HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-07-25 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa MesaI
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Sex Poster Br-i.._gs
Arres·t of Coast
Hippie .Shop Owner
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DAI LY PILOT
i -' "'
THURSDAY :AFTERNOON, JULY 25, l968 ,t •• _,. • •
V~ .1, NO. 17t. • llCTIONt.__°'1' fl!AllU • . ~ ·~.., I
Perie~i . Posture ' . --.. .... ... .-· ~ --.__ ':" --~""'.:" -~·---·
Sailor. Given Up. l . '
:.For Dead Bn1nored •
Adrift in Trilllaran
R .. : .: · 1.~1ng Costs Scuttle·
• •
.. ' ' I
Officials Say
Alternate Plan
Under ~tudy
By WILLIAM REED
Of .... Diii" ''"' ,,.,,
Bolsa Island, planned to h..,.. the
world'• largest nuclear power and
desalting plant, was scutUed Wed-
nesday,
It was the vidim ol costs rising too
high to maifttat.n the interest of those
who had pledged only· last year in a
NeWjloil Beam C<llilerenct to build the
huge plant offshore of Huntington.
Beach.
Announcement t h a t tbe nucJear
plant won't be built alter all came
We dn esday afternoon from
Washington, D.C. after two days of
high level meetings .during 1'hlcb the
Southern Calilornia Edison C o •
reportedly led . oppciiitlon to con-tinuation of tM 'illMd. project,
Interior Setretary:; Stewst Udall'
and Aton)ic Eiiei;gy _ Comm!Uion
Ohalrman Glenn ,T. Seol!Orl, ·-ol whom presided kl~J'!ewport ~-lllt
Y.e"" over a mw;ti. MUCUed. ~act
••gnlng .... 1.., 1 .. , lliO Bain ~
announced that ''a8 alttrnate Pliii ii
Wing examinlcF· for: S' o a t b t r D
KILLED-PLANT .
Ill effeet, tbe ............ <; ....
t h • ilrtlflclal• is-p1anl. Phlncljila
-for lbt·-of tbo plan, -
--11 the 1-<ii the world, .,,.,
CoU:nty Jury ·I_ndicts :9
rll!J!I', coots -up froin the $144 milHon
original cost e1tiiDate to '165 million
this spring.
To bave participated in the project
were the Southern C8Ufornia Edison
Co" Sin Dlego•Gu and Electric Co.,
the Loo Anp!eo'.IJe;ertment of Waler
and Power,. the Depmtment of Saline
Water of the federol ioftrnmenL the
Atomic Energy Ctm-ond the
Meli'Gpolllan, Woler District. •
On Tax Fraud Charges
Nil)e persons, Including a Fountain
Valley man, were incticted Wedne!d y
by the Orange County Grand Jury for
conspiracy to commJt grand theft, and
five counts of grand the!L -
Atteeted Wednesday were Gustav~
Galas, 39, ol 1179 La Rosaµne, Foun-
tain Volley: Lyman Garber, Btjierly·
llll!s: Fred K. Dell, Elmhurst, ID, 8!1d
Robert Hayes Sr .. Wheaton: Iii. Galas
WU freed Oii 16,250 bail.
District .Attorney Cecit Hlcks said
the inducted per80M oPer.ated through
Americans Building• Comititutionally,
non-profit trust headquartered in
Ban-ineton, Ill.
The •••ti<ll whlcb is the.1ubj"'1fl
Hunt1Dg1>0n Beach lll<lyor ~.in Coen the,lndlclmenll Involved malting false told the DAIL y PILOT today dial he
repreSentations to individuils that Jn believed the reasoa the plan to build
Setting up certain for.ms of trusts and the atomic power and desaMing plant
foundations the individuals would be on an artlf.ickll island just o(f the
able to av.oid inheritance aud estate c0a·1t11ne of· the city ii be.lng-«telved i1 taxa~on UPon death. • that "the,Sou-. California -Edison
Hicks said the defendanll obtained Co. backed out In Ille face ol money . from indlvlduah for . the e...uting -..
PIJf1l(IJe cl .__.and .. .-.. ''We (tht city) were In fovor ol the ln I ietti!>g up the lrUsts and foun-pllqt ~11 of lncreaotd ..........
· Qttons. ' · evaluatiotl and the po11ibillty ot'a bolt
The money ·involved approximated harbor •• well u believing that the
$20,000 in . orange County and JQany plant would do ~ to sol Te the
th001and1 rnOl'e in the "1tateWlde' ac· power and water problem of Southern
tivities of ttie firm . c&ufomie. We too ., believe the plant
Te.Uf)'ing to the l~ce of the may have helped to oolvt _. of the
(See DAVD,"Y11t".1) -(\~'• nl« JlC111>1iiil,,
----..
• •Ww,, Reeoverinfl . . .
UPI C.....,.
'
Denlilt Phillp, Blalberg, world's longest surviving heart transplant
. paijmt; i•. app$r.enUy recovering from recent relapse. He smiles and
gl-victOcy rsi&ii from his bed. f -. . , .• . I I \
Sex Poster Brings Ar-11est
I ,
Of· Hippie Shop Owner ·
San Clemente police -acting on
thtir """ wlllle the Dll1rict Attorn<y's
offlce is atlll considerlnf Gle· matter -
arrested the c0-ownet" ol. a coil•
troversial psychedeUC: ·shop Wed·
nesday for 1ale of. a 1exy pOeter.
James Colwell, 20, co-owner of The
Mind Garden, 2"' s . Ola Vitia', ....
booked on suspicion of contrlbutinf to
Ille deliJ!quency of & minor aa the
re1ult of' aelllnf the pootor to a 13-
year-old girl. · , .
The multl,-cq)~e4 potter depicts ~
boy and girl having ~ ....
described Jn oacienf books oa the, art
o nove.
' Colwell was rt.Jeasid 6n h.is own
-lzl!tco without baVlnf to post
boil on llie char11 alter arraJcnn>tnt ~ *"'" . Rid>lrd • lllmi11olJ· .Ji!
.
South Or.,,ge Councy Mun!clpal Court.
Co!W.ll faces prellmiDory hearing
on the charge Aug, 20 at 10 a.m., and
the sUJpect say he will plead not guilty
and request a jury trl(ll.
A pl>.1ibility exisll that H e
American Civil Liberties Union may
~In, 'lince Miio Cyndi Wild, 17, Col' wen·. partner and "-· hU said the ACLU la totereated In their cale.
, Several ~UJl!}red lrot•' Sin Clem1n,
leans .,, inuurilll the City Council
to lake stepi to clooe Tho Mind
Garden by reVoklng the . bu11M1•
Jlcenie laiutd in the natl¥ or Colwell'•
mother. •
Just whether Ille cl\y hps legal
IN\llldl ~or 1uch action is 1WI beinC qlltlti ; but San Cloinllite P..UC.
· ~MIOP,.P11t I)
,..... , ~.
Missing Sailor
Said Found
Near Equator
Rumors reached the oranae . qoast
Wednesday . that. Anl>ur Plver, noted
trimaran de6igner and sailor missing
since April 3 hi:s' been found adrift in
his d~masted .trimaran ' near ·t h e
Eq"uator, .
Earl Cork~1~ m\:ner ·of~ tne· yach~
saiacia in. the 4>a Angeles to TahiU
race, saJd the rumor tbit Fiver. h'ad
been found reached Papeete, ·Tahiti, a
few hours before Ii. ,left Monday to .fl.Y
to Lo! AngeJes . , . •
Corkett 1ald the uncontirri:ieJ repor1
had Piver, still all ye,' plc~ed UP:' by a
tramp steamer en route to P~.
Piver 1"11 San, Francisco-~h 17
on a solo ·~ tO San ~O ln m'der to get In 500 lniles of loiO'aatllllg that
would quallfy'blm 10. the single.-band·
ed trans-Atlantic race, He re~ly
carried two 1'eek1 suwb ,of loOd and water.
The COa&t Guatd received an
ov~rdue report on ~iv.er "-prll 3 and
(See. SAlµJR, P•le I)
Oru1e ·
-•
In spite ot early morriing
haziness, Orange. counttana can
expect clew af'ernoen · akles
With temperatun1 ranlin1 In
the .eevenUes ·for the ·nezt tew
days. Today's waltr tempera-
ture ls 70.3 defrftl. • INSmll 'roDAY
. lf l/O• 11>•tt b01Tot0, /i....aa!
Writer s,1.., Portor'. i.lli ,...
,hoto. to/oo ~"' U i• o eolian" !"' Pogt 10'"""'11·
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l
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2 DAILY PILOT
l'OLICEMIN SLAIN -Killed by sniper fire in the
Cltvtlalld riots Tuesday were poll~• ofllctrs (left
to right), Lt. Leroy Jones, Patrolman Willard Wolff
UPI,....
and Paltolman Lewis Golonka. Six other persons
were killed, 18 injured and 411 arieated. Ohio Na-
tional Guardsmen were called to quell the riots.
Planes Answer
New North Viet
Invasion Threat
SAIGON (AP) A North Viet-
namese buildup in a new area Of the
central highland! alerted U. S. of-
fici.all Tbunday to the pooslbillty that
the next enemy blow may be &truck
ll>ere.
• In re.!pOOle to the thrut, U. S. B528,
the heavyweighta of the Air Force,
•truck six t4me1 Wednesday and early
'lbunday In the area n<l"tll of Ban Me
Thuot, upltal of Darlac Province.
"U there's going to be any action, it
looks now like it witl be in Dat-lae Pro-
vince." a senior U.S. officer satd.
"tbere are good s i z e d . con-
centrations in there," another Officer
reported. ''You mig1Jt say they have
rehabilitated the area."
Bran Me Tbuot is about 110 miles
south of the area of Kontum, hitherto
considered the most likely poblt for an
enemy drive de1tgned to cut Sooth
Vietnam in two.
. But intelligence reports say the North Vietnamese in the Kontum area
near ttie borders or Cambodia, Laos
and Soultl Vietnam have been on the
inme to the south.
There was n.o.estimate of the' siu .or
the force moving into Darlac Pro·
vi~. But enemy forcec deployed in
the central highlands previously have
been identified as six regiment&, each
or about 1,500 men.
A new outbreak of fighting in the
highlands would be in line with enemy
strategy of doing the unexpected. For
months the focus of the enemy threat
h a s been on Saigon and in the far
north.
There have been sizable buildup• of
allied troops around Saigon end in the
north to COWlter the t h r e a t s •
?tteammile, the highlands have been
relaUvely qui<! with oo major flllbtlng
since the batUe of Oak To last Novem·
ber.
From Page I
SHOP ...
Olief Clifford Murray 11aid \Vednesday
that Ilia department round Colwell had
violated the law in the 1exy poster
sale.
The San Clemente Chamber of Com-
merce and the U n i t e d Presbyterian
Orurch are urging a vigilante group
and other measures to guard against a
takeover by hJppies, as a result of
much rumor and the Mind Garden in·
cidenl.
The City Council recently passed a
law prohibiting sleeping in vehicles on
public or private property as one
safe111anl.
DAILY PILOT
N..,.,. '-" Ce1te M•M ............. .... u.,.. '-" w .... lllillmr Fil•11Nl11 Velky
CAUPO•HIA
Oll:AHGl' CO.UT PUILISMING COM~.ANY
Robert N. We•'
f'l'n'6tflt end Pllllll""'°
J1(k I . Curl1y
ViUI Prtsidltot atM1 C.-11 Mfl'lliwr
Tllo"''' k••vil Ed!lff
Thom11 A. Murpl!i'"
~""1n1 Edltw
P111I Hi11e111
.AOvotrtll .... 01...-t• ...... _
Stokes Sends 250 Guards
Back Into Cleveland
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Mayor Carl
B. Stokes ordered 250 national
· guardsmen back into the battle.scar-
red eut &ide today to halt looting and
flrebombJnl.
"We do not feel that the danger has
passed," be said. "This situation rt·
quires hour by hour evaluation."
Stokes ordered the guard to return
following three cases of firebombings
and 36 lootings, He said most of the
violence was caused by teen.agers.
"To prevent fart.her looting, we are
sending national guardsmen into all
areas where stores were broken into
last night (Wednesday )." Stokes told a
news conference. "There are 12
specific locations."
PLAN SUCCESSFUL
He said his action \Vednesday in
removing tile 2.600 n a t i o n a I
guardsmen from the area where 10
persons had been shot to daeth the
night before was successful.
"It is our considered opinion that we
made conslderable headway last night
(\Vednesday) in restoring order and in
ending the looting and violence," he
said. "No one was killed, no One wa~s·
shot. no one was injlU'ed.''
Stokes saJd police made 13 arrests
Wednesday nJght.
When Stokes removed the troops
Wednesday, he sent in their place 100
Negro police officers and 500 Negro
community leaders who "challenged"
residents to keep the peace.
;'If \\'e are successful tonight in stop·
ping looting and arson, we can get
back to putting Cleveland into high
gear."
Return of the guard coincided with a
report by the Cleveland press of an
alleged black nationalist plot to
assassinate ·stoke1 and Necro City
Councilman Leo A. Jackson.
Stokes said he had "no reuon. to
believe it (the plot) bu any basis of
fact."
SHOOT TO KILL
lbere were 2,600 D a t I o D a I
guardsmen patrollng the s tr e e t s
Wednesday, anned and with order1 to
shoot to kill snipers. The east side was
a battleground. The racial peace that
had been Cleveland ended in the
report of automatic weapons and the
crash of Molotov corktails through
ghetto windows. 'The nation's eighth
largest city was on edge.
The mayor Carl B. Stokes, a Negro,
made his bold gamble. He ordered the
national guardsmen removed from the
at?<ets.
His gamble apparently paid oil.
The Cleve-land police chief, Michael
Blackwell, called it "a brilliant idea."
The city was relatively calm Wed·
nesday night and early today.
Stokei; ordered. all but 100 Negro
police out of the city's scarr~east
side. He replaced the Nationa1-·cuard
with 500 black community leaders.
Stokes "challenged" them to keep
the peace. They did.
A group of civil rights leaders,
wearing orange armbands with
"Mayor's Committee'' printed on
them, moved into the area talking with
residents and trying to relieve
tensions.
Czechs Warned to Brace
For Russ Showdown Talks
PRAGUE (AP) -Czechoslovaks
were warned tetlay the fort.hco~nf,
showdown talka with the Soviet Com-
munist party Politburo will be "very
difficult." They were urged to support
the reformist Prague leadership with
a new demonstration of confidence.
Tite com~nts came in an edJtolial
in Prace, the newspaper of the 5.3
mllllon-strong Czechoslovak Trade
Union Federation. Prace said the con·
tinuatlon of attacks on the liberallza.
tion drive and its exponents indicated
the meeting will bring a tough con·
front.ation.
The editorial specifically rejected an
East German PoUtbµro Matement
\Vednesdiy that accused th e
Czechoslovak Communists of not doing
enough to strengthen socialism ''with
all means of state power."
The Polish Communist p a r t y
newspaper Trybuna Ludu came out in
Warsaw today with a similar attack. It
accused Alexander Dubcek's regime
of taking no action against "forees
hostile to socialism" that the orthodox
Communist nation& contend a re
flourishing here.
In Budapett, the Hµngarlan Com-
From Page 1
FRAUD ...
case to Jaw enforcement officials, the
presentatJon to the Grand Jury w11
made ~ office of the It.ate At·
.....,. al, Hklu said.
nii:. i1 btcacH of "the statewide
sc~ of the operation and the
responsibility of the AU«ney General
to prevent abuse 1n the operaUon o{
tax exempt trustl, mckl said. ·
Th• Attornt1 General~ a
slrnllar case la Rlverl.lde Col.mty in
1963 and U 11 ~ lllot olflct
will hanclle ~ of 11111 .,... ID
!ht SUperlor Court ~.
Four of tho per•,.. lodlcWd ..aide
In !ht Southern Callfonia area ..S
Im out side out of llllle.
The ads which reouHed la the
c::harae of con11plracy o c c a r r e d
be\\Yeen Jan. I. 1981 and F'd>l'UarJ,
111!1 ln Orance County, Ille '\*"'ct •~
torney &akl.
munist party paper Nepszabadsag ap..
pealed to Czechoslovakla "not to let
the 1ame thing happen that led to the
all-out counterrevolution in Huna:ary"
In 1916.
Thl1 was the uprising flnally crush·
ed by orthodox Hungar1an Com·
munists with the help ol. Soviet tanks.
Neps11badaag said the s l tu at l o n
Jn <!zechslovak.la resembled that ln
Hungary, when those who "voiced
slogans of democracy, liberty and
freedom of criticism, once they grab-
bed power ... tried to silence everyone
with d1fferent views ."
Referring to the East German state·
ment, Prace declared demand1 for a
policy rever11al mean interference in
the sovereignty of the state, "an at·
tempt to change the conditions of llle
in Czechaslovakia ... which is social·
Lit by the wUI of the populaUon 1 n d
will undoubtedly remain so."
"We can therefore expect the
forthcoming talks ... wUl be very diJ.
licult," it said. "Jn thl1 &ituatioa we
think it will be useful to show con·
fidence in the Presidium and in
Comrade Dubcek on a broad scale, to
reassure them with ten1 of thousands
of resolutions and statementa."
The Youth Union dally Mlada Fronta
commented : 'The only possible
cou;se for Czechoslovakia is a
purposeful, resolute and c a 1 m way
forward." A return to an orthodox
course "would mean that socialism
had lost in fhis country," it said .
Meanwhile there were gesture.t of
cood will toward the SOv\et Union. The
army weekly Obran.a Lldu and the
magUine Student both announced they
would discontinue publication or in·
terviews with editors of Radio Free
Europe, a privately fin an c e d
American station that broadcasl.s to
Eut Europe from Munich.
........... J
SAIWR ...
lluncllod •• nltDltft ... ·-wllb no rnul'LC. He was finally &lv,tn up al
lost.
Severi! ylCbllng mapilnes hive
printed Plvtr'• obituary ~r tho
IHldl was abandoned. .. •
Happy
¥ achtswoman
Calls Solo
Trip 'Stupid'
By At.MON LOCLUIEY
DAILY l"ILOT ... tlllt llli!W
HONOLULU -Peggy Slater, who
embarked on a solo sail cruise to
Hoaolulu June :io with "nothlnf to
prove", ]ll'OVed llOlllelhln( to hentlf.
"It was a ·1tupid tbiDC to do. I abould
never have tried It," Ute 48-year.old
~·&ch.tawoman told a new1 conference
altar btlnS brOUlhl ub<ire from a
Coast Guar,d cult«. •
MIJo Slater wuJUl!l r,om her 43-
foot sloop Valenti. 11 Tuesday by a
Japanese freighter which had respond·
ed to her urgent "mayday" message.
She was later transferred to the Coast
Guard vessel.
Miss Slater'• boat was located 400
miles 1outh of the bland of Oahu, ber
origlnal detUnation, alter she.had HDl
Urgent mes..,es requestlnt bllp •. ·
"I wouldn't havt btlleved -where I
was, 0 Mis1 Slater told 1Dterviewera.
GOOD POSmoN
"The Coos! Guard bad glmi me a
line of posltiOll , and I toot it for a
course," she explained. This meant
5he would have been sailing in the Op·
posite direction from the island.
The bruised and battered Miss
Slater said her troubles started lail
Thursday when she went forward on
Valentine II to jibe the bead'sl. A wave
washed her and the ull overboard and
the motion of the boM dragged the sail
under the hull and pinned Miss Slater
against it. She was flClaed to the beet
by a safety line whlcb she uaed when
leaving the cockpib
"I was over the ·• l·d e two hours,
clinging to the r ail by my elbows be·
fore another wave tossed be back on
board," she said
Exhausted and bruised, she radioed
Coast Guard Honolulu to ask for a
bearing. ln her dazed and exhausted
conditlon she mistook the bearing
from Honollllu as a course to steer.
she explained.
"I have to bilieve I was having
hallucinatlont," said Miss Slater. "l
was so tired I didn't know what J was
doing."
TOO TIRED TO EAT
The red-haired yachtswoman said
her troubles were compounded when
she became too tired to eat. She said
.Ml bad period& of blackout and
generally ceased to function.
"I do~'t know .how long I would
black out. but It must have been
lengthy. \Vhen I would wake up I
would have new inju,ries," said Miss
Slater.
Her later messages became more
urgent. "Help me, I'm lost and ex·
tremely tired. It's blowin_g like he!\,
hurry up!" were messages logged by
the Cout Guard before her boat was
&potted by an airtran.
When Miss Slater left Marina del
·-~--~--------
to Be Alive
Ul"I T........,_
SMILING THROUGH FATIGUE-Peggy Slater smiles as she fields
question& by newsmen after she was brought ashore at HonOlulu
from her a~rtive 1010 sail from Los Angeles to Honoluu.
Rey June 30 she termed ber solo
voyage a "fun vacation .. "
The fun ceaaed when sbe got in the.·
squally trade wlnda within 500 miles of
Honolulu.. '.-
BOAT ADRIFT ·
Miss Slater said her K.it.3 Valentine
ll was sUll adrift bUt that the Coad
Guard would attempt to a:et a line
aboard and tow it to Honolulu.
''I hope nothing happens to the boat,
but at thil point I'm only thankful to
be alive. I would never try such a
thing a1aln," she said.
Miss Slater is a sailor of life-long ex·
perle.nce and has done considerable
single-handed sailing in her various
00.ts along the California coast.
Her overboard e1:perlence J s
reminJscent of her younger days when
she fell overboard from a 26-foot sloop
w b 11 e en route from Newport to
C:.tallna and had to swim several
hours before she could get a hand on
·the boat and 'hoist hersell back
aboard. ,
Miss Slater 1ald she would rest up in
Honolulu before flying back to the
mainland.
"I'll probably ship Valentine II back.
One thin.I is for 1ure, I'll never sail
alone again," she vowed.·
'
Horrified Mother
Watches as Son .
Sets Self Afire
A La Palma t>oy quarreled with hls
mother Wednesday al'ld then sel
himself on fire while sbe watched in
horror.
David Wllllams, 17, was critically
burned::J'he names were put out by
the motPler and a passing motorist .•
Mrs. Diane Williams told police that
she and her son had quarreled and
that he had stalked out ol the house In-
to the garage.
"I saw. him run from the garage to
t h e street, s t o p and pour something
from a can on bis clothe6 and then
light a match," the mother told of.
fictrs.
Mrs. Williams grabbed a blanket
and rushed to throw it over her son. At
the same time, according to police,
Robert Huey of La Palma tossed a
bedspread obtained from a nearby
borne over the youth.
· The boy is in Orange County Medical
Center today suffering Crom second
and third degree bums over 75 percent
of his body. Hosp1'41 aides said be ia iD
critical condition.
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al .JJ. !}-. (Jarrell
ALL HERITAGE
Upholstered Pieces
OFF REGULAR
PRICES
Ov•r 200 Styl•• of Sof11 -
Ch•lr1 -loTe Seats -Otto•
m1n1 in your choic• of 1ny
Herlt19• D•cor1tor f1bric.
Herltote "'' Sofa -F1brlc
n1tur1I b1ck9round w it h
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sold 11 i1. W 11 '4'49.
I Pt. C.....t s.19. tufted In
olive v1lv1t. Wai $680.
T•a.11 I Pt. Set. tufted
fabric -91renium velvet. w •• $950.
I Pt. Tu• hW Volnt
SN -Loos• Piiiow.
'
Also many other fine sMas LR addition to
Heritage - a few are listed below
NOW McG'°""'" c°"""" 100"
5299 Sefw. Down incl spring -
fabric, n1tur•I backgrcund
I: marin•. W•1 950.
NOW 100" Sofa M1rflex con1truc. 5499 tion, hi;t' 1rm, n1tur1/ with
olive fa rlc. W11 ,5,5.
Herltote 100" Sole in na-
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floor 11mpl1. W11 $1 5.
'"·-·--· fabric y•llow & gold, ton•
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NOW
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5349
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Your feTottt1 int1rier cle1i1ner wlll be ~tppy to 11tl1t you , •.
H.J.GAl\1\Fff fURNflURE
0,. -.. -• I'll. ....
2115 HARIOR ILVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
6-4M275 6-4M276
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Bea~h
Yoar Bomet.o1"11
Dally Paper
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voe. 6r, NO. 178, ~ SECTIONS, 3, PAGES THURSDAY, ~UL Y 25, "1968 TEN CENTS
$12 Million Beach Highway Project Proposed
A huge redevelopment project from
downtown Huntington Beach
northwest of Golden West Street was
suggested Wednesday night to the
city's Mid·Beach Developip.ent Com-
mllt.e. (Related stories, page 2)
The committee ordered studies to
progress·on·the project whlch would
Lnvolve clearing some 126 acres of
l a n d considered blighted with old
houses, ancient buiiness buildings and
~u . indoatry.
From 1st Street norUtw~st to GOiden
West Street one block inland from
PacUic Coast Highway·'\\·ould be the
boundaries of the $12 million project if
the project size and costs are kept
within the limits predict.ed at present
OuWning Qie project was the com·
mittee's consultant Ted Adsit. He said
that by ualng three methods the city
would acquire the land involved in the
re;development proposal. The "tooJs" woul\f be the city's Parking Authority,
•·
esa
Site's in .Fine .Forua
Anita Grandy, 19, of Westminster came through the Miss Posture
.contest in fine form. Selected by the Chiropractor's association
meeting in San Diego, as the second runner·up in the California
State posture contest. Anita, who works a& a tour guide at Universal·
Studios in Hollywood, has four other beauty tiUes to her credit.
1 • Airport
BY SANDI MAJOR
I Of ... ....., .........
If tho Orange County reglonol
airport IJ built In Huntlnit<>n Beacb,
the city's berbor and beaches directci'
sats It cOuld cause erosion ot th•
beech herf: "mucb more drastic'' than
ttuit now being checked at Newport
BeBch.
~We need this type ol airport jn
OrEltlge Coutlty," 1ay:i: Vi DC e
\
\
Threat
Moor1>ouat. "It certaWy ~ o-eate
an ecooomlcal booot to H untlngtoo
B<llch.
"But our btachea must be protected.
Right today there ts only enough sand
for 3 or 4 percent of the people along
all tbe California coasllille."
Huntington Beach is one of five pro-
posed 1lte1 ror tbe airport.
He 1aid tbat every, time "ma:n in hi•
great wildom" attempts to alter
-·~-·~--·~· ~-...... --·--~.i.....A-. 4 .• ..... ~ ·'----.. -
' its Redevelopment Agency and the
power of the city to widen streets,
Adist said.
As outlined by Adsit, the city would
widen Walnut Avenue to 100 feet and
offer it to the &late as the reloc•tion
slte for Pacific Coa1t Highway.
The present highway would be aban·
doned, half of the street going to ad·
Jacent property owners. Bf various
means the city would acq~ tiUe to
all of the land in the lint block Inland
Rising Costs
Kill Project
Off Bolsa
By WILLIAM REED
Of "'9 Delb' Plllt Sr.ff
Bolsa Island, planned to house the
W'OI'ld's largest nuclear power and
desalting plant, was scuttled Wed·
nesday.
It was the victim o( costs rising tao
high t.o maintain the interest or those
who had pledged only last year in a
~ewport ?Je.ach coofer~nce to build lhe
huge plant off9hore of HunJlngtoq
¥eacli . .
Announcement t !l a t the nuclear
plant won't be built after all came ...,.,e an "i 1 day a f te moon from
Wublngtoo. D.C. alter two cloys of
lilgli ~v<l meelinga during wbldl the
Southern Califorrila ·Ediion Co.
reporteclly led oppotitlon to con·
tinuation of the island project.
· Interior secretary Ste~art Udall
and Atomic Energy ·Commission
Ohairman GleM T. Seaborg, both of
wilom pr-esided in NeWpOrt BeadJ. last
year over a much publicized contract
signing session f<>f' the Bolsa project,
announced that "an alternate plan is
being ex.amined for S o u t h e r n
KILLED PLANT .
In effect, the announcement killed
· t he artificial island plant. Phincipla
reuon for the demise of the plan, once
hailed as the hope of the world, was
ri&lng costs -up from tM $444 million
original cost estimate to $765 million
this spring.
To have participated in the prC1ject
were the Southern California Edison
Co., San Diego Gas and Electric Co.,
the Los Angele1 Department of Water
and Power, U'le DepartmeDt of Saline
w,ater of the federal government, the
Atomic Energy Commission and the
Metropolitan Water District
Huntington Beach Mayor Alvin Coen
told the DAILY PILOT today that he
belleve4 the reason the plan to build
the atomic power and desalting plant
on an ,artifis:Jal island just off the
coastline of the city is being shelved is
tt>at "the Southern California Edison
Co. backed out in the face of
escalating costs,
"We (the city) were in favor of the
plant because of increased assessed
evaluation and the possibility of a boat
harbor as well as believing that the
plant would do much to solve the
power and water problem of Southern
California. We too, believe the plant
may have helped to solve some of the
world 's water problem.
REGIONAL AIRPORT ~
''The city will now turn its attention
to the possibility of a regiona.1 airport
being buJk out there (in the water
where Balsa Island was to have been
built)."
J0&eph Jensen, chairman of th e
board of dirtotors of MWD, told the
DAILY PILOT today tllat "! assured
Secretary Udall of MWD's continued
(See DESALT, P11< %)
from 1st Street t.o Golden West Street.
By including the streets which the
city already owns tbe '200,ooO per
·acre price of land could be reduced to
about '127,000 Adsit esUmates. He
p o 1 n t e d out that in the proposed
redevelopment project ""' 16 ..,... ol
stttets now owned by the city.
He emphasizes that the project
under discussion does not , invoIVti
federal urban renewal,
Followin1 <1Cquis!Uon of the land ii
an
would be resold for development. Of
the 126 acres, 38 are now privately
owned, 16 are in streets, 4 in the Hun·
tlngt.on Pacific Corp. apartments, l in
pier use, lS'in Coast Highway, 16 in
joint ownership blUffs and 35 in beach.
Following redevelopment 5S acres
woul dbe for sale. 4 remain in the Hun-
tington Pacilic Corp. apartments, 7 in
widening of Walnut Avenue, 38 acres
of beach and 8 aCres combined with 14
held by the Huntington Pacific Corp in
the blufft area. • • ,
,,_.CU
Part of the SS acres would be
purdwed by the city Parkin&
Authority to build parking lots to 1erve
the beach and future apartmentl to ~
constructed along the waterfront.
The rtst could be sold or traded.
poulbly to the HlinUngton Pac:lllQ
Corp. in exchange for the beach land. The plan as presented ii ''very,
rough'" and the comm~ee M>Pc>inted a
Jub-committee to look further into the
pooslblllty of the project becoming a
reality.
e
POLlCIMIN SLAIN -Killed by snljler<W-.Jt>tbe
Cleveland rtou Tuesday. were· polli:e ottltors ·(left:
to right)1 t;t.,Leroy Jones, Patrolman Willard Wollf
and Palrolman Lewis Golonka , Six other• penont
were killed, 18 injured ·and· 48 arrested.< Olilo 'Na-
tional Guardsmen wei:e Called to qUell ·the riots:
Stokes Sends 250 ·Guards
Back Into Cleveland
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Mayor Carl
B, Stokes ordered 250 national
guardsmen back into the battle-scar-
red east side today to halt looting and
firebombing.·
"We do not reel that the danger has
passed," he said. "This situation re·
quires hour by hour evaluation,"
Stokes ordered the guard to return
following thre!! cases of firebombings
and 36 lootings. He sa,id most of the
violence was caused by teen·agers.
"To prevent further' looting, we are
sending national guardsmen into all
areas where stores were broken into
last night (Wednesday)." Stokes told a
news conference, "There are 12
spe<:i.fic locations,"
PLAN SUCCESSFUL
He said his action Wedpesday in
removing the 2,600 n B't ion a 1
guardsmen from the area where 10
persons had been &hot . io daetb the
night before was successful.
"It is our considered opinion that we
·made considerable headway last night
(Wednesday) In restoring order and in
ending the looting and violence," he
said. "No one was killed, no one was
shot, no one was injured."
Stokes said police made 13 arrests
Wednesday night.
, When Stokes removed the troops
Wednesday, he sent in their place 100
. Negro police officers and 500 Negro
community leaders who "challenged"
residents to keep the peace.
"If we are successful tonight in stop-
ping looting aOO arson, we can get
back to puiting Cleveland in.to higb
gear." ...
Return of the guard coincided with a
report by the Cleveland press of an
,alleged black nationalist plot to
assassinate Stokes and Negro City
Councilman Leo A, Jackson.
Stokes said he had "no reason to
believe it (the plot) has any basil of
fact."
SHOOT TO KILL
There were 2,flOO n a t i o n a I
guardsmen patroling the s tr e e ts
Wednesday, anned and with orders to
shoot to kill snipers, The east side was
a battleground. The racial peace that
had b e e n CJeveland ended in t h e
report of automatic weapons and the
crash of Molotov cocktails through
ghetto windows. The nation's eighth
largest city was on edge.
The mayor Carl B. Stokes, a Negro,
made his bold gamble. He ordered the
national guardsmen removed Crom the streets.
His gamble apparently paid off.
The Cleveland police chief, Michael
Blackwell, called it "a brilliant idea,"
The city was relatively calm Wed·
nesday night and early today.
Stokes ordered all but 100 Negro
police out of the city's scarred east
side. He replaced tbe National Guard
with 500 black. comi:nunity leaders.
stokes "challenged" them to keep
the pe.ace .. They did. , .
A group· of civil rights leaders,
wearing orange armbands with
"Mayor's Committee" printed on
them, moved into the area talking with
residerQ and trylng to relieve
tensions.
,. ' .
Valleyi~ Among
9 Men Indicted
In Fraud Case
Nine persons, including ~ Fo~
Valley man, were indicted Wedneldy
by the Orange County Grand Jury for
conspiracy to commit grand theft, and
five counts of grand theft.
Arrested Wednesday were GU1tave
Galas, 391 of 1179 ~ROl!!a Lane, Foun4
tain Valley; Lym .Garber, Beverly
Hills; Fred K: De , Elm hunt, Ill, and
Robert Hayes Sr., Wheaton, nl. Galas
was fre~ On '6,250 bail .~
District Attorney Cecil Hicks said
the Inducted persons operated through
Americans Building 'C006tltutionally,
non.profit trust headquartered in
Barrington, Ill.
The operaUon wblch is the subject of
the indictments involv'ed making false
representations to individuals that in
setting up certaJn for.ma of trusts .'.llld
foundatioos the individual! would bl
able to avoid inheritance and estate
taxation upon death,
Hicks said the defendants obtained
money from individuals for the
purpose of instructm and assistance
in setting up the trusts and foun·
(See FRAUD, P1ge %)
Weather
to Huntington? Pair Get $125
In Market Heist
In spite of early morning
haziness, Orange countians can
expect clear atternoon skies
wilh tempeiature1 ranging In
the aevenUes for the next few
days. Today's water tempera·
lure ls 70.3 degrees,
INSIDE TODAY
If Vo• m.,t borrow, flnanclol
writtr Sulvia Porter tcU1 roai
how to oo about it in a coltnnn
on Pape 10 todo~. nalw-e, yoo have .an Immediate
result. •· Jf the airport Is built In Hunling!M
Beach, as proposed with nmwl,)11
stretcbing more than a mile into the
Pacific Ocean, the result would be a
change in tbe littoral drilt, the coastal
currents that run fairly parallel to the
beach, he said.
He explained that lor many eons.
sand bas piled up on the beaches (rom
natural aources -slit coming down
rivers and to the sea 111d sand carrled
ont.o abore by current&. '
"A• we began building jeWea, rtvtr1
were cemented and check dama built
in the canyon.I to prevent Ooodl, we
lost these natural sources.''
Newport Beach tn the paat year has
worked with the U. S. Anny Corpa of
Engineer• to robulld Ill beaches DO<lh
(Soe AIRPORT, P11e %)
Two men escaped lale Wedll<sday
with an estimMed $125 from a
W estmlnster . Tic· Toe Market alter
forcing al guJ)pOinl clerk R1ymOnd
P~a to band ~ the calh then to
lay on the !loo<.
Polke described the pair only as
being of Latin d6scent. They entered
the all·nlgbt mark<! at 8032 Huard
ard Ave. at approxlm8tely 11:20 p.m .• -
r 0 b b e d Petters Who WU alone, and made lbeir escape on foot. ..
' , ...
" " • • • " 1 .. 11
" .. ..
-. r=e: ,... ,..:, --. --' ., .... ,..,, " IMMil ---,,,,, -..., .......... ,..,.
'fetwlt* It = ·: --..
•
! DAILY PILOT Tbundly, July 25, 1968
9tl and Pushing
How many things can you do with a peanut? RuUty
Gray 7, and Brett Anderson, 7, practice at West·
mont School for the annual Peanut Day sponsored
by the Recreation and Parks Department at all
Huntington Beach playgrounds Friday. There will
be loads of games and loads of peanuts. For tiines
check with the neighborhood playground recreation
leader. Most areas open at 10 a.m.
F,.... P .. e l
AIRPORT ••. .
of the Newport Pier. 'Ibree years ago
Iha clcy began trying' to rebuild
the eroding -by replacing sand
but had to call on federal help for the
job.
Beachfr011t house• were close to
beinC undt<mlned.
Moorhouse aays the effect of the
alrport In Huntington Beach could be
"much more drastic" than the 1itue-
lion haa been in Newport Beach.
"Maybe thia will be one of the costs
of. the airport, to replace the beachet,''
Moo<bouae aald.
He wants engl.neerlng studies to be
-to see what effect the airport
wUl have on the eoology, or the
bucbe1. Then he will make a
dietenninatioa, be 1ald.
He Hid be has "11ome suspicions"
the bydrollc study will &bow the
nmways wUl affect the littoral drlfts.
And if that'll the case, "the city
would want guarantees that sand will
be replaced on the beaches 1f erosion
occurs."
Baseball Tourney
Slated Saturday
5eal Beach and Twentynille Palms
buebal1 teams will open the sixth an-
nual Bill Comearney Boys Baseball
Tournament at Greer Park in Hun-
lincton Beach SO.turday.
Teams from Huntington Beach,
Westminlter, Needles, N()rco and
Oa1alina will enter the play-Offs Satur.
day and Suoday in the meet co-
•ponsored by the Huntington Beach
Recreati()n and Parks Department
and ttie dty Recr~tioo Activities
Assn.
The tournament begins at 8 a.m. and
contiooes to 8 p.m. The championship
will be decided Sunday at I p.m.
DAILY PILOT
H•rla9t ........ c.nt.nr.
OltAJ<lGE COAIT PVILISfilNG COMP,t.,NV
Robotf N. Woed
PrKIOltll •nd Pub!lill!T
J oek JI. Curley
Vite Pmkltnl •nd Gentr-11 M1111oer
Thorn11 K11¥il
Edllor
Thorn11 A. Murphlno
"""nH!ne Edllw
Alb,rt W. l 1t11 Willi•'" Reed' Assoeltlt HUl'llnalOll !H(fl
Editor Clly Edllar
""tlltf™ lffclll Offlc•
lOt Ith St,.tt
Melling: Add're111 P.O. lax 7t0 92&41 o,..,._
N ..... ~! 11n Wnl .. lbH hlwtlrf
Cotto ,_.I Ull W•t 11¥ S1rw! """"'9 felcfl: m ,_,, ..,,_
Huntington Eyes Trade
Of Highway for Beach
Nearly four miles oC sandy beach
could become the property of the peo-
ple or Huntington Beach ll the city
leaders are able to complete plans to
trade Coast Highway for the strip of
sand.
The beach is Crom about .the
municipal pier northwest to the bluUa
area on the highway. It is owned by
the Huntington Pacific Corp., which is
composed of the Huntington Beach Co.
(70 percent), and the Southern Pacific
Railroad (30 percent.
Speed in acquiring the beach is con·
sidered imperative be c a u a e the
private corporaUon baa planl to build
along most or the enUre length of the
beach and has just completed con·
struction or an apartment project on
the sand from 6th to 9th streets.
The city's Mid-Beach Development
Committee Wenesday night heard Its
Banker Replaces
Walter Longmoor
On OCC Board
Coron.a del Mar resident John
O'Hoara Smith was selected Wed.
nesday nJght to serve as a trustee of
Orange Coast Junior College District.
Smith, :r7, of 1126 Eb!itide Rood,
replaces long-time board member
\Valter Longmoor, wbo retired last
mont!l. He was chosen Crom amoog
seven applicants to c o m p l e t e
Longmoor's term, which runs for
another year.
Smith said he is coocerned about the
apathy of a majority oC the voters in
the junior colleg.! district and their
unwillingness to support bond issues.
''There Is no questi()n in informed
people's minds the junior college rune·
tion needs to be performed," he said.
"The function of the junior college,"
he said, "is to make available educa·
lion to students who would possibly not
continue beyond high school because
of academic standards and increasing
costs of higher education.''
11e said a junior college certilica.te
gives job applieants "a better hunting
license." He s.atd society has need of
trained technicians and a higt school
education often ls not enough to train
young persons for jobs UM!y po6Sibly
eould handle.
The junior college also is a vehicl e
lo higher education, he noted, for
students v.iw after hi~ school become
"a little more mature and a little bet-
ter able to understand what they want
to do.'"
Smith ls manager of the real estate
loan department at \Velis Fargo Bank
in Santa Ana. He Is serving on the ad-
viso ry board of Cal State Fullerton on
appointment of former Gov. Edmund
Brown. He ls a director o{ the Orange
County Olepter of American Red
Cross. He also belongs to the Balboa
JJay Club, Balboa Angling Club a n d
Pacifk: Anglers of Newport Beach.
f'ormerly, lie wt.s president of the
Stanton Police Athletic League ind
vk:t president Of the Garden Grove
and Stanton chemben of eommerce.
Smith has lived wilhln Orlol' CO.at
Junior Cotle1e District aJnce 1961 , in
Newport B • a c h, Seal Beach a n d c.orona del Mar. He end hla wUe,
Marcia, have two cbildrtn, a
dautbt.tr. DIDI, five, and • IOll, Juan, toA-o.
planning conaultant Ted Adalt point to
the posslbllity of a trade.
He was discussing a p r o po s e d
redeveloPtnent p-oject northwest of
about lst street to the bluffs area.
Part of the plan involves building a
new Paciflc Coast HJgh.way along
Walnut Avenue which is one block in·
land from the present highway.
The city would then abandon the
present highway. Under state laws
half of the 100.foot road would revert
to the adjacent property owner1.
Since the city would buy a1f or the
land north of the highway it would own
50 feet ol the roed and the other 50
feet would revert to the ' Hwitington
Pacific Corp. under terms or the law.
This action would widen the building
area at the top of the beach. The· city
would then sell or trade at least
another 50 feet to the company and
perhaps as much as an additional 20
acres or land for development by the
private company.
Rather !bait to act\lally aell land the
cfty would consider trading its half of
the highway property and possibly
even more land for the strip of
privately owned. beach from the pier
to the bluffs.
City officials have been severely
criticb:ed from time to time or
permitting construction by private in·
teiests on th'e beach, but since tile
beach la privetely owned there ii no
legal means to prevent IUCb con-
struction, the otfic:ials point out.
* * * Beach-highway
Trade Defended
By Company
Di.scus&loll-· of a poasible beach·
hilghway swap between the city Of
Huntington Beach and the Hlllltlngton
Pacific Corp. brought an immediate
and defensive reply Wednesday nlgbt
from corporation exetutlve Wllllam
Wren .
Wren said that the discussion BOUnd-
ed "like a giveaway to the Huntington
Pacific Corp."
"Huntington PacUic certainly ls not
getting .anyUU.ng for nothing ," Wren
said. "I don't want 'gtvea'W'8y' to be
Ule tone(){ this d.i!CUSSIOll. ti
He pointed oot that if Uie cor·
poratlon gets inteMted in a swap of
land with the city 0 it will be because
of a benefit to eadl."
"Acqulrlng h6lf of Coost Highway 11
not a giveaway. Jf tht: city abandona
U1e highway we are entitled to the half
under t h e law which presumes t h a t
land is owned t() the center of the
street.
"We do not need the higtrny llOd in.
order to build. We can build on tbt
sa nd and tiave done so. We are not
1naking a request to have Uda 50 feet.
"11owever, we do recognize the benc·
l it to both o! us. We are giving up the
beach, which b bulldable and we have
proven that, In txdlan,. for the hllh-
WIJ land ..,. -id be buylnf Moro,"
Oouncilman Htnry Kautmlo JIQlnt-
ed out to w .. n that the city corlalnly
did not COD.11ider any deals concendnl
tM beacb .. flYHWl)'I.
"W• would lie Mllinl )'OU land at I
1'"UY lood ~<-0. Wt'd bt l'tllnl the
hooch only b7 .. -llnJ & llD v'1ue
O[ lead.:"
From P .. e l
DESALT
lnlerelt in the proJed. We would be
happy to cooperate in exploring means
by Wllld> It can be carried out.
"Al tar a.s MWD Js concerned, our
detlrt la as keen a& ever to detennine
the potential ot desalting ocean water
as a future source of supply for the
people of Southern California."
SCE Board Chairman Jack K.
Horton told the DAILY PILOT that
"Edison continues to support the con-
cept or the desalt.nuclear power pro-
ject even though the increased com of
$300 milllon OVOT the l\J6S figur<o
makes it uneconomical.
"We agreed to continue with MWD
and Los Angeles Department of Water
and Power and San Diego Gas and
Electrlc and the government to find
economic alternatives for a combined
desalting and power plant.
"~son wnuld look ror a cheaper
plant or for a plant &omewbere else.
We would like to put something
together on a reduced basis. The man
made is: land costs a great deal."
Rep. Richan! T. Hanna ( D •
We'stmlnster) said this morning, "[
regret that those involved in this r :o-
jec.~ were not farsighted enough to see
the full significance for f u t u r e
development ol the entire Southwest.
•11 am particularly unimpressed
with using costs as a basis f<>r dispens•
ing with the projett. lt is not going to
get less expensive in the future ."
Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty in
-W85b.ington tor the meeting, said he
has asked the AEC to license a
nuclear plant at Malibu for a desaltlni
project in case the Bolsa Island pro-
ject collapses.
Both Secretary Udall and Chainnan
Seaborg reaffirmed 1upport for !be
concept embodied in ttie nuclear pro·
ject and the impact they will have CY.l
the future or the country and Southern
California. .
Tbe original plan called for con·
structlon on a 40-acre man made
island or two nuclear power reactors
capable of generating 1 , 8 0 0 , 0 0 0
kilowatts of electricity and a desalting
plant ultimately capable of producing
150 million gallons Of fresh water a
day. The first unit of the plant was • J
have been in operation by 1973.
Horrified Mother
Watches as Son
Sets Self Afire
A La Palma boy quarreled with his
mother Wednesday and then set
himself on fire while she watched in
horror.
David Williams, 17, was critically
burned. The flames were put out by
the mother and a puling motorist. Mrs. Diane Wllllama tokl police that
she . and her son had quarreled and
that he had stalked out or the boUle in·
to the garage.
"I saw him run from the garflie to
t h e street, s t o p and pour 1omethln&
from a can on his ck>thee and then
light a match,'' the mother told of·
flcers.
Blaiberg Recovering
Dentist Philip Blaiberg, world's longest surviving heart transplant
patient, is apparently recovering from recent relapse. He smiles and
gives victory sign from his ·h!d·
Missing Pico Man Found
De.ad -in Huntington Surf
The body of a Pico ruvera man,
reportedly missing since Tuesday, was
found floating face down o!f Hun·
tineton State Beach today.
His body was discovered by £our
F"'"" P .. e l
FRAUD ••.
dationa.
The mDMy involved approximated
$20,000 In Orange County and many
thousand• more in the atatewide ac·
tivitles of the firm.
Teotllylng to the lmportan<e of the
case to Jaw enforcement officials, the
presentaUon to the Grand Jury was
mado by the o!fko of the otate Al·
torney General, Hlckt &aid.
Thi.I is becacse or the statewide
scope or the operation and the
responsiblllty of the Attorney ~neral
to prevent abuse in the operation of
tax exempt trust&, lllcka 1aid.
The Attorney General prosecuted. a
similar case in Rlverslde County in
1963 and it II antlclpated that office wm handle prosecution of tllil cue in
the Superior Court here.
Four of the perso111 indicted Hilde
In the Soutbern Callfornla area and
fiw out side out of state.
'Ibe actl which resulttd in the
charge of conspiracy o c c u r r e d
be-Jan. l. 19117 and February,
1968 In Oran,. County, the dlltrlct a~
torney •aid.
early morning sW'fers about 9:10 a.m.
Leonard L. J()nes, 18, of Cypress
reported seeing the body to -State
Lifeguard& ob Smith, 23, and Jerry
McGraw, 20, who pulled it MhOR.
Huntington Beach Police Officer I.
F. Neal said the body was . "extremely
discolored, like he'd been in the water
a couple or days."
Smith •aid tlle bndy WU floatlog
face down about three feet under the
surface of the water 20 yards off ahore
at Weguard station number 22.
"We didn~ know but what be drowJi.
ed. last night," said Smith, "until Hun-
tington Beach city lifeguards came
down and said he'd been miasing about
three days ." 1
The youth bad reportedly come :to
Huntington Beach with b'ieuds aild
disappeared near the city pier, he ad·
ded.
The name of the man, believed to be
18-years-old, Is being wilhbeld pendlne
notification or his family.
Earthquak~ Strikes
In South Pacific '
BERKELEY, Callf. (AP) ~
An earthquake meuuring 7 on !be
Richter Scale &truck ln the South
Pact!lc today, the Unlvmlcy ol
cautornia sel1mograpb station at
Berkeley reported.
A spokesman u.1d the quake'•
epicenter waa near the Fiji Islandli or
New Herbrides.
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COSTA MESA, Cl.LIF.
'46-017' MMl7'
' j
(
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I
I
Lagu~a .Bea eh
voi:. 6f, NO. '178, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES
• ew I
Halt Loot ing
Cleveland Mayor
Reorders Guards
Into Riot Zone
CLEVELA.i'lD (UPI) -Mayor Carl
B. Stokes ordered 250 national
guardsmen back into the battle-scar-
red ea st side today to halt looting and
firebombing.
"We do not feel that the danger has
passed," he said. "This situation re-
quires hour by hour evaluation."
Stokes ordered the guard to return
following three cases of firebombings
and 36 lootings. He said mc>st of the
violence was caused by teen-agers.
"To prevent further looting, we are
sending national guardsmen into all
areas where stores were broken into
last ni ght (Wednesday)," Stokes told a
news conference. "There are 12
specific locations."
He said his action \Vednesday in
removing the 2,600 n a t i o n a I
guardsmen from the area where 10
persons had been shot to daeth the
night before was successful.
"It is our considered opinion that we
made considerable headway last night
(Wednesday) in restoring order and in
ending the looting and violence," he
said. "No one was killed, no one was
shot, no one was injured."
Stokes said police made 13 arrests
Wednesday night.
\Vhen Stokes removed the troops
Wednesday, he sent in their place 100
Negro police officers and 500 Negro
community leaders who "challenged"
residents to keep the peace.
"If v.·e are successful tonight in stop-
ping looting and arson, we can get
back to putting Cleveland into high
gear."
Return of the guard coincided with a
report by the Cleveland press of an
alleged black nationalist plot to
assassinate Stokes and Negro City
Councilman Leo A. Jackson.
Stokes said he had "no reason to
believe it (the plot) bas any basis of
fact."
Sex Po ste1· Brings Arrest
Of Hippie Shop Owner
San Clemente police -acting on
their own while, the District Attorney's
office is still considering the matter -
arrested the co-owner of a con-
troversial psychedelic shop \Ved-
nesday for sale of a sexy poster.
James Colwell. 20, co-owner of The
Mind Garden, 204 S. Ola Vista, was
W ho's to Bla me
For Fewer Ar t
Festival Banners?
Will they be sharing credit or blame
for Festival of Arts baMers?
The question of fewer banners
heralding the art spectacular was
raised this Week by chamber director
Harry Moon.
J-le s u g g e s t e d the chamber
cooperate to publicize the event end
sa.id it would be difficult for ''someone
coming intO Laguna Be a c h to be
aware of the Festival of· Arts."
Verner Beck, a festival director,
said the Festival has in the past been
criticized for the quality Of the ban·
ners. This year, he said, there are
rewer but more expensive banners.
"Now we're being criticized for
fewer; I suggested we don't have
ar.y," said Beck.
Moon suggested that gallery owners
would be willing to chip in for ct couple
of banners. He called for a joint effort
to let people know about the Festival.
With a twinkle , Beck suggested that
the chamber help design the future
banners then the chamber could help
"take some of the blame."
booked on suspicion of contributing to
the delinquency of a minor as the
result of selling the poster to a 13-
year-old girl.
The multi-colored poster depicts a
boy and girl having intercourse as
described in ancient books on the art o flo ve.
Col'"'·cll l•:as released on his own
recognizance without having to post
bail on the charge after arraignment
before Judge Richard 1-lamilton in
South Orange County Municipal Court.
Colwell faces preliminary hearing
on the charge Aug. 20 at 10 a.m ., and
the suspect say he will plead not guilty
and request a jury trial.
A possibility exists that th e
American Civil Liberties Union may
step in, since Miss Cyndi Wild, 17, Col·
well's partner and fiance, bas said the
ACLU is interested in their case .
Several hundred irate San Clemen-
te<tns are pressuring the City Council
to take steps to close The Mind
Garden by revoking the business
license issued in the name ot Colwell's
mother.
Just whether the city has legal
grounds tor such acti on is still being
questioned, but San Clemente Police
Chief Clifford Murray said Wednesday
that his department fou nd Colwell had
violated the law in the sexy poster
sale.
The San Clemente Chamber of Com·
mcrce and the U n i t e d Presbyterian
Church are urging a vigilante group
and other measures to guard against a
takeover by hippies, amesult of
much rumor and the Mind Garden in-
cident.
The City Council recently passed a
law prohibiting sleeping in vehicles on
public or private property as one
safeguard.
ED ITI ON
r LAG UNA BEACH, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, :JULY 25, 1961
ro
Laguna Canyon Crash
FIERY CANYON CRASH -Westminster motorist
Kenneth E. Hunt's car was totally destroyed when
it crashed and burned Wednesday night on Laguna
Canyon Road. Car was fully engulfed in flames
(upper photo} before Laguna Beach firemen arriv·
eel to extinguish it. Hunt's auto collided with a deer
and auto driven by S~ndra K. Silka of Laguna
Beach. Both Hunt and Miss Silka suffered serious
injuries but are in satisfactory condition today.
Nixon Not Idle During
Sojourn in Cameo Shores
Richard M. Nixon . guarded by
rederal and Newport Beach officers at
the home of Judge and Mrs. Thur·
mond Clarke. in ·cameo Shores.
Corona de! Mar, may have retreated
to s o m e degree of ooUtude, but in·
dications are that he has not been idle
during his week-long exile from the
rigors of th<! political world.
R. E. Haldman, the former vice
president's chief of staif said Wed·
nesday that four papers have been
prepared b)' the GOP contender for
Stack Marke t•
NEW YORK · (AP) -The stock
market fell sharply 'lllursd<>·· a!·
ternoon in active tradlng. (See quota-
t1ons, Pages 10-11).
presentation to the platform com·
mittee o! the na tional convention.
The papers reportedly deal with
Nixon's positions on V i etnam ,
economy, Jaw and order and urban
problems. Apparently breaking his
April l call !or a moratorium on Viel·
nam discussion by the presidential
candidates. Nixon will give his paper
to the committee during it! hearingi;
in Miami Beach before the GOP
convention Aug. 5.
The NixOn aide would give no inkling
n[ the contents or the former vice
president's papers.
Lt. Gov. Robert II. Finch, who
directed Nixon's Presidential cam·
p<Ugn in 1960 met with Nixoo Monday
night.
2 Deer Blamed
For Lag una
Canyon Accident
Two deer prancing across Laguna
Canyon Road Wednesday night caused
a flery headon collision that seriously
injured a Laguna Beach woman and
another driver.
Sandra Silka, 26. of 264 Dolphin
Lane, and Kenn eth E. Hunt, 23, of 8711
Jennrich, \Vestmin.ster, are both in
satisfactory condition after their cars
collided at 10:39 p.m.
The incident took place about one
mile north of the El Toro. Road in·
tersection, 300 yards out.Side of the ci·
ty limits.
Laguna Trash Costs to Rise?
Nixon arrived about noon Monday at
the Orange Cou nty Airport, and was
taken to !he secluded Clarke home in
Cameo Shores. Heavily guarded by
Secret Service and local law en·
forcement officers, Nixon has been
meeting with aJdes and relaxing at the
Corona del Mar residence.
The California Highway Patrol sa1d
Hunt was travelling north on the road
when he saw a deer lpp!'Oximately 100
yards ahead. Another d<e1' jumped out
immediately in front of him . Hunt
jammed his brakes, and they locked
up. Police said he sUd over the cen·
terllne, hitting the deer. His car col·
tided with the car driven by Miss
SUka.
Hunt said he didn't see the other
car, o!Ocers reported. Miss Sllka, 1a1d
&he did not see Hunt's car. Continued "fine tr as h aervi<."e in
Leguna Beach" may cost residents
more than the dime hike asked by the
con tr actor.
This seemed the consenst.14 ol coun-
cilmen at an informal study session
Wednesde.y.
JOO.n H. Lindley, owner of Laguna
lloadl Disposal Service, lnc., had ask·
ed for a dime-per-month·per-unit in·
crease, the first increase in nine
years.
Llndtey's company now receives
11.45 monthly for each unJt collected.
The city takes onotheT nlcklo for bill·
Ing residents plu1 8.3 percent ot the
11.1!.
·'
City Manager James D. \Vheaton
estimated th at penonnel costs for
the billing had probably risen 50 per·
cent in nine years. Maypr Glenn Ved-
der suggested the price per month fo r
trash and garbage collection be in·
cr.,.,,.d to 11.75.
The city would then receive 20 cents
plus 8.3 percent of Llndley's $1.55 per
unit. Vedder said residents have prais·
ed Utt! sanitary service and would not
object to the hike.
Councilmen will Uke.ly act on the
matter Aug. 7.
A Dew contract will likely also cut
back the present goarbage collection to
once weekly.
Trash is now collected once and
garbage twice weekly. IIowever,
Wheaton estimated that of 4,500
subscribers to the service~nly 350 use
the second garbage colleetlon. Jie &aid
ttle extent of that use varies greatly.
The city manager said co-mingling
of garbage: and trash is now allowed
but wMn't when the contract was Rt
up In 1959.
Wheaton spoke of the dUQculty of
collecting for rubbish dlspollll 1n
Laguna because ol the 25 pettent
vacancy rector and summer Influx of
(SU GARBAGE, P11• l)
Little Change_ Due
In Postal Service
There may be setbacks nationwide
in the postal system, but the change in
Laguna Beach and lta outlaying ~as
will hardly be notl<ed.
The only cutbacks planned at this
time, according to local postaJ
authoriU.., 11 U.. ellminatlon af Satur-
day window service, to begin this
Saturday.
A11 other services will conUnue as
they have been, lncludln1 ·Saturday
home deUverlcs.
Miss Sitka sulfered cuts on the left
side Of her chin, and a broken jaw. She
Is in salitfactory condition at the
South Coast Community Hospital, a
spokesman said. lier sports car
recelvtid major damage on the left
front side.
Hunt's '64 model sedan caught fire, /!'! was destroyed. Hunt suffered se·
cond degree burno oa the left 1ide al
hit face, hla left arm and hand. He lJ
also in satisfactory condltlon.
The CHP reported thot tbe County
Animal Shelter pi.eked up the remains
of the deer, for poaalble use u food at
lbe coun\y jail.
TEN CENTS
ose
Councilman
Cites Need
For Police
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of ... DMIF ,. Staff
A Lagmia Beach councilma.'s dash
with hippies blocldllg bis business en-
trance lead Wednesday night to a push
for police patrolmen afoot in the
business area.
Councilman Richard G o I d b e r g
detailed his Tuesday encouoter at the
entrance lo F'ads &: Fancies, m s.
Coast ·mghway.
He called for an immediate beefing
.up of enforcement to control hippies.
Cowicil opinions varied during a pro·
trated discussion of the tacties and
philosophy of law enforcement.
Goldberg said his wife phoned him
that eight hippies were blocking the
shop entrance and refused to move
when both 5he and the candy shop pro-
prietor next door asked.
Goldberg said he told his wife to cal)
police and then drove to the store
from Boat Canyon Shopping Center.
BLOWING FLUTE
"There they sat," he said. "One
blowiDg a flute. Another one said, 'I
feel so wonderful. I could just fly .'
Another one said he felt like a piece ot
clothing going through the washing
machine."'
The irate councilman said he told
the hippies to ge t out and they said,
"peace, brother, peace." Goldberg
said he warned that they would have
peace in the city jail when he signed a
complaint.
Five minutes later. said Goldberg,
two motorcycle officers drove up and
said, "Where are they?" Goldber&:
said he asked. "Where were you!"
Goldberg said t'he officers told him
they were two-thirds of the police force
at the time since officers who bad
worked overtime at the weekend Jove.
Jn were given compensation time ott.
Goldberg asked what wOutd · ·have
happened had a robbery or other crime
been in progress.
The businessman made a proposal
"to see that the city of Laguna Beach
take direet action to stop continued
harasS"merit or merchants in Laguna
Beach.
"I feel that the merchants would be
more than happy to pay for unifonn
poUce on a beat in _ the downtown
area."
ASKS INCREASE
He proposed an increafie ifi the
business license fees of 50 percent -.nd
proposed that artists rm Laguna Beach
(now exempt from business license
fee) pay $15 annually. He estimated
that there are l ,OOC artists in Laguna.
City Manager James D. Wheaton told
Goldberg he had been given incorrect
information. He said there were two
patrol cars and two motorcycle Of•
ficers on duty at the time so that the
motorcycle officers represented half
the patrol, not two-thirds. He said
there were also other regular day
personnel at the police depar tment.
Councilman Joseph O'Sullivan said
Police Chief HBn'y Labrew felt he
could not justify foot patrolmen
because of the topography of Laguna
and other matters.
O'Sullivan said if a foot patrolman is
placed downtown, perhaps another
would be needed at Sleepy llollow or
clsewhere.
O'Sullivan said he knew lhe city
(See PATROL, Pa1e !)
Oraage c;oaac
We aCber
In spite of Carly morning
haziness, Orange countians can
expect clear afternoon skies
with temperatures ranging in
the seventies for the nest few
days. Today's water tempera-
ture is 70.3 degrees.
INSW E TOD,\ l'
I/ you must borrow, financial
writtr Si.itvfa Porter Celfl you
how to go about i t in a column
. un Page 10 toda11. ·-• =-• Ctll""'lli , .. C .... lfi.; ft-I; --1 .. 11 ,_ .. ,..,.. .. ,.... • -.. _ _,,, • --• --" --• --, .. .,
••""'114 "-" -.... httltaa.-• .. .... .,...... ,..11 ·-1 .. 11
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MlrM lt-c .. .. -• ... .._ u --..
-------------------
'/
' I
' -----~---~~-----' ---~ ' Jr IWLY PILOT Th-. Jul1 2S, 1968
DAILY PILOT IWf .......
Laguna Hillside Blackened
Firemen work on black section of hillside while pump operator and
kids look on after two blazes broke out on hillside. The first was caused
by a firecracker, the second by sparks from first. Location was 1340
Morningside Drive.
Solo Yachtswoman Vows
Never to Do That Again
By ALMON LOCKABEY
DAILY PILOT •OIHnt ldllor
HONOLULU -Peggy Slater. who
embarked on a solo sail cruise to
Honolulu June 30 with "nothing to
prove", proved something to herself.
<lJt was a stupid thing to do. I should
never have tried it," the 48-year-old
:'achtswoman told a news conference
after being brought ashore from a
Coast Guard cutter.
Miss Slater was taken from her 43-
f oot sloop Valentine JI Tuesday by a
Japanese freighter which had respond·
ed to her W'gent "mayday" message.
She was later transferred to the Coast
Guard vessel
Miss Slater's boat was located 400
miles south of the island of Oahu, her
original destination, after she had sent
urgent messages requesting help.
"I wouldn 't have believed where
was," Miss Slater told interviewers.
GOOD POSITION
"The Coast Guard had given me a
line of position, and I took it for a
course," she explained. This· meant
1he would have been sailin g in the op-
posite direction from the island ,
The bruised · and battered Miss
Slater said her troubles started last
Thursday when she went forward on
Valeotine JI to jibe the head's!. A wave
washed her and the sail overboard and
the motion of the boat dragged the sail
under the bull and pinned Miss Slater
again.It it. She was secured to the boat
DAILY PILOT
i.. ......... C.llhnS.
ORANGE COAST PVllLISHlNG COM,.~NY
RoD•rt N, w.,d
,.rn!dml 1114 Publl~
J•tk Jt Curl•Y
Vice Praldenl -'"' c;.r.n1 Mfllf"'
Thom•' K•••il Edlll>f
Tholl'lll A. M1Hphin•
...,,.11111111 Edlklr
Rich•rd ,, N•ll P1 ul Ni11111
L111'11M Ifft!\ Aotvertl•lllf
Cit~ Edi1or Director
~IMdiOffk•
222 For11t Av•.
M1lllnt Addr•n: P.O. lol! 666 92651 .....,_
CO.fl"'-! m Wist l•'f s"'"' """"°" &ffd'I: nu wnt h lbl:I• k<llW•" HWlt!Mta! hldl: at Slh $1'111
,,
by a safety line which she used when
leaving the cockpit
"1 was over the s l de two hours,
clinging to the rail by my elbows be·
fore" another wave tossed be back on
board," she laid
Exhausted and bruised, she radioed
Coast Guard Honolulu to ask for a
bearing. In her dazed and exhausted
condition she mistook the bearing
from Honolulu as a course to steer,
she explained.
"I have to believe I was having
hallucinations," said Miss Slater. "I
was so tired 1 didn't know what 1 was
doing."
TOO TIRED TO EAT
The red-haired yachtswoman said
her troubles were compounded when
she became too tired to eal She said
she had periods of blackout and
ge nerally ceased to function.
"I don't know how long I would
black out, but it must have been
lengthy. When I would wake up I
would have new injuries," said Miss
Slater,
Her later messages became more
urgent. "Help me, I'm lost and ex·
tremely tired. It's blowing like hell,
hurry up!" were messages logged by
the Coast Guard befure her boat was
spotted by an aircraft.
\Vhen Miss Slater left Marina del
Rey June 30 she termed her solo
voyage a "fun vacation."
The fun ceased when she got in the
squally trade winds within 500 miles of
Honolulu.
BOAT ADRIFT
Miss Slater said her K-43 Valentine
JI was still adrift but that the Coast
Guard would attempt to get a line
aboard and tow it to Honolulu.
"I hope nothing happens to the boat,
but at this point I'm only thankful to
be alive. I would never try such a
thing again," she said.
Mi ss Slater is a sailor of life-long ex·
perience and has done considerable
single-handed sailing In her various
boats along the California coast.
Her overboard experience i s
reminiscent of her younger days when
she fell overboard from a 26-foot sloop
w b i l e en route Crom Newport to
Catalina and had to swim several
hours before she could get a hand on
the boat and hoist herself back
aboard. ,
Miss Slater said she would rest up in
Honolulu before flying back to the
mainland.
"I'll probably ship ValenUne U back.
One thing is for surt, I'll never sail
alone again," she vowed.
Struck in France
PARIS (AP) -A gold medal in
memory ot J o h n F. Kennedy and
Robert F. Kennedy has been issued in
France.
One side of the medal has P"O(iles ol
the brothert, with dates of birth and
de.alb forming the outer ring. The
other side has a variation of the great
aeal of the United States.
From P,.e l
PATROL •••
maoacer Wll ID tho procell C( tighten•
inc up Ibo city lolterlnc law. Wheaton
Hid it would be a recommendaUoa. at
the AU(. 7 c...,cil meeting.
O'SUlllv111 llld police do lea ..
patrol can llld, ro "" fool petrol He
said he felt a patrolman with a cat
wu more effideat uae of manpower
than a patrolman on' tool
He -aid be w~ want lo aee a
recommendation from the police chief
beJore acting. O'Sullivan said ad·
ditiooal police could not be secured in
less than six weeks. He mentioned the
importance of picking top quality men
for the task of carrying a gun and
making rapid-fire decJJions .
Said Goldberg with feeling:
~·Joe, I didn't have a gun but I got
them up and moving. I'm not talking
about a gun or a club. I'm talking
about someone in authority."
ONCE AN BOUR
Detailing a physical area that would
need to be covered Wheaton explaiDed.
that a foot patrolman would likely not
past a given point any more fre·
quently than one each hour or bour
and a half. He said hippies would learn
th• pattecn.
Goldberg Hid the hippies he routed
have not returned.
"But, you are not the fuzz," said
Wheaton. "This ls part of the hM'ass•
ment game being played with the
Police department.'"
Wbtaton ah:o said t:bat the police
chief had been· delaying certain
recommendations until councilmen
e e t t I e the salary question f o r
munlcipal employes. "We are now the
lowest paid department ID Orange
County," the city manager said.
Wheaton mentiooed 81.so that it ls
dlfficult motivating officers to become
beat patrolmen.
Said Goldberg, 1'Tbese are not
ordinary times and not ordinary
circumstances. I don't like it any bet-
ter than you like it or the chlef likes it."
He said be felt the council would be
derelict in its duty U action is not
taken. ''I'm sorry to disagree," said
Goldberg ·~but, thk is my feeling and
the feelin,g of 75 to 80 percent of the
merchants in town."
MORE APPEAR
Mayor Glenn Vedder suggested to
Wheaton that the routine of officers be
rescheduled so more appear along
Coast Highway. O'Sullivan t o 1 d
Goldberg he could have made a
citizen's a.nest. Goldberg uid be
couldn't hold an eight hippies,
During discussion of parking meter
officers, Goldberg said, "there's no
reason traffic enforcement couldn't
move these people along and help the
situation by giving more than parking
tickets. He suggested uniforms more
blue in color that look more like police
unUorms for the meter men.
Counclhnan Charlton Boyd said
many sociologists would agree with
Goldberg's push for foot patrolmen
but for different reasons. He spoke of
a revolution overtaking the country in
police work in which police become
more friendly with the people.
Goldberg said be was not talking
about economic panic but the imege of
the community.
Boyd cautioned against reacting out
of panic. Council opinion concensus
w.as not clear but ttie matter will like~
Jy come up ~ Aug, 7.
Jury Trial Slated
For ManAccused
Of Defacing Flag
William Reid Parker, held on
charges of the July 4th defacing of a
huge American Flag at the Tolo, Inc.
plant on Newport Freeway, will face a
jury on Aug. 6 in Central Municipal
Court in Santa Ana.
Parker, 23, free on $125 bail on the
misdemeanor charge, was arrested in
Costa Mesa . He form erly lived in
Tustin and was traced through the
license number of his car.
Santa Ana detectives picked up
Parker at 2280 Pacific St. July 24.
They said be was sharing an apart·
ment With three or four friends .
He was allegedly caught spraying
with black paint across the 20 by 3(}..
foot Flag, "Vietnam, 25,23S Dead,
151,344 Wounded."
The men who stopped to try to ap-
prehend him said he was wearing a
beard and had long hair, When ar·
rested, Parker was clean shaven and
bad a normal haircut, the detectives
said.
From Page l
GARBAGE •..
visLOOrs.
He said many don't undmtand the
regulations and use large paper bags
and boxes inatead of oontaJners.
Councilmaa Richard Goldberg sug·
gested publishing the regulations.
Councilma n Joseph O'Sullivan noted
that the city currenUy has no effective
way to force a user of th e service to
pay.
The mayor suggested that Wheaton
bring forth e recommendation et ttie
next meeting.
65-foot Fall Hurts
PARKERSBURG, W, Va. (AP)
Mrs . Henrietta Winn, 35, fell about 65
feet from a bJghwire motorcycle act
Wedn••daf nlghl while performing
with her hlUband Hans In the Shrine
circus here.
DAii. Y PH.OT ltatf f'lll1t
No Longerto Be a Lodge
Demolished building was, at one time, the Crescent
Bay Lodge, located at 1187 Marine Drive in Laguna
Beach. Before that, though1 it was the Masonic Hall
in Long Beach. It was brought down from the north
when the COast Highway was opened more than 40
Y.ears ago. The lodge, later used as apartments, was
torn down in order to make room for an olympic
size swimming pool. The historic building was call ..
ed the oldest building in Laguna Beach. The swim-
ming pool will be one of the biggest pools in Laguna
Beach, according to O\vner Harry Howard.
Car Strikes Down Girls Youth Finds His
Surfboard · and
Marijuana Farm On CdM Traffic Island
Four girls st.ancMng at a traffic
island in Corona del Mar were struck
down by a Coota Mesa woman's car
nwrsday afternoon.
one of them, witnesses told police,
was dragged 70 feet. She is Debbie
Zllnmerman, 12, of 4607 Ho!lnlpden
Road, Cameo Shores.
The girl sulft;red multiple injuries.of
the spine, according to Hoag Memonal
Hospi·tal spokesmen. She was oot
paralyzed. Her condition today wa s
listed as "im1'i'oved, but still serious."
Less severely burt in the 2:20 p.m.
accident on East Coast Highway at the
enU'ance to Cameo Shores were :
-lJ11a Nunl1, 12, of 297 Crescent
Bay Drive, Laguna Beach.
-Lanra Davit, 14, of 216 Jasmine
St., Corona del Mar.-
-Ber tlster, Kimberly, 11.
'Ibe Davis girls were treated at
Hoag for cuts mid released, but Miss
Nunis was hospitalized.
Authorities 6'8id she was in fair con·
dition this morning with lacerations
and abrasions of tti.e lower Mck, ab·
domen , forearm and a fractured
pelvis.
The California Highway Patrol said
the four girls were standing on the
traffic island, waiting to cross the
street, when a southbound car driven
by Mrs. Patricia M. Graham, 49, of
716 James St., Costa Mesa , plowed in·
to them.
Mrs. Graham was arrested on suspi·
cion of drunken driving.
Earthquake Strikes
BER KE LEY, Cali!. (AP)
An earthquake measuring 7 on the
Richter Scale struck in the South
Pacific today, the University of
California seismograph station at
Berkeley reported.
Billy Lee Lejeune had his two
surfboards stolen this week and be
didn't wait for police to find them.
Billy discov ered the boards himsell
and accidentally led sheriff's deputies
to a thriving marijuana "farm".
Billy, who lives in Dobeny Trailer
Park near San Juan Capistrano
discovered tbe boards leaning against
a house near the beach.
He called the sberiff's office and led
deputies to t h e home when they ar·
rived. There they found Eric S.
Ingram, 21, and Michael G. McCann,
21 , both of 26135 Victoria St., San Juan
Capistrano.
Deputies in checking the residence
claim they found 200 marijuana plants
growing in the backyard. They booked
Ingram and McCann on marijuana
possession charges as well as on the
surfboard theft cC>unt.
SOFA CLEARANCE
al _jJ. J. (Jarrell
ALL HERITAGE
Upholstered Pieces
20 0
OFF REGULAR
PRICES
Ov•r 200 Styl•s of Sofas -
Chairs -Lov• S••fs -Otto·
mans in you r choice of any
. H•rit•g• D•cor•tor f•bric,
H•ltote 86" Sot. -Fabric
netural back9round with
aquamist -Floor sample
sold ·as is. Was $-44,,
I Ft. Carred Soha. tufted in
oliv1 vtlv1t. Wes $680.
TomHlllOll I Ft. Sofa tufttd
fabric -9•r1nium vtlvtt.
Was '950.
I Ft. Tondo Gold Yel'"t
Sofa -Loos• Pi llow.
A 10fa you'll
about it.
Abo many other fine sofas in addition to
Heritage - a few are listed below
NOW McGR.til• CCMndl 100"
s299 Sofa. Down and 1prin9 -
fabric, n•tural background
I m•rint. Was 'SO.
100" W. Marfltx construe.
tion, hi1h erm, natural with
ol ivt fa ric. Was •595.
NOW
s499 --.:o
Herftoge 100'' Sofa in n•·
tur1I vtlvtt with •qua -
floor s•mplt. Was $805, I NOW
S695
SPECIAL
s349 9old, ton•
'.Your ftvorit• int•rior dtsignar will be happy to 11si1 t you • • •
H.J.GAl\l\fIT fURNrplRE
NOW
S695
NOW
s399
NOW
s599
llOFISS10MAL
INTERIOR DESI-
..... ,... ...... _ 211 I HAI'°" 11. ¥0.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
M6-0275 M6-C1276
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J Countian
9 Men ..
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Indicted
Rising Costs
End Bolsa
For Grand Theft Desalt Plant
Nine persons, lncluding a Fountain
Valley man, were indicted Wednesdy
by the Or&Qge County Grand JW'y for
' ' conspiracy to commit grand theft, and
five counts of grand theft.
Arrested Wednesday were Gustave
Galu, 39, of 1179 La Rosa Lane, Foun-
tain Valley; Lyman Garber, Beverly
Hills; Fred K. Dell, Elmhurst, UJ, and
Robert Hayes Sr .. Wheaton , Ill. Galas
was freed on $6,250 bail.
District Attorney Cecil llicks said
the inducted persons operated through
Americans Building constitutionally,
non.profit trust headquartered in
Barrington, Ill.
The operation which is the subject of
the indictments involved making false
representations to individual! that in
. seUing up ceritain for.ms of trusts and
foundations tile individuals would be
able to avoid inheritance and estate
taxation upon death.
HickJ said the defendanta obtained
money from individuals f~ the
purpoSe oC instruction and assistance
in setting up ttie trust.s and foun·
daUons.
The money involved approximated
$20,000 in Orange County and many
thousands more in the statewide ac·
tivities of the firm.
Testifying to the importance of the
case to Jaw enforcement officials, the
presentation to the Grand Jury was
made by the office of the state At·
torney General, Hicks said.
This is becacse of the statewide
scope of the operation and the
responsibility of the Attorney General
to prevent abuse in the operation of
tax exempt trusts, Hicks said.
UPIC ..........
Blaiberg Recovering
Dentist Pbilip Blaiberg, world's longest surviving bearl lr'!"splant
patient, is apparenUy recovering from recent relapse. He smiles and
gives victory sign from his bed.
By WILLIAM REED
Of tM Dlllr Plllt Slllfl'
Bobe Islalid, planned to house the
world's Largest nuclear power and
desalting plant, was scuttled Wed·
nesd_ay,
It was the victim o( C06'ts rising too
high to maintain the interest of those
who hiad pledged only last year in a
Newport BeaOO. confere~ to build tbe
hu~ plant offshore of Huntington
Beacti.
Announcement t h a t the nuclear
plant won't be built after all came
Wedne sday a f ternoOn from
Washington, D.C. after two deys of
high level meetings during which the
Soul!hern California Edison C o ,
reportedly led oppc>sition to CilD·
tinuation of tile island project.
Czechs Warned to Brace North Vietnam Buildup
Reported in Highlands
Interior Secretary &tewart Udall
and Atomic E nergy Commission
Chairman Glenn T. Seaborg, both of
whom presided in Newport Beach last
year over a much publicized contract
signing session for the Bolsa project,
announced that "an alternate plan is
being examined for S o u t h e r n For Russ Showdown Talks KILLED PLANT
PRAGUE (AP) -Czechoslovaks
were warned today the forthcoming
showdown talks with the Soviet Com-
munist party Politburo will be "very
difficult." They were urged to support
the reformist Prague leadership with
a new demon.rt.ration of confidence.
The comments came in an editorial
in Prace, the newspaper of the 5.3
million-strong Czechoslovak Trade
Union Federation. Prace said the con-
tinuation of attacks on the liberaJiza.
lion drive and its exponents indicated
the meeting will bring a tough con-
frontaUon.
The editorial specifically rejected an
East German Politburo statement
Wednesday that accused t be
Czechoslovak Communists of not doing
enough to strengthen socialism "with
aH means of state power."
The Polish Communist p a r t y
newspaper Trybuna Ludu came oot in
Warsaw today with a similar attack. It
accused Alexander Dubcek's regime
of taking no action against "forces
hostile to socialism" that the orthodox
Communist nations contend a r e
flourishing here.
In Budapeet, the Hunprian Com·
munist party paper Nepszabadsag ap-
\
pealed to Czechoslovakia "not to let
the same thing happen that led to the
all-out counterrevolution in Hungary"
in 1956.
This was the uprising finally crush-
ed by orthodox Hungarian Com·
munists with the help of Soviet tanks.
Nepszabad:sag said the s i tu at i o n
in Czechslovakia resembled that in
Hungary, when those who "voiced
slogans of democracy, Uberty and
!reedom of criticism, once they grab·
bed power ... tried to silence everyone
wit.ti different views."
Referring to the East German state-
ment, Prace decLared demands for a
policy reversal mean interference in
the sovereignty of the state, "an at-
tempt to change the conditions of life
in Czeehaslovakia ... which is social-
ist by the will of the population a n d
will undoubtedly remain so."
"We can therefore expect the
forthcoming talks ... will be very dif-
ficult.'' it said. "In this situation we
think it will be useful to show con-
fidence in the Presidium and in
Comrade Dubcek on a broad scale, to
reassure them with tens of thousands
of resolutions and statements."
SAIGON (AP) -A North Viet-
namese buildup in a new Mea ol the
central highlands alerted U. S. of-
ficials Thursday to the possibility that
the next enemy blow may be struck
tlhere.
In response to tti.e threat, U.S. 8526,
t.ie heavyweights of the !'.ir Force,
struck six times Wednesday and early
Thursday in ttie area north of Ban Me
Thuot, capital of Darlac Province.
"If there's going to be any action, it
looks oow like it will be in Darlac Pro-
vince," a senior U.S. officer said.
"1bere are good s i z e d con-
centrations in there," another officer
reported. "You might say they have
rehabilitated the area."
BM Me Thuot is about 110 miles
south of the area of Kontum, hitherto
considered the most likely point for an
enemy drive designed to cut South
Vietnam in two.
But intelligence reports say • the
North Vietnamese in the Kontum area
near the borders of Cambodia, Laos
and South Vietnam have been on the
m ove to the south.
There was no estimate of the size of
the furce moving into Darlac Pro-
'Vince. But enemy forces deployed in
the ~ntral higtllands previously have
been identified as six regiments, each
of a'bout 1,500 men.
A new outbreak of fighting in the
highlands would be in line with enemy
strategy of doing the unexpected. For
months the focus of the enemy threat
h a s been on Saigon and in the far
north.
There have been sizable buildups of
allied troops around Saigon and in the
oorth to counter the t h r e a t s .
Mean..wu.Ie, the highlands have been
relatively quiet with no major fighting
since tile battle of Oak To last Novem-
ber.
Tusk Found iu Baja
TIJUANA, Mexico (tJPI) -A 5'n·
foot elephant's tu1k, buried in 20 feet
of sand and which may date back over
40,000 years, hail been uncovered on
the beach n e a r this Mexi<::an border
txlwn .
In effect, the announcement killed
the artificial island plant. Phlncipla
reason for the demise of the plan, ooce
bailed as the hope of the world, was
rising costs -up from the $444 mill ion
original cost estimate to $'765 million
this spring.
Tu have participated in the project
were the Southern California Edison
Co ., San Diego Gas and Electric Co.,
the Los Angeles Department of Water
and Power, the Department of Saline
Water of the federal government, the
Atomic Energy Commission and the
Metropolitan Water District.
Huntington Beach Mayor Alvin Coen
told the DAILY PILOT today t1"1t he
believed the reason the plan to build
the atomic power and desalting plant
on an artificial island just off the
coastiine of tbe city is being shelved is
that "the Sout.hern California Edison
Co. backed out in the face of
escalating costs.
"We (the city) were in favor of the
plant because of increased assessed
evaluation and the possibility of a boat
harbor as well as believing that the
plant would do much to solve the
power and water problem of Southern
California. We too, believe the plant
may have helped to solve some o{ the
world's water problem.
Security Bank's newest branch opens for business Friday, July
26. To celebrate this happy event, we're having a Housewarm-
ing Party. Drop in for refreshments any time from 10 a.m. to
6 p.m. There will be a memento from our flower cart waiting
for you. We look forward to meeting you. * At our new South
Corona del Mar Branch you'll find the convenience of safe
deposit, in addition to regular banking services.
OPEN A "GOLD" CHARTER ACCOUNT! Regular individual Checking
and Savings Accounts opened between July 26 and Augu11t 9
entitle you to a special bank book, designating you as a "Gold"
·Charter Account Customer.
South Corona de! Mar Branch, 3435 East Coast Highway -John 0. Ballard, Manager Joan P. Williama, Aast. ll!anager
Mw )'>"• finmv:ial port"'1" I
SECURITY PACIFIC NATIONAL BANK
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OAll y PllOT II
JUNIOR COLLEGE TRUSTEE
John O'Hera Smith
Banker Replaces
Walter Longmoor
On OCC Board
Corona del M¥ resident John
O'H•ara Smith was selected Wed-
nesday ni ght to serve as a trustee of
Orange Coast Junior Colle~e District.
Smith, 37, of 1126 Ebbtide Road,
replaces long-time board member
w,alter Longmoor' who retired last
month. He was chosen from among
seven applicants to c o m p l e t e
l.cngmoor's term, which runs for
another year.
Smith said he is concerned about the
apatJ\y of a majority of the voters in
the junior coUege district and their
unwillingness to support bond issues.
"There is no question in informed
people's minds the junior college func-
tion needs to be performed," he said.
"The function of the junior college,''
he said, "is to make available educa·
tion to students who would possibly not
continue beyond high school because
of academic Standards and increasing
costs of higher education."
He said a junior college certificate
gives jo-b applicants "a better hunting
li cense." He said society has need of
trained technicians and a high school
education often is not enough to train
young persons for jobs they possibly
could handle.
The junior college .also is a vehicle
to higher education, he noted, for
students who after high school become
"a little more mature and a little bet-
ter able to understand what they want
to do."'
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All 11 of "-'-n llid l'r-
GwrNln'e OOdreli wei'e .bOt'll In
L;nn (Mu1ac~1111tti) lt0oplW.
Alid Ill hiJDilt of llie occaal · . No.
12 wu on the bOllll!. l!r . .:liu.m
G. l'rooor, llie obl)etiiclan wbo de.
livered the lint h Gortnan chll-
dl'in, ilio 1ilj>OMied !hi arrivlil
ol Nliic7 Wbo Wtijbed I pounds,
10 •llilcet. •
Cltlel Ktit11 .K:Hnger btgan hfl 18th
~tor u eht./ of the Lot Angelei Coun. tw ;trf DeJKatffhent and todl hmiored
~ Ii wr,rlee f'Or!y: TM ehitf tvmtd
tht fofJ!es and ShOU1ed ttp a! tht party
Iii lri! full fire fighting togalla, put
9ttt tht f~re mi the tdJC1!' nrtd fl'lade 4
hlJlt1I f:tlt. • A Te::tan haS discovered. that a
flll!ftblll~ 1& A g06d cHme prevent-
er. Michael \ferciecchl, 23, of San
Antonio h~ard someone sneaking up Ille ttaitl el his gerege eperl-
ll!Oftl iii !he mldaJe of !he night. He
ilrn!d h!S flash camera a\ \he door-
l>llJ' nd when a man walked in;
Verducchl .. flashed the cametA~ temp(!rariJY llllndllig \h! li'lln, and
tUn llugg.a h1iii on !lie cliin. PO. nee imslOd lhe .Prowler end \oOk
him IO !he hospltel. • --~--
ShaTDMt County wtid spraying
crt101 are ~straying a field of
mariquana eitimated to be worth
more than $1 million on the illi·
cit market after processing. The
Wf?td often grows wild in Kan·
IOI which may account for the
longing for "tht: green, green
oms• of home."
• Seattle police detective John
Dormedy 1o1 into tti>uble with e
police 40ff 11!Cently when \he Ger-
mall shepherd JumpM iOto the
open window of his car while the
officer was away from lhe vehicle.
"I tried to coax hint out " Der· " J, -mody said, "And When that didn't
work, I ordered him out. That did
not work either. He just cur!M up
his lip and remained in the back
seat like he owned the car." D~r
mody called for assistinl Officers.
They didn't get anywher• with the
pooch either. Finally, the embar-
rassed police officers ~ailed Hu-
mane Society dog catChf!rs Who
took the dog to the pound And \hen
called its owner.
House OKs -
Gun Control
Legislation
WASHillOTOM (AP) "' 'Ille HoUAe
-has appr0vod a ...... -bill falling
f• 1hort . Of President t1obillon'1
f~~~Ofii liiid Kii. Uilt II cMi to ~~ ~~~tidll la bbl Ii'
At the ii.me time Wedne""'' thl ~9~~ J¥<1lclory ·~OY«I •. ,olmllar meal"" 9-! .. ~ ....t ll to the floor.
'.nil H•::J!li ~id .al IQ
!JI lirlieff 61 -~ r1!il = wore lackid ...
<>De such amendment was ~.
criti.clzed ,by Rep. s ....... 1 Ce1ler D-
N.Y., l!halffi>ah Ill the l!Oiiii .r.aia-~ Whd lal8 II •ckfid grfl~
Nilffit !hi N-il RUie J1Sloel1tloti . eeuer called the i Iii • n d Iii e ti i ''dre~.·~. and ll:id Ui•t 1f it lutv:l'f~ he ~ .. ~ .. lllllal heerin , I lol b~ NRA 1~\Tiilcfi ee11er ~iila
"eib't ltadd the iig\t oi tlaY:"
The ailieodli!eet wli• lnirbdileed "1
1!>111-linl• NRA 111emller -L. Sl1!eoi.P..-l'."la .. and "QU!d .ei<clude from
flie bU.1.11 .~VlsiOlll Jt\f .Natianll Boon! lo< r;roiriouon ri Rlf)e J!racUce: :n~/h"·i:0!~'."'1 iroup cklielj allied
I!'!, lf>_e ,~, t110 !lei,,.. ihe blil: ~b "'!iie, lntersto)e .. sale of iines and shotguns f~ugb tbe mail
except by licensed deileri.
:....PrOliltiits Orii-Ute~eunter sale to
nenteiidenta Rcejlt te tltole tram cO!J<.
ti,uoui 1tatft. Thil wai ainended to
01;,; lllcli1de lhMe who sign ati. al•
Odavlt that !heir flr<enn wis loot:
itolen o; hid Wrime ihoperat:ln, Iri
the latter ins1'nce, the d!iter must
f<jlo<t Iii< sale lo tlie purcbaffr • s
pouee d.~--....:.PrOh!blts the matt order silt: of
ammunition for plalo1!,,,te•olvm ml
tlestn.ct:iVe Weapons. ·JlUS Wi! aihend:.
M to es:cJUde Ovei--the-c0unt'1-sales
for all emmunlUon ihd m&I miler
sales or immunftioh trn-tifles;
!hot~nS &nd rirhfired .t2 caliber
shells.
~Prohibits the •ale of 10ng guna to
anyone andtr 18 yaett Old and hand
~s to anyone under !1. AmmuJttlion
for tho!e tuns Could not be sold to
anyone In those age brackets.
-Prohibtts the salt! Of firearms ttl •
fugitive; a felon; one under ln;
dictmeitt ; a nstr M ftaltilttcs, or a
mental defecti•e.
~Requlreo that all.Jlt!IDDS ;,,gaging
ln business as a ftrNrfut or am•
inw)ltlon rrtanafactUJ:f!r, trnpOttet O?
dealer must have a Ucen$e. GuD clil-
iecto.• deallng In fh..aYl\!s at lliiioi or carios C'l7U!d obtain a ilcen~f! so they
could buy and sell ifJ interstate com:. meree.
Second Grizzly
Sliot in Attack
I n Y ellowslone
wEST YELLOWSTONE, M o .n t.
(UPI) -Yellowstone NaUobal Parlr:
rangers killed their 11econd gtlidJ in
three days after the bear attacked a
man flWin& near Yellowstone Lake,
perk officials said today.
The ~an, not identified, tried to run
Wheil tile big adult grizzly charged.
But He slipped and the bear !ell on him; The animal then ambled into the
woods. The man suffered only minor
scratches.
P.ark rangers went after the bear
Wit.~ a tranquilizer gun , But when the
animal charged the.m, they shot and
lulled it.
The incident came after a MOOtani.
fish and game warden killed 6 young
male grizzly near West YeUawstorre
that attacked a group of young
C8'1Tlpers, injuring two teen-age.t girls
and a boy from New York. ·
I f Leader Condd~
Black Panther s
Vo w Armed W ar
NEW YORll (UPI) ~ The rtillitillt
Black Ponther patty 1ald Wedilesdliy
that 1f 1tl leadir, &aclnl lhufiter
chw1es in CalUor'.MI, wu tiot 1et free
It would be almost !mp<iailble tO avoid
armed confllcll ln the ltreeta.
oiu there has to be war, then let p
tbtre be war " aald Ekirklle CleaVer, Dai ~~ apet• 1pokes1nan for Ille Nell'1J orlaninUan · f) J a
~by Huey P . N-. .....-of
killing"" Oakland pollcemen, Out o'U s· ·t·r~ke··· Clea'fer appealed at a new1 con-I • 11
reredce at Utt United Nill-p!llla
and ..... accompanied bi' •boll! io I c • t z· blacI.atd party meiill>ei'!. They ea me n . api a
to the t!ti.ited NaiiOnt Calling iOr
establishment of observer teama Jn WABHINGtoN (llPI) '-' A ltdiHI
tho Unltl!d StalOo Whei<!ln .l!IOCk peO-mfdlator taiiay tilltfd p.lil!ill<l't liiiil -~ t atriklng attreOly)>o!rt loatlh!t Iii in ff. :;;:.:.:;•';'1~.:""' concmtta ed In tort to •ntt a atrlki wlilcH ltittl <!Own
all three dally newspapers in the na· "11tis is necessary," Cleaver said, tion's capi.tal.
"Because the racist power structure An otiiclil 6f the F~al MedlatlGn
of thia imperialist country is preparinJ ~rvl.et l:ltdered • 3 ,E.lft. rneeijig
to ulll.,;;,h A..war QJ.lleft9cll)e a1alnst lle!W!l!b !M Wi!lilii"on l'lewsp-aper her Dlacli: COfonial subjects." l!i•
Cleaver said his group received Publishers Association and the
asslU'ances of support from the Cuban Stereotypers Union Local 19.
ODIN' THE NEW YORK DRAO -Resembling a group of square
dancer> doing a d<Hl'<lo1 p;,!leo collar i de!ftonstralor as :!00 Pul!rlo
Ricans ci>livtr'iled dn tile iJollce •talion In Ea!! Village. Wedneaday
night to protest the pta1ence of the Tactical Patrol Force in the
neighborhood. Four persons were arrested during the fourth straight
night of violence; A policeman was lnJtlted in the cla<h when lit wai
bit wilb a loaded tin can,
and. 'tanzaniftn rttissions. He said his The strike,. which be1a11 at I rJn.
patty would ~ly for the 1~tus of a Wedrte~y; .. fW~ed .the mo r fl n g "ttlSfi.-eovefll'ment Organtzailoii" to Washington Post to cancel its normal
represent America's blacks at the editions. The Post published an S.page
world _organization. news section and 18-pagt: tablbid
Reading fI"Om A pr~ed Sllltetn~lit, ad.Vi~_Siili &upple~~pt ,~i)icii wfre
CltA•er utd tilat if Newt.Ob Wtte fiat a I r e a d l U;i ....Pfirtt. J>e(~ t h e
turned loo!< "'111ere IS lltt!e ~ of itei'e<ifypers willieci off \lie jiib,
avoiding open, armed wac in the Pi~kei lines Were 1et.up at..lll lbi"ft .stre~p C/! ~!l}i!oraja $1ld of,pre'(!nUng !fatly. papen,. v.:bich .meant the Enn:.
ff lrom sweepmg acfoss the nation." ing S~ and . the Wuhin«t(711 DailJ
He sa.ld tha1 II NewtOii ii coftYiclea News also might not publish today.
mid t~U!DCt!d tO <leatH, it Would ~ave Other n'lecbi.iHCil:l ttniottli w--to be: dbne: ''clvEf wr aeii:d ooaJei.' 11a-.:s ''They \\!ill flAVe fO kill iii fifst," obs~iri£ lhf 8lere&typer8 ptCftt Httei
Violence Flare8 in Detroit;
New York Riots Continue
In• lli t. -.... · aftd rilem6erS bf the W88bf:nttoh Cl!ll'ver slid, aaa "' al nis ·dfgAruza-Newspapet Gulkl 'were tokl Ii> flftlih
UOh wotild not pumi! "old bald-liead-their al!if'-"··t lhe·n ~-er'"' p' ••"-' M r'll&t! 11-00 a r • -=eteriiiliied to ~ ~ ~ •• = ~tid flUh t<J me aas ~firmBer" to 1iiKI nnes,
DETROIT (AP) -Mck•lhrO..hig
cro•da im&!bed ~ wlndow11 ~ong Detroit's Uth Street earlf today
and ,pOllce..artisted 14 penon1 in COii"
nection with the disturbance.
"Looting was held to a minimum,"
said an officer ~ the lOU). Precinct,
whicll c6Vera the lilt! Sr,.! mi,
wtme Im """'!! mt li1 iiiooem
tizneriC.!ft history fint flared up a ye!r ago.
"II w91 mo.tiy &Oken wiiidow1 Uu. lime,11 " olfiiCer ,-·, 9ddiag thlt
W,iii :.O\ii/=Er. t~£!r=
M'8riat er lftUie. 8"t111lll 1
One c i v i I i a n resisting aITttt
reportedly suffered a minor IDJ!lfy.
Police in the u.. '#tire on I · tiCtiell
alert for ?;t nf:llifl, bUt the drt w ••
lilted ii ibOUI aan.
Meanwtttl@, icr0111 the rillte tn !len-
t.iii llarbor, polic!e repOrted c1lm
ovemlitl for the lira\ time Iii !Our
days.
Commenting on tht number of •·
rests in Detr<Nt earlier 111 the eftnlng,
a loth Pr•&ct offiCer oiO'.I IN
notnber WU "bot UOUIUi.I for l t\lghC
like this."
The State Police Operatlona c..ier
11!.~IJ.w>lioe. lald ll bed been Ill
contact with Detroit authorities during
the ni~ but were told "1t's a minor
problem and no a~ee WM need· ed.,"
The Stai. Police Mid fltey hod
!eftral peof>le on tbe meet, but they
were ff!tel!lgOD<e •fetits tild not
T.~ tlM tfi DO!ml i..t~m
-cori&cM!red tile worat in nfodern
hi<torr -began July 23 lollow,lnl •
jioll<e.rtl4 t! mi •il1<:oo.t1 a'lbliiftll
establishment.
[Q tht dll:Y• .... loll°"ed f!..Jltfs<>U• a1e.i ana 10<m~re esllii>Oled by th•
Kirner OofnmistiOn at betwHll ffO
MU flS ~!, OJM!Rh Nllref
Newton guilty arMl !lt:eCUte fi.liii. A statement . from the publl!heta
Agai!! the cetttral c o m m It i. e IP"'"'~ !ikl 11 fied propeied a aet, ~µin.nt fee!s ~,~100j1U. t damage11 at mote inmi.beri, au driised kl b?ic.lt shlrt!l, tletftent ealHftt fM it wige inctem: of
u.8.D i60o nuw trouser!; leathet jackets amt l>eret!:, Pl a Weel f« a t:ftree-ye.ir ct1ntraet
In New Vert, 1 . policeman wu aild Hie party member!, most trf .ttl~ th&t we\tl.d brini ~ stft'eotypers' pay
ellghtl1 lhjured early today And four ah10 were dre!!ed tn black tt'ltfl a few !d:li ~ fl87 a 1'ttk, • !1 peretnt m.
peQDl\8 "°'" itratM on the fourth wearing: brighUy cMottd Airtcan crease ovei Pf*!!elli rat!S. Jt iaJd the ....,..,c;uU,, night of di-ID a pre. tribal !hlrts; ch<eredo Ul!len lvanted oll lllcrea. of ~ a tlo~Uy . l''l<f!O Rican oection of A spo~eltnlln far California's PO."' week cv.r a lhree'~eei cOt!tract aM
!lie!iiieiasitivillii.i8iigiei. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiali. il<!iiI"tiileediiioimili~iirljliiiiil-•iiiil.Sioli~lifteiiiiE<IMi_iiil~ihieiiiil_ii]laj~ tritjt~ .. ~t-~~!~·
GIRLS & INFANTS:
CARTER'l UNDERWEAR I IA BY CLOTHES
KAjE GREENAWAY DRiSSlS
KARINDA a t.l.TALINA rLAYCLOTHES
MOJUD I BONNIE DOON SOCKS l TIGHTS
LADIES:
Stlttlfti CANis; l tffmt; 11.0USIS, TOPS, JACKm ,
DIUIU, SHIFTS, IUITS, SWIMSUITS l ACCW OllU
KOi.inoil AANCISCA cooiumi.lTls-
RIDUCID
1/3 TO 1/2
Ufa 1'0
Monsoon Season?
DllCONTlllUID COi.OU 6 99
10.00 SKIRTS a C»11s NOW •
CilllOll CHltt I UflNO CHCOIC .. IAm
ll9W 4.19
NOW 3.59
o/o
Eastern Seaboard Deluged by Heavy Rains
CaHfornl• te••et llh!Ha
A.lbl.o•lltl'lllltl ,, ..
AfldlW.~ ,, " "'"'"" " ff
81k1rtflelll " .. ,.,,,...rd: ,, ..
eO'lt• .. .. ..... " ~
CJl l<.ffO " ~
(11'<.lflNlll .. n
CtewtlllHI " " ....... .. • 8fi MoTllh ll ..
Dtlrotl .. ..
IE'lfilit M ..
fort WDl'fll .. " • 'Fmno .. ..
. Mt-" M .... "Honaluhr .. " v.s. s ............ """"" • • ~-CltJ .. ~
I.II \lf!lal •M • HH ...... r1ln1 '"" h!tll WINI• ilni<k ll'le Los "'""'" " .. t lll Wednffd1w, Clytf"' di-11 Ml1ml .. n
,,..,,,,,,.Im, P1., •lid 1tlllnt • reconl 11 Ml,.,.1ulf1t • .. N-Yont Cltv, ''" __ .. .. a _, Th411! '" lllCll el t l ln ~ tfl ... e'.A'" a Phli.dtli>hll ""'lie more !II.en J~ ;::..::: dlH fell 11 Ml-Im. Winds '"" . W. .. .. lo IO ml'" 11'1 '*ir, lllo'«I"' ott rwts, ...... .. ..
"""N"' lrfft Ind 11'11111"' 1 ~ PHO Roblb " " llledc -ti ~11111,,. Wiie Jlr1iltll c.1" II Phli..l!Dflll " " ..,,_....,Ill .... lfli.rtt1 :'11..,..,.,.. ,._,. '" i ·• 111CMt "' rt1" t ftn ~ EV 5 !'Ti '1'11#'11; ~...,,.,..ii.~ • I fltlltt., It 1 .... tM .... ffWfl .......
I '--it ..... w1-.. lilld Jle1"tl delt!Y ltN llllf'r .. .. 11r11 ... 1111111•. ·-.. M
Tiit r:: Ill :i: ..... M 9' • i .. •1'4 I I ft lrtft-1 I Ill .,. I ~-;··~= :i;i! K·~ ~ 41 W!c1t1 .. 1t:t....., -n ..... ,,. ft'IOIH'l!lll'I , • ......, Uft Fr11!(1k0 .. .. :frllhl·I"~~ I.Ir r.,.-:r..-i £ " I r.·~r.-:: •• iJ-i l'.l.I.":'..... l'l ll!l~ll'Wl
a
...
"' "' .n ,,
.M
••
••
.:~
1.lt ...
..
..
6.M MilaTI OFF
AND DOZENS MORE TOO NUMEROUS TO MINtlON liEkE
MEN & IOYS: IEDUCID
SLACKS, SPORTSHIRTS, OHSS SHIRTS,
toSO°lo swi1'1 T~UM!!; SW!ATER,, SWl!AT!HIRTS, 300/o rAJAMAS, JACKETS, SLIPPERS
MARTEX TOWELS ON SAU
SOYlllllON l'LAINS -REG. 2.50 NOW 1." REG. 1.50 NOW 1.2f, WASH C~Otl1 NOW 55c •
INVITATION SOLID TERRY DOWN -REG 1.50 NOW 2.50. REG. i,00 NOW l.?f, WASH CLOTH He
CITATION 50llll' = REG. 2.50 NOW 1.99. REG 1.10 NOW 1.lt. WAIH ~TH NOW He.
OPIM t:Jt TO l?fl ..... ,-"", ...
a.i.m-UDI
01 non cHAHL
""' .. ii , ..
)i;IAM .. -o. ... , ... ....,.
------,
Ill CGITA _,, IT'I
UNilltiv LOC.ATlt
At HAllOI .... Alll •.. .., ...
•
Prisoners Rwt
During Bus Ride
CHINO (UPI) -
Pr'-s on a bul trom!or·
riD( coavlctl, 1Dcludln1 ....
vkled '!rile 1llyer Dr. R.
Benard Finch, f r o m •
Tehachapi Slit• ~ to I
minimum 1ecurtty flclllty
Y.., rioted durinl the mid·
lliglJt ride.
Seventeen of the 41 coa·
vlcll. blocked off by 111 Iron
IMlh ocreen from tile guard
at the rer1r MMl tM <&river,
began tbelr hcu 1hortly
afte< IMviPf the 1llte flcill-
ty In Ken County 100 mii.s
nortl> ol bore. Flncb w11 not
...
.
See th•
MATIEL
TOY
FESTIVAL:
• s Friday & Saturday
Free Prizes ! !
on tho 1111 II 1t
FASHION ISlAND
Newport Center
.... .., tllo 17. " As the bul neared
~ eo m11 .. north o1
Los Angel11 tilt prilOner•
first · tried to upset the bu1
by standing up aDd rocking
in unison.
Unsuccessful in this at-
tempt they beean breaking
windows, ~ up tbe in· terior and throwing out seat
cushions. The rear guard,
uniable to resotte order fired tnr g .. at tile prloonero but
the gas blew into the
driver's compartment and
bamp«ed hiJ vision.
'lbe driver also was
unable to quiet the priaooers
..t>en he tried speeding up
arid swaying hil vehicle.
The driver called for help
on his radio and Loi Angeles
sheriff"• deputies a n d
~ IU&l>W"1 palrol
unlta tniled tbe bus • an
e!COl't tllroulill PAimdaie.
When the bus swung
eastward into San
Bernardino County, site of
the Qlino facility, it was
picked up by additiooal of-
ficers who followed it down
the San Bernardino
Freeway while the Nm•
paging prisoners cleaned out
anytlling loose in their ccm-
partment and distributed it
along the freeway.
'Jazz at Josef's'
COCKTAIL DANCING
EVERY FRIDAY
5:00 • 8:00 p.m.
JOSEF'S
2121 i:. COAST HIGHWAY
Corona dol Mer 673-1180
Clearance
Famous name brands
reduced to low, low
prices for quick clearance.
LINGERIE
BRAS
and
GIRDLES
PRICE
llShlons lor • • •
NEWPORT IEACH-F1tMon hland 17141 M4-0170
0,.11 ilaify 10 •·"'· te • p.111.: M.-. •11il Frl. +. t 1JO p.111,
o,." • L• F•m111• Cllert•, a.111tA.M'T~•r4 ., M•1fer Cli•'1•
1 DAILY "1.01' '1
Solons Wielcl Ax ~o Clear Backlog
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Biii. repeo11ng -boulinc
II"' -_.,. the P"qai'"" of le11aletlve aides
_. alUOll( the ICOIW of
me.._ CO!llipecl t o
defeat .. Jawmaktrl WCl'k·
ed todoy to complell tl!etr
1988 se1alon.
S-te Pr-nt pro tern mMtiPfl w tl>t pul>Uc. A
Hugb M. Burns (P.Frt1no) tlllrd wOIJld b&ve D&med a
olld the Senoia committee ll&to part ofter t h e
Md considered the M1u11natfct Dr. Martin
meuur.. "both In public Lutber Kine.
With tile measure b&vlnll!p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
an estimated potenuaI eo1t
of 11.a mllllon a yeor, tho
commltlat recommenclad
more study. Staff members
ore now Included In t b e
,,.gu1ar, Olld 1ooa lucr1Uve,
state emplo1"' peasfon IYI·
Checks Due
On Test
<Purses?
HAYWARD (AP)
Chancellor GleM S. Dumke
Moving belUd c 1 o s e d
doors, .. and into executive
sessJOl\I l\'edneoday, the
-GoYerameat.al Ef·
flcieoey Commlltee and the
Allernbly W1ys &eel l'Hnl
COmmittee ltilled • 1on1 lilt
of pendinc techlatlon, then
publlcly IDOOUDCOcl t h •
d~IOOI.
and private and tl!IJ allows Of rl bWI tlllt Woy1 ond
UI to clear OW' file." Means took into aecuUve
'Ibe 5el'Nlte committee 1~n1 onl7 two wve ap.
dereated mort than 80 proved. 1be rat were tither
pieces of ieClmUon. Tbe ::I: l! :i".::!.i~-; ~~!
belt knoWn would have under 1ubmheion.
either ·modUled or repeoled The prlnclj>ll vicUm was
tile Rumford open hollling , a S-.j>a11ed bill that
law. would have included some
Another required the 700 le Ii 1 lat iv e staff
Unlventty ol Califomia memberc, secretaries aod
regeutl to open all their JllMMngers in tbe lucrative
. PflJl.lon plan for lawmakers.
I
Smog Remains
tern.
In another d8"lopmet1
the AssomblJ joined tilt
Senate in approving • far.
reaching change in It.ate
election Jaws -a measure
tblt would assure that every
ricogniied presidential can-
didete oppear on the June
Call!ornia primary blllot.
o1 the calilorn1a stat• Bu~l t' · ot Getting Worse
Colleges propooed t o d I y
that campua. presidents ex· LO GELES (AP) -monoxide adverse level has
ert more control over ex· That b r o w n i s h , eye.. not been as great this year
experimental, ttudent. run smarting stuff stayt around, u in 1966 and 1967, the
but 11nog ·experts say it's nitrogen dioxide level is ~se:g, trustees met on not rettine.worse. greater, accordiog to the
the Hayward ClmlJUI !or a The Air Pollution Control APCD report.
review of Gov. Reagen's Di.atrict said today there By the end of June tMre
cutl in tbetr budget and 8 were 74 1111oggy day1 in tile had been 60 days during
new look at tbe unofficial, Los Angeles Basin through whidl the adverse level, .24
experimental cour1es of. Junt :I> this year, compared ppm 1astint for one hour,
fered •t nine oi the 11 Clln· 'With 73 a year before and 89 was reached, c o m p a r e d
A colorflll, flCl·fillld book obout t111
1961 Proildlfttlal DICllOn PfOClll •••
t1111 shttb for""'' ... ""' .•
t111 Ropd>llcan 11111 D-n1t1on11
convlOll"". ~-tll~ shllts for Doctlon
Illy •.• hlslD!y, facts, fi&wn, mop;,
ch1rta ••• MrJ fmnlly should hrt1 on1
t1ll1 1loct!On )tlf.
by U.t clala In 1966. with c clay• iD 1118'1 IDd 34 ~tea decided I a 1 t Tho uporU call & &moCIY iD IBM.
Stl! "' pt ,.. In• • .,, ... wm.c ..........
·~.-..
(4'.·, MERCURY SAVIN&S a.. Mid io.n auoes.tlon
month to poe1pone '61J ec-clay one In wlli<b tho O<Ont Wlllioun Jullln King, pro-
tion by Dumke until they count reacbel .15 part per felSOl" ol. engineering at the
could decide their own one mllllon prll"U of air. An University of Californf-a 1t
policy toword tile ...,.. alert Is callod whln Ibo Los Angolel, wd thoH
trowr*l program 0 f count readles .so. There has figures J.odicate that local
ci.... iniilated by-itudeatl been one alert this yNr. smog is not getting wane, =tftl&tt ..,•4~.!fbA ...
and U<ulty ember A-• emi.wloo lo "except !<IC tile lliCmlflCIDt lllilaw All. ~· ~·
Think
SALE
Think
Jt41n lnhl ---.... fll•• ........ -...... ....lnt
Trustee ~ s~ of blamed t.Jr 90 percent ol It. lnoreue iD nitrogen llos-=· ~-o;, Kaolt, ::""~
Carmel Valley bed railed -~Al~tboutb~~~tlle~-c~1~r~b~o~•__!ide~.:"~~~~:__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!~ the laoue, locusiPg bis ob-
jection on•~ celled "a
seminar in.Aµerrllla
warfare'' cciridUcted for a
time at San Jl"rtmcisco State
College.
Some 40 other courses
also were ottered 1n the San
Francll<:o experimental prcr
gram. p-,_,. Slato is t b e
only campus id the system
that g,ive1 credits foc all its
experimental courses.
• ' Experimental courses
and experimental colleges
can have a significant role
In making tl140 total blgher
education experieDCe more
relevant," Dumke said in
his report to the trustees.
'·'However, in several in·
1tances problems have OC·
curred.''
The p~sldent of t h e
American FederaUon o f
Teachen;' College Council f
strongly criticized Dumke !'
for pledging to "take away 1t
control of tbe experimental
colleges from the students."
John Sperling, the
teachers union leader, Mid
in a written statement that
, tile proposal to place the
COUl"8M under campus ad·
ministration "Js another ex·
ample of political e:.:·
pediency."
State Gun
Vote Needs
Timeout
SACRAMENTO CAP)
Time was running out today
for Al&embly Democrats
who hope to win a public
mandate at the polls Nov. 5
for-tough gun c ontrol
legi1latlon'.
They are propoolng that
thie ad:ri.sory ballot question
be put to the voters for
lel!lslative guidance:
"Should legislation b e
enacted to control the sale,
~transfer and possession of
fnanns, including re-
quirements for the periodic
licenainc of persons who
own or poness firearms and
requiremen ts for the
registration of f i r e a r m s
with appa:;ir,late po Ii c e
authorKiea? '
'lbat 37·word proposal was dJ:'.alted. by Assemblyman
Winfield A. Slloemaker (D-
1.ompoc}, after Jt became
apparent he bad no chance
of winning passage of his
ctrict gun Ucem;lng and
&emi-registration bill tb.i1
·~·on of the legislature.
•
Chances for getting tlle
question on the baUot dim·
med hourly. althoogh a com·
mlttee 1-lng on the pro.
posal was scheduled in the
AHembly lete today. -BoxSeat.2e
Shoemaker •dmitted time
"b the big problem we're
facing."
Asllistant Secretary o I
State H. P. Sullivan has said
the legi.!lalure really must
act thi1 week if the question
cen be sent to the ballot
printer1 In time.
B~ Shoemaker and his
c~ face other
.-..-A11embly
llepubll--NY the legllli-., lhould "sllad up
and bt counted" oo sun con·
trot now : a boltile Senate,
and prob• b I e oppootUoo
from Republican Gov .
Re.g.n.
·-
Notbin_g beats the excitement and thrill of getting
outrothe ballpark and rooting for the homet.eam.
But wben the team's on the road, or the ~e is
sold out, there's still major league action m your
living room.
That tight race for the pennant and the personal
battles for MVP are right there on.yoµr TV set.
Because of today's biggest barnin ... electricitY-•••
you'U have the best i!eat in ball~ks all over the
country. And it costs 'you so little. About 21 per
game for the electricity your set uses. ·
Only electricity does eo much for eo little.
E I
Southern California Edison -
.,
' J
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Tube1ess Blackwalls Tµbe le88 WhitewaiiS
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1711 !.Ill ... !\.
IU1&71
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'
--------------------------
-·
• r •
I
For the Record
ms -. 'ZS sum·
Ff,.e Calls
See,..
MA1TEL:
TOY
FESTIVAL
s frlday 'Sllutdlr
...... l'lliesl I
.. Ille 111111 at
f ASlllOli ISltll
leWpllrt Center
School Tax U.S. Pullback to Rice Bowl Urged
NO Lonaer 111 tttOMAll rol\'.l'l!lili Korean W't" n.ky. ~· .. ~. M*~·ei"
Think
e • "' ""~ -•iili "Uthe VIOi tot.ti •tatlm · thf coot di dit<iicllog Sciulh
In Eff-t Tlil oiily Wiy fir tM oame trlcli; W!>at <lo we Vlitnam 1'oold be stag· . , -ec Unltecl.S-ti wtn Ill \ilet• dO?" he asked of 1!\g UC EX· • fll'lnf .. 1Wf 1 litllllQtl meil
nam ii to ·-IOin< ct -Ion class ln OUt nr lli'o cOmililtlod io d.ien I
••em· .. ~-·~·-,.·=--•• DlllH!.11'1Mlb." · "0
A ......,.,Ide school tu •• ·~ ...,... ---~· ••. ___ ._. "'• ........_ tIW il/ii[eioli, . • ··.border le 7ear1
ol neari; 11 ttnll tlie put (lllil bo<l ta iliienli ct Iii ~.;.=~~h ii; ;:;j:i afler Ile wor, Iii noted. To
;<it hu dltappeared. it ii IOilibern ttu biW1, Dr, 11.. ~~Jlli V11hlerable defend ilie lonier Soulh
iiM Iii fli'Ojier!Y owMri Yoni Perk tllli fiiii ilild a ' iml lll~M lo Ibo Vletnaril jJOHlneler equally
won'i haV. hi pey dutliig Ille C!Oaa at .tlC !Mnt. Viet llont illll bold la tlct well ••i!ld rei(u!H !bur or
new tchoOi year. Tlit M'il>Olliliii-liin lie• lltlh n'° m!ltt.ft -· . Tb tlll'er oaii ~-tilko la "if ,,_, -1""' .U He ntd he lean !lie U. s. e tax ii levied 1'1\d tilt p Ii I I --..... ---~ oor_power. WI could whi th; !Ill accept a ••• I JI l 0 •
.... ....i value hi luil cub ...Jui: 3:: ~ (lifil ciii,~ ~11& ct \ht jieop1i ti)' 01, ioVernrnent, wl)lc~. h e
\lalUe f&Uo• ill UI• c0UW ilot· to li0¥jalll tliit lo accept !t!tillJ ~1111 lnJl!I ti!!'-, ii!erted, inevltllbly enda In
leUs below\ ttie etatewtae our -1 .. .oo:....:......;., rorists " he sU!: 1•trfttk•'jiiliiiiiiiilliill.li avera1·e. i>. rellmlliat• ~~ -'-,_ .. -~ ~-tll llt!Urei l""'1 tlie Sli~ "When Joliillion -ibl ' '"' c ...... w••~ ""8
Board 1lf E:qualliatlon hi• i n d II t e d G • b , IM llolltll Yle.Ulomtee -dlcete It hu 1 one above \VHtij>Otetanci, i!Jcklng _iiim moOI, ~ .~;, to,c!Per~~
i . llpltalrij \hO Viet c.H!I "'-IHllf-~ l!i<li' .... verep. ~ ..... our' -, v' ~-nt ._. _,. !ff t1J! mi m. liUI ..=•=r :J~P~~l ~" '°J1a":r';aid. nlt:•~d jlll!rti)IM eou~ ~ ~ ~ ~·=: ~1!'! :.:t:.J.~': Mi .-.... Wllloiil 1111~
I" . •-· I U. S. follOwil!C Ille Tit of· -... ptdllli 4llli tll• wer va ue 11f ha propeffy Has n• r.niive 't. ---id iii Frill• wqul~. ea<la.Ilerii· -·--au·· I " ·-cl'ftsed1 Eriiest .N cl t t o p , .. .:. :..•= 1~100 .. p' , "'••.' Oiiier ves or en· :::.i".1tf Ill ·~~Ii iu::,;ri ·~ .. S.iky"A:i: to i-..11 to <lizif !lie 'klif rta lblil!Y
· -' aeCejit olii 1um11lder ...; ~It; be tl!d. •
°"i'.i...umably, -·• l!lel' were •ut!ll'lMd, I b'filrollALiZI! Att.ils
U.eieed Value hai ~ up -·" 'l')ie ~'01 \\'ij oftiliJllnt ror Ille coiiil1 Ii> tllmb . 1'11'1! Alil --~ lluf ~ ~ '!'It .,.,._ tlie .-. ,.....,._ tillta liiri 11e.m u...; Ii a 1111e1 t!ll'Ollilt<nil Ille world,
T!ie tali Ia ocillled i echoot Itoo4 Chance a;'; will dfti. n@ ~t~. · fnod~f~ c a ti_<) n aid . or oo. Hi ~ thlil la1ii 'i'i\~ ha#lf'1 wliy 61 un• :~.~l"'l ~ ..:"~~U 1-two t•• awl'!« .l!i• .~. ~ ,.,l!v ~
lilcal tcllOOi dliliicli · · !Oil
ol revenue becau.e C.u!iti' ~ .,...led vatu. pereentagee ""'11<•• . -• DRAPE R 'f'
are 1... "' DT ;. L~ "'Nl'!lf Altlio1lg!! gell!nf el-; . . ""~-,., -.
California, county
assessments etil1 are Dot Up
to 25 percent of full cash
val .. , Bojni ol ""~ ~ illiow ~~e co.iii·
tef'i til!Mi lljJ hi :!3.i Pffctlit,
above &i:e lltatewld.e 8.veti.ge
of 22.7 ptrceµt. .
.The relilive 8lihdini Of
county Jo state_ ave-rap ls e~~~ 1to bold wl}en final equalization flan.--a r e
retiili<I 11eiil ~
When needed, the tax is
levied countywide by the
Board of SupenrtSOfs and
distt\buted, jllllont t h e ~hool districts. Only once
before, since 1961 when the
equalization tax went inte
effect, baa Mle County 'Men
above the st.ate average and
the t4x not needed.
1M 18il !Wo )iim tlie
c.tmly ltt .... 18.32 ·~~"' and 14. !• .. nts per $100 Of
assessed valuatien .
. The pot.ential savings . this yw ro . owner OI a !20,000
hOJM, if his assessed valui-
tioD. did not rise1 ia f7,50 oo li1s tax oiiI.
R-Wotor ....... • Pl.AMI PRciofoUIO
1 aca.irsivi
•uAllAllTDD lllWll't CWll!KS
°" ._ •• a. ••l+r 20% 1~·13~6
642·0270
i702 NEWPoliT BLVD., COSTA M!SA
CO II/I MUTER
RIRLINE,S
RIOM OllANGE COUNTY AlllPOltT '711
22 minutes !Ml' the ftWWJUIS Ins 20 ~;
tot.I oomfnUnlil confi'ol.
''We would give
ever)'lhut1 ti.Ok to Ute eom'
munlsts, bU! with my plin
we ean sWI hold what we've 1
ilalned at eu<K • tiii-iltc
COit," he saifi. "Tbii -Ii tfle
oftly course out."
SALE
Think J ~. J~~-hl
' -
Looking back, he said the
moit fiteful step the U. s .
med& to get into the Wat
was undercutting s o u t b
Yietna.mese strongman l'fi:O
pinb Diem. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ------·--
Cable Jet to LA. ln~~fi()n6/. flidhM eVfJl>I hlJtJt ~
call It 7he connection ,YG61VB be6fl weitirfj KY. ~ th/ilk
you wfll too. Call yoUtliiJve/ b/JOOf,}f>Ur 1Bvon1e lflrllti. or
Cllbl• Commllfel at (114) 1814BOI. •CORONA DEL'MAR--3321 E. COAST HIGHWAY
• SAN CLEMENfl!.-. 111 AV~NIDA DEL MAR • • "
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J. DAILY PILOT
TS MAGIC ...
IAL BUTTON HOLES
WITH DIAL-A-STITCH
98.00
WEST PRICE EVER
ORE TiiAN A ZIG-ZAG
OW DIAL-A.STITCH
FOR All YOUR SEWJNG
PFAFF
SELECT-A-STITCH
PORTABLE
reg. 99.00 59.00
model }1, not shown
Orange
Best In
Coast's No. 1
Can't come in? ... Call your nearest
Broadway for a no obligation
Home Demonstration
Anaheim
SJS..8121
Huntington Beach
892-3331
The West
Paper! The
model 40l
portable
Daily Pilot
Is Your Business Conducted Under A
FICTITIOUS
FIRM NAME?
IF SO IT IS MANDATORY UNDER THE LA\llS OF CALI·
FORNIA THAT THE FOLLOWING REQUIREMENTS OF
THE CALIFORNIA CIVIL CODE BE COMPLIED WITH:
LAW ON PUBLICATION OF CERTIFICATES
OF BUSINESS, FICTITIOUS FIRM NAME
(Civll Code s.ctlon 246UU9)
Sec. 2466-Except as otherwiH provided In the next
section every person transacting busin"' In this State under
• fidltlous name ind every partnership tr1n11ctlng busin ...
In this State under • fictitious name, or 1 dnlgnatlon not
showing the name of the person int1ru tld as partner in
such buslnus, must file with the clerk of the county In
which his or Its principal place of buslnns Is situated, a
C9rtlficate subscribed and acknowltcfqed In the manner pro-
vided in Section 2461 of the Civil Code, stating the nem•
In full and the place of rnid1nc1 of such person and stating
the nam9 In full of all the members of such partnership
and their p!.cH of rnldence.
Such sublcrlbecf and acknowledged certificate must be
published subsequent to the flllnA thereof with the county
clerk pursuant to Government Cod• Section 6064, in a n1W9o
paper published In the county, if there be one, and if there
be none in such county, then In a newspaper In an edjoininc1
county. An affidavit showinq the publication of such certlfl·
cate 11 in this section provided shall be filed with the county
clerk within 30 days after tfte completion of such publi cation,
but in no event shall such publication be made prior to the
filing of such certificate with the county clerk.
2468. -The t 1rtific1t1 filed with the clerk " provided
In .. ctton twenty.four hundred end sixty-s ix must be siqned
by the person t herein referred to, or by the partners, as the
case may be, and acknowledged before some officer, author-
ized to take the 1cknowl1dg1ment of conv1y1ncft of rtal
property .... Where a business is hereafter commenced bv a
person under a fictitious name or 11 partnership is hereafter
formed, the certificate must be flltd and the pvblication
desiqnattd in that "ction must be made wi thin one month
1fter the commencement of such business, or after th• form•·
tlon of the partnership, or within one month from the time
designated In the agreement of Its members for the com-
mencement of the p1rtn1rs hip. Where th1 businns has been
heretofore conducted under a fictitious n1me or where
the partnership has been heretofore formed, the c1rtific1t1
must be filed and the publication made within six months
after the passage of this act. No person doinA business under
a fictitious name or his assignee or assignee, nor any Del'-
ton doing business as partners contrary to the provisions
of this 1rticl1, or their assi~nee or 1s~ignH1, shall mai ntain
in the cou rts of the State of Califor nia.
Sec. 2469-0n EVERY change In the membe rs of a pa rt·
nership transacting busi ness in this state under a fictitious
name or a designation wh ich does not show the name of
the oersons Interested as partners in its businn s •.. , a new
c1rtlficat1 mu st be filed with the County Clerk, and a new
publication made as required by this artici. on the formation
of 1uch partnership.
If you have neglected this procedure, you should realize that
the name of you r firm Is not protected and that you are not
entltled to maintain suits for collection, or for other purooMS,
any adion upon or on eccount of eny contract or contracts
their partnership name, in anv court of this state until the
certificate h11 been fi led and th• publication has been mid• as herein required.
Take care of this important matter now, by having the
DAILY PILOT, •n adjudicated leqal n1wsp1per for Orange
County and distributed in COSTA MESA, FOUNTAIN
VALLEY, HUNTINGTON BEACH, LAGUNA BEACH, SEAL
llEACH, NEWPORT BEACH, WESTMINSTER, publish your
cerllflc1t1. The cost ls small but the fili ng and publication is
10mething which should not be overlooked. .
fonns for Fictitious Firm N1m11 and Certificate of Abandonment of Flct1·
ffoue Finn NarMt can be obtained FREE fr om any of the DAILY PILOT
•"'-ohown below:
S30 w .. t S.y Strfft, Costa Mesa Y~627
2211 Wett S.lboa Bouleva rd, Newport Beach 92660
309 5th StrMt, Huntington Beach 92646
222 Foreat Avenue, Laguna Beach 92651
BE SURE TO CONSULT OUR
LEGA~ ~DYERTISING DEPT. AT
' DAILY PILOT .. ...,. .............. ,._,...
642-4321
r . r
Surveys
Study
Shoppers
NEW YORK (AP) -The
informaUon most sought by
poQ.stets throughout t h e
year is not voting in·
clinatlona, as yq.u might
suspect, but consumer in·
formation.
The National lod~trlal
Conference Board haa 10,000
e<>nsumer.!I surveyed every
other month The University
of Michigan interviews well
over 1,000 every quarter.
Commercial Credit C 0 .
questiorus 15,000 every three
months. Sindlinger &: Co.
queries 1,600 every week.
Total numbers really don't
tell the story. Some snrveys
are less sophistiCated than
others. Others are con·
ducted by telephone and few
questions are asked. A few,
such as Michigan and Com·
mercial Credit, CQnducts
face-to.face interviews. And
the interpretation counts
more highly than t h e
numbers.
REGULAJI BASIS
These are among the most
prominent investigators of
the consumer mind on a
regular basis. But perhaps
·many millions more calls
are made throughout the
year on a much narrower ·
and irregular basis, usually
in regard to the marketabili·
ty of new products.
Why? Because just as it
benefits political candidates
to know what voters might
do, it benefita banks, car
manuf41.cturers and f o o d
chains to know what the
consumer might do with his
money.
Once this might have been
fairly well known, for the
take-home pay of a family
head left him few choices.
With growing affluence, the
consumer .can now use more
discretion: he can save or
spend, buy a car or postpone
buying one, take an ex·
pensive vacation or stay at
home.
PERPLEXING
With his assets now ex·
ceeding liabilities -Oy about
S2 trillion, and with his
behavior no longer
circumscribed by needs, the
consumer now w i e l d s
enormous power. He is a
sometimes perp l exing
economic fo rce. It pays to
understand him.
The pioneer in consumer
surveying is Dr. George
Katona of the University of
Michigan Survey Research
Center. Katona began in
1946 and since then has
regularly and often very ac·
curately forecast consumer
behavior, based mainly on
his expert interpretation of
attitudes and sentiments.
Katona's methods are
complex, and his reports
are detailed. But basically
he belie,·es a consumer's
discretionary purchases de·
pend on ability to buy and
willingness to do so.
In his most recent study,
between May 2Q and June 3,
he found a continuation of a
wait..and·see attitude. The
ability to buy remained
high, he reported. but w1ll·
ingness w a s depressed,
largely because of Vietnam
and inflation.
The Industrial Conference
Board report, whicb. is bas-
ed on a survey conducted by
Na·tional Family Opinion,
Inc., stated in it.s July let·
ter: :
"At midyear the nation's
consumers are less op.
timistic In appraising the
likely course of business
conditions than they were at
this juncture in 1967." It
found confidence leS"Sened in
the economy's immediate
future.
INTERPRETATION
The Commercial Credit
survey, co n d u cted in
cooperation with the N~
tional Bureau of Econowc
Research. also stresses· in·
terpreta.tion.
To illustrate how com-
plicated the analyses can
become, consider UUs com-
ment by Dr. Tom Juster,
one of those involved In set·
ting up the Commercial pro-
gram:
"There Is a major defect
in all buyer Intention data.
It's simple : Ma1t people wUl
not give you a definite 'yes'
but they'll give you a flat
'no.' Most of the people who
say 'no' do the pure.ha sing."
Not Science F~tima
This space-age innovation looks more like some-
thing from Jules Verne's_ novel "20,000 Leagues
Under the Sea." It's a uspeed mask" invented and
worn by former Newport Beach resident Calvin
Gangwer who used the device Tuesday during. a
swim from CataHna Island to San Pedro. Used with
Scuba gear, the mask is prow-shaped with a buil,t·
in snorkel which follow s the contour of the wearer s
bead. Gangwer claim s it cuts drag by 35 percent.
If You Must Borrow,
Shop for Best Deal
By SYLVIA PORTE R
It will be 11 more months
(July 1, 1969) before the
new Truth·in-Lending law
goes into effect and another
12 months after that (July
1970) before some of its key
provisions apply.
This means that during
the period directly ahead,
you'll still have to find your
own Way through today's
credit maze of comparative
interest r a t e s , "points,"
''add-ons," special service
charges What'r. more, the
le&; informed you are about·
how and where to borrow,
the greater the likelihood
that you'll choose the most
costly terms and the least
advantageous deal.
TO HELP guide you, here
are 10 fundam en ta l
guidelines for borrowing
money:
1) If you cannot postpone
a major purchase until in-
terest rates decline. shop as
never before for the best
deal available. Determine
the total financing costs
charged by each lender or
dealer, in dollar8 and cents,
over the life of the loan.
Then compare the totals to
see which deal is least ex·
pensive. Financing co~ts
may ih<:lude not only in·
terest but also varying fees
for insurance, processing,
etc.
2) Beware of ads for big·
ticket items at "only '10 a
month" or other "easy"
repayment terms. S u c h
come'°ns often mean the
highest total f i n a n c e
charges. Find out the totals
/Ii ev> Dea"
Dr. Jack W. Colem an is
the new dean of the
school of bu&iness ad·
ministration and econ·
omlcs at Cal State Ful·
lerton. A retired Air
Force colonel, he for·
merly was with the
Texas A & M Unlver·
sity school of business
administration.
-A-
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Standard P a int
Earnings Rise
Standard Brands Paint Co.
today reported the best nine
months ln Its history for the
period ended June 3 0 ,
1968, with both sales and
after-tax earnings up 16 per-
cent after allowing for the
Federal ta x surcharge,
compared with the like
period last year.
For the nine months end-
ed June 30, net sales were
$24,534,242. Net earnings
alter taxes were •t,622,780.
equal to $1.29 a share on the
l ,2.SS,517 co mmoo shares.
The company now
operates 30 paint .a n d
decorating c e n t e r s in
California and Arizona.
Tractor Sales
On Right Track
PEORIA, 111 .
Caterpillar Tractof Co. an·
noUl'l(ed sales Of S460.9
million for the s e c o n d
quarter or 1968, 12 percent
higher than for the second
quarter of last yeaT, and a
new record for any quarter.
For June profit after tax·
~ was $12,379,512, or 21
cents per share, compand
to $10,562,296, OT 19 cents
per share, in 1967. Sale•
were 1161.758,:ra;, Compared
to 1132,071,872 in 1967. •
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Thursday's Closing Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Exchange Closing
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The newest Buick/Opel dealer
in town has an old fashioned
way of doing business.
••
He talks your languag~
The whole idea behind talking your language is as old as
g6od business. You see, we think you deserve to have a
little bit of a fuss made over you. Especially when you're
buying a Buick. Or Opel. This is why you can expect
friendly treatment when you come in. Also quality service
when you need it. And most important, great deals on any
car you buy from us. This is what talking your language is'
all about. On Skylarks, GS's, LeSabres, Wildcats, Electras,
Rivieras, and Opels. One look will tell you how much more
car you get for your money. One talk with a salesman
will prove how little more you pay to get it. Come in soon
and watch us talk your language. We think you'll like it.
234 E. 17TH STREET
BUICK-OPEL COST A MESA 548-776S
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BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Tllllnilff, Jiii¥' U. IHI Ma.CM-L• I"-ll
Wise Shoppers
Starting Early
If you 've noticed your paycheck dwindling lately due to the additional
withholding taJ, perhaps yo u are wondering how to make el!ds meet.
Budgeters who are thinking and planning ahead for the holiday sea-.
100 will find relief offered in one area -that of Christmas card buying.
Thr~e major _Orange Coast organizations are selling the greeting
cards at discou nt pnces, and to add pleasure to shopping numerous coffees,
teas and poolsid~ parties are being planned.
Turning salesmen are members of coast guilds o! Children's Hospi·
ta1 of Orange County, Newport Harbor Spastic League and the Auxili~ry
of Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian.
Of course, profits will benefit charities. and to ease income tax pinch.
50 percent of the purchase price is tax deductible.
Discounts will be given during the remainder of Ju1y and all of
.__}ugust by the Spastic League which is offering a choice of more than 1,000
types of cards, according tp chairman Mrs. Terence P. Hanna.
Funds will support the rehabilitation and education of cerebral pal·
sied and spastic children and young adults in the couiity.
During the August discount sale of Hoag Auxiliary, coffees are being
planned . by the Mmes. James W. Laws, Aug . 1; William E. Langs ton, 6;
Bra~ Miller, 14; Robert L. Bacon, 16: William Durkin, 20, and Ephraim
Lewis, 23. A day-long coffee in th e ho spital conference center will take
place Tuesday, Aug. 27, to which the public is invited, according to Mrs.
James W. Decker, card chainnan.
Members will continue selling cards into early December at the Gift
Box in the hospitaJ.
Under the chairmanship of Mrs. Howard Cunningham, Newport Cin·
derella Guild members opening their homes for sale parties are the Mmes.
Cunningham, Sam Gurley, Fred Prescott, Loring Dyer. Jack Adams and
Joseph Ryan.
Hostesses for Queen of Hearts Guild, Laguna Beach include the
Mmes. George Gade, Macau1ey Ropp, Douglas Kenaston. James Delaney,
Neil Nelson and Francis Fabian.
> ••
Mrs. Wood.row W. Lane Jr., Costa Mesa Punch and Judy Guild chair·
man has arranged card coffees in the homes of the Mme s. Zenas Averill.
Renton Carsley, James Gorman, Alfred Van Hoosen, Lane, Charles Serano
tom, Raymond Ceccarini, Robert Norris, David Bourke. Arthur De Cuhe l·
lis, Robert Thomas, Billy Gibbs and Fred Owens.
FUND-RAISING BRANCHES OUT -Calling atten·
ti.on to early·bird Christmas shoppers that the·New-
port Harbor Spastic Leagut!' is offering greeting
cards at discount prices. are (left to right) Mrs. Ter-
ence P. Hanna, chainnan and Mrs. Robert Wooi-
ward. Also serving on the committee are the ~·
Robert Fuller, G. R. Jansen, William P . :n.ernas
and William Wilson.
IT'S IN THE CARDS -It doesn't take a
fortune teller to predict a generous taJly
of tunds will be realized for Orange
County Children's Hospital ... It's al·
ready in the cards, for members of the
four Orange Coast guilds will be lending
support to the annuaJ greeting card sale.
Representing the guilds are (left to right)
the Mmes. Howard Cunningham, Cinder-
ellas ; Charles Roberts, Queen of Hearts;
Ramon Potevin, Punch and Judy, and
John French, Little Mennaids.
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CATALOGING SALES -Ready to start ringing up
sales during discount days are Candystripers Miss
Lara Ferguson (left) and Miss Vicki Cox who heJp
Mrs. Joseph R . Metcalf Joad greetin' card catalogs
which will be taken to various locations where cof-
fees will be given for prospective shoppers. Mrs.
Metcalf is coffee chairman, and Mrs. James w.
Decker is in charge of the Hoag Auxiliary card sale.
Assisting Mrs. Decker are the Mmes. Charles Cle-
mens, William Durkin, Ralph Tilton, Leonartl South.
Metcalf and Miss Bernice Vestal.
Patient Becomes Unnerved When Root of Problems' Exposed
DEAR ANN LANDERS: May I air
my number-one gripe H others have?
I don't espe<t you to print ii hut I'll
!<et hells II I pt It oft niy <belt.
Dentiltl an, In my opinion, tbt
mott bactwvd of all professionals. U
BonjamJn Franklin h a d not in""'ted
fain teeth, people would be walldnl
around toothleu today.
I have been reading articles on tooth
tnmspYnt.a since I wu a child . They
hive been "experime.n\ing'' for the
lut 2» yean. I have written ta the
authors of the arti.clel to learn which
dentlatl perform the procedure. The
repllet wer"e vap. I never did find a
dmtlal w1lo coald tranaplant a tooth.
All they ltnow ii drilling and pulling
and denim. amd partial plates. They
m"I too buly nkin& in tile money to
._. -.,ldDI new, TodlJ whea
f
ANN LANDERS
kidrleys. the liver, human hair and
even U:le heart. can be successfully
transplanted , is it too much to ask that
the dentists get busy and join U'le
Twentieth Century? EX P 0 SE D
NERVE
DEAR NERVE : There are hnn-
dred1 of de.nU1ta wbo tran1plan& ~.
Where have )'OI 1» e e • lootlnf?
Tran1plandng teeill began lt the UHll
Century. Yoar reference to lknjamJn
FrukllD 11 l.llfere1dng. Tbe aioay pr•
d-bf lllo buhnatle-(I-
ed out of bippop0t.ama1 Ivory, 1"0ll,
·gold plate, rivets, 1crew1, haman In·
ruor toelll ...i 1toel 1prlag1) llarted
dendata e1perlmeattn1 witb tootll
lran1plantl.
Toolll douon, prladpallf ppor peO-
ple, wen teeared tbroa&' 1tew1paper
ado. A New York pa,... In Int canted
tM followtar nodee. "Teetla -a11
peno• wllll•C 10 dll-of 1111 froal
toelll apply to Number ZI Maid••
Laue. A ceaerou pr1 .. will be ,.. ...
N.B.-plMU(-Nl181oday•1
•
eurreney) • 111 be pa Id for every
tooth.'•
TH pnctlee (tf tranplantatloa w11
11Htm1tel1 abandoned for several rtalOU. First, It fal&ed to meet Ute
needs of tie maUet. Secead, muy
dlteate1 wen tru1mJtted· tr.m doltOr
to J<dpleot (mOll llllobly 1ypldllk).
Tbtrdly, tbe medleal world leaned of
the rejedloa pbeeomeaoa. Alter 1 few
moallu, lruoplnted leelll loooeffd
and fell oat.
A bu.adred ye1r1 later, however,
denUltl bepn expertmentlD1 HCt
.... wffll ......,.._ letlll ... Ille
tocbalqueo bave. -•ally Im ....... .
Today a Ira..,._ -wll 1111
for foar to ftve · yean. '
Tiie kDowledce pined by -·hi
llldr lrulplul ............ llu llolpN lay llu llleorellcal _.. __ _
made potltble tbe ir.m,. and Over
tranpluta, ud aow Ute beart. Now,
art•'& '" aalaame4?
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am living
with a mtn I love very much. We are
not married because his selfish,
mooey·bungry wife will not give hint a
divorce. Some people know the score,
other• do not. I could care less about
the toll<.
Yesterday was my birthday. J
received 1n ancnymous gift -a set of
ptllOWCIMI on which WU embroidered
"Mr.'' IDd "Mrt." I'm sure this wt• a
d1g by OD1 ol. the oaf1 who works with
me In lbll olllce. I aho thlnl: I know
•hid> cir~ Hnl the pit. Shall I play
dumb or lot her have It -rilht In the =! -NOT SENSITIVE JUST
DEAR NOT: U lh1o lo Ille -Ill
yoa fet, eondder ,......., haet1.
Petula. A cir! wllo CO<• In fer ,iay1u
boaae wlUa • mur:led mu cu Ill .f..
ford Ille lunry II klo,,.., -18 Ille chopo. Play damb. AM fer ,_ tt
1boald be a dacll.
Wben romantic glancea tuna to
warm embraces is it love or
chemiJtry? Send for tbe booklet "Love
or Sex ond How to Tell the Dif.
fereoce," by Ann ,µinder1. Encloee a
loag, stamped, ..it .. ddrelled en·
velope and 36 ctlll$ In coin willl 70ur
requeft.
Ann Landero will he Clad to btip JOU
with your problems. Send lllom to her
in care of the DAU., Y PlLOT, encio.
In a 1tamp<a, oelf·addrelMd ...
velope.
I
.,.,,,"·""""""""'""' _____ ----.. ~· -'"""'"' ......... . -,., DAILY ,noT Thursday. J,~ 25.l968
Hours Flutter Away Horoscope
Elbow Grease
Not the Answer
111 KAY LAMON °' ....... ,... ...
Got time on :pour bandilT
You're nre In tblt cue,
accordlnl to Ualvenlt1 of
Oallfornla Extension, Home
Adv!Jar Dorotll1 Wenck.
Findln( free time II tho
crltiul problem ol both
employed and nonemployed
homemakers, 1ald M r I .
w....,i., 1poaldac at the final
meeting of "Suddealy .•.
You're a Homemaker."
Time stealer& Include pr ..
crastinatlon, interruptions,
fatigue and CIJ'f:lell habits,
all ol whieh add to poor
management, lbe noted.
Then there are t h e
"honest time 1tealen" like
meal planninC and prepara·
tion (which takes up 25
houri a week) and children
(a new baby can demand
1000 extra hour• a yer&r).
Mrs. Wenck. offered
homemakers IOlne helpful
tips to keep houlework
houri to a minimum.
Fatigue counts for a large
part ot wasted time, yet on·
ty 10 percent of
homemakers' fatigue 11
physical, she said. The ~·
90 percent, it ptychological
and Js related to dislike of
one's job, boredom, truttra·
tion because the job doetn't
stay done, and other Ml·
noyances.
To avoid that blc slump,
she noted, use tbe belt toolJ.
Putting nylona and delicate
clothes like under'Wear in
the washer Ind dryer 11
perfectly safe If you lint
put them in a nykln net beg.
Everything but foam rubber may be handled thil way.
The dryer is a very handy
machine, espedally if you
have small children. But It'•
w\st to keep the direction
boo'u near all appUance1.
own goals. 11 it really more
Important "' ..... the flool'I or to Ille the clllldren to tho
zoo? 11 it worth it to do Job•
no ane will notice or ap..
preci.ate anyw&y? 1he ast-
td.
lt iii po!fiible to wu floors
and scour link5 too oltetl,
for wu builds up and takes
more work to clean off,
while tbe porcelain finish
may wear off sinks ICZ'Ub-
bed every other d a y •
AJJyway, your family llhould
oome fint, aai.d M r 1 •
Wenck.
You can avoid cleaning by
buying tuntiture with ease
of cleaning in mind (no
mort white lilt 10fa1) or
perforated pan lids to cut
down on grease during
frying. House rulec help,
especially with s m a 11
children. Another lip is to
check your forced-air
furn&ee filter otten to avoid
duat build-up that aimply
circulates more dust into
the boose.
Avoid ironing by wise
buying, sht said. Then put
small lo.ads in cool or
lukewarm water in your
washer, because it saves
wrinkles. Prompt removal
from the dryer also ii im·
AFTERNOON RECEPTION
Mr. end Mrs. Meurice J, Yoder
portant.
you can om.it many steps M •
In cooking u you plan ahead. au rice Yoders Feted
A can of cherries and a-------------
small box of cake mix
blended together in a pan
can m·ake a fine cherry
crunch. Instant minced
onion, aoup, tlllMl and chow
mein noodles go together for
a snappy oasserole.
But the most important
thing to remember is to
qtlf:stion the way you work
. so you can tbirlk instead of
slave, abe concluded.
Golden Years Recalled
Fifty years of marriage
were celebrated by Mr. a.nd
Mrs . Maurice J . Yoder
when they were honored at
a golden anniversary recep·
tlon in the Huntington Beach
home of Mr . and Mrs .
Edwin W. Anderson.
Kikhtns •• HPtlCitlllY ott<n lim•-waster1. !iie aul· News Revealed
gested keepint •lazy lllND ---------or brood boord In the ~:::a.~ri:·~~:..1i Party Honors Couple jelly, peanut bu~ o r
meats. Store all equq>mtnt
and necessities like spices
close to the work area to
uve many extra miles of
walkdng a week. You can
buy cUpboord atop.shelves
for under $2, lbe noted, and
they make excellent 1paee
avers in cupbowds.
Boredom fatigue may be
combated by av old in I
diltractloGI md competing
with )'OUl'IOll to pl the job
dono, pemope before a radio
procram comes on the *.
Another tip LI to very your aw.-i. Start In a clif.
fa'ent room each week.
But moot lmportat, ah•
ltressecl, 1& to question your
Bake Sale ·
Aids Fund
The ClllCOr Fund will
benefit from a rummage
and bake 1ale which will be
1pon1ored b f the
Westminster Auxiliary to
Veterans of Foreign Wan,
Pott 975&.
Mn. Laura Iuliano will be
chainnan al the sale taking
place between 10 a.m. and 7
p.m. Friday, July 26, in the
Odd Fellowi Hall. Harn·
burger• will be terVed dur·
Ing the lunch hour. Mn. Erwin C. Ruka, who
11 serving her &e<:ond term
as president, met last week
with her n ew officers to
diJcuu various project& and
plans for the coming year.
Artyaoe wishing to donate
rummage fOf' the sale may
call her at 892-0t67.
LET'S BE FRIENDLY
Hunlinqton Beach
Visitor
642-6014
Cosf 1 Mesa Visitor
642-6014
Se. ColSI Visitor
*'4579
Hlrflor Yhffor
642.JSU
U ,.. bave .,... neltbbor•
• taOll' cf an,_ movln1
.. -.... plNM tell QI .. -.. --.
tdmdlJ ···~--and belp -• --"11ed .... _ ..... _,.,
RRST, FAST
...... ,.. ftrwt •""" th• ._.,It .... , .... t ca...t It
.... tt't ... ,., .1w.,. ...
DAll.f rn.or.
BARBARA GIBBONS
Envagod
At a party last Saturday,
close friends and members
of the immediate families
learned of the engagement
of Barbara Gibbons and
RW11ell Goodwin.
Parenti of the engaged
couple are Mr. and Mrs .
Matthew J. Gibbons and Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Goodwin,
~ll of Huntington Beach.
Mias Margaret Goodwin,
a\tter of the benedict-elect,
boa~ the party which took
place in their parents'
home.
Both Mis! Gibbons and
her fiance wert graduated
from Huntington B e a c h
High School prior \o his
graduation from Orange
Coast College. He entered.
the U.S. Army Ia.st Tuetday.
No date bas been 1elected
for the wedding.
GET IN THE SWIM WITH A NEW CATALINA
OR COLE SUI T! Ef'IT lRE STOCK OF FAMOUS
BRANDS. OHE·Af'ID·l PIECE SWIMSUITS RE·
DUCEO. SA.VE 40" DURING THIS SPECIAL
SAl.E. REC. TO 18,00.
SALE PR ICED U.SSO T"ES£
Auxiliary
American Legion Hall in
Costa Mesa, la the setting
for meetings of the Aux·
illary to Barracks 1249,
Veterans of World War t.
The first Tuesday of each
month members gather for
a business Session at 7: 30
p.m. and the third Tuesday
\hey meet for a toclal and.
potluck at e p.m.
WHILE THEY LAST $8 to $11 1 REAL IAllGAINSl ,
A ~NZA'!IFilllS$ BlllOA SljjAV ' UP
TO~Olt MoPH!! ,IHAL·R!oUcTloHS ......
WANTED STYLES AND FABRICS ...... MISSV,
JUHl~R AN ¥ f~TITE Sl~E . AtG. T9 J..ttj
SCOOP·U' 1'SHIP 'n' SHOft.111 ILOUSIS ......
YOU'L0l BUY 'EM IH' l"Al"S TO WI.AR WITH
SUMMER PANTS ANO SKIRTS.
1 HOW Fltl~L . $'5' De $8' WE'VE CORRALLED THE
REDUCTIONS TO • l!ST IRA.HO AT OHLY •• , ...
LEG IT ON llOWll TO SALLY FOft PAllTY
H0$( ••• SPECIAL PUR CHAS f: 01'" l'.\MOUS
.MAKER CAHTRECE HYLOHS ••• HUDE H(EL, ••
SHAG R.ESISTAHT, LEG SMOOTH flT,"llt!Y
MIGHT AS 'WELL BE SKIMi"
PETITE, MEDIUlil,
MEDIUM,TALL, TALL.
.......... OW:~! . -~ 1-=:.;..
U•e Your
Selly Cher1•
Master Cher9e
Be"kAm•ric•rd
5916 Edin<Jtt'
Merino ViRagt
Huntington Bch •
I ·
Leo: Power,
Success Lured
0 Sales and Your OMEGA s.rv1cecentor
• DIAMOND SPECIALISTS
• REMOUNTING & DESIGNING
Complete Giff Department
90 Day Accounts -No Carrying Charge
Bank americard or Take a Year To Pay
N•• 2 ...... St.... T• Sar.. Y"
HAllOI SHOPPIN6 HUNTI N•TON CINTD
CENTll IU.CM I: UINMI
JlOO HAllOI ILYD. HUNTINClTON llACH
COSTA MU.A • '4S.f41S lfJ.1501
0,... Meit .. Tlurrs.. M . Tl t ,..,
UNIFORMS
JULY
CLEARANCE
of
FAMOUS
BRANDS
*NEAR COST
*AT COST
*BELOW COST
(Pricft 11 Marked)
SHOP and SAVE
AS NEVER BEFORE
Catli"~
UNIFORMS
IN MESA CENTER
646-5388
Floor Models ..:. Demonstrators
'
SIVE*50
',
from ~price when new
on Golden 1'ollt:h « Sew•
Mwlng machine· in a wide choice
of handlome consoles and dalk&.
a.-.,_ a wldo nriotJol dotlc inodolo lftd COM0111. Also a choic1 llloction °' °"" ro-• .._..
machl-lnclooling poolobl11 II $»$40 ......_ lnMn regulw price when now. They'YI ......i 11 -
models •nd derawww.,alor1 •nd ... ,. MOWing •.,.. out It pHt NVings to you.
CLEARANCE-Trade-In Sewing ·Machines
STRAIGHT trom $1995 ZIG-ZAG $2995
STITCH MODELS MODELS trom ·
With IYlfY used 11wlng machine -Iha SINGER' Sow & S.. Gu1,..1oo. Mo.., back H na1-..
with purdlu1, or Jul -~ """"i tho purch1&a of a now SINGER' -.. ......... -IO d.,.i
Come ~our nearest Singer Center and corral yourself a real buyl u ..... -.,._ .. .,..,,. .. _...,.._ r-.-1 ... ,.-.. ,.,.
IUINA PARK
IJJO On Th• M•ll
TA 8-7540
Bven• Park Center
COSTA MESA
llOO H.,bor ll•d.
Kl 9-1195
H1rbor Centtf' ........ ,. _ __.
GARDIN IHOYI
9931 Chapman
6!0-4010
Orena• County Pl111
HUNTINGTON llACH
Edint•r 1t IHch
197-1041
Huntin,+ott le•c.h C.n+•t
SINGER
for iddrns of store ne1r1st you, Ht Miila,....
of ploono boo1 under SINGU a.AJl'f
ANAHEIM LA MlllADA
51 S N. Loar• 15024 L1 Mirada llvd,
535 1126 LA 1-lDl
An•heim Cent•r le ~irede C.n+.r
SANTA ANA
Downtown
305 w. 4th St.
Kl 2.3945
COSTA MISA
lrhlol a Sunflowor
540-26ll
South Coast l'lnt
MWWWMM··w···w·we1MMW 1·V11WNAW1WNYtWV . .. ~··· .... .. ........ . .
\
I
'
t
' ' '
Newpor·t Barbor _ _ DAILY PILOT TOday's «:IMlnl
:vor. ~r. NO. '178, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES
OAll.Y 'PILOT Si.ti l"MI•
BIG WEED -Newport Beach police detective Al Epstein and John
S~on stand \!flder largest marij~a11a, P,.lant ~v.er ~s~~v~re4 1n N~w~ por.t Beach. f'i>tte4 pot illtlnds 11gbt fi!eb·tall;_!"!'U·.Wten to pobce
station along with l~year-old boy ·accused of growing it.
·-
Poli~e Dig Pot
Newport Tee1iager Charged
Good police work involves a little
digging.
So shovels in hand. two Newport
Beach police detectives started dig·
ging in the yard of a Central Newport
residence early Thursday to uproot a
robust marijuana plant, eight feet tall.
Narcotics investigator Al Epstein
and detective John Simon also placed -
under arrest a 16-year-old boy Jiving
at the house. ·
The giant specimen was growi ng in
a pot which had been placed in the
ground, police said.
''The boy said he didil't have any
idea what it Was." Epstein said as he
cast a glance at the patted pot.
"Said he'd never seen marijuana
before."
The teen.ager \Vas charged with
cultivating marijuana, and released to
his famiJy·pe'nding Juvenile Court prO·
ceedings.. ·
Asked how· many1marjjuana cigatet·
tes the leafy p1ant could produce, Eps·
tein said: "Oh, l couldn't even begin to
guess."
Beach Chief Says Airport
Tl1reatto Huntington Area
BV SANDI MAJOR
01 !fie O•llY Pllrtl Slatf
If the Orange County regional
airport is built in Huntington Beach,
the city's harbor and beaches director
says it could cause erosion of the
beach here "much more drastic'' than
that now being checked at Newport
Beach.
"We need this type of airport in
Orange County," says V i n c e
Moorhouse. "It certainly would create
an economical boost to Huntington
Beach.
"But our beaches must be protected.
Right today there is on1 y enou"gb sand
for 3 or 4 p_ercent of the people along
all the California coastline." .
Huntington Beach iS one of five pro·
posed sites tor the airport.
Engineers to rebuild its beaches north
of the Newport Pier. Three years ago
the city began trying to rebuild
the eroding beaches by N?placing ·sand
but had to call on federal help for th e
job.
Beachfront houses were close to
being undermined.
Moorhouse says the effect of the
airport in Huntington Beach could be
"much more drastic" than the situs·
tion ha~ been in Nl!!wport Beach.
"Maybe: this wlll be one of the costs
of the airport: lo replace the beaches,"
Moorhouse said.
l~e wants engineering studies to be
done to see what efiect the airport
· will have on the ecology, or the
beaches. Then he will make a
determination, he said.
EDITION . N.Y. Stoek.s
NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA 'THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1968 TEN CENTS
Riot Troops Move -In
Cleveland Looting, Burning Force Stokes Decision
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Mayor Gari
B. Stokes ordered 250 national
guardsmen back into the batf:.le-scar-
red east side today to halt looting and
firebombing.
"We do not feel that the danger has
passed," hEi said. "ThJs sittiation re·
quires hour by hour evaluation."
Stokl!!s ordered the. guard to return
following three cases of iirl!!bombings
and 36 lootings. He said most of the
violence was caused by teen-agers.
Four Young
Girls Hit by
Car in CdM
Four girls standing at a traffic
island in Corona del Mar were struck
down by a Co6ta Mesa woman's car
Thursday afternoon.
One of them, witnesses told police,
was dragged 70 Ceet. She is Debbie
Zimmerman, 12, ol 4607 Hampden
Road, Cameo Shores.
The girl suffered multiple Injuries of
the ipine, according to Hoag Memorial
Hospital spokesmen. She was not
par8.Jyzed. Her condition today was
listed as "improved, but still serious."
Less severely hurt in the 2:20 p.m.
accident on Ea"st Coast Highway at the
entrance to Cameo Shores were:
-lJsa Nunla, 12, cf 297 Crescent
Bay Drive; Laguna.Beach~
-Ladra Davis, 14, ol 216 Jasmine
St., Corona del Mar.
~er •liter, klmberlyt 11.
The Davis girls wefe treated at
lloag for .ow and reluald. but Miss
·Nu!lls WI!• bospltaliUd:.
Autlflorities· &aid 'she was In fair con-
ditiOn this m·90ling with · lacerations
and abrasions of ttie lower back, ab~
domen, iorearm and a fractured
pelvis.
The California Highway Patrol said
the four girls were standing on the
traffic island, waiting to cross the
street, when a southbound car driven
by Mrs. Patricia M. Graham, 49, of
716 James St., Costa Mesa, plowed in-
to them.
Mrs. Graham was arrested on suspi·
cion of drunken driving,
-Jury Trial Slated
For Man Accused
Of Def acing Flag
\Villiam Reid Parker. held on
charges of the July 4th defacing of a
huge American Flag at thl!! Tolo, Inc.
plant on N_ewport Freeway, will face a
jury on Au g. 6 in Central Municipal
Court in Santa Ana .
Parker, 23, free on $125 ball on the
misdemeanor charge, was arrested in
Costa Mesa. He formerly lived in
Tustin and was traced through the
license number of his car.
Santa Ana detectives picked up
Parker at 22.80 Pacific St. July 24.
They said he was sharing an apart·
ment With three or tour friends.
He was allegedly caught spraying
\\'ith black paJnt across the :I> by 30-
foot Flag. "Vi,tnam, 25,23: Dead,
151 ,344 Wounded."
The men who stopped to try to ap.
prehend him said he was wearing a
beard and had long hair. \Vhen ar·
rested, Parker was clean shaven and
had a normal haircut, thl!! detectives
said.
"To prevent further looting, we ar'
sending national guardsmen Jnto all
areas where stores were broken into
last night (Wednesday)." Stokes told a
news conference. ''There are 12
specific· locations."
He said his action \Vednesday in
removing the 2.600 n a ti on a I
guardsmen front the area where 10
persons had been shot to daeth the
night beiore wa s successful.
"Jt is our considered opinion that we
made considerable headway last night
(Wednesday) in restoring order and in
ending the looting and viOlence," he
said. "No one was· killed, no one was
shot, no one was injured."
Stokl!!s said police made 13 arrests
Wednesday night.
When Stokes removed the troops
Wednesday, he i;ent in their place 100
N~gro police officers and 500 Negro
community leaders who "challenged"
residents to keep the peace.
"l! \\'e are successful tonight in stop-
pi ng looting and arson, we can get
back to putting Cleveland into high
gear."
Return of the guard coincided with a
report by the Cleveland press of an
alleged black nationalist plot to
assassinate Stokes and Ne'gro City
Co1,1ncitman Leo A. Jackson.
StokeS said he had ''no reason to
believe it (the plot) bas any basis of
fact."
Peggy"s Dis~overy:
Solo Sailing 'Stupid'
By ALMON LOCKABEV
DAILY PILOT a .. 11n1 ldllor
HONOLULU -Peggy Slater, who
embarked on a solo sail cruise to
Honolulu June 30 with "nothing to
prove", proved something to herseU.
"It was a stupid thing to do . I should
never have tried it," the 48·year-old
"achtswoman told a news conferl!!nce
after being brought ashorl!! from a
Coast Guard cutter.
Miss Slater was taken from her 43.
foot sloop Valentine II Tuesday by a
Japanese Creighter whjch had respond·
ed to her urgent "mayday" message.
She was later transferred to the Coast
Guard vessel.
Miss Slater's boat was located 400
miles south of the island of Oahu, her
original destination, after she bad sent ·
urgent messag2s requesting help.
"I wouldn't have believed wherl!! I
~as," Miss Slater told interviewers ...
Pereira Air
Plan Critics
Meddlesome?
The
By BRUCE BENSON
OI tM 0111' PllOt St.If
chairman of the ofiiciat
Ne wport Beach city committee on air
traffic problems today scolded critics
of the recl!!nlly completed William
Pereira master plan for Orange Coun·
ty air travel.
"The dangers of Intemperate med·
dliog by ill-informed persons can in·
tlnsily this problem rather than aid in
the solution," complained J a c k
Mull.an, head of the Newport Air Traf.
fie Advisory Committee.
Though he mentioned no names.
Mullan obviously was aiming his ar·
rows at Dan Emory, a leading airpo~t
expansion foe. Emory appeared before
city councilmen Monday night and
convinced them to withhold approval
of the Pereira report.
"Some of the vocal opposition pro.
bably comes from not understanding
the information developed in the
Pereira report, or how the study
should be used,'' Mullan said.
Emory. a s pok es men for
homeowners' grouns opposed to more
noise at Oran~e County Airport, told
councilmen that Perelra's figure~
show that as much as 15 minutes of
every hour will be consumed by jet
noise in Newport Beach by 1973.
"Pereira makes no attemnt to ap-
proach a solution to this problem,'' he
said. "His report is filled with
elaborate charts, but thete isn't one
showln i:t: the noise impact on our com.
mnnitv.''
Mulian. a prominent local realtor,
responded that Pereira's figurr.~ wert?
not j.!athe.red to "solve all problems."
Inste;id, they were presented in order
to define the problem and "show the
ma,irni tude or potential future air traf.
fie demand.''
11The Coast Guard had given me a
line of position , and I took it for a
course,'' she explained. This meant
she would have been sailing in tlle op-
posite direction from the island.
The bruised and battered Miss
Slater said her troubles startl!!d last
Thursday when she went forward on
Valentine II toJ· ibe the head'sl. A wave·
washed her an the !iail overboard and
the motion of the boat dragged the sail
un der the hull and pinned Miss Slater
against it. She was secured to the boat
by a safety line which she usl!!d when
leaving the cockpit.
"I was over the s Ide two hours,
clinging to the rail by my elbows be·
fore another-wave· tossed be. beck on
board','' she :slid
Exhausted and brul&ed. sh,e r:adio.ed
r.oast -"Guaid Honolulu ·to asll: for a
bearing. In her dazed and· eihat1st9d
condition she mistook ·the ~~C *. ?r '-•• ,,.,~ , ~ ..
from Honolulu as a course to steer,
she explained.
"I have to bel~ve I was having
hallucinations,'' said Miss Slater. "I
wa s so tired I didn't know what I was.
doing."
The red-haired yachtswoman said
her tr.oubles werl!! compounded when
she became too tired to eat. She said
she ,had periods of blackout and
generally ceased to function.
"I don't knaw bow long I would
black out, but it must hive been
lengthy. When I would. wake up I
would have new injuries,'.' said Miss
SI~=~· later mesiages becam~ more
urgent: "}Ielp · me~ , I'm lost and ex·
tremely ,tl•ed. It'> )>lowipg 4<e . hell,
burry ·up!" were messa~es logged ,by u1e Coast Gbat,d before ~per b9at wa s
. (Set SOLO SA/LOR, Pac~ z
'U,IT .......
SMILING THROUGH FATIGUE-Peggy Slater smiles as she fields
questions by newsmen after she was brought ashQre at Honolulu
from her abortive solo sail from Los ru,gele.s to Honoluu.
Resting N~on
Prepares Papers
• Richard .M. Nixon, guardl!!d by
0r .. ,.
'
We•tliler
He said that every time "man in his
great wisdom" attempts to alter
natur,, you have an immediate
result.
U the airport Ir built In Huntington
Beach, ao pr_..i with runways
1tretdlln1 mere than a mile into the
Pacific Ocean, the resuk wouJd be a
change in the littoral drift, the coastal
currents that run fairly parallel to the
beach, be aaid.
Laguna ·'Hip Patrol' Pushed
federal and Newport Beach of!icers at
the home of Judge and Mrs. Thur·
mond O.arke, in Cam'o Shores,
Corona del Mar, may have retreated
to a o m e deere6 of IOJJ.tude, but in4
dlcationa are ibat !>o bu not ¥'• Idle
during hlr -k-IOOC' ulle IJ'om Ille
rJgor1 of the polltlcai world.
· R. E. Haklman', . the former vice
prelldent'• chief of· llall said Wld·
' netdiy thlf four papeis have betn
prepartcl by tht GOP conlender for
preoeil!IUon Ill the plallorm com·
mJttee of the national convention.
In spite of early mornlng
haziness, Orange counUans can
expect clear afternoon sides
with temperatures ranging in
the sevenUes for the next Cew
days. Today's water tempera-
ture is 70.3 degrees.
INSmB TOD&Y
If you mY1t bom>to, ·fincmdal
writtr Swlola Porttr t1li. W!'
hmo to ,go about if in ci colvmn
on l'ag• 10 today. He explai.Qed that tor many eons,
sand haa pUed up on the beaches from
natural sources - silt coming down
rtver1 and to the sea and sand carried
onto sbore by currents.
''As we began building jetties, rivers
were cemented and check dams built
in. th• canyons to prevent Ooods, we
Jost these natural sources."
Newport Belch in the put year hu
workld lllib Ille U. s. Army Corps of
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of ,.. Dlltr ..... ""'
A Laguna Beach councllma'1 clash
with hippies blocking h1s business en-
trance lead Wednesday .tight to a pu1h
for police patrolmen afoot in the
business area.
Councilman Richard G o 1 d b e r g
detailed his Tuesday encounter at the
entrance to Fads & Fancies, m S.
co .. t Htghway. .
He called foe an lmmediale beeline
up of. enforcement to control hippies.
Co~ll opinions varied during a pro·
trated discussion of the tacties and
pbllosophy or law enforcement.
Goldberg said his wife phoned hJm
that eight h_lppies were blocking the
shop entrance and refused to move
when both she aod the candy shop pro-
prietor next door asked.
Goldberg said he tl>ld bis wile Ill call
police 1nd then drOve to the store
from Boat Canyoo SilOJ>Plni Center.
"There they sat," he aald. "One
blowing a fiute. Another one aald, 'I
feet so wonderful I could just fly.•
Another one sa1d he felt Dke a piece of
clothing going th'rough the washing
machine.'"
NEW YORK (J) -The stock
The irate councilman said he told
the hlpples to get out and they said,
"peace. brolhtr. peace." Goldberg
zaid he W'1ntd thlt they would hive market fell 1barpty 'Jburldly a!-
peaet tn the cl1y Jail wbta be atglled a temoon In acUn INtdinJ. (Set quo4&·
complaint. Uo.,, Pa1ea Io.II), ·
J , _1
'~
s-• =-• C•""'1111 , " CltlllffM ... ..ll """" " --c-" °'111111 ~ ' --• =-.. -' ..... t>U -·-.. L~l!l •"""1•1-' " ·-.... ~~~ .. =Ii '" " • .. --..
,(
I
'
I
I
-----_,_,..., ..... ,,,, _,. •... _ ..
z DAllV PILOT .
Psy~he Shop Raided
.. Owne.r. Held for Sex Poster Sale
sa.n Clemente police -acti.ng on
their own while the D!Jtrict Alt4rney's OWc, ii tllU coasiderlng the matter -
amltad th• co-owner ot a con-
tn>verllal pi1<11edelic lhop Wed·
nesday for sale of· a sexy poster.
James C01wtU. 21. co-owner of The
Mind Garden, 2°' S. 'Ola Villa, was
hooked on ausplcjon ol conirlbuting to
the dellnquenq or-. minor aa the
reault of Mlllq tho poster lo, a 13-
year-old girl. .
The multi-colortd poster depicts a
boy and girl having Intercourse as
deaaibed In ancient books on the art
o nove •• Coiw.U wu rettued on his own fOCG111111Uct without bavlog lo post
Cable Airlines
Defies Orders,
Continues Flights
C.ble Commuter Airiioes defied a
cease and des1at order for the fOurth
straight day today as it contlnued
flying passengers from Orange County
Airport to Los Angeles International.
Demands for the airline to halt
operations were issued Monday by the
California Public Utilities OomnU&&ion
(PUC) OD the grounds that Cable is
operating without a PUC certificate.
However. William E. Myers, C1ble
board c~an. responded that Cable
doesn't need PUC sanction because
most of the airline's passengers fly to
Los Angeles and then proceed to out of
state destinations.
The PUC can regulate «lr traffic on-
ly within the state, not out of it, ac-
COT'ding to Myers.
He contmded that Cable c.ommuter
is ferrying Jassengers to
by the f~ Civil Aeron111.utics
Board. The dispute threatens to bring the
PUC end federal authorities tnlo COO·
ruct over their reeulatory rights of a1r
passengers.
Al Orange County Airport lllia
morning , a ticket clerk 1aid Cable
passengers bound for Los Angeles
must show either interstate fllcht
tickets or sign an alfidavjt stating
they u{1en<1 to buy audl lickels.
Since the PUC cease and de11t11t
·order, Cable has stopped provldlna
service to customers destined for
placoa within the Btote.
The clerk 11ald Cable's 16 fights a
day to Los Angeles are continuing
uninterrupted, leaving at the start of
eVflf1 i-rrom 7 1.m. lo 10 p.m. dal·
Jy for out-of-atate pa11en1er1.
Missing Trimaran
Sailor Reported
Found in Pacific
Rumors reached the Orange coast
Weclneoday tbal ArUlur Plver, noted
trtmaran ~ and 11llor m111tng
slnce AjJr1l 3 bu been found adrllt tn
hil clilmlltod trimaran ,,.... I h e
Equllor. Earl oornu. ....... of tilt yacht
S&1"cla m 11t Loo Analt1 lo TahiU
raco, Ilk! a.. rumor thM Ptnr had
-lound -Papeell, TahlU, 1 fn holn be!°" bl lell Mooday lo fly
to Loo Angelea.
Corh4t Nld a.. unconflrmol report
had Pl...-, aW1 aUve, picked up by a
tramp steamer m route to Papeete.
Ptver !ell san Francil<o March 17
on a aolo sail to San Diego in order to
gel tn IOO miles of &Olo salUng that
would quallly him for the single-hand·
ed trans-Atlantic race. He reportedly
carried two lveekl aupply of fOOd and
water.
DAILY PILOT
.....,. ...... c ...
OIWfOI COAST PU8LllMINO COMPANY
RoHrf N. w,,4
p~ ..... Pvll!Wltf'
Jee.It R. C11,1.., . °'"' Pt•ktlnl .,,. Gtntnl MINlttr
Thom•, Ktt•il
EdllDr
lho11111 A. Mwrphi"' ~~ld!tor
Jtrom• f, ColhM P1wl NIHtl'I
N.....crt I.at AcMt111!119 Ot)' Edi... P1ttellr ---211 I Wilt l1ID01 lo11!1111td
M1111111 Mim1i r.o. '" 1111 t2i•l
°""' "'"-Cot!• Melt: S» Wttl ti.y $1~
u.wi. 119«1\: m ,_, "-Hurt11"""" a.ell: alt 111'1 Strnl
bail on the cb1rge after arraignment
beCore Judge Richard Hamilton in
South Orange County MuQicipa~ Court.
Colwell faces preliminary' hNring
on the charge Aug. 20 at 10 a.m .. and
the suspect say he will plead not guilty
and request a jury trial.
A possiblllty Wits that l h e
American Civil Liberties Union may
sten tn, since Miu Cyndi Wild, 17, Col·
weiI's partner and flan ce, has said the
ACLU is interested in their case.
Several hundred irate San Clemen.
teans are pressuring the City Council
to t.ake steps to close The Mind
Gardea by revoking the business
licen1e Issued ill tbe name of Colwell'•
mother. ·
' -J'• I
JUI\ ~ 1111 .c1tJ lw ltcll
grounds for 1ucb actJon ts still l}efng
ques.tioned., but San Clemente P9llee
· Qilef CWford.Murray llld W-•dat '
that hl&.dopartmenUound Colwell had
violated the law ln tbe aexy poster
s1tle.
The san Clemente Chaoibef Of C:Om·
roe{ce .and the U n U e d Presbyterian
Church are urg\ilc a vt(Uan)t' group
and other meas~ to ·IUard 11alnst a
takeover by hippies,. aa a . r11ult of
m6ch rumor and the Mind Garden In·
cldent. ,
The City Council reeently passed a
law prohibiti.Da sleeping in l.ehicles on.
public or private •property as ooe
oafegu:d.
Mom A~used of Belting
' Police Awaits Prelims
A Costa Mtsa mother of two teen·
aged daughters was free on $625 bail
today pending a prelim.in:ary hearing
Aug. 7 on two felony assault counts,
stemming from a brawl la.st week at
Newport Beach police heed.quarters.
Elva Earley Bokenko, 33, ol 734
Joann St.. appeared in Newport
Harbor Municipal Court 'Ibur.sday for
arraignment on chargea of attempting
to cause violent injury, and 111Sing of
force in an assault on a police officer.
1lbe woman was arrested at police
headqu-arters after she allegedly
SWilre, kicked and injured a Ne-wport
Beach police sergeant, a policewoman,
and .a potice clerk.
Her daugl>ttors, 17 and 14, allegedly
joined her in the ... au11 and sw-iog
spree. 'Ibey were el.so merged with
felony asnult end face Juvenile Cowi
proceelllngs.
Police llld the fi&bt erupted atte.
Mrs. Bokenko wae notlfled that one of
her daughters had been picked up on
the street on charges of being under
the influence of drngs.
'lbe mother arrived at the police
department along with her second
diaughter. Police charged the woman
unleashed an invective of obscenities.
"Then her daughters joined in, and
then all hell broke lOose," Officers
later reported.
A police sergeant wa1 kicked twice
in the groin , and a policewoman and
records clerk suffered minor injuries
during a scuffle to subdue Mrs.
BokenJro and her daugtiters, according
to police.
If convicted on both felony counts,
tlhe mother could face up to 12 yeers in
state prlaon.
Mesa Slaying Suspect's
Hearing Slated Friday
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 1M Dtlly Pllet llttf
~liminary hearing for Mrs. Irene
M. Tucker, charged wlUt murder jn
the atabbtng death of her next.door
neighbor, will be set Friday.
The wUe of Costa Mesa City Coun-
cilman George A. Tucker, of 1642
Minorca Drive, ls due to appear at
9:30 a.m. tn Harbor Diltrlcl Judicial
Court.
The 37-yaar-old defendant's at.
tomey, Paul Aucuattae Jr., ii ex-
pected to make a new motion for ball to be set, tbu1 allOwlng Mrs. Tucker to
be releued lo her huahand.
Superior Court Judge Howard C.
cameron Monday declined to set ball
for Mrs. Tucker at a hearing in which
two court-appotnted peychlatrisls' fin·
dings were revealed.
The men ilid Mrs. Tucker ls sane
and capablit.: of aiding in her own
defense, 10 Ct1'inal proceedings were
reinstated and the defendant was
transferred from Orange County
Medical Center to jail.
Mrs. Tucker has been held without
ball since June 28. the date Mrs. Har·
riett Westphal. 68. of 1646 Minorca
Drive, was fatally stabbed in a
backyard fight. _
There were no direct witnesses to
what happened and crime lab techni-
cians have been unable tO_.tJ\abllsh
just what knife was used ·tn-Jbe fatal
stabbing. · · ·
Mrs. Tucker's c•se w11I be bu'4 o~
an angle of self-defense and jurors
must make their decisions largely on
physical evidence and backnound ln·
vestigatlon ol the two women.
Persons questioned by detectives
reported bearing scrNms and dogs
barking shortly before Mrs. Westphal
.staggered out of her yard, then col-
lapsed and died across the street.
The defendant was arrested shortly
thereafter at her home.
No Flag Defiling Issue
"' In Me~a Theater Display
By PAMELA: POWELL
Of t11t ~ llllel Sllfl
Flag defilers are hot flag defllers
unless they defile an acti.ial America n
Flag, Costa Mesa Detective Capl Ed
Glucow ruled today,
In making t h e announcement,
Glascow said all complaintg had been
dropped against South C o a s t
From P .. • J
SOLO SAILOR .
spotted by an aircraft.
\Vhen Miss Slater left Marina del
Rey June 30 she termed her solo
voyage a "fun vacation."
The fun ceased when she got in the
squall y trade winds within 500 miles of
Honolulu.
Miss Slater sa id her K-43 Valentine
11 was still adrift but that the Coast
Guard would attempt to get a line
aboard and tow it to Honolulu.
''I hope no-thing happens to Ute boat.
bu t at this point l'm only thankful to
bo alive. I would never try such a
thing again," she said.
MJss Slater is a tailor of Ufe·long ex·
perleace 111d bas done considerable
single-handed s&Uing in her various
boats along tbe cawomia coast.
Her overboard experience t s
remtnlacent Of her younger days when
she fell overboard from a 26-foot aloop
w h i 1 e en route from Newport to
C&talina and had to swim several
hour• before the coaJd get a hand on
the boat and hois t hersell back
aboard.
Miss Slater said she would rest up in
Honolulu btfore flying back to tho
mainland.
"I'll probably s!llp Valentine It hock.
Ono lhtni ls for 1ure, I'll -1111 alooe again/' abe vowed.
L
Repertory 's Se<:ond Step Theater after
photographs of the flag poster were
reviewed by City Attorney Roy June.
Under the California Military and
Veterans Code, flag desecration ap·
plies only to abuse of an auctual Flag.
The federal law which prohibits defile-
ment Of a representation of the F1ag is
not in effect, Glascow said.
''It was never our intent•
either dlrectly or indire<:Uy, to
discredit the dignity of the flag of our
country," a theater spokesman said
today.
"Our window poster Is not meant to
represent the nag: it is a graphic
de&lgn, concejved by an artist, in·
tended to project the American sub·
ject matter o( our 'cWTent production,
'America, HWTah!"
Earlier this week, the theater JX>Sler
display.c:I a noose on tbe right corner.
"We removed the noose from the
design becau se it was too graphically
restrictive and did not effectively
symboli1.e all the concerns of the
play," the spokesma n continued. ''The
decision to remove this element was
made before tihe unfounded complaint ·
became public." ·
The cc:nplaint against the manage-
ment ~ the theater was filed Monday
when Police Officer Jack Koch noticed
the flag representaUon. The theater
11 .. u was not no1ilied of the complaint
until it bad been dropped.
"\Vhi1e the complaint filed bid no
· baall ln iaw, we, nonethele11, have
had unjUJtJJiable doubt cut on the
nature of our activity," t h e
management's ttatement said.
·, The produclioo •. "America, Hur·
rah!" whtdi deal s with tbt moru ol
modern America opene tooiCht al tile
Secood ·Step Th..t.r, 1112'1 Ntwporl
Blvd. ' ' '
l
Ondinell
Big .Race
.
Winner
TRAVEMUNDE, Germany -SUmner~ A: "Huey" Long, wbo l! ac·
cu.stomed to being first in loog
dl!tance yacht raciDI, ncorded an
unuiuil "first" tocle1.
!Ito 73.loOl.Olidlne ID wu declared
first to finloh Ibo 3,500-Jllil<I transatlan·
tic"-all<r t\ wu provlousiy report·
ed. "withdrawn ' fi'om the race.
Race offlcials said the m.isun..
derst.anding about Long's intentions
occurred when he radioed f o r
perm!Jaloo lo ••il to Gotheburg,
8-, lllinkln1 he 'had llready
llnlshed tile race. . Race officials said Long apparenUy
thought he bad finished Ille race after ~g tile ·F<tunam Light Ship and
tnstflild of going t.o Travemunde, he
wanted to save time and 9B1l his ves11el
to a rlhl!>YOJ'd at Gotlleburg, He also
ael,<ed that 12 o( his .cr~w be removed
1""'n OndiM II by an escort veslel.
However, tbe race committee in·
formed him tbat he 1VOUld have tA> sail
lo Travemunde lo comply with tile
rules.
Prior to the confU&ion, CornellUI
Bruynzeel's Stonnvogel had been
reported leading the race. But
Stormvogel finished closely behind
Ondine III.
As llrsl lo ltnlsh, Ondlne ID wino tile
cup donated by West Germany's
federal president.
It is unlikely, however, that she will
wind up as the overall cOrreeted. time
winner. The S3-boe.t fleet 11 competing
on a time allowance basis.
Summer Fun
Signup Time
Registration for the third and fourth
sessions of the Newport Beach sum·
mer recreation program ii now under
way and will continue through Aug. 7.
Openings are still available for sail·
lng, surfing, swimming and tennis
lessons, according to a Parks,
Beaches and Recreation Department
official.
Brochures with specific information
on cl11ses and registration times can
be picked up at City Hall, the New·
port Harbor Chamber of Commerce,
city libraries, playgrounds, 111d rec·
reation department office.
Classes are generally offered for all
age groups from beginners to ad·
vanced students. More Information
can be obtained by calling 673-3180.
House Burgled
. While the family waa away, thieves
.entered a bathroom window Thursday
at the Dougtas.M. Layman residence,
1066 Santiago. ·and stole '635 worth of
housebOid Items iilCluding a color
television set, man'• wedding . ring.
.and perfume, Newport Beach police
were told .
NIW ' PARK~ LEADIR
Walttr SOmenluk
Teacher Elected
Newport Parks
Board Chairman
School '-lier Willer S. &emenlult,
46, 1& new cbatrman ot !he Newport
Beach Parka, 8-cbel and Recreation
Commloalon, 11-anDCIWICed today.
Semenluk, hualneu -and coumelor at Wettmlnater H1lh School,
has served on the pvla: omnmluion
since 1965.
His awomime.-as cll&1rmoo will terminate July, next yem-. He suc-
ceeds Walter Kodl •• head fl. the
parlu boerd, w!Jidl adviles the City
Council on all ·recreaUonal end
beaullflcaU<111 mallers requiring coun-
cil action.
Semeniuk was unanimou11Y elected
cilalnMn by fellow c:omm!aal<Jller1.
They ailo el-reoltor Jomea R.
Downer as vtce-cblirman.
S&ated aa new commlas!oners at tile
board's lira! meeting ot tllo llscal year
was Hall Seely, attiorney, who replac·
ed Ted Witmer, Mtose foour.year term
e<plred Juoe 30. Seely will oervo ~
1972.
Appointments to the nven·man
board are made by 1ile CllY OouncU.
New chairman Semenluk ls a nsi·
dent of Newport Shorts.
Arsonist Sets
Apartment Fire
An arsonist touched off a gaS<>line·
fed blaze at a C06ta Mesa apartment
hou se early today, but the fire was
quickly extinguished, with no damage
toothe structure.
Leslie L. Weeki, of 1801 Whitiler
Ave .• told pol.ice the fire fiared up
shortly after midnight in a trub area
only two feet Crom the apartment
building.
Officer John Stoneback said the
arsonist left a f;wo-galloa guollne can
at the sc.ene.
OCCDr~ts
'.Argume;nts
For Ballots
Wording ol argwnenb that will ap.
pear on the Sept. 17 ballot was drafted
Wednesday night by Oran&• Coast
JWllor College District trullee•.
Hm 1& how ballol argumenil for the
two-part finance meuure will read :
OverrWe coavenloa -"The current
10\t-cent ovtnide, now rettrkted to
Ibo purchue ol bu11dtngs and equip.
mtnt, ta needed for current opera·
tionl. The district wishes to convert
tbl• tu lo • a•nerll plll'poff tu. This
action will not tnci.. the -lo the
taxpayer."
Boad woe-"Orange Coast CoBege
at preaenl ii dea!gned to handle 5,000
tlud-. By Im, ·more · tbaa i,500
a I u de n I a muat be accommodated.
Golden West College ls den,n.d f!>f
1,500 atudentl. In tour years, more
than a,ooo ltudenta will bl lffktng
enrollmenl The cdleges must build
addtUOllal fadllllel ii lhey an to be
able lo otler educaUOllal opporlUDities
to all allgthlo atudenla tn the cllatr!ct.
Exlollng facUW.a al both lnlt1tutlons
are now utU.lled at the mazlmum.
level
"APflS'OYll of tlio fl.21 mllllon bond t11ue will enable Onnge OOlst: College
and Golden Well College lo recelva
matching gr&nCI ot alloc-public
lllnda and wjll lllerel>y Jl<ovlde the
ftnanclal rOOOW'Cel needed to build the
addiUonll facllltleo required duting
the next four years."
Former County
Aide Arraigned;
In Embezzling ·
The man who took convicted· em·
l>enler Lou1a T. Vaucourt'a job' as
chief deputy public administrator of
Orange CoUnty hao been arrllgnec! on
charges similar to the ones which 'put
V ansc:ourt in prlllOll. .
Arthur CbarloH, 33, will answer
charges he stole G39.87 from estates
handled by the public admlnistrator's
office on Aug. 9. ·
Charloff was indicted 1ast Wed-
nesday by the Grand. Jury on :6ix
count6 of mlsappropriation of_ public
funds. He held Ute top public 'ad·
mlnbtrator's post !tom May 2, 1967
until his res!gnallon last April.
He is now in the private accounting
business in Anaheim. Charloff was
credited wiUt helping establish rigid
procedures for .• the band.ling of cash
from decedenta' property after the
V anscourt incident.
He had been an FBI man for four
years and a member of the Orange
County Auditor staff before laking
over the public administrator post.
SOFA CLEARANCE
al .JJ. J. garrell
All HERITAGE
Upholstered Pieces
OFF REGULAR
PRICES
Over 200 Styl11 of Sof11 -
Che irs -love Se1ts -Otto·
m•n• in yowr choic• of any
H1rit19e D1cor1tor f1bric.
Htrftot• 16" Sofa -F1bric
n1tur1I b•ckground w i t h
1qu1mi1t -Floor sample
1old •• 11. W11 '449.
I Pt. c:.nM Sofa. tufted In
olive ~elv.t. W11 S610.
T...a-. I Pt. Solo tufted
febric -g•r•nium v1lv1t. w •• $950.
I Ft. Tuxedo !Oold VolHI
Sefw -loo11 Pillow.
Also many other fine 1ofu in addition to
Heritage -a few are listed below
NOW
s299
NOW
S695
SPECIAL
s349
McGr..tHr Co•.. 100"
Sofa. Down ind 1prin9 -
f1brlc, n1tur1I b1ckground
& marin•. Wai 950.
100" Sefe Merflex constrvc·
tion, hi9h arm, n1tur1I with
olive f1brlc. Wat S595.
H ..... t 100" sot. in n•·
turel "•lvet with equa -
floor ••mpl1. W11 $805.
I Ft. Dowa I. F..-Sor.,
f1bric yellow I: 9oltJ, ton•
on ton• ptffern.
NOW
S695 I
NOW
s399
NOW=,: s599
Your fevorit• in+•rior cf11l9n1r will b1 h•ppy to 111i1 t you •••
H.J.GAl\l\flT fURN'lURE
·rltOFESSIOHAL
INTPIOR DES~NaS
0,,.-.,-. ..... -2115 HARIO!t llVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
'46-0171 '46-0176
_,
I
• J
---------------------
Costa Mesa Today's Cl•lpl • <
YOC. 6f, NO. 178, ~ SECTIONS, 36 PAGES
·-
Police Dig J-ot
Newport Teenager Charged
· G~ police work involves a little
digging.
SO shovels in hand, two Newp~rt
Beach police detectives started-dig-
ging in the yard of a Cen~al Newport
retidence early Thursda~.to·uproot a
robust marijuana plant, eight feet ~J..
Narcotics investigator Al Epstein
and detective John Simon also placed
under arnst a 16-year~Id boy llvin,k
at the house. .
The giant specimen was growing in
a pot which had been· placed in the
ground, police said.
!'The boy said he" didn't have any
idea what it was," Epstein said as he
cast a glance at the potted pot.
"Said ,he'd never seen marijuana
b~fore."
The . teen-ager was charged with
cultivating marijuana, and released to
hLs family pending Juvenile court pro-
ceedings.
Asked bow many marijuana cigaret-
tes the leafy plant Could prbduce, Eps-
tein said : "Oh,·I couldn't even begin to
guess."
Boy Sets Self A fire After
·Quarrel With Mother
A La Palma boy quarreled ·with his
mother Wednesday and then set
himself on fire while she watched in
horror.
David \Villlams, 17, was critically
burned. The names were put out by
the mother and a passing motorist.
Mrs. Diane Williams told'palice that
Orange
Weather
In spite of early morning
haziness. Orange countians can
expect clear afternoon · skies
"1th temperatures ranglDg in
the seveni.ies for the ne1:t lew
days. Today's water tempera·
ture is 70.3 ~dell'ees.
INSWE TODAY
If llO• mud bom>1D, financial
wri~r S11lvia Porttr telll )IOU
how to go about it irt a column
cm Page 1 O today.
• ' ,.,.
" " • • ..
" l•ll " " ..
she and her son had quarreled and
that he had stalked out of the house in·
to the garage.
".I saw him run from the garage to
l h e street, ~ t o p and pour something
r rom a can on his ciothes and then
light a match,•• the mother told of·
flcers.
Verde Election
Meeting Tonight
An estimated 400 persons are ex·
peeled to turn out tonight for the an·
nual election meeting of the Mesa
Verde Homeowners Association.
Meeting time is 7:30 o'clock at the
Mesa Verde Country Club and guesf
speaker tor the affair is Orange Coun· _
ty Planning Director Forest Dlctuon.
Dickason ....;. himself a Mesa Verde
area resident - will discuss long·
range pl~njng for county airport.I,
lreeways and papulatlon growth;
A registrar of voters wlD also be
present at the meeting, dmJnit which.
members of the organliatJon wtll elect
18 directors: from among 26 nomlpees.
Stork Markets
NEW YORK ( API -The stock
market fell sharply Thursday af·
ternoon in active lradJng. (SM quota•
t.iODJ, Paa'• J.0.U).
--COST>: MES>:, CAOFORNI>: THUR~AY, :JULY '25, 1968 TEN CENTS
Riot Troops Move Back
.
Cleveland Looti·ng, Burning Force Stokes Decision
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Mayor Gari
B. Stokes ordered 250 n11tional
guardsmen back into the battle-scar·
red east sJde today to halt looting and
firebombing.
"We do not feel that the danger has
passed," He said. ''This situation re:
quires hour by hour evaluation."
Stokes ordered the guard to return
following three cases of firebomblngs
and 36 lootings. He said most of tbe
violence was caused by teen.agers.
Decision Due
On Changing
Of Trash Fee
A decision on how -and whether or
not -to enact a new method of
assessment for billing Costa Mesans
using public trash collection service
will be made tonight.
A public hearing on the issue is
sc heduled for 7:30 o'clock before the
Costa Mesa Sanitary District_ Board of
Directors in City Council chambers.
A<:tioo on the proposal was con.
tinued from last Thursday to allow the
city finance department time to con·
tract all owners of apartment units
and trailer parks within the city.
This was done to find out how many
prefer to continue with private trash
pickup service, thus being able to
av<Jid paying tor city service under the
new assessment method.
The ~lan is to bQI indi'w'.idual gafbage
collection·users separate from routine
Costa ~esa Sanitary Di.strict general
assessment, pj.lttiltg the , pickQf!_, cost
onlv ~on 'those whO'benefit. ·
U adOpted as set · up now, the
average Person's cost per month will
go up from the current 92 cents to ·
about $1 , while non-µsers of the public
servJce won't have to share the bill.
OnJy a few prOtesU 'froni Individual
Costa Mes.a homeowners were voJced
during the meeting last week, but
many rnuJtiple unit Property-owners
com_plained that it will be unfair.
Cable Airlines
Defies Orders,
Continues Flights
Cable Commuter Airlines defied a
cease and desist order for the fourth
straight day today as it continued
flying passengers Crom Orange County
Airport to Los Angeles Intematiooat.,
Demands fCJr the airline to halt
operations were issued Monday by the
Calilornia Public Utilities Commission
(PUC) on the ground s that Cable is
operating without a PUC certificate.
However, William E. Myers, Cable
board cho.irman, responded tbat Cable
doesn't need PUC 1ancti~u. because
most of the airline's passengers fly to
Los An geles and then proceed to out of
state destinations.
The PUC can regulate a:ir t!'affic on·
ly within the state, not out of it , ac·
cording to Myers.
He contended that Cable Commuter
is ferrying passengers to
by the federal Civil Aeronautics
Board.
The dispute threatens to bring the
PUC and Cederal authorities into con-ruct over their regulatory rights of air.
passengers.
At Orange Cowity Airport this
morning, a ticket c1erk said Cable
passengers bound for Los Angeles
must show · either interstate fli ght
tickets, or sign an alfidavit stating
they intend to buy such tickets.
Since the PUC cease and desist
order, Cable has stopped providing
service to customers destined for
places wlUtin the state.
Arsonist Sets
Apartment Fire
An anonist touched o(f a gasoUne.
fed blaze at a Cotta Mesa apartment
house early today, but the flre was
quickly extinguished, with no damage
toothe struchire.
LesUe L. Weeks, ot 1801 Whittier
Ave ., told police the flte flared up
shortly after midnight in a trash area
only two feet !rom I.be apartment
building. 1 Officer John Stoneback said the
•rsoailt left a two-gallon guollne:· can
It Ult """"'·
•
"To prevent further looting , we are
sending national guardsmen into cill
areas where stores were broken Into
last night (Wed~es.day)." Stokes told a
news conference. "There are: 12
specific locations."
He said hls action Wednesday ln
removing the 2,600 n a t i o n a I
guardsmen from tbe area where 10
persons had been shot to daetb the
night before was successful. -
"It is our considered opinion that we
made consider~ble headway last night
(\Vednesday) in restoring order and in
ending the looting and violen~e," he
said. "No one was killed. no one was
shot, no ori.e was injured."
Stokes said police made 13 ar.rests
Wednesday night~
When Stokes -removed the tr6ops
Wednesday, he sent in their place 100
Negro police officers and 500 Negro
community leaders who "challenged"
residents to keep the peace.
I
"lf w.e are successful tonight in stop-
ping looting and arson, we . can get
back to putting Cleveland intO h)gb
geaf'." . .
Return of the gUard cofncided with a
report by the Cleveland' press or an
alleged black nationalist plot t'o
assassinate Stokes .and Negro City
Couneilman· Leo A. 'Jackson.
Stokes said he had "no reason to
believe it (the plot) has any basis of
(Seo CLEVELAND, PaJo I)
No Charges Due Mrs. Tucker
Faces Court
On Friday On Theater Flag
By PAMELA POWELL
Ol flll D•!tr PllM Sllll
Flag defilers are not flag defilers
unless they defile an actual American
Flag, Costa Mesa Detective Capt. Ed
Glascow rule<! today. '
In making th e announcement, ·
Glascow said all complaints had been
dropped against South C o a s t
Repertory's Second Step Theater after
photographs of the flag pester were
reviewed by City Attorney Roy June.
Under the California Military and
Veterans Code, flag desecration ap-
plies only to abuse of an actual Flag.
The federal law which prohibits defi1e·
ment of a representation or the Flag is
not in effect, .Glascow said.
"It •·u ~·.our l nt ~nt,
either dirdy or indirectly, to
discredit the dignity or the fl ag of our
country,", a theater spokesman said
loday.
"Our .window.~ter is hot meant.to
represent Ule flag'; it ,is a graphic .
design, conceived by an artist, ln·
tended to project the American sub·
Ject matter of our current pr oduction.
'America, Hurrah!"
Earlier this week, the theater poster
displayed a noose on the right corner.
"We removed the noose from the
design because it was too graphically
restrictive and did not effectively
symbolize all the concerns of the
play," the spokesman continued. 'iThe
decision to remove this element was
made before the untounded complaint
became public."
The complaint against the manage-
ment al the theater was filed MOllday
when Police Officer Jack Koch notic"ed
the flag representation, The theater
itself was not notified of the complaint
until it had been dropped.
"While the: complaint filed had no
basis in law. we. nonetheless. have
had unjustifiable doubt cast on the
nature of our activity." the
management's statement said.
The production, ".<\n1erica, I1ur·
rah!" which deals with the mores ol'
modern America opens tonight at the
Se<::ond Step Theater, 1827 Newport
Blvd.
* * * Jury Trial Slated
for Man Ac~tised
Of Def acing Flag
\Villiam Reid . P¥~er, held on
Charfes ol thi J!dl . .-dolaoln1 of a
huge AmerioU Jl'.'lar·at the Toto, Inc,·
pllint on Newport Freeway; will face a
jury on Aug. 6 Jn Central Municipal
Court in Santa Ana. ·
Parker, 23, free on $125 bail on the
mildemeanor·cbarge, was · arrested in
Co1ta Mesa. He fqr~erly lived . in
Tl)Stin , and was -~c_ed through the
licerue number.of his car. ,
Santa Ana det~ctives . pic~ed up '
Parker at 2280 Pacific St. July 24.
Thej' said he ' was sharing an apart·
ment with three or lour friends. He was,.allegedly .caught spraying
with black paint across the 20 by 3()..
foot Flag, ''Vietnam, 25,23: Dead,
151,344 Wounded ."
The men who stopped to try to ·AP·
prehend him said he was wear.ing a
beard and had long hair. When ar·
rested, Parker was clean shaven and
had a normal haircut, the detectives
said.
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of lht O.lly Plltl Staff
Preliminary hearing for Mrs. Irene
M. Tucker, charged with murder in
the stabbing death of her next.door
neighbor, will be set Friday.
The wife of Costa Mesa City Coun·
cilman George A. Tucker, of 1642
Minorca Drive, is due to appear at
9 :30 a.m. in Harbor District Judicial
Court.
The 37·year-old defendant's at·
torney, Paul Augustine Jr., ls ex-
pected to make a new motion for ·bail
to be set, thus allowing Mrs. Tucker to
be released to her husband.
Superior Court Judge Howard C.
Cameron Monday decllhed to set bait
for Mrs. Tucker. at a h~aring in which
two court-api)otnted PfiYChiatrists' fin·
din~, Were revealed.
The JQen said Mrs. Tucker is sane
and capable of .aldlag in her. 'l"" ·
.W.nae, 10 crimlbl.l.J>roceedh:t1•'wtrt ·
reinstated and the defendant wa11
trinsferi-ed · froin · Orange · county
Medie<1l C.nter to jail.
Mrs. Tucker has: been held without
bliil since· June 28, the date Mrs.' Har·
riett Westphal. 68.· of 1648 ·Mlnorca
Drive, was fatally stabbed Jn a
backyard fight. · '
There were no dire<::t witnesses ft1
v.·hat happened and crime lab techni·
cians have been unable to establish
just what knife was used in the .fatal
stahblri?..
Mrs. Tucker's case will be based on
an angle of self·defense and jurors
must make their decisions largely on
physical evidence and background in-
vestigation of the two women.
Persons quesUoned by det.ecUves
reported hearing screams and dogs
barking shortly belore Mrs. Westphal
staggered .out of her yard, then col·
lapsed· and .died across the street.
The defendant was arrested shortly
thereatter at her home.
No Solo Sailing Ever Again
By ALMON LOCKABEY
OAILY PILOT t .. tllll llllW
HONOLULU -Peggy Slater, who
embarked on a solo sail cruise to
Honolulu June 30 with "nothing to
prove", proved something~ herseU.
"It was a stupid thing to do. I should
never have tried it," the 48-year-old
~·achtswoman told a news conlerence
alter being brought ashore Crom a
Coast Guard' cutter.
Miss Slater was taken from her 43.
foot sloop Valentine II Tuesday by a
Japanese freighter which had respond·
ed to her urgent "mayday" message.
She was later. transferred to the Coast
Guard vessel.
Miss Slater's boat was located 400
miles south or the island of Oahu, her
original destination, after she had sent
urgent messag~s requesting help.
"I wouldn't have believed where I
was." Miss Slater told interviewers.
0'The Coast Guard had given me a
line of position. and I took it for a
course." she explained. This meant
she would have been sailing in the op-
posite direction !rdfn the island.
The bruised and battered Miss
Slater said her troubles started last
Thursday when she went forward on
Valentine JI to jibe the bead's!. A wave
washed her and the sail overboard and
the motion of the boat dragged:the aall
wider the hull and pinned Mb:s $later
against it. She was secured to the boat
by a safety 11"6 which she ~ •hen
l~avlng lbe cockpit
"I was over the 1 I de two hours,
clinging to the rail by my elbows bf.
fore another wave tossed be back on
board," she said
Exhausted and bruised. she radioe:d
f".:Nst Guard Honolulu to asi ror a
bearing: Jn her dazed and exhausted
condition ahe mistook t.he bearint
(S.. SOLO S.W.OR, Poe< I
.,,........_
SMILING THROUGH FATIGUE-Peggy Slater smiles u abo lleld1
questions by newsmen alter she was brought ashore 1t Honolulu
!rom her aborUve solo sail from Los Aneeles to Honoluu.
•
----------~----~---~ ---~--
"
I DAILY PllOT
U~S. Jets Unable
' \ ' ' .
To Help Pueblo?
WASHINGTON (UPO -Top Hou,.
R•publlcam charged tod>y that U.S.
planes were unable to go to tbe aid of
the u~ Pueblo to prev~nt tta capture
beo•UM they went "Loaded with DU•
clear ..._PDnl" aod could not be re--
fitfled hi time wltb coo...rtional arms.
Al ·& aews confertn<e, the GOP
leaders raid this alleged lack of con·
Ungeney plans typified mishandling of
the Pueblo incident by the ad·
ministration. They suge1ted tbat an "obloct _ .. by the United Statea
to North Korei-may be fortbcom.i.Dt.
As to what other steps might be
taken. now to Win release of the crew
members selzed wit.b their sbip six
mooths ·ago, they said that ''when
there ii a Republican admlnislrotioo.
and we have access to all the facts, we
will have an mswer to tbat."
The Pueblo comments came in a
stiat.emeJJt in news c o n f e re n c e
remarks br Houoe GOP Jeacler G•rald
R. Ford (Mich.), and Rep. John J.
Rhodes (R·Am.), cheinnan of the
House GOP Policy committee.
There were published r e p o r t s
previously that when the Pueblo was
...,..fed by North Koreaa g1111boats on
JM1. 23, oil tbe North Korea coast,
U.S. fil!hter pW>es in Soutb Korea were prevented from going to the alrl
of the i?W.elllgence ship because of
lheit assigned rruclear role.
This has not been confirmed by the
Pentagon. However, the United Slates,
as part of its strategic force, is Don
to keep planes stationed at yariou1
parts of the world ready to deliver
nuclear-weapons if needed.
The administration has denied
reports it plans an apology to North
Korea, but the GOP leaders &aid "an
abject apology to North Korea would
be in the same pattern aa the J obnson-
Humpbley administration apology to
the Soviet U.Won which gained the
release of an American comm«cial
airliner from a Soviet base.''
Mom Accused of Belting
Police Awaits Prelims
A Costa Mesa mother of two teen·
a-ged daughters was free on $625 bail
today pending a prellmtnary hearing
Aug. 7 on two felony assault counts
stemming from a brawl last week at
Ne"WpOrt Beach police headquarters.
Elva Earley Bokento, 33, ol 734
Joann St., appeared in Newport
Harbor Municipal Court Thunday lor
arraignment on cbargea of attempting
to cause violent injury, and usJng of
force in an assault on a police officer.
, The wonLall wat &Tested at police
boadquarters after she alleg<dly
swore, kicked and injured a Newport
Beach police sergeant, a pollcewomao,
and a poli<e clerk.
Her daug!lters, 17 and 14, allegedly
Youth Accused
Of Police Ruse
Faces Hearing
A youth accUHd of tbaklng down
youngsters and takln& their pock•t
money wblle posing u a policeman
wu ldleduled lor prellmlnacy bearing
in Horbor Dilltrict Judicial Court t ..
day.
Buddy D. Garten, 18, ol S&nta Ana,
is charged with one count of robbery
as the result of the alleged acts last
Saturday in Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach.
The District Attorney's o ff ice ,
however, refused to issue complaints
charging Garten-with kidnapping and
robbery ln connection with two Costa
Mesa cases.
He is held at Orange County Jail in
lieu of $31,250 bail 11 the result af an
inddent in wblcb a pair ol Newport
Beach boys were forced to band over
69 c<nto and a used note pad.
Two small brothers and a pair of
teertagers in C04ta Mesa had earlier
been ordered to turn over their pocket
money, totalling fl .20, by a youth who
said he was a policeman.
They de1cribed his car as being an
older, blue sedan with a wide silver
racing stripe and currently.popular
flower decals plastered all over it.
Newport Beach police officer Harry
\Villiams spotted Garten driving a car
ol !bat ducrlption Sunday and caught
him after a brief clwe from Newport
Beadl city hill Into Coeta Mesa.
DAILY PILOT
Oll!ANGll! C:OAST PUILISHING COMPANY
Robetf N. Wet4
Pta\flllt end Publlthft'
Jecli: ll:. Curlt'f
Vitt Praldlnt 9M Gtftlrtl Mlntw
Tltofl'let keeril .....
The11111 A. U11rpfll11t
#rMtllllftl 1:•11w
Pe11I NitMll Mwnllllfll OlrKtor c..--lJO Wt1t by Street
Mell!"' AU,.Ht P.O .••• 1s•o 9262, --tK--1 flt.let!; J'ltl West "!t!Qt lloulevenl WWnl tlleCJI: #22 "-ti AWl'Plll
Hlill'lffMfoll liNdl: Jiit llll '""'
' ••
joined her in the .asa:ault and swearing
spree. They were also charged with
felony assault and face Juvenile Court
proceedings.
Police said the fight erupted after
Mrs. Bokenko was notified that one 0£
her daughters had been picked up on
the street oo. d>arges of being under
the influence of drug1t
The mother arrived at the Police
department along with her aeoood.
daughter. Police charged the woman
unleashed an invective of obscenities.
"Then her daugtters joined in, and
then all hell broke loose," Officers
later reported.
A police se•geant was kicked twice
in the groin, and a policewoman and
records clerk suffered minor injuries
during a scuffle to subdue Mrs.
Bokenko and ber daughters, .according
to police.
If convicted. on both felony COi.ills,
the mother could face up to 12 years in
state prison.
OCC Trustees
Draft Ba/Jot
Arguments
Wording of arguments that will ·~
pear on the Sept. 17 ballot was dratted
Wednesday night by Orange Coast
Junior College District trustees.
Here is how ballot arguments for the
two-part finance measure will read:
Override conver1lon -"The CWTent
101,1-cent override, now restricted to
the purchase of buildings and equip-
ment, is needed for current opera·
tions. The district wishes to convert
this tax to a general purpose tax. This
action will not increase tht cost to the
taxpayer."
Bond issue -"Orange Coast College
at present is designed to handle 5,000
students. By 1972. more than 7,500
s t u d e n t s must be accommodated.
Golden West College is designed. for
1,500 students. In four years, more
than 5.000 students will be seeking
enrollment. The colleges must build
additional facilities if they are to be
able to offer educational opportunities
to all eligible students in the district.
Emting facilities at both institutions
are now utilized at the maximum
level.
"Approval of tht $7.25 million bond
JJSue will enable Orange Coast College
and Golden West College to receive
matching grant:s of allocated public
funds and wW thereby provide the
financial resources needed to build the
additional facilities required during
the next four years."
Missing Trimaran
Sailor Reported
Found in Pacific
Rwnors reached the Orange Coast
Wednesday that Arthur Piver, noted
trimaran designer and sailor missing
sinCfl April 3 has been found adr!It in
his dismasted trimaran near t b e
Equlrtor.
Earl COrkett, owner of the yacht
Salacla Jn the Loe Angele• to TahiU
race, said the rumor tbat Pinr had
been found re1chld Papeete, TlhlU, a
lew boon befor< he left Mooday to Oy
to Los An&elu.
Corkett said the unconflrmeJ rtport
had Plver, still allYe , picked up by a
tramp 1teamer en route to Papeete.
Plver left San Francisco March 17
on a solo sall to San Diego in order tn
get in 500 mlles of solo sailing that
would qualify him for the single-hand·
-ed tra.M·AUantic race. lie reportedly
carried two lveeks IUpPly of IOOd and water.
L
ARRESTED -Fred Ahmed
Evans was among 48 arrested.
in Cleveland after night of or-
ganized sniper fire.
Steek llf•rketl
CLEVELAND ..•
fact."
There were 2,600 n a t i o n a 1
guardsmen patroli.ng the s tr e e ts
Wednesday, armed and with orders to
shoot to till snipers. Tbe east side was
a battleground. The racial peace that
had b e e n Cleveland ended in t h e
report of automatic weapons and the
crash of Molotov cocktails through
~etto windows. The nation's eighth
largest city was on edge.
',ple mayor Carl B. Stokes, a Negro,
made his bold gamble. He ordered the
national guardsmen removed from the
streets.
His gamble apparenUy paid off.
The Cleveland police chief, Michael
Blackwell, called it "a brilliant idea."
The city was relatively calm Wed·
nesday night and early today.
Stokes ordered all but 100 Negro
police out of the city's scarred east
side. He replaced the NaUonal Guard
with 500 black cor.imunity leaders.
Stokes "challenged" them to keep
the peace. They did.
A group of civil rights leaders,
we.aring orange armbands w i t h
"Mayor's Committee" printed on
them, moved into the area talking with
residents and trying to relieve
tensions.
Fr~• r.,e J
SOLO SAILOR
from Honolulu as a course to steer,
she explained. .
"I have to belle.ve 1 .was having
halluclnatiQ!MI,''. 'said Mias Slater. "I
was so ttrea I didn't lalQw what I was
dOing."
The red·halred yachtswoman said
her troubles were comPounded when
she became too tired to eat, She said
she had periods of blackout and
genera1ly ceast!d to function.
"I don't know how long I would
black out, Hut it must t,ave been
lengthy. Wben I would wake up I
would have new injuries," said Miss
Slater.
Her later messages became more
urgent. "Help me, I'm lost and ex·
tremely tired. It's blowing like hell,
hurry up!" were messages logged by
the Coast Guard before her boat was
spotited by an· aircraft.
When Miss Slater left Marina del
Rey June 30 she termed her solo
voyage a "fun vacation.''
The fun ceased when she got in the
squally trade winds within 500 miles of
llonolulu.
Mi ss Slater said her K-43 Valentine
IT was st.ill adrift but that the Coa st
Guard would attempt to ge t a line
aboard and t O\\' it to Honolulu .
"I hope nothing happens to the boat,
but at this point I'm only thankful to
be alive. I would never try such a
thing again," she said.
Miss Slater is a sailor of life.Jong ex·
perience and has done considerable
single-handed sailing in her various
boats along the California coast.
Her overboard experience I s
reminiscent of her younger days when
she fell overboard from a 26·foot sloop
w h i I e en route from Newport to
Ca talina and had to swlm several
hours before she .could get a hand on
the boat and hoist herseli back
aboard .
Miss Slater said she would rest up in
Honolulu before flying back to the
mainland.
"I'll probably ship Valentine II back.
One thing is for sure, I'll never sail
alone again," she vowed.
Ondine Wins
Transatlantic
Yacht Race
TRAVEMUNDE, Germany
Sumner A. "Huey" Long, who is ac·
cu-eel to being first in loog
di.stance yacht radng, recorded an
unusuil 1•nrat" today.
Hii 7l-foot Ondine Ill was declared
first to finlah the 3,5QO.mlle transatlan·
tic rec. alter It was previously report·
ed "vllthdrawn" from the race.
Race oilicials said the mlsun·
dent.anding about Long's intentions
occurred when he radioed f o r
permissioo to •ail to G9111tburg,
Sweden, tbinkln& lie bad already '
finished the race.
-· _,. ___ . - -- -
'
·-. -
.Owner Held' for Sex Poster Sale (
• • •
SU Oemente police -acting on
their own while the Dlstrlct Attorney's
bilk; It ollll.conaidering the mattar -
arrested the co-owner of a con·
trovorlial · poycbtcl.Uc Mop Wed·
nesday for sale of a sexy poster.
James Colwell, 20, co-owner ol The
Mlltd Gardea, 204 S. Ola Villa, was
booked oo ~lcloa ol COlllribuiing to
the delinqulncy of a minor as the
result of 1e1Un1 ths poster ta a 13-
year-old girl. · ·
The multi-colored poster depicts a
boy and girl having intercourse as
described in ancient books on the art
oflove:
Colwell .was released ·on bll own
recogniiancs WithCIAI havinJ to r10st
Resting Nixon
Prepares Papers
For Convention
Richard M. Nixon, guarded by
federal and Newport Beacb officers at
the .home of Judge and Mn .. Thur·
mond Clarke, in Cameo Shores,
Corona del Mar, may have retreated
to s o m e degree or solitude, but m.
dications are that be bas not been idle
during his week-long exile from the
rigors of the political world.
R. E. Haldman, the former Vice
president's chief of staff said Wed·
nesday that four papers have been
prepared by the GOP contender for
presentation to the platform com·
roittee of the national convention.
The papers reportedly deal with
Nixon's positions on Vietnam,
economy, law and Grder and urban
problems. ApparenUy breaking his
April 1 call for a moratorium on Viet· nam discussion by the presJdentiaJ
candidates, Nixon will give bis paper
to the committee during its hearings
in Miami Beach before tbe GOP
convention Aug. 5.
The Nixon aide would give no inkling
of the contents of the former vice
president's papers.
Lt. Gov. Robert H. Finch, who
directed Nixon's Presidential cam-
paign in 1960 met with Nixon Monday
night.
Nixon BITived about noon Monday at
the Orange County Airport, and was
taken to the secluded Clarke home in
Cameo Shores. Heavily guarded by
Secret Service and local ·Jaw en·
forcement officers, Nixon has been
meeting with aides and relaxing at the
Corona del Mar residence.
House Burgled
while the family was away, thieves
entered a bathroom window Thuraday
at the Douglas M. Layman reald~,
1066 Santiago, and stole '635 worth of
household items including a color '
television set, man's wedding ring,
and perfume, Newport Beach police
were told.
' bail on the charge after arraignment
before Judge Richard Jlamllton in
South Orange county Municlplil Court.
Colwell faces preliminary bearing
OQ tbe charge Aug. 20 at 10 a.m., &lld.
the suspect say be will plead not guilty
and request a jury trial.
A poulbliity ulsta that t h e
American <lvll Liberties Union may
step In, lince Illa c;yndl Wild, 17, COi·
well' a -and -· Ila said Ille ACLU la intares1od In their C&H.
s.-11 -Irate Saa Clem<n· !<!""• m (nllUring Ibo <lty Coua¢I to tab lllepo to c1ooe Tbe Mind
Gard• by revoking tbe N1siaes1
lic.eDH lUued in tbe name ol C.Olwell'•
mother. l
Just whether the city bas legal
grounds tor such action Is 1WJ being
questioned, but SU Oemreata PoUce
Chlel Clillord Murray said Wednesday
that hi& departmant lowl4 Colwell bad
violated the law in the 1ex-y poster
sale.
The S&n Clementa Cbambw ol Com·
merce and Ille U n i t e d Presbyterirui
Church are urging a vtcltante sroup
and other measures to guard aga.lut a
tak<over by hippies, as a result ol
1muc:b rumor and tbe Mind Garden in· Cldeol ·
The City council ~ J>llM4 a
Jaw prohibiting sl~ping in veblctei ~·
pul)llc or private property u one
lafeguord •.
Car Strikes Dowri Girls·
On CdM Traffic Island
Four girls standing at a traffic
island in Corona del Mir were struck
down by a O.ta Mea woman's tar
Thursday lfternoon.
One ol them, wi!De1H1 !Olcl polke,
was dragged 'IV f«l She ii Debbie
Zimmerman, 12, ol. t607 Hampden
Road, Cameo Siores.
The girl sullered mulliple injurles ol
the spine, aecordin( to Hoag Memorial
Hospital spokesmen. She was not
paralyzed. Her condition f.od.a1 was
listed as "improved, but still 1triC>us. ••
Less severely hurt in the .2:20 p.m.
accident on East Coast Highway at the
entrance to Cameo Sb«es were:
Mesa Burglaries
Yield Much Loot
Jewelry, cash and a lettering set,
totalllng more tban '500 in value, were
stolen in commerclal and residential
burglaries reported to Costa Mesa
police Wednesday.
Mrs .• Helen A. Petrie, of 566
Hamilton St., lost four rings -in-
cluding one set with a Star of India
stone -in the $440 burglary of ber
apartment:
Police said someone puilcbed a hote·
in the screen and re.ached through to
unlatch the door of Mrs. Petrie's
apartment, going right to the bedroom
for the loot.
Earlier Wednesday, Fred V. N.
Ellis, of Master Blueprint and Supply,
2380 Newport Blvd., reported f,heft of a
$65 lettering set from a showcase dur·
ing business hours.
~··Nall, 12, o1 297 CrelCOnt
Bay Drt.., Laguna Beach.
-Lima llo'fll, 14, ol 216 Jullline Sl,~deJMa'. '
-Hor 'o111«, Klmb<rly, 11.
The Davis girls were treated at
Hoag lor cols and meued, but llliss
Nunis WU bospltalind.
Au111oriti .. Nici abe wu in lair COJI•
dition this morning with -· and abrasions ol tile 1o-'bock, air
domen, lor<arm and a !racturid
pelvis.
The C&lifornia lll&bway Patrol oaid
the four girls ....,,· llandlnc on the
trollic Island, waitfnc to c:nA uie
-1, wllen &'IOlllll>ooioct Cll' driven
by Mrs. Patricia K. Gnlwn, •. ol
718 Jam• SL, Costa -· ptowe« In· to them. •t
Mn. Graham was arreatecl oa llOlpi·
clon of dnmbn drlvlnl.
Girl on Bike
Struck by Car
A small girl riding her bicycle on the
wrong side of the street was struck by
a car and injured Wednesday at a
Costa Mesa-intersection.
Lori A. Shannon, 9, of 2116 Sterling
Ave., was treated at Hoag Memorial
Hospital for a minor le& iajury and
released following the accident on
Hamilton Street at Sterling Avenue.
Police said Sandra K. Wood, 28;-1Jt
2083 Wallace Ave ., was making a right
turn onto Sterling Avenue and didn't
see the victim before the impact.
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al J./.. J. (Jarrell
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• '
------------
I
I
I
BY
WIL~IAM
REED
.........
In the Wind
At 10 a.m. Friday begins one of
the most important hearings ever
will be the future for many resi-
will be. the · future for many resi·
held.-illJ!untington Beach. At stake
dents of West Orange County.
Some 116 hearings have been
held in the p8st to arrive at this
point, a public bearing by the state
highway commission, whlch is
charged with making a decision on
a route for the future Huntington
Beach Freeway.
While it may or may not be the
governing factor in selecting the
freeway line, the effect on person.s
living on 01 near the various study
routes must be considered. • For those persons living on the
line selected the future does not
look so bleak as it does for those
living just off the right of way.
Those on the line can move and es-
cape the noise and fumes.
Or can they? Many of these
homebuyers have mortgages with
on1y a few years to run and at in-
terest rates which would make a
banker cry today. • For those whose property would
back up to the freeway if it is
built, the picture is not too good.
Despite all the efforts to make
freeways nice, cars still send
clouds of smog rolling from the
freeway. And there is noise.
In several communities of West
Orange County there is a battle
going on with an ernestness seldom
seen in the conduct of municipal
affairs. People are fighting for
their homes, not so much to pre-
vent them being taken by the free-
way, but to prevent being left on
the edges.
Battling tomorrow are some fine
people, sincere in their belief that
selection of one freeway route or
another will ruin hundreds of
homeowners. Trouble is that there
are many such fine, sincere people
on both sides of the current free-
way hassle.
. ;
i
DAILY l'ILOT 3•---
Reading Project Follows Right Line.s:
'ily SANDI MAJOR
Of lfle o.llY l"llM Stlft
Eighteen Ocean V i e w kin·
-dergarteners, whose formal education
at thiJ poinl would normally be con·
fined to social adjustment, are already
reading·en a level with last year's first
graders.
They are learning ii) a pilot project
being tes'ted by the ·school district to
see II children can be taught to read
and stimulated t.o learn at five yeara
014 lnstead of aix.
"lt'1 just a part ol this diltrlct11
conUnulng interest in iroprovln1 tta
education program," stid · Wood.Js
Chaddick, assistant superintendent In
charge of curriculuro.
The children, all at Rohinwood
School, began the early reading pro-
gram laat apriag; 'Ibey were enrolled
in the prosram, with their pare.nu• ap-
provll, alter bttng selected oa Ille
bull ol roodlnes& t.111.
Durln& the spring, when the kin·
dergarten session ended each 4ay, the
teadier stayed after school and taught
reading to these selected 18, She did Jt
oa her own ti.me, without charge to the
school district, Chaddick explained.
Wooden Cars To Race
The Pinewood Derby of the Huntington Beach Rec-
reation department will feature these determined
youngsters (left to right) Kathi Niffenegger , 10,
Kevin Fitzhugh, 8, and Mike Myers, 8, as well as
many others in the driver's seat when the derby
opens Saturday, Aug. 3, at 1 p.m. Cars must be
made from kits obtained from the recreation de-
partment. Awards will be .given for the fastest and
best looking car in each division.
County to Get
Two New Judges
Two new judges will be appointed at
the end of this year with another judge
to be added sometime next year to the
West Orange County Courthouse mak-
ing a total of six jurists for the facili·
ty.
The addition comes a5 a result of
legislation by Assemblyman Robert H.
Burke (R·Huntington Beach) and sign-
ed recently by Gov . Reagan.
Hjs new statute will take effect
ninety days after: the close of the cur-
rent session of the legislature.
Fountain Valley Jaycees
Back Red Freeway Route
A red line Huntington Beach
Freeway was endorsed today by the
Fountai n Valley Junior Chamber o!
Commerce.
The J aycees approved a resolution
denouncing the State H i g h w a y
Engineers' recommendation of the
Orange line, which would put the pro-
posed freeway oo the V~ley's western
border.
Jaycee president George Scott
charged that orange line adoption
would spell greater citlun displace-
ment, increased expense, and violation
of the majority's· best interests.
The Valley Jayci:ees called for the
State Highway Commission to adopt
the red line after Friday's hearing.
Tbe 18 ~ldren have continued com.
ing to school th.la summer. Now their
parents come also and are learning
bow to supplement the classwork. at
home, all without cost to tbe school
!)'Stem, he cootinued.
"Already the cblldren are read1ng at
1.9," the level normally attained by
,the last month· Of the first grade, the
* * * Europe Tour
Will Assist
.Experiment
: Westmont first-grade teacher. Mr
·Margaret Heis_e~ wW tour Ew::ope next
spring to help develop Ocean Vlew
school district's pilot program to teach
five·year-old.s to read.
She is the first teacher in th! district
to be granted a aabbatical leave of
ab5ence.
She requested the one-year leave to
complete requirements for b e r
master's degree ·in the fall at
California State College, Long Beach,
then to travel with her family to Bri·
tain, Germany and France.
In her request, she offered to
"observe on a first-hand basis"' how
certain European and American
schools are teaching five·and six year·
old children how to read.
Mrs. Heise began teaching in 1957
and has been in the Ocean View
schools most of that time. She has
taught fourth, seventh and eighth
grades and remdeial reading · to
children in fourth, fifth and sixth
grades.
Physician Faces
Abortion Hearing
A physician charged with illegal
abortion performed on a 22-year-old
Anaheim woman will face preliminary
hearing in North Orange County
Municipal Court Aug. 8.
Dr. Robert K. McReynolds, 5, of
Glendale was arrested on a district at-
torney's warrant after the woman ap.
peared in Orange County Medical
Center J une 16 in serious condltion
resulting from the abortion, according
to Anaheim police Det. Lloyd Lowery.
McReynolds has been released on
his own recognizance pending court
action.
Security Bank's newest branch opens for business Friday, July
26. To celebrate this happy event, we're having a Housewarm-
ing Party. Drop in for refreshments any time from 10 a.m. t.o
6 p.m. There will be a memento from our flower cart waiting
fo r you . We look forward to meeting you. * At our new South
Corona del Mar Branch you'll find the convenience of safe
dep osit, in addition to regular banking services.
OPEN A "GQLD" CHARTER ACCOUNT! Regular individual Checking
an d Savings Accounts opened betwee n July 26 and August 9
entitle you to a special bank book , designating you as a "Gold"
Charter Account Customer .
South Corona de! Mar Branch, 3435 East Coast Highway
John 0. Ballard, Manager Joan P. Williams, Asst. Manager
MW )O'Mr fina,.aal JlfJrlfWf' I
SECURITY PACIFIC NATIONAL BANK
ME:MBE.Pt 'Ole
assistant 1uporlntendeot ctalllled.
WheD tbeM Cbildrlft enter the ftnt
grade thh 1111, <l!addlc:I; tald ''we plla
to tailor ttie r6adlng pro(ram to them.
We want to tee if we can keep up tbeir
motivation Ml the way ttwou.p.••
The test program will contklue for
the next three years, and the 11
children, most ol whom Chaddick
hopes wll remain in dlrtrict ld»oll,
will be tested p<riodlca!Iy,
He said recent studies on early
learning have indicated that cblldren
who did not begin reading as Ov•
year-olds catch up with their advao-
ced classmates by the fourth grade.
. "U this is so, we waot to learn what
you can do t.o reinforce the gains made
by the eai'ly ffiarner~" be exptakaed.
For this reason, DO plans are being
made to put the program ~ all district
schools for some time, he added.
• Disbict Supt. Dr. Clarence Hall
pointed out that research in the 19'lO's
tried to show children are not able to
read unW they reach a mental qe ol
6.5 years, which Is usually reached
during the first grade.
.Research since the 1960's la proving
this to be wrong, he said.
One of the greatest benefita: of
teaching reading before the first grade
would be to "decrease boredom add
increase interest" for the creative
child , Chaddick explained .
Also , the burgeoning amount of ~
formation man must absorb now "ii
requiring a greater amount of learning
to be done ln the earlier grades," he
added.
"From the dawn of times to 1900
man's knowledge doubled," be said.
''It doubled again from 1950 to 1980
and in the past seven years, it has
doubled again."
Kindergarteners now begin readlng
readiness -learning symbols and
sounds -in the sprlng before they
enter th e first grade.
When they reach the first grade, the
children progress according to their
ability, Chaddick sald, and oft.en as
many as "three or four dlfferent books
will be used in each classroom" to ac·
commodate the difference in reading
levels.
As the cblldren progress through
school, a report on what books have
been read and a reading level for each
is passed along to each new teacher.
A state-wide report this spring
rating school districts on titeils
students' reading abilities put ~
View above average.
The average Ocean View first
grader taking the test used to make
the evaluations scored 58, which. would
put him in 42nd place from the top od
a o to 100 scale. '
Scores for other school disb'ictl hi
this area were Huntington Beach O.ty
schools, 54; Fountain Valley, 47j
Newport·Mesa Unified, M, and Latunl
Unified, 67.
,.
•
DAILY I'll.OT
House OKs · I f Leader Con.,lcted
Gun Control Black P anthers
Vow Armed War
'
Legislation
.
~ .. All l2 of NornMin and Fr•ncet
:GonrYn's children were born in
WASHINGTON (AP) -The House
has approved a gun-control bill falling
far short Of President Jolmson's
recommendatiqps and has sent it on to
the Senate Whe~ final action. is not ex-
pected until SeptembeT.
At the same time Wednesday. the
Senate Judiciary approved a slmllal'
measure 9-3 and sent it to the floor.
NEW YORK (UPI) -The mWtant
Block Pllll!)er party raid Wedllesday
that if its leader, lacing murder
charges in California, w.a& not aet free
it would be almost impoasiblll to avold
armed coafllcta ill the meets.
news conference and reat a blDd·Wfit..
1e11 1tatemont in wlllch be saJd that
new left party would s u p p o r t
"whatever actioos are ~ in the
black community" if Newton were not.
freed.
' . !YM · (Massachusetts) Hospital.
• in honor of 'the oc~asion, No.
. wa~ on th~ house. Dr, Wllll•m 0. l'r•Mr, the obstetrician Who de--
llv•~ the first 11 Gorman chil-
dren, also supervised the arrival
of Nancy who weighed 9 pounds,
10 ounces. · •
Chief Krith Klinger bel7on hi! 16th
year cu .ch~f of the Los Angele! Coun· tu Fire Department and ioas hunored
by a surpri!e party. T~ chief turned
the tables and showed up at the party
in hi! full fire fighting regalia, put
out the fire on the cake and made a
hasty erit. • A Texan has discovered that a
flashbulb is a good crime prevent-
er. Mich••I Verdecchl, 23, of San
Antonio heard ·someone sneaking
up the stairs of bis garage apart·
ment in the middle of the night. He
aimed his flash camera at the door~
way and when a man walked in,
Verducchi flashed the camera,
temporarily blinding the man, and
then slugged him on the chin. P1r
lice arrested the prowler and took
him to the hospital. •
Shawnee County weed spraying
crews are destroying a field of
mariquana estimated to be tvorth li\
more than $1 mil/ioii on the illi· "II ~ cit market after processing. The l
weed often grows wild in Ka n-r.·
sas which may account fo r the •
longing fo r "the green, green
grass of home."
• Seattle police detective John
Dermody got into trouble with a
police dog recently when the Ger·
man shepherd jumped into the
open window of his car while the
officer was a\vay from the vehicle.
0 1 tried to coax him out/' Der·
mody said, "And JA.•hen that didn't
work, I ordered him out. That did
not work either. He just curled up
his lip and remained in the back
seat like he owned the car.'' Der-
mody called for assisting ~fficers.
They didn't get anywhere with the
pooch either. Finally, the embar·
rassed police officers called Hu-
mane Society dog catchers who
took the dog to the pound and then
called its owner.
The HOuse bill was approved 304 to
118 after several amendments opposed
by backers of stronger gwi controls
were tacked on.
One such amendment was sharply
criticized by Bep. Ernanu~l Celler,.P..
'N.Y:, chairmaD oC the House Jadicls.rY
Committee who said ft would greatly
benefit the National Rifle ~ssociation.
Cellef .called the amendmeni
uareadfui," and ·said \hat if it survives
he will stage. ~siooal heorlng, t.O -bare NRA actiVlties which cener ~ai~
'.''can't itand the light ol day."'
The .amendment was introduced hr
long-time NRA . member ·Robert . L.
$ikes, P·Fia., and would exc\ode fro'll
the Dill's provisions the National
Board for Promotion or Rifle Practice,
a civilian·military group cl01Sely allied
with the NRA.
As passed by the Hou,,e the bill:
-Prohibits the interstate sale of
rifles and shotguns through the mail
except by licensed dealers.
-Prohibits over-the-counter sale to
nonresidents except to those from con-
tiguous states. This was amended to
also include those who sign an af-
fidavit that their firearm was lost.
stolen or had become inoperative. In
the latter instance, the dealer must
report the sale to the purchaser's
police department. . .
-Prohibits the mail order sale of
ammunition for pistols, revolvers and
destructive weapons. This was amend·
ed to exclude over-the-counter sales
for all ammunition and mail order
sales of ammunition for rifles,
shotguns and rimfired .22 caliber
shells.
-Prohibits the sale of long guns to
anyone under 18 yaers old and hand
guns to anyone under 21. Ammunition
for those guns could not be sold to
anyone in those age brackets.
-Prohibits the sale of firearms to a
fugitive : a felon: one under in-
dictment; a user of nareotics, or a
mental defective. ·
-Requires that all persons engaging
in business as a firearms or am-
munition manufacturer, importer or
dealer must have a license. Gun col·
lectors dealing in firearms as relics
or curios could obtain a license so they
could buy and sell in interstate com·
merce.
Seco1id Gr izzly
Shot i ii A ttack
In Y ellowstone
WEST YELLOWSTONE, M o n t •
(UPI) -Yellowstone 'National Park
rangers killed their second grizzly in
three days after the bear attacked a
man fishing near Yellowstone Lake,
park officials said tod·ay.
The man, not identified, tried to run
when the big adult grizzly charged.
But he slipped and the bear fell on
him. The animal then ambled into t.he
woods. The man suffered only minor
scratches.
Park rangers went after the bear
with a tranquilizer gun, But when the
animal charged them, they shot and
kill ed it. •
The incident came after a Montana
fish and game warden killed a young
male grizzly near West Yellowstone
that attacked a group of young
campers, injnring two teen-aged girls
and a boy from New York. ,
•
"U there bu to be e war, tbe!l lt.t
there be war" Ndd Eldridge Cltavtr,
1p0tesman for the Negro organlu.Uon
beaded by Huey P. N-, accuoed of
killing an Oakland Policeman. •
qeaver appeared at a oewa con·
ference at the United Nat!on1 plaza
... was accompanied by about 30
liliclt-clad party memben. They came ~ the United Nations calling for
~shment of obaerver teams in
tjjo United Statee wh<ftin black peo· rte are cooped up and concentrated in
\fl'etcbed ghettos."
''Thia is necessacy," Cleaver 1aid,
"Because the racist power structure
Of this imperialist country ls preparing
to unleuh a war of genocide against
her black: colonial subjects."
DOIN' THE NEW YORK DRAG -Resembling a group of aquare
dancers,dolng a do-al-do, :J>Ol!ce collar a demonstrator u 200 Pu~o
Ricans converged on the police stal!Dn In East Village Wednesday
night to protest lhe preseit<e of the Tactical Patrol Force In the
neighborhood. Four persons were arrested during the fourth straight
night of violence. A policeman was injured in the clash when he was
hit with a loaded tin can.
·Cleaver said his group ~ved •
assurances of support from the Cuban
and Tanzanian missions. He said his
party would app1y for the status of a
''.non-government organization" t o
represent America's blacks ·at Ule
world organization.
Reading trom·a prepared statement,
Cleaver said that if Newton were not
turned loose "There is little hope of
avOiding open, armed war in the
Violence Flares in Detroit;
streets of California and of preventing
it from sweeping across the nation."
He &aid Utat Jf Newton is convicted
and sentenced to death, it would have
to be dont: "over our dead bodies."
New York Riots Continue
"They will have to kill us first,"
Cleaver said, adding that his organiza·
tion would not permit "old bald-head-
ed racists who a re predetennined to
send him to the gas chamber" to find
DETROIT (AP) -Rock-throwing
crowds smashed several windows
along Detroit's 12th Street early today
and police arre"Sted 14 persons in con-
nection with the disturbance.
"Looting was held to a minimum,"
said an officer from the loth Precinct,
wffiCh cOVetS' the 12th Street area,
where the worst rlot in modem
American· history first fl ared up a
year ago.
"It was mootlY broken windows this
time," the officer said, adding that
most of those arrest~ were charged
with disorderly ~uct, breaking and
entering or traffic <>ff«ises.
One c i v i I i a n resisting arrest
reportedly suffered a minor injury.
Police in the area were on a tactical
alert for 5J,2 hO\a'I, but the alert W a I
llf~ at about dawn.
Newton guilty and execute him .
Again the central c o m m i t t e e
estim·ates had put damages at more members, ail dressed in black shirts,
than $.500 million. trousers, leatheJ" jackets ·and berets,
In New York, a . ]Xlliceman was and the party members, m06t of the
slightly injured early today and foor also were dressed in black with a few
persons were arrested on the fow1h wearing brightly colored African
consecutive night of disorders ill: a pre-tribal shirts, cheered.
dominantly Puerto Rican section of A spokesman for California's Peace
the east village. and Freedom party aiso attended the ---------iiiiiiiii
19 TH 000~~~~
ANNUAL c . . E
" Daily Papers
Ou t on Strike
In Ca pital
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A federal
mediator today, called pubUshers and
striking stereotypers together tn an ef.
fort to end a strike which shut down
all three daily newspapers in the na·
tion's capital..
An official of the Federal Mediation
Service ordered a 3, p.m. meeting
between the Washington Newspaper
Publisher• Association and t be
Stereotypers Union L-OCal 19.
The strike, which began at 5 p.m.
Wednesday, forced the mo r lfi n g
\Vashiniton Post to cancel its normal
editions. The Post published an 8-page
news section and 16-.page tabloid
advertising supplement which were
already in print before the
stereotypers walked off the job.
Picket lines were set up at all three
daily papers, which meant the Even•
ing Star and the Washington Daily
News also might not publish today.
Other mechanical unions were
observing the stereotypers picket lines
and members of the Washington
Newspaper Guild were told to finish
their sbifts but then observe picket
lines.
-A statem~t from the publll:hers
group said it bad proposed a set-
tlement calling f« a· wage increase of. l32 a week for a three-year contract
that would bring the stereotypers' pay
scale to $187 a week, a 21 percent in·
crease over present rates. It said the
union wanted an increase of $40 a
week over a three.year contract and
large fringe benefit in.creases.
Meanwhile, across the state in Ben-
too Harbor, police reported calm
overnight for the first time in four
day&.
Commenting on the number ol ar·
rests in Detroit earlier in 1be evening,
a 10th Precinct officer said the
number was "not unusual for a night
like this,"
SUPERB. BARGAINS IN MEN'S, WOMEN'S, BOYS,
SPORTSWEAR, SWIMWEAR, LINGERIE.
The State P<>llce Opefi!Uoos Ceol<!r
in East !Jansing said it had been in
contact with Detroit authorities during
the night but were told "it's a minor
problem and no assistance was need·
ed.!'
The State Police wd U..y had
several people on the street, but they
were intelligence agents and not
troopers. .
The five-day riot in Detroit la&t year
-considered the worst in modern
m.tory -began July 23 follow!ng a
police raid at an after-hour4 drinking
establishment
In the days that followed 43 persons
died and lo&ses were estimated by Ule
Kerner Commission at between $40
and $45 milli'On, alUlough earlier
CLOSING OUT GIRU' & INFANTS' WEAR
SALE STARTS 9:30 A.M. THURSDAY MORNING
GIRLS & INFANTS:
CARTE R'S UNDERWEAR & IAIY CLOTH ES
KATE GREENAWAY DRESSES
KARIN DA l CATALINA PLAYCLOTHES
MOJUD l BONNIE DOON SOCKS l TIGHTS
·LADIES:
SKIRTS, CAPRIS, SHORTS, ILOUSIS. TOPS, JACK m,
DRESSES, SHIFTS. SUITS, SWIMSUITS • ACCU SORllS
KOU.TRON FRANCISCA COOIDlllATIS-
REDUCED
113 TO 1/2
UPTO
' I c
I
Monsoon Season?
DISCONTIN UID COLORS 6 99
I 0.00 SKIRTS • CAPRIS NOW e
CAROLI CHRIS RUFINO CHICK SIPARA m
7.00 CAPRIS NOW 4.19
NOW 3.59
~o
Easte rn Seaboard Deluged by Heavy R ains
Califonda
Coastal
l-lt lll 1ne1 v1•!1b1t we1t~•l1 wind•
11111 •ft~,_,, I to 16 m.1.11. Sunny
tfltrnoo... IOctlY •net Frldly. TOC111·•
Mt~. 6t Ill 1J.
'10
v.s. Summa r y
He1vv r1ln1 111(1 Mth wlnot 11ru<k tht
f~ll Wtdnt:S<llY, Ctull"9 dtr'l'llll fl M1nn11e1"'. Pa .• tll(I settlnt • mOrd t t -
Nt W YGrlt (UV,
Mott tlltn 1n 1°"11 ot •tin ltU Oil
PhllA,,..111"1• while mort lh•n lwo I"'
tlltt lt ll ti M•nn,.•lm. Wlll(ls t1u1!Pd \Ill
to 60 mllu '" r.our. blow!"' oll roolt,
IOPPll"9 ''"" Ind umdln1 • comr11e l:llocll. W•ll cr•ltllnt Ol'llo 11•'119' cert 1t MIMM!ftl, No ln!ur1t1 wt,. 1"0rltd, Tiit 1.• IMflll of r•ln thlt 11111 Oii N1w Vont bfoll:e t 4Y,INllll ffl:Otd of
I.I 1""11411. I! •llO cooltd ..,. city trom
1 ~ llNI w1v• 1M M:IPH cttll1 lllrTIM flfthtl,
""" r1111 "' "'* .... .... lllrt d • bflnd •lo!lf • eolll fl"Ot'lf 1tr1tdll"' from lht NortP! Al1111fk Co-ti to IC1n1•1 Ind
(olor.ctco. II l lM 'l'l!ntd t lonl t11t • .,..
llrt str"dl ol lflto ltodllet Incl GV« the
"'""" -1111'1 , ......... Wr1tflt-,.111ttMlll Air l"ortt ltM t i
Fii"'°'"' Otii.. """'""°" mer. "'-" '"" '""""' tit ,."' wl"'l" I llw-flevr tlerlfld tndllll ••fly loctlY. Al tllt t lll'lll
11mt, more Jl\111 1n lf!dl 1111 11 D1yton.
( .
•
Tem....,...tures
Albufllut',..,. " u
Anchor•ff " " Atlenl1 .. ..
81)1tr1fltld .. " Bhmarck " " 80ltt " ..
·~ ... " " CMct•o " " Cine1n.vll .. " Cltvti.nd· "' " Otnver .. " 0 .. MolM1 .. " De1ro1t .. .,
Eu,..k1 • " Fort Worth .. " FrHno .. " Htltn1 " " HO"ll11ihl .. " Hovtton u n
IC1n"s (!tr .. n
ltl Vt11AS '" " Lil' Ano11ts u " Ml1ml ... n Mllw1u1tff " u
Ml-I.Olis M " New Or ~.tn.. " n N~w York " n O~kl•nd M " .... ,. .. ..
"•IO Robltt " " ,.htlfldfllfltfll• .. n ,.hotrll• ·~ .. .,.._. .. " Por!~ " " lteplct (11'1' .. " ltl'ltl 11"" .. .. ·-N ..
S.Cr1tnt11to .. ..
61. Levie " " """'' ., n
Sert lt),f tltr .. ..
Sen 01-n ..
11111 Fr111t1tet " n ... l11"Mrt n .. ..... " ..
-OM " " """"" '" " W1thlflltlft .. H
...
·" ·" .n ,,
.n
·"
..
•• ...
1,n
l.M
•
6,00 SKIRTS OFF
AND DOZENS MORE TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION HERE
MEN & IOYS:
SLACKS, si>c>RTSHIRTS, DRESS SHIRTS,
SWIM TRUNKS, SWEATERS, SWEATSHIRTS,
PAJAMAS, JACKETS, SLIPPERS
MARTElC TOWELS ON SALE
REDUCED
300/o to 500/o
SOYIHIGN PLAINS -REG, 2,50 NOW 1.tt REG. 1.50 NOW 1.2t. WASH CLOTH NOW Sic.
INVITATION SOLID TERRY DOWN -REG l .50 NOW Z.50. REG. 2.00 NOW 1.71. WASH CLOTH 69c
CITATION SOL IDS -REG. 2.50 NOW 1.99. REG 1.50 NOW l.Z!, WASH CLOTH'NOW lie.
OPIN f1JI TO 6111
,...,, na nL '"'
MAJOl CllDIT CA.US
0 1 STOii CHAIM.
,... C..11wl"'"' .... , .... ...,.'" . o. .... ,....,
L
ll COITAMBA IT'I
.,,_ ...
••Nwµ:rtlW.
I
CllllWlT LOCAID
AT llAllOI, aft. AND
NIWPOIT ILft.
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lhursday, Jul)' %5, 1968 DAJLY PILOT G
QUEENIE ly Phil lnterlani.11 Prague Stiidents Recall Hungary Lesson ·
. '
' .
' .
' '
"ComJ!l!'"d to tear pa or mace, it'• harmleoo-but
1t hu a great pofCllolollcal .effect ._ •• " ·
Many Who've Had It
Finally Hated Job
PRAGUE (UP!) -The
1tudent1 of Piague
remember a lesson from
l~.
Wbu soviet tanka: came
to\ crush the Hunglrlan
freedorp upris.Jng or that
year, Budapest students
hurled ltoues at the armor.
'11\e Sov\etl ,won.
No w C z e choslovak.ia,
struggling for more
freed"om, is under threat or
Soviet armed intervention.
"What1 would be the use to
fight them?" said a 21-year·
old philosophy student, !tan·
ding in Weneeslas Square
and waiting for a bus.
"We have no arm1. We
would do nothing aaalnlt
thtm."
"What fs Hungary now?
What have Ibey cot to &how
for it? It's all just the same
now as before," the student
of philocophy said.
He said that If Soviet
tanks come, be thought
Prague students would op·
po6e them but not with
violence. "I don't know what
we could do. We coW.d f1nd
1 ways."
WON'T MARCH IN
A 20-year·old P r a g u e
Technological lm:t~tute stu·
dent said he could not tm-
•Ii•• the Sovleta-marcbin, into C!echO&Jovakia. ··u they interfere here1 it
would be a gre11ter violation ot peace than the Vletnam
war, I don't feel there is any
chance of that because they
must worry about world opi-
nJon ."
He fingered the plastic of
an lm.ltation leather brief·
case fat witb books and
paper. He· said his family
had suffered under , the
Stalinist regime swept away
eight months ago by Cuch
Communist reformers. They
had lost a small business.
He said no one wanted a
return to StalirU1m but
students fight tllo Sovletl!
NO.·
.;What do we use for
weapons? We are no army
and we can 't even bother
them. We can only depend
on the new (reform) govern-
ment to take a firm stand."
In one of the dark arcades
that honeycomb thla lovely
old city a pretty girl in
dungarees clutched h e r
. boyfriend's band and talked
proudly of the r e f o r m
regime. But she said she
doubted students could and
would fight if Ivan comes
marching in.
SATURDAY 9 to 5130
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Memo to Messrs. N:ixon,
' ,, Humphrey, M c Cart h y ,
Rockefeller, St assen,
Wallace, (Caples to Ronald
Reagan ~d all d a r k
horses): >
Any last~rninute thoughts,
gents? Anybody want out?
Sure, lt looks like a great
job. Selary of $100,000 with
another $50,000 in expenses.
Two limousines. A yacht .
Your own private song. A
house of 132 rooms, rent
free. Private airplane with
crew. Nice front yard with
fountain. Big back yard with
flowers. Both m o w e d
without cost to you.
fewer heart burnings ... than
J do." ·
And finally , Lyndon B.
Johnson: "I shall neither
seek nor aceept the nom.in11·
tion ,"
Ifow's your right arm?
It's estimated the president
has to shake hands with
somebody at least ,28 times
a day. During a campaign it
can run into the thousands.
·'
END DISHWASHING
BLUES FOREVER-EAT OUT
Every coin has two sides.
llow about a look at the
, ~ other side? E ntry in ·the
diary of Presi"dent James K.
Polk, Feb. 13, 1849 :
t
i ~
"I am heartily rejoiced
that my term is .so near its
close. I will soon cease to be
a servant and become a
NICKNAMES
Can you take a vicious
nickname? Like Light Bulb
Johnson, Whiskey Van
Buren, Old Granny Har·
r fso n, Baboon Li n coln,
Butche_r Grant, Gran n y
Hayes, Dude Arthur .•
Hangmau Cleveland, Four
Eyes T. Roo,sevelt, \Veasel
Words Wilson, High Tax
Truman?
Can you force yourself to "' ,
eat a six-course banquet .. ,,1 .,.
regardless of whether you
are hungry? Can you listen
to senators giving you three ·~ ~
hours of advice without
breaking into laughter? Can
you kiss babies and look like
V.WREMCE weLK
HAS NOTMIHG
ON ME!
-: -
CleenQueen Automatic
Faucet Dishwasher
Thi1 It 1 d1ncfy. will'fit 1ny ltilch1n f1u c1I i nd i1 fully
gu1r1nt11d for an• y11r. H11 111y to fill d•t1rg1nt
r111rvair, euh di1hw11lling 1;,.., lo I mini"'u"' I But, Mr.
Rimi, '!"hit I hid In ,..ind w11 eulling it out 1lla91th1r.I
Thi brush h oul of sight tao, it's 2 in ant, auftr circl e i1
far ardin1ry di1h11 i nd th1 tough brililed inn•r eirtlt i1
far h1rd la d11n pah i nd p1n1,
£ · sover'eign. A:; a private
citizen, I will have no one
but myseU to serve and will
exercise a part or the
.sovereli:$s;. power, o( . the
coun([y;'J,am •l!y, I~ happ'Ier Ki this ' co~\]on
than in B exalted station I
,
l
you are enjoying it? Can you face:.te1e~i90J!&ht'.! ~!hol_!t
b1tnking? 'Oan you si gn your
•name to a .bill usiJtp .AllY""'"1~m.J1ly11 •. 1961, .,,41"" •· .. ,.
co""" M loll.
I • • ' I
' ' !
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l
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now holcf:N ·.
HERE'S MORE
Want some more? Letter
written by President James
Buchanan on Sept. 19, 1839:
"I am now in my 69th year
and am heartily tired of my
position as President. I shall
leave it in the begin,ning of
March, 1861, should a kind
providence prolong m y
days, until that period, with
much greater satisfaction
than when entering on Cbe
duties of the office."
pens?-. I I ! "~•>'.l'•"fi., •' 'fl'li~ ~t ,over, gents. • ~~
Theres sYll ·time. ' • >SHEPARD LIKE CASTERS
Me'n'J f'ash'ion l 'lotliing * ANAHtlM
'*COITA·MUA * GARDIN GROVE * HUNTINGTON llACH
I .
~' t ~
·\ 11 •l ,
Th111 ••• 1h1rp lao~in9, of
bright br111y laakin9 fini1h
with wlli!t bi nd 11aund
th,,... Ca1npl1t1 111 of 4 fa r
on• low priee.
Set of
Four 199
' CAMPING
SHOVEL
Greif far e1mpinq trip1.
Arid still more? Letter
written by Pre&ldent
Rutherford B. Hayes, Jan .
l , 1881: "Nobody evllf left
.the presidency wtth Jess
regret, less disappointment,
JULY
SALE
SATifliPAY
LAST
DAY
picriic1, or if you cln t1lk th• ~t
little kid1 into 1om1 of the
Named lo Staff
Charles P. Citanese, pr in·
cipal of Sonora School in
Costa Mesa, has be en
assigned to the staff of the
Navy Reserve Officefis
Instructor Sch o o·l 'at .. , '
Treasure Is·land for bis "~====e::;:;:===='...ll reserve active duty. 11
. ~
Have· the NIGHTIME
of Your Life!
NIGHT RACING
now I at beautiful
LOS ALAMITOS
FIRST Of' NINK RACO
MON.•SAT. AT 7:-15
Tllrl Terrtce Oinlnc , ••
T.W. R"""8tlOM Cllt
~U) 431 ... 22 (714) 527-4471
v••d wo••. it'1 the ri9lll 1i1•.
lly the fi"'' I t1lk "'Y litllt
kid inlo doing 10"'1 wa1k,
ltt 'JI be I big kid . J
I 99'
· IHAND GARDEN TOOLS .4 Chalet of lraw1I, culli•1tor,
hind hoe, or fork. Chram1
p11t1d wil ~ 11ot,h1d h1 ndl1
lor 1111 of h1ridl in9. !Giv11
th-. "tht1t1 1 mer• m1d1rn
1h1p1 tao. I
,,
VILLAGE 8LACKSMITH
ELECTRIC !EDGER
A!O""'J N1v1r run1 oul al 91t,
ju1! plu9 ii in ind mavl It
111y 1lan9 Ille l1wn 111191,
lurn1 out the n11f11t l1wn
in lawn.
1811
Ftcfery 1h1rp bl1d11 r11Uy l1v1I •
9rowing l1w11 f11t, il'1 I 4 cycol1
raf1ty tll1t'll g;.,, y•ttt of 11n<i,1,
3911
Grass Catcher
Flh lh1 mow1r 1al d 5 95 4bov1 I 11 11111 "'' •
h1p1 w1 1ald you one, _ •--..;'°:,;;;"•'"'P;.:.•r th1 h1I, 1om1htw.I
. •
e. ..
6 FOOT RUG RUNNER
..
s;. ,,,,of el••• pl11tie
'/JI//'/ praleetion far c1rp1f, Don't
w1il for r1iny w11lh1r, 11ndy
foaled ltid1 fr11h from th1
b11eh e1n do 1 c1rp1t i11 no
tim1.
6'x24" 19c
APPLIANCE AND LIGHT
" .
TIMER
Sil i nd then fo•t•I It. Tlii1
m19ie ti1n•r will remember la
tu•n an or off 1ny 1ppli1ne1
01 li9llt you wi1h. Merlin
'hould h1v1 hid it ID 900~,
J99
•
GARDEN
GLOVES
Th1t• 1r1 toll in1id1 but
pl111ty tau9h ouhide lo
pral1cl ov111 th1 "'01! t1nd1r
h1nd1 fro1n eut1 i nd
1cr1teh11.
29c
-.•
ELEC:TRIC HEDGE TRIMMER
0011 1ll th1 1hrub1 i nd h1d911 ju1l th1 w1y th1 pro• ia, 011ly
It cath 1 lo! 1111 tlli1 w1y.
1588
• •
PLUMBERS FRIEND
A r11I 1tl1 th1nt th1t ;,n't
quite d1eor1IOI' 1pprav1d,
but It 1ur1 c1n !:.. the 111olf
l:i11 utifwl 1r1if1ct In th•
breom cl1t1I wh1n the 1in1r
or toJ111 It 1tapp1d wp.
29c
•
•
She looked at b or
boyfriend.
"But who knows? You
always act impulsi'vely in a
sltu.ation like that.''
A law student, a
handsome blond fellow wlUl
a smiling girl holding ~e
arm, was not sure about
Czech COmmunlst reform
leader Alexander Dubcek. ·
· · "I ha ve not qulto formed
an OPiriion about him yet.
But I know we must stand
behind him now beca111e It
b much better now thu
before."
U the Soviet. i tep In! !'I
do no.t think we are a 1avae1
naUoo. But l think that it tt
came to the worat, the
students would fight."
i!iiiii!i"
SUNDAY 10 to 5
Imported Shelving In
Schmart Decorator Colors
Will, would you b1li1v1 truelr1d dawn from G1rd1n &rovet
Th1t'1 wh1r1 th111 1raovy eolor1d 1h1ll1 1r1 m111uf11tv ......
ind th1y do th1ir thlnt r11I will. Thi eolOI'• 1r1 y1llow,
1voc1da, ind ar1n91, i nd you tin 1ni1 or milch them. C1n
b1 u1itd to bri9ht1n 1 earner, 1 din, • f1mlly roam, or '
1tud y 1r11 i1 tho b1droom..
tDx ....... _ 2.89
I 1: 24 ....... . 1D x 41 ....... 3.19
,.
•
'
lzU .--
•• 41 ....... .
1.99
2.29
3.19
12 •H -....... '
12 J[. ······-
3.19 •.
3.89
TOOL TABLE
W1 thr1w th11n 111 out h1r1, 1am1 1r1 worth th1 99e i nd
10"'1 ltl worth lwie1 or thr11 tim11 th1t, Choo11 fraf'lt
1er1wdriv1rt, 1qu1r11, pll1r1, h1mm1rt, tan91, wrench 11h,
i nd mar1. My n1 i9hbor, Ch1rl1y Allthu,..b1, 11y1 thi1 i1 1
t••1I buy.
Your
Choice 99c Ea.
DRIP PAN
Ju1t !1lr11 1 11cond to plunk
!hit do:iwn i ncl lt11p th1 floor
from 91ltin9 oily 1ncf diek
ind the wif1 fr11n 91ttin9
19if1t1d with fh1 IMI ..
10 YEAR GUARANTIED
Mal or
..iUIT
,CALLMI.
HOT-
~F
•
Brand
WATER
HEATERS
30 Gal. 44ts
40 Gal. 499s
Fully t l111 lin1d, 1ulo1t11tle
111~1 off, r1pi4' r1c1p, 111!1 j
eouotlon ro4, t1mp1rtlur1
eo11ttol. lt't 1 good one, fir1I
qu1lity, A!Mric.111 1t11d1.
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.'• DAllY PllOT
U.S. Wounded Return to · Battle .
WASHINGTON IAPl -
Nearly IQ pen:<nt ol the
American troops wounded
seriously enou&b to be
h0$pilallud In the Vietnam
war are reas'slgned to
fighUoa: unlLs, accord1n1 to
Pentagon statistics.
The figures .bow .lhat or
Sl,2:52 ho6pitalized wounded
in the 1965-37 pe_rlod, 2.S,539
returned to service in Viel-
riam .
Of the rest, 15,00&, or
about 30 pereent, were
assigned outside the war
zoae, 3,400 got ~sabiUt.v
discharges, l,585 died and
7, Tl2 were still In the
A l o t 1 1 of .S,565 others
A total of 48,565 others
who suffered what Js loosely
termed as bandaged wouods
either continued fighting 01·
returned to duty aftei' get-
ting treatment from bat·
t!erleld aid stations.
gOOd lf be ta twlce wou.nded,
both reqWrina: 48 hours or more in the hospitaJ.
The Army bas 1 much
tougher policy. A soldier can
be laid up nearly . two
months and still 10 back to
the war ,vben he la flt.
The Air Force . h a s
virtually no policy at all ex-
cept, ln the cue of aertous
wound1.
The Pentagon says tht:
decisioo on t11u1lt y
reassianment1 la left to eacll
&ervlce because of their
varied manpower Medl.
'l'here Is no plan to stan.·
dardize · tbt policies, a
spokesman &aid.
Bogus Bill Suspects
Free on $25,000 Bail
The percentage of wound·
ed men leaving the war
points up the policy dll·
feren ces among the services
concerning the reassign·
ment of men wounded dur·
Ing tile gightlng.
A Navy man or a f\.1arine ,
for example, may be ship·
ped out of the war zone for
Volunteers Install
Convention Phones
NEWARK, N. J. (UPI) -
S o m e S3 miUio n worth of
counterfeit 20 biUs -the
second largest ceobe 1vu
found -wwe plled up in
secret qrvice vaults today
along wltfl. the well-wrought
plates used to prlnt ttiem.
A 1ecret service
5.p0ke1man said' the bundles
or boll!• bills and Ille hand·
made plate& would be stored
in the v1ulta until court ac-
ton btgina aplnst eight
Pueblo Crew
Unde1· Guard
PANMUNJOM. Kore a
(UPI) -North Korea keeps
such close guard on the 82
crewmen ol tbe captured
U.S. intelligence ship Pueblo
that even Communist
newsmen cannot interview
them. a Japanese newsman
11ld today.
Kat suo Takasugl ,
Pyongyang (North Korea)
Corre s pon d en tofthe
Japanese Comm u nl 1 t
new1paper Akahata, Nld his
"many" requests to in·
terview the Pueblo crew had
'been turned down.
Takasugi was am on e
new1men at the 2'74th
meeting of the Korean
MIUtary Armlltico Com·
ml11lon at the truce vlllage
or Panmunjom. ·
supects rounded up in a raid
\Vednesday that covered a
loo.mile rac;lius in New York
and Nn JerHy.
The suspect.a are free to-
day on ns.ooo personal
recognizance bail unUl a
Feclecal Gr&Dd Jury hears
the 1ovtrnment'1 ca s e
against them.
Frank B. Wood, Secret
Service chief in New Jersey.
described the billJ as 11very
good" except for the quallty
or the paper.
He ••kl It lecked the line
red ttlreads found i n
legitimate currency paper,
Wood said the bills were
printed in tile basement of
the shore cottage about 65
miles south of Newark. The
occupants of the house.
Wallace A. Dixon, 37, and
his wife, Susan Ann , 30.
were among those arrested .
The ring was broken
following the arrest early
tt.is month of Carl M.
Medioll or Elizabeth, N. J.,
on charges of pe!iing $1.000
worth of counterfeit bills,
Wood said. He .added that
leads arising from this ar·
rest resulted in the seizure
of the plates.
The other suspects in·
volved Eugene M. Biscula of
Linden, N. J., identified by
Wood as the printer ; Simone
John Santora, 25, ol Cliffside
Park, N. J., tile platemaker,
according to Wood, and
Simone P aul Santore, 29, of
New York City.
Israeli Jets
Clash With
Egypt MIGs
By UPI
Israeli jet fighters drove
off three Egyptian MIG jels
that tried to penetrate
I1r1tli occupied territory
cast of the Suez Canal to·
day. a n d Israeli Air Force
spl:>kesman announced in Tel
Aviv.
The spokesman said the
incident occurred at noon
and that all Israeli planes
returned to their base. He
dld not say whether the
I1raelis fired at the Egyp·
tian plue1 or whether any
were damaged.
It was the second incident
on Israel's borders within a
few hours.
Earlier Jordanian a n d
J 1 r a e 11 troops fired
machineguns at each other
for 30 minutes across the
Jordan river. Each side
blamed the other and no
casualties were reported.
The clash occurred six
mJles north of the Allenby
Bridge over the Jordan and
was another in the almost
daily outbreaks of gunfire
between Jordan and Israel.
CHICAGO ( U P I )
Preliminary work begins to·
day for instaU...t!oo of com·
munlcollono fadl1Ut1 at the
Imernatlonal Amphitheatre
where the Democratic Na·
tionat Convention o p e n s
Aug , 26.
The questi on was : will on-
ly the amphitheatre get the
laciUUes~
The International
Brotherhood of ElectriCal
Workers, on a strike against
the Illinois Bell Telephone
Co. for 79 day•. anoolol.DOed
Wednesday that 300
volunteer workers would do
the work without pay to
enable Chicago to keep the
convention.
There had been r eports
the convention ""·ould m ove
More Postal
Hikes Slated
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
The Post Office Department
has a go·ahead to raist
parcel post rates 10.5 per·
cent -probably effective Jn
60 days.
The increase, first parcel
posl rise since January 1067.
will affect · packages and
catalogues sent through the
mails.
It is expecled to bring in
an extra $86 million in
po1tal revenue.
lo h1iami Beach If no com·
munications facilities were
installed at t b e am·
phltlioatre.
Union officials Mid about 20 men, mainly ca b I e
pullers, today start laying
wires necessary for com-
munications at the
vention.
Astronauts
'Fly' Friday
In Apollo 7
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)
-Altronaut.1 Walter Scbir·
ra, Donn Eisele and Walter
Cunningham plan to "fly"
their Apollo 1 spacecraft
Friday in the artificial space
of a v.cuum chamber.
The nine-hour simulated
fiight will be the second of
three key tests of the
moonshJp's spacev.·ort.hines1.
The first one ran 15 hours
wi thout a crew and was
successfully completed Wed·
nesday.
For the test. the Apollo 7
ship will remain motionless
Ins ide the massive chamber,
but it will be subjected to
the vacu um of space and lta
systems will be exercised
eleetron!cally as if they
were In orbit.
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•
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Prisoners Riot
During· Bus Ride
CHINO CUPI) -
Prisoner• OD a bu1 tranafer-
ring conv1ctl, includinc c:On-
vlcted wife 1 •layer Dr. R.
Bernard ll"1nch. from
Tehacbapl State PrUon to a
minimum 1tcurlt,y faclllty
here rloted dlD'lnf the mld·
nllbt ride. .
Seventffn of tht U con-
vleta, blocked off by en lron
melh ocreen from tht guard
iit tht rear IOd t.ht clrlver,
be1u lt1olr lracaa obortly
a11or leoviDR the state faclll. ty In Kern County too mlles
north of bere. Fioch waa not one of the 17.
Aa the bus neared
Palmdale llO mll11 norlh ol
Lot An&elt• tht prla0ner1
first tried to upset the bus
by standing \IP and rocking
in unison.
t• •••
Unsuccessful in this at·
tempt they began breaking
windows, tearing up the · in-
terior and lllrowln1 out -t
cushions·. The rear guard.
tmable to resotre order fired
tear gas at tbe.prle0ner1 a..t:
tne cas bltw Into the
driver's compartment and
lwnpered bil vlolon.' I
See tit• ,/
MATTEL
TOY "'
FESTtVAL
This Friday & Saturday
frH Prizes ! !
'Ibt driver Ibo · w .a s
W>ablt !<>quiet the prl1oners ; ~··I!' lriill .•ptodinf up lllCl .,w11iqg1hll veblcle.
The driveP called for help,
on his t,adlo .,.S Lot An1eles
sheriff'• , ·deputies • n d
Callforilia Hllliwar patrol
units trailed the bus u an
escorl lhrougll Palm<kle.
When the bus IWUDC eastward mm San
Bernardino County, site of
the OUno facility. it was
picked up by additional oC·
!icers who followed it down
the San Bernardino
Freeway 'Wtrile the ram-
on tht moll •I
F-ASlllON ISLAND
Newport Center 1·, ' pagin& prisoner• cleaned out
anything loose in tlielr cOnl·
partment and distributed It
along the freeway . '"
'Jazz at Josef's'
COCKTAIL DANCING
EVERY FRIDAY
5:00-8:00 p.m.
JOSEF'S
2121 E. COAST HIGHWAY
Coron• dtl Mor " 6h.1 lio
Clearance
,
F1mou1 n•m• br1nd1
reduced to low, low
pric11 for quick d11r1nce.
LINGERIE
BRAS
and
GIRDLES
I . 2 PRICE
fashions for • • •
' NEWl'O~T IEAC~Ft1hioo 'l1ltod 11141 M4-0170
011'•" 4•ilr 10 '·'"· le 6 11 .111.; M•n. en4 f ri. t• t :lO ,.111.
Open • le F''"'"• Che't'• l•"•Awitri1J.er4 ., M•lltr Clte r1•
l hursd~, July 25, l 9i:ill DAILY PILDT 7
Solons ·Wield Ax to Clear Backlog
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Billi repealln( -bouslnC law1 and -., the
penalons of le<ltUYI olde1
were amoni the 1eon1 of
me&IUl'M con1l1ntd t o
d.t'e&t • lawmaker• work·
ed todoy to complete their
1989 111sJon.
Stntle Prllldent pro tom
llufh M. BID'DI (l).Jl'H1110)
Hid the Senate commitlte
had cons i dered the
meuurts "both in public
and private aDd this allows
us to clear our flle ."
"'"llnlVG, lilt public. A With the measure havln11 lp;0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii;;;;;;;;;;;;
third would hive named a an estimated potential cost •~ park ofter th• of 11.8 million a year. the Think
u1u11Dated Dr. M 1 rt I q committee recommended
Luther Kine. moni study. Staff member•
Of 27 billl that Ways and are oow included in th t
Means look into execuUve reiutar, end lel1 lucrative,
•e•lon, only two '"r' •t>-stlte employ11 ptQIJon SYI·
SALE
Checks Due 1
On Test
Co~? -. .
HAYWARD (AP)
• Mov1D1 behind c I o 1 e d
doors, and lnto execuUve
1e11lona Wednesday, the
Senate Governmental Ef·
ficlency CornmJ.ttee and the
Asaembty Wayt ·and Mean1
Committee killed a loog lllt
of pendinC letf1laUon, then
publicly announced th e
dtc!SIODI.
The Senate committee
defeated more than 80
plece1 of teitslaUon. Tht
best known would Mve
either modified or repealed
the Rumford open bouslna
law,
Another
Unlvtnlty repntl to
required t h e
of Calllornla
open all their
Smog Remains
Cl\anctllor Glenn S. Dumke
o1 tht c.i11orn1a state But It's Not Getting Worse
eoue1., Jll'OPOffd 1 o d a y
that campu1 pretldenll ex· LOS ANGELES (AP) -monoxide adverse level has
ert more contto\ over U· That b r o w n i s h • eye· not been as &reat ttus year
exper1ri-itntaJ, itud«lt . run 1marttnc 1tuU •!aYs around . as in 1966 and 1967, the but nnoa: experll .l&Y it'1 riltro11n diox.ide level is courMS. not gettlne worae. l?'J'&ler, accordin1 to the
Collep lnl1lela met on The Alr PolluU. o·n Control APCD report. the Heynrd cmbpU1 for a review of Gov •. llelllD's Dlltrict 1aid today there By the end of June there
cuts ln their budltl and a were 7C lmOflY day1 ln !!le had been 60 days durln1
new look -al tbt ~Dofflcltl, Loa Anceles Dasin through which t.M adverse level, .24
experimental courees of. June 30 tit year, compared ppm 1utint for .one hour,
fend at nlne of u.. 11 cam· with 7S a year before and 89 was ~ached, c o m p a r e d
• .by lhll cltte ln 1966. · wllll '2 days in 1967 and 34 ~~t•• ~Id I I 1 t 'Ibt ezperta call a 1mo11Y In 1986.
proved. Thi Hit wtre elther tern .
held in commlttff -polite In another development,
talk foe defeated -or taken I under 1ubml11lon. the All1mbly jolnod the
Tile prtnc{pal vlcUm w.. senate In approving • '"r-i Think
a Seoet.e·pa1sed,, bill that reaching change in state '
would have included some election laws - a measure Jc 11 ,.,,,:
700 I e e 11l1 t l v e staff that would assure that every \Ailll I
membera, 1ecretarles and recoenlzed preaidential can· W.tdllt .,...
m111eq:er1 ln the lucratlvt dldate appear on the June ... ,...
eenston plan for lawmaktr• •. California prlma.ry ballot I
A iolortul, t1ct-11llld boo!< ll>oul U\1
1961 l'mldlnllll £l1tti011 prnct1$.,,
. t1U1 ahtltt f«.hom1 vst u )IOU watdl
tho Rspubllcsn 111'1 0-.. 1~ nallonll
conv111U0111 ... t1il1>hMll for D1tUon
Dty ... history, ftcts, flaura, m1pa,
chub ••. 1Y1ry flmlly lhoU!d htvt one
this ellCtlon yur.
Sls!l ltt pt,.. t11 "" ... wtthotl lllllptl11.•
•Munt.pt .....
month to pottpont ant ac· day one in wtrlch the ozone Wlllllm Juli1n King, pro-
Uon by Dumke Until"' they cOunt ttacbu .15 part per fessor of englneerlng at the
could dtdde their awn one mllllon part.a ol air. An Univer1lty of Califo1:nia at
poay toward tbf con--alert 11 called when the Loi Angeles , said these
-.rrial :'f,fllll .o I count reaches .SO. 'ntere ha1 figures indicate that local
I lnllla..... .. ... ~,.. been one alert this year. smog is not getting worse, l.....,otfllt. l•tmcli ~au::w+v ~KNWI~ Automctile emission is "except for the s.ignUicant 7112EdlllprAft. Blt•KnottAn.
tnhQ
.. ....,,., ltll ... ,,..
'' m 1' blamed for IO percent ol Jt. lncreut ln nltro1en dloz· ~ -1"" '"'
Truattl Dudley SW!m ofl ·~~~~ ... ~~-~-_.:.:~~~~·~~~·~·~~~__:~~_.!~~~~~~~·~,.~,...,~,~~~on~Knott,~~"'~'~U~loco~o~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Carmel Valley hod ralttd .,. -c a r o • ~
the iloue, loclllln1 1"1 ob-
jectlon on a coune called ''a
aemlnlll' 1n cuerrllla warfue'' conducted for a
time at San Frlllclact Stall
Collqe.
Some IO olhtr COUl'IH
also were ottered 1n the San
FrancJaco experlmenUJ. pro-
gram. FRmo state la: the
only campu1 in the l)'ttem
that glv11 credlll for all 111
experimental cour111.
' ' Experlmentll courses
and experimental coue1e1
can have a slplfJcant role
In making lhe !<>Ill hl..,.,.
education experlence more
relevant," Dumke said i.D
hll report to the tr11tee1.
"However, in several ln-
atances problems have OC·
curred." .
The president of l b e
American Fed.eraUon , o f
Teachers' College' Coubell · l
atrongly criticized Dumke ~
for pledgJ.Di to· "take •W'IY •
control of the experimental
colleges from the 1tudeats.''
John Sperlin1 1 the
teacher• union. leader, seld
in a written statement that
the proposal to place the
coursec under campus l.d·
ministration "is another ex·
ample of political ex-
pediency."
State Gun
Vote Needs
Timeout
SACRAMENTO fAP)
Time wu running: out today
for A.Nembl)' Democrats
who hope to win a public
mandate at the polls Nov. & •
tor . touih (W1 control
lep1lallon.
They ore propotlnf that
tlU advl1ory ballot qutltlon
be put t<> the v-a for ' I
-lellf>latlve cuJdance: ,
"Sbould legislation be t
enacted to control the sale, ~
transfer and possession of :.
firearms, including: re· !
quirementa for the periodic ;
Ucen1lng of persons who 1..#'
own er po91N firearms and -~ ' """,
requlretments for tbe r;1,
J'lllltrllloa of f Ir•• r m s t ~, :ll:.Jll:i'll'late p o l i c e l -
'lbal 17·word proposal wu
draftlld bJ .• Assemblyman
_Wlnlltld A. Shoemaker (0.
Lompoe), after it became
apparllll ht bad no chance
of wtnnlns pa1sa1e of his
1trict gun llcensing and
aemi·regi1b'1tlon bill thl1
1essfon _of the legislature.
Qaencn for geWna the
que1tloa on the ballot dim·
med hoorly, allhoufh a com·
rnlttee hearln1 on the pro.
poaal wu scheduled in the
Asaembly Iii< today.
Sboemaktr Kmkted time
''ls the bif problem we're
' '
BoxSeat.2c
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1ac1n1." Al•-Seci etary o I
St.ate H. P. Sull1v<1n has 1aid
the leslslature really must
act th11 week If the quertion
can be aent to llMI ballot
prfuter1 In lime.
But Shoemaker •nd h1I coUeecue• face o t h e r
roadl>locU -A I II m b 11 Ropubll..,. who say the
lelllill>n 1bould "stud up
• Nothin_g beats the excitement and thrill of getting
out to the ballpark and rooting for the home team.
But wben the t.eam's on the road, or the l{SIDe is
80ld out, there's still major league action m your
living room.
That tight race for the pennant and the wrsonal
battles for MVP are right there on your TV set.
Because of t.oday' s biggest bargain ... electricity ...
you'll have the beat seat in ballparks all over the
country. And it costs ·you so Ii file. About 2F per . , ,
game for the electricity your set uses. • · ·
Only electricity does 80 much for 80 little.
and be counted " on run con·
trol now : a holtile Senate,
and p r o b a b l 1 opposttlOfl
from Republican G o v •
Reaa:an .
-.~.
Southern California Edison
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I DAILY PILOT Thursday, July 25, 1968
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• ThermO!tat automatically maintains desired cool.ness
• More knee room thanks to super.slim design safety
• Wide ran1e1 S..speed control for perfect air: volume
selection.
Expert Installation Available!
,~..,_ ~¥ .. "r""~~ • ~ •. T :~ . . ~·
Santa Ana i: / Costa Mesa '1; ... l .NO\". • • • O" ••'GE ) 717 :S. ltlaia !L f \ 8rkle1 at 511.nlo~tT 'f l\ill1
Kl 7&71 la South Cotit Plau
.Sf0.3333
•
12 Reasons Why Sears
BRAKE RELINES
·SNn·
A•t...,lnt c ......
\110\• ll 1:.:l1 .... ,
.II \ / 11 .... l \I I
Are Better, Safer
Ail 4 Wheels 2888* for Only
V Inspect Ma11ler Cylinder
,, Bonded Llnlnr In.talled .. '
\Vbeel.IJ
\{ RebuUd All ' Wheel Cyllndeni \I Jn1pect and AdJoat Parkin( Bnktt
V lri1pect Brake Hoee•
\f Free AdjuatmMlt fM" Life .t Ltntnr• \I Arc Grmd Brake SbOM
y ReMUiaoe All I Brake Dram• V Repack Front Wheel Dearin(•
V In11pect Greue Seale \I Bleed All Linell and Acld Flatd
V Road Tett for Brake Rellabllltf
•Chrysler products having S wheel
cylinders and cars wlth dUc brakes
slightly higher.
Any necessary •dditional pa.rt. and.
labor available at Sea.re low, low
price!
l 1·l1 •:,:1",q1li f(o.111
.11 ' lll'lll1·1111,1
•
-------~ ~-----------------------~~~~~ ....... ~ ............................................................................................................................................................... "!I
, For .the .Record •
DEA TH 'NOTICES
FRASER
At11l•lr J. l'"r1ser. 1?"91 F1m11111Hf St.,
G•""n Grov1. ~rvlwd bY H rtnh, Mr. ind Mrs. T. W. Fr1uri b!'ct"9rs,
Thomas K1llt1. 11.ldlerd lruc:1 ind l1n
ONn· Fr1i.eri 1l1ttrs, Slndrl IEllutbelll
Fr1seri Flof'tl'ICtl R. With. i nd
P1h'lC!1 M. P1t!V. ~rv!ctt, Saturd1y,
11 AM, SI. AnHlll'll E1>1sCOP1I Church,
G1rde11 Grove. Directed by Ped: F1ml·
Ill' Co!Onltl l"U!!trtl 'Hcl!ltt. ANDERSON
Au1ud1 l . Anderson. 101'1 L1rlO<'I ,..,__, Gird"' Grove. SUrvlwd b'I' son,
cir! E. And1r1«1. 11111 d1ugllter. IE11Mr H. G,lrr11on. GravaloH &ervltn. Fri·
d11y, 10 AM, fMlrose Abbey Mitmorlll
P1r1l. 0!'111111. Olr.aed 1W f'Mk f1tnlt'I
Colonll l .. _., HorM. ·cnASE
Mwrle L. CheM, HOil lrwlft Or., Stll'l-
1'1111. Sufvlwd b'I' Pa!'eftl'I, Mr. Ind Mr1.
l\bel ChlHI 111~. TIM and Llbbv
Cha11, Ind P11N!Lll stlnntri metrr1111I
1r1nd .. mm. /fir, 1rid Mrs. Samuel Mll~I ,.,,,ML or1ndmcttier. Mrs.
l ...... aw-. Grt'"'"kh HNI~ ..
TllU'l"ldrt. 11 AM. w11tmln1t•r
"-'-1 P•tlt. Dll"KTIOll bY' f1tk
F•mllY Colonl•I Funer11 HO>ne, . STRAIT
ltuue11 J. StT'•ll. 1670 Gleflllaven Line, Hunllneton lltull. Survlwcl bl' wile.
111mei ..,.. D1Ykh d1uoll!er, Mllltld81
111111,-., ltub't Kr1use, F lo~nu Ml1r,
1nd SHlt arou1rd. Servlas. Slfllrdtlv.
1 PM, In IM Ch1pel of !ht Chlmt•• lntltwood P111! Cemeterv, lntlewood.
Directed by PHk Family Colonl1I
F11Mr1I HGrntl. MIX
Lt RO'f J. Miii. 1006 S. A111tln 51,, Sllnt1
Anl . Survived b't wife, D1rl"''ll ,_,
LeR oy Jr. 111!1 RodntY Lee MlJ11 dauohhll,.., Trudy J11n, T1mmr Lvnn
tnd Wendy M i mother, Mr1. MAri
Mill four 1l1fl!r1 •fld four brothers.
Servlc11, Slfllrd&y,' PM. Peek Ftmllv
Colonl1I Funeral Homt.
VAN THYNE
JOO! J. "'" 'TIIYM. ... .. ,,, dlfl of tle•th, July 2S. LO\'lllO l11Mr of "'"'11
• .., of lllnchl 1nd fl.rt Ven Tht'llll bro!Mr of ll:&Y Ind llOl'I V•n thyne.
Vl1ll1Hoft aftt'r A PM todav, ThundlY• 1t1v C. Addi.tntn .. $0rl Fuenr.-1 Heme,
11331 t:. Vt lltY BIYd.; Et MGnft, Cant. FUMr1I $trvla1. Frldey, 10 AM. St.
Louis of Fr&llCI! C.thoflc Clltlrch,
B1s.,tf, t all!. lntermtnl, Ql.OMn ol
HtlYtll Ctmtler'/.
WWELL
Ftl'ltl Lowell. l6'6 ~ ll'fll ..
to•lt Mtta. Aff 17. SUrvlwd lrl' nlttt,
Mr1. Orvllki Bov11tr, lo¥r&. Gr1wsl6e lf!n'lct1. Friday, ID AM, M1rbw ll:n l
~I l"al1!. Dlfed9d bY' k rt l~•Y MarflHorv, 110 Broed'lfray,
Coll• Mell. THAYER
Mlt'lllt E , Tllty.,., A3' l"rwMCf,
NtWPOrt &ttctt. Ct ll of de•ltl. Jutv n .
SuAIYtd b'I' dl11111hte,., Alla kwmen, Newport BNchr Hnlll' Laupert,
M1ryl1!1111 MlrY B1l!lwln, 1<1111111 111111, Ltwr'tnc. Th1y1r, Bnumont1 bntthotr, Cll\lde l ed row, N..,, MIX I co I
shier, He1twr Wlttr. Dhlo1 I 2
11r1ndcltlldrtn 1nd 10 o r 11 f •
1r1ndchtldrtn. Services. Frld1y, 3 PM,
In fllf CNPf! llf P1clfk Vlf!w. lnMr·
metn, P1clf1c Vkiw MtmDrlll Plfli,:. Dtrec;tl!d by P1clllc View MOrfllary,
MOSS
Llll LM Moll. AM Aol, of l!IN
IUvtr11d1 Pkict. Coil1 ""'51. SurvlY'fd
br husbtnd, Jetln1 ""'"'-· Liii le1nlll Greon. L..11.,,.. ludl1 1111'• bra~,... Mldllel c°""'. C 1 • r k Elhetedll Ind Wllll""' C_., 111 cf ;Florlda. $0rvlca. Frldly, 2 PM,
,.wntdlfP C"'-~ wttl! ~.., Jotlrl
1oanaio.i otnc11•.,.. w.m:iiK 0.-1 Mor1u1rv, ~ Dlrectan. ,
• BALTll MORTUARIES :C.rou dtl Mu Oil ...... J:otlil Mesa Ml f.ZUI
BELL BllOADWAY
MORTUARY
lUI BrNclway, Codi Mesa·
: LI 1-USa • PACIFIC flEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery e Mortury
Chapel
3500 P1clflc View Drive
Newport Beacil, Clllforala
144-mt
PEEK FAMILY
COWNIAL FUNERAL
HOME
'7Bll Bella Ave.
W-lalller 111 Im
SMmI'S MORTUARY m Mila Ill.
RuU.11t9 l!Hdl
LE Miit
WESTCUJIT MOR'ft!ARY
fr! E. 11111 Ill., Cotti -.....
WESTlllNSTEll
MEMORIAL PARE
Mortary Ii Cemetery
Clilpell
111111 Beadl, W-
At.1'111 e m&al
$r,, CO.It MMe, llo'f n• M
Mr. fflC Mr\. llfl CllllM. tot! Col·
tytti.o" er., wu.tl~ hocJI. orrt
#k. Ind Mil. 11.~rd Fodw, :MQJI
~....,,..,.,DIM ~t, llov Mr. Ind Ml'L B-lf Sllffttet, .. CHI
AYI .. ll'lboei lskiftd. boY
.,Diy orces
llft lllLOCVTOll.Y D•Cttl•S
S-.11 K1ro ll:tts n Kt!llletll Theodor1 ·-Fr..,., E11Mr Caub YI FrlClll: JICOb
D1ub
Denni• M.. Wtyne VI N11KY M. W1YM
Lindi IC1y Kn VI ltobtrt McCannkk Kl!Y. Jr.
Mar111ret J . .H1rmon vs ll:obtrt Hermon
Judith Anne Wood YI Otll H1rrlaon w"" Ma,.., G, Mlyer VI M1rcel G. M&Vff
Cht,..,1 Je1" PK& YI Clll'ton ll:1lph
•KO
Alblrl C. Webslff VI Htlen J. W~ter
Dorc!llv F. 01,..,.. YI Df!Rovct v. Olsen
Gr•co F1rre11 G11;t "' JlrwM Alfred ··~ Roboerf1 A. Slllf1der1 vs Gllblrt D. St unders
M••lllr'tl A. TOMY YI Glenn Frink ,_
Miry L. Lucero vs ltobtrt IE11llll1 ,_,
Jolln "'-111 0'9•11'1'1 VI ShlrltY M11 0'9r!rn
Kilhletn S. Stonru YS ltldllrd P. ··~ Le l.\01~ L!$1'tr lr•nl Y• W111CY l.ou !lr"'I
WUH1m W. c.rter ·'ft ll'rbtrt £. Carter '
Jlmmv G. H11 .... VI Ednt M. H&IA
John Lawltr VI c.tthtrlrlt Uwlff'
Ll'ftetle J, McMNn.s VI DtWlll C M<MftM •
Sue L IE~rds VI AU.., EdJl'a~ Mlrlltrl Jl:eelf YI .H.,~ •• ftd, h ,
C•ll• .a. ... -......:r-.·· WINIMI •· Wlltrams • ,
Judl Jo Glranl vs. J11hn A. Glr1r•
PINAL D!C••IS
Sh1rrori Ellfnt S.'91111 YI Lovl• CNtles Sll'l~I
Everttlt E. Moms 111 Je111 J. Morr1•
hmlr'd Gret0ry c.· II YI ltDlllle hY ....
Carole J .. Moon n Cilrl MIQn
E!1l1 P. J1r1m1llo YI ll:uben J1r.,..IU11
Htl<'n Btrnlc• D&YldlOn vs fMr.httl J1mes Davidson
J BmQ F. Fll'l\l\WOrth YI S li t Ftrn1'1¥1:1rth
WUl!am G. PhlllllH VI 11:1111! Phllll" Vlro!nla Gayle Hull VI Rot.rt LH H~ll
Lucv Peyton VS ll:obert II. P•rtoti
JlJOOMllfn
Vicki LY'lll ll:vs!1n, 1 mlllOf', vs ll:obert l"°'1111 ll:1r1!1n, (1nn111mtnO
Fire CaUs
See ....
MATTEL
TOY
FESTIVAL
. s Fridly & Sllardly
' ' Free Prises I I
on the moll 11
fASHIOll ISWID
llewporl Cenler
Thuod01, July 25, 1968 DAILY PILOT I
School Tax
I.No Longer
In Effect
U.S. Pullback to Rice Bowl Urged
THOMAS FORTUNE Of .. DeUT ,..... S'9ft Korean war., rJakY'o be iakl. 'Moreover, total communist control .
"If the Viet Cong j>lay the . the cost ct dolonding South • • We w o u Id g I v e
Thi nk .. SALE
The only W"f foe the
United St.ates to win In Viet-
Dim 11 to abandon some of
same trick,. what do we Vietnam ~ be stag-everything back to the Com· 1
do!" he asked of his UC Ex.· 1 gerli>g. 11&. u milllon men tension class in "'Our F_ar munist.s, but with my plac
Eastern Relatlom;;." ~committed defeo1e of we can still hold what we've
TbJn he out¥ned hls own the Korean border 16 years gained at such a terrific
"peace plan,'~ which he said 1 after tbe "WV, be noted. To cost ," he so.id. '"This la the
A' ~e school tu tlle 111..-i regions .,id or nurly 15 ceMI the past pull bock to .Wente ot 111•
year ,hu disappeared.. It is .souther'n rlce bowl. Dr. No-
one tp: pro~ owners Yong Park tt&l1 week told a
won't have to pay dtu'ing the class at UC JrviDe.
is to abandon the vulnerable defend the longer So uth only course out.'' • Th; n k
northel:'rl ·provJnces to the , Vietnam perimeter equally Looking back, he said the
new school year. The M:aochUJ"ia-born lee·
The tax Is levied when the turer aald peace talks 'in
assessed value to full cash P--a r i s ai. •~I nowhere
belt. , five millJon men. most fateful step the U. S. Viet ~ and hold the rice well would requ.lre four or JEDJr\ lnhl
"U we concentrate all He said he-feats the U. S. made to get into the ' war , ·
Will t 11 t I d · W•lclltt Plauo .,....,,., ... our power we could win the accep a co a on was un ercutting Sout h w.™' ...,1nt
hearts of , the people by: of~ , government, whJch, h e Vietnamese strongman Ngo~~~~~~~~~~~~ because the Vlet Cooc came value r•Uo In the county not. to bargain bUt to • .,,..... falls below the statewi\)e -~..fering protection from ter· 1 asserted, inevitably ends in Dinh Diem .
aver1ge. Pr e l i m J n a r y our surrender· rorists," he . said.. "Until iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
· tbeo, ·we O&DDot ofJer what 'fifures from the Slate "When ,J-bowed out
Board or .EquallHUon Jn. and f Ir• d G • n.
dicate It bas gone above Westmoreland, klcldng him
averaie. " upstairs. the Viet Cong
:~ 59: ~i~a~::r::b!!
-'as!iiurance their Mad
woo 't bt cut oU the nm
·night." · However,·• property tboutht'our government had colla.....:il," 'D.ar"k, I 8 i d • owner may not 1ee tbe ef. ..--...,. feet of the lb d.IJaolutioo on "'l'llel' ~ they 'saw the
his tu hill lf th• .........i some 1hlnC ~C In tile
value of hb property bu Jn-U. s . lollow!Dg the Tet of.
creased, Ernest Norton, fensive.u-occurred in Fran·
assistant COunty s•mPrin· ce after Dien Blea Phu.
. He said guen1llas could
. no\ 5µrvive without help
from the people aDd. the Wfl.r
would end.
te~· of Is ,,. ts · , "So 1bey ·came to Paris to • .,..nt aOboo ' poin ~1 our· surrender aod out. -.... r
Other alternatives for en-
ding the war are totally
unacce~le, he said.
DEMORALIZE ALLIES Prelumably. MDIO(lf:'I :il .. :were surprised, I
~ested value has gQbf up . · . , .
fOf the cOl\QIY to dimb Pan said -now peace
above the state 1verage. talks haw be(lm there is a
The. tax Ill tcalled a school good •cllaDoe they will dHg
~ fl c a ti o,n . aid • or . I/II, He . telnlnded that talks
eqflallzaUon oliiet tax. It II lillled twe· years during Ille
The dove's way of pulllrig
out would ·demoralize our
allies throughout the world,
he predicted.
The hawk's way of un-
conditional vict.ory is too
Ule•sed t 0 ,COUlpeDl&te jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili . IoCai IChoofdllltricls;for 10ll cl revenue because county·
.....,..i value. pen:eJl!aget are1ow. . ·'
l\Mbough getting cloeer,
California •. c o u~n t'y
assessments stiU are not1up
to 25 percent cf full cash
v~ue. JJoard of Eq~alization.
ftrures sbo)V Orawge. COun~
ty's ratio up to 23.2 percent, ~Ve tfie statewide ayi?ra_ge
qf 22,7 P"n:iont. . · Tbf relative standiiig of. Cow\ty to state average' Is
e><pel;ted io hold when llnal equaliiaUon fifures a r -e
released next moDth.
Wilen needed, the tax 'is
levied countywide by the
Board of Supervisor.!! and
distributed among t h e
school district!. Only 'once
befote, since 1961 when the
equalization tax:· went int.o
effect, has the county been
above the state average and
the tax not neede<!,. .
The last two years the
county tax. was 18.3! cents
and 14.74 cents per $100 of
assessed valuation.
The potential savings Uiis
year to owner of a $20,000
home , i! his assessed valua·
tion did not rise, is $7.50 on
his tax bill.
..., .... , /?~·-:!hrafl oRAPERY
LM\"UT (,.,Ot(.., w.J c L ~~ N ~ II s
• .._.. W•tw D."'"9 e FL.AMI PROOFING .
EXCLUSIVI
•UAIANTDD .DllAPRY: CUANIN•
Dl'lll*Y c1 .... 1,.._ Pwhct ......... , ....... :r, .. your llr•,er,, er 100 %, ,..
1tl•c9!Mftt tf cl•Mlale.
•No Shrink•
e No Wltt.d HoM1
e P•rftct ptNt Follllnt
• Perfect lven Hems • ~::::-r.::.·"i.:.-z
OUR IXC·WllVI lllVICI
e Ptef9tlloMI .......... e Tenn1 M•Y .. Atr•n ... • ,,.. littm8f'91
e Pne. L9U1 Dra,_ DRAPERY.
CLEA E-:R=S !....---.-.
20% Off for c•• & carey
540-1366
642-0270
1702 NEWPORT BlYD., COSTA MESA
COMMUTER
RIRLINES
•
FROM ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT ~If
22 .minutes over the fmewiiys in a 20 pa.ssenger
Cable Jet to LA. International Rights evety hour. We
call it 'The connecoon you've been waiting tor: We think
you will too. Call your travel agent., your favorite airline or
Cable Commuter at -(714} 985-2803.
I
' .
.. •
~~~~-"
·e CORONA DEi: MAR•-3321 E. COAST HIGHWAY
• SAN ·CLEMENTE--111 AVENIDA DEL MAR
•
i
;
I -' -. . . •• . . . . ·-. -~ -~ ... . -..,._ .. .. ·-...
TS MAGIC ...
IAL BU'ITON HOLES
WITH DIAL-A-STITCH
reg. 199.00 98.00
LOWES'!' PRICE EVER
MORE THAN A ZIG·ZAG
NOW DIAL-A-STITCH
FOR All YOUR SEWING
PFAFF
SELECT-A -STITCH
PORTABLE
reg. 99.00 59.00
model Sl, not shown
Can't a>me in? •.. Call your -
B~y for a no obligation
Hom. Demoostraiico
Anaheim
~121
Huntlnaton Bo.ch 892-3331
Newpori
&44·1212
Best In The West
Orange Coast's ,No. 1 Paper! The Daily Pilot
Is Your Business Conducted Under A
FICTITIOUS
·FIR·M NAME?
IF SO IT IS MANDATORY UNDER THI LAWS OP CAL~
FORNIA THAT THE FOLLOWING REQUIREMENTS OP
THE CALIFORNIA CIVIL CODE BE COMPLllD WITH:
LAW ON PUBLICATION OF CERTIPICATIS
OF BUSINESS, FICTITIOUS FIRM NAMI
(Clvll Code Socflon 2466 61 6'I
Sec. 2466.-Excopt n otherwllO -'°" In tho -
sectfon every person tranndl"I hvalneu In thh Sf1te Uftdel'
a flditious name encl every p1rtnerahlp tr1nuctlnt IMJ1lnH1
In this St1te under 1 fldltlous name. or 1 Htlgnatlon not
1howlng the n•m• of the penon Interested H pirtner In
such busln•1, must file with the clerk of the county Jn
which hl1 or lt1 principal pl1ce of business 11 1ltu1tecl, 1
certificate 1ubsc:rlbecl and aclmnwltldned In the m1nner pro-
vided In Section 2461 of the Civil Code, 1tatln1 the neme
In full ind the pl1ce of Ntldence of 1uch person ind ltatlftfl
tho .. ,,,. In full of all tho members of such portnel'lldp
and their P'-cn of rnidence.
Such 1ubscrlbed •nd 1cknowled'*' certificate must ..
publl1hed 1ubtequ.,,t to tho 1111 .. thoroof wltlo tho ffunty
clerk pur1u1nt to Government Code Section 6064, In a n....
D•per published In tt;e cnuntv, If there be one, anti If there
be none in such countv, then In 1 new1p1n9r In •n ecfJolnl'"I
county, An 1ffld1vlt 1howlno the puhllc•tfon of such cerlJfl.
c•te 11 In thl1 Mdlon Dr..ovldecf shall be flled with tfi.• co11"ty
clerk within 30 dl'IV!I aftfr the comnletlon of such publlcatlon,
but in no nent sh•ll 1uch nuhllcatlon M made prior to the
filinct of such certific•te with the county c'•rk.
2468. -The certlflc1te filed with the clerk n proviclect
In Hdlon twentv·four hundred and shcty.shc must be 1lonecl
bv th. person therein referred to. or by the p1rtnen, u the
ca!'e mav M, and 1cknowlllffcted .,,_for-t some officer, 11rthor·
itad to take the 1cknowlAdnement of cnnvev1ncn of re1I
nron•rfv .... Wher-. a hu1lnts1 is hereafter contmenc•d bv •
"8r1on under • fictitious n1me or • n1rtner1hlo Is h•re1fter
formed, the certlfic1,. must be flied end the nublicatln" tl~ian8ted In that HCtlon mud be m.de within ene month
•ft.er the commencemettt of such buslneu, or efter the form ...
tiot<i of the n1rtn1rship, or within one month from the time
desli:1n1ted In the aqrHment of lt1 members for the cem-
mencement of the Pllrtn•rshfp. Where the busln"' his heen
heretofore conducted under • flctltfou1 name or where
the Plrfn•nhlp h11 been heretofore formed, the certificate
must be filed and the publication mede within six month1
1ft11Jr the n1111ae of this 1ct. No D1:rson dtilna bu1lnet1 under
a fictitious n1me or his 111lanff or •••Ian ... nor 1nv oer-
aan doing business as partner1 contr•ry to the Drovislons
of tl,fs 1rtlcle, or th•ir 111ion• or 19otlqnH1, shill maint1ln
In the courts of the St1te of C1llfornl1.
Sec. 2469-0n EVERY chanQf' fn the memben of 1 part·
nership tr1n••ctlnJ1 busln.-1 in this 1t1t1 under 1 fiditiOUI
n1me or a dfflgnatlon which does not 1how the name of
the Mr1ons lnterest.d 11 p•rfnen In lh bu11lneu • , .. • npw
certiflc1te must be filed with the County Clerk, incl 1 new
publication made 11 required by this 1rtic"-on the fonn1tlon
of such partnerthlD.
If vou hive neolectttd this procedure, vou should reall1e th1t
the n1me of your firm Is not prot9Cted and that you are net entitl~ to m1lnt1ln suits fer collertlon, or for other purDOSet,
1nv action upon or on 1ccount of 1ny contract or contrldt
their D1rtnenhlp n1me, in 1nv court of thl1 state until the
certificate hff bHn flied and the publlc1tlon h11 been mid•
11 herein reaulrld.
T1ke c1re of this lmportent matter now, by h1vln11 the
DA.IL Y PILOT, 1n 1dludic1ted lea1I newsp1per for Orenge
County ond dlstrlbutod In COSTA MESA, FOUNTAIN
VALLEY, HUNTINGTON BEACH , LAGUNA ll!ACH, SEAL
BEACH, NEWPORT BEACH, WESTMINSTER, publish Y""'
C9rtlflc1te. The coat 11 1m1ll but the flllnv end pubflc1tlon la
-thing which lhould not be overlooked.
l'orma for Fictitious Firm N1mes and Certlflcete of Abandonment of Fldi·
tlouo Firm No-. con be obtoinod FREE from ony of the DAILY '1LOT offl-shown below:
II 330 Wnt lay St,..t, Cotto MKo 92627
•'' 2211 Woll llalboo loulevord, Newport lluch 92660
1 309 Stlo StrHI, Huntlngt"" hoch 92646 r: 222 forett Avenue, Laguna Beach 92651
j BE SURE TO CONSULT OUR
l LEGAL ADVERTISING DEPT. AT •
f -D~~L~!~9T
! 642-4321 I~
' I
\
. .
;Surveys
Study
.
Shoppers
NEW YORK (AP) -Tbo
lnlormation mort 1ou1ht by
JIOllJten throughout t h e yur 11 not voting ia-
cllnatlom, u you might
1uspect. but con1wner in-
lormMloa.
Tbo National lndullrial
COnfe.rence Board has 10,000
conaumen 1urveyed every
~er momb Tb.1 Univer1ity
of Michlgan interview1 well
over 1,000 every quarter.
Commerclel Credit c o •
quutiona 15,000 every three
month!. Sindlinger & Co.
queries 1,800 every week..
Total numbers really don't
tell .the story. Some 1urvey1
are le• aopbisti.cated than
other1. Otben a.re con-
duot.d by telephone and few
queationa are asked. A few,
such as Michigan and Com-
mercial Cl'edlt, conducts
face-to-face intttview1. And
the . interpretation count&
more highly than t h e
nwnber1.
REGllLAll BASIS
Theae are among the most
prominent investigators of
the consumer mind on a
regular basiS. But perhapa
m8ny millions more , calla
are made throughout the year on a much narrower
and irrfgular basis, uaually
in regard to the marketabili-
ty of new productt. •
Why? Because just u it
benefits political candidates
to know what voters mJght
do, it benefits banb, car
manuNcturers and f o o d
chains to know what the
consumer might do with his
money.
Once this might have been
fairly well known, for the
take-home pay of a family
bead left him few choices.
With growing affluence, the
consumer can now use more
discretion: he can save or
spend, buy a car or postpone
buying one, take an ex·
pensive vacation or stay at
home.
PERPLEXING
With b1J aaseta now ex-
ceeding liabilities ~ about JI triWoa, and wllh his
behavior no longer
circUIMCTibed by needs, the
consumer now w i e I d s
eftOl'mOUs pawer. He is a.
sometimes perplexing
economic force . It pay1 to
understand him.
'Ibe pioneer in consumer
sUrveying is Dr. George
Katona of the University of
Michigan Survey Research
Center. Katona began in
1946 and since then has
regularly and often very ac-
curately forecast consumer
behavior, based mainly on
his expert interpretation of
attitudes and sentiments.
Katona's meth.ods a re
complex, and his reports
are detailed. But basically
be believes a c.'Onsumer's
dls"cretkinary pUre'hases de-
pend on ability to buy and
willingness to do so.
In his most recent study,
between May 20 and June 3,
hi! found· a continuation of a
wait-and·see attitude. The
atiility to buy remained
high, he reported, but will-
ingness was depressed,
largely because of Vietnam
and· inflation.
The Industrial Conference
Board report, which is bas-
ed on a survey conducted by
National Family Opinion,
Inc., stated in its July let·
ter:
''At midyear the nation's
consumers are less op-
tlrnJstic in appraising the
likely course of business
conditions than they were at
this juncture in 1967." It
found confidence lenened in
the economy's immediate
future.
INTERPRETATION
The Commercial Credit
survey, con d uc te d in
cooperation with the Na·
Uonal Bur&au of Economic
Research, also stresses in·
terpretatlon.
To illustrate how com·
pllcated tbe an.aJyaes can
beccme, consider this com·
ment by Dr. Tom Justei:,
oae of thoae involved in set-
ting up the Commercial pro-
gram:
"There is a major defect
ln all buyer intention data.
It's 11imple: MOit people will
not give you a definite 'yes'
but thty'U give you a flat
'no.' Most of the people who
ny 'no' do the purchasing . .,
LEf,')l CP BUY
r o .... 1.,.r .. ' r.l
i.,if llC t,;llT
COU(,.t.~
,.,,. "'· ....... ' ., :' ..
(~(., . ' ' +
a $4244 QSIJJCLCVP!i!E& 5 0 0 5
Cotntnunii11 W•ry
Sulfur· Boom
Strikes Again
By GIL HINSHAW
ORI.A, T~~ (AP) -
Outside, the 'est Texu 1un
bears down at a acorcbin&
102 decree•.
l!IOlde his comblllaUoo
cafe, grocery 'lllore '.and 111
ltotioo, Hall Olds upre.,..
doubta about the ruUur
boom jaldng place llOll\e 17
mil ... away in the RuaUer , """'"P country. · -·'fve seen it start and
atOp ·too many times, and
I've been bel'e 40 years,"
Old• •Y. with a ICOl'llful
amile. ·
Noi S~e Fiction
This space-age innovation looks more like some-
thing from Jules Verne's novel "20,000 Leagues
Under the Sea." It's a "speed mask" invented and
worn by former Newport Beach resident Calvin
Gongwer who us·ed the device Tuesday during a
swim from Catalina Island to San Pedro. Used with
Scuba gear, the mask is prow-shaped with a built·
in snorkel which follows the contour of the wearer's
head. Gongwer claims it cuts drag by SS percent.
If You Must Borrow,
Slwp for Best Deal
By SYLVIA PORTER
tt will be 11 more months
(July 1, 1969) before the
new Truth-in-Lending law
goes into effect and another
12 months after that (July
1970) before some of Its key
provisions apply,
This means that during
the period directly ahead,
you'll still have to find your
own way through today's
credit maze of comparative
interest rates, "points,"
"add-ons,'' special service
charges What·~ more, the
le51S informed you are about
how and where to borrow,
t.he greater the likelihood
that you'll choose the most
costly terms and the 'least
advantagecus deal.
•
TO HELP guide you, here
are 10 fundamental
guidelines for borrowing
money: ·
1) If you cannot postpone
a major purchase until in-
tere9t rates decline, shop as
never before for the best
deal available. Determine
the total financing costs
chirged by each lender or
dealer in dollar1 and cents,
over-the life of' the loan.
Then .compare the totals to
tee which deal ts least ex·
pensive. Financing costs
may include riot only in·
terest but also vary}ng fees
for insurance, processing,
etc.
2) Beware of ads tor big-
ticket items at "only $10 a
month" oc other "easy"
repayment terms. Such
eome-ons ,dten mean the
higheit total f i n a n c e
charge1.~ Find out the totals
N~ Dea•
Dr. Jae); W. Coleman is
the new dean of' lhe
school of business . ad-
ministration and econ-
omics at Cal State Ful·
lerton. A retired Air
Force colonel, he for·
merly was with the
Texas A &: M Univer-
alty school of business
administration.
by multiplying the amount
of the monthly payment by
the number of months you'll
be paying.
3) IF YOU BUY a costly
item from a department
store on your charge ac-
count and plan to pay it off
over a period of months,
consider getting a bank loan
to finance the purchase in·
stead, at interest rates
which almost always are
lower than the typical 1-1112
percent interest charged per
month after a certain grace
period on charge acounts.
4) If you are buying a car,
compare the dea1er's total
financing charges with those
at your local bank, or other
lend).ng institution.
5) U you must borrow
now, borrow only the exact
amount you need. '°r·
rowing more will mean
paying peak inferest rates
for the extra cash. Bor·
rowing too little will mean
returning for another loan
and paying extra processing
co9ts.
6; ON ANY 1'Y~E of
purchase on Ume , always
keep in mind that the most
expensive way to borrow
money is to make 1 small
down payment and t o
stretch out · the life of the
loan for the longest possible
period. To Illustrate: a
fl(),000, 20-year mortgage at
8 percent will cost you a
total of fl(),149.«I in interest.
Thf: interest will exceed the
total loan.
7) In shopping for a
lender, c11eck all sources of
funds. Borrowing against
your life insurance policy
may be your best choice
because of the favorable
terms ybu can get. But if
you do this, vow to repay
your loan when you can
refinance it at lower cost
elsewhere; otherwise, you
may continue the loan in-
definitely and that would be
self-defeating.
8) Try to arTange a deal in
which you pay no penalty
for prepaying your Joan, and
plan to prepay if you can.
9) IF YOU ARE buying a
house, try to work out an
agreement with the seller in
which he would turn over
his lower·rate FHA or VA
mortgage to you .
10) AJso In buying a house.
find out If "points" are
being added to b • a ic
mortgage rates. A charge of
fi\te. polnll, for example,
means that S percent of the
face wtue of your mortgage
is deducted at the beginning,
although you still hive to
repay the fUU amount of the:
mortgage. Addlng f Ive
polnts Is the equivalent of
boosting the ba1lc interest
rate more than 'i1 percent.
Cowpokes with faded blue
eye a line the luncb counter, :::"I! :et: ~ata de:::
cold beer. 'lbe w•ll behind
the cou.nter serves as a
clu1We:d adve:rtlaing 1ec-
tion. :Along with the "Sorry,
No Credit" tip are posters
advertising a house, or a
barn for r«tt.
A steady stream o f
vehicles, water trucks, gas
trucks and those bearing
dri1lin.c crew1, rumbles past
out.side on U.S. 285 from
Carlsbad to Pe<OS. They
slow down at Olds' station
and turn onto the county
· road toward the •\11{.ur field.
NO' SCHOOL
bldlJ wno· came to Orta in
1910, nys he doesn't believe
. OZ.la. will grow as a result of
the activity. There'• no
school in this small far West
Texas community, abQut 30
mi.mites by car north of
Pews and 40 minutes IOUth
of <iarls)>ad, N.M. . '
He' voices a suspicion that
the su,lfur activity might be
a ·promotion.
It· would be an expensive
promotion.
Duval Corp .. pre$ident W.
P. Morris annoµncet;I in
Houston Friday tbat·Duval's
directors have authorized
construction of ·a '65 million
facility for mining and
development of s u 1 f u r
deposit& 17 miles west of
Orla.
He said financing plans
for the new f-acilities are un·
der study.
But Olds ha.1 reason to
wonder about tile sulfur
boom that is changing the
face of the lonesome valley
near Rustler Spring& where
outlaws used to waylay the
stage between st. Louis and
San Francisco.
The sulfur business in the
area has boomed numerous
ti.mes since before the turn
of the century.
EXPEDITION
William P. Blake, at-
tached in 1854 to the U.S.
War Department expedition
that made a railroad survey
from the Mississippl River
to ·the Pacific Coast, first
reported that native ~ulfur
existed In the area.
Mining operations beg.an
sometime in the 1890's . By
1900 there were two com·
panies operating, and
mining stock 'ftl sold as ,_.
away as the British Isles.
The war years~ 1916 and
shortly thereafter, raw the
biggeat development. As
many as 60 men worked the
claim, producing pure
sulfur, and a town of sorts
grew. It had a post office,
church, dining room and
even a house of pleasure at
one time, some oldtirners
claim, but it 'iMS a town
whose name no o n e
remembers.
There were plenl at one
time to build a rail line from
the area into Orla, 17 miles
to the east, to link up with
the Santa Fe Reilroad. One
company bought tbe old F;l
Paso narrow-gauge street-
car tracks and laid two
miles ol the rails from Orla
toward the mJnes. ~,the
construction ended and the
remainder of the r a i I s
stayed, stacked, in Orla.
FRASCH PROCESS
The Delaware Co. and the
Michipn SUiphur C o •
operated In the Rustler
Springs field. One flrm even
used the Fra1ch mining pro-
cess -forcing hot water in·
to th• Mrth to bring up
molten ore.
'Jbe Ort Wll bauJed into
Orla by. elgbt mule team
wagons, and ihoosends of
tons were shJpped by rail to
the West Coast.
Development or tht big
Loulalana and Em Texas
1u11Ur ,depooitl In the 1910'•
11w the end of the Rustler
Springs rnlnln1. The .,,.t of
produclton w11 too high to
re11ize a profit from the
area.
Tbe man wlJo probobly did
most to rpur the PfeSent
development boom , in the
1950's became lnterelted in
the Rustler Sprlnga area for
qUlte another reaion.
'nlad Sandford, DOW &
Carls:Jad resident, had min·
ed gold and coal in Alaska
before he heard ab;out the
· Rustler Springs deposits of
suHur soil, a fertilizer pre>-
duot.
He bought into the then
ulstlng fertilizer company
.and toot lease• oo about
6,000 acres of land, During
the next 12 years, he worked
the sW'face mine, digging up
the soil and transporting it
to Orla where it was ground
and sacked:
DIGGING RIG
As his digging rig pushed
.deeper below the earth's
surface: veins of p u r e
sulphur became m o r e
prevalent. He W3I hard·
pressed for operating
capital, and began writing to
the major companies, Jen•
ding them samples of the
pure suUur in his diggings.
He conducted c o u n tl e s s
tours In the area for com-
pany experts. They became
convinced that something
big was under the earth's
crust. This year, Sandford
sold most of hiJ holdings.
De3pite Olds' admonition
that it may be another pro-
motioo, the present aulphur
exploration ifs '8king on a
"we mean business" look.
Half a dozen companies
have taken l&ases in tb•
area, or are drilling test
holes.
Ten drllling rigs are work·
ing in shlfts around the
clock. ,
Duval Corp.'s test plant is
the dominant structure in
the valley. Duval a n d
Sinclair Co. have the major
operations, aod a few J.n..
depend,ents have elbowed
their way in beside them.
Other majot companies
with holdings in the area are
Phillips, Texaco, Texas Gulf
Sulphur, ·Cal-Tex, and
Freeport.
!GI EMPLOYEs
Tbe activity has drawn
upward of 200 emplo)"!s into
the area, "all working in
shift... one crewman said he
had been working 24 hours
on and 24 ~ since he came
to the sulfur filed. Most of
the workinen commute from
Pecos or Carls.bad.
Most companies h a v e
declined comment on what
they've learned from test
drilling. But Duval reported
iU 85 test holes in Culberson
County indicate d
recoverable reserves of 15
million tons.
Back In Orla, Olds telll
his Hsteners that over the
years $40 million has bee.ii
spent on sulfur develo~
ments et Rusller Springs.
A Texas millionaire, whe
made his fortune in oil at
Orla, comes into the eafe for
a beer. He bears the talt
about aullur and exprtssel
regret that he didn't invest
in Sandford's leases when ht
was offered the opportunity.
"I could have made f
ml Won," he adds.
Gulfs Net
Income Up ,
' Gull Oil Corp. toda1
reported first -h a If con·
solldated net income of
'311 ,144,000. an increase of
9.8 percent over that of the
first alx moothJ of 1967 and
the highest in history.
The: earning•. equal to a
a share, compared with
those of $283,303,000, or
$2.73 1 share, exclusive or a
nonrecurring gain, for tho
s1me perlOd last year.
Gulf attributed the CUT'•
rent rise in earnings to in•
creased volumes lo Its m•
jor operatln& caterories.
4
I
I
' f
r
t
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St~~s .. ~y Dipi~s
Three first-year Orange Coast College sttidents
Larry Davis, Bill Thornhill, and ·Curstis ·cutler Jio1d
checks . rece4ved as _architectui'al ··achiel/emerit
awards from Newpor.t·Balbo·a, _ Sa\ring~ and Lo~n
Associat~Q.n. Flanked by Larry:. Wood.· instructor
{left) and Gordon ~¢mon, savings, and loan ·~s!~·
' .
' Shop Centers
Chief Picked
-• Lew Gpodfield , former
., manager Of Beal's Home
Furnishings in N e w p o r t
Beach, has been named
manager of Irvine Raiich
neighborhood s h o p p t n g
cent.ersf acrotding to Albert
J. Auer, ·vice president of
real estate !or the 1Iryine Co.
A resident of Newport 1 Beach. Goodfield will work
wi,tb v a r i o u s merchants
associations i n directing
promotional activities at
Bayside Center, Westcliff
Plaza , Eastbluff Vi 11 age
Center, Irvine Town Center
and ttie yet unopened
·University Park Shopping
Center.
CENTERS MANAGER
Lew Goodfield
. ' •. SHARP_ . --
If yo11'r• 1 sherp tredet, 111• the DAILY "PILOTS l1mo111 Oi..,"I:'
A·L,INE el1uifi1d 1d1 S1t11rd1y1,·M1k1 1 bett1r d11I, •• whether
your• b11yi119 or 1111i"9·
'
Computers Gi'l{en New
.Jobs in Tax Business
You Name
It, Then
Charge It
NEW YORK (AP) -·
Wml lo bunt polar bear in
Aluka, ·enttrtaln y-o u r
molblr-ln-law· al a Paris
reoteurut, rent ah-boat for • Mlaailalpp1 cru111; blro
a h11 .. am1 · 'orcblelr.a i.r
your. dalllhter'I -I ·
recellllon -and cbarll It! ·
All 7001 -le • crodlt card. .
TbtH 1rt aorue ot tbi moH blaarre Wl)'I )'OU C:lll
UH . a crodit CIZ'd but lholf
.purcllulH. 1>0-......
. tilt w11o1.-, ... Ill of '°"'
and lll'Vjco1. .
lt'1 .• illllmatecl. t.b a I
AmerlCIDi in cll'?Ylnt 300
million crodll Cardi' liiil ill-
1111 them· lo• IPlod IHWld "° bUlloa a year.-. Al ••. f91ull. .ol tllt pro-
lllerotion ot c:redlt cli'ds,
tlllrl bu been wldffProld
!lplCulation about t b ~
DAILY ~ILOT. ,
po11ltiWt1et ot a cblCklon, · ca8hlell society· Jn '· tile · RIADY POP PIRING -The paper target rocket developed by Aeronutronic
future. · · •talld• on Ill launcher j~st prior to launch for testing at Fort Bliss, Texas: Dub-
Some banktri envlilolf"a bed LOCAT, the target can reach speeds of 500 mph only two seconds after
nalle!Owtdt c)'ltem tn whl<h ltrln£ It 11 made of a cardboard roll similar to that used by carpet manufao-., •
a Ii.nett ldeaUficathtn card , turera. Plastic tins and nose cone are stapled to it. l _:
wou1d bt uaed in place' of 'ill ) · • ~
checa and almoot au euh. • •
Biii Am.~-Ex_., a Se . ~.~.':t't·:rt:,-r:: · na~ OKs Gunners to Shoot :
cll'd syotem couldn't '-·
fUrtbet fiom 'rialliy lodf;. Jn tin• The .,...i lt!'lklnl feature of . ves g ..
our ~Dt system o t '· lo, •
1rmilferi1n1 moae1 11 · Iii• State Funds m0_~Pl!cl.... ~-. of _er e, d It . A paper rocket-powered
~ · mbiU.ry air _target has been
Down Paper Targets
• Americ&n-·EXpr,11 . u•c ' SCAllAMENTO (APr -·
presen~ cost by ap· :
proximately 50 percent. 'lbit ;
despite the .. ·fact. that the :
tip-8:.et can be .. used -only 3
once.
the earUeiit foreriumer 'to Th~Senate voted Monday developed by ~Philco-Ford's
NEW YORK (UPI)·-The many COIJlPuterlzed tu flt. the credit card' may h~vt ' to let the stete invest.'Unused Aeronutronic· Division. The
way things are shapi'ng up, 1nf lel'Vicu have bltn been ,f!l' utr~~ ~tter aurphis mQliey in top quality N e w p or t B e a c h
the electronic c om p u1 er fcitnied .tO e:ervf· tbt ic. ayltem which .WM In· commercial securities to Aeronutronic Division. The _,_,,__ . trodiictd In Iii 'UnitOd LOCAT is the result of the : may be making out most iQ.. co!UNU& p'rOfeulon. At leut . , . _ ;:!.._~ · earn interest. development was aMounced •
dividual income •~x returns •"'--...... ,......p..J.llli 'Oil a States Jn. llM. ~ COil· Th · · -• 2115 b J hn B La I N-........ based companv'a ·• .... wu--v. vr-... nnnm;· credit reUaJ;llity e measure passcu -, y o . wson, v ce .... .,.,.~ .J
in the United States within a fairly large scale, &rid 1,08w were illutd 'frfdcb were the bare majority needed i'n president and g e n e r· a 1 sponsorship of a program to ;.
few ·years , in addition to one caterJne to accountimta com.I*able in usage to the the 40-seat upper house. It manager of the Newport provide the Anny with low : ;~diting them tor Uncle with clients in the '20,000 to modern, "colartesy"' credit Anow gboesl foback tot· the facility' in Los Angeles to-cost air targets. The ~ ~
m. . A_.. al..._ ·-H .ted. t ssem y r a voe on day gram was funded com•~
Tile C mpute air d h $30,000 income bracket has c.,."" . UJOllgu mi 0 Senate amendmen" · o r. ea Y as charge! for lodging. _ ...... , Tagged LOCAT (Low Cost pleteJy with comp ant ; made substantial inroads 'at just been formed in New Department stores started , It would let _the sta.te put /Jr" Target),. the target is money. t :·
relieving tax accountants of York. Others are getting in· issuing '4ctedit ·· c 0· 101 • • ~?TPlus f~1 into ~?~a~M lHdt of rolled cardbOard TesUng of the target hlf l
the drudgery of making out to .the business. , aomet:lme befote 113> to ,:commercial paper Which with iurfboard-like plasUc already taken place at Foll
~ return• and doing 'I1IS! new one ifl New York ltimulate their Nlft: · -OU , la held by a Onaactal used for the nose cone and Bliss, in Tex.as. The U.~
ar1ttµnetical calculations. ls called Prorirammed Tax companlea began taiutq orpnllation · wKh .Useta Of . rtar fins. It· UJ powered by Army is c u r r e n t I
'Mlis leaves the accountant Systems, Inc., run b Y ncollrtesy -cards" ln the 11t least $500 mllllon. This ·three small rocket engines evaluating the LOCAT f
free to spend neerly all his Edwerd Horowitz, a CPA. 19'20s. means the company would ~ed in the fins . use. , ,
time simply ta kin g fn. HorOwtu fraocblsea . hi a Credit cards u we know havti. the use of , the ·state Overall -length is 15 feet "LOCAT provides a wholi ~
formation frotn client. and terVic• to ·a<:co~ ·who them today were pioneered money for fl.Dlnclal J>ackinl ,while the total weight is only new concept alld philosopht ~
glviJli them advice -the are used to getUng 1115 lo $50 Jn ll!l!O by Jlln•n' ·Club for a certain period; wllll1 155 pound4. in aerial gumery pracUce,' '
rea'lly profitable part -of 'hJs for making · elich return. whl~Ji w,.. Created .lflih 200 · paytag interest;· ', · • · 'Compared to present air aaid Arthur Molkow:ltz, ~ ~ prac~. It also cuts down ·'I'beY fill· ®t forms, .and be mel)Wers, "Jn inlUal in· Proponents said the military targets used in gram manager. ' ' W J t 6 j
on office and onrhead charges them a flat '5 each vestment of f.18,000 and a ·devtce could bring in up to training defente gun crews LOCAT, troop motivation ii "
. costs. to nm them through the b'andful of rtltawanU ID the '2 m1llloo a Yfll' to the state against low altitude enemy high because of the reelisti~ j .-rioo _______ iii;;;.--,;;--•-•iiiii•-----oi'/i;,.~Jt~··~hard;;.;toiio::i.;ini;;1~·u~et~bo;iiiw;;;;;icom~~puter~~---;;i;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;i;Niiew;i:.·,;iYiior~k~Cliii;ty~are~a~:,i;;;;;iiii_;tte~a~sury~~ln~tnlere!t~-~~--·-·-:alr~cr~a~lti;;, •· ~LOC~A~T~~c~u~t~•;_.~•IIn~-~ul~a~tton~d~anii;iiaeiiriilal~liioe~.~!~ !
"
·-. . -. '
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Dress Yourself in Profits
Maybe you think you haven'.! got a thing lo wear. DAILY PILOT advertising
representatives have ideas in all sizes, shapes and colors. We'll tailor a
program Jo flt your needs. And we'll rriake it lit your budget, too.
Come in today ~nd browse around the shop that produces the best-dressed
newspaper in town. ti's a la$hion show in pidures and print. And your product,
goods or services will be dis~ayed !~ t~e .most respected showcase you can find •.
Call 642-4321 -We'll send a Fitter*
•Ad Rtpr~ntltiv• _-
.-DAl ·L¥ PILOT
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.{J DAIL V PILOT
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Thund<1, ~J~ 25, 1968
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The newest Buick/Opel dealer
in town has an old fashioned.
way of doing business .
.
He talks your language~
The whole idea behind talking your language is as old as
good business. You see, we think you deserve to have a
little bit of a fuss made over you. Especially when you 're
buying a Buick. Or Opel. This is why you can expect
friendly treatment when you come in. Also quality service
. when you need it. And most important, great deals on any
l
' car you buy from us. This is what talking your language is
all about. On Skylarks, GS's, LeSabres, Wildcats, Electras,
Rivieras, and Opels. One look will tell you how much more
car you get for your money. One talk with a salesman
will prove how little more you pay to get. it. Come in soon
and watch us talk your language. We think you'll like_ it •
234 E. 17TH STREET
BU.ICK·OPEL COST A MESA 548-7765
••• ---. --~
•
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' JODEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321
llMllniNy, ,,., n, IM Ml ..... 11
Elaborate Fete
Fall's Forecast
The most elaborate Fete "d'Automne yet to be presented ·is being
anticipated by members of the Golden Key Auxiliary. Committee members
have put aside vacation thoughts and turned to completing preparationa for
the fourth annual luncheon and fashion show.
The first meeting of the full committee took place in the Huntington
Beach home of Mrs. Robert Blau, general chairman of this year's show.
Mrs. Dale Dunn will serve as co-<:hairman and Mrs. Paul Phillipi,
president, and Mrs. Frederic Forster, second vice president and ways and
means chairman, were named honorary members.
Also volunteering their services are the Mmes. William Hanna, Bob
Goodaon and John Wyatt, tickets : Raymond Morehouse and William
Dawes, decorations ; James Hughes and Jack Greeley, programs, and Cy
i"son and Stanley Ruiz, prizes and table favors.
Mrs. Morehouse and Mrs. Hughes are planning· to coordinate table
decorations and programs to provide the most continental and elegant de-
cor Y~t created for the fall event.
Fashions will be provided by the May Co.'s South Coast Plaza store
and arrangements for the latest styles are being completed by Mrs. Blau
·and Mrs. Dunn.
The luncheon and fashion show, which will begin with an 11 :30 a.m.
social hour, will take place Oct. 19 in the Sheraton Beach Inn.
•
All volunteers from the general membership with time to assist the
various sub-committees will be welcomed since the chairmen hope to have
all arrangements completed by the auxiliary's first meeting in September.
The next meeting of the fashion show committee will take place at 10
a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 20, in Mrs. Blau's home.
The Golden Key Auxiliary is one of the support groups for the Child
Guidance Center of Orange County, the only private low~fee clinic in the
area for the treatment or emotionally disturbed children.
•
CONTINENTAL ELEGANCE -Fashions with a flair will be re-
vealed when the Golden Key Auxiliary s p o n s o rs its fourth An-
nual Fete d' Automne in the fall . Members of the fashion show
committee have forgotten other summer plans to give their full
attention to the many details yet to be completed before the Oct~
ber event. Selection of the Sheraton-Beach Inn as locale for the
luncheon is made by (left to right) Mrs. Dale Dunn, co-chairman,
Mrs. Paul Phillips, president, and Mrs . Robert Blau, chairman of
the benefit.
At the first meeting of the fiscal year for the center's board of direo-
tors, Mrs. Phillips presented the auxiliary's check for $1000. Half of the
funds were raised throµgb the thrift shop, staffed on a volunteer basis by
auxiliary members. Located 'at 7201 Westminster Blvd., Westminster, the ·
shop offers a variety of usable merchandise at reasonable prices.
Early-bird Shoppers
Get the Price Break
If you 've noticed your paycheck dwindlin~ lately due to the additional
withholding deduction, perhaps yo u are wondenng how to make ends meet.
Take heed budgeters. for relief is on its way -in one field at least.
Offering a break i.n prices to early-bird shoppers are the 11 guilds of
Orange County Children's Hospital who are selling holiday greeting cards
at a discount during August and September.
or course, profits wµI 'benefit the charity, so another enticement is
added -eliminating a little more of the income tax blues for a percentage
of the purchase price is tax deductible.
The sale or greeting cards at substantially reduced rates bas had
such success that guilds are stepping up efforts this year, according. to.Mrs.
John French, card chairman for Huntington Beach Little Mermaids.
Featured ·in the-~elections will be exqu.is"ite silk screen and ever--
popular creations by.Laguna.Beach and other artists.
To aid prospective ·buyers to browse and shop al their teiSure, I
series of coffees, teas and JM?Olside p.arties are planned. ·
.. .. ,
Hostesses and the dates of their parties include the Mmes. A1 Dow-
ers, July 31; Norris Marshall, Aug. 4-5 ; Al Krukenberg, Aug. 6-7 ; Rudolph
Busch, Aug. 1-7; William Thomas, Aug. 14; Glen K. Kenworthy, Aug. 23;
Andrew Holtz, Aug. 26 ; Russell Reilly, Aug. 28, and John Mcintyre and T.
W. Welch, Aug. 29.
Others are the Mmes. Robert Kerr, Aug . 15-16; Harry Okuda, Aug.
21 , and Charles Heller, Sept. 19. Hostesses who will set party dates later
are the Mmes. Charles Bauer. French and Joe Irvine. '
IT'S IN THE CARDS -It doesn't lake a fortune
teller to predict a generous tany of fun,ds will be
realized for Orange County Children's Hospital ...
it'1 alrea<l_y in the cards, for members of the four
Orange Coast guilds will be lending IUJ>POlt to the
annual greeting card sale. Representing the (Uild1
are (left to right) the Mmes. Howard Cunningham,
Cinderellas ; Charles Roberts, Queen of Hearts;
Ramon Potevin, Punch and Judy and John French,
Little Mermaids .
Patient Becomes Unnerved When Root of Problems' Exposed
DEAR ANN LANDERS : May I air
my number-one gripe &fl others have?
I don't expect you to print it but I 'll
feel -U 1 got it oil my dleot. Dentilts are, in my opinion , the
most backwvd of all professionals. If
Benjamin Franklin h a d not invented
fahe tMth, people would be walklng
around toothless today.
I have been reading articles on tooth
tnmsplants since I was a child. They
hlVe been "experimenting" for the
last ~ 1""· J have written to the
aUthorl of the articles to learn which
deM.iltJ perform the procedure. The
replies were vague. J nev~ did find a
dentill wbo could lr"°"plaot a tooth.
All they tnow iJ drilling aod pulling
and dentures and partial plates. They
are too busy raking la the money to
learn anytblJll new. Today wbeci
ANN LANDERS ~
kidneys . the liver, human hair and
even the heart can be successfully
transplanted, is it too much to ask that
the dentists get busy aad join the
Twentie1h Century! EXP 0 SE D
NERVE
DEAR NERVE: 'l'Mre an ban·
dr<da .Of deaUata -lr111plaet f<db,
Wbere have yoa b e e ·• 11Nm1?
Traaapl1Dttn1 te<tli bet'" llt ~ lltb
Century. Your reference 1o s,-.tunla
Franklin 11 lateretttq. TM a1o9J pr•
dactd b7. ld1 bud ... de leetll (laolllo•·
'
tel out of hlppGpOtamu1 Ivory, wood,
gold plate, rlveta:, screw11 huma1 In·
cltor teeth ud 1teel rprla11) R11ttcl
deatiata tiperlme.U.1 wltb tootb
tr au plants.
• Tootll doeon, prledpa!Iy poor peo.
pit, were ,ecarft tb:roa&h newspaper
1d1. A New York paper lD 17'7! canted
&be folllwlll ...Uet. "Teet.II -any
penoa w1111af ti dla-of 1111 !root
teetb 1ppl1 1e Nam"°' II Milda
Lane. A feoerMa pr1 .. wlD be ......
N.B. lour ,....u.(•-• 11.-y•a
currency) w 111 be pa Id for every
tooth."
The practice of transplantaUoa wa1
ultimately abandoned for several
re110D1. Ftrat, It failed to meet UH:
need• of tM mauet. SecoM, m..,.
dlte1se1 were tran1mltte4 mm dnor
to rodpleat (moat ootably aypllll1fa).
Thirdly, Ibo medlcll world learoed of
tbe rejectloa pltenomeaH. Alter a feW
mo1lh1, truapluted tedll ltole1td
aad fell Ht.
A •andrtd year• lat.er, howewer,
deetlata bop• oaperlmeet1111 ....
1fala wllb trua]llaated -ud Ibo
teeblq-bave -•ull1 lm,.....i.
Today a 1f•uplaete4 -wit 1ut for. foar tci ftve yean.
'Die Imawle!ll• l-·"1-111
tbelr tnllaplaii ,.-,.. baa·= .., .• --·~--
made po11lble tlM Wdttey ud ttver
transpla&ita:, ud now tM beart. Now,
area 't yoa allr.lmtd !
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I un living
with a man I love very much. We are
not married because b.11 aellish,
money-hungry wife will not give him a
DEAR Nor, U 1111111 Ille wenl dlL
yoa Jel, coDllder ,-.elf bodJ,
Pelula. A flrl wbo -Ill tor plaJllla
beue w1t1t • mantel ma cu Di al.
lonl Ille lu11r7 of ~ -Ill die dlept, P1aT nmb: -.ull lw TM ll -~·d•dl.
divorce. Some people know the score, When romantJc glance• turn to
others do not. I could care less about warm eml>raoes ii it love or
the tall:. cbemiJlryl Send for the boo~let "Love
Yeoterday was my birthday. I or Sex and Ho'W to Tell Iba DU•
received ., anoa:rmoua &ift -a oet ol IU'lllCO," 1J1 ~ 1Ander1. Eaclolt a
plllowc:Mes on wtiich was embrokttred lODf, stamped, tttf-actdretlld •
"Mr." and "Mn."l'm tunthilWH a velope and SI C'll!tl bl coin wttb,wr
dig by -ol the oal1 wllo works with reque1t. me ID tflia olflce. I also think L know, Ann Landero w1II be llod to belp TM
wlllcb Sir! oent the pit. Shall I play with your prob!ama. Smd l>am to ber
dumb or let lier uve·11 -rllllit ID Ille ' ID care Of tba .l>AILY• PILOT, atlcloe,-~! -NOT' SENSrrl'lll: Jl:JST 'In a 11Wnpail1 •aelf.--.,. mope.
'
I
J4. DAILY PILDT
··Hours Flutter Away Horoscope -----.-
Elbow Grease
Not the Answer ..
Leo: Power,
Success Lu red
By KAY LARSON
ot -DllfJ , • .., ....
Got time on your hands ?
You're rare ln th.at case,
• acc:ording to University of
Crallfornla Extension, Home
. Adv!J~ Dorothy Wenck.
Finding free time is the
critical problem of both
employed and nonemployed
bom.-ken. wd M r· I .
Weocil, speaking at Ille final
meeting of '"Suddenly .•.
You're a Homemaker."
Time 1tealers include pro-
cri.sUnation, interruptions, fati~ and careless habits,
oil ol ..tli<:h add to poor manaiemen~ llhe .-.
'lben there are th e
uhonest time stealers" like mear plannloC U1d prepara·
Uon (wbicll takes up 25
houn a week) and children
(a new baby Can demand
1000 extra hours a year).
Mr1. Wenck offered
hoolemU.:erS aome helpful
Upa to keep boUlework
houri to a miDUnwn.
Fatigue counts for a large
part ol. wasted time, yet on-
ly 10 percent of hatn~akers' fatigue l 1
phi'>lcoi, Ibo said. The mt.
oo-percent is psychological
and ls roi8ted to dislike ol
one's job, boredom, frustra·
tion because the ,ob doesn't
stay done, and other an·
notances. ·
To avoki that big slump,
lhe noted, USoe tlle best t~ls.
Puttlpg nylons and delicate
clothes like underwear in
the. washer and dryer is
perfectly safe if you first
put them in a nylon net bag .
Everything but foam rubber ~ be bandied tllis way.
The dryer la a very bandy
machine, especially if you
have small children. But it's
wise to keep the direcUon
books near all appliances.
own goals. Ls lt really more
important to WU tbfl floon:
or to take the Mildren to Ule
zoo? ls it worth It to do jobs
no one will notice or ap-
predate anyway? 1he .ask.·
ed.
.
FRIDAY desires -you come clooer
JULY 2.6 to peroonill wl>I>. UtlllJ.e
orieinal mttbocb. Be in·
By SYDNEY OMARR dependent In thought, ac-
tion. Oddi, clrcumstances 0 Tbe wile man c<drols turn in your favor.
bis deltiny. . .MtrolOIY SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. points the way.••
ARIES (March Zl·Aprll Zl): Loving gesture from
9) Y ol ~ ty one cloll to you marka this
I • our """ -au • a diltlnctlve •-·. H • e din-the dnmaUc ii hellhtenecl. ...,
Cre juJ n y ner voice. Show other& you ative cei 0" • 00 sire capable of '"vtng u well are better able to expreu ~ yourseU. In romantic sit· • receiving.
uaU911 -you excel. Exciting SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 22·
day l Dec.21 ):Bytaldngonetaslt
TAURUS (April 20-May :ak ~~!~ ~ -:;:~~
n Sal• and Your OMEGA ServteeCenter ·
• DIAMOND SPECIALISTS
• REMOUNTING & DESIGNING
Complete Gift Department
GO Day Accounil -No Carrying Cbargo
Bankamericard or Tate a Year To Pay
M9w 2 ..... S..... Te S.-Y ..
HAUOI SHOfflN• HUNTINGTON CINTll
, CINTll IUCH I DIN•ll
Uto HAllOI ILYO. HUNTIN•TON llACH
COITA MBA 4 14S-t4al ltl-1111
0.-MM .. n.n., Frt Tl t p.a.
It is possible to wax Doors
and scour sinks too often ,
for wax builds up and takes
more work to clean off,
wbile the porcelain finish
mey wear oil sinkJ scrub-
bed every other d a y .
Anyway, your family should
come first, said M r 1 •
Wenc;k.
You can avoid cleaning by
buying furniture with ease
of cleaning in mind (no
more white silk sofas) . or
peiforated pan Uds to cut
down on grease durini
frying. House rule1 he\P,
especially wittt s m a 11
children. Another ttp is to
check your forced -ai r
furnac~ filter often to .avoid
du.st build-up that simply
circulates mere dust into
the house.
20). lmprOYe home sur· which solid ~. results
roundings. Guesta at your .--.---Ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ home could offer unique from efforts. Give some at-
suggestiona. Fine day for tention to proper exercise,
testing your abWties. E:i· diet.
pren Ideas. Othon due to CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Avoid ironing by wise
buying, she said. Then put
small loads in cool or
lukewarm water in your
washer, beeause it saves
wrinkles. Prompt removal
from the dryer also is im·
port.ant.
AFTERNOON RECEPTION
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice J. -Yoder
respond. You leun. Jan. 19): ·Fina.nclal pro-
.GEMINI (May 21.Juno specta are higllllgbted, You
20). ·Your ability to talk, ::1:tereq, ~~·: ..... ~ write emphasized. People .-...._.
seem to surround you. Much between the lines, cbect fine
connection today w I t h print-appliea especially to
relative•, neighbor•. ldeu money agreement.
map and pop. Take time to AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
cbooee quality. 11): Relatlon•hip ii eemented; notblng hallway. CANCER (June 21-July You go all the way _ or 22): Surprlte gift, luury no-e. lleollze t11is and
item featured. See persons, plan situations in reallat!c light. movea, actiOD& ac· corc:Ungl.J. Be a k e en
Genutne compliment lbould 'Obs,frver, don't rush, Wait be' dllllnguisbed from falH and ~ttery. Avoid sell • decep-p~ (Feb. 19 . March
. You ~an .omit many steps Maur1'ce Yoders Feted ln ~!ting if you plan ahead. .
20): Strive for greater fami-LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): ly harmony. Youngster who
What you seek comes your apeaU bi.I ,mind deserve•
way. You attract 1ucces1, credit. If aingle, there is
power. Time for you to take likely to be m a r r i a g e
the initiative. Glamour sur· discW!sion. If muried, mate
rounds your efforts. You are makes combined request
A can of cherries and a -------------
small box of cake mix
blended together in a pan can make a fine cherry
crunch·. Instant m inc e d
onion, soup, tuna and chow
mein noodles go together for
a snappy casserole.
But t.he most important
thing to remember is to
question the way you work
so you can think instead of
slave, she concluded.
Golden Years Recalled
Fifty years of marriage
were celebrated by Mr. and
Mn:. Maurice J . Yoder
when they were honored at
a golden anniversary recep-
tion in the Huntington Beach
ho me of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin W. Anderson.
Hosts for the occasion especially attract1ve to op-and demand.
Mr posite sex. IF TODAY IS YOUR were their daughters, s. VIRGO (Aug. 23 .. ,..,t, 22): Anderson and Mrs. William .,....y BIRTHDAY you are natural Totton, and sons Charles F ., Completion of project In· executive. Opportunities due
Joseph E . and M. David dicated today. You work to multiply. New project is
Yoder. well with group, special favored.
The tea table was ctn· organization. Be with those G E N E R AL T E N·
U:NIFORMS
JULY
CLEARANCE
of
FAMOUS
BRANDS
*NEAR COST
*AT COST
*BELOW COST
(Prlc.. u Marked)
SHOP and SAVE
AS NEVER BEFORE
UNIFORMS
IN MESA CENTER
Kitcbens are e~olly R / d
o1i.n ttme-w•st•n. Sb• rug. News evea e
646-5388
tered with a three-tiered who share your interests. DENCIES: Cycle high for
wedding cake flanked by Excellent for attending lee· LEO, VIRGO, LIBRA .
golden candelabra, and Mrs. ture, motion picture. Special word to A·
Yoder selected a beige lace LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): QUARIUS: sharpen sense of
gown accented with gold -~l~m~pet~u!,s _!gi~ven~~to'......:y~o~u~r_!limin(~· ~·~·:_------~~~!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!==~~~~~~~~~~~~ gett<d keepinl a luy llUll&D --------or bread bovd in · the ~~=:~'J~·i:.":rd~ Pa. rty ·.Honors Couple
embroidery in honor of the
occasion.
jelly, peanut butu:r o r
meats. Store all eqwpment
and necessities like spices
close to the work area to
save many extra miles of
walking .& week. You can
buy cUpboord step.llbelves
for under '2, she noted, and
they make excellent space
savers in cupboards.
Bocedoln fatieue may be
combated by· avoiding
distractions arid competing
witli y<>Ul'S<ll to pt the Jo)>
done , perhaps before a radio
program comes on the air.
Another tip is to very your
approach. Start ln. a dif.
ferent room each week.
But most important. she
stressed, is to question your
Bake Sale
Aids Fund
The Cance r Fund will
benefit from 1. rummage
and bake sale which will be
spo n s ored bf the
Westminster Auxiliary to
Veterans of Foreign Wan,
Post 9756.
Mn. Laura Juliano will be
chairman m the &ale taking
place between 10 a .m. and 7
p.m. Friday. July 26, in the
Odd Fellows Hall. Ham-
burgers will be served dur·
ing the lunch hour.
Mn. Erwin C. Ra.ska, who
is serving her second term
as president, met last week
with her n ew officers to
discuss various projecta and
plans for the coming year.
Anyone wishing to donate
rummage for the sale may
call her at 892-0467.
LET'S BE FRIBIDL Y
HunfinQfon Beach
Visitor
642-6014
Cosl1 Mesa Visitor
642-6014
So. COISI VlsHor
4f4.0,579
fll!Mr Visitor
642..3535
U ,.. bavo new ndllbbor•
or tnow cl -movln1 to our. area, pl-i.u .,
ootllolwma7atend1 _,_ .... bllp
tbem lo -acqulnlod
11-newiW..-dfnp.
. . RRsT, FAST Witt..,, .... ftnt ....... e
ket J11 lecel _., Cfiieck It
.... lt't ....,,,, ., •• .,.. ffte
DAILY PILOT.
'
BARBARA GIBBONS
Engaged
At a party last Saturday,
close friends and members
of the immediate families
learned of the engagement
of Barbara Gibbons and
Russell Goodwin.
Parents of the engaged
couple are Mr. and Mrs.
Matthew J. Gibbons and Mr.
and Mra. Kenneth Goodwin,
all of Huntington Beach.
Miss Margaret Goodwin,
sister of the benec:Uct-elect,
hosted the party whlcb took
place ln their parents'
home.
Both Mill Gibbons and
her fianc• were graduated
from Huntington B e a c b
!Ilgb School prior to hit
graduation from Orange
Cout College. He entered
the U.S. Army last Tuesday.
No date has been selected
for the wedding.
Among the 100 guests who
enjoyed refreshments, a
musical program and ppetic
history of the hon<llees'
lives together were 11
grandchildren and o n e
great·grandchild.
Also attending w e r e
James I. Stone, Mrs .
Yoder's brother; Mis s
Gertrude Yoder. and Mrs.
Lynn Sheller, daughter of
the minister who officiated
at the couple's wedding.
Auxiliary
American Legion Hall in
Costa Mesa, is the setting
for meetings of the Aux·
Wary to Barracks 1249,
Veterans of World War I.
The first Tuesday of each
month members gather for
a business session at 7: 30
p.m. and the ·third Tuesday
they meet for a aoclal and
potluck at .g p .m.
LAST CHANCE CLEARANCE SALE
CLEAN SWEEP IN AU DEPARTMENTSI
U11 Your
S.Uy Ch•NJ•
Me1fw CharCJ•
lankAmeriu rd
FINAL REDUCTIONS
OF All SUMMER MERCHANDISE
including famous National Brands
SAVE UP ro50%AND MORE!
I
ICOOP..Ufl 11SMIP 'n' SHORE" BLOUSES ......
YOU'L..l IUY 'EM IH' PAIRS TO WEAR WITH
SUMMER PA.MTS AN O SKIRTS,
WE 'VE CORRALLED THE
6916 EdiJl99r
Marina Yol.91
Huntington Bch,
'
...... -..... --~ -
Floor Models -Demonstrators
SllE 650 from NgU1er prlct when new 9 on &olden Touch· & Sew•
, Mwlng machine In • wide choice
of handsome consoles and de1kl.
Choose from a wido nrio!rol...., _ ond-... Also 1 chcMc:o Hloction of othor ToueJr• ..w' -
ma:chlnes lnclucl• peotlbles .. $20-$40n•c11on1&.ft1'1QU1er price when new. They've serncl ••floor
models and ct..cMbatw1 lllCI ... ,. lllOwlng 'em Ht .t .,._ ..... to rou.
CLEARANCE-Trade-In Sewing Machines
STRAIGHT tn1m $1995 ZIG-ZAG $2995
STITCH MODELS MODELS trom · ·
_...., _ _,,_,._hSINGD"-&lae-lloneJbocl<Wnot .......
wffh ,...,,_or full CNdil -h poo:hooo 11 o -SINGER*-,. ......... wi111n m...,..
Come to your nearest Sln11er Center
and corral yourself a real bUyl
•
IUINA PARK
8ll0 Oo Tho M•ll
TA 8-754D
Bu•n• Park C•ntar
COSTA MISA
2l0D Horbor llvd.
Kl t-1195
Harbor Cent•r
•AlDIN IHOVI.
9931 Chapman
SlD.4DIO
Or•n • Count Pl•1•
HUNTIN•TON llACH
Edin9•r et leach
ff7.JD41
Hurttin9ton leach Center
Uoo __ ,._......, .. 111_ ........
T .. hM t .... "'°""" to ..,,.
SINGER
For address of store ntlftst roa. stt wtiite Pllll
ol """' book under SINW COMPANY
ANAHEIM LA MIU.DA
515 N. Loera
Sl5 1126
Anah•im Center
SANTA ANA
Oo.wntown
lD5 W. 4th St.
Kl 2·1945
1502-4 la Mirada llvd.
LA l·l5l2
l• Mir•d• Cent•r
COSTA MDA
lrt1tol & Sunflow ...
54D.26ll
South Co11t Pia••
j -
-
• -
... ~~~·~~~~~~·~ .......... ~ .................................. ,., ...... .,.. ....... .,.. ........ .,..,. ............. ,.. ......... """"~"""'"""'""""""""""""""""" ... ""'!:'ll:"'l .. '"'111!1 ............. ""' .......... "'!''"!"
Vow s, Rings Exchanged
In Methodist Ceremony
Rome U, ~co.ta . ft!esa
following a Lab Tahoe
.. Jioneymoon are Ottie Wayne
-..,Rowe of Cotta ,Mesa and his
... bride, the former Wendy
. Marlene Hunt, also of Costa
~~·~ bride ls the daughter ·~ Mr. and Mrs. Frederick: ~ ...
"
-KA:rHL:EEN EMCH
Engag..i
November .. ..
Nuptials
.Planned
St. James Episcopal
'Jiurch, Newport Beach will
~ the sett.ing for the Nov.
~ ri~ linking Kathleen
Emch of Ba:lboa and Gary
L. DeBonii of Costa Mesa.
11unt of Wootton Bassett,
Wiltshire, E n g I and, who
new to Costa Mesa for
the ceremony which was
performed by tbe Rev.
James Ledgerwood in the
First Methodist C h u r c h,
Costa Mesa.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a
floor length empire gown of
venise tace and organza.
The skirt flowed into a
chapel train, and a pearl
headban"d caught her illusion
veil. stephanotis and orchids
formed her bouuet.
Wearing aqua gowns and
carr)ling cascade9 of white
carnations were Mrs. Sylvia
St.a.ssner of Reseda, the
bride's Sister and matron o[
hooor and Monica Knight of
London , bridesmaid.
The bridegroom, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Lovie Rowe of
Belvidere, Ill., asked Hugh
Sisco of S1lJlla Ana to be his
best man and Don Little, of
the same city, as usher.
Circulating the guest book
to 50 well·wishers attending
the reception in Daniel 's
restaurant, Costa Mesa, was
Mrs. €athecine Traven of
San Antonio,. Texas.
Centering the Mble was a
traditional English wedding
cake, which was brought
from England by the bride's
parents.
The bride received her
education in England and
her husband was schooled in
Arkansas and Illinois.
The Tee
Tattler
News of ~ forthcoming WWWSAiS$&l?'
everit has been announced llANCMO SAN JO.t.OUI N
by Mrs. Jtames E mch of MOST ,...,., tN l'LtoMTS -A . FllQM, .,..,. Mmes. 1.-•vne Tl\om••· 'PfabuCO Canyon, mother Of 11; l:ldl•rd Bluno•n, J•mt• Voe!kl, Al ifte bride-to-be whD a\5o i5 H•lt , 14; B Fll11ht. lh• Mmfl J. L. W~lbr!<f9t, M•lcalm Jones, U; Cn•rlff tihe daughter of h late Mr. l!lven•. 15; Rodger Turner, 131 c
Em•h. Flltllt. fll• Mmes. Harr\' Cott1m, 1'; '-Jo/In McCrOMcl!'I. 1•: W1vne Gold!t, 1?1 WJss Emch is a graduate Oon•ld Ta1m-. 11 ; o Fntht, ""' Mmes. I. w. Stuails, U: WDOdl'llW or Costa Mesa Hig!h School. L•dtner, 11 ; E FlltM tht Mmes. M .
. a,,.,,.ge Coart College end a s1r1en1, 1•1 H•rberl Martin, F. w.
P•I"'"°"• ll. ~ta Ana business school. Low NIET -in. M~. McC•"''°"·
ti ·1h Ill 81unOen, JOMI. 1•; J, J. l(lnn•v. ~She has been ac ve WI e Turner, JS; L•dner. Lundotd J<Mn1. :Orange Coast YMCA . ti; R1Jpll T•outmen, 11.
Her fiance, son of Mr. and 11:v1NI! coA1T
Mrs. John DeBonis 0 { LAOIES DAY -Cl1u A. M'I.
bell ·· I { II.•-FOOfe, 36V.r M•1. 1(1n Wll'-Monte o, ts an a umnus o •trbOJ•n. 3,, M111 Ott DH Wiil!• • .a, Montebello High School. Mn. Grett Llfllr, •1; Cl~" 15, the Mm..,. ICtnl l:.Owln., 1'1 W!llllm Leslef', Robert Arf>Old, I' r 1 n II:
&mom...,r1h, !It">: Har.., Brown, 'llV..
Cl.tu C. tht #une's. J. t.. Pov••· >'"''
[ Peering
f Around
Ln.llt T1tr, ,,, H. B. Cl\1pm1n, •l'lt;
E. Br1ln1rd, ~; Cl•u 0 , th• Mmn.
Emorv Mtwf, 1': J1ck .111i..v. )II:. C.
E. 0 11,,...., 3'; G!lbe11 Smith, 3'111.
MESA VIEl:OI!
MUTT ANO JEFF -the Mmu.
Nld'lol11 Holt, ll\l:i; Gtrrv McPeek, 3';
J""n O'Brien, l$; l:!chard Sw1n, 3511>:
GUEST DAY l..9w N-' -Gue•l'll, A
1'11111\1, the Mme.. E. H. N1wl111d. 11: D•n• Crum, n: Don ll•ndall, n : B
Fll(IM, the Mrnn. Gl!l'l•tt Woacllord,
75; w. B. Dlcklmon, 1': Pat Hert, l'r..:i
P1ttrt$0ft, 1': C FlltM. IR~ Mmes.
Cll~rte. Mciver. 1'; Elwnod Tavlor, 11:
Tncm11 Pekin, Burl Moorf. 'f, p R O U 0 G R A N D• GUESTS D,t,Y -~"-"· net ,t,
S h F ll9hl. 1M Ml'l'>f'S. Wllll•rn E~tr!kt~. P A R E N T for l e 1111 N!d10111 HolT. D•lm•• ~•m••· u ;
f. l "-are Mr and Mrs B Fllqht. -Mme. J""" "'d•m•, ITS LUUe ' . l:ld>•rd Murt1uth. n ; G~·.-. McPeet, :;everett Erxleben and Mr. 13; ectw.n1 CitOU<t•, n: c 1=11,h1. ,..., . d M M B H •·i g au Mmes. Mith•~• lla1><><>r1. J'l; H1rolcl j\n TS. · • u..., n ' Solomon, 16; Ken Mln!ff. 11; Purl I I· -of Cost.a Mesa. ble, IO; Grm5. ,. 1=1111h!, 11,. Mme1. 11:;
~·: Soni·a Mar1'e was born Ju. e. MtDon11t11. ••: w. o. o ·&•rr, ur ..... Gre~. llO; 15 Fj;!lf>t, tht Mme.. J°"n Jy 17 to Rick and Rita Erx· o·ar1'", "°' John Modeen, o ... n 01"'"·
A, "' C F'tltM. !tit Mmn. G1rl1no Cr1lt. ·leben at Blattsburgh 1r 101 ; Ptter M11r1,,.1; 1iw.
·Force base, New York. ,=.=========::,I ·· Both grandmothers were
in New York for the happy
event . Rick and his wife are
1lue back in Costa Mesa for
Ji leave in about three
:tnonths.
FIRST, FAST
Who 11 1!1 ~ou firit 1boul 1111
b11t in loc1I "'w•7 Clo.it\-it
o ut . lf 1 "'1rly t lw1y1 th1
DA ILY PILOT,
Omega Is the End
Not onty Ss omega the last letter in the
Greek atphabet, ifs the lasl word in Swiss
crattamanship. And there is no better example
of Omega accuracy and design tl'\an this
Constetlat!oti model . , . an offi e~lty C&rttfied
chronometer. Fea!Vtes Include automatic
calendar. self-windwig mech.tnlsm, waterproor.
and 24-jewel movement.
•
t,, stainless st~ case and btace4et. $200.
In tourt-lo!<l'I gold top, stainless back,
and~ bracelot, $260.
ltnltArntrl11N I M11t.r &111111. tet
. ,
11 FASHION ISLANO
NEWPORT BEACH
644.1310
MRS. 0. W. ROWE
Home in Coit• Mose
lagunans .
Op~n D9or
Venezuela and Au1tr1lia
ar, the homelands of two
· new foreip atildent.s who
will oltend t..iuna s .. ch
High School, -· Marshall Houts, tncomlna: · president
ol the LaCt&n• B e a c h
a.apter, American Field
Servieoe, annq\Jneed.
BOth Diana Baralt or
Caracas and Nicholls P. J .
Eftright, or New S o u t h wes, will arrive in the Art ./
· Colony in Aua:ust, she said.
The Jerome Linenk:ugels
of Laguna will h,.av,v~s
Baralt Cil5 tbeir (l,ldt, ..while
Enright wilijoll7 tbe family
Of ,Lagune ~icll city coun·
cilman ~ W. Holm:.
Mrs,,. Houts Will b ·e as~· this yeerby Mrs. Geor:1e Barr, Vice ·president
aAd Mrs . Thotnae Judy will
_,.. continue to · serve a s
treasurer. Merry Stewart
and John <llamberlain are
.tudent chairmen,
NB Auxilia ry
Newport Beach Police
Auxiliary gathers the last
Tuesday of the month at
7:30 p.m. L&catfo n in-
formation. ·may be obtained
by telephoning Mrs. Robert
Wheeler,. 67~1129.
'
Shoe
• • •
s .ale
Spedol _,,
WOMBl~S· DRfSS SHOES
Johen••n-Florsheim-0• Lis•
v ....... $25 ; .................. .
DICKERSON'S vo1 ..... ua ................... .
1300
1800
Not.,.Aur-lltqoo-1'-je
PARADISE KITTENS
~1$~.50 .......... 800
to 1 000
GIRLS KEDS
Sl1n
121;, te J
lroilffl Sins $2"
DAILY '11.ft ]f
final
reduction
LAST FEW DAYS
IMHwr ........,._
L-Ylo\'-
ffAJS AllD SAll>ALS ~"Ti' ................... s" .. , .. -..... WOMBl'S KB>S
M"rty -4, 41/2, I · 2"' Sises .......................................... ·
Pen•ljo Wedoe Slndils
y-.. $1' .. -·--··-···--, ..
-SPICIAL ••ours -
Men's Florsheim Dnss Shoes
16" .. 24" '·
I Famous lra"d1 J
MIN'S CASUALS .................. $1. to
SANDALS ........................... :. $ 6.90
-
If you w•er • lart• size ,.,.•t
mi11 thi1 sal•. Si1•1 te I ) .
COSTA MESA e .PHONE 541-9744
1831 NEWPORT BLVD.
•
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!
IN '11'iE AIR
S.ndy 51¥w
Stewardesses
NEW 'STEW'
Shell• McWllll•m•
New Silhouette
I
Flares for Fall
B1 LUCIE NOEL
PARIS (AP) -Pierre
Balmalll lbowed a ullored
flare la akirts today and
eliminated the blouse in
tailored suits u he unveiled
ao elegant fall and winter
collecUon.
The narec1 Hirte •ppeared
in afternoon and cocktail
numbers to present a new
silhouette.
Cut on the bias, the
fullnes1 jull out at each side
in a sharply pressed pleaL
It is u good in bis chevron-
woven mattress t I ck J n a:
multicolored tweeds, as in
the new afllle and silk
weaves in every color.
lop, -In Ill< back,
wu Joined onlD • black silk
crepe U:lrt al b!pllno level
and belted with • blact ••d
COid chain belL
Tho eulell e...i., model
w11 a alln.Q tib>uette black
sheath 11a&bod thigh high
and bertha-collared in wav-
ing black oetrich. abo trtm-
minc the 1bort 1leeve1.
Balmaln'1 dlytime look !1
slender ttudied and hi&b·
il)'l•.
Glouds Joined The tailored IUit ls usu.ally
1 jacket over a dren of
whld1 the built-In t op ,
whether waist length OI' em-
pire level, ii always of a
contrasting color.
He Illies the lull·tqth
coat over a wool jeney
dress. Coats are fitted,
while dreue1 sometimes
skim the figure. A coot In
vanilla yellow veku's is
worn over a white jeney
drese with• barreled collor.
Some of hi! winter eoatl
are lined in pale mink, other
mode1a feature mink used in
collar and cufft ln the way
starched linen i:s usually
shown in spring tuits. He
work& biJ mink in small
chevrons, using three dif-
ferent colors.
'lbree H-r Area girlo
ha.. ~el\ tile ranlta of
TWA stewardesses,. Miss
Sandy SbaW, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J.
Shaw of Newport Beach,
will be aboard dcnne11tic
flights out of Los Angeles .
Miss Suzanne Dethier,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Gerard Oethier of Costa
Mesa will &en'e passerigers
on b o .a r d international
flights from New York as
w f ll Mias Shella
McWilliam5, cla\lihler of
Mr. aOO Mrs. Harland D.
McWilliams Of Corcna del
Mar.
'Mle girls have completed
six weeks of classroom and
in-flight -training at the Jack
Frye Tralnlng Center in
X-. City, Mo.
ii
EARNS WINGS
Sui.tnne Dethier
Balmain'• technique 11
imperviow: to passing fads.
He has mastered every
detail, uses only the best in
fabrics, in fur1, in luxurioUJ
gold or &llver or jeweled
emlxoldery. 'lb.ii t t me
there's a Spanish feeling
about his jeweled dresses
and some of his deluxe
brocades recall cordoba em-
bossed leather.
Fabric• are rich and
handlome. Balmain is never
at a loss when faced with
opulent elements and plays
them down, by clas1k: styl·
ing attuned to the royal
courts or high society. 'Ibis
season he has new crepes
and sat.ins. They are used in
color contrast to advantage.
For a slinky dinner dre111,
an easy 1letvele11 white
A 'dreu length coat has
the top of dart mint while
the skirt it worked in a fine
chevron dea:igo, The aame
chevron workmanship in
mink is used on · a rounded
&hir·t collar and cuffs.
In b1J tweed& and checks
Balmain turns to the
French race course1 for in·
1piratt<n. He borrows jock-
ey silk treatments and does
them in the tops of tu. 1uill
in•dart and brlght color con·
trast. Some of his tweeds are
horsey and bookmaker in
mood. and there is an in-
fluence of the dress worn by
1table lads in tattersall and
trainers dleck suits.
Half Century of Marriage
A leather sleeveless vest
Is a typical example. Many
tailored coats and jacket
suits, some of which are
faced in plaids, will please
the sporting seL Thompsons CeJebrate Don't Give Up
DAVIS
Probably Has It
Fifty years of marriage
were celebrated by two
long-time Orange County
residents. Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Thompson of Costa
Mesa.
The party, which took
place in the Thompson
home , was hosted by the
honorees' two daughters,
Mrs. Sam Schwartz of Sier·
ra Madre and Mrs. Charles
Newman of Visalia.
The Thompsons h a v e
seven grandchildren. Kathy.
Sammy, Marion and Clayton
Fellowship
Ties Quilts
Members o f the
Missionary Society, Chris-
tian Women's FeHowship,
will gather in the FI rs t
Christian Church ol Hu11-
tington Beach at 10 a.m.
Each member l 1 re·
quested to bring a 1ack
lunch which will be served
following the morning'1
quilting session.
No meeting will take place
in August but the group will
reconvene at noon Friday,
Sept. 13.
Past presidents w e r e
honored during the last
luncheon meeting of the
group. and entertainmen t
was provided by Mrs. Fay
Bo.nta who offered musical
&elections.
I' Ii
5ff th•
MATTEL
TOY
FESTIVAL
frldlr ' SlfurdlJ
Flw P,kn 11 : .. "" "'"""'
Schwartz of Sierra Madre.
Mrs. Dennis WJJ:Dama oJ
Hayward, and Janene and
Roger Newman of Vila.lia.
Roger, who is in the Navy,
sent the first telegram
received on t.be day of the
party, saying "U lit your
thoughts you must embrace
time and seuons, let each
season embrace the put
witb remembrance and the
future with longing love."
Decor.ation1 included an
entry walk bordered by
giant, papier mache poppies
in pink, white.and gold. "l'wo
large wedding bell.a were
suspended above the front
entzance. In the livine room,
bouquets of pink and white
gladioli and carnations car-
ried out the color acbeme.
Angel wings of cake flanked
each side or the wedding
centerpiece and later was
sliced and served with
champagne and sandwiches.
The Thompsons originally
came from Alvarado, Tex ..
moving to Santa Ana in 1919
where both daughter• were
born. Thompson wu af.
ftllated With an oil company
as a wholesale distributor.
Two years later be wu
transferred to N e w p or t
Beach where the family
resided for 44 yean.
Mn:. ThomptiOn ii presi-
dent of the Ebell t Club of
Newport Beocb . and will
begin her secood l!rm of of-
fice this fall. For lier an-
nivenary party she wore an
orchid conage which wu a
gift from Amerkoe Lepon
Post 291.
]•1' "' 1/, 7011 "" ;a,. of
lli1 11,1 of1•mo111 J,,.,,J1 MJ1
tMrJ, fill •IJI /iIJtd • jtw
•f "'"" bt/0111.
HlHJ.lOOH
Htlt.ITAGf
ORtXEL
JOHH WIOOICOMI
O/XOH K>WOtRMAKtJ.
Students Present Show
At Fairview Hospital
Hfl(UAH
IRAHOT
KIHOtL
OAYI$ C.WHtr
WOOOUA•I(
tA.IASTAH
~-,-
Fashions around the world
were presented to the pa-
tient.I and st.all of Fairview
State HOlpital by members
of the May Co. Teen Board
of the South Coast Plaza.
The board consists of 10
senior coeds each represen-
ting a dillerent b.lgh &ebool
in Orange County. They are
the Mlaaes Vlcxte Slack,
Corona del Mar; Terry
Brett, Es tancia; Laureen
Edwards, Marina; Suzanne
Grilfin, Santa Ana; DenlSe
Jetton, Westminster; Ann
Lynch, Cost.a Mesa: Karol
McGill, Garden G r e v e ;
Marcy Neilsen, Mater Dei;
Lucy Semenluk, Newport
Harbor, and Susan Upton,
Tusllo.
Commentator was Miss
Stephanie Moore, member
of the collet• board.
11" ,_,,_ al.c• ,,,,
lt71 lon9 IMck llvcl.
Cornor of 20lh StrNI
and L<>nt llMch Blvd,.
LONG BEACH
591·1347
We have the
DIAMOND sets
that she nas her
heart sel for
... matchless beauty
at matchless prices. ---
cenv1nl1nt cradll llrmt
tor youn1 modems
~""' ' ~v111""e'vou~~
-
H•rbor Shopplnt Hunt!.,.... Confer
C.ntor INch & ldl.,.r
2300 Horbor llwf, Huntl""°" IMch
C•to -54J.9415 192.&SOI
Opon -· Thurw.. frl. 1111 ' .......
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r#llAT BEmll TIME THAii llOW WITH APPROACHING SUMMER VACATION GEAR AND THIS El.ECTllFYlllll ' IJ11 STDREWIDE FASHION CWUllCE. JUST CHARGE RIGHT DOWN TO THE N£AREST JM AND OPEN A JM\
I CHARGE ACCOUNT. IT SWITCHES ON HIGH-POWERED JM CREDIT. All YOU NEED DO IS Fill OUT THE fORMI
~ND BRING IT WITH YOU. WFll QUICKLY CHECK YOUR CREDIT, ASK YOU TO SIGN AN AGREEABl.E
~GREEMENT, AND THEN YOU ARE IN FUll CHARGE. IF YOU CAN'T COME IN, YOU MAY MM. TIIE COM
IFORM TO JM CREDIT DEPARTMENT, 59 HARRISON, SAN FRANCISCO, 94105. IT Will TAKE A UT11.E
UT THE CREDIT Will BE .JIJST""'-""AS'-'-PO-"'WER"-"!.l!.FU,,,L=-· ---------------;
PLEASE
PAINT
STREET AOOAES.$
REQUEST FOR .Ill CllAllGE ACCOUNT
FIRST ......
•STATE
.......... -
L
L
SJGHATUAE
. ......_
I ~ ~ ..... lo~_,. M Owlil Accoanl: aippllQllior\
asbfm::l IO_,. .,...ICI at• fllnM al h .. Wi9tlt.
DESIGNERS' DRESSES Y2 OFF
"~ ,, __ --
ACc:OUMT NUMIER
YOUNG CONNOISSEUR DRESSES Y2 AND MORE OFF
SPORTDRESSES Y2 OFF
SPORTSWEAR Y2 OFF
SLEEP THINGS, AT-HOME THINGS & ROBES Y2 OFF
HATS & ACCESSORIES Y2 OFF
INFANTS AND CHILDREN'S WEAR Y2 OFF
PLUS THESE EXTRA SAVINGS:
LAST MINUTE REDUCTIONS IN APPAREL V., OFF
SUMMER HANDBAGS Y3 OFF
DESIGNER'S SHOES reg ulorly 20.00 lo 46 00 13, 90 TO 240 90
herbert levine,
mister i.
ma sereti, tony the shoemaker, cerel of poris, philippe, emelfi,
CASUAL SHOES regulo~y 14.00 lo 23.00 7.90 TO 11.90
eme lfi, ven eli, bendolinos, ceresso; sportcesters. all sales final.
Sorry, no moil.phone, c.o.d. orden or delivori•~
• • shop jm •I ...th coost pla1f, l;rislol •I son Cliogo freew•y, costa mesa: monClay,
thund•y •nd frid•y 10 lo 9:30; tu .. d•y, w•dn•sd•y •nd s•lurd•y 10 lo 6.
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Ohio's Bay Bllu LEGAL NO'l1CE
Political Expert
Rebuikling GOP
I
Demos Elect
Grove Official
,r • • • ,. . .. .,, •
U11G4!. NCl'ftCS
• . -
DAILY rn.DT J7
•
• "
Journey
Tonig~t , -
For 'W..art'
"Wart, •' -~-I Jour .. y. ... i. .... b ... been aom~ ,f ate•• will
be pJayJng al'1'30 p.m. to-
day,. Friday and Saturday
and 'lbursday, Friday and
Saturday ol ne~eek at the Seoond Step ater, 2518
Villa Way tn t w p or t
Beach.
Produced by Iii< Newport
Mind Troupe, Wart proportJ
to deal with the injustices cf
I.he world ·~ of man'1
alienation frcm man.
Costumed in green and
gold cylinders, and wearing _...,,,.,.,. ,..,... ... ,..,
gree; body makeup, ttie
cast .acts out inhuman •c-
tiom which may t • k e
kaieido&copic meanings for
each viewer. The pre sen·
tation is cf mi"xed media,
meaning a _light and sound
show aa well as the play.
'Inherit
AMERICA HVRRAB!
Martha McFarland, a member of the South Coast
Repertory, port.rays a Spanish dancer in th~ "T. V."
segment of the Third Step Tbeater's· "Amenca, Hur·
rah!" The play, which opens Friday, will run Fri·
days and Saturdays th.rough Aug. 31 .
'Carnival on Ice'
TH-E MATCHMAKER -Chris Salaiz as BIOQdy Mary in the OCC summer mus·
icai ''South Pacific" brings together the young lovers Liat (Karun Pang) and
Lt . :cable (Terry Danne). The musical will be staged July 31 through Aug . 3.
The Wind'
At-Cal · State In 2nd of 4 Weeks
'B~igadoon'
On Stage
At Fullerton
The first or f i v e
performances of "Brtg;i.
doon''" by the Fullerton
Junior College S u m m e r
The·ater Workshop will bt
presented today at R p.m. in
!he ColJege Campui;
Theater.
The production will also
be staged Friday and Satur·
<lay. July 26 and 27 and Aug.
2 and 3.
OCC's 'S outh Pacific'
Highlights Dancing
If you like dancing. you're
going to love •·south
Pacific" at Orange Coa st
College th is month.
OCC will !It.age itg an·
niversary production oC tile
Rogers and Hammerstein
musical at 8:15 p.m. in the
OCC auditorium on July 31·
. i\ug . 3. Tickets are $1.
Lynda Davis, dan« direc·
tor and choreographer for
the show, said that the num·
ber and calibre of dancers
who turned out for tbe show
makes it possible to do some
pretty elaborate dance num-
bers.
will bt leatured in the
number. The music and dan·
ce represent Cable's dilem-
ma and thougtn about Liat.
Mrs. Davis said that Miss
Pang hat1 haCI , considerable
professional experience in
South Seas dance number•.
and that the dance will be
an exciting one .
·'It will be an elabor.ate
ethnic production," Mrs.
Davis said.
Wtl's. DavU Hid ttiat she
will also pee-sent different
approaches to tflt Bloody
Mary and Honey Bun dance
James Hetter's "Carnival "Inherit ttie W in d . ' ' On Ice" is now in itS second
Jerome Lawtence a n d week of a four week engage-
Robert Lee's lained play ment at Melody la n d
about the ScoPes monkey Theatre.
b"ial. will be .staged in the Jaflet Champion. Arthur
Little Theater to n i I ht Newman. Jean Sokovich,
through Sunday by the John Curtin and Pattie Hit·
California State College at tie. and Jack Rose headline
Fullerton drama depart· the show. which al 1 o
ment features the comedy ·antics
Curtain time fer the se· of Joe Jackson Jr., and his
cond 1ummer theater of· famous breakaway bicycle
feting oi ttie year is 8::Kl act. the slapstick cf Hub·
p.m. bard and Swans011 along
"Tn,is powerful documen· with ttie clowning of Jay
tary of man's right to think Kirk and the singing voice
is one of America's most of Bob Peoples.
aignUicant dramas," said Eight performances each
Dr. Alvin J . Keller. tbe week a.re scheduled .for the
director. "Taking factual remainder of the run with
mate.rial fr om the 1927 trial evening performances at 8
of John T. Scopes for p.m. Wednesday through
teaching Darwtil's theory of Satucday .and matinees at 1
evolution, tl'le 9Jtllocs have p.m . Wednesday, 3 p.m .
dramatized our vutnerabili· Saturday, 1 p.m. and 5 p.m.
ty tc ttiose ,who would on Sundaye.
with all seata reserved and
juniors, 16 years of agt and
under, are ha.H price at both
Wednesday performances,
Thursday evening at 8 p.m.
and Sundays ai 5 p.m. only.
ltdo
NIWIOH IWM -.i ... --i. ,.~ •• """ I.lo -ot .......
EXCLUSIVE
Now •t
Popul•r Prices
HELD OVER
JULIE AS YOU LOVE HER ...
S ing ing, Danctog. Delighting!
A cast and crew of more
than 40 high school and col·
lege students from
lhroughe>ut Orange County
In addition to performing.
have designed all costumes
and sets.
For eira.mple, OCC music
instructor and comPoser
Paul Cox ha~ written ttie
score for a completely new
baUet wtiich will be used to
depict die love story of Lial
and Lt. Cable. Nothing like
it ha8 been done: before in
''South Pacific,'' according
to Mrs. Davis.
numbers.
"We'll make more use cf
gymnastics and strenuous
danct numbers because of
the calibre of dancers we've
got.." she said.
destroy the democratic prin· Prices are $2.50 and $3.50
ciple of free thlught end ;n·1:.======::==:==:==:=='i1ll quiry in the ,-name of
G~rge Stoughton of the
F' JC Theater Arb: Depart-
ment will direct the musical
production. The th e • t er
orchestca will be under the
direction d.. Kenneth Helvey.
chairman of the F J C
Division oi Fine Art!..
TickeU may be purchased
at Sh"ilfer'11 Music House in
F'uUerton or at the Campus
Theater box office.
The ballet. wiU feature
Karun Pang ol Santa Ana as
Liat and Terry Dant1t of
Costa MeN. ·as U . Cable. Jn
all. JO women and 12 men
Crossword Puzzle
ACR095 , . .,. .......
l ti .s. 49 C1!rudlr -..-. novellrt '°"'"' ,_Cali's ..,,...,., 11artner .... ,.._ 1~ N1ll0Ral ,.. CHbll sy111bol 'ltl'IM 14 Flowet ~rt n Region -15 Ontario s ,.,,.,..
neighbor 51 At U.1 111 O~n Wtft't
_..,_
fabri c ,,,_
17 ll.P. flo tbt "''" tll!lt: that MIW.lfldiel 18 Circus r99111>Mc 7/2~/68 heall li11er: II Look 2 words eurlottlfiy • Fl'trll 'n t11rr111l~ 20 Gas flif-~ drink.t: fashion It 21 Ad--631'1 ...... 2 words JI Easlem 21 'lnt!rmlnglord .. n About Canad!M with 3 Eat to 40 F1111ed 23 Evince l>O'lll f'et)lltlott Jockey 25 )ntmi.. )9 OM of itt 41 Eat tioM1t ~ l "-..i r.'""' .CS HaM llYH "•landing Mis:ied .... to anothw Z7 Susontcf ...... J! Coal 44 U111plrt't 30 Steps 1long 2 Rlbbw. ctrryint dKiS/llfl 31 Pri>tecl!va C om b . loN !!lens ii 4J B1rbtrsmi, covering I-24 Posstnf\lt Item 3Z Ut1dtrgroond GrNt ·~· 46 Withtrld Wotli:ff 4 '°°"" ... 25 Sea 1ag1K ttld WO"'M 33 PripOs ltron I Ir.Ing 211 R~ir1111111t tt' Turk i'h 36 Trwisported I P\pe. 27 P'°plt 'OYMtOf' w J th e1lllll ioit
_.,
ttf Afftca ., 11'111 ..... 37 Ftlt anx l~ .... 21 Light n...,.,. 38 Smell ........ ••• mo11otarlett& 39 Jj"p,-WOlllft .... boH-0 St Btar Oft diver 1 Earfy boat "'' Jllr1Cll 40 Rec.olll: "''" 1' RestMI· 51 Eicecutied 41 tw. """'" 11ess baseball 4z·· eaches ,.__ JO Bec.OIMS llllMllYf'f 44 Befilnnlng 1""" lif"eJ.'Y · 55 Pt1c1 fer 4J Un Vff"Slty bbr. n Sutt "I:.""""'"' '''"'7 t Range of 4 Golfer'1 ~ -· -47 lnsre know ledge .... Ji Bird St1111 le ll....S 3S IOFTY 51 Artldit
12 ' "
Members of tbe stage
crew are bu.ilding all sets
for the show instead of ren·
tine them. according to
director Lucian Scott. In ad·
dition" the e·ntire .auditorium
will be decorated with
flowel\'i plus the marquee
.area. The steps will be
covered with a graSfi-likt
carpet, and South Seas
punch wJU be served et in·
termiesion free of charge to
the audience.
political ex y.
Button wned
. -Mind o ~'Way ,c1
The buttoned down mind
of Bob Newhart is coming to
Melodyland. Ji..
Bob Newhat!· has been
signed to .api:ilar at ttie
A n ah e J m theater·in-the·
round Friday and Saturday,
Aug . 16 and 17.1
Sharing tlhe spotlight wi~
Newhart will be i;inger Bill
Scott said ttteater·goers Medley, the forlJ!er member
are encouraged tc wear of the llighteaus Brothers
islafld clothing tc be more CCI'!~•• aOMT. • WN n . comfortable and tc help set ~
the South Pacific mood. · ~ 1~ --•
rliiiCwlita.i .\~" lh ···~"""
LU4L111 .. .;
C...t1111•n h lly-1 J .111.
Jwli• A11dr•w1
"Tkr• .. lilly M ...... MllH1"
"SIMl9it..t ••11 ht tile w..t"
wit!. De11 K11eth
•••••• M&et--A.lhlb $1 •••
'111
,. .. s...4t Dlellh '"
"SWEET NOVEMBER"
... :::~ lf!li! ~~!r <m
Now IOI OJICI OPIN Wiii DA.YI ':11 •
· SATURDAY -' SUNDAY 11:JO
SUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES
¥DENNIS· KEIR DULLEA· ANNE HEYl\00()~ ----
AIM HeMt Mffh a.
"THE FAMILY WAY" in Color
"'111'11111 _.,.I&,. -
UNlfU •• , l'OU 110N A l'LroGl NOT TO
lltYtA1 TNI .,...... ll+Octt INOIHOI
.LUI SllSAll URI' SIRASllER8
I
NOW 1'1.A YING
,.AClflC'S
PAULO DRIVE IN
THIATRI
NIWl'OttT fflY. AT. IAKlll
'
~ -·---~------------""-
...
"BAMBI" ...
"THI 3 LITTLE PIGS"
"SUPERIOR
ENTERTAINMENT"
'""hlp-4:41 ..... _
.... ,,., -s....,_J:41
EXCWSIYE SHOWING
....
"YOUNG AMIRICANS"
Slt rrl11t
Tiii , .... ·~
; 'Aii., 'f;i''· ·.·~·~ .. l
•. ' .,, ":~" ·'"' ;.,,. *1, .. , =-' JVLlf ANDl>fWI
MADY TYLfD "4001>1
CADOL Ct1ANNIN6
JA.Mfl rox
~11Jll: --· lw. Sllow Stem ':41
T•• Stt.ws Niptty
C.ltt. s... '""' J ''"''
-. .............. .......,..
W•ll OllMJ'* M111lnl 1'11"'1 , .... Mtc:Mvr .. , • COLOR
"THI HA.,,llST
MILLION.A.Ill"
Rt11H11• •111111 e COLOR
,.WHlll AN•ILS 60
TlOUILI FOLLOWS"
I '' T ~ ·: -,.'.
PAULO
I ·--···""' T ... fll<t Sl•m' • """-...,,..,
"ILUI" • c~ ... e
JHll ~ • lllUll 51r• ......
"THI NAMI Of THI
lo.&MI IS KILL" e C.W -_..,_
Ul·IJ71
"-"., """ .... Tiii w.,, Me11ry 1'"'9 • I.Kitt. ....
"YOUIS, MINI AND
OUU'" e C9'., •
'" "-• coi.o• ''THI P'llYA.TI NA.n OJ
S•T. O'FA.ltllU" -=:::-::--
J
'Your Own Thing' .
Hartford Shows
Best Musical
Tickets are now on sale et
th • HurK.lngton Hartford
Theater for ttle West Coast
preoUere of "Your Own
Thinga," voted ttlis year's
"BMt Musical" by the New
York Drama Critics Circle.
opening perfonnances of
"Your Own Thln1''. Wed·
nesday. J_uly ,31, and Thurs·
day, Aug. 1, tor wtllc.b ..
tickets are also available. :
Openin« Friday, Aug . 2.
the Hartford engagement
will feature the original
award-winning cast . mark·
fng the first titne that a New
York troupe baa left a JOld·
out engagement there t c
play another city.
'n!ere will be two pre-
After winning the Critlcs ·
Circle award, the new show
went on to win the Outer
Critics Circle award for
1968's "Best Musical," the
famed Drama Desk-Vernon
Rice Award to director
Donald Driver for "Outstan·
ding Achievement in the
Theater," plus inclusion in
BWTl'li-Mant1e 's "10 Best
Plays of 1968."
llEW IALI ..
THEATRE
NOW -Ends Seturday
CON:TINUOUS
SHOW DAILY
FROM 2,30
AND fHE SEVEN DWARFS
e EXTRA -Molin• Only -WALT DISNEY'S
TRUE-LIFE ADVENTURE -"BEAR COUNTRY"
e 2nd Future -All PERFORMANCES -
••• H~rflh Dlllef
"8 ON THE LAM"
SUN.0MON.•TUIS ONLY-CONTINUOUS J :lO
SWING INTO A SAFARI
OF LAUGHS! ---Book ~ "'"" "-~. '*L NUllll ' . LOUii ,..... . ,LUS WALT DISNIY
sua,a1s1
FIATUllTI'I
EDWARDS'
• llAlllOlt at ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE' !46-3102
ti -ACADEMY AWARD WINNER·
(I IST ACTRfSS :::;:..~·. BEST SCllEfNPlAr =,.
(I
ti
ti
ti
t&
(&
ALSO
tol"""'"'C'!~ .. -· Stanley Kra""" ·--Spenar SKlney llatharioe !RACY I POITIER I HEPStMI
guess who's commg to dtnnw
~ ,., __ 41&
Second Popul•r Hit
First Run Enpflment
\ STARTS
\ WEDNESDAY,
\ AUGUST 7
......
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P.T.A. IA.nlROAT MATINll-1tiJt A.Jill,
• ...,, Mttcltelll t. "Ml MOIU" A" S.... JOc
--
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JULY B
.. .......... -(C) (to) IN .... . u.._., __ tc><30l
·-... -(C) (90) 'lfrof_.. lrwltl CM1, 1111 Rut-
111, LM Mil•. 1111t Medl1111 M•rl·
1nna lllfll
D GINA LOLLOIRIGIDAI * 'FAST AND SEXY'-COlorl
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lebrill'e, Dllt Roblrboft,
GI -.., tc> 130)
·ld-(30)
l!,tMarsNIW? lll--,,.u .... ..., _ (C) (to)
""' --(C) (30) ·-·-(30)
m -.""7130> tm Sptdrm: (C) ''Glll'l• PIOPI• Pity." Pert 11 • .tiutllor·Dr. Eric Bit
llPltln Ml mtlbCWJlll psyd'I0-
11111ytjc ~ Ht talb •bout
tranuctloMI anaty91 ud 11
with hDlt DIYid l'rtwltl. Ill-" (C)
7.0 .... ...... -Witt• ~kitt.
O f,,..., (30)
m I U. lq (30) ID-•'"'"' 130) ms.en..-,.. .,,...,_
(C) (30)
1~001!1 9 00 -.... -tlii Ci"Wdlll'fl: (C) (60) A tribute
. to Bini CrOI0(1 IOllP ot trll 7:30 119 Cl) Ci9anM llril: (C) (90) (!1ilrt111 1nd • tpOOf ol tht nen-
No ltory1ln1 mll1bl1 1t pteu time. rHls of the ert ire among th1
Thi• will bt 1 r1Pfft 1plsod1 stir-hlihlliht.s of tonl1hr1 sh<lw hosted
rln1 stu1rt Whitman, JUI Town•nd, b1 Joey Hnthtrton ind Frenk Sin-
Ptrc:y Hilbert Ind .t:~ Boone. 1tr1 Jr. Pllll lrnOI 11111 lpptlrl.
!lllll~! """ ~ 0 ---(C) (60)
IOfl l•ffl Ind lwD ~la -Ill tc• 0 fWldty II let: (C) (60) fllllll centl1c lfttl• commit 1 murder, of Ille 221111 Miiiion llf "Holld1r on
but can pt no w to b.llm their let" wtf1I tlktn 1t thl Pin Pacific
ltory. Shlldoll Collln1, .loll W1l1111-Auditorium usl nt 111tur1I production
ltr •nd 11P«ial rut1t John C.rr. lllf'itln1 •nd !Ollncl. The lhow blendl
dine 1r1 ftlturtd. (R) tM Untst t.ltnll ol lntematlonal
abtln1 -Ronni• Robtrbon, Mia II Lii's It .... ._ (C) (30) Pltr1 Burb, Eric W1it1, the Gl1111-
D ~fl). llCMcl Hllllhl ft111: our_-le111, ind th• let Squirri.
(?) {fa) 'The H111111 Thi! Mtldtd -Secret _._ (60)
I Cirpenls." luill jollll Ill tldtrl)' -._..,
couplt 11'1 ttttlt fllht 1plnlt m Jadi ....... ,.... (C) (60)
Hill 11111 lllCb 11P fldfll lht Army.
He ~ tlc:hnlcll ldtrilOI'
Rudy Ind EJit l.1111. who
b1rrlca6td their J111P1rtJ to Pf1ftl'll
th• flllJOI' from' turnlnt It Into 1
putlflll trMfl. (R) "_, __ _
ltmtlr" (lllipenll) '55 -. ........ """"' ........ m Tnllll • c. ....... m ()0
111 100 hia111p/l..t ........ .... (C) .
f.li) lt&.D lhriew: "NIW M1lll Join·
ln1 Methods." Dr. Hlbbl Ind ti~
ptrts frona tht 1111<1 PRllfllll looll
II IOIM UnUIUll methods ol wetd-
1111-Dtmonstnitld" ire m1UI jotn-
lfll with .• lue:r, tltcfn)n·llM!n.
•plolivel 1M tolld -ltltt ncu11111..
m...., ..... (60) 10:• m ..... = (C) (30) B111 .1o11na.
SJ flllln:"Two 0.-p In I Cnhr.~
A hJdr.-bllloon ~ 11 tt:GI II °'"' D'Clod 1.,.,-t: (C) (30)
forttid don 1111r 1 Ttntil!Ylbn .letiy Dunphy. Wllt1no 1nd rlCOfds on fllms IOlll
of ttie lnt•11tlnc wlldlil• thtrL
..... Cltll ......
D tnl (I) Ao """ .. , (C) Ila) "'Cyrtno di Blrtrille." Sbt11
llertrillt'I fllW ,upll PrDMI lhll: I
tittle Mlmlna un h dan11mua:
Pedro, I bUaifllllmln, ... Siit11
Blltinl lo rud I lttt• .ntilll
hil lktfrltnd, Mid lhl ;;;;;;;.;~
hl111 to Join ttlf a1 ... Ptdro'1 dif·
fk:ultlll In dlati111UW!i111 10me _
8 TM llttl Ho• J!M: (C) (30)
Geor1• Sldnlllf.
• 1111111 " .. c..t.y (30)
0 """'= (C) (30) Jut. Wirt
D lihvll: "CrJ If 1111 av !dr•·
mt) '48-Vlclor M1tur1, Ricll11d
Coftll.
QI LM CnM' (C) (60)
m _, """"'" '"' ""'"' (dr1m1) '57--ie1rth1 Scott, J1W1
'-•
the ilttn ... In 11111' lllllllt• 11 :JG fl Morie: """ c.. A(llnd
(R) "'"'11" (lfl)"!tery) '58-01rr111 m Hlllf (t) (30) McG1vtn, N1u!1 Hayn. ..............
llllo -
8'JO Cl 1111 lil I-(C) (OI) "Off·
lclr "loiiliY." Olltf lronlld1 bt-
tomel 111 ll'NOlunbrr kbJlitt•
Ill 1111 00 ... TNipl .... (C)
a ~ .,., Sbtlr' Ellte11" (cor.
Id)') ·~Ja111t Leith, J1tk Lem-,,.,,
D @ClllMJ '""' -<Cl
......... r111in thll lo tlle ll:OO m .. ,,.. {C)
fl I wwld-bt phiM bMlblf ii H
tblldaMd Wlllt. M•illtY M1
lunta. (R) ll:JO m All·NllM llllr. "111 Thll, Our
O ft CJ)-.....: (C) (JO) "ll Oft."" ''Woman Ill Whlll, ~ "Pit·
TN7 "1iMi Mil" Sim flndl '*-'I t.rns.
In the 111idcnl 'lltltn the runnln1 IB ActlH n.nc "'The Lloft H11
feud btbMll Den1n Ind Endorl WT°fl(I."
en.1P11 lfltO • full ·ICllt wtr. El!dor1
tlUI 1dvlnbp of the altiuitlon
wf'len S.111 tlMs her ,art In 1 12:50 D MIW!t: "IN M11 If T"""
11u1ml wltll '#hlt'~hltH••ll'IL Shi lt:Olt" ('Hltwn) '49 -Barrr Sulll·
111111 wltdltty ti wldt11 tM llretdl VII\ Broderick Cniwfll!'d.
end Sim pis 1 Wnce • .. wlll1
D1rrln'1 life would hlYt IMlft II
ltllJ 11..t nevw met. (R) m-"""' tc> (IO)
m -"" ICl 1•0l
fR :OhY
DAYTIME MOVIES
h D --_. l_Yl
~-l.,,. ........ °""·
"""' u. ..... -(Wllttnl) '52.-SfM Codnn. (C)
..._. ti ,..,.., (dr1•) '55 ...... ~.
• JOB PRINTI NG
1:00 8 Mwlr. "'l.1111 Treil ff• ....
..,.. (mrstery) '52-Jon Hill.
II "'9ilit: "fr11MraWI ......
"""-• (horror') '41 -Lon Ch• -r: Bil• L1t10li.
8 C..•ll!Jlf llWln '-'
D -(C)
11:00 8 "ltfdlr • ...,... (Wlsttm) 'SO
-Don B1rrr. "Wtr et 1111 Wlldcltl"
(...tn) '42-Jotia W•r111.
U:IO II "P 11 I I r (drlllMI) '4t--.loln
Cmffotd. ..... llrt .. IMd: ...
...... (dmu) ·12.......-. BlllCfOft.
4:•. (C) ... " .. """" (dr11111)
'&6-Rod SfallJlf, 8tltii Kttt1L
D .,.. WllJ W' (drama) '50-
Rlr:htrd Wldllllf\ SW., Pt!k.
• PUBLICATIONS
• NEWSPAPERS
U11 war U'IOA aft.
,...,,_ ........ _ ......... ., .... . ~ . . . ..
PEANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTI AND JEFF
''///,/ . 111 WHATRE "' · 11,Y,1 , . I ,,..
I/ I'''"' SAY.UMP? I ••
MISS PEACH
' .
ly Charles M. Schull
o.:i: -
By Harold Le DoUll
17::-'.:'.::"'V':PHHAl'S=:'.".:::"::r:'.M"".'°""""'-::'.'::::'.:::CMT::::EP::-O
IM IN/ TMINICIN6 •• ISUT' IV& AL·
WAYS Fill' THA.T A. 11\AiN SHOULP
IE IN A. POSITION TO frDP'PORT
A. WOMAN ~ H! ASKS
MY! H•
C•RTAINLY
LOOIC5
QUALIFl•t>
IO RUN;
~---., HER: l't> .BE HIS WIFE!
NAW··"THEY ~AY Me:'s JUST
A B~BY•
KISSER ...
ly Ferd Johnson
ly Tom K. Ryu
ly Al Smith
GAME CALLED
•
ON ACCOUN"T OF
DARKNESSf
I
. . . .. -
NEW MEMBER -Percy Rodriguez joins the cast
of ''Peyton Place" tonight at 9:30 in color on Chan-
nel 7. Rodriguez plays the part of a neurosurgean
who, in the continuing series airing each Monday
and Thursday, becomes involved in the conflict.I
and struggles of local citizens. .. .
TELEVISION VIEWS ~i, ..
Y aphet Kotto
Great Talent
..
By RICK DU BROW ••
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Television documon•
taries this summer are tracing Negro history in
America, and entertainment shows in the new sea·
son will more and more be translating such event's
into fictional terms.
CBS.. TV's "Of Black America" ieries noted._in.
a documentary, for instance, that it was Negro
coldiers who rounded up Geronimo in the Old West.
And, as an example of a story also set in pion~er
days, NBC-TV's "The High Chaparral" will have.an
hour tale about a regiment of Negro cavalry troop-·
ers in the 1860s.
Featured in this episode, "Buffalo Soldiers,"
will be a strapping, 28--year-old actor whose ability
has been praised in the New York theater, movies
and television. His name is Yaphet Kotto, and hi1
gentle humor, ·devotion to hi s family (wife and two
children) and modesty with interviewers makes one
aware of some of the qualities helping him carv-e
out a significant, unsung path for Negro performers.
FOR KOTTO is a character actor. That is how
he describes himself. And it is the many facets of
his people that he is trying to bring to television,
not merely the heroic or silly stereotypes that have
been used for so long .
His credits are impressive. Off-Broadway he
worked ·tn "Blood Knot," "Black Monday," ''.In
White America" and "A Good Place to Raise -a
Boy." On Broadway, he gained instant fame in
"Zulu and the Zayda." His films include "Tb.e
Thomas Crown Affair,'' "Nothing But a Man" and
the upcoming "Five Card Stud." On television, he
has done "Big Valley," "Tai;-zan," "Cowboy in
Africa," "Bonanza" -and, most important of all,
t•Losers Weepers," a drama set in the Watts section
of Los Angeles.
"I F EEL realistic black character parts are so
important,". said Kotto over dinner in a restaurant
here. "We've made some significant breakthroughs.
Poitier. Cosby. Jim Brown and Raymond St. Ja'c-
ques BJ heavies. And for me doing this sergeant in
1High Chilparral.' I'm trying to claim a little history
for myself. With my various parts before, I,'ye·
broken through in character roles . And this is what
we are searching for -identity. There are so many
different kinds of us." ·_ -
Added Kottp: "This sergeant in 'High Chapll!'-
ral' 'is a different kind of man. He's the first Negro-
man I've played who is caught up-hr.self·pride. B;D'd
strength. I hope Negro kids can see the pride and
strength in this man -especially since he is in tbe-
19th century. It all comes down to the kids." :·
THE "HIGH CHAPAR RAL " story Is based' bh ·
fact, explains Kot to: 0 iThese soldiers come to.:thiJ ·
town in Arizona where law and order has broken
down. Local law officials have asked for the ArmY ·;
to be sent in. We came, and the first thing we dQ..is :-
round up the firearms. There is shock that we:V.
Negroes, and resentment. They hate to give up~
guns to us. But they have to because we are in_UDJ..
form and.-represent the United States government/.'
Kotto said that as a youngster who grew up" 1.n
New York's Bronx, he knew about Negro soldtel) .
in the west: ••As long as I can remember, my f.ut'-. ~
er taught me about these things. I was very fo~ .
nate. It is a reason I could cope as I grew up!'_, _
.Denni s t fa e Menace · ..
.. , -
I I
I
I
-. ... ~..-• • • .... <I .. ....-• .. • .. " '4 •• . -.. ... .. ... ••• 4 .,._
> -
' . DMLY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ' ' .•
Our Sick M.ait S·ervice ..
. ..
~~ 1
Althoo1b the nation's postal service Is the nearest
to a bUJlntss of any major operaUoo of the federal gov·
ernmen~ ii remains the only major public uUllly with
· rates fixed by lei\slaUon.
In other word11 the Post Office bas alw~s been and
sUU la the pawn of pollUca. Its management baa been
bobbled . Prudent and standard b111lness practices -
cost accounting, mirketing studle11 personnel incen-
tives. to name just three -have been lmpo•slble.
•. Annual deficits have been monumental.
Instead of improving service and lowering cocts, as
in the cue of lonf·distance tel~hone calls, postal ef..
f!ciency has fallen far behind the needs of the economy.
Costa, meanwhile, have gone up.
The ellects wilt be felt in Oranee County immed·
iately. Beginning Utis coming Saturday, wlndow service
will be discontinued, with mail d.Jstrlbution to box.hold·
ers and general delivery only between 8:30 and 10 :30
a.m. -varying from office to office. Home delivery on
Saturd..ay is lilceJy to be discontinued later.
Efforts have been made to solve postal problems
within the legal restructions imposed by Congress, such
as the zip code. But they have been little more than
temporizing while the service grew worse and the whole
system headed toward collapse.
President Johnson named a blue-ribbon commission
of topflight executives tO look at the postal service from
the business point of view and make recommendations.
What they found appalled them. The commission has
recommended taking the Post Office entirely out of
politics.
A government.owned c()rporation would be set up to
operate 'the service, using modern management
methods. The prospect, if the recommendations are
adopted by Congress, is for greatly improved mail
.service, eventual elimination of the postal deficit, and
much better career opportunities and working condi-
tions for postal employes.
This will take time, of course. Service likely will
deterloraljo lurthtl'·I• tho interim.
A4 for the Satiirday service cutback. ID .oranee
County, that day la belier than Monday. -!llla!M11 In
1•neral needs Mondi,y service more than SOturd&y. Sat~ <;losl~g ·works. a bah!1_bJp, bqwever, on
.working people who can't get to the Poot Office on any
other day. To meet Ibis need, the postal HMCe should
lake a lea! from lhe experience ol bank• ari.r-some Olber-
servlce establ!Jhlnenls. Later hours .eA!:Jt day, or al
least . one day a. •l!Ok, woul"d lesseo ~•hips. on
business and 1emce ,workers. • . -~
Abused and suUering as 'the ..,.ii· ae"fvlce' la, that
much conslderalion of lhe publlC lboold eallil~ be
posalble. '
The current emergency cutbaclu: really answer no
part ol the overall problem. The blunt fact 11 the na-
tion's postal service is in imminent danger of total
collapse. II is a Jiluatlon worthy ol immediate atten-
tion and drastic action on the part of Congress.
The Jogging Fad
Jogging for exercise has swept the nation and be-
~ome a new health fad. A!. with some food fads, the re-
sults can be good or bad, depebding on the prudence
ol the participant. ·
Four deaths in Orange County since June 25 have
been &'ltributed to jogging. Three of the four bad start·
ed jogging without getting a green ·light from their
physician and the fourth probably overdid it.
Doctors generally agree' that jogging is a hlghly·
beneficial form of exercise -but only for those medi·
cally cleared to use it. According to Dr. David Nielsen,
president·eleet of the Orange County Medical Associa·
ti.on, jogging is safe and effective: it diminishes the
chance that a healthy person will have a coronary
occlusion, and it builds up supplementary blood cban·
nels in the heart which help the person who does suffer
a heart attack. Adequate prior medical examination is
imperative, however.
•
Time to P1"aise the Achiever Symington to
Seek Troop
Withdrawal
.'I'm for the Upperdog'
By DR. MILLER UPTON
Pretldeat
Beloit C0Ue1e
FoUowing are excerpts fr.Pm •
speech given by Dr. Upton at an Hm.·
ors Convocation at Ripon Collegt·.
Ripon, Wis .
I have just about reached the end or
my tolerance for the way our society
at the present time seems to have
Jympathetic concern only for the
misfit, the pervert. the drug addict.
the drifter, the ne'er-do-well , the
maladjusted, the chronic criminal, the
underachiever. the loser -in general,
the underdog ...
I feel it is time for someone like me
to stand up and say. "I'm for the up-
pcrdog!"
I'm for the achiever -the one whfl
sets out to do something and does it:
thP ooe who recognizes the problems
and opportunities at hand and en-
df'.1vors to deal with them: the one
who is successful at his immediate
tas~;: because he is not worrying about
someone else's failings ; the one who
do"'sn't consider it 'square' to be con-
stantly lookinf for more to do, who
Isn't always rationaliz.ing why he
shouldn't be doing what he is doing:
the one. in short, who carries the work
or his part of the world squarely on
his shoulders. Not the wealthy , neces·
sarily, not t'he ones in authority, nec-
essarily, not the gifted, necessarily -
just the doer, the achiever -regard·
less of his m;tetus, his opulence, hiJ na·
live endowment , ..
OUR SOCIETY'S treatment of the
Negro over the yeai-s b deplorable. In
fact, that's too mild a~rm for it The
word 'sinful' in ltl full theological
sense is more accurate. But this fact
does not justify us in our sense of guilt
condemning a particular segment of
sa:ciety which in manr ways· con-
stitutes the backbone of American
social existence . . . How horribly
wrong it is to level our guns of hostiti.
ty, envy and ridicule on the successful
white man who more often than not
struggles financially to get a coUegf.
education. who more often than not
works at his job more than 60 hours a
wtek, who buys a comfortable home in
the. suburbs with the welfare of his
famUy io mind. who Is active in his
church and community affairs, who
gives his time to service on boards of
educ~tion ·and' social welfare agencies.
and tn 1ome cases is shortening his
life span through overwork and anx·
iety resulting from the basic 1 o c i a I
resj>onslbilities he must carry.
THESE ARE among the chief doers
:-ind achievers of today. And where
would our society be without them? .. ,
We have serious problems and
issues facing our society at the
present time. Let there be no doubt
about it. But they can be solved over
time if we will attack them directly
and honestly, that is, if we will be will-
ing to pay the price in time and persis·
tent personal effort. They will never
be subject to inftant IOlutlon -to
wishing it so. Nor ·Will tber be 10lved
by blaming others for their existence.
or by making certain setnNnbi of
~ociety the scapegoat for the general
ills of society ...
THE ONE MOST certain point is
that tfley will be solved by doers, not
peopt_e with good intentions but in·
divlduals with good deeds. Not those
who talk · a good game but those who
play a good g~e -the achiever ...
That is why I'm for the upperdog -
the achiever -the succeeder: I'm for
building an ever better society and
this will only be done by those who
take seriously their responsibility for
achievement, fOr making ttie most of
their native ability, for getting done
the job al hand.
All See Break With Past
CINCINNATI, ~o -Tht pro-
fe ssionals of both major parties who
gathered here at the N 1 ti on a I
Governors' C.Onference rev ea 1 e d
themselves as just as confused as
everyone else in the tortured process
of selecting the BeXt President ol th!!
United States. They seriously ad ·
vanced desperate ideas like the
reslgnation Of Vice President Hum.
phrey to free himself of Utt Johnso n
Administration. or the nom ination ot
both file President and Vk:e President
from the same state.
What they were all seeking and not
fi nding was a breaX with the past .
repruented now only by Sen . Eugene
McCarthy, whom the professionals do
not think will be nom inated. State
g. ·•crn-,rs can be assu med to re fl ect in
•~me degree the political opinions of
t.: .. ;r own states and. on that assump·
lion. the American electorate is bOred
1 iff b.v the prospective nom inationg of
F i:'iard M. Nixon and Hubert H.
Humphrey.
TO THEIR CREDIT, both can·
dictates seem to know this and they mull mow thllt •acfl of them will have
to f1.Dd • new departure if ttley are to aroioM tbe lupport whidl will ... ble
• J
--·--Thursday, July 2$, 111118
Tit< <elltoriol p<Jl/C of Ille Dollv
Pilol •••kl lo fflform a!ld rtlfn.
t tdatc reodnl "r prtlfnting th.ii
• Jl4'tOIPGPCf'I ~ and Cont-
,W!O~ .,. toplcl of fflt<rcrl
""" rigftifkml«, bl/ ~ • ffltWM for lM apt".-of
... ...-.,,..,...,, """ br
JW<untlftg lM d....... -pofflll of lnfonncd ob__..
olld .,,.u-O!I toplcl of IM
l/aP· .
Roberl N. Weed, Publilher
1 • '
~it.R1ic. ~~-,.
them to unify 8fld lead the country.
Unless conditions change drastically
between now and election day a new
departure on the question ol Vietnam
will be required of both candidates.
There is an underJy.ing erosion al. sup-
port among the governors of the slates
for ti hard line policy in Vietnam.
Governors who were once ba.wkbti,
evidently renecting what they thought
to be prevailing opinion in their own
states. now openly doubt th e i r
previou~ posk.ions. They have lost
faith in e1calation and they have lost
confidence ONlt the Viet C.On g will qui!
under su.stalned, ii limited, American
military presturf.
TIIE RA WKS OF. yesterday are th<>
doubters and the doves of today . Two
years ago at Minneapolis and thr~
years ago at Los Angeles, Gov . Nelson
A. Rockefeller and Gov. John J .
McKeiltlen ot Louisiana led the hawks
and ail the rest, save one, followed.
That. lone. dissenter was Gov. Mark O.
Hatfield of Oregon, since elect.lid to
the United States Senate. Rockefeller
now has a plan to get out of Vietnam.
McKiethen thinks he has been wrong
Ob the Vietnam question. and scarcely.
a governor remains who would vote
on Vietnam tht way ht did lwo and
th.ree years ago.
In any logical orderlng: of political
atf.alrs It could be as5'1mcd that the
ynmtng f'Or a break with the policies \
of the put would lead both parties
towiard tht selection of candidates who
wen no t klenUfied with the pilt. But.
on the contrary, there was no decisive
move at the Governors' Conference.
towar<I reje<tlng el-RicNnl M.
Nixon or Hubtrt H. Humphrey.
IN HUMPHREY'S case. there was a
widespread vfew that the nomination
o/ Se. Edwvd M. Ktnnedo< -.Id add
'
the desired new element which would
lend life to the Democretic cause. On
llhe Republican side there was only the
lingering hope ol 90llle governors that
Nixon would falter and never get over
the ftnish line, thu11 plunging the
Republican party into a new dilemma
on cb0011ing Rockefeller or G o v.
Ronald Reagan of California.
Even then the desire for something
wholly new and fresh was left
unsatisfied. It is now realized that
Robert F. Kennedy mtgtlt have filled
that gap, although present views are
ol course colored by ttie tragedy ot his
death.
A SENSITIVE and humane man.
.lohn W. Gardner. cha irman of the
urban coalition and former welfa re
secretary ta Re p u b 1 i ca n , by the
w-ay}, told tbe governors the American
~le shooJd come to expect tNit 1969
Will bring a new burst ol. energy and
oommitment in the solutiori of rreat
problems. But that energy Md com·
mitment bes not yet emerged from the
long and confused struggle for the
presidency, nor is ttie p:omi1e v«y
grut that it will unlesa inspiration
sooa strikes the older leadership.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Now that., the post offlct plans
to close on Saturdays, when will
workin& people bo able to tUe
care ol tbolr pootal budnen?
-K. T. ~
""'" ....... .....,. _.,. ..... "" _,.,., .... "' .. -·--· .... -......... ......., ... Dell'r """·
•
WASHINGTON -Administration
agents, preparing for a session's end
Senate battI.? over withdrawing U.S.
troops from Europe. are maneuvering
to block any pullback and avoid a new
rebuU for President J o b n s o n ' 1
beleaguered foieign policy.
The showdown i1 scheduled on a
withdr-awal proposal by Sen. Stuart
Symington, D-Mo., a member of both
the Senate Armed Services and
Foreigri Relations committees. He
wants to requµ-e return· of all but one
division from the U.S. NATO force.
which presenUy ~ includes t h e
equivalent of six clivbions ..
Symillgton lntanda t. ollor hll plan
as an amendmeilt to the defense ap-
proprNitit.n bill, and early nose-counts
indicate that the final outcome is in
doubt. What Is certain is that more
than half of. ttae Senate would like to
vole for a substantial troop reduction.
MORE THAN RALF or the 100
senators are already committed to a
separate Senate resolution urging that
a "substantial" troop reduction be
made. That 1 esolution is authored by
Senate Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield and has broad bi -partisan
support
Against that imposing show of
strengf.h the administration has been
pressillg a quiet campaign o f
persuasion . Harlan C1eveland, U.S.
ambBSNdor to the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO). began
the missionary work with senators
when he visited here several weeks
ago.
More recently George C. McGhee.
now ambasiiador at large and recently
returned from Germany. has been
pressing the administration's case
against withdrawal. Defense Sec.
Clark Clifford is reported to have
strongly opposed any withdrawal in
private t.alks ,with senators.
MORE THAN 300,IXXl U.S. troops
are stationed in Europe. and their
dependents raise the total U.S. con-
tingent to about 600.000. Symington's
proposal would deny funds for sup-
porting more tha n 50.000 ll"oops after
December 31. 1968.
While Symington is billed as f.he
leader of the present drive for troop
reductions, It is Mansfield who has
pressed the issue over the years. More
than two years ago he got the Senate
Democratic Polley Committee to ap.
prove his resolution Mating the view of
the Senate that troops should be
removed~
MansOeld now heads a SP,eclal
forel~ relations subcommittee on the
U.S. troop commitment which held
hearings earner this year. tn April
Mansfield persuaded Symington NOT
to press tor approval of his withdraw·
al plan AJ an amendment to a pending
defenlle procurement bill.
SYMINGTON IS now confident that
his propotal would he ve been ap-
proved bY; lhll Senate If he had pressed
the tasue at thet time. Opponenfli .-e.
privately, Inclined to agree.
In the impendin1 s ho "'down ,
however, senators oppogina troop
withdrawals: m1.y be able to secure a
rullng that Symington I• tryin& to
write sub1tanttve law into an •I>'
proprlation blU. Under JUCh a ruling,
approvai of the cut-bf;ck PfOl?OSal
would requira a. two-thirds vote of the
1enator1 present.
111 Robert 5, All<•
.... , ... A. Goldlmlll
8]~00:~. '~&
. "" .,.,,...
Get Half, You're
A W ordmaster
If those baby tests about words at1d
"word power'' that appear in some
publiC1Btions are too simple for you ,
I've devised a little test at a somewhat
higher level of literacy. 11 you can get
aa many as half of the foll owing 20
questions, consider y<>ursell a word
master.
1. When someone turns "livid" with
anger, what color does he become?
2. W'hat is the difference between
"discomfort" and "discomfit"?
3. 1f you bed a wife who suffered
from "oniomania," bow would she ex·
hibit it?
4. Where did the word "niggardly''
come from?
5. When you llverlap shingles or
tlles, what is tlhe process caUed ?
t. WHEN FEB. 29 is inserted into
the calendar e.ach Leap Year, what
kind of day is it?
7. Which kind of creatures
"nidificate " every year?
8. What are the original plurals of
"seraph" and ''.cherub," "r;tigma" and
"dogma,' "index" and "appendix"?
9. As ifl tile famous phrase, "What
hath God wrought?", what is the
present tecise of the verb "wrought"?
10. lf "rhinology" is the medical
specialty treating of the nose. what is
''nosology''?
11. ONE OF TODAY'S favorite
vogue-words is "dichotomy"; now
what is the Latin phrase for something
that e1cape1 a dichotomy between two
supposedly exhausUve categories?
12. Everyone knows the common ad4
jectives pertaining to dogs, caC&, and
cows ("canine, feline, and bovine"),
but what are the gerieric adjective•
pertaiiting to the fOUowing : Iambi.
moose, fox, bear, seal, skunk, and
mouse.
13. What kind of law is "Dracooic,'•
what kind ti! speech is "Thrasonical,''
.arid what kind of retort is "Parthian"?
14 . Distinguish between
"perapicuous" and ''perspicacious."
15. Distinguish between ''ingelliou1"
and "ingenuous." ..
16. WHAT IS THE opposite of
''dyspeptic"?
17. Everyone knows about
"Nemesis," the goddess of chastise·
meot and vengeance ; but she was only
the thii-d of a triad, the first two being
"Hamartia" and "Hubris.'" What do
they stand fOT ?
18. Wh y is "Donald Duck" a mis·
nomer?
19. Distinguish among "refr.agable,"
"infrangible," and "refrangible."
20. What i& "deja vu"?
Burdens of Presidency
Jn 1807 Thomas Jefferson said:
"I am tired of an office where I can do
no more good than many others. who
would be glad to be employed in it. To
myseU, personally. it brings nothing
but unceasing drudgery and daily loss
of friends."
Recently we browsed through a
m a s s i v e , three-volume enterprise.
"The American Heritage Pictorial
History o( the Presidents," produced
by the editors of Amer~c a .n
Heritage, third V-Olume of which is
"The American Heritage Hi story of
the Presidency" (boxed, $35 ), the
work of a British student of the
American pageant, Marcus Cuniffe.
The holiday just past seems ap-
propriate to emphasize the fact that
most Presidents have. In one way or
another, thoroughly disliked the job.
according to the tftt of thet:e books
For instance.
DEALING WITH hordes of office
seekers took a great deal of Abraham
Lincoln's ti.ml!!. To a lady petitioning
for a job for a friend, he wrote : "My
dear Madam : The most I can say is
that when the time come&, if it be
made to appear that the appointment
of your friend to the Post Office at
Askaloosa. will be .as s•tlsfactory to
the people there, as would be that of
any other person. he wlll probably
receive Jt; otherwise not." On another
oceulon Lincoln remarked that it wu
not the Civil War that wa1 kf.Uing him.
"but the Pepperton Post Office."
Martin Van Buren r~arked of
Andrew Jackson, his predecessor In
the White Rouse that "the two ha p-
piest da}'1 of his life were those of his
entrance upon the office and of his
1urninder of il" ''
IN ms FOUR YEAR term JIJlltS
K. Polk spent only liX •ttks away
from Washington. "Re works from 10 to 12 hours in eve~ 24." a Wa shington
editor said. Whf! .. ·1e day'1 labors end·
ed. Polk recounte:J them In his diary
and brooded over hi• problems. Near
Ille end of hll term bl explained that
"no President who performs his duty
faithfully and co nscientiously can have
any leisure. If he inb'usts the details .
.. to subordinates constant errors will
occur. I pre I er to supervise the wholt
operations of the government myself •
. • and this makes my duties very
great."
THE IDEA THAT government
should help the people did not find
much support in high places in the
19th Century. In his second Inaugural
Address. Grover Cleveland declared:
"The lessons of paternalism ought to
be unlearned and the better lesson
taught that while people should
patriotically and cheerfully support
their government, Its functions do not
include the support of the people."
President Eisenhower, American.
Heritage reminds us , once said:
"Every gun that Is made, every
warship launched, every rocket flred
signifies, in the final sense, a thl!:ft
from those who hunger and are not
fed .•. The cost or a heavy bomber ii
this : A modern brkk school in more
than 30 cities."
WILLIAM ROGAN
r-""l_li*_ 811 6-f'fle --.
CONFIDENTIAL TO ROWAN
AND MARTIN: By all means do
not ~ome as1oclated wiUI sny
such "Lalllh·ln'' program -the
plot makes very llttll!: sense and
people would just leugb at you.
(I hopt this advi<e Isn 't too late
-I've been out of touch with my
orfiee. The drunu have Mopped.)
I
IWrlte to George far beJp in
making mountains out o f
molehills. BH t problem this
month wins the mole .)
..
•
•
,.
WHEN NOT IN MOTION ·
"HULA HONEYS " WILL BE
PINNING EVERY ADULT
SATURDAY ONLY
• --
fhursd11, July 25, 1'68
.. ...
. . "
JULY 26
10 to 9 SATURDAY JULY 'D
10 to 5.
A. BUYERS PARADISE OF
ENCHANTING VALUES •••
··~"t.,,.,,_Pttr'M1•f"\1 •.-w•a:a1•1
I . LIVE ORCHID DISPLAY
Hl JLA HONEYS
J BREATH TAKING BEAUTIES
GROWING ON OUR MALL
•• ~,.,..., , •••• '"• '>tr''ltloamlll •~-lllilllll
GO NATIVE • • • OUR EMPLOYEES INVITE THE PUBLIC TO
JOIN THE FUN AND FESTIVITIES BY WEARING BRIGHT COLOR·
ED , COOL, COMFORTABLE HAWAIIAN INSPIRED CLOTHING
WHEN ATIENDING •••
'
...... -
-.:=.""
SWINGING AND SWAYING
UNDER SOUTH SEA PALMS
TO POLYNESIAN MUSIC , , •
SAT\JKDAY ONLY
--~~----~---~-~~~---------------------
DAILY ~ILDT %1
"
.,
'
.I
.,..,.·-·~-·---·-·~·-=--~=-=-·-·-----·-·-=-=-=-·-·-·~-~=-.•-•-=-•-•-=-•-•••4'oz=z-•..-zs=z-•-=• ... u ... s-•=,..-=z.,..,...,_,_•-=• ... •-•-•-==•-•-•-·--~--------~ ........ -· ~
U DAILY PILOT
Nixon I ' Could Be Political Comeback of All Time
Think ...
SALE
Think
----. , ..... ......
HAWAIIAN
SIDEii
,,_ Now Yan to ..
Newpari --" * native CalllGrula, -,_
lo • yellow lspl pod. -bis ,_ .. _ .. -lablsl __ ., __ --. .... -. .. ~~cl= Ille_,_, bi< ....
coBd ~ of a
ll<pabbu ~ amninetic& .
FIRST TllY
Bia --.. Joly ..
-Wbell Ille --......... la --· he bed loot Ille l"'""imcJ lo John F . &..-1 by Ul,574
out ., • l<Jbl ., 1111,131.211. It
WU tbt slimmest popular
vote margin ia a nation.al
electioo in 1' ye;rs.
Two yean later, he l06t
the California gubernatorial
race to Democratic Gov.
Edmund G. Brown by •
margin of 2516, 751 out ot.
nearly 6 millioa votes.
That was bis seventh try
for publk office. He bad
1r00 the firlt five : Twice to
the Bouse, cmce to the
Senate, twice to tbe vice
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WESTCLIFF PLAZA
•
=Cf, I I' .ta D. Sis II we. Biil
llOW bl W a "tusttnr ............ ._.
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II 11 ... _JDCft mtllow", _.
palled, cud lwhllbtl --•ldls 11111) ... wit cud ctr ls
toJlispullllo--
pl:n .............. -ll1pd tmage. B • a. DOUftell 1alt new ,....,,s
tial "1 • hlL 1. 1M1rM .. ,...... .... __
.a -1t1w e·rP"-.. ........,, .Nebraska,
o..-.w-.... -~
Nb:ma WM a C-0 ! I 41'11l
at 3.1, • 1m1t« • n, tbe -.,..,....st U.S. -
pntidelll st :II. Ria pnseot
age <Ii 56 comparu wiUI
Rodtef•llu'1 IO, and G<>v.
Nellon A. Rockefeller'• «t,
and G<>v. Ronald Reqa's
56.
STYLE CHANGES
Once known for h i I
•lashine attacb oia Ol>-
pone n ta, NiJ:on no,,
'car<fW!y avoids criticism of
.., Republksn.
His strategy ii lo p1., k
cool and build • program on
isluu: that can win the
HELf"ING HANDS -Giving Richard N°1XOll enthusiastic support in hi s s.C.
ond quest for the presidency are his daagblen Ju 11 e (left) engaged · to the
grandson of former President E!Jenhower, Tricia and his wife Pal
November election. proprieties, Nixon 1 a l d :
He ptam to coodnue enun-"Pat doe!D.'t ha.ve a mink
ciatinc major positions that c o a l But she does have
be considen to be oew ap-a respectable Republican
proacbes. An Important one cloth coal" In 19153 Ni.Ion
bas been a proposal for joined a ~lawyer New
"black capitalism" -get-YOTk firm that was ren.am-
ting free tnterprise into the td Ni.Ion, Mudge, Rose.
ghetto. Guthrie • AJo......ier. and
His present campaign bM began makinc Q)D,OIXI •
... marted departure ,,_ JUI'. Pat -hao a mint prnious ones : tbe whole COit.
lamilJ II in i~ and lbal .......... -~· ". 111![1 ,t!l(·,life."' <!!!pc+talo --.. more ...,..,_ w and _..,....law irac-
NWm and bis v e t e T a• tice and private family cOn-
&ide:kick campaigner. MrL teotment bad to go when the
Thelma (Pat) Ryu N'uoa. o)d political w a r b or s e
~ore, they always m~. •. thought the time, and the
big effart to protect their lit-country. were calling him
tJe girls from l!Olitii;s. . bock to battle.
But DOW, Patricia ls 2!. Ni.Ion fint won national
Julie ii 20 and engaged to be attention in 1947 when, as a
married to ber OWl'I ddetick fr e 1 b m an congresiman
~ a cainpalgJJer, 1"""!! 1r... California, ho pro.
David Eisenhower, • bay duced. evidence that Alger
with a bla'ninc bent for Hiss, a bmer State Depart-
politics and • grin wider ment offidlal who aat behind
tba Grandpa's. Together GD President Rootnelt at a ...,..m ar iD a receptioo
Yatt.a, wu a rmmer adjunct
of the Soviet Ccmmunist undu&f"OUDd. Hill waa con-
Yicted in 1950 of lyinc in de-
nyill( the charge.
RJcbwd Milhous Ni:ron
was born to a worting-class
family at Yorba Linda,
Calif., on Jan. 9, 1913. Both
the NU.om and t b e
.Milloules (iii m o t b e r ' s
-fam i ly) bad mi&raled hire from lreW>d
before the American
Revolution.
H YEAR TRIP
Dick Nil:oa. rose to Navy
I i e utenant commander's
rant and came out m World
War II after ttc.tng two
South Pacific aintrips. In 14
yean after entering polillcs
as a coogreuman be wu
running for president.
D u r i n t Eisenhower's
three lerioul illneUH M
president, Nilon was the
ma at the ready, and
Eisenhower drew up a his-
toric agreement empower-
ing him to auume complete
presidential J)OWer5 if neces-
sary.
One of N ii:o n's
biographers, Earl Maxo, am be wu ''born am-
bitious" wiJb ' • e n e r g y ,
bnim, comage, pit, cun-
ning, per9U8Siftllflll, the
beat for -lillng and
coqtomllline. ~ for
realities, and a rappcrt with
late and luck. . :·
Not long before zil.
nou:ncing his latest can-
didacy, N'llon commented:
...,I coo.sider myse:U a
Theodore Roosevelt
Progrellive. I have a great
heliel in tbe private sector ...
He paused and added: "But
I also bave a ltnlog con·
'1ction that you ha\•e to
move forward. I'll try a
government solution if i t'.li
necessary.•."
-Ille ,_, -qalte ·~ --N"Wll mt I • ~in-. be told
1ep«teis that "Jou Willl'l
.... Nu. 1o klct arwm
.., ......... said be
WGlllll .wr nm -aatn far
aayllllac. Be mooed lo Now
YGrt ii 1111 -lo u 1 .at<llpolities.
Girl Can Find Time to Read
CHICAGO CtJPI ) -Wbn IDd I rot ao m.ad at myself is spending the summer in
Mario <:.-.. -lo col--I .,.mdod h table. Chicago wllh her sister Mn.
lqe tlle'I ....,. llavo lo All« t111t I read 50 000 Lilia Clement<. a doctoral
campl•"' that llbe doesa"t words per :minute wida 'tm candidate at the University
haw ..,... time M do the perwwwl ~stx.'" -.i Ollcago.
. ed ~-• .-...---~ .. -will -SI--
Free Hair Co1ditio1er
Dari1g Aloha Daya
Hove your heir
restyled durln9
this big event.
Our compliment
of • free condl·
tioner wlll meke
you look your bHt.
-11AI I\ fT
PHONE 548-0460
WESTC~IFF PLAZA
Name Imprinted FREE
In Loh of I 00 or More C.rds
of Same Design.
la Ilia tamed ltU
''Checbn" lelevllloa ....
pearance to unrer alleged
campaJga.fund im-
nreq.,~,. ...... ,._.....,... .l'lcnnot 1' c •a 1 e' Clare' boardin school ..
Maria. a petite l>ye•-okl felsc:r cl a. nediDc md s g 111 In WMtcliff Pl1u
from tbe Philippinea, toot a akimmlng co• r • e at .,_a, Wis., next year and 548-7921
•
reading co u r 1 e at Nor1lrftlte';n, said Maria ilii~all~o~pl~a~m~· ~to~atte~od~colle~:g~e ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N o rtbwestern University really • erceptime' .. ID the Uoi!ed States.
tbis tummer md finished dent.
Ille eoune readlltg 56,000 "Marla Is nedilil abcNt
words per mlnDI< wilh 1llO 'l1 times I--tip percent comprebeuion. average per-." M J I I
Tiie course, Marta -.aid, Schale uld. '"nle • .....,.
was mainly "1o b•lp you In person will skim read at
school wort .. so, when she 2,00) wordl per minute 'tdth
reads for pleasure, Maria 70 perceot compl"!btmioa."
doesn't read quile that fasl Ml.ss Scbal:i. aaid Maril
$ave During Aloha Days
NOW IN OPERATION
~ COO!lli @][J1}[3~
Maria said the main thing has a "pbotograpbic mmn·
that is needed to learn to CJCJ" llJd remembers wcrdl
read fast is determination. as &be .ea them OD tbe
"One time I read 40,000 printed page.
wocds per minute with only Maria, who came to tbe
50 percent oompubension U.S. about nine moatbs ago,
Friday & . Saturday, July 26-27
• --PAJFCAXE M"'l"'x~ES"' -.... ~,--..............
2,.;,,111111
~--....
----_ ......... ........... ,...... .. 0-.......
:BiiF
STICX = '1" .. ....... ..._
~--...,--
--1•--------2-•1• -----CUl!Tllill _.,_ _ .. _ _ ........ --•-•1•
Imported Candy Special
12 Varieties
Mt Pound 98c 2nd
POUND
In Westcliff Plaza
OPEN EY.ENINGS & SUNDA y
FREE
,
Treasures from the Sea
Jewels fashioned by nature's own magic
in the wolus of the blue Pacific
Peorll of <Tory nriety, color and pri~. lnclu&g
the -South Sea Pearls -
Colorful coral in Imaginative new dellps Oil
dllplay Ii the W'81clifl Slore esp<dally lor Aloha
l>QL
• CHARLES H. BARR
----all. 111 Nri1i1 A-. --<>IS.
On Fine
BRAS & GIRDLES
LINGERIE
~t \
\
'
Westcliff
Plaza
•
Henson
Kickernick ONCE-A-YEAR
Buy-3-at-1-Time
DIVIDEND Sole
3 PAIR 425
Veta's
llTIMAn A"Alll --.... ,_ ---
t
Phone
642-1197
-------'-----~-----------~----------~~-------... ----------------·------
I
•
• ~ ... ---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ , ~ --·-~ ... ..---..-,.,,. •• ,.~•· •'<''•""~.,•~·•''' r·~· ,,,,.,. " ,,~, ...... .,, ..... ,.
---• ML MUM
UC Saving Money
'
Tnu..i.,, J..fJ 25, 1968 DAILY '!LDT J3
' Campuses Make Maximum Use of Funds
0
ll Ii
,
ii
BERKELEY -T h e reslllted in 0 more equoi Mid
economy drive at t b e efficient workload for cam·
Univers.ity of California con-pus mailmen.
tinues at full force, with
several hundred savings IRVINE
repoM:ed on the nine cam-1'be Jn&tallatlon ot. three
puses dtiribg the first three "magic cali" telephone at·
mootbl ol 191111. tachmeota in the purchasing
(JC PrOsldent Cllarles J. department has aboorbed in·
Hitch h11 stated that the creased work.load. T h e
economy effort, begun last "magic call" holds lCKXl
Octobec, la port of a COO· phone oumbera alJll dials
ti.nuing campaign to make automatically &lier a btltton
maximum use of available is pushed.
funda:, while at the same Based o n experience.
"'ll~H time avoiding damage to tile Irvine bu been able to give
1 quality of education. the pecutive architects a
Men in Service
Airman David J, Rivera,
son ol Mr. and Mrs. Henry
River-a of 34900 Vaile Road,
San Juan Capistrano, bas
completed basic training at
Lackland AFB, re:i .. He b;as
been assigned to ~ Air
~e Tedm.icaJ. Training
Center, Chanute AFB, JU.
fot' specialized schooling as
an aircraft equipment
repairman. Airman Rivera
is a gradu~te . of San qemente Higti School, 1967.
• BARSRA 6TFIEISANO
• S H ECKY GREENE
•MITZI GAYNOR
WHl~ THE 8"1GHTEST $TARS SHIN~
ED AMES
Through August 5
Coming August 6
MERY GRIFFIN
_,..,,,,1,,~~
GOLF PRIVILEGES
Paradise Valley C.C.-Courtesy Transportation
FOR HOTl!!L lltl!!91!!AV ... T10NS PHONl!VOU R TRA.VEL AG l!!NT
Th(e UC president is en· power demand factor for
forchig s t r I c t budgetary tranaformers. Th1s b a s
contl"ols, placing greater reeulted in • one-time cost
emphasis on program plrln-aaving1 for two bquildings of
lllog and anal)'6is a n d approximately f!0,000. This
e m p l o y 1 n g advanced will result in future savings
business m a n a g e m e n t of $5,00> each fOr major
techniques. buildings. In addition, ttiree
The following are a few electrical services b a v e
ex&1npJes of e c o n o m y been combined to create a
measures reported by tbe more f .a v o r ab I e rate
campuses to Hitch's ·head-. schedule, s av 1 n g ap-
quarters during the fll'st proximately $1,800 per year.
quarte" LOS ANGELES
BERKELEY The environmenial health
Betttt s w i m m i n g con-and safety department now
ditions as well as significant routinely collects unneeded
cost savings will result from isotopes and transfers them
conversion to a new method to other campus users.
oC water treatment for cam· Estimated savings are ap-
pus swimming pools. The proximately $2,000 a year.
addition of cyanuric acid to In the relsdence halls, by
the water will allow each p u r ch as in g a used
pool to be converted to a upholstering machine for
closed circulation system $450, and sending a main-
witb no further water loss tenance m a n to an
through clftnlng. W a t e r upholstering achoo}, net sav-
quality wil be greatly im· inga ol. '2,313 for the quarter
pt"Oved. while the chlorine were realized. In phy&ical
content will be reduced 90 plant aervices, $3,600 a-year
percent. Savings of '15,CKXl ~ been saved by hiring a
annually are estimated with skilled glazer instead of con-
ttie conversion of all pools to trac~g for g 1 a z J n g
this system. services.
Environmental radiation The D e p a r t m e n t of
sampling has been speeded Chemistry has automated
up through a machine which its mertury cleaning ;nd
reads the samples and dis·tillation device to tn-
r e c or d s meas..ements crease efficiency and save
automaticelly. This device approximately $20,000 a
saves 1,400 man-hours per year.
year. Annual savings of RIVERSIDE $1,800 are being realized by
providing temporary off.
campus buildings with elee·
"Irie power from the main
campus system.
DAVIS
The maJI division has con·
solidated and reduced the
number of stops. This has
I
The separation of copper,
tin, lead, iron and sheet
metal scrap _permitted bid·
ding on individual materials.
A saving of aboot $2,490 was"
realized. The saving poten-
tial is expected to increase.
Increased efficiency was
realized. in experimental
\ '\. '
DURING SIDEWALK
SALE FRI. & SAT. JULY
26-27
Ladies Sandqls
Values
To $9.00 $)88
MEN'S SHOES
Values
To $28.95
Flats & Casuals
Values
To $14.00
$190 TO $690
Ladies Keels
And Red Bal Casuals
Values
To $7.00
Please All Sales Final---No Ex.hang~ or Refunds
1052 Irvine
Weskllff Pim
Newport leldl
Shop Thmdly
EYeaila TIU 9
Phone 5"-1614
•
1ucar beet production
ttlrough berblcides ,
wecta1oa. plantings a n d
labor savings . A new system
of nursery tree plantings
and JWO(luctlon in citrus
re5ea.rcb resulted in annual
savings ol flS,420.
SANTA BARBARA
In conjun<tlon with in·
stallation of a new dlallng
telephone s y s t e m , un·
~11ary switchl)oards, ex-
tensions , and tran&ler equiir
ment have been removed,
with a resulting $44,000 an-
nual savings. -·
The I.Me of salvaged parts
and otudent and staff labor
have lead to the fabrication
ol two chemical laboratory
~actors saving a total ot
$1,000.
. The residence hall food
swvice management staff
was• reorganized to perm.it
student managers to usume
greater responsibilities over
part time student help, thus
releasing an estimated
fl0,000 anoually in stall
time.
The faculty a.nd students
of the art department now
reeonstl'U<X several kilns
rather than purcha s e
prefabricated ones. This ls a
recurrent savings as kilns
are rebuilt every two to four
years. Annual savings or
$2 ,267 were realized for
three kilns.
The use of a central pool
,---
-J.. -I -J.) -I
• •
I 044 Irvine
Westcli fl Plozo
Phone 548-8365
BonkAmericord • Moster C~orge • roy·l!·W•y• of audio-visual equipment
has resulted in an estimated
annual saVings of over
'7,500. ==~==================!
I
2 BIG DAYS
FRI. & SAT.
JULY 26-27
ac c er -S on y.
24 pc. kit with 11ndp1~
putty knife, etc. Was 24.99 Now
7!4 '' POWER SAW Block & Docker u. l 30.2.
With carrying case.
3only-W11 $34.99 Now
2 SPEED DRILL Black &. Decker U-206. 2 only;
Doluxo-2250 to 1600
R.P.M. Was 18.88 -Now
ASST. BLACK & DECKER TOOLS at CLOSE·OUT
PRICES
CLOSE our ON [~~~~TIRE STANLEY QUALITY POWER
TOOLS. VALUES ON
ALL IN STOCK. SAVE $'S
BATTERIES RAY.0-VAC TRANSISTOR
9 VOLT. REG. 69< -SALE
SIMONIZE ~~:R WAX WAS $1.88
SALE
DELTA FAUCETS ~~G~l~.88 -SALE
RABBIT EARS SALE
DECORATING KITS DECOUPAGE
REG. 7.95
TWIN SHELF & TOWEL BAR FESCO WICKER DESIGN. REG. 2.99
PAINT GOOFS VALUES
TO $9,50
HAVOLINE ·MOTOR ·01L 20 w1• 30Wt.
PLASTIC RAIN COATS SALE
SPRAY PAINT & MASKING TAPE ~~~E
STRUCTO BAR-8-QUE RIG •
• 54.91
39!.
10~ ..
ORTH. 0 LAWN FERTILIZER
AND SPREADER
RIG. $9.90 '
S~r, ... $5.95 llOTH $]90
Fortlllw for 2500 oq• It., R,. $3.95 l'OR
EASY-Off OVEN ·CLEANER ' '
ROLL~EZE LAWN EDGERS
EASY TO USE
SPRAY CAN, REG. $1.H
llEG. $2.99
SALE Gins GIFTS Gins OUR GOOFS -SOMI SHOP WORN •
' --""'.' -ALL AT LOW, LOW PRICES
! ,t
• "3\'-.,"'-.....""" ..... -.... -.-................. ~·
" GAILY PILOT TbUrsd.lJ, JulJ 25, 1'168
Bandieapped Cheers a Budd11
Mary McGrath of Christchurch, New Zealand de--
lights Tom Yuk Wo, 8, of Los Angele& as she at·
tempts to thwnb a .ride from her wheelchair during
visit to Orthopedic Hospital in Los Angeles. Miss
McGra th, confined to a wheelchair since childhood
as result of rare bolie disease, has traveled world
alone despite handicap, authored.· a book and con-
stanUy tries to cheer her fellow handicapped.
Toy Festival Set
For Fashion Island
Thi PutOOa 1., 1 a n d c.nter can be rMCbed from
llerchanU A11ocl1Uoa will Pacillc Oout Hlpway and
feattae Mattel .ToJ FesU.val connecting TOadl , from
Friday and Saturday, In MacArthur Boulevard, Jam·
SUge-COurt oo the mall at boret and San Joaquin Hllla
Fublon Island ID Ne,:,Port Road. All 11<n1 open Fri·
Cea/or. day and Moodar even1D10.
A doaen or more Mattel Fr~ park.in& ia pftivtded tor
representatives will be on. _5.;.,ooo __ •_or_•_· -----
hand to demonstrate the'~---------,ll latest ID Malle! toys and"'
talldng dolls anc1 an1ma11. FIRST, FAST
Free tickets will be given w.. t.11• .,.. nm .n.t tfi•
away at the center for free Md I• *•' ••w•t Ctl•ck It
prizes to be drawn on Satur-e11t, It'• "''~ ... ..,.. • day att.ernoaa. DAILY PILOT.
Fub!oa lllaod ID Newportr----~----···
I See by Today· s
Want Ads
e A terri& """"""""' to. "bd:,_..""'~ a marl;ted 9dpper who Woukl · Ulle m live In T•-
blti, to partidf*le in •
uJUng budneta. Mlllt be
~ .,. -.... llil'
big vnai!:ll. e A "real steal"! 21' Zenith
Console T.V. with remote
control, excellent condi-
tioo can be your'a for a
very low price.
• You can take 1"80m to
learn Sell HYJ)bOlil. Vecy
buertsting!
No Love Now • Ill Hashhury
e H ;;oo haven't Ume to do
due atrenuou.a j 0 b s
around the yard; call •
man in tM bllllne• ot
l\'eediq, haulina: a D d ............. e A~ CDGch and cbllr,
CIOCIO cob', Cttllt fcr tbe
trailer owner,• lood bu)t.
' .
Firebomb, Nighutick Replace Flower Children
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The firebomb and nightstick
have displaced the daffodil
in t h e Halgbt-Ashbury
Pistrict, where b j p p t e
flower children used to be
the attraction.
They used to say "Haight
ls Love" and call the street
"Peace Street." A tourist
might have a flower shoved
into his band. They were
plenty weird, the flower
kids, but they wouldn't hw1
you.
Today. peaceful folk steer
clear of the neighborhood
were the indolent, bead •
jangling, love • spouting h.ip-
pies have been sboved aside
by hood&, footpads, thugs
and vandais.
Tbe merchants of Haig:ht-
Ashbury -« "hashbury"
Valley Girl
At Meeting
-see the spectre of vacated
shops, padlocks, boarded
windows a wasteland once a
lively, colorful and pro-
fitable area.
ONE SOLUTION
One solution has been
found by Robert Bank, for
12 years OP£rator Of a
jewelry store at Clayton and
HaJght. His windows were
smashed Thursday.
"I'm getting out," he said.
"I've had enough."
Bemard Romano, owner
of Pacific Drugs at 1530
llairh~ said:
"Last ye<ir you could
negoUate with the hippies.
They were in control. Now,
there are rebels. I don't see
any leadership. There are
agitators .•• winos , •. drug
pushers.
"The flower children are
gone," be said, adding,
"they weren't so bad." His
place has not been damag-
ed, he said.
Said Art Free, partner in
the Free~Minetti Sporting
Goods Store at 1525 Haight,
"The solution is aimple, but
a 7 p.m. curfew on. I've
come to the conclusion that
if you get people oll the
street, the.)' can't cause
dama-ge.
DESTRUCI'ION
department store at the cor· said in a joint statement:
ner of Haight and Aahbury "here is no question the
streetl. situation is serJous, but
"We have 15 policemen police have been acting
around at 4 p.m., when firmly. The area is being
there is no trouble, and not wliced all the time.
a one in sight when trouble They pointed out that 22
atarts." policemen have been bUrt in
The hippies are not to rock·tilrowing and assorted
blame for the violence, he assaultl in the outbreds
said, but "hods who are pos-this week.
Ing as hippies. There are "Police have quickly and
still some hippies around. efficiently cleared t h e
but they do not participate." streeb. Hundreds of police
have been committed to the ~D TRASH area. We are not planning
It was reported that on any curfew."
Thursday, a few hippies And finally, they agretd
went out onto Haight Street with the consensus that
and cleared it of burled "there are no f I o w e r
trash. They swept it clean children left in the Haigbt-
and left it a model of what a A.!hbury."
clean street should be. . -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
A few hours later the II
street wa1 a me1s again.
Sholl were fired. Officers
were assaulted. A woman
was caught on a rooftop
trying to jam .the police
rad.Jo b a n d . Forty-eight.
persons were arrested.
That was the third
straight night of trouble in
Ha.shbury.
Mayor Joseph Alioto and
Police Ch.ief Thoma'll Cahill
Think
SALE
U11
Your
Bink·
ArMrl·
cord
FRI. & SAT., JULY 26-27
DRASTIC
REDUCTIONS
ON REGULAR
MERCHANDISE
AS MUCH AS
50'f0 off
i
011~.0flltft ...
642. 5262
WESTCLll'F PLAZA
W1
Welcome
Mister
Cher ..
Accts.
Fountain Va 11 e y High
School senior Karen Otsuka,
16, represented the Orange
County Chapter of the Na-
tional Foundation March of
Dimes at the National
,. oung Adult Conferen~ on
Birth Defects this week at
Brigham Young University,
P rovo, Utah.
Miss Otsuka, the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ray otsuka
bas served as president of
the Girls Honor Service
Club and has been active in
the Pep Club, C 1 a ss
Councils. Estates General
and the Spanish Club .
"The one's cau,,ing the
destruction are y o u n g
Negroes. Many have seen
this. They come in from
outside the area. this must
be controlled."
State Seeking
Fairview Bids
The California Office of~~~~~~~~~~~==================~ll
Also attending the con·
ference will be Mr s.
Norman E. Watson of
Council of Vo I u n te e r
chairman of the Oelifornia
Council of Voluntee r
Advisors for the National
Foundation.
Free, who said hia win-
dows have been smashed
three times, said his glass.
burglary and fire inswance
have been canceled."
Free was critical of the ci·
ty administration fOr not
taking stronger measures to
control the situation.
Also critical of the city ad-
ministration, and police, was
John Mulready, owner of a
Architecture and Construe·
tion, Department of General
Serviett, is calling for bids
on work at Fairview State
Hospital in Costa Mes11.
The repainting of five
ward buildings and ~Po
p l icatio n of acoustical
plaster in one ward building
at an approximate cost of
128,000 is to be bid upon.
Bids will be opened in Los
Angeles on August 7.
Aloha Days
SIDEWALK SALE SPECIALS
ISLAND FAVORITES
PINEAPPLE 01 PAPAYA
YOUR
CHOKf
Xarl:et
cJlasl:et
l'lllCIS '''ICTIVI "llDAY,
JULY 261 SATURDAY, JULY 27
WDTCLlf, l'LAXA STOU ONLY
t
,
'
·coCOANUTS
5 FOR $1
BANANAS
FIRM, Rll'E
TIOPICAL 10~
••
I Uje
\Jp To 50Cfo Off
Selected
' • Dresses • Blouses • Accessories
• Capris • Bathing Suits • Skirts
I
•.
look at
These Birdies
'
••• You11 See
Tiie Champions
'
LEE PAYNE, Dally Piiot chief photographer,
p1rMtme 1uthor ·incl coll• hdtructor, 1irna tM
Dilly Pllot11 motor-driven HQuence camera thlt
can lhoot 11 many 11 thrff pictvret per second.
lt'1 the llmt addition to 1n anenal of Cbllf'M
ho uoed i. shoot -treat pictures In 1967-
lftcludl .. -group of Im ahoh whkh Olrnod
him the press club's ''Photogr1ph•r of the v....-
1ward, from the Orange County Preu Club.
RICHARD KOEHLER la tho Dolly Piiot 11111 pt.
totri'ph1r known in the trade a~ "Code 3 Koeh-
ler." His specialties are crime ind c1tastrophe
and hfl"t one of the best ''9r1b shot" men in
Southem Californl1. But he proved his versatility
lest year by shooting a layout of five pictures of
• little 9lrl on 1 set of swinging rln91 which won
•IM tlte ,.... cmm.•1 "Int Plioto Serles" award.
He also got the club's 1181st Sports Photo" award
for 1 lootb1ll 1ctlon ohot.
LYLE HAIGH Is the man you almost never ...
at the D1ily Piiot. H1"1 our darkroom f1chnlcl1n.
A former protege of the late, gr11t William Mor-
ten"" ind operator of his own studio in Laguna
leech. where he speclalized In portr1Jt photo-
graphy ind restoration copies, this h: a mister
craftsmen who knows his butlnen. He printed the
priu-wlnnlng negatives brought blck by the
ch1mpion photographers with whom he workt.
7e,090 Shots Last Year
That's how many pictures
these specialists and others on
the staff shot during 1967.
Only 11 of those shots were
prize.winners, ~ one out of
6.371.08. But iJ you think
that's something, consider
that only about 6,000 of the
remaining 70,079 even made
the paper. You just "look at
the birdie" and let these guys
worry about the pressure •••
Enjoy Prize-winning
Views of The News in The
DAILY PILOT
•
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(
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!
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i
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F
I
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D • • • ' • N • • H • ,,
~ N • •
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"
••• -:o •
.:~""
Thur""1, Ju11 25, 1968 DAILY PILOT H ..
Now, a Few Pointers From Confucius Himself
NEW YORK (UPI) -It just so hap-
pens Casey Stengel does have a word
or two on the real vanistu.nc American
-the .300 hitter.
"Well, I'll tell ya," began the chip-
per vice president of the Mets who is
here for their Old Timers' Game this
Saturday and plans to celebrate his
"nth birthday three days after that,
"It'd.be the biggest crime in the world
if they changed the game just because
of what's happening.
"This ain't nottdn' to get in any kin·
de panir over. Once every 10 years the
NaUonal League will come up with an
amazlng pit<:blng staff. Then tbe
American League wW have the best
staff. But trus is the first· time I've
seen both leagues have such good
pitching.
"Look at Cleveland. Where do you
think they'd be without their Pitching!
Then look at some of the clubs in our
league. Los Angeles, St. Louis and
Houston. And don't forget us. The
Mets.
"No qUNUon Dllr pltcblng II amasln1 ..
l can't get over our pitchers. They
throw the ball over the plate aod lun·
me tell you when they throw the ball,
it jumps. I thlnk it's wonderful tbat
pitchers like we got have tbe ·control
they do at their ·age. Always
remember this: as brilliant and bright
as a pitcher might be, he's nuthio if
the balJ doesn't go over the plate.11
Yeah, but what about the hitters and
the hole ttiey've dug themselves into?
"I'm comin' to that/' said Casey.
"Some or these young fellas will im·
prove later on. They'll commence
usln' heavier bats."
Is that the whole trouble? Lighter
bats?
"The shape of the bats, too," $8.id
Stengel.
Dld he mean the hitters should use
heavier bats or ones with thicker
haildles?
"\Vell it stands to reason tha:t when
you hit a ball with a beavief blil it'll go
furthet. What do they say that fella in
Philadelphia (Riehle Allen} uses?"
A 42-ouncer was the reply.
"See tbat," said Casey. "I'll tell ya
one thing about him. They ain't play.in'
him for bis fielding. I'll tell you
another thing about hlm also. He can
hit th•;t ball better than most other
QI.en.'' . ,
How heavy a bat did he ~e during
his own playing days?
"I changed it from year to year," he
said. "At the eod 1 went to a lighter
SAN FRANCISCO PITCHER GAYLORD PERRY CAN'T QUITE REACH THIS BUNT OFF THI; BAT OF CUBS' DON KESSINGER AT CANDLESTICK PARK ON WEDNESDAY
Saints' Fears ·Tabs Rams
By EARL GUSTKEY
ot t1M Dally l'llel Stiff
SAN DlEGO -Fearless Tom
Fears, the former Los Angeles Ram
end who now coaches the New Orleans
Saints, predicted Wednesday that the
Rams would wind up in the SUper
Bowl this coming season.
Fears thus indicated that the Rams
-the team his Saints play at Anaheim
Stadium next Thursday night -are
about to boot Green Bay off the NFL's
throne.
"There's just going to be too much
pressure on the Packers this year,"
Fears told Southland writers at his
club's training compound at Cal
Western University in San Diego.
"This would be four straight for
them and I just don't see how tt.ey can
do it."
Here's how Fears sees this year's
four NFL conference races:
COASTAL -Rams, Baltimore, San
Francisco, Atlanta.
CENTRAL -Green Bay, Chicago,
Detroit, Minnesota.
CENTURY -Cleveland, St. Louis,
Pittsburgh, New Orleans.
" •
CAPITOL -Dallas, New Y or k,
Philadelphia, Washington.
Fears predicted the Rams ·would
wind up beating Dallas in the NFL
championship game and then meet the
AFL king in Miami next January.
Fears prefaced his flatter ing
remarks about the Rams by praising
the team's quarterback, Rom an
Gabriel. He was asked if'Gabe was on
the verge of greatness.
"On the verge of it? He's there now.
l{e has the lowest intei'ception percen-
tage of any NFL quarterback last year
and when you have a quarterback who
• , .... r"t ' ..
Fo.r Hit Batsmen (Blush)
Drysdale
LO S ANGELES (AP) -Don
Drysdale, owner of an impressive ma
jor league record for h11rling 58 con·
secutive scoreless innings earlier this
year, now is approaching a National
League mark he'd rather not reach -
the record for hit batsmen.
Two bit batters in e. row cost the
Nearing
veteran right-hander a run Wednesday
nighf and enabled Don Wilson and the
Houston Astros to beat the Dodgers 1·
0.
Drysdale, owner of an impressive ma.
innings, raismg his career total to 151
and puUing him only one shy of the.
league record set 60 years ago by the
Twins Romp, 12·1
Humiliated Angels Set
For Short Home Stand
MINNEAPOLIS · ST. PAUL (AP)-
Oalifornia Angel Manage;: Bill Rigney
walked dejectedly over to his locker
after the game, leaned against it and
spilled a paper cup of ice water into
his locker.
As he watched the Ice water spilling
A,,.el si.te
J111v ,, Anoels VI Chk l'° 7:$.5 11.m. KMPC 1710)
J 11l1' 21 .-.noeh l'I Chia'° 7:$.5 11.m. KMPC 11101 July 21 AlllNI• ¥1 Chk"° 12:$5 11-""· !CMPC ('111 July 2' MllPll VI MIMl!SOll 7:JJ 11.m. KMP'C 1'10)
J11ll' 31 An9l!l11I01-. f2) J:llp.m. KMPC (1101
into his street shoes, he sighed:
"That's just the kind of night it was."
And for hi! Angels It was as Min·
nesota's Injury-battered Twins sud·
denly got well Wednesday night, born·
bing Uve Angel pitchers for a &eason·
high 20 hits and a 12·1 victory.
The Angels return home to face the
White Sox at Anaheim Stadium Friday.
* * * CALl,O•NIA MINM•SOTA .. , •1111 .,,.""
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night. The Angels have only four l'lome
games before hitting the road again,
It gave the Twins a split of the four.
game series with the Angels as both
teams take today off. And it gave both
teams identical 47-50 records.
But the triumph may have cost the
home team the services ol outfielder
Tony Oliva, snort.stop Rick Renick and
also handyman Cesar Tovar for
several days.
Oliva pulled a hamstring muscle,
Renick came up with a back strain
and Tovar left the lineup with a back
bruise.
The Angels got their run on a ninth
inning double by Don Mincher after a
one-out single by Roger Repoi.
The Angels could only get six
. safeties off De311 Chance, 9-9, in the
game. The Californians had gotten 40
nits in their last four games.·
But the sensational hitting of
newcomer Aurelio Rodriguez, 2-for-4,
continued. '
In bJs last five games, the liWe third
baseman has pounded out 13 hit& In his
last 20 at bats including three doubles
and five runs batted in. He hu a
seven-game hitting streak going and
has raised his average to a team·
leading .25 from w e I I below .200 a
month ago.
.. "He's hitting eviery ball on tfle
nose," said Rigney. "Even when hie
goes out."
Bill Harrielson, a right-hander from
Bakersfield, has been purcbued by
the Angela to fill tbe vacancy created
by Army-bound pitcher Clyde Wright.
HUTelsoo, 23, -. pltchlna: for the
Seattle Angels of tile Pacific Coast
League when notified of the purchase
Wednesday. He compiled a record o[
4-3 In tile PCL.
Record
Dodgers' "Iron Man" Joe McGinnity.
''I wasn't throwing at anyone -
those pitcbes just got away from me,"
Drysdale said after suffering his
seventh loss against 12 victories.
He lost the game in the filth inn·
ing after Denis Menke and Bob
Aspromonte singled.
Drysdale hit Ron Brand with a
pitch, loading the bases, then hit
Wilson to force in the only run.
"Both Brand and Wilson crowd the
plate and neither pitch was very much
inside,'1 Drysdale sighed. ,.
The 32-year-0ld veter.an C()mbined
with Don Sutton to hurl a five-hitter
but they rouldn't match Wilson.
The 23-year-0ld Houston righ t ..
Dodger Slate
July. Dodtlrl 11 C~IQQO ll:Ua.m. ICFI (6-«l}
Jull' f7 Oodll'el"I at Clllc&llO 11 :JG I .Ill. KFI cun
Juty 21 OoclM1's 11 Chic"° !2) lO::ZS 1.m. ICFI l"°I
J111., 79 DocfDarl 11 Houilon 5;1$ ~.m. l<FI (6'0)
July 30 [)od91rs1I ~Ion 4:5511.m. KFI ("'°)
hander allowed only three hits and
retired the last 16 Dodgers in suc·
cession to gain his eighth victory
against U defeats.
The Dodgers have managed only
five runs in Drysdale's seven defeats
this season and Qi~y scored only 15 in
his 16 losses last year.
"It's a shame he had to lose."
Dodger Manager Waiter Alston said.
"Drysdale l'lad as good stuff as he has
had any time this year."
Drysdale was not a complete loser
Wednesday. Honey Bern, a horse he
owns with gOlier Bob Rosburg, won
the $3~ Gl"9nte Purse at the Santa
Rosa, Calli., Fair.
And the Pitcher is doing better than
the runner on the record. The victory
was Honey Bern's first in nine starts
tilis year.
The last Dodger basenmntr was
Bob Bailey, who singled with two out
in the fourth iming and atole second,
the farthest any Dodger got. Wilson
got Jorn Fairly to groond to shortstop
to aliOe the tlnat.
NOUITOll 1.ol AJtRLll
• r 111 1111 •' r 1111•11 WlllOl'I, If 4 o I I W.Dlvl"' d • o t T-• 4 1tlG_.,11111,!f4t1
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for Super Bowl
doesn't throw interception! you 've got
something."
Fears, a refreshingly candid type,
spoke of two other Southern Califor·
nians familiar to Southland "sports
followers: 0. J. Simpson and Gary
Be ban.
"O.J. may be the best who ever
came down "the pike. I'll never forget
him in that UCLA game last year.
UCLA kept hitting him harder, harder,
harder and he seemed to keep getting
stronger, stronger, stronger. Finally,
they just seemed to wilt and he killed
'em. He's a tremendous back."
On Behan: "Behan is a 'game
player.' He's definitely going to be a
pro star. He looked terrible in practice
before that that all·star game in
Atlanta but he won it. He's been a win·
ner all l'lis life. He reminds be. a lot o[
Bobby Layn<."
These are days when Fears would
rather discuss other topics than his
own team.
"We've got so many guys hurt we
can hardly practice. we ha\!e 16 guys
who can't practice -we never had
ball that many al any one time last
year."
~'""~
I
SAINTED IRUIN -Bill Kilmer, former UCLA football hero, will
be the atarting quarterback for the New Orleus Saints against the
Rams at Anaheim Stadium next Thursday night. Kilmer was once an
Eastern Conference football-basketball atar at Citrus JC.
. "·. ,· ... ~-
bat, but I swung a heavy one ~--'
long time." • 1o!
Cosey waa in Cood voice and Gw.
was good reuon. He quit smotlna 1aat
November and clrinklnl lal Jan.\: lie
feels fine now. ..~ ..
"He enjoys Ufe,'' said hit ~
Edna. "He stuck to Ilia diot and ~
ed himself ao well !Ml tbe doc141'')jjt
he's perfect now. The doctor '1lo l~I
he can have an occasional *'8ko
Casey doesn't know It yet. I'm &oi.DJ•to
tell him, though."
Sports
Clipped :.'.
" " .
Shorf: ...
•• ....... .._ .. AP/UPI ..
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -John'9r1',
former head basketball ooaeb. at ~
University or Massachusetts, :'W••
named head ' coach at Mlcru'gii.Q
Wednesday , succeeding Dave Str~.
Strack resigned Tuesday after eijht
aeuons as head coach to UNI.Pl•
duties of the newly created poslumt' of
business manager of athletics. .1• ' ... ... -· .
PORTHCAWL, Wales -JolO Llifn
u-d a vktory llr la Ida ~
l'M• after ltoppbig Heward "Wlaii11i1
of Wales ud wbmlal a Ran e! ~
worlil leallterwelf]lt ..... , ..._
ploablp.
Tbe 25-year-olil c---. npier,
who now llalla !nm MUrlil, ~
1topped Wbuton la z,ez of Ibo ·-roud w-., 1111111 ...,..., u,-
.•t Coney Beacb Opea Alr &ta..._
Referee Harry GA.. •lfl:'t.. K
because .r a W art tver !1
left eye. . . ... ... ... • • .:·~ HAVERFORD, Pa. -Jim McMl!l)!I
scrambled. to one of the big vlcl:~
of h i s late • blooming tennis ·
Wednesday, defeating top-seeded b
Hewiil of South Africa 7-6, 6-4 In llie
69th annual Pennsylvmia Ll'W'D ''M.:.
nis Championships.
Len Sehlos• ol Baltimore, pblylnf II
few courts away at .ancient dwloft
Cricket Club, stunned aeeond·sMded.
t'harlie Pasarell of Puerto Rico U: a..
3, 6-2. Seblo6S said be ....i ll lo'lri •
&ister. · 1 ... ... ... •• i ·· .
CHICAGO -Chicago Wblle '~
Manarer Al Lopez, wbo ude~ ~mer1e.11ey surgery for 1ppc1dltQ
Tuesday al&bt, was ta "'very Sood. ~
dldtlon" la Mercy Hoapllal M
neaday. . .. ··
Dr. WIWam Allen 11ld IApn bad
.,eat a very food nlJht, w11 rellllfl
comfortably aad 0 tbere were DO cam"
pUcatlona." · : ... ......
CASTRO VALLEY, Calif. J.,.;i
McArthur, 17-yeor-old Santa Ciera;
Calif., swimmer, ha.s set an American
junior women's record for three milu
in the Amateur Athletic Unioa Na·
tloaal Age Group ()pg Water awn.
piooshlps on the quarter-mile CUl!,CU.
yon Reservoir. ,
Her time Wednesday wu one hour.
five minates &Dd $2.5 stcandr, beaUn&
Ille 1966 mark of 1:119,21.9 by Roliln
JobnJoo of tbe Nortll Virginia ~
Club. ~ ... ...
MARYVILLE, Te-. -D a.v'l d
Peanoa ud llleUN PollJ wlll.M
,..ting -11111 NAllCAR >lctorif. o1 Ibo year loatpl bi Ibo 1-8""111
IMI aloct cor race al Smtl<J lllMMlla
Raceway.
Peanoa, • veteraa racer frtm.
S..r1an1>ar1, s.c., fllarea ......
plenly of compell-from PtCIJ.i R*.lemu, N.C., plloC _.. ~ .
....U.'1 Emt Tew ... -..,.. •all-mile ..... lrlld. , •• ,
CdM POLOISTS ....
... : ...
MEET MEXICANS ::: ..
'! .••
The Corona dei Mar S w t m "'Cbab
wab!r polo juggemaul will ielt' llio
Mexican National Water Polo t H ·ln
tonigbt al UC Irvine In an ellblblllon
bottle.
Opening competition will start lltt.
Leading lbe Corona del Mar:-
lingenl ls Fll'tlle MU&imlno, ~
earlier to Ir)' oul for the U.S. 0.
Team. , • ,·
other .blg 1111111 for the bolia -. Pa!
McClellan, former CIF pia,yer or,..,.
yeor from Conllll del Mar HIP. aad
Mike ?ttartln. '".. •
AD lbree are cm•entlJ Ill UC ...U.
under CG9C:b Ed Newluld. """ ~
t ' '"•.!
' 'f',
• •' .. ' ~ .. :-: ... ,
I
I I ·
I
~ .. ......... ~ .... ~ ................ ..,,..,,., ..... :""'~ . ..,""!'""' ... ~""'""!"""" ...................................................................................................................... ~
%8 DAILY PILOT
---_,
~ .. ·c • Crowd in Excess ·of 50~000 Ex pected
,North-South
2t"1A
•i> ByEARLGUSTKEY
6f .. DMIY' "'"" a•
LOS ANGELES -Came
, j.roclai. •• predicting a
~ In ....... ol 50,000
'liltlb IChool football too a t
: ftie CcUseum tonlgbt for the
..,17.tb aMual Shrine North· Sliith foolboll clank:.
·: One of the n• tlon' 1
'premier high ICbool all-star i events, the game pits the
\iou tstandlng Ir ad u ate d ~~seniors from Nor t hern
~California again.I( Soutllorn
~ ~ornia'a fiDelt.
,
i Monarchs,
• • !Tritons .,
l
tDrop Out 1 .:.,
J \t:ater Del and S a n . -· :'•Clemente dropped out of the t Costa M e s a Recreation
,. ?basketball tournament a t
~UC Irvine Wednesday night
~af!er _suffering defeat. at
g the bands of Troy and
~Buena Park.
~ ; Me~ Oei, despite tile JS.
if!*>int nigt>t of Ralitl Cban-~&oi, fell to Troy, '1M6.
~ : And, Sao Clemente went
~OOwn to Buena Parle in the
•!lnal period, 66-57. The ~ tritons had led Buena Park Z f>i.ng into the last quart.er,
The South coadi Is Sanu
Ana'• Tom &aldwln, who
has just completed 11 daya
ol workouts at UCLA. The
North ouUK, under co-head
coaches Forrest K le i n
(Alameda) and Bruno
Pellegrini (Vallejo) have
been quartered at USC.
Both squadt have emers·
ed from their tl'•lnin g
periods without serious in·
jury.
And botll _,. to be
evenly metclled 1n tbe size
aod speed d_.tmenu. The
Shrine
South club has eietit running
backs wbo have sprinted 100
yards in 10 ie(..'Onds or bet-
ter.
Both teams will b e
directed by quarterbacks
who like to lug the pigskin.
The North's Mike Kloos,
from Sen Ramon High in
Danville, is 6·1 and 170 and
terrorized NoCal f o e s all
last season with hitl Jprint
option antics.
The South's signal<aller
is Grady Hurst from 8anta
Barbara !llgh. A 5-11 and
~ ~ ~ Monar<hs of Mater ~ llei had battled to within
~ f'cW points of Troy with 3: 15
~~:to at 82-M, but fools took n ttie toll of the losers as Troy ~P.llPed away via the gratis
Mesa Verde Pro
~ ~ Mesa Verd e Country Club 's new tennis professional, ~ 1 ~ Clemente's E rick Bob Ogle, stands ready after initiating a n all new
'Iii Qlrlstensen blistered ~he program at Mesa Verde for tennis club members.
.i' iSets for 31 points on mne Ogle has been active in tennis circles in the Harbor ~ Q.eld goals and 13 free area for several years and bas developed his two ~ tprows while Sal Lombardi sons, Jim and Bob Jr., who starred on Newport
,. was baeking him up with 17· Harbor's CIF runnerup team. ~ : Buena Park outscoced the _________ ..:..._ ___________ _
~ Trltons by a 20-8 count in ;: ttf final period.
~ : : ktf'll .., .....,.. .. ' t:' Otl 11 '° 12 Jl.-.U •• ~ It 21 ll U-1'
""-' W1tW Del (WI ·~~.:. ,.,T ,,T, :·~ 1 • 2 11 ... ,...., 4011
.~ ,1f1911\fl'lltMll l ' j •
Huntington, Estancia
In 4-4 Pow Ver iii'ct
.... lltHt J I I 1 ·'~bert • 1 " •
._.., . .-,.-..
:;: 1llltr J o :I 10
.-0010 Estancia's Bruce Uttell's
desperation shot with 10
seconds left Wednesday fail·
ed to find the range and the
Eagles-ended in a 4--4 tie
-·~ l 4 I 4 f(lf. ... ,.11 71 12 10 " <. , .,. sew. .-, Oloarten := •Sin C~ft :io n 14 ll-S1
......... ftt '•rk 12 11 13 ~
<f' '. 1, :.:*
•i ·-~. ' . .. ·-;,s A!lcl'I ~ eto1l1mln ~ f!tttr
,-~omti.n11 :iat 11nnHA
jol lkhtll
:,>L9tlbtrt ~ G1Ukl.,,
)ti ~0.fti.1
" • TO!lls ~
* * .... c....,.... (11)
P:O fT f'P
' ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' . ' .
' I] 5 . . ' ' . . . . ' . . ' 11 21 20
witn Huntington Beach in a
Coota M e s a Recreation
,., Water Polo league thriller. ~ The clash between the two
3 unbeaten titans saw e a ch " 31 team scoring once in every
; quarter.
o They trail league·lead.ing J Bolsa Grande (5-0) with 3-0-
·--1 records.
Westminster stayed on the
heels of ttie frontrunners
with a 9-5 romp over Gertlen
Grove to improve its sliate to
3-1.
Other actJon a.t Estancia
High Scliool's pool had
unbeaten Bolsa chalking up
a methodical 7-2 win over
Rancho Alamitos and Costa
Mesa tripping Foothill, 6--4,
after opening up a 4.--0
halftime lead.
~ ;At Costa Mesa High School
Clash
175-pounder, he rao fOr 13
touchdowns and pas~ for
20. others in. the Channel
Llfague last year. He paced
bk club. to an 11-1 sea.OD.
and was named the league'•
most valuable performer.
Another SOutb' tlireat Is
fullback · Tom Fitzpatrick
from Anaheim. He was the
CJF's Player oC the . Year
last sea&0n. AnOtber Otange
County back "1lo could star
ii Santa Anan John Oonover.
Kickoff' is ~t 'for 8:30
p.m .. with tne Shriner'•
pag,..t' glarling at 7:30.
Anaheim
Staggers
MC, ·145
By ROGER CARLSON
OI 1tNi Dlllr PllM Sl~ff
Midway City, National
League Cbrunpiion in Orange
County Amerioan Legion
baseball, bowed out of the
District 29 playdls Wed·
M6Clay night at La Palma
Stadium after dropping a 14-
5' slugfest ·to ·Ana heim
P earson.
Pear.sob, ~-up in the
American Division, broke
loose with sev'e!I runs in the
fourth inl)ing to salt away
ttie seven·in.D:lng encounter.
~erican Division cham·
pion Garden · Grove con-
tinued unbea4!o. with a 4·2
win over the ·Fullerton
Dodgers in the nigbtoap.
Fullerton plays Pearson
tonight a t 7:30 for tbe right
to meet . µarden . Grove
Saturday afternoon at 4 for
the title.
Whichevec team w I n s
tonight, must beat Garden
Grove twice for the ti.tie
Satunkiy.
Gregg Weile.r and Will
Mcartney homered f o r
Midvray City, but to no avail
as both blasts came with the
bases empty, .
Jn the third, w h e n
manager Gene Loorner's
National champio?S scored
three times, Weiler s«ked a
home run over the fence in
dead center field. . . .
However. when' Pearson
rolled the dice in the fourth
with the score at 3-3, it
came up seven and it was
all over.
ktn •r lnlll ...
Mldw&Y City •. , ..... , 110 021 ..... 5 S 3 An1helm Pt1r'°n .... 102 1" 1-14 16 1
McC1rtriey, B1ln !~l. Ot<lrlck 15) Ind
Weller/ Smlltl 1nd Croo1n.
HJIS -McC1rtlltl' (Ml -'Flflh. one on. Wiiier IMI -Fourth, -· on. $Chrotdlr f,t,J -Sldh, none on.
sc-.., lnnlflt' • JI H l
Fulltrton Oocl"rl .... OOt 000 01-2 4 I
41rden GNMt • , ... 010 010 x2-' 1 2
W•lkitr i nd l trrv1 $111tftr 11111
Tl'lllfttnr.
1't~UU> IE
/W EVENING-OF
GR IP "71-ll?IU.$,
W~ ONE OF "l+lE
GREA J EST 6CH::l:ll.-
_.80)" 8!..0Cl<ERS IN
i+IE ~I.ANO
llUl.L.-!laZ#J<' A A4'1ll
fllR "11-iOSE f'L'llNG.
a.ILL. CARRIERS .. ' '~ .
Hunting Prospects Bright
As Season Opening Nears
Hunter suecess should be
"somewhat better than it
was last year, o.r about
normal," in the Southern
California areas or the early
deer seasonJ w h i c ~ ~pens
Aug. 3 ana continues
through Sept. 22.
That is h forecast from
llhe rield by wildlife
man:agel'5 and wardens of
the Department of F ish and
Grune.
Only a relatively small
portion of Southern
California is within the early
deer season boundaries.
Included are all of Santa
Barbara, Venturia an d
Orange Countiei, the
northwest eorner of San
Diego County and t tie
western edge of Rivel'Side
County. Small pieces of Los
Angeles and San Bernardino
Counties are within the ear-
ly season boundary but they
offer no public hunting.
Tihe remainder of
Southern California is in the
late deer season which
opens Sept. 21 and continues
through Nov. 3.
The DFG field reports in·
die.ate a better Southern
California carry over of
buck deer than last year.
They also note feed and
water in shorter supply than
last year, when the deer re-
mained widely scattered
through the entire season.
ORANGE COUNTY
T~ only area of . Orange
County open to public hun·
ting is trhe southern portion
of the 'I'Nlbuco District of
Cleveland National Forest.
The northern portion of
the forest is under f i r e
closure. Access to the hun-
ting area is via Highway 74
from San Juan Capistrano
or Lake Elsinore, or via the
North Main Divide Truck
Trail whieh leads west and
north off Hiibway 74 and
· 1 ~ mJles 90\Jth or El CarisC>
Guard Station. Check at the
guard station for lOcal in-s d• formation. tall mgs Last year Orange County
cosTA MESA produced 156 early-season
RECREATIOH OE,AITMENT 'bu'cks, just three under the
"A" SllftlllH ll1ndlAft t < w L pas ..-year average.
All1ntlc ll:esttrch
Buccanetr
CQS!I Mew Pgllce
Coury" Resle~renr
SI. Andrews Prts~ltrl1n
Ser~ICs
C1dill1c G111e J. C. C1rler "8" SoftHtl SllMIJntl
OouGi.s Alrcrall
01na L1boralotles
PIPI Joe's B1r
RIW.rd's Lido Markel
lsllilcitr Yach! CorJI.
M1s~r Speciatllts
ShlktY'S Pina
O!Ceoft Eltctronlcs
• • ' ' ' ' • •
' ' ' ' ' ' ' •
o Fawn surviv·al is equal to ~ that of last ye.zr and the
2 buck carry over is better. ~ Feed and water conditions ! are fair to good, but not as
good as they were last year.
~ Most antlers will be hard
1 although a few bueks in ~ velvet will be taken dur·
2 ing the early part of the ' ' seasoo.
Connell
Oaims
Victory
Bob Wickersham went
three-for-three and knocked
in three runs in leeding bis
Connell ChevNlet mates to
a 4-2 Connie Mack baseball
vk:tory over West-GrC>ve
Wednesday nigflt at
TeWinkle Park in Costa
Mesa.
The win w .. the 18th In 19
tries for roach B o b
Wigmore's crew.
Kauffman &: Bro•d
Marina, meanwhile, upend·
ed ._ Hootington Harbour
at G<llden West College, s.o.
behind ttie one-bit pitching
of Greg Henry ..
Connell's new win streak,
now at three, was kept alive
when the hosts came' up
with two runs in the bottom
of the sixth inning t.o break
a 2·2 tie with West-Grove.
Wickersham was the big
gun, scoring both tallies
with a crisp single. Joe
LePage and M i k e Leppa
checked in with the lead
runs.
Wayne Schrader went all
the way in the pitching
department, striking out
seven in the process while
giving up four hits.
West-Grove h·ad opened
matteni in the trop of the
first with both ol. its runs
before C.Onnell came back
with single tallies in ttie bot·
tom of the fitst and second
stanzas.
Mark Cresse had the big
bat for Marina, garnering
two RBis in the second in·
ning witti a triple off the left
field fence. He seored lal:el'
on a wild pitch to give the
Marina nine a S..O lead early
in the contest. ,,_ ., 1111111111
WHl-Orov1
Connell
••• X10 000 ~2 ' I 110 !Mn X-' 7 I
Ctnfttll (0 A• R H Rl l
Walsh, c HauPtrl, cl
C1rN>bell. d $1\Yder. 2b
LePage, 3b
Leppl, SS
wlckerlhlm, lb s. Linnert, rl
WHbrechl, If
Scnr1der. P
To/1ls
2 1 1 a
2 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
2 0 0 1 3 I 1 o
3 2 2 0
3 0 3 3
l 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
23 • , ' WQl-G,..,. 121
S.nty, cf
Carroll. t
8oYlti, lb
Neum1nn, lb MCICeoft. 1b
Ml60fld, SS
Sorl<lllng, rt Setton, 11
Mac•. P To111s
* *
AB JI H Jii t
' 0 0 0 3 I 0 0
' 1 1 0 2 0 , 0
3 0 0 0
2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 l 0 0 0
l 0 2 0 21 2 • 0
* Scan ~' tnnlfttf
Hunrlnuton
Marina
Moody, cf
RUil, p Symons, ss
Moafs, c Ryder. Jb
8en1111. lb 81lch, 2b
McCord. If
Alen/1, •f
Totals
C1mpblfll, JO
Mt01n!tld, 1b
Moll, (
llndlrf, rf H..riry, P
Cresst. lb
Andre1sen, u
Heut!I, d
Tot1ls
. '. OOO~ll OXI »-J ~ 2
Al R H RBI
2 0 0 0
1 0 0 0 ? 0 0 0
' 0 0 0 2 0 0 0
2 0 1 0
2 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
I 0 0 0
15 0 1 0
Ml rfftt {51
Al It. H Rll
2 0 0 1
2 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 1 , 0 0
2 2 I o
l 0 1 0
l 0 , 0
2 0 I 0 '° s ' J I McGivney Clears 6-4 in High Jump ,~....-... iiiiiiiiiii~
.,.
1 ~ 1 Tom McGivney, of Hun-
~~ Cington Beach, hi~-jumped .:;. f-4 to take tile hi&'fl school 1 tvtnt in higti.Ughtlng action ~ ft·Costa Mesa High Sctlool * '4. the all-comers track and ~ t~ld meet.
~ ; Complete results: ' . -6 '100-1. lroolu CS.A. Collt!iltl 2. ~· M1lmbou1'1 (HB) l . Seymour (!;WC)
.II f lmt: 10.5 ,1' 220-1. Arthur {CM) 2. Mltllr IBrt•! • \;f;! "·' it: ' l. Mvt' ... I' (LIS) 2. AIY1rl<lo
.. I Tlfnt: 5'.t ~ o ~-1~ &uri (Ultl'I) :Z. Miiier (lr11l ;,.r ti ! t~N.7
.. • '"-'· C1rlofl ltlll 2. Mtlr1 !OCCl ~ f l : 4"1~.s.1.0 .• 1+-1. C1.,.11e11 1s. Ton1n«I 1. .• "91111 (51"1 l . ICt.......,., ICM) Tlmt:
U.I 3.mlll-1. Prlesl ICM! 2. ll:flll"
fM1tu Otll J. Mtlrs COCC) Time:
11:11.0
...,.,111-1. Strodl fS.A. Collfl!~l 2.
S91car (UI J. C1n-(Tusllnl Trm1;
Jl :51.7 HJ-I. ICubnk• lCM) He!ehl: 5~
LJ-1. SWIH (Etl1ntl1) 2, Gotrkt
!CM) 3. ,t,rlllur ICM) Olst1ncl' :io.S TJ-1. Murr•r CL8$) 2. Art~ur (CM)
011!1...:e: 39·3 SP-1. Pcwer1 !C•l Stile Fullerlllr1!
2. V1nDfl!rlll (UCO J. Gordin
Ol1!1n<e: 4.0
J1vtll,.._1. C1mPbt1I !ST) Olsl1nct:
IS7·ll
HL1ll Sclllol
100 -1. lewis (SAi 2. Emtry (SAV)
3, Elleorft (E1tancl1) Time: 10.J no -1. Goo!rl<e (CM! Tim•: 'H.O
4o1C1 -l. I.et (U.Vl 2. ICitnned'!' (CM)
l . l uller (NHJ Tlmt: $1.0
UO -1. Muldoon (Ml~r 0.U ?.
Soultowlck IU.Vl J. Lun1 CU.I Timi:
2:0l.O Mlle -1. Print (CMI J. Oowll.,.
{Miter Otll J. M<TIHlrl {,1Cl!IC1l
Time: 4:4 .4 •
10HH -1. Keckler (5,t,V) 2. Stubb!ni ICM! l . Clmpbtll (5. Torr•nce) Tlmt~ ..,
U11LH -l. ICe<kltr ISAV) J. Emery
(U,V) J. llobtrlt ($Al Time: 1'.1
:Hnll1 -1. Prletl !CM) 2. Dowft"'
(CMl 3. Skinner !CMl Time: 11!11
6-mlle -1. Lipski (S.ddltblCk) 1.
Clay-I (Tutlln) 3. Simens COr1n1•I
Tlmt: 33:?5.0
HJ -l. McGlv,,..., lHB) 2. s 11t1tr
!NHI J, Mllllnc•rodt IT11tllnl Htl1ht: ...
LJ -l. Andtrson ISAJ 2. Roberti
(SA) 1. Goerke !CM) Oltl1Me: ~J
TJ -I, Andtn.on (SAi 2. M1Hlncllrodt (Tlllllft) 3. Artllur (CM)
01111nce: :rt-o
$P -1. J. Mani>: (CM} 2. Borden
(CM} Ols .. nc:t: 4~11
OllClll -I. Borden ICM} Cll1!1M:e!
Ul.O Jftft11r Hltll
lllO -1. !kllOellltr CCMI 1. H11111 (ElllMlll Time: 11 •• :: .. 1 " ~ .. ~:; Baseball Standings
> .• ~ ! NATIONAL LEAGUE
~-W L Pct. CB
.-Louis 64 34 .635
~Uanta 51 46 .526 1211
:.Cincinnati 47 4S .511 14
~ Francisco 49 49 .500 15
.~cago 49 50 .495 15*
:2>hiladelphia 46 48 .489 16
:ll'lttsburgh 4S 50 .474 1711
:,New Yock 47 53 .470 18
·~ AaJel., ff 54 .40 20
·~ 43 116 .434 21 11 .., . . ........,.. ........
.~ : ~~ t. s..t Fr.tf'ld-I
., • • Leull a. .. llHMll"°"ll I ,/: ....... I, LOI ... _ .... g*' • ""'-"" a. ....... Y-11 2 (II IM~I
, cJhcll'INn ..t ,,thlM9tl, rein
-' TMl!n ....
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Detroit
Baltimore
Cleveland
Boston
Oakland
California
Minnesota
New York
Chicago
Washington
W L Pct.
60 37 .619
54 41 .568
55 ff .556
49 45 .521
4.8 451 .495
47 50 .485
47 50 .485
44 49 .473
40 54 .426
34 59 .386
WllllllMl.,..S •-ltl tl•lll_.. I. C:ll\111"" 0
W""'lntton I, 0.trolt J
M1MtW11 It, CIU!Or!llto '
Olklt"" 14. Chk-0-1 1111""' el New Y-. r1ln
T .... .,..,._
°""1111 (t.INrml 7 .. 1 II Wltl'llflt""°' 1 .. 1. nltht °""" ·-tdltclulecl.
CB
5
6
911
12
13
13
14
18 \1
24
12tl -1. Reilly tFooltllU) 1. 01w11,,.
!SA) J, Mtlc11f IEl'l•nclll Tlmt: 27.?
UO -1, H1un (£1l111Cl1) 1. Metc1lf
(E1t1nc:l1) J. Turner !CM) Time: 1:02.t
111111 -l, ll:tllly (Foolhlll) 2. Oi!1n
Tlmt : ?:?S.O
Milt -1, ll1un (Ett111Cl1l 2. Relllv
CFoo:olhlll) l. M1cL11n tCMl Tlmt:
$:01.1
10HH -1, Schotlller ICM} 2. Wiiiey
!Ellencle) Time: 12,3
UCLH -1. Schotllll• CCMI 2. Haun !E1ltncl1) J. Wiiiey CEs11ntl1I T!me:
11.1 J.mli. -1, Fletchtr (NH) Time:
11:4 .0 HJ -I. 1Cubtsk1 (CMl 2. Scllotlller
ICMl l . Mlcl.t•n ICMI Ht!ohl: s.J
LJ -1. Kubesk1 (CMl 2. IClrlt fCMl
l. ArtM.tcl<lt (CM) Ol1!1nai; .lM
OrMll klllol
4olO -1. W1rd 1. °"" l. Wtddln,loft Time: 1:21.D
MO -I. Mefcall 1. &1rntll T!mt:
1:$1.5
Miii -1 •. F. Miki" 2. Turntr Tlmt:
1:11.7
the MARK Ill
~ ,.... Yertr CletfN N I et All.mt (Nlttlf'I .. ,,,
~~ 4Cwf¥W HJ et .. ~ (\'Nl9 r~l~le (lfl9rt Ml flf St. l.oub IO!bloll
. ,,....,.. .. -..
Ntw Ylt'I! 11 C!Pwllnll, nlthl
Mlr!Mwl1 II 0.llltftd, "Ith! Cl'll(-II C1lll'omlt. nlll'rt Bolton 11 W1oll .... ll:Wl. n1tl'lt o.tf'C>ll II 11~. nltM
'Tht mo1t authoritodvcl11
styltd, deeisivel11 individual
motor car of thti glMflltion .. ·-Orange Co/t Oldt'at Ir MOit RtlptCUd Lincoln-MercuTJI Dtaltr OADEA THE 1969
MAAI( Ill TODAY
AND IE ASSUAEO
OF EARLY DELIVERY Johnson & Son
fOO W. COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT BEACH
642.oM I . 545-1271
• .,. ... t •
----- -__ .._ .•• ----==
Ill
•
IMMIDIATI Dl\IYllT
AYAILAIU ON ltll>
UNCOLN CONT1NINTALI
-----·-····,······
j
-
,
'
-----
Tennis Shoes
Running Shoes
Basket Ball Shoes
Deck Shoes
Wrestling Shoes
Soccer Shoes
Browning Leather Boots
Duck Feel Fins-8.95
Masks-2.95lo11.95
Snorkles-95¢ lo 2.95
Frisbees-Skate Boards
Sleeping Bags-Back Packs
Chest Pulls-Jump Ropes-
Volleyballs-Basketballs
Soccer Balls-FootbaDs
P.S .. We will be closed for
vacation Aug. 12 to 18
Tennis Clothes
Men's Shorts
Men's Shirts
Ladies' Dresses
Men's Tennis Shoes
Ladies' Tennis Shoes
Tennis Sox
Tennis Hats and Visors
TENNIS BALLS
TENNIS BALLS
Penn1ylv1ni1
Wilson
3/1.76
3/1.89
Wilson-Dunlop-Bancroft-
Davls·Cragin Tennis Rackets
Racket Stringing
Raleigh Bikes
Tires --Tubes-Parts
Bike Repairing
-··-----·· 2. ·-= ··= 2 ....... ---.. -
Los Alamitos
Entries
t..-a-..........._ .... ...._ • ..,,,... t:tl•
Navarro
Battles
Los Alamitos Results
L.-ALAMl'Nll •nva.n Wf ,.,_, .... ,_
Cllwl '9lt
-~ ....
,._, July 25, 1'61 DAil. v mor IT
Parade of Sports on TV ;;
• • ' THURSDAY
I p.m. (I) -BOXING -
Raa N1v.rro vt. Ray AdJcwl, .__ .... le. Dldr
~. Mlcb1 Davlel I I
Olympe ringakle.
Ji'JUDAY
TRACK -R.>ce clips and
road testa. TUESDAY
I P·•· (l)CL -SKATING
-Tu:u 0Utlaw1 at LA T-
Blrds. Dick IAne at Olympic
tncbldt.
flliit ... -eul ~ pro -.u nan.
It p.m, (M)F -TOROI
-(Spodal -d. -...) .,,._.. WEDNESDAY
,., """""' ..., .. --.... -CINI" a, .... MilfWll'I' '*'*: Ul 11!.nll) t•. Acligmi lll•ff UCL 111 v1r& Mtlllll I .,..r ...... C .. 111\1111. , ... 11,.._
lf!dftlf1tor (R Fllutr'MI , ......... I:• pJll, (4t)F -COM-
MENTARY -"Accent On
Actioi;i," tpOl1J filml.
I:• p.m. (7)CF -COM-
MENTARY -0 Grambllnt
Collese: 100 )'Wd1 T o
Glory," dory of a ameJl
Nesrv ICbool In Louls1-
11• P·•· (l)CL ~ -BASEBALL -Ancelil!~t
~ Athlttlc1, Bwldy
Blattn.er , Doll ~
mlhlidt ~ MemorJ,111
....... hit 1141 ".M.
ll'l•IT llACI. U0 V•rlllL Mellleft t
v"' olff. Ci.Jml"', l'Vl'M t1100.
c1a1ml119 pric. SUOO.
LU 1'Mrt41 81r IN l"•ttlol 1\J
Ml• C.lalr Btlr II' (l'Dlbyl 111
lllPV MaeU"I' k¥ CW Sff"IVAI 12' or1 Jot ID Monti) 110
·-·· J.t • .,. {J lrookfltld) .. MU6tPlll CMr.-CH C,_.,,l 111
Atltll lo Ul ....,_lrl 12t DlolfMllll 5"ed fJ Metwdi) 111
Cllutl't lt-t {C Smith) 1:11
C..W.l'I Wlldat IL Wn.M) 117 ...........
Gr.nd Chk fZ C.111M) UO
(lrcumMWltlilll' {D T'frM) 121
Jlrn SWlft (H C ....... I 120
W11d Jtal co Morrlll 121
tlfCOND RACI. a YI .... I ,,_
eldl 1nd .. 111 Gf"Me 8 l'lua, ~
tUM.
lrofl CV11 (J ·~ 111 &...u ""911 IS P:0111'11 11•
1"1r1all (l Col11M} UJ
m.uu1blr IC Smlltl) 116
Mr. Nl•hl Wt tdl flt Ad1lr) 116
911k*. M'1 S-19 CH C1'911J1ol 116 GoUrrnet IL Wntfll) 116
h wlllde TDl!Y fH l'-1 111
llndentuclY {It a.11k1 111 ,,.,,..._ Hnni IJ MelWM) lit ............
T• l'rlttle fJ WU1ot'll 111
ca.t1l11'1 C111 Do CJ lnlllkfleW) 111 GoMr Tlme IC Smltll) u• ~r ltO'l'll (DIW Mllf'l1t) 117
TMllD Ill.Cl. aso y9"fl. M91dM 2 ., .. , okh br9d 111 C.ltr, l'urM Jlnt,
Orltdl tD C1,.._l 111
00n P11tblo Ut Aalrl no l'rlne9U Men'Oll (C Smith) 11J
CMlsff Girl IJ Wl-..J 117 ~II 1....., CJ K.111 .. I 117
81 Su .. E .... CJ A'-1 licl 0.1" F~ (T l""'9m) 111
Wallet litter CW ltl'aual 111
Subalft ID TY .. l 111
Madl.11"• Trwbll (W SlaN) 1'0
A ..........
Tarnedo Br-CS l"er'ltl) 117
Fou•TH •ACL :HI ., .... ' _,
•• •<Id "" '" .,.. ... A ,,,.... '""""' 117'1111.
RIW! Calld'V IW Stnoual 111 Tiit l'eltreorl CL Wr11frt) 11•
l"alleo'1 C"-'1'Y (D TY,.) 11J KlalmrMI CR 8al!Q) 111
SfMI CM,... ca 8rlr*IWI 11• Bro 8"'""'1'1el IN l"tm.I 1'1
MoM ''"''"' (W ''-"' 119 Hoo1eV Nld S.tt IJ IMtwdel 111
Mr. J11ie ft Aralul lll
lr ... I'" (H C!ll9blr1 l17l A .........
T-1111 fA Ar1lul 111
R911 1!11le 81r ID Marr11) 11• Miu ICfltv C1u1t Ill: Meir) 111
Ju911Jl1 NIM (J 8reoktlellf) 111 '"'™ u.ca. m l'ffllt. 2 "'' ......_
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Jlli-0 Jlt CW lllMJ 1U
c111i,... no. 1• lrlnkllv) 1ta
Berr..i T• t• Fl1Ulf'ot) lU Tnitv Arnita IA Nalllll 111
AkitnltM i<.v U ~I , r 111
IUCTM uc•. a nl"lll. ' ~, oldt.
Cltlmlnl. l"lln. t:ttOO. CllllTllftl •rk1 ..... NIMr'I GtM (J D"""tf") 111
D......,... Mnro Cit Flewrwll) 117 F11k.11v (H ,_) 115
S....... Str1 ... IJ KMhl 111
Ja111• Bullt ln IR ..,..1 120
No'"'-'! 1W S..,.I , llS HI HI NIM (R Alllli') llS ltt"t Or .. ID ,..,.,., 111 a-_,_ fJ W\a..i) 121
MeMweY G~ ~C. Srr!llll) 111
SllY•NTM UC.. • ""*-I vear .... end .. Ill .Gr• AA Mlnut. l"vrM mM.
l-1el Rocbf (I lrll'llllWI n• 0.. Ge IJ er-1 114 Fr'ld't; ....._ (It A.Rlrl 111 n..... Ber IJ 8rootm11111 120
Jotwrf 81 111'9 IJ W1hon) llJ
Oltll .. , IH C,.,,,.) 114
My Wllll (JI Bllrlbl 111
IC.,.., •• CabooM fT ll"'-1 111 One Of.,.,.... IC Smltti J 116
c..111'»• ltMn (A A111t11l 1\6 r, Alilll"191"'9 ,,~ .. ,.. cc Smith) 116 llMll It_,. ID Mon11) HS
tteval """" CL Wrlahtl 111 ClulcUtt..(H Crwbvl 119
,:.~· .. ·::;: ..::r:~! .. :::
nM.~'Tillt '•1m s.wr.,. .. MidMM )ii (1 C11lll11tl 11, Arctic':~ (J Dm"•rl 117· 9oll ..,.... (J WllMnl 117
S1'MtMI ltlir 18 8rlnk11Yl 1is '111 '•l'l'DMllN c• Adlil•l 111 Dldl ...... IC Smith) 111
llltrf JOI Oii ID "flor1) HS Go Min Ito CT lll'Mml 111 0.lwh' Mollllf'I IH l' ... l 114 Marl! It "" , ....... , 12CI ............
Tni..,._ 11..t Ct Slrir!tll 116 Haw A 0. {T LIPNml 111
Mllllll ltlCL -'f•rdl.. 3 .,.., 111ds Hiii •Jin G1"9119 A ..,._ l"une IUOO. Twno TNCIUt rr Ullfllrnl 111
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Tnia C.n """ ID Mllrrbl 116 Clndn ._. IR ARfrJ 11$ .. ,.,..,, 1 1..eun (R 8111-1) lU
A• 119111 ..
Hantlewll fD T.,.,,..l 111 h ll D.a !D Morrlll . , 117 Miu ci..u. Deck CT Llrthaml ns
low Wddl IN l'fttkil 11'
Del Mar
Entries
O.I Mar 111trlft for Fr1de'I', Julrl' Ill,, Tr.nwlllhlr Ill YO<tl '" "' lHI clffr •NI mt. ,Int ,_, t ,,m. DMdl.-1 IA l"li"IU)
D•llv Ooubll -,.lnl 1....:I _,. r--.
l'IRIT RACI", • fur'°""-t .,..,
follla. Clllml"' prlu ...__.,MO.
Purw n.-.
In A Whl-r <• Ycrkl 1\A
Solar D1wn IJ Artlrburn) lU
Lii' Glllf IM Y1111"1) 112
Sw!u Dt$11 ID l'lerc1) 11•
COii Coe Blrd (II: 811ncol 11A
Prl11tn1 1(11111 ID V1l1111ua1) l lA
Ruler'I Joy (A H1r,..r1l 112 N1utv Sf1 IR J 1'9!'1ld1) 110
Anvbodr1 Gam (Al Dl11) 112
T'""''' Lu fl'" G1r1•l lOf
Sun Noll (M V1lenN1ill llA
THIRD llACI". ' fur1o11t1. t I. I !'Mr
eld. Alklwanc". l'urw $3,JOO,, Glorloul Victor CW H1r1Klll 11,
Kllll IClld•ni CD H•ll) 111
1-"•ctum CA l Dl11) IGI
A H1llUM IA M•n•l 111
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Mlnv Ml.,.lonl IJ 1"11o1¥1!1111I flt A·Ttlffk: Cloud IA M19MI 111
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Woma11'1 Club l"t.lrM. Alkrw•neas.
""'""M.Jlll. '1rit D1nc1 flll 8l1ncel llt
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Gl'MY R0¥11" ( I °" Tiit .. lt"tnv fJ lllltrsJ MllllfWd Ill: Vort:I
Deep Sea Fish Report
Ult CL.aMIMn -lit 1111W.:
1,1'5 ..... I white -... ,.. 1,106
ai.on1to. '" blrTKUCll. 11 1111nbvt.
MtJJITIQTOM IUCM -41 a .. ltn:
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'MRIMA O•l •l"V -tt •111llrs:
-rock Old. 1 -cod. SANTA MONICA -t.I arieler&: '61
blM, 11f ai.onrto. 7 r.l!bl,lt. I blrTM\1111. OCEANSID• -Jlt 1111llr1: 1'7
11bta1r., ta7 berrlCIJdli, 4'11 Nu. SU
tienth!. a w1111w -bea. 3 nllowllll, a f'llllbuf,
OXNARD -101 -ltl't; -r9dl: Old, "' l'lltlbvt, • blrrec\ldl. Ma'Wl"OllT (Art't Lllllllftl) -lJl , ... ,.,..: 11 •llllc!M9, S -~Ill, 3'1 ....... ,...... m Mrllfl. .., bin, s
f'l•hbut. IDrrW"f Ladlltl • -SA
........ : 111 ·~· SANTA IAUAllA -II -llr'lt M "° COii, 11 .,,. Old. • "'"""'' no
Q ll(o ""'" MORllO UT -.D -lln: 1
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ulkl 111-. 1 l'lttl""9. I•,... 31
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hlllbut. Twll ··"""· 20ll '"'""' JI .. ....:1 Illa. 41' ai.onita. 11 .... rtivt. 4ID2 .-....
ll"AL BIACM -1J2 a .. lers: 112
blrraaict1, 171 tlonl,., :nt Mjld blH, I
hlllbut. ea,.., "a111flrl: S blrrlQICll, 600 bonito, I MNI Nu, tf PllJllJVt.
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-'"' •111"'1: 4 l'lllOWt•ll. " ... ,. rl(llU, Jiil c.1 ne1 ..._, Ml bol'ilto. 2
lltllbvt. JOI "° Old ........... LM-... -11f _..,.., Ml ·--·'* lllrrtcudl, '71 blt9, Jiii llOntto.· 2 nl._..11, 21 Pllhbut, .,..... ....,., -
" ........ , 1 Wl'llft -..... , ....... . lllrncudl. 14 ....... 1 111-.ir ..... .
.. _ ..... , 1 ...... ""'.~·· ...... t lllllbvt.
SAM Ot•eo (1't. "-1 -117 w.tlln: Jlt 'l'ltlowt1ll. "II • ._..., a....,,.,.,
Comi09 Upl
-.-4 l it On11 At
Th li9 A
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
'Y'IO.mll: ..... ...__,..., • ..... • MMl!llll .... •Willllll'l ..... lal
............................. JMlrl ....... ....
'
•
Unbeaten Ruben NM'll!To
faces tile toughest test of bis
young care« tonight when
he faces France's (by way
of Nigeria) Ray Adlgun in
Ute featured ilO round main
event at the Olympic
AudJtorium.
First bout (!ls Under W11y
at I p.m.
No>Wro, U-0.l, holia from
tne'Marivilla secuoa of Eart
Los Angeles. He is rated 9lh
among the world's junior
lightweight cqatendu1.
A<IJiun, 47;-7, h• a n
almost unbelievable record
ol 39 knockouts. He ls 8th ranked among tb_e
li{btwe;glrt contendet1 for
Carlos Cruz' crown. ,
Nlwiarro's biggest name -t to dote boo been
Goode'• hit CM l"•I UI £.•
Ml l",..ftll IJ ICllllO t.•
"'"' -lf tllt.
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T1'M -" tilt.
sav•MTll JtAca. ,,. ,...... t ..._.
tiN1 W w. Cltl1T1l111. l"llrw II.a. T1-~ wir.. IC.,.._.I 9A YI 1M Allllllw TrY tl.1'111n11 t.• t.•
""-" Or L•• fO TYn) J.• Tlflll -11 4/11.
•llNT14 1tACI, a .,,,._ I Y<Mr
, ... Wiii w I~ Grldl AA '""· Tiit SIMI .... I'-123111. MNllilM ..... CLIJl\lml l:• .... t .• hrw ,_ Lvd>: llC1nl1I . I:• t.11
l"tllM ( .. flkll J.21
Tlllll -• "11t.
Mllf'nt UC:I. U1 var.II. I.,... ai.m •Pllll .. lfl lrMI A l"lw. ,._ llM.
I ;... (T)CI' -COM-
MENTARY -"Garr,
B t b a n , Q uartert>ect, '
Repeat.
t :• p.m. (M)F -BAX-
EO-(Luella do 11......,..,
de Molco.)
It p.m. (M)F -LUCHA
LIBRE -ilAldla llbre, de
Mu.ico.)
SATURDAY
II a.m. ( 4 ) CL
BASEBALL -NY Yaoll:ee1
at Cleveland Indiana. Cw1
Gowdy, PeeWee Reeae, San·
dy Koufu mil'-al
Memorial Stadium ..
Raincbect: PI t t 1 bur I b Pnies . vi. st. Lou li . C!l:dinab, Jtm: Shnj:tim,
Tony Kabet: Ulil<e~.
Sall•r'1 Cf'l•rtt
fMl"'*I •·• .... "" MMll CMd! T .. (tlNI) 1.• i.•
"''""'-0111 (T"mil s ...
Tony Alvarado, whom be '°"'"" uc:L a Y•'*· s .,..,
foogbt to a draw early in ~-· ""' "' .,... A Millllp. """ 1967. At the lime Alvarado Trvc11:1111 "' <Arttn) 11.• w , ,...
wu one of the world's top ••••••'•••••'•· ••••••••••-fea-...ig!it contenden.
TIMI -11 1111.
4 ..... (l)CP -' GRAND
·PRIX -Worldwide cllpl
lrom'll't'lau'·""'"· \ ' ' ..,..
I '""" (l)CT -COM· MENTAllY -"lnlide Foot·
bol1;" willl Rom ...... Geo.
Allon llld Gil Stratton, looks
•t ttnnitb1, weatnessee of NID.-. AdllUft ~ · beaten Ille
likee ol George Foster, Fer·
nand Simlrd, Kid Basser
and <Jiino Diaz. Del Mar Race Results
"U i win. I expect to
<flallenge lo!ando R8mot b)'----------------I p.m. (l)CT -WIDE
WORLD -Sky Dtvln&, lrom
Tucscm; k .art in g, from
Swl~; ourflne, lrom -.-;Hanil. 11:11 ,end ot this year," la1I Navam>.
RmlOI is the lop COO-
leadtr for HlrOlhi Kobaya-
abl'1 junior ligbtwelgbt title
and recently beat the champ
in • 10 romder at the Olym-
pic.
Adigun, compaigning f<r
Crul' lightwei~ belt, is
now being managed by
veteran United & t a t e s
manager Willie Ketdlum .
"I 5lllW tlliis guy in Pelis,"
11.ya ~. "and be his
to be the harde<I hitting lit-
tle rnan I've teen in a k>ng
time. Look at his record of
KO's. It's fanta.rtic."
In a companion 10 rounder
buzz 11w Waymon Gray
tangles with runed R.aul
Herren in a bent.nweigbt
contest.
PRELIMS -Victor
Jiminez vs. Walt SWWI, g
rd&, featherweights ; Fraser
Scott VII. Rod Reed, 4 rd!,
middleweigtita.
FUTURE nGms . . .
·Frankie Crawford w. Pete
Gonzales, 10 r o u n d 11 ,
featherweights, Aug. 1 . . .
Tony Doule vs. Joe Hem·
pbill, Jieavyweichta , 1 0
roundl, Aug. 8.
Area Kegler
Sports Lead
Jim Hogan, ol. Cotta
Mesa, rontiooes to hold on
to the top spot in the scratch
all-events of the 2.1rd annual
Sf.ate Bowling Tournament
at Fullerton's Carter Bowl
with a nine-game total ol
2,024.
Qualifying for tbe cal-
State Masten conUmat at
Fullerton wllll Lorry Keller
ot We1tmlmter and Oeorle
Burden ol. Costa Mesa
.mong Ille top 10 cjualiflm
to !:late. \
c.,.,,. 9"t MMCO ....._ -tit.1110.000 ,,_.........,.,..........
You a.t fNI .....,,.. • frM i:-f·
IMdl, l••t. ...... ,...1c_. "'°'" "-..... -Hy. NW ..... MMCO. ,,..ir ,,._.....,. w ..
~..,. -l(IO MllfCO C.. ... _ .. ...t. ...,. ............... __ ... ,..... .. .
1741 .... ,.,. .. ~16"
Gonion GmN
flNI ... ..,_ ..,,., •••• --
""'' Alla ... ..,. ............... ....
Dlt. MAR WEDNESDAY, JllLY 24 1"'
Cl.Oil &MD 'AST 'IRl1' uc:a -f iw--. t ,_. .... N1-.C11 ...................
111t tl•11c•r CW Mlf'll1r'lll'l'I 1A 4 .. tM
Cllum ... Rllllt (l Dlai) 11 .• t.• u.to l lbl"9or IJ Al"IWrllvrnl MM
TIME 100.1/J ALSO •AN -lflll ltullf", MMll111
""' Sll'l'lr" Flt, My l llYlr ..,_, Rolta't SIMI, Hull!IDll Vallil'I', lllwf
Scor9, Su""' Ctll:tt, Rov•I 11---. SCRATCHEO -J'At!IM, Ctll A
Mtlon, SHrcll '•fd'I.
S•COMD u.c• -1·111• mll111. I !'Mr oldl •NI ... cr.11111111. ,_
"""· Tivoli IR Vorlll tt.!I t.• IM S1>1nllf'I ce,,.1111: 1W M1rrlll J.• tM Tlrlv .... V .. I IS T!'Wlnol ....
TIMtE -IOI/I
ALSO ltAM -~. G•llll'll ......
Cllr.,,"11 Lindi. a.111111 W911, MY l111. D111DnMt1t, Clmlollll tontrol. ltklt
lime, GODfV. KRATCMED -W.-
DAllY DOU9La -....... ._.... • •11w1. MM w.a
TMlllO llACa -~ tvr'ol!lls. 1 .,_
&kt -111111 .... .... " ..... CalbrWI. c .. ...,1 .... ...,,... .,..
No l"'OOI {J .. 111nl 11M 4.• ...,.
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.. ., ·-I.to l"lf!MI) ... TIME -t•llS.
ALSO RAN -"""*= .......... '°"'...... Sl.oll ~. "tl'Vdll ....
ltrllcl ... 11. °"' A v... """' c.,_.1,. ~ .• ,....,.. Hui,
SCRATCHED -S..-ClcMlll. ,.,....I Ruler, ""'°""'"' ..... ~ •lie-~---.......,.
FOURTH UCa -4 tllr'°"'f. I ~r oldl. Cllilmlne. l'urM lt.IDI. '
Ch 1 rmln1 Fl••f IJ
k!l•nl 11.11 •A '·" c,,,_,, • .., fJ llimllilrtl a.40 2.40
Htnl Loot IF G1rul 2JIO
TIMli -11Wfl
ALSO llAN -Mo.ul'I Olft, C-
fomllll, Aln'I Nulrll111, 11:11 N"'2 MO SCRATCHIS.
•ll'TM U.CU, • f\ol'lenel. t .,.r •Ids --~"-a.• '°"'""" ,_ fSarMI 1• UI t• JlrrY'I tlcrtt ID Hiii) 11• 1.a
.... ..... (0 l"llrCll ...... """'-'·lt .,. ..
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MtM. u ''""""· .,..., c-1c. c ... -. ArtllNI ............ <-'
~
knoldlllll -T...itMr AA111"' 'Mllli'I Vll'M. l'llldlw'1 a.,, • ..,., RMI.
llXTlll •.t.e•. ' "'"""'· , ,,.., •llf flllllll ........ -... -...-w111•1•r Mtn1v
CMlrtMrrl 7.M U8 S.• ~ Mii (D H•lll 11.M J.e
Fut ~ IW Ml"'"'") S.• ~1.•tll.
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krlldllll -M* IC•I 1..-.
•1•TM •&a. One mflt • twr, t .,..r ..... Cllll'lllne, 1"111"91 11.ltl. 1Pw T .. IMIMn!iwl ,.._. UI I.•
Wiidt'• lrllll II Tl"Wtne) II.II I .• l"r1ttlcl Jlilflwi flt ~l .... n,,.,....., ... 411,
AIM R111 -l""'""'' ,,,.., ,.,...,..
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lllad, Fartllwltf'I, Cf'lllr'l't'I DdtM.
kT1kl'lfd -T1'91111 W. ''""• IC/111~. ICl .. 111: IClof, "-"IMnl·
''II• ro un
I ..... (U)CT -SVRF·
ING -Dull Ke-cb im p Io~ ...... 1rom
Wlllmea and Mllbbl Beecb,
~-. SUNDAY
UN (l) CL -SC)\.'CEI\ -
WaobinCIOn Wbipe at NY
GeM<ail. Jack Whitaker,
Marlo --..Ide at Yankee Stadium.
l p.m. ( 11) CT
SKATING SF Bay
Bombw1 w. Midweat
Pioneen.
I p.m. (ll)CT-GOLF-
So. Cal .Amltlur G o If
<J>ompklnlhip, Tom Kelly,
Don Lomond Hnkllde at
IAltOllde CC, Hollywood, !«
!!nil tlno bolea.
I p.m. (lf)F -Ftrl'BOL
-(Suce«, ck Mulco.)
I p.m. (ll)CL -COM·
MENTAllY -Tom, Anne
Makme, wltll IPOf\ lilml.
t :• p.m. (l)CT -CAR I<
IOGGINO
He1ii•••ler1 •Jowlol•--
BACK PACK
--·~-. , ............. ,. ..... ,,,,.. .. )
•T-Trodt-
• ..... C11•tt1nlnl __ "',.....
.... 2"
Offer ...... July I I It • ••• ICOPI
Ill 122 CAL
•••• CAUi•
1110 llRI ............ 7...,.._ ....... """,...,_..w--
:wtrt.thll,.d2••-'tllllrlfle. '
WILSOll mlL 11NN1s uc1ns
T2000 3600 ., .... --.. ..... .. ..... ,"8 ... f I ""'" ""' -" .... -' •A -_.,. 1a,..iil:I
...... wftll .. II SJJlll .,,.. ............. ... ..... "-·""·
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• Oll:tr Ollldtl ... at , .. .,
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~Fr? ---"' •hwr~:ll1TtMt
Yw T:lil lllfl:t •DryPock~ ,...
•DtwllS-... .. . """" ... y.,...
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ASTIO GYM
A NIW GOll•T IN
llOTOlllC--llOM
•11111 ............... ....,..
.. 115111 91.000 .... ,,. ....
llRGA MITClllLL
SPICIAL
,.. __ 9'5 .. ..... ....
...... ........ 11 •
.........
·SYOCI II IOW
i ow-..a-...
uo -t••.oo __ , .....
~-.ox~• ................ Ml• Ill II .... ~ .. -· ....... ,, ..... ,, .... , .......... ...
JI ... , .......... .
• NEAL'S , ••• .... •.. ,
SPORTING 80005 ~ ···-.., __
""""
Stadium. · •
''ERNIE'' ~,. :-.'-1
JONEI !!lo\
. ' Tire Senlce5
THE ULTIMATI HIGH
l'ERFOR~NCI! T•l/'T
H. T. SILVlllTOWN ;
770
BIG CAR f'
OWNERS-: C1•1xeU...e~ e Ot•1 1•11 e We.,._ -·-·-·1· .. ·-··-·°'!!' WHITEWALL.;:.
•••I "'·
'" $336~"·" ... ,.,.. ..... . ~--.. ,.. ...
............ ,....,,...... .................
.,,.,.....~ .......... .... ., .. ......
• ..
Specia OW PRIC"..
FREE
maTllll
Wheel 99· ¢ ~nee
-.{ ·-. ... ·-, ' Radial 998 '·.
WHllL
ALIGNMENT
* JONIS TIRE *
SAFETY SIRYICI * INIPICTAND •119 ADJUST llAUI * UPACI PIONT
WNW 11.UINH ·
NEW TIRE GUARANTIED lllTlllADS
ANY SIZE
WHITEWALL "
i4":~1 ..... *'. TRUCK 18" .. ' ... ".
TIRES TAX TU"'' ..., ... :-. ,,
......, "''"" ... ..... ..,....,. ;~
194! .. 24~5
"' TAX ~~-••
l
I
.I
• .. 041LV PILOf Tl'llil'SdlJ, Jul' 25, 1'61
Off the Board
'New Wave' Goal
For Surf Scribe
By CRAIG LOC KWOOD
Of .... CMlltr ~1-.i lllH
''One of my main objectlves In writi ng for Surfer
M~gazine is to dispel! some of the hypocrisy in· this
sport ... "
The goal of Drew Kamp\on. 24, a recent North·
em California implant to San Clemente, brings to the
internationally recognized publication and surfing world
in general a totally new approach.
Recently hired as associate editor or John Sever-
son's magazine, Kampi on arrived with an impressive
list of academic cred entials which include a degree in
E nglish from San Fernando Valley State College, a
year's journalisti c experience for the West Coast edition
of the WaU Street .Journa l and a nearly-completed
Masters thesis on poet-singer Bob Dylan.
C,.enllve App,.oarh
The t•ll, dark haired surf•r·writer who one• slept
through a course in th• work of American writ•r Wil·
liam Faulkner, brings the •rtillery of en impressive
intellect to bear on his vi•w of tt.e surfing world:
"To me Insight and imagination are the mo&t Im·
pOrtant qualities in writing, surfing writing ... •ny
kind of writing or literary work. You have to Sffk new
•pproaches ancl avoid all the old cllched respon.ses."
K•mpion's work r•flects not only fresh approaches,
but dramatically different slants on what might other·
-·w.jse be muncl•nt r•portage. Cont•sts become • clash
of image, as well as a clash of bcMrds.
His fiction, which recently appeared In Surfer's
summer issue, is also highly 1>9rme1ted with rich Ian·
9uage and imagery -a trad•m•rk of his distinctive
style.
l'iellll Su,.fing Problems
"I think one of the vital subjects that should be the
concern of every surfer in the country is really being
underplayed .•• and this is beach access."
Kampion's response to the question of organizing
resistance in this area brought on a tour de force reply:
"Jt is upsetting to me that out of the 4-0 some miles
of available coastline in Orange County only 24 are
open to the public. And this holds true with San Diego
County as well."
First on Kampion's lists of spots that have been
closed to public access -and in this case literally at
rifle point -is the famous Trestles near San Onofre.
s.urfing
Scene
Contest
Lacking
In Surf
Laguna '& 14.th an nu a I
Brooks Street surfing con·
test was marked by sm all
surf last Saturday.
t .. lmited to L a g u n a
residents, only 41 entrant.!
vied in five categories for a
total of 18 first • through
fourth place trophies.
Over 1,000 spectators lin-
ed the cliff to watch the
surfers, while judges Hobie
Alter, Bing Boka , and Dave
Whltegon scored the event.
1t •IULTI
S.~iw ........ l wfll!ll
I. Ho ... 1rd Ch111!t111
1. CorkY Smllh !. John H•ld
4. Ed M•thtWI
.....,. Swfl1111
1. G1ry Arms!._
2. w ........ 'Wt llllnl
J. John Enfltld
4. John O'Connor
l.el!Mr Mtn1 a .. n1 Rae.
1. Jtck Linck•
!. Ed M11t1e ... 1
Jv ..... M-SNPC Il-
l. C1rl ICllU
2. SM>ie Mlkke!Hn
l . 11111 Murri~
4, J ohn Enflt ld
J11Rler llMRI IVrflftl
I. Mlkl Armslrot19
1. Stevt M!ltl<tlsen
l. Olrk Vtn~
'· 11111 l!l•o-
Area Anglers
Set for Hawaii
· ''Recently I went north on an assignment to do
some research on the Hollister Ranch. I started to ac·
cumulate some hope in the matter when J began to talk
to the Hollister Ranch surfers. Then I found that when
surfers are put in the position of authority over who
has access to, they react in the same way, onl y worse. Marlin fiihing "at its be st
is in store for Newport Sees Infighting cu Detrimental Beach anglers Hank and
''There is such • l•rge background of hostility Bee May , and George and
afnong some of the surfers that m••ningful communi-Patty Hoag when t h e
h quartet arrives at Kona, e.tion •• reached •n all·time low. And these people Hawaii, to represent the
don't even really understand what's happening." Balboa Angling Club in the
Leaning back •nd framing his words carefully with Hawaiian BilUi sh Tourn a-
hl-1 hands Kampion expl•lned further: ment.
"J mNn this in terms of th• infighting betwffn the The fours ome left th is
l ~•nd 4 A class surfers. They become so over·involv.cl morning via commercial jet
iri this cliched.conflict th•t their statements loose all for Haw aii. The tourney
relevance. Half the time they ar• so involved in mouth-oommences Monday and
ing •~vertisements that they turn themselves into self,-:':":":':lllr=o:u:g:h:F:r:id:a:y:.==;I parodies.•• Ir
Articulate himself, Kampion re•lizes that m••ning.
ful frames of reference ar• important, and must be
established In order to foster a real sens• of perspective
about the goals surfing in gen•r•I is trying to achieve.
"Surfers need this perspective . , , the readers must
be able to judge when a surfer makes a statement if he
is telling the truth. ·
''What r•ally bothers me art ft"PI• who espouse
the freedom of surfing on one hand, and then become
so laden with commercial paraphernall• and pof>Out
ideas that any kind of individual response is completely
encumbered.
Nelll Thing al Surfe,.
"The new thing at Surfer is going to be an attempt
to escape from the Orange County sandbar surf and go1
out to where we can get a good perspective on the real
surfing scene.''
Kampion felt a Jack of imagination had hindered
the best efforts of th e staff in previous times. but the
new philosophy will not establish any such limiting
factor.
It is obvious Drew Kampion will soon be emerging
as one of the most energeti c. articulate and responsible
critics of the surfing scene . and that Surfer and surfers
Me"'s fashion. Clmhi.ng
* ANAHllM
*COSTA MESA * GARDIN Gl.OVI * HUNTINGTON llACH
JULY
SALE
SATURDAY
LAST
DAY
will have a spokesman who is truely and intimately in-11 ~=========:.J volved wi th his sport. 11.
TAl(E NOTICE!
HALLI DAY'S
SUMMER SALE
.,
TRA n1TION AI. MJ:N'!il W~AR
FINAL REDUCTION
30°!o -SO°!o
•
2750 Harbor
At Ad1m1
Cost• Mes•
Californla
*
• •
.....-----PAClf'IC'S ' .HOW SHOWING IH1-WAY39 DRIVE-IN!
PROGRAM STARTS AT 8: 15 PM with "THI ODD COUPLE"
LAKEWOOD
"l!proariously ~Jl!ll~
"Wise, witty and
for everybody!''
-CMl,·...c-,-
Jaek Lemmon am
Walter
Matthau are
The
Odd Couple:
PANAVISION' TECHNICOLOR'
A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
PLUS
ROD LEE GEORGE
STEIGER • REMICK • SEGAL
NO WAY TO TREAT
A LADY
BUENA PARK
GARDEN
&:I
Ill ~ .. WESTMIHST£R ~ ..
:z: ;
, •• ONLY
MINUTES AWAY!
ANAlmM
SANTA ANA
~----------------------------------------~----·----
I
~-._ .. .,.,,:z!""P •• -·--~----... ~-~ .. ----·---..
·VINYL
ACRYLIC
EXTERIOR STUCCO AND
MASONRY PAINT
• lcrubblbte • Lntll)'tll"I
• Won"t chip, crec:ti, or·pMt
• 1 Murdry ...
• llUll'I or rolt , .• :::=!! ~1 3.95·
c~ wu OUI ::l~' US PRICE ~11on
:~ATEX " W~L. PAINT
. . ,~lNTERIOR . ,fLAT
• ~bblblt • 1 ttourdf'J .
•· l"!'fl or ioll • No laftDc odor ___. .
•
•L C•lflflTO ' 1M90SAH "AllO c.,..., ol S..O ,..'*' •hrtitt•
HAYWA/10 2U JACMIOH ...._let•6.Wlfll-
•£ MOltn
U# .108• 4H Mll:"IOIA,N AV(,. • .._..., l •n C••tol 6 MQOfJl t •ll •
~-#A·Of!TAlflO COlll'H[Jll HOlf & Milli I •liKti CHI .. 1 ... l•n HUit I Nf .
LOIN a•ACH
•
-LATEX ACRYLIC
. l!XTl!RIOR .
. STUCCO AND MASQNRY .
PAINY, ·
. CAN Al.SO .. UiiiD "°" AN ElCTRE'.M£1.Y DURABLE INTERIOR J08 .
•· l hour dry • SCrubbeble
• · Cleen·up with water
• .White and colors . · t·99
' COMl'~LE OUR ' .. .
' . . RETt~L 3.50 -~~E . '.-· ,: . , ' .,,F:rJ, ' f..j ~ '\ ..... ~..... .• • 1 ..... 1 c..~~-°' .. _;., .. ~ . ,., ......... . . HOist PlllT
EXTEitioR OIL BASE
• Excellent for all exterior wood
• Brosh or spray
• Extremely durable
• Good hl~lng
White only, you can 199 tint to suit .
COMPARABl.E OUR
RETAIL 3 So PRICE . """' PRICE '_i
JIOJ HCK lllD •• J •••e.·Ho. .. V•l~
T'OlflfAllC•
:tOI lONG IEACH llVD., So. el Wltt.w
IJ1ft HAWTHOlllN[ •lVD. •• Lefftlt• .......
A#AH•I• COll'Nllt llNCOlfll 4 1..INOll'f'
I •i.c• [•~ el l,_.l'lvnt
,I
f
•XT•ltlOlt
LOG·OIL
ClEAR OR REDWOOD
• Protletl and
belutlflt1111
'exterior wood
COMP. RETAIL UO 1~
• •
NO·DRIP .,
VINYL PAINT
' . lllTERIOR THIXOTROPIC FORMULA
• l hour dry • Scrobbabl•-
• ,Clean·ui> with water
• Excellent hldlni " • Won't chip, creek or peel
;:;::5LE.3an: colo;UR 298
P!llCE PRICE ~11on
l
REDWOOD STAIN
• Excellent for •11 exterior wood
• Fin• 1rede '
COM,MMLI
•<TAIL 3 ... ""IC! .W
ouag·g.~
PRICE
IM#TA "'°#ICA t•ll llNCDlfll llVO.
•I S.nlt Monoct '"°'·
00-llY Mlt L rlOltlfilCl A.VL t lLN...._. • ...._
.. . -------
DAU.Y P1L0f
BE THE DAIL¥. PltOT'S GUEST TONIGHT!
HOIJlll l'Olt IALI s ·11 FREE HOUIU 'POI SALi HOUI!! POii SAi.i HOUlll POii SALi
1000Chno<ol
"UGE LOTS (3) ......
I
°""" ll'M ....... , wlual,. ,_.., tennl1 ceurt,
-• lllobllloll, fruit on<I
.......... otc. ......
11 PLUS
'IW 3 BEDROOM· 3 IATHS
i! &
llDRQOM • 2 IATHS
'
•
• AT Jt11
LIDO TMEATEJl ~
Cbeclt tho cl•ldtletl oectlon ol ....,., l>.\l.Y PILOT to MJi :roar name la pabllabod. It .. n •PllW ~In Ibo Cllillmlf ......
Jut cUp,.,.. 111me out ol lhl dwl~ iitia tltl.lt te ..
IJD0 Tl!BATU bi Newport hJch Jfllf'Jlfl U In tho
ll41L¥ PILOT. <YOl\'ll need ltleilllllcaUon.)
OPPll! IOOD TllltOUGll JULY IO, IHI ONLY
!!iji=Aillill· , 1• c;orona clol Mar 1250 """"!'!'!!' '"o<!t 140I . ~-q . · :lr.J~~~ ~ Yettl
• " ~ • • Oo1J 1111.1111! fllf • v111r Grwt Dl!llln A ... ~ • zh I• aa.. _. tt blldL ID u.. a-· .......... --... ~·· 1---+--IDlllldP;!I••--- -.., _ '--l!y, .. :ii ... lilt ..... l!ep. lor,,.. lo ... •Gl-
1r, 11111, lli BA -·--.;.m..,,..,.. 1-..-. ---.--·...,. -•-scar.,.. -.10X11011.1o1-
1• .. Whff1 Ruffor ... "'alley. Lara• lot v.. .. · -··• "" ......._
-· r -. 101' down. a.mat ... -ONLY
21Q1 N ....... l!ltd. RI". 6l&-3ll08 Eveo. -~-!)ir-o-Coll ii...,..._ *LACHENM!ll <114io'I -m.a ))Na: m«ll!I ...... ' . .
~ VILLAGE O»ID'M, Ullllla!DQ I -..· .. Iii Bath" ft&;u\IR
......., ~ e1ee. 111t., WITH FRll!....J.... --·-·-· ...... pocl. ne ....... Sac. prk:e Fer tb1 cOO 0001111-.J I """11
828.~. reu. tama. By homell, + l"Jelt CDW•p. ~J
Owner, 11H DoYer Dr .. N. large· pt.lb, 50' R·J kif_, '
B., UL MMll!6. main mcl>. 158,500.. • 1"'1j • ~
BY OWNER: -Bo>; • Do Laney Roal Wife --
1'· o14 I Jiii. 1 llL -2121 E. Co.,t Hwy., ~ ...,_ ,.,~~ !fOUIU l'OI IALI HOUfll POI IALI HOUlll POii IALI ~ ai .... , l&e. baclcyard. 673-lnO bidtiOd ~ ''1!1-ry 11 1 lu!tt .._ Below °'fner'• c001 Reu. ......, ....... ~ ...... ~ "· tjl,.,.. ., ,,,..,_ °""""' 1000 ...... sn....,:imi.U><Ja i:ioo ..10·s:i.:;;?Miiif,..... """8 ~ It Nf,171 -QPBI O-rol llDO Cooto MoOI 1111 <ail o. lac ..i 23rd). lalboo Ponlnoulo ....,, "f~ ~
................. YA ' PHA ....... . . kluly . EST -.. -......... B1lllt. ID r.ul """' ot ........... Hvotl""°" ... ch Pill • SUN 1 to 4 ,..,, IAYCR Ylctorle M... C1lll 11r.---2146 Miramar ldtclwl!. Electrtc ..,...
"
_......., No~ 11 "--~ H'·h , 2331 Hoa"'9r Lono · Alltll!Jl JlKllTlllG 1111' H ·--,..n. 1 _, ' do<>( -· _, ... ._
-"" _, • wiy, ' -• -·"".,... -_....., ~ IB laoe ,_ "" iilo -.. I -';I ·i.:· 6 ,.., -~-·' 8R, dlnla& nn. loond In !u hlah<r l"'lcod
Noor -.-,thli, • • .....itH bome. ---• ID -I""! I ~-.PLUS -II NEW HOllE!I .,P,, kit-. TrM tbodod ~=~:a=. home1. ,.._
• · bod< boy ..... ., ... _ -........ -tlC fiomlW -PWS.... ~do. 1!11' 30-yr looa -J>Ot1o --~ -TARBELL, 1'111 Buch BL Shrwoofllltafetbythe$ea ::..':...."".-::'.=.: -....,,~-::::::. -m.I """':..."':".i~! V~~~·t~ 2:':,."''fH~,,.,•nl Price~lly 1.S FOllECLOSURE-
. --~~ -REPOSSESSIONm llN0to7;00~olly} ~~loll"9,l501r7 ....,_,...,, __ ........i -PLUS l.TllltlC.ol-OCEANFRONTHOME Thllnnch""l•<bodroom
. mn13 646-1111 ~ c~"' ~ OWN!;i\ u.ro .: '::.., ""': .... ,0 .,,.,., ..-. , -. •Br. Pete Barren & Co. """''bu, -""""·
I/I' Opon EvM. ~ WA~CI JEAN SMITH, :=.;,,lflal>,::-:.=: :':.:" .. ~ ia:: = 642-4353 ~:=In~
lllALTOlll· .REALTOR ~,.-...,. 167...,_o..wl'IN'lll-..... ..,,type-....VA· .... ~ .......... 11-"M 10 4141-z. lTth ... CM _ .................. ..,. , • ;.... Destiny Calls cmr.1115.00 Total -.1n
In ._crest ~QaifMIRCIAL '°'"" lftoil"l'I .., · · BDRMS • 1 a , "'· ,,,.. · IAVI "' ""'" "' VETS . ...,.. Down
-r llll0,41!' _ ,_ --$ ~:/;-;;:,~~~F ot-. -..dns. -· i., -· I 8R, I IA, lllOO ,.... ~ !omlly ID mov• FHA. --~,.·_ •. :.,.~ ~.~-.. ~ Nl;WPORT ~--"'"·"-Del ~.1...._~.1 .. __ ,.11.-..,..,-0DI 1nto,arii!cbmtlh...,boocb -.. _ -~~., NO POlllT 10•11 HTS .. _. ...-. u-HSdlolrlol.SST.il!-N!O-4oll ....... 1....-.i. old·
jll:!' ---Ell-wll l!olp -.. cu be M HEIG Ma, ltlch wood -• Pbono ..,_,.,, ' • ta4lOI .,., Tloo 1-(Jr -,_, <r homo with ov.-e, ol
..... Oocr ploa. ~ -l<a' ............ uae. Uldrm.ln_t_tloo ,,.,..,..._ """' ....... . bol•R«fla""l ... ,_ ..,,,. .... charm.SBR,111 llmD;v rom1.: tormll lvillc Olll DOW ..... pu1ladan, cu be tallln. OM' It IO eolt -11'. baths. ON" cariieta. wttb lnd1l'llCt llcbt1nl "a r.1 WHERE 80rr BA, pegied 2-rdwood lloora 'Im EDINGDI.
-IDIOftcokon;....... $45000 tDbuyor.$21,111111111--""-"'"""-.... ~=-i::::;;=.-::: IPl""""IBIDW• No..,.,,Hfl!: ·1210 • ....,_an ___ "O. INHO =_.";~ ~ """"': 0
Nowpott = 1?!.: ~ ~~· w1:':k :! ou< -...._ • 2 .:::::1: .i:,;. "°""'ASY tureo. "'·959· ~flNO •iCUltlTY "-.I -.... -,_ ' balho. .. ,.. FllA ........ botbo. --... -1v szo 950 nwn Barr White, Rullor < tP.54111
l'nM ,.i, "'"·""· ol --• -~ "'7171 ••• ••1• -Bullt • la ldtebm. ..,..., , ' • Qoolm"'"".., 11>1-. ftS«1DO .,_,__ -~~ '..,.. ..,.... • Dectrtcpnp ........ TN-H-ol OlOla M,_ .U.. "111111 --CUt!" ol -N..._ llhd. v..,._Nol¥>me·ldeal
V1cl9rlo ::1a::.~=·:;: OPE>llM>I. lybrrll!cJ 5«).1720 llolmollvlnr,butll-lnl,pri. Drtamomlo!o_Jf.,.. N-Boacia ... ~ • .,-j
WJl lxchange """"'"11'8Do.atlotndudeo Torboll 2955H••• ftto-.IJO&led-.No ..,..J!illlllllol.flllltl50ft~ Evei.(11-1!21 •""°!'lfUL·I-._..,,,.
__ ,._"'"' 64Ulll all CAllEPREI LIYlkl ..af~:-i:.--..-~an•":'::...-.= !'.!"::..lie~"":: --··"""'-E<> 3 IEDRM-$19,'21 ·-r110 -~---.-'15 Wnt lay Ave INl!t·ID ~ -
-· rmtol ........ ,... 1otn 11>1 "Fora•t" °" I "!'---l'.ia9JEw ROAD 114.!00. S plqo BR'• Uooobottucted -Allotrinr .....::
-.. -ID Q>lla • D ple1e1 ... about home moln-ID.. or J.uit DRIVE. Barr ' -u. Re11tor v.... at Bl,)'. Private "'""· 1m11' -qloarm .. ..... -. 122•000 -·NI ii · I · SCARCE MODEL • _, 2 pu11ma n• • -w. """u....., ...... ....... ~.11!11.000.......,byOWI. $57,500 !llillloll"l',C.111. -llvffo "A" Angollt1 botbo. All built-In.,..,.., COHl>OlllNIUlll· N ....... l!lvd. Opon Delly l.S beaL '41ey added.,_
_.., d1.lbwamtr, """""',.,, JUlllCLCJllJR& 4 JR. t -:: Beach t'eatures. MU691 m.mi.,._, Ev•'"e',.m-omch ~ ~-= 1 ...... cul~to I IR B~.: ~':"....'!0!. ;;:::.,• :'.:·~~ --l\::~· -..._ ,,..., '™132 Pete BlrreH & Co. TARBELL, 16111 Beach m
-II ....... -do -Somo view ol Bay • ,... """ fin ... ""'' .... jollW. .... . "" YI f VA NO DOWN ltf1 Inc. Ile°"""'• ltlh St. J:ioctl-lloiou!"'""1o6 oomplotely !.M-,.i, Pll ...-,r. TARBELL • ' = ~ CA~~ 0ctlft eW GrtYtr ' 642-43" S BR '111 ~-~.'ilo lull
2l1JI ,w Ba!1icia Blvd., NB !~1 """'1n1m""""t1n' Call"°" -SBRhomowllloa l.oodeil wtlll """' all 16111 Boach a•·' HI -·!Zif-tu. · ....-appo en '"· ianr. IDrmal ~ rooq,, Ontcmtud, Patlol are · •••., -..ua (open e Te• ) O:me l8lt thb prestip home Wallt to bW., Onwr
642•1n 1 2\1......,..boll>lll.olb,.,.. &Ulnond......,....by 11m.,..11a1_ _,P.....,vtew.>BRlldololo 1351 :..,.....,,,111111t.,.,....
FAMILY? AAyllmo =---"';--= Coll ,:."Hr.;;:'d. lkr. 3 UNITS 4 llt + RUMPUS !.!':,.""n...":' ... ":"'~~ ·TWO STORY ~:::,\'!';
• -~ ·•--•~ ---~~ a -.,_ fOr • c~ ~ -8nncl -•~-• lJJOO "I -~ -~ ~ -~•. ( Bdrmo., 3 balhl, plua dfn. ~-:~ _, 4 lot &:"'.:::=.:-mim. ;;,;~ ~'N• 4~; .,,,,;rt· . tittlttnt' ,~;;.tment · tt m thll ~ ~ ticnal -_u::t;;.~A t::. !:tr 8:: ~ =y::; ..... -----•
l 'llloi: bed!••"~ --..... • $27 500 ed homo -..... ...... ... •• $34,'r.!O. Euy an..... WALKER REAL TY -.ch. wltb ltt Own ball NOT Ll:ASEHOW. A ne1 1 bt al Mlmt P'""'11'W, Inc • no loan chutes.
--• -.... -... ..,,1111. . Wollo-Meeardlo RflrL -• pond, .... "'·"" GR.\HAIJI REALTY 616-:1111 Jl15.521Xl 518-1167 Ev.. Oor -• -
Nlo•o--pool 1• luth P'orclol~ Ruiter i h b 1llO II ....... Blvd., C.M. COi.LEXiE REALTY -(Neor NB """ Ol!!cel Outotoncll"\ I lllMl7l NsU -~ .. -... -IEAUTIFUr . ~ 11111 w-"'· -o n mac:na .... mo """ "'"'"" .,. "° A'ITRAC _ ... '° " North -tnm~ 3 bd 5 ..... .
,._ I" Opon Houoo Sun l.S pm I Br 1 bo w/w ..,...4111 :...ba. ~1e.,.-..--
ot ITUOO llACON IAY I 0 Ille P'rlco Bq1nmt .. • RIAL ESTATE "31 MINElt Pin•""· -• ;mw· '""..,r' ..,. $9$0 Taial CaM 0oatoot Jim~ Cuoto6' d-·~Lootp 2-111,bolll ~pl« ud ol!p. Now< Sbarp3br,2bobomo.Sbob lt.C.G1ima,'11<o11y -,. ..,,...., ti>
llwo. fll.1111 home. 2 BR'• + 1 BJ\ .,t homo"' -to a -ol bdrm., 4 ~-. l'lmlly SAWMEN i1lOI, !>pl, blt·inl. SEE THIS Dovor Shoroo 1227 !NII Via Udo m<l!lO ---· a.. to
"
AR•Olll w!llo -u .. ol -...... --""""" ............. ud I car.... WANTED NOW! 122 llO ... • -""' ~ ...... :-. --, --..,, ..... ID O..,.d&lb'll:u1 .. .._ !lcftoI ....:.....;,_ LO T·LJ. Vlow. Low 7114• _ dNd> b Wbt. One ol -ldtdlc ..,. -121.000 i-. Shoro Proportl" • • ·~·-. rM'l2I 1 .. -IO•µ>' av. No. Hunllngton Booth 1400 :,J..e Jlllt.., tho marloot,
AmNTION
HELP
DllANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. 17th St. 646-4494
·channlng Value
V..-it elCale ule. Channing
·-...... _ .. by iDature lreel. S bedroom•
...S dm or formal dining
lllOCQ \n • i-rk·llke .etting. .... ooo.
~·. -..... a .. 1--~~ wttrt. ,BO an .• Vetl ud CaU for Appt. ff3-9060 BY 0 w NE R . ,...,._.._.,._ 28S ...... ...,_ build cne W'Oh't tut. SJ.SS.,.. ~· ---·-ll,l!IO-.. . --· --·:·-----and 1811 !llXI IJlro. 11iu1oD. •-1
""' 1714) 64U2JS ::'°L Coll ... Pull. 1 "r -c 2 SKIPPER WANTEQI .......,_, I.:.._ .. _.:_. Coi.:;dy' (O, == ·~~~:~· ~~":.,~;:,.;:~ Unlvonlty Pork 1237 to tak• ovu ..., "-''
-Jt.ndl -• l>lj.fnL ... _ .... Raotlc ... ..,, VllJ.AGE 2 Lu ext. S Br. 2 BR EL CAPITAN -Coldwell, Bonker I Co. 4 IEDIM + DEN-Boautllul on"· lllJRJlYJ $71,JJJI), 5IJ>.'19Ji7 .. im.2'11 Bo. Atrlam. 10 tt eetl!np. s =" = '=
,.. •· c..t "......, $24,.50DI LEASE or aUe s bchi. I 1uab prdem, m 1 r r ore d block wall t.dna ~ mtdi 10l3 WDTCLirT DIUVJ:
-..JI"'; ... =-•cr 0.Wn Poymont "OCEAN VIEW. $21,JJJI)" _,.a._ .... Nr --...... -· ... ....... """"" ....--616-TIU ~ ~ Kl ' H • !1>1 l""'°' G.I ............ Hup2-lba,10oc121 ........... -.-.,.. """"""· $71,Jm b e. fn. wlthl25100bolance·-=:.:::;==~--~::_~-:!;I
THOMAS KuDll "' od>oro1 --Ftnoloco. --Drtw -.,. ,,,. ""'' -N• ucr -.. .. 13..J .... DUTCH 2283 PACIPIC ~ lr~~~L· ........ lh· In ..,, ... , Tiled ....,., hall HOlll: -°'""'· IM W. l5IM3l2 Jm.<I01 o..w. '"dflc ~ ll<olt,
coSTA MESA r~ -•oo1qr1u1 ~"" -· MISA YEllDl-42'.soo 1111.-Eveo. .._ HAVEN
You are the winner of
2 tickets to the
LIDO THEATRE
Showing
THOROUGHLY
MODERN MILLIE
-... ;; ~ 111oot m· ...... 0 a..........,"'' bar "0" Down Po-Mno Yordo 1111 lrvlno 1231
::: ::..~..:t E=i~='"is '=°' .. 'i:.i.~~ ~~.:=:;.: V!lll&o ~Rr1: _ .. 5 BEDROOMS $22711 lluQt.ia ............ pOOI ID BBQ t<r -"Fun 11lOm. Fun Oen .... • a..r. 11ono OQl. E1oc-. 0..... ~bolt locollon, m. UC!, TAKE OVER 1111' LO.\N '
...... """1111-..... OW" --kltd>en. -a.. Joi, 101' do, $:!!,JOO. m -•.....,.don, !'W,· No loan "°"" IA!p bll·ln ~ -I BR 2 -E><collmt lqcatloo no1r . T~RBELL place, !><-Joly londocap--IA Kl ¥1111 IOO. "1 -· sr..m .. ldldoea w/bor. Formal db> -. ....... .,.,,,,_j ~ ...._ . 2H4 ldl HI od1Vd.Lowdowuto-"2-2711. fnr.2ynaow.~·-........ P!nr.rnA·VA..._ TARllLL "'°'' ' ' ·no down ID G.t.'L 5«).17" SHARPS 1111, '""le rd. R.a1 bqy! KATEU.\R!:ALTY 1117-
5124 Edl ... r, H.I. Nllb PRllNDSf TARBELL 29SSHorMr :.'°:"'*~im""'"' lack lay 1240 BRASHEAR REALTY ..;-~~===-=,,.._-!
Juat clip thJJ ad ""' .... lutolM Cooto -I ea ' .... wl.. ........... OCIAN FRONT -111..,... -1117"531 Ev ... 5'1-NEWPORT WEn II to th• Lido Theo"' "1 Beoutlllll 2 BR 1 bot11 home pOOI a patio, tlodrl b\!111· A"" I lilt Goon! Noor Hv-OWNER. °"""' built 1 BR "MODEL HOME" ftUI
Nowport Beoch with Jdontl-ID I\• 0, -I"'-loo< mtruc:o. ., n lot family room, -.... 111
.....,. k1tc11m -'"""' -•Jon<!ocoplow.llill --co11 ... Portr 1115 ....__,,_ .... .,vAoodown,.i,$915-.cr z STORY flc1.tion. Otter good throu&h area, formal dln1na: room -uuv. .;.c.;. FHA with low down Lonl.7
July 30th. -. U""" room with =: = = a.-Ra! -le Co. S Bii. 111 ba. -Im ~ ,_ yW. $!3,!llXI ....., S BR2 batll orltll boo-GI NO llOWll ar nu ....
' • "RING" Reduced to --hdwd tin, --!00 E. Bolboo l!lvd.,....... ... ·~---.. room. down. I ..... Uxll !Joml!y ··iSPRING $17,900 Q..."°'""'.·-~'-:'~ ·~ l'lMI• _.._ Eotblvfl 1242 IWTI>ALREALTY n>om,tono.!dfntar._ ~= ~ --SALES ASSOCIATIS ..!.. ''Home to Matcl> ., .... ,. 1"'30 ... .,.. "'"' wiib •-= REAL TY FHA or GI unit. ONy $19,lm. 15111 IPUt )hnapmm ~~"" INlh 1200 BWJTI, Ban "G" p I a n: lflO Wamer aa.ta BBQ or wet b a r. o.n.
' --· "Alm'Dll:'' Dondy 3 bedroom with woll RI ... -EvoL -......... .,. """"" --AHJClm -' !or, s ... "' Dlvorco/M...t Soll -·
, --.Blvd., C.M. ID woll -lhN oul. *LA CHEN MYER MMl.OS ll6Ut71 '-· Coll lor ..... IR. I llA. flomllr room, Oww. PT.llO JIM.<7140. n;o "I ft 4 + """"' + BllASHEAlt REAL TY ..... '"'°"' yW. A dw>ce HOME ..,._ ----to ""'1lo + view. st ... to 847-8S.ll 536-1"90 1161-U!I 16 U~ f:t.Jf7'f"" 546-231 • Exciting Z Story Doullle• Double SALES ASSOCIATIS -. ll•w•• ._,, El Tllro 1244 1-1> •dock. Rm. tor poo1 Sf ~R llACH • Ivan w.... ...... bome I-· ........ 1 m -111/15 ..... ..._ .. -!Jr, -sron.mi ' Br' .. ...... + free 14' Udo To '
-" °"">letoly With ...... • -story Uvtna Irr <VI • 1 ... alley l»r _.,_ Doable -.... Diil, j iAtill'• lrpl. --pr. Huoe °"' $83,000 Soc $67,000 WW lo
,_ I" I .....; .. bolhl No rm, ...... ""'·""" nn,' -Bl& l. + -lneane. CJtll b' -i.an.,, 1111 -1 "'11ed >'Ud, lndo co d. "°d" °"""· 817-~ <..--Oaly 11Jli 000 BR S b&. llu> ...,. 6 man home -2 .. _ -HOME..,._ Cor -"9,l!O ............ n.et, 1n1111, l-';5oi"i'..;.-';:::::,~:.;::;::_ P 1nlZ: _ ....: 1. ' In before ICbool lt&rtl. 6 ~ ClOYtred i-tm. t.oY. ..:..._-11:1.ruba I: 1klwen. $24 900, l0Vlst1 Special
..... t Roy J. Ward Co. Ml-15&0 b' yard wttll .-tnklen I: C t1 MeN II• -..-Real ~· nEAUTIFUL t Br. I: pool.
L1Y11T2,!11F1c1 Ust'inas NH..,. -wau. N..,, -°' 1112 *"" 11r. -.. _ 11 Bii ... "'"·· .,.. kl! =;::;::: ..,_, -uvu Hel&bt. • SIJl,IJI), !lulomit lllEU V-----: ' a, 1 Bo. Cor°"o clol Mar 1250 hdwd !loan, fully ......... :
Allnlclve "°"' pl..._ cd· ,,.., ...... • °""" -· -.!. I llr· de, Iba~ ...,.. -· I--2 ba<h. Wolk to ............ . OIU'f411 COUNTY'S O<ful ..........., clhnbfnl It out°' 2ll or OUR Uot!np q . CAU. IWG.U5l <--pa1n1 la I oat. Ntw Clow U1W1 Of Ulllllllll G!orFl!Al3Jl,950. t1y.., .._
LAIGIST ............. tnlllo ... n. Let ..... YOUR...... _, -.... Ra! -·· ...... • ...,., ... -LiJi\lily 1 Iii. I -..... Ju;n IUUIUVll P. -·RI'>' 847-..... ~ "!'" -
... I. t11h It. 64M494 """ ... _..,. ....,.., s DAVIDSON llALTY YU 1111: llRlll uw -$21.000MMllll 11111. """ ..,n. loo land. Qaolat '"""'· ,..... """" -.., S•trtfico •lob at •• ;,;:.~
.......... ' b•lhl. ,,,.,, RI... mo u.-"'· CM n~ IW.'IU 1'111111: $21,950 -OWNEll ~ ""=' $32,!llXI ...... 1n91o ... lloduced 3 BR ' ......... ~ i "' boo .. lor -I!."'· ~ .. -'1!·~111!-es Bil :: ~·\=,~~~ Sl-1 llM IJSTllG! 1:.·f: :: :':'a'f'::~ llOVl:.ilh
0
f1Mr M!f ' BR., ~ ro:l~TlN ~ ~ '°" ~ Nl!;;;I ~ :;_
I._ -__ _,,.,. """"'""'· °"""" drap-,.,.., • · 2l2ll "'"' a. ...n. 111>1., 'M -"'· ......_ JtJ;ALroRS ' etc $11.SOO. RI". !J62.<2It ELEPHANT S...,.
•• :rvd"' -·Dot· ... llloot .. eondi11on. On1' s BR 1\1 boll>I. N"' "'· t, Y,: ~ "!:"~ llALl!XlU:.!T "' °"""· ' :;,o:_ :=:., == Iii Yiew-Yitw-Y-11w LOVING ..,. ••eded. s BR, BEDRO ._D ... ~ -... hllh 3
yn. 'TA:i~L Rlln. &C241>I "-. !i48-072ll ,. Br., 2 ba. Nowly paJnlld, point l llx Up. Over :JS OJI) OMS
.,...,,. K* -. 'l'btol 16111 Bo•th Blvd. e 11:1111m· y T. H. McAnlle Breier """· d'l'8, bltno Ind.,,... BAYCIU:n'BYOWNER A homo pl&naed+r<r Ibo .... + ., n, .....,. .... "'""''1o1. Rayo1 ..., "''" __ ""° ~:.ir..!1'°""""'' UUI comm, 4\11' Gt onll. A*. SIA!pl!drmo.S,2!0oq.ft, -pp.' tomUy Priced ....... mltt. fl.t ,850. _,., _ 3 iii!+d:;
N ,._ ... ,..... Golf Cou L 222 W. W-. <X _, q 121,lOO. IWHlll Iftn WIDI loollt. Foo lond. -........ l8500 dll.-81H31M. + 2 boll>I + .......... . ~-:-c~ 1111 ...... .= : .,. sw1M. F1sH.10AT -v IE W FORSoloi.,-.-''' 1100-!AM oi;:i ~·:· BYOWNER.""""""" m ... +BBQ• larl'O i...:
.,. _ ._, -_,, -1 .. • ~ -s BR, 2 BA. 1 bdr, ~n cpWdr1JOo -UlltURT Ooodom • lll•' BOYD llEAL TY 1ou. -'"''' 2 11..,., • ....i + ........ w111 ..,
a fatrwa.Yt. ntm-cbe.nntl. ~ tanL bpo, 7U'4-xmt Io c . nr BR, SBA. MQll ,..I Ownlr' Br 2% bl., den, bltns. Water points b' nu. or GI ftnaDC>
:::; 1o1>o .to tho Chi. Only 13!1,!IJXI. OCEAN f!1lm dlnln1 """' l --Atic Pl,!IJXI. -. 1'1:S00. Call -3llZi E. Clout 8 "1" O!M coadltlooer. Franclllcan inf. l'rlcof Call A '*'
'p. lllll, --"'IWJ CAYWOOD ltlALTY '°""" ~"' ldlehon. ' MS-1!13. IG-Ol21 -altl,--Founto!n ,_.,, ~9 TRADEWINDS RLTY "': ": .... _,· -Clllo<ol.,..,,.j N. :!" W. Oout ~l290 '°1:.tr: 11:. IE~al:tllo. "'3A Doi Ma Sllr. 2 Ba. rrs WOflllERnn. t1oo....., -utllUI I Br. So. .. VERY Oean: Nr bdl 3 Br. 812.:;au or IM2«lit
tnihrMw JUtr. at IZ,(O). -~ o.t. poo1. Low dn... MMne b!ol a ..,,,_ ,. Dad ~~ 1JWMr •· ram rm. 1" a bltm, Pl.tC& Jalllr' ._ td ....... CJ1191 S\'D. CDlSS WLTI' ~ Dlll1 Pllaa Wut Adlll "' Jct;. VA klu. 0,., JON .. tbt °'rt'ed Ada-a.ct R•--· * en.-eovmd patio. Allume 5l( 9' tlleJ n ~ _ DAILY ··•=-••1::::::;::::;:;:.:::;L.:Al~"""~!:!a~Go-Go~~1=-O:IARGE JOO!' want Id now. MWkln Ml).40)0wner tt.n DOwl DUil PUae Wut Miii Gt Jou.13,IXXI dn. lm-3!:lt3 PILOr dald!Sed1 so.n.°
-/~11 r ~w -
I •
• • I
• •
1-• .... ••
HOUHS POil SALi
Huntington -1400
16xJ6' POOL
LWfurloua 3 BR home, dlnln&
room, deft 6: carden kitchm.
F"11,y -..t..i A dnped. Prof........, .... ..,. .....
Will trade tor units nf!llr the
berch ot submit otter to pur-
""''"· LISTER REAL TY
18Sll Becldl SJ., HB Ml-fi6S3
fountoln Volloy 1410
S BDRM Elt*. Reduced to
.. u by°"""'·-·"""' July 20th. 2hl 18860 Sulta
Barbu'& 10 am-4 pm or b)I
Appt. enc) 89$-.3.511
~n...~~>i<f:;:::,,.lolY;;;,~~~,1~'61:::,_.,---~~....:DAlr::,LY:,,,..:l'ILOT:.;.;.~f~J
HOUSES FOR SALi -lllNTALS lllNTALS lllNTALS 11.INTALS lllAL ISTATI • •uSINW ollli IOSINIH -
Loguno ... ch 1705 H-UnfurnhllN Apll. furnlo.Md Apll.,UnfumW... A.io. Unlurnlt"°" _O;o;•:;;.•;.;.r;.;•o.I ----flHANCIAL PINANCIAL
NEW 4 BR .,"" Nowpeit -3200 No~ 9N<!> 4200 C..to -5100 llontolo Wont.ii ~!!! Offlco llofttol 6070 ._ Opp1: ''?!!;lo _...., °"""""'"* ...
lam rm, Vlw of 0-1 MUii AVAILABLE NOW * URGENT *
L"oi';l'Oi:s";LTY ~c1n .... ;,. • ..;batb *'Clllnnel Reef* HARIOI y=. ~ = :.".:.~
& Glmoeyn Street S:ZOOmontbOft)eue APARTM:Dfi'S GREENS GmnanSbepberdcom-
Laguna &ti.ch ~ 613-3863 Evea: 54M991 SPECTACULAR Vll:.'W pe.nkm nHdl an cmfu:rnUheCI
BQ'' 8ffdt. Reali:)', Jnc:. Waterfront/Loe -Boal ont btd:loom boult or •put·
San Clemente 1710 85 W. Balboa Blvd., NB SIJpt A.vailUlit BAam..<>ft • UNnJRH. ment wttb I.need or end>
sJ12tx2oa1 s:.~.3~N~ ·~.:.i:~:~ fro: !~00 ~.--:.:".:ii:= eve~. 6C-9.n9 $445 Mo. lt qp • $58,500 up 1. • 2 6 s BDl\M. RH.lonabi. ftDt i*:ue, am OCEAN VIEW HOME 2525 Ooean Blvd., ow 1JNnmN oo 0x..i ...,,.,., Pbooe 6Y4Y• INTEREST BUY IJke rent; MZli mo 3 673-1788 -!or further info ••~a':'!_.RN~ll ..... 1u. ..:__ ~2225
NEW BR.S Ba, plor A ftoat. ~ -•-w-~ l:o==~----2 8alhoe. Cov~ 675-4331 Herman Tn>tt, Mir~ Catd-. Adj. to Shopplq -BUSINESS Woman needs 1
3 IR.· 3 IATH --BEA No pell alJowed Br unfum Apt, c M, Qu•lfty Home $31,950 Back S.y 3240 UTlFtll. waterfront apt. 270!I Pett.non Wa,. •t Hll' Newport, Cm>na de! Mu, RANC~92~;ARITA 3 LARGE Br, 2 M r.ukit-aae ,;:t~;· 1r:!: ::,1 =~ bee Ir ~Colt& ...... ~~t: c°::r i:u:~
~AGUNA llACH "Air~
ON l'ORD'•' AVENUK
DeM .,.eet available· tn
-allloa -.. ...... location i;; -. .....
Laawu:e.'och.Alrooodl--. _ .... baautlll:l
pam1ed pu1jtlonln,c. T w o
entrueei: Front.Ip on
FOl'8t A•e., rear leads ta
Muodpal ,arldnr 1"":. 1511
per month for ~<:e. Deak
and chairs anllable for 1$.
BuaineM bourw .uw•in&:
M'Yice available for no.
All utilide. paid except
telllPbone.
DAILY PILOT
SALES
1968-
Your year
of independence?
"!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!J!l!l!!!!!!!!I NB crpU, drps. &fl r!q. • 675-4009 • necesaary, 642--0086 after Ii -:; ·= =· W'M. 5*-81183 Rent or Nle; trlr. oo-Ela:ti.lent. park_ like aur-i~pm_ .. -------1--------1-6--12 Sin Juan Lido Pmin. nr. beach. ...... • ...,11 .. ,.. ,,_ adulll _,.uir-WANT unfurn apt, app $1111, W-lnater , C I tr 1no R-' to -... ·-· -·~ _ •P • ano """ .. """"" on..,., ing pee.ce 6 quiet. Laiuna atta, Sept to May or ~CHARMi'ii.:R'.MmiN<G;l3:-'iBR;;;""";,:-'iBA<; l!lu~l..!l!!l~uff!!_ __ _.:3~2~42! I Mr,. Ke1 li?.>0100 Discrlminatlve Tenuta .luoe. T~r, wife, & baby
222 FOREST'Avmt!E
LAGUNA BEACH -
We 're looking for · a 1IWt wlul liUI lo do
thlniS In. own ""Y· A maa wbo belleYe9
In himaelf. Thia man bu pnil>lbl7 hod
some succeuful Illes or bullw1 aperi-
ence, and now he'• reedy to put um •·
perience to work to carve out hil tutur• GI RESALE home, tir@ipla.ee, w a 11 e d BEAUTlFUL ~ew, apacioue OCEANFRONT Attrac. 2 Br. J 2 A 3 BDRM. API'S. due. Small tat~ i I
yard, doub~ ~· $27,000 Luak 4 BR 2!11 beth home . furn. Apt. Wlnttt or yrly. Pcxx.. NO CHILDREN availab!e. Write: Mr. L. A.
_.. a.a11> . ..._,,,,. wa1m1t pooelkd 1om11y ,...m A..U 9115. 64&-5832 MARnNltj)UE "'"'°"· d o c.,1o~. 6000 AnYMe ml)' uaume thil GI -~=~~-----1 with wall 1yatem I: H • Moolaco, Long Belich, CaJ, 5"''foloall,..,able$llllmo. RENTALS fir•plooe .. O>m.r lot, untlngton luch 4400 GARDEN Am. MAWRECpleW-.lo,...
Air-Conditioned
Ollie" ... Doslc s,_
with ttntnl teeretarial, zer-
ox and telephone answerina
ler'Vice, up to 2,CIOO Ill· ft.
The Mutual Bids.
If you're that type of penon, we'll ptJ
you an ottroctive tratnilig Wary end -
pare you tor 1 lifetime career with New
!ngland Mutuol Life !nlurance Compo-
ny. Your lacome proopecfJI will nm ... 11
Into five flguret. And your future will
depend on you.
3 Bedrocn on a bla: comer Hou ... Furnlahed landaeaped with aunny pe.tio e NEW e LUXURIOUS e 1Btb 6: Santa Ana, C.M. winter ar yrly, l bdrma. Na
lot. Room for boat ' trailer A: IeDCl!CI yard. Clrpeta, RESORT UVINC can Mra. Hendenon 66.SM2 ehMdren or pdl. Coronl !kl
21163 E. eout Hwy, OIM
Call 8 AM to !I PM m.-ta'l'O
FOR llENT
Approx. 450 Sq. n . carpeted
" drapH, ah'-cond.
~~-i;: Rentals to Share 2005 = ! :~~cbe~ 4 NATIVE GARDENS 01T77"'i'iiSan~la~Ana"li:,~Ap~t~ll3~,~c~.M~.'.l :Mar==-==°""=·=~===
new wall fl) wall carpeta, WANTED sfri m"f'!' n 11::9 l'HpOl'ISlble family, Avail 6 PCX>l..SSAUNASJACUZZI 7 s; r~~;; ~~--;;~~"'~· ;;"""'~::;;;;;;" ~;',..=ch=°'=11=2~=n=",1;:_:11:.:~:.".~;:;~~Mor~2'ti:_1~~~:1250::: HUGNATRIDNEGNTSON '~;r::.:~.:~ =. .'.; :: m 5: Please lee! froo to write cc Mil:
MARINER'S BLDG.
1515 Wettdltt Dr., N.B.
Cl:Jn.tlid: Mrs. Rainie ...,...
ROLLA R. HAYS .JR. C.L.U.
New England Life
611 W. 8th St. --'----'-"'--"= · =======~I"°""' kltch. pnvll., -
5.ll-2770 ATI'RACTIVE ww.tfdront 4 4 BR. 3 Ba., ~. tefria. Tennis· EnterWnment Newport leach 5200 ln JWm, Emplo~ lady
Br. home, bnat dock, winter dlhwlhr, .4:dults, no pm. BOLSA-CHICA & HEIL ;.;;.:==:...::~::.;..-:=:;:1 Prete fr e d · Wett DL S42·~;,~ I:: 321 lndustrlol llontol 6090
Lagune leach 1705
LAGUNA BEACH
1~ Terrace Way, Temple
Hilla. 3 BR. 2 BA, large liv·
inr nn., fireplace, beamed
ceilings thru-out. All ele<:.
kitchen, Iarre earner lot,
155' front. Landscaped,
llhrubl. Ocean View. Pri<:ed
right. P.O. Box 914, Lagunr
Ber<:h, Owner.
nflS OLD HOUSE
lit ll stately 2 story with ~
Br's, wood paneled walls &:
old mission brick floora &: a
t\&'11 ot the century bath.
Orchard trees &: guest
house. $32,950. Missim Rlcy,
985 S. Cst Hwy. 4M--0'73l
MAGNIFICENT
OCEAN VIEW LOT
$5,960 • small, but level $150
down, bat S5l mo. IA,guna
Bch. 1n4> 497.1210
BY OWNER. 3 Br, 2 Ba, fPl.
ocean view. $29,800.
833-519'1 or 4M-3894
SAYE
£ASH?
Read
DAILY
PILOT
c
L
A
5
5
I
F
I
E
D
LOOK
TODAY
leSM. 400 38th St .. NB (213) $2Ei0. 424 PoiJlsettia 615-5218 ADULTS 1474414 3 BR. 2 Ba. dl.glis; <:arp., l_ .... _1393 ______ _
OW 7..mR7 2 BR, 1 BA FURN drapes; all Me. k:itch. ind. SLEEPING mom. Men <:rl!y, 4200 SQ. rt. in mGdem tm-Ill ISTATI
A...utal:ff now Duplf'x 1 Br. k gar. 1 dbl. <Wen.di .111 h w ••he t'; non • Nnoket. Reh nq'd. fftf.e building M-2 aine $30ll AL
Balboa 2300 e 546-1'140 • hlock to bead!. '145 ma. patio. leak. to oa!an, % blk South rl Hwy, 01M. $20 wk. 1 =""'=' =("='='=-===== __ a.._.,._r_•_I -----_,,...="=46====== to bay; M peta. $195 per 675-511.f alt I 1 · A 6200 --·sULA ~ ,, ... , ... 1o LGE 3 br 2 be., blt·inl, d"*'I: -,_, ._I t I '· Loh 6100 ';o<;:;reogec:=~---....::= ,.,., .. , ba ..-... :n711 "::' rm. Avail 8/15. Na petii. Lapn1 Buch 4705 :z;;;-= u .)'8.ry..caae. LRG room privatit bath:;:;;;:;;_ ____ _;:..:.;:.::
. ·------------
Attlllat•
hdusive -
Franchlsi' ocean or y: 3 ..... , 2n ha. }225/mo 111 ~'1507 .,,... outside mtn.nce nr. bul. 2 LOTS on ~tl.qa, NB
Avail. Sept. 10. Yearly ;l35 , AUGUST Rental: DelUX4! 0-2 BR, open beamed, <:ptll, .$6(). M8-3138 euh, term.a or trade. Ftt National eompu1.Y wt1h ltl
per mo. ~06 Huntln11ton Buch 3400 CEANFRONT apt wtth pool drps, titt'Place, bet. O<:ftLll A: ..:R:::OO:..M=w-=1th=-.------mm...1~. 8*-8565 ---·• ...__..a..___ all-4.41 Acres
• 494-7205 after 6 pm bay. Avail tar adulta leuin.c . pri:9'ate 0 "'' ... '"'"' 1..:=-=:.:;==-~~--~-~
Bolboo lslond 2355 FR.EE RnITAL BOOK "R=e-N=T~A-L=s-~--!!., ~-Sept l>L Appt • ..,• _....,.,.. • ' mm. to bftd:. ""'™" .,...... °" Mar COSTA MESA :::' ~ .... ":!"' =.:; . "--In and Browse .,,~ Ocean 'rie1t lot. Fee WIN~ 1 -.... _ · 2 -··• A t U f .,,,.., ,,_ ~~ Prim• M·l property, 31li' X ...._,,, _ _,. an a·--a • ~c.n. -.... t; ._,..rm1ng WE HAVE SOME p I. n urnt Room for Renl. simple. Owner a,.,....,.,... '-CUD........ ... . '" BR •• , No students, $160 me TOWNHOUSE Npt Riveria l la«\Y ..:=:::::.::::.==-"'::_"I 630'. O>rntt locatioa. CALL J!rtn mcm~ 1ncomt . ii
uW. 4 BR Dix. Gener•I 5000 Br. Can take aver .m leaae, For 50XU6 lot with produdnc oil MR. BLACK 540-1151 Copen aeekin& a rffP(Wmlie man
Hinger RE 83.l-20.16, 6'13-!Ktl2 S2ffi mo. 548-401'1 * 642-'1697 * well Ro;yalty pQI SSO ~ f!Vfll) Heritage Real Eftate. or ~ te becamiil·~ mM. By owner 531--0'J69
VEN DOME 52 2
T.S9 ACRES, Bantow, Calif. i•ted. wtth 1.111 in • boamtfta
Ent Bluff 4 Guest Homes 5991 Ranches 6150 Hwy. 86 fl'ontqe . $250 down rnillim doilar buliw. No
PRESTIGE Town HomM PRIVATE Room for am-I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;; I MO mo. S.f.800 Ml prke. ~ roe< •••l'Y .. Hunllnglon Booch 2400
SHARE my home • mature 7682 EOlNGER
woman mly • at no I'~, N%~ ar SfO..Sl«l
Cllll SJ6..e6&\ ldt 5 ]Jm
Make reset'Vatioos NOW
Newly Redecorated
er ... to Shopping, Perle
Boys Club & Girfs Club
For leaae, 2 br A den I: J hr bulatotY lady. Good tood. ME 1.c<c:21:.:4>c.96:.:>-<:,..:::7'6~alt~6"•::"'-=--oomplete train.IQc: Is fUmilb..
with 2 tr 2% bit.tbs. Gakl Nice aurroundill8I. SG-4753 RANCH HO 5 A. Juniper Hllla rr propl>lt-ed by ~~· 'l'hll: ill • =========2 BR Duplex, carpeta,
Summer Rentals 2910 drapes, blt-m~. $115 mo. ____ ..;.;.;;;__~·..c.1 8ltt Michael Or., HB. ZIJ:
Meda.llioo all elfie. YGUl' own 3 bedroom• and swinunlni ed. Lake Perrill $950 A. full time DKQDe. $4,ID) eull .. ._....,_ .. ~ inveebnent neonury lor a
• Specious l Br's, 2 B11
ke:v tt> pool. 2-car pr. Rmt REAL ESTA.TE paol. Includes .. ~......,m ~"'::~:,:.:144:.:.,.------comp!•"
.tart sat $250 mo. General KUert hou.e and 8 stall bam. IUSINESS eml $10,000
NPT Sch 1 BR, ~ f . 1 4.'tl-8854
blk to Ocellll, S60 per wk. I ---NEAR=~. ~e=EA~rn=-
Jul,y. Avt.il ·Aur. 642-1272
• Swim Pool, Put/green
e Frpl, lndivllndry f•c'la
1145 Anaheim Av•.
~ Amiao Way, Npl. Bch. Nort.heut of Tuatin on l ac--FINANCIAL
Income Preperty 6000 rem of 1ently rlopinC land I'-==="'-----perpetual inW'!ltor)' ~
Corona HI Mar 5250 BILL ILATZEI = :=a~e!: Bus. Opportunltl• 6300 =~~~=::
4645 GARHAM DR. call GleM Tbomp11>n with NUI'Vn.LE, U.S.A. ia now I •(71-fl•Oll--9515-----·I
COSTA MESA Eckhoff I. Ao&K., Inc. --tiooa "" Laguna at Victoria B<:h. 1 Small 1 br. SIKl./mo.
BR botme, sleeps .f, 1100per1~~=--"3--0l22~--.-.,--
wk or monthly r1te. 642-lm 2% BR. lltt'g' lam rm., RENT
C.M. 64Z..28?.A
~-
2 BR DR M I: Den. downtown H. B. f140. Call 3 Rooms Furniture
w""''""1· dock. 1150 1~.,._='='"'=======-$25 Month r9i~;~ You at'e th! winner al
2 tickets to the
1818 W. Chapman Ave. franchises in OrMp Couft.
Orange, OalU:. ty. Locatima: att waiting in
!>41·2621, Evff,wknda 538-6Tlf Anaheim, LacWl& B ch,
Week. f I V 11 ••10 Shore Properties ounta n a •Y -rutL OPTION TO BUY ON TEN ACRES
l l 2 BR, Furn 6: Unfum
tram $1.50 mo. l"rplca I Pri/
Patios I P oola. Tennis • Con-
tnt'l Bld!t. 9 hole PutV
Green.
LIDO THEATRE
Showing
THOROUGHLY
MODERN MILLIE
Balboa Island 6: other areaa.
617s $14,950 cub ttq. Fully
1C;;l;trua;;;;G;,..;;;";;;;;;:;;;;·;;;;;; I llecUl'fd tnveat. ' ho u l d I , return Ut yr. Call for appt
6'13-9069 or 6'15-4747 f!Yf'A 2 STORY -4 bdr, den, 2 bath!, Na deposit n.a.<:.
2-STORY pnten hnuae. 2 blt·lna. encl. patio. nso. H.f.R.C,
..., .. """"' Furniture Rentals
BR, 2 S.. $250 weet<. 1Um·1-=-:;-=",,·====== COUNTRY PROP 642-m.3 or write to 161'1 J-517 W. 19th, C.M. 548-l481 67~ 642-3645 L-v;un1 S.ach 3705 1568 w. Lncln, Anhm 774-2800 ' W-lilf 0.., &lite 210 In a beautiful f'roe;t-frft roll·
-cl:-&.-::2 "Bl'::-.-;Fum=,-A"pt7•"'· "II~
blk to ocean. 1209 w.
Balboa B).vd. Balboa. $75
wk-$150 wk. 494-5189
MONARCH BAY AREA
LOVELY OCEAN VIEW. 3
BR I: den, 2 BA., cpll, Drpt,
!:'pl. pool. $300 mo.
adult& 496-1243 betw 1~5 pm PRIVATE~. 2 blka.
from be9.ch; GWJenrod St.,
CdM: 1lpt;. s. ro5 Week, Laguna Niguel 3707
$500 Mootb. 673-7099 3 Br>RMS 2% Ba.. drapel.
BAI.BOA Ia. A~tr, l BR apt. Fenced yard. No prt.,,
(alp&· 6); avail. July, Aua;. LEASE $215. ol9&-5M7. 1213)
Sept. 673-150.1: 499-2316 391-.'M82 11.ftw 6 p.m.
2 BR Furn, on SEASHORE <cli 1 ALS
Dr, NB . $175 wk. 6'15-1700 ' •-ts.. Furnl~
(633-4863 After 5 PMl ~
1 Bedroom lumlahed apt. . Codi Mesi 4100
Costa Men · 5100
!m Sea Lane, O:IM 1Kf.l611
<MacArthur nr. Coast Hwy} Just clip th1s ad and ra&<e Inc foodill and ot So. Wnt: Newport Bf!a<:h, Cal. 926«t.
it to th~ Lida Thstre fn RJ.ventde. lf.54 Acrea, 10 2 LAUNDIOMA TS
2 BR Cp 'r.ij Newport Beach with identi· Ac. planted to navel orang· 80 Wasben, 2T dryws; Frig·
Gracioua Adult Living M~ t&, :ra:;;, · % tication. otter good throoch es a: the remainder unMvtl· ldaire. Leu than 1 yr, aid.
2 Bdrm I~ bl. w/w Cfll'1)el· ..._ te. ' <:pts:, July 30th. .~. Full pri--,o:». For Grou $3100 per 1110., inc:tta.
Sp. "'.pea. m M&flUerite. -lo""" ..... -ing, trplc. iral 1taitta1e. 673-29S2 NEWPORT BEACH turthtt infarmation pleue Inc $100 per month. SJ)end 6
Pool. TRAVELODGE call Glenn Thomp90n with to 8 hra. per week. Seif op-
MESA EAST APTS BEAUT. Modern 3 BR apt, Depreciation SIS 600 Eckhoff & Auoc., Inc. erattng. Price $10.rw •
""M::,lh.,to•mocb. ~1006.,.. ~ .. ~';· 1966 GlOll8 ......... .' $81,<XXI 1818 w. Cl>apman Ave. Terma. Shoppinc center It> 145 E. 18th St. Mr. Deeyn ""' ,... .. , ,,,....,._, Ap1 . u * 642·3074 ' · 1967 Grou • • • •• • .. $lltl,<JXI Oranp, Calif., mtlon1, Orangt.
NEWLY DECORATED Sl6.\. 2 BR. Corona High. 1968 Gmu .• , •...• ms.cm 54J·26Z1 Eves-wkndl 538-6727 R. Nrttreu, Rltr. 642-1485
"""" Patio, lndry. Ad""'· c. R. Gang; 64Z-1115 , UNIQUE FRANCHISE 2 BR. w/rarage: mo. Fene-673-.fl.32 Eve•weekenda WALK TO BEACH Pd yani with pe.tla. W11.ter Mount & O..rf 6210 For men &: women with mat -~ :1526 o--, -A 2 BR rear 1pt $150. M11.ture 12 Units. Newport Beech. All ' ability. No exp; we train. ,,_,..., ~uta ,..,a V'f'., dul onl N ~. D. can be!ween 2 ' A fll y. 0 1•r. Wrter l·BR .. rum.; pool: 4 )'Hrs A fTENTION ottered by International
5 P.M. pd. 617 Jumine new. Groa 118.2'16: leues. Yardage P'air. US,000 to DEVELOPERS & -ooo Jn
ACTIVE ASSOCIATE
IMMEDIATE
INCOME
Lookin&' for experleneed U.
ine11 man with imqinatil:m,
--.. -.allty, .........
gretGve marbtb!c tean
with real abftity. toc.tlld
~·County, Man ......
lect must have $15,IXXJ ash
to invett which endh him
lo -· ..w,., ........ + ~are ot. profttl: etc., whidl
should return eonmd.-.l:ll;y
more than endn ln\Wt-
ment tint y~. No llflllfna,
are no burier. We tNtn.
Write givinc all particW.uw
about youraet1. Pl-Jiw
phone number. s.JH Manas-
"· IOX M-163
The Daily Pilot
1 Block to beach. Weekly
$85. Newport Bch 6(2...().\18
e ft36.4120 e ---------, No rentrl problem. Price .-., v1t apen1 retail
$25 Wk U ~ $1'75 000 INVESTOR$ .tore in auoc w:tth·thii lam·· I ~--------1 • p STEVENS VIL U-Balboa Island 5355 R. N~ttr.eu, R.ltr. 64z..1485 + 80 LEVEL ACRES * oua Co. Jim Owens, ~7 ~~~~~~~]!!!I
LAGUNA Beach. alpg. 6; e Studio • Bach apts. NEW • LUXURlOUS WATERFRONT ~Ix. l BR. DELUXE 3 BR 4-PLEXES Ideally located in hifh.-dry SERVICE !'luff ' Fold lnYettn•t ·Opper. 61.10
walk 10 betw:b. Xlnt locatiorl e btcl Utila 6: ~ 91!ft. l 1. 2 BDRM . API'~. 1 /boat ~ . ii ddttt (no amos problems, LAUNDR-"T $150 Wede. 1-639-0063 e Maid Service -TY avail. Ji'rom $130 Month •P · • ,...,.up pnv · Jn CM . Priced to move wonderful dr)i-alr!) L e v e I VlnA. r.t. 12 yrs U.S. Goveniinent L •a•• cl
-'-----'-·----e New Cai. 6: Bar Olrpelit, drapes, all built· Yrly . lfo~ U'l5 mo. Adulta $50,000. 542-29'l6 •rt. land, pump 6: well on prop-at~ w. l9th C.0.t-_ Meu., Bldp. Need P•rtn•N.
RENTALS 2376 Newport Blvd. ~ ins. Adulla nnly. No pell!. ~~ pei. !'Ir <:hikftn 2 BDRM Triplex Hnlf Sch erty Juat 18 miles Eaat of netting $l:ll0. Lcmc lette, 1tettun 10%. fnfJ la-2385
HouH1 Unfurnished QUIET. 1 BR. duplex; WRff'f' 3M AVOCAdo, CM M.e:T. Apt. R Conven. loc. Good and. ~tow Cwbere great ex-~~e7 ~ra J"riirina. -
C .. t. Meta 3100 paid. $85. 54~1517 After~ 1; AVAIL. NOW 2 BR .. new $26,990. Owner 847-lMl pansion h.a1 already begun!) ' · P .M. Real Eltete LMftl Q40
wknda cpts., dMl.pcs, bltns. Adults, Huntington .. ach 5400 90 man • made Lakea in MUFFLER Shop for Jeue, BORROW en Your BQult:r
oa.x 2 BR ept & drps, gar. ·"~oc0""-·~·c.$l:J5~.~,....::..:..:"c.'__ Busineu lentil 6060 area! Ideal Jot' res ar t c»mplf/te w/holat, $150 JnD. Private N Morfl'. Blcne:J Marvin Gro1kruet1
1932 WAI.LACE
COSTA MESA
"".' 2 BR., pool, aundeck; enc.1.1;:;==:.c;==-=~' de v e Io pm 1t n t, alfalfa 13072 Century Bl., Gardfti
No child. $135 k $150. Alao 2 BR, 2 b&, bit-ins, cpts dt'J)I'!. garage; 2 blk.111. from ocean, *PRESTIGE STORE* rrowtna:. tiab raising, et<:. Grove. ~1920. Eve 1 Ftte appralaL No etlUs.
unl. n75 C>n.ilp, 546-918'1 181 H Del. Mar. U.fS. Apply: n JOth St. Apt. C in prime locatk>n. ·..:-boo-..., s.6-733:1 AI.BO
NASSAU PALMS 1-2 BR 548-tnR after 6 PM ' . ' opportuni...,... nw.eu. ;-;;='°==-=--~~ 9:19' .lJllt TD bu IB '71.nt
You 11.rr. ttit ..,,.;nnl'!r of
2 ticket1 to !hit
l500 Sq. ft. Air Thia ii a rare otferlna:. al· AUTO Repair SJ)ft« for leue Servtns On.ne• Olty ll yre,
UJ.5 . $145. Pool Znd fl . 2 BR. New I y L •-h 5705 r.rind. See at ll!O'l fording the investor a great In ll\lto ~ter, """pie!@ SatU-M~--. ,_ tn E 22nd st 642-364f'i ..t e co r 11. l ,. d . c. a rpetcd. aguna -ac N"wport mvd CMt1 tut • p na.l · · "'' "'"A-.• '"°" ~ ~. . , Meu or Call Mr" , Wanf Utt. eno cll'C'llm· w/h<MI . S12"i mo. 1J(JT2 336 E 17th st., Cotta Meta
LIOO THEATRE
Showing
THOROUGHLY
MOOERN MILLIE
f;1trage. ms mo.~ :1 BR 2 Ra, lgf' liv rm lrtanceg fo~ thia Ale: alb· Centl1t')' Bl, Garden Grove. 642-2'17l 56<1511
N•wport Beech 4200 4 BDRM 2 Story home w/frpl, 111 et« bit-ins, ----"-'-•-"-'---er, 1m~r parcel1 avail· 5.14-m20. Eves 545-T.Ul BAK~v • ~ _ 1--~------RENT $21Ml mo. rll..,tlwuher. '18'1 w, n d t . BALBOA ISLAND 1« if!be. able below market value.1,;,;.=-===.:.::..:::::...._ l:A\, -= .......,.,.,.~ -.......-
1 BR.: GCeftl\ view: prl(ll. ~96S.'l 4~3 Store ar oHl~·IP~IO Call owner: 847-6640 Eves/ NEW cooceulon J te m · 1or -.le. Fully equipped.
• ---~·· A il A 1 "'°,. n 67" weekendA. Unlimited opportunit)I, In· Owner wrnts to rettr.. Xlllt ~ .,.,,.,, v• · ua:. al; LRG l &. 2 br, crpts, drps, R I W ~• 5990 · ' .,. lemational mrkt patentW. protlts. Beach klcatkm, ae.
J .... ~'• ~,, -• ,~ t"'• 543-2005 644-06.Tl f'Vr. bltnl. Office 28115 Mendoza enta 1 an._ WM.AC rlHce 460 sq. ft. Top rlCNI T _..... 1 . . ....... "" nu .... nu Acre... 6200 ...,.,... ...._.,. O time fottel -~· 17J..H15
it to the Lido Theatre in DAil.Y pnm DIME-A· Dr .. CM. 545-0421 WANTED: Corona de! Mar loc. Balbaa Island, '1.50 mo. ule. 642-M ~me. =""""========!
Newport Be•ch with ide'lti· . LINES '{ou CM use them PROFESSIONAL oUiN> with oofum leue. 2 or 3 Br. bse. 6'2-955.'i, 6'13-'160'2 OWNER MUST SELLI CARPET' upbollltl!ry clean-Money Wanhd 6150
rlcation.· Offer iood throueh for just peMJes 1 day. oral 1ivin1 qua~•· Sl65/mo. with R'&r· ~IOlled tan1 nee. Offic• lental 6070 5 a.crea ln 11.lbdlvllion, New· tne equlpment. High profit---"'-----~'-'I
July 30th, l-~612~·~56~73~=====~""~""~· ~===~548-BJ~~"U,~'°'~t ~.,,,~,,n;~ld~.~r.m~~· .,....,,~~~1~.:;:::::::·'--=c.;: berry, Calif. 18 ml eaat ot low em!. buaine9f. $425 ~ $11S,lm L/C an. S23lM .. •~y ~ ~·· B · Barstow. "Land o1 Lakes" Nearl.J' new 33,50lt 911: ft. 2 ·~ ~· 3 · R · • Newport •--ch p1.1e. 642-0157
ts drapes ti pl;a General 4000G.neral 4000 General 4000 ...., artt · 9l m&n·mede lakes ill It)' 1ae:tnr1' nn J~ Ac. = 'patio. ~~:: 1..;-'---------'-'-------Executive offlcet1 t32 ta 566 rrea. Much development p C'oata ~esa ~:alth Oub, ~ Ave, Di( 21) .,r.
Meath to mClflth ot ie..e. tq, ft. Yeh, near PQll ottlc:e. in1 an. J...t.vel land, water ~mt'f'I Munt. 't%1J:C.. AAA. tilmnt. OWned
l:'ll5""' mm ... VMWtt. S@\\.4}1A lla"Btrs· -... ~-~ bwintiel& ,.,, •. undef'll'OWld. c.n owner ~~.,.=-=·~213='='3'1~-~-~= byTelelbnept.y$S,<DINet &oker. 546-41(1 ~2490 -....... ,.. Utill ez paid. A.f7-6&t0 •ft 8 ~. &nY· DAILY PD.DI' WAN!' ADS net net $21,00C) yrty. LY'n.E
Division of Highways rimf' wl'(!kend1. Aak tor Lee. BR.ING RmULTSI REALTY ~
A'ITRACTIVE 2 .tory, 4 BR. ,.!oltic a Sittl.plt St?'ambltd Word Puz:Zt few a Chuckle ?13: 620-JSl-I Weekday,; 3 BA. '°" w•ttt. !"""1 'SECRETARIAL
yant, nr all k'honla. Leue. O ltear Set'9I. ., ._
$291. Mo. S49-120i or f213l ,o;'"Z•lod _., i... SERVICE
J56...62S2 law te fona teur llMP!. wettk, Modern Gtticel, cr.rpell. air
ATI'R. ' BR., ,,.,,. .. dr .... , i 1 • U)' I A Q I """"-· -· """' cm1wnieritly lo<:. U60 Mo. • . S65 per montb. Onftie CmJno
No -no drikln•· I'. I j ·I'. I IY Bank BJdr. 23) E. 17th St.,
0aB aftl!r 6 PM 6'2-.21689 • • • • • Cbtta MMA. '42-t•
2 BR' pr., patio: ,,.,,., drpo, 1· IO !JO p LAW-~ «f· Stove, l'tlfric. Tropdcal met-_ ~. hutv at Wis ..ai.
""'· Fer _... 1 Bil:. r I I ,. ~ ....... $175 ....
-· $1SO Mo. 544-l!lO · • 145 E. 1ltt: 91. 0... M-
2 BR. n.. in CIOQl't. Own • I IC-30T4
yudApr .... $llllMo.,i.t. !SOQUI I ..._.,•ioment:'l'rn~-STOltH FOR LIASI 4 Jut + dfcn ftpar:ft. 2!2· door "119 BMch. • Slater Jlnta: Bch .
... Cedl Pl. r I I r lrl iZ::r ·:;::v .. my llllO ... n . ..., ... ft. 12131
3 BR. 2 ba . 2 ""' '"· HI ~ to -h.. ho ~ I ,.,_,,.,
-"''"'"·Avail Ana IC u L' ID 1-·· ' ... EX!lC. Oflfca .. t •• 3lll ... ~'~7 -Lw,, I 'I I I r ~tt'"""l!z~~ ~.~--,
FOR Lew:; •· BR, 2 Ba., -· ~ wtdt. ~==;:.~ !ammr r r r rt r r 1 ~-·$115/:m.
·.::..~T~~ !:m=-1 I I I I I I I I '::.~:::,~:.'".!
GalwfJ, MMJJl1 d: s. - --• • -• • • -. ... 54M7ll. .................
3 Bil 1~ betM. ql&lldrlll ATroRHEY"leffta-e; JIOO:
""" .,..i, -it'l5hno SCIAM·LITI ANSWElS IN CWSIFICAnoN '650 .., 1t.: a11r .. .-.....r.,-' 56-all "'°"A waJ • lri lac. ,bM. Nit. MM'1ll •
;.
\'
I ,
I
I.
•
.t • •• • ~ ..
w1 NOTICll !~'!Jullllt•. -* *
...... ,,_ Mii 6411 llilYllT "" -· ,... . --....... -.... -..
MA.N 'S btl1 ndn1 bike, lw lt'dkll Vle fA No. H.B. -u.. numbtr. Blk Cockapoo c:lOM to Edwardl • Edin&u'·
wht on ebfft. Med. .i... .a.--He ~
Very fritndl.)'. ._. •
Mtaa Vode Golf Q:iarlt, ......,.,
f'OUNO' Mola-· WllMJD A Hu1mr 1llvd. -.
Looks to be 11 mol. ck!. 22'16
-St. Apt. C., Co<I& .... CllJ ....._. ....... , !l~td~ell!:!ll~IS!.._ __ ~'510~
u ...
NA.NY keys on kty rinc
found in my band.baa: at
"Kone Boa" BawUllll S...ma. ..,_,.
MALL 0''7 .._. cmtey
balttd-.... -atu&W ealar. no tap. *
MOllta Yillll CM. 54l-2l6T •
'l'i:E. VidnU:y oJ lrrine
ond c.lrilo. Call ...... .... -.-D; lk:tmeM cat,. vit:.
Wntdtff area. Call & W.
tify ..... 14315
TER & Temis ndtel
Mea Hi&h eowu. 546-3086
t401
ROWN AlllJ:ator Wllfo\d ii:
phone booth next t o
0 Albert.on'1 mkl, 19tl: ' Harb·~. 642-7119D 9
PAR.T-Irllb aetklr f~ in
't'k:. !illma Ana Aw. mil
Mesa Or. Flea collar _.
leather ~· to-f816
blue baby straller Vic
La.a: Bela _,.... A r t
Festival. 1\l!'WU'd. SIT-2638
REPAlftS * ALTER.A,,orts CABINETS. Ally llu job,
23 71'1 exper. 5'M113
Ca'lr.efnslldnt 6SIO
CUSTOM kit. cabJaets,
bthrm. pulbunl, formica
tos» UC· work reu. MT-9832
'· -~ 6590 1'66 llAIUZ'I' DAVIDION _r,.•l-•nt t4 NI "'-· 16.Q mll<o
CAllP'INTIY E 1900 ...... t<r
KINOK" REPADtS. • Job PICK UP.
Too 1nsa1L ~ 9 a:ar· '* MT-m; * ae-6 o t ll • r cUi.odl. • 1Jtaae 1a1t1a cm n.t it.
MS-&l'li f}we1 -..:m D'l'I in COiia 1i1eM. Trade W
H. 0 , ~ t.-« trut de.di. lfto
e NO~~ come U82.W. Owner.
Rnldtnttal-~O:>m-• 54tCD.
mereW. -~ "model NEED MOTOllCYCLE
R•IODlble. Lit, bonded, ln-Have 1864 &mca. rewat
amid. ....... lira. Mt •
• m..1m • 96U371. • , _ ••. .' ...•••••••••• •'*
-. 6600 1'Nt TIWLER PARK; Cuc,_.., Conc:rett Wll a.c:bl:!we tree I: dew
EXPIHT CDIDf'r WCU acnqe •· Palm 8prilp.
~uonabie Pricn. l(cb.. Val •P tD K),oo:I I wwne.
hi& in CUAtom ~ Fret 1,536-.c..;;lll1=. ____ _ .... c.n--
* *
\
* * *
# a &nio. O..• J n
watetfrcd; with pkr. Wit --lo--dtfterenct aboft $!15,t!m
kan. u I-Tm
LAKE TUoe View Lot fla.
• ..,. ""'"' pavod 512.IOl
clear. ~ l« .,._.
lladrs •ndec:MI Vaill.
TD' .. • f ~· '1Hl2'
2 BR. furn CICIDClc>. m 9cll
111. Vfldce,. 111Jy lit exdmo-
tw rnort arl!L 'J'ndl for
Jot.al ar• J OI 4 •• Isome
tr WC. lait Ill' bo9t. ... l27'f
N'pt Shares 3 Br 2 Ba..._ am w/pooll; w6 tD ...._
SZ.ml Val; wut lib home ............. ,._, ....
na Parlt. Owner •llJI.
' I.come anlb .. 21.lt ..
in OJSta MeM. Trade tar
bowie or trust deeiM. la-
came f40'l.SO. Owlwl'. .........
TRADE $400 "6' -.una bath, portable, like
new, FOR coa1puoable val·
ue larie rdri&'lntor with
treeur. 6C--2514
TRADE part .t 16.000
Equity in 1 ........
ctlff lllft, for Iuse oi-ndo
lnObil bomt ar ??
• 542-2514 •
IOU & IMPLO\'Mlllf IOU & IMPLO\'lllNT
twp w-. Moot ?m Holf w ....... Moot,..
Malwfacturlng/
Proitcf Control
Planning Coordinator
A '°"9 Job tiflt ......... lt'I .• big job
with 1 lot of -k with 1 .....a -
foehfrin9 com,,...., ,..klftt "'"'i•lur•
pNCkion 111,........ Starting out
y ... Job wil l>o to take spaclfic: p<O-
i.ct. and pion incl eo«dinato tM
manufacturint cycle from 11los ord•
to shipment. This is 1 permonent poU•
tlOft witlt ,_ for growth fw M ltl-
clividuol ""-nporience, oclucotion
incl "''-'• iidido proclucljon con-
trol ind manulec!uring plonnlng.
~ Mel ii-st1oclard1 111d II•
!*fillnt I cllspotchi"" Addfflonol
b~r......I In pion! layout incl f•·
cam. pl1"""'4 .... lndllllrW .......
ffring wl l>o i.....fidol. H you wont
1 ,..( cholo1190, s...d .,_,.,um• to1
STACO, INC •
ti J9 Biiier St., Cosll MeSI
An equal opportanlty employer
COOi
~ ...... " lmd. Must be :r..t. Eftii&..
Jent money u:d OWoi tuo-117. _ .. _ .....
Surf I. Sirloin
- , ... c:.t. Hwy.
No"l'Ori -
Ticda••
W-1 COMPdY
IOW 111116
I.GE. mrwd. 1 pc. 91!d·
k>naJ, white •• t.Jpe ...
ga. Xlnt cond. o.t: •· ,..,. ,,., ..._...., '"'''--1=USD==1=1=v~1=11-
""',.. _, -oa.a< Port Time
Diie to • JUmed llllDllDM' ....................
Wm DtriM. • ,. la-
tantericw' finn .... hN
need al .wnl amtdtigm
)'IUlll -1'-l&. • mini-
.rmt111 of llt0 ...... _"'_,..._
Wlll e•' 1e eaa:'I l"OP" ep.aa. bw: ia the ~
ert;J en °""P• Dr., NB ,... "'• al. .mat dlAdia
for com.1 tr lndulrtal ln on dally nm and •sslgned
Rlvenlt\e. &yd Rlty, 3629 apec:h1 trtps. P9i,Y schedual:
E. Cst Hwy, CHM fi75-58.l'.I $2.66 . $3.3 per hour. Con-
Palm Sprmp 2 BR l bath tad Penoanel Ottlce, 536-+ 12 studio aptl. Top cmd. 9331. llmlini(tal; Bndl Un-
$21,50I ... FOil llm:.. or iae HtP Sdkd. Dtatrict.
:'...";. '!:" ...':.:." llkr Cly Sllop Trtlue
* * * Heavy work. Pmnanimt
--· ... 12.
,_ __ A,...
-O.,.Pi .... _ .. ~ .. .. _,..,.,..... .. . ---.Ollll.
BOAT MECHANIC
~ with diwl
ml other marine ......,. ......
J..-Marino Corp.
ZS 1'1cher, a.ta MHI
tamtils for the )'Omli mu.
.. WW.. be tNiMd ..
Pe~ otr.::tlon, Of!!.ee
ProceedW'el am Sales Pro-m-.
$540,... "'°' 11lory
No aptritnce ii W!W'l"Y
due ta Ole m-~job traln-
in&: at ~ expe:nM,
Qu.liti9d mm di receive
!her l!nt.....,,..... ID ___ tt,..
c&11 START WORK THIS
WEEK.
J'cr lmnw!•te c:mm.a.
tilllt eaD llll-Ula f LIL tD
J P.ll.
SILL fAMOUS
KNAl'P SHOIS
* YOW' own bulM& tuU «
pan4ime * lbNJ. LID the IP'f: C8Mo
mluiw . * Ito d!pomt er St\ wb......t * Fr. bonm A llllQrmoe .... * Frtt acta91 _...
WAlLYD.VDf
Know--NII.°"'' Mll&711dlo-
Eut Loo-. Coli!. -
ITT JABSCO
IOU & IMPLOVMINT JOU & lllill'l.OVMINT 'Oii & IMPLOYMINT
-WMtod. -7200 ...... WantM. -nOe -------·1 HolpW-
7400
IEC
lntent.te hat immecll•t• r•·
qulrenwnt• for tho following
Procluction/U.b Opening•:
• Blclrllk T.a.!cl.ln
• Medllllklt. hcelYllll
llspedor A
•
• PrecWow Mlc•lllsl
l2ec! """"
• Gel. Mahilsl A
t2nil ~
• llrrer-lllM & pow"
• Slrldliu AlsemMy Mechallcs
1shoot -·n
• GINler Omer Wire Wrlf
Midi!• Operlltr A & I
12"" ohlftl
• M•l""•ac• Medllalc
• Mft. Dlsp.._ /bpedlter
• Eedro-Medllllcl
AmUler I
IEC ls a dyn.,,,ic and progr..,ivo com·
pany witlt wen balo.....I efforts io
bode.lot, -progronu, plus plonned
cl"1¥onif'oc.tion. Exceptional -Pert"
b-lil1 .,. provid.d.
&lploymeat ollke wlll lie 11111
Slhlr..,, .Illy 27t. 1-11 1.m.
APPLY AT
708 E. VERMONT, ANAHEIM
INTERSTATE
ELECTRON KS
CORPORATION
A SUBSIDIARY Of
•~le" lprlnltlor Corp. of Amor I co
An Equol_!Jpportunity F.mploJ~
--------· -·--
SALIS, i ONL Y1 .......... "' .... ...............
$975 FllST MO.
P*ntlal u )'GU ~
ly want to work ml .re
bis mt9tf, ca ..U.. Cl'·
den, you WMll:IW. write
one Older~ ml tf
rou can do that
I an offer yM
• $121~..r.r,
• N-Clllllloc furn. • w.,.,h,. • ....,
e Your office 90 4oyo
• ExHUtl .. trolnlnt ........ ,..n .... _ ... ,.
Coll Jlr. --• AM to 12 noon t:ir appL
t
OPllATOR
COUllS
RADIO CO.
19700 , .......... lao4
Nowpert luch All---on merit with at Mu .,,_
ward Ratt, C-61or, O'eed .......
w-
IEC
Bedrtlk
AsseUJers A & I
ht & w"'"'
···",... ........... In •ode him_.,. .... .-.. -....· Ottw eled1 on1c ... ......... r _.,.. ••• n.w. tor ,_ .... ... .. ..,......
I• r.... clrcull ......
Emp..,_ oflloo
will lie -..... ...,. July 27th, a.11 1.m.
Apply
708 I. Yett•llt
.Anlieliil
l1tent1te
Electro1ics
COllPOIATION
A 1ubtilllarf ef
"Au-c" Sprinkler
Corp. ef A-rlcl
J. W. Rtllllsel
HH Openlnp,...
• cmler-Tellet
• CrtllH llllenle•
Apply,.,_...,
10-4 Kon tin 7rl
FASHION ISLAHD
NEWPOIT HACH .. __ _ -
SALES
ICIETARY
Sherp cf'Mtive W..
girt ....... """"''" own le'tten, sat up
ond odmlnlolw dlroct ....n oo11c1tot1on "' •latrib"'-Morm-
dlslng, odwortloln9,
joumollom oducollon
or ex,.rlence. S1l1ry
optn.
646-9641
GARY llLVlllMAH
2011 LllWAllD LN.
NEWPOIT BIACH
You 1re the wm. ol
2 tid.eta: ., tbe
LIDO THIATRI
Showing
THOROUGHLY.
MODERN MILLIE
Just cllp !Ids ad and tab
lt to the Lido Thet.tre tn
Nl!WJ>Ort Bed with identi-
fication. otter IDOd tbroulh
July 30th.
Hostess
Sharp -Good PQ
DON JOSE
•
--"~--·'-";,.,., .... _.
J011 & 1Mft. '-'r,...,, 25, 1'6f llAll.Y PUr -OYMINT JOU & IMPLOYMINT MllCHANDlll -Ml~NDISI POii MllCHANDlll POI MllCHANDlll PM MllCHANDlll POI TllNll'OITATION iltli6MHlfXf\CA-1-------IALI AHD TlADI SALi AND TltADI SALi A~ TlADI SALi AND TIADI
p Wa-~ Waated 7.00 Pumllure IOOO Pumlture IOOO PW-& Ortano lllO Ml-Ila-NOi SALi AND TltADI ._ I y..... fOllO 1111 ll!f Mooll'!J!!'
l-'w-"-""'-"--.-.7""4M"'I -I~ •-'-I r11U11L 111n11111 FREE "O YOU WI MUJT MOVI THI WA'lft to -., :i; A . -.ln1.IA Aln.llVll 1 POLLOWING llOATll 11o•lll' • t -·
1. C. .._., °'-IEC ...., • · cdbir' cm snate.t ADOllAa& a _, tld. lift. 19 lf' CmU7 ~ •Ml H • •&t&?
,.._ --·-··--Tllu.....,.Juty 2J ""'-to -••moo. -I :•. ;:,.
Newpoot-.. DITEllANEAN ·-···--Prtday.Juty" ----•• llllll'Cr11U ·-cit • m •ttf -, ..... ,...... .r•ANISH ....... pr!Cftl 7:IO '"' 51>-1111 -•• .... P• ---1. ..
'AllT TIMI Mnv .KW .. lrJ .-• WllA'rE'IE!t,.. _ lo<Jk. LD11 "' an ---•m *'"" --.. °"" • rrMl -tz. IALlll AW ~ =.,:or~•::;:,~ 6 ca fwtdtin tn top-. .... ~ ,.....,, -.. ~ •••············· Sl9 W~ y lie w'i J
R b ,.,_ _. -.......... r:.:'1, 60 .. :ri:.. •l :Ji t. 01/.· WARD'S BALDWIN mJDIO ....,, o.q -4o -__. 4o -lllooiap. lllll ll' °">llr ---... If .... ean,... ....... i.n IM u-• u· -e6 a room .u. a.ma_.... c •1 d -.._ 11911 -.. -• .-cb.,_.ldlttothi andablUtyht•k• le-,, .... ,. -~ewport.C~ICHCM .,.....rknlc:mlra.c.unmod-~.·• .... at~!llDll"JCc:OGoaO ••• Jt• -.-~ --
lamlU'-ollbo...,. tatlonatl0to90wpm. N-SllowroomSa--'-0.-otor'al>ollllht -.---1·11 w llDrCOU?TAarl'I _y....,
time? --,..,.._ 81odat t ' GrUlll $fie. tlw tam ... -1-4o ' -ff. Clul II•>" C"-'o . -
.. I« -.......... alt-C1ft oA' 8""" Wiii ioii Any Pi-1....Wually "•did tho-.,_ do ---3 PUPI, ~rn; iiAJO wllb -.._ M-_...._-"';;_--="-I --·-bl-,_1110001 Dlpl. ll>o -· ----. _; ---T""" 4o Npt. lid>. to.TIU 11"1 IMAllTll •·
.. -d .a. -to • 771-2111 8' Carved arm divan, lg m•tchlng chalr wttb .....,. -·••did tllo.,. «I ...._., • ..... --· -1 P · 11 • JULY ~ ..... ilOUiOd, TO ~
Ila ,... ....., e.. -70I L y.,_1 beautilul tabr!cs; 5 pc heugon dart oak din-old••"""""·-· -..._ twin --.,.._
1111
--• -Col•· -Jll •.,.. oC <c •t•• lllld *'I llllPP'9 Anlheblt tng aet with black or avocado framed chain Ymt7 otbe-Grand .pedabt It... rdristft.tors, *'"' 1'REE Dirt • ioa.. oa llJO ,. ft. •• tUlt a 9tc. ~ • ..., • • *•"*'
viliml. Is vinyl CuabJ.D.DI; 5 pc bedroom let. f.dr )Ir WAII.JCHl-JL\NNING'I wuht~• MUCH MORE! ~.ml lur tvlew All i6w m•'D'-'M •• kete .. • MwN ••.
-" -111MMT1ft •Kn .i-with'' tramed mlm>r, 2 It wsrc = WIHDfS 111n10N 1.one. a.-........ ---· ......... JI',.,,•· _., .......,. Wood l'llllUUllU~ oommodes 6 1111tchlng headboard. "" °'"" Piia • M>2lll5 · . -11 "4-W3 T/:11 N.._ °"' Dodcl m.11111 ,..., • w 111t ,__._ •=• ....... I:• p.Jll.. H1mntond & Le1lle 2075% Hftpart Bi.vd. FREE dirt • i... • 0. .. .., at -a .... athen.
--1'11do> BEC1IOllCS ONLY $429.95 AnUquo -IDd pi Behlnd ....,.., lllda. Mat'IL ,..,._, 11111 lurhtow INTENAlfCB • CALIFOllNIA Clll!fll
U ---Homnwl)I .. ---Coot&,,_..,_ Lone, n.r-dol llW, ~ OS...,. lo"--
-OOIS-el.-COllPOltATION ($195 Yai.•) boct. ... MIJ.eou.,., OPENDAILYlto• ...._ ~--~&'• l"'leMl•=y 14.atl
&Al lllDAY
• "mt JJJ!l'ltdtr ..
wru.tile irtrl with cnrinn.
fllblilhinl: company. Strem&
~ olfice b&cJttround, ----llrred. WriU.. or 1dvertt.
... .........,.,. bdplul. SaJ.
l6'Y open. Phone for ·~ fOinbneil
'42°9470, Mr. Merriam
Cocktail Waitress
Ovorn
Apply In,.._
9-5 p.m.
REUBEN E. llE
151 E. Co11t Hlghwoy
Newport Beech
l
llOOKKHPR/
TYPIST
ntt ....... BotlribllOll.5. Mlrl•ml.•L-----AI>ORUL&. frtendf7, Y ... -.r-. IUJ!.'W.ltB't!!ICLJ A ouboldl•ry of or TlllMI .. 1 .. 11 U w..i. NI>"""'"'-'·-... .....,, ......_ _. 1 ..,., a14 -UI .. -..ni 11'.flr ~._ .,, a.a
"A-.ilc"llprtnldor No---··•-w ... ,1.. ~WMllllcc_., 400WllTMINSTER ......... &.I .. Ill . -Dq--··· C.rp. of AllMlrlu Appro _ _. ,.__, '°" N. Mein, S.A. 5'l<i611 NEWPORT llACH -.5IM!8'I 'ms ilii i' ix:Zrtl' Oli. • ciilJiTik fill i'r£M
V-rwMlllfe -y..,.,. .. -~ DARLIRG Kltt71, 11;.-;wl-•bood. N ...... -;i',"t'
!NoPancyPront-BUTQuofttyV1'-IMW•I l"°"BEllB-tl>t-• __..at~lOt -W -tr• ~ ... , •• An ..,.,. 01>1..tuntty .........
COMMlllCIAL
TILUR
UNITl!D CALIPOllNIA
BANK
3029 Ha•bor Blvd:
C..l•-546-2031
2159 Harbor Blvd., Ceola -., · 541-9660 ~-1"" T-:m
2
-"tho ""' IL ... B. llo""'1 Albooln lDll:1 llor""' IA -,__ -A>* Hwa ri .,._ orpn BMdl Tnl ....._T --. _. ...
Dpon9-9Dally-lunc11yl1.S -e..11n ... ,.., LIDOTHEATRI SI'·---,,_ __ ...... ":' , ~
12YNrs11meloclfleft-11m1owner. EHMIDT.PJ:III.UPSco. Showing KlifENl·Mmr·'ibi' ~ ·,...,.._..,mff>,..., -'==== ~
a ~I} llOIN.-•:llltb THOROUGHLY llllf'l'•ll"'°'*•--·lltotCondttloo ~:·:~:lle~tt.~~,.~~~~~ a1 ~ II' ....... --MODERN MILLIE """ -• we...S. ll,lleO, ••-°'Ill .... ~ I ' ...... Tnl ...,._ M:30 p.m. ua--.-t -· Dll-tH, WURLl'iD:R lllldio J1iMo Just cltp ttrla lld l1ld tUit 3 YR. Ml We Im a r a a er •• MERIDUN ftcSI. Xllit ~ ..PJ. M ._ tr
-..,.. -. ,.,,_ tt to tho Udo..,,_ ... to """'"· To .-i -...i. """"''TIM -tr.do*"--.r,.:lalo Ml-DB alt 5 Newport heh with idtldJ. w/lp. fl!oced. JUd. Good. JU>I', aim. ...._ S.. It • Owe Imt•'thl
TolovlslOll lk:o&a. •1-.. .-T/:11 -. -"""' 1111 .....,. -P.O. Wt~
--"=--..,..;12=20::5 ~SW~U:!!M~IM~IN~G~PiiODiiiilL-1 MOVING, For<:ed" liw up. 11\1' FIBERGLAS! 'Ill 1'lll ..... Uke.,. $4111.
TY Cmmle, 21" an. Good 11 Lofthle I amt J 1 pet; 19 ~ llfwS..autW 2 BR., ltlundry-ml:,_.
-=~----=--=· = --Deeorator
°"""'hi·•· ~~M!ii!!:'.!...~ beauttful Greet Dene fem.1 w/ lrier. De50. 114: patio; lee, )iy. rm., ..,
Al -,., _., ----· -Y'" old. lm-M T/76 615:4639 eplL J.,. lll!dt. •-· 4 ·-··•W• ......... II • ......, 21" zmrm OIDIOM TV J'REE 0,14:.:a,d. MAG. t.dr: illl.·f!I. w.. Loot, 11' llARK,...... trd&'' ~ Qo h.t after t
"-Iv .. -ll•tlon of $22,000.00
Sp1nhh •nd Medihlrrawn l'umltuN
-........ -SICARD POOL r..-, -w~ ·~ 0 ""bp. """'"· ...... .. 119Hl!4 IJ!a-4 Pill' • ltam M fnllolr..'I : Gora:eous I ft. cu.tam tulltil4 -...n;11. da wtlh -s-ata loose pillow with ._.,,. ca eom1tim sso. IRMl62 123 s. Main, Oran,. R • e o r • 1 , 1part1 m. tru, Oil A equfp. Pr-.c-P ACEMAXER EMiie Willi: ·' tnm.....,. U>d moJchinr .-. I .. -Olk HI-Pl & 11-1210 532-1992 "'1-<1186 Tnr tlcall7 .,., --BR. 2 llA, -·-
TRIMMING I ......._, la-l2l 58" WI -.,..,. -•'!:!'\!!'!!!"J'!~~~!!ll• 3 MO. old • ,_. Gamon 2'' 1'UIJAN -O.W ...... II, ll3tll '"' It .....
INSPECTION =c.:a:ai::m~~C:W*~~ ~ STEREO 1968 IOUd stat!, e ONE OF A KIND e &'bepberd female puppy. Good b-l1lbkts H.B. •·'.
Plastics part.II. Permanmt paneled Mediterranean ttyle with top quality cona:>lemodel.Llkenew. Brand new! Summer Free to 10Q11. mne . ~ llal S.F. S BR w/ .... ,
poli.tim. Excelle.nt wade.-15 yr. warranty kine alat mattreu 6 bos Balance$79.35oramall cl.earanc. Mle! Phlle• 54&-0198 1/JSS.Jlltoets 90lO ~•*:Jc__.
::.. ~ md .U aprlnp. Bpanmh decor ~ •t. etc. ~. O'edlt Dept, . AM/FM atereo eon• o le I KITI'ENS AUCllWd colon. ~. ml2 S. (but ...,..,
Will train but must be over ...._ .._... ......... 11 m.oo !~~~~-~""~=~~ w/tumt&ble l169·95; Pham; Mother wu Siam.e a wka 21' MOU>m Akbn lbhos. i.i-. 8-clt. • 1111 · · 18, with good eye alPt. MUST SACIJFICI $ I ~pw 11 Goeda 1500 table top color TV 1'" o 1 d . B o s tra i ned , ai1bc.t. "'* C. ndn& .-.ila, 63 PANOR.AllA 18 x • 1
CALIFORNIA POI ONLY1-r---·-·--------....... 698.00 ~ 9'I" Jaoobl, 3 ~~1~11~!.. a.. 5.lMl'JI ~ ~=· :, ~j :::W'*:t_ ~ ria116
lnildlon Moldi.. Ter•1 AwtidDle H-•••rs te C•liforni• maboc atringfta, mahor tall SPllCIA.L OFFER! 646-""4 f YR. Old ma& SIMdand OV. l-5ll.S afi.C, ar CUI be --y()a Sile: 5 Rm_ 1% Q o.ta':-BrialA~ Cr.4HA,,,..,.4 l-'lat.ly =·::-~Skq.Xlnt New POOL-TABLES ~~n~· ~~~ ~ lOBwbDrtn,N.L:
All equal oppuitwlb nTn &1 ' . A: 191·50 up. TUle 87J..1074 11i. ' Udo ~ MC-M4l -ui.ui .. ara tare SURn1a.mo, ..._ ,.... --.. !bin, barl • Udo Penn. Y--1 =-=-="""',....,,,.,....:.,,..
CDNYALISCENTAIDI --.......... -. Indoor ........... rnEE, ...... --. CALJJ'ORNJ.4 c.wn ...... ~8!t.:.,-." ........ , i 1144 Newport leulevanl, Cordi MMI (only) * 1'15-:mn * nt.oounf: priON! 8ADGDt mo "''"· W••ae • ready to ..n tnd. ..U. r-. eau ·•
Far pdvUll hatnie. 1\111 ar .__ ..a:..W 'ltl f ARD 10' • .__. ..._._ .BALD, 409 S. Kain, CJraip: lbw , '*-· 1!lm nnertoa. 4laer bou'Ci., ' 11 f ~ View $15«1. * 61YfQ
i::xromvE ottices of part time. Any .... • ....... ., ..... " -Wed., lat. & Sun. 'tll 6 lJU new. '50 . .a:aa·: er CU1 l"ranll: 5.1S41U. Opmoi CM tna lftli!l'NI' ea' II Io a•. zx.. llCYCLIS t21S
membership v&A::atlon plan HOUSEKEEPER IS:30 lU p.m. except Wed. BP!Atmnn.. Gny A whi~ c:epdmaDy Jaat rzso. Call .
needs enthusiastic, responiii-Live in er out. Full or part IOIS & EMPLOYMENT S ntJGD>AIRE wuher le Jdtten1, I wU o&d weaned 6. ~ aft l :IO PM 15 BPEm lchwll:m _..
111e aecn!tary. Diversified, time. No ftt! G1r199 Sal• 1022 ~Hawail g '1 ct' ' ~ wuber needs wen bouaebroken. 311 Carob, 21' ICHOOKElt.. um: _,. O:intineatal. ch ea p! X.t
tllteftltinl, dlallencma 1618 ~~l~MT-82 JJ•obs~~M~•~•:_·~W~om.~27~500~1LOI'S Of podits from an-~red.~.Mutt both
1
fortM%,U-l'slO,P N.B. IH-4141 11-. rW. 6IDr equip .. .i::; mnd..~nlltlftmrfpai.,
-· Exce-...... •klllo -..... to ""'"" "'"'"" SIJRFBOARD --"""'"" blblo, -""""· PITS aM LIYUTOCK """ - -.. _,,.., Mini 11.... 9'75 =-6t2-mJ. for ap. A~~ :::;. 1:: APJ'. MGR. ~tbiac mUlt l'O· 403 A I'S''. Excdmt condltbl $tO ee.. !lee. pita.r w/r:a., Cets U20 Wlll •U. « ta6t far other 1---------J'or 54 uoita in northem Kin,p Drive. (left on Dorft' _ ~ ~ • Ull't never 1l1l9d boat cr nal ntall'· 835-9f9I KESA MINI BID.;· ·
SALES Mallie'• Wig I: 8eautY ,_,~-C ty s d -"'~ ~~ BuJo --~ -""" -l LADY ""-<U'6" oun · en from Cout HW)', left at Oiff .-. • '""'"'' -· 2 FEMALE ~ kit-or_...._ (evn. ._."' • Partl e Jt.,.tn ~lnllnolffd> ...... ....,.,,. """motoRBndal!MoCor. lli.,ldt•tKlnpM ..... !l!Rn!OARD,liOleUld'IT 56-1'52-+a!'M .... AIO ID-·"""' Sailboat lall-t 2:111-CM·~
to WNr and aportswear. BUM Stitch Opera. die. 2790 Hartxw Blwl.. down to Kmp DriTe) NB ~~nirnhlatar, mpdowa AP.ut'l'IOJft SIU CQU).. bnd, .., ...... 115 ed. 20.000" ·~a..I .:::
Full time. Apply Spec. mach. prment mlcr-l==<l=c.t=1=M=_..'======-Fri/Sat/~.11:3 .5f8-M21 IPOT Rl!::rlUGJ!ltA'n'.lll. ~nm --• ~del l3IQ
GENE'S 1580 Monrovia N.B .... -Agondff, Mon & !>ooonllw BJ.FOLD tnt.m Mllcollon-. ltOO EXICDUllT aJtlDJTION. C:"-I '7 KAWAaAXl-
m> u.-Blvd. 'obi M-• w-7500 Women 7550 do4n I< -"' oocb pond llO ...... Ann< 4 Pl(. 0...-n2J * Ml-Hf• * "'2.llOO ml. 1-ll>on 1-•
Cooto -• -· '"'" • .. 1%''. Quolltr KNITTED FAlllCS U•--w-WOW! .. ·----'-:.;;;..=::..--1 -. --...... NIO ~.uc~.=: e»n 13,IOll bi~i:.~:-:,:
l:Xl'EIUENCED MOLDING J/J.nawport · -.... _, 1 11 "' FOR SALi brood. Idol! -1 mole, l Top -• .....,......, O!fw • .,__
C-rclal Toller Mach!M Opo•oton peragl'IOlancyii!lll =-· 01·1112 ,. ._..., ..,...,_ • MlP ( A s ff """'"·IUUI-,-.!· -·.....,,, """'""''' '66 BULT.&al Mod. SbOiiO A&lfibr Plutk:, mJ«tiaD. Penna-mdl kt. OnJ.1 I Lm. to t In& ....... J1919en. CUl lut. Ml-1111 Part. Nb. eq, A trana.;ffo.
llecurityl'odllcllat'I-- --aA!Wlz !Au; • --p.m.Dltakor,.,_,,_ ... 1"1. NAPL!!I ..... ..,.,..... lie. ""· -H ·pJl.
2831 E. Co.at Hwy, wark o•idtdtm. Oftro. tu 0owr Dr N I m.119, e•••1.:dn, ulrbts FOAM RVmlER, mt te Ille Paid for: . ElDZllLY illlflCilt wll pq O:implet. '150 ...,.70 .-•
Coronadellilar timeandallfringebme-642.3170 5'49.2743 6. 111*1. l.&mpt • Upb IUPPliet t•brle•' ./l'undtutt ./Appliw ... ...,....,._dUl'ins ~Yecbt..._ 'BIHC»m4JIO: olliilii
tits. Must be ~enc-deaaab bric a bnic. All naugahy&!. 'Fact. auael 1' Antiquet
1
./Tools Attr whit~ vacationt. • ta-5151 e N51. 2100 ,,... .. lllie
ed.. No phone calll: after !ch11lt lnstrucflon 7600 CJleq. Ill Walnut a. NB Law pre. A-1 Fom1 f'lluie ./ °"« ,.'!}! •, -I Stereo. No )'DI dllJdnn. ~ 20' IADJICUT arw bottDm """'., D, a.ta~ ,. - . WAITlllSI 5 P.M. IN ....... -) &UpboJ.t..,.SupplyO>.,ru ~~ i.m ' ..... ~ •
l:xperienctd, over 21. SIJIJ CALIFORNIA SCJiOOL O:lildml.'s wacatxm GARAGE Mle; car can1er, E. 5th St., s .A. ~llll Complete H~tul ~t Helptt .._ pret p.Jnt. DIC!'Ofl llill. A 'tT YAMAH,l •. Nm»
per ilour. r_._._-i &01.1• Injection Moldl-raa ....n......._.. t•• ··-·.,_.. -·--bo BOUND fl .. ~ b t M 547-6748 or 821-beautiful bt. I l lO O' .. ~~ ;\ ,.~..... .... ... q-..u ..... 1-w D-i-•• _ .. ~ ...._ ~ aquan ... ,.,., JXaMf l'IM!, carpe ... ,., e i e """'• COCK ~ A • l'(JO, ~ m.-. 1461'61 · , ~i.cl -.,. • ._. a.... 'J'ni9I: ScbDDl. Ml-2859. t1S pajotiqp, ..-. 'lbn. tbru •laa. 12 s 11, 8~ s IO, I: ftutfy 1o& "' Mr. II-675-4004 °""'" -5'Ma Doi-. CJ<. Sat ""'"'"-Dl'. HB 211 ' 10. Xlnt! Oxt !600. w A N T E D •ct I .... 21"""1· • SAVI $1500 • 19'7 TJtltJYPH .., ,_ " Ao .-pl ~ ~ fJI. a.vie BC-3629 Sac! $225. 5 drawer walnut :;;_~ln&le $25. AM er PM »' AUX BLOOP, F/~ ...wme 2,CllO Ill. Bat ... l--:~:-,.-.W'"'A"l"Tll=O:E~S~S~ ......,., Tw:boo do .. ,.. p!tar BICYCL&'!. rurnttuu .... ., "°· 642:5845 WE """' quaJJty < i... -.w.9-1.NI ....._ll5-JllT.,......., Peter 'I'bompecn ~3362 miacel. 11082 Rottrdan H.B. BLOND Magh e:tereo conao1e pieue) • Fun:Utur no oa1« GERM. ...,,, t em ale' plley. Stp ind. m.ent '15 Y.A..MAll4 • 0:: i&f tr ~::In !..o~talian MERCHANDISE FOR ~ S125. llee cub? $35. Mqff TV' a, .tlreoe, ap:lim.. .Uver, 1~ )Tl, okl; .n ll' Fm!:RGJ..AS.!, a' w Jr irade i)r car. •
445 N. Newport •~ • W-<ALE AND TltADE •nd -•·"°· N•.,P ,... loolo • -• oqulpmonl ' ;:--..., -J30, ....,.. ,_-·SUL • -• " ; _.., Appllanc.. 1100 ttooa! $20. p, twn hdboonlo TOP OAS!! IN >l Mlml'----..-N~ Be.m • Cockt1il W1ltr... furniture 1000 WHOI.llALE To Dealm, $t 5tD-6tZ'1 531-1212 * 89J.al;5 ~~ :~"e 11' THISl'LE No. J'7D. Dlicrm. $225. 67::.....~. !~N!!~~T!N,1, •H-MAPLE ... bd, ct...t. :~~r+a..'"': f!O·.,~~'*!,!.. ~~~t~to=., * 538-'ltlll _-=~l~lODt-4. T•allor,T..-fl1S
perienoad. St!lin lmmed. APPLY IM PERIDf =Ilaend :. ~3 sz. II trip ao. Obie*·.. R.e...,..•N•, owt V&emm1 e 54>m.75 e ~C ~~lie_,~~· 11' SNIPE A 'l'IWLDl ftORAG• -LI<&..
s.tary ()pm. O:ddentiaJ to.12 NOOO' Uphola:tered ~. 1 la~e FnistfneX*9 .. Dbledr m E. 17tll. at, IG-1111 ~A u~31""s' GluMd bull. la pod .. ,,;; ...... wV:::-
lloply to own -wri~ down""'"'" 2 1a11 whit• Froot.....,n.,.-...,..lll" TRIMMER powu FREE TO YOU -P. ahape.$111.491-'129 ..,... • ..,,••s•".'?s·
.. Bos P-l&t Dlil.v Pilot. u•UM'S lulPlt' lice teblt cloths. 2 era/dryl!l'l/fretl.61/ftn&fl. lawnmower m; I e. r. CXJLLIE PUP! AKC, white, RHODES JJ. Kuy S&ill tt: ff I DO ,JUI dim& cabinet.a. All Xlnt We wlD llf'lll!" be aderlDid. Ratalpsder $7S. 1 YR Old do(. Lovea dJldm ch. llttd, bom 8/li/6&. Good Coad. 131150 TRlA 21' Balill, lllf ~
.WE.R wt•••• cmd.!613-"46 A-OKW~7721Guo-. •141-59.J e alllhlMl:Ue.521-1616. *~ *~* talnld.tn. ..... 4--JI. ~ ..:=-~~ 501 30th StrMt PR. naugh chn: $15 for bodL den Grovemvd.1Blek w. ol RA'ITAN dm. tfU. l:&cbair'I Sf9..-01U eves. 1m YORKSHIRE Terrier Male BOURL YRENTAUJ md.fl5..&at•l1!Mftao.
AM ti! 4:• ..... """l'rt. 5 -,.ri ...... u,hola ........ no. 2 rod w"'""" •• G.G. ...... 1135: 2 .. """' aldo no DWGlfl'FUL Plulf) Id-~c .~.'!. ;::-*RHODES 11'2 * ,........ tJllO
1D011tb old strl. szr; week. ran nn di'ridi!r (.cm tJpe) ASKERS $29.96; dryen ach, wicker bar • 3 sUa J wk1 . Train••· .,.. .. ,.._, ••uu __ ,....., F'un zone lloU: ())., BaJtma. ;.;.;=:..---..;;;;,;;.i
-alt51'11 PollcoQlspatchorClork 125 & SlD. Baby.-.., 135: """"" 115: Jldrir., M.Bl.,...,,n0.548-JDI ~02 T/26 155. w ......... "1royNAPLE •bot..i -tllJr FORD VAN. -·:-
ORDER TlkllS Mai. or female (()pm A In-$3.50, ~tte $3. ID cbr ooppertone a: Avoc.; a.r. BLOND l'al'I, extra b1C AG~ F6'lllizer. p.t", ~. t1rm• eqWpt. $UIS. ' mbiDetr)', I01' ••• W•
lfature women -e:lrlJ, 1'.a or ternal) $41+$515 per month. $l.50. ~ 54G-1005 ~ haznaa Jaair, midi. 546-9963 available 839-1741 ,,._~ :xlnt I eyl w/._. tpm.
fU't time. D&YI or eveninp. HIP 9dM>OI ancNas.. w i"'iLUE Velvet chain a: ot. NEAR new elee mo=,... tied cmt $15t. W011!1' U... fnl rm 1WrW ..a. papa. $150. or Dill boM ils_fMt-
Pleuurt work ft1Jm our otf-,_. ~ Clf!tilet.oe, tom an. ~ Pu Maple bed Dryer Muat .ell DO 130. flO S.I fiUIO, MMlD aft I SMALL, white~. teimle ABC a.mpMm -.S flJ5, ..... r CrulMrl f020 ~-;=::~=~~-.::;...-!
b. Sa.1&17 Sl.65 br. Call ,:::. ,...;m:.:: <near new.) 546-8819 * ... , UPHOl.Sl'DUNG -$'1'9.50, 2 to aood home. No ..U .,,._ '5Z IXmGZ ....... ._.
llf·l.!23be:fore5p.m. fit.,t'Midmcenotrequfml GREYFomticatoptable 2 ~roP'tmectllefrlr.Ub pc. C!'Al:qleu cnftmMn) children. W-m4 ,,,. ,, Wl'.l;:www.._ plete1y rebtt. new.._
Cif"' PllDAY •~W••--H-'; -I -Xlnt ...;.s, '""'· Walnut 11n1ob •· l'roo Oii, ,dol. *·· lrup, %15 l!LK. Mod ..... ma!o~I H.,,.. tl30 twin 11'1. ~lo -a..n.$lll. 411
-
11311 ~-""' ~' --, 6*'1160 Mein HB ~. •-•--bull. ....... d .... , J110 ·-1M toD ~-~~ ~ ••
-.._ otrf" -IA!ll1 Ott., -..... Coll.itlf'll,51).1111 ' -~ --· Good """ AQHA R .. llloNd boon. Moool,......., ID ~-""'...::-.: .... ftlbll ..._ tn a 1 ..w AlllUI 1, 19m. WriU. •xam DANISH cmudl 6. ebUr eoc» ~re U!lpmltic WMber, '85 BSA 350CC. aa.>' atnl, MMlllll 1ta "'··-Hsldl pla. Nh .... 15 Wilt - -
-· -bo -..;;, A-11, JM. 89H5ll oaior. $111. ·-........ lot• model, 10 <Yclo. 1425; '5tl CHEV. V-8 ....... MIXED -6 -aauttM"..; -II&. II• llll"lo awi., -$8. 411-WI ' .. , <• td .... rae vdoe THI: famout len ~·1 Port, CM 642-2Ml $50. * 117-IUS tram:. 11.t <Xnnplrtel,J rebll b, male, 9 mm aid, ID ExceUent brMdinc Top I: tank, winch I: roller. T.. .,, <JIEV ·+i 1111 ...... _.._..91111o.,.._:154L -,,.... I mo, CUll"'-•"""tianc<L P1S.54U130 pd-.-""-·-~-""""""I>."°"""-· ----· mr:v....-,...,.._ -•t l.oeun• "'9ch Wo..U-uoodfun,,1112 """-lllt nlllllDlllil fit1i: iiltt .... tfltt-... --.l,..al4...., ..... -. ...... -•111-• -·-
_._ tor w.i-. c.c Now ln-le•lna for Npt m. CM 6"-1"15 ""1'1QUJ: l>Jaa:a DAYll _,_ I ,.. ... pod. ..... dollvd7. ITJ-lllT '"• ---.. -· --.. DOOG&: v-. ..... -
"211 A put ttme. !:xper. only, coab, watteni, waltremH, I'OIUOCA lop dinlai: table l n:w ftnn lricel on van ked ... JIOWl!P!l' lmWR' '25· 1~ or 6'73-1182 8* for Gale T/Z Started in Uckamon. Ex· 25' OWENS CAB atUISEa a/K. .U wBbr. IA • .-,.
AJP11 to......,. ""' ...... Id"""" bllp. ,.._ _, -0 -. «I " .. -_....., Im floor Jock IOI. sc.t8311 rttEE ........ , Put Gem "'"'"'tor.,_"' plouun. l<•lt oond. Looded! Soc! P1all * ...
ISl1 W-Dr, NB pl7 .. ,,.....,. only, "" Xtnt peou ....S, Como ,._, Ootamblon EARLY Amorlca polo tablo ""-put O>llto T c.!l '4Ullll ..... 5IO«l<l5 511-Tllll, maq .,.,., tltO * 'I'HETRIP MOM. 2 pm · 5 pm dai!J, eond • .1115. Oub, Orange. L•. Newport lamp.Sepmqukltbaldln. Wftka <Nd, 5f1-01D1 fn& ,Eves, '31' cruilier. _J_i•.,,•.'----="i-
lTM Plleentta, CM. Now bir. 31103 S. Cout Hwy, South Office Furniture 8010 Freeway at E. Oiaieman, IO Yublca J -I a 1111 lid OLD conetruction lumbtr b' &AC W.taa ,..._. .W. __., --v' awut l'NIZ LM VllGAI.: .
.. WaJtr~l:BarMaida, Lqma ~mileE.tD2bJ.Crc.R. rededc:am.w.-.ias firewood , U 11••1 podcm!.14''-.tAJ" Xllltmal.,* m-. TACA.notfwrt'H&-
21 to~. ()pm g PM DISt'RlB1Jl'ORS Went~ d. From R. tn.dlll to lit bid(. cm left WILL &.er6:e f .... -..nfl f/11 ...... SUit .....U -n:D' WAOClf'aa. ~·
LADY to-. put.-to :.-=-~~h•No• Alromotlvo c., ol ........... 11do ..... Founlly Plel. H,_ -11, 'llL Old ,..i. ..._ 4 YR. etd Gei&ii, dot ... 5!!!• lld -fOIO dr,1-lwk .... 'DO-W........ a..,..i ,_ u -U d-.... M..,., J<ltr 11, 211, 29. ~,_,CM. bone -OH. 0.1cl• --....
,,,.,..... -· PO n-quollllod. l!otlr-t ..... m oed '"""1 •--1"" Cd eoL -m.ll 911--..... -•• t . e '13«11 • 1# ,....._ aid -liubo. --a -ttlil --Nle<put_c.D .... ,., ..... ____ -l/M ... -.... -. .~ -........ _,, w-...... ... 2LI 51'1-' mloe. -.... -OOll -.... lie .. llol1IL1NG ..... -raANS"6fil'rtOll -. -·Top""""' -ITT I ' wAi'riidii wOillriilw ili6illi-M • , -... ..--. low...,MMhl-1120 -.H wwww1r.1.,, m®S -•-o __ ,..,•I!'* a-~ ~ d. Ao.Ir Coll.--1111 •·---aav-0-11.,.,.. flJl-IY ... fOllO ---····--:::._I ....... t t -' n1:1w ---.... __ 11' SKI Beat • I -RP ........ w .. ~ -·-. -........ .. • •• a'' s.A.. Ptwaq • .,. -~ -· w ~--•., " ll!IOh\_ .... llJI. ::;",:'"_....., .. ,... t<a..U. dll " Ol1llail ..;;;;: .......... color ntlZ-lo--' ~·-Flr~rt•10 ....... -""'· .1 S "iiiii:~;i{'-;jii;i~iiil ,. .. "'' toe -"""..., _..:":..n.. '. ••• · t/M ... -.. --. 11 -· •. , .._, -auw. • .. lllJl!S!2I alf, ,,._ fto _., ,_ -~ M~ -•-n ---:: -~-· SrnEEmu-·V--ooulp. -llorlto, ---•, ,,_ -" -.. ...,,.., Olll HouoohoW Cloodo I020 ·~· ~--.. ,_ -_, -.. su,e. -.: . i-lllodi 1<u1111 1iEA£ iium -·· -SU5-MMl.1' OlllDrl'.'1...,..,_.,.. l8<W TIJI wmnt!i ~ --~ ,... llO'l'OM ---,.. "' ...... -.. ---,_ ... _..._..._ ITNG--IA• W.• •<>-= TOYOTA •
lliJit1r1-iii&iiBo -1-.... -! !ID Muol11floet, 1121 -MHPll ---"" -.. ::~ M'IBA1' -..:~llD ; :.::'.' ;: :: i:r· "• ~ ~-.. 11. z. .,_ me,..,,.., oe11 ....i 1~:;.,,~ ._:.:; • ~ .. 8:::.~ t'' .!1:9-•• w m ""''!°"-~'.., .. iittl'rAllT -'ii!
...
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ree1 .,... Solo .a M; unn.a 814 4w1 fir ..,. -a ... w.a,.-.. .. Cl'ldt. • -NB. :.--,, tt• •l'lr°"*•-w t'°" ---'IT, ....... _, llWL 0.,-lllaljo 1'/trlt.-tll... .... ~ ....,...~...:.D ···
MOllL W _, • 11m1qo • -GAllAQE.., _..la.....,. El<C!UlOR -. -·•a Oi fr• *" -· • •• "" • rr ...... 5 11eno -iii' i:vaum1:, .....,. • wuin. O...
• .:~-~-11
... ~-;t._"!'".~.:=-· :.:i.~:.· Ool.C.*-GdltLi ___ .... _...,_ ----·-u• ........ -ol•fl· -. ....... itll &-·------~-•
I
'
•
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TilnilJ, Jub' 25, 1'61
'600 TltANSPOltTATION A-....... rto4 ·-l""""rtod Autoo HOO TRANSPORTATION "" TRANSPORTATION
9520 M"'--'-----VOLKSWAGEN
Com""" KAIMANN GHIA .. lm,.m.1--i_~V~O~LV!0~--1!!!'"'~"'"'="~-~-~~~-~ :.:'"'~-,......==A=-=.....:"°°=:1-------I Auto1 Wonted .
TltANSP,OltT A TION
t700
a , FT. c!,C:,!.!'~. ·ei KA1U11AN Gbio °"" "'~ ~ ~·,:: TllUMl'H '6B VOLVO VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN "' ~~':"..J:.i'I.':9
~--.,, ,,... -er ~b• N..w ere ' --G C.U lft !i M6-1908 "'::;..::' et aeoulllul '"""'· 1995. .... !WI, l2900 ... ,.,., ,. .., .. • "'° TJUA 111!111 £T oUR LEADERSHIP '61 Volbw--. FREE. LAS vEGAs pn.
WE PAY ••• CASH -~·-tnns, ~ 60-<llll ~-"-nt -ndlt... SAVINGS BEFORE --.-·· VACA'nON WITH A teU contained mall)' 64.?-0'l91 .r..AJ.._.,-.... •lMT YOU BUY!!! f>e.tli:"e • JU1t spent im. on 19S1 VW SQUARE BACK A uto. Wente« 9700
:eCaOm features, irdooina: 19&. KARMlll GHI~ ll'ft. 1'-SCHE Private Owner. mime et Otkk lvuacm'L GON
:c::Cfmictiletnblths.i.kitch. mat'_ eand )Ow mileqe. """ :""""CAVTOl~LV~O ~ "ltllHPOR•L•T.,.;$•1 :V~1i29.'i&Ul~~:-~= !':tTl~=Aw~ :.~It~ WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOi
USED CARS
COllNBl OIVROl.ET
lor Uled CUI Ir truclll jult
call ua tr tree eltimatt. ·c fully carpeted tbn>u&h· $1850. ~55n 1964 PORSQIE "C" ONpe. t--------1 """ UlllO 10 AM 49(.9173-MilaJe plUI dtpendabWty. ~etc .. $9500. Will con&lder ___ ... LL ~·· • ... -~ ·~ tt •~ •-tAdes. Prder· :.> to 40 ft LOTUS Xlnt '-'-!. A .,..,..~. 1963 VW tai:r~~~ 'au~ GROTH CHEVROlfl
,_ BIH. phone 892-6856.. New tins, $3250. ' ~ a .. .ao.. .. _ _.. .,. VOLVO ...... ..., -ter, lmmaculate JI.Lit as nice.mu frelh u
._, phom -Al '67 ELAN COUPE -In""'
........ ...._
ll2U -Bl., .HllD~Beacb 1.::;~~:::,:c::=.=.::;::!'1°"" Sold~ 10000 SUNBEAM 122 s. 2 door ....... Cao-,,.. H.-. C.M. -_,_ ""o:;it. Aho,.-.. '"" be ... ,. • """"' oJ
cwPER • tnvel trtr, owner. "~UL ' ~ condition in ertk: '86 VOLVO • door, private _..,t!!! ·Ph M2>!Mt$ moot)'. OnJy KI N331
.,_, xlnt cond., 13', $500. MilK. Special. low price this FR.EE LAS VEGAS white with contrutiq ftd, owned, beautiful condition. 'G VW bul, Corvalr eng., $1995
m& Pomona, co.ta Mesa weekend. $3t95MOTO. S VA~TION WITH A interior. Dependable, ttali· Muat tell Autnmt.dc, white new tires, 1ood cond. 200'i S. • ELMORE WE BUY
ANY CLEAN
LATE MODEL
SPORTS CARS.
um _ ... , v:~.. . ....... MARQUIS Rl '63 • 'PINE HT ......... IL ...... _ _,, ... Woodland Pl., Santa Ana •.......-ouft'. '"'-",..aize ~ 900 So. Oil.at Hwy. ........_ ...,....., • momy, ....,,. u~ walls, ndio, 393 E. 11th .Sl I~ t:amper at 1560 ~ 1..quna Bead!. e&.75m SHARP tinu aua. ThiJ: week end' CM 54&-1'96 545-&l4S aft g MOTORS
tiii N..,pt. Spa"' C-U $1299 only ill:;;======= 19'6 V.W. Fu""''*· Radio, TOYOTA 2828 Hui>o< Blvd.
9s2s MERCEDES BENZ Elmore "395 , VOLKSWAGEN ""'"'°'· "1 conditlon! Ph. 1194-""' en. .. M... ,...= D:QD• Buogies
!!VA BUGGY Bun.DERS
CQlnpleted Bua\H • Acee• Aoriea. U&ed VW Parta dJli ~Canyon Roed
Beach 494-8100
~ WE IUY tic transmiuiel\, JI fl we r ' ~&NY C' ., AN .... n. .. AM/FM l'Adio. Th•
-·#11' ~ di8criminA~ beyer will ~
:.LA TE MODEL """''" .... """' • ..... ... tiful auto. Dir. Ph 642--~
'.SPORTS CARS. DIRECT lrom Germany -
~ Top Dollar To Yoo 230 SL canvertlble, p/• plb,
~ Golden Wnt aide-facing ~ ae•t. ndlo,
AUTO CENTER Inc: mint '°""'""" "" ....,.,..
: 19&4 Newport Blvrl. prov~. Call coll. ~
" ta Mesa 642-MM MY time.
.. '66 D1t1un Sport '58 ~ES ~ 1911 SL
: Roadster 19XI Pri. Prty. Sl.450 Firm
' ess bronu:, pluab black 67:)..2752
~terior. Law, Low miles. 1J60 GRAY Mercedtl :UO.
ttake older trtde or $11'5 Good cmditiorl. $650 962-0436
&ls. Call after 1 PM , aft 5:30
04-9773 or 639-3617 l-... =-:..MERCED~--,,,_~B-""'-=""'=
~ Spot Cub fer Import! 26,000 ori1 mi. Lthr int, SU·
\Ge pay more b' MY import per cond. $2lm S48-5li8 llft 5
.. gatdlHB of year, make
..-con<tit!on. '!'.,, .. be!"" MG ~ tell. ELMORE;l------
llOTORS, 15300 Beach Blvd. * '65' MG ''1100" ~"""'"""'· 1194-3322. SEDAN 1~=======! The little Npel' l!CUK!mY
: ALFA ROMEO """"'"" ,.;'" "'' •;g "'"~ ior for • grownups. • mpeed
:i-s1 Alfa spydt:!r. cu.mim tram., rMio, .. tc. Sparkling
:: hardtop. $350. Jf'l'TY me. daYer whit• w/black
:: e 5J6.'33ll e vinyl inter. A "BIG BAR· 1-;s=======I GAJN" in a known import! ..: AUSTIN ONLY $7951 1.-,.·-------lid car lot on Harbor Blvd.
<67 Austin C-SE JOHNSON & SON
oiie owntt. ~ milee. ·.'mt Unatn-Mel"CUf)' .llke new! Driwn by little eom. Mf!M Brandi ·
)le pogtrruul. $Z!Sll. 19'11 Harbor Blvd M2·7f'fi0 " MARQUIS MOTORS ' • ..,_.... FREE LAS V!r.AS • 900 So . .._........._ Hwy. V ACATIOO WITH A
: l,ag\ma Beet:h .f.M..'l!ts '63 MG
&USTIN HEALEY
;: ~TI~S =tr~
SO AUSTIN HEALEY SPORT CAR
: ~. New-motor. WORLD
: $199 Ph. 1194-3322
SpORT CAR
WORLD
Ph. ll!M-3322
~ Beach Blvd .• Wltmnllr
TOYOTA
lilf!l ll•t-•is ~lletm
ORANGE COUNTY'S
i111ft91tu
Little De•l•r
h11 over 30 Toyot•'•
in stock for
lmmodloto dellYOry
J.arpst Stock in History
e All OMnn e All F.quip
• FinanciJW Available
NOW SHOWING
THE ALL NEW
HARD TO GET
Toyota land Cruiser
Station Wagon
COME IN NOW!
IMMEDIATE t>ll.IV.rnY
1966 Hubtlr, C.M.
TOYOTA
HEADQUARTERS
ELMORE : Ehnore '~ ...... Blvd., w-: '6B MG 1SJ00 8!..-'!_~·~stmn.!tr : IPORT CAR "~ -~ WORLD GET OUR LEAD:msHIP .• ,, Ph. 894-3.12'1 SA VlNGS BEFORE TllUMl'H iioo Beach mvd., Wstnmlltr YOU BUY!!!
apair garage. Should have •neral k nowlrdr• ~ IHPORTS
TREE LAS VIXiAS
VACATION WITH A
TR4A ~.;;~.,.~~ •-,; "flll LtADiA
~ular import•. I al a r '1 1963, '64, '66. '9i, '67
f!or comm OJM!n· Pltl'nl 1966 Harl>or, C.M. !;46-9:\03 From $1499
po&ition with adv~ment
&umt. Send n•nne "' 1964 MGB Elmore
tlfi2 Garfield Ave, Nn. ~. Rtllld&ter. Powder blue ftn-P · Or call 897-4285, 10 to 4 isb. All acceeaorles including SPORT CAR
both CD1.vft'l:ib1e end hard WORLD
:;. CORTINA ""'' lmme"'1at•. DI•. Ph. l't>. ~ ..:p__ 5'2·9400 15."m 8Mdt Blvd., Wltmnstr
~ 1967 CORTINA 1967 MGB GT FREE u.s,.v_EGA' ~ STATION WAGON. Coupip. Tartan Red .,./black VACATION .. ~TH A ~ ~uip. 12.000 •ctual JeathP.r. Bucket llf'lll , AM I '63 TR4 SH-.RP.
ililet:. Still covert'<t hy lac-FM radio, wir.. 'Nheels, !!tr., $14oo'
fry wan'Mty. Showroom f"tt'. Ab9olutely perfect. Dlr n.;? ~ition. Dir. Ph &tZ.94(f) Ph M2·94(l'; ---.:.. ___ 1iu11Ufe
: DATSUN 1967 MG MIDGET SPORT CAR
... British ni.cing green with WORLD
:· FR.EE LAS VEGAS bl.a.<* interior. Wire whfo.els. Jlti. 894-3.'m
:" VACATION WITH A Th.ii! car mull! hf' See'! A: .1.5.lXI BMdt Blvd., Wstrrwwtr ~ DATSUN PICK \IP driv .. n. Dlr. Ph M.2-94{f) 1966 TR 4A.
iiiRUCK. qJtjs Hi the most '5111 MGA . Xlnt rond, inside & R.ofl.dster. white with black
iaught alter mileagf! maker out. $47!'1. interior, wir. ~b, over-
il:ting. 4 i;pd trans., bright * MZ-27?.l drive, 13,301 actual miles!
?Jd v.itb a niee contrasting 1960 MG Wire whtt-18 new Fnr all practim] ~.
J!l tenor. Only onf' and if, tire1. <hec bl"llkea. AU1 iood ttU1 rar i~ brand new. Dlr. lftta go fast. Only eoJld. Br!!! otff"r, 962--081] Ph M2-~
-$1095 \;:'~:""'==="'=="=~============== ; EIMORE
~ .-... t.10TORS
; TOYOTA
-: Ph. 894-3.120 1'3flO &a.ch Blvd., WmnnKtr
;(66 D1t1un Sta W19
::Del.wee. Pearl srey with
:Jnatchlng int@riar. Excel· lflt cmd. Under i\l&nnltt.
~$175 cash deh or trade.
1Ymnta. $33. mo. can aJttt := 11. 494-9"n3 or 6.'B-3617
• • • HILLMAN
•
AUTO PLAZA
ANTICIPATED
Located near new Niguel
lndwtriaJ P a r k on San
Dteao Freeway between new
Crown Valley overpass and
Miuion Viejo on and off
ramJMI. Acreage availablt.
Call "Stan Allen" 547-3103
or 4114-1084 between 10 Mt
I< """" daily. or "Som Hlllt·
l&yman 11 at 7 Brothen Real·
ty ...., .Uy. 4M-ft7'11 "'
4IMl-20TI ovettlnp.
OMORE --------11 _Sl~,..-·=,...~1848--. ___ 15.'llO Beach Blvd., Wstmn&tr , Top Dollar To Ycu
'Ill FAS'raAO< vw. Lite '61 vw. Many Extru! '66 vw DELUXE Will lay Golden w .. 1
MOl'ORS
TOYOTA
MC71'0RS
• Ph. 89f.mt
15.m ~ach Blvd., Witmnstr
'65 Volvo 122 S 2 dr.
XLNTOOND. 546-6no afters pm.
..
bl.,.. !Ul1> ..WP. $1100. Ve.-, Cloan. 1895 WADED! :16,000 mile• .., AUTO CENTER Inc: --""'~°""':..540-m0:.::,=;:c---.d =""'54>-461=-="'i1'-'alt:::..:OC!p:;:m:__ speedometer. Belonged to Your Volbwacm or Porsche l9M Newport Blvd. "'\ ~ VW. '60 -""'-.Rum: well 'M VW, ~""ect cond , msny little 'ole achoo1 teacher in Ir PIY b:lp c1oUa.ra. Paid for Co!lt& M a 642-M60 ...,,....., """'' or not. Call Ralph e_a:~==----1
Radio. Mako....U..t Dune many ''""" See to ap-Son Cl"""'"· Take 1115 673-1l 90 AUTO$ WANTED
lklc· $115 675-0t34 evo. precial:'e. 546-5lf6 ca• dela, dlr, or trade. ·=..,....,=-,--,=-~.,--°"' Will Pt.Y cash for tmported
lil86 VW Sedan. 16,<ro milet. '65 VW Sedan, l carrlqe Pymta 136.116. Ctil after ll, WIU. Trada 20" inbrd with autos. Up to $5CXI. Tl')' \ll,
Radio a: be-ater. $1500 tum . ncka me. XJtit ccnd. $1Cll5. 4M.s'l'l3 or 639o3617. campletel)' reblt eic .1: otner ELMORE
83:J.0'23i · * 494-&m * equip. Value, $1,lm. 541-1131 9611 Garden Grove Blvd.
BUICK
~BRAND NEW LE SABRE SEDANS
r! r/ "'-. ~
•
Autometic: transmission, powar staarin9,
pow•r brek•s, racii o, factory •ir, WSW
tiras, tinted ~leis, many othar eccaS·
sories too num•rous to mention , Stock
Num b•r 30]
PRICES
START
AS Lf!N AS $)637 ... . . . . . -. -. . . . . -. . -. . . . . . . . . . . . -. . . . .
'BRAND NEW 1968 SKYLARK COUPES
-PRICES START AS LOW AS $ 314 8 ::w:rng;;:~ri::~.·~o~~~o br:~::.m~s~~~::
heeter, white w•ll tira1, m•ny other •c ..
cessorias. Stock num ber 264
WOULD YOU BELIEVE??
$195DOWN .l\
PLUS TAX & LICENSE
'67 JAGUAR XKE ROADSTER
beautifu l pri mrose ext erior, wire wheels , whi te side
wall · tires,. etc.
PUTS YOU IN A
NEW BUICK
LOW, LOW PRICE OF APPROVED CREDIT
54995
EXECUTIVE AND DEMONSTRATORS EVEN LESS!
234 E. 17~ ST.
COSTA MESA
B
548-7765
0,... Monoloy th...... frldey 'HI 9 p.m. °'"" 'HI 6 .., S.tvr4ev-<LOSI D IUNDA Y
Service Department
Sptc.l1litin9 ht the 1ervic• of •II ma~es
a11d modt la. OPEN Mond1y .+hrou9h f.ri.
day, 7:30-S:JO, Monday •we. until 9:00
CLOSED SATURDAY I .SUNDAY
-...... -·-----------... -~ ... ·---...... ·-· ........ , ....... "" .... ---..... ,;z:. •• -.-.... . -..... ·-· ... -----.. ~ ... 11 .. _ ... _, • ._ ____ ........
TRANSPORTATION -U... C... • ·• -u...i c... ---u..i c:... ~ -TUNSPOtn'ATION -Now Cort -HOO Now·Cln -
· LIT CONTINENTAL Leool"' t110 CHIYRO FALCON U.... c... "°'
J'M ._ Ul7 -,,.. '59 CHEYIOtlT ~~ ' •• , PALCON OLDIMOMLI
-2 Dr., I .,i. - -hid..., ........ _.. 4 DL DILUXI · :
btio, O'l'snme.._ trw.. Uta"....,",_. VS7 A1JlanNIHo tn-Wd1n, n-~a OLDI w.w.tlrll,atMIJOpw-. HAIDTCf on-Cg" tit-......-ao.S.'1dtnl«la41dl4I.. IPT, CPL °""""'"" °"' Slll9-Col: :::.:c: ~ ~~~ MARQUIS ~ -•.ua ·-""" !'oz Auto Looaoc I clocir, V-11114 ...... Tu ~--1100 lo. ""'"' HwJ. Ill" V4 .......... -,.......,a.t.IOua•lpm ---PS .. -1oodCoothoahl i..-...-... .,. ___ ..,... ..
--1'>f .... 1•---.Jl-.(DClll) ----·--_..,. -· ,,., ,. ... """., • ., $1'9 .. _ ......,. -· ""' POU -... ,... !"II-lioolll. .... °"""*"' -ml ~ -·-... u....c... -TllODOl£ROlllS ~~~ 3'67fOIDClslaiuJ ~.... -
EDITH Wiii , ottertoa , -.... . . OHL Y •nts
113 W. COAST HWY, FOii po,. cl,.. ......i o..m. 3., dloooe -· 4 Dr. VI, 111 cor lot,. --. NEWPORT llACH --...... !WI. I01' down .. JOHNSON Ir SON
THE 'llTYLINC JS '!'DIE-tnde 145 per -ICluoJie , ~v-
LIDO THIATRI
THO=HLY
MODIRN MILLIE
JUll dip ... o4 Md -It lo the Lido Theatre in
Newportlleach-ldmtt-
-~IOod~ llll1 JOtb.
Rl 11°"'!" Ill.._ U3 ON AU. MODWI. No. Pm7 ~-
0.... --NJ. llAVJ: THE TRULY St•9s oo -.... .. .. l'llD Loll VEGAS l'l!<J: CAR F!Cl'.nllt&S. IN·
VACATION wmr A WJlllNG '11\ IXJtmmoN. ii otl5i I Dr. Horillot. illil
ll9T au:v. CAKA11.0 1t1B !NO, 11 TO a1008E J'ROM, 1JIEODORE llOlll$ _., oJr, lltl9t AILI ::-.:::.::i::-· 'l'llRll IM'I. FORD "q. DSMOllLI
lladoa 1op, • "'4-. -... • Johnson & Son Cutlea 1 v, HT
........ oil __ ........ tC...tHlolowoy ----IJ1obluo-.-.... Pollllffl> .,_hJOill fN&. Newp-L..... 141-7711 a.ta Mea .... ,_,..._....._O..ow.
'l1dl "11> "' cmlr i"REi LAS vmAS •· i6t MY. ' a~ VACATION wmr A '" FOID Lm J,ISLtE5N
Uol'IVl(J; ''5 Llneoln Ceriil-11 ----tllw!i-R.T.AulD.,l!.6 ·B.11111-~
MOTORS lollber -· Air ooad. ... No. """'M-. or ,.,1!1:~8o. °'"'*• ~•-
TOYOTA ----. ·-•..--•mo. --Pb. --tad~!"'*•· w... $1995 .. Ciiii ,,.,. Wii m» Badl·llhd., Wlbwtr _. -air I t! .. .i DlJ • * '66 ·cHEYELLI n* S2l4S t lllODORE . iOBlls ... m , ' • '
MAUIU MORt FORD :.!C~t
POl'lll.AJ\\1 .. 1 dr. llllTOP MOTORS --·· blidr ·-SPT, en. ILi ---TOYOTA -·-lop, a..-
--wtlb pl<llda black ------·---oil -...... PIG, ,,.... ---.. W-.Qi!la M.,. _ -.14'1
........ R/ll, w/Wlllo, ..,_ 18111 <nrrIN!mAL Li ;i\'->63 FORD CONV"T. ALLIN
1 In 10,COI! JINPIJ'ed to aeaotlatm Im-• A tun • n • qi .,edlll " ~
ONLY ""5 -le ..ie 6 dollwcy cl Beaut. 11t1c -Galax!e UIO .. cio.-HwJ
111 '°' lot OD llarbo< BM!. 001 C tl '':Ill'' V .. wltb -·~ 1--* ... !OM JOHNSON Ir SON ---:·..n·~ .., ...i --~ 'iiiiliiifuG.-11111,,...,
Lillcoln-Mel'Cllly C....,. ot l-• Soa ILlter. lo/T, pwr, -· Riii. fad. ldr. llool ....... PD0
Coota M.,. llraadl ~ °""""'' -U. .... "Plit,.... top down Md belo!r book. 3IO Doi Kar,
-
~~up!" CJl.--•7 IUICK 1911 -Bl"1 IG-'lll50. ~. Now p or I ..-·~ONLY $n51 -
1--------FREE LAS VEGAS Boodl. OomM--'63 BUI"' SPECIAL VACATION wmr A 111 car lot"' -BM!. PLYMOUTH
\I\ ISllO CHEV. IMPALA ... CORY AIR JOHNSON Ir SON 'a PLYMOUTII Vallon
Qle. o.rlc metallic blue with Lincoln-M«l'a#7 t cqn.
FulJY oqu!ppod. VS, Radlo 6 oil -.,tenor, pwr. '63 CORVAIR OlOla "'-Bronc:b -· -8-...,..
H ...... P.S., "'" clown .. ... .. """'· etc. -.... Covpo, 3 lpoed 00 -B1"1. IG-lllO ~~. c~ ~ llO
tNde 134 per mo. J6 mo. OnJy Ont OWDll', nm perlectl , I.• .:-~-~;;;;-=-..;-;;;;:;:..';e I
(lJJl.7'6> $495 ......, .... ...i --· " FORD CUSTOM~ -a P11moaib Ilia "'"· ll:iL $795 llW\llE !:W15~•»N,;. ~-' CCllld. Oris -lllOO tr
urnnu; --"--·-VS, •-•Ile. I01' -or .... okl •Mil oft IL
TIIEODORE ROBINS MOTORS llOO .._ o..ot Hwy, tndo Q per mo. 21 mo. LEAVING o.m..,., 'M -
........ -49&-'ll!OI NOY'llll ~ VI, ldr, 11111 -· TOYOTA $ Pb. -'61 (X)B.VAlll -Ml, 595 RiH. $UGO. .. ,.,, FORD IS>JOl!eadllllvd. w--· ....... Rum. -llllOPLYMOO'nl
80 Harbor BlTd.
FREE ilS ~ _, Make a&r "'"'517 11IOOORf 11118111r Good .....,,,loa ISO
VACATION WITH A KVllllU Coll -
PONTIAC
O:llta Mes,. ec.oo10
MUii oelU ''8 Bulck Speda1
convert • low mileage -
V-1 auto, extra. Owi»er
let.vine for Drope. Printe
'6fCllEVl1LCAMINOMAL-CORVETII! FORD
mu. The """' ....... -196 CORVETTE
"""" -· • ........., .... rut -. 111wr with blade • 11arbo< Bhd. 4 SPIED bo bolp wltb ,_ -.......... automatic ....... 'OJota M... . IGW ........ Oller.-,..,., Aulo, P. Sir, AD ldnds """""" 11111 _.,.. ond YEU.ow . SPECIALISTs '
ol extnt. eem_,, 6 -. FACl"ORY All!. CONDI· V-1 !WI Fan! ota-. 'SI. HIGH PERFORMANCI '68 BUIQ< GT 400. BJc -· 10,IXKJ mt. $3350 or hfft "f4.·
.Air cond. AM/FM radio
lD,CXX> mt. $3.150 or be8t: ~.
fer,• 61S-2UIJ
"'°"' tretlL Th1' weekeod TIONING 9.119 actu.ot mil •• .: ' Ex cax!. New CUSTOM r • •• ""' • •• _,.,,,, Lato cl .. left. $l!O -~
Unbelievable auto. Dir. ft caah. See at 132 B11oa Aw LARGE.tt SELECnON Jlf
-NB (lop ot the bill.......,; OIWIGE COUNTY
... CORVEITE 2 TOPS. '811 • Euthlull • l-Rd, Selected Allhl .
$1695
ElMORE
CADILLAC
M'Ult 1en. Bed oft• r, '83 1'01tD ~Camper; C
MOTORS mg. • boly~ Xtrul 2 map 2 chrome rim.I, _.; , . enter ~. \.:!-
TOYOTA 77Mll.O" m-1.!111 uk for -6 -IOod llNo, 13012 --. Uf.M
'67 CADILLAC l5>JO .!'.::; -llluclr. --· lllOO or beot or. ROY CAltVll C ... po ... VIiie Blvd., W-fer. AM fer~ -t, ....._a --.--* '66 CHEVELLI COUGAR -__ , ""'"'"'C
top wltb 0rq ... -. Full WAGON 00 •rr 1'0RD 1l'alrllae 1iOQ , dr - -•, o.ta -,......,i.ctmylllr,,,.,...,, "llL\LIBU" v~ STATION UGAB.·'l'beNUIDberOno ....... A ... vt .. Loml.,Alto Kii 4444
warranty. 11,tm M11n. WAGOO with factory "AiR ~·Not-~!!'....._~ VW parU. 507 Tmda, NB ~ ClatY°o -
$4695 CONDmONING'', P I G, -· -.. ~~~ 60-91B7 --r --ALLEN por ........ Riii, dorome u car ot the,... In 1967 151'ClltDGalule500XLAlr, =-•8-ad OO!omob~ -.. -. .... Beaut. bu thetw .... ... ....
-.. II<! w/ llddlo Inter. portwrlcy fer the ....... Riii, P I S. New -· .,.. 1967 GTO, 2 dr IWdtop ill1!1 1150 So. Out Hwy 'Tor that chem vacatkml" public to Rlect EXACI'LY tra dean. BO:i.r Low Blue equipped, ' mp!. Door lblft,
....... B .. ch * ... IM4 ONLY $2195 WHAT rr WANTS AT Bool<all1"5.11£MUO Jun lllo -· -ILi
'6:5 OOUPE DE \1D.J..E Full lit cw lot on Harbor Blvd PRACI'ICAL PRICING. Tbl '6& FORD G&laxle le» COIJl)e: ~. M\llt 1el I tm. =~ '":"':;. ~::: JOHNSON Ir SON ::t;? :;i"y~\;i: ~~;gi -·---~ ~11,;.:;
ORIGINAL OWNER. !3300, Llacoln-"--· PORTUNITY. Vbll J~-g,>J uo -..._,__T .,.....,., '63 GaJaxle Ford, ~
837-7441 eves. 213-123-0079 a.ta Me-. Bnnclt. I: &:m, 0raJiee County'• TBlrd ,.:65"""'•~==-=·-,,-4~--daya 00 Harbormvd. &a-.?IZO olde1t UnOOilfl.M ........ -. · etlllne 1625 uu•••••"u...1.4.
···-· • -• bani .... Fully -'67 CADILLAC * 'Q CHEVY II WAG. °"'IV,~· .P!-" the ,13 roim rai.i-, stand. on<! with ldr, 1UOO. Dir. Sedan • VIiie Much wanted ea:mny .turd pa1ot ~ on ~ cat cl 548-TrSl
n.ric biue exterior, bkk vin)it "N°""'' I cyL B'l'ATION your cboilot. We even haw lbft. I C)'I., E:ilotllmt CCG-
top wltb b1uo m-. NI WAGON bo-.,. Orir. llff (5)ollahtlyaoed1B87'1--lllO. llH2'll "5 BO~, ldr.eoad,
""""'· -m, ,... '"" autumn aold wl ..-.,. oil with ..,.....,... ,......,. MERCu-·y ="· PERFEtT. -· wanuty. ter. P/G pwr, -R/ll, ...,.,..,., Our --cl $4695 et1:.' A ~ mooe, ~tor 1968'1 wlll lfw n., feliDe 1------'---'G PONT. G.P.; air, pwr
ALLEN -..., "'-' -the exact'°"' 1114 ._ ax.oNY Pork otatlcm ~ --~ ONLY $995 oqulpmeat ~be-cl ---· -· -. ooad. m.aa 1150 So. <but Hwy lit OU' lot on ffarb1r Blvd the Number C-. Cat. 900 W. :::t!-~~ ~i ~ 11 G'l'O, 4 llPCI, 3!W! hp, «» d.
r.o.,.. Beach * f91.1<&1 JOHNSON Ir SON =":;;,":":,Be~ Mercury °""'" d"1erohlp. Jo ml, -. -
'a CAD $1300 '63 aIEV Llnooln-Mereury 6G-09lll Newport·O:llta Mesa ·'".,-' ... :..,:..,...._;o,.;;;:,:_ ____ ,
Super Sport, many xtru eo.ta M• Brancb O 6U-0081 '61 PONIUC 1°empelt It&
' ::l'kl>;::_;· M:;:ob::;:,.oll:::;er:,;538-.mt:;:,,:;;::._ l9C1 Harbor Blvd M2-'7lllO '61 _.~GAR. u r llltu. '59 •-CllJ!Y M--, Wte. ~ New tin. I: ,. 7n;;O;T.c;::.c;;·;..,,.=;= v ... """ npresentattve De.ii a>.£,oJ\ ............ ,, L...-R/H ---'67 ELDORADO 'II IMPALA Hrdtop, bu BurPa mu.t now -cl PSJPB. lllr mid., -oeat --·,. -· -2 Dr. Hordtop .,.,, __ Nr-cond. hit ~ ....., tw .....,, pwr _.._ ndlo '65 BONNEVILLE amwt.
-.,....,., ....,. -Car lotll uk'$1995, I'll IUe -· Call Doan at w/vlln IGllle, IOod -· Full -.. fact ..; pod
lop, .,... leotber lnterl<r. ""'5. -er.,.. Colmly'o l<ldeot IJa. ...i pod oondl""'l l'lnt •-:::0::""':=::"::750::·:::8G-;:;;-=·=;;
Full power. _, lllr. New 'SO alEV 265 enr. Thcmant cola M"""'7 -· =1995~;,'"::;..,~'";;.--""""""-= I • a ulLIR cw wan:anty. -. es ~ars tl'aCticn ban Jolwon • Son or Nnprt. '5'l MER c. ... lntlO IUIUft
$5995 l250.5'3-15Sl' • eo...-....-......,.. -· ....... --------· ALLEN ~-~~ .-'15 IWllllZI!. Amerleu l>J admnobUe<:adfllae '\ '63 IMPALA Cmv, V-8, auto, '68 t'OUGAR Brand new. ·~ I: D:w· ~ delurt. auto. power lteer-
WO So o...t HW)' "'\ pie, NEW M<mJR. 1995. $27<0. V8 Md ~ oafo!J -lllll--'Ol15~---,---I laf, rill. LooiiO, lib -·
' --~ch * 49f.IM4 49M901,. .,..._ · equipment No ,.... "" ..,. MUST&N.. . ...,. llloo -• ~&. --~· (kan;e O:lunt)"'• " -.1-l.. _.._ ....... CADILL4C Seda n.vme 'ISSSJllS(])eftlle; CAI olde•t'Uncoln ·Men:arr -oru-.ll-nnmtl
ln<I< ..._ tape· -'66MUSTAHG ...... WD111oc.-i.,.,.. mi NI ,._ 6 lllr. l500 deonl l1900 56-.,,,.; °"'IV de&laoblp. Newport. * Fi-~ * tf, Coll -io:• ill m«m tit ~ ' Colla ar ... IG-09ll __ ,, ... *"1'JS er 813141J.T
'62 'CAD 4 dr iidlil; oil 53 CHEV oedaa doll_,, y--wtlb 'ti a.AllIC - -
...-. i.alber 1n~ ONJC "-"""'· ""°' DODGE -"""' -· Ml. ,.... ...... •,. O\VNm. l!IOO S7M!l32 !W5-l777 PIH -., $111. eT-llll ,.
•rr EL Dondo Pftlecll 1965 CllEV7!lllZr si.""' 19!0 DODGE Orone! !1110. ALLIN -
Loodedl Fact. ftrnntr. Jo waaon 11151). WID !Ue tnde y.,-,,,_. -lop. ~~ .-..-'------1
ml. Mw oiler' ~' Dir. 5'3-775l """'0"" lludiet _.._ --~ -· T ·llllD I=====·=== IG-1530 1--* •JOM CHEVROLET COMET "' Dodawr Dart, GT '67 • + • mod. (380) -• 'O T-BDU>.
V-1, 4 op!, low ml18 cub. 4 .. -hmdL lllat"""' rr QIEVY n, m . 4 opl, '610..etWqm, e 54l4'1IO e -8S11 llO/U'>J 28,000 e '1'-1111 e
Hant .. -. --a .... r/b, $350. l========-1 : ·= ~ .. m-uir . '
___ _. 1=':~·~-~~·~=1--~FA~L~C~O~N!.,__j='"':::=::::=,...-,,,,..-,,,... VALIANT ·' ~.':!"' ... "';:.:'c:: CONTINENTAL '60 FALCOll ~...= . .:t~r~ --.,"'-z_v_&.;.l~.;...ur __ ,
oole. vs .... lllllO. _,.,. '64 c ....... ____. . ---'"' a. -
-Tu 1114 --$11 =":..,111::i;:i-.:;;:;;--;;::=-= ST'TIOll wu!llll SI QIEVY Wap XI. V-1' 'M Uacoe Om-4 Dr ... mo. II -(l'YUIM) • iillfiANa. Ylw/11. lot. A AVV11
l<lll. Good -boclJ, -,_ llodoa. Hu 11111 -$299 VM .,--· 11.111
$!00. 511-a.18 .. --a1r. -""'=·'='·,;,,"":·::n::;:••=="" M~2114opd., --... ---
;;:,.. ":" ar:9-111 = :""' -~ ": 1J10001E ROllS OLDSMOIU
.. aa:v ~ -i:::::.-i:....-. FOii '67 CILDI TOllONADO GIJO. • MP •· pa ,... ..... , .... .,..
-!WH3112 JOHNSON Ir SON 1u1G0<1r-. N1-
.,.-.-.,.. ~---~--· .,,....,.alr.Uoo-.
pd. llOll °""' --O>ota --.,,,. ,_ -00 -Bhd. Nlo'ltl!O '1 l'AUnl -. -ALLIN hi"1'00ial~ilra:liiii: J 15JJ!i<~~~~"'iii -.. --. -Al ~ YOUR AD Ill " 'II L!Nt'OLN. -.., alr 1G-11111 ,. ID-'1111 WO .._ a.ut llW)o
m:DT .. • d ba coml.lootber.32.eOO ml. ... ~• -for a-•-•--* -__ .. lllll __ colooad.l:B>O.Jm.19) ---._ ·---=-....--' .......
l \
-------
"
lrnd New
1968
VALIANT
2 deor
s ... k H .. 1022
-A truly fine luxury c•r-
lral'lcf New 1961 Imperial CroW1'14 dr,
h1N top. Completely lot.tad with 1v1ry con-
·c1lvabl11dr1. Sava 1347 on thl1 be.ut. Stock No. 922
.. °""' .... '"'" ... a.~~ ............... ~ .. •m • ...-.. •a•~•a•ll•u•c•......., ................................. ~
'68 COUGAll '64 PLYMOUTH '6J CHIYROLIT
U_. \,a ~ VI. wtornlflc. l'ury I 0--11an1-. VI --, ...... .,... ........ ~ n;r-• MWW """"" I+. It.ill. .....,.,It IT1rwm,..loft. l'lfloi, INtlc.,..... ........... -$i2i9-......
$2995 $1095
'66 CHRYSLER '66 PONnAc '68 CHEVROLET
...._.,I 0-H.T. 'A •llfrotnltk. aro. ,..., ve. ..........,, ...,... "':t.'Dw .................... ,..., .... ~.., ... Milt9'. ,,., -'"'"';;;. ... --·-$1195 $2295 $2291
'64 CHRYSLER '63 VOLVO '68 AIRY m
"""""· VI --~ IDlw,4 ..... wMlt'Mllt""" =~"! ".....,, ........ ·u--· -. --. $1333 $99' $3091
Al 1<lver;ti.,;I .. ,. .,. plut tu ind le.-
Pric" good 'Iii I 0 1'1-4, lltur.1 ~uly 25
" •• •
,
• •
' . .
I
I
. -l
D!t.lLY PILOT Tb~, July 25, 1968
111 MATTRESS KING.·.~ '
• • .. . . ,
: 12-PC. QUEEN SIZE ENSEMBLE
;, by SIMMONS I '99
THE FAMOUS SIMMONS QUEEN Box Spring and Mattress-PLUS-A
· Queen Sizt Freme Foam Mattress Pad, Per c a I 1 Fitted Sheet,
. Percale Top Sheet,' Orlon Blanket, (2) Bolster Pillows ~nd (2) Pillow
·.cases.
• •. ,
•
mm bonus!
QUDN-51%1 QUILTED SPREAD INCWDED
DURING JHIS GRAND OPENING SALEI
• Only 'l'h• Mattre11 Kln9 carries EVERY famaus
brand name In bedding!
• Only Jhe Mattress King carrl_•• a COMPLm •
llne af super-size beddlng-«lng and _Queen
size Headboards, lled1pread1, Sheets,
Piiiowcases etc.
• Only The Mattress King 41ffers an
UNCONDITIONAL 30-day guarantee of
satisfaction I
•
95
COMPlETEI
.
KING.sin SPREAD QUILTED
DURING THINCLUDED . rs . SALEr
liERE'I WRAF rou an ...
• KING SIZE BOX SPRINGS
• KING SIU MAntEsS
• FOAM MAn11Ess PAD
• PERCALE FITTED SHEET
• PERCALE. TOP SHEET
• ORLON BLANKET
• (2) BOLSTER PILLOWS
• (2) PILLOW CASES
Plus Bonus/
; . ' ' 5:5 HOLDS YOUR
PURCHASEI
BUDGET TE.RMS AVAILABlfl
~j 111111011 ~ * .;1 ... 1, * E11!!la111l1 ·r * Scrla * Sprin!!· \i r * t>o-.l11n·p1·dil' * \an \ or"I * B1·a11!~ rc-.1
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BEDDING
SPECIALS
TRUNDLE
RISER
........ ~ Slz• •s• Ill fllllES ••••••
-,
"Only 1"1 Mattress Killf Ctnies EVERY FOltlOllS Bram/ Name /,, Betiding"
9·PIECE
CORNER UNIT
FAMOUS MAKER set for your extra overnight gu11ts
or 11 comfortable grouping for your den. Choict of
color• end covers. Set includes (2) Quilted Spreads,
(2) Bolsters, (2} Box Springs, (2} Mattresses i nd {1)
Corner Table.
5179'5' COMPLETE
f ·PIECI GROUP
GRAND OPENING SPECIAL!
ONLY THE MATIRESS KING
OFFERS THIS EXCLUSIVE
UNCONDITIONAL
IWRIT·TENI
GUARANTEE!
EVERY PURCHASE of 1 M1ttr1u ind Box Spring
c11'Tlts 1n UNCONDITIONAL 1nd WRITTEN Gu1 r1n-
l1t .,. phn , , , our 1xclu1lv1 30-diy gu1r1nt11 of
11tisfactlonl
BUY WITH CONFIDENCE
af '
KING SIZE VELVET
TUFTED HEADBOARD and
CUSTOM-QUILTED SPREAD
AY•CIMM, H•ft9Y ... 4,
•• ,..1 llve,
Upttkk lff
TWIN SIZE
MATIRESS&
BOX SPRING
Reg. '300
5139·
GRAND
OPINING
SPICfAU
s399m5 '
COMPUTE
GRAND OPENING
SPfCIALI
THE MATTRE.SS KING! ALL STORES OPEN DAILY 'TIL 9 • SUNDAYS 11-6
ANAHEIM COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON IEACH ORANGE '
621 N. IUCUD 270 IAIT 17th IT. 193 HUN1'1NGTON CINTll 290 ti. TUITDI AY,L
.. 4·1160 642-1327 192-3311 . OS-4742
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