HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-08-09 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa-_._ ===-==-,,;:..·; •
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Ex· Newport Co.nn~il1nan
·Details :s _hootiog_
------------.------' --At1a~L----__ . r--:_ _ _:_ FRlDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 9, )968
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Alas ·Poor Yori~k
HE WAS REAL ORANGE COAST PIONEER
Cloaeup-View of Skull Df 17,000.y••r-old 'l•tun• Men'~-·
---No Sknllduggery-
ia.!!una Man 17,000.,.Years Old
By lt'1cRARD P. NALL ' skoll baj pushed back the pas~ °' '"'~~J.1'''1.J. The fin d is now at the Smitflsonian
,\ skull found in "ia~8 :'Beacti 35 I~tituttOn. Washington, D. C. for ad·
years ago has opened a new door to QJ.il911al corroboration. . , . · Recently scientists put on display a
the puzzle qf mans first appearance charred and broken skull found in
on-this continenL \Vashington state at a federal dam site
,UCLA scientists believe the find is ·in 1965. It is believed possibly 13,000
roughly 17,000 years old, possibly years old.
more. It would set man's appearanc.. Wilson's skull find Is said to be
in North America 4,000 to 5,000 years similar , to that of Cro-magnon man
earlier than any previoos rind. fossils [ouod in a French cave. It in·
\V. Howard Wilson , 22711 Vista Del eludes a portion from about the center
Sol , Three Arch Bay, owns the skull . of the nose area, the top and part o[
He found it in 193.1 at what is now 25:-i the back.
St. Ann's Drive. Dr. Louis Leakey, internationally
Wilson and Kdward 11. Marriner noted anthropologist, asked i 11
were digging for artifacts and bones h: February to take the skull to UCLA.
the bank of a road at the time. Leakey discovered the oldest known
The skull has doubtless traveled human remains in Aflica believed tr,
further than its original owner since Oe more than two million years old.
dug from sandy soil. However. scicn-He has also contended that hand a:<1
tists in Europe and America, though es found in the Calico mountains o.
interested in the find , had no sure way California might be 40,000 years old.
years ago of dating it. Man then was Digging is again under way at the
believed to have dated back 10,000 or St. Ann's Drive site. Dr. Joseph
12,000 years in America. 1"omchak, professor of anthropology al
In February, Dr. Rainer .Berger Orange Coa.st College, is working at
told the DAILY PILOT th a r the site with students. Old bon1'
radiomeLric dating of !'.he partial skuU fragments have been found but not ye:
was under way and could alter basic dated. .
tenets about man's first appearance Wilson has frequentl y loaned thP
on the continent. skull to scientists who estimatea
Berger and James R. Sacket ol various ages but only this year dirl
UCLA have since satisfied themselve.> serious testing get under way alter
through the radio carbon tests that the Leakey became enthused.
Former Councilman Says
He Wa s Also Sniper Targe~
Fonner Ne"'}>Ort Beach city coun-
cilman Al Forgjt said today he
believes persons unknown who fired on
his car are the same suspects who kill·
cd a young Santa Ana motorcyclist on
the freeway in Fountain Valley.
"That's the same gang that killed
that kid on the motorcycle, there's no
question about it," said Forgit.
said. "Then they could have picked thr
gang up. It's a gang of ouUaws roani·
ing the county.''
Forgit said sheriff's investigators
had been questioning him on the possi·
ble link between the two shootings. A
.22 caliber weapon appeand to be in·
volved in both.
Falls Six_ Floor3
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Nixon Plans
;
On Saturday -
MlAMI BEACH (AP) -Richard ~t.
Nixon set off on a new election
crusade for the White House today by
pledging not to undercut Presiden~
John.9on or America's allies in th t..
field of foreign affairs.
The Republican party's 1 9 6 G
presidential. candidate said he is going
to ttie LBJ rooch in Texas Saturday to
visit Johnspn and to be briefed on the
Vietnam war by Cyru.s R. Vance, a top
Johnson adviser and No. 2 U.S.
negotiator at the Paris peace talks.
Nixon told newsmen J o h n s o n
telephoned congratulations Thursday
11igh t for Nixon's smashing nomine>.tion
victory and assured him "I'm going to
play it straight down the middle" in
keeping the Republican candidate up
tG date on the pace of Paris talks.
Beaming, although his face wt" puf·
fy with lack of sleep. Nixon said
Johnson told him: "Dick, you have my
congratulations and my sympathy.''
Nixon reinforei!d the gesture of uni·
ty by dropping t.he idea ol. a trip to the
Soviet Union before the November
election.
Earlier this week. when hi.s quest
for the GOP nomination st o o d
challenged by Govs. Nelson A.
fiockef&ller of New Y.ork ood Ronald
Reagan of CSlifomia. Nixon an.
nounced he was considering a trip to
Russia. possibly be for e the
Democratic convention in Chicago
later this month.
Since then, he said, he had "reluc-
tantly concluded the trip cannoit. now
be t.,c,ken and will not be taken before
the election."
Nixon added: "\Ve have too many
demands that are urgent in the United
(See NIXON, Pago %)
HESSIANS REUNITED -Eighl molorcycle club members among
22 rounded up Wednesday from around West Orange County are
photographed en masse at Costa Mesa City Jail before being booked
on suspicion of assault with intent to commit murder. Standing (from
left) ar~ Thomas Hille, John Dore, Philip Cerasco and Robert Har·
ma n. Squatting (from left) Rot)ald Murdock , James Larson,· Way ..
mon Grisenti and Robert Henderson. Nine others were in custody
as well today, aw~ti.ng arraigninent.
Waitress Who Strangled
Daughter Sent to Prison
NEW YORK (API -Red -haired
Alice Crimmins, the pretty former
night club waitress convicted of
strangling her 4-year.ald daughter,
was sentenced today to 5 to 20 years In
prison.
Mrs. Crimmons, 2!1, was senteifced
on a first degree manslaughter charge
by Queens SUpreme Court JusUcc
Peter T. Farrell.
Just before the sentencing, 1--trs.
Crimmins denounced the court when
asked U she had anything to say in her
behaU.
"You don't care who killed my
childrin," she said angrily.'"You juSt
want to close your books on this. You
don't give a damn who killed my
children." , ·
Mesa Cycle
Moh Awaits . •' .
Hearing
By ARmlJJI R. VINSEL
ot ttle Deltr ,., ... ---
Conducting themselves like choir
boys, 17 me,mbers ol. C<l6:ta Mesa's
Hessions motorcyc~ club waileji ln cl·
.t'i jiiil tnclay with ball totaling nearly
$200,000, "¥1-iille police obtained com·
plaints ctiargirlg the gang with assault
with intent to commit mw-der.
A. total of 22 men were rounded up
W~sday, but several of l.be outlaw
cyclists w«e later released and
anothier was arrested at police he&d·
quarters todny, where be went voha·
tarily for questioning. .
Th.e crowd -probaibly to be _..
raig11ed in ti.arbor District Judicial
.Court this afternoon -is ,tuspected 'ol
.the Wednesday night chaln·wNm-DC
and shooting of an ex-prizefighter aJ
.his Cost-a Mesa 'home. , ·
. !Wbert H. Glazier, 30, o{ • ~
Placen.tia Ave., was reported inbi<i.D1
·today, recovering from m u I t l ~ 14
laceraOOos, baseball bat clublifi1
bruises and a gunshot woon(l in tilt
left hand.
The victim, his wij'e Barbara, alld-a
man who strared the ap:arunent, Rbn.
\V. Hilts, 23, identWed the Intruders,
w-ho burst in after cutting telepbOlle
wires from the apartment, as tile
Hessians.
Police were told tt\at the png of
night marauders waS led by Frank W.
"Wild Mouse," Rundle. 24. of 135
Albert St., 'Costa Mesa, who bad
. (See HESSIANS, P•ge Z)
Orans.e Coat
Wea..,,.·
1 "' I Old SOI will do his darndest lo
break through that patchy fog
this weekend, llrlnill\g 'n<legree
;wafmth to the Oran}e ColsL
He referred to the shooting Wed·
ne sday of 21.year-ol:i James M.
Gardner on the San Diego freeway in
Fountain Valley. The slayers -or
slayer -are still being sought.
Forgit's car WllS fired on Sunday
night. It happened as he and bis wife
River bridge 00 Pacific Coast Hlgh-
Peggy drove across the Santa Ana
way. They were heading into Newport.
A tan Volkswagen carrying four youths
passed them in the other dil'ection.
Plunge Kill ~ Newport Man
Mrs. ,Crimmins was charged only 1n
the death. of her daltgbter. Allee
Marie. The bpdy of her son, Edmund
Jr., 5, was found later in a vacant Jot,
too decomposed io disclose· the ~use
of his death.
AccusJ.nB her pro1CCUtor1 of being
"rotten throbgb and through," Mrs.
Crimmins, trembling,·told tbe court:
"I djd not kill my chlldren."
I NSIDE l'ODAV
lt'1 link or IWilfi -llUroUr
-for Corona dtl Mar and Nt""°
port Harbqr High fHfrformtr1 iri
ihtir vuflon of the S'outh Pod·
·fit. Grab o laugh prtn"'tt and
come olono to ih.t big oquattc '"°"' lodaw in.the.WEEKENDER. "I saw a fiash, heard ail explosion
and the windshield cracked," said
Forgi t, Who UUs morning returned
from a four-day hunting trip.
Forgtt 1s a strong believer in a
police·monltored televislon
surveillance system.. 1 1r the city had one, he said today, it
might have led to the capture Of a
group of young men who fired a gun at
hi.; c•.
"II tht!i police hod .a TV cC!era sta·
tione<.! on U1at bridge, they ~did have
cotten the 'whole incident on tape," be
By BRU~ BENSON
Of .. hltt' ,lllt Sl•ft
An utUdenUfled skydiver this morn·
ing sat in bis car and watched a 57·
year-old Newport Beilch man plupgr
to his death Crom the aixth floor
balcony of a Newport m e di ca I
buikting.
The dead man was identilied by
police as Gerald 1-tnrt, 1507 Ruth Lane,
Jtfewport Beach. PoUce 1aid tbe~r~~fl
virtually certain the headlong f~1
• suicide. ?
Tbe witneas, who dccKMd to Ki,vt
I'
his name, told Pouce he had just pul{1 rerlng lrom any Jerminal disease.
ed up to a four-way stop oo Hospit8J Detect.Ives later thls mofnlng were
Road near the Hoag Memorial attempti.pg to gather more details on ~lospit.al parking lot and glanced to the the de8d man's background.
lop ol the Park Lido ?rofesaion;J ln.IUal report& 1aid thatif'flart was
Building, 351 tlospital Road. emp!Qyed u a lighting techiiclan for a
He said tie saw the man's leap Crom televtslon company.
beginning to. end. The pluns:e occurred at 8;,40 a:m.
Police listed ., a preUmlnarr, from th• top Door o! the alx·slory
motive for the 4eatn "depression1 ' buHd1ng. PoU.ce 1aid the ba.lconY. was
They said Hart had vhited a doctor at the end of a hall and accessible to
oitllor at the o>ediul bulld!D( or al the pubUc.
Hoag only three days ago. . . I Th~ body was taken lo Ba!L.z
However, an investigator said It was f Mortuary, COrooa del Mar, pending
uot believed that Hut bad been •ul· fUner&I &TID(ementa.
Tbfl 1children disappeared !rom the
Crlmmtns' apartment in Queens July
14., 1965 and the mother lnsJlted they
hall been IUdnapped from thetr ground
.aoor bedroom.
Outing her trial a witne11 told of
·seeing Mrs. Crimmins, an unidentified m_.. the UtUe boy aod the lfll\lly dog
Jeave the apartment W1th1Mr1. Q:lm ..
ntlns carryinC a "ound.le" , that the
proaecuUon contended was. Ule lltUe
glrl'• bo<ly.
Another • leading witness wu a
I 1er boylrlend ol Mra. Crimmins
tesUried' she cqnressed to him she
II.Wed btr daupt.er.
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:t DAILY '1lOT
Shots Heard ·
LMi • .m am1 • •
Afte1· Riot •
•
Runaway-County
'Hippie' Girls
Return Home
Three young girls who disappeared
from Costa Mesa Sunday night after
the Newport Pop Featival have return~
ed to their Santa Ana homes
di sillusioned with the life of hippies.
CecUa Montoya, 15, her sister
Theresa, 12, and JeaMe Castro, 14,
were picked up by Hollywood police
after an anonymous boy telephoned
Mrs. Mary Montoya that he had seen
her daughters in a Hollywood strip
night •Pot.
After four day1 of living oil the town
In Hollywood, the girl&' lint thought
was a bath. They spent the last two
nights sleeping in Ule doorway of a
school.
"It was really weird, like a different
world .almost," saJd !&-year-old Ceclia.
Why d.Jd the girl! run away? When
they called home late Sunday they
wert scolded for being late and feared
further punishment. They were given
a ride to Hollywood by a group of hip-
pie girl&.
DAILY PILOT
N...,.rt.._. c..t• MeM
Hntt.ft.. ..... l.-tll .. IMdt West..._, ........ y.n.y
CAUPOIHIA
ORANGI COAST PUll.ISMING COfUAN'f
lt•ffrt N. Wt•i
Je~k •. c~tley
Vk:t Prf!t ...... tlld C.-11 MINtu
T111111t1 K •• ,u
·~-Tho'"•• A. Murp .. IM
.MMMflllil.-i•
P1ul Nl11•• ... """" ..... "'""" --c.tll ~l -w..t "" ltftitt N...-. h9c:l!1 1111 w .. 1 .. _. ~
L...,,.. -..ctl: m "-' A-Hulllloe• 9MOI: • tttt ilrwt
Ike Stronger
But Still Not
Out of Danger
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Former
prestdent Dwight D. Elaenhower was
reported "feeling stronger'' and ''In
excellent spirits" today. His doctors
1aJd they were pleased with his pro-
gress but warned he It.Ill was not out
of d8Jlla.
0 The crlUcal period geDttally luts
through the tlrn week following such
an attack," his army d o c t o r 1
told newsmen. t
The pbylldalll said all vital We
slens -temperature, pulle, rllptr ..
tion and blood pressure -rcmaln
stable . They alaa l&ld he spent another
comfortable d•Y end nliht.
* * *
Southern States
Won't Support
Nixon: Wallace
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)
George C. Wallace says he doubts that
Richard M. Nixoo will carry •1lY
Southern states because Nixon hu
supported "those movements that
have taken over our schools and our
domeltlc lnlt!b111001 In this port of the
country."
"''lbare b not ••• 10 cent.a worth of
difference 1n the attitude 0( Mr. Nb: on
and d:l1 Democratic attitude toward
these matt.en," Wallace added ln
televlalon lnt«v1nr1 Tbunday.
The third-party pr.stdeot!a! can· d.Jdate said Nb:oo'1 uomlnlt1on tor the
presidency would not cbanet hil cam-
paign plans.
, "It doesn't mW any difference ~o
tho ftellobllcaru nominate," wan.co
said. 0 '1bey're gotng to have to run on
•
·U.s~ TroopB Set Trap
N.· Viets Caught in Search for. Food
Sf\IGON (UPIJ -U. S. ~
aboard helicopters alKl r I v e r
hovercraft trapMC) two bands of North
Vietnamese on the prowl for food near
Hue Thursday night and. tOctiy.
American headquarler,.-111id at least
ao of the enem1 were killed and 63
capturod.
In the Mekong Delta, at the other
.
end ol SOUtb Vlolnam, the U. 8. com·
mand said atray fire trom two
American pa.ttol boats under Viet
Cong attack hJt a village, kJlllng 16
South Vletllamese and wounc;ling ~.
Tbe Hue area battles erupted as
thousands of American and South
Vle:tpamese' troops presaed an of·
fens.lve through the A Shau Valley
southwest of the old imperial capital.
The fll)ltlng Oil the outaldrta of Hut
indicated allied preHu.re had forced
the main body of North VletnameM
troops into the hU1.J away from tbe
rice-producing coastal J?lains and that
these men inay be desper•tety abort of
food, Both units trapped oo the
lowlands by unit& of the lJ. S. lOlst AJr
Cavalry Division were on foragin1
missions.
From Pqe l
HESSIANS AWAIT TRIAL. • •
WAREHOUSE SALE!
FANTASTIC VALUES
I NEWPORT STORE ONLY I
HERITAGE DREXEL UPHOtmRY llG. IALI
•••• SALi •••• SALi
209. 99" 1 Cocktoll TAI•
4h:42 185. 79" 450. 179 ..
1 C.. ... llT.W.
20xl6 W\. & hl4 165. 99"
1 ....... ,..... 149 69 00
221:26 PeuR SI~ •M. "·
I Step T•ltle
PIGle 26126
1 "41111P Ct111MC1 .. e
, ... , • ...,. 27111
135. 59"
125. 39" 1 OU. Cllalr
11 .. Tex.
239. ,,..
119. 59"
124~ 64'!. 339. 13900
95 .•. 34'!. 2 '""'" cw,.. b4 Aat. letl11
89"
1 lcimp Table ""'"· ,,.....,,. 95.
I Occ. Clrl4lr
39" ..........
Occ. ClrHlln
D•llMltll Coy. ,..._ ... _,_325
14172 • 14500
1 CHkteU , ....
a.~n-11x12
1 C.ut.IT ...
.... JhJJ
lC....T_,.
M...ac r., 20.60
2a..n ........ .
Wllfhl• .. . , ,. .....
111J7
185.
245 •
129.
161.
189.
69"
99"
3900
12400
1 ••ttet w.rue
Zh60.hcl.-.11
1 Cellt. Dh1I .. Set , ..... _., .....
4 cMlft. Ml Nftt. -
6900 ,....,, .. ,,
...... J 7127
249.
695.
245.
258.
9911·
31500
79"
79"
1 Oct. a." . ... -
1 ftlSJ cat.Ir ....... s.tt.
1 lwtwt CWr
Hetft ...
Y.!low Nap.
I Piii Up CWf
MANY MANY OTHIRS
Hundreds Of Yards Of Drepery & Uphol1tery Febrics
Casements -Prints -Silk1 -Velvets -T1pestry -Etc. 1111
50°-4 TO 700/o OFF
ALL SALES FINAL -NO CHARGES
SMALL DELIVERY CHARGE
EXCLUSIVE DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-DREXEL -HERITAGE
. 99"
199"
16910
235.
195.
149;
90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGER TERMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CREDIT
INTERIORS
39"
49"
69"
89"
69"
69 ..
Nl!WPOllT BEACH
1727 WMl<lllf Dr., 642-20.SO
OPIN NIDAY '11L t
Prof"'lonel lnttrlor
Dtslgners
Avo!l1bl.--.AID-NSID
LAGUNA BEACH
345 North C011t Hwv. 494.6551
OPIN PllDAY 'T1L t
fttti• T .. "-MMt af o...,. c...tr M .. 1261
Ei&enhower suffered h11 alXth btart
attack Tuetday at Walter Retd Army
NtdicaJ Center while TK'Upt!'lting
Crom a previous attack. Dootort hid
apected to relffi&e him within a Wftt
IJOlarl bU !.atett IOll>lck. ' I\
record &Iva the American people 110 their records. Their platform and J_:~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'.!~~~~~-dlok>e In the November electlcn.''
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Huntington Bea eh
Dlilly Paper ~
VOL. 61, NO. 19f, 3 SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES FRIDAY, AUG,UST 9, ·1968 JEN CENTS
•
Killing, Beating Linked?
---
Valley P;0lice Believe Hessia~ Not Involved
LIBERTY CITY WAR -Miai;ni police sergeant talreS-1'UVer· with
drawn pistol belllnd· ti'affic light StarlcliioD' lit ·predoirilnaiiOy Negro
Liberty City section of town. Crum.pl~ form of Negro .wof!lan at ~1s
feet is apparently one of, many victims of street f1ght1ng which
erupted Wednesday in area and bas continued·sporadlcally.
3 Killed, IJ.8 Wounded
In Miami Violent Night
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -SPoradic
gunshots were heard tods.y in the riot·
torn black area of Miami where three
Negroes were shot to death and 18
persons wounded during a savage
night of toOting and burning.
Occasional shots were fired out of
autopiobiles into &tore windows but
police called the day's renewed
disturbances ''minor." The sheriff's
otlide said the area was "under firm
control."
But a National Guard Force equip-
ped .with everything from shotguns to
!lamethrowers stuck to its guns in the
"occupied territory," ready to move
back into action at the first sign of
new n~eups.
"We are standing by," said a Guard
spokesman, "waiting to find out what
they are going to do . Then we'll make
our own move."
In the Liberty City district, where
the first racial violence in recent
Miami history broke out 10 miles from
the site of the Republican Nationtt
Convention, police Thursday !aced
sniper bullets and barrages of rocks
and bottles.
Then they struck back. Two Negroes
were fatally wounded during an ex·
change of gunfire at an c:partment
house.
Later, when a 550-blOck area em·
bracing Liberty City was barricaded
and swept by National Guard troops,
another Negro was shot off a porch
balcony in the Central Negro District
to the south.
the Northwest 36th Street Airport Ex-
pressway on tile south, the North·
South Expressway on the east and
Northwest 22nd Avenue on the west.
As the curfew was imposed for th.e
first time Thursday night, National
GuErd troop carriers swept the
streets. huge searchlights swinging
slowly from side to side.
"We're g°oing to clean out these
streets," one officer barked to his
men. ''We're taking no bull this time."
Later, a National Guard spokesman
said that "once the sweep started,
there was no trouble at .ll.!11."
But, as the impressive show of force
brought quiet to Liberty City, new
trouble erupted in the Central Negro
District.
Sgt. James H. Tombly, a wounded
Miami policeman, said a volley of
shots was fired from a rOOftop at
Northwest 22nd Street and Northwest
3.rd A venue.
"\Ve pulled up there," he said, "~nd
I felt this burning sensation· in my left
arm. We returned the gunfire."
E. Jest Cleveland, a Miami Beach
car washer. was shot in the head and
toppled from the porch of his apart.
ment. /1., Negro woman, Willie Mae
Grant, was shot in the left arm as she
stood on the same porch.
Bands of young Negroes roamed the
central district, smashing 61ore and
car windO'W'S, and shortly after mid·_,
night City Manager Melvin Reese tl'IJO
ordered a curfew for that area. By
dawn, t;be trouble had petered out.
Falls Six Floors
· Police-today pondered a possible
linli: between the savage beating of a
Costa Mesa boxeil and the suspected
thrill murder Of a cleancut youn~
motorcyclist Wednesday in. Fountain
Valley.
"O! course, the Hessian motorcycle
gang has been coosidered," said Foun·
lain Valley Police Lt. Martin Fortin,
'"but we have no connection at this
time."
A patrolling Costa Mesa patrolman
on a tlll"IHV'ound swing outside city
iimits discovered the body of James
Planners OK
Valley Oil
Drill Permit
Oil drilling mai soon begin in Foun-
~ Valley. Planning commissioners
have approved an application by Shell
Oil Company to construct a· drilUng
station at the southwest £Orner of
Bushard Street and Warner Avenue.
The proposed oil well is believed to
be the ·valley's first.
Planners graoted a temporary
permit for an exploratory drilling site.
~pemt'~p!res -Dee.-~t-w!licr.
time all equipment must be removed
and the ground left in the condition .it
was before drilling started.
"1£ oil is found, Shell will have to
come back for another permit," said
planner J ohn Richards.
Valley planners al$o have approved
:i precise plan submitted by LASCO
Industries, a plastic company of Los
Angeles, .tor a 21,f;IOO.lquare·foot tac·
tory Ol\. the south~~corner of Euclid
Street And Condor A venue.
New church-building pJan1 were also
approved for the ReorganJzed Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day saints at
the northwest corner o{ Ross Street
and El Rancho Aventlt •nd for the
Community Christian Reform Church
on the south side of Heil Avenue, east
of Magnolia Street.
Alamitos Seeks
Third Police
Chief in Month
Los Alamitos, whkh has gone
through two police chiefs in the past
month, is on the look out for a new
one. .
City Manager James M. Smith
Thursday launched a s e a r c h to
replace Donald A. French, fired June
30 after heading the department for
six years.
William Austin, named acting chief
by Smith faces a jury trial Aug. 'l'l on
charges of assault and battery brought
by Robert Whitson, 19, of Rossm<>O!°.
Whitson claims Austin roughed hun
up when he went to the police station
last Friday to get back a tape player
an officer had taken from him because
he could not establish proof of
ownership.
If Austin is acquitted he will return
to the department as a sergearit but
not as police chief, Smith said Thurs·
day.
In the meantime Smith is acting as
chief. He hopes to get rid of the job
within two months.
Y Breaklast Planned
Fountain Valley Y's-Mfn gather for
breakfast at 7:45 a.m, Saturday at
Cook's Pancake Hou.se, 15081 BC9C\_
Blvd., Midway City,
'
Gardner, 21. ol 619 S. Mountain View
Ave., Santa Ana.
The "lctim, a Navy veteran who
worked , attended school and planned
to marry next spring, lay ,1ong the
San Diego Freewa.y near Euclid Ave.,
shot five times by a small caliber,
automatic weapon.
Conslderiing a possible break, in the
case as the result of the arrest of a
number of llessians, Lt. Fortin seem-
ed to minimize the possibility.
"We have sometih..ing better," he
said • , • "let's just say he may have
been the victim of an indiscriminate
shooting," indicating the continued
theory of a homicidally-inclined
sniper.
Costa Mesa· police are holding 17
members of the Hessians as the result
or .a savage chain, club and shooting
attack on an ex-priiefighter in his Cos-
ta Mesa' apartment by a motoccycle
gang.
During a methodica.1 roundup ol
suspects Wednesday nigbt and early
Thur'sday, 11 weapons were con·
Ul"l,T .......
GOP TEAM BASKS IN APPLAUSE CLIMAXING CONVENTION
Spiro Agnew, Richard Nixon Listen to Mleml's Last Hurrah
Nixon Calls for Drive
Against Crime, Violence
MIAMI BEACH CUP!) -Richard
M. Nixon today led his Republican par·
ty into an election campaign aimed at
satisfying a naUonal hunger ror peace
at home and abroad.
It was an orthodox Republican Nix-
on, who took a hard line toward put·
Ung an end to violence a n d
lawlessness in America. But it also
was a new Nixon, who took a soft line
toward the Soviet Union instead of
depicting commut1ism as the root of
au evtl.
Nlxoo began his spee,cti by recalling
he had accepted the same nomination
eight yeata ago. There-will be a dif-
ferent end.Jng this time, he said,
because "Thls time we are going to
win.''
He could a:ct applause with line&'
di.Ung back to the early weeks of his
presidential primary campaign, such
aa be wanted more people on payrolls
and fewer on welfare rolls. And he
could bring the enUre convention to its
feet cheering and applauding with his
often used punch line:
"I say that when respect for the
United States has fallen so low that a
fourth l'ate military power, like North
Kor~a. will higbjack a United States
naval vessel on the hJg.h seas it is time
for new leadership to restore respect
!or the United States around the
world!
"America Is in trouble today not
because her people have fi.iled but
-because her leaders have failed,". be
caaid. "What America needs are
leaders to match the greatness of her
people, 11
•He aaid neW ~teader.shlp clearly 11
needed when the:wortd'a strongest na~
tion is tied down by rour years of war
in V.i~am. when the world'• richest
natton -cannot· manage Its own
Sherill E. Wilson Purdy de<:lared a 6
p.m. curfew in an area bounded by
Northwest 73rd. Street on tbe north.
Detroit News
Strike Ends
Plunge K,ills Newport Ma.n
~oadmy, • wben the nation with the
grea-te1t respect fee law it 11ptagued
by unpreoedented lawlessoen" and
when the Amerlc•n president cannot
travel 1 without fear of h o & t i 1 e
demonitri.Uon1.
The re'medy, he saJd, 11ls a complete
housecleaning of those respon1ible lor
our failu:e and a complete reappralnl
Of Amert~'• poUcles In every atcUon
ol the world/1
\ DETROIT (UPI) -The natioll '•
Joogest De"Wspaper blackout ends to-c»y when the Detroit News prints its
llnt edition In lS'I days.
The News, en afternoon newspape:-
w1;ji a ~-strike daily clrculatlon of
abbut 700.000. was scheduJed to hit the
streets with a first edition befof'e noon.
The morning Free Press plan.-; to
prillt Its first editi'On In more than 8%
months tonighL .Before til e shutdown,
the Pree Press l'lad a circulation of
abo\lt 600,000.
-
By BRUCE BENSON
ot "" Oeltr ..... Jtll"
Alt unidentified skydiver this morn·
ing sat in hJ1 car and waicbed a 574
year-old Newport Beacb man plunge
to his death lrom the sixth Door
balcony of a Newport m e d I c a 1
building.
The dead man was Identified by
Polioe as Gerald Hart, 1507 Ruth Lane,
Newport Beach. POlice said they were
virtu;,lly certain the headlong fall was
a s~iclde.
The witness, who declined t to give
' ,,
1his name, told police he had just pull·
ed. up to a four-way stop on Hospital
Road near the Hoag Memorial
H0<pltal parking Int and gl'"1C<d to the
top of the Park Udo Prole•lonll
Building, 351 Hospital Road.
He aald he saw tbe man'• leap from
beglnnlni to end.
Police 11.sttd as a preUmln~
motive for the death "depre11lon. '
They ioaid Hart had visited. a d<>etor
either at the ih«Ucal building or at
Hoag only three d1ys ago.
liowever, an investigator 1aid It was
not believed that Hart bad beeo sul·
lerlng from any tmnlnal dlsease.
De.teCtlve1 later this mominc were
attempllnc ta ga!hu -.. detaill on
th• deed men'• background,
Inltlal roporll uld thal Hart wu
employed as a lighting t.ecbaidan for a
television company. ,
The plunge occurred at 8:40 a .m.
from th1 top floor ol. the alx-e:tory
bulldlng. Polic1 said the b1lcooy was
at the erJ\l of • hall and· accessible to
the pubUO,
The body was W<en to Baltz
Mortuary, Corona del Mar1 peodinr:
f~ner&a arrangements.
Of Vietnam , he aald th1t mWtary,
economic and dlplomaUc pow'1' bave
never been used 10 lneUectlvely. H•
promised. to say nothing In hit cam·
~fl)! that woold damage the Peril
peace talb. But be 1al4 that If tho,.
talkt fall to produce results by
November, the DaUon·wW 'turn to new
leadenhlp, "not tied ta the policies
add mlstaKes of the pu:t."
"The first priority fortlgn policy ob-
jective L~f our next admlnistr11tion wUI
be to ~Ing an honorable end to the
war !)Vietnam," he pled&td:
fiscated froiµ a Hessian house near
Costa Mesa.
One was a semi-automatic riDe,
police said.
"I think you can say we'll run tests
on some of those items,'' one officer
said today ..
Asked about the possibility of a ...
break in the freeway murder which
occurred at 1:55 a.m. Wednesday,
by the victim's shattered wristwatch,
be said nothing.
lncltead, he crossed two fingers.
* * * Hessians' Bail
-----In Beati~g
At $200,000
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of ll1e D1lty l"Hel Sl1ll
Conducting themselves like choir
boys, 17 members of Costa Mesa's
Hessions motorcycle club waited Jn ci-
ty ja41 today with bail totaling nearly
$200,000, while police obtained com-
plaints charging the gang with assault
with intent to commit murder.
A total of 22 men were rounded up..
--WodA&sQay.T•~0~~~W--·•• •
cyclists were later released and
another was arrested at police head·
quarters today, where be went volWl·
t.arily for questioning.
T0be crowd -probably to be ar·
raigned in Harbor District Judicial
Court this afternoon -is suspected of
the Wednesday night ch•in·)'ilipping
and shooting of an ex·pr~ter at
bi& Costa Mesa )lome. o(
Robert H.-Glaiier, 3(1, 2224
Piaceiua Ave., 1N11hported ill biding ~oday, :reeoverlng from mu ft J p 1 e
lacerations, baseball bat clubbing
bruises and a gunshot wound .in tll.e·
left band. ;
The victim, his wife Barbara, and a
man who shared the apartment, Ron
W. Hilt.a, 23, identified the Intruders.
who burst in alter cutting telephOne
wire.S from the apartment, as the
Hessians.
Police were told that the gang or
ni~ marauders was led by Frank W.
"Wild Mouse," Rundle, 24, Of 1!5
Albert St., Costa Mesa, -)lad
fought with Glazier several days
before.
InvestigaUlrs -who hinted at a new
development in the case some time
this morning -said Glazier is a
former Golden Gloves boxing cham·
pion l'rom New York.
He was employed at the Little Big
O. a bar at 1934 Placentia· Ave., as
bouncer when the alleged fistfight with
Wild Mouse occurred, according to in·
ve'stigatora.
The victim narrowly escape~ death.
Wednesday night during the melee
when an intruder named as Wild
Mouse by witnesses levelled a p!.st.ol at
him and fired .from close range.
The slug -which haa not been found
as yet -ricocheted off a fin ger bone
in the victim's left hand as he shielded
his bloody face, ripped severely by
motorcycle chains.
The weapon, reportedly a .22 caliber
r~volver. has not been found either,
but a small arsenal of 11 guns was
confiscated at 2205 Canyon Drive, a
house occupied by the Hesslaos, just
outside ·eosta Mesa city UmJU.
Sever~ 1 of the motorcycle gang
. (set! _HESSIANS, Page %)
Orange Coat
Weather
Old1Sol wW do hill damdest to
break through that patchy fog
this weekend •. bringing 72-degree
warmth t~ the Orange Coast.
lNStDE l'ODAY
lt'1 link or S'Wfm -Jftttoll11
-for Coronc dtl MClr and New-
port llarbor High perfonmrs in
their version of the South Paci·
f ie. Grab a laugh preserwr ond
come along to the bio aquatic
show lodav in ,,.. WEEKENDER.
" ' ""' .. ,:
" ~I M " " " " " • ..
"
s.cw .... 11·11 '""' , .. ,, --.. -.. n...tw. Wt I I llr w-• ..... ~,, . .,.. ... ... . .. ....
Ari ..... ' -. Dr-. '· ,. ..... , ........... ,. , .... \ , .. .. , .. ..,_ t _ .... =.-I
----. ---· --
" DAILY PILOT . F•ldil, Au,vst t, 1968
~--,Nixon~-
JIWa NAC!I (41') -lllcllln M. • v1c1«7 aad '°'llNCl llilll "l'm Cainl to
~ llt efl '"' a -•lletl• pla1 II ....... '!It mlddll" la
; crusade tor Ibo ~ HoUM today by k..,.._ the Republloan cudlda~ up
.1 P\edtlol not lo undercut Pmldent to -oe 1111 peoe of Plrll llJlll, i Jobolon • Amerlct'& aW•• in the 8-lot, aJlti9o•A bll (9ol w• put. I fl•ld of forelcn allalr1. fy with lack of sleep, Nixon said
'" 'Dle~c:an party'• 19 6 8 Jobnion told'him : "Dick, you have my
: presk!eotlal Cllldl40'4 lald be ii going concr.Wationa and my sympathy." • to 1l!e LBJ rlmcl> in Texas Saturday to Nliofl·telliforcea tlfe gesture·or uni·
~ visit Jobmoa aod to be bdef~_gn the ty bl_ drowJng the idea ot a trip to the
'"-Wlr by Cyrusil:-V,,_,.o top Soviet Ullfon before 1lle November
J..___loei -.mtt No. 2 U.S. eleotlon.
-iiel!Olla-U. Porla ......-tallll. . ~er1hla week, wh'" bil quoit
1 Nixon told n.,.. .... John1oh !or ·th• GOP nmn!Dotlon 1lood
Rupp ol c.111=.s., Nixon an-"lll!dercut" the Oomooratic president -~ IW-<o ra ltlp to or V.8 .• IDIM wbJlo tile Parll ta1U
'R\INla,' po11lblY b • l·o r • qi. · wn oe. . l>lmOOl'lllo coe+.auoe ill ' OlkolfO JU -.! lhat the party plallorm 11.llr Ullo mCllllll. ' . adatlod lhil week !1 critical of tlie Id·
1inM IMD, lie 1114, lie lla4 "rtiuc--nlllillt.Uon Vietnam policy and yet,
tanUy ~ncluded the trip cannot now Nixon said. the Republicans won't
be. taken and will not be taken before undercut eUor1s to negotiate a peace.
the eli!ictlon." · · "We're going to be briefed regular·
Nixon added: "We·bave too· many ly,'"-be -added.
demands that are ura:ent in the United Gov. S.{>'i!'.o T. Agnew "of Maryland,
States to allO'w foreip travel" -the Rep&WliCln vice F,etidenttal .can-
Nixon added be would want to visit didaite, Mood at Nixon's right cturing
other E~an e91>ltal1 as well aid the brief 1ee:&ioa-with · newsmen. He
seaside hotel where be met earlier
w1111 llll lltDllbllcu N•llonal na .... OemmlttM. ll• repor<odly Ulll10d the
committee that activities of various
fund -raising sroups wo.uld b Cl
coordinated ln ttie campajgn.
-But-a committee source said the
candidate did not indicate whether
contributions would be f u n n e I e d
through regular party organlzaion1
such as the finance committee or
through some ne)V group to be &et up
within the Nixon campaign oraaniU·
tJ.on. .
ra11e funds for a prestdentlal cam·
~Uric. eai>i. budfl! 4tractar dur· ing the EJ11nhower adml.niJtration,
was n&med chairman of Ute finance
committee. Stans succeeds Gen.
Lucius Clay Who r e 1 i g n e ~ the
chairmanship lhlJ week and tben en·
dorsed New York Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller for Ute GOP ptetJdentlaJ
nomination.
After Nixon left the closed meeting
the comm1Uee ~ o ritl au e d its
clls<uslfOlll.
A commJttee tource said NI.zoo eave :t•lepl>oaed coecralulat1qm_ 111ureda1 c11Ah!&ed . by GoVi. NeilD!l A.
tbwe wun t nougb tlJne. will accompany Nlxm to the JOhnson
'Ibe dominant theme of tbt GOP .ranch, the former vice prealdent sa.id .
ca,ndldate was t.hat be did not want to Nixon madO his. remarkS in a · f---F t for ~~·1 sm11~ nomlnatlon Rockefaller of N~ York_ '"1d Ronald
·, U .S_. Troops Set !rap
There have been confUct.a lo past
years among regular party groups qid
. 10-<:alled cltizena croup• !ryilli to
a pep talk but 111at no 1pecWc_lundo-
ra!1ms 1oa11 were meotloned •
•
. -N.,.:vietS, Caught in S.oo.r-tk.Jor Faod~-_ . .
--t-llA:IQON (UPI) --tr. S. -troops-. South :Vietnamese allli W.QUodlng 12!L _
~ • · ttiaUcopt!f'I aad r i v e r. The Hue area battles erupted as
"1)veroraft trapped two bands of North thousands of American and South
:v1etnamei8' on the prowl for food near Vietnaineae troops pressed an of·
Nue ThtD'lday Dlgbt and today. fens!ve through the A Sbau Valley.
Anlerlcan head"quartU1 said at least isouthWJISt of ttie old µDperial capital. ;
.iO of Utt enemy were k.llled and 63 Ttle tJghuiig on the ouWdrta: of Hue
.:aptured. indi~ated allled pres1ure bad forced:
In · tbe Mekong Delta. at. the other the mlln body of Nhrth ·Vietnamese
end o1 South Vietnam, the· U. S. com· troops into the hilb away from the
, nand -HJ.d stray fire from two r\ce·produclng coastal plains and that
~ \merlcan patrol boats under VJet the•e men may be desperately short of
: !ong attack hit 1 villare, kUllllg 16. food. Both units trapped on the . ,,,_ --·---
lowland• bLIUllY_o! th• U. S. 10111 Air
.Cavalry Divi1lon were oil Toriifng
missions.
'!We have beaten them pretty badly
ln the past," Col. AIOJtander Bolling
Jr., commander ot the 3rd Brlgade of
tho 112nd· AtrbOrne Division, said today.
'They are prettJ.hungry."
Bollihg ·saiii ·communist tioOps in·
V'&ded the' vt.llage·of Nam Hoa, seven
miles south of Hue, on Thursday, .kid·
naped 10 pea1111t woodcutters and us·
ed them as bo9tages to obtain rice.
... _ --Teacher Trainees fESSIANS AWAIT TRIAL ..•
embers were arrested there, a Identified as Gerald D. English, 31, of Sou·ght by valley
Juster was rousted Crom a bar at 1783 Tuatin Ave., according to Watch S h }
,9200 Beach Blvd . Huntlngion.Beach Commaoder LL Dudley Van Cleve. C 00 District 1 • : • ' Hesaiana: at first arrested, then ind a handful of others were taken JJ1 released Tbunday included Arthur R ·
: ralfk: stops. Barrett, 29 Wllllam R Black 23 and Foonl£dn Valley School Dlstrlct ls
WUd Mouse and bl1 girlfrie.nd were Greg E. El~e 28 all of 2205 ea'nyon :.eeking college graduates w:M would
lITested at Brookhurst Stre.et. and Drive near Cosia Mesa like smne on<.he-job training as
A.dams Avenue in Foun~ Valley .o\la~ released were charles E. Lit· elemem.ary teacbe~. .
early Thursday, when police , and tlejohn, of 102 Princess Lane Santa Under a ~ooperative program ~th ~herif!'s deputies spotted them crulE· Ana, Donald E. Bortlsser, 26, ~ sailor the University of Southern CaUforrua.
1ng toward Costa Mesa. . . . stationed at the u. S. Naval Weapon s prospective ~achers are hired as
tu,esttgators-taid ·Rundle--~'Stattmr.-5~-&ttven--S-cl~.~[oom aide~ for about Sl,l500 to
knowledge of the brutal attack -in' Casper' 24 of 10932 Sidne'y Pl · oflset Hie cost otlWffon:----
whl.cb ~lepbone linet were pri-cut to .,arde~ Gr~e ace, The candidates will •pend five hours
prevent a call for belp -suggesting -z • a day for 10 mooths at the 1chooL Qne
perhaps a rival club Wu involved. o_f these hour! will be devoted to prac·
The Hell'& Angels ' and· the Heasians, ·p b} tice teaching.
vhlcb have ·.eitled tn ·the corta Mesa • ara e' Film Thll !1 the -year Fountain rea in r9cent month&, hi.ve been Valley schools have offered the pro·
?uding off .00. 01;1, police were told. h gram to coll~ge graduates who U'e
The , .. , whlch bri>h tnto th• box-s own on Beach fulflllln~ reqwr""'""' for • .-ard
er's apartment W~sday night. California. el~entary t e a c pin g
however wore H"8.Wn" emblems on , credential.
their ja~kets and~-shouted as the)'. Sa~ s Movie« on the Sand, lnf«mltion and application forms
left the bloody ahambles o(the home:'' lJ:::~JJ!'.~111' .;;m:~n B.!~h ue available at the Fountain Valley
"Don't fight with the ~ans."· Parable ;i-the story of ctiri~e e ~ Dlstrlot ~el o I ~j c e ,
The crowd then roared off with a Also ~ be screened a( the weekly Ta , . and N~ Street!. I ~
burst of exhau1t pipe thunder. showing 00 the beach ue ''The '
The µttest sus~. wested on in· Seasons,'.' a Portrayal of the four B k A formation from secret SOW'COS, was •easons of Canada, and "The River ol ur e lO dclreSS
: Westminster Set
For Civic Center
Move Saturday
Saturday is "D-Day." Ant·llke con·
voys of moving vans will trek from
1We5bnlnster's old Olive Street city
1hall to the shiny, new civic center on
~estminster Avenue east of Beach
•.uoulevard.
; City officials 1ay they expect no in·
terruption of city services during the
long awaited move to new quarten.
However citizem have been asked to
'Use the present police number1 857·
'2511, only for emergency calls. For
root:ine business items and inquiries.
phone 893-4511.
• The 893-4511 number ls the regular
:city hall number. It will reach all city
'departments.
' The flre station also maintains its
old numbers -893-6565 for emergea.
cies &Dd 893-0571 for routine calls.
DAllY PllOI
Hsallallff• ..... C.U,_WI
OIV.JfGl t'OoUT l'U9Ll$HIMO COMPANY
ReLeri N. Weed Pm....,r lolld Pu1Ml51wr
J•ck It. Cvrl:r VI« l',_ldllnf aitd ~1 MINttr
TheM•• K1nil .....
Th•M•I A. M11,,hi11• Mii,...,._ Editor
AIO•li W. ltte, Wllll•111 "••ii A-1•19 tlunll!ll!i:wi 899tll Edllw City Edllw
" ............ Ofl\c9 Jot Ith Sh'1tt
!if111Uf11r M4re11: t.o. •ox 7'0 t2Mt --" ...... e.ct.: am w .... _ ~
Celll9 T~ Wlllt ..., st.-u.. !DFftltA¥111111
) DAllV pri.Or. _.. "9ikfl It ....,... h
I ,. -·-""!=-. _... ................ -.....
........ leld\, c.trll ..... La..-~ """'* _..,. .................... ... . ,......., ...... ~~ ..... , ........................ ... .., ...... ""'--.
' ,,.,.: 1n41 -,,_ ---a e4 .... ,,. Q ..... , ........ ,.
C.li-.... -c.-.... 111•·• ~. --............... . ...., .......... ,. 2 --........ I ............ ,., p .. ·----· ' -------c..w-.. ~ *" c•rrl•r ti.JI =' ~,r;;,,;;.• - -
--. r ..,..,,.. _,
No Retlll'n," a story of the Salmon
River. , · Valley .Young GOP The films are shown beginnlng at
dusk Saturday at the bleachers near
the Huntington Beech Pier.
Crew Holds Picnic
LONG BEACH (UPI) -More thaJl
200 crewmen of the Navy cruiser USS
Northampton, sunk by the Japanese
off Guadalcanal island in World Wa r
II, gathered in Long Beach foc a three·
day reunion today. Survivors of the
sinking holding their first reunion
come from 45 of the 50 states.
AISemblyman Robert Burke (R·
Hlllll!ngton Beach) will addro11 a
meeting of the Huntington Valley
Young Republicans Aug. 21 at the
Sheraton Beach Inn.
Tbe meeting, scheduled for 8 p.m .,
is open to the public.
Burke, who represents the 70th
Assembly District, is seeking re-elec·
tion. He is expected to discuss his
voting record, gun control , crime and
several other topics during the Aug. 21
meeting. A question and answer
period }rill foll~ his address .
Real Grusroois Ciimpalga
'Flowers' !or DunocraUc presidential candidate Sen. Eugene M<l-
Cartby are 1prouUng up in lawns all over area to mart homes of
volunteer workeri in his campaJgn. Petals list "llttrature", 1"talt111
and other Mc\-:arthy materials ava~able at horoe of Mrs. Merilyn
.Olsen (left) o! 16172 Melody Lane, HnnUngton Beach, who is show·
Ing McCartby petiUoos u. Mrs. Mery Ev.ns, also of HunUneton
Beach. . t '
~'
I
OAIL Y rtLOT Stiff P""9
Pitching Tickets
The real 11pitch" here is for tickets -both for Huntington Beach's
Night with the Angels and for the big Bob Hope show for the USO,
both to be staged at Anaheim Stadium. Miss Huntington Beach
·(Jellye Blackard) is plugging both events. She's getting help here
from Chamber of Commerce' Manager Dale Dunn (catcher) in sell-
ing tickets for Angel-Senators game to be played next Thursday.
Kenny McCray, 13, registers a Jittle pessimism. about the pair's
playing ability. But nobody doubts th ey'll sell tickets to the ball
game and to the Hope sho\~, to be held Saturday night in Anaheim.
County Hears
Racism ·charge
In Employment
By JACK BROBACK
Of "" °"'~ '"'' '"" Racial dfscrlm!naUon in Orange
County boualng and em#layment was
chll'led Thltt'sday before a ineeUnt of
the Sllte Fair Employment Pracllces
CommlHiDll.
. Rei;re1enta~.ve1 of minority Jl'OUps
took turns makint general char1es
agalnat county employers a n d
landlords.
James Allen, chairman of the
Oren1e County Fair Housing CouncU,
told commlsaloners -dJ.1crlm1n1tlon
being practicod in the collllty la "a
capsule version ol what ii belnJ prac-
ticed Jn the larger urban areas, but Jt
ts the same kind of vicious attitude."
The FEPC meeting in the Santa Alla
City Council chamber• wu the nJ.ne-
year--0ld commission's first 1eu1oa Jn the county.
Executive Officer Peter Johnson
said during that period the com·
mission has received 107 complaint. of
job discrimination and 24 of housing
dlscrimlnattoo from rftldeoil ol tbe county.
Allen complained that aeven housing
complaints processed recently through
.. -1.heJ'.E~C were Jost in part ~due to
lack of sensitivity" of FEPC Jn.
vestlgaton to minority problems.
Ted Heilser, chairman ol the
Orange County branch of the NattOlfll
Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP) also cbarg·
ed housing and job discrimination.
Heisser said that Negroes in the
county are victimized by employers
who offer them "only those }obs that do not pay enough to live on.'
California Real Estate AssoclatJ.on
vice president Nicholas Barletta of
Santa Ana refuted tbe claims of
discrimination in housing and employ-
ment in his business.
WAREHOUSE SALE!
Hf!HTAGE
1 "-J T9Me
JO.JI Sl-.etke
1 C.at.N T.W.
JhS6 Wll. & ••Ill
ltlG.
209.
165.
I
SALi
99"
99"
FANTASTIC VALUES
NEWPORT STORE ONLY
DRUEL
1 Cocktclll Tobie
4hlll2
1 SteJ TGble
"-261Z6
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.I
Lag~:Da Bea~h
. • VOL 61, NO. 19 r, 3 SECTIONS, :.a PAGES rAGUNA BEA"CA, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, '1968-• TEN CENTS
N_ixon Visit ·LBJ
• --·
For Vietnam Briefing_~"··,:
Policeman
Quits Force
Mt~r Fight
A probationary Laguna Beach police
officer has turned in his resignation by
request iafter an off-duty fight with a
~year-old man.
Police Chiet Harry Labrow said Of·
!icer Art.bur Purk:aiser, 'IT, turned in
his written resignation Wednesday at
Labrow's request f o 11 owing a
departmental Investigation.
Purk:hel.ser had issued the youth a
traffic ct talion and· bad feeling
resulted. 'The officer assert.edly went
to the unideutif'4ed young man's home
Friday and a fight took place in the
yard.
~khei.ser is now Umping. He
r\'wrtedlY ~led the skin from his -.. ceet on cement during the scuffle.
The y,iJtlJ l"BS not inl~-. A Laguna J>Oliceman since January,
the officer bad been named in
previoua complaints. However, they
were found not sustained i n
'departmental in v es ti g at i<> n.
Purkhelser was formerly a reserve
sheriff's deputy in Los Angeles County
for about a year.
Questioned about tile incident, Chief
Labrow said today, "Statements ti:1ve
been made recenUy that cqnpJaints
.against members ol tb1a department
were not adequately investigated. The
outcome of this investigation should
show that When the complajni. are
valid, appropriate action iJ taken~"
San Oemente
City Council
Blocks Hippies
Sao Clemente c i t y councilmen
Wednesday pasSed an emergency or-
dinance aimed at blocking any pos·
sible hippie invasions of the city. The
ordinance is effective immediately.
Prohibited is sleeping on the beach
after sundown, sleeping in vehicles
including campers, except at author·
i7.ed camp si~ and public beach parks
designated fO'f' camping and sleep~
or camping on public property, or pr1·
vat.ely owned vacant lots.
'l'he council also tightened munici·
pal Jaws covering issuance and revo•
caLion of business licenses.
Last month police arrested the OWTI·
er ol a psyChedelic gift shop for sell·
ing an alleged pornographic post.er
to a 13-year-old girl.
A petition by 700 residerits asked for
the revocation of the shop's business
license and the city's inability to act
swiftly on the request prompred the
new ordinance, according to city offi·
cial1.
Stork Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market
trading slowed to a walk this sf.
ternoon as prices dee.lined irregularly.
(See quotations, Pages S.9).
The market was mixed at ttle start
but softened gradually as bids dried
up.
~ .• ·'. ,_ .... "•, 1 , .UPIT~, .<---~· -. . .. ,.,
GOP TEAM 11ASKS IN APPLAUSE CLIMAXING CONVENTION
Spiro-Agnew, Rich.-rd Nixon Listtn to Miami's Last Hu rrah
Nixon Calb; for Drive
Against Crime , Violence
MIAMI BEACH !UPI) -Richard
M. Nixon today led his Republican par-
ty into an election campaign aimed at
satisfy;ng a national hunger for peace
at home and abroad.
It was a·n orthodox Republican Nix·
on, who took a hard line toward put·
ting an end to violence a n d
lawlessness in ' America. But it also
was a new Nixon. who took a soft line
toward the Soviet Union instead of
depicting communism as the root of
all evil. ·
Nixon began his speech by recalling
he had accepted the same nomination
eight years ago. There will be a dif·
ferent ending this time, he said,
because "This time we are going to
win."
He could get applause with lines
dating back to the early weeks of his
presidential primary campaign, such
as-he wanted more people on payrolls
and fewer on welfare rolls. And he
could bring the entire convention to its
feet cheering and applauding with his
often used punch line:
"I say that when respect for the
Unlted States has fallen so low that a
fourth rate military power. Uke North
Kor'?a, will highjack a United States
naval vessel on the high seas it is time
for new leadership to restore respect
for the United States around the
world.
"America i, in trouble today not
because her people have failed but
because her leaders have fa tied," he
said. "\Vhat America needs are
leaders to match the greatness of her
people."
l-fe said new leadership clearly is
needed when the world's strongest na·
tion is tied down by four years of war
in Vietnam, when the world·s ri chest
nation cannot manage its o w n
economy. when the nation with the
greatest respect for law is "plagued
by unpre<:edented lawlessness'' and
when the American president cannot
travel without fear or hos t i I e
demonstrations.
the remedy, he said, "is a complete
housecleaning of those respon~ible for
our failu!'e and a complete r~appraisal
of America's policies in every section
of the world."
Of ·Vietnam. he said that military,
economic and diplomatic power have
never been used so ineffectively. He
promised to say nothing in his cam-
paign that would damage the Paris
peace talks. But he said that if thos•
talks fail to produce results by
November, the nation will turn to new
leadership, "not tied to the policies
and mistakes of the past."
"The firs~.Priority foreign policy ob-
jective or our next administration will
be to bring an honorable end to the
war in Vietnam," he ple<lged.
Arch Be-~ch Building Ban
A moratorium sought on buJkling in
[Aguna'a Arch Beach Heights because
o1 c<S8pool f>Toblema has been d<!la,ed
pending 1 report from the Orange
County Heal11! Departmeot.
Mayer Glenn Vedder said bee.Ith
auttioriUes are working on tbe pro.
b\em and may come to the conclusion
tflat a sewer district must be formed
for the areoa.
The moratorium wa11 sought by
Pblllp D. May, chairman protem ol
tlle Arcb Bead\ Helghta ASIOd>tioo ol
Property Ownen.
lie staled In • Iott«:
-Increased dwtllfng eonstructl.on on
25 by 100.foot hlllsiae lot& has resulted
in rows of cenpoob spaced about 20o
feel apir\.
I '
-The county (befon anne~at ionl
detennilled nearly six year1 ago that
cesspool density had reached satura·
ti on.
-County requirements for cesspool
installation were more stringent t.h;A
the city's oon:teltmes requiring two or
more for a single dwelling wherea1
under city standards a single cesspool
can· serve as many .as t h r e e
bathrooms. a garbage di$pcsal and
normal drainage.
-Older cesspools ere leaklng into
streets and natural nmof'f terrain:
-'The hillside shale, clay and un·
derground springs and pools is not
proper for the hjgh density of
tt&SflOOL!.
-A typhoid epidemic ' we p t
'
Aermalt. Swili.crland. several years
ago where there was a similar over·
density o{ cesspools on hillsides.
William E . Harenvious. a member
of the proerty owners' board soid he
felt the cesspool saturation point had
been reached or soon will be.
Roben Kellogg. 1034 Katella, s.aid he
built a home with three bedrooms six
year& ego (when the area was not a
part ol tl>e city).
lie said h< had been requir<d to
send down three holes (cesspools) '¥1
feet deep. He said builders are now
allowed to punch down 153. "lla1 the
land become more poroua since we
joined tile city?'' he uked.
Drops Plans·
Of Visiting
Soviet Union
MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Richard M.
Nixon set off on a new election
crusade for the White House today by
pledging not to undercut President
Johnson or America's allies in the
field of foreign affairs.
The Republican party's 19 6 8
president:j{l.l candidate said he is going
to the LBJ rDnCh in Texas Saturday to
visit Johnson and to be briefed on the
Vietnam war by Cyrus R. Va.pee , a top
Jolmson adviser and No. 2-U.S. -
negotiator at the Paris peace, talks:
Nixon told rrewsmen J o h n s o n
telephoned congratulations Thursday
night for Nixon's smashing nominz.tion
victory and assured him "I'm going to
play it straight down the middle" in
keeping the Republican candidate up
to date cm the pace of Paris talks.
Beaming, although his face was puf·
fy with lack of sleep, Nixon said
Jolmson told him: "Dick, you haVe my
congratulations and my sympathy."
Nixon reinforced th~ gesture of uni·
ty by dropping the idea of a trip to the
Soviet UnJon befoie the November
lSee NIXON, Pace !)
Early Remains Sought
-At the salne general locaiion where remains of oldest man in· the
Americas was found 35 years ago, diggers are looking for more
remnants of the Laguna Man. Dr. Joseph Tomehak and Jane Ber-
wester are digging about 10 yards from where a skuH of 17 ,000-year-
old man was found. So far, at the 255 St. Ann's Drive location, the
group has found numerous small bones. People in background are
sifting through dirt for more clues.
Half Loop Tie?
County Youth
Ever bear or a hal! league tied for
----.. ~~place at tbe-.fJld..df _the. seuon?
playing the Firemen, the last flace
team. Should the Realtors win, i will
mean three teams, or haJ1 the league,
tied for first •
Dressed -Doivn
. For Wearing Flag
By J~CK CHAPPELL
Of IN 0.111 l"lltt Stiff
A Buena Park yo!Jth who COOJ1hined
fashion with patriotism was arrest~d
Thursday in San Juan CapistJ-ano for
defWng the American F1ag, '
Deputy Sheriff Robert Schlice said
he found Nathan P . Gilgore, 18, clad in
a fashiooo.ble red, white and blue,
Nehru·style shirt made by his mother.
The arresting officer said Gilgore told
him he loves the American Flag and
thE.t's why he wore it.
The officer said he observed Gilgore
at about 1 p.m. Thursday slumped
over ·the wheel of his car off the side
of the road at Junipero and Cer:-o
Roads in the mission city. When the
deputy stopped to see if anything was
wrong, Gilgore told him that he was
going to San Diego when he got tired
and pulled off the roOO to sleep.
Mrs. Louise Gilgore, the youth's
mother. told !he DAILY PILOT she
mad·e the shirt for her son after coh·
suJUn.g Buena Park police.
Accordlng to Mrs. Gilgore, someone
in the Buena Park Police Department
told her it was all right to use the Flag
for a shirt.
She used the starred field for the
sleeves and tl1e stripes for ttie body of
the mod shirt.
Gilgore entered Orange County Jail
at about 2 p.m . .I-lours later, sans ~rt ,
he emerged from the jail under '190
bail. The shirt was held as evidence.
The courts of Orange County
already have ruled this year that you
coo't use the American Flag for a win·
dow curtain, a beach towel, or an
automobile seat rover.
Now they will be called upon to
decide whether the height or fashion
shOuld remain rm the flag pole.
Delayed
Another man said, "evldtntly some
of your Inspectors aren't up to souU in
the city." .
Clyde Z. Springe, city planhing and
bulldlng dire&-· said percolation
tests tire required before building is
allowed. Ji"e said be suspected t.bat the
area would not be able to sustain
many more cesspools. He urged no
n1oraloritun :.:nUl Health Department
findings are in .
One spectator said that he bad oaly
seen one percohrtlon test pe:!ormed 1n
two yeara. The test meaa:ures the time
tt take• a given amount or water to
dJ.saP.pear into tbe toll. Councilmen
reeell'ed ~nd filed the property
owner'• lttter. ·
Tbat may happeo -Sht at the
Laguna each lUgh School baseball
play 90m~ . se. <fiamond~_,, mft Huth League
. As ·~11 ··'.~f~.~ t :now , two teams
have cUndied the number one spot,
Kiwanis and the· Boys' Club. Both
teams have a 9-6 record to end the
season. Tonight at 5:30 o'clock the
Realtors,· with an 8-6 record, will be
At a special board meetin&: Thlll'>
day evening, it was decided that the
tied teams will not bold a plaYott. Tbe
reason: give the kids, and · their
families, a shot at vacation before
school begins. So, duplicate trophies
will be di stributed to all the players on
first place teams.
Which may be half the league.
Trustees Name Delegates
To Study City Recreation
Two school trustees have been
chosen to act as representatives of the
school district in a joint city·schoot
study of L.aguna Area rec.Teation
needs.
Dr . Norman Browne. president of
the school board, and Robert Turner
were named to ttie committee to meet
with representatives of the city.
Browne. a looal dentist, ls presently
associated with the .Junior Chamber o{
Commerce. fie has been on the board
or dearons of the Oongregationhl
Church, and has been on the school
Barge Off Aliso
Not for Public
The barge off Aliso Beach is not a
surfer convention. Nor is it a
chartered fishing boat out of Newport.
The South Laguna Sanitary District
has employed Orea Diving Service (o
re-stabilize the sewer ouUaU line,
which extends 1.800 feet into the
Pacific. .
The barge I~ working as· a plaUorm
from which divers.ate .placjng a. sand·
rock b&llast around the line. Tiet.es
have erioded the .Previous ballaSt, and
this work ls .bejng done to prev~nt the
line from brea1dng. The .cost of U1e
project Is Sl!,000.
The pubUc -, inch~di.ng_ surters .and
fi shermen -Is asked to SJAY clear ol.
the barge. ·
LAGUNA. COPPERS
HOLD CHOPPERS
Chew on thls one.
The Laguna Beach Police Depart·
ment has a Cbmplete sel Of upper and
lower deQtwres, by ·guni.
r.ie found ltem waa turned In 'tQ
police by William Wood of -259 Pearl
St. Ofncers AM Wood fol.ind Uttm on a
ftont lawn at m Canyon Acres t>Mve:
PoUce wiU (l'.la'dly re.le~ them to
the owner.
-Ray L aw son, supervisor of
Turner is vice president o( the
Rotary Club of Lagiina Beach in
charge of youth activities, a director
of the Laguna Beach Board of
Realtors. and a director of the Orahge
County District of the Ctti.ldren's
Home Society of California.
T,he pUJllose of this eommltt.ee is to
reooh, by Feb. l of 1969, suggesUons
on how to improve the present recrea-
tion program.
In other action at TueSdoy night'1
board meeting:
-The resignation of Mrs. Roberta
llarrretiaux, district nurse, was ac·
cepted.
-Ray Law soQ., rupcrvlsor o f
maintenanet>, ope r at Io n s and
transportation, was assigned a district
car to use ·as tran~rtation to and
from v.ork and to use on the job"'..
Orange Coa•t
~-, w e a ti.cir ·
Old ~I wiU. do hjs damdest to
break through that. pat'chy fog
this wee~enil ,'t>r;41'grng 7¥tt&r~e
warmth to the Orange Coast.
)NS IDE TODA Y
It's sink or swim -UttraUr1
-for Corona dtt Mar and Ncw-
part li'arbCJr High 'perfvnntra in
t~eir vertlen of tM ·So14J.h Paci-
fic. Greb a laugh preserver and
CQme along to &ht big aqMOtsc
show today in Ult WEEKENDER.
I'~ ..
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W& • tic ...,.....,., ' --. ::.=· ... • +•• ~· "lllM 1+.IS ... _ . , o-.... .
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i
" '
' 2 DAILY PILOT Fr1~. Aug1at '· 19Y
Saddle'ba~k Short~ ·O.f A~~reditat_ion
Ill' 'J'llOMAll JlOlmJNE-°' .. ~ , .. Slll'I ••••••••Jm11r-cr 11 ••• road lo bocomlnl a ........tul achool
bu! needa a larpr llbnry and • belier
roW'lded cun1culum.
That .b the oPln.lon of an examiner
tor an accredltln1 commission who
· review• coue~,c.fam' ahd gives or
wilhholdl an INl of approval
Hessians'
Bail-Near
$200,000
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI .. OIMr ,_....,
Coaduc\!ns lbemoelvu like dJoir
boy1, 17 inember• of Cotta Meu ''
Helalans motorcycle club waited ln ci-
ly jail today w!lb boll totaling nearly
'200,000, while police obtained com-
plAlnll charging the gang wilh a11aull
wltb. tment to comm!t murder. .
A total of-22 men were rounded up
Wednesday, but several of the outlaw
cyclists were later released and
.another was arrested at police head·
quarters today, where he went volwt·
tartly for que1tionlng.
The crowd -probably to be ~
raigoed in · Harbor District Judicial
Court th.la afternoon -js suspected <Ji
1he Wadnes<lay nigh! chain-\ltipping
.and shooting of an ex-prizefighter at .
lU Costa 'Mesa home.
Robert H. Glazier, 30, of 2224
Placentia Ave., was reported in hiiding
today, recovering from ni ult i p 1 e
laceraUons, baseball bal clubbing
bruises and a gunshot wound in the
left band ...
The victim, his wU'e Barbara, and a
man who shared the apartment, Ron
W. Hilts, 23, identified the intnlders,
who burst in after cutting tel.-"'"''"-...
wi ...... ~ '"Oill the apartment
Court Rejects
CA TV challenge . .
To FCC · Rules
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) -The Bib U.
$. drc\lit court of appeals 'n!W'Sday
upheld tlie right Of ttie ji'ederal Com·
munkations Commission to regulate
'cooununity antenna t e 1 e v i s i o n
syllllems.
The court denied a challenge to FCC
regulation& by five CATV ouUetii who
68id the FCC had no authority to
regulate them undei" the Com·
munlcations Act of 1934.
CA TV uses large aritennas to ~ck up
distant TV signals, then magnify and
di:Stribute them to subscribers by
cable for a monthly charge.
The U. S. Supreme Court in June
uphe1d the agency's powers to
regulate CA TV under the act, but did
not ruJe on specific regulations.
In denying the challenge, the ap-
pellate court affirmed FCC rules ths.C
CATV carry local instead of network
programs when requested to do so.
The court also upheld an FCC rule
that a bearing be held before 5t8tions
built alter Feb. 15, 1986. are penni1iled t.o operate in any o{ the 100 largest
citi~ with satisfactory ~on.
"Protection ot ttle public interest in
the televisloo field is clearly a
responslbility of tile commi6sion under
ttie Federal Communications Act," the
ruling •aid.
The regulations were attacked by
CATV outlets in Alice, Tex., Toledo,
Ohio, San Diego, and two in Litit.le
Rock, Ark.
DAILY PILOT
i..-..... uw.r.I•
OllANGE COAST Pt.llLl~I~ COMl"ANY
l':eMrt N. Weed
Prealdttll -"' Pub1L9hlf
Jae~ I':. C111ley
Vb Prsldmt .,,,. 0.-el IMMlltf
n.0111•1 "•••ii .....
T~o111•• A. tr.411rph;11•
MtnMlflO f:llltor
Rithard P'. Nell
L111111a ~ C.ltJ EOllOI'
Pa11I Niue11
Ad~rllt! ...
Dlr«tor r" ...,._.._.OfAce
222 fer•d )...,.
Malll119 Addr•n: P.O. IOll ''' 92652
O*< OflkM
I
• ,~ ~) '
~ II -I -redllatlon
to aaauro that it bll a quality
ICJdomlc pro....,, S\IPt ?red IL
B,..._ oaJd. He no4ed that four-raar
collePI nqulre trander otudani.
come from an ICC:l..iilld ocltoo~
Henry T. TYier, examiner for the
Western AssoclaUon of Schools .and
Colleges found Saddleback to be doing
anough lblnp rigbl to grul !be new •
juolar cellop ~I !Wul. 'Iba ciaulllcallan II VOii •-11 not
yet la operatioe w allow evldell."t
or -plannln1 and polen!lal lor ·~ !aWlr fllll accrodllatloD. Howevw, tbl n•mtw· t.llol),lnled
• ftt crltlcllma. Ila """""' tllal to receive accreditation "substantially
greater library apace muat be JU'O"
vided and 1trong evidence must be
vtded and attong evidence m.uat be
HESSIANS REUNITED -Eight motorcycle club members among
22 rounded up Wednesday from around West Orange County; are
photographed en masse at Costa Mesa City ·Jail befor e being bOoked
on suspicion of assault with intent to commit m urder. Standing (from
left) are ThOmas Hille, John Dore, Philip Cerasco and Robert Har-
mon. Squatting (from )eft) IUJnald Murdock, James Larson, Way-
mon Grisent). and-Robert Henderson. Nine others were in custody
as well today, awaiting arraignment.
From Page l
NIXON ...
.
_,_ of !he intenUoa to moUDI a truly
ccmprtbenslve program."
Ba aotod, '"ibon -to bo -
-lo thlU tllal tho .... (la -Ibo carrlculum II pWmed to be a com· .. -,. one, in reality 11 ii Uke1¥ to nmaiD heavily acadtmic."
He alao dbapproved of the library
for the temporary campus to open this
fall, wblcb will seat only 40. "Such a
minimal flldlily ii cau1t lor ""''*"·
.. pec1a11y In view ol !be largoly
ac1demic offerings," be ob1ervtd.
Tho root of hll !!ndtnp in a rtpOtl lo
the accredJ.tiol commisllon were
largely pra!Mworthy.
He also offered thl!: comment:
"The 5addleback Colleae develop.
ment. con1Jdering ita stroog financial
support base and evident community
aupport ea well, ought to move ahead
In eood fuhlon. There appear to have
been, howevtt, a number of ap-
prehemlona repnllnJ Iii pro&rus,
which one plckl llJ> in eonversatioq
over the atate. Pinpointing the ac· ·
curacy of these is difficult, and they
may be comj>lt!Oly unlOUllded. This Is
tO ~ liQPed. Fri>ni "611 iny viii! was
able to es"8bll.sh, I believe 1ucb fears
need not prove valid."·
U.~. Troops Set Trap
N. Viets ~Caught in, Search' for Food
SAIGON (UPI) -U. S. troops
aboard beUcoptert and r t v e r
hovercraft trapped two bands of North
Vietnamese on the prowl for food near
Hue Thursday nllhl and _, _
American headquarters said at teast
50 of the enemy were killed and 63
captured.
Complaints S{rout Anew
On High Cost of Weeding
'!'be 1qh cost ol weeding billy have coot Iola le11 m"'1ey."
l.egwM Beadt was a illDrn in Ille city Engineer Bmad Syfan said be did
councllJ aide Wednesday. not bid, but believed it would have cost
"''"" cleaned lols ol lats and it him '28,000 llo do !be wort. '!be con-
seem .. awfully bi#J to me,., said John tractor recelv~ '22,246 and there were
Gabriel quectioning dty bid pro. $6,346 worth of overtiead costs for a -~ ·-b __ , cleared tolal ol '28,82S. . '--=-ute1 w ave w~• · An Arch Beach Heights resident
The city bad budgeted '18,000 for oornp1ained that then .seemed to have
contractual services from A P r i l been no weed abatement there. He
1ihrough July but !be weeding actually warned Iha! lire could burn ."quite a
COllt '22,246 plUI overtiead. few hemes ...
Mayor Glenn Vedder said when the Sweany s.Ud the fin! maraball felt
city cleared weeds last year with .u. d persona supplied by the state employ-u.iere were a equate Lire breaks in the
ment service they were not satWac· ar;:·0 tory. Hence the work was contracted. . . DeBelle, 868 Bluetard canyon
He said he fell the situation would be Drive, said of his area:
better next year. "U ttlat canyon doet get on fire
In the Mekong Delta, at the other
•end ol South Vietnam, the U. S. com.
mand said stray fire from two
American patrol boat& under ' Vie t
Cong attack hit a village, killing 16
South Vietnamese and wound.log 12.0.
The Hue area battles erupted a s
thousands of American 3.nd South
Vietnamese troops pr~saed an of·
fensive throUgh the· A Shau Valley
southwest of the old imperial capital.
The fighting on the outskirts of 1-Iue
indicated allied pressur.i: had forced
the main body of North Vietnamese
troops into the hills away front the
rice.producing coastal plains an<( that
these men may be desperately short of
fOOd. Both units· trapped on ' the
lowlands by tmits of the U. S. lOlst Air
Cavalry Division were on faragin·g
missions.
"We have beaten them pretty badly
in the ·past," Col. Alexander Bolling
Jr., commander of the 3rd Brigade of
the 82nd Airborne Division, said tOd.ay.
"They are ire tty hun.gry."
Bolling said Communist troopg in·
vaded the village of Narn Hoa, seven
miles south ot Hue, on Thursday, kid·
nraped 10 pea~t woodcutters and \IS·
ed them as hostages, to ob~ain rice.
"It's not next year, it's now," said ttiere won't be eay eto~ing it. Tbe election. Committee. He reportedly assured the Gabriel. ones (bomee) on the north side and
Earlier this week, when his quest committee that activities of various J oseph Sweany, director of public my &lde will all go."
Mr. Salveson
Service ·Slated Ooundlmen eutborlzed ttie extra for the GOP nomination st o o d fund·raising groups would b e worka, said three cootractors bid on M,9&4 and confirmed the aseesamerrt.
challenged by Govs. Nelson A. coordinated in the campaign. tbi,~ed,work and the city selected the low Thore were no protests from property F.tineral services will be held Satur·
Rockefeller of Ne w York C)nd Ronald But a committee source sald the O'WDerS of U:teir t n d iv i d u a I day for Arnold Elmer Salveson of Sweany said that a county ordinance Laguna Beach, a retired fonnean for Reagan of california, Nixon an-candidate did not indicate whether agalolt bu.n*1g bad forced used hand usemnentl. Pc:cific Pipe· Line Co. "''ho died
nounced he was considering a trip to contributions would be fun n e 1 e d labor on hllls.ides where machinery '".... \Vednesday. He was 68.
Russia, possibly b e for e the thr gh gul-part g · ""'1 could oot be usde. The Rev. Baird Coftin will officiate Democratic convention ln Chicago ou re -Y or aruzuw.ODll Crew· H Id P ' ' later this month. &uch as the finance cormnlttee or He mentioned that post cards had 0 8 _ l CWC at ·the 2 p.m. services, robe held at the beeo sent out to owners of weedy lots Laguna Beach Fwte~l Home Olapel. Since then, he said, he had "reluc· through some new group to be set up giving thftil the option of clearing LONG BEACH (UPI) _ Moce than Interment will be private.
tantly concluded the trip cannot now within the Nixon campaign organiza. tllelr own kits. A report from Sweany 200 crewmen of the Navy cruiser USS Mr. Salveson is survived by his
be taken and will not be taken before tion. noted. tDat tbe cost per lot last year Northampton, .aunt by the Japanese wife , Doris, cf the family home, 218
the election." · · A..1 -'l'bis ••• '· ff Guad I ···• "la·' in W Id W St h Mr Nixon added: "We have too man Th_ere have been-conflicts m past averagC\.I """"' yes, _, p&reeui o a caua.a ., uu or ar Wave .; two dwg ters, s. Jennie ·~-gul art od were cleared at an average COit of '60 II, gatt)!ered in Long Beach f« a three· L. Burnaugh of Granada HiDs and demands that are urgent in the United--)'ears among re ar P Y groups a each. day reunion today. Survivors of the Mrs. J oy L. Griswold of Sepulveda ; a
States to allow foreign travel." so.called citizens grou.ps trying to Said Gabriel: "If you had done it sinking holding their first reunion sister, Ruth KWlZ of Minnesota; and
Nixon added he would wMt to visit raise funds for a presidential cam· with ctty employes, I feel tt would come ·rrom 45 of the 50 states. five grandcbildren. other European capitals as well and paign. •· -;--...;:......:...:_;,. _ _;_.:_ __________ _;,._;__;_; ___ .,::.:...;::..;:::::;::::;=..:=.. ____ _
there wasn't enough time. Maurice Stans, budget director dur·
The dominant theme of the GOP ing the Eisenhower administration,
candidate was that he did not want to was named chairman of the finance
"undercut" the Democratic president committee, Stans succeeds G en • or U.S. allies while tile Paris talks Lucius Clay who res i g n e d the
were on. chairmanshlp ~s week and then en·
He noted that the party platform darsed New · York Gov. Nelson A.
adopted this week is critical of the ad· Rockefeller for the GOP presidential
ministration Vietnam policy and yet, nomination.
Nixon said, the Republlcans won't Arter Nixon Jett the closed meeting
undercut efforts to negotiate a peace. the committee cont in u e d its
"We're going to be briefed regular· discussions.
Jy," he added. A c ommittee. source said Nixon gave
Gov. Spiro T. Agnew of Maryland, a pep talk but that no specific fund ·
the Republican vice presidential can· raising goals were mentioned.
clidate, stood at Nixon's right dwing
the brief session with newsmen. fie
v.'ill accompany Nixon to the Johnson
ranch, the fonner vice president saJd.
Nixon made his remarks in a
seaside hotel where he met earlier
with the Republican National Finance
Guards Planning
End of Summer
Demonstrations
There's going to be a lot of actioo on
Main Beach in Laguna this Saturday
-more action than usual.
The Lifeguard Department i!i plan·
ning its end-of-the·su.mmer demonstra·
lions, to begin at 9: 15 a .m .. and end.,
about 11 a .m.
To be included in the two hours of
act.ion are mock rescues , Coast Guard
helicopter and Harbor P a t r o l
demonstrations. a display of ljleguard
equipment, and a relay amphibious
race betW~ the .Jifeguards. -·
Probably the most thrilling spec·
tat.or event vdll be the mock rescues.'
whidl Include an amphl biou1
helicopter dipping into the water to
pick . up victims. The Hart>or Patrol
will also enter the action, wltfl their
boat assisting the hell copter.
'I1he most gruelin g event will be the
rour· eight-man tee.m relay races,
which will ha~ lid'eguards board
paddling and swimming approximate-
ly 150 yards into the ocean and back.
board for over three years.
BLACK LIGHT
PAI NTS TONI GHT
A demonstration of black light pNn·
Ung will be given tonight at the
Laguna Beach Splinter Festival, 346
N. Coast Hwy.
Artist Alice Higgs will be palnllng
on a four by el,iht. foot canv111, under
a black Ught 1'18 paint •he will UM
ahows up best under the eerie light.
The demonstraUoo 11 &:Chedultd to
beglo at 9 p.m.
Art Festival
Board Seating
Deadline Today
Candidates stood two deep at noon
today for three Festival of Arts board
se-ats.
Latest to file was O. E. ''.Bud"
Schroeder, local manager of the
Automobile Club of S out her n
California. Today is the deadline.
Other petitions had not been returned
by ROOD.
Other candidates are William D.
Keeley. former Laguna Beach COOO·
cilman; Joan Short, Festival ex-
hibitor: Clarles BeauvaiS, Fegtlval
exhibitor; and Robert Turner, school
board trustee.
Votes of the Festival memberslMp ln
Orange County will be counted at the
September meeting.
The seat.s are currenUy held by
h1artin, Marshall Clark and Stuart
Durkee. Durkee said he will not &eek
re-election to the nine4Dember board.
Burglars Bust
Boardwalk Bar
An estimated $836 worth of -sound
equipment was taken in a burglary at
Laguna's Boardwalk Bar (formerly
the Bare.foot) at 111 Ocean Ave.
Larry F. BlodgeU of Anaheim
reported 1he tbeCt Thunday. Police
Sgt. Wen~ell Faulk .said the thief fore·
ed his way into !he buildin& through
louvered wlndows. Taken were a
fender tw\n amplif i er and
mi~es.
In another theft, Mrs. Louise
Turner, 343 Emerald Bay, reported
tbtt a German camera, v a I u e
unknown, bad been taken from the
11Jov• compartmeol of her car.
Herl H. Lovelady, 2861 Zell Drive, lip.ned !lie theft ol '110 cash and a
movie camera in the burglary of bis
home.
WAREHOUSE SALE!
FANTASTIC VALUES
I NEWPORT STORE ONLY I
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Three· Killed iri Riot
Gunfire Rips Miami in Violent Nigh~
LI BERTY CITY WAR -Miami police sergeant takes cover with
drawn pistol behind traffic light stanchion in predominantly Neg~o
Liberty City section of town. Crumpled form of Negro woman at his
feet is apparently one of many victims of street fighting which
erupted Wednesday in area and has continued sporadically.
NY Rift Widens
Rocky, Lindsay Drifting Apart
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -The rift
between New York's two top
Republicans, Gov. Ne Iso n A.
RockefeUer and Mayor John V.
Lindsay, grew wider at the Republican
National Convention.
\Vhile Lindsay "A'Orked htrd to
secure the presidential :inmination for
Rockeieller, it became apparent that
the two New Yorkers t ave charted
quite different courses in th e
Repub!lcan Party. '
The ~plit between the governor and
the mayor began soon aftl!r Lindss.y's
election when Lindsay made his first
trip to Albany to teU Rockefeller that
N!!w Yo:-k City was not getting its
share of a!d from the .stair.
It \Videoed serious.y earlier t~is
ye:ar during the New "fork City
~arbage strike ""'hen Rockefeller
refused to btcio: Lindsa~ .. s strong st.and
against the sanitation :.inion and call
out the 1\ational Guard.
:\t 1;;e convention the tension
between rhe two began again when
Lindsay arrived Sunday. Alresdy
there was a drive afoot boosting the
New York l\1ayor for the vice
presidential nomln(\lion.
\Vherever Lindsay went to speak to
delegates about backing Rockefeller
there was t.<>lk about the mayor run-
ning for the number two spot.
J{ockefeller's staff was peeved. They
felt the mayor was hurting the
governor. Lindsay realized that it was
not t.he time to talk about his own
future and silenced the drive.
During the next three days Lindsay
worked around the clock for the
governor vnd proved an effective
spokesman for the Rockefeller camp.,
But after the governor's defeat,
Lindsay was thrown back into the
spotlight
Rockefeller wanted Lindsay to
Priests Protes t
Papal Preaching
ST. PAUL. Minn. (UPI) -Seventy.
1ix priests of the Mlmeapolis-St. Paul
archdiocese say the t.eat!hings at ttie
Catholic church on birth control "have
In sc)me m11Tlaget: led to infidelity and
woman's loss of respect for herself as
a person."
The priests said TiltJrsday in a li!tter
to St. Paul Archbishop Leo Binz ttwlit
Pope Paul VJ's recent encycUcal on
birth control denied a woman "tier
role as an equal partner in sexual
love."
The priests said I\ wat' difficult to
1ccebt the pope's encrttlical '"until the
questions raised by the ex..perience or
married people b.ave been resolved.''
I
I I
UPI Ttle•he ..
LINDSAY, ROCKY RIFT WIDENS
New Y~rk M•yar Pitched far Unity
divorce himself entirely from the con-
vention and the delegates that had re·
jected his "new lcadersh.ip" for the
"old politics."
Instead Lindsay took the course,that
Rockefeller has never found it easy to
Iollow wtlen he loses -party unity.
Lindsay's first move for unity was
to agree to second the nomination of
Gov. Spiro T. Agnew of ri1aryland .
This was a significant act of party
harm.ony since Lindsay had been high
on Richard M. Nixon's list of possible
running mates but had been rejected
by conservatives.
RockefeUer was reportedly "a little
disturbed" that Lindsay agreed to se-
cond Agnew, Who had played a key
role iJI deriyi.ng tl'le Rock:efeUer
presid.i;ntW nominaUon.
Lindsay's big push for unity came
later in the evening when a grasii roots
movement began again boosting him
for the vice presidency in opposition to
Nixon's choice o1 Agnew. Aides told
l..indsay he had a chance o( winning
the nomination it he would con:rent to
let his name be placed before the con·
vent.ion.
But Lindsay had seen what hap·
1 pened to RockefeUer ln 1964. Jte has
}Ong beUeved that Rockefeller was
dtnied the Republican presidential
nomination in 1968 because he did nol
campaign for Barry Goldwater in
11164.
Lindsay waint.ed to be s u r e
Republicans will know in 1972 tllot h<'s
a team player Who goes along,Witl'I the
nominee. So he left the hall and block·
td an.v Attempt to u~e him as 11n op·
poner;t to Agnew.
'·
MIAMI, Fla., (AP) -Sporadic
gunshots were beard tod&y ln tM riot.-
torn black are.a of Mi.am.I where three
Negroes were shot to deAth and 18
pe:reons wounded during a savage
night ol looting and burning.
Occasional sbots were firtd out of
automobiles into store . windpws but
police called the day's reneWed
disturbances "minor." The sherirf's
orfice &aid the area was "under firm
control.... ~
But~J ~ational Gi.rarct Force·equi~
ped with everything from shotguns to
flamethrowers stuck to .its guns in the
''occupied territory," ready to move
ba<:k into action at the first sign of
new flc.Yeups.
"We are standing by," said a Guard
spokesman, "waiting to find out what
they art going to do, Then we'll make
.our own move." •
In the Liberty City.district, where
the first racial violence in recent
Miami history broke out 10 miles from
the site of the Republican Nation&{
Ccnven.tion. police Thursday faced
sniper bullets and barrages of rocks
and bottles.
Then they struck back. Two Negroes
were fatally wounded during an ex-
change of gunfire at an apartment
house.
Later, when a 550-block area &m-
bracing Liberty City was barricaded
and swept by National Guard troops,
anottier Negro wa.s shot oil a porch
balcony in the Central Negro District
to the so\Jth,
Sheriff E. Wilson Purdy declared a 6
p.m. curfew in an area bounded by
Northwest 73rd Street on the north,
the Northwest' 36th Street Airport Ex·
pressway on the south, the North·
South Expressway on the east and
Northwest 22nd 'Ave nue on the west.
As the curfew was imposed for the
first time Thursday night. National
Gus.rd troop carriers swept the
streets, huge searchlights swinging
slowl y from side to side.
"We're going to -cleanout these
streets.': one officer barked to his
men. "We're taking no bull this time."
Later, a National Guard spokesman
said tha-t "once the sweep started,
there was no trouble at s..~I."
But. as the impressive show of force
brought quiet to Liberty City, new
trouble erupted in the Central Negro
District.
Sgt. James H. Tombly, a wounded
Miami policeman. said a volley of
lihols was fired from a rooftop at
Northwest 22nd Street and Northwest
3rd Avenue.
"We puUed up there," he sald. "E.fld
l felt .this burning sensation in my left
arm. We returned the gunfire." .
E. Jest Cleveland, a Miami Beac~
car washer, was shot in the head and
toppled from the porch of his apart-
ment. A Negro Woman , Willie Mae
Grant. was shot in the left arm as she
stood on the same porch.
Bands or young Negroes roamed the
central district. smashing store and
car windows, and shortly after mid-
night City Manager Melvin Reese ~!so
ordered a curfew for t:tiat .area. By
dawn, the trouble had petered out.
County Hears
Racism Charge
In Employn1ent
By JACK BROBACK
Of fllt rt.Uy Pilot Ili ff
Racial di scrlrn.J.nation In Orange
County housing and employment was
charged Thursday before a meeting of
the State Fair Employment Practices
CommJssion.
Representatives of minority grouns
took turns making general chargeii
against county employers and
landlords.
James Allen. chairman of the
Orange Coun.ty Fair Ho'using Council,
told commissioners discrimination
being practiced in the county is "a
capsule version of what is being prac·
ticed in the larger urban areas. but il
is the same kind of vicious attitude."
The FEPC meeting in the Santa Ana
City Council chambers was the nine-
year-old commission's first session in
the county.
Executive Officer Peter Johnson
sajd during that period tbe com·
mission has received 107 complaints or
job discrimination and 24 of housing
discriminatiOn from residents of the
county.
Allen complained that seven housing
complaints processed recently through
the FEPC were lost in part "due lo
lack of sensitivity" of FEPC in-
vestigators to minority problems.
Ted Heisser. chairman of the
Orange County branch ol the National
Association for the Advanc.ement of
Colored People (NAACP) 1also charg.
ed housing and job discrimination.
Heisser said that Negroes in the
county are victimized bi employers
who offer them "only those jobs that
do not pay enougb to live on ."
Callfornia Real ·Estate AssoclatJon
vice president Nicholas Barletta of
Santa .Ana refi,jled the claims of
discrimination In housing and employ-
ment in his business.
take
with
12.00
------·--·~
Frld.1y, August 9, 1%8
a new stand
the flare leg pant
•
Hip low. Gung ho . Great wide legs that move .,,.jth you when you
move, whue you move, footl005C' and oh so free! Ours first, very n('ll,.,
\'('ty now 'in c.a.refree rayon and cotton styled by Bronson.
a, rottet't--knit-.turtl~top;-blaclr,browtt; "·hit(': navy;-gr('y, gold. Fm-I 7.oo--
b. double button pants in yellow, whitt", navy, black, grey, bro"·n. 12.00
i'...cotton...knit sleevdeu7 turtle top, "'hltc, blade, brown, grey,
navy. gold. ~m·I. 6.00
d. Button.front ~ants in brown, navy or black. 12.00
may co campus shop 43
'·
'
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.&. >
! ; , ! ,.
·•
l
i
' '·
\
\
' ft,
.. , t,\
~· '-
•
DAILY PfLOT' ;':
..
(,
d.
[, ..
1V.[ \.A y e .o
,I
'"•Y · co south coast plaza, san dle90 freeway at bristol, costa me111; $46-9321
shop monday throu1Jh saturday, f O:OO a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
\I
i
l
•
..
~-
I '
,•
----4 OAILY l'tl.OT
Poul G. Fisher, 113, filed suit In
Indianapolis, Ind., for an annul·
ment, contending his bride of six
weeks was guilty of traUd preced·
in& their wedding. He said his wife,
Dorothy Jean, 34, had told him she
bad four children. After the wed·
ding, Fisher said she just kept
bringing .more-Children ' Into the
home. "She finally admitted that
she had 10 children," Fisher said. •
Touriit Megan Timothv. 24,.of HoUir
wood.; got htrielf into a 2~.cent jac.Jc,.
pot tn Las Vegas. Meoan; a gue1t at
tM HacUnda Hottl, bet a compmii<nJ
a. qucrttr that she-could iquttzt
through a tiny gap beneath thi!'.St
stalr1. She lost. Hotel engimer Carl
Shqpard /reed Miss Timothy by 1aw-
inQ tM riser tiraces a'fter all othtr
methods failed. Megan suffered no
in;urns ... ixcept to her pride. • After Christopher Nelson used a
four·ton steamroller to smash four
automobiles, a truck and a lamp
post, the youth's mother'told police,
''He is a reat-problenr sometimes.
The trouble is he gets so bored.
Perhaps be will be better when be
starts to school." Christopher just
turned 5. • Pretty Jeanne Colller, of San
Francisco, 27-year-old star of Brit-
ish documentary films, has this
thing about her nose. She won't
have it pierced so she can 1fear .a
silver ring in it, even to please her
producer. "It's an Insult to my dig-
nity as a woma n," Miss Collier
said. • Mrs. Bertha Freer, 85, of Po r t
Allegany, Pa., entered exhibits in
the McKean County Fair for the
60th straight year. Mrs. Freer, who
hasn't missed entering since 1907,
has won first place in caMed
and baked goods for 14 straight
years. • ' -a
t
Fifteen card players at Char· I
lotte's (North Carolina) Moose
Lodge told police the11 were rob·
bed by two gunmln of more I
than SS,000 .. , plus their trou-
sers.
• San Francisco poli ce didn't have
to go far to arrest John Gibson, 45,
on charges of purse snatching. Off-
icers alerted by the victim's
screams grabbed Gibson as he got
off an elevator in Ole Hall of Jus-
tice ... headquarters of the police
department.
Fr!d17, A,.,..t •. 1461
Agnew Once
Liberal
-Democrat
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -Gov.
Spiro "Ted" Agnew or Maryland, the
Republican vice presidential nominee,
has changed his political thinking over
the years.
The 49-year-old candidate switched
!run the Democrats to the GOP In
post-World Wac 11pay1. In the past sil:
months, he has gone through a re·
evaluation period which he changed
Crom moderate to conservative, from
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller to Richard
M. Ni.i:on, aDd from a posit.ion aa an
emPbillic noncandidate to the second
spot.on the Republican.li<kot._ .
Agnew has more tban two year.s re·
maining of hi& four-year gubernatorial
term. He swept past Democrat George
P . Mehooey in 1966 by nearly 100,000
votes oti a liberal plaUorm th&t 1n·
eluded an open-occupancy plank.
The liberal stance was not new to
the soo o! a Greek lmmJgrant wh06e
father changed his name from
Anagnosl<>poolos. It was during his ad·
miAistratioo as Baltimore County ex-
ecutive that the county became one of
Ule first in the ~Y to enact a law
banning racial discriminaf.ion in public
accommodations.
"Let's keep Maryland in the
mainstream ol Amenca," he asked
voters during bis 1ucce11ful bid tor
governor in 1966, as he called
Mahoney a "bigot, r a c i s t , in·
competeot. menace to Maryland."
Mahoney campaigned on a platform
depk<ing crime Jn Ille .U..ts and with
a slogan "Y.our home ii your castle,
protect ·u."
But Agnew's poliUcal posture chal).g·
ed slowly but radically in the last 1b:
months, although he told reporters
shortly before leaving for Miami
Beach, "I beven't changed."
"I'm standing still: Jt's just that
othen are moving more to ttie left,"
he said.
Canada's Mail
Workers Vote
To End Strike
OTl'AWA (UPI) -Mail began to
move again in Canada today alter
postal workers voted to accept a new
contract. eridlng a 22.<fay strike.
The 24,000 workers, faced by stacks
of mail reaching to post office ceilings
when they offjcially returned to work
·at one minute past midnight today,
woo a two-st.age, 39-eent-an·boar in·
crease over two years.
Union officials said the contract with
the government also provides for the
betterment of "scandalous" working
conditions. The pact was approved by
a vote or 12,173 t.o 8,168.
The end of the strike averted the
recall of parliament which Prime
M.ill'ist.er Pierre Elliott Trudeau had
indicated he would request if no agree·
ment had been forthcoming.
Page 4 6 1 dead ea
I Dead, 20 Hurt
In Train Crash
HAMILTON. Ohio (AP) -A
Baltimore & Ohio passenger train car·
rying about 100 persons derailed on
the Butler-\Varren county line today .
killing one person and injuring about
20.
All five of the train's cars derailed
and two of three passenger cars tu.rn·
ed over on their sides , but apparently
did not burn. \Vreckage wa s strewn
over about a half mile area where the
derailment occurred four miles north
of nearby Middletown .
,
.--~-------------·
•
--...
Veep Oioice · '
Picked for
Least Harm
MIAMI· II.EACH (AP) -WJ>Y did
Rjcbarq M. N_i.xon choos~ the relative.
ly obscure governor Qi a small rt.ate
as his vice pre1Jdeotial caodl.dale ?·
The answer Is that be didn't
necestarlly cDoo1e the man be thought
could help him the most when be pick-
ed Gov. Spiro T. Agnew of Maryllmd.
He cboee the man be baped would hurt
him the least in h.ils dlvlded party.
"No one could sa:y mythin& bad
about.him," was how a key participant
•
in the meetings that led to AgMw's ..
~lectioo ~t it. From this so~ce and
otibers ttie Associated Press bs.11 piec-
ed together the outline!, at least, of
the making of a vice pre1ldentl.al can·
didate.
,
Ul'I Tt!w .....
It began even before Nixon 's first
ballot victory in the early hours of
Th~y morning.
FAMILY AFFAIR -Spiro T. Agnew, vice presi-
dential Candidate, and presidential candidate Rich-
ard Nixon gather with their families 'to face cheer-
ing delegates at the final session of the Republican
National Convention Thursday nigbt. From left are :
Ajnew;. Mr~. Judy Agnew; daughter• Pam and
Susan Agnew; ·.rulie Nixon; Tricia Nixon; Mrs. Pat
Nixon and Richard Nixon.
About 20 milnrtea earlier Nixon met
with his closest staff advi!ler1 in hls
penthouse apartment on the beach to
start discussing a running mate. The
meeting went on with an ever-eh.ang-
ing cast for nearly 12 houri, with only
an hour out for sleep by NJxoo.
Agnew Thrust Into GOP S*potligh~
Family Becomes 'Instant Celeh_rities'
When Nixon finally emerged to •IY
Agnew was bis choice a shock waVe
traveled through tti.e crammed hotels,
jotting especi~lly the foDowen of Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller, who i111-
mediately dla<ged Nboo wtth tryin&
to appease his southern supporters.
The charge waa: denied by Nixon
aides, but there was no denyine: ~.
satisfaot.ion that Agnew's 1electi<m•
brought to most southerners. MIAMI BEACH ( U P I )
Republicans are counting on two
handsome families -the Ni.Ions and
the Agnews -to lead them to victori
in November.
Their political union was forged
Thursday night before millions amid
wildly cheering party faithful as tor-
rents of orange balloons were cut
loose in convention hall.
Neither the Nixons nor the Agnew1
wanted the beady day to end. They
celebrated long past' midnight at
parUe1 with fans clnd friends.
Thi• weekend they ~ill travel
together to Mission Bay, Cali(., an
oceanfront resort, to try to plot the
demise of the Democrat&.
Llghtning struck for the A~news
early Thursday. By evening, still stun-
ned and shaky, they had bee n
catapuJated lnt.o the national limelight.
HUH,. McCarthy Prepare
Strategy for Showdown
WASHINGTON (UPI) -S e n •
Eugene J, McCarthy expects the
R~epublican Ni.xon·Aa:new ticket to
have some effect on the Democratic
Convention, but not on his. owa' cam,·
paign strategy.
planned to catch up with him later Jn
the day at Corpua Christi, Tex., where
he is scheduled to speak tonight. He
will speak ait San Antonio Saturdl!IY.
I
·It all began with a telephone call to
the MarYl.and governor's suite by
presidential nominee Nixon. Spiro T.
Agnew hung up, turned to his wife
Judy and Siflrincredu1ously : "I'm it."
Their daughters Pamela, 25, a social
worker, and Susap, 2.0, attending the
conve ntion with thelr parent.I, were
overwhelmed and ·became instant
celebrities. Their youngest, Kimberly,
12, was at ocean City, Md., and their
son Randy, ts a Sea bee in Vkrtnam.
"The South got a candidate it can
accept," said South Carolina Sen.
Strom Thunnond, ooe of Nixon'& moit•
influential southern supporters , "while,
the big cities did not get who they said
they bad to have." i ~
The emotional shock was still wear·
Rocky 'Bitter'
Over Outcome
..
'
Ing off when they_.went to convention __ MIAMLBEACH, Fla·. (Al?) -Gov ..
hall to take their bows. They shared Nelson A. Rockefeller finished a week
the moment of glory with Pat Nixon . ol political frustration today, heading'
and her dynamic daughters Tricia, 22 fur home bitterly disappointed over hb·
and Julie. 20. failure to capt.Ure the Republican
For Richard M. Nixon's loved ones , presidendal nomination and resentful
it was a dream come true. In a of Richard M. Nixon's choice foc his
poigant soliloquy at the end of his ac-running mate.
ceptance speech he spoke of his Persons close to Rockefeller said }\e
"courageous wife and loyal children" felt deeply mtronted by Nixon's seleC:-
who stoood by him jn "victory and tion of Maryland Gov. Spiro T. Agnew
defeat." for the supporting role OD bis ticket.
AuntORIZEp ~EAU ... CHRYSLER w.M~-. The Minnesota Democrat told a
news conference today that the GOP
selection made it clear American
vote rs will not be given any real
choice if the Democratic nominee is
Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey.
"The Republican choice w o n ' t
change my strategy," McCarthy said.
"My nomination will depend on the
strength we develop at the canventi.oo
on the hsues, whether we can con-
vince the delegates that we should
carry the issues to the people and
thirdly, who can win."
Clean up with
the Unbeatables
The Democratic presidential hopeful
said he had some "general ideu''
about his choiCf: of running mate if he
is nominated , but he refused to
elaborate.
Vice Preside nt Hubert H. Hum-
phrey, eager to do battle with the Nix·
on-Agnew Republican ticket, wound up
a week's rest at his lake home in
Waverly, Minnesota today and flew to
the LB J ranch for a meeting with
President Johnson.
Aides said the vice president left at
7:45 a.m. in hili jet star government
plane. They said the meeting at the
ranch was set up Thursday night.
The Humphrey campaign entourage
On A Heat Wave
:J.ecord Breaking Temperatures Fr@m Albany to Augusta
California
Coastal
\'/ ,
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Atl•nl•
8•ker1llehf
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• Great year-end buys from those unbeatable guys • Newporta, Newport Customs, Chrysler 300s, New Yorkers . -. • Everything goes to wind up a great selling year!
•Act now while !here's a good model and color selection
FlJR YEAR-END CLEARANCE BARGAINS ON
THE SUCCESS CARS OF THE YEAR YOU GO'l'rA SEE
THE UNBEATABLES *
!
Attas Chrysler·Plymo1tth, Inc. \
~929 Harbor llvd., Costa Mesa , Calif. 1714) 546·1934
I I
I
' -----~-~ ---------------------~:_ __________________________ ......
-·-. , .... ---~ -. -.. -. ---... ~
fi'ound at Seeaae
Law Textbook K~y
In Panther Trial
OAKLAND (UPI) -A
blood·-Xed le-k •n
Callfotnla law wW bt tl>o
key lo tl>o Huer Nowlon
* * * 8 Panthers
Held After
Gun Battle
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
-Eight peraonl believed by
police to be membera ot the
milltant Black P a n t h • r •
were arrect.ed today follow·
lng a gun battle with of·
ficers in a downtown boua·
ing project.
Police 1ald several blue
IWeaUbJN with the -.fl
"Black Pimth<r" aW>clled
on. them, a book of the
wril!np of Cbinele Com·
rnunist party Chairman Mao
Tae-tung and two platol1
were found at the abootlng
1cene.
murder trial, ac<Ordln& to
the Black Pant.her founder'•
attorney.
Qiarles Garry, Newton's
coume~ Hid alter tl>a flnl
decree murder trial o'
Newton, 2', MCesMd for the
-'tond that the book. Storm Hits
already Introduced 1 n t o .
evidence, WU a "key." North. 350
Garry had r<lernd lo tho---· ,, • --
book, "Clllfornia Criminal •
Law," w11en Oaklan d Fires Start
policeman Herbert Heane11 • By \IPI 25, was te&tifyinJ. Heanes
wa1 wounded In t h e
predawn gun battle Jaat Oct.
~ in whJch fellow policeman
John Frey, 23, WU killed
and Newton shot through
the abdomen. Newton was
arrested a.half hour later at
a hospital where he bad
gone for treatment.
Garry asked Heane1 if ho
saw Newton reech into the
back seet of the Volbwagen
he was driving and take a
book when Frey ordered
b1m out of his car at about 5
a.m. on the day of the
1hooting.
A "battering •lectrlcal
storm which burst over the
coastal range in northern
Oalllomla early Thursday
showered the area with bun·
dredo or lightning bolts and
touched oil nearly 350 forest
fires.
The St.ate Division of
Forestry reported mo st of
the fires were small, five
acres or leas, but were in
remote areaa accessible cn-
.1,y to hikers or aircraft. One
blaze burned 20 acre1 of
timber.
Nearly 800 ftre"'btera
--·---·--
•
DAIL V PllOT r
Finch Joins
MIAMI BEACH (AP)-Lt.
Gov. ·Robert H. Finch, who
worbd in Gov. ·Ronald
Reagan'• shadow for
monthl, ls emereln& u a
strongman or U>, Repuhll· can party lo Ca!Uarnla.
He ii jolning the preslden·
tia1 campaign of his good
and IOQl·time friend, Rich·
anl M. Ntxon, lo an UD•
speclfiad hut high level job.
"I won't take on a Une of
reaponaibWty or a regional
responslbWty ," 11ld Floch.
''tt would be inCODJiltent
with the oUOce I have. But
at the minlrnum, thf;re will be some travels with Dick."
Reagan, meanwbile, baf
-11ad his"ilopes·lor-lho-prosl·
dency shattered bf "Nixon's
victory.
He started out as a favor·
lte son to pnserve party
unity, bu~ pusb.d by hi•
8upporters. finally became _
a candidate. That angered
Ca!Uornla Nb:on backer•
Man Slays
Woman, Self
MODESTO ( A P )
SheriU'a officers said an
elderly man &hot and killed
a former neighbor, then
fatally sho t himself
back of her home Thursday •
She was Mra. Floy
Worthington, 63, a widow.
Who jo1ned 1111 lavorlte son nomlo ... Floch ls gaining Georp Murphy, (R-Ollll.).
deleiaUoii, bUt dldi't nee· ln!lue.nce among California 1n the 196' Senate race.
e11~ want b1m to wln tht Republlcw. If Nixon wln1, It was Finch'• flrat tey
prealdenµal nomination. hll tnnuence will grow even for otftce and he received
'lt "'" FlDcb. who first more. more vote• Uwt Reaa:an did.
propoled tbe idea of the He 11 a broad lhouldll"ed, AJ lieutenant governor, he
party 1Dlify1ng favorite IOO c h a I n smoking attorney worked with Reagan on such
11at6 that lel'lt Re111n on who waa elected lieutenant &tate problems u unem· bla unsuccessful pursuit of governor in 1966 after year1 ployment, but hlJ close tles
the presidency. u a professional political with Nixon appeared to keep
Al one of lh•men cloae1t manager, first for Nixon in him out of polltlcal discu.a·
to the ,Part)''• pr:_ealdent1a1:llfth~•=l8llO:~P~'~··~id~eo=t1a1=~·~am~·~·~;on:• i1niiiitihi ·•~ciovie~m~or~·~· =N=o=w=1~Mo! .. ~~c..t:•:M:•:••~ paign and then for U.S. Sen. offlcf.
Death Hf?me HARIOR
SHOl'PIHG Burglarized ' CENTER
UH H.,._IM.
HOO. Y\VOOD (UPJ)c -C:--
Only bOUrs after the cor:oner
removed five bodies ·trom
the scene ot a aboottng
spree, the 1100,000 home
was eatered twice and
ransacked by b'P'glars.
Police today were con ..
ducting an inventory to
determine u .., ol the
valuable art ww.U or ex·
pensive furni~w-e known to
be in the home was taken.
Kille<! •arl)' Wednesday
wert the owner of the home,
Phlllp Welostelo, 47, 1111
wife, Rosemary. sa, and his
daughters, Debbie, 19, and
Mrs. Myra Chegwtn, 24:, the
estranged wile of Fred
Chegwln, 31, whom police
believe shot the other• and
then hims.ell.
SEMI ANNUAL
S~lE
Fl L
The seven men and CD!
woman were bOoked on
9U1Pldon of etsault with in·
tent to commit murder. No
one wu lnjured in the gun
batde, police aaid, although
one suffered a cut arm from
an unknown cause.
The defense attorney allO
asked Neiro bus driver
Henry Grier, 40i who said be
wttne1ted the shooting, if
Nowton bad anything under
h11 erm, Grier flaid no.
spread out over six northern -----------------__, California counUes batWng
the fires which followed one
of tbe worm: electric.al
storm1 in the area in 20
years. Twenty a e r i a l
tankers and eight
helicopiers were brought in.
REDUCTIONS
Police said the tncldent
developed after a group of
Negroes shouted ob1cenlt1es
at a pa1sing police cruller
and five shots we.ce fired.
Tony Curtis
Named Dad
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Actor Tony Curtis ts named
as the father of an unborn
child lo a paternity suit Oled
on behalf of "John Doe
Schwartz," the baby ex-
pected lo Seotembe!-.
The auit filed 1b\U'sday in
Superior Court was brought
against Bernard Schwartz,
43, ai.o known . as Tony
CUrUs. An affidavit iden-
tified hlm as a movie actor
earnln& more than '5(),000
annually.
Polloe t>echniclan Albert
Lusk testified Thurtday that
he bad pickeO the boollfp in
a pool of blood around Frey
and some distance from the
Volkswagen.
Newtoo.'1 n am e was
handwritten in the front of
tl>e book, Garry said.
The state Division of
Forestry reported 190 fires
doclno, Shasta, Sonoma and
docino, Salta, Sonoma and
Tehama counties, while the
U.S. Forestry service said
155 blazes broke out in its
northern zone. Most of Thursday's
session wu taken up with
cross-examination of Grier,
a burly Nell'o with 20 yeart
in the Navy, Who testified he Strike Cost
""' New1on gun down-holll---officers. Grier , six·foot-one
and 200 pounds, gave hJs
testimony in a poslUve man·
ner, but CODtradicted some
$4 Million
o! the sllMmenta he had LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
made to the police on the nercUator for the American
morning of the S'hooting. Newspaper Guild 1ay1 the
0 n c r oss-examiDaUon, strike against the Herald·
Garry brought out e:onflicts Examiner haa cost his union
between Grier's testimony and 10 others about '4
and the police report. The million ao far.
COST:
•5.00
£1ch
NEWI
PRODUCT
STOPS
SUI
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dft•IDC*I ...... -avtlllblel
Mnt SKIN CANCU h ...-lly u..i•• _, .. _ .. lfle •••· rw tti1M wM .,...i • 191 ef ti,.. ....... ,. -lif .... ,., C1"'
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stdio'·-· FJmNGS IY Af'POINTMElfT ONL.Y
CALL (114) 642-5411
SPORTs-..COATS
R~_G.ULAR T~$45. $19.88
$68.88 SUITS
REGULAR TO $125.
Orlon Turtle Necks
Short Sleeve-Reg. to $10.
IVY SP.ORT SHIRTS
REGULAR TO $7 •
7.88
2.88
. ' Many, Many Other Men'•
Acees•orie• at Fantutic Savingst
USE KINGS CHARGE-8ANKAMERICARD-MASTER CHARGE
The protpe<:tive mother
was identified only as Anna
M.argaret Henter, a minor,
also known as P e a: g 1
Henter.
defenie attorney read Into · Robert Rupert uid Thurs·
the record the entire seven· day fewer than two percent
page question and answer of the oriitnaI 2,100 atriken
statement 'taken from the have retmmd to their jobs.
bu, driver by a police in· The strike bepn 1 a s t
gpector about ·oo minutes ~O.C~e:!m~be!!r'=.·-----~==================: after the sbootlng.
Two State Dems Say ·
Nixon Due 3rd Loss
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) iHue !acing this country. I
-Richard M. Ni.J:on will happen to believe that there
becomt:: a three-time loser in are more important matte.rs
November, according to two before us."
cf the state's Democrats:. Alioto &aid that the
San FranclJco M a Y o r Republicans were o!feri.Dg
Joseph L. Alioto a n d an old face when new solu·
Assembly Speaker Jeflse M. tloos .are needed. 11Tbe
Unruh predicted 1n a joillt times are cut of jcint, and
news conference Thursday they are not gcine to be set
that "eitber one of our top right by the attitudes of the
two candidates, or several 1940s and 1950s."
others in our party" could Alioto was asked if he aaw
beat Nixon in n!68. anything of a "new Nixon"
At the same ti?ne, Unruh and Rid "e. Jeopard can't
conceded that Nixon's well· change his spots, a· 1triped
planned nomination victc:ry bus can't change his was "a remark ab I e stripes and an elephant
achievement'' for a mw can't change his trunk." who lOlt the presidency in1,i" ___ ii;;;_;;;;;; __ ;;J 18llO and tile Calllomia II
governorship lo 11162. SAVE 331/3°/o
Utinlb laid be WU &truck
by "th• sheer boredom anc1 8 n. QUILTED SOFA
the high.school hi-jink~ of w/Matcldftl a..¥• S.t
the Republican convmtion"
and he aa1d he bcped the 1 .. ul1r Price SQ.I.GO
DemocraU wouldn't repeat S•I• Price S2t0.IO
the scene in Chlcato later Sn1 $141.oo
th1I mooth where Unruh wm
lead tile 1llltn'1 dolegirtlon. J. J. INICklllOCklll
He aid tl>at the GOP 4001 lllCH IT,, N.I.
convention "seemed t o '"""*" ,., ...... • MKAr11WrJ
bellevo tl>at Repuhllcan uni· !145-MOt
t wu the most ~nt:l.l••••••••-IJ
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e 9.trfa Up!ll A T4" tear-
drop, bnud nnr ...-fbo&rd
''wavln&'' • fix &lie llgn
... $00.00.
e ''Mullclan T.......,...."
A piano 1'11,..-, also otll'1'
mW!killnal an needed for
a Group. Muat do Standu'd PopA~AB-e An r ntngy. ~ --Sbp-and-lodudod, ...
~ ~OLARA Tiuty11uxury car at.an eoonomr prict.
Tep of the nn1 hardtop, Wlg(lnl ind Hdlf'IL
. . . "· n.r.•e no tt... ,__ 1boUt the Ml ... 0...,. Dl•11••• Cl11 •• .._
W.'N ............... tel ........... fortM ""''II ..... ,.,..... why wt'N IMillfte hltft
prleN •••Pll•r ••• thl wt of lmlurTatn11 dins;; aw. n..t'a wf9ywa're otfwl .. *
............ -.i .... yau· .. ..,.,....,. W.wt9*"ta ..... , .. ht ..... ,.... ........ ""_.·...,truck ................................... ••··· ..,..,. ............. tlo ........ during .............. ., ... ,....,
~· ~·· ~OftONrTWldt-
oloolon endlt)'ill In-end -__ ., __ _,......_._,, ............. _ .... _ .... __
Ewn • low --end 111"~
WE'LL MAKEADODQE DISAPPE4.R INTO'VCUR QARAQFI ---0•'1"
,
tnc for • vrry tn8tlnllble
....... 11-------------------------------------------------------------------
I
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..... O>rv<ln, -to aJllt Urtle "'V.F .. .,
• -""""'"" """"' tn Ttlclay'1 ()prn ){ 0 U I e
Guide. Whit • quidc and
easy ~ to lhop b' • .......
,
BEACH CITY DODGE
16555 BEACH BLVD. <HWY. 39)
HUNTINGTON BEACH
847-9631
I
HARBOR DODGE
2150 HARBOR ILYD.
COSTA MESA
546-3050
I I
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.,/· . -.
I • -a OAll Y •JJ.OI
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Fri~Js Closi ng -l_!ri~es" __ ~~plete---N!l!~l7or~S~~~ba~ge -tist-
•
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DAILY rnor •
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--~-_,__
n.. o,...,. C...rt"
Mort Complete
PRINTING .
SERVICE
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,JO DAILY PILOT Fr14M1, AugUJl 9, 1968
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl $10 Million Tax Assessment Library
To Oose
Disputed for Hughes Plant SANTA ANA
Orange County
, .
j
J
II
~ 8 -6
"Keep that up and we'll find out how & couple of
black eyea look with an overall tan!"
For the
Meetings
Divorces
OIVOltC l!S PILl!D
Record
"''-. Gereldlne D. C1rrl1an vs Ardl• Edwin C1rrl11n
Cllrl11fne Tl>eres.a Gre-tne VI G1ry
H!'nf'f GrHne
P1hv M. 8oubel VI W•lkr c . Boubfl L .. 1enc1 P. o,._,,, Sr. vs Allee Jorinne or-n
Kenn. s. c-·· vs (Mrff F. C1p ... 1
Glenn C. $!tinner vs Helen M, Sklnroer
Jtrt P1ullne Buford VS Kelm Fr1,.ll11
'"""' s.11111 .. Join
H1rndM
Ntalv JoY«
S.v1nt S.Vlnf vs Rl::t\ercl .lN
l'INAL Dl!CIEES
L1vrr,.n Oon.lld McCC'Y VI Shlrln M11 M«o>
Plml!la JIM Lulrd YI Jost'PI! MlcMtl Lt1lrd
FULLEllTON T h e
giant llughes Aircraft Co.
says its Fullerton ''think
tank" plant is worth about
S2S millioc lor tax purposes
--$10.6 million less than
what the county assessor
says.
TI1e difference can't be
taxed because it's basically
"head scratching" costs,
says a company official.
The firm has complained
to the Orange County Board
of Supervisors that Assessor
Andrew llinshaw
overassess¢ ":ie value of
the last year's inventory by
$10.6 million or t h e
equivalent of a $270,000 tax
bill. The supervisors said
they would hear the appeal
Oct. 17.
The Hughes research and
development plant· is an
engineering concept of the
last two decades whlch the
men who framed the state's
tax code didn't foresee.
One of the many projects
on which the research
specialists are working is a
defense system for
Switzerland, says Hughes'
attorney Walter Chaffee.
"Before any parts -
radar, early warning
devices and so forth -can
be manufactured, our ex.
perts m,ust study
Switzerland, its topography,
its present defense
capabilities and a whole
range of other factors,"
Chaffee said Thursday.
"Only when they've col-
lected all the data on
Switzerland can they im-
provise a syst.m that will
mect that country's needs.
And it's only alter the
system is on the drawing
boards that we go into the
manufacturing pha1Se oC the
contract."
Under s tate law 1 California businesses must
pay a yearly tax on
whatever inventory 'is in
stock oo the first 1t1onday· oC
March. < ...
Hinstiaw estimated the
total value of the 1967 in·
ventory at $33.6 million. But
Chaf!ee says $10.6 million of
that represents "th.inking"
expenses -production costs
that went into consultatioos,
designs, conferences, and
just plain head scratching.
The assessor a r g u e a
Thursday that the costs of
thinking contributes to the
Work Starts
On Center
ORANGE The
umbrella · roo!ed two-story
octagonal structures located
near the Santa Ana
Freeway, Santa Ana River
and Garden Grove Freeway
are the beginnings of the
· county's new $1 million
Youth Guidance Ceater.
The center w i J 1 ac.
commodate children who
find themselves w i t h o u t
homes or those who have
had minor brushes with
authorities. It is nvt a deten.
lion facility. ..,
&onnlt Lou l!lttudoln n kmMlt!
Mldlltl l!lt1udoln Bllllt G. flurkn YI Junlo<' W. llurlo;n
Marlt Dr1ke vs Robert S. Or1k1
Betty F. Amlc:.y vs B. F. A. Anttl Peno A..,Jcav
Kall»' S. Ev1111 vs John J. Ev1111 ~
Merv Gu1~lu1>e F1t:r,ier1kl vs Ch1rlft
Edward Flh11r11d
Teacher Sent to Prison
J1me1 Albert Gleltbrook \II f llHn
M11 Gl11ebl'Ollk R1vmond Rodr'9~t vs Mar11rtl Ann Wll<M Amy ll1>11tm1n \II Ot\lld Thom11
f11>11tm1n Iris M. Mllll vs Fredtrltk N. Miiis, Jr, Ar!ll G. we11 \II L1wrtnct G. Wtll
Miidred J . BrOWll YI LIC'I' B•OWll Mlc1tl1 Vlgll Meodou ¥1 Wlllltm Solo
Rodrlllutl
Onet1 N•de•u VI Rav N•dtau
NIHWo M. Endtra!M YI ManJev J. E'lder1be, Jr.
John Morvan Nunlltl vs Miry P1trlci1 Nunll1!
For Firing on Homes
.... u fl l1ncr.. Fumiko C-r""llt! \II
Wiifred llodM't' (_.r1m1tll
Lind• s...-n G1rnett ..,, llon11d Noel
G1rnttt Judllll C, Gr1y VII Woodrcrw Wiiton
G•t¥ Dontld .ir.. Ct•lw \II Mlrltvn It. C1r1'tr Miry S. Grui>e YI .ir.1i.r, L. GIVPI!
KtltllMn Ltlltnt Htmntr YI Tllom11
Edward Htmntr l'ltvtrl'f' 0. Ctudlll YI John It. Ctudlll OorolllY A. $Chmudt .,. Pawl A,
"""'""' Elu.-Ellttlltltl lnttr VII Mtrl DtYld Lerlu Ht"'ld J. Scatt vs Mn Ctr91 kolt Mt•lorlt M. Mllltlr \II Walro' P. Miiier
Kt•tn I. Jo1wrSOn .,. J1m111 E . .klhnlon
y,,.,..,,. Jttn E"911dllllill'" \II 11.antld
Vtrn E119eldl_.
Ao:<fnoy Lee 01lll1r.n .,. llobtrl Ll'Wlt
p1111tmi
IHTlltLOCUTOllY orc•••s
Vlrg!nlt 0......1'0n .,. Jase C. Ovt ....
N&ftC\I MH l'IKOll vt l lWrtnc. 0111
lltcon -
Wl1m1 M. Girvin \IS llobtrl L. G1ry111
flDrtnc• ll. Knubon. •ltf. 11111 crot• dtlclt. \II M•ryfn J. Knwbon, creld'I. Ind Cl'911 complt,
Mll!lt M. Melult YI fll!IY LM Mtkllt Ac11111 Wlllon .,. J1mn Ptul Wl!1<>11
fllllee M111lne HIMI ~· Rebert Edw1rd H1nn1
PllYlll• llN Mllll9111 vt ~IDYlll It.
Mflll111"
MaflltV1'1 lrwl" vt Wlll11"' P. '""""
M lc,,1e! W1)'M Hllt1!1 YI ,P111!1 Clral
Hltll le • £11/nt .ir.nn fl'll'ftll, lie. vt Tl'lcmtt L. Pow1ll w,,,..n ~ FM YI Do"""1 .ir.1111 '" CMryl JNnnt Mt'-YI Ml>! Cle'ffon
c•ttnr w. WOM 11'1 Hor1ct M. w-Jamn Edw1rd Fish vs Mldel'f'n Cltlrt Fl111
Dlrinle M. Smllll n L1rry J1y Sr.)1111
S111ron L. O'llourk1 YI Jol!n T. O'llourke
Miry Ntll Clrltton YI kennelli "· Ctri.tott
RocllW'I" Ewrl'f SchepeJ vs Mary .ir.n11
SdltlN'I
N•ftC'll J. ~VII Cl'Mlrln 1!1 . 5_,,,
Stndr1 Jetn llllount ¥1 w1m1m Allen llllollnt
M.iry M. l lttltf111d VII El:ldle llttleflfld
Ptlu J11ne Curry V$ Het\O' 01nltl Cur-
~
Norm111 Elllolt, Jr. vs M.tble ~e EUk1tt
ll1rti.r1 Mn knott n ~!"Gld w1v.,. ·~" Ju1nlt1 F. ll1~r VII J. H. llltll~
L.olt M. ~ftson VII .Jo11n Ill. ~l'llon
' JUDGMlllNTS
llonnlt MM SI** w1 TtrtY Wiibur ....
NMm1 J•n M<C.ov \II L1Veni J M«w •
Fire Calls
SANTA ANA -A former
high school his-tory teacher
was sentenced to one to five
years in· state prison on a
shooting charge Thursday
after his probation plea rail·
ed to impress Judge How<ird
C. Cameron.
Frank o. Sanborn Jr., 41,
a former chairman of the
history department at La
· Quinta High School. told the
judge lie had sponsors in the
Youth Gets
Probation
11AL a1:Ac1t SANTA ANA -Cal State Tl'tllrldly, H:lll 1.m., er1~1 lino. b k lball la m;:_ru.1 11d wut1 N•v11 WNPons s11-Fullerton as e s r
1:s. P.m.. ""M" tJr., 11111"1ry ,, Joseph L. Ware, 21, of
Ronmoor Plw'!!:,1:1,, Anaheim. Thursday was
~.=,.. ~1,:10 '·"'·• c•r 11,.., •102 sentenced to three years'
12 :211 P.m., m.-1kt1 11d, 1ln1 Un lvtrH probation and ordered by
• !.::. cir 11r1, "'°° eo1u Ave. Superior Judge H o w a r d
F'6!frvvri l,:m •.m.. ,_,icti '"'· 1'102 Cameron to continue with
state of \Vashington.
"It will be a long time
before you see anybody in
WashingtOn," Judge Came-
ran told him.
Sanborn had pl e ad e d
guilty to one of three countsl
of firing a gun at the homes 1
of witnesses who h a d
testified against him in twol
morals cases involving
former students. The
morals charge1 ·Were
dismissed .after two hung
j uries.
After the shootings, San-
born allegedly fled toward
Canada but was stopped at
th e Washington.Canadian
border by immigration of·
ficials.
After being returned from
Washington last September,
he was committed to the
state mental hospital at
Atascadero as insane and
unable to aid in his own
defense. Alter five months
there he was ruled sane.
r:-11111 ""'"' h th 1r l t DEATH NOTICES Fr1cr1v. ,,15 a.m_, mec1lc11 t lct. 1,111 psyc O· erapy ea men .!i. 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ llrcaill'lllnJ~:i,... IHdl Arrested 11-fay 2 at his r
GRITl\tAN 1"= A·~~ •. ,., .. ~· 11•1• 77n home, Ware had pleaded BLUE RIBBON COMEDY
urllmen, F•11>C Lor-c nn >11 s1.. 17:.0 1>.m., rntOk.11•kl,1o.1 L•ke Ave, guilty to charges of unlawful OF THE YEAR 'le-I flltdl Sln"Ka "'1Cll!l1 • p.m .. rnedkll tld, 1'711 !IUJl'llrd SI. wnldi" Mortw•;..,. · t :n •.m.. t1r1 1n""'tl•••KJ11. 112111 imprisonment or three col-
Av11on Lt/\f • coed ~ f STADLER }o~:.·T:b~~~ic!?'.~1;.Ms1inn lege s. '-'41.arges o rape
s1td1er. 1t1c:Poen1, 1111 .._,, Av... sr by force. assault with intent Nl>nllnvton flffCll. SWY!-=--wllt, . CllTI Miii . ~io:::n. ~~E .. -=.. 11;~: Thllf'ldlv, 1:J1 •.m .. 11rs.r 111,m, to comnut rape, two counts
Jot,.,. Sffvk-.. Nr«i.. 1 P.m. ti Pltlr. ::t:"':te~~~-~.:' 1~~~ llJ] l'lrlii..I Of rape by threat and tWO F1mll'f' t01an111 F....,....1 Hornt. l :ll P.m .. 1111e 1J1rm, 22n11 s1. •nd counts of assault with a BAKER Ne_. fll\I([. ,,.,. P.m .. rtKUI', ~ ,.01,!1'111!n w., deadly weapon were drop-!!~ J~1.1"'sv:!r~fdAc~• wft'1: io?~s',.m~ retllll 1r1a. 15'5 N9WP011 ped by the district at-
Florenct . Son, '°'tolk l'lol11, Clllllf'llW• !llYd ' ff' Ntl'<Y R!chlf'd.. S@onolctt Sii. l_,.m. 11 Fridl!. l '~ Ill fl N I torney s 0 ICC.
PHii F1m1tv co1on111 FU!ltl'•I ttomt. et::d'. .,i.t .V.:..Tt'vf11111 ,., ~ Judge Cameron a J s o
WILSON wn'°". J~n A. 'II), 01 ~ ~ se11 Pt"lot l't" •t"tor• ordered Wave not to have in Lene, Nuni:i .. tton BIKll. swvtved bY a ..., his possession any firearms °''"""'"""' Mr1. R*rt Z""'9!er, of Lat """"1". s11hlr-1n-L1w JI'" M. e11ck o1 or .any deadly weapon of any N<w1 Scollt. l 1r1nOcch 1dren. s .. vlct• foun ,,. tttnducted MOllCl1Y1 1 n «
Fri. ~::io "·"'· ,, sm1tt.·1 Mor1u1ry Fr'd•v• 1or 1c11oo1 c111111 ot flllfl kind. Ware already has (,,.,.... Flnel """"' p!1ce, O•lotd. 11rN11 11\111 tnd abclv~ or oltitr Of'· -" d · ,,._ Sal'tlt. sm11ti•1 Morfu1,.,,, Hvn-11nlr•tlon1 ot 11 r.111 lh11 '" ....... serv ... .,.. 68 ays 111 the
...l.'A '. w
Ullllli lllU·ll!.\Bf fllriDA
·10urs.Mlne
..iOUJ!S"
''"~ &Nell, dlrec:tors. "~"'•••lid 11'°"m m•~ c~11 Mr. Orange County Jail. AERVALOS ·--~-·~·-"" AILY PILOT_. ______________________ _
Aerv1kN. 01nltl Ltt, 2t, flA lm61 Since
de M1yo. ,_,,in V•llllY. Sum,,..., ~y wife, lltrbtr~ •. ".Olllt Dtnltl Ind A-IG.
dauvll!tf', s ........... d "" -· MOll'ler, Mn. Ntftlf' .ir.. o1...-.11os. arottwr, Wlllt<ft Ao1Ulllr1. Sl111t .. Jtt~ l¥t, af'ld YllY" Vt~i.. Jlo&ary 5"". 7;:l0 P.!". ti $mlll't 0..HI, R""ltm Min MOft. l :AI t .m. ti $1. SI,,_ -J.... Ctlllollc Cllwrtll. Hll'!llntf'llft 8"d\. Int-I Goad Sl\fl>l'lerd c~. Stnllll'• MOr'Nlry, Hun-
ll119""' llMdl. o61rtdon.
BAL Tl MORTUARIES
Corona del l'tlar OR l-."50
Costa l\.len l\U ... w..
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
UO Broadll·ay, Cotta l'tleu
LI lh1'33
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORJAL PARK
Cemetery e l\.fortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacllle Vie" Drive
Newport Beach, Calllornla
144-Z7DI
PEEK FAMILY
COWNIAL FUNERAL HOME
710l Bol11 Ave.
1fe1tmln1&er IU3SZ5
S!IDTH'S MORTUARY
&%7 Mala SI.
HullJlgtoll ll<tcll LE..-
' WESTCLIFP MORTUARY \
al E. 17111 SI., Colla Men I
; ••cat 1
_D.A_YS
HALF of SALE PRICE
SUPERB BAIGAINS IN MEN'S, WOMEN'S, BOYS',
SP-ORTSWEAR, SWIMWEAR, SIACKS
CLOS!NG OUT GIRlS' & INFANlS' WEAR
Ladies' Dresses, Shilts, Suils, Skirts, Capris ,
Blouses ••. Men's Sport Shirts, Slacks, Pajamas.
OPEN
9,30 to 6,00
FRIDAY
!VES-9,00
l•nkArwtHlcanl
Mtehr CM11•
DIMl"s Clv~
Carte llai:ic.ht
Boys' Sport Shirts, Corduroy ·slacks.
IN COS7A ME.IA IT'S
DI I' MtTlfC.•T a TQR-1:
1816 Newport Blvd .
C•ntrally
Located at
Newport &
Harbor Blvd ..
Park
Conw9flltntlr
at Our
••• , (l••t)
lntranco
value of the final product.
"Whatever they pay out to
develop the gystem, they'll
get back in costs from
Swit.ierland," be said. "My
.tssessment is an estimate
of ttie value of the end pro.
duct."
No, says Chafiee. "It's my
understanding of the law,"
said the .company
spokesman, "that we should
only be taxed for actual
merchandise," not for the
cost Of developing its design.
Library system will close
for inventory this month to
verily book holdings and
other related 1 J b r a r y
materials ..
Scbe<!uled to close Aug.
13-17 are 'the Adult
Reference Center, and the
following branch Ub~aries:
Bolsa, Brea, C h a· p m a n •
Costa Mesa, Cypress, Dana
Point, Fountain V a 11 e y ,
Laguna Beach, L e i s u r e
World, Seal Beach and Villa
Park.
I
I •
r$25,0.00 WORTH OF
FURNITURE MUST BE ·
SOLD FRI. SAT. & SUN.
FOR THE BENIFIT
·OF THE CREDITORS
SOFA & CHAii, J pc.
Cholu of colon
SOFA & CHAIR ll!CLINl!l
l pc. Cholco of colon.
$0FA & LOYI! Sl!AT.
Loyboc:ll !Mii" Into Htl S.t.
Cholco of colon..
SOFA & LOYI! SUT
Sprl119 plllowt
69.00
179.00
119.00
295.00
LOVI HAT YILYn 159 00 Cw1tot11 ti•Htff. Cliolce of colm •
HIDl!All!D
Cholco of colon.
CHAii$
Upli-'•kfff
139.00
... ~ 25.00
S PC. ll!DlOOM
I 11l9M 1tc1111ft • .,.1,...,, Mod.
kn, 64ro'"'"'"'"·
BOX
SPRING
•nc1
66.00
MATIRESS
Both for
MAPLI! IUHl llDS
l11c. aprl"t & "'9tf.
YILYn SO'A .I;. LOYI SEAT
S.t. ........ ti•"'·
I n. MIDITllllANEAN
SICTIONAL C1Jht111 .. Ht.
APAITMIHT lANGI
JO IN. lANGI
J'" IAH•t ............
89.00
395.00
395.00
50.00
119.00
19.9.00
ALL FURNITURE
HAS BEEN MOVED
TO THIS ADDRESS
FOR THIS
SPECIAL
SALE
EVERYTHING
MUST BE
SOLD
REGARDLESS
Ofl COST
•.Terms
BRING YOUR
TRtUCK or TRAILER
ALL SALES
ANAL
DEALERS
WELCOME
• Up to 36 Months to Pay
FURNITURE LIQUIDATORS
11807 NEWPORT BLVD.
COSTA MESA
OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 Sat. 10 to 6
PHONE 646..0291
Svn. 12 to 5
•
I
----....... -... -.... ··----.. ....--..,.. -------"-·--·-~~~-..... -............................................... ~ ...... -,...-... -----.----...... ,.. ........................................ ..
' ••
..
JEAN COX, ,AA.M66 ....... .,, AWW*t t. 1M La h9t 11
Wheels Set in Motion
F llies Lo -om •
Rome, an extravaganza cannot be built in a day. Therefore,
fo ations already are being laid and construction of the 1968 Fractured
Follies is moving' according to schedule towards its Octnber destinatjon.
During an informal meeting in her Emerald Bay home, Mrs. John
Weld, general chairmaq, told committee members all projects are under
way for the show to take place in Laguna Beach High School's auditorium
Oct. 24-26 at 8:30 p.m .
The follies are presented by South Coast Community Hospital Auxil-
iary and features talent from San Clemente to Newport Beach and inland.
Jerome C. Cargill Productions of New York offers professional direction
with the script, costwnes and sets. ·
Mrs. Gertrude Carroll, auxiliary president, said while each show is
completely new, this will be the third follies presented as an auxiliary bene-
fit. Proceeds from the event will be turned ove-r to the hospital to be paid
on the auxiliary's current $100,000 pledge.
Under the direction of Mrs. Weld apd coordinator Mrs. Macauley
Ropp, members currently are painting posters, scouting talent, desigliing
prograrris and printing tickets.
Chairmen working with their committees this summer include the
Mmes. Don Seals an~ H. Donald Outmans, tickets; Hovey Cox and Alfred
Kress, posters; John Lawson, sponsors; Perry La Pierre. mimeographing
and secretarial work, and Charles Quilter, courtesy. .
Walking ads for the show are being arranged by the Mmes. Donald
Teet.or, Douglas Kenaston, Dewitte Chatterton and John Kerr along with
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wilson. Others are the Mmes. Violet Adams, fi ..
nance ; Victor Andrews, William Gwinn and Ella Duffy, talent scouts;
Joseph Kauker and Edmund Van Deusen, publicity, and Sam Garst, auxili ..
ary ticket coffee.
•
. . r
I
CA'4 DO -Plans for the upcoming fall Fractured
Follies brings out the theatrical in its costume chair-
man Mrs. Neal Amsden who demonstrates her· kick-
ing abilities for hei Emerald Bay neighbor Mrs.
Charles J . Quilter. The extravaganza is the third
such benefit show to be given by South Coast Com·
munity Hospital Auxiliary.
Behind the scenes and preparing for their roles are chairmen Mrs.
Neal Amsden and Miss Evelyn Reynolds, wardrobe; Mrs. Patrick Shea,
baby-sitters; Mrs. Gene Brookbank, makeup; Charles Col~an,. ushers;
Van. Deusen, stage manager; Jack Lyons, props, and Mrs. Elizabeth Deni·
son, cast party.
The Laguna Line
Waves of Luaus Seen
By JEAN COX
OI tl'll Dl!IY l"llDI Sl1H
When in the party mood ,
do as the Hawaiians do. 'Ill.is
seems to be the theme of
area hosts and hostesses
who are borrowing tropical
·ideas for their shindigs.
HAWAIIAN HOSPITAL-
ITY was ex.tended by Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Bradt when
they invited
'about 30
friends and
relatives to
their Capis-
, trano Beach
~home for a
luau dinner
a n d enter·
Lainment re·
cently. Jt:.lN co~
Lagunans attending inclu·
ded Mr . and Mrs. Leslie
\Yeldon . Also present were
the Bradts' son and daugh-
ter-in-law. Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Bradt, and their two
children from Whittier.
off:ieers Who came from as
far away as San Francisco
for the occasion.
Mrs. Connett is a member
and past. mab'Dn or Laguna
Beach Chapter, Order of dte
Eastern Star.
MRS. BEA CRIST ·
entertained about 25 ol her
former University of
Souther n California
classmates and Alpha · Chi
Omega sorority sisters with
a noon lunoheOn.
Lmer the women were
joined by ttieir husbands for
coc~ at Mrs. CTist's
Laguna home and topped orr
the day by visiting the
Festival of Arts J!ld seeing
daughter, Mrs .. R. ii. Depen-
dahl. wttich included about
60 guests· Who were en·
tertained by some of the
youngsters participating in
the Up Writh People Sing-Out
groups.
THE BILL McCREA DYS
h06ted a cocktail party
Saturday evening for about
60 ol their Three Arch Bay
neighbors.
ln addition to the hors
d'oeuvres. refreshments and
sociality. guests also en-
jGyed dancing outdoors on
the Mcereadys' patio.
Bill is the r esident
manage£ of Dean Witter and
Co. of Leguna Beach.
the Pageant of the Masters. JUN IOR s EC TIO N -
Mrs. Crist presently is members of the. South Coast
busy planning a trip to Club will fasten their irn-4'.
Hawaii with her daughter aginary seat belts for a
and S-On-in-law. Mr . and vicarious trip to Mexico and
Mrs. Wesley Ashton and Hawaii during a meeting in
their two teeaage sons from the Lagune Niguel home of
Santa Ana. They will be Mrs . Paul Christ at 8 p.m.
joined by other members of Thur5day, Aug. 15.
rt1RS. HARRY H. CON· the Crist family including Guest st)eaker wiU be
NELL said "aloha" to 25 her son and daughter-in-law. Mrs . Beverly Hewitt from
·--"tll"'e_R,,.,.obe.,..rt....,Cr.u;isuL•~~•'Of~S~•~•~ta~~1..,a~avel--Set'-v-ice--wbG------•l-----,.,,,neirl!'Urrrtt1TOUghout1:he Ana and her d~ughter and will present a slide program
state after entertaining soo·in-law. Mr. and Mrs. on places of interest in both
them over a luau dinner in Roger Kunsaitis of San spots.
her Lookout Drive home. Diego. A socLal holll' with dessert
Wee Sale
Glorified
What started out as a
simple liUJe garage sMe ha&
pyramided into a Glorified
Junk and Treasure Sale.
The event, which benefits
South C o a s t Community
H06Pital, is to hlke place at
374 Ocean Ave. from 10 a .m.
to 6 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 7,
and from nOon to I p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 8.
Currently the w o m e n
volunteers behind the sale
are looking fOI' donatioos
and so far have gleaned a
"marvelous orl!ntal rug"
and two automobiles -a
Lincoln Continental and a
dune buggy.
Anything from clotltlng to
furniture is acceptable, and
donations, which are tax
deductible, may be made
until Sept. 5 by calling or
visiting the ExpM!.sion Fund
Office, l<M S. C o i s t
Highway, 494-0727.
Mrs . Ray Friesz:, publicity
chairmen for the venture,
saJd it originally started as
a community effort between
women from Top of the
World who envisioned a
modest garage sale.
__...'.ihe mor.e~we_talked
about it, the more wa
lllought it might be pro-
fitable to expand so it
reaches all Laguna.Df," she
exp'8ined.
One of 1he st:ate officers o.nd coffee: will fOllow the
for the Order of Eastern MRS. SAM GARSt · meeting and program. Mrs.
Stu, her home was the spot reported she recently at · Adrienne Knute , 495-5915 js
fDr a meeting between all rended a party in the supplying infonnation and
the group's Wp California Riverside home of her reservations.
'AND IT'S TAX DEDUCTIBLE' -Everyone's do-
nating merchandise for the Glorified Junk and
Treasure Sale to ~nefit South Coast Community
Hospital. Young Winston Hendrickson brings bis of·
ferings to Mrs. John Taul, sale chairman and Jenif·
fer Friesz. Proceeds will go towards the hospital's
expansion fund drive and all donations are tax d e--
ductable.
Chaired by Mrs. John
Taul with ttte assistance of
Mrs. Burt Hendrickson, the
&lie will fealllre baked
goods on SMurday.
Tel ling All Won't Forestall
DEAR ANN LANDERS: The lett.r
you printed from "Sadder but Wiser"
compelled me lo write this lette.r. She
was the mousy little housewife who
felt guilty about having an affair,
I'm a high school student who knows
of a similar affair -my mother's.
Mom always decides to see a very late
movie "alone" when Dad Is out of
town. Once I asked how the movie was
and she got so rattled I felt sorry for
her. Recently I came home unex·
pectedly. (I had planned to opend Ille
night at a girllriend's house and
changed my mind.) I heard the bock
door slam u I came in and I smelled
pipe tobacco" all over the place.
This afternoon I needed 60 cents and
Mom wasn't home. I looked in Mom's
coat pocket for change. To my hcrror
1 discovered .a key to a local motel.
\
ANN LANDERS
Do I owe It to my dad to tell him? U
t don 't tell and they get a divorce 1
will always feel as th~ugh I couJd have
helped save · their marriage if I had
spoken out. -J.K.L.
DEAR J.K.L.: Doo't say 1 word . To
anyone. WhUe you may beUeve the
evidence Is conclusive, ytu eo111ld be
wron1. And U you art wronf 700
would be rtlponslble for stin1D ap s
hideous mess.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: We are an
average family. By "averaae" t mean
my husband and l are at the mercy of
\
three lazy, uncooperative, smart-
mouth kids.
Our daughters (ages 13 and 15)
kept us broke. The bOy, .ail:ed 11,
keeps us exhausted. My husband and I
don't want to break their spirit or spoil
thelr fun by being loo demanding. I'm
afraid, however. that we have been too
lenient and now we can't get our klds
to do anything that vaguely resemblts
work ·-either In or out of achoo!.
Last week the kids suggested a
"famUy jury," with each member or
'Friends'
tl)e family having one vote. Of course
my husband and 1 always lose because
the kids vote as a bloc. Can you help
us teach these ~Ids to be responsible
citizens? -OUTVOTED
DEAR OUT: The majority rule 11
e1cellent for a:overnmenl, but It
doesn't wort well a. meat.al t.
slltuUons, prt~n1 or fam1Ue1 wt(b two
or more cbildi'ta.
Adolescents not only need dlsctpllne
but t.bey want IL Whea clllldrea eall
tbe 111~als and run the famtl,y tMy cet
the lmpressloa &belr pareab an Jm.
beeUe1. KJU wbo do u tbe1 pleue
are not bapp)' -they art: toatuled.
The beH way to keep your chlldru't
feet on the 11ound ls to put tome
respoatlblllty oa tllelr sboWden.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My 1l1ter
Coming
Ma zlt and her husband have had din·
ner at our house very Friday for the
last six years. Thts means they have
enjoyed 312 free meals oVer bere.
We hBve been to their bo'me for din·
ner three times. (Once was when my
brother·in·law's boe:s gave him a
turkey for OU\stmu. Another time,
m, brotber·ln·ll.W 1hot a duck. It wu
too carny to eat. And once we hid •·
Chinese dinne.r which they pald ua to
pl ck up on the w~ over.)
Lut week u oui-ol-towu aunt was
~viag a 1erlou1 operation end I off·
ered to take c:aro ot her children.
Mazie didn't invite my husband over
for a 1ln&le meat. This burned me up.
I told my hUJband I'm tllroulh feeding
them every Frlda7. He 11y1 Ma&le..
wlU be mad bocaute Ibey have 1fOW11
to expect it. How do I unwind a Iii:·
to Call
year habit! -THE CHUMP
DEAR CHUMP: Flad oomeWq die
to do 1 few Fridays la a nw aad aa-
DOu.aee fl well I.II advaace. WM. yo•
do ~vile Mille CeU W , 11lt'1 your
turn·nexl «me," ud put yolU' dluen
on an altenaU.1 baU1.
Too many c:ouplff go f r om
matrlm<1:1iy to acrimony. Don't Jet
your marriage flop bef<J:e it a:ets '
started. Send for Ann La.oder•'
bookie~ ·"Marriage -What to, Ex-
pect." Send your request' to Ann
Lander1 lD care al thls newspaptt
enclodnc 50 cents in coin and a loot.
stamped, 1elf-addres1ed envelope.
Ann Llmder1 will be glad to help you
will! your problem1. Send tbem to her
In ~are qi the DAll.Y PILOT, enclos-
in( • ooll.Mfdnlled, •tamped ...
velopo.
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'J! DAILY '1LDT ...
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Horoscope
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I
Scorp io: Day to Create
SAT., AUG. 10
97 SYDNEY OMARR
"1be wiH man controls
his destiny. . .Astrolo&y
pnintl the woy."'
ARIES (March 21-AprQ
191 : Morale ia: boosted -
you are surrounded 1,. by
glamour, intrigue, mystery.
Day when much happens in
quiet, behlnd-1cenes man-
ner. Importarit to b e
discreet. Do~'t tell all you
know .
20): Finish projects. some
around family clrCle are lm·
.patient. Set example. J;fan-
dle one thing at a time. Be 1
good listener. Unwiual in·
dividuaJ may e<1nfide unique
problem.
CANCER (June 21.July
22): Good lunar aspect to-
day coincides· with
journey--elther literal or
mental. Means your present
surroundings change. Actual
be tranaformed into •binin& U&ht. • Message clear by
tonight.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18 ): ResuU. of put effl>rta
pay dividends. Check~ in·
';estment possiblliiies. Don't
-waste experteoce. You have
chance t.o rise, \0 be pro-
moted -don't let it fiy
away.
PISCES (Feb. Ill-March
20):, One close to you turns
apparent adversity I n t o
achievement . Legal
circumrtances swing in your
favor. Partnership C(luld
Oourtsh. Good public ela-
tions today can w o r k
Wonder•. Act accordingly.
T6 find 6111 wllo'1 lucky lor \IOU In -Y •rid loffl order SvclntY Om1u'1 tldclklft, "S.Crt HIM$ kt Mtn Ind
W-." SW blrlhll•lt ind 50 Cf"' to Omllrr Altro~ *"'h: .,,. DA LY PtLOf; 1-12 , Gr11'1d Clntrtl Sil· '""' "'""' v...... .'I. 1111111.
trip occurs or journey of the I mi~0wnt~:nd23-~~: Z2): Coun e at Home
Fine for sbopping. If you are · f""
alert, you find aomethina: of __. --
value. Quality does not 11 T
expense. You can obtain
what you need at bargain
• TAURUS (April 20-May
20): Pleasant surpriJe due
-cook! be in fonn of party
or 1peclal event. Some of
your hopes, wishes are due w be fullllled. Get basic
1'•i.t qut...oe...way early
necessarily correspond with Fo OW,· n g r ·, p
n.te...Look._--~------. ---VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Now home in Huntington
A Pleasant Day for Dining and Cards
Before resuming fall activities members of South-
ern Orange County Alumnae of Alpha Phi are look-
ing forward to a relaxing day in the South Laguna
home of Mrs. Fitzhugh Brewer (middle) at 11 :30
i.m. Aug. 14. The women will enjoy a buffet lunch-
~n and play bridge. Appreciating the ocean view
are Miss Susan Muller, a student at San Diego State
College and Mrs. Edward Bowen, chapter president
(left to light). Reservations, by Aug. 12, may be
made with Mrs. Bowen, 494-2328 or Mrs. William
Hersey, 675-2993.
Harbor -Council Movie Guide ..
GEMINI (May 21.Juoe
Members
Center On
Bouquets
Day ol. expansion. You Beach, Vicky Lynn Blase
multiply efforts -you see and Richard C. Cleveland
beyond immediate In· exchanged wedding
dications. Accent on how · rings and vows during a
you relate to mate, partner. ceremony conducted by the
Your assets are ap-Rev. J<iln P. Ashey in St.
predated.. Your possessions James Episcopal Church,
rise in value. Newport Beach.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Parents oI the newlyweds
Your work and methods are are Mr. ~nd Mrs. Hal Jay
being observed. Realize this Blase and Mr. and Mrs.
Floral &n'angements for and respond accordingly. Walter C. Cleveland, all or
the home will be given a Check apparent minor mat-HuntingtDn Beach.
designer's attention when ters. You couJd make pro-For her wedding the bride
Mrs . Dudley case fitable discovery. Seek key selected a traditionally sty!·
demoostrates the art at the to puzzle. . ed gown of white Silk
Coast Mesa-Bay Cit i e s SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. organZ;& with a lace bodice
Fuchsia Society meeting 21): Good lunar aspect to-and )ace repeated in )lands
Monday , Aug, 12, day ~incDides with sell..exd-on the bouffant skirt. Mrs. Case, .._ ft 0 rat presston. ay to create an
Miss Diana Frere was the
maid oi honor a n d
bridesmaids were t h e
Misses Jodi Madison, Llbda
and Stephanie Blase.
The bridegroom asked
John Megery to be his best
man and Jeff Harrison and
Bill Diever were ushers.
Following the wedding the
couple greeted 150 guests
during a champagne recep-
tion in the Newporter Inn.
The bride was graduated
from Marina High School.
Her busband ,a graduate of
University High School, now
is attending Golden West
College.
designer and wedding con· Shl?W feelings. Loved one
sultant associated with needs reassurance. Throw
Hollister's Floral Shop in off false pride. Rediscover
Costa Mesa, will create a past joyS. Marriage Plans Told
casual ~ring or French SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22·
Basket A-line design using Dec. 21): Obtain hint from Mrs. Lois " Hutchison of College where she wa_!.?
£resh nowers of the garden SCORPIO message. Strive Newport Beach has an-member of Sigma Gamma,
citing, entertaining situa-Greenwich Village poet. POOR COW -S or d id variety. • for greater domestic peace. nounced the ,ng~ement of interclub council president,
t ion occur 5 w he n TiiE FOX -Relationship drama of girl who._ faces a , ·-Believiilg ·~no home is harmony. Spotijght --0 n · her daughter, Sharon Lynn -AWS'-president and secre--
American orchestra iS between two women living seamy ex i st enc e in complete witlhout nowers, home, property. Ch e ck tary and president and sec-captured b N · al y Hutchison to Ray Austin · Y a--a z 1 ' on an isolated f0rm ;s English slums. the designer is interested in v ues. ou Po s s e s s re t a r y-treasurer of the
general in World War II. shattered with arrival of ROSEMARY'S BABY _ s'howing how bl use flowers something others need. Get Arnold, son of Mrs. Mar· Math and l;ngineering Club.
ENTER LAUGHING an attractive man. Sordid. decadent and from garden or shop in in-your price. guerite Voboril of. Lincoln, She plans to continue her
FAMILY Hilarious, affectionatr ·rnE GRADUATE -Comic blasphemow; film about ex pensive arrangements. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Neb. ·education at C.a 1 if ornia
AROUND 'lliE 'WORLD IN fllm of Jewish life durin;., satire of a young man who Satan and witchcraft. She also will give tips on J·an. 19): Visit which had A September wedding is State College at Fullerton.
80 DAYS -(X) -Adven-19308 in n.-Bronx. h fl been ™'' off may -ur •-be' g 1 d H f'a ,. a ph m e Wt:: breaks oot of materlalisti: .'HE SECRET LIFE OF AN ow to preserve cut owers ry "'"· w· m P anne . er 1 nee s so o or
turous Londoner and his THE FLIM·FLAM MAN -world of bis elders. AMERICAN WIFE and will demonstrate the art day. Strive r o r un· Miss Hutchison is a grad· at Orange Coast College
valet wagu they can cir-Comedy of chicanery. c......,histicated 8 1r 1. c 11 y of making fuchsia cor· derstanding of opp o s i ng uate of Corona del Mar High _and ~ved for four years
Cle the earth in 80 days. SPEEDWAY -Musical LIVE FOR LIFE -French ""1-' views Glimmer of truth r,an School and Orange Coast ~with th U ·s Navy
BLACKBEARD'S GHOST corned about •--k .l ·.. drama about a televiaion adutt comedy of a bored sages. . . J;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;ii';;;;;;·;;;;;;·;;;;;;;;;i;ii. ;;;;;;;;;;;, -y as~ car . su~·-ban~ousew"e The 7:30 p.m. meeting, m I D. • d d hi t · Journalist, his personal u""' 11 u wol,famot 'u',"'pY;!,.t'e. ventures rbaillsce.r an s s agger1ng l'f 'fONY ROME p'. t the American Legion Hall in ..... 1 e and his involvement -r1va e-Costa Mesa is open to the
0 o N • T RA I s E TH E WILL PENNY -Itinerant with the violent world ey~ uncovers corpses in public. '
BRIDGE, LOWER THE cowboy is brought into around h.im . tJt:t~er .c on t r as t_ l n g Club members ate.. asked
RIVER. Big time wbeeler-C(lntact with a home NEV ADA SMITll -Violent millionaires and lowlife. to bring plants for the plant
dealer schem~ tq win, _!amily _and love_ in ..tbi~ _Ji.estern. X denotes ueellent film. table.
back wife who wants di-unglamorized view 011---------------------'==-------ll
vorce. Montana during 1880s.
THE JUNGLE BOOK -
Disney version of Kipl· MATURE TEENS
ing's tale of boy reared in AND ADULTS
All P•""•Y Stor .. Ope" Every Night Monday Through Saturday
6'uai'=~
ANNUAL AUGUST
Jungle by a family crl THE FAMILY WAY -Lack
. ~l~e~ AND ONLY, GE· ~fo ~i~a~yn :~.:om~:n~ enne• •J
NUINE. 0 R t G I N A L certingly earthy interest ~.
SATURDAY
LAST DAY! ' . ,Sl'?tfaJ~ ~11 SALE!
~ FAMILY BAND in their affairs threaten ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY
American politics of 1880s the marriage of a young
. •
pfovide a period English couple.
background for th i s THE GREEN BERETS -
Disney musical. Authentic action -packed
Pl\IVATE NAVY OF SGT. patriotic war film.
· O'FARRELL -Good· GUESS WHO'S COMING TO
naturtd spoof oo a lonely DINNER -Moving story
isle in the Pacific. during of parent's reaction to .a
World War JI. racially mixed marriage.
THE RUSSIANS ARE COM· 0 DD COUPLE -
ING -HJlarious comedy Uproarious comedy j n
about a Russian sub-which two ill·matched ex·
marine grounded at Cape marrieds ~cide to room
Cod . wgetber.
SHAKIEST GUN IN THE THE SAND PEBBLES -
WEST -Deritic:t Sf'f!k"I story about crew o f
his fortune in Wild West of American gunboat, San
1880s in this slapstick Pablo, set in allna during
western. political unrest of the
THOROUGHLY MODERN 19'1.n<.
MILLIE -(X) -Musical THE SCALPHUNTERS -
spoof of 1920s. Trapper and r u n e w a y
THE YOUNG AMERICANS slave follow trail of rtolen
-Delightful production in ~Its in this gory and
whldli ba.Jented teenagers violent film.
sing their way across the WHERE WERE YOU
U.S.A. WHEN THE LI G HTS
YOURS, MINE AND OURS WENT OUT? -Famous
-(X) -Warm, lively blackout of November
domestic comedy of a 1965 , serves a ~
widowed naval of r i c er background for this com-
lritb 10 children and a edy.
Navy widow with eight ADULTS
children who marry. A FINE MADNESs
TEENS AND ADULTS Crude film about sick
COUNTDOWN -Story ofl ~~~-----·;;· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I how race to moon affects If
on astronaut, his family ILUE RIBBON COMEDY
and friends. OF THE YEAR
COUNTERPOINT -E•·
: .. Alumn i Meet .l..'o::-1 '@A'
. • > . • . • . •
-~·. • • • • • • •
. .
: .... :·
~: ·.,..
•• • •• :: ....... -.
Or&nge County Catholic
Alumni Club will hear a lec-
ture by the Rev. Bob Nich-
oll, director for 1he county
b r a n c h of the Southern
CbrisUan Leadership Coo·
ference-West.
The meeting will take
place at 7:XI p.m. next
Monday 1n t b e Charter
HOUR, Anabetm.
IllllU aw.· llN! llXill\
"}{Jurs.Mine
... OOgS.
NOWI -. Coot1 -
RUTH BR YA NT-Beauty Consultant
pr•••nts
Ma~ NOIMAN co s11n1cs
CALL FOR APl'OINTMENT
For complimentary col«>r I mek•-up enely1i1 , , .
646-4026
Brina Ad for Free Clf\ wtth appolntment
291 L 17tlt St. C.... M-
lewW>-I< BouUque Items
)
•
• \: •
I
REDUC-ED!
Back-to.;school savings
on quality underwear!
Boys' underwear
Reg. 3 for 2 .19
3 for 1.77
~ l-0."" and brioh of oolt combed
-Double back brioh ..... -w.ar, flot ~nTt T..Mrtt haft nylo11 Nin·
~ NC.Ir. loyl',.liz• 6 to 18 .
Gi rls' llltderweor
Reg. 3 fo r 1.7 5 •
3 for 1.44
a--bond fag """"...,...,_ ,.,_ bl...r. ~ dl"'plo ""~ oloollc fag
stylet, ...,.,, f)f'Stty blrds.t)"I cotton prints.
White and °"°"" colon '" glrk' tint.
HUNflNGTON BEACH COSTA MESA NEWPO RT BEACH ALL
CREDIT
CAllDS
Famous Brand
Names-You
1All Know.
Bargains Aft•r
Bargains!
Prices Slash•d
to Exciting N•w
Lows!
33 1 /3 .. so•At
OFF
on
Shifts
Skirts
Sun Dresses
Cotton Dresses
Cocktan Dresses
Capris
Blouses
Lingerie
Sweaters
Swim Suits
Swim Suits -Prices Slash.cl
300/d to 500/o off
3424 Via Lido • Newport 11-i.
1lto Dlaneyl1ncl Hotof
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Ki:rnball Wins Snipe
t ' •
Jr. i· ~·-' ~ .
' J
J
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Championship
FrldlJ, A1tglHl IJ, 1968 DAILY PILOT J 1,
Multihull OCC May Develop
Trials Now H b p ar or roperty
under way By THOMAS FQRTUNE c.rolng to Harbor Dis~
'!be_ tru.r.d aMual World Of .. "'"' '1ttr. S•.tff Manager Kenneth SampAOo.
MulUhull championship got The Orange Coa1t Junior TOO 'SMALL
under way at Lon_g Beech College District Is working Sampson said he woold
Thursday with speed and ef-on plans to develop It! crew Uke to see the property have
fieiency trials. base l>toperty on choice great.er use, but poted it Lt
More &peed and etcrciency Newporl Harbor waterfront too small for substantial
trials were scheduled today for fuller use. development . The area is
fr.om 1 to S p.m. Joining With UC Irvifle less than an acre and wfth
Sta.rt of the first race in and other Orange County buildin~a-wooWD.~' ,..!>1.---'
the Day Sailing Regatta is colleg~~. the junior-~Jll6 ..... "'ffitiC1\ room left for parking,
slated Saturday at 1 _p_m.--disfi'ict ·pJan1 to bulkhead he obse:ved. . .
The day 1ailing will con· the shoreline and add moor-He said a 11te ls being set
.elude. Sunday:-.wi~-~ iflga-.for-@llegiate-racing ·aside ilt"D~a--Point-HM-bor -
awvds__,pruentatiOI\-and-sloops. · _ for _J_.,JP..Wn~ stud¥-. artd _
"CJ'O'Wning'' of • th~otIO-Plai\s-for ml!:ifil!'-:lludy.::" reslerch ractlity_:;_ -;:_ _ _.::::::.
JnliHiftuTchaffi.j)ioil'it T:36'1 ac n rr1e5 including "It ts located nen to lhe
p.m. _ aquariums _ an_d a .!!...-2!..!!:.... breakwater wher~. you c.an _
t"--""'1tl. -· Speed anO effic1encYlfials de.rwif« observatory ap-ge,r ~esh seawa:t~ "!rum--
Rink)i-Di~k Bu.ilder-s
. I
Set Up Association
Southern Ca· 1 if or n i a Riverside Sail CJub, was
builder-owners of Rinky· elected president ol. the new
Oinks -those unique, sew" association. Se!'ving with him on the original board
it-yourself one· design are Art.Hestand, vice presi-
sailboats. h ave Connally · den€; Pollard, -treasurer;
organized, elected Officers Clay:. secretary and
and gt.aged their iltlaugural Wahlgren, riace chairJDafl.
ratt. 1be fir:st race was held on
The Soothem California Lake Evans near Riverside
Rinlcy-Dink Association wias and was won by guests Jim
formed with · seven chart.et\ .and Helen Hellyer, Goleta.
members: Bob CI a Y"': In a two-out-of three series,
Westminster; Art Hestand, Jones -w.i1!1. Clay crewing
San Diego; Venl Hestand, -won· the first rece then
Port Hueneme; D e n n y fooled a :marlt and dropped
Jones, San Bernardino; Don out o£ the second. 1'\e
Palmer, Hrawibome; Bill Hellyers won the third going
Pollard, Riverside, and War-away as they q u i c k 1 y
ren, l.ia Mesa. mastered the li:gfl_t ad.r con·
"'Jooes, commodore ol. the di~ on the late.
are being held off Pier J. pareotly have beeo diverted sc1e:riti.sts .~ell me I!_ hi~
inside the Long Beach by. t~e Countr H~m--da61reble, brAXI.
Harbor jetty and the day mission, . wh.1ch pre!er1 a
sailing eventS will be held in Dana Point Harbot:"s1t~ ..
iolll~""/1 -the ocean· outside the Long Th.e Har~r Comm1ss1on
Beach breakwater. also asks th.at crew ac-
Awards include the Glas· tivities evenltJally be moved
Craft Perpetual Trophy for to the rowing . course to be
the fastest boat plus first constructed lll U P p e r
thiOugh third most el-Newport Ba.y.
ficient and the vi c t 0 r The m~ine study and
Tcnetchet w 0 r 1 d Cham· crew f~ltties would be
pionsh.ip Trophy f<lr the first cooperatively developed and
boat fn day sailing. Shared by several Orange
Special awards will be • County colleg~.
given t<l boats built to the DRAW UP PLANS
lnternat,ional Ya<;ht Racing
Union rule defining classes
for best total s ailing
performance in the day sail·
ing regatta.
Orange Coa1t Co 11 e g e
Dis trict trustees Wednesday
night hired engineer Jack
Raub to draw up plans for
bulkheaclingj.he properly. -· AleK·Kozloff-of Ooronrdel·
Mar is general chairman of
the event. The regatta is
being held in conjunction
With the Long Bead\ Jnter-
tional Sea Festival.
H a r b o r commissioners
next Tuesday will hear a
l f r E"ry wel'k MMCO utitfi" -progress repor o m tti." 10,000 u 1"1n1i19* prObM.mL
Cat Races
Next Week
Harbor District engineers You 1tt fr•• towlnf. • ,,.. l!O'do who are studying the mat-ch.ck. t11t .n1c1iaet ..,,;.:~ ---·--f Pi·l'i,,._i~ .. t.-_...,..-AM •tti ler. --AAMCO, )'our tr1n1ml11ion C*'I ii. The collegi district rents protected by CY•r ~()(I MMCO. Otn·
from the county 300 fron· ,.,.. c-o.tt to cont.
• lage feet and b a c k u p E"'1'' '"i"ut. 11111 • ..,.., .,..... -ProYll •••
World Outboard Event King Harbor Yad>t Club,
Redondo Beach, will be host
to the Pacific Catamaran
n a t i o n a l champiomtlip
regatta, Aug. 16-17-18.
acreage to Pacific Coast
Highway for Sl a year. The
2.5-year lease has 10 more
years to run.
Orange Coast Co 11 e g e
District officials are seeking
a ~year extensioo, and
have btooched the subject
with Supervisor Alton Allen. O_ffers $30,000 Purse The annool clas.s meeting
guaranteed the winner, has
been posted tor the 1968
Outboard W or 1 d ct.am·
'10,00J in cash and priz.es
at Lake Havasu City.
"We expect money of that
kind w lU attract th< top
drivers from ~ parts of the
Un 'led Sta•-ll will-be-held at KHYC -Aug. 1 ics as we as 15 at 8 p.m.
foreign stars," aaid_RoberL Boat -owners in the
P. McCullodl Jr., rece as60C.i·ation who live m<lre
chairman. than 600 miles away may
The event wu already the borrow a boat !or jfle event. . . Dry storage f« the boats r1cheGt outboard race in the will be av.ailable et KHYC.
world and the boast from Any skipper may sail in
last year's $27,750 adds to tile championships providJng
that claim. he has sailed in two PO:A
"We anticipate a field of sancti<lned regattas since
150 boab:," McCulloch said. last year'• championship
The site now is developed
on)y with a st<ln!house for
the crew shells ~ and a
launching float. It is located
-between the Balboa Bay
Club and Orange County Sea
Scoot Base.
The Bay Club has a
month-to...mooth lea-se with
the couoty for offshore
moorings along 250 feet of
the 300 feet of frontage.
Development might cost the
Bay Club part or all of the
encroaching boat slip&, ac·
COSTA MESA
1741 M•_,.,. 11, 646.166'
KC! OtrMtl ~ l lY&. .... ....._
S.nt• An•
t2t L ""'' St ............. MMU1
O./£R 60 ,\A'. CC..
,..,. Ct. IFC'"' .:
NOW SHOWING! BIGGEST HITS OF TH ·E YEARI
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...
"'rri"' Mia Farrow • John
TECHNICOLOR • S<JggestedtorMalureAudiencesG
EVERY EVENING
AT •••
8:15 and
10:45PM
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CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM ...
2:15PM
SATURDAY & SUNDAY FROM ...
12:15PM
Midnight Show FrldQ & Saturday
mMlllUln ll1Vl'lllGO. 171-551$
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EVERY EVENING AT •••
8:00 and 10:00 PM
ACADEMY
AWARD
WINNER
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AT Hl•WAY 39 DRIVE•IN
ANNE BANCROFT ... DUSTIN HOFFMAN • KATHARINE ROSS
TECHNICOLOR • P.AN.AVISION
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11 DAILY PILOT. EDITORIAL .PAGE
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Rapid. Growth Ahead
Sweeping changes and rapid growth are around the
corner for Orange Co unty's south coast area.
Dramatic expansion plans just announced by the
Laguna 'Niguel Corporation include a $.acre salt water
Jake and soua:oevelopment of i¢s two-mile shoreline. '
ment and population influx are bound to ha'f'e an impact
from Laguna • Beach to San Clemente.
The planning I• desirable in that It attempt.< Lo pro-
vide a range of recreational opportunities; eliminate
where possible .the-busing oLchildten to..scbool, aupply-
ing pedestrian systems for them to walk; provide a ·t _ The
1
man-made lake with surrounding recreational variety of housing types; and provide facilities for shop-
~ • aqcl_ residenti3L,_deYelopment w:.e....part or the corpora-ping, business, social, cultural ~d educational' needs .
-i.+--_ ---Uon's recently updated_pjan..-The planned facilities range from a resort hotel and
~ ---The·tllfiSliOreline along with a mile of ocean beach Stean-front cottages to a l ,02Q..unit hilltop apartment
-;, 1 --will gi.ve tesident.&...oLthe .ar.ea-.about tb.ree m.Ue.s f sea project, from neighborhood parks to small convenience
or lake...sbo.re.for recreational yurposes. -shOpping centers. _ _ _ .
-t--· -~4' ~~.:_ The plan has an ultimate development foreca5t..o! -The.planned comffiunity • ..sh9uid be an excitini ch~p-.
23,699 dwelling units of varied types and a population ter in the colorfUl · contemporary · rus.tory-nf-Oi'i.nge
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-l>e.velopment-of the aJ;ea-is...expected...to begin....ne.xL.
year. The corporation recently acquired 850 acres for
$10.5 million. The purchase included a fast vanishing
Calif~rnia. commodity -undeveloped shoreline.
The very con of the land will likely hasten imple-
""JDenta~n Of the development.
Other iJlfluential fac'tors include:
-North American Rockwell plans for an autonetics
plant in place with 7,500 employes late next year. This
may be the nucleus of even greater industrial develop-
ment and far more jobs.
-Adoption of the Route 1 freeway alignment
through Laguna Niguel last year and related county
arterial development plans for the area.
The planning seems the harbinger of a whole new
·--. _era.loi:.lhe..slllllb..l:llJ!~l21.Jlri!!il_C.oq~ty~ The develop-
In the Common Good
tt seems well for Laguna Beach planning commis·
sioners to continue to hold the li ne on large-scale zone
changes on the eve of a general plan study and a pend·
i_ng commercial·hotel zone.
Such a policy is irksome to property owners who
hope to be a llowed a higher use for valuable holdings.
But the delay would seem in the common good. Th8
city is buying the talent of top-notch planners. Zoning
and the balance between estbetic and commercial val-
ues will be an important part of the plarullng process.
The planners should have an opportunity to shed
some light on a multiplicity of municipal problems in·
eluding zoning.
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FUN IN FLOR\t>A
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I -lt's-W ell That
They Straddle
_'I Lo_ve You~
In Spite of
Police Won Overdue Respect -,
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MlAMI BEACH -The Republicans
·.ave straddled the Vietnam issue, as
will the Democrats, .and it will be up to
the presidential candidates to draw
an)"" ~definable disUpction between
.th~m_on ~ tbL:war .•
< Tbe issue wm finally rest not so
much on phraseology as ·upon at·
Utydes. N~~political party really
knows how to end the war. nor will the
~andidates know. In the end people
will intuitively judge which candidate
is the more likely to be ~le to bring
'.the thing to a desirable cooclusion.
lt is just as well ttlat both parties
are straddling, Otherwise tbey could
end any pro.speot of the negoCators in
Paris aocompHshing 81lyUiing. If the
hation i& wholly lucky the presidential
campaign will end just as in·
conclusively as the national political
'convemions. insofar as a Vietnam set·
tle-ment is concerned.
FOR THERE IS NO question at all
that the Soviet Union and the govern·
ment of North Vietnam are pinning
their expecl.DtiOIMi on the presidential
campaign so unhinging American opi-
nion that it will be the end of any
further American aspirations in Asia.
In any sensible ordering of events
the next President of the United States
should not be bound by compromises
forced upon him in a presidential cam-
paign. Only the naive could con·
ceivably believe that issues like Viet-
nam and the AmeriQan role in Asia
can be resolved by public opinion polls
or presidential elect.ions.
Presidential candidates who commit
Uiemselves to courses of international
action are inevitably embarrassed,
viz. Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon
B. Johnson. Dwight D. Eisenhower
committed himself to nothing but a
trip to Korea which he made and
which so hardened his view that he
thereupon, according to his own stale·
ment, sent out the word that unless
the Sorth Koreans and Chinese settled
he was likely to use nuclear weapons.
THERE WERE SOME in Miami. as
there will be in Chicago at the end of
this month, who prayed that the
political parties would wash out the
Vietnam war and so inhibit the can·
didates th~ all freedom of action
would be Jost.
They did not prevail in Miami. and
lhey wl:tl , not prevail in Chicago,
-"lthough ti will surely be a noisier
·sue when the McCarthy forces loose
811 George ---,
Dear George :
I plan to become a
multimillionaire and my ideals
are J. Paul Getty and How~rd
Hughes. Do you think J have a
chance to be exactly like these two, and how should J start?
YOUNG HOPEFUL
Dear Young Hopeful:
Why don 't you get rid or the
idea of being exactly like
somebody else and be yourseU7
In the first place, it's not prac·
t.ical -I can't tell you how to
suddenly get both older and ln.
.Ulble.
Dear G<o<ge :
--'What do you thlnk of the lady
&dv$ce columnist& who seem to
have no trouble aolvlng every
prcl>lem ?
CURIOUS
Dear CUriow :
I think they're sweet. OOe ot:
my dearett friends is 1 lady ad-
vice columnltl who s o I v e 1
everythlna. once I chance her
~wr!Cer ribbon tor her.
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upon the Democratic convention their
clamor for retreat in Vietnam.
It-will-be 5aid, of course that the old
political partjes offered nc hope for
the rising generations who are un ·
dergoing some kind of miraculous
change in human nature, shedding in
tht wink of an eye all tile sins of the
past to emerge in a warless world of
uninhibited freedom, equaHty and
ease.
And that is quite true. The old
political parties are not creating the
new world ol which youth dreams
because they bave not found any way
to do it. Nor has youth found any way.
Sen. Eugene McCarthy 1 e a v e s
something to be wanted in this respect
also.
FROM ALL INDI CAT ION S,
therefore, we are to go along again
this year with the old parties, the old
candldates (even Rockefeller is 00),
and modifications of old ideas to solve
old problems.
Republican criticisms of the conduct
of the war were familiar -frittering
away of our commitment in a pro-
longed war of attrition. Republicans
would change the strategy to the
security and loyalty of the population,
instead of control or territory, which
is" of course, exactly what the
strategy in Vietnam is now. So ·there
was nothing the Republicans h<:.d to sar. which was of much help to our
military commanders in Vietnam .
The same will undoubtedly be true
when the Democrats go through the
tortures of drafting a Vietnam plank.
THF. DIFFERENCE \VILL be that
the Democrats cannot so easily gloss
over the differences between Vice
President Humphrey and Senator
McCarUty, as the Republicans were
able to gloss over differences between
Ne lson A. Rockefeller and Richard M.
Nixon. There may even be a minority
report. which the Democratic cori-
vention will have to vote down .
Both parties will end up being strong
for peace -honorable peace, the word
honorable being a qualifier covering
all kinds of differences.
Then the next President of the
United States will take up where
President Johnson will have left off.
He will face the real practicalities of
Vietnam. how to end up with an in-
dependent republic in the south shield·
ed from internal subversion &'Dd at-
tack from the north a:nd free to choose
lts own political course.
Quotes
Allan Grant, Berkeley, Stile Board
of Ag:rlcullure pre1., on ca1lern boy·
coll of Calif. 1r1pc1 -"This boycott
i~ a Lhreat to the jo~s .o( every grape
picker in the state."
Gov, Ronald Reatan., on youthful
dl11enler1 -"Success to thcnl Is fin·
ding a way lo stop the licking but they
haven't the vRguest idea of how to put
the clock back logetber again."
L. "· M1yor Sam Yorty, 01 ••
nou.ncff left.win& demon1trallo1 plan· t
ntd for HHJI vlsll -"It's • sad day
wheo the Vlce President has to put up
with this type of haralisment jun
btcaust he wants to visit a few
rrlends."
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_The Hippies'
By ELLSWORTH L.
RICHARDSON
ft.1)nlster, Tbe Neighborhood
Conrregatlonal Cburcb
Lafuna Bea~b
Our town has a bad case of ''hippy-
titus'' ! 1
Before we for m sides of accord or
dissent. Jet us define what we mean by
being a hippy. T like Pro! . .Earisman's
definition: a hippy is "any individual
or group that separates themselves
from the prevailing systems and stan-
dards of a society in order to find
" ' . 'Eveey<Jay
. RroJJleDU! . . '' ·~
meaning that they cannot find in that
society."
If we accept this definition, then we
find the modern hippy in the company
or' a long list of individuals who sought
meaning that they could not find in the
society in which they lived : such as
Socrates, Diogenes. the D e s e rt
Fathers. St. Francis of Assisi, the
Brethren of the Free Spirit, the
Shakers, the poet William Blake and
Thoreau!
THOREAU SAID, "I went to the
woods because I wished to live
deliberately, to confront only the
essential facts of life. and see ii I
could learn what it had to teach, and
not, when I came to die, di scover that
I had not lived. If a man does not keep
pace with his companions, perhaps it
is because he hears a different drum·
mer.'' Then after two years of drop·
ping out. he said, "I left the woods for
As good a reason as I went there , .. t
had several more lives to live and
could not spare any more time for that
one." lie continued. ". , . if you have
built castles in the air. your work need
not be lost: that is where they should
be. Now put the foundations under
them." ·
IT SHO ULD BE evident to some of
the hippies who are now turning to
switchblades. or who are thinking
about it , recognizing the folly of their
unproducUve lives, that "NOW is the
time to put found ations under their
castles." The problems of our cities,
the menace of war, will not be solved
by sitting cross-legged on t h e
sidewalk, but only through the highly
disciplined use of reason. It requires
the cultivation of the imtitulions of
ordered human re1ations.ttips.
We need to learn not only how to
love oui fellow men. but to work with
them In some systematic and orderly
way. Let the hippies of the world unite
with the human race I Let the hippies
put foundations under their castles,
noble as they might be
TO RE SURE, like Thoreau. they
have heard a "distant drummer," and
now l.s the Ume for them to listen to
the distant rumble of drums on Mt.
SIM.I and Mount Calvary!
I have noticed a yellow bu m per
sticker which reads, "P. S. I Love
You." On cloier scrutiny the legend
rtads, "Palm Springs, I Love You."
What a creative way to enhance the
ima.11 ol Palm Sprinpl "Laguna
Beach, r love you ' .. fn .spite or the
hippies." Maybe now Is the time for
.a:ll ol \11 to ~t foundallons under our
c1sUe1! Lets do It toret.herl
Pop Festival fj
Ill Retrospect
To the Editor:
I am not at alt surprised by the
Costa Mesa City Council"s decision to
ban any future Pop Festivals. This I
believe was decided upon before the
first performances. What d o e s
surprise me, however, is that our
moral protectors let tl].is thing slip by
in the first place; no loopholes in the
la w, perhaps. , .
Many considered Costa Mesa's
"retirement vill8ge" reputation just
too much to overcome and couldn't
conceive of it ever being the site for
an avant garde or youth.oriented spec·
tacle. It was a happy surprise when it
happened.
NOW THE MAYOR tells us that he
witnessed the whole "explosive situa-
tion" from the roof of the police facili·
ty, a good city block away. I'm sure
the good mayor was unable to
determlne the mood of the crowd. and
I'm also sure that Mr. Pinkley made at
least 90,000 more enemies by calling
us all animals in the light of those few
who chose to go that route.
l attended the performances both
days and never once fell like an
animal. Nor did I witness one ins.ult to
a police officer. The police were
wonderful. Were beautiful, and won
much overdue respect. If there were
insults, and I heard there were, they
were not deserved, nor did they reflect
the attitudes Of th e majority.
Professional agitators were alleged to
have been present. If this is so. then
the crowd should be rewarded, not
denied, for not blowing it in this "ex·
plosive situation." No professional
agitation could even upset the com·
placency of the f~Uval .
THE PEOPLE as a whole . were
very well behaved. The police ~ven
reported this to be true several times
during the performances. There was
not even a fist fight, which is unusual
at a large gathering Of yoWlg people.
Through all thia the city of Costa Mesa
paid photographP.rs to seek out. and
film "incidents'' that would pamt a
mood for the crowd. You can believe
that the majority of the individuals at
the Pop Festival will be edited out of
that film.
For all the undeniable order at the
Newport Pop Festival, what do we get
but A slap in the race by the mayor
and city council. If you wonder why
today's., youth are discontent. look no
further. This is not an unusual turn of
events for kids with honest motives to·
day.
Mayor Pinkley's irresponsibility and
questionable motives for th I s
discoloration, io the face of 100,000
witnesses, may have added another
several thousand frustrated souls to
the rising tide of rebellion,
JERRY NOLAND
lrrespoiulble
To the. Editor :
Your paper pointed out clearly some
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
J don't know what else the Pop
Festival ach.h1ved , but certainly
It prodUC"ed the largest cooven-
tlon of piJs In Orange Coast his-
Lory, Hopefully, the promoter ol
thJa nightmare will be back to
clean up after his swine, aldtd
by whatever officials were r~
1ponsible for issuing h1I perm.IL
-Mrs. W. H.
" i
l •tl•rl from rt-rl •rt wtloomt. ttorm•llY wrll-trt
lhould to11Ve'I' Their tnel~ In 300 wonts « leu, T~ rklht kl conOenH l•riers Ill Ill sPI-« « enm111.r•
libel 11 reserved. All 1tn•r1 m11St 1nc1uOe 11t111tvrt
111<1 m1illnt addrn1. bl.II 1111\lft wilt ti. wlltll!lild
011 re..uest. •
of the problems experienced by our
police department due to the Newport
Pop Festival held at the Orange Coun-
ty Fairgrounds over the weekend.
However, it did not ~te who authoriz·
ed the use of the grounds to state "the
world's biggest love-in" as stated or
who will pay the bills to clean up the
filth and debris left behind by these ir·
responsible persons.
E. STARR
Attendance was at Least four times
the number e:J;pected when the fair
board contracted with the producer.
'fhe contract included 0provisian fot
post-event cleatiup.
Poorest Qu0Ht11
To the Editor:
Editor
This is to express my disapproval of
the festival or "hippie singers" which
was recently sponsored at the Orange
County Fair Grounds.
As a taxpayer helping to support
and pay for the fairgrounds facility. I
see no reason why the board should be
a party to inviting and in effect
sponsoring this type of program which
is being criticised from all sides
throughout the country. Not only was
the type of entertainment poor. but the
program did in fact invite a large
crowd of the poorest quality of young
people to be our guests in Orange
County.
I would also can attention to the fact
that the present leadership at the
fairgrounds has eliminated several of
the traditional horse sllows which In
the past did enjoy using these facilities
tor a valuable purpose.
BOB PALEY
Build Bridges
To the Editor:
We would like to express our
gratitude and thanlu to the Costa
Mesa Police Department and the
various organizations working with
them for their pleasant cooperation
and fine judgment in helping us make
the Newport Pop F1!stival a beautiful
experience for our young community.
As to the 100,000 "screaming, drug-
crazed anarchists'' -thanks for going
so easy on us. kids. Let's build some
more bridges. (Support your local
police.) Love. LHASA
To the Editor:
Seldom bas It been my privilege, or
mort properly my misfortune, to
witness first band a more e<1mpl«tely
irresponsible reporting of the new11.
The tone of your headlines and your
artlcles concerning the Newport Pop
Fe1Uval will no doubt summon
William Randolph ~Iearst from Rotten
Reporter's Heaven to reward you .. with
a hearUett. "Well done; thal1s the way
to sell newspapers. n
AS A POSTMAN, apd !here.tore at
least tbeorctlca.lly a membe11 lR good
standlng of t.he ~•t1blishmenl, J would
Uke to go on r~ II saying t WU
there, rlght ln the middJe of what you
called the "screaming. drug-cr1ud
anarchy," and CID only conclude lhat
one of two things must be true . Eithe.r-
you an completely delud.ed as to whal
b.nppentd a.nd what didnll, or you are
deUber•te.J.Y mlsrepre.se.otlnf the facts,
as a more peaceful crowd of 100,000 I
cannot imagine.
DENNIS C. SMITH
'R1111 Them Out'
To the Editor:
I-hope the people of-Cesta Mesa will
be properly aroused and run the
parties responsible for the horrible
spectacle we were sl.ibjected to this
past weekend completely out of town
and never permit them near this area
again.
AU you need to do is to drive
through our streets to see that these
undesirables .are still hanging round.
Do we want the same ~robleros
Carmel and Monterey are still coping
with ?
ftts a local responsible newspaper, I
beg you to do something now so that
we will not have our good cities
blighted.
MRS. WANDA LUCAS
Mnrl11e Life
To the Editor:
As I have read in your editorials,
you feel strongly against taking
marine life from their n at u r a l
habitat. In fact, it is against the Jaw.
But in Dana Point they are going to
close the harbor. or rather block it off
and dredge all the water out.
Now taking life from the sea is bad
enough but taking the sea from the
marine life is unthinkable.
IRITA NELSON
S mh11 Fb1ols
To the EditGr :
We are disturbed tonight (August 5)
to find no mention in the DAILY
PILOT of the finais of the Orange
County Swim Conference which took
place Saturday, August 3 at the local
high schools and Sunday, August 4 at
Foothill High School in Tustin.
To have witnessed and worked at
these meets was a real privilege. The
eager and competitive youngsters, ag-
ed 4 through 17, who participated in
this important athletic endeavor were
surely more newsworthy than the
swarms of other young people whose
doings fill the paper tonight.
THI S LATTER."group spent their
weekend shoving for a space to loll in
and listen to the latest in "folk rock"
or "pop" music •put forth by various
groups of so.called musicians.
How much more interesting would
be pictures and front page coverage of
our great young locai athletes in im·
port.ant events such as these swim
finals.
It's 1 too bad the Pilot missed this
scoop--not even one small paragraph
to honor its "happening."
SHIRLEY P. CALLAGHAN
Re1ults were received too late /OT'
vublication Augll.!t 5. They were pub·
Li.sMd Wednesday, Augual 1.
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Friday, August 9, 1963 -
TM edicorlol page of the Dailu
Pilot ietkt to 'nform and 1tfm.-
Watt rtadtTs b11 prtrtntino thia
ntwipaper'1 optnion.i and com-
mentarv on t.opk:s of inl.tr11l
and riqn.ffkan«, br providtng a
forv.m for the ir%preuion of
our ttodtrt' opinions, and b11
prerntino «hf: diverse ~
poi"tr of informtd ob1rnin1
a1ld IJ'Ok<.....,. on topics oi the claw.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
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Newpo~·-Barbor : Today's Closing
-EDIII ON
' VOL of, NO. ·19r, 3 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES NEWPORT 8~t:H, CALIFORNIA fRIDA'I', 'AUGUST. ·9, -'1 968 JEN CENTS
1 DAILY ,ILOT 111ff ,.....
LONG WAY DOWN·-View from where Newport man began fatal
plunge oD si:kth floor balcony of Lido Park Professional Building
this morning indicates height of !an to paveme~t below. where New-
port Beach Police Officer Duane Sands stands alongside shrouded
body.
MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Richaro M.
Nixon set of.f on a new election
1 crusade !or the White House today by
pledging not to undercut President
J ohnson or America's allies in the
field of foreign affairs.
Tht: l\epublican party's 1 9 6 8
presidential candidate sa\d he is going
to the LBJ rooch in Texas Saturday to
vis.it Johnson and to be briefed on the
Vietnam war by Cyrus R. Vance, a top
JohnsOn adv~er and No. 2 U.S.
"Hessians'
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
0 1 tM 0.llY ,1191 Sllff
. Conducting themselves like ch<iir
N. t B h M n·. boys, 17 members of cOsta Mesa's ewpor eac .an i.es Hessiansmotorcycleclubwaitedinci· ty jail t.oday with bail totaling nearly
$200,000, while police obtained com-
plaints cliarg.tng the gang with .assault
I S • th Fl Pl with intent to commit murder. n lX ' oor unge· A total of 22 men were rounded up
, Wednesday, but several of the outlaw
· c~.li~ts ~e ,..later released and -
B BRUCE BENSON Police listed as a preli"1ina"ty ·-·another was .arrested at police bead-\
yor""' tMollY' Pi'-' 111ff motive for the death "depression." qu~ters today,,~e be went volun·
· · · .~ · They said Hart bad visited a doctor tartly for question.mg. An uru.denti!ied skyazver this morn· 'th at th edical building or at The crowd -probably to be ar-
ing sat in his car and watched a 57-:Ioa erg only tf:re~ days ago raigned in Harbor District Judicial
year-old Newport Beach man plunge ti •• · ·d ·i as Court this afternoon -is suspected of
t hi de ~ from the ·sixth floor ·H11wever, an inves gawr &a1 t w the w·•·-• . ht _ ... _1_ ............,. .. d o s a . . ~.£~~,·~J:{~__-::~~been suf-~ay rug UJ<UU--.._~~ bajcony o! /iewp_oi:l,.,. ~'d I C ~· -(erilf(.JC~ ""'r~ disease. ~d Shooting Of an U •priief!ihfe ii
bulldirtg. . . Detectives later this morning were his Costa Mesa h~e.
The dead man was identified by attempting to gather more details on Robert H. Glazier, 30, o( 2224
police as Gerald Hcu:t.150? Ruth Lane, the dead man's background. Placenti&i Ave., w.as reported in hiding Newport Beach. Pohce said they were • . . . . today, recovering from m u J t i p t e
virtu<:>lly certain the headlong fall was Irutial report~ s~id that .lla,rt was laceraUons, baseball bat clubbing
a suicide. empl~~ed as a li ghting techruclan for a bruises and a gunshot wound in the
The witness, who declined to give television company. left hand.
his name, told police he h~d just pull-.The plunge occurred at 8 :~0 a.m~ The victim, his wlle Barbara,. and a
ed up to a fQUl-way stop on Hospital from the top floor oI the six-story man who shared the apartment Ron
Road near the Hoag Memorial building. Police said the balcon.y was w. Hilts, 23, identified. the in~ders,
llospital parking lot and glanced t~ the at the ei:id of a hall and ac~s!ible to who burst in after cutting telephone
top of the Park . Lido Profess1onal the public. , wires from the apartment, as the
Building, 351 Hospital Road. The body was taken to Baltz Hessians.
He said he saw the man's leap from Mortuary, Coron~ del Mar; pending Police were told l!hat the gang o(
beginning to end. funeral arrangements. night marauders was led by Frank W.
Ar so11 a11d Burglary Co st
Mesa Boat Firm $40,000
A CosU Mesa boat company was
wiped out late Thursday in an arso~·
burglary which added up to $40,000. tn
losses. as the intruder splashed the of·
iice ri,h lacquer thinner and set off a
blaze.
Ronald D. Snyder . of 2320 College
Drive Costa Mesa, told investigators
about''500 in cash and $2 ,500 in checks
1 were stolen from his Mesa Boat
Marine, 1595 Newport Ave., by the
burglar.
Costa Mesa Fire Depariment Bat-
talion Chief Bob Beauchamp probed
the smoking ruins of the boat company
later and rouod lacquer thinner on a
portion of the office cnrpeting.
Pa1rolman George Wilson said five
louvers had been pried out of an offJce
window, apparently with a
screwdriver found lying at the scene.
An open door at the north side of ttie.
building indicated the bur.glar-arsonist
evidently left by the safest route as •
fl;.:mes licked at the south portion.
Snyder told police the b I a z e
destroyed a boat parked outside the
building, as well as reducing all the
firm's records and paperwork to
blackened ashes.
Damage was caused mOS.Uy to the
south side of the building, which is just
off Newport Boolev£trd ·near Ute south
city'lirnits of Costa Mesa.
Another arson-set blaze gutted a
Costa Mesa boatbuilding company two
months ago, but it was blamed solely
on a disturbed mind. w h ere a s
Thursday's. job ~ently was set tc
camouflage ttieft. •
Sto"k Ma rkets
NEW YORK (AP) -St.ck market
trading slowed to a w~lk this af-
ternoon as prices declined irregularly.
(See quotations, Pages 8-9).
A R eason for Police. Tl'?
"Wiid Mouse." Rundle, 24, of 13.S
Albert St.. Costa Mesa. who had
rought with Glazier several days
before.
investigators -who hinted at a new
development in the case some time
this morning -said Glazier is a
former Golden Gloves boxing dlam-
pion from New York.
He was employed at Ule Little Big
O. a bar at 193' Placentia Ave .. as
bounCer wt.en the alleged fistfight with
Wild Mouse occurred, aQCording to in#
vesligators.
The victim narrowly escaped death
Wednesday night during the melee
when an intruder named as Wild
Mouse by witnesses levelled a pistol at
h.im and fired from close riange.
The slug -w~lich has not been found
as yet -ricocheted off a finger bone
in the victim's left hand as he shielded
his bloody face, ripped severely by
motorcycle chains.
The weapon. reportedly".l!i .. 22 caliber
revolver, has not been found either,
but a small arsenal of ll guns was
conCiscated at 2205 Canyon Drive, a
house occupied by the Hessians. just
outside Costa Mesa city limits.
Several of the motorcycle gang
members were arrested there, a
cluster was rousted from a bar at
19202 B'each Blvd .. JJuntington Beach,
and a handful of others were taken in
traffic stops.
Forgit Sees Sniper Link
By JEROME F. CPLIJNS
ot tllt 0.llY 'll•t lteff
Fonner Newport Beach city coun·
cU.man Al Forglt saJd today be
believes four youths who fired oo
his car are the same su.specti wbo kill-
ed a young Santa Ana motorcyclirt on
the freeway in Fountain Valley.
"That's the aame gang that killed
that kid on the motorcycle, there's no
question about it," said Forgit.
He referred! to the shooting Wtd-
nesday of 2i-year-old James M.
Gardne.r on the San Diego freeway in
Fountain Valley. The slayers - or
slayer -are still bclng sought.
Forglt's car was flred on Sunday
night. It happened as he and h\S wife
Rlvtr brld&e on Pacific Coast Hjgh.
'
Peggy drove acr06s the Santa Ana
way. They were beading into .Newport.
A tan Volkswagen carrying four youths
passed them in the other direction.
"I saw a flash, heard an exploSton
and the wiDdshield cracll:ed," u.id
Forgit, who thla mornJng returned
from a four.day bunUng trip.
Al a r.suU ol the inciderlt. Forgil
said he supports "more than ever be-
fore" Newport's proposed police-mon-
itored television surveillanCe syste.m. rt the city had one, be declared, it
might have led to the capture ol the
group of young men who flred at his
car.
''If the po!Jce had a TV camerl s'la-
tione~ on that bridge. they would have
gotten the whole incident oo tape," be • '
said. "Then they could have picked the
gang up. It's a gang of outlaws roam·
ing the county."
Forgit said sherill's investigators
had been questioning him on the possl·
ble link between the two shootings. A
.22 caliber weapon appeared to be lft.
volved in botl'I.
A long-time Newport hardware
merchant, tbe ex<0uncilman said the
incident convinced hlm ''more than
anything else" of the need for the pro-
posed "Electronic P.rotectlon System"
IEPS) in NewporL
The proposal, a public bj!aring on
which will be held by councilmen Mon#
day, calls for the use of federal funds
to develop, install and oper•le some 1$
(S.. FORGn, Pait 2)
---~-----·~-~-~-"'-____ .._...__,_ __ ~-----------------
negotiator at the Paris peace talks.
Nixon told newsmen J o h n s o n
telephoned congratulations Thursday
night for Nixon's smashing nomino.tibn
victory and assured hlm "I'm going to
play it straight .<fown the middle" Hi
keeping the Republican candidate up
to date on the pace of Paris talks.
Beaming, altl1ough his face ws5 puf·
fy with lack of sleep, Nixon sa.id
,Johnson told him: "Dick, you have my
c:)[lgratulations and my sympathy."
Ni1on reinforced the gesture of uni-
ty by dropping the idea of a trip to the
Soviet Union before the November
election.
Earlier this week, when his quest
!or the GOP 'nomination s t o o d
challenged by Govs . Nelson A .. ·
Rockefeller of New 'i ork ~nd Ronald
Reagan of california, Nixon an-
nouru:ed he was considering a trip to
Russia, possibly be Core the
Democratic convention in Chicago
UPI T.....,..
GQP TEAM BASKS IN APPLAUSE CLIMAJllNG CONVENTION
Spiro Agnew, Richard Nixon Listen to Miami'• Last Hurr1h
Nixon Calls for -Drive
Against Crime, Violence
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Richard
M. Nixon today led his Republican par-
ty into an election campaign aimed at
satisty;ng a national hunger for peace
at hllmc and abroad,
It was nn orthodox Republican Nix-
on , who took a hard line toward put-
ting an end to violence a n d
lawlessness :n America. But it also
was a new Nixon, who took a soft line
toward the Soviet Union instead of
depicting communism as the root or
all evil.
Nixon began his speech by recalling
he had accepted the same nomination
eight years ago. There will be a dif-
ferent ending this time, he said,
because "This time we are going to
win."
lie could get applause wifh lines
dating back to the early weeks of his
presidential primary campaign,. such
CAR HIT, BUT 011F.c:M\ERA
Ex°Councllm1n Al For9it
I•. -
as he wanted more people on payrolfs
and fewer on welfare rolls. And he
could brlng the entire conventioo to Its
feet cheering and applauding with his
often used punch line:
"I say that when respect for the
United States has fallen so low that a
fourth rarte military power, like North
Kor-? a, will hlghjack . a Unlted States
naval vessel on the high seas It is time
for new leadership to restore respect
for the UDited States around the
world.
"Amerlca Is In ..trouble today not
because her people · have failed but
because her leaders have failed," he
said. .,What America needs are
leaders to match the greatness of her
people."
He said new leadership clearly is
needed when the world's strongest na-
tion is tied down by four years of war
in Vietnam, when the world's richest
nation. cannot manage its own
economy. when the nation with the
greatest respect for law is "plagued
by unpr~ented' lawlei sness"' and
when the American presidt!nt ~annol
travel without fear of ho st 11 e
demonstrations.
The remedy, he said, "Is a complete _
housecleaning of those respoodble for
our failure and a complete reappra.isaL
of America's policies in every. tection
of the world."
Of Vletnlll'n, he sald that military,
economic and dlplo~Uc power have
never been uaed so ineUecUvtly. He
promised to say nothing ln his cam-
paign that would damage the Parts
peace t ·~s. But he said that lf tbos•
talks fail to produce. rtsulll by
November, the nJUon will turn to new
leBdershJp, "not tied to the policies
and mistakes of the past."
"The first priority roreia:n policy ob-
jective of our next tdmlnlstration will
bt to bring an bonor1ble end to the
war in Vlttnam," he ple'1a:ed.
4,
later· this month.
Since then, he said, he had 0 reluc·
tantly concluded the trip cannot now
be taken and wiD. not be taken before
the election'."
Nixon ·added: "We have too many
demands that are urgent in the United
States to allow foreign travel."
Nixon added he would want to visit
other European capitals as well and
(see NIXON, P11e Z) •
Beachfront
Gets New
Sand Soon
The U.S. Army Coips of Engineers
expects in two weeks to award a
$1.50,0oo contract for a new gandbaul
project along_ West Newport's eroded
beacbfront, it was learned today.
Included in the work will be con-
struction of a second 250-foot long
steel sheet groin.
The groin will be bullt out toward
sea at the root of 44th Street. The
Corps last fall constructed one at 40th
Street.
Advertisin1t for bids will begin next
week with the contract award ten·
tativ.ely ~et for Aug. 'll. Corps SO\U'Ce!
aaid that the time schedule is subject
to fUrtber approvals-. .
The work, in any case1 will very
likely begin tn early September. ·Tbs
·job should take about two to three
weeks to complete. accordlnr to city
Public Works Director JOJeph T.
Devlin. · '
Devlin said it ls his unders.tandlng
that the ~aul will involve cartJl;'lg
150,0CK> cubic yards or ..sand dow:nc;-~t,
from the Santa Ana ~Iver J,ttf area.
The work, he noted, will force closure
of fhe beach from the "borrow" area'
to tbe 40tb-44th Street fill site.
UCI Instructor ,
Loses Blood
After Accident
UCJ graduate student John Euton
Van Maanen, 25, was reported in
1erious condition today at Hoag
Memorial Hospital after losing 4 to 6
pints of blood from a cut artery in a
pre-dawn accident.·
Newport Beach police said Van
Maanen told them he became in·
volved in an argument at his
residence. 3161,-i Amethyst Ave., and
acCi<Jentally Oung his arm tbnugh the
glass-plated front door.
Police said the man apparenUy at.
tempted to climb into his car l1'ld
drive to the hospital but collapaed
lrom loss of blood.
Ooctors at Hoag estimated Van
Maanen had lost up to IS pints: when a
brachia! artery of the ann was cut
The victim was taken to the 'hospital
by . ambulance after neighbors sum-
moned aJd.
Orange
Weather
Old Sot will do his darndest to
break ' through that patchy fog
tills' weekend, bringin4-72-degreo
warmth to tbe Orange Coast.
I NSIDE T ODAY
/ It's .rink or swim -llttrall11
-for. Corona del Mor amt New-
port Harbor llir;h performers ;,.
their ver•io" of the South Pad-
/ic. Grab a laugh pr11trvn and <.... along lo Ill< big aquatic
show t<Jdai fn Ill< WEEKENDER.
" ' .....
" • " " .. •• ..
" " ...
" " • ... ..
~ .... 11•11
IMnl 1•1• SllldlMtflilll M ,_ . --WMltllr • ....... ..__,. IP .... ,..... ... ·-"" ""' . DllltMr •
Dnl-,, 11 • . ..,, ........... 1.
•••• 1•1J ........ I -.... --. ..... ' '
• .--.,cc.._ .. ,,. .. -... ' ..
,% OAll Y PILOT Friday, Au,ust If, 1%8
-=·-'. ~
Teachers Hire PR Man
He'll Represent Theni at . Board Me~ti!'g~"J
B1 THOMAS FORTUNE
Of "" Olltr l"lllt Stall
Barbar ArM teachers have hired
an u.ecuUve direct.OC to hMcUe public
rtiallona • n d admlnl!ter teacher
a11ali.. .
-eartMld R. Hack, 411, ot Loui>Vill •
Ky .. DOii week will -jlrlt exec·
utive dlrector of. N ,, w p o r t-Meca
~ucatloo AMOclatloo.
"'Plibllc rolatloM wtll ba .. lu>por·
tint part at his Job." s.Ud Raymood
;....r_-S6.YdU .. ~~~on president. ''lie WtiJ. represent • fi!acheri ID CIVIC
activities aod at .cbool board meet·
ings, and 111111a1t 11!o1Mehs lllOCla·
tion of!loe."
· Snyder said-Haak'• tolary will be
about fl4,000 per year. Teachers pay f11,50 d"°' per year to N-MEA .
Snyder and ~!dent.elect Gonion
Becktold Interviewed !Uck lul month
-jn-Dall.u;'!V., at a National Educa·
t1on ANOClfiUon coaventio11. He was
aeltctod !roar 26 appllcanta.
Hack currt11tly is a repNeentat1Ye
fOf' a New Ycrk textbook pubUahlng
firm . Pre~iously, h.e was superlnten· ~nt al a small school district in Cov·
glon, l'eM-;:-Siijaer sild'.-
Hack bolds a masters degree from
a-.. ~bodjl Colloft lot~ and ii working towa,rd" a doctoral de·
p-ee from the Unlver.sity of TenoesHe.
. His family will remain In K .. tilck'.Y tor hl1 son's senior year oi hlgh eebool.
His wife is a librarian, Snyder aakt.
He said the California Teachers
A.uociation (€TA) recommendl biring
e execuUvt direotor when a teacher
wociatlon reaches 1,000 membien.
Lait school year, 988 of the diJtrtct's
1,100 teact>ers Joined N-MEA, Snyder
said.
The association president previously
toOlrare of the exa"Utive-direct0!"1t
duties as best be could, Snyder said.
HE WAS REAL ORANGE COAST PIONllR
Closeup View of Skull of 17,000.yu....W 'L•IV"• M•n'
C--"'.t-!~ 01~nty llll~
•
-Chief Lists ' .
Probe Rules
•• Ground rules have bMn Uated for
the four public hearings scheduled for
Aug .. 26-30 on Phase One oC the Master
Plan at Air Tranaportation ol Orange
County.
In a letter to mttr••ted Individuals
IJ1d OflWUt!Qlll, Robert J.
Bretnlhan, County aviaUon din!ctor
and . secretarY of the airport com·
ml.salon Ulla the followln1 rules :
1---AJI. commallls to ba llun-al'1la
pul>llc bearln&a 1hould be submitted in
wrttlng at leut flve daya prtor to the
burinf•.
-PerlOllS or groupe appearing
belon the Airport Commlnlon will be
Umied to ~ minutes. Laguna Bans Everybody New Bridge
But Sidewalk Walkers For Newport , .No Sknllduggery -It is ·requested that not more than
two penon1 1eTVe u 1poktml«l for
any community, organ.lzatl<ll or
homeowner• assoctatton.
,_
.. ·.
,
r f.
\
•
-
,t.a.guna Beach co~c:111Jt•n p111ed an
anU..loltertn1 ordtnanct . ·Wedneeday·
nJaht, erouaed about newspaper hippie
stof1es and again heard complaints
about the altuatlon.
The urgency ordinance (now in ef-
fect) rules out sitting, lying , reclining
or even standing on a aldewalk except "as near 11 phy1lcally po1stbJe to the
building Una of such 1idqalk."
Vice Mayor Joseph O'SUllivan com·
Cameo --Shores
Accident Victim
Still Hospitalized
One of four glrla struck· dOwtf ln
Corona del Mar by a Cotta: Mesa·
woman's car two ~eeka .ago' •till .re-
mained in Hoag Memorial H.oSplt.11 to-'
da,y in fair condition with multiple in··
juries.
Debbie Zlmmerm·an, 12, of, 4607:
Hampden Road, Cmeo S h o r e 1 ,
Newport Beach, was dracged several
hiet in th• accident it'd suffered tn·
juries of . the spine, abdomen, fore.arm
and pelVIS.
A Hoa1 spokelman .sold the i!rl was
not paralyzed. . .
A ncond vi.Ctiri:l ~of the •ccident,
Usa Nunis, 12, of 28'1 Crescent Bay ·
Drive, Laguna Seu:h1 ·Wis releutd
from the hospital elllli• th11 month on
crutches. .
Kimberly Davis. 11, an¢"lier alsler
Laura, H, of ·Corona dOl ).lar •. were
treated for cuts and released . l
The Cillfqrn.ia Hllbway ·PBitro1 11.id
the four gtrJ1 were &tandlnlJ at a traf·
lie Island "(ilttnc. to cro" the street
when they were &truck by a south·
bound car driven by ?.11'1. Patricia M •.
Gribam, 49, of 718 Jamea St., Costa.
llrom P .. e l
FORGIT ...
TV cameras for law enforcement
purposes.
Some of the came:ras would be
permanently &tationed along major
roads. "If then were a camera there.
they would have caught those guys by now," said Forglt.
He ~ ebaiv lasu1 witb Vice ~or
Undllley Paraon11 stated objectionl to
the EPS procram in Wednesday'•
DAILY Pll.QT.
ParlOM Ntd tlle TV came191 aren't
needed In Newport: the dty'o criminal
activity doeon'I warrant lllem.
For1lt, v.tio v<>t<d fw initial EPS ac·
lion while oo the council, responded:
"He's wronc about that criminal
thlng. We got a lot of crlme here. I
was 1hot at list Sunday; we had
almost 200 arrests in town last
weekend. The polict are 1olng to need
a lot of help. 'They need it now."
DAllY PllOT
N..,_. ..... , c.m.fti.
011.ANOI COAST it\111.ISHlNO COMPAHY
Jtobtrt N. Weed
PNl!Mtlt lftlf ,llllllll!ft'
J•tk R. Cutley
Vke Preidl!lf e!>d Geneo-11 MIMIM'r
Th•m•' IC•••il ldllor
lh•111•• A. M11,,hl11e
MtnHl119 lctltor
J1to"'• F. C•lll111 Pt11I Niu1 ~
N,.,._, 8..cft ,,ld•trtlllna c11r ~uw Olrtctor ...., .. __
• 2211 W..t l1IM1 lnln"4
Mtlli ... Ail4tt•1 P,O. ln 1171 t2i6J --C•M ,._.: -Wt1t • .,. l"ftl u...,....1-...:m,.,...,..,_,.
14\lftllntle'l liMCfl: ... '"'""
Isl.and Due
ptalne~ betore the u ~· 'n I m o u s
ordinance 'dopUon that ''¥tr1-ra1h of Newport ls.land will aet a new hlpple letters pro and eon brought front plge neWapaper coverage-. brJd1e early next yiar, city aide• aald
He 1aJd that1newspapeT editors tiad· today. .!
told the city-that as.tong as hippies are It will cost about $50,IXXl and will
on the councU agenda , it Is news. replace a 40.yaar-old wooden span
Several council meetinis have become leading to the 121-bome isle at $Ith emotlon~ar1ed about the topic. City A y Jack J. Rlmel adv!Hd Street In West Newport.
councilm that any communications The present atructlll"e, according to
to the couDcU are public tnformaUon. Public Works Department apoketmen,
CouncllmeB dJ1cU11ed the time ele-ll 1lnkhl1 and it.I tlmbe.r member• are
meat of makln1 Iha letter• public, aP. rotUnf. The new bridge will be coif. panntly with an eye to eontrollinl the time auch lttter1 become public. structed..of poured concrete.
. Mayor Glenn Vedder said the hippie Money for tho project bu been pro-
lettera just fan the fire• ot excltem1nt vldtd by the city council 1n the current
and 1ald townafoli: recenily seemed to buda:et.
have 1tarted calming down. A contract probably wlll be awarded
Councllman Rlcllard Goldbera: asked In December. Prior to that de1lgn ap-
Clty MJ.naa:er Jamel D. Wheaton provala must be obtained from the
about hi• request for a downtown foot U.S. Army Corpt of Engineers and the
patrol to control hipple1. Orang Co ty H bo DI tr! t Wheaton 1ald the' parking en· e un ar r s c · forcement offtcera could not become No dlfficulUes from these agencies are anUclp1ted.
peace ofilct.r11 bec1u11 of provlalons of Construction of the new bridge will
their retirement !rom l a YI en· take 1bout three months. During th1t
forcement. period a temporary wooden bridge will
However , he 11ld they will be ex· be uaed 1lon1 Man:us Avenue, city oC·
peeled to ac~•Hhe-el'M~~llll-.ald-• ----Md to make clUHn .,,..,ta for viola· · -
Uon observed. Goldbera aaked for a
rtKUiar report of the actlvltlea.
Dr. John Wallace, paychololi•~ ac·
cuatd the city manaaer of. l'Pf'•dlnl
highly prejudicial lnformaUon throufb
new1paper1. Wheaton ba1 authored a
fo\D' part aeries on the hippie attuatton.
Wallace aald he doe1 not approve of
clUztas actin1 11 v11Uante1 . He called
ror a dt.f!1cal1Uon of ten1lon.
County Youth
Dressed Down .
For Wearing Flag
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of "" DlttJ '"" .....
A Buena Park youth who combined
fashion with patri~am wa1 arrested
Thursday in San Juan daplatrano for
defiling the American Flag.
Deputy Sheriff Robert Schlice said
he found Nathan P. Gilgore, 18. clad in
a fashionable red, white and blue,
Nehru-style 1hlrt JTU1d1 by his mother.
The arresting oftl.cer said Gilgore told
him he loves the American Flag and
that's why he wore it.
Tue officer sa.id he observed Gil1ore
at about l p.m. 11nulday slumped
over the wheel of his car off the side
ol the road at Junipero and Cerro
Roads in the mission city. When the
deputy stepped to see if anything was
'M'ong, Gilgore told him that he waa
goin1 to San Die10 when he got tired
and pulled off the road to sleep.
Mrs. Loul se .Gllgore, the youUi"s
mother, told the DAILY PILOT she
made the shirt for her aon after con-
sulting Buena Park police.
Accordlng to Mrs. GU1ore, someone
in the Buena Park Police Department
told her lt was all ri.a:ht to use the Fl•&
for a shirt. She Uled the starred field for the
sleeves and the stripes for the body of
the mod shirt.
Gi11ore: entered Oranae County J11l
at about 2 p.m. Hours later, tans 1h1rt,
be emerged lrom tl!t jail und<r f1911
bail. The shirt was held as evldence.
The courts of Orange CoW1ty
already have ruled this year that you
cmi't use the American Flag for a win·
dow curtain, a beach towel, or an
automobile seat caver. •
Now they will be cal~ upon to
decide whether the helght of fashion
1bould remain on the flag pole .
Job Service
To End Soon
The l11t d1 y ol optrttlon for the
Youth Employment Service 1pon1ored
by the Junior Ebell Club of Newport
Beach will bt Aug. 16.
Th• Hrvict, located at Colt.a M111 '1
McNally School, 19111 Nswporl Blvd.,
ta open w11kday1 from O 1.111. to l
p.m. Po11lbl1 1mploy1n are ur1td to nn th•lr ltQll!rementa beforo th• cloa-tnc date. Studentl are requested to
re1lster ln penon. Employen are 11k·
ed to can &42-0471 or &42-0402.
According to Mr1. Jay Moaeley,
Junior Ebel! youth chairman, 300
teena have been placed In Joba ranpg
from factory 1mpklym1nt to 1wim·
ming' ln1tructlon and convale1cent aid
lbrou.gh the aervlce. .. . '
Surf er Accused
Of Police Assault
Dries Out in J ajI
Swlmmer James Allen Crawford, 19,
of Costa M•H wu ~Ing ott In
Newport Bead\ City Jall -~ ID eu of fl,260 ball alter tie allegedly 1lug-
pd a policeman wb<> was trytnc to &et
him to oome out of Ille surf.
Police a&ld the le«l·all<f, of 2196
Pltcentla Ave., w .. swtmm!nf 'lbura-
clay eveninl et a clootd beach 1>1ar
'3rd Stroot In Wttl Nt"l"'rl. The
"-ch hll -clolld clurlDC an eroolon -for bW!dollnl _...
tions.
Officer Lawrence Doyle ordered
Crawford out of the water. The
poUceman utd the youth 1luged h.im
after he waded ashore.
Police said the assaulted officer
cha&ed Crawford back into ttie V;llter.
tilen m'&llaged to haul him out and
JUc• him under arrest. AITa lgnrnent was pending this
morning for Crawford on felony
Msault charges.
Costa Mesa Man
Pleads Guilty
To Assault Rap
A Costa Mesa man actused of club·
bing a teen·aied Newport Beach wal·
treas with a 1oot lOQi wmich plead·
ed aunty to one count of aisault with
a deadly weapon in Superior Court t.his
morning.
The defendant, Richard L. Rhoades.
29, wu orde-ed to appear In Superior
CoUrt Aug. 29 for seotenclng.
Rhoades was found sitting stunned
behind the steering wheel of a car
whrMl police an-lved at the scene of
Uie July 9 incident.
The fathe r of the 18·yeu·old cirl was
pounding furiOOsly on il1e vehicle with
an axe, police said. The ettractlve
waitress was attacked as she stepped
from her car at her Newport Hei ghts
home. She 1Uffered a concu11lon and fa·
cial lnJurtoa .
l'retlt P .. e J
NIXON • • •
there wua't enough time.
The dominant th1ma of the GO P
candidate wu that J\t' did not want to
"uodtrtlll" lilt Dtniocratlc pr111dent
or U.S. alUu wblls 1l1t Parll ta1kJ
w ......
HI -1111\ ths llartY plMlonn odootad 11111"-ll cdtlctil <i tha ad·
mhllltraUon Vl-poller and yat,
NllCll 1~ Iha llapubllcana won't Uodoml\ morta to .. ,_ a ptact.
"Wt'rt (ohl( to ba 1lrilfld rt(Ular·
ly," h• tddtd.. 1• Gov. Spiro T. AIJllW of Maryland,
the llepubDc111 vtca prt1ld1•Ual can·
dldate, atood at Nixon'& right during
tht brJef acsslon with newamt!:n, 1-te wtlt •ccompany Ntxoo to tbt JOhnaon
ranch, tti11formtr v1oe,pruldent 1ald.
' .
Laguna Man 17,000 Years Old
TboM tntareatad In belnf htard at
. tbe meeUnaa u1 aaked to comment
on:
-What do you think<( Phaae ODe In
By RICHARD P. NALL Wllaon'•· skull find 11 Hld to be feneral! °' '" D111Y Putt 1t•ff almllar to that or Cro·magnon man -What do you .think of tbe 1y1tem
A skull round In Laguna Beach 35 fo11lll found In a French cavt. lt in· concept?
years ago has opened a new door to eludes • porUon Crom about the center -What do you think of the awnmary
the puule of man's first appearance of the nose area, th• top Gd part of of Phase One with lta four point pro-the back. !
on this continent. Dr. Lou11 Leakel'it tnternaUonally &ram th t b Id UCLA scienU•t• believe the find Is -Do you think e coun Y s ou noted anthropolo11 , a1ktd I o accept Phase One and proceed lm·
roughly 17,000 years old, possibly February to take the akull to UCLA. mediately to futurt phases of the
more. It would set man 's appearance Leakey discovered the oldest known Master Plan?
in North America 4,000 tJ 5,000 years human remalns In Africa belleved to Hearinc date• and aubjecta are : ea rlier than any previous find . be more than two mllllon years old. -Monday, Aug. 28, l :SO p.m. Five
\V. lloward Wilson, 2'1711 Vista Del He his also contended that band U• propo1ed general (private) avtatton
Sol, 'Three Arch Bay, owns the sk1,1!1. es found ln the Calleo mountains of airport sites.
He found it in 1933 at what is now m California might be 40,000 years old. -Monday, Au&. 26., 3:30 p.m. St. Ann's Drive. Digging Is again under way at the Metroport sites. Both seaslona will be
\Vilson •nd t:dward H. Marriner St. Ann's Drive site. Dr. Jo$eph held In Room l.201 Or,an:e County
were di gging for arU!acts and bones in To mehak, profesaor of anthropology at Health Department, 6U N. Rosa St.,
the bank of a road at the time. Orange Coast College , Is working at Santa Ana.
k h I I d the site with students. Old bone -"' d A 27 7 Or The s ull as doubt ess trave e 1 ues ay. ug. , p.m. . ange
further than its original owner since fragments have been found but not yet County Airport, restrictions to be ap-
d4g from sandy soil. However, scien-dated. plied in cooperation with air carriers
tlsts ln Europe and America, though \Vilsop has frequently loaned the and immediate improvements . re·
interested in the find , had no sure way skull {o sclenUsts who estimated quired at the airport. This is a regular
years ago of daUng It. Man then was various ages but only this year did Airport Commission meeting and will
believed to have dated back 10,000 or serious testing get under way after be held at the Orange County PlanDlng
12.000 years in America. Leakey became enthuse d. Commission hearing room, 400 W. 8th
in February, Dr. Rainer Berger St., Santa Ana.
told the DAILY PILOT th a I ·LA C Off' , ] -Wednesday, Aug. 28, !:!IQ p.m.
radiometric daUJfg of the paitiol 1kull OUDty 1Cl8 8 Proposed regtooal airport sites at El
was under way arid could alter basic Toro Marine Corps Air Station,
tenets about man's first appearancs Ask Special Session Marine Corps Air Facility, Sa.'lla Ana, on the continent. and Los Alamitos Naval Air Station.
Berger and Jamt1 R. Sacket ol LoS ANGELES (UPI) -Los Ange· To be held In Room 120, 6411 N. Ross
UCLA have since aatiafied themselves lei County 1upervllors Tbunday peU· St., Santa Ana.
through Ute radio carbon tests that the Uoned Gov. Ronald Rpaan to ca.ll a -Friday, Au1. 30, 1:30 p.m. Propos-
1kull has pushed back Ule past. special sess ion of the le1!1lature to ed regional airport site in the San Joa·
The find b now at the Smithsonian consider property tax relief. quln Hills between Corona del Mar and
JnatituUon. Washington , D. C. for ad· Supervisor Warren M. Dorn aaid Ule Laguna Beach.
dJtional corroboration. legislators had bypassed elgbt county· -Friday, Aug. 30, 3:30 p.m. Propos·
, Recently scientist& put on display a spoltllored billa: on th& subject. One of e<J regiooal ~rport site, 6oba Chica
charred and broken skull found In them would have eannarkt4 one per· ~.a~a tn ffunungton Beach. The latter
Washington state at a federal dam site cent of the state's five peftent sales ""'tWb meetings will be held In thfl Board
in 1965. lt ls believed possibly 13,000 to.x for property tax rtlief, with fwids of Supervl!ors hearing room , l'ith flobf,
years old.-·-------=dl:.:str=ib:.:u:.:ted:.:.-t:.:o.:.•::ll:_:iltlcc..::.c'":.:::n:::Ues:.::.. ___ __:Co.:.u::n:::ty::_: IA.:.dm::: inlstratJve Buildlng.
HERITAGE
1 L..., T.W.
JO.JO JI...,.,,..
,~, ...
JO.II WI!. • 9414
lllS.
209.
165.
I
WAREHOUSE SALE!
FANTASTIC VALUES
SALE
99"
99"
NEWPORT STORE ONLY
DREXEL
IEG.
185.
135.
SALE
79"
59''
I
UPllOLSnRY 11•· SALi
~ ~ ~· er.. 45('. 179"
:.::: :;"loll• 239. 99"
I ,. ..... ,.... 149 6900
JhZl ,_._ SI,..,..• • "' ... 1 &...., C...-ft r.r.,...z1.z1 125. 39" ·--••T•· 119. 59"
1 .,. c ..... 11 '-"'• 4J" 4hl. ll"'1'9'tce
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1 '11'1! .... 11137
ll9. 1~00
185. 69"
245. 99"
1~9. 39"
1 f\11, 12400
189. 69"
1 .. #fret w .. ...
20.60 e .......... ..
1 CNt. llt. .... s.t
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4 •""'-....... -1 '"'"'" c ..... .... Mw , ... ""' ,..,,,
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95 .... 34'!.
95. 39"
249. 99"
695. 375°'
245. 79"
258. 79"
I Oc•. CtlM .........
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DeMeM c .... ·----......... --, ,..,.. cw, -, ............
1 ,.. u, CMI'
MANY MANY OTHERS
Hundreds Of Y trd~ Of Dr •P•!Y A Uphol1+1ry F1brTct
Casem•nts -Print s -Stiles -Velvets -Tepestry -Ete. 1111
500/o TO 70°/o OFF
ALL SAUi •INAL -NO CHARGES
SMALL OELIVERY CHARGE
EXCLUSIV! DEAL!RS FOR1 HINRIDON-DRIXEL -HERIT4GI
124" 64" "· ....
99's 39"
199" 49''
169" 69"
235. 89"
195. 69"
149. 69"
90 DAYS N
1
0 INTEREST-LONOIR TIRMS AVAILABLE ON APPROV~D CREDIT
Zvt.. f~
NIWPO~T l!ACH
1727 W11tcllfl Dr., 642·2050
O,.N JllDAY 'TIL t
INTIRIOU
Prol-lellsl Interior
Detltn•P'I
Avollabl....AID-NllD
• LAGUNA llACH
345 North CHtl Hwy. 4"'"6551
OPIM NIDAY -rlL t
I
,
.... . .. ~~ . . -........ --. -. ,.....,., ~.~,........;;.; -____ .. __ .. ---.·~;,.,..,...,....,..,., .... ..,,,._,..,..,....,,,.,..'"'.,.. ... "".'""'"""""-""""''"'""'""···-1!!1111••••191!""••••••••1111"1•1!!!11!!!1•1!1!!!1!1!1!1!1!1!!!1•111•!1•1!1.!~ .. ~
•
'
BEA ANliE~SON, Editor
llrll&ly, AUlllll f. 1tM Mt(M ..... 11
Phi lanthropy Selection
Campaign
Launched
Members of the Mesa-Harbor Women's Cl ub aren't
satisfied with doing what everyone else does. They like
to be distinctive.
That's why they've chosen an unusual method for
selecting their yearly philanthropic project. Four stu-
dents from Mrs. Caroline Woli's speech class at Es·
tancia High School will each speak on one of the four
philanthropies being considered at the September m uet·
ing. Afterwards the members will choose.
Speakers will be the Misses Amy Austin, Michele
McClurg, Marianne Dreiss and Deborah Thomas, Phil•
anthropies will be -qie Albert Sitton Home, Newport-
Mesa Hard of Hearing Paren\s Group, Services for the
Blind Inc. and the Orange County Child Guidance Cen-
ter.
steering this unusual group, which meets on the
second Thursday of each month for lunch at different
locations, are the Mmes. Paul Kee, president ; William
Holmes, first vice president; Richard Parrish, secol\,d
vice president; Du_ane Step~tis, third vice president, and
Wil'liam Mc<::ann, recording secretary.
• .. -•
' •\ . • • -·--
Formed as a· newcorr\er's· club seven ·years ago the
group still ·Weicol'hes'new residents and old ones as well.
Parties, dances and community activities are part of
the club's interests. Anyone interested. may call Mrs
Stepatis, 54~2.
MOST UNUSl.iA:L CROP -Of new officefs, that is, for the Mesa-
Hiil'bor Women's etub this.year will be (left to right) .Mrs. Rich-
ard Parrish, second vice president; Mrs. William C. Holmes, first
vice president, and Mrs. Paul Kee, president. All are looking for-
ward to a year filled with h·ard work for good causes and fun for.
members ,including bridge, theater, couples gourmet parties,
travel and dances.
Debvfante Whirl Goes on Ice
Before packing suitcases and traveling to colleg~,
1968 National Charity League debutantes and their
escorts will get together tomorrow for a summ er
social. Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Smith are enter-
tai ning with a poolside buffet· in honor of their
daughter, Miss Kathleen Ann Smith (~enter), who
with Miss Linda Susan Campbell (left) and Miss
Paula Maxine Williams antidpite' the after-dinner
performance of "Carnival on Ice" at Melodyland
Theater. Others attending •will be the Misses Mary
Barr, Sharon Haskell, Robin Ann Horn, Christine
Londelius, Judy Meeks and Mary Alison O'Bryon .
Tel ling Al·I Won't Forestall
DEAR ANN LANDERS' The letter
you printed from "Sadder but Wiser"
compelled me to write this letter. She
was the mousy little housewife who
felt guilty about having an affair.
ANN LANDERS A ~M I'm a high school student who knows
of a similar affair -my mother's. Do I awe it to my dad to tell him? U
Mom alwa.ys decides to see a vu)" late t don't tell and they get a divorce· I
movie "alone" when Dad is out oC will always feel u though 1 could have
tcwn . Once I aU:ed ticrw the movie was ~ save theJr marriage if I had
and she got so rattled I·feU sorry for SJ)obn out. -J .K.L.
her . Recently 1 came bmne UDtJ:-DEAkJ.lt.L.: Don't AJ 1 wont. To
pectedly. CI had plamed to spend the aa71ae. ~lie yo• ma1 beUeve the
night at a girlfriend 's house and evidence l11coDtln1lve, 10• coald be
changed my mind.) I hellrd the back wrong. And II you are wrong yoa
door slam as I cam& In and I smelled woa.M be rt.1pou1lble for stirring ap a
pipe tobacco all over the place. lddeoat me11.
This afternoon 1 oeeded 60 cents and \
Mom wasn't home. I looked in Mom 's DEAR ANN LANDERS: We are an
coet pocket tor change. To tpY horrot average family. B1 "averace" I meu
I (\lcovered a key to a local '1oteL my husband and I are at the mercjf of
three Iaey. uncooperatiVe, smart.
mouth ldds.
••
Our dauihten (a1e1 13 and 15)
kepi ,. broke. The bsrJ, aged 11,
teepo u. exllauated. My buoband and 1
don't want to break their spirit or t pcll .
their fun by being too demanding. I'm
afraid, however, that wi have been too
lenient and now we c1n,'t get our kids
to do anything that vaguely retembles
work -tither in or out of school. 1 •
Lalt week the kids augge'stecf •
"family jur)il" with each member of
·-~-------.._ ...... ___ , ____________ -
Luau
For Night
Signaling the Hawaiian
luau season are the tradi-
tional warm,-al.my summer evenirig br -g the
Orange C st.
And, JI06talgical!y belng
wafted away to t h e
POiynesian Paradi
their own party s
be Balboa Ba
members ·who will gather
poolside for a festive even-
ing Friday. Aug. 23.
Party.goers, clad in
sarongs, muumUus and col-
orful print' Shirts, will be
presented leis as th ey ar-
rive.
Complimentary mai tais
and other tropical
tefreshrnents will be served
from. 7 to 8 p.m. from the
Grass Shack, while strolling
muiciaos add to the Island
mo<>!.
TMtebuds will be satisfied
at th e sumptuous buffet of
authentic dishes, and af.
terwan1 . "natives" will be
entertained by an all-star
Haw3.iian Show, featuring
traditional music, b u I a
maidens, km,fe and fire
dancers and comics.
Perfonners will be Trudy
Borger and the K a I u a
Serenaders. 11!111.WllOO;:;.
Serving on tbe hast com·
mittee are the Messrs. and
Mmes. 8 i 11 Weddington,
Gene Sullivan. Don Regan.
Willi'am Stabler and John
Cashion.
POLYNESIAN PARTV: -In the proper mood for the annual luau, staged for
Balboa Bay Clubbers are members of the host committee (left to right), Mr.
and Mrs . William Stabler, John Cashion and Mrs . William Weddington who
urge early reservations as a capacity crowd is anticipated.. The p&rty begins at
7 p.m. Friday, Aug. 23, with complimentary cocktails.
'F 'd I rien ·s
' the farl'tily having one vote. Of course
my husband and I always lose because
the kids vote as a bloC. Can you help
us teach these kids to be' responsible
citizens? -OUTVOTED
DEAR OUT ' n. mojority rule 11 .
exceUent ror covernmeat, but It
doen't wor~ well la me1tal 1a-
1UtutloD1, pri10a1 or lamWea wl.Uri two
or more tWldrea.
Allo!etceoll otl ooty ..... dlodplhle
bat llley wul II.. Wlleo ddklru eal1
lbe 1lpal1 •nd ,... the limllJ> llley pl'
the Impression tbelr parents art tm· ~
becUe1. Kida wbe do u tbej pltaae
are not happy -tbeJ are confused.
The bt1t ••1 to keep your cbllclrt1'1
reet 011 the voun,t la '° put tome
re1pnolbltlly ortb<lr lhoulden.
' DEAR ANN LANDERS : My oiBter
Coming
Mazie and her husband have had din-
ner at our hcuse very Friday for the
last six years. This means they have
l!hjoyed 312 free meals over here.
We have been to their home for din·
ner Utree times. (Once was when my
brother·ln-law'a boss gave him a
turkey for Cbrlltmas. Another time,
my b!Uber·ln-iaw ahot a duck. It wag
too ganiy to .Ht. ·And once we had a
Cblnese ~ Wblch Ibey paid US to
pick up on tbt way over.)
Cast •Week aft .out-«·to'#n aunt was
having a serloU1 operation and T off.
ered to take c~ of her children.
Mai.le didn't Invite my husband qver
for a single meal. This burned me up.
I told my husband I'm through feeding
them every Friday. Ht ttys Mazie
wlll be mid because they have gtown
to ~pect It. How do I unwind 1 six·
to ' Gall
I year habit? -THE CHUMP
DEAR CHUMP: Find somethin g el8e
to dG a few Frlday1 la a row and 111-
nouace it weU In advance . When y9u
do invite Mute ~n her, "It's your
turn .next lime," and put your dtllatra
oa an .il&er1atJng bl1l1o
Tot> many couples go f r o m
mattimooy to acrimony. Don't let Your: ·marriage flop belore lt pt.
started. Send lor Ann Landen'
bookle\1 "Marriage ~ Wbat to El<· pect.'' Send your equest to Ann
Lande$'1 in care of this newspaper
encl06~g 50 cents in In and e long.
stampeCI , sell-addressed envelop&.
Anh 1.Jand'ers will be glad to he ··~ you
with your problems. Send them to her
.in .care of the DAILY PILOT,· enolo1·
ing a 1elf-address'1\ stamped .en·
ve'-'f>e . ,
'I
I I
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I
J2 DAILY PILOT I FrlcSQ, August '· 1968
·---.. ! -·-
.Horoscope
Scorp io: Day .to Create
SAT., .AUG. IO
By SYDNEY OMARR
20): Finish projects. Some be transformed into shining
around family circle are im· Ugbt Message clear by
patient. Stt example. Han-toalght.
"The wlse man controls dle one thing at a. time. Be a AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
ht• desUny. . .¥trology good listener. Unusual in· 18): Results of past effort&
dividqal "'•Y conflde,unlque ~r dividends. Check in· polntl the way." -... r'" 11., problem. vestment po11iblmies. Don't
ARIES (March 2l·April CANCER (June 21-July waste experience. You have
19): Mor1le ii boo1ted -22): Good lunar aspect to-chance to rise. to be pro-
you are 1urrounded by day coincides with moted -don't let it fiy
glamow:, 1ntrl1ue.-my1tery. journey~lther-literal or-aw1y. •
Day when much happens in mental Means your present PISCES (Feb, 19-March
1!0): One cl.,. I<> you ·""111
apparent fd_venity ,1 n t o
achievement . Legal
clrcumstanw swing in your
favor. Partnership could
flourish. Good public rel•·
tion1 today can w o r k
wonders . Act accordingly.
Te llnd out wi.0·1 ludlw tot vau 111 ~ tnd lo.,. ordtf SvdM"r 01¥1frr't booli:let, "Stcrel Hlnll lor /o\111 11111
Womtn." s.tf'CI bl•tlld•ll •nd .SO ~~" lo Omtrr Miro Y l'"lll. DA Y l'lLOT. 8CIOI 3?'2: ~!Id c:.:t-11 I• lion, New Yorlt, N.~'too11. 'l!l:uiet, behind·1cenes man· surroundings change. Actuil
ner. Important to be trip occurs or journey of the
di1creet. Don't tell all you mind. Write ani;t read. ~.-. -LJ;O (July_ 23'Aug. 22)'
TAURUS (April io.Maf -Fine for shopping. If you are .
-lO)-;....P-leanot-turpriae -.due alert, .you find.-M>methlng of
-could be in form of party value. Quality does not.
or 1peclal event. Some of necessarily correspond with
your hOJ>el, wisbe& are due expense. You can obtain
to be fulfilled. Get basic what you need at bargain
tasks out of way e'arly. rate. Look .
Coup l-e·at-Home -
Following T ri.P
GEMINI (May 21.June VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22): Now home in Huntington
Day of expansion. You Beach, Vicky Lynn Blase
Members
Cen t er On
multiply efforts -you see and Ri chard C. Cleveland
beyond immediate _in· exchange d wedding
dications. Accent on how rings and vows durint a
you relate to mate, partner. oeremony conducted by Ute
Your assets are ap-Rev. Jctin P. Ashey in St.
preciated. Your possessions James Episcopal Church,
rise in value. Newport Beach.
Miss Diana Frere was the
maid of honor a n d
bridesmaids were t h e/...
Misses Jodi Madison, Linda
and Stephanie Blaie.
·A Pleasant Day for Dini ng and Cards Bouque ts LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Parents oi the newlyweds
Your work and m'ethods are are Mr. and Mrs. Hal Jay
being observed. Realize this_ Bia se and Mr. ~nd Mrs.
The bridegroom asked
John Megery to be his best
man and Jeff Hoarrison and
Bill Diever were ushers.
Following the wedding the
couple greeted 150 guests
during a champagne recep·
tion in the Newporter lnn. ·Before resuming fall activities members of South-
~m Orange County Alumnae of Alpha Phi arl Iook-
·ing forward to a relaxing day in the South Lafuna
home of Mrs. Fitzhugh Brewer (middle) at 1,31)
i.m. Aug. 14. The women will enjoy a buffet Iunch-
~n and play bridge. Appreciating the ocean view
are Miss Susan Muller, a student at San Diego State
College and Mrs. Edward Bowen, chapter president
(left to right). Reservations, by Aug. 12, may be
made with Mrs. Bowen, 494-2328 or Mrs . William
Heney, 675--2993.
Floral an-angements for and respond aci::ordingly. Walter C. Cleveland, all of
the bilme will be given a Check apparent minor mat-Huntington Beach.
designer's attention when ters. You could make pro-For her wedding the bride
Mrs . Dudley ca s e fitable discovery. Seek key selected a traditionally styl-
demoosttates the art at the to puzzle. ed gown of white silk
Coa5t Mesa-Bay CI ti es SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. organza with I lace bodice
Fuchsia Society meeting 21): Good lunar aspect to-and la~ repeated in bands
The bride was graduated
from Marina High School.
Her husband ,a graduate of
University High SctK>Ol, now
ia attending Golden \Vest
CAlllege. Mood A 12 day coincides with self-ex-on the bouffant skirt. ay , ug. . . D d Mrs. Case, a f I 0 r a l press1on. ay to create an
Harbor Councit Movie Guide .
designer and wedding con-show feelings. Loved one
sultant associated with needs reassurance. Throw
Hollister•'1 Floral Shop in off false pride. Rediscover
Costa Mesa, will create a past joys. Marr iage Plans Told
FAMILY
AROUND THE WORLD IN
80 DAYS -(X) -Adven-
turous Londoner and hi~
valet wager they can cir-
cle the earth ln 80 days.
3LACKBEARD'S GHOST -
Walt Disney's adventures
of famous pirate.
DON'T RAISE THE
BRIDGE, LOWER THE
RIVER. Bii time -r-
-llCbemeo I<> win bock wife -wanll di-vorce.
THE JUNGLE BOOK -
Di.mey Version of Klpl·
ing's tale of boy reared in
jungle by a family of
wolves.
THE ONE AND ONLY, GE·
NUINE, 0 RIG IN A L
FAMILY BAND
American politic• of 18801
pr~vlde 1 peri o d
IJacklnlUDd for I b I I
Disney musical
PRIVATE NAVY OF SGT.
O'F AR RELL -Good·
natured 1poof on 1 lonely
Isle In the Pacific during
World War II.
THF. RUSS 1ANS ARE COM·
ING -Hilarious comedy
about a Ruaslan sub-
marine grounded at Cape
C<Jd .
SllAK1EST GUN IN THE
WEST -Dentist seek!li
hla fortune In Wild WNI of
lll80s In tlJio 1lopotlck
weetem.
n!OROUG!Il.Y MODERN
MIU.IE -(X) -Mutlcal
opool of !ll'l()o.
THE YOUNG AMERICANS
-Delightful production in
which t.lented teenagers
ting their way across the
U.S.A.
YOURS. MINE AND OURS
-(X) -Warm , lively
domestic comedy of a
widowed neval o f f i c e r
with 10 .children and a
Navy widow with eight
children who marry.
'TEENS AND ADULTS
COUN1DOWN --,. of
how ract to moon affect.I
an astronaut, his family
and friend!.
COUNTERPOINT -Ex.
Alumni Meet
Orange County Catholic
Alumni Club will hear a lec-
ture by the Rev. Bob Ni ch·
ols, dlrector for the county
b r a n c h of the Southern
Christian Leadership Coo-
ference·West.
The meeting will take
place at 7::.> p.m. next
Monday in t h e Charter
House. Anaheim.
casual spring or French SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Basket A·line qesign using Dec. 21): Obtain hint from Mrs. Lois Hutchison of College where she was a
fresh nowen of the garden SCORPIO message. Strive Newport Beach has an-member of Sigma Gamma, • citing, entertaining aitua· GrG111wich Village poet. POOR COW _ s 0 rd id variety. . hfor greater d~~1s.tich peace, nounced the engagement of interclub council president,
ti() n ec curs w'h en . THE· FOX -Relationship drama of girl who faces a Believing no home is armony. "I"'' ig t 0 n her daughter. Sharon Lynn AWS president and secre·
American orchestra is between two women living seamy existen ce in complete w)1hout flowers, hom1 e, pryoperty. Check Hutchison to Ray Austin tary and president -and sec·
captured by a Nazi on an iaolated farm is English slums. the daiigner is interested in va ues. ou P o s s e s s r et a r y·treasurer of the
general in World War II. shattered with arrival of 'n.OSEMARY'S BABY sh<>wing h<>w to use flowers something others need. Get Arnold,\ son of Mrs. Mar-Math and Engineering Club.
ENTER LAUGHING an attractive man. Sordid, decadent and from garden or shop in in· your price. guerite Voborll of Lincoln, She plans to continue her
H ll arious, affectionate ·ruE GRADUATE_ Comic blasphem<>Wi film about e J 'pensive arrangements. CAPRICO~~ (D~c. 22· Neb. . . education at Ca Ii f ornia
film of Jewish life durin• satire or a young man whu Satan and witchcraft She also will give tips on J'8n. 19): V1s1t which had A September wedding ts State College at Fullerton.
1930s in the Bronx. . breaks out of materialisti l lE SECRET LIFE O.F AN how to pres.erve cut flowers been put o.ff may occur to· bein~ planne~. . Her fiance is a sophomore
·rHE FLIM-FLAM MAN -_ world or his elders. .o\MERTC"~ WTFE-"'=-and·wtil"demonst:Nlte-the-art---".u. ~tr1ve___f o r_ •.. un--M1ss-Hutch1soll-l&-a--gr~d--at-Orange Coast College
Comedy of chicanery. I.IVE FOR LIFE_ French Soph·ru ted t . t 1 of making fuchsia cor-d~rst.and1~g of opp o s 1 ng uate of Corona del Mar High and served for four years SPEEDWAY -Mualcal dult1 ca~ •of" cbo Yd seges views. Ghmmer of truth can School and Orange Coast with the U. S. Navy.
COmedy -•-.. t •-k drama about a televls\ori a eom=iy a re · . . \j;;;;;;;;;-..-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;i;;;;i;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;, d'UUU as""" car suburban h-··ew1'fe . The 7:30. p.m. m.eeting, •.n racer and hi t · journalist, his personal """" s s agger1ng l'f d hi . ·roNY ROME p . t the American Legion Hall 1n b"'-1 e an s involvement r1va e ua. · - -Costa Mesa ill open to the WILL PENNY _ Itinerant with the violent W'llrld eye uncovers corpses in public '
CO"Wboy ii bn>ught into around hlm. ~il~er _c 0 n tr• 5 t.1 D i Club memberl are asked
contact with 1 home, NEVADA SMITW -Violent millionaires and lowlife. to bring plants or the plant
fam.lly and love in thla western. X denotes ex~llent film. table. unglamorlud ~ew 01\-~~~~~~~~~~:....:.::....:.::....:.::.:.:::.:.:::...:::::::::.~--===~~~L-~~~ll
Montana dUrinfl 188Qs.
MATURE TEENS
AND AJIULTS
All Penney Stores Open Every Night ~onclay Through Saturday
THE FAMILY WAY-Lack
of privacy at home and j enne~J c om mun lty'a dilcon·
. cerUngly earthy iriterest .
in their alfalro threaten ALWAYS . FIRST GUAUTV .
SATURDAY
LAST DAY!
the marriage of 1 ·young
En1ll1h couple.
THE GJ\EEN BERETS -
Authentic action -pocked
patriotic war film.
GUESS WHO'S COMING TO
DINNER -Moving 1tory
of parent's reaction 1to 1
racially mixed marriage.
ODD COUPLE -
Uproarious comedy I n
which two ill-mat.ched ex-
marrleds dilclde to room
together. ~
THE SAND PEBBLES -
story about crew o f
American 1unboat, San
Palllo, 1et In Ollna during
political unrest Of Ute 1920s.
THE SCALPllUNTERS -
Tcapper ad runaway
slave follow trail of stolen
pelt! in this gory and
violent film .
WHERE WERE Y 0 U
WHEN THE LIGHTS
WENT Otrr? -Famous
blackout of November,
1965, serves as
background for this com.
edy.
ADULTS
A FINE MADNESS
Crude film about 1lct
Lio?. "@X
U!lllll BW. · Hl!llll' Ill\M
·lllws.Mlne ... ooas·
NOWl-.,Coota Mou
REDUCED I
\ ...
TOCIAYI
·Back-to-school -savings
on quality underwear!
Boy s' un derwear Girls' underwea r
Reg. 3 for 2.19 Reg. 3 for 1.7 5.
4"" ,, :4""4
ANNUAL AUGUST
, Sl\?flmeJltt y~ SALE!
Famous Brancl
Names-You
. All Know.
Bargains After
Bargains!
Prices Slashed
to Exciting New
Lows!
33 1 /3 .. so•At
OFF
on
Shifts
Skirts
Sun Dresses
Cotton Dresses
Cocktail Dresses
Capris
Blouses
Lingerie
Sweaters
Swim Suits
RU TH BRYANT-Beauty Consult~nt 3 for 1.77 3 for 1.44 Swim Suits -Prices Slashed
JOO/o to 500/o off pt•••nh
MULi NOIMA N COSMITICS
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT For C19mpllme.nt1ry fOlor I m•~•·up •n•lysis ...
646-4026 •
Brine Ad for Free Gitt. wtlh appointment
·: ztJ L 17111 St, C.U. M-• •; JewtlQ A Boutique I"°" •• •• t•
HUNTINGTON BEACH COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH
(F.i1hleit hl1t14l
ALL
CREDIT c.t.11.qs
3424 Via Udo • Newport Beach
aloo Dlonoyland Hetal
. -... -.,.-¥ ~-•• ----.. ......... ,_,--·~~~~~~~~~ .... ~..-.... ~.~-................. ,..~ ................. """ .......................................... ll!'ll!ll!!llJl!ll(!ll!!!!!!!!l!l!ll!l!lll!!!l .... 1!!11!!!11!11111!1!!111:111
I·
·--------·~-----------
·' Frld.1,, Au,u.st •. 1968 OAJLV PILOT JI
l(imhall Wins Snipe
Jr. Championship
Multihull OCC May Develop-
Trials Now Harbor Pro erty:--
Under Way By THOlllAS FORTUNE cocdina: Harbor Dlsb'lc:\'
By ALlllON LOCKABEY
D.llb' Plitt ....... lllfW
A few years ago Alex
Kimball of Alamitos Bay
Yacht Club was making
yachting headlines with con·
·sistent wins in Sabot regal·
tas in Southern California.
Today the 17·year~ld
·ABYC sailor is junior "a·
tional champion of the Snipe
-Oass,-Uie Jargesr~e
.the most competitive one·
design classes in the world.
. · KimliaJJ started w 'the
junior championship regatta
Wednesday with t h r e e
straight wins, and followed
up Thursday with two fifths
'Jor a 1COre of 2Ci" under the
new Olympic scoring
system.
The two fifth p 1 a c e
finishes weren't exactly of
Kimball's doing. Re got ·off
to a bad start in the 27-boat
fleet in the first race and
had' t.o bear away from the
fleet to get clear wind.
Thirty seconds prior to tile
start of the final race the
gooseneck on bis boom let
go, forcing him to make
hurried repairs. Even so, he
started a full 50 seconds
behind the fleet and again
had to sail around and
through to pick up another
vital fifth place to maintain
his low score.
Moving up fa st was John
Swanson of Winchester,
Mass., who won the final
race, winding up with a total
series scon «. 24.7. The win
nudged Roger Stewart of
San Diego out Qf second
place 'as he could place no
better than fourth in the
final two races.
Stron~ winds that hit 25
knots lD the gusts con-
tributed to a baH-Oozen
cap.sizings and numerous
breakdowns -including
Kimball's.
At the conclusion of the
second race Thursday the
boat skippered by Jim
Grubbs of c.alifornia Yacht
Club capsized just before
crossing the finish line,
dumping him and hii crew
Rinky-Dink ·Builders
Set Up Association
Southern Ca·lifor.nta
builder-owners of Rinky·
Oinks -those unique, sew·
it-yourself one ·des lg n
sailboats. h a v e formally
organized, elected ofIK:ers
and staged their irlaugural
race.
The Southern California
Ri.nky·Dink As!OCiatioo Wia8
formed with seven charter
members: Bob CI a y,
Westminster ; Art Hestand,
San Diego; Vem Hestand,
Port Hueneme; Denny
Jooes, SaG Bernardino; Don
Palmer, Hiawtllome ; Bill
Pollard, RiversJde, and War·
ren, La Mesa.
Jones, commodore of the
Riverside Sail Club, w-as
elected president of the new
association. Serving with
him on the original board
are Art H~ta.nd, vice presi·
dent; Pollard, treasurer;
Clay. secretary and
\Vahlgren, Nee chairman.
The first race was held on
Lake Evans near Riverside
and was won by gueSts Jim
and Helen Hellyer, Goleta.
In a two.out-of 1hree aeries,
Jones -wi'th Clay crewing
-won the ·first rece then
looled a m:rt and dropped
out of the second. The
Hellyen won the third going
away 85 they quickly
mastered the lit1Jt air con·
d.itrons on ttle lake.
' J o y c e I.oewy into the
drink. Grubbs succeeded in
righting the boat, despite
the crush of finishers, but it
drilled .away from Miss
Loewy, leaving G r u b b s
crewless and Miss Loewy
swimming frantically t o
dodge boats.
nu~ third annual World CM 1111 N•IY '1191 11•" Manager Kenneth Sam~~
MuJtibull cbampioosbip &ot The Ori:n&e Coast JuniQI' TOO Sl\1ALL ...:.:. !
under way at Lone Beach Colle&e District is workine Sampsoo sMd tie wtuld
Thursday with speed and ef-on plans to develop its crew like to see the property ha.Ve
ficiency trials. base property on choice grea.ter use, but noted it ii
..,_ The skipper of another
t hauled. bet-on-board,_
More speed and efficiency Newport Harbor watertrori.t too small for substa11tfal
trials were schedWed today for fuller use. development. The area ii
from 1 to· 5 p.m. Joinln( with UC Irvine less than an acre and wlt.11
Start of the first race in and other Orange County buildings there wouldn't be
the Day Sajling Regatta is colleges, the junior college much room left for parkin«.
_ ~l~ed_ Saturday ·at 1 p.m. disb:ict plans to bulkhead-he--ebs~ved. . .---.,-
The day sailing will con-Abe shoreline and add moor-He,.sai.d a site 1s being set
chide Swrday--with I. hT • fngs for collegiate racing --a·s1~Darra-Potnt-Harbor
awlrds presentation and sloops. for a marin~ study and
1opUy'1iinnped .
the drink again when it
e-apparent-be -wa
going to finish with more
crew than when be started.
She was finally rescued by
her own skipper.
Augustin Diu· of ~mi,
Fla., and Tim Bernsen · of
ABYC tied oo points but the
third place in tbe regatta
went to Diaz because he had
beaten Bernsen in four of
the five nces.
Today the senior Snipers
went into action with 87
boat& scheduled toO bit the
line in the first race. of the
Crosby elimination se£ies.
The top 25 in the Crosby,
plus defending champion
Earl Elms ot San Diego, will
compete starting Monday in
the Heinzerling Series for
the national senior cham·
pions hip.
"crowning" of the world Plans for marine study research facJUty .
multihull champion at 4,:..SO fa c i Ii tie s l n c luding "It ls located next to th~
p.m. aquariums and a n un· breakwater where you ~aD
Speed and efficiency trials derwater observatory ap-ge~ fresh seawater ~hi~
are being held off Pier J. parently have been diverted sc1c:nti.sts .~11 m~ is higb.ij'
inside the Long Beach by the.County Harbor Com· desirable, he said.
Harbor jetty and the day mission, . which pre~ers a
sailing events will be held in Dana Point Harbor site.
the ocean outside the Long The Harbor Commission
Beach breakwater. also asks that crew ac·
Awards fuclude the Glas· tivities eventually be moved
Craft Perpetual Trophy for to the rowing . course to be
the fastest boat plus first constr.ucted m U p p e r
through third most et.-Newport Ba_y.
ficient and the V i c t 0 r The marine study and
Tchetcbet W or 1 d Cham· orew [~cilities WOJ.dd be
pjonsh.ip Trophy tor thf: first cooperatively developed and
boe.t i"n day sailing. stared by several Orange
Special awards will be County colleges.
given to boats built to the DRAW UP PLANS
fnternational Yacht Racing Orange Coast co 11 e g e
Union rule defining cl:assff District truatees Wednesday
for best to~al s a i 1 in_ g nigbt hired engineer Jack per~rmance ln the day sail-Raub to draw up plans for
trig regatta. bulkheading the property.
Two top skippers from
Newport Beach are entered
in the Crosby Series. They
are Dave Ullman, twice run·
ner-1111 ill tti• nauonai., and . Unifonn of .the Day Argyle aa·mpbell, recently
named on the All-American Burly Dan Blocker, better known to television· view~
collegiate sailing team. BoUr ers as "Hoss" Cartwright, looks more like a loco--
are member1 of ·Balboa motive fireman tJian a race boat driver as he pre-
. Ale_x Kozloff ol ~a del . Harb 0 r commissioners
... Mar lS general chaJrman of next Tuesday will he<K' a ~ event. ~e ~ttai· progrefs report Cr o m ~ng held in con]uncti flarbor' District engineers
with the Long Beach In -who are studying the mat-
tional Sea Festival. ter. . ~
''"'Y ~ MMCO _... -tfl•n 10,000 lta1*niMIM proMMtL '
YOl.I lft frff 1-lnf. • fl9f l;Of6.
Chtck, fittt, •frlellH"lt ~
timH hi just ·-• .,. ANI with AAMCO, your trtn1ml1•1oft cen bf
PfOltctM:t b)' 11111r 500 AAMCO 9!11-hlrs co••I tore~. Yacht Club. pares to drive his boat Lady in Cement in the Long
The top 10 finishers in the Beach Hennessy Cup Offshore Power Boat race. The
junior championships: La_dy finished sixth.
1. Alex Kimball, ABYC, 1---'-'------------------1·1·5-5-~ pts.
2. John ~wanlOl'J, Win·
chester, MaE:s., f-2-4-3-1-
24.7. .
·3· Roger Stewart SDYC, 2·
3-f>-4-4-34.7. .
4. Augustin Diaz, Miami,
Fla., 3-1().6..2-7-49.4.
5. Tim Bernsen. ABYC, 5·
4·3·6-3--49.4.
6. Mac Kilpatrick,
Oklahoma City, 6 · 5 -2 -I •
DNF--56.7.
7. Scott Birnberg, Cal. YC,
13-6--13~.4.
8. Preston Brammer,
Wichita, Kas., 8-DNF-12·7-2·
-91.
9. John Skinner, San Fran· cisix>. 7·11-13.S·DNF -93.
10. Jim Grubbs, Cal YC,
ll-ll·DNS·I0·6-94. 7.
World Outboard Event
Offers .$30,000 Purse
A purse of '30.000, with
national Sea Festival.
guaranteed the winller, has
been pooled for the 1968
Outboard W o r 1 d Oi.am·
H0,00! ill cash and prizes
at Lake Havasu City.
"We expect money of that
kind will attracit the top
drivers from all parts ol the
United States as '11ell as
foreign start," said Robert
P . McCullocti Jr., r-act1
ctiairmall.
The event wu already the
richett outboard race in the
world and ttie boost from
last year's $27,750 add! to
that claim.
"We anticipate a field of
150 boats," McCulloclf said.
Cat Races
Next Week
K..in.g Harbor Yadlt Club,
Redondo Beach, will be bolt
to the Pacific Catamaran
n a t i o n a I champlomhip
regatta, Aug. 16-17-18.
The annual class meeting
will be held at KHYC Aug,
15 at 8 p.m.
BNt owners in t h e
MaOCi-ation who live more
than 600 miles away may
lxirrow a boat for the event.
Dry storage kr the boats
will be a¥ailable at KHYC.
Any sk:ipper may sail in
the championships pnividing
tie has sailed in twa PCCA
sanctioned regattas since
last year's championship
The college district rents
from the county 300 froo·
tage feet and b i. c k u p
acreage to Pacific Coast
Hig'1way for SI a year. The
25-year lease has 10 ·more
years to run.
;Orange Coast Co 11 e g .e
District oftlclals are seeking
1 SO.year extensioo, and
have broached the &ubject
with Supervisor Altori Allen.
The site now is developed
only wtth a storehouse for
the crew shells and a
laurichlng float.,Jt is located
between thV~lboa Bay
Club and Orange County Sea
Scout Ba1e.
[V.try ml!NI:• ""' I ....,,
-~···
COSTA MESA
1741 """"" •• "'"''"' The Bay Club has a
month-to.month lease · with G1rden Grove
the collllty for offshore 9541 ..,.... .,...,.. 11"" •••• ....
moorings along 250 · feet of S..nt• An1
the 300 Ceet of frontage. m .. """ ••· •..........• W-t@I
Development might cost the
Bay Club part or au of the
encroaching boat sllps, ac-
:,1fR /..':, .,, '. ~ ,
IN Ct..lf01.!'~ I
NOW SHOWING I BIGGEST HITS OF THE YEARI
.-, Mia Farrow • John Cassavetes
TECHNICOLOR • SuggestedforMatuieMiencesED!l
EVERY EVENING
AT •••
8:15 and
10:45PM
I I CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM ...
1 2:15 ·PM I SATURDAY. SUNDAY FROM ...
11 12:15 PM
Mld11l&ht Show Frldq & laturdar
I
I
I I
I
* EVERY EVENING AT •••
8:00 and 10:00 PM
ACADEMY
AWARD
WINNER
AT Hl•WAY 39 DRIVE-IN
iNNE BANCROFT-DDmN HDF,MAN ·KATHARINE RIIS
TECHNICOLOR • .. ANAVl•ION . ..
· P,ACIP'IC'S
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-
•
I
DJ\ILY PftOT EDITORIAL PAGE
, A Time for Patience
Matorlsts In ~rona del Mar -"old" Corona del
Mar -will be 4elounne around a lot of rubble the resL
of the summer. "
But the inconvenience will be worth it.
The cny next, w~ek w11l ·start tearing' up much-trav·
eled. Second Avenue. Many alleys throughout the com ..
munlty below East Coast Highway will also be torn up
and closed off. t
All ol it will be part ol tM biggest public works pro--
jeet In Corona ae1 Mar since its annexation by the city
ol Newport Beach 4{) years ago. ;'tie cost is $215,000.
A new storm drain and water inain will be buried
along Second ·Avenue, which Will then be repaved, -rrom-
Avocado to Heliotrope. The Blleys, those in "really rot·
ten shape," as one city aide puts it, will be-reconstruct·
ed. ·------~-
Stonn drain· and sewer replacement work will take
place in other areas, as well
The work has been long needed. But why do it now.
one might ask, in.the middle of summer?
To beet the rains, explains Public WQrks Director
Joseph T. Devlin. COropa del· Mar's clay ·soil won't ab-
sorb water quickly enoqgh to make the project practical
except during the dry season.
So the work must be done now, wben the traffic is
heaviest. Residents, then, can only be patient. And they
should sure~ find some satisfaction in knowing that
here Is collll!Fete evidence -no pun intended -of their
tax dollars at work.
All ol the $215,000 comes from revenue generated
by the city'& $1 .225 tax rate. About a dime of that tax
rate goes toward the Corona del Mar project.
That's a lot of money,, but it is still a bargain. It
would have cos~ an estimated 15 percent more bad not
all the work been combined into one j'omnibus" pro-
ject.
1t is this kind of planning and engineering that en·
11.bles the city to keep up appearances, with economy.
Municipal officials serve the taxpayers well with
such an approach to their responsibilities.
Potential · Money Saver
U. $. Army air defense crews may soon be shooting
down paper rockets-for training purposes.
That's a prospect as a result of a newly developed
P hilco-Ford Aeronutronic product.
Company officials took the wraps off the proposed
military air target at a press conference the other day.
They call it LOCAT , for Low Cost Air Target.
The fuselage ol the 15-fooL long, 155-pound rocket·
powered device is made of rolled. paper tubing. The fins
and nose cone are made of the-same type of plastic used
for surfboards. s
In other words, it's a cheap item.
·And 11iar,-ineems to us, 1s 11's it should-be. It ls;-
after all, designed onJy to be blown out of the. sky by
air defense gunners.
Philco-Ford executives say LOCAT will work just as
well as costly military targets now in use. It travels at
500 miles an hour, they say, and simulates a low flying
jeL.
And it won't cost much.
We hope this won't rule it out for consideration by
the Department o' Defense.
Lockahey's W ah'lls Win
Newport Beach lileguard Logan Lockabey last week
won an impressive victory in the annual Walrus Swim.
In the race around Newport Pier, Lockabey out-
scored his closest opponent by 1,414,503 points. •
Now tba<t's a substantial margin, even in these days
of rising everything. -except for Dodger baseball
sct1res.
Lifeguard Lockabey deserves congratulations for a
splendid performance. The scorekeepers, of course, are
another matter. N
It's Welf .. That
· . They Straddle
'I Love You
In Spite of
The Hippies'
Police Won Overdue Respect
MIAMI BEACH -The ,Republican<
have stziaddled the V1e1114i.m issue, as
will the OemdcraU, and it-Will be up tb .,;,>
the presJdentiaJ candidates to dra..y
any definable dlstinct.ioA betw .. n
them on ending the war.
upon the Democratic convention their
clamor for retreat in Vietnam.
It will be .sai4, of course that the old
political parties offered no hope for
the rising generations who are un-
The issue will finally Lrest not so
much on phraseology as upon at-
titudes. Neither political.'party really
knows bow to end 1he w.11", nor will the
candidates know. In the end peo~e
will intuitively judge whfch candidate
is the more likely to be able to brlng
the thing to a desirable cooclusion.
. dergoing some kind of miraculous
' change in human nature, shedding in
the wink of an eye all the sins of the
past to emerge in a warless world of ~
uninhibited freedom, equality and
It is just as well that both parties ' •1 are straddling. Otherwise they could
end any prospect of tile negotiators In '
Paris accomplishing anything. If tile
nation is wtlolly lucky tbe presidential
campaign will end just as in·
conclu sively as the national political
conventions, insofar as a Vietnam set-;,
tlement is concerned.
FOR THERE IS NO question at all-.
that ttie Soviet Union and ti:Je govern-
ment of North Vietnam are pinning
their expe<:twons on the presidential
campaign. so unhinging American opi·
nion that it will be the end of any
further American aspirations in Asia.
In any &eosible ordering of events
the next President of the United States
should not be bound by compromises
f~ced upon him in a presidenti.i cam·
pa.ign. Only ttie naive could con-
ceivably believe that issues like Viet-
nam and the American role in Asia
can be resolved by public opinion polls
or presidential elections.
~esldential candidates who commit
themselves to courses ol international
action are inevitably embarrassed.
viz. Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon
B. Johnson. Dwight D. Eisenhower
committed himself to nothing but a
trip to Korea which he made and
which so hardened his view that he
thereupon, according to his own state-
ment, sent out the word that unless
the Sorth Koreans and Chinese settled
he was likely to use nucle9T weapons.
THERE WERE SOME in Miami. as
there will be in Chicago at the end of
this month, who prayed that the
political parties would wash out the
VieUMlm war and so inhibit the can.
did.ates that all freedom of action
would be lost.
They did not prevail in Miami, and
they w1n not prevail in Chlcago.
although it will surely br a noisier
issue when the McOarthy forces loose
,.---Bw George .....,..---,
Dear George:
I plan to b ecome. a
multi.millionaire and n1y idealli
are J. Paul Getty and Howard
Hughes. Do you think I have a
chance to be exactly like these
two, and how should I start?
YOUNG HOPEFUL
Dear Young llopeful:
Why don 'I you get rid of the
idea of being exactly like
1omebody else and be yourself!
ln the (irst place, It's not prac-
Ucal -J can't teU you how to
auddenly get both older and in-
Ylllble.
Dur Geor1e :
Whll do 1"" tnlnk ol tile lady
advice colum.nLltl who seem to
have no trouble solving every
problem!
CURIOUS
DelJ' Curiou1 :
I think they're sweal. One of
m y deare1t !rlendt 11 a lady ad·
¥Ice columnl•t who s o I v e '
tv~n&, ooce I chanp her
~(other. "
ease. ·
And that is quite true. The old
political parties are not creating the
new world ol. which youth dreams
because they have not found any way
to do it. Nor bas youth f.ound any way.
Sen. Eugene McCarthy I eave s
something to be wanted in this respect
also.
FROM ALL INDICATIONS ,
therefore, we are to go along again
this year with Ule old parties, the old
candidates (even Rockefeller is 60),
and modifications of old ideas to solve
old problems.
Republican criticisms of the conduct
of the war were familiar -frittering
away of our commibnent in a pro-
longed war of attrition. Republicans
would change the strategy to the
security and loyalty of the population,
instead of control of territory. which
i.s. of course, exactly what the
strategy in Vietnam is now. So Uiere
was nothing the Republicans hc.d to
say which was of much help to our
military commanders in Vietnam.
The same will undoubtedly be true
When the Democrats go through the
tortures of drafting a Vietnam plank.
THE DIFFERENCE WILL be that
the Democrats cannot so easily gloss
over the dirferences between Vice
Presi~umphrey and Senator
l\1cCarthy. as the Republicans were
able to gloss over differences between
Nelson A. Rockefeller and Richard M.
Nixon. There may even be a minority
report which the Democratic con·
vention will have to vote down.
Both parties will end up being strong
for peace -honorable peace, the word
honorable being a qualifier covering
all kinds of differences.
Then the next President of the
United States will take up where
President Johnson will have left off.
He will face the real practicalities of
Vietnam, how to end up with an in-
dependent republic in the south shield·
ed from internal subversion and at-
tack from ~e oorth and free W choose
its own politic•l course.
Quotes
AUaa Grant, Berlueley, State Board
of Agriculture pres .. on e11ten1 boy·
colt or Cain. p-aptt -"This boycott
la a threat to the Jobs of every grape
picker ln the state."
Gov.· Ronald Reaian, oa youthful
dltstnttra -"Success to them ts fln-
dlne a wa,y lo ltop lhe ticking but they
haven't the vaguest idea ol how lo put
the clock back toðer again."
L. A. Mayor Sam Yorty, oa an·
nounced left-wing dt mons1ratJon plan.
ned for llJlH visit -''It's a aad day
¥1hcn the Vice President has to put up
with th.ts type of hara11sm nl just
because . ht went.I to vt1lt a~ few
[rlend1.'' ""'
By ELLSWORTH L.
RICHARDSON
l\linlster, '11Je Neighborhood
Congregatlona1 Church
Laguna Beach
Our town has a bad case of "bippy-
titus"!
Before we form sides of accord or
dissent. Jet us define what we mean by
being a hippy. I like Prof. Earisman's
definition: a hippy is "any individual
or group that separates themselves
from the prevailing· systems and stan-
dards of a society in order to find
; l ti'i~ ' ..• 'I
Everyday
£ o.bl .mll'
v
meaning that they cannot find in that
society,"
If we accept this definition, then we
find the rpodern hippy in the company
of a long list of individuals who sought
meaning that they could not find in the
society in which they lived: such as
Socrates, Diogenes. the D e s e r t
Fathers, St. Francis of Assisi, the
Brethren of the f'ree Spirit, the
Shakers. the poet William Blake and
Thoreau!
THOREAU SAID, "I went to the
woods because I wished to Jive
deliberately. to confront only the
essential facts of life. and see if I
could learn what it had to teach, and
not, when I came to die, discover that
I had not lived. If a man does not keep
pace with his companions. perhaps it
is because be hears a different drum·
mer.·• Then after two years of drop·
ping out, he said, "I lefl the woods for
::is good a reason as I went there .. , I
had several more lives to live and
could not spare any more time for that
one." He continued, " ... if you have
built castles in the air, your work need
not be lost; that i.! whf.re they should
be. Now put the ronnd1Uon1 uader
them."
IT SHOULD BE evidefit to some of
the hippies who are now turning to
switchblades. or who are thinking
about it, recognizing the folly of thelr
unproductive lives, that "NOW is the
time to put foundations under their
castles." The problems of our cities,
the menace of war, will not be solved
by sitting cross-legged on t h e
sidewalk. but only through the highly
disciplined use of reason. It requires
the cultivation of the Institutions ol.
ordered bum.an relationships.
We need to learn not only how to
love our fellow men. but to work with
them In some systematl~ and orderly
way. Let the hippies of the world unite
with the human race! Let the hippies
put foundations under their castles.
noble as they might be
TO ' BE SURE, like Thoreau. they
have heard a "distant drummer," and
now is the time for tbem to Usten to
lhe distant rumble ol dnun' on Ml
Sinai and Mount Calvary!
I have noticed a yellow b u m P.: e r
stlcker which reads, "P. S. J L'Ove
You ." On closer scrutiny the legend
reads, "Palm Sprlng.s, I Love You ."
Wh•t a creative way to enhance the
image ot Palm Springs! "Uiguna
Beach, J love you , .. h1 spite o.( the
hippie,." Maybe now is lhe time for
all ot 111 to ~t foundations under our
ca1tle1! Lets do tt toretbar!' {
-----------------------
Pop Festival • Ill R,etrospect
To the Editor :
l am not at all surprised by the
Costa Mesa City Council's decision to
ban any future Pop Festivals. This I
believe was decided upon before ttle
first performances. What1 d o e s
surprise me. however , is that our
moral protectors let this thing slip by
in the first place, no loopholes in the
law, perhaps.
Many considered Costa Mesa's
"retirement village" reputation just
too much to overcome and couldn't
conceive of it ever· being the site for
an avant garde or youth-oriented spec-
tacle. It was a happy surprise when it
happened.
NOW THE J\IAVOR tells us that he
witnelised the whole "explosive situa·
tion" from the roof of the police facili·
ty, a good city block away. I'm sure
the good mayor was unable to
determine the mood of the crowd. and
f'm also sure that Mr . Pinkley made at
least 90,000 more enemies by calling
us all animals in the light of those few
who chose to go that r oute.
t attended the performances both
days and never once felt like an
animal. Nor did I witness one insult to
a police officer . The police were
wonderful, were beautiful, and won
much overdue respect. U there were
insults, and I heard there were, they
were not deserved, nor did they reflect
the attitudes Of the m a j o r i t y .
Professional agitators were alleged to
have been present. If this is so. then
the crowd should be rewarded. not
denied, for not blowing it in this "ex·
plosive situation." No professibnal
agitation could even upset the com-
placency of the festival.
THE PEOPLE as a whole, were
very well behaved. The police even
reported this to be true several times
during the performances. There was
not even a fist fight, which is unusual
at a large gathering of young people.
Through all this the city of Costa Mesa
paid photographers to seek out and
film "incidents" that would paint a
mood for the crowd. You can believe
that th e majority of the individuals at
the Pop Festival will be edited oUt of
that film.
For all the undeniable order at the
Newport Pop Festival. wtiat do we get
but a slap in the face by the mayor
and city council. If you wonder why
today's youth are discontent, look no
further. This is not an unusual turn of
events for kids with honest motives to·
day.
Mayor Pinkley's irresponsibility and
questionable motives for t hi s
discoloration, in the face of 100.000
witnesses. may have added another
several thousand frustrated souls -to-
the rising tide of rebellion. JERRY NOLAND
I rrespomil>le
To lhe Editor :
Your paper pointed out clearly some
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
••
. "' r c...'-'::r..l"' I lellera from readira ,,.. w.ICO<nl. Norm1llY wrllel'$
1hould convey Thelr mes•-In 300 words or less.
Tiit r~lll to CONIMIH let!1r1 lo ILi w>KI or 1llmln•l9 11~1 Is reHrved. AU ''"'" m11111 lnd...W slirn•lvrt 1N!I mlllll't!I •lldrt n. bu! n1mes will bl' wl!hheld
on r11<1ues1.
of the problems experienced by our
police department due to the Newport
Pop Festival held at the Orange Coun-
ty 1''airgrounds over the weekend.
However, it did not Wlte wbo authoriz·
ed the use of the grounds to state "ihe
world's biggest love·in" as stated or
who will· pay the bills to clean up, the
filth and debris left behind by these ir·
responsible persons.
E. STARR
Attendance was at least four times
the number. expected when the fair
board contracted with the producer.
The 'Contract included provisian for
post·event cleanup.
Edito r
Poore•r fl11allr11
To the Editor:
,.
This ls to express my disapproval of
the festival of "hippie singers" which
was recently sponsored at the Orange
County Fair Grounds.
As a taxpayer helping to support
and pay for the fairgrounds facility . I
see no reason why the board should be
a party to inviting and in effect
sponsoring this type of program which
is being criticised Crom all sides
throughout the country. Not only was
the type of entertainment poo r. but the
program did in fact invite a large
crowd of the poorest quality of young
people to be our guests in Orange
County. .
I would also call attention to the fact
that the present leadership at the
fairgrounds has eliminated several of
the traditional horse snows which in
the past did enjoy usin& these facilities
for a valuable purpose.
BOB PALEY
Build Brid9"'•
To the Editor ;
We would like to express our
gratitude and thanks to the Costa
Mesa Police Department and the
various organizations wOrking with
them for their pleasant cooperaticn
and line judgment in helping us make
the Newport Pop Festival a beautiful
experience for our young community.
As to the 100.000 "screaming, drug•
crazed anarchists" -thanks for goi ng
so easy on us, kids. Let's build so1ne
more bridges. (Support your local
Police.) Love. LHASA
Peoceftd Cr0tlltl
To the Editor:
Seldom has lt been my privilege, or
more properly my misfortune, to
witness first hand a more completely
lrresponsl ble reporting of the news.
The tone of your ht-ad\ines and your
articles concerning the Ne\vport Pop
Festival will no doubt summon
William Randolph Jiearst from Rotten
Reporter's lfea~en to reward you with
a beartlell "Well done; that's lhe way
to seU newspapers."
I don't know what else the Pop AS A POSTMAN, and !herefore at
Fesllval achieved, but ctrta1nly leut theoretically a member ln good
It produce<t the largest conven· standing of the establishment, I would
tion of plg1 in Orange Coast bit· like to go on record a.s saying t wa9
tory. HopefuJly, the promoter of there, right In the middle of what you
thls nightmare will be back to called the "screaming, drug-crated
clean up after his swine, aidea anarchy." an.d can only conclude that
by whatever officials were re· one or two things must be true. Either
•ponsiblie for (JsuJng bis ptrmJL i:u are completely deluded as to wh•t
-Mrs. w. H. • ppen$1 and what didn't, or you are
.._ ____________ _. dellb@.rateJy mlsrepre1enUng the facts.
as a more peaceful crowd of 100,000 I
cannot ilnagine.
DENNIS C. SMITH
'Run Them Out'
To the Editor:
I hope the people of Costa Mesa will
be properly aroused and run the
parties responsible for the horrible
spe~tacle we were subjected to this
past weekend completely out of town
and never Permit them near this area
again.
AU you need to do is to drive
through our streets to see that these
undesirables are still hanging round.
Do we want the same P.roblems
Carmel and Monterey are still coping
with?
As a local responsible newspaper. I
beg you to do something now so that
we will not have our good -:ities
blighted.
MRS. WANDA LUCAS
IHarh1e Life
To the Editor:
As I have read in your editorials,
you feel strongly against taking
marine life lron1 their n a tu r a l
habitat. In fact, it is against the law.
But in Dana Point they are going to
close the harbor, or rather block it off
and dredge all !he water out.
Now taking life from the sea is bad
enough but taking the sea from the
marine life is unthinkabl e.
!RITA NELSON
SJci111 Ji'f111rr.s
To the Ectitor :
We are distur bed toni ght (August 5)
to find no mention in the DAILY
PILOT of the finM s of the Oran i::e
County Swim Conference which took
place Saturday, August 3 at· the local
high schools and Sunday. August 4 at
Foothill High School in Tustin.
To have witnessed and worked at
these meets was a real privilege. The
eager and competitive youngsters. ag·
ed 4 through 17. who participated in
this important athletic en1eavor wer•
surely more newsworthy than the
swarms of other young people whose
doings fill the paper tonight.
TRIS LA'ITER group spent their
weekend shoving for a space to loll in
and listen to tt1e latest in "folk rock"
or "pop" music put forth by various
groups of so-<:alled musicians.
How much more interesting would
be pi('lures and front page coverage o(
our great young local athletes in im-
portant events such as these swi1n
finals.
It's too bad the Pilot missed this
scoop-not even -$11 paragraph
to honor its "hap 1n
SHIRLEY P. CALLAGHAN
Results wtre received too late for
publication Augtist 5. They were pub-
lished Wednesday, Augw! 7.
-----
Friday, Augu sL 9. 1968
The editorfGJ page of the Daily
Pilot n:tks to inform and t Um.
ulaU read.In by presenting thQ
neaospopcr't opinionl ond cOTJ1io
mtt\ta.rV Oft topia of inttr11C
and significance, by providing a
forum for t.lll txprtslton oJ
our re(l(ff:r1' opinions, ond bt1
prc1nting thl dit1trse vitio-
pofnts of fnfomr.td obstrveri
mid ipoktsmen on topic.t o/ th~
day.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
-' I
(;osta ----_ DAI LY Pl LOT _______ _ Mesa Today's Closing
'
YOL 6T, NO. 19f, 3 SECTIONS, ~a PAGES
Ul'ITe ...... '9
GOP TEAM BASKS IN APPLAUSE CLIMAXING CONVENTION
Spiro Agnew, Rich•rd Nixon Listen to Miami's Last Hurrah
Nixon Calls for Drive
Against Crime, Violence
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Richard
i1. Nixon today led his Republican par-
ty into an ele<ltl.on Ce.Q'l~gn aJmed at
satisfying a national li\ing_tt for peace
at home and abroad.
It was an orthodox Republican Nix-
on, who took a hard.line toward put-
ting an end to violence a n d
lawlessness in America. But it also
was a new Nixon, who took a soft line
toward the Soviet Union instead of
depicting communism as the root or
ill evil.
Nixon began his speech by recalling
he had accepted the same nomination
eight years ago. There will be a dif-
ferent ending this time, he said.
because "This time we are going to
win."
He could get applause with lines
dating back to the early weeks of his
presidenti8.l primary campaign, such
as he wanted more people On payroUs
.and fewer on welfare rolls. And be
could bring the entire convention to its
feet cheering 'and applauding with his
often used punch line:
"I say that when respect for the
United States has fallen so low that a
fourth Me military power, like North
Kor~a . will highjack a United ·states
naval vessel on the high seas it is time
for new leadership to restore respect
for the . United States around the
world.
"America is in trouble today not
because her people have failed but
because her leaders have Jailed," he
1aid. "\Vhat America needs are
leaders to match the greatness or her
people."
He said new leadership clearly is
needed when the world's strongest na·
tion is tied down by four years of war
in Vietnam, when the world's richest
nation cannot manage its o w n
Orange Coast
Weather
Old Sot will do his darndest to
break through that patchy fog
this weekend, bringing 72-degree
warmth to the Orange CoasL
INSIDE TODAY
It's sink or swinl -literall11
-for Corona dtl Mar and N~
port Harbor High performer• in
thtir vtrtion oJ the South Paci.-
fie. Grob 'o laugh pruerver and
come along to the biO aqiwttc
show todall in t1te W8EKEND£R.
... !1111 " Seel•! ·-11·11
c1ntor1111 ' ·~ 1 .. 1.
Ci.ttlflM U·ft .... -•• ,_ .. n T~•tll9fl JI ·--• Tiltfttn We •1 W --" WH-• .. _ .. .. --...... ,. " ... ""'' ..... " Wttltlll ..._. ..
l'IMlll• M --"" C:•"' .. "" -• ·-" -• ..... _, " ..... '· u ....... " ••ttl'l11M1tM •II _,,.,. .. ..... , .. u
"""" c ....... " "" ...... ' Mutll9t ....... ' e1t4lll!IM • flll•""'411 ,._ .. --' orM .. C-'r " Mwk '
economy, when the nation with the
greatest respect for law is "plagued
by unprecedented lawlessness" and
when the American president cannot
travel without fear of b o s t i l e
dtmonstraUons.
The remedy, he said, "is a complete
housecleaning of those respon~ible for
our failll!'e and a complete reappraisal
of America's policies in every section
of the world."
Of· Vietnam, he said that military,
eCQnomic and diplomatic power have
never been used so ineffectively. He
promised to say nothing in his cam·
paign that would damage the Paris
peace talks. But he said that if those
talks fail to produce results by
November, the nation will turn to new
leadership, "not tied to the policies
and mistakes of the past."
"The first priority foreign policy ob·
jective of our next administration will
be to bring an honorable end to the
war in Vietnam," he ple<J.ged.
County Youth
Dressed Doivn
For Wearing Flag
By JACK CBAPPELL
Of 1'11t D1l1Y Pllt! Slaff
A Buena Park youth who combinell.
fashion wiUt patriotism was arrested
Thursday in San Juan Capistrano for
defiling the American Flug.
Deputy Sheriff Robert Schlice said
he found Nathan P. Gilgore, 18. clad in
a fashionable red, _white and blue.
Nehru-style shirt made by his mother.
The arresting officer said Gilgore tot~
him he l<lves the American Flag and
thct's why he wore it. .
The officer said he observed Gllgore
at about 1 p.m. Thursday slumped
over tbe wheel o! his car off the side or the road at Junipero and Cer:o
Roads in tbe mii;sion city. When the
'deputy stopped to see if anything was
wron g, Gilgore told him that be was
going to San Diego when he got tired
and pulled <lff the roOO to sleep.
Mrs. Louise Gilgore. the youth'~
mother, told the DAILY PILOT she
made the shirt for her son after con·
suJting Buena Park police.
According to Mrs. Gilgore, someone
ln the Buena Park Police Department
told her it was all right to use the Flag
for a shirt.
She used the starred field tor the
5\eeves and the !tripes for the body of
the mod shirt.
Gilgore ent.ered O,ange Counly Jail'
at about 2 p.m. Hours lBk'r, sans shirt,
he emerged from the jaj1 under $190
bail. TM shirt was held as evidence.
The courts Of Orange County
already have ruled this year that you
cM't use the American Flag for a win·
dow curtain, a beach towel, or an
automobile seat cover.
Now they will bt calfed upon to
decide whethtt the htilgbt or fashion
lhould remain OD the tl.it1t pole. n
. EDITION . , N~Y. Stocks
COSTA MESA, CA[IFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, '1968 TEN CENTS
Nixon Due LBJJkiefing
Won't Unaercut Pres.ide~t on f f!reign Affairs
MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Richard M.
Nixon set off on a new election
crusade for the White House today by
pledging not to undercut· President
Johnson or America's allies in the
field o{ foreign affairs.
The Republican party's 1 9 6 8
presidential candJdate said he is going
to the LBJ rEinch in Texas Saturday to
visit Johnson and to.be briefed on the
Vietnam war by Cyrus R. Vance, a top
Jotwson adviser and No. 2 U.S.
Hessian's
Near
By ARTRUR R. VINSEL
Of lhl DlllY Pit.I Slllf
Conducting themselves like dioir
boys, 17 members of Costa Mesa's
Hessians motorcycle club waited in ci·
ty jail today with bail totaling nearly
$200,000, while police obtained com·
plaints charging the gang with assault
with intent to commit murder.
A total of 22 men were rounded up
\Vednesday, but several of the outlaw
cyclists wa-e later released and
another was arrested at police head·
quarters t-Oday, where be went volun·
tarily for questioning.
The crowd -probably to be ar·
raigned in Harbor District Judicial
Arson, Theft
Ruins Mesa·
Boat Company
A Costa l\1esa boat company was
wiped out late Thursday in an arson·
burglary which added up to $40 .00J in
losses. as the intruder splashed the of·
flee with lacquer thinner and set off a
blaze.
Ronald D. Snyder. of 2320 College
Drive . Costa Mesa. told investigators
about $500 in cash and $2,500 in checks
were stolen fr<Jm his Mesa Boat
Marine. 1595 NeY.'Port Ave ., by \he
burglar.
Costa Mesa Fire Department Bal·
talion Chief Bob Beauchamp probed
the smoking ruins of the boat company
later and found lacquer thinner on a
portion of the office cru-peting.
Patrolman George Wilson said five
louvers had been pried out of an office
window, a p p are n t I y with a
screwdriver found lying at the scene.
An open door at the north side of ~e
building indicated the burglar-arsontsl
evidently left by the safest route as
nc:mes licked at the south portion.
Snyder told police the b 1 a z e
destroyed a boat parked outside the
building, a.s weU as reducing all the
firm's records and paperwork to
blackened ashes.
Damage was caused mostly to the
south side or the building, which is just
off Newport Boulevurd near the south
city limits o{ Cost.a Me sa.
Another arson.set blaze gutted a
Costa Mesa boatbuilding company two
months ago, but it was blamed solely
on a disturbed mind. w h ere a s
Thursday's job t1pparently was set to
camouflage theft.
Costa Mesa Man
Pleads Guilty
To Assault Rap
A Cosla Mesa man accused of club·
bing a teen-aged Newport Beach wai·
tress with a foot long wrench plead·
ed guHty to ooe count or assault with
a deadly weapon in Superior Court th.ls
morning.
The defendant, Ri chard L. Rhoades.
29t wa1 ordered to appea: in Superior
Court Aug. 29 for sentencing. ~Rhoades was found sitting stunned
behind the steering wheel or a car
·when police arrived at the s~nt or
the July 9 iocl<Jent . The father ot·the l&-year-<Jld girl was
pounding furiously on the vehicle with
an axe·, police sa.id. Tht) attractive
waitress was attacked as she stepped
from her car at her NewPort Heights
home .
She 1urrem:l a coocussioo and la·
dal lnjur;...
negotiator at the Paris peaee talks. ·
Nixon told newsmen J o h n s o n
telephoned congratulations Thursday
night for Nixon's.smashing nomination
victory and assured him "I'm going to
play it straight down the middle" in
.keeping the Republican candidate up
to date on the pace of Paris talks.
Beaming. although his face Y.'&'5 puf·
fy with lack ol sleep, Nixon said
Johnson told him: "Dick. you have my
congratulations and my sympathy."
Bail
Ii;'.
Court this afternoon -is suspected of
the Wednesday night chain·wtlipping
and shooting of an ex-prizefighter at
his Ccsta Mesa home.
Robert l-I. Glazier, 30, <lt 2224
Placentia Ave ., was reported in biding
today, recovering from m u 1 t i p I e
lacerations, basebaU bat clubbing
bruises and a gunshot wound in the
left hand.
The victim, his wile Barbara, and a
man who shared the apartment, Ron
W. Hilts, 23, identified the intruders,
who burst in after cutting telephone
wires from the apartment, as the
Hessians.
Police were told that the gang o[
night marauders was led by Frank \V.
··wild Mouse," Rundle , 24, or 135
Albert St., Costa Mesa, who had
fought with Glazier several days
bef<Jre.
Investigators -who hinted at a new
development in the case some time
t his morning -saJd Glazier is a
former Golden Gloves boxing cham·
pion from ·New York.
!-le was employed at the Little Big
0 , a bar at 1934 Placentia Ave., as
bouncer when the alleged fist£ight with
\Vild Mouse occurred, according to in·
vestigators.
The victim narrowly escaped death
\Vednesday night during the melee
when an intruder. named as Wild
Mouse by witnesses levelled a pistC?l at
h.i1n·and fired from .close Nlryge.
The slug -which ha s not been found
as yet -ricocheted off a finger bone
in the victim's left hand as he shielded
his bloody face. ripped severely by
motorcycle chains.
The weapon, reportedly a .22 caliber
revolver, has not been found either,
but a small arsenal 0£ 11 guns was
confiscated at Zl:05 Canyon Drive. a
hou se occupied by the Hessi ans , just
outside Costa Mesa city limits.
Several or the motorcycle gang
members were arrested there, a
cluster was rousted from a bar at
19202 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach,
and a handful or ethers were taken in
traffic stops.
\Vild ~1ouse and his girl£riend were
arrested at Brookhurst Street and
(See HESSIANS, Page 2)
Stock Markets
NEW YORK CAP) -Stock market
tracling slowed to a w<>lk this af·
ternoon as prices declined irregularly.
(See quotations, Pages S.S).
Nixon relnfOrced Uie gesture of uni·
ty by dropping the idea of a trip to the
Sovlet Union before tbe November
election,
Earlier thi.s week. when his quest
for the GOP nomination st o o d
challenged by Govs. Nelson A.
Rockefeller Of New York und Ronald
Reagan of California, Nixon an·
nounced he was considering a trip to
Russia, possibly be Io re the
Democratic CQnvention in Chicago
later Utis mootl). ...
Since then, he said, he had "reluc·
tantly conclud!d the trip cannot now
be taken and will not be taken blf«e
the election."
Nixon added: "We bave too many
demands .that arc urgent in the United
States to allow foreign travel."
Nixon added he would want to vi.Sit
other European capitaJs as well and
(Seo NIXON, Pac• %)
• • 1' HESSIANS REUNITED -Eight motorcycle dub members' among
22 roul)ded up )l'ednesday from around Weit Orange C~ty are
photographed ·en mH"•e iit•Costa Mesa Ctty JaU before being bookOd
on S\ISpiciOn of assauJt with intent to commit'inurder. Standing (from
left) are 1bomas Hille, John Dore, Philip Cerasco and Roi..t..!!111"
man. -Scj~litftilg (from left) Ronald MurdOck, James Lafs3li, War.-
mori 1Gt!fenU . and Robert Hehderson. Nine ot.her1 .were in~-cqatQdY
as ,well, today, awaiting arraigrunenL . , ,.·
\ •.
Police Doubt Hes .sians ' . .
Li.nked to Cycle Sniper
Police today pondered a possible
link between the savage beating or a
Costa Mesa boJ;er. and the sµspected
thrill murder of a cleancut young
motorcyclist Wednesday in Fountain
Valley.
"Of course1 the Hessian motorcycle
gang has been considered," said Foun·
lain Valley Police Lt. Martin Fortin.
"but we have no connection at this
tim ' •• A patrolling Costa ,_1esa patrolman
on a turn.-around swing outside city
limits discovered the bod.Y or Janles
Gardner, 21 , of 619 S. Mountain View
Ave .. Santa Ana.
The victim. a Navy veteran who
worked, attended school and planned
to marry next spring, lay along the
San Diego Freeway near Euclid Ave.,
shot five times by a small caliber,
automatic weapon.
Considering a possible break in the
case as the result of the arrest or a
number of llessians, Lt. Fortin se~m·
ed to mlninilze the possibility.
"We have somelh.lng better, .. he
said .... "let's just say he mAy·~ve
been the victim cf an· indts<;ttiuinate
shooting," •indicating the cOntinued
· theory · of a homicid.µI.Y·incli'ne,d
sniper.
Ccsta Mesa Jl:Olice are hOldibg 17
members of the Hessians as 'the ·result
of a savilge chain, club and shooting
attack on an ex-prizefighter in ht.s ·cos.
ta Me.sa apax:tment by a · motorcycle
gang. ·
During .a methodical •roundup of
suspects Wednesday nlgtit and early
Thllrsday, 11 weappns -.were con·
fiscated from a Hessian house near
Costa M'esa. ·
One was a semi·automaUc rifle,
police said.
"I think you can say we'll run tests
on some of thOse itema,'' one OUice.r
said today.
A Reaso1i for Police T\11
Forgit Sees Sniper Link
By .JF:ROME F. COLLINS
Of 1M DlllY Pl•t St1tf
Former Newport Reach city coun·
ci\man AJ Forgit said today he
believes four youths Who fired on
his car are the 11a.me suspects v•ho kill·
cd a young Santa Ana motorcyclJst on
the freeway in Fountain Valley.
"That's the same gang that killed
that kid on the motorcycle, there's no
quastion about it," said Forglt.
lie referred to the shooting Wed·
ncsday of 21-ycar-old James M.
'Gardner on the San Diego freewe.y in
i''ountain Valley. The slayers -or
slayer -are sUU being sought.
Forglt's car was fired on Sunday
night. It h.appened &s he 11nd hi1 wile
Peggy drove across the Santa Ana
lliver bridge on Pacillc Coa1t lUgh·
way. They were htadJng into Newport.
A tan Vblkswagen carrylng four youths
passad them In the other direction.
"I s8w • nsah. heard Jn explosion
and the windshield cracked," said
/or&i~ wbo lb.ii-mornint returned
from a rour-Oay huntlng trip.
As a result of the incident, Forgil
said Ile supports "more than ever be·
fore" Newport's proposed poUce-mon·
ltored televiskm surveillance· system .
If the city had one, be declared, It
might have led to the: capture of the
group of young mm who fired at hls
car .
''If the polic:e ha<t a TV camera sta·
Uone~ on that bridge, they would bave
gotten the whole incident on tape," he
tial d. ''Tben they could have plctll;d the
gang up. It's a ganc of ouuaws roam·
Ing the county."
Forgit said 1herlft's lnvestlgators
had been questioning h1m on the possi·
ble link bctwtt.n the two ahooting1. A
.22 ca Uber we.apon· appeared to be. in-1
volved ln both. ·
A 10ng·Ume NewPort bardware
merchant, the ex~uncilman said the
Jncid'ent convinced )tlm "more than
anything else" ot the need for lbe pre>-
po,.d "EJ•clr.onic PrQlol:lloa.5)'Jltm" ___ CARJi!L~Qf,-!lAMlllA_ (EP~ IJI ~pwpor~ l'.C:°""':ll"'"'.!'· ,or9lt
.. --.. .&•••·-...... --
I
•
'
..... , ... r.•
.Z DAllV 'llOT
County Air
. Chief Lists • . •
Probe Rules
Ground rules have been listed for
the four pubtlc bearine• scheduled for
Aug. 26-30 on Pbaae. one d. the Master
Plan ol Air TramportaUon ol Orange
County.
' ID I leller to lnienMcl lndivldual1
ind orguilaUMI, R 0 b. rt J.
--Bret11·.,.,... count)'-avi•*1or dlrtd« -
and a~tary . ol the airport com·
mlsalon um the following rules:
-All comments to be given at the
public hear!DgJ lhould bl au~tted In
writing al leau live d'-!'f prier lo the
~arlngs.
-PersoDs or groups appearing
}erore lhe.Airporl Commlnlon will lie
l!mled to 15 minutes.
Frldl.J, ~l 't, 1'68
' -It la requested that not more.thin
two per&ODl ~&«Ve :u sPokeemen for
any community, organization o r
homeowners ase:ociati.on. ,
Those interested in being heard at
the meetings are uked to comment
On :
' ,\~AILY PILOT It'" .....
LONG WAY DOWN -View from w6ere Newportianbegan fatal
plunge on aixth f)oor balcony of Lido Park 'Pro ,' atonal Butldiqg
lhta morning Indicates height of fall to pav~~I ~ow where New· · · Jl9.rl . Beach Police Officer Duane Sands stands a gside shrouded
' -What do you think of Phase One ln
general?
'-~.a , l''I IJVUY• ~ I
,, -What do you think of the system
concept?
-What do you think of the summary
o1 Phase One with tu four point pro-
gram?
-Do you think the county should
accept Phase One and proceed int·
mediately to future phases oC the
Ma,ter Plan? •
Hearing dates and 1ubjecU are:
-Monday, Aug. 26, 1:~ p.m. Five
Newport Beach Mtin Dies
·In Sixth Floor Plunge
pl'CJ!>O'ed general (private). avtatinn By BRUCE BENSON
airport Q.tes. · ot "" oan, Pli.t st.n
-Mooday, Aug. 26, 3:38 p.m. An unldenttfietf skydiver trus morn-
Metroport sitea. Both sessiona ·wlll be ing sat in bia car aDd watched a 57-.~ held In Room 120, Oran(• Coull\)'
Heal" Departmen• 645 N. Rou St:.·, year-old Newport Beach man plunge
1.&i ., to his death from the sixth floor Sa~.~!~ A g '1:t 7 m Orange balcony of a Newport ~medic a I
1. ue1.....,, U · • P· • building.
County Airport, restrtctioru to·.be ap-The dead man was ldentifJed by
plled.1 ln cooperation with aJr ~· .... police as Gerald Hart, 1507 Ruth Lane,
and immediate improvementa r.=· Newport Beaeh. Police said they were
uired at the alrP,ort· This ii a regular virtually certain the headlong fall was
Commiwon meeting and will a ·IUlcide.
be at the ~e County Planning The witness, who declined to give
Commillion hearinl room, 400 W. 8th his name told police he bad just pull;
"Sl, Santa.Ana._ . · ed. up to 'a four-way stop ou Hospital
-Wednesday, Aug.. 21, 1.30 p.m. Road· near the Hoag MemoriaJ
Proposed res!<lllll ·l!lrl>ort alto• at El Hospital parking lot and glalced to the
Toro Marine C:ort>~ . -Air Station, top of the Park Lido Profe~ional
Mlr!De Corps A\r f:adll)Y, 5'mta Ana, Building, 351 Hospital Road.
.aod Loi AlamttOl ·Nav.ll Air Station. He said be saw the man's leap from
To bo held In Jl:oom 120,·1145 N. Rosa beginning to end.
Sl,SantaAnL -~ .-1 .
Police listed as a preliminary
motive for the death "depression."
They said Hart had visited a doctor
either t:t the medical building or at
Hoag only three days ago.
llowever, an investigator said it was
not believed that Hart had been suf·
fering from any terminal disease.
Detectives later this morning were
attempting to gather more details on
the dead man's background.
Initial reports said that }I~, was
employed as a lighting technician for a
televisli5n company. -
The plunge occurred at 8:40 a .m.
from the toP floor of the six-story
building. Police said the balcony was
at the end of a hall and accessible to
the public.
The body was taken to Baltz
Mortuary, Corona del Mar, pending
funeral arrangements.
. -Friday, Aug. 30, ~:JIO p.m. ProPO•·
ed regional airport siti1n the San Joa-
quin llilll between Ccroa:a,del 11,f41:and
Lafuna Beach. . ·
·-Friday, Aug. 30, 3:3&p.m. Propos-
ed ngional otrport 1ltt, llols• Chica
Waitress Who Strangled
Teachers Hire PR Man
•
He'll Represent Them-at Board Meetings
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of ttie Dall'I' Plttl· lllff
"Public rtiallona will be an lmpor-Snyder· oiad· l'f"'ldt•l<iled Gor<[on
tant part of his Job," aald Raymood ll<cktold Interviewed Rlock last month
Harbor Area teachers have hired ' an executive director to hand.le public
ftlations a n d ad.niinbter teacher
affairs.
Snyder, association president. "He in Dallas, Ttx., at a ?failoll.11 Educa·
will represent the teachers In civic tion Association oonwaU.on. He was
Barthold R. Hack, 45, of Louisvillt,
Ky., next week wW become fint eXec·
utive director of N e w p or t·Mesa
EducaUoP Association.
actJvitfes and at school board rt· selected from 26 applicants.
· d g the •· h I Hack cum!lllUy is a re~ntative un:, ;noe:.ana e ...,.ac er aai a· for a New York textbopk publishing
Snyder salOHaclt's salary will~be-firm. PreviousJy, he w(f sbperinten·
about $14,000 per year. Tucben PIY dont nf a small achoo! diltrlct In Cov·
-50 d to N •~ • ~. Tem., Soydor apd. ~· · ues per yeor ·~ Beck holda 1 muter a del!ft 1""11
> George Peabod~or Teachers ::::It~ T _ l"f\ ,-1)..,...ds ~-b wotkb1ttow · -a-d~de;-o;a. roops i rap'-.1\.t!-,.L "":~will..... r.,n~~~t",:
fot bis aoo's tenJor yeal of hJgh school.
His wife Is a librarian; Snyder saJd.
Stray Shells Hit Village ::~~~~~~:::,~;
assOCJation reaches 1,000 members •
• ,. Last school year, 988 Of the district's
SAIGON (UP!) -tJ. S. troops lowlands by uniu ol the U. s. 10!51 Air !;1~ teachers Joined N·MEA, Snyder
aboard helicoptera and river Cavalry Division were -on foraging-Tti"e assoclitfon prei:fdeot pttVious1y
hovercraft trapped5o s of North missions. took care of the executtve director's
Vietnamese on the row! f food near "We have beaten them pretty badly d~ties as bes:t be coul~ ~yder said.
Hue Thursday n t today· in the past," Col. Alexander Bolling
American headquarters said at least Jr., commander of the 3rd Brigade of 50 of the enemy were killed and 63 caiitured. the 82nd Airborne Division, said today.
In the Mekong Delta, .at the other "They are pretty htingry.'i
end ol South Vietnam, the U. S. com· Bolling said Communist troops in·
mand said stray fire from two vaded the village of Nam Hoa, seven
American patrol boats under Viet Cong attack hit a village, killing 16 miles south of Hue, on Thursday, kid-
South Vieb'lame&e and wounding 120. naped 10 peasant woodcutters and us-
The Hue area battles erupted a11 ed them as hostages to obtain rice.
thousands of American and South One boy in Nam Hoa managed to
Vietnamese troops pres~ed an of· escape and reported the North Viet·
rensive through the A Shau Valley namese iuvasion to a district chief who
southwest of the old imperial capital. passed the word to Bolllng's men.
The fighting . on the outskirts of Hue Within an hour, more than 600
indicated allied pressUre had forced America11s swept across the paddies
the main body of North Vietnamese and pinned the North Vietnamese
troops into the hiUs away from the against t~ Perfume Rixer. ·
rice-producing coastal plains and that The Americans withheld the attack
these men may be desperately short of until the North Vietnamese in·
food . Both units trapped on the explicably released the hostages.
From Page l
NIXON ...•
there wasn't enough time.
Then, the U. S. Air Cavalrymen moved
on the village from three sides in an
assault supported by U. S. artillery
and air bombardment.
Some of the North Vietnamese dived
into the river .and, using reeds to
breathe, estaped.
The dominant theme of the, GOP
candldat• was th•• be did no1 w•ot to _Mesa p 0 1: __ u .. -t
"uMercut" the Democratic president ~.lllll
or U.S. allies while the Paris talks
were on.
lie noted that the party plaUorm
8dopted this week is critical of the ad·
miDistration Vietnam p0licy and yet,
Nixon said, the Republicans won't
undercut efforts to negotiate a peace.
"We're going to be briefed regular·
ly," he added .
Gov. Spiro T. Agnew of Maryland,
the Republican vice presidential can·
didate, stood at Nixon's right during
the brief session with newsmen. He
will accorripany Nixon to the Johnson
rarn:h, the former vice president said.
Sleepy Burglar
.
A burglary susipect with long blonde
tresses and sleep in her eyes is sought
by Costa Mesa police today.
Mrs. Uvoo Bullock, of 2341 Orange
Ave .. told police Thursday that some-
one broke into her home while she
was away aid slept through the night,
in her bed. •
A check of tbe premises revealed no
broken chairs or empty porridge
dishes.
Surf er Accused
Of Police ~ault
Dries Out in Jail
Swimmer James Allen Crawford, 19,
of Cosba Mesa was drying oH in
Newport Beaoo Ci\)' Jail today in lieu
ol. $1,250 ball after be alleP,dly &lug.
ged a Policeman who wars trying to;Jet
him to come out of the surf.
Police ta.id the teen-ager, of 2196
Placentia Ave., was swimming 'Ibur&-
day evening at a c106ed beach near
43rd Street in West Newport. The
beach bas been closed during an
erosion ltlreat for bulldozing QPef'a•
tions.
Oflic~r Lawrence Doyle ordered
Crawfurd out ,of the wter. The
Policeman said the yoatb slugged him
after he waded ashore.
Police Sia.id tile assaulted officer
chased Cr-awfotd back iilto.tbe water.
then :mana,ged to haul him out and
place-~ und~~L-..---· ~-·---Arraignment was penChng tnls
morning for Cra,vford on felony
assiault charges.
Judge Dunbar Dies
COMPTON !UP!) -Services will
be held Saturday for Superior Court
Jud~ Donald E. Dunbar, ~1. who died
in his sleep early 'Thursday at his
Cowpton home. ~ "Dunbar w8s appointed to ' . UJ>C•
ri<'r Court bench in Los Ange es Coun·
ty in June, 1967, by Gov. Ronald Rea·
gan. --area In HunUngton BHCh: Tile latter
two meetings will be held in the Board
of Supe!'VisorS bearing room, 5th floor,
County AdmlnUtraUvo Butlding. Daughter Sent to Prison
Runaway County
'Hippie' Girls
Return Home
Three young tirls who disappeared
from Costa Mesa Sunday night after
the Newport Pop Festival have return-
ed to their Ssnla An.a homes
diaWusioned with the life of hippies.
Ceclia Moutoya, 15, her 5lster
Theresa, U, and Jeanne Castro, 14,
were picked up by Hollywood police
after an anonymous boy telephoned
Mrs. Mary Montoya that be bad seen
her daughten 1n a Hollywood strip
night apot.
After four days of living off the town
in Hollywood, the girls' lint thought
wa. • bath. They &pent the last two
niihl.t 1leep1Dg in the doorway of a
acbool
"It was really weird, like a different
world almost," sai4 15-year-old Ceclia.
DAILY PILOT
OA:ANGE CO.UT PUBLISHING COMPANY
Robert N. Wttd
Pmidtftt Ind Publisher
J1clc R. C4rrlty
Vitt Pmldmt l1'ld ~II lo\lntter
Thom1s K11,il .. ,,,
TH1111s A. M•rphin1
IMl'ltllrw Edltw
Pi.I Nlnttt
.lohertl11nt Oirtie:ICll'
c-w--
)10 w ... l ty 5tt ...
t.f1lf1111 Md ..... u P.O. 1.;'"1110 t2i2' --......... "*"' m1 w._1 .. ltlot ......_., ~ ri..oi1 m fWll'll .. .._
........ IMdl:., Miii ...
NEW YORK (AP) -Red • halrod
Allee Crimmins, the pretty former
night club w.aitress convicted of
strangling her 4-year-old daughter,
From Pqe l
HESSIANS
Adams Aven~e .in Fountain Valley
early Thursday, when police and
sheriff's deputles spotted them cruis-
ing toward Costa Mesa.
Investigators said Rundle denied
knowledge of the brutal attack -in
which telepho~ lines were pre-cut to ....
prevent a call for help -suggesting
perhaps a rival club was involved.
The Hell's Angels and the Hessians,
which have settled in the Costa Mesa
area in recent mooths, have been
feuding off and on, police were told .
The gang which broke into the box·
er's apartment Wednesday night,
how_J!Ver, wore J-Iessian emblems on
their jackets and one shouted as they
left the bloody shambles of the home:
"Don't !.ight with the Hessians."
The crowd then roared off with a
burst of exhaust pipe thunder.
The latest suspect, arrested on 1n·
formation from secret sources, was
identified a1 Gerald D. English, 31 , of
1783 Tustin Ave .. according to Watch
Coounander Lt. Dudley Van Cleve.
Ilessians at first arrested, then
released Thursday included Arthur R.
Barrett, 29, William R. Black, 23, and
Greg E . Elshire, 28, all Of 2205 Canyon
Drive, near Costa Mesa.
Alao released were Charles E . Ut-
tlejobn. Of 102 Prtnceas Lane. sanu
Ana, Donald E. Bortlsser, 3i, a salJor
stationed at the U. S. Naval Weapons
Statlon, Seal Beach, and Steven S.
Cuper. 24, ct 10932 Sidney Piece,
Garden Grove.
Woman, Mesa Youth
Injured in Crash
An elderly Lone Beach woman and 1
Costa Meu teenaetr wm injured
Thursday when their can coWded at
th<! lnteraecUon of Buer Strttt and
Fairview Road, Pollot 11ld today.
Siifld C. Pew. 77, of Long Beach
and Allen R. Yarborough, 17, of 970
Valencia Drive. Costa Mesa, were
treated for lactratJooa at Hoag
Memoriol Hospital and nlc.,ed,
t.,
was sentenced today to 5 to 20 years in
prison.
Mrs. Crimmons, 29, was sentenced
on a first degree manslaughter c~arge
by Queens Supreme Court JusUce
Peter T, Farrell.
Just before the sentencing, Mrs .
Crimmins denounced tbe court when
a&ked lf she bad anything to say in her
behalf.
"You don't care who killed my
children," she said angrily. "You just
want to close your books on this. You
don't give a damn who killed my
children.''
Mrs. Crimmins was chargeCl only in
the death of her daughter, Alice
Marie. The body of her son, Edmund
Jr., 5, was found later in a vacant lot,
too decomposed to disclose the cause
of his death.
Accusing her prosecutors of being
"rotten through and thrnugh," Mrs .
Crimmins, trembling, told the court:
"I did not kill my children."
The children disappeared from the
Crlmml.ns' apartment in Queens July
14, 1965 and the mother insisted they
had been kidnapped from their ground
floor bedroom.
During her trial .a witness told of
seeing Mra. Crimmins, an unidentified
man, the lltue boy and the family dog
leave the apartment with Mrs. Crim·
mins carrying a "oundle'' that the
prosecution contended was the little
girl's body.
Another leading witness was a
former boyfrielld of Mrs. Crimmins
who testified she confessed to him she
had killed her daughter.
Joh Se1~ce
To -End Soon
The last day of ' t ation for the
Youth Employment ~tee ~ponsored
by the Junior £bell, tlub of N<wport
Beach will be Aur. 18.
The MTVice, located at Co1ta Mesa's
McNally School, 1901 Newport Blvd ..
ls open weekdays from 9 a.m. to t
p.m. Potstble employers are urged to
fill lhelr requlrmellll before th<! cl••·
In( dall, S111denfl we , requellAld to
nctater tn ptl'IOn. Employers are Uk·
td to Clll 642-0474 or 6i2-0I02.
Accor«Inc to Mnl J11 Mo .. ley.
Junior Ebell :r<>lll-chairman, 300·
teens have been placed ln Jobi ranatng
from factory emp~ent to ri"im·
mlng lnJtrucUon anl convalescent ald
throu&h ~ ...me.. l
' I
,
WAREHOUSE SALE!
I
HERITAGE
•IG, SAU
1 L..,T-... 209. 99" JhJO ~ .........
1 c.chel T.W. 165. 99" 20.s• W.. l --~
1 ............... 149 6900 2hJ•r.c..~ .... -·
339. 139"
FANTASTIC VALUES
NEWPORT STORE ONLY I
DREXEL
I CMlnlT.,_ 4b41
1 ~c. •• ,_ ,..,. :17aJ7
II&.
185.
135.
125.
UPHOUTBIY
SALi z re s.ctt..-t c... 79" .. " .........
59"
1 ..,._
.._. Allt. s.h ......... 39" ... , ...
n•. SA1.I
45(.'. 179''
239. 99"
119. 59"
95 ••. 34" J:Tllflwil C..... .... ""'·,... 124'!. 64'!. 1 ._,_ 709 89"
Jt.. .. T.W.. ,,_
JO.JO ......_. !Nie.the • • "·
95. . ......... 39'' ... -. ,~, ... .... r......, -----· 1 c-. ·-·-325 145" J4w7J •
249. 99" 1 Ou. CWt ...........
695. 37500 ........ ._ ....
1 c ...... , ... 185. 69" •k._...1 ... 72 , ............
1C......T.W. 245. 99" JO.II hct•11tlM1
& .... lbJJ 1 C•l't. Da.t.,. Set
1 c"'""'** T.W. 4'" ..... 129. 39 00 . .............. M..tc T., Jh&t -1 , ..... a.tr
245 • 79" ........ , ............ J •••••••• ,... 16'. 12400 ,_._ --· ....... , ........ 189. 69 00 """ 258. Ii.., T•t. hhrJhl7 79" 1 NI u, CWr
MANY MANY OTHERS
Hundreds Of Yerds Of Dr •p•ry & Uphol1tery Fabrics
Cia1em•r1t1 -Prints -Siiks -V•lvets -Ttpe1try -Etc. !Ill
500/o TO 700/o OFF
ALL SALIS FINAL -NO CHARGIS
SMALL DELIVERY CHARO!
99"
199"
169"
235.
195.
149.
EXCLUSIV! DEALERS FOR: HEN!llDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
fO DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGER TIRMS AVAIL.AILE ON APPROVED CREOIT
LAGUNA llAOI
39"
49"
69"
89"
69"
69"
. NIWl'OllT IEACH
1727 W01tcllff O. .. 642-20$0
INTERIORS
~-.... 11n1e-
O.l1nen
Anllablo .tilD-NSID
>cs North c ... t Hwy. 49""551 °"" ...... ., """ '
1 ,.
I
OPIN PlfDA T Tl\ t
•
.. r• • --..
Kimball Wins Snipe
'
-C~ampionship. -·Jr.
. By ALMON LOCKABEY
1>111'1 ... .., .......... J o y c e Loewy into the
drink. Grubbs succeeded in
righting the boat, despite
the crush of finishers, but it
drifted away from Miss •
Loewy. leaving Gr u b b s """'
•
Frld1y, AU9USt It, 1968 DAILY PILOT l t
OCC May Deve lop
Trials Now Harbor Prop erty
Under Way By ~HOMAS FORTUNE cording lo Harbor Distrlet
Multihull
oi "" a.~ ,. ... lttff Mana"er Kenneth Sampl-0_ "' The third annual World •
MulUhull championlhip 1ot The Orange Cout Junior TOO SMALL
under way at Lo1'g Beach College Dlstrlct is working Sampson Mid he would
Thursday with ~ tnd ef· on pliM'ls to develop it& crew Hice to see the property have
fic!Mcy trials. base property on choice greater .use, but noted il ii
More gpeed and efficiency Newport Harbor waterfront too small for substaatia!
A few years qo Alu:
;. Ximball of Alamitos Bay
Yacht Club w11 making
. ·. yachting headlines with con·
ilistent· wins in Sabot regat·
tas in Southem California.
T-y -·1-b e -11-ye-·
·--'+-... ,._ _ _,,..,ye sail•< i• JuniOL.na·
crewless and Miss IA>ewy ·
,awJmmir'I frantioally--t.-o·-:<'--
dodge bo"". · '
trlal:l!I ftt"t scheduled today for fuller use. development. The are& ii
_ fro~ 1 to ~ _p.m. ·-_: __ _Join..lng w.lth UC Irvine less than an ·acre _and .'Pi~_
start of the first race in an(l <>ther Orange County buildings there wouf<lii t.Di
""'""""-"'...lh'=f!. Da~ cSaili!IS '!!i!Llt=f• _.colfqes~~....collej!e;:...Jl!Ucl!:toom 1'(1..fnr-~---
1 tional champion of the-Snipe
'
.. · Class, the largest .and one of
the moot compeUtive one·
., .design classes in the world.
Kimball ltllrted off the
Junior champ!onslllp regatta
. ". Wedn!sday with th r e e
stralfbl wino, and followed
·up Thursday w~ two fifths
• ·for a KOre of 20' under the
. new Olympic acorlng
· l)'Sf.em.
· The two fifth place
.. _finishes weren't exacUy of
. Klmball'• dofnC. He got off
to a bad atart 1D the 2'1·boat
· fleet in the first race and
hAd to bear ....ay from the
fleet to set clear wind.
·· ' Thirty IH!COllCl8 prior to tile
.st.art of the final ~ the
gooaeneck on his boom let
go, forcing him to make
hurried repairs. Even so, he
started a full 50 seconds
.behind tile fleet and again
· . .had to sail around and
through to .pick up another
vital fifth place to maintain
hi' law tcOre. Moving up fast was John
. Swanson o f Winchester,
Mase., -won the final race, wi.nd.ing up with a total
lieries scored. 24.7. The win
nudge:d. Roger Stewart of
San Diego out of second
place as he coukl pl&ce no
better than fourth in the
final two races.
Strong win<ls that hit 25
knot! 1n the gusts con-
tributed t.o a hall-dozen
capsizing& and nmnerous
bl'eakdowns -including
Kim.ball's.
AJ. the concluliiOO of the
second race 'Ibursday the
boat skippered by Jim
Grubbs of California Yacht
Club capsiz.ed jU9t before
crossing the finish line,
dmnping b1m and his crew
"'ftte-skipper -of--another
boot hauled her on board,
but promptly dumped h<r Jn
the drink again when it
became apparent be was
going to finiab with more
crew than. when be atarted.
She was finally rescued by
her own skipper.
Augustin Diu of Miami,
Fla., and Tim Bernsen of
ABYC lied on points but the
third place in the regatta
went to Diaz becalli'le he had
beaten Bernsen in four of
the five races:
Today the senior Snipers
went into action with 87
boats scheduled to bit the
line in the first race of the
Crosby eliminetion series.
The qt 25 in the Crosby,
ph1I defend.iDg champion
Earl Elms"-San Diego, will
compete starting Monday in
the Heimerllng Series for
the national senior cham-
pionship,
Two top skippers from
Newport Beach are entered
in 11\e Crosby Series. They
are Dave Ullman, twice run-
ner-up in the nationak, and
Argyle Campbell, recently lfniform of the Da11
Rinky-Dink Builders
:« Set Up Association
named on the All-American Burly Dan Blocker, betty known to television view.•
collegiate sailing team. Both ers as ''Hoss'' Cartwright, looks more like· a loco-
.are members o1. Balboa motive fireman than a race boat driver as he pre-
Yacbt Chm. pares to drive his boat Lady tn Cement in the Long
The top 10 1inisherl in tlle · Beach Hennessy Cup Offshore Power Boat race. The
junior championships : Lady finished sixth.
1. Alex Kimball, ABYC, 1· --------------------1·1~20 pis.
Southern California
builder-owners of R.inky·
Oinks -those unique, sew-
it-yoornlf -o-n-~e 1 I g n .. sailboats, h a v e formally
. -.organized, elected Off.leers
. and staged lhelr inaugural
race.
The &Uhern Califomio
Rinlcy-Dink Aasociatioo -formed with seven charter
•. memben: Bob Clay ,
Weslminoter; Art u.-,
San Diego; Vem Hea:tand,
Port Hueneme; Denny
Jooe1, San Bernardino; Don
Po.lmer, llawthom<: Bill
Pollard, Rivenide, and War·
ren, IA MeN.
Jmet, ccmmodort d. the.
Riverside Sail Club, WM 2. John. Swamoo, Win-
~~~~ x ~-· -.. 4-UJ.l-Worldllutboard Event
him on the origiDrral boerd-~...a-Roger-stiewa:tt-sDYC,·2;---·
are Art Hestand, vice pres!-3-5,..~.7.
dent; Pollard, U·ea.w"ir; 4. AUJustin DiM, Miami,
Clay. 1 e c re t • r y and Fla., 3-10-6-2-7-4.9.4 .
Wahlgren, R1Ct chairman. 5. Tim Bernsen. ABYC, 5-Offers $30,000 Purse
The first r.aee was held on 4.J-6..3...-..49.4.
Lake Evans near Riverside 6. Mac K i l p a t r i c k , A purse of t31l.<XXI, with
.and was won by guests Jim Oklahoma City, 6 -5 -2 -1 • national Sea Festiva1.
and Belen Hellyer, Goleta. DNF~.7.
In• two-out-ot' tbrff aeries, 7. Scott Bimberc, Oat. YC,
Jones -:--with Clay crewing 13..g..1J..3.3--68.4.
-wm the first rwce llen 8. Preston B r a m m e r ,
louled I -and dropped Wichito, Ku., 8-DNF-12-7·2·
out d. the aec<n:t. 'lbe -91.
Hellyen won the third goi.n,g 9. John Skinner, San Fran-
away u they quick 1 y cisco, 7-~13-8-DNF-93.
mastered the li1'lt air con-JO. Jim Grubbs, Cal YC,
ditioos on the lake. 11-8-DNS-10-6-94.7.
guaranteed the wiJmer, has
-pollted for tile 1968
Outboard W o r I d CJ\am·
•10,CKX» In cash and prizes
at Lake Haviasu City.
1'We expect money of that
kind will attract the top
dri'vera from au. parts ol. the
United States as well as
foreign stia.rs," said Robert
P . McCulloch Jr., r.ct
chairman.
The evert was already the
richest outboard race in the
world and the boost from
last year's $2'7,750 adds to
that claim.
"We anticip•le a field of
150 boat.e:," McO.illoch Nid.
s MM 'Saturaay at 1 p.m. dlstrlct plans to bulkhead he observed. : .
The day sailing will con· the shoreUne and add mo:or· ~e said a aitt Is be.in( set
elude Sunday w:ith t h e ings for collegiate racmg aside in Dana Point Harbor
awards presentation and sloops. for a marin~ study and
."crowning" of the wor.Jd Plans for marine study research 1acllity. . .
muJtihull champion at 4:30 fa c i Ii tie 1 i nc ludlng · ''It is located next to· the ·
p.m . aquariums and an un-breakwater where you ~an
Spreed and efficiency trials derw.ater observatory ap· get fresh seawat~r ~bich
. are being held off Pier J. paren"Uy have been diverted 1cle;nUsts1~JD.~ u: ~.~
inside the Lone Beach by the County Harbor Com· demable, he wd.
Harbor jetty and the day mission, . which pre~ers a
sailing events will be held in Dana Point Harbor site.
1he ocean outside the Lona: The Harbor Commission
Beach breakwater. aiso asks that crew ac-
Awwds include the Glas-tivities ~ventua.lly be moved
Craft Perpetual Trophy for to the rowing course to be
the fastest boat plus first coostructed in U pp e r
through third most el-Newport Ba.y.
fident and the v i c t 0 r The marine 1tudy and
Tcbetdiet W or 1 d Cham· crew f-aci1itie11 would be p.006hlp Trophy for the t.irtlt cooperatively developed and
boat fn day sailing. Shared by aeyeral Orange
Special awards will · be Coupty colleges.
given to boats built to the DRAW UP PLANS
International X~ht Ractng Orange Coast co 11 e g e
Union rule defining da8ffl8 District trustee• Wednesday
for best tof:ai •a 11 i n_..g night hired engineer Jack
performance 10 the day &ail· Raub to draw up plans for
iog regatta. bulkheading the -Piopo'rty.
Alt.x Kozloff of ~a del H a r b o r ~loners
Mar is general chairman ~f next Tuesday will bear a
the event. The ~tta . is . progress report f r o m
bein( held in c;ODJuncbon Harbor District engineer•
with the Long Beach Int«-who are studying the mat-
tional Sea Festival. ter. ~
Cat Races
Next W eek
King Hari•ir Yacht Club,
Redondo Beach, will be host
to the Pacific Catsnaran
n a t i o n .a I cbMnpiolllhip
regatta, Aug. 16-17-18.
The .amue.l clau meeting
w.ill be held at KHYC Aus.
15 at 8 p.m.
Boat owners In t h e
usocialion who live m91'e
than 600 miltt away may
borrow .a boat for ttie event.
The college district rents
from the county 300 fron·
tage feet and backup
acreage to Pacific Coa'St
Highway for $1 a year. The
25-year lease has 10 more
years to run.
· Oraage Co~st College
Diatmi officw.ls are··•~
a SO.year extensioo, and
turve broached the subject
with Supervisor Alton Allen.
The site now is developed
only with a storehouse for
the crew abells and a
launchlnc float. It is located
between the Ba1boa Bay
Club and Orange County Sea
Scout Base.
111•1')' wMll MMCO .-I..._ -
that'I 10,000 ~lla!cM ..........
You teit tr• ~ 1 f,.. l!'Nf-
thec~. fMt. el'llc:lerit •"o• ••I
Um" "' tv•t -•· Altd ._.. MMCO, )'Olor tr1nsm'9ilerl -·..i.
Pf"Ol•cted ~ a'"' MIO MMCO C:-.
te~ tOlll to .«e1L
[11.lt)' t;t1lnwt11.• 1 .........
-~··· ., ... .,..7 ..
•• 'wlM•JMll ..
COSTA MESA
1741 ....,_.. 11. 64&.1W
• Dry st.Grage klr the boats
will be aV9ilable at KHYC.
The Bay Club ha1 a
month-to..JJ1onth lease with Garden Grove •
Any skipper may sail in
the championships providing
he Ns sailed in two P<X:A
sanctioned regatta1 since
last year'• chmlpionahip
"41 ....... 9"1n J:NC. .... --the county for oUahore
moorings along 2.50 feet ol Santa AM .
the 300 feet Of frontlge. Hf a. '"' I f, ..... ·· ... · • I01'a1
Development might cost the
Bay Club part or all ol the
_,,,., boot .Upc, ...
'II I •
•, ~; r~c·.
NOW SHOWING I BIGGEST HITS OF THE YEAR I
-Mia farr'CNI • John Cassavetes .
TllCHNICOLOR • Suggelledfor MalueAudiencesG9
EVERY EVENING
AT •••
8:15 and
10:45PM
I
I CONTINUOUS DAILY FIOM ...
·2:15PM .
SATURDAY A SUNDAY PIOM ...
12:15PM
1i.11aht lllow Friday & lataN•J
* EVERY EVENING AT •••
SiOO and 10:00 PM
\
lClDEMY
AWUl-
WINNEI
AT Hl•WAY 39 DRIVE•IN
liR£.JANCROFT-DUmN HOFFMAN · KATHARINE llSS
TECHNICOLOR • P'ANAViSION
........ --·
'
,,
. '\ . . \ .
DAU.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Excellen·t Police W orl{
No one has a mild opinion about Co~ta Mesa's week-outlook, incidentally, is not good if you're in lhe Pop end baptism in the mainstream of contemporary Amer-Festival promotion business.)
ican popular music culture and its fans at the Newport The cost of policing the big show will run high into
P op Festival th~ thousands of dollara as all expenditures· and over-·
Either it was "groovy," as younger fans wou1d say, time pay figures are tabulated, but it could have run
or it was a disBusUng spectacle which cost the laxpay-far higher through mishandling.
era money an9 headaches. Actually, it was, indeed, a .. I'm d8mn proud of all the officers out there,''
bit of both: troublesome., but aJso intriguing. said Police Chief Roger Neth, speaking not only of his
The indisputable !&ct of the matter, however. Is own men but of those from seven .Mighboring cities
largest such festival Jn U.S. history was exemplary. And 50 is Costa Mesa, Chief Neth .
\,
-----
"'1 '~.:·rf.0 .,:.1 ~. ,;·
~... ) . . . '"·
•• . -
·.,
that police work in handling what turned out to be ~~·:.:===~·~•:n~t ~tD~he~l~P·~~~~~~~~~=::=:==::=====~*~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~ .Thil__ 11iewpoin1...Js.$barec1-1>¥-tiu>se-wbo .w~e...there -b=c=-==--=c-:!:;';~ the sacia1 spect~questi~d -~~J ~~=~:.•r won't und•r•tand then•· Potential Money Saver
'
• A lawman's job.is enforcing the law. It is also, and
even more importantly, protecting the public. Costa U.S. Army air defense crews may soon be shooting
Mesa police assigned to the monumentaJ crowd control down paper rockets -for training purposes.
job were careful to avoid provoking incidents which That's a prospect as a result of a newly developed
could have resulted in any type of mob violence. Philc(>.Ford Aeronutronic product.
A few incidents were reported, but based on the Gompany officials took the wraps off the proposed
sea of humanity -which flowed into town for the Pop military air target at a press conference the other day.
Festival, trouble was kept to only a fraction of what They call it LOCAT, fo i Low Cost Air Target.
could easily have occurred. Many instances of law· The.fuselage of the 15-foot long, 155-pound rocket-
breaking on the grounds had to be ignored, but a head powered device is made of rolled paper tubing. The fins
swimming in self.imposed marijuana intoxication is and nose cone are made of the same type of plastic used
better than scores of them s wathed in bandages follow-for surfboards. .
ing an outbreak of mob violence. ! In other words, it's a cheap item.
Too many people complain that police and civic And that, it seems to us, is as it should be. It is;
leaders did nothing about the Newport Pop Festival and after all, designed only to be blown out of the sky by
the influx of people and problems it would bring. They air defense gunners.
overlook the fact that the crowd was four times that Philc(>.Ford executives say LOCAT will work just as
anticipated by any agency, and included cleancut young-well as costly military targets now in use. It travels at
st.era and curious adults, as well as the irresponsible 500 miles an hour, they say, and simulates a low flying
element. jet.
There was no pre-festival basis for preventing the And i t won't cost much.
shqw, aJthougb Costa Mesa city officials will decide in We hope this won't rule it out for consideration by
the future whether they will allow any repetition. (The the Department of Defense.
c
It's Well That
They Straddle
'l Love You
In Spite of
The · Hippies'
Police Won Overdue Respect
Pop Festival • 1n Retrospect
To the Editor:
MIAMI BEACH -Tile Republicans .
have 1tN.ddled tile Vjetnam issue, as ~; i! ~"S,~ .... !~ / By ELLSWORTH L.
J a.'ll not at all surprised by the
Costa Mesa City Council's decision to •
;will the Democrata, @! itwjJtilt.!JP ~-~"W'Uiiili ~PFesfdtritiat candidates tOd!aw --' . $f
RICBARDS01N---
Minister, The Nelpborhood
Congregattoul Cburell
Laauna Beach
ban any-futllle-Pop-F'.e&ti-vals.-----Th.iW-.\'o'-,.,;. o\i~"-"="f;.;.:
believe was decided upon before the
first performances. What d o e s
surprise me, however, is that our
moral protectors let this thing slip by
in the first place. no loopholes in the
.any definable distinctioii between
.them on ending tbe war.
1 The Jssue will finally rm not so
much ·0n pbrueology as upoo at·
'titudes. Neither political party really
knows bow to end the WM, nor will the
candidates know. In the end people
will l.ntuiUvely judge which candidate
is the more likely to be able to bring
the thing to a desirable cmclusion.
It is just as well that both parties
are straddling. Otherwise they could
end any prospect of the i:iegotiators in
Paris accomplishing .anything. If the
,nation is wholly lucky the presidential
campaign will end just as in·
conclusively as the national political
conventions. insofar as a Vietnam set·
tlement is concerned.
FOR THERE IS NO question at all
th at the Soviet Union and ttte govern·
ment of Nortti Vielllam are pinning
their expectations on the presidential
campaign so unhinging American opi·
nion that it will be the end of any
further American aspirations in Asia.
In any sensible ordering of events
the next President of the United States
should not be bound by compromises
forced upon him in a presidential cam·
paign. Only ttie naive could con·
ceivablY. believe tqat issues like Viel·
nam and the American role in Asia
can be resolved by public opinion polls
or presidential elections.
Presldential candidates who commit
themselves to courses of international
a ction are inevitably embarrassed,
viz. Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon
B. Johnson . Dwight D. Eisenhower
committed himself to nothing but a
trip to Korea which he made and
which so hardened his view that he
thereupon. according to his own state-
ment, sent out the word that unless
the Sorth Koreans and Chinese settled
he was likely to use nuclear weapons.
THERE WERE .SOME in Miami. as
there will be in Chicago at the end of
this month, who prayed that the
political parUes would wash out the
Vietuam war and so inllibit the can·
didates that all freedom of action
would be lo.st.
They did not prevail in Miami, and
they wtD not prevail in Chicago,
although it will surely be a noisier
issue wb~ Ule McCarthy forces loose
811 George ---,
Dear George :
I plan to become a
multimHUonaire and my ideals
are J . Paul Getty and Howard
Bugher. Do you think t have a
cha.nee to be exactly like thes' two, and bow should J start?
YOUNG HOPEFUL Dear Youn~ Hopeful :
Why don t you get rid of the
Idea Of being exacUy like
tomebody elH and be yourself?
ID U.. first place, it'• not prac·
tic al -J can 'l tell you how to
•uddenly set both older and in·
vklble.
Dear Georse:
Wbot do 1'0U tlllnk ol the lady
~•vice colum.nlsta who see.m to
• ..... no traable aoivlq evwy
problem I
CURIOUS
upon the Democratic conventhNl their .
lA"•r• from rlldtMI •rt w1lcom1. Nor'm1llY wtllers
sllould convey lhfllr mtswsi• 111 JOG word• °" le11,
The rlthl to cona.n.. llt!Ten "' n1 w:i1c• or 1llmln11t1
llbtl 11 rut ..... td. All letttn m111t lncludo. '"'"'"",. •nd m1U11>1 l<ldr111, but 111mes w111 bl w!lhlM!ld on rtc1ue11. · clamor for retreat in Vietnam. Our town has a bad case o( "hippy· law, perhaps. It will be said, of course that the old .. , tibls"! Many coosidered Costa Mesa's
"retirement village" reputation just
too much to overcome and couJdn't
conceive of it ever being the site for
an avant garde or youth-oriented spec·
tacle. It was a happy surprise wheo it
political parties offered no hope for """'8efore we form sides of accord or
the rising generations who are un· dis~t. let us define what we mean by
or the problems experienced by our
police department due to the Newport
Pop Festival held at the Orange Coun·
ty Fairgrounds over the weekend.
However, it did not state. who authbriz·
ed the use of the grounds to state "the
world's biggest love-in" as stated or
who will pay the bills to clean up the
filth and debris left behind by these ir·
responsible persons.
dergoing some kind of miraculous being a hippy, I like Prof. Earisman's
change in bum.an nature, shedding in definition: a 'hippy is "any individual
the wink of an ~ye all the sins of the or group that Sepl.!'ates themselves past to emerge in a warless world of . . ..,. happened, uninhibited freedom, equality and from the prevailing systems and slan·
ease. dards ol a society in order to find NOW THE MAYOR tells us that he
witnessed the whole "explosive situa·
tion" from the roof of. the police facili·
ty,. a good city block away. I'm sure
the good mayor was unable to
deter mine the mood of the crowd , and
I'm also sure that Mr. Pinkley made at
least 90,000 more enemies by calling
us all animals in the light of those few
who chose to go that route.
And that is quite true. The old
political parties are not creating the
new world m which youth dreams
because they have not found any way
to do it. Nor has youth found any·way.
Sen. Eugene McCarthy I e a v e s
something to be wanted in th.is respect
also.
FROM ALL INDI CATIONS ,
therefore. we are to go along again
this year with tile old parties, the old
candidates (even Rockefeller is 60 ),
and modifications of old ideas to solve
old problems.
Republican criticisms of the conduct
of the war were familiar -frittering
away of our commitment in a pro-
longed war of attrition. Republicans
would change the strategy to the
~ecurity and loyalty of the population,
mstead of control of territory, which
is, of course, exactly what the
strategy ic Vietnam is now. So there
was nothing the Republicans had to
sar. which was of much help to our
military commanders in Vietnam.
'f'he same wi ll undoubtedly be true
when the Democrats go through the
tortures or drafting a Vietnam plank.
THE DIFFERENCE WILL be that
the Democrats cannot .so easily gloss
over the differences between Vice
President Humphrey and Senator
McCarthy, as the Republicans were
able to gloss over differences between
Nelson A. Rockefeller and Ri chard M.
Nixon . There may even be a minority
report which the Democratic con·
vention will have to vote down.
Both parties will end up being strong
for peace -honorable peace. the w()r(f
hon-0rab\e being a qualifier covering ~
all kinds or differences.
Then the next President of the
United States will lake up where
President Jonnson will have left off.
He will race the real practicalities of
Vietnam. how to end up wlth an in·
dependent republic In the south shield·
ed from internal subversion And at·
tack Jrom the north and free to choose
its own poUUcal course.
•
Quotes
~
Allin Grant. Berkelty, State Board
or Agriculture pre1., on ea1ten boy·
~U or CaW. grapes -"This boycatt
J~ a th:e•t to the jobs or every grape
p1cktr 1n the slate."
Gov. Ron1Jd Reag"Ab , 011 voulhfal
dl11e•ter1 -"Success to therii ls fin~
ding a way to slop the tJcking but they
haven't the vagu~t lde1 ol how to put
the clock back together again."
L. A. ~tayor Sam Vorty, n ••
nounced ltfl·wlng dt moa1tr1llt1 plu-
aed ror llRH vlsll -''ft'1 a aad d17
when the Vice Pte.sldent h1~to put up
wlth thiJ type of har11~nt Ju.tt
because be wants to viall a few fritnds.'' •
•
meaning that they cannot find in that
society."
If we accept this definition. then we
find the mddem hippy in the company
of a long list of individuals who sought
meaning that they could not find in the
society in whi ch they lived: such as
Socrates, Diogenes. the D e s e r t
Father s, St. Francis of Assisi, the
Brethren of the Free Spirit, the
Shakers, the poet William Blake and
Thoreau!
THOREAU SAID, ·•t went to the
woods because J wished to live
deliberately, to confront only the
essential facts of life , and see if I
could learn what it had to teach, and
not, when I came to die. discover that
I had not lived . If a man doe9 not keep
pace with his companions, perhaps it
is because he hears a different drum-
mer." Then after two years of drop--
ping out, he said, "I left the woods for
RS good a reason as I went there , .. I
had several more lives to live and
could not spare any more time for that
one.'' He continued, " ... if you have
built castles in the air, 'your work need
cot be lost: that is where they should
be. Now put t.bt fou.ndaUon1 under
th em."
I attended the performances both
days and never once felt like an
animal. Nor did I witness one insult to
a police officer. The police were
wonderful, were beautiful, and won
much overdue respect. If there were
insults, and I heard there were, they
were oot deserved, nor did they reflect
the attitudes Of the m a j or it y .
Professional agitators were alleged to
have been present. If this is so. then
the crowd should be rewarded. not
denied, for not blowing it in this "ex·
plosive situation." No professional
agitatjon could even upset the com·
placency (\f the festival.
THE PEOPLE as a whole. were
very well behaved. The police even
reported this to be true several times
during the performances. There was
not even a fist fight, which is unusual
at a large gathering of young people.
Through all this the city of Costa Mesa
paid photographers to seek out and
rum "incidents" that would paint a
mood for the crowd. You can believe
that the majority o£ the individuals at
the Pop Festival will be edited out of
that film .
For all the undeniable order at the
Newport Pop Festival, what do we get
but a slap in the face by the mayor
and city council . If you wonder why
today's youth are discontent. look no
further. This is not an unusual turn of
events for kids wlth holiest motives to·
day.
Mayor Pinkley's irresponsibility and
questionable motives for t h I s
discoloration, in the face of 100.000
witnesses, may have added another
several thousand frustrated souls to
the rising tide of rebellion.
JERRY NOLAND
E. STARR
Attendance was at least four times
the number expected when the fair
board contracted with the producer.
T/l.e contract included proviaiO'n for
post-event cleanup.
Poore•t Quality
To the Editor:
Editor
This is to express my disappraval of
the festival af "hippie singers" which
was recently sponsored at the Orange
County Fair Grounds.
As a taxpayer helping to support
and pay for the fairgrounds facility, I
see no reason why the board should be
a party to inviting and in effect
sponsoring Ulis type of program which
is being criticised Crom all sides
throughout the country. Not only was
the type of entertainment poor, but the
progra m did in fact invite a large
crowd of the poorest quality Of young
people to be our guests in Orange
County.
I would also call attention to the fact
that the present leadership at the
fa.lrgrounds has eliminated several of
the traditional horse sl'lows which in
the past did enjoy using these facilities
for a valuable purpose.
BOB PALEY
Build Bridp•
To the Edilor :
We would Uke to express our
gratitude and thanks to the Costa
Mesa Police Department and the
various organizations working_ with
them for their pleasant cooperation
and fine judgment in helping us make
the Newport Pop Festival a beauUful
experience for our young community.
As to the 100.000 "screaming, drug·
crated anarchists'' -thanks for going
so easy on us , kids . Let's build some
more bridges. I Support your l6cal
police.) Love,
LHASA
IT SHOULD BE evident to some of
the hippies who are now turning to
switchblades, or who are thinking
about it, recognizing tbe folly of their
unproductive lives, that "NOW is the
time to put fouad1tlon1 under their
castle&." The problems of our cities,
the menace of war. will not be solved
by sitting cross-legged on the
1idewal.k, but only through the highly
disciplined use o( reason . lt requires
the cultivation ol the iostituUons of
ordered human relaUonships. lrrespoM•ll>le Pe...,erul Crotcd
We need to learn not only how to To the Editor: To the Editor:
love our fellow men, but lo work with Your paper pointed out clearly some Seldom has It been my privilege., or
them in some systematic and orderly more properly my mfsfortune, to
way. Let tbe hippies ol the world unite witness first hand a more completely
with the human race! Let the hipptu Dear irresponsible reporting of the news.
JMJl foundations under their c•stles, Tbe tone of your headlines and your
noble as they might be artlc.les concerning the Newport Pop ', Gloomy FesUvll wm no doubt 11U111mon TO BE SURE, like Thoreau, they Wllllam RAndolpb Hearst from Rotten
have heard a "distant drummer," and Gus: Reporter'• Heaven to reward 1011 with
now Lt. the time tor them to Usten to • hea.rt!ell, "Well done ; that'• tbe way
Ule dhtant rumble ol. drums on ML to • tell Dew1paper1."
Sinai and Mount Calvary! J don't know what else the. Pop • AS A POSTMAN, and thertfOTe at
t have noticed a yellow b u mp er Festlval achJeved, but. certalnlJ lea•t tbeoreUcally a member tn good.
stlckct which teads, "P. S. J Love It producect the largest conven· standlng of the eittbllshmeot, t wouJd
You." On closer 1cruttn1 the legend lion of pip ln Orange Coast bis· Uke to go on record u S"linl J wa1 reads, "Palm Sprinp, I Love You." tory. Hopelullf, the promoter of thort riJlht lo the m.lddlc ol whit you
What a creaUve way to enhance tht 'this nightmare will be back to cau;d the "1creamtna:, drug-crazed
lma&e of Palm Sprlng11 nLacon1 clean up after hlJ swine, a.ided anarchy," and can only conclude that
Beach, I love you .•. ln sp1!!_"1,~• by whatever otficlals were re· one. ol two things mutt be true. Either :Jr.!"·" Maybt -11 the ;;nor oponslblo for tasui., bia pmnt1' " C" an compl•ltl7 dtluded u to whit
as a more peacefuJ crowd of 100,000 I
cannot imagine.
DENNIS C. SMITH
'Run Them Out•
To the Editor:
I hope the people of Costa Mesa will
be properly aroused and run the
parties responsible for the horrible
spectacle we were subjected to this
past weekend completely out of town
and never permit them near this area
again.
All you need to do is to drive
through our streets lo see that these
undesirables are still hanging round.
Do we want the same problems
Carmel and Monterey are still coping with? '
As a l~caJ responsible newspaper, r
beg you to do something now so that
we will not have our good cities
blight.d.
MRS. WANDA LUCAS
Mari ne Life
To the Editor:
As I have read in your editorials,
you feel strongly against taking
marine life from their n at u r a 1
habitat. In fact, it is against the law.
But in Dana Point they are going to
close the harbor, or rather block it off
and dredge all the water out.
Now taking life from the rea is bad
enough but taking the sea from the
marine life is unthinkable.
IRITA NELSON
S1vi1t1 Fittols
To the Editor;
We are distu rbed tonight (Au gust 51
to fin d no mention in the DAILY
PILOT of the (inais of the Oran ge
County Swim Conference which took
place Saturday, August 3 at the local
high schools and Sunday, August 4 at
Foothill lDgh School in Tustin.
To have witnessed and worked at
these mf:f'lts was a real privi lege. The
eager and competitive youngsters, ag·
ed 4 through 17, who paTticipated in
this important athletic endeavor were
surely more newsworthy than the
swanns of other young people whose
doings fill the paper tonig ht.
THIS LATTER group spent their
weekend shoving for a space to loll in
and listen to tfle latest in "folk rock"
or "pop" music put forth by varioua
groups of so-called musicians.
How much more interesting would
be pictures 3nd front page coverage of
our great young local athletes in im·
portant evenb S\lch as these swim
finaJs.
It 's too bad the Pilot missed this
scoop-not even one small paragraph
to honor its "happening."
SIDRLEY P. CALLAGHAN
Resulb: were received too latt fo r
publication Auawt 5. They were pub-
li.!h.td Wedne.tday. Augw& 7.
----Friday, August 9, 1968
The tdtiona! pag< oJ the DoUfi
Pilot tttlu to inform end atim.
ulotc readns bu prtSl!nting this
ftttOSJ)aJJtr'I opiniot\i and com,. """tarv oo toptu oJ fnt<rut
and, riQfdfiam<•, bu pr01>fdmg • IOl'1lJ'I for tllt upr.,,;.,. of
.... Nodtrl' opfn1-, o!ld bJ1
prnna.tfng the dllJtrlt ""'°"
poftUa of fft/ormtd obstrvtn
o!ld rpokum.n on toptc1 oj the lday.
Robert N. Weed, PubUsbor Uol 01•,~1p•00t IOW!datl11 ••• ~,~ liur -·Mrs. w. H. ~-ed 1ndm.lwbat didn'~ or you ·~,. C:IS ea ui: -I wltUJn ddJbet'lt11ly &representing the facts. ~~======-==-...::==~====~·~"
-BY
WILLIAM
REED
Reeds •• •
In the Wind
'
Huntington H~~k
' '
Twain Meet in Fishing Derby
By SANDI MAJOR
Of Ille Delff '"" S'l•lt
It wasn't the Mississippi River and
very few of the mischievous fishermen
could boast of a i:--lm, Scripture-
quoting Aunt Polly who would thump
them on the head with her thimble.
But it was the mid-1800s all over
again Wednesday, taking Huntington.
Beach back. to Ule days of Huck. Finn
and Tom Sawyer and sweet Becky
Thatcher.
From time to time there are in-It was the 16th annual Huntington
vasions of West Orange County by Bea.ch Huck Finn Fishing Derby, held i==J=~=-Australian sailors. Latest of _ th~•=•"U~WednHda)HnOFB..lng-oo-the-Hun---1 -Royel-AustralimrNavymerris·6un• Ungcoo·.aeaCh-Piet:
ner Fraiilt: Wardle, 20, who is en More than 350 youngsters, aged 6 to
I
joytng the hospitality of Ed~ar 15, showed up to compete for fishing
Brown and his family at 10081 The-tackle, cosmetic cases, pocket knives
fuf Drive, Huntington Beach. ·and candy bars. Many or,them were
The Aussie is reputed to be quite dressed 8! though they had stepped
a comedian as well as being an from the pages 0£ Mark Twain's
artist. Frank is scheduled to be classic.
here until Sept. 29 when the HMAS
Brisbane sails for home.
Frank said he hopes to return
someday to the States, possibly to
live. It seems that he has acquired
a girlfriend -the best friend of
Brown's 17. year-old daughter.
Those Aussies.
* Right now the various s c h o o I
districts of West Orange County
have just about completed the
round of budget adoption sessions.
As usual, the taxpayers have stay·
ed at home in droves.
The Huntington Beach League of
Woman Voters had an observer at
the City School Di strict hearing on
the budget and Chuck Palmer, the
finance wizard of the district, says
she was only the third person of the
general public to atte~d a public
hearing on the budget 1n 15 years.
Mrs. William Miles hopefully has
set a trend and \vith any kind of
good luck the trustees ma;: see an-
other real live taxpayer at future
public hearings. It would be a wel-
come change. Trustees get tired of
looking only at r eporters and ad-
ministrators and I suspect the re-
verse is true as well.
HONOR CATEGORIES
They competed to see who looked
the most like Tom Sawyer and his
sweetheart, and to see who could
catch the biggest fish. the smallest
fish, the moot unusual fish and the
Largest variety of fi sh.
For those wh<l failed to make any of
these speC"ial honor categories, l-lun-
tington Beach pier merchants were on
hand to pass out candy bars and
fishing hooks. Their.prizes went to
anyone who caiJght a fish of any k.ind.
Everyone got something, except for
7-year-0ld Susie Van Dermolen ol Hun·
tington Beach, who went home with a
knotted . fi6hing line that fouled up
before she could even catch some
seaweed.
The recogniied winners in the
fishing ca\~gories were:
-Ro!>ger gooth, 11. of 16441 Duchess
Lane, and Elizabeth Cor-giU, 13, o£
21752 Coast Highway. who won
trophies and fishing rods and ree!s for
catching the biggest fish;
TACKLE BOX
-Brent Lollse. 10, of 6931 Marilyn
Drive. who got a tackle box for cat-
ching the most unusual fish:
-His brothe-r, Rick Lohse, 13, who
got a pocket knife ror the sm.allest
fish;
-Jeff Patrick, 11, of 9102 Christine
BEST 'TOM SAWYER'
Mlkt Miller
Drive. who caught the largest variety
of fis_h to win a rod and reel.
David Fritzler. 13 of 8342 CostiUan
Drive. was the first boy to catch a
fish. Mary Ann York, 9, was the tint
girl to catch a fish.
The girl whose costume most
resembled Becky Thatcher Utis year
was Stephanie Shaffer , 10, of 16902
Concord Lane. She won over her
sister, Leslie, 11, who was named
Becky Thatcher last year.
Tom Sawyer this year was Mike
Miller, of 5681 Castle.
Placing second in the costun1e con·
tests were Scott VanDermolen o{ 9472
Mokihana St. and Karen Witte of 8331
Snowbird St.
Currently tearing around the
Fountain Valley City Hall on his
well lubricated crutches is none
other than the fugitive from Van·
couver, Wash., City Manager Jim
Neal.
The ex-athlete (he was a boxer
so I'm not going over to city· hall
for a week or so} sprained his
ankle in a moment of exhuberance
on the tricky Pebble Beach golf
links where he and Mrs. Neal
spent a brief holiday.
Huntington Beach Seen
As Site for New ·-Airport
Jim, who was known as the
''Masked Marvel" in his younger
days I hear, will be hobbling on the
crutches for about three weeks.
Garage Gutted
In $1,800 Fire;
Girl, 12, Burned
A blaze gutted Pedro Esconvedo's
garage in Huntington Beach \Ved·
nesday night, causing an estimated
$1 ,800 damage to the :structure 11nd
:slightly burning his 1 2. ye a r ·old
daughter.
Adellcia Esconvedo su£fered mincir
burns on the back of her legs as she
tried to get out of 1!he garage at 8401
Tradewind Circle. The fire started
about 10 : 13 p .m. She was treated at
the scene.
Huntington Beach fire officials are
still investigating the cause of the fire .
They said it may have started when a
butane tank overturned and was ig-
nited by a water heater.
Smoke filled the Esconvedo home
but officials reported no damage to
the house-
Chances are good if the county
Board of Supervisors decides to go
ahead with a f!ew regional airport for
the county, tihe site under study in
Huntington Beach could be ch<lsen.
That ~ the impression left by Pete
M·oore, ajde to Second District County
Supervisor Da'vid L. Baker. speaking
to directors of the Huntington Beach
Chamber of Commerce.
•Moore, urging the chamber to make
a study of the a:iriport problems. told
tlhe directors tlhat a report delivered to
the supervisors lists five po6Sible
1ites.
"'Three of them are military
airfields end there's DO indication that
any <lf these airfields will be given up
by the military." Moore said.
Moore's contention leaves the BolSfl
Chica .mte and the Joaquin Hill site
between Corona de! Mar and Laguna ,
B~ch still in the running.
Bolsa Chica location is just rast of
Warner Avenue on Coast Highwav and
would take about 1.400 acres o! the
l.91Xl • acre Bolsa Corporation's land
which to now has been considered as a
futurt boat harbor and marina area.
Moore-said public h~ings before
!:he airport commisSi.on are scheduled
Aug. 26 througll 31 with tohe Bolsa
Chioa s1te under discussion on Aug. 31.
"The chamber should be there and
express an opinion on solving the
county 's airport problems," Moore
recommended.
He said the master plan calls fnr a
new airport to be in operation by 1973
Dahlia Show Entries
Preparing for Orange County Dahlia Society annual show are ?!tr. and
Mrs. Harry Pound and Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Frazier of Huntington
Beach. The big show will be held Saturday from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on
the mall at Hunfincton C'~l.er,·Edillger Ave. we•t of Beach Boulevartt
' '\ -
~--·-
in order to take the pressure off
Orange County Airport which cannot
handle the expected press of airline
.passengers.
Council Studie8
Election Issues
At Monday Meet
Election matters are the main agen-
da item for a special session of the
Hunting.ton Beach City Council called
ior Monday at 7:30 p.m. in council
chambers of Memorial Hall, 5th
Street and Pecan Avenue.
Councilmen are racing agkiinst time
to complete legal requirements to
place on the Nov . 5 general electioo
ballot two charter changes and two
bond issue propositions.
First c~r amendment under
S<'..u.dy is on which would give the
council a y raise of as much as
$125 per month. The council is asking
VQters to remove the charter provision
sellting a limit now Of $175 per month
per councilman and s u b s ti tut e
permission to use the same system as
do the general law cities.
That system is tied to population
numbers. Under that system. coun-
cil.men could be receiving about S300
per month now.
Second charter chan-ge would be to
make the office of city attorney i'.lp-
poin·tive by the city council with ttle
right of recall reserved to the pe<>ple .
Propositions are S6 million for parks
and 13 million for a new library.
The park propositicm would provide
funds for ocquisition of land and
deveklopment of more than 30 parks
Library bonds would pay for a new
EI0,000 square foot building at the
northeast comer of Talbert Ave nue
and Golden West Street.
Beach Boys' Oub
Selling Tickets
For Angel Night
The Boys· Club of Huntington Beach
i5 selling ticket.I ror Huntington Beach
Night at Angel Stadium.
Money from tickets iiold for the Aug.
15 game between the California Angels
"alld the Washington Senators will go to
the Boys' Club.
Ticket.I can be purchased at lhe clu~use . 319 Yorktown, and at
Flci.scher's Men's Store. Robert's
Men's store. United California Bank,
Jooe1 Ghltspie Insurance Agency,
Hund.ngb:>n Beach Animal Shelter,
Allan Drugs, Five Points Pet Store,
Crocke\" Cittiens National B & n k .
Dewey's Men 's Store and the l1un·
tington Center office.
-____ __,
DAILY PILOT 3
take
--with
12.00
new stand Q
the flare leg pant
Hip low. Gung ho. Gtttt wick Jt-gs that move with you whtn you
mOTc, where you move, footJaost: and oh so frtt! Ou1.s fir.st, •ery ne"'·
'ery now in c:a.tt!rtt rayon and c:otton .styltd by Bronson. _
·----------· ~·· '
a. cotton knit turtle -mp, black, ~rown , "·hite, navy , grey , gold . .s-m-1 7.00~
b. double button pants .in yellow, wh itC", navy, black, grey, bro"'"· 12.00
c. ~ knit slttYC!css turtle tup, ",.h lte, black, b~·n, grey.
nary. gold. s-m'I. 6.00
d. iution·front pant& in brown, navy or blac~ 12..00
may co camp in .. shop ~3 ...
b.
• ·~
. ·' :
J ;~~ r ' .(. .. ..
-., ... t · .. ,
' .•: J . ' ·, '1--./
; \
i ! '
:.··
' . .. . t. ·~
; .· ·i -~•f' I ' t ' ' l ',. . ~
•
(,
d.
l
t
•
may co south coast plma, san di990 frMway at bristol, costa me111; 546·9321
lltoP. monday "lfOuth ICltllnlay, I 0:00 a.m i, to 9:30 p.
•
" . '
• ..
' . '
" .
•
Agnew Once
Liberal
Democrat
ANNAPOLIS, Md . (AP) -Gov.
Spiro "Ted" Agnew of Maryland, the
Republican vice presidential nominee.,
1~ h' ,.. °""' ru1t 111'" has changed bis political thinking over
years. P•ul G. F lther......_53, filed §Uit in 49-year-old candidate switched
Indianapolis, Ind., for an annu1· · from the Democrats to the GOP in
meDt, contending his br1<te of six post orld Wax II days. In the past six ~-,. ;;;.,.,--'"'"~!""-.he_ bas &"1• ...l!!Nl!i!!L • re-eelfs wa.rgmny OFtrauaprecea-eva ation period--whiclt-he changed ing their wedding. He said bjs wife, from oderate to conservative, from
Dorothy Jean, 34, had told him she Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller to Richard
had four children. After the wed-M. Nixon , and from a pc15ition as an
ding, Fisher said she just kept emphatic ooncandidate to the · secood
bringing more children into the .spot on the Republican ticket.
home. "She finally admitted that Agnew has more than two years re·
she had 10 children," Fisher said. maining of his four-year gubernatorial e tenn. He swept past DeIDocrat George
P. Mahoney in 1966 by nearly 100,000
votes on a liberal platform that in·
eluded an· open-occupancy plank.
Tourilt Megan Timoth11, 24, of HoUir
wood.,• got Mr self into a 25-cent jacJc...
pot in I.Au Vegtl3. Megan,-.a guest at
the Hacienda Hotel, bet a companion
a quarter that she could aq~eze
through a tiny gap beneath these
stairs. She Lost. Hotel engineer Cari
Sheppard treed Miss Timothy by saw-
ing th.t ristr braces after all other
methods jailed. Megan suffned no
in;urtes ... ezcept to her pridt.
The liberal stance was not new to
the son of a Greek immigrant whose
father changed his name from
Anagnost,opoulos. It was during his ad·
minUtration as Daffi.more County ex·
ecutive tbat the county became one of
the first in the country to enact a law
banning racial discrimination in public
accommodations.
1'Let's keep Maryland in the
maimtream ol America," he asked
votors during Ilia auccesalul hid fOr
governor in 1966, as he called
Mahoney a 1'bi:gct., ,. a c l a t . in·
com'petent, menace t'O Maryland."
Mahoney campai~ on a platforro
cieplortng crim~ In llle -•ts and with
a dogan "Your home is your castle, protect Jt. ••
But Agnew's political posture chang-
ed slowly but radically Jn tbe last sis
months, although he told reporters
shortly before leaving for Miami
Becx:h, "I haven't challged."
"I'm ltand.ing sWI; Jt's just that
others are moving more ,to t:be left,"
he said.
.. •
FAMILY AFFAIR Spiro T. Agnew, vice presi·
dential candidate, and presidential candidate Rich-
ard Nixon gather with their families to face cheer-
ing delegates at the final session of the Republican ,
uP1 T....,,,. ..
National Convention Thursday night. From left are:
Agnew; Mrs. Judy .Agnew ; daughters Pam and
Susan Agnew j Julie Nixon; Tricia Nixon ; Mrs. Pat
Nixon and Richard Nixon.
Ag~ew Thrust Into GOP Spotlight,
Family Becomes 'Instant Celebrities'
MIAMI BEACH ( U P I ) wanted the heady day to end. They It au began with a telephone call to
Republicans are counting on two celebrated long past midnight at n .. A ..... 1 d g • ·ie b
handsome families -the Nixons Jnd parties with rans and friends. uio:: lviary an ovei:nor s sui Y
the Agnews -to lead them to victory This weekend they will travel presidential nominee Nixon. Spiro T.
in Ncfvember. together to Mission Bay, Calif., a" Agnew hung up, turned to his wife
Their political union was forJlled oceanfront reso rt; to try to plot the Judy and said incredulously: "I'm it.''
Thursday night before millions amid demise'"Of the Democrats. Their daughters Pamela, 25, a social
wildly cheering party faithful as tor-Lightning struck for the A~news ~worker, and Susan, 20, attending the
rents of orange balloons were cut early Thursday. By evening, still stun-
---_,
Veep Choice
•
Picked for. ~
Least Harm
MIAMI BEACH (AP) -Why did
Richan! M. Nixon choose the relative.
ly obacure covernor of a mall It.ate
as his vice presideoti.al candidate!
The answer is that he didn'l
necessarily choose the man he thought
could helpJlim the most when he pick-
ed Gov. Spiro T. Agnew of Marylmd. ll~an h•.l>'lX'i'woulanurf ~· --HH •
him the least in his divided party.
"No one could say anythinc bad
about him," w·as bow a key participant
in the meetings th.at led to A&new'1
selection put il From. this source and
others the ~ssociated Press b•s piec-
ed together the outlines, at least, of
the making of a vice presidential can-
didate. ·
It began even beforf: Nixon's <first
ballot victory .i:n tbe early hours of
Thursday morning.
About 20 minutes earlier Nixon met
with his closest staff adviser$ in his
penthouse apart~ent on the beach to .
start discussing a running mate. Th•
meeting went on with an ever-cbang·
ing cast for nearly 12 hours, with only
an hour out for sleep by Nixon.
When Nixon finally e merged to 1ay
Agnew was his choice a shock wave
traveled through the crammed hotels,
jolting especially the followert of Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller, who im-
mediately charged Nixon with tzyin&
to appease his southern supporters.
The charge was denied by Nixoq
aides, but there was 'no denying the
satisfaction that Agnew's aele<:tion
brought to most souttiemen.
"The Sou1h got a candidate it can
accept,'' said South Caroline Sen.
Strom Thurmond, ooe of Nixon's moat
influential southern supporters, ·"while
the big cities did not get who they 1aid
they had to have."
• After Christopher Nelson wed a
loose in convention hall. ned and shaky, they had been convention with their parents, were C ada' M iJ Neither the Nixons nor the Agnews catapulated into the national limelight. overwhelmed and became instant Ull S q. celebrities. Their youngest, Kimberly,
Rocky 'Bitter'
four-ton steamroller to smash four
-:--""'BlifOinobiles, a truck ahd a tamp
post, the youth's mother.told police1 "He is a real problem sometimes.
The. trouble is he gets so bored.
Perhaps be will be better when he
starts to school." Christopher just
turned 5.
. 12, was al Ocean City, Md ... and their Over Outcome w~ ...... ·T.ln-tnt.,,,-e ----11H~u11 ~~tttfir h Pre "" Randy. " a Seabe< m Vietnam . ,.,. urlf..t1 0 ,. v ' 1, c t :v-·p~t-enrotional shock was stillwear--' · J · Q.I. '-..I lni of( when they .went to convention . MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (AP) -Gov.
To End Str;ke hall to take their bows. They shared Nelson A. Rockefe:ller finished a week
., ,the moment of glory with Pat Nixon of political frustratioo today, he.adini:
• OTI"AWA (UPI) -Mall beaan to
move again ih Canada today after
postal workers voted to accept 1 new
contract, end.in~ a 22-day strike.
Strategy for Showdown and her dynamic daughters Tricia, 22 for home bitterly disappointed over hi1
and Julie. 20. failure to capture the Republican
For Richard M. Nixon's loved ones. presidentia1 nomination and resentful
it was a dream come true. In a o( Richard. M. Nixon's choice for his
Pretty J••nM Collier, of San
Francisco, 27-year --old &tar of Brit-
ish documentary films, has this
thing about her nose. · She 't'OQ.'t
have it pierced so she can wear a
silver ring in it, even to p1e8se her
produCer. 0 lt's an insult to my"dig·
nity as a woman," Miss Collier
said. • Mrs. Bertha Freer, 85, of Po rt
Allegany, Pa., entered .exhibits in
the McKean County Fair for the
60th straight year. Mrs. Freer, who
hasn't missed entering since 1907,
has won first place in canned
and baked goods !or 14 straight
years. •
Fifteen card players at Char·. j
lo tte's (North Carolina) Moo se r.
Lodge told police they were rob·
A bed by two gunmen of marl'
r than $5,000 ... plus their trou·
iers.
• San Francisco police didn't have
to go far to arrest John Gibson, 45 ,
on·charges of purse snatching. Off-
ic!lrs alerted by the victim's
screams grabbed Gibson as he gol
off an elevator in the Hall of Jus-
tice ... headquarters of the police
department.
I
The 24,000 workers, faced by stacks
of mail reaching to post office ceilings
when they officially returned to work
at one 'bl.J.nute pa.1;t midnight today,
won a two-stage,• ~ent-an-hour In-
crease over two years.
UD.i.oo officials said the contract w:ith
the eovernment also provides for the
betterment of ".!lcandalous" working
conditions. The pact was approved by
a vote of 12,173 to B.1138.
The end of the strike averted the
recall of parliament which Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau had
indicated he would request if no agree-
ment had been fortbcomine.
Page 4 6 1 dead ea
I Dead, 20 Hurt
In Train Crash
HAMIL T 0 N. Oruo (AP! -A
Baltimore & Ohio passenger train car·
rying about 100 persons derailed on
the Butler·Warren county line today.
killing one person and inj111ing about
20.
AU five or the train's cars derailed
and two o!'Ulree passenger cars turn-
ed over on the"ir sides, but apparently
did not burn. Wreckage was strewn
over about a half mile area where the
derailment occurred fOur miles north
of nearby Middletown.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen.
Eugene J.· McCarthy expects the
Republican Nixon-Agnew ticket.,. to
have some effect on the Democratip
Convention, but not on .his own cam-
paign strategy.
The Minnesota Democrat told a
news conference today that the GOP
selection ma.de it clear American
voters will not be given any reaJ
choice if the Democratic nominee is
.Yice President Hubert H. Humphrey.
"The RepubUcan choice w on 't
change my strategy." Mccarthy said.
"My nomination will depend on the
strength we develop at the convention
on the Issues, whether we can con-
vince the delegates that we should
carry the issues to the people and
thirdly, who can win."
The Democratic presidential hopeful
said he had some "general ideas"
about his choice of running mate if he
is nominated. but he refused to
elaborate.
Vice President I-Jubert H. Hum·
phrey, eager to do battle with the Nix·
on-Agnew Republican ticket, wound up
a week's rest at his lake home In
\Vaverly. Minnesota today and flew to
the LBJ ranch for a meeting with
President Johnson.
Aides said the vice president left at
7:45 a.m. in h.is jet star government
plane. They said the meeting at the
ranch was set up Thursday night. '"
The Humphrey campaign ento111age
On A Heat Wave
R:ecord Breaking Tenip eratures From Albnny to Augusta
Cullfornia
Coastal
Moon,
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Tempuatures
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C~l<t•e " n .~ (IM:l"n1t1 ~ " •• c 1-11n11 " ,. ·" De"V1!• " " 0.. M.elt!el " .. ,,
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Ntw ft•IQ!lt ., n
Htw Ytf't .. " nelllt"41 n •• ...... .. .. • .. " .. ll:oblet ., .,
l"PlllMtir.tltt ~ " -,., M ,_ ..... .. " ~""'"" ., " 11:1111t1 er,,. ~· M • ... llutr .. ,. ·-" ~ •~c••-111 " •• SI. Lwh .. " .II
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poigant soWoquy at the end of bis ac· ruMing mate.
planned to catch up with him later in
the day at Corpus Christi. Tex., where
he is scheduled to speak tonight. He
will speak at San Antonio Saturday.
ceptance speech he spoke of his Persons close to Rockefeller said he
•
$
"courageous wife and loyal children" felt deeply mtronted by Nixon's aelec·
who stoood by him in "victory and tion of Maryland Gov. Spiro T. Agnew
defeat." for the supporting role on hls ticket."
AUTHDRIZID DEAU•• 0 CHRVBLEA· --· . --._.
Clean up with
the Unbeatables
• Great year-end buys from those unbeatable guys • Newports, Newport Custom.!, Chrysler 3008, New _Yorkers,
• Everything goe1 to wind up 1 great 1eUlng year!
•Act now whlle there'• a good model and color H leetlon
FUR YEAR· END CLEARANCE BARBAINS ON
THE SUCCESS CARS OF THE YEAR U GOTTA SEB
THE UNBEATAB~
Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.
2929 Harbor Blvd., Casta M•IG, Calif. 1714) 546-1934
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-~iled ~-s.-Viet_: P oliricla
··--··----.._ c;;:;;:: -_ _____.J_ '
Won't Ask Thieu for M, rcy
SAIGON (AP) - A year fare, and n;ws of tbeir six fall as an ~tan W:p
ago, lawyer Truong Dlnh children. toward demicy. the win-
Dzu was running for Pres-"Some ol ·my husband'• ner'a treattn of the run-
ident of South Vietnam,> associates have asked tba~ nerup has eriiba.rras·
claming ttlat he was the I write to President Thleu~ sing to the rJclµ\S~ ·But appealing to him 'for · cl&n-if the embas~b pressur-only man who could bring ency,"· said Mrs. Dzu, "but Ing ·Thieu to clerilency
peace to his war weary I won't do that. My h41band ~o Dzu, it is not talking
country. iS not guilty, so I see no about it. 1
. Te>:<1ay, the 51-y ear-old reason to ask !or elem-"nw, Embas'7 is certaln-
prtstdential runner up lives ency·" ly interested," a ' U.S. offi.
in a cell at Saigon's Chi A tribunal of five officers cial said today,, "but, th_ia is
Hoa Prison, serving a five-found Dzu guilty of "ac-stricUy an internal Viet •
year sentence for advocat. tiona harmful to . the anti. namese matter."
ing that the government oC Commurust fightin g-spirit Asked if she had appealed
the man who beat him talk of the South Vietnamese to the Embassy OL her hus·
peace with the Viet Cong's peoPle and armed forces." band'• behalf, .Mrs. Dzu ~t-...----Nammat-tiberatto~onr.-Jt sentenced_ hinr~_~ect-amt-aatd~ ~ Tlfe-U.
There is -no ai)~al fr om years at bard LiliOr ... --~fieiais · ~ave-iJ _
"
the sentence-givef-rum ~ .D'nrWa5Jaecused-of tell· ported this government, so
II military court. But be ing a British 'correspondent if I .ask for help ' they are
could get clemency from and an American newsman not likely to do anything.
the man who won the elec· that talks shotlld be sought "Everyone in the goyem-
tion, President Nguyen Van with the NLF and the for· ment talks so beautifully
-Thieu. mation of a co,alition gov· about democracy, but they
.Dzu's cell is furnished ernment considered. But µte don 't act as they talk." .
with a t.able, a chair and a stocky politician who ran as The. Dzus ha~e two chil·
mattress on the floor. He a peace candidate last fall dren. lll the Uruted States :
is allowed no reading mat-and got 17 percent of the Moruque , 24, a. gra~ua1e
te.r and can neither write 4.8 million votes has been stu~ent at the Uruvers1ty of
nor receive letters. in Jail, under house arrest Californl_a at Los Angeles,
I CIDLDREN or under detention almost and David, 22, a recent U.~.
• Ftld•y, Aug1.1it 9, 1968 DAILY PILOT 5
.E =•0·111 -.-A--N 111'Y'llfSA R-. -
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·The Ca"Y-ttta • Modtl EL_-410 .... · TM.Ct.odldtte • Model EL""2 . ---io2-sq. In. plctur. .-180 sq. In. pktur. Tbe SanfOrd • Model L-610
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COLOR ·PORTABlI Will B1dpt Vote! ' New f .. i!J.SU. COLOR PORTABLE COLOR CONSntE Yalu Wiier
81114"' •as .. 102 sq. ln. picture. "" Ylstl Cblslb Superb. tr '.dfc., llO sq. 111. color! • Solld St11i c11nt Saini. kiwnt prju mr tor 1 COllOlt ~ •Uh Zl,500.wlts .. pl~-9i::._ ColorStllllllar • -~ 11,,C. . lCA~ 'if.f.$. ; _ -ea-ci., _ _ o[_ .=---'-vitf,hij111, ·~!!Ba . 8;,.,:;..--=-~ O'irUfl'ifsfott -;sg~ -95~ ·----~ ... ~-Mt, ~ ---=--· ~'*'•Pop. VtlfTuner,newSolldSt1te ,,.· ._.........._ lmdl1. _, badt. IMF T.uw • Modin Clblllt. ~ . THE · FRIENDl. Y STOR·E · t
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• APPl:.IANCE and TY-SALES . ci11d SERYICl .
IBIS NEWPORT BLVD •• COSTA MESA • su:n11· He is seldom allowed to
leave the cell. His wife
visits him for half an hour
a week, on Wednesdays,
bringing him canned food,
fresh fruit and vegetables
to supplement hi~on
continuously since he led c~lle~e graduate who ~s
other defeated candidates Y<Ork1ng for the Columb!a
in charging that the elec-Broa~castlng S y s t e m m
tionwasUaudWent. 1~w~a~sh~1~ng~to~n~,~D~.C~.---~"!'i''!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!"!'i''!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!!"'!!~"""!"',..,..,..'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!~'!l!!'!l!!'!l!!~~'!l!!~'!I!!~·
NOT TALKING
Because the U.S. Embas-
sy hailed the elections last
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RCA. Introduced the flm famlty-olze color
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RCA was first to br1ng Integrated cfrculby
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RCA pioneered the color tube that became
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fJ DAILY PILOT
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f -·-.. ~ . .
Friday, Augutt q, 1%8
Battlefield M order
Marine Charged in Deat1i of 5 Civilians
DA NANG, Vietnam (AP) took place early last May WaJ unexplainedly abSent
_ A 20-year-old u. s. near ·a small village just and Allen took charge, call· ed artillery in on bis own
Marine hu been dl.arged south of Hue. position and drove off the
with the battleEield murder The cbarges against the attack. .
of five Vietnamese civilians Marinec are now under Figbtlng c 0 n t l nut d
-one of wh>m w.u: banged review by Maj. Gen. Carl A. throui;bout the night and at
and two executed by a liring 'Youngdale, conunander of dawn a live-man squad was
squad. . the 1st Marine Divlision, who sent to reinf<>f'Ce Allen'•
Io ddiUOn to fiVe mW'der has the power to reduce th e position. On the way the
counts against' Lance Cpl. charges or to order a squad }»eked up three males
Denz.il R. Allen, Lebanon , gener41 court martial. of military age with suspect m., individual m u r d e r U tri.ab are ardered they identl!ication papers.
charges bave be~n brought wlll probably begin in the The report sakl two were
against six other Marines, early fall, a ~1arine legal mardled onto a s ma l 1
autDorJtiet md. spokernw10 saiid. bridge, a firing squad shot
A spokesman said that a 1 n div id u a I m urder tbem, and their bodies fell
50 Killed
In British
Tito Visit• C:%eclis
'
• Averted Soviet I • . vas1on
PRAGUE (AP) -Prague modl.rate e rnenta In the The reported So vie t Bohemia, stoclrpl.led for
prepared a warm '"lcome Soviet ·feadeilhlp succeeded strategy was to have the a n ti-Communist guerrilla
for Yugoslav President 11to in avertlnc Ile .invasion •t Novotny wing ''rise up and forces. Officials in Prague
today \,o e .a: pre 1 s the 11th ~, the Times cry fer help,'' providing an suggested latd that Eut
Czechoslovakia't gratitude 11.id.. ~ e:icute tor Soviet iand East Germana had planted the
for. .bU allPP,(I'{ &l&lilst tbe Thia info""1Wlt Hid the (;erman forces to pour anns.
Russlana, Poles and East ()\)e'r'aUon .. destgned to across the border. Informants told Binder
Gemums "turn beck ~ clock to Jan. The pretext for such that EaSt German leaders ~-.•• :.... 1 1 1 5," the day before Antonin a move wa1 Jlt'OVided July are relieved that the .in· ~ '~ of c z e n s Novotny was replaced llis 19, Bilder nid, wtien the vaslon did not take place
were expected to set sside party leader ·by Alexander Soviet news agency Tass an-and are Satisfied wi1b the
their uslJal weekend plans to Dubcek, and to gtve the jOb nounced that e large cacl1e compromise read'led at the
cheer the 76-year-old apo&Ue to one of Novotny's old-line of .. western .arms bad been Bratislava summit meet:i.ng
of tndependent communism,1 f_11e_tioll_. _. _· _____ _;di!=' ::'::•v:.::ered:..::~ln:_:W::...:•.:•.:l.:.•.:.r.:n_;la::•.:l .:So::tur=da.:Y::.;· ___ ~
who stuck by Czechoelova-.-p r et r I a 1 investigation charges have been placed into 8 canal. 'J'lbe thlrd man dis~ that llbe-slay_ings against: Pvt._ ¥-~n:-R.;;-..was--taken to-a -nearby--------.~-"" Alvarez Jr., netroi.t-!"ftcb.·}-house.-------~-
Pfc. Robert J . Vickers, nie pretrial investigation Air c h kla's ';llkl!"'1inded"--ili&l'ft:p.,,,,.....,-~-~----_;;;,.....;.,._...;;. ___ ,,,,._,, · ·' ··
during their showdown with . . the ~lJ'~ '67 Birth Rate Dothan, Ala.: Pfc. Manuel s,;d Allen fastened a nylon ras
C«ne)o, Brooklyn, N. ".·: cord to tbe man's neck and
the orthodox Communist re-. ...,
Lowest Ever
The United States birth
rate of 1967. was. the lowest
. in histocy, the U.S. Cemus
Bureau reported this week.
Only 18 babies were born
per 1,000 people.
Over-all populatii>n growth
during the year was 1.08
percent of the tot.al popula·
tion, the lowest since 1945
when the· population in·
creued· by 1.05 per<enL
The net Increase wu 2.1
million penonr. the recult of
3.1 mlllloa blrtba, 1.9 million
-· -44.1,000 Added by ~.tllon.
Rescue Ship
L:ance Cpl. Anth-Ony Lie~ to a roof beam end another
ciardo Jr., Lowell !M~s, · Marine kicked away the
Lance Cpl. John 0 . Belknap, chair on wbtch the man was
Forsyth, Ga., and Lance standing.
Cpl James ~· Mausbart, Testimony in the pretrial
Vacaville; Calif.· . . u· ··'• All l k .....:~1 • 1; .. ti mvestiga on -..u en oo A prel;'__. mves""6a on 1·...:r and cut !tie man's report said : a ILUI e .
Allen and five 0 th e r throat when be did not die
Marines were aent out May immediately.
5 from a patrol base tll set The bod·y was throvm into
up an ambush and two Viet· the canal and a n o t h e r
namese ~en with suspect Marine threw sever·al band ldentificatiion papers were . seized. The two prisoners grenades into the :wate.r to
were questioned and taken make tlle three bodies sink.
bebiod a small .&back. Their The staying came to ligtt
bodies were tound later, ~n one of the men ill tlle
eadl with lwo bullet """nds u.i •nuad -led lhom from an MJ.6.rille. re "" ·~r~·
Thal nig!>t, tbe Viet ca.g lo his pla-common<ler.
altacl<ed tile mo1n potrol In all, -· 20 -· tiue. A oerg-1111 c:narp ...... qutlltlooed.
This is an artist's conception of the A1coa Seaprobe,
a 244-foot, 2,000-ton, all aluminum boat equipped to
search the oceans at depths over 6,000 feet and raise
an object weighing 200 tons. A derrick mounted on
the craft lowers a string of pipe that supports and
powers drilling equipment plus search and recov-
ery gea r.
Read The Daily Pilot
The Great Orange Coast's
No. 1 Paper!
e INSURANCE TO $15.000 e FEDER.ALLY CHARTERED ANO SUPERVISED e
WI PAY EAR.NINGS ON YOUR FUNDS FROM DATE RECEIVED TO DATE OF
WITHDRAWAL e FUNDS RECEIVED ON Ort IEFO RE THE IOTH OF ANY
MONTH lA.A.N FROM THE IST • SAVE-IY·MAIL. WE PAY POSTAGE IOTH WAYS, A CONVENIE~T WAY TO SAVE.
111111 S tt•t"'9-Pi•""" ...... l ... fOlll'l'Ua .... CO"'"'ACT
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MUNICH, Germ;uiy (AP)
-Bavarian Police reported
today that a British airliner
crashed on the Munich·
Berlin autobahn at nearby
Pfaffoohofen ond tllat 50
·.persons were dead.
gimes in Moscow, Warsaw an~b~~~:;:.k Times to-on·gm· al t" dray. quoted high sources in ,~
East Berlin es saying that
the· Soviel ·Unloo and East li~t
Police said the wreckage
was in names on the super
lligl>way.
Police said the plane
crashed directly on the
autobahn.
Pfaffenholen is about 27
miles north ol. Munid:I.
G e r m a n y serJously con-
sidered jnvading
Czedloslovakia In mid-July. Scotch A dlspatch .from Berlin by
Times correspondent David
Binder said one infQrmant
told him that in prepan1tioo n.ow5 99 for invasion, part d.. the
6.50,000-man reserve force of
the East Gennan ormy was fifth mOOllized, hun<lr<d• of East
The WNithw waa grey and
mJM.y ... 111• trM. P.u.. ttld avallablt
tmtrttnq --and In ~...,. cal1td to
111o ......
German touriats were USHER'S' recoiled and E.••I
Dtrman111 froatier with
C1tcbo1lovakl&waslL.~~~...::::...:.;::..;;::;.::==:=::.::;:::..=...:.....:...~J.i. W11aJ11Hlltd.
-....,.. tald
•1•v' ... 3.;a..
EMAMIUD ........
stM.alE 1Y ....... _
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-tlrlJ>ol, printa In. pa16 ••
telaaad ..... tones. J" i r • t • ...., ...... ,. -.... ,
lip?
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IMSIUn!D ; ......... 158
Re1.•I•
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NO.IRON PINAFORE
Dresses
2, .. s3
·celgate
After Shave
89'Yaluel
38~
79cChl11pen
NUT HUT
Mixed Nuts·
-•u.. 1Gtf•59c •ti t.ddld to fl.Dq' =--
$170.$330 Val.
BETTER 9UAUTY
Bath Towel
$100
29c 9•Volt
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<llo batter)' &t
Thrifty •v-lnpotonr~ 11c
15c •ook
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Box of
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-i.,-art. .Noa.-«aaC, .. pattnr.--in(, Palatable! 11 o.. San 6Ic ...
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Found at &etae
Law Textbook Key
In Panther Trial
OAKLAND (UPI) -A
blood·IOOked tmbook on
Calllornla law wlll be Ille
key to the Huey Newton
* * * 8 Panthers
Held Mt~r
Gun Battle
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Eight persons belleved by
police to be members of the
militant Black'l> anther 1
we.re arrested today follow-
ing a gun battle with of-
ficers in a downtown hous-
ing project
Police said several blue
sweatshlrt.s with the words
"Black Panther" stenciled
on them, a book of the
writings of 'Orlnese Com-
munist party Chairman Mao
Tse-tung and two pistols
were found at the 1bootlng
scene. The seven men and one
woman ·were booked on
suspicion of assault with in·
tent to commit murder. No
one was injured in the gun
battle, police said, although
one suffered a cut arm trom
an unknown cause.
Police said the incident
developed after a group of
Negroes shouted obscenities
at a passing police. ~er
and five shots were fired.
Tony Curtis
Named Dad
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
---,..cto.-l'~-named
as the father of an unborn
child in a paternity ault filed
on behalf of "John Doe
Schwartz," the baby ex-
pected In September.
The sWt filed Thursday in
Superior Court was brought
against Bernard SCbwartz,
43, also known as Tony
Curtis. An affidavit iden·
tified him as a movie actor
earning more than '501000
annually.
The prospective mother
was identified only as Anna
Margaret Henter, a minor,
also known as P e g g Y
Henter.
Two State Dems Say
Nixon Due 3rd Loss
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) issue facing this coun1ry. I
-Richard M. Nl:lon will happen to believe that there
become a three-Ume loser in are more important matters
November, according to two before us."
of the state's Democrats. Alioto said that the
San Francisco M a y o r Republicans were o!fering
Joseph L. Alioto a n d an old face when new aolu-
Assembly Speaker Jesse M. tions are needed. "The
Unruh predicted in 8' joint times are out of joint, and
news conference Thursday they are not going to be set
that 11either ooe of our top right by the attitudes of the
two candidates, or several 1940s and 1950s."
others .in our party" could Alioto was asked ii he saw
beat Nixon in 1968. anything of a "new Nixon"
At the aame time, Unruh and said "e. Jeopard can't
conceded that Nixon'a well· change his spots, a· sbiped
planned nomination 'Victol')' bass can't change bis
was 11a re markable stripes and an elephant
achievement" for a man can't change bJs trunk."
who lost the presidency ln.-;;i;;;;;i;;;;;i;i;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;I
1960 and the Call!orniall
governorship Jn 1962. SA VE . 331/3°/o
Unruh said be was struck
by "the sheer boredom and 8 n. QUILTm SOFA
the high-school hi-jlnks of w/Matctlilrtt LP• Seat the Republican convention"
and be said be hoped the •11ular Prtu JUS.00
Democrats wouldo't repeat hi• "a 12'1.M
the acene in Chicago later Sftt $145.00
t.h1J month where Unruh will
lead the state'• delegation. J. J. KNICKOIOCKD
He said that the GOP 4001 llOCH IT. N.a.
convention "seemed to 1"""'911 , ........ • ~1
believe that Republican Ulli· MM40f
tv was the moct tm nt
I See by Today's
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drop. tnnd new IUl'fboud
'""•'finl'' a f« Nie lien
tor $80.00. •. ._T_ ..
A pianO Player, *1lo otbtr
muaiclalls are needed for
a Group. Must do Standlll.rd
PWA~AB...._ . "" .. """"· ---wilh 5 ... _
Storm Hits
By UPI
A shattering electrical
stonn which burst over the
coastal range in northern
Oalifornia early 1bursday
showered the area with bun·
dre<h of Ughtnlng bolts and
touched off nearly 350 forest
fires .
The Sbate Division of
Forestry reported most of
the fires were small, five
acres or less, but were in
remote areas accessible on-
ly to hikers or aircraft. One
blaze burned 20 acres of timber. I
Nearly 800 firefighters
rriday, August '9, 1968
Finch Joins Nixon Camp in High Post
I .
MIAMI BEACH (AP)-Lt. wbo Joined bl1 favorll.e 100 nominee, Finch Is gaining George Murplly, (R-Calll.),
Gov. Robert H. Finch, who delegation, but didn't nee· influence among California 1n the 1964 Senate race.
Worked in Gov. Ron a Id euarUy want hbn to win the Republicans. 1f Nixon wins, It was Finch'• first try
Reagan's sh ad ow for presldenUal nomination. his lnfluence will grow even for offlcfl and be received
months, is emer&tnc a1 ~ lt wu Finch who first more. mare votes than Reagan did .
strongman of the RepUbll· propoaed tho ldfa o! the He is a broad shouldered, As lieutenant governor, be
can party in Calltornla. party wdfying favorite ton c h a i n smoking attorney worked Wilh Reagan on such
---
D.lll Y ,!LOT 1 -
BLUI lllllON COMIOY
OF THE YEAR
He ls jolning the preslden-state that sei:tt Reagan ori who was elected lieutenant atate problems as unem-
tlal campaign of his good h!s unsuccessful pursult of governor In 1966 after years ployment, but his close ties
and long-time frleod, Rieb-Ule presidency:. as a professional pollUcal with Nixon appeared to. keep afd M. Nixon, in an un· As one of the men closest manager, first for NiJ:on 1n him out of poUUcal discus·
specified but high level job. to the party's presidential the 1960 preaidenUal cam· sions in the governor's
"l won't taJce on a line or palgn and then ror U.S. Sen. office. ~=========: rese_on.slbility or a regional
responsibility," sitd rinch.
"It would be 1ncons1a1ent Death Home with tbe oflllce l have. But
at the minimwn, there will .,_ •
be.some travels wJth.D~-n-urglarized-Reagan.· meanwhile, has
lfa"dbi.s hopes for the presl· . • -
dency shattered by Nixon 's llOLLYWOOD (UPI) p -
victory. Only hours after the coroner
He started out as a favor-removed five bodies from
lte son to preserve party the scene of a shooting
unity, but, pushed by bis &pree, the $100,000 home
supporters, finally became was entered twice and
a candldate1_That an1ered ransacked l>Y burgl1rs. I
California Nixon backers Police today were con-
Man Slays
Woman, Self
MODESTO ( A P l
Sherill's officers said an
elderly ma.n shot and killed
a former• neighbor, then
fatally · shot himself
back of her home Thursday.
She was Mrs. F I o y
Worthington, 6.1, a widow.
ducting an inventory to 1
determine U any of the
valuable art works or ex·
pensive furniture known to
be ln the home was taken.
Killed early Wednesday
were the owner of the hom e,\
Philip Weinstein, '47, his
wile, Rosemary, 38, and bis :
daughten, Debbie, 19, and
Mrs. Myra ctiegwin, 24, the
estranged wife of Fred
Chegwln, 31, whom police
believe shot the othus and
then himself.
HARIOR
SHOPPING
CENTER
JJDO M_.., ..... .......
'SEMI ANNUAL
SALE
spread out over six northern 1 .--..-------,...------------. California counties batUing
the fires which followed one
of the worst electrica 1
storms in the area in 20
years.. TwelJty a er I a I
tankers and eight
helicopters were -brought in.
The state Division of
Forestry reported 190 fires
docino, Shasta, Sonoma and
doclno, Sasta, Soooma and
Tehama counties, while the
U.S. Forestry Service said
155 blazes broke out in its
northern zone.
Strike· Cilst _
~
$4 Million
COST:
$5.00
E•ch
'NEW!
PRODUCT .
STOPS
SUN
BURN
L0<aUy
dweloped ........
oow
•Y•li.blef
' -·-~ . I . I . . . ~ .... '•1ft!'_....__,.._ahutthe Mt 'II Dodge D' P.S •raitlOl Cfeet.,...a.IL
n 11...... owtto ""*-'°'°"'for th9 new 'M Olfll. Thd'a why we'n rn11tJni hfgh
P'iw dlt1111pw ••• the GOit of ......., ..,,.. dla111pw.1Thfrt'a why we'N offtrint tM .......................... ,.. ............. w. WMt **"to ,ff ..... rilht tfttO,.....
.... , •. l""f w, neryMi9k ........ dw modrlle Md ltemolwtawtot1 too ••• _ .... _ .. ,_, _ _...._
.... , ••• 11 .... oftheyw'.
__ .,__. .................................. _ ......... __ _
SPORT COATS
REGULAR TO $45.
SUITS
REGULAR TO $125.
Orlon Turtle Necks
Short Sleeve -ReCJ. to $10. 7.88
IVY SPORT SHIRTS ' 2 88
REGULAR TO $7. e
Maky, Many Other Men's
Accessories at Fantastic Saving•:
USE KINGS CHARGE-BA,NKAMERICARD-MASTER CHARGE
~ ~OLAR A Truly a luxury e11r at an tcoN>mY prlcl.
Top of tht Unt hlrdtop, WIQOnl 1nd Hd1ns.
WE'LL. MAKf ADODQE DISAPPEAR INTO YOUR S.._A..AQEI
, .
__ _. ...
and t.rdwa.re lndllded, p
it\I' for a vtrY rnmna.ble
.,.;c.. E ........................................................................................... ..
• Some ..,., good """ In ueed can; from Qrno.
-a..an.· ~ to art9 little ''V.W'a."
e More .chmn!na: Homu In
TodlY't 0ptn Hou a e
h
Culcle. -· • quidt ud ~MY M¥ to mop for • """"·
·'
BEACH CITY DODGE
16555 BEACH B~YD. lHWY. 391
HUNTINGTqN aEACH
1847-9631 •
•
,
HARBOR DODGE
2150 HARBOR BLVD.
-COSTA MESA ·
54.3050 ~
' ••
. ,
i I
. . ·~ . . -
K lWL Y PILOT
'
•
'
I
-~ .... ·""¥• -;.-. • -
~. t
~ .. •••
•
' ...
• . '
• DAILY PILOT
New· York
£~ •• =i.-
flt
jj ~~
~·~
IJ ~i *~ f" ~1 •• -:1 i ..
iii
iii
~·ii i ..
' :.:·~
+1
r~
-
.:!" .II" .II" !J
!J
' ·_1
l lA, ...... ~~-··-·-·---·~·-=-= L..T ...-.. .._ it "' L • • .-. IL" W .. --------------
J 0 DAILY PILOT Frld.11)', A1.19111l 9, 1968
QUEENIE By Phil lnrerlandi $10 Million T·ax ·Assessment Library
To Close Disputed for Hughes Plant SANTA ANA -
Orange County P u b l i c
Ubrary system . wlll close
for i.Qventory um month to
verify book holdings and
other related l J b r a r y
materials.
,,
J
J
9
FULLERTON Th e
giant llughes Aircraft Co.
says its Fullerton "think
tank'' plant is ·worth about
$23 m111ioo for tax purposes
-110.6 million less than
what the county assessor
says.
The difference can't be
taxed because it's basically
"head scratching" costs,
says a company o!Clcial.
The firm has complained
to the Orange County Board
of Supervisor.s that Assessor
Andrew Hinshaw
overassessed the value of
the last year's inventory by
$10.6 1 million or the
equivalent of a $270,000 tax
bill. The supervisors said
they would bear the appeal
Oct. 17.
meet that country's needs.
And It's only after the
system ls on the drawing
boards that we go Into the
manufacturini phase or the
contract."
Under 1tate law,
Cafilornia businesses -must
pay a yearly tax o 'n
whatever inventory is in
stock on the first Monday of
March.
Hinstiaw estimated the
total value Of the 1967 in-
ventory at $!3.6 niillion. But
Chaffee says $10.6 million of
that represoots "thinking"
expenses -production cost.!
that went into consultatioos,
designs, co nferences, and
just plain head scratching.
The assessor a r g u e d
Thursday that the costs of
thinking contributes to the
'4]{eep that up and we'll find out how a. couple of
bla.ck eyes look with an overall tan!"
The Hughes research and
development plant is an
engineering concept of the
last two decades which the
men who framed the state's
tax code didn't foresee. Work Sta11s
On Center . For the
Jtleeti1ags
Divorces
DIVO•Cl!S •1L•D
l onf'llt Lou llttudoln on k-111
Mld1H! l!luudoln
8\lllt G. l 11rkn VI J11"I,,. w. Burl<n
M1rlt Drtkt YI RoMrt S. Ortkt
JtflWI Albert GlarrOl"ook VI f llffn
Mtt Gttleb<'l'll>k WllrM A.rnv Boeh"Mn -VI DtV!d Thomtl __ ,
lrl1 M. Mllll VI Frfttrlcli; M. Mlllt, Jr.
Arllt G. WtH vs L~ G. Wnc
Miidred J. ll•-111 LKY e..... "
Mlctoe1t Vl911 Mfftdouo n WllllMTI SOio
91~ Fllltl11CO 'COPPf!n.tnllfl -v1
Wllfrfd RodM"!' C-•Wflllll
Lindt suun Gtrriell "vs llOM lcl Noel
G1rn11! Judith C. Gr1v \II Woodrow WlllOrl
Grt v Donald A. Ctr~ YI Mtrllyf'I It. Ctr~r
Mt'Y S. G"'" n Al'"' l , Gr"" 1(11!\lffn l.elltnl Hlfl'IMf 'ft T~I
Edwtrd Ht...,...
8f:Vtrlv D. Ctudll1 vs John It. Ctudnl
Do<tll'llv A. Schmudt vs P111l A.
"'"""'"' E'-"nor Ell1.11belll ln~r Vt Mtrl
Otvkl Lesttr Harald J. Scott YI Joen Ctrol Scott ~r!orlt M. Miiier YI Wnle¥ P. Ml!ler l(artn I. JollnMHI YI JI,,.,.. E. Johntorl
Y"Oflf'lt Jqn E""ldl.-.er "11 11:-ld Vttn E,,.eldl_, A~'d"'J' l ee 0.11'9rtn VI ll:obert l.w!I
D111i,"n
INTSll:LOCUTOll:Y Dl:CR•ES
v1..,rn11 Overton "' Je.se c. o...rm.. Nencr-Mar a.con "11 Llwnr>n Din .. ~
Wiim• M. G1rvrn VI Robert L. G1rvtt1
"""-nc• A:. Kt1ul$on, ptH. I nd Cl"OU
drfdl. VI Marvlt'I J. KnuliOl'I, oStfdl.
Ind Cr"OSS tornP11. ~
Miitie M. Metcalf VI BlliY Lff M1ft:11f
A1111t11 Wlh.M VII Jl me P111I wn~
l!lllff Malllnt HtnM VI lloblrt l!'.dwtrlll
H1n ....
Phv1ll1 II.It Mlltl91n 'n fl'lorid II:.
Mlllltlt1
M.oniitni Irwin VII Wlll[f.m fl'. trwln
MIChltl w.,.... H!rt111 VI P1ul1 C•ral
Hld•ll
El1lnt A~n Pawtll. tic. VI Thom11 l .
Powtll
W~"'" Geo<'I• FH 111 Dorolhr Ann
"' Chtrvl JtlnM Mahon VI Mell Cl1ykln
DEATH NOTICES
BALTZ MORTIJARIES
Corona del ?.tar OR 3-9450
Costa ~tesa r.u 1-ZCC 1
BELL BROADWAY
MORTIJARY
110 Broadway, Costa l\lesa
LI 1-3433
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery • Mortuary
Cliapel
1511 PacUlc View Drive
N°ewport Beach, CaWornla
. lfl.%7tlt
.PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL llOME
'ilu 'rlol..Aff. wan•·ctr •sm
J ' wura.in MOB'IUARY
m E. 1'111 a, Cella M-r-• ..
Record
··-Gt>•ld!nt D. C1rrl11n YI A•dll Eclwln
Ctrr!gan
(."rl1tlnt Thar~ GtrtM VI G1rv
HPnrv G•ttne
PtllY M. l!oubel V• W1lltr C. Boo"°'I Lttl1nd P. Drown. Sr. VI Atlee Jo.nllf D•-
K..,,... s. t':111re1 YI (Qftfld F. CIP"'I
Gle"" C. $1<1nntr YI Htltn M. $.Ii.Inner
Jeri Paull,. ,BUlotd VI Keith Franlr.Un
Buford
Slndr1 JOln H1rncten YI Wllll1rn R.
Harnden
NrtiY Jover Slv1nl v1 R1:111rd Lte Slvant
PINAL DIECll:EES
L1rm1n Oon1lcl Mee,,., YI $hlrllY Mlt ""'~ Ptmtll J IM lttlrll YI Jllff'PI> Mldiffl Leaird
lettr F. Amlcar YI B. F. A. A"lltl Peno A'TllCIJ'
Kathr 5. Ev1n1 YI JMn J. Evans
Marv Gu.<111upe Flflllertld YI Ch1rle1
Ellwerd Flttg1r1lcl
Revmond Raclr!1ue! YI Mtrtlrtl AM
Rodrl11vti °""' Nadeau YS Rn Nadt•U N..:11 M. ENl..-lbs YI Min~ J. Elldersbf, Jr.
Joltn Mol'91n Nunflll YI Marv P1lrlc!1 Hunl11t
C1t1tr w. w-YI Hori<• M. w..,..
JemM f dWlrd Fl1h YI M&d•lvn Clllrt Fish
Darlene M. Smll!I YI L1rrY Jay Smllh
Sharan L. O•Roor•t YI John T. O'Flciur~1
Marv Nall C1rteton VI l(enneth A. C1r1eton -
RodMY Evtrly Scklpet YI M•rv Ann Sch1pel
N1nt:r J. S..-YI Clllrr.. I . S-
Sandra J11n Bloonl YI WllH1m Allen
Blount
Miry M. l!ttletlt ld YI Eddie Lillleil•ld
P•h• Jullf Currv YI H1nr1 D1nlrl Cur·
~
Narm1n EUlaH, Jr. YI Mioblt M1t ematt ,
l1r11Ar1 Ann JCnigH w Harelcl w..,,.,. ·~· Ju1n!t1 F. l1Kltr YI J. H. &t•ter
la/1 M. Mltt$0ft YI Jflhn B, Mlfhon JllDGMaNn
l llMI• Ml• Shaat on T«rv Wiibur -Notma Je1n Mc:Co1 YI l 1vem J . MeCor
Fire Calls
Pilot Visitors
One of the many projects
on which the re s e arc h
specialists are working is a
d efense sys t em for
Switzerland, says llughes'
attorney \Valter Chaffee.
"Before any parts
radar, early warning
devices and so forth -can
be manufactured, our ex-
perts must st udy
Switzerland, its topography,
its present def e nse
capabilities an~ a whole
range ·Of other factors,"
Chaffee' said Thursday.
"Only when they've col·
lected all the data on
Switzerland can they im·
provise a system that will
ORANGE The
umbrella -roofed two-story
octagona:I structures located
near the S a n t a Ana,
Freeway, Santa Ana River
and Garden Grove Freeway
are the beginnings of the
county's new $1 million
Youth Guidance Cellter.
The center w i 11 ac-
commOO.ate cliildren who
find themselves w i t h o u t
homes or those who have
had minor brushes with
authorities. It is nut a deten-
tion facility.
Teacher Sent to Prison
For Firing on Homes
SANTI\ ANA -A former
high school history teacher
was sentenced to one to five
yea1·s in state prison on a
s'hooting charge Thufsday
after his probation plea fail-
ed to impress Judge Howard
C. Cameron.
F rank D. Sanborn Jr., 41,
a former chairman of the
history department at La
Quinta High School, told the
judge be bad sponsors in the
Youth Gets
Probation
SANTA ANA -Cal S'tate
Fullerton basketball star
Josepn L. Ware,' 21, of
Anaheim. Thursday was
sentenced to three years'
probation and ordered by
Superior Judge H o w a r d
Cameron to continue with
psycho-therapy treatment!.
Arrested May 2 at his
home, \Vare had pleaded
guilty to charges of unlawful
imprisonment of three col-
lege coeds. Charges of rape
by force. assault with intent
to commit rape, two counts
of rape by threat and two
counts o! assault with a
deadly weapon were drop·
ped by the district at·
torney's office.
Judge Cameron a 1 s o
ordered \Vave not to have in
his possession any firearms
or any deadly v.•capon of any
kind. \Vare already has
serv._!d 68 days in the
Orange County J ail.
state of \Vashingto\l·
"It will be a long time
before you see anybody in
\Vashington," Judge Came-
ran told him.
Sanborn had plea dtd
guilty to orie of three counts
of firing a gun at the homes I
of witnesses who ha di
tesWied against him in two
morals cases in vo l vi n g
former students. The
morals charges were
dismissed after two hung
j uries.
After the fihootings, San·
born allegedly fled toward
Ganada but \vas stopped at
the Wa shington-Canadian
border by immigration of·
ficials.
After being returned from
\Vashington last Sept.ember,
he W'!-S committed to the
state mental hospital at
Atascadero as insane and
unable to aid in his own
defense. After five months
there he was ruled sane.
~
Ul.1Ull MU· lllllll! lllMl.l
'}burS,llllne
...<JURS·
LAST DAYS
HALF of SALE PRICE
SUPERB BARGAINS IN M£11'S, WOMEN 'S, BOYS',
SP-ORTSWEAR, SWIMWEAR, SlACKS .. CLOSING OUT GIRLS' & INFAHTS' WEAR
Ladies Dresses, Shills, Suits, Skirts, Capris,
Blouses ••• Men's Sport Shirts, Slacks, Pajamas.
OPEN
9:30 to 6:00
FRIDAY
EVES-9:00
l•nkAm..-l<•rd
Ma•t•r Ch•rt• Oln.,..1 Clull
Cartt llan<h•
Boys' Sport Shirts, Corduroy Slacks.
JN COST A l¥$A ITS
C1ntr1lly
Located at
Newport &.
Harbor Blvda.
'•rk c.n ..... left.tly at Our
I Mr (last)
lntranc•
value of the final product.
"Whatever they pay ou t to
develop the system, they'll
get back in costs from
Switzerland," he said. "My
assessment is an estimate
of the value of the end pro-
duct."
NO, says CbaUee. "It's my
understanding of the law,"
sai d the company
spakesman, "that we should
only be taxed for actual
mercharid.lse," n~ for the
cost of developing ill design.
SchCC:uled to close .'t.ug.
13-17 are the Adult
Reference C.enter, and. the
following branch libraries:
Bolsa, Brea, Chapma n ,
Cost.a • Mesa, Cy?'ess, Daqa
Point, Fountain V a 11 tW ,
Laguna Beacb, L e i s u r e
Workl, Seal Beach and Villa
Park.
I
I
I
r $25,000 WORTH OF
FURNITURE MUST BE
SOLD FRI. SAT. & SUN.
". ' FOR THE BENIFIT
·oF THE CREDIT01RS ' ,,. -. ' .
SOFA • CHAIR, J JIC-
Clloka ef colon
SOFA • CHAIR l!CLINER
l IK· Ckke 9f colan.
SOFA• LOVE St.AT.
Layback ..,.. Int• bM Sofo
Ckolce of ,colon.
• SOFA & LOYI St.AT
Spti"t plUews
69.00
179.00
119.00
295.00
LOYI SIAT YILYlT 159 00
C1stct111 .,i1tM. CNlce •f u lers •
HIDEAllD
Choice af col•rs.
CHAIRS
Uplllolu..-.4
5 l"C. llDROOM
I 1'9111t 1ta114s. 111lrrer, lleff. km!., .. _ .......
BOX
SPRING
.nd
139.00
25.00
66.00
MATTRl!ISS
Both for
MAr LE IUNIC IEDS
IH. ...-t"t & ..-tt.
YtLYn SOFA & LOYl SEAT
, ... Cl"-•'"·
I FT. MIDlnRRANIAN
SECTIONAL C•ltaM -a1At.
JO IN. IAN•I
Ii'" lAN,•I ........_,., ...
f9.00
395.00
395.00
50.00
119.00
199.00
ALL FURNITURE
HAS BEEN MOVED
TO THIS ADDRESS
FOR THIS
SPECIAL
SALE
EVERYTHING
MUST BE
SOLD
REGARDLESS
OF> COST
• Terms
BRING YOUR
TRiUCK or TRAILER
ALL SALES
flNAL
DEALERS
WELCOME
Montt.s to Pay
FURNITURE LIQUIDA ORS
:1807 NEWPORT BLVD.
COSTA MESA
OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 I Sat. 10 to 6
PHONE 646-0291
Sun. 12 fo 5
. •
----------..-
J OOEAN HAST IN.GS, 642-4321
.,.....,, AQllM f. IHI M• P•" II
Beauties Favor
Natural ·Look
.Surf, sand and sun are summertirpe blessings the Orange Coast sup.
plies in abundance for its teenagers. . · ' --
The "scene" is the beach and 'damp· hair and sunburns are the order
of the day -which presents a problem if•you are a young woman who may
have to appear, poised and perfectly groomed, as a representative of her
city during civic functions.
Lightly applied makeup which emphasize~ the natural look was fav·
ored for summer by the beauties who represent Huntington Beach, West·
minster and Fountain Valley. ~
"I was sunburned during the Miss Orange County contest and peel·
ing in the Fourth of July parade," commented Miss Huntington Beach -
Jeffye Blackard, 17.yea~-old daughter of Mrs. G. C. Fuller.
To make sure she can appear with her golden-brown hair perfeclly
groomed in an instant, Miss Blackard keeps several hair pieces which can
be styled quickly.
The Marina· High School senior, who completed a summer school
course to enable her to graduate in February, also enjoys pool and goU .
. Freckles are a major concern of Miss Westirunster, Linda Harvey.
The 17-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Harvey solved her sum-
mer hair proble!ll by experimenting with several styles until she found a
simple one which could be arranged while her hair was still wet.
fler boyfriend, Hank Von Gerichten, shares 'her enthusiasm for horse-
back riding and swimming, and the Westminster High seriior, who also
attended summer sChooI, works as a part-time chec~er in a market,
. BakiP.g pies vfes with the beach as a .favorite summer activity for
Miss Fountain Valley, Ellen Evans, 16-year-old daughter of Mrs. Jack
Pike. ·
• --·
'
•
The Fountain Valley High junior also shares the family's hobby of
photography and enjoys dinner dates and dances with her .teady, Tony
Wallace.
Calories don't cling to the youthful beauty contestants so eftting -
with international disheS favored -is one activity the young women· enjoy
all year around.
TIME . TO PRACTICE -Pool, in addiilon to swim-
ming and golfing, is a favorite summertime activity
for Miss Huntington Beach, Jeffye Blackard. The
·Marina High School senior plans to enjoy a long
vacation in Hawaii next summer before she returns
lo major in pschology at Golden West tlollege. As
head banner girl she presently is organizing her
group in preparation _for the opening of school in
September.
FAVORITE OISH -Baking lemon meringue
pies and cooking in general are relaxing holr
hies fpr Ellen Evans. The l~year--old junior
will be entering several beauty contests this
month following her return from a trip to
San Francisco -one of the prizes she won
when she was crowned Miss Fountain Valley.
Dur\{lg competition she tries to pretend the
judg"ls aren't there and behave as naturally
as possible in front of an audie.nce.
LIFE SAVER -Miss Westminster, Linda
Harvey, whiles away summer days swim-
ming (she is certified as a junior life saver),
horseback rider~ttending summer school
and working pan-time. The Westminster
. High seriior plans to attend Golden West Col-
Tel ling All Won't ·Forestall 'Friends'
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' The letter
you printed from "Sadder but Wiser"
compelled me to write this letter. She
was the mousy little housewife who
felt guilty about having an affair.
I'm a high school studellt who knows:
of a similar affair -my mother 's,
Mom alway s decides to see a very late
movie "alone" when Dad is out of
town. Once I asked how the movie was
and she got so rattled 1 felt sorry for
her. Recently I came home unex·
pectedl,y. (I had plamed to spend the
night at a girkriend's hou se and
changed my mind.) l heard 111< back
door slam as I came in and J smelled
pipe toba cco all ov•r the place.
Ttlls afternoon •J needed 60 cents and
Mom wasn't home. I looked in MA:im 's
coat pocket for change. To my horror
I discovered a key to a local motel.
' ... .
the family having one vote. Of course
ANN LANDERS A ~~
my husband and I always lose.because
the kids vote as a bloc. Can you help
us teach these kids to be r..esponsible
citizens? -OUTVOTED
Do I owe j t to my dad to teU him? U
I don 't tell and they get a divorce I
will Always feel as though I could have
helped sav e their m"arrlage if I had
spoken out. -J.K.L.
DEAR J .K.L .: Oon'l 1a7 a word. T•
anyone. Wbile you m17 believe tbe
evidence 11 conctu1lve, 7oa could be
wrong. And if you are wrong 7ou
would be re1pon1lble ror 1Urrh:l1 up a
bJdeou1 mess.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : We a.re an
average family . By "average" I mean
my husband and l are ;1t the_ metty of
I . (\_ -
DEAR OlIT: The majority rule ts
three lazy, uncooperative , smart· excellent ror covernment, but It
mouth kids. doe1n 't wol·k well to mental l.ll-
Our daughters (ages 13 .and 15) 1tltutlon1, prt1on1 or lamllie1 with two
kept us broke. The boy, aged 11, or more children. Adole1ttnt1 not only need d11dpUne keepg us exhausted. My husband and I ....._ but they want It. When children call
don't want to break their spirit or spoU the 1lpal1 and run the famlly they cet
their fu.n by being too demanding. I'm the lmpres1lon their parents are Im-
afraid however that we have been too bec:Ue1. Kids who do as they please
Jenieni and ~w· we can't get 001 kids are not happy -they are confused. · The bes& way &o keep yoar childrea11
to do anything that vaguely ~semble1 reet on the polUld_ 11 &o put 1ome
work -either in or oot of school. respon1lblUt}' oa U.tl'r 1boulder1.
Last week the kids 1ua:gested •
"famlly jury," Witi1 each member of. DEAR ANN L.".<~ERSJster
lege after her graduation. Light natural
make-up and simple hair styles aie recom-
mended by the young women as keys to eooci----_
grooming during active tummer months.
Coming
Mazie and her husband have had din·
oer at our house very Friday for the
last six years. 'nlis means they have
enjoyed 312 free meals-over here.
We have been to their home for din·
nex three times, (Once was when my
brother-in-law's boss gave him a
turkey for Christmas. Another time,
my brother-in-;aw-shot a 4uck. It w.as
too gam y to e.at. And once we had a
Chinese dinner which they paid us to
pick up on the way over.)
Last week an out-of-town aunt was
having a seriou• operation and J off.
ered to take care of her children.
Mazie didn't, lnvlt.e my husband over
for a single meal. ntls burned me up.
l told my husband I'm through feeding '
them every Friday • .He says Mazie
will be mad because U'ley have grown
to expect It. How do J unwind a slx-
to Call
year habit? -THE CHUMP
DEAR..CHUMP: Find 1ometllhll t11e
to do a few Fridays In a row ud ••
nounce It well la advance. Wba 70•
do Invite Mazie ct:U Jttr, "It's yo11r
turn next Ume," and put your dlaaen
oi an altenatlnr bails.
, Too many couples go fr o m
rqatrimooy to acrimony, Don't let
your mama·ge flop before lt gel3
started. SeDd for Ann Landers'
booklet , "Marriage -What to Ex·
J)eet." Send your request to Ann
Landers in care ol thJs newspaper
e~Iostng 50 cents in coin and a long,
stamped, sell-addressed envelope.
Ann Landers will ba gled to help you
!'/th your problems. Send them to her
ht care of the DAil..Y PILOT, enclo•·
mg a aeff-addre1sed, stamped ea
velope. :
---.... .,;. -.......... ._ .. a:-... -------------------------~------------
•
•
I '
1l
!ll!ll ............ 1!1911 ........... --------------------------~~~~~~~---~
JZ OA!LV ,ILOT Fridly, All""t 9. 1968 -
' '~--
•
Horoscope
·Scorpio: Day to Create
SAT .. AU_?. 10
By SYDNEY OMARR
''The wise man controls
, his destiny. . . .Utrology
J>Olnls tbe way .''
ARIES (March 21-April
19): Morale is boosted -
you are surrounded by &lamQUr, Jntrigue, mystery .
Day when much happens in
quiet, behind-scenes man·
ner. fmportant to be
discreet. Don't tell all you
know.
TAURUS (AprU 20-May
1.0): Pleasant surprise due
-could be in fonn of party
or special event. Some· of
your hopes. wisbes are due
to be fulfilled. Get basic
taski out of way early.
GEMINI (May 21-June
Members
Center On
2.(1): Finish projects. Some be transformed lnto 11hitUng
around family circle are im· light. Message clear by
patient. Set example, Han· tonight.
dle one thi,ng at a time. Be a AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. ·
good listener. Unusual in· 18): ResuJta of pa1t e!forta
dividual may confide unique pay dividends. Check lo·
problem. · vestment possibilities. Don't
CANCER (June 21.July wa1te experience. You have
22): Good lunar aspect to. chance tc rise~• to be pro·
day c o Jn c i de s with rooted -don't let it fly
journey~ther literal or away.
mental. Means your present PlSCES (Feb. 19-M~cb
2.(1): One close to you turna
apparent· adversity I n t o
achievement. Le1al
circumst.ances swing in your
favor. Partnershlp could
nourish. Good public rela·
lions today can w o r k
wonders. Act accordingly.
Te llM Olll Vl'M's 11,idcV lw \'Oii 11'1
lflOllt¥ •nd lev•I ~ SYlll...,. Omtrr't
booilltf, "Stc:f't Hlnt1 for ""-" •llf
Womtn.'' 11nc1 t>lrttid•te '"' JI ~I" 10 Omarr ·~~ 'J:!"'IL tM D Y l"ILOf, 80ll ~ -Celllral ..
!loft. "'" v ' .. 10917.
surroundings change. Actual
trip occurs or journey of the
mind. Write and read.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)'
Fine for shopping. If you are
alert, you find something of
valuo. Quality does not
necessarily correspond with
expense. You can obtain
what you need at bargain
Couple at H.ome
Following Trip
rate. Look.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): • Now home in Huntington Miss Diana Frere was the
Day of expansion. You Beach, Vicky Lynn Blase maid of honor a n d
multiply efforts -you see and Richard C. Clevel~nd bridesmaids were t h e
beyond i m med t ate in· e x c ha n g e d ···-•"-~ dications. Accent on how rings and vow s' d:i,i:;·:-MISses JodfMadison~"tln·da
you relate to mate, partner. ceremony conducted by the and Stephani~ Blae.
Your assets are ap· Rev . JOOn P. Ashey in St. The bridegroom aske<!.
predated. Your possessions Jam'l;S Episcopal Church, John Megery to be his best
rise in value. Newport Beach. man and Jeff Harrison and
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22 ): Parents of the newlyweds Bill Diever were ushers.
A Pleasant Day for Dining and Cards Bouquets Your work and methods are are Mr. and Mrs. Hal Jay Following the wedding the
being observed. Realize this Blase and Mr . and Mrs. couple greeted 1.50 guests
Floral an-angements for and respond accordingly. · Walter C. Cleveland, all of during a champagne recep· Before resuming fall activities members of South-
ern Orange County Alumnae of Alpha Phi are look-
ing forward to a relaxing day in the South Laguna
'1ome of Mrs. Fitzhugh Brewer (middle) at 11:30
1.m. Aug. 14. The women-will enjoy a buffet luilch-
'!<>D and play bridge. Appreciating the ocean view
are Miss Susan Muller, a student at San Diea:o State
College and Mrs. Etlward Bowen, cb8'ter president
(left to right). Reservations, by Aug. 12, may be
made with Mrs. Bowen, 494-2328 or Mrs. William
tJ'te 1-ome will be given a Check apparent minor mat· Huntington Beach. lion in the Newporter IM.
designer's attention when ~rs. Yo~ could make pro· For hef wedding the bride The bride was graduated
Hersey, 675-2993. · ...
Mrs . Dud 1 e y case fttable discovery. Seek key selected a traditionally sty\· from Marina High School.
demOO'!ltrates the art at the to puzzle. ed gown of white silk Her hu sband ,a graduate or
Coast Mesa.Bay citie s SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. organ?Jl with a lace bodice University High School, now
Fuchsia Society meeting 21 l: G~. lunar. aspect to-and lace repea.ted in bands is attending Gold/n t
Monday, Aug. 12. day co1ncD1des with seU-exd· on the bouffant skirt. College.
Mrs. Case, a f 1 0 r a I pression. ay to create an , A
Harbor Council Movie Guide ,·
designer and wedding con· show feelings. Loved one
sultant associated with needs reassurance. Throw
Hollister's Floral Shop in off false pride. RediSC<lver
Costa Mesa, will create a past joys.
casual spring· or French SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2'l·
Basket A-line dtsign using Dec. 21 ): Obtain hint from
fresh f].owen; of the garden SCORPIO message. Strive .~~:;''~0~ "Jlt!:i, ~~: citing, entertaining situa· Greenwich Village poet. POOR cow _ s 0 r did variety. for greater domestic peace,
i.rt>or council ;.TA. Mn. 1t t 1·0 n oc cu h •-h ony Spotlight "'°"'"..,, 11 ..,. .. ldl!lf 1M Mn. •rt rs w en TIIE FOX Relationsh'p w~ma of girl who faces a Believing no home is arm · 0 n
:>wtt""" 1. commllHoe cMlnn1". 11 '' American orchestra 1·, -
1 home P'operty Ch e c k ·~~ ,, , ..,.,IMI 1n *'"'""'""'" between two women living seamy e x l s t e n c e in complete without flowers, · ·
1Uli.t11e tums ,.. cin.1,. -'""'" captured by a Na z i on an isolated farm Is English slums. the designer is interested in values. You p o s s e s s
•nd wtu •PPJ•r Wll'klv. Your Yl ... '" gene·-• m· World War II. thi oth eed G io11e11ed_ w.11 ,,...,, to MOVle Gt.ikle, ''Cl.I shattered with arrival of :l.OSEMARY'S BABY _ showing how to. use flowers some ng en n · et
ur• ot"' OAILY 1"11.0T.I ENTER LAUGHING f rd h · · your price.
H ll . ff ell an attractive man. Sordid, decadent and rom ga en or s op in in· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22_
FAMILY ar10us, a e onate I'HE GRADUATE_ Comic blasphemous film about ex pensive arrangements.
AROUND 'MIE WORLD IN fi
9308
Im olinJewlsh life dutinb satire of a young man who Satan and witchcraft. She also will give tips on J.an. 19 ): Visit which had
80 DAYS -(X) -Adven· \S:: the Bronx. breaks out ol materiali&th i'HE SECRET LIFE OF AN how to preserve cut flowers been put off may occur to·
turous Londoner and his THE FLIM·FLAM MAN -world of his elders. AMERICAN WIFE and will'demonstrate the art day. Strive for un·
valet wager they can cir· Comedy of chicanery. · of making fucllsia cor· -d~standi!fg• of o P P o s i ng
cle the earth in 80 days. SPEEDWAY -Musical LIVE FOR LIFE -French Sophisticated 1 trict1 Y sages. . views. Glimmer of. truth can
BLACKBEARD'S. G. HOST_ comedy about a stock oar drama about a t.elevl!ion adult comedy of a . bored . Th 7 30 1. .
Marriage
Mrs. Lois Hutchison of
Newport Beach has an·
noonced the erigagement of
her daughter, Sharon Lynn
Hutchison to Ray Austin
Arnold·, son or Mrs. Mar·
guerite Voboril ,Qf Lincoln,
Neb.
A September wedding is
being plannedo
Miss Hutchison is a grad·
uate of Corona de! Mar High
School 8nd Orange Coast
Plans Told
College where she was a
member or Sigma Gamma,
interclub council president,
A WS president and secre·
tary and president and sec·
re t a r y-t:reasurer of the•
Math and .l!.:ngineering Club.
She plans to continue her
education at C a 1 if ornia
State College at Fullerton.
Her fiance is a sophomore
at Orange Coast College
and served for four years
with the U. S. Navy.
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
journalist, his personal suburban housewife, e : p.m . mee mg, in Walt Disney's adventures racer and his staggering the American Legion Hall in bu1~ life and his Involvement TONY ROME n-1vate of famous pirate. '-"· -• " · Costa Mesa, is open to the o o N • 'f RA I s E T H E WILL PENNY -Itinerant with the violent world eye uncovers corpses in public.
wbo · b ht · around him. thriller cont r t ,· g BRIDGE, LOWER TI-IE co Y ts roug n1to as n Club members are asked
RIVER. Big time wheeler· contact with a home NEVADA SMITW -Violent millionaires and lowlife. to bring plants for the plant
dealer schemes to win family and love in thi~ western. X denotes excellent film. table. t>ack wife who wants di· unglamorized view o 1J -----------------.:..C:=~......:=::.... _______ JI
vorce. Montana durl.ng 1880s.
~uUt=~
ANNUAL AUGUST
THE JUNGLE BOOK -Disney version of Kipl· MATURE TEENS
ing's tale of boy reere<rin· AND ADULTS
jungle by a family of TI!E FAMILY WAY -Lack ~~l~e~E AND ONLY. GE-~fo ~i:aa~yn :i~.:om:u:o~~ enne~J
NUINE. 0 R 1 G IN AL cerUngly earthy interest
FAMILY BAN O ' in their affairs threaten ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY
SATURDAY
LAST DAY!
American politics of 1880s ' the marriage of a young
p r o vi de a p e r i o d English coople.
background for th i s THE GREEN BERETS -
Disney musical. Authentic action · packed
PRIVATE NAVY OF SGT. patriotic war film.
O'FARRELL -Good· GUESS WHO'S COMING TO
natured spoof on a lonely DlNNER -Moving story
isle in the Pacific during of ~nt's reaction to a
World War JI. racially mixed marriage.
THE RUSSIANS ARE COM-0 D D C 0 UP LE -
ING -Hilarious comedy Uproarious comedy 1 n
about a Russian sub-which two Ul·matched ex·
marine grounded at Cape marrieds d\:!cide to room
Cod. together.
SHAKIEST GUN IN THE THE SAND PEBBLES -
WEST -0.,..,1;~1 11:~"~ Story about crew of
his fortune in Wild West of American gunboat, San
1880s in this slapstick Pablo, set in Ohina during
western. political unrest oI the
THOROUGHLY MODERN 1112()g.
MILLIE -(X) -Musical THE SCALPHUNTERS -
spoof of l9'l0s. Trapper and runaway
TIIE YOUNG AMERICANS slave follow trail of stolen
-Delightful pcoduction in petta in thia gory and
which talented teenagers violent film.
sing their way across the WHERE WERE Y 0 U
U.S.A. WHEN THE LIGHTS
YOURS, MINE AND OURS WENT Otrr? -Famous
-(X) -Warm, lively blackout of November.
domestic comedv of a 1965 , servl!I as
widowed n'lval o f f i c e r background for this com·
with 10 childJWl and a edy.
Navy widow --With eight ADULTS
children who marry. A FINE MADNESS
TEENS AND ADULTS Crude film about sick -
COUNTDOWN -Story of l ·------···--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:I how race to moon affects II
an astronaut. his family
and friends.
COUNTERPOINT -Ex·
Alumni Meet
Orange County Catholic
AJumni Club will hear a Jee.
ture by the Rev. Bob Nicb·
ols, director for the county
b r a n c h of the Southern
Chri.!itian Leadership Con·
ference-West.
The meeting will take
place at 7:30 p.m. next
Monday In t h e Charter
House, Anaheim.
RUTH BRYANT-Beauty Consultant
pr•••nts
MUU NORMAN COSMnlCS
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
For cornplimtnttry color I m•k•·up •ntlysis •..
646-4026
Irina Ad f« f'rft Glft wtth trDPOtntmtnt
. 2tJ L 17 .. St, C-M-Jcwtlr7 .... _ 1 ....
REDUCED I
~ U••YOUA rENNEY
CHARGE
F ACCDUNT
TCJDAVI
Back-to-school savings
on quality underwear!
toys' •clerwear
Reg. 3 m 2.19
3 for 1.77
lloro' T..t.lm and b<left of ..Ft '°"'bed
-Double -brim oho ......
-· flot kn~ T..it!m -.,..... Nfft. i.....i ....... lloro' -6 lo 11.
-
Glrls' •nderweer
Reg. 3 for 1.7 5
'
3 for 1.44
HUNTINGTON BEACH COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH
! "· '
' SWlttaiP'tt y~ SALE!
ALL
CREDIT
CARDS
Famous Brand
Names-You
1All Know.
BarCJains After
BarCJains!
Prices Slashed
to Exciting New
Lows!
33 113 .. so•.4
OFF
on
Shifts ..
Skirts
Sun Dresses
Cotton Dresses
Cocktail Dresses
Capris
Blouses
Lingerie
Sweaters
Swim Suits
Swim Suits -Prices Slashed
300/o to SOo/o off
3424 Via Udo • Newpoit IHch
alto Disneyland Hotel
••
. .
. . . . . : . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . • : : . . . • . . . . . . . . • i . . . . . . . . . . . .
. l
f . .
l . . .
:
:
f . . . .
•
.. ---... -.. . '
Friday, August 9, 1%8 OAILV PJLOT J:J
II
.. -
ONE DAY ON!.Y! SOME QUANTITIES LIMITED! SORRY, NO PHONE OR MAIL ORDERS
I' \
. ~ A', f!• ·,·, ~
I ~ p 1 'o . -9 ,0 .+
4k ~/f
Pierced aid pltrctd·
look 11rrl11s saler
• Nowo•t fall style•
• Pierced with 14kt.
posts; rich looking
• Buttons and drops
SAVE TO 61 •,
77!.
RI~. TO $Z •
SATURDAY ONLY!
-
IOYIAI
HAIAllTll
v .. ,o1 .... i..,.,.,1r .. 11
...... fciih ~."' '•'octlt• ••1•~•11 er wot~-"""I' '••Ing ""' ' y••f'I •fl•• ,.rd>oi,. w~011 lntlo~
... 1.i...ii.1 .......... ,., '
~•w "-'"' olSO'I. ofCllf·
...... prk• ,1 .. 10"
'"'"chwcue<fjot y"rlf
'•"" hilh '"'"'' ............ flvo yooro, l"otoUo!loo
c!Mir•ts HI , ... orul ofrtr flnt 7ot1r.
= = = =
Wards new Signature "300"
30"9111on gas water heater
·o ldeel lor tho •mall SAVE 20 'o
home, vacation cabin
• 30.2GPH.t IOOriso 3911 • Glass lined ·tank
64.88, 30·GAL. 59.88
7.4.8.8, WARDS BEST
30.GAL. .•..• 69.88 RE~. 49.88
S.UURDAY ONLY!
2'14' p11•011d for
k1tc•n, works•opl
• Holds pots end pens
. • Perfect for tools
• Buy several-save
SAVE !Oc
REG. 4tc · HO OKS ....• le eo • .._ ___ __..
SATURDAY ONLY!
' .,
J
1.
; ""'"" ' I \ ~-
• •• 's c~tt~1 kitt · -• .
t1rtlt·1t1k s•lrtl
• Smooth flat kn \t
• Cool short sleeves
• Full turtlo·n•<'!! . RIG. J.ff
• Fashionable c9J'Or1 .. '-....<.----'
PrtttJ 1111111 wtaYt
floral prl1t •la1k1tl
• Rayon and Nylon
• Machine wash, dry
• Moth, mildew proof
• Size 72-in. x 90-in.
SAVE $1
499
HG. 5.ff
, SATURDAY ONLY! SATURDAY ONLY!
RIG.14.ff
e Heevy g&ug• 1teel
• 3-in. high drew•rs
• For tools, perts
UNCONDITIONA
OUARANTll
If any Powr-
Kraft• socket,
ratchet or drive
port In this tool
Mt falls t9 give
you .com.pl1t1
aatlsfactlon
Warm will ,..
place it or refund
your money.
-"-........ _,. __ ---"\. ___ _
. .
3-dr. rollaway
tool c•est salt
552
HG. 64.'8
1 large flush-front
drewers op•n fwlfy
• 8i9 bottom ·•fori9e
30-piece socket set for fast, SAVE 15.02
easy household fix-ii iobsl
• 3/8" retchBt~ flex handle, bar; 5" extension: spinner
hondle; 23 •ockets 13/16· I 3/16"}; 3/8 • 1/4" adoptor
• Guaranteed quality sockets made of hot forged steel 19~
• The custom-fitted case organizes set for easy selection RECi. 34.90
SATURDAY ONLY!
la•p liter co1trol
t1r11 ll1•t 01, off
• Photo-electric lite
contro~just plug in 2''
• No wiring is needed 6.ts VALUE
• Discourages burglars.._ __ -;:;;'·'"'-;;_-'
SATURDAY ONLY!
ltlay Yolct ~-•llt wit• W@lklt talkies
• Strong, 4-transistor
circuitry; rugged
• 9·Vbatt.,y! operaies
on Cititens bend
'Batteries not incl .
SAVE 1. II
'
SA TUR DAY ONLY !
Kltc•u or111lurs
of •••reaka•I• polr
• Durable, li ghtweight
poly-pretty colors ·
• Swish thru suds to ·
keep fresh for years
REG. 41c
SATURDAY ONLY!
NO MONEY DOWN
Signature 9-cyde washer leas
economy water-saver control
·• Complete fabric core
• 5-wesh-rinse temps.
• 4-speed combination
• Bleach dispenser and
. lint filter; 3·colors
SAVE 50 95
s199 ·
a&: Jolt.ti
SATURDAY ONLY!
Zl1·za1 porta•lt, for
•o•t st•l•t 1ttdsl
• Handy, fest' sewin9
• Fancy st iichesj has
adjus t. drop IHd
base1 foot control
SAVE $2 7
RI~. $65
SATURDAY ONLY !
SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY TILL 9-SVNDAY -11 A.M. TO · 5 P.M. . ~
HUNTINGTON BEACH s:~ :ei::: :r~"J'!· PHONE 714-892-6611
!
..
' I
14 OAJlY fllOT
Mexico City Gives 'Boot' to Lions-Eagles Tilt
B1 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
P!ttabllrCh 1J at St Louil and
C!evolllld 1J It Lo& Anaeles ton!Cht i.o
the ope.-1 tor a lour-day pro football
elhibition scbedU1e that wu thrown
Into 1om• confusion 1ai. Tbunday by
the canceiatloa. ot a ICheduJed Detroit·
Philadelphia game ID Mulco City.
The Eagin and Uon1 were slated to
play in• Sunday altomoon game to be
tele\'lted notionally In the United
Slllel.
No remon w• given for the ca:ncella·
U011 ln the joint announcements made
in Mexico City, Philadelphia and
Detnit 11w.r1day night, but there was
.. .
'
*
Jffisse• No-hitter
speatj&Uon tht game w11 called
~·• ot atudent unrest that baa
plagued the city in recent month1.
National Football League olficlals,
along with the Uons and Eaeies Im·
mediately began workln& on providing
another site for the game.
Whether the game goes OQ or not, at.
lea!j.t 12 othen will. The long weekend
winds up Monday night with the New
York Jet.a: playing Houston Jn the
Astrodome.
Seven games are scheduled Satur·
day, including two more of lhOfie NFL
vs. AFL affairs, and at least two Sun·
day games, perhaps three lf the
Phlladelphla·Dttrolt Problml can be
aolved.
The Rams-Browns clash features a
meeting Of the NFL'• defend.in•
Coastal and Ce,lttury Division cbam·
pions. The Rams, who won tM.ir
opener on two late touchdown pMse1
by Roman Gabriel are favored by a
touchqown, even though not at full
strength.
Deleo~lve elld D.ivid Jo0«..and split
end Jack Show ended their salary
dispute holdouts Thursday. They won't,
play tonight.
'fhe Browns' devastating offense
centers around quarterback Frank
Ryan, fianker Gary Collins and nm·
nln& backs Ernie Greeo and Leroy
Kelly.
Young quarterbackl will be in action
in the St. LouU-PltUbur&b game, Jirn
Hart for the Cards.
Pittsburgh Coach Bill Austin said
'Illurtday Kent Nix will play the first
half and Dick Shiner will take over,
"We'll do tt that w1y for perhaps the
Iirst thne games," Austin said.
"From then on, we'll play Jt by ear."
The NFL, trailing 3-1 Qi its ex·
hibition& with the AFL. hopes to catch
up Saturday. Kansai City of the AFL
was impressive in a 38.14 victory over
expansion NFL team Cincinnati last under new quarterback Don Trull.
week and now toe• a&ainat the ViJ<:· New Orilee.ns' Billy Kilmer threw for
ings at Mlnnea:ot.a. BOiton of the Ati.J two touchdowns and bad another
opem at NFL New Orleans. nullified by a penalty ln last week's
The Chiefs, however, fumbled four loss to Loa Angeles.
tJmeg against CinciMati and Coach The other Saturday games are
Hank Stram warned "you can't lose AUanta vt. Wasbingtm at Tampa.
the ball that many times and hope to Fla., Baltimore vs. Chicago at Birnt-
win the big ones." ingham. Ala .. New York at Green
The game at Minneaota could be a Bay, all in the NFL, and Cincinnati at
big one. For one Ullng , they're a much Denver and San Diego at Oakland in
toqgller _team Ulan the new Bengals the AFL.
and have yet to win .agalnst AFL op-In addition to the now canceled Mex·
position. Gary .Cuozzo makes his debut ico City game, Sunday's schedule has
as the Vikings' quarterback. Dallas at San r~rancisco in the NFL
Boston's game at New Orleans' ls and Mia ml vs. Buffalo at Rochester,
the Patrio~' opener. They'll epera.te-N.Y., in_ the AF!.:i. _1
-City Fatliers Unveil Temporary Stadium Site
Dead ·Montreal Rolls Over
MONTREAL (APl -Montreal
received encouraging neWs TJlursday
night when it was announced the city
and sponsors of the proposed National
League baseball expansion team had
reaxhed an agreement on the aite of a
temporary stadium.
Montreal Mayor Jean Drapeau
emerged from a marathon four·hour
meeting with sponsors, city officials
and a high-ranking baseball represen-
tative and i.uued a brief one • minute
statement to waiting reporters.
McLain(23)
Continues
Wild Pace
, ~ DETROIT (AP) -"[ didn't have a _ ,. :. ~---thing-out t.fiere---:-. , it was a good thing ~ the team got me a doieri runs." " I"~· The speaker was Detroit Tiger
: pitcher Denny McLain and he was
wrong on both counts.
McLain. winniIJgest pitcher in the
major leagues with 23.J record, set the
Cleveland Indians down 13-1 Thursday
night.
He was wrong oo the sc.oce -the
Tigers got 13, not 12 -and he was
wrong when he said he didn't have a
good stuff in his six-hit effort as the
"Afte.i; many hours of meetings I am
pleased to inform everyone that we
have succeeded in reaching a formula
of agreement feasible lo both parties,"
the mayor said.
He said the agreement "implies the
use of Jarry Park Stadium," a huge
city.owned and operated park located
in the north end of Montreal.
"The city will bring the stadium up
to National Leagqe standards," Mayor
Drapeau said in his hand-~itten state-
ment, which be read in French first
and then translated into English.
He closed his brief statement by ' sayi.ng that further inform·ation would
be made public "during tile coming
week."
Before making ~ speech. the
mayor insisted that neither he nor
anyone connected with Thursday
night's meeting be a"Sked any ques·
tions following his statement.
Sitting in on Thursday's: meeting
along With the mayor were Georges
Mantha, director of Montreal's parks
• Ill Grave
and playgrounds ; Charles Bronfman,
Sidney Maislin and Lorne Webster.
sponsors of the proposed club; Gerry
Snyder, vice·chairman of the city's ex·
ecutive committee: and John McHaJe,
administrator in B as e b a 11 CoJll·
missioner William D. Eckert'• office.
Warren Giles, president of the Na·
tional Letgue who attended all4ay
meetings at City Hall Wednesday,
visited Jarry Park Wednesdiy nia:bt
with McHale and Mayor Drapeau ill.·
stead of reb.trning to New York u be
said he would do.
Scorer Records Safety,
But Wise Is Satisfied
league le~ding Tigers &wept a four4
game ser1t'l6.
''Denny was working well and he
bad contrvl when he needed it," e.x·
plained Tiger catcher Bill Freehan,
who slammed a pair of home runs to
bring his season total to 16.
"When a pitcher gets a big lead. he
works a bit differently than when he is
in a real close game and Denny work·
eel well out there." Freehan Said. -LOS ANGELES (AP) -Most major
league pitchers raise a howl on those
rare occasions when a borderline of·
ficial scorer's decision deprives them
of a no-hitter. But the Philadelphia
Phillies' Rick Wise is an exception.
''The decision could have gone either
way -I'm just happy to pitch a
shut.out and win a game after the way
Dodger Slate
Aut. t Ooel .. r• YI Phlle<Mllpllle 1:" •.m. KF I (UOI
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I've been going lately," Wise said
Thursday night after he hurled· a bne-
hit, 1-0 victcry over the Los Angeles ,
Dodgers.
Philadelphia shortstop Rober to
Pena thougbt Wise was "robbed" of a
no-hitter.
The lone Log Angeles safety came
with one out in the third inning when a
grounder by Bart Shirley took a wick·
ed. high hop and caromed off the tip of
Pena's a:love.
"I should have had it -it should
have been scored as an error," said
Pena.
Wise accepted the decision with.out
rancor.
"It happened early in the game and
it could have been .5Cored either way.''
said the 22·year..old right-bander of the
decision that kept him from entering
b•ebaU '1 record books.
Wilt, M . allowed only one runner to
advance u far as second bsse. He
retired tht lut 10 batters in 1uc·
cession to 1aim his ilfth victory in
1evea lifetime decision& against Los
An&el•s.
HEMPHILL HALTED
IN COMEBACK TRY
LOS ANGELES CAP) -The slow
but ,... """""'"* ol heav)'W<ighl
Joe Jkm9hlll bu been slowed, .and
u.t'• lot sun. nae 1915-pound Los Angele& boxer. in
bil teeand oullnl In two yurs, sul·
fered a -.,.,.,. cle[eat T1111nday Dia11t at 1be lw!ds of Tooy Doyle or
Salt I.Me City. D1Y1t, _,.,_, leaded a 10Ud ri&ht in
Ibo !lflll rvund IDll Hemphill appeared
to hl:llll • tM ropes. There were no
kJw<' a JJDI. lllf-1M G<-ollll>Ol1 _.ed the !lllltN. Judpo J• 111omu had it Ii-
i •lea Olmll -od tht wtooer 6-
•· 1
u,
"I've aJways thought Rick had good
stuff," said Dodger Manager Walter
A.lbton, "but I've never seen him
throw as hard as he did tonigat. He
was overpowering "
Abton also had praise for loser Bill
Singer. 9-11 , who had the ?hils shut
out on four hits until Richie Allen won
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-2:16. A!len1!1nct -
the game with a ~20·foot homer
leading off the ninth inning.
The drive into the distant center
field pavilion was Allen's 23rd homer
of the year and &addled the Dodgers
with their 25th loss in their last 36
games.
"It was the best game Singer has
pitched in~lo g while." aaid Alston.
But Singer w distraught in defeat.
"Allen · a fast ball wl.th nothing nn
it," said. e young righthander. "I
think it's the first hit he t".&5 ever got ·
ten off me. I got h.im vut easy the first
three times he came up toni&ht."
McLain said a rain.caused 90-minute
delay in the start of the game contest
did not bother him too much.
"As a 1natt.er of fact. I was a bit
surprised when they came and tDld me
the game was on, for the way it was
raining at game time and the next
hour. I figured we would be washed
out," McLain said.
McLain was a tit unhappy with his
pitching performance. even though he
set the Indians down with two hits
over the last six innings after being
touched for four hits in the first three
innings.
··I did not have a thing out there
tonight,".he said with extreme candor.
The Tigers were locked in a
Scoreless duel until the bottom of the
third when they scored six runs off ln-
di&fls' starter Sonny Siebert.
ATTORNEY CLAIMS
OWNERS ST ALLING
NEW YORK CAP) -A crisis i~
developing between the major League
Baseball Players Assocfation and ttie
owners.
Marvin Miller. executive director of
the association, made that assertion
Thursday in aceusing the owners of
stalling on negotiations on the players'
benefit fund . which comes up for
renewal aft.er this season.
Miller s aid negotiations should
start no later than mid.August. He
said the owners' proposal to wait until
late fall would cause complications.
Bird Food
'llhe St. Louis Cardinals, runaway leaders in the
National League, have been thriving lately on the
newest Cardinal delicacy -sunflower seeds. Out·
fielder Roger Maris (left) receives his quota from
third baseman Mike Shannon fright). How the new
fad was started, no one is quite sure, but the world
champion Cardinals can afford some off·beat re·
taxation with a 14-garne lead.
Angels: Punchless Wonders
Yield to Game's Worst Club
By EARL GUSTKEY
Of ""' OllllP ,li.t '""'
BAL TIM ORE -Bil.I Rigney sat
slumped in Ute visiting manager's of.
lice at D. C. Stadium Thursday night
and contemplated the Angels' 7·2 loss
to baseball's worst team. th e
Washington Senators.
What galled Rigney even m0tt than
the fact that it was the Angels" eighth
defeE..t in 12 games on ttie current bip,
was the fact the winner was Jim Han·
nam.
··wasn't that temble?" he inquired
of writers attirward.
"Tha1 guy was ~ting us out on
nothillg -we need come punch in tbat
lineup."
The punchless wonders from Orani:e
County are in Baltimore this evening
to t.oke on the Orioles in a three· game
set ending Sunday afternoon. Bill Har-
relson (0·2' duels Dave McNalley (14·
8J tonight.
When Rig opined Ulat his ball club
needed more punch. he was speaking
A,,.e1 Slate
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in terms of a 21-year-old fi rst beseman
playing for the Angels' El Paso club.
Jim Spencer.
At I.o:st c0unt. Spencer hid 21 home
runs in the TexM League and 70
RBl'1.
Why is Rig looking for allOGier first
baseman wh en he has the veteran Don
Mincher, you ask? WeU. Mincher is
one reason why the Angels aren't win·
n.ing many ball games.
His average has been dwindling for
the last month and currently rests at
.243.
He went hitless in the cleanup spot
ThW"sday night while the No. 3 hitter,
Vic DavaJillo had a three-for-four
evening.
Top U.S. Tra~k Stars at Mt. SAC
Davalillo, hitting .239, turned in a
typical effort. His three hits advaT1ced
a runner to third each time but in all
instances they fiailed to s: co r e.
navalillo will frequently attempt to
ste~I sec.ond aft.er singling merely to
avoid bei.ng gobbled up in a Mincher
double play ball.
Spencer is onJy 21 and might not yet
be seasoned enough for the big leagues
but look for ttll! Angels to give him a
crack at It when the Texas League
season ends around the first of Sep.
tember.
WALNUT <AP) -Crack athlete:i; hoping lo make the U.S. men's
Olympic track learn luned up todiy for the t.hird 'Pre-Olympic meet
Salurday atternoon at Mt. S;1.n Anton.lo Colleee.
The array.of compdjtor1 lntlude seven tporting world record&,
either official or pending.
The)' include J im Ryun, the young Kans.at star who hold~ th1
world rtCOrd in tht mile, but hun't yet measured up to Olympic
tll.Ddards this year becauae of illneu.
Ryun was hit by mononucleo5i1 in the apring and couJdn'I make
lht college championship• or Olympic Trials.
But he ran a 1:47.9 half-mile two weeks ago in FlaJ?"stafr. Ariz.
The Ol.ympic quaillying mark 11 3:42 in the 1,500 meter race Saturday,
equivalt!nt to a four·minute·O•t mile run,
In the 100-meter dub will be the Utret 1prlntt:ra who st..Mled
clockwatcber1 at the MU ChamPionahips June 2l in Sacramento with
9.9 marks, ponding wocld re...U. Tiie three are Ronnlo Ray Smllh, .
Charlie Greene and Jim Hines.
OthO( top eoni.nder1 Include Ralph s.-, who hold! the world
t
long jump record of 27-4o/4 : Randy Matson. world title holde.r ln the
shot put with 71·S'A; and Jay Silvester, who ha& a pending world ... cord
d.i.lcU1 throw Of 218-4.
Trainers will be usessing how recent high.altitude U-&lning af-
fecU~ the performances al Mt. SAC," only Sl9 feet above sea level.
Then the candidates return to the l~·mile altitude of South Lake
Tahoe next month for final trials which determine wtwi make1 the
Olympic team .
Timers In several evenl5 Saturday will be at both meters and
yards to give two chinces at records.
Ticket.a, all priced at $3, are on sale at the L.A. Coliaeum Ticket
Office; Vroman's, 695 E . Colorado, 2nd Floor, Pasade.na ; liill'r, Inc.,
505 No. Mtdn St., Santa Ana; In 1he Potnona ttt1, ticket.a are 1v&ilable
at the Pomona Ctlamber ol. OomJMrce. 14' E. a'd St. or Covina
Chamber of Commerce, 153 E. College, Covina; any Pomona First
Fodenl Savlnp .i. Loan Ol!ice.
All procffd8 10 to tho Unit.cl Stat .. 01,ymplc Jl'und.
,
'Jbere's no two ways about it -the
Angels must have some sock ii they're
lo avoid a disastrous finish this year.
W.UHIMGYOfll .. , ~,..
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F:td.ly, flll']U\t IJ, 19'8
BUD TUCKER
Eric Pa.tto11 Vs.· Tom Fitzpatrick
North, South Coaches Ge::nef~nse on Linebackers -
I By ROGER CARLSON on him .' .. definJtely." llla job ho\Jtt conftkt with
oit *' EH11J ''• 11"' Slated to stop t h e . the IS p.m. atartipa times for LOS ANGELES-If George Allen never wins a National Coach Jim Coon of the Anaheim buUdour at one of practice. ·
rootball League championship, you can throw out ded.icatioa SQuth contingent of the up-the linebacker positions is Standing. by In the w~gs
and devotion and alavery to a purpoee as worthwhile tra.its coming North-South AU -Star Mater Del's gift to Notre are two mot:t defensive
in a human being. Cootball game (Aug. 22) at Dame, Eric Patton. , gema U Berr .ii unavailable.
George Allen Is bead coach of the Rams football team Orange Coast Co 11 e g e ' s Patton, a. 6-2 210-pounder, One la Mike Spradling of
and his desire to win a championship drives him. After be LeBard Stadium was a little will anc~_or the ~uth's wide-Estaocla. The other is Gary
wins it, he 'll find something else to drive him but at the hesitant when asked tr hiJ> tackle-six defense against McGlnnls of Santa Ana
mome.rit "he wants a title so badly he can taste it. He can defensive troops would be Fitzpatrick's runiiing anCt. Villey.
taste it more vividly than the Jee cream he is always eating. keying on Tom Fitzpatrick quarterback Brad Wekall & Both players are presently
George had a championship with the Ch.icago Bears in of t?e No~th. ,, Company'• pass~ng game. on the alternate squad, but
1963 when he was in charge of the Bears' defensive unit. Fttzpatr1ck, the All -CIF . The other side of ~e movement for at least· on. ThL!!_~fense was Iarge!t cr~~!te~ as.J>eJ!ll~~~sible for Pla:er of the Year for_ ':he _hneba~ker tan~~m__l! !12.-;.ln to Jhe active roster is im·
the Bears wlnrung ever~~h:Ji.g and Allen was VViftdUe rec.-Cl~ ~ampion An ~ he t nr tlte-atr""'beeause or Jun mlneDt ~,-U-unable,.. . . '!tu" Colonists, ts the obvious run-Berg's outs 1 de com· compete.
ognition. . . ning attack f<1r the North. mJtment.s. Berg, a near-dou-Brook Smith ol Santa Ana
The Chicago p~ayent sang an accolade to Allen in the Finally, attrr hesitating ble in physical status with has also been added to the
locker room followmg the championship game, the words to for a few moments Coon his former Mater-Dei team-alternate squad. He is a
\•thich _were heard on national television. The Bears bad a revealed, "I didn't wa'.nt it to mate, Patton, is locked up in defenftw tackle.
championship and they nearly had a jail sentence. be in print, but beck. a predicament of available Sp radlhfg spearheaded
naturally we 're going to key hours. coach John Low_ry's E1tan.
.
eta defense last year while fens-Ive backfield tor the
running at the fullback slot. North in the power position,
He's ~foot-9, 180 poUDds. however, Karch wUl be able
!he, gal!le, ninQ.l. in the_ to concentrate full time on
.Nse
0
rrtbles, .~~· ~-ene'sw~1b1ey tthbee the defenslv~ aide ot the u. uin ...,Ul game in stopping the South
South bas managed only two and its passing game.
wins. Karch will be Oanked by
Coach Herb Hill's jug-John Ruisell of Garden
gerDaut wiUOe utilizing' a 4-Grove and John Miller of
3 pro defense along with a 5-Fullerton while the Yanks
2 "Oklahoma" type of are using 1 4-3 defense.
defen1e to teep the South In the Oklahoma shlft,
ho~sL .:.___ ---l41&ffll. -moves-to-defensive
Lead.Ing th• pack o f end. . •
linebackers lor the North Reg8rding a red dog or
will bt Jim -Karch af blitz on the South's passing
Servile. Olf'ensively, Karch attack, Hill rem ark e d ,
was the starting fullback for "We'd like to do some."
Servile'• Angelus League Coaching the N or t b
champions last year. linebackers will be Hill
With Fihpatrlck In the of· l>imseil.
ERIC PATTON
ToKoyD-..
But that was 11 u a1sbtant coach. George Alle\
ls obsessed wldt the Jdea of winning a title all his owo.
He tbouibt be bad It in 1961. Tbe Rams went into the
divisional playoff wltb the Green Bay Packers on a
frozen day 1n Milwaukee and 101t It.
Three Basie Roles GOLFING A L}.
WITH ,./lf.l(JJ/.d r~ Top Final Threat
Allea waa 1twrned. He sat on a trunk In the locker
room wearing the look of a man ·who bad juat bad an en·
counter with a woman driver. He thought at the time -
and still swears up and_4._own -he had the best team.
Allen would not nseft as an excuse at the time but
some months later be admitted his athletes were bother·
ed by the tenlble cold ta Milwaukee, whereas the Pack·
ers were used to tt and took the obvious advantage.
"I would like to play the Packers every week all winter,''
Allen was to say later. _
That, however, is ancient history. Allen claims it Js all
f<>rgotten and turns his attention to the new season upcom-
ing. Once again he thinks he has the best team.
George Allen is a strange man. All coaches wish to win
and if they a,re good coaches, they burn most oI their energy
in that direction. But Allen is something else.
His desire is almost less than normal.
He does not think of anything else, He does not seeni
capable of a conversati<1n about anything else. His world
is tiny and it is dearly defined. U ta ~ about football and
winning and nothing else.
Otae-traek Mfu
'Etiquette Week'
For the Duffers
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Qu!ck what wttk iil!I Jt?
No, not just the week <lf
the Republican convent.ion
or the week of Aug. 4, it's
Golf Rules and Etiquette
Week. At le2$t it is in
Oalifomi'a.
The state senate officially
proclaimed the week by
pa!oSing a resolution
sponsored by Sens. Clair
Burgener of San Diego and
Lou Cusanovich of the San
Fernando Valley.
And the Northern and
Southern California sections
of the Profes-sione.l Golfert1
Association have seized tne
occasiOo to remind golfers
of the rula5 and etiquette <1f '
the fairways that they say
are too often forgotten.
Joe Za!tarian and Howard
SmiUt, presidents of the
Northern and Southern
Aasoclations respectively,
have prepared a small
You might think thl1 would mate Allea aa tntere1t. mountain of material on the
tog interview. It does not. He la too wrapped up even subject. Herewith are some
to dlscuH the things that go through hl1 oae.track mind. METRO LOOP of their findings.
Be telll you things like, "Our team has some short. "Ther:e are not too many,
___ ~_omipgs bul ,we will make up lo~ wllb 1J1lrlt aa_d __ ,1 'R' uJ:! . .aLr-OSE _.,ule<-la-1a11~~--:-prlde and i -Sliicere-deitft-to"WJ.il."' --1r.r.tl". :T'L..J IUJ _,_
Corny, to be sure, but that ls what comes eut wllen "However, they are like the
George Allen opens bis mouth. Metro League baseball words to tbe second verse of
Most professional athletes are swingers to one degree is in its final stages with the National Anthem -good
or another. For this rea1on, you wonder bow Allen ceta this weekend's agenda stuff, but read by very tew
the remarkable effort ont of bis men. Clearly, be ts not capping the re i u la r people.
th Lr f season. "It •·-been estimated e type o guy. G Id W t I ·-o e n es s that a goUer's chan-· of But he has sornething. He lnjecta something into his men hed 1 d t t 1 -sc u e o mee eague-making a hole-in-one are hat makes them want to win. He says it is pride, maybe it I ding •··•· An ~ 'ght ea .:>CU,... a wm greater than the probability
is. at 7 at Boysen Park in that he will read the rules of Allen creates respect In people who do not even know Anaheim and then ends 1"· 1.:1 the game."
him. oampaign with a 7 p.m. The tllree basic rules of
Woody's Cagers
Scent OCC Title
----·
KEEP YOUR WEIGHT
"INSIDE" YOUR FEET
Woody's Wharf put lhe
1968 Costa Mega Recreation
Basketball League cham·
piooshlp in the refrigerator
Thursday niiht a6 the Wharf
Rats stand <1nly a
theoretical chance of b¢.Dg:
tied in b final standings af-
ter a 93-78 triumph over
Jabsco Pump at Orange
Coast College.
In the first game of the
night Orco-7 was rescued
from ·humiliation as they
sto~ by the revived
Johnson and Son sponsored
Orange Coast College con·
ti~ent, 71-69.
Curley Manfree's Jaboco
Pump clan were out tD bait
tbe Woody's •tamped•
toward the champi1'Mhip
and ·trailed· by only two at
the hail, 39-37.
But Wharf .. lW John
F'alrchlld pa«d his squad tn
a 54-p<>int second haif and
sent his team over the list
hurdle to the top spot in the
final standings., Fairchild, of
the ABA's Los Angeles
Stars, collected 32 for the
night, followed by, team-
mates Dave Waxman and
Bob Bedell who e a c b
dumped in 19.
Tht figures on tht left and riaht in the itl ustra· * '1;( *
..JiQn.. 1h_ow the 1olfer in th•_• .. 1.~~fl.~iamUia.t.!!sw~:~· -+-·~-"-------::: ~--·-------~---·------~ • kt"' •y ·H11¥1l position-aw1y from tut t1r1tt on the backsw1n1, ore0o1 lS 36-11
towards tht t1rget on th• downswina:. Joh"'°" " :,: .. 1 ,111
33 ~
The sway robs your swins of power. It prohibits Po l'T
you from fully coiling on y0:ur b1ck_swing and re-j:ff~.. ~ :
leasing on· your downswing. ·r~e sway 1lso moves G••"' ', ', "" the club out of its proper path , thus·causing miss· 1111eh•tt 12 s
hit shots. t••1• Jo1111M11 ., '1! 1~t
To pravent swaying, you stlculd never ltt your "" l'T
We ight shift to the outside of Your feet. It snould ~:~;::" t ~
shift to the instep of your right foot dlJring your ~~.~;~ve i ~
b1ckswin1 end onto, but not outside of. your left s.tv•• s, •,
f d . 5.chtrmerharn oot on your ownsw1ng. coon 1 '
Sllck~elr l f
" • ' ' ' ' " " ' 1
' 1 • ' ,
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" " " " " " ' ' " " • • • •
Coliseum
To Host
Two Titles
Gene Mauch, the baseball manager, said the other day, struggle with Cal State th Zak · d "Tl t um· · t to th R I t (Fullerton) Sunday a I e game, say anan an ---------------------1e nex e you are going ou e am camp, e me . Smith, are play 1he course Mc(1rtl" 3 t Tof11t 31 7 ' n • H
LOS ANGELES (,\j>)
Mando Ramos conllQatly
predicts he'll be the--ld
lightweight boring chaiDAOn
before he reaches hit 20th know. J w<1uld_like to watth George Allen in action. I would Shaffer Park in Orange. as you find it, play the ball D
like to see how a man like that operates." Ward 's Pi r ales , · 1 G L meanwhl'le, wrap up the1'r as 1t lies and pay fair. eep eorge Allen is a glave driver. So wag Vince ombardi, Other than this th Sea.on Saturday and Sun. , ey say. Sea Fish Report kHI .-, H1tvn Weo4~'$ Wh•rl 3f SI -'3
birthday. •
The. youngster from -1.ong
Beach. Calif., battles " the
135-pound king Carlo1 Teo
Cruz of the Dominican
Republic as part of a double
title outdoor cerd Sept. l• at
the Leis Angeles C<lliseum.
"'tl1e self-confesed Sunday madman. keep calm day. · But there is a difference in the two men. Lombardi work-"Even -~-ou m•-a The Pirates meet Wlat;:n y ... ,. cd with hate and admitted it. Allen does it some other way. shorl putt you can vent Chapman College Satur-• His players never say they hate hlm. d·ay at 7 p.m. at Shaffer your frustration.s and disap-
In fact. they play for him in a manner to suggest they Park and foUow with a 2 pointment in outbursts
love him but this is impossible. There is no room in George p.m. game with Long which are not crude or
Allen for any kind of love other than football. Even at that. Beach City Colleg~ at vulgar or uncontrolled. In
the type of football he loves Is limited to one S<rl. Memorial Park in santa fact, you might even try the
Winning football . Ana. more gentle approach or
C011rr111111 '"" ~ov TrllMllM 111e. laughing it off."
Schlee Takes -Classic Lead
AKRON, Ohio 1 (AP) -
Lightly regarded J oh n
Schlee finally bas emerged
from a long slump that
could lead t<J a $25,000
jackpot. .
'·I've had .a bad summer "
the third-year pro fro:n
Dallas said Thursday after
he blistered U!e back-break-
i n g 7,180-yard Firestone
Country Club layout with a
five-under·par 33-32-65.
Schlee's sizzling round,
wtiich included efght birdie s
and thr~ bogeys, equaled
thfl course record held NCAA rollegiate c h a m p
jointly by Doa Fairfield, Hale Irwin of Colorado and
Bob Rosburg and Arnold Lee Elder, the 1963 Negro
Palmer. Golfer of tlhe Year.
The 6-foot-2, 165-pound pro "I played well la st week
carried a two-stroke lead in· and I guess it came to a
to today's seco und of head today," the 29-year·old
the $125,00) America Goll ScJUee said.
Classic. The tour Rookie of the
In hot pursuit wM 23-yelil--___.r...,_ilt_l966, Schlee's best
old Bob Lunn, wh<1 posted an finish this season has been a
opening 35·32-67. tie for fourth at Lo s
Three strokes off the par Angeles. He has won
at 68 were veterans Art $16,618.
Walt Jr ., Gardner "This course ls a tremen-
DicldnlOD, JOhnny Pott, 1967 dous challenge, but I drove
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB W L Pct. GB
real wen and had a lot of
C!Ofi:e shots."
He also wielded a hot put-
ter, drilling ln birdie putts of
40 aod 60 feet. He needed
only p:i putts.
Lt\fl-n. ttle 1963 Public
Link$ titlist who has scored
victofies at Memphis and
Atla.nta, credited his fine
round t<J his pafrings with
Jack Nicklaus.
"You learn a l<Jt when you
play with Jack. It really
helps," he said.
Detroit 71 41 .634 St.. Louis 74 40 .649
Baltim.,.. 64 47 .577 61> Chicago llO S4 .526 14
Boston 61 51 ,545 10 A1.lanta 59 S5 .518 15
BENEFITS OF LEASING
THE FAMILY CAR
Cleveland 60 55 .52'l 121h Cincinnati 56 53 .514 15"2
Oakla nd 57 54 .514 131h; San Fnncisco 57 54' .51• 15"1 litcf'MSJ.. ll•l!llilen ., "--'•-....-
New York 51 57 .472 111 Pittsburgh 55 S8 .487 18 '12
Minnesota 51 59 .464 19 Philadelphia 52 59 .568 201,2 tHM "-fw...Uy ••· -"' .. ""' "'9 .._
California 5.t II .411 11~ New York 52 S.1 .447 221,i h: "wllet't tOG' f9" ,..._..,._ _,_
Chicago •7 62 .431 22Y.a Los A:ngelet 51 13 .447 %3
Washington 41 88 .376 281h Houston 48 86 .425 ~ ,... ... II .... ,...i fw Mt. ,.......
Tflll ...... f'• ll•lft TIWnll•r'• l-lh 80f!Ol'I t. CMt ... f Clllc-~ "111nl1 f · -... lu1 •II • .. c.a.., ,.... ....
Otkl111d 6, Htw YM ~ Pltt1bu.-.h ~ Hov1111<1 J lt111mort If. Ml.......it J il"l'lll.lpl'!l1 1, Liii Anttlll f ttH ...... wft\ ... ~ ....
Ollfllll ll, Clrttll/'11 1 $1. LOUii 1. ClflCIM1ll f Ill tnr1t,,.tl
WtJhl11tlOll 7, CtltfomJ1 J Olltv ....,.. Jdled~lllS. ..,._ fw $1U -lltlt .......... TMIY"I .._ T ... r', ......
1-n.M:::.":"· (Hiii NI " "'"' Yort !Vtrhfllc dtltl~;·:;t:J---f.7) tt $111 ll'rlflClla !Mllrt-... c..,.. ... .., .... .,.,, ...... ...
ni.ll~ltYllW (H..-..n 7-111 ti O!lc.tte (~ N J, •t"':"~ (....,. l•IO 1t LM °'""* (0.fMll ................. • --... ....
h llOft (Pl._1'1'9 ,_.) 11 Oltroll (lltlml •IC), p'"""""' (._.,. •ttl " HMIMfl !""'*"'
"'9111 .. ,), nltl'lt -............ , ....... ..... C1Hhlm1t (Hlrrt1-11-21 1tt lllllmofll IMdltTI'I Chkl9i ("'*-1111 l:t-lO) II (lrlc1-f! (A~lto
t"IJ. 111-llt 1-7), """' ..._, -----.... -O.klt ... fM\lllft!" '"' 11td Dellllllfl t-111 If W11ho II, """'-l01'Ml'I IHI If Al""'-ll'filkN IN ), .,.. • ,_ ,.., r""-1""·-~--·"_-_'_'"-""_-., __ .. _'.,.'-' _ .. _ .. _ .... ___ ,_._"--------------' -· ................ ,., ........... ...
Orang• Co.'1 Of<i.11 lo Moll llnpt<Ud Llneoln-MtmUV D'4/n -• .... --., ... ..... ....,,,....,.. ........ .
Johnson & Son ..... ,, ................ .......
• ,._ -.... ""'"" ...... , ..
900 W. COAST. HllM!WAY, NIWl'ORT 11.ACH .............. '4Wtt1 ... 14Mt71..
M2.o911 SU-1271 "'
• -.. --·-· --------
51NTA MONICA -" 1111l1n: m
bt11, 102 bo"llo.
OXHARO -'2 IMlert: 6.111 Nu, tt!
r&<:k (Cid, 10 h.11111\11, 11 boll!IC>i I 11,,. , ...
LONG llACH (111-1 1"111') -
• •11111le,.; ll2 tit... 17t banll'll, 14
lwillbul, llr'lllo '9 tntler.t 2J lllH, 350
bonlhl, J /\1Hb!ft, 100 "rch. (1'1flflc
UllCll"'I -lM t"tler.; 15 1lbleart, 2
•lut'll" turw1, 107 ti.rr1cudl, 7 .. ullco ban, :itO banll'll. n llaHllut.
SAN 01100 Cl>I. a.-.. H•M.
"'•lllrm1Jt'1J -fl4 1lblcor1, l Y11lowt1llt, u 1Nrrtcud1. no bonito,
7'3 u llco bti.&. 10 111111 Nu, It
h11!but. (HM fl. ~119). -1A
111111te'1 : 16 1lbtur1, 12 hrrHllOI. l50
---
~
' I --~---
J1b1011 l'uril~ 37 •1-71
Ullte Mh, 3f l\tllbul, HO borltte.
SAN CLIMIHT• -21J •ntllr$; 121 W1~m1" """ Wlnltrbur~
lfflbltt MOIUIO UY IVir'll't l~111} -7r:edttl 1nelen: U lllllb!.11, 161 11,,. <;Od, •1 11rtlllld
INlu. Hukhln1 l"OllT HU•NaMa -M 1ntl1n<: 7A · Tottlt
bin, J<ll borllhl, U blrr1cud1, •
N llllul.
ullco 11111, 1 Ytl1Dw111l, 31 MrrKVd11 " bonito, 36 Pltltbul.
MAlllU fl llll -..i 11111llr1: '65
c1lllco bin, Sii bot>!l'll, S lllllb!Jl. 81rgt,
«I ll'ltl•flt ,,. bot>llll. " ~ cod, tt
ltl'ICI *'· HlllMOIA llACM -«I 1"'111"1: 2 v•llDwtlll, u ullco Mq. iO M trtcud1,
J7 bonito.
Ch.IPml"
FllCOMr C1rrldo
•0111r11 Butltr '"" Tot1ls
• ...,,,. (fl)
1"0 l"T Ill' Tl' 1 1 , lt
• n 2 I ) 1 I 1
l 1 l 1
I l 3 19 u , 3 32
J ' , ' •• 12 ,. 9:1
JI~ l"l l'O P'T ,, Tl"
1n 2 1 22 1 1 3 15
7 • , 11
3 0 • ' 1 l • 1
! ' 1 10 :u 10 17 78
•
In the other half Ol tile
program o f lS.rounC!:~1,
Raul Rojas of nearby ~~
Pedro will defend his W:otld
B11xing Ass <l c ia ti 0--11
featherweight title against
Sh<1 Saijyo of Japan.
ILL
FOR VACATION
' '
~ZJ§Qlt$iU2J2J@ 6 .. Jlll!#lll!Qlllli!§Jlllif!l'l~JlllZlll.!lllll.91!111!!111!9•.•;;m;@ll!g'111'!Jjll!Jlll;pJP1•1'po.:J110.,•1J110J,.•P,..4""•'"',.••"'"*'""., ... ,.,.,..,, ..... ~,.., • ..,,.., ............ ~~~~•·•~~~-·~~--~--~-~-----~
-J 8 • OAILV PILOT fridQ, August 9, 1968
.-.
Los Alamitos Albacore
,., .. ,...,, ..... t. 1~1-0.¥
C_. _,. l'•d ........ ...., r:tl P.M.
, Llll:IT llACL 411 1111'1h. l Y'MI'
Dkl~ d "" 111 or.-a •1~ "',... tl.SOO.
.,._. Llllll (Ill: .......
Jldll """ 0.YtON ...,..,. (I W StnU,lilt)
...,,...,"' Sir IZ: Cblll,..1 y
Ml. Mith! W1ldl (Cl MOrrl&)
MtiN'I' aar IC "91111'11
...
"' "' "' ...
Entries
oie. INI _,. 11'1 Gf'llk AA MllluL l'VrM
Ulllll.
S.""" """"'* \It AUlrl
Tl"' lit-I hUIMr ID C:•rtlnUll
My Wiiii ... .... ·--0... 01 TPll'W {C Sml"'l
LHY It S...rt tP CrmllYl
~., 8 . $!1rr IH PIM)
Stwml' aw~ !Z Collln1J
"' "' "' "' '" '" "' "' "' "'
NEWPORT BEACH
"Hook.up," comes the cry.
The bor.n blasts.
An&ter1 race to the baJt
tank, hook a wriggling
anchovy and dip t h e l r
f1shl.ng lines into the salt
water for what cou,ld prove
1!le merriest mix-up since
ttie invention ot blending
machines.
•
Becomes
-----J!'ll!'r_tlf!l!l_JI M11•1
.•• OOt'lll '" "' "' '" ...
......... Lett Go Som IJ K111hll
I'm ltrlo !J Wl~l
OllM ltr IH CrOlllYI "' "' .. . Albacore. 1be mag_ic word
or Southern Oalli<rma deep
sea fishing dra'W'S throngs to
private craft or party boats
for a chance to pit skill
against a finny bomb whose
'
E119'• lt«ll II D C.rCIOl1)
IVl"I Wlfl'lff (P CroMy) .... ·~ lll<h VllMUre IL Wrklllll
A G"1 To W1h:l'I (! D C1111au)
11t1y G,_y ft W Slrl<IU) '" '" "'
Sl!CO!fD •.t.<•. "' Y••lll. J vur ollh atld Ull Ill Gorldl A Pkti. Pll<M
\1900.
NIMf"1 Gollf fJ K ... bl
J lmm' MK .. , (A Ar1l11)
Pooleo JIOCl<•t (0 C11'do11I
"'"""' Ohl (J w .. aonJ ~·II JIOCl<tl (~ SlrouH)
J~ Fuel (JI Adllr J
S.NI Jll\otr WI" !0 T,Nt
WhD Pit, IH PIH)
;Bir Df<lt.er Go !T ll""-ml
S-A L .. CR .. 111<11
... •• ...
•M
"' '" ... •M '" ...
THIJID •ACI.. lSI Ylrdl, ) "'"' elc:b Ind Ull l" Grlde A Plln. PvrH
(•1900,
Molllflfo' GYft' 18 Mlll1I !Oil
Llw OMr Ill
Miu TOP l"ec:o TH
TiplOP Dtd< [ti: Adtlrl '"
Go lll\olM !C $rnlll'1) 11•
8 Uflll.!,..,.,. It-111
8'9 Gn.ndldd't fJ , ltlltYI lU
Miu Moon fl'rl<1t Ill
,. 0... Luclt.y (T Llpli1ml 11•
Ptllto Lii (I D C•rdol9) HI
A~ El+,Jaill
Tttrtdlel"M t2 D C1nlcN1)
POUlllTN lllACa. )50 Vl nh, 2
old1. · ~tlow1nce1. Pune S2tlOll.
Wiid Wmdl I• hnkll C>tt>bY• •~st CA Ar1lu1
'-el CMriot~ !Ii T.,.,.) °"'" Forfhrw (T Lipl'llml
My K...ic. Ill: Adllr)
S-c-to-IJ 8rlnll:ltYI
Ftn, ltodtet fD Morrill "'-'• ....., cc Sml"')
Ct t Quk* IN fl'tttlo)
1"1f'TH •ACI! • .00 ,,.nb. I
l'er Sii., A119. U, 1Mt
"'
"' "' "' m
"' ·~ •M
"' "'
CIMr , ... P111. Finl l'MI 1 ... II\.
OtllY Dw.,._,.11'11 11141 SIC: .... h«o
"1•ST 111.t.Ctt. 6 tllr'-1. 2
o4d• Ctlbrld1. Cltlmln• pt!te
Purse n ,JOll.
J troe [A Plrledtl
Gr.,.11 Amlto CM Ytntl\
I'm ,t,lrl<lhl JICk IA L 0 111)
llut1 If OU! IJ Limbert)
9111dul 8Gb !S Tr...,lno)
P.m'I Pt<!U fJ ~fltrl)
Pt'11 Sltr [W M1r11c-I
11.lwr ICl<lll CE Mtdb"'J 5-1 Clnd\l·Jo ID Hill) aVSf'lel Of CMrrle1 (II CtlTIHU
l'flr
U50C.
"' '" I llJ
'" "' "' '" ...
"' "'
' MCO"D ll:ACE. 6 IUrlOl\tl. J VM•
Didi t nd UP. Clt lml"' "'lu U ,000.
SIXTH •ACE. l90 y1r<I$. l l'ttr
oldl UICI 1111 11'1 Gr"" M Plu1. PurM """· ,t,n1n11 J•I tl Com1111
Mldl1NI Jet IC Smllh!
Gl111& Cl'llr1> tT Ll!>html
LklPltnl"' tt!Olle c• Ad•lr) Cllbber'I ll:Kl<tl (0 Tl',.I
Go Moo" Go 10 c...-.1 Etf1bo (It lt!lk1l
•w '" tenacity f.ar outsbadOW5 his
iu 20-40 pound heft. "' 11s Bill Casper took a vac,a-
111 tion from the professional •u
ll:Md Chtrte ltr [W ~!nu•) '111-
Sl!Vl!NTM •ACE. fOll '''6\ l ,,., oi6o 11'1111 LIP In GrtOe MA Ml...,.,
Pvne uooo.
Slltfl' ltr ll ColHMI
Cllbbtr Go IR l1nll:1)
POWl'f IOI' (J tc ... 111
Dtl Llmlh (It Meir)
Cl>il' Cl'ltr9t fJ W1l"'°J
Dick HolM CT Llpf\eml
POOi l1r IC Sm!lhl
Sllnl'I a ... lo
"' '" "' '" "' '" •M
'" llGHTM ltACI. U0 V•nlt, 2 Yttf
oldl. All-•MH.. The Ann. Oltl, ... ~-Artlllerv IZ Collln'll 111
R11t1nln ltod<el fJ W•l-1 Ill
,t,pr!I Dl1! 10 Ty,.) 1»
Trulll1 CJ IC1nl1l 117
S.Uor1 Hltllt·iT LlpMml IU
8,_., I.IHI$ (I 8rl'*lev) 117
••• 81!'11' Dldt 10 ''"'°"'' , ,, 1..tf Ion IC Smllftl 111
PrlllCHI Mell'Clf' (A Ar1l11) 114
S-lt It• Mis.I (• 8tnlul 117
MINTM •AC&. Solt VtnlS. l Yttr
oldl t ntl Ill'. AllO¥l't11Cft. Pur .. Slklll.
flunnv'I Wtrrlor IC Smltll> "' p.,,,,, Ive (J tc1nl1l 117
Ret'I lt....,.SI IT Lll'hlm) 12!
Ttve*.lln Git (0 C1rO«IJ 11 1
Ke! Trldt 10 Mor1lll n•
ltOfl Sld<le [J MthudtJ 11'
Oh Go Go {It l1nlr1l 11•
Del Mar
Entries
A·Tr11tlc 8e1t Ill C1mN•l lf!
A-W. a . F!nM111n-tr1lntd entrv.
NINTH •ACE. Ono mU• °" tuM,
Th1tt 'e1r olcl1. Cl1lm!n9 Prkt J!J ..
o»S13.50ll. Purse a.;,ooo.
C1vey tclcl (E Medlnt) lU
,t,.W\ne commtnotr <) J se1i.ri) JU
Writ' Em Ph!I (W Htr1tt-1 111
Sh11t1 ftultr IU
Slt r S"tem [A L 0 1111 .. , 11
Rovtl O.Sert !A Plftedt) 11•
D<!nl1 ,t, Menect (0 PltrCt l 111
Dtlecled fl M \lt»tl) 111 our 811<k1Y IW H1rm1ll) 1 II
Arlt1 /W Htrrl1J 111 AIH .1 .. , ....
Coslt Del Sol (1 J Lt mtlH'I)
ll:eo111tble p J 5tlleriJ
A·Br1v• Blue !) M YtMI)
A-A. T. D<wlt-lrtlNid lln!r')I.
"' '" '"
Southland
Stocldng
For Trout
This week the follow ing
Southern Caililontia and In·
yo-Mono waters are sched-
uled to be restocked with
catchable·size rainbow trout
by the Department of ~
and Game. Anglers are re-
minded that this list is
tentative and may neces·
aarily be changed:
WS ANGELES COUNTY
-Big Rock Creek, Bouquet
Canyon Creek, C r y s t a I
Lake, San Gabriel River
East and West Forks.
SANBERNAROJNO
COUNTY-Arrowhead Lake,
Big Bear Lake, Green Val·
ley Lake, Gregory Lake,
Santa Ana River and its
South Fork.
I NY 0 COUNTY Big
Pine Creek, Bishop Creek
Middle and South Forks,
Cottonwood Cre€k, Goodale
Creek, Independence Creek,
Lone Pine Creek, 0 a k
Creek North and South
Forks Sabr ina Lake. South
Lake, 0Taboose Creek, Tin·
emaha Creek.
MONO COUNTY -Buck-
eye Cre€k, Convict Creek.
Convict Lake, Deadman
Creek, East Walker River,
Ellery Lake, George Lake,
Gla!s Creek, Grant Lake.
Green Creek, Gull Lake,
Hilton Creek, Hot Creek,
JUne La k e, Lee Vining
Cr,etk and its South Fork.
........................... .., .......
Los Alamitos Results
112::~,..__. .......... ""b ............................. ..
TMUltlDA'r, AUG .• , 11't
Clur & '••I
l'lll$T RACI. IOI) ,1r111. J '"'' old• 1nCI Ill' In Gr1de I Pt111. Purit
11500.
Cool I! (ll:Jn1!dll
Moon 81rl1v !Ad<ilr)
8ell1 Tont !Pt Ptl
Tlme-11 ttll.
l,'O l.2CI , .60
$.6G ~.20 ....
Scrtldlld -Dttk1!t Miu . Srtr
Evin, GI.on 5moll• Do<;, Anelli)( ltt •
Revel C11M1v.
SECOND II.ACE. 350 Vtnll. 3 Vetr
old1 tNI U11 In Grtde A Mlnut. Pur1t
Sl7QO.
sr..., The Mu11c ITYrt\
G1ll1nl V•IDr (IC1nl1)
Tonelllt fP•'iel
Tim-II 3110.
t.20 '·'° l.20 l .60 l .00 ....
krtld!ed -Prlrice Yoo DoO, Dolf',
Qut:lr Moon.
,OUltTH ll:ACE. AOO y1rcl1. 3 wtr
oldl Ind UP In G,,.,. A P l!tl. Puroe
S\900.
Lfln! Obie !H Crmbvl
Henry McClure !Forlhf
011 Prin<e11 !C1rdo11I
Tlmo--20 t/10.
Scrtlehtd-Blt GrtfMltlld,. H1na-'°""'· Tk>IOI> Deck ,
,l,,H ltACE. J.50 ,1rd1. M1ldtll 2
ve.tr okh brt'd In C1ill. Cl1lmln11. Put11
'17llO.
Gr lrUI tC1rdoal
Ftnc' w 11i-lAd1lr)
Fle1hv 110S1eH IK1n!1)
Tlme-11 1110.
Stretched-Clrc11mMv!1tlor.
SIXTM RACE. :ISO vlnll. l ~tit olds
1nd Ull In Grode M Minus. Purte
12100.
c-r 01ndv (Ll~h1m)
OttP Go ISml!h)
Apache Rov11 ($tr111nl
Tlmo--11 •no.
kr11cMcl-LuclltV S!tr~I, Meleo
81r1. P!!tr!m 8tl"l, 1tov11 f lllf>t".
51!YENTH RACt: . .U0 y1rd1. 1 Yffl oi•s. C1tlml<19, PurM 11100.
S1m'1 Nltht out
'H Crosb'I • 7,..0 '·'° 2.IO S.lldy SYr1tr (P Crosby} t.00 l .60
Sod• Sim ••• CTvrtJ 2.IO Tim&-11 1/10.
No Kftlehel.
•TOMTM •ACE. IOl)-y
olds IT'ld Up In Grt
sroc111.,..,
vetr
111. Tht
OUIQt Go Go 18trill.I\ u. 6.20 1.60
Th< Churl (Morr11) l.1111 l.llO
D·Aiclmlr1t Red tklnl1) ~.00
Tlm-:io !Ill.
No sc:rotcl!ft.
D-Finllhed In do~t tor 2t>d.
Dl1ou1llfl9d lfMI Pltct'd "'lnl,
Pun.t J2,JOCI.
ICR'9hl Prowltr (R C1mpf1) l P..-(It lt1yJ "'---.,.·---• .-,MU __ _
01W1 Swt"" !A L 01111
11.1"' Fr11e CJ Ltml:ler1) Nike Point {J ArttrDUrn) A"'-Ftlher (J Stllen)
ltl Rote IA Plntdl)
&IKll Moad CO Pltn:t)
.. ~
"" '" "' '" '" "'
l'OUltTM •ACE. 1 1116 m!!". J vnr
..WI IM Ull. Cl1lmlne Pflu. 11,000.
$1.200. Purw IJ,«IO.
Brtl'llllt'I Joe !S Trevino\
A•SMdV INlltR (II: C1mp11I
Me e .. ~ <J 1.t11e .... 1
a-P1,o Robin ro 111111
.&..Mlr ln•-!J L1mber1)
Clt!Cll' To• IG Ltn°"'tYI
&·A~ E~ Cltl CA Plnedtl
111!.nl Trutl CW Htr!tclll
Gttlllnlo [It 8 1,,>COJ
'" '" '" ',. "' "' '" '" "' 0..il'I Eta IW H1rrl1) 111
F-•~• [D Pierce) 111
A--N., E, MIH1rldr.·lr1~ enln'.
a -R. IC . Mlh:MH·tr1!net1 ..,,..,,
f_tn1ot llACt:. l turlotill1. 1
old. Al!owtllCll. Pu..., '3.SID.
Sfll!:llr>w Bull\ (J L1mtltrll
11-h ICtled (M Yt~rl
OM Alie¥ ($ Trovinol
PelliR<>rt !D Pler<:t )
Utllt krill IW H1rtitcitl
11(1<1• Lomt !E Mt<lli\t)
~ DI H1r1 IA Plntdtl
"' "' "' "' "' "' '"
'1XTl4 ltACE. ' fur!Qng1. l '"' t>ld'I. AllOW.l>Ctl. 1'1trH M,000.
~tl!tv ?NI Ul C1mci.11 111 l\fftr Sorn !A L Dl11l 1107
Cl'llct Bowl 10 P~rtol !It
le>"Ol ... 81•b (W 111r1tci<! 1'1
llL 81! !J Sflltr\! 111
tlO lltmt !W 14trrll) 11)
Sl!VENTM llA(.I. 7Vt lurlof\tl ...
turt. J ¥tt• old tllllt• 111<1 ""'" J!oM-1nce1. PurM u ,mo.
Mlf'r~ MetGl! !J Ltmbfr!l lH
M<.:ia (It CllnPl\l H•
Pln' GI ! 11'([ !0 Htlll !If
t!J>Mr !E Medi"') 1:n
)'loPt'u!I l1t!re11 !D Vt1110U01r! lit
l-• 11.,.,110 IA L 011r) 1111
a1c-.&.ot ln rw H1rr111 lit
llDNTH ltA(E. Olle milt. l WU
llldl. l'lffl rUMI"' f1I 1hr Lt JoU1
Miiot, fl'urw l!S.000.tddtd. Grou
11,,l!b. To winner tt,'50 St<Ol'lcl I
u ,ac:o, lhlrd '7,500. four!ll '1,11)(1,
a..tt .. rw H1r1t~l iu
GlorY H111e1u1111 (A l 01u1 111 I
Al ltl'wlul (5 T~vlMI lll't
illl~IM L1r1t (M 'l'IMll 110
.. ..,,. 111t (L Glm11n1 iu I rue oou.11 !E Mtdl<11\ 111 ...,..'" °'' tit l!lltncol 10. •:obtl<l<cn.,, lO P1tm1 U)
Aftflcarl T ... r IW l'ltrmt!J) U!
Mc«*'lln'I CJ S.lltn.1 lU f'l,_, Meft IJ Llmlllr1) na
t.dtl' Court (A "l'*'•I 113
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AND
TlADE
"'-641-4nl
. .2211 w. lolboo 11..i.
.......... lleoch
•
Del Mar Race Results
Smart car buyers wail all year for this big sales event!
During Official Ford Clearance everything goes. But hurry,
'cause everytbing's going fast . Take your pick of T-Birds,
Mustangs, Big Fords, Torinos, Fairlanes, Falcons or
trucks-on sale right now at close-out prices!
I SEE YOUR FORD DEALER
Magic Word LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
BAlt tu
NOTICI TO CJIED1TOlt$
SUPERIOR COURT OF TM•
$TATE O' CALIFORNIA FOii
THE COUNTY OF Oii.ANGE
Nt. A.UOOJ
E1talt GI LOU IS C. LAMB, O.Ct1Hd. NOTIC E IS HEllE8V GIVEN 10 lh9
c•tclll<lrs of !'Pie above named dec..,tnf 1~11 t ll 1>11r10n1 h1vlne cl1lm1 ee1ln1r th•
w ld d«!lllt"I •rt re<iulrt<t to Ille lhtm.
•llh "'" lltetHl•Y 'iOUChtrs. In Ille ~Ifie• of lht cltrlt al Ille 1bow ..-tilled cwr1, ""' la "'Htn! llltm, W!lh 1111 llftftWrtl'
\tO\Klleri, lo !ht! undtrilt"'41 11 fPle o11;ce1 ot lhtlr Anorntys LUCAS ANO
DEIJKMEJIAN, 830 EclllOfl 81vtl., IM
LOfltl Btlch llvd .• L""11 8e1dl. CallfDrnft fOIO'I, wlllth It Ille PllC1! ol blJ1lntU of
u1e UflClt!"l!9ntd ln t ll cn1ltt<1 1>11r1•l"!nv
lo Ille •1t1lt of sold cleqd1nt, within 11:1
months 11rer fPle tJrir PUbllc.llol'I o1 11111 l!OllCe.
Dt~ Jul, 11, 1t61
Lindt l'r1nc11 tnd
lftrbfcrt Monm.tn
Co-E•..:utors al 1~ wm •
!ht tbo"" n1met1 dtcedenl LUCAS ANO Dt:UICMEUAN
Alt9rflll11 11 LI•,
&JI l'dlllOll l ldt ..
lM ~INC~ ...... ~
L-ltlc~, C1ni.n.r1.,_..
Ttl: UIU W •Httl
Att11'''"' 1w c .. 11•ecvt-....
P11bll1 Or•nve Coe11 Dtllv Ptlol. JI/"
If '" llf>tl Auwu11 '· '· lt6f 1'll..,
LEGAL NOTICE
•
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•
Multihull OCC May Deve lo p Kimball Wins Snipe
Jr. Championship
Trial s Now H b p ar or roperty
--
Unde r w ay 81 THOMAS FORTUNE cording to Harbor ~is1>1ict
87 ALMON LOCKABEY
O.J" l"llel .... "" •<lltw ~ few yean ago Alex
Kimball of Alamitos Bay
Yacht Club •wa s malting
yachting headlines with con·
sistent wins in Sabot regat'..
tas in Southern California.
Today th e 17-year-cld
ABYC saiJor is junior na· ---;oti~o"nar champlon·ot the-Sni
Class, the largest and one of
the most competitive one-
design classes in the'world.
Kimball started off the
junior championship regatta
Wednesday with t h r e e
straight wim, and followed
up Thursday wi~ two fifths
for a score of -20 under the
new Olympic ·s c o r· i n g
system.
The two ../fifth p 1 a c e
finishes weren't exactly of
Kimball's doing. He got <Jff
to a bad start in the 27-boat
fleet in the first race and
had to bear aWe.y from the
fleet to get clear wind.
Thirty seconds prior to the
start of the final race the
gooseneck oo his boom let
go, forcing him to makl,
hurried repairs. Even so, he
started a full 50 seconds
behind the fleet and again
had to sail around and
through to pick up another
vital fifth place ta maintain
his low score.
Moving up fast was John
Swanson o f Winchester,
•.>
MaS&., whc wen the final
race, wlnding up wllh a total
series score cl 24.7. The win
nudged Roger Stewart of
San Diego out of second
place as nt" could place no
better than fourth in the
final two races.
Strong wiods that _bit 25
knots in the gustS con·
tributed to a half-dozen
~izings and numerous
breakdowns -including
Kimball's.
At the conclusion of the
second race Thursday the
beat skippered by Jim
Grubbs or California Yacht
Club capsized just before
crossing tbe finish line,
dumping h!m and his crew
Rinky-Dink B·uilders
Set Up Association
J o y c e Loewy into the
drink. Grubbs succeeded In
righting the boat, despite
the crush of finishers, but It
drifted away from Miss
Loewy, leaving G rub b s
crewless and Miu Loewy
swimming frantically to
dodge boats.
The third annual World
MulUhull championship got
under way at Long Beach
Thursday with speed and ef-
ficle.ncy trials.
M'ore speed and efflciency
triahs were scheduled today
from 1 to 5 p.m.
Start of the first race in
t11e Day Sailing Regatta is The skipper of another
rhautl!lni>rbft"1>oarr,-
but promptly dumped. bet" in
the drink again when it
became apparent be was
going to finish with mOre
crew than when be started.
She was finally rescued by
her own skipper.
.. '"'-"-slated Saturda)' at 1 p.m. ''t'he -nay sailing will con·
elude Sunday with t h e
Augustin Diaz of Miami.
Fla., and Tun Bernsen of
ABYC tied on points but the
third· place in the regatta
went to Diaz because be bad
beaten Bernsen in four of
the five races.
Today the senior Snipers
went ihto action with 87
boats scheduled to hit the
line in the first race of the
Crosby elimination series,
The top 25 in the Crosby,
plus defending champion
Earl Elms of San Diego, will
compete starting Monday in
the HeinzerLing Series tor
the national senior cham·
pionship.
Two top skippers from
Newport Beach are entered
in the Crosby Series. They
are Dave Ullman, twice r un·
ner-up in the nationals, and Unifornt of the Day
Argyle Campbell, recently
named on the All-American Burly Dan Blocker, better know n to television view·
collegiate sailing team. Both ers as "Hoss" Cartwright, looks more like a Joco-
are members o! Balboa motive fireman than a race boat driver a s he pre-
Yacht Club. pares to drive his boat Lady 10 Cement in the Long
The top 10 finishers in the Beach Hennessy Cup Offshore Power Boat race. The
awards presentation and
"crowning" of the world
muffitlull dl.ampion at 4:30
p.m.
Speed and efficiency trials
are being held off Pier J .
~de the Long Beach
Harbor jetty and the day
sailing events will be. held in the ocean outside the Long
Beach breakwater.
Awards i.nelude the Glas-
Craft Perpetual Trophy for
ttie fastest boat plus first
through t h i rd most ef.
ficient , and the Vi ct o r
Tchetehet W or Id Cham-
pionship Trophy fo r the first
boat in day sai ling.
Special awards will be
given to boats built to the
International Yacht Racing
Union rule defining classes
for best total sailing
performance in the day sail·
ing regatta.
Alex Kozloff of Corona de!
Mar is general chairman of
the event. The regatta is
being held in coajunction
with the Long Beach lnte!'·
tional Sea Festival.
junior championships: Lady finished sixth.
1. Alex Kimball, ABYC, 1· ---'-------------------1-!.S-5-2ll pt..
Southern Ca 1 if or n i a Riverside Sail Club, was 2. John Swanson, Win-
Cat Races
Nex t Week
builder-0wners of Rinky-elected president oi the new chest.er, Mass., 4-2-4-3-1-
ot 111e o.•N-,.."' St•tt Manager .Kenneth S8J?psoa. . The Orange Coast Junior TOO SMALL "'
College District is working Sampson said be .:would
on pla31$ to develop its cre-w 1ike to see the property have
base property on choice greater use, but nottd' it iJ
Newport Harbor waterfront too small for subSWltiaJ
for fuller Use. development. The area is
Joining with 1JC lrvkl~ less than 3,n acre and with
and other Orange County buildings there wouldn't be
colleges, the junior college much room left !or pfil-ldng,
district plans to bulkhead he observed .
the shorelfne and add moor· He said a site Ii beipg set
ings ror collegiate racing aside in Dana Point Harbor
sloops. for a marine study' and
Plans for MQJ'ine study research facility.
fa c i 1 it i es inc lading "It is located next to the
aquariums and a n un· breakwater where you can
dcrw,ater observatory ap· get fresh seawater which
parently have been diverted scientists tell me is hlghly
by the County Harbor Com-desirable," he said.
mission. which prefers •. ----'-------
Dana Point Hllrbor site.
The Harbor Commission
aiso asks that crew ac·
tivities eventually be moved
to the rowing course to be
constructed in U p p e r
NewpoM. Bay.
The marine study and
orew faeilities would be
cooperntively developed aod
&'hared by several Orange
County colleges.
DRAW UP PLANS
Orange Coast Co l lege
District trustees Wednesday
night hired engineer Jack
Raub to draw up plans for
bulkheatl.ing the property.
H a r b o r com mi ssioners
next Tuesday will hear a
progress report f T o m
Harbor District engineers
who are studying the mat·
ter. ,
The college district rents
from the county 300 fron·
t.age feet and b a c k u p
acreage to Pacific Coast
Highway for $1 a year. The
25-y ear lease has 10 more
years to run.
Orange Coast Co 11 e g e
Ev•ry w•ck .V.MCO »ll1liH . l'llOf'•
th•" l0,000 1ran1Ml1$1on .,,,..i,i.m.,
You &et fr•• towlns, • ''" ~ chec:k, l•sl. •"iclMI .....,ic-11
times In iust o,.,. d.,.. AM lillth
AAMCO, )'our tr•n1ml1slon cen lot
IHOltcted by ov•r 500 .V.MCO c,.,.
lt rs cottt to cots!.
Ev.try minut• and a IMtl', IOll'I ..
.,.,.. prDYtl •••
.,._ ... tir..c .,..,
........... 1-t.~1
--~. -··
-those unique. sew-association. Servmg with 24 .7. --Jr----~~~':;l'~~~~~;_....11ill· IL<>!!.n J!!e ori~l board . 3 Roger S~wart SOYC, 2· it-yourself one· de s 1 g n are Art HestaridJVice pres1· -,.s::r+:=34.7.
World Outboard Event
~· . ----
King Harbor Yedlt Club, District officials are seeking
Redondo Beach, will be host a 56-year extension, and
to the Pac:tnc Catamar.nr-nave broached the subject
n at i on a I championstiip with Supervisor Alton Allen.
regatta. Aug. 16-17-18. The site now is developed
-
sailboats, have formally dent; Pollard, treasurer; 4. Augustin Diaz, Miami,
organized. elected officers Clay. secre te r y and Fla., 3·10-6·2·7-49.4.
and staged their inaugural Wahlgren, race ct\_airmlln. 5. Tim Bernsen. ABYC, 5-Offers $30,000 Purse
The anll'l.lal c lau meeting only with a storehouse for race. The first race waS held on 4.J-6-3--49.4.
The Southern California Lake Evans near Riverside 6. Mac K 11 pat r i c k ,
Rinky·Dink Association w-85 a.nd was won by guests Jim Oklahoma City, 6 · 5 · 2 -1-
formed with seven charter and Helen Hellyer, Goleta. DNF-56.7.
m~bers: Bolb C 1 a y, In a two-out-of three series, 7. Scott Birnberg, Cal. YC,
Westminster; Art Hestiand, J:ones ~ with Clay crewing t3.a-13-8·3-ft9.4.
San Diego; Vern Hestand, -won the fir..st rece 1tien 8. Preston B r a m m e r ,
Port Hueneme ; Denny fouled a marl!: .and dropped Wichita, Kas., 8-DNF·l2·7-2·
Jooes, San Bernardino; Don out of the second. The -91.
Palmer, Hawthorne; Bill Hellyers won the third going 9. John Ski nner, San Fran-
Pollard, Riverside, and War-away as they q u i ck I y cisco, 7-9-13-8-DNF-93.
ren. La Mesa. mastered the ligtlt air con-10. Jim Grubbs. Cal YC,
Jooes, commodore of. the ditiom on the laike. ll-8-DNS-10-6--94.7,
A purse of $30,000, with
national Sea Festival.
guaranteed the wiooer, has
been posted tor the 1968
Outboard W or 1 d Cham-
~10,000 in cash and prizes
at Lake Havasu City,
"We expect money of that
~nd· wiU attract the top
drivers from au parU o{ the
United States as well as
foreign strars," said Robert
P . McCulloch Jr., Net
chairman.
The e\l'ent was already the
richest ootiboard race in the
world and tbe boost from
last year's $27,750 adds to
that claim .
"We anticipate a field of
150 boats," McCulloch said.
will be held at KHYC Aug. the crew shells and a;ililll•ll
15 at 8 p.m. 1atu1ching float. It is locate~[]
Bo.at owners in th e between the Balboa Bay
association who live mo re Club and Orange Coonty Sea (QSTA MESA:
than 600 miles away may Scout Base.
borrow a boat for the event. The Bay Club has a
Dry storage for the boats month-to-month lease with
will be av.ailable at KHYC. the county for o[fshore
Any sk:ipper may sail in moorings along 250 feet of
the championships providing the 300 feet of frontage.
he bas sailed in two PCCA Development might cost the
sanctioned regattas since Bay Club part or au of the
last year's championship encroaching boat sLips, ac·
1745 Nh pott II. 646"_1666
G•rden GroVe
tM1 Gar .. GAYt llYlt. •••• 'IJMtle
Santa Ana
ttt I , '"'' St. ,, .•..•.•.•••• MJ,.Kll
OVf~ tiO :.:.•, ,· ~ , •
IN Ct.t IF O R'~ t.
NOW SHOWINGI BIGG-EST HITS OF THE YEARI **** * * * * * * *
"'rri"' Mia Fclrrow • John
TECHNICOLOR • SuggesledforMatureAudiences<tf,&
EVERY EVENING
AT •••
8:15 a.nd
10:45PM
I /•
I
I CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM ... I 2:15PM I I SATURDAY It SUNDAY PROM ...
I 12:15PM I Midnight Sllow Friday & latllNIY
I I
*
* '
EVERY EVENING AT •••
8:00 and 10:00 PM
lClDEMY
AWARD
WINNER
AT Hl•WAY 39 DRIVE•IN
iNNE 8ANCRDFT ... DUSTIN HOFFMAN • KATHARINE ROSS
TECHNICOLOR • .. ANAVISION
***** '°~·~ *****
• _,
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DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Each ,Jssue
Confusion about who is asking for what and com--
petition for the taxpayers' dollar Is a likety result of
the Nov. 5 ballot in Huntington Beach. No fewer than
three bond proposals from local agencies are up for
·vole.
Voters will find the Huntington Beach Union High
Scilool District asking for $12 million, the city parks de-
partment asking for $6 million for park land and de-
velopment and the municipal library asking for $3 mil·
lion for a central city library.
Each of the propositions ba"'s merit and each h·as ill
inadequacies, but each should be considered 8$ an In-
dividual unit and approval given or withheld on in-
dividual merits.
The high school bond issue proposal is for $12 mi].
lion to provide school construction funds. The amount
is pared considerably from the $22 million rejected by
voters~ last year.
Passage of this proi>osal would not increase the
present tax rate for bond interest and redemption. The
reason is that the district each year retires bonds sold
in years past to finance other school needs and would
only substitute the new bond debt for the old debt.
There may be questions about the adequacy o! this
bond request in view of its being cut severely, but there
is no que9ti~ of the need for more high school class·
rooms.
The $6 million being asked by the recreation and
parks department is in answer to the demand for more
parks to serve the rapidly growing population.
As the population has grown the amount of land
available for parks has diminished. ln addition, the
price of land is climbing.
Park commissioners are sure that if this bond issue
It's · Well That
They Straddle
Has Merit
proposal Is not accepted, th• price may be con•lderably
higher in the future (or the same number of parks.
Co<t o! the park acquisition program would be about
'6 per year for the owner of in average home in the
city at present a1sessed vaJuaUon figures. AJ the vala•
tion goes up, the price comes down'.
The library is asking '3 million to replace the o1d
building downtown as the city's central library. Tho
old 8,000 square foot library was hardly adequate whell
the city was a village ol 10,000.
Need-now is for 60,000 square feet to serve the 120,·
000 population expected by the time ii ls built. Taxpay-
ers already are paying the cost of these bonds through
the trash collection fee. Needed Is voter authorization
to sell general obli,ation bonds rather than using other,
more costly fmancmg methods. \
CampEUgning for or against any or all of the pro-
positions could be heated. The important thing is to
make sure they are not lost in the press of the national
election and rejected out of ignorance.
Back to Normal .
For nearly three months Huntington Beach's chief
city executive Doyle Miller has been recovering from
a heart attack.
He is due back to the same old qffice on Aug. 19 and
for the city staff from Brander Castle, who has been
acting as city administrator in Miller's absence, down
the line, the return means that city business can be ex-
pected to go back to normal.
Castle is to be commended. for putting together the
final city budget under trying condition•.
'I Love You
•
FUN IN FLORll>A
H
Police Won Overdue Respect
• Ill Retrospect In Spite of Pop Festival
MIAMI BEACH -1be Republicans
have straddled the Vietnam issue, as
will the Democrats, and if willl>e up to
the presideN:i.al candlidates to draw
any definable distincliion between
them oo ending the war.
Tlie Hip pies' To ~e Editor : happened and what didn't, or you are ..-,,,,.,."fi'Fi ~-I am not at all surprised by the -, deliberately misrepresenting the facts,
R _ ' _ .. , "1 -~ • -.. By EU..SWORTH L. Costa Mesa City Council'~ decisio~ to '0W as a more peaceful crowd of 100,000 I
The issue ..WU finally rest not so
much Oil phraseology as upon at·
titudes. NeiUieT political party really
knows how to end the war, nor will the
candidates know. In the end people
will in.tuitively judge which candidate
is ttie more likely to be able to bring
the thing to a desirable cooclusioo.
It is just as well that both parties
are straddling. otherwise they could
end aDy prCIL$peOt ol tile negotiator~ in
Paris accomplisb.ing aoyttring. U Ule
nation is M>c>Uy lucky the presidentlal
campaign will end just as in·
conclusively as the national political
conventions, insofar as a Vietnam set·
tlement is concerned.
FOR THERE IS NO question at aJJ
that the Soviet Union and the govern·
ment of North Vietnam are pinning
their expect<.rtions on the presidential
campaign so unhiDging American opi-
nion that it will be the end of any
further American a:spiratioos in Asia.
ln any sensible ordering of events
the next President of the United States
should not be bound by compromises
forced upon him in a w.esidential cam-
paign. Only ttie naive could coo·
ceivably believe that issues like Viet-
nam and tile American role in Asia
can be re5olved by public opinion polls
or presidential elect.ions.
Presidential candidates who commit
themselves to courses of international
action a-e inevitably embarrasSed.
viz. Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon
B. Johnson. Dwight D. Eisenhower
committed himself to nothing but a
trip Ul Korea which he made and
which so hardened his view that he
thereupon, according to his own state·
rnent. sent out ttie word that unless
the Sorth Koreans and Chinese settled
he was likely to use nuclear weaPons.
THERE WERE SOrt.IE in Miami. as
there will be in Chicago at the end of
this mon1h. who prayed that the
poUtical parties would wash out the
Vietnam "''ar and so inhibit the can.
didates Ulat all freedom of action
would be lost.
They ~id not prevail in Miami. and
they wtn . n<>f: prevail in Chicago,
although 1t will surely be a noisier
issue wflen the McCarthy...,orces loose
---B 11 Ge<>r ge ---·
Dear George :
t plan to be c om e a
multimilHonaire and my ideals
are J. Paul Getty and Howard
Hughes. Oo you think J have a
chance to be exactly like these
two, and how should I start?
YOUNG HOPEFUL Dtar Young Hopeful:
Why don't you get rid of the
Idea Of being eitactly like
!omtcbody else and be yourseU?
In t.he llrst place. it's not prac·
acaJ -J can't teU you how to
suddenly get both older and in-
vl.llble.
Dear George :
What do )'<>II t!tlnk ol th• lady
idvlce columnirll who seem to
have no tro:;bte solving every
problem?
CURIOUS Dear Curlous:
l think Ibey·~ rw~ Oae o!
m1 de;.rest fri<nda iJ J lady ad-
vice columnUt who ',, o l v e 1
everything, once I ,change her
~..,. ribboo 1 ... her.
)II
DENNIS C. SMITH fl".• \ft •~'""~, ""DJ · , ~~---·-. .-IUCHAJU>.SOL ... _ -ban-omlt-futw:e.Enp..F.es~ 'f!l.is_l __ "\l~~~:;::r;::!:;Ji;j::-;;:Jji,;~~;•"1.~-~~i!-' cannot imagine.
IClJL _. '" IO)l , , Ml 1 1 -N lghbo hood believe was decided upon before the · ... -_ :. _ _ _ _ ,, -_, n s er, .1.ue e r 1. 1 f What d 0 es .... lillili:i.:i ---' Congrecatlonal Church ll'S • per ormances. . Let1ar1 1rwn re.a.rs ere weicomt. ~ormaHY wr11ers • urpnse me however JS that our ltlouJd convey lhflr meu.1• In :m word• or lea. Laiuna Beacb s • . ' . . Thtt r1u111 111 condtnH ~!ters 1o 111 SP•« or ellmlnate
upon the Democratic convention tbeir
clamor for retreat in Vietnam.
It will be said, of course that the old
political parties offered no hope for
the rising generatioos who are un-
dergoing some kind o( miraculous
change in human nature, shedding in
the wink of an eye all the sins of the
past to emerge in a warless world of
uninhibited freedom. equality and
ease.
And thU is quite t!'ue. The old
political parties are not creating the
new world of which youtJi dreams
because they have not found any way
to do it. Nor has youth found any way.
Sen. Eugene McCarthy 1 e a v e s
somettting to be wanted in this respect
also.
FROM ALL INDICATIONS.
therefore, we are to go along again
this year with ttJe old parti es, the old
candidates (even Rockefeller is -6()),
and modifications of old ideas to S(l!ve
old problems.
Republican criticisms of the conduct
of the war were familiar -frittering
away of our commibnent in a pro·
Jonged war of attrition. Republicans ,
would change the strategy to the
security and loyaJ.ty of the popula·tion .
i.Thstead o! control of territory. which
is , ol course, exactJ.y what the
strategy in Vietnam is now. So there
was nothing the Republicans htd to
sar. whlch was of much help Ul our
milit.ary commande!'S in Vietnam.
The same will undoubtedly be true
when the Democrats go through the
tortures of drafting a Vietnam plank.
TllE DIFFERENCE WILL be that
the DemocraU: cannot so easily gloss
over the differences between Vice
President Humphrey and Senator
McCarthy. as the Republicans were
able to gloss over differences between
Nelson A. Rockefeller and Richard M.
Nixon. There may even be a minority
report which the Democratic con·
vention will have to vote down.
Both parties will end up being strong
for peace -honorab)e peacl!, the word
honorable being a qualifier covering
all kinds of differences.
Then the next President of the
Unitt;d r.States will take up where Presid~ Johnson will have left off. H~ will 'fil<!e the real practicalities of
Vietnam, OOw to end up with an in·
dependent republic in the south shield·
ed from internal subversion and at-
tack from tlhe north and lree to choose
its own political course.
Quotes
AIJ11n Grant, Btrlleley, State. 801rd
of Agrltuleure p~1., on ea1ttra boy-
~U of CaHf. crape1 -"This boycott
i~ 8 th~eat to'"the jobs or ievery grape
ptc.ker 1n the state.''
Gov. RonaJd Re1(11, on youtbral
dl1ttnltn -"Success to thtm Is fin.
ding a way to stop the tickln& bul they
haven 't the vaguest idea or how to put
lhe clock back together agllln."
L.. A. P.1ayor Sam Vtrty oa ••·
nountecl lert0wtn1 demon1tr1U1n plan-
ned lor RHH '1l1lt -"It's 1 Hd day
when the Vice Pre~dent h11 to put up
with lhl1 t)·pe of harassment ju5t
because he. wanli to visit a few trte.ndJ. '' ,
moral protectors let this thing s~p by Jlt>el 11 ruervld . .-.11 "'"-"' mun Incl""" •'9n1tutt
Our town has a bad case of "hippy· in the first place. no loopholes m the ~r~~t1~1 addrus, but n•IMI w111 *" wllhlleli:I
litus"! law~ perhaps.
Before we form sides of accord or Many considered Cosla Mesa's "retirement village" reputation just
dissent, let us define what we mean by too much to overcome and couldn't
being a hippy. I like Prof. Earl11man's concl!lve of it ever being the site for
definition: a hippy is "any individual an avant garde or youth-oriented spec·
or group that separates themselves tacle. It was a happy surprise when it
from the prevailing systems and stan-happened.
dards of a society in order to find NOW THE MA YOR tells us that he
witnessed the whole "explosive situa-
tion" from the roof of the police facili·
ty, a good city block away. I'm sure
the good mayor was unable to
determine the mood of the crowd. and
I'm also sure that Mr. Pinkley made at
least 90,0CIO more enemies by' calling
us all animals in the light or those few
who chose to go that route.
Problems
meanipg that they cannot find ln that
society."
U we accept this definition, then we
find the modern hippy in thl! company
of a long list of individuals who sought me~ning that they could not find in the
society in which they lived: such as
Socrates, Diogenes, the D es er t
Fathers, St. Francis of Assisi, the
Brethren of the Free Spirit, the
Shakers, the poet William Blake and
Thoreau!
THOREAU SAID. "l went to the
woods because I wished to live
deliberately, to confront only the
essential facts of life, and see if I
could learn what it had to teach, and
not. when l came to die, discover that
I had not lived. If a man does not keep
pace with his companions, perhaps it
is because he hears a different drum-
mer." Then after two years of drop·
ping out, he said, "I left the woods for
as good a reason as 1 went there ... I
had several more lives to live and
could not spare any more time for that
one." He continued, " ... if you have
built castles In the air, your work need
not be lost: that ls where they should
be. Now put the foundations un der
them."
IT SHOULD BE evident to some of
the hippies who are now turning to
switchblades, or who are thinking
about it, recognizing the folly of their
unproductive lives, that ''NOW is the
time lo put foundatlon1 under their
castles." The problems of our cities,
the menace of war. will not be solved
by sitting cross·legged on th e
sidewalk, but only throogh the highly
di sciplined use ol reason. It requires
lfle cultivation ol. the institutions ol
ordered bum.an relationships.
We need to learn not only how to
love our fl!Uow men, but to work with
them in some systematic and orderly
way . Let lhe hippie• of the world unite
with the human race! Let the hippies
put rouodatlons under their caatles.
noble as they might ht
TO BE SURE, like Thoreau, they
have heard a "dl1tant drummer," and
now Is the time for them to Usten to
the distant rumble af drums on Mt.
Sinai and Mount C.lvary!
I have noticed a yellow b u m p e r
rtlcker which read.I, "P. S. J Love
You." On c101er JCTUtiny the legend
rt1d1, "Palm Springs, 1 Love You."
Whal a creative way to enhance the
image ol Palm Springs! "Laguna
Beach, 1 Jove you ... ln spite ol tbe
hlpp\.u." Maybe .fX1W Is the time f«
au or us lo put !oundatJont undtt our
ca.sUe.11 IAt •do it toeethe.rl
' r
I attended the performances both
days and never once felt like an
animal. Nor did I witness one insult to
a police officer. The police were
wonderful. were beautiful. and won
much overdue respect. If there were
insults, and I heard there were, they
were not deserved, nor did they reflect
the attitudes of the m a j or i t y .
Professional agitators were alleged to
have been present. If this is so. then
the crowd should be rewarded. not
denied, for not blowing it in this ."ex·
plosive situation." No professional
agitation could even upset the com·
placency of the festival.
THE PEOPLE as a whole, were
very well behaved. The police even
reported this to be true several times
during the performances~ There was
not even a fist fi ght, whlch is unusual
at a large gathering of young people.
Through all this the city of Costa Mesa
paid photographers to seek out and
rum "incidents" that would paint a
mood for the crowd. Yoo can believe
that the majority of the individuals at'
the Pop Festival will be edited out of
that film.
For all the undeniable order at the
Newport Pop Festival. what do we get
but a slap in the face by the mayOI'
and city council. If you wonder why
today's youth are discontent, look no
further. This is not an unusual turn of
events for kids with honest motives to-
day. . .
Mayor Pinkley's trresponslbil1ty a~d
questionable motives for th 1 s
discoloratiGn. in the !ace of 100,000
witnesses, may have added anotfler
several thousand frustrated souls l()
the riliing tlde or rebellion.
JERRY NOLAND
l rrespmulble
To the Editor:
Your paper pointed out clearly some
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
-J don'l know what else the Pop
Festival achieved, but cert.a.inly
tt produced the largeat coaven.
lion ol pigs In Orang• Coan his·
toey. Hopefully, the promoter of
th.Ji nightmare will be back to
clean up after his swine, aided
by whatever oflici1ls were re-
rponlible for lssuing hi.$ permll
-Mn. W. H.
of the problem& experienced by our
police department due to the Newport
Pop Festival held' at the Orange Coun-
ty Fairgrounds over the weekend.
However, it did not state who authorit·
ed the use of the grounds to state "the
world's biggest love-in" as stated or
who will pay the bills to clean up the
filth and debris left behind by these ir·
responsible persons.
E. STARR
Attendance was at least four times
the number expected when tile fair
board contracted with tile producer.
The contract included provisiun for
post-event cleanup.
EdJtor
Poorest Quallt11
To the Editor:
This is to express my disapproval of
the festival of "hippie singers" which
was recently sponsored at the Orange
County Fair GroLU1ds.
As a taxpayer helping to support
and pay for the fairgrounds facility. I
see no reason why the board should be
a party to inviting and in effect
sponsoring this type of program which
is being criticised from all sides
throughout the coontry. Not only was
the type of entertainmeni_..~but the
program did in fact itlvite a large
crowd of the poorest quality of young
people to bt: our guests in Orange
County .
l would also call attention to the fact
that the present leadership at the
fairgrounds .has eliminated several of
the traditional horse snows which in
the past did enjoy using these facilities
for a valuable purpose.
BOB PALEY
Build Bridges
To the Editor :
We would like Ul express our
graUtude and thanks to the Costa
Mesa Police Department and the
various orga nizati'ons working with
them for their pleasant cooperation
and fine judgment in helping us make
the Newport Pop Festival a beautiful
experieoce for our young community.
As to the 100.000 "screaming, drug.
crazed anarchists" -thanks for going
!iO easy on us. kids. Let's build some
more brid~es. !Support your local
police.) Love.
LHASA
P ea ceful Crowd
To the EdiU!r :
Seldom has it been my privilege, or
more propuly my misfortune. to
witness first hand a more completely
irresponsible reporting of the news.
The tone of yo ur headlines and your
artlclet conceming the Newport Pop
F e!itival will no <ioubt 1ummon
William Randolph Hearst from Rotten
Reporter's Heaven to reward you with
a heartlelt. "Well done : that's the way
to sell ocwspapers.."
AS A POSTP.1AN,•and !}lerelore at
lea1t theoretically a member in good
standing of the: estabU1hmenl, t would
lllco to go on record a.s saying I was
there, right In the middle or whit you
called the "screamJng, drug~raud
anan:hy.'' and can only conclude that
_one of two things must be true. Either
you are completely deluded 11 to what
'
'Run T hem Out'
To the Editor:
I hope the people of Costa Mesa will
be properly aroused ani:t run the
parties responsible for the horrible
spectacle we were subjected to this
past weekend completely out of town
and· never permit them near this area
again.
All you need to do is to drive
through our streets to see that these
undesirables are still hanging round.
Do we want the same P.robJems
Carmel and Monterey are still coping
with?
As a local .responsible newspaper, 1
beg you to do something now so that
we will not have our good cities
blighted.
MRS. WANDA LUCAS
1Uaritte Life
To the Editor:
As I have read in .your editorials,
you feel strongly against taking
marine life from th'eir n at u r a I
habitat. In fact. it is against the law.
But in Dana Point they are going to
close the harbor. or rather block it off
and dredge all the water out.
Now taking life from the sea is bad
enough but taking the sea from the
marine life is unthinkable.
IR!TA NELSON
N ol ffld b1g P roble tn•
To the EdifOr :
Congrat\JJatlons to princi(}Bl Paul
Berger and activities director Dave.
euffington f()r their willingness to
discuss some un iversal problems of
today's high sohools with Fountain
Valley Exchange Club members -
"communication breakdown between
slucient and teacher.~· ··inherent
division between academic and voca·
tional programs,·• ·• spiraling drug
problem.··
All too few administrators are will -
ing to admit such problems exist. The
first step toward solving any problem
is defining it.
The headline, "Valley High Said
fl iding Dope Users" wa s not accurate.
The reason for this letter of com-
mendation is that th ey are not biding
these problems and are willing to
share them with the community.
Your consistent and thorough
coverage of school news is ap·
precrated.
CAROLYN R. MITCHELL
Chairman , Citizens Committee
!or Better Education
Huntington Beach
-----~
Friday . .August 9, 1968
Tht tdltorl41 Poiie of <h• Dallv
Pilot ll!ll!lkl to infonn ond stim.
ulatc readers bu prtitntino thb
new.spap.ir'1 optniom and c~
mentory cm topict of inttrtst
and rigni/icance, b11 providing a
forum for tht expreitfon of
our rrodc11' opiniotia, and bu
presmUng the dlVfrse trlt.tD-
poinu of fn/ormtd ob•erver1
and apokumm °" topici o/ the c1a,.
Robert N. Weed, PubU1her
• ••
-.
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\
r
PHASED OUT -Stephen Young, left, and guest
star Kevin McCarthy Dave their day in court on
"Judd for the Defense," tonight in color at 10 p.m.
on Channel 7. McCarthy, as a midd le aged execu-
tive phased out ol. his job, is charged with the mur-
der of his ex-bOSIS, Stephen Young acts as the de·
fendant's lawyer.
TELEVISION VIEWS
NBC-TV Team
Best Coverage
By ROBERT MUSEL
NEW YORK (UPI) -When it comes to a big
:tews set-piece like the Republican National Con-
vention at Miami Beach NBC.TV is bak'd to beat.
All the usual audience measurements show the team
headed by Chet Huntley and David Brinkley wound
up the fateful week well ahead of the opposition in
the ratings.
CBS.. TV DID a little better against its arch
:ival than it managed in 1964 but not enough to
inake any claims -and the silence from CBS was
more eloquent than words. Yet for those who tried
to watch both networks there was technically little
to choose between the NBC crew ~nd Walter Cron-
kite's CBS cohorts.
Both turned in fine reporting jobs. Huntiey and
Brinkley, who first teamed for the 1956 conventions,
batted the ball back and forth complementing eacb
other in their usual easy, authoritative and informa-
tive style. They were visually more concentrated
and, perhaps, more attractive than the solitary
Cronkite alone in his booth passing the baton from
time to time to Roger Mudd and Eric Sevareid in
their own corner.
BUT SHOULD THIS have made so much differ-
ence? In 1964, in a similar ratings depression, CS.S
switched its anchor man -with even unhappier re-
sults. There will be no changes for Chicago this time
since it obviously is not a matter of personalities,
\Vbatever it is.
NBC's lead was expected and modestly accepted
in a statement by its news president, Reuven Frank.
ABC-TV sta rted the week with a striking success of
its own -it increased its audience tenfold over its
tiny 1964 figures. And it might have done even bet-
ter bad it been able to inject more vitality into the
90 minute nighUy summary it carried rather than
face the intimidating expense or gavel to gavel
coverage.
THE CONVENTION windup came across strong-
ly Thursday night with some dramatic shots of presi-
dential nominee Richard M. Nixon promising Jaw
and order in the streets (which ABC's special com-
mentator William Buckley Jr. had accurately pre-
dicted would be the big campaign issue rather than
Vietnam ).
There was another example of good exciting
television reporting in the way the networks floor
men tracked down those who objected to the selec-
tion of Gov : Spiro Agnew of Maryland as Nixon's
running mate -before the convention overwhelm-
ingly approv ed Nixon's choice.
SPOKESMEN FOR ALL three networks said
that none of the lessons learned at Miami Beach
wou1d significantly affect their coverage of the
Democratic National Conv ention in Chicago start-
ing Aug. 26.
If the pattern of viewing of the Miami Beach
show demonstrated anything it is that the public
does not watch a convention simply because it's ..
there. Something worth watching is what it wants.
How to replace the predictably dull portions of a
convention with more attractive non-convention
material could be the problem for 1972.
Dennis tJae Menace
.
. --~
"•
PEANUTS
l•NOW
~. NflL 50N'.S
A P.5YCHl,tiTRl11T,
DOC ·· 8Ur lttAl
WEIROO :.HE'&
"10Hf ~"' TllfRf-Hf LOOKS
~O OF HOMICIDAL
10 Mf,
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
WHY PON'r VOii
PRIVE MY CAR: 10114.0RROW! ~P
I Ttilt<IK l'P &ETTER 6ET
TO !EP, RAMPY! I'M 601NG
TO HAVE 1' lOUGH PAY Al
THE Tl-IEAlER TOW>li:ROW!
CAN PROP IAF l'---
OFF FOR WORK
IN "THE MOll:NtWG!
MOON MUWNS
-
TUMBLEWEEDS
IT'S VER'f FRIGHTENING TO THINK
OF TllE HORDES OF SAVAGES HIDING
OUTTHERE, WAITING TO POUNCE
UPON OUR MEAGER GARRISON,
ISN'T IT,COLONEL?
Mun AND JEFf
8 8
R
MISS PEACH
•
•
~ERE'S '!<R roJRAGE,
MAN? WHERE'S .YER
SMlllf .• DON'T LET
TilOSE TilROBBING WAA
DRUMS UNNERVE 'IOU!
By Gus Arriola
By Harold Le Doux
•
By Ferd Johnson
Wll'l ,ARe you
PRi<SSE:D L.lKE:-rnAT? I LUCK<t> OUT-
Nil 81RTHl>AY
"IHlS Y<Aft AND
MOON'S DAILY
!>OUBLE CAME
,.-OGliTHER~·
DRUMS?_
I DON'T
HEAR ANY
DRUMS!
By Tom K. ·Ryan
BEA GOOO LAD
AND FETCH MY H EAAr
PIUS, WILL 'IOU?
lj
i' r
By Al Smith
ME'? I AIN'r GOIN'
ANYWHERE. I JUST
WANTED TO SEE
WHO WAS!
By Men
811 .....
fP ID AY
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•
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1:30 I KNBC ..... llrYkt (C) (60} AdlM Thlltr.: ''WOllltll II Tiii .,_, lflolr' (C) (30) Wbil1" 11111 "Tht lb1111tf'° llt
...... , ... (30) ; shown.
MdWt'l lllWf (30) iJ) Cultlrrn = .. (C) '''°RI IE ::-..:~~ tc1
7:001J CIS (JM1ln1 N"'1! (C) (30) H Movll: "Htll't 0.....,. (ldv•,..
Walter Cronkite. ture) '54-Rod Clrneran, .lot11 L..,
If r..., (30) Ht. I lM l.JICy (30) 0 @ CI! Jounllf ti .. C.llW
Clmpn I.._, (30) 11 tti1 Elrtfl (C)
flltln: (C) 1lit Clll)'fl'lls €m Escutia KMEX (C)
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Ch'°"'lt." (R) 0) Clnt MnuM
8MI* .,lllllfftcl LllJ" (ro-10:3011m SplCt Ci.t (C) lllHCI) '47 -by Mllllnd, T1reu • 6 AIDll Mt (C) Wl1afil A mtmb1r of Ult British Gitorlt ti llt J..oe ft1
P1rt1."*'t lalla • IM with I 11 :00 0 9 (])Molly IMdl ('C)
ba!ttnna. O @@ Mltfor IMtw .......
0 ~(})OH T1 S.. tht W'lllrd: (C) Teams to bl 11111011flttd' onr tfj (60) "Capt1in Sinl>ld." locll stltlon1. D Mllllln S Mowll: "11 thl ht-O Mowie· "Rod: IM.. T,.P
llo111t" (c:omldy) '64-lu!it Phil· (wultm) • '49 -Forrtd Tucklt,
llp1, P1111 Cumml n1, H1tllt Adel• M1r1.
Jac:qUK. James Booth. 0 @ m TIM ....... (C)
I TMll or Coruequeam (C) (30) aJ AwardlllNh: "Sin FnnclllCI
Ptrry M11011 (60) Story."
1•11atiDul M1pZlnt 11:30 0 Qt}(]) Su~11·Aq11 ... (C) 1:oom Hull (C) (30) O@(J)A111rit111 111Mbbnd:<CJ
·(II LI Prohlbldt The program etl1bnte1 lb lltk ' ,. a (I) iit-Pyle: (~ (30) 1nniwrs111 with hlfhllght1 of pro-
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(fO) "Who's Mid Now?" McGiii II Chelo AlonJO.
ated lot hlitl br Ill old friend who
Ir coiwlnced IN II hint: tollond f\!I ERNQ(J', ii• llrlnp blonde wom1n. .... cm. (C) (IO)
..._II Cele (C) (30) ...,.. 1!:00 ml V1 C.ntl de Mab
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d1nlc comefr II "don printa" (westam) '49-Wllllllll DIJott., Mn.
Hilo Htttlt, 1rwl tilt h1 1n Booth.
ltniin• of "Bin H1r '" ftatvrlt o @ Cl) H.,,.1n, 'U (C)
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&I Mnl " MOldllur El) hill dt ....._
9:00 6 iSJ tTl frid'IJ Nlght MoYie: (CJ 1:00 ID 9 (JJ Tiii Liiie ltnfl' (C)
"lnu1dlliie Wor1d Un!Mr tbt SU" 0 Movlt: "Dini..., '"'"'" (r.
(sd·li) '66-lloyd Briden, Shirl.,-m1nc1) '3'-lorlttl YOllllC. Dlvid
f:1ton, 8ri111 Ke111. Niftn. m A11triai! (C) (30) "The Pitas· {J Movie: (t) -c.,bl11 F,.. C.-
ure P1nlnsvle." tile" Part I (tcfnnture) '47-T1"
I!) DtMnlrill ron1 POllltr, Mn Plttr1, Ceur llo-
t :JO 0 @ (i) HIUJWOQd Sq111m: (C)
(j{)) Peter Marslrtll hosts.. C11
.,. N1n1t11 f1bny, Dun Jone1.
Buddy Hacklllt, B1r~1ra l•ln, 1nd
Mtrtln Lindau.
I TH RI.,_: (30) ''Gun Shy."
@ (]) Giwns et WDI Sonnett:
(30) "Find 1 Sonnttt, Kill 1
Sonn1tt." Two m1111:rfut men hold
Jtll ttpti'l't to lore. Will ta tum
Jim oYlr to them. (R) m Ml'lit: "llrtlfty, Inc.• (lllJ'I·
t1ry) '42 -Etnnrd C. Robln10n,
J1nt Wym1n.
tI;) Nf:T Pl1Jbtus1: "Th lrl11n A&alnst r.1 ...... Th1 Son." cm•-._ Aiel7il
'"°'D~ill* •-""""\Cl (60) 'Justict tor Allr (R)
I l•i;e_ htn ....... (C) (fill)
~ ~ lldill fir ttM: Def1n11: {£0) 'You Rtmembtr Jot Mld-
d<JL" A middl••11d nteirti't'e "pl1111d out" of Ills )ob II ch1rgld
with mllfderinl bit •·boa. (R)
1--(60) .hcti ld,. """' IC) (60)
LICh1 Llbrt
IO:JO ID 1n .... 1tltn1: "Cryuaen•."
"'°" • -....... -(C) (30) Jin)' OuP141hy,
E 11• ... -\Cl (30) Std11n1r.
I ...,_(30)
Ntn: (C) (30) Bu:t.r W1tl.
Mtw11: "'Crl• Ill Bia Strlttl"
( 1m1) '5&-511 Mineo, John C.s-
11nttes. !111111 Whitman. Denise
Almndtr.
!@Ju. en... (C) (60)
""": (C) "I W.,.., WM't
q M.-...,. (rom111Ct) '47-
Junt KIM, Milt stMnl. Ill fMlfll .. hlk9ln Mak1111
ll:JO B ...-. "llJ fl"llOl"ltl lrundW"
(comtdy) '47-Bob Hope, Dorothy
L11nour.
O@ CIJ n. '"''"' -(C) 0 Mww. (C) "Dlntl lndOnf'
(waltr11) '56--Del• Robtfbcrn.. Un-
111 D1rnell.
11 111l (J) "" ib!-• -(t) 1toom"'""' <CJ
lZ:Jll m All·Nlrbt Shor. (C) "lu11e1 ol G~ry." "Ht1cul1s •1111 tllt T111nts
ol !1b)'lon,': "f:ril Ille Conqu1ror,"
ind "Sword of th1 Conqueror." m ~ TllMtre; "Clrtlt ol 01n-
111."
IZ:H 0 MM: "Odr'• ......... lil-
v1ntu1e) '51-Jimtt llarnw, Ddll·
.. ChotlrMU, Jack W1f11t11.
1:0011 Mowte: "Mn II lie DIN'
llllYllllY) '65 -WH111111 Sytmttt,
B1rblr1 Sfl1t1ey,
D..,.. (C) -a...ldl"' idr11111)
'61-R.rw Riecl, Pqol1 st094)&.
DC-'°"' •--D-(C)
• JOB PRINTING
mero. m Opiillo11: Wmlnrbl (C)
1:JO e a rn Tllt hid '""'* (C) m .... ~ (dr1m1) ·41
-Btl1e D1vi1, Cl1ullt Rtins, Ptlll
Henreld.
Z:oo II Prolld tl'9d Sbit: (C) Thi
biker's tasty OD11trlbutioM: to the
urmmunity will be depictld.
0 Movie: (C) "1111 Fiii LMJ"
(d11m1) '6l--Jullt Oirist)', .hrrMe
RobertJoft Justice. 0 Merit: (t) "Accmld " .. .,.. def" (mystery) '56-Dmtl lrlln,
Ver• Ralston. m Corolltt n.bt: '"Iron SMrtft.•
2:30 lfJ ~ 10: (C) RllWdl pr•
lrlmli llQW bline: conductld .. 111rt
of tht U.S. 9'*et procr111 lfld lht
1cientlst1 wtio '" r:oneemld wlttl flights of the 1970's 1nd 1980'1 1r1
5P0tli1hted. 0 Morie: (C) "'TN Wwllhrhl
Country" (Wftteln) '511 -Robtrt
Mitchum, Julit London, &I Cine .. Sii c..
J:OD ti Alt tf c.-..1 HJ. ('C) Tht n-
piollv1 dMlopmtnb In the world
of 1111 ICltnet 1r1 l!lust11tld bf
Dr. Robert [. OIJOn, noltd ~11>
dternilt Ind tint 1ppoln!M for tht
Allct A. Dols, prufmor1hlp of bio-
dlemlabJ 1t st. Loub University. 8Mewil: (Q .,,.. .. I W
lihll" (mt:rm) 'st-.llrnt1 c.,.
ney, Ir"" P1pe1.
1:15 m n. EmlPfWI (C)
3:JO I CMll M fw Mnk (C) 11111 Scope (C) ... .. Ult T'-h: (C) 'Tur: LISI rl
the Mot!lcan1."
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lallliDdl C11 Y1ut 5:JOl b lp*i _, (C) TwiliPt hM ._ ..
leM: hit: lobeft Cromie I•
teMtn Don Robtlbon. Th.., tilt
tbout '?1r1ditl F111s," I now:I
concerlll111 a l!l)'ttlicll 1Dw1 1~
ttlt fflll 1165-1900.
• PUBLICATIONS
• .. NEWSPAPERS
PILOT PRINTING
n11 WIST U.UOA an. HIWPOn IU.CH '
-----~---~ -------------------------~-...-------------------
I '
--~ -..------._--...-.....-----........................ -.........---.................. .......---.... ___....-,-....--.......-,..-------..----------------...,.---,..----
Friday, Al/gU$l ~. 1968
HOUSES FOR SALE H(lUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR $AL HOUSES FOR SALE
lioiie~n~eiira~liiiiiii!iiiiiil000~11~o.~·n~•~r~•'.:'===~l~OOO~O.~ne~ra~l====~'000~: Gen•r•I 1000 Gener•I • :-=;:~~;;;;;;;;;~;:;:;:;:;~:;;;;;;;;;;;~~,l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ UDO ISLE ;.
10000.n•r•I 10000 ..... 1 1000 0.nerol 1000
BARBOR VIEW 811,J ,S Flnt Tim• Offer•d! Fina/ Model Closeout
Exquisitely manicuri!d
tll.ntll1 bome :"'".:""~:;..·: NAME YOUR TER~S
&raciOUI susp(!nded stairway _ """~.: tt:~·~;; ... Only 2.homes · available
a large 1amJbi
on exclusive Lido Isle's e _. btdrooms • 2 1/1 b•th•
East End • Formal din.ing room • Pa rquet family room '
"7,750 e Tiled wet btr • Mirrored wtrdrobe1
Call : John Abell • De corator htrdwtre • Built-in vacuum
Eves 673-7365 • Deluxe carpetin9 • Ltundry tub
BAYCREST
i\n exctptlonally flne buy. 3
BR, J.Mmily nn, di.nl.rta rm,
pool alle yjrd with bath en-
l1·11.ru:ll, l"bxi lighting Lroot
.1c rear. Wool cru:pctl11g . .fl.I
Fl piJ*.(t lh,ru-out, ~lt·i.n v•o-
uum !\)'Siem, aarage door
oi>enel'. linrnaculate home,
159,950.
OPEN SAT t. SUN
1901 Glenwood Lane
BAYFRONT
CORONA DEL MAR
OCEAN VIEW
HOME
NEWPORT HEJCHTS • 3 bd-
L L H rm. 2: ba. 17 x 34 beamed US1t omes • • ·• t.-eUing uv. rm. Jam. r1n.
Qutlity, Value, Beauty, Comfort Obi. Un.•p\3 ce, Lgc. mailer
• bdnn. w/ tirtpl11oce. E:IN.i-ln the Southland's most desirable and fascinating area. A SU· tric kitchen ONLY $39.500.
perb school system and .University of California's Irvine Cam· BAY FRONT
PU! just moments away from Harbor View Hills. Beaullfyl 4 bdrm, <I bul~. 70
.Sensibly priced from Di1"¢Ctlcm: MacArthU1' Blvd. from ft. lot, sandy beacb, tge,
Pacific Coast Hwy. or Newport fv.·y. lam. rm. wllh bit-In bar &
with volcanic lireplace. mas. $34,900 lo 1.48,900
DAILY PILOT .IJ
l'IOUSES FOR l:ALa
Gener ii , ... _.t.
HUGE LOT •
60' x 200' nefr oceat1.
3 bf.droom• • 3 balba. ~ •
N11w IUX\11')' Buccol1 • bul\t
home if!t simple). Ul~.560C,
$1,8:i0 down lo vet.I, $5,
down F.H.A. 21.Mt .
Clrcle. near Brookhun!
Hamilton, Huntington Be~.
lllit •ianaJ North ot •C'Qa$t Jilgbwey.~ 'I,
• l ctr gar•ge • PoOl-si1:e yerds
• Full grown tree • Tr1de-in plan
The l:inest Bayfroot buy in
Newpon Harbor. <I enorm-
ous bedrooms, 4 large batbll,
Tum on San Joaquin Hlllt Rd.,Jlhe.n , .b~tbeque, lge. IJv. room SHERW.OOD ESTATES
follow algna to model area. ter bdn.n. w/ li.repl<tce. prl-by the SN !
viate. pier for 70 tt. boat -Tel. 96a.303' ! J ,.. __ ,.,.._·-·-·-ASKING $119,00l.I. Open 10:00 to 7:00 dally HOMES . ''.C" THOMAS Rea l.lor ======= :?'24 W. Coast Hwy 5-18-5627 ---
N•wpo<t ll<h. Ev<. 545-5643 -4 BR HOME · I : t eloga."lt pc)wder room. Large · 30 Yea11'r-a6.6°/e Loans ramJJy ,m, 1m·mo1 ""1ng
. . 1m. Over 4,IXXI sq ft. Pier "------------------a: slip privU<"ges. New, Built
WSK
Of'EN DAILY -10 o.m. to d!Kk by Craftsman. Owner musl VE-!!l!Ts-=--~-1 BONNIE BAY HIGHLANDS "'"~~~~·:~~""' OPEN SAT & SUN
NO $$S$s DOWN
CUSTOM HOMES 333 Morning Stu Li ne
4 BR 2 baths 2 car garage, Off Tustin Avenue, between 21st a'nd 22 nd BAYFRONT
hardwnod -floors, built -in on Windward La ne, Newport Beach kitchen with dishwasher, TRADE
brick fuepJace. Loc<lod oo ® H-ASLALESP.IANGECNT,HS -IN a, quiet _jainjo street. OH
YES! ':l\'beautiful pool with
decl'ative waterfall. SEEING
IS BELIEVING. ANO ASSOCIATIS
"42-2468 ' 67S-4392
Full Price $23,BSO
60 ft Bayfront lot wlth PiC'r &
Slip privileges. Owner will
trade for Bel Aire or Bev-
erly Hills h!?me.
john macnab
The ;&.trium Newport
•• Victoria By Ivan Wells
an Galaxy Drive
646-8811 Glamorous & distinctive, with
(Open , a 14' beamed cei!i~, trflns-
Evenings) lucent roof. Terra llle Ooo~
l':li~~~~~~~== ing & panelled walls. This 1: thrilling atrium and !he un-
obstructl"d view are just two
of the features you wilt want
to see in this~ BR -3 BA -
3 car garage home.
1500 Eton Place Two of these exciting homes
Weslclill area -off Dover are aln1ost ready for occu-
OPEN SUNDAY 12-5 , pancy. Make your choice
Be the first to see this excit-now and niove into your
ing custom • designed CQfl-sparkling NEW HO?l1E be-
temporary home, complete-fore school starts.
\y glass-walled to a perlecl· Prices $67,900 and $68,700
ly beautiful lg. sunny patio Models Open
& pool~ 4 spacious BRs. for-H}-5:30 Daily
ma! dining iloom & large. !iv-Roy J_ Ward Co.
ing room. Tasteful & wuque 1 Ba ye rest Office I
built-in convenienl'es! Spark-1842 Santiago Dr. 646-15&0
-ling· heatcd..swjmming._.~~·r.ijiiji;iif!!!i!;:j;;:i I Shows like a "model" home. ------·
Just listed -doo't miss it! Is This
Ruth Pardoll, Realtor Wha y A
1605 WestcliU Dr. 642-5200 t OU re
HUGE LOT
Loo~inq Far?
Ocean View borne
3 Bedrooms, 2 baths
with lush landscaping
2 separate yards
60' x 200' near oetan. private corner location
4 bedrooms -2 baths. in scenic Harbor Vi~ Hills
New luxury Buccola • built $41.600 • excellent terms
home (fee simple). $36,275 -Quick occupancy
$2,575 down to vets, $6,275 Contact
,down F.H.A. • 21561 Archer Ml'5. Pavlovich
Cfrcle, neer Brookhurst and Eves: 673-6316
Hamilton, Huntington Beach.
(lst signal North of Coast
flighway.)
SHERWOOD ESTATES
by the Sea
Tel. 968·3036
Open 10:00 'to 7:00Claily
$148 PER MONTH
OET IN THE SWIM
and don't miss the boot. This
New Beauty
In Westcliff
cozy 3 BEDROOM. 2 bath. This quality 1900 sq. ft. home
POOL 'liome with all elcc-has been comple tely and
tric built-ins, carpets and tastefully renewed. From
drapes, snuggles near the shingle roor to the all new
beach oo quiet street in the carpeting -repainted inside
very dioiC('St locations and and out. the large kitchen
with payments of $148 per hns new all-electric built-
month. HURRY~ HURRY! ins including dishwasher.
COSTA MESA OFFICE
2629 Harbor Blvd.
545-9491 Open 'til ~ PM
B/B
2910 Cliff DR.
Formal dining room, 3 large
bC'drooms and e1cgant lradi-
tional architecture. Large
lanai oprns to pool sized
yard. Quiel corner location.
ASSl'.lme existing 51h'Y,, fi-
nancing. Asking $47,900.
Colesworthy & Co.
642.7777
1001 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
OPEN SAT & SUN Open Eves.
1 to 5 P.M. . $500 Dream Cottage Don 't miss this attractive 2 3 .__..,___ 2 balh " ·
d D 1 1 "'-"-''"'"'S, s, uving bedt·~~ an en, P us ~r-room wil.h romantic tire-
mal dining room home sil-place. Bt>autiful Kitchen
uated under 8 .shady ~ca-forced air healing, 2 car gar'.
more tree. Asking sag,...,.,. age, huge enclosed yard,
673-9200 Eves: 54B..WO great for 1.tiildren. Ovmers
Bay & Beach moving very soon. Try $500
Realty, Inc. Down, payment let'ls than
2025 w. Balboa Blvd .. NB · renr .
* 53/4 °/o LOAN*
No poin1s to pay. You can as-
sume lhis loan. Total pay-
ments only S168 per mo. 7682 EDINGER
Beautiful 3 BR 2 bath home 842-4400 Qr 540-5140
wilh lovely. paUo & yon! in BA YSHORES
excellent Easts1de location.
Mw1 occup;oo. Private Beacll
Rltr. &16-3928 Eves. 494-9.t>B Ehchanting provincial 3 BR,
*LACHENMYER 2 BA horn< oo cho;.,. Bay.
~~~~~~~=~I shores local:ion. C u 1 t o m GIANT SIZED FAMILY built, flit electric bit. • ins.
ROOM-$22,5001 lovely landsc•ping &: pel:io
Family room COVl'ts the en-+ separat~ yard tor )'OUr
tire length of the home -boat. Call today (or ai:iPolnt-
R I ch panelled, attractive men! to ~.
tire-place -3 B«lroom, 2 ROY J, WARD
pullman baths. Built-in kit-(Bilycre>st Office)
cllen. Sliding door to ~Y 18-42 SantlAgO Dr. &Mi-1560
r"~~ii~'tL""29s5 Horbor TOWN HOUSES
attote aoPtti
Open Dilly 3 • 6 208 . 39tlt St., NB
Close ro Beech, Channel,
&nd Playground, $49,500
George WUUMNOt1, Rltr.
6734350 OPEN EVES.
$17,500
OOST A MESA • HUNTING-
TON BEACH 2·3 &tad 4 bed-
roonu1 • 2 ~th1, prlcro from
n7,500-LOW DOWN. GOOD
RENTALS.
I• Your Ad., our ctoullle<bT ORANGE COUNTY'S
Som,.... w111 be looldn& tor LARGEST
IL DW &12.s671 293 I, 17th st. 646-4494
OPEN HOUSES
Corana Hiqhlan!ls
531 De Anz•
Florence Lictiter
SAT ONLY l~
-,
1114 White Sails W1y
J~arbor View Hills
Florence Lichte-r
SUN ONLY 1-5
601 Rockford Road
Cameo Highlands
Charles Hancock
SAT & SUN 1 -5
Westcliff
1106 Dover Drive, NB
Anne Bi-umnien
SAT & SUN 1 -5
Don V. Franklin
REALTOR
32.'JO E. Coast lfwy,
Qirona del Mar 673.2222
2414 Vista Del Oro
Newport Beach
Sensatianal Buy
"Lusk" Home·· in EastbluH
beautifully appointed
or\ginal Model Fenced
yard, prof/landscaping
large pool. 2 fireplaces
3 BR, 21,J ba, clec/kitchen
dining rm plus fam rOOm
Added attraction:
Can be assumed -Slf.i'il.r
Ph. 644.1133 .-.------fiV.4.z.&.~
B/B
FIRST TIME
LISTED
4 bcdl'OOln, l beth home on
Balboa Peninsula Point.
Close to Ocean, Bay, boat
ramp and Tennis Court.
Large Family kitchen and
Dining area combined. Spac-
ious Den. Patio, also Sun
Deck off master bedroom.
Own('r purchasing another
home . Shown by spPt. only.
$66,500 Terms.
673-9200 Eves: 548-6966
Bay & Beach
Realty, Inc.
2025 W. Balboa BJvd ..
REAL TY ('()MP ANY
1181 DOVER DR.
NEWPORT BEACH (714) 642-8235
~LEGE
REALTY
Pr.ice Slashed
SHARP TIU-LEVEL
Out-of-area owner has slash-
ed $2500 oU the price of this
beautiJtdly decorated Meri-
dith Gardens home with it'
lush caf'P('ting. fabulous de-e-
orator draperies & huge
n.1mpus room with wet Dar,
& etc. Don't delay on this
one!
Golf Course Lot
l';,8 I o o t fron1age on the
course overlooking J u s t,
greens and fairways, num-
erous lakes and the Club
House. Surrounded by lux-
urioos homes.-One-of-a-kind
at S25.000.
4 BR+ Rumpus
Brand new listing -1800 91'1
ft in this beautifully im-
proved home with hug+;!
trees, lots of walnut 1)8J'M!-
ing, waterfall & pond, etc.
t26.500.
College Reilly 546-5880
1500 Ad1UI1s at Harbor
!Near Cinema Theatcr1
YOUR OfflCE
AT HOME
Large BA YCREsr foor bed·
room, two bath homp with
spacious electric kitchen.
?,I(lO square feet of top qual-
ity construction. An addition.
al 180 square fc£>t or pan.
eled oificf' space loaited at
the rt'ar of double garage,
ca.n be used as office, hobby
roogi, etc. A "WHALE OF
A BUY'' at $44.500. Good
Financing available.
Evenlngl' Call 646-lffiO
Delightful home with extra
g\k'St house which can ~
rented. ExccUent fan1i!y
room and pro!ected patio
area. Vacant -ready for
ml"diate posses~"ion. -
A appraised at $26,500. -
Just $2300 down -payments
like rent.
MESA DEL MAR
POOL HOME
One of the most popuial' mo-
dels in this fine area. 4 bed·
rooms & den. Just redecorat-
ed inside and out. H & F
pool with loads of decking.
-$34,750.
NEWPORT BEACH
POOL HOME
Beautiful 3 btxlroom, 2 Qath
-All new shag carpets -
Tastefully landscaped. See
lhis pei·fecl free formed pool
with waterfall and scads of
decking. -$29,900. 546·2313 646-7171.
OPEN EVF.S.
"THE fl/EAL
ESTATERS
OWNER
TRANSFERRED
Assume 51,1 %loan. Custom
3 Bdrm. plus huge panl'led
family room wUh gigantic
fireplace, plus fonnal dining
room, breakfast area. Beau-
tiful garden. $54 ,500.
MOVE IN NOW
FOUR-PLEX
All lwo bedroom, ht1il!-ln kl!-
chens, carpels, drapei,, lo-
catM MC'&J' major shopping.
$37.500. Reallor, 642-9.>5.1.
SPECTACULAR VlEW-·OCEAN and IAY
C~ann11f /e1111/ -Aparfm11nl6
On W•terlront N11r Newport Harbor Entr1nct
252.5 Ocean Blvd., Corona d•I Mar, Calif.
AMPLE GUEST PARKING and BOAT SUPS
Why Not Enjoy
Th• "Condominium" Way af Uf•
THE ADVANTA~ES WILL SURPRISE YOU
You c11n purchase and get fee tftJe -OT Joue tf you prtfer.
ALL ants. have WATERFRONT VIEW. All have two bedrooms
and two baihs. -WITH LARGE PATIO.
YOU ARE INVITED TO INSPECT OUR FURNISHED MODEL
Buy $59,500 and Up -Lecne $445 Monthly & Up
I'll-67l-178B fOf' fvrth•r lllfam.tlOll
FHA S JUST FOR YOU-2 Bathli, tir~place, carpets, Tree Lined treet" Gt or FHA Buyoi·s. 2.im dra~~· bit-ins. All In A•l
Inunaculate 3 . bc-droom, • S9'\l&re lett or spu.cious !iv-condition. Close to &eboob
bath horn" with new car-ing area with 5 LARGE & shopping. S24.CXX>.
pets. fresh paint and nPatly BEDROOMS. 16 X'i2 POOL, Wells-McC1rdle, Rltr1.
landsc~Pf!'d· ~ll this and a tremendous family room , 2 ~ 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M"
ctuamung neighborhood lor baths, all built-in kitchen 54&-7729 Eves. 548-6_773
$21.950. and low maintenance yard
"ring" I!\ SPRING «"" .. •REALTY W. "anytime"
for a LOW l LOW $26.~. UNDER $25,000
LOW DOWN
2629 Harbor Blvd., C.M. COSTA MESA OFFICE,
J bdrm, family room
Martin Real Est1te
B·oA ISLAND "00 """'°' Blvd. BAL 545-"'91 °"'" till 9 PM
548-6332
FHA-VA
. Hardwood floors
OPEN SAT 12 · 2 ONLY
or by Appl.
116-1161/2 Coral
DUPLEX
Fine location, ouldoor living,
close to Sooth Bay. Out-
standing Income of $5,500
pel' Year. Good linancing
$54,750.
Hinger
833-2036
This "'Hall of Fame" 3 Bed-liiiiiiiii!iJ!~ij!iiiijii.ijijjj room hon1e is !'eady for
your occuparn::y. Has tire-WISE OLE' OWL!
ptace in family room, huge Sez: Investigate thi1 6% GI
back yard beautifully land-loan on 4 BR near n(>W
scapecl. Shake roof & 5 Shorecrest home with cus-
years young. Only $24.960 tom carpels & d!'apes thru-
/fiJla,.. COATS
~ WAL'L..cE
REALTORS
~54"'4141~
(Open Evenings)
BACK'"il~y~,-.
Dream Home-$27,900
on quiet secluded street. All
eleetric kitchen. Deep pile
wall to wall carpet. Lawn
&: fiOllt'er gardens llT'llllged
for very low maintenantt.
Owner moving from area.
Wants a Sale Now. Call Ron-
man Co. 546"8222.
out. l"ull Price, $3.1.900, with
a GI balanl-e of SZ!,995,
Pacillc Shores Realty
847-8586 536-8894
GOLF Course Contemporary.
Covered entry Joggie, S~ui"
ish tile floors in gallery, din-
ing room ~&-kitctmn;-targc
family room . Library,
breakfast room, exposed
beams, 6qundproof BR wing
with zoned heating, lari::e
open court. Unusual -one of
a kind, $62,900. 546-4407
NR. Hatbol' Hi, 3 br, 2 ba,
tam. rm. Elec. kite., Beaut.
)'d. $29,950. Agt. 646-1456
Coldwell, Banker
OFFERS:
Dover Shares/Bay Loe.
Exquisite Dover Shs. 4 bdrm with for-
mal den, superb interior decor, pier &
sli p for lg. boat, xlnt financing.
.. ' '' ' ... '.'''''" '' $139,500 Patrick Miller
Bayfrant w /Dack for Lrq. Boat
Unusual home for the discriminating
buyer. Lrg terrace over looking water
~ustom decor. Like new. 3 bdrn1 &
den w/wet bar & din. rm. , .. $90,000
Mrs. Harvey
Lido Luxury
O\vner-builder has more cost than list-
ed pr ice in this home. 2800 sq. ft., 3
brs, 4 baths. great family room .
Charlotte Long ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' .. ' ' $79,500
Million Dollar View
For only a fraction of the price plus
a new , never occupied home. 3 bdrms.
2 ba .. family rm ., prime location .
.. ' ' ' . " ' " " ' ' " ' ' ' " $56.300 Miss Leidy
Ownen Said .•.
Must .sell this new 4 br., 3 ba. Lusk
home. Pool size cor ner lot, tlarbor
View School. Carpets & drapes, blt-in
kiLchen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $49,800
Lavera Burns
Bayshore's Best Buy
3 br., 2 ba., form . din. rm ., comp. re·
:-nod. w/blt-in kit ., wet bar, 2 patios.
quarry tile entry & din. rm., xtras. Low
lse. . . . . . .. .. .. .. .. . . . .. $48.500
Joe Clarkson
Rne Jetty & Ocean View
Splendid 3 br., 2 ba . Cam eo hom e in
Coro na de! Mar. with canyon privacy
-electric built-ins, private bea ch.
'.'"' '''''''''''' '''' '''' $41 ,000 Walter Haase
Superb Custom Deslqn
A Home that has everything, on a t,.-ee
lined lot in Exe Baycrest. 5 Bdrm,
sunken den . Fam rm. Office or Study.
Wet bar. Hi·bearns ..... only $79,500
Mrs . Marlon
OFFICE OPEN
SATURDAYS
COLDWELL, BANKER & CO.
2200 I. COAST HIGHWAY
NEWl'ORT IEACH
Kl f.:1351
• I
Open· Houses
THIS WEEKEND
r:.., 1111, .. 11dy 41rKhlf' wltfl '" tMa """'41 • yo11 90 lto11ae lrl1111tl11t, All tlie lec:.tlo111 111194 Nhw
oN Mtcrtbff 111 ...-t« .._II •Y '""""'"' ..... •'*-111 ttldoy's DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. Patras
lltowh19 ope11 llotlMS f• 11110 er to tHt .. •rtff
to lltt MCll lnfor.,,.11011 In fllls col11-MC• frfffy.
HOUSES FOR SALE
(2 Bedroom)
383 Magnolia (Eastside) CM
642·1771 (Open Sat & Sun 1·5) •
(2 Br & Family or Oen)
531 De Ania, Corona Highlands
673·222Z"--· \Sllt1!nly'l-S/
1518 Dolphin Terrace (Irvine Terr) CdM
642'6472, Eves 673·3468 (Sat 1-5)
(3 Bedcoom)
685 Vista Bonita (Bluff's) NB . 1
644·1149 (Open Daily)
**1606 W. Oceani:front, Newport Beach
(714) 688·8383 (Sat & Sun 1·8)
2506 Sierra Vista, Newport Beach
675·5726 !Open Sat & Sun 1·5)
2020 Aliso, C06ta Mesa
64fi.3255 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
(3 Br & Family or Den)
2006 Commodore Rd, (Baycrest) Npt Bch
646·5775 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
1687 Gis ler Ave. {Me6a Verde) CM
'I 549·2374 (Sat & Su'llJ
2814 Francis Lane, Mesa del Mar
'545· 1909 ( 12·6)
441 Lenwood Dr. (Newport Heights) CM
646·1456 (Open Sunday 1·5)
601 Rockford Rd., Cameo Highlands
673·2222 (Sat & Sun t.)5
1114 Wh ite Sails Way, Harbor View Hills
673·2222 (Sun Only 1·5)
2519 Vassar PL , Costa Mesa
546·8222 (Dairy l ·5)
*3099 Counlry Club Dr. (Mesa Verde) CM
540· 1720 (Sat & Sun 2·5)
332 Princeton (College Park) CM
· 540· 1720 (Sat & Sun 1·6)
1901 Glenwood Lane, Baycrest
(714) 642·8235 (Sat &. Sun)
(4 Bedroom)
*2854 Caro b (Eastblufl) NB
673·3770 (Sun 1·5)
1207 Sussex Lane. (Westclif.f) NB
642·4686 (Open Sat & Sun 1·5)
4709 Dorehester (Can1eo) CdM
842·1485 (Sun 1·5) * 1336 Galaxy Drive, Dover Shores
(714) 642·8235 (Sat & Su n)
(4 Br & Family or Oen)
6522 Segovia Circle, Huntingto"il'Beach
842·8519 · (Sat & Sun 1·6)
3201 4th St.., Corona del Mar
842·8519 (Sat & Sun 1·6)
1620 Dorothy Lane, Harbor Highlands
842·4353 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
1314 Santiago Dr. (Dover Shores) NB
642-3983 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
384 Meadow Lane (Back Bar Newport Bch
646·3255 (Sal & Sun 1·5)
1501 Eton PL (Westclilf) NB
646·3255 (Sun 1·5)
1842 Santiago Dr. (DoveT Sil-Ores) NB
64fi.1550 (Dally 10·5:30)
**333 Morni ng Star Lane , DoveT Shores
(714) 64~·8235 (Sat & Sun)
(5 Br & Family or Deni
1106 Dover Drive, Westclill
673·2222 (Sal & Sun 1·5)
221 Via Nice (Lido Isle) NB
646.3255 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
Dupi.xes Far Sale
(2 Bedroom)
116 · 118lo> Corf I, Balboa !!land
833·2036 or 6'13·9402
Apartm•nts . Far . Sai.
(3 Br. :I-2 Br. Apts.)
1311 CUil Dr. (Newport Heights) NB
546-7249 (Sal & Sun) . ....
** ---*** ,_....,
\1
... ______ ...... _. _____ ..._. ....... -............. ___ _
•
• •
~·~T~/~, .,_,. .......... ~~----~~~ ----. -
•
frldol'. Aooull '· 19111 !!!!!J!!!~~::i~!!!!!J~~~:i~~:.;S;.:;l;.:.S.;,.,;.:.O:.:.R .;.;SA.;.;Lo.;:l:,_-i;H.;.;O;.:;U;.:.Sl:.;S;_.:..;FO~ll:....;.;SA.;.;L;.:;I_ HOUllS l'Oll SALi HOUllS POii SALi ~~~~~~~~ 1• -tll 1000 lffwJM!rf Buell 1200 IHlbluff 1242 l!vnll...,... -1400 Daily Pilot Cle11ified
CLASSIFIED INDEX ~ 1;;;;;;;~~;;;;_1FOR!al1"'tnlde:exdUllV1 u-lack lay 1-L •··lJt I/I B/B RMan MC&loo of Paclfle rr-• ..... -
PaJlAdtt; 4 Bfl, S Ba., NEWLY DECORATED One of tf'le ftw Rffaln: on HU6f IDT
oc-.N FIONT
I ta• hnllllulm 1601
w/m1Jd'1 qU'L lttd.. tilt. A ltrik1na: • n t 1 y will Jerad Lb1s outstandlna: well. pl&n-
pool. WUJ trade up or down. you \nto • 1arp home ex·
0 ttnd•,.., beck into 3 lwtll ned home. Pric.-.d II pe,500. &0' X 200' MW OCMn. Pti~. SM.cm. w n • r ...,. ' 3 BR, 2 badla, crpta, NI•, 4 bedrooms .. 2 baths. nl;~76 caeb oUtrina room tor ~ ..... -, d" P' a. Plt ... 1 .... New ho-INecola • buUt
Hou..-Regulatlon1--Deea'lins1 ;
Point
Mtw .U tl.ctrlc: bom1-with
tnaa)'. man,y utru. 4 bed--room.a. Den, l bath&. Double
pn(e pb UU'I plttln1.
Lwtuey appolh Im 1 nt1
thow ..... t. $07,500
lly1dere Terrttt
Irvine II
=======:::I """"' ...., ., &Ctlvllf, s ·~ -__ , Coit• MIN 1100 BR, • bath, extn rooms + WOltc·lrM rant. let ptYtd bom• Cree slmple). $36,250 •
---------custom fet.turea. AU tbla Id .,_tor Boal or Trtr. S3.D) down to wU, $6,850
IRROH1 A•'19rti.ra lltffN ..... tMtr ... MJIJ end ,,,,.,. JrnmHlat.ly .,.,.,.. -•r mltol ...... ~ THI DAILY PILOT --.rMM Uablllty flt.,,.,. 1nl,y to ta."""' et ,..11w.1,.. the •~nt •l'f'Mltr'•n• tllN-
• Coron1 del Mlf
Ol'!N DAILY OPEN SAT. & SUN.
I le S l'.M. 1 • 5 PM
lJll Ifft OcNn Front •11 you Mvtft'I '"n this
ALSO '"""'°"' -, """"""· °'" NlnAI DUPLIX • "'""" Dlnina Room ....... ~ff )'OU baYe overiookf!d 8 WITH Vl!W .. ......,,
r1. 0ceM and Bly. Lowtr ·. Ex«lknt View of Bay l
iarlt hu 2 bedroom•. 2 Ooetn and the Pm ii
bliil:, pl.m Oen. Upper ha1 Mb' $68,900 ~ Terms.
2 bedroom1, 2 baths, powder 6'lS-300> Eves. 543-1962
..... and °'"· $'19.500. ,,.. E1stbluff • View cellent TenT1a.
Ol'IN DAILY
I le S P.M.
1151 EHi Bolbo• Blvd.
lay & Beach
ite1lty, Inc.
' 2025 W. 81.lbol. Blvd,, NB
673-GIO Evt1: 548.f966
Like-new -I &droom &: Fam-
ily Room Home overkiokini
B.ack B1y &: Vllley Ughts.
2:e Sq. F'1. of living. spice .
and the ·be.ck yard t75xl28l
ill ideal for a irowtng ftm·
U,. Aoklna prier !fl,500.
Good ttrma.
6~3000 ----Duplex
011en ..J./.ou,Je On Bilbo• Ponlnoulo r Near the Library· Upper l#llt
2001 Santlqo Drive has J Bednns: 2 Baths. J..ow.
91,Ya'tlt • not lnsed land er baa 2 BDRM; l Balh.
OPE2i SUNDAY' 12-S Complete Elec. Kitchen Blt·
Do 1te tb1a hospitable 4 BR inl. Good income record
Haclt'nda ·white stucco w\th Fee Simple (You own die
i-tnted brick wal1' " red land) Price $52.500 Prtsent
Wed roof on a 90' wide Jot Loan SlS,600.
Iman& other cliatincubbEd 675-300) Eves. 646-H
bomel! Gnclou& d I n l n 1 .......... --room. deluxe ldJchen. 3
llp<ding belhl! Frnhly
dewrated with lush new nY·
lm ...., c:arpet1n&: thru-out.
Wonderful ftV lawn I: yard
tor chlldttn'• tun &:: aa.let;y!
All this .. only $64,500!
Ruth Ptrdoll, Re•ltor
16«i Westcliff Dr. 642-5200
$15,750
CUb! 3 bedroom, one beth on
quiet trff U&*l atreet. Fix' er
up and rent, move in )'OUl"-
tel.f or build lnother unit f'OI'
income. Lot bu alley ac-
Cff&. An emtllent opporb&
tty Jw the wise shopper.
lay & Beach
RHlty, Inc.
HJ7 E. Coe.st Hwy., CdM
NEWPORT.
BARGAIN BUY!
3 + Den or 4 Bedroom1 with
3 bl.th!. Walking distance to
all schoola and We1tdiff
Sbcwinr area. Hardwood
floors, fireplace, large dou..
ble prage on big comer lot.
Room for boat or trailer.
N@ed& Work, but. our bell
bzy in this fine Newport
Beech artt It on1y $29,500.
ll'nOlllftt trees in a 1arp CaU 6fl.9190 tor UPI. down f'.H.A. 21531 Archer
1o1 ~, -A • 1 Fa-' Walker C!rcl•. "'" --end 2 doubl8 a:&raac• • 1 ln front .., ......... pp.. 0 n y. ,_ flamillO!), HWl.tlngtoa Btacb .
ror can -l off ~ for PrinclpW only, M&-29Si9. ~~!l!!lllEAL!!l!!!":ro""'R""'-""'I Oat lilnal North of Oobt
work&bop. 811 3 + lamlly HOUSE'16r Sale by Owntr to BLUFFS,::= .,, __ "G" p I a n· Hirt.way.>
home wtth 2 bl.tbs, th'f!lpl.ce Princlpata 0 n Ir· 2311 ~ · SHERWOOD ESTATES A hugft COVf':red patio. Love-Redlands Dr. Newpor t, Sp1.cloU1 4 br. 3 bt., 8)1
ly yard with apriride,.. and Close to Backs.,. 3 BR, 2 Owner. $37,!m 644-0'140 bT. tho S..
block wall. N e a r Newport BA. Arch'l I~, ti lee. T • • ?61-3036
Heiaht.a -$25,000. SUbmit llU'a&fi door. c 0 mp I et 11 Irvine Terr1ce 12•5 Open 10:00 to 7:00 dally
yoor tmn1 -own« IN.Yin&. fence. ftcom for b 0 • t Builders CtOMOvt
cw. 5<1>1151 •-•vet.> ''°""" Low county tax. VIEW Plus POOL JUsr ONE LEFT
Herlt•ge Rn.I Em.le Comtt lot with room for Must Re to Appreciate 3 BR + den " famib' room.
EXTRA SHARP pool. lat T.D. $1~ mo. Will 2 ••-• o.n, wxler •~,OCIO Brand new! No down Veta· carry 2nd t.o qualifM!d beyer. pg.ini ... -3 BR, 1% BA, MW KOld crpta;, To•·• F p •¥1 ~ ~..,, 5266 CAU.. '°"'down FHA. Your cbokt
-· lrpk, iw.!wood ....... ~ · · -·-· ~ Pele Barrett & Co. '!..::~y11na ... :~"':.·...,-.,.'::'. bltin" >ron ,_ Frl&ld.U.. ·OPEN SAT & SUN •~ ••w ~· ind. Bnut. landscaped, dbl:e 1 • 5 642~53 lei -or pay your clOlin&
detached pr. By Owner 2506 Slerr1 V11ta com-do your landa:aping.
$23,500 ~75 3 BR., 2 baths, blt·tna. C!'Jlt.!I, lfnlMd. poaeuioa on credit ~ -· •ht ...,..... Coron• del Mor 1250 "'tisfE:'~A.L TY'
' • ' Bdmo, , ...... .., bit· Scenic Propertle1 I;:~~~~~:;=;;;;;;! ~io;~12~ ..... ~~B1~ .. ~flB~.~842~<.633~
.... """''" '"""'· _._ 475-5726 Provlnciil Cottage 111.nd in tho sun lWied &tee. B«r. Outdoor living indoor in this 545-~ Evtt. 546-9480 * OPEN HOUSE * Vt block to Ocean iove1y s a: den. Huire tam-~ Sat It Sun 1-5. Dover Shores ft Jot ily room with Palos Verde
FOR Sale by O"Nner, save!!! llttl. Owner tl"flm". 4 Br., 2!:~~n::~le~ly·fur: fireplace overl.ooking pro-
3 bdr, full cpl.ll/drpa, nice ram. rm, formal dln. rm. 1-~-n.. •-~c•ped -·· an1 Xlnt b:ati nlshed -$45,500. ..,..,......._..,, ......... ·~
Dovble • Double DUDLtNa POfl COPY AND l<ILLlf '* l'.M. VI• dl7.,.,;,.. ,ub!90ttlon, 1Xoa,e: ,.,
'f¥' .. ktl\d l'ltlon an!f MonC11y MCtlont whtn 1l•ln9 tlrM i. l :IO l'.M. 'rlday .•
YOU MUIT HAVI KILL NUMll."I Whan kJlllnt an 1d "°'""of ,_tllclc ruult ..
'9 tllN tti Mak.a a NC4nl ., tJM kill numlNr t lYH you by your ad talc1r .u •
v•rfflcl1tlon el ~' •IL
lv•rr •ffort 11 ma• tt klll •r oorroot 1 n•w 1d lh•t h11 ff•n ord1r.d, but w• Oii""
not 11u•rantM t. .... untll th• od haa 1pp11rtc1 In th• piper-.
I ' DIME·A·LIN• Ads •I'll ttrtctl)' uah In 1dv11noo lly 1"11111 or •t any •n• If our l1"ell.
NO ph-. otd1,., '
Th• OAILY PILOT ,...,.... thl rifttt .. ol .. lfY, •dlt. o.nMr or refUH an)' adw,.. •
tlMtntnt, and .. chJlnlO tta ratas 1nd ,...u1at11nt without prior notlca.
AM)tt11,. m•1 ,,._ th1lr 1da by tele.phon ..
DIAL DIRECT 642.5678
WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540-1220
Huntlnvton 8Nch 540-1220 L19un1 BMch •94-9.U
!'hones Are Open 8:00 a.m. -5:30 p.m.
9 to Noon Solurd1y-Clooed Sunday
CLAlllPllD COUNTE"I ara loeattd •• follows1
tt11 W. .............. N1wport 1M4 JJO Wd l9y ltrMt, CllfW M .... lot
ffM ''"'"• H ..... Oll ...... ZIJ...,... A.-_ latoH hecll. l:J0-1:10 lnlpt. Sot. & S.1.
Miii AddrNll ••• 1875, N•WPOf't leach, C11lf. Y · on nea.r Cusl. dlx. borne. 3,000 1q, ft . yard. Fonnal dinJ.n&: room
.schls/&bopi, :rDI Miner St. Fee simple. By OYmet. ~ & expenll.ve Lee ' 1 w/w HOUSIS POii SALE NIWPOltT 1ue11 OetOIMot.fTION .as C.M. 543-1313, 642.--0'121 $78,500. Broken Cooptr1tion A-df. ~~ ~ NIWitOh Ml~KTS 4111 DllA,.TIMIJ SlllVtcl "11 ~ .... :::.._~ throughout, many e.xtnu. •IMlkAl. Mel NIW'Oln lttlMlll mt lllCTalCAL ....
BY Owner, $17.900! 3 BR.., inv1ted. 1314 Santiaao Dr. ... -·-·-Will sell at FHA appraisal. COITA NM "" WllTCLI,. ct• IOUll'MlltT llMTAU Ult
patio; la;e. lot: clO&t. fo 642..J983 LISTER REALTY MaM DIL MAit u• UNIVl.UIT'r •.t.aa •'"' l'l1tc11t• ..,. I-~~~~-~~-332 Mar&uerlte, CdM MllA VlllDI Ult IACIC IA'r 41 .. l'LOOIJ,I .... grade &: high Khll. 646-7034 Berth Your Y1cht _.. Gcuo 16612 Beach BL , HB, 84U633 CCIU.IH •.u« u,.1• 1.uT 1U1•• ctn Pua1tAc1 •••AIU.,,., .. u
After 5 PM PIER • FLOAT •• -~ -J ·===~·;;;·~;;~===ii;;J~3J~~~~~~ WIWlli'OIT llACN 1 COllONA OIL MAI -GMDINING ... a 1--...... $123 PER MONTH ••w•Ol:T ••*"' 1n• u.LM»A a. ••NlllAL •••v1e11 Ma
EASI'SIDE by owne.r: 3 Br. front door. F.a&y 9.CC'l!H t.o $15,500 ruJJ. price a: $123 p@t ~~~ 1111 IA'r ISL.UfDI UH lllADIM"t DllCIM• ""
2 Be., bltn, Kitch. Atrium, the Bir; Bay from this Chan-Summer Home mmth includes fuel. 2 BR IAYC•HT ;: ~~u:M.AMO = :w: .. ~WUMI =
carp. Gu4!'5t house .in tear. nel location. Lie Apt over with bl · IA'rlttoall tm IWWT•w•TOM llACM ... euN •HO• •n•
$28 ~ ••• ~-to build with Income t·lD ran&e I: oven. DOYlll '"°"" lUI ;cx,Jf1'AIN YALUIY "411 HUI.TM CLUIS °" ·"""· ~ &ar. -room . dble iiaraie. landacaplng, WUTCU•• ,. IL\L. llACH .. HAUUM• °"
Burr White, Realtor For tbe cost conadow: 50xll8 tio Down MAllOft w1-.u.Mn 1n1 Loo 1u.cM .,.. wou11cuAN1N• •n1 Meta Del Mir I IOS 675-4630 pa · pymnt • try UN•vm••rrt •u:• ,,., OllANH couNTY .w. 1NTl!11:1oa otcoaATIMI ' ft. R·l lot, 1 blocX from $2{XK). l .. YINI ::: MllD•N eaOYI 4611 INCOMI TAX O•
-cooL SEA BRIEZES B= B_ UY BAYCR.EST. beach & shops. 2 neat homes ::~~ru:. tHI WllTMINIT•• •u lllON, ~ ... lfll. '"' ""·1~k p plus Guest rm. I; be.th. 1avtNI T••LU• 1M MIOW.aY crrr 4'1' ••OHINO l1U Peaceful p.rden sWTOUJlded . ~...,.,,. ossenon COllONA DIL MAa 11M uNT.a AMA •• t111uuT1N• "" by .............. lnl!d 8 beautj... SpactOU& 3250 sq. !l cu.st., Move in tomorrow. lALIO.t. lli'INIMULA , .. SANTA AMA Mll•Hn ... INtUllANC• '"" ~ prof•,. d•-r • Ind·~ 5 ~-Loney Reil Eotote ''''°" .. -,,. TUSTIN ..-1Mvan1•ATIN .. ~ •111 fully c~N 3 br, 2 ha, ... BR.·~-~-con· d ... :::.:.: .. , ..,., ~Tl 545-8103 ' COAITA&. .,. 'AMITOal,lL '"' •·-· N 1 ••• od Aw.a n.m..; ~ 2828 E. Coast Hwy., CdM 1-,..,=='"°'"=~=~ UY di.ANDI ;:; U.OUNA 1LlCM .,. '''#ILll'r 11aPAt1t. in.. a. '"""""· l!Wy Pau1t ext, at $69,500. 511'% Loan ALMOST 1/3 ACRE l.IDO llUI 1,.. LA•UNA NllUaL a111 LANDKAl'1N• UI
walldnr d l 1t1 nee to all tranfenable, Not on lease $19,.400 =~~~.~~':"a':iAcw , .. MN CUIMaNTa a11 1.0CKSMITM ..,.
••hool Incl occ E 1 OVEAN VIEW H"HT••e-• ..,..-., '"' DANA "°'""' a• MAIONllY, 1a1etc HM --1• · · " ra land. 646-2828 Evea, Submit No Down GI ,OuNTAiM"'vAi.uY 14,1 TIUl"LIX. 11c. .,. MOV1No a 1To1A11 ....
bonus for the tamlly or pn>-21oo WINDWARD LANE Cameo Highlands Room for en oliympic sized ••"" taACM , .. coMDOMIMUIM .. •A1NTtNo, ,._.._.. .-
feastonal man Is the 22'~'1;;,=:=,,.-,-,.,-.,.,-.,--IUNt•T llACM 14" RINTALS ;!~~~~No.•• ._ ~ nn or priv U BY Owner; 4 yn. old; trans., SHARP 4 BR separate dining pool. 3 bedrmL boliated OAllOIN HOVI un A""' U Iv I h-..1 l"MOTOOllA•M'r ::;:
•1, ·.,1pool· t.b'·.· :!..:.. '.:.':'.·. m\191 sell! J BR. 2 Ba .. 1850 room, built-in kitchen, lua:b ~ living room overlooka 1.01t• ••ACM ,.. ,..,_ n m ' ~ •LUTalllM .. "'""' ..,... '*
!' ... IC ...... v-.... th I ,., d .th U.lthOOD ,.. • ..... Al -,. er, 545-1909, 1q. ft .; rumpus rm. JOO .11q. landscaping. 'Room for pool.. e ave.., groun s W1 ma-Ou.NO• COUNTY u• COSTA M••• 11• 1.UMllNlll • ... o.rn;;=-7.=-,,,.-,---J ft.: 3 car gar.: all bit.in•, OPDl HOUSE SUN l.S Jettie shake trees. Built-In OUT 0" COUllTT , .. MllA YlllDI 111• =~L.~11°v~~MIN :.": ASSUME 5%. Cf. G le OtJT O• ITATI ,.. f\llWl"OtlT IUICM IHI 0 I JoM. 3 incl. vacuum. $39,000. Open 4709 OOR.OiESTER CdM range oven. Quiet cul~e-STANTo" "' 1'11 MmwPO•T "''•Mn u1t ~=•sC:.~~tNe ::: __
BR;"'2 be. f1m J'."I· fl.fi.30 HOUtt c;tai.ly 1·5: 4 4 3 R. Nattress, RJtr. 6.u.1435 IBC 11freet. 84&-0604 WllTMINSTII• 1'11 MIWlli'OaT IMOllll mt 1100,IN• ""
PAY• an. '24,950. 546-2667 .... u,"-... ~-1-=="'"'=""'=7'=-TARBELL 5124 Edi MtowA., c1n '"' w•STCL1•• nM uDro. "'""' •tc. '"' s: u •·w11 ~...... VJEW Of HARBOR nger SANTA ANA ,,. UNJVS•lrrt P.t.al am al'MOOILrNG & ••l"Ala '"' OPEM SAT/SUN ~~i~:,.,. """ ::: ::~~ :tJ.. ~= :=1~~':;. •m:MIMS =
TUITIN ,.... CORONA OaL MA• IUI SIWIN• '"' --~-~-~ ... ~ ~---~-room &: fireplace. Reduced 9332 NANTUCKET DR.. AIWlllM •AY Ill.ANDI -Sll'TtC '"'""'""""' uc. .s
fl ti SILYlllAOO CM'rONI 1• LrDO ISLI IHI TAllO•IMO _,. LARGE 3 BR & Fam, 1% ba.
le $38,900. un naton Beach, tlnm ioc. LAOUNA Mll.U '"' MUllfTIH~ llACM "" Tl!llMtTE CONTaOL "'" CORBIN.MARTIN 2-Story 3 BR. family dining. LAlllUNA ••Ac" 1111 ,oUNTAHI YAU.IY Mlt TILL c ... m1c '"'
D I SON LA•UNA NIOUl:L 1711 ••A.MA ln..ulD 1115 TILi, u•-& MlrMt •m
AU Blt.ns plus wall speakers.1---------
ml WESI'CL1FF DRIVE 2 frplcs. Sprink1ers, troot l Newport Heights 1210
646-171.1 Open Ewir. bad!:. Approx. 1600 1q. fl ,
PRICE CUT
Dolphin Terrace
Spotleu 2 Bdn'l'I, plua den-
2'Ai beUis-minfmwn main-
t~. OvenlJe pnee
plul QMftd boat court.
$41,500.
CURT DOSH, RuHor
1m w. 0out JliahwllY
M2-64n EVJ!lS • ..,,._
ONLY $19,000
Easlside Cosll MeSI
8'autilul 2 BR "°""'· t.,.. k!tdMnwtth-.....
aep119te din in r room,
~ llflna: room with
-· bdwd !In. Otrvlco perch, dble p.np ,,,,,rk·
ohcp. """"' fur .......... unit.
Rltr. 148-3921 Ewa. 642-0185
*LAC HEN MYER
A CHARMER!
Immaculate -Eu11 Ameri-
can. 3 ~.. J'amlly
Room. I>d>lo ............
Dcuble prap. Wodc: Shop,
Boat Yard. Call h 1ppoint-
ment to .ee thll tpaclous
cmmm bunt bcwne. $74,500.
JEAN SMITH,
REALTOR
GI l:. 17th St., C.M. 646-3255
R.E. SAWMAN
()pmins: lor ll,llNMive eaJd.
permn. Top locaUan, excel
comm. ~ cmlldential. . ------·-
P EP :::iO '\J . _,. ~ ...... . ... * 642-1n1 AnytJ .... *
$450 DOWN
fD Q1llllfted Vctenn. Nn' 4
BR 2% beth, f>mlly, dlnW, ......... _._
"""""ped. 137,960. -1'
REALTORS 61s.1662 AV D Realty •A• CUIMl:NTI: 111• •• A .. ••ACM s.i• TllE• s••vic• ,,.. 1WO ...,,. ... te hc:rulK. 2 BR, ""' 'u"" CA•tna•llo T71I 1.oNe llACM u• Tl!LEYISION, ••"-,,., ,,. -...--CA•llTIU.NO lllACM 1111 OllANM COUNTY I* Ul'HOLSTlllY ffM
l BAM.ch wttb trnrlftc bay .fUtr. 2750 Harbor SB CM DANA POIMT lta •A•D•M nov• Nll w•LDINB '"J NO LOAN COSTS 6""' 1oan. ,.,."', S3n mo Blue Otun View include tans. Full price
NO LOAN POINTS ''"""' """"'' ""' .,, """"' .. with Ihle and ocean vtew1. On me lot 54&-5460 Eves. Sf5.5142 ~:1:~:. ::: :'~:~"r~ :1! JOBS & EMPLOYMENT step in Ind auume 5%% Save_ By Owner preati(e home. 3 Br. 2 baths
I'HAlolln.Pmt11$159-tbot'1 4 BR. 2 Ba Aalume 5%% pha many line features.
all. Truly outltancling 3 BR FHA. Batutilul comer lot Tutefully decorated. Gar.
but etlter kJ). at r ee I 1 , VA A -RAISED IAN 011.0 1111 SMTA ANA "" ,oa WAMTID, ,._ ,... $87,500. An Excellent Buy! .,r-r •1v11111oa COUNTY , ... IANTA AN• Mil.MTS 141 JOI WANTID, "'-mt -~ MOUSIS TO SI MOWD IM T\llTIM "'9 .H>a W .. MTID, Dl.>-Q124, c 0 u r I e I y to $22,250. Ooon 3 BR 2 bath CC*DOMlfUUM ,,,. COASTAi. • .,. M•M .. WOM•N ,.,.
broken, home, w/w """""l!, .,.. .... DU•l.IXIS 1'01 ML• "" UOUMA ••ACM IN DOMllSTIC Mill• Jftl ~ .-APAllTMllNTI lli'Oll SALi 1,. LAlllUMA NIOUIL 11'1 AOl!MCll!S. Mn 11• home witb family room, rttl $25,900. 531·7636. MS-680J sunded: aJm h111 view. Low
pride of ownershlp. Blt·ln SHARP 3 BR 2 F I intere~I, no loe.n cbaraea. A ABOVE THE BEACHES ~llt·lns, fireplace,~ pa· RENTALS wi. c1.1M•11T• m1 M•.., WAllTID,-. ,,.. tio Very convei<_., I SAN JUAN CA•llTUMO Inf AllHCllS. ·-,,.. MilUon $ Vli!W from 1780 IQ. . · ,..., . .,,\ oe&· HouNS Fum1thecl DAMA lli'OllfT .,. .. M•i.• wANTIO, w-, ... kitchen, pro1euiona1 land-• r1J Lg yd, bargain at $.14,'51. ~. nice peHo. Near cl11e to schools Can aaaume GRAHAM REALTY' 646-2414 ft of root deck. CUit.om ce-tion. Possesion before 11chool 01MaaAL -lt&AL ESTATE, 'OIS-M• & •-1Mt
meit block 2 Br. 2 be. By start.II'. Stt this one now. •••TAU TO tfWlt -A---I AOINClll, Me11 • w-1IJI p I J R COSTA MIU ,,.. -rt SCMOOU & INSTllUCTIOM 1f0f Q w n. r $69,000. 546-8693. •u onn ealty MllA DIL MA• n• 1'1:1•LaX. tic. ,,.. Joa •1t•l"AUTION "°' llChoola, uking $25,500. low ~~ ~ 1$26,5CIO. 1674 (near N.B. Post Office) ..... ...... NEE6s AilP
l ' \I l • \\ 11 1 I I ;Q'°t \It\ \II \\
I I \ I ' \ • '
College P•rk 1115 2 Bdrm, 2 be.th + family
67l-4953 8't7·1266 Eves. 347-6978 MISA v•••• 1111 CONDOMINIUM .... THIAT•ICAL ,,.. Sf $22 250 coL1.1oa PA1t1t 1111 ::o~!L:O,~~:.'::' = MERCHANDISE FOR
MU SEU. Willhun!burg 4 I ::::::~ ::::." :: llOOM & IOAID .,.,. SALE AND TRADE .
BR, den family nn, pool + GI A I I NIWPO•T IMOlll tnt MOTl!U, TRA11.11 couttTS "'' •uaNITU•I ""' 3 BR. 1% ba, large ram rm.
Screened·in patio.
'"":=B:=ak=:":=':=c:=.M=:. 11::111........,lilllE I m.soo * 545-4713
rm, 2-story with large fa"te·
ed ysrd in quiet Newport
Height1, S:5,00l.
Pete Barrett & Co.
rental 3liR, $200. Nr schools ppra SG IA'rlttOllll U» •UllT MOMl1 "" 0"1'1ca •U&NfTIJlla •1f 3 BR 1% be..,-DOVlll IMOl.11 mJ' MISC. a•MTAU mt O•l'ICI IQUll"MIMT •n & beach: ;68.000. By owner. w::;, lg, fam rm W•ITCLIP• tm IMCOMI ••Ol"••n "" sTO•• IOUl•M•NT •1' 673-2877 with frplc, overs:ized lot. UNIVlllllT1' lli'All( nn IUllMlll ••o••nY ,. "'"·· l;llTAUa.urr ...,. ====-~---1 I ed · l•YINa ml TIU.lllll lli'AIUtl '* IAll aOUll"M•NT atll INVESTORS -T w 0 n t c e mm ' ~ w I I h •ACIC aAY n• IUllMIU lll!NTAL .... Nous•tt0LD eooos _.. NO DOWN
TO VEl'S for thls cute East·
Aide 3 Ba home, fireplace,
lll!Veral fruit ttftl, Outstand·
ing buy fer only
520,950
~
~-
OE~~ON _,, ... . ........... ...
* 442-lnl Anytime*
----------
$650 DOWN
ntANA terms on ttrll neat.
Eut&ide home. Call NOW
for 1ppointment to see!
ALTY C A * 442-1 n1 Anytlmo *
4 IEDRM-FAMIL Y
~23,500
NO DOWN PAYMENTU
to I C.I. ~ coYered pttlo.
ExqW:ltel;y landtca?l!d. Wall
to wall fireplace enriched
with rich wood pl.ndiin&. 2
bath&. ExpmsiYe carpet:lnz.
IMU681
TARB!LL 16111 8Nch
b bl lender's approya]. a,14T ILU"" tttt o,•1c1 R•NTAL .. ,. GAllAOI ML.a Int . ouse11 on d lots IO ol hwy BRASHEAR REAL TY 11tv1N1 n•itACW tMS INDUSTRIAi. ••o•••Tf' '* ,U11M1Tua1 AUCTIOM em &LUFF'S in CdM. 0 w n er $58,500. 847-8531 Ev co .. ONA 011. MAI tt• coMM11tClAL ..., AP•1.1ANCU 11•
. . ' Prlc·• To Seit No-I !":n-tl~~"",,,,.,,.=-=~~~-llini'ir<..r~'i·~"'~--~ 1ALaoA i.. 1MDusTa1AL ••NTAL '°" M1T1au11 1111 S rif •~'> 500 8 3 -.. SAY ISLANDS 2UI lOTI •1W SIWINO MACMIN•S II" ac 1c;i· ..-, · Y owner 4 Br's 2 be.. Xlnt location. Beaut:Uul 3 Br ... _ of BOAT STORAGE LIDO ••L• nn ltANCMl'I a1tt MUSICAL INSTtUMIMT 1us
Br. ?lh ba. 0iiu .. drps. Im· M ...... other attractiv• ,,,. .,.,,. aAuo.& ISUMD s• CITllUI ••OVU ,,,, •U.NOS & D••AMI ,,,. ed t Frt.n -'I highway. By owner only, • c.orner, 3 BR dm, 2 ba. MUNTINeTON llACN Nt .u:11uoa ., .. llADIO .,.. m 18 e posseSSIOn. . tuns. Close to schl11. Out-Rea!IOnabJe. * ....... ,,,.,_. "-t l"OUNTAIN YAUA'r 1411 LAKI IUINO•I •Ml TILIYIStotl UIS celiCa Model. atandln" val I 139 tJl:A Vl.M>Q.)D ........ gate. 16x38' H/F pool SIAL llACM MM ••IOltT ••OPlllT'f' •M ffl.fl & ST•••o 123 * 644-11 .. * ... ue a .~. DUPLEX , BR ··-* 5 BR 3 blth. VA, FHA or LON• llACN -OllAMOI co. l"llOl"lan am TAPI ••co•o••• ---SA:Yif!N;"---1~"~2-584~~':..-..==.,,..-= . eor. uni ... , t o•AN•• COUlfTT ..... OUT o• ITAft ••ol". .,.. CAMlaAS & IOUll"MllfT SAVE 6•' C011v location. $ 3 9, 5 00 · e-rms. u.NTA AfllA Ml• MOUNTAIN & 0•1•11T •111 HOll'r 1u•PL1•s Met 1• \\o'Il.J.. SELL $4,000 under Mid Owner. 494-U. 49$.1916 HAFFDAL REAL TY WllTMINITI• »11 1uaoiv1110M u.11D .u11 1..o•T1N• 90001 ... By Owner, 5 Br, J Ba 2500 .. J BR. 2 ba, 2 fplc, crpts, "Hornet to Match Income" MIOWAY CIT'r »1• ....... lfTAT• 11avte1 •1u llNDCUU.aS. KOf'•• ..,.
sq. f_•. Qul_ et cul-de-sac, O:l.M ·-. . -~nu·t On. Pmt. IAMTA AMA N•••Hn -•.•. IXCKAM•I •tJt MIKILL.AltlOUS .... • ,..a """' Lido lilt 1351 &470 Wamf'l' 842-44CI) Co.uTAI. me a. L WANTID ,,.. MISC. WAWTID NI~ HS district. $37,200. 340 Cller· $33.950 net. Bkr 646-7484 U.•UNA llACM !!! BUSINESS ind MACM!Nla't, .,., •19 ry Tree Lane (nr Santa Isa· L I 2 YR old Shors:rest Colonill.l u.•UfllA Nl•UIL .,., LUM••• 1111 be! It Redlands). 54~7866 SAVE 7%-$26,750 A'J'TRAC. eve Y Amenities cloae 10 beach in new axea'. SAii c1.1MIMTI '"' FINANCIAL 1To11Ao1 am
--, .. .,,,,.:,~;;..c=--1 3 Br. I ••. MAKE OFFER Prime location l·Btory 4 ""' 'UAN CAPllTllAMO 2121 •USIMats Ol"l"O•TUNtrlat ... IUILDI ... MATllllAU ., .. BAYCRES 5 BR, 2 BA, up, 1 BR cr den. CAl"llTllANO a1AcM me 1us1N1ss WANT•D .,.. swA•• .,,.
' __ ,., Im ...!. 3 BR 400 Pirate Rd. 646-JJ79 Bel, 3Bbekl•• ..... ..,..Sote din~ Be, lam, din, llv rm down. 2 :t.::.~~~OUWTY r: ::::~::: =-~: PETS and LIVESTOCK ........ ~. mac. , ... ,""'; . * ~~··ANT rm. r arta, . pgtoo p 1. ... ___ ........ __ , , 01 IAL -r~ Cliff H 3 a IOll • ...., e,..,,..,., vw1111:t YACATIOM lllNTAU JM MOtllY TO LOUii UH I I. N• For::raal din. rm., lg,, pen-IVen SVSt on 50' lot, $74,500 Princlpalg oa1 •• , 962-m13 CONDOMINIUM "" l"ll;IOMAL LOAMI •m CATI _ ...
eled lam. rm. Assume5%% lnBr, 2 b• .. ~ ! .. 9,'5000cr:.eA~n Vu R. c. GREER, Realty ~ DUf"L•MU l"Ull.tL 911 JIWll.l.Y LOAMS ,,. DOOi
l0&.n. Owner .,...,5.,.,., come ,.,... ..... , """'""7249 3416 v;, Lido 67, ·-RENTALS coi.u.T•llAL LOANS '"' wo11111 .,. .,..,,... '"' ""'MJ •IAL llTAT• LOAMS Ut1 LIVllTOCIC ...
NEWPORT Beach O>oice R.3 "-n Sit & S•n 1-5 Huntington Heu ... Unfumfthed Mo11tTeM1s. T,...,.... ,,., CALIFORNIA LIVlNG:
H bo H • hi d 2 -,-••L -MOMIY WA .. T'ID &* om lot & J Br. house. 161l3 w. tr r 19 1n 1 I 35 !r29 Via Udo Non:!. un. Ft. H1rbour 1.05 =~'M•u. 11 .. ANNOUNCEMENTS :~r,:~~~'•oou ..
Oceanfront. 0peri House Sat -· -j-. ciii7 Front~. ~ p1tio. FORECLOSURE ::: ::l.~ :: 1nd NOTICES "" :~~':os :I ~"° s~~ 1-3. s:-:.5.000. 1n•o DELUXE HOME Rlch1rdson-Purcell IMMINDIT cDLL.a•• •A•• 1111 ittufllo ,,.,.. ._ vA.CATIONf ..
ooo-t>.,JO.l 2443 E . O>lut Hwy, CdM MIWlli'OllT lllACW ... LOST ... _, ,TRANSPORTATION p~~EC'I f . 4 Bdnn & Family rm. 32x.16 3350 IQ. n. 4 + malds + MIW,_, •TS. a111 ••RSOMALS ,..
,,...... er retirement or fcnced·in pool with beauti-l;;;;;-:,=='_.7"<00.,..,l~~---&tudio + view, Near bffch ",,•.,.-... TetlMOllll •-:r.~~~NC•M•NTI :::: ::i'i.1.'o:nYACKTI MM
vacatl<ll. l.ar):e Mob i I e full,y landscaflf'd separate CHARMJN'G 2 BR, den, 2 A: dock. Rm tor pool. DOVlll IMOtlD mu JIUll•UU .. u l"O'Wall CllUlll•I ""
Home, 2 b•ths, .P 1 t i o back .............. ,.,. ~. _ _.1 p&tiog, Stl,500, Owner .....mo BEST OFFER/TRADE wtSTCLtfl• -•A10 011ITI1AaY .w1i ••ll'D--llC• ao.&Tt ,.. clubhOUAe ,...,J I ""''" '"' ":I ...... ·-....... -..... ..,,. PUNllU.l DllllC'TOM "'14 aOAT ftAILlltt .... . ,......,., p r I\' I e tre to Europe. 67S-G34 Cott $83,000 Sac. $67,000 ::'Vii.• .. • --l'l.Olllm ••11 •OAT MAIN'rll'MANCI ....
beech. Ba.raaln. 675-1612 OP"E·N SAT & SUN 1•5 UC:k .,.,., *"' uao o• ntANtCI 61u MIAT U.UNCMtM• ,.. Olarmin&" 4 Br. 3 Bl, ftmlly Owner 847-61.86 Cr1ly to bkn. IMT ILUPP .. IN MIMOlllAM I MMIMI IOUI•.
DUPLEX; ~ Yiew. Up-1620 Dorothy L•n• nn. Ea1y livtn&: home. 11tVJN• TS•IAC9 .. CIMITlll'r l.OT1 aOloT SLll", MOOlllM•
per on yrly leue. Lawtr CAU. F I y I -c•MllTlllY c11v.n T 111vtc•• $65,000. By Ov.-ntt. 675-lSTI ountl n al ey 1•10 ~~~DI\. ..... ... CIUMATOlllll T 11.IMTAU _ .... on 10 mo. Gl"OSa' 0 ye r -OAT CNA•T•R
"61001yr. ~3639 Pele Barrett & Co. Hunttrtgton a.ich 1400 Nice 3 sR By 0wner, 1" ~ e:t.•" : ~~ .,.... ::.ivN:o~~:~ :
0\\>'NE.R: l BR, 2 BA. Short BA, bl.tlns, IDft laO, Qlltl, ~~r=,. ':', ~v'1'r' ... vtc• MIAT ITOllAel ...
walk to beach, pool Ir 642-4353 DOWNTOWN drpc, trplc, panelled ff.m. MUNTINITON ••ACft .... Al• TtAlilSHllTATIOW r.:J":...~NTID =
Clo•-··· T 11 nn ·------~ 1 .. ,__. "u"'....,... ...... ...,. .. AUTO TkAMIH•TATIO PLYIHe ....... • •• .,....,.._,,, crma 'x. CUSTOM BUILT ., -.:•~ _...... ._ .,,.... l'OUNTAIN 'rALLIY Ml• Ll...,L MOTICll Mo•1LI MPM•s '* 6"2-3CM ""' lot. $25,900 w/snJO down .. AL auc" .... ••llMAM & TUTIMtUte ... MOTOll MOM•• "''
LARGE Mobile Home, 2 lrvlne 1231 :r-Bt. lrg f1m rm with stone 6~% loen. C.11 f'OI' appt. eMMll e11.w .,. S!RVICI DIRECTORY 11cTCL•s '*
fl.replace. Hd Doon. Elt!aant Bl678 evn. A wtcnd1 only =:.\'='UMJ'f : ~~~~"/.~;:': lllt'ltce : ~~=~~~~~•"''' = Balhs, peti(I, c I u b h 0 u I e Elegant Privat' Twnhae 3 Br. crpl! .t ...... Walk to ldlla" .~ .. -FUL 2 -IAJfTA AM ... •••LIMlt'I! llllli'AIU. ,. .... .,,. MOTO•C'rCL•I ,.. pool, priv1te beach. 6~1672 2 bti. Comm. pool, rte. • ....... Lltl.Ul'l ltOry e nnMlhTft •11 A••UltfN• "11 MOTOllSCOOTllU ... perk. 50xl.27' lot, aDey. over 2 000 Ml tt cio.. ~ MIDWAY cm ... Ml"MALT. 0.. UH AUTO •••vlCll & •AllTI •• 1812 Highland Or., Harbor Decor. e)ltt'As incl. $27.lm. BRASHEAR REAL TY IChols.' Xlnt · ne;~ MMTA ANA MllllfTI a&M AUTO ••l"AlU .at AllTO TOOLS a IQUI,. NW
Highlands; ' BR. 2 Ba. Owner 833-0.lM 847 .. ~~1 ...... COM'TAl -AUTO. .......... ,..... .,.. ... tUILlll. T•AY•l ..
$32,950 548-a.tT; l-'m-290!!1========= """-"""'"'"="'.Ev,__ .. _._968-~~U_781 $28,900. CNti to lo8n $8.500 U.•UNA IUCM -tASYllTtl... ... TIU.ILllll. "'""' ...
Owner lack lay 1240 FOR Sale by Owner: Near dn. FHA $2,lm d n . ~:U:t.:i'..~' :;: :-".litw.~~":.'!, = =::• ::
Newport B•ech 1200 642-4353
=
Owner tnnlfemd koavina
vecancy lor new OIWner
a.,,, pridt' al ownership.
(Jc. to lhopa, Good rtntN ......... Shown.,. -
llMftl. Afmt · phone ~
MOVE In! Near MW 4 Bil, achool.11. shopping. J bdrm. FHA/VA si.m dn, VA No CAlli'llntAllO .. 1u1111m Ult'llCll "" Jll.. ....
DELUXE OWNER "'-......... 1 ,...,,...__ new W.W. c•-. built -·. down. JUtr 839--0617 C.VltTUMO II.ACM n •UIL.DI.. "" DUMI IUHllt • frpl., new cpts. nr. beach. • _,a ...... ,... .... _wm -t""'' ""' DAMA lli'OtlfT .. un•1M9 un IMlli'O•T•o ""Tos W ~. Pt.. home. 3 BR. $28,000. r......n weoekendl·, 351 Built J Br. Family room, F .. P. $23,900. asking $l,900 CGNllOMllUVM -UllM.,.MAltl.. ... POlt1' UIU r ~·-A -·-"l"" n-•--""'& •"' 500 dOWl'I . "'-II ~• •~ ~ •-~~ of County 1605 'u"'NT'°'A'LVSMl'VI.. .,. u••11tn11t•• "" ""TIQt.llL CUlllCJ am. rm..,...,,,... ..... 62nd St. Owne.r 675--0144 •wep,.,icc. "'""'· .-. · or ....., __..,v, '"" r VVT c•MnT, c-. "" tu.Cl CAllS. •oot
vehle •t S,';6,000 trade equ~ for belch pro. pointme.nt CMILO CAlll. UteMlll ..,, ""'° l'llN'TI
Balboa RMI Emt~ Co. W1terfrool 3 BR, No. S2 petty. 673-496.1 FIXER-UPPER ~ y~trl.d:~Br.~ ..= fuml&hed .. ~.... = ::r°'u~~tn'11D
.... ::: .... = -700 E. 8&1~;1" Balboa :~ ;::-by*:.-Eastbluff Nee.d new owner to pelnt A $10,500 fQ. $4300. '99-4.ln =• =• = ~~., .... a ... ,.,. :: =: ~1u I-'"'!!!"'!!!!'"!'!!"!"'!"'"'"'• I •. 1 In lJ .. -1242 brletitm. Well built 4 Br. we&. Rlfl..\llPER 4 BEDRM -$23,750 -· ,.,.,... "" 2 be. """"· nr ....,.._ Bo-I======= -
SUBMIT NO DOWN LUXURY 3 hr. 2 bath condo, OPEN HOUSE low m'""•t. °"""· m.11m L&fllnl 8Nch • 1705
2 ft bn. bcult, Jl..2 ~ • C.J. or kJw down to otJMn. trpl. pool, rroU. fee land. SUN 1 • 5 C T ho
-.. lot. Neu' lTih st. ~ Completely IT.f'llmlshtd in-Owner ~ $31~ 2154 Carob orner own "" ""' OCEAN VIEW
.... Ano • .._"""" """'A out. 2 b&lhA. Qualll> By o.m.r. &1>-33'11 COOL POOL By""-· 2 "'"Iii be. Low BY OWNER* Tempk Hll1I ~~ •··I ~~ In N I BR. FliA. Good locetion. WORTH ,,,,,. T W • BR, t •· laon .__.# ~ ter tw?ttinc. 2 J)9tio& for out• Mv ... ..., I Ml' D•w , SEEING! 962-4195 1..-.i e'lTflC9: ay, • ""'
M14Ja ~ door' Uvq 1t tu. best. BuDI· fl-pl., new cpl.I. nr. beech. HOME elea 1dt wlbll·ln ran&'t •
wm U""' In ...,... l """'· Elt&t• "3.000. Open ......... , 3>1 m Easttlull. < BR, 2 be. e BY OWNER e dW.-.&ther, ... ti• rm,,
IT .tv.d ~ S«).1120 Cid SI. Owntr 615-0l4C Q\jdc p:ll'll!'tslm $0 «!() 4 B~ 2 8L Pl.500 ot belt frlllace. be1med ctlUnp.
Nr. MarlMtt lcl!MI TARBELL 2955 H1tbor BAY VIEW 1.ax .....io 1tw2 DoL&;;;, llui loiito .u ... -Let.,,.,... lot w!WI' bmt.
Ill. a .... -m~ ... -· mr I 111 -& °'"" ""''' OM BY OWNER. -"' GI Lendtcepod • ---
HAVE YOU LOOKED FOR
THE · HIDDEN DOLLARS
IN YOUR HOME LATELY?
.... TOI, I-.. _ THE QUICKER !OU oo._ w/poolo, 1(111 .... y..,..._ 6n.f770 I loan-Span. -2 """ I 11< od riflht! P.O. Box l1A Le·
-'I'll!: QUICKER YOU ll1'U. 5&o --2\0 be..., blmo. lllU51t sun&~~Beo~d>~4fl4.m6~'.!!._--,:.=======================::a
t ,
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Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Fingers?
See If You Have Any
Of These Things A
DAILY PILOT
WANT-AD
1. Stovt
2. Guitar
3. Baby Crib
4. Electric S1w
5. Camera
6. Washer
7. Outboard Motor
I. Stereo Set
9. Couch
10. Cli.rinet
11 . Refrigerator
12. Pickup Truck
13. Sewing Machin•
14. Surfboard
15. Machine Tool1
16. Dishwasher
17. Puppy
11. Cabin Crvl11r
19. Golf Cart
20. Barometer
21 . St1mp Collection
22. Dinette Set
23. Pl1y Pen
24. Bowling Ball
25. Water Skis
26. Fruiar
27. Suitcase
28. Clock
Will Sell Fast!
29. Bicycle
30. Typewriter
31 . Bar Stoolt
32. Encyclopedi1
33. Vacuum Cleaner
34. Tropical Fish
35. Hot Rod Equipm"
36. Ftle Cabinet
37. Golf Clubs
38. Sterling Silver
39. Victorian Mirrc
40. Bedroom Set
41 . Slide Projector
42. Lawn Mower
43. Pool T 1blo
44, Tir"
45. Piano
46. Fur Coat
47. Drapes
48. Linen&
49. Horse
50. Airplane
51 . Organ
52. Exercycle
53. Rare Books
54. Ski Booh
55. High Choir
56. Co ln•
57. Electric Tr1in
58. k itten
59. Cl111lc Auto
~. CoffH T1blt
6 l . Motorcycle
62. Accordion
63. Sklo
64. TV Sot
65. Workbench
66. Diamond Watch
67. Go·Kart
68. Ironer
69. Camping Trailer
10. Antique Furniture
71 . Tape Recorder
72. Sailboat
73. Sports Cir
7 4. Mattress, Box Spgs
75. lnba1rd Speedboat
76 . Shotgun
n . Saddle
78 . Dirt G•m•
79. Punching Bag
80. Biby C1r rl1g•
81 . Drums
82. Rifle
83. Desk
84. SCUBA GHr
These or ony other extro thln9s oround the house may
be tumed into cash with o
DA~ Y PILOT WANT-AD
so • • •
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678 .
1. CYOUR CREDIT IS GOOD>
DAILY PILOT WANT ADS
WILL WORK FOR YOU!
Get In On The Action Today!
'
----·--------·· ---... -
DAILY PILOT Z:J
HOUSES FOR SALi RENTALS RENTALS
Leguna Beach 170.S Hou111 Furnl1hed HouMS Unfurnished
R NTALS .
Apto. Furnlohect I
REN ALS
Aplt. Unlurnlollod
Gonor1I 2000 Coot• u---•100 c ~ • osto Me,. floo Gener1I JOGO
BEACON BAY EX-MODEL Ho"" I BR. 21-----------------
9 MO LEASE ba, """''· drapes._ bit·'~" $25 Wk. Up RENT ' 1 fenced. gardener included I I. • • BR water roru •. S42S ~ mo. Bkr ~2424 E'Yet • Studlo 6 Baeb 1p11. 3 loomt Fum ture
2. • 2 BR.2 ba new tPI ,. mo 54&-.... • lDcJ Utlll l .'l'hone ,..., $25 Montll
3. -3 Br + lam. view .. $300I ========:;;= • MUI Servk:e • TY 1vdl. ruu. OPTION TO BUY !,·,·,'. BMRonoo~· potio ...... f.!50 N_owport Beech 3200 •New Cate " 'Bard N'o de-t o.a.c. " 2376 Newport Blv • 548-rn'6 ,,.,...
3 I • Bo"" " Be ~ ' BEDROO I f H.f.R,C.
RUL •8TAT• ..., ... ,..~-, ......... ~ ...
'494·1177 o nJ>l ,,ewport ,..,..,, ...-1 M, nice Y um., Fumltu,.. Rtntals
On Qllie'l Cul de Sac. Over clean. Elderly peraon r1 el·
EMERAW BAY . Ideal lam· 7100 sq. "ft. Gardent'I' &: water derly couple preferred. $85. 517 W. 19th, C.M. M&-!411
Uy home in iteehlded g-.uden Coldw II Ba-L & ( lnchid. 1325 per mo. $295 oo mo. 966A • 9108. W, 17tb., 1568 W. ta:ln, Anhm Tl""2800
11?1.ting, 6 bedrnu, '8rae dln· e , naer o. 2 yea.r lease &16-4316 c .M .. ~: ~.:~, ,'"".,..=., -APr-MGR 1 ..... rm ta.mu .. rm w/FP 4 2200 I!. CN.d Hlellw1y _ ...,.
.. ,. ' UJ ' ...__. 1Hd!.·ct11'9nli. BAYSIDE Villag•, $175·, 2 nn"C 2 BR ~ul •·-l)ttru P.Jwi 2 half·bath.s, -lov~ kl Niil 01 l•Mll un""" · " .,,... · •w·u. whJJe away. Couple with
ly & . 2 Ba.. •Love, n:trl&. 8etm cell. bH:ns patio. """' In Or ~ • patio ocean views ·1 c d dul ' ' Y "" np ' ...... · arpell, rapea. A ts on-Adults. No pets. $145 Mo, wanll opportunity to baJtd].e
SJ.29,500. Adjoini."' lot, com-Rent1ls to Shirt 2005 Jy, No pets. Pool, slip; call 1974 \Valle.ee, C.M. your property. Box P-1•, P~Y landscaped -$27 .500 • 6~l(6t Alter 4 PM
n-.ist be sold with or after Shar CM I l B I DL..X 2 BR., tum. Ideal Jor Dally Pilot
home s&le e l'i r w lwn 3 BR. Fenced ill y11.rd &: .bachelors. $1~. Pool. 1993
, ' beds 1w/lady, coov loc. pool, heated pool, Crpts, drap., Qaurch, CM 548-9633
·PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEWS Reas. &H!.-25(18 blJns, din nn or den. $?15 -;POOL=:;.,-.,.-;;;:--,turn=-cc;;;-· . oJ ·-f : l BR. . Utll. • A delightM, 3 yr old home, WANTED Single C\rl 21. to mo. 642-u= 8 t 5 pm. paid. SJlS Moll.th
high bNmed ceilings, te&k share Apt. Call al1er 5:30 t BR, 2 ba, pool, w/yan:t & e 548-334S e
Paneling, 4 bedrms, den. 20 673-357!1 pool maintenance. $375. 369 1 '1"B"'R;:-•p-;IC". Be;:-a-ui"•,-o"1tr""t"orn,,,-SS5"'
x 3J llvinr nn, all the built-C M llOO Vista Baya Circle. N.B. Unl'um $85. Adult!!. Util. In extra&. J400 sq. It. • ost1 en IH2..J:li9 or 542-&!14 S73-l365
fJiiN·ER ASSOCIATES l BR. F~m. m mo, ~ar 3 BR 2 bath duplex, bit-ins DUPLEX 2 BR apl., 611-rllY
Water pa.1d. Oose tn. 1 "1Jiel cpt.s/drps. Nr bc~h· Av ail furn 1975 Wall c M 682 No. Coe.st Blvd. older .person. No pe\ll. AUi· 15, $250 Yrly. 5005 · • ace, · ·
l..agunA Beach (7141 494-Un 5'18-J2'17 , Rlwr. 642-3865 .. 548-8687. aft. 2 PM . 549--0154
$140 UTIL. paid. Lovely
LEASE ~ 3 BR., 2 Ba. $250 3 BR. 2 Bth Duplex Bit ins. 2 BR., blk. to K·Mart.
Per Mo., water pd. Mrsa S235 yrly, 133 ~h St. N.B. 5TI Joann. S4S-0787
Ver-de area. 546-6203 6r.;....,2445 !========= 2 BR~ 1 adult -$125
Newport B11ch 2200 Newport Heights 3210 • 360 t-111.mllton, Apt A • I--'"----~--• """383 •
ATI'RACTfVE waterfrnnl 4 NEWLY df.ror 2 BR, den, ~ • .,.u.,....u"1"n"'pd7" . .,., "B",.-... =-;":::""it.
Br. borne, boat dock. winter hobb)' rm. Gar. boat 1-'um sso. Older sgie person,
E 0 d• lease. storllg'I!• Adults pref. \1511 pet £»{. 2335 Elden.
xtra r 1nary tn3J OW 7~ 67~2885 aft 6 I ·L,-A'°'R"G"E'""""B"'"ACHE=~w=.,.._ ..,,,.,1.-= ..
Sacrifice WJNTER • Bay Bea<.'h Front. 2 BR. Lrg fenced lot. Dbl & nicely lurnistwd. 2885
ol new bomr.s. Builder must 4 Bdrm • 3 bii.th -S300 per gar. No pets. $135 mo. on Mendoza Dr. Apl. A, CM .
sell several new view homes mo. 9'15 w. Bay, OR ~rn leallt". ~8-7!li2 BACllApt. Ideal for working
in Laguna Beach. all with -175 ·1 views ol coast. 3 bdrm 2 N1wpo" Hgts. 2210 Bay Shorft 3225 woman or pensiOOC'r. uh -~-------pd. No pel5. a-13-8.128 art 5 hath, custom design!'CI & • -built. True Spanish styling 3 BR partly furn ... l~e J>?OI, AITRACT.IVE 2 BR 2 ha, f:URN. Bach, Apt., $65
. 1h .__ JaWf\ & pool S(>rVIC'! Avail 9-nf"W lumiture. Avail Sept. I ~·3• 5119 w1 operi .,.,.,m con&truc:-. l I 2 T 5 I .....
SIOO
2 BDRM APT
lltln._pooJ-Patl• * $13G mo. * 313 E. 17th Pl., Apt. K
Coste Meta
SMALL rear bachelor eol·
tai;e. Npt Hitits attl $90.
Avail Aug. 19 Pref•r
employed ~~ woman.
548--4711
1028 EL CAMINO DR.
Deluxe 3 BR. $WI. Reipoos.
ible }'OUrl& adults ok.
540-0154 Ml "922 548-3481
SPAC 4 BR. Towrtbol.PI!,
Newport Upper 8&7, Pool.
Rec. lacll. Qlildren, pets
OK. $260. llfUe. 642-6791
AVAJL Aug 17, Olx duplex. 3
BR 2 ba., bl.UM, cr,Q, drpa,
gar. S170 231 Knox SL
548-3165
SEPARATE 2 BR., carp.,
drpa. S!ove: Encl. paUo;
gar. 1 Child OK. No peU .
Refe r. $120 ~1076 ti All d l l 1·68. S215. 642-8706 Wmler ease. mo . on. e uxe 11.ppo nt· 646-7847
men ts. ========= Newport Beac~
OPEN HOUSE SlJNDAY la_._lbo_• _____ ._300_1 Balbo• 3300
Call for location & terms. Bayfront Executive Small furn a.pt for rent
$33,500. Peninsuh1. Point Avail now near ocean. C11ild OK.
4200· SPLM'-Levl!l 2 Bedroonu.
bltn&, drpe, cpl. No prt.1.
28!15 Mendoza Dr., Neer o.c.c. 545-5471
494·8833 Type home. Pier & not. 5 Br. 4 Br. 21,fi bi.. Custom Q\o.'T1er on premises Sun. 1 BR Unf. apt.
LOS PADRES 4 bath, comple1rly equip. features. $275 mo. Yrly Jse, 6001h aubhouse, N.B. $80
REAL TY Avail Sept 1orOct1. 67J.2039 Cll.11673-.'1882 alter 6 pm. 2 BR, ne&r ocQllli, crpts, Realtor 548--7720
li9.5 Glenneyi·I! Street $140 yearly, Rear duplex, 2 BR. 1% ba. Drp6/crpts.
Laguna Beach Lido 1111 2351 Huntington Beach 3400 1211111 461h St. 548-8379 BllM, prt gar/patio. Adults "!!!!!!'!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!I ----------See by appt. only. $140 M9--0433 546-40'll noe. "' OPEN HOUSE 4 BR., 'l Ba.: avail. 3 BR.: get new cpts., drps. ,
2880 Zell Dr_ Sat & Sun, Aug alter Labor Day lhru $140 Lease. 2 Oilld. O.K. Nr. BEAlITIFUL Waterlron1 apt.• $90. 2,BR Eastside CM Stove
10 & 11, 2 to 5 pm. Ch-01 a Junf!. S325 Mo. 675--0176 Bea.ch Blvd. & Slatrr 2 BR .. patio, boat dock . il refrigerator. 1687 T\iiltln
kind nearly n I! w !amily 17656 Van Buren M2·'1n1 Winter leasr. 3403 Finley Ave. Apt 2
home in tiptop condition. J:funtington Baich 2400 3 BR, 2 BA, Newly rcpaintl!d, e 675-4039 e 0T"°R0A°'N"'°SPO=co;R'"T"A"T"l""O"'N,.-
Inviting living room with 1 milr from beach. $18.'i. Winter 2 BR. adulu1, 9 ---~-----1
stone fireplace, 4 BR 2~ G~T Hou~. m8:'1 prefer., 536-8129 month1t leaae. t712 Scaahdre Used Cars 9900
BA fam'J dinin cookin& fac1l.; ut1l pd. Nr . --Dr. 615-3345 -'"""-";;_;;,---..,;,.;.;;,;,1 are~. e~l~ rooi;:autifull~ beach. t75 Mo. 536--7870 eves Laguna Be1ch 3705 OCEANFRONT .Atfrac. 2 Br". CADILLAC
landscaped yard wlth patio, Summer Rentals 2910 OCEANF'RONT. LEASE fura. Apt. Winter or yrly. ---------1
waterfall, fishpood, plus<J-----'----'"'---'---Leaving for EW'QPe. Exrc. _A_v.,.•,",.',.1,.'-',.· c;641;-=5832-:c::o;;;--CAD'ILLAC DEVILLE
spare lor boAt or trailer. NEWPORT Beach, lg•. fami· home. UnSUfPAssed view. 1 BDRM Near pier. r.:15 Lustrious 4-window '60 Hdan
Owners leaving •at!f. Must ly sized 2 BR. tum P1'1. Sandy swim brach. Versattlr month. Avail Sept. 15 with air, power •teering,
£rll. $39 .~. w/pe.lio. Avail. AU![· 24 4 B * R'.!6-:UM. JM)Wtt brakea, ~r win. r ., 3 Ba . $500 Mo., yearly.
mARION mllH~ thru Labor Day: 1~ blk. to Owner l--49'3-19'17 2 BR., ima1l ocean vie>R; dow1, etc. Seals look new!
beach & Bay. 673-1452 s~·>c. Wini.er·. '°"pies only. S780 NORTH ocean side of hwy. 2 ....., HOLIDAY • • ~LER NE\VPORT I Bal Bch e 67J.1715 e ,_,,,_.,, · · BR.. den. frplcs. carp, 1969 Harbor Blvd.
house 3 Bdnn ~ blk lo 8:3Y· drapet, appliances. View TEACHERS -DELUXE 3 br OlSta Me1a
61S South Coast Hiway $125. wk. NO\.V 11 v 1 1 1 · Many extras: Cardrnc.r & 2 ba Winter or yrly lsc. Open Sunday_ Drive-In
REAL ESTATE
l.Agun1 Beach 673-8793 water incl. $385 Month. 122 46th fit. 6'f5..2587 ===="'-'=-"-===!
ialt"a Dept 494-4764 l & 2 Br. Furn Apts. J,i lease. 494-1701 ·
i:ental Dept 494-4874 blk to ocean. 1209 W. MONARCH BAY ARE A B1lbo1 4300 ___ C_O_R_V_A_fR_,--1
Laguna . Charm wk~~~~~l~~~boa . Sl5 LOVELY OCEAN VIEW. 3 --------
'l BR, 2 baths, beamed ced-, BR & den, 2 BA, cpl.I, Orpl, OCEANFRONT
1ngs. frplc. 1undeck. oorner 2 BR heme 1n Laguna trpl, pool. S300 mo.
lo!. w/w carpets. So. La-Beach~ Aui:: & Se~t. $123 wk adullll 496-1243 betw 10-5 pm Y1arly R1nt1I
guna, $24,750 wi!h excellent or $385 mo. 497-t-t:il r-.1Y Lovley la ..... e 5 BR, 3 ba No pets or chiklrett '• llOO & $125 mo. tem1s. 1 BR. furn. Apt. sip:;. 4 home lo responsible fam on-925 E. Balboa Blvd ,
BOND REAL TY 1 Block to beach. Weekly ly, S:IOO mo.· Owncr/Agt. ----
323L So. Coa~t Hiwa y ~. Newport Bch 642-0316 5'10-.186~ B1lboa l1l1nd 4355
South Laguna 2 BR. rum. apl., a\Jlll. 6: $145 ========= l------'----
499-2238 199-3403 per wcel!.. Nr. Beach 312 Dina Point 3740 "'INTER 3-BR./near bay!
THE BIG ONE 33rd SL, NB. 67:>-2032 Sl35 mo. + uUI. * PANORAMIC Vl~"\V • Upprr Sprawling 5 BR & den, D"I '-'cN fAL~ Wkenris. 67>~0' " " <1 2 BR Carpetrd, drapes, 2 Pl!IO tile noo1·s, C.·"~' Hou"' Unfu,nlih-..1 12131 SY u"-"'""' fil car gar, palio, Lralif' $150,
beam ceilings. Uv nn, utll11; pd. adul!s, 644--0GCJI or S!JI COZY Bachl!lor. Pa!io
Spanish f)>lc, w I w crpts, Gener ii 3000 4~S094. Avail Sept IsL Util. Yearly. Em p Io ye d
bh·in range & oven. $31,950 . adult. no pell!. 116-A Agate
oUer your down pmt. OFFERED ., . 1 AL~
Mil.:oJon Rlty. 494-0731 FOR LEASE Apt1. Furnished Hunfington Beich 4400 """":~~~~~iiii-INewpor1 llNghts · 4 bdrms. ---
1
MAGNIFICENT 9 mo .• $250. General 4000 2 BR. 1% baths, pool,
OCEAN ,VIEW LOT Nt'WpOM Beach • 3 bdnns. -EXPERIENCED APT MGR sundrck, enclosed gar, ~
$." 9.50 pool $300 blockll to beach, immac 1 1, ~ 11mall, but level $750 M ·Del M 3 bdr or taker.are ol your propert)' thruout. Apply ~ _ IOth SI. down, be.I l53 mo. Laguna esa . ar • · ms. while away. CouplP. with
Bch. (114 ) 497·1210 ~ener Incl · 5ZJO. many yrs l"Xp in Or. Co. Fi.JRN Duplex 1 Br. &r: gar. 1
'61 COR VAIR MONZA
Sparkling all original club
coope • aulo:Jnatlc tran1 ..
radio, h@ater, vin,yl aeatl -
extra big valul! 11.t
S595
HOLIDAY RAMBLER
1969 Harbor Blvd.
O:ls1a Meu
Open Sooday -Drive-In
OLDSMOBILE
'62 OLDS -$600
"88" sedan with power 1tttr·
ing, automalic trans .. beet.
er. etc. Good·lookina,. de·
pendable and 1afl!.
HOU.DAY RAMBLER
1969 Harbor Blvd.
Caita M1!1&
Open Sunday -Drive·In
FORD .. ~'""'""'"""'.""'!~'""!!I Mesa Del Mar · 4 txlm1s. wants opportunity to handle block to beach. $145 mo. Pa · • VI ~arcll'nPr incl · lnl. your property. Box P-168, 536-7146 '62 FORD 500 noramrc ew Phone Mrs. Pkk<'I(. 646·7171 DailY Pilot !-=========::: Club COllPI!. )>OWl!r lleerlng, F~RCED SALE . THE REAL ESTATERS CHATEAU La POINTE Laguna Biich 4705 automatic trans .. radio UJd
3 BR, 'l bA, S2500 for equity. ---· -·----· B llul 2 B !Um 1 heatlft'. A Pmt ••un ..... C M 3100 t"fl.Ut r . , ap " 14., aaume s _...,mo . .--.ir.-ost1 esa J-ltd pool, Carport-<>(! st NEW Furnished 2 BR 2 Ba
clpals only. 494-6230 k' Adu.It N ls all elec bu i I t • Ins. HOlJDAY RAMBLER
ABOVE & BEYOND (the AVAIL TMMEO. M!'sa Verde p~lin~MON;· AVoE~ cM Panoramic view overlooking 1969 Harbor Blvd •
smog) 4 Br., 3 Ba., fam . rm. 4 1:1'R, 11" /dil'.vi.ng rm, LIDO BAY VIEW Aliso Beach. Mature adults Colla Meaa
Lease sm mo . sell S36 900 spacious am nmi;t rm, only, no children. $Ul5. Open Sunda,y -Drive-In
:i% Down ~· 494-SJ&t ' bilt·in kilchen, beaut!JUIJ)' Specious l BR Apl in hl·rille 499--3755 BUSIESl' muleqll&Ce tn
· er landscaped yard. Y~Iy Bldg. CX!stom Fum. Yfily
BY OWNER. 3 Br. 2 ha, lease $325/mo. incl water $3.'iO/mo. 67!>-2676 Ritt. DON'T JUST WISH for IOmt'o town. The OAD...Y PIL01
r. la ~ v · lhlng to tumlah your home Ousltied tectim. . 51..,. 1rep Cl!, v.:ean 1 e w . and gardener St'fVi<'i!. ...._.. PU w d _, 800 For VILLI)' ot an! A s. . , . find rreat buya In ~ O>OJ1ey, time • .rfCll'\. i..oM ~"· 673-3663 Eves. 548-6966 Dial &42-5678 day's Cla&sified Ads. oew! ! ! ==·'-",."'='o-"c;·-~,,",,,-=-IFOR Lease. 3 sr.. 2 BA I ~:========'""=====i:::==::::.!.:::======"O':=== I
l
f"Ul.L OCEAN VIEW. C()mc Jamily/tanai nn. Lge frne· General 5000 Gener1I 5000Gen1ral 5000
and !W!t"! 3 Bt 2 BA . frpJ. ed yd .. firl"f)latc , cpt11 lll1d l-----:===================-----1 $33,500. Owner. ~!M-4146 drps. Av11.il Sept. 1. $25() mo. I
;,,.,h><I•• G•"""" • ••'"· Cl~ -0 ,ii-.. ,( -/) "11 ~ C::, I
U. OJI. Robert a. Moore P'!:I J.'"U }..)' J.. ~ JJ <1• V Laguna Niguel 1707
646-4771 -OPEN SAT & SUN
I · 5
2•311 Los Serrenos
NEW 5 lsR .. family rm .•
Imai. lmlnac. Superb I y
carpeted lo draped, Ll!&Af' •
option; $2511 • $1 ,000. Co~ta
Lag\Jna Niguel Men . H.B. border
5 BR. 2~ bt.lhs, b.11.w . 2 car 642·:->495
p.ra1e $.11 ,500 I '°'"°AS=,.-d=-;3-;;B;;R--,M= BOND REAL TY LE E, lx. . on· ricello townhouse; pool &.
l23'l5 So. Coast HiWl)I recreation. AdultJ () n 1 y ,
S<Alth Laguna $175. Agmt. st()..8!M5
499--2Z38 $1592:i-~2~BR.~un~r.C"--~m-coort--
This Page
REACHES
68,972
HOMES
Mgr. on ptemlaes aft. 6 mo W. 17lh St .. CM
3 BR., 2 Ba .. bltns.,
p&.t_lo; carp., dra~:
~ Month. 546-:l!ICI
3 BR. 2 ea.; i160 monlh. Xlnt
loc.: room for trailer or
boat.~
2 80RM Plul Om. S@p houae
Sl.25 mo. Ph11 Util. Cill Mrs.
Pickett. &t6-7tn
FOR t,.,ue 3 Bf', 2 ba, tam
rm. Lrr pe.Ho, fenced Jtrd,
....... d .... 12!~564163
IS YQ\JR AI> IN Cl.ASS!·
l'IEDf Someon. wlll bl-
Solue a Simple Scra.mbled Word Puzzle for 11 Chuckle
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II I I I' I 0 C...ploto .... "'""''• ...... by 1111;,, ,, .... "'""' -. you dwtlop froM $Mp No-. 3 ~
~ m\'i.~'01• 1· 1· 1· --r· 1· r r 1· r 1
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EACH WEEK
-• ------•• • ---. -.._ -.._ _, ,.. _.. t ~ .I "--._ ilt.. • • ---.--...-._,, ______ &-••M•'•·~----·~--·---·~·--~·--~-· .... •---.... ~ .... -..... _,_., _ _, • .__ ...... -..... ~::..~"".""""--'" .................................... __________ ..,.,.i..;...., -· -----· --· ----• -· - - - -·-e a ·e=,.-• "> *C' c w s +•t·' ta5·· sna o cc e r "
l
l
1
•
... ~ .. "•\ ..... •
llARIOR
GREENS
8Acnw\ft • urmJIUI. . ,,_ $100 ._,., .....
Ind. Id. PRIVATE Jtoonl A bath,
l • 1· • I BDRM.. pttvata entrbOI a paho. "5
' Become a d!Jlr!butor ot America's fastest
CUSTOM HOMES * CUSTOM DfSIGllHIG
Interior •ncl Exterior
* Jt HOUR SERVlCZ: •
Pl-lni. """· rtmodal, Elec ICWf:r c:leuJnt
f\JlUI ... tnmJllN. l ~S6-Ull==P""~-:-=-:
Reatod -Qdl4 On QUIE.T: Mp. mtrt. '"1 A
C.ta'. Adj. to·~--$515; with ldtc:bn'-rm ...
No pell aJJond mo.; Or weekb. 54-GSMi
ma ,....,.,. w11. at eu-1-:========
growing Prepared Food it.ms. No uperl·
ence required. AU account.a: contracted for,
and ael up by our c<>mpaay. You lnei<tly ,...
stock locaUona with our National llrand
Product
You can earn $180 or moro·a 111DOlh baaed
on your effol'Ul
Room Ad.<jitlon• * . Remodeling_
Custom kitchens & both'
Sendblflsting & Stuccoing
QUALITY Peinllng & Masonry Work.
Firaploces. Ber·B·Qu••, Plantert
WllttWya Wann WMMJ• Gal?
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATIDN FOil
NATUW IDRN SWAl'l'EllS
Spacial Rate
Gaannteed • &t8-140'I'
PLUMBING U Hr-Ml'Y,
Work cuat· Uc., .inlur.;
remodel, repair, rooter Ml'V·
Sll-1566
~;;.1"'2.----·"'"°c;.;;1
e DRESSMAKING·
ALTER. bor I -°""' -G~ -· 5'91 -ln .. almont .;, S2190 to $3960 ·required. You A. the oreo Since We Bid on Moofng tM
1 n--st1--sllucb
•LM.IU -1<11..,., ltta.\19.I
PRIVATE Room tot am-must hal'e a fOOd car and· at least 4 to 8
bulal0r7 IMIY. Good loot!. hours •~time per week. JB49 London Bridge ~ ...... "' ,,..., .......... c.--.. .,... ._YOUll ...... IMf• ...,_ ..... If ............
.__fHI ... l'OJI l.M.I -J•ADQ OMC.TI
Prdeuionai • rut
Reuooablt-646-6446
Exallent. parll: • ... IW'-Nl -·--.t1-5'&.f'1S3 """"""" '"' ...... ....... ct-·-u you are 'lnterea\ed, have lhe desire, drive, OK BUILDERS l'HDNI 642-5671 Altarat1~2.5'45
Neat. accuntt, 20 yn. exp.
lni .-. • ....._ Mite. it.ntill 5999 determlnaUon and want to be succealful in
Te ...._ Y-Trader's Parllllat M
°'"""""""tlv' T....,u 1 growing busineaa of your own. write ua M4 Vlo Oporte. Newport _., I.AXE 'l'altoo ''" Lot N ..
1, 2 6. 3 BDRM. APl'S. SINGLE prqe for ·n:nt today. Please enclose name, address and Ttl.,a...e •11~~461 vada Ude, paved $12.500
POOL..NO CJDLOR.EN Costa Meai. Call beJcn: 10 h be ev. Exchan1e tor 10me-telep one num r. bod,yl bekl.acbel untm. MARTINlt;>UE AM .. """. PM. 541-mT W• ... 1-lnveotlgatloil AHNDUNCIMINTS Carpantarl"ll '590 m·, "' ' Bu. ~,,.
GARDEN APT.S. llEAL ESTATE , COMPANY encl NOTICES N•w c..ta M.,. 3 BR. 2
!811\ • Sanu Ana. C.M. 0..IOlol NATIONAL p!ZZA,. CARPENTRY ho. ,_., vol 125.000. Ex-
c..11 M,... Hmdenoo K.s5C Income Property 6000 · 10407 Liberty Personals 6405 MDiOR REPAIRS. No Job chan&• for vacant lot,
lm Santa Ana, Apt U3, C.!iJ. St. Loul11 Mlstwrl 63132 Too Small. Cabinet in pr-"junker,'.-boat or T.D.
WALK TD IE.t.Cll Ar" Coda 314-42).1100 FISH N' CHIPS .. ,. • otbu cabindL 0..-/Btdl.,<, .,._,.,.
-A-VAIL. Aue. 15th 12 Unila, Newpnt Beach. All Ask for: Mr. Arthur Included with ,1 adrnWion 545-8175 Eves. 646-2372 0t.y1 Honlulu Hawaii home with
2 BR w/carpor1. $100 1-BR., furn,; pool; 4 yean liiL .ESTA.Tl NUl'VILLE, U.S.A. is now u our Thun. ~al! Serv-H. 0. Andusciii. income, Unlvenl~ are a. ZIMDi=u:~:.~. D ;:·,;:-:'~. ie:;: Gen1r1I ~~ ~~u,.orw -~ edw~ ..!. 'tll BFrlPM. Sat Cement, Concrete 6600 ~~= :n. t~. !~t:
Call between 2"' 5 $175,IXMJ. Good Hnancln(. ------"""".·:::'·'~ .. I ;~=tic:. ~ .. ~at~ oANCERS''coRNEi 494-M.17 or 6'lS-M
• 636-4120 • R. Nattttsa, Rlr, "2-l41l5 1l1nch.. 6150 Anabelm.Lq\lnl.Bcb.,San-14311'N.Maln,at EdingerSL EXPERTCEMDITWORK • 3 ACRES* * TOWNHOUSE * NEWPORT IEACH ;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~?I 1a A>a, o,....., Huntlrirton S1nt1 Ana 542-9306 ",'~••1•,,"""""tt-:;"" B .. uiand Hawaii
2 BR, 111 batluo: .. tto0cpU, TRAVELODGE HORSE RANCH Bcb. • otbor anu. $14,!ISO ·~"' "' "" P' "'' " will trad• lo< down "'
d ...... 1tove, adultr. $140 mo. Dep1"eciatkln $13,600 v-• Cub req. FUI.ly teCW'ed in· PIAJIO PLAV1:R est. Call anytime &42·!M96 "··"" able R·l lot Newport . •--G ..., -20 Ac:rt• near Murrieta .a· I l ~ 134 E. Mebb Lane 1-rou •·•·••·••• .,.,,<Ml Test. lhoUld retum lit ft. CUSTOM PATIOS A: Bea.cb an:a. 842-51&4
&tJ..6812 * MS-1768 1967 Grau •••••••• $UO,mo le)' wtth awn well' comp. c.J1 tut appt. &C-7'113 or AOt'Of'd.l.ati or ·~ A: muli· Block wall.I. Also OObCf'tttl~-------
1961 Gro11 ........ $1Z,«X> lnip.tkm l)'atem. Lee mod-write to 161T W•tcllff Dr-. danl wanted tar sroup. u.winr i J't.11'IOVal. Ml-1010 1'!'-de: .. ~ Ila.hi ~'~Enque
h 5200 c. R. c-~"" "2-l615 em home, I aWl traWna 'ft-·'" . pOol wo or ren <aA.u> r -1N ·-•-•-''P"_rt_B_•_•c____ ... ,.. tiam, 4 stall .tallkn bun, sutte 210, Newport -Must do ltandud Popi A: CEMDn' Work, all type a. snooker tbl for late mod IO'
DELUXE Baytront, boat atlp OOWNI'OWN i..qunl. Beach fo&llni bun with lab A: y. Cal-92660 ~ A: BIUn. Call No job too ama.11. Frtt nt camper/l&' oh/dut! buagy
-zoned for bw. -IJ'Ht P> ___ .. •--'-r. -.... ~ CORONA dtl Mu, E. Clout (n.fl OB8-20U ' H. STUnJO( 5t8-161S •Uc""' ........... -· • a'fl,il, pool 2 Br 2 119. $25(). ' Jl)CaOI 1Cfa;w .r U1I ....... ~ '""""~NIU ........ ~
Ritt 615-2ni tential for Wdn, lnvstr1 or $90,pX). F.or more ~· Hwy, Beauty Salon SlNGLES 35 to 5.S BESJ' In concrete. Walb, Will trade accomodationa
up. · f.l.m home w/inocme. Paya tion )lltue call G~ e1tabll1btd1I yn, M&-3523, New Social Club fonn~ for pool dec)!S, Doon, patios. Mtn. cabin, 2 BR. l % BA,
NEW SotmdPf'OOl 2 BR-2 Ba-for ttadf. Prin. Ol'llJ. Wbat Thom.pd\ with 613--7159 Beach d liM area. Pnl~ 6'2-1514 fu:l1y """"td for Beach area
Acro&1 tm. Coco'•· 16&5 have you'!' fM.3170 Eckhoff lo AsNc., Inc. -twice wee~ 1 athertn 1 LI __ , ~. lily -•
Jrme SUS/$20). 60-0239 TRIPL.EX H.B • all 2 Br. • ..... w. Qi.apman Ave. R .. I E1tlt9 Lunt 6MO under Ideal coadltion • C c•,"w":'k-""'~-~ ~. aumttmer/winKI !.'!~
GOLD Medallion. 2 l 3 BR Good cond. Adult-ten111ta. -I ---------I Interested? Write Box M emw ..... · ~ « same me. .--
cpts/drp1, bit-in&, $175 A: $26,990.ownerM?~.2341 541.-'ll!lllC::::~~ BORROW On Your F.qtdty 169, Daily Pilot Chlld CIN 6'lO 42 ooit Hywd, older, Bread
up. 673-23'10, m-1995 Private 2nd Morta:. money FLY TO CATALINA l butter income. Trd $60,<m
1==========ilullM11 lltent1I 6060 FREE APPRAISAL l DAILY J'LlGin'S FROM SPECIAL Summer program. eq./waterfroflt hm, land or
Neweert Sho.... 5220 NEED More apace ioakte "' AcrNf9 6200 PROMPT SERVICE ORANGE <X>UNTY ~ Aa:e1 2~ to 6. • a.m. tG S: 30 comJ. property s. Calif.
2 ... BR. 2·· Ba., carp., drpc out? Downtown area. Large Reputable O>mpany terVln& PORT. Catallna • Vepa p.m, .$18 wtek. Cl a• l • Owntt ln.'\) m.1203 l9-SJ
bltna; nr. OCUll· $185 Mo. 5 room houM. D 0 ab 1 e A nEN110N Orange Cowlty 11 yean. A1rUnH. • 546-6612 Monteaoni School&, 1525 N. 35' Brill pulman bus for lg.
yearly. 5Q-8lSO prap plua 1111:1race. e&' x· DIVILOPERS & Sattler Mortaace Co.,· Inc. GENTLEMAN ttd rid Santa Ana, C.M-&f&-3706. lam, club, AlJ>! 22. Full bet.d I""'='=======:'".'. I 300' lot. Lota « l'OOm fer . INVISTORS ~~it~th ~~~~:-lnPewood ~ve ;:30 e~ rnu.o care fl strt aae 3) stereo, bar, AC, crpta. Nu
E11t Bluff 5242 y0ur buline11 inaide a * IQ LEVEL' }.CRl'.S * A: wkenda 6'7J,..Tl65 642-WT Mum anytime aft 5, my home, compankm to own o'haul trade tor TD '• etc ..
Ho outa:kle. $1S5. Call 546-.23ll IdMlb' kated tn hll:h-dr1 PRJV•TE ....,, will ,_ .. 673-2842 child. 8'2-1860 $9500. ~ PRESTIGE Town mas .. ~ 5 m u-~~--~. ~ -""'"' : • 1a1• ....... u....-.. detert (no 11D01 ., • .._ms. lllXI MO wrl 2 DUPLEXES val. $37,500, For lease, 2 br I: den ' 3 br Chol .....-..1.-..1 dty-ait!) L • v •I taOneJ' on aaod eqUJI)'. .; want ter or Centractors 6620 in Colla Meaa. Tndt for with 2 or 2~ 'Datha. Gold * Cll Locat'9n * WVIJU'I'"••... A.gt "2-58&1 artilt to share hadenda. f'OOL Mariner'• Mlle Newport land. pwnp • well on prop-• Sep apU; • ID ltourita , B I hi I L houM or trust deeds. In-Medallioo all eledrtc. Minney'1 5*Cl91, 5t8-4l91 arv. Jlllt 11 milel Eall of ' Beadi. se.97s& . Don t Unt ~ t I •• come $402.M. Owner.
2-car aar .. Rmt .WU at s.ntow (where srut ex-Mort...-. T .D. I 6341 The money )'OU re apendin&; * 5f9.M33 *
$%1(1 mo. Offf~ Rent I 6070 bu llrMd,)' be&Uo') ALOOHOLlCS AnoQ)'moUI 11 your own. Free est. 151=="""===="° 837.m Amifro W-:11 N.B. a ~ • mad• Lakes in ~.000 lit TD on .mpedKular Harbor .U.. PhDDe m-srn yn. Xlnt service. New con-NIED MOTORCYCLE
Co....a dal Mar 5250 LAGUNA llACH am! Idell Jar re 1 0 rt Oce&nTiew ~l So&d for P.O. Box 1%23 Costa Mua. irtruction. Addn'i. Rmlodel. Have 1964 Simca. rebuilt
Air Condltlenetf d•vtlopment, alfalfa 17.!flO. Pa.yal»e 1% per AUTO INSURANCE HIT Tom Carney Bldr., 2400 W. qine, MW tires. $450 ot
ON FOJl.D'.i' AVENUE srowlna. ft1b raialna, etc. month ~lni 8%. All due Relu~~ DNV nlina'!' c.out Hwy., Newport SH.ch, '!' .................. 494-mt
_ Deak ~ ·~ In .• , opportmdtiel boundleu. 3 )Tl 109'-~ aalely Ph Valda * ~1123 673-2473. 28' Trailer In nice peril. Ex-
-..., newut -• at 11rla la a rara o1ferina, d-retums approx per yr. J WILL play piano fer Jour • ROOM ADDmONS • ehan&'e for dupkx or 2 on
Q. =-~~ tn ~=-fDrdlna: the lnvntGI' a areat .f%.ll37 pertin: &tvtn 1.t Jout home. L. T. Construct lot. tr wtiat haw you1 Call
ftrture! Penonal drcmn• '1390 2nd TD PQ'able 1 % per F« nominal fee. lfi7~ ramily rooma, kitchen or 642-4610
ON TEN A.at.ES ~ =~ ~· ltancd force thll -.le; otb-morith including 10~ all due units. Single st~ry .. or 1; 1 ·,-1'.lP~" -or-w=o-RLO=,-Laruna--.
1 , 2 BR. !'um • UnfUrn entrucea: Frmtap an er, smaller parce11 avall-5 yn:, eov~rS m:eile!lt Annou~ments 6410 pl~ C"UStom designed. l'or Ocet.n view 2.st)'. 3 BR. 2 .___.,en mo. -.1 ... / PrV Forett ATa., rear leadl to abla below market value. Oceanview klit-:l>% CU.. estimates & lsyout, phone Ba fa ' -i bit~ ~...,.u......., ..,._. Call owner: Hf-eMO Evu/ count. '94-1137 • 841-1511 • ·• m. rm., u ~-. • 1' Padol/ Pools. Temrl.I · Con-Munclpel parldnr Iota. $50 ==-==----·I Llfette Health Studio deck. Trade for CdM Horne.
tnt1 Bkflt. t bol9 PutV per month kif' apace. Deak weetendl. U1iS% YIELD an .euon 1e-Holpltallty 11 Our Motto Licensed Contractor 49f.5111 eves.
Green. and dWn &~le for 15. cond trU1t deed. $4i,IXXI cub. FREE STEAM wrm Residential • O>rnmerclal
900 Sea Lane, OU4 IM-:ml Rt....._ boun wwtrin& ACfMlll--'"-----•-200_ 496-7508 M· C. Thoren. SWEDISH MASSAGE Maint &: Repairs. Free F.at
!MacArthur ,.._ Caul Hwyl aervke "1allabl• far . $10. SHIP AHOY! ANNOUNCEMENTS Open 'Nkdya 10 am .. 11 pm 673-2129
All ottlltiea paid axcept LAND IN OCEANSIDE! ind NOTICES Stmda.Ya 10 am· I pm Addition1 * RemodeUna: LOVELY 1 bedl'OOlll apart.
ment, 3 blocb from beach.
$135. month. 675-1338
tel~All.Y . pn..or 24 Acrn to&Jstrlal, near air-519 E. Broadway Fred H. Gerwlck. Lie.
222 roR&!l' AVEllU!: port .............. $25,000 A. found (fl'M Ads) 6400 Lonr S..cli i21J) 43'1-T069 613-<041 * 54!>-2110
LAGUNA BEA.QI 5 Acres at busy comer, oould nxiNu Set <ii ·~:-~--. MEMBERSHIP for aale . • PAnOS e Pl.tio Coven
3T Sch:::loner · Value $19.-
50). Trade equity for air-
plane, aport1 car, Real ni.
late. Owner, 673-6900, 673-
'911 ewe.
* * *
$10,000 S<curitr _ ...
pa.yable S3CXI or more per
mo. due 7 yrs. Want F1xer
upper, Cotttt Shop er etc.
Art Gio'rinetti, 6'7J,..T420.
6'13-9117
2 BR tum condo. on Bcb
nr. Venicf:, Italy in exclus·
tv• re10rt area. Trade for
local area 3 or 4 Br. home
or vac. lot or boat 646-12'17
Want 3 « 4 BR w/vlew.
Trade clear 3 BR Collea:e
Park home, w I waterfall,
cvrd patio, spmkln, Ind·
""'· ... """" dlamocd. ........
~an View • Nr Npt pier.
4 units furn , best rental
a.rea. $58,500 • take 1m htie
in tr.de. Owner. 2006"' Court Ave., 673-6527
TILE, Ctr1mlc
* Verne, the Tile Man •
Oiat-woc1r. Install A: ttipaira.
No job too amall. Pluter
patch. Leading I how••
repair. 847-1957/846-020S '
Upholotery _____ l
So«1a1 -Spodal -Spodal
CU.tom upholstery , bootha ~
any type· Bari, Rest., H01Pt:
Will work n!te1, 10 will not·
lnterfer with your bl»ln~. -JOBS lo EMPLDYMENT
Job W1ntod, Lady 7
LADY With nlll'linz exp. will
cani for lad)' or a:ent in )'Ola'
h?me. Ll&ht housework OK.
Best o1 referencu from
_ 4 housea, Wilmtngton F I p =local==ru.,..,.._54H534==::--;;:::'i
$35,500, eq $14,00:t, lncome DENTAL Auiatant. Grad.
$300 I mo. p y m n t s $234. dental aehool, 6 moa exp,
WANT land or local units. aze 19, dependable, wfilina
Bkr. {part owner! 646-9666 to leun. 545-25SS AM or aft 6PM
TRADE $10,000_. equity in WOMAN wi&bes daywork.
West Covina Hills borne, 3 Good and re I i a b 1 e •
BR, 2 ba, den, for aame In. R f 835-7Z16
l.Aguna liills ot NfYIPOrt -'-='-=""""'=;;;'=c-,;=,;;--HIJ. 613-6752 (12 to 5 PMl PRACTICAL NURSE
I'n.de '65 250 cc Yamaha for
amall boat with engine &
trlr or dune buggy. Call aft
5:30 or wkends
~
Days only. Local Ref.
• 64&-1790 •
e PRACTICAL NURSE. U'le
in/oot. Llaht hoosekeep!JW.
Drive. R.els. 493-4949 ...._
'6' 0.... ttuck li< T w/'61 Domaotlc H1lp 7035
10%' Travfl·Quem Cl.m~l---------1
er. Air cond. 2 extra ga1 e O:mipank>n, drive
tank, intercom, boat, m/ex. e Hsd<pr, li.w in, drive
tru for 9 pus Sta Wq of e Prac Nurse, live in
_oom __ •_al_!£1._2266 ____ 1 e Aides, by day or wk
e $4,800 TD e e C.onvel aide, home
Trade on 4 or 5 BR houst Short or Ion&: term
Newport or Corona del Mar Employ" bonded .\: lnsUr
494-7S03 HOMEMAKERS, INC
547"6681 •
Alhambra $11.750. Oear 2
BR. R-2 IOt. Nr LA &: free.
way. Trade for Orange Cty.
Income TD Ol' ~ Owner, 413
M,...U., CM. 6'Ull5
Npt. Ht&. 3 BR, 2 ba. a-.
tom bit .. crptll, drps, pr
door optY'r 114,000 equity
J'nde for t, Real Estate,
or TD. Owner/Bkt 646-7484
• • • • • l!l&S Galaxie 500. Clean,
Trade $600 equity for Volka.
wagen. 413 Map:>lia, CM,
6IUllS
* * *
LIVE INS
Employer pa)W feta
Geoqe Byland Aa:eney
105 B E. ll!th, S.A, SfT..(1395
OrineH live-in1. Cbeerlul
Perm&MDt Experienced.
Far Eut Aaency 6'2-8703
English Cpl 20 yrs exp
Avail immed. Agy oo..8103
rlelp Wanffd, Men 7200
Administrative
Assislanl 2 BR. Unfum.; pr., water 4N-ta be C-2 .......... $25,IXXI A. Oitvrolet rlDs (Bill Bunett Prtvate temia club. no ln-Room Addition&, Lie.
p&id. ~Psi<opm~ Drpf., Air..CondltienMI 15 Acfti, sr_eat potential, Jev-Chev.I vie .. (oU ot Old ttiation fee. SlO monthly. &42-S!m Daya-~Wkndt SER.VICL DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY CITY OF JOme ...... . OfflCll & Desk Spice el, ll!'WU •••••••• $15,000 A. Newport Rd.; to t b ~ 673-Snt .. NEY/PORT BEACH
5355 . ... wtal. JI A=s, cioM bl, ,_. ,_ ~ 646-3311! 1=======
64
=
1
=
2'1C1rpat CINnl.. 6625 ft-~·nlne 66IO -1_-1-.,-----.-7-55-1 $173-1139. Now .... tton. Ex·
wiUJ. = ._1~ : May Cb. •••••••• $10,000 A. &J. fUMr1h _.._ ,.,, cdlent opportunity lot co&.-
IG--RAN--D-canal--; -boa-t-ti..-u-p ~ ~-2-«XJauw ft. I 61 ~a"l!on buay hiway7 hold FOUND doL rolden mlxed1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Revolution1ry Host JapaneM Ga:rdenlnt Iese crad. looking toward
Balboa lolancl
Th. ui: ~ -~· for lnTnt ••.••• , , $4.,900 A.. C'OCkt!'. Near SP'rfntdale l:/t Dry Ci.•nint Method PnlfHlk>nal Maintenanct KEPHART'S custom Ironing cart'S' tn municipal IO"-
.,,.tYil. Dlx. 2 Br. apL Adulll 2163 E. c.c!.t ~'()w 80 ~ JDr countey view•• Edinger. S902 M...,..Llrll: WESTMINSTER Rua•. DrapeJ, Upbol.ltuy ~ hu moved tom E IT, SWte emment admini&tnUon \e =·,: :: i.': ~-Call a AM tos PM '7Mno ta~SiD"E"RJi.~ A. s~. ~~ 5 ~ bike at MEMORIAL PARK C:e~w~:111~::r art a: Eda• Lawn ;~:~M=tn Pft. ~;t~ne~~
Huntington IMch 5400
LARGE Liv. nri., 2 BR $155
mo. All util pAid. Clole to
OCHll .l hi&b acbool.
536-11'6
l1gun1 Baaclt 5705
SECRETARIAL SOI 3rd 'St. 7%l-&7 Gulf Statkm. O:Jron• del Mortvlry & Cemetery Sales, Servi~ Maintenance-Llcenaed hr. Speedy aervice. 962-3465 let:e IJ'ld. and min. CllM
SERVICE Mar. 6'75-«»0 Complete funtr1l1 and Installation 548-4808, 54S-8510 aft 4 PM year experle:nce. For more
Modem offlcel, carpet.I, air Lake ElaineN 6202 RED Taby kitten w/oranat from $245 • Master O:lara:e MOWING, Edzlni, vacalawn, L1ncl1uping 6110 infonnatioa contact PtnJn-
conditlonlnl, parldns. From 1trtpn', Found J.i6o Ille. Cemetery lots • Bankarnericard ~·t cleanup. Hauli ng. nel Office, City Hall, 3300
$65 per month. Ora.op O:lon-PRICED TO SD..L. Good 573-2689 from $130 Modern Rut & C•rpet Odd Jobi. * 548-6$5 I HEAVY yard work &: soil Newport Blvd., Newport
ty Bankmda. 230 E. lTth St., ~le Home Lou I Beadt GREY l . White k It ten lncludt!1 Endowment Can 4335 Cttnahaw, Loa Angela JAPANESE GARDENER pr!p&l'ation. McCann. A: Son heh 9'l!IOO. <n4) &734110.
Costa Mesa. &C-1415 property. w/wtUte collar. Found vie. Evtr')'thlna ht one beautlful 213 -296-5100 Collect EXPER, reliable ma.Int * 495-4697 *
EXECUTIVE Site. 6 roomi. Ag111~!7c'~-~7 .. A2132 Baycreat. Call s.&&-7362 P1ac. mearu: tn. COil. CARPET &: Furn. cleaning; Reu. mo rates. 892-3219. CORRAL'~ lndscp & rototlll
"" ~.... """ , ... IQ w N ----~ I Ii bl ·-·. ~-••I, have own $11., per mo. 1'5 E. .M1111 Sl W El .-eaitt. BL:AO< wh1 1 o U"UUC .,..,...ema. or re a e service i quail-LOW COST Maintenance ..,, • .r•=
CM. &n-:m4 . e MDDl'I, ~~. V~ m:.; 5311~ Bea.ell. W.tm!nller ty w.ork, call Strrlina: for MOW_ EDGE_ SPRAY tqllipment. 962-4764
.. ...
Young Man .
..
100 CLIFF DRIVE
WXURY FURN/UNFURN
Yt'ar\y Lease. 1 & 2 Bdrm&.
Yearly Lea&e. 1 bedroom
atepa lo Shore I: Sbopl
Ocilanv1ew from every Apt.
R. E. W1ntod 6240 Bluff. 644-1195 .1,-193-2421 brightneu~ 642-8520 FERTILIZE. 962--7349 6110
lndudrl1I Rental 6090 . · ADORABLE onnre kitten. SERVICE DlltECTOR'r Mesa Ceaning Service e JAPANF.SE GARDENING Llftdaciplng "'. '
from $150 mo up. lust .... ,..,
MODERN Garden apt. north
al, 2 atory, 2 BR, l'Ai Ba, 2
llUDdecb, gar, 1 bllt •ho9-
pina:.-beach. Vm plulh.. WW
furn. $225· C!K-913K2
e DELUXE 2 BR UDfurn 1pt
dose IO ocean. e n.JRN. 1tudio. 497-18
FOR Leaw: or 1tmt "'~. WANTED. Small houle, wry NO p u1arino. CM 1ea...-1 I . Ca.rpeta, fin .• window1 etc. Service Oeanup Landacap-GAYNOR'S LANDSCAPING
all fenced on ('Ol'Mf or near ~tboUc QiUrdi, for a • ..., .. tt... 6550 Free ell. 548-4111 Ina: 531-1034 aft 7 p.m, 6: GARDENING SERVICE
Crystal A: Ernest H.B. $'9,00l Cuh. lU: 2$1-4593 ~.:~vie~ Ana 11' You want a pod mature SPRING SpecillT 5c:: a ft. RELIABLE: Heu. Oriental State Hcenatd eontrdr,
m.5274 BUSINESS eMI · · Mb)'idtttt, a aood home at. Advanced Carpet • Upbob-can. Cleanup, odd job&. Rn.ldential -Com~rcial
FINANCIAL 1 __. MOI mo.pt.ere for )"OUI' child tery, 54.l-1188 Toll tree Vincent. Hl-4336 Frtt at -No Job too bia:-a:» SQ. Ft. in modern a. .._ while )'OU work -call mt. 893-J58l =e~ D>t $3CIO lut. Oppertvnltlet ADO LOST Costa M..., White ~ N. Colla MM& Draperl.. 6630 Gener1I SMYlcet 6612 ====="===
.. -·•-~ ~ T l'eperhe .. I .. IDEAL O»ta Mesa kM:ation, WOULD JOU like a businea ,._ ~mo ....,.. mos.. BABYSIT my home. Xlnt * ZAFFJNO'S * PROrESS. Wlndolr, walla • A50 350 1q. ft. $15. mo. AU utll'i . ol JO'll' own? You don't Mid wry a.ffeetianatt. Pitue care Nourisbln1 meal a, 25~ ol1 -All fabrics flr. cleanina: bu a In e 11 , _l'e_l_ot_l_nt.:_ ____ _
pd. 67~1-0T an ottl!:e to atut. 8ql:n at can 64&-157J after S· PM ~ play Jrd. Hr, daJ Is 1S22'Ai Newport, CM &CU8l56 rerid., A: con1tructlon. PAimlNG And Paperin&'. U
home. full or pe.rt time. Reward ' wk. Start Sept 2. 168-lfl Cryltal Window Oeanlng J'OU call me we both bend it
Lott 6100 ldnl for huaband A: wife TurquoiM & Dl1mo* BABYSrrnNG, lovllla c:ar., Electrlul '640 n-ee F.atbnatet 5tMT3'1 Exclusive buy mt expensive
--------ttam. Call: 545--7993. No tee. Woach, vie. Udo Nord, bot luncbe1, fenced yard. Tl'J' me and att. 541-3157 l·R_•_•_l•_l_•_W_•_n_t_od __ 5_990_ 2·1 /3 AIMf obUJ:aUon -no lnlonnaUon Berbhlrtt Rntaurut, Cab-Eut C.M. Rn.aon. 5'l-3a64 ELECTRIClAN, \Jcenaed & Haulfnt 6720 NE ED A Pa inter 1
ua-..J over the tdtphcine. Let's Marlnu. REW ARD' b o n d t d • Small ;!obi, AUG l!lth or Sept ht B~ have colfee a talk. anu • CHILD Can I« Want undtr mainttn. A: npa1rs. ~5203 Lite Haultne:·Trlmminaa, Interior I exterior. 1 11tory n~u Woman Dl'ed.11 Bt UI)> VACANT LAND f73-22e . I ,.ar, m my home; Co.ta Truh, Gtrqt: Cleanlij)& 1tuoco $85. Work iuar.
furn Apt , C.M., Newport. Zoned C.2. Welt Bola Ave. FISH-A·GO.GO GREY/Bltck min poodle. Mftl. .,..., 60-fi665 Floen 6665 Nam• ttl Reuobable MT.f'J8'f T~ !~. ~~ ~r ~~ ln s;uita Ana. SUHab~~ F.at.ablllhtd a ~IU'I. Orig\nal ~"'.!= t:-endbr-~ BABYSTITING BJ the 'ftlk. LIN"'"~ ..... ~·-.ne Ra-BIG JORN 641.f030 P°'Al"NTIN"='""'G-. ~Ext~.~ln~~~Ext-.1
n~uary. &IS-Olli ~·5 mote· apta., aimmcn:w, OWMr, Exct:Uent kicat:lo!\. A: ni,..._; · HB. Rftwd You fumilh tnNportatlm. v ....... v•n, ..... ""'.'""' · Lftl HAULING I: CLEAN Hae Trailer. 17 yrs eJtp.
convalHCtflt hospital, and Grohn.M"IOO month-. $7'1Xll 847~·-. Pmnannlt. can "2-1~ model. rep&Jr. Many mn· UP FrH tit A"°"'t ctU.
'"'pm;;;.,,· =-c-.,--,-~-I m&r11 otMr Ultl. tw.n:Uit11 nanta. Frte nt. 139-JITT, l'JlEE r.:srtMA~ MS-532$ 2 BDRM. untum. bunlaklw Pbona 542-ml '°'" fl'l<n Ted Mc:Ardl R I 10.!T: Abyulnian mo cal, BABYSIT Yout ~ rr old, in 541-8664 • ~ ffM. 1 ~===~====-........ ~-n-e, ea tor ,__,_ -t..1 .. t.1~1. ...., 0:.ta M• home, '-.,_.,_ JN'I'EltlOR I: EXTERJOR apartment. VIQl:t coupM. ..,.....,,.., ni: w wo.on CM ••• ,_1 UlV'fll'n __.... • _ N'r .. v 111
Both work. Dm't amoM or PORTAnNA LAGUNA . ' "'""'' Md'..iMn A: GoWen West~ da, or w.tk, 5&fTJ4 0.rdenl"I "80 a..EAN Lota, ..,...... «le. PaJntlna. f'1" Ill.
drink Mound llJ1 BEAtrrY lolon. Pri« 1<>r Goldto WHt ... L Rnanl · TrM .-ovel, -lllcip. Uc. A Int Olud< WWII< ~-W:t pe~t. l·mwl ~ :~ew o!: quk:t Wt. EI t 1tnt11 197 .. 1391 Irick, Matonry, ft ANTHONY'S 1*:khoa. a.ll, ....... M2-ll'•
•• •TURE -··i. ~. L """ ~.. -.tod. ea,..,.,, ... • -"'° Garden Service i llA\JLING Trub plclrup
For cooking position.
Pine epportunlty for
1dv1nc1ment In ,,..
1rn1lv1 compeny .,;
fering profit 1harlnl;
p1ld v1catlon1 and lft..
aurance pr09r1m,
Apply In ·parson
Wu Ben's
333 Boy.Ida Dr.
Newport B11ch
FRY COOK
I9 or over
Apply 1n ptrw>n
3-5 p.m. Daily
Snack Shop No. 1
2305 E. Coast Hwyl
Carona dal Mer ...
,...,,. ~-..... .... ID .... Dtllfd. Good clltntel. Nr, .....,., ViclnilJ ~ Meta do
"HcMl1t Sii" JCMr homt ·--'26 NJta P1act ~ n.-.n. $11i,950. CaD Hieb Scbool t'rilSa.)' &J. BlUCX, Conc:ft;ta. car,tntry 646-1941 Trtmm''W ~.WI
AUi· l~ thnl Labor Day. Lqma BMcb Dueat Wicklund, Walker a temoon, Bnme eollr•d OJllOmC&Mnl'll.lrnalljobm LANDSCAPING ttalLDpetwork56--2'1D
541-2734 (n{) .W-.9.181 Lff 56-Wl. Stinlftl f:7pt ~e, lJc OK n.. Elt ~ LAWNS REMODELED
' No. 1--. !1'5-m Exp bortlcultulilt. lntarlo< -at!"! '7i7
"PllplT 1lttC:IY" 147-1659
MobU store • home atllt
We advilt • tell • inlt.all MACllINIST C.pable o t
PAl1f'nNG Awtr· room makllll' own aet UPI on nill
com.pl. $25. A up. Neat A: latht. Short run ~
wort. Local ttfl. MT-1358 d u" t Ion. Some it~ C(lo!SERVATIVZ ~
dnlnt alll'Phw r o o m ,
P r• f' r Balbol;/N"'1Qt, ,,,_:lMJ
ePAI..MA VAU.l'Ye
II) a.c raw, roWtia land.
froet.frTt .,... o+a'M*hc
Palma Vallry. Water, pa,
A: mac cm prop.. n.aio pet"
acre, w/mm.. Bkr , su.-.
MAOflNE Siio!> w,u ...,, .. , _ F-·•-~·,. ~. luilclarw '570 -.. mon•"-0.~ 1 • peel. Nice b1d1 on % •ctt • ......->• ,...._ •111 ,,...........-.....,. .. ._. e ltnl~lfMI. t.wn
M-J, CM. WW 1oeU u c!om. No eollar . .AM to namt of REPADUI + ALTZRATJONI G~'L 0Mn-UP. tree .no, e P.--. kit. I: llXL
plittli: l*kac• or con&ider "M'-7." fllnd'a • p • t . CAmNJ:TS. A1f7 a ,.. rototll, fT'll(M:nc, sprtn.klen1 e Wall Cl:lwf'tnll:
!cue. BJ CJWMr. &G.3601. Reward! 5t5-02tO 2J J1"I apar, $Q.f7IJ lawna. b&uJ'1. lt e a• . e Color (:oardination
--Alllptrr ililllOili .. -PllZE ISl'IMA'l'E HAYE 1di&I ..,.,....,. !or ---to Car,....arint '590 IAPANESE GAllDEiifit UcoN<d I ,_
1e1M J:ir weekftMI Aue. Alba'tloQ'1 m.tt. U. a 9N0 JOB TOO s:.IALL e Malnt A damlJ. Rtllablt. MOOIRN
t1ono-11ooU • 1..ii. ... --·-----a1co.,. a.u mcotb11 ratu. DICDllATDllS
CIUlqla'I tte. ~ Acres fmc> LAblEI bM tiliililOili: IDlt 9le. mmtal. ~ a nmodel. m-6U8 an 6 pm -..SU
.s, Harllor Blvd. cau R. L. WoodJ'• WMtt A p • r ox JleuonalM. u~. bonded, m.. -:llio:Ppai•niM ... iOOco.iOrrii"°'ii-;;,.,-;;-"1;:::=::=:;::::::::;:::=;;;;; ,,,,,. co. KI 3-TO!t 1111 --....._ Expor• """""' ,_.. Interior 0.0.Nll"! •7J7
PLACZ JOGr ,,.. .a -.. ~ vb:U~ 4"t jliJf. Inl • ~un • man • 9tt'V1cit. Trwt t«tm•t• HOUSD'AmrER w a 11 t . ::or tnd::::..~T ~~Vic. OIM. ~.;;* .'!=:1 I "*tMS-.1: :, :: ... is;..:.e Olll~ta A:
* ~ * fmtflt.al A p p I )' Ou1lde
-!1..ui< °""' ~ PIMion-M&-1"4, eveL ti• Aw. Of
INT. ext. AVotnp 1 BR apt, --•"WTNDOW===w=-..,._=="'•,.-I
labor a mat'ia 1 t • .1 t. Exp. hll or pan tll1M
---• ......,61 . PA!NTtNG tntma../Dctaior. DWVERY. l<urt drt ...
f'ret Esttmata! nlsht 1n1rtt I AM. The Pbla * IC-4669 * ~2 * Mu &G-1491 lft 10 PM • Pro!•-Pabttinc Barliif Wantod; Wi(na;:
-·-·-cll.Gli31or6'1U?ll ""''"' "'""'' DIAL_IGS1t,_
)'OOI' ad, then sit back --· ... --
ii
Ill .. ...
"' •
-•• •
.. ..
.......... -.~.•-:--;-..e:.-'42 • ·""' ;r www:;;e #,4¥' P .. =. ,; I+~*' JI -.!' >• T T IP..!'!"> ii' # W # " l" #" ':;t » y ¥" W t' > '¥ .. y • ¥ +' # W w + + P ¥ w • w 9 • + w * - -·-•• -• • • ~ -· •
JOIS a IMPLOYMINl JOU a EMPLOYMINT
Help Wonted, ~ 7200 Help Won..._ Men 7200
. ·-
MOLD PRW
OPERATORS
Small mokl ibop. Must be _......lo"""'" one! in)ectioa moldlnc. M\llt be
capable ot dolns set ups.
Apply
STACO, INC.
113t lokor St.
Cotta Me.II
. ~ •• $.!f.-304L
An ~ opportunity
employer
Police
:~ Asslst1nt Chief
• CITY OF
~ NEWPORT BEACH
$1.114-1,354. Requires com-
llletion of 60 'unit.I collece
imd 10 yean municipal p&
llt:e uperlence Including
')'ears Mlpervisory experl-
~~•tad min l1trattve
level. FOi' furtbtt inform•·
llOn contact Penonnel Of.
fli:f!, City Hall, 3000 New-
Dll1 Processing
hllysl
CITY or ,
NEWPORT BliCH
S&Slol,010, N.-pqo!tloo of.
fen challtQ&ib& QPPOrbanlty
to i.d \IP a lftlw1DI mwU-
d pU data Pl"OCeahlC f\mo..
tkn \llll\g Nql. 500 cam·
P\!ter 1Ystem. ~e. eol·
1ep: dtll'ff and ftve )'Mtl.
experience .. • I)'~
and Pl'Olflm.mine ~
ilt. A.deft), ~ ftlB1
be -Med ... -· For fUrtber Wnrmation
contact PetlC.WWl Ottice,
City Hall , 3.lOO Newport
Blvd., Newport Be9.cb 92660 <n•i m mo.
I MECHANICAl
ASSEMBlY .
One year experience nec-
eaaary in dtctrcn1c type
mechanical auembb'.
-APPLY -
IOIS a IM°l'LOYMIHTJOIS a IMl'l.OYMINT JOIS a llMl'LOYMINT 1015 a IMl'l.OYMINTJOIS a IMP\.O
SALi SALi AND TltADI -~Wonted, Men 7200Help w......._ Men 7200 u.i. wa-~ l;J~•~••:M~..,~-=·:·~w:-:a.~7:1;•~J:•~•·:~Mll=~·~w:-:~7~•;\j~~~~~~;~~~~11~~1~~~11~:~~~~~1111 ....... ~ '""'11v.. -,...,,..,,. --_w_-_____ ,_400_
1 sAus sTAllnNG u' A NEW PLANT Def!Or'ator
OUTSTANDING CAREER HUGHES IN ' btelwtco-llaffonef$22,000.00 COSTA MIS~ SIPT. 9TH. Spenllh enol MMlhrrenean Purnllure 1 .
Ol'POlTUNITT l'Ol
SIU •STAlm
'WITH IXICUTIVI POTIHTIAL
( ' '
IF y.ou er• •· recent coll•g• 9r•~ueto wh•••
fufu,.. is blocked boc•u•• ef tho noturo of his
work or tho 1i10 of +h• or90 ni1ation
Ol
a min now ••llint who feels hi1 work it net
sufflc.l •ntly c.h•ll•n9ln9 or th•t It do•s not of ..
f•r ocf•quato.-inc.om• or acf..,anC.•lft•nt posalbi ..
litie• or r•quire• too much tra..,ol . ·
Ol
a junior ex•cufi..,•, •chool teach•r, oniineer,
business own•r, •ccountant or lawy•t w~• b•-
lie..,•1 h• h•s th• ability to •arn mor•
THIN
in¥•stig•t• this opportun ity t o qu•lify for th•
hi9he1t roco9ni1•cf l•Yol of 1•llln9 t• bu1 in•••
ancf prof•11 ional groups. Our Aptltud• Analy1i1
Syst•m will d•t•rmin• your cha"c•• for sue.
c•s• In our Fi•lcf. If you qu•lify w• will p•y y•u
an attr•cfiY• ••l•ry while you l••rn t h• bu1I·
nos1 and gain •xpori•nc• uncfor 1upe,.,l1ion.
Your incom• pro1poct1 will bo w•ll Into fly•'
figur••· Phone 5-42-5621, Ext. 321 or writ•
bri_-f particul•r• to lox Ml67, Daily Pilot.
AdminJ.l tratiYe M1chlnilt1
Neweart INch ,,. ... ,.. ....., .._. .._ ~-: -.--Wil ho.. .,....Iott for: " ,,.,._, .._ "-" °" ...... _,..,.,,,
H11 1ever1I openlftfl
fer
MICRO
ElKTROlllC.
BONDERS
Must h1.ve min.lmum ol 1lx
months recent expuitnct.
Openlna:1 ltt Oil lSt and %nd
lhlllL
Plea• 1pply in J>tf'IOft
HUGHES
500 SujMrier Av•nu.
Newpert le1ch, C1Hf.
An equal opportunit;y
employer MA:F
Women
• llama u follows: Gor1eous a ft. CUiiom q"" ... e Office PerMMel -Stelle oofa with oeporale 1 .... pUlowa with heavy o¥
& .. __ .......,. trim ~r ind m1teh!n1 chair, 3 m1tebln1 . '
-... -·-r occulollal teblol, !2) 58'' WI decorotor '
• Plant 0 ,.-rs h1n&1n1 chela IWll limps in wrou&hl in>ll,,,!!l
'"''"' a.piece kln1 Iha muter -.x>m llllle In pec111 • ll 1-~ poneled Mldlterranoon style with top ~ • ~';!"pint 'I' ece "'"' ta yr. W1J111•ly klnl mo m1ttre11 " bOJ< 1pr1Dp. rii Spanllh decor dtnlnl so~ ete. .....'..
WW. ........ "' ~St.lllM _ ....
e "i..tryll T:C~.!!.Mi.11-Che111-=:'o:~~~ ....... _ ............. ~698.00
IS • .....-.. Altf,.... C• h ,..,.,.,. 1Mlhl61atr _ ... ,,
f •r111t A••il.~l-_N•wce"'•" t• C•llf•tRf• ~,1
Interviewing wil IN done on P!.nt Sile
Starting A119. 12th. Cal H. M. Chri1te""
sen for AppoinhMntS. Plione 546-250
DOW CORNING
CORPORATION
.. Redhill, 2 ~lks· north el lek•r
An Equal Opportunity l:mptoyer
Cre.tlt A,,, ... M l111111t4lll•t1ly ,.,""I
1144 .Nowpo..t .... i. .. rd, Costa MIN Conly)"; .............. .
Ivery nl9ht 'Ill t -Wed., Sot. A Sun, '.111.6
1liiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Spanlsli & Mediterranean "' .'
llevtht Monufacturor's Showr...., Somplos -• ~
At Terrific Savlnp! . .
1 .pOrt mvd., Newport Beach
-9'J660. cn•i m.ruo
M1rsh1ll
Communications Gener1I Services
Di red or
HUGHES Help WentMI Help WonlMI
for p1rt tlrna werk Wemon 7400 WetMft 1ie1p1., 1,; feed pre,. 1--------1·---------1
7400
8' Wood carved arm divan, Ia. man's ch•lr:
beaut fibric.. 5 Pc hexa1<>n dark olk dln.'·
se~ w/black or 1voc1do frmed cha.int 5~ ~
Pc BR 1el 9-dr Mr. & 141)1. dl'Ulor, I. mlrr'or; ·:
2 commode!, decorative he1dboard 1n Span.· ·
Uh oak or IYOCldO d'"ICJI.
e 'Gonorol Mochlno
; Shop Helper
I e. Co bl not Miker ' ,··Mill Mon
2230 S. Anne St.
S1nt1 Ana, C1llf.
S40.2120 CITY OF
NE.WPORT BEACH
$1,141 * ·1,387. ~
]lOldtion •• be'ld ot 96 man
«putment responaible for
Newport Beach
Has ur.-nt
requirements for
aretioft. lx1Mrltnce ftDlft MITIR MAID
Mt neceuary. .llUN FO.R WATER DJSTJUCI'
· Ap'ly In Peroen
Items Sold Indlvidually
Shop Around-before you by -US! VALUI $195 -fULL PRICI $429.95
er t•rm• ts low " $3.0D wMk ~
No Down-Use Our Store Charge Pion '"'" ·
No Fancy P'r1lnt.-BUT Quollty V1lueo lnaicla. . e Arc & Htll1rc
Welder
--------~I equipment maintenance, u Ben's
33 Bayside Dr.
N_ewport Beach
Wouk1 like nllnlmwn 2
yean experltnc:t, Typo
50 wpm, cape.ble til u•
inr dict.:tlftl equipment, ........... _..,..,,
No eXPW!ence nectllU')'.
Must bavt aood JltND&nabip
one! ...,,. -.... of doors. P!euant warkina'
C'Oftdidons. Call fOI:' ant. I
a.m. .. 5 p.m. a..M81 or APPROVID fURN. 215t HARBOR, CM ,,;
. . -
: ·lxporl.nced Only
• ·· APPLY AT
:.columbia Yacht Corp.
215 McCormick Ave.
'. -Costa Mesa, Ctllf.
:.• Molders
· •· ASMmbl•rs
: • C1rpent1r1
:Some bo•tin& experience
·MCUAl'Y· lnterviews be-
.fWem 9 i&: 10:3(1-a.m. ONL
"lro phone calh.
Apply
:Wayfarer Yacht Corp.
' 1682 PlacenUa
Costa Mesa
Busboy &
Dishwashers
Full time, over 18.
Day and night shifts
APPLY IN PERSON
Bab's lllt Boy
lSil -E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa
FRY COOK
Experienced
Apply at
THE RIGGER
No. 16 Fashion Island
Newport CeDter N.B.
BAR11llOER
~tu~t have refen'.nces.
Csll 67S-11100
. "PART TIME HELP
Eves. Must be n years of
, qe. 410 E. 17th Sl., CM, ap-
, ply after 5 P.M.
BUSBOYS
Full and Part time
' ·· apply in person
: .. Th• V•rsalllts
1617 \VestcllfJ Dr., N.8.
: MANAGER NEEDED
For condominium of l30 horn-
: es. Submit qualifications and
: salary requirements to P .0.
Box 763, .Huntington Beach.
PART &:-tul.1-time janitorial
: work, day "-niabt: Calif.
, <!tjver·s lie. required. Uve
•in· West m i ns t er-Htmt.
' Be8.ch area. 897-2342
~ For deU-.ery • in-
, stallaUon t1f appliances &
TV's, exper. Jftft.ZT~. Ap..
ply in persori. Davis-Brown
Programmer
for
Real Time Systems
Call or "nd rosume
Marshall
SAILBOAT
ACC&SSOltY
MAHUfACTURER
Moves to
NEWPORT BEACH
Offers challmiinl: oppor·
tunlty to man with leadtr-
&bip potential. We will train
to manl.ifactutt Our patenl·
ed fiberglas,, product!. Dry
process. aean ahop. Fib!s'-
glay and wood experience
helpful. Call 642-4261 for ap-
pointment.
TELO DIVISION.
WOOLSEY MARINE
INDUSTRIES, INC, ss1 w .·16TH sr.
NEWPORT BEACH
Oranp County's
L1rgnt
PONTIAC DEALER
Hai opening for 2 profession-
al auto salesmen.
Eaminp to lltl,000 pr. yr.
Excellent compen1ation plan.
Group b@nefltl. Will tra.Jn
qualified applicants. Apply
in perton to Bob Lonapre,
''· Bob Longpre·
Pontiac
13600 Beach BJvd. 892~]
CAREER
OPPORTUNITY I
Join todays fattest irowinr
profession-Mutual Fund aaln
No experience necessary.
We train . full or part time
Mutual Fund Advlton,
Inc.
Np! B. 1603 We1tcliff 642-6(22
.S.A. 1212 N. Broadway
5'7"331
Co .• .f11 E. 17th St., C.M. e Busboy
REAL ESTATE. Shouldn't
you be .selling the hottest e
an'.a I Huntington Beac!\'.'
Call for appt. Villait. R. E.
96J..4471, 546-8103
A. M. Dishw11her
Apply in pe_r90n
3-5 p .M. daily
SERVICE St.a salesman. Exp
' tune up • brks. Older man
line. Top wages & conun.
' Chevron Station Adama ll
: Mainolia HB
Snack Shop
230S E. Coost Hwy.
N wn td to drive truck I.
help ill 1tore. 8: »S p.m. S
, dtY wk. 646-8961.
SERVICE Statioo Attll'.nd. full
time. Experienced. Over 21.
490 E. l7ttl St CM
;-.Driver, Van oper.
.. .Uaht delivery, over tO
, 546-9240
Coron• dol Mar
ERV. Sta. Atten wfmech 1--c~------
-luU Um•. -part lime S.I•• over 11 -rmn. 1691 Placentia CM .,.,
field maintenance, bu.Udl.nr in Siles ~ant. Ap-
ply -12 Yetr1 same loc1Uon--s1me ownen _ .... ~
maintll'.nance, and ftfuae
mUe<tlon one! -· Re-quires min. two ynrs col·
SAWWOMAN Delly 9·9, 10.S Sundey e 54S.96'0 .. .
lere Ind rtve )'Mn of ret-
ponsible administrative ex-
perience in public worka
coa.stna:Uon and mainten-
ance. For further Worma-
tioo contact Penonnel QI.
ficll'., City Hall, 3311 N"'°"
port Blvd., Newport Beach,
Calit. 92660. tn•i mruo.
MACHINE STACO, llC. tor Orua• Co'• lMdllW ----lftfefnd. 40 Jtoqr ..... ·················di JOIS t. IMPlOTMliNT IOIS .& iiMl'£0y .
OP.ERATORS INSUllANCI 113' liker St.
Cfft•Mesa
5494041
trinse brnefttl. APPIY
in per.on only.
J .. 1 Min, w-. 7500
School•lnstrvcti.n 7.00
With Tomo @xperlence.
Ahility to do own 1et'uP1 de-
sirable.
AGINCY OlltL
Excellent opportunity tn
larie qmcy. Experienc-
in Oabns and Secretarial
w o r It dHirable. Starting
salary $350. up depending
on experience.
KIRK JIWILlllS
ml Hubor Blvd., CM llbr1ry Assblanf ,.,.,. " nmnln& "'' WAITRIU ENROLL NOW
Openln11 are on 7nd mµt. Part Tlme n-... CTl'Y OF for apedal Mdl·btchool be-
Exper. in ltlliln NEWPORT BEAOI sinner • bruah up OXS'M In
Work in a clean, air-con-
ditioned lhop located neu
the be1.cb. Enjoy top com.-
paey boot1'!L._ ~·-
l'Hcock ln1ur1nco, Inc.
t714) 841-8514
CAJHlllt·RiCIPT. lood .,..,,...., ll6Ulf, N.,, poottlon ,... Typl"f A Shorthlnll
Xln opportwtlty U you bave VIII• lleme lteltiurint centJy cre1ttd to be aa-O>educatianal • d111 or nit.
17931 Beach Wvd. Suite H
Huntlnaton Beech
accunte clerlcsl 1blllty I. f4S N. N.wport Blvd. liptd to Balboa Ubrary ~~ Y'J4.r1 ... ~ ~~·
poise ln handlinl cwtomer NeWJIOl't Buch to perfClrrn re~ tub-"""'l"J'"~HONeli DI ~·
ccnJJcU. HJsts .cbool srad· ~can~_~...,~-d'~""~JIMl'll~~-~~-f.ij':~~ ..JuUJn_ the ques. ---------1 u1tion ttqUired. ~ . ....._ 1 __ ,. R.eftreDCt and QDdrm'a PClLY .PR.IU1'
PACIPIC flHANCI ~~-·--Lll>r<u> 1trvlc•L .ua1an-BUSINESS COi.LEGE:
Rubber •xperl•nc•
only. Ono on 2nd
shift, one on 3rd shift.
Apply to:
'nM!se poaltklna otter an ex-
cellll'.nt future with a irow-
in.c mrnmercial divhion at
Huahe1 Aircraft Company,
a l"fCOl(?!ized lnder in the
field ot eltttronica.
e W1ilress 2T9'J Hll'tlor BJvd., C.M. =·· r;::;-nt, e~p e'r mtnt wW. lncludt evenin1 326 N. Nf'WPOl't Bl., N'.I:
Equal opportunity employer and SaturdQ" hotn. R.e-For det&ll1, mt t~
e Hostess WAITRfSSES perbo&rd 11atem for PIR le 'IUins snduatian .tra:n u 541-tn3 AIP. Pleuant: Work ecnd. .__. ............. , um. S&lar)t open. Send rffUme to -."'~-... ....... ese or SCHOOL etaldren'a. vacaUan
Pl verllty or & eombinatian of TateL Cbllcoat 10 , Le'80tl
Please apply in person
Apply ln peraon
3-5 p.m. daily Experl•ne·• on•·•. Box P·Ull, ~ k>t ..... , ....... __ _. ... n tlm• -•• Typ. •·· Sc'-' "'" Apply •• ~p.....::. $1Ciil'tARY;RICIPT. ~--~·MM·-· ~ -~ ~. -·· 11' w ... _, library expaience equiva· Del Mar; c .M. P•rsonnel Offlc•
. HUGHES
Snack Shop
230S E. Coost Hwy •
Corona d1I Mir
SURf A SIRLOIN GIRL fltlDAY lont w fo<r yoen. For ..,_ rs YOU!t child bolllM'
5930 ltac. Cat. Hwy. For vcpanct1nc WffltJ,y .new. thtr hdormatkln eont&ct Remedlal Rea.die Tu. U.S. Divers
Company
Newport Beach · ...,.. Good ....,,., fl1n&• P.,..,,.el Otlle., City lllll, · ~ tonner UCLA -~·~
TOY • GIIT PAR'n!S beneftti. Send brief rtaume 3.100 Newport BIYd., N~· "T ..... .._.i 500 Superior Av.nu.
Newport Beech, Cellf. TEACHER w"'" , b,, a-w1 .... '""' """' l500 ~ ~ ... ...:;....-~ ~~-f,;!1 := .. Calif. 92611(1. =ANDrsE ,C,ii' . ,
woman to care for 2 ITIOI. to 12.000 by nee. ht. NO ·~ ' · SALi AND y••DI"
3323 W. Warner
Santa Ana
An equal opportunity
employer M&F
old infant • do 11 t e DEUVERJNG OR COL-IMMEDIATE opml.nc' for _.
housework in new home in L E CT I 0 N S , FR EE neat 1ccur1te lirt with le!lerJ ---------·-------"·· .. ·:.;· 1
Huntln&ton Beach, bet:in HOSTE.!S GWI'S. C • J I or note dtpartment txptli-0rt"'9 CM1t Purnftv,.. llOO
Sept 3, M"1 1M> Fri sehool NOW! -In ......... Jr. Celi.,. District
An oqua1 """'"''"""' employer TRAllfR
EXPERIBKE
h o u r •' I a I a r Y op en • Cllta le Gad1ets Ml-1583 ¥1'· Brown itl).2111 NEEDS
Referencel Jtequlred. DENTAL A$1STANT SEAMS1'RES.9 With f u ll Ac.unt Clerk ~ Over 25. Some fnmt desk ex· knowHdae fA m a k In I DIVtnU!td dudes, rood tw-
WAITRESSES peri""" ...,erred. MUii -· ...__ ._. lot Start SGS. CAREER S ale amen At-
tention, We are looklnr for
men that are interelted in
becominr Better th a n
av~raa:e Sale1men for a Bet-
ter than •Yttt.rt income
with a Better than averqe
Co. 25-35 years. Married,
stable. Sal.._. expe.rlenc
preferred. Phone 642--0814
Mr. ff. C. Van Ausdeln al
th~ Pennysaver, for Appt.
Experitt.ced onl1 ~ have more than one year ex.. Beacb Off tot ltret1
'"'-1.. N h _,, perience in deiiW offi«. "H!KP==R.,..>""ts""'dl-.,---m,.....,""""r'"".. ~ltor Sidew1ll & ltinel a.,....,. o p one .. -...1 49f..0034 ~ 4:MI "" • .,...
please. dau&bCer: full c h a r 11 ; Must have one year expel'· Con1tructlon
Excellent hneflh
Apply in per"n
1779 Placentia
DENNY'S WANTED: OIUd care for I li•e.in, H. Bcb. ~U· knot on oftltt di411lcltor,
1600 s . Cbast HW)'. yr old IOI!.. Wk days after EXPERIENCED Nur.s alda able to do lJ&bt·table &ncl
Laruna Beach achoo!. Prt'f Bal ~ ra. or wa11ted. 5 dq wk. daiicroom w or k. Salary
HOUSEKEEPElt, Jr vi n' nr by. Ref1. Wnte Mn:. U7-t8Tl for A,ipt. $45&-$M6.
Costa Mna Yoon1er, 1539 N. Miramonte I '5'iiAfOjis:lhiili~· I Sr. Steno c .. rk T-ern~. Corona del Mu. Ave Ontario, Cal . I OftlttATOlls.Gt1• Pay Shorttmnd 100. OWlenstnc
Excellent startlna: aalllt1 " • Garment Manutacturer and Workini ccnditloni. ~ BABYSTrrER My home 5 1580 Monrovia, NB '42·2'16 responsible polldon. 8wt
.a--cfN, Wernett 1MO boura per day, any 5 day•. day wk, child 15 mo. Refs lxpor 11n11t:z Ht... -~--lstant s-·-L ...,..., week. References required. req. NT. Baker .I: Fairview, .,.. _. ·-~
Own transportatlcn. 67l-09S8 own tnn1. 546-1157 after fi ~fl l1r Mln.,.r ENGINEERING
MAINTENANCE
HELPER
Amerlca r•, Inc.
214 Hospital Cirde
Westminlte'I"
WORK • ' ' p.m. PART time housekeeper ln 4 • 10 p.m. Monday thru at YOUR conv1hl•nce VERY Attr. ~rl to model Th 8 ~ •1 -BAR MAID -Nll'.WJl(ll"l from 4:30 to fi PM u:n. tan ..,.., . The ··Temporary Dlvlslon" linj:erie, 3 or 4 hr1. • week, A •· M -· Fri Go.GO DANCER Mon ttmJ Sit.~ PPY on u•u • of the Newport Penonl.l not in publk: ain&k or mar-2701 • I I Rd Appl• In penon. 2901 re l'V OW • Arency oltll'.n pleuant, top rled. Reply Box M-1n, Dai. ~ W 7500 c t ~-1•• •709 pa,yina: Job• (lee paid by the ly Pilot Harbor. Sauy Lusy. JeM Min, em. " I .._ -
89:H541, ext 331
Equal opportunity employll'.r
employer, of coune) for the ~LIN=E~-lN~~Ho-...,~,-,.-.. -,~.,.,,,=,,,... .... ~9983-,-*~=7 qualltled woman who likes child care. Private room WIDOW 1«k1 nice motherly Recr••tlon Center
to work just now and then. and bath. $200. mo. sin daya woman to care for her 18 .---,A"'H"'O~Y~TH=ER~£~l --I NEWPORT a ""'· Perm. "'"'"'" wUh mo old boy. Pooabty "" In. 'eraonnel Agency reterencea. 54()..9212 1toom fbolrd $2CI wk.
8l3 Dover Dr .. N.B. DRUG Store clerk, full time, "'.......,=="~·=.--,...==I
Sailboot manufacturer need 642-3170 neat, experl~. Middle-QUIET Middle ared ooupla
=:;;e :: t !.n=11•: F JC BOOKKEEPER •red pref. App ly in perlOTI. require General Oeulnr
Shop FOl'f'man with with Must have he9.ry conatruc&n 31S&2 S. O>ast Hla:hway, So. Woman 2 tMl'ftl. a week. Lquna Beach Ref• ll own transp. OR prod tJCt lon experience . ~. G re • t com-~ml
1n1 Lankel'Shim Blvd. pany. Fee paid. $550 up (de-BABYSI1TER for teacher. -7'."-:0-7'."-=::-;=::-
·North Hollywood p..nd't on exp \. AJ~ fee jobs My home, own traM. Ref1 . LIVE In, S day wk. Room,
MISS EXEC AGENCY Edincer le Boiaa OJica HB. brd, I. S20 wk. Lite PART Time crew manaaer, ........ _,,, ~ be 2nd 410 W. c.oa.t H~, NB M:J-1754 '""''"'-• '"''"'• easy work, 3 or 4 houri -:r th to boy 10 &1).903012 Call Bet'" Bruce, 646.3939 e ... ~DREAM JOB e mo er . evenings workina: with boya. v ~ to J PM
M111t haYl! c a r . Qnn-Ke.eop your important job u ~~~· =~~==c 1
miiiions. For informatim Help W•ntH wUe 1r; mother .l earn a PART nME SCH 0 0 L
call ISJ..5375 and ask for Wemon 7400 wkly pay check. 548-9528, BUSDR.JVER. 1-t AM, or Bob 1---------544-3854. 3-a PM. We W ist with
WOMAN Or rirl care for 2 Uc.naln1. CIU HUl'lt. Bftch SALESMENwanttdunder35 achool-art chUdren, 2 to 4 UVE.IN hou•ekeepe 847_2655
full time ooly. Exp pref. but PM Mon thni Fri, also lite ba1.~'."1r....5..0r+l~.r ~-~! RECEPTIONIST not ne<:. We will tra.ln you. housework. Ovm t r a 11 •, ... .....,. ~ ........... ~ A~y in person, uk for 543-6219 .I: paid medical ~-Attrac. sh'I to wt1rtc in major
Tom. Grant'• SUrplut, 1150 . 61J....J4M bol.t mfr. co .. 1'yptns Ind
Newport Blvd c M CPA Office in CM haa W .. ,.,.......,., to" be-ba•, inorthand req. M8-tW =~°""' __ . ..,_. -·-~ permanem position for F/C -u~~ • '" • MEN For ellrly momlns BookkeeJ>f!'r with aceountlna: Wllt'1 Ul Audrey'1, at e EXP l! R J 1l N CED
deliffrY· Muat have dtpen-education A: variety of ex-Beach I. Y o r Ill tow n . Seamttrtll for c r • a t l " •
dable car I be f't'Uable. perimce Call 5'7-'1081 968-14.,;9 clothlnr ahop.
Write P. O. 8oJc 7M O.ta · T ELEPHONEE Aiwtrtertna Vllions. m-uss
MrN. H~~PER.. :~~I Serr oc>er. E:q!tt. Jftl. Ap-DRAPERY workroom
2 SERVICE Station At-s da1 Mo ,.:;· ui~ . ply A.M., m Forest Ave.. machine operator. Good Pll'
tendant1/S ale1men. F u 11 • · · Lq. Bch and worldllr canctitlor\I. Hall .... BABYSITTER o v e r ll. 1 ol lfunllnatoa.. $3S-93T7 °'"" part time •. Exper. RQ' RELIABLE lady wat1ted: -====-;:::.=::-
CoordlHlor
QTY OF
NEWPOJtT BEACH
$5419-887. New poal~ in
Recreation Depanment for
collea:e ,rad. with major in
recreation, ph,yPcal ed. or
related fleld &rid mln. one
year akWed: leadentup eK·
perlence In recre•tkin to
tm'e ln retpONibk diarrt
ot • communh;)' recreation ...... _ ...........
ini, and IUpervistnl acti-
vitiet. For f\&rther tnlorma·
don cootact Penonnel Of·
tk:e, 01;)' Hill, l300 New·
port llhd., N-1 kach "*'· cn•l tn4uo.
J. C. PINNIY CO. .. \
NEWPOl\T BEACH Hu_ ...
Personnel An1lyst
CITY OF
NEWPOJtT BEAC'H 1636-m. New potiUm ol·
ferw cballenrtnl opportun-
ity to work 11 1eneral11t
in municipal peraonnel pro.
era,m. Re q u Ire a coUes:e
pUuation in pubUc or
buUKI admln., PIY'!~
loo, aodoloo or a related
field. Experience in a rea.
ponttbJt po.IHon in perM>fto
nel Industrial rdaliont w
ttlated field ma,y be ~
tuted lor education on a
Yttr tor year btlil. For
further lnform•tion contact
Ptrnmtl Offtce; Ctty Hill.
DJ0 N"'POl"l Blvd., New-
port Bffcb ,.,, cn4> m mo.
HADU>RESSER, Prtf. .ome -· """' N-Salon, '°"' -lty• m-6342 Aalt for Tom
THE IEA\1J'Y SALON nHds
lood halr ttflllt w/foDow-
in&. Prt or fUll·Urne. 531 w: 1t<h St. C.M. IO-fTTI
ACCENl ~~
Inferior besign
Custam Fumltin
Made ta Order
Lowest Prices
In Town!
Ill' Velvet -. cul(04 · -i;n~--~b.''~
quilted .,,., liMll ......
•• ""'"" ....... Ill ---...... -T °"9hed Velvet ....,j, ii-.
All furniture
Mede by FemUy, e AC'C'e'UOl'in Ir; AeC(nt
P~I 1vallabk
' ala> "91ZPhoi.tetiic 333 Morine Avli;
Balboa lslind 673-2HO
BROWN twwd rq l2x1I •.
1'oin .... $15. Occas -$15. Mpl cctfee tbl/tnd thl
$5. ea. Rd mpl tbl $15. DQ1 .......,.
HIWAY UMd lton. New loO
• T.al Westminster B I• d ,.
Weatm ISJ..3683. Biq, all,
trade. --
GREY .-tea top ~:·
leave1, 6 chain. Xlnt ~mo.&.'
Call oft 6 Fri, ..,_WI
CASH for tum A ~.
we 1e11 rood uted tww. 1m
Npt Bl. CM IG-'IOlS
OOUCH, dbl. walnut hee,d.;
bolrd. """ ....... '"""'. linm1, mite. turn. ~o:: .
QUEEN ~ .. Sbnmans Z
....... 1 Yt· old.~
eond. 11&5. -•
HIDE-A·BEO. ExceUmt eon:'
dltlon. Black ' brown twttd
RIO: I r t y tweect
C.rey Cbtvron, «M S. Cout day wfoek. 2 tmaD boys. My room I bo&rd in exchanie BOOKKEEPER. 1"UJl nm..
H LI home. Hta;. Beach. M2·'TM4 M t h kDowl~-ot wy., auna roir bl.b)'llttm, • Utt hQrp-UI Ive -. ..
Parklnt A,ttonclants WAN'I'Et> lad)' for &nwnl 982--TOOO ~..'.;... work le reportt.
PART TIMI
HUllSIRY HILP
la our Gudtn. !bop
Motnlna:, NOC* and
Ewninc tcbtdulet. o..im-.-Prmoul expn'. prefand
AP.PLY IN PDllON ..... .,, """ .......
FRU11WOOD de1k, Uh new
!00; ,,., two<d studiQ
couch, 3 plllowt $20.137'"'2310
2 NA111'1CAL b-W.,. tll
n... Mtch f:(1V colt •Wt.'
beau. L1ke MW JT5, NMIO'J5
Afondte, -I ~RMCHAIR , bl.a _!~ · 7550 . n•ual.h.Yde. 1~ 'GOid ..
AltOUS 135· -.. ~ .
Werk Noor !M· leech OIUE'Hl'4L ,,,.. a--
w ct.anlnr of Apt.I, 8)' hr. GS•:o==~~,--~~1 •·~•H anted 11 )Tl. or over. Ap-Center SL Apt l CM PHON!f ab'I· Gd. pay, full Ol''llD=LE="~---,....."·Do=IJan,--,-l =-.. p.17 tt 1600 W. Coa.st H1')'., pt. time. lnL !I AM • 1 PM, na• m._
&lite G. Npt. Bcb. RELIEF LVN. 11·7 lhlft. l:tz5 Warthou9e 1\d. C.M. a 1'ullt.rttte S2 ht rut• Wt 10 ~m. '° t:JO p.m.
COOK-MENU 'o!Mers only. fi da1•. Ca.It
fo r' •PPOlnlmtnt. 61'3-fiMO
Sales; promotioa Jobi aYall. SERVICE StaUon Attendant H.B. irta. 147-trrl call EXP. Waltren. A119ty in ~;_ HB Mn. 'D r a I•
LI btwn 1-3 _,..~ l'(e lnt1. C'Of11. Sl0,000 h t Put lime eve1. Some txp 1--~=='"''"'°~~ ptrtM. 5w1u (.'hllet. 414 ~-
J. C. PINNIY CO. Pl)'l'Oll Ok , ........... 5435 Never t.llld.. Ml MS-C2ll
NEWPOllT II.EACH 0..1 Ollleo ............ """ H h w A.~
year. Manaaement opportu.. NK'. ma E. Clout Hwy WAITUSS Newport 81'fd, NB Dental Offla Ml .......
Prod'ft mer' doth , ,,, to 1100 IUll ..... ~
I ~ERY Salttman -tXpt:r
• 'AMUNC'S NURSERY
nltlu C&D JO am • 2 pm CdM Appb' MUA LANES BABYSnTER ftrHded from Sindt. Exp. Z4.
53$-1113. EXPER. lAmineton tor 1'10.lSupertarlft .• C.M. J:15 pm IO t:30 pm, 5 daYI * 54WllOO tr
24 Fuhliall. 111.tnd
N-B ..... c.itt. Ali eqllal _,,, ......... Dtbft Selll • •••• •••• • to '8IXI BUtrrr Re1t dbl. ~
ARGUS IMl'LOYMINT a boa sprfncL tat wli· ~TANT J.Ql:llCY Diii, """"""$3. a
llewport "'""' ~25'13
I Sl)lCK a.ERK ... boun.
·Ex><ri-~ .
• -~10 ~ 81Yd .. 0(
I
w ANT E D TRUac • Intricate hind laJ-1.1.p; DENTAL ASS ISTANT, O'ltt
DRIVER. to Prof"o, Uta.\. full or pu;.ttme work. 2S. CJrt,I aqrpry . Mmt takt
Leave U'MI 16th. C&IJ 1131-G.121 642-nsT and read X-rays . 511-m1
socx rr 10 '™ awtG& m DiJ _,. lor llEBULTS
• '
-------------~---.
wll . .,.iy IOI -CM.
HOUUKEEPDl ot htlpu
under 3tl for widower. Uw
Gilt. lft~2t
" -
TEAOIER N-""""'""' :DO W-, NJ. JMl.71111 IS YOUR 4D DI • • far 1 '"' °"' bl my ho,.. MA.fl!AG.tll U tam tmlU CM. lat. E. 11th St .. u . $fT.Q31 nan s..-,.. "' --~· Wrlll Dot. ,..,, 0.0, Piiot Wont Adi. -... tt .. lllal -Whitt tit,_,..! Dl~llM Ii Pllol b M011' Dial-... -·-·. ! •• ~ ! ....... ~ .. .. . ---. I
' :
I
I
'
•
• -.• •• • J: !" ·-·· .. M'"-···-• ... -_, • +. ,-•• -r_,11 c 1 l .... . ...... -.. ,, . -.,_ • I ' ' "
ff DAILY PllDT
ucHANblSI FOi
: : JALE AND TltADI
MEitCHANDISI fOll MIRCHANDISI POii MlllCKANOISI POR
SALE AND TRADI SALi AND TU.DI SALi AND nADI
.<'1 ~
;&-Ila u11hokl Goed1 8020
~I-~~~~~~-~ M1SCE1J,.. cba1rt.. couch. BACSTROM I •trinc dee. i~ lampf, dND, a 1 l v e r • ru.itar, dlld plck-up w/cue if 53&-3'1'9. m N. Orat11e, $60.
.: 1;"'-======== .. ..
:: ~S.le
'·•. ,....,.,._.....:;..----'< p,.,,o S&le: All N • w
f f\grdlandise AU $ l z e I 1
!" !Agf.rie-HOR Dma s h 0
~ riturn Glua 1helvlnc ~ nJa Ir br1Cket.1. Shower
~~ CJlrWns Tburt thni Sundtf ti4 Dally. 487 Apt E Morn· tii ca.nyc.i Rd, Corona del
. :: . . , ' , , • ' ' ,
~ ' " -
J ' .
-.
I
'
I
' l
' ' ' '
-6"'3SOI
Z AMPEX SPEAKERS wUh
built • In ampU{lera. BEST
OFFER. 499--2305
EXCELSIOR Accordian, like
new, full keyboard: with
cue. Sacrifice $5(1. ~
ROOERS Onunl complete
CUM included. 96U120
l600-1'-l600
HARBOR BLVD.
DRIYE.fH THIATRE
SWAP MEET
IUYI SELL! TRADE!
MlllCKANDISE POii TRANSPORTATION
SALE AND TRADE
FREE TO YO.U
lloolt & Yachla 9000
42' TWIN DIESEL
DACFISHUND, pr~er former FLY BRIDGE
Oac~ owner. No SPORT FISHER
chllclnn. ' rn. CIAd. male. l2 MUe ndar, hllh lt4I' n ·
Xlnt bklodllne, AKC rec. dlo, c.e., auto pilot. ADF ,
MT-TT.U 819 depth IOUndtt. G*t boat
NO ONE knowl our daddy,
Out mommy 11 Slamr.u. We
are darlin1 &lrb. Wr. need
home• .uti love • plr.aae.
613-9«2 • 8110
Jor Mexico. $1.5,(0).
WEST COAST YACln'S
3333 W. Coast Hwy
Newport Archca Marina
Newport Beach * &42·77ll
SABOT No. 3692 with Olll'I
Completely retinUhed
$275. 6'2-3369
TRANSPOllTATION
Bo1t Maintenance 9033
PAINT, varnish, ttopair at
your dock. E~rienced .
Reis. 541-7807
IT'S SMARTER
TRANSPOllTATION
TO CHARTER
Cal 25 • 1taweon 30 • Alberg
35 • Boullty 40 • Newparter
ketch .. Mariner 40 •
Scboonrrs • 11' Fairliner • 30'
Trojan • 38' Spt FU.her • nu-
merous others.
CALIFORNIA CRUIS!S
20 years in Newport
Emio Minney 541-4191
BtiJEWATER CHARTERS
27'..to' U-Drlve Sklp. Avail
Day/wk. 646.918) 24 hrs,,
e OIARTER THE FINEST
N~ 40' Ketch
67J..251 7 • 67~2400
Tr1iler, Tr1>HI
23' KENSKlLL
•'f.8" MODEL
·~·
·9-425
Shasta 16' Make Offer
~18-1561 eves or Sat.
9500
)
•• ' ~
I.
'·
. ,,
d ;.
-I·
T
" -0
y •
. 5
I()
" ••
0
00 •· • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I • • • • • • .,
..
•
'
--·-
·-
• • I S4 A • W .. * $ 4 1 U U • • 4 4 W o •• W # w W y y # y •• + • ¥ W" w W W •• W 4 • -·-·-- -c• -- -----·-- ---
#!. . . . . Frid«J, A.,.1 9, 19'8 . DAllY Pll.~
CONNELL CHEVROLET'S USED CAR CENTER -SPECIALS
j ' • I -• ":..t ......................... ·~
.. ... .........
'64 P,ONl'.IAc ·
Grand Prb. VB. aqtomatlc, po_wer _1teer-
in1, elec. wtndowi, RIH. D.:nubi blue
w/white vlnyl rod.. (NQX710)
. $1195
'65 DODGE ..
, '65 M RCURY
·-----vw. ..._ .... __ ,_,, .................
i , ..-.-ermtm W!ilt. wtth blue laterkr. ~'85)51795
•
•
.
'66 CORVAIR
C(olls>«. Autom&Uc tn.n&mlaaion. ~
be9.W', htec Brome. (RGVt97).
'1395
'66 MALIBU
Sport Coupe. VS. automatic, radio, hff.t-
er, Marina blu. w/blaek vift11 interior.
(MV2762)
51695
'64 CHEVROLET
% ton piclcup. 8" Fleetstd•, VS, auto.
matic, radio, beater, cusl cab. (R28417)
51595
'66 OLDSMOBILE
F-35 f door Hdan. V-8, automatic, radio,
heater, power 1teerl~and finlahed tn Tu~u~e.~795
'63 GRAND PRIX Automatlc, !'OW<' oteertnr. lactoey air
COl>d., RAH. Sl~okl with Addle
bucket 1eata. (N ), ·
'1295
IEST SELECTION OF
EL CAMINOS
IN THE AREA
'66 EL CAMINO
CUSTOM. VB, automatic, factory air :vu-
dltionlngc ra<llo, beater, red (57B61A).
52595
'61 CORVAIR
Monu. Automatic, air conditioninc, r•~
dio and heat.... $495
'67 EL CAMINO
CUSTOM. VB, automaUe, power 1leerlng,
R&H, ermine white w /black vinyl inter-
ior. (V42925)
52595
'66 EL CAMINO
CUSTOM. V8, aulomatie,.PS, factory air,
R&ll, wilh lll>erglui loelrlng cover, tr·
mine white. ('IW086)
$2695
'63 CHEVROLET
Bel Air Station Wagon. VB, a•tOmatto,
power oleerlng, radio, heater.
51195
.
. '62 c;HEVROLET
Bel-Air ' *>at. • eyltnder, ltandant uanamtuM>n. radio, beater.
5595 I I . .
. '62. FORD
Galaxle XL"".toupe. VB • .au~tic. power atitrlni. radio.· beater. White w/red.
bucke,1 IMtl.
?95
'68 CHEVELLE
MaUbu. Automatic, racllo, heater, pow-er .1teerln1. (VIM 691)
·52895
.
'67 CAMARO
m V8, automatic, radio, he&ter, powwr
1teertn1. (ULSl.85)
52495
'63 FOID
G&1uil: Sport Coupe. VS. au.tomatk,
power 1tHrlng, air condtt:lonln1.
5995
MG
MGI '66 '
! o; '63 NOVA S.S • "°'1po. Aulomatlc, rtdlo, boater, ..,,,,,,..
Wltlt. wired vburt bucket .. u. cmmT&:
: -~
; !
'1195
'65 GMC
.. . . ' , I .. I ·' ' : ~i
' !
• IUburban CorTyall. I eyllndH -•• ' i clean. (m98J). • : . ' s1495 .-: I
::::::::::::I'' "i
. !
'65 CHEVROLET ':' ! :
•. I
0tlY)' II Nova wq:on. Automatic. radio';··
hea,3,.. mn1nt white witb. bd1e lntericr.:
(N ........ 1). ·:.
! ; -· ,.
'1595
'65 CHEVROLET
. . . . , . : .
I . ..
Monza coupe. ., a• tor y alr eondlt1on.hl£::..
Automatic, radio, heater, enn1ne whlte,
wlth blue vinyl bucket aeatl. No. JUS2 -~
51295 -~
'64 CHEVROLET
,,,,· :
.!:. :
., ' • ·-.
Red wttb ~ lnlcior. Wire ,
/
WHY'.
CLOWN
iAROUND'1 ~ .....
--~--· llWPORT IMPORTS
3100 W. O»lf. HW)'. · ..
N"'JIO['t Be•dl
Ma-ta ~l'JM.
Au1bor1ud MG Det..lrrr
ELMORE -MOTOU
SPORT CAil WOALD
'63 TR4 :0.~::.·
'64 lTW0> ..... -
$1457
$1727
'
'
. .... ' . • t.: : ....:.:..._J
;:!,\'.',':
. .
·~• I
"~ . .... : . . ... . . '
:·:.: s --.
L.t ttl. M,1 wl+ti th• 1lrcu1 Je th• fn"' ....,I &.I• 111 1114 fl'Me ... tltf Witri ;i.vt
.., .. •111 ·' th111. :.:-:-:: i
E1peci•lly wften we 9ive them the Volk1w•1e• I ~inf laf~ ~.,,.. form•nc~ in1pection. Th1t'1 why we can 1u1rentee lOO%: fhei ~er.
repl1cem·ent of 111 m•jor. MKh1•dc•I IN~• • lut n,ot ~very usH ~·
th11 ln1r,ectlon. Only VW1 sold by euthor1zed deeler1. Like u1. ~·~r.·::
• Ent ne • Tr1Mml1tlon • ltelr n:le • llront axle .....,..,._ ...,..,
system • llectrlcal 1y1tem
'66 YW
...... , .. ly .... ,,.4 +-.
'15.99
'63Porsche
c.,., 4 ...... ,.. ...
'3199
'63 YW
....... Puny 9'1ulp'• +
rMll.
•1199
'61 GHIA Cw••••h, w ,.,,, _ .. + .....
•999
.
'66 YW '61 vw. ' ,_, .. ly....,.4 -'""' ~4 + rl4"1o +-,..... :· ! • , ,·. /. .
s.1799 $13991
,, • j
'61 YW '64 vw
lllU•NHck. '"'" -4+ ...... ... ..... •r•ea. hP.lfllJ -4 + ... ~.:C:
'1799 s1299! .. I
'62 YW '60 •Hi~
~ '"'" .... .,.4 --Mt.~-·4 + , .. + ~· w~:i
11099 . •att·· . .... i
• "! ., vw CAMPERS i -. '61 • '66 • '6~·j -I MUST Sii TO APPUCIATI .'~,
I .
·:: 1· . .. ; .. .
. '' I .:~:
• I ~· ..
-.. j' -" . .
• ... .. . ... I ...
..., aa:v 11·r. li:ii • .-AUSTIN """11 -... -_. -----..,--.1
''1'0£Vf)-~.
=j :~1
>::f ·-· I ,;. . •.• t Ulol ~ .,. et -• '67 AUSTIN
;.--COOl'lll s 1MI iiriiiiGft&W:... Ona""'*'., .....
:2794
'65 Triumph TR4 =... $1827
'66 (2) Triumph':::.':. $2257
'67 TR4A IRS :...... $2357 ~·; I
.,.. ..._ ..... ~,...... . .....-mil.
...,., -u ,..,, -lfARQUll *"-="'" • ··-.,.,.,~""' .......... ~ . --.. _c_ ___ _ ·-----P&ff!pUt1 iG-.am @Jstt11'\"T ~
•.n Frle.U21sfler.
m.nu
~ .. . -. ••I
-..._. -------. ________ .._
-&... ---------·-·-·-·-·--· ---·-----·-· -· -· --·~------·-·>~ .. -.r-.tot.-M'>..''""""""''':..•a.• -""""'"'"'-"""-' •· >""'"'' .. •.:..• **'"'-'"""""""'"-'"'",.•.:.••......,•=••"SiiO''"-•%.._. _______ """*=.._
'I
--,..,.. ... -. 0 , \t o •• WI . -.. •
MG .
'51 MGA
5989 llfter 5
9600
' '"°"· "-! •. 1968
1mDOtrlCI Autos %00 TRA SPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 9600 TRANS1'9RTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIQN TRANSPORTATION
PORSCHE lmpor1ed AutM 9600 lmporttd Aut .. 9600
Imported Autos -..,_
VOLKSWAGEN lmpartsd Auto• 9600 9610 Au!OI Wantocl ;;;.:c._;;;..;.:;z..==--"'"" I ;;:Spo:;,.;..rt.c...oC-'-1rs-'------I 9700 UNd C1r1
f'REE US VEGAS
V ACATiON Wmi A
'61 PORSCHE. 1968 Earth
grftl'I, diton\l' wheels <Sup..
er 901 , Undoubtedly th l'
sharpest Partebe in Pili1·
$2995
ELMORE
SPORT CAR
WORLD
Phone 8!M·332'l
15'XI Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
, Ponche '64
2 to choose-"S.C." and "C"
~. ~ blue, one red.
The best anywhere!
NEWPORT IMPORTS
j\()(l W. Coil.st ltwy,
Newpor1 Be1ch
~ 541).1764
Authorized MG Dealtt
'66 PORSOiE • 912; immac.
cond. Loaded! Must sell!
M8-95M aftu 6 d1ily &r -'58 PORSOiE Speedster 1700
CC. Hardtop SISIX). 548-9534
aft 6 dail)' A wlmds
TOYOTA
rREE W VEGAS
VACATION wrrn A
1966 TOYOTA Sedan. The
most sought •Het' K'OOOOl)'
~·r built 1od1y. Arlie wbite
with oontruting interior.
1uto. trans .. ridlo, heater,
etc. Up 10 30 m.p.1. with 90
h.p. doing the job. Five lO
choose from. Al low 11
S14!ll ,
ELMORE
?.lOTDRS
TOYOTA
Ph. 1194--333>
lil>O Beach Bl11d .. Wstmn1tr
1',REE LAS VEGAS
VACATION WITH A
l!lll> TOYOTA P\d!: Up. Com·
plete with twin bed camper.
F1mou1 ror its 9 hp. JD
m.p.a;. Mgine and f..spd. De-
peodabi.lity. Clean and fresh
This Weekend ooly
$1495.
ELMORE
TRIUMPH '65 VW, UH, tuned vi:h .. ---------1 ictn c1ean, like nu. Cone 1963 Triumph .,..... Mu• .. u. 11049.
841--TR4 $1545 . MIJSf SELL FAST?
VOLKSWAGEti
Superb Coridltlonl
'61 VW DELUXE
68 f1A T SpJdet c o tt v •
Drafted. Ta~ OYl!t' p)'Dltl of
$85. 78 mo. 642--6495
Ju.st painted ltoodU1'8.$ Ol'· Antiqu.1, Cl •dict 9615
1nge, pin slriped. Imma1.1.1·
lite condition! SlOO Cash '31 F'ORD C1bf'Olet coupe
Will "1
Your VolkswaeeD CIC' Pwtcbl
l ,.,,, top doUaro. Paid far
or not. Call RaJ.pb
473-1190 Powder Blue w/mati:hin1 In-1967 vw eedan like ~
teriof', wire wheels, radio, RJH. Let.v\na ' ror lldlool:
heat"', Pirelli Tire$. GOl'ge-11475. 548-67811 dell, dlr, will finance bal· ORIGINAL! $780 UHCI C•n • t900
Mee for pri11ate p&rty, S32. 54&-1214 oua In ever)t derail~. Mk forl.,c=-=~~~~-~=-Stock No. SO'l1. 68 VW. R/H. Sunroof. Xlnt J>l'r month. After lO::r.1, 1934 FIAT R o ads t er, NEED A CAI?
494-9773 {Classicl. One of a kind tn CAN'T BE FINANCEDT Ul:WPQRT IMPORT' oond. Loavlog """""'· Mu" mn ~ aell. Askin&" $1 850. 7 14 '67 V\V,; AM/FM radio, U.S.A. Make of.fer, 67J....5156 e Banknl;pl'! e Reposset1lonT
wood steer. whl. Tuned ex· •Ba4l a-edit! • DtVt'.lr'CfdT 833-1129
3100 W. eoo'st llwy. haust, Autos Wanted 9700 •MD.1t.ary •New 1111 .V.T '65 VW Deluxe. Very sharp ~ After 4 PM I-..;...--------· I Make Payday PQ'DH'Dtl Sfl.~f!Wport Beic~l?64 car. No dWn OAC $40.60 mo. I-========= WE PAY McCARTHY MOTORS "~~~~~~~~~ 1·~Dlf'~· ~..,...Fn~"~,.r;;:;,;-oo l""" <."A u-•~ .. 1l'ilho•--Authori2ed MG Dealer VOLVO -"'II.I< __.. • ~-'64 VW Oelux• 159 dw" OAC R (2 blocQ JI, of Sean)
Triumph '66 TR4A Pym!> "''' $33 . ., mo. D1'. * "Economy Plu1" TOP BOLLA ..,,,. Ana"" SC.....
2 10 choose: ooe black, one 842-4615 1964 Volvo 2 Or. 4 speed '6'2 IA.~ T DODGE truck. '60
white. Both have wire c,,.,,.-~vw=~x~,,.--cl..;...,.-..,-,.-r. trans., Radio &r H~ler. Teal FOR· ~~·1.,!11h in good cond.
wheels and both are excep. No dwn OAC Pymts only $47 Blue exterior with light bl.IJC ......-..... ~ ftpQRJ IMPORTS .:~··~=-~~"' "' No :Y~::g ~ t.".' ~ USED CA RS
dwn OAC Pymts only S47. Price SU!fl 00
3100 \Y. Coast Hwy. nK1. Dir. 8.f2-t6I5 1st cir lot ~n .Ha1bor Blvd. (ONNfil (HfV~OLEJ
N•w,.., 8'och '65 VW Delux•. v....,, '"'"' JOHNSON & SON
642·9400 540-1764 car. No dwn OAC $40.60 mo. LiJK.'Olo·Mercury
AutboriU'd MG Dealer Dir. 842-4615 Cost1 Mesa Branch
2828 Harbor BJvd.
Costa Mesa 546·1203
,.,.,=-V\=vc--ox~ .... --,~,.,.,--00-,-. ~"'°= l!Mt 1-tarbor Bh'd. 642·7ffi0 WE PAY ...
VOLKSWAGEN
BUICK
FR.EE LAS VEGAS
VACATION wrnt A
'64 BUICK SKYLARK HARO.
TOP. Beautiful Platium with
black Landau to¢ Immacu·
Mite. dwn OAC. Pymts S53 mo. r.tOTORS 1----------1 Dir. 842-4615
TOYOTA '61 VW Red . good cond.,l ~=~-~----CASH '68 VOLVO $1395
CADILLAC
FREE LAS VDJAS
VACA110N WITH A
1962 CADllJ..AC COUPE De
VlUE. Nu white with
oontrul:in& i<l9 blue .i.terior.
FutJ pwr . .Ii: air cmd. All
FM ,e~tru. rul)' an lmm1c.
ulate bm\lty, Only
$1495
ELMORE
TOYOTA
Mql'ORS
Pbooe IB4·3320
15300 Beach Blvd., Wtt:mrt¥tr
'86 CAD .. ConV., St-1' Mitt
su~r. blk. leather, every
fact. option. New Vo I u t
Tyres. Xlnt care. t-Owi:lS".
$3795 494-4540, 469-47UI
'67 El.DO, 15,000 ml, war-
' ranty, $5,995 or trade for
Porsche 911. w/ S sp.
~
'66 CAD CONV, all black,
1tf'reo t&.,e deck, ne'llJ tires.
S4000. Gi-9358, Mr. Wood
Ph. 894-3J20 R&.H , Private party. S'l'l.,5. '64 VW Coov. Real nice car. ~;;~~~~!i~9~600~~1m~po~rt~ld~A~U!O~~·!"i~9~600~ill~ ec11ch Blvd .. wr1mn.11tr .i69'7>-i1il821woolr<Q;i0:-t:Omi [..'N?'.o',':;'.,'dw~"~~O':.A_i;C,,,. ~p':,y::'m~u ONLY S31. mo. Dir. 84:.!-4615 ,68 TOYOTA .1967 KARMAN Ghl•. Lo ml. -ELM O RE MOT O RS Rodin. Xlot oond. $199.i. l ; '62 VW, do"'; .adlo, ht"
GE"I' OUR LEADERSHIP
SAVINGS BEFORE
YOU BUY !!~
~Ml~
ror used can l trucks jU.11t
c1U us tor tree estimate,
GROTH CHEVROLfT
ELMORE
TOYOTA
MOTORS
Phone 894·3320
'68 DEVllJ..E. Priced tor
quick sale. JU!! driven from
Indiana. Pri prty. 540-lffiS
'65 CAD. Cpe. De Ville: kt.'.
inh.>r., full pwr., ract. air
c:ond.: ,~. 67J.-4465
;_fr.;: SPORT CAR WORLD GET OUR LEADERSHIP 493-3210 Sunroc:t. Newly painted. SAVrNGS BEFORE S790. 644·1098 Ask for Sales Manaa:er
182U Beach Bl.,
Huntington Beach
Kl~=
15300 Be1ch BIYd., Wstmns1:r
'56 CAD. Rebuilt ·engine,
rebuijt trans. $250. 842-561l3
~ AUSTIN HIALY SPlm $AVE YOU BUY!!! XLNT '67 VW Bug. 23,000'i---------;:i!!I.' O• ef • k1M --'lb -CAREF1JL MILES. CALL 63 VOLKSWAGEN Bu s
~ '::.!. •;:s::...,.111, .-. $899 ejfal\ L~ ~ =~: xln1 roid. ~:./~s~~~H~~ncs~~act
• IMPORTS CADILLAC CHEVROLET •
M6 MID61T $767 Extras Sl425 19£.S VW Squareback Top ~G":" .. IMPORTS 1--~~·~1'-0'l!!=l=--,---roodltion • $2350. ,.,,.,..,
1966 llarbor, C.M. 646-9303
'62 VOLVO 544 Sport
$650. 4\}4..5(114 alter 6.
"11LL Trade 20' inbrd with
comple1ely rebh ena-&r other
equip. Value, $1.000. 548-llll
'56 CAD Funeral coach. Good
cond. Equip W/ surfboard·
racks. Best offer 00-8598
'60 NOMAD Wgn R/H, aulo.
tr, PIS P/B, low niH, oria:
owner, xlnt cond. 8»-0541
A -.. ._. ._. $1897 * SACRIFICE *
SUNllAM H.T. $1187 1966 Harbor, C.M. 640.llXJ '&> VW sunroof, Ask Sl .000
Ull'I -642-6570-kttp callini:::
SUNllAM TIGll H.T. $2187 TOYOTA Loh of'°-· -..... '61 VW M,.. wh~I•. Big
DATSUN H.T. IOADSTll $2227 ENGIN"E. Loaded ""'-rxtras
Ult.• Mw. • 1-IEADQUARTERS Xlnt cond. 1 ownr. 962-6591 .............................................. ., ELMORE 1967 vw $tsso -~~.._ ........ 15300 1 BEACH .... ~ • ,......,, •
_:::-WESTMfNSTER -15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr l.oo=N='T~J~U~s=T=w~1s=H"'°1<>-,-.,-,,,-•• ---AA3322 ' Phooo 894-3322 Ihm& to furnlm '°"' born• == '.is..,.,~ a.,... .. ,,-...'-'""':" JOIN tbe nrWtpn In tht .... find great bUYI ln ti>
=: · ""' • • • • li'!i'i'!' '!i'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!IL~"~A~IL~Y~PIWr~~=l"~ANT~=ADS~~,~~·;"~';•~CJ~·~'-""~· ~· "':;:A~o~·~· =;
9900
DOUBLE CHECKED
USED CAR CENTER
'64 BUICK
l• Sa b•• '4 Door. Aulom1lic, radi•,
he1t•r, pewer 1l••ri119, pow•r wi"·
dow~, 'f1 clo•y •i• co11cll+io11in9, lew
"'ile•9•. K•llv llue look S 1620.
$l595
'64 CHEVY IMPALA
Spo•t Coupe. Aulo"'•tic, r•clio, pow·
'' tl11•i11fi, 127 \I.I , Kelly 11111 l ook s1••0.
'66 FORD 4-DOOR
AuleMelic, ••die, l.11l1r, power 1+•••·
Ing. Ke lty 81111 loo'. Sl9tO.
'65 BUICK RIVIERA
Full power, f1clo•y t ir conclitioninfi .
Kelly l lu e l ook S2 7•o.
52695
'66 FORD
Cou"lry 5tcl•n. Auto..,•tic, ••die,
h•Jl11. pew•• .tee•i"9· f•clory .;, COii·
ditio"i"9· Ke lly Blue Book $21•5.
s2195
'65 BUICK WILDCAT
Aulom1lic, ••clio, h1•+1r, pow•• 11••"
i119, pow1r br1k11, pow•• wi"dow1, full
pow••, fa ctory 1i• co11dlti1ni119. Kelly
11111 l ook S2•10.
s1995
'67 BUICK SPECIAL
Coup•, 11110..,•lic. •1cl io, heel••. l'O"'·
'' 1l11ri"t· Kelly 11111 l oo'. $2010.
'65 GMC 1/• TON
Truc k. \I.a, •uto ... •lic, pow•• 111••·
;"'i• long be.ii, e•ctll•"' fat c•"'Pi"9·
K•lly l!u1 loo'. $1920.
S1695
'65 CADILLAC de Ville
'ltll ••w•r. tectory 1ir 1e1>ditio"in9,
'"lo•dtd." lteUy al ue l ook Sl)75.
53095
'67 COUGAR
Aule1111lic, power 1l1•ri119, ftclory t i•
c•nditionin9, l1ndl w lop. K•lly 81111
l ook $1115.
s2995
• BUICK
21 .00 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA
MESA 548-7767
'· ..
1968 4.4.2 Holiday Coupe
Factory Air Conditioning!
•oo cu. ft. ENGINE. Turbo.Hyclr•m•tic, pow.
•• d••ri119, powfr br•k•'· clelu•• ••clio, ti"t.
ed 9!•,1, r1dll111 ti•11. All factory eq uipm•n+.
No. 610. s3545 $~~~50 T~:·
& LIC.
'68 OLDS 442 Holdy. Cp.
pow•r ll•t•in9, f1ct, 1ir cone!., 0 11r
vi"y l lop, tinted <al1u. Cost
Over 100 More New
&B's at Unbelievable
Discounts!
'68 OLDS F-85 Sport Cp. t99 Om
v.s, •11tom1lic, r•cl io. h1•+1•, f 011r
pow•• 1leerin9, white w•ll lire1, Cott
li"ted <al•n. Stoel No. 550
'68 OLDS F-85 Sport Cp. lt99 o-
• cyli "cl er, 1lick 1hill. r•cl io.~ 011r
h•••••, po ... tr li11ri11fi, feclo•y Colt
.;, co"ditioni"'i · Stoel< No. •&7
v.a. •u•om•tic., ••dio, he1t11.$99 OM•
Stock No. •ll !-----------------
'68 OLDS 442 Holdy. Cp.
v.1. 111tom•tic, ••clio. "'''''·$99 OM• pow•• ll11•i119, f1ct. •i• cone/., 0111
vi"yl lop, tinted 91•11. Coit
Stock No. 611
'68 Olds Delm 88 4-dr. Sd
11s •vtom•tic, ••dio, h1 1t••,$99 Ono
po:,.,, ,leeri n<a , power br•k11, Our
wh;1, will lir11, tinted 91111. Cett
Stock No. IJ)7.
'68 Olds Delta 88
HOL. CPE BLACK VINYL TOPs99 o-v.a, •uto..,•lic, r1d io, he•ltr, Our
pow•• 1l•eri01fi, po..,•r b••k•i, Cost
wh ilt will li•11, wi01yt top, tint.
•d 9l1n. Stock No. 69•
'68 OLD5 442 Holdy. Cp.
\I.I, .01110 ..,,1;c, r•clio, he•ter,$99 OM•
pow•• 1le••i119, f1~t .• ;, cone!., 011r
linltd 91111. Di1k brek•'· Colt
Stock No. ••s
I ;j
• • • : •
'65 MUSTANG 2 DR. HARDTOP
\I.I, 1wlom•lic, r1dio, hetlt•, po""''
liftri11 . Sloe• No. 621 ·A ..............• · · · ·
OTHER DEALERS ADVERTISE IT ••
"REMEM11ER, WE ARE NEVER SATISFIED UNTIL YOU ARE"
UNIVERSITY
\
1968 Vista Cruiser Waqon
l'•clorv Air Cotldll!Mlnt. ' P"llffllll'I", Turbo Hl"
drorn,,1 ic, -llft<'l"t. -brakn. *'I*• wl'let!I disc, cvslOm spar! wood ''""' 11Ttrln1 ""'""'· nn .. -way w~ttf, carivenlen« ''°""• dCIOI ad'1" ouerd. IM'IU~f. •Milo, tinted ti.", PG-1111 pit'
wl'ld<>w, lu98<1M ••<~. rtm0l1 OUlllcloi minor.
1 Stock
No. 673
'68 OLDS Vista Cruiser
'I PASSENGER WAGON s99 °"' \I.a, .011!0., 11.&H, power 1i11"
in g, power br•l•1, powe• wi"· Ottr
dow•. feet. eir cone!., w-w tire1, Cost
tinted gl•u. '400 cu, In . •n9. ••9·
111.1. Stoel No. 674
'68 OLDS Vista Cruis«
9 PASSENGER. WAGON s99 o-V-1, ••dio, h11I••, pow•• 11•••· 01r
illfi, fact. •i• co"d., w.w lir11, Coit
ti11t•d 91•15. 400 cu. in. e"9· ••!· fuel. Stock No. •o7
'68 OLDS Vista Cruiser s99 °"' ' PASSENGER WAGON O.r
\I.I, e uto., R&H, power ll1e,iR9, Cflf
pow•r br•ke1, f•ct. eir cone!.,
while w•ll, lir11, tinted gl•n. Steck No . 692
'61 OLDS Vista Cruiser
' PASSENGER WAGON s99 Om v.a. •ulom•tic, radio, he•l•r, 011r
power .+i1ri119, feet. •ir cone!., Celt
while will tir11, tinted <al•u·
•oo cu. i11 •"''"•· Stock No. 6•2
'61 OLDS Vista Cnilser
9 PASSENGER WAGON s99 0-\1.1, •utom•lic, r•dio, h••ltr, O•
power •l11rin9. feel. eir cencl., Celt
whit• wt ll li<tl, !iRl•d 9!111.
•OO cu. i11 ••911l•r fu el •ngin•· Stock Ne. 61•
• WE DO IT!
2850 HARBOR
BLVD.
COSTA MESA
NEW ~550
USED 546-5553
•
Frldly, August 9, 1968
TltANSPOltTATION •. TltANSPOltTATIO N T iu~sP6RTA_T_1o_N_~ __ T_RA_N_sPO_R_T_AT_1_0N __ -._T_R_A_N_sP0_1t_TA_T_1o_N _T_RA_N_SP0_1t_T_AT_1_0N __ T_RANSPORTATION ATI
-~-N-•w......;.c~·~""--~~~9-B® ..... ~_ ... ~c_a~~~~--9_1100_N_ ... ~c-·~~·~--'-IOO~N-•_w_ea~"~~~-'IOO~-Ne-w_._c_al'L.. ... -...~!.~IOO:.:;;.:N=•-:...::Ca=~:..:...~--'~IOO::.;.;N~ew~~~·~a=--·~.....:'=IOO:..::...N~·-;;....;C~~:..::...-;--...... -'~IOO;;;.New:.;::.;~·~Ca~".:....-~~;;;M
ON COMPETITION!
.. c;ii
BECAUSE EACH & EVERY "CARVER-CARE-CAR" CARRIES A 100o/o GUARAN.TEE ON ENGINE,.TR4NS. & REAR END PARTS!
'65 VAUANT
4 Door 1eclo11. Awlol'l'lolic, roclio 011cl hooter,
white 1iclo woll tire1. 17,M2 111ilo1.
'67 CHEVROLET
lmptlo S.S. VI, hyilramotic, power 1teoM11t
I ltra .. 01, rodlo, ~efflt, whlto woll1, foctory
oir conllilio11int·
'63 CHEVROLET
\'J ' 1011 pickup huck. I' bod, 6 cylinclor, redio,
hto+·,., -4 1pttd, 1$,964 milo1.
'67 FIREllRD 400
4 1p1td lrt111mi11ion, rodio tnd ho1!1r,
whit1 tidt woll liro1.
$2877
'65 MUSTANG
2 Door horcltop, VI, 4 spootl, rocllo oncl hooter,
whito 1illo ••II tlro1,
'62 CHEVROLET
lm,.lo 4 Door 6 po11. wogo11. Vt, po•1rglid1,
po•er 1toMl11t, rtdie, ho1ter, white wt llt, 11t•
1ngi11e,
'65 GRAND PRIX
Hyllromtfic, po••r 1le1rlnt I brt .. el, rtdlo,
hotl1r, whit1 1ide wall tire1, foctory t ir.
'64 THUNDERBtRD
ltndtu. Cruitomttic, pow1r ''••rlng·brtk•t·
windows· lttf, focto tlr, -4-4,267 miltt.
SO FRIENDLY, IN FACT, THAT WE WILL DELIVER A NEW CAR FOR
$ TOTAL DOWN
0 .. . .
r ,
A
. -
'65 RAMBLER
Cla11l1 770 con¥ortibl1. VI, 111temotic, r1llio,
hoot.,., whlto 1illo well tlre1,
'64 PONTIAC
Sto!I011 ••t•11. VI, hyclromollc, ,...,, 1foori11t,
rtlllo.. hoofor, whlfo 1llle •ell tlrot.
'64 FORD FALCON
Futuro Sprint. VI, 011to111ttlc, rtlllo olld
hotter, white lltlo wit\ tir11.
'67 GTO
2 Door h•rcltop. VI, kyclromotic, powor 1te1r·
i11g, rocllo, he1!1r, whito 1ide w1lt1, l ],746
mll11.
' I
2925 HARBOR BOULEVARD. C'OSTA MESA
----~-~---1--------1--------1-""'-------CHEVROLET U1ed cars CHEVROLET CORVETIE _ulld __ c._rs ___ 9900_ 1 u1ec1 Can
'60 cuEV. '" v-•; """ .,. -.-=c:-:H=m=o=-LET=--11-~4:..:.:::s:..P::E.=E:::D=:.._ -.63-ro-Rv_E_n_E-,-TOPS--•• -. FOliD
Uaed Cart CHEVROLET
FORD FORD JEEP , '60 CHl;VY Panel. Good
cond.
642.0015
ter./exter. Xlnt tires, good Must sell. Best offer. SPECIALISTS l body Man Xtru! '67 FORD BronccH.lk:e new, '61 GALAXY $550 '62 FORD EcoDoline. Rebult FREE LAS. mech.: $350. 545-6033 '63 CHEV II ~llO or m,_u:J uk fer only l,m mt Good temu. C Dr. Hrdtp. XInt cond. 6 cly. Chrome wheels. StO). VACATION
7 CHEVY 6 cyl stock sit. '64 CHEV. Impala 2 Dr. hdtp. NOVA STA.
0
WAG. HIGH PERFORMANCE Cluck. Private owner. &n-7559 R/H. * 675-1027 53&-0137 1964 JEEP WA •
S250 cash. 1714 Pine SL H.B. Real shalll. 1-0wner. $1250 Economy six cyl. high totKue LARGEST SELECTION lN ======= '62 FAIRLANE 2 dr. Xlnt 6l FORD FALCON '61 FORD Statim Wag. Good dr, 6 pau., ( wbl.
SOCK IT TO 'EM! 642-3427 Call be t. 8-5 PJ\I m glnC', powC'r glid!', power ORANGE COUNTY --'-ON Co I u with 1-.......:~!!...'.c~'.....'.::::.:.._.!..co======= \ •l-·m· g, R • H. ld••l ..... CUSTOM CARS COUGAR IDllCU. paint, tires, etc. Standard Shift. RJH. Lt. shape. Must aell $ 3 8 5 . · mp e
..... CK. -$495.00 642-8115 im. 4 Dr. $300. 54().7599 64.2-5864 hubs. Blue with a l!iiiilful
96001mported Autos 9600 ~00vacalion. f'ull Price SeleCc~eclt Auto 1968 COUGARXRT. ~!ust 1en (]~ ~:1~!:.:E:!E
1st c~r .\01 on f!Jrbor Blvd. en er rnydemorul.nllor. Call Len a~ara market or JOHNSON & SON .= Haroo' Blvd. 537.""' =~· ~~ :f.\ ~i I I , oqual .,,., W•o<...sig
Llnc:oln·Men.'Ury 63 CHEVY II G cyl, sx;vate e1tabllsh e d LI n co In a $1595
Co6'ta Mesa Branch ~rty. New brakes pamt & Mercury, Cougar dealenhlp. ELMOR
1941 Harbor Blvd. 642·7Cli0 vm>'.I top. Excel. cond. $895 N!'WllOri. CM -~ SP~i1~~~TS ··~~:;~:;:L DODGE \t· ELMORE MOTORS HIG~:~~~o~:t:~cE ':,.~=..~;;: i:,.~~:= i-· The Largest Toyota Facility Anywhere
LARGEST SELECTION JN mil• d•mooatnt.,, oqulpl"<I -===·=== NOW AT OUR NEW LOCATION
ORANGE COUNTY '°' th• eont1nm•I .,,,.. -FALCON
·Of DATSUN
FREE FOR TAKING-A TEST DllYI IN A NEW
• DATSUN. TOUR CHOICE OF AN ILi·
PHANT 01 DONllT SAYINliS IANIC. Seleccted Auto ~::~t };,~"mi:e.: s!;~ -------CHoos1 You• TOY OT A ••ow THI LAa•m s1uCT10N
enter Or11.nge County'• olde1 t 'l50 FALCON. Rebuilt enaine
lll32H'"'°'"'·•· "'-'"'•"·•·•LI"'•' EXTRAS!!ms ........ o1. Just Arrived 1969 "Corolla" '65 CHEV. Malibu: air-cond., Mercury, Cougar dea.lership. fer. 5'8--1670 evenings HERE ARE THE CANDIDATES
1961 DATSUN PLS10 SEDAN
e t6 HP! O'hoM c•111
ellf.,· 4 spl, l'l"ICO
...... .. llftt. ... ,
pwr. steer .. 1ttteo. Loaded. Newport -CM 642--0981
ion• """'· s•"" " roNTINi:rAL. M..,,,n. FORD 4''•°Ao oent one owner tedan. Anti· -------/ j '64. JMPAl..A <I Dr. bdtop. que plld. AM rM radio, FREE LAS VEX>AS ... , ...... , ....... .
~n D..,. 110 COit ,,_,, Pwr. «teerlng, new tires. ex· .peed control, tilt steer. All VACATION wrnt A Fln1ncln9 Av1ll1ble
tras. Sll9S. 968-3275 .......... _ -veniences. A l r 1964 FORD CORTINA <PE. ON A'PIOVID '""'""""" ....... Hard CllDIT
FOR SALE Factory wan'Mly. call only Thi• lo the "'""'"· m TOYOTA (OR"'" -$1996 1956 Olev. Sl50. extra 3 spd. ii you appreciate the fine9t. find Hardtop OUb Cpe VIUl
trans. 5J6-l51i7 548-7751 Flalhinc red with bu<*et
··6'65iiSC>iiiJEVW. ,,-on.,:-. 'J;' 1m;;;.,;;;;1,.c,\ ======== \ Mt.ti. 4 IJld. plus k>ta of
• t6 HP o'i.H c•111
...... 4 ~· IYftCO
,,..,, disc bn1, pl11
2J _,. ltO COit rtT9t !
$2196
1968 DATSUN SPL 311
.... tty ........... . -......... . .,.ere .......... .,,..
., fnt, UtH, vlliyl ,..... --:J-7' .... . + 11 .. ..... _,,
$2766
A ..... llric1~ ..f-D & M plut·T•ir: I Li~.
CORVAIR extraa. Immaculate and a
P""· ''"'· R/H, VS-. Auto. -• il -"-~• .. F11.ct. air. $1.liO. 54&-1214 !--------. .,.. m e&ge m~ . ..,....,
'59 a-IEVY, good cond., '64 SPY DER-Tan 150 hp. $995
leather uphol1 .. floor shlfL Turbo-Oiarged. 4 apd. R/H, ELMORE Make ol.fer. 546-M46 w.w. Xlnl cond. Asking $9'J5
, • CM evet &: Sun. 642-7Tl6 65 El. C.AMINO, well equlp·I~~="""'-=-:-::-:-::-~ ped, excepUon&Uy clean, v.s '65 MONZA Convert.
11.uto. ~7249/543-4207 White/red. blk . top; auto., ·===-=--~-,-I R/H, xJnt. cond. $900. '48 OlEVY. Very good cond. 549-1842
New brakes. pod tires.1.=========I
TOYOTA
MOI'ORS
""""' 894-33>) 15.m Beach Blvd., Watmnatr
4 SPEED
S165. 962-t955 CORVETTE SPECIALISTS
1959 IMPALA ' d• hdtp. HIGH PERFORMANCE
aean p1, pb or will trade FR.EE LAS VffiAS CUSTOM CARS
for clean P.up. 642-9159 VACATION WITH A LARGEST SELECTION IN
19&1 CHEVY Bel-Aire V-t~ '63 CORVEITE Fut Bad!:. ORANGE COUNT!
au!Dm, • d<., R&H. Good °""""" plottnum It n J 1 h ,. _, __ , _ _. Auto
cond. $850. 548-8650 aft. ' with rid:I red leather inter· .. ~ 9'U
... El om1no. :m. "" """ """" trans. Mai Center
o,., 71 ........ ......,. I .... ...., ,.-.. ,,_ <I .peed. Goad oond. wheels. 13032 Harllor B~vd. 531'"'6M
UHi ..... t. I ltte ..... wl ... ef ,._ * 548-3155 + $2599 1116' l'ORD Sprint v.a. Good
,.._ ..., w ••h~•• i. tM -11 .... ,... + 1961 COR.VAm MONZA ELMORE mad. JJma1t new Utei.
••;••:••:•;11 ..... llllJllmJ!~llllJlllllJl~'!"Jl ..... 11 1 $450.00 $lOOG. Clll GiM1 • Call !168-2"8 alt. 4:15 SPORT CAii . * -* GEORGE ZIMMERMAN 'SO CHEV. e.i.!Atr 2 Dr., WORLD w FORD J Dr. Rwb
DATSUN dHn, _...,...,. tirft. -IM-3322 W-• N .. tna: !12 llL
SALIS AND SERVICE on 846-206! lml Beach•Bhd., w-V-3, O'dc. Mint COlld. 14>lJ,
PHONE 5-40+4 I 1 DRAFl'ED T.ol'. ""' a... '60 (])RVEITE ris.1m hldtp ,,,.,.i.. Xb>t ~ TIGHT MOTOR l>AILT PILOTWANT Alli 21U Herblt' &1¥d., C..11 -. . &e-79t>6 $800 nnn * ...__ lllUltG IU'.IUJ.111
\' ' '
FRll
I.ls Vegas
V1c1tion
JDap 0 2N""'9
AT THI
Hcl ... Hohl
.. ..., cleol fitirM I
t.1t 4r!.011. Ne P'"'
di110 11oc•11try.
15300 Belch Blvd.
WESTMINSTER
894-lln
•
1'MERICAN CAR ·
TRADES WANTED
'
.f'. !
-•
MOTORS _:
TOYOTA=~
Ph.~ l5.1lO Beach Blvd., ,tr
MERCURI:"~ --· '68 COLONY~ Wap1. I will now
my 2000 mile de · .
Aa completely u
)"OU nll&bt want. WW:ill er
~~Can ol HllSoart! Olunty'a oldest ·
Llnmln Mereury •
deUnhfP. Newpotl: r. ta
Mesa. IWJ...<ll81 ~ ~
1968 MERCURY St.1'n
Wqon, brand new~
top, third itee.t, di8C ·--..
...... ·-· rodliand lnv<ntory aacrlfle.~. al Johneon and Son, . e
c...ntla "'"'"' Llncobl -Mercury -.= .. -;-
l!J6() M""""' O>loollG k
w .... 'Pw:. Good= Make a(f«. 675-3"39 ~M
MUSTAN * 0
"M.;.,Mli ~· UH.i late ~ M .
-· ·9Q1fne, pow• • aJtotrw.,:.,•a; n.w...i tn -
mtlnl &old -••illll 2 --1~ P.zk'9 $lllll5.00, ..
i.t cu kit Oft
JOHNSON&
· Llncoln .. lertur#E °"'" -8nllli"' OOH..W8¥. r
'17 FASTBACX
390, 4 ipd, r a ll. "' 12'JOO.nl~altl
PLACE fO'D' 1nllt ad waer. ,-a..JGoldnr-DAlLT
P1LDT dUl!llld
t •
I
•
•
-COME IN FOR .A--------.....,..
''COMMAND PERFORMANCE''
• OF A NEW OR: PREVIOUSLY OWNED CADILLAC
' ' 1968 CADILLAC
ELDORADO
' . -
H•re's th• f•bulous h•rdtop coup• finished in K•shmir Ivory with.Juxurious bl•ck t11terlor •nd bl.ck p•dded
fop. Fully equipp•d with ,f~ctory eir, dt1c brekes, AM-FM 1t.,eo, fitt wheel, power querter windows, elec-
tric door locks •nd trunk opener. Full .pow.er _•nd m•ny other .d•luxe ·~••· I Stock No. 7541
--
'
$
---OVER 80 QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO SELECT .. FROM---
'63 OLDSMOBILE
F-15 4 door. Aulom1lic tr1n1mi11ion, pow1r 1'1••·
in9, r1dio •nd h••t•r, whit1 1icl1 w1U li11i. tint1cl
91111. 9old 1.-l1tior.
SALE $888 PRICE
'65 RAMBLER
H1rdtop coup1. Cl11ic 770. VI 1n9in1, r1clinin9
bucket 1e1h, redio i nd h•1ier, white iid1 w•ll
tir11, 1rclic wltit• with 111 whif1 vinyl int1rior.
SA.Li $999 PRICE
'65 MUSTANG
Economic1I • cylind•r e n9in1 with th1 li1nclercl
t11n1mi11lon, ••di1 t nd h11l1r, whit• !_icl1 will
tir11. Snow while 1xl1rior wit)! h1rmonbin9 blut
inl11io1.
SALE $999 PRICE
'64 OLDSMOBILE
St•rfirt h1rdlop coupe. Auloll'•lic lr1n1miuion, ••·
dit 111cl h11t11 ,powtr tl11rint . power ltre k11, buck·
1t 111h, ctnhor cont•lt.
SALi $1111 PRICE
'63 PONTIAC
, l•11111villt 4 Door ' ,.1u1n9er 1t1tion w•9on. Aulo·
m1t!c lr1n1miu ion, r1dio i nd h11l1r. power ti•••·
int . pow•r ltr1k1i, while tidt will lir11, ei1 con·
oilili1nin9 ,
SALE $1222 PRICE
'66 CADILLAC
lrou9h•m lop•• 9old with 1•ndl•wood l•nd•11 •ool
i nd l•1th1r int1rior. full pow1r inclwdin9 window1-
•1nt window1, 111t-br1k11-1!11rin9-door lock1 i nd
of cown• f1clory 1ir co"ditionin9. AM/FM r1dio
11111 twili9ht 11nlin1I,
SALE $3999 PRICE
'66 CHRYSLER
N1wpori. Torrty 9r11n cir with m1lckin9 i111.,ior,
t nd bl1ck vinyl roof. pow•• 1t11rin9 i nd pow••
b••~••, l1ctory 1ir co11clitionin9 plu1 much , much
mo••.
SALi $2444 PRICE
'67 CADILLAC
Coupe 01Ville. Moniert y 9rt•n with b!1ck vinyl
roof 111cl full l11th1r inl11io1. Full-power includln9
pow•• "111! winclow1 •11d of court• feclory eir con·
~ilioriin9.
SALi $4777 PRICE
'63 CADILLAC
Coup• o,Yillt with 111 pow•• 111id1 includint pow.
•r 6 w1y •t•I, power wintlow,1, power b11kei, pow.
er 1ho1ri119, i ncl of count ft clory t it co11ditio11i119.
SALi $1444 PRICE
'63 CADILLAC
51cl1n 01YiU1. 4 .loor h1rcltop, limo 9•1•11 with
l1eth•r i nd 11ylon int1rior. H11 power 6 w•y 111t,
power winclow1, power "'"' wlnclow1, powtt 1'1et•
i119, power ltr1k11, ftclo"f 1ir conclilio11in9.
SALE $1444 PRICE
· '63 CHEVROLET
lmp1l1 Sup•• Spori. Sil••• with blac:k l111e~•t ,,11
lnt•rior, fully •quipp•d includint 1 utom•lic tr•nl•
miuio11, pow•r 1l•1rinf, r1dio ind h••*•'• f1clory
•ir conditionin9, whit• 1id• will tir11.
SALi $1222 PRICE
'64 CADILLAC
Coupe 01 Ville. Sil"'' 1rl1rlor with bl1c~ vinyl roof
F1ctory 1ir conditionin9 end h11 1U the lu.-ury
pow•r f,1tur•I includin9 pow1r "l nh • 1!11rin9 •
bt1k11 • windowl, AM/FM r1dio.
SALE $1777 PRICE
'63 PONTIAC
l onn1vill1 Coupe. Gold will. h1rmoni1in9 inl11ior
!full vi11yll, Autorn1lic lr1ntmiuion, power sit••·
in9, power Dr1k11. rt dio incl h11t1r, while 1lde
w1U ti,11, ti11t1d 9l1u •nd much mort.
SALE $999 PRICE
'65 PONTIAC
Grind P1ix. Autorn1tic ff1n1mh1io11, power 1l1er•
iri9, pow1r br1k11, rtclio 111cl h1et1 r, Duck1t 111h,
''nttr c•n1ol1, l1chom1t11, white 1id1 wi ll tir".
SALi $1444 PRICE
'64 IMPERIAL
Crown 4 door h1rcHop. l11th1r e ncl +•ptti"t in·
ltrior. F1tlty equipp1cl with power tl1•rin9, power
braket, pow•• window1,pow1r 6 way 11•!, 1ulo·
m1!ic dirnm••, AM/FM r1clio t nd f1c!O"f •ir con•
ditio11in9.
SALi $1777 PRICE
'64 OLDSMOBILE
J1hl1r h•rdlop co11p1. R1dio, h1•!1r, •Ulom1tic,
pow1r 1t1•rin9, pow1r br1k11, WSW, buck1t 111!1,
c1nt1r con1ol1.
SALE $999 PRICE
'67 TORONADO
F•clory 1ir conditionin9, pow•r tl11rin9, pow1r
br1k1•, r1dio, hei fer, full "inyl interior, r1di1I tir11.
SALi $3222 PRICE
'65 CADILLAC
El Oor1tlo.Pcw1r 1l•trin9, power br1k11, powtr
window1, powtr •••f, f•clory 1ir conclilionin9, rte!
with white tcp, le1th1r inltrior.
SALi $2999 PRICE
'64 CADILLAC
Con .. 1.+ibl1, llow1r 1t11rin9, pow1r winclow1, p•wff
b1•k11,pow er 111t, white with r•d l11thtr int•rier,
f•ctory 1ir co11ditioni119.
SALE $1 777 PRICE
'62 CADILLAC
l'ow1r d11rin9, powtr Dr1k11, pcwtr wirulow1, jllW•
•• 1e1I, f1clory 1ir conclitio11i119, Norm1ncly Dlu1
w/whil1 lop.
SALE $888 PRICE
'65 CHEVROLET
lmp1l1 4Door h1rdtop. 127 VI 1n9in1, "inyl roof.
r1dio i nd h11!1r, pow1r li11rin9, power br1k111
f1c lory 1ir conditio11in9.
SALE $1555 PRICE
'63 FORD
61l1xi1 500 h1rcltop coup1. Whit• w/h1rmoni1in9
inlffior, r1dio, h11t1r, 1ulomtlic, pow1r 1t11rin9,
whit• w1ll1.
SALE $999 PRICE
'65 FIAT
S1cl111. Li9hl bl u• i11 color. 4 1p•t<lll tr1n1miuion,
h11t1r, bucket 1e•h, wfite 1idt w•llt.
SALE $666 PRICE
'67 DATSUN
4 Door 11d111. Autom1tic tr1111mi11ion, h1 •t1r. reel
witli bl1ck Duck1t 1e1t1, whit• 1i<lll1 will lir11.
SALE $1666 PRICE
'64 VOLKSWAGEN
C1mp1r. lito1dio o1nd h1o1~r, compl1t1ly 1quipp1cl fo~
c1mpin9 includi119 lift up top.
SALE $1444 PRICE
___ .,..,._ ___ SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN--------
B:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY
YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER SERVING THE ORANGE COAST HARBOR AREA
NABERS
2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-9100
1 i<AN)r'UR I A TION * "POWERHOUSE UIOd Can 9900 I Uaod Cara 990ll SPORT MODEL "
,,., Ola. s"""" c,... "'1. OLDSMOBILE PLYMOUTH
Air l'OOd, hill power with ------------------
--PL_Y_M_O-UT_H __ -u-.... -c.-.. ---9900-i--P-O_N_n_A_C __ ---T-·-Bl_R_D--l--T-.~Bl-R_D_~
PONTIAC
Uaod C~ 9900
OLDSMOBILE
1965 01..DS \'1Ma Crui~r. Ps,
Pb. Fae a ir. Rack. Very
gtX>d corn!. Org ov.•ner.
644--0IJ I
'67 CU1l.ASS Supreme. 2 Dr.
Pwr. all'er.. brks., air
e<nt.; U,OOl Mi. 642-3868
auto. trans., beauWul onyx * "4 SPEEDS
black exterior with le11.ther· ON THE FLOOR"
eHe bucllet seat interior & 19&t Olds OJUess Spt Holiday
high plush bl.ack carpets. Power st'eer\ng, VS. cast
The best Olds buy In town. iron eng. A ~al hot model
S15ffi.00. for tbolle who !eel young.
1st car 101 on Hartior Blvd. Local one owner car \\'hich
JOHNSON & SON .....,.,,_""" •""" ,~ ....
Lincoln·Me"l'CW'y Full Price Sl Di.00.
196!) OLDS 442. A Real man'a Costa Mesa Bn.nch lit car lot on Hart>or Bl vd
'"· Rod . Gcul •h•P'· IMI """°'Blvd. &12-7"'0 JOHNSON & SON
I =$'="°=·=M>-=5'=l=7 ===:..!.:.:Dial:::_642-56:;::::78:.:'....:b~::::__:.:RF.S::::;:UL TS Linc™n·Merc:ury Cb&la Met111. Branch Imported Autos 9600 Import.cl .. l .. 01 9600 1941 Harbor Blvd. 642·'1tW
PACKARD
'50 PACKARD 4 dr Sedan.
Ultromatk:. Orig. FinUh.
Sharp? Int. Oean. Motor
needs work. 548-8355 PriY.
Own<e
PLYMOUTH
PREE U.S VEGAS
VACATION WITH A
1966 PLYM0Un1 Barr11Ma
Sport Cpe. SUnlNrsl iro'd
"''Ith contrasting b u c: k e t
1e11t1. auto. tape deck, lll1
the a~rtt!1. Abltolutdy
l!lhov.TOOm frr1h. Pricff ta
aeU now. Only
St!IM.
ELMORE
MOTORS
TOYOTA
'51 SAVOY 2 Dr .. ~bit eng., FREE LAS VEX1AS 4 SPEED
SPECIALISTS
HIGH PERFORMANCE
CUSTOM CARS
LARGEST SELECTION IN
ORANGE COUNTY
Selected Auto
Center
VACATION WITH A 1964 T-BlRD. Full power, alr 1962 T-Bird Full power, air.
MUST Sacrifice be I 0 w 1966 PONTIAC G.T.O, hanl· rood. n.395. 548-Xl22 afte.t 6 Stereo tape. Xlnt cood. $950!
auto. trans., RH. Good --------1
cood. Sl9:1. -fM·93l4
wholesale book, 1 owner top cpe. Most popular model pm or all day wkends. 544·2257, 531>-7747
PONTIAC black 63 Grand Prix. Full going. Silver melalic green • '62 T-BIRD • '55 T·BliRD in mint l"Qfld. ::
pwr. air cond, gd tirea. with black bucket seats &: Xlnt cond $700 Both tops. Sll96
'67 FlREBIRD 326 HO. r/h. 673--34..?7, 673-673.l landau top. 4 spd. trans., e 674-1584 e 847-5ttl .~==~~-""7'-,-1 consoh~. plus all the extras. auto tr. full pwr. Original '68 LEMANS Pootiac. Air & Positively the nicest in ()r.
owner. $2495. 494-3794 s.11 extras. 4,(0) Mi. Cannot ange County. This Weekend
'60 PONTI AC Jfardtop. Auto. take overseas. Sacrifi~. Only
13032 Harbor Blvd. ~"7-1646 P/S. P/B. Radio &: Sl.250. 847·'1124
'63 Plymouth Sta Wag. Ex. Heater. 548--0793 a.fl 3 67 PONT. GTO loaded. One
Cond. Orig owner $900 or '66 GTO, full power. in-yr old. 11.000 mi Call to see
bc11t offer! 499-2481 aft 5. eluding factory air. Original .l price. 644-1342, day &
CHARGE your want ld'now. private party. 644--0857 nite. 613-9240 day
. '
COUGAR CLEARANCE!
BRAND NEW 'bl'• WITH FACTORY
LIST PRICES FROM Sl I Ob TO $5503
BUT
OPEN TO NEGOTIATION
MERCURY
------
LINCOLN
$2'295.
ELMORE
MOTORS
TOYOTA
Ph. IJM.J.U1
l.">100 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
ROY CARVER
l'ONT1AC
-H......_ Bl., Coltl M-
Kl 6-4444
Oranp Comity'• ~
Dealer f9r RoU. • l\orC9 and
B<nll>-
1967 GTO. Chapagne with
black padded top, black in-
terior with bucket .eats. Jm.
maculate. 1 ~r. 19,000
miJff, [,quipped wiC2I u.
ccllenct mclucHna air cm-
dltioniflc . $2,9!1). Pleue cail
&U-Q62 (1l 613--9191
'67 BCl'INEVJLLE. k>aded,
air, excrll. (IOnd, Muat .ell.
Pvt. ptf. 962--4610
sgg TO sggg
••••••••••••••••• •2500 . DOWN :
1959 PONTIAC H.T.
VS, Auto., PS, PB
1958 CHEV. 2 DR. H.T. s399 ' CRAGER MAGS '
'
1959 CHEV. PANEL s399 . Nu Point, Stick
1962 CUTLASS
R.built ong., bucket soats
1963 CHEVY II NOVA
Auto., R&H. s599
~ ...... 15300 ACH ··~ ' •"' ...... ~ ............. ,
,;;; ' WESTMI STER :
Ph.ll9<J320 I
l5DI 8eadl Blvd., W1tmnstr
STUDEBAKER
'H STUD~BAKER Com-
mander 4 dr. R./H. Auto.
Pert.ct <.'Ol'ld. 1 owntr $$95.
Oft~ril.~
Auto Discount Center
. ._' aa.1 ·322 ' i ' ;"'• .. .,..,., . •7"r .... , .................
E. 1 ••···········~'"'
. -\ •
l960 PLYMOUTH StaUon
w1aon. V3, pwr brake• i
-"""· $22). 147"673:1
•
-.I.
.....oar--conA MUA
too Wiil COAJf MfOHWAl'
NIWPOIT llACH • Ml·J171 / .. .1"°'11
--=:: ...... -...,-.u:--
' I
'2004 HARBOR COSTA MESA
642-4621
;,
--···•·e.•·e-"s-' '•·-•r--rr AA.Ato• .. •.M.....-•.6••,....lli.•-• •
l .door hardtop with h.ater end all
=""'==:::::--the oth•r factory equipment .
..,::--.__The Auto buy of the y•~r.
TOTA&. -$76 ''"" s MOHTKLY PAYMl"'T
IEW 1• DODIE DART
H-'• tit. -l.w "''-' 11r with 1ft tli1 lllfll--
pric....I f11t•t1l. A r11I 11ono1t1it1I D11uty you'll
Dt 1'4'0ld fl IWll.
N£W 1988 CORONET WAION
D*-Mtf It.It. a 0111 D,1\i119 ,.,.,.,,, • H11"-'
I 41frort.r • H1•1rd fl11hi109 1yt+1111 • '•ddff
d11h I .,Joor • l1ck-11p li9hh • IY!wlti tpeetl
wipe" with w11h11'f,,
'71 TOTAL DOWN
'71 :::.
IEW 1988 DOD8E COROIET
• 0111! hon; 1V•f1111 • Ti11t.cl wf11d1l.i1ld • D1lu••
wlt.11 11¥1" • D1 lw•1 tti"' • F11111 frollt Nth .
'69 TOTAL DOWN
'69 TOTAL r..w~
NEW 1988 DOD8E POLARA
A r11I li11111ry "'1tl1I eq11ippMI with • Nyl11 .. ,.
ho lotery • Well t. well 11r,..h • A11t1o1111li1
t.•••· • H11t1r I tlefreot.r 1yd11'111 • l•c:~-wp
li1hh • l.411lti·1p11tl wipel'f, •~d w11h1r1 • S11t
•• 1 ...
1980 CHEVY %·T111 Pickup
•·Cyl. Stict J111t the thi"t for yo11r li9hl •• h11•y
haulinq neecf1. Lie. #~501)6
FULL PRICE: S699
$23 Do., $23 Mo.
1913 FORD F•2&0 P'lck1p
•-,.._. 1-' 1.tl \•tf ,..l'ket fw 1 ••"'~'·
Lk. #VJJ24t
FUU PRICE:
SlZ h., $32 Mo. $899
-
BUY ON BEACH CITY'S
EASY CREDIT
* If ,.. lloo't lfllok ,.. ........ .......,. *11--... .... .-...,.. .. -* 11,.. .... '""_ .........
w ... ....,,.. ... ., .. -....
sttl .,..., ,_ ... ., I
usa CAI TllMI ..... OM ,,
MO. 0.A.C. -MIW' CAI TllMI
IASID ON 41 IAIY MOMTH4Y
PAYM""'1. O.A.C.
StlectlM .f N•w C•ro le1.J ..
AY•ll•llllity
100%
, ..... & L9ltiitr ... , ....
ON ALL USID 5 STAR
CARS PLUS CASH IACK
...... ..,.. -""" J .... -......... ~ llM wh1dlh'-ld W IN aw ye.u .. IKf fw ttll1 ........... tcllM. -----------.... -oPIN-DAiiT'TIL'itt.M.
INCLUDING SllNDA Y
All ,,,.. -,.,_ ~ ..... .....,,. -.. ..............
1960 FORD
STARLINER
J · tl11r hertltep , V-1, 111!1.
h•~•. P1rf...:t fer tile f1 "'i'f
11c1..J ••r er fer tll1t 11ll•t•
•fvtl"'t. Li", # OEZ·4lt.
l'\IU $299 l'lllCI
$16... $16 k
1960 Y. W.
k1tli1 I "••ler, ' r11/ 11111
'••' tll1t will 9.+ ye• where ., .. ••"' ••••... e.-. ... 1.
11lly. Li1. #fUL.7JJ.
~ $499
$16... $16 k
'
'"""· ·-9.1'61 DAILY riLOT .
WE'RE CARRYING OVER ·
INTO .AUGUST WITH EVEN
LOWER PRICES !
HERE'S PROOF!
NEW CAR TRADE-INS at SELL-OUT PRICES!
1986 Pl YMOUTH F1ry II
v.1, 1.+1., p1w1r 1to.rl19, retlio I ho1t.r.
L!c. j:kll-lil
$50 $50 FULL $1499 Do. Mo. l'lllCI
196 7 DODGE Coronet 500
Aoto. tr1~1 .. power tlnr\19, ,_,, •••••a. Y-1,
!11!. 1ir 11Rtl. l11I th1rpl Llc. #SKO.flt
$73 De.$73 Mo. ~~I $2299
1913 PONTIAC Ira•• Prix
2-Door H1..lt1,. V-1, ,, .. , Wt11., po-.... FMf,
pewer ltr1k,1, f11t1ry eir, r1cll1 I ho1t'lr.
Lie. #•CE.07J $32 $32 FULL $899 De. Me. PllCI
1981 vw Sl111H •11•
J111t like •ow. 4.1,11tl tr111., r1tll1 I IMetor,
Ll1. #UJ&.JJ I
$.59 Do. $59 Me. ~~. $1799
1984 MERCURY W1g11
C1"'"'ut1r, V-1, 1 wt1. tr1111., ,ewe+" 1to1rillt , f1 ..
lory 1ir ''"" r1di1 I l111!1r. Llc, #fVJ.,lf.
$35.,..$35 .... ~~. '999
1986 Pl YMOUTH BelteHrt II
v.1, 111to . .,,,.. .. r1cllo I i...t.t. U.. #UQe.JJ7.
$25 De.$25 Me. ~~~. '799
1986 HD8E Pollr1
4·Doot. V-1 ...... w. .... retllo I lio1tot. lo111m'lll
•t•1 color. Lic. #UIW-7". $25 $25 l'\ILL $799 De. Me. l'lllCI
1913 PLYMOUTH
4-D-. ••rt. diet A "°°' .t-y ,,_,
LI.. #TIY;l49
$1611o.'l6Mo. ;~I $499
1986 OORTIIA W1111
A11t.. tr1 ... , r1411 I ltt1t.,, A ••ltltt, 111Mry r.J
11l1r, U.. #NN-147
$37 Do.$37 .... ~~. $1199
1• MUSTl• H.ntop C..,.
A.too ........ t.Mk • 11o .....
Ue, #MP'O·Jtl $29 s29 l'\IU s799 Do. llo. PllCI .
1913 OLDS • 4-hor v.1, em., tt-1 .... ,.w., .._,i.,, ,_.~ I ......._
Ll1. #AID·llt
'23 Do.$23Mo. ~~~I '699
1986 PLYMOUTH lml11•
J-D11r. H1rhop. V-1, 4., ... tt1-.. rd!. & lrr+f.
L11. #11.fK-IJI
'42.,..$42 .... ~~. '1199
1• -E On1ll 440
1.0.w H.i.,. A• • .,, ... , ,.4i. & ir..1M, ........,
,,, 11M. U.. #lf'Z...411
$6011o.$60 .... ~~'1699
1986 ILDS F .. "'°'" w ... .._......, ,,_ wHti v.1, ..... .,. ....
111.11 •r1111 -'29 Do.'29.... :~. •799
1117 ILIS F ..
v ••. e .... .,_ ..... 1'1111.
'34D..'34 .... =~·1099
lllZ UllOOLI Oelll1lllll .. , ............ , ... .,,, ,,, '"'" ,._ ....
i.,, ,.. ... 11t1•" ,114'1 I lrtootw. u •• •OW..tti
'31 Do.'31 .... =~· '999
1184DIM11• S.S. v ............... , ............ .....
u.. IU-IH
•31 ... •31 .... =~ '999
1• FOii 0.111•
Y-1, .................. I ....... U.. .,.,..,,
s • l'UU '899 32 Do. 32 Me. l'llCI
lllZ llOllET SllH11 W1p1
6=cyl., 111t1. tr1~1., r11i1 I li11t1r. P'l..ty of ,...
t.r tile f1111lly 1"4 tlio clot. Lie. #lfL..161,
'16Do.'16 .... ==~· •399
1913 OOllET 2-DR. SEDAI
l\M ........ -... .. .. • ., ... ·-tl1t1 .. , .,, .. -4 It • ,.,1 ... ....,. U., #OUY-104,
'16Do.'16 .... ~~ •299
OPIN DAILY 1IL 10 P.M.
INCLUDING SUNDAY I
cotn11•rr 'IO RT 'IO l'IOM
All\'WI VI 111 OIA-COUllTY
"' .\ '"""" ----'" _ .... ~ .-. c. ••=·ea<• A 4 1 • •+A r .... ·= ........ ·-· ., ..... -•• --ga "---• o •oaan •& ••ed .
. ., .. -• ...
·-.-. -
. ·.
:.:::n ..
I
,
. -
'
J2 DAILY PILOT Fr!da,r, August 9, 1%8
NO PRICE LEADERS!
\ Nol just a few specially discounted "advertisers," but every new car In our
tremendous stock is slashed lo ABSOLUTE FINAL year·end clearance . dis·
count prices! So many models and makes that you must lake one of our
electric '1rolleys" lo see them all! Maka your choice and determine your
ACTUAL SAYINGS in I 0 seconds by comparing window slicker with our
'
UNBEATABLE DISCOUNTSI
NO IEW '68 IN STOCK EXCEPTED! FORDS, MUSTANGS,
T-BIRDS, FAIRLAIES, ENGLISH FORDS, SHELBY AMER·
!CANS, FORD TRUCKS, CAMPERS, MOTOR HOMES •
SCIENCE HAS
DEVEWPED ...
'65 BARRACUDA Plym. $,. 295
~';,.~ ~ ................. (PIZ 4111 lt1l "°""'"or ,,...,..
'59 CHEVROLET H1rdtop
I ,,_., .,. ..cl e<i\111"". TM .... "-" dotMI, M lltl'
-.. ,. ...... lllC 121
CHEVY 2-Ton Cab & Chusis
e TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS e
~ •~tr"lllnR 16 -· """" wtell "1111 .. ~ bit rwtlil9d .. wtlol11t~ lo h ""blk, e .. ; !he ....,-., OIJ. !l!Je oio.r c ..... _____ +:....11 .. ,.._+.;..... ___ _,
22 WAGONS "SALE" 22
22 to choo1t from -'59 thru '67 yttl' modtls. 6 to 10 pass·
tngtr -somt with 1ir conditioning. Pl YMOUTH -'66 MERC
COMMUTEl -ICONO BUS'S -FOROS -FALCOHl -FAIR·
LANES -COUNTRY SIOANS -CfflVY H WAGOll -COUNTRY
SQUIRn.
Exampl11
CounlfV k0¥!. V.~~u1l2!2.. ~~2091, dtow" er trldt. U1 mo., le .-.it.s.
$1595
EVERYT HING (and anything)
GOES IN THE OF FICIAL FACTORY
CLEARAN CE OF 1968 FORDS
Read what you want-BELIEVE what you want, btlt remem-
ber-the dealer with the most cars to clear before tM '69's
arrive is the dealer who must offer the highest discounts to
9et the job done! And we have one of the lan)est '68 lnven·
tories In Southern California!
E GUARANTEE
No dealer-ANYWHERE-can give you a better deal on a
new '68 Ford durin9 this "Clean Sweep" sale of all remain·
in9 models. In short,
TRY US FIRST OR TRY US LAST •••
BUT TRY US BEFORE YOU BUY!
'h TON. V.C . ...,io Ind '-'w, (LI.wit). •'llo dowll or ....... '" '*' _,,, 20 monfh.I.
'63 FAIRLANE Wagon
\141, radkl Incl l'>Nlw -·""'f""'. M down«' trD ... per mo .• '" moo. CGl'"I 6DJ
'64 VOLKSWAGEN
$495
',~,~ ~D!:~S2_!o~r.!a~t!,P ~-~ -s595· '64 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON f129-5
IPXL 1161. :;,-1~. ~ P:::-'°~~)I~: COtol UM.-* ..,,,.,.,.
'63 CORVAIR MONZA · S69S
MUSTANG sm
20 TO CHOOSE PROM "6" I "8" MINDllS, 4 SPll)S, AUTO-
MATICS. SOME WITH POWH STEHING & AIR CONDITIONING.
196$ THRU 1967 MOO!LS, CONVIRTllLES, COUPfS, AND 2+1
FASTBACKS.
IXAMPLE,
'65 MUSTANG $
A!r i;ood., R&H, Vt, Auto .. I'S, 20'll. _,, OI' lrldt 139 5 + S'9 ~· mo. 311 mo. (RGU $29)
1IOW ••• w. c• scienttf ... lly
.... ,_ ..t cheek over 100 ...... °" nc:h ..cl Ar tMt af..
J.ct1 ltt perform•nct prior to
selli"g It. You buy with built
Jn confidence when you buy •
Theodore Robins Used C•r that
carrits the Di1gnostic sticker.
Thue 'Mn .,.. gu1r.enteed
100°1• USED CAR SALE PRICES GOOD FOR 72 HOURS. ALL PAYMENTS FIGURED ON APPROVED CREDIT.
,( ' I'
...__..,,, ~ ...... ,,,_
• \ . '·
•
. ---·-••
I
Frld•y, August 9, 1961
FORRESTINE RliSPO, THI
SUBJECT OF DOROTHY
PIER'S MEET THE PEOPLI
FEATURE ON PAGE 3,
WAS A TOMBOY DURING
HER GROWING UP YEARS.
NOW SHE IS AS FEMININE
AS HER DAILY WORK.
THE NEWPORT HARBOR
Y M C A W I l L B E THE
SCENE OF THE BEGONIA
AND .SH ADE PL A NT
SHOW THIS SATURDAY
AND SUNDAY. IT IS SPON-
SORED BY THE ORANGE
C 0 UNT Y CHAPTER OP
THE AMERICAN &EGONIA
SOCIETY. SEE FEATURE
.ON PAGE 4 •
• T H E ENTERTAINMENT I SCENE IS A LIVEL y ON&
I I N 0 R A N G E COUNTY.
THIS WEEKEND IT Of4
• FERS A WIDE VARIETY
OF ACTIVITIES FllOM 808
HOPFS BIG USO SHOW TO
QUIET DINING IY CAN·
DLE LIGHT. CHICK THE
GUIDE TO FU~ PAGE 2
AND THE ENrERTAIN·
MENT PAGES 8 THROUGH l5 FC\D C\' ' ... -,. C:Tl(\NC'
-
1
. . ~ W E ·E · K .. E. N D E R
- . . . t ' .• .
-" • t • • ' • •
l
. . .
... •
1
BALI HAI IS CALLINO fOU
Special Eventa
CHILDREN'S THEATER -The Huntington Beach
Playbou.se ii pretenting a special chlldren'a
fanwy, "Sir Slob and the Princeu.'' Fri. and
Sat. Augult 9 through M. Curtain time Fri. at
7:30 p.m., Sat. 2:30 p.m. Ti.Wt.I, •1 for ldulta.
50c for cbildml under 12. Phone 847-1631.
USO -BOB HOPE SHOW -Bob Hope, Lea Brown.
Jimmy Dwante, Danny Tbomu, Ann Margaret
and other cuett ltar1 perform It the Anaheim
Stadium, 2000 State College Blvd., Ana.helm oil
AUIUJt 10 beglnnlnc at 8:15. Tlcketa, $2.50, Jl.50.
'5, fl.50 and flO, availabie ·It tbe Aniabelm
Stadium box office, t a.m. to 5 p.m. or anJ
branch ot United Callfornia Bent. Phone e
~. See P.ie 12.
BEGONIA SHOW -Tbe Oran1e Cout Beaonla So-
dety la boldlnl their 15th annual Begonla ancl
Shade Plant Show Aua. 10 and 11 at the Orange
County YMCA, 2300 University Drive, Newpon
Beach. Hours: noon to 10 p.m. Sat., Aug. 10;
10 a.m. to & p.m. Aug. 11. Adm.llslon 75c for
adults, dlil.dren undel" 12 free. See Page 4.
MOVIES -The Huntington Beach libraries are
ahowing family fllm1 each Sat. at dust through
Aug. 24 in the Beech Bowl just eut of HunUnc·
ton Beach pier. There la no admla1lon charce.
FNltund film• Sat., Aug. 10 •e "The Parable,"
"The SeUODJ" and "See You in Peru."
POP SINGER -Jose Feliciano, who recorded 1ucb
hita aa "Upt My Fire" and "Callf ornia Dream· lnl" will perform at Melodyland Theater, 10
Freedman Way, Anaheim on Aug. 12. Ticket
prices: $2.90 to '5.50; curtain at 8:30 p.m.
Phorle 77&-74eo.
DISNEYLAND ENTERTAINMENT -Comedian
PbylllJ Diller, The Clinger Sisters pop music
group and a comedy and juggling act ol the
Rudenko Brothen will entertain on the Tomor·
rowland Stage at Disneyland, 1313 S. Harbor
Blvd., Anaheim Aug. 12 through 11 at 9:15 and
11 p.m. On Sun., Aug. 11 western style to 1 k
ainger, Roy Clark and husband and wife ~am
Johnny and Jonie Mosby and Mary Taylor will
present a Country-Music JubUee on the Tomor·
rowland Stage at 3, 5 and 7 p.m. Disneyland is
open 8 a.m. to midnight Sun. through Thurs., 8
a.m. to 1 a.m. Fri. and Sat. Phone 533-4456 for
information. See picture on Page 3.
AQUATIC SHOW -Students from Newport Re<:rea-
Uoo Department aquaUc cl&asea will present a
"South Pacitlc Aquatic Show," August 14, lJ
and 11 at 8 p.m. in tbe Newport Harbor Hi&b
School pool, 900 N. 1n1ne Ave., Newport Beach.
Ad.miaalon 75c for adults, 50c for children. Pbon1
8'73-2110. SM Page 5 for ltory and pictures.
CIRCUS -1'he Rin~ Brothen and Barnum
and Balley Clrcua will perform ill the Arena
of the Anabelm ConvenUon Center, 800 W. Kat--
ella, through Aue. 14. Perlonnances: Tue•.
t.brouell' rrt. 2:45 and I p.m.; Sal 10:30 a.m,.
2:30 and. p.m.; Sun. 2:30 and. p.m. ncteta.
$2 to $5, discount.a for children under 12 at spec-
ified performances only. Phone 635-8962 for
f w1her information.
2 .... CINte ... ....,
• • -• •
GUIDI TO FUN
Special Events
TEEN DANCE -A dance for high ~bool aced
Weatm.inlter teenagen will be held Fri., Aue.
1e trom I p.m. to midnigbt in the Community
Services bulldlng ol the Civic Center, 8140 Weat-
minlter Ave., Westminlter. Featured band will
be the "Sound Shop." Admll1lon, $1.50, lncludel
aie price of a teen card which wU1 8dmit the
bolder to future dancea at a diaccnmt.
LAGUNA ART FESTIVAL -The 33rd annual La.
iuna Beach Featlval of Art.I and P.,eant of
the Matera b betni atqed tbroap Aucuat it
at the Lasuna Beach Festival GroUDdl, tsO i..
iuna Cuyon Rold. T1cbta for Pqeut of the
Matera, a 11Yine creation ol art woru, are oa
aale at the box ottlce dally 10 a.m. to I p.m.
Prices rans• from $2 to ts and lncludt ldmJ.t.
1lon to the Festival IJ'OUD(ll. Single ldmtamoa
to the Festival O'oundl, where art woru of an
kinda will be dilplayecl and aold ii IOc far
ad.ult.: lOc for children. Hours : GOOD to mJ4.
night daily. Phooe 4M-1145 for further Informa-
tion. See feature on Pqe &.
• •
ALL CALIFORNIA ART SHOW -An invitadoul
art eshiblt ot approximately 1000 entrie1 by
Callf ornia artllta will be OD dlaplay noon to 10
p.m. daily at the Laguna Beach Art AJIOCia-
tion Gallery, 307 Cliff Drive, through Aug. 24
u part of the Lacuna Beach Festival of Arta.
Houri: noon to 10 p.m. dally. General admlllloaa
25c, Art AJ1~Uon membera and OOI pat,
free. Pho.nt --.,1.
Coming Up
SOCIAL ARTS WEEK -The Cotta Mesa Recrea-
tion Department ii aponaoring ita fourth Social
Arta Week Aug. 17 through 24. Events include =
a modern comedy "Brother Goose," preaeoted
by the Coda Mesa Civic Playhouse teen divilion
nightly at 8:30 p.m. at the recreation center O.C.
Fairground.I, 88 Fair Drive, Coata Mesa; Sun.,
Aug. 18 a Barbeque picnic beginning at 10 a.m.
at the Co1ta Meaa City P•k; Mon., Aug. 18 a
playground talent ahow and spaghetti dinner at
the recreation center, cost 50c for children, 7Sc
tor adults; Wed., Aug. 21 Pops aottball game at a p.m. in TeWiokle Part and a teen dance at
I p.m. at the recreation center; Thura and Fri.
Aug. 22 and 23 an acquatlca show at Estancia
Jngh School, 7:30 p.m., ad.mlaalon 50c; Fri., Au&.
23 a square and 1odal dance jamboree, 1:30 p.m.
at the Comunity Recreation Center. For further
information phone 834-5391 .
JAIZMAN -Harry James and hil orchestra and
ling« Della Reese perform Aug. 19 11t 8:30 in
the Melodyland Theater, 10 Freedman Way,
Anaheim. Tlcketa, $2.SO to $6.50. Phone 7'7t-7480.
BAU..ET -ins. Laguna Ballet Company preHDtl
their third annual "Ballet Allrelco" Sat, Aue.
31 at 8:30 p.m. Procrams 1Ddude1 "Fuiitive
Vlliooa" by Prokofiev, "Mood.I of Ancient Ru-
1la,11 ~ and "'lb• Enchanted Toy Shop,"
JOHpb B.,.-. ncteta, '2t .., and '4. ball pnc.
for ttudenb 1n the aide and center sections, on
sale at the Irvine Bowl box office, 650 Laguna
Canyon Road. Laguna Beach or phone 494-7271.
•
---~-
, .... 1 .. I
~ ,,
Things to Do
BARBOR CRUISES -Boat tours of Newport Har ..
bor'a historical si~s. famous houses, lslanda
and polnta of in~rest leave dally from the Fwa
Zoo. dock, between Palm and Main Sts., Bal-
boa, hourly 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tickets for 90-
minute cruise, adults, $2; children, S-12, fl.
youngster• under 5, tree. A 45-minute cruise
al.lo ii available. Phone 673--0MO.
CATAUNA TRIP -The Island Holiday boAt Ia
making dally trips to Catalina Island leavtna
from the Balboa Pavilion, 400 Main St., Balbot
at I a.m. and return.iJig at 7 p.m. ROUDdtrip
fare for adults '8.50; children, S-12, fU5 and
youngsters under 5 free. Reservations r~
quired, phone f13-6US.
Sports
DODGERS -Tbe Loi Angielea Dodge.rt VI the
Pbiladelpbla Phllllea Aug. t, 10 at 8 p.m., Aug.
11 at 1 p.m.; San Francilco Gianta Aug. 22, 2.\
24 at 8 p.m .. Aug. ~ at 1 p.m. in the Dodgers'
Stadium, 1750 Stadium Way, Loa Angeles.
Tickets available locally at W allicb1 Music City
ttor. and Mutual Ticket Agencies.
ANGELS BASEBALL -California Aneela VI the
New York Yankees Aug. 12, 13, 14 at I p.m.;
Wuhington Senatora Aug. 15, 1&, 17 at I p.m.,
Aug. 18 at 1 p.m. in the Anaheim Stadium, 2000
State College Blvd., Anaheim. Ticket. available
in Orange County at United Calif. Banka, Mutual
ticket agencl.el and WaWcbs Music City stores.
Phone 6.13-~.
BORSE RACING -Quarter Horse Racing even-
in&• at the Loa Alamitos Race Course, 496!
Katella, Loa Alamitos. First Post time 7:45 p.m.
Mon. through Sat. Phone 527 -2231.
BORSE RACING -Thoroughbred horse racing at
pe1 Mar Turf Club, Del Mar, Mon. through Sat.
Nine races claJly, first post time 2 p.m. Phone
(714-1) 755-1141 for further information.
COVER: Nancy '---·--·· our cover girl, IJ not a flower child really. She simply is extend-
ing an invitation to the public to attend the
''South Pacific" aqua ballet at Newport Harbor
High School on August 14, 15 or 16. See feature
on Page 5. Dale Samoker photos.
Gii.ide to Fu
Meet the People
Dlaeyland
Garden Note1
Beconla _Show
Aqua Show
Dealper's Notebook
Festival of Ana
Suclay at tltie Bowl
Upi.wa Roallda.p
Oat 'N' About
Entertainment
Movlet
ORANGE COAST
IDDIDllDll
Aqutt, 1Mt
Pace z
Pace I
Pace J
Pate 4
Pace'
Pace I
Pace•
Pace•
Pate 1
Pace 7
Pace• a.u
Pases a.11
Pafel IS.Ji
MAGAZINI .
.._ C... WHKUOla Mell.Diii II ....... ,,_. .. -
-.... OAll.Y ,Ul' tr tM ..... C... '111111 UC:...
........... "---l'9dl. c... ................ ..... ..... -........ YNty, ~ ~· ,.. ..... .. "" ....,,_. ---. c..rw ...
Lae1 Bell Ed!Mr
11 1
, .. ..
She Built New Life Filling Needs Of Others
Looking at 1' o ............ .: h ,;,)a'o, the very feminine owner of the Trim-
ming ShopJ)e in Costa Mesa, it is hard to believe that she was a tomboy
in her school days. Yet this Newport Beach resident has been in on the
action ever since she was very young.
The only girl in her class at Roosevelt high school in Port Angeles,
Washington who had a car, she was an active participant in the local dra&
racing club.
As .she grew older the excitement on the ground was not quite enough
for ~er and she decided to join the WASPS (Women's Air Force Service
Pilots). Before being accepted into the corp she had to learn to fly and to
grasp thoroughly airaraft mechanics. But just when she had completed her
preliminary training, the war ended and the corp was disbandecl.
Not one to give up a dream, Forrestine setUed for being a stewardess
on Western airlines. The job allowed her to live in Southern California,
which she loved, and visit her mother in Washington.
She ~arried a young engineer in 1951 and settled down to becoming
' Mllle&llll s.cti..--oAIL Y PILOT
..,..,., A..-1 t, ...
ON
STAGE
U.S. A.
Phyllis Diller, the "Twig-
gy of the Twilight Zone,"
will be entert1lnlng 1t
Dlsneyl1nd M o n d 1 y
through F rid1y, August
12-16. She will be joiMd
by tht Clinger Sisters ind
the Rundenko Brothers.
The four Clingers com-
bine voe1l 1nd Instrumen-
tal talents to create dis-
tinctive pop-rock sounds
while the Rudenkos do 1
f 1st plCed fuggllng 1 c t
with rapid fir• comedy.
The shows will be p,._
Hnted 1t 9:15 end 11 p.m.
on th• Tomorrowlend
stagt.
a housewife. Four yeara later completely happy in her role as mother e>f
a three year old son, she was looking fo rward to a new baby when her hus-
band died of a heart attack.
Rearranging her life Forrestine bought an old house with a rental
unit on the property to help pay the mortgage. Alone she repaired the
plumbing, even rebuilt walls and ceilings.
To support the boys and herself she worked as a part-time secretary.
Gradually things looked better and when the boys went to scboof she took
a job in the accounting department at Uni~ersal Studios.
One evening a little less th~ a year ago, Forrestine realized sbe was
tired of the heat and smog in the San Fernando Valley. For years ahe bad
been studying business procedures and thinking of opening a shop where
women who enjoyed sewmg could find all their trimming needs without
going from store to store. Her mlnd made up, she eave thirty days notice
at the studio and set out to find a place to live in tht Newport Harbor area.
AJ soon as she was settled she began to look for a good place to open her business.
''Everything broke right for me," she recalled, her dark eyes warm.
"The first building I visited had the perfect location for the shop, but I
kept looking for a month. Wholesalers were delighted with the idea and
extended me credit. Bea<is were in style when I was ready to place my
first order. Now braid has become popular trim for Nehru jackets, dresses
and slacks," she said.
In her shop at 433 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa, the Trimming Shoppe
carries sparkling multi-colored beads with which a person of little ability
can take an inexpensive sweater and make a ~ creation. Antique-like
earrings which sell in department stores for quite a high price can be made for as litpe as 47 cents.
She offers free designs and instructions for all the imaginative pro-
jects in her shop. Another of her services is custom made bridal caps. She
copies magazine pictures or sketches and makes the item at about half of
the usual cost.
"This creative, womanly part of my life i5 just as important to me
as the active role I played when I was younger," Forrestine commented.
In her spare time Mrs. Respo enjoys sitting and walking on the beach,
an enthusiasm she shares with her sons, Jay, 15 and Del, 9.
Forrestine Respo's full and round life has molded her into a warm
and understanding person who earns her living by offering a hard to find
se rvice to the Harbor Area com{Jlunity.
-Dorothy Pier
WE BUY LOCAL-
-WE SELL LOCAL
WE BWEYE THE BEST POLICY IS TO TRADE lOCAll Y-
We buy our c.orn from Or•nge CoHt College--
Our berries fre>m S.nta Ana-
Our mushrooms from Huntington BHch--
And many, many more of our produce items are picked 'Jt "our neighbors,"
that's why we're successful -•nd we sell the FIHlt eMI ~ ~ ..
Town! Com• SH fo r yourselfl
AND LOOK AT THESI LOW PIJCU
,,_ - - - - - - - -..... - - ---1 I • I Fancy-Ripe ,,..,. eras, I L.art•
Bananas I Cello Vine Ripe I I I Canota I Cantaloupe I
I sc Lb. I sc I , ...
Limit...... ... .,. ... I I With thll Cevpon 1 With tMt c..,,... I Wttt. tt.11 C...,...
______________ ...,
COUPONS IXPIU AU•UST 14
Theie restaurants also believe in tr•cfing locally with "their neighbors." We
congratulate them and hope you £;lionize theml TM Cnlt Coell•a TMO .....
COCllt S.,., Mc.tleti Ce..tle._ 1 W .............. 1'7 otltet ..
establlsltmelth. Congratulational For choo1in9 N•wP.ort Proclucel
"Wllefe ,-, II Tiie ~Of Tiie ..... " ------
PHONls
673-1715
NEWPORT
PRODUCE
• • • t •
261'
H~
IW. .. ... , ...... .
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GARDEN -NOTES
Facer Shrubs Important In Good Landscaping
Low growing shrubs in the foreground of planting beds are called
lacer shrubs. These usually grow no higher than 18 inches and fonn an
important part of the landscaping picture since they are the shrubs near·
est the observer.
Probably the fjrst facer shrubs that come to mind are the low grow-
ing junipers. The most popular is the tam juniper which grows about 18
inches high but there are some that hug the ground such as the shore
junjper. These are useful plants. They are easy to grow if not overwatered,
are slow growing and they do not flower.
Gold flower, Hypericum moserianum , is a good !acer plant or ground
cover for part shade. It can be kept under two feet in height and bears an
almost unending profusion of yellow flowers . An old faithful border plant
in the shade garden is saxifraga which bears clusters of pink flowers in the
~pring. It has fall en into di sfavor because it harbors snails. However, by
applying a lilUe snail bait, saxifraga can give one a colorful border in a
shady area where not much else will grow.
Star ja smine is a versatile shrub that can be grown variously as a
\ ine. a ground cover or a-facer shrub. Jt does well in part shade or full sun
in this area but does need good drainage. Its dark green foliage and frag-
rant flowers make it a very ornamental plant. To keep it in bounds as a
facer plant its long shoots should be trimmed back occasionally.
Bush bougainvillea is an extremely colorful low shrub. It has the same
fcli<lge and reddi sh-purple flowers as do its big climbing cousins but the
bush "bogey" never gets more than about 18 inches high wi th a spread of
three or four feet. It thrives in full sun.
For red berries instead of flowers there are low growing varieties of
f otoneaster and pyracantha Rock cotoneasler is a grey foliaged spreading
shrub that bears red berries in the fall. Jt spreads from four-to-six feet
which limits its use in a narrow area. It likes heat and will grow with a
minimum of water.
Pyracantha Santa Crnzh as has the same bright red berries and prick·
Jy branches as the regular pyracantha but only grows two feet hjgh. It is
an attractive ground cover and facer plant as weU as one that can protect
it sel f.
-Don Horton Tam Juniper Grows Low
'
ANNUAL BEGONIA SHOW OPENS
South Gate double pink fuch5i •
• OrMt• (OO I rt Wtttl~-
With hea ds up and best colors forward,
hundred of begonias, fuchsias, ferns, orchids,
bromeliads, cacti . bonsai, and other shade
plants will compete for awards and ribbons
this Saturday and Sund ay during the 15th
annual Begonia and Shade Plant Show. Ap-
proximately 400 entries were on display last
year for the show which is sponsored annual-
ly by the Orange County Branch of the
American Begonia Society. An even larger
turnout is hoped for this year.
The geueral public is invited to partici-
pate in this year's show. Gardeners interest-
ed in joining the competition may bring their
plants to the Newport Harbor YMCA, 2300
Uni versity Drive, Newport Beach tonight,
Friday, August 9. Entries will be accepted
until 10 p.m. Competition will be in fou r
classes for begonias; advanced amateur;
amateur: novice. and junior.
Jn additi on lo the hundreds of lovely
plants there will be booths with the latest
garden gadgetry, and professional men will
be there to help answer questions. A rnern-
bershjp booth also will be avaHable for those
who wish to join the society.
The show will be open August 10 from
noon to 10 p.m. and August JI from 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m. An admission charge of 75c for
adults wiJI help provide scholarship funds for
students of horticulture and related subjects.
Youngsters under 12 are admitted fre('.
T ·HIS WEEKEND
Tuberous begonia
Ma .. llM S•<tlt-DAIL T ,.lLOl
Fr1Cr(, A"f"I f, llU
AQUA SHOW AT
R 0 G.E R S.'H AMMER STEIN MUS IC
OF SOUTH f!ACIFIC FOR SHOW
The cast members of any production are bound to undergo that trad·
ilional sink or swim feeling before the lights dim opening night. But the
members from the syncronized swimming classes at Cotona del Mar and
Newport Harbor High School pools have been taking this feeling a bit more
literaUy than most. They"ve been practicing water ballet, Tahitian dancing,
clown and exhibition diving for seven weeks in preparation for their "Soutll
Pacific Aquatics Show," opening next week.
In addition to pool workouts they have designed and built their own
sets, carrying out a South Pacific theme and the water ballets have been
ctforeographed· to the music of Rodgers and Hammerstein's "South Pacl·
fic."
Ranging in age from seven through 16 and from beginning swirnmer
to five years of experience, the cast includes : Jennifer Chapin, Felicia
Calle. Lori Robinson , Kim Lynam, Tracy Lynam, Leslie Brown, Julie
Thomas, Anne Viergever, Cindy Hughes, Dodi Marose, Kim Alm, Nancy
Collier, Terri Gilcrest, Mary Grimshaw, Gail McClair and Nancy Newton.
Also included are Tita Lillegraven, Julie Bennet, Phyllis Bennet,
Michelle Howlette, Lisa Maglioni, Marie Gage, Lori Nichols, Nancy Nolan,
Stacy Cochran, "Lumpy" Durk.in, Brent Parker and Jeff Stevens.
Director of the show, Chris Godwin, is also assistant manager for the
swim sessions throughout the summer. She ts assisted by Betsy Barnett
am Cheryl Dami in coordinating the programs at.both pools, and Christy
Peterson in char~e of set designing. Jay R~binson will direct the lighting.
The "South Pacific Aquatics Showu is sponsored by the Newport
Parks, Beaches and Recreation Department. It will be performed in the
Newport Harbor High School, Newport Beach, August 14 through 16 begin-
ning at 8 p.m. Admission is 50c for children, 75c for adults. Tahitian punch
and refreshments will be served after the performances.
-Kristin Goff
Abov•, Mary Grimshaw, Jullt a.net, Phyllis Benntt, Llu1 Me9llont,
Ttrrl Gllcrtst and Mlchtllt Howlttt, cloclcwlst from top ltft, art rthHn·
Ing for ont of tht numbtrt to bt ustd In tht txtravaganu.
In a salute to tht proc:luctlon s;,:r. Cochran encl Gell McClalr, top, left to
right, incl Nancy Newton and I Merosl rthH rat ont of their numbtra
for tht aqua show with a "South Pacific" themt to bt 1t1ged on August
14-16 In tht pool et Newport Harbor High School.
r OIV A •"'' • •• fU
NHHS WEEK
Practicint for the big water event to bt staged next Wffk art clockwise
from bottom left, Terri Gilcrest, Nancy Collier, Jiii Corsint and Tita l
Llllevraven. ~
f
DESIGNER'S
NOTEBOOK
Decorating Costs
BY J. RUSSELL TU MELSON, ORANGE COUNTY DESIGNER-DECO RA TOR
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Comparative shopping for furniture and
household decorating items will reveal in
most instances that furniture in department
stores and decorating shops compare favor-
ably. Variation in furniture often is the rea-
son for apparent price dHf erences. A chair
found in several locations may be priced dif-
ferently because of the grade of upholstery
or a table because of extra leaves or a dif-
• ference in fini shes. Most furniture and labor
costs are standardized and the additional
costs are related to specials and extras.
A well trained decorator is capable of
working to any budget limitation, often with
startling effects. Good taste and the expen-
sive look can be achieved by educating and
attracting a buyer to the well planned use of
furnishings. "
The decorator's job is to correlate the.
wishes of the buyer ·and his budget in dec-
orating a room or home. All final decisions,
of course, are subject to the client's approval.
It is Important to remember several
points in figuring decorating costs: The labor
cost to make draperies or to upholster in an
inexpensive fabric is the same as that when
a long wearing and more costly material is
used ; upholstery prices· are dependent upon
costs of fabric, size and construction of the
furniture; Carpeting is available in all price
ranges and one gets exactly what is paid for.
A cheaper carpeting cannot be expected to
wear as well as a more expensive; Furniture
prices also will vary somewhat, according to
the manufacturer, the distance in shipping,
fini shes, features and styling.
Your own preference of style and color
in addition to your budget should be the gov-
erning factors when deciding upon your in-
dividual decorating costs.
NEXT WEEK
ARCHITECT OR DESIGNER FIRST?
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Please address inquiries end questions by letter to: Designers Notebook,
Weekender Magazine, Post Office Box 1875, Newport Beach, California. ,.
·1
f!ESTIVAL EXHIBITORS
James Clutter,· impressionist painter, studied at Olis Art Institute,
Chouinard Art Institute and City College in Los Angeles and at the Uni·
versity of Mexico. Noted for bis vibrant colors and bold designs (painting
above), he exbibi'ls in nine major cities in the Pacific southwest and cur-
rently is exhibiting in Newport Beach as well as at the Festival of Arts .
Georgia Ball, below, a first year exhibitor at the Festival, attended
Chicago Academy of Fine Arts and expresses her talents in three-dimen-
sional applique on fabric. Her animals are shown at work and play and
are a delight to every child. Georgia keeps busy in her booth during the
run of the festival.
""'"9111141 Stel!M-OAIL Y PILOT
l'.W.y, AllSVst f, I'll
~------------------------~~
undays Are -f j.r.n= · At ···The · -Bowl
It' 1 a family affair every Sunday after·
oon in the Hollywood Bowl. Los Anaeles,
· g at 2 p.m. Billed as "Sunday at th•
wl," the aftemoona art flllecl with tun for
from an art· flltival. With more than 100
bitors, to a juggling clown who enter-
ins the little ones.
All sorts of material• are available, pro-
ided free of charge, from which viliton
ay fashion ouUandisb sun bats. The world'•
xhlblton, more than
atrong, will dlspley
pelntlnt• and scul~
each WMk. S. fer
artist contf....,t of
eya at tht Bowl"
IMen v•ry tNppy
the number of Mitt
hevt made. In h Mcklrouncl of thla
• portion .. the
If Ballet'' may be
• ft f 1 one of the
y f r • • entertain-
ts provided tfurlnt
•moon.
8 o m b y , th• JUff llnt
C I o w n ent•rtalns the
children on Sunday after-
noona at the Bowl where
there Is something for
every member of the
family to enloy, clHr
through the s u m m e r.
"Sundays at the Bowl"
wlll continue through 5•
temlMr 2' with mtlvltles
betinnlng at 1 p.m.
Jonaett taputry, now 21 feet tong woven by
Bowl fan.a, can be added to by anyone who
feell ht would like to contribute a few
ltttchet.
The free entertainment in the afternoon
includes a "'llnfqll Ballet" which ta enjoyed
by all In the eventnc at 8:30 in the amphi-
theatre there ts a concert of some special
program for which there ii a $1 charge.
'lbere la no cbaree for any of the afternoon
activiUes.
I UPTOWN ROUNDUP I
lncloon end out of doors, and all around tbt
town, theaters in Loa Angeles and area u.
bu.sy offering conerta, plays and a liberal diet
of musicals for leisurt DOW'S in August.
At the Music Center in Los Angeles, the
Civic Light Opera is in full swing with two
productions continuing on the boards. An~ela
Lansbury stars in the hilarious "Mame' at
the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion while next
door in the Ahmanson Theater, Signe Hasso,
Leo Fuchs and Melissa Hart star in the
Broadway musical hit, "Cabaret".
In the M.rk Taper Forum of the Music
Center, a different type of production, Te~
nessee Williams' "Camino Real" is on stage
through September 22. Described as a sort of
jazz symphony, "Camino Real" follows the
ponderingi; and fears which plague a man at
the midpoint of hla life.
"Your Own Thing," a muaical claiming to
be based loosely on Shakespeare's 11Twelfth
Night" commands the Huntington Hartford
stage. Performed by the original New York
cast, th1a production makes use of such
techniques as multi-media cinema effects,
resounding sound sy1tem1 and projected
photos of Humphrey Bogart .. John Wayne,
Shirley Temple, Queen Elizaoeth I, and the
Bard himself. The musical continues through
September 1 ...
Another Musical, "On a Clear Day You Can
See Forever" is on stage at the Greek
Theater in Griffith Park through Augmt 11.
Starring Tammy Grimea and John Cullum,
110n a Clear Day" takes a little extra-sensory
perception, adda a blt of romance and ont
spectacular reincarnation to come up with a
delightfully zany love story.
The Hollywood lowl'a 47th season under
the atara continues with an array of Loi
Angeles Symphony concert.I on Tuesdays and
Thundays aDd pop concerts each Saturday
night. Percy Faitll conducts the Hollywood
Bowl Pops Orchestra, August 10; Lawrence
Foster directs the L.A. Symphony August 11
and 15; Henry Mancini mount.I the podium
August 17, conducting a Popa program which
includes many of hiS own composltlons; the
L.A. Symphony'• All American concert
directed by Andre Kostelanetz, 1a August 20;
a Tchaikovsky concert August 22 · a pops
concert, "International Promen;de," with
_ Kostelanetz August 24; symphony concerts
August 27 and 29, and Roger Wagner with the
Wagner Chorale presenting a program of
Lerner and Loewe on August 31.
Scheduled for Friday, August 16 at the
hwy Bowl, are the Young Rascals, with
special gue9t:I Tommy James and the Shon·
dells plua Eric Burdon and the Animals. Fol·
lowing on It.age August 23, Simon and Gar·
funkel offer their special brand of folk-rock
music.
Alao at th• Hollywood Bowl is a program
"Sundays at tbe Bowl," co-sponsored by the
Los Angeles Department of Parks and
Recreation and the Southern California
Symphony-Hollywood B o w 1 A11ociation.
Under tbia program, art exhibits art offered
in the part at 2 p.m. concerti are presented
in the amphitheater Sunday evenings at 6:30.
The Mexican Players at the Padua HillJ
Theater in Claremont perform a light
musical drama, "Tropical Veracruz" wlth
authentic costumes and muaic from the hear-
ly carnival held tn VerfcruzJ. Mexico. After
the state production, tbe aumence 11 Invited to partldpate tn an outdoor festival with
mualot ~Ing, 1amea and typical Mexican refreanmentl.
•
-Kristin Geff
or..c ... 1
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Versailles Versatlles
The Marshall Otwell Trio, currently pro-
viding listening-dancing music at Versailles
Restaurant, Newport Beach, not only is a
••see and hear now" aggregation, but one that
promises even more enjoyment for the
future.
A comparatively new and untried group,
Otwell and his sidemen, even now, are a
mo~t versatile three~ome.
Give a listen . . . and also give a try to
the new menu items being offered by Robert
.. Brownie" Brown ... latest manager at this
Vinnie Hutchinson-owned smart and spacious.
The Otwell outfit is on the scene at Ver-
•ailles Restaurant Monday through Saturday.
ADDITIONAL ACTS
While on the subject of entertainment,
Jet's check a few more of the local niteries.
At Bob Burns Restaurant, Fashion
J!land, Newport Beach, you'll bump into the
Dick Powell Trio, Wednesday through Sun-
day evenings. Filling in on Monday and
Tuesday, the Carroll Coates Duo.
Haven 't heard the Coates clan, but can
Presents
DISCOTHQUE
RED VELVET
DANCING. DANCING HARD-ROCK-son
UNl9UE LIGHTING EFfECTS
THE DOR1AN MODE TRIO
IN OUR COCKTAIL LOUNGE
Sun., Tues., Wed., Thun.
9 P .M. NIGHTLY
CLOSED MONDAY
No Cover-No Minimum
You Must Be 21 • • DINNER SPECIALS NIGHTLY
• DAILY BUFFET LUNCHEON
• BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILA8L!
~ifua"'
"At The Entrance To Balboa l1l1nd"
1045 BAYSIDE DRIVE
NEWPORT BEACH 675-0200
No-one can figure out why Vil-
lage Inn is 1uch 1 'swing ing" )JIMW!jM( spot! Drop on in-maybe you
can come up with the t nswer!
VILLAGE INN
129 Marine 673-4530 Balboa I.
-- --~ . ---
.OUI 'N' ABOUT: Or111
/
most heartily recommend the Powell pack
as being most outstanding.
Practically permanent fixtures with the
Reuben's chain (Tustin, Newport Beach and
the Reuben E. Lee) over the past few years.
Powell and Company provide aome of the
best listening to be found hereabouts.
Their style is strictly progressive . . .
but not overbearingly so. And • · . . as a tri·
bute to the abilities ot their leader . . . Dick
Powell will be "doubling" as an inttiuctor of
music at a local college durin1 the-fast-ap--
proaching Fall semester.
An added at BBR . . . on weekdays only
• • • and for eyeing only • • , • moet inter-
esting twist (you'll pardon tha tzprtsaion) to
67~-~~
NOW
APPEARING
HERB & JOE TRIO
D•Kl11t-Lhtelll .. ,..._ 1:41 NltMfy llapt s..-,
e COCKTAILS e DINNER e DANCING
FOR RESERVATIONS: 536-1421
21112 OcNn Avenue Huntlntfon Beech, Calif.
Bill Martini Prnents
"THE COOK BOOK"
DANCIN6 NIGHTLY
••• -'"' lhtettl .. ,.....,. ... 1
MA~PY 9HOUR
In town!
• .... , ••• •Uy
1111~ .... Le~lts Weko•
BILL MARTINI
COCKTAIL LOUNGE
UI L 17tll COSTA MISA 646-1111
the bar-boy aide ot the service picture.
A bar-GiRL ••• wbo rinaea those glus--
es, drops C;herriu, olives aod lemon peeJ Into
"1• drinks and • . • take it from us • . •
displays beautiful form in the doing!
/
Alphaheticals Amazing
Up Orana~ w~y •.. at Queen'• Inn,
Town .and Country . . . the amuin1 Alpha-
betical•, led by top ahowman JGhnn' Smith,
· 9'till packing thetn · in for bossmen George
Olsen and John Ryder.
An extremely enjoyable quintet, the Al-
phabeticalJ provide dance mUJic ntahtly,
Monday through Saturday, and alto ltage
three or four 1how1 during the courie of each
tvenina'• festivities.
Old. pros, these . . : and their NDditiona
ef former Ink Spots hlta will briq back a lot
DON'T MISS THI
"NEW LOOK"
AT
JOSEF'S
ONLY SEEING IS BELIEVING!
e DANCING NIGHTLY e
LUNCHEON e DINNER e LA TE SUPP!R
2121 I . COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR 67l-1180
FOR ADVERTISING
IN THE
WEEKENDER MAGAZINE
Phone 642--4321
.. REAKFAST SERVED 24 HRS. A DAYlli=============
WITH HOMl·MADI 11scum AND HONEY
NEW REFRIGERATED _
AIR ·CONDITIONING
Y·BONE ONLY
s17s
Dick Powell Trio ·
Wednesday thru Sund1y
Carroll Coates Duo
Monday and Tuesday
Me,.llllt s.4.... DAILY "LO'
ptMfY, A .... I t, IH
Or1111 County's lest.rant IM lntert1lnment Scene
IS·
1:1to
llD,
~a
. th,
~1•
>DI lot
R
!AIL Y l'llOl
'""'' ,, ".
ef memories to many.
It you're old enough, that iy
But then .•.. who is,,t? . .
Shona Bishop, pianiat .. vocalist e~traord·
lnaire, stW beautifying the premiset at
Queen's Inn during cocktail hours.
Daniel's Dllo
~. to heat about the forthcomin1
breakup of "Los Dos," excellent duo bead·
lined twice .in recent months at 'Daniel's,
Costa Mesa.
Los Pos (Tony and Brad) have provided
a lot of enjoyment for local out·n·abouter1
during th01e two stands and at other O.C.
•pots.
Brad, bonJ~ biggie, will' join thrH other piuJJ.ctan-voc t1 . when ti.le 1plit ·occur1.
Tony, iuttar-vocal.tlt tremender,. atready a
.
IMJOY DININ6 AT
SCHROEDER'S
STIAK HOUSE
(formerly Cho{'1° Inn )
f .. turin9
lttak, CMck•, Lobster, •9'd Ribs
Houst Specialitt1 • • •
15 ·oz. T • BONE STEAK
NOW PLAYIN6
MA1RK DAVIDSON TRIO
WIDNISDAY THRU SUNDAY
Open Dally IJla,t Tu.lay-1111-!ft-SuJ'•r 4 .. ~ \
1201 IAST COAST HIGHWAY-CORONA DlL MAR
Por ReservatloM TeleplNMle 671-0470
IP£CIAL SINQIN8 STAR, rrt: l Sat, Aff.·I· &'11 .
BRANDI PiiilY
Httr htr own atory of the Viet Conti tm·
buah whtr• the n1rrowfy 11111*.f ••th
whll• 1nt1rt1f nln1 th• troope, lht was
woundtcl twice and eMlpH tx .. utlon
lty pl1yln1 dticl. · · ·
DANCING .. DINNR Ul.t 114/IM-4090 m rm llTIOl llGBT CLUi
tti ldltl ... If~ ...... ....n
Ma,.Jlllo lodM-DArL Y l'ILOl
rr141ey. Autwsl t. ""
"booked-in 1000" at Pete Siracusa'• Ancient
Mariner, Newport Beach.
It should all take place a couple of weekl
hence.
Hurdy Gordy ·Girlie.
Headlined at. the Fire Station Nightclub
and Restaurant,. Garden Grove, oil Friday
and Saturday nights . . . Barbara Kelly ..• rurt, loverly featured aongstress on t-v'•
'Hurdy Gurdy" proJJrµm .
.,~ '
. The Fire Station Band (a show in them-
1elv11) backs-La Kelly; and the FS dancinl
girls are also on hand to entertain with their
i'enditions of the Watusi, Black Bottom and
Chrleston. ·
RESTAURANT FRANCAIS
Frencll Specialty
(.hef Rene'
!formerly with ltom1noff'1I
3012 Newport llvd. Newrrt Beach
OPEN DAILY 5:30 P.M. Tl 10:30 P.M.
Closed Mond1y 673-7183
ge~~!cl
RESTAURANT
Tw• &..c.tt... , • •
COSTA MESA
Cener •f lat14olp• l lrftffl
540. 3641
o,_. I P.M.·10 P.M.
Ott.er L.c""911 -........ tHc•
CLOSID MONDAY
'NA< " ..
DON JOSE -
presents
Th• Fabulotn
RecordffMJ Artist
MARIO SAID
TR 10
Q .••
INCHILADA & TACO ........ Sl.JO
CHIU RELLINO-ENCHILADA .. 11 .45
.e COCKTAILS e
9093 I. Ad1ms (1t M19noll•) Hunt. 8e1eh 962-7911
c
From the Mailbag
Remember Walter Gollahon, longtimt
manager at Balboa Pavilion, Balboa? Well
1 : • recenUy· ~eived , .. an epistle from
Mr. G. wbicb ttates, in part:
"I left the Balboa Pavilion about 1ix
months ago, and since then, have taken a
long overdue rest, but am now ready and
anxious to get back into the food and bever·
age business. · .......
The tremendous growth of ~ew, delux•
type eating establishments now cemb\g into
our local area makes old-timers Ute l!1yseJ1
very proud of what is going on."
HELLO FROM HONIV.111
Nice to receive a note from two of the
nicest entertainers hereabout.· . . • or any ..
where, for that matter . . • just have to be
'lbe•Honeybees {Helen and Bus) now tnatru-
mentallzing and doing the vocal bit on week-
ends at Sea Shanty, Newport Beach. ~
It is always pleasant when entertainer1
and restaurateurs drop Out 'N' About a llnt
~or two to keep us posted on their latest newt
and triumphs.
Continued On' ..... 10
•
f
\
. _,.
l
ff) ~ jj .. l~f~··
Bill ' Art Paul
McCLURE BARDUN MANNERS DUO TRIO
~ ~ '-v--1
SUNDAY MONDAY SUNDAYS THRU THRU FRIDAY SATURDAY ..
Jpm 8:30 pm 8:30 pm ti II ti 11 ti II
lOpm 1:45 om 1145 om
1107 JAMBOREI ROAD • NEWPORT BEACH • phone 841700
• t
i
'
IXTllMO.Y I.Mii l1'Cll •l ........ It PIDINo 91Nt•Nt"I
PICKWICK ff . ro ~~.!!'!'.! a ram~ .,., .... ,,..... .....
11e11ywec1 12111 llO MUI
N..,_..._.
67wtH
"'Ulla nova
.newporl
1111 COAST tUM4WAY
NIWPOIT llACH
~ ....... .,. ,, ......
'ltESERVATIONS SU<ftE5TED
642-7110 •
1:00 P.M.,. Z:OO A.M. Delly
NOTES OF A NOMAD
Continued from Page t
AP.parently Hank and Gertrude Pab~~t
Hank s Fish and Chips, Newport Beach, ww
1tay in the immediate area when their pres·
ent lease runs out at the end of summer.
Rumor has it that they will move up the
street (only a block away) to continue dish·
ing out those fanfiaitic finny favorites with
their accompanying garden gr eats.
* Allan Dale, Villa Nova Newport, Newport
Beach, now talking about adding a slzeable
watercraft to his over!lll operation.
Not a aea-going aame, but one to be tied ..
up at the VNN dock for 10D1ething new iD
cocktail·hour facilities.
With the crowds on hand that jam Dale's
Delight constantly, the added apace ..• no
matter in what form ••• makes a lot of
sense.
*
Th' Dorymenu Fish 'N Chips Hu Just Developed
''TH' DORYMEN''
A Totel lxperience In Hting •.• unequelltd
quellty ••• Mrvice • • . atmosphere.
O Nowt ''JH' DORYBURGER"
••• our trt•t MW hamburger by-th.-... For non
fish eaters. (With melted chMH) ............ .
O Terrific NEW ENGLAND STYLE
CLAM CHOWDER i.~~:0:rvln9 .....
O Frtth "GALLEY GREEN" Sal.d.
(Comes with fish or 1hrimp). No extra chartt·
-.... 0 Ntwl ''JH' SEA DOG' I
••. Grllltd to perfection for
''Th' Little Mateyt" ...........•••.•••.•.••••
Nothing but tuc!os for the food at J~
Overland and Rick Lawrence'• Alley West,
Newport Beach. A limited menu here, but,
from all reports, a mighty good one.
This sip-sup salon open -seven nights a
week . . and, at this writing . '. . alJO set to
•wing back those doors daytimes, as welt
From midday on. .
Speaking of nice people • • . top this.
Along with three companions, this out-n·
abouter recently played the Newporter Inn
par 3 golf co\lrse on a Sunday morning.
Prior to that momentous event, said four-
some stopped for eye-openers at the bar in
Lido Lounge.
After the round (golf-type) our hearty
backers were greeted, upon returning to Lido
Lounge, by a like order ... poured and
waiting.
And . . . food manager -greeter R o y
Guerra apologized for missing u1 on the 9th
bole . • • where he had originally planned to
surpriae us with the wet and wonderfuls.
* Amigos Restaurant, Costa Mesa, now of·
fering a "pronto luncb0 at 95-cents. A choice
Continu9d on Page 11
NOW APPEARING NITEL Y
IN THE
• HOT APPLE TARTS ............... .
VEBSADJ,ES LOUNGE
PLU)--TH' DORYMEH STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE
RSH 'N CHIPS ............... : .............. $1.00
SHRIMP 'N CHIPS ........................ $1 .SO
2100 WEST Call In Ordertt
OCEAN FRONT 673·2200
NEWPORT BEACH Open: 11 A.M. .11 P.M.
\ "Across from Newport Beach Piel'''
THI EXCITIN• NIW SOUND Of THI
MARSHALL OTWELL TRIO
FEATURING THE VOCALS OP
KATHRYN HOWARD
l'ridey and Saturday
FOR DINN ER RESERVATIONS
DIAL 642 -4840
LUNCHEON DAILY 11 A.M •• J P.M. OFFERINe
A IUSINUS MANS IPICIAL
L•rt•. Cholc• H•mb11r9or With .. con Sfl'lpi l M•lt.d
CMo .. , mr11• Prl ... S•l1tl1 Chol•• ef Dr.11111" k vtrtt•·
~ ._.... DAILY PI LOT .......,, ...... ,,,, ..
NOTES OF A NOMAD
Continued from Page 10
of beef taco, beef burrito, chile relleno or
cheese enchilada with Monterey rice, refried
beans and one of three accompanying
beverages.
* Pianist John GetUe now entertaining
nightly at Betty Caldwell-managed Jolly
Roger in Costa Mesa.
Another ste~up at JR, too, for Bill Wri~bt,
area plankmaster who bas now gone mto
management training entirely, at Jolly
Roger.
Rumor has it that Wright will be banded
the mangerial reins at Jolly Roger, Honolulu,
when that store opens sometime duriJia th ..
next year.
Rul
C1ntonese Food
Mt here or
t1ke home.
STAG
CHEE WINO
. . . . \ (~ <·)' \'' \•1
Frankie Savage ts a WI,-blond, Nonli4> 1=========~.-::::~~~.......,---type wbo does the bostt11 ·routine at Alle1
West, Newport Beach.
Seemingly a cool and aloof 1a1, La Savage
is described as having "a heart as warm as
an oven" by her bossman, Jerry Overland.
''But ••. like the oven ... only wben tu med
on," says tall, blond and Nordic-type.
* This is the final column by this out-'n'
abouter for the Weekender Magazine and we ·
take with us a merry·g~round montage of
marvelous memories. Thanks to all our read-
ers who have expressed their appreciation for
our efforts and opinions . . . and also to
those in the restaurant and night club busi-
ness who have provided the column contents
over the past 20 months.
And ... REALLY, this time ... tha's all
Note
Restaurant and entertainment patrons
and restaurateurs are invited to send in their
observations, opinions and news to Out 'N'
About. They must be signed and have an ad-
dress and phone number where the writer
can be reached. Simply add.ress letters or
cards to: OUT 'N' ABOUT, Weekender Maga-
zine, Post Office Box 1875, Newport Beach,
Calif. 92663.
IUVIERA-
. ftE&TAUMNT
Contln1nt1I Cuisine
Cocktails
Serving
Luncheon and Dinner
Monday tllrough Sattl.rday.
Closed Sundaus
Open for
Privau Parties Only
We ue located on the
Bristol Street side be-
tween Mullen and Bluett
and the May Co.
nu s. Mnt c.... ..... 140-3t40
llunchton
Wttkd~I
l];nner
1med ln the
Grand Manner
•
$71 S. MAIN, ORANGB
Jtaervatlom: S4Z..3S9S
(C~Sund&y)
-Editor
From the beautiful new :iky Noom ut
· the Grand Hotel, oJVerlooklng Dlaneyland.
firework• bu1n •t 9:00 ~•~h nlclit during lhe 11umrner.
Entertainment
nl1thlly by J)~,L NADEAU: opfn trom 4:00 p.m.
''Whtt'• l!Jdtl11<1
Tllhtes ere
HI-Ille''
--------------
YOUU ENJOY OUR
SUNDAY
BRUNCH
11 A.M. TO 3 P.M.
mm~
fin'-Dlnfna Since l965
3801 EAST <:oAst' HIOHWA't'
ColtONA l>P.L MAa. CAUFOlNIA
PHONt!: (71-4) 675-1374
mw~~~rtttm11 •
TOP SIRLOIN
STUK ••••••.•••
NIW YOH
CUT STlAK ••••••
1/1 lit. &IOlhiD
lOUND STIAI ••
ALL ABOVE INCLUDE BAKED POTATO OR FRENCH FRIES,
AOl.L &. BUTTER.
DILICIOUS mu
SANDWICH
TRY
SIZZLER
FeMlly Steell H.-• • •
They Woul4 Not 0 11ly
BE
SMARTER
Ii.It letter F..t -4
Richer, Aa Woll!"
HAMIUl&H • • • • 49c
CHEESI .......... 54c
DRESS 'EM UP
AT FREE GOODY BAA i
DELICIOUS 1 19 •UIJI SHllMP • • • • •
WITH FRENCH FRIES
O• S..• lell °"C COFf.U 1 Oc FffKll Pfles 0 7 IA.II Y" c-*llll)
ALL STEAKS SERVED ON SIZZLIN' PLATTERS!
MIIH fkMw Sol•• 24« Choice of Ore11in9 .••.....••
~:~: ........... 79c
e DAILY LuNCHION SPECIALS e
MONDAY FAMILY Nl&HT 2:00 • t :OO P.M. $1 09 R~•· 11.» TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
C.~;LD'S POITION 1/J PllCI e
FAMILY STEAK HOUSES
HUNTINGTON IEACH I' COSTA MBA HILLGREN SQUAAI TOWN & COUNTRY HHINO Tl!XACO STATION
11512 1eec1t IW. .;,.l-ltU I. 17tll I s-tw AM 642·74'1 e FOOD TO GO e .
a-
11
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------~·-~~-~-....___-.. -- --
0 ·f Th e Ac t i o n . .. ,
Happening
The fighting man's best
friend, 8ob Hope, Is stag-
ing a big super-star show
at Anaheim Stadium to-
morrow night, August 10,
at 8: 15 p.m. It Is a tMn ...
fit for the USO and he has
done his part to llne up a
fine cast of people to en-
tertain the audience. It ls
a cause worthy of support
from th• public. Among
slated for the show are
Jimmy Durante, right,
Sebastian Cabot, Ed
Begley, Ann B. Davis,
Danny Thomas, A n n •
Margret, Fe11 Parker,
Glenn Ford, Sergio Men-
dez and his Brasil '66,
and as always on Hope's
USO shows, Les Brown
and his band of reknown.
S.. Gulde to Fun, Page
2, for ticket deta!lt.
This happy group is the
Dick Powell Trio which is
currently entert1ining 1t
Bob Burns Restaur•nt In
Fuhion Squire, Newport
Beuh. From left they ire
Bob Messenger, who plays
bus and flute; Dick Pow-
ell, pianist-leader of the
trio ind Gery Howl1nd
who is on drums. They
m1y be heerd Wedne1d1ys
through Sund1ys from 8
p.m. An 1dded 1ttr1dion
on Sund1y evening is the
addition of vocalist Dewey
Ernie,
Jose Casi1111, new rmltre
d' in the dining room of
the Grand Hotel in An•·
heim, is st1nding beside
one of the many fine
s,,.nish p1lntlngs that
adorn the wells. The room
h11 u n d • r g o n • many
ch1nges ind 111 of them
add up to 1 very plHunt
dining experience. The
menu, which hH been r•·
v1mped recently, offers
choices extensive enough
to please most 1nyon1 •
In Orange
-
County
MtlattM SICllM-OAIL Y .. ILOT
Fn •1y, A•Ji11~1 f, 1(1'
r -
'****************** THE BIG
s
ANN·
MARGRET
'•.
STARRING
BOB HOPE
AND HIS GUESTS
. ; •, . . ·)./· •y .
JIMMY
DURANTE
-~'· . ~ DANNY THOMAS ·-ii.
FRANKIE AVALON· ROSEMARY CLOONEY
JOHNNY GRANT· HONEY GIRLS, LTD.
BRIAN SULUYAN nl LES BROWN~~~~~~~
PLUS A HOIT Of OTMER GREAT STARS.
Tickets: $2.50, $3.50, $5.00, $7.50, $10.00. On sale by mail, at
boxoffice, So. Calif. Music Co., 637 S. Hill St., LA., all Mutual
Agencies, U.C.8. in Orange County and Long Beach. For Inf or·
matlon phone 714-633-2000 or 213-625·1123.
T h11 ad dona led by • 11i.114 ol 111• USO,
"'• .. llM 1«1'--0Alt.. Y P'llOT
",...,, ·-· '· It ..
-CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 2 P.M.
FOR
Advertising
in the
Weekender
Phone
642·4321
Maria's Artistry In Oils
Visit Orange County's Most
Elegant Art Gallery
MEDITERRANEAN ART SUPPLIES
TRADITIONAL
OIL PAINTINGS & INSTRUCTION
frolMt Priced W~fetcM te hMi.
Opn 7 Days a WHk
llOOIHUIST & ADAMS, H. I. t61·2040
~
•ti In·--~::--,:~••
WllrRE THE BRIGHTEST STARS Sii/Ne
MERV GRIFFIN
Through August 26
Coming August 27
CAROL CHANNING
-~·•llll, .. -.
FOR HOTEL RESERVATIONS PHONE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT
The Luxuriou s New
Vnltefll A rtl1t1
15'5 w. 17tlt. s-t. AH
Ho11« rt-54J.f217
BOX OFFICE OPENS
51111.·Frf. 12 Noo11 Sat. 11 :45 •M
-DAILY -
12:l0-2:l0-4:l0·6:JO·l :J0· 1 O:JO
'"' Speclol Ml4tll9ht Sll.w
Scmir4ay 011ly
12·2-4·6·1-10-12 PM
ACADEMY AWARD
WINNER
8HT DtlleCTOR-MIK! NICHOLS
~
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II AMERICA HURRAH"
Surrender
to the
Great English
Fish&Chips
lnva&ion!
IHOW THE WHIT! flAQ
The terms of 1urrender AM
delicioua. Simply give yoW'-
aell in to the H. Salt, Esq. Authentic Engliah Fish and
Chipe Shoppe nearest YoU. Throw up your hands and
uy, "Hey mate, 'ewt about
a wrap_per uv fish and
cbipa." One tute1andyou11
d.iaooYer why thia nourilh-
ing and utterly deliihtful
treat bu been Gre11t Brit-
ain'• rreat natio.nal dJ1h
1ince 1866. H. Salt. EsQ.'1
1uccalent eecret i1 the
batter, orifinated 1ener-
ationa ago in England,
and zealou1Jy ruarded
by Haddon Salt himself.
Pop in and take out an
order o{ authentic fish and
cbipe. It'• deliciously un·
like anythin( you have
ever taated. British and
American currency cheer·
fully accepted.
H. SALT, esq.
AUYMl•TIC 1•elllM
<fl.sfi &
Cfi!ps
SHOPPE
COLLIGI CENTIR
M.AallOa A"D ADAMS
TEL: nw,.I ..
SOUTH SW
TROPKAL FISH
Largest Selection of
Tropical F i a h &
Supplies ln the area.
New 2 LecatleM
llt W. Wll.tDM, COSTA MlllA
l71.0, ..,,.,.... Dr__..._. ......
OlllllMI ........ Offtcel ...... ,.., ~•ln'lew •411.1 ... ,,.1
....... ... . '
BROADWAY
.... ......, ... ...,141 ... m
Twe .... DilNY o ...... .
"JUN•U IOOK" e C.I•
0.H .ffMI e COLOll
.. ILAClllARD'S GHOST'
( I ..... f ., --·~ ')~
PAULO . .,..
I .__ ......... ·::Itel ,., A4111thl
Wall~r Mall: &U • COLO•
"THE ucr.n LIFE OF
AN AME.RICAN WIFE"
S111:nn1 Leigll e COLOll
"THE LOST CONTINENT"
I .• lllY Enltr1•1rlmntl
Wl!I DiSMY'I
"NEVEi A DUU MOMENT"
With Didi V•11 Dylte e COLOa ,,.... MacM11rny
''SHAS.GY DOG"
-·=~:4
I "·~:!~v!, .. ._ , ...
lwt 1-Masltf' e SIMllY Wi""' "rHI SCALtHUNTEIS" e ColOI'
CllllrlM Htsltft • COLOlt
"WILL PENNY"
1311:::..~~
I ll•"·nimenclM lw ACIUllSI
Mii l'trl'9W e JllUI CHUWNI
"ROSEMARY'S IAIY"
Sll)Wfl If I . IS •ftd lt:U
-~t
ltKOmmtnell4 I~ Altultsl
A-t.ancrttl e COLOlt
'"THE GRADUATE"
Sllew11 11 l:U •nt lt:IS
For Adverfoing in
The Weekender
Phone 642 -4321
cu•••NT
A•T
IXHIBITI
LB FESTIVAL OF ARTS...-TM 33rd annual Fe•
tlval of U'U display 1a at the Festival Gro.uiadl,
650 Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna ~
through August 2:5. AdmiJaion to tbt ll'O\IDdl
where all types of art wort are dispi.,.cl ucl
sold ii 50c .tor adulta; lOc for children. Ho11r11
noon to mldnlght dally. Phone 4M-1HS for fur·
tber information.
ALL CALIFORNIA SHOW -Laiuna Beach Art M-
aociation Gallery, :rn Cliff Drive, Lacuna
Beach. An invitational art exhiblt of apprubii.
ately 1000 entries by California artisu w1ll be
on diJplay noon to 10 p.m. dally, tbroup
August ~-The exhibit ls part of tM Feltival
of Arts and may be reached from festival
grounds by a tram service. General admlslion
25c, Art Association members and ont guest,
free. Phone t!K-6531.
SAWDUST FE&TIV AL -93S Laguna Canyon Road.
Laguna Beach. The Artist. and Gallery Ono
ers Association is displaying art in vartoUJ
media through August 25. Part of tbt-pro-
ceeds from the aale of art will go to the South
Cout CommWlity H~pital fund.
SPLINTER FESTIVAL. -346 N. Coast Highway,
Laguna Beach. Exhibits of approximately 100
artists in various media will be on display
through August 31. Hours: noon 1to midnight
daily. There is no admission charge.
CHALLIS GAu.ERY -1390 S. Coast Highway,
Laguna Beach. On exhibit daily 11 a.m. to 5
p.m. a one-man show of paintings of Mark
Coomer and sea scapes of Bennett Bradbury.
COFFEE GARDEN GALLERY -2625 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar. On exhibit Mon.
through Sat., 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., watercolors and
etchings of Arthur Miller sponsored by the New-
port Harbor Service League.
NEWPORT BEACH CITY HALL -3300 Newport
Blvd., Newport Beach. On exhibit during regu-
lar business hours, a one-man show, James
Clutter's "Rt~ospective Collection," sponsored
by the N.B. Art Committee.
JUNIOR EBELL EXHIBITS -Art work from the
Junior EbeU Children's Art Worksbol) will be on
display along with works of local artist.a, Ester
and Jo Dendel, Lou Houston, Kay Davis, Merlyn
Aronovic, Paul Ditzenberger, Dianne Norton,
and Suzanne Biaggi at the Corona del Mar, Mar-
iners and Newport Beach Public libraries.
NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK-1090 Bayside Drive,
Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular busi-
ness hours through August 30, a one-man show
of new oil and acrylic paintings by J a m ~ 1
Clutter.
UNITED CALIF. BANK -2983 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. On exhibit during regular business hours
through Aug. 15 art works by Loretta Tropea,
Marion Ficus, Clyde Zulch, George Burkhart
and John Burgess.
SECURITY FlRST NATIONAL BANK -196 E. 17th
St., Costa Mesa. Paintings by Marlayne Beemer,
Emma Lubeck and Doris BerTy are on display
through Aug. 9 during regular business hours.
CAMERA WORK GALLERY -18340 Newport
Blvd., Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular
business hotll's prints by photographer Rulli
Bernhard through August 13.
~o. CALIF. FIRST NAT'L BANK -17122 Beach
Blvd., Huntington Beach. On exhibit during reg.
ular business hours oil paintings by Huntingto11
Beach art Jeague member, Janet DeHaven.
CHARLES BOWERS MUSEUM -~ N. Main
St., Santa Ana. Hours: Tues. through Sat. 10
a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Sun. 1 to 6 p.m.; Thurs. eve-
ning 7 to 9 p.m. No admission charge. Currently
on exhibit, pen sketches by Richard K. Brooks,
Jr., and handicrafts done by Cuna womea on
the San Blas Islands. Panama. ...
IN 1"• WSeTMIMrnut CCNft"
1
plANET
·.;AP~
THE LUXURIOUS
NE~ IAll-
. THEATRE
NOMI OP 10C10tM CHM lQe ..
I '"WT L\LIOA llYI. \ i/. IAllOA POllNSUU • ,73_...I ~
Child WH" '•rent Only e Op•n Ni9htly 6:45 e
e ENDS TUUDAY e
T1te ~ ..,.. Tiiey
C.1114 the "Mea11-0..."f
lilllmN Bmuns
wAYNidAN'SS.
H"IM 0'1 unDN ,___
e Riotous Co-FMture e
JoMFftnto
Sllolloy Wl•tws
1i.ia.w.,
•• Tiie "-'le.....,,,., F-..
"ENTER LAUGHING"
\
EXCLUSIVE ARIA IUN
MA TINEI DAILY 1 PM
Petfffvely Ends Tuea.
1 ... telt.Jf a.cw, ll\. WI
Evenings 6:30 & 9:30
Matinees Sit. & Sun. 3:00
52 BEST PICTURE
AWARDS
Me•lllM *'--.GAILY PIL01
rnai; • ...,., t, !':"
. '
--
JN
•M
:..-1
•: Tl
160 ..... WI
l)
:00
~· ID
lJ)
PIL.Gl
'· ''!"
CacllMlll hlf 111 PM ~ ... " .. , .....
-YOUU. MINI AND OUll"
"• .. DON'T IAISI THI HJDM.
LOWH THI llYll" .,,., Lewie
...... t 1J .. l&Jl.t:1 t
,..,. l:Jl-7it 1-11111
Run Away to
MEXICO
"'·-~--.... -..... -..
Ask Mr. Foster
Travel
lOllNSON'S Newport CeRte
(714 644-2100
............. Nil\' PILtlT ""*"· ..... '· , ...
Alw•Y• f,.. Perklnt
WHk•p--4:45 P.M.
Cont. Sun.-2 PM.
•
LIVE THEATER •
@
STILL RUNNING
"Amertcu Burrala"
Thre. anti-establlahment plays "The American
Hurrah" will be presented Thurs. throup Sun.
closing Aug. 25 at the South Coa.tt Repertory Third
Step Theatre, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa.
CUrtaln time 8:30 p.m. Phone &46-1363.
OPENING SOON
"Sweet Cbartty0
Ntil Simon'• comedy of a &lrl with queationabt.
morall but a heart of cold, "Sweet Ch•itJ," wW
bt 1taged Thurs. through Sun., through Sept. 1
at tbe Laguna Playhouse, 319 Ocean Ave., Laguna
Beach. Curtain time 8:30. Phone U.-9061.
"Bndler GooM0
'lbe tten division of the Cotta Meaa Civic Plar-
Wtlt Gate, Oranee County Fairerounda, Cotta MuL
hCIUH 11 1ta0ng a comedy 0 Brother Goon" Aue.
11 tbrouih 24 at the Community Recreation Cent.er,
H..,ry Fenda and LoulM Troy there• tfrlnk
In • Ja,.,..•• l'Htavrant durlnt the movie
"Youra, Mine and Ours" MW ahowlnt at the
Mela Theater, C"t• Mesa •nd Tustin
ThHter, Tustin.
ILUI IUllON COMIDY Above Dustin Hoffman Ofl THI YIAl
and JCatherlne R"'' are
ahown In • scene from
the Acatfemy Award wl,..
nlnt r,ctvre, ''The Grad-
uate, 1 MW ahowlnt at
ldwarcls Cinema, Ceeta
Mesa, United A r t I 1 t 1
ThHter, Santa AM and
HI-Way 3t Drlv•ln, WM ..
minster.
...
lAGUtlA PLAYHOUSE Sll4MER IHUTRE
PLl~;:. SWEET CHARITY
N£W YORK MUSICAi. HIT
August I lluu Seplllllber 2nd . ,
... k ~ Nell lffilet1 ~
Directed lty: John FertUH -Mualc Directer: Derla Shlelcla
ALL $IA TS RISERVED 1.11n...as..-a.i1Maw. .
l1 t Oceee A.._. 4t4-1061 lea OMee 0,.. ,,.....,. .....
HARBOR at ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 5<46-l102
., NOW DAILY-1st AREA RUN '
ACADEMY
AWARD
WINNER
•UT DIHCTOR-MIKE NICHOLi •
Performance Schedule
1.U.7·f·11 P.M.
e DAILY e
-==11
4 ~
i
J
4
i
l
1
l
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1
1 l
' ~
• •
I
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' •
• ..
..
•
•t ••• '·~
• ' Orat111 C.Ut J WtllltfMMt
. Get Low Tire Cost
with ~ I .t9J.. • d ·General ar84'. iie8 8
TIRE
Kraftreads are General1s
factory method retreads
applied to your tires or
safety inspected casings.
•
Tremendous Special.
775x15 735x15 845x15
775x14 825x14 855x14
Pl•• a.c.,...w. c..a., -4 F.r.t. so.
.
CAR
MATS -== by Rubbermaid
WHEEL
-~
BALANCE
•All vinyl SPECIAL $277
e Choice of colors ..
e one-piece mat converts to
2-piece set.
s200 PER
WHEEL
RADIAL TIRES
e Black
Tubeleaa
• Seconds IOH· 11, 1.11111
Plua Fed. Exciae T.x $2.36
Store Hours:
7:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
.
646-5033
WIDE OVALS
e . SECONDS • RED LINE
e WHITELIN&
$21~.T.
2.20
&70X14
WE ARE ·NOW
THE
DISTRIBUTOR,
FOR.
CONTINENTAL
TIRES IN THE
• HARBOR AREA
The tire made
for all
imported and
. . sports cars.
The prov•n radial for
wet and dry weothu •
• Up to. twice the mileage,
twice the traction,
twice the comfort.
(qntinental
RaP 14 Radial
SECONDS
GOODYEAR
POWER CUSHION
WHITE SIDE WALL
825~14 • 855x14 • 845115 . $2195 TIRES ··=~
PHONE
646-5033
,
Tax
Houra1 7:30
to 6:00 Deily
540-5710
•
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