Belinda Gillham, 18, Miss Santa Ana; Pamila Reed, 18, Miss Costa Mesa; Ronnie Lopez, 17, Miss Stanton; Katie Alfsen, 18, Miss Los Alami- tos; Jacqueline Harper, 20, Miss Cypress; and Patti Terrell, 18, Miss Corona del Mar. Not shown in the photo is Marcia Lynne Roberts, 17, Miss Orange. County Fair Fun Filled Gates Open on Tuesday at 1968 Extravaganza Entertainment running from a rodeo to a symphony orchestra, from horse 6hows to barbershop quartets, from m arching bands to a beauty pageant '"'·ill be on hand for Orange County Fairgoers this week. The 1968 fair which opens Tuesday on the C05ta Mesa fairgrounds and Black Panther Trial Put Under Hea vy Guard OAKLAND (UPI) -Armed deputies guarded the courthouse today as young demonstrators converged for the murder trial of Black Panther leader Huey Newton, accused of Cal B e aKt y K ille d Former Mi ss California Jeanne Venables, 26, along with two other persons, was killed Sat- urday when light plane in which they were flying plung- ed into the Colorado River. Miss Venables was 1964 queen. killing a policeman. Newion, 2ti, a handsonte young militant, has pleaded innocent to charges he shot and killed an Oakland policeman during a street gun battle last fall. Eight months of legal maneuvering and public campaigning to "Free Huey Now" followed the arrest of the founder of the Black Panther party. A final pretrial rally Sunday drew 1,500 supporters of Newton to a city park. Many of his backers -Negroes. liberals and student activists - claimed the case is a test or whether a black militant can get a fair trial in a northern court. The proseeution charges Newton killed Patrolman John F . Frey, 23, and wounded a second officer in a gun battle just before sunrise last Oct. 28. Police said Frey stopped the suspect's car for a routine tN.ffic violation. Newton's sympathizers c ha r g e Oakland police were out to "get" Newton and other leaders of the small. aggressive Black Panther party. They term the shooting "inevitable" in this city where clashes between blacks and lawmen are routine. Newton was arrested when he staggered into a hospital with a bu1let wound in the abdomen a short time after the gun battle. · Sheriff Frank Madigan t o o k extraordinary precautions to prevent disruption of the trial. Newsmen and the few spectators who can crowd into Judge Monroe Friedman's seventh floor court room were to be searched by deputies. Armed guards were posted inside and outside the courtroom and on the streets below. The precautions came at caravans of young "Free Huey" demonstrators prepared to 'converge on I h e courthouse from San F r a n c i s c o , Oakland and Berkeley. SigJ,J. "Lord Sraeyd' continues through Sunday will be the si te of almost continuous entertain- ment from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. Beginning Tuesday at 9 a.m. is the Junior National Horse Show followed by FFA and 4-H agricultural exhlbitions and judging. In the afternoon from 2:30 to 3:30 the preliminaries for Miss Orange County Tommorrow Beauty Contest will be held. Finals will be that evening at 8 p.m. Also appearing on openjng <illy is the El Toro J\.1arine Band, at 5 p.m., the Optimist Youth Band of Orange County at 7 p.m. and with the Popcorn ·Theatre Marionettes at 2 p.m. The Festival o{ Nations with JU; 150· person cast will highlight the lair's entertainment on Wednesday. The Festival will bring authentic cultural music and dances to tbe fairgrounds amphitheater at 8 p.m. The morning horse show, and animal judging will continue through Thursday. The Optimist-Youth Band of. Orange County will again perform on the parade grounds, this ti.me at 5 and 7 p.m. Wednesday. On Thursday, the Pageant of The Flag will be presented by the Sea School Marines from the San Diego Recruit Depot at 2:30 p.m . in the amphitheater. Later on Thursday, the Kingsmen, ncrtional champions drum and bugle corps and color guards will perfonn at 6 p.m. on the parade grounds. The Barbershop Quartet Contest that night from 8:30 to 10 p.m. will conclude the Thursday schedule. Friday afternoon, the Pageant of the Flag at 2:30 and the Kingsmen at 6 p.m. will be making re peat performances. That night at 8::.>, Ni.no Tempo and April Stevens, along with the Back Porch Majority, will be performing at the fair amphitheater. The Tempo- Stevens act will feature songs they have re co rded including "\Vhispering," "Sweet and Lovely," and their modern version of "Deep Purple." · The. Back Porch Marjority, a four· year-old singing group, has played night clubs. TV programs and made several records. The 100-person cast of the Sing-Out- \Vest-End vocal group will present, Sunday, at 2:30 p.m. its prog.{'am "Up \Vith People" in the fair amphitheater. Tempo and Stevens along with the Majority will return again at 8:30 to the amphitheater. Brother Reveal·s Ray Note CHICAGO (AP) -The Chicago Daily News said today in a copyrighted story that a letter written by James Earl Ray to a brother removes any doubt that Ray and Ramon George Sneyd are the same person. Sneyd was tbe name under which Ray was arrested in London . in connectim with the assassinatlon o( Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The Daily News said the letter was written to John Ray ind was signed, "Lord R. G. Sneyd.." John Ray aaJd the handwrlt.lng was his brother'• and. be added, "l don't know where he got the name of Sneyd, but hti had lots or names.'' Asked about the tlUe, "Lord," John Ray said, "That's pn>ba~ly his idea of • a joke." The Daily News published ponjons Of the letter which in part read, "I could appeal my extradition hearing but I am getting tired of listening to these liars so I might close il up about Tuesday." . There was no indication which Tuesday the letter referred to. John Ray said he interpreted the letter as evidence that his brother did not kill King who was shot to death on the balcony ol. a Memphis motel AprU 4. "Ube really did it," John Raiy said, "he wouldn't be thlnldng about 1l~g ttl08e extradition papers, would be?" . The letter was malled ~ a married SlSler who llves in a suburb d. St. LoWs, the Dally News said. It was not dated. U.S. officials working on obtalnlng Ray's extradition have said they are convlnced that Ray and Sneyd are the same person but the fact that the alias was used caused a point of legal confusion during the e x t r a d i t l o n hearings. The letter also implied that Ray would have sufficient funds to finance his defense when he is returned to Memphis to stand trial. 1111' you could" the letter said, "I would like fttr you to give the Attorney Arthur Hanes '600 you can get some Of JI off Jerry (anotb<T brother) and I will atraJgbten tt up WI.th you whtin I get back." Hanes, ol Blnningham, Ala., is repre,.nling Ray In London. Neither John nor Jerry Ray would speculate on where their brother would obtain the mone)' • Molld•y, J11ly 15, 1%8 DAILY PILOT ,1 Vietnam Peace Ta lks Stil l Deadlocked PARIS (UPI) -The Nor I h Vietnamese today said lbtre has been no progress ln Vietnam talks wlth the United states and there is no 1ign of hope there will be any way out of the two-monJh-old deadlock, "The (act is that up to tbls hour. ·the offlclal talks have made no progress, they have not moved an inch and there is no glimmer or Jiope, .. Nguyen Thanh Le, North Vietnam • deleg~tlon chier spo){esman, ~old a news conference. 11Amerlcan ofilclalt are advancing fal5e arguments that moves are being made in Paris, that there are hopeful signs, that there are 'straws In the wind' and what have you," Thanh Le saie. . The North Vietna1nese delegation previously has said there has been no movement toward the talks' goal of cooling down tl1e war enou,gh to permit a peace conference -but it has never ~ l \" \ F l.f h" \~ ortre as rons. the romantic look of fall put Jt so blunily. A week •co chief U. S. delegate W. Averell Harriman reported no progren but to I d newsmen he rema.1ned hopeful and felt there was a "straw in the wind." No, aaJd Thanh Le. He blamed It all on the United States. The deadlock since the talks OJ>ened May 13 "is entirely due to tho obstinate refusal in Washillflon to order an unconditional cessation of Americe.n (air\ raids on North Vietnam," be &aid. Juliet dresses in brown frosted with black velour, iced with black lace.and tied with velvet ribbons, Of easy care Celanese® Fortrel®polyester and cotton. By Chann of Hollywood; 5-13. F«•e1•; .. oadem11k•f F1bo111ld<J.lble1,1nc: u umS' ' ' Newport Cenler 11 Fashi111 Island • 644·2200 • Mon., Thurs., Fii.10:00 till 9:30 O!ierdlys IO:~ P at ) l .. ---~~~~~.~.~.~.--.......... ~ ..... ,.... ....... .-.......... _..----------------~r 4 DAILY PltOT IC:-1111 11r .. o.ty ,U. Jlllfl Competitors in the Naples Son g Festival have sung ballads for years about broken hearts, aching hearts, cheating hearts, 3;0d lonely hearts. Tenor Aurelio Fierro has come up with a new angle. His en-- try was entitled "The Transplant.'' • • Candt1 Froehle, a Pasadena 1ecret4r11, dip.s httr toe gingerlt1 into the fou• tain at the Los Angelta Civte Cimter Mall Moment! later, she tumbltdinUt. the ~Ur. She didn't stem to mind Gt all M the Los A ngeits aua. temperq- tures at the timt were hootrinQ around the 100 mark. • Republican Wig mor• A. Pitrson has mixed emotions about running for election to the Massachusetts House of Representatives. The rea .. son: His Democratic opponent is David J. Bablty ••• his landlord. • A IO.year-old Pueblo (Cok>rado) boy has been sentenced for rwming a stop sign with bll bicycle and·col• Iiding with a cir. J ...... Fred J. Mack said that young J...,., V1l- enti would have to spend 3) days on foot and oft bis bicycle. • ~ Tl~rt 1DUl be no haircut& in tM town of Adami, Jiau., 12,()()(1 popu/aUon, during tit< ••.,.k of Jul1f 18 throu{lh JMlv 22. Th< m.Mbm of the ba.rber1 union fJ vottd to cl<ne aU 1hopl for thl ' week 10 that ever,one can haw I/ equal vacation ·titne. ' l.o::mDIO!IK-""~--... • County collector Clifton Hurst, of St. Joseph, Mo., couldn't get a full night's rest. "A radio kept playing in the distance and bothered me all night long," he explained.. Hurst said he was sure that the people playing the darn thing would turn it off sometime but it kept operal· • ing all night. When Hurst aroSe to prepare for his day's work, be found the radio which had been bothering him. It was on the dress· er in his bedroom. • In 1965 when the Arkansas River flooded South Dodge City, Marion Murphy waded through waist-deep water trying to rescue a man trap- ped in his home. When he returned to high ground he discovered his wallet with $120 was missing. Last \Veek , three boys playing in a field uncovered Murphy's wallet and the $120. The boys, Don and D a v i d Shumard and Greg Underwood, r e- turned the wallet a nd money to Murphy. . Friday, J•IJ 12, 1%8 Talent for Beadli•• Rep. Pool .Dies Of Heart Attack HOUSTON (UPI) -Joe R. Pool (D· Tex.), member of the House Committee on Un·American Activities and opponent or all things Communist, collapsed and died Sunday of a heart attack at International Airport. lie was 57. , Pool, who stood under 5-feet-6 and "'-eigbed over 225 pounds, was likeable, jovial, jolly, unsOpbisticated and down to earth. He had a talent for making headlines -defying federal judges, being arrested after a traffic ;tccldent, being iued for ~ge to a house. He W. direct 1 in his likes and dislikes. His .. greatest fame -or iiotorletf -. ·c81\\e from t h e controver1ial &n t i -Communist committee and from his hawkish views on thfl Vietnam War. He WU chairman Cf a llCUA subcommittee 'meeting in 1966 to comider bis bill to make it a federal crime to lnterfefe with <U.S. military ·traffic ·ud prohibit shipping money, suppijel or blood to. the \f_iet Cong. The day bellfl::e public hearmgs were to begin; a federal judge in Washiogton i.uued a lnjunct1oo forbidding the -., .. Pool proclaimed. be would go to jail _.. allowing tlie judicial branch to interfere With the Congress. Minutes befoni the bearing began a higher C'OUl't knocted down the injuoction so be dld~not get lbe chance. 11le &eanng was stormy. lt was marked by demonstrations a n d sboutiog. Police dragged out and arrested many of the demonstraotrs. Pool interrogated the hostile witnesses in a loud voice. The witnesses replied to quetUons with condemnations of U.S. policy. , Pool was arre1ted last July in Six Auto Racing Accident Victims Remain 'C1itical' MARNE, Mich. (UPI) -Duane Wi1Jon'1 modified stock car was doing 100 miles per hour when it climbed a cement wall at the Berlin Raceway and aailed into a grandstand. Two persons were killed and 26 injured. "The back wheels just sorta came loose," be to!d police. Six of tbe 26 injured were in critical oondition today. Wilson, 18, suffered minor injuries and was treated and released from a hospital. The yooth had just entered the fourth turn of the final lap of the race in this western M.ichgan community Saturday night when his front wheels jumped onto the rear o( another car. The car, going 100 miles an hour. then wrenched free and Wilson's right front wheel spun onto the four-foot high cement wall surrounding the track, police said. "He 1raveled about 31 feet like U1at. then the whole car was on the top or the wall and sped for some 90 feet into the ftrll ftve rows o£ the grandstand &eat.I," J&id S~. Jack Rosema or the Ottawa County Sheriff's Oepilrtment. "lt flew up into the grandstand and pieces ol. lt were flyin g all over," said Trudy De Heer, a spectator at the track. Two Grand Rapids brothers were in the stanch when the car hurled toward them. BlWe Brakefield, 17, was killed instantly when the Impact threw hlm from the ltand1 to the middle or the track. JU1 brother, Albert, 15, was listed in crltical condition. James Muon, 3.5, Allengan. Mich .. u•as the second victim. Arllngtoa, ya. He spent five hou.r1 in jail on a reckless drlvinJ cbarae. Police said his car hit another 'from behind. His Congressional Immunity did not help. The judge said he did not know who Pool was. "l was not under arrest," Pool said. "I was waiting for the judge to come down." Two weeks later the Congressman setUed out of court a $7,771.11 suit brought by his former landlord who accused Pool of damaging a suburban home. Pool said flooding did the damage. Pool received a Jaw degree fro'm Southern Me~odist UnJversity in 1927. He practiced law for several years and served in the Texas House. In 1962 he was elected Congressman at large and was re-elected twice -once at large and once from a Dallas district. The body was arriving in Dallas today. Funeral plans were incomplete. Newark Blaze In Tenements Kill s Fireman ' NE W.ljRK, N.J. (AP) -Two blazes killed one fireman and r o u t e d hundreds of persons Sunday . F ire director John P. CauUield said both fires were ''tle f i nit e l y suspicious." One fir'e raced through half a dozen vacan t tenements in N e w a r k ' s predomirlantly Negro Central Ward , the scene exactly a year ago of rioting that took 26 lives. The blaze began at 2:30 a.m . and sent hundreds of residents from threatened tenements across "the street fleeing in night clothes and underwear. The !itf took the life of fireman Edward Dennis, a 41-year·old father of two. Caufield said an investi gation would delve into'the possibility or arson. "Why would a fire start' in the middle 9f the nigbt in vaciint buildings?!' he said. ~ A short'time later, a tJlfee -alarrn blaze bro~ oot in a vacant four·story factory on Mulberry Street i n downtown ,Newark. One fireman was slightly injured and the factory was burned ou\_ ' Of fieer Killed; Hunt1 2 Suspects PHILADELPl~IA (U PI) -A yo un g policeman "1as shot and killed today on a street in West Philadelphia and a city\\·ide ~hunt \\'as launched for his assailanl The victirh, idenlilied as Patrolman Ross Brac¥tt, ~. was pronounced dead on ju-rival at Misericordia lfospital after the 8:40 a.m. shooting at 52nd and Walton Sts. Police bro'edcast an alarm for two suspects, icij!ntified as Barry Clark, and Philip CJ.ark, 24. The alarm urged ci ution and &a.id the suspects may be armed and 4angerous. Police had feared that Brackett's assailant wa4 armed with his service revolver but this later was found a bandoned in the backyard of a building several blocks from the scene ol the shooting. Thunder.storms in Mi·dwest A~ RlLins Wash South, Buffalo Ties High• With 91 Callfontla rttlYIEW OF (SSA'ff(ATHlltMlAIFOllWT TO 7:t1A.M. IS T'7 •If~" ,..,,~?-~.:--I\ \ . SHOWlll-COOl.IR ..... "0 MILD Coat•I '"'-.... 1n 119 !!ltf!I •flCI mornl119 low t!wdt •1111 "'""' "' betol'lllM l'Mlt-"' -Y kl mio...11.r-l!:IMy ,,. Twi,tty, WlM1 11rill a. lltlll Miii Yl tJ. tll .. ~lflll IOW-lltrly II 19 :t0 fT'9l'I Ill Ille 1""-. .S...nuy lfmHr•t111'f.t ~•l'lfff '"'"' '' lo 7) ti.,. lfll Ol'il'ft (Ollt "Wtll .. lnt•lld 1114! rt -wn 1111 111 IO, W1t1r ,.,,_,,u,, It M. 81111, Moo11. 'l'lde1 iri,..1 1o11n , 1J 1.m. ).I 'I'" JO., 1:0 1.111. I.) S.C:OM ftlt~ l :U '·'"· ~.1 h<ond low IG:JO p,m, \,f MOOll •1 .. , 11 :d e.m. k4 11:41 •·""· Sii'! •IMI I:» '·"'· ltfl l :OS e.111. .. .., .. "" ,1.,1 0 , , ... Jf/lff U JuJt-1J Au1. 1 A1111 t • Tl•lfl l •r-.:.JJ:::;;; •••M \j•u•• 11.s. Sn'" ... r• T11~knl lhllndf~tom\I nlllfll K l'Oll Ml ...... t IM" Ille IWrlh JIAllllll cit• lodt1, tf'ttr MYet"•I tomlOOlt we .. r.- llO/'tM kncl1y ft""'· In c..,1r111. wttm iW'lfl1 '""'"'' cowl'td matt ol tllt ntllort fOHy, Ttl ....... """..,"" .ctl ... ttr dlrnlrllllltd from t'M Gllll ., ... , 11) ""' Clohl 'Hiiiey. Hiii I daffll fvNlll CIOuOt .... re \lllflmt In Mlr!Mtolt SUnOtr llltlll, but !llt Ofll~ -to HluClo llOwll lltm 1ved llortt &ulllll!'ltt' nter Nlmrol. Nil I,._ luri.1 wer• r.:1111<1M. fomffon _,, 1tia 5"111.0 S.Ut'ldlr In Norttl Ctl'Oll,.., '!«1111, Mktllt lft, MIMOllrl l !'ICI lf'ICl!fl\I, 0.""'" Wtt ml-11'1!1 "'II !ftklrlte Wirt rniorted. Ht11"f r11!'11 lotkld H rt. llf Okl1ri. 1'111 l !'ICI Tt•tt &und11 nltlll. T~ t4 ltlf'9 l!!Clltl .... "°""' Mlllnttlll v ...... C*•• .. ••tllM ,,,..,,,. 11'1 ""' ,,..., t 'l'euaper•turu Albu_.....,, *=-·" ••• 11nflrld ftl$1f¥111:k 8 01 .. 80$10fl ChltlDo Cll\tlnnetl Cle'ttlt nd ,,.,.,, OM Mai~l ""~' •• • "0<1 orlft ,-,.,.Siio Heltft• H""lllUlll HOll•"l'! t<tru9' City L11 Vttll t .. """"'~ M!1ml Mllw11Att MIMMPOtlS N..w °"''"' New York Otkltllll ""'"' Paio •ol>teJ PNitdtlpl'llt -·· 'lltsbu1"911 Port11tld JllllN CllV ""' l lVfl ·-S1Jet"1 m,..,10 St. Loul1 $111Mt Si lt LH;t Cil't $1n 01"<1 S!n F .. nclsco Stft!I S1rto.r1 ... ,. s-·~ T"""''' w .... , ... ,.,., M1t11 Lew 'rte. " " "' " ~ ti .. " ... " .. " " " .. ., " ,. " .. N " " ., " N .. .. " • n ., ., .. • .. " ~ .. " n >W " " u " " ·" .. n " " ··~ ., " N " .. " .. " ti " u " >M " u .. "' " " .. .. .. " " •• • ~ .. -~ .. " .. " n .. " .. n .. M " n " '" " • " Dependable at your fingertips. The Gas Company supplies its more than 3,000,000 customers with enoua:b equivalent enerCY to launch 143 Apollo minions to the moon-each and every day of the year. Tbat'1 a lot of energy. Yet there has never been a time when residentl in this area had tO wait for gas service. JC you've always been a Southern Californian, th1t statement won't strike you as unusual. But many people from other parts of the country do think it'1 unusual. Arid when they move here they're glad we've worked hard to stay ahCad of the rapidly increasing need for natural gas. We'rC an investor-owned company, state reculated. And we're atway1 lookinc ahead, plannin1 ahead. That's the way we do busine11. M ore gas is being used in Southern California for a variety of reason1 ... from b roiling hamburgers to air conditioni ng office build1ngs ... to consumption by industry including electric generating customers who want to burn natural gas to h~Ip in the fight again1 t air pollution. Gas is the number one source of ener1Y in Southern California. We're investor-owned. That's why We take that "extra 1tep" 6 lo meet the growinc needs of our Customer11 large and amall. gllS Keepiilr you sati1fi.ed is our number one job. SOUTHERN COUNT!ES COMPANY (ln~e~!o1.owneJ Compatly ol the Paci!k Li~hthia Sydeml .. __ ,. Are you the Two/One/Free type? Do you become a little nettled or CXJnfused when your service charge gOBll from $1.98 one month to$2.69the next? Would you like to know what your service charge willbefrom month-to-month?~ Do you frequently have service charges greater than $2.00? ' Do you have Ii balance that ·seldom goes below$500? 1 If you anawered yes to any of the atx.ve questions, you're the Two/One/Free Plan type. The Two/One/Free 'Plan is a brand new Bank of America checking account. It's probably the most eco- nomical acxount you can find if you write more than 18 chocb a month and maintain a relatively low minimum b•l•nce. It's free if your !!al· ance is $500 or more. Tho most you'll ever pay is .$2.00. And your oervico charg• are 1implo and predict. able. In fact, they're thia simple: --Otol219 '300 .. Mt ISOOor--. _.._ ..... ..... - EVID if JQU're not tbe Two/ One/Pree Plan type,,..._ still be a Benlc of America type. Bec:a111e Benlc of Amer- ica ba1 Pertonal Choice Cbrking-for dilf-kind1 of people. To find --ctly wbicb o1-Pertuc..1 ewa llCOJWd:i la the ridit kind fer :roa. Nit J'Olll' n 111J1t Blllt of "-b 8-cb. And .. for a cbedt-up. People are different. So are Bank of America Personal Choice Checking AccOunts. -·-------- • I ' s • J ., ' I Answers Guaranteed Producing answers to questions posed by Visitors to the Art Colony during the Festival of Arts season is the job of Laguna Beach Mer- maids and service clubwomen who are helping them staff an informa- tion booth by the entrance of festival grounds. Of course, tackling miles of questions is not always an easy task and Mrs. Zachary MaJaby, booth co-chairman, looks discouraged. However, with the help of her friends, Mrs. Jack Rowe, booth co-chairman Mrs. Rudy Burton and Mrs. Robert Turner (left to right), answers will soon be found. Clubs helping to erase question marks under the coordination of Mermaids include the Woman's Club, First Nighters of Laguna Players, Tau Tau Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, Soroptimists, and the Business and Profe.s- sional Women's Club. Mermaids are busy throughout the year m Laguna Beach assisting the Men's Division ~ the. Chamber of Co~­ merce and aiding in civic improvement, beautification and commuruty projects. JEAN COX, 494-9466 MMlit• .l•lr II. ltM U ... 11 The Laguna Line Question Marks;.trased by Mermaids By JEAN COX 01 tllt D•Ht PllM Sl•ff LIFE IS full of questions and Mennaids have their hands full trying to answer some of them during the run of the Festival of Arts. The answers women, with the help of service clubwomen, are dispensing information from noon to 9 p.m. daily in their specially prepared booth, decorated by Mrs. Jack Rowe, at the entrance of festival grounds. . Mrs. Zachary Malaby and Mrs. Rudy Burton are again chairing the booth, its activities and personnel this season. Prior to its opening, the two gathered information enabling ho stesses to accurately supply factual data to satisfy the multitude of ques· tions vi sitors ask while they are visiting the Art Colony. Monday finds the Woman's Club staffing the booth, while Tuesday night First Nighters of the Laguna Players act as host- esses. Wednesday is Tau Tau Chapter members of Bet.a Sigma Phi's turn to come up with the answers. Thursday ts the Mer- maid's tum, and Friday Soroptimists are caUed on. Saturday, Business and Professional Women's Club members will have all the answers. Altrusa Clubwomen also participate. WATER FOUNTAINS and fountains of youth are common enough ideas. However a margarita fountain is something a little different. It was the main attraction of a party for residents of Casitas Capistrano in Cicudad Capistrano where margaritas flowed like water recently. LAGUNA BEACH Garden Club members have a right to look a little smug these days. The group recenUy was honored with the Ri chfield Award, "Conservation of Civic Beauty" for 1968. Mrs. Harry G. Busby, spokesman for the group, explained the award was given in recognition of the club's do11 .. t!ni; 20 large shade trees of various types µ, beautify grounds of Tnp of the World Elementary School. The club also donated funds to underwrite the cost of o.ne concrete picnic table and benches for the picnic area being built adjacent to the school. In addition to the plaque, they received $50 to use for buy- ing more trees to be used in a civic beautification project. Tl!IlE ARCH BAY families have been gathering alter 6:30 Friday evenings for do-it-yoursell barbecues on the Three Arch Bay Cominunity Clubhouse patio. After devouring steaks and other nourishment, barbecuers top off the evening with tennis, volleyball,· shuffleboard or ping- pong. OUter attractions for residents include a Couples' Bridge Party which is being planned as a conclusion to the first annual Couples Bridge ~ournament sponsored by the Three Arch Bay Women's Association. The event will take place at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, July 'll, in the clubhouse where dessert and prizes will be ' additional attractions for bridge lovers. JOAN MARIE McMahon of Laguna Niguel served as dis- trict attorney of the mythical county of Larkin at the 25th anni· versary session of California Girls State at the University of Cali- fornia, Davis campus. The week-Jong nation~l youth-In-government program, sponsored by the American Legion Auxiliary, included 560 coeds chosen from their high school junior class on the basis of leader- ship, scholarship and interest in government. Joan represented. Laguna Deach High School where she will be a senior next fall. IF NOT RELAXING, Mrs. Doris Funk's recent five-week flying trip through Central America certainly was packed with excitement. · . The Lagunan and her sister, Mrs. Grace Harris, an Inter- nationally known airplane pilot from Kansas City, Mo., were serving as timers for the Angel Derby, an ·internationaJ race be- tween women pilots. "The gas was runnin~ low, so we had to make a forced landing on a military base in Guatamala," Mrs. Funk recalled. All ended glamorously, although the sisters had to rough it that night in a small town in the middle of nowhere. Later they -were entertained royally by the President of Nicaragua in his presidential palace. "They really rolled out the red carpet," Mrs. Funk reported. The termination of the race was Panama City. Fla., where the sisters put on ~ir party frocks for several festivities. MRS. ZACHARY Malaby of Laguna Beach did a good job surprising her husband on his recent birthday. ASout 20 friends from Altadena, his former home, and 30 residents of Laguna just kept arriving alJ day to help celebrate the occasion. ' CULINARY ARTIST -"Cooking," says Laurence Reynolds, Laguna Beach realtor, "is like painting a picture. To be a good coo}(, it takes care, patience and a sort of innate talent just like if you were an arlist. Some people have all the ingredient& and tools, but something is lacking -imagination . ., Man in the Kitchen Emerald Bay Leader Stews Beefy Specialty Laurence Reynold! looks like he just .tepped out of a Hemingway nove l. He is the type one pictures unblinkingly aiming his 15 h o t g u n towards a chargin& rhino ill the. African jllllgle. And he has some vt!ry masculine ideas about cooking, which is not necessarily a feminine sport since "the biggest chefs all are men." The part owner of Good Realty has lived in Emerald Bay for the past 23 year1, served .as its fire chief for 16 years and presided over its board ror two years. He likes to cook with wine and hlwldy, using "primitive utensils such as Mexican or French pottery." A one-dish cook, his specialty is what he calls "peuant·type foods which basically are OMseroles." One of his favorites is Boeuf Bourguignon which simply is beef stewed in burgundy. The only extra Oavors mingled with the dish are onions, which already are cooked, set aside and added later, and the flavor of mushrooms. BOEUF BOURGUIGNON (BURGUNDY BEEF) 2 pounds lean beef 2 tea15poons bacon drippi.ngs 10 small or 5 medium-sized onions 1 in tablespoons flour Marjoram Thyme Salt Pepper If.I cup beef bouillon one cup dry red wine lf.i: poWld fresh mushrooms To begin with, peel and slice the onions and fry them ir1. bacon drippings in a heavy skillet unW they are brown . Remove them and saute the lean beef, cut into one·incb cubes, In the same drippings, adding a little more fat if necessary. After the cubes are browned on &!I sides, 1prink11 the flour. a generous pinch of salt, pepper, marjoram and thyme over them. To thU add the bouillon aad I cup of a good American burgundy. Stir the mixture well for a moment, then let ft simmer as slowly as possible for 3V" hours. While cooking the mixture should just barely bubble occasionally and if necessary a mat should be put under the skillet. Ir the liquid cooks away, add as much bouillon and wine (in the proportion of one part of stock to two parts of wine) as neceM&?y to keep the beef barely covered. After the mixture has cooked for 3V" hours, return the brown on.Ions to the skillet along with the sliced frab mushrooms. Stir the ingredients well and let them cook for 4& Dunutu to one hour. U necessary add more stock and wine, as the sauce should be thick and dark brown. ' Fine-feathered , Friends' Forecast Not Only for the Birds DEAR ANN LANDERS: As I write thil letter it is raining hard. I see two cardinals, a red-wing b 1 a c k b i r d • several sparrows am. a finch feeding outside my window. I've cenceled my plans to go shopping because the birds have told me it will rain all day. ANN LANDERS [il were called. subject we would have known that our 10n'1 behavior was not normal. Please print th.ls letter, Ann. lf we had seen one like tt we could have obtained some help for our 150D before he wound up ln trouble with the police. - L.A. HEARTACHE travel under her own name. Y<MD' hus- band ought not try to cll1lel a few bucks out of the airlines by resorting lo thla cheap etmmlck. Tbia -for hotel rooms. too, in case be hu some other "mOCM1y-Nvin1" tricks up his sleeve. Before you decide I am crazy, please let me explain. When I first shared my theory with friends and neighbors they thought I had a:one bonkert, but they have tel5ted it out and now they tnow my theory is cor· reel. People can learn a great deal l'.rom birdl and animals if they observe them closely. Mother Nature has a way Of warning her furred and feathered friend• against impending dangu. U it is r.a.Jning and the bird1 cootinue to feed and don't tat• cover, it means the rain will last all day. If tile bird& disappear when the rain begins to fall it means the shower will be brief m'KI the sun will come out soon. It never fails . I~ hope you will publish mr letter, Ann. It will help your readers plan their day. -GRAND FORKS, N.D. DEAR GRAND : The we 1 t II er forecasters II.ave ctvea me so many bum deer• I am perfectly wllllDI to place my faith hi lb< birds. TU.U for DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'll start from the beginning and tell you my 1tory in as honest a way as J know how. although my heart i1 broken and my spirit is crushed. OWT IS.year-old son wa1 picked up with three other youths (all older) for smoking ~arljuana. (One of the boys was pushing it.) The teenagers were taken to the Juvenile Sedlon of the Los Ange~' Police Department for quel5tiOninl and my husband and I My husband is a professional man and we are considered responsible members of the community. When the police questioned us, it dawned on me that we were both embarrassingly ignorant We knew nothing of the symptoms of the marijuana user although our boy had been smokina: for well over a year. We ignored tbe boy's drowsiness, hlil runny noa:e, hi• con· linuaJ thirst We didn't notice his dilated pupils, bis uMlturally sOft voice and his "I don't care" attitude. We attached no sieniflcence to his strange sleeping habit&. (Somo night& he'd walk arouod the houH Ult 3 a.m. Other nlghta he'd retire at 7 p.m. and sleep until noon the following day.) DEAR L.A.: The 1ymptom1 you describe are Ht alwa,1 to pronoaaced tn martjaua 1moll:en. My coaaaltaats have 1u11e1ted th1l perbaPI year 101 .... wu OlffftaJ a little a:lae aDd a.Sag a rew Bemilea. Yoar letter should serve &o alert pareat1 lo abaormal btbavtor patterns, ltowever, alld J thut 1oa for wrtuac. " ,.. bave lrouble plllq aloof wltll 10Gr pareata ••• u ,.. ... , ret lhem te let JOU U.ve yoar 1ww 1*, MM for Au Luden' ltoMlet, u~ .,. P1rellht Bow te Get Men Frteatm." s .. d II ceola lo cola wllll yov ,.. .. o& aocl • ...,, llamped, ... - envelope. -·· Had we done more readina an tbt CONFIDENTIAL TO W A I T I N G FOR YOUR O.K.: Sorry. 1 can•t ctve IL Your hu1baad'1 aecretuy .lhould Ann Landers will ba rJad lo help you with your problems. send them lo her ln care of the DAILY PJ.U)T 1DC)MID1 • otamped, 1111...icsto-ODwiopl. ) ., • -------w. ,.-.... ·~--"''"'""'-... DAILY l>ILOT -- Brides in a Stew ---. - N.ew Cooks Get Tasty Advice By kA Y LARSOI'! ... ...., ,.... , .. ,, At the month ro11s to a cloee are ltrinl beans and. poUlto chips your st.pie' fare? Got the "not &llOlllec bot dog" b1U661 . Doo 't despair, help IJ around the corner. Thia time the whMA! knight 11 in the form of Mrs. Dorothy Wenck, University of California Ex le n 1 l on home advilor, and the first ol her three IHSioo& oa being a homemaker. Mra. Wenck arrived at the first~. t itled "Cooking For Two," with b<r colored food charts under her arm and detailed . advice on "what to eat, wben to prepare it, and .mat to buy." Good eating depends on being a good homemaker in more tban just cooking MRS. WILLIAM C. BARR JR. , 1tiU.s, she explained. "Good management la the key," she said, punctuating her llateme!li b y proje<tinf &!ides. RocllH Plodpa Newlywed W.C. Barrs In order to make her career • a homemaker more pleaeaot a woman muft take the altitude of a hoU5'ehokl executive mating lmpo-dec!J-. Home • Costa Mesa The flrst goal lhould be to plan for gooct: nutrition and top economy , 1h e emphaaized. · Arrangements of white and yellow gladioli and cbry1antbemum1 adorned st. Michael and All Angell EpilcOpal Cbwch, Corona del Mar when Marilyn Campbell became the bride of William Crawford Barr Jr. of Cost.a Mesa. The Rev. John W . Donaldson directed the ring and vow exchange. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L , Campbell of Newport Beach, was escorted down the white carpeted. aisle by her father. She wore I white peau de sole empire 80WD. with a lace bodice and wattea11 train. Her tiered Wmloo veil wu caught to a crown of chantilly lace, and forming her bouquet were while Easy Smocking 9240 SIZE$ 2.6 t., 1(f,_.; .... 1il't.tt< ... Smocking checks in as llll'• prettiest. new rashfon detail. No transfer i s neoe.ssary -use gay check- ed pgtuun for quick, easy tmOCking. N.i. chamting yoke detail. sleeves. Print.eel Pattern 9 2 4 O : NEW Qnldren's Sizes 2, 4. e. stle I tilket 1 yll'ds 35-I -· I SIXTY·FIVE CENTS tn coins fU" eocll pattern - UI 15 ceMs fC< ead> pat· lml ,.. fnt<IM& mailing DI IPfdll h a n d JI n g : .,.... • .., tbird·cJas s 6111•"7 will -- -"" """"'· Send lo I' rila Mmtin, the DAILY PILOT, 442 Pal.1enl Dept., ID Wwt 11th st., N• YC<k. 1/.Y. HlllL Print NA::: ADDUlll -ZIP,' .. ITIL& lfUllllEIL ~I _,..,,. __ ...... -~-·­• T p 'I a O.U>nc. :Ill,,,_ ell -&lml IO -·-INITANT SEWING butterfly roses, 1tephanotis, baby 's breath and carnations. Yellow empire gown 1 were selected for Patricia Ann Campbell, the bride's sister and maid of honor. and the Misses A n i t a Righetti, the bride's cousin, Gayle Reynolds, J e n i c e Edwards and Mrs. Michael McKinney, bridesmaids, all of Newport Beach. The honor attendant carried a bouquet o f multihued spring blossoms while the hr ides maid~ carried yellow and white margueriie daisies. The bridegroom. son .or Mr. and Mrs. William Crawford Barr of Stafford Springs, Conn., asked his brother, Brian Barr to be hll best man. Ushers were Eric Anderson, M i c h a e I McKinney, Gordon Abbott and James Keeler, all of Newport Beach. A reception for 150 guests followed in the home of the bride's parents. Assisting were Mrs . John Christiansen and M r 1 . Harry Miner. After a honeymoon trip along the northern coast, the bridal couple will reside in Costa Mesa. The bride. a fourth . generation California, is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and Orange Coast College. Her husband, an OCC student, w a s educated in Kenitria, Morocco. To show the importance of rood nubition lhe brought out a display board and Paintings On View The o r i' g i n a l paintings seen on the covers of Orange County Illustrated magazine will be on view for the publltl during the montti o{ July in the Mariners Library, Newport Beach. The works, dooe in a variety ol. media including oils, co~ge and a<:rylics, will .be dioplayed .. part of ttJe regul.ar Artist of the Month series sponsored by the Junior Ebell of Newport. AU the artists are countians. Also on display is a pie· torial explanation of ttie steps required for reproduc- ing and printing • cover ol quality. ArtiMs 1p<>tlighted include Rex Brandt, Paul Darrow, Joan Irving, PM Dike, Joe DiVicenzo, James Warren, Frank Interlandi, J a n K..a.syryzchi, Robert Young, P.at Smoot-Walker, 1-lerb Griswold and Larry Rink. N..rs . Oharles Oiapman, fine art& eo-chai.rman, is the guidlllg haod behind the monthly e:lhibit. Laguna Group American Legion Aux· iliary of Laguna Bea<:h gathers at 8 p.m. the second and fourth Thursdays in the Legion Hall. . FINE BAKERY ~~1H£,C~ l ight •nd •iry chiffon c•ke frosted with fresh lemon icin9. 1.H ~~~~~Ode Richly l•ced with honay end elmonds, perfect with morning coffee. ea. 17c WIN A lllTHDA Y CAii. NDI If your birthd•y I• ln Au9u1t, Septamber or Oe. tober, stop in •nd fill out •n .ntry , • , • decor-• •ted 2·1•y•r ce~e to S lucky peopl• eech month. "£.~LIDO ' CENTER ---J'l'lbowlo __ _, __ It_· -· 0... a i*DM. oaly !NEWPORT BEACH 673-6360 ~ IL.._.._.._.._.._.._.._.._.....;,;;.;,;;.;._..__:::.;:::;;__.. Luncheon Benefits· Children • What's Doing I MARY DAY, "42.4321 The Bold and the Beautiful $625 $1 The rings are a glimmering new kind of brushed 14 karat gold. The diamonds are mounted slightly offset, so they're unified when the rings are together. It's a whole new ball game in wedding sets. And it's ours alone. A diamond ls for nowl (Diamond prices vary with 10lltaire selected.) BANKAMERICARD ond MASTER CHARGE, too · S~VICK'S o'~ ...... - ~r~oros 18 FASH ION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER 644 -1380 HAS A SUMMER SALE CAPEZIO'S & CLOTHES ONE WEEK ONLY STARTING JULY FASHION 16th .•. ISLAND ONLY ALL REGULAR · INVENTORY 833_-1333 I L.-...:..;m ______ ...... __________________________ ~~~~~~~~~~·~~~----- I I I ,, I• I I I ! ~ I I I 1 I I I I ' I u um • ~ ff: YEAR ROUND WOOL COATS;! / /A . , 1ti 70.00 lo 7t00 3 8. 0 0 I / A !dlecliot1 ol ll;rtweight woof coats for all«casi011 .California wear. ~styles 11111 fabrita ill fashiotl's 1 best eolors, lncludltl1·whill; 6-lt Bl SUit io ... 111111. w llld Coat~ SUMMER DRESSES ._,melfllllhm1111111eh Ill IOOI, -ci1111 L lllllJ -~•II 'llrWlu iWd eolollllld ..... 'z rl I W 1'J'1'mt•1t. NEWPORT CENTER • #I FASHION ISLAND / • 1>44-2200 • J / -·Ju~ 15, 1%8 . ''NATURAL MINK STOLES 1377.00 ' .. You'll cherish your investment in a mink stole or cape with double colla1s. In dark ranch , pastel, Tourmaline' or dawn shades. All have Bu ffums' unconditional ~ranlet. A spe<:iat "fur purchase pl1111" is 1veilabl1. Or, a small depOlit , 1rill hold yw choice. FYI Salon. All t1.t piodudl llbelH llf .,._ tOllllWy ti orifin !ti lm~r-.t tu1s, · •T.M. l!mt. Ml"k Br11W1 An«l1t11111 FAMOUS-MAKER DRESSES 18.9 9 rea. 28.00 lo 56.00 Casual dresses in new fall COIO's. Solid• in black, broW!I 01 ••Y spun rayon. Prints in unusua( nowlJy weaws and other fashion fabrics and colors; S.20. Dress $!lop, • MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY I 0:00 TILL ~:30 • OTHER DAYS I 0:00 TILL 5:30 ' DIANE SHOl'FNEllt Nov..-nber Pl•n1 Harborites Pick Date Diane Shoffner, daughter or Mrs. Luelle Shoffner · of Newport Beach and lhe late W.r. Arthur M. Shoffner, wiU become the bride of Felix A.- Toedter. They have selected Nov, I as the date of their wedding which will take place i'n st. A n d r e w ' s PrnbyterilD Church, Newport Beach. Miss Shoffner ts a graduate of Newport HarboT High School and a business college in Santa Ana. Her fiance. son o! Mr. end Mrs. Herman W. Toedter of Newport Beadl, also iJ; a NHHS graduate. An alumnus of Orange Coast College, be a t t e n d ed California state College at Long Beach. Stewa~desses Miss Susan Mangan, daughter of Mrs. Jean Mangan of Costa Mesa, has received her wings from Trans lnternation· al Airlines, a charter airline. She is a grad· uate of Newport Harbor High School. JUDITH ROSENTHAL Sopt.mbor Bride Fall Rites For Bruins UCLA .. o1on Judith Abbe ROlenthol and Wiiiiam Tilmpletoft F'anner Jr. will be married d11rinf a garden ceremony Sept. 15 at the SOuth La,,... 1t0m1 ol h<r parent.I, Mr. ud Mn. Devid RoatnthaL Miss Ro11n.th*.I , a srlduate ol Fairfax llilft &bool, ls studyln( Ell&lisb at the university . The bMdecroom ~lect, son Of Air Force Lt. Col (rot.> and Mrs. w1ru1m Tem_pleton Farmer ol Daytona Beech. ll maj6rta1 la mU1ic. ) . • -.. ~ ... • ' . Jf OAILV PILOT Mond>y, July 15, 1968 • Sears ~ares About Yo or tAR DRIVING SAFETY on 1\ny Road Newest Color In 1968 and 1969 I Style Seat Coven ••• Sears Can Flt An1Car Complete Brake Reline Job Carefully Double Checked for Y olir Safety ., v Mufflers Quickly Installed Ask for a FREE , Safety Check · on Your Muffler Complete Automodve Services from Faetory Trained Experts at Sears • • • Have Your -~r Serviced Now You Sav~''30! ' ·Regular $249.95 21995 NO ~!ONEY DOWN on Searl Euy PaY!llent Pia• • Cools every corner, even in big station wagon• ... you feel cleaner, more relaxed • Three 4-way adjustable louvers provide direct or riraft-free cooling • Thermostat Rutomatically maintains desired coolness , , . and there's more knee room tha.n to super-~lim de~ign • Padded face and fully receued controll fOIJ safety and good looks • Wide range, 3-speed control allowa perfect air volume selection. ~!odel 57715-7 Expert In stallation is Available! NO MONEY DOWN '• Se&n1 Easy Paymmt Plu ~ .... ,.... . ~ . ~·-~~-I • Size 9o/a x9x8 .Y2-in ..•• fit.a 12- volt negative ground and plays all 4 track tape cartridges ..... r. ~=-"'"" • Built-in noise filters, play eject lever, more 12 Reasons Why Sears BRAKE RELINES are Safer and Better All American Cars and Volkswagens AII.t Wheels for Only 2888* • ln1pecl ~lut.er Cylindct • Boaded Llnlnr 1111~ on 4 "'h~I• • R.ebuUd All ' \\'lleel Cyllnder1 • ArG Grll1d .'8rake ShnH • Rc1111rf11ce All 4. Hraka Dn.111111 • Ul'p111·k Front \\'httl 8t<11.rln11 on Star1 Euy PaJD1Mt Plan• ~·o MON'l:Y DOWN • In.pee.( lira. HOMS • Inapecl and A.dJa .. Pattd.llJ Bnke e lnlp('d QroeeM SM.JI • Bleed All LIAM &ad Add Fhdd • • Free Adjustment for Ute ot Llalncii • RMd Tc1t for Brake RrUablllly 'Chry1l1r producla having ll °"'hell eyllnden and tan wttb di11e bnJ<e1 lllghtly higher. Mly necuMry addiUonal pan. and labor ..a.bl. at a.n -lo"· low prk:•l T SEARS AU O SERVICE t~.OOUNtf • Santa Ana 1717 s. .Hain SC. Xl7-"7l l Brhlal•S n"a11a ... Soodl. "-' ..... StMISS -• NOW ••• ORANGE 'llmln at Meata o.-.r-,. . ' ;I . .. , .... ly Charles M. Scliull .---.,...-----. IF l'll 60M1 "I> It>'!! FOii fOMIONI, I illl4Tl! MAit A 1«11) llEASQI. T"--1 MO NDllY MY 11 1:11."' ... -IC) llO) ""' au""". ·--"""' IQ (30) IJJ'::·~ =· c f:~ F I. I. IOfW, ..t D1tt1M D'lrllll .............. c-. fftlrll the -rtdiM II Cllfor'llM 1"""8tors .. ..... ........ _(II)_ .... ...,. (liflMhtl•) '51- --.. T ..... • -... (II) (30) .... _(30) m::""' -·--,,. ____ IQllO) .... _ -(Cl PO) ·--(30) ... : ::; ... (IO) • " I l WWW ., .. tf fllelllD." Aid: II 111 1Mw1c:t1o11 lllhl•n ltudtlb lflCI flcul!J In llllidlct! tducelloll. DMd PrDWltl .. tht &how fllllled It H1Mnl Mtdleel """'- ·-· .. IC) ..... - -IQ 1"11 'IT.It« Cninkltt. • ,,_ (30) • I LM '*7 (30) ··-~ ·-(30) 111•-·-IC) eu c... Yldl 1"° 8111 Cil ,_,, CCI <60) M· Ill C«U~ 111~ .loMflhlne Hutchin· ton portl'IJ llUlll wt. Mi.a: Wortti $WlllllJ (Qaljde »JM.), I WIMlllded olltllW Into Do1111 City 111d thin ,,. 11luctallt fl) tum 111111 O¥lf to M1rd!1I 1>111011. (R) 8 ne ....._: (C) (30') .. Mtlfl· kin Mind Tlltlr M11W11." The boyl IO to En11t11d whtn tti., !um th1l Orly * llllillffl:ld 1 llrrt country lll:ltl there. (It) ·--fQ (IO) ..... .,,.ry °'" lit Llbt!ICM.· -· m .. I])_ lw .... IC> (i))'""tP1i111cllce IM tlll Pollcl." Thi .-r, tf tti1 dr11!11tic!lllltholl utld tor •poilnc ~-11110n1 ttit 111tn If Hotlaton'• pollcl Iota. ..... $ ....... tJ." (dt1r.:d '57 -.leek Wlllb, Don Dvbblna. m.,,..c. 1 ••fltC30l to tt1r In 1111 •rt nn to bl MMt bJ ANo Clrf!llMIL Shi 1111111 IMr form• lllllbtncl CNr111 pl1u ti ll'lln'J' Ftwiie. • Atablt11 llri1t• Hi ... lltddls • 'fl!ll Oillllt Mei _.... hHIOIOlll "*'"'· .......... •·•utllot ol' .. ....., ..., ffOlll Miieti tfll• pt\llrllll ..... Id. pllJl Fmll . • <Hl (I)"" ,..., -(Cl {10) ""llhi1 Dtalltr Abductor&. M Stop. plnf fio lnveltipt1 111 fOddllt. s11. Stotw .,,11 hit flOllct 11m. 111 lfllt tM a..ir pibow, Ill• mektr JoftM Qifl&on, i. kldllll*f. Thi~ Wint Cllh to open I llft fof\lltll. (R) •• IC) ~O) ., __ .,_,._,._ ""•Ill Cil ...... Iii"" (Cl (30) Cidt-.;,. WU. portrlfiq .. t6f. wtr ctin-. llilll I lltW llltlftlt • th ... ht 11al1 twilla luffy "" '°" "' . ..,,,,... ... -r. llNL (It) •illlm--. IQ ,.,i 1M .lW.""Toa1 Wimer II ..,.... by llli11: ..-.his f•linp for Jiit Smith; C.rolrfi 111d lltr f1thlr hm • htert·to-llllrt lllk; Rodney 1M flltr. min H1rrlntton dtdllt to lllttr 1 molortllkt l'ICe, lll1'o-l!O) Im JIO ~ "Ju.e!OI 11111 tht l'ior." Alt lnclslff report Gii tht un- b1!1nctd 1e1let fA Juttlc:1. Appu1- ln1 Oii the Ptott•m lrt Sllpr1mt Court Justice WllHam O. Doufl•• arid m1ny not..i tttome,a. l1ltJ took at ltpt ttpf-.tbitlon, th• bail '"'"" •rid JIO!ict tflltmtftt " th• poor. ................. ,.,., R 9 rI><••""" IC) 160) "A il1tln l111 Dut." Andrtw Duapn who will star In tl\1 flfW '1.a~ 111ies on C8:!i nil! fill, Clrrolt '1· Connor 11\d Midlatl N11r11bJ llttd the cul of I tl,lllptft91 drlllll llMJvt officills S tti1 Grflll: Uk• 1m.. state llun11u llln:hi111 for 1 Swl6- iltl •man •med GrtMttorn (6u11- 111r. Hebtrom) who jumped 111\l' Ill Clliclto. D <II fll I "" (Cl l!Ol """" BrrttiTay:-lvtfYbocly." RbbiMOn 11111 Scott 111 111!e111d to p1ot:ed 1 re- tired •1•nt (Jim BICkU!) •••Inst 1 Ylf11Nnct-seeking Utaptd pris- oner. filmed on location In Mexico. IR) ·---(Cl 1"11 'J.~~ ~. v:: :> ~e: Into P1rtnlrllllp with Sidney Cllovtf, 111 Important mine 0111rllor, wtM11 lie le1rns tti1t Glo<ltf Is llOt 1bovt 11sin1 fo1ce trt 1et What h1 Wlntl. Ven Wi!liems, Roblft Mldd!tton rulll (R) ·-.... (Ol) ..... ~-(C)l!O) ll)T-.F .... .,.,, -(IO) ld CB..._ fC> '2Kll 1111 Johr& ·---er ·.!• , •lldttlll • S. M Allllrica.: (C) "Hum1n Reproduction." Dr. Joll11 "Biiiion Jlrwldv 1 COllClll npl1n1tlon tf l:Oll II Tiii c....-.: (C) (to) "Ml•· tilt reproduction system. •lOn of tilt Ch1mpioM. • Cl1ls II· 11111111 tltf tulle el I lleporild ll:GO 8 EMii O'Oldl ltipolt: (t) (30) Amtrlcln pnpllr In •lief to 1111. Jtf1Y Dvnph,. lltmllM Ill cqllltlntbt thlt ID widll I _,.., 1111' .... mill!Nlt. ___ ...,_ -)---· -- ·--(30) ·--""-· 1M St.Illy lrut!Mn, The Cllncll Mountl>llt ao,t 1nd t.ousln Emm1 t•m ., for mine mountain music. l'.llll·Ullll fMrtt• Include .. It T1ku 1 Wlll'rllcl Min," '1urbJ 111 tht strn" 11'11 '1>rMll Ill h Y1ll,.-." .,,. tltl ........ (Q (IO) r-.. Mdn111r. ............ (IO) Ill----(ii1m1) '57--&mna Rory, H1tttd lll1rlldt, m la -IC) 160) 1B 1111vt1: "Mtllptt" (mystery> ·53 -Sterilne H1Ydtt1, .lol11 Wiit. GORDO 1·15" JUDGE PARKER \'IOULC' IT BE P05518LE FOR YOll 10 5EE ME "°MEWH~ OTM~ lliMI YOUR OFFICE, Ml.P'RIVB? ' --W.Yld l'l> llTTllt Sft<PW UP. •• .Le......... 11:9 ..... : "tolll... ........ '1 (Tr.mt) '4f..lMttb Y1111111. Ctllltl .,. • 111 Cl) "' """ -(C) -· (lflj ........... """"' ,..,. I II ~ t1J Tiit '-illlt ... fQ ~nrt bit' wlltl I llfl,llbMl-wkt ... _ ,.. ""' -· !11_"1.,lW-M 1111 ~ llltil lJlef ......,. 'lJ..-..corMI Wtldl, (VllJll K.,.. ... Ill) fil 1111 (I) "" --tel • 1111 Cl)... -tcl (30) oiftM: Tq-of-W• ...... DWrich 1HO ID ... """ rt> tMl.'.tM fcl Tra, 11111 FllWI, I Frwdl lpf', w!"· lllftlfnc to form hllt to rM11 the IDcltlo!l flt ltDltn l!:ID II o.tw U.lb llllcrdllllL Brtonl htrlH avm, (R) .... -IC) (IO) ....... -IC) l!OI ·-·- TUESDAY DAmME MOVIES 12:45 0 Nllil: "'Sflt.Outon,.. (•Mn· turt) '51-lrlih McCallt, Toti Griffin. 1:1118 Molli: .,, ...... (llrlrnt) 15 -Joel McCn1, DIYld NIYlll, ·--• ...... I .. vllltuno) 'S.1-.lolMI w.,..., u.i,.i ....... ·---·-.., U:eoB "P• .. _I_ '3' --ttiy lnnl ....... Ill • llrl" tdrlN) '3S-Ci1J IMt. 12:11•--1-...... Cl1udlttl Colbtrt. "1'111 """ ....,. (dr1m1) '43--0olt Amldle. ~lt--Wil-(-'lO ,, ... _ .......... 1 ..... ) -=-1111111 Mtton, Dl11 Du,.,.._ '62-1Dh11 hntley, r.t• lf1Wthonl.. 0 W ~E /.'£XlN HATI1 OON~ AROSE I' SPRINKLIN' MOONDUST 'RJN Mf NOSE! SPRINKLED MOONDUST IN MY HAIR, ~IN''MJNGSTlllo ~1!£JIE! • MUTI AND JEFf IF ONLY MY ARMS WERE THRE& INCHES LONGER I WOULDN'T NEED GLASSES TIPRle 'ID MY' TRUE ~·TEEPEE. CRFfl'IN' FJ.Em.Y, 'IET DlSCRmlY! · LrmE P16wl J 1s 'ttlU 1J.1ERE? S!E. IFI llOLD ITWAYOUT WITH ONE l-\ANDI CAN .JUS'T ABOUT READ IT! 111 ·• , ... "" -(dn· ,,,. • (C) ""' • -1-) ... " M) 'u--tVt ..,,.._ 4CJ ........ -0.""' ""'-DIMh lhcn. • • • , '11 tit II ........ ,,......, 'IO • "Ir .I -, .... ( .. 1111) 'II '' • ...:..M :~" _... ..._ _..,. .... Ftlflllll ....... ,.::= ,.,..._.. ..... ____ ......;:_..1 .-:;,, .. :,.;::;iiei~;,;;_ MISS PEACH • JOI PRINTING • PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS • \ • 111 l WllT IALMA kft. ~-· ....J,..L&.lool ~ ' -•• .. TO CURB MY APPETITE! ly .anr Brewer ly Gus Arriola ly Harold Le Doux ly Ferd Johnson ly Tom K. Ryan OU MJll( t.EAVE wmroT.$ l\MR! ly Al Smith ly Mel WMIN6 ~~ =.:. ,., STARS -Lucille Ball bas stars in her eyes when s)le discovers Wayne Newton and decides to belp him on his way to auccess on "The Lucy Show" tonight, in color at 8:30 on Channel 2. N-n guest stars a sa farm boy whose forte ts country mu!;ic. : TELEVISION VIEWS Newark Still 'Tinder Box' By JERRY BUCK . NEW YORK (AP) -One year alter the city of Newark was wracked by a disastrous riot the causes were examined in an exciting confrontation on ABC Sunday by eight persons affected by the disorder. FRANK REYNOLDS, who was host for the program, "Newark: Anatomy of a Riot." observ· eel that "if the lessons of Newark weren't learned your city can be next.'' And if the people ·who participated in this pro: gram are respresentative of Newark, as they .ap- peared to be, .it seems that Newark itself hasn't learned much from a riol that killed 26 people and left sections of the city in ruins. THE SAME LACK of underslandihg, the same hostilities, the same calcified viewpoints -tliat evidently contributed to the riots were openly dis- pl&yed . It made for exciting television, but it didn't say much for the future of Newark. At one point, as the accustations and recrimi· nations mounied.. Donald Malafronte, administra- tive assistant to Mayor Hugh Addonizio, said : 0 We are in some sprt of tragic dance here, where we eat each ot.ber and berate each other and hate each other and curse each other." _ BUT IF THIS airing serves as a catharsis it will have had a usefu,l, purpose. ~ None of the participants could agree on the ,..~.toot causes of the riot. ~ -~.- ' MORRIS SPIELBERG, president of the Spring· field Avenue Merchants Association, laid the blame on the "unsensitivity" of Ci ty Hall. But Malafronte snapped that it was the merchants, not the city government, who were sensitive. Negro panelists complained of storekeepers overcharging for shoddy goods. Robert Curvin, former chairman of lhe Newark chapter of lhe Congress of Racial Equality, said the "hoi:rlble ?elations· between the blacks and the police wblcb still exist to this day," had to be considered. HE SAID THAT Negroes, who make up 52 per· cent of the population, had to have more power in the city government. . Warren Copeland, a young Negro, who los1 hi s right leg due to a bullet wound be said was iJlflict- ed without reason by a policeman, said, 111 just~hope there is hope for us." THE PROGRAM WAS the third in a &eries ol six in ABC's "Time For America." The fourth, "Prejudice and the Police," will be presented at 7:30 p.m. PDT today. On Friday night, NBC presented lhe first .of four hour-long conversations '1Wbat's Happening to Ameiica1" The idea is to invite persons knowl- edgeable in government, history, sociology and allied fields to discuss the tensions and uncertain- ties afflicting the nation, Edwin Newsman, an 8.ble and versatile newsman, is host for the series. · THE FIRST GUESTS were Dr. C. Vann Wood· war, a historian on the faculty at Yale, and Dr. Kenneth B. Clark, a Negro who is a professor of psychology al Cily College of New York. The two professors suggested that America's history and its myths have caught up with us, leav· ing the nation facing a series of Unsolved problems at home and abroad amid present affluence and past success. AL THO\IGH the program lacked spark and Im· pact, telling points were made about the anxieties arising from the war in Vietnam. vj.otence, racism. poverty and the crisis in the cities. Dennis the Menace I ' ~ " • - 'WILL MIJSl<AA1S l!AT 1U~ FISH ?' • \ I I \ ' I I • --~---...... ____ ...,.... -·-~----., ............ ,. ... ll'l•llll••••lllllllll•llllllllll• ......... " .... . • 1 • J I DAii. Y PIJJ)f HE 'LL MANAG E llANIC 11.i..rt .... o .. ..,.. Des Granges To Manage Bank Office Robert H. de5 Granges. of Yorba Linda , member of a pioneer Orange C o u n t y family, has been elected vice president of t h e Newport National Bank and named ma nager of i ts University office in the new College VJ.ew F i n a nci a I Plaza, Fullerton. The annouocement was made by George L . Woodford Jr., president of Newport National and its chief executive officer. Des Granges is a 1937 graduate of FuUerton High School and also attended Fullerton Junior College. His great grandf a ther moved to Fullerton in 1872 and bllilt the house which still stands at 2.000 E. \Vilshire . Des Granges j o i n e d Newport National after 29 years with the Bank of America , where he advanced from Con c or d branch b o o k k ee p e r to manager .of the Placentia branch, a position be held from 1961 to 1968. Des Granges is a member of tile St. Jude Hospital Advisory Board in Fullerton and finance c hairman , bOa:rd member, and former treasurer of the Placentia Boys' Club. He has served as treasurer of t h e Placentia Salvation Army and tl'le Placentia March of Dimes .d'nce 1963. Astrodata Picks New President As.trod.at.a. 1111.c .. Ane.heim. manufacture:T of electronic dala systema a n d in· strument.atian. h a s an· noonced the appointment of .James A. Yunker as presi· rlent and chill opeJ'ating of. Heer. and a director. George Mordy . Astrodata chairman. said that the ap· polntment of Yunker follo"''s the r~signation of Thomas :\Hinso n. Allinson w 11 s associated with the com· pany for 18 months. Joining Yunker a.re. two other former ITT ex· ecutives. R. Baker who was appointed vice president in charge of finance. And treasurer and J. Somers Who was appointed vice president of administration a·nd secret..ary. Pia.ul Teplin was also elected a member of Im board. Yunker mo v ea lt1 Astrodata f r om Interna· tional Telephone and Telegraph Corp. t I T T ) where he. was group gener.al manager of the ITT e\ec· tromedtani.cal component~ group. Allinson resigned f n r personal reasona &nd will announct his f u t u r e business plans within the next few ~eks. : Mondlj, Julr 15, 1968 Dust Ooud Has Silver Lining Too By LEROY POPE "', .............. NEW YORK (UPI) -It may com• • a IWpl'ise to many di)' dwellen, but u.. polluted air they 1 n I f f containt a 1 lgn I flea n t amount or &old and tilver. A Bureau of MJnea awdy of tly-<asb from incinerators in seven cJties indicated rubbi"sh may be ltl rich in gold end silver 11 JOme ores bei ng mined in Nevada. An estimated $14 worth per ton of asti wa1 found. It came from diJcarded CO!tume jewelry, coins and photo negatives. This study was cited in the summer issue of t he General Electric Forum in which many experts urged Americans to show more concern about management of wastes and salvageable materials. Dr. Walter Hibbard Jr .. former director or the U.S. Bureau of Mines, said the modern automobile · ' i s designed without sufficient thought as to what to do with it once it reaches the junk heap. "I{ it wtre designed so that it could be easily dfsassemble d into components,'' said Dr . Hibbard. "recycling would be easier and economically attractive, too ." Some junk yard managers do remove some parts of old automobiles for sale to parts remanufacturers. And some take olf fender s a n d bumpers for sale to body repair shops. But it's a hit- and-miss operation. D r . Hibbard, now in th e research department o f Owens -Corning Fibreglas. suggests car manufacturers design them so they can be routinely dismantled when they reach a certain age. Then. says Dr. Hibbard. most of the parts could be remanufacture, those left sent back for remanufacture, those left over could be crushed into a small bale of metal and we coold eliminate unsightly car cemeteries and much cost. A few years ago a junk car was worth from '"° to $50. Today you often have to pay to have it t.owed to the year. Or. Hibbard sees this as a great waste, ooe that .11hould be eliminated. Or. Charles Reed. A General Electrics president, seconds thlt motion. Noting that the cost of developing new material.!! COl'l&tantly involves greater ~omic risks, he suggested that conserving what already is avaUable not only makes moral but financial sense. Part of the answer is to make the present materials or goods last longer. And industry has the m m the works, according to Dr. Reed. If is devel op i n g amal.ing n e w composite materials made of very :;.trong fiber~ of metals or carbon embedded in plastic 11r &oft metal. Very light but. very strong. The public hasn 'I seen them y t: t because the y still C06t about $500 per pound. County Firms Ge t Joint Pact SACRAMENTO fUPll - A S6.59 million contract for construction of 1 Ubrarv classroom building al san Diego State College has been awarded to G. L. Cory Inc .. and J. B. Allen & Co., of Anaheim in 1 joint venture. Award of the contract was announced by the State Department of G e n e r a I Services I See by Today's Want Ads •A i ood bt1~ ff'lr th,. ~m11l1 nffir,.: n11 11n 11ntlque :i·,.rn '1,.Jl;k. 111th 11"& tnp plu.' mii tchln11. stt.7· taris l chtur, •A port;11b]e &Ur~• Ilk,. ""w for tht travellt11 ITIUlil<" lover. • huUful buy~ In homes all alonr tM beach area. ~ • ;. frtt rldr 10 LA. lo a ti a 11 y commuter, Wil· shire M-r Wes tern A~. • l.rq ora nn !hr fl ul"' 11.nd rl&rln~I t n r brtinnln~ 1t udf'nl~ a l very reaS<Jn• •bl• r9let. Laguna Bills Gets Motel Artist's rendering of the Laguna Hill• Motel, now under construction at 23932 Paseo de Valencia, La· gun a Hills. Slated for October 1 occupancy, the twin two-story buildings wJU consist of 72 guest rooms. The 2-6/!0th acre motel site is planned for a third unit of 36-roomt to be added at a future date. Your Money's Worth Inflation Hitting Retirees By SYLVIA PORTER John D .• a •16 .000 a year salesman, retired in 1962 on a retirement income of '6,324 a year, 30 percent of his preretiremelit yearly wage plus Social Security benefits. Because t1f Social Security benefit increases since 1962, John D'a 1967 retirement Income amounted to $6.431. However, because of cost of living increases since 1962 the buying power of John D's 1967 income was a full 8.6 percent below that of his 1962 income. And h i s pension income is now a full 15.3 percent behind the rising earnings of t h e average working American. Even 1 9 6 8 ' s across·the- board Social Securit y benefit boosts have left him 5 percent behind where ht was in 1962 in terms of buying power and 11.6 percent behind in terms or earnings of w o r k i n g Americans. U.S. retiree . They dramatize also the widening gap between the working. earning younger American and the non.working retiree. Inherent In them are vitally important questions for U.S. corprtaoions and for Social S e c u r i t y policymakers: 'MINl·MERCEDES' -The new Dune Buggy, so na med because of its square nose and low profile silhouette, is currently m anufactured by Dune Buggy En· terprises, headed by Jim Taylor in Westminster. New Look Dune Bug Bounces Onto Scene A n e w "continental" i;tyle Dune Bugg)o. called the Road Runner has bounc· ed onto the Orange County sports scene. From Dune Buggy Enter· pr i s e s in \Vestminstcr boosters of the sc hool o~ buggy builders. the new car sports a square nose ()n a low profiled si'hou"tle. Owner o( the firm. Jim Taylor says the nr\v buggy hai; been named "the Mini · Ml'rcech~s ... Most you ng Ot\•ners pur· Laguna Niguel Center Pl a nned Preliminary plans ., r e under way to develop IS acres of Laguna Niguel Industrial Park lnlo a 1 p e c ializ.ed commercial cent.tr. wkt'I the purchase or the property by Stanley C. Allen. Allen, Cad 111 ac and Old smobile de 1 It r In Lagu na Beach the past 21 years. purcha.scC.: the land oo lhe eastern border of the park. Adina for hhn in the transaction was Atty. Fra.nk s. Filta ot Lacuna Beach. ' chase their buggy in kil form . supplying chassis and effort themselves. Taylor. ,11\ong with fiberglass pro ,Jim Ford decided to build their own buggy kit. In 1967 they established lhemselves in 400 square feel of working spac~. Today they are using 8,000 square feel Course Set On Inves ting ''Tht: Jo'undamentals ()f Investing" Iii tht topic of •n inVHtment lecture teries to be given at the Dean Witter office in Santa Ana oa three con1tcullve Monday evening&, beginning today at 7:30 p.m. The lectures, under Claude Taggart, account executlv~. wiU cover atock marftt LoaM Ottfcf!f' George, Maschmeyer of ·Mesa Verde ha1 been appointed chief loan of· ficer of Mariners Sav· ings and Loan Associa· lion, Newport Beach. He will Initiate a new construction loan pro- gram for the 1.5-year- old association. langua.ge. function of the ;;:;=========. securities market a n d tnv .. tmeot poUcies. LOCAL Reservations may be made by contacting Dean Witter and Company, 12.8 N. Broadwaiy. Santa A n 1 , leleyhont S47~l. Ne ether ...... ,,.,., t1!11 y .. "' ... , •••rv city, 1belft whit', t•i"' •11 111 .... , ...... 0,1~9• Ce•d tfo1111 tli1 DAILY PILOT. Massive SF Sewer Plan Proposed C•I Fl11111I C•I LloG1 ,6tl C11l1h M .1'11 c.moll:L .di! !•'""Saw 1 OAKLAND (UPI) - A Ill fr,., ·'° gi1:11t, freeway.sized sewer ~ ~ 1'° ((Ill fl'IC 11'1 J tb carry waste fr om the c. ... 1 11.1nd l entire Say Area out to sea l::'-r'~o has been proposed as part of z:~ ·""" the San Francisco Bay· r-,£'4".J Delta water quality control ~:~rt~ ;)i program. c:::::,. c;..• Raymond Walsh . director ~~'ir11 ·• of the program. said lhe ~:~i. ~:la; huge WNtt could be ~·~·~~ 1·>r constructed at an estimated ~~o""c'r1.'il cost of •1 bl!Uon to handle ~:,:;:c:, ,• two billion galtoni; of treated ~ 1'::)"'~ sewage 1 day in SO years' "'Ao111r J! . ~!<itrt .r.z. Ume. . ::::n\111 if. The pro1ect was baud on ~;\' .11 studies by Kai1er Engineers "'' s;: 1:1 of 0.akland. Engineering· :;tf'fl""r,:.;• ScienCe 111(.. and the .,,'.~ J.io Califomi1 Fish and Game '}r"t,~ 11,• Department. ~~ ~ The •ewer line would ~ir t: either be bored through the -~ ~ peninsula hllls or straddle vi 1:A the range with 1 pumping ~ .. :. station. It would t b e 11 1cE1M 111 ~ · ... ! ·1& IMJ! STf' JI 1tretl.'.J1 ei6.. mi~s to 1e1 M ~k•1s somewhere between Pillar &\'"_, 1.11 Point and Pigeon Point near rJ\f 1C1"~, Half Moon Ba,y in SM Mateo ~~, N't' County. '"'1"~::: 1: I ' -A- . -. t ' ' .. ••In .... iha.l Mltlt ltw Ci.MCI! .. Ah· line's Traffic Up ·United Air Lines traffic: during Ju~ was up over the ~e period a year ago in m~t categorie5• according to company official5, A total of 2 ,S80 ,7gt rtv~e ~gerigers were carried during the ntooth up 14 percent fr om lasi year; whi le. nyl ng included 2.168 ,603 .000 revenue passenger miles. up 17 pereent: 13.171,0IXI mail ton miles. up 45 percent · 36,932,000 freigbt ton mile; ( excludlnc Military Airlift Command t I i gb t,) an increase of 10 per~nt. and 51,838,<m total cargo ton milts (expre:sa, mall •nd frelgbt l, up by 18 percent. ExpreM1 ton mlle-.s In June wtre down $ perctnt 1~ 1,734,000. I '. ... 1tlt• -1\• +• -· ··~ .:.:-. + .. _ .. .... f ~ -·~ =~ + .. + .. +• -h _., + .. 1'" -•• " ti~ _, .. -· -· t•. + ,, -Hio +~ -· _., =·~ :!: \i :t ... ~l -· i ~ ~----· '" •• 11 -.• ' .. -· ~· :t~ ~ :~ -1 :~ •• • • . .. •• . \l .. ·:: 1 .. .. .. " '" ... "' ,, .. .. •• • !•.~ • .. .. .. .. .. 1 ... •• .. ,, •• ~ .. • " '• .. .. .. .. " .. " ~ .. • .. • " • " • ' 1 ' • • ' • l ( I I I I I • -.. -~ --~ ---... ---................. , ......... -....... -.......... ,,_,i"', •• _ ........... ..,,,..,~,'90"'"'''""*'"-"'""''-""''"'r•:••• .. ¢11"40S•C•U•GGl•••r··· .... • ••• ,,., •• , •. ,,.,~.,.. • ..._U!'1'•4 .. Z4o¢ .... , ... ,.~ •• ,._,.u.,,,,. •• ,l .... ~.~C~Q ... ¥44!9•W•C••••~• .. AA • DAILY OILOT %1J Monday's 9osilig Prices -Co~plete New York Stock E_xch31!ge List " • --. ~~-· ..... --------...~~ .................... "".191 .... 111111111111111111111111••••• D.~JJ,V PD,OT EDITORIAL PAGE • r .~ •• . Faith Ill the Court The John Birch Society's ''Impeach Earl Warren'' .movement was preposterous. So were most or the other accusations hurled against the Supreme Court durinc Chief Justice Warren's leadership. In a period of great change in Ame.rica. nonethe. less, the court bas played a key role. And unrest and 1uspicion often accompany changes in social structure. Thus, I\ is not difficult to und•l'stand why many Americans harbor doubt about the Supreme Co urt. . Recent deveJopments are not likely to increase middle-<>f·lhe-road support for lhe Supreme Court. Justice Warren's threat to continue on the bench unless a man meeting his approval -Abe Fortas -r&o pl aces him shows a lack of faith on the part of the Chief Justice in the system itsell. We would wish that the re-- tiring head of the court would not want to perpetuate himself by hand-picking his successor. It also "".'?Uld have 1lrengthened the average Amer· lcan's fai th in the Supreme Court if President Johnson had selected two ·nominees with impeccable records to replace Mr. Warren as Chief Justice and to fill the vacancy bis resignation creates on the court. The cry of "cronyism" Is too close to be comfortable. The opportunity existed to restore much of the bed· rock loyalty long felt in the nation's highest institution. Unfortunately, the turn of events is not likely to restore ~at unquestioned respect. \ 'Like a Prairie Wildfire ... ' Boozers, tipplers and now·and-then social imbibers in Orange County and other areas surrounding the city of Los Angeles may laugh at the new tax adopted on booze and beer in the city of the angels. In an unprecedented action, Los Angeles City Council adopted. and Mayor Yorty signed, a special five percent alcoholic beverage tax ordinance. In most cases, after the bar ow ner eeti throuah figuring out his slice of lhe prlc•, I\ will mean a nickel a drink or a nickel a b~ more tJian the present price. During the council debate on the new tax, down .. town restaurateurs and bar owners complained bitter .. ly that the city tax would send drinkers to the suburbs -creating a sort ol mass exodua at martini time. History shows that if this 5 o'clock pattern develops it won't last long. When some imaginative city official• figured out a "bed tax" several years back -a municipal tax on hotel and motel rooms -there was much head-shaking. What happened ? After the first olive was out of the botUe, practical .. ly every city In California adopted the bed tu. It is In effect in almost every municipality In California cater· ing to tourist! and travelers and bas been absorbed somewhere along the line' to the degree that the.re is little hope it will ever be rescinded. Thus, we look for nickf:l·a-drink taxes to spread from Los Angeles like, to use one of Governor Reagan's favorite phrases. 11a prairie wildfire." Hi,. Ho, Come to the Fair The Orange C<>unty Fair certainly has changed aince it went into business in 1890. The agriculture exhibits are still there, to be sure, but the fair is as much a reflecUon of the county's growing industrial might as anything these days. When it opens its doors tomorrow for the 20th an .. nual running in Costa Mesa, the Orange County Fair (officially Orange County Fair and Exposition) will stage a variety of entertainment, exhibits and com· petition broader than ever before. The fair runs from Tuesday through Sunday. Don't miss it What's the Party Line Today"! Guns: Lethal Gus Hall and the 'New Left' Aml Serious Mr. Gus Hall, general secretary of the U.S. Communist Party, has issued a public denunciation of the theories of the Ainerican "New Left." They are, say..s he, merely "petty bourgeois radicalism" and "anti-working claSs." Mr. 8-ll singled out the concepts of Prof. Herbert Marcus, of the philos~y department at t b e University of California at San Diego, 2nd Jules Regis Debray, French Marxist and adviser to Fidel Castro and the late Che Guevara, for special criflcism. Mr. J)ebray. now serving a sentence in Bolivia, said Hall lacked realism in saying that guerrillas c o u 1 d 0\1erthrow capitalism by encircling cities aftd carrying on guerrilla warfare. MR. MARCUSE received the back, of the Hall hand for decfaring the \vorking ' class no longer was a revo1utionary force because union b.,rgaining stuffed workers w i 1 h cons umer goods. It was obvious. however, the New Left had troubled Mr. Hall . He said tht CP would begin to place new emphasis on youth of America. The CP. he said. had been active in many student protests, especially the draft cr rd burnings and so on. ~1r. Hall's statement will both n·~<><;e And annoy the extremt ri l:!ht \'·in~. He confirms the ch::irge of CP participation In some student and youth prot~st demonstrations. But. he admits to but 13,000 due1 paying members and estimates 1ympathizen at perhaps 100,0CM>. MEANWHILE, there still is not much evidence of any de fined objectives by the U. S. student rebellion groups. This is one reason why Mr. Hall referred to them as representing ideologically "Infantile leftism." Activiats of the StudenU for a OemocraUc Society (S.D.S.), at It. MichJgan convention in J u n e , reaffirmed repudiation of the "American political syste m .'• Elections. for ex a m p 1 e , are meaningless in the S.D.S. doctrine, because the system merely "renews itself' by holding elections. This belief explains why S.O.S. and others or the New Left American groups also reject the doctri.Da.lrtl authority of the Communist Party. THIS ALSO explains "New Left" plans for demonstrations against both political conventions in August. The New Left views them as merely a part of the mechanism of the "sy~tem renewin~ itself." They wish to destroy the system. There is passion and f i e r y • ambiguous rhetoric in the New Left - , .• And Still More Trouble The militantly leftist Students for a Democratic Society <SDSI is being hectically convulsed by a big dose of its own particular brand cf trouble- making medicine -raucous bra"'·ling and disruptive dissension. The Progressive Labor Pa rt y (PLP), a pro.Chinese offs hoot of the U.S. Communist Party, is aggressively infiltrating SOS in a drive to gain control. PLP came close to doing that at the recent SDS nati<lnal convention at fo.fichigan State University, East Lansing. More than 800 delegates from some 200 chapters throughout the country attended the w e e k . 1 o n g sessions, held heh.ind closely guarded doors. from which the press was truculently barred. A LT ff 0 U G H PLP's tighUy controlled and disciplined group of around 60 was greatly outnumbered. it almost succeeded in c apt u r in g rfo rnination of the key 11 member !"1Atlonal Interim Committet -that Dear Gloomy Gus: U piclollini kept Hubert Hum· ptlreT out ol Coliloml1, will lhe --Wop him out ol u.. White Ho,..rr,; -P. E. . ,_ ,. .... ,..,. .............. .. ~"'!-~, .............. ... .................... 09lfr ... llt. i~ . -- I ;".t .. formulates SOS policy and strategy. While thwarted, PLP's power grab Wa!i so confusing and disruptive that it largely unhinged the convention . Delegates spent so much time and energy furiously WNngling over PLP, its revolutionary ideology and tactics that scheduled important SOS affiars got short shrift. As a consequence. left up in the air were plans to implement a hi.'!hl v significant chanJ::e in basic SOS concept and/thinking. IN THE PAST VEAR, SOS ha:ii shirted from an "anti-imperialist" to an "anti-capitalist'' perspective, It is on the verge of embracing socialism. or In the terminology now glibly common among SOS members . "revolutionary communism spelled with a small c." To propagate this new ideology, SOS leaders have evolved a two-pronged campaign -to develop strong regional organizations. and to Involve SOS in ghetto activities. How far SOS will get in these radical alms remains to be seen. Taking up militant cudgels for the impoverished a n d disadvantaged. chieOy Negro. in slums Is far dJfrcrent from st.aging 1ntl-war ind other demgnstrations and disturbances on university campuses. En t I re I y different people. ractors and tssues are involved. For example: The recent violent student disorders at C o t u m b t a UniVt.rsity. in which SOS was active. art one thing. But agitatln!l and or g ~ n I z i ~.g ''rev o 1 utlonary ~nsc1ousness among ghetto dweller• 11 somcthln1 very dJfferent. -Rohen AJle,. and Job Goldomlllo but a meagerness or coherence. The goals are ambiguously described as "participatory democracy" a phrase whJch seems to m e a n participating in life without any regulations or organization. The same meaning is inherent in the phrases demanding the "overthrow o f bourgeois democracy'' and "capitalistic society." MARXISM, Maoism. communism, anarchy -all these hi storically arose out of oppression , economic and political. Marx remains a mystery and a paradox. He, too. was ambiguous. The paradox Is that his theories caused capitalism to reform ttaelf to such a degree that It, with IU later research and development, produced a technology that made m o d e r n capitalism more widely accepted and supported than otherwise would, have been possible. That the New Left should seek lo aubvert, ra~her th a n reform. representative ~overnment and technological benefits. is not without a certain danger to their own ambiguous roats. That's the basic SOS prc&lem, but not for the pro-Chinese Commun!!it PLP. TO TRIS S/\1ALL but exoerienced clinue of rrvolutionarie:i. there Is little dirference bl"•wet n creatin.« chaos and upheavals on colltge campuses and among the Ignora nt and impoverished in fetid slums. PLP' came into being in New York City in April 1985 at a so-called national convention of Communists expelled from the U.S. Communist Party for following the Peking line. A ?D-member "National Committee" was named to direct the organization until the next convention. PLP has a number of publications, -among them a theoretical quarterlv: a month I y magazine. and so-cailed newspa~rs in New Yprk City and on the West Coast. IN NEW YORK , Pt.P h a s ex tensively infiltrated SDS an d conside rably determines its policy there. This was a subject of angry argument at the Lansing convention. The Communist Party's desi~nation of a Negro woman as Its presidential candidate was a deliberate ploy to garner Negro support. The orlJrinaI plan was to make Gus Hall, long-time CP general secretary, the standard- bearer. But Moscow c rd ere d otherwise. and he obediently made way for Mrs. Charle11 Mitchell. 38. Communist for 22 years. WRA T'S BUGGING MOSCOW American jazz music of a1\ kinds is a major reason for the long-stalled negotiations on a new c u I t u r • 1 exchange agreement with Russia. The old pact expired la11t December 3t . Discussions on a new ()ne have been futilely underway since laat September. ff and when a new accord will be reached Is anyone's gues!I. After ten months or dickering. there Is still no sign or one. .----B,, Gf'f>r11e ---. Dear George: For years my wife urged me to take up some hobbies because she &aid I was around the house Loo much. Now that I make con· structive use ·of my spare time, !'he keeps busting in saloons and flmbarra&•ing me and she's even rude to my new girl friendl. What Cll»et this! ANNOYED Dear Annoyed~ Women are JU8t lnc:on.-iltent. ble• !heir liUI• heort.. In Europe To the Editor: We were in Europe at the time ol Senator Kermedy's assassination and had a good opportunity to hear what people there 1hought of our outlook on guns. We afso liked the attitude in Europe regarding guns ; namely, treating them as lflf'ious, lethal object$ at least on a par with automobiles, aircraft and narcotics in their social implications. or course, registration won't keep guns from professiOnal criminals but the majority Of our huge number of gun deaths are not caused by professiooal criminals but by unistable people who puroflased w e a p o ns without being conscious of what use t.hey might eventually put llhem to. Repstratjon would help Unpreas upon them the seriousness of what they were doing while putting them on national record at the same time. Wilti virtually every activfty that bean; on other people's right& and safety requiring some form of control and participant's support, surely no genuine gun collector, marksman or hunter would object. And as for people who have the deep feeling that they need guns for "protection," it seems to us that they will shortly find that when everyt>ody bu I gun Ibey will have come full circle to :too the situation 111ey orillnally hoped to get out of -only with far WOl\9e potential NED ll>d MARY JACOBY More· on Bircher• To the Editor: I must take issue with Fred W. VOS8 (Mailbox, July 9) and his outrage at Birch Society members who actually had the effrontery to show themHelves in public on {of all days) July 4. As if ttaey had a rl&bt to march straight doWTI the middle of Marn Street in Huntington Beach ! Mr. Voss sees in these "uniformed Birchers" (ls there a Birch Society uniform?) the reincarnation of Hitler's bully boys, with the ' 'r u th I e s 1 organization" of a crack higtl school marching band. HE REFERS to this procession as an ''organized civill111 army" operating "on the dark edges of political process." On tbfl Hdark edges," Mr. Voss ? How much more open and public can you a:et than a holiday parade in ltle bright noonday sun? 1! Mr. VOM saw roe armed marcher in this "civilian army" he doesn't say so. nor does anyone l know Who WM there. t question tht baQs of M.r. Voss• declaration that "unifmited financial resources" were behind the marcb. From whence comes thll assumption which he states as fact? Does he have acceu to the Dunn and Bradll:ree:t ratings of tbe paradersT MR. V~· indJscrlmlnate ·tossing about of the standard hale W o r d s ''superpatrlot," ''paranolc," "fascist," and "rig'1t·win1 ~tremlst" does no credit either &o him or any truly fair-- lnded liberal (for I NSUme Mr. Voss considers llimself a liberal). Ht protests the peaceful, 1 o 1 e m n appeerance oo a public occasion or a group of 1IDC:tre. roncemed dU~na. then In the same breath calls on ue to "see that democr1cy doeJ not exc1ud• digsent." W'boM dl11ent, Mr. Voa? HARRY WEISBERGER ~ --··-! .. ~ • ·; . -~·---~ .. ~ ... -___. CZ 5 rt Shrinking Time For Everything Some fa eta yoa may not know: In every year of the past decade - since 1958 -the U.S. has spent mere on defense than it baa collected in individual income taxes; and this does not even include interest paid on the national debt, which is c a u s e d primarily by war and defense. One large casualty i n s u r a n c e company alone pays out Sl million a day to individuals wh o are injured in accidenbl; and this single dally amount is greater than the sum spent in a whole year in the U.S. for researching the cause of aceideota. THERE WERE some 3 , 0 0 0 important business and Industrial mergers in the U.S. last year -nearly quadruple the amount a decade ago - as smaller and weaker businesses find it harder to survive in this era cf abrupt technological change. Speaking of such change, the advance Jn scientific· knowledge alone doubles every 11 yean; if the scientific journal, "Physical Review," continued to grow a11 rapidly aa it had been between 1945 and 1960. It would weigh more than the earth during the next century! • War has grown at such an exponential rate since our nation was founded that it is hard t.o believe that fewer than 15,<XXI soldiers Ml both sides ~e killed In all the battles of the Revolutionary War. THE THREE largest socialistic org.arBzations ln the world -in terms of numbers of persoMel and funds - are Soviet Russia, Red China, and th• Pentagon. Despite the migration a n ~ concentration of Negroes in urban areas, the actual percentage of the Negro population in the U.S. has scarcely changed since 1900 -It is only about 12 per cent of the total population. as it was then. Our 11ational productivity output per man hour is now doub11ng almost every 20 years. rather than every 40 years, as it did before World War II - and bef<lre the 20th Century is over, It may easily be possible to produce everything we need for basic living with only 10 per rent of the available labor force. THE LARGEST single "business" in the U.S. has become education, which now accounbl for sOme S30 billion in funds each year. and i!i growing at a faster rate than any other segment of society. One of the most amazing phenomena or our time is the shrinking interval between the time of a discovery an d its commercial application : Before World War I. the lag wa s 33 years; between the two wars, 17 years; by 1970, it will be down to five or gix: years. (A homely but dramatic example of the difference is that th• zipper was demonstrated at the World's Fair of 1893, but not put lnto ... ...w tho 1930s. The Attic of Your Mind Every house should have an attic in whic h to store those things we don't need at the moment but may require later. things too good to throw away. Every life should have an attic of this ldnd, too, and every Ufe does -a room of the mind where we retain things which may be a bit out or style but are too precious to discard. This is the room called memory. a meditative chamber which serves as the chief warehouse of our being, where the occurrences of our thought and the experiences of our past are catalogued. What pleasure it is to steal away now and then from the eternal bustle of our lives <a.nd spend 111 idle while In that echoing chamber! YOU'VE GOT a pretty extensive memory attic if you can look back and remember wben- You cOuld buy a two-seated !Urrey with a fringe on the top for 148.40. It was passible to win a local reputation a1 a aage by making auch Jll'O{ound "'-"•lions 19 ~ Anybody can make a mistake: that's wb7 they put erasers on pencils and rubber mats under cuspidors: You always knew e: neighborhood fruit and vegetable peddl~ his horse if he tied an old straw bonnet on its head to protect it from tbe hot sun. One of the most wistful dreams of childhood was that sometime the Jampllgbter. who came by at du sit on his bicycle, would once -ju1t once - let you help him Ught 1 limp. A SOPMS'nCATE wu someone who pronounced the word vaudeville in only two 1yllable1, whereas the unlettered majority atways uld. ''Vaw-duh·viUe." A dude wu a JtJY who wore spats; .a fop was a IUY who not only wore Jpata -bl llJo sported • rottan cane. a a , ) During the Dapper era of the 19208 -40 years before the arrival of the miniskirt -it was agreed by head!ihaking moralists that women had never worn less in public, or looked worse. A sport was a fellow who tossed 1 hatcheck girl a full dime tip and said breezily, "That's all right, baby, keep the change -there's a lot more where that came from." THERE WERE more people in America trying to gain weight -or keep the weight they had -than to Jose il Happiness was a full.red man standing outside a restaurant using a toothpick with one hand while trying to ~ his belt a notch with the other. -~-- Monday. July 15, 1968 Tht tdif.orlal pagt of the Daily Piloc seek! to infonn. and sttm.- ulott re<U:Ur1 by preatntina thil n«10apo.ptr'• optniom and com· fMntory on topic1 of intctat ond signi/iconce, by providina a forum for Uk e:rprea.rion of our rtadrra' opin{QnJ, and by pr1111f'1tting the diverse view- pofnti of informed OOservtTi and .spokeimni on topici of the dov. Robort N. w...i, Publl\hu I I I , Newpor·t Harbor ·roday's Closhqf . • EDITION VOl. ~r. NO. '169, l SECTIONS, 34 PAGES NEWPORT BEACH, CAIJl10~ MONDAY, JULY I'S, :19.68 • • .TEN CENTS Saigon Gets Alert Tense City Awaits Red Terror ~aids SAJGON (UPI) -National police imposed the second full-scale attack alarm on Saigon in a week today when intelligence reports indicated a noon hour terror raid. None developed but the city remained extremely tense. U. S. military sources said a Viel Cong munitions dump found 15 miles west of Saigon contained enough supplies to sustain a unit of 15{) men for a prolonged -period. A similar cache discovered near Hue, the old U,IT ...... Uni1'ersal Queen Earth's entry in the Miss Uni- verse contest won again this year, this time winner" is Mar- tha Vasconcellos of Brazil. She was chosen from 64 beauties In Miami Beach Saturday night. Water Agencies Gird for Battle In Service Area Three \Valer a g e n c i e s are maneuvering into position for a full scale battle over service areas in the Santa Ana fleights and north Newpor t and Costa Mesa areas. Latesl move is the attempted formation of a Santa Ana Jleigh4s \Yater District. This is sponsored by the Santa Ana fleights W a t e r Company which serves more than 2,«M> people in the area. The district formation w a s postponed for 30 days when it appeared on this week's Local Agency Formation Commission a g e n d a . Asking for the postponment was the Costa Mesa County Water District and the city of Newport Beach. Both the Costa Mesa district and Newport have water s er vice connections and customers in the area proposed for the new district. The sponsors of the district oall it a protective measure to prevent the Santa Ana Heights Water Co. being taken over by the Costa Mesa County Water District. Negotiations for the purchase of the water company by the Cost.a Mesa district have been underway for some time and looked successful in the early stages. However they OOve broken down recentiy a~d the shareholders in the water company are attempting direct action to thwart any attempt of the di strict to t:ake nver, The new district is 53.id to be designed lo prevent a takeover by condemnation of the \Valer company. Heading the Santa Ana Heights district formation committee are Mr1. Cal M. Fuller, Mrs. Forrest Richardson and Mn. Mel 'J'heUord. imperial capital 400 miles to tbe north, could equip a battalion of 400 Communlsts. Despite the Saigon alert, Defense Secretary Clark Clifford began a round of top.level briefings with U. S. ·military and diplomatic officials. discussing the Pentagon's plans to beef up the South Vietnamese Army. \Var communiques late today reported no major battles, but front reports said American ·helicopters flew several resupply missions for U~ S. and South Vietnamese troops trying to seize Superstition Mountain, a Viet Cong stronghold in the Mekong Delta near the Cambodian border 120 miles southwest of Saigon. The Saigon alarm was ordered as squads of national police in battle ge8r stopped hundreds of t w o ~ m a n motorblkes and searched them for weapons and bombs. • Coast Blast Tied To News Strike A hand grenade hurled from a passing car into the sandbagged Huntington Harbour home of a trucking company owner who supplies paper to the strikebound Los Angeles Gov. Love Of Colorado Backs Rocky From Wire Sm1ee1 ·DENVER -Colorado Gov. John A. Love former head of the Republican Gownklr&' Association, today endorsed New York Gov. Nelson A. RocJIMeller for tbe GOP presidential nomination. Love threw his support t o Rockefeller even though he said the New Yorker was a definite "underdog" for the nomination. Love said Rockefeller faced "rmber long odds." Love i.s·a member of COiorado's 18· member delegation to the NatiOnal convention, which is only three weeks away. Supporters of Richard M. Nixon have most of the votes in the Colorado · delegation , possibly a:; many as 15. Another o{ the delegates favors California ~onold Reagan. Lov.e'"'S3id hi \Vas "hopeful" that h.is public st.and for Rockefeller wouid influence some Colorado delegates and possibly some delegates from other stat:es. Gov. Reagan picked up the lion's share of delegate strength at the Utah Republican state convention in Salt Lake City during the weekend. Reagan, a stated non-candidate for the GOP presidential nomination, picked up five of the state's eight delegates. Two delegates firmly in the camp of Nixon we.re elected. The eighth delegate, state vice chairman, Janice Romney, the sister·in-law of Michigan Gov. George Romney, is Officially undeclared, but probably leaning toward Nixon . Meanwhile Gov. Rockefeller aays he should win the nomination on the fourth or fifth ballot. A top lieutenant of Nixon says on the other hand that the former vice president will win on an "early" ballot, with the second ballot tbe target. Botlt sides agreed that Nixon. despite his apparently overwhelming lead currently, is not likely to get a first-ballot victory. Herald-Examiner caused $500 damage late Sunday night. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Brockman and their two children were in rear bedrooms of the home at l&Ml Bolero Lane when the thundering blast hurled rock landscaping in all directions like shrapnel Brockman told the DAILY PILOT today he had sandbagged the yard - one of five homes he owns -in expectation of violence due to his role in the bloody, eight-month-long labor dispute. The victim sai~ he has been moving his family around among the five homes in an effort to save them from harm, due to a string of incidents involving his trqc!P and penonneJ., .· Brockman "'1d l>e l!as been lhot at twice and hil truck& damaged due to his continuing to service the Herald~ . Examiner despite the strike by units of the Los Angeles Newspaper Guild. The Hearst newspaper· has been involved in the labor dispute since last Dec. 14, with scores 'of incidents ranging from mild curses to the shooting murder of a non-union employe, Huntington Beach police said today they are not certain what type of explosive was used in the attack on Brockman's plush home, but that it :tppears to have been a grenade. Brockman said he has be e n protected by a fulltime bodyguard hired at $3,CMXI per year, but he was not present Sunday night when the bomb exploded. Hearst officials said officially today that Brockman has been supplying their publication with newsprint for three years. Burglar Gets Jewelry, Furs Burglars swiped $8, 100 in jewelry and furs from the Newport Beach castle of a Disneyland executive, police reported today. 7be house burglary was discovered after Mrs. Jack C. Sayers, wile of a Magic Kingdom executive, returned to find clothes strewn throogbout the couple's home at 6Zl VIM& Venita. Police said entry apparently was gained by breaking a bathroom window, Contents or drawers and jewelry boxes had been tossed on beds and the floor . . The burglars left behind one mink coat but took a full-length mink va1ued at $3,300. Also left behind was a '2.«M> charm bracelet and f750 cameo ring. according to police reporta. Joh Interview • Ill HOOPING IT UP -Newport playground supervi- sor Rozzie Richards, 21, shows her charges, from left Kristy Yates, 9, Karen Steele; 10, Lauri Her- bert, 11, Mary Da Ros, 8, Tom Brock, 9, and Marc Hurlbert, 8 bow to hula a Hula Hoop. Death Toll Rlsln l·,• \ ,.J From Auto Accidents Two persons were killed in weekend Huntington Beach traffic accidents and two otlter countians died of injuries suffered earlier, one of them a Costa Mesa boy knocked 82 feet by a car last Thursday. A fifth victim died alniost instantly Satur_day when he suicidally ram1ned his car into ant>'her veh icle to climax a sifing of tormenting personal probl-cms, bul his will n:il be listed as a traffic death. The dead are : Jobt Kleckner, 57. or 512 E. Wilhelmina St., Anaheim. Pbllllp L. Lani, 4, of 16082 Gold Circle, Huntington Beach. Erle E. Pauley, 6, of 2128 W.allace Ave., Costa Mesa. Robert Mancha, 17, of Norwalk • Richard D. Maples, 19, of La Habra. Huntington Beach police s a I d 115 Deatb Toll 9~ 1988 County Trafftc 1967 Kle<!kner was dead on arrival at Huntington Jotercommuniy Hospital Friday, following .a three-ear collision at Warner Avenue and Edwards Street. Kleckner was a passenger in a car driven by Barbara Mattison, 29, of the same address, who was injured, along with Mrs. Gene Meiners, 28, of 15571 Swan Lane, driver'Of the second car. The Luna youngster boy was killed Sunday when he apparently trotted out of a drainage ditch in which he had been playing and struck the side of a passing car. The fatal accident i n v o I v i n ~ motorist Janet J. Fleming. 17, o{ 661 1 Abbott Drive, Huntlngt011 Beach, Bikini occurred on Edwards Street about 70 feet north of Lennox Drive. Deatlt also came Sunday to the Pauley boy, who was struck by a car last Thursday on Victoria Street near Wallace Avenue and thrown 82 feet, landing on his head. He had been in critical condition at Hoag Memorial llospital ever since. Police said the boy ran intp the path of a car driven by Judy A. \Vood, 25, or 8171 Seabird Circle, l~untington Beach and she had 'no time to even apply her brakes. FOURTH FATALITY The fourth fatality was that of the Mancha boy, who was thrown from his car July 7 at Golden West and Mansion streets in Huntington Beach, after it struck a power pole, Coroner's deputies said the death of young Maples will not be listed as a traffic fatality, although he used an automobile, because of Ute obviously suicidal nature of the crash. Investigators said the y o u n g husband and father tried to hang himself Saturday at his parents' home, but fouled up the job and came running into the house for help. Mesa Re8ident Fails in Plan To Escape Jail Costa Mesa resident Willlam l. McDonald. 38, remained in Newport Beach City Jail today after he failed in an .alleged attempt to walk out under the guise of another man'1 name. The othor man's wile was wailine {OT him, Students Teach Summer Class In Recreation No more classes, No more books. No more teacher's dirty looks. ' When the regular school session ends in J une the little angels soon begin to flood Coalt recreation facilities the ch~nces are that they'll end up as the charges Of other students -college or high school students hired by Costa Mesa and Ne wport Recreation Departments just for the sun1mer. The two cit i e s hire about 125 students, JOO for Costa Mesa and 23 for Newport Beach -as playground supervisors, swimming instructors, tennis instructor, sailing instructors, baseball, softball, basketball officials and day camp supervisors. Studenl5 earn an avarage '2.10 to $2.50 per hour for working with the tikes. Newport Beach's summer recreation program runs for eight weeks and involves approximately (See STUDENTS, Page %) Endorses -McCarthy NEW YORK (AP) -Eugene H. Nickerson, who was the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy'! choice for the U.S. Sena~e , declared his support of Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy for president today. Orauge~~st Weat•er It's back to normal for the Orange Coast as thoso lovely blue skles in the early morn· ing and evening are bidden by morning and night overcast. lt'a"lso slightly cooler. INSmE TODAY The area Is bounded by Newport Boulevard on the west, 23rd Street in Costa Mesa on the south, the Upper Newport Bay line along th• bluffs to the Palisades aod Jamboree roads intersection oa the IOUth and east. Moving Agent Accused of Call Girl Pitcli "That's not my husband," police l'laid Ule woman exclaimed when McDonald appeared at the jail entrance. The United State! often gives tttc Soviet Union aomething to think about a.t Ru.tsfan ah ipi watch tht maneu~ri oj the powMfw U.S. Sf<th Fleet in th• Mediterra:ntan. Pagt 12. Stock /lferbU NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market sagged slightly this afternoon tn !alrly active trading. (Quotatlons. P;.ges 22·23). The market was higher ln early trading but backed away and was a bit lower by m .1 d · d • y • Lollies · outnu~~ gains by around 100 Issues in late deaUn.&s. A .. hefty Costa Mesa moving van line agent was jailed Saturdar after a shapely girl from the D fl t r l < t Attorney's oUice &aid he made her a use-therbed-betore·we-move:.Jt p l t c h during a job interview. Donald E. Martin, 39, of 3023 Murray Lane, was booked on susptclon ol soliciting for prostitution as a result of the interview at Republic Van Lines, 1340 LOgan Ave., Saturday afternoon. Mar11n posted $315 on t h e misdemeanor charae ind w as \ ------------------------- released, pending his July l a arraignment in Harbor D l a t r l c t JudlclaI Court, lnvestigaton sold today. ' Mrs. Jan.Jee Rhodes, 24, was sent to Martin'• firm for a job Interview arter the district attorney's office was fed information alleglng the su.spect was attempdng to set up a prostitutlc;n operation. She told Colla Mesa detectives that Martin asked her to come in a bi1tlnl. then explained that part of her dutie, would Involve going to bed with prospective movtac customers. Mrs. Rhodes said Martir., who weighs 345 pounds and stands five feet nJne inChes tall , promised her '25 for eadt customer who sampled her charms in the course of business. Martin, however, told police after his arrest that he only wanted women employes to entertain client& socially and denied the sex angle. Police said he aJso had a comment In regard to asking the interviewee to appear in a brief bikini. "11 it a crime to want to look at her legs?" they quoted Martin as 11ylng. j ' Police sald McDonald, of 2015 Charle St., was &M'.ff~ an a charge of drunkenness Friday night. The next day. a· jail officer Mnt to retch an~ nother prisoner who had Just been bail· ed out. But the second prisoner apparently was asleep, and McDonald stepped up to take hla Plac<. ol!icen 1aid. The woU'ld·btl ttcape artist was rebooked on a IW'fer-charge of felony attempt escape. Jle' was «Cheduled for arraignment Jaw today on the new charge In Newport Harbor Municipal Court. I .r ' ' J DAILY PILOT Monday, J1.1l1 lS, 1%8 .....,; TAKING OFF THE ROUGH SPOTS -As Sally The two guys right are finishing their racers, Escher, 7, sands feverishly on her Pinewood Derby which th ey have designed and built for the annual racer, she gets some over·the-shoulder instruction Newport Pinewood Derby race to be held on July from Newport Beach supervisor Jacki Miller, 19. Z1 this year. From P .. e 1 STUDENTS ... 2,590 youngsters per day in the city's aeven playground programs and about 10,000 registered adults and children in the instructiooal program& !or the summer. Costa Mesa's summer program entertains about 2,500 children per day during its ten week run. Meil Scorched But Nearly All Still Mailable About 200 pleces or mail in a Newport Beach drop box were subjected to fire, water and a carbon dioxide ex·tingui.sher Sunday, yel nearly all of them are stlD malla~Je. Some of the letters may be "a llt1le hard to read," said Thomw; }''ox, mail foreman at the Newport Beach main post!offic e, because they are scorched and damp. But nearly all of them will be forwarded on to their addressees today. Those too dam&ged to be mailed will be returned to the senders with an explanation of the fire. Fox said the fire broke out Sunday about 3:30 p.m. in th.e box at 203 Main St. The fire department was called by witnesses \vho said they saw some small boys running from th e box. he said. Before the lire department arrived to put out the flames with an extinguisller, 5 o m e o n e Dpparently tried in vain to extinguish them with a glass of water, Fox uid. Woman Pharmacy Graduate Dies Funeral services v.•ill be held i 1 Anaheim Tuesday for Emma L. LO\.\'C. the first woman graduate of pharmacy in Missouri, V.'ho died Saturday. Mrs. Love, 95. a native of Hannibal. 1'-10., graduated from Kansas City College of Pharmacy in 1895. She was an Anaheim resident liince 1946 when she left Missouri. DAILY PILOT ""'"' ...... c.flftraJll RoH rt H. WotJ P'llblltller Tho 11111 Koovil fd!W .JI Tlio'"•• A. M11rphi110 ,..,.,,.gl11t f_dllOr Joromt F. Collin• '"'"""" Modi Cltt fal!or J1ck R.. C11rley Po ul Hi11 t11 .,..,_ ~""'r ~ Olroder ---22 I I Wt1t ltlboa llvJ. MoillAt MIJr .. u l'.O. l at 1171 926•1 OtW Offlc11 C.0.11 W.: Pl W.11 ll•r SI'°"' LA_.. 1etc111 m l'wttl ,._ Hlll'lt1ftlfon Bttcf>: )Of Stfl Stre~I ~~~~~~~~-'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Warrant Out for W omari In Costa Mesa Vice Raid A bench w&rrant has been issued for the arrest of the only one among four women picked up in a Costa Mesa massage parlor vice raid who has yet to work out her affairs with the law. Alicia Mendez, 28, of Compton, failed to appear for jury trial in Harbor District Judicial Court lc:'St Thursday, at which time her charge of residing in a house of ill fame would have been dropped. Charges of maintaining a disorderly house were di smissed on motion of the prosecution in th e case of Mrs. Afsar Mahjoubi, 41, of Long Beach. and Karin I~. Campa, 26. of 7892 Rockwell Ave., Midwt:.y City, when they nppeared be Core Judge Calvin Schmidt. .. They, Miss. Mendez and 1'.1iss Jessie L. Cox, 24, of 7681 Joel Ave ., Stanton. "'ere arrested. March 25 at the Costa Mesa Jiea!Ul Club, 132 E. 18th St .. , which Mrs . Mahjoubi has since CI06ed in agreement with the city. Miss Cox was the central figure in the case, since Detective Frank Upham said she took off her blouse for $5, then mc:de another offer for a $'lO fee . ' All four women were taken into cwtody on the vice charge>s, and Miss Cox was booked on suspicion of soliciting for prostitution, plus two lesser charges. She subsequently returned to court and changed her plea to no contest on one violation, rather than fight aU three charges. A court spokesman last month said erroneously that Miss Cox pleaded no contest to the original charge of soliciting for prostitution. She actuaUy pleaded no contest to Costa Mesa City Code section 4205 - Y'hlch prohibits a variety of things - including indecent exposure, le\vd acts and obscene language in public plae€s. The Cox woman asked that the DAILY PlLOT set straight the fact that it was charges such as the above that she c,hose not to dispute with the city. Newport Auto Accidents Injure Trio On W eeken__d 'fhree . teen.agers today w e r c recovering irom injuries suffered. in two unrelated weekend t r a f f i c acci.dents in Newport Beach, including a collision involving a 14·year·old girl driving a motorcycle. Th~ girl was idenUfied as a Costa J\.1esa resident driving a cycle owned by Gaylord Pritchard, 16, of Gardeu Grove. Police said the motorcycle collided with a car driven by Armando Zepari 1''lores, 22, Of 540 ,V. Wilson St., Costa Piccard Scores Another Victory, But On Ground I-lot air balloonist Don Piccard. '''inner of several aeronau tic a I contests and titles, has scored another record first -this time with the municipal codes of the city of Newport Beach . l)iccard today is the rirst man to invoke a two·year·old Jaw dealing with the removal of sand £rom public beaches. ' The balloonist sought. and "'·on. permission to "remove up to one cubic yard of sand from the' public beach near the Santa Ana River jetty." Piccard, a Newport Ji e I g ht s resident, who has his manufacturing plant in C06la J\.1esa, wrote City Manager Harvey L. ll u r I b u r t explaining he needed a cubic yerd of sand for test requirements of. a new balloon he is building. Tbt sand of Huntington Beach is too fine, and that of Laguna too heavy. but Ntwport'1 sand , .. Hurlburt's administrative assistant. Philip Bettencourt, sald the hauling away or up to five cubic ~ards of sand requires the city manager's permiaelon. Larger amounts need a City Council '°"· j,I Mesa. The accident oc.:curred at I :JO p.m. Saturady at the corner of ,Y. Balboa Boulevard and 2oth Street. The girl was treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital for injuries to her right leg and later released. The owner of the cycle, riding as passenger on the machine at the time of the accident. was taken to Orange County Medical Center with a leg fracture. The driver of the car was not injured. Police Jssued no citations pending an investigation. In another incident, fire and police rescue teams freed a driver from his car after it overturned and trapped him at daybreak Saturday. Police said Steve Graysonn, 19, of 2095 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa, was driving on Jamboree Road j11st north of Back Bay Road when the car left the roadway. He was treated at Hoag, then transferred to Orar)ge County Medical Center where he was later released. Georg e Thomas Rites Wednesday F'uneral services for George C. Thomas, Commander of the British Empire. one of seven Americans to be honored Yt'ith the order, will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Pacific View J\.l emorial Chapel. Mr. Thomas died Thursday or an apparent het:..rt attack al 1-loag Memorial Hospital. He was 81. Born in England, he was educated in Cornwall where he received a doctor's degree in science. He became an American citizen in 1930. He was presented the CBE for h11 services to the British Empire by KJng George VI, in 1950. 'Ite citation w11 for production of a mine i n Newfoundland where he wu the general m111ager. Survivors Include h1s wife, Gertrude of the borne, 310 Fernando St.1 Balboa •nd a '""'· Cleora• c. Tbomu Jr. of Riverside. llrtermeot wW follow at Pacllic View Memorial ~k. Beach Attendance Up ' . C~un_ty Bµ4,get lf ~t·s Lifeg uard Service , o f , I Newport Beach lifeguard ohiet'Bob Orange County Board of Supervlsofs The exact doUar gap Reed faces this Reed b trying to figure out how to calling for more funds. next fiscal year is .still. being worked piovide tlie Nme ,proteCtion for more To help clear up lbe air the council · out, but . be ·said 1t will amonnt to ' . several thousand dollars. people with IMt money. added it .~oukl ~ a gOOd idea for Unless the county reconsiders the Because ot a hold·the-line order coastal c1Ues to meet with County amount of money it can spring loose from county officials on department Adm.inistraUve Offietir Robert E. tor Newport Beach, Reed sald he'll be budgets, Reed is slated to get pretty TbomM to discuss a • ' u n l f I e d forced to consider some kind of much the same amount of money tttis approach for the retention of current reduction in services. fiscal year as be did last. service levell." Watem south of Corona del Mar city . The rub comes in the fact that no City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt limits were mentlooed as one area for one has given: a similar "hold·the-line" said part of the problem stemmed reduced services. order to beachgoers. from Thomas' lack of knowledge about "Are they going to tel the people Reed, city marine safety director, a special formula. It computes the drown beyond the southerly c ity says he expects roughly a 12 percent annual amount of county money to be limits?" asked councilman Lindsley increaseJ n beach attendance.over the spent for lifeguarding _s er 'vices . Parsons. !<tat fiscal perfod. , Thomas only rectl!Dtb' took over the .. "l'm sure the city of N~wport Beach Outlining ttle sltuatio:n to Newport administrative poet. will respond to an emergency outside Beach city councilmen, Reed cOnceded The formula takes into account the the city limits, but it seems unfair we that his department1s "capability wW expected yearly growth in beach shoUld have to pay for it." be brought d<lwn so~." ;.ttendance and .allOWs for more money Supervisors are.expected to take up As a result of the predicament, the to meet · the .required addition.a] the Newport Beach problem early this council ha.s shot off a resolution to the lifeguard services. week. Assemblyman Hanoi Scoffs at Johnson Badham Sued A. . D I 5· h . s1a eve opment c eme For Divorce · Assemblyman Robert E. Badbam (R·Newport Beach) to d i"y faces divorce alter his wife of 17 years filed suit Friday in Orange County Superior Court, charging extreme cruelty. ~rsons close to the Badhams, however. liaid today that incompatibility due to his absences and diiffering aims and interests generated. by his legislative career have precipitated the breakup. Mrs. Ann Badham, 36, who married the 38.year.old Republican 17 years ago In Newport Beach, was one of his key campaign workers for a n assembly seat. Badham, who serves the 71st District, bas had three two-year terms In the Assembly and was renominated in June for a fourth term without opposition. The couple has three children, aged 11 , 13 and 15. Americans Start Paying Higher Tax on l1icome \VASHINGTON CUPI) -Americans started paying higher federal Income taxes today. President J ohnson's loog-sought 10 percent surcharge - designed to raise $11.8 billion 1n additional revenue by IM!Xt J une 30 -went into effect today. The tax l.s retroactive to Jan. 1 for corporations and to April 1 for individuals. The increased withholding from · paychecks of wage earners starting this week actually will not meet the obligations of many taxpayers. Some firms were enc our aging employes to increase their weekly withholding to avert an unexpected bill ot tu settling time nut April J5. President Johns-On, in signing the tax package June 28, said Congress had "fulfilled an import an t responsibility" in enacting the bill. He said the measure -which also ordered $6 billion in federal spending cuts -would cut '21'.l billion from the fiscal 1969 deficit. TOKYO CAP) -North Vietnam today scoffed at President JobnSon's billion dollar plan for the postwar developinent of Southeast Asia, calling it "bait" to perpetuate the Amer,ican COUNTY SCHOOL PREXY Clay Mitchell Clay Mitchell Heads County School Board Clay Mitchell of South Laguna has been elected new president or the Orange Cowity Board of Education. lt will be a first term as president for Mitchell, retired Air Force major who has ~n on the county school board since 1962. Mitchell wa.s vice president of the five member board last year. He traded posts wit.h A. E. "Pat" Arnold oL Cypress. who moved down to vice president at Thursday's an nu a I reorganization meeting. The county school board has responsibility in several broad areas of education but has LiUle direct authority over local school districts. presence in Saigon. The Communist party newspaper Nhan Dan said the Communists would "build a life of plenty" for the North and South Vietnainese people alter the United States IS defeated. "The Vietnamese people ·have clearly realized that the billion dollars promised by J ohnson to the people in Southeast Asia is but a bait," the party newspaper said. ·"Tht! stick-and- carrot policy of the United States is going bankrupt. The stick has been broken and the carrot is rotten." W. Averell Harriman, Ute U.S. negotiator at the Paris talks With North Vietnam, had last \Vednesday renewed the--president's oUer to underwrite a postwar development program in which North Vietnam could part.lciapte. The Viet Cong press agency, in a communique broadcast by Hanoi, denied American and S o u t h Vietnamese cbwges of atrocity in a Viet Cong r aid that left 88 persons dead J une 28 in the coastal flstling village of Son Tra, 55 miles souttieast of Da N"ang. The Viet Cong said the attack was a "patriotically led rebellion by Vietn>amese held in an American concentration camp." Son Tra housed about 4,000 refugees at the time of the Viet Cong attack. '!' "Puppet South VI e t name s e criminals running the concentration camp for the Americans" were tbe only ones killed, the broadcast said. Husband Brained With Bat in Fight A 42-year·old Laguna B ea ch housewife hasn't much prospect of qualifying for the Angels, especially - her 26·year-old hu sband might say - after what she did to him v.-ith a baseball bat Sunday. The woman was placed under citizen's arres·t by her spouse after she crowned several hours o f exuberant predawn marital discord by crowning him with a Louisville slu gger. Sh~ went to Orange County Jail and her aching husband went to the family doctor, according to Laguna Beach police. who booked the suspect on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon. 0 OMEGA Yovr Omega Salt:1 dr Service: Ajjmq YOUR WATCH\\: .-.,-... -.,._-~ • Cleonod • Oiled ..,.~ y,. w... FREE • Adlutttd .. ~mu~, 51 • 99 $5 99 RIN"5 52.49 SIZED, frtnll ::o-:-"-:.,------ Mlul111 DinDnck $4 99 COMPLETE ... ,,..., ,,... • Jewelry Design!,. A Speclollyl • Now 2 Grut Stores To Serve You KAUOI IHOPPIN• HUMnNeTOM CINTU CIHl'll llACH A IDINM I IHI KAllOI: an. HUtmN•TON llACN COlf'A WllA 14M411 m.IH1 0pon -.. TIMlrs. Fri. Tiii 9 p.m. -ftc:ll10geod .. ..,,., frvm 11H .. • t•r""' ...... .. _ -.......... "°"" •nJ. ...... _.. """"•1• _,,,_ --· -- ,..... lO "' TOUI ...... •• ---- -- ·.f. ' , "' '·' ,;\,( •!!ijii.I 1 \'."<!. ·41.. 'fl" ~ BY THE SEA -By the sea, by the beautiful sea . , . there will be many members of the Balboa Bay Club, gathering for their annual beach party July 25. Getting appetites and voices ready for the evening event at the club are hosts, (left to righ) Mr. and Lido Luau South Pacific Aura Prevails Underlining the relaxed mood of summertime will be thP. Polynesian party planned by Lido Isle Yacht Club, the highly anticipated annual mid-summer luau next Friday. The Lido Isle Cl ubhouse will be transformed into a South Pacific setting with a profusion of fresh flowers, bamboo and exotic birds. • In keeping with the authenticity, planners will serve island hors d'oeuvres such as teriyaki, shrimp and ru.maki and the native feast features kalua pig, lomi Jomi, Hawaiian chicken. long rice, succulent Oriental vegetables and fruit plates. Diners, who are asked to don Hawaiian garb, will be seated at long, low tables at 8 p.m. Entertainment will be provided by the Tahitians, a group well known for authenticity and skill of dances, and music for dancing will be provided by Bill WoWord. Rear Commodore aqd Mrs. Donald Ray have ap- pointed Mr. and Mrs. Guy Miner as chainnen. . " ' ' " .. • "Mrs. Anthony Ballantyne and Mr. and Mrs. James Michael. There will be lots of good things to eat with dancing afterward on A- Deck for the adults and games and prizes for youngsters. ,, IEA ANDERSON, Editor Pla ns Never 'Beached' Family Fun CoOked Up The circus, the county fair and in some parts of the country the rodeo have long been traditional family attractions. In more recent years places like Disneyland have tak~n over as the embodiment of family entertainment. But there's nothing quite like the picnic, especially the coastal variation, the beach party. And that's what members of the Balboa Bay Club will be enjoying Thursday, July 25. Hearty food with king-sized portions of it will star at this open air event on the sand and A-Deck of the club. Youngsters wilJ be cooking their own bot doga and playing games for prize~. The adults will have it a little easier. Gay Japanese lanterns wi11 light the way to the chef and his staff who will prepare the goodies which will include top sirloin steaks cooked to order, corn on the cob, baked beans and fresQ summer salad right out in the open air where their efforts will do the appetite the most good. Dancing on A-Deck will be to Ronnie Brown's trou· badours and mom and dad will have a chance to show the kids how it's done. This cool way to spend a summer evening will be hosted by the Messrs. and Mmes. Anthony Ballantyne, Richard Pauley, James Michael, Richard Keilholtz and William Moody. Serving on their committee are Dr. and Mrs. Wil - liam Gautschi, hors d'oeuvres ; Mr. and Mrs. William Conover, decorations; Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Johnston, set- ups; and the Messrs. and Mmes. Herbert Riley, John Davis and Douglas Prestine. Reservations are to be made by Wednesday. POLYNESIAN PARADISE -Lido Islanders are borrowing ideas from Hawaiian Islanders for their annual mid·summer luau next Frtday in the clubhouse. Among the authentic dishes to be served include the traditional msh fruit compolm which an being - joyed by Mr. and Mrs. Domld Jacobi and Jack Jolm8ton (!ell to light). Fine-feathered Friends' Forecast Not Only for ·the Birds DEAR ANN LANDERS: As I write !his letter it is raining hard. J see two cardinals, a red·wing b 1 act bird , several sparrows and a finch feeding out.side-my window. I've canceled my plans to go shopping because the birds have told me It will rain all day. Before you decide I am craiy. ple.11e let me explain. When I first lihated my theory with friends and neighbor-1 they thoupt I had cone bonkers, but they Mve tested it out and now they tnow my theory is cor· red. People can learn a great deal from birds and animals if they observe them closely. Mother Nature has a wa y of warning her furred and feathered friends 1gainrt impending danger. U it IJ: reining and the birds cootinue to feed and don't take cover, ANN LANDERS . it means the rain will last all day. If the blrda disappear when the raJ• ·begins to fall it meam the shower will be brief and tbe sun will come out soon, It never falls. I hope you wW publish my letter, Ann. ll will help your readers plan their day. -GRAND FORKS, N.D. DEAR GRAND: Tbe we 1. the r forecuters have flve1 me se man:r bum steers I am perfedly wtJlln1 to pl1ce my flhli ID Ille blrdl. Tbub lor .... u. •. " DEAR ANN LANDE-RS: I'll start from ttie beginning and tell you my story in . as honest a way as I know how1 although my heart is broken and my spirit is crushed.. , Ourr 15-year-old son was picked up with three other youdls (all older) for smoking marijuana. COne Of the boys was pushing it.) The teenagers were taken to the Juvenile Section of the Los Angeles Police Department fOr questioning •od my bu1band aod 1 -----·---------------"' ------- ' were called. My bmband 11 1 profeukm.l man and we are com:idered req>0nsible members of the communi~-. Wi'lf!ft. the police questioned us, it dawned on me that wt were both embarrassingly Ignorant. We knew nothini ol the sympt'Oms of the marijuana user although our boy had been 1mokin1 for well over a year. We Ignored the boy's drowsiness, his runny nose, hi• con· Unual thirst. We didn't notJce bis dilated pupils, his uMMur1lly soft voice and his "I don't care'' attitude. We attached no significance to his strange sleeping habita. (Some ni.ghta he'd walk around the boose till 3 •.m. Other night.a he'd retire at 7 p.m. and sleep until noon the following day.) Had we done more readlna on th. subject we -would have known tbat our son's behavior was not n«mll. Please print thia letter, Ann. U we bad teen 004! like tt we eould have obtained some help for OW' son before be wound up in trouble with tbe police. -L.A. HEARTACHE DEAR L.A.: 1'11e 11mptonu :roa deacrlbe are .et ahrl.fl .. preDtUCed la m1rijaua 1moken. My coa11lltanta hal'e naated tbtt perbaPI )'CMlr IOD alto 1r111..UO.c • UWe tlae ud a11D& a few 8enle1. Your letter sltoald serve to alert ••reata to abD0r1D.al behavior p1tterns, however, •ad [ lllanll y .. !'• ""UJI&· CONFIDENTIAL TO W A I T I N G FOR YOUR O.K.: Sorry, I can:t 1lve It. Your bu•band'• oecrewy 1bould travtlanderborowa-v-• band OUlht~not 1r7 .., -• 1 .. bucb out of tho airline• by -· to tbll <heap gilnmlct, 'l'bll -I• hotel rooma, too, in CIM be hu IOIDtl other "mooey-11vtq" tricb up bll sleeve. IF 100 U•t-lllo ptllq Uolt, wfllr. JOt1f ,.,. ...... 11 JW ... , ... tbem te let ,.._ llve ,_,on If•, .e.t lor Au L111den' -el, • ..,.... " hnmts! Bew .. Get Mtn h•••••· SeH It ee9t1 a. eU wt&ll .,_. r04111t .... loq, llampetl, ... ....- e1velepe. -Lander' will bt 11ad .. btlp ,.. with your problems. Send them to her In cart ol tho DAILY PII.OT t11eloclll & ataniped, Mii-...... I DAll.'f l'lLOT Brides in a Stew New Cooks Get Tasty Advic~ By KAY LARSON Of h 0.111 1"119f '"" Ai the month rolls to a close are siring beans and potato chips your staple fare? Got the "not another hot dog" blues? Don't despair, help l!: around the corner. This time the white knight is in the form of Mrs. Dorothy Wenck, University of California Extension home advisor, and the first of her three seKion.s on being a homemaker. Mrs. Wenck arrived at the first presentation, t i t I e d , "Cooking For Two," with her colored food charU under her arm and' detailed advice on "what to eat, when to prepare it, and \rtlat to buy." MRS. WILLIAM C. BARR JR. Good eating depends on being a good homemaker In more than just cooking skills, she explained. "Good management is the key," she said, punctuating her statement by projecting slides. Recites Pledges Newlywed W.C. Barrs Jn order to make her career u a homemaker more pleaStant a woman must take the attitude of a household executive making important decisions. • Home 1n Costa Mesa The fut goal should be to plan for good nutrition and top economy, she emphasized. Arrangements of white and yellONV gladioli and chrysanthemums adorned St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church, Corona del Mar when Marilyn Campbell became the bride of William Crawford Barr Jr. of Costa Mesa. The Rev. John W . Donaldson directed the ring and vow e:rchanp. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L • Campbell of Newport Beach, wa1 escorted down the white carpeted aisle by her father. She wore a white peau de soie empire gown witlt a lace bod.ice and watteau train. Her tiered illusion veil was caught to a crown of chantilly lace, and forming her bouquet were white Easy Smocking 9240 SIZES 2.6 "" 11f ,..;..., 11f,..'1' ... Smoclting checks in as fall's prettiest, new fashion detail. No transfer J s neoessary -U6e gay check- • ed ctngtmm foe quick. easy IIllOCklng. Not.e cbarnting yoke detail, sleeves. Prin~ Pattern 9 2 4 O : NEW anldren's Sizes 2, 4, I . Silo I takt1 I yanb 35- ~ indl. I ' SIXTY-FIVE CENTS in c:oinJ fOr each paUern - : add 15 cenU for each pat- ·-for lht..W. mailing -. ,...i ..,....1 b.andling : 1• •* tbird-cla11 ci.11"'7 will W<o 1llree -or · riloJ'e. Send to '-~Mortill, 1he DAll.Y 1' PILO!', 442 P1!1em Dept., , Ul-lllth st., 1'/0W York, ~ Print NAME, • wllll ZIP, SIZE ~~ NtJllBEll , ....... -- ,; ~ lit -Si>rinc· · "' P II a Cllaloe. :,• ., 1111 ..... Sm! IO butterfly roses, stephanotis. baby 's breath and carnations. Yellow e"mpire J?: o w n s were selected for Patricia Ann Campbell, the bride's sister and maid of honor, and the Misses A n i t a Righetti, the bride's cousin Gayle Reynolds, J e n i c ~ Edwards and Mrs. Michael McKinney, bridesmaids, all of Newport Beach. The honor attendant carried a bouquet o f multihued spring blossoms, while the brides m·a Ids carried yellow and wh.ite marguerite daisies. The bridegroom. son of Mr. and Mrs. W i 11 i am Crawford Barr or Stafford Springs, CoM., ask.ed hls brother, Brian Barr to be hill best man. Ushers were Eric Anderson, M I c h a e 1 McKinney, Gordon Abbott and James Keeler, all of Newport Beach. A reception for 150 guests followed in the home of the bride's parents. AssfsUng were Mrs . John Chrllitiansen and M r s . Harry Miner. After a honeymoon trip along the northern coast, the bridal couple will reside In Corta Mesa. To show the importance of good nutrition she brought out a display board and Paintings On View The o r i g i n a I paintings seen on the cover5 of Orange County Illustrated magazine will be on view for the pubUc during the month or July in the Mariners Library, Newpoft Beach. The works, done in a variety ol media including oils, collage and acrylics, will be displayed as part of ttie regular Artist of the Month series sponsored by the Jwllor Ebell of Newport. All the artists are countians. Also on display is a pie· torial explanation of ttie steps required for reproduc- ing and printing a cover o( quality. The bride, a fourth- generation California, ls a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and Orange Coast College. Her husband, an OCC student, w a s educated In Kenitria, Morocco. Artists opoUfghted include Rex Braodt, Paul Dam>w, Joan Irving, Phil Dike, Joe DiVicenzo, James Warren, Frank Interlandi, J a n Kaspryzchi, Robert Young, Pat Smoot-Walker, Herb Griswold and Larry Rink. Laguna Group Wus. Charles Chapman, fine arts co-chairman, is the guiding band behind the monthly exhibit. Am-erican Legion Aux· iliary of Laguna Bea<::h gathers at 8 p .m. the secondi and fourth Thursdays in the Legion Hall. FINE BAKERY ~ eA4f,/~CaU,, light •nd •iry chiffon c1ke frosted with fresh lemon icing, 1.19 .w~~~~tizie Richly leced with honey ind 1lmond1, perfect with morning coffee, ea. 17c WIN A llRTHDAY CAKI. NBI If your blrthd1y Is in Au9ust, September or Oc .. tober, stop in •nd fill out en entry , •• •·decor• eteid 2·l•y•r c1ke to 5 lucky people each month. ? '£.~LIDO CENTER N" JNiirAm S!:WING : ~ .......... ,..--. ~~ i!W1t.....,.-11tomor· -' ~· ~ ........ ODlr""---3-4-33_v_1A_u_oo ___ ;..1N;..EW..;.;PO:.;R;.;,T.;;B:.EA;.;"C;;.;H....:_....:6:::7.::3~:3:::60::.... __ I . - What's Doing MARY DAY, 642-4321 The Bold and the Beautiful ·~·-.,,.,---~1 ! ._._,,_~~ $525 $495 The rings are a glimmering new kind of brushed 14 karat gold. The diamonds are mounted slightly offset, so they're unified when the rings are together. It's a whole new ball game in wedding sets. And it's ours alone. A diamond is for nowt (Olemond prices vary with solltaire selected.) BANKAMERICARD end MASTER CHARGE, too "" SLAVIC K'S ~efeu, "'""" .... 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER b44 -IJBO HAS A SUMMER SALE CAPEZIO'S & CLOTHES ONE WEEK ONLY STARTING JULY 16th •.. ONLY FASHION ALL ISLAND REGULAR INVENTORY 833-1333 -. - ) { I I Costa Mesa DAILY PILOT Today's Closing f EDIIION , N.Y. Stoeks YO[ 6f, NO. 169, l SECTIONS. 34 PAGES C';OST A MES.I\, CADFORNI>: "40NDAY, JULY ·1s, 01968 JEN CENTS 0.1.llY "ILOT ,~tM 111 lH 1'11111 FUTURE BIG LEAGUER? -Terry O'Shea, 16, in· structa Brian Doyle, 8, in the art of bunting. From Jeft, Scott Clarke, 7, and Greg Friese, 8, await their chance at the plate. Costa Mesa bas two playground supervisors for each of the city's 13 playgrounds. Approximately 2,500 youngsters per day take part in the recreation program. Sn1dents Teach Summer Class In Recreation No more Classes, No more books, No more teacher's dirty looks. When the regular school session ends in June the little angels s09n begin to flood Coast recreation facilities the chances are that they'll end up a~ the charges of other students -college or high school students hired by Costa Mesa and Newport Recreation Departments just for the_ summer. The two c i ti e s hire about 12.; students, 100 for Costa Mesa and 2.5 for Newport Beach -as playground supervisors, 11wimmJng instructors, tennis instructor, sailing instructors, baseball, sortball, basketball officials an.:! day camp supervisors. Students earn an avarage S2.10 to $2.50 per hour for working with the tikes. Newport Be a c h's summer recreation program runs for eight \\·eeks and involves approximately (See STUDENTS, Page %) 3-car Acci.dent Hurts Visitors ·rwo out-of-to\vn visitors '\' tl r " injured Sunday in a three-car. rear· end colJision which occurred in heavy traffic on Newport Boulevard at 21st Street in Costa Mesa. Jerline Robertson, 34, of Pasadena, and Burl T. Graves, 20, of Riverside, were treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital for ·apparently minor injuries after the 5:32 p.m. smashup. Costa Mesa police said the Jnjured "''ere sitting ln a stopped car driven by Charles R. Robertson, 21, of Highland, a GI stationed at March AFB, Riverside, when it was struck !rom .ihe rear. r~rnvestlgators identified the driver or the northbound vehicle wh.ich hit'the Robertson car ·as John D. Demotte, 20. of 400 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. Impact of the crash knocked the Robertson car into a third stopped t·ehicle. driven by Jasper Wells, 41 , of Pasadena. investigators said. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Arms Cache Found Alert Clampecl 011 Saigon Fearful of Cong Terror SAIGON (UPI) -National police imposed the second Cull-scale attack alarm on Saigon in ~ today when intelligence reports indicated a noon how· terror raid. None developed but the city remalnid extremeJy tense. U. S. military sources said a Viet Cong munitions dump found 15 miles west of Saigon contained enough supplies to sustain a unit or 150 men fbr a prolonged period. A similar cache discov:ered near Hue, the old imperial capital 400 miles to the north, could equip a battalion of 400 Communists. Despite the Saigon alert, Derense Se<:retary Clark Clllford began a round of top.level briefinl(s with U. S. military and diplomatic ofricials. discussing the Pentagon's plans to beef up the South Vietnamese Arn1y . \Var communiques late toda y reported no major battles. but front reports said American helicopters new several resupply missions for U. S. and South Vietnamese troops trying to seize Superstition Mountain, a Viet Cong stronghold in the Mekong Della near the Cambodian border 120 miles southwest of Saigon. The Saigon alarm was ordered as !;quads of national police in battle gear slopped hundreds of t w o · m a n n1otorbilres and searched them for Two Craftsmen Thieves' Victims Tools and eqWpmeirt worth more than '1,000 were stolen l""1l parked trucks belonging to Harbor Area craftsmen in wu-elated theft!: report- ed t.o Costa Mesa polioe Sunday. Ronald R. Rocheleau, ol 112 W. Pa- cific Coast Highway, Newport Beach, said his truck was parked at 560 W. 19th St., when someone took a 1750 airl~s paint spraying rig. Robert G. Neal, a glazier, said some- one took a box crammed with tools in a ~ theft from his trltlck, parked in the driveway of his home at 3142 Barbados Drive. weapons and bombs. Informed allied intelligence sources said a major Communist oUensive against South Vletnamese population centers could be expected any tinlc. und these reports produced some invasion fears. The weapons cache found 15 miles \\'est of Saigon contained two wbeel- mou nted heavy machine guns and 1.125 slicks of TNT. The arsenal near Hue was filled with rockets, automatic riOe ammunition and mines. Reporting !rom the Superstition Mountain !ront Monday, freelance correspondent Doug Warren to ld UPI allied forces had killed 16 Communists in rive days of sporadic combat. He said there were no allied casualties in the force of about 900 Sou l h \'ietnamese Rangers and A1nerican . \ir Cavalrymen. Mesa Resident Fails in Plan To Escape Jail Co.sta Mesa resi<lent William t. McDonaJd, 38, remained in Newport Beach City Jail today after he failed in an alleged attempt to walk out under I.he guise of another man's name. The other man's wife was waiting for him. "That's not my husband," police said t.be woman exclaimfJd when McDonald •P!"'ar<d at Ille jail entrance. Police said McDonald, of 2015 Charle St., was aCTest.ed on a charge of df\!!!kenness Friday night. The next day, a jail officer went to fetch an- nother prisoner who had just been bail- ed out. But the second prison.er ·apparently was asleep, and McDonald stepped up to take his place, o!flcers said. · The would·be escape artist was rebooked on a stiffer charge of felony attempt escape. Water Units Near Fight 3 Batding Over SA Heights Service Area Three water age n c I es are maneuvering into pol!lltion for a full scale battle oveT" service area in the Santa Ana Height. and DCri1 Newport •nd Costa Mesa artal. Latest move iJ the attempted formation of a Santa Ana Heights Water Di&trlct. This fs sponsored by the Santa Ana Height& W a t e. r Company which 1e:rvM more than 2,00Q people In the area. The <lirtrict. formaUon w 1 1 postponed for 30 dly1 when Jt .appeared on lhiJ week '• Local Agency Formation CamtnlMion a g e n d a • A.sking for the postpon.ment w1s th~ Costa Mesa County Water Dlstrlct ud I the city of Newport Beach. Both the Costa ?.1esa district and Newport have water s er vice. connections ind customen In the are.a proposed for the new district. nie sponsors llf the dltlrlct call It 1 prote<:tlve measure. to prevtnt the S.nta Aba Height& Water Co. being taken over by the Costa Mesa County Water District. NegotlaUom for the purchase of the water cOmpany by the Costa Mes• dJstrlct have been underway for tome time and looktd successful ln tbe earl1 1t1ges. •Towever, they have. broken down recenUy and the 1b.arebolders in the • • wat~r Company are attempting direct action to thwart any attempt of the district to take over. The new district Js said to be designed to prevent a takeover by condemnation of the water company. Hddlng the Santa Ana Jleighl'I district formation committee. are Mn. Cal M. 1-'uller. Mrs. Forrest Richardson and Mr1. Mel TheUord. The area Is bounded by Newport Bou1evard on the west. 23rd Street In Costa Mesa on the south, the Upper Newport Bay line along the bluffs to the Pallsadea and J1mboree roads lnt.erscctlon oo the south and east . Interview in Bikini Mesan Accused of Call Girl Pitch A hefty Costa Mesa moving van line agent was lailed Saturday after a shapely girl from the D I s t r I c t Attorney's office said he made her a use·the-bed·before-we-move·it p 1 t c b during a job interview. Donald E. Martin, 39, or 3023 Mufray Lane, was booked on suspicion of soliciting for prostitution as a result of the interview at Republic Van Lines, 1340 Logan Ave., Saturday afternoon. Martin posted $315 on t h e misdemeanor charge and w a s Coast Blast Linked to LA News Strike A hand grenade hurled from a passing car into the sandbagged Huntington Harbour home of a trucking company owner who supplies paper to the strikebound Los Angeles Jierald·Examiner caused $500 damage late Sunday night. ~tr. and Mrs. Lee Brockman and lheir two children 'vere in rear bedrooms of the home at 16641 Bolero Lane when the thundering blast hurled rock landsc'aping in all directions like shrapnel. Brockman told the DAILY PILOT today he had sandbagged the yard - one of five homes be owns -in expectation of violence due to his r<>le in the bloody, eight-month-long labor disppte. ... , Ttie victlirt'taHt1 tie· bas ~n moving tiis family arouftd among the five homes in an eUorl to save them fron1 harrri;· 'due to a string of incidents involvir'lg his trucks and personnel. Brockman said he has been shot at twice ari<l · his trucks damaged due to his cOnUnuing to service the Herald· Examiner. despite the strike by units of the L<>s Angeles Newspaper Guild. The Hearst newspaper has been involved in the labor dispute since last Dec. 14, witll scores of· incidents ranging from mild curses to !he shooting murder of a non·uruon employe. lluntinrt,on Beach 1wlice said today they are not certain what type of explosive was used in the attock o.n Brockn1an's plush l)ome. but that 1l appears to havr heen a grenade. Brockman said he has be e n protected by a fuUtime bodyguard hired at $3,000 per year, but he was not present Sunday night when the bomb exploded. . .. Hearst officials sa.Jd off1c1ally today that Brockman has been supplying their publication with newsprint for three years. U,IT• ...... l1 tah,er1a& Q•eeta Earth's entry in the Mlss·Unl· verse contest won again thls year, this time winner is Mara tha Vasconcellos of Brazil. She was chosen from 64 beauties in Miami Beach Saturday nighL NEW YORK (AP! -The stock market sagged sUgrtly U11s alte.rnoon in fairly acUve tradint. (Quotations, P•ges 22·23 ). The market was higher ln tarly tradJna but baoked way and was a bit lower by mld ·day. i released, pending his July 1 8 .arraignment Jn Harbor D I s t r I c t Judicial Court, investigators said today. Mrs. Janice Rhodes, 24, was sent to Martin's firm for a job interview after the district altorney's office was fed information alleging the suspect was attempting to set up a prostitution operation. She told Costa Mesa detectives that Martin asked her to come in.a bikini . then explained that part of her duties would involve going le> bed with prospective moving customers. Mrs. Rhodes 1 said Martin, who weighs 345 pounds and stand1 five feet nine Inches tall, promised her $25 for each customer who sampled her charms in the course of business. Martin, however, told police after his arrest that he only wanted women employes to entertain clients socially and denied the sex angle. Police said he also had a comment in regard to asking the interviewee to appear in a brief biklni. "Is It a crime to want to look at her legs?" they quoted Martin aa 1ayiDa:. By Council Tonight Rezoning Studied At · Country Club A variety or items are up for consideration berore the Costa Mesa City Council tonight, in what appears likely to be a fairly smooth, short. inidsummer night's meeting. The matter surrounded by most interest during the 7:30 o'clock session is the proposed Mesa Verde Country Club rezoning for two housing tracts plaMed by the R. A. Watt Co., and developer Wally Gayner. Councilmen will not discuss the controversial tract proposal tonight, but only set a public ·hearing for Aug. 5, at which tiJM ' Meta Verde l-Io.meowners Association members will air their opposition. Several hundred persons i1howcJ up bcrorc the Planning Com rnisslon last week in such a show of force that commissioners voted 4-0 against the development. although a continuance had been asked. City Attorney Roy E. June has three reports for the City Council, two of them on ordinances pro hi bitin g sleeping in vehicles and creating aux· iliory land uses for Industrial Zonff. The third deals with o f f i c i a 1 stUTender of the Costa Mesa Health Club's business license, in the wake of a vice raid and dlsmissal of cbar&es against the owner and one employe. Awarding of a contract ( o I' construction of a chain· link fence between Fairview State Hospital and the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club is also expected at tonight's meeting. Two small boys slipped away from the Fairview State Hospital grounds earlier this year and both drowned in nearby bodies of water. one of them on the course. Five in County Dead From Auto Accidents 'f"·o Jler:;ons "·cre killed Jn \"'ee kend Jluntington Bcacil traffic accidents and two other counlians died or injuries suffered earlier, one of them a Costa Me-&a boy knocked 82 feet by a car last Thursday, A fifth victim died almost instantly Saturday when he suicidally rammed h11 car into another vehicle to climax a string of tormenting personal problems, but his will n"-be listed as a traffic dealh. The dead are: John Kleckner, 57. of 512 t::. \V ilhelmina St., Anaheim. PbWlp L. Luna, 4, of 16082 Gold Circle, Huntington Beach. Eric E . Pauley, 6, of 2128 \Vallacc Youth Encounters Pot of Trouble It's nice to be in friendly hands when fatigue and the fruit of the vine combine to subdue the human system into deep slumber. A Huntington Beach youth who dozed o£f in a Costa Mesa apartment Saturday night, however, r o u n d himself in the arms or the law, arrested on a lelony charge. Charles L. Painter, 22, of 17502 Geraldine Lane, was carried out or an apttrtment at 286 Victoria St., by OfUcer Norm Kutch after a record check revealed he was '\'anted on a warrant charging assault anc\ battery. Kutch was in the neighborhood l·hecking for a hit-and-run motorist, " 17-year-old girl also taken into custody al the apartment and who appeared to be under the influence of a n intoxicant. He had asked about Painter and another youth present aald he didn't lcnow the youth asleep on his couch, but mumed him to be intoxicated, so Kutch checked his identification and ran a check. Police said the ituporous Paf!'tf.er was searched before being booked on the $31$ assault warrant when Orfirer Dick De Francisco found wha\ appeared to be a marijuana cigarette 1D his shirt pockeL The suspect was then re·advtsed of his consUtuUonat rights under the law and booked on Ute add!Ucmal char(e of poJacsaloo of marljuana. t 1\\·r .. Cost<:i !\!('SJ . Jtobert 1\Iantha, 17, of Nor\1•alk Richard D. l\1aples, 19, of La Habra. lluntington Beach police s a Id Kleckner was dead on arrival at Huntington Jntercommuniy Hospital Friday, following a three-car colli!:ion . at Warner Avenue and Edwards Street. Kletkner was a passenger in a car driven by Bar bara Mattison. 29, of the 1!161\ County Traffi c 1987 I l!i Ue.ath Toll 9:i same address. who was inju red, along \\'Uh Mrs. Gene Meiners, 28, 0£ 15571 Swan Lane, driver o( the second car. The Luna youngster boy was killed Sunday when he apparently trotted out of a drainage d1tch in which he had been playing and struck the side of a • passing car. The fatal accident I n v o I v I n g motorist Janet I. Fleming, 17, of 6611 Abbott Drive, HuntingtOtJ Beach, (S~e ROAD D~THS, Page %) Orange f:oasa Wealher It's back to normal for the ()range Coast as those lovely blue skies In the early morn• Ing and evening are bidden by morning and night overcast. lt15 also slightly cooler. ll'liSIDE TODAY 7'11e United St.att1 -oftin git>tl the Sovtet Union 1omethfnQ to think about aa Ru.sdan 1hip1 war.ch tht mautWers of tM powerf1ll U.S. Sl:tlh Flttl I• Ille Mediterranean. Page J:l. .._ ' -' ....... •• -" (•llfltrM • ....... _ • Clt•lfJMI .... Mllleffl ..... .. ,_ .. " -.. ..... ' ,_, .. 1,ivi. ""-' tt Dtetll HtrlCft ' Mell' c ..... " ·-' """' ...... ,.,. l llltwill ..... .. --..,. ·-... " ·--... PW. C•ltl ' ·-• -.. -... • -·-• ·-• AM.__. .. --• -.. --.. I , l ' J I l Z DAILY PILOT N. Vi tnam Scoffs LBJ Asia Plan TOKYO (AP) -North Vietnam tod•y 1COff~ at President Johmon's bUllon dollar plan for the p05twar development ol Southeast Asi2., calling It "bait'' to perpetuate the American JX'<'""""' 1n s.Jgon. The Communist party newspaper Nban Din said the CommunlsU woold ubuild a life of plenty" for the North and South \7ietnamese people after the United States Is defeated. "The Vietnamese people h av e clearly realized that the billion dollars promised by Johnson to the people in Southeast Asia is but a bait,'" the party oewspaper said. "The stick-.and- carrot. policy of the: United States is going bankrupt. The stick has been broken and the carrot 13 rotten.'' \V. Averell Harriman, the U.S. negotiator at the Paris talks with North Vietnam, had last Wednesday renewed the president's offer to underwrite a postwar develOl)ment program in which North Vietnam could particiapt.e. · The Viet Cong press agency, in a commuNque broadcast by Hanoi: denied American and S o u t h Vietnamese chc:srges of atrocity lo a Viet Cong raid that left 88 persons dead June 28 in the coastal fishing village of Son Tra, 55 miles southeast of Da Nang. The Viet Cong said the attack was a "patriotically led rebellion b y Vietnamese held in an Americs.n concentration camp." Son Tra housed about 4.000 refugees al the time ol the Viet Cong attack. "Puppet South Vietnamese criminals running the concenh-alion · camp for the Americans" were the only ones killed, the broadcast sajd. Police to File Murder Charge In SA Slaying Santa Ana police Wlll seek a murder complaint today against Earl Roy Lyon, 24, ol La Habra. who was arrested Friday night h1 the shooUng death of Raymond C. Ruiz, 23, of 2!:;23 S. Baker St. Investigators said they will alao discuss with the di.strict attorney the possible involvement ol Lyon's wife, Judy, in the shooting. She is alleged to have handed him the gun. 1 Also hit by the same slug whi ch killed Ruiz was Rudolph Guzman, 25, of Santa Ana, who was struck in the right arm. Police said Ruiz and Guzman were walking by the apartment where Lyon's sister, Donna Sheppard lives . They were said to have gotten into an argument with her and the shootir"" followed when she allegedly called Iv brother into the picture. Women Offered Police Positions A career in Jaw enforcement, be· ginning with police clerking and ma- troo duties is awaiting applicant.s, ac· cording to the Costa Mesa Police De- partment. Young women 21 and over may ob- tain applications for the position at U1c Police Facility. 99 Fair Drive. A background ln general office work ls required and applicants for the job must be good spellers and type at least 50 cotTeCt words per minute. Applic&11ts must also have a good personal background and qualified character refermces. ,., ' . ' ' DAILY PILOT c:MM M-. Cellfenl. Roh.,t N. Weed ,..,_ TlioM11 K11~il .... Th••• A. M•r,hi111 IUNllM Efllor J1cl k. Curl1y P1ul NiH•" .. :-1 MlnQlfl" .&dvtrll1lng D!rtd or ---2JO W11t t 1y Streit Molfbtf A44r,11: P.O. loi 1560 •1626 ' Othet Offic11 ~ ... c.11: 2211 W. l•ltlio9 l oultv11• UIYM •e•c/1 1 "22 1-trttl llo¥1ftlMI Mul'ltlllt191 IQdl: M Siii ll•MI .,, • Mo,,dl)', Jul115, 1%3 • Me sa Warrant I ssued Police Seeking • 1 Vice Raid Figiire A bench ws.rrant has been issued for the arrest of the only one among fonr women p1cked up in a Costa Mesa mmage parlor vice raid who has yet to work out her affairs wlth the law. Alicia Mendez, 21, of Compton, failed to appear for jury trial In Harbor Dbtrlct Judicial Court 1 .. 1 'lbunday, at which ti.me bu charge of reNdlnr b:r. a boUH of ill fame would havo been dropped. · CbKgea of ma1ntalnin1 a disorderJy hoUH were ditmlaed on motion of the proHCuUon in the ca.se of Mrs. Afsar ~oubl, u, of Loog Beech, and Karin H. Campa, 211, of 71192 Rockwell Ave., Midway City, when t bey apP.eared b e f o r e Judge Calvin Schmidt. They, Miss Mendez and Miss Jessie L: Cox, 24, of 7681 :Joel Ave ., S1'nton, were aJTested March 25 at the Costa Mesa Health Club, 132 E. 18th St ., which Mrs. Mahjoubi has since closed in agreement with the city. Miss Cox was the central figure in the case, slnce Detect:.ve Frank Upham said she took off her blouse for $5, then ms.de another of.fer for a Pl fee. c All four women were taken into custody on the vice char.ges, and Miss Cox was booked on suspicion of soliciUng · for prostitution, plus two lesser charges. She subsequently returned to court and changed her plea to no contest on one vlolaUoa, rather than fight all three charges. A coUrt spokesman last month said erroneously that Ml.s1 Cox pleaded no contest to the original charge ol sollclUng for prostitution. She actually pleaded no contest to Costa Mesa City Code se<llon 4205 - ¥>hich prohibits a variety ol things ..... 1ncludlng indecent expoatae, lewd acts and obscene language in publjc places. The Cox woman uked that the DAILY PILOT set straight the fact that Jt was charges such as the above that she chose not to dispute witb the city. Assemblyman Badham Sued For Divorce 1'.fesa park. Callahan is one of 100 college students the city hires to man its l~week summer recrea~ lion program. JUST CHECKINC UP --Jack Callahan, 20, checks the action as, from left, Susan Brown, 10, Alan Brown, 6, Kathy Sherzer, 11, and Karen Brown, 6, while away those long summer days at a Costa ~.:.....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Piccard Scores Another Victory, But On Ground Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R-Newport Beach) today faces divorce after his wUe of 17 years filed suit Friday 1n Orange County Superior Cow·t, charging extreme cruelty. From Page 1 STUDENTS ..• 2,590 youngsters per tlay in the city's seven playground programs and about 10,000 registered adults and children Jn the instructional programs for the summer. Costa Mesa's summer program entertains about 2,500 children per day during its tee we~k run. From Pagel ROAD DEATHS. occUrred on Edwards Street about 70 ft.et north o! Lennox Drive. Death also came Sunday to the PauJey boy, who was struck by a car lasl Thursday on Victoria Street near Wal1ac1e" AVenue and thrown 82 feel, landing on his head. He had ~n in critical condition at 11oag MemoriaJ 11ospital ever since. Police saJd the boy ran into the path -of a car driven by J udy A. Wood, 25, of 8171 Seabird Circle, Huntington Beach and she had no time-to even apply her brakes. FOURTH FATALITY The fourth fataliiy was that of the M3ncha boy, who was thrown from his 1·:-.r July 7 at Golden West and Mansion streets in Huntington Beach, after it struck a po\ver pole. Coroner's deputies said the death of young Maples will not be listed as a traific fatality, although he used an automobile, because of the obviously suicidal nature of the crash. Investigators said the young husband. and father tried to hang himseU saturday at his parents' home . but fouled up the job and came running into the house for help. George Thomas Rites Wednesday Funeral services for George .. C. Thomas, Commander of t;11e British Empire, on~ of seven Americans to be honored with the order. will be held at 2 p.m. \Ved.nesday at Pacilic Vi e1' 1'.1emoria1 Chapel. ~1r. Thomas died Thursday o( an apparent he<:'fl attack at l-loag Memorial Hospital. lie was 81. Born in England, he was .educated in Cornwall where he received a doctor's degree in science. Jte became an American citizen in 1930. He was presented the CBE for his services to the British Empire by King George VI. in 1950. The citation w_as for production or a mine 1 n Newfoundland .,.,·here he was the general mooager. Survivors include his v.•ife. Gertrude of the home. 310 1',ernando St .. Balboa and a son, George C. Thomas Jr. ol Riverside . Interment will follow at Pacific View Memorial Park. Suicide Wro te Name On Arms, Legs SAN FRANCISCO I UPI) -Wnen. Collin Hul~r. a 22-year-old Mill Valley youth. stepped off the Golden Gate Bri<f8e to his deaU1 Sunday he apparently had no int~tion of being listed as a ''John Doe." \Vhen liutter's body was picked up a short time later by lhe Coast Guard, a deputy coroner found the victim's full name .and the telephone number or his mother carefully lettered with a ballpoint pen on botl'l arms and both lees. l. Newport Auto Accidents Injure Trio On Weekend J·lot air balloonist Don Piccard, v.•inner of several aeronautic a I contests and titles, has scored another record first -·this time with the municipal codes o! the city of Newport Beach. Persons close to the Badhams, however, said today that incompatibility .due to his absences and dif!fering a1ms and ilrterests generated by his legislative career have precipitated the breakup. Mrs. Ann Badham, 36, who matrie<l the 38-year-old Republican 17 years ago in Newport Beach, was one of his key campaign worker& for a n assembly seat. Three teen-agers today we r c recovering from injuries suffered in two unrelated weekend tr a ff i c accidenb: in Newport Beach, including a collision involving a l'-year-old girl driving a motorcycle. The girl was identified as a Costa Mesa resident driving a cycle owned by Gaylord Pritchard, 16, of Garden Grove. Police said the motorcycle collided with a car driven by Armando Zepari F'lores, 22, of 540 W. Wilson St., Costa Mesa. The acc!i;lent occurred at 1: 30 p.1n. Saturady at the· corner of \V. Balboa Boulevard and 20th Street. The girl was treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital !or injuries to ber right leg and later released. 'The owner of the cycle, riding as passenger on the machine at the Ume of the accident, was taken to Orange County Medical Center with a leg fracture. The driver of the car was not injured. Police issued no citations pending an investigation. In an()ther incident, fire and police Staff Added • At Saddleback Saddleback College in Mission Viejo, continues to add to its professional staff with the employment of an assistant librarian, a g u i d an c e counselor and two more instructors. The junior college, which will open Sept. 2.1, now has with the addition Of the two new instructors 25 or an anticipated 30. Appointed assistant librarian is Dorothy Kathleen Spidell of Orange, currently a librarian at Orange Public Library. The new guidance counselor Is Dr. Mary M. Beets, who ha.s been an assistant professor at San Diego State College. The two new instructors are Vlcy M. 1.eldorf of Costa Mesa, a t r 1 J n e · stewardess Instructor, and Wayne J . Horvath, art instructor. Mesa Fh·e Causes Damage of $1,000 Fire which e r u p t e d after smouldering for some time in a couch caused an estimated $1,000 damage to a Costa Mesa apartment Saturdav night. although neighbors threw wate'r into a window. The unit was occupied by Mrs. Mary Fedewa. of 598 Joann St., according to investigators, who said nic major loss. $750. involved the victim's personal belongings. The apartment owned by Alen C. Storreman was empty at the time names flared up, according to Costa 1'.1esa Fire Department investigators. l\fesa Thieves Gel 82,391 in J ewels Theft or $2,391 worth of jewelry and money was reported to sheriffs deputies Sunday by Karen Dyer of 1132 Victoria St. on the west side of Costa Mesa. She told officer• the thieves broke Into her home while she wu absent. rescue tean's freed a driver fron1 11is car after it overturned and trapped him at daybreak Saturday. Police said Steve Graysonn. 19, of 2095 Santa Ana Ave .. Costa Mesa, \Yas driving on Jamboree Road just north of Back Bay Road when the car left the roadway. He was treated al l-!Gag. then transferred to Orange Cou nty Medical Center where he was later released . A mericans Suirt P ayi1ig Hig her Tax on Income WASHINGTON (UPI) -Am<!rtcam started paying higher federal income taxes today. President Johnson's long-sought 10 percent surcharge -designed to raise Sll .6 billion in additional revenue by next J une 30 -went into effect today. The tax is retroactive to Jan. I for corporations and to April I for indlvlduaJs. The increased withholding from paychecks of wage earners starting this week actually will not meet the obligations ol many taxpayers. some firms were enc our agin g employes to increase their weekly withholding to avert an unexpected bill c:it tax settling time ne:ct April 15. President Johnson. ia signing the tax package June 28, said Congress had "fulfilled an imp O·r tan t responsibility" in enacting the bill. 1te 1aid the measure -which also ordered $6 billion in federal spending cuts -would cut $20 billion from tbe fiscal 1969 deficit. Piccard today is the first man to invoke a two-year-old law dealing "'1th the removal of sand from public beaches. The balloonist sought, and \YOn, permission to "remove up ~o one cubic yard of sand from the public beach near the Santa Ana River jetty." Piccard, a Newport He i g h t s resident, who has his manufacturing plant in Costa MeSa, wrote City Manager llarvey L. l-1 u r 1 bur t explaining he needed a cubic yard of sand for test requirements of a new balloon he is building. The sand of Huntington Beach ls too fine, and that of Laguna too heavy, but Newport's sand ••. Hurlburt's administratlve assistant. Philip Bettencourt, &ald the hauling away of up to five cubic yards of sand requires the city m a n a g e r • s permission. Larger amOlDlts need a City Council vote. Buttons Galore At Mesa Library Buttons, buttons, who's got the but- tons'! The Costa ?t1esa County Branch Li- brary at 566 Center St., does during July and August -buttons of all kinds, from the armed forces to state public services, comic characters, fairy tale figures and other things. Garden Grove resident Mrs. Henry \Vall has placed her elaborate dis- plays with the library for the next two months. Librarian Gertrude Pearce notes, for the benefit of potential viewers. that the facility will close Aug. 13-17 for routine inventory. Badham, who s e r v es the 7lst District, has had three two-year terms in the Assembly and was renominated in June for a fourth term without ()pposition. The couple has three children, aged 11 , 13 and 15. No Driver? Well Not One That You Could · See A Costa Mesa policeman who noticed a great big convertible with a little tiny driver cruising city streets Sunday jailed two small boys on suspicion of burglary and grand theft auto. Patrolman Bob Overholt said the pair readily admitted stf!aling the vehicle belonging to Daniel L. Robinson, of 1010 E l Camino Driye. after he pulled them over. The nine-year-old driver, who \Yeighs 64 pounds and could barely see through steering wheel at four feet . seven inches tall, was also driving barefoot, an additional violation. PoUce said he and his IO-year-old passenger were cruising along Ctt Presidio and Junipero drives when they were spotted and stopped a fe\v blocks away. Subsequent questioning implicated the boys in a burglary as well and they were booked into Orange County Juvenile Hall. pending a hearing. 0 OMEGA YOUR WATCH'\:•---., ... ----~ • Claonocl • Ollocl "" ;:.::;•;,.•;=,.;..;W:::•:;.• _--:F~l-"E'°"E • Adi a.-..1 • PEARLS Sl 99 .,_ RE·STRUNG • $5 99 ="'-., •• T'-'-s -$2.-49 SIZEO, frM Ml. D&li I JI $4.99 COMPLETE :::"'"~=""';:<-' '"'-=-.,,-..,-7-'-~ .lowtlry Dltlfniell Cllnaocrapll • Self. A Spod1ltyl wladen 1U111U1 W1111t: ~~~l//M FAST Dl ,I NDAILI IHVICI > • •• Now i Great Stores To Serve You MADOI .. °""... HUNTINITON c 1m1 CINJll IU.CH • IDIN .. I UM MAllOI IL.ft. HVNTIN•TOM RACH COSTA ..sA 14M41S "2·1111 Open -· Thuto., Fri. Tiii 9 P"" -.......... "-'""" llll ln1~ ...... ,.._ ........ w •u1-tla frotft llli. --"-l lJQ. _..,_ _ ... -- TllMI TO '" YOUI IUDMT ' ) l I I ' i' .. .. ",, v ... A;: .. , .. ' l • • • ·.~· DAILY '°ILOT Slt ff """'' · 'Oil Sites Cleared Assistant School ~i!! ~n":~t.~~y prlnclpal o! Joiln Muir Hl~h School In Pasadena, has been appointed as an assJ.stant principal of Westminster High School by the board Of trustees of Huntington Beach Union High School District. Marvin Marshdll, an admin.lstrator 1n the Los Angeles City Schools Systems, also was appointed as an assistant principal .at Wesbninster. -•• • --..... Moodar, July 15, 1968 OAJLY PILOT 3 Cooper Elected Chairman Of Beach Park Board ltecreation and Parks Commissioner Thomas Cooper has been elected to his second term as chalm1an of the Huntington Beach commission. Vice chairman will be Bruce \Villiams, representing Golden \Vest College. N e w commissioners introduced during the Wednesday meeting are Dr. Ralph Bauer .. of Ocean View Schoo1 District : Ada Clegg, of \Yestminster School District ; and Lee MosteUer1 ot l!untington Beach Union High School District. The City Council is t.'Onskierl.ng applicants for two f u 11-term appointments to the commJ11sioo. _ : '.Where once stood the dusty wreckage of years of ·:·.'.oil operation now are working bulldozers clearing .. · land in an attempt to make the old Huntington :, .. Beach oil field available lor new uses. Here is par· tially cleared well site which Jong has been point- ed out as not only ugly but a health hazard. The area has been cleaned and junk removed. Many other old wells are to be removed in the next month. ,, Reeds BY WILLIAM REED • • • In the Wind · ·.At the Aug. 14 meeting of the . -Huntington Beach Recreation and ·Parks Commission some of the -pfOblems of the various Little . ~agues and other pctvate sports -leagues around the area are due fof heavy discussion. ····· Principal problem of the leagues : :·rs·· finding a location they can call .,.Jiome with any certainty. Because · ~ the great expense of land the · 'ieagues generally have looked to the city and to the school districts for ballfield sites. Over the years the attitude of botlt sides bas varied considerably \Vith the city first opposed to use by .;private sports groups of public · ···Jl~operty and now apparently will· "in_g to try to work out a solution to ~ 'the problem. '•' * .,. '•'The Little Leagues have been de- manding and uncooperative al limes, but apparently no\v are r.eady to cooperate if a workable .·solution to the land problems can be found. · One of the problems of both · sjdes in the land dispute has been · t.hat unless all that is said about Dne group or another is favorable, . me feeling is that someone is . ·against them. ~·The Little League and city prob- lem certainly is one of those areas where no one is completely in the right and no one is completely \vfong. Of course not everyone sees it' that way. * Those who do will recognize that the city has just so much park land and that there are many de- niands for use of the property. Marina Park at Edinger and Gra- ham Street is an example. Resi- dt'.!nts in the area would like a neighborhood p a r k. Robinwood Little League wouJd like to con- -tinue using the park for the ball program. It is possible tha t both activities can co-exist, especially if a plan lo increase the size of the park by some five acres is adopted. Use of school land has worked out to some extent, but it's difficult to make permanent improvements on school property. : Valleyites Advised : To Specify UF Gifts Fountain Valley residents who work : in other cities !lhou1d designate, when giving to the United Fund, that thelr · money go only to Fountain Valley, . -ised Donald Blakely, a6M9 United 'Fund city choirmlll. . Charles Dlsoa, Valley b o 1 r d · <lhalrmu ol the West Orlmi• County ' 'unlled ·Fund, said the city-wide · 'campallll! will begin In 5eplm>ber. . 'rhe campaiil''• goal $24,500. Underground Utility Law Comes Up for Cit y Vote One of the more controversial pieces of potential legislation comes before the Huntington Beach City Council tonight. Iit's the city's attempt to put on the books a law leading to underground installation of existing public utilities. Ordinance 14291 would allow crea- tion of an Underground Utilities Commission and o( underground utilities districts in th'e future. Such ctisitricts could require that utility poles and overhead wires be elilninated from areas of tile city. Such an ordinance is required before the city can claim slate funds set aside for undergrounding utility lines. The ordinance, which comes up for second and final reading, would allow the City Council, after appropriate study and public bearings, to establish Valley Hi gh Girl Named to Attend Dimes Confer ence Karen Otsuka, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Otsuka if Midway City, ~'ill represent the Orange County chapter of the March of Dimes at the National Young Adult Conference on Birth Defects July 21-23 at Brigham Young University, Utah. A Fountain Valley High School senior, Karen has served as president of the girls' honor-service club and has been active in the Pep Club, Estates General, Spanish Club and has been a mem·ber of a number of class councils. She will be 1968-69 treasurer for Girls League and hopes to major in art after enrolling in college. She plans to become a teaCher . underground utility districts. Following adopt!ion of a resolution naming an underground u t i 1 i t y district, the city would have to notify owners oC the involved property. Underground utilities would be required within 30 days from the receipt of official notice . U the 1'Jndowner did not provide the underground services. the city would instcll the service and bill the owner . Protest hearings would be held for anyone wishing to protest an assessment for underground utilities. Utiilty companies would have to provide connections to individual properties so long as the liries did not exceed 34,500 volts. The ordinance proposal specifies cel'tain o t be r exceptions as well. Several councilmen .already have voiced displeasure with the ordinance, claiming that it would a ff e c t home owners in ·areas built without underground utilities and that no cost li.ntits are spe<:i!ied in the law. Tennis Places Still Available Openings remain in tl1e Wesbninster Recreation and Parks Department tennis sessions beginning July 23. Children 's classes ar-? offered at 11 a.m. at the La Quinta High School tennis courts and at 1 p.m. at the Westminster High courts. l·lousewife lessons -are 9:30 a.m. at La Quinta and 2:30 p.m. at \Vestminster. All classes meet on Tuesday and Thursday. Registration fee is S2.50 for the four-week course. PaymMt should be made at the department office, 14381 Olive St., 893-4511. In San Leandro Ta x Rate l{eeps GoingDown ,Not Up SAN LEANDRO (UPI ) -OfUcials in this community of 74,000 -where the property tax rate bas been going steadily down for 20 years -are again preparing to lop a few pennies off the rate. Mayor Jack D. Maltester says the city council on Aug. 19 will consider a · tax cut of two to five cents on the current rate of 90 cents per $100 of assessed valuation . - San Leandro~ located on the edge of San Francisco Bay, has managed to lower its tax rate each year since 1948 -the only U.S. city to accomplish this fiscal mJracle. The key to this happy situation is a Anderson Named Trustees' P rexy ,I Roger Anderson has been elected president of the board ol trustees or llunUngton Beach City School District and Orville Hansen was named clerk. Traditic:m. oalls for the newest member to be elected derk and .as president a Year later. Bo .a rd meeting• wi1l continue to be held at the admJ.nirtraUve 0Hice1, 17t bstreet a1Jd Palm A'lenue, on the 1eeond and foorth Tuesday of the month . \ broad indu strial tax base consisting of some 300 healthy industries. many of them national in scope: The city's total tax assessment has increased each year, allowing regular reductions in the tax rate. This year added revenue will come from a large increase ln assessments put into effect by the Alam~a County assessor. "\Ve could spend all this added molfey without any effort. but we aren't going to do it," said Mayor Maltester. "We're going to turn a good part o( it back to the taxpayer." Akin Selected For Convention Dennis Akin, Huntington Beach Higb School senior, has been selected as a delegate to the Interscholastic Press Association convention, meeting at the University of New MeJico July 29 through Ang. 8. Akin, Of 7791 Uberty L a n e , Hunlington Beach, i! 19 8 8. 6 9 commllisiooer of publicity tor the high a.chool. In addition to a theoretical 1tudy of jouruali11m, the week long seminar will provide 1tudent. the practlcol experience of working on campua publications. ------··-~=~~~~---......... --........... -------------- ~ \1 l <f h" \~ Fortre as ions. { !' the romantic look of fall Juliet dresses in brown frosted with black velour, iced with black lace and tied with velvet ribbons, Of easy care Celanese® Fortrel®polyester and cotton. • By Chann of Hollywood; 5-13. Fo!l~t•;,. ttadem"~ ol f ibe! lndusbles, 1ne: • • u umS' Newport Center °il Fashim lsland • 644·2200 • Men., TulllS., Fri.10:00 till 9:30 D.!ler days 10:00 li11 £37 \ I I I l I --- 4 OAILV PILOT (C_,.... -... Dt1tw ,1111 ••ffl Competitors in the Naples So n g Festival have sung ballads for years about broken hearts, aching hearts, cheating hearts, and lonely hearts. T.nor Aurelio Fierro bas come up with a new angle. His eJJ-o try was entitled "The Transplant" • ' ~· ' ' -. . Caudy Froehlt, a Pasadena secrltat'JI, dim her toe gingerly into tht 1~ tain at the Los Angelt.s Cioic Cmkr ~fall. Moments later, she .tvmbled.into tlte water. She didn't seem to mind at aU ~ the Lot Ange!t.s area tempera- tures at the time. tDf.:re hovering around the 100 mark. • Republican Wigmor• A. Pi•rson has mixed emotions about running for election to the Mas sachusetts House of Representatives. The rea- son: His Democratic opponent is Da vid J. Babley ••• his landlord. • A 10-year-old Pueblo (Colorado) boy has been sentenced fonunning a stop sign with lrla bicycle and col· liding with a car. Judge Fred J. Mack said that young J-ph~V•l­ cnti would haye to spend 30 days on foot and off his bicycle. • ~·,._a.,i;;.,....,. ... ..,,;iii ............ "I 1~ There wiU be no li.aircutl in the town of Adams, Mass., 12,000 population. during tht week of July 16 through July 22. The members of the barbers union voted to close all sllopl for the iveek so that everflone am have equal vacation time: County colJector Clifton Hurst, of St. Joseph, Mo., couldn't get a full night's rest. "A radio kept playing ln the distance and bothered me all night long," he explained. Hurst said he was sure that the people playing the darn thing would ·turn it off sometime but it kept operat- ing all night. \Vhen Hurst arose to prepare for his day's work, he found the radio which had been bothering him. Jt was on the dress· er in his bedroom. •• In 1965 \Vhen the Arkansas River flooded South Dodge City, Marion Murphy \\•aded through waist·deep \Valer trying to rescue a man trap- ped in his home. \Vhen he returned to high ground he discovered his \\'allet \\1ith $120 was missing. Last \Veek. three boys playing in a field uncovered l\1urphy's wallet and the $120. The boys. Don and D a v i d Shumard and Greg Underwood, re- turned the \\•allet and money. to Murphy . • - F"rlday, J11\f 12, 1%8 Tal.ent for Headlines. -Rep., Pool .. Dies ! Of Heart Attack HOUSTON (UPI) -Joe R. Pool (D· Tex.), member of the House Committee on Un-American Activities and opponent of all things Communist, collapsed and died SUnday of a heart attack at International Airport. He was 57. Pool, who stood under 5-feet-6 and "ilr-eigbed ove!' 225 poo¢s, '!as likeable, jovial, jolly, unsoptusticated and down to earth. He had a talent for making headlines -defying federal judges, b.ilng..arrest.ed after' a traffic accident, being sued for dan)'age to a house. He was direct in bis likes and dislikes. HiJ greate&t fame -or notoriety , canie from t h.e controversial anti-Communist committee and from his hawkish views on the Vietnam War. He w1.4 cbtlirman Of a HCUA subcommittee meeting in 1966 to ccoaider his bill 'to make it a federal crime lo Interfere with U.S. military traffic and prohibit shipping money, supplies or blood to the \'let Cong, The day before public bearings were to begin, a !eden! !ud1e In Washington issued an injunctioo. forbidding the beorlngJ. Pool proclalmed he wbuld go to jail _.. allowing the judic!a! trandl to interfere with the Congress. Minutes blfore the bearing began a higher court knocked down the injunction so he did not get the chance. The bearing was stormy. It was marked by demonstrations and shouting. Police dragged out and arrested many or the demonstra<>trs. Pool interrogated the hostile witllesses in a I01Ud voice. The witnesses replied to questions with condemnations of U.S. Policy. Pool was arrested last July in Six Auto Racing Accident Victims Remain 'Critical' MARNE, Mich. (UPI) -Duane Wilson's modified stock car was doing 100 miles per hour when it climbed a cement wall at the Berlin Raceway and sailed into a grandstand. Two persons were killed and 26 injured. "The back wheels just sorta came loose," be told police. Six of the 26 injured were in critical condition today. Wilson, 18, suffered minor injuries and was treated and released from a hospital. The youth had just entered the fourth.turn.or the final lap of the race ;n this Western Michgan community Saturday night when hls front wheels jumped onto the rear ol aoolher car. The car, going 100 miles an hour. then wrenctied free and \Vil son's right front wheel spun onto the four-foot high cement wall fiWTounding the track, police said. "He traveled about 31 feet like that. then tlie wbole car was on the top of the wall and sPed for some 90 feet into the first five rows or the grandstand seats..". said Sgt. Jack Rosema of the Ottawa County Sheriff's Department. "It flew up jnto the grandstand and pieces of it were flying all over," said Trudy' De Heer, a spectator cit the track. Two Grand Rapids brothers were in the standa·wtten the car hurled toward them. Billie Brakefield, 17, was killed instanUy when the impact· threw him from the staods to the middle of the track. His brothel, Albert, 15, was listed in critical dlndJtion. James. Mason, 35, Allengan . l\.11ch .. \Vas the second victim . Arlington, Va. He spent flve how;1 lri jail on a reckless driving charge. Police said his car hit another from behind. His Congressional immunity did not help. The judge said he did not know who Pool was. "l was not under arrest," Pool said. "I was waiting for the judge to come down." _'.two weeks later the Congressman setued out of court a '7,771.11 suit brought by his former landlord who accused Pool Of damaging a suburban home. Pool said flooding did the damage . Pool received a law degree from SOuthern Metbodi.st UniveJ:"sity in 1927. He practiced law for several years and served in the Texas House. In 1962 he was elected Congressman at large and was re-elected twice -· once at large and once from a Dallas district. The body was arriving in Dallas today. Funeral plans were incomplete. Newark Blaze In Tenements Kills Fireman NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -Two blazes killed one fireman and r o u t e d hundreds of persons Sunday . Fire director John P. Cauliield said both fires were •••erinitely suspicious." One fire raced through half a dozen vacant . tenements in Newark• s pred<Eiinantly Negro Cenb"al \Vard, the scene exactiy a year aao of rioting that took 26 lives. The blaze began at 2:30 a.m. and sent hundreds of residents from threatened tenements across the street fleeing in night clothes and underwear. The flre took the life of fireman Edward Dennis, a 41.year-old father ol two. Caufield said an investigation ·would delve into the possibility of ar&on. 1 "Why would a fire start in the/ middle ol the night in··· vacan~ bUildings?" be said. A.short Ume later; a'1llrW"'oiannl· blaze broke out in a vacant fOur.Story1 factory on Mulberry Street i·nl downtown Newark. One fireman was: slightly jnjUred and the factory was burned out. Officer Killed; Hunt 2 Sru;pects PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - A young policeman was shot and killed today on a street in WeSt Philadelphia and a citr.vide manhunt was launched for his assailant. The victim, identified as Patrolman Ross Brack.ell, 25, was pronounced dead on arrival at Miserlcordia Hospital after the 8:40 a.m. shooting at 52nd and Walton Sts. Police broadcast an alarm for two :tuspects, identified as Barry Clark, and Philip Clark, 24. The alarm urged caution and said the suspects may be armed and dangerous. Police ...had feared tl1at Bracketl's assailant was armed with his service revolver but this later \\'as found abandoned in the backyard of a building several blocks from the scene of the shooting. Thunderstorms in Midwest A~ Raitf,s Wash South, Buffalo Ties !ligh With 91 CalUornla PRlYl[W Of £SSA W[ATM(llUR[AIFOQCAIT TO J:tt A.M, [ST 7 •II ·5• "''"?t:.-I\ SHOWlll-COOlll ..... '°0 MILD Coastal Tlltr. w•U boio nl9'11 •1111 mornJM IO"f <1-t tncl Pl!UIJ lot Mc~ moot· .., 11.ft!J In mkl .. l!t•-KICll J '"" l~1Clrf. Wlfllls wm be n9111 1nc1 vtr\. •ble bt<oml ... """'" .... '"''!' 11 f9 10 """' W. It-. ti""'"-. ~J tt-•IUrH r11'!1'fd flllfft ., to n •I-""' Or•fltt! '"''' w1111e lfll.w\d "" flntl WH .. lo a. Wtttr ~lt\lrt l•ll. Suu, Moou, Tide• -· $fcOt!d le• l:S<I '·"'-1.1 T-dtJ Finl '"'~ . 1:111 m. ),I Flrtt io.. t •O •.m. 1 I St<Olld Mtfl ):n •• ..,. ,,1 Secon4 l(IW • • • IO;JO P.l'I. l.t Mooll Ill .... 11 :0 •• ..,, ''" 11:41 '·"'· Sufi It.._ J:A 1.1!1, Jttt 1.0$ ,,..,. Lttl O. """ J'l"I 0 , '•It J11t11 II J11!J ~ Aut. I AUf, I ll.S. S1un ... r11 T""""lfnl """"'efSICI"'" ~eel KrllU Ml<lllftG'lt !{II' 11\f lour1h 1tr119'11 °"' IOCl1p, tflfi MW'•I tor ...... 1 ""''' re- ~ """"-• ,,..,.,, In cont,Mf, w1rm J1mr1J "'"11M!r c-rwo:I ...,., Gf Hit Miion todrl', Tflvt>. dtn'-'1n t (lfVl" dlmlftl..-''°"' "" Co/If lltlft TO ttlt Ollie v•lllJ. ~If • dottt1 funtltl doudl ""''' 1l9lllecl M Mlnnnol1 tllriOtJ 11191'11, llu'I tht onl• -to taudl ...,. ffrnetecl lflf'W bulldllltl Mtr Nllnred. No lrt-1~ wt~ re-1•. Torl\Moel .,..,. 1lto "'°''"' '"""' In l'tortfl Ctron,.., ~lorlOI, Ml<cf11111•, Ml"kourl .,.. IMI-. DllNI.. we1 "''"'°' •rid llO lhlurln ..... """'"· HMllV N lhl ..... Ht'b tf Oli:ltr. .,,,. -""' T1~11 Sur*J Jlllllt, TW9 fe lflrf'f lnthll d,..lldltd Mwnttlh Vlftr, Oltl1,. '""'lllnt •tn11tn1 Ill the ''"' Altloi<lvtreu• --All•n" l11tersflelcf l lsm.tl'<lt .... ..... Ch!C•to Clncl-11 ClfVll•"" °"'~' Oe• MG!"'' Detroit Eurell• !<Ort WOl1~ ·~­HelftMI ·-· ._ ... Kanst• Cllp ltt Ve1111 lM A""fel Ml"'!•I Mltwllli<M MlnnNllOll1 New Orfu.n1 New York 0.ltll!WS ........ Ptse lltob~ Pt11t•1i>t11-'"""' Puuo.,,,..11 ,,.,,, .. 11!1111d Cl" llttd •Mt ·---· SI. I.Gull s.11,... 5111 ll>k"1 Cl" .... _ kn ,_~llCI S.n11 ltrMr. ..... s.-1t11o Tfltmi•I W•lflllltlOOI Hllll ltw ,.,.. " " ·" " a .. .. " .. .. .. .. " " • " " .. .. .. • " " " " M .. .. " .. " " .. " • .. " .. • " " "' " " ., .. " ·" " n " " I.~ " n .. n .. " • " " .. H n ... ., " .. . .. .. " " .. " ., " • .. .. " •• .. " " " n " ., " n .. .. .. " " '" " • " I r I I I ...-::::- Readyfi • • .unn1e e d~live~ --- . Depepdal?lt? at your fingertips. The Gas Company supplies its more than 3,000,000 customers with enouab equivalent energy to launch 143 Apollo missions to the moon-each and every day or tbs year .. That's a lot or,epergy. Yet there has never been a time w!ien reaidents in this area had to wait for gas service. Jf you've always been a Southern Californian, that statement won't strike you as unusual. But many people from other parts of the country 22. think it's unusual. Arid when they move here they're glad we've worked hard to stay ahead oI the rapidly increasing need for natural gas. We're an investor-owfled company, state regulated. And we're always lookinc ahead, planning ahead. That's the way we do business. M ore gas is being used in Southern California for a variety of reasons ... from broiling hamburgers to ai r conditioning office buildings ... to consumption by industry including electric generating customers who want to burn natural gas to help in the fight agains~ air pollution. Gus is the number one source of energy in Southern California. We're inve!tor-owned. That's why we take that "extra step" to rqeet.the growing needs of our customers, large and small. Keeping you satisfied iS our number one job, SOUlHERN COUNllES (l"ves!cr·owned Com1>11n~ ol the P<1c1tlc l.lght;ng Sy5leml Are you the Two/One/Free I type? Would you like to know what your service charge will be from month-t0-month? I Do you become a little nettled or confused when your service charge goes from $1.98 one month to$2.69the next? I ' I Do you frequently have service charges greater than$2.00? Doyouhavo a balance that seldom goes below $500? If you answered yes to any of the above questions, you're the Two/One/Free Plan type. The Two/One/Free Plan is a brand new Bank of Even if )'Oll're not the Two/ ; One/Free Plan type, )'Oil am ' llill be .......... of ·-~ ' ~ nwenea . America checking account . It's probably the most eco- nomical account you can find if you write more than 18 checka a month and maintain a re1ative1y low minimum balance. lt'a f...e if your bal· type. Bee&_ Bank of Amer-: anceis $500ormore. The lea bas Penonal Choice : most you11 ever pay i1 Cbecking-fordifterentlcind1 '. ' $2.00. And.your service ~fpeople.TofiDd-eactJy : charges are simple and predict-which of oar Pencoal Clioice · able. In faq, they're this simple: accomdl ii the right kiDd fer , ~ llioJaDM M~ CWp )"OU. Yilit J"OUt 1-tlill Bat : .... ,.. ,,.. ' . of America Brmch. ._. ...... ' $300 to $495' $1 .0I) .--.u-. ....... _.. ~ fbr. cbedr-up. Peopl~ are cflfferent. So are Ban~ of America· Personal Choice Checking AccoUnts. -·------·----~ .( ) -·r----- New York Bombings Continue NEW YORK (UPI) Police tod~y found a n unexploded bomb al the French National To u r i at Office. The bomb squad dismantled it sal~y. Since April 22, bombs have been detonated 'in New York at six diplomatic missions or national tourists offices of nations tradin·g with Communist Cu b a. Police .sources believe anti· Castro Cubans based in Miami are responsible for the bombings. Police said the device. consisting of an alarm clock. dry cell battery, blasting caps and plastic explosives -was in a shopping bag banging on the front entrance of the French Tourist Office at 610 Fifth Ave. A security guard and a 1 --' ._ . . .. ' .. ' . -j • • ...... -... ·-·· ..... - Fre nch Celebrate Riots PARIS CAP) -Sman sporadic clashes between .]>oliCe and y oung damonstrators punctuated Bastille Day celebrations Sunday night in the Latin Quartt:r, where crowds of toutista had massed for an evening of merrymaking. Mark Gaulle rode down the Champs EJyscelii ,in an open car despite the r a I n . acknowledging the cheers o! the crowd. Later the prosident stoOO in a covered. stand and watched units from all branches of the l'~rcnch armed forces marctt past. Among the displays were DAILY PILOT /S Bastille Day bulldoz.ers like lhOsl! that tore down the bal'ricadc11 the students thre\Y up in May and June. The red, white and blue of the F'rench TrlcOlor were in evidence everywhere.-Few persons wore the ted roses of the left wing in their lapels. There were scattered riots throughout the c a p l t a I Saturday nl,lht. and about 20 persons were J n j ured, including seven policemen. Violence also broke out in B!!sancon, wh.e.re so111eQ.ne set fire to the parade reviewing stand, and in Bordeaux , where two police s!atio:?s were attacked with Molotov cock1 ~:ii'i:. Small groups of st\ldents )tend ~ several thousand helineted poUce m a s's e d along Boulevard St. Michel, on tbe watch for leftist distutbances. The poUce hurled tear gas grenades af the hecklers and launched several baton charges. A number of persons were injured. NIGHT .nd DAY SERVICE There were few disturbances in the capital doting the day w h e n thous.ands turned out in drenching rain to watch the annual parade rn-iewed by President Charles de Gaulle in his brigadier general's uOirorm. With Dt Gaulle 9:30 A.M: TO 9:30 P.M.-SATURDAY 10 A.M.. TO 6 P.M •. patrolman both saw the Trapped in P~I '. bomb shortly after 2 a .m. and called the police bomb Patty O'Brien, 12, of Watervliet, N.Y., waits patiently for rescue crews lo squad, whfch dismantled it. jackhammer the drainpipe in which her arm was trapped at the floor of a Scott Guiliano, 19, the swimming pool. The pool was being drained a nd Patty's arm was myster- security guard. said he iously sucked into the pipe. Patty ~nd the pip~ were finally separated fro_m the picked the bag off the pool after five hours and both are 1n the hospital where doctors are trying to doorknob, opened it and remove the pipe. · Were Premiere M a u r f c e Couve de Murville and other" - members of the n e w Clbinet. After reviewing the troops at the Arc de Triomphe, De looked inside. __:.c:;.;c... __ ..:_:c_ _____________________ _ "It looked like a coffee Tho ' container," he said. "There were some while wires. I put. ii oti. the ground and walked away." Patrolman Ed Mahoney said as he was calling the &tati'onhowe a s e r g e a n 1 drove up and they decided to get emergency help. The bomb squad took the device apart right there on Fifth Avenue. Czechs, Soviets Waging Serious War of Nerves Orange Co.st's Most Complete PRINTING SERVICE -·w New York police have launched a wide hunt for suspects in the bombings that began April 22 v.•ith hifs at the Spanish National Tourist Office and t h e Mexican Consulate. Suspect Set For Hearing On Murder NEW YORK (AP) - Bobby L. l\ogers, 31 , accused of killing three men on a Bronx street was brought back to New York Sunday. "I'll see you. Later , ' ' Rogers called to relatives as he left the Alamance County jail, accompanied by two New York detectives and a representative of the Bro'nx district attorney's office. He faces arr a i g n me n t on homicide charges today. Rogers eluded a New York City police dragnet after the shootings Thursday night and fled to North Carolina w her e . accompanied by his brother Henry Roger s. 35. of Burlington. N . C . , he surrendered to authorities. Authorities in Ne\Y York ,,·ere holding Roger s incommunicado and refused to say where he '"'a s or ho.,v he had been brought back to the city. PRAGUE (UP!l-A Czech government source s .a i d Soviet Army forces today made no move t.o withdraw from Utis country. The Prague press warned that Moscow is planning "measures against Czecho· slovakia. '' "Soviet!, go home'' signs began appearing on walls over the weekend. The government source said Sov i et troop commanders here had told Czech leaders their forces, whose pullout b e g a n Saturday but stopped Sunday, Would resume the withdrawal today. Tb e Russian5, ¥astly unhappy over the seizure of power here by refqrm Communists blamed Sunday's halt on heavy civilian tou r i 't traffic. The Russian forces came for last month's East Bloc military maneuvers but did not leave when the War R eservists In A ssault C A M P PENDLETON (AP 1 -Five thousand regular and reserve Marin:!s hit the beach at Camp Pendk!ton today in an air·sea amphibious assault called "Operation B e 11 Banger.'' The fourth di v ision reservists from 1 14 states are undergoing two weeks of annual active duty training. games ended Jwie 1. raisin& fears among supporters Of the Liberal Czech Communists. Prague newspapers. freed from censorship by the Liberals, said Ule Soviets were mappin-g a campaign against th e Liberal regime in a Warsaw conference of CommunJst leaders from Moscow p lus Ea.it Germany. Hungary, Poland and Bulgaria. Russia, U.S. Jet Flights Start Tod(ly MOSCOW (VPJ) -A giant Russian jetliner took off today on the first Soviet commercial fligbt to the United States, ending 10 years of negotiations that waxed and wa.ned with the poUtical temperature. The Soviet IU)'LLShin 62 ol the government a i r I i n I! ..\eroflot left M o s c o w ' s Sheremetyevo International Airport al 11 :25· a.m. witll 100 pa ssengers, including Soviet officials, newsmen and some payi n g passengei:~. It \\'as due in New York at 4 :SO p.m. EDT after a stop in Montreal. The Pan American World ,\irways jeUiner 1 e ave s K e n n e d y International . .\irport in New York at 8:25 p.m. EDT for the first flight in the olher direction. Sl1oe Sale further rediictions \ Special Greopt \ WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES 1 I. Joh1n1•n-Flor1h•im--de Li10 Yalvll la $25 ···············-··-· 13" ', :::~~~~~00 ················· 18'° l Naturul111f-Al"1"o-1'-1jo PARADISE KITTENS ' ::1;;;,SO -·········· 8'~ IO'° -CHILDHN'S DIPT. - Stride Rilt-Specl1I Group · 7111 .. 8'° -&IRL'S KEDS - --Sluo --~·-····· 200 I \ I Edllh Hlftry-M .. bt- Ltft~:....VJo Votte FLATs AND SANDAU ~a!$~.oo ..... ... . . 5 to,. 9 to 011• Group WOMEN'S KEDS Mully-200 "' ...... --················-···-· Pen1ljo Wedge Slnd1ls v ..... ,. 16.00 ....................... -. 9 '0 -SPICIAL GROUPS - Men's florshelm Dress Shoe: 19• .. 24'° I Fa mous l r1 nd 1 I MIN'S CASUALS ......... -....... $10.00 SANDALS ·---··-····-···-···· $6.90 U you wear a large size. don't miss this sate. Sizes to 13. 1COSTA MES• e "PHONE 541·9744 •1 1131 NEWl'ORT ILVD. • The pre&s here called it a Soviet "war of nerves.'' Phone 642-1321 I All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday . Dressmaker sewing savings! Cottons! Acrylics! Blends! All reduced during our mid-summer cleqrancel ftrints ahint brightly in 100 -A. combed cotton 1atetn lelO and ~ ....... Mr*" 1110k11 lftts h.outiful Ml!ITlfr .nat., 1kr_, ond host.ts.,_. .O" "'4it. Machine wcn ha bl1 acrylic pri nts in fancifu l patterns S.W .ofi, t.mininl lmhiohi wUh thh eo1r ccn 100~• ocryllc foWjc. In 11 -1- 011t arroy of pott1rn1 011cil colon U-4$" wide. Qrlg. 1.9888. c Orig. 2.4~ NOW . y.i. NOW:·"· . It's ahttr 1a v4ngs on printed volle yorda91l D!Xl'Of!' polytitlr / tOlfOll voi!. prl11l~ lo~• o lr~rnl!lonal 1l1p IOMtrdJ kill, lig on desigm, 1mol1 on price! "'•Melt. COSTA MESA (Harbor Shoppin9 Cen ter I HUNTINGTON BEACH (Huntin gton Center) Cotton •••rsucker for sporty casual wear NEWPORT BEACH ( Fashibn Isl a nd ) I l ( I -......... .---------~ ~-. 4 ,• •• Whale. Bor.n . ' 1st in Captivity Stillbirth REDWOOI) ~!TY (UPI) -A !D-fopl lone killer wbale cave birth to a stillborn calf Sunday night at the new Marine World amusement complex. Marine World olficlala said there are fewer than 12 killer whales Jo captivity in the world and they believed the birth, altbough urwuc<:euful, was the first involving a capt!ve whale. Ti1e mother whale, nicknamed "Bonnie" was broua:ht to the amusement park June 9, alone; with a second whale. Both were captured near Pinder Harbor, British Columbia. The 7,~pound whale's pregnancy .was unknown to her keepers and the firaf indication that the birth was in procress was the emergence of the baby's tail. The birth process toot about one hour and 15 minutes. Tbt newborn whale immediately dropped to the bottom of the 14-foot deep tank where the mcther attempted to nuda:e it !>Ack to the surface. When that failed divva went into. the wa'-'r and brou&bt the seven-foot. 2l'J0.1>0und call t1p in a net. ResuacltaUon w.u attempted but the call showed no l1ln of li,fe. . ' Picriic Becomes Tragedy As 3 Children Drown SAN JOSE (UPI) .-A three-fmtily picnic on the allor<I cl nelri>y Calero ~-.. ~ _,. ---. dlwbicl-~ 'lbe· children were -eel .. DllM Shonk, IJ,herbrolher-- •;l!ld -Qolml, 10. All the dll~n lived in the aeme San Jose apartment building .and were picnicking with their mother& and a tlllrd f&mily. The ·,;.,~ began wtien Shoan waded into the arev. cl.• 20-foot 4eep channel thoa rum 1llrouifl I h e re1~.·Bis silt« tried to reodl l*n, and IOI! her footiJll. Young Quinn 111en tried ID i'oadl ... - diildren l!ld W. uni late the muddy wten. A Santa Clara County sherill's deparbnent diving learn recovered the bodies four hours alter t h e accident. Ex-harbor Officers •' . Face Jail LOS ANGELES ( UPll - Former Harbor Commis· sioners Robert N1 Starr and K a r I L. Rundberg face pOss.ible ooe-lo-14 yea; prison terms, and" Uie Cit}' attorney says their bribery convictions 5trengthen the city's case in ~ttempting to cancel a 812 million -World Trade Center contract. Starr ana Rundberg were convicted Saturday o f accepting a bribe in the Monsignor Gives tJp Priesthood form of $6,500 \I/Orth of LA JOLLA (UPI) office furniture Ir om Msgr. Joh n L. Storm developer Keith Smit.ti . The announced Sunday he is jury of eight men and foor )eaving the pries~ .and women announced t h e the· Roman Catholic Church Veidict in the'"' Superior after 25 years becaufe it Court of Judge William B. continues to move.. "in. the J(eene after almost 17 hour! direction cf inltituUoneliz. Of deliberation. · in• God.·• · Keene set sentencing for • Storm, former tresident Aug. ~. Each mail could d. the University of San receive from'ooe to 14 years DiegO, said be. resiiiied· his i11 pdlOO. . . ~zte II All · Hallows Clt:i Alty , Rorer Oiurch Jli!y 5 llld aent a Ameber&ll Hid Sundly he letter of rt:sigution,1 to e1pected the oonvictiob1 to Bishop Francis J . Furey of help the city's attempts to the San Diego Diocese. cancel its contract for . "One or the compelling construct.ion or the 1 trade reaso.ns for my detision ," center by companies b.eadH he said In a statement,' "is· by Smit!). that in Spite · of Vatican Altbmi&h the convictionJ Council JI, the Rom a.n eould be ova1:urned on Catholic Cburcb eiW mov,s appeal. Al neber th ..ail, "u in the d i r e c t i o n of a ~ mllter, the in<titntlonalizinc God." -will..,.• ~ry storm ,.;.i · he ouffered moteriOI effect. They will he through "l!ar...meo15 and very di.llCOUf'ICine to those ·injustices Of ·.'tht system' " .who liti&ate ·11 to the io the Joiist 18 months of his b Ind in~ n e 11 (Of the · university presidency. He contract).' said he retaiDed the tille of The a:r&nd jury h a s pr~&kient -but was i_ n indlcted Smith himseU on 10 actuality a ' ' p u p p e t counts of bribery a n d president from September, perjury. 1957 to March, 1959." ·Re .agati; .. to , '"Ke,e.p. Faith~ • .SACRAMENTO, (UPn -• !Mp! of an at1e Gov. Ronald Re1pn 111<1 llnbolublnc by two SW\jlly la ~ tel•v!Mc! chat y-!alt week, ·~ out wl\11 Cllll«nilot tbll be Orlllly'&11lnat rocia~dOOnc lalendocf to "k .. p faith" aa a •. ...... o1 ~Wnc with racial mllliorltte1 but dlfferencet~ · 1 · wouJd not "srand.stand" "Mobs do not ·Jlner•te wfth, prOmlses. prOpeu; they retar4 Jl, ... he He lald II< hoped to close $lid. "Mobs do not !1'!1bll1b boa."•• expec-· PP -il&llta: they lnmp~ thoJ11 . a" chasm _betwee.a wha! .ii No ob will ' t'(tt1l~ld a atid what should bt" and a better.cawornia, ot a better c b m m u n I c a Uons gap world. And dtoe• 'f.ho •oold bttween majority and Ie•d a mob 4r.e minOrlty eom""'-ani:tiea. doub~I ~ v e r·y But tbe R •·P,u b J'i can · peop1'.t6ey preteafj they are governor, whO&e ho.me waa: tryinc to help." 'I Widow, Di vorcee Wed Reapa.'1 broedcaat, pre. tilmed lo color, w11 carried by 15 televi5ion st.aliOna: in the a·ta le ' s metropolitan areaa and made available in a lf>.minute tape to 250 radio stations. Tt.e a t a t i o n ' carried it without charge bul Repu~Uc•n party fun<ls paid fO( the filmjn(. The Republican governor, who 1ay1 he won't actively eek but will accept hU: ,Party's .preside n ti a I nomlm.tlon, leaves Friday for another round o f ipeeche5 to raise funds for the GOP. . He will ~ak in Am.Jrlllo, Tex.: Little Rock, Ark.: CharlottesvWe, Va:; and Baltiniore, Md., b e f o re attending tbe three· day primarily on him. But 1t times it cut away to rhow racial fl;\l.oorities al 'vork and play. The bulk or the pro~ram was filn1ed be.fore the attack on t.he go,vernor's llome by two Negro youths a n d Reagan tnade no referen<.·e lo the inddent iD tJ1e film. Th1e y ou ths, whose makeshlft firebombs were not lighted, hive not been captured. 1,400 Guns Tw·ned In By Catholic Priest n al i o o a I Io v e rnors' SAN FRANCISCO {UPl)- conference. Afterward, he Mayar Joseph Alioto's "no • plans a IP e e ch in questions asked" I \In LA JOLLA (UPI) -A Kav:anaua:h said th e Birmin&ham, Ala., ·before collection ended Su n day Roman ·Catholic priest who marriage was a civil, not a return.Inc to California. with more thari l, 4 O O mariied last .December in reJi&ious ceremony b u. t He spoke Friday at the weapons sunendered t 0 added~ he. is prepared for a Utah state GOP convention Li defiance of church celibacy court fight. if the union in Salt Lake City shortly po R~ktents turned in 144 rules performed a marriage ihould be challqed. before the western state e:unis on ttie f\nal dlil:y of the ~eremony between a '11 an lJ o·u n c e d :rhy · pickeC! its 'delegates to the month-long anmesty period di"{orced father of five and a resia:nation " fro m the AlJ(USt Republican National declared by the mayor widow. priestbood a t ·t.e r my O>n\(~oo .. Of . the eight following tile -assuslnation I J&!Jlft , Ka~F8°od gh~~ marriage, but never went delegates,· 'five fa v -or e d o{ Sen. Robert F. JCeMedy. ·author of 'Am ern .,~-.. through wiit.h a formal Reaa:~ and three Richard The weapons will be LooU at His Outdated resignation, '1 he s a Id . M. Nixon. meked down and the iron Church," nid he~ as a Kavanaugh 'said be had not Reagan's Sunday ch al used tc build a monument to 'icivil witness" Saturday in been foram.Uy excummuni· showed him -sitting on the President John F. Kennedy. officiating at th!!!" ceremony. cated from the church and edge of a desk in his Los Martin Luther King and ~,''I am a .priest forever and said he would have f~t Angeles office and speaking Sen. Kennedy -•I I under California · Law, a 11.M:h action in the courts. while the camera focused assassins' victims. priest iS atdhori.Jed to -~,.:..c=:..:::...:.. ______ ~---------------- perfonn a ·marriage ceremony," Kav~agh 1aid, "My resignation from the Romm C,.a.t·h·o l·i c PriesUlood does not alter my legal status." The couple was Wiltiam Brockiey,. director of counseling for the Human Resources ·1nsfitut:e ""here . and Mrs. Jean -Rf an· of nearby Pacific Beacp. • We it.rin1 Mmplnl • ,,... consultationl • free 11tim•t•I • Ne oltligotionl Shop at home! Call collect (714) 523-6511 El Rancho travel& with you to the corners of the world This week we bring the enj1>yment of delicious food& and enchanting r,lishe1 of • • • , Cabbage .............................................. . Solid ••• and the recipe for "Colcannon" is intrirui~! Beef Stew ................ . .. .. . .. .. ... .. .. .. . .. ... . 59c ?>iaty Moore ••• 24-o.z .••• for an Irish di&h ••• in minutia! Del Monte Salmon .................. .. . .. . .. .. . 93c 6'ekb't ••• No. t can •.• try the Irish "Salmon Loaf" recipe. &old Medal Flour ............ :.................. 49c ,,,.. ~ be ... homemade bread i1 typicolly Jriah ! ~-JliskeJ ...................................... '7" Old ....-.n ... ath ... pour I jirger into '"·armed coffee .. ~~to !Mte, fill with hot 1tro~1 corr .. , top with wllJiipld .., lrilh Coffee! FeaJ.,.U.g, 1hu -k •••. 8Jllhonticolly lruh •«if'<' (with not a bit ef Blarney) . • . yow1 for tM uki.nf fl our· ~rvice mc!'tU co wit er! Corned Beef ..... 7 9~· \Vhat could· he more Irish. th.an Corned Beef and Cabbage? •.• and El Rancho's Corned Beef ia Jean, from 1elected rounds! Lamb Stew........ 19~ Be aure to ret our recipe for real Irish Ste\v ! SHOULDEI CUT Lamb Chops 69~ The Irish reliah the f'()()dneN1 of tasty, tender lamb! ROUND IONE Lamb Chops· ...... 89~ SerVe them broiled ••• and pour a 1J1s.s of Guinness Stout! Pntatoes ....... S ; 29c No. I White Ron .•. do try the recipe tor "Potato Cake.s." Pricea 1'.n effret a.t fill 1tM"e1 At .... T.ua., Wed., Julv i s, ~6. 11 MCAlllA: S-.nset & HU1Jliolttio Or. (e R•ncllo Cioterl _ . ',lfMIDIA: 320 West Colo!aclo Blvd. • SOlllll '~ Fremont l Hunliniton Or. 19)TI MBTDN IEACN: Warner and Algon"in ·(Just ~as! of Hunlington Harbour) IDPGIT IUClt 2727 Nowport BM!. • is5s· &slbluff Dr. (Easl~•ff Vi111&t Cenler) ' I; -· ... ' ' \ i ' • .. •. ' \ ~ \ i \ .I • ~ ; l_-..,~ '· : ":~ .-· , , -~: . , . '. ·.\, Special c.ustom drapery bonanza means terrific savings for you! 2.69;d. *Fabric and labor • A handsome selection of fashion Manor fabrics in nubby textures, a iry sheers, open weaves, antiqu. s.atins ond natural homespuns. You get 1both fabric ond labor at a price . you would expect to pay for the fabric clone! Coll t~oy ! : ·.: . '.<. ~-~ , . •,, ; ,,· '~': · ·,,~ ~lf 1welcome summer .~ ~. with Penneys· shag carpeting . ;~ .. .. ' .. Continuous filament nylon shag carpeting DuPont "501" nylon thog carpeting Continuous filament · 7.7,."{ : 8.7,.."! . nylon "'"°.and solid 9 7 7 shag carpeting • ,.. J4. Special low pri,.. Include inatoltotion with poddin9l R UHYOUIO '"'ENNEV CHARGE .ACQCUNT., ~;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;T;O:O~~;~:'=-v : SERVICE AVAIUllE IN GREATER LOS .ANGELES • I OR.ANGE AND VENTUR.A COUNTIES • • For ·~the lffeetiags MOM DAY Uni"'-FllN li•tc:lltl..,. lurd, Corti ........ 1 ..... ...i, WJ H.,.bor I I,.., C•tt Me .. 12 -Nfl'<l!'l'ON iqr!iW Ar .. Y~ Mt!!'I CluO. Odl•'• ?12 Ii:. 11111 llrHf, C114tt Meu, E:iit;f·'ft~: ltbcoQ; Ellt1tonlc1 ~""'°"' 1 u1. I 'b r. •·r. k llCfronkt. I Htrl!Or l\ltl., Codi "' 1:1s1:,~-· P~~ol1y, •::r. .C011t Ch111t1r, .,...IOllic: ttllP I l 11 St.. tncl St AMniWI 1"11(1, """'°'' lt1ch, 7:30 O:,.;Ci,y, ltunllnvkwl llHctl Cl\tprer, #Mtonlc T.,... .. , 10ol lokt A'o'fl'lut, t-l1111tl"'t.oi INdl. 1:30 .,m. COlll ~.. ...rmony led.. No. 2', ~ Ftll~tll' 1.SU HtwHl't ll'd., ~ 1 'rUll'DAf' l'.lfl. co.t• Matt E•tPlt~ Club, Corel lteet iil.11t111r1n1, l64S' H1'11or llYd .. Colli ,..,. .. , 12 -MtwPOrt H1rW Adl,.. ~ Club, Vlllt" Inn, 12' Mlr)nt, ltlbot bl1,..,ll!IOl:Orl I (WOii• dOI M•r ll:IW11\15 Club. VIiii lwtdton. 35:16 E. C011t Hl<thwt•. (.,,._Ml Mtr, 12:!0 1.m, H""llntkl'! ltld'I ROllrv Club. Nor111, F1111r Wlnd1 rt1l111r1n11 1'411 kl .. Chlcl lt...S, ~Mlnctleft llKll,, U:U 11.m. H1111tln11to11 IH(h ll:twon11 Ch.lb. HUnllnt""' a..a. COllnlr., c1111:o. m 11111 St •• Hllntl.,.ion .. tell. ll:U 1.m .• N._-t H•rbor OollmlJI Cl~1 VIiie Mlrlnt, UW! ltv1kle Drfve, N1wll011 ltoci't1, I!: 1 p.m. Coste -Klwtnb Clult, Ct5Pleft Rf1f1ur1nt, IUO He_,. llvd .• Coate Miii' 12:1S p.m. ltot1rv c ub el c.,.,, Meu.Nor111. Costt MIM Golf Ind CO\mlTY Clutt. 001 Goll COUrM Oft¥t, CCllll Melt, 12:10 "·"" Births l•N• I UCM CO.M.MUlllTY "rv.:1r"l Mr. tlld Mn. Rla:1r<:t J. C..ltlauft, 7'tl Ror11ld Rot•, ~~wlneton htdt. 1lrl Mr. 411111 Mr.. Fr:., ; lu-cea. '°2 llltl St., H11nt11111on lttclt, alrl ST. JOll,H HOSPITAL , •• , s M•. !"" "'t Htmllkln Chock. 1t411 le• ntlllt! tne. Hvntlntlotl Inch, t lrl Jutr 1 Mr. Incl Mr1. E<tw1r• t: Mlsbrwlc, 1!.l56 01nborouttt, Wt.,lmln1\1r, 1lrl Mr. Incl Ml'I. (Mn<11 I<, ltmm, H'2 M1rblo c•rdt, w111m111ti..., boJ Jllfy • Mr. Ind Mrt. Jtmt• L ~lendlh 20532 ~rl>l1 Lt nt, Hvnl ton etch, Div orces Record F i re Calls HNt--19"11 12:2' t.m. S.tunMr, ,,.tu flt•, l lt l &rvlh Orlve ~:115 l'·l'fl~ '""le.ti 11d, 161'1 M1rloft t:l)~.m., ttr flrt, W1mtr Av111U1 e•st ol Gothtrd Street "'so '·"'· Sundt.,, medl(tl 11d, 1110 lloultv1rd tM Oce1n Aw-11 :?2 1.m., ,,.IH fl rt lnvwntll \~:20 p.m., 1116otlne Wt~n. lwint• ond E<lwtrds Shwl l :TJ p.rn., ''"" tire, 70ll 2 F1wnsworlft 1:~ P.m .. eleclrlttl tire, 11.111 Wl'1!l1>1 WtU 1:1~ P.,..,, 1r•1st !Ire. lf1'1 Deltw1r1. Apt. 3 St•I letcll 5:U •.m. Sundev, smok1 hwestl1t llon, 1:11'1 Ar1111ndllt, AP!. ~ Low Bidder Announced 01)' Channel SANTA bidder d,i ANA Low the project to improve the Santa Ana River ch~nnel to proteet- ai::ainst fioodinc is the Paul Hubbs COftstruction Co. of ruaito, Sui>ervLsor William Hintein~lflnounced Friday. The firm . bid 1798,328.50, the lowest of seven bids for the job. This considerably below engineer'• estimate $960,CXXI, HirJtein out. The project, w hi ch extends upstream from the Santa Ana Freeway north to the Katella Avenue bridge, will be financed from Ille 11 million remaining .JJa the 1958 band funds of the Flood Control District. The work wijl consist primarily of linin,. the banks • • $6. 78 Million Worth County Okays Work Projects I . SANTA ANA -Caplla! Land le<julsltlon and improvement p r o J e c t g development of the new totaJling 16.78 million Were County ~Operations Center in approved by the Or!lllge southeast· Sant.Ii Ana calls 1 Courrty supe,rvisors Friday. • for expenditures of more The lara:est single item is than •1 .2 million. construction. of the Sputh ' County RecionaJ c i v 1 c Center in LaJuna Ni1uel. Cost estimate is $1 · million . avic Center development in Santa Ana continues to be a principal capital expenditure item with land acquisition at '600,000 and development at $750,000. The county expects to move into the ri. e w courthouse and jail buildnig later this year. Tlie $750,000 developrilent progr11.m is to provide landscaping aOO, parkin' in the "super bloC~" area qear the n.evt courthouse, Th.l.11 is ~ini .done in coUabor~on ·with the city of Santa AJl:a· County Wins Fair Award DELMAR -or·anre County's Feature Exhibit was a winner at t h e S o u t h e r n Caifornia Ex· position held here recently. · A 1piMing citrus display proclatmtn1 comm~ r c e, tourism, industry and oil and topped by a a:iant orana:e won the top award, worth. $300, for Citrus l'ruits Feature Display for the Co_unty. ~··' .·~ "Prtpart for School of · Business tht futurt ..• TodcYr' s~ ABC $HQRTH~ND e Me41ct l ln111r1ne1 · with riprap stone· for levee protection and a large reinforced concrete dropl-"-='-' structure for stabiliution of Pho no 543-1753 .. J.43-1721 the channel bottom. , Mondoy, Ju~ 1$, 1968 DAIL v .,LOT T FI NE SUMMER DRESS & SPORT FABRICS • HOND l'UZA 17TM AT IRISTOL SANTA ANA 541-5511 dacron polyester Ir cotton VO ILE PRI NTS 100 '!. COTTON KN OBB Y KNIT PRI NTS l!t+le Iron ~o++on PETII POINT P.K. PRINTS All Cotton SASSY. CANVAS PRINTS Rty.n lutch•r WNv• SHAN NON PRINTS Cri1p, Cul Fabrics +o Wur All Sum_rn•r REG. $1.49 YARD VALUES 36"/'45" widths 1u•r•nte1cl wa1h1bl• ['f\/\l'f f(lf ~ • c r• HUNTIN•TON" ClllTlll £DIN&!•· Al ·1£.-,CH HUNTl~GTO~ IUCH ••7·101) SOUTH COAST l'UZA PISTOL AT SAN OIKO FwY., COSTA MESA 1-45-1116 l'111nltlll Yt llt1 1:53 ,.,m. Sundt)', reslut.. 11601 Stnl1 M~nlct Hirstein said tije work ~1ould begin latf ~his month. ~· All Penney Stores Open Every Nigh.I Monday Through Saturday DEATH NOT ICES MADDEN Kellfl H. Mtddttl, ""' W:. 1'Jfl ;It., NIWllOrf lloo~ $UrillWd lior.._-Or. •. •. Mofftft: ............... ~ •nd ""'"" ~·s..~·1 thtW. Mn. Rtrlll Mvlllfl. ¥.-' ~1-m MI H Wis nltW fl "*""""• M<>ncl.t'I', t 1.nl. • OUr "°' 'ol Ml. Ctrmel C1tllollc CllcHri. lllN.--nl. c1rv1rv c .... 11trv. Oll'llCftd a.y t1111: Menu.rv. ll70 E. CM11 Hlohw1r, Coront d1I Mtr. ~UXON Emtlll Ml•t!!. l3oll2. lllWI SI., WnlmlMl9r. Surv!Yed bv ~lutll•tr, Mr1. l-1 l1 (N; lllree ~rotllert, Alfrlod. Ch1rtt1 Incl H1ro1d W. Johtn1en; loUI'" 111'91"1. ~on. A11n11o., AnM Miiioy, lltrnlct Sl!'1rm end Llltltn Jtnstn r 1nd three t rtndcl'll1dren. R<>11ry, Tllt~ty, I •.m, PMk FtmllV Colonltl F11ntr11 Homt. lttctul•m . MIH, WMMSC!l'I', t •.m .• l lesltd Stcr1mont Cel"-'tlc C"'-'rcl'I, Wt$""ln11Tt". Dlrecll'd bv P~ ftmllr Cotonl1I Funtr1I Homt. KNUTSON Dtvld G. ICnutson, tnt Vlllo l'ICJJlc. Huntl11911in llffdl. Dtte of dHlh,:, .. hJl'f IJ, SIJn>lwd bV Wiit, Slltrl F. K11U"""; -..,, Otvld Scott; dtUllllltr, Am'i' loul11. t it al l1'lt llen'lt; 1(51tr1, I Olll!le Ceultrr, Ftlltt..ok. Incl c.,..1 T19"- NtwPOrt l11cll; otrents, Mr. ftnd ~ Ger.Id K11Uhon, S.nlt ..... Stfvlt11• todev. Mondtr, 11 1.m., 1" IM c""~'' 11 Ptcltl' VIOW. lnttrmlfll, P.elfk V!l'W ~ltl Ptrlc. MltMr111 ,llrnd h11 ~ nt1b11,lttd ti !ht N....,.rt Mtllont! link. SllH•lor incl l"lt~nl!1. Olrecled bV P1cll!c Ylr# Mortlltl"/'. · ; · Wttlllllft1ttr 1,,39 ,.m. St!cl'dtlY, tire lnvn.11111\e", 1'l2 MttflOtlt 2:75 p,m., !!rt lnv11111etlon. 6'11 Homer. AP!. ll 5:3' o.m., llrt lnYt stl11tlon, 155'0 aeeonll ''" p.m.. Wl lhd<lwn, W l McFtddtn Aw. 10;.9 •.m .• re.cue, :Un Whitt: Clrclt n :t6 '·"'· SUl'ldl.,, r11CU1, u1n MlddJttleroueh 11:5' D.m .. tire invttlltlllon, lelu 1.-.d J~~e~ 2:1l p.m.. fire lnvt1tl91tion. 1.1»2 J1s"""°" 2:.13 o.m., re•cvt, lit.ti~ Dover Circle. ~:5' o.m .. rHCUt, Un'! F""''' .S:2' P.m., rtscuof, 1e 1 Golden Wat. Alll. ff Jail Ou t ' For Wom an In Assault w .. t111111utr ANAHEIM -An Anatu>im 7:11 •.m. rHaN. un "'9!ner St. wh h r·-T:M P.m .. ..wi1c "51.t. 1•M• Gretd'11n woman o eld 5 O L•ne · c"t11 M• policemen at bay for \three ''g,.:·~~!Y tll"t ~1t.._11o11, how-1 last May 13. -wi\): not 1~""·•;,,..,,,.._ .. ,.,.,..J.w. """~--hive•-·-v• "me Iii i·•1"' ·~r1..!:;~··· ~ .... !"'· J'4~ JM--"' _.. -·1 • "?""· 1,ff .. m .. !":• ""'' lOCIO "'....,. ........ Mrs. Snan Jean ,Pemma, 1:' it.m..• . .u1111c. Kalst, 111 s1tr1t1 st. 28 •withdrew her ple1 Of not J . .U p.m ... trtu fire, Cltll9M Avtn\le 1 J:&~.~~~r.i:r:r.mt. n F~lr Or;YI guilty tO . lWO COUnts O( f°' •·'"·· "'~~ w,1,,,,.1 · assault with a d e a d 1 y 'i1., ~::· o~Sl.lioci""'"~~~:t "' JNn11 weapon against police in her ''!1l'lll"ii'l~,f~111 Hr.. <01'-,.,.,..,,,.,. appearance before Superior io:ca 11.m., tr•~••· 1.s.s1 '""" st. Court Judae wu1:-c 10:16 •.m.. 1ru. flrt. lOIO HtrW • u..m • ,,,31:~;,,. sunc11y, rucu~. 2:1' •-· ·· ., Speirs Friday and pleaded 6:i~t'ii.m ... 114f"lrrieftt f ire. "" C•ni.r guilty to a reduced charge 1 :f!'·,~~· ~.v. r.5cv1, 2015 c111,,, of disturbinf the peace. st. Mrs. Pemma barricaded •-.wt •••0 herseU in her apartment on 1:01 1.m. Stlllrdn, tr1$h 11r1. Ulll S11111ma1trr J111i1d the morning of May 13. She s:-;r,,:;m., met1l'11 •!II· 1~o7·Jim~-wa.s captured when she ''i3vt~~':i~ fire, 2111"" Emtrtld finaUy burst from t h e ''~,;:;1tt"'•":.'· .,.. .. 11r• '" bulldin&. fun in hand and n :i. •·"'·· fl.., 1nvest11111on. 1'°7 was overcome by two Ana-Stntt•• Otlvt ., l :t7 p.m .• ml'llbsx firt, 203 Mlln r· heim ofums. 1:11 '·"'·; fire lnYtlrlt1!1011, •1 •W, J d S . . d 111t1ot 1Yd. u ge peus 1 m p e 1 e 2:t1 '·""·· Mondt'I', fir• ln~li911klll. b " tc,.,,.. ,,..,.. n• ••nldt DrlYe three years pro IYOn on the defendant. She told officers at the Pilot Visitor• time of tht siege that she r~~~': 4.-~ e1~ 1,U was upset because a friend •r.dt 1tvt-1 tnCf •boYt or o!Mt .,.. h d ta k h 4 e Id 11n11~1eru °' • '"'' tNt ,,, """' a en er ·Y ar·o SULLIVAN 1:1~" ~91r.~&'.1'LV .'=-1/ta'f: daughter away from her. Helen Sulllv1n. 14&1 Mt!lo'I'. Hlll\UnolOfl l,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=;:::::::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;==;I llp(ll. "'' 661 dtl9 of de11h, Jutr n . lt'1'YIVed b\I lwo tonl, Jl1Y ......... Incl LIW1'9MIJ dtUOhler, Htlen T. MC81r· !'Olli brothff, S!et>ht!! 0'~11tYI 1l11tn, Miry O'Mtlley, Ot llt MI In I k I Mll'91•'1 Incl ll:1tMrln11 • II n I. .. IC1ti'lerlnt G t n non ; tnd U gr111dclllld...... Rottrv, lllt!l1hl, 7:.U l'.m., Smiths Ch1~I. Requiem Mtu. TUfldtr, I 1.m .. SS Simon j, Jlldl •, Cell'lel!c C"urdi. lnlermont, G.od' S~1>1ttr11 Ctmettrr. 01...cllod bV Sml!l!t Mert...rv. CLARK Ge,... 0 . Cltrll. JOI ~rod. c.-- ftl Mtr. SOJNIV9d bv hit wll9 'Ari. FIYI Cl•""· --Jerry Cl•"-· cor ... 1 11191 Mtr. -dtuthtfr MrL JIClllH!-llnt •runner, corone de! Mir, .,,,. brolllof' Mr. Jlrrn'IO'ld Cl1rt al .,,. dlt111 . -1!1l9r Marie ••mt!! ol K1n-w1, 111r" ortnddllldrtn. SeMce. ...- di.,. ti letl lr11i1dw11 mvlutrv •• BALTZ MORTUARIES CorvH del Mar OR~ Costa Meu Ml .. Jaf BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa LI WlP PACIFIC. YIEW MEMORIAL PAll Cemelery e Morloary Cbapel · 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport ::4~:. C..rola PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL "1NEllAL ROME '7801 Bol• A•e. Wutmbl1ter • - ' SMITll'S MORTUARY m Mola SL Rutlnlllff Reado LEM$W WESTCLIJl'JI' MORTUARY 4%7 E. 17111 81., c.m M- tt1 • " Sea1·s ... SAVE '30! HAIU ,COST 4 (11154 ....., .... ~..._ ... ,.c ... ,. .. PHONI J.40.333J ... -.... -:::... ..... _ ....... y..,. en., ............ ., .., +-w... .. , ..-.... ..,.... <:-.. ..,..... '""'· u.sa. ,..,_.,, ,._ ""9ldl;-.;..iil ..... ,......., ..... ........... 1 .. .... _ 2~J3 .ai.-ltft 1.99 .,.., ......... , ""''" ... 11rla'..,.~J~cet1 Telltre4 ........ ~ ...,_. ............... ..,._.... ...... ...., ...... bit,.,.. 0... ... ,...,..,_ ...... ..,.. ... ..... ...... 77c , .... --$1 ...... , .. ,. ''"'-'"1 ..... C.l'-MM ............... hJM 1 ..... .,.,,"*'1.._ ......... ~ 19 4;41 I -t' _... o...•W1·-.....i.....,_ ... trr.alt .,.. ...... M"""'4 """""' .. .. i ......... 111., .1 .... ., -' .. .......... ..,, __ -' 2.aa·· ' . . ' COSTA MESA .. (H•r~or Shopping Conter) 1......,..--........................ - ·.-. ........ :.. .. ~1.ie..J.w....: jw'llM...-..S.-.ill_.ched._. .•. . theMHl'iMMiallf...._. ••• -.-~a.e1 · , · . I earance. S... I Cl-ra!Mll .... ...,,., .......... ,.... -•k ........ ..,... •"""1 •llM°,eb'-1 ... -l'o: ""-" --..... , .......... ,... .... ..... ,,... .. 11 • 1•99 SPECIAL BUY! ·HOUSEWARES Wiii ·~ --tie .... ,.. .. ,_. ""-Wl~s. ~ ~ ·youR CHOICE only99c HIMTINGTOll 9JACH (Huntington Center) .\ . . . 1iJ • Top H lectlon of.cool 1ummer dr••••• for all fashion 1lz•I s.aa-,6.aa NEWPORT BEACH l~••hion l•l•nd) I ., I' 1 '-·----.... ---. . . . . .._ . .. ' •• • . ---,, ·• 4~ -o•,==-'·;-;-:-. =· ;:-.::---. • '· . ---... • . -. . ! •• • • -. -, . • • • . . !· . . . .. ·:~ • • •, f DAILY PILOT £-' Kai 211d I •l ;N ~ :f M l/413•2~~ A.rness Victor In Cats You Select the Fa bric WE'LL MAKE YOUR DRAPES i OLYMPIC CONTENDERS -Lowell North's North Star Ill (No. 4733) from San Diego Yacht Club, winner of Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Baxter Bowl Regatta, is lramed by two-runners-up Tom NMI 14cluler l"MN Blackaller's Good Grief, (No. 5150) St. F rancis Yacht Club, and Kevin Jaffee's Cubalibra, No. 4875. NHYC. They were among top five who qua!Uy for Olympic trials. Harbor Star Sailors Qualify for Oljmpics HONOLULU (AP) -The 58 -fo·ot catam.1.ran Seasmoke, o w n e d by relevisl.on •ctor J a m e s Amess, croesed the finish line first at Diamond Jiead Sunday night in the muw.i· hull tran&·Pacific y a ch t rz.oee. The twin-hulled v e s s e l completed the 2,225 nautical mile crossing from San Pedro, Calif., in 10 days, s1x hours and' 23 minutes, race officials reported. · The Seasmoke's ti m e failed to beat the record crossing Lime for sailboats of nine days, 13 hours and 51 mim:rtes set by the yacht Ticonderoga in 1965. Reported in second place · earlier Sunday wDs the Lani Kai, still so me 250 miles from the finish, followed by the Manu lwa in ,third. ONE PRICE. -FABRIC & LABOR FAN FOLDED AT NO EXTRA COST! ..,..Dewble 4 h•"'1 I •••ding ..,.T1bl1d lo •••cl m1t111r1 5'W1ight1d Corn1 r1 '-'llincl slitch1d ""'''' f,,.,c1 .... D1111bl1 1 •1, turn back 1id11 ..,.Pinell -pl1tl1d ...,.5,1 .. 1;1 C11! or Cl!pp1d fabrics include: e SHEERS e NOVELTI ES e CA SEMENTS e SLUIS e PRINTS e SOLIDS OFffl GOOD FOR J WHKS ONLTI U " Minimum hog,. ••. Acid $1.00 yd. If lined Actor Buddy Ebsen's Polyneslan Concept w a s running in fourth place after losing Q second-place lead ~ , . . ~ ' e) ti ' •• Saturday. 11 .. . ii .& , With the race resting on · ·• ,.•i • ', ~ ~ ;.·~' • .,,:, ·n . , " ,. · handicap results, Ebsen's ~ ~ ~. ~:-:'\.'-"' • -b t lands ood h to ~. . ' ... i."''¥ ~~ ~1'{: 'iJ!! w~ ~he ra:e g on ~o::1eC:ted , 4+1ii@f4i§L'i or~APE: Ribs time , race officials said. HONER PLAZA H fifth . waa Kevin Jafie'i 9. Kazam, Allen Raffe, 11. Leprechaun. Ch arles Lani Kai, Manu Iwa and UNTINGTON CENTER SOUTH COSTA PLAZA , p l · Con 17TH AT I RISTOl EDINGER AT IEACH • I RISTOL AT SAN DIEGO CUbalibra, NHYC. SDYC. Finlay, NHYC. 0 ynesian cepl are SANTA ANA HUNTINGTON IEACH F-WY .. COSTA MESA By ALlllON LOCKABEY ... 111111 •fifer • Two Newpori Harbor SIM 1Jdpper'I were among five quallfien for: the f i n a 1 Olympic trials Sunday in Newport Hari>or Y a c h I Club's Baxter Bowl Regatta. The win made North a top 1 H Ra! h expected to .arrive in 541 -555 1 191.1011 545-1516 0. omer. p De 12. Savage, S.e Y mo u r Honolulu late today or earlyj"~~~,'"'~·~~·~-~·-~-~·~-~r§.'"!"'"~-~~~~-,~··~-~"'~--~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~ contender in two Olympic _Lu_c_••:...s_t_. _F_v_c. ____ _:ll:...•:...ek::•.::·NHY.c::.:..C:...-_____ ..;T:...•::e•:...d::"Y:.;· ______ , classe.s. He has recently Topping the list of. 33 entries was Lowell North of San Diego, former three· time world champion in the International star Cius. North tillered his North Star ill to a come·from-behlnd performance in the final three races SUnday1 after trailing in third place in the first four races 1ai1 e d Friday and Saturday. Runner-up to North wa1 Pete Bennett in lnclunaree, also from San Diego YC. The top five finishem in the regatta qualified for the final Olympic fria].g to be held in San Die.go in September. In third place was Barton Beek'& Hanna, NHYC; fourth was Tom Blackaller's Good Grief, St. Francis Yadlt Club, and • ·' ~ ' launched a new 5.5 meter in which he will enter the Olympic trials at Newport in August. North was a bronze medal winner in the Dragon Class in the 1964 Olympics at Enos bi m a , Japan. The first 12 finishera in the Baxter Bowi event were: 1. North SIM Ill, Lowell North, SDYC. 2. Inchmaree, P e t e Benneit, SDYC. 3. Hanna, Barton Beek, NHYC. 4. Good Grief, T o m . Blackaller. St. FYC. 5. Cubalibra, Kevin Jaffe, NHYC. 6. Zucker Kanichen , Charles Lewsadder. NHYC. 7. Chatterbox, Ma Ii n Burnham, SDYC. 8. &winging Star, Don Truk, St. F YC . REDUCED FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY! Penneys summer fashion perm! Reg.$15 Now9.66 W•••ciftili•ln the COf1I of fmhion wigs NO APPOINTMINT NECISSART ......-NUtnlfll•T'Dlf •l~H l'llWl"CltT ••ACM _ ... HUflflllffOl'I Gtfittr """ .... lsll l>d .. ""'· 91..00. lNl~.m-nn ,.,,. tfoor · u .. tJU All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday USEVDUR NNEV CHARGE ACCOUNT TOCAVI '· ... .. ,, Special! Portable Zig-. Zag sewing machine.·! Our Penncrest• portable zig.zag sewing machine is now specially priced for your sovitlgs I Just in time to sew school and foll clothes, this special fun-size manual zig-zag has adjustabl e drop feed, st itch length and width regulator and two-tone en amel fi nish. It mends, darns, appliques, sews on buttons and makes buttonholes. Ha rdwood case is cavered with washable vinyl. f NEWPORT BEACH (F ashion Is land ) • HUN T INGTON BEACH -(Huntin gton . C enter) • ' I ,..,.. • Monday, July 15, 1968 DAILY PILOT n 137 Boats in 13 . Classes Enter BYC's Summer Regatta One-hundred · and thirty seven boat.I ·in 13 classes -.nswered the starti n g signals 1n Balboa Yacht Club's Summer Reg a t ta Saturday and Sunday. 'Ille Pacific H a n d i c a p Racing Fleet and Luders-16 classes turned out t h e largest entrles 'ln the outside classes with is· each. ffop classes ratf.lnside the bay were the bot A a:n·d Sabot C with entries each.. . Final results: PHRF (15) -(I) Frill, Cliff Ryao, BYC;· (:) Cece II , Bill -dden, BYC ; 13) Flyer CPC No 55) Bob Sodaro, BYC. MR. CLEAN? -Rogef Welsh's ne\v fiberglass In- ternational-14 White Tornado from Voyagers Yacht Club will be a prime favorite when the West Coast Championship Regatta get~ under way off Marina del Rey today. Following the ' West Coast title match the "l4s" will move to Alamitos Bay for the national cha1npionshlp regatta. African Yacht Sought . T RAVEMUEN OE , Germany '(AP) -An air search was ordered by the West German navy Monday ·for the South African ketch Stormvogel.~. which . w a s leading in tne TrinsaUantic B e r n1 u d a -Travemuende · yacht race~ wb~n radio contact was lost on Friday. Roger Welsh Favored In International 14s Race officials here said they were not o ve r l y concerned at this point .ind exprfll!ised the belief that the Stormvog e 1 ' s transmitter Roger 'Velsh of Voyagers Yacht Club, Ne\vport Beach. \Vill be a heavy favorite for one i( not two championships in th e lnternational·14 Class this week. The \Ve s t Coa s t championships will be held off Marina de! fiey today, was out of order. Tuesday and \Vedn-esday, The 73-foot ketch, whose si::onsored by the South home port is Stellenboscb , is Coast Corinthian Yacht skippered by D,utch m an Club . Cornelius Bruym;eel. At last On the weekend the \Vest reports, Jt had covered 2,000 Coaster's will move to Q:illes or the 3,500-mile Alamitos Bay at L o n g course. Beach for the" National Still listed as se<:ond, champjonships. pending word of Stormvogel, \Velsh's new fib 2rgl.:iss is the American yacht boat has been t ak i n g Ondine 111, skippered by S. everything in sight in recent A. "lluey" Long of New Bob Bogel} months -as did his wooden York. 14-Karat previously. The West Germ·an escort Stuart Walt<er fr 0 m tender \Vesterwald radioed Log Race. Annapolis,~ rt.d. will give that since the previous \V c Is h so m e keen reporting on Sunday, the competition as he attempts Ondine had covered 300 0 S d t tak th •~-I 1·11 nautical miles and at last n atUI' ay 0 e e na~,a I e back to the east coast. spotting had put 400 miles of \Valk.er is a past winner of ocean betiind it. Balboa PoWJr Squadron, the frince of Wales Cup. Reported in close pursuit has schedllled Jts Bob BOgen The Dlter.nat:iooal-14 is a ~re Kialoa 11, with John B. Trophy predicted log contest dCvetopment"~s -whi ch Kilroy of Newport Beach •t for next Satuit:tay, The tneans the fieet ,rules are the tielm, Gtnn.D a · course \vill ta[\the }lioats liberal enoulli;to encourage skippered by ' H•Vtktoi: from a star '· lihe off progressive ..tQevefopment Jlowaldt of \Vest GemtP.nY, Newpor\~ie~ e Jstt}tnw; and experimentation in ·th~e and Stella "Polare; ~se at Catallna~ · t {,oil$ Point design of hull and rigging. 1 captain is AgostinQ,Straul.l}io to Casino Point a Avalon. The boats are 14-feet lon g, o! Rome. The contes~n\s m a Y undecked and arc a The Jeading B-Class yacht, choose a finis h time of 12, 1 challenge to sail. Most Rage, skippered by Homer p.m. oi ~ p.m. The experts agree that the Denius of Melbourne, Fla., approximate length of the design of modern hig~ was reported 240 miles course is 42 1niles. performance planing boats behind the Ondine. The winner is the beat has. evolved largely through (> ==========.I "'hose skipper makes the lessons le~rned in the . BOAT BUFFS least percentage of error in designs of Int . 14a. passing marks o( the coursJ!. Son1e . ·Of the h i g h 1 y' . · ·Almon Lockt bo., Ts tke onl., and at the finish. respected ; designers who full. fi1t1• botfing editor Predicted log racing is ·a have contributed to . the, worki"g 011 '"" now1pop1r contest of skill in navigating evoluti(}ri o·r the class are 111 Orong• County. Hi1 ••· ~I d I Pr of cluli¥t co¥tr•g• of bolt• rather than speed . · Uffa FO"\.lan an octor' Ing i nd .,.chting 11,,.., is , The Bob Boge n 1vlcmorial ·E ngland and Ch a r I e S . .Joily f'11t11re of tk• DAILY MORF (5) -11) Anita , Tunt S<:bock, NHYC. IUlOOES-33' (4) -(1) Maruja, Bob Kettenhotfen, BYC. LUDERS-16 (15) ·-(1) Kildee, Ben 11romadka LYC: (2) \Vlndsong, Bill Fundenberg. NHYC ; •(3) Es Velero, Paul Jacobs, SSSC. .~ ' . ' '• l " SANTANA (8) -(1) No. 328, Buster Hammond , BYC; (2) Shadow, Dave and Baro8"l Turqer' SI BYC. CAL-20 (7) -(1) Von Voyage , \V .B . von KleinSmid, SBSC. L!00-14 A 17) -(1) No. 2752, Blair Barnett, BYC. (2) Little Twitch, Chad Twichell, BYC. LIDO·H B (12) -(I) Fungus, Hank H u m a n n , BYC; (2) Cblck<n ol the Sea, George J e ff r J es • OCYC: (3) LOng Sho t, G.P. Dunigan Jr .. BYC. METCALF (11) -(1) Rogue, John ~ne, BYC ; (2) Seasong, Bob Williamson, BYC; ( 3) H.,.le, Jack Sdlolz, BYC. SABOT A (18) ~ (I) Keep Your Kool, DoveU SmJth, BYC: (2) Tequila, Bruce Humann, BYC; (S) Br'eezy, P.1ary Ann Sigler , BYC; (4) Cutty Sark, Bob Bu.ros, SYC: (5) Arriba, Ph i I Brown, NHYC. . SABOT B (12) -(I) Retaliation, Mike Tbcl'ne. BYC; (2) Mollywog, MoUy Lynch, BY C; No. 4089, Corby Gage, BYC. SABOT C (18 ) -(I) lt1unkin Boat, Laurle Shaw BYC ; (2) Blu; Ty Beach, BYC ; (3) Green Phantom, Tony Pert!z, BYC. Yo~ can see why . the popularity gap is growing. We could tick off a 1ot of reasons why more people keep getting into Chevrol et than any: other ca r. Some samples: Y.ou get styling that's a clean step ahead of any other car in Chevrolet's 6eld. The a:reatest choice of engine-transmWion teams, with V8's available up to 385 hp. A remarkably serene ride. And out· standing spaciousness (for inatance, Automotive News rates Chevrolet'• four.door sedan roomier than any other sedan in the U.S. except the leading luxury make). But the nub of it all is this : Chevrolet just shows more partiality to people than o.thrr carf do. And people rel.urn tlie favor. Like we say, putting you first keeps us ... first. And especially now at your Chevrolet dealer's. - Yau get the biggest ywar-encl ICIYings just where )'llU'd expect lo, Trophy was set up by BPS · Bourke and Brice Ki.rbr of r lLOT. · ) to perpetuate the memory ol the United States. L,,=========d.-;-.------,,..-----~'----------------------------------------lhe late Robert Boge n in \Velsh's new \V h ! t e --;; acknowledgement of h i s Tornado is considered by many contributions to f(ie many to ,be the most highly Balboa Po"·er Squadron. refined dinghy ever built. lt The race was started 1.~ was built 'by W. D. Schock 1963 wit h Lawrence Booth's Co. of Santa Ana, Caracola as the \Vinner. Even so, it will see plenty Other past winners have of competition from / such been E. L. Mi 11 er ' s out-of-state skippers a s Rainbow's End, 1964, Robert Baird Bardarson, D·o n C. Hill Sea Joy, 1965. and McVittie and Bud Easter, John C. W a shin gt on 's from the highly B<!tf vc lorana, 1967. Seattle Fleet. . "\.I . ' . . ' • " • I IN COSTA MESA IT'S sin eris DEPA"TMENT STQRE - 1816 Newpo11 Blvd. ( crt Newport ond Harbor llvds.) ' IHE 9Ja11d gCllee11ed cphi11t COLLECllON Dramatic I Sophisticated I Romontic ! The choice for a n individualist. Exciting, vibrant copyright prinh; ~and 1creened a~ designed in Miami.. Fa'stidioosly tailored in ArneJ!l triocetate, Mly·llned wit+i self so.hes. Panties on blue, pink or yellow. Medallions and birds on beige or white. Butterflies ancf flowers on beige or white • Sizes I to 11. $26.00 • a . - I I I I I I J I DAILY PILOT RED CROSS CHAIRMAN Selim H. Franklin Red Cross Again Picks Franklin Costa Mesa attorney and Balboa Island resident Selim •1. Franklin has been re- elected chairman of the Or- ange County Chapter of the 1\merican Red Cross. A law graduate of the University of Arizona and a retired Lt. Col. in the Air Force, Franklin ffrst be· l'ame affiliated with the Red Cross as .the 1966 fund rais· ing chairman. "I was obvi · ously their last choice and the only one willing to say ·yes'," Franklin said. In 1967 be completed an unexpired term as chapter chairman and has again been elected. A resident of the Harbor Area since 1944 he has served as president of the Orange County Chamber of Commerce, a member of the Costa Mesa Elementary School Board, Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce and is currently president of Cos· ta Mesa Tomorrow, Inc. Prior to establishing his law practice in 194.9, Frank· Jin was editor of the former Globe Herald weekly. now the DAILY PILOT. He is associated with the Orange CoWlty Coast Association, a member ol the board and :Vice president of the Balboa Island Improvement Asso- ciation, a charter member of the Costa Mesa Rotary and a trustee of the Orange Coast College Foundation. 4 on Coast Honored For Wo1·k 1'""our coast area students at \Vestern State University College of Law in Anaheim have been honored for their <:cademic achievements. \Villiam P. Paulson. 32592 Balearic. South Laguna, was preseflted the Bancroft- \Vhill'ley al'o'afd for ex- cellence in the field of cor- poration law, plus a citation for his overall academic re<:ord. He is president of the Student Bar Assn. at the college. Tv•o Ne'>'·port B e a c h students also received Ban croft -\\'hitney awards. Allen D. Elsberry, 215 Prospect, '>'"as presented the award for . his understanding of con- stitutional law. and Roger J . Agajanian, 125 'h 44th St .. for excellence in le g a I methods. i\·lrs. Betty Farrell. 110 ,,.ia Quito. Newport Beach, "·as cited for her overall academic record. GI Wido,vs Home Loans Plan Eases Due to recent cllanges, it 1s now easier for thousands of widows of veterans to get G .I. home loans, ac~rding to Mort \Vebster, Manager of tKe Veteran s AdmlrUstration Regional Of- fice In Los Angeles. •· A new law permits the VA 'to guarantee holllt! loans up ~to $12,500 or the loan amount i:but 'Dot more than 60 per- ~cent ol. ttie loan, Webster ':said. • Ba.sic olfgtbiltty ro· -q-.... that the ·widow'• bu.band either died ·Oil active duty or from a ~!service-comected disability, )pd that the veteran '!' ,•...-vice WU durll!g World :war n or .,... June 27, k1t50 • • Web1ter Nid lllat -· -· wbo think t1wJ -11fy for G.L IOIN MoncUJ, Ju!J 15, 1%8 ' Education Resour~es Worry. Business (ContlDued From Pace 11) charac terized as the •\Vlndow or the Future' ls due in Jarge part to the character and extent of our public education systen1," Post said. "I think it is a fact that unless California maintains ane ducat lo n system of the highest order. the state will not continue to be economically, politically and s~ia]y the dynan1ic a,nd progressive s o c i e t y which it has represented in the twentieth century." ' ';It l!i clear that the allocaUon or addJtlonat state and local support for Ilic exisUng seniority b a s t! d salary structures ls not likely to affect educational i mp r overnent positively when the top teaching salaries remain-. below the sa laries of sc hool administrators, consultants and specialists, and below -what the successrul teacher might earn outside of tlif.! educational system." he said. Another pressing problen1 , according to Post, Is that or t e a c h i n g disadvantagt>d yo u n gsters, particulai•ly those In urban centers, and he saw litUe indication that any widespread success had been reached. Whatever effective programs are f i n a I I y developed will not be cheap, J>ost pointed out. ''Jn California approximately 3 7 O , O 0 0 disadvantaged pupils are enrolled in special programs which are costing t h e federal, state and local governments over ' J 0 0 rnlllion per year," he explained. "ln order to simply provide comparable programs for other disadvantaged pupils who c o mprehenslve education services, but wh11 are nol presently enrolled in special programs, would require an additional $100 million per year." Need for more Our money makers are income certificates that let you make the most of your money-5% intere st guaranteed for up to 10 years. comprehenslve planning of local programs ~d willingness to experiment was also urged by Post. And the disparity between the financial resources of individual districts must be dra:stically revised to bring true quaUty education for the majority, he added. Post noted that a recent poll f o u n d Californians listing education as the single most imp o rtant investment the state can make. This has been matched by high priority to educational financiJlg, with state supPort nearly tripling in a 10 year period. ·Last year's AB 272 provided more than a 10 per~ cent increase in 1 t a t e subventions to p u b 11 c schools, Post said, which is the biggest dollar augmentation in one year in any piece of school legislation to date. 4 Kiwanians Return Ho111e FOlll" Orang. County Kiwaabns are beck from tM club's 53rd JntetNttonal convention in T or on t o , Ontario. Blair Barnette, president of the Irvine Complex KlwanlJ Club; D. E. Wolle ol Newport Bead!'• club, and Ramond Beudisch Jr., Garden GTove, and John L. \Varwick, Coata Mesa, both members of the Tustin club, attended tho June 30.July 3 conventlcm. ( Two new money makers are available at all Crock er-Citizens offices: Our Current Income Certifi- cate gives you an immediate sec- ond income. Th e 5% interes t is compounded daily and paid every 3 months-for up to 10 years. If you need your fund s before the ma t urit y date,youcan withdraw the total principal and interest du e aft er the first quarter. You can buy either certificate for $1,000, up to $100,000; And you can select any maturity date from 1 to 10 years .< Why not see us soon for more details on these 5% certificates?, :: It'd be worth your time., And . money. Our Def erre d In come Certifi - cate postpones your extra income until you 're in a lower tax bracket. Th e 5% in terest is compound ed quar te rl y but paid onl y on th e certific ate's maturity date. You ca n withdraw t he pr in ci pal , t hoµg h, after the fi rst quarter. Crocker-Citizens · Income Certificates· at the big bank where little things count COSTA MESA: Harbor Sho,,lng Contor' JHO i.i.iti 5-I lboUld oltleiD fllliller ID· lom>Oti<NI fl'om tho VA of. r~ ot 13111 south,_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-• '5epul...Sa; pbont 471-371L ,. ., ~-. ' ,, • I ' MOlld1y, Ju~ 15, 1968 DAILY Plll7T JJ Businessmen Propose Educational Fiscal Master. Plan~ • A Muter Plan for fiscal and admlntstrattve operatl091 o f CaWornla public education has been called for by a group of leading educators a n d buslnenmen. the Council in San Francisco on "The F1nanclal CrWs in Public Educ a tlo n •in CaWomia," at which the need for auch action was underllued by speaker after speaker. session by A. Alan Post, concepts of tea c b t n e the teacher wu generally teachers 1n the classroom academic career. Th I a , regular pupil or for teachei-1 Ca 11 to rnla's leg111aUve' methods and costs. I believe believed one of the most wllh pracUcal, up.to-date though, ls be com l n g of dhladvanttged puplll." analyst, who termed the big the Legt.lature will conunue . ln)portant faotora afledlllg t e a c h i n g skllil •nd 1Dcr .. 1!ngly critical ii new The legl!lative analyat p r o b I e m s t b o 1 e o f Its recent tendency t o pupil performance. m1terlab are performing a teachers are to be provided 1"U also hllhlY critical of educational quality and 1pproach the educalWJial NOT ACCEPTABLE less than acceptable job," the skills nece1ury to pruent salary Jevell ud ln letters to Governor Reagan and leaders of the Legislatqre, the Northern Ca 11forn1 a Jnduatry. Education Council stressed such a Master Plan ia ''essential if California la to effectively u ti 11 z e its educational resources upon which its healthy development and prosperity depend, and, further, ls to avoid a monumental collision which is going to lead to nothing but trouple ." inequality. pro11"amsaodflnanc'l1I ''However, there are be cauUoned. operate Jn today's practlc::es. • : "We have not used our problems wt th lncreulng lndtcatloN that both the .. There ire very lew classroom. Similarly, the NO E-Ecr • Council President Donald P. 1Crotz, a Chevron Research Company executive, said symposiwn pa r Uclpants emphasized that financial demands for educaUonal needs at all levels are expanding daily; that wastes are b e 1 n g allowed to continue almost strain on California's financial resources is unchallenged and that the nearing the ''breaking point." resources as well 11 we boldness, with direct and teacher tralnJ.ng lD.stltuUons teacher training Institutions evidence suggests that the uTh'' I q·-": should, and U we do not posiUve approachea, and as and the school dlstilcts in the state which provide public scboolJ do n o t ere 1 · · • no ...... uun attack the problems of ·pulillc policy tslues, and I which are supposed to teacher candidates w 1th provide comprebemlve in· ~t ~~,: ~~pll ~y m a l d 1 s t r l b u t I o n of think It needs to do so." prepare teacher candidates p r 1 c t I c a 1 c 1 assroom service tratnm4 prof ams wu.J ~01 ~ "° 10 w""'! resource a, cost in Post said the quality of adequately and 1 up port ezperlence early In their for the teachers o t.be '(Sff'EDUCAnON. p_,..it) effectiveness and education1-..:.::::...=::..::::.~:::~::..:..:::::.;::::;:_:;::_;;:.::..::.:.:..:._:::;:::.:;:::;._;;;:.::_:;,_;::.:;:;_;:::._;;;;;...=::::::.:....;;_:=-_;;.;.;.:;;;._;;_;,;..;..:..:.;:;;;.,.,l.f in the ghettos, our fmancial problems in the years ahead will g e t · progressively worse," Post warned. CUT TOO LONG NEED TOLD The Council resolution for a Master Plan followed a symposiwn sponsored by The financial problems which the state f;ices were detailed at the opening "We have cut and filled too lon g with our educational system organization and its basis of financial support," h e continued. ''We have taken for g r a n t e d tradiUonal NOW! NEW! PILOT PENNY PINCHER CLASSIFiED ~DS WITH A NEW-LOW-RATE 3 LINES 2 TIMES 52.00 lN THESE CLASSIFICATIONS! Fumitvre 8000 Office Furniture ICINI Olflco lqulpmat1! 8011 Sto"' Equlpmat1t 8012 C1fe, Rftfaur1nt 8014 air Equipment . 8015 Houtoliold Good• / 8020 AppllanCOI /',> 8100 Antique• ~· · ', 1110 S.Wlnt Mochl-. " 8120 Muolcal lnllrumot1lo 1125 Pi1nos &. °'1.,. Rod lo Teini1lon HI-Fl & Shi,.. Tapo R-1'1 C1mon1 & Equlpmatll HobbfSuppn .. Sporting Gooda BlnKUlll'I, 5- Mlocollo- 11JO 8200 1205 1210 1220 UGO Moo 1500 1550 - e EACH ITEM . 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When you use Countemold 11 directed, you will do more than juat le11en lbe pain 1nd "88ravation of ' hemOrrholds. With the unique action of DSS~ working against hard stool constipa· lion, you will be helping to provide the best possible conditions for natural healing to take place. Only new Countemoid works this way to actually attack this major cause of hemorrhoids. When used as directed, medically teated Counternoid offers the moil complete 3·way relief you can get without pr8scrlpUon or painful surgery. If you live with lbe pain and fear of re· curring minor hemorrhoid troubles, iet temporary relief with amazlns new Countemoid. New Counternold ts avallable in white, 1lainle11 cream 1nd 1uppo11loriu. With Coun ternoid there Is no meas, no emblJ"o rassing stains. Now at all drug counters.- For a trial supply, clip lbi1 coupon. ~------------------~ 1 I MaU lo la•l•r a..-......,* I lox 1111 N..tlq, N.J. ln11 1 1 tm lnleretted In aew J·W•Y Counltmold ud wo.W I Ilk• 10 receive • trit.I npply ol both 1uppoeftorla I •nd cr.11'11, I tnclott W In cofn lo C1rftf allllq ud I h1ndlla9. I 1n..,., _________ .,...._ I I Add?91"-----------I !cur ,,,. n,c~--- ~-------------------~ ~~111 .. _.11~111•1•• ... • HIP. l ----·--------------- I I I '" I I' ' I J OAILY .iLOT MO!MIOJ, Ju~ 15, 1968 iJ.S. Sixth Fleet Gives Russians Something to Study Us S INDEPENDENCE penlstence. Jt watch ed fJ1d drop a torpedo. elaewhere. Adm. Mart Jn 1,154 sallin( und..-U.S. Port Said, Egypt; Lotakla, cruiser and a destroyer and psycholo(lcal impact In OF!'' SIClLY (A.Pl -The pJanH take oll and land, Two 1,800 mlle-an-bour wat ODe of the f1rat to alr flap,. Jte added that the Syrla, and Mers-el·Keblr, permaoenUy stationed in the the Medltmaneao." twin·J•l, two.man Ft saw them shoot down Phaotorno also treated the such concem .about a year Soviet Union J.a currently Algeria, • former French Indian Ocean. Asked ll U.S. stups kept u neval base. h R I Phantom. loaded w I th target$ w I t b Sidewinder Wubertly to a couple of ago. McCaln dwelt at length building 456 modern new Neither McCain nor his close a watc on uss an bombs and gtUded missiles, missiles, was within a few ctoge-ln sonic booms that on the subject in a ships while only 51 are S5I RUSS SUBS sub or d In ate 1 in the Mediterranean activlUes in hundred yards of' a cruiser must have rotked the llttle shipboard talk ·during the under construotion 1n the In other areas. he said , Mediterranean suggest th'at re s Pons e to S 0 v I et rockets off the aircraft and destroyers when they tanker to its keel. 6Ut Fleet's b Ir t b day UnJted States. Russia ts ope:rating 3SO the Russian Oeet in this s u r v el 11 anct, McCain carrier with I.ht shriek or a shot down a drone plane. U.S. admiral! are openly exercises. In the Mediterranean , suQm~s. 40 of them area is any match for the replied : "No." crated ghost. Every few Through binoculars it could concerned about the Soviet J{e said the Russian navy McCain said, Russian naval nuclear-powered, 20 modern 25,000 .man 6th Fleet. But Why not? •·Don'teskme,'t seconds another one follows see an unmanned helicopter naval buildup in the and its merchant marine units have highly useful port cruisers and 150 modern McCain said the Soviet he replied, Implying a 1 t 1nt0 the cl e a r 1...;fl..:y_;o_;ff_;b,:y....:.re.:m....:.ot;:•_;co.:n:.tr:.•.:l....:.::M:..•:...:d.:l.:t.:•.:r..;r_•_n_•_•_n_;_an_d __ •_;re_;operatln;:.:_;.....::g:..l..:,_360_;•:..hi..:"pc;s....:.to_;cl•.;;c.;;lli.:'ti.;;.•:.•_ln;;:_A:..;:le;;.x.:andr:..;:..;ia:...:•::nd;:_..;d:.:e.:SU.:..:;Y:.;•:.':;'•....:...:ln;:cl=udhtg=·::...._:•_;bui:=':.:ldup::;:;..:h::as;:_'..:'gr::..:.e•:.l~po::....;liti_;. _·ca_I:..· _hl..:gh:....er_co_mm __ •nd __ dec_lsi_._•n_._ 1.1editel'f'a.De31'1 sky. In a mattt:r of minutes the oo.000-ton lndependencc ha s ca tapulted 60 to 70 Phantoms and other roarlng jets, many or them supe rsonic, into the air and out of sight. A few miles avray the USS Sbengri.La has flung a fiimilar number of planes o(f its l ,000-foot !lighl deck. Once away from tlle 6th Fleet's two huge carrler1, the planes form one Of the most powerful single forces in \Ve stern Europe 'today. 'PEACE POWER' Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer, supreme commander of North Atlantic Tr e a t y Organization forces calls the 6th Fleet's two carriers and its 48 other ships and planes, many Of the m capable or delivering a nuclea r punch , a tremendous "power f o r peace.'' \Vhenevcr there is trouble in the Mediterranean, units of the 6th Fleet are close by. In 1958 fleet M·arines landed in Lebanon at the request of the B e i r u t government for help in its civil war. In the Arab- lsraeli war of June 1967 the fl eet moved close to Israel and Egypt again and one of its ships, the communica· lions vessel Liberty, was hit by -Israeli planes. Even when there is no hot- spot crisis, the fleet stands watch. In one part or t h e Mediterranaen or another, planes. fly off carriers almost · daily in takeoff and landing exercise s. Occasior..ally they go loaded for target practice. More <1ften than not they are \\'atched .:ind tracked by units of the Soviet Union's <' xpanding Mediterranean fleet. new numbering about 40 surface ships. T,IKE SNAPSHOTS Sometimes the S o v i e I ships come in close enough to allow camera~ying c:;ailors of both fleets to take snapshot,s of each 0~1er. Twice recently the Russians <'Ven rendered formal naval salutes. dutifully returned by astoni shed Am er ie a n commanders. 'V·hen not dogged b y Soviet naival vessels, 6th Fleet commanders usually spot curious Russian merohanbnen. tankers · or trawlers '\\'andering through their formations. occasionally at considerable risk. Last v.·eek the Russian rubbernecke1 s attended a bigger show than usual. It was the 20Ul anniversary of the fleet's formiation as a guardian of U.S. and NATO in tere sts i n t he Mediterranoean area. Vice Adm. 'Villiam T. i\1artin assembled 30 of his fleet's 50 ships -its tv.·o carri er s, cruisers. drstroyers. submarines and attack transpo1,t.s -off ea stern Sicily. He put ships and planes tlirough wide· ranging 1naneuvers \\'ith live bombs . rock et s and missil es. Present ror the sho\v \\'ere Lemnitzer, fro~ his ne\~1 N A T 0 headquarter s in Bru ssels: Adm. John S. 1\1cCain Jr., commander or U.S. Nav al Forces i n Europe. NATO admirals from Italy, Greece and Turkey -and l'A'O Soviet tankers, the Grozny and the Ljubertsy. The Ljubcrtsy clung to the Independence like a \raitin~ tender all day and '"'as \1·et1 rewarded t or it s Boy Shot Dead 'Ai; Prowler' VISTA (UPll -A Mar ine Jjeutenanl colonel fac-cs a murder charge today after a 14-year-old boy w-shot to death OCl the front lawn or the officer's home. IA. Cot Jot<ph M. Vosmllt WU -ed Sundoy for 1.nvntt&!ltlon ot. murder in 1118 tlboollng ol Micl1ael ,/-,,__ ol VIJu, ---Ill the neck and .... -!Old poJJce ... thcJoClll 1118 boy ..... • p:.,.ler. He ..,., bot.cl al &oa l>JllD'c:.ouni, Jail ·Th·enew Mercedes-:Benz .280SE_: so ''over-engineered'-' you'll never ~ • > fear a panic stop_ again. -The ne\v Mercedes-Benz 280SE has a disc brake at every wheel. So do all J 8(). mph Grand Prix road-rac- ing machines. Some critics have called the ne\v Mercedes-Benz 280SE "over·engi· neered." Sure, they say1 a passenger car needs good brakes, but does it need brakes gOod enough for a racing car? "Absolutely;' say the Mercedes-Benz engineers. ''Test after test has proved th at disc brakes pro\•ide"tke most pre- cise braking possible-at any speed. Put one \\'herevcr you have a \vhecl." By conventional standards, the J\llcr· c:cdc.s-Bcnz 280SE is"over-cngincered:' And Mercedes-Benz is proud of it. M~t conventional cars have old- f~hioncd drum·lype brakes. They 're cheaper than disc brakes, and good enough for most average situations. But drum brakes can be marginal in a "panic" stop. II lakes horsepower to stop J\1ost people don't realize it, but ·it takes horsep01ver to stop. It's the sa1nc had drum bral.eS of the same diameter, this area would be cut considerably. There would be less area to develap braking horsepower, less area to dissi- pate heat. Such brakes would he more prone to fading, swerving, and judder· ing. Drum brakes· lack the feeling of "1lthorily you get with disc brakes. DllC br1k11 1re 1t1nd1rd equipment· · That's \vhy Mercedes-Benz engi· neers insisted on disc brakes for the new 280SE. And not just on the f rontwheels -or as an extra-cost option-but on a11 4 \vheels as slandard eq11ipnie11t. The tre1ncndous margin in braking pcrfom1ance you get 'vith 4-\vbeel disc brakes is just one example of 'vhat"over- cnginecring" means to the O\vne r of a J\tlercedes-Benz 280SE. I-lore are some more: Fuel injection Usually, your car's engine is designed either for po'vcr or economy-not both. J\rlercedes·Bcnz engineers found a \vay to give you t~c po'ver of a V -8 an cl the fuel economv of a Six. It's called "fuel ·injection," an ingenious device that ram~ feeds gasoline into the en· gi ne under l1igh pressure. 11esu lt: horse power is boosted by nearly 15% al 110 :incri fi ce ia gas 1nileagc. '''"""\ ''"'-~ ''Panic ~tnp" tle111anstr11liou: A u st drii·er slnnrs tla~ new (Tccl111ical note: TI1e "S'' ir1 1/1e 280SE's 1u1n1e sla11ds for "Super." 111e "£" sla iuls for "Einspritzn1otor" or f11 el- i11jec1io11 engine. And "280" l!·lcrudcs-Ben: 2SOSE to a sure stop fro111 80 11rpli. kind 0£ horsepo\~C r lhat lnakcs your car go, c.xcept t11al it's applied in t11e oppo- site direction. And . instead of being produced by the heat of gaseline burn- ing in your engine, it co1nes frorn £ric- tion in your brak es. In a "panic" stop-real or simulalc<l -it takes the equ ivalent of 321 hor.;e- po,ve r 10 stop a 3.500-lb. ca r f ro1n 80 n1ph. This energy transfonns the car's furHard n10111cntu111 into lical. And this he.11 1nu:.1 be cli~!'ipatrd by your brakes. ·1 he <li:.c Lrak~ or the ~l crccJcs· Urn1. 280~[ h:1\·c 421. l sq uare inches ol' effective braking area. I( the 280SL is i11e siz:e-1/ie 111etric di splacen1e11t- of tli e engine, 1vliiclJ is 2.8 litcrs.J Fuel injection also gives the 2SOSE c.xccllent engine response at all engi ne spct!ds, \Vith exceptionally smooth pick- up from lo\v revs. The 280SE en gine's overhead can1 silences the fuss and clat· tcr of con\•entional tappets. And its 7 main hearings give the cran'kshaft he.t· ter support than most V-8s, for less vi- bration at hig h speeds. 10,000 body weld s J\ilost conventional cars ha,·e a sr.p- aratc body and chassis, beld together 11.e hupeccable Mercedes-Benz 280SE-with ifuc brakes on all 4 whuls. \Vith bolts. After a \vhile, the bolts can \\'Ork loose. On a rough road, the rattl es can be deafening. lVlerccdcs·Benz eli1nin:itcd the rat· tlcs by eliminating the body bolts. In· stea d: 10,000 indiv id ual body 111eltls, Result : astructureof immense strength and rigidi1y. After 50,000 miles or so, you may begin to \Vonder if your 280SE ,,~lJ ever rattle. Built to be the best -not the beat seller After \v el<lin g, bod y scams are ground do\vn and checked \Vith a soft glove. Any bum are filled with pelvtcr and polished smooth by hand. The body is 1hen dunked in a 52-ron prin1cr bath unlil 24 pounds of a spe· ci:il anti-corrosion fonnula h:i,·e seeped into e'•cry cr:inny. This prin1er coat is baked on. The next is sprayed on. Be· t\veen the last t"'O coats, the body is hand-sanded. Tbc final coat of enamel is hand-sprayed.1l1ere isn't any" orange peel" or ot her min or blemtshes. l11e fin ish is as nearly 7Jerfect as the present "state of the art" allo\\"S. (f\lotc: l\liipickers 1vifl (i11cl 11ot/1i11g lo cnrp 11houl. A sla1licri11g of per111a· neut plas1ici;:ed 101dercoating figlits rond salt, r1tst arid rot. 17ie insides of the f111bcaps are prii ner-coated after tfie outsiclcs are cl1ro1ned. Even t11e 11nder- side of the clasli is {!illy 1ri111111c1l.) By the ti111c your 2SOSE is con1plcte, it has passed 8, 11 7 inspections. One out of every 11 \\'Orkers is an inspect or to make sure that' Mercedes-Benz stan- dards arc maintained, Clip coupon for brochure For rurthcr details on the ne\V i\1cr· cedes-Benz 280SE, and 6 other nc\V n1<Xlcls From Mercedes-Benz, send today for your copy of the free, 24·page, full- color brochure (clip coupon at right). Take• test drive Better yet, visit our showroom \vhcrc . the 280SE is now on displal;, Kick the tires. Slam the doors. Get hind the \vhcel. Then make your own. liecision about the "ovcr~ngineered" Mercedes· Benz 280SE. A lu.ti!f)' C"llr u.·i1hot1t a11 QHncc of faf, tlic 280SE n1t att1ru 2 feet s1'"1'1Cr duin ils domestic rivals, )'tf yitlds not an Inch of inurlor mom. '·· -- Merce'das-Benz motor cars from $25,785• to $41446• )'ou 1nay be able to afford a l\1ler· ccdes-Beni \\'ithout realizing it. 1-lcre arc sl1ggestecl retai l prices for 9 of the J 5 Mercedes· Benz 1noclels: 600 Grand ~1crcedcs .•.•••. $22,472• 300SEL Sedan . . . . • . • • . •• 9,489' 280SE Coupe • • • . • • • • . • • • 9.262' 280SL Road ster • , ••••..• , 6,568' 280SE Sedan . . . . . . . • • . . . 6,336' 250 Sedan.. . . • • . . . . • . . . . 5, I ;o• 230 Sedan. . • . . . • . . . . . . . . 4.63 l' 220 Diesel. ..••• ,........ 4,580' 220Sedan .••••••••••••.• 4,446' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • -. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • SEND FOR FREE BROCHURE (or bt:ttl"r yet, corne in and pk~ one up) Jim Slemon1 Imports Inc . 120 Weit Warner Avenue S1nt1 ·Ana, C1llfornl1 92707 Pk1w: 1end the frM. 24·pa.ge. full <nl!'ll' brochure thlt ttlls ill about the oew c.111 from J\lercedo-Bcnz, Add=--------- s~~-~~~-~P-~~- ' • -__, ......... th: ca ... OU ~ I pk 11> ,,., bo! ID "" I blr tb• -fOI dol .. -~----~~--,~~~~~ ............. ~~ ............................... ~ ................. "" ...... """' .. ""111 ...... ~ ........................... lllJllll!ll!"lllll!ll ..... ,.,.ii!"llllllll~, ........ ~. i II Ii I I I ·1 - I --=--- JODEAN HASTINGS 642-4321 ......... U.ltrM Ill , .. IJ Soils Replace Sandbox 'Small Fry' Take to Sea ' Proving that all the skills of an "old salt" can be learned best· at a tender age are the youngsters who are enrolled in t:he summer •ailing program in Huntington Harbour. All the basic' skills of seamanship -knots. rules of the road, rig .. ging, proper boat handling and maintenance -are being taught Monday, Wednesday and Friday by Miss Alice McFadden and Miss Barbara Wilde. Beginners' classes, equivalent to the Red Cross Basic Sailing Course, are conducted between 9:45 a.m. and noon . Students passing the course Will be qualified to handle a boat alone. . Intermediate classes are conducted between 2 and 3 p.m. Jn this cours~ students who have passed basic sailing or had prior sail· ing expenence review basic sailing tactics, perfect sailing skills. learn. racing rules and general safety procedures. . Racing rules include instruction on how lo make a good start taki~g th~ mark flDd charting courses. While one portion of the clas~ receives 1nstructio~ on the d.ock, the other portion puts its knowl· edge to test by taking to sea 1n the ever-popular sabots and Lido-14s. - Beginning and intermediate classes also are being offered moth· ers during adult sessions which are conducted between 12 : 45 and 1: 45 p.m. Add.i.tional. information regarding the {>rogram may be obtain- ed by calling Miss McFadden, 6?3-5546, or Miss Wilde, 673-6341, or the Huntington Harbour Beach Club, 847-2531. SET FOR A SUMMER SAILING -Youngsters in Huntington Harbour are learning proper sailing and racing techniques in a series of courses being con· ducted during July and Au~u.st. Jeannie Craig list· · ens carefUlly while Miss Alice McFadden and Miss Barbara Wilde e~lain proper rigging of a sabot to Bill Cooper and Rich Martin (left to right), ClaBSes in beginning and intermediate sailing instruction are conducted Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Book ... -. . . Beat !Editor'• not.: T"-followllll UI'" 1ult book r1vltws -• 11r·w1rNI for !he DAILY "ILOT by Willllf' John1on, Hun!l119lan Betidl 1lbr1rJ- 1n. Tht volumes hilvt been rtc1lvl'd 11! !ht llbrtl'Y fnd 1rt 1v11t1bll for ~lreut1tlon.) "The Grimke Sisters from South Carolina" -by Gerda Lerner -It has been over 80 years since e biography has been published or Sarah and Angeline Grimke, two daugh ters of a prOminent Charles.ton family that fied the South in the 1820's because or S'favery. With extensive research, primarily diaries, the author carrie:i the sisters from their lire as Philadelphia Quakers to their short but important role as abolitionist. leEX!ers. to tbeir utopian colony, to their death. "ESP and You" by Hans H-olzer -The Ghost Hunter has taken time off from h.is nightly sa£aries to provide an entire in trod u c tory handbook to the m a 11 y worlds ol ESP. The areas covered include : clairvoyance, astral projection, h y pn o ti 1 m, reincarnation . medium1hip, and healers. For pSykicks. "The English" by David Frost and Antllooy J~ - Messrs. Frost and Jay provide a brightly critical perspective of their tight little island, not really mod, just modified. It's ettractive social carlo0'9Pby a n d commentary with a quip or an offhand -llt ti>• drOp DI a hat SOS FOR YES -A plea to employ area youtbs in summer jobs has been Issued' by the Westminster-Midway City Co- ·Ofdinating Council. Mrs. Ernest L. Simpsoo checks the ai:tivlUeo ol. Mike Sherbondy, 17, Mike Roberts, 17, and Grace Marcotrigiano, '18, (left to right) who found employ- ment at K-Mart. Additional infonnaUon regarding the Youth Employment Service may be obtained by calling !be COllDcil office, 892--0049. Help Wonted Youth CalJing All Employers Somewhere in the area there is an employer with a job that needs to be done. Ready, willing and able to take on any and an tub are many of the area's young people who are anxiotuly 1eeking summer employment. An urgent appeal is being issued by the Westmin- ster Youth Employment Service, sponsored by the Westminster-Midway City Coordinating Council, to all employers with jobs available for area teenagen. Many of the young applicants are experienced and have held jobs before .. Their wide range of interest& and abilities enables the service to provide a qualified applicant for almost any job offered. Some of. the young people are helping to 1u1'11"" themselves as well a~ save money for future education. Included among the jobs the young people are seek- ing are baby-sitting (full or part-time), housework irOning, wi~ow~washing, yard work, pool care, pet: aitting, vacation care of fawns and pets, moving, library wort, office and factory work. Any young people between the ages of 14 and 18 may apply in person in the office to fill out applications and be Interviewed. Located at 7332 Westminster Ave., the office is open from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. weekdays and will continue in operation until school , resumes in the fall. ProspecUve employers who would like to interview a screened applicant may telephone the office 894-2361 during office hours. ' ' The service, in ill first year of operation, 11 beiJur conducted by volunteers of the coordinating council ana is supported througb funds provided by tbe Wnt Oran11 County United Fund. There is no charge to either the teena1en or the employers in tbe WestminBter, Midway City and Seel Beach area. Fine-feathered Friends' Forecast Not Only for the Birds DEAR ANN LANDERS: At I wria UU. letter it i1 ramtng hard. I aee two cardinalJ, a red·winl b I a • k b I r d , sevmll 1pam>w1 OOll a !loch !«<ling outside my window. I've canceled my planl to go lbopplog because the birdl b.ave told me It will rain all U,,. Before you decide I am crazy, pleale let me explain. When I first shared my theory with friends and aelghbors tl>ey thouJIK I had gone bonlcen, but tbey hon telted It out and "°" tl>ey know my theory i. cor-rect. People can learn a areat deal from birdl and llllmal1 If they oblervt them closely. Mother Nature has a ftY DI -mine her furred and r-..s friend• ap!Mt tmpudln1 danger. U it II NlniI>I and Ille blrdl ,., ............. •'t .. .,.., 'I " ;, ANN LANDERS it means the rain will Jiit aD day. lf the birds disappear when the rain begins to fall it meana the shower will be brief and the sun will come out soon. It never fa&. I hope you will publilh my -r. Am:'· It will help your readers ~ their di)'. -GRAND FORKS, N.I>. · . DEAR GRAND1 TIM we ct b tr forec:11ter1 II.ave Jlvea me so maay hm Ileen I am podeelly wt11ta1 IO place lD3 fallll la tH IUU. Thaab for wrltlq. DEAR ANN t.ANDFJRS : I'll start from the beginning and tell you my story in as honest a way as I know how, oltbougb my be!art i. broken and my spirit ii UW!lbed. Ourr 15-year-old son was picked up with tbr.ee other youb (all older) for smoking marijuana. (00. Of the boys wu pushing It.) The teenagers were taken to the Juvenile SectiOft of the !At Anl•let Police l>epartmmt for qi-.. """ lD3 -llld-1 ' • were catted, subject we would have known that our My huJband ii a professional man aoa'1 behavior wu not normal. Pleue and we ere considered responsible print thiJ letter, Ann . If we had seen members or the community. Wilen the one like it we could have obtained police questioned us, it dawned on m'e some help for our son bdore he.J¥OUnd that W! were bOth embarrassingly up in trouble with the Police. -L.A. ignorant. We .knew nothing ol the HEARTACHE symptoms of the marljuaoe. user DEAit L.A.: Th •Y.mPtom• you although Ota boy had been 1mokJng for describe are aot always so proaouced well ov~ a year. We Ignored the boy's ta marljaau 1m~en. My couulta.ata drowsiness, his runny nose, bis con-have n11e1W 1ll1t perb.aPI your 109 tinual thirst. We didn't notice his allo wu utfft•I I Utile P•e and aslD& dUat.ed pupils, h11 unnatur•UY solt • few Bellllle1. Vear letter tboald voice and hia "I don't care" attitude. ffrYt te alert ,.re1&1 to abnormal We attached no 1ignitloance to his behavior paittera11 bowever 1 aad J strange slee:plnl habits. (Some mghll thou JOI! for wrlttof. , fle'd walk aroun11"the h<NM Ull 3,:a.m. 1 Other nf&ht. he'd rotlre II T p.m. and OONFIDENTIAL TO WA IT ING sleep unW noon the followln1 day.) FOR YOUR O.K.: Sorry, I can't 11v1 Had we -more rudin1 .., !be It. Your buobud'1 HCrtllary ahould travel under her own name. Your bu.. hand ought not try 11> dUel 1 fow bucU out of the airlines by relOl'tinC .. thl& cheap g!mmick, Thlo ·-for hotel rooms, too, in c• he bu some · other "m<meY·•vin.111 tricks up hit 11"ve. IF 1'" b1Y1 lrooble 1eala1 aloaf wtU. roar p,ireats • • • If ,... cu 't &et t.bem. to 1et·,.. UYe,JOV on Ille, H9d for Au~· boelllll, "Ba .... •t Pare1ttt Re" to Get Mon Freedom. s .. .i 11 ... 1111 .... w1t11 , ... ,.. .... aad a loq, itamp.d, telf....,..... envelope. Ann Lander• will ho sJad .. help ,... with your probl11M. Send them to btr Inc-DI tbe DAILY PILOT lllClollnl a llamped, lall-addrelnd _... I • -• • ' ! t -. ~ ,. ____ •••·--.:"4....,_"T"_·-:o. --->"c 14 DAILY PILOT -- .J Brides in a Stew -· ew Cooks Get T a$ty Advice 87 KAY I.ARBON Oii .. DelfJ """ It•" As 1.he month roils to a cloee are 11rln1f beanl and POtato chips your stiiple !are? Got the "not anotl1« hot. dog" blue&? Doa •t despair' help ii around the corner. n.r. time tile whlle knight b in the form of Mrs. Dorothy Wenck, University of. California Ex ten 1 lo n home adviaor, and the first ol her three Rlliom m being a homemaker. Mrs. Wenck arrived M the fiiiCpreoellllltoa, •ti tied "Cooking For Two ," with her colored food . chart.I under her .arm and detailed advice on "what to eat, wten to prepare it, and what to buy." MRS. WILLIAM C. BARR JR. Good eating depends on being a eood homemaker in more tblm Just cooking ckilla:, 1bi explained ... Good manacement 11 Lbe tey,0 she oatd, punctuating her otatement b y proJedlnc .UdK. Rocltu Pledtes Newlywed W.C. Barrs In order to make her career • a homemaker more ple-aant a woman must take the llttltude of a ho!Mebold executive making iJnpo,_ decil-. Home • Costa Mesa The !!lit goal thould be to plan for good nutrition and Lop economy, she Arrangements of white and yellow gladioli and chrysanthemums adorned St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church, Corona del Mar when Marilyn Campbell became the brJde of Wllliam Crawford Barr Jr. of Costa Mesa. The Rev. John W . Donaldson directed the ring and vow exchange. '.fhe bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Campbell of Newport Beach, was escorted down the white carpeted aisle by her father. She wore a white peau de soie empire gown with a lace bodice end watteau train. Her Uered illusion veil wu caqht to a crown of chantilly lace, ud forming her bouquet were white Easy Smocking · 9240 SIZ'!$ 2-6 . "" 11T .... i .... 11T ... -t- Smoclting checks in as fall's prettiest, new fra.sbion detail. No transler i s ne~ -use PY c:hreck- ed gm~ foe quick. easy omoclring. Nm channing yoke detail. sleeves. Printed Pattern 9 2 4 O : NEW Children's Sizes 2 4 &. Sir.e & takes 1 yllr"ds '~ iooh. SIXTY·FIYE CENTS in I coins b' each pattern _I add 15 cents lor eadl pat· tern for lint-class mailing ad specDl b•ndling ;) ._wile tbird ·class dtlm!y will talz - -"' ...... Send to f' .... -, the DAILY PILOT. 442 Pattern De¢., 131Wm18th SL, New York, N.Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADOlll'.llS will! ZIP, SIZE 11111 ftYLE N\JMllER. 0.C.. CIDI s-;tta D fr-ee -. clp ..._ ID ...,. Slldoc· ""' .. -ColaJoti. ·~roll-.-IO N-IN5TANT SEWING ____ ,...,..., .. _ • ...,.-It-· butterfly roses, atephanotis, baby's breath and carnaUona. Yellow empire gown 1 were selected foc Patricia Ann Campbell, the bride's sister and n:iaid of honor, and the Misses A n l t a Righetti, the bride's cousin Gayle Reynolds, Jen l c e Edwards and Mrs. Michael McKinney, bridesmaids, all of Newport Beach. The honor attendant carried a bouquet o f multihued spring blossoms, while the brides ma l d s carried yellow and white marguerite daisies. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. W i 11 i am Crawford Barr of Stafford Springs, Conn., asked his brother. Brian Barr to be his best man. Ushers were Erle Anderson, M i c h a e I McKinney, Gordon Abbott and James Keeler, all of Newport Beach. A reception for 150 guests followed in the home of the bride's parents. Assisting were Mr s .• John Christiansen and M r s . Harry Miner. After a honeymoon trip along the northern coast, the bridal couple will reside in Costa Mesa. empbaalled. . To sbow the importance of good nulritlon the broug!tt out a dilploy board aDd Paintings On View The o r i g I n a l pairltlngs seen on the covers of Orange County llluatrated. magazine will be on view for the public during the moot!> of July in the lllar1-1 Ubrary, Nrwport Beadl. The works, done ln a variety ot. media inchuti.ng oils, collage and acrylica, will be dilplayed •• part ol tile regular Artist ol the Month series sponsored b-y Ole Junior Ebell ol Newport. All the artiats are countians. Also on display is a pie· torial exp'lanati.on of the st~ps requ.ired for reproduc- inf mld printing a cover of quality. The bride. a fourth- generation California, Is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and Orange Coast College. Her husband. an OCC student, w a s educated in Ke nit r i a , · Morocco. Artists opotlighted Include Rex Brandt. Paul Darrow, Joan Irving, Phil OOe, Joe DlVicemo, J•mes Wanen, Frank Interlllldi, J a n Kaspryzchi, Robert Youna:, Pat Smoot-Woll<er, Herb Griswold and Larry Rink. Laguna Group N'.rs. Charles Chapmen, fine arts c~ i& the guiding hand behind Ill• moolhly emtblt. Amtriean Legion Aux - iliary ol Laguna Bead! g.aUlers at 8 p.m. the second and fourth Thursdays in the 1 , LeJlon Hall. FINE BAKERY ~~~~ l ight ind 1iry chiffon ceke frost1d with fresh l1mon icin9. 1.H :w~~qCllile Richly, laced with hon1y ind almonds, p1rf1ct with morning coff11. .._ 17c ~IN A lllTHDA T CAICI, .. DI If your birtltd•y i• i" A"tu•t, Septtmb.r or Oc. tcb.r, stop in e..J fill ovt en tntry ... , a cfKor• at.cl 2-l•r•r uk• to I Ncky ,..,a. Nch mofttht ? "£.~LIDO CENTER ~-°"'·~·-01111,._ ____ 34_33_v_1A_L1_0_0 ___ 1N_EWl';....;O;,;,R;,;,T.;;B;;EA,;,;CH;:.;.. __ _:6::,;7J.63:::60:_ __ ' • • I Luncheon Benefits Children \ I What's Doing MARY DAY, 642.4HI The Bold and the Beautiful $525 $4 The rings are a glimmering new kind of bru1hed 1.C karat gold. Thi dlamonda are mounted •lightly offlet, to they're unified when the rings are together. If• a whole.new ball game In wedding sets. And it's ours alone. A diamond is for now! (Diamond priot1 w.rywlth :10llt.ire selected.) BANKAMERICA!\D and MASTER CHARGE, loo S~VICK'S c7~--- ~rW\oros 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER 644· I 380 HAS A SUMMER SALE CAPEZIO'S & CLOTHES ONE WEEK ONLY STARTING JULY 16th ••• FASHION ISLAND ONLY ALL REGULAR INVENTORY 833-1333 • • • • I "" • ·,. "" ... ... ... • -... ... " .. •• '" I~ -•• ... -•• ... .... -' ... .... ~' .. " -- ./ • M .... 11. JMly 15, 1968 OAflY PILOT J5 Kitchen at Seo Bags Provide Ounce ·of Prevention LAST ·12 ·DAYS , ..... 1111 .. !I'll ""'"' Wik .. '" • urlH M .... It .... ,. 6UCC:Ull!!I lftfflt ,., """'r'MrtlPM Mllorl.I By NANCY HYDEN WOODWARD NEW YORK (WNS) -Leftovers stored in them Hlnl No. l Pla1Uc rood· before 1otnc into the ice box storage bags can be a are safe from any leaking · valuable aaset on shipboard . ice blocks. These bag~ also Created for yoo to be fastidiously beautiful onyoorvacation ••• by Elizabeth Arden "Slttlt" is the safe, easy way to remove 11nwanted hair; It keeps your lep, arms and face satin smooth, 1.R and 2.21 "11111 Grus 5'nr Dtlllwur• is very effective and long lasting. ·Keeps you dry and sweetly-scented , 3-oz., I.DI "••• Lec.Tlllr' covers up le11 imperfections. You can now ~aw an instant bronze-lookillJ tan; t01Tifi:te ly 'nlelproof, 1.11 l'.oslnetics, u mS' , I are aood for protecting items Ukt radios a n d cameras from sea spray . Hla& No. Z for cooking bacon. Place Iii inch of water in the pan before frying. This will prevent galley from smoking up and also stops bacon f r o m shrinking . I diced onlon dash of starch and Dour diced celfry a alt pepper garlic powder dill Mix all lncrtdients, except. clams, and cook tu boilinC for flve minutes. Add clarnl a nd simmer for five minutes more. Serves 2 to 4. • Your chiUl's photograph can win a · spectacular '2,500.00· SHO,PPING SPREE IN OUR STORE! Rlat No. 3 for baking bread or biscuits. Place , dough in tin foil, allowing enough room for dough to rise and expand. Bake in skillet over tow name, turning frequently until the bread rises and ls done. 'fERRAPIN SOUP 'di> i terrapins, 5 to 1 inches, ., boil and piclr: out meat (or use 2 cam: of f" terrapin meat) % pound butter KEY LIME PIE I can condensed milk 11.3 cup lime juice 1 pint of milk ( o r "' :i HOSTESS 1 baked pie shell 4 egg yolks 4 egg whites Beat egg yolks plus one egg white until thick. Add condensed milk, beat again. Add lime juice and beat until thick. Beal th e remaining egg whites until dry, fold into mixture. Pour into baked pie shell and bake in low heat about 15 minutes, or unW set. SCALLOPED OYSTERS Enough oysters tG fill substitute) t heaping tablespoon flour 6 hard-boiled eggs salt pepper 11.i: pint cream Melt butter in p a D • Remove from flame, add flour, blend. add milk. salt and pepper to taste. Chop egg whites and add to mixture. then add terrapin meat. Mash egg yolks and add. Return to stove and simmer until thickened. Then add cn!am. Sherry wine optional. Miss S u s a n Dray, daughter of E . W. Dray I of Newport Beath, has won the wings of a J Trans World Airlines flight hostess. Having completed six weeks traininJ in Kansas City, Mo . Miss Dray will be serving passengers fly- ing out of Kansas City Municipal Airport. And that 's just o"" of th• hundred. of valuabk prizlS and gifts totalling individual casserole Cracker crumbs as needed Milk Salt Pepper Alumnae Cool Heels •2s,ooo.oo 1/1 pound butter Drain juice fro m oysters. Wash oysters to remove all grit. In a buttered disposable a I D m in um casserole, alternate a layer of oysters · with a layer of cracker crumbs. beginning and ending with the latter. Season each la yer with salt and pepper and lumps of butter. Strain oyster juice and pour into casserole, add enough milk to fill until an inch from casserole top. Bake in hot oven at 400 degrees until brow n. With Mid-summer Dip · in the 34Jh Nati.anal Children's PHOTOGRAPH CONTEST! CORN AND CLAM STEW 2 cans corn and juice 1,, quart clams and juice 6 diced carrots Gerden Cl ub Mrs. William Gallavan, member of Huntington Hills Garden Club. will furnish location information a t 962-6139. The club gathers the secon~ ThuTfid&y of each month at 8 p.m. Alumnae and members of Alpha Gamma Delta. will enjoy a cool mid-summer change from campus and social activities Wednesday, ~uly 17, when they gather at a swim party and lun~eon ill t:he home « Mrs. Melvin Schantz in Anaheim. 'rule alumnae chapter will welcome June graduates wh(l will be joining tile club, as well as Delta members home for the summer from many college campuses. President Mrs. William H. Reed will report briefly on the International Convention of Al~ Gamm• Delta which tOok place in Mheouri during June and w i 11 introduce club deJeeate Mrs. H. Thomas Orr Jr. of Placentia. Orange County's other delegates, Miss Kathy Bice or Corona del Mar. from the undergraduate chapter at Special Purchase! 100% human hair wiglet only· 8.99 Lit Bullwls' iocperts hel p you choose 1 IMMlous wir1t. Sett and th ick human hair ~•Y bl styled in 111ny attractive .,sliions. Nalufal colors include b!owns, blondes, lll•Y mixes and 1ubuin tones. S.lve 9. 00, reeularly 18.00. Mi llintty "''°"· Ill Slor!S IXC&pt Ma rina the University of Southern California : Mrs. John V. Parker of Santa A n a • president of Deltia Alphe Alumnae chepter, end Miss Peggy Croof<e of Fullerton, president of the Epsilon Theba Chapter on t ti e Univerlity d Colorado campus at Boulder. will pve their views . Mrs. Ronald Wood will assist at the luncheon . The next luncheon w111 be hos.ted by Mrs. Earl Harris of Fullerton on Saturday, Aug. 24. Additional informetion is available by calling 537-4948 , 5.'M-9317 or 532-1036. Group Meets Discussing the calendar of event& lor the coming year tops the agenda of the Women's Auxiliary of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 441. The meeting will be called to order at 8 p.m. tordorrow in Union Hall. Santa Ana . HB Auxiliary Ls.dies' Auxiliary to Hun· tingt011 Beach Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post 7368 meets at 8 every first and third Wednesday evenings. YOU CAii WIN ONE OF THESE llATIOllAL PllZES: Fi"' Pri:e ••• •2,soo.00 Slwpping Spru Second Prize .• •1,S00.00 Shopping Spru Third Prize • , •1,000.00 Slwpping Spru Four1h Pr ize ..• •soo.oo SlwppingSpre• 50 Fi/1h p,;,.,, ea. • 100.00 Slwpping Spr<es 011 ONE or HUNDlltEDI ., u .•. IAYINU ..,.DI AS MONOIU.a&.I MlNTtoN PRlllSI Hive yourself a Shopping Spree,,, ya, a paid. up charge account that let.I; you buy whatev'er yoa "'ant! It'• 1 snap lo enter ind euy to win . Let UI photograph your child ind we'll enter a duplicatt in the cont~l 1t no ellr.& charge. Complete de- t1il1 and rulea in our Photograph· Studio now. Big balloon will be given .to every collle!tanL ruous WU: ""-nrr,h .. e.... n·••a..., ... Speci1l prites on m111t 1iu.1nd photo111ph linilhq. Foruu:iplc: CONTEST SPECIAL! 7 for 4 91 One 81:10 .nd 1i1: wailet.liu (TIIATI -TIU Vs lff TitE •OUUtl'llCl.J) Photograph :5tudio ••. floor MOR£ SLAMOUR A-HEAD I "°" that hailSt)4es 111 aettillf mlllr, curlier, be-ribboned, nl .n enhanciac than ever, llley lhould also Ill shinier, ridler-loakiw, nl IS alamouroas as possllle. CIAIRll llllia I head bl witll blo llllunlly beaatiM ~ espedallJ llr iw-ttes. ~ brolm* shinrnen witll I WR. spdq ....... Slllllt ir-• ,, ....... wiUI aolden llithfiahb, IQ. !rm 7.!n ., llr JOSEPH MAGNIN BEAUTY WEST for • ..,,,..,lnwn~ ell! 540-!050 II '""...--plm. .... -. . ' . .. I \ f \ I ,. l I I ' • Jf DAILY PILOT _,,July 15, 1961 ··weddings -· ' • Ring Up B'ig Bills · ii, IYLVIA PORTEil "The &irl may be ltorm· ing tile 1.w of Oolumllia at rina:in& doorbells fur a p(littiCll cllMlklate or 10- roinl in a disco all nlJbl, but -it -lo ber WeddiDC, Ille W-a fGrmai , ...... -·and .. el-a recoptiaa u ber family Ol:D affcrd. u Thie ii the ~ biued opid.on o f a spokeaman tor K o d e r n Bride mapslne, but lt'1 &loo bued on oolid fact. Fer ii> stance, 1n 1188 alone: 'l1la weddinl aet wW buy "" ~ f450 million ol en_....i rln&• and •100 milllaa ol wedding rinp, •aya tho Jewelry lndUltry Council in New Yort; 'Ibl ainele average bride will cenerate an estimated '3,900 in retail ule1, ranc· ing from wedding a n d shower &iltl to wedding clothes, ud weddinc recep- tion food and drink, Tbe total "bridal market" will reach nearly a billion and even thll rt.aggerlng sum will not include the giant portwedding marbt for honeymoon tr a v e 1 , a p art m eats, furniture, homes, car1, appliance1 and all the [est that goes into aettine up a new home. ''Marriaee'' U now acain bo<omlne a rapidly ever- greator fan:o 'in tht U.S. economy. In the flrtt tllNe manilla ol ll!l1 yetr, the -ol marria1e1 jumped 10 per· ee:nt and a record total ol 1,980,<0I !Ml'riafl• .. es pected fer .. ol 1tll. 'll!t rurp tr-dlAdlJ *' lllt fact that mlDI..,. ol ..,,.. babier,'' born tJ;l b :&.-1940I, .,. ...,. ,,. ·•c manJlalift. BJ .1171. ..,. ... "' •. c..-amw,... '• ol ~ will ,..,., %,300,mt e y .... Ami IDW· rJll!C 11 ltl!ini ...... .,... roan4.. ... _ -.r-IO stm tilt moot _,Jor ~::: ereada# fevtnd. H ... --11-*' eetm--,? O!Mou<J1J ... -""" •trY ..._,. Bal ••• minimum IOr a ellunll wtd- ding, with ..., • ,.., ..-. is around ~ -lo rover the costs ai a ftddiaC dress, iD'Yitattm.. &>waif. reception ·-and other items. Typically, tho sro<>m JI0'1I for engagement and wed· ding rings, the lfllU!ly !or the minister. the bride'• bouquet, blood -. tho marriage lceDM. rental of. fonn al attire for bl.mllK and male attendantt: and. of course, for tile honeymoon. The bride'• family p&)'I for the relt, and Ole amounts depend ~ _ "!' the me of the family ... balance plus the extent of their dauglUr'1 wilbel. In case there's a w•oddllll...,hwl in !lie offing in yaur family, here are rough MtimMes drawn up for me by Modem Bride to show how a $1,IJOO. SI.500 wedding mlgbt divide up: ITEM AMOUNT Weddlflt' -ft ~ VMZiO ln~1111lori1, POa11.. "9-11llO C:lluM:ll dtt«ll*'-W ,_ 11»* Flo\ll'en. 11C9 Tr1n11>0rt, hi Ind"'"' cfQdl •m Pllo!CP11r11>"' _... &ridnm1lcl5' t ilts MO 8not'5 1111 hi '"'l'I"' .. Brlclanllktl' lllM-l'8 RKH'll.., flood, arlnll;, c.1efi,,., t'te.1 11211 Gr1tulllet, l\lhl ._ lot •~n~ 1170 c ... 11_... runo:1 ..,.. You can use t b e 1 e categories as a guide to \11hat to include in figurine the cost of a wedding in Whatever amount your fami· ly can afford. At the very leu~ they will help you be realistic about the expem:e5 involved . And inddentally, lo be reali'ltic, at a minimum, quadruple whatever total you ~ ettimated for Ille cOatlnteucy fund. For thil Is the catefcry whlch will COftl' "error• and _ .. HB Auxili•ry --~Aux· iJi1r7 ol HomlbekG Btach ....... .. .. --1411m Hall at ,,., _JI.ID~ .. 1burwdlir "' -~ ....... ()a ... l!Hrd ~=~ .. ., .. _ _...... u· ' -FAMOUS MAKER SWEATERS 9.9 9 II(. 1.1.00m17.00 Save 3.DO m 7.00 oo 1111sy-ca11 cardipn Malels of washa~e Orlotl •acrylic. Attractive novelty llnM "&ht and brl;it COIOIS. Pe~ Witll casual clothes '"i time of't!t• year; 1izei 34-42. AeuHory Ito!! KNrr BPOR'ISWEAR • 4.9 9 • 5.99 pants - l'l'1lld tops In sfel'ltfess, lhcrt Of lonr styles. In llYlon knit, alate 111af1Dn blends; sizes J0.40. Panis fa "Sh~". If/la! 11 Orlotl'•acryfic knits. Pwfklt 11 zip stylls ill l!shfan colors; lfzH 8-11. AlllllD'/ ~-,.,, lllllpwU ...... _ .. _A-_. •a111, ,_ Jueattcm tn· -ClllT CB I Bl .. *•· • • I I ' , c • '44-2D ' • ., l . . DRESSES IN FRESH STYLES AND NEW FALL COLORS 13.-99 112.11.mm20.oo Three dresses shown from a larre collectloft flf styles for summer and early fall. A. pleated dress in polka dot on acetate jersey. B. Semi- fitted skimmer in abstract print on acetate ~--.; and nylon jersey, C. Two-tone dress In wrlnkl .. free look-of-linen rayon. Half-sizes 14~2211 llld misses' sizes 8-ZO. Bud&et Dresses B • • OTHER DAYS 10:00 TLl. S:llt • ' ' • • ' v / .?:, ~ ~ YEAR ROUND WOOL COATS.(.7 / /.< . , rea. 70.00 to 76 .00 3 8. 0 0 . I / A collection of lightweight wool coats for •ll·occasion California weat. Many style• and fabrics in fash ion's best eolors, inclurfina wh ite ; g.16. Be •urt lo at lhesl. Suit and Coat Sllo!l SUMMER DRESSES • Show!o, one dins flOlll a llllleetion ol eool, -r dresses. Many CllHf.-a-kiftd stylH i111-itd cofo!s lllld liair. Sunchlra ~ta.. , I ~ I NATURAL MINK STOLES 377.00 You'll cherish your investment in a mink stole or cape with double collars. In dark ranch, pastel, Tourmaline• or dawn shades. All have Bu ffums' unconditional guarantee. A •pecial "fur purchaso plan" is av•iteble. Of, a small depos it wilf hold your thoict. Fur Salon. All rur preducb: llbllff '° 11\ow tOUntry et flli}ln &t f"'l)On.d "''·'· ·•T.M. l'lli. Min~ l rNdtr'• AneclHIM FAMOUS-MAKER DRESSES . 18.9 9 rei. 28.00 to 56.00 CasUt!I dresses ilr rw 11111 eofrn. Sol id• .in black, broW!I or ••Y lljlUn rayon. Prints in unusual novtfly weaves and otller fashion f1brics and colo15; S.20. Dress Shop, DIANE SHOFFNER Novtmber Pl1n1 Harborites Pick Date Diane Shoffner. daughter of Mrs. Lucile Shoffner ot Newport Beach and the late W.r. Arthur M. Shoffner. will become the bride of Felix A4 Toedter. They have selected Nov. 9 as the date of their wedding which will take place in st. A n d r e w ' s Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach. Miss Shoffner is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and a business college in Santa Ana. Her fia~e. son of Mr. nd Mrs. Herman W. Toedter o( Newport Beaeh, also is a NHHS gra duate, An .alumnus of Orange Coast College, he a t t t: n d ed California State Colle11 at Long Beach. ·~ ' -' \ .... Stewardesses Miss Susan Mangan, daughter of .Mrs. Jean Mangan of Costa Mesa, has received. her wings from Trans Internation· al Airlines, a charter airline. She is a grad· uate of Newport Harbor High School. JUDITH ROSENTHAL September lrlde Fall Rites For Bruins UCLA .. .ion Judith Abbo 114oenthal and W I r II a m Templeton Farmer Jr, will ht: married during a garden ceremony Sept. 15 at th• SOuth Laguna nome of her parent!, Mr. and Mra. Devid l!Olen1bal. Miss Rt•••th~1. a erliCluato ol J'altfax H\clt School. is 1tuclyill( En11ish at the w\ivtnity. The. brtdtaroom-elect. 19n Of A Ir Force Lt. Col Croll! and Mr$. William Templeton Farmer Of Daytona :eeac· is miJorin1 in mu.Jc. I r II DAll.V PllOT II~, Ju~ lS, lM Sean Cares About Yo ar CAR DRIVING SAFETY on Any Road h : Newest Color in 1968 and 1969 Style Seat Coven ••• Sears Can Flt Any Car Complete Brake Reline Job Carefully Double Checked for You Safety • :V . ' Complete Automotive ServlOOll front Faetory Trained Experts at Sear• • • • Dave Your Car Serviced \Vh1ile Now You Save '30! Regular $249.95 21995 NO MONEY DOWN oa Sean Euy Pa1111t11t Pin • Coola every co.mer, even in big gt.ation wagon1 ... you feel cleaner, more relaxed • Three 4-way adjustable louven provide direct or dr&ft-free cooling • Thermostat automatically malntain1 duired coolneM ••• and there'• more knee room than to super-slim desirn • Padded face and fully roe.and eontn>la !-. BAfety and good looks • \Vide range, 3-speed control allows perfect air volume selection. Model 5775-7 Expert Installation 11 Available ! 49!!. $69.99 NO MONET DOWN .., Sea"' Euy Pa1111ent Plu • Siu 9¥sx9x3J,1-in .•• , fill 12- volt Mgative ground and plaYJ all 4 track tape cartrldgea • Built-in noise filters, plaf eject lever, mort 12 Reasons Why Sears BRAKE RELINES are Safer and Better r\ All American Cars and Volkswagens All 4 Wheels for Only 2888* • IJlapect Muter OJllDdet • 80..s.d lJa1q ........ -'wheel• • Rebaild AU ' W-.. OJUnden e Are OTID4 Brab 8hOM • Relllrface AU ' BrQe Dn.11111 • Ref'M:k Front l\'heel ...., .... .. 1eiarsr-,PaJmee,tPIM' NO MONJ:Y DOWX • lll.lped Brak• UHM • ~ and •dJa•' ParldllJ' Brake • Inspect Ortufl s-11 • Blffd All U-&lid. A4d ...... • FrM AdJa.tmMt for Life or Llllklr• P Raad Teat for Brake lteUabUlty I\ Santa Ana 1717 S. Main St. KI 7-3371 Briotol at Snnllower in South Coat Plaza 540&33 NOW ••• ORANGE Tu&tln at Meal& Orange County • I MO/ldoy, Jo~ I.!, 1!61 . DAil v 'II.OT JI Wheel Balance Sears Arranl'tll Sears WW Safety and Installation ' Check Your Car at Re-Alignment AUSl'ATE ' No Obllption. Saves Wear on Remanufactured Give us the Tires, SpriJ>«s· -Engines ••• Symptoma ••• ~nsorber1 Honored by the We Will Point Adds Safer Finest Guarantee· Out Your Troubles. Mileage .Anywhere No Obligation. --hllle You Shop In Air Coadltloned Comfort ••• NO MONEY DOWN on Anything Yo• B11y at Sean on Credit! . ' - ' I I Guaranteed 40 Months EVERY SEARS TIRE PURCHASE INCLUDES: FREE Allstate Tire Moantlnc Full 4 Ply Nylon Buy lat Tire at 47 Regular Trade-in Price of 8.50x13 $26.95 ,Tubeleu Blackwall and Get 2nd Tire plu1 1.81 Fed. for Only Exe. Tax and iY our Old Tire Check These Safe Driving Features: All.tat. Pramror Tire Guarantee TrMd W•r-Out Guarantee SIZE ~ k!:Jn:i I ~ -iUi!i1I ·-·· 11.47 Bilik I ll1 7.35xU '29.9 U .97 60% %.ul 7.75XU 181.9 15.97 50v/O 2.19 8.21ixU 133.95 16.97 50 70 ~ u...,_ 129.95 U .97 ~,. I.•• 7.00.13 131.95 15.97 ouo/o 1.9. 6.95xh 13-0.95 15.47 -• 1.95 7:35d4 132.95 16.47 60 • :<.08 7.7h14 134.•5 17.47 60 • ,, ll.25u4 I 136.95 18.47 5" • z..~ •.55xh 139.95 19.47 60 • z.!1 ' FREE 8.8:;x1• I H2.95 I 21.47 !" • ·~ 7.7!x!5 I S34.•5 11 .•• 5•% Check of Your \Vhetl .Ali&lllllent FREE Allotate Tire Rotation Every 6,000 Mileti rc=1 •UOIT GASD ~----·--· --- ' 12 to" ...... ~ ....................... in" 2T to II ••••••• •••• ,. ,, •• •••• •••• •• , •• 20'J'. '° ISlJcat av.art ••..•.•••••••••••.••.•. 21" • eu.t Oaud 1ea1u1t •••••••••••••••. ao,. 8.!5xl5 8.45xi5 8.85xl5 9.00xio . 1.lbU 136.95 •. 139.95 $4•.95 145.95 545.95 I 18.47 50"'/o 19.47 50% 21.47 ~-,. 22.97 .... ,. ... 97 5··1· Keep Your Car . in Tip Top Shape •• , Now Drive to Sean for All Needed Parts and Services ••• CHARGE IT on Sean Revolving Charge! .l f• Z.36 2.5• .. ,, "-• .,9 Installed by Sears Experts! Auto seat Covers • H"""°""' woven fabrk MM: toftrl with mm lldo iion•ll • l.onf'Jor!lnc, dmillil - • Avallahlt In reel. bl-. r.-°' black to!on ' , MO llOlQ'I' DGW!f • ..,...., ........... Includes Expert Installation! ·- 88 Eadl Fila Tb-<An: 'Mo.~ Chevy; 'SZ.. '67 Ch1•7 II and Ch 1•1IJ1; '60-'K Dodgo, Valiant; '62· '65 Plymouth; '60- 'SS Falcon, Comet; ~()..'65 Ford, Mer- cury, Fairl&M ; '61· '62 PonU.C. ..... .......... Ctn I• • I I i' I I I . ' Monday, July 15. l'MI DAILY 10 · 10 Sun. 10 • 7 Prices Ellective Mon •• Tues., Cost1 Mew Store Only Horoscope t'si:tT:",l!n-- Sagittarius: Be A d venturous In r JUESDA Y for progress. M e a n s upfetdnt conditi.onJ -tboee T• HM ..,.. wtie's llKtlY tot .,.., i.. . born ...... ARIES and ,..." •NI ....,.. .,..,. S\ICll'W am.rr'• JUL y 16 authorities give you &<>-"61~ Mokltt "stiu• Hl"" tw IMll •"' 1-' CANCER a.re in public 'w0mtn.'' '-"" bl•llod•t• 1M so '"'" BJ SYDNEY Oft.tARR £!head. Press f<Jr comp ,,ion s"""·•ight. ,0 °""''' AttrololY IK••ts. tM DAtLv1 of 0, t Doo't accept r-w> ,.1Lot, tos n... Gr1nc1 C.nl•• ''The wise man controls pr Jtc · -:;:::;;;:;;========'=:;:;,;;;;;=:::::;;:::::::;·I 100 Count SPOONS & FORKS 27¢ Our R09. 41c "•~c 11+1n1il1. J11~1 th• +hin9 fer ,;e"ie1. rAm M>ODS D•"· " .... "1:'. .. ,., u · 1•· 11 his d st.I A -I halfway measures. ·"' e ny . . . Sw o ogy SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. J)Ointa the way." ARIES (March 21. April 21): Much concern indicated 19): Avoid conflict in the about longe~range projects. home. Impulsive 1 ct i 0 n You want to bring the could upset family member. unknown closer. You take Know this and re a Ii z e definite, independent steps. restraint could be great ally. Some may think you are W11h·N·Tou@ Stmch Apply · Ught touch. Avoid • overly aggressive. FOAM PLATES PANT•Y .HOSE exc ... speed, demands. SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22- TAURUS (April 26-May Dec. 21): Keynote is 26 " 86" 20): study ARIES message. w i 1 li n ines s to be " J' Take special care in traffic. courageous. Adv o c ate ~ Tendency is to want m get adventure; shake off status { 'Nhere you're going in a quo. ROmance, ch a n g e , Our Reg. 36< Our Reg. 1.3.. hWTy. This u fine if you varie ty a re spotlighted. divid•d -~••P food 'tpt•••1d. In "'i,tou, wrthn•. einn•"'on. own goOd . make for a brighter future. ilo .... ,1.+•1 ~old h••I' in fo.d, Th•y'•• ' o~. ,;,. n+, .u 1lrt «.h fll•I~ ptnfy ht11 don't go too rast for your Utilize past knowle dge to PA.ITT GOODS DI". KOSlllT DIPT• GEMINJ (May it-June CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· .,.,..,.,.,., ..... .., .. _..,,..,,.._'!-""'-"'"""_..,.,..,. . ..,..,....,.,,,..,!i:' • ...,.,,,,_..,...,~·.-••••'"'"''"'••ro""-•"'"--"""'"""" 20): Amb i tion s are Jan. 19); Don 't be in too w~11o1 ,111, w~;" J111, highli ghted . You get action much of a hurry to battle ~11t11... 11 .1,.u °"'(:!':... 1s-1a .1' on reques1s. Be sure you odds. Stick to conservative 16 Piece .... , Portable 5 Ounce know what you need . Be course. You require rest • POTIERY SET SEWING CHEST DIXIE ® CUPS ~:;~ .:,~~~dt~!•ti~; ~~~br•~i~~~c:': ~.~ getti~ rid ol red tape. where health is concerned. 5 81 2 9 6 5 2¢ 22f: ~~:On (Jc~n~es21.fa~1[ iaf:~e~u:ni;;!i :J:~~Y • Harmony between yourself activities with you may • and one in alrthority is appear irritable. Hold back Our Reg. 7. 7 Our Reg. 3.66 Our Reg. 71c restored. Don't tole r a t e on confiding plans which Avee•d• 1tt includ•1 -4 ••ch, 1111 .. 1. 1111''• Stu1'41y p111tic 1ewint ehe1+ wi+h divided ll11t1I eolered Di xie@ C11p1. Tlti •~Iv U n n •Ce I s a r y delay. would mean big changes. 11u'e", 11ltd llewh. tr1y in1erf end de1p lower cornp1rl"'enl. cu" 9111r1nte•d to fit +he Dixi• di1pen11r. . Momentum is on your side Now is no time to 6Urprise or DINNl lWAll DI". NOTIONS Dll'T. rAITT GOODS DI"· -carry through with startle . . p IMX'9!'J'fr"""~ •!ti@_ :w ----·~ confidence. P ISCES (Feb. 19-March . w~119 ,,...., WR1t1 J~11 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): 20): Whatever yu do, do it i· 0111ftl11111 u .1, • n w~;" J1111 ou1a111i. 11 . 1•-11 Your views receive wide.r in dedicated manner . Mean s ·r ..... BOND BOX OU~"!',"" ll ·1'·lf L.11! distribution. Could be re sult halfway measures will nol Fire Resiltant 1 Dozen Lather of publishing, 1 p e c i a I suffice. It is all the way BIRDSEYE DIAPERS AERO SHA VE ~i;.~·t:~ ":1 ~.:-.tis~;~ )~~;.-::;:·:~;·gin~':!i.~~·~ 9 6 6 5 may be called upon to own ideas. talent. I 1 117 ¢ speak , mak• special IP 'TODAY IS YOUR ' tr, , appearance. 8 I R T B D A Y you are • • VIRGO (Aul:. 23-S(:pt. 22 ): introspective, possibly a 0 Our Reg. 76c Money news t. pp e a r s student of history and the He1vv ,,.,, bor p••+ech ye11r v1l11tbl1 ur Reg. 1.57 favorable y " t "" U • 11 · ,, LIVING IS EASY WITH OUR INFRA RED LAMP CU T Rog . $5 Now complete with shampoo The style's in the cut! After 1 luxurious sha mpoo your hair is brushed under the gentle hu t of 3.50 en infr1-red li mp ••• your own natural curl tendency appears! So easy! No pins or curlers! For odded bod y, • soft perm•nenl: 8.50 in tho S1lon, 13.50 in the Studio ' '• p•ptr1 f••rn ponibl• d•sf•llelion. Ric h 111~ •• in the 11 or. ctn. R•911l1• · OU may tU11Ve o history ol religion. You .o.Y"e : Alnorb1nt 'i~p••1 ef ,,ft bird1ey1. o• eeolin'J "'•nthal. handle added responsibility ol a religious nature but not Beauty Salon, 601 ~. STATIONllT DIPT. IN FAft]'S DIPT. TOILET AITICLIS DIPT~ at -but rewards increase. necessarily 0 rt h 0 d 0 x . .. ,....,..,. __ """""""'...l""'""" ~ s f ed Id be ~ phone: Huntington Beach 892-3331 t' ou~;,.'."°'""""""'~,_~~:-w~-:~~u~~'.17 ., o:!~~~;.~~ i=~s~~e~0~s in ~F~~~~~~:~oc~!~~~=~e0J Newport: 644·1212 ' Lltl uit ~ f'. i..st ~ LlBRA(Sept.23-0ct.22): GENERA L TENDEN· '~11 ,,J"1 "'·1 f DEP Round·A 1 Fi1mily Fun You get decision which C I ES: s u r pr i 15 in g ~~ \ STYLING GEL BOLSTER KA BOOM '1 _c_ou_ld_,p;__ro_,_ide_;:,gr_••_•_li::.gh_t ..:c:::ir.::••::m:::'':::·••::.Ces:::.::c:::o•::.":::ibu::te:.t:::•.'.================ ~ I 1 .... ,_ • J.~.~.:....... :~, ., .. ~J~t~~--· .. . ..... ~ ~~ .... I TOILIT AITICLl l DI"-DOMISTICS Di n . TOT DIPT. I Room Sin ,., ll·U ·U COTION RUG I l:J11. t S•v• •n thit bit wt1lt•lll1 c•ff•n ind I ••yon ru9 wth r ••.•. ,,1, b•c.•int f•r ,n, •e1+,11nc:e. DOMISTICS DIPT. --~ ~fii'.!'.0"' ~ "'""""'¥3.t-'.1¥1}4£.~ f JlllJ W~l.. J""Y ll ·U ·17 OU1ftt!llM 11 ·1•·1' Thr•e Pack BATH SPONGES 18¢ Ou r R09. ~7c Th••• Dri9hl colored 'pon911 In e pick. D1c:or1fiv1-f~nc:li onel. CHICICOUT" DI". cello i...11 • Mothers TOT-TOTER 1.96 Our Reg. 2.18 Cornfort fo• b1by i nd 111o+h•r in ltot 'II"'• "''' w11iher. Toh "''Y t ho b1 propp•d . :· up yet h1"• c:orr1ef b1,• 1Upporl. INilANTS Dll'l. I E~ ~~ .... ,.., .......................... ""' ............. ' ~ liOd!LWl"J!lll~'""""""""""'""'""'"""" ..... ~.,.. f Wftllt JlllJ Wftlle JMIY Wllllt JMIY l OU1ntlllft 11 ·1•·11 Oll•nlllilt U ·ll ·I' Olll ftH1'191 U ·16 ·U t L.11! Liii 1.111 Chrome Shelf ind 21 "x34" ~ CLOTHES TREE TOWEL BAR T·HROW R1UG • Colo.4'111 pl11tic: 1h•ll h1n91 •" wi ll. • •r roemy •••••· Gr11I d1eer1lo• il1m. c:o1o., 1v1i11ble in this ¥1r11til1 little "'t· f HAI DWAll Dl'1. PLASTICS DlrT. DOMESllCS DEPT. 1 .,,.,. ....~-----"'!!',.,...""""' .... .....,_ .... ,.,.., ___ .;;_ ........... ,,.. .. _ ... WMlt OUln!IUH JlllJ rl, W~lle OU1ntlllll 11 ·14 ·11 f 72 Count f "'" I CLOTHES PINS "'' ,., 1'·11 ·0 wn1,. OU1"tlliH Lid Vacation Speci1 I Boys Crew Neck FOLDING SUPPERS SWEAT SHIRTS i t Our R09. Sk Sprint +yp1, wooden' l'i"'· HOUSIWAIU DIPT. Genh Hamilton "'' ll ·li -U WRIST WATCH 44i.03 Our R09, 53.'2 Thi1 htnJ1om1 17 j•w•I w1lch r1!1il1 for 11 11111ch '' $85.00. 1.22 Ou~~~l7 Comp. It 2.49 Ou1li ty I 00 X. co++on lon9 1l••v1 1w11I ~ I lovely wiS1t-d1~" •inyl 11ip oni with p!11. , 1~i•h wilh "'PP•d fl••<:• linin,. Whit•, 1 9r•y, ••d i nd rnore. Sii11 S-M ·l. , tic tl•ryin9 <•••· lirnit l P•• c:u1lom••· SHOI 01":_;·..,, ........... ;. ... _ _.MEN 'S WIAI DEl'f~ ..... -..,,. .... ... """'* ..... Goldcr11t TRIPODS 5.88 Our ~"II· 6.97 "" 11 . u • 1' l •tl ••''"" le l I"'. Hol11h .n ty,e1 ,1 W~ilt °"'"'"'"' ..... Aircr1ft ,., It •••. 11 AM-FM RADIO 13.57 Our R09. 1 S.H ll1tllon1 MN.I l0l6 inel11d11 liatt•ry, ••rphont, ct rryin9 c111. SMALL Ar P'l.IANCI S DI". lllNI JI WIUT DIPT . ..,,.,,,.,,.~ ,,:..,;:.,,.,...,,,.,, ... a. ....................... ~ ..... ~ .,_. l<• f' ~ .... __ _ '"'' If .... _,,_ 11 -Ii' 1, I ..... Autogrophod GOLF BALLS ·2.99 DL Our .... J.99 Dot. TN.. kit Miii ,.tf N llt h•v• 71 ,111, • ..,,,... • .i..-. ' srom• 900tl ""· Colorful FIBBIGl.ASS PANELS 11-Sq. Ft. Our R09.l2c tq. fl. t'. 10', •n4 12' p•n•h •~•llelllt. filt••· tlet '-l•e~' h•tt -leh ll9ht 1how ..... 11,h. HOMI IMN0""'1N1' DIPT. . ' OU•"frtrw Q tJ·ll-1, W~!le ~ '"' "'" Expert WllfEt AUGHMENT 3.87 Our R09. 7.17 Alju1t 11d er• •n" 111110.r -tit tee·l"' i nd t•• ... t -in,p1c.t dHrint . Air e•n• ~titi•nint c•rs $2.00 "'•re. AUTOWOTIYI DIPT. •. .. 117 1f.11'11ittwt -·--- WE FASHION THE NEW FRINGE EFFE~ ·-"'· '., ~ ' ' J ' with feminine neck 'bangs'- with fabulous instant color ••• ' ROlfX • •'•• *. . ... 0 Afterourexpertsfeatheryour tresses to this fragile new flattery- , they color wi th Fanci-Full : in stant rinse from Roux that colors gray, or adds delicate color-tone to bl eached hair. Just rinses in, shampoos out.whenever you wish -Perfect finish.tocititliriUiant bnlsb WO!~ IOlfA !AU.. ....... ---I(~ .... -- PLUS SHAMPOO AND SET I ~on. thru Thurs. I IAfter 5 p.m. $2.50 ) Fri .• S•t .• Sun. $l.OO 17 ...... ..... ---... NIWPOIT MACH. CMAf, POUNTA ... •AWY, CALlf. Jiii "'-' ...... Ml"'" .... a.u. .. ~ iln-11,. 1l't• ,,.,.. ..... Vhl1• Cao ... U.flftAAM.L\W. ,,,.. W-.ni ..... ,_c...., IAtftA ANA. &Ma. .. .... P .......... ,, ......... CMftl" '""---..n ---. .............. \llllW~ ·--...,,_ ... ,.. ,.,... ..... ' • I MONDAY JUlY 11 .,. • "' ... -11:1 (tO) )my °""""'' ·---·(C)(!O) ·-.. -11:1 (30) iii" ..... ..., -"" ... ,_,., ........ _, O'lrill• .......... ..... .... ........ ·~ ,,,...,. .. ... .......... _11:1_ --1•-> '53-RitNnl WldtMlt,, Diii T.,W. ·-.., ICI (30) .... -.(30! 11 :·:--e-- .... _ - -IC) (OJ) • "' - -IC) IJll) ....... , ... ('°) .... , ·:, ... (IO) • " 1 ' "hot " bolifltftc:e. • ..................... " ..... .... ftr:Ultr "' Wlldlctl .-...... Dlwld Pnwltl i.. the lhclW lllMlll It HIMrd M1dle1I ...... e-· M IQ 1•• .. --(C) (!O) 1¥irter troftkltL •• ,..., (30) m I LM LllCJ CJ'.)) •• _.. -(30) .... 1 .......... (C) lllLI C.. , ... 7:IO II at CIJ •-• I<> !60! An· .ta Coruut ind JoMcihi111 Hutchin· aon pom., 11111tt whl M111 Worth S...., (Clllldt Aldnl), 1 woundtd oatltw ,. Dodi' Cltr IM1 ttitn ,,. rWdNt .. tun Mii """ lo M1rftl DlllH. (II:) en. ...._ CQ (JO) '!Mon· UM Mild Tllllf M1111t." llM boys l'D to EqltlMll wllM thlf IMrn thll Dwy hit h!MrttM I llrfl coullf17 edltl IMrl. (R) ·--fQ (IOI ..... •rely 0.,. II Lib,....,• Dll!llJJ-., _ ICl (~ ~ ...... Pllllet." Thi .,, ef flt •flNk ~ 111111 Mr •1*1111 .,... amon1 till .... " Houstol'• ,allot fortt. ·-$ llMr. "'"" IJ.• (dr1r.:~) '57 -.... ...... Doll ""''"'- m1n1111 .. Ca 1e 11• CQ (30) .., ..., -(IO) ·--- ·-.. -(C) COii e-•- l ... l'lill!rTl -lor. (C) (OJ) "A Wilk~ 11. Dlri." Mdrw OU11111, wtio will It.tr II h 111W ''LllQf" will • CBS ..t tell, Clrroll '1 · Co!mor •ltd MidlMI M-i>bf 'lld tllt wl d • ~ dr11111 lbollt affidl!1 ti ltlt lrllt Labl Inf«· ltall BUrMU •rdll111 fir I Sftd. iltl *1111" 1111Md Gr•,._ (Gun- nir Htlllrom) who )lmptd •Ip 111 ""' ... JI 9 00 I ... (C) (60) ""'" Bittlliiir.tverybody," flDbl..,,. tnd Scott 1r1 llllcllld '9 prollct 1 fl- tirM ll'lflt (Jlr11 llcbs) .,alnst • ¥'Mll'MCl· .. kln1 .. ,.., prla- Olllf, fillftld .. IDc:dlll 111 Muico. (JI) ' ·-- -(C) (!O) '1£~~~v=:>~S: hlto pertlllnhlp wltll SWMy Clover, 11 i111portMt ... ..,...,,, wtlt1 lie lunll ttllt Glowr ii IOt 1bo¥e lllinc forai • Ill what ht nnb. VIII Wllll111'11, loblrt Mlddllton ..... !') ·--(OJ) • ""' ,_ -(C) (OJ) ., ... ,....., ......... Ito) D ,._ (C) (30) lldtr W1rd. ·----(iime) "51---. • ..,,., "'""' .. -. mi. -tCI (Ill) m -...._ ("""••> .., -Sttrllll( Hayden, Jolrt, c.,.i1 .. i:00 91111w11: ,,.....,.. (4111111) '35 -Joel Mc:Cm, O.Yid "'""· 8 MIWll: .. ._ II .. Slrr" (ld- vllllllrt) '51-Johrt WIJl'll. Uoyd ...... 8C•••••ltJ..,..~ ·-IQ TUE~DAY , ••• .,. •• ,.,,. (...., '35 __ ..... _ ....... D"YTIME MOVIES <*-> ........, ...... -·--(-...... a.-.. Calbert..,.."-"....,. l*""l'--. . l:JOB.......,..,. <..,.,,,'IO 1:11 • ......, ... INif" ( ...... ) -·-........ a.,.. '52-Wi• ........ ".* ...... JI. ••• , ...... -1*1· 4:•• (C) .... -(-) '41 •) ·52~ ........ fQ ....... -0.llllJ ~ Di.ti ..... .. 111 .. ftlllW' (....,, 10 ... , .. a 18*' <*-> 'II _....... ...... ..... ,......., .. • JOB PRINTING • PUBLICATIONS •·NEWSPAPERS Ul 1 war IALIOA an. , P!ANUTS DR. KILDAIE GORDO JUDGE PARKER --MUTI AND JEFF IF ONLY MY A~ WER& 'THREE INCllES L.ONG&R I WO!JLDH'I'. NEED GLASSES ~· ~.~...;;._ • ' .~1 • • 1. ''':' -- MISS PEACH · • • ~-· • --J».Yld t•r> Wiilit &HAW UP. •• 5!E.1Fl .iOl.D IT ~OUT WITH ONE +\ANDI CAN JUST A80UT READ IT/ Brewer By G•s Arriola ...fo IQ.IOW 't'M A ~~WLYW~Of By Harold Le DoUll By Tom K. Ryw By Al S1111th By Mell ... .. ~ .. STARS -Lucille Ball hu stars lo her eyes when she discovers Wayne Newton and decides to htlp him on his way to success on "The Lucy St.ow'' tonight, in color at 8:30 on <;hannel 2. Newton guest stars a 1a farm boy whose forte ts country music . TELEVISION VIEWS Newark Still 'Tinder Box' By JERRY BUCK · NEW YORK (AP) -One year after the city of Newark was wracked by a disastrous riot the causes were examined in an exciting confrontation on ABC Sunday by eight persons affected by the disorder. FRANK REYNOLDS, who· was hm;t for the program, "Newark: Anatomy of a Riot," observ· ed that "if the lessons of Newark weren't learned your city can be next." . And if the people who participated in this pro- gram are respresentative of Newark, as they ap- peared to be, it seems that Newark itself haan't learned much from a riot that killed 26 people and left sections of the city in ruins. THE SAME LACK of understanding, the same hostilities, the same calcified viewpoints that evidently contributed to the riots were openly dis· played. It made for exciting television, but it didn't say much for the future~of Newark. At one point, as the accustations and recrimi· nations mounted, Donald Malafronte, administra· tive assistant to Mayor Hugh Addonizio, said: "We are in some sort of tragic dance here, whete we eat each other and berate each other and hate each other and curse each other." BUT IF THIS airing serves as a catharsis it wiU have had a useful purpose. None of the participant& could agree on the root causes of the riot. MORRIS SPIELBERG, ·president of the Spring· field Avenue Merchants Association, laid the blame on the "unsensitivity" of City Hall. But· Malafronte 'snapped that it was the merchants, not the city .'government, who were sensitive. Negro panelists complained of storekeepers overcharging tor shoddy goods. Robert Curvin, former chairman of the Newark chapter of the Congr.,s of Racial Equality, 1ald the "horrible relations between the blacks and the police which still exist to thi• day," had to be considered. . HE SAID THAT Negroes, wbo make up 52 per· cent of the population, had to have more power in . the city government. 1 Warren Copeland, a young Negro, who lost his right leg due to a bullet wound he said was inflict- ed without reason by a policeman, said, 1'I just hope there is hope for us." THE PROGRAM WAS the third In a aerie5 Of 1ix in ABC's "Time For America." The fourth, "Prejudice and the Police,,; will be presented at 7:30 p.m. PDT today. On Friday night, NBC presented the first of four hour-long conversations "What's Happening to America?" The idea: ls to invite persons knowl- ,edgeable in government, history, sociology and allied fields to discuss the tensions and uncertain· ties afflicting the nation, Edwin Newsman, an able and versatile newsman, iS host for the s~ries. THE FIRST GUESTS were Dr. C. Vann Wood- war, a historian on the faculty at Yale, and Dr. Kenneth B. Clark, a Negro who is a professor of psychology at City College of New York. The two professors suggested that America's history and its myths have caught up with us, leav- ing the nation facing a series of unsolved problems at home and abroad amid present affluence and past success. • Al THOUGH the program lacked spart and Im· pact, telling points were made about the anxieties arising froni the war in Vietnam, violence, racism, poverty and the crisis in the cities. Dennis tlae Menace • ' ' I I ' 'WJU. ~ I.AT~ FISH?' , ,~ • • ' • ' ' . . " • • ------:--:::::-:::-:~'"""":'~~~~;:=.:~~~~=""'~ --.~ f" ,,-~ I ·~ _., ¥ .; -fl -# '"" • _.. ....-.,. • • •' .,..--,. .. -._-... -~ .... -.~-.. n " .. ..._ .. . . . ,,._. . .. , .~ •• v -. , DAILY PILOT . Dust ·Cloud Has Silver . Lining Too By LEROY POPE \11•1 ....... ......,. NEW YORK (UPI) -ll may come u a Surprise to many city dwellers, but tbe polluted air they 1 n i f r contains a slgn ifica nt amount of gold and silver, .Laguna Hilb Gets Motel HE'LL MANAGE BANK Robert clet Gr•nte• A Bureau of Mines study of fly...asb from incinerators in seven cities indicated rubbish may be as rich in gold ,and silver as aome oreg being mJned in Nevada. An estimated $14 worth per ton Artist's rendering of the Laguna Hilb Motel , now under construction at 23932 Paseo de Valencia, La.- guna Hills. Slated for October I occupancy, the lwin · two-.story buildings will consist of 72 guest rooms. The 2-6/loth acre motel site is planned !Or a third unit of ~roonu to be added at a future date. Des Granges To Manage Bank Office Robert H. des Gr.iinges of Yorba Linda. member of .a pioneer Orange Co u n t y family, h-fs been elected vice president of t h e Newport National Bank and named manager of i I s University office in the new Coll ege View Fin a nci a I Plaza, Fullerton. The announcement was made by George L . Woodford Jr .. president of Newport National and its chief executive officer. Des Granges is a 1937 graduate of Fullerton High School and also attended f·'ullertol} Junior College. His great g r a n d fa· the r moved to Fullerton in 1872 and built the house wh.ich still stands a t 2.,000 E. Wilshire. Des Granges j o i n e d Newport National after 29 years with the Bank of America. where he advanced from Co n c or d branch b o o k k ee per to manager of the Placentia branch. a position he held from 1961 to 1968. 'Des Granges is a member of the St. Jude Hospital Advisory Board in Fullerton and finance c h a i r m a n , board member. and former treasurer of the Placentia Boys' Club. He has served as treasurer of t h e Placentia Salvation Army and the Placentia March of Dimes since 1963. Astrodata Picks New Presfdent Your Money's Worth of ash was found. It came from discarded costume jewelry, coins and photo negatives. This study was cited in the summer issue of th e General Electrjc Forum in which many expert! urged Americans to show more Inf lntion Hitting Retirees ' concern about management By SYLVIA PORTER U.S. retiree. They of wastes and salvageable John O., a $16.000 a. year dramatize also the widening materia·ls. salesman, retired in 1962 on gap between the working· Dr . WaHer Hibbard Jr., a retirement income of earning younger American former director of the U.S. $6,324 .a year, 30 percent of and the non.working retiree. Bureau of Mine s, said the his preretirement yearly Inherent , ln them are modern automObile · ' i 1 wage plus Social Security vitally important questions designed without sufficient benefits. Because of Social for U.S. corprtaoions and thought as to what to do Security benefit increases for Social Se c u r it y with it once it reaches the since 1962, John D's 1967 policymaker-s: junk heap. retirement income "If it were designed so a·mounted to '6,431 . IF OUR society fails to that it could be easily However. because of cost control inflation, should we d i s a s s em bl e d i n to of living increases since 1962 provide the elderly retired components," said Dr. the buying power of John citizen with automatic Hibbard. "recycling would D's 1967 income was a full protection against th e be easier and economically 8.6 percent below that of his erosion of his buying power? attractive, too." 1962 income. And h i s If so. who should provide increases. U.nder the U.S. Civil Servicee mp IOye' 1 retiremerrt plan, to d a y ' s biggest "co!rt of I i v i n g plan," pension raises are granted whenever I i v 1 n g costs rise 3 percent or more above the level at the time the last raise was granted. periodically votes S o c i al While Congre11 periodicaUy votes S o c i a l Security benefit raises to offset the effect of inflation. these boosts are n <l t automatic, as they are in many other industrialized eeuntries. Some junk yard managers pension inoome is now a full the protection, the federal · do remove some parts of old 15.3 · pe'rcent ~hind the governinent through Social 'MlE KEY a r g u m en t automobiles for sale to parts rising earnings of the Security, or the corporation against automatic benefit remanufacturers. And some average working American. through pension plans? increases is that this would take off fenders a n d Even 1 9 6 8 ' s across-the· Should we be trying t-o a m o u n t to off i c i a 1 bumpers for sale to body board Social S e cur i t Y find s om e m e a n s of acceptance of inflation as a repair shops. But it's 1 hit·• btinefit boosts have left him maintaining retirement way ol life. Similarly, the and-miss operation. n r. S percent behind where he income proportionate to the corporMion prov id in g Hibbard, now in ·the was in 1962 in terms of income .of w or k in g automatic ·pugon increase research department 0 f buying power and 11 .6 Americans so that retirees is linking its f u tu re Owens -Corning Fibreglas, percent behind in terms of can share in rising living obligations to a quantity of suggests car manufacturers earnings ol. work i n g standards? The pensions of inflation which it ca n design them so they can be Americans. many who retired years ago neither prediot nor control. routinely dismantled when do not take into account the Neverthekss. bot!! our ttiey reach a certain age. JOE S. was earning $3,000 fact that such one-time Social Security system and Then, says Dr. Hibbard, a year when he retired in luxuries as cars. long-our corporations must do most of the parts could be 1947 with company pension distance telephone calls and more to shield retirees from remanufacture, those. left income .and, Social Security TV sets have now become inf l a <f. i <l n . :w or k i n g .sent back t 0 r benefits tot a Ii n g $1.728. necessities for most of us. Americans must attempt ti> remanufacture, those left Today his buypig powef is 8 fill the future income gap b.v over could be crushed into 8 percent less than it was two WHAT IS management's their own retire men t small bale of metal and we decades -ago tlld his income responsibility here? What, savings plans. Lo ca t could eliminate unsightly is 65.7 percent less than it the federal government's? communities must create car cemeteries and much would have been if he had What, the ind i vi d u a I more pa. rt· ti m I'! job cost. continued working. family's? opportunities for the elderly. A few years ago a-junk These examples, drawn up So m e t o p-U . S . In our inc re as i n g ly car was worth from $40 to by the int e r nation a 1 corporations have adopted complex society , the m an a gement consulting policies in recent years of retiree's dilemma cannot $5-0. Tl odhay y~ul ,ottendh~Ave,:~ fi~m of Towers, Perrin, periodically hildnC penaiOI) help but become ewn m<>re pay 0 avei .<1we w •1o: Fo'r ster •Crosby, income for ttier,t,retired urgent. Unless we act year. Dr. Hlptiard sees this dramatize how brutally hard workers. Otters provide reasonably and in time. the as a great waste. one tttat inflation hag been hitting automatic pension rai!les to dilemm• will explode in our 'hg-:'.d ~~~nat~d, a _•_nd_is_co_n_t_in_m_·n-'1'-ro __ hit_lh_• __ c_o_ver _____ .,. __ 1·_1_v_i_n-'g'---ra_ce_•·-------- General Electrics president, secOnds that motion. Noting tt18t ·the Cost of developing new materials constantly involves gi-eater economic · risks. h"e suggested that Astrodat:a. Inc .. Anaheim, conservi11g .. wtiat already is manufatturer of erectronic avaiJ.a·bte n'ot only makes data systetn6 a n d in· strumentation, h a s an· nioral but financial sense. nounced· the epPotntlflent of Part of the answer is te ,James A. Yunker as presi· make the present materials dent and ahief opei;ating of. or· goOds last longer. And Heer. and~..a dire<:tor . industcy . has them in tbt George Mordy, 1\strodata work$, according to Dr. chairman, said. tbat the ~P· Reid. It is 'de v e Io ping pointment.of Yanker foUOWli ~azing new composite the resignatiOfl o( Th<_>mas materials made of very .&.1\insori. All'in so n Was 9troni fibers of metals 9r asso6iated' wittl the com· carben embedded in plastic patiy for ·1s months. or soft metal. Very light but Joining Yunker are (wo • verY ·s'trcing. The public olher f'o'tmer. ITT e"; 'hasrt't · seen them y et ecutives. R. Baker who was because they still cosl about appo inted vice presidenl in $500 per pound. charge of finance. and treasurer and .J. Someri; Who was appointed vice president or administration and secretary. ~ul Teplin v.·as al so elect.ed a member of l!he board. Yunker m oves to Astrodata fr om lntcrna· tional Telephone and Te legr<iph Corp. ( l TT I where he was group general manager o( the 1TT elec· tromechanical components group. Allin son resigned for personal reasons c.nd wil l announce his f u t u re busfnes11 plans within thf next few weeks. ' - r County F'irms Get Joint Pact SACRkMENTO (UP!l - A 16.59 million contract for consb'ucti.on of a Library classroom building at San Diego State College hM been awarded to G. L. Cory Inc., and J. B. Allen & Co .. of Anaheim in .a joint. venture. Award of the contract was announced· by the State Department of G e n e r a I Services I See by Today's Want Ads • A good buy fl'lr tht' i;m1ll offi ce: on en antique crcrn desk. \I Hh i:1aa:1 1np plus mlltchlng 11ecrt· l11ri111 ch111r. e A f"ll'Ul hll' $\t'r,.,, • llkP """. for t he lrevt-llng music lov,.r. e 8r8nHful hU)'$ In hnmt-~ &II 11lons 1hfbr3ch •rea. e A IT.-, rift, to L.A. 1 o a dally commuter, Wil· 1hlrt ne.tr We&tl!Tll Aw.. • V..1on1 on the: fl ute •nd clArlnf't tor t'M?ir:innin~ atucknl1 ,. 1 Vfry reason· able rate1. 'MINI-MERCEDES' -The new Dune Buggy, 50 n~ed ~ause of its squaie nose and low profile silhouette, is currently manufactured by Dune Buggy En- terprises, headed by Jim Taylor in Westminster. New Look Dune Bug Bounces Onto Scene A n e w "continental" style Dune Buggy, called the Road Runner has bounc· ed onto ihe Orange Cou nt y sports scene. From Dune Buggy Enter· p r i s e s in Wcstrnin ster. boosters of the school of buggy builders. the nev• ('ar sports a square nose on ;i low profiled silhouette. O"'·ner uf the firm .. Jim Taylor sa.vs the ne111 bu~gy has been nan1 ed "the Mini· Mercedes." Most young owners pur- Laguna Niguel Center Planned Preli minary plans ay e under way tn develop I~ acre~ of Laguna Niguel Industrial Park into a s p e c ialiied commercial center. with the purchase of the property by Stanley C. Allen. chase tbeir 'buggy in kit form, supplying cbass.ie and et Cort lhemselvee. Taylor, along with fiberglass pro .Jim Ford decided to build their own buggy kit. In 1967 they established themselves in 400 square feet of working s pace. Today thPy are using 8.000 square feet. C.Ourse Set On Investing "The Fundamentals of Investing" is the topic of an investment lecture series to be given at the Dean Witter offiee in Santa Ana on three f: on s e c u ti v e Monday evenings, beginning today at 7:30 p.m. The lectures. l1nder Claude Taggart, account executive, will covtr stock market Lean Officer George Maschmeyer of Mesa Verde has been appointed chief loan of· ficer of Marin ers Sav· ings and Loan Associ11· tion. Newport Beach. He will initiate a new construc tion loan pr()o gram for the lS-.year· old association. Allen, c,dillac and Oldsmobne de a J t r tn Laguna Beach the past 21 years:· purchased the land <in the eastern border of the park. Acting for him in the lrMsad.ion was Atty . Frank S. FltU of Laguna &.ch. language, function of ttle ;==========:., securitiei market a n d lnvffbnent policies. Reservations may be made by contactin& Dean Willer and Company, 828 N. Brotdway. Santi A n • 1 telepll..,. 147Gl. LOCAL Ne eth•r n•W•Jl•p•r kll• ,... mor•, •Y•ty 411y, 11l:tovt wh•t'• tOfnt Oft lfl fh• f f•olhf Oro1t1t• C.111t tlr.1111 tM DAIL'¥' PILOT. Bank Chairman Carl E. Buchheim, long time San Juan Capi· strano resident and the city'1 first mayor has been elected chairman of the board of direct· ors of Orange County Bank. Edison Picks Manager For Newport Ronald D. Blake ha s been named Southern California Edison Company's manager at Newport Beach, a c cording to an announcement by Ra Ip h Kiser. district manager. Blake, formerly service planner at EdJso n 's A'lhambra district, replaces Jesse Luke, who retired June 30. Blake, who has been with Edison since 1960. is a graduate of San Jose State College where he majored in busiiless an d industrial mana.gement. He i1S 30. He began his Edison career as a commercial department trainee in Los Angeles in June, 1960. From January, 1962 to August, 1962, he was assigned to the c o m m ercial procedures• division. then_ was a ssigned .as service aupervisor in the company's Lan c a st e r df5 trict. In August. 1965, h e transferred to the Alhambra district as d i str ict representative. He w a s named service p I a n n e r there in September, 1966. Blake is a member of the Pacific Co a st Electrical Association. W h i l e in Alhambra, he served as a member o{ the Planning Commissi'on and the Junior Chamber of Commerce. Massive SF Sewer Plan Proposed OAKLAND IUPll -A giant. freeway-s ized sewer to carry ~·aste from the entire Bay Area out ~o sea has been propo5ed as part of ttie San Francisco Bay· Delta water quality control program. Raymond Wal sh, director of the program, said the hu ge se-wer could be constructed at art_estimated cost ol $1 billion to handle two billion gallons of treated sewage a day in 50 years' time. The project was based on studles by Kaiser Engineers nf Oakland. Engineering· Science Jne ., and the California Fish and Game Department. The &ewer line would either be bOred through the ))(!ninsula bills . or rtreddlt the range will! • pumplJIC ttation. It would t h e n stretch eight miles to tea somewhere between Pillar Point and Pireon Point near Hall M..., Boy ID Sao Mlteo Coun17. Not Just Desserts Profits Fatten On Frozen Meals NEW YORK IAPl -They might deny it, but it's a fact that some of your favorite restauroot& are 5 e r v i n g specialtiet o( the house that wel'1! prepared and frozen in factories hundreds of miles away. An industry repre· sen t a ti v e claims that in one well known Eastern chain about 70 percent of the meals are so prepared. Even gourmet meals ol veal cordon bleu or filets de sole bonne femme are offered this way. In some restaurants a frozen entre that cost 75 cents wtiolesale is simply popped inta the oven for a prescribed t i m e . The vegetables, also frozen. a"d Ule bread are added, aiong with any unique ~ouch lhe restaurant might devise. Served in fine surroundings, the meal might cost $6. CHALLENGE •;1 don't think you or anybody else would know who made it..;' says Gerry Thomas a former Nebraska farmboy and now frequently the man behind that semi anonymous tag, "industry spokesman." . Thomas' challenge was in response to one skeptic's allegation that he could easily detect a frozen dinner when served at h o m e . "That's because of · the aluminum tray," he said. Maybe. ln a restaurant. h e' agreed, "you would have .an opinion of whether tt was good or bad." But, he added, "since you · wouldn't be thinking along certain lines you wouldn't detect the difference." The trend to restaurant use o( precooked dinners has been developing for several years, partly for convenience. partly because of a shortage of chefs and + the rising cost ol employing one : as much as $25,00J for a quality man. Regardless of price, however, there aren't nearly enough chefs. DISDAIN With obvious disdain for their lack of foresigh.t. Sam Martin. editor of an industry publication, remarked that "The kids today are. taking up physics. They don 't want to be cooks. It illn't glamorous.··, Some claim also that precooked meals f o u n d restaurants when t h e minimum wage rose to $1.60 .an hour in Februery. One frozen food e xe cut iv,_ claJ.med a growing trend •·rapldly accelerated'' about that time, presumably as restaurcmts turned to mor• automatlon. '' lf you run your own restaurant you can't even be 1ure ii the help will show up; the"'s a big turnover,'' thJs executive said, adding that precooked meals lessen the impact of this threat to business. The mass prodUCt"T of frozen meals, by contrast, eau buy in volume and can afford the most expensive chef to formulate recipes. .. fabricart.e" them, and a laboratory technicians to "fabricate" them, and a stable labor force to run them down the assembly Une. CUT WASTE The restaurant that uses the meuls then can regulate its storage, cut waste, and employ relatively low pay personnel to heat the meal!. It also isn't restricted to service only when a chef is on duty. _ Present offerings include almost everything from hors d'oeuvres to soup to entre . sauces, desserts. Some of the best hotels no longer employ sauciers but instead melt frozen newburg or mushroom blends to spread on their best dishes. Some companies in the frozen food business concentrate only on dishes tha·t involve considerable preparation time. gr e a t complexity and high labor costs - on Stroganoff and lasagna, for example - ignoring the steaks and chops and other readily prepared dishes. IN HOSPITALS Pi1ore precooked dinners also are being served in hospitals, nursing homes. schools and industrial cafeterias. Un i v e rs it y lffudents reportedly a r e going big for precooked omelets, the airlines are considering offerinr them al-so. ·rhe l'!ntire business - home and away from home -is now a f7·billion·a·year enterprise thatis expected to double in size within the next 10 years, Thomas claims Americam average 6S pounds of frozen foods a year and will be eating 129 pounds by 1776. And sometime within the next 10 years. says Martin, about 25 percent of all mass feeding will be through use or meals prepared and froien at a factory and merely heated at the point ol' coruumpuon. Chase Manhattan Offers Hope to Unemployables By DEAN C. ~ULLER UPI Bui91ncss Editor NEW YORK (UPI) -In February. 1967. Bill Walker dropped out of Taft High School in the Bronx because ''I was so far behind t felt I couldn't catch up ." A year -and three jobs -later he was not so sure. No money and another pink slip. Today Bill Walker is thinking seriouly about a career as a ba nker. He goes to work every morning. wearing a suit with white shirt and tie . ~le has not received a high school diploma yet but he's so cer- tain it will come he already has started saving !or co l- lege. \Vh at tipped \Va lker from the list of alienated une.mployables into a bank· ing career was a program called Job Opportunities in Bu siness (JOB) started last December by Ch a s e Manhattan Bank. New York. JOB is aimed at shaping careers. not s~pplying busy work. for young men with potentials, reg·ardless o f Uleir backgrounds. It takes young m e n between the ages of 17 and 22. nearly all high school dropouts and unskilled. and puts them, 20 at a time, through six weeks of in· tensive remedial instruction in reading. language ski\111. mathematics, social ikills And basic attitude: reconstruction. The school day coincide& with tf>e 9 a.m .•5 p.m. work day, and the pay for going ro 1ehool ta 11.eo per hour. Bank exec'Lltives and a.ix professional teachers are the Instructors. The typical job trainee enttr1 the program wlttl the equivalent of a sixth l!"fldt edu~ Aftlf aix Weeki I of personalized instruction, the average trainee raise11 that le vel by two years. Jn some in stances, trainees have advanced by four years in those six weeks. Social a n d attitudinal changes are even more startling. They take pride in wearing b.usiness sui ts, their manner IS assured. They even are willing to try four syllable worlb wh ich earlier had been signs of an aUen world . Graduates in the six-week phase one part of JOB then get training for such entry· level jobs as key punch operator, sorting and listing clerks or stock expediter et $75 per week . For most of then1 there still is mor• schooling. They leave t.heir desks for 10 hours per week , depen. ding on lndividua.I needs. for further instruction in reading, mathematics and language .. This goes on for one year so tihat the 80 per· cent of the trainees who are high school dropouts can get that diploma. Judy McCoy. a reading t~cher in the program. says "everything about the program is important ..• even such a minor thing ait teaching them how to shake hands properly. But th• result.5 have bee n fa:n· tasti c," The nearly too students who have gone through tht four JOB scssion:r; to date would, almost to a career man-. agree heartily. Rudy Martinez, a J OB alumnus, .hu organized a J O B neW11.-per which helpS him gmn more language sklll1. He 1150 is organizing a JOB dance where wives and glrllriends can meet and share their J)f'lde In llheir men'• achievemenU. I• ' 1 • • • -~ • ;-; -:.. ; -i!!C - r • \ . ; . ... Tiie Copenhagen mermaid cHdn't exactly lose her head over the topless fashions, but at least the Incident gives us a chance to point out that when everyone around you Is losing his head over fashions -or anyhlng else -there is one place to turn for untoppable facts and information. The DAILY PILOT keeps lh head, far ahead of the rest, In deaDng with the fashions, foods, fads and fast-breaking news alolNJ . the Orange Coast. If you think it's just a fish tale, tie onto the one most of your neighbors clock on, the one newspaper nearly everyone reads along the fabulous 0..-.. Coast. • ·' '· ( ~ ---------------- --· J 1·eally Topless · Y ••· thi1 i1 •n• •f .th• wotlcl' 1 meat femou1 'topleu' 9irl1. The little metmeld In Ce,tin· h•t•n Hillrlter we1 intenclecl lty: the 1culptor to lie unclothed. lut then 1he leat her heed, toe, when vendel1 ett•cked her. It not enly 111ede her reellv. topleu ltut It re1ultecl In e atory thet 111ecle heedline1 around the woild. She he1 e new heed · now end the teuri1t with the DAILY· "LOT U11cler hi• erm 11 enly •119 ef hu11dr.ci1 whe plioto9repli her every week. DAILY PILOT ·: . .. . . ' 1 I 0 ,\.lf,Y PJLOT ·EDJTORIAL PAGE . . • r I Faith Ill the C.ourt The John Birch Society's "Impeach Earl Warren" movement was preposterous. So were most of the other accusations hurled against the Supreme Court during Chief JusUce Warren's leadership. ln a period of great change in America, nonelhe.. less , the court bu played a key role. And unrest and suspicion often tticcompany changes in social structure. ·Thus, it la oot difficult lo understand why many Americans harbor dopht about the Supreme Court. '\Recent developments are oot likely lo increase middle-of-Ute-road support for the Supreme Court. Justice Warren's threat to conUoue on the bench unless a man meeting his approval -Abe Fortas -re- places him shows a lack of faith on the part of the Chief Justice in the system itself. We would wish that the re- tiring head of the court would not want lo perpetuai. himself by hand·picking his successor. It also would have strengthened the average Amer· ican's faith in the Supreme Court if President Johnson had selected two nominees with impeccable record.1 to replace Mr. Warren as Chief Justice and to fill the vacancy his resignation creates on the court. The cry of "cronyism" is too close to be comfortable. The opportunity existed to restore much of the bed.' rock loyalty long felt in the nation's highest institution. Unfortunately, the turn of events is not likely to restore that unquestioned respect. 4Like a Prairie Wildfire ... ' Boozers, tipplers and now·and·then social imbibers in Orange County and other areas surrounding the city of Los Angeles may laugh at the new tax adopted on booze and beer in the city of the angels. ln an unprecedented acUon, Los Angeles City Council adopted, and Mayor Yorty signed, a special five percent alcoholic beverage tai: ordinance. In most cases. alter Ute bar owner cots Utrough lliurinl out hi • sllce of the price, it will mean a nickel a driJlk or a nickel a beer more than the present price. During the council debate on the new tax, down- town restaurateurs and bar owners complained bitter· ly that the city tax would send drinkera lo the suburbs -creating a sort of mass e.xodus at martini time. History shows that U this 5 o'clock pattern develops tt won't last Jong_. When some Ima~tive city offtcia11 figured out a "bed tax" 1everal yeara back -a municipal tax on hotel and moteJ rooms -there was much head.shaking. What happened? AftB the first olive wu out of the botUe, practical- ly every dty in California adopted the bed tax. It II in effect In almost every munldpallly In cautornia cater-. Ing lo toortm and travelera and bu been absorbed somewhere along the line 1o the degree that there II little hope it will ever be rescinded. ThWI, we look for nlctol-a-ddnk taxea lo spread from Los Angeles like, 1o use one of Governor Reagan 's favorite phrases, "a prairie wildfiu." Hi, Ho, Come to the Fair The Orange County Fair certainly hu changed 1ince it went into business in 1890. The agriculture exhibit.I are still there, to be sure. but the fair is as much a reflection of the county's growing industrial might H anything these days. When it opens its doors tomorrow for the 20th an· nuaJ running in Costa Mesa, t.he Orange County Fair (officially Orange County Fair and Exposition) will stage a variety of entertainment, exhibits and com· petition broader than ever before. The. fair runs from Tuesday through Sunday. Don't misa it. • What's the Part11 Line Toda11'l Gq__ns: Lethal Gus Hall and the 'New Left' Aml Serious Mr. Gus Hall, general l!lecretary of the U.S. CommunUt Party, has issued a publ,ic denunciation of the theories of the American "New Left." 'niey are, says he, merely ''petty bourgeois radicalism" and "anti·worklng class." Mr. ffal~ singled out the concepts of Prof.· Herbert Marcus, of th e philosophy department at l h e University of Callfomia at San Diego, and Jules Regis Debray. French Marxist and adviser to Fidel Castro and th.e late Che Guevara, for special criticism. Mr. Debray. now serving a sentence in Bolivia, said Hall lacked realism in sayin~ that guerrillas c o u t d o· erthrow capitalism by encircling cities ~d carrying on guerrilla "n:irfare. members and estimates sympathWen at perhaps 100,000. MEANWHILE, there sUll Is not much evidence of any def In e d objectives by the U. S. student rebellion groups. 'Ibis ls one re1son why Mr. Hall referred to them as representing ideolo&ically "infanUle l!ftism." Activists or the Student.a for a Democratic Society (S.D.S.), at its Michigan convention in J u n e , • reaffirmed. repudiation of t h e !\IR . J\1ARCUSE~f'eceivtd>•.the back •."American political system .•• nf the Hall hand' ror declirlng the Elections, 'for e 1: a mp I e , lt'e working class no longer was a meaningle ss in the S.D.S. doctrine, revolutionary ·force because union because the system merely "renews bariza ining stuffed workers vii t h itself'" by holding electi0:ns.. c{lnsumer goo:ds. This belief explains why S.D.S. and I' was obvious, howe.ver, tl}e N~w others of the New Left American I ~n ll11d troubled Mr. 'Hall. Re said groups also reject the doctrinaire 111c CP would begin to place new atJthority of the Communist Party. t'mphasis on youth of America. The CP. he said. had been oactive in many student protests. especially the draft card burnings and so .on . ~1 r. Hall's statement will both p1i:i~se and annoy the extreme right \l"i n~. He ~nfirms the· charge of OP p:.irticipation in some student and youlh protest demonstrations. Bu!. he admi ts to but ~3.000 dues pa:}'ing -THJS ALSO erplalrui "New Left" plans for demonstrations against both political conventions in August. The New Left views them as merely a part of the mechanism of the "system renewing itself." :rhey wish to destroy the system. There is passion and f t e r y , ambiguous rhetoric in the New Left - ... And Still More Trouble The militantly leftist Students for a De~ocratlc Society (SOS) is being hecti ca ll y convulsed by a big dose of its own particular brand of tro11ble- n1aking medicine -raucous brawlin g and disruptive dissension . The Progressive Labor Pa rt y IPLPI. a pro-Chinese offshoot of the ~-~-Coi:n munist Party, is aggressively 1nf1Jtratlng SDS in a drive to gain control . PLP came close to doing that at the recent SOS natio nal convention at Michigan Stat! University. Ea 1 t L.a.nsing. More than 800 delegates from £ome 200 chapters throughout the country attended th! week . 1 o n g r~ssions. held behind closel y gua rded r1oors. from which the press was trucu lently barred. A LT H 0 U G H PLP'• tighUy controlled and disciplined group of around 60 was greatly outnumbered, it almost succeeded in c 1 pt u r In g rlomlnation or the ke.y II member "'itianal Interim Committee -that Dear Gloomy Gus: II pl<Ullii· '41it .ltlobaif Hum- phrey .. at Collfornl., will th• same """' lllm Out d the 'Wbite Houaef 'j . ' ·' -··-- "'* ..... ,...... _.... ..... .., •• 0111'1' .... ., -....... ..... -.. -. ~ ... ...,. .... . formulates SDS policy and strategy. While thwarted. PLP's power grab was so confusing and disruptive that It largely unhinged the convention. Delegates spent so much time and energy furiously wrangling over PLP. its revolutionary ideology and tactics that scheduled import.ant SDS affia rs got short shrift. As a consequence. left up in the air were plans to implement 1 hil?hlv significant chanJ!e in basic SDS concept and thinking. IN TlfE PAST VEAR, SDS ha~ shifted from an "anli·imperialist" to an "anti-capitalist" perspective. It Is on the verge of embracing sociaUsm. or in the terminology now glibly common among SDS m em be rs "revolutionary communism spelled with a small c." To propagate thl~ new ideology, SDS leader~ have evolved 1 two-pronf!ed campaign -to develop strong regional organiiations. and to Involve SOS In ghetto activities. How far SOS will get In these radical aims remains to be seen. Taking up militant cudgels for the Impoverished a n d dhiadvanUaged chiefly Negro. In slum s ls far differeni frQD) st;g:in1 anti.war and other . dem0111_lnltions and disturbances on U!11ven1ty campuses. E n t I r e I y dif!ettint people. ractors ind issues ~Involved. For example: The recent violent 1Wdent dllorden at C o I a m b t a Untvtnttyr In which SDS w11 active are one thing, But 1gltating and or can I zl n i ·•rev o I utionary ~n1cfousnes1" .among ghetto dwellers 11 something very dJrferent. -Robtrt Allen and Jollo Gold1mltll ~I but a meagerness of coherence. The goals are ambiguously described as "participatory democracy" a phrase which seems to m e 1 n participating in life without any regulations or ·organization. The same meaning is inherent in the phr1s81 . demanding the 11overthrow · o f bourgeois de m oc racy •• and "c1pltalistic society ... MARXISM, Maoism, commun!sm, anarchy -all these historically arose out of oppression, economic and political. Man remains a mystery and a paradox. He, too. wu ambiguous. The paradox la that hiJ theories caused capitalism to reform itaeU to such a degree th1t it. with ill tater research and development, produced 1 technology that made m o d e r n capJtati.!im more widely accepted and supported than othe.nme would have been possible. . ftat the New Left should seek to subvert, rtd!her th an reform, representative .eovei'nment a n d technolo~cal benefif.R. is not without a Certain danger to their own lmbiguous goals. 'J'hpt's the basic SDS problem, but not for the pro.Chinese CommunJst PLP. TO mIS SMALL but experienced cliaue of revolutionaries there is little difference between creatln~ chaos and upheavals on college campuse1 and among the iimorant and impoverished in fetid slums. PLP came into being in New York City in April 1965 at a so-called national convention of Communists eipelled ~om the U.S. Communist Party for following the Peking line. A a>-member "National Committee" was named to direct the organization until the next convention. PI.;P has a number of publications. among them a theoretical quarterl_y. a m o n t h 1 y magazine, and so.called newspapers in New York City and on the West Coa st. IN NEW YORK , PT.P ha s extensivelv infiltrated SDS a n d considerably determines its policy there. This was a subject of an~y ariument at the Lan"sing convention. The Communist Party's desi~ation or a Negro woman as its presidential candidate was a deliberate ploy to garner Negro supoort. The ori~nal plan was to make Gus Hall, tong-time CP general secretary. the standerd· bearer. But Moscow o r d e r e d otherwise. and he obediently made way for Mrs. Charles Mitchell. 38. Communist for 22 years. WHAT'S BUGGING MOSCOW - American jazz music of all kinds Is a major re11on for the long·staUed negotiations on a new c u I t u r 1 1 exchange agreement with Russia. The old pact expired last December 31. Discussions on 1 new one have been futilely underway since last September. If and when a new accord will be reached i.s anyone's guess. After ten months of di cker ing. there is still no sign of one . 811 Gf'or!ff! ---. Dear George : For years my wife urged me to take up some hobbies because she s1ld 1 was around the house loo much. Now that I ma.ke con· 6lructive use of my spare time, the keeps busUng in saloons and emb11TU1ing me and she's even rude to my new pr!. triend•- WhM causes this? ANNOYED Dear Anno~: \, Women are just Inconsistent, le11s their little bevta:. In Europe To the Editor: We were in Europe at the time Of Senator Kennedy's a.ssa.ssinatiOn and had a gooc1· o(>portunily to hear what people there thougtx of our outlook on guns. We also liked the attitude in Europe regarding guns ; namely, treattna them as terious, lethal objects at least on a par with automobiles, aircraft and narcotics in their social bnplicati.ons. Of courst, registration won't keep 11111• from profess!onal criminals but the majOl'ity of our huge number of gun deaths are not caused by profe86Jonal criminals but by unstable people who purchased w e a p o ns without being COMcious of what Use they might eventually put them to. Registration would help impress upon them the seriousness of what they were doing while putting them on natiOn:a.I record at the same time. With virtually every activity that bears on ottler people's rigbts and safety requiring some form of control and participant's suwort. surely no genuine gun collector, marksman or hunter would object And as for people who have the deep feeling that tbey need guns for "_protection," it seems to us that they will 1hortly find that when everybody has a gun they will have come full circie to just the situation they originally hoped to get out of -only wi!h far woree potential. NED and MARY JACOBY lllore on Blrehers To lhe Editor: I must take issue with Fred W. VOS« (M&Ubox. July 9) and his outrage at Birch Society members wbo actuelly had tbe effrontery to show themselves in public on (or all days) July 4. As if they bad a right to march straight d<>wn the middle or Main Street in Huntiogton Beach! Mr. Voss sees in these "uniformed Blrchers" (is the.re a Birch Society uniform ?) the reincarnation of HiUer's bully boys, wiltl the ' ' r u th I e s s organization" of a crack high school marching band . HE REFERS to this procession as an "organized clvil!an army" operating "on the dark edges Of political process." On tihe "dark edges," Mr. Voss? How much more open and public can you get than • holiday parade in tlle bright noonday aun! If Mr. V081 saw one armed marcher in this "civilian army·" he doesn't fllY so. nor does anyone I know who w..- lhere. t question the basis of Mr. Voss' declaration thlt "unlimited financial resources" were behind the march. From whence. comes this usumption which he states as fact! Does he have acceM to the DuM and Bradstreet r1tings of the paraders? MR. VOSS' lndlscrlminate w.ssing about of the standard hate w o r d s ''superpatrlot," ''paranolc,'' "fascist." and "right·wlng extremist" does no credit either to him or any truly fair· lnded liberal (for I assume. Mr. VOlls considers himself a llber1l). He protests the peaceful, so I e m n appearance on 1 public occasion of a group of 1incere, concerned cltiz;e.n1-, then In the 1ame breath calls on us to "see that democracy does not exclude dissent" Wbc»e-dissent, Mr. VO!!.\? HARRY WEISBERGER Ake. Shrinking Time For Everything Some fact. yoa may not know: In every year of the put decade - since 1958 -the U.S. has spent more on derense than it has collected in individual income taxes; and this doea not eved include interest paid on the national debt, which Is c a u s e d primarily by war and defense. One large casualty i n s a r a n c e company alone pays out $1 million a day to individuals who are injured in accidents; and this single dally amoaat is greater than the sum spent in a whole year in the U.S. for researching the cause of accidents. THERE WERE some 3 , 0 0 0 important businen and industrial mergers in the U.S. last year -nearly quadruple the amount a decade ago - as smaller and weaker businesses find it harder to survive In this era of abrupt technological change. Speaking of such change., the advance in scientific knowledge alone doubles every JO years; if the scientific journal, "Physical Review," continued to grow as rapidly as it had been between 1945 and 1960, It would weigh more than the earth durt111 the next eea~ry! War haa grown at such an exponential rate since our nation was founded that it is hard to belleve that fewer than 15,000 soldiers Ml both sides were killed la au tbe battles of the Revolutionary War. THE mREE largest socialistic organ!zations in the world -in terms of numbers of personnel ind funds - are Soviet Russia, Red China, and the Pentagon. De.Spite the migration a n .. concentration of Negroes in urban areas, the actual percentage ot the Negro population in the U.S. has: 1earcely changed since 1900 -It is only about 12 per cent of the total population, as it was then. Our national productivity output per man hour ia now doablln& almost every 20 years, rather than every 40 years, as it did before World War 11 - and before the 20th Century is over, It may easily be possible to produce everything we need for basic living with only 10 per cent of the available labor force. THE LARGEST single "business" in the U.S. has become education. which now accounts for some JJQ billion in funds each year, and is growing at a faster rate than any other segment of society. One of the most amazing phenomena of our time is the shrinking interval between the time of a discovery and its commercial application : Before World War I. the Jag was 33 years; between the two wars, 17 years; by 1970, it will be down to live or sir years. (A homely but dramatic example of the difference is that the iiwer was demonstN.ted at the World's Fair or 1893, but not put Into ... until Ibo 1930s. The Attic of Your Mind Every house should have an attic in which• to store those things we don't need at the moment but may re11uire later, things loo good to throw away. Every life should have an attic of this kind, too , and every life does -· a room of the mind where we retain things which may be a bit out of style but .are too precious to discard. This Is the room called memory. a meditative chamber which serves as the chief warehouse of our being. where the occurrences of our thought and the experiences of our past are catalogued. What pleasure it is to steal away now and then from the eternal bustle of our !Ives .and •pend an Idle while in that echoing chamber! YOU'VE GOT I pretty e.xtenslve memory attic if you can look bac"k and remember wben- You could buy a two-seated surrey with a fringe on the top for $(8.40. It was possible to win a local reputation as a sage by malring such profound oboervatiooo as -Anybody can make a mistake; that's why they put erasers on pencils and rubber mats under cuspidors: You always tnew a neighborhood fruit and vegetable peddler loved his horse if he tied an old straw bonnet on itl head to protect It from the hot sun. One o( the 1"()8t wistful dreams of childhood was that sometime the lam plighter. who came by at dusk on hls bicycle, would onee -j ust once - let you help him light 1 lamp. A SOPIDS'MCATE w11 someone who pronounced the word vaudeville in only two syUablea, whereas the unlettered majority alway1 aald, "Vaw-duh·vi1le." A dude w1s a 1uy who wore IJ>IU ; a fop w1s a IU)' who not only wore QNlt.I -he aLto 1ported 1 rattan cane. ' ' '>. .., ... During the flapper era or the 1920s -40 years before the arrival or the miniskirt -it was agreed by headshaking moralists that women had never worn Jess in public, or looked worse. A sport was a fellow who tossed a hatcheck girl a full dim! tip and said breezily, "That's all right. baby, keep the change -there's a Jot more where that came from." TBERE WERE more people In America trying to gain weight -or keep the weight they had -than to lose it. HappineS& was a full.fed man standing outside a restaurant using a toothpick with one hand while trying to ......, his belt a notch with the oth<r. -....iW- Monday, July 15, 1968 The tditorial pa.Qt of tM Daily Pilot setkl to inform and stim.- ulatt readers by presenting th.ii ncwspaPfr'1 optnions and com· mtntary on topici of interest ond signi/ieanet, by providino a forum for tht t:tprt.T1ion of our nuJMn' opinio11.1, and bt1 pre1nting tM dil>tr1« vif'W- pointi of informtd ob1eTVtr1 and spolctsmen on topic1 of thl d<ly. Robert N. Weed, Publli her I ' Mondi)', Jul)" 15, 1969 DAIL y PILOT ZI 2 · Goal Line Stands and NFL Strike Ends NEW YORK CAP) -A pair o1 bargaining·tabl• goal lino stand> - one by the club owners and one by the players -involving a ~nslon dispute are ended. The National Football League Is ready for football again. The 18 club owners agreed Sunday night to pay almost $3 million in 1968 and 1969 f« pension beDents. It was the last of 21 poinU to be settled in negotiations between the owners and the NFL Players Association, which began last March 19. . A dead~k on the pe.nrion l1sue threateDfd to disrupt pr e 1 e a s t n tr&lning which beglne ln eamest this week, llp6et the ubibition season and cancel the College All·Star Game. Detroit Lk>n guard John Gor<ly . president· ol the NFL P I a y e r 1 Associtadon.,• Mid uoder the new peMioa plan. a 10-year veteran Will rectl ve '1.eo& a month at the age ot 65 .. Thi• compares with ms monthly under the o:ld agreement and wlth fl,132 a mod:b '°" 10.year vetieram uod« the cu.rrent American Football ~·· pension plan. Benerits f<ir five and lS-year veterapa under the new NFL plan, which Gordy said w11 retroactive to 1959, wen: not avl.llable. • Alter a mteting ol about w, hours at a midtown hotel, tbl agreement. was .announoed • 1 newt conference by Gor'dy aacl Nn. Prelldent Arthur Mocteu, owner ot 'the Qevelend Browfls, ~ joint statement, read by Modell, aaid: VISITS COAST AREA -Karen Muir, who at the ripe age of 15 has broken.13 world swimming rec· ords, is seen taking an easy workout over the week· end at UCI while visiting the Orange Coast ~rea. Miss Muir, a South African, will not get a chance to display her wares at the upcoming Olympic Games because the International Olympic Committee re- cently voted not to invite that nation because of its racial policies, And Karen Muir Osteen.Tries Kimberly's Blue Ground To Upright. Famous for Diamonds Diamonds from the blue ground area near Kimberly have made that. South African city weU koown to the rest of the world. However. another gem wh.ich comes from Kimberly has also attracted global attention. 'nhat would Of course be 15.year-old swimming sensation Karen Muir. the soft voiced little lady who has already broken 13 world records since the age of 12 and currently holds four world marks in her speeialty -the backstroke . Miss Muir worked out at UC Irvine's fa cility Over the weekend while visiting American butterfly star Toni liewitt of Corona del Mar. Karen confides Ulat she was deeply ClllllllllllllJ WHITE WASH <11111111111,11 disappointed when she first learned South Africa would not be invited to the Olympics because of its apartheid policies. But she says ttie sat.ion by the International Olympic Committee did not make her· consider giving up t.he sport she enjoys and excels in. Her co8ch, 36-year-old Frank Gray. eclloes Karen 's disappointment at not being aff«ded the chance to perform in the Olympics. But like his youthful. somewhat shy pr:itege, he is philosophic. . swim the year before I got her.'· he continues. "I taught her all the strokes that first }'E'ar. She was very timid -a complete introvert. But swimming has helped her become more of an extrovert." Miss Muir's progress was steady and by the time she was 12. she had her first world record -a 1 :00.7 for the 110 yard backstroke. She has been knocking off global standards ever s i n c e and would be a prohibitive favorite in the upcoming Olympics. if her country had been invited to the Ga mes. If& debatable whether she 'll still be competing w h e n the '72 Olympics come up in Munich. And it's debatable whether the IOC will invite her country to participate. Miss Muir hopes to study medicine by the time she's 17 and admits it will be extremely difficult to maintain rigid two-a-day swimming workouts and keep up with studies. fier rather is a retired veterioory surgeon and now farms in Kimberly. This week .she'll vie in the Los Angeles Invitational then later she'll take part in the U.S. championships before returning to the blue ground country. * 1:r P eople In NeUJ• Bob Par1001, who reslg-ned rectntly as Costa Mes• High baseball coa<'b, will be teaching physics al Saddleback Collere this fall. Par1on1, county coach of the year 1 directed the Mu1tanr1 &o • share of the Irvine Leacae tttle. Dave Knott of Holtville steps In to assist John Lowry wittl varsity foot· ball (ortune1 at Estancia High UtiJ !all. Sinking LA ST. LOUIS (AP) -Just because Larry Jaster happens to tieat the Los Angeles Dodgers almost all the time is no reason to forget there are other clubs in the NaUona! League. Claude Osteen. who dropped a 1-0 decision to AUanta his last time out. is Dodger Slate July 15 Jul~ u July 11 DoO'fl'' II SI. Lwta S:JJ P.m. ICFJ l•«ll Oodoers 111 CIM~ll S:Oi)P.m, ICFI lttlll Dodgf'I 11 CIMlnnell J:DO P.m. ICFI (...0! tonight's starting pitcher against the Cards. His record was 1.12. St. Lou.is named Ray Washburn (6-3) to oppose the Dodgers. · Jaster, the "St. Louis lefty , \\'O'llld like people to remember he beats other clubs, too. Maybe not as much as he does the Dodgers, but he beats them· all the same. "1 don't think pitching against LA is that much of a factor," Jaster said, "Just look at my record ag&nst the other clubs." Larry. 7-4 . now has a lifetime reL'Ord in the majors ot :.:> victories and 16 defeats. The 30th victory was a 5-1 rive-hitter against the Dodgers Sun· day. It was the Dodgers· ninth loss in 10 games. LOS ANGl!Ll!S ff. "LOUii ••tfltflol '~•kfr. cf ' I I G llrock. II P-vlcti, 1b l ~ 1 0 J1vle<. 7b St\ltllf, rl 4 0 0 0 FloaO, cf IC.Boyrr, lb • D II I Ctl>eCll . lb ll.81111t~. lb J 0 2 0 si.1".-. Jb L.itttvrt, II J II 1 1 MC.C11vrr, t Tcr1tot11. t J o e a Tolin, <1 Mil'"°' .... 1 D I I M••YIM, q VtrMlln. It J 0 0 0 J1~1t!r. 1 ICellkfl, , I 0 0 0 ~lln9ft, 11 Crl'W!Otd, ... I II 0 0 Hoe-rnef, ,. S\llton. • t o o o Alt:llrlt,l't\ 10 00 1111n1111w1t1. ' o a e 1 ·~ , k ..... ' 1 ' 0 4 I 2 I 4 1 1 I J • 1 0 1 I 1 1 3 I 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 t ) • 0 • o o o e 0 0 0 0 TP111ll Z1 1 J I T011h 21 I 7 J LDI Al!Mlft. ••• GOii GOii 001 -I SI. LOUii ••.• -. JOO XIII Ollx -J 01' -lCll A111tle1 1, l.011 -LO$ An•!t l 6, SI. Loull l, t• -J1v1tr, l'loOCI, M<C1r"'°. Lf~ tl¥Ni', Mil -11111""°" 1121, II -•l'Odt. 5 -Toltfl. IF -I,.,._, MnYllL. .. Under this acreemflllt, the league club owners will contribute 1 totN of. $3 million tor the year1 1968 and 1989 for pension benl;lfitl, administrative coots and the co.t ol a joint study to be conducted In anticipation ol the .merger of the NFL and AFL peiuloo plant by lll'ro. '· "It ii estimated that adminiltrative ' cost.I will amount to '144,000 and that 11\e joint lludY will cost _.,.Jmately M0,000.-No commlbnent was made by the owners. either expreuly 'or implJedly, regwdio( pension -bu- UOlll beyond 19611 anil 19611. . "In a de:parture from part practice in this area, tbe parties agreed that In view of the owners' ruarantee as to the amount ol, the contribution, any reference to t.be source of revenue shall be dropped and the owners shall have excluslw. control over determln· In& how ~t to meet the euarantee." It also was agreed to rorm a joint commit\ .. to adminltter the plan and arrl.J)ge h • pension study to be u1ed In the negollattons lolloWilig the merger. c-mlttee member< •Ill be named later. Gordy upressed pride "thlt we 11 pr'()fesslonaJ alhletet can settle oor dtllerence1 ..,.... the barcalnJnC table as &enUemen. "We wanted to be beard and we wanted voice but never, never wanted to use our own sttengUl unJutUy." Pete Rozelle. commJtsione,r ol. professional football , said: "I'm most pleased it bu been tettJed and at a time when it doet not lllect the pc'O-S al tbo tnioln( nuon." Please .Rai,n, Stop!, Is Plea As Wilson Racks Up 18 ·Ks CINCINNATI (AP) -Houston's Don Wilson strives to overpower hitters and he certainly fired the ball put Cincinnati batten Sunday -even beavy,raih.~ld not impede a recQr~ equalling perfocmance. Wilson, who admits he is not "a finesse pitcher," struck out 18 men alli at· one time farmed eighti straight while limiting the Reds to tive hits and pitching Houstoo to a 6-1 victory. Both strikeout marks tied' modern day major league records. Bob Feller of Cleveland and Sandy Koufax of the Los Angeles Dodgers both struck out 18 men, Koufax turning the feat twice. Max Surkont of Milwaukee, Jim Maloney of Cincinnati and Johnny Padres of Los Angeles all struck out eight straight. Pressure's Off .. When I've had such a bad year so far, I'm glad for this because it gives me more confidence," the 23-year-old right-hander said reg&·ding bis 6-11 record. Wilson struck out the side in the first three innings and also whiffed three Cincinnati b a t t e r s in the sixth. He fanned Jim Beauchamp to o(>en the game, yielded a walk to Alex Johnson, and Ulen struck out the next eight batters before Johnson slammed a single to open the fourth inning. In fact, Johnson was the only Cincinnati batter that did not go down on strikes and Wilson seemed slightly disappointed about ttlat. "l Jost some of my fast ball in the fifth inning, then turned kl a big slider. Then I picked up again .l:n the seventh One Paltry Lo ss to Angels Won't Rattle Mayo Smith By EARL GUSTKEY Of 1M CllllY 1'1111 Ii.ff As he emerged from his shower late Sunday afternoon, Mayo Smith had all the earmarks of a confident man. True, he had just lost, 7-3, to the Angels. but he was smiling and his behavior revealed no hidden fears.that the Detroit Tigen may yet tote the 1968 American League pennant.' Smith, Ute team's manager. was told that Angel skipper ~ill Rigney had just rernar\ed that nobody can leltch the Tig.?rs. • "The ·only way the 'ngers will lose. it will be if they lose a lot of ball games Angel Slate J\11"1" U Allffll ¥1 0.!rolt 7:!5 P.m. ICMl'C 11101 July 1' "'"""i. Y1' C~<tellM 7:SS •. m, KN.PC (1111) Jul"I" 17 A1111m1 'II Ci.Ytllnd 7:U p.m. ICMPC 17111 the second half." were R.i(s7xiCi words. . "Yeah? Well, that's what they all keep hopin'. ·isn't it?" parried Smith. More seriously, he continued·: "Naturally, nobody can expect us to play as well in the second half as we did the first half. But bear one thing in mind -·we don't have to." Not. in the irrunediate future, anyway. Del.toil is an amazing 2S games above .500 while the Angels ar.e four games below water. Detroit has slugged 105 home runs th.is year. far more than any other AL outfit. The onl y worry that haunts Smi1.h is a key injury or two. "l don't worry about us going into any taHspin but injuries -that's what can kill you. Kaline gOt hurt but we were able to absorb it·because of our outfield depth." Sunday 's Angel win , achieved before 19.971 under a warm cloudless sky. "It isn't over. The Detroits might stlll hear that pitter-patter." Rig broke 'Ntlters up with h.is version of the beef be had with plate ump John Odom in the eighth. The BRUNET, LOLICH CLASH TONIGHT The league-leading Detroit 1'igers conclude ·their two-day visit to Orange County tonight at Anahei m Stadium. Angel pitcher George Brunet 18-91 will attempt to make it two straight for the Halos when he duels Detroit's Mickey Lolich (7-4). The Angel~' home stand will continue Tuesday night when Bill Rigney's team opens a two-game set with the Cleve18.nd IndianS. dispute was whether Norm Cam had been hit by a pitch or not. Odom aald he had been. "Odom said: 'Well, I have to live him f·irst or call him out.' "So I said: 'That's right -but why firsj.?' "Then he 'said: 'Well\ he has .i. red spot on his hand.' "So I said: 'Oh! Well, let's get it X· rayed first thing in the morning !" D•TllOIT c.r.a.1,o tlNIA Mtltrll 'H 't flrtol MCA11lll!t . lb ' D I II 01Vtlllle, cf ' 2 2 I Sltnltr. cl ' 0 : II Frevo.I. H 2 1 1 II Norltlrup, •I ' 0 • 0 MIMt._r, lb 2 0 I I C•1h. lb J 1 I 1 Klr~Pltrldt.,rf 3 I II I w Horton. n • a I 1 lltlclll•dl, I 4 2 f t Frfthtn, c • a 1 1 S.1•1-. 311 .s 1 1 • W•rt,Jb •t 111C-,1b 3122 Oyler. 11 3 o a II llodl'l'~. c t o a O WJl-,p llOIEHls,• 2011 Ptntraon; • O O O II Wrlvfl!. P 1 0 I 0 G.Brown, pti 1 a 1 O L«kt, • o II II I W..-llPn,p 011011 Com..-.oPI GOOD Wrtn, p O·O 0 • l'r1c•,PPI 100 1 To1111 :u ! t > Tm111 21 J 1e 1 Oe!Y'o ll OOC1 00! 110 -3 C1Hlornl1 • . . , . 3Cl! :ICO Olx -J MBP -Wr11tt (lltod9'l'rt), Wrl9ht ICt1PI). P8 -Frtth1n, Tlmt -2:21. AltendlltCI -19,971. NBTC Sets 'Laver Day' For Tue sda y Orange Coast area tennis fans are invited to visit the-Newport Beach Tennis Club ·Tuesday evening at 5 to congratulate touring pro Rod Laver for winning the Wimbledon singles championship two weeks ago. Laver will be fresh from bis win over John Newcombe in tht Pari1 International pro tourney Saturday. Next stop for Laver after Tuesday's brief visit at his home club is the international pro event at The" Forum in Inglewood beginning.Wednesday. At Wimbledon. where he won In 1960 and '61 as an amateur, Laver won aix matches against top pros a n d amateurs. Then. in the championship match. he won a straight set victory over Tony Roche from Australia. In Paris, Laver teamed with fejlow Newport Beach resident Roy Emerson to defeat Ken Rosewall and Fred StoUe , 1-6. 3-6. 11-9. 6-3 and S-2. In the singles final, Laver beat John Newcombe of Australia, 6-2, &.2, 6-3. The matches WR held at Roland Gan'06 Stadium in Paris. The Newport Beach Tenn.ii Club ts located on Eastbluff Drive adjacent to the Eastblu!r ShopPng Center, ntar Corona del Mar High School. inning," Wllson continued. He recorded his 15th .Mld l&th strikeouts In ti1e seventh and set a club record for the most strikeout. with 16. But as he coasted along, he said he was worried about the clouds -. showers dodged Crosley Field most ol. the afternoon and finally troke looee in the last two innings." "I just kept saying, 'please doa't rain.' " And as the rain really poured down in the bottom of the ninth when two were out, he had 17 strikeouts and John Bench was batting, be repeated,, "pie.a.st don't rain." But he surmounted the r at a problem, put a called third strike paat Bench, and tted the 1econd record. GLENN WHm Sports Editor Olympic Polo Tryout Camp · Gets Area Aces LOS ANGELES P' 6 r d l e Massimino of UC Irvine and the Corona de! Mar SWim c1ub has been 1elected to the 22-m·a·p water polo squad which W1lt vte for berths on the United States Olympic team. Also ta.ken is former Costa Mesa water pole coach Dave Ashleigh. They will go to the polo t:rainiftt oamp at DeAnza. Calil., from Aug. 12- 25. F'..nal Olympic trials wW be It.aged at Long Beach's new Belmont Plaza pool from Sept. 1.J and at that tirr;I.• the final lS.man team which will perform in Mexico City is to be picked. , Massimino's team mates, Pat McClellan and Mike Martin, were chosen as alternates to the 22-player conLingent. Ashleigh, Massimino and 2.0 other selectees were taken from tbe weekend AAJJ tournament at Loi Angeles Swim Stadium -.a towney WO{l by Phillips 66. The champs too& the title by slamming Foothill A, 7-L Defending national champion c.r... na del Mar bowed out « the toum. meat on Saturday by vir1ue ol (Ool average aftft' coacjl Ed ~wland'I group had d.,_ Oenitoo, 6-3, and lost to Foothill A, 3-1. El SegWldo whipped Cerrttoo, S.S. when the latter's first team goali• failed to appear for 1tMI pmo. And lhen El Segundo,fell to, FoothAI A, 4-1. That gave El Segundo one mOh: IOI! than Corona del Mar and the brtb berth In Sund&)''1 linal 1011111L Aaron ·Blasts ' 500th Homer ·'A Sportsman is broogtil up to accept disappolnlment. '' he reveals . .. \\'e hope 00 be invited to t he '72 Games in Munic:h . ··sout h Africa Citied the requiremenbl prevtously set up by the IOC so nattrally 1 was very surprised when the decision not tp Invite us to Mexico City was aMounced." he says. Stockton Hits Woman, Wins Open ' ' ATLANTA (AJ') -Rtm'Y Aaron wanted bis 500th home nan to come bl the proper oettlnc nl --clreumstlllces: He wanted It to 1meu Gr ay will not further pursue the subject of politics. Unlike some great athlete~. Karen 's abilities wen not i mm e d I 11 te ly recognlzabl<. In fact, Gray reeall1 hi• first Slml>oe al Mias l\luir. "S1it was nine," r. rllat.es. "She was one of the first l'UPill · I bad 1'ben I moved from EngJlf1\! tn sooth A!t1ca tn 11161. ''You'd, .never have imagined then. that tbe would be a great swimmer. In lod, .... could doll peddle and that . WU lfl9tlt all Siie bod just ~llnl<ld to • ·' MILWAUKEE. Wis. <AP) -Dave Stockton can thank an unknown wome.n s~tator and Donald O'Burn of Milwaukee for some unplanned help in h.l.a four-stroke victory ove.r Sam Snead tn the Grealer Milwaukee Open Golf Tournament Sunday. The 26-year-old Jl!lh-year pro from California hit the unidentified woman with hiJ IH ohot on the pu 3, 246-yord third bole and plunked O'Burn in I.be head wt.th a booming drive oo the par l,550-yanl 18th. Boa> Ume& bo lalva(ed I*'· "The woma n was okay, but her arm swelled up to twice Its size," said Stockton, who pocketed a $40,000 first- place check. "My drive on 16 hit the man right on the head," Stockton said. "It must have knock"ed •him cold because the baU came d.ght back at me 40 yards. The doctor said lie would be okay." Right after Stockton hit th• woman. he )lirdied four sttalaht hole• to go 14 under par ror the tournamUl and mu. tho nlne•holo0 1Ura In !OUN!iider· Pm' 32; • He came home in 31, with three bogeys and two birds thrown in, to wind up with a 13-under·par total of 275. his best effort this year. Stockton, who 11dpped last week's Buick Open to be wlth bis wife , Caq1y, who is expecUng Ute couple's first child later thl• month, won the Cleveland Open two weeks ago. ..As soon as I started making birdies. I knew 1 could Win," Stockton said. "Every-Ume. J stroked the bell. it felt ab8olutely super." He one-putt.ell U ci the ftr1t a.even ' ----. ---. -~-~--~-------~------- ;. llO!nelltlng. The setting and circumstances wera there in the ti1ird lmHng Sunday and a quick lllck of t111 Allanla llurr'r'• PoWeriul "'1111 -!be boll 400 IMI to the Ielt.<o-~ and Aaron to lllhth pl""' 0. llo • •mo borne run da:t. lt meant 1omethln1 -belidN tbree run·s, a 4-2 victol'J' for tile Bravea (/I/flt San Francisco and hi• 11th or th• season. "lt equals lhe tt<1ll al biWnc tile home nm that won lht 1967 .,...ant. iii Mltweuket." Aaron NXI. • I 'I ' -.MJ15,1M . . .. • 1 llOUNCI 'Oii OL YMl'ICI -Harvard Univarlity'1 , m..,. crew move1 away from Illa· dock lad htads • tor Ille boat bouH after calnlnr a. photo-finish vie- ' tory twtr Ptllll·ln· tilt korl!d Olympic Trlab at tone· Buch M1r1Jta. Harvlld hu -rowlnC tor lill year1 but thiJ will be the ·cr1nuo.a•1 !int trip §,..... • ....,. Woman To Carry Torch Oly111pi~ Berth lo Harvard ; Military, MEXICO QTY -1'or the !Int limo In bilttJry ol Ibo mOdoiii ' Olympie G.ne1, a -will man tllo loll llO.Ji tlrougb the rtidium and lllht the OlympJc torch -• -bnJulht from -CIJ111ijHiL Tllo-· -far tbe SuJDJMT GIDles ol 1181, haw ehoHa Norm a J:nrlqQlta -Sotaio, • JO.y..--oid hurdler' ... th• Yulma atbletl who11 JllbUng ol the -h will be mOlt 1ymbollc of tbe spirit ol tbe Games. A M-Olympie Or....., Committee lpllb-·Mid -11111 Balillo -from the OOlllllrJ" -ate, Bala Callfornlo, and lllat •be re-11 Ille -and qua.litiu 1xllibit1d by M~ women thraulhout hiJtocy, Crimson Nips Penn in Crew Trials By GLENN WHI IE HarVard Cox'.a Paul Hottman. "But LONG B~.:C.~ 'Prnl.a went ap • wbea they toot 10 lq to pkt the in tho 1ymllollc vlclory .... two -a -·I befan to wony.• ~ -nt cox'n ,._ tho Virlln altar tbe lftll !Dlenin', u-...'.1 l.t.ndl rot tbe ..... .., dip and ..... -biln Into Illa CUii in tl>a llarvord Unlwnlt7 e • • e b Hany -ary w111 f.thtlila. --lllat ... wmt to plln, . allbouCh tho pl>oto--venlct .,_ Pll'kel' Ai4 the nee wont_, the University o1 l'ennlylvanla wu to plan -ucept far the cl-ol too close for comfort. '111111 was the acene Sunday at Lon& Beach Marina, momenta after the Crimton bad nosed out Penn'• Qual<en for !Int place In tho kind OIJmpie ""'""' lria1I II Loaf· Beach Marina. ' · A crowd or 11,341 wald1ed the epic battle which Penn seemed to have won -200-erl to 10 llld a half lonllh lead. ' ' Howevw,. the' erlmaoa•b.irted 'ladl ttom Cambrtdge ·tumed on the power and flnllly ooulht Ptnn with 10 -left:.TboJ -the tall! riflJI at tho lhlWl lilt. and ,_,. r-w .. not -until ~ -· cbeclted by olfidlla. . "I t:bougbt we bed ~ won," 1aid Ille tlnilb. llanord fliured to let Pull Mt h pace far -ol h Jaine. And that'• enctly 1'ilat bappelled. '!be Quaker• mow<! out qulcldy and by the time they'd reaclltd the IMO meter mark ol Ibo 2,000 -..,.... they OWllld 11.1 oecond advantaJ•. Harwrdi whlch defeated Penn twice -ll• tbll year -by ooe length and two l•nithl -~ali1 eut the rap and hit the ftnllh 1lM ... --ol the di111ppolatad -,._ P-. '''Ibey (Penft) .... Clll tbt IWWW) and we were oa the drift at tbl fbdlh Ford Bags CM's Reif 2nd -ht WU tbe dlfferuct," Parter conlldet. ' Quaker boll Jotipll Burt Hlltd tllo NICt "a cLaaiC -me el the anat-t l"ft •v• Miil. 1t was a touP, .. te loot." llar'Hnl'1 --a 1,40.I and Parter credltl a ltraq CWJtllt IDll tailwind far .,. tropolinf eloc:ldns. Pam, -a 1:40.7. So Iba Crimson wm ....,.._ 111o Unltad lllMe• 1n tho Ol;rmj>ICI at Mnico Ql1 tio Octebtr, 1n 11>• lln'1a 1C1111 1>1111a, Loar Beach'• John Va Bm -a halrllnewla onrTam- Van Blom put oa a-~ the tut 100 mtlerl to mil Mc with five met.en to the ftldlh and,,.. Oven a 8:18.0 ~mini willlt Mc-WU caught Jn 1:11.C.· Van Blom'• louflla" emnpetlter in Mexico City will ~ be -time Olympic pld m t d a 1111 Vyachy:dav Ivanov of J\uui,a; Harvlfd'I It Ir ft .I It competition flJurft to ..... -Eut Germany, Ruuia, Ntw fie•l•nd IDll Wat Germloy, ICCOnllni to Parter. COLUMBUS, Oldo --E d -· u. a •e•···· .. n urance I PGA C'-~ . :.=' :· ~ N~= n uu;sic HeJperin, Paddock Win Title Fetlblll Leapt, 41o4 R s ~~ 1 w1:"t;i1i:;-~4 . un weep Jim -· head pro ti RHt fono....I ltoif around c•llese l••t'-•11 a& -w..~ y c.o.ta M ... GoW and the com'M durklr hi• Nert~-U.U.enlf.7, WAilW'S GLEN, N. ' Coun11y Club, Httltd for pre11mi-y maldltl -Her WU bljuHll J-D la a (AP) -Jom Wytt'• two ... ond placo ad fl,800 In the -k but bad a llmt -..,.1e _, -"""' GT40 lporla Cln haw Sund•y at the Sou~ ol her own le ploy Swida)'. el here. taken first and oecood placo Cll!rom!a PGA· f1na11 at Powell iJ a !om>« lvll nt Oldo State lllfkw•y in the Six H..... o r Jloerealloa Piii< in Lona time tour1nr pro but had to Patnl aald Reetor aH a Endurance for 'tbe World Beach. leave the haird crind five l"IP 91 metoreJclllta lnm Cb• m p 1 o·n 1 hi P o f Wimer 'tt'1lll J t m m y yeln ago with back trouble. Btrllerteo, · oi.lo, • • r • -al Watldnl Powell ol -WellJ He conllna bis -...y 10U ri4la& ie Celambu te watd: Glen nilce tract. Cow-M in Bivenlde, who n ow to S o u t h 1 an d mot.re1de races. One tu r b int.po••ld put toptbw a aitrtnr of 12 tournaments and bi.I even.ti Reeter k.. ..,. la ,.. Howmet upe11mental TX btrdles In the 28 holes of the -n they'?o In the area. loteoatve care ult t I ---~ from the " -· Powell Aid ch••-In RIV er 11 d. Me ... ~~.... .. ......... ,.,_ match. He won ... ,-. · • -._ -~ Unit.cl Stalel w• tl!in1 • Powen -a rt durlnJ biJ triP belptd him leDJthen Betpltal lioee the tcddm. Sunday's race. the mcrnlnf 13-holt match O<rt hiJ tlrl-ad he • * * The winninC EI\ I lJ I b and WU teven. up 11 \he. domlnated Reif from the te. entry, tlrlvtil by Jacltla lckx · tw-.. went to the first SundaJ. P-n out-drove Mid Lucien Bl-. -ol tae rar the aft<rnoon II. He his roe II times ~. Mr1. Jerry H•lptri1 learned with ,.,..i Mrs. P'ranl< Poddoclt ol Me1a Venlt IMt week to win the owrall ,._ tlt1t 11 Santo Ana Cow!lry Olll"• Ladlto --TGorntmont. ,,,. _, -sltot a lM '°°" for their Th IB'idoJ·P'rida7 round1. 'lbl ftnt fliCbt I r o 1 1 wlnnen wen llfn. Gow&• FntOhllnJ al -. Ana and Ml• Dee Dee Wlllta ol lnlnt Oooll, with a 158. Boffinl the -Dlllrt INGLEWOOD, Calif. - Two cases alleging drugging of a horae at Hollywood Park have been refernd to the California R a c I n g Boan!. Bei,tum, covered ·117 · I birdied tl>a flnt two holes miles over the 2.~mBe U.::11: and . the iuue wasn't in in the --at an doul>t after that. average speed. ·o1. 1•.5' Powell'• win wu the most Ramblers ;~e i!t" =~ -~ Track officials . suspended thoroughbred trainer Oliarles C9miskey 'I'hUf'sday And William Helm, a groom, Saturday. The aurpensicns ~ a m e after a t.at of Bel Bush ahowed b'aces of a prohibit.eel analplic. Bel Bush. winntr cl the silth Nee July 6, Wll llddled by Com.iakty. miles per hour. me41c!ed match In the The win gatntd nine title hiRrJ ol 17 • y e -1 r . o l d points far Ford GT40 Jlvinfl toumty. the Muque 40 net polntJ f.ir "I dkia•t play vm-y badly the championship, only two tod.17," ReH eommented net lltle Poinb behind tho afterword. Genn•Portdlowlth42. ."Mr ·--ftlll• _.k Donahue lltytd in WU pod, but the pul<i just lop drlftr 11"1 In the U.S. woulda't drop -they lloa<I Rocl111 O>ampi..,.hlp had to. It just wua't m1 series when he won dQ." Stllmlay's 200 mllo USR!IC Relf bad ta play - event at the Gia, aftl'arinl lril "aood luck charm.,. Wi.lliam Dawaon Of M~ Tryouts Set ven1e. w11i • 170. Flrlnl a 1• aod liking The Orance C o a n t y the third n.ight gross Cl'OWll Ramblers will cmduct a wera Mr1. Woll Corbin of tryout camp at Chapman Santo Ana and Mn. c.roi,a Colleft oa ~. July M-ol lnlne. 30, at 2 p.m. ~t wWier1 were Mn. 1be camp iJ open to all -Mouron and Mr1. Jab com.en wbo want an op-Johnsm, Mn. Rupert parlwli~ to play In the c.a-H-*lcb and Mrs. ll<llorl 1ttMbta1 ~ League, Gordner, ad Mn. Hall<)' accon11nc to 11atr1l MopJ' and Mr1 . Mitt Puts Dent lnOCC LONG BEACH -A jolt by the military It a • t I 0..,. Oollt CO ll t C 0 ' I pl-. lo eompeto In .. ObmFlc Triall for ....... rowtnc-un t1>e one! ol th1a week. D... Hdlday'I l'elWft outfit· In Oat1and bu - ealltd to -=tt .. duty aad ha deplrll today lo join hll unit. • "Dave will be e:dremely bani' to ,...,iaco " UJJia1n1 OOC coach Dive Grant. .. We'll sleep on it f<r a few days, then make t h e decision." BUCS !ND Grant's Costa Me a a ~ wound up oecood in thtlr fiDal two efforU .t lbe ,...ktnd'1 Ol7111Pic S- oared rowing trialJ at Long Beach Marina. CGmpe-ting in consolation action Sunday, they came within three-fourths ol a lensth ol <atcbinc Stan/on! Rowing Association's A team entry as the laitter -lhroUih the waten In • lqhly ..-abla 5:58.3. Dr..,. Ccat WM g1..,. a 1:58.5 wlille the Western Dnolopment Clinic rrom Seattle WU third In 8:00.8. Sf.ollloro B and Cal State (Long Btl<b) trailed. OCC Jed early, t be n dropped to third momentarily, before moving back lnlo contention. Tiie ~ dolll'd Stlanford'• pace •ettinf shell to the l:SOO -line, lbetl made a bid to....-the lndlam. SLICED GAP They oliced the pp but couldn't mate up the deficit, tettling 1or u..1r rui.st time of the unbelievably auccestful C'mpaign. Saturday Jn repecbage, 1 they made a gallant lhowing. Sulxrdinated by UM Mmomcer to a role of being obvtoo.ly oul<:l ... d by WuhiftClon and the Development Clinic, t h e BUCI quickly d!Jpellled thtt thought. They led at :SOO meten aod then again at IMO melon 1beJ lum<d oa the juice and neorly caught Wullingtoa, placins S<Cond bf -quuttn ol a lenlth. 'Ibt wi!!Mrs clocked 1 1.18.4, DCC ,.. timed In 8:01.8. * * * 117.97 m.p.b. In hll MdAnn EIJl>ly-·year-old 51111111 Chevy 4%7 Sunoco Specitl group 7 sports car. -Jaet-. Carter. ::..::.:.:..=::___~'---~~~~~~~~~~~~- WASHINGTON -Sa•lot .. BruO ••PftH • two- ,.... • .. , 111ta1 -"' V.S. .eeeer ... r &.Hay, ••• ...., "•-Slot 1-1 -In pals., Pepe. Chuck P.arton1 ol Pfl>ble Beech. Calif., in a Barb Chevrokt Lola S i m o n 11 Special WU teOOnd and Baseball Standings PtpellrHeal .. ltlt -a 11-yanl'"" -..,..... I Jlp II lite Wlttp1' llefeue ...... lets tlaaa four --left ..... -half --.i.-.... , .. 1 .. •. --. -al 11,11 of .. __. .... George E.-ol Canada In ~ • _ a McLaren Mark J wu Na-al .._,.. W L Pet. GB thin!. St. Louil 17 SI .811 The oecond·ploce GT40 In Allonta 47 40 IMO 91> Sunday'1 Manufactur~ra', ~• · driven by David Hobbl and Phlladel..,. ... a 44 40 .524 11 Paul Haw-. both or Son P'ranc:Uco 45 4S .511 12 Enrland. "' on}J Mftn Onclnnati · 42 44 .411 14 oecood1 bthlDd the -·· ~"'iork ~ ~ :: ~I> Plltsburp 40 4 .486 18 0 Coas C T • Lot AoJelOI 41 • .•t If .. rang~ t rew r10 Houston ..!.. .!!.. .a1 111> Will M UCL ·=1\~mi::-M-ove on to A ~~-:::. «'t".'"$,• ·---71""'..~"' f.adl-.. ltl • tMw YM lll'P.., .. -L<ape W L I'd. GB Detroit Blltimon Cltvejand Borton !41nnel0ta Calllonla Olkland Now York ~iE11oa 58 SI .844 47 :n ,530 41 41 .Ml 45 • .ii31 41 44 .4113 41 • .m 41 • .477 • 44 .4'10 311 47 .4.14 30 51 .. 71> ,.,. ,.,. 14 HI> HI> 15 11 231> the MARK Ill A trio al 0..11 Cout Cal•• a.w memben baT• otpod llllen "' -lo ...U at Ila.A tllil fall, the and ~ Strand wiJI movt ~..:'J. IJtM._ •ltl .t l"ltttWl!rl I"""' M w . V....J.ft,....,.. on to Ua.A.. ......,. ceu.., Ml 11 c~tt '"-""" N>. Jorgemen 1 t t t n de d :r:.. ,,_.. ,,._., M l ., •n.ttt• ,....,_ .. ,~ Newport Harbor Hi I~ ll~~~ to--1-111., "· ~ ,..,......,. • "'T'Jlt ftlOl't a11t1'oritatioelw •tJlcd. decisiwlr indioiduol l!IOlor cor of lllil geMNltiot\" D.uLY PILOT I o 1 r 1 o d -·· ,,,.,. ... part ol tho ooc ........ -=-·to• II ... oi,...p1c tldl .. r-r:r:~ ---....... fie..., titre .. ., ........... . Jim Jal ... 111, Ylrdley ......, --· Jolm Boio • School,, Strand went to ,--------------------------' C..-dtl Mor and Bale -to ar.,. Cout froal1-Boach. Durln( fie '• ,.uon DCC ...,. Iba Weoltm Spt-lnu at Jobnson & Son Seatlla aad placed 1econd IJI 900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, NEWl'OllT llACH the Intacollefl~ RowlJlf ,.2 _1 ••• _ • A.llOdltloa reratu.. i n L ____ -_~_· _____ ...... __ .,_· ____ ~= Syr&CIMt. ' ... ORDlll: THI 1•6t MAU Ill TODAY AHD II ASSUll:ID Of IA•LT Dll.rYUY IMMltiAtl 11Uft11' AYAILAIU Off 1t6t UMCOLll COJl11NINTALS • I Wolves Will, 2-1 PASADENA (AP) -'!be IM Anlelt1 Wolves t.._i a ..... ,.,.. loelnc llreak ' by beatlnc tile Sall Diego ,._ 1-1 ~y In a Nu'lh ~ Soccer LeoC\lt -at.,. Rose Bowl. Cllvt r...io1 Lioc<ltn city. Enctond; playinf 1-' second fame for tbe WolYN, acor- ' td -. li>aJ.<. • 1be Int; • U-yd lilot, . CllDO :ti mlJlutOs In ... MCOCM! ball. Novalt. Oomlc tied It lor SID Dlero HVta -later .. a fioo lild<. Alber a teeond htlfi:ll.~1 Ford toot a Cl'Clt14lald -lnlm .MJcuy Walloer and booted' In ... winninl,... at 76-.· ''ERNIE'' JONES Tire Service Bl (,o,.,!r1 11 . -When You Buy The ltt Tire at Our Low Price-·--, ....... ww.. .... ATIN SIZE lit Tlll h4 Tiii llt Tiii JIMI Tiii ... _ "' '6.50-1 l 14.60 7.30 17.55 8.71 ·-7.00·IJ -7.75-14 -16.40 1.20 19.35 9.61 ........ 7.75-15 --c..- 1.25-1 4 11.15 9.43 21.IO 10.90 .,._ 1.11.rs --1.55-14 21.95 10.91 23.55 11.71 .. ~ ..... 1.45 -1 I -M * JONES TIRE * SAFETY SERVICE * INlPIC:t AND AD.Rln IU.llS * UPACI FIONT WHllL llAllN6 •119 STANDARD SHOCKS i ":Si39s .. ,·~~ NEW Tlltl! GUAU.N!llD UTllADS ANY SIZE WHITEWALL 4 for $48~:~~ ._ .................... llw4., ...ii:_..., ,., ,...,._ ef ........... tN ....... pr&c.. ti•., .. , ........ 11 Y"' Car A WHW WOBBURI if yo•t ~•f ha1 • t1•rv••1 1toorlt1t wlriaol Je11'f fitht ff Whffl AlkJnment eCombor •cattar ., ..... ~~~-~ No fl\oney Down • --"M O• Own Choice Cllarte • • '-lAlll9ricard • Malter c11a,.. I'--Hi1wt! I a.& .. t ..-. ,._.,.., tin r""9y ......... , ........ ,...... Phona 540-434J e 646-4421 I ----~ ----· _ _.._ ---~-= 1 ..! ;. .l ..... --.... ---,_ • In Metro Play B.ucs Win, 2-1; awe Falls, B-3 " ' " . I IJ ROG~ CA~ lortlnS Ille llnal bajlor to \ "' ..... ., ...... '"" • . Pop to flrtt-_. \( ' ' Gory -Dilntelbe<,.,-. llre<I Golde\1-.iv..1 ocorad three • ·!00!:-l)ltter lo 1"41 bh . ·-· lll,jb( "'~ ~. Wmi•a . Pjr-to~1' but<il ~ .... Mar~ ,to " lo a,2.1-. deOl1ion .ov11"(lal " ollMt -~-~~ thfrd Stal>t (Fulluton) HuolJeri'.· aw.a'"'"" ~.rolled. !)I.a !lfeb'o.Loague btli~ >lhl,dk:e and d\llflll»~ Vf:r'dkt Sunday on t b • seven. 1 , wlnner'a.diamood. • SlnClel bJ Jim llorter, Golden West w11 not 10 Myron Pines and. '..Mik~ ' ,fortunate-, however, fatJ.tnc Reyes accounted for the w to ·u.. Orange Panther• Golden West ICOrinr. after giving up seven runs in "'" "' ....._. • M • the third timing on four ~ wnt a • ~ , 1 waiks . ...and four singles. Or, '"'ttwrt 1111 • 0111 ..... • 1 -· .. i" It was the · P t rat i! s ' · A · Ill· "••• _,. lnll ,lq111;s,d ,,,. ISeV•:a91-11 Win •larts, C•rt.,, 39 4 J 1 I including a tie, and Din ""'"· " • 1 2 1 Dale6out was the big gun =~~r, " ! : : ~ with both RBI'• io the third MCGudllrl, .. 1 • I • Gflr1Mr, • 1 t t t f.r£roe. COITIPll, II• 4 O O 1 l\Js sincle ~ed ' MIJ:te ~:.:C--:1:. ~ : : : : ,.., GCIODSTUDEIT DISCOUNTS • .1 ,.,, 18//f ....... """' ,.,,,. Boti Paley an4 Auoclatel INSURANCE 474 I. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 642-6500 Leppa and Rick Seibert. °"""-... • 2 • o o Dunk lbe < ) k Eld.,, 2b I I I Ot~;;;;~~;;;;: e rger (.rl struc To1111 :u 3 , i out nine in g1>ing tbe route •c-., 11111111911 and Wu in eerlous tro\)ble w1n1'• "'"''" m ooo ~1",•1 o n I y -_ In t h e ninth '" s .. i. P'1111. ooo aao 001-1 ' 1 ..... ,,.., °"'-c-t 111 wtlen the losers loaded tbe A• 11 M 1111 bases with none out. ~1/:::~. ~ ~ ~ ~ : QUICK JUST LIKE LEAPPROG -Bob Wicker.iham (88) of Huntington Beach High School is brought to the turf by Long Beach City All-Star Urry Martinez (21) after Wickerihllm had picked off his 'second interception Saturday in the second annual Senior Bowl DAILY PILOT l'tltt..., Lyi. Kelllll game al Long Beach. Sieve Hill (left) of the Orange County Stars follows Wickersham -the latter the hero in the ·eount)''1 lf-6 upset over Long Beach. Two sin•let and a walk Jri1.,., rt-111 ' o 1 • " S.!blrt, If l I I I loaded them and after one •-... 1b 1 o 1 o l'W},ca;me pver oo An infield ~=.:.~ •.. : ~ ~ : out w ith one out , C.i.bo\lt, c • • 1 2 Durikelbefger settled down, evT"::\:9'"r' ~ ~ · ; l ; Cttcll 11, 1111lckly 011 locof evenh. keatl Y•'"' c•l'l'l!Hld1 ••- :ir1heriliv• •••.t•-•cUti .. .f tti. DAILY PILOT. Mustang To Debut AtOCffi A m.md robin funny car derby featuring ttie first appearance ol Gas Ronda's worked-ovtr ~ustang will higltlight Orange County I n t ernati.<Ual Raceway's program Saturday night. The Southland's bes t foony cars will compete in tl1tte rounds of head-and- head racing. 11te t w o undefeated oars alter two rounds then collide ·in the final fOl' top eliminator honon. Ronda's mechanics have mWed hia engine further to the rear in order to achieve more traction perfOl'mance. Already. his car has logged a 7.91 time at OCIR. Other funnies slated to drive Saturday are Charlie Allen's Dodge Dart, Rey Alley 's Plymouth Barracuda. Jess Tyree's Pontiac Fire'bird, and Dee Keaton's Mercury Coopr. An .added attraction will be the aerobatic sh>w by Art S<iloll and Skip Vo\k, WOO will perfoitn a mock dog fight in the motq>lmes. Scholl will conclude the air show with i. aeries of 10lo manuevers. Assassination II ICOl'ed its second straight win in the championships over t h e weekeOO wtien driv« Art Ward ol Denver piloted his Co.rvair to 8 two.oot-of·tlne win over. The "Samson" Dodge Dart of Rici! Ham- mons of San JOl5e. PUBLIC WEU:llM£ Located In 1-11.mtftcton Beach • Vt mile from Paclfrc Coast Highway off Golde:nwelt Street For starting: tin. al (714) 536-7575 HUNTINGTON SEACLIFF JI( COUNTRY CLUB Intr oduces A Monthly Ticket for the W eekdey Goller Hu1bend & Wif.-$60.0a VALUE 5116.00 lndividue440.00 VAlUf: fll St1rtlnt ti111e1 J.,; .. th• w•e• 1vt l1e .. l1 e<'le week Ill tJ••llCt ft tht J1y Smo9 Ft.e Cooled by tfte Oc:Hn Breen _ .. _ .. ..--.... ....,Gil* Ml• 3?ca DB's Wickersham Leads By RAY PLUTKO Of 1119 OallY l'llet Slaff LONG BEACH -It's saill the oDl.y item that really counts in fOQlball is the filial . score, so let's get right to it -Orallge County 14, Long Beadl City 6 and Bob Wickersham 31. Just the initi'al two tallies appeared on the scoreboard at Loog · Bead! Veterans Memorial Stadium on Saturday night, but it was the latter figure that proved to be the difference in the second annual Senior BoWl game. As for an upset, it was all of that and then some for the 10,00) fans wti0 saw the Orange· County All-Stars c1'aim the initiai credit sign in the series -last year's affair having ended in a 14· 14 deadlock. But if· you read between the lines it was virtually all Wickersha·m for the Orange County eleven as the former Huntington Beach standout p a c e d a -near-flawless defense for coach B j 11 Boswell's troops: Wickersham; playing defensive right safety:, led' his unit with 31 defensi've points -compiling his log on four unassisted tackles (3 points each), six t.ackle as sis ts (1), two interceptions (5) and a paa; deflection (3). "It was just plain neat," said the six · foot, 175. pounder. "All the effort. we [\owJ' ...-. MMCO ..tf.ht '""°' -. J0,000 i..."*"'l•alon ptOMtrM. Yo.i s.t frH towl!!J. • frM ...-. dl8ck, '•t. •fficl.m -1c-ma.t t'-In ju9t -d.,.. And wtttl MMCO, )IOU!" ln-ln1411'1 -... ~-.,. -500 MMCO C-. .,_ oo.t. IO coa.t. r-,.~ ......... --.. ..-... COSTA MESA 1741 .....,..,. .. "'"'"' O.rdon-· ...................... -- Sent• Ano 9aa· 1MD1v1Du•L s'rATIST1C1 !Of'•-(IUlllY lltnlllnc) Me. ~yw T(I YG YL :Jt.-elldl...,i1 ' n o '"· 10.7 l,_T1mty1i.11 1 · 2J ' t . 2}-.lmllll· · t ts .1 . 1'-J1mes 1 I I ClMt ~ Rwtlllll) n-c;1i. f n o l~rllOll s J 2 '4-A...,.,_, ' 1J ' 10-llrftNl/lt,, . j :n • 'U-Colt~ . • ,.. :t »-l.•ODI"" I· I • O· 21-MPrtlnei 1 l • n:-.t.~ 1 . 0 (Or111M CtililntY l'IUlftl) ... u ... 10,3 ... •• "' "' ,. • •• .. ~ l'l•Ytr ·PA PC PHI M're l'ct, lf-TtO'lll••~ . '' t 2 12' .a o. ... llHcll .... 11111 1~$1111 USS 10-lra''''"" 6 2 I " ·" 11 .u ,, ........ --.1. ...... ...._..a._ ' ....... --....... -~ .. • -.,.._ ... _, ................ ,,_, J!. . -----.... ~~.-~--. -.. -.......... ~ .. ---......... ' HERE'S WHAT YOU PH> our~ ... ____ _....__.'--.. _.., ......... ___ ._.,.. ..... lo.-._....., ----1nav11111• ••au•D' 8UtcKLY ·TILL YOU TMI HHf'S HOW A' W05tKS • , • _. . ._ ...... -............... __ t-""'r •--.... ··= ..... ......... . _,__ .. _,_ ...... fl ... .. IX.ACT COMDIT10• .. •1 n .. _,_ .. _...,...,. __ ____ ................ ~ .. OP YDUfll CAfll ""-·•-,...•-• ............ _. ............. -..... / .............. ...... --"" ---- ........ ~ .... --~~:-.. --i. ...... ., _ ... , :-.....,, ~ ··~··:'i.· .•. • All PJnney -Stores-Open Ev~ry Night Monday Through Saturday 5.88 ... .:;121* ...................... Foremost· Premium heavy duty shocks ' . A new super '-vy-cluty thock absorber for extra •me.. extra lllf•ty Gii 1M road! Rugged, high quality conatruction for added •nduranee. Up ID 43" _.. cushioning piston arltCI than ordinary shocks {or greatw eqlltral of 'wh•I ~· ... 1moother, tn0re comfortable ride .•. longer lire Wlt<lr. Slap. in. todayl . ' WHEELS WOllLE! CAR WANDIRt You nffd .our whffl Cl!llgnment 1p1~:1 HIRl'S WHAT WI DOt 3 DAYS • ~:' caoter., ••'-•, ' Q N LY I . ·--.,._... .......... . . =?~e ......... t .. wt.Mt , 4.44 • ,,.,,,. lire life,. .. ~· Charge ltl . " -. HUNTl'!"'GfON NEWPORT . BEACH BEACH -. ··---. (Hu..tlnpn Center) (Faahioft lal.""I " --~-~----·-............................................. -........................................................................ ~ .... --. .. --~..,.~ ................ -.. ·--·~-------. -···-------------------- ; • I f ---,,,.---.--r -• • -• • ,,--;_.,.., ..... ,.~.:-.::'"' ... 0::::0<.::'"9~""'!C"i ......... ,,."" ... """"""o:""""'"" ......... 'l!" ... "'1"' ........ !"'1,..11'" ......... "" ... ~'"" ...... 111!! .... U 11A11. Y I'll.OT Tiri!ff~ -Monarchs Risk UCI Hoop Lead Jllaltt Del rlsb ii> spat at the top la the UC Irvine basJtetball • rice when the Monarchs meet Troy tonight la Ille 7: li tilt .. °""Piii Holl Bolb llqUOds·bold a lluln of lint place (f.I) aJooc w!tllF~, MlbN--Malor Del Jn tilt acortnc column with 71 poiDla w h ll't Estancia'• Mite Heyes Is IOlll on tile EIC]o 1141uod wllb Ii. llllllC19 CNI """ Wllll•nw ·~· °"'u ""'~ V•l1-,_ ""'"' ·~­a ...... tt '"""" C>ur•nl• ......, .... ,. .. ,. ,,. ,. )I " 17 ' • l4 ' )I 11 .10 " 1 11 2S . . " 1 3 11 7 2 ,, ' 3 lS s 0 11 • • • . . ' . . , • • • ..... n.t ( .. 11 ·-... Chendos W11lr.er Gir,.r1 '~· Mac.Mtnrm.t w .. Frlh: .. " " n 21 12 21 11 . " " , " . • • ' ' ' . .. C-...f'I .. ) •• l'T "" " .. " 19 • 46 • :a lf GOLFING , WITH :4~ p~ -. ... · ............. _ ' . LErr ' HAND GUIDES YOUR SHOT The position of, the left hand on th• 'club1h1ft pretty .much dt lermi nts tha direction your shots will fly. Basica lly you will h1v11 good chance forstraight 1hots if this hand is in the 11ri'le position 1t imp.Ct 1s Jt w11 in at addrtss. I suntst you "memorize" the position of your left ha nd at •ddrtss. Ret ain this mtm· ory ~rou1hout you r b•ck$Wing Ind downswing SO you cln fl· turn to It by the time you hit th• b•ll .. I personally prefer to position this hand so that the back of it faces down the target line (ii· lustratlon I l ). If iny clubface also . faces down the target line both at address and impact. I will obtain pretty good direction on my shot. that is, if the back of my left hand again looks down the lint durina im· pact (illustration f2). RACE ENTRIES : ! ~: .......... ,. .... ,..,,.., .. ,. .. ~n,.,,c~"""'"~'~M""k*""'""""'a"""·"" s • ,, :I ' 11 • • • . ' ' . , , • • • ~ading Rusher All-America fullback Lar. ry Csonka of Syracuse set six Orange records last aeuon by ru&bing for 1,127 yardl. He led the team in scoring with 12 points. DGiD M Northrup, FrtelienM I )Celine 60 fOI' lrokol DITIOIT TIGIU T ooitht at I p.m. Clevel•ncl Tue1., Wff. _ .................. ..... __ _._ .......... cm. ....... ~ ... "°"'-"°"lllflll. -....... ,J' ,. c.11. TUUlh\Y, JULY, .. INt HVl!lf'TllTM DAY-f'l•ST POST 11• CL•A• • PAIT Pl•ST •&ca. ' furl-a. 4 YNt old• & Ufl. Cl•lm!n9. Pune f.«IDD. TOP cl1lm.. lne Price NOOO. ll'oad Min (It C1mp11) Twenty Kin IA P lrwa1) Bull Rllfht.r (W H1rrl1J '" '" m ..l'll"TH IV.Cl. 1-lfl• mlln on ttl• 81rv1ln C1111nter (W H1rrl1) El Mlrln !W H1rmetzJ Equipped IW Mal\orney) Miies City IL P lngoy Jr l l11i1nd M11ter (It YOl1r.J Liiio Llbr1r (J Amrbllrn) Oftf'WOOCI Duke (J L1mblrl) Dlnmer IJ Sellenl l\lrl. 4 Ytor 01111 & up. C!tlmlne. Pur .. lU S65DO. TOP cl1lmlrt11 prl<t I UMIOO. Vtn- 11• Ice Alhlell< Club. 11' F1ellblt (I. PlllCl'i' JrJ 11'0 LauoMn Sir IA Plned1l m '" ·~ X107 1U Grind Slim Mike (0 H1!1) ll2 Btrleycorn {A Ol••l H• Bta\I Bravo IS Trevino) 120 Short Acc.ount !J Arttrburn) "' '" "' •• Rubbl.ri Min (0 H1llJ N•11nu Ruler llt C1mPft) Si.I llu~r IA Plntd1l llS You Da1it II (J Stlleril 114 Mecll1f (M Yanez) '" POii R~. 11 MMll1111I "' s•CCHtD llACI. 1·1/IC mlltl. ' .. ' Vt•• olcl ITltkttnl. a1rm1,.., Puru MOOD. Clefrnlnt Mee 110.000. Gi lls Allbl CE #Mlllnll 0'1 Clemtrdlne IA 0 111) TMIHllllollS Link (It •l1n<o) •-• laiftlllt U StllersJ l"oco .NIIMI (, !)1m) Frlilr'• .. oltlt IA l"lnffll Gll'dle Tiii Globe IJ L1mbtr1J 1'Gr•I R-(J PlneNI AWllow Mitt UI: MIMlll T .. A Trip IL Cenleolll ~ •u1h IW Mtllor'TMYI lrvt11dl (W H1rl1dlil "' XON "' '" .... '" '" Xll7 !09' ,, .. '" >n TNi.110 IV.CE. IV. f\ltl_,, ' ve1r ollf m.~n fllllel br911 In C1lllornl1. Cl1l111ln1t. PU,.• IMOOll. Ct11Frnlnt prlte ........ ~ LillfY ilotl-(I TrtVllW) It~ Mtld IW H1rrlsJ Trleklr Rry (L G!Ul11nJ Worry Niii (J Pillomlno) All TM Senw (J Arlertiurnl VM111 Mtom11r fJ L1mbtr1J Llehl 0. ROllll (A Olll} Momeni\ tilolen ID Holl) Tootle Loo CR B!1ntol Miu Chi '" Off <E Mtdln1J Tlent. 0. IR Yllltl.) ~ Ci.-CD Pltml _J17 nr "' "' "' "' X112 "' "' "' "' "' l'OU•TH •&ee. SY, futlonfl, ' yNr 111d1, Ct11m1M. l"vnt POOO. Toit <lelm- lnl 11rlce Sl.S.000. w+nm {L PlrKIY Jr) WKlem Ber (W Ml~°""") Bt011;1r'1 Bvy (ll Yort.l 1,,.111111 tMlll (J Lill'l'lblrt) Biffle A:ov1t IL Glllti1n) llollf PollC"t CJ Seltenl Fpnn11l1!e (W H1rlKkl An9tll\ln1 (D H1tll S.m'f Prlll<I "' "' "' ·~ "' '" '" "' "' SIXTH •ACE. 6 f11rl0<!tl. FllltH & m1rw 3 YHr 01111 &. 110. Cl1ulfled 11-krwllnces. Purw S1SOO. .Usl1lln<1 L"ltue ol Si n P9dro. St~ EndHV011r fl. Plnc1y Jr) FlurfY ThDlllM (J L1mbtrll Prlncw1 Pel (E Medln1) My L101 (M YI Ml) l'tclnerbet L11ckr (R York) Get N" Win (R C•ml>fll) Dacltlv's D,..1m (0 Pierce) lick Brltcl'les (W fMhomtY) llV•NTH llACI •• furl-I. ' veer olds S. UP. Cl11mlne. Puno 17l00, TOO cl11mrr111 price 125.000. Coil• llr1v1 (0 H1111 lle1r S!orv (M Y1,,.,1) Ster Autl (A Plned1l WllO'I Alrl ltl /W Herr!I} Xtr11e111orv ID Pler<:.el RHlltl1 $Orit (I. P lnur Jr) "' "' "' '" "' "' RIO NTN •AC a . Ont-. mlll> on fM lurf. l Ye1r oldt. El Dor1clo H11\dlu 11, .Pun.e 170,000 ldcled. Groo 123,$. To wlnnor 114,$. A-Flcldll Ille \1.,,-Gllll~lnl 1l4 B-11.ovil Illas! (W H1rtlCkJ lU Olsttnctly ID P!ercel 112 ll·Blffle IW Hfrl~CI.) 115 Dlevo Seoc11rltv !M Y1"nl 11! Skookum (W M1tiornev1 TU ll'"lnl Mlt. (J Limbert) 117 P1111t IA PJn,t11) 111 ,..l"lnlarto IL P lnuv Jl1 117 Amerlean Tlfff cw H1m11tz) 11• CDUr1,_ RKeH (J Se.tit,.) 111 FIY1119 L1rt: (E Medlnt \ 109 /l.•C. Wllllllnthtm lr&Tned tnlrv. 11-J, Lontdtn lrt lnl!d O!<lll'Y. NINTH llACe. 1·111• mll& 4 ""t lllcl1 s. l/P. C1alm1"9. Pur,e JolOCIO. TOP <11lm1119 11t1ce MOOO. PeNglno IW MahOl"MYl ttoll The Drum1 IL Plncay Jr) Red SPlrn<I011r fJ Lembtor!J G1llilnl Slltl CR CemMll Ollt Albert Ill YOl1r.) '" "' ... Sol•-ID V ... to111Hl Double Ctffllll fA Ollt) D1t1tr IJ Pl"'9Cl1) Obll 1W H1m11lll Crossword Puzzle "' "' '" X!07 '"' '" "' , .. AClills JO-SI ... SI-ls dt •• · •• I Tith! of ....... ,14 Rtbute 15 ..... blue USl!ort-lollled ri ll 11 Suffer• throbbing '''" 11 liy of te:1ching tht dt1t. 2 words 4'Lloll p'""1bllll0 f7Eqiras ....~ 49 , .... to ''"" 51 Fish fra• movlnp boll 54 Ian o tf'lt cloth 51 Guided Ml To--: 2 words '1 Thorougb 63 Deslccata M Ht•vr blows '5 A dtbll of lnfmllliOll " litbilt: 10 lontrn1•s -· du·~ ll-ef 1%=" 7/15/68 )7 Famous £la tutti. . SI =="a fl "a • S,001111'/ ... _ Roa!e'1 Slftf (0 H11I) Hoftty Bush IS Trevino! Olillldlli.r &er fM Y1ntrl The DAILY PILOT Covers Boating "' Pro Soccer Standings ~AMWbl~~ .,. "" ............ ,,.. ....... CsrtrteU """" , ...... TorOllM "'"'" ""'-* .oww.. W L Y •l"P'fa.UtA ll43ff\Olf71j J 4,Jl100#U t••• Mai31 tlO 1 H IN '' U 21!)21 $131.0 ,,_ .. _ , •• ..,11'"" 14 13'1063'2' 1 1 1nn>oo •12 1 20.,i.a W•tww CMf11-. ..... _ K•n111 Clty St. '"°"'I' ....... 10 $4 2t101 77SN13 ,,,,. n n" " n " ,, " .. """' 0113 11 21 Pldllc Df'lllllll ~o:= ... 11 ::~1r.;~:: Olk.llncl f I S )) 9' 3' '' VlllCOllYtr • f 4 7t tt 30 :M """'"' ·-"' LO$ A"91ln J, Stn DliltlO 1 St. Loi/ls 31 Clt\ltlancl 3. 11• Ntw Y«k 4. C~lc-3 Mo11111Y'1 G1111• No 11mn Wltdult4. Deep Sea Fish Report SAN CLI MINY•-lff -Itri: 1.ol.S bonllo, n1 bilu, 31 blrr1cuc11, 13 htll· '"" Nt:Wl'O•T (DIWtY't Llckilrl -371 1nel1ri; t:ll bonllo, 1n b&u, 27 blrr .. cuc11, 11 •llllconi, 1 yellOW11!1, • hall· but. (ArYI LIH1119)-UI 1n91eri; f 1lb.lr.ore, I bluelln tun1, '° barrot\ldl, 1,1'3 txlnlto, m blss, S "-llllul. HUNTINGTON BEACK-J2 ilflll\""f; (1 11nct llllss, 70 blrracutla, 17 bonito, 1 h1Ubl.ll. B-. II 1nelln: II blrr•· c~o. 19 bin, 1' hellb\IT, 2' bonito. ~I macitrrtl. OC ... NSIDl!-4f) 1n;lersJ '10 bltrl· CUii•, "' blH, 21S bonUo, I whltt sr• bau, 1 yr1towta11, olO heUbul. LONG •EACH (Btlmtllt Pit!-) -93 11191en: 21 barr1cuda, 117 blu. 1 bonllo. 1 h1Ubul. CP1cllk SPOl1t1$11111t ) -2$7 1n11er11 26 .it11cor1, ' yellow-- t1H, 7 btnaaidl, 3'f RIH, 3 h1llDIJI, 1( bonito. (l"ilrPOlllt Ulldl11t)--391 11ntt- i.r.1 11 1Lblcon, • blrr1Cl/dil, 2111 NH, 1' bonito, 1 yellowt11f, 3 h1llbut. SAN rueoo (Pt. Lom•l-1.079 1011- 11,..)1 m •1bfc:cire, a yelloW111t. 11111- Hrl•I Bu dl)-JG5 •Mle,..; '' •fbl(~. 23 yeUowtelL, (9S bonUo, 9S barr,cucll. _. ...... CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 2 P.M. ,...... • J:l.1·6:JO • tO:ltO :'20 African llltiYt vll l1gt 121 Chu11 :22 llad !23 Sh1rptntd • 25 RIYl!I' of Co&llne 67 Artnu CCll:llllmllf 61 Hnt: Co11b, font 69 Sn 31-. 111agt: Var~ J3HJheYllMrl- blt-'! far •si:ft 41 v~ rattly 46 Finder ti Continuous-Open Noon Washington 27 Not Im· prisonl'lf 29 ChrmicaJ suffix 30 Wr19on hand1 r 34 W!ight of lndlt 36 Dent•I surgeon's conc~n 38 llontr -39 L1wytr Of • doctor, t .g.: 2 words 142 ''"°" 1 polnln 4J Complnloa 44 NtUYC Suffix 45 R•irtlllnl 2 ' OOIN 1 lmpttuoUI 2 Milk: Comb. fo111 Jib-novel: 2: words 4 G1rdtn tool 5 HlghwtJ '''" 'Tapestry 7 Cltlttnshlp In 2 count~ rlt s: 2 wards 8 Fish t l oUon ·Picture episode _ 11 lnnounc«'s lttetnlty:. lnfomal 24 Dlsc:our1gt 2Q Miss.-. chusetts co111111•nltJ 21 Dawn 1 ... ... lO ... . nlckn111e n 110•11 In b1ttlt 3Z Owtlling · l!ftl t 33 lfuslcal ..... 34 Bddgt sectlolt 35 So11rct or N11111ra River . Holy Grall •• o..i11m111 49-of Com111ons 50 Crowbar 5Z kind of contra~t 5J OonnellSt 54 Ont that IMDyl ,5 Slutft on which whtel ftVOIYtS . S• Cheap ftlttntll S1 Pick down tlgh Uy .59 PtOPlt : . Comb. fOfll 6Z It~ or ..... lnfot111llf!ll WALTlll: MATTHAU 111 .. A 6UIDI FOi THI MAlllU MAN" LIDO NEWPORT BEACH DAVID dANSSIN IN .... ....., 6~1; c..t. S.. t..• J P.M. ~ • -.- , Win• Two Over Weekend • Midway City Battles Sonor~ Tonight Midway City tra .. la lo SoDOl'I High School today to battle Son-1-la a D American Legion baJeb&U encounter a!ta: w l n n I n g twice over tbe weektnU to extend its league lead to two games . in the loss oolumo !AHi Alamlloe on ;ietw-d•Y at TeWiakle Park by aa J.2 tally, and ftnl$hed up with a 7-4 ,~!eat at tile bat>dl of Aniheim ' Kolme •t J, • Palma Stadium ill Anaheim Sunday Dliltl. * * over the Fullerton Dodgers. ~ -., 1...._ G t ••• ame ti.me ts 5:'5 wi h s.ril!•to 000 on-.... s , Eddie Bane (7·2) slated to MlllW•Y c1tv n• • OOll-$11 1· Pitch for the loop leaders. MIM'i' cuv n1 0 .... " .. , Midway r a c k e d up 1111111en. • 4 1 s • MlfWr CJty II) ••• "1t•1 Jt~I, It • ' ' ' W, MtC.1rflltY, d ' • • • ...... " • I ' • Jlrn-Hoetn.111 • • • • Wtllrr, 't • ' ' • Kief.tr, a .,$. • • I I P, McelrtnfY, • • I • ' Oedrldl, " I • • • B1ne, " I • • • John HCIClll'I. It • ' ' ' Tot11l .. ' • • k.#1 " 11111111• . ". LOf Alilmllel totue-....13 3 -102 aoo oao-s 1 o ...... 11) .. • M R•I Ml"1rl. ~ . • ' ' • MlllllOlf, ... • • • • KIN, It • • 1 • Birton. d • • • • Fleldtl', U • ' 'I • LN\IY, 3b • I ' • FOJter, a • ' • • Blll'Clllrd, rf • • • • Tot11s .. I ' • sc.ren1..-. ••• HIWH't Oii n CI00-4 f I A!\llltfm kal!IMI IOI 400 IOll-7 I I """"~ 11 Mll l Cllr!I. M • • ' • Mar1lll. t • • • • M1UnoH, 1111 • • ' • King, II • ' ' ' St1Hord, 11 • ' . " LffVY, & ' ' • • Birton, 11 • • • • P1ul, • • • • • FlrlOer, n • ' . ' • f11111r, ct • • • • , W, McC111ntY, ct ) I t o victories number 12 and 13 · smutt. 11 4 1 1 l:llF~==-~~==~="=:."""""""""""""""""""""l when it ...... .J......t Pacifici a. Jim "°'•"' 10 • o t 1 "~ • Kliltff, :tb 4 0 'J ' 6, Saturday on the loser's "· Mct"•rtnfY, rt 1 1 • • P..u~" • • ' • To!l11 " • • • diamond and then put down =::: ,rt ~ : ~ : SaDtlago by a S-2 count in ~~, .::,.. ... • ; ~ 1 ~ Sunday's fea t ur e at Toi111 31 ' 11 • Westmlmter High School. kOl't w 111111aea Newport Harbor lost twice over the weekend, first t.o NEWIAU4tA THEATRE ••• P1clll<11 110 000 «>0-4 I S MklWIY City '210 IXIO 140-t" t 1 WT TWO DAYS c-.. .. s.t. -4 S.. fre• J~I NIPtfJ-6:10 _. t :JI ---W•lf'DlllltY'f "NATURl'S HAI.JI ACRI"' COMING NEXT WEDNESDAY Sllril Wed. July 17th -. • Plus Phyllis Diller in "DID YOU HEAR THE ONE ABOUT THE TRAVELING SALESLADY?" -ENDS· TUESDAY M•ri11"• Dally -1 Z Hean Stal'fl WHltftday Joh11 W•rne 111 "GREIN llllT$" ,,_ ... ....,.., fE.UtSA.1.Ttll ....._.,._,,..... -..... ·-*"t• h I z• . . -.. I• 1.caw CQlllONil. Ill. llW. INDS TUISDA Y ''THI. DMU IRl•ADr ·Wltllllll ..--Cllfl'll*"'- "PllT FULL OF DOLLAU• STARTS WEDNESDAY "Suporlor 'Enttrt•lnment• • c......... .. tt.tlttt • 21 ,. .. hUy HIT NO. 2 -"YOUNG AMERICANS" Sf'ol1illt TM Yo1111 Alneftcus c.,;4 'Whole GJ\Tew'World of 'P:ntertainment! TONITE lhru FRIDAY NITE "ON srAGE U.S.A." Thl1W~~rrlSi-'A~;-~ Extr1 Alfdld AHr1Ct!on .., · LOUIS NYE' .,;,, . .. THE FIRST EDITION ' ~linws 119:15 1nd II PM-On tlte TOMORROWLAHD STAGE. In lt!1 w"ks to com1,,, PAm PAI£. JACI cum, PHYlUI Drt.t£R, llU DANA EVERY SUNDAY conm MUSIC JUBILEE Nll!I. Sund•w Stlrrlnt TEX WILLIAMS THE ITONDIAN FlMILY•CHl!RYL f'OOL NOEL IOGGI •nd hi• BAND FRANK EVANS-GUEST MC Sf'lows at !, 5 llld 7 PM-On flit TOMORROWlAHO STAGE *** Disneyland On Parade 7,30 PM A Mfrry, Muslctl Promenade throu1h thf' Ma1ie KinadOln starring Mickey, Pluto, Goofy and all your Disney Character favorites. EVERY NITE al 9 PM Fantasy in the Sky Tinker Bel rs flight signals the slart of 1 Spectacular Af'rial fireworks Display * * * AM ~I Tllniudlout tht IM1lc KlnldGlll ••• TtDOT IUCKMEW. TN£ MUSTANCS •f1•£NOUS£ rm +2 JH( CIOS or JJI[ llNliiDOfll •TN[ CUM WARD SiMCtn ln.l llllDn l JJI[ DISMEYUMI DAT[ •nw Tiit IOl'AL TUJITWIS•TM£ IMVADCIS mn 1AND TIE ""'u TWiii• TKl: MIUJICW. IW$ ..... .., •ml ,. I ¥11J lf«lllf ... 111"'1ttl!l}o'111 t~ Otlb~ •,, DISNmAND AfTtR DARK TICK!T IOOC l11tllldtt Atlllllsalcll tH M1 J Alttatrlotis If T81r Cftlk1 AduH $4.00 Junior '""" $3.00 ('S.75 .... , (51.10 '11111•1 Aftll•bll At11r t PM ¢lllr Opll .... n.t. I AW It 12 MWllli.-f'rL I Ill. I AM .. 1 All Disneyland ·--..... -)., • .. - -"' -,, -' ... -' 'T' -... • -· ...-... ..... --· - -• ........ ., _,, .......... ~-..........,,... • -. , ...... ..-• • •"" •· ' 1> e ¥$ i ; ¥ v • 4 q P • 'I! '6'W1=¥ :::; +: , .... • ... •• _._.,""'f"" ~~"···~•• .. ...-""""•'..,.1'1"'"~...-..,"'""-.""" .. li""~ro:!I'"~""'~ • • • • • • • " • • • • 1 • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • N. """· • Pitta re ·Peeks • • • • ., M-.ya I •••• ' Local film fare for the week aliead is highlighted by a pair of popular productions, one with the thrills Of a science- fictlon adventure, tbe other a lavilh star«udded musical. At the M•sa. •bowing on the big, wide &ereen in Pane.vision and Del.Au:e Color is Planet Of The APes. Here is the story about men who crash land on an unknown planet after a Journey of 2,<XX> years, spacial time that is! Charlton Heston, Burton and Robert Gunner ue the astronauts, They are captured by native torillas, showing up in uniforms. Kim Hunter and Roddy McDowell appear ae dlimpanzees who are. sympathetic. to the captive men. An escape along with oavegirl Linda Harrison is arranged. Thus begins a moot Campus Takes Shape A folded building module is positioned on its cement . f~w;idation for. Saddl~back Junior College at Mission V1eJo. The 26-mch high module contains roof, floor, end walls and &!eel supports. As the unit is lifted by the roof, all these parts fall into place, ready to be bolted to the foundation. A completed module stands behind the one being raised. Installation takes about 4.1 minutes. e,xci~g adventure involving theesoapeesandtheirsimian,1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ pur:suers. The make-up of the apes in Plauet 01 Tb< Ape1 is something to behold. Wait until you see the change of features of these well-known actors who appear m such true likeness of the native masters Of yet another world. Tire climax, revealing why slmlans, not men, are masters of this planet is a shocking secret. Don't tell! Tboroagbly Modem J\llllle proves to be an infectious musical spoof of the fads, foibles and styles of the 1920s. Showing in Technicolor, Julie Andrews, Carol Channing and · 'Mair ice Lillie ·iOio with Miry Tyler Moore, James Fox and Jofln Gavin for a merry musical romp that really entertains. Julie plays a small town girl seeldng employment as a secretary with a bosg she can marry. Miss Moore is a n sident at the hotel for single girls only. Bea Lillie operates the hotel and also a white slave tr.alfic. As she seeks to entrap the two atwactive gals tile fun begins to pop out in story and song. Gavin is .a rweil boss for Julie. suiting her to a "T", but he falls in love with Mary Tyler Moore. Fox appears as a happy-go-lucky charmer who has a car complete with a rumble seat, a standard token of the flapper era. Violence Said Result Of Impairing Dignity LOS ANGELES -"We She cited the recent can expect violence and Columbia U n i v e r s i t y destructive behavior from incident as an example of • • .people who feel that their faculty becoming confused freedom and dignity as human beings are impaired and overprotecting students or infringed up o n , ' • a gainst the police. according to anthropologist "The cure of this order of Margaret Mead. violence will be to treat the Speaking at.a University students as people. Then o f Califoriiia Extension they will be as f u 11 y symposium, Dr. Mead said responsible to civil law as that every time violence anyone else. This is equally happens it is more likely to true of the ghetto." happen again' 'be c a us e.---L"E=G"AL~N~O-T..,ICE __ _ people take cues from each -----:::=--:::--o-----1 other. We face a new a1D 1r10. 1 Problem in contagion n 11w S.ddlebec~ Junior Coll.,. Dt1trlcl • of Ol'•nt• Covnl'I' w!ll r~lve 11eellld bld1 She defined violence as u. 111 10:00 •·"'" Mflflct•v, 2:1 Julv. 1968. " j l U f th f 11 the Adm!nl1lr•llon OIHm, 2.5(1111 i.. v o a on o e norms o a P•z Ro.d, M1ut011 v1e10, c1ntwn11 t2o11s, society in regard to the way for 1t1e turnrs111n, of ™"'111,., 11.1111>11e1. one should physically treat w~~~ty'':1;' :i:rp:''t1i~i~~··s~:11ff: the body, property, territory dn1m, totether w11t1 full d1xrlpllons id tit f I h 1nd •PKlflcatlons, 1r.:I 1 11a1em.nt of or en ~ O a n o e r conc1111on1 110ver~1ns11 th• b1dd11111 m•v bit Person." All societies have 1ei:urtect trom ll'le Pu•ctia11nv Deptrtment • Tb al ltlt 1bov1 lddress. some VIOient people, e Rav N. B•r"tt• difference lies in the way Pub II•~ 811ci~":i11 ~;:~r 01111 ,.rtot. they treat violence, she J111~ 1i,. 15, 1961 1:io1 ... ·noted.· •'"" · · LEGAL NOTICE The English greatly reduced v i o 1 e n c e bv -.--:.~,~,,~,~.~.~,,.,,,.~,~,~"~,~.~.,.~,~,- d • •d TllUST NO. 6Ut intro ucing an U n a r m e On Jull' 30, 11'611, •t e1ev1n o'c!Gcll A.M. police force Of "big and First A.nMrtc.n Tlllt lnwr1nce and Tru1! · h h d Cornwn,, 11 tn111", or IU«e»Or 1ru11n patient men w o never a or Wbltltuted tru11re, tty IM cer111n Oftd to fight anybody " Within a "' TN1t txecurfllll bv l(l!NNETH A. , ' SV!OEEN tl'ld ELAINE G. $VEDEEN, generation London which hu1bend 1nd wife •nd reai<llld J1nu-rv had been one of the most 10, '"' In 1oo1i; 11n . P•oe ns of or11c11r in th id RtcOfdl fll Ortnn County, ClllfGmlt trld lawless areas e wor 11urwant 10 th1t certain Nott« of ee-became one of the most law 1tu11 •rid E1tct1on 10 ,,11 111trt11n4•r ,.. · ed CGrded Mlrdl 21, 19'1 In Book 1.W, P101 abiding, she explam . :ioc of Off1Ct11 1tecort11 ot or'"" County, Dr. Mead said that ~1111":[. ','t :'~~t"!11~1i:.•ld f(lr~ .. : university campuses and the 11Wfv1 mOllf!y "' th, un11ec1 sr.tes of ghettos are the most violent ~~~' 1L,:!'~,:;;'1~11~";~,~~~:~ .~ places In the country today. trv11 ComPltlv bu1td11111 rOt11to:1 11 lht "In both places a~ults are ~fr!:~" tn ta~r cf't'f F~ni s:~ ~~~ treated like second class c1111Gm11 111 ""' r111M, tnr. 11111 1111e .... 1 · I he h t t tanvtYtd tD • now held unc1.,-Dtfd of citizens. In g e 0 truit In Ille' •f'Olltt1y lllu•llld In the they're underprivileged. In eo..intv •rid s111e c1e1crrbfcl ••: • . , tht $ubl111tllo!d l~tere11 Jft 11'111 te the un1vers1ty t h e Y r e lot '° of Tratt No. )$1t u 1riown on overprivileged. Both groups • Ma• ~ed rn Book 121, "''" 11 th to 21 rnc:1u1rve of Ml1ee!11nt«1' Mapa, are treated as though ey ..ce1rc11 of or11111 county, c11ttorn11 are not full d i g n.i f 1 e d cr11ttc1 tty 11111 c1r11tn subrttist o:r11ec1 be f · t 11 Jvlv I, 1960 be!Wtfn Sunny Homt1, mem rs o socte Y· inc:., • c.111orn11 _._,HOii. Micco CMllOrtnon, • Nevtd1 torPOr1tlon, DOESN'T KNOW Wtrd ~velGP"leftl (11., • Ctllfornll Socl·ety of .... n doesn't know C«POntlon, 111m1111on ~vetOJ1m1~1 ~~ co., 1 Ctllfllml• corporallOll tnd Hn-Carol plays the world's what to do about it when tw DevclClllmtnf co.. .• c111torn11 COf· n"ohest widow who flies a such groups we violence to -•"1111• •• L••or •!Id T•rt•n "-· Inc. LeuM Ind rec:onltd June 29. biplane aod enjoys being shot gain rec o g nit lo n "as 1"1 1n Bott mo, "'~• '" °' Offlc:111 out of a cannon. A dozen hit people," she pointed out. rtlCOl'da of 0t-1noe CtKJnty, c.11to.,.11. Still wit wtrr be m1c1t wltlloUt c:ov.n1nt tunes of the Twenties are LEGAL NOTICE or w1rrcntv. 1XJ1reued or 1m1111ed, ,, to f lured and al .. there is a 1111 11111, -kiri fll" tncumbr1nc. to ea :1---:....=-=-.:..-----l •tlsfy fM l'llmlllllnl •rlnCll'll IUITI d11t foursome of originals for IAll-IH on "" nolt lt(Urecf br 111c1 Deed of Tborougb'-Modern M11Ue. svPhTOR cou•T 011 TM• Trvs1 te w111 111,(1)1).00 w1111 1n1em1 •J •TAT• 0, CALll'"O•MIA l'"O!t lhenon from Junt 30, 1M1 11 pravlcltd TH• COUNTY 01'" OJl:AMOI In 11111 no!t ~r With '"9;, ClltrteS Ne, A....a tnll ll(penllS of ttle l ru1tq Ind 9"dl MOTICI 011 MIAllMO Oii ,.ITITIOM "1tttf 111m1 11 m1r fltvt bNn tdvinced 1101 1'1109ATI 01' WILL ANO ~· bV t11t ...,_ and flolcltr of 11tcl ~ Ll'TTl!llS TISTAMl!NTAllY • E11tte of 5, MELVIN SALVlSOtl, wfltt lntirnt, ll •rcwtdttl In Mid DHd 0.C std fll T!'\111. N~Ttci! •s MEl'tE8'1' OIVl!M Tiie! Otttd1 JulY s. 19'1, ALPHA KNOX SALV&.SON htl flied Mrt-Flrit Amlrlt111 Tlllt In 1 pe!lllOll for 11robll1 of will tnd for lnsurenct tnd Trust Co. iuwnc:• GI Lllltfl TMIUMntll'Y h:i av Al111 A. !(neut l'•tlll_., Nfertnc:• to which i. mid• for Anltl&nt Stcrtl•rY rurlhft' 111rtlc:vl1ri, 1nll th1t the 11m1 tnd ll'tJblWlttl N~rl Htrbor News-PrtH 1111:9 of httrl111 !M f.llftl hll bllll 1.i comllllllll Wllfl Dtltr "lit!, Nl'MP!lrl fc>r AUllUll 2, IHI, it t:JO 1.m .. '" n.1 Btecll, Cttlt. Julr 1, Jull' 15 11111 JulY 12, courtroom of D11'1rtmelll No. 7 of 111!1 IHI. llso.M. (l)Urt, ti IOI Nl)fth lroadwlly, Ill tfl4I City of s.1111 ....... Ctl!h)t'flll. LEGAL NOTICE Olttd Jul'f 12. 1'611. W. E. ST JOHN, Countr Cltfk JtOTICI 01' TltUITll'S SAL• Ha..-11111 J-. "'· ~u -Nlrlll Mthl ftrltt, ..... -. NOTICE II 1111tEB'I' GIVEN: s11111 A111, c1111or1!11 n7tt The! on ThurJd•r. Julr 2s, lta 11 Ille' T•I: 11141 M1·1Nl llout of 11:00 A.M. ti the nwotn tllll'lllet CllAllJQH IGJQK Altll'Mrl tw P"'tltllff l•Oflfl"' on E11t Erllf Street, Lt 11tbrt, Pvblflhfo! OrtllH CNCI OlllY Piiot, County of Orin,., $1119 of c.n1amr1, of J1.1tr 13. 11, to. 196' 11fMI "" L• Habrt Cfty Hall !ottl~ ti 201 E. LOOK FOR future IJdo and Er111 Slr'1tl, tlortwld, FfllST CHAltTER Mesa motion picture features LEGAL NOTICE :.!r'!,~1~1~~ T~~,::~~~·~ :i T~; to include Walt Dl90ey'1 The · ••·17' In the or111n11 1moun1 of w.000.00 n- d 0 I G I SUl'l•tO• (OUllT Ofl TM• ecultd br MILTON c. OARNELL .t.NO One an n y, e D a De fTAT"I: o• CALll"OltNIA •011. C'l'NTHta. l. DARNELL. HU1l)lllCI t!ld Original Family B a • d TM• c.ouNTY °" OJtA\ltOI Witt •nd ,._dell on Olct!llber tt. 19'1 "' ,._ In Book M1' P-no of Offlmt Record• starring Walter Bren 111 n, NoTic• 0,. MIArllM °" ,..,1T10M of 0r-c-1r, c111forrt11, of w111ch B dd Ebsen Lealey Am "" P•OIAT• Oii WILL AND •O• Offd of Tr111t AMEl't!U.N SAVINGS AND U Y ' . LITTlltS TISTAMINTAaT LOAM ASSOCIATION, I corportllPn 11 Ille' Warren John Davidson and 1 , " 11 ARTHUR s IL.ACK. JJt .. lfMl1c11rv, w ru'°" .,, def1u11 1n ttM B'j • "" b ad d •~:. ~Hd ' ltlrmtnl M perlwm•nct of tbl191tlens J anet air • .tU;;0 e e uwo NOTICE 1S HEllE8Y GIVEN Tilll ~ thertlrr. lrld 1111tk• Ill def1111t •lld way sooo, Yourt, Mine And ltUTH MA.lttON el.A.CK ,.., 11..., ..._, .. n l1lllfrc11rv•1 111c11on" uuw"' 111 told L ill Ball ntlon "" "*"' .,, will tftd ror 11-1M •~rl'I' herelnbellW dtKrlbtd, ,...,. Oar• ~ UC • • • M ~ L-• T-ltmtnlt" to Prll-Int bell! '"-ded ., PrOYlded h)r Irr t1w -•--• V tu•llQ "" •• " ~· end mort then """" rnonflll h1vl1111 Henry ro-°""' • a lloMr. fflenta to wlllCh Ii lllldt for llfflltl lfll(ll well r«orftflell, Wiii "" " J-~.... fUrtllfr 111r11c\11tn, tnd !1'1111 "* time ,.,blk:: •udilrl hi ft'M hlmest blcldtr for Vl<U<>00. tftd Pli<e tlll ,,.,.,. tht "":-llll Ille!! (Ith, NVtblt "' llWf\11 ~ of tht! 9'I for AlltUll t. 1 ... ti 1.» t.m .. In U11I'" Sttlft of A~ ti Me time flf FREE PASSES to tile Udo "" eairtroom d Dtpenrtlllll Ho. 1 "' .... wlffloul _,rlftty OP .... Of" l!Nll .. ,.Id CCll!lrl. II IOI N. ,,.,.,.,..,, "' ..... to 11111 POllfttlon or lf!Cl.lmbrt-or the Mesa will be malled Ot'f 1111 s.n11 .1.111, c.111or1111. 1111 '""""icon""'" ,. n -111ro:r ~ today to Hazel K. Payne. 3o3 o.lfll w~u~ ~~ J~M. '-"' on =.:= ~o;:ert,1" .~~IN c:1: '3o1~nrod, CoroGoa de} MBalarbo, C. ::= ~ '::::.:" °"'~· ~":i "11~:'°",;;•iit to"1r11 Der w Zink, 7tl214 ame.. a 11• Welt Sldtl"'"" Mtr. In 11\e city cof N-1 lffdl ... Jsiand,·F. J. Quigley, 990d0olpbak, :::-..=-~ ""4 :=n,.~.:e,~r.~M~ Costa Mesa and Ru T.t• (t1JI ~.-,,,,..., ·~ of Mid OT-.. Counl'I'. F d -c_._..,, Dr a...... -,..,. ,... ,,..,... .,, ""'"' "" •UHnon. er &, MJ•1< ~"""' •• Jl>llbllthtf Or111tt c..i Dllllr ll'llOt, .cvn11 1W .. 111 Dlld _, T""1 lnc:tudt111 Nawrnnrt S.Cb. 1:"'::"::::'=·=""==tl.::::'"'====::::i:='='-:::.J'"" dlt~ •llf ~ cof fllt T""'" ., .. .... .... "' fllt .... Dttlll thll '""' .,. .,. """ tML You .1-M. ---.1 ..,...... to Fll'tlt (HAltTllt -lo ~ ~ lllNANCIAL COltl'OUTIOft enjoy tbe llaest fl1ml at the QUICK •• Tl'llllll M.'a ... ''"-Udo. Simply er J. •· H•m-. -Cate• Ill 411ldJp .. fM•I 'ltc AllO!'nl1 In ,9d ahow your Bankmnerloard or ..,""" «••• ,.... &•ll'llNd, ,...:::' """°"" H.-,.... ,._. Master at.rge card for a•111P'•h111,f1'• """"9t.w11 "11-~MMll wrth 0111r "'""· l'lfWtlf'I a d~ i 11 t o D to I O 0 d ttu ef ttt. DAILY PILOT. :'Cit. C.l!fol'l'lllt Jvlr t. a. lit TM 1111- entMtalmnul. "-~~~~~~~~•'-~~--<>-~~~-· -· -------· .................... .... • Little League Given Bats For Homer Do Wes Parter, LA Dodger lint b.,.man, and tho Security Flrst Nat!011'11 Bank have something in common? They certai?:!y do as far as the WestmilllSter Natiooal Liltle League is concerned. The Orange County baseballers were presented with 24 new bats when the big slugger smashed a homer during the bank· sponsored broadcast of a re- cent Pirates-Dodgers con- test in Chavez Ravine. 'l'he name of tl>e{:cky We6tminster league as pulled from & hat an- llOUD(!ers Vince Scull and Jerry Doggett. Room to Drive Around On . behalf of the bank, which practices the homerun ·giveaway throughout the b a s e b a 11 season, Westminstet branch manager Richard A. Brahams presented tbe bats to Little Leaguers and womens' aux.iliary president Mn;. Judy Deg~erdl A circle and arrow pinpoint an automobile to give some idea of the size of the world's largest vehicle test area which General Motors inaugurated last week at its Milford, Mich. proving ground. The paved section is as large as 59 football fields. , :.' I • ' THE llACK PORCH MAlOltllY '67 QU8" AT 11.0WD SllOW llECllEATIQN VIMICIW & IOAT SNOW NINOTIWOI Nltll 5TIV!NS . 19 68 ~·....-· •YESTERDAY MEETS TOMORROW" AT THE 1968 ORANGE COUNTY FAIR AND EXPOSITION JULY 16 ·thru 21 Yesterday meet.. TomO<Tow sets the theme for the 1968 Otonge County Fair and Exposition. Spece ·Age miracles seen side-by-side with reflections of Orange County's rich agriculture.I history. The th ousands of e xhibits end features insure an excitin g time to Fair· goers of every eige. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • FREE IHI-NAME STAGE SHOWS IN TM• IOOO·SEAT OUTDOOR AMPHITHIATllll CURTAIN TIME 1:80 P.M, WEDNISD1U, JULY 17 Leo D1ml1ni'1 "Festini of N11ions" fliDAY I IATUIDAY, JULY If I 20 Nino Tempo & April Stevtns Ctlerhl c:-t--C... ti ISO -111• - -~ -_. ...., The BKk Pon:h Majority .. llithl "''-"" SUNDAY, JULY 21 GLEN CAMPBELL Me.Stctr fJI the "'Smothers lrothon Show" I Grarnmy.Wlnnkt1 Reconfln9 Star also COMEDIAN FRANK WELKER PLUS S,.clal PerformanCM by '"Up With P""'t" 1Hh1'illt Si"9-0ul·W11Hnd Singm & Musl<l1ns lltrtltnhop Q-J1 .. borM . IOnpnln N1ttM1I Chlsoplon Drum & lugi1 c..,. GI""'"' Hltl>l1nd l1nd I D"""' Onnt• Counly loys' Clubs All.Stir V1rltty Show Opttmist Youth l1nd of 0 ..... C°"nty • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • *Junior Scl•nce fair Winnen* Ntwtll ProclYCh and ServlcH from Ltcrd· Ing lndulfrt• * S~n Anlmal Fann for Todd&en *Thrilling Midway lld• •nd Attradlont * Popcorn Theatre Marionette ShoW1 * Space bhlblts *Community hrvlce llorunt *Min OrartSJ9 County Tomorrow Appearonc. * Junior Atirfcvttvre Proiects * SIHwalk Aft lmtrvction * Hom• fconomlo --.. by hperll • Minond and Chm Show * Holl...,.., Sliy lld• * Spoctacular Plowtir St.ow * ffltival of hod1 * PllDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY MY 19, 20, 21 CHAMPIONSHIP IRA RODEO Top C9Wboyl from acrou the nation compeM for big pr!-In faur thrll~ htw recl9o ,.rformancos. FRI, JULY 19-1 ·10 P·"'- SAT., JUlY 21!-2·4 P·"'· 11·10pJL SUN .. .MY 21-1 ·4 P·"'· &7tc19p.M. lol5Mts$J-Gnnobtlnd$2 ll.....,.$T.50 '"11w1<111~UMOl'••oe1:m111,. A,.. COUMll of thl •o,' &oo1.1tt o1' Atneric-1 0... .Sngle •dmltilon charwo It an you pay, Once you are lmlct. the 1ate, all ef the oxdtlna 0 r a n 1 o Ceunty Pair and bpotltlon nhlbfft pel thows a r • ,,_, with tho oxCllP'tfon ef tho Co""""I rf<IOI and la--A4olls -$1.00 5111-13 • 11-.IO s-.12·1nd--.:ia Clrllhll"ftt ..,.., 11 •MMn,_ .. ,.., "" ....... ,,.., a.PY'-• ... ....,""" ""''""' "'"' ACllSOfPA- All DAY I All llllllT SO. SPECIAL IClllDllUD MNTS TUESDAY, JUlY 16 "Miu Or1n91 Covnty TlllOr'l'Ow" '°"'"' 2,39 p.m. & 8 p.m- Amphi.th~ater . WIQNESDlY, .JULT 17 S.nlor Cittnns' V"'•ty - 2 p.m.-AmphithMter TUISDAY, WEDNISDAY, TllUlSDAY, JULY 16. 17, 11 AHSA Junior Hone Show 9 a.m. to S p.m.• 7 to 11 p.m.- A""' FRllAY, JtA.T 19 Jonior ltnstodl -$l1Mp 1,30 to 5 p.m. ltogt. ht! 6,30 to TT p .... GATES OPEN AT 10 AM. DAll.Y -NEWPORT II.VD. AT FAii DI., COSTA MESA ' - ~ ,. -' ,~. -~ f ' ' • • ' • " • ' ·' • • • ' ' -• • .. •• .. ' l . -.... -. .. ... "' ... ..... ... . .. ,, ;,-.:;;--.--~T'f , .. ,.c.0-• ...--.--:--:-.,, • -... .... ,,. .... ~,...,.. ' . ' • DAILY PILOT Monday, July 15, 1968 @ses FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSE.S FOll_~~E-HOUSES FOii SAL_~ HOUS!S ,OR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE. HOUS&S FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi p..ij,ral 1000 ~·• _____ 1000_ General 1000 Gtn.-r•I 1000 General ____ 1000 Costa Me•• II!> Coron• dtl Mar 1250 Huntington ll•chl400 L•9~!".fl,u!!__ 1707 I $22,950 BY OWNER • $24,500, JOI> OCEAN VIEW ko'"" VANO. DOWN * Monarch lay * '"G PRIVATE Bachelors r ' Sweepinn VA or FHA 3 BR 2 ba, pool· dn. 3 bT, 1'6, ba. full • l BR with den, pool , Sf:P. 3 BR li'. bath. $26,150 M l s. Cout'• ftnn t ex.elusive t!h II; Attention f.. ' ''• Jizcd yard, Crt>t11, ttreplace, cpta/drps, lndscpd, xtn. din rm, la master BR. prl(e • $214 mo includfs tix· beach eommunlt,y bldn ofl. ·.·~.u l "ER su1n: The prime ing. redictlt ln yOW' C:,. ~-. p blllns. Ne:u-all. ~~ 8~=r· ~73~· Llke new condldoll. cameo es. Walk to beo<:h. ~r er 8 ne.w 3 & • bdrm homes ..... :l'HUI I~ kl< u. "'"wingUlg pad. Con· ()Qf • U IROflma 'OWNER MOVING 6'2-<ml • Shoru ............ 18S,OOO .... .,,,,..., B<lilt·ln ra nge with nmgnillcent °"""and do dc!llgn l'd and decoru.ted rea. ty v,cy cleuu 3 BR 1% bath, P•· ========="'! • 4 BR aep. din. nn. "3e ~A oven, forttd air beat, tire-wand v~wa. e door e-ntcy. W1tlnut wttb. you In m1nd. 2 and. of llewport Bay tlo, Near au. Only $19,900 M .... V•rcl• 1110 view lot, room fOl poOJ. place, carpets/drapes, (enc• $$2,ooo-m.<n> . tO cabtnc~ i.rl elccuic den, wM.t • dae. eonnete Rltn. 642-9730 Evff. M8-0'nO ----'-'-'-----I Custom feab.ln!I. A • l int la.ndscapb\g, 1..-ul~e.aac 499-2850 499-SMS ldlclion. Plush carpe~ & kitchen with vory pn,ate pa· ""' Vltlta Ocl Orn hil<h In llltitot" Vt~ Hill$ • KENNEDY UNDER $25,000 c 0 " d. Ca~" Rlgtt: lo<. RENTALS drapN .• Completely fenced u·o for ih-a aJter the show Newport Beach th'· hom'• offers u lands ..... •• ·•••• $47,900 I' _, ·-I Ill 10•(. DOW"' uJ..,t, Nattreu, ......... ,..._ Houses Furnish-& . landscaped. Loeated en cancl tight supers. You have Rare L sting an w1surpaa&ed Vlcw • .......,.. ~·- qi.w.et street ln lush Mesa Ch th both .... • 0·1·••1 'Colon'1al Comer 3 BR + ffinllly room l% • 642·1485 • · l.4r ~:o;.K,nr ... t k ... a1u~1d "~nerol 2000 • t'efae got lo .see n. caper an Bluth very p0pular WOOJ e.o~ bath newly decorated. Nice T E I 962-4471 546-8103 """' _ : • Souod good! Is OUI· rent al $172 per month in· • Bedrooms. 2 full baths vt'l1' separl.l~ living rm g roonu s BRs 3 baths. Near paUo. fenced yard. 0 nterta n I fo I stand!Jla! $32,500. eluding taxes and mainten· fireplace, pool p!us formul dining· room Sears. all schools & church-M•rtin R. E. 548-6332 ' ELEPHANT SIZED Rental n rmat on ~ COATS an~. Small down and only Ji>vely open fttllng, family room w/fiuplace etor'· ~~~eorm"','•lio.hbon ronlboody.· ~~ BY Owner Mesa Verde 4 Br. Be Entertained BEDRO. OMS C. F. Cola1worthl & Co..: & S23,S!J(). nea r new with many xlras beautiful ma11ter bedroom .. ., LNU 2 f 1~• Horbor lvd 00 C ... th k Ba, fa.m nn. 2 brick rplcs VIEW • -clou•'-· d••tgnod 7~ · • • W WALLAC~ $23,5 Gr••t trouble fl'M suite opent onlo all'.\Sher u .. s c ey, 1 ..... ..y Royal blue w/w carpeting, COSTA MESA I ·1 h $30 995 """"'"" pool T. ·H. McArdle Broker b ""· new ··~· crpto thiu· • BR, Fam "'" 2\1 baUu. """" -•. 3 BR + don ..... REAL TORS Mesa Verde 4 bedroom plus 1m1 Y ome - , · out N t pl··~-~-Ph. 644..1133 tastefully tteoorated . ew pain• ...,. • ...,. $5,000 On, Vac:>nt . + 2 baths+ tree-form pa. R•nlolo to Sh•re 2005 ·.tu!..._546-4141-guest or swinging run1po11 C4l1 now at only $52,500 $21,950. 549-ZT1J after 6 pm B0Yp REALTY tio +BBQ A lara:e fenced .,,:'(Open Evenings} room. New carpeting a nd I ~~1)!11~~ ·contact:' Z'l2 W. \\'Ui;on. C~1 ,.tl-6817 or Sun. 3629 E. Q:iast Hwy, CdM ya.rd + owners wlll pay COLJ..EGE Students need 1-2·· roommates for summer tii. sbare Lrg 4 .Br house in Npt $80/mo. 64'2-6822 · fl'eshly painted. Reduced I· v I E w~ --liti!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ........... 1 Sl,OOJ this week for action. Corona Del Mar Bever!l' Pavlovich 3032 CAPRI LANE, C.M.. 675-5930 poinu. tor FHA or GI financ. UISURE LIVING Eves. 673~16 Executives & Doctors will ing, Price? Call &: ask! ·!" Vacant and ready. Duplex re · this d 1 ~ L• le T ' ·" · C I h C HARBOR OCEAN from dining room & •PP '"" . '""' ·~me in Corona TRAOEWINDS RL Y. I• ' . 0 eswort y & o. On ocean side of Paclilc lov•"' garden kitchen. 4 on 15th lalt8W} of Mesa J -I t lro ·th. 842..sm.t or 842-5012 this ~10 BEDROOM, y Verde c. c: Drive by - u .. , .a ew 8 eps m lll n\'P BATH all electric ful· Hiflwy .• 'Ibis beautifully large bedrooms & :z~~ baths. phone 673-2654 eve unusual home. Charming 2 16x36' POOL ~':c 642·7777 maintained income is full D•lta R•al Estate · . BR Spanish Hacienda + Bock Boy 2240 (U~r~~ ~~~ :RE~~ 1904 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. of raritiee. • Both living 646-4414 O~ER, Republic . 2400 aq. Guest.rm, & bath on large Luxurious 3 BR home, dining -~-=°"'="-=E_v;c"c,· -~-I rooms have fireplaces. • =========I ft. 4 BR. 3·Ba.; din. rm. & Jot. Be surprised, $39.500, room, den & garden kitchen. $120 MODEST Cottage, 1ra . tncd Yrd w/boat entrance. 2801h Santa lsabtl 646-9789 • , ·1»'P swimming pools. catr Hard to F·1nd Large workshop 1n rear. . 673-4400 Costa Mesa 1100 fam. rm. 2122 Canary Dr. R. L. Strlckl•r, Rltr. Fully carpetOO & draped. :aJ\11? ,puttinl::: greens & shu!· Roof top su~ with bay I _ _ $44,000 Open Daily 54a--0987 673-6510 Professionally landscaped. 2250 ; ~tic.:board with NO MA INT-IN MESA VERDE & . $48 81 H s II p . v· . M -Will trade for'units near the 1 .C::•::•:.:•::;n:.:•:..::d•::•~M,;•:;.•_.:;.:;o..;;1 ~~ENCE PROBLEMS. B. 4 bed & ., octan view. -8.t ,900 9 OUM-m• r ice tCfOrlG esa 3 BR. 2 Ba. Fam room, bltns, ___ --------_ _ _ be h b f , 'Phis is an excellent value ~ths, spa~ng n :U:'~ar~ witb. excellent terms. $100 Down FHA.VET Homes 2 frpl?l· close to sc~ls & LOWEST PRICED ac or su mit of er kl pur. 2 BDRMS. plus priv iuesi , ML ON ONE FLOOR for 646-7171 e 546-2313 NO DOWN TO VETS shoppmg, $25,900. l*O~~d~wn22 2 BEDROOM clmL,.IS. TER REALTY qtn, tge. encl pt.tio, Jeue. • pets, covered patio. garage 3 Bedrooms, 1 baths + 16 NE.W HOMES .,.,..-vu Adults. $196. &TJ.3285 ' ·on11 $...'>9.950. Call us now has been cooverted to large BIG SEPARATE FAMILY tow dn. 6%% JO.yr loan Two bath bome in CdM. 16612 Beach Bl., HB 842-6633 =========I' t¥~aptilpo"/11~:~.to see this recreation roomta or guest ROOM. 2 elegan t baths, From $24,950 New~rt B __ •_•_ch __ 1_200_ 1 "u',',·t room lor add1l~n600al NEWPORT WEST &.Ibo• 2300 ; ernu " house. lmmed le posses-buiJt·in deluxe kitchen, 2 car · Va!Jcy Road at Victoria -• · · · ··· · · · •· · '"1• ·,11•111111111•11!1!1111!~1 sion with 10o/o down or as-gar8ge. Forced air heating (Just E. of Brookhurst King's Place D•L•ney Real Est•t• 2 story GI no dn. 3 BR 12x18' LG ... Br. hm. Nr. ocean a : sume low interest loan with Plush· deep. pile carpeting up on bluff) ·· · 2828 E. Coast Hw y., CdM fam rm, fonnal din nn, bay Yrly $~. Winter $200 , ::.::iu1 minimum down. FP $23.51Xf Harbor. V1'ew H1'ffS and matching drapes. Beau-Lido size lots, fee simple Lovely Ranch .style home in 673-3770 14x30' cov. patlo with BBQ or summer n~ wkly, Call r 546-2313 646-7171 tifully landscaped. 0 n e land . High above sea level. this quiet & desirable area.,~~~~~~~~~~ I & wet bar. Owner trans-collect 1·213: OX 6-0218 Open Ev•s. Coron• d•I M•r block to school. Start to en-Built·in electric kitchen. 3 BR, dining rm, Fplc, kit·I' feJTed, TH E ~I EAL E S TATERS Milie Housekeeping • -·-· '' 1"""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii0 .. ~ 1-. -:: Simple SHARP SHARP- Tru..luoctio"''· bwll·in ltitch-COLLEGE PARK ert4w1th Westinghouse dish· . .,,.~er will delight the wife 3 BR + fafllily + profession· + '"' many olher extras. ally landscaped & sprinkler- 1..a.cge yard with block wall ed. lawn both front It rear Mice, sprinklers front & yards. Assume $19,000 GI ~t. Spacious Jiving room. loan at 5*% • $156 per @!Place, w/w caripets & month includes everything. 1hat>eS. Reasonably priced N•wport •t.s27 ,500 -10% down. .r• ., Victori• 646-8111 (Open Lusk built homes located joy life and relax. This is Convenient to shopping cen· chenk .,.;quarry ti!~. blt·in!1, Balboa Panln1ul1 1300 BRASHEAR REALTY Lagun• Nlgu•I 270 in the Southland's most de-VALUE: noo ' covered pauo, encl ".• !ii!ii!iiii~!iiiiiiii;iim I 847-8531 Eves. 53&-7000 bth. · ter, near schools. 3 and 4 yard, beautifully landscaped .. ! BEAU. Fum. 3 bdrm, 3 . -ble 4 .. ,., ....... area. DORMS • 1 & 2 '"'· Fire-Estato W• at 132,500. Of. 915 West Bay Ave TWO on ONE LOT in M........ch Bay " •• :· ~=~18 ~st C~.m ~i~: places, carpeting, draperies, fcfli considered. 3 plus BR's, UnobSlructed Modem 4 BR hardwood firs, communlty. Jnd. trplce, ' fencing, landscaping. GRAHAM REALTY, 646-2414 View of Bay. Private patio, elec. kit., d/w, grdnr, dub away. Sensibly priced troll Michael. Kay, Builder (Nr. N.B, Post otfice) w~ ~-. lath & plaster home in front. privileges. Avail Sept. 15, $34.900 to $48.900 COST A MESA OFFICE Phone 642-2821 Eves 642-5106 '" ....., Older, huge 3 BR home in $35(1. 499-2898 or 499-2428 LUSK HOMES 2629 Harbor Blvd. COLLEGE PARK CliH Dr. Newport Heights Open Sat~ & Sun. 1-4 rear. Patio. Big comer lot Dittctions: MacArthur Blvd. 545.9491 Open till 9 PM AcrMs from park. 2 story 4 with alley. $26,500 gets them =:.:~c~c~":.;5;,: 1,.,0ME PLUS $22,750 ~;'p,,'"':'''b1in":.1"'!"'~~. Pete Barrell & Co. ~~ L. Hodges RHlty Joaquin Hills Rd., then 111. Lowest priced home in this back patio Xlnt storage. 347.2525 follow signs to model area. top flight area, Large cozy O ose to all sc:hls. Fine avail Vacation R•nt1l1 PALM Springs, 3 bedroom 2 bath pool and air con. ·: ditioned $250 pr mo }ease. ', Week & weekend rates. 71'-. Deluxe Triplex 2 BR + room with fireplace, 3 bed· $43,500, 642-5843 New 5 Bedrooms family + living room rooms and family room • A SACRIF!~ 4 Mi + deluxe kitchen -perfect buy for the budget '-"'" Must Sell • 21 6 1ramar B trade before July 20, Bay - WHY PAY RENT? l=53!>099=='=""="'=6=pm=.===I Neat 3 BR 1 ii'i. bath, carpets, aye rest 1 BR & 2 BR, all deluxe minded ·Owner. No down to View Custom Cond 3 b 2 Near new. Owntt tranafeITerl 4IXXI sq ft of best custom con· $44,500 Vets cir low down FHA. ba hrn. 2,{X)) sq. ~: 2 1~ -must sell. 4 BR. dining rm, stru<:tion, Formal dining rm, Income $430 by Sept. 546-2313 646-7171 w/pools, golt, etc. Loan ha] Open Sat. & Sun. 1-4 fam nn with enclosed wet · Newport Open Ev•s. $29.300. Oller! 613-1356 ,..., .. Poot·''" tot '°" "'" · ., 2200 sq. " . , .,, ;11 b" Pele Barrell & Co. Fine View .......... $89,500 Victorl• Frpl, Lg Family Rm, Dbl. WaitEr Haase G Pool · drapes & electric built·ins, Summer Rent•I• 2910 Full price $15,600. Pacific Shores Realty 536-8894 Eves. 962.S701 Magir: Isle :. 1410 .. - '... 646-(0pe88n11 a ~ . • walking di.St to schl'1 • playground & 1.,,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!E!!v!!o!!!n!!ln!!g;;,s!!)!' city Ii~. Owner • 642-0936. ·ll~ugh around the edue.•r I SHRUNK WESTCLIFF JEWEL ,_L_ld_o_1s_l• ____ 1_3s_11 B'Ul'a little paint will make 1t 5 UNITS Ev•nings) 1 LARGE 5 bedroom, 2% bath home. Separate f a m i I y room. All blt·ins Completely carpeted & draped. Fencecl Near Schools, shopping and San Diego Fre e wa y , Spend a bewitching week Iii: the. true land of enchant>- ment. Neat, clean, cottag& for weekly rentals in ~ trancing Avalon, Qltalina.~ ALSO select residential prop- erty for sale. , .':J:Wme sweet Home." Va-Coli.1\'tli.11, ISanker & Co. 'il========rl Only the price has shrunk on Newly dee, 3 BR 2 baths Prime Property ~t and sell FHA and VA On The Beach 22" E. CNll Hltnw•w 1 ·--tltis cozy, attractive, 3 BR Family rm. Covered patio. 3 SD, 2 ha, W/'J. [plc, open ~ pay your costs to al· $49 500 N7r:.',::~"c~=11 $18,950 cottage. Size, quality, and $ 41 , 9 :i 0 Owner, J.206 to huge private garden. Big 2901 Newport Blvd. Burr While, Realtor low for painting. Modem 3 • I appearance t em a in the Pembroke Ln 642-4251 BBQ. Great expansion po-Newport Beach bedt"oom . Z bath. Hardwood LOW DOWN, Step ouiiio~e OPEN DAILY 1 .. 5 3 BR Westside home, interior same. Near South Coast 1812 Highland Dr., Harbor tentiaJ, St/St. $89,00J . I ;-L"o"v"EL"Y""'3-;B"•-. "'2 "•a"""w"ith..,.,,•x-1 ~6'15"-"30~""'""'!!!!E!!!v•,.•,.' !!642-!!!!!"53!!!!!.l 842-2342 n0iers fully carpeted. Sacri· doc.-into the water. • recently redecorated. Hurry Plaza. ·2 Baths, fenced yard, Highlands: 4 BR. 2 Ba. 75, on Li"do Soud tras. Patio, large Jot . ':'.Ck:J:! ished. TetrifJC .appreciatioa Corona del Mar on this onl"? fireplace & shakeroof. Price $32,960 548-2847; t-ns.:2908 $26,500. 962-1678 LABOR Dicy Week. FroiP , and tax shelter. Mr. ~s 219 JASMINE 642 1771 jUs~.e:=iuced to ~•¥XI• FHA ?~,.~ ~-, ..... _,,~,~v-~ scp&ar:,~e l~sBd-e:ch has SSOOSat. A~!,..:, 31;2$.100wk"•.t. ~.~ .. eves. 9fi8.35ffi. · • ~.% ·1.i ·1oan mh,y be assumed. -"S,-fiEN", iBATir~:f.,-. pier ,,.ip, ~· ''~' 00 G1rden Grov• 1475 "' &:..Iii~ Anytim. Burr While, Realtor Library, 6 yrs new 3 45~n ';3.~:r:~esu~!:°1 5 BR. Plus pool. West Garden ~:1f~::·~d~~ 7682 ED1NGER ~55 or 540-5140 liiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiii l"--3-E_._l!_l~h~S~t.""",_-646-44 __ 94 • POOL jbhn macnab , o• < bedroom• ''"' "'"'"• BAYFRONT LOT room or family room. Four· O.:.er 70 ft of Bayfront wil'l th bedroom could . be large pl~ & Slip privileges. We den. Heated and filtered 16 Wii1finance100% to approv. x ~ Anthony pool .. Covered , "j,lfl clienl with right of a~ patio. .Easy. ~amtenance Prt1val plans. yal"d. Night lighting. Cul-de- ""1' C II for Appt sac street. $37,950. (7~4) 642•8235 JEAN SMITH, Reoltor " 400 E. 17th, C.M. 64&-3255 Home Sweet Home 1 .__ Cool It! -$20,900 with a dive into the sparkling Delightful covered patio! pol" of this big 5 BR, 3 bath Free swim pool too. King , ff>flmrr model home at only sized bedroom11. Formal din· : S!Y.000. It 's a repossession. ing room. Picture windows ~ il is immaculate. One overlook the park·like yard. '~ of S31,500 With 6.6% Assume present financing & ':?,itrrest. 1vill not be increas· make payments of $125 a ;;;J; A real delightful Jerge month. 84&06()4 , filihily home. TARBELL 5824 Edinger ,· .LEXiE REALTY 546·5SM M·l on 63 .5 x 108 lot, 5 WI· J. tal11, $39,000 1st TD. Low On . GOLF COURSE LOT OR TRADE S'!S.000 (Lot 1 15& loot frontage on the south avall) 6734521 C~\:irse overlooking I u s h \ gr~ns and fairways, num· •'llrOUS lakes & the Oub r U:ftuse. Surrounded by lux· 1 .wjous homes. One-of·&·kind al $25.0IXJ. ~ -: i Collega Reolty 546-5880 'l::=====~I I ~~~'.~(~~~~~on r ·1.e o d close in location. ·~·"'°· '..' :W•ll1-McCardle Rltrs. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.i\l. TI29 Eves 644-0684 :u PENINSULA PT. fftl~m·Blt. Beauty! 3 BP.., am.rm. frplc .. Elec.·Kltch. Ocean. $56,CXX). :.Balboa Real Estate ()). 700 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa ORiole 34140 NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD CHARGE yo11r want ad oow.1 ...,_,4,...,,.....-~----- Sleps to beach 3 BR 1-t bath, 14 x 20 living room, fireplace + family room. bJt.infl, lg dining area, ser· vice porch, quality carpels & drapes, dble garage. Low dn. Vac. O.vner anxious. Rltr. 646-3928 Eves. 642.0185 *LA CHEN MYER Great Value ln a custom Ney,.'POrt Bt>ach home. 3 large bedrooms, family room, two fireplaces, 21h balhs. Overlooking fu. ture park and close ~ fu· lure boat marina. ~..,I y $35,!M. . •!•es~i~~G ,,,., •REALTY •• "Aoylim•" 2 BEDROOMS $900 total move-in cost, S134 per month including taxes. Large fenced Jot, built·in R&O, garbage disposal, car- pets, drapes, redecorated. Vacant. See this one today! l' 1lla ge Real Estate 546-8103 962-4471 DAVIDSON Realty P.E.R.RON ~""'°"~ H oneymoon C0til9e:- -$20,900 Fruit trees & flowers galore. Delightful covered pado. King sized bedrooms. For· mal dining room. Picture windows overlook the free swim pool in park-like yard. Charming spilt rail fence. faymcnUi less than rent. . 540-17'0 2901 Newport Blvd. Newp0rt Beach 6754030 , Eves. 673«169 CONDOMINJUi\1 FORECLOSURE Absolutely the best buy & best linancin1t available on any pro p e r t y . FOUR BEDROOMS, 2 baths, brand new carpels, freshly painted & prime location. FULL PRdCE ONLY $21.900 • 10%. down no 2nd CALL 540-1151 ;(open eves) Heritage Real Esta re car, bll·ins-$49,950 R. C. GREER, Realty Grove. Decking, Jandscpd, 4~2898 or 499-2428 HOME 642-4090 3416 Via Lido 673-9300 sprinklers, C""t.!!", d~, 2 I 2 Br .,.. ·,.... or . Apts. fum. ~ LUXURY 3 br. 2 bath condo, -.-SACRIFICE e frplcs, 2 story. $36,400. blk to bch. S:IZ &. $150 wk. frpl, pool, golf, fee land. Owner Must Sell Spacious 2 5322 Trinette • 897·8598 1209 w. Balboa Blvd., Balboa Owner :transferred. $32,500 Br. home on 52' strada cor· Sant• An• Hgts. 1'630 * 494·5189 * · By Owner. 642-3371 ner lot a t ONCE? Reduced BALBOA PENINSULA OCEAN VIEW I Fee simple $8JXKl to sell at less than lot VACANT ,!SA. HTS.) FOR 2 BR., sdps. 8; avail, 7128 ,3 Br, large family room value. Price $50,00J. By RENT OR SALE 3 BDRM, ttiru 8/25. 318 Anade 6f5..2S81 offered by prt pty. Must ONner Open House SUn. 1·5. 1,i A. R4 ZONE. RUBY H. sell! $49,500. 642-31);4 673-7611 RUSSELL, RLTR. 54!>-2209 NEW 2 Bdrm 2 Ba. Steps to ~~=-bay & oettan. See at 310 E. MOVE In! Near new 4 BR., -Bri9ht & Che•r~ Bay Ave. Balboa irpl., new cpta. nr. beach. Immaculate 4 Bd, 2 bath. 2 L•gun• Beach 1705 I n;-;';=C'i:~C:::..,.,=-~l $28,000. Open weekends; 351 story. Brick Fplc, blt·in -."-J-U_S_T_R_ED_U_CED--M-,OOO-BALBOA Is. Attr, 1 BR apt~ 62nd St ~.. 67< m44 '"t h u· d k •• (sips. 6l ; avail. July, Aur. .. · v wner .......,... "' c en, pa o, sun cc Short walk to Beach -North Sept. 613-1503; 499-2316 3 BR, 1'~ BA, xlnt Joe. completely F'Um, S59.ooo end, ocean tiide of hwy. 2 br, Cor lot, $.1!,SOO TRADE R. C. GREER, Realty d . 2 ! I NPT Bch 1 BR, sleeps ·4. 1 3416 Via Lido 6U.9300 en, patio, r P 11 ' blk to Ocean, $f,() per wk. R. Ross Myers Jr. 673-6756 spec tac u 1 a r view of July. Avail AUg. 642•1272 TAR BELL 2955 Harbor iiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii "NEWPORT BEACH" $14,500 BEAUT, redcc, ocean view. 3 TWO STORY . everythin g & has 4 + 3 Baths, $33,700 Ranch modem . bll·lns. Beautiful area . HURRY~ "OCEAN VIEW • $25.900" H11ge 2 B<lrms, 2 ba, 50x127 Fi.replace, Bel(lw market! HOME 642-4090 CHOICE CONDOMINIUM 3 BR, 1 ~ BA. 1200 sq. ft. Carpeted, drapes. Outside maint., pool, clubhouse, Ad· jacent shopping c e n t e r , From owner. $18,450 inc. refrig., wRsher, dryer. S3,000 to move in. 548--0587 Good 2 BR, 50x140 R·2 Jot. 10% On. Owner leaving Stafe . must sell! Petitte Rltr. 54&-0522 BR, 2 BA, all conveniences. 4. Bdrms .. 3 ~aths, plus din· everything. Low int. no 2 BR Furn, on SEASHORE Owner. Xlnt fine. 548-1284 1ng. So~e view from spa?. point Joan. $45,700. Bkr. Dr, NB. $175 wk. 615-1700 =========I mstr. suite. Lge. shady pallo 494-7578 (633-4863 After 5 PM) Newport Hgts. 1210 WALKER REAL TY ..C:.'-""'RA°=MS"'HA=CKL=<E;--1 BDRM, Vk?w, nr beach, 675-:>200 548-1467 Eves RANCH HOUSE nice. $85 wk: 2 bdrm $l1S BY OWNER 3 Br. w/w 64" "'"" 642 ~· E S• L Early Calif ranch style, on ~ or -=uv crpts in liv rm & hall. Wood State lie Ot Huntington lkach ~400 estate size lot. exterior wood 1 Bedroom tumished apt. PANELING Lrg back yar with 4 car garage, and fine plank, bvy shake roofline11, ] Block to beach. Weekly FHA A P P RA l S E D at 3 Br, 2 bath home. Jutt oJf HQ DOWN GI lge picture windo-.vs, 3 BR, $95. Newport Bch 642--0316 $1 8,750. Will Sell $18,500. Clift Drive, asking $.1.1,900. den, 2 ba. mod'/lt. Mission S43-l.28l OPEN SAT & SUN 1·5 Spacious 5 BR. family room, Rlty 494--0131 1 OR 2 br •pts. Furn. 1-' bUt DIVORCE sale; $3,000 under 324 El Mod•na in lovely 2 ~ory Glen Mar. i oiiiii ......... ;;m;o;;;;;~iiiiii j bay or kh $l25 & $150 going market. 4 BR. 2 Ba., AVAILlmmed, CliU Haven 3 A must see & buy at $28,500. MAGNIFICENT wedt. * 673-7452 (am. rm. t6X24' fun rm. Br, 2 ha. & 2 Br Ocean Vu Paul Jon•s Realty OCEAN VIEW Kt:NTALS Mesa Del Mar. 1st $:0:7,000 Inc Apt. $49,500. 548-7'249 847·1206 Eves. 5J6..2465 $5.!M • small, but level lot. HouMS Unfurnished $11,950 t BR + buill·ins, R·2 lot 63-135', Room to build. Rl tr. 2750 Harbor 58, C.M. 54&-5460 Eves. 548·8584 ~~;73;t~vc~n. A v a i 1' BY Owner; 3 BR .. l ba at-REDUCED TO $27,650 ::171ttgwn . $53 mo. fTI4il Cost• Meui 3100 $1000 DOWN BY O\VNER Must sell. 4 br, 2 tractive well kept. Nr schOols Lov•ly 5 B.drooms. 1..;;,;,;~~~~~!!!!!!!!"I ;--;,;;""'.;:;;:--;:;::;-'-;;j 3 huge BRs, large lam rm S26,750 or ? 646-3079 Close to schools . Owner NEW 4 BR . 2 Ba 2 BR. home, brdwd flri, with dble stone trplc, blt·ins ha. fam rm. bltns. frplc. I&. -transf -despera!c lo sell. fam rm, View of Coast Must displ, 2 Cat gar. 1 child OK. ind lot. S23,950. 545-3582 D Sh 1227 H · N d ••o -including dishwasher. Per-over ores AFFDAL REALTY sell . Jw Dn. $32.500 o ogs . .,..,... .. , ... v Exciting 2 Story feet cond inside & out. Large 3 BR. l30 ft wide lot. ()pen 1· _L_O_T ___ L ___ v_· --Low-I "Home to Match Income" LOS PADRES Rl TY 3 BDRMS near 19th and New· brick patio. Fine Mesa Ver. 4. $20,500.J~.~hitUer. g ' >ew. 8740 Warner 8424400 895 Glenne,,.... Street port. No praae. $100. Phone Ivan Wells' model home with view. 2 • Story living rm. dining ~. ram rm, 4 BR. 3 ba. Buy now & move in before school starts. .,..,,.~ leasehold , 80 x 120' av. No,,--,..,,...,. .. --, .. de location. CALL DAVE OR ~~~------·I 285 Santiago $2l,500, build 1 SACRIFICE Laguna Beach 494·8833 l-=&lt>8222=='°'· ==-~~- LARRY 540-1152 owner/bkr. 3 BR, 11,2. ba, fam rm, frpl. your own-&14-2039 eves 3 bdr, 2 ba. $14,950. $121. Need • Garbenatangle'!' EASTSIDE 3 Bdrm, 2 dtldm .. SALES ASSOCIATES lrg ya.rd. xtrall. 5tz'""1 loan =========! mo w/subst. down. 962-4219 Find It With• wut ad! no cloga. $130. 540-0'l89 85115 split. Management ~1,,2_1.,oooc-c0w-c-""'754_,, .. =25_26~=·I Harbor Highlands 12351:========~-======'===="=========,,j O!Jportunity. Double your BY Owner. 5 BR, 2 BA. Cost• Mes• 2100 Co1t.1 M•1.1 2100Cost• Me.. 2100 Roy J. Ward Co. 646.1500 f)iaJ 64Ui6TB for RESULTS Income. 01.U for appl. hlt-ins, good location. Very VACANT 3 BEDRMS, 2 -------------...;..; HOME 642-4090 clean. $27.700. 962-2728 BATHS, F.P. PATIO CR.PT, --------- .f..-m8 TAR GA'ZEK1<i'"' A11U , Br CU..~ It POll.AN Ull4 ~ MAA. n M Your Ool/y Adi~~, Gui&. ~ $CPT. 2l rh. ~ ~R. Y Accord/119 to th• Stor;e. f OcT. 2l ~~ To develop me5soge for Tuesday, 1· .S.1().Jl r~ words corresponding to !'\Umbers ~73 of your Zodioc birth sign.. "-2 '"'" J Kte11 'Hopi)' "'"' l'i You'•• 1 !l!tfl II t"'ll".,.j """' ""' 11Tf,. """' 1lUw M•o 1$CO<Jlcl 16YC>urw!I """' """' 19n .. 20Fa~ 21 ,.,,.. .. '"'" 21Mak• 1• R"lpll!ftt 2!.Ftll••lll• 26 Hf!ltt 27Ca111~ 180....lop :2'9r""'°' 30 ll'to @Goo! ( DRPS RENT WHD..E IN ESCROW . RUBY H. RUSSELL, ru:m. 545-2200 Unlv•r1ity P•rk 1237 VtLLAGE 2 lux extras 3 Br, 2 ba, atrium., lt. ft ceilings, 3 lush gardens, mirrored elosets, glam • p a c I c u s entertaining $26.500. Exe. in· vest. Nr UCl 833-0304 owner. frviM 1238 IRVINE SOO. By owner. 297-43'13 or VIilage 1, 2 BR Spanish, green ~It location, nr. UO, 11hopping & Na'fftion. $24,. 4"i2·274t Ea1tbluff 1242 BLUFFS, Rare "G" P 1 a. n: Specious 4 br, 3 be, By Owner. $37,950 644--07~ Coron• del Mlir 1250 cameo Hilhlanda, apactoos 4 br, 2 ha. On canyon, $36,500, OWNER~ - O R.orrongtJ '-tt.rs of ttr. four x rombled words b.. low to form four aimpl• word1, ICHITCE 1 11111' ILUB AM I I' I I rl IRUNPS I 1111'1' One ·nippi• to cnothen "What do you you use on your mustache tp k•ep o atiff upper /Ip?" His pol c nswerecf: ,,_ • 0 Complel• th. chuckle ciuoi.ct by fllllng In th. mlu'.ing word YoU dewlop frOl'l't ll•p NC). 3 btlow. e ~~IN~rs~M~~~E~fTIERS r r 1s r ,. r I' ] G 2ri':~~\'. lfJTfU TO I I I I I I I I ) SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 9000 ~ ... --..-. ...... .... _..,._ l RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS UAL ISTATI IUSINISS 1n11 ANNOUNCEMINTS * ..,. ..,. HllV HCKISM Unluml1hlcl Apts. Furnlthod .Aph. UnfUmhhod -JI PINAHCIAL Ind NOTICll 1f 1c " " rr' .. ':'~~~ .... : ... ~·:MJ~~~·:1'68~~~~~~~~~~~~ Cotti M.o 3100 N_..t INch 4200 C..... .. Mir SUO ~ ltont1I 6070 .... 0,p!r:h'!!!!i. 6'°°Ptr __ _.. _____ '405_ ~E OPTION. Rwn,.. LAGUNA II.ACM ' I (VUll<UN PAPEIIHANGER. Vlll1 I ....,._GoodEaat&ld• .1 Wlll-UASE 1 -.ONroRES't(<V1l<JJE NUTYIW USA -• -Rll'fTll>I, s."' •. 1.1, r•••••·' )61:9.tion. 3 Bil, hudwood y ~ .,.. -Willalilt In COMES To 8LUD, .. ~ Dnlmmor F o I Jo..Vl.,.i. SCl!\V : 1111ors •>.. -. ....... ADULTS ONLY "" ---" ... , •o.. 15, .... D ..... -*" ~ l'lab!a MT~ -1 ,...... U6 71 m o¢Go • J I A Se L ,.._ . .....,.a -town .,...,. " ...,. lo Iona beayy -fer p ,ml.~ ti : ._, Clllly $20,!liO. CALL U J • ag, • p ON TEN ACRES i-lloodl. Air eoodl-.... -... -1 area. ,.. e111 m. ,.. W -.at. ; MG-1151 (open e. Vt:•) 1 a j BR. Furn 6 UDlum tloned, cvpeted. beautiAIJ Amefsc.11 r!*t addQa: DBW Prderably muaici.au wbo ~ bat DOI...,.... li«ltaceRe'1F.atole FURNISHED APT. o.ml!SOmo.Frt>lea/PrV """''"'"""'-·Two Jood tndtloo 11 -a.OU. cao a1nc IOOd ......., ,..,.,.. ........ MWIST I iJllt _ 2 BATHS 2 BEDROOMS-2 BATHS Patloa / Pools. Tennll-0... ;::;":' """"': .. ':" &bl•.., Balboa llWld. .... part>. Mull bo"""' ZIA 30. JNTERl1lll ,_ EX'IUU~ io.•1> '""'· Fully dnped. W1i."-t/Loc. ml1 -. I "°"' Pultl ..,, -..... ~ ceuMJy ..-u.c In W. '*"3$5 Palnllnl-,._ -- :Aftliable --""1-ml BOAT SLIPS Gl'ffll. Muodpol -Deak • ..,, Sura a..tot. ud FLY TO CATALINA = w...:.-=..~ iJc. A l!W. caua< 51M314 ;riimlil. Days call ~ • Chaltllel Reef 900 .... ._ QDI -.... = "";:;:;<• """"°' 'c.u-. Also In DAILY 1UGJn'S FROM _.. -· * "--'-'-• ......... II • ;ssk for D,..ld. E"""1p call 2Sl5 oC-... lliJid~ GdM IMaeArthur or. Cout Hwy) ~ i:... .:...":.:.; LU v-. ud -In -ORANGE COUNTY AtR. I CL.ASSIPICAT l'OR ·~·-.. ,, 1 :"""68 ·1-673.:ll'n 2 B• ll•th .. ~-e lllll mo. ....ice 9'ali.>l• for $10. lo Reno ond Son Df,... PORT. Catalina • v-NAT\111.AL llOaN IWAl'f'IU 518-1'it/ ..,., , ,: ' •'BR '"!'!:!!!!!~~""''"!l:!!!!!"l"'P. I ... .._ All at.IUtta paid exct&rt • , i1 Alrllntl. • M6-flS12 lp11lll ..... '.... .; guage, patio; carp.," Oii leue. llellnq Red~ tol~-. U4,!lll0 euh ... you In bud. ., -·OIJ~ •-· 5 ·-_ S ti--1 ~~ • PAINTING I ~~ ~~· stove, refrig, BEAUTIFUL Waterfront m..3Tl'O ~""' .. ..._i .. L ~ _. _..,,,._ -._....._._,_ !lloip, iet.l aetH-.lor adultl. Apt,, 2 Br, patio.. bo&t, dock, I-=-------DAILY PILOT -wttb & bilbb: ~ u • .._ ArN. Phoml'B-t1'U ~ ' tM.11-AD -.itt, -a.e: llrteriot: .:: ru.u::a-1'1'1 ·-2 BR -·• ..... -~ . -ro·-·v~"'E ,...... --to -te st.or. "r-.o-. Bos·---.... ........_ ._. .... ,. .., • .....: .,......., ... • "• 54&--T887 11~ Blk. lhopa. $150 Mo. wkly -15\lnlmS rental ar • •--. • • ,...,.,.,, ~ ~• "' ~~u ~ ~--, __ ... u.w ....,. .. _ ~'f'OIM ,,..,. llMI• ...,.._, ~ • ...,..._ ~79) wthter . lease. 3403"" 11nley A...U JUl)t %1. ·$13$. 213: LAGUNA BEACH that lbou&d rttunl )'OUJ' • 1-====;=::;:::::::::: .....,,MINO jl(Ht Ml I -fltADa ....... ~ LEAl11' •~~ ~ =-======:l---...,..."""9466 -· d>o l!nt ,.u. •---~ ••II • l'ltONE '42-Mn Pl.......... , , f ·--..,..JBR.pl"'f-"o..;:=------DILuXE-OFFICE (Soi...,. ..... -,.,,,.-·-·-.. -·~ '" T•-Y-Tr-1P..-M ·= '.-·(im. nn. Meoa Vmle born•. 2 BR., ""..,.,.. _L_klo_ltle _____ SJS_l 1000 SQ. IT. CARPETS _ $30,000 oet ID . 1!nt ,.....). lisolte-Hulth , B PLUMBING :ULlc.Jlr, ~~· :&R to ICbools &: Shopp1rie ~I. pr. $1C Leaa. Many ....1-.. ueu avallalQ -'11\ADE llnpcrt • Dom11-# 11 aaa.c. ~ • R Work CUU'· , --.: 'h · 68 A·-" ~. •·1 -TO ••y • SHOPS -""TE RESTROOM ud .--~ -• VI -~-• -• ~--,a;,o-11 Doyle & Wood Real .......... _..., .,,~,, -• ki'td:, tadllties. Ort)' $lB5 _., Holpltallt)' ts VIII' MottD UC cu: for approx -·~· waterfroat wtth Jier, W re~. n....,., ~· • :~te 54!Mi289 128% "6th St. 548-8379 Ic. 2 Br, stvdio, 2 be.. r.. FREE SAUNA wmt tnbolrd .bo&t. SolRh eout oon1kler anyth1nc 1n va1ue isn~-~i'liiOiiammCi'9f; CR n-AduHl.113-1502, m...m mo. Year leue. BAL8C1A ISLAND, 1.0a.. SW!DISH MA,S;AGE: o~ 1.ASW1tlk¢ pc~ but tor d~ abow Sli,ftXI e 24 HOUR SEK t '>I ~t °".Leu.. 3 Bed· Huntl•"'on BNch ,,_ 8l'ORE ROOM'COSTA MESA ~ p•--·~9303 )rOom house 1n quiet court.,-'"--·_, .. '-·----~-TION JS INSTAU.ED AND Yll""'' Matya 10 am· 11 wn not neuc. .......: "'""' lou. Ll a.rm Plumbln& • repairs, remcfS.a. !"'11dren OK. No per.. Wat.,' MroALLION ( BR """'°' !:f!!:•!f!!!'°': -,5400 1'100 SQ. IT •• BUSY 11!011-.rutAI>il TO GO. D' YOO 'lltJndleys lO am • 8 pm. I aak ... llld> .,. CLEAR ., ~ Ualla fllln· lnr· -trio ..,.,. .,..,._ I ]pt.I~. $120 mo. M ...... 642-8584 -1 .. 1um, encl patio, swim-·._..... OF ARE • LEASE $1! MO. AU CA LL FOR AP. • '19~E. !Sroedw-.y , ! ll Unlts Hunttn;ton Bch, ocean view, ~ b1k. Npt. lq. ~ work par: M6.J. .. I -o• ..... ~ 't" NEAR H1.WUUgtoo Oenler: 2 EVES: KI 7·1875. ,/ ron.~n:o..-AND pr>n ,_Beach c213J 43711A:1 .....J A--1-pling pool, $1%i mo. 615-5034 BR., new carp,: drapn, lge. soNA.L.c.i.iN!rmvtEW .\NY ......,.. ··::r: ......,., oo va.__ over pier, best rental area. $58.-: :.:.S.1A • -p<irt .Beech 3200 FREE Utilities, tum apt. "' !dtch; ,.,.,...._ $m 2 Blko DAY ID A.M TO, P ~ .(/iitOL LOPICCOLO: $20,000 ~· WANT ~ ""• mn, .,.. In tr,.ie. ~omod1I., Ropllr, !!'.'l' ! !lA°¥CRESr: n. ... -.i-L bch-Yrly or Wkly. $].25.up. W. ot. Beach Blv., l Blk. N. ... .. 2·271 • ...... lormerJ.y o1 P&ayboy Bet.uty ~~:Oloca•, .~~2125um D'.16\.1 COUrt Aye., m.'527 JtEMODEL I: REPAlll_-i~ ',' .... ---·•·•· ,, ~ ..... ,.,4 bath• 53&-1386 536-3171 ot Hell. Tl62 Glencoe: tnq. -• " Salon in WNtdiff Plaza, bu "'c. ~ uwi. n1· DELUXE S BR 3 bl film eu,.atrJ'. Pa!Dt • Pia.Ui'- tuuuao.."W.....-• Ul'o"" 711 Apt. I; 8l'U-240& Aft & PM ~ .t.:. 11th SL 6t6-t49f I'"======== I joined the ltaff· at fi CHAlR ddux.e Bartlet on Goll Count, pool, wat-1: cOOc:rtte. Dlclt IC-:1'{'911;: .,:::.:;. ·~. "'.~t1ola_!, L19un1 Bolch 4705 wlalys. ""· 64&<mo2 In-ho-0ppo~: 6310 PETEii CHRISTIAN Shop Top >oc., N-c.M. ""111, hobby t11op $15.500. . ........,. ~ ...... " .. "". SPUr leivel 3 Br. 1% ba all Alr.c.dltloned Nlwporter Inn Shop'& Ctr. 1nde for "te•· eq. Want 1ncom·e Units. s.wlnt .... : ;bolU-lo ldlchen, .,.,,,."' • NEW lumt.hed'2 BR 2 BA, elec '""" dawhr d 0111 .. Desks Anl!NTION S..uty salon 644-0300 ....... TD .. &Old •• ,. Dania Rlty'O> """'° . :4'\peri.., llOO/mo with all electric bolll·lo•. p,... b ' ;,pr, '" poco DEVELOPERS " "-n Sunde-'-ippt. ••"' Collep ru~ 546<1!80 • • .Alt.rlften1 642·5M" 1 i[Kl?tcare. 2year lease. ramlc view overlooking All-crpll, drape&. Encl gar a: with ctntral aecretanal, ur-INVESTORS .... ..,.. , ... , ,SEA Going outbofu:d Rig. Neat, accurate 20 yrs. «JIP ' ~ SHORES AREA: so Bee.ch. $18S. 499-375.5 carport Patio. pool&: frplc. ox &11d telephone answerin& * to LEVEL ACRES * Bahl I: Smith Bklg, Coatr. MteroYia Houle -.,Qt:t1er1uU;y Trade for Sports car. Also ' · ~ ~~autitully decorated . &: can 53&-3190 lel'Vlce. ld"'1b' located ta high-dry DOW Clllftltnlctina: • Gold !·BR, 2 ba, lp ram i:m, wet have '65 ':ord F..cooo-Van TILE, Cer1mlc 69H !~matic large Spai;i f sh ttENTALS WATmFRONT 2BR. 2 Ba. '?be Mutual Blda. M.ed&Wan Home at '32 bar. WANT · lDcal rental Factory camper. Pop up.1~;r-:---...,..--.-I :~e •. 4. BR-3 ~~.dining A_._ Unfumbhecl apt. Frpl..; boat slip avail. ..._2!6'311;-_0>ut5 ~'?~ ~ =!~vn:t HlM-endoza T~""CorollM • properey. Madie O..Yl.s Rltr Trade f1n' !. SC-3791 '* vmie, tht Tiie Mu-""1 •P.11 &:panelled fanulyroom 1-:.:::.•~·-====~c: i... ~; w/slip '325. _.. -to . r•afi1""9U"' land, pump I: wiell on prop. ~• U' 60-7000 :zo Ft •65 Shuta Trlr, self Cuet-w~~·~ lll~on~Iug~~·=landrapod~:!~~lo~t ..,~·th~l ~Go~ne••1•~liP,P,P,iij5joooiiii I 592-6144 1738 ANAHEIM, C.M. 500 Mf, .. -.. Just 18 -n-·-~of mr HAVE Ox'Om del Mar [)u.. contained excel cond. For: No ;lob too smaD.. Piutll!!r-;yea.ra leaae. Realtor642-5200 ft. --' floor oftlttf15 '50..,. ......_ ~ runenle '412 .' _....._ headlnc show tr DEllJXE Waterfront 2 Br. 2 P......,, · • ~ ~ great ex-I;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I plex $ll,500 equity, WANT equity m inl;ome prop, ~ MT-19511816-0'l06 ~Y.~Auglst,corUnitfac· VENDOME ;;..= ~5~ :;!; :s .. =·:::~ ~an~==~ WESTMINSTER ~;~~=~181U: ~~De' bom~, TD '• JOBS .A EMPi.OYMb4T ft=_:,1 ~ru;~~; Make reservations NOW att)'tiin~:·. ' : , ' =:or!~tc. Ptw,. ll'ea.! 1deal ill' ~••art MEMORIAL PAU !!:~ _.._ ___ .. _. iox.81\'.)R.£.Bldg.w/~ M W1nted, L..ty :~·baths,$250moon lease. Newly Redecorated s-· ~R RINT devalopmeat, altalta ,.__ "u... u--= -~--~ ·~ W&1.'ehoust; Jp.lot; W.Holt 117$-3'63 .,.,., 548-6!166 l.lgun1 lelch ,_ ~ -"'i. 11111 ·IOJaiac, ele. ~··-'Y "'1m -for -·In eiv.: 10niorlo,'nL '70,000. LADY Vllth ........... : ,, :.Bay & Beach Realty, Irie. Close to Shopping, Park ;.;...:.....-"'-----Approx. COO Sq. Ft. carpeted • • • opportunltiee boandlea. C .... "..,funer1la O:iUt ..,. rmta1 untta. Trade up for commerc. tn ~Jar lady or &"!ftt ln yaar ,). 2fl25 W. Balboa mvd., NB Boys Club & Girla Club LOVELY 2 br 2 ha vkw apt • ~~m'.oo.. 1bll is • ran offerlnc, af. from $245 536-1131 In Cdlll .na. l-9116«1110 home. Llg,bl: bouaeworil: OK.· l!!o'!!"!""""'""''!""'!'!!!!!!!!I e Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba wtth pn1ge. No ltepa. Lae fm:lin& the tnvntor a ~at Cef~.'I .!:" W-Covlna lot 90xlts. 3 Br LAKE Tahoe View Lot Na. Bnt ct nifl!ftnC!m from )'..4'SR Newport Beach home e Swim Pool, PuU~ $175 mo. CM-7891 lSlS Westdift Dr., N.B. flltuN! Per1ona1 drtum· ·-·· il-local rN 548-4534 · · ... d , --"~-· f Is Contact Mn Rainio M2-4<0'J atmcn ..__ .u--•e·, 0~ 111.. '-!am nn. mtnr, patio. 18x37 vada lllM, paved SU,500 · .._£;"': ·.~.qwet Cw e sac . .._.oe • Frpl, Indtv,., ...... ,,. •c' B--1111 w •• ~ 5990 . .IUl'\.'l: ~.... i.q. _::.,..,,.:... Eadr:lwm .. _ ...... ~! pool. OU'/C.C. Oft $212,500 c!Mr. £xchan .. tat IOIDe-SFCREI'ARY, tut ""*'"!~ ;fam. room -living room, 1845 Anaheim Ave. IWf1 ..._ 2 Commerdal, l Indutt, l tt, smaller pareela avail-.£.,,._,,....._ '""'111" good at flg\fts. ~ · -oo It w 1 •-.,A,,.,.,.,. "th li _,_ft CM able btlow _ _._ 1 .~. ~--....,. '·--Val $:11,500. Trade dnlbch bodys headache! Units, ~--hi 3 ~.. w •' : Qver ~._ sq, a er « C.M. U'W"<-<U'I YOUNG Lady with multiple WI ving .,.._..en:. m ..... e v-..U't'. N-o ___ -=--area. 1213) ED 2·!M88 TD'a. or t Bkr. 1175-5126 ~~ ~ e. ......,,. • • ~ordener inc. $3?i per lii!!li!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ade:wia 'and well bebaved _ewner==-==2!.!ll==== Can owner. 147-661> Evn/ ~ ............ ~ V'lV'V"" ~month unfurn. 646-016 RENT Gennan.S h e-pb fl rd com-~ 1_·.,;;--<;;;:;-:::o;;:-;W"==" 1C901 Bwh, WMhnfnatier 3 BR, 1% BA, Newport Bcb Dclx. Cbndo. 3 Br. 2,0l> sq. DAILY Houaework $2.2S :W'· ~ 3 br, 4 ba, boat dock, parOOnneedirmunfurnlshed lndustrlll Rental ,6090 W"'E 7_% ON YOUR 531-1725 89»fi21 $37$1). Equity $15,250. ft. Npt, Badt Bay, View ~ ,'«Un deck family only. $350 3 Rooms FumttuN onebedroomboweorapart· MONEY ______ ..;;.;..;;.;olWANT:land,ft&Ort,lncome Dbla:ar.Pool.Allelecmtns =~·own ... • -3605 Finley 520-3081 $25. Month th 1 __ , ncl LG. 3 Br. Oki« hm I: la: lot. Church Bon-'-1-::--------1 or 11? R. Roa MeYf!!' Jr. crpts, drpa Val $38,500 . "'1" ·lllP· meat w:I en .. -cu or e · Ideal tor Mfg. rental. 936 .... ClltMtery Leh -6411 67U756 Trd/Income, TD'~· 646-2670 CARPET Cleaning. FIOor h 3210 FUt.J., OPTION TO BUY osed yard. Old HID'ltingtoo Swuet CM 548-65.55 i====1"37=·=1733=== Cf•-·-_ -... ,,.. .... St strlpplng. Waxtng, ~ ewport Heig ts No deposit o.a.c. Beach loeatlon prefemd. GRA.VESITE Fw a ale, ..... srove, .uuzot ... ..,.... area f Income wtita ~ ~~ · Window• wubed-531-«IV~ ts H.F.R.C. Reasonable rent please, am 4200 SQ. Ft. in modem o:in-RNI Estate LHnl 6340 Padfk: View Memorial EXCHANGE fur Income in Colt.a Mesa. Trade fol' - !AVAU. Sept 1· 9 mo e. fumitur• R1ntal1 on fixed income. Phone crete b~ M-2 :.one $300 1---,------I Park. property Orange Co. or dt· house or trust ~ In-JOit Wanted _ .. / ;.Cut.om 3 gdr 2 ba, c.rpb, 517 w 19th c M 548-3481 "'~" "937 "no..,_ ph ,,..2225 _m=o=·=(="='l=434-0082===== BORR6w en Your 1;'_,.... 5fi8..-093S rva land No. San Diego Co. come $402.50. Owner. u~ " W-...... :-drapes. bl~·ins, $250 mo. util · • · · ....,.,..... u. ~ ~te 2nd M,.,.. .. , ::.::_ Fortin, Rltn &U-50XI. 1703 * ~ * -n .,.,..,,. ~ pa.id. 64&-2891 1568 W. Lncln. ADhm 774-2800 BusinH& woman needs l Dr 6100 ... ..,. ~-..,, · ffi ...-Apt, CM, Newport, 1L;;.°"=------rr.. •~ No ..,._ Trovel 6435 Westcllff. 2 BR tum '°"""· on Bch TOP APT MNG'T TElll!I 5100 O>rona d•I Mor, Hunt Bch 1.5 ACRE M-1 · LAD NEED MOTORCYCLE nr. veruc., Jtai, m "'c!u• Dix only, N.B. orea JR ·Corona del Mar 32SOICiiiosiil!•ijM!i! ... !!iiiii!!iiiiiiiiiii -•---a. To n.oo mo. Gu M 1 _ .. _ OO'i'o -1st 'It> loana to $71.,500 y leeving for St• Have 1964 smca, rebuilt Ive ttaort areL Tnde Jor ferred, exper. &: ftfa. AVllll •. _ .,.. ....,,h''" •"' Level lot in best • ~ Servinc Orange Otty 18 Yl'L Petenburs, Fta. July 17th. . "~ -..en loc-' l f B born 1 """" 1346 -' ,1.7 ...... FOR LEASE-.. OR or carport necessary, 200x326 • et approximately Sattler M~ Co Inc. Lady, er couple llD &hare enime. new ... ~. _... or .... atta or r. e Sept .. -.u ·-HA RB 64UOl6 atfer 5 p.m. 90c llCI· tt. $59,500 • owner 336 E 17th st. ~--··M.. driYinc I: ellpel'lllea. IU--l080 ? •••••• ••••,, ...... 494-?20I pr we. lot or boet. 646-17l7 Do--lc u-lp -s 2 BR, elec bit-ins, crpts, 1,--...,"°"=..-""'"""-"" .._ua ..... , .,. ,_ drpo, w/pool, 1235 mo. NS 1 BR Bach Studio with s:'2hel31p3flnuce. ~ .. 7171 ""'2!.n 54>-0611 9COMMt11'E ., .. ID L.A.• * * * * * * UVE rns ..... .l.L Robertson Rltr. 675-2440 GREE garage, for 25 yr old ....,. Wlblhlre near Weatern eagjneer. Beam ana. Sept Open Eves. Mo,,..., y D' 6345 My dri 536-45'2 Employer pays few-' .·"BR, 2 ba, blt--ins, crpts, or Oct i. Box P157 Daily :--''""''-"-"·=·•::.....;:;:.:: c:.r,}'OU ve SERVICE DIREC 0 C Ceorse Byland Agmo1Ji1 :,..,,., $275 mo. R. L. BAOIELOR • IJNFURM, Ptlot · ' $S,"5 bt 'm 00 ~ SERVICE DIRECTORY T RY 51RVICE DIRE TORY ii. 8 E.16th, s.A. 517---~trlckl.,., RLTR. •~IO.. frolll $100 WAmED 1 Bedroom .....,. Oceerimw lot. Sold f<>< Aute ll1p1lrs 65'11 Contr1mrs '620 O.r<11ni"' 66IO aw-Uv .. loL °*'1PI f:funtington Belich 3400 FREE RENTAL BOOK ·• Drop In "and. Browse •1~. WE HAVE SOME ind. utll. with encloaed yard. $7,950. Payable 1~ ~ .aNTHONY'S Permanent. "Experienoed. l • 2 • 3 BDRM. Down to wa -H.B. toe. mmth ~1%. All due Garage stal1a fer rent. LicmHd Cantradar ,.. Far Eut ~ HJ.ll03 ruRN. • UNJ'URN. preferred. Phone 536-2225. s ·yrs 10" discount afely Bo6atl, air oomPtewt • Relldentlal .. CDmme:rcial Garden Service Heated Pools, Qilld Cant 60xl0 Oceanfront Lot rctuma lillP"D 1"' per yr, accesqiea. 8C-fmO Mahlt I: Repajn:. Free Elt 1 Center, Adj. to Sboppiq _ BUSINESS Family &ttklng (Balboa PenmiuJa) Of-1137 673-2129 646. 194 No pell allowed winter lease. Oce1111: or Ba)' 1148 E. Oceanlront Stred $1390 2nd TD JllYBf>le 1% per S.byslttl"I 6550 Addltiona * "Remodellna LANDSCAPING ,\, 2700 Peterson Wa,>•l Jiu. front only. 3 or 4 Br. 2 Ba. Sell or trade montb-1Dcludingl0% all due Fred H. Gerwick, Lie. LA\VNS REMODELED tKW 6 Adams, Costa M-. 673-8715 5.17..00SO 5 yrs. Coven ocdlent H s Senior sfrl will baby.it m.tilMl * 5f9.2l?O Exp horticulturist. CLOSERS-CLOSEU !!•IP Wonted, Mon 7"'8 546--0:rlU FURN/Untuni: Fer divorcee!~~~~==~~~ Ocnnvlnr lot. 20% ~ f«bablncramallchlldnm Rtt•. monthly Gardening $98 DAY:I L" *"hi age chldm. rus mo I . count. 49fi..1137 1CMJr ,borne. XLNT REFS. PA110S • Patio Covera J-nooo A-~-, • · •""'" PARTIAL Ocean vtew; Cor· Room Additto Ll ---.---.. · ' . ' 7682 EDINGER -"""==· C=M=area.==-==== I oaa del Mar, Chok.w o'stze ANNOUNCEMENTS M6-35t6 642-5952 Day .. ~_:.~ Exper., complete yard Nitlon1I CorporatWftj~ ~-4455 or 5«).5140 Excellent, park • like sur· -lot Nar leasehold. Lovely 1ncf NOTICES BABYSMTING Jn )" o u r ltt'Vice. Frff ntimatea Payday everyday! ~ .. · . roundings for adults req\JW. Rooms for R1nt 5995 tnes. m..JJJO Realtor. ::--:-.,-~-=---! home. By Wf!f!k. You furn 54S-7!M • 546-m2f ,.~. pl"'""-n.r .i .... , • f:BR. Q>ts. &: drapes Avail. iDg peace & quiet l'ound (F •~1 ••-1-C "t" .,..... ."._ r-.-., Aug. lsL Fenced yard. Discriminative Tenants 2 BR. upstairs. private 2 LOTS on Santiago, NB rw -~ tnna. Perm. 6C-..,, lrpet Ley JAPANESE GARDENER one out of thnie. ~ ,., ~ lease: Nr. Beach Blv. 1, 2 & 3 BDRM. API'S. bath 1: eot. Furn. Near cub, ttnm or a.de. Fee FOUND:. Fmiale German • BABYsrr Or board &l'lf· p1tr 6626 Maint I: dtanup. Reliable. All compiny benef~ 1~ Vaa Buren 842-6997 POOL. No CHil.DREN o.c.c. phone 541)...2625 atmp1.e.6t6-R ShepJleni. Vrry frlendi1: ttme. Pri room, reuonable. CARPET • Lie. Contractor Reu monthly rate•. APPIY ll-2 pm only 3 BDRM, • ba, d'", "1>>. MART1Nl"'UE Vic.17th A Santa Ano, Coola AI.,'""""•· NE CM """"'11 all prlcH • b'ee ..umai.. 821-6218 alts'"" J500 Ad..,., Swte 303 ~ed p:ll"Ch, POOL, Ref, T Guest Home1 5"8 Ranches 6150 Mesa. Taking to Sheller •Wn.LBABYSlT 54&-4471 awnlnp STUDENTS, work1nc their Costa Mea ~ 'E"""""1"' GARDEN Am. Friday -. c.n: -•EVENINGS. ..., -co11,... Alleni---=,.....--• j · BR, near park, a II 18th & Santa Ana, C.M. PRIVATE Room for eldttly RANCH HOME (1'1ephane.Na. d m.u .. ). *646-<490 6630 Broa. _., .....,. ....,. SALES "''" ..aPJ>l,iancet, w/w cplll, drps, Call Mrs. Henderson 646-5542 lady in licensed ,uest home. I bedrooma and awlmmln& FRI. 2 p.m. tiger striped cat Dr.f[Mrln lawn care. M&-4203 REPRESDITATIVQ~"! ·tau f213) 339-7882 lm Santa Ana, Apt ll3, C.M. 646--3391. pool Jndudes 2 bedroom with 4. white paws. Jumped Irick, Mnenry, .tc. * ZAFFINO'S * RELIABLE: Re a a , Leading l nd •P • nd•,I ---PRIVATE Room f« am-..,,_. bolDf! a:nd 1 stall bani. ~ Yt'ilow Poncbe-or 65.0 25% off -AU fabrics w/Orimtal care. Cean-ups ~ detliDC ill · l:-~gun1 Be1ch 3705 STEVENS VILLA bulatory lady. Good food. :.=:.. _ _. ol ""·-=-_ 3 __ foreign aport car 2n Newport 1!22% Newport, CM ~ a: odd ;fobl. V 1 n cent, 100 mutual funda, N~u LUXURIOUS Nice surroun-':. .. -5'S-fi7S3 i~• • _...._. -.. --.......,_ I ~-...,... BRIOC, Concn!te, Carpentry .~,. ....... in n...-... ,.. ... _.... This ta __ Aia, M·nYARC!fBAYAREA """-..... _ -•-.1 .... land .... -per~ ~--"~ ~ ....,...,. ............ .., .,... ' RM APTS rn of smd::v Dl"" .. ,. ' Oatom cabinets. ~ ,.,_ 6640 o p p o r t u n I t y to tiQtao · i.Cw£Ly· OCEAN VIEW. 3 1 ~~!1k Month ' Misc. Rent alt 5999 entirely ~ $98,500. For 67 ESTANCIA JU boys dus OK. Free Est. 96U94S llMtriCll ,..____ -~~~ .r..r:-dtgnlfled pro(euiollal~~=~ BR Ir: den, 2 BA. cpts, Drps, Carpets dr pe all built· ·"'-'c::..==.;o..---" I fUrther lnfDrmatioo please rlng, Tic 10th It beach. ELECI'RICIAN, Licensed &: __....1 _...rw. ..,., fUll or part t:hnf'II ;, - trpl, pool. $300 mo. In Ad.tlts a nl s, N .....,. TWO Ganges f« rent call Glenn Thompson with lnlttals lmlde. I d • n t l f "I , lullden 6570 b 0 n de d, Small jcbs, PROFESS. w•-1-, W•lla .. op not neceuai'f, wei. adW.ts 496-1243 bctw 10-5 pm s. 0 y. 0 .,....... $10 each. 918 Palm SL, Eckhoff " ··-., Inc. &1&-5381 -• ._ L --1 "'~· "203 .,_ • """ ,,_ Mu .. ·•1 1' 384 Avocado,CMMgr.Aptl HunttngtonBf!ach ~ REMODEL. repa ir• m ... a..,n.miqoa.ira . .,_..-J flr.cleanlng; buslnea 1 , j;'~lDc 2JOOJf Ci:lndominlum 3950 I STORY Triplex. u:JO aq ft, 181! W. Cha~ Aw. FEMALE Kitten • yellow Jlumb'r., painting, elec., 6665 mid., I: COllltruclion. s wt! Ana • ' • 1.-,-------1 2 BR, 2 marl>le pull batru, llEAL ESTATE ·~ ,.~ °:!'.'•·· ~" ······727 ~".'".'.'·Bl~c CdM.Cmoatloo .. ..,,,..1..,,, resld .. commen:. Floors Cry"'1 w-Cle•ntnr an RIMENTA't''' '~ ELlJXE 3 Br 2 ooo bl .. -....... '""'• """es-w,... .... s i.l)O"'O ~ .. u . 673--1341, ---.Loa. Re-· rn:: -· Free Eltim&tes 5fiS...8737 EXl'I! •· $.Mi D · • fKI. w/w cpts, drpe, ........ 2 lrs Gtiner1I ( k f Gali) "-.,,.,,.,,, ,...,... ..,.. ... ui-.,. lJNOLEUM, carpet. tile. Re· fl Newport Back Bay. View enclosed cpted P• t Io•. -=--------aa °" <IW"""':1-REPAIRS* ALTERA'i'iONS modtl, npalr. Many rem· LIC Swed.lib Mat 11 u e ae MACHINISTS~: Pool All elec. bltns, crpts, Adults only. 40!l Ford Rd, Income Prr-rty 6000 Acr.... 6200 10UND Fatr4y twmed wild ,,..,.. nn.~ ...... _,_ (..). " ~-.... -l6TI EUROPEAN TRAINED .. . Dbl gar. 646-2670 64&-1546 -bird w/lelllltMr ltrapl UJ """"°"''"'"oh -OJ -Ill"• nan · "'.-....,, -' n4 327-41~ Palm Sprinp R&D, no prodoctkil line,..., I est ( D I' hf 10 LEVEL Ac. COLORADO m-5H8 2! Jra aper. 5fi8.6113 54l-865fi vB'lilled experience l'tCfl* Dupl1xo1 Unf\lrn. 3975 ~."'1.i:':i,~1":; nY 0 S e lg RIVER. or BIG RIVER YD.LOW And -panteet Colol1Nt11wltl.. 65IO Go .... I.. -ll<!ull.. 67'° etl. 5 >r mtmm.m. 4 . ~.,, ""1235 T--'"'-, __ ......J. _____ ....__ devel, Riverside CountJ". In ••• ol ~ ·~-1.... tlve wqes I: b!ne6b ·• ·-::: 'f."'' bm ..._ 1 br, 'nle kit &: UUNttn or peta. <>M" eiTLla:: ~ .. "wi::i........,. ",.;. ........ _. ne,...ta CUSTOM kit. billtt bthrm. LlTl1.E GIANT TRUCK Ad ced K!net1cs Jne. Vt"-depred.-tiOn wrtteott Cl w $7,990, $100 dn, $Ill mo. verytame.548-1'11 ca ' GARDENER nn • 1 a. Gar. $100. Pref lady SPAC., Immac. 2 BR. $150. 0 I 615-5017. L.A. 213 467-213.1 ...... ,ES w~ "'&tch • _ _. pullmam, formic• topa exc. Rd1able le Experienced Hsultn&. 6' httpt, 10' bed. l23l Victoria, CM •():'): alone. 220 E-20th St:, CM Adult s. No smoking, no pets. land to bnprowment nto). ~ ..... .. WWJU work reu. M'l-9132 615-41; . 'You name. ft r haul. Reu. 646-n65 -... : 1.;::;:::;,.::;,_;:::::=..=::..::.:...-1 2 Patil:ie; privacy. 675-4859 NO ext.eiior maintenance fl R. I. W•nt.cl 6240 tn vie 2200 Ocftntront N.B. , 2 Bl& Jolin 64J;.4030 An eqOO oppty emplo)if'"; ~ -..-' 1 ALS yard work to worry abouL 7fll. 87$..1085 Mlllt ldentlty Cement Cw,... 6'00 MOWING, Edctni. vacalawn.. f/ HAUt!Nd Truh pickup DR IV i R To de 11 <; t; .. Aph. Furnlah..t Newport IHch 5200 Complete recreation fadll-WANTED FOUND Qdtghua ftinale ' Gen'l cleanup. HaulJnr. Trlmmtnc. ~_we do aandwichee., must haw owd -.. ___ 4100 u., and good establlahed IMMEDIATELY ~ .. --~-. CDIENT Work, all ldndL o&Uoba. * 54M95S ~aIL"'--wOl'll51s.2l!l2 alatlon w•-5 •··-,' Oacf• ..-NEWPORT Riviera. Back tenants. &uy l to 3J w11.ra Home tn Monarch Bay area -,..._.... Instant credit -all major ~ ~""'·-to 10-u ....,.:'Jfl.,, IO Apt. over pnge. :Bay. Avafi juJy 2'7. 3 BR 21Ai and laugh at "tax time". Laguna Cash blO'er Ne.d 646-Ml&. Cl"ldJt eatda Incl at cards GEN'L sradlnl';; :;:'' O.EAN Loti, 1aragea, etc. &JD. • or •.m. . :I I h It BA WfW rugs, drtls. Monticello Homes • • hcJnorN. 12 Mol to pay. rototil, ' n rs, Tree removal. dump akip in penon, Hambur · l! ~abeds.K tc. ene bit-in.. Large pool I rec. 546-1210 4 BR boalf/, ~ « ~ Lod 6401 Ree--b~.5JM&fi4 lawna,·hlul.'1.Reu.646-5MS ~.&.andt.~45 Bary 2136 Pi.centia Ahl •/disposal, dressing room. Pet OK $345 mo. 542-2307 with DPtion ,, llUJ't . ~ • JAPANESE GARDENING . OOsta. Meta ., I shower & tug. Beamed · Couttuy to Bnmin W w kit. Principals onbr mt0WN AlllcMol' t.ill&Md In EXPERT CEMENT '!'~ Servke Oeanup, J.andscap-~INnlnt 6115 S'IJMMJl!R EMPLOYJmfl': ceilings, crptd, frplc. Walk 2134 VISTA Lattdo The TERRIFIC 4 UNITS pleue. m-J35.«Jll dlO'I or pboQt booth N'Xl t 0 tteuooable,7:;·G:;.' iag. 531-703fi alt 7p.m. cm:ANJNG • Nkle-out. ..... rootbd Ttam 11it9 to banks &: mrktl. $100 for Bl': =·1~~!, 4:! 3 yn old, 3 BR, 2 bl, Fplc m63llll rv& ~·a mkt, Ulb I: ~ ~-..-Yim:I Oeuup lA.wa Mowinl n..c---diiu5ft _ _.,, neat appeuinr, llll'f:iilie: 1-$115 tor 2 .ind. utll. S'J5 3 • A il 8-15. .~ tn f!Bch. 3 l"f!llted. )'OU 1fw IUSINISS and Harb. Rew'. 6'2-7&90 -Free Esdmatet ... __.. 1 ._..:;;Power· Toob .-.... n .... , rug I wm.11 J"OW'I men, qce lT tQ ,p::I cleaning depoalt. a-pts,drpe. va ...,., tree:PrlmCdMJoc.t"11tt.llM PAR'J'!r..i.. .. -found DI COJ;;Bm: .. t-a.·c.....•-.. _... waalalr\l·F1"tlt-M-&03 ll •~-... Responsible aduH• only . per mo .. on yttr Jtue, CORBIN-MART~ FINANCIAL -... -, '~•.£.·........., _ .... ~. 2272 pref. l3l-2i80 ao -~~ 548-4093 NEW aoundproof 2 BR, 2 BA REALTORS 175Jll2 ................. IHel 6300 ;::,. ":° .~:: .!J:;. :: tlll, -.,,U ~ 6 FOR Commetdo! Londscar>o ,,.;,._ -'7U appt.. •ii 1' ::::::::~"""='-;,,-:--I Jcrou tm WStelltf Plua, -~ alum. t'4)0b. Maint Bay Land-.:::% Taktni Application Fir $25 Wk. Up ,,.,., hvlne ~ l!C-6060 UNIQUE FRANCHISE leather ooDlr. l4Mllll FLOORS.Walloo-PaUol A :0 5*'1544 KEPllART'&O-. lrcalno PAlt'l1 MAN 'Col e S1ud~A BaeO-.0239. llusf-Rlntll Fcrmc6womenw!tllmst IMrlltomooildfmer .... .2 E>!poKd Rocb. E xport"""" . . ·.~ ·11M.-111UOE1T,Slllfa SIRVICIWlllTIR · tnd Utill • Ad'8 _.. ' BAUIOA train 1rr center ltOne9 I: a WodnnWhlp. MMS14. U.WN SDtYlCE P5 llllV· 1. Ol. Ole Mco&.t Excelltnt -1ary + inca ~ • TV d. usmLUFF 1 BR. 2 a... · ll1and bayfrant; 009btll~ ~.~~1 .... " ...__; amantt diamonds. Probable cu~ p·•nos .. ~ Pa~ & : L.•i -. -· ~· • • Maid Service • 1 av Pool· $235 'MS Am.W<le l ,OOU eq. ft. atore: e~ .,1 .uo ~ ~·........ .... • W91klf ~ ts:a.tat. iw. """ - e New cafe .I: Bai W '~· 499-m4 'ftu. rent. 5M-17H eves Yardap Falr. $15,(ID to YicWfllcllft8h:ipa5'9-C'JO Bkd: waDI. A1lo wnc::retie -J•ttWlal '791 ..... : 2376 Nowport Blvd. ....m; "1· ' llALBOA ISLAND for Jew. 125.llOll -....... retail LADIES """"' waleb, bU> --A ......,i. '°'lfJID. CSli 6 Edp LnD Lu c L ~ • A°'ITRACTIVE, fun:!., cute J ;rRLY Ulfln 4 BR 2 bath. StoN or oftlce IPllt'e to liCl:)ft tn llaOC "1th. this fam· tiend lost 1112. fftc. Hartior CEMDn' WOl't" all t7PNo ~,,,_Vt.. Uctmed. B1UGl1TDt SIDE Jan .-s r00& . •: B~Spotll.'8$. Walk to 491)18, Stuhore Dr. w "111q.fL 6'15--~ ousCo.JhnOwens.~ VM. Rew'erd" 90-115.l or Nojobtootmall.neeat. • 56WKI aft 4."' O'ptclelnlns,tft.~ BOB'SCOITE£ ~~: atores. $104.50. Ph 0 n e 533--1351 5'&-&tll-SER.via: nua I: Fokl 9'2-32112, lt m;ruac: 541-aBlS LOW <DBI' Mabltnuce Indmt1, Rettd1. 511-1134 10 s. El CUnJno ""' I 549-3&13 eves or call at %Z56 Office a.nt1il 6070 Ea b MlXED Tmitr, wtit wlblk. MOW -EDGE-·IPltAY · Sen.Oemmte &.llSt.~7 B Ma-•-SL AI., 2 BR Eut Bluff 5242 LAUNDROMAT la 1"hed L ........ -Qu1ll1Y J'ERTILIZE. .._,,. Lend......... . ~19 ~-# • ....., ; .,.... 12 yrs at 788 W. J9tll o.t:a bm. F, 'fie Mffl. del Mar, Cemtat wort. --. -•T-, r1-r•I ~ , . '°"""'· ovaliAMe Au(. lat. PRE5TIGE Town -SECREl'AIUAL l!EllVICE •-netttns moo. l.cxw loot TIS --JAPAil!llE GAllDENDI GAYNOR'S LANll8C.\PllfG .,,,_... -~ BAO!. Apt.. 185, a(f!Hls, Forl .... ,lbrA ..... 3br i:-.::::=~.:: -· Olllt oooplo. °"""'" Q1W C... .. 10 EXPER,-molnt A G4llDll'llNG -na; ,.,, --. ... r.-oener.i.unctrJ. w1ui. 2 a1 %% bad& Gold rnaa11aar...o-c:ra.M ndrill. u NM.TAM·,..,. 1, "405 Reu.morata.•S2Jt. , ·!tall t1 ... ••ctr, m.-. • 64&-ZlU . -·• ... al!elee. y_..,. Bldr· 230 & ft a.~ 11'111. • SP1XJAL••11+ilJlrCln J_ . ..._..' .11 ......... 1 • -p y 2BR.!tn.Adnlll.llOJl"lo ...... pool.kupr.-_....,. llEAUTf iliOP .......... imwm:nmuis 11110d ... --Prol--.'ho.l"-Fmk ---,,,_ AYalL Aa(, tst. YtlJ a... ...... .i l250 mo. MAKI: .. _, t,-_. --..... -1!loo WHlo ........ toaJ1t1eo fer -lie. 216 lo~"" T -lllMl53 llo lo' ... Ills. -,;-"-· - BScottPI. M&-0323 145AmJtr>WOf,Npt.tlcfi. ...... ,_ • .,, __ S2,llOO. Ileadi ....._THE --cin.~ I pm. $11 Weolr. Clo"° DON'T Ifft ft pt OORllAL'S Lod••PI A OaototdW-~ 2 BDR-lll bo, bll·!oYourA<lln-do •• , .. -... --llEALDTATSRSMJ.'!ln. ~.------.·ms11 .... -... ~. _..., .... ,... -VICE - ·I .., ..,,.., -p40.., --wtllbo-b = 1·•-11111-A*lor"VC'ferl*IDll ~-U,.~--NllJ :t-~"f:.2111 =.--.wi (Jlaw~,••'ll PID•al Part -~st Aiits. !()lg ~.Al>t l a.·Dlll ---11.0'a. r-• •• -. -- -~ · --Oolita·-· . ' l ·1 - • --·--·----· ---·-•MM M+••••• 4 ••to &.e .e•wte ' •t • _ _. _______ -1 --~--~--------~---...... -------------------- • / 1 ,, .. ..-----.-... . ·~ .. --------~ ~--.--....,--.,,.·~~ ..... . . ... .,. . . .. . .. . . , . . -. ~ -....... . , .. .. . . . . . .. -. ' .. '• --~--·--...................... , .. -~ ........... '\ .. . .. -, .. . . . . . ' . U 0.ULY --· Jt1J 15. 1'61 • t A IMiiLOYMllii OiOiS 6 IJIViCOY#llllNT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT ;! :-1e11o w-. -nD0 Ho!P W ........ -72GOltolD w ........ Mon 7200 ... JOBS & ~OYMINT JOU I ~OYMINl IOIS & IMl'LOYMINT JOBS I IMl'LOYMINT IOIS & IMl'LOYMENT MlltCHANDISI PO~, Apn<in, w-11'111 ~Ip W-1 Help Wonlolf Joki M,on, .W-J SOOlolio Mor, w-7SOO . ~l~ AND TltA .•J .. SKIWD MISS EXK AGBICY w-7400 w-7400 "tt111~.-. . ~~f SECUll.1-y CUlUNT 1-L ope· nln TIAIN UCVM'.G.E.!IAfriaw~. AND UNSKIWD (MIN NllOID NOW FU.I. yACANQES IN EW DEPARTMENT 1211NGS DUE TO IC<- ANSION IN out\ "!I-- ANGE COUl<TY DIVISION. STAltTINO SALAltY $120 Mechanical Inspector J:IporiJln"" nquirod, llodtrale tolennc-oo. Join a YIW expandlnc lndultry with the loremoel monulactwu of automatic valves and conl!Ols. CALL Olt APPLY CLA-VAL CO. ,... _.."" IMMEDIATE EM.PLOY· MENT FOR 1'1106& WllO ' Q U AL IT Y COMPLEI'E 17fh Ir l'lacetrfla 11. :)oe nwmNG AND JIAP. i, , ADVANCEMENT. Cost. M-. 548·2201 , : . REXAIR INC. 11. ORANGE COUNTY DIV. An oqull opportunity employer • ' • Far tnrormatlon eall '• :. Mooday I:~ I ---- ;; • 774-7251· N I , •, ew stere open "fl ii· CNltt ackfltlon1I !Ii ~ENGINEER L .. :~t:: .. ·1: 8. S. M. E. ..uni * Start u ""''•" """"' · l 9r1du1te· to Service * No lnvestmem. ft!QUirtd ' -. * 1500 montbl,Y l&1&ry , ~ d Accounts ind * 2 werics pOS vacation 1 • d * lntettsting work . • -wpervise new pro • A rul c1rfff' ucl development for opportunity In 11: division of n1tion1,I store m1n19ementf • Applicant must be over :n, NfW PLANNED FACTORY EXPANSION IN ORANGE COUNTY Provid .. Dept. Opon l1191 ~ ARE N(fN BqNG INTERVIEWED. HIRED AND TRAINED TO FILL GOOD POSmONS WITH TOP STARTING PAY.· $512. mo. & up :I': comp1ny. S.lery tn ---4 ..... -:-1 condition ........... .,...,-.-11 qualified and ae<:epttd go r ~! $10,000. Excellent and capabl!-of starting on the payroll thil week. , • • work immediajely. Both skilled and unskilled ·:: opportunity. Phone Pmume.l SecttW)' lhould apply u experience ·!' -(11•) 6'6-96•1 for·~"~' :··~.::.;· = I' Mon-Fri 9 am-5 pm I '-------"'°""· '... nc roe MINIMUM '' • QUALIFICATIONS: .. Poe PoW ' Secmaey/Ute bkkpe •• '600 Bkkpr/Glrt Fri( ....,, •• ISOO Somw>/bldqr ·•. .... • """ Secfttar)'/~ •• 1-tSO a 1r1 f'rld.ay, split • ·•• • • • • Qerk typist ..... •. • • • • • $425 Secy/rtteptklnilt •••••• 1390 Clerk t)'Plst ••••••••.•.• S3:iO Appll<1nl P..,. F" Secretary!M$1J .1 ...... $500 Secretary • •• • • .. • • • • • • • $480 ~ •••••••• : ••••• $433 Prod'n control elk •••• $316 slllin'a Ctm .. . . . . . . . . SMO Put -trPilt .. · · l2lilr 410 'w, Cou( Hwy., N.B. Ca1J &n;y Bi:uct. 646-J939 Sec:yt, m11111 ••••••.. to S560 OMV ....... , , • , • , •• , to $475 Bookkeeper •• : • • • • • • • • • $450 Loan~ ............. $450 Mfd ~ •••••••••••• $400 Med Cen'l Office' ,,,, to $tCXI Cll< Typist .............. S:liO Tmee Gen'l oi: ·~· .. ··· $315 PBX ....... , ••••••••••• $300' Trriee Dental Aaat , ••••• $250 ALLSET AGENCY · 437 W. 19th. C.M. &&2-6752 Beach Ar•• Openlnp Girl Fri, fee neg • ._ .... $500 °'""""""'" oxp ""' Acct'a Ok/type ........ f400 Learn stqck "' bond bus Inv &: .lfDdc, trorucs • , , , $400 Gen1 ofc, 10 key ...... $346 Dental 1 girl otc •• _ ...... $325 Lnawoman PCS •.•. $2.15/3 J. R. Pierce Mme. ActncY 1885 Newport, CM. 6IU7>l Help Wonted w-n 7400 ASSEMILERS lloct..,,lc Com-nb Tbl!lle oPtf\ln&• require 8 monthl recmt experlftlce in eJectronk component u.wmbll' operations. To qual.lf)' )'OU mu~ know color codinc and hand IOlderin& technlqutt Visit DANA L1bor1torl•, Inc. 2401 CA·MPUS DR. lRVINE CAUF. (Nea.r Oranae Co. 'Airport} An eqUlll opportunity employer 1 Police Department ' City of Costa Mesi Job opml.n&.a 1ot Dep&rt- ment Oerir. Requliet knowledge of aeneral off.. Ice, aood spelllng and ~ ina at leut 56 accurate w.p.m. Awllcants must be at-leut 21 years ol are. Worit 11 diversified and interesting. Appl.lea· Uona may be obtained at the Police Facility 99 Fair Drive or by caJlln& 834-'""' LADIES WOMEN GIRLS PiDM w<ri: no exp, nee. $1.'15 tu-. to atart + bonuaes. LOCAL illVV g NOWI .,,,....., ......,, G•~4 eondltion. ~ 60-1482 j!. ASSISTANT IBM BOOKKEEPING MAYTAG Aotomotlc Wl!iif. (E!ectrtc Type-Repro) (Trana&ipUon Operator) tin Y~ :J:· ~ ; . Muoi loo upotio- ln DOD lndullrill ,.. cvrlty prececlu,.. in.. cludlng clocunwnt ~ trot, penonnel teeur0 lty, incl vendor/ 1ub- contr1ctor ll1lson. Must be 1ble 'to •c- curotoly typo PS Q ' ·ms. Contact Jim Z•mpeUi 1714)54M030 Mfsall• Syatems Div. ATLANTIC RESEARCH • ()'.)R,f'()ftA TION A DtY, a( ' 11le Susquehanna Corp. 3333 Horbor Blvd. Coste Mell, C1Uf. Oulcll Deparmenl Clerk-Personnel Dana Laboratoriet, a local ---eompmy hu &n openlnc for • Ptt'soMel l>epe.rt· ment c\edt. Duties t:ndude OMV DICTAPHONE GENERAL Dectrle ~-<Inc. Pl)'roU I: Tues) $25. Call 161-4311 alter •:lit TERMINOLOGY STENOTYPE <L<pJ-M<dl"'1J Anti~ nJO REfRES~ERS Go\MGE tun ar -.... (Machine Shorthand) (Greu-Stc:no-'.fype) Pattern itaa. cmdYal. I: RECISTElt NOW FOR, J'ULY TERM etc. J>erU!:ra ~. ~ For Ap~t.ment ··=-=·=· N:;pt:;,;Bcllo;, ;-=:;;~=:.I (4 ,. 14 546•7391 IN""'1ool Sowl'!f MMhl--11 Wffl1) Ti bl~J I -t.! ""-196'! SINGER (3) ~ EDVCATIONAL CENTER ~ 1« su::IJ, CAL. STATE DEPT. OF EMPLOYt..iENT BLDG .. !: ~ ...= 2ndFL.,281·7S.BRISTOL S.A. OK. """"" -,ljU;d · ' bema, overcutl etc. $ 4b- MERCHANDISE POR MERCHANDISE FOR SALi AND TltADE SALE AND TltADE furniture · IOOOFumlture IOOO tachmenta needed. F~ ~ New .Ushtly • c r at c .•• d cobinol wi1I> mochilM, -~ they last. Term. $1.JSi'~ ·<lft approved cndlt.• ~ 52$-8618 •''" ~ Musical Inst. --$3.5. ......... 1125 ... • . • '~ .. ~ S!"'nish/ Medltt • Showroom Samples 8 Wood C:'"ed arm divan, lg. man's chair; beaut labncs. 5 Pc hexagon dark oak din. set, w /black or avocado framed chairs; 5 Pc BR 'et, 9-dr Mr. & Mrs. dresser, lg mirror, 2 Plsnoo_A Orgo111 1.131! commodes, paneled heac;lboard. . . ~ •1 VALUE $195 -FULL PRICE $429.9S ! Special ScM:J : • WE otter our lf"tl.tilt or terms 111 low 11 $3.00 w .. k itock: ol new & med ~ Items Sold Individually -No Down _ A ....,.. • 11 Spociol -~~- Use Our Store ·Charge _ No Fancy Front mer Sale priefl! ~ but -Quality Values Inside! •in~~~::.~~ Approved Furniture• 2159 Harbor CM t>rioe ,.... will P<Y·...;..i,.. I WARD'S BAJ..DWIN .,~!-:''-1 .... Dolly f .f, 10-5 Sund1y e 541-9660 1801 NeWP>rt, CM oo;a.tc 1-Collete Students RKETS INC • Ago 20 or over '~ MA . • • • HI. school 9rod or Custom•r Rel1tlon1 Must be ab~ to read. with p.t>Uc and employee con-J~J~oiil!'i'"i'l~~~~~~~ ......... "!"!""~!! I tact, employee recordl, in-_!_S_&_E_M_P_L_O_Y_M_E_N_l F\lrnitutt returned from di~ Docoretor'1 Dolltllf; Stodart 5' Grtnd S69t. -~ We dkl the inlkle • )'OU dq : nu. Wftk our compa.Dl' will II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I equlv1lent r.' :,~o ~~inco= :.: • o.·.•,n,.''"•ncl ounty Loc1I m1nuf1cturer his d•1 · m ofb on a lull time f • u--honlcolly Inclined ... lmmodloto oponl-or: ~ ii during Ul'C summer. ··•· e Able to st1rt work ; ' -$'115. per -k Jobs designed to Jive 1t11-• Wiremen , 1-ents practical manage- ~ '1nent experien~. For per- ! IQMtl interview call " 539-1183 tram 9 AM to 2 PM ') .. -: . ' CAREER now We also have good summer jobs. Interviewing and acceptina applications Mon. &: Tues. Coll Kl 3-9289, ext. 23 Ask-for Mr. Hill, Penoimd Department ind $1IH with enthusium. Wc:rl" .hn. N~at attractive Jadie• to call 1:30 pm • 1:30 pm. No l~­ on our pteM!nl customen: offs, pleasant aurt'OUndtnp. and help establl!h new ones. Air-cond. otfke • group ins, Salary plut commission. avail Apply 1!23 E. 17th Mutt make $525. mon~i.i... St. Suite 308 S.A. betwn n.. .. ..., ttn I Grand. C.Acrols S.A. or Car nee. Apply 9 1.m. 12790 Newport trwys) 1::\() pm • \Vestem Ave., Garden Grove 7 3ll onJ : pm Y. S.cret1ry-Girl Frld1y --~-~--­ Pleasant Npt. Beach ofilce. XI n t cpportunity. Intelli- gence &: initiative e-uentlal. l.Jte Insurance exi>er, type fiO, Call betw 9 A 1 weekdays for appt. 642~ ~ 545-8471 ADVERTISING AGENCY Stcretary, sharp with ability aurance and wage and Jobt Men, Worn. 7500 play stl.lcUos, model homes, salary. Requlrts excellent decorators cancellation. typing tkilts. Must be ma· Spanish I l!Mditerranean etc .... w•ll °"'""'"' .,.. Wu Ben's RD FURNITURE able to commwucate d· fectiftly. Apply, 1844 Newport Blvd., CM every night til 9 Wed., Sat. I Sun. 'til 8 DAllA Newport Beach11 newest ind most exciting Canton. KIDNEY Shaped cottee table $15. Shadpw box $ 1 5 . Seascape $10. Pole lamp $10. ,. ..... , the outskle, · ···i· Mayer Baby -we did ~AP· side l outJtde, ebony .... Many other Cn.nd spe(:iak! WAU.ICHS.MANNING'4. MUSIC CITY' ~ So. Coe.st Plaza • 540-21ft NOW HERE -the -$,UJ>!!l'IOundin( T-20Q.;, ! Hammond Spinet O?'l'lll~. -the finest yeti : • ; L1boro1tori .. , Inc. 2401 CAMPUS DR. l'RVINE, CALIF. (Neer Orange Co. Airport) An equal ewortuni1Y employer •se restaurant now 1cc1ptin9 appr.ca· tions for: SCHMIDT-PHIU.IPS 00... 34x60 AN'l1QUE Green desk, 1901 N. MAtn 0 20tb · ~ alus top matching Santi.Ana , i • "OPPORTUNITY! ~ j-oin todays fastest Ef'OWini: • fession.Mutual Fund sales We ire 1n nt1bllshld commercl1I firm with llber1I fringe benefits. Only people with of ieltf six months ex- porlonco should opply to YOUNG Expe r l---------1 WAITRESSES, Ken'• to oraaniu and follow ---------1 throud\. Good shorthand and • food W1itresses aecretarlal chair $ 5 o .1 ~"'"~"'""!""'"'"'"i9iel ,. .. ,.., ====-,--=,,.,.~I Conn deluxe, theattt ~ GREY Formica top table,' 2 l2 pedals, lull pe~ . No experience necessary. ; '1e train -tun or part time , IW\ufu1I Fund ·A·dvl.Ort, ' Inc. PARAMETRICS 929 liker Street Coste Maw S49-2221 • • ' •• •• t B. 19>3 Westcllff 642-6422 • S.A. 1212 ,;~....ow,. 1--AccUJOM==-:-:A:::JK:-:---1 ,• . ·: FOREMAN : • YACHTBUILDElt : 1mmedlate opening in the ! ~ent for man with back- : ~ u foreman oI If.tit .! , U.S. Y1chtbulklin1 com-!i , who is expert is ALL • phases of class toolina:, die- ; I, cabintry, etc. Top op- TRANSMISSION MECHANIC oma MANAGERS Here ii an 'opportunity to join one ot the Wett's largest and fastest crow· in& retail organilltiont in a po1ltion of responsibili- ty and Importance. Poci· tions available through- out the Southland. Super. viO'Y experien~ nsm- tlal. Experience dtalrable in A-'P, A·R. sales audit· ing and merchandise con- trol and credit. Restaurant tmdtt n e w management.. 3050 E. Cout Hwy .. CdM· Call for appt =io Newport B •"' h. Relief & Salad • Cock1111 W•itr ..... • Dl1hw1shers ~9591 --~~~~--Coff oo Sllop OF'FJCE Manager, full C11hler/Hoste11 char&e bookkeeper, thru DAYS financial •tatement. .\ti.lo Cockt1il W1ltre11 exper. New dealership HB DAYS area. Ken Robinson 521-6050 Apply in peraon WANT Mature Woman to Sher1ton leech Inn wwk in bakery. 1"Ull time. 21112 Ocean Ave. Exp. prri. Appiy · at Hwitlngton Beach """"'"' Puny 111" w. INSPECTORS Baker St. CN WA I TRESS, Experienc«i, mature. 3: 30-3 p.m. 8 da)'I .. Sundty oil. Apply in peraon lmmediate opportunity tor women with exper. in print. ed circuits and mulWl.)'er boon!. Preparation Cook • Busboys •Cooks Experl•ncecl • B1rt1nder1 Full limo Excellent benefits. Apply Personnel 10. t Mon, thru Fri. ROBINSON'S FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH PLEASE APPLY 9-12 and u Daily REUBEN'S 2S I E. Co~11 H;..; •. Newport 8e1ch CHEMFLEX An oquol opportunity MATURE Co~ltt to manage 20 unit Apta. No chldm, no pets. 847-548'7 leaves, 6 chairs. Xlnt cnod. 'Used as studio or~""]ri; Call aft 6 Fri, 54G-1188 $2500. Full, new orp.n. war. SPANISH Wrought iron ranty. , .• ~ decorator wall accessories. Gould Music Com~y $25-$50. 549-2042 2Mi N. Main, S.A., 547~ MAPLE Bunkbeds w i l h Baldwin walnut gpiQet , m•tt:rnl $20. piano. 4 Yean old. Lao.: * 673-1951 * new $545. • , PROVINCIAL Dining room table with live chairs, Salem Maple, noo. 673-2639 roR Sale chest cl drawers, vanity, bench. bed. Good cond!Uon ~. 6'13-29'l8 DINETTE Set $20. 6 plttf: Gould Music Compei,j 2.045 N.~ M_~in, S.A., 541~ FOR SALE Wurlitzer Spjntt J>ion<> M"'°""1Y· cl>eny, ,. walnut wood. Very mood condition. $385-548-4~,; ; BEDROOM set $20 543-£415 Tel1vl1lon ------''-""! i Portuni'Y and s!ary tor :. 4'ii:bt man. Send resume to Combination UM mechanic I transmission overhaul man. Must have Cadillac ex- perience. E:xcell~t comp&ny benefits. Contact Mr. Bob Rogalski for interview. Excell!nt ~ salary and: company benefits . HAMBURGER HENRY 2136 Placentia, Costa Mesa DENTAL Alliitant, Ch air aide, experienced. No phone calls. Apply at 11 0 :l Watmimter Ave. Suite B. Westminster. 3761 Birch, NB 54&-TI90 employer Offl E I t 9011 Equal opportun.lty employer Agencl11, Men & ce qu pmen _ NABERS CADIUAC . 1: '$ox Ml58 Oranp Coatt ·!. .~t. Confidential. i • ,.1 1 •--------1 2600 Harbor Blvd. Co.st• Mesa: ~9100 i : ' MAINTEllANCf SALES 1-: Position open in Marketing in ;: · ., H"' MR Sa.let Div,. Must be 20-27, -~ · · tLrl neat aggressive, with car, ~ • aome colleae. Sta.rt .. $6oo pe:r 1 • R.etinid man interested ~ •employment to suppli-month. Rapid ad~ment. Appb' 1·3 p.m. LIDO DIS-: • .}ment retirement income. TRIBUTORS 12732 Gardm ,·~. t, Night shift • p.m. to 11 G 81.J G-~ G °"'--rove vu.. ... ... en rove. • p.m . .-'"""" . Apply in 1'f:l'10n only to Stol"I! Manager Wlltn FRONT STORES 3011 Bri1tol Coste Me11 An equal opportunity employer WOMAN To work in Donut Shop 9 P.M. to S A-M. Apply in peson. no piMite call3 pleue. WlnchelJ'a Donut Shop, 2947'Harbor Blvd.' PLEASANT, Reliable ,person needed to care for 3 scbl age chiknn, 4 daya a wk. Vic of Harper Sehl, FV Ca 11 962-1513 : ! 673-3131 for oppt. PLATER :: Immediate opportunity for BEAtmClAN, Xlnt oppty! • d•--------1 peraon exper. in precision Followina; pref. but not .~ ~ electro· platina for printed WELDER essentiaJ.Jo.sephine's690W. : (OOI circuits a nd multil9yl!r 19th Costa Mesa 642-8316 ·: · , board. PART-TIME Maid, Flexible ,: ~rten~ bttaldast It CHEMFLEX Will work on megnes· hours. Call in person: •' ch. Must be fast. ExC'!!I-376'7 Birch, NB 54&-n.90 lum, ilumlnum ind Huntington Shores Motet '·!l fen! money and opportun-Equal opportunity ,employu lt .. I using layouts to Ocean Ave., HW11· Beach ·cy, Apply in peraon onlY. WATER DISTRICT Desires work to 1peclfic1tions. CLERK 'JWist with 90me ' Surf & Sirloin "•Id Mamtmance P.-. Requlr., 2 y01rt wold-know!""• "' .,,..,_.., ~ ~5930 Pie. Cst. Hwy. nel. No ex Per Jen c e ing experl•nce or Cir· f(!f'ms. C.OOtact Mn. Lewis. S . Newport Beich n e c e s 1 • r y. Excellent tlflcitlon. 1 ~-...i=="NB,.--.=-:=. 1 ., pay-benefits. Apply No. 3 WORKING mother Medi '!' ' AHOY THERE'. Mon•""' &y Plan Soll< CO(llld Jim Zomdlll bal>ysltttt for hn b>wn 10,lll 102, South Laguna IM\ t.o S (714) 546-103 pm til 7:~ am. Own ttant. ' .: ... Dr1ft1m1n NMClecl pm 06'2::..:-<>l::.12:;:_~=-=--~ :: · ..&itn thorough knowledge of Missile System Div . LIVE-IN babysitter, in 1 . 11boats and equipment. BOAT MECHANIC exchange for room Ir. board. ·: a i Ibo at manufacturer. Experienced with diesel ATLANTIC Mothl!'r works nightl. Vic. or !: F'rtnge benefits. Send Tea-and other marine inslalla· O.C.C. 646-4045 :1 • :)me and salary expected to lions. MEDICAL ASSISTANT r: t.lr_ Victor Morttnsen, 8211 J•nHn IMrine Corp. RESEARCH Penonable, att'ractlve J ~ nkcrlihlm Blvd., North 235 Fkher, Costa Mesa lnjeetiOM. 40 hr wk, No Sat, : ollywood, Calif. 91605 Garden Grove 5!1)-.. if · ow Import Csr Agency '""E rucruau CQR,P()RATJON s.1 .. 1ody . E><p. Only! ~· ow taking applications tor .HIV .IALLX'IAR ELLEN' CARTER ' •-A Div. of .• -rvlce & P1rts Mgr. -.._ ..... ., .. ~ .. , °'"· Lidie• H1btrdnher ~, =tmport Cir Mech1nics E:xJ>l!rlenced sh o e fttter, ''~ -'"'"~" 87~2810 • . Lot I Dot II .u_ mm'a-wo~ lhoea. Apply ' • -n 333• H bo •1 d H'IR STYLIST J. ~-M GI in Pl!l'SOl'I Hemphill'• 1831 • 1r r u v • "' ....,..tact r. en Colley N BJ·J C C"tl Mo11, C1llf. App. 1~ tn Person ~~ "' 3100 West Coast H l!WJ)Or vu., .M. .., : • wy. Les Cc>ttturea 11), N~rt Stach SEMl·I"l!tlred or college man An ~ opportunity m Newport Blvd., NB 1il e TRAINEE for year.round motel clerk, ~~ IAl\lna a.rea. Must type l employer . IDLE Hn make Dollara! Be IJ Z-lOWart<*l lotpaint man· have aome acctg &: a f'Wlereltl! $2 hr au&r· We ~I ~ wonc_. f\ill time, maintl!flance ex-per. t!K-U96 tTa1n. HB Mn. Dre et f = :n~~toob:; MA_N .to woril: fuJl time, ... ncl•, °"°'"*" 7300 ~1932 ! •m 1-U. 160.1 W. Alton, drive-1.n rmaurant, cooldnr RUTH RYAN AGENCY L"~VN=-~"°"u"aw..,=---,,No::.,.=,.:-.•Top;:: ! s..nta Ana. exper nttessary. Ca 11 pay. Bristol Om•. Hosp., I \ between 9 ,i; 10 AM 673-61'0 • '"""' W H -•~ W•• S A. CONV;;;;;;=A';'LESCD<Ti;;:=~AID;-i;:i;E=c I ·---------1 Women 7550 '!BM Typewriter. Fleiowrlter For private home. Full or REGISTER NOWI 1----------J auto. Typewrtter, Roy a I :Ho.. N..i, ,,_ '...,.:. ·,v.,wuanf.i •IFlllGDATOPS FaWDIS-tllYEIS-llJm$ time An J/)_ Standard, Royal portable. H~EKEE:Pri qe. 08Wp0ft . Adding machine, 10 key. Live in or out. Full or Plll'I Nurses Aide persorinei Thennotax copier. Kodak time. No tee! Redi-Prlnt Copier. 646-l!i67 HOMEMAKERS Training Program .. agency .r 642-l.26• & PllOllDS. --» 1638 E. 17th, Santa Ana Prof .. slon1I Service G1r19e Sile 1022 FACTORY SPONSORED BY for th• employer P1rk Lido end the 1ppllc1nt TRAINEES · Convoi;..cont Hospltol Machine Oper•tor Trainee tor 1445 Superior, Newport Beach WOMEN'S DIVISION HEIRLOOM Gun C a a e , hnvy eolid oak.many com-- partments, hidden drawera, $110 ot ol!er; Surfboard, TV Console, 21" 8Cfto ~ 8'4", iood cond $25; V-rtm Condition. S26. . • Plastic Moldln.1. ~ini &: July 17th thru. the 3llt.. IJ1'8.Veyard shifts. Apply ISO N? COST to fH P1id Politiona motor, noise mak~ for by-673--fB ,. : cycle, U: Blond, real hair :...IO·. W. 18th, Costa Mesa. qualltil!d applicant& Secy/Bklcpr • • • • • • • • to $.550 Employment ..,,arantetd Ex--.. _ •:An SALEC; Girls nl!e'ded for .. -~ ... ---YI ••••••• ••• to +JVU Groovy store apenlng som upon pthtl'actory Stenos .............. to $450 fall, $5; old suitcase full of HI.fl & Stereo n: in South Coast Plata. Only completion of the coune Med secy (30 hr wk) to $400 Jain glrle who DIG The Req>t/PBX • • • •• •• • to S398 iz 14 winter skirts, too long STEREO 1968 solid sia1e,·. &: rabbit fur lined grey wint· er COllt, all for $1; beat up console model. Like ""'· Scene please write: Sanford =======:7:':S:':00:1een'I office ........ to $375 Ro.l!nfeld ll5 Nietti, Long Jobi Min, Wom. Aocli clerk • . • .. . • • to $364 Balance $'19.35 « ama11 bed divan & 2 chrs, all for payments. Cndit Dept. $12; old Jr. encyclopedia $3; , 535-7289 ~ . ', Beach 90fl00. Include phone numbtt. Rodio-T elephone Dispatch Girl 25 to 40 yean. Must know loal al"l!a. Apply in person YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 161~. St. Costa. Mesa SECY To Computer Prorrammina M;r. Must be accurate typist &: aood with numbers. Job f n cl u d e • t;yplna: I 1111 n i I keeping track 6f aoftw.krllt, key pi.mchlnc &: operatinc small computl!'I'. &t:Z-9630 TOUCH UP GIRLS Expe.r. preferttd ln photo toueh up on printed drcuU boon!•. CHEMFLEX 3767 Blrch, NB 546·TI90 . Equal opportunif1 employer ATTRACTIVE Youns lady with aood tt!lephon penona1it7 for receptionist pmition. Capable d 17Pin1 better than 50 wpm. Sala.I')" $.150. Call M&-1~ aak for MI'S. Prettyman J,. (. PENNEY CO. IN Newport leach H11 positions For soles in MEN'S DIVISION Many ftt Paid OppomriiUes TEMPORARY DIVISION Part time &: teipporary PositiOfls Available Also FM Positions Lionel Microscope, xlnt. $10; .......,.n..,....,. n---" chldrn'1 books 15c-$25c; Few ., '~ ~'WU' pl.,.-~· IP ~rds. mono 35c; Some JIOrt.a.b}e, LiM ww. ·.Sii. paUo fl.Im, ml cheap ,i; Jots 61J..-26J9 · • of miscellaneous items cheap Sportf.. ,._____._ •.R-· or tree; foldin& chn: lOc ea. -'--''-'''_,1_--"'---'._""';1 l4i O'e!Cf!nt B a y Dr., SURFBOARD 9'8" Jacobt, l Lmguna Belt 4~1101 eves & ma.'\o& •trinren. ma.ho&:"taµ wkends. block, liml·IJ>ffd Skq. Dtt GOLF Clubs, T.V., 2 rms. cond . &».1954 ·• I like new carpet, JneCh, tooots, elec. drill, eome by Ml1cell1neous Mab and make offer.102s4 POOL TABLES .'., Nlghttngaie F.V. 7n5 • SPORTING GOODS Now l """ IS7.50 ""· Tililo WARE 133 Dover Dr., N.L HSEHOLD itema, wearing tennis, Poker tblet, kn~ • HARD 642..3170 549·2743 award, mlr.c &: &Orne furn. stools, indoor ""1'M!" ~·~ e COSMETICS Thurs • sun. 8·8. 9231 • SEWING MACHINES ARGUS Chrutlne Dr. RB 0 "'°""1 """"' BADC . SALES. 409 S. Mam ~ WORK NEAR HOME GARAGE Sale AnUques & or Call Frank 538-0.iu. ~ Recent aucceastul expef'i.. enee preferred. Generous bl!nei!t program. ~ AePLY IN P.ERroN Monday thnl Frid&,)' 9:XI a.m. to 9:XI p.m. J. C. PENNEY CO. Newport Center 24 F1thion fsl1ncf Nowport Booch, C1llf, Ins secy .. , , •.•. , $400 liHd furniture. Misc. 1U p.m. except W«i " 1 PR Gel ...... ~ppt. 2SlS Elden Ave, CM DECORATIVE ~?¥$ Comp oper , ...•. $375 MOVING! Selling patio I: interior doors (4 P&/lel.o Cost led • , •.••.• $100 d~ rum. Misc. 96U018 9825 each panel 17"-" x 8' ~~· Oper1tlon1 trne .. $600 E T'llrliPM tln:le, FV Quality hardwood, aritf~ lrolferm1n .•. , at $20 white 'With i!)ld trhri; ·alt ARGUS EMPLOYMENT Appiloncos 1100 bardw•re. '99-215~ ·<r CONSULTANTS AGENCY D VACUUMS D '37--0191 ,. : 2043 We.stcllff, NB 5'3-1196 UPHOl..S'l'ERJNC _ m.-.: 1624 E. l11h. S.A. 547-6336 SlO llP-Roplln l pvta. pc. (~·-u a-uu..e.11 R.ealOllable. Coast Vacuum ........ """" 1U E. 11th, CM. 642-1560 Fl'NM , m, de!, pickup, • WESTL"i'GHOUSE _ SUMMER EMPll>YMENT for....... FEE '•icl uv::i • e............ _., · ,...,.. PIT S2 br Fuller KINDERGARTEN Teacher ~-Tam nel!dl SERVICE Station Attendent Secy, No S/H •••••• to "50 _ruar. lfB with credentials; b' child An oqual --· .. 1ty MUSIC atudent wants Smool1-ln1tructlo" 7600 a.in, HB "Bemy" ~- COPPER.TO.NE REF RI c Mlde to "Of"du -any ci>kit, 12.S cu ft. L.H. do«, nr new. DecoratOt' ll"&Pff, candlJ-1 S90 6TM'104 other ·~s. 192-~ WASHERS $29.95; dryen THERMOP'AX ~ '35; Freewn $75; R.tf.11a., macbfne, HCretvJ ~ • :lvoc.; Guar-6'GS12560-2079 ·-~, -t --••-·"•• Ex--io IKIW\ "Bnuh customer aerv. . . . ..,.........,_ .. •"""' -.... , -·~...,,, e:x,per. ooly. Fl.Ill time da3'•. ~ ~-•••••••••••• ..,.,,,, 540-UJ32 care, part time. Muat havt · ~ploya-belinnin& 1~ntl on Flute -mm,•-17 to 22 ._ .. ,_ UnlOn' .. __ ,, __ Teletypeoper ........ to$42S 1'.V., Mrt. Brown . ct·"· I SlOO I · •-:;• ·~· .-~· _.._ ~nu '""'' .,.,., ..... ..: car. APJIJy APROPOS No . or iuu1e . . per ellOft. pr""" ........, a.m. --)'· lM!i ... __ r-• M ' TYPIST ttmpol'&r)' job tull 29 --•~ •·•·~ NB -limiiif.t;JC.iiiiroi-1~56-~1"'2~===-:-=-.,e'w. H• St.. '!\Ilda 54()..m••· ..__,_, esa.. Fff lteimlturted time to ttart, $1.EI hr. lte-m..Uil...,., _..,,.,., . Inventory Control ' 'i1 Q.VICE -Matlran m 111 • Secy • • • • • • • • • • · • • • • • '> $«iO P4y P 0 Box 115 Colta MHt Familiar w/ order po1tlns. SQ{~=·· 1= 1111 -...;.. -MlXllANTC. ExJ>or. with wont..i shlpplrc. 1)>e ~ w/ fir· ra • er.""•_._ -~ own "'°"· S1-. """ Foo llARMAIDS • lop ..,.. 1 llllint Clerk· Typlot urn. ""°"'· """"' TYP<nl School. S<S-2958. 17> - • ......,_ -Bl. .. rntrt Auto Repair Girl ~, l500 ' Sharp. Co-Go. SUIJ'o Rectni up ntc. Small cat· , Del Mar, C.M. -• t•M ..... ~· C.M u .. 7 r~1<1at ···•••••lb Uay C.M. 56.s · ' REAL E\'TATE. Shouldnt =u-;-;;i'M:;:;<'<'.'.-:--= .f!L ,., ·~•m . ~n Clk IYPIJt .......... lo $460 • . llr .... d.11 oll1ct. So. ~· ,... bl oellinc tbs ho<t<lt SWIM LESSONS 1'y • -~ r•• •I• h I 1 . YARD SALESMAN, 90mt 1 tirt o8r:: • •• • •• • •· • •• to. '500 ~::: ~ 6:: 21 · I .,.... Stkt $3'2' pa-mo. arta I HuntlnlJfon Be&dl.T tir:ctlonal ~ p:xi. MrJ. ' 1 I .. ~ .,._ ••e• n tea I • x P• r, f"arat\ to · • 45M6I tor Awt.. Call for -.pt. Vlllaat Jl £. Bee. Rns. ~tea P"91 P.M'. to~ A..M'-s dl1S-ptn'QrlMlll •mployment, 5 1'793 N~. C.M. • MS-4154 ~745 • -· · 1 DRAPERY ~E:R.ATORS 1162""'4n 546-1103 GUITAR 1et11ont In rock, tollc ""' •i•waw !kar1, 4o)<a.· bl-E·Ron"", 2117 11'1!1 O...h, H.B. IC'l-tllt PLOlllST, ooono....i """°'' a-Iinosn• l clwtcal. P-- --· C-. --;QI 142 W. 1'1111, S.A. !Ill-QJi Mt-Ttll 311!1 Blrdl, NB. llW"11 .Al-o eo.Got m.ms -~ . -· 54()...1t85 , CJJU..S Bicyt'ln • 2 ;_, :, GE Port a b I e clllbwuber handbrakes, Sdnrinn · " w/CDmlft '°P'I 1 :rear old Jnaina. ~ Each, $100 ar btll oner. 968--l'fS6 NEW 10'1" Vardeman Tlnla BUSllSr -• O...W..· N~ 0.,. mw. 1be DAIL'f PILOT 5t8-2938 . . ;.;! 0• ...... wds Sl,,. FRIGIDAIRE S50 Set · .Jri -· -• -. 1-Brit'"""' ~ -ill ..... t-lOll -: --.. -···- I .. -· • ' • . -------. --------------------------------------------- • --------~~~-~~~~~~~~~ ..... ~ ...................................................... ~ .. ~ ......................................................... "'~ I MlllCHANDISI POil MhCHANDISI POil TllANSl'OltTATloN TIANSl'OltTATioN TllANSl'OltTATIDN TltANIPOllTATION nANSPOltTATI:"' :-" l5, l'6t '·-· :--SALi AND TllADI SALi AND TltADl . "!'J'" tSIO l"'flOrlod A-HOO Uaetl c-' --U.. Con -Uaetl c.,. ffOO r: Ml••·-"°° jREE TO YOU ?::t!'1:11'::t= • WIU.TI ·1 ...• -111Uw.'H NaD" ~ CHIVIOLD MDCUltY 'c SWIMMING POOL ' • *We. 0.. m .... l:mu ' '?4i TJ'h TAJ -C»l'T a l'DWfCl:DT • ' · FREE..-..~ ':• IDdltadJ.ca.U.1* ..... "'a~ ID ._Mn -..... •Pm,""*' el'11'ltr1sill•t '" ~n • -MEltCURY. AVallable : ,,,., ..... _ ...... __ ........_ ,u ... 1,..--~ . 11ea1a.,aci...i .... _._ wa,-.;, l>oraol•••tandmo<t : • ~~mer~::_-KU. -Tilt ~tt. ' ~ $413. '* llMDll e~' eillw 11 Anal f91P1Ctec1 Uncoln -Mercury ~ •14'.il riiti Klttw LEAVING ltatt ...it ML CMnpen 1 .._-.tm llUt .__ = ti •Door. allMo ud kalw, Ooapr dHkr Jn Oranse :, .'-: ~·~:::., ~ -. "u ::;.~..:,1:°".!.~.1: 00::.!·~!!~'1*.. '.~ucvws~:= ~a ~K.~ • .. ~ ~=::-::·,:~,,~ ~~ ~~..,:~ ~"":; --"-~~~~lftOC=~~lf""'° I lldl. ~ • o8tr. M6-1116 , -" ...,..._ _., llClll on ..,, ctwdll. 3'll'C a~U. at a bent-:=·:~ ,;.~~-."'ua"'·l!ll!;ll!!oll!!I .. -..,..,.-1;~::111'1;:;;...;;•;;:M::..:;Ll:.;V-"'7_;"1 .... =~~~ = ;.~;:.::; ::.£ .::;.:, E ~ ;;..:;-: $1195 as=:l~3'0c.ii: ;I tot·.u 1'1'11 wUI MU S·q ~ l'Ot' $lie ACTA·:.. Cl'A make oa..-.Ul!St cua• fe~. iDclwHna: ka CtiMtole. Tlllt 111$ • TllODORE ams 1,,.,;..,.,:;EllCUi;;;::;-;;R;-;:Y;-;J\;::Olll'::-4:;:-(I=« -, . atv• ,., •• ,.-."' c....., ... ..u.. ,,. ... ~ 25 ltp 1-,..,...,tlJo•b,.,.•~-... • ""· • -. ,j[, au1111 SPECW wtd! otr. ,...,.,..,tocand ~~ A~l'ridlYT:~p.rn. lndtvldually. llWl.9 oootroll 4 tsnk. -"Ju1.b' cuvete:d ~ PY•• $11.86. can .a.n.. .. ""' FOID r bn.k••· lndMdul •POOIM-~ ~ ~Windy's Auction l•m Dot• 1125 • · MZ·U69 • :!;!~··;;:; W: ::'~ ::v::w~ :~~ , vw Nly ~pped. va, r.no and muta. mrio. Dlr. 548-TlSl t ~. ·lehlool TalY• !Ilda. Mat1 -·-· ~ Mal111..,--fOA llllat. lua; ,._. -..,,, "62 K-vw -· _., "' Iii,'°" DO-81..S. MUSTANG · _,,. n......,, CM...._ GERMAN SHEPHERD . ---Al!Aos ..,,, :16.000 _.,_ __ ............ Pl,.. m.. 0oota --p .. ; • !VACUUM. ic..mor. ·-· PUPS s K ri> p It: I\ • 8. • • .. F6iD % .. --..,,, $2,,;,.""""., vw ,. -tm.136 • .... ..... '5' &.., ... Air -------- ' \8, old« 8-lnt El<ctrte • monU.. old maW-.,._kwant ... -· ·~ .,,-~-·-·---.i< , Hord top. V.f, ....... tie. (2) '67 MUSTANGS '.;: · AKC REGISTERED poWwr cml.1, Pa.rt • tllDI ~ ...-· ...... .,......,_, ...... $795 ,ilfyw 15, chain, 50c Moh. -54641i4 , VW • V1I • VW -..,,, • VW <JwMd l!o< -o-r. : :: 1-;kolbwood bed frame'. $2. Champion Blood line• priaiMl ~ .._ .lfld 2 to choote trom. Factory " l"'llA GE. AM-· Bred for • • UM YW Bus v.a. NtW' 'II ·' ' white. JlD 'l!ka • doCk! wuruty, VS, automatics, ' ' :ztti6 75 ~ ~ =; Quality It Temperament M.rlne Equip, 9035 Dune l~lff 9525 1500 CftC·, l"KI' P. beater, DIODORE ROllS Take St5 ctlh, Pll¥ bl.l Pl. with or without powtt ateu-, i" f'eCXll'lll. Wen. Shott It Worm!ns atereo' aet-up. N!edl 90lDe per mo. Call alter ll, 4M-1.ng, Rl:H. TEY924 • UJD813 . . , "on' ,_w .... ~· $15. "D.M--with .. ch PUP Tii HP Ou.tbo&rd motor. New BAJA BUGGY BUILDERS body work I: patnt job. FORD _ or ~-1 15""-.. ___ ...... ~. --· ..-............... n.w, "'--· .. -.....""' remote tuk. Xlnt eand. Completed Busgies It Acee. Jl<Xn ~ call after ;Jiii''" _... ,. uuwu -u-au -,...... :• ·~ 837-38615 Eves. aft. 1:30 PM ~ nf..135-0385 .arie.L Ultd VW Part.a 9:30 pn .199S OiEVftQl.E'I' Cqrice .._,, 36 mo. on app. Cftdil , .. LEAVING State GE refric, Wethnda: after I AM ZWA.rr btath radio tel. J'J"Qi.a-a~'.&.rt ... ...--;;VW;;;-,!300=;-s:;;ED=AN=.-;-<:=I iDmHarbol'Bhd. •tab ......_ Power $2195 '• )'ellow, er.. top ·~ rrALIAN.CltEYHOUNO-~ S1QO. Hath RDF $3S.. Lasuna Be.ch 88100 w/a/w very clean. Must a.ta Mna 6'UOlO •teerirle and brakes. Air .~~+$).00,Mlple~etrock.er ~:.~:_.ne. awn1 __ !'!""1 •eves.545-ITJI* ~ -.eO!Duned.$1215~-TEA.CHER'S-at ~ ... eondlttontns.Canbe ftlt. l\N\ftl:ROBlllS, ,'> •<'10-...... floar ..... 1l5 ~. -..... ~, im,orMd A-•-OV•L -· -finoncocl. """· 541-'1'151 lrn;WVl(l :: M,..._,...__..135. l<maI..11Z.tll.each,h>chxl-2 alllYl!. MorlH -· m.o::=.---..====I '62Slcylarl<.116H,P.S.,air,1:========'1 ~ ~....,...._ tram. =.,~ 11111 ...,..._ Cal! =,.:;.,. ~·,•d · · A~li :~N '~...;:"';,.: "~ ~~-.!'.:i';,000 "' • COMET FORD .-. ~=ER-,~~,:":":; ~ =:: IMtsnrMoort"' 9036 LATE MODEL .,. vOLKSWAG»< F~ •• ~-· ..... -.-~.;.Dr_. .. :::;.~:;-;°"" ":'.!"""'81"!o.,.0 ... ··-· r.... ... ...: llestiDl!tta!"EXQIJlSITEt WAST!D' !lllp -'"' SPORTS CARS. __ ....,, .... m11 ..... :;;s::air_ ... ,.,_ m-11121115 '65 MUSJAllG ~ .Low Jft. A-1 J"o..n l'*ic JUcb able • white. Male. 22' Sa1bM From. July Top Dollar To You Dlr. 5'S--Tl'Sl ' 5t&-.3f1I 1, :~'u=~l.."':?~ .. ru ~u::·::~~-= $. CaU coll Cll3I Golden w .. t ·~~·· ::t'uli ~01~:~:..·sl':" CONTINENTAL VI .. -. fully -». !f;C.A-o.iprT.f.1111. Bill• 80XElUI 1or Sale. S11ow .. ~w-ANT~-,.----o11p~-.. -..,.~ AUTO CENTElt Ille ...__-. •• 5980. m-n19 -1:• -?Odlo ud .... ,,,,air-. • 'WI>• 21" T.v. ""-woo1 ..._ .,.. .. m.., "'"-· •· ,,.. ,, • ...,,.., ..,_""'· ,.. ·n...,... 111v<1. '61 vw .....-.... ......,_ ''4 Colltleental ....... 10" ....,, .. -~'xl.O' deic:uillrlW ~ $50 doc ~. b •th In I · ext 341 (8{j) OI' 541-615.l atter O:lsta Meu 642-3460 Radio Xlnt ccnd. $2200. Call CADILLAC 'M Lincoln OJntinent:al 4 Dr S47 per mo. l> ma. TXU5n . ,~~ "°'· dre•••r·. ~~·~~XER KEN. s:so. • Spot Cub tcr ImporU -"'-5-=-=...-===--1 Ton Sedaa. Hu tun JOW· • qipS.,...11'9· 5 :• ·"muTOI' siz. m..39f3 · ======== We pay more for eny tzriport 'tr vw. 15,tm mt., (2) ,61 CADWCS er w:lth factory air. lmm•c- :.,,) ~n: Beautiful Walnut DOB ~,!~N _._!,_•_ p pie lo•t·Yacht r~ardless of ~ar. make n.dio, xlnt cond. $1650 ulate thru out with lilver . -~ CL--•9 or condition. Try us before • 546-2Tlf • metalic finish. Now this THEODORE !IOBlllS l -wllb --Xlnf '.............. ~rte.. -""" ..U. ELMORE ff __ rllll_ ... air ""°°·"' car new '"" be r ~ =:.~ ~ ;::; .. ~-: AKC -.-awt'l'ER-m-"1_N_..,_T"'-.-~---1'1NEST--,~:~~~TO~RS~· .. ~153'0=· -~s;,.~di=_ 81="1-= ·=~~~~ =:· $:?~~:; ~~~~&: • ...,solllvdN_ FORD l 'Mlic. Wlflfod 1610 °'"""'~·-Un , SalllnJ 1......,, ""•loop AUSTIN HEALEY 062 ~_".,hl~upttlDI, cndlL Llncom--...,,. :lllOHarborBlod. ~ new ,....-.; ... UQU<I o;;vuu, $695 ~~. M.,. Br-~.... O:icta Meu 14° -· I" -)'(',ANTED: OltTettl WIRE Fox Terrier JllUlll. ReU)Rable rates; avall Jor $995 * 8f2-f1981 ~ ..... TI ~ : ; ·Underwood tQe ca1cuiatar. .AKC Oiamp llOck. charter 648.-9650 548-2592 1957 AUSTIN HEALEY , -=========I !Ml Harbor Bl'Yd. IG-'ftlSO '61 MUSTANG, f eyl, low I ~-Bead! Blvd. M7..fl00 * &e9939 * BLUEWATER CHARTERS needs VOLVO DIODORE ROii$ 't5 LINCOLN'. Power, au mlleqe, radio A ·twatar. · AKC IASSIT PUPS 21'-IO' U-Drlv• Skip. Av.:U • UIU. """· 13511-"""'-IMlha. 11.600 mt. ox-$ZIO-cuh • tako _, ·j~~--~f~R~EE~-~T~O~Y~O~U~;ffi~~=R=•=-=· """"']~ Day/wk. l40-9tl00 24 ""-.....,..,. '68 VOLVO FORD ..i.-.$0600.l13-l530 ="" !51 • ...-mo. ~ CAL 24 SAIUNG SLOOP DATSUN GET 0 LEADERSHIP co l mm Falha .. Blue Pemao itw.. 1130 12$ PER DAY OR mo .. UR ' RVAllt '&5 MUSTANG 6; •ut~. -~· PER WEEK M2-'IS2! SAVIN~ BEFORE Xl80.H.u'bor Bhd. '.::'::::"':--''----I r&dio, new t1rff I: shoclu; ~ =~~~o! 2 BL~old ........... ~~~ 4 · n.. '61 lte~~IFoil YOlJ,BUY!!! a:.t:a MeA IG.t.m.O '15CORVAJRQ:n.I; llOHP, "xlnt coni:I.. $1.50ll or otter ~ ablolutely &donble. Tho It mm . ~ & ~"''• 1 lolt1 Wanted 9050 ""'tswi 2(Q) toa<U1•er. actory l 'ST C\D1U.AC Std a a ~-$900 Cash c67.-'>-311-.;;;;;T.,.,,,.=--::;:-=:::; ~ ·~ kl their hearts femk, 1 mle. 4M-63'J'1 "'"'-"'-"=='--.:..= frelh! Due to war ~em1 •-=• DtVW.. <hiM eon trol, (~). f1S-«l99 Aft I PM '68 MUSTA:NG, Pl. pb, rood •~ ' a • OUf ·YDC WANTED RACING SABOT. could not keep. WW. take UUIO 1e11Cber mtmcr, etr. l&,000 cond, except needl bod7 =for~-= ~ BMts & Yachts 9000 P refer bi&h number. oldertradeor$3Xlcubdel1, IHPORTS mi. Localb' ••rvlee CORYEfil wort.Only$18255U-'56:i • ,_ 642-421 dlr. Car urwler 50,toJ guaran-WarrmtJ-In affect. OritfMl :::-::~::::;.:,::.::_:--1::::::=;;:;::=;;::=. ~. Mlof.mi.ti!::'°.=:'..'!!1 SCRAM-LETS Mo1111e -noo :;.·~~=;·-1981 -.'cM . ..._ .:;:'fi:oo"":':,.-;;;;: "!c~·~~E~~;,!1 __ o_L_D_S_M_O_l_l_LE __ : '·Wu old, box·tnlned and ANSWERS 10X41 XLNT •UM · Set up -&'.A VOLVO Fae. •llT&n ... lt•r••· Mllllt •ll. But offer . •g OLD! 412 Can:n. Air. .~. ~ Some with • -.. G' ·s -y nMUo f1$..l301 :.-Cute and plartdl. ~ . In Par1c. Awntn1m, cooler, '-" "50' AM/FM..-Ntw tira,. Al . Chucll. Cit' a1k for LOADED! 2'900 q . mlln. • 6U-lS95 · 7111 Hee& .. Album _ Spurn _ new ~ $3000. er belt 174 Darrll, C.M. 548--253i pwr. Leather. 6"B-tl.1i Aaking $31186 Call 11.S pm. • I~ Bladr Go-Toptber DefUe -SHD..LA.C offer. M&-8216 ·~~n ~ == l2l)O 'M CAD O:lnvt. Ewry 1961 WHITE Convt. Hrdtp. -~-""~7::;--,===:-;= :~~;."Mom A: Daqbtu One ~*it toebrJr lx501960Nashu2Bt. baflan Call&73-lSt2aftS Auto. Wanted 9700 Extn.!, I W7 .at, tilt Au•. $2095. Xlnt «ind. 1963 OLDS Convertible. P/I, :O•JC&Iwaroo" 6 "Blac:k:ie" One hippe to mother: w/awning. Sl850. WE PAY-wbitel. 1 OWMr G,OOD ml. .... UOl&ft I Pin p/b white w/blue-tnt. NII ~.;...,. """""' ........,._ "What c1o ,.. ... on 1our .....,,. JAGUAR ..,,.158l .,. roaVEl'ri:. ci. •• • ...._ XInt con4. ""5-ww Botl:a ~ "2-1m1 aft mliltlehe ti) IDeep • atlff up.. MOBILE bornt 60xl2' double 1939 CADILLAC .. dr. SidUI ~ Mtw tim:. See'° .. tan trade (114) arr-mo r ·S· "" ... !&~-·"'"""SHEL-~= ..... or ~~G~~la~-=: TOP .DOLLAR ;:.';'."",;.::-.,.:: -c···o~Rl~.-.•. . -~~!f,';~:!~ .:.. ,-~··-. S, P.ID. wblt., -I LAC." . ,,, • ., ...... i: FO' ' •; . IG-«DO' ..... for-·.'••• 8941 • ir'rila. old TO load hclmtl. I-==~~~---19115 10 x 50 2 Br. Adult puk. ~ .:>CU -,,_ ' :Alao,...-1....,.coll 17Ft.Prefonner Calta,._ tU-5410, CAMAltO 'Sl<XlUG41\XllTPowlorake ·•.OLDS n.111 _1 door wltll ;o ~,. old wllb --.,.. ·1o11ndor Dthrxa Model =-====·==I KARMANN GHIA .USED CARS and -""" D~-... ""'"tloolntr· Dir. · --and - -.,._ !>a» •Ul' -cooditlaa. lndud-Ml"' llka1 9275 '67 Kannton Ghho BY OWN!2l -.,_,.., UT 541-mt .i;54&-;::.-;T151ii'i;;;-:=-,.-,;:= :· ·WUOII Eves. 531-Ga T/16 tDa cust.am map don eov-1---,..----...-----fa atr (ftlllml nmnu\lft' Auto. Hw tnb. td rvf>.. lJS1 C'OUGAR Or Jain al '17 OlDS· .euuu. Oaavrt. :~· !liepberd male, 2 .ir. Btc twhed tDt tnlln-. MEs.\ MINI BIKE di~·c.: n:; Vnnu.L UJll~I )Ill', P/S. RH. VDT «Jld.b. -UJM D'OIL Very Sharp! 21,<m ors:_ nU. t :~ old, ~. niaed $900. Phone M2-491!10 aletr Sale1 • Partl • Repairs net nu. car ta 1n perfect dnn. &oa. in 1 e r v I c L Dtr. Pbont S...'ml s:450 1tlU llhmtty. 613=0217 ·: i# eh i J d rt a , from '--;iT'i:tlli-P:;;·;:m:,. ,..,...=--=== 2267 Harbor O! e M&.-3007 cmdlt.icn. Take older trade '8211 Harber BM:I. FrH llltlft1. T.O.P. en ,. if1 C01JGA.1l XJl 7 Sacrttice '68 Torcnado r1 ·jlippybocid, netdl ·~li'Jsu: 1; stl 20 .. Trimann . dJr WW Cotta Mesa -MS-UOS . P'OTd crdlL 8bown lo' · ~on...., ....,.., -~ ~ '--"" -·--.. 1115 .... dola, . . WE IUY ' -·· m-54U 1ll -""!; ~... """-. CaU l4$--33U ; '•-• and -·---.· >-lM 1"...,. ob. Ai>lon>x 1S eye-,._ finance pr!vat• --MaM -" <' --.ii at• 5p.m. TIU In. Bait tank full ..,..n '61 HONDA 305 l ow .,...._ 8l.m:I « 'ANY CLEAN CUWIO "1 Sii 350 I op!., --~ @ABLE F....i. -.... lff• .,_;....,._. -i 638-3111T ... .. ... -.... ml, lll!o _, DODGE PLYMOUTH ~ ,;iilobq,All-·0....Wlll wall-• tnlJer, 2 extra Scromblor, Parl•lon ••"-I======== LATE MODEL lofakealfer ..... mt. ' . IWl.Y rao( ·u DODGE WAGON $399 I ·u ' ' CHEV. , ; WA&ON : ! $499 I ! 'M : FORD ! HARDTOP.r I ' $999 ; j •99~ DELIVERS ' I "" $~ kemWw W•tM , • 'f'I . ' '"' $1 .. Pl.,me•lti HT•• ~, .. .... $1~ .C1.411111 ,, •• ••, TJ " 1f61 . $l Plyme11fh •• , .'., ...... SS ::: •........ $ 1161 Chry1l1r ••• , •• • 1t61 C•11fl111nttl • ••• ''" ~ ~;:: w., ...... u.. ''"'·'•········ .. tr .... $ Tl C•""rt ,,,, ' ,, ... o .. w •••••• 1161 $ D•rt HT ••••••• i ·"'1> "°' ........ _.,,. _. . ._,... i. 1or aa1.. ~=~:w~ MERCEDES llNZ SPORTS CAltS. NEW 1981 Doda• aiarrer. 1:..,.PL~U.:'i=. i &uortmmt cl k 1 t t9 •a IC-3020 aft 5 pm. take $9D cuh deh: ar take Top Dollar To You CHIYROlET Bia en 1 In, • loaded! * l'B-9583 * 1t'4 $109 it '.$4?-DrJ . °'Zl;ll JULY lplCl&I. Bo.ti hauled, trade. Pt.Ymefit. $29.116 ma. Golden W-• ··~rv-~ ... tncludinc air condidonine.l.,m=======•llChrysl•r •••••• • , • diiGANIC Tertilbtr hm'le bottom -=rubbed A: painted, $9173 ar 6.19-3817 -~·... -' 40,(IJ) mi. left oti warranty. NTI . 1!6,•,,.fot ••• .$·1199, ·1 _,,,.. , -,..,. ..;.;-11.so ,..11. .. -•-. AUTO CENTElt Inc """' """'· dlr, omtc Tue -,.,._., or PO AC _ '."•otnbln•d muldl A All other mainten.anct •·HARLEY Dll'ridnl ltlS. 191MN tBlvd. Zl"ffll.blad:Jlblltnt.ericr. '80.la per mo. Wlnn-------- l ~-..._ aft_.....,__ Fully-.Selleoulrirbtar <»ota II••:""' ~ V--1, ,.......,., power Av!a,..,.-4 SPEED 1t'4 $1!:: ·.: ~,,, w N_~":.':~-";:""' =-=-~·:~~~ . Wit: PAY ... ::"Jd.r ......... ~,;._"_! ~ .!;'!'_.~~air· Sl'E_ CIAUSTS Ch••· SS ..... alt whl ~ ,,,_...._ $3900. Wllrli .. ,,._... .,. -• -ml.'I M",',1,,,, ••••• $1 -QNE Yr. old fem te TRADE Import or Dome•tlc _,_ • IHT CASH 146-•· at--1!'13 or-• ....,, 40,000 mi left .., HIGH Pll"OllMANCI Enlliab Bull Tmt.ir. Good car for aipprox 2()..ft lnbflard like new $400. 546-23'11 ' 'It PAIUCWOOD Cht\I' waranty. Talcl! over pmnts CUSTOft.' CAU ' ~th chldrn, hMbroktn, aood bae.t. South O:iut or 13'S'' SKI Boat with 35 HP SA.LE Or trade 'Sfi Merc:tdes Station W&IQll, allkl 1ran1, '80.80 mo. Wbm Avia tion LARGFSJ' SELECTION IN l tU $14'~ . "' ~tch doa;. 541-1317 ,:!~ LapeJtack ~ but not Mere: and trailer. $400 Beu 300-B. 4 dr. cmrt. pwr *• Nl.tio. X 1 n t ~ ORANGE CCXJNTY v.11,.t w.,. . . :11 ::· ..... ,;w -· ---5*-83(8 Uk valH. Will trade kr 305 cc ... Ul!C! CUI. trudg,.. --..L.·--1-• ·-·---~ .& ''" -$1 ·--..--$1600. 642-9261 eaD Ill .,, tre. nttmaa. ~ .. ....,.. owl. Mult lieU 1983 DAIRT. cyl Auto, lo ml. ~TWU "uto BLACX Ox::ker Male. Want fer Dick Honda Scrambler d Nmt: '-:;======== Im---' ... -· .. v w __ ,_ --' GROTH CHEVROlET ...__ .. -... -. ,,_ •• ., •• Ecanolnl*ca1.536--U1io"" -. • c._._. ········· · · __.adult home. nm happy ..... II' • ---. n..-y ..... e. -MG "'.. - •-ollollk ~ --~· -··'-~s-·--11a.... ',',',,',,, ...... $15 ' dfl'llm unh..,pl;J n Alum. 33 HP Evtnrude. 1116'1 TRIUMPH Bonnevilk -~ .....,. '61 IMP.ALA sa, Wq:. Wif•'• 13032 Harbor Blvd. 5.17..-S :; JOds_ 00.-lStl T/115 El..,, .,....,., Tandem 2,000 ml. llest "'" taku. '68 MG 11%11 l!each BL, carV-.1.?UrlooH-.,, FO. ltD ltOY CARYU ~ FJ!EE kitMal tav• liKJtl tn.Ur. Ji1aD7 xtra11 615-26Tl, nes. 675--202 Hantlnston Btadl ,._._ _,_ -.,.._ •: mantbl okL Adonblie, J ' 5t6--0196 GET OUR LEADEKSHIP KI~ ~ .. Xtru~' law $1.000 '66 fORD PON11AC· , :_ . ....i..; 1 -......... 1-,..=l'IB=ERGLAS.!==,--:-11un--""'·-,«rt Trallor, r..... 9425 SAVINGS BEFORE WHI ·--lJD --... Ooota - : 11...,., """"· T/U Trawl« .. ltp 1........ YOU BuY! !I ... , Kl' 4444 2...' ADORABLE Malt ldttma, dQde tJ1r. Xlnt eand. sixo. LEA YING State mu.t RD U' fl L '$3 ImpU:, 2 *· ~ ':t. AutDmadc. radio 1' ._inothtt WU Si&mNe~$~-=1~·~·~ .... ~W'"'ii;n-;;;;-"';;;;;;J :rne~t!J~~:!i ! ran lJDid 1'~~~ := =·~~:ce: 'I : 6111 JOWtr•· ff =--~=~ __ .. Dld"'1_ott..:N , , ~ 201 30tb a Ncwpat 1r LYMAN, ·no hp. Ciampi dmea. ~ U«IO tell sm « IM~,.., or llOt. Clll Ralpb Ont owntr. * ,.,,.... down « tnde llllS per ..,., ....,. • : -;l!each 7m ·....taut ... Fun, -"'"-146-7611 • o-urcTS 67'.'-l l90 l!IOOY.r:.. oo a..v 8'h-Or !:.' No. 'l!U4 '"' ..,,. LEAVING •••••-• ., GTO, ',~; ........ 'Dl .. ...a..1 male -'-er .PO> cub. Owner 5*-l&ll 2 ~ ·~·-.., ..,.. llllo . •• _. .. __ ..... ., ---.. _,,,..._ .,. ts' TRAVELEZE, W:e box, M&.a303 .,...__,.,_ar • $1995 au·, auto, P9. ·--. ~. ,. kittens 303ll I . W. CfJnM or "4-0:Z.1t atove, oven. Sip. a. s11rp 1168 Huticir, C.M. AUTOS WANTED 'new Fllk bt.ttaT J 1 a. SJ.500 caah, ba1 11241. $51.43 ; .$"an ta Ana Heiabta Sa"=l=boa======90=10 brkl. NeW eonct. 1111 . 'MMGB-xtntCond. Will PIY ca,ti f« impeded StMl573 1 mo'*'9191 :._~$tf..9963 7115 1:.:;;I :.:;;;_fl; ____ ~-54G--2.\58 Witt Wheels -'11SJ'. autot. Up tO '500. ny us. '61 Q!EVY lmpepa beaut.if\ll T1IODORE ROBINS l:..,=---.so=NNEV==a71°'E--:-4-.-door"" ~ '4 GROWN Blk eat w/wbt WOWI 1!165 SHASTA 16' • t If SCZ..2398 afltt 5 P!f, CM . EL.t-\Oltl red 2 door hm'd. t(l), V-1, hard top. Fully equipped. ~ .• t.toddnc ft. A: tnut. White CAL-JO $2!KD contained. A-1 cmd.. $1500 9611 Garr:S'i Grove Blvd. ~·.~ ~~· 8)' FlORD. !~ _: 1 tb air, $.19(IO. Dir. , ·Mllaken. v..,. fritndlY -Top.....,. comforfablo Incl. hitch. tllM-4020 SUNIJAM ···~· -~-.. , : '. ~ T/15 cndler • HllrTY • thts S?ORAGE,_ Trailen, boats. ---------I Uad Can, 9tOO 1982 CHEVY super Sport, 30IO Harbor Blvd. ./ AIR. t'QllD A: all poir.rr •15 :; ~.-PALM TrMt,. Bta u t. won't lut! sgt.!IJ ett:. S1$pe~mo. Work '67 SUNBEAM A lpt n• -,-63--tllUll-~-ER--•• -DR.--I bekrw INite Bed:; lft at 135 a.ta Mesa t«J.(J010 Bc:meYWt. XlDt CCIDd. Gr•t :~ '~ &boat 12 fl. tall. PIDG!NcY Sale! o t apace. 64W60l A: 548--3261 Roadater. Britiah radnl UllU\ • ~~· Hunt ~flt call ·-r:~ Gal•-500 towinl car. Under Blue :, .~fer the d t 11 t n I beautiful :U' Ta h 1 t I an IJ'fff'. Still wxler 50.000 ad., .,.,....,,.,., ~.,. _::;:_, -.~ ...._ _,. , 1,...., 15' trlr. stps 5 Stove, OYm, factnrv warrantJ. 'I'llil c.r I •·•• and hot g-~ • ,...., Trtmuul aloop.. Btat Rfria: .. eleebrQ.2Jrokl. bu~buutifuleve.$175 PHRnser.-..a • '6.1Be1-AirMationwqoa; xlnt-rnakeolfer,must '14 BONNEVILLE : , _ , Male Ilk A whit.. clfu. f3T-tt58 Xlnt allld. $950. 536-8132 CUh dell. WW fl.n~ b&l :.:..::..~=·or':: JVH. pwr. stetr.; '9llO-..nr 1161-GJ aft 2 PM Cocrrtrtfble Air .coa •, :, .~ ..-.S· N-arked 1''Flb..-zlaualoop,a.l, II FT. HOUSl:mAILER. 1or----.Ca\jatw .... , ~ e .,._,..,, e LOAD!l>- .. ,,.,,_,.i.-.. , .. "'eard U -.,.. _..., S33 ~mo. 24 mo. RP.ft,. -~.llSta .. -... _ '13 FORD LTD, AM I FMllll~-~~,;·~·;;-~~:='T:'"' • ·-' ,,_ .. _ ..... " · .-h A fMt. Hew 1a L -· l\rRNISHED. ••u. ..... E. 1, MU._ll'n'I or 639-3617 •• ~· UVQ ---........ air ·'-·'lop....., xlot -• . ...__ TIU ~ --·----=~=="·=====: llO'"' •-cr .. lL ~~ h~ •~, , ·-• , • , -:r==-~.....,-,·-.--·~ Stlck-,11/H.,~., ...... low milK, '1Q'•LEMAmlludtnp.,_ : BE411l'ml1.· y..._ .. ma1. SNOWBIRD No. .... Xlnt Trvcka 9500 TOYOTA $&85 --· -m-1nt alt 5,,, ·-old, ..... opt, -- : t, Pu r • bred ccmd. Well equip. $400 -----..,.----1---------1 . ,. '12 au:v Ml Wq. A9to. 115 l'OIU> Ltt> 2 Dr-,..._ !'!;, Belt caer. IC«ICI •• --1/11 . * -h-* ... DATSUN II T. 41r. ptcl< ••• TOYOTA ~ .. ___ -.~ ~. ~ --· -• c:oebr ··-up 1111 blue 1'dl .. ttae .. A llVDIKI """· AMI ~. ....... pwr. bnket A: ..... R/H, •• GR.AND Pr Nil i "1IEE l!eautlftll~Nh IUNFISll. Uood aolJ S "'°' ...;.., bone ·,. the tn1ck GET OUR LEADEllSHD' "8-2561afttpm -llUo. fac:t.'atr;"olia· Ix, -.- , . .,.me! to .....-omt Xlnteond.M.ttelllmm!d. 1Nrlcd-$US.C&atacrtnida. SAVINGSm;f'ORE F RD '1'1 IMPALA, Loedtd, ~ -..: Jdntemi.m..tlM air, xlnt cond..aood tin1. : ~-.,,~l«tc«J, )'I'd. SST.cm 7111 ~<n-O 54l-ell i>'ymts PIS.IS mo.. *'l1'h. YOU BUY!!t awle rad. lb' OWllG' U'll5 .. J'ORD c.M.s. ••• S1'5Q 17$-m7, 1'73-4733 : ?~ To --f mo 2411' COL. ch. Socr 11,11XI, -T "'1u DO .U-81od. 5'&m2 -air -t!oaq. ... PQ<T. q .P.: air; ..... ~ il'.41 m•I• bc•rl•. W/l:xVw. ~ U. Encl 'll'~CIEV==Plc~la-.. -_-1-eyl.-l-tldo-1 . •0iat ~.._ . .;.•;..M;.;_;_;_;;;... ___ ...;_o.=..=i~ JKPALA .HT J'ac air. Md poww. $1D caD Dir. *&I 1ftl ~lll!C ... ta. : UI -T/JJ beod. tt .. TIM!ll u. cond. 11 .. t Sell! IO-l830 _ 1uD -· Lo ml· Xltlt S.-mt -· eond. ~ : Motblr. ~ 9fOWBlllD Fl beJ" I J a•• AM .._1225 PK AM S lf'FCRTS ean4. * Ul-2384 'II QA.L4DE 500, 4 dr, lUclt • -... -.... ---$300. Tom 'tolQIEV.XIDt-cond. ..... 11111. ....... ; -...ildtt..._-T/11 m-.1111 ""i"' .. ~-~Do4oo~~!i-... -Pl~1'*~-· -Qeul .!ltfldc X1at ...... ..,..1------------ '"' $16 ow. • ••••••. ~~ ........ $17 '''' $1 ... Ply1111, hry • ... , ~ ,1 "" s1·-•• ,, •• u. •.. . '""'J.· !!!!111 KT •••• $21~ ::1t:u1 HT ... = ,, .. Chrytlet • ••••. "" .................. .... 1.,,.,,.1 ..••.. "" RhlMt• •••••• 1 Al ;' 'ROBERT$ 1•--11 ..... :::;;~ ~ • w • ., !! ' 2 FEMALE -· 1 .. Up. 11,000 m11oa...... • H.-, C.M. ,._ N• "'1nL . * -· -orm.lGT .. T-lllRI> -..U, -j ¥ °"' ..,. --· -cru1oo.. f020 "'"'· "::, ;ei1.;i~ T"YQTA . .., NOVA. \ilhlto, •••• '111'0RDOW11-. an .,..._~=-JE 7.7100 ," .Jtl 11&1 Tiii i&aUnCS' 2:1' ea b Io =,.,~,f::~,.:..--=~-= U °"""' _, aood --,._, Mil, .......... -o.i·-""-::-':".:'-:":7:::---l !=-'r-,JO•·....-i .... • "• •riilii>l6 ... ,,_.,. DADQU.uiDI ..... 1212 -vAUANT •"'-ftlOlllH• ~ ~~~-. ,•1 ~·~~ ::;,'.~=~ ~.:;:..::.'""' ELMOIE iPmn • , , • ~~:.~~'~ ""!i.li:~mii..,~.11iii~a;;;;..;,,r .. ;~~ ... ;;;.;':a;cr11;; ... ;_;l..,~11G....,.:NEl';:::.,::,:.,=:.::,..:.... •• a1r-:-... .• CHITll&i I . .,.. ,.. -.,.... ~ -_ _ • llODGS vaa. v-1. Auto. • _ • . -· Tlil.i DAILi, PILOT so.am m1. '1~ -11Mw-. _., , nL v., 0-1 """"""' • llll'DIAL_ _ .1. ~t---· !/II ll"OWMI '{-..... oat RiH. Al -· Lo ""-lSlllll lload>.lllfd., WlimS = ... -· ·--~OiiMiiltir --G.\UXY, W•li•w ......... ' ~ ' · ImoocUldron -. lnl!r. 211Ctdll'I.-• 1111XI *OMCl55 Pllono ~ -·--•-....., ..,..111S1L Wiii---·•-PwT•alr,aD THE Qllla<m -YOU CAll.. e •MC 111u4;A. N •• .... -.ail -t'"iJ5 .......... -• ..... • •• ., DI-..... .-...;IOCK=;;;;.;IT;.;...;TO;.;...'Dll ___ '-"_='-11..._ __ . ---"DIY. 541-t'l111 ..... $1l!IO.. CM4GI Tlm'QUl(JCEI( YOU SEIL•.:...---------·· -, , • I , • • ' i..., ____ .... ____ ....................... 11o..1 ............... ui ... ..i..li'L...•::..::~_-:;;__!___L_:__ ..... _,_.'--"----• ..... ... • • -·• ~ •• ~, .......... ~~'-'----"'--~~.c ~-~--· . .. . . . ' • • .. .. . • \,~,_~~~~-'----=cm ' I d DAJl.Y t'ILOT • r Readers of this newspaper: Special ·INTRODUCTORY OFFER brinqs you as much as ·-' .•. ,• --·----=····----•• ) -tr Pays In addition to all other coverage you have-Including Medicare . ·- -tr Pays up to $10,000.00 tax free cash for each hospital stay 'ir Pays you cash benefits that increase each year ••• to a maximum o• $130.00-A-WEEK ... at no extra cost to you I -tr Pays all cash direct to you (not to doctor or hospital) 'ir No age, llmlt-no medical examination required . . SPECIAL LOW RATES! E:JAMINE PDLICY-·lN .VOUR OWN HOME-MONEY BACK IF NOT 10&% SATISFIEDt ACT NOW-YOUR ENROLLMENT FORM MUST Bt MAILED BY MIDNIGHT, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, OR IT CANNOT BE ACCEPTED Ont out of two families will have aomeo"e in the hoapital thit year! It C>Ould be you -or some beloved member of your family t.omorro".,, next week ... next month. Sad lo say, very f~w familiea have ·anywliire near enough coverage to n1eet today's -ring hospital co1t1. TheR coils have tripled in just a few ahort )'ear1. They are ex pee~ to double again in t M few year• ahead. Stop for a moment. Think how much a long stay in t he hospital will coat you or a loved one. How would you ever pay for costly, h,t neceaaary, X-ra)111, doctor bills, drugs and medicinea! What .,....uJd you do with your pay check atopped, hut living expensea· attll going on the aame as ever! The 111.me renl, phone, food, all the day-to-day expenses that never atop. ·what is the average breadwinner to do! We believ' we ha ve the an1w•r in the famous Presidential Extra Cash Plan that , ~, l'•Y• you $100.00 a week tox·fre• «rsh wh1t1t you 90 to th• hospital. Now, Presid,ntial's economy plan enables you to enjoy thia pro- let:tion. Mail the Enrollment Form. We will send you the actua.1 policy to look over at home. No rush. No agent will call or phone ~u. T•ke 15 daya to decide. Show the policy to a friend, a family •driaet' fir1t .. You Icuia•ll4'1Jf_,y~o.nl wa,nt~lh~...ll~ if you do·•ant it, you're entitfed to PresldeMiat'i 1ptt1aTli>w rate• de1cribed ~ow. So low, you'll find you get protection at a prict th~t'a just a fraction of what you'd expect to pay. Your casll ffnefit• JncreoM each year - :' . crt "° extro coif to youl -Your caah benef\tl automatically ri1e year after year. You get Ece of mind ao you don't have to worry about ri1ing coat.a. Your ltttioo automatically increa1e1 $3.00 a week each year. The t year you att $100.00 a week. You get $103.00 a week in the tecond year, $106.00 a week in the third year. $109.00 a week In the foanh yer.r.·BJ theeleYenth year, your policy will be worth a full 1130.(JO a. week in ~neti.t payment1.,. at no increaae in cost to you I This generou1 cash reHrve protection will belong to 7ou for u lonl' a1 you keep the policy. You can .ee t hat your ut1urance will be worth much mar• than the present "face Yalue" o! the policy. C.rtainly, Oor increaaed paymenta to you will help keep pate with ri1in1 COi~ -and beat of all .• , • , • TM lncrN.Stte Nnefits come to you ot no extr• cost. Y-stlll p.y th ,...,,., low 'r•sldentlol premluml • \"hat other Plan prot.ttta you.like thi1 today! What other Plan keep1 pl'o\eCtirii you 1gain1t ri1ing living co1ts in the yeara ahf/a4 without increaainr )'OUT premium1! An d that's nnt all. T.!"' •~l•l.Pre1identisl Extra Caah Plan (#H P ISL-1067),,. PiAVS tip to $10,000.00 CASH for udl accident or ft f Ill""" 1tartin1 Ute very first day in tt~e hospital. P•AVs·Sl00.00 A WEEK CASH-if yeu need a full· "f time resisttred nurse when you come home from the hospltal -up to SO weeks. PAYS $1,000.00 !.XTRA CASH fOf' accidental death. P.a v5· Up to s2.ooo.oo CASH for accidental 10• of " I limbs or eyesl1ht. . PAYS $100.00 A WEEK CASH for N ch pre1nancy, when you 10 to the h~pital. assuming botfl , husblnd and wife have been enrolled in the family Plan With Maternity. PAYS Up to $5,000.00 when • child 1JOff to ttie hos· pitat for any accident or illness When you are enrolled in the Family Pl1n. P'Ays you c•sh ~nefits that lncrea1e each year , , . to • maxnnum of $130.00·A·WEEK, •• at no lu1tr1 cost to you NO ... limlt-no medical ex•tnfft1tion ~uired IF YCi>U AllE 65 Oil OVEll YOU WILL COLLIC1 IN ADDITION TO MEDICARE Why are smart folks over M "o"' hasteninr to prot,ct themselvea with the Presidential Extra Cash Plan in addition to what Medicare ·will, do· I or them! Evrn though Medicare ia a .creat boon to folks over 65, it will not, of cour11e, pay all the bill! that quickly pile op as a r'sult of illne11 or a.c:cidenl. Regardless of your age, you stlll n••d oddltlot1ol ltealtfl protection. We have deaigned thia plan u the impo,.ta"t additioJt to what you receiYe from Medicare -or any other health insurance yo\I may have. Remember, all check1 will be 1ent directly to vou (not to the doctor or ho1- pital), to givefou that "extra" help juat when you need it most. Uae the tax-free cash any way you aee f\t. And ,,,u will be rlad to know the cMck1 will be big 011«1! In 1ddition to what you reeeiv1 from Med icare Pres'idential paya yoa $70.00 a week ..• EVEN FOJi 100 WEEKS if nece11a ry! You eiz11. ,..ee•iv• 111 mueh.111 11,000.00 f o,. ta.e.\ illruiu or ittiur"¥ w"'1t h.01pita.lUed! ••. 't!Y• you $ i 00.oCf ~ w~e"· .CASH for o re9fstered •ur1e at home, Yes, in addition to the 1100.00 weekly checks we send you during your hospital stay, we. pay you an extra $100.0CI a week if the doctor 1ay1 you need 1 full-time registered nurse to take tare of you at home. How com forting it i1 to know that -after your 1tay in the hos- pital, if you've been there three day1 or more, you can return home to re~uperate and yet not be a burden to your loved oneL Ye1, if yoUr·doc:ti>r 1ay1 you need a regiatered nur1e fu'll time within 6 days after you come home, we'll 1end you checka for 1100.00 • '°''k-for a1 lone u you need the nurse -even ap to SO week1. lt'a like haYing a reserve of $6,000.00 cash to draw on when you need it. TheM Mnefita ol10 iftertit11• each :tear by $8.00 a week. An other exceptional feature you have with Pl"Hidential ..• ••• P'Jys you $ 100.00 o wee le cos It maternity hnefifs 0 rdtna,,. . '"*ftiMI 'fn1uT.a:nm:mar;t:&Q caft.."Qf.: put..of.10.w. u.· f:n&eft when you go to the hospital to have a haby. But Whati licy can you think of that ll'ivea you rash to blly all the thing' u need for the new baby? Now, if both huaband and wife are insured in the wonderfu1 Family Plm1t With Mat•r11 it11 tor thf entire periOd of the preinancy, you get 'xtra cash to UM a..,. )'VaJ you _want. If a_pre11;T11ncy, childbirth or even miscarriage- puta you 1n the hospital for one day, five days, 10 day1 -a.I long ll8 11ece110-r41-you 1tet $100.00 • week fo r e-wery d~ of your confin,ment, up to 100 weeka. 1 1 All th••• added tash benellts. Yes, in addition lo $100.00 • week for hoapitaliiation or $100.00 a wttk maternity benel'tta and $100.00 a w!t!k for 1 nri i1tered nurse al home ... you Ket all this: Addtd ta!lfl bentfirs: 11.000.00 cash to your family if death 0ttur1 •ithin 90 daya from any at°C'idental injury. Think of how handy the caah can be in time of lo~s. It can take care of burial 1x pense.11 without burdening your loved ones. Addtd C:._'ih be!lffil: Up to $2,000.00 cash for accidental losa of limbi or ~yes1ght, when the Jou attur! anytime withi.n 90 daya of thi ~cc1dent. The loss of a limb or eye1ie:ht i11 a terrible thing. Nothl 1n.e: car:i replace the loss, but a chttk !or $1,000.00 or $2,000.00 will bring greater peace of mind during the period Of adjustment.. A4ded c:adl M0tfit: Choo,te tithe,. Fami11 ·Plan .. , and you~ c~ildren will ~ co~ered t.oo! Pre3ident!91 r•Y• up to $5,000.00 any time your younrster goea to the Hoap1ta ... for tonails, appen- clltltta, or a.11.v othrr illneis or injury! Yea, yo11-will Hc:eive $50.00 ea1~, week after week -for aa many as 100 ~1k1, if neceasary. We pay yovr Pf'1tmfums wlte1t you o,.e not oble At a apecial ~n1iderati~n to you -if y~ are hospitali&ed just 6 weeks or mor?, all pr,m1ums that come due while you are l'otill i" LICENSED ,IY THE SIA11 OF CAUFOllNIA ---~-----l"'·''''4''''VIW·ar&1awjhwww • _..;,..;...__ -i I ~~~:~~E,::,::IL, ~~~l:z:1$ FmfHM[siBMfitttft\A!tifill! Cii. OF AMERICA -I ... ~ ... ~ ................. ~. ~ 11401 ROOSEVELT BLVD., PHILADELPHIA, PA. 19154. f Appr1cat1on to: Thi Pres1dent111 l1fe Insurance Compan! of Amenca, Ch1e1e9, HI., for Tht Pre s1dent1al Hosoital-Nurse Plan. I Mii D-J·l ·DS46·D1t I I I NAM[ (Pleage Print) ,,.1ts. ,,.1ss-~~~~-..,,=,,~,~~~~~--,~~-, •• ,c,o.,"•''="'""=••~~~~~~~....,"•'"~~~~~- ADDRE$S _____________ ..,;:::;-::-;;;o,----------~ Strttt er 11:0 # crrv _______________ STA'rE ______ .ZIP ____ _ M•le O Female O DATE OF BIRTH __ -::-.,,---7""---,,...--~GE ______ SEX OCCUPATION~~~~"-'_"_'"~~~~°'-'~~~~-'-''-'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~­ l alMI hereby apply for coverage for !he members of my family· fisted belo1¥: {00 NOT include name thlt appears above.) Please list additional dependents on se parate page. , . : ~ c . , ! RUATION9HIP SEX y, AGC I 2 3 the hospital after tfti1 period wi11 bt paid by Presidential. A"d your protection continue1 as if you were paying the premiums yourself'! Then if JOU leaYe the hospital and must return for the same condition before yoa haYe resumed full normal activitieg for 90 da)'!, PrHidential will again PAY ANY PREMLUMS WHILE YOU ARE IN THE HOSPITAL-TO A ~I AX/MUM 0!' 100 WEEKS per confinement! This meana you pay no pre- miums, yet your fulJ protection remains in force -you eo/leet up to llD,OOQ.00 fo,. •o.oA eo1t.Jium.n! I THIS llMJTID INIOliMfHT 0,,11 INDS SOON Amo.alnsr low •ot•s -Money·8aclr Guorant•• You can now have your ftnt month'• protection at the 1pecial low rata listed below! But you mu at act immediatel11. Your re· quest for lhia wonderful Income Protection Plan muet be mailed on the convenient form below NOT LATER TUAN MIDNIGHT of the date in the Enrollment Form. This midnirht expiration hour eonnot b• 1:xt•nd1d. If your enrollment form ia mailed l•ter, it ea.nnot b• a.uepted. TheM ar• tQ ONl r excfusionsf Your Presidential policy covera every conceivable ki nd of sick· ne11 or accident except conditions cau11ed by war or any act of war; '!lental disorders; intoxicants and narcotics; pregnancy except a1 provided under the maternity benefit prov11ion; and expenses re1ulting from any 1ickne11 or injury you had before the Elfective Date of your policy ... durinr the ti rst 2 yeara only. This last item ia a real help if you 11b·;:od11 have a he alth prob- lem. If you &re aick b•for• you take out this policy, you will 1till be rovered for that condition after the policy has been in effect. for 2 years. Of conne, meanwhile every"'"' ~ndition i1 imm.- dia.t1/11 covered. How con theM 1Nrr90Jn low rotes buy so mucltt You can buy ordinary inaurance at any time and pay the regular rates, if you wish. But Preaidential .can now provide you and your entire family with $100.00 a week tax-free Income Protec- tion at special low rates only becau1e we enroll a lara:ie number of people at one time -di:i-1tt by mo.ill This highly efficient "Maas Enrollment" method cuts coat.a to the bone -o.nd tM uv- in"' .,.. pcued Oft to ~OKI Mole• your decision coref:fly Think how co&tly a ho1pital eonfinement will be. Imagine paying for thoee indi1pen1able x-rays, doctor billa, medicinea and drur1 that are not covered ,by your present inaurance. Would )'OU be able to afford the quiet and privacy of a privat. room and a private nur1e, 1hould you ao de1ire! Or a telephone to •pin touch with loved ones! Or the rental of a TV set to help pus the lonely hours? Who would pay your bills that keep on eoming in at home! Many folka ha•e 1<>1t their life aavings, their cara, even their homea trying.ii:> meet auch e11pensn. And no one knowa whoae turn it will be nexL Why you must act Nfore th deadline date 1hown ia tlte enrollment '°'"' -jolt o few do)'• from today Why muat you act betoN the deadline? Because, as mentioned above, we muat Heeive WOIC.f' Enrollment Form t.U •c-me-time 0-1 all th• otllna in order to ,PUI on ·to you the 1avinp that come from proeeaaing Martf JN1hcie1 a.t n• ti?li•. · We mail you tb1 pohey u soon aa we receive the Enrollment Porm. When the policy arrivu, examine it i" the phvacy of your ewn home. Take all th'e time you need. It'• a very ahort document, and you'll be pleasantb" aurpriaed to discover there ia NO FINE PRINT. Then -•low it, if '°" W l , to •om101t.e yoai tru•t. Per- iiaps your lawyer, ateO\lntant, or banker. Better 1till -•how it to 11011,. °""' iiteK,.O.Jl.CI 7INltl ••• •wx th.auglt. h• ma.w 11ery w•ll be .,o,..ki1t.g fo,. o..nothc,.. iiu•,.o.iue eaMpo1t.w/ lf he i1 a personal friend, he has your bnt intereats in mind. So you can believe him when he tells you there is no better bargain available any-where -at any price! Money bock 9uorantff-ln COM you change your mind Even after you mail your Enrollment Form below ... even aft.er you examine the policy in your own home and talk it over with anyone you wiah ... even attar all thia you are still free to return the policy within 15 daya 111t.d •11•r11 p11u111 llOK paid will be ,..,. /u1t.ded. o.t 07tc•. There will be no obligation whatever. Meanwhile, all during the 15 day1 you are making op your mind-you'll be prcitected by $100.00-A-WEEK extra caah bene- flt1 just as if you had already s1id "yea." That 'a right, you will be fully_ cove~ ~II this time for a~yaccident which euts you in the hoap1tal, eYen if )'DI f\naHy &;cide to 1eturn the policy. · However:, after you 've ~n the pcrlicy for yourself, 31ou will !mre~y agre~ that thia ia a tnmendou1 value and you'll want to continue this $100.00-A-WEEK extra cash protection under the Plan that's best for you. 'lAH f -IHOIYIOUAI.($} ONlY PlAN: If you want ttl co-wer 1ouraelf -or younielf and o~ o,. more adult dependenl.I (including your spouse) -then this la the Plan for you. E•ch per1on must be 18 or over, and shall pay (per person) the rate applicable to hia or her age. r------------"\Ast 1t ll:nroHrfttnt MOl'l'ttily Prt mlum THESE Alf YOUI LOW um 1~39., ...... ~-..... lndeee tint"'°""''• 40-49 •• ,, ••• onl~ $4.95 ~""-' --~• te 50-59 •.•••• , only $5.95 ... ..... ..... ......... 60-7.&, ••..•• onfy $6.95 75 •net _, •. only $8.95 SAVE EVEN MORE·( up to 20%!) by paying at quarterly half year or y•1rly rates, ~ent with policy. ' PlAN 11 -IAMllY PlAN wnH MA1lRNITY , Thtfi ,pl•n is for the f•rwilly th.at la still crowing. To the tot ii cf , the. mon~·lf premium tor the _adults to1l>e insund, Juat-aCl.d $11. Th11 entitles you to all rflliltef!l!tY be.ndlt.s. It also coYera all yo111r 1 11nmarr"'8, d91tndent ch\ldr«it; Htween th1 .ag-e1 of 3 111'1onµi1 .ain4'J1'1dd 19 ,...r;a .wlto live,at holf'lt. F11ture diepen~1n( dt.lild"n •lll ..... COYen!d,'Whin:the)' retd ! months of •D andtwithout·1Mt7 tdditional d:!•"P· 'I'·. • , , • • . t 1 ~I.AH lfl-fAMllY "4.llN WITHOUr•MATfRMTY. I 4 5· =':·::-·a!J-lftdivjdual(l) Only~ 0 D'-F.Jinn, Phn1wtth .;.e.,.;.if o m~lfy ~~·M1bmity Thia plan ia tor the family that ia no lonrer growing: To the ,j lodt.d I._~! Thth•1 monthly P11~mium.,.for th!' ~dultt to be inaurtd, just a .r-· .•,covers a .your marr1e..,. ~dent ctnldren be· ·i t•ent lht W' of 3 m~ths a-.:t u.~ 11.,.earsw!af live al hom!. ·N01 •• "9 ~ular MonM ,....*.......,. .... (--~....-'~ 1;..,. of • I Do You arty dttier -with this Company! 111 "VIS'' pluse i!tt ~~· ' ·-_ •• lo·the<btll oflny lullWled .. and belitl llfilher I, nor "'I person ll>llOI ....,., llM"""' relu...t 1111·fllottt1,1Jos9illl 111'1ift i\lu· inc• • I undOfSUnd'tt>lt I, lqd 11\J pmon lisled -· will be -9d lflClfr' llrif i'MkJ for Iii} injurj orsloluJni I (wo) hlf be· lore !lit Effective 0.tt of ltMJ Policy but not unlll ij has b"n in f1111:t for 1 contlnuovs period of IWo (7J ,..,.;·1nd that tllb f'Oflcy sl!all not be In forte until the Efftclivt D•I• shown in lht Poliey Sclltclyle, ' . . ; ••j " 11 f ~ _l ,,. •tlP't I I ,.,~fl !ht M,.._;:~ptt ,.. •lll,6ofi.,,_. W~;.'ft wlll ""' a ol .... lnttt•N•.-, "--.. ~ .... Md. O~ I' . I' @i .... .-ofltd, 70111f t•le Ull .... lie /#'flWM --UM;;tf" ........ \Kl! oi ' ..._ 1" colt.ct ~ lft -et '""" el"~ ... -111u1 °"'Y r I ' .. ii', ... •r•I , ... -.iii"""*"-!IP w 'OO-. Oft-.. ,....._ fll tlllt type: j '°"" tntlre •J•lt. · • • I Act __._~•laf#U .,.y be toe late# TIMI 1$ PRECIOUS I Ad quickly I (No salesman will call.) Get Si It X JMr ~'Ollrnat -~· , Lht mMI &Her wttt. y'1fb ~di mOetft .. I" ur• s 51••~• ilM!pl~nftll!dhoM.'aim• rler.'Joe•ull HA17L.J06J .. ·=1 .... __ .·, I omplet,ely sat t9' your-~ wiH bt rehl!IW,Btit • t::::~:J~!:'.;!!~~~r!~!!~!E~~=;;g:i~!iit~~i~~;~~==~~~=~ ad ,...t ~:! em~~C'9 .,.,. ~~• atti or --------~WI!'" fOWl4.U-MI ;,;::;;;:=~.:l;N:U•' ._: __ ,~· .. ;;";;,."'.;;'•iio.~lior.._.I :-.:;.T~.jt,~E ~~'=="''·~ """' \11, f I' .. .s. t.I '\ •• :Ji .'!11, I' ·if'l i -1 ·J.--• . .. • ' ' • -"" • <! ' ,. ·; ' r ,.... THESE 22 QUESTIONS AND ANSWllS Tell you ltow ,,resicle1ttiol'1 COST Of &IVING ~f .. 1 ,,tACEMlNT HEALTH AND ACCIOIHT ,,lAN 1f"'-,,_ .... prol1ctio" yau neecl -al amaiingly 1-qflf/ 1. How much will m1 policy Pit me When I ao to tN hoslllWP The full 1mountr You 1rt p1ld $100.00-A·WEEK c:aeh wery 1ltt1la .... i.. And II ltll'tt !ht Ytry flnt • .,. yau ••• In th• hos.pit•\, (ff )'011 ••• over S5, you 1rt peld $70.00 • wttk, !ti addition to lftJ Mtdfc1r1 btn1llt1 )'OU re.;.1ivt .) 2. Wiii I bl ,.Id If I am hoso!Qllt .. for Int thin a Ml "WMll:t Y~u Ctrtelnly will ••.. r•&•rdltll of whtlht• )'OU 1rt In the ...... P•t1l for a1 1hort • l•mt 11 -day ••• or n loOS: • time aa • wtak. month, y11r or mort. , J. 00.1 this l'tln ,.y_ me· fram thl first dlJ of ~ Yt1! You rac1lvt full c11h btntfih of SI00.00 t Wffk ltartl"I th• very llr1t d1y you 1n11r !hi ho1pltat. TN cov•rap blf:hta when w1 rect iw1 your lirtl P•tmiu..., -that 11 lh1 day )'OU are covered for any· accidtnl1. Slcknt11 cove••&• bt&ln• IO . ..,.. •111r !ht tfft<;llv1 date of Iha palicy. 4. How m~ iM l'r-.iva tor a llclatwed Nu,.. H Hemet SI00.00.A-WCEK for up lo $5,000.00 1tt1r· you 1!av1 a.-.... pit1lired for l day• or mart, 1nd )IOU< doctor h11 you 1fl\ploy • full-tlrftl •tl illtrtd nUl'$1t within 5 dt)'I 1fe1tr you le1v1 !fie h- piltl. Ten year1 !•~m now lt will have incretle.d to illD.00 e Wttk In b1n1flt1 ... 1t no ii111ra cost to ycut · · I. Are ther9 lflJ' ecddMtal dMth '*'-fltlP Ytt. Sl.000.00 ca•h ls p1fd to y0ur tllttt> wllen tfffttl IOCUl'9 1ny tlrftt wlthlTo 90 dlYt Of •11 1ei:.ld1nt. .I. WUI I bt JYld extra.If I letM e HmO or eynlt:M! '1'11. Prtsldtntlal p1y1 Sl.000.00 for comal1t1 accld1ntal low et one hind or 0<11 foot a• s it;ht of 0<11 111; $2,000.00 lor leu of both h1ndl ~ both l11•t or 1i1ht of both •Y•I .•. wht" dl•'"•- blirrft1nt occur• t n)'lirftt wfthln 90 days of tht accident: ' 1. How mucti do we recelva for presneneln? If you havt th1 farnHy 'l"ftn -Wlth Maltmity you 1'9Clf\oe 1100.00·A·WEEK for tacll ,..,,anancy, chlldbltth Or m i1urrla&1 !hit r1sult1 Jn ho!lPll1I conf1"1mtnt whtn bolh hu•b•nd and wt re a re enrolled undtr this pl1n for th1 t nllrt ptirlod ol pr11n1r!C)'. L Suppoae I Mn P1id lleneftta for any llkJu-or accldMt. WW hlppen1 If I am ac•ln '-Pltallted for the aame condition? Don't worry. You 11JU coUtcl SI00.00-A-WEEK for • lot•• et too WMkli. And If you have 1Jr11dy r11urned full norm11 actlvilfn tor just 90 ftys, l1'1•eon1ldertd'1 ntw conflntmtnt, 1rtc1 you can c»- ltcl for •11 •ddlllon1I 100 w11k1. Of cour1t. 1ny-condition Ill covertd l'"medf1taly for a full 100 wuks • 9. How mey I UM t""9 bepeflt JYyrMntl! "Wou m1y utt thtm in any w1y you wish -for l'to•plt•I a11d lklctM blll1, rtnl. food. housthold t li>e"s11, or a11)'1hl111 1111. Tiiis IS t nllra ty vp to )'OU. 10. May I apply If I 1m over ISP Yts, rou mar. folks 1ny a11 ate wtlcorftt IO IPJll)"-IM,. .. 119 •11 Umltl Mtlt'lbtrt Ovef 65 1r1paid170.00 1 ~ pl111 all MM!o CIPI btn'1ff\s. 11 . C1n I collect from l'Tniftntill -H I urry ottw ....,_, Of course. This pltn wlM pay you In t ddltion to whtttver ~ rftlY rtctiY• from any other pallclet, lftclvdin1 Mldlure for folks 0Vt• S5. 1%. wny do I nMd tfllt l'residentMI "'8n In edclltloll • "" ....... h0tplt1I •nd h••rtti ln111ranc1? , Whil1 hosplttl co111 h•vt trlpltd In rt cant yetrt. very lew oeooM h1vt t•lpltd tt11I• in1uranc1. The chanctt art one '" MW" tfl.et ~ou will nted moner to t1k1 car1 ol 111 your olht r tlflolfl$H, n well 11 your hc1pit1t bill•. Your Prttld1ntial dttckl .,.. r111""41 to rou by •I• rftall to u•• at y0u 111 Ill. 13. Wti.t t.i.llU do my •Hstble, ••P•"""' cfllldreft ,.a If yau choc11 1 Ftmily Type Pt.n. your d1pt1ndtnt •1if:lblt dtiJ. d,.n, •&t• l month1 to undtr 19 yta,.., wovld rtctivl 50% of 111 !ht Cath bentfitl cf tht Plan (t1tludln& Wa l"tr of Prtmlurft), 14. M•J I •dd Mure, dependent chlldren to "'1 potlcy l'flar It II in fore•? '1'11. fndttd. if )Ou havt the FAMILY PLAN WITH MAiTEllNITY Ju" "Olily us when they a re J month• old tnd lhty ..,.;n be coV: trtd without 1vldtnc1 ol ln1ur1blU1y tnd wilho<.11 1ny tddltlonaf ch1r11. 15. wm my protection be canc11ad bloc1u1e I M~ toa m1ny ct.llMP No. dtf1nitely nol! P•t1ld1nti1I 1ut rant111 naver to c1nctl r," a•ot1clion btc1u1e you have loo m1n1 clalmt or btcau11 e 1d- '""t lld a1•. Wt 1110 auartnltt n•ytr 10 rt fu11 to rtntw )'Oii' pehc.y unltss tht ptt,,..iurft 11 not paid befort !ht t nd al !ht ll• d111 f'I Ct Pt•lod, or unless rtn1w1I 11 dtclln1(1 en 111 aollcit• !11 thtt .IYPt In ~Ur tnlirt 11111. (01 COUP$1, II dtct otion IS used _ __,.$1-1!'.!!'!.nl ~pphcat.lon, the _poljcy "'!Y ,b~·-'"!'!.•clivt.l 11. WHI my r•let be r1iMCI 11 I 1row ofd.,. ., If I "'" too "'"" c:i.ims1 ~ No mat11r how rftany cl1im1 you ht~e. or •ea1rdl111 ol llow lo111 >"OU kttP wour potlcy. )'OU• ••I• will •tm&in the ''""' ti It wa• for your a11 whtn yau 1pplied. Pr11ld1"llll &Ut •ll'llttl ntver te 1dju11 lftis ••It unl111 lht r11tl a r• tdjutled on 111 pelic:ll• of lhi1 type In your tnlire 1t1tt. 17, Whit 11 not ccw.rld by tl'lla pallcy1 Thi only con~ll.lons not covered 1r1 ,ttlol!_t ~•uffd by• mtnttl di• o~ars; lntouctntt t'ld n•h:ottc1: ••P11n1a1 r11ulhn1 lrorft 1ny ~·c~n111 or lnjul'Jt ygu h•d btlore the poHcy Elfectivt D111 ldu,. •n1 !ht Urtt y11rs only); 1c1 of w1•. [\'[lt"WTHING ELS( IS COVEll:ED-lrtefodin1 P••an1ncy wh1n both husband and .-lfe ll1vt b11n tnrolled ill th• FAMILY PLAN WlrH MAT(ltNITV ,_ lht 1nllrt a••;od of pr1sn1ncy. 11. Whit 1r1 the l'lqUil'fl'tlentt for membt..nip irl one ef h Pr11ldent1a1 '1.ansr You rftUll not h1v1 bttn rt.fustd any h111th, hospittl or 1111 ll'IW•· Ince; and. lo qu111fy du"n• lhll 1nrot1ment IM"Od. JOU mutt t nl'Oll before m•dni1ht c l tht dalt in the coup0n. 19. Why 11 ttll• offer llOOd fDf 1 limlt1d time only! 81c1u11, by tnroTllna 1 l•f"I• numbtr ol peoplt 11 the ""'' tlllte und•~r1Un1. 1N'OCl•1in1 tnd policy i-Jsuanct costs can be k.,.i •I• m1nlmum-111d we ctn IHI•• 1h1tt ••vinp on to you. 20. hsldn !fie 1evinc1 • .,. theN oltler ldvantsps te Jelltlfll ~!111 durinc ttlis enrollrMRt periodf YQ. there ctrtalnly are. Ai very lmp0rta"I ont 11 lh1t ,.. " "" nted to compltlt • rf'Slll1r 1ppllcation -jun your br11f form In !ht lower 1111· tMnd com•r of this aas1. Also. du•!n1 11111 tnf'QIJ. ,,....,, Pl,~d th•'.~ ••t no .01h1r r,quirt rfttnll lot t ll&lblllt'-t"d no wtl~ ~ rellrictlvt endo,.1mtnt1 cin bt ..... -your p0lleyl--.,.... __. 2J. C1n other memberl of my flmlty t1ke Hv111t1p of tl'lli -offar! -. Vtt. at lofll •t they (t n "'t it Ill• f-rtquttt'"t ntt hi tt11 ...... Quetllo" IS. -· r -· I I 1-~~:::::::~:~:...~...:.:...::.:~..:...:.:..·:....:..~~~~ .............. · .. .;..~·:..~·~·~·.;,·~·~~.:..~~~~~ ~ ,. .... -. , ---. . • ' ' I • r; .. •• • "' .JI' -•