HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-08-05 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa•.
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' • MONDAY AFTl'.RNOON, AUGUST 5, 1968
VOL..,, MO. 1'1'~' SlCTIOHS, • PAGIS 1.,. FromBocl@1,eller.,B_eagan
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WORLD'S BIGGEST LOVE-IN? -This was Mecca
Saturday and Sunday for eyery hippie, bopbead and
pop musfc fan wbo,could buy or steal his way into
the· Orange County Fairgrounds in .Costa Mesa for
the Ne.WP.Ort Pop Festival. Orange Coast traffic pat-
terns were hopelessly fouled up and" the fairgrounds
groaned ·under. the weight of an estimated 100,000 '
music (?-) lovers during·the two-day event. This
photo was made Saturday at the Jteight of 918
day activities. Note traffic-clogged Newport e'
vard (upper left) and <;osta ¥~• C!Vic . \er
(right, center, background) fOl'QnenaUon. .
Officers Keep
. '
Crowd in Check
100,000 Jam Pop P~stival
Despite Agitators )ti County Fair grounds
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
or ""' Dallr l'Uot s11H
OVerwheJ.mlng attendance at what
·tW'tiec!' out to be the biggest mu sic
f8't.Wal itt U. S. history led to only
se'fen Costa Mesa arrests over tbe w~kend, de6pite police harassi:nent
by .negedly4"'0ressional agitators.
· '"jfe -· lmoW!edge that there were 1ome professionals but they were u:nable to provoke any in·
cidfl2lti:• Costa Mesa Police Chie1 aocer Neth said today.
·Paid attendance was about '12,<XXI.
but totals ran as high as 100,'000 for
tbe entire show. " ·, "We were sitting on a powi1~g,"
he said, "but we BV()ided situllioos
which could haVe led to .rterts aDc1 ln·
(See POLICE, P~"l)
By PAMELA POW£LL
Of "" Delh' '1"1 Std "Let's get out of here, there's·no one
here," a barefoot, bearded youth
screamed across the mass . of pressed
bodies. "You're right," a·voice shoot·
ed. "l C8Jl't find enyooe."
Communal living did not set well
with many of the estimated 100,000
, who i11:mmed the Orange County Fair·
grourtds Saturday and Swtday for the
!liewport Pop Festival. For the remain·
der, the two-day listm·in was the
grooviffi happening of all time.
· The sounds, except for a diversity
of gimmicks, were remarkably Simi·
Iar. The sights were slightly tmbellev·
able. Pop Festival fans, ranging from
the staunch believers, and ~al hlppies
to the "plastic" hippies and Ille curl·
* * * * * * Franti~ Weekend
Newport Police Busy at Festival
By BRUCE BENSON
Ot .... ~ ... ,,.,.
Newport Be&cti police today were
sweeping debn. out of City Jail and
dis.mantling tmf:fic (.'o(drol banioades
after handling an overflow weekend
crowd ol Newport Pop Festival
celebrants.
·~it was wome than an Easter
Week," 11&id one olficer in tbe wake of
161 amsts from Fridoy nooo to 8
o'clock this morning.
The crush · ol young people spilled
onto the. Balboli, Peninsula and Balboo
Island, jamming botti areas and caUs·
ing officers to set up control points in
an effort to limit vehicle traffic.
EnlraoceJ to Belboo Island and the
Peninsttle were sealed Off flom time
bl time throughout SUnday aRernooo
and evening.
City Jait •became so h ea v l l y
populated lhllt •t least two b.Ulload1 of ~ persoias were shipped over to
Orangf'Coonty Jail to make , tor
a steady stream of newcomm.
The arrest tally was broken down
lil<e tllis:
-Adults 48, with 31 for narcotics
charges , 3 fOr felonies, and 14 for
miSdemeanors.
.....Juveniles 113, with 12 for narcotics
cbarges, 34 for ~ oi parential ®n·
trol, 38 fOr Clrfew and 31 for
miscellaneous deeds.
The weekend total of 141 arTetu
reflected more than a threefold in·
crease over the 50 per90m arrested
for the same weekend periOd aeven
(lays a(O.
Besides baoclliDg the' exuberant
yootN ·in• town , Newport poilce alSO'
dispatchoed 41 ollioers to <loN Id-.
Sun16y tlfternoon iii answer to &1 plea
for rOlnlorcementa ·to keep• ~ Ill
the feltival. ·
'nlO ,dlapatd! ol men represented a
100 perft•t oallolll d avallabl'
Ncwpoct policemen. ~ . 'i,
ous converged on the grounds to listen,
sleep, talk or just stare.
Highlighting Saturday's show were
such groups as SoMy and,Cher. Can·
ned Heat, Steppenwol!, Electric Flag,
Chamber Brothers, Butterfield Blues
Band. James Cotton Blues Band and
Tiny Tim.
The expected show stopper of the
day was the 45-year.-old, , long·haired
Tiny Tim. Crowds estimated at 40,000
waited until 5:30 p.m. for his en·
trance.
His falsetto voice brought beads and
medaJllQns flying from the, audience,
amidst· Cries of "more, more."
SAttlrday's festivn1es w'1-e marred
only by a shortage of water. Shortly
after noon all stands had gone dry and
five gallon botUes of 'Water were
brought in.
Later,, crowds stood under nearby
garden hoses and drenched themselves
until a water pump arrived and doused
the throng. Sund,ay's water supply was
plentiful, assiltedby indivlduail carry-
ing their own jugs.
CONCESSION BOOTBS
Between acts the ctowds strolled
among the concession booths buying
hippie clothing, lieads, Po1ters. in·
cense, psychedelic kites .and refresh·
ments.
Festival promoters Wesco Produc.
tions. originally afraid the $S and $6
tickets would scare away: any conces.
sion business, were hapJihy mistaken.
"I sold 80 or 90 prograD\I in about
three minutes. 0 one cOnce1sionaire
said. 'The programs were Sl each.
Several merhbers of both the Hell's
Angell mid HesSlans motOrcycle clubs
roalned the gro!lllds. . .
Master of cuemonles or the two-
dJY succe11 was Radio IQJJ di$l! jock-
ey Humble Harve, asdllted liy the
nature boy GJl>IY Boot" Both toward
the end of S.turday11 lboW' offered
·-·-for "crasb~" for the · nlgbL Many 11*11 !ht I in sleei>r iDJ bot• oa the ~ bile· otllen cwped out Oii Red Bill Avenue ntar
the alrport.
The crowd double!! Suq<lay, accor~
(See FESTIVAL,~ Z)
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' Arrests • ID Newport
Soar · Like Bal Weeli
'.Alter Pop Festival
Ni.xon Seeks H·ol:douts
·. Massive·Firn Ballot Effbtt''Waged " ..
MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Richard M.
Nixori's strategist! are conoentratiJ'lg
on holdout delegates · in a massive ef·
fort to win a first ·ballot' presidential
nomination for him in the Rej>ubllcan
convention opening today.
The !ormer'vice pfesident, chalking
tip gains in his effort to close in on the
needed 667 votes, was encountering
stiff resistance from Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller of New York ,and Gov.
Ronald Reagan of Caillornia .
Reagan, quoted as telling an
Alabama delegation caucus "I'm in
this to win,'' was by all odds the
·busiest candidate in this overstuffed
and overheated convention town.
Taking time out for a $5® a plate fund·raislng gala, Reagan scooted
about town, meeting with southern and
Rocky Mountain delegations in his ef~
forts to win first ballot supPort away
from Nixon.
ROCKY GAINS
Rockefeller, who called a morning
news conference , registered an
upsurge wten 13 of Rhode Island's
delegates caucused on their .arrival
and agreed to cast a first ballot vote
for the New York governor.
Rockefeller was assured
Massachusetts' 34 votes on the first
round because of his write-in victory
in that state's primary. Howeyer, Gov.
John A. Volpe was working hard to
&Wing a majority to Nixon on the se·
cond ballot, if there is one, despite his
all but vanished hopes for the vice
presidential nomination. The ring of the Nixon anvil was
predominant, although the candidate
himself refrained fr<im predicting a
first ballot win. Nixon was to arrive
·tor the convention tonight. ·
An AssoCiated Press recheck show·
ed he had pusbed his total of publicly
c<lm'mltted delegate votes to 572, <lnly
95 short of · the prize-winning totaJ,
over .the weekend. This was a gain of
23 over SatuN.y's count. Rockefeller pulled up to 232, a gain
of 24. Reagan stood at 161, favorite
sons accounted for 231 and there· re•
mained 137 uncommltted.
NIXON CONCENTRATION
It was oo the favorite son delegates
and the uncommitted that NiJ:on 's
men were coocentrating as the con·
cenUon approached tts first formal major event tonight, the keynote
speech of Gov. Daniel J, Evans of
Washington. Evans said be will tell the
convention that the nation can't base
law and. order on inequity and in·
justice. .
In the mJdst of tlle heavY earn-
• ~g, the convention's platform 'committee, heM!ed by 'Illinois · Seu.
Everett M. Dirksen, came up 'with, a
IS,000.word documenl> that ,,.med
liltely to ,,et a,ccepted wltholll a ripple.
While ~·deJegatea: Were getUng set
·for Wedil01i1Jy's· cQnvtJ!Uon balloting, ·the ·~• ol·tile Nlxo11'iltlve Cl'Op-
ped up m inany plices. • · '
Dirk1en, l'ho heado the M-vote D·
Iinolo tlilegaUon, • heli>ell turn oo !bit ~ for the Niuii f°""" with ·• •
p111>Jic ~ti.0\1 tl>at the former vice
pre,ident1 "ls ,so close to striking
disWoe· of •the.1nominaUori that off-
hand !,don't believe he OOuld• be stop-
ped."
The Nixon pressure was such thM
Reagan felt it_ necessary to tell sup·
porters of the former vice president in
hls Cali(omi_a delegation that they
would be "very foolish" if they tried to
defect from his favorite son candidacy
on the first ballot.
Reagan came away from a .con·
fereitce with OhJo Gov. Jameit ;A.
Rhodes1 a key man in the jockeytng·,of
the major c&ndld&tiel for po11Uon,
witliout any asstir8nce1 ' about bOw
long the Ohioan would dr could bold
the majorlty of his 58-vote deleptloo
to hls favorite son stance.
There was an internal move wUb1n
the 26·vote Maryland delegaUon by
Nixon sup~ers to desert the
(Set REPUBLICANS, Par• Z)
Here!Js GOP Pledge
By THE ASSOCIATED PR E~S
The platform proposed to the Rep1.1bliean National ConvenUon -
calls for the phasing out of U.S. involvement in the Vie~:war
and negotiations to end the conflict that arc not camouflaged 1ur•
render.
• Other proPosals :
• Move against blight in citie.s with . programs ·empbasizlnt
private ownership and participation of industry.
• No toleration of riot"violence and an ajl-out fight on 0<"111".
ized crime, but also attentjon to the ca~es' Of rioting and .dime. .
•· Limit the number of years a young man is subject to
draft; encourage the states to reduce the voting age; help education
at all levels.
• Strive to reduce budget deficits and n>duce taxes when
military needs decline.
• Use foreign aid more selectil(ely,,llmit trade with Com-
munist countries. help Israel with arms ablpme¢s aild avoid malf-
ing the United States a world poll~einati. ' . . ·
Governor Agnew
Of Maryland
To Back Nixon
MIAMI BEACH-(AP)_..,-Go'v. Spiro
T. Agnew, favorite son Of the 26-vote
Maryland·delegaUon,.wiU formally en·
dor1;e Richard M. Nixon as the
Republican presidential nominee, lt
was learned Monday .
The announcement would be a ma·
jor blow to the nomlnalton 1-•. of
GOv. Nelson A. Rockefeller, who ii at·
tempting !<> keep tlle favor!~ '°" delegalioJU from vollng oo the flrst
ballots for Nixoo ; Ille front-running
CaJ>dJdate. ' I
1be unolftcill ~oadcoliut o1 the
Marylaod• delegaUorr gives Nixon 15 . voteo w Roctereuer 11.
Sources said · Nixon bad uloed "-Jlerl-uy to mal<e tlle former vice phlldttil'•· nominating speech ·wean-; nlpL Ther added 1!111 will ·be m1de public &lier ~.,., formal
endor1emtJ1t, upecle<f at 'a 4:15 p.m,
De":_' ~-=--. ' . ~-. ' .
«:out
Wea~Aer ' ' ·Another one of 1 1hose typical
Southern .Cali(orn1&,days dawna
Tueiday with , cloudy mornings
· and·temP.,.atutes in the·mld·70's
!or "the Orange. CouL
tlWSIDE TODAY
A . JS cllo-•d iigh,t1tring
flight cndl up 1Dlth pilot taklng
; a detour to HavanO, CubG at' tht
inris'trnct o/ a qu.nman ('Ste
.Poge 4)
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.......... 11 , ....... ' ,.... ,....... • ' 1 .. 11 ......... ...
'ir.CaMl 1' 'T....... 1' ...... ,. ~ .. ..... "-'Wt ~ t1 ......... • ....... , ..... ..
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DAILY f'ILOT ,...._ " Dell ,......,.
TINY TIM 'IN FLIGHT' ON POP FESTIVAL STAGE
Jeanette McDonald, Rudy V1llM and Shirley Temple -P•ck19ed
Tribute to Tiny
Hippies Led on Trip to Vaudeville
By ALAN DffiKIN
01 .... DellJ I'll• Slaff
He looks like Joan Baez' sister. He
talks like a canary with a cough am.
he walks as uncertainly as a high-wire
artist who just dropped his umbrella.
WMll hil nose you coold play Fagin
in 1'01ivet Twiat," with his hair )'OU _,_a broom to be !be witch
in "Snow Wbb." and with hU com-
plnim you could be 1lle egg In "The
Egg and]." ,
l\Jrl!I now he bas the opotligbt in the
WU'kl of music. 'lbil weekend be made
UM 1cene on the Orange Coast. His
nome lo Tiny Tim.
Tblo unlikely perfonner b<ougbt the
old end new £enerations together in
ooo of the strangest half boon the
Ormg< Oouoty Fairgrounds h a s
tnown. Thousand• of today's youth,
barecbested aod bell bottomed, sat and
U.lened .. he took them lrom the
fr-.0 ri>)<l!uns of the Newport Pop
Festival on a trip back to ttle melodies
of vaudeville. Tbey enjoyed the ride.
'Ibe man's appearance and &ty\e are lMeed groU!llque. Like a ghoot with
-Ill, he -and struts ~ bll act, blowing two-fingered
kiases to bls "dear, wonder r u I
frieods." But close your eyes end you
bear the voice of vaudeville, the singer
f« all seasons.
Ilk eel lo steeped In ~t
nonalgi.a, ii •"!'hlstlcated and f'6t
lllOYini. -to •P!'l'eclat• Ulen criticize. One momeot his wice car-
ries a trill ol Jeanette McDonald , the
nat it appears to be coming through a
~ as be iJ Rudy Vallee '
DAILY PILOT
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CAUFOINIA
OMMG& Co.MT PUIL/$Hllt0 C0¥P.uil'
ltobert N. Wttd
I Pretldlnt f!ld Putllli.lltr
J•ck It. C11rl..,
Vici Presld9nt Ml 0.-11 INNlltl'
n._.. k••vil ·-Tholft•I A. Mv"Pliinit Ml-1119 Edit«
P1vl Nl11•t1
#.4Wt1111N
°""'"" --
singing "As Time Goes By."
He is aboard the "The Good Ship
Lollipop" with Shirley Temple and
'"High oo a Hill" wi1b Nlok Lucas. His
switch~ from falsetto to berltone are
never more impressive, however, than
when he sings a "duet." He is both
Sonny and a..... In "I Got You Babe."
Ttny Tim's applaUH: getter, of
coorse, is "Tip!oe Through the
Tulips." It made Ile flower children
blossom. All the while they h&d listen-
ed silent and moUOOless, but this num-
ber brought them curling to theJr feet.
hand! above haad, In tho uninhibited
snakHance that does for any tempo.
It was the young dancing to a tune of'
old, the past pleasing the preseot It
was truly like old times.
Tiny Tim's re.creation oI an earlier
er-a was so complete tn fact that you
fell that if you did not enjoy his ''Tip..
toe Through the Tulips," the singer
was not to blame. It was the song -
and the late twenties -you bad walk·
ed out on.
From Page l
FESTIVAL •..
ing to one Costa Mesa police o!Cicer.
"There are twice as many of them to-
day," be sald, "but they seem much
quieter."
"Wow, they are really far out to-
day," one entertainer back stage sald.
"I wonder if they know they are here."
Some wondered if the entertainers
knew they were present Sunday. Two
popular groups, Blue Cheer and F.ric
Burdon and the Animals destroyed all
their instruments and equipment on
stage. The Animals btD'tled their am-
plifiers while the Blue Cheer threw all
thelr equipment to the crowd .
Top name attraction for the second
day arrived on stage at 7:30 p.m.
Most of the youn~ hippies exhausted
after more than 24 hours of KTOOvin11:
lay on the ground for the Jefferson
Airplane. while more than 100 police
officers from all surroundlnr Oranl(e
County cities waited to clear the
grounds.
More than 500 persons were tre111ted
for injuries over the two-day period,
an ambulance attendant said. Injuries
ranged ftom beat exhaustion and cut
feet to ,drug overdoses.
An estimated 12 ambulance runs
were made. One Involved a boy who
suffertd a scalp wound when a l(irl
dropped a five gallon botUe of water
on his head.
While officers ~om ~ewport Beach,
Costa Mesa, Orange, Sa.Dta Ana, Tus·
tin. the Sherifrs Department and the
Hi~way Patrol atood ~ over the
gates, ~the remainder of the Sfterilra
officers took over the detlil at the
Costa· Mesa Police ataUon.
Although an unfouodf!d n1port wu
made that tbm bad becJ1 140 arreab
during the weekend, Police a:enerally
felt the youlhl had tonducted t.bem-
1tlves well.
Traffic alOng routes to the munda
was congested both day1. Newport
Freeway Saturday nport!d a back up
of traffic for 11 mlles1 dh'ftUy attrtb-
utable to the f•1Uval, a Hlthw11 P•
l10l ofllcu said. ,.
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. U~S. Troops Nab 50 Viet Cong
. -, I
SAIGON (UPI) -American troopo mandlng g ...... 11 of Ill' 199th LlgDI 1111111 lllill, • _. lllilld ~ •il'ldCeiilnluallt.bdlldLlp-· Ge
otrildng thnMl&h tile fOrbiddlnc u ¥Jnh Iltantry Brigade. ma wi>und8 """' and It IAidQ, hubllll DOr!Aera • -"'"''• Mir
"l"cn1t of Oarlmeso" 100 miles 1Uperflclal. Ho 1auChed ii oil as "• ; ·la -..siOI, <'41M~'«I ..... lallOG ..i la Iii ,daliA ....... llli).
ooullwut o1 SoiJon today captured 10 occupallonal h&J2anl" llld qulc"IY an .,.....__ ollal don a __. •m. .-_.. ,_ .._ U ..,., I•••-uo•uJi. Viet O>ng luopecU ,,-, f« a rotlll"IJld ,14 dulj<. ._ --..,...,_ -- --•tr•u .. 111m .... 1111 v111ap o1 VI 'Ille Jatort 1>ow. In the u ~ . ~ -ttio wltrl Jlq fl Tua -VlllalmM 1polloo-.lei
"nlanlt. N-.. other Viet Cong wero Forel( devlloped Wilen .1ntoW-1 ky, 3i10 niU.. north of Saigon. Thwi far Viet Cong temr!Jta set oil an •t·
killed. sources reported Viet Coqg leadert 803 U.S. <;hoppers have been a.bot down plOlloa outalde a Saigon police stauo1,
Another force t4 American 1 gathering for a meeting. Th t in the war. Communist fife also shot wouncung one oUicer and f o t1'r
qper~& 20 miM1 south of Sal&o.n Americ;ans Jtr_µc:k and ,1ei1ed tb• down a two engine U.S. scout plane clvW&n1. AnOther terror blast kill~
lft'Wlllbecl a Viet 0oQg f<ree and cap. 11theflns Colrimuntsu <along wltb over the central blghlands Sunday. No two clvtliafta aDa wounded four on ,a
tured guerrilla fortress threatening documents 1lving detail!: of the Americans were ldlled in any ol the -train 14S miles n0ttheast oI S~igon.· ·
that city. A spokesman said -44 Viet mMun,. aircraft downings. · The ten'or was possibly part of the
Cong were killed in thia fight a)ong the The flahllng raised to 201 tlle Over North Vietnam U.S. fighter· guerriij.a action that sent the Army~
'n'a River. number Of Communist troops killed in bombers flew 100 missions Sunday. No Infantry Divialon troopt 1Dto A.ct:S,on
In a nlated acUon. 11ven miles a ,.-ol fi.CNin& Jn the deJt.a tnud in planes were lost. They hit supply near the Tra River south. of SaJ.~n
nortbe< of this btttle pen1llas fir· l"til.Olb where IOldltn encounter boats, roads, bridges, truck 1 , ind in the U Minh Forest. In the u 1111 B40 rockets hit a rlvtr auautt crift cbtst ,. deeP 1w11Qpc 1n the ~a wareboo.ses and fortress bunkers. Minh the Americana found nabp'e
and wounded Brif. Goo. l"rmkliD M. f ...... fw 1" buCe bitlnc ..... giant I n South Viet n am , 8 5 z almoot aa tougb a foe as tJie (lier·
Oavil, ol Wlltbllll, Mw, com· ~ -vtiier• and colru. Of Stralolortnsses late Sunday llld today )illas. .
Nixon Won't
Let Delegates
Choose Veep
From Wire Services
MIAMI BEA<Jf (AP) -Richard M.
Nixm1 if IUCCf!asful .in bU drive far the
Republlcm presidmtlll ~ ...
doe• not .intend to leave the choice of.
his """""' mate to 1i>e GOP nalioooll
coonnlloa, .his dilof ~an Hid
today. -
Nixon .. will ask the convention to
nominate bis cboici" for vice pres!·
-Heri>ert G. klein, tlle canmdate'o
press secretary, said.
Klein repcrt.ed Nixon's &election will
be disclosed after the conventioo picks
a nominee Wednesday night. Nixon
flies heR today trom New York to
·lake peHOOOI charge of ru. campaign
Efioct. .
More than half a doi.en names are
being COllSJdered by Nixoa, aides Wd,
Asked whether Nixon's chief rival for
the nominaUon, Gov. Ne boo A.
Rockefelkr', was among them, Klein
said, "We're not ruling anyone out."
Nixon and his wife, Pat, were due to
land here at 10:15 p.m. POT on a
fltg!it from New York; thereby
touching off carefully c o n tr o l l e d
hysteria et the Miami lnt.rnaUonai Aill'Ort .ntll still another mammoth
welcome waifinr at their beidqUll"ters
hotel, tJ_ie Hllton Piua, -11:30
p.m.
The hullabaloo for Nixon was long
.overdue in the opinion of many of hi!
supporters who faJJed to get the
subUe messege of calm confidence
from bJs spendlng most of last week
in seclusi.oo at Mootauk, N. Y.
il<>cke!ellet and Ronald Reagan bad
Miami Beach pretty mucll to
themaelves lut week as t b e i r
adl>fftmtl staged •hows and spec-
tacl•• with littfe compellUon from the
Nixon eamp.
"I think there is a very good chance
that we can win it the firot ballot, but I'm not predicting i~" Nixon told CBS
intervtew.r Mike Wallace at Monlaul:
Sunday. "I'm not taking anything for
granted."
By ttlis be meant ccdin~ presaure
on tbe major favwtte aon condidat.s
to release ~ delefates from first.
ballot commitments as Gov. Dewey F.
Bartlett of Oklahoma did Sunday. Gov.
Spiro Agnew of Mayrland was ex-
pected 14 take a similar step tonight.
* * * Rocky Pushes
Bid to Rally
Uncommitted
MIAMI BEACH {AP) -Gov.
Nelton A. Rocke.feller presled an 11th
hour effort to rally uncommitted
delegate. to his banner today and cut
Rldlord' M. Nixon's long lead ln the
coote1t for the Republi<an presldenlill
nomination.
AXies of the New York governor
reported tbat a promlneot Kansas
Republican had arNDged a private
meeUng today between Rocteleller
and what tbey l8id is a large group of
uncommitted dele~ from 17 staW.
Rockefeller strategists said at.mllar
aessilJns with other grOupc o f
delegates were being amlDged.
"He'• £0ing to be bopping from one
delegation to another unUI tb1a
nomination to a n o t b e r u.nut this
Rocke!•U,,'.a..~!s ,secrelaf}'., Leslle
Slote. ·· .
Slote said todey's meeting, involving
delegates mostly from Midw~
states ""' lnlUlled by Mdlill Boyd,
Republican nationoi committeeman
from KaMu.
1
Girl Attacked
At Kn if epoint
Orange County sheriff's dep.IU..
and Compton police &odif _ I r I
searchin.& for a tJdna~r1ptgt wtio
fOtted a lfl.7ear-ol4 Campton Jlrl lnto
his car 1t knifepoln~ <Im< lo the l>ana Point area and auacUd ber.
'lbe awpec:t ii deo<rlbed u a w!Uta
male about 50 yun old, .w-.., with
yeUowla:b·wtdte balr. n. • w11 a
tuniuoiM and wb!la JIM Dode• four·
door ltaUon Wafo•, depuUu said.
The lllrl wu ta,ken from the street on wbfdl lhl lives in Complml, ...
<ordlllC .. -ol1lcor>. ..
Ji'rom Page l
REPUBLICANS ...
.favorite son candidacy of Gov. Spiro Bartlett said Reagan would get seven
T. Agnew, who admits be is leaning &Dd Rockefeller one.
toward a Nixon endonement liut says Nixon's campa.Igner& appeared to be he could challge 191 mlD<L Agnew is
scheduled to annoupce his couree at a giving Gov. Winthre>p Rookefeller of
caucus of the group tonlgbt. Arkansas, brother of the contender,
Gov. Louie B. Nunn ot Kentucky trouble in his 'efforts to hold that
promised to produce "sulficlently con-. 1tate's 18 votes behind 'his favorite son
vincing evide~" at a caucus: later in . candidacy for the two ballots - a ploy
the day to persuade his state's 24-vote the New York governor'! backers
delegation to go foc Nlxoc in the initial have been tirging on the favorite sons
balloting, to ward off an early Nixon victory.
Nunn said he thinks th.e former vice The Arkansas governor s a i d ,
president will get a minimum. Of 20 perhaps significantly, that he will not
votes from Kentucky. exert any pressure to swing the
Gov. David F. Cargo of New Mexico, delegation to NelBon Rockefeller on
who said he wants to preserve the the third ballot, although he said he
neutrality of his state's 14-vote delega-thought. the group would go with him if
tion unW Tuesday, scheduled a con-he did.
ference with Nixon. .tfis delegation Keynoter Evans sald that if Nixon
wu reported about evenly split looks like a winner wben Wasbington
betwee(l Nixon and Reagan. is reached in tbe alphabet oo the flrat
Gov. Dewey Bartlett of Oklahoma, roll call, the state's 25 votes probably
who has been for Nixon all tbe way, will go to him. If further roll calls are
yielded the hoped.for, if brief, indicated, he said he thinks about half
sp<Ali.ght of a favorite son nomination would go to Nixon, with Rockefeller
to let Nixon have 14 of the state's 22 and Reagan dlvJdlng the remainder
nominating votes oo the fir6t ballot. about equally.
Ji'rom Page l
POLICE AT FESTIVAL •••
cited the crowd."
One J.S.year-old Torrance boy was
taken Into cua1ody Sunday u be danc-
ed wildly bef«e the throog -totally
Diked -while apparently uoder the
influence of a narcotic.
"It is obvious what I took by the way
I was actblr.'' &aid the boy after being
arrested by Officer Norm Kutch, ex-
plainlng Jt was LID.
A 13-year-ol.d boy from Palm Desert
was also arrested u he stood at the
Newport Pop Festival entrance to
the Orange County Fairgrounds,
clutching a bottle of soda and begging
for water.
Pollce iaid the youngster -later
booked Into Orange County Juvenile
Hall -was sobbing acd revealed he
had taken LSD also, according to Sgt.
Thell Glascock.
The boy was also carrying a plastic
bag full of marijuana.
An 18-year-old Bakersfield youth
was arrested Sunday after undE'l'COYer
Officers sitting eight feet from him
watched as he rolled marijuana
cigarittes and passed them around to
!be crowd.
Russell D. fNlllk , 18, was booked on
suspicion of possession of marijuana a
short time later, after Huntington
Beach police Officer Henry Hitchcock
and his partner followed. him to a less
crowded •ea.
"Because oI the amount of people
and activity. all the suspects were
allowed to fllliah the possible mari-
juana clruettes," Officer Hitchcock
noted in his report. .
Gate crashing was one of the biggest
offenses and LOllg Beach police,
among scores of security officers
rounded up on three days' notice,
caught one narcoUcs ollender as an ii·
legal entrant.
Officer John Turley said the 11.year·
old San Lorenzo youth was chased
down on the fairgrounds, !earched and
fouol to be carrying marijuana and a
switdlblade knife.
Several persons were taken to Hoag
Memorial Hospital for treabnent after
su!fering hallucinations and other
drug overdose symptoms, police said.
One of them, a 15·year-old
San Bernardino youth, was arrested
when he was found to be carrying a
plastic bef of marijuana and a dnlg
capsule resembliDg LSD.
An 16-year-old Riverside youth was
arre6ted on suspicion of disturbing the
peace Saturday, after a melee in which
spectators splattered Costa Mesa Fire
Department Capt. David Teeter with
cat.sup.
ATOP TRUCK
The fire captain placed Dotson un-
der arrest after he and another youth
were seen atop a Coca-Cola ..truek,
throwing dlspenser equipment at each
other. "I just climbed up oo the truck to
talk to tbe dude and i.u him to quit,"
complained Dotson, who sa.ld someone
dumped a whole bucket of Kool-Aid on
him during the disturbance.
No real trouble resulted from the
Pop Festival mob, police said, al-
though several hundred commandeer·
ed a nc Toe Market at Newpcrt Bou-
levard and Del Mar Avenue Sunday
night.
"They saw OW' officers coming and
realized we meant buslnes!," said Lt.
Austin Smith, noting that the crowd
dlspersed without a confrontation at
that point.
Six fires were set sbnultaneously in
the fairgroonda Sunday nigh~ all of
them in stacks of po6ten t~ down
by the crowd, but no damage resulted.
* * * Hanoi Claims
Parley Must .
Include Cong
PARIS (_UPI) -Norfli V!Mnom "1d
,today If the United State• wantl to e"'1
the Vielnam War P.ace!W!y it must
"discuss ttie issue!" wittt tbe National
Liber£ition Front (NLF), tbe Viet
Cong's political arm.
N·guyen 'Ibadt Le, spoke'lman for
Ute North Vietnamese delegation to
the Paris talks on Vietnam, spoke at a
news conference.
It was the first time tbe North Viet-
namese had specified that the Untted
States would have to recognlu the
talks with the NLF as a cooditlon of
ending ttie war peacefully. ,
"To resolve the p-oblem ol. South
Vietnam, the Un It e d Sta\e1 muat
recognize the NLF and discusi the
issues with them," Le said.
Diplomatic solll'C'es said the North
Vletnam~se were bound 1lo ~
with scorn to the Republican pertj'a
platform plalk urfini ' ' d e ~
Americanization oftbe Vietnem War."
The sources said tbe Vietnamese
feel the Premise ii anotbe< eumple :ol
what Hanoi camiders "~s
m.t«ic" of U. S. ~!icy.
Th• Republicans suggestion that the
United States concentrate o n
"sln>ogttieniog of local !on:e1 (In
South Viclnam,)" wu bound 14 be in·
f.erl>reted by Hanoi ae Just -avowal of support for tbe regime of
President Nguyen Vail Thieu.
N"1h Vi.-n inaiolo that f11e
present Sliigoo govei ili\tent does Dot
1'>present the majoril?y of tbe people of
South Vietnam.
Auth«itative N o r th Vietnam~se sources have often said they saw no
hope in the U. s. polltJcal convecitioos
for progress in tlhe Paris talks.
LA Man, Sister
Held in Grisly
Death of Mother
.
'
;,
'·
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Police
have booked a 4().year-old man and his
33-year-old sister on sUJpiclon of kill~
ing t.heir mOther with a claw hammer,
a crosscut hand saw and a lalife.
lA1z Lava Hernandez, 65, was found
dead in the bathroom ol. the family
home Saturday night by lier husban~d1 Jesus, 68, when he returned from
church. 1 •
Police arrested Alex Hernande-z and
his sister, Soledad.
Det. Sgt. Bruce Embree aald the
dead woman's right leg had been cut
~ above the knee, apparently wlh
the saw and the knife. ,
n
OMEGA
M""" -$4 99 -·'-.
J1Wtlry Detlgnint
A Spocl1ltyl
Now 2 Great 5Wroo To Sent Yoo
MAbO• '"°"'" HUtmJl•lOW C8fTll C1tn11 llACH a ., .....
JMI HAllOI •W. HUNTI'1eTON aACH
COSTA Mn.A 14...... ltl·llll °""' -· Thurs.. frl. Tiii ' p.m.
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Beaeh. Yoar Ro•eteWll
Dally Paper
VOL 6f, NO. '187, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1968 TEN CENTS
Nixon Shows Gain
Makes Elf ort to Win on First Ballot
WORLD'S BIGGEST LOVE·IN? -This was Mecca
Saturday and Sunday for every hippie, h.ophead. ~nd
pop music fan who could buy or steal his way into
the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa for
the Newport Pop Festival. Orange Coast traffi~ pat·
terns were hopelessly fouled up and the fairgrounds
groaned under the weight of an estimated 100,~
music (?) lovers during the twCHlay event. Ti_rls
photo was made Saturda~ at the height of operung
day activities. Note traffic-clogged Newport Boule-
vard (upper left) and Costa M~sa ~ivic Center
(right, center, background) tor onenation.
No Incidents
Despite Pros
At Pops Fete
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of "'-0.JIJ ~n.t st.rt
Overwhelming attendance at whal
turned out to be the biggest music
festival in U. S. tiistory 1ed \to only
seven Costa Mesa arrests over the
weekend. despite police harassment
by allegedly prori:ssional agitators.
"We have knowledge that there
were some professionals but they
were unable to provoke · any in·
cidents," Costa Mesa Police Chief
Roger. Neth said today.
Paid attendance W8$ about 72,000,
but totals ran as high as 100,000 for
the entire show.
"\Ve were sitting on a powderkeg,"
he said "but we avoided situations
which cOuld have led to arrests and in·
cited the crowd."
One 15·year·old Torrance boy was
taken Into custody Sunday as he danc-
ed wildly before the throng -totally
naked -while apparently under the
influence of a narcotic.
"lt is obvious what I took by the way
I was acting," said the boy after being
arrested by Officer Norm Kutch , ex·
plaining it was LSD .
A 13·year-old boy from Palm Desert
was also arrested as he stood at the
Newport Pop Festival entrance to
the Orange County Fairgrounds,
clutching a botUe of soda and begging
for water.
Police said the youngster -later
booked into Orange County Juvenile
Hall -wa-s sobbing and revealed he
had taken LSD also, according to Sgt
Thell Glascock.
The boy was also carrying a plastic
bag full of marijuana.
An 18·year·old Bakerstleld youfh
was arrested Sunday after undercover
o[fiaers sitting eight feet from him
watched as be rolled marijuana
cigarettes and passed them around to
the crowd.
MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Richard M.
Nixon's strategists are concentrating
on holdout delegates in a massive ef-
fort to win a first ballot presidential
nom~ation for him in the Republican
convention opening today.
The former vice president, chalk.Ing
up gains in his elfort to close in on the
needed 667 votes, was encountering
stiff resistance from Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller of New York and Gov.
Ronald Reagan of California.
Reagan, quoted as telling an
AJabama delegation caucus "J'm in
this to win," was by all odds the
busiest candidate in th.is cverstuUed
and overheated convention town.
Taking time out for a $500 a plate
fund-raising gala, Reagan scooted
about town; meeting with southern and
Rocky Mountain delegations in his ef-
forts to win first ballot support away
Crom NU;on.
ROCKY GAINS
Rockefeller, who called a morning
news conference, reglstered an
upsurge when 13 or Rhode Island's
delegates caucused on their ·arrival
a:nd agreed to cast a first ballot vote
for the N~w York governor.
Rockef"-ller was assured
Massachusetts' 34 votes on the first
round because of his write-in victory
in Uiat state's primary. However, Gov.
John A. Volpe was working hard to
swing a majority to Nixon on the se-
cond ballot, if there is one, despite his
all but vanished hopes for the vice
rresit1ential nomination.
The ring of the Nb:on anvil was
predominant, altho~b the candidate
himself retrained from predicting a
first ballot win. Nixon was to arrive
for the convention tpnlgtit. ). . ..
An Associated Press recheck show-
ee. he bad pushed hJs total of publicly
committed delegate votes to 572, only
95 short of the prize-wlpning total,
over the weekend. This was a gain ot
· 28 over Saturay's count.
Rocketeller pulled up to 232, a gain
or 24. Reagan stood at-161, favorite
sons accounted for 231 and there re•
mained 137 uncommitted.
NIXON CONCENTRATION
Jt was on the favorite son deleeates
and the un committed that Nixon's
men were concentrating as the con·
cention approached its first formal
major event toni ght, the keynote
speech of Gov. Daniel J. Evans of
Washington. Evans said he will tell the
convention that the nation can't base
law and order on inequity and in·
justice.
In the midst or the heavy cam·
paigning, the convention's platform
committee, headed . by Illinois Sen.
Everett M. Dirksen. came up with a
13,000-worJ document l:Jlat seemed
Ukely to get accepted without a ripple.
\Vhlle the delegates were getting set
for Wednesday's conventlo"l balloting,
the evidence of the Nixon drive crop-
ped up Jn many places.
Dirksen, who heads the 58-vote II·
linois delegation, helped turn on tbe
burners for the Nixon forces with a
* * * Governor Agnew
Of Maryland
To Back Nixon Russell D. Frank, 18, was booked on
suspicion of possession ol marijuana a
short time later, after Huntington l\11AMI BEACH (AP) ~Gov. Spiro
Beach police officer Henry Hitchcock T. Agnew, favorite son of the 26-vote b,lin. Y ltlt.OT "'9M .-r Otlt hmtMr
TINY TIM 'IN FLIGHT' ON POP FESTIVAL STAGE
Jeanett• McDonald, Rudy 1Vellff and Shirley Temple -Pi1ck1ged
and his partner followed him to a less • Maryland delegation, will formally en·
(See POL1CE, Pace !) dorse Richard ~.-!. Nixon as the
Republican presidential nominee, it
was learned today.
Tribute to . Tiny Ti111
Flower Children BlosS'om as He Tiptoes Through. Tulips
Bv ALAN DffiKIN Of tM DlllY Plltt II.rt
lie looks like Joan Baei' sister. Tie
talks like a canary 'ilrith a cough and
hc walks as uncertainly a& a high-w1.re
artist Vo'ho just dropped his umbttlla.
With his nose ypu_ could play Fagin
tn "0Uvcr Twist." With his hair you
wouldn't need a broom to be the •lkh
in "Snow Whlte," and with his com·
plexion you could be the egg in ''Tbc
Egg and I."
Right now he )las the spo(liglll in lhe
world of music. This weekend he made
-the scene on the Orange Coast Ills
name ls Tiny Tim.
This unllkely performer brought the
old and new-generations together in
~ i
one of · the strangest half hours Ule criticize. One moment his voice car·
Orange County Fairgrounds h as ries a trill of Jeanette McDonald , the
known. Thousands of todiy's youth, next it appears to be coming through a
barechested and bell bottomed. sat and megaphone as he is Rudy Vallee
listened as bt took them from the singing "As Time Goes By."
frantic rh)<lhms * ttic Newport Pop He Is aboard the "The Good Sllip
Festival on • trip back to the melodies LoWpop" with Shirley Temple and
of vaudeville.,They enjoyed the ride. "High on a Hill" with Nick LUCfiS. Jlis
'The maJf's ilPl)Carance and1ttyle are -1wttche1 from (al.set to to baritone are
Indeed grotesque. Like a ghost with ncvtr more impressive, however, than
clothes on, he prances and struts when he sings a "duet." Ile is both
through tw: acl. blowing two-fingered Sonny and Cher in "I Got You Babe."
kisses to bi1 "dear. wonder f u I Tiny Tlm'a applause getter, or
friends." But close your eyea and you course. ii ''Tiptoe Tbrough the
hear the voice of vaudevUlt:, tbe &inier Tulips." Jt made the DOlfer chUdren
for all 1ea1ona . blot:aom. All the while they hDd lbten-
ltis aet ls steeped in innocent ed silent and m0Uonlt11, but thls num·
nostalgia, ls sophisticated• and f;«t her brought thtm curllrur to tht.i[ ltcl,
moving, taslcr to appreciate than (See TL"Y Tll\I, Pa&e 2J
r
The announc~ment would be a ma.
jor blow to the nomination hopes of
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, who is at·
tJ!fftpt.ing to keep the faVorite son
delegations from voting on the first
ballots for Nixon, the front-running
candidate. ~ unofficial headcount ol the
Maryland delegation gives Nil.on 15
votes and Rockefeller 11.
Sources said Nixon had asked
Agnew personally tp" make the former
vice president's nomlnating 1peech
Wednesday night. 'I'hey added tbls will
be made public after Agnew's formal
endorsement. expected at a 15:15 p.m.
news confer:ence.
Herbert G. KJein , Nixon's .pre11
secretary, 54ld. "The man whe' w!.11
nominate Mr. Nixon wlll be .announced
tomorrow." He declined · "canunent
when asked speciflcall,y whetber
Agnew had been uked to make the
speech. '
Kle.ln said earUer Nixon, U suca
eess(uJ in his drive ·ror the nomina.U.on.
doea not illt.end to leave the choice ol
his rumdna mate to the coovenUon.
public: declaration that the former vice
president "ls so close to strUdng
dlstance of the nomination that off.
hand I don't believe he could be st.op..
ped." . '
The Nixon pressure was such that
Reag'an felt it necessary to tell sup-
porters of the former vice president Jn
hJs California delegation that they
would be "very foolish" if they tried to
defect from tw: favorite son candidacy on the first ballot. ~
Reagan came away from a con-
ference with Ohio Gov. James A..
Rhodes, a key m111 in the jockeying of
tne major candidates for pos1Uon,
wltbouf any assurances about bow
long the Ohioan would or could hold
the majority of his 58-vote de.let.Uoo
to his favorite son stance.
There was 'In uiter:nat move within
the. 26-vote Maryland delegation. by
Nixon supporters to desert the
(See REPUBLICANS, Pace I)
Here~s GOP Pledge
By The AllO(!lated Press
The platform proposed to the Republican National Convention \
calls for the phasing out of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam war
and negotiations to end the conflict that are not camouflaged 3Uta
render.
Other propdsals:
• Move against blight in cities with programs emphasizing
private ownership and participation of industry.
• No toleration of riot violence and an all.:.Out fight on organ-~
ized crime, but also attention to the causes of rioting and' crime.
• Limit the number of years a young man is subject to
draft; encourage the states to reduce the voting age; help education
at all levels.
• Strive to reduce budget deficits and reduce taxe3 when
military needs decline.
• Use foreign aid more selectively, limit trade with Co~
munist countries, help Israel with arms shipments and avoid mak ..
ing the United States a world policeman.
$2 Millio:n Project
Beach Council Considers
Bids on Big Parking Lot
The biggest projeot tackled so far in
lhe attemJI( by Huntington Beoch clly
leaders to improve the waterfront
comes before the: Parking Authority
for fin:a:l a6tion tonight.
Parents Seeking
Double Sessions
At Circle View
A delegation oC parents of Circle
View School studenta tonight will, ask
the goverriing board of Ocean View
School District to put Circle VieW
. cl1ildren Oll double s.essjons riltiler
than convert a multi-purpose room to
tempoc.ary classrooms.
Petitions bearing the signatures of
ab3Ut 300 of the parents are to be
presented at the 7:30 p.m. meetin« at
the district ~rd room , Beach
Boulevranl and Warner A venue.
Parents are protesting an order or
District Supt. Dr. Clarence ~11 to
convert the s(!hool's multi-purpose
room infu clasSropms for the·l20 first
and secood graders the sdJool cur·
rently cannot hold.
Circle View is one of five schools Jn
ttie district f.acing overcrowded con·
diti::lf16 ttus fall.
OFFERED CHOICE
When Dr. Hall joined the districl in
July, he met with parents at the five
5Chools, asking them to choose among
the double sessions. busing thetr
children to other schools or converting
Uleir multi·purpose rooms as ways to
. ease the situation.
None of the Jive schools i:. to go on
double sessklna, according to the
parents' de<:lsion.
At Cirele Vit~w. a gr()U4l c:i pare.W of
first and second graders decided to
keep the children at the school and
convert the mu.lti·purpOst room, w1\ich
is used for dance1, meetings, the
achoo! library and a cafeteria. Install·
Ing cnpetlng ..i portable dividers
v.-ould cost $2.200.
Abou~ 35 other mothers met 'lburs-
<lay with Dr. Hall and boord President
Robert A. Knox, to ask Ulem to "save
our multi·purpore room." ·
Mn. Robort Webber. 6402 Antrim
Circle, at whose home lhe meeUng
wao held, arsued w\111 the two olflclal>
that lf the room were coa:v.erted, It
woold be used to house Ibo overfiow
from other schools as kin& •• the
dlJtrict is overcrowded, even when the
Circle View situation ls eased. 1
The openln( _Of __ Glen View In
(S.. PARENTS, Pace I)
4
Coonsideration of the official call for
bids is scheduled for a brlef session of
the authority after the regular
business of the City Council has been
conducted tonight. The ?Qembers of
the council are also the members of
the authority.
The project Is the $2 million parking
Jot extending from the municipal pier
at Main Street q. Beach Boulevard.
Present. schedules call for completion
of the project before next summer. It
would be financed by the sale ol
revenue bonds.
Councilmen meet in c o u n c i 1
chambers ol Memorial Hall, 5th Street
;.ind Pecan Avenue, at 4::)) p.m .. and
again at 7:30 p.m. Consi~ration of the
parking lot proposal is slated for tile
latter part oI the eveuing se"1<11.
At present tbe city owns a.bout QJ
parking spaces along the waterfront
frorp the pier · south to . · Beach
Boulevard. The new lot will ba.ive
capacity for about 2.500 oars.
In eonjundion witb the ·parking lat
project are pbms to plant trees,
shrubs Ind nowera in a median strip
on Coost Higliway. and lo lnstal
~dscap~g and UghUng on both' sides
of the highway from the pier to Beach
Boulevard. .
Orange Coaac
.
W eatl&e'r
Another one of · tbo.se typical
Soil.thern <!:allfornla d1y1 daWl\s
Tuesday wlth cloudy mornings
and temperatures in the mid·70's
.. for the Orange Cout.
INSIDE TODAY
A $S e-hartlrtd .sightutinU
llia~t "1ds up wtth pjlol taking
a detour to Havana, Cuba a& th•
in.st.sttnu oJ a gunman (Set
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, J DAILY PILOT
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ritified Scareer0w
This pastoral picture of the past, believe it .or not, is view ioday of
field off Gothard Street, north of Talbert Avenue, in midst of Orange
co·ast areals 'largest city, Huntington Beach. The scarecrow bas full-
time job guarding .one of city's many agricultural parcels isolated
from commercial, industrial and Iesidential growth going on all
around it.
Team of Surgeons Saves
Valley Youth's Hand
Rod Hunt ts about as happy as any
14-year-old can be. Doctors have told
him that he'll be Dble to keep his left
/f.iverside Girl
Killed in Crash
At Aliso Beach
A truck-sports car crash at the en-
trance to Aliso Beach in South Laguna
resulted in the death Saturday of a 17-
year-old Riverside girl.
stepbanie Jahnke died at South
Cout Community Hospital, South
19" CoWJty Tralftc 1967
128 Death Toll 113
Laguna, four hours after the ace~ent.
California Highway Patrol officers
said Miss Jahnke evidently was tbe
driver Of the car. Her companion,
Florian C. Pulver II. 28, also of
Riverside remai.ns in tbe bOS}lital in
critical condition.
Officers said Miss Jahnke drove
from the beach parking lot ont.o busy
Coast Highway and into the path of
northbound plck·up truck.
J. Norman Rankin, 19, of 1264
Starll&tit Drive, Laguna Beach, driver
of tbe truck, twened into the south· .
bound lane 1n an effort to avoid the
s~car but struck the small auto
broOd&ide, officer• .aid.
Witnesaet said the s(>Ortscar ex·
ploded Oil impact. Rankin was only
.Ughtly injured.
DA ILY PllOl
" ............... Canhnlf.
OftAJfGE COAIT rtJll.1$HINtJ COMPANY' ' Jtobtrt N. Wt1d
Prni4erll ...a Pullll!J'lft
Jt(.k 11;, c11r1•r
Vici rmldMI Ind G«m-1 Mlnttn"
no111•• k•••il EOllol'
Tho11111 "'· Murph;.,. M6n&Ol119 E.dlfor
Albfrt w. ••t.• w;r· "••' Anoct1t1 Hull' eetlr Ed/tot c. .or
" ... __ Offko
309 5th Stroot
M111iff111 Ailclr111i P.Q. lot no 92'41 --,. ..... 19Kt!: 2m Witt ..... lclu ......
C•• ....... : D:I W-' &ti' Sl,....1 u.unt ~ m ,_. ,..,.,.,,.
•
hand.
The boy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norlan
Hunt of 17181 SaDta Rltra: st., Fountain
Valley, wa.s constructing a match-bead
SNnb last Wednesday evening with his
friend Michael Derrington, 14, st the
Oettington1' home, 8572 La Cas1ta
Ave., when the homemade bomb ex·
plod.eel in Hunt's hand.
A team of surgeons operated Thurs.·
day morning at Hurrtington Intercom·
munity Hospital to save Rod's badly
damaged band.
,At that time Mrs. Hunt reported that
the decision for amputation depended
on the amount nt: infection. "We'll
know by Monday," she sald.
Today a hospital 11 p o k e a m a n
reported that Rod's band was in
"quite good" cood.ttion. "Hll fingers
seem to be all right and repair work
surgery is slated for later today," she
added.
Mrs. Hunt •aid that Jlod w..s in
"good spirits," that the soon-to.be
Foun.tain Valley J{igh School fre&bman
doesn't plan to Rlay with any more
fireworks . ·1 .
From Pege 1
PARENTS •..
Ja0uacy is expected to. eue Circle
View's overcrowdlag.
"The question 6tl0uld have been
brought before all the pa.Nnts," she
in:tisted, apparently v o i c I n g sen-
Uments of tile rest of the group.
"That's a lot of money to spend for
just four or five months. Plus thtre's
no guarantee we'd get our mulU·
purpose room back," she dwlrged.
"We've been-on double s&SsiOM five
out ol the past six years," added Mrs.
William Johllstone, 6471 Dunn Drive.
"~llat's wrong with doing it five more
months?"
Knox advised the parent& to reptat
their requests at tonigbt's school
board meeting and let the trurtees
decide whether to make an excepUoo.
He said the board has a generel policy
now against double sessions.
Meanwhile, Dr. H.all orde~ work
stopped temporaril_.Y. on the multi·
purpose room, pending action by the
tr'U3tees.
F,..m P"fJe l
POLICE • • •
crowded area.
"Becau11e of tM amOW1t of people
and activity. au the suspects were
allowed tt finish the possible marl·
Juana cigarettes," Officer IUtchcock
noted in his report.
Gate crashing wa1 one of the btgaest
offenses and Loag Beach poUce.
among !cores or aecw"'ity officers
rounded up on three days' notl~.
caught one narcot1c1 offender as • ll·
Jea:al entrant ~
Officer John Turley said the 17·year·
old San Lorenzo youth waa chuid
down oa the fatrground1 , aearched and
found to be cm)'IDg marlJuta• and •
mtdlblade knife.
Several persons were taken to Hoag
Memorlal Hospital for treatm.ent afttt
sullerlnf hlllncln1Uono and other
dtuJI oven!Ofl 1ymp00ma, po~ said.
..
U.S. 1Troops Nab 50 Viet Cong!
'~ (111'0 -AmericiJI ~ tllrOOlll die !Grblddinl u Mlilb ••J' ot l>artmiu.. 100 mUp
I . cl Saip lodQ ~IO
VIit "'-" PllNrlni '!if a '
llrategy .1t11loo neor tbe·villaire ol VI
Thanh. Nineteen other Viet Co.Dg .were
killed .
A.Dotbtr force o( Ameri ca ns
operating 20 miles south of Saigon
smashed a Viet Cong force and cap.
lured guerrilla fortress threatening
that city. A spokesman said 44 Viet
Coog were killed in this liglit along the
Tra River.
In a related action seven miles
nonlleut of this batUe gu<lTillas Jir-
ing B4o rockets hit a river assault craft
and wounded Brig. Geo. Frank.lin M •
Davil, oi Waltham, Mais, com·
'Nixon Won't
I
Let Defigates
I
Choose Veep
From Wlrt Services
MIAMI BEAOH (AP) -Riehm! M.
Niion, if succeslful in his drive for the
Republican presidential nominaUon,
dots not intend to leave the choice 0£
his running mate to the GOP nationall
convention, his chief spok~man said
today.
Nixon "will ask the convention to
nominate hii choice" for vice presi-
dent, Herbert G. Xlein, the candidate's
press secretary, s8'd.
Klein reported Nixon's selection will
be disclosed after the convention picks
a nominee Wednesday night. Nixon
flies here today from New York to
take personal charge of his cranpaign
dfcrl.
More than hall a dozen names are
being considered by Nixon, aides i;aid.
Asked whether Nixon's chief rival for
the nomination, Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller, was among them, Klein
said, "We're not ruling anyone out."
Nixon and his wife, Pat, were due to
land here at 10:15 p.m. POT on a
night from New York, thereby
touching off carefully c o n tr o 11 e d
hysteria at the Miami International
Airport with still anoUler mammoth
wf!lcome waiti.ng at their headquarters ·
hotel, the Hilton Plaia, about 11:30
p.m.
The hullabaloo for Nixon was long
overdue in the opinion of many of his
supporters who Called to get the
subtle message of calm confidence
from hJs spending most of last week
in seclusion at Mont.auk, N. Y.
Rockefeller and Ron~d Reagan had Miam.I Beach pretty much t o
themselves last week as t h e i t
adherents staged abows and spl(:·
ta<:les with little competJUon from the
Nixon camp.
"I think there ii a very good chance
that we can win it the first ballot, but
I'm not predicting it," Nixon told CBS
interviewer Mike Wallace at Montauk
Sunday. "I'm not taking anything for
granted.''
By ttlis he: meant cootinued pressure
on the major favorite son candidates
to release ttleir delegates from first·
ballot commitment. as Gov. Dewey f'.
Bartlett of Oklahoma did Sunday. Gov.
Spito Agnew of Mayrland was ex·
ped.ed to take a similar step tonight.
16th Huck Finn
Fishing Derby
Set Wednesday
Wednesday is the bii day of the year
ror hundred> of Huntlngt<)n Beach
Huck Finns aad Becky Thatchers.
It's the day of ttle l&th annual Huck
Finn Fishing Derby on the municipal
pier. Fishing for youngsters six
tlvougb a begin< at 9 a.m.
Prizes will be swarded following the
nOon closing time for fishing. Trophies
and priies will be awarded for best
Huck FiM and Becky Thatcher cos·
tumes, the heaviest fish, the best
variety of fish, the first fish caught,
most unusual fish and in many more
categories.
Each child must bait his own hook
and lend bil fish without belp in order
to qualify for prizes. There is a limit'
of four hoots per person. Children
must furnish their own equipment.
Boys and girls may register at
Ron's Bait and 'l'ackle on the pier
prior to th<i contest or early on the
morning of tbe derby. Fi1hinf Is
restricted .to certain arM.S on the pier.
The aMual event ti c<>·SPC>MOred by
Roo'1 and 1i1e city Recreation iii<!
Park& Department.
m...,.. J:•n<O'ai ol the 1991~ U1ht
~ llti..i.. Jlll woundl ..,....
au~. He laughed Jt oU as "an
ot!CuPaUOnal bauard" and quicldt
-~duty.
Tbe latest battle Jn the U Minh
Forest developed when intelligence
sources reported Viet · ~ng leaders
gathering tor a ~~Ung. T b e
Americans struck and seized the
gathering' Communists'. along with
documents giving details of the
meeting .
The lighting raised to 201 the
number of Communist treops killed tn
a wee.k ol fighting in the delta mud in
regions where soldiers encounter.
chest ~ deep swamps in the area
famous for its huge bltinJ ants, giant
leeC'hes, bamboo vipers and cobras. Of
the 201 slain, ~ were klll~d SuDday
&Dd ~· locla,y. •
In other action, Communist a::to\IDd
lire Sunday ,,&!lot down a second IJB1
helicopter near lhe coastal city of 'flam
Ky, 350 miles north of Saigon. Thus tar
803 U.S. choppers have been shot down
in the war. Communist fl.re Wo ehot
dcwn a two engine U.S. scout plane
over the centril highlands Sunday. No
American s were killed in all.)' of the
aircraft downi.ngs.
Over North Vietnam U.S. fighter·
bombers flew 100 mlssions Sunday. No
planes were lost. They hit supply
boats, roads, bridges, t r u c k s ,
warehouses and fortress bunkers.
In South Vietnam, B52
SlratOfortresses late Sunday aod today
From Page l
REPUBLICANS .
favorite son candidacy of Gcv. Spiro
T. Agnew, who admits be is leaning
toward a Nixon endorsein·eot }?tit says
he could change his mind. Agnew is
scheduled to announce his course at a
caucus of the group tonigbl
Gov. Louie B. Nunn of Kentucky
promised to produce "sufficiently con·
vincing evidence" at a caucus later in
the day to persuade his state's 24·vote
delegation to go for Nixon in the initial
balloting.
Nunn said he thinks the former vice
president· will get a minimum Of 20
votes from Kentucky.
Gov. David F. Cargo of New Mexico,
who said he wants to preserve the
neutrality of bis state's 14-vote delega-
tion until Tuesday, scheduled a C'On·
ference with Nixon. His delegaticn
was repOrted about evenly split
between Nix.on and Reagan.
Gov. Dewey Bartlett of Oklahoma,
who has been for Nixon all the way,
yield ed the hoped-for, if b r l e f ,
spvtlight of a favorite son nomination
to let Nixon have 14 of the state's 22
nominating votes on the first ballot.
Bartlett said Reagan would get seven
and Rockefeller one.
Nixon's campaigners appeared to be
giving Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller of
ArkanSlls, brother of the contender,
trouble in his efforts to hold that
state's 18 votes behind his favorite son
candidacy for the two ballots - a ploy
the New York governor's backers
have been urging on the favorite sons
to ward off an early Nixon .victory.
The Arkansas governor s a i d ,
perhaps significantly, that he will not
exert any pressure to swing the
delegation to Nelson Rockefeller on
the third ballot, although be said be
thought the group would go with him if
he did.
Keynoter Evans saJd that if Nixon
looks like a winner when Washington
is reached in the alphabet on the first
roll call, the state's 25 votes probably
will go to him. If further roll calls are
indicated, he said he thinks about half
would go to Nixon, with Rockefeller
and R·eagan dividing the remainder
about equally.
Gcv. George Romney of Michigan, a
former candidate for the top nomina·
tion, was concerned about what Nb.·
on's 11upporters on the 48-vote delega-
tion would do if he tries to hold them
to bis favorite son candidacy.
ROMNEY BOLT?
Emil Lockwood, chairman of the
state's Nixon committee, said there
was the possibility of a bolt from
Romney.
Reagan made a personal request to
School Board Meets
The board of trustees o f
Westminster School District meets
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. for a regular
business session at · the district ad-
m i ni s tr a tio n building, 14121
Cedarwood Ave., Westminster.
• •
talk to the 64-vote PeMsylvania
delegation. Gov. RaymQDd P. Shafer,
a Rockefeller bac,ker, said that from
40 to 50 of the delegates would go for
the New York governor.
This was challenged by Nix.on sup·
porten, who said the former vice
president may get 30 to 35 ol the votes.
The running batUe between Nixon
and Reagan was highlighted by a
three-hour caucus of the 5&-vote Texas
delegation which produced no reliable
nose count on presidential support .
Sen. John G. Tower said be expects
Nixon to get at least 40 votes on the
first. rundown. But J. R. BuUer, an
alternate drumming up Reagan's•
chances, said he expects the California
governor to get 18 or 19 votes.
Reagan, who has been saying that
he would not become a formal can-
didate for the top nomination until his
name is presented to the convention,
was quoted as telling the closed
Alabama caucus that he now is more
than just a favorite son candidate.
The California governOI" said he
understood Alabama had agreed to
yield to California ~o Reagan's name
could be offered in nomination first.
But Alfred Gcldthwaite, the delegation
chairman, said no decision of this kind
had yet been made.
From Page 1
TINY TIM .•.
handl!~ above head, in the uninhibited
snake-dance that does for any tempo.
It Was the yoUllg dancing to a tune of
old, the past plea.sing the present. It
was truly like old times.
Tiny Tim's re~Uon of an earlier
era was so complete in fact that you
felt that If you <lid not enjoy his "Tip·
toe Through the Tulips," the singer
was not to blame. It was the song -
and the late twenties -you bad walk·
ed out on.
Heavy Rips Keep
Guards Busy
Heavy weekend lip tides kept both
Huntington Beach's. city and stare
lifeguards busy.
Capt. Douglas D'Arnall reported
that his 22-man city lifeguard crew
made some 300 rescues in the heavy
six to seven-foot city beach surf.
"We didn't have anythlng bair·rais·
ing but our men were plenty OC·
cupied," said D'Arnall.
Statewide, a lighter two to four-foot
surf prevailed. Ranger David Donahue
reported < 134 weekend rescues oU
Bolsa ana Huntington state beaches.
Total beach visitors numbered
193,000 together with the relative}y low
figures of 84 lost children and one ma-
jor first aid.
' . ' 1truck <:omm unlit b¢l4.op areas ill Ill'!
~ llClrtba'n j ... , ... ~ ~
Saigon &Dd ill the della where ther,
softened Ul) tbe U Miol1 fer the assault_:i
. South Vietnamese sPokesmen saia;
Viet Cong terrottsta set off an ex1
plosion outside a Saigon police station.!
wounding on,e officer an(I f o u r;
civilians. Another tetror blast kille~
two civilians and woundeO foul-on a.1
train lU miles northeast of Saigon. :
The terror was possibly part ot tlie
guerrilla action that sent the Army; 9th
lnlanlry Division troops Into Action.
near the Tra River south of Saigont
and ill the U Minh Forest. In the u:
Minh the Americans 1ound nature"
almost as tough a ioe a1 tbe guer··
rillas.
* * * Hanoi Claims
Parley Must
Include Cong .
PARIS (UPI) -Nortll Vietnam said
today U the United States wants to end
the Vietnam War peacefully it must
"discuss the issues" with the National
Liberution Front (NLF), the Viet
Cong's political arm.
Nguyen Thanh Le, spokesman for_
the Nortil Vietnamese delegation to
the Paris talks on Vietnam, spoke at a
news conferenee.
It was the first time the North Viet·
na,mese had specified that the United
States would htive to reeognize the
talks with the NLF as a condition of
ending the war peacefully.
"To resolve the problem of South
Vietnam~ ~ U n i t e d States must
recognize the NLF and discuss the
issues witb them," Le said.
Dip!Omatic sources said the North
Vietnamese were bound to respond
with scorn to the Republican party's
platform plank urging ' ' d e •
Americanization of tire Vietnam War."
The sources said the Vietnamese
feel the premise is another example of
what Hanoi considers "meaningless
rhetoric" of U. S. Polley.
'1'11e Republicans guggestion that the
United States concentrate on
"strengthening of locsl forces (in
South Vietnam)" was bound to be in;
t<rpreted by Hanoi as Just another
av<>wal of support for the regime of
President Nguyen Van Thieu. ,.
North Vietnam .insista that the
present Sajgon governmf:nt does n~t
rep.resent the majority of the »eople tf
South Vleti!am. ' ~ '
Authoritative N o r t h Vietnamese
sources have cften said they ·saw no
hope in the U. s. political conventiofl.s
for progress in the Paris talks.
Private Service
For Beach Burn :
Victim Slated
Private gr&Yeside funeral &erVicti;
will be conducted for: Katrina Wayman
at 10 a .m. Tuesday at the Good
Shepherd Cemetery, Hunt1ngto-n
Beach. She is the 2-year-old who died
Friday from burns suUered the
previous Sunday in a backyard
barbecue accident.
Katrina ii survived by her parenti<,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald w.,.,.an Df 21752
Pacific Coast lligbway, Huntington
Beach, and two older brotbers, Kin
and KL
Officiant at the serv!ce1 will be Rev.
Thomas Schneider Of St. Simon and
Jude Catholic Ctuach. Funeral ar~
rang'ements are under tbe direction oi
Smiths' Mortuary. -'-
0
OMEGA
Your Omega . ' Salts & Service : l Ageney
YOUR WATCH~~., ... -c~~ ..... -_c:
• ci .. n..t • ontt1WM :o:;•;.,.;.;v .. ~w"',1':.....~,.:,F,:.R'°'E"'E
•
.. _ --"-'""" IUS lit • v•ri.tlf .. .....
• Adiua!M ,,~ft:~, $1. 99
Two Principals $ 5 99 ==~""·~=~:---~----~52.-4-9
Named Tonight ". Chto••rr•:7:E "''~";,:::~~99 --·· -"" ,,..,.. tlll. _ .. _ -·· Pr1nclpal1 will be 1ppolnted tonliht wlodm 1llfhU7 hl&beri ._ _______ _
to !UI vacancies at two Ocean View PAST DIPINDAILI SEllVICI
Sdlool D!Jtrlct schools. ~\~\If/I!.
A IC'l"eening commlttee of schoo1 ~
personnel w., to lllfft Satunlay to ' •
nview "eever.al" apPllcatlons, and
mob rocommendatlon1 to the board
Of trulteel for new appointment& ot
Q-est View and Star View ldlooil.
Both bave been without principals
sl~ June.
Scbool trultee.a meet at 7:30 p.m. in
dirtrtct ofOcu, '19n Warner Ave.,
Huntmston Beacil. ,
Now 2 Great Stores To Serve Yon
HADOI IHOWIM• HUMT1N•TON CiW1ll
Cttnll llACH & RIMMI
UH MAllOI t\Vlt. Hvtrm"4•TOM llACM
COJT'A MnA 14M411 .. t.JIOt
Opon -· Thu..., Fri, Tiii 9 p.~
---_,,,_ --
......
to
"' TOlll ......
--_.._ --
I
I
l
e a -\ •
I
Lag~na Bea~h I'oday's Closing
N.Y. Stocks
VOL 61', NO. '187, l SECTIONS, 30 PAGES [AGUNA BEACH, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST S, '1968 TEN CENTS
Police Control Pop Crowd Despite Agitator·s
By ARTHUR R. '\'.INSEL
Of ti. 0.llY,l"IMI Stall
Overwhelming attendance at what
turned out to be the 'blggest music
festival in U. S. history led to only
seven Costa Mesa arrests over the
weekend, despite police harassment
by allegedly professional agitators.1 "We have knowledge that there
were some professionals but they
were unable to provoke any in-
cidents," Costa Mesa Police Chief
•
Roger Neth said today.
Paid attendance was about 72.000.
but totals ran as high as 100,000 for
the entire show.
"\Ve were sitting on a powderkcg,"
he said, "but we avoided situations
which could have led to arrests and in·
cited the crowd."
One IS-year.old Torrance boy was
taken into custody Sunday as he danc-
ed wildly before the throng -totally
naked -while apparently under the
IXOll
CAUGHT IN THE SPIKE -Bobby Jones delivers vicious spike dur·
ijlg 14th Annual Laguna Beach Open Volleyball Tournament . as his
partner Dave Holtzman, left, moves into position. A crowd estim~
at 2,000 watched the weekend action by two-man teams. Holtzman
and Jones placed second.
2,000 Line Beach' to See
·open Volleyball Tourney
To the oohs and ahs of spectators,
Ron Lang and Ron VonHegen spiked,
dug and slammed their way to victory
Saturday and Sunday in the 14th An -
nual Laguna Beach Open Volleyball
Tournament.
A crowd estimated by Recreation
Director Norman Borucki at 2,000
\1:atched 31 other two-man teams give
way to the merciless pounding of Lang
and Von Hagen. The team was select·
ed number one before the contest.
The team of Dave Hollmlan and
Bobby Jones, seeded number three,
pulled through for the second spot.
The number two seeded team of
llenry Bergman and Larry Rundle,
was beaten in the second round, and
had to withdraw from competition due
to an injury.
Third place weot to Bob Vogelsang
and .Gene Pflueger. They were not
seeded in the top !our places.
The team of Kirk Kilgour and Larry
Millikan placed fourth.
Don Winterburn and Jime Keane
tied with Dan Patterson and Butch
May for fifth spot. The latter team
was seeded number four.
The contest was open to men from
San Diego to Santa Barbara. In 1965
and 1966 Lang and Von Hagen won
the contest without illy defeats. Last
year they placed second.
TV, WaUetStolen
Over Weekend
La:guna Beach soprano Marilyn ln·
terlandi probably felt like hitting an
indignant high C Saturday at the
Festival Of Arts grounds.
' ' Gi.t·I Attacked Mrs. lnterla.ndi, 1199 Temple Hlll s
Drive, told police her wauet with f1
and credit cards was stolen. She is
director of the Festival cOOrale and
was rehearsing at the time. At Knifepoint
-'
Orange County shl'rlff' 1 deputies
and Compton police today a r e
searching for a kldnap-rapl.rt who
forced a 19-year-old Compton girl Into
his car at knifepolnt, drove to the
Dana Point area and attacked her.
The suspect is described as a white
mate about 50 years old, 5-feet-9, with
yellowi•h·Whlte hair. The car was a
turquoise and white 1956 Dodge four·
door station wagon, deputies 11ald.
The d.rl wu Uiken from ~ street
on wbfch she lives in Compton, ac~ cordln!/" oflicers.
1
In another weekend theft report,
Marjorie N. Rafldall. 59Ci Cress St.,
told police that her 21.·lnc.h televll1ion
had been stolen from her home. Police
said tbe burglar crawled tbrougn a
wlttdow to remove tM: set valued at
about $35.
Stock Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -The -k
market held a gain on balance Late
this afternoon . Trading was moderete-
1y active. <See quotations, Pages 10.
11)
'(
Influence of a narcotic.
"It is obvious what I took by the way
I was acUng,'' said the boy after beJng
Additional stories and photos on
Pop Festival performers, including a
personality spotlight feature on Tiny
Tim. appear i'll today's DAILY PILOT
on Page 3.
arrested by Officer Norm Kutch, ex·
plaining it wa.s LSD.
•
A J.3.year-old boy from Palm Desert
was alsa arrested as he stood at the
Newport Pop Festival entrance to
the Orange County Fairgrounds,
clutching a bottle of soda and begging
for water.
Police said the youngster -later
booked into Orange Cou!Tty Juvenile
Hall -was sobbing and revealed he
had taken LSD also, according to Sgt.
Thell Glascock.
. The boy was also carrying a plastic
bog full of marijuana.
An 18-year-old Bakerslield youth
was arrested Sunday after undercover
officers sitting eight feet from him
watched as be rolled marijuana
cigarettes and passed them around ta
the crowd.
Russell D. Frank. 18, was. booked on
suspicion of possession or marijuana a
short time later, after Huntington
Beach police officer Henry Hitchcock
and bis partner followed him to a less
es 1rs a .o
Girl l{illed
InS.Laguna
Collision
A truck-sports car crash at the en-
trance to Aliso Beach in South Laguna
resulted in the death Saturday of a 17-
year-old Riverside girl.
Stephanie Jahnke died at South
Coast Community Hospital, South
1968
128
County Traffic
Death Toll
1967
113
Laguna, four hours after the accident.
California Highway Patrol officers
said Miss Jahnke evidently was the
driver of the car. Her cptnpanion',
Florian C. Pulver II. 28, also of
Riverside remains in the hospital 'in
critical conditi.on. ~ '
Officers said Miss Jahnke drove
from the beach parking ·1ot onto busy
Coast Highway and into the path of
northbound pick-up truck.
J. Norman Rankin, 19, of 1264
Starlight Drive, Laguna Beach, driver
of the truck, swerved into the south-
bound lane in an edort to avoid the
sportscar but struck the small auto
broadside, officers sald.
Babe Ruth Race
Still Hot; Three
Teams Can Win
Laguna's Ba.be Ruth baseball games
continue to wow the fans.
Friday, five teams out of a six team
league could mathematically claim the
pennant. After weekend action, only
three teams are left.
Friday's acti<in went like this :
The Realtors beat tlhe Kiwanis; but
tllen forfeited the games due to a
pitching persoMel rule.
The Boys' Club beat tile Americ·an
Legion.
Saturday's action:
The Boys' Club again beat the
American Legion.
The Realtors, this time legally, beat
the KiWQfUans
So, the lineup looks like this: the
Boys' Club is in first. with a 8-5
record. Second is ttle. Realtors, 7-5,
behind by a halfgame. Third is the
Kiwanis, 8-6, also a half game behind
by a few percentage points OOck.
The American Legion and Holiday
Bureau are tif!i1 fourth, a game and a
half behind and el.irnineted from con-
tention fQUr the rennant. I.at is the
Firemen.
A speeial game is being playe<I. to-
day -at 2:45 p.m. between the Realtor~
and U1e Boys' Club. Results are not
known at press time. Toni~t at 5:30,
''the K.iwanis meet the Holiday Bureau.
and the Firemen play the American
Legion. On Wednesdey, the Boys' Club
will play the Realtors, at 5:30 p.m.
Admission is free.
Things are stiO tight.
Woman Found
Dead at Home
The body ol an elderly Lo.gun>
Beach woman was found on the. Ooor
of her home Sunday-by police.
The dood woman waa identified' as
Rose C. Smith, SA>roxi.mately 80 years
old. of 1110 Glenneyre St
Police entered th6 home wfloo
friends of tbe wooian became eon-
ctrntd. The body was discovered at 8
p.m. Sundey on the floor between Q)t
boUiroom and k.itchen.
Lag11nagrins By Phil lntorl1ndi
--,,-..+; ,·
~l .. ~~
''Okay, so you remember whet Laguna was like in '45; that's
no reason to spend ever'f wnkend hidden in the closet!''
Rockefeller Pushes Bid
For Uncommitted Votes
MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller pressed an Jlth
hour effort to rally uncommitted
delegates to ~is banner today and cut
Richard M. Nixoo's long lead in the
Governor Agne·w
To Back Nixon
MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Gov. Spiro
T. Agnew, favorite son of the 26-vote
Maryland delegation, will formally en-
dorse Rlchard M. Nixon as the
Republican presidential nominee, it
was learned today.
The announc~ment would be a ma-
jor blow to the nomination hopes of
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, who is at-
tempting to keep the favorite son
delegations from voting on the first
ballots · for Ni:-::)n, the front-running
candidate.
contest for U1e Republican presidential
nomination.
Aides of the New York governor
reported that a prominent Kansas
Republican had arranged a private
meeting today between Rockefeller
and what they said is a ta:rge group of
uncommitted delegates from 17 states.
Rockefeller strategists said similar
sessions with other groups o f
delegates were being arranged.
"He's going to be hopping from one
delegation to another until this
nomination to another until this
Rockefeller's press secretary, Leslie
Slote.
• Slote said today's meeting. involving
delegates mostly from Midwestern
states was initiated by McDill Boyd,
Republican national committeeman
from Kansas.
Rockefeller tried his hand wiUl the
58-member Illinois delegation on Sun·
day, maklng an appeal for support at
a closed caucus. But after hearing
Rockefeller, only five of tlhe de~gates
were reported to support him. Most of
the rest were s.aJd to be for Nixon,
,-
( lle1•e's1 GOP Pledge
B~ Assoclat.etl Prest
The platfonn proposed to the R epublican National Convention
calls for the plrasing o\Jt of U.S. involvement in the VJetnam war
and negotiations to end tbe conflict that are not camouflaged s ur-
render.
Other proposals :
• Move against blight in ciUes with programs emphasizing
private ownership and partlclpaUoo of industry.
• No toleration of riot violence and an all-<>ut fight on organ-
ized crime, but also attenUon to the causes of rioting and crime.
• Llrnlt the number ol years a young man Is subject to
draft; encourage the states to reduce the voting age; help educaUon
at all levels.
• strive to reduce ·budget deficit. and reduce wes when mllllary needs decline. ·
• Use foreign aid more selectively, limit trade with Com· m~nist col!;"tries, help ~srael with arms shipment..s and avoid mak·
Ing !JI• Uruted States a world policeman.
I
crowded area.
"Because of tbe amount ot people
and activity, all the suspects wera.
allowed tc finish the possible marJ ..
juana cigarettes," Officer mtchc:~k
noted in his report.
Gate crashirig was one of the biggest
offenses and Long Beach police,
among scores of security officers
rounded up on three days' noUce,
caught one narcotics offend.er as aa. il·
(See ,POLICE, Page I)
• Ill
Candidate
Chalking Up
Vote Gains
MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Richan! M.
Nixon's strategists are concentratln'!
on holdout delegates in a massive ef.
fort to win a first ballot pr~sidentlal
nomination for him in the Republican
convention opening today.
The formel' vice president, chalking
up gains in his effort to close in on the
needed 667 votes, was encountering
stiff resistance from Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller of New York and Gov.
Ronald Reagan oi California.
Reagan, quoted as telling -in
Alaban1a delegation caucus "l 'm in
Lhis ta win," ·was by all odds tha
busiest candidate in this overstu.ffed
and overhUted convention towo.
Taking time oUt for a $500 • ~ p~ate
fund·raisiog gala, Reagan scooted
about town, meeting with southern and
Rockr. Mountain delegatiOQS in his ef·
forts to win first ballot suppbrt away
!,rom Nixon.
ROCKY GA INS
Rockefeller, who called a morning
news conferebce, registered an
upsurge when 13 of Rhode Island's
delegates caucused on their arrival
. and agreed tit call,it _first ballot vote
for the New York governor.
R o ckefe ll er was assured
Massacl'lusetts' 34 votes on the first
round because or his write-in victory
in that state's primary. However, Gov.
John A. Volpe was working bard to
swing a majority to Nixon on the se·
cond ballot. if there is one, despite his
all but vanished hopes for the vice
presidential nomination.
The ring of the Nixon anvil was
predominant, although the candidate
himself refrained from predicting a
first ballot win. Nixon was to arrive
for the convention tonight.
An Associated Press recheck show·
ec! he had pushed his total of publicly
committed delegate votes to 572, only
95 short of the prize.winning totaJ,
over the weekend. This was a gain of
28 over Saturay's count.
Rockefeller pulled 1,1p to 232, a gain
of 24. Reagan stood at 161, favorita
sons accounted for 231 and there re•
mained 137 uncommitted~
NIXON CONCENTRATION
It was on the favorite son delegates
and the uncommitted that Nixon's
men were concentr'ating as the con·
cention approached its first formal
ISee REPUBLICANS, Page!)
Ora119e
lt'eatlter
Another one or those typical
S9uthern California days dawns
Tuesday wiU1 cloudy mornings
and temperatures in the mid-70's
for the Orange Coast
INSIDE TODAY
A $5 chartered iig11t.!eeina
f(igl•t ends up with pilot toktnQ
a deltour to IJaoana, Cuba cit the
imLt&ence of a gunman (Sec
Page 4) -" M ....... _.. tt ........ ,.... ....
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1 DAILY PILOT
Nixon Says
He'll Pick
Second Sp.ot
From Wire Stnteto1
MIAMI BEACH VJ'l -Richard M.
Nlxoo, If 1uccessfuJ 1n bla drive fot tbe
llepubllcan pnaldodlal nomlJllUoo,
does not lnleJ>d to leave the choice of
hll runnlnc mote to the GOP notloooll
convtnUon, hll chlef apokesman 1ald
today.
Nixon "wW ask Ule convention to
nominate his cbol.ce" for vice pres.l·
deot, Herbert G. !Oeln, the condidaU's
pres• ncr«ary, 1ald.
Klein rep<rted Nlxon'a ae:lecUoo will
be dilclo&ed after the conveatlou picks
a nominee Wedn<ldly n!Jjht. Nixon
rues here today from New York to
tab pel'IOllOJ charge of bli. cunpolgn
tifort. More tb8'\ half a doi.en names are
be:hlg comidered by Ntxon, aides said.
Asked whether Nixon's claef rival for
ttie nomination, Gov. Nellon A.
Rockefeller, was among them, Klein
said, "We're not ruling anyone out."
Nixon and biJ Wife; P·at, were due to
land here at 10:15 p.m. PDT on a fll&bt from New Y or\, thereby
touching off carefully. c o n tr o 11 e d
hysteria at the Miami International
Airport with 1UU another mammoth
welcome waitmg at their bea4quarters
hotel, the Hilton Plaza, about 11:30
p.m.
The hullabaloo for Nixon was Jong
overdue in the opinion of many of his
supporten woo failed to get the
subtle mesaage of calm confidence
from hh spending most of last week
in seclusion at Montauk, N. Y.
Rockefeller and Ronald Reagan had
Miami Beach ptetty mucb to
themselves laat week as t b e i r
adherent.I at.aged shows and spec-
tacles with little competition from the
Nixon camp.
"I think'there ls a very good chance
that we can win it 111• ru,t ballot, but
I'm not p<edictlng it," Nixon told CBS
interviewer Mike Wallace at Montauk
Sunday. "I'm not taking anything foi:
granted."
By this he meant cooUnued pressure
on the major favorite 10J1 candidates
to release their delegates from first-
ballot commitment. as Gov. Dewey F.
Bartlett of Oklahoma did Sunday. Gov.
Spiro Agnew of Mayrland wu ex-
pected to take a similar step tonighl
Fire Hits Boys Home
LOS ANGELES (UPI} -Fire broke
out in a second story room of a boys
home operated by the California Youth
Authority Sunday, forcing the evacua-
tion of 25 boys. Damage was estimat-
ed at about $1,«XX>.
M...,, .,,.., S, 1%8
El Morro Accident Scene
California Highway Patrol officers and passersby
cluster around )961J J'aguar in which Jack MJithin-
1on, 24, address unknown, apparently was riding
alone when it collided with Volkswagen driven by
· F1oyd Braunn, 49, of Laguna Beach, at ll:SO p.m.
SUllday on El Morro curve. Braunn's car reportedly
was propelled along the road where it struck a 1966
Chevrolet driven by Jennlfer Lee Clark, 17, of Tor·
rance. Neither Miss Clark nor Braunn was inlured,
according to CHP spokesmen who said Mathinson's
car overturned and caught fire. Mathinson is at
South Coa$t Community Hospital today in "guard-
ed, serious condition, bordering on critical." He
sustained third degree burns and a possible skull
fracture in the accident which occurred. as his car
roared south on Coast Highway at reportedly "ex-
cessive high speed."
From Page J
POLICE · AT FESTIVAL. ••
legal entrant.
Officer John Turley said the 17-year·
old San Lorenzo youth was chased
down oD the fairgrounds, searched and
found to be carrying marijuana. and a
switchblade knife.
Several persona were taken to Iioag
Memorial liospit.al for treatment after
sufierlng hallucinations and other
drug overdose symptoms, police said.
One of them, a 15-year -o ld
San Bernardino youth, was arrested
when be was found to be carrying a
plastic bag of marijuana and a drug
capsule resembling LSD.
An IS-year-old Rlwrside ;youth was
arrested on susplclon of disturbing the
peace Saturday, after a melee ln which
spectaton splattered Costa Mesa Fire
Department Capt. David Teeter with
catsup.
ATOP TRUCK
1be fire captain placed Dotson un-
der arrest after he and enother youth
were seen atop a Coca·Cola truck,
throwing dispe!l6er equJpment at each
other. _
"I just climbed up on the truck to
talk. to the dude and tell him to quit,"
complained DoUlon, who said someone
dwnped a whole bucket or Kool-Aid on
him during the disturbance.
No real trouble resulted from the
Pop Festival mob, police ·said, al·
though several hundred commandeer·
ed a Tic Toe Market at Newport Bou-
levard and Del Mar Avenue Sunday
night.
"They saw our officers coming and
·realized we meant business," said Lt.
Austin Smith, noting that the crowd
dispersed without a confrontation at
that point.
SL..: fires were set simultaneOW1ly in
the fairgrounds Sunday night, all of
them in stacks of posters torn down
by the crowd, but no damage resulted.
Lt. Smith said the crowd, hungry for
more than pop music, stripped one
catering truck like a swarm of locusts
Saturday, sending its operatoc driving
away in disgust.
"HI said he wasn't coming back. It
was too expensive,'' noted Lt. Smltlti.
Three Teens Held
On Drug Charges ·
By Laguna Police
Two girls and a young man were BT·
rested by Laguna Beach police early
Saturday morning on suspicion of
marijuana possession.
Lt. Robert McMurray identified the
three as Oarla Cathy Henrie, 19 ;
Patricia Marguerite Pierce, 19; and
Mark Roy Craven, 18 ; all of 1133 Glen·
ne~e St.
McMurray said they were arrested
at the Gleruieyre address at 4 a .m.
Saturday by officers anned with a
warrant alleging ma' r i j u an a
possession.
Seized, said the officer, were three
ounces of marijuana; marijuana seeds
and dirt in four containers; two water
pipe!; a white powder substance
believed to be methedrine; 24 yellow
ca~ules ; four marijuana cigarets ;
four marijuana cigaret butts; and a
small quantity of loose marijuana in a
vase,
Mani Others Killed
U.S. Captures
Fifty Viet Cong
SAIGON (UPI) -American troops
slrikin& through the focbldding U Minh
"Forest of Darkness" 100 miles
southwest of Saigon today captured 50
Viet Cong SU$pectl gathering for a
strategy session near the village of Vi
Thanh. Nineteen other Viet Cong were
killed.
Another force of Americans
operating 20 miles so1:1th of Saigon
smashed a Viet Cong force and cap.
tured guerrilla fortress thrtatening
that city. A 1pokesman said 44 Viet
Cong were killed in this fight along the
Tra River.
lo a related action seven miles
northeast of this battle guerrillas fir.
ing B40 rockets bit a river assauJt craft
and wounded Brig. Gen. Franklin M.
Davis, of Waltham, Mass, com-
manding general of the 199th Light
Infantry Brigade. His wounds were
surerllcial. He laughed it off as "an
occupational hazzard" and quickly
rP.turned to duty.
The latest battle in the U Minh
Forest developed when intelligence
sources reported Viet Cong leaders
gathering for a meeting. Th e
Americans struck and seized the
gathering Communists along with
documents giving details of the
meeung.
The fighting raised to 2Ql the
number o{ Communist troops killed in
a wee.le of fighting in the delta mud in
regions where soldiers encounter -
chest -deep 5W&mPI in the area
famous for its huge biting ants, giant
leeches, bamboo vipers and cobras. Of
the 201 slain, 28 were killed Sunday
and 19 today.
In other action, Communist ground
fire Sunday 11bot dawn a second UHl
helicopter near the coastal city of Tam
Ky, 350 miles north of Sal goo. Thus far
803 U.S. choppers have been shot down
in the war. Communist fire also sbot
dawn a two engine U.S. scout plane
Marine Arrested
After Assault on
Laguna Officer
Laguna Beach pallce didn't agree
with an El Toro Marine who asserted·
ly said, "I awn tbe wocld."
Blair Ray Clark, 21, was one of
three men booked Stmde.y on suspicion
of assault with a deadly weapon, of.
fleets said.
over the central highlands Sunday. No
Americans were iiU_ed in any ol. the
aircraft downings.
Over North Vietnam U.S. flgbtel'-
bombers flew 100 missions Sunday. No
planes were lost. Tbey hJt supply
boats, roads, bridges, trucks,
warehouses and fortress bunkers.
Jn South Vietnam , B52
Strato!ortresses Jate Sunday. and today
struck Communist buildup areas in the
troubled northern provinces, near
Saigon aild in the delta where they
6oftened up the U Minh Cc.-the assault.
South Vietnamese spokesmen RLid
Viet Cong terrorists set oil an ex·
plosion outside a Saigon police station,
wounding one officer and f o u r
civilians. Another terror blast killed
two civilians and wounded {our on a
train 145 miles northeast of S~gon.
The terror was possibly part of the
guerrilla action that sent the Army 9th
Infantry Division troops into Action
near the Tra River 60Uth of Saigon
and in the U Minh Forest. In the U
lVJnh the Americans found nature
almost as tough a foe as the guer·
rilla&.
From Page l
REPUBLICANS .
major event tonight, the keynote
6peech of Gov. Daniel J. Evau of
Wcu;hington. Evans said be will tell the
conveaUon that the nation can't base
law and order on inequity and in·
justice.
In the midst of the heavy cam·
pltigning, the convention's plaUonn
committee, headed by Illinois Sen.
Everett M. Dirksen, came up with a
13,000-word documect t.bat seemed
likely to ge t ac<:epted without a ripple.
While the delegates were getting set
for Wednesday's convention balloting,
the evidence of the Nixon drive crop·
ped up in many places.
Dirk.sen, who heads the 58-vote ll·
linois delegation, helped turn on the
burners foc the -Nixon {oroes with a
public declaration that the former vice
president "is 110 close to striking
distance of the. nomination that off-
hand I don't belleve be could be slop-
ped."
The Nixon pressW'e was such that
Reagan felt it necessary to tell sup·
porters of the former vice president In
his California delegation that they
would be "very foolish" if they tried to
defect from hi! favorite son candidacy
oo the first ballot.
Artist Turns 79 Outmanned Costa Mesa lawmen
finally called for help at one point Sun-
day, bringing in extra men from most
other .agencies in the surrollllding area
to help with the monumental crO"Wd
control job.
McMurray said a complaint would
be sought today. Bail has been set at
$1,200 each.
Lifeguards Haul
32 Swimmers
From High Surf
Police Lt. Robert McM~ay said
police officer Robert Romillard was
attempting to bandcufi the Marine to
arrest him on suspicion of being drunk
at 4:30 a.m. Sunday.
Reagan came away from a con·
ference with Ohio Gov. James A.
Rhodes, a key man in the jockeying of
the major candidates for ~ltion,
without any assurances about how
long the Ohioan would or couJd hold
the majority of his 58-vote delegation
to his favorite son stance. Fern Stone Feted at Arts Festival "Estimates by the promoters and by
us were exceeded about four times,"
Odef Neth said today, poinUng out
that the mob's mood c h a n g e d
dramatically Sunday, compared .to
Fem Cunningham Stone celebrated
her '19th btrthday Sunday at the
Splinter Festival grounds where she is
exhibiting. The celebration came com-
plete with flowen, a handmade birth~
day card and !our birthday cake&.
An experienced artist, originally
from Ohio, Mrs. Stone has been living
in Laguna Beach for five years. She
exhibited at the Festival of Arts in
1966-67. She did not submit in 1968
because Of a planned trip which did
not tramplre. "I am very proud to be
with the SpllDter Festival," she says.
Mn. Stone has !our specialties. One
ls fingerpalnling. She didn't learn
tl'rou&b trial and error. She went to
the top for her lesS011s, studying with
Ruth Shaw, a pioneer in tbe field.
Mrs. stone also has learned the fun-
damentab ol. making porcelain objects
from a friend who worked in the
Dresden plants in Germany. Mrs.
Stone creates dolls from porcelain.
In addition, ahe creates flowers and
DAILY PILOT ---Oll:ANGI!: COAST l'UILllHIMCi COM1AMY
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•
scenes in enamel.
Her favorite, however, is oil paiJ>.
ting. She paints ~ascape'S and desert
scenes.
Mrs. Stooe's creation1 are on
display at boll1 tt>e Splinter Fe.Uva! at
~ N. Coast Hwy., and her studio the
Orchid Gift Shop, in the Pepper Tree
Patio at 448 So. Coast Hwy.
She has lectured, exhibited and
taught throughout the United states.
She is a member of the National
As-sociation Of Women Artists ih New
York, having passed a jury of 12 to get
in.
She bas three sons, t en
grandchildren and eight gr e a1t
grandchildren.
Saturday, ·
lie said there was definite harass-
ment against the unifurmed cificen;.
"I'm damn proud of every one of the
guys wbo were there," Neth said.
Several Sigalerts were put into ef-
fect both days, at peak hours, when
traffic snarled intersections for blocks
around the beleaguered area.
"How do I get to TeWinkle Park for
a little tennis," one motorist asked a
poli~e sergeant while caught pastilng
the fairgrounds In a sea of vehicles.
_"Try Monday," the weary sergeant
said.
'PEACE,' SAYS GESTURE OF MUD-SOAKEO FESTIVAL FAN
Ho..Wo1 Ono of Do-• Who Wollowfd In Pond Medo by Pumpod~n Wotor •
Laguna Beach lifeguards hauled 32
swimmers out of four foot surf over
the weekend.
Lifeguard Eugene DePaulis said a
crowd of 28,00> persons jammed La·
gun.a's beaches over the weekend, tak·
ing advantage of clear skies and 68
degree water temperature.
OePaulis reported 15 rescues in Sat-
urday's crowd of 15,000. There were
another 17 rescues in Sunday's crowd
of 13,000.
San Clemente Lifeguard Department
reported a total of 32,600 people basked
in the sun during the weekend. 1bey
reported 55 rescues Saturday and 35
rescues Sunday. A South~tem swell,
created three to six foot waves, guards
said.
YOUR
WATCH\\:.
O Cl11nod • Oiied
• Adlosted
., ... "" ... WMlt Yeu Wall
PEAltL$
RE·STRUN'
RIN'S SIZED, frOlll
McMurray said tbe Marine pulled
away, struck Remillard a glancing
blow on the cheek and lacerated the
officer's wrist with a handcuff. The
suspect was subdued, said MeMurray.
The lieutenant said police wouJd
seek a felony complaint agaiMt the
serviceman today. The incident was
said to have occurred near Broadway
and Coast l-Ughway.
About an hour earlier police ar-
rested two Santa Ana men on suspi-
cion or assaulting a gasoline station at·
tendant in the same area.
Delbert Charles Noble, ~; and
Thomas George Mack. 18 ; were each
booked on suspicion of assault with a
deadly weapon.
Mcl\~urray said thty were alleged to
have attacked Mark LaPort of 405
Blumont St. McMurray sltid Mack
allegedly struck LaPort on the head
with a tire iron.
Both men were released on $315 bail
each, the officer said, pending ar·
raignment in Superior Court on Aug.
14.
Gov. Louie B. Nunn of Kentucky
promised to produce "sufficienUy con ..
vincing evidence" at a caucus later in
the day to persuade his state's 24-vote
delegation to go for Nlxm in the tnltial
balloting.
Nunn said he thinks the former vice
president will get a minimum d 20
votes fro~entucky.
Gov. DaVid F. cargo of New Me'.dco,
who said be wants to P£esen'e the
neutrapty oC his state's 14-vote delega•
tion until Tuesday, schedule(! a Con-
ference with Nixon. His delegation
was reported about evenly aplit
between Nixon and. Reagan.
Gov. Dewey Bartlett of Oldabooia,
who has been for Nlxon all the way,
yielded the hoped-for, if brief,
spvtlight of a favorite son nomination
to let N"rir:on have 14 of the state's 22
nominating votes OD the first ballot.
Bartlett said Reagan would get 1even
and Rockefeller one.
0
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-
WORLD'S BIGGEST LOVE-IN? -This was Mecca
Saturday and Sunday for every hippie, hophead and
pop music .fan \vho· could buy or steal hi s way into
the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa for
the N e\vport Pop Festival. Orange Coast traffic pat·
terns were hopelessly fouled up and the fairgrounds
groaned under the weight of an estimated 100,000
music lovers during the two-day event. This
photo was made Saturday at the height of opening
day activities. Note tra!fic·clogged Newport Boule-
vard (upper left) and Costa Mesa Civic Center
(right, center, background) for orientation .
.
100,000 Jam Pop Festival
All Shades of Hippies and · Curious Converge on Mesa
By PAMELA POWELL
Of t111 D1llY PL .. I Sllff
"Let"s get out of here, there's no one
here,'.' a barefoot, bearded youth
screamed across the mass of pressed
bodies. "You're right," a voice shout·
ed. "I can't find anyone."
Communal living did not set well
with many of the estimated 100,000
who jammed the Orange Co unty Fair-
grounds Saturday and Sunday for the
nAIL'I' PILOT Pl>ete '°' 0. .. SMMll.,.
TINY TIM 'IN FLIGHT' ON POP FESTIVAL STAGE
JeaMtte McDonald. Rudy VallH and Shirley Temple -Packa9ed
Tribute to Tiny
Hippies Led on Trip to Vaudeville
Bv ALAN DIRKIN cit t111 D•ltr Piiot Slaff
lie looks Uke Joan Ba.ei' sister. Ile
talks like a canary with a cough and
he walks as uncertainly as a higb-wire
artist who just dropped his umbrella.
\Vith hiJ nose you could play Fagin
in "Oliver Twist,'' with his hair you
v.·ouldn't need a broom to be the witch
in "Snow 'Vhite," and with his com·
plexion you could be the egg in "The
Egg and t."
Rigbt now he has the spotlight in the
world of music. 'Ibis weekend be made
the scene ou the Orange Coasl Hls
name is Tiny Tim.
This unlikely performer brought the
old and new 1enerattons together in
one of the s1fangest half hours the
Orange Coubty Fairgrounds h a s
known. Thousands of today's youth,
barechested and bell bottomed, sat and
listened as he took: them trom the
frantic rby:ttJms of the Newport Pop
Festival on a trip back to the melodies
of vaudevillt. They enjoyed the ride.
The man's i:ippearanee and style are
ind~ grotesqur.. Like a ghost with
clothes on, he prances and struts
through his act, blowing two-finge:ed
kisses to his "dear, wonderful
friends.'' But close your e}'CS and you
hear U1e voice or vaudeville, th'-~ingcr
for all seasons.
His act is steeped in innocent
nostalgia , is sophisticated and fz..5t
moving, easier to appreciate than
criticize. One moment his voice car-
ries a trill of Jeanette McDonald, the
next it appears to be coming through a
megaphone as he is Rudy Vallee
ainging "As Time Goes By."
lie is aboard the "The Good Ship
Lollipop" '"'Ith Shirley Temple and
"High on a If ill" with Nick Lucas. His
switches from falsetto to baritone are
never more impressive. however! tl1an
when he sings a "duel." He is both
So nny and Cher in "I Got You Babe."
Tiny Tim 's applause getter, of
course. is "Tiptoe 'I"llNugh the
Tulips." It made the flower children
blossom. All the while th~y hod Usten-
ed silent and motionless, but this num-
ber brought them curling to the.Ir feet,
hands above head, in the uninhibited
snake-dance that does for any tempo.
It was the young dancing to a tune of
old. the past pleasing lhe present. lt
was truly like old times.
Tiny Tim's re-{T'Cation of an earlier
era waS> so complete In fact that you
felt that if you did not. enjoy his "Tip-
toe Through the Tulips." the siri'ger
wall not to blame. It was the se>ng -
and the late twenties -you had walk·
cd out on.
•
Newport Pop Festival. For the remain·
der, the two-day listen-in was the
grooviest happening of all time.
The sounds, except for a diversity
of gimmicks, were remarkably simi·
lar. The sights were slightly unbeliev·
able. Pop Festival fans, ranging from
the staunch believers, and Teal hippies
to the "plastic" hippies and the curi-
ous converged on the grounds to listen,
sleep, t:ilk or just stare.
Highlighting Saturday's show were
such groups as Sonny and Cher, Can-
ned Heat, Steppenwolf. Electric Flag,
Chamber Brothers, Butterfield Blues
Band. James Cotton Blues Band and
Tiny Tim.
The expected show stopper of the
day was the ~year-old , long-haired
Tiny Tim. Crowds estimated at 40,000
waited until 5:30 p.m . for bis en-
trance.
His falsetto voice broui?ht beads and
medallions flying from the audience,
amidst cries of "more, more."
Saturday's festivities were marred
only by a shortage of water. Shortly
after noon all stands had gone dry and
five gallon bottles or water were
brought in.
Later. crowds stood under nearby
garden hoses and drenched themselves
until a water pump arrived and dou sed
the throng. Sunda:v's w;:iter supply was
plentiful, assisted by individuals carry-
ing their own jugs.
Between acts the crowds strolled
among the concession booths buying
hippie clothing, beads, posters. in·
cense. psychedelic kites and refresh·
m ents.
Festiv;:il promoters Wesco Produc-
tions. originally a fraid the $5 and S6
tickets would scare away any conces-
sion business. v.•ere happil,v mistaken.
"I sold 80 or 90 programs in about
three minutes." one concessionaire
said. The programs were St each.
Several members of both the Hell's
Angels and Hessians motorcycle clubs
roamed the grounds.
Master of ceremonies for the two-
day ~uccess was Radio KHJ di~c jock·
ey Hulnble Harve. assisted by the
nature boy G:vpsy Boots. Both toward
the end or Saturday's show offered
susi:gestions for "crash pads" for the
night. Man y spent the night in sleep.
Ing baits on the grounds while others
camped out on Red Hill Avenue near
the airport.
The crowd doubled Sunday. accord-
in l! to one Costa Mesa police officer.
"There are twice as many of them to-
day.'' he said, "but they seem much
quieter."
'''Vow. they are really far out to.
day," one entertainer back stage sai~;
''I wonder if they know they are here.
Some wondered If the entertainers
knew they were present Sunday. Two
popular grouns. Blue Cheer and F.ric
Burdon and the Animals destroyed ail
their Instruments and equipment on
staee. The Animals burned their am -
plifiers while the Blue Cheer threw all
thrir equipment to the crowd.
Top name attraction for the second
rt11y arrived on staJ?e at 7:30 p.m.
Most of the youne hippies exhausted
after more than 24 hour~ ol v.rooving
lav on the ~ound for the Jefferson
Airplane. while more than JOO police
officers from all surroundinS!'. Oranl!e
Countv cities waited to clear the
gro11nd s. ·
More than 500 persons were treated
for injuries over the two.<fay period.
an ambulance attendant ~aid. Injuries
ranged from heat exhaustion and cut
feet to drug overdo!its.
An estimated 12 ambulance run s
were made. One involved a boy who
suffered a scalp' wound when a p-irl
dropped a five gallon bottle of water
on his head.
WhJJe ofOcers: from Newport Beach,
Costa Mesa. Oranee. Santa Ana. Tus-
tin. the Sherifrs Department and the
l~i!?hWa.v Patrol stood guard over the
gate11. the remainder of lhf'! Shcrilr's
officers took over the detail at the
Costa Mesa Police station.
Although an unfounded refl()rt wns
made that there had been 140 arrc11ts
durin~ the weekend. police gene-rally
felt the youths had conducted tbe.m-
sclvcs well.
• • ~ "!" ..... " -
OAJLY PILOT 3
Percy, Hatfield VP Choice
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Sen. presumably fW the only spttlllcation
Nlxon has announced for the job -
ability to bandle city problems.
He lndlcated be would not throw the
selection open to the convMUoa,
w;itesa "I were able to control the
nemes to an extent."
Cllar1es Pefcy of llllnois , a n d
Gov. M...i.k Hatfield of Oregon were
report.00 today to be leading prospects
for the Republican vice. presdientfal
nominatlcn if Richard ·M. Nixon wins
top place on the llc.ket.
• Nixon has said be won't worry about
a running mate candidate until he has
the presidential nomination in the bag,
but Republican strategists convinced
that Nixon will be the candidate were
already speculating about his choice.
In tbe best informed · GOP circles,
Perey and HaUleld were considered
the inost probable.
. Nixon, in ac' interview published ln
Hearst newspapers, 1aid be did not
want New York Gov. Nels'on
Rockefeller, his principal rival, for a
running mate. California Gov. Rona1d
Reagim.,. another Prlisldentiat coo·
tender who ls considered by many of
Nixon's 111.pporters to be the most. at-
tractive No. 2 man, says flatly be
would not accept a vice presidential
spot oo any Uckel
Some of Rockefeller'1 supporters
were discussJn&, rell>C'tantly, a Nixon·
Rockefeller tickel A cb1tf Rockefeller
backtr, Sen. Edward Brooke, (Maes.),
said that U Rockefeller lost he would
urge the New Xork Gov~r to aceept
the second spot for the good of the
country.
Both men are prominent in the
liberal wing of the party, and would
Nixon said in the Interview his run·
ning mate must be able to .. take over,
virtually as chief executive officer, in
the whole problem of cities."
Percy's endorsement of Rockefeller
would make him even more eligible
for Nixon's running mate, since choos·
ing hjm would be a gesture of unity.
may
•
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(
co south coast plaza, san diego freeway at bristol, costa mesa; 546-8321
shop monday thravgh satu relay, 10:00 a.rri. to 9:30 p.m.
:) 'I 1
•
' •• •• •• •• ~ ~: • .
:1'
:8 ~: ·-• .•. • •• .• •• .. -...... D9l'r Plllt • ..., •• ~= .'Hoo.siOD patrolman J. C. Doy1I
:: had no 'dWicuity in determining • tlu!t 1 a C!!J" ~\l;D<loned on his beat
was ~en.· JI. note on the front seat
·-read: "This car belongs to Low R. :.:-Williams in New Orleam ••. lt is
:· stole. Please see thit he git it." .... . -· •• .;. The Grand Rapids suburjJ .of Wy·
:: · oming !)as an honest-1<>-goodness
:::,. sidewalk superintendent •on the
:~~ payroll. The Western Mi~gan
:_...,_ town. hired Larry KnickerboC:ker, ::~· a high school teacher, to inspect
:--· most of the several hundred miles :!_ of sidewalks for defects this sum-
:•: mer. •• ••• ••• •• .. , ~ .,,
:~ ••. ..... ..... . •• ::-•• • =· ::. .. .... :~ ••• .• . •• .• -~
You can find the itrengttt o jectl fn
boi/s pockets aa eveey motlm' am ot-
t.est. David Walter, 8, of PaihewiUe,
Ohio, is no exception to the rult. He
ii Pictured caTTJling his pet hamster,
Gordon, in his shirt pocket. •
A film promoting the pre.rlden-.
tial candidactl of HHH didn~ g<I
a very good reception at its pre·
miere tn Memphis, Tenn. It
flashed on the screen of a drive·
in movie and before Humphrey
had spoken a dozen word&, the
honking of car horns toat ao
loud that the management was
forced to stop the film. • • After 22 years ·oI slilnlng shoes
at the San Diego armed forces
YMCA, Loon 0 1born1 pas polished
off enough college courses to earn
himseU a master's degree in art.
Osborne. 42, received his degree
from San Diego State College. The
Negro bachelor dropped out of high
school 25 years ago, and after a
hitch in the Service began his car·
eer as a shoeshine specialist. His
next goal is teaching in a college. ·• Herb's Feed Service in St. Jos·
eph, Mo., was fined $10 for carry·
ing an 870-pound overload on a
truck. The small fine was levied by
Magistrate Margaret Young after
the owner explained that part of his
weight included in the overload was
a 325-pound friend who had asked
for a ride.
-.
When his truck collided. with a
car at a Los An geles intersection,
Albert G. Wobb climbed down from
his truck. "Can you give me a
lift?" asked the driver of the darn·
.aged car .•• Mrs. Vivian Cr1i9,
62, Webb 's rnather·in·law.
MOfld11, Auoust 5; 1968
_ let. Lands Safely
Midair C·ollision ·
K.ills 3 Teenagers
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) - A jet·
prop a!rliner, Lwith the wreckage of a Jil#>t plane and the bodies of its three
young passengers embedded in its
side. landed c safely Sunday before
most of tt:ie ·10 passengers aboard
kMwwhat~.
Capt. Ted Jlawn, 43, Sk-. Ill.,
broogbt the --engine plane in with
one engine de_ad. mJd bis copilot badly
injured in tti.e-cockpit.
"l thought . that something was
wrong, but nOt a collision," said Mrs.
Nancy Steffens, 44, of Two Rivers. "I
was more nervous after I got on the
ground -te_allied lt bsd been a col·
lision."
"We didn't know what hit us. I think
only the stewardess knew," said
~S:am!j:St 1t~ldofus~~~ :~d
with our seat. belU: on. The pilot came
down with what seemed like a normal
landjng."
Officials said the aingle~gine
. Cesma 150 nmmed N-Oentral
.,
Airlines Flight 281, a Coovalr 580, over
southern Wisconsin. The Ugbt plane hit
just behind the copilot's aeat, al.lo
damaging the propeller. on the plane's
right engine.
The copilot, first olficer Jobrl
Mazur, 30, of Wheatoo, ru., suffered
multiple ftacto/es of bJs right leg and
head injuries. He was reported in
serlous condition in a Milwau.kee
hospital. He was the only person on
the airliner injured.
The victim's bodies were removed
after the plane landed. They were
i..!enti.fied as Rick L. Stenberg, 19, of
Elk Grove Village, Ill., the pilot;
Virginia Johnson, 18, Mt. Prospect,
Ill., and her brother, Richard, 13.
"That pilot did a fantastic landing
job," a federal official said. Otherwia:e
there was no comment as a team of
about 35 National Transportation Safe·
ty Board investigators led by board
examiner Tftom.as Saunders ~ived
from Washington to probe the cause of
the crash .
Firehoinhs, Shots, Bricks
Spark Violence in Nation
By ·United Pre11 International
Gang.I ol Negro youtlls hit and ran
wiUl -and bricks in Racine,
Wil., early today. Several other cities
acrUM the nation rep01ted similar
trouble.
It was 8 bit different at Denver,
Colo., Sunday when "the Queen of
Soul." sing« AreCb:a Franklin, walked
op stage at Ule open air Red Rocks
theater, sald she bsd not been paid
and therefore would not sing.
About 100 to 200 of 3,000 persons in
the audience began shouting and
University Law
Professor Blasts
Publisher Report
throwing bottles, cans and rocks. They
rolled 50-gallcu tnsh barrels down the
s:tsles. Same of tbe youths ran onW the
stage and 1madled a piano, must~
instruments and electrical equi}mlent.
A dozen police officers called fOr
help. Answering squad cars hOO. some
windows smaabed and one policeman
wu slightly injured when a bottle hit
his leg. Three persons wer.e arrested.
Trouble also broke out Sunday night
at.York, Pa., where 11 persons were
injured early Sunday in a gunfight,
Grand Rapids , Mich., and Mobile, Ala.
New York City police were put· under
orders not tu use their 4,000 call boxes
after a homemade bomb demolished
one in the borough of Queens early
Sunday.
At Racine, it wa,s the second night of
such trouble. Eighteen persoos, six of
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -A law them policemen, were injured and
professor has accused newspaper pub-eight arrested durin·g an outbreak
lishers of "the kind of inflammatory Sat~ay, zµght and Sunday morning.
nonsense that can only iriipede'".ef-.Slplllay ~t's trouble broke out in
·forts to resolve the current conf.ro. .... · torieDtial ~·and. hit-end-run· ~cks
versy over pre-trial treatment or ended this morning after several
crime ne'ws. businesses were IOOted and several
Louis B. Schwartz of the University, cars stoned and overturned.
of Pennsylvania had some harsh Two ga ages were fired . Firebombs
words for a report on "Free Press crashed against two other buildings
and Fair Trial" issued in 1967 by the but did not explode. Police would not
American Newspaper Publishers As· immediately reveal ii any arrests
sociatiol'.I CANPA )". were made of if anyone were injured.
"The ANPA would have done better At York, six pe!°SOns were arrested
to come forward with at least one or and an arm<red police car was fired
two suggestions for a voluntary code on. Early Sunday, a white meat
of ethics on the subject of pretrial m arket owner traded shots with a
publicity," he said in a Pennsylvania group or Negro youths alter they hurl·
Law Review article. Advance print· ed a rock ttirough the store window. Eleven pel"6ons were injured in ttie ings are being distributed at the 9Ist gunfi'gbl A nearby dry cleaners and a
annual convention or the American papermill storage btlilding were set
Bar Association (ABA) her~. afire.
"The NAPA report is an indiscrimi· F irebombers struck for ttie secood
nate and intemperate rejection of all time in a week at Mobile. A furniture
relorm proposals," Schwartz wrote. store in a Negro neighborhood went up
He said newspapers object to cen· in flames. Fire authorities said six
sorship of news at the source but they oUler fire bombs were found at a
themselves "do a little healthy cen· nearby furniture house just before the
sorship at the source" when they deny Gulf Furniture Co. was destroyed.
the right even of courts and grand Three firebombings and a series of
juries to know the confidential sources minor rock4hrowing incidents OC·
of a reporter's expose of political cor· cWTed in Grand Rapids " Negro
rupt.ion and tolerated crlme. southeast side. No ain.sts were made.
Beaches Cloudy Today
'
Clearin g Tuesday With Above Average Temperatures
California
Coatal
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c.c11r 1t1plfl, 1ow1. -ffit fifty.
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lloinlon
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'"Greatest Day of Our Li'1'es~
1
Three ~eleased ,Pilots ReunUe'\ !fith Families
WASHINGTON (UPI) -(For cajit. on-psan said hia diet during five · 'lbe men were held cal>tlve in a
Joe v. carpenter · the l~lllldr.ct lllld 1 o hall monlhl of priaoo wu '!l'i•oo comp j..t outside .}Wd and
' , • • "slibslalXial and kept me 1n good '"!\fned· July H ol their pendlng Yank ol .the trip le lreed'"1l , . ~. health." r el ... e. Low said there were .about 30
ha'de-1:. His happy yowig daughter• tow, who apeot seven and 1 half or-r Americans in the caµip.
were not a)>out le let go _jl!d ha 1>91>-.....uu ln prlscii, said "we bail good ter, uked If he tlloui!lt other
bled aloog with a child lihielni -treatment Jn Hanoi." . c • ~men wOQld soon be retells·
leg. . . ' At a -urt stop, Low repeated ed . by N~ Vietnam, sold "l would-· ~arpenttt, YI, ,waa nunlt.cl witti bta the 1Jlen bid urecelved a a bower every _ assume 10.' •,
clilldren late Swiday when the joorney day aod reading material mually The !art such release w., made
home !tool.a Commwlllt prilon comp English translAtiOlll ol Nofth Viet-Feb. 16 when ~a,j; Norrts <>Wrly,
Jn HaDol_ended for b1m and two fellow ue n§.WS s." He If.id thete ea~. Joo D. Bl&ck and ~avY Eris •.
U. S. p1lota at-Andrews Air Force =tno polltt~Moctrination and 00 DaVld P. Matheny ~~ere given their
Baae in nearby Maryland. force or iressure wu applied freedom. Carpenter aod his companions, Maj. '
James F. Low, 43, aod Maj. Fred N.
Thompson, 32, were the lateat group of
American pllot.a downed over North
Vietnam to be given their freedom.
The three flew trom Bangkok,
Thailand, via Cairo and Fr.ankfurt to
New York, where they were reunited
with their wives and flown to Andrews
on a military plane.
Beaming and hugging their families,
the pilots pronounced their release
"the greatest day" of their lives, then
were taken into seclusion for several
days of debriefing and medical exams
at Andrews before going on leave.
With the apparent intention of
saying nothing that might prejudice
future releases of captured Americans
the three made no references to their
captors beyond reporting proper treat·
ment.
Sky Diver Killed
LANCASTER , c.lif. (UPI) - A 24-
year~ld sky diver was killed here Sun·
day when his parachute failed to open .
Chester Gary Brown ol ~rest
was supposed to alight on a landing
pad .at Foxville Airport, but he fell on
a vacant field nearby.
$5 Charter Sightseeing
Flight Detours to Cuba
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - A hijacker,·
clutdtlng a gun and hia baby, onlered
a charto< plane pilot le take him to
Cuba Sunday or "fly ,unw we run out
of gas."
The pilot, J ames· Yach, 21, was
released after spending three hours at
Havana's airport. He flew back to
F lorida where the trip began as a $5
sightseeing tour.
"He was very calm," Yach said of
the gwpnan, who said he could see bis
baby on weekends.
.. He said it very casually: 'Let's go
to Havana'. I laughed. I didn't believe
it. Then I looked at him and I saw the
gun. That changed the whole picture."
The hijacker listed bis name as
Stewart Orth of Miami when he
cbsrtered the flight to take hia blonde,
two and a hall-year-<>ld daug!lter
fi ytng over Naples, a Gulf Colst
F1orida city south of Tampa.
Radio Havana, the official voice of
the Cuban goovernment, reported the
incident early today and identified the
hijacker & a U.S. citizen but listed no
name. The report did not say what the
Cuban government intends to do with
the man and child .
Va.ch said he told the man he didn't
have enough fuel fur the trip and had
no maps. The gunman ordered VllCll to
fly south anyway and check the fuel
gauge at intervals. A quarter tank of
fuel remained when Ibey landed.
American intercept.ors from Key
West, Fla., accompanied the plane
part of the way to Havana and then
Cub'an jet& came alongside. A All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through SatilrffYi
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'Teel anything yet!"
Humphrey Far Ahead
Nixon Shows Drop
In Delegate . Total
WASIDNGTON (AP) -
One weet from the opening
of the Republican national
cooventioo, Rlchard M. NiJ:.
on slipped slightly Monday
in tenns · ol delegates who
are committed or have &tat·
ed a f1nt ballot choice, but h9 made up mi.;ch of what
·he dropped ooe place by
registering gains elsewhere.
'The former vice presi-
dent's principal losses, in an
AssQCiated Press tabulation
of fitst ballot votes based
on prbnary results, pledges
and replies in an AP poll,
were a dozen ln North Car-
olina and five in Washing-
ton state.
New head counts in other
delegations. left him at M2,
down a net of six since last
week and well ahead of New
York GoV. Nelson A. Rock·
efeller who g4llled _six and
bad 202. Nomination re·
Quires 667.
The Democrats fioiihed.
over the weekend the allot·
ment of their convention
votes and Vice President
Hubert H. Humphrey at
7921f.J rn o v e d farther in
front of Sen. Eugene J. Mc·
Carthy who had 4231'. • \ The number ·of Democrat;: ...
le faVorlte sons holding del·
egatioiJs toiether ·while they
sho,p for a candidate swell-
ed to 13 when Govs. John J.
McKelthen of Louisiana and
Mills Godwin o! Virginia
joined the' ranks.
The tabulation :
aaP'UJLICAN ... .,. •• St1t. JOxM .... ·~· ~·· "II . • " .... 1 ..... " "•Ii. " 11 ·~· C.111. N c .... • • COlln. " "'" ' • Fl1. " ' ••• " ' H1w1il " ld•ho " Ill. .. " .... ,.
" ·~· ••• ~ ,,, " ' ' L•. " ' -I " IM. " Mur. .. " Midi. ., • ··-' " MIN . ' " Mo. " ' ""'" " Neb. " Mtv. " ' M.H. • ,, M,J. ' .. .... • "
,,
N.Y. ' N.C, " H.O. • .... ' "'"· " .... " P•: " R.I. .. s.c. n
S.D. " '-· n
Tex. n
Ultlt ' ... • Vo. " ...... " W.VI. • Wit. " .,,. ' D.C. • P .lt.
V.I.
Tot11t ..,
" ' '
' ..
' ' ' '
•
"'
.,
...
• I
I
·;
"
" I
' ' • • • • ' "' O!Mra: GOY. •-Id llM••"· outtlll• of C1lltwn! .......... l1. 4. Coto. 3, Fii. I,
GI. 5, ·-· I, LI. 6, Miil. 2, Mont. 1, N.C. A. N.M, S, Okl9. I, P'1. J, Tn.
11, 01~ S. W'l'o. ), Tot1I ...
F1~or1'9 HM: "l1tk1, Ow. Willer
J . Hldceh C1Uf., tl-1n1 H•-11. Sf".
Hlr1m F0t1111 Kin. 5lfl. Fr•llll: C.rf. '°"' Md. Gov. &Piro "9Mw1 Midi.
GO'I. G-tlomMV; NJ. Sen. Cllf·
fof"ll P. Cl~I Cl'll<o. Gov. JI-A. ·-· DIMOCllATIC ..... •• ••• HHH MCC -~·· ••• • " ...
"Iii.kl " ArlL "" "' • ..... ,.
C..Uf. ' .. m c ... " " • c .... ' • ""' " • ... • " ' ... .. _, ;; ' ·-" ' • "" " ' .. .... 31\., .. "" .... " • " ..... • ·' "'· " • ..
Lo. ,. ..... " Md. .. .... n ..... .. • " Minn, ~ "" "" MIN. " .... .. ..... " ' .... • ' n
NH, " '" '" N.H. • ,. ' ~.J. '" " ' N.M . " " N.C. ..
N.D. " ' ..
""" ' m ' Okll . " .. •• "'" " ... • .. ~ ...
It.I • ,, ..c. " 5.0 . " ,_ ·-" ,K, •M ""' ,. • VI. " ' ' Vo. " w ...... "" .... ' w.v •. " " ""· .. ' -" •• '" D.C. " l".tl, • V.I. • c.z. ' .. .. • Tol•ls ,.,. .,,. ... "'
Pancake Feed
Slated Sunday .
A pancake breakfatt ..W
be held Sunday fnlm 9 a.m .
to 1100t1 et die St.er Olld
Stein Restaurant in Cotta
Mesa to r.ise fund• fOr the
Gina Uhrlaub Cllopt« ol tho
City o1 Hope.
'!be publi< iJ invited for a •1-. !Or adulta and 50 oeatJ for chlldren. All pro-
cee<IJ 'Will benefit the !He
Olld llODMCUorlao medl<:ol
cent«.
•PfQXJrt for
the futur1 •••
Todofl"
e s...t1NI
e MMlul
1...,111c1 . '""",; ..
e O•fllf•f
At.J1lht1
Phone
543-1753 •• 14U721
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DAILY PILOT 9
,
Buffums' annual sale of trays . .
in Webster-Wilcox Silverplate
a style and shape for every decor
10.00 to 120.00 Reg.ltSOtolSO.llO .
To own or give, yoo'fl be proud of 111y of these ve1saU1e trays
f10m our extensive collection. Choice of any size, style orshape. ·~' -. --~ All superbly c.ralled. Silverwar11-
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IUFFllMS' SILVER CLUI
Nothinr down,, no interest, no canyinr charae.
5.00 per month up to 120.00
7.00 per month up !o 160.00·
10.00 per month up lo 240.00
15.00 per month up to 360.00
As lonra~ two years to pay.
i 'ii 4:
Save on International Sterling silver 1
place settings in a wide selection
of fifteen patterns
Haw, before P'ices ao up, is the time to fllke admtaae
of Buffums' big savings on silver. save t• on A-plen
place settinas, 10,00 on 5'piece place settlnp and U.11
on 6·piece place settinas. individual pieces are priced
·II 2,00 savinas and servin1 pieces are pricid at 2.11
to 4.00 savin~
Sil'lirwara
_,,
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Newport ciiltar el Fnhim island • 644-2200 i' Mon., Thurs., Fri. 10:0011119:30 Of!i! ~ ~ llJl'Bf i I
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I t DAlLY PILOT MO!tdlJ, AutUtl 5, 1'68
ltt High Gear
Buick Maintains
Image of Luxury .
B1 Carl Can&easea
A service station at-
tendant put It aptly as be
looked at tl1e prlce 5Ucker
a(!lxed to the rear window
or the '68 Buick Electra 22S
we "·e.re driving.
"That Jure is a tot of
money ror a car," he of.
fered . Then, standing back
he gazed at the entire 217.5
inch length , and s aid ,
"Yeah, but that sure is a lot
of car for the money."
He <k:scribed the Buick
luxury model to a "T". The
Electra 225 ls the top of 'the
line Buick (excluding the
specialty car -Riviera)
and lor 1968 It comes as a
'sport coupe, hardtop· sedan,
post sedan, or convertible.
They stretch it one step
further by offering the 225
Llmited which has more of
the (\eluxe options, vinyl
root. etc.
Buick Division a l w a y s
keeps wilhip ·its established
guidelines of luxury and
comfort but 1 t s con·
centration of the theme on
the big cars this year Is bet·
t.er than ever. Although the
intermediate GS series ls
being sold at a record pace
Ilui~ refuses to sacrifice its
well established and auc·
~ssful big cal' reputation
for the sake ot sport.
With visible changes on
the upper serlu Buicks l'i&v·
ing been confined to facelift.s
and the like.
But there bas been much
ado this year on the un·
· derside of the big cars.
~1any features that "•ere
designed into the Special,
Skylark and GS 350400
series have no\v been in·
corporated into the Electra.
~WVlJi datUitio h(~al ... UJ~ ~aivei1ome,8ENEATSf;'~ou1 '* 0 Interest from the 1st of any month on
funds received by the 10th.
8 Interest from date of receipt after the
10th.
@) Interest to date of withdrawal on
funds left 3 months or longer if account
remains open until quarter's end. * 5% per annum compounded daily current
rate on passbook savings.
5.25% per annum on bonus accounts .
• • . call nr come in 1'0DAY!
MUTUAL SAVINGS
2867 E1~t Coast Highway • Coron1 Del Mar, Calif. 92625
Telephone 675-5010
MEAD ornCl • '.u&D('"
ll~ £. COLOllAOO llYO. • ,ASAO£HA, CAllr. Jlllll
MRS . BILLIE GOLDEN
BUICK ELECTRA 215 -Buick's version of ele-
gance and luxury is better than ever this year. Stan·
danl equipment oa Electra includes power steering
By SYL.Vl1\ PORTER
In U1is era, Old Age Is A
Long Time. If yo u have
enough money, absorbing in·
terests and go9C[ hcaltb, the
20 to 30 or even 40 ylars or
retiremem. -voluntat· . .; or
in ... ·oluntary can b -~
pleasant and re\\'ardln,. But
if you are poor, have never
had the chance to develop
interests and have un-
dermined your he alt h
through decades of neglt>Ct,
the older years can be
unadulterated hell.
\\'hy shouldn't there be a
"Late Start" ptogram
designed to help the older
person l:i \'e to the end in pro·
per dignity -just as tl1e
successful "!lead Start"
project is designed to help
the child of poverty get a
proper beginning'!'
TllERE definitely should
be, says Genevieve Blatt,
assistant director of the Of·
!ice of Economic Op·
portunily in \Vashington,
and she argues ··it could be
set up easily in n1any com-
n1unities without eosUng a
great deal of money." Jfs a
f<iscinating conct'pt v.·hich
you c<:1uld adapt right no\v in
your O\\ll nei~hborhood at a
minimum cost -if you l1ave
and brakes pl"' big 430 cubic Inch engine. Electra
comes as hardtop coupe, hardtop sedan, cbnvertible
or post sedan.
the needed enthusiasm and
cooperation Of your
neighbors and community
leaden.
involve
ple.
Billie Golden is a well kno~n and long time resident of Co~ta l'>ft~it. As ~ecret~ry o{ 1hc Downtown Busine~~·
mcn·s As\ociation. 3hc is a vital co.:; in promoting busi·
nrs~ and induslry in our area. A lllQthcr of 1wo c:hildrtn,
D11lic is also an ac:1ivc n1cmbcr of the Harbor J..rca
Council of Bela Sign1a Phi.
Billie .~:iyi: "IVt' all xtt .to i111·ulvetl in tlie problt'1n.r of
1/iJy·tu-tfoy /111i11f:, th11t i1',f .101111•/inrt:r raJ.] 10 for111•t
t1huut 1llr l11t11rc 1<11til ir'.f 11po11 11.t. ~)'s1t1t1atfc sa1'in& is
/or rtrr 1111 i11lf'Rflll part of 111y pf(lllltin{l /or the /u111rt.
Ar 111/LSlllRJ:." Ft.'D£RAL SAVINGS my 'nel·t "Ill°
RttJ'W:t, earning I/it' lrightst rate '" tire irisllrtd MJ/tty of
Record 1st Half Levels
a Frdtral Ass0t·ia1ion." '
Funds received by the 9th of t'11 month e1rn from th• lst •.. after th• 9th
from the date or receipt.
5°/o becomes 51/1 % when compounded da fly and held for 1 year.
~vlnas insured to $15.000 by the Feder11 S1vlngs and loin Insurance Corpor• t1on.
Bonvs.: Urn •n extra 1.4 % on a 36·morilh CertifiQte Account In multlpln of '1,000.
l~WILSHIRE
.: FEDE. L
SAVINGS
4 •• /. ., r, ( .. •.
fl---'
t't-:nt::MAI.
•-~llO"Cf -· ~·
1833 Nnport Bou ....... 'ftft• H9rbof •Cotti Mna, Celltomla • 642 .. 711
1 Hom• otnc•: LOJ An'•'-
'
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ncvcnue nr Th<' Ti1nes
Mirror Co. rc ~hed record
levels in the second qu3rter
and first half or 1968,
Norman Ch andler .
chnirman and chief ex·
ccutlve ofricer. announced.
F·vr lite 28 \\'eeks ended
J uly 14. re\·enue iocreastd
more than 8 percent lo
$162,949,578 compared \\'ith
$lfMl,151 .489 last year.
Net Income a(ter taxts
~·as $9,498.347, or 79 cents a
lihArc , compnred w i t h
SS.779.939, or 73 ctnts per
share. for the rirst 28 ¥.'Ctks
ol 1967.
The increase in 1968 earn·
Ings amounted to 8 percent
despite the errects of a
l\D'Char;c on f~eral income
la'.'Ces. Provision for a 10
percent tax s u r c ha r g e
amounted to $887,000. which
decreased earnings about 1
cents a share.
The second quarter also
shov1ed strong improvement
over 1967 results. For the 16
v.·ecks ended July J 4 .
rC\'enues increased to
$90.384.890. ccmpared with
$32.874,499 last yenr. Net in·
co1ne rose to $5, 7t6,S32 from
SS.032.680 last year. Per
share earnings were up 11
percent to 47 cent.s over last
yenr's 42 cents.
Operating results tor the
first half benefitted from
Improved perrorma.nce or
the company's forest pro-
duCts groop and rrom !n-
crtased revenues in other
ope:r"1on1.
·A·
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D.IJLY PILOT Jl
Monday's Closing Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange List
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J2 DAILY PILOT
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ALL MAY co swiM SHOPS OPEN AT ·8:00* AM MONDAY*
SO YOU CAN SHOP SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST COLLECTION!
:-. ~ '-\
• .... . ,,
your favorite nationally
famous makers at savings
6.99 to 1.8.99
were 12.00 to 35.00
Find .•. sizes 8 to 20 and 5 to 13!
Find.:. sheaths, bikinis, two-piecers, blousons, j
tunic-looks, boy legs, maillots!
Find . . . fabrics you love .•. Lastex
powemets, Helenca9 nylon knits, cottons!
Find ... sun bright solids, subtle and vivid
prints, stripes, dots, and morel
Find ... matching coverups and beadi
robes tool You'll find everything you could
possibly want in a swimsuit at May Co's
great annual sale! Pick two or three
and get a winning start on next seasonl
Get tile coverups too. Don't waste a minute.
Plan to be at any one of our 16 swim shops
lo reap the biggest and best savings on the
I . . most exciting splash fashions
in Southern California.
may co swim shops 72, campus shop 43-
all 16 stores including our new
montclair store
•rto!'9 wm N OflMI tt1 !:00 a.m. tor •Yl!uull ~l10!D•l'I only
..::epl San Dl•gO, Sall. Bern.nduio and our new Montcl::ur 11ore, •bld:i. will c~ ci:t 10.-00,
<
may co south coast ·plaza, 3333 bristol st., costa mesa: 546-8321, 675-341 8
shop monday through saturday, 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
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Newport Barbor Today's Closing
EDITION
YOL 6"f, NO. 187, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAG ES. NEWPORT• BEACH, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1968 TEN CENTS
Sea Slims Beach Down to Eight Feet
OAtL Y Pt LOT 51111 l'Mlt
SANOHAULERS WILL BE COMING BACK TO SHRUNKEN BEACHFRONT IN WEST NEWPORT
Beach Width in This Thra•Block Area Early Today Was About Eight fHt
Banqit C .~IJpl~ to Wed? --~
I" • )
A youthful gunman and hls tecnaged
girlfriend, •ccused of blitzing liquor
stores from . tne Harbor Aree tG
Redwood City as a "Bonnie and Clyde"
team. have disclosed a desire for
respectability that woold make \Var·
ren Beatty llU'll green:
The couple, in jail nv.·aiting prison
sentences. want to get married.
Redwood City authorities today said
Alan M. Grwnberg, 21, of Ne"'port
Beach, and Cynthia Harrison, 18, of
Charlotte, N.C., want to hitch up while
the hitchin's good.
John Wayne Says
To Delegates :
GOP Gives Darm1
f\.UAMI BEACII (UPI ) -\Veslern
movie star John \Vayne of Newport
Beach stood tall in the Republican
party Monday with an "inspiration-
al" speech that declared: "Thls is the
party that gives a damn."
Wayne drew a standing ovation. ap-
plause cheers and whistles with a
short ~ddress to the GOP National
Convention about the things 11e values
in America.
"I think this is the party that cares,"
he said. "To use a good old American
expression, I think Utis is Uie party
that gives a damn."
The crowd in the convention hall
cheered and yelled approval.
\Vayne said the nation needs a "Con-
gress that cares and will not rush out
all the decisions of the government
and the judicial branch:
"This nation is more than laws and
government," \Yayne said. "Lt's an
outlook."
Ile quoted his reply to a question a
fellow actor once asked him about
what he wanted for his daughter.
··1 told him l wanted for my daugh-
ter what most parents want for their
children," Wayne said. "I want to see
the she gets a good start, that she has
the values we knew as kids, values an
articulate few are saying are old·
fashioned."
"I want her to be as grateful as I
am ." he said. "Grateful CO'f" evt-ry day
nf my life I spend in the United States
nf America."
Young ,Republicans
To Meet Tuesday
A meetin1 of the newly nrgantzed
Harbor Area Young Republicans is
.!!Cheduled for 8 p.m. T~sday 3t the
Ncwporttr Inn.
All interested persons betwtcn the
ages of 18 and 40 are lnvtted to 11UcrnJ.
F1or further Information contact Ted
Cri!lell, temporary chainnan at 675--
4329.
·~
The two are said to feel they face a
long separatinn. They want to n1arry
now and be able to look for\\·ard to
so mething ooce they are freed .
Jlcchvood officials me reported to
have no objection. But the Ornng-c
Cou!1tY District AUorney's office is
still trying. to make up its mind.
The couple are Y.'anled here on
charges of robbery and kidnapping
stemming from two appearances they
allegedly made May 24 th.is year o.-t
Costa Mesa liqunr stores.
In one instance, the doo tapped the
Mesa Verde Liquor.St.ore, 1520 Baker
St., for about $600 in cash, police
claim.
ln !he second case later_ the saine
nigh!, ~1cy .:Uegc~ly knocked over a
Tic Toe l\1arkct at!1211 N. Grand Ave.,
Santa Ana for an unknown amount of
cash.
The Orange County authorities said
U1ey \\-'i ii try to determine whether a
marriage of the two accused b~11dits
would al{ect the outcome o( any trial
they might stand here.
Nixon Courting Holdouts
In First Ballot Win Push
J\llAl\11 BEACll (AP) - Richard J\1.
Nixon's stralegists are concenlraling
on holdout delegates in a massive ef-
fort to win a first ballot pr:!sidential
nomination Cor him in the Republican
convention opening today.
The former vice president. chalking
up gains in his effort to close in on the
needed 667 votes, was encountering
stiff resistance from Gov. Nelson A.
Rocke!cllcr of New York and Gov.
Ronald Reagan nf California.
Reagan, quoted as telling an
Alabama dclegatinn caucus "I'm in
th is to win," was by aU odds the
busiest candidate in this overstuIIcd
and overheated convention town.
Taking time oot fnr a $500 a plate
fund-raising gala, Reagan scooted
about town, meeting with southern and
llocky Mountain tlclr.t:ations in his ef·
fort s to win first ballot support away
from Nixon .
Rockefeller. who called a morning
news cnnference, registered a n
upsurge when 13 of Rhode Island's
delegate~ caucused on their arrival
and agreed to cast a first billlot vote
for the New York governor.
R o ck e f e 1 I e r was ~!sured
Massachu setts' 34 votes on the first
round because of his write-in victnry
in that state's primary. •Iowtver, Gov.
John 1\. Volpe was worldn,g hard to
swing a majority to NL"tOI on the se-
cond ballot. ii there i~ one, despite his
all but vanished h~pe.s tor the vice
rresldenUal nomlna~.
The ring of the Nixon anvil was
predominant, although the candidate
(See REPUBLICANS, Page ZI
~ ........................................... ..,, ..... IC'll&:"'
· He•·e!J s GOP Pledge
By The A1sodatcd Prtss
The plaUorm proposed to lhe Republican National Convention
calls £or lhe phasing out n! U.S. involvement in the Vietnam \Var
and negotiations to end the conflict that are not camouflaged s ur·
render. ·
Other proposals:
• Move against blight in citie" with pro~rams emphasizing
private ownership and participation 0£ industry.
• No toleration o! riot violence and an all-out fi&~t on organ·
izcd crime, but also attention to the causea of riotm, anti crime. ' .
• Umit the number ol years a young man Is •ubject to
draft; encourage the states to reduce the voting age; ¥Ip education
at all levels.
• Strive to reduce budget deficits and reduce taxes when
military needs decline.~
• Use foreign aid more selectively limit trade with Com·
) -munl st countrlM. help lsr•el with arms shfpmenlJ and avoid mak·
ing the Unit~ States a world poUceman.
I •
City Asks EmergeJWy_ Erosion Aid
By J EROME F. COLLINS
Of ,._ Glib' llll•t St1tr
Mechanical ·sandhaulers Will .soon be
clanking their way along the
beaohfront in West Newport again.
The retllnl of the haulers was
assured by the city's newest erosion
crisis.
Heavy surf and high tides over the
weekend left nnly eight feet nf beach
separating some West Newpnrt homes
from the sea early today.
The city responded by :
-Closing olf the bea'C.b between 40Ul
and 43rd streets.
-Contacting the U. S. Army Cnrps
or Engineers for emergency aid .
The emergency aid, said Assistant
City Manager James De Chaine,
means a "sand mnvement or sand-
haul" erogram. Corps officials were
conferrmg with municipal authorities
Ulis morning at the erosion scene.
De Cbaine said the clty and the
Corps agree that the replacement sand
should come from the Santa Ana River
jetty area.
Last year tons nf sand were carted
upcoast from Balboa. It bu.ilt up the
beach in West Newport to almost •a
alO-foot width. Most of that sand in re-
cent days ha.!! been swept upcoast by
the tides.
The present crisis area begins at
40th Street, where the Corps built a
(See EROSION, Page%)
·worse Than Easter Week~
Pop Festival Crowds Jam Neivport City Jail
By BRUCE BENSON
Of IM DellJ ~lilt Slatr
Newport Beach police today we re
sweeping debris out of City J ail and
dismantling traffic control barricades
after handling a n overflow weekend
crowd of Newport Pop Festival
celebrcints.
"It was worse than an Easter
\Veek," said ooe officer in r11e wake of
Additional .!ltories and photos on
Pop Festival performers, including a
perso11alitt1 spotlight feature on Tiny
Tim, appear in today's DAILY PILOT
01t Page 3,
161 arrests from fo'r~day noon to 8
o·crock this morning.
The crush of young people .!!pilled
nnto the Balboa Peninsula and Balboa
Island, jamming both areas and caus·
ing officers to set up control points in
an effnrt to limit vehicle traffic.
Entrances 1.o Balboa Island and the
'Peninsula were sealed off from time
ID time throughout Swxlay aiw-
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and evenin&. . ... ._.
City Jail became · io h e a v i 11
populated th.at at lea1t,two bu11loa4s of
arrested person.s w.ere shipped over to
Orange County J ail to make room for
a steady stream of newcomers.
The arrest tally was broken down
like t:his:
-Adults 48, with 31 for narcotics
charges, 3 fnr felDnles, and 14 for
misdemeanors.
-Juveniles 113, ~'ith 12 for narcotics
dlarges, 34 for lack oC parental con-
trol, 38 for curfew a nd 31 fnr
miscellaneous deeds.
The weekend total of 161 arrests
reflected more than a threefold in-
crease over the 50 perwns arrested
for . t he same weekend periOd seven
days ago.
Besides handling the exuberant
youths in town. Newport police also
dispatchced 41 nrficers to Costa Mesa
Sunday afternoon in answer to a plea
for reinforcements to keep order at
the festival.
The dispatch of men rcprescl)ted a
100 percent callout of available
Nev•port policemen.
Court Refuses
Injunction in NB
'Illegal Rentals'
Newport Beach city officials tod.ay
said !h('ly would seek to bring a Cnrona
de! Mar landlord to civil trial £or
alleged in£ractions of the city's rental
codes despite a setback in Superior
Court 1-'rlday, . ,
Superior Judge \VUllam. L. M:urr,ay
denied the city a tempor,try injunction
banning1 landlord Peter De BaUn frrim
renting duplex aparbnents as five-unlt
rentals.
De Baun has denied he i s
overcrowding his unit.!!, and h.:i.s
challenged the city's Interpretation or
the municipal rental laws.
Assistant Olly Attorney Tom
\VoodruU today snld that Friday'~
court denial of a temporary Injunction
didn't come as much ot a surprise.
''\Ve Intend to proceed with the ne-rt
step. which J,, to try lo get the matter
set for trial." \VoodruU saJd. "In the .
meantime, we 'll be gathcrine more
evidence."
Stoefc Marlceu
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock
market be.Id a gaJn on balance late this an.ernooo. Trading was moderate-
ly acUve. (See quotatioos, Pages lG-
11) .
Gains outnumbered losses· by more
than 200 bsues. Due lo IOltness in
&0me blue chips. tie Dow Jones In·
dmtr11.1l averq-c lhowed only a
moderate cain.
DAILY lltLCIT l"Mlt I" ,_ .. '°"""'
'PEACE.' SAYS GESTURE OF MUD-SOAKED FESTIVAL FAN
He W•• One of Doien1 Who Wallowed in Pond Made by Pumped-in Water
'Pro Troublemakers' Fail
To Stir Festival Crowd
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
0t ll!ol OIJIY. '1'-' 11111
Overwhelmliig attendance at what
turned nut to be the bigge&t music
festival ln . U. S .. history led to only
seven Costa 11esa .arrests over :the.
w~kend, despite police harassment
by" allegedly professional agitators.
"\Ve have know ledge that there
were some professionals but they
were unable to provnke any In-
cidents," Costa Mesa Police Chief
Roger Neth said today.
Paid attendance was about 72,<m,
but totals ran as hi1'h as 100.000 for
the en Ure $how:
"We'were sittb:ig, on a powderkeg."
he saJd, ''but we a'lolded situations
whieh could have led to arrests and In-
cited the crOwd." . .
One 15-year-old Tarrance boy was
taken Into custody Sunday as be danc-
ed wildly befGre the throng t: .. totally
naked -while .apparenUy unoer the
influence of a narcotic. .
''It is obvious What 11.oOk by the w:iy
1 was acting," said the boy after being
arrested by Qtflcer Norm Kutch, ex-
plaining it WU LSD.
A 13-year-old boy from Palm, Dtscrt
was also. arrested .a1 he stood it the
Newport Pop 'Fe11tlval enlrance •to
the orange Couf\t.y F.airgroUnds,
clutching a bolt.le of soda and begglnc
for water.
Police n.ld the youngster -later
booked into Orange County Juvenlle
Hen -W86 sobbing and rev~ated 'be
had taken LSD also, according to Sgt.
Thell Glas<oclt .
'nil boy was also carrying a plas:tic bag run or marijuana .
An 18·year-old Bat,nllltld )'outh
wag acre.st«! Sund•J alQir u:ndercovl!r
0£Clcer1 1ittlng elgbt 1eet from him
watched as he rolled marijuana
.>, • -
cigarettes and passed them around to
the crowd.
Russell D. Frank, 18, was booked on
suspicion ot Possession of m arijuana •
short tmie l.:itcr. after lluntington -UeatJl..P.Q!Lce Officer Henry Hitchcoc'I
and his partner followed him to a less
crowded area.
"Because or the amount nf peoplf'
and acUvily, all th~ fil!Spects wer•
allowej tc fin.ish the possible marl·
juana ci~arettes," Officer Hitchcock.
(See POLICE, Page 21
Orange Cocut
tfeotl1er
'Another one or thoso typic;1I
: Southern Cautotnla days daWn11
Tuesday with cloudy mornings
and temperatures In the mid·70's
for the Orange Coast.
IN.SIDE T ODA Y
A $5 chcrCered 1iglllsttb111
flight end.J up wttfl pilot taking
o detour to Hauanc, Cubo at th•
m.riltnce of a. a101num (Ste
Pog, 4)
M • -..
" ' • " ....
' ..
" '
·--·---·-
le DAILY PD.OT
Three· Face
Court Over
Strip Theft
'lbz'oe persoos charged wllh strlp.
ping a Corona del Mar woman, beating
bee and stealing her-furdl, antiques and
jewelry h.ave been orralgned in
~lor Court Oil ~and,_,.
cborges. •
Loula Fiallo, 46, and l1ls ·wlfe,
Rarnooa Raye, :Kl, ""' charged with
conspiriJ>g will! John Allen 1!411<er, 22,
i!I the att.ack on Mrs .. Belle Chase Lee,
35.
The llll!lOCll. all from Lakewood,
had be«!. sdteduled for trial lut May
ts. T!tei< altorney, J""1' Plunkett of
Himtingtm Beach, appealed their case
to a higher court ln an un11JOCesaful ef·
fort to have the charges diamilled.
Mr. and Mr&. Flaoo al>!Jeared In
Judge Howard C. Cameron'• court
Friday and had their trial dote .it'\ for
Oct. 23. -~ Baker who hao been held ln OrlJlte;
County Jail in lieu ol Sl25,000 ~all o!llc••
lasl November changed hil pl<IB in a
sep•ate appell'&!tee .bef«e Judge
Cam<l"Oll Jut week from 'not &!lilt)' to .
guilty o( the arnied robber)' Charge on·
ly. He is scheduled for probation bear·
inS and lentencing Aug. :zz,
!Wpea1ed eU<rU to quash tho
cha<,.. includln« motion• to djm,lla1
to suppress evidence and 'to have COl'l·
fiscated evidence returned to the
Fianos failed and Judge cameron
ordered setting of th6 JieW.trlal.date.
Plunkett had ' cOIQnded t 'b a t
Newport Beadl pollce were not
justified In confiaoaling property from
the home of the couple without a
search warrant. He aaid the 1emire
occurred some -after the llleg· ed. ~ping atlack.
Newport Beach police 1ald the
assault 1ook place latt Nov. 26 when
the vtctW admitted two men to ber
residence who claimed they had a
package to deliver.
·Al1hougb the victim was not taken
from the home, she was forcibly mov-
ed Crom one part of tbe I'Mldence to
-and -injured In the. pro-ceu, giving rile to tile lddnaplng
charge.
After the 11u1Janfa left, Mn. Lee
.,,_led while 111111 boW>d to a
netgbbor11 house where she WU freed,
She wu hoepltallr.ed for several days u a result ol the beeting, police said.
A fourtb suspect In the case Joe
Gurio, one of the two men who carried
out the actual Mtack, escaped pro-
. secuUon by tumlng -·· w!lness apl• Baker and the F!lllOI.
Yacht Explodes;
None Injured in
Newport Harbor
One yacht blew up Saturday In
Newport Harbor and bll waves gave
IW!mmen unt'Jl<Cled bnJiHI but DO
major lllj\Kies went reported for the
ettimated 140,000 weekender• flockln:r
tJ the waters and &bores Of Newport
Beach.
The boot explosion occurred at 12:43
p.m .. at a marme gasoline dock at 814
E. Bay.
A Harbor Department spokesman
said William Kendall, of La Verne.
had apparently taken gasoline aboard
.a 32-foot sloop and caught a spark
When he tried to tw'D over bis engine.
Bilge vapors bW'st into fire, eauslng
an eistdmated $4,00J. Neither Kendall,
nor his wife and three childreh, were
reporOOd hurt. The fire wa1 put out by
extingu..isbera from the dock and by
Harbor Deportment patrol boats.
On shore, sun seekers were treated
to tepid 69-degree waters and a balmy
74-degree e.ir temperature. However,
etpecially heavy waves of up to 6.7
feet pounded ashore and caused more
ttian JOO minor injuries.
DAILY PILOT
........ "-'""' ........
OJtAHG! COAST PU8llSHIHG COMP'AN'f
Rob1rt N, W1•d
Praid9nl lrllli Pullllll\fl'
J•cli II:. Cutl•T
VI« Pra~ •~ Gener11 Mli111lffr
Tlio11"' IC•t•il Edllor
Tho"''' A. M111"9hi111 IM"'9ln1 Ellllol"
J1ro111• F. Cotl1n1 P•ul Nh1•11
H~ 9HCtt .-.~ ...... 111111
c.llY EOllor Plrtctw
.......... , omc. •
21 11 W11t l1lb11 h1lov1rd
M1llln1 Mdr.u:1 r.o. to .. 1111 tti•l o,..._
C•N ,,,_: m Wfft ...., llTftt
L"""' a.aui: m ,_, •-• ~Wltllltttrl lt«tl: • ..,.. '""'
DAILY PILOT PIMi. " 0.19 s.mtl!W
. .
Mani Others Killed
U.S. Captures
Fifty Viet Cong
SAIGON (UPJ) -American troops
striking through the forbidding U Minh
"Forest of Darkness" 100 miles
southwest of Saigon toda.y captured 50
Viet Cong suspects gathering for a
gtrategy session near the village of Vi
Thanh. Nineteen other Vlet Cong were
killed.
Another force of A m e r l c a n s
operating 20 miles south of SIJgon
smashed a Viet Cong force and cap.
tl,ll'ed. guerrilla fortress threatening
that city. A spokesman said ff Viet
Cong were killed in this fight along the
Tra River.
Jn a related action seven miles
northeast Of this battle guerrillas fir.
ing B40 rockets hit a river assault craft
and wounded Brig. Gen. Franklin M.
Davis, of Waltham, Mass, com·
manding general of the 199th Llght
Infantry Brigade. Hi& wounds were
superficial. He laughed It off as "an
occupational haz:zard" and quickly
IP.turned to duty.
train 145 miles northeast of Saigon:
The terTor was possibly part of the
guerrilla action that sent the Army 9th
lniantry Divis}on troops into Action
near the Tra lUver sovtb of Saigon
and in the U Mlub Forest. lo tlie U
Y.Jnh the Americans found nature
almost as tough a foe as the guer·
rilla..
From POfJe l
EROSION ..•
250-foot long sheet steel groin· last
winter, and ends at about 43rd' street.
The grokt, noted City Marine Safety
Director Robert Reed, has succeeded
in "coofirming" 11Je beach loss up.
coast or west of 4001 Street.
MUDHDLE CREATED BY PUMPED-IN WATER FORMS UNDER FEET OF DELIGHTED FANS
They Enjoytd The Dousing Afttr falr9rounds Water System Ran Dry, Concession 'Juice' Dltappeared
The latest battle In the U Mlnh
Forest developed when intelligence
sources reported Viet Cong leaders
gathering for a meeUng. T h e
Americans struck ~d seized 1he
gathering Communists 8.long with
documents giving detaila of the
meeting.
There nevertheleu is some erosion
east of the groin. where the sea
outflanked the steel barrier on its
upland end. A deep pocket bas been
chewed into the beach there, with the
waters swirling about the entire groiD
during highest ~des.
De Obaine said the Corps i& con·
sidering negoUating an emergency
sandhaul contract "so sand can be
moved tomorrow or 1he next day -if
the beach dan waJt unUl the next day."
OAIL T PILOT ....... " 0.19 IM!tltw
From Page I
REPUBLICANS
himself refrained from predicting a
first ballot win. Nixon was to arrive
for the convention tonight.
An A.sscclated Press recheck show·
ed he had Pushed his total of publicly
camrnitted delegate votes to 572, only
95 short of tbe prize-winning total,
over the weekend. This was a gain of
2.8 over Saturay's count.
Rockefeller pulled up to 232, a gain
of 24. Reagan stood at 161, favorite
sons accounted for 231 and there re·
mained 137 uncommitted.
It was on the favorite ~on delegates
and the uncommitted that Nixon'•
men were concentrating as the con·
ttntion approached its first formal
major event tonight, the keynote
speech of Gov. Daniel J. Evans of
Washington. Evans said be will tell the
convention that the nation can't base
law and order on inequity and in·
justice.
In the midst of the heavy cam·
paignlng, the convention's platform
committee, headed by Illinois Sen.
Everett M. Dirksen, came up With a
13,()(1().word document that seemed
likely to get accepted witliout a· ripple.
The fighting rai11ed to 201 1he
nwnber of Communist troops killed in
a week of fighting in the delta mud in
regions where soldiers encounter
chest • deep swamps in the area
famous for its huge biting ants, giant
leeches, bamboo vipers and cobras. Of
the .201 slain, 28 were killed Sunday
and 19 today.
In other action, Communist ground
fire Sunday shot down a second UHl
helicopter near the coastal city of Tam
Ky, 350 miles north of Saigon. Thua far
803 U.S. choppers have been shot down
in the war. Communist fire also shot
dcwn a two engine U.S. scout plane
over the central highlands Sunday. No
Americans were killed in any of the
aircraft downings.
Over North Vietnam U.S. fighter·
bombers flew 100 missions Sunday. No
planes were lost. They hit supply
boats, roads, bridges, t r u c k s ,
warehouses and fortress bunkers.
In South Vietnam, B52
Stratofort.resses late Sunday and today
struck Communist buildup areas in the
troubled northern provinces. near
Saigon and in the delta where they
softened up the U Minhift the assault.
He said it is under9tood the cost of
the project would be borne by the
federal government, through emergen·
cy funds available to the Army Corps.
It is possible, De Chaine added, that
construction of a second goin at 43rd
Street will be included in tne upcoming
erosion work.
"The groin we have at 40tb Street, ..
he said, "has been very effective. If it
weren't there we Wf?uld have lost
several llome.s by now. It very much
helped to stabllze the beach east of
40th ."
Meanwhile, at tbe beach front ,
Marine Safety Director Reed said:
"Things are looking better now,
even though the beach is shorter."
He explained that the surf, which
r ose to 6 feet at times Saturday and
Sunday, has dlminlshed. The weekend
breakers, in combination with 6-foot
plus high tides, chewed away the
beach in great chunks.
Tonight's high tide is scheduled to
roll in at about 7:25 p.m. It will reach
6.5 feet. But if there is no surf of con-
sequence there would be no property
damage. Reed indicated.
OYPSY BOOTS TAKES TUG ON JUG OF JUICE
Show's •mcM Pullhed 'Zuzu' Health Juice Bttwetn Acfs
While the delegates were getting set
for Wednesday's convention balloting,
the evidence of the Nixon drive crop·
ped up in many places.
SouU1 Vietnamese s kesmen said
Viet Cong teiTofists t ~·an ex-
pl~on .9~ls~e a Saigon pollc~ station,
wounding ooe omc·er and f o u r
civiUans. Another terror blast killed
two civilians and wounded four on a
The last word on the subjett today
was utteri;,d by retiring General
Service .Director Jake,.Mynderse. He
looked gloomily at what remai.J.ied of
the beach. then sighed:
"Here we go again."
From Psge 1
Dirksen, who heads t.he 58·vote II·
linois delegation, helped turn on the
burners for the Nixon forces with a
public declaration that the former vice
president "Is so close to striking
distance of the nomination that off-
hand I don't believe he could be stop·
School Trustees Resume POLICE AT FESTIVAL • • •
noted in h11 reporl
Gate crashing was one of the biggest
offenses and Long Beach police,
among scores of secutit) officers
rounded up on three days' notice,
caught one narcotics offender as an il-
legal entrant.
Officer John Turley(Said the 17-year-
old San Lorenzo yoUth was chased
down on the fairgrounds, searched and
found to be carrying marijuana and a
iwitchblade knife.
Several persons were taken to Hoag
Memorial Hospital for treatment after
suffering hallucinations and other
drug overdose symptoms, police said.
One of them, a 15-year-old
San Bernardino youth, was arre&ted
when he was found to be carrying a
plastic bag of marijuana and a drug
capsule resembling LSD .
An IC.year-old Riverside youth was
arrested on suspicion of disturbing the
peace Saturday, after a melee in which
spectators splattered Costa Mesa Fire
Department Capt. David Teeter with
catsup. -
The lire captain placed Dotson un-
der arrest alter he and another youth
were seen atop a Coca·Cola truck.
throwing dispenser equipment at each
other.
"I just climbed up on the truck lo
talk to the dude and tell him to quit,"
complained Dotson, who sald someone
dumped a whole bucket of Kool -Aid on
hlm during the dlsturbance.
No real trouble resulted. from the
Pop Feilrtival mob, police said, al·
though several hundred commandeer·
ed a Tic Toe Market at Newport Bou.
levard ·and Del Mar Avenue Sunday
night. 1
"They saw our officers co~lng and
r-...UEed wt me&nt business.' said Lt.
Austin ~Jth, noUng that the crowd
diaperftd without a confrOotation at
that point ..
Slx flttl were 11t 1lmuJtaneously in
the fairground• Sunday night, au of
them in stacks of posters torn down
by the crowd, but no damage nsWted.
Lt. Smith 1aJd the crowd, huncry for
more Ulan pop mualc, stripped one
catering ·truck like a swarm of locusts
S.lturday, sendlnS Ill operator driving
away iD di1p1t.
"He-said he wam't eoming back. It
WU too uponalve,'\ nolA!d Lt. Smith.
Out.manned. Colla Mesa lawmen
fmally caJJe'.d for help at one Polnl Sun·
di)', brtn&inl ln extra men Srom m.bst
other aceoctes In the IWTOundl.cl etta
to help with the monumental crowd
cor;trol Job.
''E1tim1te1 by the promoters and by
us were exceeded about four Umes,''
Chief Neth said today, poinUng out
that the mob's mood cb1n1ed
f,
dramatically Sunday, compared to
Saturday. ·
He said there was definite harass·
ment against tlMl uniformed otflcers.
"I'm damn proud of every one of the
guys who were there," Neth said.
Several Sigalerts were put into ~f
fect both days. at peak hours, when
traUic snarled intersections for blocks
around the beleagu~ area.
"How do I get to TeWinkle Park tor
a little tennis," one motorist a1ked a
police sergeant while caught passing
the fairgrounds in a sea of vehicles.
"Try Monday," the weary sergeant
!ill.id.
Man Witl1 Rifle
In Room Nabbed
ped.'" '
The Nixon pressure was such that
Reagan felt it necessary to tell sup·
porters of the former vke president in
his California delegation that they
would be "very foolish" if they tried to
defect from his favorite son candidacy
on the first ballot.
Reagan came away from a con-
ference with Ohio Gov, James A.
Rhodes, a key man in the jockeying of
the major candidates for position ,
withollt any a.ssurances about how
long the Ohioan would or could hold
the majority of his SS.vote delegation
to his favorite so n stance.
Gov. Louie B. Nunn of Kentucky
promised to produce "sufficiently con·
vincing evidence" at a caucus later in
the day to persuade his state's 24·vote
delegation to go for Nixon In the initial
baUoting.
Discussion on Bond Vote
Newport-Mesa school trustees Tues-
day night will resume disCussioO on
when to hold another bond election.
The discussion was requested by
trustee Mrs. Marian Bergeson .who
thought it time board members again
consider the housing problem beset·
ting the school district.
Supt. William Cunningham said he is
in no position after only one month on
the job to make a recommendation.
He said he th.inks Mrs. Bergeson ask-
ed far the discussion "more than
anything else to bring me up to date
or. board thinking."
Mrf. Bergeson. however, said that
110\v Dr. Cunningham has had time to
check into the housing situation she is
looking for comment from him.
She said she expects an advisory
committee eventually will be ap·
pointed to advise the board on what to
ask for, but thinks maybe it is time for
the board to consider a new timing or
the neX't bond election.
A seven-part bond issue totaling
$20. 7 million failed last October.
Most or the bond "Propooitions
received better tha 60 · percent ap-
proval but failed to gel the needed
two-Otirds. One measure -$185,000
for rehabUitaUon work at Newport
}£arbor High School was approved by
voters.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
At GOP Parley li~~~~~~~~~~=====~O~===:s;;.~0:=·,,".'."o;:=,:.=1
MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Authorities
alerted by a tip from Nevada's
governor arrested a 29-year-old man
today \\.'ho they said lhad shipped a rl·
fle to hla room at a hotel housing two
delegations to the Republican National
Convention.
OMEGA Ag•ncv
Dade County sheriff's police said
James Chad Anderson of Kanab, Utah,
was charged with vagrancy and
volunteered to undergo psychiatric
tests.
Nevada Gov. Paul Laxalt said he
recognized Anderson and told hotel of·
ficlals of hls presence. Laxalt said
authorities were called &ft.er the man
inquired about fi&hin& tackle he was
havlllg sh.lpped here.
Lt. James VermUye, In charge of
the Dade County criminal intelligence
unit, said the FBI and Secret Service
joined police In a check that "revealed
.a .22 caUber rtne had been shipped to
AnderGon's room at the hotel." \
.Fire Out of Control
In Cleveland Forest
ESCONDIDO (UPI) -Fire was
burning out of control early today· In
Cleveland Natlooal Forest Just west of
Japatut Valley ln northeast San Diego
Count,y. •
----fnll'll 111!1 ··-......
.. _ -ev..,,.lta
"-'n"
wlffl ""-"" ....... u ••
OttWr ··-""
_ ... --
. The blue had destroyed 1.m acres Now 2 Great stol'ftS To Stn-e You
ol brush as of 6 a.m. (PDT). About HAUO• SHO,,.N• HUNTIN6TON CINTD ":"
400 men were on the flre lines and CllffU llACN • IDIN•••
planes loaded wtth fire retardant were Ult HA.DOI an. HUNTIN•TON IU.CH ,.:1 standing by but were unable to take COSTA lftlA 14"'411 "a."" IUMIT
off early btcoust o! log. the U.S. For· • _____ _::_ ____ ..,....,..,..,,,,===,..;°"";::":.:.;;"':..,::,•_:Th::::•::"":.:':.:rt.:·.T~l~ll~t~p.;::"":;;....::;:;;;::;;;;:::;::;;;:; est Service said. · · __
I
•
Costa Mesa DAILY PILOT Today's Closing
EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
VO L 61, NO. )87, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES COSTA' MESA', Cl\UFORNIA'' MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1968 TEN CENTS
~row s am
DAil Y l"ILOT l'M19 ~y 0.111 ""'"*W .
MUDHOLE CREATED BY PUMPED-IN WATER FORMS UNDER FEET OF DELIGHTED FANS
Thty Enjoyed The Dousing After F•irgrounds Weter System Ran Dry, Concession 'Juice' Disapp9'ered
Nixon Conrting Holtlouls"
Massive Effort for First Ballot Nomination
MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Richard M.
Nixon's strategists are concentrating
on holdout delegates in a massive ef·
fort to win a first ballot presidential
nomination for him in the Republican
Reagan Makes It
Finally Official:
He's a Ca1ididate
MIAMI BEACH , Fla. (AP) -The
batUe for the Republican presidential
nomination officially became a three·
way race Monday with the formaJ an·
nouncement of candidacy of Gov. Ron-
ald Reagan of California.
But dei;pie Reagan's ofricial entry,
former Vice President Richard M.
Nixon remained the odds-on favorite
to capture the no.r:nination. Reagan
and New York Gov. Nelson A. Rocke·
feller remained far behind in the com-
mitted number of delegate votes.
Reagan , of!icially only a favorite·
son candidate until Monday. made his
formal all-out bid known at a news
conference shortly after the California
delegation unanimously passed a res·
ohrti.on asking him to pursue the nomi·
nation actively, · ·
"As of this moment and in con-
fonnity and in keeping with this resolu-
tion," he said, "l am a candidate be·
fore this convention."
" i
convention opening today.
The former vjce president, chalking
up gains in his effort to close in on the
needed 667 votes, was encountering
stiff resistance from Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller o[ New YOrk and Gov.
Ronald Reagan of California.
Reagan, quoted as telling an
Alabama delegation caucus "I'm in
this to win," was by all odds the
busiest candidate in this overstuffed
and overheated convention town.
Taking lin\e out for a $500 a platr.
fund-raising gala, Reagan scooted
about town, meeting with southern and
Rocky Mountain delegations in his ef·
forts lo win first ballot support away
lrom Nixon.
Rockefeller, who called a morning
ne\\'s conference. registered a n
upsurge when 13 of Rhode Island's
delegates caucused on their arrival
and agreed to cast a first ballot vote
for tile New York governor.
R ocke feller was assured
Massachusetts' 34 votes on the first
round because of his write-in victory
in that state's primary. J-lowever, Gov.
John A. Volpe was working hard to
swing a majority to Nixon on the se·
cond ballot, if there is one, despite his
all but vanished hopes for the vice
presidential nomination.
The ring of the NUOD anvil was
predominant, all.hough the candidate
himself refrained from predicting a
first ballot win. Nixon was to arrive
for the convention tonight. 1
An Asspciated Press recheck show-
ed he had pushed his totaJ of publicly
cominitted delegate votes to 572. only
95 short or !he prize-winning total,
iL' ICW•i!'
lle1•e's GOP Pledge
lly Th" Associated PrtsR
The platform proposed to the Republican National Convention
calls for the phasing out of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam \Yer
and negotiations to end the conflict that are not camouflaged sur-~
render. ,:
Other proposa!J:
• Move against bllgbl in cities with programs empha sizing
private ownership and participation ol industry.
1 • No toleration of pot violence and an all-out fight on organ·
ized criJne, but also attention to the causes of rioting and crime.
• Limit the number of years a young man is subject to •
draft: encourage the states to reduce the voting age; help education
at all levels.
e Strive to reduce budget deficits and reduce taxes '>''hen
military needs decline.
e Use foreign aid more selectively. limit trade \\'ith Com-
munist countries. help Israel with arms sttipment.s and avoid mak·
ing the United States a world policeman.
..
'
over the weekend. This was a gain of
28 over Saturay's count.
Rockefeller pulled up to 232, a gain
of 24. Reagan stood at 161 , favorite
sons accounted for 231 and there re·
mained 137 uncommitted.
It was on the favorite son delegates
and the uncommitted that Nixon's
men ,~·ere concentraUng as the con·
<·ention approached its first (ormal
n1ajor etJcnt tonight. the ke ynote
speech of Gov. Daniel J . Evans of
\Vashinglon. Evans said he will tel\ the
convention that the nation can't base
law and order on inequity and in-
justice.
In the midst of the heavy cam·
paigning, the convention's platform
committee, headed by Illinois Sen.
Everett M. Dirks.en, came up with a
13,0CJO.word document that seemed
likely to get accepted without a ripple.
\Vhile the delegates were getting set
for \Vednesday's convention balloting,
the evidence o( U1e Nixon drive crop·
ped up in many places.
Dirksen, who beads the 58-votc 11·
linois delegation, helped turn on the
burners for the Nixo n forces with a
public declaration that the fonner vice
president "is so close to strilting
dis tance of the nomination that o((.
(See REPUBLICANS, Page Z)
Governor Ag1ieu:
Of M aryla1ul
To Back Nixon.
J\tlAJ\11 BEACll (AP) -Gov . Spiro
T. Agne\v, favorite son of the 26-vot('
l\1aryland delegation, v.·ill lormally en-
dorse Richard 1\1. Nixon as th e
R<'pubUcan presidential nominee. it
was learnOO today.
The announc1.:n1ent would be a ma-
jor blow to the nomi11ation hopes or
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, who is at-
tempting to keep the favorite son
delegations from voting on the first
ballots for Nixon, the fron t-running
candidate.
The unofficial headcount of the
Maryland delegation gives Nixon JS
votes and R,ockefeller 11.
Sources said Nixon had asked
Agnew personally to make the former
vice prtsldent's nomina!lng speech
Wednesday night. They added this will
be made public after Agnew's formal
endorsement, expected at a 6:15 p.m.
news conference.
lterbert G. Kleln. Nbi:on's pre11.,
secretary. saJd, "The man who will
nominate Mr. Nixon will be announc«I
tomorrow." He declined comment
Wh<'n asked specifically whether
Agnew had been asked to make the
Jpeecb. I
esa
Chief Hits Pro Agitators
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of Ill• D•Jlr 1'11•1 Sl11f
Overwhelming attendance at what
turned out to be the biggest music
festival in· u. S. history led to only
seven Costa Mesa arrests over the
weekend, despite pclice harassment
by allegedly prQfessional agitators.
"\Ve have knowledge that there
were some professional! but they
were unable to provoke any in·
cidents," Costa ~1esa Police Chief
Roger Nelh said today.
Paid attendance was about 72,000,
but totals ran as higb as 100,000 for
lhe entire show.
··\Ve were sitting on a powderkeg,''
he said, "but we avoided situations
which could have led to arrests and in·
cited the crowd."
One 15-year-old Torrance boy was
taken into custody Sunday as he danc-
ed wildly before the throng -totally
naked -while apparently under the
influence of a narcotic.
"It is obvious what l took by the way
I \\'as acting," said the boy after belng
arrested by Officer Norm Kutch, ex-
plaining it was LSD .
A 13-year--0ld boy from Palm Desert
was also arrested as he stood at the
Newport Pop Festival enlrance to
the Orange County Fairgrounds,
clutching a bottle of soda and begging
for watei .
Police said the youngster -later
booked into Orange County J uvenile
Hall -was sobbing and revealed he
had taken LSD also, according to Sgt.
Thell Glascock.
'PEACE,' SAYS GESTURE OF MUD-SOAKED FESTIVAL FAN
He Was One of Do1tns Who Wallowed in Pond Made by Pumped-in Water
San Bernardino Man
New City Manager Aide
A new assistant cily manager to
replace retiring Ray Jiartzter will be
announced at the Costa Mesa City
Council meeting tonight.
He is Frederick L. Sorsabal, 31. of
San Bernardino, according lo City
Manager Arthur R. McKenz.le , who
recently selected HarWer's successor.
Sorsabal will go to work Sept. 16,
after quitting his post as assistant city
administrator in San Bernardino.
"'here he joined the city st.a.ff last
year. lie held the sa1ne job in
Anaheim for five years.
The new cily aide has a bachelor of
arts degree from Califor.nia State
College, Long Beach. and a master's
d e g r e e from USC In public ad·
mirustration.
Hartzler w~ll leave city employment
Sept.. 15, after retiring once, only to re·
join the staff for a brief time to allow
McKenzie to CQllCentrate on several
major programs now completed.
McKenzie is expected to make the
announcement at the close oC the 7:30
o'clock City Council meeting, which
is expected to be fairly r o u t l n e
otherwls".
The City Cou n<'ll i& also expccttd to
sign an agreement for the $110.000
Jiali; Scctch Jo'our!!ome Invitational
golt tournan\t!:nl Oct. 24 to 27 at the
NEW YORK !AP) -The stock
market held a gain on bd\ance late
WJ afternoon. Trading was moderate·
Jy aollve. IS.. quotatloos, Pa11ei· 10-
11)
'"
public Cosla Mesa Goll and Country
Club.
Councilmen meeting last Monday for
a special study session at which no ac·
tion could be taken indicated they
would be interested in contracting for
the tournament ovtr a five-year
period.
The tourney will bring top names in
professional golf to Costa J\.1esa in
hopes of a cut fro m the big purse,
bringing much with them to spend in
the city as well .
Police Clricf's
Moth er Loses
$99 lo Thief
The elderly mother of Costa Mesa
Police €1\lel Roger Neth lost 199 In
cash alld a11sorted personal belongings
to a 1purse snatcher out.s.lde a shopping
cent~r market Saturday.
A witness to the lncldent lnvolving1
Mn. Selma R. Neth, '15. at 241 E. 17th
St .• not far from her home, chased the
tillers getaway car but lost him.
Ofliccr David ~laye1 said the robber
ran to an older blue car eontalnlng at
least four other youths, possibly
visitors to . the huge Newport Pop
Ftstlval wtdcb drew 100,000 persom to
town,
Witne11cs -one of whom had noUc·
ed the thief 11 1 suspkiou, cha.cacter
he!or< Mrs. Notll w .. robbed -.. 1d
he was barefoot and hia trouser lca:s were lilt.
The boy was also carrying a plasUc
bag full of marijuana.
An 18-year-old Bakersfield youth
was arrested. Sunday alter undercover
officers sitting eight feet from him
watched as he rolled marijuana
cigarettes and passed them around to
the crowtl. -
Russell D. Frank. 18. was booked on
suspicion o( possession of n1arijuana a
short lime lotcr, after }lunUngton
Beach police officer }Jenry Hitchcock
and his partner followed him to a less
crowded area.
"Because of the amount of people
and activity, all the suspects were
allowed. le llni$b the possible mari·
juana cigarettes," Oflicer Hitchcock
(See POLICE, Page Z)
Worse Than
Easter Week
Say Police
By BRUCE BENSON
01 1111 D•ll'I' PllM Siii!
Newport Beach police today were
sweeping debris out of City Jail and
dismantling triaffic cootrot barricades
after handling an overflow weekend
crowd of Newport Pop Festival
celebrants.
"\l was worse than an Easter
\V,eek." said ont officer in the wake of
Adclitio1111l stories n11d photos on
Pop Fes tJvat performers, illcluding a
ptrsonality ipoUight /80turf! on Tfng
Tim. apptar in today'! DAILY PILOT
on Page 3.
161 am?Sts from Friday noon to 8
o'clock this morning.
The crush of Young people spilled
onto the Balboa Penimula and Balboa
Island, jamming both areas and caus-
ing officers to set up control points in
an effort to limit vehicle traffic.
Entrances to Balboa Island and the
Peninsula were sealed off from time .,
to time throughout Sunday afternoon
and evening.
City J ail bccan1e so he av i 1 y
p;>;:iulatccl t:i at at IC>ast l\1·0 busloads of
arrested persons \Vere shipped over to
Orange County Jail to make room lo r
a steady stream of newcomers.
The arrest tally was broken down
like this:
-Adults 48, with 31 for nar co tics
charges, 3 for fe lonies, and 14 f()r
miSdemeanors.
-Juveniles 113, witJJ 12 for narcotics
charges, 34 fo r lack of parent.al con·
trol, 38 for cul'fe\v .and 31 for
(See ARRESTS, Page Z)
Four Teen s A1·resled
In LA l\fau's l\'lurder
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Four I&-
year-old boys are suspects in the
fat.al shooting of William Hall, XI,
found shot in the neck with a .22·
caliber pistol.
The four youths wer e booked Sunday
on suspicion of murder after they
were arrested in Hall's car. Police
said they allegedly stole the vehicle
following the shOOting.
Ora11:e £~''
Weall1er
1\nother one of those typical
Southern California days dawns
Tuesday wlth cloudy mornings
and temperatures in the mid·70's
for the Orange Coast.
INSIDE TODAY
A $5 chorttrtd .tighUtt!lttg
flight r.nds up wiHi pilot taking
a dt!:tour !o llawna, Cuba at the
h11Ute11oe of a gunnt.on (Stt
Page 41
IHl)llt M
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----~------
% DAILY PILOT
~aonaie atul Ctfide'.
• ID Jail Couple
De·sire to Marry
A. youllllal flWIDlan and his teenag<d
slrlllioftd, 1«uaed cl blitzing tiquor
stores from the ltarbor Area to
Redwood City u. "Boonie and Cl)'d<"
t.n, have disclosed a deaire for
~ty !bat would make War-
..., ~turn ., .. n:
Tbe eouple, In jail awafflng prison
-· want to get marrted. Redwood City authorities 1oday aal<t
Alan M. Greenberg, 21, of Newport
Beach1 and Cynthia Harrison, 18, of
Charlotte, N.C., want to bitch up whi!('
the hitchin's good.
The two are said to feel they face t lone aep11ation . 'M!:ey want to, marry
now 1ind be able to look forward tu
som.ttllng OOci! they are freed.
Redwood officials are reported to
have no object,iOll. But the Or1;11ge
County Dlotricl A.ltonley'1 olft<e Is
sUll trying to make up Ill mind .
The couple are wanted hen oo
charges of rol>bery and lddnapptng
stmuning from two appearances they
allegedly mado May 24 t!lis year &!
Costa Mesa liquor stares.
In one ~. the duo tapped the
Mesa Ven!• Llqull< store, 1520 Ba,ker
St., for about '600 In cash, police
claim.
In the second case lat.er the same
night, they tllegedly knocked over a
Tic Toe Market at 1211 N. Grand Ave ..
Santa Ana for an unknown amount of
cash.
The Orange County authorities sald
they will try to determine whether a
marriage ot the 'two accused bandits
would affect the· outcome of any trial
th.,-might stand hen.
Nixon Sf!,ys . He'll Pick
His Own Choice for Veep
From Wire Strvlces
MIAMI l!EA.CH (AP) -Richard M.
Nixon, if ruccea!ful in 'rus drJve fOJI the
Republican pruldential nomination,
does not intend to leave the choice Of
hit running mite io 1lle GOP 'natlonall
conveutlon, bl! chief spokesman 1aid
today.
Nixon "will ask Uie convei.J.tlon 'to
nominate his choice" for vice presi-
dent. Herbert G. lOein , the candidatt's
pres1 secretary, said.
Hanoi Claims
Parley Must
Include Cong
PARJS (UPI) -North Vietnam said
today if the United States wanta to end
tbe Vietnam War ~acefully it must
"di1CU11 the ilaues 'with the Nalional
Liberation Front (NLF), the Viet
Cool'• pollUcal arm.
NJUY8n Thanh Le, spokesman for
ilbie No:rtfl VJetunttlft delegation to
tbe Paris ta1kl oa VJeCnam, spoke at a
news conference.
It wu the fir•t time tile North Vlet-
nameH bad rpecified 11lat 1lle United
States woald hove to recogni&e lhe
taltl with the NLF 11 a condltlon of
ending the war PMCefully.
''To reeolve tbe problem of South
Vietnam, the U n I t e d states must
recogniie the NLF and d.L!cuas tbe
Issues with them," Le said.
Diplomatic sow-ce• said the North
Vietnamese were bound to respond
with scorn to the Republican party's
platform pl&nk urging ' ' d e •
Amertcaniu.tioo ol the Vietnam War ."
'Ibe 1ources 1aid the Vietnamese
feel the premise is another example of
what Hanoi consid.-s "meaningless
r-c" of u. s. l"'licy. The Republicans suggestion that the
United States concentrate o n
"strenctbening of loct1l forces (in
South Vietnam )" was bound to be in·
terpreted by Hanoi as jun .-itr
avowal of support ftlr the regime of
President t<Jguyen van Thieu.
North Vietnam tnsi1ta that the
present Saigon government does not
represent the majority of tbe people of
SOu!b Vietnam.
Authoritative N o r t h Vietnamese
sources have often &aid they saw no
hope in the U. S. political ~onventlons
for progress in the Paris talks.
DAllV PILOT
OltANGE COAST PUILISHING CO#nAN't
R•btort N. w •• d
Pl'fthl9nl 111d PubUtlltl"
J1tk A. Curlt'f
Vlu: Pr~l*M i'ftCI Gtnwll N\llltter
Th•rn•1 k•1'l'il ··~ Tho11111 A. Mur,hi"•
H.1~gJftl' ECll"OI'
P1YI Ni11111 AllYlrll1l11• Dlrttt«
C•.,_ NltMI Offke
JJO W•1t 111 Sir11I
M1ili119 Addrtn: P.O. lol I S~C 9261&
°""" OHl-N,....,,., "'-"": 1111 \Vnt .. ltlN l.Dulh'trd
LHll.lllt DnC'.111 nz ttor.11 AYll'IUt H1,111lltlftOlil IMdo: )Of Siii $1t1.i
Kle\p repo,rted Nixon's seleetion will
be dlSf:lostd after t,he ~onvention picks
a nominee Wednesday night. Nixon
· flies here today from New York to
take personal charge of his campaign
effort.
More than half a dozen names are
being considered by Nixon, aides said.
Asked whether Nixon's chief rival for
the nomination, Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller, was among them, Klein
1atd, "We're not ruling anyone out."
Nixon and h11 wife, Pat, were due to
land here at 10:15 p.m. PDT on a
fii&bt from New York, thereby
toucbinc off carefully c o n tr o 11 e d
hyaterla at 1lle Miami lnternaUonal
Airport with still anottier mammoth
welcome waiting at their headquarters
hole~ lhe Hilton Plua, about 11::.J
p.m.
The hullabaloo for Nixon was long
overdue in the opinion of many Of his
supporters who failed to ~t the
subtle mesu.ge of calm confidence
from his spendlnc most of last week
in 1ecluslon &t Montauk, N. Y.
Rockefeller and Ronald Reagan had
Miami · Beach pretty much t o
themaelves last week as t b e I r
adherent• atagtd 1bows and •pee·
tac!•• wilh UWe cqmpe~~"' lzvql lhe
Nixon camp. ·
"I lhlnk there lo a very 1oocl cban<e
that we can win it tbe !lrtt ballot, but
I'm not prodlcllng !~" Nb:on told Cl!S
tn!>orvlewer Miko Wailace at Moolauk
Suud1y. "I'm not tattn1 anytbln1 for ~.-By thls be meant cantAnued pre1s1D'e
oo tbe major favortt. son candidates
to releue their delegates from flrat.
ballot commitment. u Gov. Dewey F.
Bartlett of Oklahoma did Sunday. Gov.
Spiro Agnew of Mayrland Wu ti·
pected to tal<e a similar atep loni!lbt.
John Wayne Says
To Delegates:
GOP Gives Damn
MIAMf BEACH (UPI) -Western
movie star John Wayne of Newport
Beach stood tall 1n 'the Republican
party Monday with an "inspiration·
al" speech that declared: ''This is the
party that gives a damn."
Wayne drew a standing ovation, ap-
plau&e, cheers and whistles with a
short address to the GOP National
Convention about the things he values
in America.
''I think this is the party that cares,"
he said. ''To use a good old American
expression, I think this is the pany
that gives a damn.''
The crowd in the convention hall
cheered and yelled approval.
\Vayne said the nation needs a "Con·
gress that cares and will not rush 'but
all the decisions of the government
and the judicial branch.
"This nation Is more than Jawa and
government," Wayne s&ld. "It's an
outlook."
J~e quoted his reply to a question a
fellow actor once asked him about
what he wanted !or his daughter.
"I told him I wanted for my daugh·
ter what most parents want for thf!lr
children," Wayne said. •·r want to see
the she gets a good start. that she has
the values we knew as kids . vaJues an
articulate few are saying are old·
fashioned. '1
"l W&Dt be.r to be 81 grateful u I
am," ht said. "Grateful for every day
cl my Ille I ~ In the United States ol Amtnca.' ·
Young Republicans
To Meet Tuesday
A meeting of the newly organized
ltarbor Area Young RepubUcan1 ls
scbeduled for 8 p.m . Tue&day at t.be
Newporttr Inn.
All interested persons between the
agu of 18 &ad 40 are Invited to attend.
For turlber Information contact Ted
Cl'hell, tamporary cblinnu at e7s. 4!21.
(
DAILY Pll.OT Phllte In Diii ..,,._.,.
GYPSY BOOTS TAKES TUG ON JUG OF JUICE
Show'• EmcH Pulhod 'Iu1u' H11lth Julc1 BllwHn Acts
Fro111 Page l
POLICE AT FESTIVAL • • •
noted in his report.
Gate crash.Jng was one of the biggest
offenses and Long Beach. police,
among 11oores of security officers
roW'lded up on three days' notice.
caught one narcotics offender as an ii·
'legal entrant..
Officer John Turley &aid the 17-year-
old San Lorenzo youth was chased
down on the fairgrounds , searched and
found to be carrying marijuana and a
switchblade knUe.
Several persons were taken to Hoag
Memorial Hospital !or treatment alter
suffering hallucinations and other
drug overdose symptoms, police said.
One of them, a 15·year·old
San Bernardino youth, was arrested
when he was found to be carrying a
plasUc bag of marijuana and a drug
capsule resembling Ur>.
An 18-year.old Rlver•ide youtJi was
arrested on 1usplclon Of disturbing the
peace Saturday, after a melee In which
1pectator1 1plattered Coata Mesa Fire
Department Capt. David Teeter with
cat&up.
Tbe fire captain plaei!d Dotson uu-
der arrest after be and another youth.I
were seen atop a Coca-Cola truck.
throwing dJspenser equipment at each
other.
· "! just climbed up on lhe truck to
talk to 1lle dado and tell him to quit,"
complained Dot.on, who said 10meone
dumped a whole buck'et o! Kool-AJd on
hfm' durtn1 the cll.rturbance.
f't'Olll P .. e I
REPUBLICANS
hind I don't believe lie could be slop·
ped."
The Nlxon pressure wa1 such that
Reagan telt It necessary to tell sup·
porters of the former vice president in
hls California delegation that they
would be "very foolish" if they tried to
detect from h1I favorite son candidacy
on the first ballot.
Reagan came away from a con·
fereq_ce -with Ohio Gov. James A.
Rhodes, a key m1111 in the jockeying of
the major candidates for position,
without any assurances about how
long the Oh.loan would or could hold
the majority of his SB-vote delega'tJo n
to his favorite son stance.
Gov. Louie B. Nunn or Ktntucky
promised to produce "sufficiently con·
vincing evidence" at a caucus later in
the~ to persuade his state's 24-vote
delegation to go !or Nixon in the initial
balloting.
Red Cross Swim
Oasses Slated
To Start Tuesday
The fourth session of Costa Mesa
Recreation Department sponsored
Red Crosss v:imming instruction will
begin Tuesday at Costa Mesa and
Estancia HJgh Schools.
According to Tom Duttine, aquatic
director for the Cost.a Mesa Recrea·
Uon Depertment and chairman of the
Orange County Red Oros5 Water Safe·
ty program, an estimated 5.000
youngsters will receive water training
th.ls sum mer.
Duttlne said the Costa Mesa turn out
has been among the largest in lhe
county. Over 100.000 are currtntly
undergoing water safety programs.
As t. result of the Red Cross pr o·
gram, DutUne said, the drowning rate
In the county, which was above tt.e na-
Uonal rate 1lx years ago has dropped
to 2.2 persons per 100,00l population.
The naUonal IV'Ell'Agt ls 3.2.
No l'eal trouble resulted from the
Pop FesUval mob, police &aid, al·
though several hundred commandeer·
ed a Tic Toe Market at Newport Bou·
levard and Del Mar Avenue Sunday
night.
"They &aw our officer& c<1min~ and
realized we meant b·.isine&s," ga.id Lt.
Austin Smith, noting that the crowd
dispersed without a con!rontation at
that point.
Six fltts were set simultaneously in
~e fairgrounds Sunday night, all of
them in stacks of posters torn down
by the crowd, but no damage .resulted.
Lt. Smith said the ttowd, hungry for
more than pop music, stripped one
catering truck like a swarm oC locusts
Satm'day, sending its operator driving
away in disgust.
"He said he wasn't coming back. It
was too expensive," noted Lt. Smith.
Outmanned Costa Mesa lawmen
finally called !or help at one point Sun-
day, bringing in extra ip.en from most
other agencies in the surrounding area
to help with the monumental crowd
co!itrol job.
"Estimates by the promoters and by
us were exceeded about four times."
Chief Neth &aid today, pointing out
that the mob's mood ch an g e d
dramatically Sunday, compared to
Saturday.
11e said there was definite harass·
ment against the uniformed officers.
"I'm damn proud of every one of the
guys who were there," Neth said.
Several Sigalerts were put into ef.
feet both days, at peak hours , when
traffic snarled intersections for blocks
·around the beleaguered area.
"How do I get to TeWinkle Park !or
a little tennis," one motorist asked a
Pblice ·sergeant while caught passing
the fairgrounds in a sea of vehicles.
"Try Monday," the weary sergeant
said.
'From Page l
ARRESTS. • •
nUscellanetus deeds.
The weekend total of 161 arrests
reflected more than a threefold in-
crease over the 50 persons arrested
for the same weekend periOd seven
days ago.
Besides handling the exuberant
youths in town , Newport police also
dispatchced 41 officers to Costa Mesa
SUoday afternoon in answer to a plea ,
fOr reinforcements to keep order at
the festival.
Tbe dispatch oC men representCd a
100 percent callout of available
Newport policemen.
RINGS
SIZED, "'°"'
Mlsslnt Dllfllllldl Rtpllc!d, 'fr1111
Jtlot•fl Otlaers Killed
U .So Captures
Fifty Viet Cong
SAIGON (UPI) -American troops
strlldng through lhe forbidding U Minh
"Forest of Darkness" 100 miles
, southwest of Saigon today-captured 50
Viet Cong sllSpecls aa_tbering for a
strategy session near the village of Vi
Thanh. Nineteen other V.let Cong werl
killed.
Another force Qf Americans
. operatiilg 20 miles south of Saigon
&mashed a Viet Cong force and cap.
tured guerrilla fortress threatening
th.at city. A spokesman said 44 Viet
Cong were killed in this fight along the
'fra ruver.
In a related action seven miles
northeast of this battle gqerrUlas fir·
ing B40 rockets hit a river assault craft
and wounded Brig. Gen. Franklin M.
Davis, of Waltham, Mass, com·
mandlng general of the 199th Light
Infantry Brigade. Hia wounds were
6uperficial. He laughed it oU as "an
occupational bazzard." and quickly
,..turned to duty. "
The latest battle in the U Minh
Forest developed when intelligence
sources reported Viet Cong leaders
gathering for a meeting. T h e
Americans struck and seized the
gathering Communists along wtth
documents giving details ol the
meeting.
The fighting raised to 201 the
number of Communi&t troops; Jdlled in
a week of fighting in the delta mud in
regions where &oldiers encounter
chest • deep swamps in the area
famous for its huge biting ants, giant
leeches, bamboo vipers and cobras. Of
the 201 slain, 28 were killed Swlday
and 19 today.
In other action, CommuniSt ground
fire Sunday &hot down a second UHl hell~opter near~ ~011t.Al city of TfJU
Ky, 350 miles nOrth of Saigon. Thus far
803 U.S. choppers have been shot down
in the war. communist 'Dre also shot
dpwn a two engi.l)e U.S. scout plane
over the ce:Dtral hJghlands Sunday. No
Americans were killed in any of the
aircraft downings .
Over North Vietnam U.S. fighter·
bombers flew 100 missions Sunday. No
planes were lost. They hit supply
boats, roads, bridges, trucks ,
warehouses and fortress bunkers.
In South Vietnam, BS2
Stratofortresses late Sunday and today
struck Communist buildup areu in the
troubled northern. provinces, near
Saigon and in the delta where they
softened up the U Minh for the asaaulL
South Vietnamese &pokesmen said
Viet Cong terrorists set off an ex.
ploisi.on outside a Saigon police station,
wounding one oUicer and f o u r
civilians. Another terror blast killed
two civilians and wounded four on a
train 145 miles northeast Of Saigon.
The terror was possibly pm ol. the
guerrilla action that sent the Army 9th
Infantry Division troops into Action
near the Tra River south of Saigon
and In the U Minh Forest. 1n the U
Minh the Americans found nature
almost as tough a foe as the guer·
rillas.
School Trustees Resume
Discussion on Bond Vote
Newport·Me6& school trustees Tues-
day night will resume discussion on
when to hold another bond election.
The discussion was requested by
trustee Mrs. Marian Bergeson who
thought it time board members again
consider the housing problem beset·
ting the· school district.
Supt. \Villiam Cunningham said he is
in no position after only one month on
the job to make a recommendation.
Riverside Girl
I
Killed in Crash
At Aliso Beach
A truck-sports car crash at the en·
trance to AlJllO Beach in South Laguna
resulted in the death Saturday of a 17·
year-old Riverside girl.
Stephanie Jahnke died at South
Coast Community Hospital, South
1968 County Traffic 1967
128 Death Toll 113
Laguna, fciur hours alter the accident
CalUornia lllghway Patrol officers
said Miss Jahnke e~denUy was the
driver of the car. Her companion.
Florian C. Pulver ll, 28, also of
Riverside remains in the hospital iD
criUcal condition.
Officers said Miss Jahnke drove
from the beach parking lot onto busy
Coast Highway and into the path 0£
northbound pick-up truck.
J. Nornian Rankin, 19, of 1264
Starlight Drive, Laguna Beach, driver
of the truck, swerved into the south·
bound lane in an effort to avold the
sportscar but struck the small auto
broadside. officers said.
He said he thinks Mrs. Bergeson ask·
ed !or the discussion "more than
anything else to bring me up to date
or. board thinking."
Mrs. Bergeson, however, said that
now Dr. CuMingham has had time to
check into the housing situation she is
looking !or comment from him.
She &aid she expects an advisory
committee eventually will be ap·
pointed to advise the board on what to
ask for , but thinks maybe it is time for
the board to consider a new timing of
the next bond election. ,
A seven-part bond issue totaling
$20. 7 million failed I aft October:
Most of ttie bond proi>Qsltions
received better lha 60 perce'nt ap·
proval but failed to get the needed
two-thirds. One measure -$185,000
for rehabilitation work at Newport
Harbor High School was approved by
voters.
Isabelle Boudreau
Succumbs at 91;
Rites Wednesday
Services for Isabelle Boudreau, a
reside nt of Costa Mesa since 1~1, will
be held 10 a.m. Wednesday at Bell
Droadway Mortuary Cha~l.
Mrs. Boudreau di~ fr1day ~ta· con·
valescent home aft.er an illness of ia
year. She was 91.
Born In Canada, she had made the
Snug Harbor Trailer Park her borne
for the past 15 years.
She is survived by a. daughter Mrs.
llazel Batker of Chicago, JU.
Interment will be at Harbor Re11t
Memorial Park.
0
OMEGA
Your ~QC
Salt1 & Servi«
Aaencv
-~ "-lrom tltf ··-.... -
........ _ ....
Reglstration for the ruth session wtll
be takA!a Mondi)', Aug. 19 from 9 a.m.
to noon at either pool.
$5!!~£
Chrooorrapli • Stlf. whtden 1UfhU1 lll&her!
Jttoiry Dotltnlnt
A !pocl1~rl
•lltomlllcs
"""' 111.1. --.. --°"""' .. ..,,.,... _ ... --F'urther Information on the program
or on a rtctnUy rt.leased text book <>n
water s:atety may be obtained by call· Ing~~.
~\~\ll/Q. FAST OIPINDAILI liltVICE
~
\Voolworth Head Dies
BROOKFIELD, Conn. tAP) -Al· r.rtd L. Cornwell, fonnt.r prealdent
and chairman of the board of lhe F.
W. Wool...nh Co., clled Sunday al his
home after a 1001 tuoes.. Be wu M.
•
I ,
Now 2 Great Stores To Serve You
HAllOl SHorrtN• HUNTINGTON Cllftll
CINTll IU.CH • IDIH•D
lJtl HAllOI M.ft. HU"'1N•TOM ~CH
COSTA MDA 141-Mll ltl-HI\
Open -· Thun.. Fri. Tiii 9 p.m.
t '
TtlWS
TO •n
'l'OUI
'""" )
(
f
/
I
BY
WILLIAM
REED
••••••••
In the Wind
'Look for one of the major ob-
jections against a proposed $22.9
million bond Usue proposition for
the Huntington Beach Union High
School District to be the proposed
county alq>Ort.
Tonight school trustees will be
presented. with the results of the in·
vestigation by· the C it i z e n s
Advisory Commlttee into the
district's future building needs.
8ome committeemen are of the opi·
nion the situation has not received
enough study. ·
Jt appears· no one is disputing the
need for two additional high
1chools in the next flve years. In
dispute, however, is where the
1chools should be located. * be" • One of the sites mg m·
vestigated is a 50-acre parcel just
outside the city limits in the old
Bolsa Chica Gun Club holdings.
Proposed for the area is a county
regional airport requiring about
1,400 acres fo r runways and sup-
porting buildings. Plans call !or
building the runways ~t to sea.
Since there is a total of about
t ,900 acres in the holdings there
will be little land left for the homes
the high school is supposed to
serve.
* On the other nand, Dr. Max
Forney, district superintendent,
says there is no certainty the
airport will be built on the Balsa
Chica property. ·
His staff says that studies show a
need for a high school in the area.
Another area of contention involves
Seal Beach Where the question of
need for a future high school is
complicated by a lack of suitable
sites.
All of these questions and many
more are likely to be debat ed hotly
if the trustees caJI for a bond issue
proposition to be on the Nov. 5
general election ballot as they are
expected to do tonight.
Speech Center
.To Open Soon
Appointments are being taken now
for the Speech Center which opens
next month at 301 Walnut St., Hunting.
ton Beach.
The Huntington Beach Assistance
League has hired a qualified speech
specialist who will be available from.
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. each Wednuday.
Fees for the service will be based on
ability to pay, accocdiJJg to Assistance
League leaders.
Witness to Fatal
Valley Crash Sought
Fountain Valley police are asking
any wiblesses to the fatal accident
Sunday on Bushard Street just north
Of Toucan Avenue about 8:15 p.m. to
contact Officer Clark Corvin, Fountain
Valley Police, 962-4444.
Tammy carter, 9, wa.s killed when
her bicycle collided wttb. a n
.B\ltomobile driven by Clark Rutledge,
21, 18524 Hawthorn St., Fountain
Valley.
•
HELPING HAND -Karen Dorst, 14, (•eated) and Marci Martin, 15,
both students at Huntington Beach High School, donate their time to
help the Huntington Beach Community Center open by September.
Students Pitch In, Aid
City's Community Center
By SANDI MAJOR
Of tM DlllJ ,.!let Sllff
A little time and effort donated by
HWltington Beach high school students
during their vacations is helping the
aeeood hall of the Huntington Beach
COm..munity Center open by Sep·
tember.
That, plus donations of materials
and time by city businessmen and
craftsmen are being welcomed by
Community Chest directors.
Stan Dorst, a director of the Hun·
tington Beach Communl.ty Chest , said
seveial high school students have been
painting and cleaning up the 50-year·
old building at Main and Garfield this
summer.
They are working on the back M.lf of
the Community Center builfilng,
known as the Holly Sugar Co. ofiice in
early city history, tTying to convert it
into Community Chest offices and a
counseling service area.
FRONT HALF LEASED
The front half of the building is now
leased from the Huntington Beach Co.,
which owns it, by the rruntington
Beach Ministerial Assn. It is open on
weekends as a teen center, with
a kitchen, pool table, refreshments,
dancing area, TV, reading room and
meeting areas.
The Community Chest has invited
four counseling organizations to share
its part or the building. So far, the
four-Family Service, Catholic and
Protestant Welfare Services and the
Salvation Army-have not answered,
Lions Chili to Meet
Westminster progressive Lions Club
will hear GBTy P . West, public rlea·
tions representative of G e n e r a 1
Telephone Co., at 7 o'clock tonight at
the Kings Table restaurant,
West.minster. Topic lor the meeting is
"Objective Outer Space."
Dorst said.
Dorst said he hopes the agency can
move in before school starts. "So
many people a:.re making it possible
now," he: added.
The District Council of Carpenters
Craftsmen built partitions in their
spare time making: what was one large
room into seven offices and counseling
areas. Members of the union also in~
stalled a lowered ceiling, Dorst said.
Kaiser Gypsum dooated. the wall
board for the ceiling and partitions.
WINDOWS DONATED
Jim De Guelle gave the teen center
window glass panes to replace those
broken wtLen tile building was vacant,
and he is to do the same thJng for the
Community Chest office, Dorst said.
Montgomery Ward is providing
carpeting for the agency offices at
cost, and Tovatt's Paints is offering
the paint at wholesale price.
The Electrical Workers Union 441
has put new wiring throughout the
back half of the building, and.as soon
as the high school students finish pain·
ting this week, electrical workers are
to install light fixtw-es, the director
went on.
The students who have been paint·
ting and cle.aning off an on got an ad·
ditional boost .Wednesday from out·o!·
town youth.
Four high school seniors from San
Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento and
Los Angeles spent the day painting at
the center. They form a Presbyterian
Church "caravan" Uiat is going from
town to town this summer helping out
in chlU'ch or community projects.
Valley to Test
Math Textbook
Only Two Valley Schools
To Be Overcrowded in '69
Fountain Valley will be one of three
school districts in Orange County
testing a new math textbook next year
that may be adopted by the state in
1969.
Dr. Dale Coogan, deputy superin·
tendent in FOUDtain Valley, said the
new ~ks, which wlll be provided free
of charge to the district, w111 be used
exclusively in one. school, which will
be selected later this summer.
Laguna Beach Unllied an& Fullerton
school cfutricts are also •*1menting
with the new. texts ~ may be
adopted for state-Wide use. Fount'.ain Valley school trustffs
leanied this week that their 11 1chools
will house 8,820 students by February
1968, or 210 lewer pupils tb111 the
school.I were built to hoicL
Only two ochoo!J will actually be
owrcrowded, ac«rrding to projecUoru
released by district lldmlnlstrators.
Fountain Valley School is to have
907 students .in its rooms built to house
885. Harper School Is to take in 88!1
student!, 10 more than itl useable
capacity.
Estimated enrollments for the
distz'ict's other schooh for next spring,
with the capacity of each in paren·
theses, are:
-Attvalos, 7~ (783),
-Bushard, 773 (783),
-Fulton, 721 (747),
-Lamb, 793 (813).
-McDowell. 843 (882),
-Newland, 744 (783),
-Nleb1"s, 850 (879),
-Tamtlra, 812 (816).
-Wardlow, 7~ 1780).
Huntington Di•trict
Standing Roomj <;hiJY
The owner of a sports caf reported a
$500 theft Thursday to Ne.,fport Beach
police which be'lsn't going 'to take sit-
ting down. Robert Reaves complained
that someone slipped into his unlocked
auto at 621!.f.i Begonia A,. and took
both seats.
Rihal: Reopen Contracts
Trustee J.,eph Rlbol Of tho Hun·
tington Beach Union 111&1> School
District hu •skedr:f:dl& of con-tract. for 1b<! top ...,,, 1r-. ol the
district.
Ilia request will be colllldered dur·
Ing the 7:30 o'clock m,.tlng tonight at
district hudquarters, 1902 17th SL In
a lett.r dated July 31, Dr. Rlba li asked
that t.be Jtem ''nulllficatlon of new
four.year admi:nlstrlttve contracts"
be on the agenda.
"I consider the lour·YNI' cootracts
approved by tho board during my
abseoce1 to be prematW'a and not in
~
lhe best inlerestl ol the district.~
TrUlt.ees, with Dr. RJbal absent. ap-
proved· contracts and raises July 23,
during a meeting at Fountain Valley
HJgh School
Dr. Max Forney, district. superin-
tendent, iJ slated to mtlke $25,600 per
year. Assistant superintendent for in·
struotional services Scott Flanagan is
to receite '22.400, and Dr. Ethan ·
Fullm«, assistant superintendent for
business services, 121,700.
, The officials' S'aiarles are besed on
mu1tlp)es of maximum wages for a
c:WtrlCt teach&. The superintendent .,
receives twice the top teacher'1
I aa.Jary. Flanagan's salary ls 1.75 times
the top "'8ge and Dr. Fullmer is paid
at t.7 times the top wage.
Tfie new cootr.acts go intc effect Ju.
Jy 1, 1969, The. superintendents are
now in tbe t;J.nal year of fOQl'·yeer con·
tracts. Or. Forney said tlie contract.
must be approved by truitees at least
six months before they exOire.
Dr. Rlbal baa argued In il>t past that
admlnlatratora. should be j>aJd a rite
only 25 percerit more thin teachers
receive, With the suggestion h~ 1.. • ., .. J
raiJin& teacher salaries much hiCher.
Monday, August !, 1968 DAil Y PILOT :t occ Issue Debated
Overcrowding at Two Campuses _Cited as Major Reason;
-The necessity of , a $7 .25 million
school bond Issue and a lOY.r:-cent tax
override conversion for the Orange
Co.a.st Junior College District \\'as
ouUined Thursday before members of
the past P..teJldent1 committee of the
Costa' Mesa Cba1pber of Commerce
and the study and research committee
of lhe Newport Harbor Chamber of
Commerce.
was bUUt' to house I.500 students.· It
will have 31000. In 10 years we wnl
have twlce as many students as we
have today and unless we build •d·
ditional facilities there won 't be
enough rwm."
The bond issue, wbi~h will come
before the voters in a special election
Sept. 17, calls for fi'.25 mlWon from
dlstrlcl taxpayers which will. be
matched by state aud federal funds.
Unless the bond is passed, the mat·
ching funds camiot be obtained.
and ia useless without the passage of
the bond issues. The override co~·
version, over a four year ~Jod would
permit approldlnately ISQ0,000 ~
year, matched by Jtate and feder l
funds to be change4 trom c&;pl I ·
outlay or b~lding f~ds to general
purpose or operational funds. 1
"The facts speak for themselves,"
Qistrlct Superintendent Dr .. Norman
Watson said. "Orange Coast College
was built for 5,000 students. Next year
it will have 7 ,000. Golden West College The tax override conversion win
cost the taxpayer no add.iUonal money
. ~gher education is a n 'Ip·
'v.estment," Watson saJd. "There is on.-
ly one source ·of human resource and
that is education," he continued. "lf
citizens decline tfle bond Issue they
are forfeiting their right to the state
and federal money."
.
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'
FABRIC SALE
Dacron® polyester
doub)e knit, yardage 5.79 yd.
"'9'· 6.99 yd.
I Wonderful wash and dry double kn its for eosy core, easy wear. Features Per·
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ter weaves. In fashion's latest colors, of course!
I
may co fabrics 54
Permanent Press @ prints
Kodel 10 polyester and rayon
• In
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Save on washable prints, all 45 " wide. Choose from a varie!J; of
' new transitional prints, small floral and geometric patterns.
may co fabrics 5
linen weave rayon in
mcmy. many shades
1.19 yd. reg. 2.00 yd.
Enjoy famous quality and crease re-
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bow of colors. 44/45" ;wide.
may co fabrics 54
acetate prints
44/45" wide
1.19 reg.I.SO
J 00% acetate, printed and patterned.
Savings on Jail's marvelouo new
shades and patterns.
bonded wool flannel ·
in ten great colors
3.49 yd. reg. 4.00
No need to line these wools. Choose
from white, black, camel, kelly, red,
moss, teal, gold, orange; navy. 54"
wide. 100')', :wool and acetate.
Ponte .de Roma
double knit wool •
5.99 req. 7JX>
Wonderfully wide ani:l softly hueC! in
gold, red, brown, olive, lavender,
grey, royal, black. 62/64" wide.
may co fabrics 4
' c::::
I."
••
may co soutti coast plaza, san lllego fl'Hway at bristol, costa -:. 54M321i ·
shop monday thl'OlfCJh saturday, 10:00 a.Ill', ta 9:30 p.m.
~ .,.
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' . ••• ~ :-. . -..:
•• . .
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4 DAA.Y PllOT
, Cc-.tlll W .. Deir Pl• 1•
· HOlll!On l>atro!man J. c. Doyal
h"'1. no dlffic:Ulty In determining
that a car. 4tiandoned on bis beat
wu ~Jen. A note on the front seat 're.ail. '4'Thls car belongs to Low R.
Williama In New OrleanJ ••• It is
stole. Please see thit be git il" • The Grand Rapids suburb of Wy-
oming bu an honest.-to-gooclneas
lidewalk superintendent. on the
~ll. The Western Michigan t.own hired Larry Knlck1rbock1r,
a high school teacher, to lnapect
most of the several hundred mil.es ot' sidewalks for defects this sum·
mer. •
Yqu cmqind·jlii r~ o? .ift.
bqll#. pocketl m nert1""'°thn can at-i•!~ /)avid Walt<r, B, of PcfiMivil!e,
O~io. is no ezception to the rule. He
ii !J>ictJWtd carrying his pet ham&t.er,
Gordon, in hi! shirt pocket. •
A fil1" promoting tht. priridi!t'
tial cnndidacp of HHH didn~ {lfl
a very good reception at ifi·prt·
·miere in Memphis, Tnm. lt
1la!Md on the acrtett.·of a d!"ive-
,in movie· and 'before BumphreJI
had spoken a dozen 'toords. the
honking of car horns 1DG) 10 •
Loud that the management irocs
forced to stop the j«m.
After 22 years of slilnlng. shoes
at the San Diego armed forces
YMCA, Leon 01borno baa polished
oU enough college courses to eam
himself a master's degree in art.
Osborne, 42, received his degree
from San Diego state College. The
Negro bachelor dropped out of high
school 25 years ago, and after a
hitch in the service began his car-
eer as a shoeshine specialist. His
next goal is .teaching in a college. • Herb's Feed Service in St. Jos-
eph, Mo., was fined $10 for carry·
ing an 870-pound overload on a
truck. The small fine was levied by
M•gistrate Margaret Young after
the owner explained that part of his
weight included in the overload was
a 32li-pound frie!ld .wbo had asked
for a ride. • When his truck collided with a
car at a Los Angeles intersection,
Albert G. Wabb climbed down from
his truck. "Can you give me a
lift?" asked the driver of the dam-
. , aged car , , , Mrs. Vlvl1n Craig,
!· 82,' Webb's mother--in·law.
•
Monday, All9\llt 5, 1968
let IAnds Safel1
Mida ir c ·ollision
Kills 3 Teen a gers
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -A jet.
prop alr~tf. with the wrectaat or a
11g1rt pi..,. 'and the bodle1 of ita three
youn& paD.og.,. embedded In !ts
side, Jandl<! safel;y Sunday btfOl'e
most of the JO pasaengers aboard
knew what happened.
Capt. Ted Baum, 43, Sit-. Ill ..
brought tile tw1n .. nctne ~ In with
one engino 'clead and hil copilot badly
Injured ln<tlle cockpit.
"I thOQgbt that something was
wrong, but not a collision," said Mrs.
Nancy steffens, 441 ol Two Rtvm. "I
waa more.:aervoua after I got on the
ground ml.,..al!zed it had been a col·
lisioo."
"We dldn't know what hit us. 1 think
only the stewardess knew 1
11 said
Wilma ROss , 17, of Saginaw, Mich.,
"and she just told us to stay seated
with our ael.t belta on. 'lbe p.J.ot came
down with ·what aeemed like a normal
landing." . '
.Ofllda1' aa!d the single-engine
" Celma 150 rammed North Oentral
Alrl!rtel l'Ught 281, a Coovllr 590, over
aoutllll"ll Wllco-. 'l'he UiJ>I plane hit
juat behind the copilot'• seat, al&o
damaging the propeller on the plant'•
right engine.
The copilot. first olllcer John ·
Mawr, 30, of Wheaton, ru., 1uffered
mulUple.fracturea ol his riJ1t1 lef and
head injuries. He was reported In
'leriOUJ coodttion in a Milwaukee
hospital. He was the ooJy person on
the airliner injured.
1be vicUm's bodies were ?flll'IOYed
alter the plane landed. They were
lo!entl!!ed u Rlclt L. Ste..berf, 19, of
Elle Grove Vlllago, Ill., the pllot;
Virginia Johnson, 18, Mt. Prospect,
JU., and her brother, Richard, 13.
"That pilot did a !~tic landlnf
job," a federal official said. Otherw!H
there wu no comment as a team of
about 35 National Transportation Safe-
ty Board lnveaUgllors l<d by board
examlDer Thomu Saunders anived
from Washington to probe the cause of
the cralb.
Firebomb s, Shots, Bricks
Spark Violence in Nation
By Ualled Preu !Alerutlonal
~ ol Nesro youtbJ bit llltl r9D
-!Ir-llltl -in Racine, wi.., earl;y today. s. ... a1 other cti"
..,_ the -.in reported stmllar
1%ooble •
Jt was a bit dilfereot at Denver,
Colo., SUnday when "the Queen of
.SouJ," linger Aretha Fnmklin, walked
. nn Jta1e al tilt "l\tD air Red Roclts theater. said Ille bad not bten paid and-... 'WOUid oot olng .
About· 100 t.> 200 Of 3,000 per.oos in
the audialce began shouting ond
.lJnivel'.Sity Law
Professor · Blasts
Publisher Report
urowtoc boUlel, c:t111 and rocks. They
rO!led ~gallon 4iuh bartt1' down tile
a1r1 ... Some ol the youths ran onto the
stage and 1malted a piano, mualcal
lnllrumenla lllld electrical <qutpment.
A dozen police officer! called !or
help. Auswer:lllC 1quad ·cars bad same
windows ,..,bed· lllld one policenw)
was sllgbt1y injured when a bottle bit
his leg. Three persons were arrested .
Trouble also broke out Sunday nlgllt
at York, Pa., where 11 persons were
Injured ... ly Sunday in a gunfight •
Grand Rapids, Mich., and•Mobll<, Ala.
New York aty Police ~e put under
orders rd to use their 4,CMXI call boxes
aft:er a homemade bomb demolished
one in the borwg!i Of Quems -ly
Sunday,
At Racine, it wu·the sewnd night of
sud! trouble. Eighteen penons, six of
, Piln.ADELPH!A, (UPI) - A law thenf Pollcem.m, """ injured and
professor bu acclllld nfiwapaper pub-eJlht arrested miring an outbreak
lishera of "the kind of. \nflol"l"•tOIJ' · ·~ Digbt and SundarmOl'Qln1.
•-that can ooly Impede". ef· Sunday nlgllt'a trouble ~.U <Kt In
f<>!13 1o· nisolvo the current contra-· tom!l1llal Dain and llit4Dd'Nti attacks
Yetty av ... ~ ~tmont • of ended this ID<IC'l>ng after se .. ral
crime news. ~intsses were loot.ed and several
Louis B. Schwartz of the lJnlversity· cars stoned ~ overturned.
of Pecnsylv~ had eome harsh Two gsrages were fired. Firebomb&
WU'd.s for a report on "Free PrHs crashed .against two other buildinp
and Fair Trial" is<ued In 1967 by the but did oot explode. Police would not
American Newspaper Publlsben Ai· ilnlnediftly reveal iI any an..ta
sociatJon (ANPA)". were made~ if anyooe were inj~.
"The ANPA would·have done better At York,. six persons were arrested
to come forward with at least one or and an Mmc:nd police car was fired
two ·suggeltion• for• "Voluntary code .on. Early Sunday, a white meat
of ethics on the subject of. pretrial market owner traded shots with 1
publicity,'' he said in a Pennsylvania group of Necro youths after they hurl-
Law Review article. Adva{ICe print· ed • rock h'ouJb the store window. Eleven penom were injured In the lngs are btlnf distributed at the 9lst gun!ighl A NCby dry cleaners and a
annual cOnvention cf the American papermill stcrage bWlding were set
Bar Association (ABA) here. afire.
"'l'be NAPA report is 111 indlscrimi· •'lreboml>ers .strilck for the secood
nate and inb!mperate rejection of all . ti.me in a ~k at Mobile. A fumiture
reform JrOPOiall," Scbwartl wrote. &kn in a Negro neighborhood went up
He said ne;wspapers object to cen-in flames. Fire authorities said U
sorship of news at the source but they other -fire bombl · were found 1t a
themselves "do a litt1e healthy cen-nearby fumiture house jurt before the
sarship at the source" 1when they Oeny Gulf Furni~e Co. was destroyed.
the right even of courts and grand Ttiret firebombings and a series of
juries to know the confidential sources minor rock~owing incidents oc-
of. a reporter's eipose of political cor-cun-ed in GrafJd Rapids' Ne&ro
rupttoo and tolerat.ed crime. 1outhNat 1kle; No anwtl ftre: made.
... • Beaches Cloudy Today
: Cleari ng T uesday W ith A b ove Average Te mperatures
Callfor1tla
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1.,
Grea·test Day of Our Li-ve8~
Three Relemed Pilots Reunited JVith Familja
WA5!11NGTON (UPI) -Fer Capl
Joe v. oarpenter, the 1ut bundred
yards ol the trip to lroodom m \be
hll'deol Hi• boppy young daughlef1
were not about to let JO and )lo bob,
bled along wltli a cb1ld hUUl!>g each
leg.
Carpellt..-, 37, --with hi! childri!n 1'te Sunday When the j(lllrney
home from a CommtuliJt pdJou comp
In HI.IOI ended for him and two fellow
U. S. plloto at Andrews Air Fnrce
Booe In nearby Maryland.
C'f1"nter and hil companions, Maj.
James F. Low, 43, lllld Maj. Fred N.
1'h<111pooa, 32, wera the latest group ol
American plloto downed over North
VI~ t.> bt givm their fr<edom .
The three new from Bangkok,
'l'halland, via Coiro and Frankfurt to
~ew Ycrt, where they were reunited
with 1betr wives and Down to Andrews .... nill,tWy plane. .
Be~ and hugging their families,
the p~ot& pronounced their release
Htbe IJ'Utelt day" Of their lives, then
were taken into seclusion for, several
days of debriefing and medical exams
at Andrn1 before going on leave.
With the apparent lntenUon qi
aayln( notlllng tl1ot might prejodlce
future releases of captured Americans
the ttne made no references to Uleir
captors beyond reportins prqper treat-
ment. '
Sky · Diver Killed
LANCASTER, Calif. (UPI) - A 24-
year~ sky diver was killed here Sun-
day_, bla porachuto failed., open.
Cbener Gory Brown of !Udgocrost
was supposed to alight on a landing
pad al Foxville AiI1><rl, but be fell oo
a vaoani field nearby.
Tbomp1m lald his diet durlnl Ove
and a ball months ol prioon wu
"aubotantial and kept me In 1ood
health." .
Low, who spent seven and a half
montM in pri10n-1 said "we bad &ood
treatment In Haooi."
At a Frankfurt atop, Low repeated
the men had ''received a shower every
day and readiltc material, -.Uy
EnsU<h tranalatfons Of NOl'th Vlei·
JtaO)ele DeWlptipll'I." He Aid there
wu no politjcal indootrlnation and no
fcrOl!I or ireu11re waa appUed.
1be men were beld e@dve 1n .a
prison camp ju.II oullldo 8-and
learned July 14 ol -ponding release. Low 1ald there were about .ao
or 40 other America.DI lo the ump.
<:arpenter, a&Ud iI he tl!ot>Cht other
captured ilnhen would 'soon be releu.
ed by North Vietnam, lald "! would
assume 19. '' •
Tbe lall mil re!eaio w., made
Feb. 19 when Maj. Non1J 0-ly,
Capt. Jon D. Blaclt and Navy Ens.
David p. Matheny were &iven their
freedom,
$5 Charter Sightseeing
Flight Detours to Cuba
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - A hljacker. two and a half.year-old dau&bler
c!utchlng a gun and hil baby, ord«ed Oylnf ovtr Naples, a Gull Clout
a dlarter plane pilot t.> take him to Florida city south Of Tampa.
CUba 5unday or "fly unW ~ run Olll Radio Havana, tile official vqlce of
of gas." the Cuban goovemment, reported tbe
The pilot, James VACb, 21, was incident early tO'.daY and lde:nUfied the
released after 1pending_dlree hours at hijacker as a U.S. ciUzen but 1Llted no
Havana'• airport. He flew back to · · name. The uport did not say what the
Florida where the trip began as a 15 CUban government lntendl t.> do With
sightseeing -· tile man and child. "He was VffrJ calm.'' Vach s_aid of Vacb. said he told the man be didn't
the gunman, who 1ald be could HO his have enoug!i tuel tor ~ trip and had
baby cm weekenc!J. no maps. The ,..man ordered Vaci! t.>
"He said It very cuually: 'Let'• go fly south anyway and cbeclt tho fuel
to Hav .. a'. I laughed. I didn't believe iauge at lnW'valJ. A quarter tank of
it 'lben I looked at him atJd I saw the fuel roma1ned wben 1lteJ Jandod.
.... '!bat chqed 1lte -picture... AmeriC811 !nternept.>r1 !Nm J(ey
The hijacker listed hil name as Welt, Fla., acoamplllied tho piano
Stewart Orth Of Miami wllen be port of the way to Havana and then
chartered the tucht t.> tako hil blonde. Cuban Jell came aloafalde. A . · All Penney Stores Open ~ry Night Monday Through Saturd01;
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Shopping Center Huotlogton Contor Fo1hion l1lond
',.
I •
• '
•
• I, Mond1y1 .411911st 5, 1%8 DAILY PILDT 5
Quake Death C:zecJas Witt First Round . ---·-'
Toll Now 214 New Crisis Pending
MAN IL A IUPJ) -An Sunday Wt.IS that of a
anny of workers dug in the newborn baby that doctors
rubbhi ol an earthquake· said apparently was born sha1ltered apartment house
today bli,.. t:h(I head of ~lil~•-.abou,..."t;;-th<:e;;; ti!fle~e earth-rescue operation ·said llope qua smashed the five-
was gone for the 200 per5ons story apartmen.t house. The
.!itlJl buried in the debris. child lay next to JU mother
The toll from Friday's among ttie concrete slabs.
earthquake reached 214 to-splintered wood and twisted
day, including the 164 bodies steel.
already dug from the Ruby Since the disaster. nearly
Towers apartment house in 3,000 r e s c u e r s including
Manila's SaDta Cruz district. American servicemen from
Forty per601l5 who survived U.S. bases in the Philiw.ines
tile apartment. house col· have dug throogti ttie rubble
lapse died later in hospitals o( the apartment OOuse 24
and 10 were killed in other hours a day.
parts ol the Philippines. President Ferdinand E .
Gen. Gaudencio t'obias, Marcos said Sunday there
director'«' tilt rescue work, appeared to have been
said, "lt would be a miracle "c,riminal ·negligence" in
if we find any more persons construct.ion or the Ruby
alive· under that debris. We Towers, Manila's first COil·
do not expect to find any dommium apartment. house.
mere people alive." The Manila weather
Among the bodies found bureau's g e op h y s i c a I
No Comment
Says Navy
On Scorpion
WASHINGTON (AP) -
The Navy declines to con·
firm or deny a report that
top.secret listening device5
recorded the sound of tlle
ocean crushing the nuclear
~ubmarine $c0rpion obout
May 21.
The Pentagon issued a
"no comment" Sunday to
the repcrt published in
Newsweek magazine.
Pentagon sources con·
firmed, however, that the
Navy ordered a check of
tapes after the Scorpion fail·
ed to return on schedule
from a cruise. but declined
to djscuss any phase or its
analysis.
The Navy has several
d e v i c es for monitoring
underwater traffic. using
them mainly to keep track
of Soviet submarines.
department recorded 240
aftershocks following tlhe
main jolt or the earthquake
on Friday.
North Korea
Infiltrators
Hit Patrol
PANMUNJOM, Kore a
(UPI) -Communist North
Korean infiltrators attacked
a patrol. of American in-
fantrymen on the edge of
the Demilit.artzed Z o n e
separating North and Sou.th
Korea today. Each side suf·
fered one man kiUed.
Several North Koreans
Qpened fire on a U.S. 2nd
Infantry Division p a tr o I
while thP. Korean Armistice
Commission was meeting in
the truce village ol Pan·
munjom, a U.S. military
spokesman said.
. One member of the patrol
was killed and four others
wounded, the spokesman
said.
The North Koreans fled
back across the truce line,
Israeli Jets
Blast Arab
Home Bases
TEL AVIV (AP) -Arab
and Israeli rorces exchanged
fire aer06s the Joni.an River
for the second straight day
today following a retaliatory
strike )ly Israeli warplanes
which the Jsmells claimed
destroyed Arab guerrilla
bases only 15 mile6 from the
Jordanian CJpital of Am·
man.
An Israeli army spokes-
man said Jordanian troops
rained bazooka and mortar
shells on three settlemf:!lts
in the Beisan Valley. Israeli
f~ returned the fire, he
said, and no Israeli casual·
tie6 were l'eported.
I s r a e I i jets streaked
acrnu the Jordan River Sun-
day and dealt what military
rpokesmen called "a sub-
stantial blow" to Arab guer·
rilla ~s inside Jordan.
Jordan reported 23 civili·
an!I and five of its soldiers
killed in the air attack and
82 persons wounded. It
claimed one U.S.-built lsrae·
Ii Skyhawk jet was downed.
But Israel said all of its
planes returned safely.
Both Jordan and Israel
notified the U.N. Security
Cou ncil of the air raid, and
Jordan char~ed the Israelis
with ajtgression. But neither
asked for any U.N. action.
The air strilre-first in two
months against Jordanlan
territoni -"completely de·
stroyed" two guerrilla bases
near the town of Salt. 11
miles across the Jordan Riv-
er and 15 miles wt!6t of the
capital. the Israel\ chief of
staff. Maj. Gen. Haim Bar·
Lev reported.
PRAGUE (UPI) -Czech
Communist reform leader
Alexander Dubcek is not out
of trouble yet, western
observers said today.
The party first secretary
over the weekend finally
won a so.rt of hands oft
agreement ove'r' his reform
program Crom his unhappy
East Bloc allies lead bf the
Soviet Union.
But the ob&ervers said the
Stalinists inside the Czech
party still are opposing and
threatening Dubcek's pro-
gram to loosen Communist
control and give CJeehs a
fuller measure of
democracy. The next crisis
is ~xpected in September.
At that time a party con-
gress meets and it may be
the last chance of the
Stalinists to oust t h e
reformers who b o u n c e d
them from power i n
January.
Dubcek well! on television
Sunday night to c I a i m
quieUy a victory in his
struggle a g a i n s t in ·
terference by the Soviets,
East Germany, Bulgaria.
Poland and Jiung.ary. He did
not gloat -he is no( that
powerful. But he told his na·
tion the bloc meeting in
Bratislava Saturday pro·
duced "new scope f o r
further development of our
democratization process."
The Russians had
threatened ,. a r m e d in·
tervention fu the war of
ne.rves leading to Bratislava,
so greatly they opposed the
refor,ms they saw as the
first step ~n a Czech
withdrawal from the Com·
munist bloc. But the
Dbservers here said the
BratiSlava agreement cost
Dubcek soniething.
They said it wiped away
.any hope Czechoslovakia
might develop more in the
direction of such neutral
European states as Austria,
Switzerland. Sweden and
Finland. Dubcek's television
report bor.i out a theme of
internal refbrm but external
loy.alty to the bloc.
In Washington, U P I
The Navy ha8 extended Of.
ficial condolences to the
Scorpion's 99 crewmen.
leaving one body behind, the ==========:;
spokesman said.
diplomatic . corre!pc;indent
Stewart Hdnsiey said U.S.
officials lre taking a
cautious view of the long
term prospect! of continued
reform in Czechoslov-ak..ia.
He said they suspect
Dubcek may have had to
make solfle unannounced
deal with the Soviets to win
The search for the vessel
is now centered in a "highly
suspect" .flrea about 450
mile5 'o u th we s t of the
Azores where ocean depths
run to 12,000 feet.
South Korean troops killed
eight North Korean in·
filtrators in three gun bat·
ties Sunday a]()l'IJi:: the truce
line. One South Korean was
kiUed.
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Missing?
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QUICK
C.td'I II' qY ickfy Oft foctl(
ovtnt1. R•1d t•11r co"'p1cf,
co"'pr11'i1n1ivo orntfown 1di0
tio1 of tlto DAILY PILOT.
I
-( ;I
REDUCED FOR ~
LIMITED TIME ON~Y!
II
•'
Penneys sum r er
·· fashion per~
Reg.1250 NOW e88
$ Shampoo and set
(Monday, T....day, Wodnoodoy)
W1 tptCiolii• In th• cort of f0th0 'ilri9'
USI YOUR l'INNIT CHAIGI ID -
NO Al'POINTMINT NICIS IY
:1 ... ()Mee,[)! T !' ''---------------+------',II 'i' • • : .... -. ..... ,...,.w.-, ...... •~I
• .....,,~._._....,.....,_.. .... .,_' ; :ctla • . . . .
f'ULL•ITOM
Ol'"•.,tf•lr Cati!•
.... ,...., ' •1o40
MUMTIMOTOM llU:ll
H.,..11.,t!Ofl C...1...-
W flow, ftt.-1111
their hands off agr~ment.
They said Czecboslovakia,
unlike Roman ia and
Yu gos I av ia, is too
ecvnomically tied to
Moscow to siver her Soviet
relations too drastically.
Dubcek and his fellow
reformers have been busy
for months on plans for the
Sept. t p:rrty congress.
Delegates have b e en
selected (rom across the na·
tiOll, II the Stallnists show
up with enough delegates
they oould wreck the reform
drive and even oust Dubcek.
But m0&t observers here
predicted the delegate1 will
support Dubcek who is more
popular than bis Stalinist
predeceuors because o{ his
successful co n fr ontatlon
with the Soviets.
Radio Hanoi Sends
Propaganda Message
liONG KONG CAP) -over North Vietnam Sept.
Radio Hanoi broadcast to-16, 1965. He was one of a
day what it said was the number of pilot! paraded
voice ol a captured U. S. Air through the meets of Hanoi.
Force pilot urging th e The broadcast deplored
withdrawal Of American the high cost or the war in
forces in Viell'lam and end Vietnam, and the number of
to the U.S. bombing of North lives lost . Risner was quoted
Vfetnem. as saying:
"The obvious and correct "Although the intensity of
solution to the Vietnam pro· the air was has been step-
blem is for the U. S. to stop ped up, produotiOn (in North
all bombing and other acts Vietnam) hb re ma in e d
ol war against North Viel-stable -indeed s o m e
nam 'and withdraw all U. S. segme~ or the economy
troops from South Viet· have been stimulated by the
fNml ," s1tid ttie broadcast, war.
attributed to Lt. Co 1. ''Instead of lowering the
Robinson Risner ot Tulsa, morale of t.he people or
Okla. weaken!ng their determina·
There wu no way o( tell-tion, the attacks again&t
Ing wbether it was Risner North Vietnam have raised
•
Troin Now ... St.rt P.,.....ts ,_Monlhs·
After Croduotionl /
whospoke.He,w .. ~a~s~c~ap~t~ur~e~d~~th~e~rr'.iifiigh~ti~·n~g~sp=i~ri~t~to:..::•~n~a~IIJ;::::=:=~================================= when his plane_ was downed time high ."
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with miraculous foam backing·!
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Horbor Shopping Center Hunlin9ton Center Fe1hion lolonJ
1,
•'•••••II ......................... •·M••••••• •• IL----------------,:f------·''-------------------------------------------1 -•I I '•
l
l
I
I DAILY PILOT Mondi)', AllOIHt 5, 1968
Vltltttattlna to Vnrula
Reagan Demands
Program Suppoi·t
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Goof. Reagan has told
Aaaembly Speaker Jesse M.
Unruh that the I 9 6 g
· leei1Wnn -atruptly sent
po despito Unrub's pro-
p.ti Saturday -could go
back to work, but only on
Che Gowrnor's terms .
:Reagan's ultimatum,
a11patched from the
Jt.e pub I ic an National
Convention at Miami Beach,
anded united support of
nruh and his Democratic
embly colleagues "for
y property and income tax
hlief programs." ! An angry Unruh urgently
E·uested a meeting witb
agan, in Florida i f
essary, after Acting Gov.
Slugb M. Burns dismissed
Ille session Saturday. It was a historic action climaxing a
1immerlng feud between
~nate leaders and Unruh
which ftnol1y boiled over ln-io bitt<r argum.-.
• Reagan refuled, inaking
lear be 1uppor1ed Burns,
the Democratic preoidenl
pro tem of tho Senate who
became a c t I n f goverDOI'
?hen Reagan and
nepli>Ucan Lt. Gov. -II. Finch bolh lelt the 11.ale
•
Saturday to aUend the con·
ventJon.
Unruh vainly appealed to
Finch to , .stay over in
California and prevent the
move, mapped out b y
Senate leaders after the
Assembly propose-ct t h e
legislature recess for more
thllD a month and then try to
work out the Usues Unruh
considered essenUal -new
school aid, property tax
relief and financial help for
the San Francisco Bay Area
rapid traosit system.
In Miami Beach, the
Reagan camp. pushing hlm
for the GOP presidential
nomination. made no secret
of Its delights over the
unusual events in
Sacramento.
More Called
To Battle
Sierra Fire
EL PORTAL (AP) -
More firefighters were call-
ed in Sunday night to battle
a brush aod timber fire
burning in an area where
the Sierra aod Stanislaus
Aware of what Burns National Forests and
might do, at the urging of Yosemite National Park
his fellow senators, Reagan aides said with a chuckle, border each other.
"We'll let the governor The fire began behind the
CBW'nl) handle It." post or!ice at El Portal and
Unruh called asgembly-then burned north away
men back to work today any-from the town toward Eagle way, even though Burns -with the b a c t l n g 0 f Peak and away from the
~ legislattn's lawyer -west edge of the park. In
1aid nothing they might do about eight hours it had cov·
would b.ave any legal sian· ered 320 acre6.
ding, The U. S. Forest service In • telegram to Unruh Sunday, Reagan said "the at Sonora reported the head
legislMure bu bad seven of the fire was halted when
2 Wallace -to adopt my recom-it got "' the top or 4,578 root
mendations for property tu Eagle Peak.
and looome tu: relief • • • No structures were in·
D I • Unde!' the circumstances, I volved in the rough, steep e egattons do not ... how • meeting in country.
Miami Beach c an ac-About 400 men were to be
See F• h complish anything that you on the lines by dawn. One 1g l could not have accomplished fire camp was set up by
in the 1IM aeven months." Sierra Forest crews at the
SACRAMENTO (AP) When UDruh agrees to ·El Portal School House.
E1 ... " b bee Reagan's propoaab, t b • Another fire camp was ..,.ty pertons ave n · governor 9dded. , "I will be established by Stanislaus chosen to appear o n Califomkt/a Nov. 5 general glad to discuss with you, in · and Yosemite crews at Big
election ballot as electors Sacramento, methods o f Meadows in the park.
for Georgte Wallace'• third· .-curing Senate support for Eight aerial tankers and
party presldentw move-that JftttPerD. and methods two bellcopters wcrked on
ment. But. there's room for·, .. of_Ollrl'JUll __ . ._it-.oot~."-' ---alh~e.r.,1r,.•.,un._1fil.,· • cd'-'u"'sk'-'.-=-1
only 40 names.
Assistant Secretary o f
State Bert .Cllnkrtun says
the names of the eJ.ecton
chosen by the "rMl" ooa-
vention of the American
Independent party -the
convention with the ma·
jority of recognize d
delegates -will be placed
on the ballol
But the leader of the other
convention, WlWam K .
Shearer, says he'll so io
court to have bill ll!:t
recognized as the official
Wallace slate.
Clinkston says Shearer
has a right to take legal ac-
tion. but be said Secretary
or Stat. Frank M. Jordan i.
bound by law to, recognize
the convention which had
the majority of the elected
delegates, who were the so
or so party candidates who
qualifled at the June 4
primary for November
races on the legislative end
congre:ss.ional levels.
P&F Votes
To Panther
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Black Pa.other l e a de r
Eldridge Cleaw.r received
60 pen:ent of tl>e vote. of
Calilornia'1 Peace and
Freedom party members
who caUCU&ed here and in
San Fnmcisco over the
we<kend.
About 30 percent ol the
votes went to Negro leader
Diet Gregory with the re·
mainder going to S e n .
Eugene J . McCarthy and un·
committed delegates.
Sears SAVE
'30!
EyejJlass Bearing Aids
Replar 1241.50 Trim 211 "'0 Lite ID, actiTe right ..
.. left temple only.
RecuJai: $281.50 Trim 2 SI "'o Lite V, adne right or ..
left temple only.
Rep)ar $191.50 Trim 161 "'0 Ute IV, aeti"Ve ri«ht ._.
or left temple Ollly.
NO MONET DOWN
WIMm Y" Btl;J Yow Beuillc Ml a& 8e&r'll en Credit! . .
SEARS COSTA MESA
Brlatol ud SuaOower -Soatll Coast Plua
Phone 540-3333
NIGHT ··d DAY SERVICE
9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. -SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
,,
Panther Chief's Murder. Trial Begins Con Slain
OAKLAND (AP) -A tall
quiet-maonered proiecutor
set out today to convince a
jury thait Black Pantller
leader Huey Ne w ton
murdered a white
policeman.
Lowell Jensen, assistant
district a t t o t n e y for
Alameda County, wiH ask
the 12 jurors -a Negro, a
J tJpanese-American and 10
whites -to retum a first.
degree murder conviction
against Newton, 2.6, in the
slaying ol palr<>lman John
Frey l..t Oct. 28.
But the defense attorney
has made clear during the
itlhree weeks it tmk: to get a
Jury that it will cootend far
more ttian a happenstance
street slaying was involved ..
Charles Garry, who tried
Skier ,Killed
In Long Beach I~ .
LONG BEACH (UPll ~
One kite skier wu kill~
and a~ critically fr·
jured as an ts'tfmated
100,000 persons watched a
show at the sea fe.«ivaJ
spectaculat· and parade of
lights here.
...,,..t«!ly to have the jlll)'
tossed out as one excluding
Negroes from Newton 's
"Wfft Oakland Ghetto." has
indicated he wW counter
Jensfli with the B l a c k
Panthers' argument that:
1. There 1J white rtclam
io the Oaitland police force.
2. This iirompted bnrtaJ
incident& in Negro area.a..=.
and orgalllation by Newton
of the gim-canying B'8ck
Panthers in 1966 to put a
sbJp to them.
-.US. ol the Padller
activity, the police compiled
a list of the licenses of
PUlill<!< pa1rol cars,
• Ir
officers pictures of Newton
and deliberately set o:Jl to
"get" the Panthers.
At Quentin
SAN QUENTIN (UPI) -The Uia1 b expeded to be
a lengthy ooe, probaf>lr ex· A 36-year-old San Quentin
tending i n to September. inmate was -stabbed to deafh
Jense.n said he would have( Sunday cutside bis cell in
XI wttnesses, among t'bem the honor unit of the prllon.
patrolman Herberf Heans, the officer who , although Wallace Ruben Lane we.s
wounded three time• ill Ui.e found lying in a pool of
gUDfire. which c;ut down blood. Pri!on officials . said
patrolman Frey, m'all~ged he was knifed in lhe groin
to get olf a shot of his own. and chest and bad numerowi
Newton. who had been . ttupped in a car •bout a cuts on h11 hands, arms and
traffic violatiOn, later was legs -indicating he may
arrested when M showed up have tried to fight off his 1t•
at a bospltal with a bullet tacker. No weapon was
wound in the st.omach. found.
CONNOISSEUR
19 CU. FT.
TWIN REFRIGERATOR-FREUER
·rtp ool
u.bllleWbly-..letd
thM Mwrl Hua• --d~W11shln1 CJ1*ftY
• full·sb:• revol'llnl
spny •rm
• com~lttd
siW beSkilt .
. ''"°"'"'"' tnter
No Defrosting Ever in Freezer or Refrigerator! Huge 226
lb. No·Frost freezer and big capacity refrigerator, side-
by·side and only 32 % "'wide! • Separate cold controls for
freezer and refrigerator • Roll ·out basket in freezer
• Choice of white, ed&ed avocado or edged copper at no
extra charge.
NOW -LIM ITED TIME ONLY! HUGE 19·CU. FT.
ONLY
FREE INSTALLATION
WHIRLPOOL ICE Magic•
REFRIGERATORS
bi:lustve Autom.tlc k9 Maker-no
trmys to ftll or empty! lee Is eutomatl·
ully r.plteed n you UM It.
•
WESTMI STER FOUNTAIN VALLEY,
6618 We stmln ter Blvd. 17185 Brookhurst
W_...._., old"' ...i Floes Appl!••• ' TV Stot• -Nlo Volley'1 Newest • FloOll A,,n-e ' TV SI«•
893-7 94 962-3500
~I
•
t
l
I
I .
PLANE WIPED OUT ~ Crumpled' mass of wreck-
age is all that remains of converted military trainer
from which pilot Nick Marshall, 58, and passenger
Lou Want, Sr., 39, escaped with Cheir lives. ·Mar~
. . ' •. •. -•. -. . ,,
...... Q T""'lq,tlr shall suffered cut face from smashed glasses. Want
was uninjured. Piston blew out of engine when plane
took off. Crash occurred about 300 yards from end
o! San Juan Capistrano Airport.
•
Capo Eyes
Override
Election
CAPISTRANO -'l1ax-
payer1 in tile Capistrano
Unified School District like·
ly will be asked to vote .In a
tax override election within
the year.
Included in next year'S
budget, ready foot adoption
by the board tonight , ls
$5,<XXI eennarked ~ elec-
tions.
Supt. Olvles F. Kenney
soid only about one-turd of
thlt mnount will be needed
tor biennial election ot
board mtmber1· ne.xt spring.
1be remainder, he saki, U
set aside for an ~e
election.
next year, probably ln the
spring.
Meanwhile, board
members tonight are ex-
pected to adopt a IS.:>
million budget v.illdl would
increase the district tu: rate
nearly 10 cents to $4.U per
•too of assessed valuation.
•
DAILY PILOT 7
I See by Today· s
Want Ads
• YOU CtJ'J tnjoy )'OW' JN.
ure time more with. thb ,_,Ulul TV, ..-d p1.,.
tr, rtdio combination.
• Someone la lelll.n1 a 1950
milk truck. RUl\I rood!
• A MW 1968 Roma Nova
mini bike wanta a home
a.l)d a yoon1 boy to make
happy.
• Here'a a cute little 'S4
MGB lot mme l5Xll't1 ........
• Ttred of the ole HHv""Ho
lawn mower, bere'a a aelf.
propelled rotary mowtr.
for $25!
Two Survive
Capistrano
Plane Crash
Parents Taste College Life
More than 400 el'ltering The remaining orientation Altogether, m<ft .LL.. 800
K......ty bu -.~t Ille
matter before the boarlt.
but no decWon has been
readied on wben tbe elec-
tion mlibt be held or for
bow much . KtDlley guessed
an election will ·be called
sometime after the firlt of
KeMey said he is recom-
mending an $8,15,0CX> in·
aeese over tbe 6~t for
last year because of in·
creased &tudent enrollment.
higher te.acher salaries and
higher transportation costs.1~~~7!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ni. big facto< in plannlng The Great the school program i s Orange Coast's
1 Paper!
CAPISTRANO -Two
men were sllghUy injured
Sunday when their plane
era.stied into a squash field
near here.
Pilot Nick Marshall of San
Clemente and his passenger,
Lou Want of San Juan
Capistrano had gained only
about 200 feet altitude when
the plane engine blew up.
The Ryan PT-22 converted
military training plaDe had
just taken of.I frcm ~Juan
C apistrano Airport.
Marsha.ll attempted a
complete turn around to
the runway but fell short.
The pair was given first
aid by Mrs. Andrew Cook, a
registered nurse of Dana
KlWUs who wimessed the
crash. She said both ~en
ran from the plane feanng
an explosion. She treated
their minor wowwh.
Cycle Death
Probe Slated
TEHACHAPI -Al>
autopsy bas been sched'llled
in the death d. Anna Mee
Ramer. 33, Of Orange,
whoSe body was found SUn-
day beside a m«orcycle on
a rural road near here.
California Highway patrol
officers said the victim may
have suffered a heart at-
t,:ack. They said she WU
found lying beside t h e
motorcycle, 'Wbid1 w a 1
resting on its stand. 'nlere
were no apparent injuries,
they added.
BALTZ MOR'nJARIES
Corona del Mar OR 1-HSt
Cost. Men Ml 1-UU
BELL BROADWAY
MOR'nJARY
110 Broadway, Costa Meu
lJ U43I
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PA.Ill[
Cemelcl'1 • Mor1lw7
C'apel
:1Mt PacllJc View Drln
Newport Beacll, C&lllonla -PEEi: FAMJLY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
BOMB
1111 -""' We-....
SMml'S MORTUARY
"' lblll Ill. Rol!Jllloll Beadl
LEMAt
WESTCIDT MORTUARY
U'I E. JTda Ill., Ooola M<ll ......
freshmen and their parents sessions will be held the persoos are expect:f'b, at•
will attend summer orien· next two weekend 1. tend summer orientaUon. ,
enrollment, be said. He said
· the district is expecting 930 NO.
additional students this fall.
talion programs that began
at UC Irvine over the week-
end.
Pur)>ose o! tht programs,
according to l>ean o f
Students Robert S.
Lawrence, is to give both
the parents and the pro·
spective students a taste of.
college life .at Irvine. The
new freshmen also are get-
ting 50llle serious academic
advising from 40 volunteer
students.
The students and their
parents sleep two nights in
the campus residence balls
and participate in college-
style "bull sessions'" which
attempt to bridge t h e
generation gap. They also
attend typical college lee·
tures and hav-e use of cam-
pus recreation facilities .
Each of three weekend
sessions begins on Friday
afternoon and closes after
~eligious seryices on Sunday
JllOlrlDing. A highlight is a
drilmatic presem.ti.on each
Saturday evening of "'Don
Juan~ in Hell,"' starring
Dean Lawrence.
China Study
Center Set
In Anaheim
ANAHEIM -The offer of
more than four acres of land
as a brandl for a fOl'eign
univer~ity bas been ac-
cepted by the College of
Chinese Culture 11 n d
In1titute for A d v a n c e d
Studies, according to Dr.
John J . Magrann, founder
and developer of 'The
Orient" here.
Acceptance was made by
Dr. Chang Cht.yun ,
chairman of the b:>ard of
directors of the sll·year.ald
college located in Taiwan,
China.
"The Orient,"' envisioned
as a $100 million center for
ttie exchange of Asiatic
culture and education, will
encompass some 200 acres
at the intersection of State
College Boulevard and Ball
Road.
Peace Corps
Test Listed
SANTA ANA -Orange
County residents interested
in joining the Peace Corpe
can take the Peace Corps
P\aoement Test here Aug.
17.
Teroitg is sOOeduled for
1:30p.m. ill &an ~of the
U.S. Post Office, 615 Bush
St.
PersoD$ interested 1 n
le!"Viog M.th tbe Peace
Corps must fill out an ap.
plication end present it to
the admi.nistNtive officer in
dw'ge ol. the ·Aug. 17 test.
AppliQMiron forms can be
obtU'led .at post offices and
by wr!U.ng tbe Peace Corps,
WoahltlelJOO, D.C. 211525.
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What's your big idea? A boat?
A trip abr0$d? Mountain cabin?
Open a California Federal
savings account Just for fun.
Two great ways to eam!
NOW ON DISPLAY/
CAMPAIGN PICTURE BUTTONS
wltll poliUoal rlbbona •nd alo91no
Polk. Unciifn. 0111nt. Wlnklt. Dftor;: FM. and oth.111
Wll.SHIAE l GRAND: AUG. W
ECHc>PARK:AlKJ. ,2-19
SUNSET l VEAMONT:.AUG.19·23
RANCHO PARK: .AUG. 2&-30 ' .
YOU CAN DOUBLE YOUR MONEY SAF~LY ~T THE NATl~N'S lfl~ST FEpERN-SAVINGS.'
~~!ii«?m!@ ~F.fr!~r~!~!!i!!gs
• ' • r
• •
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• DAil Y PILOT
Dr. Palley
Gets UCI
Dean Post
Dr. Julian I. P•lley,
scholar in ~h century
Spanish poetry, h.u been
named associate dean of the
School ol Humanities at UC
Irvine.
Dean Samuel C .
McCulloch said Dr. Palley
will b&ve responsihlity for
administrative assignments
ln the School of Humanities.
He will be acting chairman
of German and Ru.wian and
will continue with h i s
responsibilities in teaching
and~h.
Dr. Palley oame to UCI as
associate professor in
Spanish in 1966 from the
University of 0 reg o n .
Reared in New Jersey, he
went to Mexico City COllege
for the bachelor's degree
and obtiaiDed tile master's
degree from ttie University
o{ Arizona and the doctorate
from the University of New
Mexico.
Circus Que
On Tuesday
ANAHEIM -The 911th
edition of the Ringling
Brothers and Barnum and
Bailey Circus opens a nine.
day run Tuesday at the con-
vention center here, August
6.
There will be t w o
performances daily a n d
three on Saturday. Children
will be admitted for half
price for all shows except
Friday night and weekends.
Tickets can be purchased
at the convention center box
office and at all Mutual and
Wallich's ticket agencies.
RoadJohOK'd
The California }lighway
Commissim bu allocated
$9,000 to construct a median
barrier on Cllapman A venue
between the oorthbound and
southbound off-on·ramps ol.
the Newport Freeway in
Orange.
•
·-
-MOfld,ay, A.utust 5, 1'68
For the
Meetings
Fire Calls
WnhftiMIW
1:17 1.m. S.lun"9¥. firm !IWffUNllon. IO• G1roe11 Grewe llvd, S:lJ 1.m .• 1ree llcuH 11,..., ll'71 1111 .... 11
•:SI P.,,,., ~kll 1lcl, 71151 H911rO ... 11 :01 p.m., madl~I 1kf. 71'1 UI~ SI. 2:01 1.m. surio.r. P<lbllc 11•l1t, 1us1 ,,..,
f :22 1.m., ......ik1I 1lcl. sm G1n1e11 Gl'OW Bll'd. C.01 Mesi t :JI 1.M. S..tutd111, 11!.., I ll""' Ylt· hlrll Ind Hirbor 9ouli!¥1•d t :•I 1.m., car llre, N-ri F•-•Y "°"'"' Ill Blkt'I" $11"111!1 2:3' 1.m .• Cl• ll•t. !ff-rt FretWIY
llOUTl'lbowid laM ttl Hltbof 2:.U 1.m., ll lM 1llrm. 11111 and
-~·
3
Record
Children
Helping
Children
. -~ -
A children's M at 1 n e e 111
Movie to benefit the Orange,1,'.-. ".-. :J; .... -.-.-;;.-;.-. '"• -.-.-.-.-.-. "'• •. -.-. ;..• -.-. -.-.-.-.-.-. -.-.-.-.-.-.-,,. -. -;.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-• .:.• '-.-. )..-.-.-.-.-.-.-. -. :..--.-.-.-.-. "'• "'• '-.-.-• ..:..-.-. "'• "'.-.-.-. ""• County March of Dimes will I'
be held Saturday, Aug. 10. COSTA MESA
The benefit is b e i n g
sponsored by t he a t e r STORE
owners throughout the coun· '
tyTheatres participaling ... ,I -~~~~~~~;~~:;;;~~~.;.;.~:;;;:~~::. ___ .,:O:N:L~Y~--C in em a Land, 1411 N.I.
~~.~d:.' '; AP~i~~. • 1H~n:,1·-' .. 1.1.c.E.s.E.Ff-:E:C:T:IV:E::-A·U·G·U·S~T=S=·=7=M=O:N::D:A:Y::T:ff::R::U::W:E:D:. =
Group Gets
Recognition
Alter five years of 1erving
the Orange and Riverside
Counties ~ the Southern
tington Beach; Fox.SOutb
Coast Plaia. Costa Mesa ;
and South Coaat Theater,
162 South Coast Highway,
Laguna Beach.
All theatres will open
their doors at 10 a .m. and
will feature the full·length
film "Tiko and the Shark'"
plus· color ca..'1.oons. Tickets
are 50 cents. Adults must be
California K 1 d n e y Foun· accompanied by children.
datlon, Orange C o u n t y Receipts from thf:s beMfit
Chapter, the organization will go to help rupport ttle
Orange County March of
has g&Oed formal recogni· Dimes Biith Defects Center
tion by charter to the Na-and other JocM service pro·
tional Kidney f'oundation. grams of the Orange County
The unit will now be (])apter of The National
known as the Kidney Foun· F o u n d a t I on-March of p C O
datlon for Oriange-Riverside
1
,..D_i_m_•_s. _______ 16 . • P TTERY SET
Inc. Medical programming POWllFUL "-UNI• CLIAll 3 Dclt11 Only
and foundation procedures CLOGGED TOILETS ~ 4' A
will be governed by leading Our ·Reg. 7.27 Je 6,f
physicians and cili"zens of
the Orange-Riverside Coun.
ties.
The foundation provides
assistance &udl as a drug
bank, research, di s ease
detection, and public educa·
ti on.
Prof Attends
Moscow Parley
-f""~·'· (
t ,. •\ ..-: .. ·;,~) ~t~.l-' 'd·'···"t>tl
14 Inch
PATlO BROOM
97¢ l
!
' ~; ..
'
bowls,
GULf LITE
28¢
.
'
TO!LET TISSUE
66c ALKA SELTZER
38¢
Our Reg. 78c Our Reg. 97e Ten rolls ol facial quality
two ply tissue. 25 refreshing tabs . ~, ....................... .,..., ........................ ..!!
Our Reg. 97c
19" diamete,-tables with
tripod legs. Use for cof-
fee or patio snacks.
-~ ..
12" LONG
TUMBLE BASKET
1.67
Tumble basket i$ chrom·
ed steel, 12 inches long, 7
inches in diameter. Self
basting. Fits all barbecue
and rotisserie spits.
9'x12" COTTON RUG SERVICE
CLINIC! Our Rey. 1 .:14
Hurry! 3 Days Only
Our R eg. :J:Jc
011r Reg. 2:1.BB
:I Days Only 18.88
Shag type cotto n pile rug in 750-0 cotton, 25 %
rayon. DAYS ONLY 1 qt. Liquid Fire Starter -·---·-10 A.M.•7 P.M.-AUGUST 5·6·7
COSTA MESA STORE ONLY
BRING JN YOUR HOOVER VACUUM
FOR A HOT SERVICE VALUE!
e NORMAL: SERVICE e GREASE BEARINGS
!WHERE NEEDED)
e REPLACE PARTS
ALL FOR
ONLY
!WHERE NEEDED)
2 99Plus
Part1
ALL LABOR
INCLUDED!
VERSATILE HOOVER HANDIVAC
The New Hoover Handivac gets the work done
fut.er and with Jess effort. A combination rug
and Door nozzle cleans carpeting or bare floor!.
Hal a three-pooltion brush for greater speed and
elflci<lney, Weighing only 7\'J pounds, It is highly
I
tnMleuverable and extremely convenient for dot-
.., of cleaning jobo around the homt.
GINllOUS TR.ADE·IN ALLOWANCI
88
f
!
BAR SfOOLS RUG SKAMPOO
8.66 1.86
Our Reg. 9.:13 011r R eg. 2.57
Your choice of black, The large 1h gallon
' 409
............. ....... _,,,,.
409 SPRAY
CLEAllEL
68¢ >
Our Reg. BBc i:
Spray bottle holds gen· t,
erous 38 oi. 1•
MEN'S ORLON
STOCKINGS
2 "· 97¢
Our Re9. 68c pr. white, tangerine or avo-~ size. c:ca:d~o~.=r~=====~=========~-..,.,..•_. .,....,.. Soft. or 1 on and nylon fi socks have spandex top
.for longer wear. Many
____ colors 1to choose from.
• •
9 INCH PAPER PLATES
Our Re9. 68c
3 Da111 Only 48'
While paper plates ti" Jn diameter \\'ith lluled
edges.
"Lakewood" Portable Fan
:I Da11• on111 lr"" 44 Our R eg. 15.BB tJL.e
Keep cool with 1000 RPM motor, portable fan . Fea•
lures enameled metal Aluminum prop.
2200 HARBOR BLVD. Corner of Wilson and Harbor COSTA MESA
•• ' >-•
""!"m .. --•
I
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f .
t
: .... ,. •• •
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••
'Teel anything yet!"
HDD1phrey Far Ahead
Niion Shows .Drop
In Delegate Total
WASHINGTON (AP) -N.Y. ' N.C. 11 One week from the opeDin1 H.o. s
Ohl• ' of the Republican ,national <*t.. 11
" ' t . ;
convenUoq,. Richard M. Nlx· ~~ ~ · a
on 1UpPed lllghlly Monday '"· n
in tdnn1 ,:of . cWlegates who ~:~ ,,
are .cOnimltted or have &tat· i.~ :
~ a .flr'.lt ballot choice, but ~:~ !
be .made up mt."Ch of what v.. . 21 w ..... 11 · be-dropped one place by w.v.. '
registering gains elllewbert!. ':~~. ~
The fonner vice presi· o.c. • P.ll. dent's principal losses, in an v.1.
,
' ' •
•
Associated Press tabulation TNls su m
..
'"
• ' '
t ,.
" ' ' t • • •
I • 'D
of first ballot votes based Othett: Gov. "°"•Id 11;,,,,n, eu111c11
On primary results, pledges cf C1Utorn11-A11. 4, co1a. l. 1<11. 1,
GI. 5, lcw1 I, LI. I, Ml11. 2, Mon!. 1, and replies in an AP poll, N.c. 4, N.M. s. Okla. 1, P•. 1. T•-· were a dozen in North Car· n. ut1h s. W>lo. i. To!11 "· F1V111'1 .. 1m11: Al1tll1, Q.w, Wtlltf ollna and five in Washing-J. H1e11111 c.ut., ll-'"' H1wt11, 1e11. ton 1tate. Hlr1m Fans• Kan. &Mt. Fr•'* c:.11-
N.w head Counts in other Hiii ""'· Go¥. s.1ro ..,,_, Midi. Go¥. 6"rft llOfftM'l'I H.J. Stfl. Cllf. delegattona, left b1m at Ml, ..,,.. "· c.-1 Ofllo. ow. J'""' ,..
down a net ol. slz aince last ltlftlda.
week and well ahead of New D1MocuT1c
York Gov. Nellon A. Roclt· si.111 MH1t MCC ::.· c!:.
e!eller who gained aix and ""· v. ,, 11"'
bad 202. Nomination re· ~&k.t 1211r 1"' ~
quires 667. Art.. SI The Delnocratl finilhed eaut. 1 11 •• 1n
over lhe 'Weekend the allot· ~:!_ 14 1: J
meat of their conventidn o.L 1• •
v0te1 and Vice .President Fl•. •• ,. " ~
• Hubert H. Humpbre~. ~·~ it:.:11 a .. · ~ ·'192~. moved f~,m UL , g : " front of Sen. Eugene J. ·MQ.. trill• 21"' • sm Cart.by who had 4231Ar:. ,_ 1s • · :zs
The nunlber of Democrat· ~;~· :
Jc favortt.e IOOll holding del· L•.
egationa .together while they :_:~ ,,
shop for a candidate swell· fM•.
ed to 13 when Govs. John J. :il<tl· ::v. McKeltben ot LOutaiana and ,,.,::_
Milli Godwin of Virginia ~ :
I
,,
..
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joined the ranks. "''"· 1 Tbe tabulatioo: HltY. 1•
, • .. ,. ,.
N.H. I " lll,Ua&.ICAlt N,J. ;·j " "
..
" • ' ··-All.
,11. U11-N.M.
Jth111 lltdl -• cmM. N.C. l) N.D. t• ..
' . ...
12 Olill. )7 .....
Mi. 1• .... • '-.. "' ·;
C1Hf. c.. •
c~~ ... ' I'll. 25
G1. U
H•-11 ., ......
111. ....
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21
ICJ. 11
LI. 11
Mllllll I .... .....
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MIM. 1 .... " Mont, ll
Ntb. lt
H11, 10
N.14, I
H.J. 1
HM. t
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Tlnll. ·• Ttx.
Vtlll 20
VI, t• • •• Wt1h. lll'I
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n w.v1. 11
Wl• .. I
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1'.ll.
V.1,
C.I. J
Gut,,.
Toltl1 m~
•
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•
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Pancake Feed
Slated Sunday
A poncol<t -ti\ will be htkl SUndly tlrom ......
1lo ..... ot tho st...-IDd
Stein -In Cotta Mta 1lo ro1H fllndt for ...
, G!nt Uirlaub a.pl« ot tho
Oil)' ot Jl®I.
'Ibo putlic ii Invited for •
*1-for-andlO C11111 for dllldrtn. AD ...,,.
CHiii will -1111 me ...s -medlcol ctllllr.
J 4l4'11_~ t\f ,_. .. .
Sdlool of Balms • ....... ....
eMHlul ........ ,, .. ·-· Aul•tllltl
I It W. 5tlt l'htM
Santa Ana SG-17» et 543-11ll
~-------------
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Mood1y, A'9'11 5, 1968
Buf fums' annu~l sale of trays
in Webster-Wilcox· Silverplate
DAILY PILOT 9
a style and shape for every decor
10.00to120.00 Rei.lt50to150.00. •
To CIW\I or &ive, you'll be proud of 111y of these versatile trays
from 11111 extensive collection. Choice o_t~ slzeJ s~ «~~·
All StJperbfY ~ra!led. Sllwmr~ ..
·'
IUFFiAll' llLYE!I Cl.ill
Nothinf lawn, no lnlllrnt, no carryinf cbar19.
5.00 per 11111111 up lo 121>.00
7.00pe111onlll11p!O160.00
10.00 jlel 8111 up to 2•0.00 • 15.00 Jl'I 11111111 up to 360.00
' As ma• two years ID pay. '
j
E
.i.
Save on International Sterling silver •
place settings in a wide 11el!1¢ion
of fifteen patterns
Now, before pricn 11 up, Is Ille 11111 to 11111 .rv.t111
of Bulfums' ·bir savlncs on sllY6r. SM .1.W on A-tll'9 . ., place settings, 11.• on S.,leca place settlnp llld U,11
on ·&-plece place sattlnp. individual pieces are priced
·•I 1.• savings ind servlna pieces 1r1 prlclfd at I,•
to 4.• s6vin1s. --.. Sllvinrlll
-.
u mS·'
'
• • ~ f '. ! • ;l. '~ ""!!' C.entcr tl.F~lC11.lsland • G44-22a! i Mon., Thurs., ~ri. l~ti!l~:3l)Olleidlys!~ljll~ •• •
I I
--·
Look Who's Cooking
BATTER FOR THE FUDGE CAKE LOOKS GOOD ENOUGH TO EAT
Buddy Morris (ltft) Handles Mixer While Kevin Ch•rd Stirs
'
Boys Tie On
Apron Strings
By SAND.l MAJOR
Of tM Dllb' '"'' S111f
"Looks like a big mess to me."
"Is it supposed to get thick?"
Not unusual questions to hear
aroW)d a beginning cooking class.
But What is UD'U.SUal about the class,
taught by Southern California Edison
home economists, is it's for boys only.
Twenty Wert Orange Coonty boys,
aged 11 to 15, took lessons last week
aild learned how to make barbecued
beam:, tuna boat.s, ice cream, frozen
Ctuit salad, fud1e cake and other
recipe<! foods.
"Th eboy1 are better at it than the
girls, if they're interested," said Mrs.
Margaret Parmelee, home economist
now in her second year of the suinmer
cooking clas&es.
She theorized the girl! are sent to
the class by mothers wbo think it's
time their daughters got into 'thd'
kitohe'1.
"Boys ~ sent by their mothers
because they keep wanting to get in
the~.··
Nearly all of the 20 youngsters in the
program this summer have cooked
sometmng -cannedJOOUp, eggs, or bot
dogs, at least -befon.
Then why bother with the course?
"Cause I like to eat, ... said Mike
Sedan of. Westminster. David GlenJJ of
Huntington Beach likes the course
because "we get free food ."
Steve Katz, one of two sons of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Katz of 6341 Myrtile,
Hunti'ngton Beacti, in the course, has a
SUMMER ASSISTANT DEBBIE SEEDBORG OF HUNTINGTON BEACH PREVENTS A CATASTROPHE
Arthur Preci•do (right) i1nd Di1vid Pitttn91r Ne•rly Goofed Only Once
•
THE RECIPE CALLS FOR MORE WATER IN THE CRACKERS
Greg Bentdlct (left) •nd Jeff Brown Are Making the Main Meat Dish
pra~cal approach: "When you go grocery bill.
camping, you gotta know how to "I asked her to buy cream, walnuts,
cook." chocolate chips, ln.ixed vegetables,
And George lloffer. S-On o! the tomato soup, and club soda," he said
George Hollers Jr., 87Cl2 Squire, Hun-proudly, "so I could fix supper one
tington Beadl, decided he had!<> learn night."
how to cook in.sell-defense because his He admitted he already knew how to
11-year-old ~r made jello "three -. broil steaks and fry eggs before he
nights straidit\" joine~ the cooking class.
After the ~~t day o! classes, Gary M<ISt mothers were deluged with re·
Judd, 13, son• di Mr. and :w~s. Julian quests for special grocery items after
H. Judd or '9172 Pioneer Ln., Hun· the 'firSt couple of days of class. And
tingwn Be.acb, one of the most ex-the boys made gOO;d their promise -
perienced chefs in the clasS, gave his t'hreats? -to fix supper for the fami-
mothcr a list; of things to add to her ly.
The mothers might have nixed the
idea if they could h8vlfat in oo one or
two classes. ·The SCE Living Center
n:om filled with-smoke on more than
one occasion, somebody dropped a
bowl of batter into the gre86ed cake
pan .and another en thus i a.s t j c
youngster making mayonnaise poured
all the oil into the mixture at one time,
creating a slimy, clumpy mess.
But apparently, the end results
weren't calamitous, because after
each day's cooking session, all: the
boys sampled what the group· had
made. All survived.
MAKING MAYONNAISE CAN BE JUST A FIVE-MINUTE JOB
·If l'aul Bentdld (left) and Bruce Ktnntdy Do II Right
"PACIC IT TIGHTER AROU"D THE STICK" QUE5'TION AND ANSWER PERIOD PRECEDES LEARN-BY-DOING SESSION
f •
iGHrp Caldnd WtJ ond 0.ry Judd Mlk• Bfff Drum1tlcka
•
Sum'l'tr A11l1tant Ml11 Slia...ft Hoke of Loot B uch An1wirs • Question During Cooking Cl111
"'
'
OAILV PILOT
I~ B'a!t Gear _
B ;"kM" . me a1ntruns .
Iniage of LUXury·
B1-Clrl _~1·
. " A 1orvlct 1111loo at·
tenda,_ put-II -u • ho looked ·at th• prlco" ~
alllxed to the rear -.,
of Ille '18 Buick Eloctna az
we were driving.·
roof, etc.
Sulek Dlvlilon a I w a i •
keept within ~ eotablllbW
guldalJoea ol J .. ury 'nd comfort but I h il>n·
centr1tion: of the theme ,an
the bl& cars tblt~I• bet· ter tban ever. the , tntermediate GS ,, II
being sold et a rteord J>OCO.
Buick refuu1 to sacrlllco Its
•
Stee'l I-likes
Badly Timed
B1 JORN CUNNIFF decreaied 7 percent, partly
NEW ~ORK (IJ>) _ due tO a 'l1 percent ex·
• Aasume / tor the J'l)Oment p1111lon in ton mile capacity.
that the lteel lndultry ta before announcing action by
j..,tilled, In, talalni p!i<os Ila directors. B•t Bl( Steel
ud youtre 1UU left wltb a did feeJ a re1ponsibllftr to
diatur1>1ni , leelinf t ~ a t keep Kennedy Inform~.,
1omethlo1 II . out of jOUrt. SHll(:KED
"That sure Js I lot O(
JC9ftey for a cu," be af-
ftred. Then, standing back
h1 . gazed at the entire 217 .s
Inch Jongtb, and 1 a I d ,
"Yeah, but 11¢ sure 11 a lot
of car.for the money."
He .deocribed the Buick
l'!X"'T'ii>odol to. "T''. The
Elech UJ.11 the lo!> of the
line Bulcl< (ueludi!ig the
spedllty car -Rlylera)
and for 1968 tt comea as a
sport coupe, hardtop .edan,
post sedan, or convertible.
They stretch It ooe 1tep
furttter by offering the 225
Llmlted which has inon of
the deluxe options, vinyl
well esta,hll1bed and IUC· 'BUICK EL.CTR'A 21! -Bliick'• v11'1i1111 of lle-
cesslul big car reputaUon gance 'nd luxury ls better tht11 ever thll jU?, si.n.
for the •• o1 l]l<rl, dard equipment on Eleclr• 11lclucln poi>~ steering With vlllh1e cban11S on · I
th• uppei: nrlll Bulca blV·
and brakes plus big 430 cubic incb engine. J;:lectra
comes as hardtop coupe, hardtop sedali, convertible
or post sedan.
Alic! somethln& 11, It's the · So Bough wished " It be
tbning-,apia'. known,. he told l'ennedy1
1111 been <Ollflnecl to lacellltl
and tbe !lie.
But th6e bas been lnuch
ado tills year on the \Dl·
derddo o! the big cars.
Many features ·that were
deslped lnia the Spectol,
Skylork and GS 350-400
series have now been in· -•ted into the Elect<a.
• 1 From a '}>UbUC relations · that a 1 ff.a-ton Price in•
standpoint, Bethlehem Steel creue "f' then being an·
bu really tripped on Its Um· nounced In Plttabllrgh and inf, !bl blcrH.le being an· that it would take eUect at
nounc..i elmost •imultan. mldnlg!>t He seemed ge-eoualy with a 1ur1e tn P{'O-llta and , immedil!lely after nulnely •bocked and puzzled
algning • WJJe aireemtnt. at Kennedy's anger.
Roar 1111pon.don bm -,tile -·t 11·~ oll-expense ol>owrooma and I Irv l c. over In Huntington Beach
altered to reduoe road shock pa"1 trip to 14.,Uco City for laclliUea are blos1omlllg all ,_ Bill Ill
~LlhAfi dOWl<.io htuwat ...
We ~a.ve ~om~BENEF1Tf ft~ou1
• 0 Interest from the 1st of any month on
funds received by the 10th.
•
8 Interest from date of receipt after the
10th.
@) Interest to data of withdrawal on
funds left 3 months or longer if account
remains open until quarter's end.
• 5% per annum compounded daily current
rat& on passbook savings.
5.25% 'per annum on boiius accounts.
••• call or comeln TODAY! " MUTUAL SAVINGS
........... A••••1&T1•00
arid s.ensJUvlty and It bas all dealerl and tll<lt wives. The &loG.I the 'Orange Cout. now open ~ · axey
but el..imtmted any road winning Alea mauqers and Johnson le Son Lincoln Toyota on Beach Boulevard.
noise. Doo.'t make plam to Wivea will be l\lest& of M.-cury wUl be movtpg off Opening 1oon nut to Maxey
go drag racing ~ Witb the D!>det Divil10n on a trip to the Coast Hllhway to a new la Dot Dats1.11 and farth'r
El-• b•t tho sllµldard 430 Momnal, ~· Sales for were taolUI)' Oil Harbor north on Boedt Boulevard
cubic Inch v.a la ample for Dodge dea1'11 lllliooally Boule\'lrd lo the elrly 18)1, will be Lee White Chrysler
all power ·utr11 and bas are beaded l<!C a record, CbJck Iverson Volktwagen Plymouth scheduled f pr
lots to spare. w l t b J' o c l I d e a 1 e r 1 aoon will be opening his new openklg in the near future.
Although It's a lar&e car eatabllllblng even high er dealership at the corner of All these deeler1 are now
(wheelbase ts US 1Pebe1) it aalea marks than the na-Bayaide ·Drive and Coast in the proceas o1. ~g
·is quick to respond, a&lle, tioaal llverage. Highway in Newport Beach new s h o w r o om • and
and most predictable and STARS and H•bor Dodge will be automotive fadlltlu. Th'
dependable. NEW DEALERS ABOUND movillg about six blockt growth and d e a 1 e·r bt-
Standard equipment in· ALONG ORANGE COASt north on Harbor Boulevard vestment in this a.rel ipeaks
eludes Super T u r b i n e New dealerships a· n d to open its new store in the fOI' itseU in regardi to the
automatic transmission, 430 _d_eel_or_• __ m_o_vln_:g_t_o_n_e_w_n.::. ... ;,:::..:f.::.ut.::.ur.::.e.::.. _____ _;l.::.ulur<::=.::.,;:ol:.tb=e.:Or::=an:!g:::•_:Coa:::•:::.t.
cubic inch, 360 horsepower
engine, power steering and
self adjusting power brakes,
One item not lilted but
deserving ·of special em-
phaais in the Electra is
"cohfidence." It's standard
equipment on all '68 Bulcks
but is particularly
notlceable with the Electra.
Buick's full line of 35
mod.eta represents about 10
percent of the over 350 U.S.
cars introduced at the start
Of the '68 model year and
It's quite apparent by their
success that luxury cars are
not totlally giving way to the
''performance specialists.'~
Buick cmtinues to run a'Vf81
with recont sales honors
this year with sales from
Jan. 1 tlll'Ollgh July 21> total· int 367,536 a near '20 perceot
•again· over 1987. ·
STARS
..
SJaoYi Take off Spedall st
ooi:;:i, ·~ The Modet\1sa short takeoff ,and landing (STOL) aircralt arrived ln St. Louis
2867 East Coast HighWly • Conni Del Mar, Cllif. 12625
Tolo~ 1571·!50!0
last week 'to b~ outlltted With special avionics and instrumentation at Mc· re~oJ'· m~=er.11:sd !n~ Donnell N[craft Co. 1n preparation fo.r del1ionatraUon program later this aum-
ooonctd thet Costa Mesa mer. Po'fored by four turboprop englnes; it can take oU in less than 1,000 feet
dealer Bernie Snyder was -a and. Jand!bi lelS than 500 feet and crul1e at about 250 mph. Model 188 with cap-
winnff' in the :recent "Swing acity for M.PJlSlj:engers, is foreruilner of Iarier .McDonnell Douglas SroL air·
In Spring" soles contest. __ ·cr_af_t _heln_i,_CJe_••_ign'-ed-l_or_aJr_liD_•_•_e_rvl_ce_. _____________ _
'
MMOfra:• ........
Jl5 !'. alUIADO ll'l'D •• ~ CAUF. 1119 I
;Harbor Dodge 1 a l e s
.mal)lger Bob Swick waa
also a Winner.
Dealer reward for winning
Portrait
of a happy saver.
l'i ~
MRS. BILLIB GOLDflN
Billie Golden is a well known and Jona time resident of
.COSta Mesa. Aa sccretarY of the Downtown · Bwiness·
men's A$soeiation. she is a vital coa in promoting bwi-
nw and industry in our area. A mother of two childrt:n,
Billie .is also ·&n active member of the Harbor Arca Council of Beta Slgma Phi.
Billie says: .. w, all ~t so involv1d ltt 1ht probltm1 o/
day4<>-day living, tltat it's 10~1imt1 ttUJ 10 forget
about tht JutMr• until /(1 upon us, Syzttrnatlc :raving is
for mt an Integral part o/ mJ planning for rM /u/urt.
At WILSHIRE FEDE/UL SAYINGS my 'ntst ttrl
growl, earning tht liighut falt in tlrt insurM 14/tty of
o FfftraJ Auocialion. ~
Fundt ~ by th• 9th of th• month ••m from the lit •• , efter the 9th trom tn9 Ult. of receipt.
5% btcomtl 5~% when compounc1ed dl11y and htld for a )'ttr.
~np ln1urtd to $1!5,000 by the Fedenil Slvlnu tnd Lotn ln1ur1nce Corpor11•
llOn.
8onUI: Cam an utn 'A " on • J6.month Ctrtffleltt Atceunt 11'1 mufti.,._ elf ,1,000.
1133 Newport Boulrnrd nter H•rbor •Cotta M ... , Callforril1 • 642-4711
Hom•Offkli:U.Anpln
I
' ' ~ W li.at About 'Late Start'?
By SYl.V!A PORTER
In this ari) Old Age 11 A
Loog Time. U you have
eno•g!> mone1, ablorb!nf In·
terests and good health, the
20 to ~ or eVan 40 years of
retirement voluntary or
tnwluntary -can b e
pleasant aod rewording. But
if you are -P.Oor, have neVer
had the clioiPce to develop
in.te.rests ;li>d have un·
dennlned ;i.>ur b I & 1 I h
through ~ ol negloct,
the older 7ell'1 om be
unadu!t«-hell.
\\Illy •-'I there be a
"Late. Start' p r o I r am
deoign<d to help the older
person lve W'tbe end in pro-
per dignity -just M tile
succenful "Heed start"
project Is designed to help
the child ol poverty &et a
p1oper beginning?
THEHE aefinitely lhould
be, says Genevieve Blau,
assistant dlredor of the Of.
fice of Eeonomlc Op-
portunity In Washlnstoa,
and she argues "it could be
set up easily in many com-
mwUties without costing a
great deal of money.," 1t•1-1
fascinating concept which
you could adapt right now 1n
your own neighborhood at a
minimum cOlt -U you have
the ..-entllllalum and
cooperation of your
ne!ghl>or1 and community
leaders.
Tbe lundame!UI point II
that our older poor are the
most "diaadvantaged" of an
groups In our IOcldy. They
never had the advantage of
Head Start DOW 1vallable
for poor chf1dren ; they
nevt!r received the tralmng
now provided .for teen-ager1
t hr o • g b Nelgl>bol-
Youth or Job Corpa; they
never bad the chance for
retraining now available .for
young a n d middle-aged
workers through various
programs. So they face a
loirg portion of thelr u .. ,
with the new burden ol old
qe on top of the burden ol
poverty. II "" can't st•• them a reol .wt, 1&)'1 1lllsl
BlAtt, WI Olllht lo be Ible to
give thtm a Lale Start.
Here la bow it mll(bt -t:
-A llmitecl number of mtn and women -fl or 30
-wbo quallly u old and
poor, would be auemblecl In
a nelgbborbood group, The
dellnlttono could be tile
-quallfylng •1• for SOclal
Security beoeflll («I to 85)
and tile ol!Jdal illcOme
ponrty lino ($3,300 for •
faml\y of lour.) 11111 would
Times Mirror Achieves
Record 1st Half Levels
•
Revenue . of The Tljnel taur. Provillon for a 10
Mirror Co reached record percent tu:: 1 u r c b • r I •
levels In tbe aecond quarter amow!ted to "97,000, wbldl
and first haH of 1968, , :_~~h:*"' aboat, 7
Normaa Chandler,
1
Th•-....,..~ allo
chairman ~ and chief ex· showed strons tmorovemeat
ecuttve officer, announced. oVer 19&7 reautta. l'or 1be it
For th~28 weeks ended ween eadod Ju!J 1 ~ , revenun iDcrffMd t\o
July 14, ven.ue Increased '80,!84,llllO, oompoiod wHll
morw 8 percent to '81,874,4111 lart 1""· Net in·
fl«l,M.A' cunpared with come r011 to $11,711,132 lrom f150,151,4119 lasl yeac. '3,IJSZ,8'0 1ut yur. Per
Net Inc... after taus 1bar1 eomhlp -. up 12 was '8,4•,M7, or 79 cents a percent to 47 centa over 1Mt
lhau, ~ wltb :reas"•Gcenll.
'8.Tlt,•, • 'IS ..,,.. per OperotiaJ naaltl fer Ibo
&bar•, for l>I first 28 weeks llnl ball bene!IUed lrom
ol 00. , . Improved perfonnance o1
The Iner-In 1968 earn· the CDm!'ODY'• lortll pro-
lllp ......-to 8.per<ent clucll -and from ln-
dtoplte the ell-of a ere-.......,, in odler
1111'Cbar&• on federal Income-, oper"1ono.
I
Involve ·-5,1100,tlllll peo-ple.
-A COORDINATOH, •
aeveral inltructors and
aldea would be necelAl')'.
Some or all might be
vokmleers (no c~); the
meeting facWties C<Nld be
any school room or hall ·
(perhaps also free ): needed
siupplles and bee.1th facilities
mlg!Jt be obtained through
exlltlng chaooels (free too,)
-The ll'OOP would be
&Jven thorough physicall.
Since most would be emttled
lo lllll Medicare -ta and the service• of neJgbborbood
health cemers, costs 1bould
be mli>lmaL
-A nulrlUOUI !Mal would
be oerved eadl 4•Y· It l'Ould
be !ftl""od mainly from
rurptu1 foods by vofunteers
or a regular school staff.
'nit C'Olt could be. 40c per
dly pet por1on.
-TRAINING cOlll'lles ml..,i be &Ivon in morning,
aftemooa or evening
eelll.ona Of three hours
eaCli, -~to the local;-
ecooom.Je, eChnlc and other
-of the port!clpDI,
-~ the 111'11 of lralnlns could b • : In·
-In 1&..tnc money
OD beyinC; mUbls the moat
of a llmlttd income, evoldlnl mio, overc1>arg11:
how to oeleol, _.,. ""' cttW food ; courwe1 In bltlc
reildln1 and wrltlna; ,craft
re-1"'1lcllcoaM!ead
to emplo,....i. (For . In·
-.1r...-a--uin1
t;iUt In -al tho elletrle typewriter or aa u .... lh
teaober ill the ''neW' mao. ...
Or any older ,.._ ml&llt
be -in art and muolc apprie-. ~ Cerim.lcs, woodwwk, metal
-· lmllllnc. -·· ele.)
Tbe l'Olll ~ dlptnd on.
.the -of -and communll1 contrlbullolll.
Older -· --tboulcl be ~ ID
cbarp.
THIS IS just an outline
llDll it' I ---ly limy -but It warr..U a
test on o aitl-1 scllt to
-how It would -k and
llt ft•t cost.,..,.
Such tlmln1 creates the The 'preseQt, "slightly Jess
impression Jn the public than 5 ,percent" Increase is
mind that the corporatt somewhat differen• but!tbe negotiators have played a "' coy game wttb their labor time ol the announcement is
count.erparta, cleverly ex. eqi&any curiou1. . '
JlOllni their oppooenta• hind lt', ·1oo, comes In the midst
and o b t a fit I n g their of. 411 anU-inflaUOn drive 8.bd
alp1tur. ao they could go threettm, tn the oplnioii of
llft,r an even iatger ~ President Joh11S011, "~e
CONClAJSIONS tcooomlc consequences foc otfr nation."
'This may not be IO, but it It was made a 1mq1 t
11 one of the rash bUt in-,lmultaneously with the ·an-
evitable conclusions t o nouncement by Betbletiem
which people will leap. Com· of a 47 percent increase in
bi.ned with other" curious second.quarter profits to
aspects of timitlg, this in· $49. 7 million, and a 27 per·
crease rlvala the U.S. Steel cent jump in sales over the
9pltode of'. AprU. 1982. second qu·arter of 1967 to admAtl!ilth~-~~e tile Kennedy f869 .5 million.
:111.1.-w.uvD was making Its logic was developed
a big drive for price ltabW-and presented by the same
ty and to it openJy J>Nmlled executives wha claim that
ta help the industry resist low price foreign steel is un-
exctsslve wage Increases. dercuttl.Dg their markets.
Using tta influence with How, Ulen, Will a price itlCI-·
labor, the Kennedy ad· ease help?
mintatration helped obtain a
"nouinflltlonary" Contract DECLINE DUE?
calling for no wage increase It ·precedes what almost
for a year and fringe every steelman will tell you
benefits of 10 cents an hour. is an expected sharp decline
. Hours afttt Kennedy had in sales during the second
sent a letter to th e half of the year. In the logic
steelworkers praising them of ~ mQ.fket place OOesn't
for their "forward looking this dictate lower rather
and responsible" act 1 on , ttum higher prices?
J\,oger Blougb, U.S. Steel In steel's atitude it ls
chairman, drove up to the easy to detect thai it does
Wbtte Houae on a courtesy not believe in taking dic-
call. tatlon from Washington, and
Now neither U.S. Steel nor that no amount of noise
any other «irporatlon has to from there can cause it to
call on • president in person fore&ake its obligation to
make profits for
Traffic Up
For. United;
Profits Dip
;_ Traffic and revenues of
United Air Lines set records
for the second quarter and
first' half but earning• fell
~ow Jut year, reflecting
tile industry ptoflt squeeze,
G. E. Keck, president, an-
nounced today.
Second.quarter net earn-
ings Wert' IS ,888, 000,
equlvalmt to ~ cents per
common ahare. In the cor-
reipondlnr period of 1967
net earnings were
'25,321>,000, or •Uo per
commS)D 1blre.
.Net urnJors for Ute sJz
montha were flB,388,000, or
87 oenta per common share,
with Iii' •verage of 1,641,000 more lherea outstanding
than a year ago. First-half
earnlh1s . in 1967 w e r e
'32,192,000, equivalent to
ft.90 per common share.
Operating revenijes for
the quarter were
$.118,lCl,OOO, an increase of
13 pereent over the secood
quarter ·a· yeat ago. First-
half revenues also advanced
13 percect to '591,254,000.
Operating expenses total-
ed $285,"81,00> for the se-
cond quarter and
'666;180,000-for the-six
montha, both up 18 percent.
Cost per •vallable ton mile
stockholders .
Thi• could, In the Dght of
future events, turn 10ot tQ be
a. noble stance, . ~ l!~t everyone i1 agreed Ul<lt
wildom res 1 d~e • in
W•slJi!!gton and l t b a t
political dec11:1ons
automailcally mal<a · ·good
buslneu declslons j For ~ es:• mp t,e 1 'the
domestic steel lndU.stry has
been clamoring foT llnport
restrletion.s on foreign steel,
but Walblngt:on ha:Sn't been
too receptive. In steers' bpi·
nlon Wuhlngton !; wrq)ig,
.and the .announced 1ncreGes
may be a w.ay of s&ylag lo.
POLICIES : ,
Again, the 114el .J:1'1stry
bas been at the f oni in
wamlii1.1bout Washingtan's
lnllatlOMtY policto1J Yoo
c&11 bet Iha( rteelln~ ate
1ayln1 today that l.ynclon
Johueon.1 not steel, ~uted
today's dire econ~ m:t c
threat. · · • In opposing W"l'hlngton ,
then, the steel people could
be playing a critically Im·
portant role. Ho..yever, it
would seem ' the 1 industry
could court public ~plnioo -
if it wishes to do lo· -by
making Its logic Jnore ap·
parent.
As . it I.!, the industry
seems time after . Ume to
look like an enemy of the
people, which it doeln't in·
tend to be, of course. It
simply Is made to look so
and appearuces-somettmes are as effective as the reali·
ty,
' Woolworth Sales .. Rise · " i
Sales or the F. W.
W o o I worth consolidated
eompanlea totaled
'111,678,000 for the first hall
of 1968, an Jncrease of
'77,379,000, or 11 percen~
over tile f/06,299,000 lal<s In
the lint ball of 1967.
'E.ttmated net Income fOr
tlie ,... period, lncllldlng a
Ill 7 percent share of the
-oamipe• of the Brttlah IUbaldJary, WIS '1J•,llllll• or Be conlt per
lhlre, compared w i t h
..,IOO,llOO, or n cents per
1hln fer.the same period of
1117. Provision for
utlmlled U.S. taxes In 1968
lnehldei the I~ pen:ent •arcUrS• eUecUve retroac~ tlve!J from the !list of the
~ ·tllo Mt h>cotne
-·--ofl.7por-
CO'ot -clue, the Componf 1111491 to the devaluaUon o(
Ute pow1d ot.rllng -
e.Umated net income from
all consolidated companies,
exdudlng the British com-•
' . . piny. Increased 41 perofnt,
and domestic • al r • 1,;c s
1ho\fed an ettl1Dflted +in·
crease· of 2" pern lnd
wlthoot tbe •llret QI. -surcbara:e,.. domestic~ earn•
inJt would have lfdnl,.an
increa1e of 4:1 perteat. :
Prudential
Loans Told
Orange Coonty real ••\al•
loan1 to ta l l n g t:l.1721050
heve beeo ln«'eslea ~urlng
tbe llr1t half of 1988 by the
Western home office of the
PrudenUal Insurance Co.
}IUC C. Corns, Southern
Calllonlla reelonal manager
for-tile COft1!>1111'• mottgage -. deportment, nported
that of the toi.l dlahursa11
for the first 1lx montht of
thl1 year, $21284,050 wu for
restdentlal purposes, and
'608,000 for commercial and
lndllltrial .-.
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.J z DAIL V PILOT
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Mondq, Autust 5, 1968
•
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ALL .MAY CO SWIM SHOPS OPEN AT 8:00 * AM MONDAY *
SO YOU CAN SHOP SOUTHERN . CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST COLLECTION!
•
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·your favorite nationally
famous makers at savings -
6.99 to 18.99
were 12.00 to 35.00
Find . • , sizes 8 to 20 and 5 to I 3!
Find ... sheaths, bikinis, two-piecers, blousons,
tunic-looks, boy legs, maillots!
Fina • , • fabrics you love • , • Lastex
powemets, Helenccie nylon knits, cottons!
Find, .. sun bright solids, subtle and vivid
prints, sbipes, dots, and morel
~
Find ;-;~ matching coverups and beacl:i
robes fool You'll lind everytliing you could
possibly wanf in a swimsuit af May Co's I
great annual sale! Pick two or three
and get a winning star! on next season!
Gef \l:ie coverups too. Don't was1e a minute.
Plan lo :Deaf any one of our 16 swim shops
lo reap the biggest and best savings on the
most exciting splash fashions
in Southern California.
may co swim-shops 7-2, campus shop 43-
all 16 stores including our new:
montclair store
may co south coast plaza, 3333 bristol st., costa mesa; 546-8321, 675·3418
shop monday through saturday, 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
t ' •
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J ODEAN"HASTINGS, 642-4321
M91M1o', Awnt I, IMI MWM>tt•L• .... lJ
Int.reducing ..
•• 'Sir Slob'
"Sir Slob and the Princess" will be delighting children of all ages
when the Huntington Beach Playhouse curtain ris~s at 7:30 p.m. Friday,
Aug. 9.
Starring in the first children's production to be presented by the little
theater group will be two casts of junior actors ranging.in age from approx ..
imate.ly 7 to 16.
Tickets for the waggish comedy will be 50 cents for children and $1
for adults, and the play will run three weekends with Friday performances
at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday matinees at 2:30 p.m,
Comprising the casts which will alternate performances are Barbara
Ackley, Debbie Bauer, Ron Deane, Lisa Dorward, Jim Dyer, Mike Frym,
Tress Gardarian, Fiona Martin, Susan Marquez, Kelly Masterson, Casey
and Carey Miller, David Peck, David Perry, Crystal Payne, Julie Smith,
Joel Strauss, Rebecca Sullard, Judy Wa1den , ·Scott Wall, Russell Dorward,
and John Zimmerman.
Randy Keene is directing and Robin Myers, Fountain Valley High
school student, is stage manager.
HORSE SE NSE -Getting advice on how to pass three tests im-
posed by the King to w.in his lovely daughter is Ru ssell Dorward
, as Sir Slob, so dubbed by the Knights of the Square Table because
of his position as Knight of the Kitchen. Standing in for Nag, the
talking horse and Sir Slob's constant companion is Tatum's Bunny
owned by Julie Wi"se. Starring as Nag in the children's production
will be Barbara Ackley and Julie Smith.
Adults assisting with the production include Mrs. Norbert MUIJ?hy,
producer, and Mrs. William Moreland, costume designer: Sets, design~ ·by
Charles Taylor of Long Beach, are being completed by William Moreland,
Bill Susman, Gwilm Williams, George Ralph, Greta Smith, Nancy Wells,
John Zimmerman and Carole and Fred Albright.
Tommy Edwards is in charge of programs.
The playhouse production will be staged in The Barn, located at 2110
Main St., Huntington Beach. DAILY ,ILOT Plle'91 llY Jllcllanl kHlller
DISCONSOL ATE -A dejected Princess
Rosebud (Lisa Dorward) learns of the
tests which must be passed by a prospec-
tive husband from her father, the King
(David Perry).
'SOUA RE ' KNI GHTS-Knights of the Square Table
portrayed by (left to right) Carey Miller, Scott Wall,
Russell Dorward, David Peck and Casey Miller hear
the King's edict read by the herald, Fiona Martin.
The only rOle not double-cast is that of the Wizard,
played by Mike Fry, a veteran performer with the
little theater group who also produces and acts in
plays at Huntington Beach High School.
ADVENTUROUS JOURNEY -Sir Slob and his
faithful friend Nag go off to the forest to attempt
the tests and encounter excitement in the Conn of
a lion, a witch and a giant, and Princess Rosebud
disguJsed as a peasant girl, portrayed by (left to
right) David King, Russell Dorward, Crystal Poyne
and Debbie Bauer. rt1any of the your,g people, per-
forming in lhe play have had no previous acting
experience.
.
~I DUB THEE' -Practising the knighting
scene during rehearsals now ta1dng place in
The Barn are (left to right) Kerry Miller,
Joel Strauss, David Peck, Kelly Masterson,
Russell Dorward, director Randy Keene and
Casey Miller while watching from below ls
~--------------------~-------------------~----------
SCR IPT CH ECK -Closely following the
dialogue during rehearsal of the first chil-
dren's production to be sponsored. by the
playhouse group is the youthful s t a g e
manager, Robin Myers. '
Scolt Long. Adults and children wishing to
discover whether Sir Slob wins, the princtss
may attend Friday "'Id Saturday perfonn-
anceo beginning Aug. 9 and continuing three
weeks.
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J.f OAJLY PltOT
MRS. WILLIAM CARY GANNON
Ttie Former Janice Lea heney·
Fair Homemakers
'Most
Public opinion won many
Harbor Area homemaking
exhibitors top prizes in the
last day.s of the Orange
County Fair.
Merchants in o r a n g e
County 1Upplied merchan-
dise for Best in . Category
af.ter the public cut its
votes.
Receiving m votes for
her decorated "Log Ceke,"
Mrs. Joanne Tatum of Cost.a
~1esa woo the Fr<l8ting
Ho~ prize, a set of 26
decoracfng tips and coup1.
ing.
Gastart Floral Workshop
offeTed Mrs. Betty Bog"5 of
Costa Mesa an unuau.I
floral arrangement for Best
in Dining Room Unen.
Other winnenr were Marilyn
Year Flips
Looking backward fur a
day into the serenity of
times gone by will be the
Alumnae Association oi Im-
maculate Heart College,
Orange County C h a p t e r
when it stages its summer
"Countr:v Pic:D<:, "'Aug. 11.
The annual giatberlng will
meet at the picturesque
Meads Ranch, w h e r e
fishing, swimming, boating
and other --.;tt.s will be
•
Popular'
Plllllips of Costa M ... , gift
certificate from the Houge
of Fabrics for Best in Adult
Wearing Apparel; Shirley
Jamison of Co9ta Mesa for
Best in Bedroom
Furni!hinga, a set of sheets
and pillow caseg f r o m
Moolgomery Wards.
Otbert are Mrs. Harry
Dady o( Costa Mesa for
Best in Living R o o m
Funiminp, a &eC of crystal
starcut tumblen f r o m
Karen Margret.a Imports ;
Mwgie Haizllp of Hun-
tington Beach, a 1ub1crip-
ti0ll to Suneet Magazine
from the Coast
Homemakers Organization,
for her handmade dolls :
Eli'zabettt Barkemeyer of
Huntington Bea ch.
Reverse
a·viailable for members.
A new slate of officers, in·
eluding Mrs. Jim Capasso,
president; Miss Lav ad a
Mauday, vice president;
Mrs. Donald J . Amert,
secretary; Mrs. J . Bernard
Miller, treasurer; and Mrs.
Jolin D. Ornes, publicity
chairman, will be present
for the year's first event.
Officers were i n 1 t a 11 e d
recently.
THE ROMANTIOUE
Let our expert stylists
create a frosted look
especially for you.
Frosti119 ) &.QO U .00 ~I~
Complet. with set
Gr --frosted wigs -nd eurls.
. .
Gannon-Seeney
Vows Repeated
Co.ta Mesa will be the ci-
ty 1n whJch Mr. and Mrs.
William Oary Gannon will
re1ide wtaen they return
from their wedding trip to
Palm Springs.
The couple were married
in Mesa Verde Methodist
Church in an afternoon
ceremony at which the Rev.
Joseph Mc5hane presi'ded.
Parents of the bride, the
former Janice Lea Beeney,
are Mr. and Mrs. Robert L.
Beeney of Cotta Mesa. The
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mr1. William A. Gannon
oi Costa Mesa.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride selected a
floor length white sheath·
with scoop neck and elbow.
length sleeves. The gown
was Of embroidered lace
over taff&ta and featured a
low . squared off neckline in
back accented by three tieri
of rulflts. Her illusion veil
was caught to flowers
fashioned wltlh pearls of em-
broidered lace and stamens
made of pearls and crystal~.
Her flowers were a cascade
of phalaenopsis orchids and
white stephanotis.
Mn. Linda Floyd of West·
minster was matron of hon-
or, wearing a moss green
empire gown with matching
headpiece. She carried a
cascade of tiger lilies, man.
Voted
darln camationa and yello"
pompona centered by blue
comfiowera.
Bridemaidl dro1aecl In
celery green em=1ownc w!1h malcbint leces
and carrying CMe es of
mudarln carnaUona' and
yello1r poOlpODI wen Ml11
Candace Lei& of Anaheim
and Mn. Judy Zimmer o!
Balboa Island.
Miss Cindy Gunon, lister
of the bridegroom, waa
flower girl wearing a short
white dre9s and carrying 1
moss green basket with a
o.cade of blue, orange and
yellow flowers.
Serving as bett man wu
Michael Hussar of Garden
Grove .. Usbers included
John Robers of Newport
Beach and Gary Gannon of
Costa Mesa, a brother of tl!.e
bridegroom.
Miss Judi Reid w a 1
o r g a nist, accompanying
Oave lfland, soloist ln the
church, decorated with altar
arrangemenbl of y e 11 o w
gladioli and orange carna-
tions tlanlled by two col·
umns featuring y e 11 o w
g1.adioli, 'yellow s t o c k ,
orange cant'ations and blue
iris. White ribbons entwined
wittl fem and yellow carna-
tions decorated the pews.
Presbyterian
Vows Recited
--PAMELA HARTMAN
Janu.ry Bride
Hartmans
Announce
Betrothal
Before U altar decorated
with bouquell o( white
gladioli and roses laced with
gypoophlla Helen Lee Hall
became the brlde of Chailea
Ohriab>pber Melchior I n
Portlaod, Ore.
'lbe IOD of Mr. Ind Mr1.
"Cba-le..W:-Melt.hk>r of Irun-
tington Harbour and the
daughter of. Mr. and Mr1 .
Lee George Hall of PorUand
exchanged vows in the First
Presbyterian Church before
the Rev. Morgan Roberta:.
The bride wore an empire
gown of silk organza over
taffeta, appUqued wtth em-
broidered organdy flowers
and 1eed pearls and carried
a Bible topped with a
cascade of white rosebuds
and stephanotls. Her pearl
earrings were given to het..
by the bridegroom.
MiS<I Kethleen Zinn of
Culver City, fiancee of the
bride's brother, .attended
Mis6 Hall as maid of honor.
Bridesmaid was Miss Susan
Melchior, sister or the
bridegroom.
A buffet dinner party in Timothy Kellog Melchior
MRS. MELCHIOR
Colorado Home
the home of the bride-elect's of Huntington Harbour was
parents was the setting asked by his brother to be and holds 8 BS degree from
when the engagement of best man and David E. Hall Northwestern University,
Pamela Jean Hartman and of Los Angeles, the bride's where she affiliated with
Ens. Timothy E. Brown was brother, was groomsman. Kapp.a Kappa Kappa and
announced. Guests were seated by Kappa Alpha Theta. She
The couple plan a January ushers Lennart Nilsson of
wedding in St. Andrew's Saffie, Sweden, former AFS was employed as a systems
Episcopal C h u r c h in student at Portland High demonstrator for IBM.
Newport Beach. School : John J. Jaqua Jr. of Her husband received bis
Miss Hartman, w ho Portland., and Richard J . MBA degree from UCLA
graduated from Newport Meeker of Flossmore, Ill. and was also employed by
Harbor High School and at-White roses topped the IBM before he began his
tended Orange Coast Col· fclur-tiered wedding cake at service with the U.S. Army
lege, is ttie d·aughter of Mr. the reception in the home of in Fort Carson, Colo.
Feast Set
The Newport Outrlner
Dance Club wW honor Its
boat&' anc:eatry Saturday,
Aua:. 10, witb a fir1t annual
111111.
The door• of Olrl"'nter1'
U n I o n H a 11, Huntiniton
Beach, will open at 5 p.m.
for cocldialla. Dinner follow•
at 7 p.m.
Eotertaioment is provided
and Polynesian attire is
welcomed, All proceeds Will
10 to 2_r<mote the club,
Tickets will be available at
tile door at '5 fur adult& end
S2.50 for children under 12.
The public .. invited. llld
more information is
av.ilable at 962-2044. Miss
Ruby Kalama and Thomas
Xalam'I are coordinating
the evem.
·v1s1T us
Before
'tho
Stork
Vis its
You
For Your
Co111pl•t•
M•f•rnity
W•r•••b• •f
r••••n•blo
pric11 • • ,
•••
CATHY:S
MATERNITY SHOP
w .. ee.tw -J1t .. 17tli St. c..t. ..._ 646-IJll
Reynold's Knitting Kit from
Harriet Crawford's Kn i t
Shop, for Best in Knitting.
The reception took place
after the ceremony at the
Senior Citizens Clubhouse in
Ne-wport Beach. A four-
tiered cake wit!!. simulated
doves on top and cham-
pagne punch were served to
150 guests. Miss Karen
Szymamki, a cousin of the
bride, circulated the guest
book while her sister, Miss
Andrea Szymanski presided
at the gilt table.
and Mrs. Kenneth L. the bride's parents. The couple will make their
Hartman of Newport Beach. The bride was graduated fir st home in Colorado
The future bridegroom's . .'.:fr'..::o'.'.m'....:P.:'.o'..:rtl'.'.a'.'.:n'.'.d_:H'.'.:i~g'.:h .:_S":c'.'.hoo'.'.'.'.'..I __;S:!'.pr~in~g~'':.· ------~'::::'.'.~~:::::=:::::~~=::::~ parents, Mr. and Mrs.1-
Ann Daisey from Hun·
tington Beach received a
Shambow Shuttle and Quills
from Townhouse H a n d
Weavers for Best in Weav-
ing; Doris Shattuck oi
Laguna Beach, subscriptiOn
to ttie Hand.weaver and
Q-aftsman Magazine for
same.
Other w:irmer1 are Mrs.
James Porter of Fullerton,
towels, rug and lid set from
J. C. Penney's; Pl.rs. Fred
Schoepe of Fullerk>IJ, set of
dinnerware service for eigtit
fro m the Pottery Shack;
and · Lou Ann Keith of
Anaheim, a Oasey Jr. Lamp
from Youngland in Harbor
Center.
The bride is a graduate of
Newport H.arbor H i g h
School where s he was at-
filiated with Tri·Hi·Y. She is
a graduate of Orange Coast
College's cos me to l ogy
department where she serv-
ed as pr~dent of the Cos-
metology Club. Her husband
is a graduate of Coli't.a Mesa
High School and OCC. He is
a student at Californie State
College, Fullerton, studying
marine bklk>gy.
Special guests at the wed-
ding were Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Field, the bride's
grandmother and s t e p ..
grandfather Of Vallejo, Mr.
.and Mrs. Merritt Blackwell
and Doug Blackwell from
Detroit, Mich .. the
bridegroom's aunt and uncle
and cousi.n, end Mr . .and
Mrs. Everett Vanlon from
Southgate, Mich.
Lawrence E. Brown, also
reside in Newport Beach.
The benedict-elect is a
graduate of Newport Harbor
High School and Occidental
College, where he v.•as
elected president of Alpha
Tau Omega and served as
captain of the baseball
team .
Brown graduated from
Naval Officers Candidate
School In Newport, R. I.
recently, receiving his com·
mlsslon as an ensign in the
U. S. Navy,
Sisferhoocl
Temple Sharon's
Sisterhood meets the fourth
Wednesday ol tlhe month in
Temple Sharon Religious
School1 Casta Mesa. at 8
p.m.
Sweepshakes winners in
the Baked Goods a n d
Preserved Foods divisions
were awarded prizes by
Holly Sugar Cot-poration.
Maureen Rischard t.opped
llhe li'st wttti ~ first, 8
seconds, and 2 tttirds to ac·
cwnulat.e 56 points. Alice
McCullough took s e c o n d
with 29 ~. and Marilyn
Phillips of eo.ta Mesa, third
with 12 points.
Pledges Presented
Preserved Foods winners
were Amelia Bates, fi.nrt,
Eula Cox , second, and
Norma Law. third.
New members have been ~!corned by Delta Alpha
Phi chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi.
President 1/Js. Ro g e r
Denig officiated during the
pledge ritual for M r s .
Robert Goff of HuMington
Beach and Mrs. Steven Bon·
net of Fountain Valley.
Mrs. Bonnet wiU appear
FINE BAKERY
~~
o.n the television program
"Let's Make a Deal" Thurs-
day, Aug. 8.
Board members a r e
preparing a full social,
cultural and service calen-
dar which wi1! be presented
to tne general membership
Sunday, Aug. 25 -tradi·
tional beginning day for
Bet.a Sigme Phi chapters.
Our own 111ort•cl crisp •n~ fl1vorful butt•r
cooki•1. Gr•it for muncliing. '4 cloa:. box 1.65
~kdt ~~,um(,t
w.stph•li•n ry•. flavor1cl with rnol111•1 incl
c•raway. IJ'.lt•r•stin9 flavor incl textur• for
1andwlcha1 and canepes. 46c
r9uet~e:r~~
Light angel food c1~e levishly ic ecf with
chocolate. 1.&t
~JI: ,fM,,w_,
rich rei11cf dou9h, maple fro1t-M. M•n
If your birthday is in September, Octobar or Nov•mber,
stop ln incl fill out •n •ntry •.• 1 decor1tecl 2-l•y•r
ceka to 5 lucky paopl• each month!
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~~LI DO CENtER
3433 VIA LIDO !NEWPORT BEACH 673·6360
•.
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BIGGAR'S TWICE-VEARLV SALE
FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK
OF QUALITY MERCHANDISE
CRAFl'ED BY THE NATION'S
FOREMOST MANUFACTURERS
FOR FINE HOME PVRNISHI!llW
ANO INTERIOR DECORATION
SANTA ANA-MAIN at ELEVENTH
' P11ecl•n• -Colorado et El Molino
Pomone -Holt Eest of G•r•y .s..... ..... s....o,..w..-.~·
_________ ....
Wilbur-Connell Rites Sole.mniz ed
MRS. JAY C. WILBUR
Home Jn Cost• Mesa
MRS. ROBE RT G. SKINNER
Recites Pledges
Newlywed Skinners
Honeymoon
Honeymooning in Hawaii
are Robert G. Skinner and
his bride, the former San-
dra Lee Stuhrman who ex-
changed vows in St. An·
drew's Presbyter i a n
Church, Newport Beach be·
rore· the Rev. Dr. Raymond
Brahams.
The bride, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Ahlert P.
Stuhrman of Ne wport
Beach and Palm Springs,
selected a peau de sole gown
fashioned with English Oor·
al designed lace with seed
pearls on the bodice and
hemline.
Her watteau train was
caught to the shoulder line,
and her elbow length veil
fl owed fi;om a crystal tear
drop headpiece.
Miss Carolyn Stuhrman.
the bride's sister was maid
of honor, and bridesmaids
were Miss Carol Graves of
Downey and Mrs. Dale Wei·
gel of Alexandria. Va., the
bridegroom's sister.
They wore pastel col«'ed
gown• with venlse 1 a c e
Sweet Adeline•
• Hawaii
trim.
The bridegroom. son of
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart G.
Skinner of San Diego, asked
Norris Brock of Pittsburg.
Pa. to be his best man.
Guests were ushered to
their seats by Barry Lane
of Lido Isle; Guy Barnicoat,
Laguna Beach; Chuck UI·
rich, Long Beach ; Lee and
Ronald Schlenker of Pied·
mont and Tustin. the bride's
cousins, and Don Scoles of
Orange.
Baskets of flowers and
candles adorned the altar
while whi te garlands decor-
ated the pews. Soloist was
Jonah Kliewer.
A reception followed in
Irvine Coast Country Club.
Assistants were Mrs. Glen
Gr006 of Mission Viejo and
Mrs. Lee Sch lenker.
The bride was graduated
magna cum laude from the
Uni versity of Southern Cali-
fornia where she was a
member of Alpha Ch.I Ome-
ga, Phi Lambda Theta and
Phi Kappa Phi .
Her husband, an au.omey
with the Orange Cowlly
Public Defender's Office. 11
a graduate of S a n Diego
Harborlltes C h a p t e r , State College and South·
Sweet Adeli nes convenes western Law School. He is
every Monda y at 8 p.m. for affiliated with Sigma Alpha
meetings in College Park Epsilon and was a member
School, Costa Mesa. Further of the Bachelors Club of
jnformation about t b e San Diego.
women's club may be Upon their return Oley
secured by calling Mrs. Pat will make their home in
~n, ~0670. ~ Costa Mesa.
Bouquets of tall white gladioli and chrysanthemums flanked the altar
of st. John lhe Baptist Catholic Church, Costa Mesa when Sandra Susan
Connell became the bride of Jay Charles Wilbur of Costa Mesa.
Directing the double ring ceremony before 200 witnesses was the Rev.
Joseph McEnaeny.
The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Connell of Costa Mesa1 was given in marriage by her father. She wore a floor length gown of im·
ported Swiss, embroidered with silk organza over taffeta.
The fitted' sheath featured Jong la,ce sleeves. Swiss lace edged her
long, flowing veil, and she carried a nosegay of white roses and baby's
breaUi. . ·
Serving as matron of honor was her sister, Mrs. Jerry Perkins of
Colorado, and maid of honor was Miss Suzanne Dethier of Costa Mesa.
Bridesmaids were Mrs. Robert Durr of Whittier, Miss Dona Wilbur of Port ..
land, the bridegroom's sister, and the Misses Candice and Colleen Connell,
the bride's sisters.
The attendants wore white silk organza over blue sheaths with velvet
trim. Their headpieces were floral covered bows, and forming their nose-
gays Were roses and gladioli.
Dressed identically was Kimberly Connell, the bride's sister and
flower girl. Carrying the rings on a white satin pillow was Timothy Con·
neil, the bride's broUter.
The bridegroom, son of Eric C. Wilbur of Portland and a former
Costa 1Mesan, asked Timothy Williams of Newport Beach to attend as best
man. 1
Assuming usher duties were Robert Vaughn, Newport Beach; Mike,
Pat and Casey Connell, the bride's brothers, and Perkins. Organist was
Mrs. Darrolyn Fennelly.
Following a reception in the Newporter Inn where Mi ss Karla Miller
circulated the guest book, the newlyweds left on a honeymoon to an undis-
closed destination. Upon their return they will reside in Costa Mesa.
The bride is a graduate of Mater Dei High School, attended Mount
St. Mary's College and is a graduate of Orange Coast College. Her husband
is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School, OCC and UCLA. Currently
he is working toward his teaching credentials at Chapman College and this
fall will begin teaching in Artesia.
Special guests attending were Mr. and Mrs. John L. Connell of Cor·
ona del Mar, the bride's grandparents and Mrs. Olive Shoen of Santa Ana,
the bridegroom's grandmother.
Out-Of.town guests were Mr. and Mrs. John Nagy and family of castro
Valley, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Yol<sa of San Lorenzo and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Purcell of Castro Valley.
Double Ring Rite ,
Jeannette Merriam Weds
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Olurch of Newport Beach
was the setting for double
ring nuptials uniting in mar-
riage Jeanette Louise Mer-
riam and Reggie Dean
Donovan.
The Rtv. Dr. Raymond
Brahams officiated at the
ceremony, assisted by the
Rev. Milton Palmer of
Lake Arrowhead.
The bride is the daughter
of Mrs. Melba Louise Mer·
riam of Newport Beach.
Parents of the bridegroom
are Mr. and N'l..l'll. Harold K.
Donovan of San Bernardino.
Escorted to the altar by
her uncle , Frank McCubbins
of Sama Ana, the bride wore
a floor length gown of chair
tilly lace embroidered with
pearls and sequins. The full
skirt featured a lace train
decorated with irridescent
sequins and pearls. Her il·
Iusion veil was held in place
by a crown of sequins and
pearls. She carried a bou·
quet in the shape of two
hearts entwined w i t h
orchids, baby's breath and
carnations.
Miss Melanie Marie Mer·
riam was asked by her
sister to be maid of honor.
She wore a blue chiffon em·
pire gown with flowing
pane] in back with white
daisy trim. around the neck
and down the back panel of
tlhe dress. Her matching veil
was held by a blue bow.
Carnations and b a b y ' s
breath in a cascade formed
her bouquet.
Bridesmaid6, dressed ex·
actly like ttle maiQ of boo.or,
were Miss Mary Nugent of
Newport Beach, Mrs. John
Zambel of Lake Arrowhead,
MiM Wendy Krause of
Cedar .Glen, Miss Neta
Skaggs of Newport Beach
and Miss Heather Hughes,
junior bridesmaid, the
bride's co u s i n from
Silverado Canyon, who wore
a gown of blue dotted swiss.
Flower girls were Tam-
mie McCloskey and Natalie
Mccloskey, both wearing
pale blue dotted s w i s s
gowns and carrying small
white baskets of carnations.
They were escorted by Dan·
ny McCubbiM and Gary
Donovan.
Harold Wayne Donovan of
Oxnard was asked by his
brother to serve as best
man. Ushering guests to
their places were Tom
Akery of San Bernardino,
Jim Keller of Long Beach,
Frank McOJbblns Jr. of
Santa Ana and Ron Golds-
tein of San Bernardino.
Ronnie Donovan was his
uncle'• ring bearer. ~
Robert Huestes provided
background music ( o r
solol1 t, Mrs. Ron
McCloskey, the b r Ide · s
oouafn. Oarnation1. stock
and baby's breath and white
satin streamers on each
pew formed the church
decorations. Miff S u s i e
McCubblns of Santa Ana
and Tun Hug)les of
Silverado Canron w e r e
candlellghters.
MRS. REGGI E OEAN OONOVAi..
P resbyterian Ceremony
A reception took place
after the ceremony in
the fireside room of the
c hur c h, wh.ich was
decorated for the occasion
with bouquets of blue and
white flowers and a topiary
tree made by Mrs. Kenneth
George. Mrs. Mina McCub·
bil"llS. grandmother of the
bride. assisted wlth the
decorations. The six -tiered
wedding cake was decorated
by Mrs . Carl Hagan of Santa
Ana, and Mn. Paul Taylor
of Tustin circulated the
guest book .
The bride is a graduate of
Newport Harbor High
School. Her husband, a grad-
uate of Rim of the World
High School in Lake Arrow-
hcar, is an enrolled as a stu·
dent at California State Col·
legc at San Bernardino,
After a wedding trip to
Carmel and Nor the r n
California the newlyweds
will reside at Lake Ar·
rowhead .
Couple Set Fall Date
The engagement of Jt1c·
quelint Ann Peed and
Michael F. Hussar Ill has
been announced by her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
E . Peed o( Huntington
Bead\.
Plans for a wedding on
Oct. 26 Jn the FlTAt Brethren
Church, Long Beach, were
announeed to memberi of
the immediate family dur·
ing 811 Informal dinner party
in the home of tbe bride·
elect.
Miss Peed was graduated
from Montebello l{ I g b
School and auended Golden
West College.
Her fiance, son o( Mr, and
Mrs. Mike Hussar. attended
Garden Grove ffi&b School
and h8' eomple1<d rtx YMI'•
of service with the &r
Force.
-,.~----
Monday, August S, 1968 DAILY PILOT JS
·Honeymoon
For William
i·n Mexico
Bielefelds
Honeymoonlng in MexJco
City and Guada)ajara are
Mr. and Mrs. Will ia m
Frederick Bielefeld. The
newlyweds wru be making
their home in Laguna Beach
following thelr wedding trip.
The former Carole Anita
Brimhall of Leguna Beach,
daughter of Mrs. James
Hubert Brimhall of Long
Beach and the late Mr.
Brimhall, exchanged vows
with her betrothed in St.
Michael's Episcopal Church
in Anaheim .
Officiating at the double
ring ceremony was the Rev.
Harold F.dwall.
William H. Brimhall gave
his sister In marriage.
For the afternoon nuptials
the bride donned a floor
lengtti organza over crepe
gown featuring G r e c la n
lines. Ribbon lace overlay
adorned the bodice and
flowers caught her veiling.
The new bride carried a
cascading b o u q u e t of
stephanotis and orchids.
Mrs. William Wiloon of
Garden Grove w.as matron
of honor. She wore a long
pale yellow organza over
crepe gown and held a bou-
quet of stephanotis and
carnations.
Asked to stand as best
man was Wilson. Ushering
the 125 guests to their seats
were Dale Hutchins of Hun-
tington Harbour and
Richard Keller of
Bakerefield.
GJ.adioli and cbrysan-
themums adorned t h e
church altar.
The Spanish courtyard of.
the Saddleback Inn in Santa
Ana was the setting for the
reception. Among special
guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Bielefeld and family
from Bakersfield.
MRS. WILLIAM FREOERICK BIELEFELD
Laguna Beac:h First Home
Mi6S Vala Jean stultz of
Long Beach circulated the
guest book and Mr. and
Mrs. Joel Graff of .Laguna
Beach assisted at the gift
table.
The former Miiss Brimhall
ts a graduate of Long Beach
Polytechnic High School and
Californ1a Slate Coll~• at
LOng Beach, She lS a
teacher in Laguna Beach.
Her husband, son of Mr.
and Mrs . Henry D. Bleleleld
of Anaheim, is en alumnus
of Anaheim High School and
the School of Engineering et CSCLB,
Catholic Ceremony
Vows, Rings Exchanged
<llristy Ohrestensen 8fld
Thomas L. Griffin Jr. pledg-
ed nuptial vows in st. John
the Baptist Gathollc Oiurch.
The Rev. Mark Stehly
solemnized the afternoon
ceremony.
The bride is the daughter
of Mrs. Betty Blakeney ol
Coste Mesa and B r • t t
Olrestensen CJf V 11 a 1 t a •
Parent of the bridegroom is
Mrs. Harold Moore of Costa
Mesa.
Given in marrJage by her
fattier. the bride wore a
floor length gown of white
peau de soie with a square
neckline and A-line skirt.
The fitted bodice featured
belied sleeves. Her
cathedral length veil of silk
illusion cmtpletely trimmed
in lace was caught to a
jeweled headpiece. She car-
ried. a bouquet of cascading
W'hite elegance with a center
of soft pink daisy
chrys~emums.
Mrs. Lee Bosanko of El
Centro was matron of honor
and Miss Sharon Gfeller of
West Covioo was maid of
honor. They were identically
attired in floor longUt pele
pink with velvet bow bats.
with veils and bouquets of
alternating hot pink and
white daisies with baby's
breath.
Bridesmaids, dreued in
floor length lxii!Jt pink
gowns with matching velvet
hats and bouquet& o l
alternaU'ng pale pink and
white dai'sie.s and baby's
breath were Miss Debby
DeSimooe of Weot Covina,
Miss , Sue Blakieoey 1 and
Mhs Diane Blakeney. Junior
bridesmaid was Miss Lisa
Moore of Costa Mesa, sister
of the bridegroom.
Bob Conrad of Newport
Beach carried out his duties
as best man. U5hers were
Don Cox o( Newport Beach,
Parris Mamion of Costa
Mesa, Larry Robins of Long
Beach and Tom O'Connor,
Newport Beach. Ju n i or
usher W&6 J ohn Blakeney.
Ray Pelletier provided
organ mus.le in the church
decorated with baskets of
white gladioli, baby's breMh
and stock.
A reception In the church
hall took place after the
ceremony, Bright p Ink
nowefl and fem decorated
tables In the hall fn whldl
200 guesta wm-e served
champagoe punch and cake.
The bride 11 a graduate of
Edge wood HIRh Schoql tn
Wect CovlDa and attended
Orange Coast College. HeT
husband Is a graduate o!
Newport Harbor High
School, attended OCC and
now Is serving in the U.S.
~Ir Force. Ai!" a wedding
~ ..........
MRS. THOMAS L. GRIFFIN JR.
T.,. Former Christy Chr..ton ....
trip tn Rosarila S-Med-Baoe to Maine wbero the
co, u.. -1.yw<dg will re-bride will cmttnuo 111!1' PIY·
side on Loring Air FU'C8 cbology studies.
September
Rites Told
The El Toro Marine Corps
Chapel ha• beeo selected fOr
the wedding of Jo a n
Mullano)' and Everett E .
Morris, whose engagement
Wat ll1llOWlced by ber
pareW.
Mias · Millloney It Ute
dlUllJW ol Mr. llld -.
Thomas Mullaney ol Hun·
. tington Beacil. She la a
graduate of Marb>a High
Sd>ool and Oml«• eo..t
COU!i!· Her fianc:e, a member ol
Ibo Fountain Vllley Junior
Chamber of Commerce, ii
tile oon of Mr. and Mrs. M.
L. Morril of Richmond,
Ind., end ""' graduated from John Muir High Scool
and •Pasadena Cit,y COllege.
The wedd.ln& will takt
placo Sept. 21. "\
JOAN MULLAN EY •rod
I
--------~---------------------------·--------------~=-----------'
I I
t
I
I I
I
. '... .
• J• DAILY PILOT Mond~. AugU$l ~. 1%8
'Fink' May Sink for Drink
DEAR ANN LANDERS: M Y
&randmother it 68 years oC a.ae. She
fw a 'eood lneome but in.sl.a:t.1 on work·
In& part-tlme to "keep up with
t111n11." Gram la peppy and tun and
could ~ar out a person hall her age.
She bu llved wt.th us fee' two years
(w• DHd the $1110 a month) and °"'
~loveber.
The ....,!om 11 that Gr1m drinltl.
(She'• been dolnc it for 40 years that I
bow ot.1 lt wouldn't be so bod If 1he
dranll: quietly at home but si>e &oe• to
the neiShbmbood taverns four even·
lnp a week. Occasionally some "n!C<
younc man" brings Gram home but
uauall,y •he hll'el • tu!.
'!be driver1 are geWnc to know her
by lier l!rlt name. I doo't mean to give
the !mpnMlon they have to belp htr
walk or uythin&. She never &eta
red)' looded. She can put the key in
the lock and pt henelf to 1>e4,
My husband 1ay1 Gram can tither
1top ddnk1ni « move tilewhere
beOlule 1bt f1 11.vin& our ad<reu a
bod name. I tllinlt be II being too bard
on the old darling. What do you 11y!
-LOYAL TO GRAM
DEAR LOY AL: Tbe '•old darlln&" 11
preUJ .well pldled by Ibis lime ao
yoar ha1bud cu forcet about a
reform preiram. &mee Gram doel11t 1et Into trouble
Ud ,... lmlbud'1 only eomplailll II
tut dte ea'b driven are cettlnc to
bow 10Gf addre1t. Cell ldm the
drh'tn do1't care about addre11es eo
loq u tbeit raree behave tll.emselve1
Horoscope
ANN LANDERS ..
ud pa,y. I'd halt to 1ee you t.o11 out
lbe old flrL
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My parents
had a teJTible marriage. Dad was a
quiet m&.n who didn't have much am·
bition. Mom alwayc held an executive
poiitioo 111.d made 'three times as
much as Dad. Although she never
threw it up to him he mentioned it
olten .as ''the cause of au our-trouble.''
I guess history repeats itself
W-ause I was married a t 24 -to a
man who was making less money than
I. The marriage lasted exactly two
years. l swore I'd never make that
mistake again. Now l am 31 and in
love with a man whose salary ls ex·
actly 50 pttcent of mine. He wants me
to m~ him 11;nd quit work and have
a family.
Am I wrong to want to maintain the
high standard of living to which I have
grown accustomed? I can do without
him. Please advise.
-SARA
DEAR SARA : $Ince yotW principal
late.rett In life $eemt to be to enjoy a
bi&b $tudarcl of Uvint, tell the fellow
no. It would be • dirty trick to marry
him. And l hope you and your $tan·
dard of Uvln1 wW be very happy.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I atartod to
-wTite to this · boy in the service. He
saw my picture in a high school paper.
J erry was a real brain and I knew it
irom his first letter. I bad to sJt with a
dictionary in my tap". l was detentlin·
ed t.o look smart, too , so I got the
smartest girl in school to compose
"my" letters to him.
Jerry is coming home next month.
The minute I open m y mo uth he'U
know I didn't write ~ose letters. Shall
I confess right off or try to fake it ?
-GHOSf ED
DEAR GHOSTED: Conleu rlfht off
and pray that Jerry bas a 1e111e of
humor. If be doesa't laugh, lntroditee
him to tbe girl who wrote the letter1.
Drinking may be . "in" to the kids
you rlUl with -but it can put you
'"oUt'" for keeps. You can cool it and
stay popular. Read "Booze and You -
For Teenagers o·nly.11 Send 35 cents in
coin and a long, self-addressed ,
stamped envelope with yo ur request.
Ann Landers will be glad to help you
with your problems. Send them to her
in care of the DAILY PILOT, enclos·
ing a self.addressed, stamped en-
velope.
Capricorn: Break Out What's Doing
MARY DAY, 642-4321
Of Constricting Rut
_JUES., AUG. 6
By SYDNEY OMARR
"The wile man controls
hit destiny. . .Astrology
point. the w-ay."
ARIES (Marcil 21·April
19): Go to tile lx>p. Don't
waste time with red tape.
Display talent6, versatility.
Fine day for impressing
higher-ups. Prestige rises.
Cooperate in community
project.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20): Good lunar a1pect to-
day coiDcide1 with possible
journey, communication
from a distance. Keep mind
open to ideu1 philosophy.
You can learn and mature.
me11ege.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov.
21): Get gotna: on ideas,
short journey. Make con·
tacts. Be creative. Expres.<i
confidence in your ·own
plans. others observe. If
you are a go-getter, rewards
could follow.
SAGmARJUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Be re<:epti"ve to in·
vestment proposals. You
have chance to make s olid
gain. Ke y ii to be a shrewd
bargainer. Realiu wortb of
pos.sessions. Git paid in
cash, not promises.
CAPRICORN Ille<. 22·
Jan. 19): Break from rou-
tine. Let other• 1ee you at
your best. Put as.ide details.
Plan -and dream. Con·
1tructive creative f o r c e
could lift you beyond restric-
tions . Act accordingly.
T9CAY
thHlllll'llltll l11c11 TOPI "•1111111
,jflPln -Allt" :k.l\ool, 7 p.m.
St.,_ I Oaltl TO"I Cl!illl -'Smllll l!'l1m~!1ry School, Hunllntlon k •cll.
1:30 "·"'· . TO"I Hll'Nr Llahllr1 -H1rp.or Schoel, Conti M1111, 7:JO p.m.
0YlfMl"1 AM"Yl'l'llUI -Ancl~r$0n School, W11tmln1ltr, I p.m. H1rMrNl11 Ch1tt11r, SWMt Adtlln11
-Coll"' P1rk Sclloo!. Coat1 Me~. I "·"'· TU•sDAY
<:eSll M ... Stnl1r ClllllM -Cam·
munlhl R«r11llon Center, O""'' Counlv F1lr1round•, 11 1.m. Au•lll1,., r. •1rr1ckl 1Mt, Vtflf1n1
IOI WorlOll W1r I -Amerlct n Levlon Htll, Cosll M111, 1;JO o.m.
0 Ylf'llltt"I AlllnYM0<.11 -L11un• HUI\, L1!1vr1 World, CIUbllouH 1. I ......
l llvtr 11"411 2U. Nl lfYt 01111hl11'1 II .. ...., wm -Like P1rt. Clubllouff,
Hunt!ngr°" 8ffcll, I a.m.
Miii llOtlialt L..011 -Odd Fellow1 Hill. C11111 M111, I p.m.
E"'Mwft Clwll ffl ., L.ltUlll llKh -EUu L.odH, I 11.m.
LB Group
Arranging
Party Date
WEON•50AY
Or111 .. CeunlY c.mn •IHI lv(ctll1n1
SoclMY -Odd Ftllowl H1J!, CO:l!I Mew. noon.
lllWHmltt Cir.tit If N-lt HI .....
-C1111l1n rnl1ur1nl, CO:lll Mel•, -· TO"I Sii Sl•lft• -Kllhlbraoke
School, Coilt Mnt, I p.m. Munllnt1an l11cll TOI'$ &ttcll &•kl
-Hunll"9ton lltt\::11 H!11ll k llOal, 1 p.m.
Art Ll•1111 IOI Nu11Hntlon lltCll -
ltke Perk Clubl1ou1e, 7:37 p.m. Chtri1t1n A,....1....,1 -ll11r Slreel
School, CO:ltt Me .. , I p.m.
TNUllOAY
TOlll Wt If Hu1!111111ot1 •tecll -CommunllY MellloOl1! Cllurdl, t :>O ...... C11l1 Mna L!brt ,., Sl.,Y Klur -Cosl1 Me .. Llbttry. 10:30 1.m.
N-lt N111io1r Ori..........,., Clw•
-NIWPOrllr IM, ,_,._
llutlr C-t WNYm' 01111111 -Slnt1
"'"' Pullllc Ll~•l"Y. I 11.m. &11111 Cll1111tt" II N1ll-J Semrlt""'
ltt Al~L•tten tnMrMlilrltl-L~tlon
11 1v11l1bi. bl' ctllllll Mr•. 5111'1 I'll.,,.
1111, •~. ''» ,.m. TOPS W1l1l W1tdlln -Clrcll View
khoc"!. HU11ttn1ton IMdl, 7 11.m. TO"'S ,,,,..,n' Mloklr1 -, ... ..,. kl!ml,
M1>nlln1ton l111dl, 1 ,.m.
TO'I Mlr911111 M1nMlfl WllOllllMI Scllool, Cotti MIU, 1 11.m.
Trim·'llll TO"I Clllfl If WHl!llllllltt"
-l'lnllY kl'loOI, 7 '·"'· U.I. Air .hrc1 MlttMn. l'ltM It -
K-Ki t meblle lloml llll"k. Slnt1
Ant . 7:30 ,.l"l'J;
AIMf"lctl Llllfltl A11•ll1rv If L"11111
•Nell -l "lon HtO, I P.m. Mun11'1ttllfl Kiili 01..... Ctu--Loc111on 11 1v1t11bl1 bv ctlll"I M111.
Wllll1m G11l1v1n, ftl24 1)t, I 11.m.
l'llOAY
Toastmistress Image
Refletted at Meeting
,,,, 'l'o¥1iulstrm lmaae
will be ex:atnlntd when Mrs.
Vinc ent D. Brf'Ult If'-to
members ol Ooundl Six,
Golden Desert Re110q of
JnternaUobal Toastmistress
Clubs following i dinner
meetidg at 7:30 p.m. today
in the Greenbriet Inn .
'!'he form.t presJdent of
International TOastmistress
Clubs will bale her t.cpic on
a workshOp pr esented dur·
ing the re:gional conference
in Los Angeles this year.
Mrs. Frank Young, coun·
cit cbainn~, his chosen
Living to Learn as the
Uieme for her term of office
and will em p has iz e
strengthening membership
in clubs, attendance a.t coun~
cil meetings and the form·
inc of new Toastmistress
ClubS.
Mn. YOUJ\1! stal<d that
the council is directly
responsible for the progress
and welfare of member
clubs and w o u l d stand
behind and support club el· roru. Council meetings ·will
be concerned with club
educatior.al progress and
membership stability.
During dinner a discussion
on Officers' Training at the
Club Level will tab place
with e.ach discussion leader
~portina: re1ult.1 to the
genera I member.sh1p af·
terwards.
Mr1. Duane Shpffler will
serve at Toutmiltr111 for
tM evenlnc.
International To as t·
mistress C 1 u b 1 jnvite
the membership of oil adult
women wtthOut regard to
race, rellg1on, cltizemitlip or
c:oontry of r~fl< ..
Women interested tn con·
tinuing education via a:uided
self-development in com-
municatiOn and leadership
are invited to call Mrs.
Dominick C orrabin o ,
Anaheim, to obtain in·
formation regarding area
Chiba.
Emblem Club
FINO OF THE WEEK
GollttM!Mlld!on91 imported from England
come Jn handy for'°" of other th Inga
-aelod.Gtotdltn-IMm
for hot doga-mH-aeutrt<taut and lhey'OI
wonderlul torMfVing-""11 neally. TM Elks l.A>dge ls the set.-
ting for meetings oC ttie
Emblem Club 201 of La,guna
Beach. Members aather the
firat and "third Tuesdays at
8 p.m.
Plain or .mboued lffverplate, rn lnchel In length.
. L1gun1 Group
American Legion Aux·
illary of Laeuna Beach
gatners at 8 p.m. the second
and fourth Thursdays iD the
Legion Hell.
our lpOClol price ""'° -h ..
1111lfA"'''i'''"' a M••••r Cit•'•'· r,.
s~~·~
II FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
6-44-1)10
FABULO~S FABRICS
for ~KTOSCHOOL)ll
avril rayon ind cotton
MINI PRINTS
n11t d1Ji9n• on light 9 ro111141 fer tlr11i1•
~ blou111.
RI•. 6tc N 7tc TD. YALUU
36" wide
9u1r.
wa1h1ltl•
I 00 ,.. •. combed cotton
WOVEN PLAID
GINGHAMS
1H new fill 0::1l1r t1mbi111ti1 n1 fer .,,11
ll'UI er c1r11r w11rlnt. tt•. 6tc t9 ltc YD. YALUU
36"wide
9u1r.
Watha bl•
NEVER IRON "LIBERTY" PRINTS
petit• d1si9ns in avril r•r.on and cotton. novelty prints, mini clots, fl orals,
c ustar•d on dirk grounds.
Reg . 19c to 91c ycl. V1lue1
36" wide
1u1r. w11h•bl•
m1chi111 w11h1il1 e COTION RllllD ,RINTS
1vril r•y•n & cott111 "t11'11I"
e IROADCLOTH ,RINTS
79¢
twin w11v1 11cor1ll111
ACRYLIC PRINTS
GEMINI (May 21 -June
20): Exdtange o f in·
formation concemina: in-
vestment hilbllehll day.
You coWd uncover secrets.
Key ii to dig deep., Don't be
1atiatied with IUpe~tiO~J
answert. Concentrate on
quallty. Be !borough.
CANCER (June 21-July
22 ): Home affab'I need at·
te.ntion. Make domestic ad-
justment. One who ii im·
portant to you requires
special cone:lder.11.tlon. Give
it. Don't risk a break with
persone who can make you
happy.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb.
18): Peek beb1nd the scenes.
Do some personal in·
vestifldb>c. Shake 0 r. r
needl-ese: f e a r s • The
Anticipating a gala even-
ing Saturday, Aug. 10, are
members of Les Petites
F'leurs, Children's Hom e
Society .
1'1111111111 V1lle1 Null 11 Nlltlllll
TOPS Cltl -Recr11lfon Center, Hun-
llntton l1Kh. 10 ......
•~•"" ,rtflv l1111tM111 Clut -ne
W. llY AW., lllbol, -· Orin" COU11tv 1111111 •en -Dolt
S<Jlool, G1rd111 Gt"(MI, I p.m.
colt1n Jporhw11r
e DUCK ,RINTS
fortr1l "oly1it1r I cotton
1114, "''"' lll1altnt 111.I celerful flor1l1 Oft I silt
fl•n111l·li•• fi~i1lt fo1 fill 1uil1, dr11111, jum''"•
'''rt1w11r.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Important to p e r ce i ve
trends. Find out what people
are thinkin1. Bau actions
on new!y glean e d in-
formation. Don't brood
about the past. Inistead, take
constructive action ta build
fUture.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 221:
Notlllni happene halfway.
Day when yoo commit
yourself. Know this -and
play aame to win. Be
creative, dynamic. Hesita-
tion now could be in·
terpreted a1 lack of con·
lid"1C ..
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
You c.an finllh important
tuk. Key 11 to be thorough,
detmntned. Build on solid
bue. Don't be tempted into
premeture action. Be Surf:
of faoll. ftcur••· study LEO
unknown becomes known
once you throw light. The
excitement, pr o f 1 t 1 or
discovery await you.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March
20): The more you com -
mtmicate thoughts, opinions,
the mort: )'OU favorably im·
press. Make new friends . Be
receptive. Love, travel and
variety are ke~d . Ex·
oWic day.
IF TODAY IS YO UR
BIRTHDAY you have sense
of color and harmony. Now
you are building on rela·
tionship. Momentum i t
t:here and your keynote is
progress-personal and pro·
fe6'1onal.
GENIRAL TEN-
DENCIES' Cycle high for
CAPRICORN. AQUARIUS,
PISCES. Special word to
CANCER: atudy oppoaing
views. Gain greater sense
of i>alance.
To 1111111 out whe'1 lu(ll;y tilr VOU lfl
,..._.,. 111111 ""-Ol"'dl<" svorwv 0merr•1
ballt, "1«1•1 Hinh 1w ........ •nd w-... klllll 11k111Nt. end Jt cents .. OINon" ....,,...., $eoenh, h CAIL Y
PILOT, I OI! 3:1& Grind Cmtr1t St•
lllfl. N-Yll'll. H.Y. 1111117.
The Laguna Ni gue l home
of Mr. and Mr5. KCt1neth A.
Bloom will be the setting fo r
the festivities. AcUve and
associate members w i l l
'"k..ick off" the party with a
cocktail hour at 6 p.m., and
a potluck dlooer will follow
at 7.
Mrs. J i m 1-loltel. social
chairman , announced that
dancing also is planned for
the evening . Assisting her
are Mrs. Will iam Crapo and
Mrs. Paul Thompson.
Service Moms
U. S .. i\ir Force Mot.hers.
Flight. 19 have selected
Kon a Kai mobile park's ,
recreation c enter, 4117 1
McFadden Ave., Santa Ana.
fo r their meeting place.
Members gather at 7:30
.m. the second Thursda .
PENETRATION
N1ftrly 1Ylf"YOlll r11.lt +he I
DAIL y fl'tLO,T, ,1i'.'"',t'w"o"'WI• .
p1p1r or t • '"" ''" r1n91 I
Co11t.
THIS UNIQUE COWCTIOll OF
e Gift Cards e Gift Items e Costume Jewelry e Boutique & Ladies
reedy to weer
WILL BE SOLD IN
JUST 3 DAYSI
EVERY ITEM •..
~---FIXTURES FOR SALE----'
I 072 BAYSIDE DR.
NIW,ORT llACH
MAITll CHAflOI IANl(AMlfllCAflD
(BAYSIDE CENTER l
e NO ,RESS ,RINTS
t,11ntn~ou1 new fill 11l1ct ionJ
36" /4S" widths
guar. wa1haltle 98!.
ll•. S,.tl t9 SZ.4t TAll
45" width
hand
Wlthtltle
s14s
y~.
Woolens
BELL RINGER VALUES!
IOO Y. WOOLS WOOL BLENDS
PLAIDS e SOLIDS e NOVEL TIES
VALUES $2.91 lo $l.29 YARD
suit •ncl dr•ss w1i9hts for 1porf1w11r, dr111-up, robes
54" to
Widths
58 11 $1~.
zingy new foll
SKIRT
LENGTHS
for school and dr•ss w11r. I 00 "!. wools.
wool blinds 12" long, m1tchin9 l•ngths
• PLAIDS e CHECKS • SOLIDS
e NOVEL TIES e FANCIES
V;.LUES TO $2.91 E;.CH
54" to 60"
widths
BON·DED
SUITINGS
I 00 '/. 1c1t1I• trkol lini1191. choo11 fr1m 9r11t
111w color. t!ld w11v11 in wools 1 nlll w1ol
bl1nd1 ..
• PLAIDS • CHECKS
• SOLID COLORS
VALUll flOM SJ.6t t1 S4.tl TAlD
54" to 60"
widths
BONDED CLASSICS
, •• ,. ....... trklt ... ,.,
WOOL & NYLON
• COORDINATES
100" WOOL e 41" WIDl
• PRINTED CREPE
WOOL & NYLON F-ANCI ES
• BLACK & WHITE
ALL RAYON
• BLEN TEMPO MATCH UPS
IOO 't. WOOL .
• TEXTURED SOLIDS
VALUIS UI' TO SI.ti YAlD
54" to 60"
wtdth1
r11~r\1 1 1 f~l l ·~
SOUTH COAST 'l..UA
I RISTOL AT $AH Dlf$,0
FWY., COSTA MESA
141·1116
HONIR l'lAZA
I nH AT lllSTOL
SANTA ANA
141-Sll l
HUNT1N•TON CINTIR
IEOIN61:l AT llEACM
HUNTIN6 TOH llA.CM
lt7·101)
. .
-~.~.~~~~ ..................................................................................................................... ~--:~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~--~~~
CIRCLING FASHION -Circles are in. Full circle
belts surround stylish waists and circular sunglasses
shade the eyes (above). Brass and silver rims com-
bine with amber, blue or smoke lenses. Circles also
ciang!e from wrists (below). In gold and silver time
pieces. Available at Joseph Magnin's.
Let us capture
the summer sun
in your child's
glowing smile ,7;
Summertime lights up your chlld's face.
Smiles ilow. Eyes sparkle. Hair sh ines.
And only a fine· portrait can remember
that "summer look" all year long, Le~
our ta lented photographer capture your
child's sunny glow now. Hurry in and·
you'll make special summersavlngs, too.
9 GLOWING 995
PORTRAiTS , , • JUST
Sugar, Spice Featur ed
The Eyes
Have It
Summertime, when living
easy Ja on everyone's mind.
Calilornianl dream o f
scorched bills, fu11 and
laughing swimming pools,
sailing, twilight barbecues.
trips to .tbe beach and moon·
lit horseback ride• . , • in
short, of 1wnmerUme.
Summer 1968 ii a time of
change. It's a time of major
fashion newa. lt'1 a yeer
that will be remembered for
ruffles, curl1 and
sportswear looks.
Gone are the myriad bor·
ing, aleeveless A-line shifts.
Happily" back are wai.Ma: and
lace, organdy, cotton liace,
deep V necks, bare midriffs
-and lots of· jewelry. 'lbe
comfOrtable skirt and shirt
have replaced the architec-
tural shift, as curls and
waves have replaced the
harsh "Sassoon" cut.
Summer bB.6 ushered in a
se ason f or ac tiv e
sportswear and for
wardrobe accent$. This is
the time a palr of
suriglasses, a new swimsuit
or coverup and a p a i r of
brightly colored sandals can
add si;Cce to your wm!robe
• • • and to your 6\1.Dl!Der ,
lull.
)
Monday, A119ust 5, 1968 DAILY PILOT Jf.
David G. Gibson Claims • • •• • :.~~ • • • •
Bride in Colorado Rite Pitture :
Peeks : Judith Ann Brown and
David G. Gibson pled&ed
nuptial vows in ceremonies
in Rockland Community
Church of Golden, Colo.
The Rev. WWI.am Scoles
officiated, linking t h e
daughter of Mr. and Mra.
Norman 0. Brown of Dillon,
Colo. and the son of Mr. and
Mrs. William H. Gibson of
Newport Beat'b.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride .selected a
white chantilly lace dress
with an illusion veil . She
carried a bouquet of yellow
and white roses.
Her attendants were Mrs.
Thomas P. Popadak, her
sister f r o m Denver, w h o
was asked to be matron of
honor; Miss Kathy Brown,
her cousin from Lamar,
Colo., Miss Paula Weeden of
Denver, and Miss Leslie
Storin ol Lakewood, Colo.
Attendants' gowns were
floor length yellow frocks
witih daisy lace bodices and
white · lace picture hats.
They es.ch carried a bouquet
of yellow and white daisies.
Miss Elizabeth P11.tterson,
cousin of the bride from Lit·
tleton, Colo. was flower girl
while David Patterson
of the ·same town was
ring bearer.
Serving as best man was
Donald M. G1bsoo1 brother
of the bride&room, Newport '
Beach. Ulllering guosta· lo •r MWWJ11 1 • • 1 • • their pews were Popadak,
Michael Swaflor<I, cousin ol Henry Foodi playo tli4 ~
the bride,. Hugoton, Kan. of a N1.Y)' Warrant Ofnc.t.
and Patrick D. Brown , the happy family film Yi -'
brother of the bnde, DWoo, Ml .. And Oun. In ·~ i
Colo. . filled movie, opening 1 -e
A reception took place im· Mesa Wednesday you'
mediately after the Lucille Ball as a' nur1:& bl~
cerel11?'1Y in the ch~h dispensary. Tte acUon, ~
reception h,it. Decorau~ plenty of it, Is centereil lb,
were . yellow . and white around and .about San l"iab•
gladioli and dms.ies. cisco -
The bride ls a graduate of · -,
Lakewood High School in Sequences appear on tbt U.
Lakewood Colo and at-S. S. Enterprise at sea, in the
tended M~liian College Alameda Air Station, on board
in Denver. Her husband is a cable cars, kt FishertpaJl,'I
graduate of Newport Harbor Wharf, GhirardeW Sq u_ 1 ~e
High School and attended and •0 forth. Van Jolu>sOn
the University of Califamia sows as Henry'.• best buddy.
at Riverside and Santa Fonda is a widower. Lucille
Barbara. is a Navy widow. Tbey are at.-
The newlyweds will reside tracted to one another .and
in Killeen, Tex. begin to have some fun and
.i;.pproach an "understanding ..
Then comes the bomb! 11e
Ovara•tars widower has ten children. Tile u widow has eight. That add! fJ
Every Monday at 8 p.m. to "Yours" and "Mine", bu~
members gather in An· ft haven't arrived at a fifure
derson School auditorium, for "Ours" yet. Wait and
Westminster, for mee~gs see.
of Overeaters Anonymous.
Guests are welcome to at·
tend.
Joseph Magran at South
Coa&t Plaza ba6 &elected
thue f e w 1Ummertime
fashioas to entice you.
SHOWING STRIPES '-The one-piece tunic sui' ls
an important addition. to the fashion swim scene.
The navy and white striped suit by Bob CUnning-
ham la not an item to be wrapped in a towel but is
OC Sinl)le Bees an entire ·coUum•, coming in its own tote with its own coverup and towel to match.
! WE HAVI YOUR SIZE 21111 TO 12 !
NO llCTIA CHAIOI -SIDS ova TIN A&..L WIOTHl1 l:XTlllA WIDI: TO AAAA'I
HAAD TO FIT? LARGE SELECTION
DIPllE~trrry SHOES FOR WOMEN $11 .99-$16,99
IA.NU ANA -ANAHllM -
IM l!ad Mt. St, IOI Weil l.l!!COOl!I "llmw SO~\ ,.,_,.: US-0...0
The second and fourth --------------------11
FridayotthemoothOrange The Great Orange Coast's County Single Bees ga1!ber HlNRT FONDA .
in D o i g School, Garden N
Grove. Activities begin at 8 O. 1 Paper! YThe companlon piece with
Hwn: t 1M " ,,.. Maftlllr a ,,..., 'IM • ours, Mine And Ow-1 at the ,-'p~.m~. --====-====,-:=::-::::-:=--------------...c!~!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!'!~!!!!'!!!!!'!~!!!!!~!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!~'I Mesa theatre will be Tb• r -•••••••••••••••• •••. •••••••••••-., Private Navy Of Sgl. O'Far-rell. Bob Hope leadJ the
: famous recipes from famous cities! 1
1 ~~·1~;~:~~~~.
El R h plays Bob's old flame, and I anc o continues to bring you interesting meals from around 1 bow!
I th ld ' h • ~ Action in The Private NaVJ e .wor , wit recipes 1 rom famous cities, where food is an art! 1 01 s11. o'Farren take• place
I. on an atoll in the South Seas. -•• • • •••• •• • ••• • • • • • • • • • ••••••••.I Tbere lsllttlewarf&H oobeer drinking happens to be the
This week ••. four new recipe! with the accent of Roma •••
yours for the taking at our service meat counters! Ordinary
inrredient.a take on a touch of wizardry .•• plain food becomes a
delightful dish to tempt all who enjoy good food with the
imaginative touch!
V I TOP SIRLOIN $149 ea • • • • • .F~R. s.c-!L~O!l~I. • • • • • Ill
Young, tender, tasty! Let us alice it thin for you .• , just right
for this great favorite ••• and a et our easy-to-fix recipe!
Perch ..... f~~Y!{t~1 •••••• 59~
So easy to prepare when you follow our recipe! ... and so very
delicious when you prepare tender fillets in the ltalian stylel
Sausage ... ~A~~N. ~l~ ••• 79~
Dell1btfully seaaoned I ••• authentic u Hadrian's Arth !
Spinach~.~~ :~E!H •• 2 BU. 25c
Be aur~ to get our recipe for delicious "Spinaci Stufati" !
Spaghetti ........................................ 19c Zucchini ... ~N~~R.~U.~H ••• 19~
You've never enjoyed it until you've tried "Zucchini Fritte"!
Globe Al , • , 1 pound package .•• Golden Durham wheat!
Tomato Sauce .................... 12 ™ s1 oo
Hunt'• •.. 8 ounce can .•. rich, for a better 1auce I
Olive Oil ......................................... 89c
Pompeiian • , • pure, imported! ••• 16 ounce aize.
Canneloni ........................................ 89c
Pri.cu i1l tf/tr.t at aU 1tort1
Mon,. Tue1., Wed ., Aug. 5, 6, 7
main activity. When the cargo
ship, with more beer, ii
torpedoed by the Japa, morale
sinks to a low ebb, 1be Navy
calls for pretty nuraea to
,,ubltitute for the bnnr. But.
alas end alack, D!Iler ii tl>o
only one who arrives. Morale
stilt low.
Then Hope roes into don
and takes off in an 111em1
torpedo boat f<r more beer.
Wait and see for your1eH how
one man can almost win 1
war all by himself, or at least.
help his buddies and hurt the
enemy.
Doris Day stan: in Where
Were Yo u When The Ltgbta
Went Out'!, a very funny film
set e.gainst the backdrop ~
the par alyrlog power failure
that blacked-out Manhattan in
1965. Patrick O'Neal p~ the
hubby Vlbo gels togettie< wi\11
his wile (Doris) for an in-
frequent romance, when tM
bulbs wooldn 't ligbt·up.
Counterpoint is a gripping
dramatic film, st.afifng
Charlton Heston and Max·
imilian Schell, that &hows with
Where Were You Wbea The
Llgbta: Went Out? at ttie Lido.
LAST CALL for Tboroa1bly
Modern MIUJe at t h e
thoroughly modem Me a a
tonight £Od tomorrow even·
ing. "
J.AKDT DlHNll
MESA MATINEES provide
tl1m fans with a grand OP·
portunity to enjoy the 1ood1 new movies during the af·
temoon ,bours while tald.bc ,a
break from dally duties and
weekly chores. Try a matinee
for size and just for fun.
FREE PASSES to tho Udo
or the Mesa theatre wtll bt
milled W<131 to four o1 ·oar
selected guest&, J e n 11 I •
Dorsey, 1640 Newport Avt.,
C..11' Mesa ; L. L, Calhoun,
101 N. B~lde Dr., Newpo ..
Beadl; Ai. c. Smith, 7 ll«J
Island, B~ and W. C.
Moeo, 1309 Dolpbin Temee,
Coront de.1 Mar. ~
You. don 't n-S casb to en':.
joy a fine film at the Lido or Crepes, delicioualy stuffed and frozen ••• Grand Tour .•. kt. ...... tll• M .. a tbeatre. 11 the AR.....: sunset & Huntiniton Dr. (II RlllCl1o Conte~ · AulU>I vacllh ba1 you pino;!f.
PWDE!lk 320 West Colorado Blvd.• SllUl1I PAS.\ll!JIA: Fnmont & Hunlin&ton Dr. ed I« penole1, Just-·~ Chianti ......................................... S199 .. HUNTINGTON BEACH: Warner and Al&onquin (Just East of Huntiniton Harbou~ ~=~~~ ~er ~ .....
HUNTIN6TON BEACH ....,.... ,.,.,.. "'21 "" ~-'' Pho"' 192.1111 • Ed. 211 F;n1 Floor Thi meal isn't complete without !ti~. Btrtoll!"s. _.,.,., ,_ "' Newport Bl'ld. •...,., Elllblutt Dr. (EJstlllutt Vilile Cenlelj to the Lido or Ibo MO,a L-~~~~~~~~~~~~~·-~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~-~1tbealrel .
' '
---------------·--
(
------·-----
•
-
I
I
r
' '
\
::\r "' . . . s MC •!.. .. e __ ae:s . _ t a c t o !!CJ a t c a a a 2 2 a . -.. . .... ··-.. .. .. -... .. .. ... ---~ .. ... . . -. . . . ·-·-. --. .. . . -. . . .. -· .... .......... :-·. ___ ...., .· .. . . . -.... ~· .. . . . . . . . . ..... _ ....... .,_ ..... .. --... 1··-· ....... _ ... . -.. ~... ... . . ..
Ja OAll.Y PILOT
~~SU.rtlttfl New F i lm
i~ ~~~~o ~~~~~~~~~~.~~~~~( ~ _ IONOLULU (AP) _ ring role in Elia Kuan's haven't worked with a direc-.:::z __ ,__ """e •-angement" Io tor like that 1·n and , ::~ Brando appear & au ru~ years, ' ~dy to go back to work. devote h1s time to civil I'm looking forward to it" . ,
:Iker ttie a.ssusinaUon of rights. The late Kui Lee, already ..,!!!"· M&rtin IAlther King Jr., Stopping over in Honolulu an is land legend although he
11-en route from Tahiti Island died only two years ago, will
to Paris, Brando said be ex-get the fHmbiog treatment
pects to begin.work soon on under a deal set by Honolulu
''The Rebetlion," to be film· Advertiser columnist Eddie
ed in Europe. Sherman. He secured rights THE LUXURIOUS
NEW IAll•
THEATRE
~ ~::;aa::~\ r: ~IAllOI. PEiOllSUU•IJl-4041 ~1
: ··W'I!I __ _.,.
.: ':;'. C1'lld WtRI p,,,.t O"ly
6~ :,:e Op•" Nighjly 6:45 e
-! ~· e I NDS TUISDAY e
S ACADEMY AWARDS
'The director ts Gilio to Lee's life story from the
PontecorW. who made 'Bat-songwriter's estate, a n d
tie of Algiers,' " said the ac-producer Leonard Freeman
tor. "He's one of tho5e new has taken an option on the
directors who doesn't g.ive a biography.
damn about stars or Kui Lee was the brilliant,
anything but his film. He's rebellious island boy who
wrote "One Paddle, Two
Paddle'' and ''I 'l l
Remember You ," "Ain't No
Big Thing" and other songs
which helped propel Don Ho
to national fame. Lee dled of
cancer in his twenties .. ,
A location scout from the
Mirisch Brothers company
visited here re<!enUy to hunt
scenery for a sequal to
"Hawaii" The producers
Me apparently going ahead
with plans to continue the
James Michener saga with
the Clhinese and Japanese
portions of the novel, which
many readers consider the
beSl part.
Many persons consider
''Hawaii" a flop because it
drew almost uniformly bad
reviews. But it appears to
have been one of thOEie
movies tbat nobody liked
but the public. "Hawaii"
was a big moneymaker fur
the Miriscbe& and United
Artists. So there is little
wonder that a sequel is
planned ...
Hawaii is becoming in-
creasingly popular as a
background for televiSion
commercials. The reason is
not merely to capture the
islands' scenic beauty 1n col·
or; .the film makers can also
escape some of the stringent
terms for actors by not
shooting on the mainland ..
R e c e n t entertainment
figure& in the islands: Helen
Hayes, visiting son James
M•acArthur, co-star o f
"Hawaii Five-0"; Nancy
Sinatra, filming for a new
television special and not
visiting her ex, Tommy
Sands; Betty Grable, here
for a stand in "Guys and
Dolls" ...
James Arness dropped his
Garbo habits and gabbed
with the press when his
catamaran finished first in
the trans-Pacific race. His
fellow television star, Buddy
EOOen, came in two days
later but woo the race
'Greatest Show' Due
In Anaheim Tuesday
•
.. •
• • ..
" :· :; ,. •' •' •I ~ .. •• • • • • :---• • •• • ;-
=-• • • • • I
¢ .,.
~ • • • • ...
... ::-
' .
c,ACWhole
c.NewCWorld of C£ntertainment!
. TONITE lhru FRIDAY NITE
"ON STAGE U.S.A."
"':;;:' ~;iii-1°N"o-
SKILES & HENDERS C
flttr• Added Attr1ctlon
GLADYS KNIGHT
' & THE PIPS
3hows ill 9:15 and II PM -On the TOMORROWl..ANO STAG,
I~ w11k1 to tome ..•
PKYlllS DlllER, Bill DAMA, and 1111ny, 1111111 lllOtl
* * * Disneyland On Parade
7:30 PM
A Merry, Musical Prom enade throush the
Matzic Kingdom starrins Mickey, Pluto Goofy
and all YoUr Disney Character Favdrit.es
EVERY SUNDAY
COUNTRY M1JSIC J1JBILEE
N•rt SW141J st11ri111
ROY CLARK
MARY TAYlOR
JOHNNY •nd JONIE MOSBY
NOEL BOGGS and hl1 BAND
DICK HAYNES •nd COAKY MAY BERRY
GUEST MCI
s_tiows ti: 3, 5 ll'ld 7 PM-On !ht! TOMORRO'M.AND STA(
EVERY NITE al 9 PM
Fa ntasy in the Sky
Tinker Belrs flight si11nals the start
ol a Speclacufar Aerial Fireworks OispJf'
* * * .tlld""""""' ....,...,_.,Ille. .,,Ilk lllnl~Oftl , , ,
TEllf IUCIN(t . '"[ MUST AN$$• rlJIDtOUSC nvt + 2
M Kim OF TIIC IUMCDOM •THE ClW WMD SINCltS
•ll WIQTT I THE llSHrn.All8 DAR NITEllS
... aGYM. TAMIJIANS • TH( INYAOEIS sna IAfll
M AMEllCW ftW 1M llHf Mn!
,_,_, .... ,.,..__,to~ •II tf>1 tstihMlll, ••
. llSlltYlNID AF1U DARK TICKET IOM
lldWtt~ tM _,l mt9Ctlells ofYM CtlMt
Adult .$4.CiO Junior ••·•• $3.00
...111..-) (15.10 ¥11119j •'*" Mtw • ""' 01111
............. I • .. 11 WdlM.-..frf, a Sil t NI. .. I IM
Dis neyland ··-----l '
The big silver and r ed
streamline train or Ringling
Bros. and Barnum & Bailey
Circus arrives in Anaheim
Tuesday for a nine-day
e-ngagement at the Anaheim
Convention Center Arena.
The Greatest Show On
Earth has been greatly
enlarged this year and will
persent one of the most
outstanding performances in
its 98 year history. ac-
cording t1 to new owners,
Irvin and Israel Feld and
J udge Roy Hofheinz.
'Ill.ere will be t w o
performances daily with
three shows scheduled on
Saturday. Children under 12
years of age are admitted at
half price for all performan-
ces except Friday nights
and weekends.
TICkets are now on sale at
the Anaheim Convention
Center box office. all Mutual
agencies, all Walli ch's
Music City stores a n d
United California Banks.
Crossword Puzi)e
ACROSS
1 War God . 5 Supply what
Is requ ired
10 Excl amallon of discomfort
14 Singer
15 Hi gh mass
vestmtnt
16 H lgh rating:
2 words 17 St1trsllc1I
person:
2 words 19 lll llll1ry operation
20 Domestic establish-
ment
21 Ship
trnployees
23 Rema{n
unsettled 25 Exclamation of surpr ise
2& Took umbrage 30 Mountain
rJdges
34 N1utlc1l
command
35 Glass articl e
37 City of Europe
38 Jack of clubs
39 Race track
structures
42 fill Int
43 False god 45 Very short of molsturt-
4& Tree
48 Wa steland
50 Mod,rated
52 Pattern
ef Scottish
tartan
54 Transported in spi rit 55 Watchers
59 Notice
63 Powtrful
emotion 64 ln dlanapolls
contestant: 2 words
&6 Ending used
with dow
and tern
&1 Frt11ch school
&B Nobod y 69 U.S. optra singtr 70 Co-inventor
of cordlt• 71 Achlh eS
DOI N
l Man In
Genesis 2 Ttar apart
J Not slopi~
4 Men's
cloaks
5 Convincing
& Exist
7 Head cov erings I Raise to the skies
9 Turncoat
8/5/fi8
10 Mardi 40 Torn In
Gras shreds
part icipant 41 Mil itary
11 Rime tfl!Jln''' 12 Feminln• 4~ Canada's
nam• Pearson,
13 Unites and others firmly 47 Riskin ;
18 G-Men or money
T-Men, e.g. 49 Ste'p
22 State of 51 Eurasl • hostility herb
24 Deprive 53 Ra infall
26 Not slo w amount 27 Escap• 55 Hit 28 U.S. 56 --·sti ck
sa te llite 57 Stov' 29 Opposite of chambet
a cr edit 58 Vesse l
31 Drunkard 60 Reveltrs' 32 Frenchman's cry namt 61 Coln
33 Glutttd &Z -· Bien! Jb Ste 4& &5 Guido's Ac ross nolt
..-i::....-..-i....-:--r.-"r.-T,....,.,....,,
" ..
Comi~s Say ··Goo.dhye Dere ~:
Allen and Rossi Carvin g Out Se JXLrat,e Careers .
By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD UPI) -
Co,medy team partnerships
bear a atrong resemblance
to California marriages -
they are inclined to end in
divorce. · ·
Heading their separate
ways next month are Marty
Allen and Stfve Bossi. After
10 years of partnership the
lads are splitting up and,
just as in a marriage, the
announcement was made
that they were parting
amicably.
This means n eithe r
partner pulled a knife on the
other.
Comedy teams in the past
bave agreed (o disagree on
a more volatile note. Martin ·
and Lewis split up with a
boom. Abbott and CosteUo
feuded for years before they
divorced.
Usually the parting is a
traumatic experience for
both members of a team.
and even in this friendly
split some scars will remain
where the scalpel severed
Allen from Rossi.
Allen, the frizzy haired
"hell~ de re" guy, said, "I
imagine there will be an
YOU'LL
QUAKE
IAT HIS
EVERY
SHAKE!
emotional Jolt for both of us
because we've always got .
ten al<>ng so weU.
"lt was Nat King Cole
who first suggested we work
together as a team. But
there are several reasons
why we've decided to call it
qui~."
For openers, Steve, the
h, a-n·d s om e straight-man.
singer, lives in California
with his wife. Marty and his
bride make their home i9
New York City.
"Our last performance
togettier is in [;as Vegas this!
September." Allen said. "I
want to diversify and do
other things -Broadway,
television guest shots, com·
mercLa.is and maybe even
movies."
As moVie stars, the All en
and Rossi team was a bomb.
They starred in "The Last
of the Secret Agents." lt
also was the last of their
screen career as a team.
Marty's first big deal as ;i
single is a contract with a
laundry product as a
gOQdwill ambassador.
He will make television
commercials for the com-
pany, appear in newspaper
ctllllll "7 """" Cit
STARTS WEDNESDAY
lft1tl•P 6:JO I 9:JO
M.tlftffl Sat. I S•11. J :OO
S2 BEST PICTURE
AWARDS
and magazine ads and earn
a tidy SUJ\l. He will also
make solo guest shots on
television.
"I'd 11 k e to d<> movies
too," the comedian said.
"For Instance, I'd like to
co-star with Phyllis Diller in
'Wutbering HeighU,' or
'Sam.son and Delilah' with
Tiny Tim -only I don't
know who would cut whose
hair in that one.
"I'm going to keep my
hairdo unless a part comes
along that reqwres me to
2/ldo
cut It. And I will also 'use the
phrase 'hello dere' beu~
everyone associates me wUtl
jt," •
People also assoc I at e
Marty· with Steve RosaL
Just as lt is with married
couples who decide to brtth
it off, they may find the
going somewhat dlf!icult.
Dean Martin and Jerry
Lewis have OOne beautifully
as single&.
However, Allen and R<>1si
Were never that big. It could
be tougher.
Alw1y1 FrN P1 rklng
WHkdayo-6:4S P .M.
Cont. Sun.-2 P.M.
MIWPOlT tU.Cti -"" IM p1,._ 11 hoMl-lJ,ol., bJo -(II, MJ)O • ''~"'M•~··~·~··~·~··~.:i..~··~•M·'~OM""~'"MO~"'MO-"Y
EXCLUSIVE
DorisDay·RobertMorre·Tenyihlmas·PatrickO'Neal
CltllRllOO HmD11
mRHllll&IRO semi,
_ 'COU~IDr liil
Read The Daily
Top Sports
Pilot
For Coverage
11181111
who'•
coming
flodlnper
BEST DIRECTOR-MIKE NICHOLS
I 1 ..
I •
MONDhV
.... • llll (J)... -It! (IO) "nit ,..... ... Dilmff bW.. 1111
bb ~ for c.. 0... u ..
....,, ..... ".,.... llttHlpa 1111
---...,., .. --.------. .... .-------.ly Charles M. Schull
~ .. ,. .
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~-DON'T! ~~ NOW, HOil OIO
t DO '!llAT 1
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l\e Illa fktd lie WOUllded 1.Mnl
NIOlt lit °""'81!!1 •. but wflf11
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(aml'd. flOlll 4:90) ''Tht Republl·
can Nationll ColWtlltlolL" TOftiidlt'1
l'lltlll II the kiyftllCt M11-. C1S
N1wsmt11 Clll'Nfln1 the COIVtntioft
1r1 W11ttr Cn:lnklt1, 1nchetman;
Erle Smrtld 1"'11 hfll' Mudd, ••
tl)'lit; and HltrJ R11-.., r,..
tht "'9kif'• IOltrum. MiM Wal
•' hNds I 111111 of six 1Hn USi&nld
tMr by tt t.U 111111 to • hMiiital
... IRMlb °" '"411ftl tti1111 on 1
mlaloft to dllt10J 111 hn110rtlnl
Gemwi11 fut! plptHne. Joh11 Andtr·
.. cunta. (R)
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Mlrldt of l irttl." The 1cl¥tntur1 ol
.Cuttl chllAllUI ii ~ tt the
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to OMr tflt conwntioll floot-Jo· t:OO 8 ...._: .,,.. Klfl II ~
Mph Btntf, JoM Hart. It. l'tppU, (drMN) '54 -Burl lal!Clltw,
Din ltlthlr, 11Ml 1111 Steut; 1i11 Dtbotlll Kerr, ftl!lll SIMtfa. Acid-
·, "111111 and Inlet Morta. .,., lll\1·1Mnl wluifll 4fllll DOl'ICllfll•
Richlfd Nixon; Motton 0.111 111d kl1 tht p.wjons ltld 'tiole11tt If
M1ry1 Md..luahlin CO¥er Ntl1on I fJOUP of toldim st1tiont4 11
DR. KILDAIE
~'OJ, Mlf. MAYOR.
AND BEFORL lON6 ~1LL
HAV! A Jrf6ULAR ~Lf;
CIW~Y l'M lflH& WMTfO •
OJ'ltf ~ CHARGE ct-nos
JUtill(J;T-90 WH'f WOT UQuf6T
A RfPlACEMNT m.-,. ME r
ANOTHER ~fRAI... ,,;>.t.eftJIOMr:R
N'STfAO OF A P$VC:HIAT"l5T.
Rocklf1l11r; •lld TtnJ Drinkw1t1r 1'111t H11bor just Mlllf'I W111d
eove11 ltolllffl R11p1. M: Bodi· War II. 111.l~ ... --
Wtld offtr1 wry CIOinllltlllll)'. 8 (U'J (]) f....., S4u11: (C) (to)
M Yl51T9 TO THIS lOWM.
l!I Q) (I) 1t911•Uu1 Nltilul "Thi Human T1r1et." SIL Stolll c:.n.u.: (C) (cont't frvm 4:30) .. ,rb • ro11nd·tht·clodr: hunt for
Chit Huntley 11M1 o.w\d Brink! Joe Moralu, an •·mnvict he helplll
~ IJ NBC't 1lldlolmt11. N tt aet I )Db, who Is Ill'# wt!IW
News Mis •lllicnad 1 ruff of M•r· .for C1uutioni111 In the murM lfltl
ly MO "'1Pftl ,9 Ill live 1MI·• nitWllry fll lib tm~. St0M pv.i acwtrQt' "'' tht COflVlntioll lllnls fnlm Joll'i filllCll ht JDe
Thi foUI floor rtp0rtt11 111 Ft•'* Nmlwtd lllOllfJ frell hlf • Ill Mee". John C111ncellot, Slndtl 1111 of tow.. 1111! Stolle ~ Joi
Vanoc11r ind Edwin Nlwman. Rtu· Wll fram.t. Ro11 Soblt, Liiie Ctl-
Wfl Frank. PrlSldent of NBC Nnl, ilnl ind June Dt7ton 111•
wlll be In tf11 NBC Nl'WI tlllb'OI e IWWlr. (C) (XI) "lrhll ill
room m•nr tM runnln1 dee · Reritw.• Bill BllmHI .,.no. 1 d11
11 lit wt.It iii toinl on tflt air. In London.
g SfM -SMw: (C) (90) =·~ "-: "Thi RNpn Cl•
Co,1111ic Mort¥ Amst1rd1m, lin ., ., ... J MllM' M..-t
Jimmy Dun. ptlplllf Sharl llwl1,
1nd ttll ~ l•M of Jtckil CW· NO 8 I.Ill .... l.nilJ 8lln (C)
tbs 1M Bill lflC)' 111 StM'I (90) Political commtntlty.
,Un G at!Cl>h•1ai11c11 ......,.
D Sil O'Cllcl lllllM: (C) "Diii c. .... lltiell: (C) (IO) MC· ,. ....
SIMf CIHl" (wutem) '5Z--Altd:I• "11nconvflltion1I" conwiltion CO¥«·
Mu1pby, Sttph• McN1lly, F1ith 'I:• Off1rs.wllwt1111 comllflhlnsM
Dofl'H!flUI. SUun C.bat. )'Ill Dl)mpKt view of the 11Mkin1 tf
th• 1968 P1uidtnliail candidates QI M1ri111 .., (C) (30) lhniup cartfully loflllllhd ttlt-m.M Mllitlnlll (30) etsb •Kii ntiht of the Republle1n m WW'• .., convention. Eich nl1lrt ia divided
8t bft ,..._ lni:I IM Mll!ltnb, which lrt llJttd
1:30 II TM 1,_, Show (C) ~
ID......., fdlr (!O)
Cll MdWe'1 MfWJ' (30)
in Tuttdey nilht's 1o1.
8Till• ..... (60)
GD IE JetirNI: "Plum• tor Mf
Rich Aunt."
II Rft'iltl Mlllkll m s,.ctnMI: "Edit of Endur1nct.• ·-e ~ ~ -Cl (IO) NET ldlllOI lditM Dftid PnMitt .,_ __.. ... ~..... (
tllb witfl Dr. JelMf i.wnin' of lls.cnt A111t (60)
NASA lbolll: thl men 1t1d 1111Chin• m JICk Ult.• IWiwt (C) (60)
pl'Mlln1 the ltrmll 1n bumtn Ill Tlltrl , ....
beinp. .,_'4 !Cl
7:00 0 F T""' (30)
ID I LM Liiey (lll)
ID Clltipll's htlllfl (30)
fmW ... lnstN 1111 ..._ (C)
111• .... -
'"° e-'""" It! (30) .,.,. New Jerustltm."
D ll7JCil-• """' CCI (60) "L.1•1 Slnclllr." A IDl"rnt:r
r1nch hind ln\IDl¥el Jim In • trib11
lov• tri1n1tt wlltn hi stub 1 bride
incl com• to Jim fo1 help. Rockne
T1"1nlton 1nd Gktril C.lomet
IUISl (II)
10-.JO tD lit-= (Q (30) BiU .JohM.
IDs. 11 AIMritt: <C> "'°Plltatioll
E:qilosioll." Dr. John Blll!ton tlis·
cuues world populatioft PtObltmr
Ind fnethods fll llil1h control with
Dr. Jalllt Dinlll, d11ector ti F1mlly
Pll1t11tnr Clinic kl Cll'llllnd, Ohio .
11'I090.... D'Clod-(C) Cl~
JlfTY Dunphy.
· II Tiii lltll MM 111W1: (C) (30)
. Geo11e Sklnntr.
II Tiii w...._,. tJO)
D 1' ... : (C) (30) BIXier Ward,
1J Mlvil: "'Wit Aifflll" (dr1m1)
'61--llont Buchholr, Giit Frobti
M1rtin Meld, M1rl1 Persch)'.
m l• er.. CCI (60)
tE ~ "1wltJ ""'' ..... (drt1111) "&() -C.ry Wiry, Annlt ·-· a._,...,, ·-,.,..
tery) '11 -Jeck Wimer, Roneld
ll'Jl'IL The llDry of 11 rtfentl•
m1nltunt JM 1 c:oldbloodtd killer ll:IO 8 U CJ) T11t T..i,ttt ... (C)
dltldttll pilct topther tht dues 8 lllOril: ..,.._s" (wsp111S1)
to 1111 c11lne. '4&-Clry Grlllt, ln1rid Ber11111n.
GI Trd ., r...1..-11CllS (C) (30) fJ @(I) Joty 11.i.o,. S"9 CCI
e 119ew;1 ·-..... DNltl: • tc> 1r.o1 1lll ttm111n1 MIQHI « 11:40 D MeM: CC> "llluttr1111 t1 IM-
Americin lllilitll)" Plflllfll'lll Wilftd ,_. (watem) '55--Geor11 Mon!·
1111my lln• ill YllhllM ii told Jn toflltr'J, Nancy Gatts,
tflil film. (II)
ID Mlllq Mi11 tr-= ''Soilt." l2::GD m M ,.,.. (C)
Th1l1m Cru10 upllins tl'll PH .
tu:tor, llMI fDI" four blJic tolls 11111 H:Jtm D111r U.llS
types of tlrtlllztrt 11141 1ddKlvlL 19 Allilll T1llllrt: "J1nrrtfw.•
., CH!ioM , ~
1:00 111111 Ill' hn: (Cl (60) Jerry
Dunphy.
II MD: (C) ., .. fhl1ll ,,...
Id" (dr11111) 'SB -G1ry Cooper,
Di1M Y1rsl, Stu1tt Wl'litm111.
...... It! (!O)
ID ...... ...-: T1tt New loll
CitY fbntibllrl lifti AIMnctn folk
mllllc.. T1lt pup ii llllde "' tf
Ptt1 S..11r'1 lllllthlF, Ml llrotlltr·
in·ln, 1114 TrtcJ SdN'•rtL ., .. _
TUESDAY
DAmllE MOYIE$
12:45 G MeM: "'1111 Cor111ttrf11t Pin•
(lllJSltry) 'S7-Z1ct11ry Scott, f'll·
Iii CIStk, MtrYJ11 JohM. Sid11t)'
Trfllr.
1:00 8 ...... : "Aqeb 0vtr Ir..,,..
(-•) '40-... -
"Doull•· falf'I• Jr.
8C-wft!llhtilllM . ·-tel
1:10 11 ...,..: "TM 11111 llllW"'
(waCn) '31 -frl4 M1eM111ft)', ,... .....
•• e....,. ,..,.. c••1111) 'SG-
1t1Wr11 Emoly. -n. Lml C...
-.,,,,,. ("""'-l.lrt) '55-SltflhtJ .......
U:JO • .... "" ... Lill" (tlraJM)
·u~...._-...,. -·--
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
As
JtlPGE PMkER
~P' KATWERINE
PRIVE UP 10
Tl-lE !tit-I.
""""""""""" 10 ...
SA.lo\ P'Jl:IVER:
l+ELPING SHEILA
Hil"lt> MtS CM!
MOON MUWNS
TUMILEWEEDS
Mun 'AND JEFF
MUTT. LDOKATl'!llSMcmll
~E SAT ON OUR COMIC
STRIP BEFORE l'!IE INK
DRIED!
S·S
GOSH! YOU
LOOK AWFUL
SOM BERi
LOOK .lliT "?Wrr! ~E's
MAKING 'FOaTPRJNTS
ACROSS'TllE
STRIP!
_ly Gus Arriola
Iv Ferd Johnson
SER.VICE!!
ly Tom K. Ryan
1THANK YOU, MY.
BOY .... YOU LOOK PRETTI
GOOD YOURSELF!
ly Al Smith
•
·-·
... .,.. ..... ..., ""' (dll·
..,w--.~~ ..... l<Jt •-" -Cm•» '" Iv Mel _... ........................ r:>~-~~:::.·:..:::::.:.·~~~'.'""~~~~:-~~,...~~~~~~~~~~~ .... :;;:;;.;;;:::.l-'!;;;;...,~ MISS PEACH __ ...... _ , ... _ ... __
!Cl--· <....-. 'M .. ,.. • .....,.
.... ___ ,_ .. , ....... _.,._
• JOB PRINTING
• l'UILICA TIONS
• NEWSPAPERS
•IWfOIT 11.lCH
---~--~ ~--.~--
'f
Ml'5 PMCH, FOii HOWL.OHW t:llH A GOOD, P!!Nt
F'RliNO ICAACW-""'OTHl!IC GOOO,CMR l'Rle='5 'IHIN65 l!tl'ORI! 7H& FllC5T ~ ~ Fiii~ IS
llCNI THe PNm' ""1'liE FIRST0PAl'T')&.ase PJl\\';l!NCE
WCTH ~.P 60001 CW4R FIGl!HO{Pl#{Ty or< 'lH! f'#;FJN«JCNJ..S 'THEPrlf.ICE?
0
• •
1 •
DAILY 1111.01
• CONVENTION-W'1ter Cronkite above is anch~r:
man for !'Campaign '68" cover8ge in Color of:ttl~
Republican National Convention at Miami. Procff:d ..
ings ma;y be yiewed with commentary beginninfi;i.C
4:30 p.m. torught through Thursday on Chann•t:!:Z:
A 90 minute roundup and analysis of tf1e conve.
also is scheduled nightly at 9:30 on Channel 7. 1 ~:
TELEVISION VIEWS
Cronkite· Seig
Political Stage
-·
By ROBERT MUSEL '::
' NEW • YORK (UPI ) -"What's going on "Ul
Miami Beach?" asked Walter Cronkite. :
THEN THE VETERAN anchor man answereil
his own question by giving the CBS audience an in·
troduction to the Republican National Convention
Sunday night with an hour-long series of interview•
and opinions setting the stage for this week's selec--
tion of a presidential candidate.
He made it look easy, neatly slotting lacts'fJlft
comment into the introductions that preceded ::air pe~rances by the three leading candidates=:-
Richard Nixon and Governors Nelson RockefeUeEO.f
New York , a~d .Ronald Reagan of California. Bui it
isn:t easy !ll1d in an inter~iew Cronkite talked~@ut
th& four y,ears of study and preparation that pro-
vide the solid background for bis conven~on @r ..
formance: · -. • ...
-ALL THREE--~ETWORKS weighod ib SwGiy
with programs from the Miami Beach conve~n
all kicking off a month of political decision wtil:ch
will cost them an estimated $25 million, including
an expensive shift of electronic gadgetry tram
Miami to Chicago where the Democratic NaUOial
Convention inakes its presidential choice the Rk.
of Aug. 26. . I .,:
The actual cost of TY covefcige is sometJat
hlg~er since. over.seas networks/are bU¥ini ddfl:d·
erable time on the satellites. There has beeh tegfet
expressed that some of the convention hoOpla_oi-ihe
past has been eliminated for the benefit of iile-
vision but perhaps its just as well. Our allie€in
Europe and the Far East have enough to w~
about without puzzling over our exuber~nt mefliod
of choosing a man for the most powerful polit1Cal
job on earth. :
CRONKITE FOR CBS and Chet Huntley a)td
David Brinkley, working in tandem for NBC for
the 12th year since they were first teamed in qte
1956 conventions, paved the way in Sunday's shows
for the saturation coverage to which their netwoCks
are committed. ABC's Howard K. Smith made the
point that bis network will concentrate on a go..
minute sumpiary every night rather than follow eie
proceedings from gavel to gavel. ;
ABC's motives are largely dictated by econol)ly
but it will be interesting to see how it fares in the
ratings. Some CBS and NBC functionaries privat~ly
think their networks are overdoing a gobd thinJ liMI
that fans of preempted shows may spin the dial:in
frustration or boredom. .
CRONKITE IS NOT unique in the intense pte-
paration be considers necessary for holding a c9n ..
vention together with thousands of facts at !tis
fingertips to keep the interest continuous and perti ..
nent. Brinkley and Smith also assemble facts per4
sonally and perhaps its not a coincidence that 811
three learned the harsher disciplines of jounraliim
as reporters in the same news agency.
Cronkite waved to a mass of loose--leaf notebooks.
"I start on them as soon as a convention ends," he
said. "It's a continuous process. I clip, file and
make the notes myself. A few months ago I copied
all the items I wanted to •save into what I call iny
desk book. This is the book that helps me keep the
continuity of the show flOwing. f write it myseU )>e-
cause once I have it written down l don't have· to
refer to it any more. It's planted in my mind ."
Dennis tlae Menace
2 ~
·~ ........
··-~~ ··'-b
.
.
' .
'
f
r
I
I
•
ff·, b#Jj..Y. PILi)T -Monday, A11911st s. 1968
•
;
' ·;
1
• . .
. .
l
j
•
'
•
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DAILV ,!LOT J.f, 1
1\.irkpatricli En-dorses 'Fenway Pawk' Via Bat
BJ EAllL GUSTKEY
Of the o.IW Piii! Staff
BOSTON -"Fenway Pawk'' is
what you would call a hitter'• park.
lt'a always been that way. Babe Ruih
loved it here, and you know about Jim·
my Foxx and Ted WWiam1.
Ed Kirkpatrick's talents with a bat
aren't to be conlused with those men-
tioned above but he did modesUy ven·
ture into an explanation ol. wby slug-
gers prevail here.
"It's the seats in center field." he
said Sunday afternoon, after logging
his greatest day in baseball -four
hits in five at bats.
"They don't let people slt In those
two 1eet1on1 out there and you can
plck up the ball from Ule pitcher re.al
well," Kirkpatrick said.
Those were the only empty seats In
Fenway on "steamy" Sunday, as
27,182 rans watched. the Angell poke 19
bits to win the second hail ol a semi·
doublehead<r, 12-<;.
The Angels lost the makeup oC a
suspended game earlier, 5-1.
Bill Rigney's exhau.steO athletes
took it ea-sy 1n their SomersetlIOler
rooms today, They leave 'l'uesday
morning for Washingtqn where they
play two more that night Marty Pat·
BACK IN THE WIN COLUMN -Jack Nicklaus shows off trophy for
winning the Western Open Golf Classic at Olympia Fields, Ill., after
romping to an ll·under par 273 Sunday to rack·up his second straight
Western Open. His final round of 71 netted him a 273 overall. three
strokes in front of Miller Barber and four ahead of Bob Stanton. The
win marked the first for Nicklaus on the tour this year.
At Western Open
Nicklaus Makes Most
Of Year's First Win
CHICAGO (AP) -.4.n hour after
Jack Nicklaus handily locked up the
Western Open Golf Championship Sun-
day he still was hangilllg around the
press room. He was laughing, patting
scribes on the back and talking about
ttie technicabtles of hjs game.
The frustration of failing to win a
tournament in 91h months was over
and the Golden Bear. file a kid with
new toys .. ma<le the most of it.
He took his socond consecutive
We stern title and the '26.CXXI payoff
with ridiculous ease.
He was leading by fwr stroks
ent~ring the last round and won by
three with a c!DSing 71 and a 273 total,
11 under Olympia Fields' murdered
par.
Only one player who was anywhere
near the pace made a detennind
charge at Nicklaus. Miller Barber. ~7,
winner of the 1968 Nelson Class1c,
fin ished wiUt bir<tics On three of the
last five hOles for a 66, It gave him
second·place money of '15..600 witb
2'76.
J\.1uch credit Mr adding some dash to
tile 65th \Ve5tern Open muset go to 20-
year-old Bobby Stanton of Australia,
winner of a mere 15,131 this year.
Bobby wts in contention from the
start, failed to break down where
others did, end closed with a 71 .
He took a bogey 6 on tlle la!t hole
"'tien he strayed into the bleachers.
Stanton t.ouited 277 and picked off his
biggest purse of $9,750 for third place.
Julius Boros. the oldest PGA king at
age 43, displayed unreal steadiness in
a final 70 for 278 and fourtb·place
money of $6,500. •
Bobby Smith. young pro from
Sacramento, Calif., had 11. dazzling Ei6
finale to share fifth place with George
Archer and Homero Blancas. They
each pocketed '4,980.
Before departing from the press
room, Kid Nicklaus asked writ.en to
send him clip sheets so that he could
paste them in his saap book.
Long Sunday:
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Pasarell
SOUTH ORANGE. N .. J. IAP) -
Chuck Pasarell. who almost played his
way off the Davis Cup team earlier in
the year, has played himself back on
by winning his first !ive set match in
lour years.
Pasarell rallied to defeat top.seeded
Clatk Graebner of New York 3-6. 4..fi.
6-2 , 6-3, M Sunday to take the Eastern
Grau Court Tennia tiUe.
Two houn later, Davi1 Cup captain
Don Dell. wbo watcMd the match.
said Pasarell would be on the team
tin (3-3) lJ\d Jim McGlotlllin (6-9) are
t.he scheduled starters.
"I guess I'd bave to 1ay that was tht1
be-st day I've ever had in the big
league1," Kirkpabick 1aid. "But I
Angel Slate
•w. / A1'-.!1 11 w ... 111,..11111 m ''" •·"'· KMl"C AUi. A-II 11 W11hlMlwl l :• •. m. KMPC CllOI
drove in six runs once in Chicago with
two homers.''
Kir~who~hit in tiie~Jeadoff
spot in the second game Sunday, Im·
pressed his boss.
"I guess I'll let him play some more
now," Rig said . "Why not?"
'
Tlhen the manager endorsed today'1
off date.
"These guy1 are getting Ured seeing
baseball, Th3t'1 eight games lo. five
days."
Everybody in the llneup 1~ked at
least one bit save. for , •• you guHsed,
AUl'eli~ Rodriguei. 1be little third
baseman who had his ts.game hitting
streak snapped Saturday went 0-for·S
Su nday: He's now O.foc-13.
RIJ thinks Rodriguez is getting too
eager.
"He's swingin' loo hard -he's got a
pull in his side from trying to hit
homers in. this place."
Sunday'• first came wa1 one the
~ would like to lorget. It was a
game 1u,,pended after five Innings
almost two months ago wheo. the
A.ogela bad to leave to catch a plane.
The acore wu 1-1 at tbe time Qd they
picked it •Pat that point Sunday.
It went down to the last of the ninth
that way when the Red Sox loaded ttie
bases with nobody out. Rigney plucked
poor Andy Messersmith of Los
Alamitos out of the bullpen to replace
starter Bill flarrelson.
Waiting @t the plate was another
Harrelson, Ken, or "The Hawk," as
he's known around here.
Mffaeram.itb ran tft• count to 3-and.4
I and had no choice but to put t2le nut
pitch rill!lt down the pipe. He did and
flan-elJOO rocketed it far over ttt. left
field wall.
Jt was 94 degrees at the 1tart of the
second game and the humidity wa1
equally oppressive. Askett what. he
was going to do on tl\t day of!, Rigney
quipped : "
"I'm too tlrfd to do anything. 111
fact. when they comoe. In here Tuesday
morning to take the equipment to the
airport, they might find me right there
in that bat bag."
'
Jeannette Returns to Bread Line
BALTIMORE (AP) -It was a matter of pride for Buddy Jean·
neflte. He was fired from another bask~!>all job, and didn't mind say·
ing so.
For awhile Sunday, there was a mild bettle ·of semantics -
which unlike the zone defense, ha~ not been outlawed by the National
Basketball Association.
"I've asked Buddy Jeannette for his resignation," said owner
Abe Pollio of the Baltimore Bullets front his Bethesda, Md., home,
"I've been fired." said Jeannette, the colorful 5(}.year-old gen·
eral manager of the Bullets .. "This keeps my string intact. I've never
quit a job in my li/e."
"Anyway, how can I honestly say I'm resigning ?" Jeannette ask·
ed rhetorically. "Resigning to do what? I've no job to go to."
Jeannette sold his interest in a Baltimore liquor store when he
rejoined the Bullets for a second hitch as coach for the 1964-65 season.
He became general manager the folJowing year, and served as
interim coach for 17 games early in the 1966~7 season -after Mike
Farmer was fired , and before Gene Shue was h,ired.
Jeannette played for BaltimOl'e in the old American League in
. -
1946-47. and as player-coach the following year. led the Bullets to a
title in the ~asketball Association of America. He wa.!: fired in 1950.
''1'his is the second time the Bullets fired me," said the easy·
going .Jeannette. "I think they 're trying to tell me something.
"But 1 was also fired by Georgetown University and the UnJvers·
. ity of Baltimore. I've been through this before."
Pollin , part owner of the Bullets since 1964, announced when he
bought out his partners last month that he would "examine and re•
examine the whole organization" for possible changes.
"1 want to surround· myself 'with people 1 personally choose -
those who are capable, aggressive. hard-working guys," the 44-year-old
owner of a construction firm said Sunday. "Jeannette did not fill the
total need."
Jeannette, earning an estimated $17.500 a year, said he learned
of his dismissal when he went to Pollin's Washington. D.C., office Sun·
day "to get a few things straightened out."
"I started talking," Jeannette said, "Abe said. 'I've got some-
thing to say to you.' and that was it. Afterward, I got in what I bad to
say, but it was too late then.''
Wins Butterfly and Olympic Trial Berth 'Unpredictable'
Kekich Elated Victorious Hewitt .Returns
By ROGER CARLSON
0 1 !ht Dllll' P!ltt 11111
It's back to the training grind today
for Toni Hewitt or Corona de! Mar in
preparation for the U.S. Olympic trials
in Los Angeles, Au g. 24 .
Miss Hewitt is just off her victory at
Lincoln, Neb. in the 200-meter but·
terfly finals of the 18th annual AAU
outdoor swimming championships.
She outdid Ellie Daniel oi the Vesper
Bott Club (P~iladelphia ) by two-
ten.ths: ol a se<:ond to win it. The win-
ning time wa.s 2:24.2, 2.2 :;econds off
Miss Hewitt':; pending American mark
in the event.
"The reasoo the time was so 'sl(lw'
was because the water was to be
heated by sunlight, but the sun never
came through," commented Miss
Hewitt later:
~1iss Dattiel led most of the way by
a body length before Miss Hewitt pull·
ed into the lead with about 40 meters
left.
Despite trailing for most of the race,
the winner claimed. "I never doul>ted
in mysell that J would win the event."
The Corooa de\ Mar whiz will C()n·
tinue her training for the Olympic
Trials in Los Angeles for the next 21h
weeks before tapering off two to three
days before the opening of the trials.
Only five world reC()rds and 10 meet
marks fell in the 18th AAU Outdoor
Swimming Championships, but don't
worry aboot the United States in the
Olympics this fall in Mexico City.
"This was primarily a m~t for the
young kids to build up their confidence
for .the Olymp,ic Trials." said Yale's
Don Schollander. a four-time gold
medalist at the 1964 Olympics.
"The world records will come at the
Olympic Trials.'' he predicted Sunday.
"Most of the top swimmers already
had qualified for the trials."
Sohollander, a graybeard of 22, was
himself dethroned in both the 100 and
20().meter freestyle events he has rul·
ed. for fi ve years. He was beaten by
Mark Spitz, his 18-year-old Santa
Ciara Club teammale.
Spitz, a triple winner and leading
men's scorer in the meet, was himsell
upset in the 200 butterfly Saturday by
23-year-old Mark Robie. an Olympic
silvu medalist who competed at
Michigan.
UCLA's Mike Burton missed his bid
for a world 1,500-meter freestyle
record Sunday night. So did 15·year-
o\d Debbie Mayer in the women's but
she had a C()nsolation prize -a world
800-meter reccird of 9: 17 .8 en route to
bet meet mark of 17 :38.5.
Burton barely held off 15-year-o\d
John Kinsella o£ Hinsdale, Ill .. 16:29.4.
against 16 :29.6. Both broke Burton's
meet and Am erican citizen's mark of
16 :31.l but missed the pending Vr'Ol'ld
mark of 16 :28.l set July 7 by Mexi·
co's GuiJIEOTio Echevarria, who was
third in 16:40.2.
Ralph Hutton o( Canada. a product
ol Foothill Clu·b at Los Altoo , Calif ..
was fourth in 16:49.3 in the swiftest
mass 1500 fiDish in swimming history.
MEXICO'S NO. 1 HOPE -Guillermo &bevarria of
Mexico Ci tv. prime ~old medal hopeful for Mexico
in the Olympics and holder of the pending world
record in the" 1 SOO·meter freestyle event, was u pset
at Lincoln. Neb. in the AAU Swimming and Diving
Championships. He finished third behind winner
li1ike Burton, who went the distance in 16:29.4.
Wins Belated U.S. Berth
that takes on Spain In aeveland Oct.
15-16.
1'he muscular Puerto Rican. ranked
NG. I in the United States. was not on
the team that beat Ecuador In the
American Zone !lnals.
But Dell 5aid that the Graebner
match "kind of helped put .him over
Ule top."
Pasarell replaces Stan Smith, "
doubles speda.Ust on the te:tim, which
also includes Graebner, Arthur Ashe,
an Army lieytienant st•lioned at West
Point, and B6b lAltz oflos Angeles.
In the women'• Cina.I, top seeded
Mary Ann Eisel of St. LoWs ended the
five-tournament wirming streak 1Jf
K r i s ;, y P I g eon, the 17·year-{lld
southpaw from Danville, Calif., who
has: been the sensation of this season's
tour. The score was 3-6, 6-1, 6-2.
Graebner's lois to Pasarell marked
the fourth time he has been runner·up
here. and the third time in aoccenlon.
He was 1.J.eaten by Athe in 1964, by
Tony Roe.be in 1966 and Marty Riessen
in 1967.
Miss Eisel. whose closest call ca.me
in a quarter·linal matob with Patti
Hogan of La Jolla, calll .. started slow-
ly against Miss Pigeon. But Ille breet:·
ed to a 6-1 victory In the second set
and ran up a quick 4-0 lead in tile third
to seal maUers.
The men's doubles final was halted
by darkness after Graebn~ and
PasareU had taken the flrst set from
Lutz and Smith 6·3 and were lied 14-14:
In the IOCC>lld.
In the women's doubles, Miss Elset
and Val«le Zlegenfll.SI o< San Diego
be.at Tory AM Fretz of Sherman
Oaks, Calil .. and Vicki R•llO!'•, oC Rre.
N.Y .. 8-61 8-6.
i
Over Victorv ,;
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Those who
claim there aren't enough colorful
players in baseball today are overlook-
ing Mike Kekich, the 23-year..(lld
letthander who pitched ..a 2-0 one-hitter
Sunday for the Los Angeles Dodgers:.
The Dodgers figured Kekich was:
unusual several years ago when he got
hi-s wire injured in a motorcycle ac-
cident on their wedding day,
They were even surer that the 6-1 ,
100-pounder was SDmething spe<:ia\
when he was kicked out of a major
league game betore he had ever ap·
peared in one, He .,-as banished for
riding an umpire lrom tile bench.
They fl.ever know 'lr1lat Kekicl'I wl!J
do. or say. Sunday, h.e was so elated
over his near no-hitter, his 11
strikeouts and the end of his Jive.game
losing streak that he threw hJs glove
high in the air upon fanning the New
York Mets' Jerry Buchek for the final
out.
It wasn 't until the.-e were two out ln
the seventh inning that Kekich gave up
a hit. a single by Ron Swoboda, and
the Dodger rookie was asked if he bad
been thinking .about a no-hitter.
"No, I wa1 thinking about how many
hits I had given up," he nplled,
straight·l\aced.
"But you hadn't given up any -at
Dodger Slate .
A111. s Dacfaers VI l"ll!sbur1fl 7:ll •• m. ICFI IMO)
•~•· I Pottrl VI Pln•bo.lr"' 1:55 p,m, ICI"\ I"'\ AUi. 7 Dad-I "'· PltUbutth 7:U •.m. ICF 6"
least not until the seventh inning,"
Kekich was reminded.
"I know," he replied. ''What J mee.n
is that I've given up a lot of hJts this
year -more hits than innings pitched.
Today, at the end of every !Ming, I
WI! thinking, 'well, that's an inning
without giving up -a hit."
Kekich's victory over the Mets was
his second triumph in seven decisions.
It was his first complete game in the
majors and gave the Dodgers .a split of
a doubleheitder. The Mets pounded 14
hits to win the opener, 8-4, against
Claude Osteen, 8-16, and Jim ''Mud·
cat" Grant.
lronica1ly, th~ Mets' Swoboda has
spoiled two no·hitters in the last five
years. In 1964 , tie broke up one with an
eight-Inning si ngle at Milwaukee
against Braves lefthander Wade Blas·
ingame.
Ron Fairly, averaging .384. In hl•
last 12 games. won the Sunday
nightcap for the Dodgers when he hit a
third.inning double to drive in Willie
Davis, who had singled. Bart Shirley
singled home a fifth • inning run to
drive rookie r.tghthander J l m
McAndrew, 0-2, from the mound.
The Mets won the opener in the
seventh inning when Al WeJs and Bud
Harrel.Bon hit run·scoring slngles to
demolish a 4-4 tie.
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JI DAILY l'ILOT1
AFL Apparently Over Jitters, 1-lold 2-1 Edge
By THE ASSOCIATED 'PRESS
The Amtrlcan Football League, over
Ito !lrst y-jitttn, bas $book up the
National Leatue thu.s far ln this
season'• miniature Super Bowls, and
now it ;s Butfa.10'1 chance to lnc:reue
the vibratJoru.
Tbe Billi, wbo cootrlbuted an 6-2
rflCOrd. in last year's S-12 AFL io·
Lu~teague exhibition debut, and the
Detroit Lions of the NFL crack heads
tonight tn Buffalo's War Memtrial
stadium.
AFL clubs already have won two
Sports
Clipped
Short
~ ............ /Uf't
ST. LOUIS -National League
President Wan-en Giles said Sunday
the deadline foe initial payments by
the league's two newest entries was
extended till Aug. 15 because "these
thin gs never work smoothly."
Giles wa:s in St. LOu.is to attend the
unveiling lnd dedication of a bronze
likeness Of fU"IDer St. Louis Cardinal
p-eat Stan Musial.
"Both Montreal and San Diego were
to make tl>eir first payment Aug. I,"
Giles explained. "But we extended it
for the two of them."
The Natimal 1-11< oUlcial denied
that the de\ay was because Mootreal
W8' having .trouble locating new
backers for the ones that pulled out ol.
the syndicate awarded the franchise.
He decline<I to say bow much money
was involved in tbe lint payment. ..
LAPLACE, La. -Terry Hedrick of
Detroit drove a car called tbe Staton
Shaker t.o 18%.t! miles per hour, cover~
inf tbe quart.er mile fn '7 .• teCODds to
win tbe reatare match race Sunday at
Laplace Drarway.
Hedrick ouµoaced Don Gay of
Houstoa, who followed at 171.64 m.p.h.
and a time of l.Ol aecond1. .. .. ..
ST . CATIIARINES, 0 n t.
Americans, led by Jim.my Dietz and
Lury Klecatsky, dominated the final
day events, but the st. Catharine's
Rowing Club took ttie title Sunday, the
final of five days of competition in the
Royal Canadian Henley Regatta. .
St. Catharine's clinched it.a eighth
consecutive title wit.h 395 points, m05t
of tihem compiled in junior events in
the early going. .. .. ..
ADENAU, Germany Jackie
Stewart'• rain-splattered victory in
the German Grand Prix ha1 thrust
him Into a strongly contending position
in the standings lor the world's driving
championship.
Stewart, a Scot driving a Maira
Ford , was an easy winner tn the 14
laps around tbe Nuerbur rlng. He was
timed in ! hours, 19 minutes, 3.2
seconds Sunday for an average speed
of 86.82 miles per hour, leading almost
all the way.
The victory was worth' nine points lo
hJm. With eight of the L! races com-
pleted that count toward the cham-
pionship, Graham Hill of Britain has
30 points, Stewart 26 and Jacky lckx ol
Belgium %3.
PLEASANTVIU.E, N.J. -Gyps~
Joe Harris sparred three tough rowlds
Sunday. but Emile Griffith took the
day off for a dip in the surl as both
wound up training for their 12-round
middle weight fight in Phili:detphia
TuesOOy.
Hanis boied three rounds with
welterweight Joe Walcott. Th e
workout was similar to most that
Gypsy Joe has had in training camp -
he hit and wa.s hit frequently. ..
DAYTONA BEACH, Flo. -Ed
Haga• of Jacksonville, Fla .• look top
bonor1 la tbe one hour Paul Wblteman
Trophy race at Daytona lnternatJonaJ
Spttdway Sunday al an average 1peed
ot M.2:07 mbes per hour.
Hup1 drove a Trtcor Special to vie·
tory. Robert Gray of Sebrlnc, Fla ..
flnl1hed second ID a Corvette and
Vlncace Glmudo of Orlaodo. Fla.,
fllllalled thJrd la a Corvette.
games, and lost one, in the first week
of tbls year's exhibitions after a split
durtnc the 14-ttkend.
San Diego of the AFL scort;d twice
in the last two minutes for a 30·18 vie·
tory over San Francisco of the NFL,
while· AFL defending c ham p i on
Oakland lost to Baltimore and Johnny
Uoitas 14-12 Saturday night. llouston
owns the AFL's other inter-league
victory, beating Washington 9-3 1ast
Thursday.
In other cames Saturday, the
Chicago Bears edged the "Dallas
Musical Chairs
Cowboys, 30-24 lh the lll·NFL Hill or
Fame CB.me at Canton. Qhio, Jn the
afternoon, and Kansas Qty spoiled ti.·
pans1on CinciMati'a debut 38·14 ln an
AFL a:arne at Cincinnati at night.
The Rills, who dropped a 19-17
decisJon to Detroit last year. will start
a veteran tineup, with only &tarting
right end Paul Costa, offendve tackle
Dick Hudson and split end Bobby
Crockett sitting out. Jact Kemp will
be at quarterback with Elbtrt Dube·
nion , \Vray Carlton and Keith Llricoll'l
cornp~ting the backfield.
Tim Cullen (left), now with the Washington Senators, and Ron Han-
sen (right). now with the Chicago White Sox, exhange proller ca{>s
after being swapped by the same two clubs for the second time this
year. Owners saved travel expenses. swapping the players at the Sen-
ators-WliJte Sox game at Milwaukee over weekend.
Wins Indy 200
Andretti Breaks Jinx
On U.S. Auto Circuit
MONT TREMBLANT, Que . IAP) -
Diminutive Mario A n dr et t I of
Nazareth, Pa., finally broke through
for his first vi'ctory on the U. S.
Automobile Club champioDShip circuil
in almost a year.
Andretti captured his second con·
secutive race in the annual Indy 200·
mile event at Le Circuit Sunday, his
first victory on the USAC trail sinct
last No~mber .
"I was really looking forward b:I this
race and it gives me great satisfaction
because it's my first win this year,"
Andretti said after wiming both heats
in the two-heat race before a crowd of
more than 20.000.
"Now I'm going to battle for that
WOLVES BLANKED
BY OA.KLA.ND CLUB
OAKLAND (AP) -The Los Angeles
\Volves OOn't play again until Saturday
-and they could use the rest.
The Wolves, third in the North
American Soccer League's Pacific
Division, play Vancouver next, the on-
ly team below them in the standings.
· Los Angeles was sent reeling Sun:1ay
as the Oak land Clippers ran1bled to a
4.0 victory before 4,212 rans.
Two of Oakland's goals can1e ~·ith
the Wolves short-handed, the result of
George Piott i's ejection from !hi'
game in the second ha.If.
championship right down the line,'' he
added. ·
The triumph earned him a n
eslimatOO $17,500, the Labat Trophy
and 400 points in the champiooohip
standings , which vaulted him into
third place in the series standings
behind ttle Unser brothers, Bobby win-
ner of this year's Indianapolis 500, and
AL
Andretti won tile pole posi tion Satur·
day with a qualifying time of one
minute, 35.7 seconds, over the 2.65·
rnile track.
He didn't let up any in Sunday's race
and he got off to a fast start in the
first heat and held the lead until the
22nd lap when Al Un6er overhauled
him.
However. with two laps .to go in the
first 38-lap heat, Unser ran out of fuel
and Andretti crossed the line ahead of
Bobby Unser, Ronnie Bucknum and
J im Malloy .
Before running out of fuel, Al Unser
managed to set a lap record. lie
r_egistered a time of 1:35.7 for an
average speed of 99.69 miles an hour.
The old mark Wa& 1:37 .3 set by Chris
Amon in 1966.
Andretti shot off again in the second
heat. followed by Bobby Unser in se·
cond spot. Al made a try to overtake
Andrctti in the second lap of the heat
bt.rl he hit an embankment and damag-
ed the suspension system on his car.
forcing himself out of the race.
Top Hitters
Bobby Unser was the only hope left
lo catch Andretti, but he blew his left
rear tire and it also ruined his
suspension system. forcing him out as
~·~II . Andretti's elapsed time ror the
1'4'0 heats was 2:09.41.
After that, Andretti drove his Ford-
pOwered Hawk without much com·
petition. crossing tile fin ish line a full
40 seconds ahead of J ohn Cannon. a
former Mont.realer now livlng in
California. ~
"Once both Unsers were' t:limlnated,
it looked pretty easy," AndretU ad·
milted.
Malloy. or Denver, nnishe<I second
<l\'t r·all in the race aod Bucknum, a
native of California was third.
Cannon w11; fourth ·in the over-~11
final standings.
Cannon was Aecond ta Andrettl in
the second heat with Bucknum third.
However, the Uona, who were
$.hocked by Denver before beatlnc two
AFL clubs lut 1e11m, will bl minus
ho<pitaliud startlnc quarterback Bill
Mwqon. Vtiteran Karl Sweet.an wlll
replace him.
Detroit will have rookie kicker Jen-y
OePoyater from the College AD-star
game, but quart>erback G,.. Londry
and flanker Earl McCulloch, who alao
starred for the All.stars In the 34-17
loss to Green Bay Fr1day night, are
oot expected to.see much action.
''That game took on tIHll'! tm·
portance than the U1ual exhlbltloii.,"
admitted Baltimore coach Don Shula.
"Wt knew the Raiders wanted to prove
sometblng alt« the Super Bowl."
Oakland lost to Green Ba,y in the
Super Bowl la1t January.
Chicago rookie Willlle D e r i o n
returned a punt 62 yards in the final
quarter for the Bw11 victory, but it
wun't decided until the Bean: stopped
Dallu on a fourth down situation 18
yards trom the goal line in the last
minute. ·
Another Chica·go rootle, Ce c 11
Turner, and Lance Rentul of Oellu
each scored. two touchdowns.
Kansas CUy ruined Pout Brown'•
TtttZl'lli to c:oachlnl u Mike Garrett
ran. far two touchdowns and the
Chiefs ' dd•nso stopped Ille Ben&ala
with only two rlrst downa until late "'
the game. "
At Canton , seven football creatl
were .Inducted into tbti Hall of Fame -
Marlon Motley, Elroy Hinch, Charley
Trippi, Wayne Milner, Cliff Battles,
Art Donovan and Ales: Wejiciechowicz.
Connell Faces Win or Exit
Clash Tonight • Ill
By ROGER CARLSON
Of ""' Nlfr 'IW Stiff
LONG BEACH Co nnel1
Chevrolet's 0ran;e Coumy champions
of Connie Mack· blleball are faced
with a win or drop out proposition
tonight when it faces San Pedro at
6: 30 in the losers' bracket of the Con-
nie Mack District Championships at
Bl.o.ir Field.
run-scoring infield out. One run, one
hit.
Shih Lula(-A dl-opped fly ball !0<
a gift double .and two emrs 1c:oring
the runner from second. One nm , one
hit.
OUensively for Wigmore'1 crew,
Mike Leppa led the way with a three-
lor<tiree• nigbt.
Scoring-wiae, Connell P,cbd up the
lead run in the tint 1nn1nl cm Bob
South at Marina
Playoffs
Wicbnham's bases loaded single.
Dan Me)W (via a single) .mxl Tom
Walah and Bob Warbington {via er•
rors) had loaded the sacks.
In the final at.am.a, Connell came
tbrou&h with °"" run when Leppa
1lngled_leadlng off and with twq, out,
Walsh tripled to left-center. Meyer
followed with a walk, but the rally
died willl • lly to richt field. Six: unearned runs killed Cormell in
the opening game Saturday against
Mei Burns' Mwotangs ol Long Beach ..
the boslis Wllzed nine walks and six
Oonnell errors (along with fJve timely
hits) to rip the locals 6-2.
Other playoff action Friday at Blair
Field aaw tlendale disposing of
Pomona, 9-7, and San Pedro nicking
San Fernando Valley by .a 5-1 tally.
County Grid All-Stars
' In the nightcap Saturday it was
Glendale banding San Pedro iU first
los1 ol the playoffs with a 5-4 defeat.
Pomona and San Fernando Valle1
tangle in the 8:30 encounter tonight,
with the loser dropping out of the run-
ning.
Open Practice Sessions
Connell led only once in the Satur·
day game, that in the first inning w'Mn
it scored .a tally to take a 1-0 lead.
However, walks and crucial eJTors
turned t.he tide.
Offensively, coa_ch Bob Wigmore's
Costa Mesa nine couldn't have looked
better considering the fin&] output of
runs.
Connell slapped the ball for seven
!la.feties along with an incredible string
of line drive out& to the ouUield.
Said the coach of the victorious
Mustangs, .. I hate to say this. but
you've (Wigmore ) got by far the best
team we've played this year."
Wigmore, somewhat disconsolate,
remarked afterwards, "We ripped the
ball all evening Jong . , . just one ol
those games.
"Our pitching let us down. We were
Jn trouble all night because ot the
pitching. Too many walks: and then the
base hits and bobbles finished it."
Joe LePa~ will take the mound
tonight in an attempt to avert a qqjck
exit from the tourney for Connell.
LePage's place in centerfield will
not be decided until game time. Kim
Wilbrecht, Doug Campbell and Ron
Muniz are in line for the starting
berth.
To point out the remarkable
defensive collapse by the Connell nine,
here's how the winners racked up
their six J'lJfl.o;:
Second lnnlni -An error and walk
net runners on first and third and the
run scored on a bobble at second in an
attempted S'l.eal. One run. no hits.
Third inning -A hit·batsman, two
walks and a bases clearing double.
Three runs, one hit
Fifth inning -A walk, single and
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By RON EVANS
OI .... D.w, '"" l .. ff
Theninttt annual North-South
Orange County All.Star football same
ii nearing Wit.h the South, winners of
two ga:mea out of tbe previous eight,
poised and ready for opening Jractice.
Head football coach Jim Coon of the
South All-Stars wiU. bold court for his
Rebel squad tonight at a in the initial
practice .session.
The South is expected to hold its
usual position ol undenlo& eel will be
attempting to make it two in a row
· over its Northern counterputs.
Last ~ar in a thriller, the South
coached by Mater Dei'1 Bob Woods,
pr-evalled by a 19-6 tally.
Coon will nm hi> charttn through
single practice sessions M o n d a y
through Saturday at the evening hour
on the Marina field.
Coon, in addition to running the
whole .show, will tutor the offemive
backs while receiving a..ssistance from
his stair.
Dave Okura is set to take care of the
offensive line and linebackers, w1lile
John Myers will handle the offensive
ends and defensive backs.
The defensive interior is Mike Hen·
nigan's responsibility along with help-
ing out on the offensive line.
Barry Wallace is slated to assist
Coon.
The North squad, meanwhile, will
open its practice at the same time
tonight at Loara fU.gh with Herb Hilt,
head coach of the Loar.a Saxons, in
charge.
Single session practices Monday
through Saturday are also set for the
Yanks.
Coon and hls assistants have been
n:i-eeting once a week in the evening
smce the end Of April.
They went over films of all the
players qualified to compete in the an-
nual event along with the recom·
mendations of coaches and came up
with what they considered the 25 OOt
in Southern Orange County .
Two spots could be in the offing
already to the five alternates selected.
One, Jack Meier of Santa Ana, is
definitely out of the game due to the
slow recovery of surgery on his wrist.
Anotber guard, Al Perlee ot Hun-
tington Beach, is .in 1 doubtful status
afU!r he was rejecetd in the Shrine en·
Baseball Standings
Orange Co.'s Oldctt & Afoat RerpeCtf!d. Ltncoln·Mercurv Dcoler
Johnson & Son
900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT BEACH
642-0911 545-n71
counter because of a bad knee.
nu. ~-·· edition ol the county clusic will be held at Oranfe CO.a.st
College's LeBard Stadium, Aug. 22.
'!be tilt is sponsored by the Brea
lion's Club.
Ironically, it wu Brea wtMre Coon
spent his prep days. And it wu Di.ck
Tucker, h~ad coach of Orange Coast
College who waa Coon'• prep mentor.
All ~actice se1ROl'l!I are open to the
public, according to Cooo.
The rponaor1 moved the rite from
Santa Ana's Munlclpol Stadium be·
cauH" of ltldium ret.ala and conces-
1ion diffetenoes .
Sudden Death
Nets Victory
For Whitworth
DANBURY, Conn . {A) -"I dul'I
care how long the putt was. It went
in." That's how jubilant Kathy
Whitworth felt about her winning
stroke: on the · fint audden-deat.h
playoff hole at the windup of. the
$15,000 Women's Open Golf Tourna-
ment at Ridgewood Country Club.
Kathy and tiny Marlene Bauer Hag.
ge had tied at one-under-par 215 when
regulation play ended at 54 holes.
Then Kathy hit a 240-yard drive and
140-yard 7-iron to within good putting
range on the extra bole. After Mrs.
Hagge missed a 20-foot putt for a par,
Miss Whitworth holed out her birdie
putt .which ranged somewher e
between JO and 15 feet.
First prite was worth $2,250 and
Mrs. Hagge won $1 ,750.
Just as important, hO"Never was the
35-footer she had made on the 17th
green Sunday whidl pulled her into a
tie with the comeback-minded Mrs.
Hagge -who began winning pro
tournaments in 1952 but ha.m 't cap-
tured a tour title since 1965.
Kathy, winner of four tournaments
this year, increased her career total to
40 tournament victories as a pro-
fessional
BENEFtTS OF LEASING
THE FAMILY CAR
'
______ .. ________________________________________________________________ ..;, __ .. _
I
rains'·
et Win
At500
ATLANTA (AP) -Lee
Roy Yarbrough used h1J
brain more than his foot
Sunday, taking a fairly easy
victory and fl7,885 ln the
ninth annual Dixie 500 at
A t I a n t a l n ternational
Raceway.
He mapped it out, and it
.worked.
His arch rival, Mercury's
Cale Yarborough of Tim-
moosville, S.C., also had it
mapped out. But his strategy
turned out wrong.
....
however, as he was also the Pacific Coast water ski champ and
was named to the Hot Rod All-America boat racing team before
taking up bis latest bobby overhead.
i.~ ... , I ••"j .....
From Overhead
Versatile Driver
Takes His Loops
Skip Volk Is a w...,r ski,
boat rad.ne 111d aerobatic
expert o f consider able
stature.
Volk, h& wife and three
daughters just moved from
Covina to Lido Island, where
he is ttle president of the
Aqua.Craft Boat Company.
The Hrobatic side of his
varied talents have been
tested at ONnge County ln·
tematiooal Raceway where
Volk and Art S c holl
(Riverside) combated one
another over the track in a
mock dogfight. Scholl is 1965
N.atklnal Champion and a
4,000 hour veteran of the air.
• Although he hu carried a
private ptloU license tor
many yean Volk entered
the aerobeUc field only a
year ago. Today he is con·
sldered by thole who know,
to be one of the moe:t pro·
mislng and rapidly develop-
ing aspirants in that 1elecl
field of daredevils.
His Volk Aerobat Special
carries a 200 horsepower in·
verted Ranger ~. hu
clipped wings and I I
specfally structured for the
twisting gyrations peculiar
to aerobatic manuevers.
"We bad it all planned last SEE YA UPSTAIRS -Skip Volk o! Lido Island bids farewell be-
Wednesday," said the 29-fore taking oil on aerobatic jaunt over Orange Coast area. Volk,
year . old win n e-r from who recenUy moved to this area, is rated as one of the upcoming
Columbia, S.C. "I was going air daredevils in the United States. Jfis talents don't stop there, to hold back at firs.t and see--------------------------------------------------
Volk first gained national
prominence in 1951 when he
captured the Pacific Coast
Water Ski Championship.
Volk's daily trips to and
from work are as unusual as
his sporting activities. He
flies his single engined
Mooney between Orange
County Ai'rport and Brackett
Field in La Verne where he
manages his boat business.
what the competition did. I
drove it that way and Jt just
worked."
The way it worked was
that Lee Roy capitalized on
other drivers' mistakes. He
kept his 1968 Mercury in
check until about midway in
the raoe, and when he made
his move, many of the top
contenders already had been
sidelined.
In Metro League.
Ward's in Split,
' Rustlers Log Win
' Ward's Pirates split two
games over the weekend in
Metro League baseball ac·
tion, while Golden West took
advantage of one scheduled
encounter for a mark on the
credit side of the ledger as
the season enters the final
w~k of competition.
Ward's took a 12-4 trampl·
ing from Chapman College
BUD TUCKER
LOS ANGELES -Nobody rode past on a pogo stick and
asked me, but . . . . . .
on Saturday, but turned
around and ripped league-
Jeading Santa Ana , S-4 , Sun·
day at Memorial Park.
Golden West had little
trouble in disposing of Long
Beach City College with a 6-
1 win on Jim DeMase's
three-hitter.
Ward's Pirates' action left
s.1111 Ana
C111pm1n
W1rd'1 Pfr111t.
Golden Wn t
L0r111 Beech
C1l Stilt Fulllrlon
STANDINGS
W L T GI
l l J 2 -
111 ' J 2 • 7 2 ,.,.,
' ' 2 '"" J 11 J f
0 10110
Chapman two games out of
first place with two games
left for Chapman, including
a last day showdown with
Santa Ana.
The split left the Pirates
two games in front of
Golden West in third place.
Area Clubs
Drop Loop
Encounters
Costa Mesa and Westmin-
ster lost in National Base·
ball Congress of Orange
County action Sunday after-noon.
Costa Mesa's Comets fell
to host Placentia by a 4-0
count and Westminster was
beaten by visiting La Fonda,
9.5
For Costa Mesa, it was a
case of frustration for coach
Deep Sea FishRep'!rt
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By 1962 his boat building
interests and capability had
led him to the formation of
his own company, Aqua-
Craft. In 1966 Volk won the
Nati'onal Super Stock Grand
Prix driving a boat of his
own manufacture, a victory
which earned him a ~ on
the Hot Boat All-America
Racing team of that year.
At age 38 when most men
have settled to a routine,
Volk is JUst hitting full
stride. From the way he
was scrutin~g the race
cars prior to his last air
show at Orange County his
next trip down the quarter~
mile might well be between
two smokinc racing slick.I.
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
3 Days Only!
Service Specials!
..........
If the Dodgers finish in the cellar, it will be the first time
since 1905. The two party system is okay but you get a dandy of a
After dropplli.g the 28-hit
game to Chapman, the
Pirates went to work on La
Fonda, rapping 11 hits while
packing up'the game in the
first inning with four runs.
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W1nl'1 Plr11ft 002 000 002-' 11 S
. John Saint and his crew as
they left 11 runners strand· '~
hangover. Gene Mauch will get a hundred job offen before next
spring.
A lot of old guys take their daughters to Las Vegas.
Wtrlf'• ,lr11t1 10
Jrilns, lb
L~ppa. lb
D11e-bol/I, r1
Billey, 2b
El~. c
" . ' ' , . H Rll , . • • ' . • • ' . , .
ed while taking the blank '
job. f,,(~t:;;;~~~l Twice the losers loaded \
the bases, but could not.
come up with the clutch hit. If the Rams do not win everything this autumn, they may
never win everything.
Two guys rolling around the ground at a used car lot are
close to making a deal.
STARS .
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Tol1l1
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Maybe there will be more interest in ~ new American
Basketball AsS'OCiation because the National Basketball
Association championship has already been decided.
A guy who would eat well-done streak would stir cham· • H IE S1nl1 Alla 000 OM 01µ !I 2
Agull1r, Jb
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pagne. w1n1'1 Plr11n "°° aai 21•-I 11 o You know you are getting old when your kids never heard wani·• Pir.tn 111 Al R H ltll of Pee Wee Reese. J1nk1n1. lb s , l o
A girl who wears low-heeled shoes never has any fun. Le1>p1, lb s 1 o o 01l"bout, If 5 I O O Orlando Cepeda is an overrated ball player· aeu~r. rt , o o o ' a o •
When a head waiter e%lends his palm it doesn't mean he 1:1i.r, 2t1 ' 1 2 2 ~bert, cf·tf ' 1 2 2
' 0 I O l6 0 • 0 To'l1J1
wishes to shake hands. Pell!lfr, c ' o 2 ,
If Don Drysdale signs with the Dodgers for 1969, it will be w •• ~~o, 11 ', •, •, ', * * * Pinier, t for the highest salary the club has ever paid. Tot•I• 11 1 11 r • " 1
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know the difference. M&11I••· '1 t f g g ::.~~~ " : : : :
Roman Gabriel should find a new hairdresser. ...':~~er, "' 1 1 1 , Frlh, " 2 o 0 0
The best cut for a steak is top si~loln. th . U ~f::lf1.~11 i, 100 \, 11 =~1;· " ~ ~ ~ ~ Arnold Palmer may never w1n ano er maJOr go c11u"'", c ounun, " D o o o
tournament. o=. • J : : : H~!t": cf i: ; ; ;
Show me a guy Who has 15 martinis when he comes home 1----------------------trom work and I'll show you a guy who knows how to relax.
The favorites seem to have more trouble winning at Del
Mar than any other race track:
A guy who sitJ down at a cocktail party is from out of
town.
If Mayo Smltb wins the pennant with his Detroit Tigers,
it could not happen to a nicer guy.
* * * A guy who wears brown shoes a£ter six o'clock is pro-
bably wearing garters.
The odds are the Dodgers will have a new manager ln
1969.
The worst part of a hangover ls the terrible thirst.
When Ram coach George Allen can't sleep be counts
defensive formations.
A guy sneaking down an alley to eat a candy bar is pro-
bably on a diet.
The first player the Dodger& let go in the draft will be Al
Ferrara.
The olive Jn a martini is a tiny island in a sea of pbtenUal
remorse.
Night racing b the best thing to happen to Southern
California since freeways.
They should stage a poor people's march on Disneyland.
With expansion, Bo Belinsky will get still another shot at
the major leagues. .
Turtleneck shirts bad a very short nm.
STARS
The retirement of Roosevelt Grier will not cause the
Rams to lose the NFL championship.
The guy who 1ay1 be wouldn't have a swimming pool pro-
bably can't afford one.
Bill Shoemaker may not bt ready foT the next Santa
Ani ta meeting. •
The uninvited guest at a cocktail party 11 the one doln1
all the Uilktng.
l\nnelft
AllTO c .....
911
111 ACTIDN·TllTI
DN IMDDDR
1PRGVIN8 DRDUNG'
DUICr.LY TILL YDU THE
IXACT CONDn'IDM
Olli YDUR CAR
HERE'S WHAT \YE CHECK.,. 1.-"" ... --.2 ............ _ .. "_ .......... -............ _,,.. ... _, .
• -... -............. -.a....1oo1-1, ....... _ .. ,... ... _ ........ _ ... __ -.. -....... ""__. .. ,__.
HERfS WHAT YOU flND Ollf .,. •l.o.od--"""'*-·C--.... .......... ,_ __ ...... ,_ ._ ....... _ __...,.
HERflS HOW IT WOllCS . , , -·· """"'* ... , .. .....---.,.. -_....,. ___ ._.....__
..,,..., .......... -............... ....
.._-~---11 ... ,.. .. __ _ .. ____ .... ..., ... __ ..,. ____ , ____ .....,_,,,..
............... --................ -~ ... """' .... _,.., ...... ____ .. __ ........ 0.-.--11 --· Bob Lemon w1l1 replace BUI RICJ>ey as manager of the
California Angeli.
Women 11way1 wish to dance the moment you light a ..---------------------,
rresh cia:antte. --•1110 4. µ ....
.... DMIM
hA•rt. .. __ -·-__ ... ,,,, __ _...,,,, Wilt Chamberlain will be the nut coach o! the Lakers
unle11 he winds up ownJng the team.
You do not have to be nutl to write a sporta colwnn, but '-------------------""
It helpa.
EXPERT WHEEL
ALIGNMENT
Her•'• whot we Clo:
1-2-3 LUBE SPECIAL
Her•'• what you 9et1
WHEEL BAl,AN~Ni
Hor•'• what you geh •
• Correct ca1t1r, camber,
toe·in
• Comploto cha11i1 lube • Wo balance all 4 wt.h
• Now oil flltor • lncludo1 weights
• Reduct 1xc111iv• front incl
wear
• Oil change (5 qts. HD) ·
• Eliminate ilangorous whoo!
pull
• Pro'-tire llfo, up to !IO%
~""""'""""'""""'"""""""
Get an expert motor
tune-up at Penneys!
Prices Include all parts and
labor! You got new po ints, plugs,
rotor, condenser and distributor cop;
expert adjustment of cam-dwell, tim-
ing and carburetor. Result , , , more
"pep," better mileage, more enjoy-
able driving. Tune up now and aavel
11 88
YoRin.1•
1388*
6 Cyl!Mler
1788*
I C:yl11d1r
"Moat Am1rlca11 cars
~EWPORT BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH
(F11hion Island} (Huntington Center)
'
•
'
'
..... " . "
Los Alamitos
•••IT IAQ:, -Wrk Mlldlltl ! .,_. ollh. Cl•l!ftlne. ,lll"lit 111'110.
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81111"9 Htlt'l'I' 11 I Afflrl 110
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Mii Doy)t fO C..nlOU) 111
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lvv'I Wlftntf (P' CnilbYI 11,
s-'ft El• IJ Wlll.,I u'
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THl•O IACI. )$ v1nl•. Miiden ' YMt lldt. Clllmll"ll. P'Uf'M 11100.
ci.lmin. ... $3DOO.
Tllrw C..1111 U Z Coll~) 110
M11t WI""""'" CD C1rdCIWI 11'
Dr. MU!w Cl. Wfltflrl l»
Sib U A Anil•I 111
WhlrtlWIT ! (J ltLlrlrl lit S...rt 'N ._.... {W INIM'TlllMfll lM
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IJMi. 1Edl1r tft Adllr) 120
T-ln Cl 0 Mon'l1l 117 CJ~tlr CD 1'Vr1J lit
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G'9NI Olk: (1 Z ColUfttl 110
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P'OUITM Rt.Cl. 4IO y1rds. S YHt
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11.ttv'• ,,_ (T l.lpMm) 117
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Addolil (I lotot) l U
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c"'"" Cordt11 IG u-rl 11•
l.l1to l.lbnr IJ Artlrtlllml 122
Columrw ftleltt (A L 0110 11lot
My SllYW ~ CJ ,lllMI) ICIM
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n ,11116. l"llne IL500.
Iron Admlr1I (J Stilt") lU
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P1l1m1 Kid IW Hel11dc! ll7
L1dv 8ol1CIUI JS 'T,..,VIM) Ht
Center B•lcotw 1.1. L D!11) ,11,.
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llrvtOWtv Clown t'E li\tdln1)
Gelttll G. W. [II CllflNll
Hi rd l.ooll I.I. l Olllt)
W•r Fltt fJ Stlltrt.J
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N_.•tlwlc IA L 0111) 11111
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SOFT SELL SAM
Entries
"' 117 ' '" 'In• U(;l. U> v1r4s. S Yfff
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ft-n L1rll (ll Mtlrl 116
Dkkn'I Cllldl 111
a-v"1 W1rM' (! l. lll'rltllt) 111
fttbel SI.It' (0 C11*1leJ 111
0 11 v.,. I' Cl'o*rl lU vin. llO'r tll FlwtNel ns
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llW JIAt fW Mtll'll 11'
0-1 Mooft (J Ma.-11 1M
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AlM .......
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Ol1 Pnnteu CO CINOU) 111
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Mlklln llod:;rt CA Ar1lul 111
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'Tl_...,,~ 111
'Te» SIM (T l.lllfllm) 11,
llOO..r1 Klltry (W Si.ti 111
SIVIMTM llACl. 150 ''""· Cl1lrn-ln1. Plil'M 111100. c111n11111 pr!Q UJOO.
WI-Chle (2 l: Colll111) 117
Mr. Mln:ir II It Fl-roe) 120
ftodlet J1f111r (C 15mlllll l:lt
A~ P1uum (J w.,...,,, lM
Chu Chu loti I (W Slr1""'l 12'
Gulll Th Clletff (ti (;(M'f'I 11t
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lo+~ """"" CO lvnl 711 TNl'Y Am• (A Ar1ll1) 121
...... lfltlllf
llt!M T• It 11. P''-rw.I 12t
Jim Swift (I Z Co1U1>1J 120
llGHTM ltACI. 350 Ylltdl. 2 yeer
etOs n 11P In Gr'eM AA P'lva. l"llrM -Owdt J1dt (J 11.ilty) 117
Cltbbtr'1 Rock.rt (H P-l lU
Bold 0.... {W 511'11\llll HJ
Or. Hink CC Smllll) 117
Birt. For L\ldl (J K1nl1l 116
Pen l"•l't O•ndY Ill A~lr) 111
Mldluld Jlf {l: Colll!ll) ·111
TOP Ellml111tw (H CroWl'I 117
Jelld'y Olk ID Morrl•l 117 Oedl. Nobe ('T l.lphem) lU
HINTH •ACI. Solf y1rdl. l 'ft•r
oldt 1rid \IP. Allow•nwt. Pi.rte l720!),
Urtl Gnorid IT UtillMll lU
Dlrwct 5'>ol (A Miu) 117
.S....ltll eev11r.r (Z C0Hln11 111
Mkt .. Miit: CC Smith) 170
l.MY k lurt IP Cl"lldbrl lU
Mlcitl'f B. IRrr (W SI-I 120
Del Mar
Entries
TaYGlo ft-tll YOl'IC) 116
Dot I-Ml CM YIM1) 11'
"owl f"Lft' (1 W Mltlla!'MY) 116
Git It-rd• Cl A Plned1) 116
10111111 Ill"" (I Cl 'l•ro:•I 111
Lltfl1 V1r1ndll fft Clfnpet ) 1"
AlMI' ......
A....mllll1n Glrl It D fl'ltretl Ill
lold Doll (2 A fl'lllldll 11'
'Tottle l.Cla IW 1-MrtMlll 116
Tll!1ft j2 W Mlltomrfl 116
l'Vt • ..., Sfl'oltlCI 11 M V11tnJ111ll ) 11,
Vlllanlbroll (W H1r11ck) 111
SIXTM aACll. 1 1116 mlltt. 1 v11r
ald1 ind 11p. Clelmlllfl prl<• $51JOG.
..... """' '2,IOO. Hi.11111 {L c ... 1co111 llltM
J-111.tr IA !"lned•I 111
<ltlll CW N1rm1lll 122
fl'ffillllno fW MlllOr""l 11•
Mlr'll'• Dtl!ollt tW Hlrrl•I ni
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l"nhl'I Vl l'IU* IA l. 1)\11) J.lot
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Sl'VIMTM It;;-, .Jr1e1191. 2
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Ttlklnt lllrtl (W Hlt1tCkl llJ
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Min C..ewr (A l. Ole1l 11109
MlSI Mu1lul (W Mtl\ofMV) 11'
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mllrft. AllGwl!Mn. PutM tll,ooll.
Flof'l(I IJ TrvlllloJ ,,.
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l'f'I Bff Blrtllron IA L Dr.II Ill"
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Hlll"90d :lrMf (.I. Plnedt) 1'1'!
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S'-l• c-..-r (W M1rt~J l:r:t
Form1I Merr11111 !II. Yorll:) ne
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Alli lll•"IM
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P\lrtll ... M~ter lfif M. 10 ... Ill IU
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seottisl'I I""' (J Tn1H'll1) 111
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M'Yt«i/IT R1t ;Ml! )FMS.''
•• ' '
Baseball
All.Stat·
Rosters
LttUe Leogue A 11 • S t • r
bueb&U games lD the clan
C and CC cllvlslOM are In
the book1 with M.,. Verde
the winner in class C and
Harper the top league iD the cc.
C MllU. 't'lftOI
AU..ITAltt WI Doftlrl -1Ct11¥ 9,_.._ Miki
C ..... tl. X12 Ol111h -M.lrll 0111 .. 1er,
DOii ~ ...... kOtt 1-MYtt. ,..,y Jll(>
-. m Pllllllet -All• •~· Or" Kr1ilw!lt«ft, 1.M11 Mc:Gowfft, Clll'h Pit-
,,,...,_ JN l"ltllll -Dtvld fl'tlldlllllr• no, Krlt lllfndlt, Miki V1111et.
C ADA.Ml AU..ITAll
(QI ft1011e91 -D1"'4 ""'""' Tlnl (ollt'°"" Mlfll .....,.1,.., Mltl Cltt1<•.
"31 Att'l'M -I(.,. l(flldltrlMKIC"' J im
l.11k1Y. ilf1 BrtWS -Skvt le.-'°"' Jtl1 Mlliht'#S. «II Ct•dl ... 11 -II.Oii Ll.-colrl, Cllrl1 l-lll!ti., 11.lek
MCCor"'ltll. Joe Mlllllll. 5 I I YI
Mldlnl.
C DAVIS Al.L-S'TAllS .tot C~bl -Slew Cl!u.ald, Mike
B•1nltv. 6\0 Dodtler1 -6'-lr1'1' EHl-h1ow . 01n Oudd•ldtt. Oall9 DYHrl.
Miki tr'lln, J.n l'r1lltt. '11 Glenh -
AU111 Dulrlla!I. ,,_,,., Pltlli, Jtl'llll
Ollvtt. ~12 l"hllllH -l•uc• lllverm1n.
Me•C Whltmor1, Johft l'urdy, Devi
Wlcll:lund.
C P'A.Ut.AltUIO
ALL-ITAl.t
•IS Altr'ol -Tim Wltl'l'IO"· 1"1!
W161, Chtl1 Mtrt1n, kiDt1 Cle\lth. •11
Br•"'" -'Tim t>tt«Mtl. Jtlf Smith,
Joe Goblltr. Kwt11 kfMl1, 8rvc1
"Ulotrldo. '14 ftld"91 -ICurt l.YllM.
kiri .loll-. 4U ,I,.._ -'Tedll
Ellr.1)(11, ~1rrl-Tim FoltY.
C MOftTll 't'llTA
ALL·STAltl •If GlnllMll -\l]N;e Bllrlll!IN, Jeff
ll1flhow, John B..,,_, MI r k
Otl.1ne1tl0tll. '11 CuOI -M I k •
Or.,11111, S'-!'rk-. 6\f Dedttl'I
-Mitt Mlckltt, Art Ollw-. Tim P'flllotr. 00 Gle11ts 0 I YI d
Sd'lmll•-· OlllM SdllMlt.Hf', 511vt S...td, Cht11 Vllorlt, 01vld Varborll.
C MAit!"•• Al.1..-ITAltl ftldt P'1 I""'· Brld $mlth, Tl"' LI.,.
d•1t1n, Jrtt S!Tvlf'll, ft• Cnilt. Lrn £;eninornl, Mire Gelll!I. Ch r I•
""'«!lo¥1, Tim C1mPbtll, Kel!Y 0111111,
Krl1 Ounn, Mlrt. Dorri-. OOll Wrt.tlt, Doi/I Stmlt. C MAllllNllltf
.1.11-ITAll.I
l"lrt111 -llrll ft Bluonett1, Clou9
lrown, Ml.ti Wurlb\lrt, D1vld llu.,MIL
ll r•YH -C1rv Ire". l"re1h>ft Mint.
Chuck Sfttp1rdton, Miki WIUlftehtl'l'I.
ftldlle1 -llruct Cllfk. Mitt Old!W,
Knln Slff11. Alt--IMtt P11mtr,
OOU1 Pvtl. Plr.te1 -Mike H1111. C i'tl• l"AllK
ALl.·ITAltl
Cll'dlntll -Miki JohllsM, Cor1tl'
BrooQ, JoM '°'"'· 'h!llltl -P•I Gr lfflll!. Miki O'Connor. Ood9ert. -Ty Eo11t1lan, Todd 71mpll, 5 1 m
HumPliren. Cllbl -Sle\11 0¥1111, D•n O'FllM,,.,, Gltftll -Miii llln1w1111Jtr,
M1rk PIU.ln, Joey Ho161m111,
C COSTA MlSA
Al.l.-ITAltl
0-111 Alllm!, llln O.y_,-t, CIMV
O!tfln, Gtl'll Meh•f'fn, '"'" ~""• SlmniY Srtvdlf', JDIHI G1rc11, G'"
Htw!ll, WH HtnMn. Chris Horton,
Ml.ti Lund, W•lter Miiiien, Mlrk
Jh.16awln, llrl•ft Ctrllon.
C l!.liTll.Ul'P'
ALL•l'TAftl QJ lr1"" -Ancty l"ulll,, Mefk
C11dtt, Clltlt 1t1~, BrM GrlllfV,
Ml ... ltlnetta. at C1nllr11l1 -Cllucll Bllllow, 1"1\11
Akln, lt!Pf TllamtlllllOll. k.IJ Cubl -
S!Tvt 1!_1,., kott f vfflllfl, Tim
P'ttdl. 421 Dlldt4!r1 -0.., 1-Mrrilr. Tim
McGotwltk, Gll't' l!llftlH .
C YDU7H Cl'HTl'lt
ALWTAltl
.QI ,lr11'ff -Jotwi l1rtll, Collin
W•rfl11d. CJ 11<11191 -Mltk Jolll.,.
Mt, Ml.ti krttlt, M.rtl' Fr1nll. 40
PhrlllH -Jtn1 Sdllndlilr, Orn1r Slm11k.
'1) All--Blt ln 'EnOlltv, SllYI
Mlkt ,_, John CM'"'rne", W1N1r
Bl'ldltV. k<lft lnrstHu.
Cunlff, JO/In 1&m1111son. ol2t Glenll -
CC Ml'IA Vl'lll>l
.1.Ll..·IT.1.11
30\ OOOGll!'ll.S-Fr1nk Dtl"llQUl!t.
ftevt f l<11tum. lO'J Gl•nlt-0111 Brock·
lneton. Todd Hunm, 11.ltMrd Jull1n,
J1M111 Kltlnl'l•ln, J.it KroMleldt. 3t3
l"l!Ul!tl -P'IUI Molbrucktr. Do<.111
"''""· Tt•rv Pelt'10ft. llott• PhltllPI. llM Plrtlll -Notl Smlfh, Stuer!
V1nHorn, Miki Wll••-· CC ADAMI .1.LL-l'TAltl
305 11ec1-.1 -01v1 1-fl\fl, Jlt k
01\fld, Jim 01¥ld, Mitt C..mblll1. 306
Alln11 -i...rrv Hill, T-M1t1111. 307
l r•vn -II.lb M(('.arml1h, AnclY
PtrlOlll, 0Jvt Srnellwood. Frl'd S~ •n1. )Ill CtrdlMlt -Mll<• SlllllYtft,
lllck T111bt, Scott Wlllon, Ni.Irk
V1Mtrv11r.
CC l"AUl.AllND
ALL·ITAll
311 'treM -ftabtrt AYt tt. Mtrk
T-111. JU ltH!"91 -Mtrla F..,te1, Gf"ll P'r111d1, Cole Ht/11, Slt\11 Kiity,
Gltnl LY'""· 315 Altros -1Cu'1 Munir, GJltn Piton. Joel MaftfOt. :n •
lllr•V91 -J1r G•rdlMr, Bab l.owrY.
1 1n S1'111•N"'-Mtortlft s1111111m. O•n
V11tni!M. JU Ctrdl ... 11 -Miki 811"·
brld9t, J1dt ft1l"Wlltr, Chtrllt 11111,
01"ft' ll'ff.lltt, Ch1rle1 8uUtnelM. J1t
Cubs -Gr11 F11lll, Gre11 H1rrl'°"'
~ti °'""· )1t Oocr.trt -1ao& lvenon, Olft McC1....,. :no Gl11111 -
Jolin ''di. J im P'ttfy, '•I W1rd, Kiii!! Wotft.
CC MAatH•1tt ALl.·ITAlll
P!r1tn -GllrdOn Aci.m1, And~
.. dlfll1r, Joe DltltftltlHI. ltedllift -
Merli: Cll1rlft. Cll1rll• HIUM, Jotlft
H-... "4lrll -Tim L01h. $ton
l.allmln, Glnlori MtOou11I, Ted
McGtftltV, Jlfrt twwton. 9r11111 -Piii 1"1trtd, Jolln fl'H,_., Miki Tllon!.
CC COSTA MllA 'Alli< ALl.•ITAltS
l abln Porkk. S!Tvtn w1111u, Mot 0.V!llt Fltml..,, Stnt MdC:tnilt. 8tfl
ltl!Y111. F1n14"ido Mortlff, Scott T&r· ~. c;...., Hurd, l rL1n Hunlor.
.lrihut' llu1t111111. 1t1111tr c-t•nr, ••.,. dy FOiier, ll11Pl'I 11.-Mtl.
CC 0.1.Vll ALL-ST.I.Ill
JOt Cllbl -Ion 8a1'd, Mike l over,
St.Yr lll•ltt. Jll Ood$frt. -Cl!rl1 Ft•· •1r1, lrl111 Jll'llft. Griff 1...,Jft, 5tlv•
Kall. 311 Gl1n1t -c1..,. O'Toalt,
Ml.ti °"'tft, S,_ Pllrtl, Georit<!
OUllftt•. J12 PhllllH -P111I s.1611, Ml.ti Sfwrwn, Grit Sl-ltft,
CO MAii!"•• ALL-ITAltl
&rltn Grillo. Jim Hlid<tr. 0ir11
"""""" 0.,. klf'llft, Sim VatN, J im
C-"'''* Arlderlln. fttti W-r. lluu IClrkH,,.ldi:. Jim P11rMr, ll•!lft Wiid, Ml.ti Kt!l'r, Ktt1 1"1te'10ft. Mlrt.
M(D111l1I, Jtff Wiiton. Jtff l"erkl"'-
CC IASTlt.U,P' ALL-IT~·· 1 111 MlcOo!Mlll, Biii MOort. .,...
Mltltf, Dtlft I"-. ftOll OWIM, Jofl"
"""""' t11m c.._. Gtrv G1111~"" OtYlll $fT\lltY, Mli!MW Whtrton, Lllftet
Coftlftl, Ctllrlel Wll\t••<lo ltobert l 11lllrd.
Oilers' JV
Tough Also
H~ Beach basket-
ball i1 apparently solid from
the top oa down through the
ranks.
The JV version of the
Oilers -the HWllin(ton
Bead! JV Summer Buket·
ball 1.._ue with a 10.1
record, While the varsity
was runntng undefeated at
jt. vanity kvel.
PIMt lllNll11tt • L Hyfttl"'loll " ' Mar!ftt • • COl'Olll dl\INr ' • F..,.,ltlft Ytllf'I ' • G1 ..... GrtYI ' • ...... ' • ft 111Cl'!o Alt "11b ' • Cot.ti ,,,._ • ' V!111 "••It • ' Wt tll'lllntftf • • ......... fltl ,.
LI Outnk "
'
.. r
DAILY PILOT, ...... ., NtM ......
SOUTHLAHDERS TOP LIDQ.14 MEET -Displaying a wealth of Bill McCord and wile Joan, Newport Harbor; Rowland Lohman
hardware, the top flvo flni•h•rs In the Lldo-14 national champion-and wile Bonnie, Newport Harbor, and Stuart Roberl5on and Pat
ablps line up with their crews. From left: Ed Rodriguez and wife Ro!lni, Alamito• Bay. Rodriguez i& also thp new lljltiOnal prestdenL
Flo, Alamitos Bay; Tom Lewecl< and wile Barbara, San-::::ta:.;M::::oru:·:::c•:,:;~-----------------------
Rodriguez Victor
In Lido-14 Oass
Jeff All.en Captures
National Kite Title
BVC : (4) Rick Nabers,
NHYC; (5) Grant Bal<lwin,
.NHYC. Ed Rodriguez of Alamitos
Bay Yacht Club scored a
double victory last week. He
won the national cbam·
Santa Clara
Wins Night
Log Contest
BiU St Claire's Santa
Clara from Hollywood
Yacht Club was overall and
Class A winner of the
Schultze Night Race, a uni·
que predicted log contest
sponsored b y Hollywood
Yacht Club.
The race was instigated
several yaars ago by
Elwood Schultze, an ardent
predicted log. racer, and has
grown to be one of the most
popular features on the
Southern Californi'a Cruiser
Association calendar.
Tbe race starts from
three different locations,
Palos Verde6 P oint, t he
Long Beach entrance and
the Balboa Jetty bell and
cooverges oo. Long Point,
Catalina Island. From Loog
Point the fleet skirts ttie
Catalina Island shore past
Ship Rock and ends at Eagle
Reef at approximately 6
a.m.
The race is a test of boat
handling a n d navigation
under n i g b t conditions.
There were 19 entties in
Saturday's race,
Final results:
Class A -(1) Santa
Clara, Bill St. Claire, HYC,
.978 ; (2) Florencia, Eldood
Schultze, HY C, 1.325; (3)
Temptation, Lou Gan.
delman, DRYC, 1.659; {4)
Carpetbagger, Tom Young,
HYC, 1.731 ; (5) Sarami II,
Mickey Winterer, San Pedro
YC , 1.733.
Class B -(1) El Sid, Sid
Senter, DRYC. 2.680; (2)
Great Scott, Jack Pessis,
DRYC, 3.917.
pionshlp of the Lido-14 Class
at Huntington Lake, Fresno,
and was elected president of
the class association.
The Lido-14 Cla,s now ha·s
more than 3,000 registered
boat&. The championship
regatta drew 84 in the senior
division and 33 juniors.
The new junior champion
ts Carol McCord of Newport
Harbor Yacht Club.
Special perpetual trophies
were awarded. Winner of
the Warren Pomeroy
Memorial for winning the
first race was Tom Leweck
of Santa Monica ; B i I 1
McCord, of the Newport
Harbor Fleet won t h e
Governing Board Trophy !or
the winner of the third race;
Don Robertson, of Alamitos
Bay won the Robert Bridge
Senior Citizen trophy for the
oldest skipper over 50, and
Robert Schwarzler, Long
Island, N.Y. won the
Langest Voyage Trophy.
Final results:
Championship Fllg!it
Ed RodrJguez, A I am it o s
Bay, 1314; (2) Tom Leweck,
Santa Monica, 18:Y'; (3) Bill
McCord, Newport Harbor
213A; (4) Rowland Lohman,
Newport Harbor, 24¥"; (5)
Stuart Robertson, Alamitos:
Bay, 2.5; (6) Dick
Lineberger. Alamifos Bay,
33; (7) Jared Smith ,
Newport Harbor, 35 ; (8)
Harris Hartman, Mission
Bay, 37~; (9) Dave Ullman,
Newport Harbor, 40 ; (10)
Jim Tyler, Newport Harbor,
41 .
Junior FUgbt -(1) Carol
McCord , Newport Harbor,
41h; (2) Mike Peters ,
Mission Bay, 10; (3) Vicki
Lohman. NfWP()rt Harbor,
Ilo/"; (4) '1'erry Glagg,
Fresno , 15 ; (5) Mike
M~Clenahan, Mis son Bay,
22.
Con1otauon Flight -(1)
Jobn Peters. Mission Bay,
24¥'; (2) Mark Tainter, San
J05e, 32 2.13; (3} Jim Van der
\VJsche, Santa Monica, 44 1/
3; (4) Lotds Westphal. Santa
Monica, 44 1/3; (5) Millard
Rosing, Redondo, 45.
Voyagers,
Bahia Event
Draws 115
Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club and Voyagers Yacht
Club joined forces Saturday
and Sunday to stage their
annual Summer Regatta.
The regatta drew 115
boat! in 10 cla!ses, desplt!
a couple of national cham·
pionshJp regattas which de·
pleted the ranks of the Lido·
14 and Kite fleets. Final re-
sults:
Paclfle Catamaru1 (.12)
-Cl) Pacifica, R. Paul Al·
Jen, SSSC; (2) El Tiburon,
Pat Carrick, OCYC; (3) Lo·
ki, Earl Thornbugb, CBYC.
PllRF (27 ) -(I) Flyer,
Bob Sodaro, BYC ; (2) Viva·
cious, BJU von KleinSm'.ld,
NHYC: (3) Libra, Joe Kal·
tenbach, CBYC; (4) Joie de
Vivre, Ray Garra, VYC;
(5) Bebotoo, Bob Darnell,
VYC.
PC (8)-Panic, Mark Co·
holan, BYC ; (2) Panacea,
Bill SCott, BYC.
Luders·l6 (9)-Kildee, Ben
Hromadka, Lahaina YC ; (2 )
\Vindsong, Bill Fundenberg,
NHYC ; {3) Lillie Lulu, Al·
Jen Lindsey, VYC.
Lld•ltA -(1) Ole Pokey
Too II, Marty Lockney,
UYC.
Lldo-14 B -(I) Chicken
of the Sea, George Jeffries,
OCYC ; (2) PhasL Allen
Oleson, BYC; (3) Julie lf,
Fred Hoepel, VYC. ·
When someone told Jetf
Allen of Bahia Corinthfan
Yacht Club to "~ fly a
kite" be decided it would be
more to his liking to go sail
a Kite.
Allen won the national
Klte Cl8.S6 sailing cbam·
pionship Sunday for his
tilird straiglit title. Before
he graduated into the &enior
division three Yea!"I ago he
was nat!ooal junior cham·
pion fof two consecutive
yars.
The cbampiooship regatta
was hosted by Bahia Cor·
inlllian Yacht Club and drew
15 entries in the 1enior
division and 31 in the jun-
iors.
Pat Scruggs of Newport
llarbor Yacht Club proved
he liked the winner's circle
by capturing the national
junior champi005hip just ooe
week after he scored a vie·
tory in the famed Flight of
the Snowbirds. In recent
years Scruggs has been a
top performer in tbe Sa.bot
Class. Final results:
SeDlors -(1) Jeff Allen,
BCYC; (2) Pat Reaume,
LIYC; (3) Jay Lawrence,
Tetua Takes
Top Spot
In Vicente
Junlon (l) Pat
Scruggs, NHYC; (2) Bob
Haskell, L!YC; (3) D!ano
Billings, L!YC; (4) John
Daigh, NHYC; (5) Suzi F«·
rier, LIYC.
YRU Cruise
Prize Goes
To Arriba
John Thorne's Arriba, •
Cal-34 sloop flying th•
burgee of Balboa Yacht
Club won the second race of
the YRU (Yacht Racing
Union) Cruise Saturday.
The race wa1 a 15-mller
from Howland'& Llmding,
Los Angeles Yacht Club'&
leased cove on Catalina
Island, to Moonstone Cove,
Newport Hart>or Yacht
Club's diggings.
The win gives Arriba the
Robert M. Allan Gabboon,
which is the priU for the se·
cond of the three races of
·the cruise.
The race started in a
breezy we.nerly f r o m
R owland's to a marker a
mile from t1ie west end of
the island, but on the spin-
naker run down the Cata.Una
coast the wind subsided and
the 17-boat fleet had to run
far offshore to find zephyrs
enough to keep them mov•
ing.
Arriba was the second
boat to rmtsh behind Gene
Art Walker's Cal.40 Tetua Trept~'s 42-foot stoop Wind
was the winner in the ocean Star !rom ·San Diego Yacht
racing division of Cabrillo Clab. Wind Star saved
Beach Yacht Club's Point enough time to wind up se·
Vicente raoe Satlrday. cond in the handicap 1tan·
The race drew 51 boats in dings.
five classes. Final result!: Third over.Ml was the K-40
Ocean Racing (8) -.11) Atari, skippered by Jolln
Tetua, Art Walker, CBYC ; C&zier of Balboa Ya~hC
(2) Balcutha, Jo!ln Kincaid ,~ Club. Fourth was B 1 l l
CBYC; (3) Tortola, Jim Haskell'• Newport-30 Bravo
Cowie, CBYC. II. Lido Isle Yacht Club, and
Freek Wins Music City
Race in How About That
Flipper -(I) Ambish,
Jeff Weiss, OCYO.
Sabot A -(1) Gig T, Tim
O'Reilly, NHYC: (2) No.
46.13, Hugo SChmldt, LJYC.
Sabot B -(I) No. 5218,
Brent Bootwick, BCYC.
Sabot C - (1) Follow Me,
Judy Bostwick, BCYC: (2)
Peg as u s, Lauir Smull,
BCYC; (S) Gulp, Briant Hu·
mann, BYC.
MORF (8) -(1) Westl:rly, fifth was Don Ayres Jr,'s
Ray C...bett, CBYC: (2) Cal-40 Melee, Newport
Camelot, L I o y d Powell, Harbor Yacht Cllub,
CBYC; (3) Fly Away, Cbuck The final race of. the
Manning, CBYC. cruise from Long Point to
PHRF·A (15)-{l) EL Ti· Long Beach was sailed Sun•
gre, Bill Petersen, CCC; (2) day, but result! were not
Muneca de Oro, M.acCarne--known today.
ron J..,.., WYC: (3) Heath· ----'-----
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP )
Dick Freek, driving
Howard McCorznack's How
About Thati ran away with
the first annual Music City
250 Speed Classic power
boat race Sunday.
Freek took command at
the start and scored a three·
lap victory in the race on·
Old Hickory Lake, almost
five minutes ahead of run.
ner Jack Stuteville .in The
Inlay.
The victory jumped How
About That from -to
third place in th! National
Association of Power Boat
Classics standings, just five
points off t.ht pace.
C a I tfornla stockbroker
Tim Wl.nace, driving Tiny
Supply Firn1
Goes National
Newport Marine Supply
Co. has gone national.
Rol>ort F . l\lcCurdy, presl·
dent Of Newport Surr ly an·
nouooed tbe forlf'l.&tl<in of a
mall order division to be
_.....i under the wholly
owm!d •ibsldiary.
AOCU'ding to McCurdy
this la the !Int slop towin!
IUJll>l)'inC ~I and boal
owner. °"' • oaticm·wld• ba!U. Various ca1alog1 ond
lllAillng pieces will be Issued
during the yem' with the lnl·
tial one to be malled llllt summ«.
Tim, to a fifth place Sunday,
moved Jnto the overall lead
for the national cham·
pionship with 81 points, a
single point better than The
Inlay. Cole Combines
er, Gordon Cowie. LAYC;
(4) Ginge, 11, Dave Jobnsoo,
CBYC.
PHRF·B (4) -(l) 'l1>e
Turtle. Jim Lunn, wee.
Paclllc MllltthuJI (Ill -
(I) Swil<h Blade, Nell Har·
v.y, CBYC: (2) Whip I.uh,
Bradley & Marlotte, CBYC ; Lou Brummett. leader
after the circuit's first race
at Houston, earlier this
year, was not entered Sun.
day, and national runner
Brent Berge was forced to
the sidelines after 13 laps
with mechanical troubles.
Jack Cole Co., manuf&~· (3) Force 10. ~r Jewt.U,
turer of marine 6eating, CBYC; (4) The 49er. Alex
marine canva1 ,q>ecialties K08Wf. CBYC ; (5) Beowulf
and th• SDpJIClt 20-loot Ill, Steve Dasbew, Malibo
power cruisers, hal moved YC. to new facilities at 1'16.1;,-c.:;c..... ______ _
PleceOOa Ave, Costa Mesa-.
WDttaN ITATI UNIVllSITT
COLLEGE OF LAW
In Orat199 Ca¥011 'I
ftOW ......................... ... ---._,, ... ,,_... ..... ..... , .. ,,. •-u_. ......... .,...,_~ .......................... "' ......
, .. -. ' xV , ... -··
•
n.. LL&. ..,_ -....... "' 4 """ If ""' M• ._, ·-------·---.....
SAFECO
INSURANCE
fur sfllCial
GOOD STUDENT
QISCOUNTS on
your Family
Aulll lnsar111ct,
lob Paley
•nd"'-<W-
INSU~NCE
474 I. 17111 ST.
COSTA MISA
642°6500
COST.A MESA
1741 N1w,.... •• 6"-1"6 a.....,o,...,
"41 ...... ....,. ...............
S.nto Ano '" ....................... .....
LEGAi, NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEQAL NO'l1CS
Kids Uke to
'Ask Melt.
DAILY Pit.OT .........
JUNGLE FIGHTER J.C. VOUlA AND JUNGLE BOAT
Solomon ldonder Vl11t1 Dl1neyl.and'1 T•me 'Wiii•'
Isl.and Hero Hosted
By Grateful Marines
Pointlng to th• alrull on a · himoell, l>o made.his woy to
stick. set. Maj. J a c ob the Americrall c a m p ,
Ch a r l • s Vouza s al d, lltwnbioi !iato it yolling, "No
0 Japanese here! .. , and then shoot .me! Japs kill me
be laughed along with the already."
rest of the men around him wtio were recatllng a time Before he would accept
26 years ago when 5U<:h an medical care, he Wisted on
exclamation mi sign would living the M a r l n e 1 in·
have been of terror and formation on enemy plahs
fear, not levity. for an ambuih at tbe Teciaru
Friday however, the skull River -information that
oo Ute stake was plaitic and turned tile ambush ·into a
it w&s decorating the Adven· bloody defeat for Ule enemy
turtland section of troops.
Dtsneylllllld, not a jungle site Vi.sited by Ute F 1 r 1 t
oft.ortureendmurQ.erinthe Dlvi•ion group in
S o l o m o n I s 1 a n d 1 , Guadalcanal last year in
Guadolcanal, during World ceremooies cel<braW>g the
War II. 2Sth anniversary of the Jan.
The men were members ding be Wd them that hia
of the lat Marine Divilion "big-feller wish" wu to
Inc., a corporation of men of come to America. And now
that division past and be'1 here and taldng in all
present set lip I'! retain the the siglta, ties among them tbat ttter---..:..-'------1
cocps formed. The grou was
holding its annual con-
vention in the Anaheim Con·
ventioo Center last week. Jt
ended Sunday.
Vouza,_ now 73 year1 old,
oilce helped lhe Marine. an<!
saved cOUDtlesa livea of tbe figh;.:f. men on hla native
Gu anal Ht, atone with
Martin Clemens, the, British
district officer oo the island
at the ti.me of the Japanese
:br\l'alion, were the guects Of tile"'-· Walking through the
amuJement pert, constant
reminders of the war would
appear, like the skull on t.he
Mak•. Three dilferent tlnies men walked in from the
tourist crowd &tlook the
¥lander'• hand and saJd1 "I
remember you.''
The time they remember
WU during tile battle ol
Guadalcmal. Vouza had
been tbt: aergtant major of
tile f I l 8 D d eonltabulary
under Clem.,,., With 11le in-
vasion. of the island , °"""""' and Vooza took to the bii1s •with a short wave
radio. Clemens then acted
as coast W'Mcber for the allie&, .
Wh"'1 the h!V<lalon ol lh•
American Marines came,
Vouza 6COUted for them.
Captured·by the J_.,se,
VOuza refused to give lnfor~
mation about the strength
-posft10!1 of t h • American forces. Th e
Japanese -tied him to a tr.. and !Ncyooetod blm In
the thrwt, cllOot 1 n d
stomach.
With. ~ tl!rust, they
d e 11l, a n d e d Information.
Vouza """'ed·to loll< to.the
J-1•11 tilm tied to the
tree to dle. Managing to 1r ..
Daily Pilot
Want Ads
HOUSES FOR SALi
o.rteral 1000
"NEWPORT BEACH"
"5, DEN, 4 BA.THE"
LlbrarY, 6 yn new 3
Cat, blt~in• -$49.tsO
"OCEAN ,VJXW -$2S,900''
Huse 2 Bdnna, 2 ba, 50X127
Fl.replace. Below market!
HOME IU-4080
Deluxe In-Unlll
NDYPORT BEACH • belt ~
ce.tkln! 10 9libl, 2 BR's MCh
with tinplacm, Xltlt tlnanc-
lnc! Gl"OSIH $17,(0). 1'lll
pl'loe $US,llOI.
Ruth P•rdoll, RMlt.or
lti(l; Westditf Dr. 642.SDI
Under $25,000
Low Down
3 bdrm,_ ......
Mortin Reil Etlll•
5411-6332
DA YIDSON Realty
POOL
North Cosla M,.. 3 BR +
!amllY + -· -!In, ... ..,. y«. f.ll.>00
Rltr. 219> Harbor SB, Cf
-Ey<o, 549-1<04
THE ATRIUM
by Ivon Wei!•
m.tincttve 4 BR, 3 BA, 3 cw
pr&it• 14' St.med ttmng..
tranaluomt roof, tern tile
"'4 penelled ...n..
Roy J , Wlf\I Co., 646-1$0
DAILY PILOTi
WANT ADS
HOliS~S fOR SALi
Gone..i 1000
iohn macnab
BAYFROtn
'?be tintst Bayf:root buy ln
Newport Harbor. 4 enorm-
ous ~ •• ' larp baths,
tif&Vll powder room. Lars•
lamlly nn, trm.ol d!n\rc
rm. Ottr t,000 IC(. tt. Pifr
6 slip pri-. New.
Built by QartRoan. Owner
must aell. IY."' finandng.
'-down ..,,,,, ...
333 Mornlnt1 Siu Lone
Coll for Al'P'.
(714) 642"'235 .
TAKE OVER LOAN
3 Bedroom in Mela del Mar.
l'ireplace, lhllke roof. 5%
FHA Joan ""'""1e $167
month can be a..u.zmed with
no increase. in Interest
"'·""' l'1ll buy It!
•
COATS
WA~LACI
REALTORS
546-4141-
(0pen Evenlnp)
Harbor View Hills
Coron• d•I Mir
Lusk buUI horn~ kx::lted
1n the Southland'• mcm •
sltable a ftsctnatlng area.
Schooh .t Ce.ill. Irvine
campus just moments
away. SensJbly prlctd from
$S4,900 to $48,900
LU$K .HOMES
Ditectiona: MacArthur Blvd.
from hcltic Coast Hwy. or
Newport Frwy. Tum on San
Joaquin Hilia Rd., then
follow signs to model , area.
College P1rk
Squeaky Clean
Allwne $19,000, 51.4 9' Joan.
$156 rm. pay Ill. Proteaton.
ally landscaped with bee.Utt•
ful. patio I: block wlll tenpe.
209 Dartmouth
Newport
ot
...... ,
PRIDE .OF
PEltF&'CT!ON 4 ID~
"O'• DoWN PAYMENT
laloakd rear itvln& room OV•
erlooka , a ptcture1q11e yard,
nntly manicured lawna •
.,en (l'Omed abtubs. 2 bathl.
Dream kitchen with all the
20th ctntury bQ.llt·ln featUl'o
es for your OClflVenl.ence I:
Com.fort. Priced to RD at
$24.950 :» No down G.I. or
low ~ FltA! &46.fmf
TARBELL
5124 Edinger
A CHARMER! _ .. -Earl> Amerio
can. 3 :8edrooma, Family
Room, Double Fireplace,
Doable aarai:e, WoHt Shop,
Boat Yard. Call fol' appoint·
mtnt to see thls spe.cloua
cuatom built home. $1'4,SOO.
JEAN SMITH,
REALTOR «». E.17tb st, C.M. M6-S256
5 llEJ:!ltopM-POOL
RIPOS1ESSION
ImmaCllate lormer model
harne -9 rooms, 3 baths.
-& m..,;,i poo1 with
board a: ~. I: aet thl>-
'"'1 !0% down with ''"' loan •l 6.810 lriternt -"re-
peU.. 6.8* lnttntt" $35,000.
COILEXi-E ltEALTY 5'allO
• Goff Coune Lot
158 f o o t f.l'Wlt•ge on !:hit
coune overlomrlng I u 1 b
gf'ef!nS and fairM.Ys, num-
erous lakes and the Cub
House. SUtrounded by Jux.
urloua homes. One-ot ..... ldnd:
_ •• _ ~,iroo.
Wl.LE()E REALTY 5*68110
WESTCUFf
4 bedroon111, Family Room,
niarn for irwtmm~ pcd,
boat rite. Jteduced to $$2,.
000 lot quick salt.
JEAN SMITH,
REALTOR
.orJ !:. flth St., C.M. ~
EASTSIDE
$18,500
Dtnd)r uni. bunpJow 111
11>• -• CIOeo .. _..and_
-Ptiftct 1ttrter tor ~re
couple "' -· !or -DELUXE
-Pt.boq>e.lBR. F~ i!"'" l'rplc . .\ ...0
"MU. It 1:16,Qi) Balbt& Real Ettatt Co.
'11111 E. 8ol1>q1 llML, -67Mltll
' .
H~~SES ~~ SALE
0-rol IDOi
NO DOWNER
TO VETS
i BR. 2 BA, swimming pool,
•&tl!r tountain, tittpla~.
phot.0 dark room. Walk to
llloCbooll.
$23,150
Newport
•I .
Vlclorle
646-8111
(C1n
Anytime)
Spoitdlng Comer·
Four Bedroom
Ju.t a.bout perfection. Beau•
tttully carpeted sunken liv·
lni niorn witb comer fire--
piece. Ll&fat airy kitchen
wltb dishwasher lind cblble
ovea built·lnl. Qui.et n~
bcdood and iood flnane-
lna make UU. a ahlzti buy
•l $2i,!m.
Colesworlhy & Co.
642°7171
190t Hadior Blvd., CJif.
Open Eves.
5 BEDROOMS-
$950 Totol Cash
Required to mOYe into th.is
larve family bomt. Oose to
abopplna, IChools Ii: chlJl'Ch-
es. Just put on the market,
ttu. won'I !lilt. $163 per
mantb lncluds taxq and
in.urance!
1.0CJ CES'l'CLIFF DRIVE
&16-'l'rll Open Evel,
OUR BEST BUY!
10% Down • Qv.rmlng 3 bed-
room. eutslde doll house ..
bullt-1n8 • lovely ce.rpetin& ..
dKD u a. pin • Te~ val·
ue at $23,0Cll. ;you'll Jove it.
~7171 546-2313
OPEN EVF.S.
T;IE fJ EAL
l~ST PA'TERS
Rare Find
Lldo 70' Jot with ioVely 2
atory home. Sunken livin&
room, lu:teioua new carpet.
Sunahlne &:; beautiful PJ'.
den• ;, , .. , •••• , • • • $69,500
Charlotte Lona
·~
Cill•welL Buie• & to. ... LC........., • ..., -.ca. cal ......
Kl Niii Oa ....
$650 DOWN
J'HA/V A termt on thia neat,
.EutBlde hcmt. Call N(JW
tor appointment to aee!
f"AL OMP'ib-NV * '42.1n1. Anytime *
50 FT. PATIO
"TAHITIAN"' BEAUTY
$2.4,950 ·No Down G.I.
or low dOwn to others. 4 apac-
lou; bedroorn1, 2 batb1. The
)'ard ts a "l;l'oP:tc&l paradiae--
Ele.vated bamboo hut, watet
1.1!, ... porld • 5<1tt. cOVmd
pol.lo. All built • Ill luxmy
Jdt<ilen. See it You'U love
it; M0-17!0
TAWLL 2955 H1rbor ..... ""':""-----..... ._. ..£>.i..\LAW..,..
becvti'9 Chol .. 1 a.um buUt 4 BR. OD Im ft
lot tn oclushre area offm
formal dJnin& room, attach-
ed .,.,.,....i patio ""' l1lll1Y
-1.....,. ... ..,... 1'1111 price $31,950. Term&.
Psclfic Sblrea RftltJ
53&.a94. ct 84?..asa&
• s31;f s0' -•
and onl)o $4io -... qooll0
fl,cl Vetnan. New. 4 bed-
room, 21' boll>, !amlll!. e.
Inf, dm wltb. lreplace-, m. .... 1-hclt><d. 646-4414
fi>,,,. G:LtatJ . -
l'OR. Wt tr tndt; exdu.ltvw
-.......... P~clllc
t&llaad,a; ' I BR., 3 Ba.,
w/nakl'a qtn.. Htd., tilt.
pool. WlD tnide 1'> or down.
Pritt, ~.-. o w•• r 213:-
HOU$E5 fOR SALi
Gonerol 1000
Canyon-Side Home ,
wttb Y1ew ol
breakln1 surf (ft •
yo-bite l&lKt7 bi9ds '
!n exclusive cameo ~
3 Bedrooms + makta ::.:;-,.,..::,:-
Prieed to sell! •
197,rn>
°"11ad WOlllY llll1bers -
Ne1r All Schools ·
9 BR, 2 BA, Ken Kall home.
Protes"1ooaDy landscaped.
large covered patio. Nev
new · carpets, fireplace, bit.
bl kitcbm.
AHentlon Vets
No Down
$22,950 Full Prl.-
~•wport
et
Vlctort•
-11
(Open
Evenlnp)
Wooded Retreat
Have YoU thought about
~fry· Uving in a spacious
3 bedroom ·home on a large
wooded lot? Relax in UU,
c 011 n t r y atmolphere for
Onlf l2J,,900. Sd:lqllt co V4 .d --· , f i·nnu .. l.!.,1SPRING ·~~!.!
2529 Harbor Blvd., C.M'.
NO LOAN COSTS
NO LOAN PolN'rS
step 1n mf ILUWM 5'6,"' 1
f1L( loan. Pmts S159 • tbat'a -
all Tl1l1y -S BR 1iom.-witb famib' romn, real
p-ol ........... Bit-Iii
1r11.;,.,,, ....,_ -
aaqring, nice patio. Near
-· -$25....,.""' CkMn pmU.-
I ' \ l I • \\ I JI 1 !
~ ! \I:\ 1.1• \ \
1........-Kt\ '''
1093 Baker, C.M.
Now Vacant
Immediate pc:!tllftlk:m. Excel.-
lent" 3 BR. 2 BA 110me. AU
blt·in kitchen with recessed
lighting. Tree abaded m9'0
ered, s-tio. Doctl:U pn.a-~
tmmftculately la.nd-=aped.
Only Sll.--..i.rut •-..
Call ~Wl 1_, ovat-
Heril .. e Ila,! £.\at..
LOW. DOWN
3 OY6'Slz«l BR&, extra da9-
etl. W.. rand>..,, .. lritd>o
m, bullt·bt range A OVt!n.
di.shwaaher, w/w carpets A
drapes, large· ovenb:l!d lot
on· cul-de-sac, covered pa.
do, oompt.tely !lnd.o:lped.
$163 month.
1llJ ~e Real [~liite
516,8103 . 962M71
4 BEDRM • POOL 'PUN'
U3,500I
NO DOWN PAYMENT!
V•cation btrt • ~ )'W' r\')Wld,
Generooo liJed ~ 2 ""1lma!I botha. M..,. addtd
luxurlel ,.. ,..... -& <.'OnVenienee. 15 X 3) pool,
Prtee tncludt111faaher A dt)o.
... ~1'120 •
TAltB.LL 29SS Harbcw -------
Odecil 1ront
Ftnt time otttred. ecm..
lot, larp • ..,. nn, ,..,.
-locatlon, $47,500. •'
~ Home
3 BR, ?'""°"' $23,900.
Cof(qeWlllln»on,ll!b'.
~ ~EVES.
200 PT.DEEP •
GROUNDS • $17,950I
B~lhWn -.11on1 •
vi::.~~em-.=
• San Dlfso hway .. Gt
ttostve tommttclaJ bldo. tD
artt. 111trw'a a 3 bedtoolQ -Ii""', c .... potentlll hire• YI m bofne DOW bu!Jd
tmlts for the f\lturel MUl!l91
TAltBILL 1'111 IMch
FIXER..Ul'l'ER
2BR-.-.M-· tarrre lot. 11tll St. Sbopplmr
Atta • ..4.llldng $11.m>
Loon Vlliort, llleellff
-...,e ..
• •
•
I
-..
i.oi~. k191al !>, M ~~:!!~!!~!::~~~CT)~RnsA~L~EC:~H~OU~ES FOii SAll HOUSIS FOii SAll I HOUSES FOR SAL! RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS REAL ESTATE
-·• 1000 Cool• MO.a 1100 Now~_rt _B .. _ch .~ Huntl......, leach 1400 Out al County 160.S Hou-Unfvrnhhod Aph-Fu':!'l•_had ~1. Unlurnl1had 1-..:G:.:.,..::::;r..:•;;,l __ -:-:=:I
!;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Cotta -3100 Newport leach 4200 W01tmln11e< 5'12 Olflco Rental 6070
SCHOOi. BB1
SPECIAL
Newport Peach quiet eorntt
locatlon. l Br , beith, bltn
1dtcbtn. Nor new cupeta. v A.CANT Ready lor )'QUI" OC"--· vm NO DOWN
$32,500
Nawport
at
V lctori1
646-llit
(Open
2414 VI.st.a Del Oro
Nt!WPQrt Bet\cb
Roady by November
Prnmtly ...
Under con.struction
J • l -4 Bedrooms
Complete kitchens
Double ·garages
FplCI • custom carpetine
Spanuti deslen
Loaded with tile
Oose to shopping • achool.s
t'htlrehes • beach • etc.
Would you OOtieve
$23,900 to $27,(0)
Ph; 644-1133
Corona del Mar
Dandy Duplex
walk to beach and lhopl.
Coty b'ont hOme newly d~
corated wtth beamed ceil·
inp and fireplace. Large 7
bemoom apartment also
has-beamed ceiling• and
completely carpeted. Plus
-nice guest room and bath.
Double a:arage -each unit
l.!i completely !Urnlshed -
owner leaving area, Full
price only $39,950.
BY OWNl':R 3 8'. l\i bo. NR. H-Ill. 3 br, I bo, NOW IS THE TIME OF SALE Or tndo I 8'. mnd. H
St!M, dr•PtS A water rani.. rm. El«. kite., Btt.ut. THE YEAR TO BUY hit Yucca Valley priced 2 BR, p.rqt, ca.rpeta, 1125. $80. JNQ.. util. Small apt. tn 2 BEDROOMS LAGUNA BEAC '°'''""· Lri. co•. patlo. >d. 12'1.950. Ail. 146-l"6 THAT HEATED POOL ll0,500 oq. IOlll. -n w-pold. %193\l Ma~k n.. Ardltt. Adult& ..,ty, With,.,., .. $11.1 monllo. Bit-Air ~ndltlonad
Wide lot. Rtd~ pt1ce ·-w-4 BEDROOMS DEN wt11. St. C.Mi 642-~ 6424583. lnl., carpet.I; cttaposal, water ON FORES'i' AVENUE .
S>l.50). 265 c.m.rua Lo Newport Holg~h ___]~ + DINING II~ ========-! paid. 13836 Locust st. °"" '""' anllabl4 In
642-0G68 + 2 I · .....W ·;;-:;:;;..:;;,ln;;,s;;to;;,r ___ lc.;6,;.12" I N-r1 INch 3200 Hunti-ton B••<h 4400 Call ht!twttn 2 I 5 newest oUk:• bui\dlnl at
-cus'roM1zEo Blue Oce1n View ""'~ ... -~:·~::: -· ... • 636-4120 • """"1oc•""" 111 "°"""""' ~-r• GI RESALE 3 lo. BDRM ?(ewpon B(ach fVRN Dl.lplell 1 Dt. ' car. 1 Laguna Beach. Alr c:ondi-HALECREST llh thll vate bath wtth door to mm-on quiet Cul dt'Sac. °"~ block to beach. Slf.5 mo. L-una llaa~ S70S tioned. carpetr:d, bff.Toti!W borne, with new shai cpt. blt· anifSea Bn.-e1e1 So w Dina COVERED PATI() to -• '"" artl"··•·· w prei tlge home. 3 Bt. 2 baths 1 • 211» eq, fl Gardener A water 5J6..n46 -paneled P uvo, .. ,.. 0
l.na, frplc, 3 br, 2 ba, $24,0JQ tom an I c warm water includ. 9--.. mo.-... on 100 CLIFF DRIVE entrances: f'rontaie en
"'""' ~o:. plu1 many llne features. SWIMMING POOL: HAPPY ' this G1 -_. .,.;N I w I ~~ Tutelully decor1ted. Car. D S y U AnYon• may uaume 2 year lease MM316. Lagun1 8"ch 4705 LUXURY FURN/UNfURN Forest Ave., reu ' 0
$21,950 -OWNER aundeck allo ha• view. Low A y ! OW' famuy descrv-~IA c;(, loan, payable Sl<I mo. --'-------I ;:::!;::;::..;:::;:::,._...;.::.:;:1 Yearly Lease. l l 2 Mrma. Munclpa.l. parklna: lot.a. $50
s Br. l'iS ba, bltns, frplc. p1. interest, no IOlUJ c:ha ... t1. A '1 it. Full Pr1:~ Only SU., 700. 3 Bedroom on a hie ~ 2 Br house:, '1rp1, C&l'p'ta, NEW P'Umlsbed 2 BR 2 Ba y 1 .. Lase 1 bedroom per month for 1pace. Delk ·• 1o• "'-m for boftt & •-lier patio. Nr bch. No pets. Mo all ,,_ bu I 1 t • In a. ear..., . rul ch•'"' available tor $5 tio, dbl pr, fncl. GI or FHA bargain at $34,750. .. .,,.... u..... to I +.CA 123 totb .... 1lepa to Shore A. Shop• a · -St. ,,,.,,,_ parking:. Sparkllna: new paint mo. ot •e .,......,. Panoramtc vJew overlookln& · BU51ne• hour• answerina
.u.PJ Maple _.2309 GRAHAM REALTY 646-Ult job bWde & CNlalde. plu1 -•=t.", ="=.B=.====== Allso Beach. M$tur1 adultt Oceanview from eveey Apt. aervice ava.IJable for $10.
tnear N.B. P01t Office) --wall to wall c•"""ll. -ho "'''' no cbUdren. 5185. !tom Jl.50 mo up. lease ••1 utilllie1 paid exCt.Vt MHa Doi M•r 1105 '"" -~ N rt S 3220 494-"'9 rn ---='"°' Q S' £ ... , 1~ l::..,.;.1,Gg[_ _ Vacant and lrnmcdlate po1-ewpo -res 4~ telephone.
CUSTOM 3 BR ! fam nn, U8e0 fie ga e 842-4455 or 540-5140 sesalon at only St8,950. NEWPORT SHORES MODERN Ganl~-apt. north DAILY Pilfil
HI ... W/W '"""""'· STEWART REALTY RENTALS ""'· 2 ''""'· 2 BR. Ill Ba, 2 222 FORE.<'l' AVENUE drapes, frplc. shakeroof, Spaciou1 3 bdrm 2 bl!. hOme, 4 IEDRM ~ 2 BATH -2 BR 6 Den Ol'l yea" lease Apts. Unfurnished 1undecks, gar. 1 bllc s~ LAGUNA BEACH
ne-wly dffilrated large cul d cplli & drp1, ti replace, cov-$2.4,950t-1===='53t>==m9'="'-=== l='=ISO=mo=. =642-M30===== -ping--beach. Very plush. Will 49f·9f66
aac lot. Block wall, extras, ered patio, L&e 4 car &ana:e NO DOWN PAYMENT! k General 5000 furn. $225. 49t-898'l Air-Condl.ctl~on_ad...,..-
$ll,500. By Owntr. 546-m.t /eleoet opener. On 114 iou. MOKt Snsplrlfla: crounda • • L1gun1 Beach 1705 Unlvertity Par 3237 WXURJOUS 'tiew apt, 3 BR, Olf"oces l Desk Spece
Bearing avocado trttt. Alk· I al -.. -.u ... 1 so ft L RENT alter 6 p.m. Princi pals. . S33 900 only lO'Xio dn trop c ...,.._. · COV· 1455 Tttnce Way, Temple SHARP 3 br, 2 ba, fireplace, 2 Ba, elec blt·lns &: with central secretarial, zer-
mg ' ' · ettd patlo surrounded by u•"-3 BR 2 BA d'-" bl.t-llu, crptl, drps, swim· 3 ooms furniture dlabwuher. frpl. 494-98'3 ox __ .. telephone answerln& GRAHAM REALTY 646-2(].4 lush land.cap .... ca.aca.a:--n.uq;. , , .,..,tte, llLI"' /Near NB POii!. otflce) waterfall, tiah pond A ;;;;; large Urine rm., trplc, beam-mini pool. Nr. UCI. l.ea!e $25 Month • DELUXE 2 BR unlum apt aervice, up to 2,000 sq. ft.
ed ceilings thrv.«it. Elec. $250. mo. 833-0276. rou, OPTION TO BUY close to ocean. The Mutual Bldg.
Mesa Verde 1110
By Own"r 3 BR &-Fam nn.
1"-BA. Car,,ets, drapes
Heated 16x36 Pool. 2 patio
Beaut landscaped lge let
Sprinklers. front Ir back
Queen Sile E"'lll9 able elevattd bambJD but kitchen w/blt-tn r,.8, • SHARP 3 ~ 2 •-·~ e ruRN. studio. 49"1-1056 2863 E. Coast Hwy, CdM UI pla)"bou&e. Evtt)' room is an V<, ""'• ..... -c-.,.ace, No deposit 0.1.c.
invitation to spadoul Uvtng! diahwa.eher lari:e comer loc, blt-lna, crpts, drps, swim-H.f.R.C. _ _. Call 8 AN. to 5 PM 675-4010
Family fruit trees
5% % FHA Lean $31,950
wllh 10% dn. 549-3165
Newport Beach 1200
Spacious 3 bdrm .2 btl borne-,
cs>ts & drps, fireplace, COY·
ered patio. Lee 4 cu caraa:e
/elect-opener. On 1% lota.
Bea.ring avocado trees. Aak·
lng $33,!nl, only 10% dn.
GRAHAM REALTY 646-2414
(Near NB Post Ott!~)
FIXER UPPER 115~...,""-_· B"; i::,,,,
NEWPORT HEIGHTS e 646-8329 e
' Bdrm. in excellent coodi-* PLEASANT Out H1ven 3
Oon -114 baths, new car-Br. 7 ba ./ 2 Br Ocean Vu
pets. Immediate ~e&SM>n income A.pt. $49,500 54&-nt!t
upon buyer's crecht ap-
proval, $24,500 with n ,950 SAVE ?%-$26,750 ATTRAC.
down on FHA. terms. Widow 3 Br. l ba. MAKE OFFER
moving oot of co u n t r y 400 Pirate Rd. fd&-30"19
wanU offer.
646-7171 546-2313 .. lrv,;;:,i"°:::., ____ ;;12::::31
OPEN EVF.S. ..
THE~EAL
E S TATERS
Elegant Private Twnhle 3 Br,
2 ba. Comm. pool, rtt.
Decor. extna Incl. $27,000. °""'' 833-0."4
Delletitful family room. "To 155' frcnt. Landscaped, ming pool. Nr. UCl. Lease Fumlture Rentals Rental• Wantsu 5990 SECRETARIAL
"
I ' shrubs. Ocean View. Priced SllO mo. 833-0'l76. 511W l9th CM 548-•~cn · SERVICE see it to wut t. No down right. P.O. Box 914, Laguna · . · · '""' AUG 15th or Sept lit Busi-~1 low down to otbt"! Beach, Owner. n4: ~'126 B __ ••_k_Bo_:.Y ____ 3_2_40_ 1568 W. Lncln, Anhm 774-2800 nesa Woman needs 1 Brun-Modem offices, carpets, air
EXTRA ORDINARY -EXPERIENCED APT MGR furn Apt, C.M., N~rt. conditioning, p~king. :;:m
TARBELL 16111 Beach ALONE On lot, 2 R., cpt.s., or talle care cf ycur property Corona del Mar or Laguna. $65 per month. ange un-
JR. '~IT A LIAN VILLA" SACRIFICE~ New Homes, drps., range: no garage. while away. Couple with To $100 mo. Gar or carport ty Bank Bldg. 230 E. 17th St.,
POOLll $22,950 Views, 3 BR, 2 bl., custom, $125 MO. 548-9536 642-2821 many yn exp in Or. Cc. necessary. 642-0086 after 5 Costa Mesa. 642-14115
•e.N DOWN PAYMENT Spanish atyling. deluxe apPts wani, opportunity to handle pm .. ~ $33,500 OPDI HOUSE SUN. Coron1 del Mar 3250 your property. Box P·168,,l,;..c;.==-..,.-;,-....,.-,,,.-You won't believe it 'ti! you Call for location & terms • _______ ...;....;..;,I Daily Pilot WANTED: 4 Br. rental or
aee it· moat gorgeous rear 494-8833 3 BR, 2 ba, bit-ins, crpt.s, =========I purchase wflg yrd or on
yard • eoH course grass • LllS PADRES REALTY drpa, $275 me. R. L. Costa Mesa 5100 heh. Pref w/option. Can
never needs m~wine -!Nnk· '11-IE BlG ONE Strickler, RLTR. 673-6510 provide n.IXXI "eamest $"
en pool, !ountams • truly a $~ mo. Have xlnt credit &
beauty! King sized bed· Sp~wl11:1a: S BR 4: den, Del Huntinnton Beach MOO HA .. BOR ref1. 536-3726 -·, qu·"ty n•W _,_,_ PlaO tile floon, C.athedral • 1ft ·-~ ~ -~ ~-~~ li L.A. Ram pl•Y" w••" · stom ,_ M t ""'"'"' c., • ..,.,p, v rm, NEWPORT "~ 4 BR 2 lumished 2-3 bedroom apt
lndU1trl1I R•ntal . 6090
16,IXXI SQ. Ft. prlrne bide.
Sprinklers-air ccnd-panelled
offices. PERRON REALTY
64Z-1m
4200 SQ. Ft. in modem cm-
crete building M-2 zone $300
mo. (213) 434-5082 mg, ~ "':11pe1. 011 Spaniah F.plc, w/w crpll, .... ~. .. GREENS converuent location. 84&«164 bit-in range & oven. S3l,950. Ba. carp., paneling, iocd.
TARBELL cHer your down pm t yd. BJtns, pali<>I; cul de sac,
582.4 Edinger Mission Rlcy. 494--0731 ' walk 00 beach. Leue $225 BACHELOR • UNFIJRN.
from $100
or townhouM:, preferably in ---------'
Surfside tract ol H.B. Im· Acreage 6200
Month. 962-9628
POOL 15x35 * TOP cl the World, ocean I~========= I
Legune Beach 3705
-~------• Price $23,150
• Hardwood fioo"
• W /w carpets
mediate rental. Contact
Geora:e Burman n~
tncl. util. YOUNG lady, worlting-stu-
1. 2 6 3 BDRM. dent wt.poodle desires 2
nJRN. Ii; UNFlJRN, BR, unfum garden apt. Vic
ATTENTION
DEVELOPERS l
INVESTORS
a.rth Your Yacht
PIER & FLOAT at your own
front door. F.asy e.cceu to
the Big Bay from this Chan-
nel location. Lge Apt over
gar. -room to build.
Burr White, Realtor
Eastbluff 1242 • Covered cabana
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!• Wetbe.r
view, 3 BR 1%. Ba & fam
rm, frpl, blt-ina, beaut
lndacpd. Walk to schools.
$35,SOO. By owner. 5% % Isl
Will trade C.D.M. 494-518'7
MONARCH BAY AR !: A
LOVELY OCEAN VIEW. 3
BR &: den, 2 BA, cpts, Drps,
trpl, pool. $300 mo.
Heated Pooil, Child Care OCX: or So. Coast Plaza,
Center. Adj. to Shoppln&: -Sept l 544-mT RW.
No pets allowed 1 BR Furn apt Yr'a lse. CdM
615-4630
• e Excel cond thruout
OPEN HOUSE
SUN 1 -S
2854 C1rob
COOL POOL
HOME
e Terms GI or FHA
Never again""'MU YoU find a
home like this at thla price.
Paul Jones Realty
847-1266 Eves. 842-5844
eve. ,.. ........................ I adulta 496-1243 betw 10-5 pm
MAGNIFICENT 2 BR VIEW HOME
OCEAN VIEW LOT on 2 Iota, fenced yard, car-
$5,950 • small, but level $750 pert, 1 yr lease applies on
down, be.l $53 mo. l.Aguna purchase, $175 mo. 497-1210
Bch. {TI4l 497-1210
...,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,.I Laguna Niguel 3707
2700 Petet"80lll WBJ, at Har-nr bch. Bacbelor teacher.
bor I: Adami, Colla Me11.. Before or aft 9 I Z.
546-<l3'10 213-7!&--7563. 1800 State St,
Apt 34, So Pasadena
Excellent, parll; • like eur-TEACHING CcfM couple will
roundings for adults requir-care-take home & pets. Aug
ing peace & quiet. + while home is being com·
BEST BUY BAYCRES'T
Quick Pcmeslon
Spacious 3250 sq. ft. cust.,
20"1 WF.SI'Cl..IFF DRJVE profeu. decor.&: lndsc:pd .. 5
646-m.1 oPen Evell. lg. BR. Xlnt cood. Rare buy
in EastbiuU, 4 BR, 2 btl .
Quick poMesslon, $43,950
Delancy Real Estate
2828 E. Coast Hwy., CdM
673-3770
DOWNTOWN
CUSTOM BUILT
RENTALS
HouSH Fuml1hed
3 Br. lrg fam rm with stone Rent1l1 to Share 2.005
fireplace. Hd floon. Elegant ---------"-
crpts, drpa. Walk to schla &: GIRL Over 25 to share apt.,
park. SOxl.2'7' lot, alley en· Newport Be a ch. 548-il88
./ 3 BR 2 Ba, cptg, drpii,
built-ins, view of g o l f
course. Pvt beach. Kid! &:
pets OK. $300 mo. 496-3276
Dlscrimlnatlve Tenants pleted. HY 4--8109
l, 2 & 3 BDRM, API'S. RESPONSIBLE Executive
POOL. NO CHILDREN wants comfortable 1 Br.
MARTJNICj)UE Bay!ront Apt. ....S155 ""·
GARDEN APTS, Rooms for Rent 599S
* 80 LEVEL ACRES *
Ideally located in high~
desert (no smog probleD'IS,
wonderful dry-ait!l Leve I
land, pump I: well on prop-
erty. Just 18 mile1 East of
Barstow (where great ex-
pansion has already begun!)
90 man • made Lakes in
are-a! Ideal for r e a or t
development, alfalfa
growing, fish raising, etc.
.. , opportunitle1 bound.leis.
This is a rare oHering, af.
fording the Investor a great
future! Personal circum-
stances force this I.ale: oth-
er, smaller ~ avail-
able below market value.
Call owner: 847-6640 Eves/
weekends.
LIKE EllGAIKE at $69,500. 5%% Lo an
tranferrable. Not on lease
land. 646-28211 Eves.
BLUFFS, Rare "G" PI a. n:
tnnce. after 6 PM
3 BDRMS 2% Ba, drapes.
Fenced yard. No pets.
LEASE $215. 1-495-5947,
lJth A Santa Ana, C.M.
You will love thil attractive--Zl.00 WINDWARD LANE
Spe.ciou.s 4 bl', 3 ha, By
Owner. $37,950 6'4--0140 BRASHEAR REAL TY 2"~B"°R-;Fum.--w71pco1~.-.~ .. -don~t
841-8531 Eves. 968-1178 S60 ./ Util ea. 2ill 16th N.
(213) 391-3482 after 6 p.m.
Call ~frt. Hendel'90n 646-5542 MESA VERDE to share rm.
1771 Santa Ana, Apt 113, C.M. twin beds. 1586 W. Baker St.
ly customized tbrtt bedroom EASY ACCESS
Ctwo bedroom and dm. pool Near Ocean 2 year old 4 Corona del Mar 12.50
CM. 546-8229.
8 . Apt G 494-3015 aft s RENTALS
home near WESI'CLIFF I ;:;:;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;I SHOPPING CElITER. Tbe Bdrm, 3 baths, brick frplc I 1
muter bedroom ia extreme-bll·in kit. Deck & Patio (It.A SI I LuxuriOUI 3 BR home, dining
16x36' POOL --------1 Apll. Furnished
CLEAN, spac. 2 BR. Stove, LARGE Room. PRlVATE
refrlg., blt-ln bar. Walk to entrance and bath. Near
stores. No pelli. 2 Children bus. 543-3738 4.41 Acres
ly """'"""· m"l" bath hu Try low down, $45,500 Cameo JINres ea room, d•n & ...... kitch ... ,,_, tub ~-·· R. C. GREER, Ree.tty Full ted &: .. _......a
Coata Mesa, 2.100 General 4000 ----'----Sep. tum. bach house,
$90. Incl. eardener.
EXPERIENCED APT MGR
or take care ol your property
whlle •way, Couple ·with
many yn exp in Or. Co.
wants opportunity to handle
your property. Box P-168,
Dally Pilot
0 .K. $104.50. 549-3643 or =~=~~=~-~I 646-5961 Key at ~E NEW $12. 75 up. W-W carpet.
Maple Kit. avail, Semi-priv. COSTA MESA
awmen roman and airuw· 3416 Via Lido 613·9300 ·• ·-3 BR 2 bath horn Y carpe Ulay=. er. Dellsbtful kttcben with ......._. ae ' e ProfeuJonally la.ndacaped. 646--8359. 135 Albert Pl 0.1 (2) DLX large apts, 3 BR 2 ..:.:::..:::=.=.:.::.=:..:.-c.::::...
BA, blt·ins, quiet area. NICE Room kitch priv. Men
Adults. Sl!JI. 2285 Fordham only $45. mo. 803 Governor
Prime M·l property, Jm' X
630', Comer location. CALL
MR. Bl.ACX 544).ll51 (open
eves) Heritage Real Estate.
loads of cupboards. Built-In Priced To Sell Nowl secluded •rN with 3 Will trade tor urribl near the
Electric range and oven, 4 Br's 2 ba. Xlnt location. o~Nt;~N~ 5 beach or submit otter to pur.
Realtor S48--Tia>
dlshwasber, disposal a n d Many other attractive fea-chasP.
nutone mixer. The pool be.! tures. Close to sch1s. Out-46·12. Roxbury LISTER REALTY
Newport loa~h 2200 Dr. 548-9417 St CM. ~52.89
a UNIQUE WATERFAU. standing va.lue at $39,950. ~ lli612 Beach Bl., HB 842~ ATIRAcnVE waterfront 4
and lot.a at deoking. Priced 642-5843 ~ W«lil ~ $!4,000 Br. home, boat dock, winter
unbelltMnsiY 1ow" et only PER.FECI' fur retiremenl or A -• -•-2 BR, 60xl00 fenced lot, dou· leaie.
$34,500. DON'T On.A Y ~ vacati~. Large Mob 11 e ble garage, new carpets & ==='~21_3_l ~o_w_'~""'-'--
CHATEAU La POINTE
BeeuWul 2 Br. furn. apt.,
Hid pool, Carport-df 1t
parking. Adults, No pets.
19f.l POMONA AVE., CM
2 BR. 7 ha. Adults over 50 LGE Room, priv. ba, and en--
only. $l2S mo. 263 l&th Pl. nrance. 549--00SI a.lier 5 or
CM See manager I =w='='k='="doo=. =====
1 BR Uni. apt. Guest Homes 5998
Out of State Prop. 62.08
TO S~E Estate I n
Washington. 113 Acre1 divid-
ed by State Highway 31 in
Colville Nat. Forest, north
ol Metaline Falls. Small
house and buildings, f e. i 1·
timber, no mineral. $15,000,
asking cllh. Also 10 Acres
in Si;okane Valley 20 min
irom downtown. Zoned agri
under new i rrigation
district. Great view, nke
spot for horse ranch. Asking
$15,000 cash. W. Carlson, 181
G Del Mar, C.Csta Mesa
SEE TifIS ONE TODAY!! Home, 2 baths, patio 332 Ma=, CdM drapes, electric range & CIV· WINTER· beach cottage 2
cltlbtiouse, pool, pr i v a t e en, landscaping & sprinklera. BR, avail, mid Sept Jl25
$80
Realtor 548-7720 PRIVATE Room for-am-
Evenings Call 545-2833
REPOSSESSION???
$900 DOWN
Comer lot and 3 spe.cious
bedrooms, 2 baths with built·
in kitchen and cozy family
room. Dn't mlu this BAR·
GAIN OF THE MONTH with
NO DOWN to VETS a n d
ONLY $900 Ior e.11 othi:T
-~.
COST A ?-.1ESA om CE
2790 Harbor Blvd.
5-6-9491 Open 'ti! 9 P!IJ
Brokers • Salesmen
Earn 100% comm . Law
monthly desk lee multipl1
oHice
HOME 642-4090
beach. Bargain. GTh-1672 Ready to move into. Vacant. mo. 6T5-l084 o~n Dally 1 to S ======== "SWIM IN '11-IE SUN'' r· $13t month including taxes. ":"" WFSl'CLIFF AREA 219 JASMINE, CdM Lido Isle
3 Huge Bedrooms, 2 Baths View home, stepa to beach. 3
Fenced off Pool. Only $.11, 750 BR 2 baths, living room + 4 BR., 2 Ba.; avail,
HOME 6424000 famUy, !ittplace, bll· i.nl. after Labor Day tlmJ.
Sep. dining ~a. service June. $325 Mo. 675--0116
2351
LIDO BAY VIEW
Specious 1 BR Apt in hi·rise
Bldg. Custom Furn. Yrly
$350/mo. 615-2676 Rltr.
Costa Men 4100
-----'---'---1 bulatory lady. Good food.
---------,,l=N~l";,;""":;;;';"~ru~·,~.,;·=54~8-4~'153~ Newport Be1ch 52.00r
SEPT. 151.; lease, S159 util Misc. Rentals 5999
pd. 2 BR., cpts, drps., beam GARAGE lor rent: Eastside
ceil., trpJc. Nr. beach. Costa Mesa.
Adults. 613-38&2 $20 Month 642-2657 LARGE Mobile Home, 2 porch, carpets &: drapes. -3 (3~ HlJG~ LOTS_. near Ocean ========= NASSAU PALMS 1·2 BR
Baths, patio, c I u b ho u a e car garage on alley. Larse 60 x 200 (t,.,_ .. u""'s pie). Huntington leach 2400 $135-$14~. Pool DELUXE Baytront, boat slip
pool, private beach. 6~1612 lot v t 10...: .. ___ 177 E. 22nd SI. 642-3645 avail, pool 2 Br 2 be.. S25Q. REAL ESTATE
GeMrll · acan · ,o uvwu. 3 &: f Bedrooms. t..wruey GUEST Hoose, man prefer.,
1812 Highland Dr., Harbor Rltr. 646·3928 Eves. 642.a:L!S BUCCOLA-BUil.T homes cooktng fact!.; utJl pd. Nr. 1 BR. Pri patio. a11 electric, up. Rltr. 6'&-2805
High!'""'; 4 BR. 2 Ba. *LACHENMYER SHERWOOD ESTATES buch. $15 Mo. '3&-7810"'" c.pu, drtl"•· 1125 mo. No NEW Soundprool2 BR. 2 Ba. Income p..,porty 6000 $32,950 548-2847; 1-~2908 . pets er chldrn. ~1322 Acrou fm. Coco'1. 1665 Mount. & Desert
Owner VIEW Of HARBOR :::.:n:.~.H•= KE~!,~5
Furnlahad DLX 2 BR, tum. ldffi !or lrvln• $1B5/1200. 64>-02J9 WHY FIGHT
6210
LUXURY 3 br. 2 bath condo, -------.0:.-bachelora. $140. Pool. 19'33 S frpl, pool, golf, fee land. Quaint home. Large living RETIRE '& INVEST Summer Rentals 2910 O!.urch, CM 548-9633 East Bluff 5242. RENTAL
Owner transferred. $32,500 room & fireplace. Reduced ONLY $19,000 ~=-'--~--~-Bu;y Uta well located 10,(Q)
By Owner. 642-3.ID to $38.900. Lovely 2 BR & den, close to NPr Bch 1 BR, alffPI f . 1 11:~1an:"ly.~~~6s ~:: PRESTIGE Town HanMa sq, ft. i.ndustri~_, bldg. in
J\.10VE In! Neu new 4 BR., CORBIN·MARTIN Golf Course W/R-4 zoning. blk to Ocean, $60 per wk. 642--8213 642-l5T4 For lease, 2 br &: den & 3 bl' Santa Ana. Lea ........ to AM
-1 •· ~ h REA' ~RS -1"""' HAFF DAL REALTY July, Avail Aug. 642-1712 ' with 2 or 2~ baths. Gold & local companies. Returns .... t-.. new cp .... nr. ~ac . ...,v "'""" ...,.. 1 BR Fu a .... t Adul~ H ~-$2S,OOO. Open weekends; 351 "Home to Match Income" Laguna at Victoria Bch. 1 · rn ...., · "'• no Medallion all elec. Your own epprox. lO ·ro on pu.-...--. ... se
62nd St. Owner 675-014t Beautiful 3 Br. So. of 8470 Warner ~ BR house, sleepa 4, $100 per pets. $60 mo. 1876 Fullerton key to pool. 2-car gar. Rent ,price of $85,000. For mo~
highway. By owner only. wk er monthly rate. M2-l.712 _A='='=· 54&-=.,1356=====: I mrts at $Zl0 me. inlonnation, please call K.
BAY VIEW Lux oondc 3 hr 2 Reuonable. * 67H636 $49.50 DOWN -845 Amigo Way, Npl. Bch. W. Small ba. home. 2CKXI' 2 ary 1 "-2 Br. Furn Apts. % Corti Mete 4100
w/pools, golf etc. Vacant, Lido Isle 1351 To qualified vets. 3 homts blk to oceu. 1209 w. .;.,;.""-'...;.;;.;.;;;;.., __ .,.,;,;;;; Eckhoff & Auoc., Inc.
Sac $35,9CXI 67J...43S6 to choose from, all fully car-Balboa Blvd. Balboa. S75 $25 Wk. Up Corona d•I Mir 5250 1818 W. Chapman Ave. peted wtth built-ins, cloae to wk-Sl50 wk. 494-5l89 Orange, Calif.
DIAL direct 60-5678. awp BAYFRONT DUPLEX scbool1. Call for information -=~--~~-e Studio I. Baell apta.. 541-2621, Eves-wknds 538-5971
OWNER MUST SELLI
5 seres in subdivision, New-
berry, Calif. 18 mi. east of
Barstow. "Land of Lakes"
area • 90 man-made lakes in
area. Much development go-
ing on. Level land, water
underground. Will ncrifl~!
Call owner 8-47-r.640 aft 6 wk.
days,_ any time weekends.
Ask for Lee.
BUSINESS and
FINANCIAL
YoW' ad, then alt bade .nci Enclo9ed patio. 2 -3 BR. LISTER REAL TY :1 &BR _!'°rri: ~Int ~ • lftcl Utlll A Phone"'"·
listen to the phcmt rtrw:! Fireplaces, SllS,000. 16612 Beach Bl., HB 842-6633 ach, UJ491 !_ · • Maid Sf:rvJce • TY avafl. .. .. 12. UNITS Bus. Opportunltlu 6300 ~ .. ;,." WALK TO BEACH NU1VllLE, U.S.A. i• nnw Walker Realty or $385 mo. -1 .... 1 • New Cal• A Bar DA.ll.Y PILCYr WANT AQS 16382 Eagle Lane AVAIL. thru Labor Day; 2376 Newport Blvd. 543-97$
BRING RE.5ULTS! 3336 Via Lido 615-MOO Immediate pogsesion on thla: 3 BR. 2 Ba.: arnaU 00.t All 1 BR. tum. Pool. Bit-in accepting 1pplic1tiorM1 for
ON TEN ACR!:.S appliances. Newport Bea.ch. franchises in Orange Coun-
L1rn1 a.ach 4705 laguna Buch 4705 Laguna loam 4705
tbarp 3 Bedroom home, near Dock. $250 Wetk. 673-6540
-·· ochool&, • Doolg-lu plant. $24,500. Subrntt 1 BR. Mn, Apt. alps. 4
2 BR., ntw w/w carp ..
drapes. Bit-in oven. stove.
Attr. furn. Walk lo stores.
No pell. Child over 8 O.K.
$124.50. 54~3643 or 646-5961.
Key at ~E Maple
1 A: 2 BR Furn & Unturn 4 Yrs. new. Fee land. Man-ty. Locations are waiting ln
from USO 0mo. Frple1 / PrV ager avail. Good tax lhel· Anaheim, Lai\lnl. Bch., San-
Patioll /Pool.a. Temia. Con-ter. No vacancy problems. ta Ana, Orange, Huntington
tnt1 Bldll 9 bolt Putv Gross $18,DI, Price $175.0XI Sch. &. other areaa. $14.950
I I I r I
IPIDEt I r I' I
l ~YLA5 I __ ....... 1 ....... r_._I _.I_.. --S·I
lTEPIAT ·111'1
Overheard In o college
football locktr room: '1he
coodl kos no fohh in our
team. In betw"n holvei he
a lways o sks u, to give him 0 __ .. e eoino,,,. it.. chuc;kf• quot.d
b., 1111.ng In 1t.. l'l'lilllnQ word•
Y'Oll dtve~ ll'Otl! U.p No. 3 below.
e ~~,~!~;mtas r r I' t I' I' I' I
0 ~1mt•s1 I I I I I I I ...
SCUM-LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 8610
ie:rnu. 1 Block to beach. Weekly
PERRON REAL'JY 642-tm $85. Newport Bch 642--0316
NEWLY decor. 3 BR.; lge.
famUy rm. (19x22), bltna,
carp., drape•. Nr. achoola.
16311 Nusau Lo. 846-94'7
e BY OWNER e
' BR, 2 Ba. $23,500 or best
offer. 494-9232
3 BR 2 ba neAr bch. lmmtd.
poaaeasion, Call 9821125 or
962-7914 f« Appl.
Corner TownhauM
RENTALS
Houns Unfurnished
General
EASTSIDE 2 BR., elec.
bltns; patio. Adults only
361-8 OGLE 642-1.m
Green. Good financing. Cash n'Q". Fu1ly secured in.
900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 R. Nattress:, Rltr, &12-1485 ve.st. 5hould retum 1st yr.
(MacArthur nr. Coast Hwyl NEWPORT BEACH Call lor appt . 642-2713 or
TRAVELODGE write to 1617 w~tcllff or.,
A1iRACTIVE 3 hr. 2 ba, all Deprttia.tiorl $18,600 Suite 210, Ne"'POrt Beach
II' Available Now 1N;-;"w;;:po;;;;;;rt;;;;Bo;•;c;h;;;;;4;;2;;00;1 ''"'· ,..,, d.,,., ""'"· "' 1966 a .............. 181.ooo c.1.""" .
MESA DEL MAR ~1111-673-3324 1967 Gross ........ Sll0,000 WHY Wnrt for 110mcone
* "'annel Reef * l·BR .. carp .. drapes, bit-ins. 1968 Gross ........ $125,000 else? Be your own boss• 5 BR · S Bath• • ·····•· $27fl UI Yearly b:e. $125. c. R. Gangi 642-1615 You can hsve your 0~
4 BR· 2 Ba • ........ •· • $195 APAR'PMENTS Adulta only. 673-5809 DOWNTOWN La B yaniage $hop in the hean of
3 BR-2 Ba ••••........ $1&5 :='°'=======! KUnft each CM A"''''''''°' -m SP~~ACULAR VIEW zoned f bu . . "" ton!' Owner/!Ucr. 6'15-3131 .<:.A.• B1lbo1 Island 53SS • or s. ·great po-who likes to aew a-.. m·•o
By Owner. 2 Br. l \ii ha. Low Costa Meta 3100
rnA. Good JOCAdon. WORTH -------;;..;.:.;
Waterfront/Loe • Boat -------.C.:~ I tentill1 for bldrs, lnvstra or money. SS.OOJ.00 to •;l'I 1;;' _
Slips Available WATERFRONT dlx. 2 BR." tam home w/lneome. Paya Include S8 00 00
2 BR • 2 Bath Apt•. f 1,_,1 Prln ..... i.. ""'· s • · inventory apt w/boat tie-up prlvll. or .....,, · · ., .. ..., ... ,..,1 end lixtun-s. Tll E REAL
SEEING! 962-4195
Huntington
H1rbour 1405
LARGE 5 Bdrm. 2% bath.
Tri-level borne. All built-ins.
Cl.f1WI~ throuabo11t
Drl.ptt. AJIPtOX 2300 IQ ft
li•inc arM. l..alMlscaped A
fenc«I. WaUdna: dia:tanct to
granvnar .l ht&h ICbool • lhopplnt. Clo.e lo freeway.
$2$,!!00.~
Assume G.I. Loan
Sl500 b&odlet • available
lmmcdl.lttiy. Btr/Own«
842-6633 Of 191""366
AVAIL IMMF.O. Me1a Verde LEASE · or· BUY Yrb' lat. $225 mo-Adulll on. have you? 494-8170 ESTATEs -546-2313
4 BR, l.ge llvinc rm, $445 Mo. It uii • i:;!J,500 up ly. no pell or chl1dttn
spaciou1 fam/dlnll\1 rm. ~ Octan Blvd., CdM 673-0'207 Bu.In ... Rentil 6060 MASSOClATES WANTED
btlt·ln kHchen, beairtltully 673-1788 -fot further info an wfbusint>s1 'xPt-r &
JandsctPHJ yard. YurlJ Httman Trott, Mer. Huntington IHch 5400 THREE room .Wte + mt ~In ce~h to invc.t in ht
l"ase $325/mc. ind water!!!!!!!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!! ";;;;,..;.;;..:,c.:;.;..:.,:.:,:;.;...:..;;:;:1 room l.l'ld lobby, desk~. profit RN\tt busiM111 or
l.Dd ra.nttner service. Small rum ap1 fer rent 2 Bedroom 2 11th l'"ICks. I.lid table•. ground )'OW' own. No M>ll lng. We
673-3663 Evn.. ~ near OCH!\. Olild OK. Cpll, drapes, bullt·ha. 1 blk Door al 1736 Anaheim CM train. Wrile A ni e r i c a n ~-•• on pr•m•·-s • h 1 $140 Marketw1ys, PO eo, 1~ FOR Lease. l Br. 2 BA VW'll~ ._.. un. to " Ptl l\Ol'M, I ea er, elc.1.::.:::...,=C"'.',-,=---~
famlly/lanaJ rm. Lee fenc> ~ Oubhouse. N.B. IMMEDIATE OCC\I. S12S pr. Ston.ge Genge =f Ave., nun1. Beach
ed yd. tittplict, cpl• and Winier 2 BR, aduJU, 9 mo. Call owner 642-:1835 or 20 ii: 25' x JO'h. $45, or per110n1l lntf!'tvlt'W
drpa. A•all Sept L $250 mo months Jene. f212 Seuhorf' key flt 77'01. Elli• Apt 0 ., Schw-orer. 67J..26S4 RESPONSIBt.E PtrlOns 10
lnc.ludes GardeneT A water. Dr. 615-3345 ~812~.ml~~~~=~~~I ~~~~~==~~ atrVice t •tabllahe-ct N p 1 Ll Col ROOtrt B. Moore OCEANFRON1 Attrac. 2 Br. Office Rental 6070 custom'" Pflrl ·Um4!. No ln-
646-.fM rum. Apt. Wimtt « J'l"}y. Wntmlnater . 5'12 S11-291ti NEWPORT Bc•clo wntoritl or lnvt'!ltmenl re-
AvaU 9(15. 646-Q!32 quited. Paid i r a Int n II: l BR., 2 Ba •• bltns.., .2 BR. crpO, drpa, car. Sm11.ll rrd Doer c((lce in av.1111.ble. 646-9895 afttr !I
patio; carp., drape•: hr llllJlck. dci.tftt tmlftl $115 mo. A•all AUi· f Gntph(c Arll B!da ntar bay. pm. '
fZ1$ Mooth. -P1LOI' WANT ADI! OIH6ll 35028 or <-l'IOI Jlch=wn;;:'°'.::...;-::.:.:=:.::$00::__..,! ~Dltl~~-~~..!lor~REs~~UL':!;Ts
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1BUSIN!SS ....
FINANCIAL
BUSINESS ind
FINANCIAL
lw. Opportunlll11 6300!lu1. b pportunlll11 6300
EXCLUSIVE
. DISTRIBUTORSHIP
SPARE TIME OR fULL TIME
Be..,me a distributor for one of the fast .. t
seUlnJ & hottest household products on the
market today, one that is sweeping the coun-
try. Company arranges for all accounts in
busy markets, so no experience or selling is
required. Can be bandied by man or woman.
-YOU CAN EARN T0-$350
MONTHLY SPARE TIME AND
$1750 MONTHLY FULL TIME.
Requires only 4 hours weekly lo start and
a cash Investment of $1500 to $5000. Money
back guarantee on all merchandise.
ANNOUNCIMINTS
ind NOTICES
Loot, ' • '401
LOSI' Colla l\feN, While
female Eskimo doc;, 1 ntG9·,
Vft'1 alf«ltkNlt.. Plffse
call M&-15'11 .it.er 5 PM
R<Wml
64115
ASTROLOGY • Fall Clultl
DOW iorrniD&t Befinnen •
Adv&nced • Intro!1uctqry
* * * -*
• •
M .. Ung. 'J'Ueod01, Aug. 8, Whlddyo Worlt? WhMWyl Got?
8'"' PM. Bolboa Pa"1lioo, · SPI CIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
""'"""· For further "' HA TURAL BORN SWAPPERS form1tlon. 61).-214111 aft 6 ' Special RIM
FLY TO CATALINA $ 11--S 11"'" -S bucks
DAILY FL!Gtn'S FROM •U.Ll& -Aa MUil INC\.·UDl nornG., mr""""" A1Jt. t-WMI Wu MW • w-., t-wri.t '1W ... Ill ...... vnn..i• ""' .....,u...... t-Vou• .,._ #!di• .,..... 4-4 n,.., et Nftrti.w., , PORT. Catalina· Vep.a f-HOTMINO FOJt Utl -f1tA01s OHL.••
Alrlln... e ~ PHONI 641-5671
EX·ACTRE.SS/ artist. look· Te 'lice ~our l reder'1 PJradlH Ad
in& fM wrtter, •rt I at NEED MOTORCYCLE # 62 Balboa Coves S BR (~ffll 3$-50) to ah~ J&'. hacienda, Rosarlta Beach, Have 1964 Simca, rebuilt waterfront wtlh pier. Will
54S-97S5 enPie, new lli\!s. $450 or conakl.er anything ln valut
7 .................. 4%'raM for diHl!l'e!'let! above $35,000
ALCOHOUCS Anonymom 1-----~~--loan. U 8-mt
Harbor Area. Pmbt rD·rm TRADE '$4 Ctd. flettwood
P.O. Box 1223 Costa ?ifelL full pwr., &t Npt. Bch. Ten-
Mond'1, A>tun 5, 1968 DAILY l'ILOT ~7: .
SlllVICI DIRECTORY JOBS I IM'LOYMINT IOiS I IMl'LO~MINtJOiS i IMl'L6YMIN ~
P1,.rhongl111 Help W•ntocl, Men~ !:!!',I' Wont..i, Men ~Help W......,, Men 7200 "'~
P•lntillt ~ Machlnbt. • -
PAJP:'!NG AJld Pa~~ SALES
1"' coll '"' •• l>oll> bcncU! ff U 6 H E S Exeluaive bll)' not txpenllvt
....,. ... Ind -51W!J7
PAJNTING Intfrior/Exterior •
....... EaU.makll
* 642-4669 * 548-8Tll *
Proteuk>naJ Painting
Spray • 8Nab -Roller
776-8613 776-34.1'
Pa.perhaoiina 4 Pe.intinz.
cleaa • f'UI. 20 'Vn. u,
Loe rel. 00.132'i aft 5 p.m., INTEluO~ ,. 'Ji'rERIOR
Palntinr. Ffte est.
Llc. • Ina. Oluck S484114
Palntiq, exterior, interior
,L1c. Ins. 17 yn up. Free est
~. ACCOUltical cell.
"'Paper Bugg)'" 847-1659
Mobil store -home calla
We advise -114!11 -iMtall
PAINTING Aver. room.
compl. $25. & IQ>. Neat
worlc. l...ocal tef,s:. 347-1358
Newport leach '
H11 u,.,.nt
requlr•,.,.,,h fer
SWISS
SCRfW
MAOUll
OPERATORS
With Tomo experltn<.'IL".
Ability to do own •IUPI de-
sirable.
Openlnp an on 2nd shift .
OUTSTANDING CAREER
orl'OlnlNITY l'OI
SIU' STAITll
WITH IXICU11YI POTINTIAL
IF you ere 1 recent ~oll•t• gr~uafe who••
ftlfutt ia blacked bee.use of the nefure of hi1
work er the 111• ef the or11nluition
' .;.i
..
o• I • m•n now 1ellin9 who ftel1 hi\ work it not
•ufflclentfy ch•Jltn9in9 or th•t it does not of.. 1 :
fer adequ•t• lr'lcom• or tdv•ncement posslbl ..
liti•• or require• too 1nuch tr•••' ! r ..
OR '
• junior e:ic.cutlve, scihool teacher, en9lnetr. I ~l
bu1lne11 owner, account•nt or. lewyer who be-·
lieves he haa the a bility to 11rn more
THEN .•. . .
I
I
! I
THIS IS NOT VENDING AND OUR 1 WILL ,i,. ,1ano ,,.. '"" parties riven at your home.
nil Clb. membership, for
dinghy w/o'brd or ? 897-00ll
Work th a clean., ~
ditioned stqi locatf'd near
the beach. Enjoy lop com-
pany bendita.
investiCJ•t• this opportunity to qu11ify for the
hiCJht1t recoCJn lztd le11.1I of stUinCJ t o busi ntts
and prof1~1ion•I 9ro.up1. Our Aptitude Analysis
Sy1tttn \ftl/l deftrm1n1 your ch1nc1s for lUC·
cast In our Field. If yo\I quelify we will pay you
an attrtcflvt stl•ry while you INrn the busi-
~,
DISTRIBUTORS ARE ALL SUCCESSFUL F" oomlnal .... 847-mll Ext. 4403 Days
-i$ ECONOLlNE HEAVY
'DUTY $1 ,000 eq. or 'IllADE
for older ca.r or motorcycle
plus ca.ah.
~se positions otter an fX· n1s1 and 9ain experience under 1upervi1 ion.
cellent luture with a llJOWI. Your Income pro1p1ct1 will be well into five I ~ I WHITE CROSS INDUSTRIES
2825 W. Lincoln Ave.
Anoholm. C1llf.
Coll 127.951 5
Rul Ett1t1 Lo1n1 6340
BORROW on Your Equity
Private 7nd Mortg, money
FREE APPRAISAL &
PROMPT SERVICE
Rl!'putable Company 1<!rvlni
Orange County 18 years,
Sattler Mortgage Co., Inc.
336 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
642-21TI 545--0611. Nights
&: wkends 673-7865 642-1157
PRN A TE party will bliy
your equity or Tnllt Deeds.
Eve• S42·7lli
8FJ1, Opportunltia 6300
SPARE TIME WORK
DISTRIBUTOR FOR nus AREA
Become, cfi1tributor in on• of America's l1rg-
est a nd fastest 9rowiRCJ industries. Th is is ~ new
concept in the fielcl of vending. No 1xp1ri1nc1
r•quired. All eccount1 ere contr1cted for, ind
•et up by our comptny. You merely relfock
locet1on• with our Natlonel Brend Product•.
YOU CAN EARN $800
OR MORE A MONTH
BASED ON YOUR EFFORT!
Inv estment of ,2, 190 to Sl,960 cesh required
secured by inventory •nd eq.iipmtn+. You must
heve • 9ood cer and bt •bit to devote et le•1t
4 to 12 houn per wttk~
If you •r• inttre•t1d, h•v• the desire, drive,
dettrmln1tlon •nd w1nt to bt succt stful in t
9rowinCJ bMsln1ss of your own, write u1 todey.
PJ1ese 1nclot1 n1m•, •ddr1ss i nd telephone
number.
Wf WElCOME INVESTI&ATIOll
INTER-STATE DIST. CO.
5l5 South S.cond WHI
k ff Lok• City, Ut•h u1or
1-IOLIDAY HEALTH SPA
MEMBERSHIP FOR SALE.
67:;.;332
Announcements 6410
Llfotto HHllll Studio
CMMnt, Concrete 6600
6424826 -------
Floore 666$ EXPERT CE?o.t ENr WORK I;_~:;.. ____ .::.:;:.::
Reuooable Prlce1. Specialb.
Ing In custom patio•· 1'ree
Nt. Call anytlme &tl-9496
CEMENT Work, all tfpee.
No ~ tao mall. n ee m. n. STUFucx 5e'15
a.J.rn'.>M PATIOS •
Block walla. Abo concrete
sawing &: removal. 842-1010
BEST In concrete. Walk•,
pool deckll, fioora, patios.
642-8514
Llcon...t -Qulllty
Cf:mmt work. 839..soo&
Chlld C1"' ' 6610
SPECIAL Summer prorram.
A&:H 2% to 6. 8 a.m. to 5:30
p.m. $18 WHk. CI a TI I
Montuoni Scboola, 1S25 N.
5-lt& Ana, C.M. 641-JTOS.
Contracton 6620
LINOLEUM'Pcal1>4H, tile. Re-
model, rep&t. Many rem.
nants. Free est. 839-1671,
Sll.aGS< Fast~~lsb
Everythlns. 14z..1164
G1rdonlnt 66IO ===''=====
_J_A_P_ANES _ _,E.__G_A_R_D_EN_E'R Interior 0.Cor•flng 6737
Maint " cleanup. Reliable. e Resldence • Conwn'I e
Rea.a monthly r a t ' • • • Palntina, lnt. • ext.
827-6248 llt 6 pm e Wall Coveriaa&a
J •p1nes1 G1rdener • Color Coordination
Exper.. complete fUd FREE ESTIMATE
te.rvice. Free estimatf:t Licensed 4: Insured
!148'1968 e !l4S<l7U MODERN
MOWING, Edging, vacal•wn. DECORATOl!S
Gen'I cleanup. Haullnr. ====OJ&.=;9'=13====
Odd JOO.. * $48-69$ ~ 1-' 1 ... 1., RELIABLE: Real. vs.1en iu
6715
care. C!Mnul. odd jObl. KEPHAAT'S Cottom IJU'liq
Vincent. 6U-032G bu moved to JIO E 17, Suttt
Japanese Garcknklg 1 _Tc.' _CM_. Opm..;.._M_oo-Sat ___ _
Profeu\on-1 Ma.lntmance FAST Experieoced ironlni lsi
&Mi-6:63 my borne. St.5o lu'. BriDI
~:=.~ d~~n~ f igures. Phone 142 -5628, Ext. 321 or write
a l'EClOl?litled leeder in the 1~!!~!!,;!!,!!l~p!!•!!..t!!;!!,•!!l!!•!!n!!!!to!!!!B!!o!!x!!!!M~!~6!!7~, ~D~·~H~y.,;p;~lo~t~. !!!!~J
Plum~ln1 6190
Alter•tiont-642·5845
Neat. accuratt', ~ yrs. exp.
TILE, Ceramic 6974
* Verne, the T\le Man *
Cu1t. work. Install " ft'{lairt.
No job too small. Pluter
patch. Leading 1 b o wer
repair. 317-19:1i/846-'4)206
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Job W•nted, Mon 7q<I!)
RET. Marl<et A: Liquor ato~
mgr, wanll pit employ·
ment. ~1ote1, collector, or
what have you. PO Box 1123
NB
Job Wonted, L1dy 71120
field ol electrooics. J·
Pk&R aprply In pmon
HUGHES
500 Superior Avenue
Nowpori Booch, w ill.
An ~al opp:>rtttnity
emp&oyer MD'
MOLD PRUS
OPERATORS '
Small moi'.d abop. 1-fust be
expefienctd in trandtr and
in.Jectlon. moldin1. h1U51 ba
capable of dofna: set ups.
Apply
STACO, INC.
1139 Bokor St.
Cost1 Meta
549.3041
An tqU&I opportunity
emplO)'er
ASSlSTANT
A yoona: man t'O Ull.st man.
ager In Order Branch of
O:ialt . to Coa•t orpnlu...
tlon. Experli!nce ln man.-
agement unneceuary but
must be able to converM
intdl.lgently. Have H.S. ed·
ucatkln and neat aPPMT·
"""· Solory $135 per Wffk
Call our Anaheim office fOf
appoinbnent s:J9.lW alter
9 a.m •. , ·
IUD COOK
25 yean or ovu
DISHWASHER
Nishts
Apply In ~l'IOl'I
9 .5 P.M.
REllBBI E. Ill
151 E. Coai t Hlghwoy '
Nlwport Booch '
CAREER
OPPORTUNITY!
Join todays tu ttlt powing
profeuion-M.utual Fund aalai
No experience nect:ssary.
We train • full or part time
Mutu1I Fund Advisors,
Inc.
Npt B. 1..60.1 We1tcllff 642-6422
S.A. 1212 N. Broadway
5'7.a331
Fry Cook .,
Kitdten Tral-
Pmraanmt job. Chance for
advancetntnt.
(No students Please)
Apply in Pl!l'SOn
Bob's Bl9 Boy
JM E 17th St
Co3la Mtsa, Cal .
-~----'--SAILBOATS
Foreman needed for sailboat
man ufacturer. ·Must have ------------------1 thorough knowledae of sail-
e Gen1ral Mach ine
Shop Holpor
e Coblnet Miker
Mii i Min
• Arc & H1U1rc
W1ldar
Exporloncod Only
APPLY AT
Colu m bia Yacht Corp.
27S McCormick Ave.
Costa Meaa, Cllif.
boats; be capable of SUptl'-
vi1ln&: TO emplO)'ets .l mee~
tnr production quolls. Send
resume ii: salary expected
to Victor Mortl!Ml!ft 8'l1l
Lankmihlm Blvd., N. Holl)'-
wood , Calli. -"~~R~o~ol~E-d_o_te __
S.IOI P1roonnel
• Income • Indultrlal e Commerdal
Small a:roup
651 W. 19th, Costa M"8.
1Utr11. 642-9730 Evn. 543-0120 • KBlllDY
~--.-ALES----l ~-P~AR~T~.n=M~E-
REPRESENTATIVF.S SUMMER HELP
Leading in d ep e n d en t 6-lO ~ l8S W k Pl • 1pec1alllta dealina in over ~ves., ee ary,
100 mutual funds, expandlna delivery, aall!I &: service.
·m Orange County, Th.Ii ii an Age 18-25, 547-T1'82 Aak for
H1ln Wanted. Men 7200 o p p or tun l t y to enUn--'-'"..:""'=·------dlgnWl!d profl!llional Hllinll: PART OR FULL TIME lUll or part ttmo lnvo.tm<ot FRY COOK
positions now avail. for sev· exp not neceuary, we b'ain. Experlmced
eral ambitious men, 2f>.4G. ~T~. Mutual r 11 n d Apply at
Flexible hnl., 90me eves. lnve110r1 Inc. 2100 N. Main, THE RIGGER
pert. car nee. Prettige work Santa Ana No. 16 hshlon Island
with abo've aver-at earn---'.-------! Newport ~er N.B.
lna:•• Oppty for Manager pos. e 2 Choppe r 0rr1ton 1---------We train. For 'introd. iJ'Jter-ExPtrlenced wl &11u-
view ca!! Mr. Whitney. Mechanic era.ft~· ~54.:c..,,.:=:::.,-~~=.---1 • 3 Plbergl1t1 Rolltrt Top pay, full co. benditi.
SAILBOATS E"""'"""' '°"" wo•klng conditions. Inspector r;-ndfd tor sailboat e 2 8onc11rs RAY VINES
manufaetutt.r. Must tuwe Experiencl!d Olry&ler Pb'moutb
knowledge ol sailboetf. &:. ht e O.lcoat Touchup 42Cl1 Willow
capable of assuming fUll In· APPLY __ _;:Lm;:::•c.::•;:.,::"'::..--
IPl!(tlon respon1tbllitie1. Columbia VIC.ht Cerp. -
Send brief rtl\11l'le 4: 118.l&l')' 275 McCormlclt Ave. Cook
eXpected to Victor· Mori.en-Costa M1!81l, Ca.UL
Hn, sm 1.Ahkenhlm Blf'd,, EXPERIENCED
NEW PlAllNED
FACTORY
EXPANSION IN
ORANGE COUNTY
Provides
Dopt. Oponl"I'
MEN ARE NO\\'. BEIN9 f;d INTERVIEWED, lnRED -
AND TRAINED TO ru..r. ~
GOOD POSmONs wrrn
TOP STARTING PAY. I
$512. mo. & up ·~:1
If qualil1ed and accepted RO J.o·•' I
on the payroll tbh week. 1 J
Both Stilled and unskilled •ii
should apply a.s txperlence ··~
isn't nece1sary, and we are •
en equal opportunity .rn-· '•
ployer. ..
. ' MINIMUM
QUALIF ICATIONS : "1
• Age 20 or over.
• Hi. school grid or I
equi valent
resll:l1nt 1-~ • Orange County \
• Mechanic1lly Inclined ~..a
• Able to start work I now
We al!o hive good
surruner )obs.
Interviewin&: and acceptina
appUcatioos all day Mon.
&: Mon. evening.
C'1!
Kl 3·9289, oxt. 23
Ask for Mr. Hill,
Personnel Dep.rtment
.. .: ~ • ..
' . ' ' ' ' ,:, :
• t : v; I
' I ! I . ' ' •I I *.-----·~*,.[,.,
REXAIR, INC. .-; I
NOW HIRING ,
42 MEN ::~I
\VE NEED 0 MEN WHO
ARE NOT AFRAID OF , I
HARD WORK AND ARE ~::
ABLE TO START IMMED, !
IATELY. NO EXPERr~ .J
ENCE NECESSARY ·AS
COMPANY WJU. TRAIN.
GOOD PAY
L 0 TS OF OVERTIME
DURI N G NE X 't 8
MONTIIS.
' I ._I
' ' ' I ,,Yj•
CAIL PERSONNELD!llPT. ""I '
774-7151 ·~ I
* * ,i ,, I SALES '1j I '.' An A~ of Jcat ·Hancodt !
Lile Insurance Co., special-I
izin& in J.4fe, he6lth., ._. I
aJ'ICI! &t mutu al' fUnds, leelCI ...
management trlJl'lee for 118 I
immediate expansion pro-
gram. Tralninc allannce ..,_-:
plus commiasion. Extensiftt--
tralnin& • .......,. Call .... ·ii
Larson rru, 426-0363 • • I
(ll4) 96J.0320 eveiinea. -~ •
An Equ"1 ()ppo1tuol1y '·· j
Ernployl!I" ~
~: -----------------! ' •,.J I
FRY COOK
19 or over
Apply ln pel'90I\
3-5 p.m. J;>ally
Snack Shop No. 1
2305 E. Co11t Hwy,
Coron• del Mir
·-· I
~
Mo. Hollywood, Q.111.s _E_R_V_l_CE--S--"---__ -,----IM CONTACT .;...;_.;;.:,~..:..----1 tauon .... e1mu , r. Zimmer 675-4004 ---------I
Full time exper., over 21, marrled.,l:-=~~------Mal~.:~:'1 Man' ·~~U:,:~·1i!~m,mg.?~r: PAiT 1\me crew manacer,
Good compe.ny benditt. Fwy., Cotta Mesa.. f:U)' work, 3 or 4 boul'I
Call fol' 1ppofntment --'-'-------• ~en~ work1Da; wltb boy&
54().SIJiO, ext.:.> REAL ESTATE. ~1t MUil bJve ,c ar. ~ J'""'1 Mogn;n '°" "" ..w.,. tho hott•ll millfonl. ror lnformatloo
An equal opportunity aru I Huntln(ton Beac~T call IUo6375 and uk tor ~O>'f:r Ca.II for appt, Vlllil• I\. £ Bob
3 OPENINGS
PARTS MAN
• • B~DY l.f~E R
SERVICE WR ITER • ~~~-'-'-~..,.,.~ 962-44n,5t6-IJ.m =R£CEIVING=====~~~.-,~h~1-p_p_t_•_•
ileod fl" pl_,
conditions. Plj.
f'\JLL Oiarge Bookkteper WANTED dQ man. Lita d erk upedetlotd. '1ex1ble Fhll co.
for public acct. olc. EXp. on. prdenlna:, ·~ dcl1Ytrlu Metal Hole ~ workin&
Iy. Trill bat thru gert. Ute maint wvrk. See aw· 0on.,.ny. m w. llith st 646-1195 ~· ,::,0Up~11~ aU 7, PaWo Drivt lb Cotta MU& caD -.....U or I ·-----------------1
548-9M4, I...f. PM coly 'I'tleatre 5f9..08.41 • Butcher
BUS BOY GEN malltt,... .. p1 fu SERVICE S!> ..i-... Exp • P..-Man
ICbl ~ l t!D exp/ ~ tune QP 6: brb. Older md Small mt.rie:d =~ ;:Ll;:nd=ICl=pl;;;"f;;£. __ .:;61;;.l;.:;O " yn or older. Groveyllif ""· plumb~ • .i.c -• u,... Tot ...,. a 00..,. •hie m • o.
LlcenHd Cootnc!Dr e JAPANESE GARDENING ,;h~°""o:;",;;·;~=====
Realdential -O>rnmcrt:1a1 Service O eanup, Landtcap.
)bfnt Ir Jteoptira. !'Ht F..t Jna. 6S1~ aft Tp.lrl
I HEAVY >anl ""'k ... n ~iTAGE COITE SHOP rtll. m.1520 °""""" Statloo -a aq. Clll ... __..L rrS-2U9 cut ,, £'.die Lawn
Additkml * 1ttmod.ellng ~ Ucenatd Fl'td 11. G«wtc>, Lt<. MM8UI, 5'!14510 olt 4 PM
6'B«>f1 * Sts-2110 J APANESE GAftDENER
PA'I16S e Patio Covert £.'<PER, nill1ble maint
Room Additions. L1c. Reu. mo rates. 892-3219:..·
~ n.p.--Wlmd• ,__:IOCK=::.::rr:..'IO=.::'BMI=-
............ MaCan••Soo 562 W. lltl St., Qd .MAN -... !live \rllCll a M-11» . ' 49i'-10U ==.,;*~ .... ;::.;;::::...;*_,..,,, cou.mi: s Tu D" N Ts help In ·-.. ,, 9fMi,..... 5 -liii>Oiil4i· a Con. ; 4
CORRAL'S fodl<1> A ...... bu-mind<d, -''* ,,,, wit. -· ... -· Boot bodlpoutld C\1STODWI J:<!"*l llntii. RrV. Free ell, ha.Vt OWi part·Ume .wmk d urtn r smviCESiatktft lttmd.tull Ded:llJll'J'~ ~ , 8ch au. c o n •a l eace
.;-:::;;;;:.:;;;::"'::;· 86S-4:.::, . .::"';,~---•I IChao~ coll: ._. :1-1' ume. J:oiiie-over 21. i'ilJ; llOUllCER YOU CALL. hooplt>L 5 day1 •k. 147~ _..:awum~:::::::..::;m:;.._ __ .:.PM::::_.' ------1 4111 E. 11'11 St or Tlll!I CIU!a!l:ll YOO SEIL for -•
' \
I
I
I "
'
. '
lk>odq, -· s. 1'68 ....... ..,
rlelo w ........ -7100
w-7'CIO & EMl'l.OYMINT IOIS & 1""-0 YMINT IOIS & llMl'l.OYMINT IOIS & IMl'\.OYMIHT JOBS 1. EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDISE FOlt
Ho~ Won!M 7400 Help Wantool Alondel; Mell & AgonclM, M. W. 7550 Help Wantool SAL E AND TRAOE
MERCHANDISE fOlt
'4LI AND TRADE
Royal
Industries
Has Immediate
requ irements for
Machinists
& other
Manulacturina
Personnel
ht 2nd I. 3rd shift
• GRlllOER
MACHINISTS
Class A or journeyman
OD. ID or thread upe_ri·
e.nce a I r condltlontd
area. Own tools.
e BIGINE &
tURRET lATHE
MACHINISTS
Must have min. 3 yrs.
exper. on 4A w~s Tur-
ret Lathe. Tracer experi-
e nce preferred on engine
lathe. Also need experi-
enced man on BuUard •
Daya. Short run prod.UC·
ti on.
e HYDROTEL
MACHINIS'TS
newport
personnei
agency
-w-7400 _ w-7550 w..,.., 7400 FurniluA 8000 Plano& & Orvans eno
f H Paid
CPA SECY •••••••••• to SQl)
Exp'd 6: caner minded. Xlnt _,,..IY to ri&bt Pi
CONsr SD.:S S ••••• , ID $500
I. Sl>c>nhond. IYP!n&. lanill-
iar with comm'I RE. Top °'"""" Coun1> -2. Ccwtruct'n ottict rlrl
Fridq. No S/H, comm'I exp
3. ~. Fait worker
for 4 comm'l a.alesmen.
EX!lC SECY •••.•...•• IO<lO
O:mtnktlon and/or land de---SECY •••••• , • • • • • • • to S5llO
Stat \yplng, S/H &: dicta· .......
D'PllN SEXJYS 2 ••• , to $t30
1. Product~
2. aales
61Rl FRIDAY
An exctUent cballfl'll\n&;
and vulod "'""""' ....... lna: for our Plant Man-
~r Mid O.lef Enstneer.
Podt.IM will lntett•t one
who bu mature Jud&t-
ment, handles detail work
well and ttUoya: telephone
contact with cwtomera.
It you have 1nlatlve, en-
joy worklna with people
and have sood lhorlhand
and typing lkllla, please
call Vil H. C. ~ fQt
an appol.ntm1ot.
LANGEVIN
Division ol SclentUlc
Induatries, Inc.
1101 E. Cor""lll• Avo. Dicta.phone experienee.
X1nt company benetitl
potential
,, San ti An• 546-11830
FH By Applicant
SEx:Y ••.•.• • . • • • • • • • • • • IO<lO
An equal opportunity
emplo)'er
Eledrooic background help---------
ful. Fullerton &rff,
133 Dov•r Dr., N.B.
642-3870 549-2743
MISS EXEC AGENCY
FM Paid
Oocupa therapy {reirn to $150
s.a.tary • • . • • • • . • • . • to l450
Dent ale/math apt . , to $398
Appllcan Payi FM
s.a.tary . . • . . • . . • . • • • • ""'
Secretary ...... , ....... $.SlO
Secretary .. • .. .. • • • • • • • $475
J. W. Robinson
Has openings for
Port time
Saleswomen
Experlenoe prtlerred
Excellent benefits
APPLY PERSONNEL
10-4 Mon thru Fri
Fashion lt l1nd
NtwPOrt Beach
An equal opportunity
employer
A/Payable ............ $4151---------
S....et"." ...•.••••••••• l450 OFFICE GIRL Girl Friday ............ $400
Gen '! Ok/med ........ S37S
Recept:ioo.ist • • • • • •• •• • $316
Ocoap therapy aid/tm • $286 Part time lite bookkeeping
and machine upuimce pre-.
410 W. Coeat HW')'., N.B. !erred.
Call Betty Bruce, 646-3939 BEAL'S
RN's ................ to $650 HorM Furnl1hln91
HUGHES
Newport leach
H•• Mw1r1I openln11
fo r
MICRO
ELKTROlllC
•ERS
Mu1t have mlnimum ol six
rnootbt rectl\t ~ •
Openinp a.re on lit and 2nd ......
Pleue apply in pd'mn
HUGHES
500 Superior Avenue
Nowpor! I Hch, Collf.
An equal opportunlty
rmJ>k>yer MA:F
Would like minlmwn 2
yean experience, Type
50 wpm, ca(*ble ol us.
in& dictating equipment,
cl>all ....... opportunl\y
In Sales Department. Ap-
ply
STACO, ltC.
1139 Baker St.
Cotta IMH
5-49-3041
An oqual ""'°""'"ty
•molo>'er
Premier
PlllONNIL
A•INCY
W L 1,.._ It.
Ceata M-.. _,
11M L 11th I t.
lent. AM
147•t721
MALE
X0r1y techn1cl1n
P1 rt Time
lo $2SO mo.
Exper tech to work from
6-10 PM, Mon-.FtL Some
t¥pln1. Fee neaoUable.
Lot Attondent
$1.6S hr,
Wor)I; on lot, pickup I:: de·
livery. Over 18. Ott on
Sunday.
G11 Pumper
$2.00 hr.
Not a service atatloi;i. After
30 daya will have review
and get commisa:lon on aaa
and oU.
ARGUS
Won Near Home
-WOM£ff-
J!:nar. Girl Fri •••.••• to i:;oo
3 man ofc, fet zweot.
L<ca1 ............. ···"" Fmt ok, fee rdiilb.
Oonltr. See ............... $500
Fe@ reimb.
ln1. Gel Fri .......... lo $4SO
Grp exp, fee pd.
Sales Sec. • • . • . .. .. . to $650
Exp wlbuyerii·
.......................... !400
Ute SH, .... 56
R«plffypbt ..•••.•••••• $31;()
Frt ofc appear.
Secretaries
fnt.ereldng poaitlonl ~
qutrina one IO three )le&n
ottice expcrlcsx:t: plus
aood tJdlla on electrlc
twewrlttt and lhort·
band.
APPb' la penca
" call 546-8030
Mlul.le System Div.
ATLANTIC
RESEARCH
CORPORATI~
A Dl.v. Of
The Sus'puehana ())rp.
3333 Horbor Blvd.
Cotta M•••, Calif.
WAITRESSES
F\amitur• returned from ell.
pt., 1tudlot, modtJ homes,
decocaton CUICltllatlon.
Spani&b ' Mt<fUernnean etc
RD FURNITURE
11« N-r! Blvd., CM
l\ttl')' nltht til 9
Wtd., Sat. & SWt. 'til 6
OED>RATORS Item. 44"
round dinina: table, pecan,
.wl• contitmp. blue upbOi
chrl il 3-.12" leave& $200 5'8-m•
BEAUTIFUL
TV-Reeord-nr.dlo co m b ,
Prov triple dre11er,
Tllomuville.JteU! 675-1060
BEAU German make
credenza (buffet). Hi polish •
ed Ilnlah. Xlnt cond $1,200. ,.....,.,
Office Equipment 1011
APf}CO OOl>IER Cdial·A·
copy) with metal roll·away
&land. $315. Gd c 0 fl d '
545-4645
GARAGE SALE
Rag rua:. multi-colored, all
wool with pad, 12' by 20',
excellent condition $75. Baby
bed, 1pring1, matt r' ss ,
Publlc Accountant Experienced onlyt Bathlnette, all $6. Boy'1 to $120 Acct. Q~·~:····$450 Apply in Penion Stingary bike $17. Two
Working toward CPA de· SURF & SIRLOIN cbairl, needs covering.
iree. Muat be amblUoua. 5930 Pac. Cat, Hwy. Other items. 54G-5595, 288
Electronic Trainee
to $2.75 hr.
F. C. Bkkpr .••••••••• to $500 Newport Beich Bucknell Rd. C.M.
Nice &ad! de. COMPANION for elderly LEAVING STATE!
lady. Nuni:ln1 expuience Many bouaehold item 1,
Jr. Bkkpr to T/B ••.••• $400 ksirable. Live In. 548-6181 garden furniture.
2 yn exp, fee negot, EXPERIENCED NW'Setl aids 2 0 8 9 H a r b or BI v d , ,
wanted. 5 day wk. CM 642-4400
Season Sile!
Fall lhlpmmll of Ba1dwth
Pit.nos l ()rpm on the
way. Our Ooor A diacon
model.I must IO• Price•
ala.shed! Doesn't lt make
aense to lbop ua belarl you
buy!
WARD'S BALDWIN mJDIO
1801 Newport. C.M., 64Wf84
NOW HERE -tbt new
Su........,.tlna T_.
Hammond Spinet orsaa
-the ftneat Yttl
SCHMIDT-PHILLIPS-CO.
1507 N. Mai!'I O iitb
SutaAm
GRAND PIANOS
Ftne&t select.ion in Orar\11'
County. All perfect concl.
Knabe • Sohm.er • Staztc.
True bargain prl<:ft: today!
Gould Mu1ic ComJNn'f
204S N. Main, SA MT--0681
SCHAAS B A BY GRAND
PIANO (Walnut). FIN E
COND ! ! $550 * 675-5303
1205
: 'N•, Neorfy N .. G lte6ullf.'
TY1, WAIHl•I,
•IFlllGllllATOlll
FR£EZERS ·DRYERS ·IWlllS
6 PllJNOS, ... -•
career oriented. 1-3 years
math, phy1ics, and chem·
Lltry. Military complete,
1table and de1lre to ad·
vance. • ..... thru P&L •••••• to l'<lO 847-9671 1" AopL MIDSUMMER SALEI
2 yn lonnal ecctg App llanc" 1100 All C.olor TV's Must Go! Elfftrlcl1n
from $4.00 hr. J 'D ... .-1• ,..,_ -.cA Jobe Min, Wom. 7500 WHOLESALE To Dealen, RCA Victor, Zenith, Pack·
r ~ 9'J• .... ....,., • •· • • • • • • ·~ Apt ownn & public re frig-ard Bell & Admiral. Some Mutt be qualified :Ii yn. 1\m area + " exper. Know color coding, eratoI'I gu1r U6 Cross top new· some reposseued.
--------1 high voltAg• and "' a "H J C PENNEY CO 125. Sq top $50. Dbl• rl<. $65. """'' '"" al •• , ' 1tarter. Able to work with· AIC Pay Ir: P/R ••••••. $300 ' • 1 Frost tree X top $85. Db le dr $149.
Women out aupervilion. Some pl Fri duty IN Frost Free $100. Also wash-TERMS AVAILABLE
"ers/dryers/freezers/ranges. HENDERSON 'S
Most men working
hours per week.
Sec 1100 Irvine :;ecya, many ••• , •••• to $616
48 MTST h ....i Newport Beach .,,. .,.st •.•••• , , to $5111 ---'--'-'=:...:.=::....-Plumb.rs
to $5 hr. LYN'S ............... , $450
Hoop. dulY
NEWPORT BEACH We will never be undersold. 1877 Harbor !downtown) CM
A.OK Warehouse, T12'l Gar· * 548-0155 *
e U-BLOND TAPE
LATHE
MACHINISTS
=~ ·:::::::: .~ :J Sales Ladies Gen'l OU:ice ........ to $475
Trne asst bkkpr • • • • to $375
Tnie process elk , ..... $346 For exceuories and drapery
Tme ien'l ore •...• , •• USO ules. Experience preferred.
Tme med asst .•••• , .. $312 Full time or part time.
l AU.SET AGENCY BEAL'S
f.or p1rt tlnM work
holplng In food prwp-
1r1tlon, Experience
not neceuary.
Apply In Peraon
"Mark Century" Con· 437 W. l 9th, C.M. 642-€752 Home Furnishing• Wu Ben's
333 Bayside Dr.
Newport leach
trol1, new machines. For that JUST RIGHT-llOO Irvine
Position • • , Newport heh e JIG BORE
MACHINISTS
Come in or call us today. PROOF MACHINE
OPERATOR RUTH RYAN AGENCY PAYING & RECEIVING
1793 Newport,CM, 646-4854 TELLE
17931 BelCh, H.B. 847-9617 . R
Proficient on DeVlieg 1042 w. 17th S.A. S4lM8l Expenenc;e preterred
Jlgmllls. ' Apply m perBOn
Cocktail Waitress
Hostess
e RADIAL
DR!U PRESS
Must b e experienced
Burgmut.er·tape control·
led machines.
e PRHISION
PLATER
Minimum 5 years experl-
en~ all round precision,
seJeclive plating.
Help Wantool
Wom•n
SroJR.ITY PACTFIC
NATIONAL BANK
7400 2Di Harbor Blvd., C.M.
Equal opportunity employer
TOY & GIFT PARTIES
Housewives, earn from S500
to $2,000 by Dec. lit. NO
DELIVERING OR COI,
LECTION S , FREE
Telephone Girls
$100 WEEK
Over 21
Apply tn person
9-5PM
REUBBI E. LEE
1S1 E... Co11t Highway
Nlwport Be1ch HOSTESS GlFI'S. ca 11 Experien~ or not · tuD
NOW! or pert time. Apply 9 to ---~~cc----
Gifts &: Gadgets 842-1593 4, lSIXl Adams, 1ulte 303, PART TIME
DENTAL ASSISTANT Costa Mesa. Ottice: •se 23+, tiling, post.
Over 25. Some front desk ex-;;n;;--,,.--~---1 ing ]..4 hours dally Mon.
perience preferred. Must PBX 0 per at or, stock thru. Fri, Permanent. $1.6S
have more than one year ex-b~erage office, Use Call hour lo start, $1.75 within 30
perience in dental oUict. Director uni!! office re. day1. P<Mitlon in Huntington
494-0034 after 4:30 locates in Newport Center in Beach. Interesting sales sys.
DRUG Store clerk, full time, fall . Some tlllng. Min. ace tern through record keeping.
neat, experienced. Middle-25. S375. Call 642-4Cllll For Will train. orflce experience
qed pref. Apply in person, Appointment. required. Apply Calllomia
31582 s. Coast Highway, So. WAITRESSES State Employment Servk:t,
Heat I: air cond. services.
Rough -inl installation and
repair.
Electronic R ... 1rch
Tr1lnM
$520 mo.
This company ii looking
for career type of young
man with electronic back·
units in math I: science.
ground. At lea.at 10 college
AA degree pref, but not
necessary. No job hoppers!
Mtn19erMnt Tra inee
$600
FH Paid
BA or BS degree. Sharp,
aggessive. Some Wes exp.
~f. but not nee,
Und1rwrlter Tr1lftff
$600
Fu Paid
BS or BA degree. IntelU·
1ent, aggressive, mil com-
plete. Some exp helpful but
not nee. A career position.
FEMALE
Medical office. Mwt know
inaurance billing, d a i I y
cuh in·take, A/Rec, A/
Pay, telephone and recep-
tionist actlvlty. Ute typ-
ing, age 25 up.
Dent&I R«pt .•••...•••. ll25<J
Med ad:ll trng
Med. Sec. , , ••••• , .•.•.•• $360
Al.st. tr' bk
H11 ofMnin91 for:
Janitorial
Maintenance &
Buffen
Trainttl HS pad .•• , to $350 Recent successful experi-
Local residents ence in all phase1 prefer-
ecl . CompeUlive wages. Out-
Asaemblers 'tronk: to $2.10 hr &landing benefits including
AJ50 wire & solder profit sharing. Ideal work-
ing conditions.
Adntln. Aut. ...... , to $600
Any degree ...
Mgmt. Trntt ........ to $440
2 or 4 yr deg
~drolic F.nir. • ........ $'700
Drattsmen ••••••••.•.• to $700
APPLY IN PERSON
Monday thru. Saturday
10 a.m. to 9: 30 p.m.
J. C. PEHlffY CO.
Newport Center
24 Fashion Isla nd
Newport Beach, Calif.
An equal opportunty
employer
den Grove Blvd. l Bick W. of (One Only) RCA Color Set
Beach at G.G. Frwy. Cherry wood cabinet $265.
LATE Model, Frost-Free, Close-out Sale on all '68
dooble-<loor, Westin~house models, Zenith & Motorola!
refrigerator, 14 cubic f t. STEVENS TV
$115. 842-5330 1953 Newport Blvd. CM
WAS HERS $29.95; dryen 548-3493
S35: Freezers $75: Refrig., =========!
coppertont & Avoc..: Guar. Hi-Fi & Stereo ,.,..,.,.
6' GIBSON Defro.stamatic Re·
frig. Good cond. $50. or of·
fer. 646-5965
Sewing M1chine1 8120
COLLECTION Agent oilers a
$289 Singer "Slanto-rnatic"
zigzag aewing machine tor
balance due on account at
$84.60. $8 mo OK with ap.
proved credit. Delivery, in-
struction & guarantee in
cluded 499-38'28. SAM to 9
PM. P & J Agency
1967 SINGER Com pl
wfwalnut console. Service
man leaving forces repo.
1210
STEREO 1968 solid state
console model with AMIFM
radio. 4 spd changer. Take
over small payments or
$93.20 cash. Credit Dept.
535-Tla)
Sporting Goods 1500
SURFBOARD 9'8" Jacobs, 3
rnahog stringers, mahog tall
block, simi·speed Skq. Xlnt
cond. B».1954
SURFBOARD 10' U6ecl twice
Like new. $50. 642-4283 aft
5:30
SURFBOARD For sale 9' 4"
Hansen 50/50, $40. Great
for beginners! 548-8:200 Cost Acct. ••••• _ ........ $785 EXPER. WAITRESSES Touch-o-mallc, auto tig-z.ag.
COCKTAIL button boles, blind hems, M I
Custodian •••••••·•·•••· .$5(XI ~· _... isc1f aneous 8600 WAITRESSES overcast.s. ,,o attau1 needed I ----"'-'-'-'---'=~I
Full price. $37.97 or assume * AUCTION * D<pt. Mar .•••••••••••••• i:;oo & WAITERS $4.JO mo. Call 526-<616
Now hiring for the opening in anytime.
Appllcal. Engr. 'I'l'ne .... $700 30 days of the farnOU.!i Ben ~;;;:~======
Brown's fabulous restaurant Musical Inst.
Salesmen ••••. ": ••••• to $700 le night club located at 8125
Laguna Beach Country Club ELECTRIC gUltar, coil cord
For. ~ Mech. ····.to $1200 & Village, 3ll06 S. Coast $45; ampliller S'25. Both A-1
Hwy, Laguna Beach. Pbo11e condition. 546-4355
SelV Sta Attmd • • • • · · · • .$450 for appt bet 2 pm & S pm ="""'~=~-~-~ EXCELlilOR Accordian, like
U ~ will sell or buJ
live Windy a try
Auctions Friday 7:30 p.m.
Windy's Auction Barn
Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'l
2075% Newport, CM 646-8686
Put yourself in OW' Place
e TEST
TECHNICIAN Laguna Beach Experienced only need Santa Ana. 2823 S. Bristol.
LA UN DRY Help ex-apply. No phone calls Tues., Aug. 6th. 9:30-10:30
perienced, mangle, •hirt please. _•_.m_. -------
Executive
Secy I BookkHpor
f,,,.. $500 L •• s·~ k only. Mr. Mos.s 1uu k boa•d "th Fee negotiable. Shorthand u~ man ••••••••••• ......, w . * 499.2271 * new, ey • ; w1
60, Type 50 up accurately. ·==~.c.::..:=-"---case. Sacrifice $50. 548-8502
Harbor Blvd D-1 Thtall'a
3700 McFadden, S.A.
Thoroughly experienceod
w i th Cryogenic and
Pneumatic testing.
e PRECISION
ASSEMBLER
girl, & marker. cau su-~ DENNY'S
befort noori 1600 S. C011.1t Hwy.
Laguna Beach UVE-In housekeeper
m o t h e r l e a 1 home. H?U~EKEEPER, mature, lo
Children, ages 5 .I: 7. hve-m: guest homt for ~c
Coroaa dtl Mar 673-3121 tive elderly. Good worl<Ulg ~~=,:,_,,::=_:c:...::=--1 con<!. For inltrvlew call e EXPER IE NCED 544-5191) or 838-3847 Seamstress for c r e a ti v , l;:;;n;;""',"-""'_::;;.-~-clolhlng sh~. NURSE'S AJD. Experien~
Visions. 497-1335 de&irable. Apply in person.
EX}'.W'rlenced In Stator
Winding, Impregnating
and •lectric motor re-
pair. CASHIER With lilt book· Laguna Beach Nu r Ii n i
1 .. --------1 I keeper eXp. lnlerviews 9 am Home, 450 Glenneyre Street
l•cteoHd Rates
And loooflh
e f llll l Llh & HH,lt·
el ln•urance. llnclt.Hl-lnt all d.,-ndent1) e 2 WlllKS P•W An·
nual Yac:atlen.
e 10 Paid H•Ud•J'1 pw ,.. ..
e Pantlen Plan. e ln·Plant Cahtarlaa.
5% 2ND & 3RD
SHIFT BONUS
to 5 pm. 1221 W. Coast Hwy 49'-3075
NB ' \V A IT RESS, experienced.
OP ERATORS ~-od p M"'t "' °"'' 21. AwJy in -vo •Y person Swiss Chalet
Garment .Manufacturer Rest aurant 414 N. Newport
1580 Monrovia, NB 642-2666 Blvd
0.ntal Office Man1ger iEXP;;.;;ER.'-"'-;w"•"'"""'""'=,-, -,-part-.--
Singl•. Exp. 2545. tiin1! ~9 eve:1.: days, varied * 546-lXIO * hours. Clo.sed Sun. &
ruu. Time maids for Motor holidays. Apply in perlOll
Hotel in Laguna Beich. 512 W. 19th, CM.
494-4563 CLERK, typing &. Ugbt
LF.GAL SECRETARY bkkpg. exper. Apply 1-5
Minimum 1 yr, Calif. tx'iier MacGregor Yachts, 1665
Satry open. 1.J &-7?56 Babcoc:k. O:>lta Mesa
LIVE in babysitter f 0 r DRA~RY w or k r o o m
c:mzrNSHIP NOT ll9UlllD mot:berlex home. Child ok. machmt operator. Good pay
Call •vtnlngs 839-1175 aod workin& conditions. Hall
A,pt, ......... ,_.
Office I A.M. ta I P.W.
..... tin M.
ROYAL
INDUSTRIES
.,2040 E.1t Dyor Rotd,
S.ntt Ano
{714) 540-3210
0,.. M Oft-Ramp,
II:. -Nftl'Ori ,...,,
.... Jl:Qall Clpporaml)' ..........
of Huntington. 536-9377 POWER Sewing Mach. -;;;:-,,.=:'::"C,,:C.:..=.--Operators experienced Boat Stationery store needs
Canvas p~ ~78S female salespe,raon. Full time. Appcy in person
PBX Operator. an1Wttin1 2823 E. Coast lfwy, CdM.
aerviee. Exper, preferred. l;i:o:=...;;..::::::._::;~::=::;...
Min age 30. OR 3-1166 IDLE Hrs make Dollar1! Be
COCKTAIL WAITREiS a ':'"erette l2 hr g\l&r. We
tr1.1n. HB Mr1. D re e 1 nlc:hta. The I.fuddle 741 Baker 540-193l
St., Cofta Mesa.. S4(J.-0966 =="""',-..,,-.,,,.-,--WOMAN 21 thru «>. sales ex·
BA B Y S J TT E R le lite perlenct ~ferte<\. Apply ift
houlekeepltta. My borne, 1 pel'IOl'I, Kifk Jewelen, 2nt
child. 646-8060 ah 7 pm. Harbor Blvd, Co&ta Mesa
HSKPJl 2 ladies or mother Ir. YOUNG Girl or yo u n g
dauahter: full c h a r I' ; woman Days· apply Afl)y'i
1ivMn, H. 8ch. ~1243 Collet Shop , 302-B Harl>of
BABYSl'ITER 1 da.y •eek. 2 Blvd .• Costa MeM
lmlllJ "°>'-. My honM. Him-RELIABLE I ad y wanted·
tinpa Beach. 96l-7Sff room l boa.rd in t:111chane~
Wit Slyll1t .,,. """""'tina l lite ...,,_
.. Kl&ry * .....,., ..... ,..,
DIAL -50-lim, "'""" lfOTEL MAID . ....-.
)'Olll' 1111. thin idt bldr and Full timf. dA)'S.
Ulteo ., ... pt...,. r!nll Call mMIO
Take chargt of calendar Glass man • ....... $150 wk. HSKPR. hve in. Working
and heavy volume of let-•·· mother & 10 yr. old daugti.
EL.EC player piano, 125 rolls.
Perfect cond $950. Shown by
appt only 613=3240
SWAP MEET J. W. Robinson
Hai~ tor
Silk Presser
Must have expuience.
Full company benefits.
APPLY PERSONNEL
ters. Handle journal and Welden ............ $3.50 hr. ter. SA area. 835-7327. Starts Aug 17
Sll-1272 aft 7
8130 36 SQ YARDS beige nylon
general ledger. Work ln-
d•pendentty. Older woman Lot Boy S2 hr S pttt. • ... ••• ••••••· · · chool1-lnstrvctlon 7600 Pi1nos & Organs
10-4 Mon thru. Fti
Fashion l1l1nd
Newport Beach
An equal opportunity
employer
Clerk Typist
to $407
Wiii be typing technical re-
porta. Good speller, neat
UK! wdl iroomed.
Burroughs 1500
o.,.r1tor
to $450
Part Time We need several. Office exper with lite bookkeep. Girl Friday '''· A/Poy. A/Rtt.
Typing, light bookkeeping, Leg•I Secret1ry
keep otfleto apk and span. to $600
Work In delightful sur-
roundihgl or fine fumJture Type 60, short.hand 100.
n-l•y & Thu-A~ .. 9-5:30 Must be •ble to take h~•'VY
Call 642:205_co:__ Steno~tte dlctatJon.
lrld1I Con1ult1nt Keypunch Operitor
Attractive wom.u, ambltioui, F" Paid
aood penonality, uaor of car, to $400
over 21. Some f!VH.. pn-6 mo. expierlenct" on 024
ferred. Avenae put time and 006.
$:59. wftk. full time $124. L-11 Se rtt week. No experlena! nee--• c •ry Trainee HMzy. For Interview call to $400
Mr. Whitney 544.a550 Attorney will train to tt-METER MAID place his preient 1eocretal')'.
FOR WATER DISl'RICT Xlnt opportunity. 1Type 60,
No ~ necOl&l')'. Shorthand 90 to 100.
Must have pod penmanship Medlc1I Aqt,
and mjoy woririna out ol 2
doon. Ple•sant working $ .50
cond!Oons. call tor •ppt. I Type 60, S/H/60 up. Must be able to ope-rate Stenot· a.m. • 5 p.m. &Mil or ette and know all medical ~-;..;..;=·:_ ______ 1 lnsurance forms.
SAUSLADY
EafM riencH
NCR Op.rotor
$42.S
TyJ)f 50.. Mwt br auret· 11ve.
Silver Dept. Modic.ti A .. t. Tra1-
F11hlon lol•nd $320.67
-==64~4=1~3~'°'=~-1 ·~"i_!"" .. ""' _ ... FEMALE CLERk s...,.~ WU! tnvtl oc:<a·
....... -11...U, .. -IDnl· Drtv•ln Uquon mum t.n'nl·
"" °"""" •••· Also Fee Jobs Hun---~.
Gen'I Machinist · · ... $4.50 hr. SOiOOL Children's vacation
rates. Chilcoat 10 • Lesson Boat Mech .•••••••••.• $3. hr. Typing School. MS-2859. 173
Lathe Oper ........... $4. hr. Del Mar, C.M.
PIANO JessoflJ for beginners.
Fact. Helper . • . • .. to H. hr. Adults or children. 675-&129
&fter 4 pm.
Maint. E1tttrician •• $3.50 hr. ---'-"'------
MERCHANDISE FOR w.itr .............. ·11·65 hr. SALE AND TRADE
Cooks •••••••••••• .. $22. shift Furniture 1000
FM& Non FM
Positions
ffiWAY used store. New loc
7401 Westminster 8 I v d ,
Westm 893-a683. Buy, sell,
trade.
GREY Formiea top table, 2
leave1, 6 chain. Xlnt cnod.
Call aft 6 Fri, 54l>-1l88
Orange Co's Largest bound carpeting wf pad,
On•Stop Music Store ~~s~llS per yard, sacrllice
Wurlitzer pianos & organs. x · St75; 9~ x 10, $65;.
Fischer, Kana be p i a n o s, runner 2~ x 10 ft, $40; 5 drawer walnut cheat of Player pianos, reblt, guar., drawers $40. 642-5845
Grands.
WALLICHS.MANNING"S • VACUUMS e
MUSIC CITY $10 up. Repairs & paru,
3400 So. Bristol Reasonable. Coast Vacuum
Costa Mesa * 540..2165 333 E. 17th, CM, 642-1560
USED ORGANS MAN'S diamond ring, 3
Wurlitzer 1968 model $8'70 di amonds, star sapphln.
Hammond chord organ $245 }leavy gold setting. SllO or
Hammond Ml & Leslie $1095 ,."'00'1"',.,"";;;';;·o;;"'=-9'"°39"-:=,,.-~I
Conn Caprice $895 UPHOLSTERING -$79.50, 2
Many, Many Mon?! Ttnns. pc. (European cr&ftsmen)
Gould Mu1ic Company Free est, del, pickup, 215
2015 N. Main SA 541.()681 Main , HB "Berny" 536.641li
WURLITZER Spinet Piano
Xlnt cond. Like new $495 * 642-0133 *
HEAVY 1,11ooden lathe. Under
hall price $4S. MB-4190
64&--23n • ARGUS
EMPLOYMBIT
CASH for tum • appliances.
We ~ good ~ furn. 1772
Npt Bl. Q.t: 6C2-7015 WURLlTZER Studio piano USED Refrigerat« SSO Elec-
LOVE Seat, gold .I: green $300. good condition, Phone tric 5tove $50 Sola-bed $50.
fabric; 5 pc. maple dinette --'i:-;;C"'-;Oali'l:'''::c,.,,.-~-89"1-'327
set. nevarmar. 847.QI Dau, Pilot Wane adl! 1 3~ HP Gu t>nginnt with
3 PC SecUone.l, brown f'A•ttd, OIARGE rT! transmisfion. $40. Go Cart
_.... --~ ·~ frame with wheels $15. •"""' <.vnu. -· or make Of· 54&-0479 1.•~·~··~~:::::::":..~~~~.!..:'=·='"==l•=•=r·======::.=:'000 ""~--c-~---Consull111f Agency 11 ",,: ~·""~ "'.:1! "::.;: Sponlsh & Mediterranean """"'· .,. ctwo link '""'·
2043 Wo1tcllH
Nowpor! Beech
541-n96
16241. 171h SI.
S.nt1 An1
Showroom SamplM ,.,, • """'· 642-1842.
8 ' Wood carved arm divan, lg. man 's chair· KIRBY vacuum cleantr &
beaut fabrics. 5 Pc hexagon dark oak din'. allachments. Take o v, r
set, w/black or avocado framed chairs; 5 small payments or S."i7,:zo
Pc BR seL 9-dr Mr. & Mrs. dresser, lg mtr-ca.sh. tndit dept. KE 5-7289
ror, 2 commodes, decorative headboard in nnN Boy gM furnaee 52,000
Spanish oak or avocado design. BTU Top disdla.rs;e lor cell·
Items Sold Individually Ina: heel. Good cond. $55.
Shop Around-be(ore you buy see US! 642-28~
VALUE $195 -FULL PRICE 5429.95 BLOND oak llbl•. 8 m•I·
or terms 11 low .. $3.00 we.k China: chain, Hutch SlOO.
No Down-Use Our Store CharJle Plan F01Jr bar atooh, hftmboo '2$.
No Fancy Frnnl·BUT Qualilv Values lruide !' olll" dm 125 ..... .,.,
Approved Fu m. 2159 Harbor, CM R<TrARY Mowtr, 22", .u.
12 Years same location-same owners propelled , ca1cher. $25.
Dolly 9.9, 1 o.5 Sunday e 54S.9660 54&-'6TI
DIAJ 6'2-5671
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TflANSl'ORTATION -TRANSPORYATION -TllANSPORTATION ~ TUNSl'ORT ATION TitANSPOJtTATIOH TRANSPOllfATION MERCHANOISI FOR ~ITS IM LIVESTOCI( jTRANSl'ORTATION -
SALi ANO TflADE ·• , --------
-w ----o.,,. ans speoc1-n1 1oo11 90IO c.m .. ,. 9520
1600 --
9900 Uood Co,.
1·;;;:=;;;;;~~~~;;;; llTAl.lAN GREYHOUND -14' SIQ boat w/ulr. Wood 40 FT, ACF BRILL 1• SWIMMING POOL plH. AKC rq:, Qwnpion bull, at!allll -4. Sidi &c equip All new powtr U'aln, ~;tnc,
S breed. ldtal pet&. 1 lnlle, 1 lnd. No cnJ. Flrtt Sl1$. trant, etc. Fully ltlt con-'64 MCB '67 VW "BUG" • $1595 '11 El.DO, 15,CXXI ml, war. '60 FALCON. ~t -· 1J Ft Pool , Flltu, urfac. t·-·• "~ 00 _,...,. ...._,.... ..,..,. ...,. "'"lmmer, Maint.en&DC9 KJt. '°' .... e. ........ ~ ...,.. .... '""""".. lalned, maay C\l.ltOm fta· • Xlnt <.'CGd. * Dduxe 2 door. Nev BRAND ranly, $5,996 or trade for !XllU.S! I S19S or nWct.ol·
fREE Ground Pad. ins llhotf lOd papen. Call ---------tutti, 1nclud1na eert.rn\c M2.-239a Nt'w' and fw.iy equipped. Porsche 911, wl 5 •P· fer. ~1670 evening• ~
$149.H 6'&-1411. 8 I T II 9032 tile In bath and IUtcb-e &Z TO BUY ......,. --
SECARD POOL AKC G °'man -00 ro "" en, fuUy ....,,.., lbroucb-OPEL JIM SLEMONS ''"°56"'CAD=-=run.-ra1,,,-'°"=,.-. Good=~ 1 FORD
alo ~ leCoodm.ale IP&)'td. 2 year o14, •s:; AlJ...OY, Uke new! Can')' out, etc., S9:500. will can.ddtt TOYOTA cond. Equip wl Nrfboard 323 s. M ' home 1st cond . to 13'; 1pmp., ll1h11, trades. Preltr :I> to«> h '67()pf:l,iclntcol'ld, racks BestoUer~ '63 FORD $795
532.-l992 S40-88Cll ewt. w-k-.. Sac. 1145. M9--0'11.9 boltt. Bus. phone 892-66.SS. ll 000 ml 11-<lT W W S.A •~2Sl2 -G • :.a:.:: . l~~~~~~~~~~I ~""'-, · •11t.1. • arntr, • .,..,,.. llaxle 500 2 ..........-hardtop. " d GREAT ..... _ ..... _._ Jlomephont530-0896A1Lonr Em •·•' ~n!3 CHEVROLET snORTWAV'E barn ra lo u.IM!: ~. crop.,_________ errcncy .,.,e .... ..-'63 vw . loaded , xlnt cond, · Radio & heater. noor slick
~iver, ~mmarhmd HQ ped, Partlalb' tn.lnod, 5 moa 1M.rine Equip. 9035 8' CAMPER Shell, 24" biJh, Sl65 Ct.ah dell. dlt, will fine bl1 enrlne. Oittttr 1Uckl
JiOC. Wu,.,.,_, -,.. ol<f-I'S-5'M298.. --~ bBll doc< ~clocy 2nd: at,. PORSCHE bal. $1'l0. Alt ll:!O, 494-ml :15 a..v,. PvleL Bucket and hood "°""·
ly sz,o. Chrome dloeH• $20. AKC MIN POODLE S5 HP Evlnnide, manuaJ Dallllun Cll>-Over, u ii: ooly. seats. 133 cu ln • bar carb. e E-Z 'ro BUY
Refrigerator $25. ~ table1 A--1, M•~, ·~ -•· '"''· lt&rt. ln xblt cond. Majorway, 2120 Placentia, l'OR SaJe 1956 Porsche 911. S 3 apeed tr•M 411 rtar eod. JIM SLEMONS
$2 each. T.V.'1 $25 arid $30. r•...., _.. ....,...,,_. • • 962-3831 Colt& Mesa 1pd air cond. c bro me '66 V91 ilUS .•. $1695 Chrome rlma. 5W aau&l!I.
511 E. Normand)' Pl, Santa HorM1 IUO ·~FORD Eoonoline Jo'aetory bumpers, lugga1e .t: aid Dtluxewlthvcry&:wml!es& Callaft6weekdl.)lsaeytlmt TOYOTA
.Ana. 543-&tlS AQHA R l red 1--.----,,---w cam.per IPoIMJpJ. Xl at rack. AM/nt .radio. Lo ml. immaculate throuPou\. weekend.I. :W~. S300 417 w. Wamer. S.A. 540-2512
POOL TAILl!S Quarter~. "°''$lip Moo "' 903f cond. 812-3198 eau....-• E-Z TO BUY CUh '63 GALAXIE !jQO
New le uaed $9'1'.!iO up. Table Beauliful bt.y Yn.rlin& fillle . BOAT 1Up for rtnt: up to 25 ========= '66 PORSCHE -912; lmmac. JIM SLEMONS '66 Chevrolet 2 dr hardtop, ticctllt'ftt cond.
CADILLAC FALCON MG VOLKSWAGEN PONnAC
Pootiae Hardtop
65 Grand Prix, air, ~r
windows, power b r a k e • ,
power 1te6iJ}r, automatic
tra.111., Double Ea< safety
lirts, tinted clua, AM/FM
radio. The )'OlltW man Case
13) who tnded k in is a
muter in keeplna a car In
the pink of cond i t ion ,
Wbotwr buys ttUI car mty
finish wurtnr the new of! cl
It Special, $2.l90
HOLJDAY RAMBLER
1969 Harbor, Cotta Mesa
Pb. ~ Open Sun. Drlve
In
RAMBLER tennis, Poker tblea, ban • Exctll!nt breed1ng. Top • Ft. boat. Sl5 Per mOllt.b. Cl) Dune luggl•• 9525 cone!. Loaded! Muat ae.11! TOYOTA lmp1I• H1rdtop Must ate & drive to ~
stools, ~ pmtt, etc. bottom. Show proaptet. Ask-~ Eve1. T·BUC, 11&11 pk kup body for &Q..Q5.34 alttr I dJily A 07 W, Warner. S.A. 540-2512 V~, automatic, power lteer-preclate $8$). 646-0411 or Air Condltiooed RambWr
Discount pncts! BADGER l.n& $600. Abo, 3 yr. old ael!l-i ---------w1cndo .,..,..,.,.~--,==I ini:. fawn llftl'· Local car. &37-6261 66 oulatandina' 990 4-door Vl 1 SALES. 4jl9 s. Main, 0rance iq clauy lookina: cheftnut loot R nt It 9031 VW. New, complete. ms. '!18 PORSafE Speedatct 1100 '66 VOL KS . . • • $1695 St~ Cas.h deli, dlr, or oldtt 1~981=FORD=~~Sp-r-.. -, -v-.. --Good~ Power •tffrinz, powe r
or Call Frank 53S-03ll. Open Started Ln hackamon. ~ ;;.;c.o..."-C"'---'''-----eaµ 6'4-0306 alter 6 PM CC. Hardtop $1600. 548-SSM lmmacW1.te and vtcy lo w trade. Low peyment1. After cond. AlmOll new tires-b r a k t I, a u lo m a t I e
12-8 p.m. except Wfd. cell.en.t for show or pleasure. SKI BOAT MEYERS Manx 40 hp, top, aft 6 daily• wknd.& milts. 10. 639-3617 or 494.m1 nooo Call Glnn)' ~1'120 or trmuniu.ion, ndlo and
oECORATOR's or I 1 In a I Call &G-am d&,)'L 544).9525 Will 1 /lid. boat c:urtains, exc running cond, I;;=="""====;;. JIM• &$ZLETOMBOUYNS CHEV. Greenbritt '62 needl 543--38M heater, recl.l.rili\z bu ck et
hand -made ceramic wJll Eve1. .~Y ten<l' w .wr...... try '1350. 613-2000 dayL RENAULT repair bu.I runs . Makt xlnt 61 FORD FALCON •.-•
I 32"0 ' Vivid tOWlltm)'teena1~n_.._. 2 DUNE B I 11•~ • TO I 1220 seeta,ctnterarm-rest,llf:.u clock,eec. lM!'· BAYMtrt.Xlnlcood,cutle Will far +dally uues. '""".,. YOTA sur er.w11on . Sl.andard Shift. RJH . Lt. rt!U,tlnted1lau.Prtmium
red. orange Ir re~ low westem saddle 1£ tack. t ~ will. CU t Udo 14 $1695. One cut dowltehauis. 166 REN.AULT R-8 $795 417 W W 5 A 5f6.Zil2 Parametnc1, 929 Baker, rm. 4 Dr. $.300. 541).1599 cc n d t t lo n t n a 11
w/gold It bla<* hidilichtl. * 536-1986 * rat . .,, A Udortn l&I tall $325. 982-2273 or 96'.l-ffi38 Sale priced t~. Hai auto-· a.mer, ' · CO$ta Mesa '6l Falrlinl! way .. weekmd 1 pe c I a I
1100 67:>-5285 mo. ur. t . tic -~ •---·•at MUST aell Movin1 East '67 =--==~~~-~-•~40 · 8 YR. 0~·1e1dln& $350, Mr. Robert E. Autb tll3) ma ' ..... u .... ,....... t . • . '65 CHEV Jmpela Conv. Sport Coupt! ..,... ·
FOAM RUBBER. cut to aize. G~lte.spirited, Enaliah 749-2l31 oolleet. Imported Autot 9600 e E-Z TO BUY V\'f ~ t.ertt&, R/H knrr Orig-owner, looks new. V8, * S46-1150 * HOLIDAY 1tAMBLER
Uph aupplld eo,F1a brlcu•· West. 8'2-6892, 8 am.U. • Spot Cash for lmporb .JJM SLEMONS mi. Zenith BJ~. Xlnt ccnd, auto. trans., radio& heater. =========11969 Harbor, O:!lta Mt
naugahy e. act. cu et. ---------1---------n625 or ~It otftr. 642-5624 P.S. $1515. Call Gtor1e MERCURY Ph. &U-6023 Ope:n Sun. Drive
Low pre. A-1 Foam Fabric I t.Y cht Wt pay moi-e for any import TOYOTA Grupe 642--0981or5'15-8218 ---------I _ln--;:~==-,.c--w
& Upholstery Supply eo., 3U TRANSPORTATION HCh .!_ rtjardle~ ol year, make .f17 W. Warner S.A. s.ro.25u ,. .. -••••rt 9039 or condltiOn. Tey us be1on • VOLVO 61 CHEV, Parkwood Sta. 'SB COLONY Parll: Station &I Rambltt WAiOn l~E,.-5-.'h.-St.,.,,,s"-A".'SJ>.""l"l~,.°"" lolt1 & Ytchb 9000 IT'S su•RTER you sell. E L,M o RE 60 CaraveUe Coupe ---·I Wagon. R/H. P/S. V-8 Wagon. I will now sacrifice American U>, 4-door 1edan,
DUAL KING SIZE BED Udo 14 suueat price S'rnO """'TO CHARTER MC1I'ORS, 15300'Beach Blvd. Smart Renault sports car. ,64 VOLVO 1225 $1795 Trailer hitch. $000. 545-8103 my 2000 mile demonstrator. automatic trana, rtCllnlni
t piece mattress -2 bo.'I: Weitmlnater. 1194-3322. One owner c~w1 all 2 doot std.an. Auto. trans, ra· •65 EL CAM 1 N 0 , ex. A.a conipltlely equipped as 1ea:ts etc. Weekend apeclaJ,
springs . me tal frame com+ Flberaiaas sabot, Cal 25 -Rawson 30 -Albtri over: Wetkmd tPeClal, $990 you mla:ht want. wm aeU or $1005
Plele -cusrom made -only need• worll; SISO 35 • Bounl,)' 40 -Ntwporter HOLIDAY RAMBLER dio. I: ~at~r and less than ceptionally clean, V-.8, auto, lea&e. Can Hal Sanders at HOLIDAY RAMBLER
Oak offi ..... ~'a ....... from ss k 1 h M·~--40 10,IXXI original mllt1. Abso-548-7249/548-tlO'l ... '""'" u-~.. ~ M 2 years old. Saerllice· fur ....... WUUI e c • ..-im:r -AUSTIN' HEALEY 1.969" Harbor, Colla Meu Ju.unaon & Son Orarwe ...,.,.... asuur. .....,,.ta tae
only U7S. Call 642~ Mark Hopkins. ·GrNt for a Schooners -n· Fairllner -30' 1 ----------iPh. 642--6023 Open Sun. Drive lute.ly showroom 1 r e s h '66 MALIBU Sport coupe. O'.lunty'a cldn;t ertablisbed Pb. M2--60'l3 Oepn Sun. Drive
boys morn $95 ea Trojart -38' Spt Flsbtt. nu· In thtouahoot. Good cond. 1..6 Mi., orJrlnaJ l..lncoln Mercury O:luga.r in
ELECTRIC Lawn Mowerl&" Thousands ol ioodies , m·-·· oth"'·· '63 AUSTIN HEALEY e E-Z tq BUY owner. 646-8185 di! 1 h' N rt Colla -~~=====-
Ro\ 80' rd Ori rice .......... "3CXX>" n:lstr., ovl!l'drlvr, wirt L• cNAULT $795 a era •P·. ewpo • AIR CONDmONING
""'' " • •· p -· Ship Owxll•~ CALIFORNIA CRUISES ·-R. . . • JIM SLEMONS SS ••• M .. a .....,., ~ ~ ••• · VI ••••• $80. Will sell $50. min 2537 w Co st H NB" whee.ls, Beautiful Blue. Can. di. coupe J ownec '6' CHEV. , power, ...... · ""'~tc ~ -power
:.3&7954 or call at Apt 2:2, • :.48~191 wy, Ern~ l'Mi~:YNst>~~91 $1795 v • ~Z TO .BUY . TO.YOTA new wlw tirell;1!xtra clean, MUSTANG lt:Srins.allred:: b:ket
mo Florid• H.B. " . L JIM SLEMONS 417 W, Warnu, S.A. 540-2512 a boy. $1200! 84 .... _w " • "'·
For Sola By lndud" Barefoot Cruise ..... ,,.,; l '68 VOLVO ,'63 Chov II Vinyl HT '"tnmatic """""""'" "'· Misc. W1nted 1610 MUST SACRIFlCE! """ UUIO TOYOTA Like new SS!!;. 00-3243 '65 MUSTANG m hp, Indy's, nno 14' Cuatom Ski&: Sport Out. to Catalina • Aua I. 10, 11 411 W. Warner, S.A. 544}.25U GET OUR LEADERSHIP Arner map, t1tereo, bktl, 4 HOLIDAY RAMBLER
SCRAM LETS board boat & trailer N"" aboard schooner "Kelpie". IMPORTS SAVINGS BEFORE COMET apd . Xlnt:. $500 T , O , p , 1969 Harbor, Colta Mesa
• paint&: upholstery. ~lrols. Depart Fri Eve tt~ Sun '66 RENAULT ... $595 YOU BUY!!! Ms-&.195 Ph. 6U-60'l3 Open Sun. Drf•e
3 engines. U pl fuel tank. Eve. S50 per person include& Daupbine. Truly ule priced! T • S • I '66 BLUE MU!tang 6 cyl. -'"~~~~~~-~-I ANSWERS $1500. <:an be Attn at 2810 f"Verything, 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 • E-Z TO BUY ej L1m:1 r1n1port1t1on .fMcR11 stick &hilt, 3 gpd vinyl 64 Rambh!:r Ambuaadm-Laf~ttc Ave., Ntwp0rt CALIFORNIA CRUISES JIM SLEMONS f41l· UllMI ·~eoi:~~ :;::.mauc. uns hardtop. Xlnt. 644-1813 990 "H''-V8, hard top sport ~:::f! :-:;;'Till<"'"'' -""''•· THE :~!:4~!k~ ~.:. DATSUN TOYOTA I IMPORTS $299 OLDSMOBILE = ~"a=
OveThe&nl in a college fool· FAMOUS "JCM WEBSTER" 27'-40' U-Drive Skip. Avail '66 DATSUN 1600 rdstr, 4 417 W. Warner, S.A. 54{).2512 JIM• &SZLTOEMBOUYNS ·-------·I tranamiuion, rad\o an d
ball locker room: "'l11e coach Committee boat for Ne..,.,.,rt Day/wk. 646-9000 24 hrs. lpd, xlnt cood. $135 cull '66 RENAULT R8 Lo miles 646-°"""" 1967 CUTLASS Convertible heater, bucket aea.u, center "-rar~ In I -~ 1966 """"'· C.M. ~· TOYOTA ronool• Weekend special , ... s no 11• our team. n Harbor Yacht Club for ALBACORE &c mar 11 n d~s, dlr, ()t trade. Pymts Top ccnd. Must sell! A&kini 163 VOLVO 122.s $l l 95 Pwr •lrl & brk.s. 22,000 mi. s1440. · '
bttween halves he ahva,ys many years. For sale ''a& charter. on the ''Gilda B". $46.86 mo. After ll, 494-m3 $950. Bill Stau.tfacher, Bank 411 w W s A 540-2Sl2 still on warranty Sharp. HOLIDAu RAMBLER
asks us to give him a PEP is" at 720 w. Bay Ave. 673-1660 or eves, 673-9138 of America HB. 847-3541 4 door with 1Uck &hilt. TrUly · amer, · · $1995. 673--0217 ..
TALK." Balboa .. A 750 67 .. 17..,.. '61 DATSUN •ta w11.g, JoadM, -;:=:=:=::::::====:I immaculate thrughout. 1969 Harbor, Costa Mesa
· ..,.., · .,.. "" Sailing luaona, 40' aloop auto, dlr, rh, take older -• &Z TO BUY CONTINENTAL '62 OLDS 98 Holiday Sedan. Ph, 642-ro23 Ope!lo S\111. Drfw
• WANTED • JULY s,_.ial. Boats hauled, Reasonable rates; avail for .......... " .. 9 86 p 1 TOY OT A 46,500 mi. Full power, 6 way in ' r~~ ...... e. pym ..... . . a . JIM SLEMONS Garage for stora1t buttom scrubbed It painted, charter 64&-9550 548-259'1 6~3617 or 491-m3 Continental Sedan pwr se•ts, many extraa! '6S R•mbler American
968-<T.l9 11-90 por tt. ··paint~·""'· · '68 TOYOTA TOYOTA 63 with a>, lull power and Xlnt cond.18911. 968-<318 330 -Deluxe
PETS ond LIVESTOCK All other maintenance •. Mobile Hornet 9200 ---------GET OUR LEADERSHIP 417 W. Warner S.A. S40-25U extr1: soft crig\nal le&thtr Radio. beater, automatic,
engine work, sec us-JAGUAR ~~=~~·=~-~ interior: car lhow1 outatan-PLYMOUTH pcw.ier atffrtn&:. Xlnt condi-
Dog• 1825 Ncwport Dry Docks 675-1505 ~RICED .. :~~hquiclc nit Vik-SA~~~SB~~RE '62 VOLVO 544 Sport dingly good care. Weekend ---------·I ticri inside I: out! $100 Cuh On the Bay at 20th SL ~ mo.,.>c ome with awn-'62 JAGUAR $650. 4M-5014 atter 6. speci1l at $1480. · kirt' '63 Plymouth Sta Wag. Ex. <Ith. dlr, or trade. Pymnts
Sii.KEY Terrier male pups.
AKC Champion stock $125.
675-""61
Runabout, 50 hp Mere crptg thru-OUt. Very clean. ~iBsion, power stterin11:. 111111 llnil 9700 1969 Harbor, Costa Meaa ~~u~'.;;aft5. or :_7116 mo. 494-8'nl or$
Thunderbolt, top. side cur-Please call after 12 noon . chrome wheels. Ullt. UU IG _A_uto< __ W_•_n_tod ___ .~-Ph. 642-60'l3 Open SWl .. Drive 1 --==~.,.--.,--
1967 GLASSPAR Avalon 16' mgs. ti ing, ahed , ww 3 8 Sedan, automatic. trans-" l • HOLIDAY RAMBLER S900
AUSTRALIAN Shepherds -
purebred -6 weekl old,
make otter. 545-38S2
~ PORTS in &5 BARRA('U'DA. New tires, Rambler Amerlcu. tains, cockpit cover, other I========= $1695 1M w E PA y xli-it cond $1395 or $200 a; 66 club coupe with automatic ::s·JL~9Call to sec in MOTOR HOMES 9215 ej l • 1:0.:~t 1968ci.Jsp~~· c ~ T.O. S61 mo. 962-9776 tnms, radio and bet.ttr,
GERMAN Shep. pupa AKC
Flashy· healthy, Guar. Stud
etr. 826--0259
fQlt. llftil 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 TOP DOLLAR preowned and brand new '61 STATION waaon, auto tr, reclining R I.ts, tmted 11ua,
Newport Dry Docks 615-1505 UUl.g '66 TOYOTA $AVE Ccntinentala at Johnlon It air cond, radio/beater. overhead valve ftlline, low
On tht Bay at 20th St. * DODGE * luDf'\ · · • mil local Slf40. ul-• "·' b-. -11~...-vRTS l owner. Fully ..,.,_, Jpped and FOR• Son Orange Cotmty'1 olde1t * $275 * 494-8468 es, °"1ltt· Boats ha=· ""ltom ICl'U ~w hoo6f: e.1labl ished Lincoln HOLIDAY RAMBLER
bed, painted & ri~. All MOTOR HOMES priced to lcll. 3 to c Mercucy-Coogar dealership. 1969 Harbor, ea.ta. Mt111.
other maintenance .. .engine lt., T-AVCO 1966 HMbor, C.M. &46-9303 from. USED CARS Newport .. Cotta Meta PONTIAC Pb. 642....fiO'll Open Sun. Drive _w_ork~-~~~=~-1121 It & 27 It. Modah 1963 Joguor Mork If JIM• SLEMONS ......., . In
28' FAIRL1NER R••Jy fo, 4 dr, black leather uphols-1968 CONTINENTAL, 2 dr 4 SPEED
FREE TO YOU
AGED Fertilizer ready fer FLYING BRIDGE. Ver Y l'"m•dl•t• Diliwi ry tecy, automatic transmission TOYOTA (ONNRL ClfEYROlfJ hardtop, full power, leather SPECIALISTS
lawn and garden. Fret from clean&. fully equipped. Must AT a••cH CITY AM/FM r1dlo. lat Oasg cm-111 w w S A "-"" 2512 It air. Ne realJODAble otter
nutrient, absorbing fresh sell, be1 t offer. D a 11 -dition. · ame.r ... .nv-2828 HIJ""bor Blvd. turned down. 644-~ HIGH PERFORMANCE
wood s.ha.vings Sun-Thurs. 646-424.2 eves 54~1339 DODGE ONLY $1,950 TOYOTA Costa Mesa 546-1203 1951 LINCOLN Capri 2 dr. CUSTOM CARS 546-9963 8/6 11111 ..... ™· BRAND New Avon Red \Hwy, Jtl 53().2710, eves. 539-4726 WE PAY . . . Good condition ms. Call LARGEST SELECl'ION IN ORGANIC Fertilize.r, horse
manure .&: wood ahavlnga, ere.rt llfr raft It Sea Gull s•t.Jllt • '66 JAGUAR XKE 4.2; 14,tm HEADQUARTERS CASH -C7• ORVAIR ORANCE COUNTY
C 0 mb1 nt d mulch &: outboard motor w/accesmr-HUNTINGTON llACH actual miles. I-Owner. Mint ELMORE Selected Auto
fertilize.r. 546-49ll a f 1 its. O>mplete "$365. Mr. Key l~~~~~~~~~ ccnd. 833-1253 Days Center
Re.mbltn AU Aita
Good nmnmc can from $M0
up.
HOLIDAY KAMBLER
1969 Hart>or, eo.ta Meu.
Ph. 642-«123 ()pen Sun. ~
in
'6.1 RAMBLER Cluaic ab:.
Weekend 'll)eClal at $585.
HOLIDAY RAMBLER 5:30 8/15 &75--0lOO Mini Blkff 927S -----~---15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
LOVABLE 5 mo . old Guman !4' SKI Boal. 71! hp motor.I--------KARMANN GHIA Phone 894-3322 13032 Harbor Blvd. 531-4646 1969 Harbor, o:.ta Meu. tor used can A truekl juat •
call "ua for tree eattmate. 65 CORSA 140 Hp ' · spd.
Shepherd to home with A-1 rond. Make otter this '68 CHRIS cycle 50cc. 1 H.P. '67 TOYOTA ..• $AVE
chi Id re n Pr t er ab I Y wsrok~~G838-E ~il bo ;;:t:~~ift · &ood cond. '64 GHIA ..... $1295 Corona. Very low mlles, 1
613-9214 8/5 n.n • ~c« ers. •ts, 1,-,=·,..,,=====;-c: Hardtop. Radkl &. heater. Ex· owner. Must see and drive.
1WO Beautiful kittens etc. $7.50 per mo. Work MESA MINI BIKES 39.95 up ctllenl condition. Over 5 to choose fro m.
silver-blk ti&er ftm1le It ipact. 642-2601. It 548-3261 Sales e Puts e Repairs e E-Z TO BUY e E-Z TO BUY
bloe ""' male 8 w ... ooe FIBERGLASS REPAIRS ~7 H""'°', c .M. • 548-3007 JIM SLEMONS JIM SLEMONS home please. 5-46-9114 8/6 * 541).20)9 * '68 ROMA Nova mini bike
POODLE Miniature. Laves ========~I $110. New 646-3382, A·sk for TOYOTA TOYOTA
children. Male 1 yr. cld. S•ilbotts 9010 John after 4 pm 411 W. Wamer, S.A. s.tG.2512 417 W. Warner, S.A. $40-2512
67j_.7905 ---'------1,===='==== l= v•RMEN GHIA I--'61 TOYOTA lldtp., 4 whl.
813 Private Sailing Less.on• Motor-cln 9300 """ ""'""' · .....
, ---------Your Boal or Mint $5 hr ----~·------mac. cond W>w mileaae. drive; Warn bubs; $.2,295 '~'REE Kitten, Russian Blue Will Teach Beginnere 65 HONDA 150 for aa.l.e $350 $1850. 675-55n 531-2682 531-0'232
mother, hou~ebroken It or Racina: Tactics or trade for P.U. of 1ame ·;;9 KARMANN Ghia O:invt.
weaned . 1986 Fu 11 er ton Taught by All-Americ1.11 value 642-JZl.6 Sharp. $695.
Costa Mesa 816 Sailor & Olympic Hopeful 'Gl HONDA, 160 scrambler. -===*="=8--<1115=:':*=== 10 MO. Old Welmaraner 642-0m or 613 -8148 PERFECT cocd!Hon. $450 -
Imported Autoo 9'00
TRIUMPH female good w I ch I Id r n Near new Ericson 32, full or oUer. 494-3440
Good hunting dog. Reg. race. Less than 1 yr. Sl:lOO. •65 BSA 350 CC
96'>..-4618 s;;; Oce11.nlc Yacht Sales Good end., S400
MALE German Shepherd 8 e 642-5151 e 312~ J6th St.. N.B.
mos. old. Like1 lridl. Needs good borne. 613-9S63 81~ SNOW bird No. 326. New 1967 TRIUMPH 650 &n-
dacron uil. Trailer v.•/new neville 2,000 mt. Best cHer
tires &. lie Price $295. take!. 675-2677 eve1 615-2-492 FREE Male Beqle, 1 ye1r
old, to 1.11yone witb KOOd
home. 89'2-9317 813 ~ 1961 90CC $249
11' SLOOP, nl'w 1tanding rig· * 8»-3604 *
Kini A engine. G~at Day lz======== ~ila. $475. 642-3192 or Triller Tr1vel 9425
543-1•87 ---·------
40' SPRUCE Box sl'Clion BAJA BUGGY BUil..DERS
mut. Near new. a I l Com pleted BIJuit• &: Accts-
bardware. S'JOO 642-8961 or aorles. Used VW Part.a
(713) TS&-1889 20106 Lquna Canyon Ro.cl
HOURLY RENTALS l.a.guna Beach mnoo
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DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Pope and Birth Control1
Pope Paul VI has sided with the conservative wi.ng
within lhe Roman calholic Church by upholding the
church's historic position against artificial birth con·
lr<lt
Leaden or liberal Roman Catholic laymen's groups
including one in Los Angeles, ''rejected" the birth con·
trol ban.
Worldwide reaction was so negative that the Pope
issued a subsequent appeal to all Chri5lian married
couples to accept his controversial encyclical on birth
control ~·tor tts human truth."
Pope Paul's position disappoints not only lhe liberal
wt.ng of the Roman church but also those Protestant
leaders who have been moving toward Christian unity
through the ecumenical movement. There can be no
question but that his decision is a setback to that move--
ment-but/e~aps not an irreparable one in view oC the
widesprea disagreement with the Pope's decision with-
in lhe Catholic Church. .
~e Catitolic protests have been reported from all
around the world, they have been especially vocal in
the United St:at~s in the last several days. This perhaps
re_flects the fact that more than 70 percent of U.S. Cath-
olics have expressed themselves in polls as favoring
family planning.
~e issu~ is an interna1 one. The Pope, after aJl, has
the final decision on church dogma. It is therefore not
the business of non-Roman Catholics, as a DAILY PI-
LOT reader points out in. a letter in today's Mailbox
(see below).
. The letter writer's objection to expressions of opin-
ion on the Pope's encyclical in the secular mass media
is hardly valid, however. Information on the encyclical
published in the world's press, both secular and reli·
gious, came from Vatican sources, after all.
Obviously, the issue becomes very much the busi-
ness of non-Catholics whenever the Roman church seeks
to extend its dictums to non-Catholics through legisla-
tion banning dissemination of birth control education
An Insoluble
Human Dilemma
In a perceptive review of my new
book, "Leaving the Surface," one of
the critics mentioned what he felt was
a basic "contradiction" in my thinking
-my "unresolved conflict between
personal fulfillment and s o c i a 1
rf6ponsibility, between the right ol the
individual to find bis own de5tiny, and
the command that this destiny satisfy
certain :standards."
What be calls a "contradiction,"
however, I call an fnsoluble human
dilemma -the fact that neither
personal fulfillment nor s o c i a 1
responsibility can ever be satisfied
alone, and that tlbe best life coll5ists in
holding each element in a constant
state of tension with the other.
"PERSONAL FULFILLMENT," -
pursued as a single goal, leads fn·
evitably to social injustice., to in-
different.ism. to callousness, to
cruelty; while "social responsibility.''
pursued as a singie goal, leads to the
tyranny of the uniform and the
mediocre and the coliective .ant hill.
And ttle6e two goals cannot be "recon-
ciled" (:ihort of a spiritual rebirth of
mankind), but must perpetually be
held in tension.
It is perhaps the rock-bottom
paradox. of our spe<:ies that both ''in-
dividualism" and "collectivism" are
equally bad alone -though the
degrees of badness differ at different
times and in different societies. It has
taken the excess of Marxism, in our
time, to make the excess of in-
dlvidualism !ook at least tolerable.
IT IS INTERESTING that the
modern th.inker W'ho bas most in·
fiuenced me, Nikolai Berdyaev, was
•
I
Sydney Harris ...
-·--· .,.i..,......;-
also accused of the same 4'con·
tradictfon" in hi.s thought. In. the in·
troduction of his splendid book,
''Slavery and Freedom,'' he writes:
"The fundamental contradiction in
my thinking about social life is bound
up with the juxtaposition in me of two
elements an aristocratic in--
terpretation of personality, freedom
and creativeness. and a social demand
for the BS6ertion of the dignity of
every man, of even the most in -
significant of men, and for a
guarantee of hfa basic rights."
HE BlTIERLY opposed bo<I! the
Marxist doctrines ttiat level meo to
mere "parts" of society. and in-
d iv Id u al i & t doctrines that
"shamelessly defend their ow n
privileges, and turn men into things."
Like another great modern thinker,
Martin Buber, he advocated a
philosophy of ''personalism'' to
mediate between the constricting
dogma of individualism and the
crushing d<>gma of collectivism.
OptimiS'ls and Utopfoans believe that
man somehow can and will resolve
thU conflict between his personal
desires and his social obligations; to
my mind, such persons (of whatever
persuasion) lack the tragic sense o(
life. in failing lo see that at best each
of us is driving a team of two horses
pulling in opposite directions, and that
neither horse can be given his head , or
we should lose ours.
Wallace as Willie Stark
California's Gov. Ronald Reagan.
about to embark on a speaking tour
through the Deep South, had some
nice things to aay about fonner Gov.
Geocge Wallace of Alabama. Governor
Reagan, for instance, felt that Wallace
"has been speaking a lot of things the
people of America are in agreement
with •.• ldw and order, patriotism Lnd '
so forth , end these are very attractive
subjects."
Governor Reagan might not have
seen the recent and explosive national
magazine series by Marsh;.IJ Frady
whicb emphasized \Vallace's role as
tbe grim joker in thi s year's politic:i.I
deck who may just pitch the elec:tion
of a new President into Ule Jlouse of
Representati ves, thus placing Wallace
in a position of arbitrating who the
Prtlsident will he and what some fm·
portant domesl.lc policie:i will be.
Marshall Frady'~ book-length p,,rlralt
and analygis of the rnan, ''Wat:nce."
just about to appe~ from \Vorld
....----B11 ~or9e ---,
Deor George :
I am going to get a dog. How
can J teU wbicb is a vtry safe
dog?
V.D.
O..r V.B.:
Watch your prospeotlvt dog
very clogely. Does be loot both
ways before croKiq the Jtrett?
Does he practice • a f e t 1
meuur. when making repair&
lnl<Jnd lhe hoUH! Hu he put
•ll)'lhl"I .. Ide for a ralllJ' "-!'!
Such •lln•, and othen, Jndkaa
1 doc .,bld> a not only nl• but
prudent.
The Bookman . ;
•
($5.95) should c::ive Governar Reagan
pause.
A GEORGIA-BORN j our n a I Is t
(Newsweek ) who spent s e v r. r a 1
months in Montgomery doing research
for a "journalistic novel" based on
\Vallacc, Frady apparently found the
\V~llace story more biiarrr than fic-
tion . Wallace is at l~ast ano~her Willie
Stark, the Southern demagogue of
Robert P enn Warren·s novel "All thf.
King's l\1 en." He is pictu1 ed as a
WtllMf. IJ Mtntltll l'• ... Y. N.w .......... l<ffl l lltr1..,
'" ..... 1 "·''
classic of the species, a cunning, win·
ning Dog patch phenomenon w h o
sprang Crom nowhere (Clio. AlR., "an
emi~ntly violenl eow:itry'') to become
a vit.;i national force at a Ume in the
country's history which simply can 't
1tand for It.
f'RADY1S BOOK IS anything but a
campaign biography. It is a literate1 anecdotal. ironic, skllllully restarched
Jll"(){ile ol what the &\lthor fit es as "the
ultimate product of 1he democratic
system. '1 Frady lets Wa llace speak for
himscU. In formal .addrttses. of!·the·
cuU rt:marka and casual corn-pane
conversation. The result is both
frightening and fasci natin~ as we
observe W a 11 ft c e 's "L)tall tarlan
society'' in Alabama, a pgychologieal.
ideologkal monolith Jn.11'1 Insular end
intranc igent than even Y.ls~Jstippl,
"Ille final Jolllole of Ille SOuth."
IVILLWI HOGA.'/
-------------
and melhods approved by persoDJ of other faiths,. or
those of no faith.
To many non-Catholics, the Pope's declaration
comes at a distressing time in history -at a Ume whee
over-population ls a crushing probleJ,D In many areas of
the world, and may well prove disastrous if it contiaUes
at its present rate.
While this is the external significance, there ls also
an internal problem which could havct far·reaching ef-
fects. An important break with the tradition of accept·
tng papal encyclicals unquestioningly-as has occurred
in the present instance-could lead to a questioning by
Catholic faithful of some other traditional postures of
the church.
This is a risk Pope Paul must have considered and
must be willing to accept.
Hope in Santa Ana
Some hope for the (uture of Santa Ana's sorely be·
set and far-under-par school system comes, strangely
enough, from another school tax override defeat.
Last week. 48.3 percent of those voting approved
the proposed 54-cent override. Two years ago, only
37.2 percent of those voting favored a 70.Cent override.
If this is not just a reflection of the lower figure,
but represents a trend away from regressive, anti-pub-
lic school influences which have so hampered Santa
Ana's progress in many areas, then there is hope for
the future.
Before another try is made at the polls, the forward·
looking elements have a hard task to perform: They
will have to tum parental indifference into parental
concern. Only 42 percent of the parents of school chil·
dren in Santa Ana are even registered to vote! c KING OF _THE MOUNTAIN
Anti· poverty
Under Heavy
Fire Again
Feeling of the Unexpected, but •••
WASHINGTON -The bodly bat-
tered anti-poverty program is under
heavy fire again, this time from con·
gressmen who say some of its ~u~a
tional programs have been a trauung
ground for violeat, hate-mongering
''revolutionaries.''
The apparently unprovoked killing of
three Cleveland, 0 ., policemen, by
black militants, is the focus for some
of Ui.e new charges. Also a target is
the "Upward Bound" program, a
previously untarnished s h o w c a s e
'
operation of the Office of Economic
Opporiunity (OEO).
"Upward Bound" is an educational
program designed to help disad-
vantaged students, witti high potential,
finish high school and go on to college.
New bipartisan complaints about the
program were a f<actor in the recent
House decision to remove "Upward
Bound" {rorn OEO and place it uad.er
the U.S. Office of Educati.oa.
REP. WILLIAM E. MINSHALL, R-
Oh.io, ho.6 now written Rep. Carl D.
Perkins. D-Ky., chairman of the House
Education and Labor Committee, re-
questing an investigation of reports
that riflemen w)lo sparked the
Cleveland disorders were led by a
beneficiary of a federally assisted
anti-poverty program.
Fred (Ahmed) Williams, a turbaned,
bearded black nationalist who has
been charged in the recent murder of
the three Cleveland policemen , is
reported to have headed a summer
crafts program which received $10,300
from a federally-aided anti-poverty
project.
"The possibility that federul anti·
poverty funds are bing diverted to
finance groups bent on community
disruption, senseless killings and at
times anarchy is one of serious con·
cem to all of us," Minshall said ln a
letter to Perkins. OEO officials say no
federal funds were actually paid to
Williams.
MINSHALL ANNOUNCED thtt he
is requesting separate inquiries by the
House Appropriations Committee and
the Gener.al Accounting Office (GAO)
with respect to the allocation of OEO
funds lo such local agencies as
Cleveland's Hough Area Development
Corp., and to the screening of .ap·
plicanU for federal grants.
Rep. Ectith Green, D·Ore., ch&oi.rman
of the House Education subcommittee,
has been leadlnj: the new attack on
"Upward Boood." Singling out
"Upward Bound" projects in lier own
state. she declal't'd that In her
"considered judgment'' the govern-
ment has been "finlnclng with fedual
tax dollar1 the activities of revol.u·
tionaries. ''
THE CO-DIRECTOR o! a Portland,
Ore., "UPward Bound" project, Mrs.
Green told the House, admJtted that be
had stated publicly he would take
"every goddamn cent" OEO would
rr~vJde and "SUWoft rewlution With
lfer&elf a critic of President
JobMOn's poUcles in Vietnun, Mr1.
Green dlrplayed a poster crlUcat of
tll• war ("Die Nigger Die -You can't
die fut enough In the Ghettos.") She
1ald such paste-rs were distributed at
the Salem. Ore.. 51.ate prison by
"Upward Bound" staff members.
By Roh<rt S. Alleo
11rid Joba A. Goldsmltb
i.
No Repeat of Willkie Upset
MIAMI NOTES -"It would be quite
a story," said a weary striver in the
Nixon cause, "if we wake up one
morning and find the convention has
been shanghaied over to Havana. I get
tile feeling something unknown and
unexpected is about to happen." ·
One does . get the feeling that
anything can happea -including some
demonstrations or maybe even a
plastic bomb or 10 placed by anti-
Castro Cubans who feel they and their
"cause" are being 111eglected.
All through the weekend the
Rockefeller regulm-s were busy going
up and down corridors and all around
the town to hotels, trying to break
holes in the dam behind which Richard
M. Nixon reportedly has all those
delegates in a pool.
MR. NIXON HAD it all wrapped up
a few days ago. Maybe it still is wrap-
ped up as neatly as a Christmas
pa-ckage. But hwnan nature is. noted
for its refusal to accept the odds. On
every Kentucky Derby eve "tlle
knock-down-the-favorite'' club is more
active than ever and persuades il.'ieU
the favorite can be beaten.
So it is here.
Perhaps this is the place to assert
the fust duty of a political candidate:
It ~ to be nominated -and, if
nom'inated, to win the electiori. Unless
he or she is elected the curtain falls -
permanently, or for a span of in·
determinate time.
Old-timers talk of Wendell Willkie
out of experience. Young-timers talk
of him out of legends, books, and old
newspaper dips.
Could this convention turn as did
Willkie's?
NO. IT CAN'T, Nelson RockefeUer
may be nominated, although the odds
are long. But this is not, and cannot
be, a duplicate of the Willkie upset of
the state organizatians, the state
chairmea, and the 1o-called "bosses"
- a breed now 'lilnost totally extinct.
Like Eisenhower in New Hampshire
in 1952? The slogan was hTaft can't
win," and after -a while it caught on
and Ike was nominated.
It can't be like that either.
Rockefeller may be nominated. If he
is, it will be, in part, because the polls
show Nixon isn't a commending can·
di date el!d will have difficulty. But
Rockefeller is no great "father· im·
age" man as was Ike. He is a good,
a·ble man -but the situation is not the
same.
ROCKEFELLER knows that. So that
is why all the weekend hi's workers
were trying out California's Reagan as
a vice presidential nominee to run
with Rockefeller. Here we have some
of the pragmatic political maneuver·
ing the professionais know and, un·
derstand. Reagan might cut into the
Wallace vote, not merely in the South
but in other states a-s well Nixon can-
not. His advisers include those who,
also feeling that vague sense that
"something is going to happen," ar1i
urglng him to duplicate some of
Wallace's arguments. If Nixon does
this, it will be so obvious a piece of ex-
pedience he will be tau~ out of the
contest.
REAGAN DOESN'T have to do an
imitation of Wallace. He works the
Wallace lode in hia own style and in a
more polished manner than does the
Alabaman. Reagan can do this act
without make-up or changing cos·
tumes. He is original. He can take thil!I
Jow ground while Rt>ekefeller, perhaps
swallowing a bit of distaste, takes the
high road.
The first responsibility of a can·
didate is to win .
If he doesn't, he is dead.
So, in the light of the sun and in the
dark of the night the Rockefeller
saboteurs keep trying to break holes
in, or explode, the Nixon dam so that
the delegates may flow out of the pool.
The odds are long. But there are
always those who believe they can
knock down the favorite.
'No Non-Catholic Comment'
To the Ectitor :
As a Catholic. I !ind the editorializ-
ing of the secular mass media upon
the most recent prono-Jnct>:-:-tent from
the Vatican on "humanae •Jil lie" (of
human life) absolutely \lnacccptable.
All of the advance comments on the
issue of family planning by the secular
mass media are quite disturbing to
those of us (Ca~hi>lica) who have yet lo
be officially informed of it, viz.,
"humaooe vitae." These comments
will undoubtedly result in more
divergent comments by r,utside (non·
CattioUc) opinion. \Ve, as Catholics,
don't need the editorialization of thl!I
aecul11r mass media in this matter I
THE ABOVE comments .are purely
person;;,~ and are not meant to imply
that I can be assumed to blindly follow
all that Ule Vatican prescribes in the
modern age in which we find
ourselves. It (the above comme.nts)
mean only that I personally resent
outsiders (non-Catholics) r~porting to
the world , to the na.tion, and to the
state, the .. supposed" opinion ol us
Dear
,Gloomy
Gus:
The peace groups in the U.S. and
throughout the world say that
they are against war. However,
they have remained silent about
haw Rus.sla 1' using the threat
of war lo subjugate the Czechs.
One may well ask if the peact
groups are just Communist front
orgonlzaUOlll.
-H. B. McD .. Jr.
Tilll tletvr. ,..,,.,,.,. _... ~ ... , _ _,.,., ...... .. ... -....... . ....
,..., ... """' •• .._.. .... 0.llY ,, .....
•
I
Letters from readers are welcome.
Normally writers should conve11 their
messages in 300 word.f or less. The
right to condeme leUer.t to fit .tpace
or eliminate libel is rt".served. All let-
ters must include signature and mail·
ingi address, but names will be with.
held on request.
(Catholics) prior to the tirnc we £fe
off\cialiy informed of the i!(SUe, viz ..
'humanae vitae."
UN11L IT, "llwnanae vitae", is
published and distributed to us
(Catbolic1} by t be ecclesiastical
authorities in Ulis country and ·it,
"humanae vm.e," llas betn read in
toto, I {ind It extremely difficult to get
excited about, to comment about, or to
participate in its discussion. ·it wo1fl<l_
be appreciated if the secular mas&
media would do Uke'WiHJ I
ANDERS MARTIN BERG Jr.
•,tmerlca BNrTa•t'
To the Editor:
Since J once took it Upon myaelf to
write a letter lo the DAJLY PILOT
criticising the SOutb Coast Repertory
Theater, t feel Jt ls only fair that r
rouse myself to publicly applaud their
excellent produaion of "America Hur·
rah!"
Tbt play itseU is strong medicine for
an ailing society, and the Ills are in·
tensely partr.,ed. The final pawe.rful
act shockingly exemplifles the violent
vulgarity and coar1tness that are a
conaequence of the abs~ of human
compaasiOD and spiritual values in our
customs and J.nstituUons.
The heartless efficiency of our
bureaucracies 'whether thOle or
private ente21JriH or gDVernment )
IN THE SECOND we see the in·
fluence of the pap or mass media on
what is left of our human sensibilities.
The mindless mediocrity pouring In·
cessantly from the TV screen dulls the
senses and the intellect. We come lo
tolerate the plethora of tastelessness
and inanity. Our standards are set
almost witllout our knowing it by the
immunity we develop to the familiar
sights of violence, greed, phoniness,
sentimentality. And then, as I said,
comes the shocking last act.
I urge everyone who still cares
about the human condition to see thi11
production -not only because tht
play is an alarum .to conscience but
also because it is expertly staged and
acted.
We are indeed fortunate to have
such timely, exciUog, professional
theater In our midst. SCR hurrah!
ANN ROBBINS
--~--
Monday, August 5, 1968
The td.ik>rlal page Of tht Dallt1
Pilot tteks to Inform and 1tifn..
ulate readera b'1 presentino thfl
nt1D1paper11 opi'niona and com.-
mt"nt.ary on toJ)ic,s of tntnt.ft
and .significoncll'l, b., protrldfng a
forum for the t%ptearion of
our re~r1' opirUon.s, and br
J)rftenhng the dlve-111 mno-
pointa of lnformt"d obsen:ier1
and •pokttm.en on topi~ of the dau.
Robert N. Weed, Publlaher