HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-08-19 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa-'f--::---.... ' -----.. ~:·...z·~ • '
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Surf Pounds Coast ·Beaches;
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20 Swept Off Dana Breal{water ' . . i : .
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~een lnJared
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'·WildWaves Wash . . -.
·Over Dana Point
BJ BRUCE BENION
Of•0.1,,PMltltaff
Rilina:, wild wave. aura:ed over the
o...a PolDt H-ma bre-ater aa:ain tb..11 · .morniDI, tbre&Unln1 to
* * * Gfunt · Breaker.3
Pound Newpoit
• For $econd:Day
. By JEROME F. COLLINS
Of .. Dtllf' Plllt a.rt
Gigantic breakers pounded Newport
Beach's shoreUne for the second day
in 'a row today, sweeping the beach
rree of everythinf but NDd and a few
mad surrers.
Red flags, 1lgnallnt hazardous
swimmlng conditions, flapped from all
lifeguard towers. They're expected to
be up throughout the day. '
The huge waves, described by one
veteran city lifeguard as "an all-time
surf.'' beg4n rising sharply and unex.
pected1y Sunday early in the af.
ternoon.
The super surf climbed to heilhb of
10 to 12 feet.
sW"pass the Intensity ol comben
which swept 3J people off the
breakwater and into the harbor Sun-
day at dusk.
Seven persons were 11..alpmed into
Ille hart>o< :at 5:~r p.m. SundlJ and
were taken to South Coasi Oornmunity
. Hospital, . South La.tuna'. 'They were
' later ·reported·in ntisfactory condition
'Nith assorted injuries.
Miracu,iou1ly, there were apparently
no fatalities from the sudden upl!urge
of the ocean. As of· noon today, of.
ficiab said, no persons had been
reported missing.
Meanwhile, San Clemente lifea:uards
patrolling Dana Harbor todaf said
they tealed <if the breakwater at 10
a .. m. t.o prevent a repeat performa11ce
cl Sunday eveninc's spectacular mass
clunl<inJ!.
"The surf out there ii increasing at
this time," said Ufeguard Captain
Phillip Stubbs.
"There's a himdful of people at the
end Of ttie breakwater, and we've
di>pab:hed a patrol boat to take them
off." Stubbs 1aid the people would be
taken aboard ttie veuel if surf made it
impossible for them to waJk back to
shore. He taid the peop!e were in no
immediate d.anpr, but we~ being
aked to leave llhe breakwater as •
preCautionary measure.
500 Reds Killed as Allies
SmashAssaultNearSaigon
SAlllON (UPI) -Allied ......,. ~
<Jay smashed the biaeet Communill
ot:renlivt of the sum.mer, klllln& more
then 500 Viet con=Nortb Viet-
namese and drJv1ng more
back into the Cam border area
Juneles northwest ol Saigon.
Just 11 miles IOuth of tM capital.
U.S. ln/antrymen oai>gl>t hundreds o1
Viet Oong troopt In rich farmland
and killed at leaot 73 In !lghtlng which
beg.an Suoo.y and resumed early t0-
da7. Up to 10 U.S. comapnies, between
I,
1,500 to 2,000 men ol the lit Brigade,
9th Infantry Dtv!slol!, ...,.. dropped
Into tho haWe uu.
OI the 300 troops of the Ith Viet
Cong Battalion, 73 wen kno'WD dead.
20 were captured and 15 others IW'·
nndered .-r Ille Chleu llol (open
arms) pr<>gram b7 nlghtfal SUncla7.
U.S. rpotesman aaid t:bouMDda of
Oommunlrts. ll'!'anr lrom loin aloog
the cambodian border and struck at
Ietst 15 mejo< lllrgetr 50 to 70 miles
(See Vll:TNAM, Pa1e %)
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::.<: "'· :..<.; .l<.
Condition Listed ' ' .
'Extreme·
Today
riti·;cal~'.~
Mother Dead,
Dad Critical .
In Shootout
Simmering domestic prOblems •P·
parently fiared into a hysterical
husband-wife gun battle at a plush
Huntington. Harbour borne i D HUD·
tington Beach Swlday night, leaving a
housewife dead and her spouse wound·
ed.
Police who arrived at the Dr. John
L. Fenner home at 4162 Trumbull
Drjve, round a scene of horror, with a
little girl" sobbing over her mother's
body <and her father with a bullet.shat·
tered pelvis.
Dead is Mrs. Sylvia Fenner, 39,
struck by a single bullet in the heart
during an apparent ~ fight in which
her ~anged husband, a non-prac·
ticing physician, 2pparenUy iried to
defend tiimself.
"It looks like attempted murder and
a k:ill-in-self«fenae case," said Capt.
Earle Robitaille after detectives piec-
ed togeUler bits of fact, rumor and
hearsay from neighbor• of th.e Fen·
ners.
He mlnimi2ed 1lle passibility ol •
murdm"-suiclde case. ,
Prellmlllary infotinati.on indicates
that Mn!. Fenner apparently tried to
kill Dr. Fenner, who i! in crJtical con·
dition at Huntin,000 Intercommunity
Hospital today, with at least three
gmi.sbot)vounds.
Neighbors said they were alerted to
trouble Sunday nigbt when they heard
·Mrs. Fenner screaming.
Queen Briefed
On Eisenhower
LONDON (UPI) -Qu ... Elizabelll,
on vacaUon at Balmoral CasUe ln
Scotland, has asked her staff to pro-
vide her with up to the minute hi·
formation on former P r e s i d e n t
Elsenbower'1 condition, court circles
said today.
She regards Eisenhower at a long-
standing -al friend, ulde lrom
their many omclal contact.I .as beads
o!ltala, the c:ir<lo• uld.
Amont their man1 ofllclal contact.
was the opening of the SL Lewrence
Seaway on --.! the royal yacht
Britannia In 1959 and Elaenhower:s
v11111 here.
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Kub-A-Dub Tub
Disc jockey Gary Schaffer waves happily lrom motorized balbtub
in middle of San Francisoo Bay. Smile later turned to fro Wt\ as
Schaffer lost bet with e<>-worker that he could make it across ·bay.
in unusual craft. Bathtub sank 20 yards from goat
Three Fail in I ailbre~k
Complaints against three 11)<11 who
pulled an .-st .. uc:ctsslul Jailbreak
with a a:ude. bomell\Ade kni!e Satur·
day nla:bt ¥.>ere issued today, wbile
each ~ was confined to an isolatlOn
cell in Oi'angi County JaiL
The trio made II from the third to
the first floor cl Ille old laclllty wjlile
holding ·111• knlle fashioned', from a
melal bunk •lr•P :.¢not the throat of
:ZS.year-<ild 1berlll'a deputy Ronald
Finch.
Cbar&es q&iDSt Ule a 11 e I e d
jailbreak leackr and two men he
. subeequently nle<ued from a ~oldll&
' tank Include ldclnaplnc. usaull on a
· police o!llcv ancf otttmpted escope.
Jail Sit Jim, 1111ddleton said Ille
pr\nclpol. 1uspoct ts Tliomu, C. Clar~. IV. ol l\llaml, Fla ., Who toot l!'lncb
hostage and then freed Cbarles R.
Pulllam, 20, ol Hollon, Tex., and
Michael 'A. Trecy, 21, ol AJl!lhelm.
.,. L ·1
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Medics · Remove
Pacemaker as
Spasms Recur
WASHING'l'ON (,U') -Former
l'tMlclent Dwight D, Elsenhon: ·,...
malns ib ''extremely CriUcal't ~
ti.on and bu sUffer~ ndmlrD;9 -· •
episodes ol . Irregular heart ae11.,_ ·11
since Sunday night, 1Army doctors N-...
ported today. ·
Doctora at Walter Re<d ~
Hospital said an electrical pacemaker,
imerted earlier into tbe heart of the
five-star general, has been' removed
a1ttt It f111Ie<t to stop tl1e 'I'-"
'Ille i:eculniig irreguJanties docitori
said euuer, consufute a '·1~t
.and. cri~'!'1· haoa'4" to Elsen)l.ow0r•1
s~lya ., , .• , . T!ie ·tut.~· ~ ...... .,.,..:,., . . ..,. ,a ~i-. ~ bqllet~·:_· \ ' :. ~· . . "~al Ei.9enbower's Caodltion re.
mains e,!fremely critical, 'Ibe elee'·
1trical ~ wai, removed lilt ,
yesterdey ~ ol !I' ,demonstrat ..
inefiectinneu .ttir. "}he initial few
hours.
r•'Since last night!~· . u fl e tJ n,
numerous epi$0des' ol-ltulst h:-
regulartty have """""flll, ocrt ol'O<ll7
a few seconds duration but two ~
qblrlng electr:lc&l CoilYUli9Jl.
1 c:-. . .
. W~'
IC you're · 'looking for a
change, forget'."1tt adviies the
weatherrqan, vho's )offering up
the same.o&d pacP,1e ,ot,mor•
'Ing cloud• an!l ·•~ al~nt •
wlth . Jll.ld. 70. . temperaiuru for
Tuesciar.
INSJ8B· roaAY
"Acapuko ~· ~
in N<V>pOrt Bcodl a · the Olp!-I
. pl< Jl<ICl>llng trials· OJ>n•lll(IA,1 7
top •llJ!>Pfra. C0!7Jl><lil¥1 i•, l!i•
finl NCC. Ser Boqd"I!, P'!Qf ~f.
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, J GAILY l'ILOT ·-· Au,lol 19, lM
LalmcJ.ea CaMpaign
Nixon Offers Aid
To All Candidates
SPf!.!NGFIELD, Ill. (AJ>)
Ndwd M. Nixon, plunglnf Into th•
flrlt natlooal lolr of his pr<sldeotiel
calll)>llJD, h a I olltrad b 1 I ..,.
donemllll to all Republican can--...
But tile GOP presidential candidate
adds et tbe same Ume that be will
nepect llo w!MM cl RtpubliClll ol·
flee aeebn ..tJo ma7 want lo olUd
apart, -atlntl their oampalills
fn>m hla. ' ..,
Nlron GUlllnad hla -di to tll•
old probllm ol -cedhlate•
ll)'lna to set alq with locll °""' In a briollDc With -llDOD in SOii DfOJO
6unday. Aller tlalldng ot lenglh al>out -11!11 pn>blems NllUI kit on a
tine-day lour ol lll!nola, Ohio,
Michigan and New York.
'lbe first atop was Springfield, JU .,
capital of a state be lost n&ITO'Wl)'
when hi nn for pr11idtnt eight years
0(0.
"We're goUic to campaign Illln<li•
like tt'1 never been campaigned
before, 11 he told ebOut 1,000 people who
~ w&1Unc lo rh1m at the spring-
field airport Sunday night.
"We're going f<I cotrrY llllnols and
we1re going to carry tile nation," he
oald.
The object of the lrip ls two-fold : f<I
meet with some cl the party's bi g
state governors and to test ttle reac·
tlon of GOP workers to bis efiortl in
the pagt week to unUy Republicans
behind llis candidacy.
The key governors he plans to visit
are George Romn.y of Mkbigan, Ray·
mond P. Shattr Of Pennsylvania,
James A. Rhodes of Ohio and Nelson
A. Rockefeller d. New York, who was
Nlxoo'• U>p cballenger for 111< nomlna·
tioo. Nixon'• decilion to endorse all
Republican< ,..king offi<e but to
respect the fact 11ome may want to go
Jt alone recalls the problems Barry
GoktvrlKer, the party's 1964 presiden·
tia1 nominee, faced.
Some candidates in urban states
avoided Goldwater becau5e they
believed he would hurt them in their
own ratts.
In wladiDg up hil s\Aly at the San
Dteao vacation c a _m pa i g n head·
quuten, Nlzon prailec1 the record Of
his nmnlng mat•, Gov. Spiro T. Agnew
ol -yland, in handling problems of
big dties and 1aid : "U anything hap.
pened to the president I would feel ex·
treme]J confident that be coold !alt• .,... ... "
Aokad -.t Agn ... •1 kliOw!odg• of
fonigD policy matters, Nixon said:
;'No man wbo ls eelected for the posi-
tillll ol vice pre-nt ol tho United stat.es is going to be an e x p e r t in
ewry area.
"Gov. Agnew is not one who has h1d
ireat experience 1n foreign affairs.
Countian Knifed
At Dance Hall;
Suspect Held
A -man ii in lair condlUon at
Oranr• County Medical Center f<lday
with a knife wound 1n the stomach, the
aipperent aftermath of a revenge at.-
tack oull!dt a danco hall Saturday nJcbl . Marloe C. ldudou, 41, wa. at-
tackad OS hi left th• clanco hall ptrk· In& lot at Cheater one! Flower Slrffta,
aceord!ng to SlaDlon pollc•.
lUoblrd MIJlica, 11, o1oo of Slallton,
-jailed "" sulpldo~ ol .,.lu\I with J.atent to commit murder after tbt at-
toct.
1nwattgator1 said Muaica cried out
to Mendoza, lunged at him one! the vtot:l.m crumpled to the pavement,
moanln1 With a It.ab wOUlld in the 1b-
domen.
DAILY PILOT
Howtve, whit he hu is tomtUllaC
vital. He hM a balance of jud-n~
He hM the fine intellect to learn V'1'Y
tut.'' J
Harriman Says
Progress May
Come in Talks
PARIS (Al') -Amba5sad<>r W,
Averell H·arrlmw says be believes
that at the Peace talks with North
Vietnam "there will be a way found to
establish the fact that the North will
not take advantage of tbe mtlltary de~
escalation of. the war."
HarTlman was interviewed Thurs-
day by the French .W. television
bef'on!I sharp new flghUnc broke out 1n
South Vietnam. 'Jbe intervleW wa1
released. today.
Asked by interviewer Maurice Ferro
If there bad been any progress in the
Paris peace talks, the chief U.S.
negotiator replied: "I can't say there
has been any direct progress. I think
that many things have happened that
give some indication that progress
may come."
Harriman did not elaborate on this,
but Nguyen Thanh Le, chief
spokesman for the North Vietnamese
delegation, agreed there had been no
progress.
Le told a news conference that
negoUati011s 110 far have been like
"talb in a cl<ised room with all the
doors locked." He added that only a
halt to the U.S. bOmbing in the North
"would permit the doors lo be opened
so we cao see what Ls in the room."
Harriman recalled that President
Johnson has promised a complete halt
in bombing Of North Vietnam if HaD<li
11how11 some military restraint.
U.S. of!Jclals have 11ought without
success to obtain such a commitment
from North Vietnam or at least some
indication of what would bappen U the
bombing was stopped.
Hamman thanked the French fOr
making arrangements for Uie peace
talks and said: "I .am sure they are
ready to be helpful in any W<!Y they
can to promote peace in that Vietnam
area. But, one cannot tell For my
part, I am satisfied that the talks will
go on. Neither side warm to break
tllem off."
Harriman said he thought the North
Vietnamese had come to the peace
talks, wtii.ch opened May 13, "ex·
cessively confident, and, instead of
showing some resU'aint at this time
which would move us very rapidly to
substantive talks, they esc£lated the
lll!hllng in all aroaa."
He nl.d the "indiscriminate shell·
ing" of Saf.gon after the talks were
under way was stopped after the
North Vietnamese seemed to realize
they made a mistake.
Stanford Names
Pitzer President
STANFORD (UPI) -Stanford
Univerllty today namM Dr. KeMeth
S. Pitzer, 54, a nationally prominent
chemist, a1 jts new prelldent.
Pitzer'• 1elecUon was aMounced by
the board of trustees and ends a 17·
month 1earch for a successor to Dr. J.
Wallace Sterling, 62, who ii retiring.
Pitzer has been president of Rice
UnJverslty, Houston, Tex., since 1961
and will assume his new duties Dec. I,
the unlvtrs.lty aaid.
Swedish
u .. ,,.....,..
Viet Faces
Their faces full of apprehen·
sion, two Vietnamese children
'vait to see doctor duting visit
by team from Medical Civil
Action Program to Tay Ninh.
Medical teams, in this case
from 25th Infantry Division,
visit towns to provide medical
services !or South Vietnamese
people.
From Page 1
VIETNAM ...
northwest of Saigon Sunday.
American and South Viftnamese
troops aided by U.S. tanks, armored
personnel carriers, h e Ii copter
gunships and planes threw back every
attack.
UPI Correspondent Alvin B. Webb
Jr., reporting from the provincial
capital of Tay Ninh, which took the
main assault, said the allies cleareJ
the street.s of Communists in eight Jiours. ·
He said the retreating Communists
burned at least 400' homes in a hall
mile section of the southeastern cor-
ner of the city of 80,000.
Webb &aid that by late today the
CommunJslll were trying to find
hideouts in the rubber plantations four
mlles from Tay Ninh, which lies in
War Zone C, once one of the main Viet
Oong sanctuerles In 11>il ~unlry.
The Communist weekend offen&ive
did not match in size nor scope the
Fetruary Tet or May offensives.
Military observers said they doubted it
WH the major Red olfensive that
allied lntelllgeno• had prediotad was
com1ng thia: mootb, in September or
October. It poisod no major threat to Saigon.
But the 1ttacb northwest of Saigon.
plus Communist activity in the
Mekong Delta, in the Ce n tr 1 J
Hilhlands a n d in t h e northern pro-
vinces ended • comparative low point
Jn combot In Sooth Vietnam. "The luU
is ended," a U.S. military spokesman
1aJd.
American forcet sald they 1ufferl!:d
at least 20 men killed and about 100
wounded. South Viet.Damese troops
Hid tlieir losses have been 14light."
'
Summer
....,....... C..t.W...
".............. Lert-IMc• WM1 ''".., 11n..-.. ,....,. Mesa Coed Tells of Experiences
CAUPOINIA
OlltANOI COAST ,Utl.llHING COMll'AN't
l•~•rt H, WtH
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Jt clc R. c~rlty Vb,,....,. .... cr-11 MMittw
1\•u• K,,.,11 ·-n.""' A. M11,,h lt11t -·-••• , N IHtll
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' I,
.. You haven't lived lll'tll you've seen
a Japanese movie with Sewdisb sub-
titles," 17·year-old Sandy · Llu!er
\\Tltes from her summer stay in
Sweden a1 an American Abroad
representing the Costa Mesa Chapter
of the American Field Service.
Selected last March as an AFS
finalist from Costa Mesa High School,
Sandy learned in June that a fam.Jly
had been found ror he.r summer visit.
Her new fattier would be a railroad
man, her mother a housewife, her
otater a leen.agtt namod Blrgltto.
A sign lettered, "Welcome Sandy to
the Bogren famUy" was her greeting
When she arrived in Vannas, Sweden.
Since tl\en 1he has been keeping her
friends potted with a aeries Of cokrlul
aC<.'OWlll of her adventures.
"Have you ever tried sleeping Vr1th
the sun streaJNng In your window at 3
a..m. ?" she writes. "1 keep wakin1 up
.and tb1nldn1 Jt must bl noon."
Exicept for th• "hlp aoup'' which i5
VtrJ IWMt, and "sm1Uy fish" (I lit•
enil translaUon), Sandy says sht
flndl Swedtab food much too attra<·
Uv1.
"I "" f<I -k it oil IWimmlnJ. thouch. r, she writes. "When I
delivered my letter from the mayer of
Costa M1sa to the mayor of Vann11,
ht 11v1 me a free pus to the town
.. 1nun1n1 pool I« th• 1ummtr, so,...
•
spend a lot of time there.''
A trip to the summer home of an
uncle, aunt and cousins Jn Lapland
found reindeer vlstting daily. The
trees along the road, she round, were
remlniscent of. scenes in ' ' D r .
Zhivago."
"Papa put no!J out In the lake
overnight and nl!:xt morning we had
about 20 fish. Mama cleaned them and
I got to wash them off in the lake. We
smoked most of then\ and had some
10< br,,.kfaat."
TelevMMon, with one cl\Mnel br03d·
cutlng from 8 p.m. to midnight Is a
favorite family diversion, w I th
Amerlcat1 -programs like "The Virgi·
nian." "Mission Impossible" and
"Hith CllaparTal," alJ presented la
English with Swedish subtlUes. nus, Sandy notes, is fortunate,
because her progress with the SwedJsh
language has been p&lnful. Sbe
describes lt briefly 11.S, ''murder" and
adds, "Spanish ls mud! ea.sier. l think
I'd better go back to that."
Sandy will be flylnf born• at tho end « the mon.lh to her Coata Mesi home
at 1340 Gar!ngl'""1 and tht belinnln l
ol. her senior year at Co5tl Mesa Hl(h
Sdlool. The aecood p!lu• of her llle 11 a AFS repr11seotativ1 will include a
serlea of !llulirated talks to tdloot.
and clubs on her pe:1 l!Cl•l expertence•
&1 a teenage me.mbtr of 1 Swedish
lamUy .
' -McCarthy Stands Pat 1
Won't Compromise on Vietnam Platform I
CHICAGO (Ap) -Prollmlnary
sparring for neXt week's Democratic
Natte>nal Convent!Oll opeaad today "1th
Sen. Euten< J. Mccarthy's campaign
manager rejecting a compromise
Vlotnam plationn plank while the
credentiab: committee sought to settle
• key civil rights fighl
M tbl platform committee hearincs
opeaad In Waal'Ogton, aducator Clork
Kerr, head of the National Committee
for a Political SetUement in Vietnam,
urged McCarthy to drop hls demand
for a coalition government ln South
Vietnam ud a'.aked Vice Preaidfllll
llUbert H. Humphrey f<I agreo to a
total hilt In bombing of N<rth Viot-
tr * * Dems Debate
Viet Policies
For Platform
WASHINGTON (UPI) -McCarthy
and Humphrey backers debated Viet·
nam policy before the Democratic
Platform Commitµie to&Y in a
prelude to what appeared to be l!lhap-
ing up as 8' major convention floor
fight over the issue.
Roger Hilsman, a former assistant
secretary of state and chief foreign
policy adviser to Eugene J . McCarthy,
said the United States should i.n effect
declare a cease-fire by halting the
bombing of North Vietnam and ending
offensi ve operations in the south.
He _ack.Q,oWledged that such a plan
was a gomble and the. Commi.inilts
might try to "take advantage of our
restra:int," but said that political
pressures from neutral nations and
from within the Communist bloc "are
likely to make their escala~oo tern·
porary." .
"In the circumstances it seems ob-
vio us that some su.ch gamble must be
made," Hilsman !taid ... Short of an in·
vasion of North Vietnam, which would
only bring on a Chinese intervention
:a:nd nm an unacceptable risk of
etarting World War III .. , military
pressures· will · only impede the Paris
negotiations."
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie CD-Maine),
a key support.er, of Vice President
Hubert H. Humphrey, said a bomb-
ing halt as a test of North Vietnamese
intentions "may be justified" at this
time, but the decision should be left to
the president who can ~eigb the rbks
to U.S. troc>ps. . .,
Ninth Suspect
Faces Tax Rap
One of nine ml!:n indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury in an in·
herftance tax . fraud case. was ar·
ralgned before Superior Judge Rob-
ert Gardner Fr.Iday and lmmediatelY
moved for dismissal of the charges
against him. ·
Lyman Garber of Beverly Hills is
one or thrl!:e defendants in the con·
spiracy case brought before the bench
so far. Last Friday two others had
their arraignment set for Aug. 30.
Garber will know the results o!
hia dismissal plea before that time.
Ht ls to appear Aug. 28.
The men are accused of making
false representatiQns to individuals
about avoiding inheritance taxes in
setting up certain forms of trusts
and foundations.
They are accused of obtaining about
$20,000 from Orange County residents
in the scheme.
$5!!~E
airo .. ,.... 6 5dl·
11..,e11 lll&Ml1 '1J'lter:
narn.
But Blair Clark,. McCarthy's cam-p,aign manager, called Ktn'• propoul
'thonlulbly lnadeq\l&le -it i1 Just not
good enoug'b." 1be McCartb7 fon:es
have made clear tbe:y will ptess !or a
fi<Q' fight unlea:1 they are successful
in the plaUonn group.
Meanwhile, Humphrey, in this con-
venlloe city for a ?OUDd of llJ>Hcbo•
and lntetvlews, plodged H elected he
will do everything be can to end Ule
war.
"Jf I am permitted to become pre1l·
dent and ii by then Iller• ls no pNCe
or ceaae fire I will do everytin.g ln
my power, wiU. boner, to lrinl peace
to Soulheost Alia," Ibo vtoe prolldoat I
told some 500 memben of the
Brotherbood of Rallwa.y and Airline
Clerks:.
The eredel>tlala iroup m e t
meanwhile, Jn cle1ed 1es1tori prior to opemnc its pubUc bearings with the
MissiJslppi challenge, whece the.:
reaw.r porty group ta being c:onlel\ld
by a blradal dtllSallcm tuppc>r1ad by
both Humphrey and McCarthy.
The Mississippi case is expected to
be settled faster than the 18 other
challenges, wtllcb involve various
ilsues of racial dil<>1mlnattoo, porty
loyalty and tho way In which dolega ...
one! alternate• could hi alloc:led.
* * * * * * Chi~ago Boggled
Strikes., Protests, Weatlier Unruly
CHICAGO (UPI) ~ Waiting for the
Democr&ic N a t J o n a I Ooovention,
Chlcqo tried to keep its cool loday. It
WM not &aly.
It waa bad enoogb that au but 1,000
of the clty.11 4,U> taxU were 'sJdelined
by a strike : bad enough that the bus
and el train drivers may be on strike
witlhin a week; bad enoogb that tbe
same !Jtrlking telephone installers who
have snarled conv enti on com-
munications are also d e n y i n t
Chicagoans new telephones.
But naw, a breed of young folks who
called themselves yippies are filtering
int.o old tawIJ, Chicago's citadel of the
h:ippje sub-culture. They claim to be
the vanguard of bearded bands o{
thow;ands who will camp out in Lin·
coln Park for a "festival of life"
beginnin.g with tt1e start of tbe ·con·
vention Aug. 26. ·
If that were the least of Qrlcago's
worries, ttie city would feel home free.
There are the black militants and
Vietnam protesters who plan to raise
all possible ca.in outside the In·
terrratiOnal Amphitheater convention
site.
There is tile knowledge that the
st.alldbp prNence of 800 National
Guardsmen ln Chicago armories on.
every ni_,t of the coove.-Ls
designed to guard ageinlt dllcxUrs
far more .se.riow: than this.
U that were not bad enough, a four.
inch rain doused Chicago Friday and
Saturday and city officials were {CfC•
ed f<I reverse the locks and left tho QU.
cago River flow into Lake Mictµgan .
'Vitll a heat "'-ave coming on,
Chicago's beaches were closed Satur·
day f<ir the fir6t time within memory
because ol water pollutim and harass ..
ed parents ~e no longer able to
solve their problems with a time•
honored Chicago order to go jump in
the lake.
Even to Chicago, the pro of con-
vention cities, tt 11eemed a little too
much.
A girl in a store in old town granted
that tbe Democratic convection would
be "good for business."
"But I'd just u soon It W'&s in
Miami," she said. "I think tbere'S
going to be trouble. I'm not going
do'M'ltown all week."
Plnyho~e T~ft Suspect
Loses Plea for Bail Cut
By THOMAS FORTUNE
OI fllt NllY .. I ... llfff
Fruier Smlth, suspected of fleeing
with $9,475 drawn on forged Laguna
io~=.=:c i~~~ b~aJ tocJay
Appearing in Laguna B e a c h
Municipal Cour1 tNs morning. Smith
comp)ained that the ball is prohibitive
and asked that it be lowered.
Judge Richard Hamilton r efused
.and ·ordered Smith to return Friday
for preliminary hearing on three
counts of forgery.
Smitb did not enter a plea at today's
arralgnment/roceeding.
He was to! a public defender will be
appointed to represent him alter
answering "no" to Judge Hamilton's
quesUon1 asking if he has any income
Or any .uset.s.
Smith, tall and distinguished, wore a
blue suit coat, dark gray sla-cks and
white shirt, open at the neck With no
tie. He looked composed.
Only as he turned to talk from the
bench after his request for a lower
bail was denied did be show any emo-
tion. He scowled slightly. Through tbe
rest Of the proceedings he maintained
a dead pan exprl!:ssion.
To . Smith's complaint that $10,000
bail is prohibitive, the judge replied:
"That's what it's intended to~. Sln·
ce the alleged crime WM commtited
here and sinc:e you had to be taken.in-
to custody In New York, Jt ii the
court'• inclination to keep the high
ball. I have to assume that if you do tt
(flee) 1n· one ca.se .yitu will do it again.1'
Smith remarked that by waiver of
extradition "I hoped to indicate my
willingness to come back." J 1
"I can think of another reeioon 'for
waiving extradition," Judge Sm.Jth
said. "It makes the tot.al time in
custody less. In other words your ex-
pl.aoat:ion does not make too much
sense to me."
Following his court appearance,
Smith was returned to custody at
Orange County Jail.
He originally was admitted into
Laguoa City Jail, but was transferred
to Orange County Jal! Friday night
becauae Laguna pollce do not have a
full time jailer.
Smith, 41, was arrested in New York
last Tuesday on a Federal Bureau of
Investigation warrant foe fllght to
avoid prosecut.ion.
He was building fund chairmc fOI"
Laguna-Moulton Pla)'llouaa -n he
di,a,ppeared 1n January. A tot.I of
$9,475 was eventually discovered
drawn from the bank on fOrged con-
tribution checks.
The district attorney issued com·
plaints on three of the first four
checks discovered. Playbouse Presi-
dent George Gade, bOW!ver, said
mON than 2.0 checks were forged.
n
OMEGA
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Bea eh Your HometoWD
EDITION
VOL 6f, NO. 199, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
ar our om
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Ike Battling On
.
'Extremely Critical' as Spasms Recur
\VASHINGTON (AP) -F<lrmer
President Dwight D. Eisenhower re·
mains in "extremely critical" condi-
tion and has suffered numerous
episodes of irregular heart action
since Sunday night, Army doctors re-
ported today.
Doctors at Walter Reed Army
flospital said an electrical paeemaker,
inserted earlier into the heart of the
five-star general, has been removed
after it failed to stop the spasms.
The reeurring ~regularities , doctors
said earlier. constitute a "constant
and critical hazard'' to Eisenhower's
survival.
The text of a morning medical
bulletin:
"General Eisenhower's condition re-
mains extremely critical. The elec-
trical pacemaker was removed late
yesterday because of its demonstrated
ineffectiveness alter tile initial fev.•
hours.
.7 Hurt as Waves Surge
Over Dana Point Harbor
By BRUCE BENSON or 1t11 ~lt't Plltt Slaff
Rising, wild ·waves surged over tbe
Dana Point Harbor main breakwater
again this morning. threatening to
surpass the intensity of combers
which swept 20 people off the
breakwater and into the harbor Sun·
day at dusk.
Seven persons were slammed inl4
the barbor .at 5:30 p.rn. Sunday arid
were ta.ken to Soutb Coast 01Jnmunity
Hospital, South Laguna. They we.re
later reported in satisfactory condition
with usorted injuries.
MiracUlously, there were a.pparenUy
no fatalities from the sudden upsurge
of the ocean. As of noon today, of·
ficials said, no persons had been
reported m.issing.
Meanwhile, San Clemente lifeguards
patrolling Dana Harbor today said
they sealed otf the breakwater at 10
a.m. to prevent a repeat performance
of Sunday evening's spectacular mass
dunking.
"The s\llf ~ there is increa-sing at
UW: time," said Lifeguard Captain
Phillip Stubbs.
"There's a handful or people at the
end of the breakwater, and we've
dispatched a patrol bo<rt to take them
of(." Stubbs said the people would be
t ~aken aboard the vessel if surf made it
~mpossible for them to walk back to
shore. He said the people were in no
immediate danger, but were being
a5ked to leave the breakwater as a
precautionary measure.
The cause of the c11ashing surr is
still Wlknown. Heavy combers began
$9.6 Million
Bonds Strategy
Parley Toniglit
Citizens backing the $9.6 million
worth of bond issues for the Hun·
tington Beach Recreatioo and Parks
Department and the city Library are
to ·meet with public relations council
Tuesday night to map campaign
r.trategy.
The civic leaders invited to date to
serve on the committee are to decide
at the 7:30 p.m. meeting whether to
hire a professional public relations
consultant or to do the job themselves.
The bond elections are to be placed
on the November general election
ballot.
pound.log the shore along tile Orange
County coastline .about 5:30 p.rn.
The U.S. Coast Guard s&id it had no
information on offshore storms that
possibly could be held responsible fo r
the 10 to 15 foot waves.
Reported one Newport. B e a c h
lifeguard, "It's higher this morning
than it was yesterday al this time, so
we're e:r:pectine it to &et worse right
through the day." .-
The rescues m: Dana Harbor h
made by two Saa C-lifeguards
on boat patrol: by two Orange County
ff-arbor District patrolmen and by two
small private boats.
"The pairol boats got a lot of spray
like being in a rain storm," according
to San Clemente lifeguards.
"But it was more of a spectacular
thing than anything dangerous for the
men in the boots. There wa very little
surge in the Jee of the breakwater,"
the iUard• sald.
Soutl1east Beach
Reside11ts Due
Post Office Soon
A post office to serve residents. of
southeast HWJtington Beach moved a
step closer to reality today.
Rep. Richard T. Hanna ( D.
\Vestminster) 1aid the Post Office
Department had approved the facility,
along with a new main post office for
Seal Beach, and has sent the recom-
meodation to Senate and House Public
Works Committees.
Huntington Beach Postmaster Pete
DiFabio said the new sub-station
would be located in the area near
Adams Avenue and Magnolia street. It
would bring to six the nwnber of post
offices in the city, he said.
The new main post office for Seal
Beach is to be located on the north
side of Westminster Avenue, west of
Bay Boulevard.
The post Office package also in·
eludes a sub-station for Cypress,
Congressman Hanna announced. Ir Congress approves the package,
construction of the new facilities is to
be completed in the fall Of 1969.
Land and construction costs Jre
estimated ae $510,721 under the Post
OffJ'ce's lease construction program,
with the federal government paying
$40,480 in rental for a 20-year period.
"Since last night's b u 11 et in "
numerous episodes of ventricular ir-
regularity have occurred, most of only
a few seconds duration but tv.·o re·
quiring electrical conversion.
"Despite this, tO:le general remains
alert, converses briefly, and enjoyed a
small breakfast. He vi sited briefly
from time to time by members oC the
immediate family, at his request.
"Mrs. Eisenhower has remained
calm during these past trying days,
and has recei;ved comfort and support
from her sister, Mrs. Gordon Moore,
who together with Col. J oh n
Eisenhower and his family have been
constantly witti. her."
The doctP{'s said Eisenhower bas
received. "inhwnerable messages of
support from individuals in all walks
of life" since he suffered. his seventh
heart attack ~ast Friday.•
Dr. Milton Eisenhower, the ·fonner
president's brotiber, has visited Mrs.
Eisenhower on several occa!ioos, they
said.
ln a Sunday night bulletin, the doc·
tors reported failure of the electrical
pacemaker; which was threaded
directly into the patient's heart by
way 0£ ·a vein, to relieve the spasms.
It was the lategt of several efforts
made to halt the irregular rhythms
.since the .77-year-old general suffered
his latest: attack. .• _ -.l,
$6,500 Fil'e Guts
Early-day Home
In Westminster
A '6,500 lire gutted one of the oldest
homes in West.minster Saturday, fire
officials said today.
The 2:30 p.m. blaze, which totally
destroyed the 75-year-old home "for
all practical purposes," said
Westminster Fire Chief Mel Ingram.
threatened the life of its owner's six·
month-old child.
Ingram said the fire started in the
qe<troom 0£ the home, .at 7412 Main,
where the baby was lying. Mr5.
George Sepeda discovered the fire and
took her child out ol the burning
house. There Were no injuries.
Damage to the house was estimated
at $5,000 and its burned contents were
valued at $1 ,500. Ingram :;;aid the
cause of the fire is stlU under in·
vestigalion.
T AMIY ASU NAMED
SOUTH CAPTAIN
Mike Tamiyasu ot Marina High and
enc Patton from Mater Del were
elected co-captains for the Sooith foot·
ball team which will vie In the ninth
aMual Orange County All.Star classic
'Thursday night at Orange Coast Col·
Jege.
Tamlyasu ls quart.erbeck for coach
Jlm Coon's Rebels while Patton, bound
for Notre Dame this fall , ls a line·
backer.
MONDAY, AU~_UST 19, ·1969
otto
'
UPI Tt ..... t.
Rub·A·Dtt'1 l'~ ~ ' I ' ·~ '
·' -Oise jockey Gary SCbaHer """" happily fll>m'Dlottn1•ed bathtub
in Jlli~dl• of San Francisco Bay. Smile la!Jr IUr!IJd to fr/nl!n ~
S<!halfet lost bet with co-worker that he could malle It across bay
in unusual craft. Bathtub sank 20 yards from goal.
AutopsyOrdered in Crash
Which Iillled 3 Countians
Autopsy reports today are being
completed in an attempt to help ex·
plain i Saturday plane era.sh at
Monterey ·which killed three Orange
County residents. i n c I u din g a
Westminster physician.
Dead are Dr. Milton Katz, 44. of
11161 Martha Ann Drive, Los
Alamitos. hi s neighbor, John R.
Record Rescues
' In Huntington's
'Su per-Sur f'
A record number of rescues were
logged by Huntington Beach lifeguards
over the weekend due to unusually
rough surf, and waves are bigger yet
today.
Huntington Beach city lifeguards.
who usually report about 30 rescues on
a typical Sunday, said they pulled 9.1
persons fr'om the raging surf this
weekend. The crest reached eight feet
in height Sunday and today they are
reported up to 15 feet.
At Huntington State and Bolsa Chica
St.ate beaches, which recorded a ten·
foot s-arf over the weekend, 48 persons
were pulled !rom tbe water by
Ufeguards.
Thompson, 48, of 11151 Ma.t'\ha Ann
Drive. Los Alamitos. and Mrs. Wilma
K. Wright, 55, of 13202 IIoover St.,
Westminster ..
Investigators said Thompson was
piloting a single engine Cessna 210 on
its approach to Monterey Peninsula
Airport Saturday afternoon when the
crafl appeared to gtall twice.
The plane clipped a tree and plunged
to earth in the heavily wooded region,
but did not burn on impact, according
·to the Monterey County Cwoner's of·
.!ice.
Mr~. Wright was hurled through a
window .and her body came to rest
outsl*-.t.he ·crumpled wreckage, whilo
Dr. KalZ and Thompson. were caught
in t.he wrecked plane.
All were dead at the scene.
Coroner's depu~e.s said the victims
were flying to Medford, Ore., in Uie
Cessna 210 owned by William C. Ulelt,
of Fullerton when the fat.al crash oc·
curred.
The bodies were taken to Cook
Mortuary in Monterey on Saturday for
autopsies and later transferred to
three different funeral homes in
Orange County for arrangements.
Seal Beach Due
To .Set Tax Rate
About 20 Huntington Beach and
Fountain V.alley leaders met last week
at the Ocean v;ew School District ad·
ministration offices to select a cam·
palgn chairman. Chairmen of the
library and recreation and park
boards, David Wkkersbam aod Tom
Cooper ,· were elected to serve as co--
chairmen of the drive.
Park Model Plea Renewed
Seal Beach city councilmen toolght
are expected to set the city's tax rate
at the same amount residents paid last
year.
The city mclnager's office today said
the Sl.35 per $100 valuation rate in ef·
f~t last year will be recommended
again this year.
The committee will meet again at
the Ocean View off.ices.
Doyle Miller
Returns to Desk
Huntington Beach City
Administrator Doyle Miller, away
from hil City Hall cleslt the put 90
d1y1 for a prescribed rest, ls back on
the Job today.
Miller left his job In June after he
suffered whal wa1 described a!I i mild
heart att.ack.
-~
Hu1itington Council Considers $500 Proj ect Tonight
Huntington Beach city councilmen,
who have previously turned down the
suggestion, tonight will consider a
recommendaUon for a th re e ..
dimensional model of t!l< future Con·
tral City Park.
Th< styroloam model, to be made
Jolnlly by cl<y penoonel and ..
..-chitectural fb'm 1 would sh ow
-aphy of the proposed pork a n d
its suggested uses.
Recreation and park commbsloner1
Wednesday night chose to recommend
th< 1 ... -budll"! model for council ap-
proval to use 1n U'Hllr campa.ia:nfor the
.~ •
S6 mllliom park bond proposal to be on
the Nov. 5 ballot.
City AdministraUve Aide John Cos·
teUo explained to commissi oners this
model would cost £bout $500, while
two othf:rs they could choose would go
.. high .. '6,800.
Councllman Jerry Matney has asked
C!Ouncll several times to approve a
similar model and color maps of the
Cmral City Park areo. Mayor Al eoea has wd he doesn't think th•
model 11 necessary.
'nle first 150 acres of the future 300·
acre Central City Parle Qre included In
the November bond elecUou.
1'hi5 ftrst phase would include ac·
quiring Lakes 11untingtcm and T&~bert
located near Golden West ind Talbert
Stteeta and Jand for the new library.
FacWUes to be Included at. th11 site
include pistol, rifle and archery
ranges, fishtng and picnlckinl areas,
flower gardens, tennis courts. and
baseball dlamoodJ and 1 blstorlcal
museum.
The remainder of the park sft.t, to be
acquJred within the next 10 yean, is to
be made Into brldle paths, a dog &how
arena. ttadlum and children's ioo, aou
course. 11wlm center. amphitbeater
and min;·blke rldin1 range.
" 'i
The council meets at 8 p.m. at the
Sell Beach City Halt
Suspects in Double
Murder Arrested
PORTLAND, Ore. <UPI) -Two
men were arrested today as suspects
Jn tbe 1layi.ng1 nearly e.laht yean ago
of Lorry Ralph Peyton, 19, of Portland,
and his girl friend, Beverly Ann Allan,
19, of Port Towi;u:end, Wash.
Held Without bail on two count.I each
of first degree murder were brothers
Cerl Frederick Jorgensen, 17. and
Edward Ralph Jora:ensen, 35, both of
Portland.
,. .
Dally Paper
,TEN CENTS
ea
Child Sees
Shootout;
Dad Critical
Simmering domesUc problems ap.
parently flared into a hysterical
husband-wife gun battle at a plush
Huntington H~bour home in Hun·
tington Beach Sunday night, leaving I
housewife dead and her spouse wound·
ed .
Police Who arrived at the Dr. John
L. Fenner home .at 4162 Trumbull
Drive, found a scene of horror, with a
little girl sobbing over her mother's
body and.her father with a bullet-shat·
tered pelvis. .
Dead is Mrs. Sylvia Fenner, 39.
struck by a single bullet in tbe heart
during an apparent gun fight in which
her estranged husband. a non·JWM'
ticing physiclc:in, apparently. tried to
defend himself.
"It looks like attempted murder ud
a kill·in--self-defense c~se," said Capt.
Earle Robitaille after detec~ves·pl.0-
ed together bits of fact, rumor aoi
hearsay from neighbors of •the Fen·
ners.
He minimized the Possibility of 1
murder-suicide case.
Preliminary information lhdioale1
that Mrs. 1''enner apparently trJed to
kill Dr. Fenner, who is in critical con·
dition at HunUngton Ititercommunity
Hospital today, with at least tbrea
gunshot wounds.
Nei~bors said they were alerted to
lro<IJ>le SW111ay night wboR lhet beard
Mti. Fenner streamipl,
"I C8Jl't go on DvJnc likO' this clay
alter day after clay," they quoted bet
a.s saylng, according to police.
Shots believed to have been Gr9ll
fr om & hunting ritle then 1balie.red ibe
evening calm Jn the cana.Lslde1tei'Jdns
tiaJ district.
"No. no. no. pleasi-," ·crJea ·a·
hysterical voice later identified as that
of Dr. Fenner.
Pol.ice theorized that the wounded
physician was able to wrestJe the rifle
away from Ns distraught w:lfe. w1lo
(See SHOOTOUT, Pqe %) .
~untington Tax
Levy Boost Seen
1st in 8 Y eal's
Councilmen likely will set the 1~
tax rate for Huntington Beach today
and chances are gOOd th&t the rate
will go up for the first time in eight
years. ·
Asse.ssed valuation figures received
by the finance department today sho'v
the city's assessed valuation at .a total
of $284.3 million, up about $11 mi.11.ion
from the $273.f oC last year.
Councilmen meet at 4:30 p.m. In
council chambers of Memorial Hall,
5th Street and Pecan Avenue.
The city has been operated on a tax
rate of $1.33 per $100 assessed valua·
lion for the past eight years, but the
council has already apprOved a spen·
ding package which will call for an In·
crease or at least 4 cents per $100 AV.
If the council decides to increase the
rate for recreation the total tu. rate
could go to at least $1.44.
Orange
Weatlter
If you're looking for a
change, forget it, advises the
weatherman, who's offering up
the same old package of morn.
ing clouds llDd 1unny aJternoons
with mid·70 . temperatures for
Tuesday.
I NSIDE TODAY
"AcopuLco weatller1' prtvail.t
in Ntwpor& Beach 111 th• Olvm·
pie !l•<hting •rial& opn tcflh 17
top rklpptn competing in the
fint race. S1t Boallng, 1'Qfl< 24. ...... ..
C.llJiWll'-I (....,.... ..,. ._.. " -" DMlll...... 11 -.. 1.i"'111 ,... JI
lllter'l•""""9t 11 ...... 1 .. 1,
f'lf't C•lfll 11 "-ttK-1J A1111 L_,.,. lJ
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.._ DAJlY •llOT
lA11taeJaes Campaign
l 4
Nixon Offers Aid
To All Candidates
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. {AP)
Rldlord 111. NIJ.on, plunging lnlo the
f1rlt natlollal tour o! hLs presldenli>l
campaign, h a 1 offered h l ' en ..
doratment to all Republican c&n-
d!c!Mel.
ll1ll tho GOP pre1ldentlal candidate
edd.t at tbe 1une time tblt he wm
·-Ille wilbo< ol Republican ol-flce seekers who may want to atand
1.part., separating their campaigns
from hl.s. Nixoa outlined hlis approa.ch to the
old problem <JI national cand161tes
trying to get alooc with local onec In a
briefing wt.th newsmen in San Diego
Sunday. After talking at length about
campaign problems Nixon left on 41.
three-day tour Of ll.linOis, Ohio,
Michigan and New York.
The first stop wu Springfield. Ill.,
capital cl a rtate he loet namrwly
when be ran for president eight years
ago.
"We're going to campaign llllnois
like Jt'11 never been campaigned
before," he told about 1,~ people who
were waiting for him at the Spring-
field airport Sunday night.
"We're going to carry lllinoil and
we're going to carry 1tle nation," he
laid.
The object of Ille trip ii two-foldo to
m e e t with IOllll o( the party'• b i g
st.Ate governors and to test the reac-
tion of GOP workers to bi1 efforts in
the put weet to unify Republicans
beblnd IN cendidacy.
The key rovernon be plam to visit
are Ge«ae Romney of Midligan, Ray·
mond P. Shafer of PeMtylvania,
James A. Rhodes o! Ohio a® Nelaon
A. Rockefeller of New York, who was
Nixon'• top challenger for the nomina·
tion.
Nlxon'a decilion to endorse all
RepublicBll• *king office but to
rupect the fact IOIDe may want to go
it alone recalll the ~terns Barry
Goldwater, the party 1 1964 presiden·
ti.al nominee, faced. = candldates in urban states
av Goldwater because they
be he would burt them in their
own races.
In wtndinl up bil stay at the San
Oieeo v1c1Uon campaign head·
quarters, Nixon praised the record Of
bis t11Mlng mAte, Gov. Spiro T. Agnew
~f Maryland, in band.Ung problems of
big cities and said: "U anything hap·
pened to the prMi.dent I would feel ex-
tremely C<lllfident that he could take
over •.. " Asked about Agnew'1 knowledge of
foreign policy matter a, Nixon said:
"No man wbo i• 1elected for tbe posi-
tion ol vice president oC the United
Ste.tel h going to be an e x p e r t in
every area.
"Gov. Agnew is not one who has had
great experience in foreign affairs.
Countian Knifed
At Dance Hall;
Suspect Held
A Stanton man ls in fair condition at
Orana:e County Medloal Center today
with a knife wound in the stomach, the
apparent aftennath of a revenge at-
tack outlld.e a dance hall Saturday
nighl
Marion. C. Mend<>u, 41, was . .at·
tacbd a1 he left the dance ball puk-
ing lDt at Chester .aDd Flower streets,
according to Stanton police. ·
Richard Mugica, 21, also of Stanton,
was jailed on 1uspiclon of assault with
intent to commit murder after the at·
tack.
lnvestigator1 1a.ld Mugica cried out
to Mendoza, lunged at him and the
victim crumpled to the pavement,
moanlni with a stab wound In the ab-
domen.
OAllY PllO I
However, what he ba.s is gomeU\lng
villi. Ile has a balance o! Judlllllen~
He bas the fine intellect to learn very
fast.''
Allied Troops
Smash Huge
Red Offensive
SAIGON (UPI) -AWed troops to-
day ll!llUhed the blggeot Communist
offenglve of tbe 1ummer, kllllna more
th"'1 500 Viet Cong and North Viet-
namese !'and driving Ulousandl more
back into the Cambodian border area
jungles northwegt of Saigon.
Ju.st 18 miles aouth of the capital,
U.S. infantrymen caught hundreds of
Viet Cong troops in rich farmland
and killed at least 73 In fighting which
began Sunday and resumed early to-
day. Up to 10 U.S. comapnles, between
I.500 to 2,000 men of the 1st Brigade,
9th Infantry Dlvilloo, were dropped
inW the battle area.
Of the 300 troops of the 5th Viet
Cong Battalion, 73 were known dead,
20 were captured and 15 others sur·
rendered under the Ch.leu Ho! (open
arms) program by nightfall Sunday.
U.S. spokesman sald thousands of
Communistl sprang from lairs along
the Cambodian border and struck at
least 15 major targets 50 to 70 m.lles
northwest ~of Saigon Sunday.
American and South Vietnamese
troops aldN by U.S. tanks, armored
personnel carriers, h e 11 copter
gunships and planes threw back every
attack.
UPI Correspondent Alvin B. Webb
Jr., reporting from the provincial
capital of Tay Ninh, which took the
main a1sault, saJd the aillt• cleared
the streeta of CommunJsta In eight
hours. ·
He 11ald the retre&tin& Communiatl
burned at least 400 home• in a hall
mile section of the southeastern cor·
ner of the city CJf 80,000.
Webb &aid that by late today the
Communists were trying to find
hideouts in the rubber plantations four
miles from . Tay Ninh, which lies in
War Zone C, once one of the ma.ia Viet
Cong sanctuarle.s in this country.
The CommunJlt weekend CJfien1Jve
did not match in size nor scope the
February Tet or May offensives.
Military ob6ervers said they doubted It
was the major Red offensive that
allied intelligence had predicted was
coming this monlh, in September or
OCtober. It poised no major threat to
Saigon.
But the attacks northwest of Saigon,
plus Communist activity in the
Mekong Delta, in the Cent r a I
Highlands a n d in th e northern pro-
vinces ended a comparative low point
in combat in Sooth Vleblam. "The lull
is ended," a U.S. military spokesman
·aa!d.
Stanford Names
Pitzer President
STANFORD (UPI) -Stanford
University today named Dr. Kenneth
S. Pitzer, 54., a nationally prominent
chemist, as lt1 new president.
Pitzer's selection was announced by
the board of trustees and ends a 17·
month search for a successor to Dr. J.
Wallace Sterling, 62, who is retiMng.
Pitier has been president of Rice
University, llouston, Tei:., since 1961
and will asswne his new duties Dtc. 11 the university said.
Swedish
UPI Tt'-"""
Viet l'a.,es
Their faces full of appreben·
sion, two Vietnamese children
wait to see doctor during visit
by team from Medical Civil
Action Program to Tay Ninh.
Medical teams, in this case
from 25th Infantry Division,
visit towns to provide medicaJ
services for South Vietnamese
people.
From Page 1
SHOOTOUT. • •
then grabbed a .357 magnum pistol
and bl.uted him one more time with
the powerful weapon.
Dr. Fenner, hit at least three tlmes,
then apparently killed his wife w1tb
one shot from the rifle.
Robthallle 11aid Dr. FeMer's pel\'is
was smashed by the bullets, but It was
al most impossible to determine imme-
diately how many Umes he was hit.
"He's torn up badly," Robitaille
said.
Despite the trauma of shock and in-
juries, Dr. Fenner was conscious when
police arrived and helped t.o diagonose
the extent of hls critical injuries.
For Mrs. Fenner. it wa.s too late.
The couple's daughter Nyle , 3,
crouched over her dead mother, sob·
bing uncontrollOOly.
The Fenners, who moved to Hun·
tington llarbour one year ago front
Fairbanks, Alaska, had a one·year·old
boy, Kiel
A1lo in the house when the tragic
gunplay blazed was Miss Maria
Martin, 24, a live-in maid and Mex.ican
national, who fie<I in hysteria to a
neighbor's home.
Miss Martin ran to the next door
residence of Mr. and Mrs. James M.
Keefe, where she fainted in the en·
trance hallway, police said.
Arsonists Bla1ned
For Ceramic Fire
LONG BEACH -Authorities today
said arsonists may have set the fire
at the Select Tile Co., which did an
estin\ated -$10,000 ·damage and com·
pletely destroyed the manufacturing
building Sunday.
Two firemen suffered minor injuries
battling the blaze, the second fire in
four months at the ceramics manufac·
twing plant.
Summer
............... c.lthn ..
CftAtlGI COAST PVtLISHINQ tOW'ANY
1'•litrt N. w •• J ,,.14111'11.,.... ,vbll'11«
Mesa Coed Tells of Experiences
J.,k 1'. C111l:r Viet Pr9111*N trtd co-MINtlf
'Tlt•"''' k ... 11 Editor
Tlie111•1 A. Mur,hin•
Mtn11ln• Edlior
.Al~frt W. l1t•1 Willi•"' a:.,,
J'M«l•ltl HUt1!111tfl)ll lfftll
EdilOI" CJly Edit« """ __ _
lOt Ith Str••t
M•m.. Aldr•••i r.o. I n 790 t2MI --""""" lmdlr am w.i .. ._ ..,.,.rd c.11• M9f,J 2a Wtlt lay Rtftt '---~ in ,_, llYalllt
' "You haven't lived until you've seen
a Japa~e movie with Swedish sub·
titles," 17-year~la Sandy Laufer
writes from her summer stay in
Sweden as an American Abroad
repr-esenting the Costa Mesa Chapter
of the American Field Service .
Selected last March as an AFS
finalist from COsta Mesa High School.
Sandy learned in June that a family
had been found for her summer visit.
Her new father would be a railroad
mM, her mother " housewife. her
slJ:ter a teen..ager named Birgitta.
A sign lettered, "\Yelcome Sandy to
the Bogren family" was her greeting
when she arrived in Vannas, Sweden.
Since then she has been keeping her
friends Posted with a series of colorful
aC'COunts of her adventures.
"ltave you ever trl~d 1leeplng with
the sun streaming in your windCJw at 3
a.m. ?" ahe writes. "1 keep waking up
and thinkina it muat be noon."
Except foe the ''blp aoup" which Is
very &Wfft, and "smelly flab" (a llt·
eral translation}, Sandy 1ay1 1be
fiDcll Sviedlsb food much too attrac·
Uve.
"I lr1 to work It o(f swhnmlng. thou.Pi'' 1he write•. "When I
deUvend my letitr from the mayor of
Cocta Mesa to the mayor of Vannas,
he gave me a tree ptilltt 10 the town
swimming pool for the sumr, so wt
'
spend a lot o! time there."
A trip to the summer home of an
uncle, aunt and cousins in Lapland
found reindeer visiting daily. The
trees along the road, she found, were
reminiscent of scenes in ' ' D r ,
Zhivago."
"Papa put nets out in the lake
overnight and next morning we had
about 20 fi sh. Mama cleaned them and
1 got lo wash them orf in the lake. \Ve
smoked most of them and had some
for breakfast."
Television, with one channel broad·
casting from 6 p.m. to midnight Is a
favorite family diversion . w l th
American programs like "The Virgi·
nlan," "Mission Impossible" and
··1~1gh ~parral," au presented in
EngliJb with Swedish subtitles.
Thi3. Sandy notes. is rortunale,
because her progress with the Swedish
langu&&• has httn palnlul. She
describes it briefly as, "murder" and
adds, "Spanish Ls much easier. I think
I'd beltM go back to thal"
Sandy will be flying home at the ond
cl the month to her Colt.a Mesa borne
at 1340 Garlngford and the beginning
oi her senior year at Costa Mesa Hlgh
School. The secood phase of her llle as
Jn AFS reprtsentaUve wUJ include a
s~rles of illustrated talks to acbools
and clubs on her J>'TSODal experlencts
as a teenage member of " S"edish
famlly.
McCarthy Stands· Pat
Won't Compromise on Vietnam Platform
CHICAGO (AP) -Prellminary
sparrlng f,1lr next week's Democratic
NaUonal ConvenUon apencd today with
Sen. Eugene J . McCarthy's campaign
manager rejectlng a compromise
Vietnam platform plank while the
credentials committee sought 10 settle
a key civil right.s fight.
nam. to Southeast Asia," the vice president
Lold some 500 members or Ute
Brotherhood of Railway and Airline
, Clerks.
As the platform committee hearings
opened In Washington, educator Clark
Kerr, head oi the National Committee
for a PoliUctl Settlement in Viet.nam,
\ll"ged 1\lcCarthy to drop hil demand
for a coalition govemment In South
Vietnam and asked Vice President
Hubert H. Humphrey to agree to a
total halt in bombing of North Viet·
* * * Dems Debate
Viet Policies
For Platform
WASHINGTON (UPI) -McCarthy
and Humphrey backers debated Vlet·
nam policy before the Democratic
Platform Committee today in a
prelude to what appeared to be shap·
ing up as a major convention noor
fight over the Issue.
Roger Hilsman, a fonner assistant
secretary of state and chief foreign
policy adviser to Eugene J. McCarthy,
said the United States should in effect
declare a cease-fire by halting the
bombing of North Vletnam and ending
offensive operations in the south.
He acknowledged that 1uch a plan
was a gomble and the CommwW:ts
might try to "take advantage of our
restraint," but said that political
pressures from neutral nations and
from within the Communist bloc "are
likely to make their escalation tern·
porary.''
"In the circumstances lt seems ob-
vious tbat some such gamble must be
made," llilsman said. "Short of an in·
vaslon of North Vietnam, which would
only bring on a Chinese intervention
and run an unacceptable risk of
•tarting World War Ill .•. military
pressures will only impede tbe Paris
negotiatlons.''
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie CD·Maine),
a key supporter, of Vice President
J-[ubert H. Humphrey, sald a bomb-
ing halt as a test of North Vietnamese
intentions "may be justified" at this
time', but the decision should be left to
the president who can weigh the risks
to U.S. troops.
Ninth Suspect
Faces Tax Rap
One of nine men indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury in an in-
heritance tax fraud case, was ar-
raigned before Superior Judge Rob-
ert Gardner Friday and immediately
moved for dismissal of the charges
against him.
Lyman Garber of Beverly Hills is
one of three defendants in the con-
spiracy case brought before the bench
so far. Last Friday two others had
their arraignment set for Aug. 30.
Garber will know the results of
his dismissal plea before that time.
He Is to appear Aug. 28.
The men are accused of making
false representations to individuals
about .avoiding inheritance taxes in
setting up certain forms of trusts
and foundations.
They are accused of obtaining about
S'l0,000 from Orange County residents
in the scheme.
But Blair Clark, McCarthy's cam-
f.aign manager, called Kerr's propo1n1
'thoroughly inadequate -it 11 ju1t not
good enough." The McCarthy force a
have made clear they will press for a
floor figbt unless they are successful
in the plaUorm group.
Meanwhile, Humphrey, in this con·
vention city for a round of speeches
and interviews, pledged i! elected he
will do everything he can to end the
war.
"lf t am permitted to become i:real·
dent and if by then there 11 no peace
or cease fire I will do everything in
my power, with honor, to bring peace
The credentials group m e t
me~while, ln closed ae11ion prior to
opening its pu1)llc hearings with the
Mississippi challenge, where the
regular party group is being contested
by a biracial delegation supported by
both Humphrey and McCarthy.
The Mils.issippi case is expected to
be settled faster \baa the 18 other
challenges, which Involve various
i!sues Of racial discrimination, pll'ty
loyalty and the way iD which delegates
and alternates could be aUecte<I.
* * * * * * Chi~ago Boggled
Strikes, Protests, Weather Unruly
CHICAGO CUP!) -Waiting for the
Democratic Nation a I Convention,
Chicago tried to keep its cool today. It
was not easy.
It was bad enough that all but 1,000
Of !Jhe city's 4,300 taxis were sidelined
by a strike; bad enough that the bus
and el train drivers may be on strike
within a week; bad enough that the
same sbiking telephone installers who
have snarled convent lo n com·
munications are also d e n y I n g
ODcagoans new telephones.
But now, a breed of young folks who
called themselves .ylppies are filtering
into old town, Chicago's citadel of the
hippie sub-culture. They claim to be
the vanguard of bearded bands of
thousands who will camp out In Lin·
coin Park for a "festival of life"
beginning with the start of the con·
vention Aug. 26.
If that were the least of Chicago's
worries, the city would feel home free .
There are the black militants and
Vietnam protesters who plan to raise
all possible cain outside the ln·
ternational Amphitheater convention
site. ·
There is the knowledge ht the
standby presence of sOo National
Guardsmen in Chicago armories on
every night of t.he CQJlventioo is
designed to guard agairut disorders
far more serious thail this.
If that were not bad enough, a four·
inch rain doused Chicago Friday tftld
Saturday and city officials were fore·
ed to reverse the locks and left the Chi·
cago River flow into Lake Mlchigfll'I.
With a heat wave coming on
Chicago's beaches were closed Satur:
day for the first time within memory
because ol water pollutioo and baraas..
ed parents were no longer able to
solve their problems. with a time-
honored (hicago order to go jump In
the lake.
Even to Chicago, the pro of con-
vention cities, it seemed a little too
much.
A girl in a store in old town granted
that the Democratic conveattoo W\'.lUld
be "good for business."
"But I'd just as soo n it was in
Miami,'' she said. ''I think Ulere's
going to be trouble. I'm not going
do'Nll'bown all week."
Playhouse Theft Suspect
Loses Plea for Bail Cut
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of ?"41 DfllY Pli.t ltefl
Frazier Smith, suspected of net.ing
with $9,475 drawn on forged Laguna
Players checks, lost an appeal today
for reduction of $10,000 baU.
Appearing in Laguna Be a ch
Municipal Court this morning, Smith
complained that the ball is prohibitive
and asked that it be lowered.
Judge Richard Hamilton refused
and ordered Smith to return 1'Tiday
for preliminary hearing on three
counts of forgery.
Smith did not enter a plea at today's
arrmgnment proceeding.
He was told a public defender will be
appointed to represent him after
answering "no" to Judge Hamilton's
questions asking if he has any income
or any assets.
Smith. tall and distinguished, wore a
blue suit coat, dark gray sla'Cks and
white shlrt open at the neck with no
tie. He looked composed .
Only as he turned to talk !rom the
bench after his request for e lower
bail was denied did he show any emo-
tion. He scowled slightly. Through the
rest Of the proceedings he maintained
a dead pan expression.
To Smith's complaint that $10,000
bail is prohiblUve, the judge replied:
"That's what it's intended to be. Sin·
ce !be alleged crime was commtited
here and since you had to be taken in·
to custody In New York, it ls the
court's inclination to keep tbe high
bail. I have to assume that If you do it
(Oee) in one case you will do It again."
Smith remarked tbat by walver Of
extradition "I hoped to indicate my
willingness to come back."
"{ can think of another reHon for
waiving extNlditlon," Judge Smith
said. "It makes the tot.al time In
custody less. In other words "your ex-
planation does not make too much
sense to me."
Following his court appearance,
Smith was returned to custody at
Orange County Jail.
He originally was admitted into
Laguna City Jail, but was transferred
to Orange County Jail Friday night
because Laguna police do not have a
full time jailer.
Smith, 41, was arrested in New York
last Tuesday on a Federal Bureau of
Investigation warrant for flight to
avoid prosecution.
He was building fund chainnan for
Laguna-Moulton Playhouse 'When he
disappeared in January. A total o[
$9,475 was eventually discovered
drawn from the bank on forged con·
tribution checks.
The district attorney issued com-
plaints on three of the first four
checks discovered. Playhouse Presi-
dent George Gade, however, 1aid
more than 20 checks were forged.
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Today's Closing
EDITl·ON N.Y. Stoe!ks
VOL ir, NO. 199, l SECTIONS, lO PAGES rA~U_NA BEACH, CALIFORNIA MONDAY; 'AUGU ST ·19, 196• TEN CENTS
Surf Sweeps 20 Off Dana Point Breakwater
By BRUCE BENSON
Of ... Diii¥' ,lllt llaft
R.Wng, wild waves &urged over the
Dana Point Harbor main breakwater
again this morning, threatening .to
surpass the intensity of combers
which swept 20 people off tbe
breakwater and into the harbor Sun-
day at dusk.
Seven persons were slammed into
the harbor at 5:30 p.m. Sunday and
were taken to South Coast ())mm.unity
en.
Hospital, South Laguna. They were
later reported l.a 1atisfactory condition
with. assorted injuries.
Miraculously, there were apparenUy
no fatalities fl"Om the sudden upsurge
of the ocean. As of noon today, ()f·
ficials said, no peorsons had been
reported missing.
Meanwhile. San Clemente lifeguards
patrolling Dana llarbor today said
they sealed olf the breakwater at 10
a.m. to prevent a repeat performance
•
ol Sunday evening's spectacular mass
dunlting.
"The surf out there ls incres.slng at
this time," said lifeguard Captain
Phillip Stubbs.
''There's a handful or people at the
end of the breakwater, and we've
dispatched a patrol boat to take them
off." Stubbs said the people would be
ta.ken aboard the vessel if surf made it
impossible for them to walk back to
shore. He said the people were in no
Immediate danger, but were being
asked to leave tbe breakwater as a
precautiooaty .measure.
The cause of the craehin« surf is ,
still witnown. Heavy ccmbers began
pounding the SbOre along tile Orange
County coastline .about 5:30 p.m.
The· U.S. Coast, Guard idd it bad no
information on oUsbore stonns that
possibly could be held responsible for
the 10 to 15 foot waves.
Rej>Ol'led . Oil• Newport B • I ell
1sen ow er
lifeguard, "It's higher thls morning
than it was yesterday at this time, so
we're expecting it to get worse right
through the day."
'nl:e rescues at Dana Harbor were
made by two San Clemente lifeguards
on boat patrol: by two -Orange County
Harbor District patrolmen and by:, two
small private boats.
"The patrol ~ got a lot ol sprey
like being 1n a rain storm," accordln.a
to San. Clemente. lif•ruard<·
a
By Phil lnterlondl
Bail Upsets Smith
Theft Suspect Loses Plea for Reduction
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of the O.Uy Pl•I Slaff
Frazier Smith, suspected of fleeing
with $9,475 drawn on forged Laguna
Players checks, Jost an appeal today
tor reduction of $10,000 bail
Appearing in Laguna B e a c h
Municipal Court this morning, Smith
complained that the bail is prohibitive
and asked that it be lowered.
Judge Richard Hamilton refused
and ordered Smith to return Friday
for preliminary bearing on• three
counts o( forgery.
Smith did not enter a plea at today's
arraignment proceeding.
lie was told a public defender will be
appointed to represent him alter
answering "no" lo Judge Hamilton's
questions asking it be has any income
or any assets.
Smith. tall and distinguished, wore a
blue suit coat, dark gray slacks and
white shirt open at the neck with no
tie. He Jooked composed.
Only as he turned to talk rrom the
bench after his request for, a lower
bail was denied did he show any emo-
tion. He scowled slightly. Through the
rest Of the proceedings he maintained
a dead pan expression.
To Smith's complaint that $10,00J
bail is prohibitive, the judge replied:
Rites Conducted
For Novelis t
Robert Leit{red
Services were held today tor Robert
H. Leitfred, 78, an author of mystery
novels, sbOl"t stories and scripts for
"The Green Hornet," and "The
Shadow" radio series.
A resident of Laguna Beach {or 38
years. Mr. Leitfred's novels include.
"Death Cancels the Evidence," "A
Corpse that Spoke," and 1 • A
Night!reigbt Murck<."
The World War I veteran was a
member of the local American Legion
Post and an honorary deacon of the
Neighborhood Congregational Church
here. '
Services were held at t h e
Neighborhood Congregational Church
with the Rev. Ellsworth Richardson of·
ficiating. Private interment was to
follow at Pacific View Memorial Park
in Corona del Mar.
Mr. Leitlred is survived by his
widow, Mildred, of the family borne.
5().1 Brooks SL ; a niece, Mn. Jane
Westbrook of Laguna Beach: and
several nieces and nephews or New
York.
Building Ahead
Of 1967 Pace
Building J> er m It valuation In
Laguna Beach is running ap-
proximately $2 million ahead ol. 1967.
Clyde Z. Springe. city building and
plaMing director, said total valuation
o! permit& issued through July was
$3,529,982 compared ro ,IS,552.837 dut·
ing tbe firrt seven months of. 1967.
PC!'MiliU for new construcUon in July
had an aggregate value of $941.125,
Springe said, compared with '386.TlJ
tor the same month last year.
Tlie July pcnnlts include a fl64.~1S
ptnnit for eonstrocUon Of the Laguna-
~1oultori 'Playl>ouse.
"That's what it's intended to be. Sin-
ce the alleged crime was commtited
here and since you had to be taken in-
to custody in New York, it is the
court's inclination to keep the high
bail. I have to assume that if you do it
(flee) in one case you will do it again."
Smith remarked that {JY waiver of
extradition "I hoped to indicate my
willingness to come back."
"I .can think of another reason for
waiving extradition," Judge Smith
TAMIYA SU NA MED
SOUTH CA PTAIN
Mike Tamiyasu of Marina High and
Eric Patton from Mater Dei were
elected co-captains for the South foot-
ball team which will vie in the ninth
annual Orange County All"5tar classic
Thursday night at Orange Coast Col·
lege.
Tamiyasu is quarterback for coach
Jim Coon's Rebels while Patton, bound
. for Notre Dame this !all, is a line-
. backer.
Police Continue
T een Clampdown
With 38 A rrests
Laguna Beach police continued their
campaign of clamping down on the
city's younger element, known as hJp.
pies, over the weekend.
Thirty-eight arrests were made for
offenses ge'.nerally associated with
youlh.
The box score:
Sitting on or ot.herwise bloekln-g the
s.idewalk -8.
Sleeping in a vehicle -8.
Sleeping on the beach or in other
public place -7.
Lack of parental COlltrol -5.
Minor in possession of alcohol -4.
Illegal lilichhiking -2.
Curfew -2.
Absent without leave (AWOL) from
Army -I.
said. ''It makes the total time in
custody less. In other words your ex·
plana.tion does not make too much
sense to me."
Following his court apj>earance.
Smith was returned to custody at
Orange County Jail.
I-le originally was admitted into
Laguna City Jail, but was transferred
to Orange County Jail Friday night
be~ause Laguna police do not have a
full time jailer.
100 Rescued
In Laguna as
Surf Mounts
Extremely heavy surf greeted 9,000
beachgoers in Laguna Beach Sunday,
resulting in more than 100 rescues.
''Ifs just as big today." said
Lifeguard Lt. Eugene De Paulis.
Surf reached six to eight feet Sun-
day. A great number o( riptides added
to the dangerous situation.
While there were 106 rescues Sun·
day, it was not a record for Laguna,
according to De Paulis.
The 7,00> beachgoers Saturday en-•
joyed lighter surf. There were only
four rescues Saturday.
San Clemente lifeguards rescued 200
Sunday in high surf. Lt. Marty Stately
reported that surf was in · excess of
eight feet. About 23,000 persons visited
city and county beaches in the San
Clemente area.
Saturday's crowd numbered 13,400,
with only seven rescues in three to
four foot surf. There were no riptides
Saturday.
S t04'1c ltfarkeu
NEW YORK CAP) -The stock
market held a gain late this afternoon
in moderate trading. (See quotations.
Pages 18-19).
Gains outnumbered losses by more
than 200 issues on the New York Stock
Exchange. The Dow Jones industrial
average advanced more than a point.
. ' . ' "Now,. ltl'• SH ••• you want • ttnant who 11 stable, quiet, and d•
pen.able. Ar• you sure you'"r1 thinking· of the ~incl of person who
comes to Li19uni1?''
Huntington Mother Slain,
Mate Hurt in Shootout
Simmering domestic problems ap-
parently Oared into a hysterical
husband·wife gun battle at a plush
Huntington Harbour home i n Hun-
tington Beach Sunday night, le&ving a
housewife dead and her spouse wound· e;.
Police who arrived at the Dr. John
L. Fenner home at 4162 Trumbull
Drive, found a scene of horror, with a
little girl sobbing over her mother's
body and her father with a bullet-sbat4
tered pelvis.
Dead is Mrs.· Sylvia Feoner, 39,
struck by a 1ingle bullet in the heart
during an apparent gun fight in which
her estranged husband, a non·prac·
ticing physician, apparen,tly tried to
defend himseU.
"It looks like attempted murder and
a kill-in-sell-defense case," said Capt.
Earle Robitaille after detectives piec-
ed together bits of fact, rumor and
hearsay from neighbors of the Fen·
ners.
He minimized the possibility of a
murder-suicide case.
P.re,liminary information indicates
that Mrs. Fenner apparently tried to
kill Dr. FeMer, who is i~ critical con·
dition at Huntington lntercornmunity
l~ospital today, with at least three
gunsllot wounds.
Neighbors said they were alerted to
trouble Sunday night when they heard
Mrs. Fenner screaming.
"I can't go on living like this day
after day after day," they quoted her
as saying, according to police.
Shots believed to have been fired
from a bunting rifle then shattered the
evening calm in the canalBide residen-
tial district.
"No, no, no, please," cried a
hysterical voice later identified as that
of Dr. Fenner.
Pollce theorized that the wounded
physician was able to wr~sUe the riDe
away from his distraught wife, who
then grabbed a .357 magnum pistol
and blasted him one more time with
the powerful weaPon.
Dr. Fenner, bit at least three times,
then .apparently killed bis wife with
one shot from the rifle.
Helicopter Flights Resume
Robitaille said l>r. Fenner'! pel\1is
was smashed by the bullets, but !t \Vas
al most impossible to determine imme-
diately how many times he •'as bit.
''He '& tom up badly,'' Robitaille
•aid.
LA Airways R eopen Se rvi ce Wednesday A fter Cras h
87 JACK BROBACK
OI 1'1111 0.11' , .... St•ff
Los Angeles Airways' heUcopt.ers
wi!l be back in service \Vednesday,
:iarence Bellin, president of the
Birlines. said today in a special press
conference at an inn .1ear Ule Los
Angeles lnternaUonal Airport.
Bellin said the return of the rotary.
wing planes to service would be
gradual with 50 percent Of the flighl!I
expe<:ted to be in service by the
weekend. He 93id there were no plans
to scrip beUcopter s~rvice.
Bellin emphaslztd that there wai no •
dou.bt of the "integrity" o! the alrcrafl
and thett. wa5 no problem Involving
maintenance. He said the crB!ih into a
Compton playground last 1"hur$day ....
which killed 21 persons had no con·
nectJon with the first crash last May
22 which killed 23.
The airline executive 11aid informa·
tion on the c81lse or the second crash
-metal fatigue in the spri.ndle
assembly of the rotors -was raleased
whereas such information on tile tlrst
craft had not been because it was
much aim pier.
11Tbe last accident Md nothJng to do
with maintenaoce.'' Bellin sb'essed.
"1~ was IOIJW!'thlng all the experts,
government Investigators and
maintenance could not h a v e
prevented."
The exccuUve said his company's
maintenance gu.idcllnes were more
conservative than the military and
than government or factory re-
quirements. I-le said the craft were
disa,5embled every 1,200 hours.
Bellin said helicopter• were in the
air Sundcy flying without pa$sengers.
He said none of the company person·
nel had declined to tty in the craft.
"Aircraft put. into service WC(f:
nesday will all have new spll'ldle
assembUes," the executive said.
Bellin said ma1:1y persons in Orang~
County saw the planes Oyin& Sunday
and called in about lUg'.bt resumpUoo
schedules.
Ht said the cdmpany ha• pl1ins to augment h•lk:opler aerytce with Shon
Take Off ond Lanlllng (STOL) plillle!
bu~o date bas beeo 1et.
,.:
Bo ys Save Pair
At Victoria Be ach
Victoria Beach was the scene of a
double rescue this momJng, according
lo Laguna Beach liteguards.
T'wo 15 year olds , Mark ltoffart and
Ken Nelson, both of Hadenda lleights .
were in the .water When a large set of
waves came in creating a rip tide Ulat
began to pull the two out to sea.
Another duo of 15 year olds. Brian
Good'and 'Jett Benic of La Habra, 1aw
the two boy• lo the water and swam to
their rescue.
LUeu&arda sald the rescuers dlcf a
"greai Job.'• The boy• walled for the
set tO subside before pullill& the lit·
·cienda !'' trom the water.
------~------......• --........... ft ....... N .... ..-..:~ .... ..,.,. ft .• I ----~--·---.. ----~ ~~ --..... . . _ __,,
"But it was more of a spectacular
thing than anything dangerous for the
men in Ute boots .. There was very little·
surge in the '~e of tbe breakwater,''
the guards said •.
Harbor District Patrolman Harry
qage wa s an eyewitne.ss to the dramJ.
''We just come in from patrol
outside.0 he 1told tbe DAILY PILOT,·
''and had tied up to refuel the IXlat. We~
heard .the noise of the first.wave and
1s ... DAN.\ llAIUIOR,. Pal• =i
n
Remains
'Extremely
Critical'
WASHINGTON (AP) -Former
President Dwight D. Eisenhower re·
mains in "extremelY critical" condi·
tion and has suffered numerouj
episodes of il_Tegular beart actiorl
since Sunday oi.gbt, Army doctors re~
ported today.
Doctor1 at Walter Reed Army
ltospital said an elettrioal pacemaker,
inserted earlier into the heart of the
five•star general, "has been removed '
after it failed to stop the spasms.
The nfcurtrng irregular1Cies, doCf:Orr
said earlier, constitute a "coDstan(
and critical bazard" to Eisenhower's.
survival.
The text Of • morning medical·
~ulletin : '
"Genera!J=isenbower's coodition re·
mains extremely critical. Tile elec.
trical pacem·aker was removed late
yesterday because of its demonstrated
ineUectiveness after the initial few
hours.
"Since last night's b u 11 e tin ,
num<!rous episodes of ventricular .ir·
regularity have occurred, most o{ only
a few seconds duration but two re·
quiring e1ectrlcal conversion.
"Despite this, the general remains
alert, converses briefly, and enjoyed a
small breakfast. He visited briefly
from time to time by members of the
immediate family, at,bis request.
"Mrs. E.isenbower has remained
calm during these past trying days,.
and ·bas received comfort and suppnrt
from he'r sister, Mrs. G-Ordon Moore,
who together with Col. J o h n
Eisenhower a11d his famil)t have bee.ri
constantly with· her .. "
The doctors said Eisenhower has
received "innumerable. messages of
support from individuals in all walks
of life" since be suffered his seventh
heart attack last Friday.
Dr. Milton Eisenhower, the former
president's brother, bas vi.siled Mrs.
Eisenhiower on· several occasions, they·
said. •
In a Sunday night bulletin. the doo·
tors reported failure ol tbe electrical
pacemaker, whicb was threaded
directly into the · patieiit's heart by
way ot a Vein, to relieve the spasms.
It was Ule latest of several efforts
made to halt the irregular rhythms
since the 77-year-old general suffered
his latest attack.
Ora nge Cout
Weather
Il you're looking for a
change, forget it, advises the
weatherman. who's otferlng up
the same old package of morn-
ing clouds and sunny afternoon~
with mtd· 70 temperatures for
Tuesday.
INSIDE J'ODAY
"Acapulco weathtr" ,,Tevail.s
in Nawport Beach o.s tlle Olp
pie yachtfno trials ope-n with 1·1
top skfpptrt tompttfng U. Ote
firit race. Set Boating, Pag1 24.
...."" i• c1111w11i. 1 c:....... 1Mt
I OMl!lft ., c:...-. 11 DMtll fteillftt, lt -" t:lln.Nf ,._ • •"""1•..,,... 17
'""'-· 1t-lf -·,.. C.111 11
--II ... "
' '
I
•
2 DAllY PILOT
WAsHINGl'ON (UPI) -'nle family
of fanDlr Prt•LAnt l>wl&tlt D.
ElH/Jbowet maintained a v1gU near
-hi, bedside t4day hoping tllo general
WOWd. thaw aome alp of improvement
from his latest heart attack which doc·
ton have termed 1'cr1Ucal."
Tllo 1'"'1 hqurs ol waitlllg and tbe
Laguna's
.
Postmaster
Retiring
Eugene T. While, 71, Laguna Bead!
postmuter tor the past seven year1,
~tired today,
Don Role hoe been appoilMcl acting
postmane.r. Rose was working out of
the Cypress Post OUice.
The Laguna Poat Office has grown
considerably smce White tock office in
July, 1961. At that time. there were 46
employeS. N ow, there are 123. The
total reeelpts In 1961 were $250,000.
Now they stand at nearly fl million.
Tbe Le,guna Beach office also serves
Laguna Hllli.
Mr. and Mrs. White came to Laguna
Beach in 1950. White al<1ng with
several others organized the in·
dependent Bank of Laguna Beacb. He
served as executive vice president,
director and officer in charge until the
bank was sold to Security First Na·
tional Bank.
White was vice president and
treasurer ci the Lagtma Beach
Ch.amber of Commerce for a number
of year1. He has been a director of the
Laguna Beach Boys' Club since 1956,
is a pest president of the local Cancer
Society and is a member oi tbe Rotary
Club.
Mr. and Mrs. White have purchased
a home in Laguna Hills where they
have been living since January. 'Ibey
are planning a trip to the East cOl&St
early in Odol>er.
Marine Officer
To Head Laguna
GOP Group
Col Willi.am H. Roley, U.S. Marine
Corps (cet. ), bas been chosen to bead
the Leguna Beach Repubtican Oom·
mJttee for the coming year.
Roley accepted tbe post at a recent
meeting ol looal Republicnn> in the
Laguna Federal building. Ile succeeda
Gerald Pell.
Esther Lockway was named vice
president Pell will become treasurer
and Mrs. Sidney Hasbbir waa elected
secretary. James Hinkson and Charles
Mccalla will co-chair the financial
committee. Larry Taylor was named
publicity chairman.
The new president bas been a resi •
dent al Laguna Beoch since 1951 -n
his duties allowed. He entered Marine
aviation during World Warn.
His background includes work as a
policeman to earn his way through CQl·
lege. He also bas worked as an assis·
tant cashier and pbyed prafess!onal
basketball.
In accepting the post, Roley called
for enttru&iasm io the organiiatfon and
pledged support ta reorgaolu!Uon of
local yo1DI& Republicans Club.
~hreaten Strike
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Drinrs for
tbe Yellow cab Co., here Sunday re-
jected a coatract Offer and gave
negoUaton 11\ltil midnight Wednuday
to reach an agreeme11t or a strike will
be called.
DAI l V PILOT '---OAAHGI COAST PIJll)SHIHG COM,-ANY
R•ltm N. W••' ,.,........,,. ........
J1ck It c.r1.,.
Viet ,,.ldlnt 1111f ~ MMttsr
Tftom•• K1tYil
E411or
Tho""'• A. Murptil~•
,,,,..,,.,"" £41tor
Ricfi•N '· H•ll p,,1 Nl1t•11 u.... ~ ,lr,dYef'tltl"'
GI!)' EllllJtr Dlfw;hlf ,__ ......
222 f•rotf Aw,,
M•lnitt Mtlron1 r.o. lu ''' t2•s1 --Cll. .. ""-: JIO Wat • .., S"°"' Nft9CWf Mtdl: 1'H Weit .. ..._ ......,.,.. ......... -..ct1:•• ....
-------------------------------------------
MondlJ, ~IHl llJ, 1966
' FaDJily .!Maintains. ••• Anxious. .Vigil
tenslcll began to &h()W a.a John
Ellenbower, th•· 1eoerat'1 100, 1n1p.
ped at• report« Lut SUDclay nipt!
"Don't you forget, you can write
noUU., but wbat the bolpltal puts
out,,. he saJd responding to a question
to his wife, Barbara, about whether
Mrs. Mamie EilenJtower was i'bearing
up!*
Tbto, In m!lilary -Jarcoo for the
queollcm !lo you UDderttaod, be aabd
11lbeckf"
llarbarf. Eiw>bower, red eyed lad
sad, aoid, "She's doing all right, u and
added, in retereooe to her huaband:
• "Remember, people get vuy upset. 1•
Student Paints School
Tbl couple and a friend were dining at lbe Walter Reed Army llollpital of.
flcen club. Except for a few
reporen:, no one else in the room
recocnized them.
Mamie Eisenhower has not left the
fourth floor where her TT·year-old bus·
band !s llg1lting for his life.
Al.so, keeping the lights burning dur·
mg the night were Injured Viemom
war veterana, some of them &m•
puteea, who -• waltlq for the w.t medical bulleUns on the coodlUon of
the five·star 11nera1.
Barbara E1atnhower said all of, her
children spent Sunday at tbe hoopitaL
They are David, 20, Anne, 19, Susan,
l& and Mary Joan, 12.
Dav1d, who h engaged to Julle Nix·
on, daugl!ter d !he Republican Cf.1:•U11' clftdld•te, rtew to UiiJl1iton Saturday nlg111 to be near
his grandfatber'a bedsjde.
He ha1 always been G e n •
Eisebbower's pride and joy and is said
to be greatly Jnflueoced by him
poUUca!IY., • _
Launches Campaign
Nixon Offers Aid
ToAIICandidates
SPRINGFIELD , ItL (AP)
Ridrard M. Nixon, plunging into th e
first national tour of his presidential
campaign, h a s offered b i s en-
dorsement to all R.epub.Iican. can·
didates. ·
But the GOP presidential candidate
adds at the same time that be-will
respect the wishes of Republican of·
fice seekers who may Want to stand
apart, .separating their· campaigns
from his.
N~on outlined his approach to the
old problem of national candidates
trying to get along with local ones in a
briefing with newsmen in San Diego
Sunday. After talking at length about
campaign problems Nixon left on a
three-day tour of Illinois, Ohio,
Michigan and New York.
.respect the fact some may want to go
it alone recalls tihe problems Barry
Go1dwater, the party's 1964 presiden·
tial nominee, faced.
Some c.andidates in "Ufban states
avoided G"oldwater because tbey
believed he would hurt them in their
own races.
In winding up his stay at the San
Diego vacation camp al g n bead·
quarters, Nixon praised the record Of
hfti'running mate, Gov. Spiro T. Agnew
0£ Maryland, in handling prOblems of
big cities and said: "U anything hap-
pened to the preeident I would feel ex·
tremely confident tbat be could take
over •.. "
Asked about Agnew'a knowledge Of
foreign policy matters, Nixon said:
"No man who is selected ror the posi-
tion of vice president of the United
States is going to be an ex p •rt in
every area.
Mark Johnson, Laguna Beach High yell leader, is
one of six senior boys who have contributed more
than 50 hours of their own time to help paint student
council and activity rooms. Rooms also will be car·
peted and paneled with student help. Project was
undertaken by New ·Prestigemen in an effort to
create new school atmosphere.
The first stop was Springfield, Ill ...
capital ot a state he lost narrowly
when bf! ran for president eight years
ago.
''We're going to campaign Illlnoi.s
like it's never been campaigned
before," he told about 1,000 people who
were waiting for him at the Spring.
field airport Sunday night.
Volleyball,
Barbecue Fail '
Gigantic Breakers Scour
NewportBeachShoreline
By JEROME F. COLLINS
Of 11-. Dally '°"" ,....
Gigantic breakers pcnmded Newport
Beach's shoreline for the second day
in a row today, sweeping the beach
free of everything but·sand and a few
mad sw1~. ..
Red fiags, sJgnaling hazardous
swimming conditiona, flapped from all
lifeguard towers. They're expected to
be up throughout the day.
The huge waves, described by one
veteran city lifeguard as "an all·time
surf," began rising sharply and uneX·
pectedJy Sunday early .in the af4
ternoon. 1
The super surf climbed to heights or
10 to 12 feet.
All of Newport's beachfront was
scoured . but no serious property
damage was reported and no serious
injury accidents were Jogged by
lifeguards, who hauled 113 endangered
swimmers out of the churning waters.
Laguna Youth
Connell Seeking
Dance in Street
The Laguna Beach Youth Council to-
day is bidding for a back-to-school
dance Sept, 6".
Youth Council President Rob KrOn.
man has written a letter to the city
council asking for permission to h<ll~
the dance from 8 to 12 p.m .. on Forest
Avenue between Coest Highway .ind
Glenneyre.
Laguna Beech Mayor Glenn Vedder
told the DAILY PILOT he sees no
complioations in gr:uxing perml.ssion
for the dance. The only besltallon
woold be that other civic activities
would be scheduled for that nJght.
Kromnan said his investigatioos
haven't revealed any other activJties
oo the Friday night.
The Youth Council had asked for a
street dance on July 13. The plana
were vetoed by the city due to trafflc
congestion end noile interference wilh
the Pageant of the Masters.
In order to cut down on the noise
problem, the Youth CO!Jncil is planning
on turning the bend.stand towards the
beach, so that music won't be directed
towards any residential areas.
A typical Sunday beach crowd of
70,<m spent mort of the afternoon run·
ning from the surging sea. At about 3
p.m. more than a dozen waves in a
row, each towering about 10 feet,
splashed ontt> the beach between 40th
Street and the Santa Ana River jetty.
Thousands oC beachgoers scurried
upland as tihe foaming surf reached all
the way to Seashore Drive at many
street ends.
On its way back, tile sea carried
with it dozens of beach towels, a few
transistor radios and .several a&Sorted
sandwiches, accotding to Marine Safe-
ty Director ROOert E. Reed.
Reed also reported witnessing an in4
cident U:lat "almost scared me to
death."
lie said a huge wave rose up on the
south side o{ the 250-foot long steel
groin at the e.nd of 40th. Street.
"Two guys were caught up in the
wave," said Reed, "and it carried
them clear across the groin to the
other side. They were dumped there
without having hit thet steel. They
could have been killed."
Lifeguard Logan Lockabey re<:~lled
seeing a large. group of youngsters sit-
ting ~ncernedly Jn .a channel cut
out on one Side of the groin Dy wave
action. TM surf plunged Into the chan· .
neJ. carriel th e tumbling g r o u p
tbroogtt the channel and around the
upland end of the groin all the way to
the other side. Everyone staggered out
of tbe water unhurt.
Robert Whitmore
Funeral Tuesday
Funeral services for Robert Stevens
Wbibnore, 78, a resident of the
Pasadena-Arcadia area for 66 years
before moving to 55-B Calle Aragon,
Laguna Hills will be conducted Tues-
day at 11 :30 a.m. in the Hillside
Church at Rose H1Us Mortuary with
the Rev. James Frode officiating.
Formerly executive vice president
of Bayle, Martin and Fay lnc., Mr.
Whitmore died Thursday at South
C.oast Community Hospital
He is survived by a son, RObert Jr.
of Arcadia; a daughter. Barbara
CampbelJ of Fullerton ; five
grandchildren a.nd two great-grand.
children.
.Three Fail in Jailbreak
Complainta against three men who
pulled an almost.successful jailbreak
witb a erode, homemade knife Saba·
day night were iuued today, while
each man was confined to an isolation
cell In Orange County Jail.
The trlo made it from tlle third to
the firrt floor or the old racillty while
hol<!lng the knlre faahloned from a
metal bunk strap against ·the throat of
~ycar-<>ld aberllf's deputy Ronald
Flnch.
Charges againlt the a J I e a: e d
jailbreak leader and two men he
subsequently releaatd Crom a holding
tank include Jd4naping. aasault on a
police orucer and .a~mpted escape.
Jail SJL Jim Middleton sald th•
principal suspect b Thomas C. Clark,
~
19, of Miami, Fla., who took Finch
hostage and then freed Charles R.
Pulliam, 20, of Holton, ,Tex., and
Michael A. Tracy, 21, of Anaheim.
The incident occu1Ted during a tr.ash
pickup by Clark, who apparently was
doing trusty cbores whUe serving a 00.
day sentence for unpaid tr.artic tickets,
deputies saJd.
Investigators said Clark, Pulliam
.and Tracy made it to the ground floor
ol the Jail using Deputy Floch •• their
pass, but other deputies talked them
<lut of com.pleting the fSCape.
1"flcy. convicted.of armed robbery,
,.·as scheduled to be transferred to
st.ate prison at Chino on Tuesday,
Wblle Pulliam .,... puttJng In a Dine
months' sentence at a burglar.
----------
From Page l
DANA HARBOR
saw the water coming over.
"You would .see people trying to run,
then be swept off. It wa! like going
down a waterfall. They jwt sort ot
went with the water."
He said be beard no screaming, and
remembend there was litUe talking
amoog the rescuers and t h o s e
rescued.
"At the lime, all we saw was
people's heads in the water, and. we
concentrated on getting them abOard."
Gage estimated that ten minutes
elapsed from the time the waves
began sweeping the people off the
breakwater till the time they were
plucked out of the water.
OVER MILE WNG
The main breakwater at Dana was
completed at the start of summer. It
rises more than 15 feet at low tide,
and is slightly more than a mile long.
A small portion of it juts out into the
sea. The breakwater then bends. and
stretches downcoast, parallel to the
shore.
Lifeguards said it appeared that the
breakwater sustained no damage.
Waters inside the harbor remained
relatively calm throughout the siege of
surf, they added .
One guard added that the badly
damaged road atop the structure was
only a temporary one. "It wasn't
designed to be a service road. It was
only for construction to complete the
harbor,'' he said.
Orange County Harbor Director
Kenneth Sampson was in northern
California and could not be reachE"d
for comment on the Dan.a Point surf.
Ottter Harbor Di.!ltrict oUicials thi1
morning were at the scene to
determine how well the breakwater
was standing up to the pounding.
YOUR
WATCH'\:
o Cl11ntcl • Olftcl
• Adiusttcl
Rinp Clt..S
Wltilt You W.alt
PEARi.$ RE-STRUNG
RINGS SIZED. f,.,. •
"We're going to carry Illinoi!I: and
we 're goillg to carry Ule nation," he
said.
The object of t~ tri:p is two-fold: to
meet with some of the party's big
state governors and to tert the reac·
tion ol GOP W'Drkers to bis efforts in
the past week to unify Republica.ru
behind bis candidacy.
Tbe key governon he plans to visit
are George Romney of Michigan, Ray-
mond P. Shafer of PeMsylvania,
James A. Rhodes of Ohio and Nelson
A. Rockefeller ol New York, who was
Nixon's top cballenger Kr the nomina·
tion.
Nixon's decision to endorse all
Republicans seeking office but to
Auto Burglars
Strike Again;
$1,635 Stolen
BW"glars entered three Laguna
Beach automobile agencies ec:rly
Saturday and made off with more than
$1,635 in cash and equipment.
As in another Laguna a u t o
dealership burglary 12 days ago, a cut-
ting torch was used to cut Jacks from
safes.
"These were definitely pro(essional
jobs," said Lagunu Det. George Pletts.
Taken was $935 from the safe at
Allen Motor Co., 1150 S. Coast
Highway; $700 from a cash box at
llayden's Imports, 998 S. Coast
Highway, and a $50 .auto radio and
antenna from Marquis Motors, 900 S.
Coast Highway.
Burglar& took $100 Aug. 7 from a
safe at Tommy Ayres Cbevrolet, 350
Broadway, Pletts said.
In all four cases the burglars en·
tered by skyligbU and used gloves, in·
vestigators said.
To Draw Young
Two major teen functions were pl~·
ned in Laguna Beach for the weekend,
but hardly anyone showed up.
The first, held Friday evening at the
Laguna Beach High School patio, was
a combination barbetu~m-dance
evening. The price of admission was
50 cents.
Op.ly about a dozen person! at·
tended, not counting the band and
Police. Today, the city recreation
department and school student council
are asking, "where was everyone?"
Jn the meantime, tbe Boys Club
planned a volley ball contest, to be
held Saturday morning at the Main
Beach. Members of tti.e club under 18
years old were eligible. Only ten teen·
agers showed up and the contest was
scrubbed. Today the trophies are get·
ting dusty, and Bill Woods of the Boys
Club said with dismay, "there's
apathy on the part of the youtb ol this
town."
Laguna Library
Hosts Chi1dren
It's party time at the Laguna Beach
Library, but only .certai.n children can
a ttend the exclusive gathering.
All children who were members or
the summer reading cl\lb and have
completed reading 10 or more books
are eligible to atten:I the Dr. Doollt·
tie party. It will be held in the Library
patio from 10 to U a.m. Aug. 24.
To be admitted, children must show
their certificates or record logs.
The library and Friends (I( the 1.J.
brary promise surprises, prtzea and
refreshments for all. ·
0
OMEGA
FREE
S.1.99
S2.49
.. _ ·---~-· · ---•
........
Misslnt Dlnllftds
RtplaUCI', from $4.99 -r ..-...
........ IJUL _,,_
Jawofry Dollgnfnt
A Spaclaltyl
N..,. 2 c,....t Stores To Se"e You
HA.Dot '"°"'" HUN11N•TON CINnl CDfTll llACH I IDINHI t• HAllOI llft. HUWTIN•TON IUCH
COlfA Mii.A 14S..t41S HJ.1101
Opan,Mon., Tltun., Fri. TIU 9 p.m.
I
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l
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FASHIONING A BENEFIT -Miss Kathy Holzemer, southern
division fashion director for Joseph . Magnin, lends a hand to
members of Madrecitas Auxiliary, the Mmes. Thomas F. Riley,
Graham Edeblute and Miclfael Blake tleft to right) as they plan
BiGyde Rider• <Called
This Exe.rcise
Soft Pedaled
If Bob Iles has his way, bicycle riding may very
well replace jogging in Laguna Beach.
A British citizen who has resided in the Art Colony
for the past five years, Iles is directing the YMCA's
cycling program and said if enough people join, the
class will become a club.
Currently class members, rnosUy women, gather
on Mondays and Thursdays at 8:30 a.m. on the Main
Beach parking lot on the corner of Broadway and South
Coast Highway.
From there they pedal out, via the Canyon Road,
to El Toro Road turnoff leading through Leisure World
and stop at El Toro General Store for refreshments
before returning.
"We hope to make this a community activity. Our
present meinbership goal iJ 100," iaid Iles.
"With enough people," he added enthusiastica'Ii:Y1 "there iS no reason why we can't go to interesting
places and pl an picnics and other outings.
Bicycle riding, according to the enthusi ast, is great
for all around toning up of the body. "Many doctors
advocate cycling. The program is one of the iwiltest
ways to physical fitness ," he said.
The YMCA will provide bicycles to those who need
them , however, many people, said Iles, have ones which
have been sitting around for years unused.
The class is open to both men and women of all
ages . Those who wish to enroll may do so at the South
Orange County YMCA on the comer of Third Street
or Forest A venue, 494-9431.
their fourth annbal fashion luncheon to benefit Holy Family
Adoption Service of Orange County, The sl:tow, Peacock Alley,
U.S.A., will take place Sept. 12 in the Balboa Bay Club.
BIG WHEELERS -Ready to slart out on another bicycle outing
are members of the YMCA's cycling class (left to right) Mrs.
Kathleen Lerwill, Mrs. Joseph C. Gaw and Peter Gaw. Class
•
JEAN COX, 494-9466
~. AllWlf If, 1N41 I.I , ... 11
Up Auxiliary's Alley
Style Seen
Fashions from Joseph Magnin's will be paraded in
the Balboa Bay Club when Madrecitas Auxiliary of
Holy Family Adoption Service in Orange County stages
its major fund-raising venture of the year Sept. 12.
The event, a glittering affair limited to 400 guests,
is the fourth annual benefit fashion luncheon, Peacock
Alley, U.S.A.
Since the auxiliary's inception three years ago, with
a roster of under 30 active members, it bas raised
more than $10 ,000 for the adoption service.
Mrs. John P. Condon, spokesman for the group,
.said the fa shion show was its most important benefit,
since its sole other project is Christmas card sales.
Mrs. Thomas F. Riley is chairman of the show
which will begin with a social hour at 11 :30 a.m. to be
followed by luncheon at 12:30. Tickets are $8.50 per
person.
Other members of the luncheon committee include
the Mmes. Arthur Carter Lowell of Newport Beach
and Thomas Kelly ot San Clemente, reservations, Phil·
lip Barry of Newport Beach, invitations and Robert C.
Robb of Dana Point, patronesses.
' Mrs. Thomas Roden of Emerald Bay, auxiliary
president, is in charge of programs, and door prizes
are being handled by Mrs. Norman Huff of Newport
Beach and Mr.s. Ford Kaiser ot Tustin.
members meet two times a week and pedal up the Canymi Roed
I '
and through Leisure World. Eventually program director Bob·
Iles hopes the class will be a club.
If Vehicle's Out of Line, You May Decline to Go to Dine
DEAR ANN LANDERS : First let's
gtt one thing strai~ht. I am not a
teenager. I'm 41 years of age and I
hold a responsible position in a bank.
My husband died five years ago aTJd
I have been going with a man who
owns a fertilizer busines . (I'm fed up
on joke.s about bis business and I have
heard them all, so please don't come
up with any.)
Last night was Horace 's lodge din-
ner . lie belongs to the Moose. I got
dre ssed up in a· silk outfit and bad my
hair set and my nails manicured. I
even bought a brocaded shoulder stole
for the affair.
Horace came for me a little late but
I didn't say anythJng. I almost died
when I saw he was driving his dump
ANN LANDERS
truck. t 'm not sure but I think it had
somt: fertilizer in il All he 5aid was,
"I sold the Buick and the new car
won't be here till ne xt month."
I am not .a snob but I don't think a
dump truck is proper traMportaUon
for a middle-aged couple. Should I
refuse to ride in it in the future?
-EMBARRASSED
DEAR EM: A dump &ruck 11 all
right for a trtp lo Ute beach, maybe,
but 1urely not So a banquet-with you
in a brocaded stole, yet. Tell Horace
you'd prefer to take tbe bu antO tM
aew car comes ln, U lt'1 all the 1uae
to htm.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am 21'
years old and the mother of a
beauUful litUe daugbtu. 'I'tle father ol
my child refused to marry me.
Although I was hurt at fir1t I have
come to the conclusloo It WM all for
the best. He was a bum.
I am very proud of Rochelle and my
family and frieodJ know she bas no
.. .. ~ .... ---------" -·-~ ---·--~-··------~ ------
legal lather. They treat her kindly and
nothing lJ ever said abou\ it.
RecenUy I took a new job and mOV·
ed to another section of town. When I
was shopping in the market Saturday
a new neighbor ¥ked, "What does
your husband do?" I replied, "The
baby's father did not marry me. She is
111 out-ot:-wedloclc'chJld.'"
The woman's mouth dropped open
and ahe yelled at the' top of her lungs,
"HOW DLJ IT HAPPEN?" She kn ows
very well how it happened. Why would
she ask such a dumb.ques,tlon?
PleMe tell me what to 141 to cruel
J*l'Ple who ask quesUons that art none
Of their business!
• -ALONE BUT'PROUD
DEAi\ A BUI' P : "WUI do<1 ,..,
•ubaad do T'' ml,:llt be a t11telet1
qantloD from a canal aequlatuce
but It Is aot cruel. You invited Utt
cruel quesUon (11How did It bappe•?")
wbtn you vol1nteered the Information
that the bab1'1 fatber did aot many
you.
lD tile future ll )'ot are 11ked about
tbe baby's father, 1hnply 111, "Be 11 a
plumber -or whatever be It -but
we are Uvln& apart."
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I read wilh
lntere1~ the quote in today'1 cohlmn fl3>-a French pllllotopher who said,
"There are no frigid women . Only
clumsy men.''
Here'• another one, from a
Hungu:lan poet: •·u a wo"*' does not
get ~ man lbe w.rtl, God help the
man the gell."
U J OU fall to 1eo the connection, I'll
polw. I& out. Some men are clumsy •
because they dontt get tM coopera.
tion. And the reason they don't aet the
cooperation is because the lady dldn'C
get the man she wanted . Get ltT
-THE HUNGARIAN POET
DEAR POET: Ar• y .. comme1111a&
or apolollzlnl? '!'bub 1 .. Ille pear~
Dad.
Is alcoholism a dJMUe? How can
the alcoholic be treated? 11 there a
cure? Read the booklet "Alcobollam-
Hope mid. Help,'' by Am Landv1.
Encloa:e 35 centJ In coin with your re-
quest and a long, stamped, 11:11-lld.
dre5$ed envelope. .
Ann Lander• will be alod to help you
with )'OIU' problems. Send them to her
in care of the DAD..Y PILOT, enclOI•
Ing a •-peel, sell·addrullld '°' velope . •
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)4 DAILY PILOT Mandly, A1191st lt, 1968
Linda Diane Davis· New
Mrs. Michael Mansolino
MRS. MICHAEL MANSOLINO
St. Andrew'• Rites
•
Couple to Live
St. Andrew 's Presbyter·
Ian Church was the setting
for the double ring service
linking in marriage Michael
~an1ollno and his bride, the
·onner Llnda Diane Davis.
The Rev. Dr. Charles
llerenf.ield performed the
·fternoon nuptials for the
laughter of Mrs, Lorraine
)avis of Newport Beach
lnd the son of Mr. and Mrs.
!alprh Mansolino of Tustin.
Tbe couple will make
heir home in Costa Mesa
ollowing their wedding trip
o northern California.
For her wedding the bride
·;elected a floor length white
taffeta gown ·covered with
net appliqued with Swiss
embroid«y. Her illusion
veiling was attached to a
headpiece of embroidered
flowers and seed pearls and
she held a bouquet of white
glamelias and orchids.
She was given in marri·
age by her brother, Ronald
Davis.
Miss Pamela White was
maid of honor in a moss
green floor length gown with
a matching headpiece. She
carried yellow daisies.
Gowned identically were
bridesmaids, Mrs. Charles
Koistra and Miss Shelia
Trovarelli, the bridegroom's
niece.
Best man wa5 Dennis
Deovlet of Los Angeles.
Ushers were Robert Dewar
of Wt:stminster and Joe and
Richard Fortunato of Los
Angeles.
The r eception followed in
the church hall. More than
2.00 friends and relatives
congratulat.ed the newly·
weds. Circulating the guest
book was Mrs. Davi5, the
bride's sister-in-law.
SHUFFLING ACTIVITIES -Members and guests
of the Women's Guild of Our Lady Queen of An·
gels Church have planned 8: dessert bridge and
fashion show for Wednesday, Aug. 21 in the Cameo
Shores home of their president, Mrs. William H.
Wedding
Planned
The engagement of
Evelyn Gail Howard and
Donald Eugene Short has
been announCed by the
bride-to-he's mother, Mrs.
Helen Maciejewski of Cost.a
Mesa.
Parents of the
bridegroom-elect are Mr .
and Mrs. Oren W. Short of
Adel Iowa. He is a graduate
of 'Arnphitheatel' H i g h
Schoo1 in Tucson, and i.!
serving in the U.S. Marine
Corps. Miss Howard is a
graduate of Costa Mesa
High School.
EVELYN HOWARD
Brid•to-be
I ••••••••• ·~
• • • picture:
peeks: • lty •• , ....... .
FNlb fi'O'm 1tardom Jn the
TV Mtiel "Pie• Doo't Eat
The Dallies" pl.. the title
role in Walt Disney's "The
Shaggy Dog", come1 veteran
-actor-1..or4 )'lelaoo In a
co«<orrlng role In t1ie new
movie WI t 11 Sb. Yo. Get Euroll
Thia cameN-wise char· acter t a k e s tbe part of a
1hffpdog, who la buddy-com.
pan.ion kl three boya playing
rolu as ions of Doris Day,
who appears as a
sophisticated widow. Lord
Nelson's romantic opposite in
WJtll Sb: Voll Get EQroU is a
pcodle, who belongs t o
Barbara Hershf:y. Sl)e is the
daughter of Brian Keith, a
widower who fllll.1 for Dori&.
Rambo. Getting in practice for the bridge are (left
to right) Mrs. Rambo, Mrs. John Kehoe, and Mrs.
John L. Connell while Mrs. E . R. McCoy models
one of the fBshions.
Their plans to get married
run somewhat askew when the
couple's various: and wndry
youngsters get i nvolved !
Those two pets turn out to
help a heap, believe it or nQt.
Guild Readies
Summer
An interlude in a summer
of boating and vacation will
be the annual dessert bridge
and fashion show sponsored
by the Women's Guild of
Our Lady Queen of Angels
Church.
The party is scheduled for
Wednesday, Aug. 21 at noon
in the home of Mrs. William
H. Rambo of Cameo Shores.
Lorraine Sutherland's col-
lection of fashions, modeled
by members of the guild,
will entertain guests during
dessert and coffee, as well
Event
as provide a preview of
fashions for the coming
season. Bridge fans will
compete ~or prizes during But not that simply, though.
the remainder of the af· 1bere is many a slip 'twixt
ternoon. the lip and fJbe altar. Wait un-
Mrs. Rambo, who is serv-til you see the poor man, clad
ing as guild president for a only in undershorts, being
second term, is chairman ?f chased by a hippie motorcade,
the summer party. She is with his very own wife among
being assisted by the Mmes. them . All th.is in a i.ugh·
C. W. Elliot, John L. Con-loarled film coming nezt to
nell, L. J. Finley, John the Lido.
Kehoe, Edgar J . Carpenter,
Burton J . Lowe. A. M.
Coker, Elton R. McCoy and
G. H. Kuhl. In Costa Mes·a
The former Miss Davis is
a graduate of Glendale Col·
lege and received her BA
and MA from Ule University
of CaWornla, Santa Bar-
bara. Her husband received
his MS 1n>m the Unlv..-slty
ot Sou111em California. Both
.,..~. -'
An October wedding in the
First Baptist Church of
Costa MMa bu been plan-
ned. Fare Feeds Orphans
Proceeds from the event
will benefit the guild's
chair,ties .
Kramer-Anderson Vows
• i ::-I
Recited in Afternoon
RUTH BRYANT-Beauty Consultant
pr•••"t1
Milli NOlMAN COSMn1es
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
For complim•ntary color & make.up ana ly1i1 .. ,
646-4026
Brina Ad tor Gltt "'1th appointment
HJ L 17tli St. Cottw M-
l ewtiry A 8o!Jt1qut ItMu
Sweet Adeline•
VISIT US
Before
the
Stork
Visitt
You
fet Y•1i1t
Co111pl•t•
M• .. Ntify
WerdreM ef , .... ,. ... ,.
'"'"'' .. .
• • •
CATHY'S
MATERNITY SHOP
MeM C....,-Jlt I. IM $t. cm...... ... ........
Let us copy
your favorite
old picture ...
PreaerV1 fond memorie1
for all th• f1mily •• , le t ua
mike fine copies to ah1r1
with them now.
SALEI
LAST 12 DAYSI
s.1 ce11y of ,1c.tilr•
111 t•-' 1:.or11litie11
" llletvN •• ll-"'· .... tolldl· tlo...J C ........ for .... to .. tlOOI .....
-Ml .. ,..IMlll, feel VDVr 9'1f'
11111 11l•h"• .. ""'"" 111111&1"''"·
Phent lt2·llll E.t. JIJ
Pho+o1r1ph Sti1111io 111 Fleer
•
TOPS Club
Buffums' introduces
the La Habra Cut
Our silky swinger loves to shine 'n wave
wherever 'you 111. Only I.II. And,
when you come In for your la Habra (or
any other slyle), receiYe a compli~ntary
5.50 Resto! hair conditioning tteatment!
Corne soon.
Beauty Studio, all sloi~ oxcei>t Marina .
Buffums·
Newport '#I F .. hlon lslend Newport C:.nter
644-2200
•
Hammerhead leaves the
Lido tomon-ow evening after
ir.troducing a brand new es-
pionage agent-Charles Jlood-to
the local film fans. He
operates in ttie highly ac-
ceptable James Bood manner.
Your, MJne And Ours takes
it& leave ol the Mesa tomor-
rr:JW eve, when Henry Fooda
and Lucille Ball pack up tfleir
brood5 and hit the road.
There are a lot ol people
who love to see the movies.
But their evening schedules
are so filled with social,
bufilness and home~maklng af·
fairs that they are t.empted to
forego the enjoyment of the
films. That's Why Me 1 a
Matinees are 10 very popular.
Take a mid-week break in the
afternoon and eee • 1ood show
at tile Mesa.
FREE PASSES to the Lido or Mesa will be mailed today
to Joame Hat.anck, 2108
Storling, Co.ta M .... G. J.
Breman, 4378 Setoo. Rd.,
Newport Beach, G11dys Quin-
cy, 1700 Miramar Or., Balboa
and J. E. PYie. &13 Poppy.
Corona del Mar.
Don't let the summer lhorta
of c""1 otop you from ... tng
one of the fine rums at the
Lido or the MM.II. For instant
admiUion to the tnovles Mow
your Master Charge Gard or
your Bankamm'Jcard .
I
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But No Bunnies
'Playboy' Invades
Television World
t •
8y VERNON SCO'l'1'
~ HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -H~aiJ Helrler, the magazine
publisher who gave a HXY
new ·definltlOo to the word
••centerfold," is no loncer
conleat to get his meuage
acrOss with the written
"A-·ord or the wde fem•.
Th e pipe-amoklng pro-
prietor of Playboy magazine
ahd1 the Playboy clubl has
tumed hia attention to
television.
Beginning rometime in
October Hefner will bost a
wtekly syndicated bour-J1111g
variety-interview teriet titl·
e:d "'Playboy After Dark ...
No, there wUl be no bun-
19 Laguna
Dancers at
·workshop .
Nineteen members of the
Laguna Beach Civic Ballet
Company will journey to U..
College of the Holy Names
in Oakland next week to
participate in a cbreograpby
worishop.
Sponsored by the National
Regional Ballet Association
and presented by the Pacific
Western Regional BaUet
Festival Association , the
workshop is a pilot program
geared to raising the level of
choreography in the United
States. It runs from Tues-
day through Friday.
Internationally k n o w n
dancer Pauline Koner will
officiate at the workshop,
while Fernand N a u 1 t ,
auociate director of Les
Grands Ballets Canadlens,
conduct! ballet classes.
Among the Laguna group
which will attend are Lila
Zali, artistic di rec tor :
Barbara Stuart, president of
the company; and dan~r&
?-.iary Hanf. Hal O'Neal,
Kristi Moorhead, _Odile de
Witte. Merilee Magnuson,
Damar.a Bennett. M a r y
Catherine Kaminski, Louise
F'razer, Leah Harln, Kathy
Jo Kahn, Melinda
Chenoweth, Hope Sogawa,
Joy Sogawa. Cheryl Mann.
Pam Sims. Gina Geer, and
Terrie Leslie.
n1 .. boppinl ""'"°"· Until now Hefner bas been
content to appear u a 1uest
on -late nl&l>t •hows or
propounding 1111 pbll0<ophy
in b!s mapiloe, ~ ha en-
joyed frollcklng around 1111
tlllcago mansion with built-
in everything ...
N(lw his personality -
which is somewhat shy -ls
going public.
"There's a dram a tic
diange in life style for me
now tbat I'm into my 40s,''
Retrier Aid from hil pen-
tbowe pad atop biJ Sunset
S1Jip club.
"The magaztne is 15 years
old, and I'm takhig ltock of
my.tell. I'm gc>ing to ltar1.
enjoying mys.ell."
"Instead of having a
formal setting with guests
coming in one at a time, we
want a party atmosphere so
that the viewer feels he is a
part oC the activity," Hefner
said.
"I want them to give
them the atmospben of aoe
ol my clubs or my pod in
Qlioago."
Yeah, well, there are plen-
ty of bunnie1 hopping
arrund -places.
"But not on~ lhow,11 he
lnUed.
"Guest.I will be m y
frieod5 in arid out of show
business comed.Jans,
mus1Clall.S, & o o d con-
versationaUsts. F o r in·
stance, there is one dialogue
about sex and cinema with
Roman Polanski and Sharon
Tate.
"And I'll di"1cUJ1 tbe new
morality with Father
MaleoJ.m· Boyd, and race
aod athletics with B i 11
RusSe'll. '!bat aort of thing."
But the bunniet !
"Ob, they'll be around, but
Mt in cosb.lme," he finally
admitted. "We hope to bring
some sex and sophistication
to television, wili'cb it surely
needs.
"We've &truck a respmive
chord with readers. We hope
to do the 1ame with
viewers."
Hefner's lb.ow will be
syndicated by Screen Gems.
So far he isn't sure bow
many stiatiom. it will find as
customers. He was advised
that if be wanted top ratings
he'd better think twice about
stocking the 1how with 1ots
and lots of bunoie1 -in cos-
tume.
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
f
l And tlst-
•hert:
l.1tln: 2 words
5 Cily ~
Utah
10 Utttr
14 Polson
15 Part of
l ·Sklte
l• Blick 17 Certain weapon
discharges
19 R111J11tlon
2D Assign to
a position
n ltoust by 'sUdden aln
U 'Co11es to
I Stop
2S Tl11t period
26o £n111\sh ass1ylst H U.S. dlplo•1t J' Apprehend by~· nr lS Slight
37 Frtqutnt winning
••rgln: 2 won:ls
31 lforstl left
It I •tll
39 8tld11• playm'
word
41 Aflltrltan
ll\d l&n .
42 Sports
palace
44 tf OYtllltnl
.upward
45 11rt11 • -To
Tell A lit": 2 words
4' Change In
lrtlcul1llM
48 Grain proctulng
•1thlnn 50 Food
paclcaglnt
material
ft Erlrt111tly
cold
5J Rldt--: 2 words 57 Bath of
llOfttn tin: 2 wards 61 Antlr of
Vishnu
61 Part of
t11rth's ablloslllltrt 64 Got off 1n alrplana 65 Att tpt
6' Of a tl111t
period
67 TIHlt
68 C1r1s
69 Rtdutt to rt0thing
DOWN
l Dl•lnlshlS 2 Desstrt
lttlll J llld ox
4 ShM!lllclf'I necessity
J Passt
6 Spor'11
7 F•llY ••b•
111!/'8 •
I 5rttlc rtslst• '' Rtlatlon or ant• group ont thing :
t C1Hle lo anoth•
b1ron'a 40 Pr1ctlcal
tnenty: ptoplt Colloq. 4J Salt of 10 Ground nitric acld
ll Border Oii 45 Now--:
lZ T1ke It easy 2 wards
lj Joint 47 Huron l TV part or Cret
2Z ll1rshal 49 S111all 14 Shedding handful r1dlance JZ Many without
2:• At a shallow cere111ony depth SJ Pubflc 2:7 Earth: Fr. convey111e1
18 Chtwfd up J4 Purity
30 lnstels symbol
31 --Jaw1 55 Dl1ehar;1
Sa1k1tcnew11156 -Jlri:
)I llovlnt JS S. A1111fltM
about nation JI Clrtl.hl 59 Kind of ''r,•: ttst In otwll Ml Ltgtndary J6 Dr11111U1 hero
personae 6l -dt
llfflbtr gl.ltft't
' 4
.... ,,....,....'Ti",...,..,,...
" hr+--t--t-"
'
MolldoJY, Aijfll~l 19, 1968 DAILV PILOT ll
Chamber Society
Announces Slate
Tryouts Set
For Comedy
SHARP
' If ,..,.,. • tlitrp tr•tltr. , .. tlrls DAILY PILOT'S f..,..u Dffno!:
MINI d1MlfW ..i1 s..t.rlky .. M•.li• t Ww 4ul ••• w•-..i•• ,...,. Mv1-, ..... 111 ...
'nl• HlllltiAC'oa Beacbr:;::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;i~ Playlloule will •• D du c I~
For Its ninth season, the
Laguna J:Jeacb C. b a m b e r
Music Society will again
pr ... nt lour dtstlbgulshed
chamber ensembles in con-
cert. The membership drive
-formally -1tart.ed Sunday.
Opening Iba society's 1968-
69 season on t-Jov. 3 will be,
the Concentua MuSlcm. An
A111triao chamber orcheatra
Negro Writer Stars
In Major Production
.,,.
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.... --. """ I'll< -· ., ..... .,_
9' PWl'lllll • 11llll*GI Ill
lwsa...S..,.6141
--~-----
°""NOON
"*'hw ·=··· ... D.... l'fWY •I lrlt"9I • W.Vll
W1'1Dl8Nln
~MIADll~ ---
of 20 mualcl;na will present
an all·B>ch program. Dr, H.
Colin Slim of UC! .. w con-
duct a concert prtvlew at
7:!!0 p.m. lD lbe bllh tcbool
aad!torium , and tbe
performance will follow at I o'clock.
lb 1uccellivt concaU the
society _will preHDt tlJe
Boroclln..Quartat, F~. 2; tbe
Smetaoa Quartet M~b 16;
and !be Alma Trio, April 13.
tryoull fo< Ill lll'lt play of
the 1 ... HUCll, ''SUnday
lo New Ycrk," on Monday,
Aua.26.
Dlnd« Ree Alber1oeD
--111• ccmecly require• a cast ot four me.a
and two women, ace.a 22 tD
~-'Ibo audiUON will be held
at 8 p.m. at lie ployh..,.,
2111 Main St, Jlunllnp
Beach. 'Ibo production will r Ngod ... n ... --.
~ llEYf IALI.,:
~ATRE
Hof!ll •f k•cki119 CMlt
Lot••
l1lbo1 Po11l11t111oe67J·4041
Ckild With P1r111t 011ly
e Op•n Ni9ktly 6:41 e
ENDS TUESDAY
.tULI~ A'"l>llfWI
MAllY TYLfll MOOllf
CAllOl CttANNING
.tAMfl ftlll:
------- ------------~ Tho i...aun-.Now
V•&te• Maita
INIW. IM. .... ~ ---
... __
Deltt-11 .....
... Olity-11'41 ....
., •• CHAil" - -unh._,...,..... .
ACADEMY AWARD
WINNER
m9T ... CTOll-MtKI NtcHOU
IOllPHl.LIYINI -• MIKE NICHOLS
LAWlllNC;E ~ -
/ .-
AN AVCJJ EMBASSY FlM
l mnrn-•1•.,...·r&fMPI• WllNiHAM-~HEMIY PAO.SIMOO
-GARFllnl. lAWRENcE TURMAN ••vcon..~....., 18:tt1Xl.1Jr AW#rmt
1:00-J:Of.1:00•7.100 SATUUAY QNLY
trl0o11 :1t .... 1l·J.4...64.lltoll .... I -.... -1.--....... --M-.. -.... -.----.
RIOTOUS C~FEATURE II~=======;;;;=======~
CONTINUt'.'!US SNOW 4
WM..n.n..,....,,.S..,S.. ...,.,,, ........ &T-.
" nm SI/If .DlllllTIIT ....................
HARIOR at ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 5<16-3102
~
fB Now Daily-1st Area Run
(8 ACADEMY
AWARD
lJ,WINNER
BUT DIHCTOR-MIKI! NICHOLS
JOSflllt r. LlV1Nr -• MIKE NICHOL.II LAWMNCE TUllMAll
(8 -I
• ,..rforma-•
1-3-5-7-9-11 p.m.
Dally
u4'Mole
'New'World of
C£ntertainmentl
TONJTE lhru FRIDAY NITE
"ON aTAOB v.a.A."
i
Tll11 Wtff lt.rrlllt ••. In l't1Mll
BILL DANA
TERESA BREWER
THE FOUR STEP BROS .
Shows It 9:15 ~ 11 PM-Dn ttie TOMORROWl.AfrlD STAGE
Comln1 Next Week ••• TONY MARTIM
***
Uisneyland. On Parade
7:30 PM
A Merry, Musfcal Promenade throuih the
Magic Kingdom sti rring Mickey, Pluto, Goofy
and ell ycur DISMY Char«:tet FtWorlta
EVERY SUNDAY
COUNTRY MUSIC JUBILEE
' HOMER AND JETHRO
HENION CARQtLL • CATHtl TAY1.0fl
NOEL IOQGS Ind h51 IAND ·
HARRY JflWMAN and IRAD MILTON OU£1T MCI
' Shows at 3, 5 •nd 7 PM-On tl'll T~ORROWLAMO STAGE
EVERY NITE al q PM
Fantaay in the Sky
T/nkf!r Bell's 111a1tt slanafs the start ol a Spectacular Aerial· Flrewotks Display
*** AM ~1~"9 ...,le~ ...
mn tatull• Tiil 111'STAlfH•rrllOllME FM+2
Tll£ llDS ff lltE llMIDOlf• lJI( Cl,AllA WUD SIMW
lfll ruron I TM! l1$111n).Mll IATl lfrtm
ntl IOTAl TAKITIAMS • TW£ Matnl ITEB. ..
IMl llllllCAllA HAU 1"'1 ""! _,
F.-1.,.,., N*lll ¥t1• .., tt t111" 111 ltlt n&lflmtllt .....
D($11£YWlll Ami um ncm 10ot1
r.i.Hs ~ W #fl I Mtrlt'tllllt If YM Cflolct
Adult $4.00 Junior ".," $3.00
(16,11 "'"'tl .... , ..... IY\I .._.lillll Afttr t ,_, ~.,
" ll!&W11n-••••1n-11111111111• 1------·--------------
._ -------------------· ------------
--
~ ----
-
.
'
. '
I
I
•
I
..
•
• .. . .
LEGAL NOTICE ·-c••T ... IUTI OP aus111111s.
"ICTITtOUS fllAMI
T .. ""61nf9NCI dOts «rtlf'll' llln' lrll
COO'ldlldtrll I buf.IMU II »5 l'1lrf1X
Orlye, C0.11 MtN. C.llhlmle, l/llOlr 1M
ll<tlllaut II"" MllW ol HOOSll!ll:
Tll:AILl!ll COUllT 11'111 Ille! Mid tl"'1 1t
~ .... f9llowl .. --""'*-""""" Ill fllll ,,.. lllleft "' l'tlldttlCll la .. fol-.:
CONTINENTAL WINN ER -Lincoln-Mercury sales in the Los Angeles sales dis·
trict earned W. A. Little, district sale5 manager, the month-long use of a new
Continental Mark III. Lincoln-Mercury.Sales through JuJy reached 19,151,
among the highest in the division'e 19 sales districts in the United States.
-MATHEW A. GLOIA. US F1lrt1x
DI'!"" C•ll Maol GLOltlA • J. GLOZA. »J F11!11x
Drive, C.11 ......... C111fw"l1,
0.tw 1<11111111 t, lHI MATMEW A. GLOlA GLOAIA J, OlOlA
, ..... 111 Clollfenlle, °''""' Cour\IY: 0n .t.wwl t, JH41, bifw9 IN, I Hoht'I'
f'~ lo! l l'ICI fot Mid SM!t, --..11'1' _,_. MATHEW A. GI.OZA 1nd GLOll.IA J. GI.OZA k-to me 11 br
"'9 --wi-Mmel lfl .UbKttbM
t(l h Wlll'tll! lnlln;l'Mlll Ind adl-1-
tdted fflfv IQ(\!fwd lhr -
tOP:l'ICIAL SE.\L)
111111111 C. IC~.
H1>11rv l"llbllo-C1llfor!ll1 1"'11'(fioet ortlr.t 111
"'-c-. J11"' 1, lt1J
l"llttlltlltd °"''* GoHt Oallr Piiot, ·A1,1t11tl lJ, It, 2' I N! Swtt!nbtr 2, ,,. 1lll7""8
LEGAL NOTICE
fjbi1
SV,.•ll!OI COUIT M TM• ITAT• 0,
CALl,OINtA ,Oil TM• COVMTY M
OltAMOI ,.., A..,..
MOTICI. 0, MU.lllflM GI' ... TITION
f'OI PI OU.T• Oji WILL AtllO "Oil LITTllll 0, AOMltllllTllAT/OM
WITM TM8 WILL ANNllXIO
l!lllfe of llUllY ll. jll(HAllOJ. ..........
NOTICE II HElll!8Y GIVEN Thll OAHA F. lllCHAllOS 1..a JEllllEL T. lllCKAllOI IMI fl)ld ""rt'lll I "'IHol'I S l'rolMll (II Wiii Mid fw llMll l!Ce d Ltt·
len of Adml11l1fr111or1 Wlltl ""' wm •~ .,... to ii. j!t!lllloMr, r•"'""'-' lo wtllch 11 mMt tor fi.111111'1" 11rllcu .. r1o Mid
..... , -"-..... •ltce of l!Htllll ""' ,Mll'lt Ml ..... Ml for Slilt.mblr 6. IM.
11 t:• 1.m., In ii. courtroom d ~rt·
ITM!ll ..... , fJI Mid C9Ufl. ti 1111 NOl1ll Br01Ctw1.,, ln IM CllJ' d J.1nl1 AM, C1llfoml1. OATEO; A111111t 16. lMI
. W. E. ST JOHN, Cou11tv Ci.t'k WA.~U.(I, 81lOWN AMO CllAIN au oewr 0r1w. SV!t. "
""""" hlca. c. ........ T~::" ". fw ...... **" P111Mh.1Md Or111D11 C:0.11 0.llV ,.llol, .llll\lll U, lf, 2~. lMI 101-4.1
SHARP
If y•11'r• • 1h•rp fr•d1r, u1• ·ii, DA.ILY 'ILOTS f1mo111
Di1111·A-l h11 cl111lfitd 1d1
Saturcl..,1. M••• • btfft r dt•I . . . whlf~tr you'rt \Juyin9 •f Mllln9,
~ •AFECD
INSURANCE
for special
GOOD STUDENT
DISCOUNTS an
your Family
Auto /nsuranct,
Bob Paley
ind A1socl1tn
INSURANCE
474 E. 17th ST.
COSTA MESA
642-6500
Che vy's 1968 Uni ts
To Total 2 ,753,200
By CARL CARSTENSEN record of 27,72Q produced in
Chevrolet Mot.or Division 1966.
has been quiet about it but Other C h e v r o 1 e t pro-
Js closing out an impressive duct.ion in the 1968 model
1968 model year of pro-year included 1 , 2 3 6 , 4 0 0
duction, including the se· regular Iii z e ChevroleUi,
cond·best year for truck out· 201,000 Chevy It's, and
put in tile division's history. 15.400 Corvairs.
E. M. Estes, general Chevrolet beg<> n pro.
manager oC Chevrolet and a ductioo of 1969 model trucks
General Motc:r1 vice presi· on Aug. 12 Bod Js &Cheduled
dent, said 2 , 1 3 9 , 4 O O to start assembly of 1969
Ch&Vl"Olet automobiles and model automobiles on Aug.
613,800 Chevrolet t rucks _26_. _______ _
were 86Sembled in U.S.
p}ant:s during the 1968 model
~ar which virtually hs.!
been completed. T o t a 1
assemblies will r e a c h
about 2,753,200 units.
'nle only 1968 m o d e I
Chevrolet assembly line still
operating iii the Corvette
line ' at St. Louis , which is
due to shut down for model
changeover &hortly.
'Ille 1968 model yev pro-
duoti.on waa 13 percent
greater than the 1,900,049
cars and 536,~ trucks, or
2,'36,353 vehlcles, produced
in the 1967 model year.
Chevrolet's all-time pro-
duction records i n c l u d e
.2,382,511 cars and 2,961,988
v~les produced in U.S .
plants in the 1965 model
year and 62.•,aoo trucks
MSembled in the 1966 model
year . S•lfl• M•nmgn "Our 1968 model year out-
put would have been con· Randy Combs of Foun-
siderably higher were it not tain Valley has been
for the frequent production appointed sales mana-
stoppages because of labor ger of Servisoft Water
difficulties early this year," Conditioning, head-
Estes said. quartered in the City
Product.ion peaks were of. Industry. In 1967
established during the 1968 western region district
model year for three of Combs was appointed
Chevrolet's six series of manager.
automobiles, Estes pointed ----------out.
Chevelle production total-
ed 422 ,880 units, surpQssing
the former record of 412,245
assembled in 1966; Camaro
output reached 2 3 5 , 1 5 0
vehicle&, exceeding th e
previous mark of 220,906
units built in 1967, and 28,565
Corvettes for the 1968 model
year will exceed the former
LEGAL NOTICE
•1111 ..... " Tiit Slddleblldl Junior Col1"t Ol1trlcl
of Or1111e Countv wlll realvt i.e•lld bldl 1111 lo bu! 110l l1kr lh1n 1:00 P.M., Frld1v
21 A111u1t, 19'1. 11 ttM Bu1ln1st Otfla 25001 LI ,... 111.otd. Mlulon '111~. C1Hfornl1 tH7~. for IM furnlttll119 d two 121 S11llllfl W1110111. 1..a One 111 Hill Ton P'lck1111. FuH 0.11111 11111 5"clllt1lr-rn1r bl ltCllred '"'"' the lu1IMH Offl~ ,, ""'
111Dw 1ddr•u 111.0Y N. BAlllETTA
llV>IMU MlnNl1"
l"u&lltlltd °''"" Cotll OtllV PllDt A11t11tf 11. lt, lffl UJCMll
•
Com puter Firm
Bares Earnings
California C o m p u t e r
Products, Inc., Anaheim,
reported earnings o f
$1,209,000 on sales and other
income of $16,648,000 for the
fis cal year ended June 30,
based on unaudited figures .
compared with earnings of
$,136,000 on sales of
$11,318,00'.l last year.
l!:arnlngs per share, adJu·
sted for a 2-for-1 stock split
Nov. 1, 1967, amounted to 55
cents per share on 2,206,575
average shares outstanding
in fisoal 1968, compared
with 61 cents per share on
1.898.134 averagt.. shares
out!taoding a year ago.
Am erican
Unveils
'69 Mod els
WASHINGTON (APJ -A
longer, w i d e r , restyled
Ambassad<>r f e at u red
American Motors' preview
of its 1969 m-0del
automobiles here last week.
It was the first preview of
new models by a U.S.
automaker for newsmedia
this year, 8lld for the first
ti.me there were ll<l COD·
vertlbles in tht lineup.
Embodying what the com·
pany termed "hundreds of
improvements and
ref inement.s," American
Motors' five lines of cars
will go on dealer display
Oct. l . Besfdes t h e
Ambassador, they include
the AMX and Javlin
sportstera, the Rambler -
formerly Rambler
American -and Rebel.
Both the wheelbase and
over.all length of t h e
Ambassador have been ex-
tended four inches and its
tread widened to 60 inches .
Its hood has been given a
sculptured look and its grill
redesigned.
Air conditioning, which
the company says has been
increased in capacity, again
is standard on all
Ambassador models. and all
AMC's 1969 cars will be
equipped with head rests.
Manufacturers are not re·
quired by federal safety
standards to begin im"talling
head rests before next Jan.
I.
William Pickett, v i c e
president for sales, said the
AmbMS&dor line is designed
to "fill a market gap
between the t o p in-
termediate and standard-
size car." It is termed a
"luxury car" in company
publicity.
Prices will not be disclos·
ed until new models hit
dealer showrooms, b u t
higher price tags generally
are forecast for all U.S.
makes . The 1968
Ambassador ranged from
$2,280.20 for a four-doo r, six·
cylinder sedan to $3 ,313.20
for a four-door V8 station
wagon.
New Ambassador models
have a wheelbase of 122 in·
ches and an over·all length
of 206.5 inches. The distance
between wheel treads on
both Ambassadors a n d
Rebels has been widened to
60 inches.
We rs how
LIQUIDATION SALE
0 Interest from the 1st of any month on
funds rece ived by the 10th.
8 Interest from <late of receipt 1fter the
10th.
fD Interest to date of withdraw•! on
funds left I months or longer if account
remains oPen until quarter's end.
5% por 1nnum compounded dolly current
Atlt on PIAbook S1vin1s.
5.25% por •nnum on bonus occounll .
1{ 11'11''" nol rcce!ving th.,. bontfii. your
11ringa Uould bt with •••
M UTl:'~J: •. ~AY.I N GS
~8111c:.llfll!MY •-D<llllr,C.1~.9262S
T..,,..,,. 178·5010 _ ..... .-.
Jlll t.~&" .• ~Ul".lllM -
. •
BY ORDER OF OWNER
32 LAGUNA BEACH
OCEAN VIEW LOTS*
• Buylqun• Beach rt1id1n·
ti•l prtiperty 1t 1 Uquidatlon
price! All these lots are fully Improved with under· 1round utllillts. They 1r1 focated /u1t Ea1t of tht ctn·
t•r ol town, 11" th•n 1 mile from PKifiC Coast Hishway.
Many of th11e lots com·
mind a magnlfkent vltw
of the Pacific Oce1n.
Easy terms--
owner will finance
with releases.
For 1ddilion11I Information,
call any of th11 Wer1how
Ocean•kl• Rial £st1te r .. m:
Carolyn, Mllll t, Rick,. Ken or Ed .
§ ! LAGUNA IEACH
" ir--'-'~l"l[ tfllll DI.
Trod #4114, l>b 1th" ll
Tt~t Cr111Sl, l1t •111•t>l•d C•nrot1 1to1d, t~~ t.ontlnu• .., to 1ot1.
,..._ lob 1•1 1!tu1ltlll "' ltte•U• lltdM a1111t>•rc1 c'"'°" ltd. 11W1 Mornit11•1d• OrJy1, •PPIO•lm•t•lJ 1 llllt. 1111 ef !"" Coell Hi1hw•1. ow e..
AUCT,_.,. • KU.JOll
J012 S, Hill St,•~ Calff. t20M•(71.il) 722·1JOI
Spendiµg Patterns -A.
DAILY rtLDT J• =· 14 ... LMr , ... t.:
-<.-
~l~r , Tll ' ·11,} Weave Cr Quilt .r~w.~'.t.i.:·1*""=°'.:.:."."'~~ ~~~.I'~ • !.i azy .=. ....... ,_ .... '~?':: .. fl!;
-A-'"':,. r J I +·~
::.. s~v~:~c~!~!n. :~bl!:['!® hl1 nearly :i!::'~}R .~ fP. ' 'i·~ , a''?j , ·. ~ t l!
wmer,spendthrettlme111 J::r:~ ~~tr•:~:·· :~l~l ·,'·! la14f ~l +;ti MS~ 1 1'1 '\ -::
much for beer, wine llld ~1terlalistic standard&. Tbe ~} ~ 1 · 1tt; ' i·1 ~11tf;~~*' ,. ~ ~1~
bard liquor eacb year al you 175 percent 10-.)'t&r Jump in ~~;.;;. ·~. n . \'I Ill + ~' j ..
spend t.o tend your children tbe imounU we spend for " "'!:'~tr' ™' ~ L = 11 \' • =;\Ii·
to privite collegea. private education surely: 1i:l1~·; 1 lftt Rf t\ . ., ... µ l,· -+·"
You spend more 1nnually reflect. our rising educa· 11:;~ ~OJ. lf! " .:..:11.t "' • !J.~ :: :
for jewelry and witches tlonal ambitions for our ~mUll r:J " \'I = ::1~ .,vtt 1
than you spend for all book.s chlldren, as well as the big :1 i 1.:: ~ ~n• .U" ~ ! : • 1.t I ._ .:.:·fli
and magazines, or •D dental aur'e In w 0r1 d war 11 :I\ Ki , 21 im n.~ ! ..... ou ,·1• +""
C:&re, or for ,alJ prfvate . bable!i nOW moving thrOUgb :11 =ii .J I~ ~I') ~ ~ :;;·· i~ r fit If' '4 = tt'
elementary and hi&h school their teens and early 20'!i. ~lfl:11::• 1::t fi ~ !' ~~ ~-~ ft 'P~fll 1'j ff: r • +1~
education. And the 136 percent jump in ~1~~~·1ei?: 1t: ""' 1~ = :! l 0 u~ •• :1 n i. f ..
YOU SPEND nearly four tra\lel surely underlines our ~ .:0* ,J •lo'I ~ ~ :tvG:.11 1_,2 ffi J:: w. =-our spending for foreign :!!"' ~. -:I F f' • ~ •j ''lo;"' \ft l:
tlmes as much ror cigaret· yearning to 1earn h o w =!S! \• n ; j'• .. "~ ... ll F : tes, cigars and other tobac· others live and inform AAJrFi1ff .• u \') \o'i i,. om " l·fl ,,.' ,L M~ 1
od ct d Am Alrlln ,to 111 'lo !iii It am oil to ~ ~ " , '4 co pr u s as you spen ourselves on the cultures of Am :,:;r 1 " n 29 " om " ."• ff' ~~ 11 -1
each year for hea1th in· other nations !~11.J .,: = n llv. i··il\ :::·~'!.Ji nu= ~ ~ -~ .ur .. c. And You 'pend far . Am (:111 ).iO .. 4 '4 '7~ .q 'Mo omwor'.M I +l\'i
· AC111 of 1.IJ '11"' n"'° ~-\I ~ ornwt • •h ~ \114 --"' more each year on personal AND WE ARE Investing :1"-'"1~1.= 1l ~" 11: »1o1o +~'4 11• ~ ill 1"1 ·i'i
m our uture 1 n a n c a .Amer.1111 .• ,. n1AI ~"' ,..,,. -" (Ill ~!• 1·.7 uT ~ care -hairdos, haicuts, · f f · 1 1 "me-....,, 1• 21 11Yt .. .,., _,"" Clfl~cc, ·t!. »fll
cosmetics, bath equipment, security as riever before.:~.,~ il;f JI 11 •• ;: i; +· ~ :: :i: ,6 s ~ ,~111 1°1'111 ,p f ·~
eantcd. w-eUlhanare aooctiavll1."er•,.llgious The 125 percent rise over :;;;ol:!.11v~ ~? ?.:' ~ l•'A -i \lo :: :;J 1 J J4 "' ~ + ~ u the past de c ad e in our AOu.1 "'·'•• t "" 1,_, 1:w. 11o onFd p1iso s ~it -~
We are now crossing the spending f 0 r "personal ~::i~~ l:if 1': ~v. Y" ~~ 1~ =~~it'1f.7& Cl ~ #:: ~ -i ~ histon·c haU 1r1·1lion mark ;. b . .. hall · A111 en ,,,.. ,. •s111 .u111 """' -v. OMPwr 1.t0 s.s •• .,.. "
-1.1..1 US.llle&S, a CatC lllC-AE•lnd pt"' 110 ICll'i 111\'I IOV. .... onPw Jtf4-'2 1100 !i 71 ji .. "."
annual corrsumer spending, luding brokerage fees, bank~"'= \~)O 1: a ~~ ~ +·~ 5f:i•rr.r;_""tl: ~ ~ n-~ ~~
one more symbol of our fan· service charges life in " Ham1 "' 2 ' "11> 11v. ttl4 +N llfl A •l .s. 11 1 *"" 11 11 .,.. a.Jue a uence. o a o surance handling c 0 1 t 1 ""' 1n11 i.s. 1 1nr. 11lh uv. -•1. fi'c"' s.so 11" * _ 14 t ,; in I n f . • -Am HolP .22 ll ,, Jlillo 3114 + Ill lll•k !.:it ~ Iii ff: J +1111
1967 we ~nt $4.9'l billion-• f lifi , "'"'""11 i.10 1J :z:i tlillo ~ + ~ :'(' :;i1s ff 1f . . + v. "t'"-lawyers ees, etc., tes es ~~F:f' ;~ J: }:~ Z:11. 10v. + v. 0~~ .;.. '~ f,"' im +1
and our spendi"n.g b now to our unprecedented le~eis ::e•...Ji!e,!·• tot.fl 1U. ~ ~ + ~ ::rcp11.,n~ lf _u~ "'~ 1 :-'.".~
surely over the $500 bfllion of tf.ock market activtty, AlllN•!G•• 2 :11 '.A'"' ,,..., """ l ~ :.ni'1.ft~n,. ·~n ,1tu ~ .: .. ::v.;
How are our speodia& of life insurance "111."rm .o.e .a 1'11.,., , .. 11o 161 t3 ont Al/ fii ,
11
1 ' + "'
or ball trillion line b nk . h Am N"'" 1 1• QI.It .fl\11 •lll> * ""' i IG.114 l +P-• · a savings and pure ase AmPllOI .a.. N ,.~ 1•111 1'"" " =: :t' .!l ! _ ~
habit. changing? To show vou' just how::;: tt9~ '.60 •tt =: ~ :" ··1,~ •.. °'101~11 ~..I W, " + :z J Am5m•lll ttY~Sl\:sey,+ •Ito 1 -illo
much we are now spending =sr: 1.10 34 ~ ~ = +~~ onr ••• " , 1 1 -::.~ WE ARE ever more ac· on. what, and how fast our An.Stet fl'"1s 211 11' 1111' 11• -"' °"':~ 1f -"'
tiveJy seeking creature com· spendi"ng is rising, here is a ~s.!.::~11.-: .; Utt ~ W"'-:-.,".'": ='"r~·21\' :J ~ L. :~+·~ rorU and ind u 11 in I chart drawn up by the Com· :~u.r~ l ff111 ffy. tfv. =YI OOPr ...... "'11~ A mt I... : -:-..~ necourseesl•vl~~ inof tlif~·e. nS01·n"c.· merce Department's Office :~ 1./'llb f::g rn m: ~41-~ ..... = ~ ..Js'N ;,, = ~ = g=.';t '"""'" ol Business Economics trac-A.rr>WWk1 ·56 u 14v. """ 14"" -.. on.i11111 .221 1 :;15\'t J::t " 1957 the ls . AW ortt 1.25 r.60 1""1 It lt'h + "" om Pd 11'0 • ... -.... , r e m our spen-illg the amounts (in $ AW •,1111 1.0 tll 16 u u ..... orGW 2_,o. ,, .., ·~,,.. -1 v.
di f -~ f the tr di Am l11c; U ttllo :ll tl\41111 Al 1 4t\lo u• --· ng or 1uV1:1~ o a -billions) and the percentage Ameltk 11 n 41 ,,,. """ l* ''" . .-34 u !At. ,~····· tlo al .... ti 5 f d Aml1t IM I I.!. ~ !61.i 5'.. Ill o•&dc<il .SI I ... '""'fl .... n nee 1 e , O o • rises from 1957 to 1967. Note AMIC e.orii fl '!"" •4¥1 ~ -'"' r-co '·'° 1j "Iii •" ~ • c 1 o thing, transportation, where the biggest increases :::!e~ntc«': 1\i i""' ~= fi lilt =~rn -fg !., 1: Pi~ +r ·
household operation, has have taken place. :~~~2;~ lfl ~'5,,.. ~ !!~+1~ ::::.,c~~rll 2: :"" ~~ it .:.:.·"
been significantly slower Prl~••• EdVc. & :~c.:! 11t '! l.:. ~~ ~v. -v. rownZ• :z.m 2" Jl'h Mil f'l: than the ri'se in our overall """'ch s 2.t s 1 .. t 11s.2 Anll•n ,,.;,, :n 1"' 11v. 11v. ... cW c!:!. 1:: ~ o111 -'"' 41-'""' 1H1 IN1'!1.lllH Allco Oll .If! lt2 lll'i 3$-'4 37\lo Tl\4 Cudlh, Co ":? , .... , tt• t . ~odm· g for all goods and , , 1 , , , , , , •• , Acw• c111m l' .ov. •2v. o12111 -1"' ~ ~· DVJ -.... "t'-ere'" reV11 · · .-. Ard!D1n I Ml 1 2 Sll'a 51'MI 51\'a -1 IHllllV JiJf J 11V. N 11'1 services. P-1 111111Mu 11 .t :».7 124.t ArlzPubSvc' 1 ll ""' P.: 2'l ... u11111n ·• 11 St 1514 :; ,. Medici! Clf"I 15.I :W.O 12'.1 Al"Mlnc 05 .21) JS Jl'lto i0"6 30'll -\~ ~urntnlM .IO 5 lffto JtlAi _ \lo We are at the same time 11Kre411on 1s.1 :io., "·' Armeo s11 J 16' .111" " -.... l"""",-o r -~ • U\.'I 1s I!+ • Armour 1.to llG 41111 .,.,. 4 . . . ••• r1111 .,.. A& m\ 2'l'4 de,-•;ng more and more of Penon11 c•ra "' a.s 111.1 ..,..,,,, _. 4.is , n••• 1311. 71'"' _ v. urtl» wr 1 "" ~!-':I 15 ·· · · ~........ H111J1!nt 31.5 10.t M.I Arm ck"' l . .io. 11 ~ 11,. 1t'Ji -1'4 Curf Wr A 2 4 ll\lt 35111 +·iii
our spending dollars to 11e11.,1ou1 & welfl•• 1.1 '·' 11.1 Armjk pfJ.1s l2CI "'a &&~ "''1' -,... ~~1~r H, 'ttJo .u 31\i. + 14 services, ranging fr O m Cloll\el & 1cctuorl11 29.J 50.1 11.1 :rm. Cub 1.= : ~ ~ ~= =:; (.,:,.~ j.40 l~ fl~ fl. :IS -....
• HOlll,hold C11tr1Tlon 41., ''·' 69.• A~ln f':.: "90 10 JN 32U. :1:.!V. D-'5 -• educauon to foreign travel, Tr1nspor1111or1 17.t 4l.5 '1·' Alllld 011 ·1.20 '2 ~ .11,. .:i-l'ii 'Ito -• • medical care and funerals. l'ood & robtt.eo 7t.2 111,, "·' A1sdB• .too 2'I ~"' IN 12-l'ii •• 8"' ~iv ;:11 '° ,:i111 21111o l. + 'It
S;"ce 1957, our s-"";"8 for 1°''1 ~, """' ~:rs,o,; l.
1:ia10 21111is111o""1,~""l'~ _:;: o:~cv& '°'° ~ ~ ~ 41~=1'1 ...., Y""'"•'·'""" Wl4f!CIM 1211.4 Mt2.2 14.t Aiod rln .«I 11 IS\11 4~ 14.,., -:it g•vm "''·2S ~ f6'h H\li H\li +l AUO(lnY /·"" ' 110\ 3\'!i J~~ -""' IY p~ l.n 1l 31 '1. ll :Jl'AI A1c:t1!1011 .4.11 IOI 32"-31 ~ Hl'I +1~ B"r• o 2 H 504' 50 .so · ·~ Alch l1 pf .50 61 ll>t :IV. ~l'Ji + '/• !flPW f !.IU t 11''< 2'1o'J ~S'14-*
T Q • An d !~'l,"11tf"t1~ 2
: 1H"" 1lr' .nl'I +,"" lih~AY~ . ..:,-10 1 1'it-~~lt~i .. ~ ... ·~ ' ax Uestlons Swere .... II 111.kh 1.10 )ti '7~ t•'!J fj'!O. -\Ii M~.!.' .to S... W.. S.V. -tit. Allllci'I pfJ.7l 12511 'W. '' ' -lo, f'l,...,,v pll <$111 4J ~ +. :::a~lc~ "'.to 1~ 1;:~ !~ 1~ =1111 '"'JC, 1 .. 1~; ~ nv. lt'4 :... .. !~::,.a~Ofll .'XI 21~ ~-J~ ~ .... : 5:f:t.:'~IO ~ l~l'IS4~v,~·-: On Deductions Auditing ~~~~~~ ~ i [ ;1 ~-~ g·t!J~\~\ 1:17~~i 1!!ilJ~*) ~
' AYCD Cp 1.20 H 'l'!o G"'-~ -V. F.!~•m 1.«I HO ~~ ll" Ht +t ~ Avco •13.2CI It I) M\11 MV. -u, 'f' Ji C2 l 42V. .,.,., ~~ V.
Returning vacationers. establish ownership show :~ r: 1tt 11i ~~ .. "t. :r t f; l's"'1°1rlo ~.,21~~ 21~ ·JI~. ti
ntl d I d Id ' AYMI IM WI .0 ~ Jl>J. :m'1 :+ .. .,.. Ir .Zlt ~5 11'-1'\li "Ot'Mo l""" conve on e egates an ev ence of the cost, -show ..,_, Pt'l.so 1 1» ua u1 --.!';\ m:·~ ·• st ~s. 2.,. ~ = \\ working persons over 65 amount of depreci&Uon and A...., Pd I.to ni Ji li:JV. 12'14 -31>1 r1tlci•10 ft ;·1"' 3"" ·11 .. -·~ --/ort ,.,. .. '1 1"" 1J.\i 7\t ! . years Of age all have the amount Of insurance Or g•rx.k 1'f 1.3' 11 J't! 311'1 ~V. -~ U nvhm :J, T4 n\61 ~ I~
something in common. All other compensation for ttie a:~rg~ i:J: ~ J}v., Yr: rr ±. ~ ~L~,t'b .u :Ii g ~ 1~
are available for income tu 1 o s s rec e i v e d or l:iri11 .,,"l' ~ '™ ~·'a V'lli t i"' /~,,,,,,:' .lo •t !i .. ~ mi -l ~ deductions or exem"';oo~,. recoverable l1"'11u~ M• '3 fl <1011t ~ + 41-~M,,lll ,·"' :.. f""' s. · ·51w 1~ t'""' .7 • In• ~,2 l i • .. +v. ~ . 211 10 ..... l~ Im • The following questions fJ -M11 mother gave 1:~11 ~~~ ri ~ ml ~~ti~ 0orr 'bVve~ 1~ £~ ?m . ""
are designed to answer · me title to her home as a 1:1!W,nc.::' ': ':t: t~ ~m + ~ &::lR~ k~ J; n~ lfu -" questions concerru·ng taxes t w ·11 •·· b •"' h1d 10 :11.,.. lAll ~ g''voep 1 ~' 1 ,. U!-~ , presen. t an11 r.u.i.. e 1u1d!Lb .111 13 '3 """ +·14 re111nd i:"' •1 3~~ .,lZ U'"";l + auditing, exemptions and 1·nvolv•d' 1·~1rL1b ·'' 11 41111 """ -11i rtnr ~12 ta 41 0 -4 bi-t --• I YUkCll 50 4 U JN 13• + 1'i Dr11Sr pf 8~ 7 40~ a.. Ql' -1 dedu ctions. A G.fls t •· bl •••lllOS .to 12 J1:i. 1 J1111...: 1t1o Orrrlu1 •o t• 1 ,. _.., + .. -J are no ..-.xa e Be1fl'd1 1.n 1t nv. 10\lo 71 ..,1,4 Out"ee"Pw '"° ~1 ;,\lo 26~ r · + ~ Q -I've been audited to the pe 50 · · B«k'"'" .JO i.t 47 4'v. ~ + "'~111'1111 .so ·t, v >! ... .P -l' r n rece1V1ng 11~ok .JO :u s1 """ 5'1') .••.. or1n ·"'' w Ml4t ~,v, """-·""' several times, but none of them. However, the person l:r:!'tt!f :U ~ t¥.; ~ iL :t.3'111 };~07 lll3: Jllllo ~ n:-t-+y.
m11 fritn<U has been aud· making the gift may be l~1H~·'l Ji r:v. m? ;s.~ +'* ~~ • .:' ~ r1t0 tt 34 :u -:-..~
ited once. Am I on a liable for gift tax i'f the t:!:i1!2:r~ 31 1m 1441o 14-\t -111 lS'V~. Am ··"' a irn ;f,;t ~r:t !. ~
blackLi.!t or something? value of the gift! to one Btnc11• 1 . .i 110 ~ P. •• ff +·v. -E-F-· BtflefFln I.to '1 u :6; .(J1'1 1•1l1Pch to Jl3:) »'Ml 31'61 A-No, you are not. Com· person is more than $3,000 l"'!JF,JJ•• z7o ·~ 5 ..,.. +ltit. •at Air :SO 1'55 .,.. ~ 11 + ~ · '"" 11 •.lO J Jt\'J \It ,..,., ••t Gn ., 111 .w .,.L a -\.'I puter!i screen all returns In any one year t::F .JO 130 39~ Mt :>9111 :.·v. •st S sr 90 l!l 2'1% 21 n f,"4 -~
and identify those with cer· Q -Do I ·have to do 11~1 Pllo "' nv. 11 1:.,., ~-~ ·~~ 1_:: ~ J: ~~ * :;,
tain characteristics for ex· anything with the stubs f l.,..,1fk'.:111l~J ~ fr ~ £::: !.'= 1:.'c:"J,J·1 ~ i:~ f'l:: ffi =~ • Jnati · h . . 11e111 su '·'° 22.1; ,.,.... 2'1111 l'f'lt; f'"' munMt .. ri 11.,. O'(I; -m on. receive w en I deposit 1n· BkrThr11 ·'° t :u mi. 34 ~ c:1t1n1 oru, ,, ~ ,,_!-':I 1 t
Q -Can l haVf! my ta.% come and social security lJr:~.u~·Olf 2l : ~ ~ ':! 1~111":'fo ·"' '1 ~~ t'a £+
withholding reduced when taxes I take out of my em· ::te-'~,],;:0 : ~?l = :r' :!.:1\\ 1't:ul!!" .ti,, ,! 'nt 1;u ~ ";1~
l reach 65? pLoyes' wag &o.lnq 1-1' "" ~ Dt'I S4'h _,,... ltd ~ as I'"' !2 20 • ·· · •
A-Yes, persons 6S and A "" hiesb. · tl~"Pri2'o 1~~ ~ g"' im tl~l~'fns~~:J.' :U: i5 f~ f~ +,~ -.. ue s you receive BOfld srr1 1 r 2~ i.111 l5V. + ~ •~G 11 1r1n lf111 1, 1"" .-~ Over may Claim an ad· when you make a de~r·t llkMtlfh l.et J #I ""' '1 -\'t I r1 r°'" 1 41 41% M •l'IW + :i· """' t°"'Sn 1.:10 100 2'\lo 2"li 2t"' + ·11 m.,. 1 n.6' 'I ,. '' ti dJtiooal exemption for in-through the Federal tax eorww1r l .. ts 12'l 2"'o 2ln'o 2n .. + r. mrl! "'·111 10 711 7t _+ ~ •• I! h h I · Bor,...nF .M 2:12 '¥ ~ 2""' +I mlryAlr .1'0 • • 41-. "1'11 .., come ""x w o d 1 n g deposit , ..... em is for your 110. £dt1 2.0t ,. ""' 41\.'r ~ -.. l"'h•rt ,,2' 112 ., ..,.. .a.. -t • T d thi fi I"• llvsl Me Co lt 2• 23\.'t 2-1 +" m101r1 1.'° 1t Jl41o ~ stllli purposes. o o s 11 out records only. It should not a~rn1 It!( 1 >1'11 Ullo 'MV. -v. "'3:'.lS.~~. 1 """ lS is ;_ tl a new Formw • E I b f.led · llr•nllAir .50 111 11'1'1 20\\ 20'lfl s; ~ .. ..._, 29 3""o ~ h .., , mp oyes e 1 with y<iur quarterly 11r111sS1 ,,.. J s.i~ sw. ll'4 ·: :·: ~ .>ot>n ~' J2IO .., u ., . +·it.
Withholding Exe m pt i on Form 941 return. =~::l.:l ~-f ': ~';: Pit ~:t ±. ~ ;~kM ,,:l'fi· J" 'Ii-'{" ~ 1r :j14
Cerlificat. aod gl·ve It to Q I took d . lldwv H1i. r 1 lt'~ -• -• .,. !"~ i:Fo .. , t • -a secon )Ob 11wn co .1511 12 it~ fut. i'~ + 111 11 lllC 1.20 ,,.. +
your employer. He will tell this summer and social se:· l:C~1f-51' ti ~ R g = ~ ::'~'~·>f.20 1'i't1u: ~ .:
you when the change will go curit11 tax is being taken ==~di .«I ,j tt':! r~ tt~ t:a 1=:1 ih . .io'° u =' = = \i
into effect. out of mu poy Can 1 stop o011C11n1~ 1.:111 5' l•,,., u\4 u 11. E~~';' ·..,"" • '-'""' 11111 1"' + "" Q 0 I
'
• · 1JtYEr 1.20 '' 21~ n v v. + "' e · SM lMI. •~ + "" -ur apor men was thi.s _withholding since the == ~: i11 l~ ]tl'i nl') ~ ... !.'v. e:r:i~rcil.20 ~ ~ ~ ~ !. :i rifled by burglar& whilt we maxtmum will bf! taken e1111e F p1_. 1 1v. ,.,.. av. . :~c~ .. " .llOb ,s .sn. "" ~ + t't « Budlef In .M l) 16\.lo lS\11 l.ff't .,.,..,,.,. ·~ 'ft r.l'i' 4f'lli "~:rt weTt away on vaca on. out for social securitL1 on g~'°"":o~a t ,,J 32~ w_: fiU t1 ~ ~:\~~ ·\ • !!!) ""' ~ -i
Since wt do not ha~ in· mt1 rf!gular job? t::1t•:,TI. 3H ~ ~ l*t = lt ~:~~' ~ 1 ,~ i5 t'~ ¥1"'1" surance, can wt deduct our A-No. The law requires 11ur1111111 1.• us '"' .,,.. ,,_ i • •,•'" 1"111 1.» • ~ :lfllt i ,• Jo'.. /,,,. •8-• t umd'll .eo '5 vi.. ,..._ 17 14 '"'l'ltl Inc a 11 .)0 111 1 -... purpo.ses1 each employer to withhold tlH'•llUlll'l1 1 • 211'11 ,10 1u~ 614 F,•• w111 Fi,, ''° JJ\lt """ · 41o A Y ... dedu tlo f .... 1 . lllltflUnv .10r 1' ~"' 7141-21\lo 'Ill l flt\Mfo .• 5t JJ11t fl 2"' -, c n or a soc1... secunty tax on the '"'""JSll .• " :Ml') ~ uv. ..... ~= ·'° ,. ",.. -. "' ,,.,
theft can be taken on your first f7,800 i"n wages paid -C-FldPac ~-: ~ ft I~ 111 +·i.t.
· , eac emp oye. more than •I llotG1 . .o ., 32 20 """ 1v. FeoiP .,.•ld 1 ,, 31-'6 '"' +1;; r.turn However only th. h I U ~I l'IMnl I-ff 1W. I~ 15,,., !1\11 F Ptc "'1.26 4 21'1o Jf\e "·
loss in excess of $100 can be the maximum has been ~~ .is! " ~ 2H4 ~ -'~ ~::otr111 ·~w 11 ~~ 11~• -+;:
deducted. Tc establish a ":1lhheld from your com-:;~·.~ U M U:: llw. t ~ ~~,. t: ,1.~ • ~ r ,,., . .:!::~
theft loss you must be abl' bined salaries, then the ex· :"'1111'".~1 1 1f u-~ • .., ;:f111 ~ : i: ~="'l.J·• ~ ~ _. . t ::
to show the date the theft cess m1y be tAlten as a '"'"" .to '° 1t ''" 21 + "* Fin F..,.,...., '" Ulj, l:Rlo d• ed b · •• C Mell " V. "'" 1'1\.'I +1V. Fl .... ! .. I.JO 1' E: .... • ~· Wat i~ver , s ow the credit on """" income tax '"run 1...0 it 4'1i o ''"' "' F1tchrl 11,., 1» ""' ~ ., ty I ~¥-1rtl1IH .60 fl 2j'I ~ ~--\lo 1'1! NII t~ 1$ »!iii praper was Ito en , return. ., •retk'r 'fJ \ lt'4 ''Ith~ 1.30 21 f. so ="" -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii :~ Sii i.to )I ~ "' .1t -II ~1Fn'.t'ott1 11' ~ ll6* 1114 "' -\to •rrlftr C£.1 SJ ~ 11V. 1'UJ -t :il't 'llnl pfA4,!0 '(TIO Mii! tl~ ti~
MERm & BENEFm OF
LEASING THE FAMILY CAR
..................... ., .................... ..., cs. ,..
,.ellffy ... 5-. ki ............................. ~ '
_.It .... '"4 fair Mt • ._.,_ ..... ...,,, • -Celffy
..... ............ ""' ... & .............. " ........ 1121
.....V, (tltt ......... lltttt C..,W .... fw ..... Stl , .WC•
l1tef ... .0 N¥:11'H terTkt -ii ... ......_ fw 40.0GO _..
1941 ·~ .........,., -"·'· .,... ........ .,..,. ,.. ,....., ... ,,....,.. ....... ,.., ............... ...., ... ""' .........
,..,...,. -.......... """ 2 .,.... ,.. ........ .
-·-•w.t COUT--AT
M NPWl..al•......,./ ....... I
,,., "'2.2 1lt ...... JI•' ll\lo + It Fl1 E C&911 2 I~ 1~ ~ \lo
•tfoftW · 71 :)''lk1''6 -II I'll On •• •M lt1" lt 11 -"' IM JI ~, <01 1 ., U lt 11 Flt l"(M .41 $11 fl"' ti !-. .... fJI" ,M .tl 2'h .. l'l•l"wt.I .H ,. U\o\ ui.
••, llt CdMl 11f •rl<i 41"' + 1i1o Pl• Stwt .ti 10 ,.... 11 .:.. ,,..
I trTr 1. 1' Cl !m 41* + 'Ii P!110r Corp ll $JI "" + \61 ~~MM~ 'f lf: 1 l'i ~ _:!::.: ~~l-.II '1 U n\.lo -._
eq C1 .• ~' i-• ! \lo PM( ~ .U IN .t0'4 Jt"' -11 ::::..c:.,J 11~1 tli\o\1~ l~'-'Ft ~ .. Jl't.P,,,. ~ · ~1 ·· r.'"'·C ' ........ ~ ~ ::"t,.,i:. :. n ~ :v. ~ +, -~~ £'!... ~~ 1~ ,~ ii'' r .. ""1• 11 ~~ u... ~ ... .,..£"'1• • •111 ~ :i:t1'itef :ti 't Jm Y'"" /If'!' _+~ ::::1 J!.~5 1. ',,Y"'10~ ~"-" .... 11~c~1 tf, ul ~ 9 .. 1 ll ·~:iGOd· 4l! n~ ~ ,,~ .. ~
: ~ ::. idn ' • im'= !lS ~: •~:.: 'l· Ji: Ii: ~ : ~
tnl loV• .• l I "" • An!Oll "' Im • ' . «l1I 1-'0b tm .i t "' AT~.,, S 1011 4" i .. m:..sr ~: ~ J:" iii! 11.ll :,a ~t.r,: i:it 'h • r. ~,~ 51~ I!! !ill~ ~i~ ~~~ i ~ ~~ =1 ~ •n::' iJ ! ~ ""r -i :i '~\·r.. 1ff
111 § ,~ .,~J ,~ ffi!' : 1:~ ~:: • • w.. ~ -~"' ,,v;:r +~ Milt ,, ~ 2. m 1.1 -I.Ii
SHARP
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1:1~..r..f ~ fi• .t . , ..... ' . _.,
1'1,_ I " ~ ·• ~~i q f i \l:I!~
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C4JLV OILOT-J •
It -•• , .... ~
•
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t
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•
le llAll.Y PILOT .. _. -19, 1961
-~una'• ~other Si de'
DAILY PILOT Atfltl'P""-
, . . . . . • ···-·---
Democrats F ea r Conve n t io n ·'Bolt'·
CHICAGO (UPI) -Politi·
cians dread the national
political convention which
eod.I in a "bolt" -a
walkout by disgruntled
Joser1.
The Democrats face a
definite danger of a bolt
when ttley meet in CtUcago
Aug. 2ft.29 to choose a can-
didate for president.
Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey is the
over whelming pre-coo-
vention favorite for the
nominatfon. His only major
opponent, Minnesota Sen.
Eugene J. McCarthy, con-
cedes he's the Wlderdog.
However, Humphrey may
have greater difficulty in
uniting the party behind him
for the election campaign
than in winning its nomfna-
tioo tor president. He i6 fac-
Negro Business
Program Starts
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
The Samll Business
Administrati.on has begun a
program designed tX> in·
crease by 20,000 a year the
number of urban businesses
owned by Negroes and ·other
mioority groups.
ed with certain defection.a when a large segment of the
from the right and possible party, for one reason or
desertions from the left. another, decides to alt out
'!bird party candidate the election and atay away
George C. Wallace has µ-om the polls.
alre,dy won the backiilg of 'lllat happened to tbe
many c o D s er v a t iv e Republicans in 1940, whee
Southerners who nornially Franklin D. Roosevelt was
would v o t e Democratic. seeking an wiprecedented .
Now, there are ominous third term. Wendell L.
rumblings of a fOurth party Willkie came from nowhere
in the making. to take the nominatfon away
Democratic conventions from Thomu E. Dewey.
have had the1r share of bolts , Party conservatives f e I t
since 1860, wh.en ttie party Wllllde was an intruder.
split over an anti·tlavery They sat out the campaign
plank. Sout.b.~n delegates and the Oemocrats walked
walked out of t h a t away with tbe electidh.
Oharleston, S. C., convention E\lfn if no· fourth party
to hold a rump meeting of m·a t·erializes, Humphrey
their own. faces a real .J>06slbility that
Humphrey bfmseli wat McOarthy supporters will be
the direct cause of ooe bolt. so disenchanted w i t h
In 1948, as a delegate from "e6tablishment politics" at
Minneapolis where be was the corivenUoo as to sit out
mayor, he led a floor the 1968 race·.
rebellion agaimt the pro-----------1
posed Democratic pJaUorm
and got the convention to
adopt a strong civil rJghts
plank. Delegates from two
Southern states -M:isl!iissip-
pi and Alabama -walked
oot.
ln hope of averting that McCarthy forces full op.
danger to party_ unity, the portunity at the conve~on
H u m p b r e y camp Js t.o air their charges of ,'rtg-
determined to · give the gfng" and other grievances.
FASHION
SHOW
and
DANCE COITEST
\VITH PRIZES
COMMENTATOR-GWEN WllUAMl
of Gwen'• School of Moftllna and Chann
Tuesday, August 20 at 2 P.M.
Wednesday, August 21 at 2 P.M.
Thur!lday, August 22 at 2 P.M.
1Iib unuaual view of the Art COOl.ony offers view of the "other side" oC Lag·
-l_rii• Beach's famed bills. The road snaking from bottom of photo toward the
JIOO (top) la Laguna Canyoo Road. All of dowotown Laguna is clustered along
::c6a&te!·plain at top of !'holo.
Named "Project Own,"
the program i6 a s k i n g
banks, industriel and com·
munity wganiU1iflioos to
furnish fund6, trai!llng and
guidance for expanded
urban b u s-l n e s s develop-
ment.
MeOarthy has disavowed
any intention of leading a
bolt from the party after the
1968 cmvention. He has said
he would not head a fourth
party ticket. But lie did not
rule oot ttie !JOS6ihillty that
a four111 party might be
fonned if dis1enting
Democrats feel they are
"&t:eamroliered" at the na-
tional convention.
Frank bolts are less com~
mon in political history than
jjsit~." A sit.out occurs
loufb Coast ?Ina
Bristol at San Diego fr-1y, Cosio MeSI
'f e1nperance Leader
~Bits HoJne Drinking
~ ANDERSON', llld. M'l)
,.. The preoident tJI tile Na·
.tiOnaJ. Wmnen'1 Olristian
Temperan1ce Un1lon
~WCTU), charging that
il'illli.001 of Americalll: have
become alcohollcc ln their
homes, bas "8lkd fw legal
C\rbs on alcoboti.c beverage
promotion aod calet aimed at home c!riuidni.
billion gallons ol hard lJ.
quor, beer and w·ine
toPOrted by· the lnt.rnal
kevenue Service to now be
consumed annually in the
United States is being sold
bottled or packaged for
carry-home to be consumed
there,11 Mrs. Tooze said.
Mrs. Fred J. Toolze ol
Evanston+ DI.. 4l<fdresling
· the WC'l'l.1'1 120-woman ex·
eclflive committee oo the
eve of the uni.on'• ~ an·
nual convtntlm, f8id '(five·
sixtlla) ~ Ille oearly Slit
"Beer bas become the
counUy's major threat to
temperance, with brewers
JeadiDg the drive to make
drunkards of t!he American
family , , , Ille elcohol habit
js Wii.tlb ruthless promotion
under political laxity being
prmed to more people than at an)" time previously .••
. .
1000 BEAUTIFUL
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moy be U<ed for morkln11 home conned food
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Vogue typo on line quolity white gummed
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M"' Ct.istin1 Brown
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•
M..dq, Auoust 19, 1968 DAILY PILOT ZI
Cubs Seek Court Action in Illegal Pitch Hassle
'
DAILY PILOT ....... ft llldlll"ll KMlll•
SAFE ARRIVAL -Ed Kirkpatrick of the Angels slides paat the de-
fensive efforts of Washington catcher Paul Casanova durin& Saturday
night'• game at Anaheim. The Angels hope
pennant hopes at the Big A loriight.
to derail Baltimore'•
Frantic
By EARL GUSTKEY
Of tllt Dtll'I' Pllol Sllff
The frantic Baltimore Orioles, the
.only team accorded a genuine chance
at catching ttie American League·
leading Detroit Tigers, i n v a d e
Anaheim St.adium tonight.
Await~ng them will be Angel
righthander Jim McGlothlin (8-10 ),
Who happens to be the Angels' best
pitcher at the moment.
Opposing the redhead will be one of
the Orioles' best. Jim Hardin (15-8).
Manager Earl Weaver's outfit com-
Weaver Says
O's Need Help
To Win Flag
MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL (APl -
Baltimore Manager Earl Weaver con-
cedes his Orioles need game help from
somebody else if they are going to oat-
Ch Detroit's apparently pennant-bound
Tigers.
Frank Robinson. the hero of the
Orioles' d a s h to th e 1966 American
League pennant. says it's not too late
-if he and some of ttie oUier Birds
can have a few more da¥s like Frank
did Sunday.
Robinson, triple crown winner aod
most ¥aluable player in 1966. drove in
four runs with a homer, double and
single Sunday to lead Baltimore to a 7-
1 victory over MiMesota.
Face Angels T onis~~ _
-·~~ ... ·-~:.i I '
Orioles Invade Anaheim
es into Orange County confident his
club can overhaul the Ti~ers, whose
pitching staff. so say the railbirds,
will coll.apse during the September
grind.
Baltimore gained a lap Sunday.
Wibile Detroit was dropping a 4-1 game
at Boston, the Orioles were whipping
Minnesota by 7-1.
N•atur.ally, Weaver hopes the Orioles
can gaill more ground with a three·
game sweep of tile Angels.
Baltimore now trails Detroit by
seven games.
Sunday's developments at Anaheim
Stadium were both encouraging and
disheartening for skipper Bill Rigney.
His great young pitciler, Tom
Murptiy, performed brilliantly in turn-
ing back Washington, 6-4, after a
shaky st.art. He was lilted for a pinch
bitter in tile eightll inning.
The disheartening part about all this
is that it w-as Murphy's last 1968 ap·
pearance. He left last nig'ht for six
months of Army service.
Murphy gave up four hits in the se-
cond inning before he settled down and
Worst Loss -Allen
Chargers Next on Tap
After Dallns Rips Rams
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -"This was
pr.obably our worst game in three
years."
Coach George Allen spoke after his
Los Angeles RaDll were humiliated 42-
10 by the Dallas Cowboys before a
Memorial Colllewn crowd of 64,978
Saturday night.
LOs Ange.Jes is at San Diego Satur-
day night for its fourth eMlbition
game of the season.
U it wasn't the Rams' worst game in
three seasoos, the result was the
worst. The previous worst defeat was
a 35-7 beating at the hands of the Min-
nesota Vikings in Allen'• first season
with the club in 1966.
Veteran quarterback Don Meredith,
wed by Landry only in the first half,
hit Bob Hayes and L8n9'8 Rentzel oo
58-y.ard scoring passes for Dallas' first
two scores. '
Meredith, wbo was replaced in the
second half by Craig Morton, also
threw 12 yards to Rentzel for a
touchdown in the second quarter. The
Cowboys left the field with a 35-10
halftime advantage.
The Rams' scoring was ac-
complished on a 50-yard touchdown
pass from Roman Gabriel to Bernie
Casey and a 42-yard field goal by
Bruce Gossett.
gave up on ly one hit through the
eighth. One of th<>se second-inning
Senatoc hits was another ta p e
measure home run by Frank. H0'.1.'.;i rd.
A Stadium custodian stepped the
cloot off at 452 feet behind the leit-
center field fence.
After the game Rigney dodged a
Ange l Slate
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pointed question as to whether he'd be
back witih ttie Angels next year.
The question was: ''Are you looking
forward to managing Murphy next
year?"
The response: "I'd like to manage
nine like him."
Rigney, also likes the looks of the
new third baseman just purchased
from Jalisco, Mexico , Winston Llenas.
"Th.is kid wants to stay up here
something awful," he said.
"The first night he was here last
week he looked up at those lights and
said : 'Look at those lights! Nothin'
like that in Jatisco, nooooo.' "
WASHINGTON CALIFORNIA
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A'rbitrator P elekoudtii
Key Figure in Dispute
CHICAGO (AP) -Th• Chicago
Cubs want a hearing over the alleged
Illegal pitches of their ace reliever
Phil Regan and umpire Chris
Pelekoudaa says he 'll be there with.
: "God as my judge and witness."
"If they want to go to court," said
Pelekoudaa "just give me the time
and date . I'll be there with niy at·
torney and God will be my judge and
witness ."
The big hassle over illegal pitches
thrown by Regan began ln the ir.eventh
inning of the first game of a
doubleheader, which the Cubs dropped
to Cincinnati 2·1 and 6-3.
Regan had a 1-2 count on leadoff
batter Mack Jones.
Pelekoudas went out to warn Regan
about illegal pitches and then came
back and signalled a 3-1 count.
Cub Manager Leo Durocher stormed
out and the umpire admitted he was
wrong and raid bhe count should be 2·
2.
Jones fouled off a pitch 'and then
flied to center. But he wasn't out.
Packers, Bears
Meet Tonight
In TV Clash
MfLWAUKEE. Wis. (AP) -Two ''.I o s er s" clash to n i g ht in a na-
tionally-televised National Football
League exhibition at Milwaukee Coun-
ty Stadium.
The Green Bay Packers. losers last
Tonight on TV
Channel 2, 6:30
week to the New York Giants l:>-14,
meet the Chicago Bears, who ran their
pre-season record to 1-1 with a 10--0
loss to Baltimore last weekend.
"We both have something to prove,"
Bears defensive e n d Ed O'Bradovich
said Sunday, "so this should be one
heck Of a game."
The battle, pit.s for the first time
P ?.-:ker coach Phil Bengtson and
Bears mentor Jjm Dooley.
Both are starting their first year as
head coaches after servJng a 1
defensive geniuses ror two living
legends -Green Bay's Vince Lom·
bardi .and Chicago's George l-Ialas.
Chicago will test its new "total of·
fense" while Green Bay is patching its
old defense.
'fhe Bear attack evolves around
veteran Gale Sayers. a touchdown
threat anytime he touches the ball,
and roolde Cecil Turner, a speedy
flanker from CaHfornia Poly.
The flip-flop offense, with Sayers
moving around in the backfield. is
designed to give the Bears "a little
edge. a little something extra for the
other side to worry about in critical
situations," Dooley said.
Pelekoudas had called ., Weg.J pitch
which now made the count 3-2.
. Durocher stormed out a g a l n and
after a heated exchange be wa1 tossed
out of the game. Jooea grounded out
and minutes later third base umpire
Shag Crawford thumbed Al Spangler
out of the game from the bench.
Before it was all over Pete Rose
struck out in the ninth but again it wu
an illegal pitch and the man battling
for the National League batting cbam•
pionshlp was given anottier chance
and he came through with a single.
This incensed Cub catcher Randy
H u n d I e y was thrown ou t by
Pelekoudas. Rose got into the act by
unsuccessfully trying to steal 1econd
and when he threw his helme~ umpire
John Kibler tossed him out.
Regan, between games, complalned
about his livelihood being in jeopardy
and Durocher •creamed, 1'Tbey'U not
get away with tbi1. I 'll iake Jt to tbe
commissioner."
John Holland, vice president of the
Cubs, said he has requested a bearing
before Presideot Warren Piles.
'.'After Pele.~oudas warD'eci Regan,"
said Holland, he should have fOllowed ·
the rule and thrown rum out of tbei
game. Instead. he kept giving' them
extra outs. This incensed the crowd
which was getting more difficult to
handle."
Holland said it would have been
ridiculous to protest because "our
point of protest would have been to
have our pitcher thrown out of the
game."
Pelekoudas, said, "I thought about
throwing him out of the game but then
I decided to let him stay in and suffer.
l-Ie wa'S using an illegal pitch. We
found vaseline inside his cap and
forehead."
During the inning, Crawford called
for a towel and wiped off Regan's
head and inside his cap.
"Where's the evidence," c r le d
Durocher. ''They don 't have any."
"They ridiculed our man," 1ald
Holland. "They were invited to take
Regan to the clubhouse and examine
him. But no. They wiped him off wltb
.a towel. Not their fing~rs, mind you,
but a towel. They accuse a man of
cheating but have no evidence."
"I know an illegal pitch when I see
one," said Pelekoudas. "A sinkar
spins when It breaks. A pitch with
foreign substance sinks without spin·
n:ing."
"It's a c r i me," 1 a!i..d Crawfocd
"when you ti.ave to go out and SeMch a
pitcher. It's a dJsgrace to the ·game
and the players."
"But what the hell can we do," aaJd
Pelekoudas. "They gripe about tow
batting averages arid illegal pitches.
Then when we enforce the rules, they
still cry. He was out there defying u1.
So all we did was our job."
Regan was mum about It all after
the doubleheader and took the "talk to
my lawyer" attitude.
"I'm not going to say anything unUl
I 've talked to some people," 1aid
Regan, who seemed embanassed
about the matter and actually defiant
when asked if he was using anything
on the ball.
U.S. Bags Zone Title
In Davis Cup Net Play
CLEVELAND (UPI) -They write
the postscript to an American Davis
Cup triumph today when Lt. Arthur
Ashe and Manuel Santana complete
the usual "meaningless'' set which
turned into one of the finest ex·
hibitions in amateur tennis.
The U.S. ousted Spain from 1968
competition Sunday as Clark Graebner
became a hometown hero once again
by defeating Juan Gisbert 9-7, 6-3, 6-1
in one of two scheduled singles
matches to give the American Davis
Cuppers an unbeatable 3-1 lead in the
interzone series.
In a following 31h hour marathon
halted by darkness Santana and Ashe
staged their brilliant serving duel at
the 11aro\d T. Clark Stadium.
The match could have no bearing on
the outcome, yet the veteran Spaniard
refused to budge under the pressure of
the young Army officer.
Santana won the first set l:J..11 in an
hoW' and two minutes. A'she returned
the fire with 7-5 and 6-3 victories in the
next two sets. Utilizing the finesse ac·
cumulated over a decade cl com·
petition, Santana, refreshed by a 10..
minute intermission, staged a volley.
Ing performance that drew the ap-
plause from a capacity crowd of 6,200
who stayed on to watch tbe Spaniard
win the fourth set 15-13. Then darknes1
closed in.
The U.S. will me e either West
Germany <l' the wirmer of the India·
Japan series in its next test. The
survivor then takes on defending cup
bolder Australia 1n the cballena;e
round later this year.
M a r k Belanger added a ~run
double and Dave Leonherd dlecked
the Twins on seven tuts -losing his
shutout in die ninth inning.
"The kind of. year I'm having,"
Robinson s'8id, "It's got kl feel good to
get three hits and drive in four runfi. I
haven't bad very many days that good
this teaSOD."
"Dallas played fine football but we
just made too many mistakes," the
Los Angeles mentor sald. "You can't
make that J;Dany mistakes and beat
anybody. A loss is never helpful until
you play some more football games
and time will tell whether the k>ss will
help Us ."
Boros: 'I Get Excited-At Times~
"There ii Ifill a lot ot. Ume. ''
Robinson said on the pennant race.
.mictl Detroit continues to lead by
,even games even though Ute Orioles
picked up OM full game SUnday IS the
'ngers bowed 4-1 at Bqston.
"We've got the pitching if we ~an
acore the runs." Frank added .
We.aver, naturally. would like to 5et
some ottier American League teams
croack Detroit a little more treque.nUy.
"We've got six games with them,"
said Weaver, wlho replaced Rank
Bauer July 11 and under whole
tutelage Baltlm«e stands 28·14. "But
we caa 't seem tu get that clOM: to
tbtm."
The defeat snapped .a IO.game ex-
hibition wiMing rtring for the Nati~al
Football League club. The Rams had
wins over New Orleans and Cleveland
in previous preseason contertl this
year.
''We played a perfect game of of.
tensive football in the first half,"
Dellaa coach Tom Landry eommented.
"Defea1ivelJ', we held up the Ram1'
}:1'1.me rece{ver which meant that Uley
bad to 10 to tht.lr sec:ondary rece.lver.
They just didn't have the ttme."
The outcome actually wu decided in
0!1 tint quart.er •hen tbe Cowboys toOt • 21.0 lead.
~ '. ------~ . ~ .._ .._ .._ ___ ...__.....__..,,,.__ . .._ . .._ .-. ....__ ----
HARRISON, N.Y. (AP) -W•tching
him play, all loose and relaxed and
smooth-swinging, you'd think there
w.asn't a nerve, oot a one, in Julius
Boros' middle-aged, over-weight body.
Not so, admitted Bi g Julie after
surviving a five-man scramble Sunday
and nailing down the $50,000 firat prize
in the $2.50,000 Westchester Classic
Golf Tournament. the richest on the
pro tour.
1•1 know what it' look.a like," the 48-
year-old Bbros said. "But I ~t tfle
flutters sometimes, just like anybody
else. There art Um.et out there when r
a;et excllbd."
Soroa, who became tht oldelt man
lo Win tilt Prol•s<lonaJ Golfers '
Association ohampioMhip earlier tbJs
year. catM from three strokea off the
pace with a final round 68, four-under·
par for the t l ghtJ..6,648 -yard
Westchester Country \;Jub course, and
finished wiUl a 72-bole total of 272.
Jack Nicklaus. defending champion
and seeking his third consecutive tour
victory. veteran Dan Sikes and red·
headed Bob Murphy, the rookie who
led all of the first three rounds, finish·
ed in a Ue for second, at 273.
Nlcklaua bad a cloclng 66, Sikes a 68
and the obviously nervous Murphy a
par 72. Th•y picked up $20,416.66
apiece.
Bill Oaaper, -wu In the tltiek of it all before t.acting, wa1 aloot in fifth
place with a 67 for 27$.
Boros, 20 pounds overweight and at
times bothered by an ailing back, in·
creased his yearly earnings to
ll44,3S7, and 1wted thinking about
the tax man.
klH'tt ttld '"°"""' wl,......," In ~'f'• H11tl l'OUftll Jf ltll WnlcMt'ltl' Tovrrw1 ...... 1 111 Ille .,..... ~ ... d • .., n W11kMl"r Cauntl"lll Club co..1.,.1
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~ilkinson
May Head
Pro Golfers
'NEW YORK (AP) -Bud WUltinoon,
!&rm.er Oklahoma fOotball coach and
fQimerly a oandidate tor the U.S. Sll!ole ii the tn1111 Ill• pro tournament io"li,,d want to run their oreariizaUon.
.'IM bmdlome. Oklahoman. now a
buaiaesa u.ecuUve and part-time
t..lev\Jkln ann...-, m a y be tapped
f or the post -Y wben the touring
plo.ywa ......... Ille pllnt .. d
format GI U>elr new ..t-up In com·
peti-to Ille PrGltsah>oal Gollen
~n. w~ cculd not be reached Im· ~tr tor comment Several ~ ·aoy ·111ey tlllok be ls rocepllvo.
l!k:ne-ir poolllon would be thot o!
colDmluionw of bi& time tournament
goll.
Both the PGA. and the players who
announced last week that tll•Y planned
to break a-..y frOm the parent
organ!Ution ...i run lhelt owo tour
\ave called preu conferences today.
'lbe PGA &etl Orll crack at pre1en·
U.g its case.
tt hu summoned newsmen to a mid· ~ restaunmt where top PGA brus
-Predde9t Mu Elbln, ,ea"elarJ Leo
f'roal«., Uecutive· director Bob Cra1y
UJd the new tour mailager, Joe Black
-will be In attendane•·
:-Prinolpally, the PGA will aimounce
that • n~ of the tournament pros
are norm 1ympillhy with lh• playen'
revolt and will probably llick wttll lh•
PGA.
Mowed Down
DEAD BUC -Pitlsburgh's Gene Alley ta out at the plate after Dodger
outfileder Willie Crawford unleashed • great throw from the outfield
Sports In Brief
at the ·Plate
tO catcher Tom Haller SUnday. Umpire Ed Vargo
Alley out. Dodgen loet to the Pirates, &-1.
l.IPIT .........
prepare to call
The PGA olflclals also will enun·
ciate a determtnaUon to cmtinue •
goll toor under tile PGA bemer ID
competition with. the ao-called rebell.
The players' New York attorney,
Sam G a t • 1, wW preside at a later
conference at the midtoWn o f f I c e s
al Nat Fieldl, who bas acted as
public relatlom comult.ant far the
tooriDI prot.
Marathoners
May Decline
Team Berths
No-hitter for Belinsky;
Singer Tries
To Move LA
Out of Cellar
Gates bu promieed that the players
will divula:e at thiJ time the name of
the new orgamizatJon, it.I framework
and its aims.
ALAMOSA, Co Io. (AP) -Goorp
Young and Kenneth Moore won berths
Steelers Nip Chargers
HOUSTON (UPI) -The riches-to.
raga Los Angeles Dodger1 open a
three-game "showdown" teries with
the Houston A1troe tonight -with lut
place riding on the line.
The new commissioner may be nam-
e¢ at tbb, time. Or 1be player• may
wait. WllkinsOD 1• the man moet of
tbem want. ·
·Gatel ii expected to unounce a new
d!al for the tpan1or1, promlllng the
~n who put up tbe money that they
will have better lfUINDlees of cett!oi
top players for the tournaments. __ .a
.LSome aebedul• may be announ(%U.
The new group also 11 txpecl;ed to
cfuclooe a plan for llgnlng club prOI.
17 -year-old
Equals World
Dash Record
DENVER. Colo. (AP) -Margaret
Bailes, a 17-year-old sprinter from ~e
Oregon Track Club, tied the world s
record in the too-meter dash Sunday
night with a 11 .l second clocking In the
AAU Women'• Track and Field Cham·
pio111btp1.
Trailing Miss Balles was the
coholder of the world record, Wyomia
Tyus of Tennessee State, timed in 11.3.
The other coholder of the record.
Barbara Ferrell of the Los Angeles
Mercuryettes, flni5hed fifth ~t 11.4.
Miss Ba.ilea, however finished 1e·
cond to Miss Tyus in the i.00-meter
dash.
The Tennessee sprinter had a Ume
of 23.5 seconds; Mias Bailes was two
tenths of a second behind.
Pat Van Wolverleare 'of the Angels
Track Club set a new American
record in the ~meter hurdles In Sun-
day'• semifinals at 27.3, then Ued her
own mark in winning the frnals.
Saturday, teammate Janene Jaton
tied the old American 200-meter
hurdles record <A. 'll.1.
Marlen Seidler of the N e w Jersey
Athletic Club suoceeafully defended her
shot put championship with a 50-3% ef-
fort.
Two of the women who qualified
Sunday are almlng. for their fourth
Olympics.
They are Wlllye White In the Ion~
jump and Olga Connolly in the discus .
Mrs. Connolly of the Crown Cities
Athletic Club won the iz:old medal In
1958 whJle .on the Cteehoslovakla
team. Mrs. White of Chicago bas two
allver medala to her credit.
The top &ix qualifiers in each of thfi
events tn Denver are eligible for thP
A-ng. 24-"28 Olympic trials at Mt. San
Antonio College in Walnut . Calif.
From those trials, a squad of 35.:n
women will be chosen for the U.S.
Olympic IHm.
on the U.S. Olympic marathon team Bo Bellnlky burled a no-bitter Sun-
Sunday with a 1-2 finJsh in the Na-day aa the HawaU Illandln downed
tional AAU Marathon Championships, tbt Tacoma Clubl 1.0 in Pacllk Coast
but both indicated they may not com· Lea;rue .a.ion.
pete in that event Bellnlky, 1-12, struck out 10 and
Young, of Casa Grande, Ariz .. is prve up 10 wa'tki. The Cubs started a
America's top steeplechase runner tenllon-pacted rally in the ninth, leav-
and he Nid be will attempt kl qualify ing h b.._ loaded. Bellnsky's
next week for the 0 l Y m Pi c performance wu the tint no-nitter by
steeplechase. Moore, from Eugene, an Islander.
Ore., said he may try to qualify N -
10,000 meters in1tead of the marathOn. ""' ... ...
Ronald Daws of Minnesapotil, who
finished third and aleo earned a spot
on the Olympic marathon team, said
unequivooabty be wW .ccept hls
reward.
"I'm a marathoner," he said. ]f
Young and Moore decline, then Robert
Deines of Pasadena, Calli., and
Stephen Matthews of Denver, who
finished fourth and fiftti, woulQ join
Daws on tbe Olympic marathon squad.
Young shaved more than nine
minutes off the record for Alamo1a's
2fi..mile 385·yard marathon course in
the rarified atmosphere at 7 ,MO-feet -
much like the atmosphere athletes
must cope with at Mexico City.
They Lead
The Majors
JIM.RICAN LIA0\11 tATTING fD 11 Mll).......Olfv•, Minn., .)1141 c .......
MINI., .m "· H•rnllon, ao-1., ·"'' Andnwa, hi., .2'2; c.mr, CMk., .m.
Ill.INS -MCA.ullfte, O.tc., n i I(. H•rrtltOll, '-'·· t.':~ V11lr•1m1-I. 8•! .. "; Tov1r, Ml""-· "' w11111,
· .. u ... 'i·1ATTED IN -IC. H•rAd-~· .. 10\.i_I'. Howwlll, W••ll .• 13: P-e11, a.tt., 7•1 H rv,, vst ..
•11 Ollv1, M!nn .• "; Frtel\111,. o.t.. . t HITS -C1m1N1Mf'la, 0.-.• lM1 AHrk k., lJ01 UM1111cllir, Minn., U01 Ollv1, Minn., I I".
H-1rd, W1sfl,, 122. DOUBLES -II:. lmllt!, 8011I .. JOI I . It I"'°", ,111., 2•; V11tritmtk , 8otl., 251 McAulltN, I., t.11 O'Ylr'-Mlnn .. 23. Tlllf'LE5 -MC.Cr1w, Clllc .. !Di l'r-1, C1llf .. '' MCAuUflt, Del., fl Stroud, Wiiii .. 11 Molncilf, Olk.,
11 C~_.la, 0.k .• >. < H HOME RUNI -. Haw1nl'-~'""" 'II . If•
......,, 111J'" M' wr ~ i;,n .. "' • JKl<Moi\, °'s\ol3i!w ":lilt t .• _ c--·i.. 0e-.. .,,
Ctrdll'lll, Clew., Jh It. Smlltl, loll .. 1'1 MC.C,._, "'ff "I rwr•\Mlnn .. ,,_ P CH NG I Dtcl1lon1l -McL1lpt, Det .. 25-:l; .Jt)1 $11nl11go. 1111., t~ •. •'21 Tltnl, CltY9 .. ll-1 ."21 Cvlf,, 9otl .• Mj M21 McN11iy, t1rt .. 16-1, M71 Tr;i~E'6°u\°i~ :..."' M~t Clfft., 2221 Tlelll, ci.w .• 21S; Mc\.lln, DI. 20~1 D. CPMoro, Mllltl .•
1721 Pllotbut, 11111.. 1'0.
NATIONAL LUOUll: IATTING flOD 11 M~l -ll~1 Cll'I., .Solt; M. Aloi!, Pl'! .• .DJ; A. JOlll'lton. (In., ,J:U; I". Alll\I, AH.,
·11J&.t1/1~'lf~· ·~· \.. 11"~1· Clll. n i t.-cUrt, Chic."''' !into! ~II , ;:d; . Wiii '"'!' Ciif~ u . llV,.5 BATT 0 ! -McCVW.'{t .F., 10 PerlJ,
Cl';;k, ni srwonnon. I. L .. ff; 1. wlll tmt. Cllk: .. "' 51HtT's !'..'c·l= ... Alov A" .. 157; "°''· crn., 1n1 A. Jal\r.M, Cln., 1501 llraO. SI. L., , .. , l"leod, SI. L., 1 ~8LE$ -lro<:k, SI. L 311; fl•ub, "'°"''·· 111
ll(ll.f. (In., JO; f'""'· ~-" •,· F". IOU, All., 11. T111PLE> -rock, t. \·• 21 Cl.m111tt , l"tn., 111 Keu"'"1'_, c111,'._71 I . II •IT'ii· (Ilk., ,, w. O•vll. LA .. 61 11. Al"", 1"1111., l.
HOMf RUNS -Mc<:IY9f,,S. F .. »t II. Alltll.. ~11 .. JS: 81nk1, C~lc.. l'll "'· At""'-... 11 .. t!i t . w11111 ... 1. Chic .. ti.
'lOLEN BASES -WUl1, l"!tf., 36\· lroct.i II. L .. lJ; W. 01vl1. L.A., Mi H. A1rvn, Al ., It; <.. J-1.
N,'t'.\ H. Pl Ct<lllllG !U OKl•lon1l -ll.e111~. (Ill<., 10-7, .13J; Klfrot, Piii., 1&-1, .1»1 MtrlCl'lll, S.1' .. D.J, .IUJ Glb$ol>, !•. L., ,,_,/, .m: Brlle1. SI. L ' 16-1. ·"'' "-""w,"\ t6-I, ·"' STRIK T -Jri.1115, c11ic .. 1'7; 11-. L.A .• 1•1 Mllr l_l!_·.i'·• 1n1 01-. SI. L.,, I Ii C. Jftert, PllM., lkl 5_,.1, S.I'., 156.
SAN DIEGO -The San D I t a: o
Otarger1 and the Plttsbur1h Steelers
ama11ed about l,*"'yards on offen~
between tbem -yet It " .. a '3·yard
defensive play tllat determined the
outcome.
'nle Cbar1ert of tlle Amertcu Foot.
ball Learae aad the Steelers of the Na·
ttonal Football Le1pe ••• blttled for
almost 59 minutes Sunday 1nd the
tcore wa1 33-33.
Thea Charier qaart.erback Jell.a
Badl tossed one of Ill• 13-paues -and
Steeler Uaebacter RJ.1 M11 picked It
off. He ran It from the f.5..yard Une to
the Charger l!. Two yards closer and
four downs and 4! tel!onc11 later, Bill
Shockey booted a fteld coal and
Ptttsburg:b bad a 3&-33 vldory.
The Cbargen' Joas eTeaed tlaetr
rttord acatast opposition In thlt ex·
hlbltlon seaso11 at 1·1. Two weeb a10
they defeated Saa Fr1ncl11!0 st-%11
wlnnln& tben the way they lost Swtday
-on an tntercepttoa. ...... ...
LONG BEACH -GeOl'l" Wood of
tho Pacific Cout Club .._ Ille -
64 feet 21/• inches for • vidocy ln an
all<0r11en field meet • t t r • c t 1 n I
several Olympic hopefuls.
In the meet Sunday at Callfcxnia
State College al Long 8-h, Gory
Carlsen ol the Southern CalifOrnla
Stiiders tossed the dllcus 19M. BUI
Neville, unattactied, wu aecond at
187·3'-
Frank Covelli of Ult Pactf1c Coast
Club won the javelin throw' with 267..f.
Chuck Pollcl ol the Pacllic·COart Club
wa1 second at 244--1 And John Burns of
the Athena Athletic Club third at 242-4.
In the triple jump, Gerald HOM'I of
the Athens · Club grabbed a fir1t wilb
52-0. ... ... ...
FORT WORm, Tex. Kea
Rosewall pounded out a M, ~ vldory
over Spain'• A.ltdrt1 Glmeno Suday
nJ1ht and won the $20,IOI ColOnlal
Te nnis Tournament.
BrHaln'1 An1 Haydon Jone11 ru.ktd
No. I lntenatlnally, cru1hed Utile
Billle Jean King 1-1, 1-% lo capturt the
women's crown. Te vll!tor)' over tbe relplnJ Wltn·
bledoo champion wu worth $1,• to
Stengels Top OiMaggios, 3-l
OAKLAND (AP) -It -quite a mlam'cb. One Case7 Stencel agaJnst
on1:f -DiMaggio br<>lllon . The. DIMaggJ01 -Joe, Dominic and
'V1ncl -never had a chance. Neither
did UMllr teammates on the Saa Fran·
-&oola Old·Tlmen t..am. ....,. arofty Cuey, man1gla1 tile
(Wind OU. Old·Tlmtr•. 1bnwdly
•=rz;ered b1I team to a S-1 vtctory
......, la a .... pm. rematch of Ille IJNI ~ between the fonnu
hdllc Coeot IM1111 tnm1 .
• , ••• who _.., the ow to
'
h league's pennant two decades ago,
again got the better ol Le:fty O'doul ,
who piloted the Se.als then and Sunday.
Lefty looked good when Dom OIMag.
1io opened the game wttb a clngle and
moved to third on a single by Joe, lbe
former Yank« Clipper, now a coach
with the Oakland AtbletlCI of the
American League.
Jackie Tobin's racrlflc. fl7 acored
Dom -but then It w11 Steoeel'1 turn
to weave hl1 wizaTdry before the
14,000 fans who came to witch the
prelude to the 1am1 betweea 1be
Athletics and the New York Yankees.
He sent Mel Oea11bou to the plait,
and the single which followed ICOTed
Oak.land'• flr1t two runs.
Stenae1, not to be outdooe by Ille
S6all' brother act. broua,bt on hb own
-Will llld Tom Hafley. Wlll b1plad
and Tom attti11ced him bome for the
Oak1' final nm.
.., Re&ardlen Of Ult number of ltln
on the field, It "" a day for Cuty ud bis wile, Edn1. They .. i.brated
UleJr 44121 -I ODDI......,..
Mn. Joan, wbo aald tile trtamP'
broalbt lier national lieape reeonll
afllml Mn. Klof to f.lt. ... ...
PASADENA -Oakland'1 Adem1r
Saccone, who bid ICOfed but four
goals all seuon, tallied ttree more
and the Clippers rolled over the Loa
Angeles Wolves ~2 in tM.ir soccer
cam• at the Rose Bowl.
1bt Clippers' victory Sunday, their
lixth ltraigtlt, g.ave them the
Governor'• Cup and m o v e d them
within five points of the leading San
Diego Toros in the North American
Soccer Leafue'1 PacUic Division. ... ... ...
WAUKEGAN, ru. -Bob Strampe, a
ii-year.old veteraa from Detroit, roll.
ed. six 1tr1tet la a row la Ills ftaal
iame to defeat Billy Hardwick of
Louitville and late the $3,000 first
prbe I• tbe $31,800 Professional
Bowlers Touraament Sunday nlgflt.
The match came f'lnal1 turaed lnte e
tW'o-way battle bttweea tbe veteran
Strampe ud the r7-year..old
RardW'lct, who exchaaced the lead
four Um.es on the final day.
Pro Soccer
Standings
K•llMtClty II. llul• ._ ..
0.1111
The Dodpri CIDTelltly occupy that
ignominious potltlon after dropping
two out of One games to the
Plltlburlll> Pirates during t h •
weekend.
HOU6lon is in ninth place,. ont·hall
1ame ahead of Los Ailgele&.
Bill Singer, 9-12, wUI try to hurl the
Dodgera out of sole occupation of the
Dodger Slate
........ lt e·-If HollllO!I 1:25 ftm 1(1'1 1··1 All•. 'JO ""' 11 Hou1lon ::ti •.m: ""I "' Au1. 11 ~...-11 Hou11on :tS "·"'· KF ''° A119. n DMMrt .,. SM l'rtncllQI r:JJ 11.m. Kl'I , .. ,
cellar tonight. Hil opponent will be
Dave Giusti, 7·12.
Loi Angele• solidified tta bold m its
lowest position 1n history Sunday when
It~ a S.1 decision to the Pirates.
The Bucs' Bob Veale and the
Dodgers' Don Sutton engaged in a
scoreless duel far the rltSf. six Innings
before the Pirates tallied three times
in the seventti.
Sutton gave up a leadoff single to
Willie Stargell, who advanced to se-
cond on a sacrifice and 5Cored on Fred
Paek'• aingle. Patek moved to third
on a double by B 111 Mazeroski a n d
Chris Canninaro was intenti<Dllly
walked to load the baaes.
Maury Wills bunted to t h I r d
baseman Bob Bailey, who threw wild-
ly to the plate for a two-run error.
Sutton, who got only four-hit 1upport
from his teammates, was the loser,
mak.ing his record 5-12.
LOS ANOILIS ,ITTSlUl.IM
Cr•wfo!'lll tt $1'11rlty, A w. O.vla el
K. lhftr lb It. ltlltY A , ....... rt
P11$10VICfl 111
Tortltrt c Vfl'Ullt1 1111 .... ~ •• c ,._,
L ... ~111'1 ·-· t llltntfltrn • '"" Loa Antt!ll
'Ith bur.,.
tlllrllM •r•M
••1 ow1n1• '''< •t lJKolbrt •ttl
•OttM.Aloll ri' •1 11
•ooos1:,:~N •111 •ltlCI lllo lilt
, ••• 11.1111 .. 1121
IOOOMure&kla 4 111 I I I I Ctnlrt1,e c I O t o 1111v, ... ., ,,,,
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lutton L, •12 ·-lUl!neMm
1 • , 1
N t I I I~ I I I
' . ' . 0 I v ..... w. 10.lt t " 1 1 • • T -2:». A -17,ft
Baseball Standings
' N1tlonal Leape
SL Louis
ClnciDoaU
San Francllco
Atlanta
Chicago
Pltuburgh
Philadelphia
New York
Houston
Loi An1etes
Woe Loll Pel.
79 15 .1137
63 56 .529
64 58 .525
63 1!G .512
64 II .512
59 64 .ISO se es .463
57 69 .152
56 69 .«8
$4 " .la
II. l.alll1 le. AH1t1 .. I
N-'l'•rl. M. HtlnMn 1 ..
Clnc1"nltl '"· Chit-l·I 111111 .. t t ..... 11 I, Sin l"rft\Clt(lf I
'ltttbul'lll J, Lei A1111r. I
GB
13\;
II
151>
151>
19\;
211\
23
231\ M·
Detroit
Baltimore
BOltoe
Cleveland
Oakland
New Yort
Minnesota
California
Chicago
American Lea(H
Woa Loll Pct.
78 14 .639
'11 51 .582
67 57 .540
M 60 .$24
62 1!G .508
57 61 .183
57 64 .171
51 n .155
w .. hington
51 71 .418
15 75 .375 .....,.. .. _ ...
letltfl 4.. o.t~ I ,.._ Ytrl. r, Otl!lllMI I, II llwllrl9I
CMc#I u. CltftlllMI t-1
.. ltf_ r. MlllMtO!t 1
C•llfonlll .. W111\1ntlo!I "
TllllY'I ·-
GB
7
12
II
16
19
201\
Z21>
37
32
a.ton Clell INJ II Cl..,..lllMI !Thil'!I 1•11.
l'lltllt
H-Vtrl. lllfWtoell 11-1) et M""'-" (~
11·11), l'llM t1111....,.. (H9r.lll'I IMI et C•llfWlll1 CMcOll!fl.
Rio I-Ill. nltl'lf
W1""'""9n llrlloln 1-51 If Dtllllfld fOlllw!! 11 .. l. , ... °"" ..-tdMd111W.
Orange Co.'s Oldtrt Ir Most RelJ)Cctcd Llncoln-Mercurv Dcoln
Johnson & Son ~#
642-0911
fOO W. COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT II.I.CH
14$.&171 I ,, . . . ,, .·
. ' ' .
-l ~ U.S. Spikers:
Impressive,'"
Burke Wins--
SOtrl'll LAKE TAHOE,_c.itf. (UPI)
-At tbe rate the U.S. men'• track
and field team ii &•ID&, lhe bjii.
altitude in Mexico City won't ltop.~lt
from matln1 • mus ..,.ult on w«kt
-at Ill• upcomtnc Olympic
Gamet. ..
The American team ran lbrough .\!,
!Int IUll diltance meet 1t lhe 7,'if;t.
loot blgh Echo Summit traiDIDJ tr.U
Saturday and came away with a wof.j.d
ncud by Jay Sllv.-In lhe clilfu
and !be equaling GI the world marli by
Mel Pender ID the 100 meter dub. '
Newpcrt Beach'• Ed Burke 1ot Ott
the longest American hammer tbiqW
of tile 1ea10n to wto bis apeciai!f.
Burke, bothered by 1boulder lnjuriH
for much of the campaign, burled l:be
hammer 226-8 -two feet lonfll' tllU
hil _previous '68 best. ';
Silve1ter, who bu a pendinS wal'ld
record of 21M in the dilcut, heavies
the platier 215 leet to top lhe recotm!z.
ed wcrld mark of 213-11%. held :by
Czecboslovatia'1 Ludvik Danik.
A trailing wtnd GI eight milel' an
hour helped Pender to bl1 10.0at
clocking In the 100. Becauae of. the
tailwind, however, tb~ time will not be
submitted to the ncords commi.ttae
!0< recognltioo. ·
Oilier notable time1 -• turned in
by sprinter John Carloo (20.3 ln lhe :IOO
meters); Lee Evam (44.9 in the 4oo,
biJ futut ever for the event); Wade
Bell (1 :49.8 lD Ille 800); Dive Patrick
(3 :52.9 in the 1,500); and Bob Day
114:38.1 in tho 5,000 -•n). ·
* * * :;. ,. METEll~1. ~ Cl.l.S. """"'· , .... :;.
Cl•Yion (Slllf1 Cllr1 YVI, 11.li 1. trllM <Ar\lilflt Sl•Nl, ll.21 4.. C•rtltlf IKYVJ. lO.l. •• ..._ 7J-,: =:~IU{s\=---rr~ i' ~"lt-J~t, !l.O. .., J.
200 METERS (,._.., Md!M)-1. t.an. llC.Y.'1.
10.l1 z. lrvcbt cu.a. H•Yl'I, •.•1 a. T1...., ,_,.,
U.}1.20.71 l'r111Clt (Arll!-~101 20.7 ' -METERS -l, v1111 n .1-IJ"') 4'.t1 :'/":'? tHV Plonter , 45.I Ktm~ C .L ;(rmy),
V ... ~> Mt:t'E1W 15••$1 -11. 4'.:ni. !r1lrt. • 1:.SO..I · Arr cwi.c.. I: 11 ). •·~.. fV.J., M..;i..Mi, j; 1 J, KlwlM h!IJ1 : .61 l•~ -ioniiM Cl d'-UfW cN!wlne ·-. D METl!llS (-..ii tKtlonl -l. wi-.otld IWl-ln), l:Jl.l1 J . Klrhdl...... (Mktl!Nnl.
l :Jl.S; 1. li.min.kj IGeol'tetrownJ, l;tf.t1 4.. .knd!
... (Wntllntlo!I Sl•ltl. l:SU. . .
1~ METIElll lflm 1«tlenl - 1. L~ IV ll'IO"fl), S:U.t1 ?. Ml-11't. H ...... llltt),
):.tl.7; J. Klvl•" tMlllNlt111). 4:0J.1.
l.5CIO METERS CMCll!lll 1«tlonJ - 1. l"•lrld! f\l'fflt'-•I· l:D.11 t. WltbDl'll (01"191111. J :Sl.V>. lllcMf IPl!llbur!ll'I), J:JJ.J; 4. Cr•wfwd (Hi.-. C~l'!rJ.t ~:01.f. ' 1s~1~Tt~~•.t11l1V°J:!Ct4f.S.!. Ac1}·1;1'ft."'!'1
Wlnllm1 (DrtOOll TCJ, 'flt.f,'",L Tr1ynor (u.1;~1'; FDl'tll, t :U.4. .
J,000 METERS -I Plf IU.S. Arm-,1 14:111.tt-"1. 5"'1tll fU .s. Armrl, l4:4l.J1 1. lallf b.'.trou ACJ,
U :SJ .,, •
llo-METl!ll HH -L PCWl'll)llr'l. (U.S. Air '-tel.
>\5; Colt-min (SJrlder1), 13.6: H-IDukt), 1 .t1 4. Fiow9rs ( tnMUH), 11.t. .m.METER IH {fin.I qetlon) -r. Ctl'ld•rtlodl:
(U5C),, .so.11· 2. 1 .... nk1111e1 (Sii•-Mlulon, K•n.J, Jl ,~t ,, 811 (Ame,lc•n U.J, J2.0. . -ETEll IH CMCOnd IKllotll -!, Wllltnn' ~Slrlder1J, 50~2. Ltt (ltlllmort OC), JI.II' l. lrdwldt (Oil I), 51.2. lO KILOMETE WALK -I. Yount (Slr~!-2:77: ... ~; J. RlnntY, 2:31.JO; 1. Kitchen. t:lfj.Jll
4 H1nlt7, 2:40.J.
JAVELIN -1, 11tnlllncl ~Ina V1!M¥ TCi. m· l! 2. Tll>~ 1u.~. Acmwl. 1 J: Vin a rltnd ~wnrr,n W•>lilncnom. ~ 01 " llmll9f'I fU •. Air
J6"Lt23J1uLT -I. V1uQ11n !UC\Al,_!7·111 2. lta•lll~ (UCLA), JM; 1 Cfl.t•t SCTV), U.l.
l.ti~ER -1. llurkt (Strlclt"/L DH1 t. ZlllM.r ....... ITIOU't11), 205-&; J. "'•ruu11n Hhodl 111111111..,.... 1 P1~rn (IJ.5. Army , 1'1-'. .:.j • LOH JUM" -I. lollo!I !111111), IW'Ao· J. ~ fllct< tU.S. Air FOrctl, 2S-lll'11}... Cllllh1n ( Ill' T(), 2H~; 4. T11t t81itlmor1 ....... 1. 26-11""' .: · SHOT PUT -1. SllY91f1r (Un11}, 6'-110 \. ll:el~,,.,..,L •,''l>!i.r!'WJu,~'1~ 1 11111 IJ~·~ T Lit. UMP -I Horn (Al'l\ef!I AC J, t> 1
Cr1lg (PllClflc C1111 '"'/· ~Y.; 1. l"or. (l ,.,14. K1e1n 1w..., "'ton r G41'1. .• ~ D_.$CU$ -, Sltv .. ler ur11l), 21H (lnlkl nm:C( wo,,d rtcord of Jll-I~, Lu""lk DI flt k t cucrio.1<1v1kl1~llvnltr 1111 11t111111"' ,..,,. ot 11 .. ~>1
J. Cartsen 1.,u_r11tl, 206-f/_ :I. Vollr!Mr (0rt9111 •"'.'fl•
'r.'f;y]j.•,HNJ'O'Ml. (~~)tai~I ~)j >•1 ! . .&°i*i
.....J: o tl-10/ l. lliMtldl ( flfl I .:iii' j ,.., !Oregon lhl19), -'-11. .
BOLSA YOUTHS '•'
IN WORLD SERIES., L:
It's off to Williamsport, Pa., and~
Little League World Strler'fOJ.
Western Regional play<A.f winner...-ef
the Bolsa Uttle League team -a unit
oompoeed of young1ter1 from youn:,;
tatn Valley, Garden Grove and Seti
Ana.
Bolsa earned 1 trip to tbe cov~
youth cla11ic by edging Santa Claraj
Calif., 4-3, scoring the deoi.dlhg nm Ji
the seventh inning of the regimal
finale held at Portland, Ore. :
Turk Schonert tripled in Jot
Schuman In the top of lhe lnDinf lb(
lhewtnnlngtally. • -.
WHY IS THIS YEAR
ANY Dlffflfflll
Traditi<>nally
Au911st •ncl S11Jf•rnh•r •11 HI• '"'nth1
fh1t y•u •r• li1111b•rtltd with tpl•1hy
"y••r·•nd cl•1r1nc•'" 111• •""•rfi1ln9.
Yot 91t ii fr11'11 ... ,.., lllr1cli•n: n1w1•
l'•P•••, •tdl• •"' TV, y,,, in •1141
'''' ewt 11'1 th• 1•111• 1111 1f1ry.
But Thi.s Year 11
Different At Johnson's
l1c1u1• tlii1 i1 th• y••r •f ••r 1r••f •
MOVE. Afttr llft1e11 Y••" 1t tit• 111111
l•c1tio11 •• wlll ff 1110•!111 1•1n t.
• '"'tnlflc•nf 111w f•cilify 111 Herhr
l•11l1"•" It Coit• ~11•.
Naturally
w1 ~•IN 11 di1poM 11 11r ENTlll 1111·
•lnl•ry •f •I llltdt l Cl!J \i•f•r• -
1110•• -It !lt1f ttr II-f1cJl/ty •11t
b• •letk•d wlttl •rind 11•w 1•••
rnod1l1. ·. Noturally •.
f• dt thl1 w1 1111nl Ii• nrtlil111IJ ti,.. •
,.tit! ....
Naturally
''' win w111f 11 t•\:1 ..,.1nt191 tf
tlth llnUt•1I 1li111H111,
Today
,
.. .. .. ,• ..
' '
'
-. -4 ·--......... • • +z •• -== • • • .. • • •o usu J. <> Q '*' e ~-• s+ ::;•~oez;; *'+::;::r s...--vs..-·~~"7 ___ ,,~~..,T•.~·-.7"~.,..,-,-~~,..,-,..,,...,,,=~=-~~-~-~ ' --, ~· -,, ., •.. .. ..,.. ~-...-........ , ..,,. ....... ~ . . . . '
' r '
Los Alamitos
Entries
NINTI+ aAC•~rdl. l Yt•r ..... Incl uP In 11r10e Ajlln. Purt1 l lt'OO.
J1blll l u111 E~• { ''""~ '•" S.VWO 511"1'41'1 (0.Ytl N«r cl 16 P11ty Bluebell (Wllll11n s l\ISU) 111 ~jOCllll !Jot W~l 1 IT 'Fu~&~iTir=:'n.'ld) l\\ Bll'CO D .. lef'M 111 llNlm Pl•Y {Chtrlel 11'1'11!111 1,," VelleY I~ (Jcihrl IC1nlul 6
Deep Sea
Fish . Report
GOLllNQ .
WITH ~~ PalMu
STRENGTHEN
YOUR
lEfT SID[
MOst l11din1 eolftrl ind In·
structors aar" that tht ltftskl•
ahOUld dominate thti 1wln1 of
ri1ht-hlndod players (vice
v1rs1 lorsouthp1wa).Str1i1ht1r
and Jonctr .shots · re1u1t· when
the ltft side pulls1th1 club into
tho ball. Mis·hjt ~ots wltll little
power r11u lt wf)tn the ri1ht
sldttakts over.
Thus it is important to
strtn(thtn the norm11ly w11k1r
ltft hind ind ··1rm. Pr1ctic1
somt 1lmpl1 1xercJs1s when ·
1vercircumstancts 1llow.
firsti prtn' the , clubface
1a1ln1t' 1n lmmov11bl• object,
such 11 1 will or a trtt, 11
hard II )'OU CIR (SH lllustr•·
tiOIJ) for stvtr1l sttconds, hold ·
int th't club only In your ltft
hind. K"p tht back of this hand
facing tht resistin1 ob,ec:t:
Second, as you walltdown tht
fairway, or wait tor th• aroup
ahead to mov1 ·on, t•ki pr1ctic1
swings while holdin1 tht club
only in 'your left hind, Keep a
straight ltft arm 1t'11t .tim11.
Soon you will develop 1 much
areat1r control of the club and
build· UP of powtr In your.1win1. l .. ~, .................. ..
SANTA MDlllJCA -1)1 1 ... 1en1 122 L.--------------------·--~
basu. ID! bonllo, 10 hl<lltlul, 1 wllH• -r--------------------'---~ N~NTU•A _ 12' •ntlers1 "'N••· •HOW TO IMPIOVEY~ MTrNG•t Htre ltAmtW "''-""'"'
'15 rode 11s11. 11 ... 11bul, t bonll9, 1 llMI•• wide:._ puttlne-.c., II~,_., s..-200-.
..,.Jmon. w4th u --:-....1, .. If M1111d et!'#lrope"• ArMW r.i...r,.lft _. .J
SANTA aARaARA -1•1 11111trs1 l...!~~~~·~-.-~:..-----------------Jl lMO rock cod. 71 Mnt' cod, oiSD Clllcit mlt •
blu. 'HO bonito.
OXNARD -2.it 11'1¥11tru IDIO be11, ·-----------------------··I I05 rodt Iii.II, U lint Cl:ld. !t wllllt fli.h,
21 hlllwt. 10 bonito.
MOR•D IAY -15' •ntltrll t
.. 1rnon. 12 ...,ubul, 211 lll'W a , •n
Vt!llawholl bil11.
.. ORT HUENl!MI! -242 1.,.ltl'IJ
1950 alko be11, l1 bonito, 41 Mr•
r•cudl. tt lll!lbul.
MALlaU -7t 11111tn1 lS 11Hco Mu. l2 banlta, 4 ""tlbut. 11"'4 -155
efl91en: 150 bonito. 2" rod!: o:ed, 7
... II but. HERMOSA aEloCH -.U 11111111'11
:is be•nocude, '5 alko beuu, l2 bonito.
REDONDO 81!ACH -:131 1,..111'1; 14
11baco~. 2 y1llowllr1 tv111, 2 blutfln
fUl)I, 59 N..-aeuc11, m uth:o Mu, •11
bonito. 8el'lln -J21 11'1¥11tr11 111 sand
bNs, • barlfto, 14 IMllllMll, 6lJ
Del Mar
Entries
meckll'tl, 1200 rock eocl. ••••••••••••••••••••••••-Sl!AL aEACH -i• 11111trs1 fl
':t'vwy WMtc AAMCCI Ntilltt. __...
''"" 10.000 t""""'l11ion ~ ·~~.vou set tr..~ 11"I ~
~ fnt. efficient .-Mc.--most ~ .. 111 J1nt -di)'. Alftl .+th AAMCO, )'llUt transml11iorl c.,. bit ~H by -r l500 AAMCO c.n.
.... coalt to c:011t.
1~''(..:ery •mlnutl wMI 1 W , -bil9 .,_ •••
':Y• .. .,..,.,..,
' II J'1' Jail• .. AAlfClllll.
COSTA MESA
1741 .._.,.,. II. "46-1666
Gard•n Grove
Koll o.r .. R a ...... llYIL • ' Ql.ntf
Santa An• f'JI e. ,.,_, St. , 141-Nll
OVER 60 AAMCC StiOPS
IN CAllFORN•A
.!.~-
bonito, "' 11ncl beH, t5 haltbul. l•rH
-110 •ll!llltru 10 blr,.cudl, 19"
bonito, 10 11/ICI bn"' 2' Mllbul.
OCEAflSIDI! -211 1nelen1 7S llblto~. lS6 blrr1cud1, 2U Nu. ~
bonito. 2 WTIUt 111 bin. J 't'4llowf1U, >I
hll\but, 3 tihlefln lu!lt .
SAiii DUOGO ll'1. L 11111 · HAM•
Fllllet'lnlft'I L1Mln1) -1011 eneltr1; ra albl<.orl!. 2 .....ii-1111, 2 doh:lhln.
NEW .. ORT IDIYeV'I LlcUr) -JM
1ntler1; .t2 illtltbo.rl, m bl<rr..,;udl. "4
bonito. (17 ball, IU 1 JNcore, A
yellowtalL IA,,._ l.llMlllfl -· 20I
1111len; 26 lllHbut, " 1lblcot1, 1 yelloWJl,lt, I bru.ftn tune. 1 doiPh111. 1•
blrracudl, lfl bonito, 241 beu.
SAN ... ORO ltbll st ........ , -
1«1 -ltrs; 21 111111~. U ber1KVdl. uo u nco tins. • ...,1111111. no bontta.
MOnol'• l.lllllllltll -207 1111lln; ' Hnd baM. 190 bonllo, 2$4 ll'bKort. 1
Ytllowftn """'· s bluelln fvlll, 1 yellowUJI. J berrK!.lde • .m u Uco ......
4. ll&llbut.
LOlllG IUCH ll'eclllc •'-tflllllfttl .:, 2'9 1nglen; M ll!IKatt, • Yttillwlln fun1, • '11l1awt111, 4 ti.rrecudl, 7M
uHco blu. 17' 11on11o, • """but. ,....,.
..in1 ........... , -nf 1n11er11 151 11becort, ) bl1T1cucll. 11135 Nu, G3 lla!lllo, Uf nx:kfli.h, 11 i..llbo.rl, 1 tllueffn
tune. IB.i-t "llrl -131 •1M1ltn1 •
blrr•eud•• 1111 bll11. 115 bonito, 10
hlllbut, 12 Ridr Iii.II. lel'9e -I'll
1"9ltl'ff.. • ...... no bonito.
Driver Killed
In Accident
SYDNEY, Australia (AP )
- A New Zealand driver
died Sunday from head in·
juries received in a two-car
crash on the Catalina circuit
at Katoomba. He was John
Ward, 30, married, of
Gtsborne, N.Z.
Ward 's Lotus F o rd
Cortina collided with a Ford
Falcon GT driven b y
Aust:raiian Ken St a c e y ,
Staei!y was not hurt.
·~Golf CLUB Sale
.... · --1968 MODElS ---
•IEN HOGAN ep1m PUGHT
lltt. IAL• Rtt. SALB .... IAL•
If.JC 19,n l WOODS M.'U ff.ts 3 WOODS .~ ... • .~·.· '" -·-•' ••O"• lM.00 111.• I lllOMI .., .... ..... ... ;..:=":::._:::.:::..:.....:.....:.....:....:::._.:....:::.--,
!tAC GUCK>l SPECIAL PACTOlY Ll9UIDATION
lttt. SAL•
l WOODS M.Oll ff.M
1967 PGA
MODELS l WODOS t lllOMS
' !llDMS 1•.1111 IM.ML---------------' i~:..1..w. he ,,. .,. 011ty. r.noflCllbM ftnt.t lrt , ..... ,....
i..-.Hh. Cl~ •till.tlll• .. ell '"fts. -"kb •N ...... .
TIY THE NIW ALUMINUM SHAm
GOLF BAG SALES 25°/o OFF
1968 Doug S•nd•rs
Aluminum Sh•ft•
SHOES
GOLF
ITAlfll sm
14 wood.,.,..,.
Rtt. N-Me~'t·L..,lt1' 'lror'I Plltf41'.
tlQl,OI 11•.• 2 ~ off ·~ w
suo.ao t •• 1'~=5:i"••Allli•li$39iiijj"9j5~p
OUl SPICIAL USID Im INTlODUCTOlf AUO AVAILAaL•
0,..1 AT LARGE SAVINGS
II 'l'OU PUrcll... betll woodl I ~--=:,;,iiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiii-
tnd l!"ON-
CV•lul U.U.OOI $199 95 ""'' ..... . ClllHT CAIDS
IAHICAME.IUCAllD • MAITl!1' CM.U:O•
TIADlolNS ACCIP'l'll
GREENS FEE
w ... -........ $3.00 I w-.......... $4.oo
T-M•1 ... ,, ..... ~ ,._.
TICKET $18.00
Costa Mesa · Golf Clab
1701 Golf Course Dr.-Costa ~
Pl>one (7141 S<I0-7200
,., T-...y, Alfi, .. 1NI
C ... r •11111 •••t. '11'11 ••t 11• ... M. D1l1J Dtl!IM9. l'lrst •I'll lectfllll ••en
'tRST RAC•. I turlon11. J ""1r
oldU Ir.ell UP. C .. lmlf>tl .. kl l3200.
P11rw 12.200.
CC1111ml\I ltlthl CA l Diii) 11112
A-Hold Ml IM V1ienn>llll 117
&.T11m T1t "..u CM Y11111) lU
Gll .. nl SIMI (A Hetr1r1) 114
HCIUll J1111 CA Plnedl\ • 114
&.K'-• 1(1, (F G.lr11J 11IOt
eum1119 Steel IW Mallclro!w) 114
lffu J-ltc (JI. Yor1CJ 119
A-lhlll Llbr1r (L J CM.I-) 119
TCIO'IYI Mltlr. (R Ol911lr1J 111
knclro (0 VIM-1) lU
A-J. S. MCC1•1l.,.lr•'""' entrY. e.-11.. '· (oklr; .. ·lrelntd 9f'llry,
s•COND llAC•. ' '41.lrler>tto. ' .,..r-
old;.. CJ1lml111 ..,.k• ••· hrw :~ior' 'sab (J P11o!!\l110I 114
c.,_.11 JI.OJ co ,.1trc1) 1u
Gllent G. W. (D H1tl) 114
SoJ 5-l.ICe CA "lnld•) 111
Welter JI.. (W H1~rl1) 111
SftmHWl'f (l J 0Ul'OllUllUJ 114
.•-FKlllm (A L Diez) 11112
Htlr•Ta F1m1 CW H•rtedl:) lU
AdYll'llere. CW ~mlT) JU
THIRD RAC•. OM milt en lllrt. l
Yff' oldl. Clfltm!"' Prlcit N.250.
.. UIW 12,IOO.
Klneuword CW H1rm1hl 117
Henry MC (J Petomlno) 111
W1r Fllt IA Pl....:llJ 11(
TemllftlllDlll Link (JI. 111rocol 111 Blu. T1rt1r flt (lmPlt) 117
Frtddl1 D. P. CA L Diet} 11117
l'DURTH RAC•. I turi...ts. I w1r
old ...... ldtn 111118. ..Uf'M U,000.
l'ellfl Lt11tt1 (A .. lnedlJ 114
SH Litt 15 Tr'lvl"'J 1U
In Thi ll1lr1 (L Gllllt1nl 111
Dh1Nll1 CD P!trttl Ill
Ollle'1 Gil 116
A-Jen Pvndl Cit Jl.ouleul 1111
Tr1ffk Cloud (A M1Q9) 111
COid CM Y1ne1J Ill
CIDll 111'11/ICI IA l Dial) 11111
C1td'I ~ 1.,.... IF Glr11J XIH
bverlt (J Entlel 11'
Ai.t E11tl~lm
lrnbr1m1 tw Mello~YI 111
Alw1yS On St!llCll Y (W Herm1h:) lll
Kll-SU-&elll IL Gllllt1n1 111
A·tC.eey G!rl (R Rotelf1) 11111
A-11. Cr1ll·lr1lned 1ntry .
P'l'TH llACll. a lur!on•u. Two l'tltr
old ffttiden flllln C1lbreoh, Pur11 u.ooo. Noll-(It B\t/ICO) 11'
Nlbblt !0 Pi'll'Cf) 116
A·LIWlbl• Stir (W H1rm1ti) 11•
L1urlt '1 Turn (0 HtllJ 11•
M1rl.,lfl't Girl 111
llMt CholC. !I I! Mldlntl 116
11·$utlt't Che•m (M V1lll'llutl1J 11f
t\nne.,1 ...... _
l'w Bin IHlttd (II C•mPIC) 111
V1ll1nH1 (A L Diil) ~111
Thi lll•ht Skit ID Vll1"ut1) 116
Get lttt1nl1 (M Yene1 ) 11•
Noble Hori 11•
AIM l!lltlllltl
llDYll TtmPO U E Medlntl Iii
(9!1'1 Well Tl" fW Mlllornt"l'l Hf
C·SMUtlfvl Mlldtn '" C•b911ero) llf
A·Jllfl9l1 Clllfttr Cit Yorll! IH
C·Kltolnl RllMI (It ClbelltreJ llf
l ·Tlll Cloe* (M VtlenlUlll) 111
~. Clewltnd-lr11ntd 1t1ll'Y,
........... 61tubu...-1re1n..o entry, C-L. T, Rutf·fnllMd Wlll"I'.
SIXTH RAC•. I 1111 "'llet, J 'fffr
aldi llld Ull, Clllmin. lria $5,.000,
Purlol 12,fOO,
A111Plllll (D "ltn;tJ 114
PM!le'I Vlrt\11 IA L Diez) lllOf
J-llUr IA .. IMdl) \"
HllNlll IL Cenkotel ll.104
"~-IW' Mll'lorMY) 111 Tnnwllll'lff (R YllRI l U
l"ndl'• JOI (W Herm1h:J 117
SIVENTN RAC•. ' lurlolMll. ' .,....,
old rmlel. Allowenc.t•. ,.un• S...OOD.
Bllullfut Dtt1m IW H1rt1ct) 111
llNllYI SU-fM Y-U 11•
A1b-r LI CA Pl"""!' 117
(ry1!tl DudN!H (It C1m111u! 1U
5wonl Fish CA l Dllrl 11112
Dovecote IE IMlffne ) !It
Diamond DIP cw H••rlul 111
Grev Crlektf (W H1rm11J) 111
Arnffillo "-"'-""' ID .. ttn;t) 11'
EllJHTM RAC•. ' lur!OML J l'Nr old 111\d UP 1111111 1nd met"ll. Allow-
t!ICll. Purse H .toO.
My LllM IW litl'1Nll) 117
Peff'f'U World (D Hell) 11•
A-GJ"y QuHl'I (M Yene1I 1 It
Fr1nclne M. !D Pltra) 11•
M@ilOW Mtri.h IW H1rtidcl II•
Ellen Grvkr fW Mlllornt"I') !It
A-Mar91lle CM YeM1) 113
Lil CA L Diez) xlU
F111'9Jvlnt fA "lned1) 117
Cteo Pit CG Ll~IJ'I 114
1-topef\1" ~lrtH 10 Vtll...,.J) 117
A-R. L. Whllllr""1!ntd .,.,,..,.,
NllllTN RAC•. ON-milt. 1 .,..r
aldt end uP. (l1lmlnt 1rkt Ill.DOI>
.. ,.000. l'Ul'M ll.D.
&rtlld 1111¥11 (D Pltrc11 112
County lottarMW (' H1r .. r1l 114
Dewll't l!to iw H1rr1t1 ni
C111ndlller IO'I' fM Yene1) 112
Mon lklue CM Y-U 112
El Lobo (W Mlh_.,1 114
Golden l!nlre (A L Dll1I ~112
Artful Dodi-tr lA l'lnld1) 114
Kids lik• to
'As~ Andy'
·9aa '·-----...--.---. .. -
,... \cno•nan -··-"NDVllll llDU•D'
eUICl'.l.Y TILL YOll TMI
IXACT co•amo•
°'YOUR OAa.
--....... B
----.......... ~ .. _____ ...... __ 7. .... _ ....................... -_ .. _ ............... ,.. ......
HB!'S WHAT YOU flofD OUT ••• ·--.... -.......... ~-_, ........ ,,,,, ___ ~,. .......... _ _....,.
Hllt:'I HOW II' WOllCS ••• ~ ...... _....,___,__ .....,__ _........, -.. -.. ..-.......... -... ~ .... "_ ........ --_., _ _, ................. --......... _,.. .. __ ...,._.. ... .. .... _ .. _..,..._ .. _.,, -.... ,_.,... ........ ,.. ..... -..... ....................... _ . ... -----.. _ .. _..._ . .......... ,,,, __ --.. , ....... ·----·
DAILY l'ILDT It_
Mitchell
Tops Field
AtOCffi
Wide-open Tilt Predicted
For North-South Classic
•
• I
Mike M!t<!>ell, a San
Frllllclsco • ~ dragster
driver, returned to tJle B a y
""" $1 ,000 w .. lthler today
af.ter wlnnin1 tht A·-gas
&uJ>••«:hatged ellmlnalor's
prlz:e at orange County
lntematione.l Ji 1. c e w 1 y
Saturdey.
By EAJlL GUSTKEY
Of .. °""' ,., ,...,
u you ·-to talt• th• word ol tho two hlad
coaches, Thunday night's
North-South all-star football
ga.me at Oranp coast
College will be one of ttiose
o l d -fashioned, wide-open
donnybrooks .
Valley Hlgh )l<llled a l•I Hill Slid. "We bod ""'I
musqe last week but sh~d scrlm~&e lut wed md-J
be at full strength Thur1day , tlllnk we've prosr ... ed -ti
Coon aaid. Ray Hunt, the let.at t hope ft 'have."
Mitchell recorded elapsed
tlmel ol 9.04, l.20 and 9.20 to
go w I t b 1peeds ol lilUO,
154.110 Ind 153.116 to -
back the bid of favorite Gars
Rmd1, .
Aa it was, Mitchell's main
competition came f r o m
Garden Gro\le11 G a r y
Burgin.
Another pre-race favorite,
Weodell Shlpman of Looi!
Beach, dlaquallfied bimseU
with two red light start..
Shipruo ctid nab top speed
honors, however, with a
188.611 mph. •
Next S..!uroay nlglrt. eight
of the western U n i t e d
St.ates' top funny car drivers
&nd their macbinea will vilit
OCIR. Garden Gro\le's Dave
Beebe will be shooting lor
three more matda race vic-hrle1. -
North cooch Herb Hill Is
preparing hl8 defeo:se for an
all~ut attack from Jim
Coon'a 1 out her n ag-
aregatloo.
"That's the kiJ¥1 of foot·
baB Jim teaches, so we're
ei:-pecting a wide-open game
from him," Hill commented,
"We'll be very aurprlsed
to see anything el!e.''
Predict s Coon :
"Basically, Herb is a pretty
conservati\le football coach
but with the kids he's got for
this game I look for an
opened-up offense f r o m
him.
Both teanu report. an A-
OK on tile injury front. Hill
says he d.OOsrrt have a soul
on the gimpy list and Coon
says what pl.ayen he has
who .are hurt will be ready
Thursday evening.
South • fullback D a. v t
Buchholz from Santo Ana
'.
240 pound tackle from Hun· Cooo t<rtm11111td . h lo
tlngtOll Beacb, ts woozy with troopc Saturd1y llld ..icJ "'I
tb6 nu but will alJo ,Play waa sat11fied Wltb bll ti:
Tburaday. fente. "We're Ml rtady u .
Coon aays a trio of grld-we'll ever be," be remark•
den lrom Mater Dei will .-ed_. ________ _
figure prominently in his
club'• fortunes .
"Eric Patton and
Berg are our
linebackers and they really
-good lo practke: Carl
Hernandez is another who'•
been imprtcsi\le, at of·
tensive tackle."
Coon also lauded the
workout performances' of
bis own end, Rick White.
Both c~s plan rugged
workouts today a n d 'l\les·
day. ·Hill, ~lling 1tie North
at Loera High in Anaheim,
will give his stalw$N the
day off Wednesday but
Coon , at Marina, will suit
his group up in shorts
Wednesday "'1d do nothing
more than nm through plays
and go ttu'ough a chalk talk
sesslon. "We're ready to play,"
Hi9h Flyin9 llr_,,
Wint Into lit A
IALTIMORI 011ow.
Tonight, Tu•• .. WM~
All Gam11 •t 8:00 P.M.
ncia:rs: ........... ~ .......... :===--ltWLDJICIM: ~TI** 1 I =
All Penney Storts Open Every Night Monday Through Saturclay
3 DAYS ONLY!
SERVICE SPECIALS!
Mon., Tues., Wed.
TDDAVI
Penneys professional motor
tune-up includes all
parts and labor!
l'llCIS lllCLUDI ,AltTI AND LllOll
You , get fttW points, plugs, •otor,
eondtnser ond distributor cap, ex·
pert adjustmfft of ea m·dwell, tim-
ing ond carburetor. Result ••• more
'.,-p,' bttttr mileage, mor• enjoy·
ablt drlvin'g. TuM up now and 1Cve!
•4 trtll• fir Velbfttt11 r• ..... "'), f '111•
-·~·.....,._-... .,,.
1·1.8.8 ~ftUNDER
13.8~8~
* 17. ,.,.t:a
Not iust a reline ...
complete Reliant brake ove.rhaul l
.... llAICI ADJUITMIN1' fOI Ufl OP UNINOI .... ....... ,., ... .. ,. ...... _,.~
NEWPORT BEACH . HUN TINGTON BEACH
(Faihion ldond) (Hunling!on C."tor)
1\
'· .
.. ..:
... ----... --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
•
,
14 IAILV Pl\.aT ~ MMIJ, ~ 1', 19'1
Older Boats Shine in
OPENING GUN -Seventeen Olympic yachting
aspirant hit the starting tine In the trtst race of the
~onjamar Scores . .
Lipton Cup Win
Fred Woodward's Ron·
jamar ll from Long Beach
Yacht Club won Balboa
Yacht Club's Lipton Trophy
predicted Jog race from
Newport Friday.
A southerly breeze which
failed to lay down a wester-
ly chop caused the fleet to
buck headwinds with a
following sea over most of
the course. The result was
some blgb percentages of
error for the veteran Class
A contestants.
Somewhat the same con.
ditiou existed on Saturday
Outrigger
Race Draws
Nine Teams
when San Die10 Yacht
started the power boa.ti on
the 17th annual llltematlonal
predicted log race into Mex-
ican· waters. The event wu
won by Ana Palou, 1ti~
pered. by Tom Swift of
Southwe1tern Yacht Club.
Final results:
BYC UPTON RACE
CLASS A -(I) Ron-
jamar, Fred Woodward,
LBYC, 1.700; (2) Largo1 Thol Simonson, HoDywooa
YC. 2.479; (3) Crea~ HIU1"1
Palmer, H·untlngton
Harbour YC, 2.6111; (4) Hop.
PY Houn, Kelly Williama,
LBYC, 2.813.
SDYC INl"ERNATIONAL
(I) Ano Palou, Tom Swift,
SWYC, 3.:1116; (2) Bomar.
Bob-Martine~ MBYC, 3.518;
(3) Happy Hours, Kelly
Wllllams, 3.931; (4) Kalua1 Gil Henry, BYC, 4.ote.
Davis Takes
Crown for
'Catamarans
Joe-Ed Davis of Mission
&.ii meter final trtals off Newport Harbor Sunday.
TIGHT RACE -Gardner Cox' Cadenza leads Bill
Ficker'• Charade •• they set spinnakers after
rounding the weather mark. Cox won the opener of
the 5.5 meter trials and F1cker was second.
At least nine looms -
includ:i.ng one &ll...tar group
'from -and eight from Southern CautonMa club& -
will take port Ill file llrll
Lone Beacb·Avaion <Mng•·
11!1' Canoe race Sunday, it
W9I announced. by t h e
c o pspon..-ing Kalifornla
Outrigger Alsoctation.
The channel croeling by
the tq lil.-IMll canoes bu:
he<e en AYaJoo.Newport
Beodt lest In put years.
Bay Yacht aub ia the new --------------------
Departtn fbr Uris year' 1
-race will be from Loog
Beach's Cherry St re e t
Litegoord Statloo.
H a waiiao-ctyle mUlical
entertainment Md a luau on
the beach at A val on will
greet the islands-developed
canoes es they arrive. 1be
Avalon Owunber of Com·
merce will present trophies
to the winners.
A preview race from
MaUbu to Santa Monica will
be staged Saturday.
Police Will
Open Center
OAKLAND (UPI)
Police Chief Charles R. GaiD.
bas announced the estabUU...
merit of four nelgbborbood
information c en t er s in
ghetto areas of Oakland.
Gain said the firlt etmter
would open in a former
retlail store.
He said .l)t centers would
"provide cltlien1 ln the area
wit.h a place where they
may go to d.Jscuas problems
n1llioC to the pollct and ob-
tain l.nf<ftnltion aboul the
police--nt."
1be chfef aid tht ceater1
will be sta,ffed eight houri a
dllJ . bJ p6i1ce officers and
neilbOl'bood voluateer1.
Scroggs Top•
Balboa Sabota
P a t ScrUCP ol Newport
Barbo< Yocht Cini> woo the
Ballloa Fleet champlonahip
111 the Sabot Cius Sunday.
The .... 111:11 open to the 17
locol i*lpperl who quaJllled
Ille _. --~~ Mld...,••••,r~J
":1:;-ID the~ wnt lo: (1) .,,_, CJ)
'John Mca..... NllYC; (I)
.Nlae NM!-, Nl!VC; CC)
'<Jng llUJ11un, BYC; (I)
llMilll ~ lcrC.
Dl.Uonal champion of the
speedy Pacffic Catamaran
Class.
Davis copped the title
from defender Bob Baker of
Miu.ion Bay Yacht Club in a
three-day five·race series
sailed at !Qng Harbor Yacht
Club, Redondo Beach, Fri-
day, Saturday and Sunday.
Btter finilbed 1ecood in
the fleet of 35 starters. 'lbe
regatta wu aailed in lieht to
moderate airs -not exactly
lo the liklng of lhe P·C.ta
which prefer the brisker
breezes wbfcb can push
them up to 20 knots.
Top l1ve in tha re1atta
were:
1. Nbnue, J .. Ed Davis.
¥JIYC,
!. Copy Cat, Bob -· CBYC.
s. Brocatt, Jo e Riddick,
ABYC. c. El Ttburul, P a t car.
r!k«, O.....ide YC.
I. Pocil!oo, R. Paul Allen sssc.
The Girls
Are Coming
Gueu who's cominf to
1wim?
At ate Boys Club of the
Harbor Area.
The girls,
~uaticl diredor J o y
Stark aay1 1wlmming
lesions are offered for boys
and Jlrll I 701r1 old and up
at the Bo18 Club pool. Mnre
tnformati911 ls available at
the club.
Pacific Crown
To Springstead
WaD7 Sprinpt.ad of San
Diego edged defending
champion Phil Ch1se of
Calllomla Yacht Club to
capt.urt the Pacllic Class
(J'C) national champloo1bip
8'mda7 at Santo Monica
YtlCht Club.
Sprln11tud beat Chlse by
-point ln third place WU ~re Harris of San Dle10 Jedlt Qui>. •'
Gem Captures Three
Races to Win Title
Gem, a Columbia-50 sloop
owned and skippered by
Qiarles Ha tb away of
Oallforofa Yacht Club, won
three of a scheduled five
Nees Saturday and Sunday
to brine the Callfornia Cup
back to the home club.
Gem was pitted in a
match race against a sister-
ship Cygnua, owned by
Ernest Cbipman of Long
Beach Yacht Club and sail·
ed by a Sm! Francisco crew
headed by Henry Grandin
Jr., St. Francis Yacht Club.
Gem woo the 6nt two
races Saturday by marlins
Head Start
Helps 900
Children
N·ine hoodred 0 r a n g e
County pre-sctioolers from
dlsedvontqed bo<kgrowid<
will toon complete their
ela:ht-wtek summer H e a d
Start experience.
As 1 pllr't of a com-
prebemive program o f
eduoliioaal end I o C 1 a I
IU'Vlces, each cblld bu
received a complete
pby8'cal exmntnatlon and
dedal examination from
~°"""I• °""'"' PoYliclano iind deoUabl.
~ oroer to remedy any
-dloeovered !run ••. .-amd to eompleto
oil --D0CUAr7, th• Orange County Com·
munlty Aotioo Coundl will
leunch a medlcel-dental
follow~_ ... .t
the ~usioa ol 1Ummer
Heed lllin.
Approxtmat1Jyt00
children porticlpa(ed la lut
ye11"1 follow -through pro-
vam, and a 11mllor -.... e~ lo pu1lclpale tu,....
of one minute 40 second&
and one minute Md seven
sieconds.
Cygnus began to make it a
real contest in the third race
when she grabbed the start
and won by a margin of one
minute and 10 seconds after
staving off a vigorous tack-
ing duel initiated by Gem.
The fourth and deciding
race wu an even closer
contest. The two boata
started dead+even and im-
mediately e n g a g e d in
another furious t a c k i n r
duet Turning point in the
race came when Cygnus at-
tempted a couple of false
tacks but failed to trick
Gem in ttie maneuvers.
Gem won the race by 15
seconds, thus bringing tha
cup back to the sponsoring
California Yacht Club.
Firemen
Rescue 10
In Sinking
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Like m1117 a AiJing ship
before ht:r, e 18-foot cruiJer
witb. 10 people aboard ram-
med 1111o OU.bury n .. 1 15
milff norUl of here Sunday
Ill a log.
The Sport.<liJbermlll Hnk
within minutes. Her 10 oc-
cqpaQts scrambled on to
rocD. But a Coast Guard
~ and helicopter
eouldn 't find tl><m lo th•
log .
The tide ebbed. and the 10
stranded persona p 1· c t • d
lh•lr ..., to -.. -ooly lo
ftnd tbtm1eJ'IM on a nar--
""' cUH-rimmed he1cll. Flna117 the jlolinaa Ba7
FINI Department lower«!
rope• over the cliff, rs
blldld ... ~lo •t.1.
•. , . " . •
Cadenza Captures 1st Event ·for 5.5 Y~hts ·i
87 ALMON LOCKAllEY Donald Cohan'• Truant, An·
...., ""' ._ ....,. napolit, Md, and Skip El·
U tile S.5 meter 11dpperi liot'1 Goi.Jng, NHVC.
lo ~ 1b u And JO Jt went (th the •ee. repre•~ e • favorites and tJi dark S. 111 Olympe yldltlng
1ame1 It Acapulco nen Oc~ horses. Som• up, tome
tober wv. lootlng for down.
WlllUter coadltlou slmilar But the final resuhs do not
to Medco, tbty couldn't reflect th• maneuvering
have made a beCie:r' ct.mce tbat wesit on ilw'oughout the
than. Nt1!PGft Beaob. race to 1ave precJ011s po1nU
SO II -lluDda7 when under the Olympic scoring
17 lop u. s. lldppen -ey.Um. .
101110 ol -It lh• helm ol Adually, Ficker got the e~ni new boat.I -hit best ltlrt · at tbe leeward
Iha IUr1iac ltDe In Iha llrll . end of · lbO line, but waa
.... ol tha flnll 1.1 trials. aerloooly hindered by the
The wUU. W.i ·lllhf-judges bOat and • few spec.
-u lllht u they ,can law boata that failed lo
expect tu AcapWco. move away quickly after the
Wben tha gun .... fired llartiol gtln.
herolllng lh• winDer of th• Bat Cox, Ficker and
&rlt ol .even r a c e 1 , Marsiball were one-two--three
Gardner Cox' Cadenza -at the flrlt weathw . mark,
one of tile older boatl -wa1 and tllat'1 the way they
first across the line. finished. Driscoll al.so held
But tile fiuky wlnda and oolo bla fourth pooiUoo but
Hght chop gave even. the na-wa.s being challenged by his
ticnal champion a few aox-old home rival North at the
ioUI momenti -especially finish.
on the fin'1-weather leg of It has already been men-
the course. Hlil'd on tioned that North 's picking
Cadenza's transom and clos-off of lour boats to finish
iDC fUt WU <llaradt -f1ftb !J one of the reasons he
another old. boat . -being waa rated u a pre-race
u.iled by BUI Ficker ot favc:rite.
Newport Harbor Yacht Parker sailed a brilliant
Club. lint leg lo round In fifth
ANXIOUS GLANCES place, but _..,tty lllC·
And causing Ficker to cumbed to experience and
cast a low anxiouo 111nceo -opeed 111 dropping to
ovee bit lbou!der wu John.
ManhaD. from stamford,
Conn. -sailing Bingo Il, an
old boat with a new sail
number.
And where were ell the
1leet new machines? Well,
me of them, Ramona -
de1igoed by Sparkman &
stepbens -wa1 in fourth
pl.ace with builder Gerald
Drisco!l at the hebn.
Close behind Ramona wu
Lowell North's new Luv,
San Diego, from the design
board of Britton Olance.
North, wllo rot oil to a
-able start, fought an
uphill boU!e to finish Ill filth
place. North bad rounded
the ftr8t weather mark iD
llinth place.
In llix1h place WU Ernie
Fay, Houstui., a former
champion Ill the class,
ip(rting a new bolt Sun·
dance. Gordon Lindeman, 1
nstiuially rated 5.5 skipper
from Milwaukee, W 1 s c •
lroutiht bia <loud Nllle
home in tewnth place, and
Ted Turner of Atlanta -no
stranrer to &.51 -wu
eighth lo Nemesis.
ELMS rr.B
Earl Elma ol Mi.llsioo Bay,
fresh from winning his third
ltratgtlt S n I p e cham-
pionship, WU s a 111 n g
Shadow, one ol. the older
boats, end finished ninlll.
10th.
Lindeman improved his
position from loth at the
first mark: to commendable
seventh at the finish. Allan
me~cally picked ofl five
boats to pull himself from
last to 11th. Fay and Turner
about held their own posi·
tions fl:om the first weather
. mark to the finish.
In the final .analysis, the
top haU of tile fieet bao
points that it may be proud
to keep. The others are
hopeful of using tbe first
race u a discard and bet-
tering their standings in
races to cune.
The Olympic 1cor1 n a:
eystam giV<1 weight lo lhe
r top ab flnllben. Ji).om !
-place on tlJey ,.ull :
take t2le place tiler llDIJh :
.anc! add lil points. :
scoreboard looked at ·tile 1
SCOPeboard looked at tb (
fhrlsb of the opener:
1. Cadema, Gardner Cox, ' ~antaloking, N.J., -O
!. Charade, Bill Fick«,
NHVC, -3 -
S. Bingo 11, John
Manhall, Stanlcrd YC, 1.7. .
Marshall, Stamlor11, Conn., : 5.7, •
4. Ramona Gerald :
Driseoll, ·SDYC, 8 • :
5. Luv, Lowell Narth, ;
SDYC 10 · · •
8. sUndance, Ernest Fay, i
Houston, U. 7 •
7. Cloud Nine, Gordon Lin-'
deman, Milwuakee, 13 .
8. Nemesll:, Ted Turner, l
Atlanta, 14 . !
9. Shadow, Earl Elms,·
MBYC, 15 :
10. Fugitive, Warren Par.:
ker, NHYC, 18 '
11. Outa SJght, Scott Alan,~
U.S. Naval Academy, 17 ·
1%. Savage, Al Cusel, '.
Y.YC, 18 .
13. Yankee ll, Taylor :
Grant, NHYC, 19 •
14. Complex VI, Britton ~
Ch.Ince, NYYC, 20 :
15. Graaa, Elliott Oldalr, I
Knickerbocker, N. Y., 21 ·
Annapoli.t, Md., 22
17. Gosllng, Skip !Jllott.
NHYC, 23
DAILY PILOT lftff ~;
In loth place, perhaps
surpriabrg some of the
eastern hotshots, was War·
ren Parker's Fugitive from
NHYC . But k>cal observers
who have been w.atchlng
Parker's performance dur·
log the past yeor were nol
too surprised to 1ee him in
the top 10.
So much f o r the top 10.
OPENING CEREMONIES -Newport Harbor Yacht Club's stall o1 boet boYJ;:
and girls stand at attention as Olympic !lag ta hoisted to signal liart ol #0
meteT trails. Competlngboall lie alongside the dock. · Wbat about the bottom
seven? Scott Allan o L
Newport Beach, now lailing
for the U. S. Naval
Academy, Annopol1s, Md.
was surprisingly in 11th
place with his new boat
Oula Sight. Also the victim
of a bad start, Allan was
dead last around the first
weather mark but worked
his way up to lltb at the end
of the seven mile Olympic
course.
Al Cassel, Voyagers Yacht
Club, was at tbe belm of
Savage, a new bolt dlliped
by Newport Bud! designer
Bruce Killg aud bullt by
Kettenburg of Sao Dleco. He
llnillled 12th.
BIG SURPWSE
Yankee n, sailed by
Taylor Grant of NHYC WM
13th. One of tha b 11
IU.lpriMll ,,.. to ... the
l<HMCI I.I designer llrltloa
~ance o f Pb111delphi'a
brine hll new hard-chine
oomj>IH VI acrooo lhe llniJb
in l«b place.
Behind <llance WU Elliott
Oldat'1 Grau from
Knlcttrboc:br, N.Y.;
Puff Wim U.S.
Cal-28 Honon
Glenn 'Iborpe'1 Putt of
calllornla Yecbt Club Sun.
day won tht national ch.am·
plonsblp of the CaJ.:11 Claaa.
The regatta waa aailtd from
cabrlUo Beaeh Yacht Club.
Top llniJbera In the claaa
were:
(I) Pull, Glcu 'l'borpo,
CYC; (I) Cha~, Larry
Helscher, OBY!:; ( S)
Weot.rly, !lay Corbett 1 CBYC; (4) Camelo~ Lloya
Powell, CBYC; (5) Vlctua,
Jamee Brown, PKYC.
Finn Championships
Start on Tuesday
The swnmer's filth major
y a c h t i n g championship
seriet starts Tuesda3 ·at
Alamilos Bay, Long B-.
when the North American
Clllmp;ombipa for the Finn
a-geta unc1 ... --. . The ·Norua Amert c • n
-..Plolubipo will precede
by ooe week lbe -Olym·
pie trials lo Ibo Flm Clo11
at Miollon Bary, San Dlc10.
Over 600 aail<n from tile
umted 541alel oncl eleewbere
art upec\ed lo j>ortidpate
in the ~ event at Long Bead>. -
Heovy ,._lteo will be
Peter Blrrett of ABYC, 1984
Olympie medalist In t h •
class, and J°'"'g B~ ol
Brazil.
Bruder, builder of the
Bruder Film m11t1, ..-ue.r
trus -.mimer wen the Flfln
nrationals at Charlesttln, S.C.
Two top-ranted Finn aldp-
per1 from Newport Beecb
also will be contaMler1.
They ue Fred Miller Jr. cl
South Sl>ore Sailing Club,
and H...-y Spregue lll,
Newport Harbor Yacht
Riots Studied
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The Na!iollll (bnmfuloo Oil .a. CM.alts and Prevention
of Vloltnce ll to begin bear-
lllp next m-. Th•
prelldentlall7 1ppolnt.d
panel 11'.ili meet Sepl 11 and
ls opeded to be Ju ....ion
lboultiz-.
C 1 u b. Both are former na·
tional and North American
c.tHunpkins.
The lleet .Wt.d arriving
in Long Beach today. Seven
riaces will be. sailed wt.th
eldppen being allowed lo
throw N ttieir poorest Nee
in tinal 1ocriog.
Sports Van
Given to
Rehab Unit
A blue and white sports
van, custom designed wlth
apace enough to CIU1"1 two
wheelchair patient.I a n d
three ambulatory patients
has been doa.ated to the
Rehlll>llitallon C.nlfr for
Crippled QiDdreft a o d
AdUfta In Or .. fl bj
membera of the League of
the Easter Seal Society far
Crippled <lliidren a a d
Adulta of Orange Couoty.
The SIMnemher allllioto of
the Eaotu Seal Sodel,7 of
Orange Coone, ii eompoHd
of relldenta of Newport
Beacll, Tulllll, --and Orange.
The Clllllom-de~ bus
II equipped •Ith a special
hJ<lraullc 111 t pmnittlng
Wbeelchalr patlenta lo enter
and leave the unit vb. the
-,,_ door ""II•
-Ill thelr dlair•.
Lido Isle
.. :
Ouh Plans
"' !
Regatta .. · . ..
Lido Isle loch! Club 1'111
hold Its August Regatta •lo;
cenleboard sailing billjli
Saturday and Sunday .. :'-:. ;
lovited to participlt. ari
Udo·H A, B amd Juniorj
Flippers, Kllel, Soowblt:dl.
SaboU A, B and C and olllli
centerboard boats claalU
that can come up with ttire.
or more entries. ,
Two races will be held
Sa turda7 starting at noon,
lad ttfte rAces Sunday
1tartlng at 1 p.m. There will
be tbi'ee-mblute tntervall
between starts of classes.
Entries must be filed bj
Dot later ttlan ooe-half hour
before starting time f«
eaob day's racing.
Gueat boaU ma,-b t
laun<1led ot tile Via Geno•
Boat Garden oo Lido Isle.
Trophy ~ ... will
be be\d Sunday evenin&
lol!owlng t h e trad!Uoaal
clam chowder 1ervt111 at the
IJYC chllibouae. ·
Crash Kills 2
BAKERSFIELD (UPI) -
A violent truclc-ar colllsl,.
north ol 1lor'e Wt week km.
ed Mn. Buel L. M1tlh.....,
f1, of Sprlafvill1, • n d a -··•r Ill her a,,qto, -H. F.we?IOG. 'If. ol
Orcrville.
I
Ul'IT ..........
Rub·A·Dub Tub
Disc jockey Gary Schaller waves happily from motorized bathtub
in middle of San Francisco Bay. Smile later turned to frown as
Schaffer lost bet with ccrworker that he could make it across bay
in unusuaJ craft. Bathtub sank 20 yards from goal.
500 Reds Iffiled as Allies
SmashAssaultNearSaigon
SAIGON (UPI) -Allied troops to-
day miashed the biggest Communist
,,. ~ffensive of tfle summer, killing more
then 500 Viet Cong and North Viet·
namese and driving thousands more
back into the Cambodian border area
jungles northwest of Saigon.
Just 18 miles soutll of the capital,
U.S. infantrymen caught hundreds of
Viet Cong troops in rich farrnJand
a nd killed at least 73 in fighting which
t:i:igan Sunday and resumed early to-
day. Up to 10 U.S. comapnles, between
1.500 to 2,00J men of the 1st Brigade,
!:tb Infantry Division, were dropped
intO" the battle area.
Of the 300 .troops of ftle 5th Viet
Cong Battalion, 73 were known dead,
20 were captured and 15 others sur-
rendered under the Chieu ltoi (open
arms) program by nightfall Sunday.
u:s. spokeSJrUl.D said thousands of
Countian Knifed
At Dance Hall;
Suspect Held
A Stanton man is in .fair condition at
Orange County Medical Center today
\vilh a knife wound in the stomach, the
apparent aftermath of a revenge at·
tack outside a dance ball Saturday
night.
Communists sprang from lairs along
the Cambodian border and struck at
least 15 major targets 50 to 70 miles
northwest of Saigon Sunday.
American and South Vietnamese
troops aided by U.S. tanks. armored
personnel carriers, h e 1 i copter
gunships and planes threw back every
attack.
UPI Correspondeht Alvin B. Webb
Jr., reporting Crom the provincial
capital of Tay Ninh, which took the
main assault, said the allies cleare,j
the streets <>£ Communists in eight
hours.
He said the retre&ting C<>mmunlstJ
burned at least 400 homes in a half
mile section of the southeastern cor-
ner of the city or 80,000.
\Vebb said that by late today the
Communists were trying to £ind
hideouts in the rubber plantations four
miles from Tay Ninti, which lies in
War Zone C, once one <>f the main Viet
C.Ong sanctuaries in this country.
The Communist weekend offensive
did not match in size nor scope the
February Tet <>r. May offensives.
fl.1.ilitary observers said they doubted it
was the major Red offensive that
.allied intelligence had predicted was
coming this month. in September or
October. It poised no major threat to
Saigon.
But the attacks northwest of Saigon.
plus Communist activity in the
Mekong Delta, in the Ce n tr a I
Ilighlands a n d in t h e northern pro-
vinces ended a comparative low point
·in combat in South Vietnam. "The lull
is ended," a U.S. military spokesman
said.
McCarthy St.ands Pat
Won't Compromise on Vietnam Platform
CUICAGO (AP) -Prellmlnary
sparring for next week's Democratic
National Convention opened today with
Sen. Eugene J . McCarthy's campaign
manager rejecting a compromise
Vietnam platform plank while the
credentials committee sought to &etUe
a key civll rigbt.. light.
' Al the platform committee bearings
opened in Washington, educator Clark
Kerr, 'ead of the NatJonal Committee
for a Political Settlement in Vietnam.
urged McCarthy to drop his demand
for a coalltion government in South
Vietnam and as.ktd Vice President
Hubert H. Humpbrty lo agree to a
toUll bah in bombiDg ol North Viet-
Cliicago Bogged
Down by Strike,
Weather, Hippies
CHICAGO (UPI) -Waiting for the
Democratic Na ti o n a I Coovention,
Chicago tried to keep its cool today. It
v.-as not easy.
It was bad enough that all but 1,000
Of the city's 4,300 taxia were sidelined
by a strike; bad enough that the bus
and el train drivers may be on strike
with.in a week; bad enough that the
same striking telephone installers who
have snarled convention com·
muni.cations are also d e n y i n g
OUcagOrans new teleph<>nes.
But now, a breed of young folks who
called themselves yippies are filtering
into old t<>wn, Chicago's citadel of the
hippie sub-culture. They claim to be
the vanguard of bearded bands of
thousands who will camp out in Lin-
coln Park tor a "festival of life"
beginning with the start o! tihe con-
vention Aug. 26.
If that were the least of Chicago's
v.·orries, the city would feel home free.
There are the black militant.s and
Vietnam protesters who plan to raise
all possible cain <>utside the In·
ternational Amphitheater convention
site.
There is tlhe kn<>Wledge that the
standby presence o( 800 National
GuardSmen in Chicago armories on
every · night o( the convention is
designed to guard against disorders
far more serious than this.
If that were not bad enough, a four·
inch rain doused Chicago Friday and
SaUlrday and city <>fficials were f<>rc·
ed to reverse·the locks and left the Chi·
cago River flow into Lake Michigan.
With .a heat wave coming on.
Chicag<>'s beaches were closed Satur-
day for the first time within memory
because of water pollution and harass-
ed parents were no longer able to
solve their problems with a time-
honored Clticago order to &o jump in
the lake.
Even to Chicago, the pro <>f con-
vention cities, it seemed .a Utile too
much.
A girl in a store in <>ld town granted
that t.he Democratic convention would
be "good (or business."
"But I'd just as soon it was in
Miami," she said. "I think t.here's
going to be trouble. I'm not &oing
downtown all week.''
ruun .
But Blalr Clark. McCarthy's cam-
paign manager, called Kerr's proposal
"thoroughly inadequate -it is just not
good enough." The McCarthy forces
have made clear they wiU press !or a
floor fight unless Utey are successful
in the a;!atform ~oup,
Meanwhile, Humptqey, in this con-
vention city (or a round of speeches
and interviews, pledgfld if elected he
will do everything he can to end the
war.
"U I am permitted to become presi-
dent and if by then there is no peace
or cease fire I wlU do everything in
my power, with bonor, to bring peace
to Southeast Asia,'' the vice president
told some 500 members ol the
Brotherhood of Railway and Airline
Clerks.
The credentials group· m e t
meanwhile, in closed session prior to
opening its public hearings wllb the
Mississippi challenge, where the
regular party group is being contested
by a biracial delegation supported by
boUt Humphrey and MCCarthy.
The Mississippi case ii expected tD
be settled faster than the 18 other
challenges, which involve various
issues Of racial discrimination, party
loyalty and the way in which delegates
and alternates could be affected.
Darkest Horse
Little Hope Seen for McGovern
WASHINGTON (UPI) -As a can-
didate for the Democratic presidential
nomination, about the most Sen.
Georg111 S. McGovern can hope to
a c hie v e as of now is to be in·
strumental in nailing a peace plank in·
to the party platform.
Party handicappers give th i s
darkest of dark horses next to no
chance <>f making ol{ with first prize,
and <>nly an outside chance of being
second on the ticket. The latter, they
say. might come about i£ his can-
didacy blocked a first ballot victory
for Hubert Humphrey.
This is the concensus .unong state
Democratic leaders regarding the can•
didacy of the South Dakotan who an-
nounced Aug. IO that he would seek to
rally supporters or Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy at the party's national con·
vention starting Aug. 26 in Chicago.
The state party leaders agreed in
general that McGovern would draw
away little .,; the support already
committtd to Humphrey and Sen.
Eugene J. McCarthy. And doubt was
expressed that those who backed Ken-
nedy prior to his assassination in Los
t\ngeles would swing to the late-
starting candidate.
Kenneth P. O'Donnell, a close
-L,
ass<>ciate or Kennedy's and a delegate
to the co.nvention, put it this way:
"Most of the Kennedy people I've
talked to have remained uncommitted
and are going to be uncommitted when
they arrive in Chicago."
On the other hand, Utah St.ate Party
Chairman Wally Sandback sai d ,
"McGovern's entry will tend to
polarize the Kennedy people who
might have gone to Humphrey."
Jn the view o( William V. Browne,
executive director of the New Jersey
Democratic state committee, Uie
·'whole thrust" of the McGovern can-
didacy was designed to get Rpbert
Kennedy's stand on the Vietnam war
into the Democratic platlorm.
Warren Sp8!'lnaus, chairman of the
Democratic farmer-labor party in
Minnesota. said he believed McGov-
en's efforts ''would give Humphrey
supporters who are doves something to
hang their hat on."
In Maine, Party Chairman Severin
M. Beliveau commented: "McGovern
will have no real impact on the con-
vention. I do think he will have some
influence on the Vietnam plank but I
don't think he's bringing anything
new to the convention."
COME IN and BE PAMPERED
Marion C. Mendoza, 41 , was at·
tacked as he left the dance haU park·
ing lot at Chester and Flower Streets,
according to Stanton police.
Richard Mugica, fl, also of Stanton,
'vas jailed on susplcion <>f assault with
intent to commit murder after the at-
tack.
U11rul1 Mum on Choice
Investigat<>rs said Mugica cried <>ut
to Mendoza, lunged at him and the
victim crumpled to the pavement.
moaning with a stab v.·ound in the ab-
domen.
-But It's Not Humphrey
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Jesse M.
Unruh will go to the Democratic Na--
tional Convention next week at the
head <>f the largest bloc of un·
c<>mmitted votes.
Jf things break hls wey, Unruh could
become the party's klngmaker and
rebuild his own flagging political
fortunes in the pr0ccss.
But if Vice ?resident Hubert H.
Humphrey wins a first ballot victory.
Unruh will be left on the siding wben
the bandwagon pulls out.
delegation," he said. "They (llum-
phrey force&) are working awfully
hard no\1J and putting on a Jot of
pressure. It is conceivable they could
get a large chunk of votes but he has
very little natural support."
Unruh admitted in an interview that
the ~llfornia delegation may shatter
when the roll is called in Chicago,
splitting its votes among Humphrey,
McCarthy and McGovern.
-. -
UPIT .......
Viet Faces
Their faces full of apprehen--
sion, two Vietnamese children
wait to see doctor during visit
by ·'team from Medical Civil
Action Program to Tay Ninh.
Medical teams, in this case
from 25th Infantry Division.
visit towns to provide medical
services for South Vietnamese
people.
Suspects Arrested
PORTLAND. Ore. (UPI) -Two
men were arrested today as suspects
in the slayings nearly eight years ago
of Larry Ralph Peyton. 19, of Portland,
and his girl lriend, Beverly Ann Allan,
19. 0£ Port Townsend, \Vash.
Unruh, speaker of the st ate
Assembly since 1.961 . is ch&i.rman of
the 174-member California delegation
which was pledged to the murdered
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy but is now a
slate witbOut a candidate.
tf that happens, California and
Unruh would both lose any in!luence
they might have.
"The delegtAion was elected to sup·
p<>rt Bob Kennedy, not to support Jes!
Unruh," he said. "It is silly to think
that a delegation which ls elected to
support one candidate, if that can·
didate is killed. bas very much to
unify it."
with YOUR OWN CUSTOM
HAIR COLOR Ro~x ·
Uf'I CUI 4 tell
Shlrlq '" r...,11e Fonner child star Shirley
Temple Black was greeted by
rain today as she arrived in
Czech capital for a lour-day
vi.siL t '
The delegates voted at two caucuses
to remain noncommitted to a n y
presidential candidate until they reach
Chicago. A few members have ex-
pressed a preference for flumphrey,
Sen. Eugene J . McCarthy or Sen.
George S. ~1cGovern . ttie three an·
noi.mccd candidate1 £or the nomina-
tion.
But Unruh Md a majority of the
delegates remain undecided.
Jn an interview, Unruh said he
would announce his <>wn preference
"sometime before the flrst ballot."
"I would bOpe that my choice would
be the choice of a majority of Uie
delegation," be said. "But I can't
guwantee that."
A.ttbougb Unruh declined to say
whom he would support, he made it
clear bis caodidate would not be
Humphrey.
'"I'he vice president has very little
natural 1uppart in the C&llforn1a
'
Unruh 1aid after a caucus: "Thi~
delegation cannot be delivered but it
can be Jed."
If Unruh can lead the delegation to
the right candidate at the right time.
he could .agWt become the de facto
leader o( the California Democratic
party, a status he held during the Ken-
nedy admlnistraUon.
He could become the Democratic
candidate in 1970 for the go'vernor's
chair now held by Republican Gov.
Ronald Reagan. Unruh has made no
secret of hls desire to run for 1overnor
or U.S. Senator.
Wben Unruh wu elected speaker
after a quick rise through the ranks.
most pollUcal pros thought he would
stop there only br1eny oo his way up.
But he has been speaker longer than
aoy other man in Calilornla b.l.story.
Clever people, Roux! They've produced a
push-button dispenser that lets us custom-blend
hair colors with the most subtle nuances-
and duplicate them every time you come in!
... your own hair color. With
F anci-tone. the tint that covers gray
completely, with" completelv natural .look.
And conditions as it colors. And doesn't
wash out. Js there any other lint?
COSTA MISA. CALI,..
111 f , 11111 Sl•u r
COSTA MUA. CALIP.. »ot 11.,bOr •1w'
COSTA MDA, CAU,,
116 W. ltlll Strf<I
M•rl•I• ("1~r ,_,.....
HIW'°IT llACH, CALI,.,
)1 ll Nf.._I llvtl. ""'""~ ••iktr S.Ulr. Priont •1j.1•1t
-·
k:·Wl'1 .... I.I ............
POUNTAIN YALLIT, CALI,..
I ,,SI MffMtrf
\ll~ltft! Ctl'I•• '"°"' Mt410l
--
SANTA AMA, CAUf.
1~ Wtilmln~t1r Te-,,....,, ,honf llt·1•
•
CREME HAIR TINT
Tint, Sh•mpoo ond Sot
ANYTIME
l~OST CASlSl $5.75
'
OUMll. CALrp.
U24 W. C,,_"
"'"'"' s.n'i
' •
I
j
-------. -
~··-°""""'...,
Ricky Doylo of Garden Grove
.oklpped school all this summer in
favor of swimming, fishing and
water 5kilng. But he received a
report card saying be bad earned
. 'B" grades in science and health
courses at Los AlamiU>s H i g h
School. Rlclr;y, U, protested to
Freel Bums, who supervises the
data processing computer t h a t
turns out the report cards. Togeth·
er they located the right Richord
C. Doyle. u1 don't want somebody
e1Je11 grades,'' said the wrong
Rlclr;y.
Bawling Vietnamese baby doesn't
seem to care for thU aort of action
at all as he i& emmined by Capt.
Tef'111 Schtoartz of Rego Park, N.Y. at
Ta11 Ninh. Capt. Schwartz i.r part of
the Medical Civil Action Program
team and U aUo.ched to the 4th Baf...
tation, 23rd Infantry, 25th Division. • A coroner in Finchley, England
last ,veek ruled that the death of
Mrs. Marion Bryer was acciden-
tal, although caused by a "lethal
piece of equipment." Mrs. Bryer
was electrocuted by her h a i r
dryer after her husband, a dental
surgeon, bad put a loose wire in
the wrong socket. •
"When you go boating, be sure
to take your L-S·D" was the
message sung over an Albany,
N.Y. radio station. lt toa1 a
"public 1ertrice announcement"
from the U.S. Coast Guard, ad-
vising water iportlm.tfl. to take
along an "nuthorized Hfe·taving
device ."
• After a recent opera tion, Mr1.
Mathilde Clom, 59, sought $175,000
in damages in the Superior Court
of Los Angeles from her doctors,
J1me1 I. W1 rgin and Wllllam G.
Caldwell. She finally setued for
$64,000 for the doctor's mistake.
They left a pair of forceps In her
abdomen. • Showgirls doing a quick change
at the beach resort revue still had
an enthusiastic audience. The sea-
side theater in Filey, England was
glass .. ·enclosed and dozens oI
bathers on the beach had front-row
seats for the unscheduled perform-
ances. Revue managers b a v e
'vhJtewasbed the windows. •
A noinger is hoping it pay1 to
advertile. lVhen he arrived in
AU1tin thil week, he placed thii
ad tn a local paper "Haw been
transferred to Austin for tl1ree .! months. Family stayed in Dal· j I&. Swingers oet tn touch."
• The head of the Ne'v England
Citizens Crime Commission in Bos-
ton bas suggested attaching a ra·
clio to a parolee lo monitor hi s
movements as one possible \vay of
preventing hl1 return to prison.
"Maybe rather than send someone
to an institution. bow about \\iring
him 16r 1 period of ailc month• and
when be feels depressed, 'o\'hen he
feels lll<e be needs help, talk to
him, meet with him, plclc up hi•
splriu," John Buckley said. • :Vandals In Ev&NU>n, JU., caused
more tllan •I00,000 damage and
petbaps as much u '500,000 last
weet when they d.,ecrated Cal-
Wt7 .C 1 m et er y smashing 300
tambltoDa ml ltltues.
M""", .....,., 19, 1968
F i red at Tr a ita·
Sniping Death
Jails Boy, 16
NEW YORK (UPI) -A 16·year..,ld
boy wbo liked to dress up &'S a fireman
aDd go to fires on his bicycle was held
without ball today in the' sniper killing
of a Long Lsland :Rallt~ passeQger
and the wounding of -another.
Police said John Wbltmare admitted
firing in1.o the b'Wt "on a whim. '1
Whitmore was charged with killing
Vincent Maher, 31, ol.New Y.ork and
wounding Gabriel J8nsen of Point
Pleasant, N.J .
Both men were Nt by the same
bullet fired !rom a sawed olf .30-06 ri-
fle ' wielded by a sniper on an· em-.
btnkment. Maher, an e 1 e vat or
operator, was struck in the neek and
died instantly. He was married and
the father of three children.
Jensen, who was ·en route home
from his jOb as a scowman on a
dredge at Jones Beach, wa& wounded
in the arm. lie was reported in good
condition today.
Police said the bullet smashed
through the car, strilUng Jensen, then
ricocheted across the aisle and struck
?V..aber. 'The sniping oceurred after the
Manhattan-bound train had entered
the borough of Queens and was about
eight blocks from Whibnore's home.
Police said an outbound train had
been fired upon from near the same
spgt mfnutes earlier. 'Ibe fir at train
waa not carry,ing passenger&.
WhttmoH we.a arrested near the
Sunnyside yard in Queens, about a ball
hour after the shooting. Several hours
later, police found the rifie bidden
below railroad ties with seven unapent
bullets scattered among rtoll6 around
the ties.
Police said \Vhitmore would not say
where he got tbe rifle.
Neighbors <1escribed Whitmore as a
qu.iei, shy boy who was a ham radio
operator. They said he boasted of
being an auxiliary fireman and a civil
defense volunteer.
He carried a sj)ortwave radio set on
bis bicycle and often sped to the scene
of fire s in his neighborhood.
The youth's father committed
suicide several months ago.
The Long Island Railroad, like
other&..in tlle area, has been plagued in
recent years by ·sniping · and rock·
thrawing by youngsters. But this was
the first fatality to result from such
incidents.
The railroad has been operating on a
reduced schedule the past two .weeks
because of what it charged was a
slowdown by carmen who conduct
safety inopection on train!. The
carmen were protesUng plans to fire
18 men because of automation.
Riots Hit St. Petersburg
For Third Straight Night
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -
Shotgun and pistol fire rang out
through St. Petersburg's Southside
Sunday night as the Gulf Coast city
went through a third &Uccessive night
of racial violence.
Police said there were no reports of
injury from gunfire during the night,
but at least one blast from shotguns
fired from ambush struck the Florida
Highway Patrol's specially designed
riot-control armored truck,
Backed up by the armored vehicle,
law eni<rcement officers employed
tear gas to btUk: up three large
gatherings of Nekroes in the troubled
area. On each occasion, olfieers .. on
foot swept through the area to drive
out stragglers.
Lt. M. G. Colman, who has led the
city's riot-trained officers on the
street, said 25 persons were arrested
on charges ranging from· disorderly
conduct to carrying co n c e a I e d
weapons.
Colman said the patrol's armored
vehicle, which can send out cloUds of
tear gas to ether side, proved a major
factor in dispersing the crowds.
"ft is extremely effective. We
haven't bad a full-scale riot here, but
if .we had you would really know the
value of that thing," Colman said.
Colman said that although the
violence began earlier than on two
previous nights and for a time ap-
peared to be spreading, "it wasn't
really bad out there toni.ght other than
in two areas. And once we put the gas
out, they all went home."
Colman said all of the gunfire has
been civilians. "\\'e haven't fired a
shot yet. We just want to get out <1f
this Uting before we have to kiU
somebody," he said.
The violence began about 1 a.m.
Saturday after a street tight outside a
dance hall patronized by Negr,oes.
Looting, rock-throwing and some "Win·
dow·smashing was widespread the
first night, but police have attempted
to break up any crowd formation since
then. .
Neither aathorittes ·nor Ne gr o
spokesmen have given any reason
publicly for the disturbance.
Gov. Claude Kirk, who flew to St.
Petersburg Saturday night and again
Sunday morning, mobilized t h e
highway patrol and other law en·
forcement agencies to help the cit y
and Pinellas County officers.
U,1 ,..._ ..
THROUGH THE WINDOW -SL Petersburg poUcemen climbs in-
to liqu6r-store through a front window that was smashed during the
third succc8'ive night of racial violence In the Negro district. The
rioting began about I a.m. Saturday alter a 1treet fight outside a
dance haU. Looting ,rock-throwing and wlndow·smesblng was wld ..
spread.
'
"'I., ......... YOUNGEST TRANS PLANT
M1 ri1 Gi1 nn1rl1, •9• 5
Five-year-ol~
Heart Patient
'Awake, Alert'
HOUSTON, Tex . (AP) -Within
hours alter her heart transplant,
Maria Giannaris, 5, was awake, alert
and able to visit with h e r
parents.
The Hagerstown, Md., girl,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nick A.
Giannaris, was reported in satisfac·
tory condition at Texas Children's
Hospital today.
She became the second child reci-
pient in history Sunday wben surgeons
tramfetted the heart of another
youngster who had suffered brain
hemorrhage. The girl was the world's
31st heart recjp.ent.
'The donor was James Dudlty Her·
ron II, ll·year-old son of James
Dudley Herron, a chemistry professor
at Pw-due University, Lafayette, Ind.
Young Herron suffered a brain
hemorrage Friday and lapsed into a
coma. When Dr. Robert Carpenter,
the family physician, told the parents
the boy was a potential heart donor,
they agreed to his transfer to Houston.
The boy was flO'M'l here early Sun-
day and died several hours later
without regaining consciousness.
frlaria was referred to the Texas
Heart Institute by the cardiac clinic at
Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore,
where her case was diagnosed as
severe heart failure.
The ~rl had been in Texas
Children s Hospital three weeks before
the operation.
tier father, \\'ho owns a restaurant
at the Hager.town Airport, said Mirla
was 51h months old when doctors
discovered she had heart disease.
Dr. Alex Haller of Johns Hopklns
"told me the heert transplant was our
only hope/' Giannarts said.
* * * Heart Switching
New Indust1·y?
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A secret
government-sponsored study s a y s
artificial hearts soon will be the na·
tion's No. 2 industry, behind
automoblles, a Stanford University
heart surgeon revealed.
Dr. Donald C. Harrison, chief of the
cardiology divislon at Stanford, told
the convention of the National District
Attorneys Association that the govern·
ment commissioned the study "by in-
dustry" on the pote·tj al number of
heart tr3116plants in the future.
·'This report says the manufac·
turing, insertion and servicing of
artifi<:al hearts will be the second
largest industry in America in 20
year& -second only to the auto in·
dustry,7 Harrison said.
104 ,K !lled
World's Worst
Road Disaster
I.
GIFU, Japan (UPI) -Driver
Mitiw:u Kawashima strained 1" ... ~ hlJ ralllow.pt wlndlhield I h e
two bf1e1.ahead of his. "S~enly tbert War thb big roar.
Mud atruct:'the bU1t1 and tbe;y were
swept•awa'f .. l shouted, 1they'te gone.'
The area Where the busts plunged was
completely dark and eve.rytblng just
disappeared into the swUt muddy
river i'' he said todaf .~ ·
A landslide wrought by rains ac·
companying Typhoon Polly Sunday
had shoved two buses carrying 104
persons oU hiebwy 41 and into the
flooded Hlda River. Three persons
survived ·history's worst highway
disuter.
The previous record death tolf for a
highway accident had been 83, set
when two buse1 fell off a mOuntain
road in the Philippines last year. Most
of .Sunday's victims were wOmen and
children.
Yoshlmasa Nartta. 14, p u 11 e d
himself out of the Hida, a river usually
15 feet deep but swollen by flooding to
60 feet "They are all gone. I managed
to come out alive but they are all
gone." he said. and the boy wept.
tlis mother. father and sister perish-
ed. They, like other residents of
nearby ,Nqgoya, bad · acceptfd a
mag~e's offer of a trip to Mount
Norikura. Polly's ralna came and the
hu.ses turned back. They had 1topped
at a roadblock, set up because. of a
first tandlllde. •
'"Suddenl7 we were heaved into the
river. And before I knew it, I was
thrown into the swift water. I swam
frantically to the surrace. grabbed
something like a tree branch and was
able to crawl up on land,'' said Aldo
TakeshJta, 30, driver of one ot the
doomed buses.
AbOut 500 resJdents of local villages
poured Out to help but the anp:ry river
swept most victim a away. Soon the
relatives came up from Nogoya to the
makeshift morgue where Buddhist
monks burned ioce:nse.
Teacher Mamor\J. Fukamizu knelt by
his wife's body and said, "You must
have suffered .terrible pa 1 n." He
waited for the arrival of h1J son's
body. Hiroko Amano, 15, approached,
weeping. Her parents, brother and
sister had gone on the excursion and
died. She had been too ill to go .
Publisher Takeshi Takasabara, one of
the outing sponsors, said he shared
their sorrow. • • -..
His wile and son were among th<!
victims.
'Fraud' Charges Rock
Miss World Selection
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Amid cries of
"fraud" and "favoritism," th e
<1utward smiles and camaraderie <lf
the Miss W o r l d USA 1968 beauty
pageant dissolved today into frowns
and recriminations. (See photo, Page
6).
All seemed well until the climactic
moment Saturday night when Bob
Hope lowered the coveted crown on
the blonde head of Johnine Leigh
Avery, 23 , Miss Washington.
"Sour grapes," said pageant direc·
losers flounced off the stage in a tizzy
instead of giving the winner a tearful
embrace in the tradition of American
beauty contests,
Leader of the dissidents was Jade
Hagen, Miss Kansa.s, Who caned a
news conference Sunday to charge the
judges with ''favoritism." She hired a
lawyer, Stephen J . Dimeft, to in·
vestigate tile pageant.
"I retained the lawyer because all of
the girls knew by midweek who the
finalists would be," she said. "U 1
waited until after the semifinals to
contact hin1. then pageant officials
would have said we had sour grapes."
show proof that Utls pageant was rig·
tpr Allred Patrlcelll. "This is what you
will find with girls who haven't won."
Patrlcelll "said just before the finals
he became aware of rumors that all
was not good fellowship behind the
scenes and that some of the beauties
even felt there was a fix .
He took the girls, clad in evening
goW1U5, into a back room and told
them:
"If anyone can come forward to
show proof htat this pageant was rig·
ged or that the winner has already
been deta-m.ined, I'll give you $1,000
cash."
'"There wasn't a peep out of any of
them," he said.
But there were a few squawks when
Miss Washington won the crown and a
ticket to London to compete in this
November's Miss World cootest.
"Miss \Vashington was standing in
the aisle and walking up before her
name was even announced," Miss
Ilagen said. She said that during the
week just a few select girls were
chosen for picture sessions and radio
and television spots.
Dimeff -who also is representing
Miss New Jersey, Betsy Swain; Miss
New Hampshire, Peggy Eckert; and
m a y be retained by "four other
girls'' -said he received calls from
seven co:itestants before the Saturday
night semilinals complaining the
pageant was rigged,
He asked them to submit lists of
whom they thought would be the
finalists. He said two of the girls pic'lc·
ed three out of five and one picked
fcrur of the five.
Miss A very said the protests were
"par for the course but a little louder
than usual. My mother said it was just
jealousy."
For the record, first runner up Was
Miss Virginia, Deborah Shelton: se·
cood, Miss Hawail, Leslie McRae ;
third, Miss Cali!ornJa, Diane Dye, and
fourth, Miss Texas, Judy Bowman.
Electt·ic Guitar
Kills Musician
DUBLIN, Ireland (A P ) -A 22-year-
old-lrish pop musician was electrocu-
ted in front o fa crowd of screaming
teen-agers in a Dublin ballroom Sun·
day night when his electric guitar
short-circuited. t
Ronald Duff was dead on arrival at
a Dublin hospital.
Duff's fiance, Sandra Grey, saw
Duff being hLJ'rtled about the stage by
the shock from the guitar. He Col ·
lapsed on the stage floor and efforts at
artificial respiration were unsuc·
cessful.
Twisters Slash Midwest
6.20 Inches of Rain in Fairbur y, Kansas
CaHfornf•
11 Ullli..1 ,,.., l11t1r.-lteMI
5ou!I!'"' C1lllOr1tlt wt•t"-r w11
rnotllP l1lr llMllP l~ntof fO< llt\111
mon1fM .... Cl...-cll I~ CMllll IK•
t~ Gu11V wllllh ~•ltd ~rt
II Wll l•lr In Lft AMl1" 1fld
vicinity 1lttr lftld-momll'le wllll the
mcrcvrv n11chln9 1 hlth of 71. u11 -
11ttr" tnim flr!\fly, Tflt It'# !.-
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Dar ho~ Today's Closing ..
11 ' EDITION
' ' N.Y. Sto ck.a
'
VOC. 6"f, NO.· ·199, J SECTIONS, 30 PAGES NE / PORT B~H, CALIFORNI~ MONDAY, AUGUST '19, 1969 JEN CENTS
Police TV
Ballot Up
To Council
Newport Beach city eti.ocomen
have made their decision on a_)Ntlice·
m o n 1 f o r e d television survelllance
system. They don't want it.
Tonight they'll decide whether to let
clty voters aecond-gues1 that declaion
on the November ballot.
Before Councilmen ts a request.from
builder George ·Buccola who says in·
asmuch as city government itself was
!IO spUt on the issue, perhaps the peo-.
pie should make the final decision.
The council voted 4-3 la.st week to
reject a city staff recommendation to
seek SSOQ,000 Jn federal funds for ~e
experimental "Electronic Protection
System" (EPS).
A spokesman for Arinc Research.
Inc., of Santa Ana, told the D~ILY
PILOT that there would be sufficient
time after the November election to
apply for the fedeial funds. Arinc
developed the proposed application re·
jected by the colUlcll.
Today no one w.as predicting council
resnonse to Buccola's request. Mayor
Doreen Marshall would say only·that
she could not Commit herseU prior to
receiving a staff report and hearing
her colleagues' views on ttie issue.
.,ni pointed out, however. that
''further public discussion of EPS isn't
anticipated."
"The request will come up toward
the end or a long agenda, under ad-
ditional business." she said. "It's not a
public hearing. We had two and one-
half hours or that last week ."
Buccola condition~ his n:quest by
suggesting that lf EPS Is placed on the
Nov. 5 general election ballot, the pr~
position should liibit the project to a
two-year period, subject to extension.
He also said that a citizens advisory
committee should be appointed to help
safeguard against invasion or privacy.
Newport 'Guar ds
Top 12 Other ·
Southland Crews
NeWJ>Orl Beach lifeguards plunged
int.O the "Rose Bowl" contest of
lifeguard competition Saturday night
at Hermosa Beach -and came out
winners against a dozen o t h e r
Southern California departments,
"You wouldn't believe what our
fellows have accomplished," an ex-
ulbant Marine Safety Director Robert
Reed was heard beaming around town
today.
The contest won by Newport Beach
lifeguards was the main event of the
annual Los Angeles Surf Carnival.
Sixteen 'Newport guards entered a
grueling relay event calling for swim-
ming, surfboard paddling and dory
racing. "We grabbed the. lead early, and
held onto · it to the end," a lifeguard
spokesman said. "It was neek and
neck with Los Angeles County at the
end but we made it."
He said the team had spent a lot of
time before the meet, "polishing up all
our .relay,exchanges.''
Staged .before· a huge spectator
crowd, the conteSt was held from 10
p.m. to midnight Saturday at the
Hennosa Beach Pier.
Finishing second was Los Angeles
County, and thl<CI, CIJ1linterla.
* * *
Swinging Nun
Roman Catholic Notre Dame Sister Jere Pekas looks like any
other coed at the University of Colorado where she :is gradua.te
student this swnmer. Photo inset shows her as she look:s ·ln her habit.
Sister Jere gives up mini-skirts and returns to convent in Minnesota
this month after a leave of absence. 1
LA Airways Helicop~rs
-I
Start Flights Wedne~ay
By J ACK BROBACK
Of JM Dl lh' Pll1t 11111
Los Angeles Airways' helicOpters
will be back in service Wednesday,
Clarence Bellin, president of the
airlines, said today in a special press
conference at an inn iJear the Los
Angeles International Airport.
Bellin said the return of the rotary-
wing planes to service would be
gradual with 50 percent of the flights
ei:pected to be Jn service by the
weekend. He said there were n·o plans
to scrap helicopter service.
Bellin emphasized that there was no
doubt of the "integrity" of the aircraft
and there was no problem involving
maintenance. He se.id the er.ash into a
Compton playground last Thur&day
whlcrh ·killed 21 persons had no con·
nection with the first crash last May
22 which killed 23.
The airline executive said informa-
. ti.On on the cause of 1the second crash
-metal fatigue in the ·sprindle
assembly of the rotors -was released
whereas such information on the first
craft had not been because it was
much simpler.
"The Last accident bad nothing to do
with maintenance," Bellin stressed.
"It was something all the experts,
government investtga·tora and
maintenance could not b a v e
prevented.''
The executive aald his company's
maintenance guideline' were more
conservative than thel military and
than government o;f. factory re-
quirements. He said e craft were
disassembled eVe-ry 1, hours.
Bellin said helicopte;s were in the
air Sund2y flying withoat passengers.
He said none of the cott:Jpany person·
net bad declined to fly ut the craft.
"Aircraft put into '.service Wed·
nesday will all havft new spindle
assemblies," the execuiive said.
Bellin Said manly pet!cons in Orange
County saw the planes flying Sunday
and called in about fl!ght resumption
schedules. . ,1
He said the companlhas plans to
augment helicopter se ce with Short
Tlke Off and Landing STOL) planes
but no date has been s '
TAMIY ASU ~AMED
SOUTH CA P fAIN
,I
Mike Tamiyasu of Maiitna High and
Eric Patton from Ma~ Del were
elected. c:o-captains ror t1'i South foot-
ball team which will v~I in the ninth
annual Orange County -Star classic
Thursday night at Oran Coast Col-
lege.
1'amlya.su ls quarter k for coach
Jim Coon'a Rebels while atton, bound
for Notre Dame this f , is a line-
backer. I
THEY'RE THE CHAMPS -Newport Beach UI ..
guards cluster happily around Judge Taplin
Perpetual Trophy after wlnpl_ng Southern California
Uleg~rd con!UI billed as "Rcse Bowl" of lifeguard
eve9. Fram left, kneeling~ are Jim McDonald,
Charlie Douglu, Sieve Farmer, Mike Ma · , Bill
.Leach. Standing, !tom left, are Ren Dru , Eric
Curtis, Mike Gaughan, Ed Newland, Randy
Howatt and Bob Ernsl I
• •
It's Super Surf
12-F.ooters Scour Beach;· 113 Saved .
87 JEROME F. COLLINS
Of ""' D•lb' Pllllt ll•H
Gigantic breakers pounded Newport
Beach's shoreline for the second day
in a row today, sweeping the beach
free of everything but sand and a few
mad surfers.
Red fli.gs, algnallng hazardous
swimming conditions, flapped from all
lifeguard towers. They're expected. to
be up thfoughout tQe day.
The huge waves, described by one
* * * Dana Point
Surf Tosses
20 into Sea
By BRUCE BENSON
Of JM ci.11r Plllt lflff
Rising, wild waves surged over the
Dana Point Harbor main breakwater
again thla morning, threatening to
1urpa.s1 the intensity of combers
which rwept 20 people off the
breakwater and into the harbor Sun-
day at duak.
Seven perSON were slammed into
the harbor at ~:30 p:m. Sunday &ad
en to South Coast COmmunity
'°';!."!~'ta , Sou~ Laguna. They were
:J'IPOi:t!Ci in11atisfactory condition
'irttljiau9r1<d i,ojuries, • • ·
·Jinraculously ,1 tberi/Jlll~~· tg>pirp.U7
.. ¥Jalal1titf •1tom ·Uii ·Slid.den' upsurge
<,,t"tlioT ......... "''JG!.• -.rtoday, cf,.
iicl&ls said, 1t0 persOti bad ~
reported misaing.
Meanwhile, San Clemente lifeguards
patrolllnt DaDa Harbor .today aaid
they sealed off the breakwater at 10
a.m. to prevent a repeat performance
of Sunday evening's spectacUlar mass
dunking.
"The surf out there is increa~ing at
thls time," said I.Jleguard CiP.tain
Phillip Stubbs.
"There's a handful of people at the
end of the breakwater, and we've
dispatched a patrol ~at to take. them
off." Stubbs said the people would be
taken aboard the vessel if surf made it
impossible for them to walk back to
shore. He said the people were in no
immediate dange'I", but were being
asked to leave the breakwater as a
precautionary measure.
The cause of the crashing surf is
atill unknown. Heavy combers began
pounding the shore along the Orange
County coastline about 5:30 p.m.
The U.S. Coast Guard ssdd it had no
information on offsho~ storms that
possibly could be heid responsible for
the 10 to 15 foot waves. ·
Reported one Newport B e a c h
lile~ard, "It's hJ"gher this morning
than it was yesterday at this Ume , so
we're expeeting it to get. worse right
through the day."
The rescues at Dana Hli.rbor were
made by two San Clemente lifeguards
on boat patrol: by two Orange County
Harbor District patrolmen and by two
small private boats.
''The pa-trot boFJts got a Jot of spray
like being In a rain storm," according
to San Clemente lifeguards.
"But It was more of a 1pectacu1ar
thing than anything dangerous for the
men in the boots. There was very little
surge in the lee of the breakwater,"
the guards said.
Harbor District Patr<llman Harry
(See DANA HARBOR, Pate %)
W oman Nea rly
G-Ot t he Point
A Costa Mesa woman complained to
p.oUce Sunday that her huaband
ordered her to gtt her teeth fixed,
then literally put hla point acrost with
a butcher knife.
The alleged vktim -who refused to
sign a complaint against her spouse
although she wanted police to be
aware ol what happened -went to
Hoag Memorial Hoapl.tal to be patched
up.
Inveatigatora aald the wom1n told
them her hUJband hurled tht knlle
acroer • bedroom. rllghtly wounding
her in th• ""'k.
NEW YORK (AP) -The atoct
market held a g'l.ln late this afternoon
In mode:r•te trad1DC-(Stt quotaUon11 p,, 111-IJ).
.. 1 .•
veteran city lifeguard as "an all-time
surf," began rlstnc sharply and unex-
pectedly Sunday early in the af-
ternoon.
The super surf climbed to heights of
10 to 12 feet.
All of Newport's beachfront was
scoured, but no serious property
damage was reported and no serious
injury accidents were logged by
lifeguards, who hauled 113 endangered
swimmers out of the churning waters.
Spasms Recur
A typical Sunday beach C?1:1wd of
70,000 spent most of the afternoon nui-
ning from the surging aea. At about S
p.m. more than .a dozen waves in a
row, each towering about 10 feet,
splashed onto the beach between 40th
Stieet and the Santa Ana River' jetty.
Thousands of beachgoers scurried
upland as the foaming surf reached all
the way to. Seashore Drive at man7
(See NEWPORT SURF, Pa11 J).
Eisenhower Still
Fights for Life
WASHINGTON (AP) -Former
Prerident Dwight D. Eisenhower lay
mar death today O.! doctors report·
ed · a gradual worst11i'ng of his condi-
tion.
The rep<1rt indicated the abnormal
heart rhythma thrt"otening the gen·
ieral's life are a late-stage devetop-
mt"nt of one or both of hit two most
Tecent pr1viou.s heart attac_ks.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Former
President Dwight D. Elaenhowu re-
mains in "extremely critical" Ct>ndi-
tion and liaa suffered numerous
1pl.sodes of Irregular bean • action
slnco Sunday nigh~ Army dodora r<·
J>01:$111. loday.
Doctcw •i t· "Walter Reed Army H0sptta1 .al<! an.eteetrloal Jia<emiler,
inserted ·earuer. into tbe heart of the
five.star ge11era1; has been removed
alter it failed to &top the apasms.
The recurring irregularities, doctors
saJd earlier, constitute a "constant
.and critical hazard" to Eiseobower's
IW'ViVal.
The text Of a morning medical
bulletin:
"General Eisenhower's condition re-
mains extremely critical. The elec ..
trical pa<:emaker was removed late
yesterdiay because or its demonstrated
ineffectiveness after the initial few
hours .
"Since last night's bu 11etln 1 numerous episodes of ventricular lr·
regularity have occurred, most of. only
a few seconds duration . but two re-.
quJrlng electrical conversion.
"Despite this, the general remaint
alert, converses brieO,, and enioyed a
small breakfast. He Visited briefly
from time to time_ by members of the
immediate f;1.mily, j!t ~.request.
"Mrs. Eisenbower bas remained.
calm during these ~II ,11;7ini days,
and bat received comtott-and elippoct
from her sish;!r, Mr~. 'GortS01r'MoOr'e,
who together . 'with Co'J .. • ·.ro11 ·a
Eisenhower and his famlly have "been
COl'}StanUy with her." · • :
The doCtors " said "Eisenhower 'bu
received "innumerable .:pssagea ol
~pport from incUvldlials 111 'all walks
of We" since he suffered bJs HVeDtb
heart attack •st Friday.
Huntington Mother Slain,
Mate Hurt in Shootout
" Sinunering domestic problems ap.
parently flared into a hyaterlcal
husband-wife gnn battle at a plush
Huntington Hmi>our home i n Hun-
tington Beach Sunday nlght, leaving a
housewUe dead and her spouse wound·
ed.
Pe>llce who arrived at the Dr. John
L. Fenner .home at 4162 Trumbull
Drive, found a scene or horror,. with a
little girl sobbing over her mother's
body and Mr father with a bulle~shat
tered pelvis.
Dead ls Mrs. Sylvia Fenner, 39,
struck by a slngle bullet in the heart
during an apparent gun fight in which
her estran,ged husband, a non-prac-
ticing physician, apparently tried to
defend himself.
"It loob like attempted murder and
a kUl-ln-seU-defense case," said Capt.
Earle Robitaille after detectives piec-
ed together bits o( faCt, rumor and
hearsay from nelghbora of the Fen-
ners.
He minimized tbe passibility of a
murder-suicide case. ·
Preliminary information Lndicates
that Mra . Fenner apparently tried to
kill Dr. FenRer, who is in criUcal con·
dition at Huntington Jntercommunity
Hospital today, with at least three
gunshot wOunds.
Neighbors aaJ.d they were alerted to
trouble Sunday night when they heard
Mrs. Fenner screaming.
"I can't go on living like this da,y
after day after day," they quoted her
as saying, according to police.
Shots believed to have been fired
from a bunt.in' rl.Oe then shattered the
evening calm m the canaJside residen-
tial dlatrict.
"No, no, no, please," er led a
hyJterical voice later identified ai that
of Dr. Fenner.
Police tbeor,lud that the wounded
ph)'Jlclan wu able to wresUe the rifle
awa1 from , hla diatraught wife, who
then grabbed a .357 magnum pistol
and blisted h1nl one more tlm• with
the powerful weapon.
Dr. Fenner, hit at leaat three Umea.
then apparenU7 llllled his wile with
one 1hot from the rifle. •
Robitaille aald Dr. Fenner's pelvlt wu 1m11hed by the bullets, but It w11
al m01t 11,,..,lbll to delmnlno Imme· ,
,, ...
diately bow many times he was hit.
"He'a torn up badly," Robitame
&aid.
Despite the ttauma of shock and in-
juries, Dr·. Fenner waa conscious when
police arrived and helped tO diagonose
the extent' of his critical injuries:
For Mrs. Fenoer, it was tbo late.
The couple'i daughter· Nyle, 3,
crouched over her dead mother, sob-
bil!1l UDC<>ntrollobly,
The Fenners, who moved to Hun-
tington Harbour one ';ear aa:o from
Fairbanks, Alaska, ha a one-year-old
boy, Kiel.
Also i.n ttle house when the tragic
gunplay blazed was Miss Marla
Martin, 24, a live-in maid and Mexican
national, who Oed in hysteria to a
neighbor's home.
Miss Martin ran to the next door
residence of Mr: and Mr,. James M.
Keefe, where She fainted Jn the en•
trance hallway, potice 11aid.
Orange Coan .
Weat her
tr you're look.Ing for a
change, forget It, advt.sea the
weatherman, who'a offering up
the aame old package of morn--
ing·ctoud1 and sunny afternoons
with mid· 70 temperatures for
Tuesday.
INSIDE T OD AY
.. Acapulco tocathlrl' preooili
. fn N1wpon Beach ai the: Olpa.-
pic vochl!ng tr1411 oprn IDith 17
top 1kipper1 competing fn tM
/irrt rcc1. Sc:c Boating, Page 24.
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I
'
% OAl\.Y PILOT
1Mesa Bars Gi~ing Dow.town Da'\goverP1
l . .
Aloollol la ~ Illa .....We --.. •••ill ~ COUt ddll
-lbolr IJ>ton>al ~ -1ay1 a
Cocta MeM cotwlhn.u who bu been
vlalllllJ bar hoppln( and c!Wlkea what
"--· Clleap la.,....., row<f1 , .. ,. joint.I
and pool ban. wblch deve~:'Jn~ older .,... ol. the dU.. ar. ca many
lelltlmale busln._1 to dry out flnan.
ciaD,y 11)'1 City Councllm .. Wlllj&m L.
''BUl" St. a.Ir.
E1tlhll1bm•t of lbopplul ce.nW"I
1n ouUytnc areu hurt the tradiUonll Costa Maia and watched t be cntrated In one a(ea, away· from the remarks by men whose ardor 1& fueled he aaid, Hit provides a place for
dontowu for a Ume, he 1ays, but the donton erea -where hJJ fatber 1hoppinf dlltriet.11 lddld. "1 alc9bol ud otber ~ oc-mere ts to meet customm a.nd
dowoton toaoop1 II grld\llllJ ttvlv· foltllded a hatbar shop -i>llia to It 'Clair said curmiceo wl-In hla -tal . .-..... II att>aota a dlf. ..._,t-1ertlit ment." Ing, Ollljr to lllC• a MW loa. ......,., --_. ....,.Inf • allo 1lmpler, junket. Modem hopping centon angle for
Thll -"'° bid -Ill and couta1 clllal tow. wllm to look for "In short, I don 't believe It pollflble thlJ type establl!hment, or at the
bloodshot eyes. ''Perhaps our grandfathers had the ''Thil sort of 1 angement ktpt for the d()WDtown areu to rebuild very least. 1 ll·kept. red carpet type
"They ue now I.hackled with one right Idea when they put all the bars, most of the lntoxic ted persona In one themselves and their image, so long as of tavern, be hid.
arm behind them by the presence of so saloons, gambling balls and 1lml!ar g!neral area, aw~ frqm housewives we .are shackled with cheap bars1" St. St. Clair . s&kl . clhil independent.
many loud, 1ometime1 dirty a.nd places -(he did not elaborate} -into .and others doing normjJ shopping Clair said. · pertonal 11tud.1 lea s h1m lo MUeve
usually obno:l:iow bars, w h 1 e b one designated place,'' St Clalr ia.ld. duties, 10 they w e not subjected to Not all ·bars, just chee.p ha.rt: Coll.a Neu. needi a~ of downtown
discourage shoppers from walking "No 1eU·respecting woman was re· harassment," be lflid. "An excellent restaurant, with 1 area zoning or city ordinance which
St , who llteral],y c;rew up with problems of the c!)mmunl.tJ were con-on the sldewalki, q v er· tr 1eDd1 y often a benetlt to a downtown aree," bars.
'
tbrou~8~e area," he said. quired to go ther., wh~n· tbe'behavlor 'nil.I include'._1Pi andllng, &pittl.ng cocktall lounge, on the other band, 11 would help J1ha~e out obiecttonable
,,..11e1ae. camea11° Civ·,c Center. Location 1st
Nixon Offers Aid
To All Candidates
Pro lem•
. . '
By BRT.p!: BENSON
Financing 2nd
turned over to a ltiD. unnamed fiolMe
committee composed of ~y coun·
cilmen for a final IUl(estloa to the lull
counctl body.
meot ageDCiec and. a 1eaee purcbM:e
aITangement.
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP)
RkNrd M. Nixon, pluog!na Into the
!lr1t national tour ol hU presidential
c,mpalp, b a 1 offered b 11 en-
doroemenc to all Repvhllcu ....
didatea. ' .
But the GOP presidential candidate
adds at the same time that be will
respect' t.be wiabes of Republican ol.·
flee seekers who may want to stand
apart, separatln& their campaigns
from hi.I.
NiXOll ouWnecl hlo appr<>acb to the
old problem of J>&tional candi<late•
trying to get along with local ones .in a
briefing with newsmen in San Diego
Sunday. After talking at length about
campaign problems Nixon left on a
three-day tour of Illinoi1, Ohio,
Michigan and New York.
The first st.op W&I Springfield, m ..
capital ot. a state he lost narrO"Wly
when he ran for president eight years
ago.
"We're going to campalcn llllooil
like it's never been ~ed
Hearing Reset
To Wednesday
For 8 Hessians
PrelimlnMJ hearing for e I g h t
Hesaian motorcycle club members
scheduled to enter pleas today ln the
gang beating of a Costa Mesa man
near],y two wtek1 ago has been con-
tinued until Wednesdray.
The group'• hearing wall re-set for
t :30 a .m. in Harbor District Judicial
Court at the request of the District At-
torney'• office.
The men are charged with a variety
of oUenses,..from assault wlth intent to
do great bodily harm to burglary and
assault with intent to commit murder.
They iare suspeded of being among
a gang of 15 to ~ hoodlums who broke
into the borne of Robert Glat.ler, 30, of
2224 Placentia Ave., on Aug. 7, ap-
parently in. vengeance for an earlier
confrontation. Investigators said Glazier, whipped,
clubbed and wounded by a bullet ln the
hand, was involve:d 1n a fistfight with
Frank "Wild Mouse" Rundle, 24, of
127 Albert St .. Cotta Mesa, a ranking
Hessian 'cyclist.
Anonista Blamed
For Ceramic Fire
LONG BEACH -Author!Ue• today
aatd anonlltl mQ' have let the fire
at th• Select Tile Co., which did an
estimated $10,exxt damage and com·
J)letely destroyed the manufacturing
building Slll!Cky.
Two firemen suffered minor Injuries
hattlinl the blaze, the 1e<ond fire In
four monttis at th1 ceramics manufac-
turing plant.
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before, 11 he told about 1,000 people who
were wailing foe him at the Spring.
field airport Sunday night.
"We're going to carry IUiDoU and
we 're going to carry tlle nation," he
said ..
The object of the trip is two-fold : to
meet with some of the party's b I g
state governors and to telt the reac·
tion of GOP workers to bi1 efforta in
the past week to unify Republicans
behind bis c.andid'&Cy.
The key governon he plans to visit
are George Romney of Middfan, Ray·
mond P . Shaler of Pennsylvania,
James A. Rhodes of Ohio and Nelson
A. Rockefeller ol New York, who was
Nixon's top challenger foc the nomina·
tion.
Nixon's decltion to endorse all
Republlcane seetlng office but to
respect the fact some may want to go
it alone recalls the problems Barry
Goldwater, the party'• 1964 pre1iden·
tial nomlnee, faced.
Some candidates 1n urban 1tate1
avoided Goldwater because they
believed he would hurt them in their
own races.
In wind.ing up his stay at the San
Diego vacation camp a i C n head-
quarter•, Ni.Ion pnised the record of
hi. running mate, Gov. Spiro T. Agnew
of Meryland, in handling problems of
big cities and 1ald: "It anything hap-
pened to the president I would feel ex-
tremely confident that he could take
over ••. "
Asked about Agnew's knowledge of
foreign policy matters, Nixon iaid:
"No man who ls 1e1ected for the posl-
tion of vice president of the United
States ts going to be an e x p e r t in
every area.
However, what he has ls aometltJng
Yitai. He bu a bal .... of jud&'m<nl
He has the fine intellect to learn very
fast.''
SEEKS NEW CRQWN
H1rbor HS Gr1de Terri Cole
Mrs. America
Contestants
Cook, Pitch Tent
Mrs. California, Terri Retch Cole,
Newport Harbor lDgh School graduate
and former Orange Coast College
homecoming queen will turn to the
outdoor• today in competition far the
Mrs. America tiUe in Minneapolis,
MIM.
The 51 contestants and their
husbands will be given five minutes to
pitch a tent and cook an "instant
breakfast" on the shore of Lake Min-
netonka.
Later In the day the contestants will
be asked to describe and Illustrate a
party for 20 guests with an in-
ternational theme.
Mrs. America finals will be held Fri·
day. The mother of three and wife of a
Llncoln Bank executive is cWTently a
resident of La Canada. She Is the
daughter of Mrs. Barbara Crawford ol
2969 Milbro SL, Costa Mesa.
From P .. e l
NEWPORT SURF ...
street ends.
On I.ts way back, the sea urried
with it dozens ol. beech towels, a few
transistor radios and several aMorled
sandwiches, accocding to Marine Safe-
ly Dlrectm-Robert E. Reed.
Reed also reported Witnessing an in-
cident that "ahnost tcared me to
death."
He said a huge wave rose up on the
IOUtb aide of tbe 250-foot long steel
groin at 1lle end ol 4-0th Streel
Frens Pflfle l
DANA HARBOR
Gage wa1 an eyewitnes1 to the dramL
"We just come in from patrol
outside," be told the DAILY PILOT,
"and had tied up to refuel the boat. We
heard the noise of the first wave and
1aw the water coming over.
"You would aee pe<>ple trying to run,
then be swept off, It wat like gol.ng
down a waterfall. They just 1ort ot
wect with the water."
He laid he heard no scrum.Ing, and
remembered then wu little tallting
among the rescuer• and t h o s e
rescued.
"At the time, all we sa" w1s
people's beacU in the water, and we
concentrated on getting them aboard."
Gage mtimated that ttn minutes
elapsed from the time the waves
began sweeplng the ~ oil the
brtakwater till the time they were
plucked out d.. the wmter.
OVER MILE LONG
The main breakwater at Dana was
completed at the start of summer. It
rises more than " feet at low Ude,
and 11 .Ughtly more than a mile long.
A 1mall portion of It jut.I oot Into the
sea. 'Jb1 breakwater then bends, and
atretchec downcoa1t, parallel to the
shore.
IJfeguards said It appeared that the
breltweter 1ustaJned no da.m1ge .
Waters inside the harbor remained
relatively calm throuehout the sl•&e or
IUf'f, they added.
One guard added that the badly
dama~ road at.op the ltructure w11
only a temporary on.. ''It wa1n't
designed to be a service roed. It wu
only for conltrUction to complete th•
harbor," be said.
Orang• County Harbor Dlreclot
Kenneth Sampe:oa wu in northern
Calllomla and could not be reach•d
for comment on the Dana Plllnt surf.
Other Harbor Dt1trkt of:llclalJ this
morning were at the scene to
determine bow well the brukwater
-otan<llDJ llP IO the~ ..
"Two guys were caught up in the
w·ave," said Reed, "and it carried
them clear across the gram to the
other side. They were dumped ttlere
without hi.vlng hi~ that steel. They
could have been killed."
Ufegmrd Logan Lock.Ibey recalled
seeing a large group of youngsters sit-
ting; unconcernedly in a channel cut
out on one side of tbe groin by w-ave
actim. The surf plunged into the chan-
nel, carrlel the tumbling group
tt.roogh tll• channel and around the
upland end of the groin all the way to
the other side. Everyone stageered out
of eie water unhurt1
~ laid that It wos "an al·
time 15Url." Roughest condlt>ons were
in 111e Welt Newport uea and by the
unguarded Wedge at the Up of the
Balboa Peninsula.
0 It'a much bigger now then it was
yesterday iat this time," he aaid Olis
morning. "So we're expecting it to be
eve.n larger today."
Marine Safety Dlrector R e e d
predicted e rignif.lcant "overrush" of
surf ell along the beachfront betwetn 7
aad. 8 o'clock tonight wtien a 5.5-foot
ll.gh Ude ls due. That could add smie
punch to tne surl, Reed taid.
Reed said he didn't expect anything
more serloua to result from thill than a
fn wet J>6tloe:, noting that a barrier of
rock! dumped In front ol West
Newport homes by Army engineen 10
daye aco "very defini'tely are help-
Jng."
He explained that the rocks are
breaking up the waves into a frotlly
foam before they haw: a chance to roll
onto tbe beachfront homes.
Pro Golfers Form
Own Association
NEW YORK (AP) -Th• rebel tour·
Ing i:rotes1Jonal 1ollen amounced the
fonnaUon d. the.tr own ix-ganiiation to-
day, to be known 11 the American
ProtesslCl\81 GoUers, w i t h Mid·
quart.en in New York.
The announcement by .attorney Sam
Gate.I sa!d tht players would honor -11
ed!Ung controcto -thmlgb 111611 and
1ome in 1969 -but would handle •ll
future contzacts and neogot!1tlort1.
The VOQJ> promised • "rt!l'"ffntatlve
field for tVet'J tourD.1JM.nt." a key
ph.r•ae in television contract5.
Tlw.y lflnounced they will have a
board or d.lrecton °' seven players
and four memben of the 1eoe.ral pvb~c:.
or n. j" "'"' ttttt
Newport Beadi city councilmen are
preparing to tacl ded1k>ns on where
to build a new clfic center and bow to
pay for It.
The need for grea.Uy el:'panded
mun!clpal facilit\fS was outlined to a
speeJal civic ce?Qr site aelectioo com·
mittee last week. -along with two
po!Slhle sJfel. I
A team ol COOSliUntl turned In the
resultll of about three months of study,
conclud.in·g the \fest ~ace for-a new
clvlc center lies on some 19.acres of
oce8ll.vlew land at Fash.loo. Island.
1'lt city's population center is shif·
ting south, the expert.I laid, and City
Hall should ~ with It to the Irvine
Company-owned acreage.
The cost of pubting up 111,000 square
feet of new facl.¥t.i.es, including CQUDCil
chambers pollc' department and ad·
minlsU'ation bUilding, amountll to
about $4..l million, exclusive of land
purchase.
Tht consultants said the expe!llle of
building a s.imllar layout at the cur·
reut City Hall &ite -identlfied as the
second best acreage available -com~
es to ~boot S.f.4.59 mlillion.
After selling the current city hall
property or 4.4. acres and buying
Irvine Company land, the city could
save an estimated $1,069 ,000 .in putting
up new buildmgs at Fashion Island,
the experts told committeemen.
City Manager Hmvey L. Hurlburt
said that whichever location is picked,
its financing will depend en reports
from two soutces.
The San Francisco finance con-
su1tant firm oJ Stone and Youngberg
has been retained for" more thain a
year to advise municipal lawmakers
on how to pay tor a new civic center.
The firm'• l!eCommend'a(J.ons will be
* * * No Civic Center
Review Tonight
At Council Meet
There will be no civic center public
review, i1s originally scheduled, before
Newport Bea~h clty co u n c i I m en
tmlght, M a y o r Doreen Marshall
reminded this morning.
Discussion of consultants' findings
on a civic center site will be taken up
instead on Wednesday, August 28, in
the council chamber\! at 7:30 p.m.
"That will be -a review, and not a
hearing at wlrich formal ecUon can be
taken,"'she DOted. "A hearing and a
proposal for/ council action will pro·
bably be schtduled for Tuesday, Sept.
10."
The civic ~nter discu11ton had been
originally fit for tonight but last week's l~ y police tele;islon hear-
ing forced e couocil to use tonlgbt'r
meeting for regular council business,
the mayor txplained.
'""" SlZlD, 1'91
Hurlburt noted that four flnanclllg
methods are .. vallable to most clties,
and tbat Newpozt Beach "!>ptan to
qualify for any ol them.
They an a general obligation hoed
Issue, a revenue hood 1.ssue, a joint
J>O'Wttl authority between two govern-
~ ci~y m&D.l:ier 1hled away fnm
speculating on Which if any ol the
methods tppear1 most f-avo~e for
the new civic center.
He noted VW a contract caI1a for
the city's fee to the Sm Fnmcl.lco
finance flrm to be paid only after •
successful fiDaDcing mettlod has been
reached..
Three Facing Charges
In Jailbreak Attempt
Complaints against three men who
pulled an almost-successful jailbreak
with a crude, homemade knife Satur•
day night were Issued today, while
each man was confined to an isolation
cell In Orange County Jail.
The trlo made It from the third to
the first floor of the old faclllty while
holding the knife f1:9hioned from a
met.al bunk strap against the throat of
25-year-old sheriffs deputy Ronald
Finch.
Charges againat the a 11 t g e d
jailbreak leader and two men he
subsequently released from a holding
tank include kidnaplng, assault on a
police oWcer and attempted escape.
JSU Sgt. Jim Middleton saJd the
principal suq>eet ts Thomas C. Clark,
19, of Miami, Fla., who took Finch
hostage and then freed Charles R.
Pulliam, 20, of Holton, Tex., ind
Michael A. Tracy, 21, of Anaheim.
The Incident occurred during a trash
pickup by Clark, who apparently was
doing trusty chores while serving a 90-
day sentence for unpaid traffic tlclteU,
deputies-raid.
Investigators .said aark, Pulliam
'Olympics' Set
For Youngsters
The Exchange Cub of Newport
Harl>or and the Newport Beach
Recreation Dpartment are joining
forces to stagt a Neighborhood 0.lym-
pics.
As a salute to the -athletes of the
U.S. who will be training for the Mex-
ico Olympics, a junior track and field
contest will be held Thunday from
5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Corooa del Mar
High School.
Winners of the local eventa will ad·
vance to the Regional Finals in Los
AogelH Aug. 23 and Regional winners
will compete in the state finals Sept. 7
at the training center near Lake
Tahoe.
The meet ls open to all boys and
girls, ages eigtlt to 111. Reglstratioo
will be tiken the nlgbt of the meet.
and Tracy made it to the ground noor
ol Ille JaU using Deputy Finch .. tllelr
pas~. but other deputies talked them
out of completing the escape.
Tracy, convicted of armed. robbery,
was scheduled to be transfmed to
state prison at Chino oo. Tuesday,
while Pulliam was putting in a nine
months' sentence as a burglar.
Drugged Trance
Leaves Boy, 19,
Mentally Ill
Superior Court Judge Lester Van
Tatenhove has commJtted a youth ar·
rested in Newport Bee.eh to
Metropolitan State Hospital for treat·
ment of a mental illness induced by
drugs.
The paUent, Thurman Odell Spr-
ngfield, 19, address unknown, was
taken into custody at Ocean Boulevard
and "L" Street Aug. 5 after police
found him totally Jmmobllized, unable
to see, hear or speak.
Doctors at Orange County Med.IC"tl
Center last week reported that Spr-
ingfield had come out of his catatonic
state and was up and about
However, they apparently later
reversed their opinion that he had
recovered.
Dr. John Guido, director of the
hospltal's Mental Health Service, taid
the youth wa_, diagnosed as being
mentally ill after snapping out of bis
drug-4.:nduced Crance.
'Ibe physician said it was mknown
how long Springfield will have tu re-
main at tbe state institution.
Threaten Strike
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Driven tor
the Yellow Cab Co., here Swidey .re·
jected a contract Offer and gave
negotiators until midnight Wednesday
to reach an agreement or a strike will
be called.
0
OMEGA
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IJp AWtiliary's Alley
Style Seen
,
Fashions from Joseph Matnin's. will be paraded ·in
the Balboa Bay Club1 when Madrecitas Auxiliary of
Holy Family Adoption Service in Orange County stages
its major filnd-raising venture of the year Sept. 12. /
The event, a ~littering affair limited to 400 guests/ '
is the fourth anniial benefit fashion luncheon, Peac~f
Alley, U.S.A. ,
Since the auxiliary's inception three years apt, witlt
a roster of under 30 active members, it hai' raised
more than $10,000 for the adoption service.
. " Mrs. John P. Condon, spokesman for the group,.
said the fa shion _show was its most llqpOrtant benefit,
since its sole other project is CbristroU card iiales.
Mrs. Thomas F. Riley is ch~an of the show
which will begin with a social bodr at 11 :30 a.m. to be
followed by luncheon at 12 :30, Tickets are $8 .50 per
person.
Other members of the )Uncheon committee include
the Mmes. Arthur Carter Lowell of Newport Beach
and Thomas Kelly of Sali Clemente, reservations, Phil ..
lip Barry of Newport;Beach, invitations and Robert C.,.
Robb of Dana Point, patronesses.
F
FASHIONING A BENEF.,IT -Miss Kathy Holzemer, southern
division fashion director for Joseph Magnin, lends a hand to
members of Madrecitas Auxilia,ry, the Mmes. Thomas F. Riley,
Graham Edeblute aiid. Michael Blake (left to right) as they plan
their fourth annual fashion luncheon to benefit Holy Family
Adoption Service of Orange County. The show, Peacock Alley,
U.S.A., will take place Sept. 12 in the Balboa Bay Club.
Mrs. Thomas Roden of Emerald Bay, auxiliary
president, is jfi. charge of programs, and door prizes
are being bandied by Mrs. Norman Huff of Newport
Beach and'Mrs. Ford Kaiser of Tustin.
Burea u 'Markets' Kindness
Volunteers Aiming -to Please
By JUDY BURST
Of tllt Dlllt\' Plitt S111f
Kin¢ness is tile language the blind
see, t.he deaf hear and the ai:e<l1 n~.
Who can put a price tag on a smile?
The Volunteer Blll'eau located in
Newport Beach "markets" kindness
and spreatls the wealth of a smile. The
rno4e~t three-l'oom building is e hive
of ac:tlvity from 9 a.m. to noon Mon -
days ·through Fridays.
Directip.g thiB o p e r a t i o n of
assistance to 66 agencies, schools,
hospitals and convalescent b<Jmes in
Southern Orange County is Mrs. E. J.
(Linn00) Arkusb of Costa Me6a.
Linn is energetic, service minded
and a bundle of activity. She seem-
ingly does a dozen t h i n g s
simultaneously to keep the machinery
running smoothly.
It is now fair turnabout for an
organization which helps others to
seek assistance in finding new
volunteers. The task of finding the
right person for the right job is Linn's
major goal.
"Volunteers are people who donate
their time, energy, enthusiasm and ex·
peri~nce to help the community," she
began excitedly. "They serve without
pay and everyone Crom high school
teens to grandparents are needed.
"People want to give ~ than a
ch~ck ... they want to . give of their
time and selves. The Volunteer
Bureau is answering the question
'Nbete to serve."
HISTORY TRACED
Mrs. Arkush, dark-haired and petite,
is usually submerged behind a desk
covered with pamphlets and papers.
But everything is genUy· pushed as.ide
when she traces the organization's
history.
In October, l9S6, the bureau was
established as a commullity welfare
project of Newpcrt Harbor Service
League. It was the first in Orange
County.
According to the director it was
<ieated for coordinating and organiz·
iilg · .volunteer service in the com·
munity and to offer citizens an op·
portunity t.o participate in the ever·
growing community.
''Today we are supported by the
Costa Mesa Uoited Fund, United Fund
of Newport Beach, Santa Ana-Tustin
Community Chest aod a limited
amount from the service league," she
figured.
Jn April, 1959, a board .of directors
was set up; Mrs. Thomas Young of
Newport Beadl cWTenUy is iresident.
And in 1960 the brunette dynamo Lin-
nea became the new and present ex-
ecutive director.
"It wa.a like jumping into a happy
beehive," she remembered of her first
da~.
VOLUNTEER GAINS
What can you gain as a volunteer if
you are a student, career minded, or
can only help on weekends or even-
jngs?
"You will find a chance to meet new
people and gain new experiences,
assume responsibtUt,y, increase con -
tact with your community and~ put
some of your skills, bobbies and
schooling to actual use," Li n n
answered.
A variety of jobs to match a variety
of skills is available through the
bureau's Friendly Visitor program.
Mrs. Arkusb sees this program as a
placement service putting people
where they do the most good. Drivers
are. badly needed. And other jobs in -
clude letter writing. playing games
and talldng with patients in hospitals
and cOOvalesoeot facilities.
'Ibe Girl! Club of the Harbor Area is
seekinl women t.o teact:i aimple
dome stic skill&, arts and crafts and
sport.a while the Boys Club is looking
for game room and athletic in·
struC'l(ft and general office workers.
The Grange Coast YMCA needs
weekend and dance ~ha per ones ,
coaches, referees, instructcrs and
clerical assistants.
Convalescent homes offer positions
for party assistants, occupational and
recreational therapists, letter writers,
readers, flower arr an g·e rs, en·
tertainers and drivers. The Well Baby ;
Cllnic asks foc assistance in the care
Of infants and area ' libraries need
workers.
Linn pointed out that the Cerebral
Palsy Training Center may fold il it is
not st.affed.
FULLER LIVING
The bureau stres5e1 uaing your free
time for fuller lving. The national
average is only three bows a week per
volunteers.
The Volunteer Bureau also is an in·
formation source for all agencies.
When people need help financially or
otherwise they will be instructed by
the bl.aeau where to seek assistance.
"For the past several years we have
been operating at a deficit end reserve
funds are running out," L i n n
lamented. A& a result the organization
has inaugurated a public relations pro·
gram with a speakers' bureau talking
to women's groups, businesses and
schools ; person -to -person contacts:
radio services, and newspaper publici.
ty.
The V<Jlunteer Bureau Is where you
can apply your social con5cience.
It is a clearing house fr;, doing good
and allows a maximum return on a
man's investment .in his fellow man.
Remember the "journey of a
thousand miles begins with a single
step" , , • or a telepbooe call.
A HIVE OF ACTIVITY -There is never
enough time in a day for Mrs. E. J,
Arkush, executive director of the Volun-
teer Bureau in Newport Beach, (at right)
to sit and take a break. She is constanUy
running down leads for new volu·nteer
placements. Her right hand assistant ts
Mrs. Thomas Young, president of the
bureau's board of directors.
If Vehicle's Out of Line, You May Decline to Go to Dine
DEAR ANN llMIDERS: First let's
get one tl>lnr nafght I am not a
teenager, I'm '1 yean of age and l
hold a responsible posllion in al>aok.
My· husband died ifive years ago and
I have been 1oing with a man ·who
oWDJ a fertilizer ·00sme1. (I'm fed up
<11 joke! about h11 bus~ess and I have
beard them all, 10 pleae don't come
up with 111Jy:)
Last night was Horace'• 1lodge din·
ner. He be!OllllO to 1ht Moote. I got
dressed up in • &Uk outfit and bid my
hair set and my Dalli manicured. I
even bought a brocaded shoulder stole
for the affair.
Horace came for me a little late but
I didn't aay anything. I alm<llt died
when I aaw be wu drtvin& hb dump
·'
•
•
ANN LANDERS
truck. I'm not 1ure but I think tt had
some fertilizer in It. All t)e aaJd was,
"t 101d the Buick and the new car
won't be here till nen month ."
I am not a snob but I don't think a
dump truck is proper transportation
for a middle-aged couple. Should I
refuse to ride in it in the tuture?
-EMBARRASSED
DEAR EM' A damp tradi II all
rljbt for a trtp to ~ beaclt, maybe,
bat 1urely not to a baaqoet-.ttb you
in a brocade4 stole, yet. TeU Horace
"
you'd prefer to take Uie but lllltll the
new car comes In, if It'• aU tbe 1ame
to him.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 211
yeara old aod 1 the mother of •
beautilul little daughter. '!be lather ol
my child refused to marry me,
Although I was hurt at first I have ·
come to the conclU:1ioo it wu all for
the belt. He wal a bum.
I am very proud of Rochelle and my
family l.Dd frlendl know 1he has no
legal father . They treat her kindly and
nothing is ever said about it.
Recently l took a new job and mov-
ed to another section of town. When l
was shopping in the market Saturday
a n.aw neighbor asked, "What does
your husband do?" I replied, '1The
baby's father did not marry me. She ta
an out-of-wed.locli chlld."
The WODlall'S lnoulh dropped open
and 1he yelled at the top of her lungs,
"HOW DID rr HAPPEN?" She knows
very wen how it happened. Why would
she uk such a dumb question?
Plea.;e tell me what to iay to cruel
people who ast queeUons that are none
Of their busine11?
, -ALONE BUT PROUD DEAR A BUT p , "What ... , your
bu1baad do?" mlgltt be a ta1tele11
que1tloa from a ca1W atqualatuce
but IL Is not cruel. You invited the
cruel question ("How did It happen?")
when you volunteered the information
that the li!aby'1 fatber dld aot marry
you.
ln the future II you are asked about
the baby's father, 1tmply 1ay, uae 11.
plumber -or whatever be Is -but
we are UvlD& apart."
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I ,..ad with
interest the quat.e in today'1 column
from a French philosopher who. 1ald,
"There are DO frl&id women. Only
clwnsy men."
Here'• another one, from a
Hungarian poet: ''U a woman does not
get the man the wmts, God help the
man 1he geta."
U lou fail to see tbe connection, I'll
pot.a; It out. Some men are clumsy
because they don't get the coopera4
tion . And the reason they doo't get the
cooperation is because the lady didn't
get the man she wanted. Get it?
-THE HUNGARIAN POET
DEAR POE't: Are you commeatlllC
or apologlzlof? Tbanb 10< lbe pear~
Dad.
Is alcoholism a cUseue? How can
the alcoholic be treated? 11 there a
cure? Read the booklet "Alcoholism -
Hope and Help," .by Ann Landers.
Enclose .35 cents in coin with your re-
quest and a loog, damped, Mii.ad·
dressed envelope .
Ann Lander• will be glad to help you
with your problems. Send !Mm to her
in care of the DAILY PILOT, enclos•
Ing a stamped, sell-addressed eno
vet ope.
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) 4 DAILY PILOT
Linda Diane Davis New
Mrs. Michael Mansolino
MRl. MICHA•L MANSOLINO
St. Anclr1w'1 Rlt11
Couple to Live
St. Andrew's Presbyter·
Ian Church was the lietting
for the double ring service
llnkinl iJI marriage Michael
Man10Uno and his bride, the
'ormer Llnda Diane Davis.
The Rev. Dr. Charles
>ierenfield performed the
1fternoon nuptials for the
laughter of Mrs. Lorraine
)ayis of Newport Beach
lnd the son of Mr . and Mrs.
lalph Mansolino of Tustin.
Thi couple will make
heir home in Costa Mesa
allowing their wedding trip
o northern California.
For her wedding the bride
.;elected a floor length white
taffeta gown covered with
net appliqued with Swiss
embroidery. Her illusion
veiling wu attached to a
headpiece of embroidered
nowera and seed pearls and
1ht held a bouquet of white
glameUaa and orchidl'I.
She wa11 given in marri·
age bY her brattier, Ronald
Davis.
Mt11 Pamela White was
mald of honor in a moss
green floor length gown with
a matching headpiece. She
carried yellow daisies.
Gowned identically were
bride1maids, Mrs. Charle•
Koi1tr1 and Miss Shelia
Trovarelll, the bridegroom's
niece.
Best man was Dennis
Oeovlet of Los Angeles.
U11ler1 were Robert Dewar
of We1tmin1ter and Joe and
Richard Fortunato of Los
Angeles.
The reception followed in
the church hall. More than
100 friend• and relatives
congratulated the newly·
wed1. Circulating the guest
book was Mrs. Davis, the
bride'& aister-in·law.
SHU,,L!NCJ ACTIYITl!ll -M@mbefl and CUt1t1
of the Women'• GuUO ol Our LJ4Y QunP ol 4n.
gels Chul'Qh have pllUUIOll a de.,ert brid&e and
lashlon show !or Widn11day, ~ua. 11 in ti!• C1111eo
Shores home ol their pre1ldNII, ldro. WlU)am H.
Wedding
Planned
The en1a1ement of
Evelyn Gail Howard and
Donald Euge°" Short baa
been announced by . the
bride-to-be'• mother, Mrs.
Helen Maciejewski of Coat.a
Mesa.
Parenti . of the
bridegroom-elect are Mr.
and Mrs. Oren W. Short of
Adel Iowa. He is a graduate
of 1Amphitheater Hi g h
School in Tucsoo, and is
serving in the U.S. Marine
Corps. Miss Howard is a
vaduate of Costa Mesa
Hllh School.
EVELYN HOWARO
Bride-t1>be
.......... ·~ •• pitturt.:
peeks ::: •••
lly M...,.. • • • • ;. ..
Pl'llh ~ !lord•lll In ih•
TV 1trll1 Hpi.. Den't Eat
Tho o.J1i11" p1w tjle 1!U•
rote in Walt Di111-.y'1 04The
'11•11)' Po1''. ........... . scrllit -. 'Lord Nellon I• a
CHlarrlle rW lit tllo l\.eW
11\ovlo W 11 -Ills Y oa f,lel t:Qrell. . .
'J'hll c;amerti1Wi1t Cl'tar· ~\It t 0 k e I the part el a
1heepdq, who I• hud4)'..,,,m·
PM1i .. to three boys pl&xlng J'(I)•• •I '°"' of Daria Qi.y. who t1ppear1 a1 a
tol)h11ti~•ted widow. Lor d Nelton'• romantic oppo1ite in
WU.: Si.J Yea Get Eirr•ll ii a
P.COdle, who beloac• · t o ll~bere Hershey. SIM 11 ·Ille ~ujhter of Brian Keith.. a
widower who 11111 for Doric.
llambQ. Getlil1i In practlc' !or the bridae are (left
to right) Mr1. Rambo, Mrs. John Kehoe, and Mro.
John L. Co1111ell while Mr1. E. R. McCoy models
one of the fa1hion1.
Their pl.ant ta ret mwied
rlUI t(llnewhat ukew when.the
coqple'a Yll'IOUI •nd tNft4ry
)'OUl)Cltera &et 1 n v o Iv. a.ji !
Th.ote r,vo pets l\ra out.-to
hetp a h•~p, believe it or u«.
Guild Readies
Summer Event
An interlude in a i;;ummer
of boating and vacation will
be the annual dessert bridge
and fashion show sponsored
by the Women'• Guild of
Our Lady Queen of Angels
Church.
The party is scheduled for
Wednesday, Aug. 21 at noon
in the home of Mrs. William
H. Rambo oJ Cameo Shores.
Lorraine Sutherland'• col-
lectfon of fathion1, modeled
by members of the guild,
will entertain guests during
dessert and coffee, as well
a1 provide a preview . of
fash10111 for the coming
season. Bridge fans will
compete !or prizes during But not that limply, 1tiough.
the remainder of the af· 'nlere is many a slip 'twixt
ternoon . . , the lip and the altar'. Walt un~
Mrs. Rambo, who 1s serv-til you see die JIOj)!' man, clad
lng e1 guild pre1ident for a only in undenlhort., being
second term, ii;; chairman ~f chased by & hippie motorcade,
the summer party. She 1s with his very own wife among
being assisted by the Mmes. them. All, this in a Iaugh-
C. W. Elliot, John L. ~n-loaded film comlnl naf to
nell, L. J. Finley, John the Lido.
Kehoe, Edgar J. Carpenter,
Burton J. Lowe, A. M.
Coker, Elton R. McCoy and
G. H. Kuhl.
;
In Costa Mesa
The formtl" Mi11 Davis i•
a graduate of Glendale Col-
lege and received her BA
and MA from the University
ol Calllornla, Santa Bar·
b••· H.r buaband received
bl1 MB !rem the Univer1!ty ot Soui1>om Calilonila. Both
art tHchinf. •
An October wedding in the
First Baptirt Church of
Ca.ta M111 bas been plan-
ned. Fare Feeds Orphans
Proceed• from the event
will benefit tte guild's
chf.ir.ties.
\
Kramer-Anderson Vows
Recited 1n Afternoon
RUTH BRYANT-Beauty Consultant
pr•1•11t1
MEILE NOIMAN cos11n1cs
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
For c•m1t lime11tary coler I nt•~•UP 1n1ly1i1 .. ,
646-4026
lrtnc Ad ffll' Gift wtlh ap~lnlment
HJ I. 17 .. It., C-11 ...
Jtwdty A: huUQu. lteml
•
Sweet Adelines
VISIT US
Before
the
Stork
Vi, its
You
f.111 Yeur
C•111plt+t
M1ttrflliy w.,,, ......
, •• ,.111bl1 ,,;,., . ' .
• • •
CATHY'S
MATERNITY SHOP
M-C.......-Jlt 1.1M St, c......... .. ......
Let us copy
your favorite
old picture ...
Pre11rv1 ft1nd memorl11
for all the fam ily •• , let u•
make fine copie• to aliare
~ith them now.
SALEI
WT 12 DAYSI
only 395
5i7 <•'y tf ,ichlr•
11'1 ttt4 Ctt1dilft11
,he111 t•t-JJl I bf, JIJ
'"•t•trt,h St1141t Ill Fleer
TOPS Cl.it,'
Buffuma' introduces
the La Habra Cut
Our silky swln111 lo111s Ill shine 'n wave
whtre~r you 111. Only•·•· And,
wheo yoo come in for your La Habla (or
any olfler style), re~ive a compli1111ntary
5.50 Resl01 .h1ir eonctltionlng trellllnentl
COl!le SOOD,
Beauty Studio, all st~ llXCtllt Marina
Bufftuns·
Now port'#' I FHhion lslond Newport ~ntor
H-4-2200
The Pink Jun1le b baaed on
the novel "Snake Water" by
Man Wllllanu. FLhd wi'th ac·
tion and 1uspen111, Viewer•
will enjoy paency ol eoqiedy
1ituatiCl'l6 u BeriiMJom Mi1s
Renzi mcaft1 her Holl)'WOOd
film debut.
Hammerhead leavet the
Lido tomorrow eveMng after
ir.trodud.ng a braOO new eti·
pi'onage agent-Charles Hood-to
ttie local film fans. He
operates in the highly ec-
ceprable Jamei Bond manner.
Your, Mine And Oura take.Ii
its leave ol the Men tomor-
row eve, when Henry Fonda
.od lA.tcille Ball pack up tt)eir
-ond hit tl>a .... d.
There are a lot o( people
who love to see the movies.
But their evening achedules
are so filled with social,
bul!nes1 and home-m.aking af·
fai'r1 that they are tempted to
focego the enjoyment of the
films. That's wtiy M e •a
Matineel are 10 very popular.
Take a mid-week break in ttie
aftemoon and see a Cood llhow
at the Mete.
FREE PASSES lo tile Lido
or Mesa will bl mailed today
to Joanne Hatl.rick, 1108
S\ertin(, C<>N Mel&, G. J.
Breman, '111 Slt<m. Rd.,
Newi><rt BMdt, Gladys Quin.
cy, 1700 Miram1r Dr., Balboa
•nd J . E. Pylo, llS Poppy,
Corona del Mar.
Don't kit the summer lhort. of ollh tltop )'OU (rom seeing
..., ol the line ftim• ot th•
Lido or~ Meta. P'or inltant
admiNlon to the movl11 ahow
yoor MHtu Cl>arge Cord or
your Bu.kamerlcartf.
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Costa Mesa Today's Closing
ED-ITI O N
voi:. 61, NO. 199, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA -;c · MONDAY, AU GUST. ·19, '1969 -JEN CENTS
Il{e Battling On
'Extremel y Critical' as Spasms Recur
\VASilINGTON (AP) -Jt'onner
rreside11t Dwight D. Eisenhower lay
11ear death today as doctors rtport-
ed a gradual worsenhlg of his condi
tion.
The repo rt indicated the abnonnol
Jieort rliythnts threatening tlte gc11-
eraL's life are a late-stage deve lop-
ment of one or both of his two most
recent previous heart attacks.
\VASH!NGTON (AP) -Former
President Dwight D. Eisenhowtir re-
mains in "extremely critical" condi-
tion and bas suffered numerous
episodes of irregular heart action
since Sunday night, Army doctors re·
j)Ortecl today, .
Doctors at Waller Reed Army
11ospital said an electrical pacemaker,
inserted earlier into the heart of the
five-star -general, has been removed
after it failed to stop the spasms.
The recurring irregularities, doctors
said earlier, constitute a "constant
and critical hazard" to Eisenhower's
survival.
The text of a morning medical
bulletin :
"General Eisenhower's coodition re·
mains extremely critical. The elec-
trical pacemaker was removed late
Hunti ngton Shoototit
W Qµtan Slain;
Mate Wounded
Simmering domestic problems ap·
parently flared into a hysterical
husband-wile gun battle at a plush
lluntington Ht1rbour home in Hun·
lington Beach Sunday night, leaving a
housewife dead and her spouse wound·
ed.
Police who arrived at the Dr. John
L. Fenner home at -41~ Trwr,ibull
Drive found a scene of horror, with a
little 'girl sobbing over her mother's
body and her father with a bullek·hat·
tered pelvis.
De8d is Mrs. Sylvia Fenner, 39,
struck by a single bullet in the heart
iiuring an apparent gun fight jn which
her estranged husband, a no~·prac·
ticing physiciun, apparently tried to
Mr s. America
Cont estants
Cook, Pitch Tent
Mrs. California, Terri Reich Cole.
Newport J.Iarbor High School graduate
and former Orange Coast College
homecoming queen will turn to the
outdoors today in competition for the
Mrs. America title in Minne'apolis.
1,\.1inn.
The 51 contestants and their
husbands will be given five minutes to
pitch a tent and cook an ''instant
breakfast" on the shore o{ Lake Min·
netonka.
Later in the day the contestanl'i will
be asked to describe and illustrate a
party for 20 guests with HR in·
ternational theme.
Mrs. America finals will be held Fri·
day. The mother of three and wife of a
Llncoln Bank executive is currently a
resident of La Canada. She is the
daughter of Mrs. Barbara Crawford of
2969 Milbro St., Costa Mesa.
Swedish
defend himself.
"It looks Like attempted murder and
a klll·in·selI~efense case," said Capt.
Earle Robitaille after detectives piec·-
ed together bits of fact, rumor and
hearsay from neighbors of the }'en·
ners.
He minimized the possibility of a
murder-suicide case.
Preliminary information indicates
that .. Mrs. Fenner apparently trie._d to
kill Dr. Fenner, who is in critical con·
dition at Huntington lntercommunity
Hospital today, with at least three
gunshOt wounds.
Neighbors said they were alerted to
trouble Sunday night when they heard
Mrs: Fenner screaming.
,;I can't go on living like this day
after day after day," they quoted her
as saying, according to police.
Shots believed to have been fired
from a hunting rifle then shattered the
evening calm in the canalslde residen·
tial district.
"No, no, no, please," cried a
hysterical voice later identified as that
()f Dr. Fenner.
Police theorized that the woun~ed
physician was uble t-0 wrestle the rifle
away from his distraught wife, who
then grabbed a .357 magnum pistol
and blasted him one more time with
the powerful weapon.
Dr. Fenner, hit at least three .t.imes,
then apparently killed his wife with
one shot from the rifle.
Robitaille said Ur. J<·enner's ptl\'is
\vas s mashed by the bullets, bu~ !t \Ya s
al most impossible lo determine imme-
diately how many times he was hit.
"He's torn up badly," Robitaille
said.
Despite the trauma of shock and in·
juries, Dr. Fenner was conscious when
police arrived and helped to d.lagonose
the extent of his critical injuries.
For Mrs. Fenner, it was too late.
The couple's daughter Nyle, 3.
crouched over her dead mother, sob·
(See SHOOTOUT, Pait l)
Summer
Mesa Co ed Tell,s of Experiences
"You haven't lived until you've seen
a Japanese movie with Swedish sub-
tiUes," 17-year-old Sandy Lauter
writes from her summer stay in
Sweden as an American Abroad
representing the CA'.>sta Mesa Cbapttr
or the American FJeld Service.
Selected last March as an AFS
finalist from Cost.a Mesa High SchooJ,
Sandy learned in JUDe that a family
had been found for her summer visil
Her new father would be a railroad
man, her mother a housewife, her
sister a teen.ager named Birgitta.
A sign lettered, "Welcome Sandy to
the Bogren family" wu her greet.inc
when she arrived in Vannas, Sweden.
Since then she hu been keepina her
frltnds posted with a series of cobfut
accounts of her adventurts.
''}lave you ever tried aleepin.g with
the sun streaming in your window .at 3
am.?" she writes. "I keep walling up
~d thinking tt muat be noon."
Except for the "hip soup'' whlth i1
\'tlry sweet, and ''smelly fish" (a lit-
eral translation}, Sandy aays she
finds Swedish food much too attrac·
tlve. "~ '\lrJI to work It oil 1wAmlng.
though,'' 1he writes. "'Mc.n ... J
(St< SWEDISH, p,,, !)
•
AME RICAN ABROA D
Sencfre Leufer
yesterday because of its demonstrated
ineffectiveness .after ttie initial few
hours.
"Since last night's bu 11 e t f n ,
numerous episodes of ventricular ir-
regularity have occurred, most of only
a few seconds duration but two re·
quiring electrical conversion.
"Despite ttiis, the general remains
alert, converses briefly, and enjoyed a
small breakfast. He visited briefly
from time to time by members o{ the
immediate family , at his request.
"Mrs. Ei5e'Dbower has remained
calm during these past trying days,
and has received comfort and suppart
from her sister, Mrs. Gordon Moore,
wh'o together with Col. J o h n
Eisenhower and hi s family have been
constantly with her."
The doctors said Eisenhower has
received "innumerable messages of
support from individuals in all walks
of life" since he suffered bis seventh
heart attack last Friday.
STAR HAS GOOD POINTS :_ Costa Mesa girls
(clockwise !rom..foreground) Shauna Knight, 14,
Maggie Stocker, 15, Marlene Crum, 17, and Karen
and Kathy Amburgy, both 15, put their toes l<>-
gether while rehearsing in Estancia High School
pool for ."Swnmer Fun," third annual Recreation
Department swim show set Aug. 23 and 24 as part
of city's Social Arts Week. Other high points are
comedy diving routines, an Olympic workout by
the Coast Clippers swim club and a water polo
demonstration.
Dr. Milton Eisellhower, the former
president's brother, has visited Mrs.
Eisenhower on several occasions, they
said.
LA Airways
Flights Resume
On Wedne sday
Mesa Picnic Attracts
In a Sunday night bulletin, the doc-
tc>rs reported failure of the eleetrical
pacemaker, which was threaded
directly into the patient's heart by
way of a vein, t-0 relieve the spasms.
5,000 to City Park
Jt was the latest of several efforts
made Ui halt the irregul~ rhythms
since the 77·year-old general suffered
his latest attack.
* * * Genei·al's Family
Maintains Vigil ..
At His Bedside
WASHINGTON (UPI·) -The family
of ·former President Dwight D.
Eisenhower maintained a vigil near
his bedside today hoping the general
would show some sign of improv~ment
from his latest heart attat!k whicll doc·
tors have termed "critical."
By JACK BROBACK
Of Ille D1LIY PLIOI Slaff
l..os Angeles Airways' helicopters
will be back in ser~~ce Wednesday,
Clarence Bellin, president of the
airlines, said today in a special press
conference. at an 11nn J.ear the ·Lo,s
An·geles ' lnternatiollal"!Jrport. ' ... ~
Bellin said the retll:t.n;df the rotary.
wing planes to service would be
gradual with 50 percent ot the flights
expected to be in service by , the
weekend. He A.id there were no plans
to scrap beliCOpter servlCe.
True to its name, the Fourth Annual
Old Timer-New Timer Picnic drew
someooe 15 days old, someone 101
years, old and ~ut 4.998 pm;oru; aged.
somewb~re in between to Costa Mesa
Patk' Sunday.
, '.J.'he big event sponsored by the
city's recreation d. e;p art men t.
Chamber of Commerce, ,,J'u''1 i.o,r
Chamber of Commerce and Costa
Mesa Art League was pronounced a
huge success, at itt: close.
Scores of Wsons won prizes Jn
drawings of .{.iycee ~barbecue ticket
stubs.81!.4 lfi ArJ. League competition1n
proresi ioul, nonprofessional and craft
categories for local exhibitors.
A total. of•nearly 800 persons dined
on prime beef and tr!mmingS at the
Jaycees' barbecue, with others
present feasting on other fare from
booths and· concessions.
More than 500 hefty submarine
sandwiches were sold by the Sons of
Italy org;ilni?.ation, accord.Ing to Toni
Popovils of the Costa Mesa Recreation ' . Department.
The Old Timer-New Timer Picnic
was the first major event in social
Arts Week, which continues through
pext .$ahU'day, with a variety of 4c·
UvJtles geared for each clty rel.!Cknt.
A family .spaghetti fetid. 111d talent
show Is scheduled begtonin'f. at 15 :30
p.m. in the Communlt.Y. Recre~tloh
Center today, at 75 cents. far adults
and 50 cents for ·children. _
Tuesday activities are earmarked
for senior ciUzens during · daytime
:hours at the Community 'R~creation
Center, with a potluck chicken•djnner
at 5 p.m., followed by a community
sing.
The long hours or waiting and the
tension began to show as John
Eisenhower, the general's son, snap-
ped at a ~porter Last Sunday night:
"Don't you forget, you can write
nothing but what the hospital puts
out." he said responding to a question
to his wife, Barbara, about whether
Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower was "bearing
up."
Bellin emphasized that there was no
doubt of the "integrity" of the aircraft
and there was no .problem involving
maintenance. He said the crash into a
Compton playground last Thursday
'vhioh killed 21 persons had no con-
nect.ion with the first crash last May
22 which killed 23.
The airline executlve said informa·
tion on the ca'Use of the second crash
-metal fatigue in the sprindle
assembly of the rotors -was released
Whereas such information on the first
craft had not been because it was
much simpler.
"The last accident had noUtlng to do
with maintenance," Bellin stressed ..
Gigantic Brea~ers Scour
Newport Beach Shoreline
Then, in military jargon for the
question do you understand, he asked
"Check?"
Barbara Eisenhower, red eyed and
sad, said, ''She's doing all right," and
added. in reference to her husband :
"Remember people get very upset."
The couple and a friend were dining
at the Walter Reed Army Hospital of·
flccrs club. Except for a few
reporers. no one else in the room
recognized them.
Mamie Eisenhower has not left the
fourth floor where her 77-year-old h1:1s·
band is fighting !or his life.
Also keeping the lights burning dur-
ing the night were injured Vietnam
war veterans, some of them am-
putees, who were waiting for the latest
medical bulletins on the condjtion of
the five-star general.
Barbara E isenhower said all of her
cWldren spent Sunday at the hospital.
They are David, 20, Anne, 19, Susan,
16 .. d Mary Jean. 12.
David, wbo iJ engaged to Julie NU:· on, daughter ol. the Republican
presidtntial candidate, f I e w to
\Vasbington Saturday nJght to be neir
his grandfather's bedside.
He has always been G e n .
Eisenhower's pride and joy and is said
to be greaUy influenced by him
politlcally.
"It was something aU the expert!!,
~overnment investigator & and
maintenance could not h a v e
prevented."
The executive said his company's
maintenance guidelines were more
conservative than the military and
than government or factory re-
quirements. He said the craft were
disassembled every 1,200 hours.
Bellin said helicopters were in the
air Sund2.y !lying without passengers.
He said none of the company person·
nel had declined to fly in the craft.
"Aircraft put into service Wed·
nesday will all have new spindle
assemblies," the executive said.
Bellin said many persons in Orange
County saw the planes Oying Sunday
a nd called in about night resumption
schedules.
He said the company has plans to
augment helicopter service with Short
Take Of! and Landing (STOL) planes
but no date has been set.
Stock Marketa
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock
market heJd a gain late this afternoon
in moderate trading. (See quotations,
Pages 18·19).
Gigantic breakers pou11ded Newport
Beach's shoreline for tht second day
in a row today, swcepJng the beach
free of everything but sand and a few
mad surfers.
Red nags, stgnaling ha?.ardous
swimming condjtions. flapped from all
lifeguard towers. They're expected to
be up throughout the day.
The huge waves, described by one
veteran city lifeguard as "an all-1\me
surf," began rising sharply and unex.
pectedly Sunday early in the af·
ternoon.
The super surf clim·bed to heights of
10 to 12 feet.
AU of Newport's beach!ront was
scoured, but no serious property
damage was reported and no serious
injury accidents were logged t;y
lifeguards, who hauled 113 endangered
swimmers out of the churning water1.
A typical Sunday bea,ch crowd of
70,000 spent most of the afternoon run·
nlng from the surging sea. At about 3
p.m. more than a dozen waves In a
row, each to~ering about . 10 feet,
splashed onto the beach between 40tb
Street and the Santa Ana River jetty.
Thousands of beachgoers scu.rrled
up!Md as the foamlng surl reached all
the way to Seaehore Drive at many
meet ends.
Festival Costs Reviewed
Police Repor t to Mesa· Ci ty Council Tonigh t
• A full evaluation of how Police Chief Members of the Orange County Fair
Roger Neth and his men in blue Board la.st week ordered their own
performed •t the big Newport Pop SecretarY·Manager, Alfred Lutjeans.
l+""estiva1 on the Orange Cclunty to c0mpi1e a' run report from the
li'l.irgroundl two week1 ago will be falrgrounc:b angle. on how well or bad·
heard by the Co!it.a Meaa Clty Council ly the festival weot. '.
tonighl D1...-1 of Ibo fair board hope to
Q?st of extra police 11u~rt work for meet with Coat.a. Mesa clty councilmen
the music f'est.ival, which drew an Jn th• ntar future to compare notes on e1timai.d 110.000 ptOPlt to Costa what turned out to be the biggest pop.
Mesa, hit '21i'l36 which Ibo city ap. rock music lest of conltn\por117
parently wlll ave to pay. titne1.
Pop Festlval police work evaluation Also up for consideration tonight are
ls just one item to be covered on a th.rte proposed city ordinance1 deaUng
five-page agenda facing councilman at glth variancea, condjtiooai u 1 t
tbelr 6:30 p.m. business sessjon and ~rmlls and their appllcaUon to
7 :XI p.m. JeaislaUve session. • manufacturing zones.
Three resolution,, also are up for
consideration, but they are routine,
annual ltem!i.
One · sets the Costa Mesa b•slc tax
tale as • general law city at $1 per
t100 or assessed valuation and lm·
posihrtltll·tax on all pr~rty 1ubJect to such ·tuatJon within city Umftf,
Another fize1 tbe amount of revenue
from ptOperty tu•• which will be
necessary to finance city departments
during the current fiscal year.
third fll<•• Ibo tu rate ol tho Co Me1a Park and ' Rtcrtation
Oi t and levies the taz required to
·~ the diJlrlct's fiscal oc~vlUu.
On its way , back, the sea: carried
with it dozens or beach towels, a few
transistor radios al'td several aBSorted
sandwiches, accordin~ to M~ri.De Safe·
ty Director Robert E, 11•!'<1-
Reed also reported witnessing an ln#
ci9ef!t that ''almost teared me to
death." He said a huge wave iose up on the
south side of the: 25().foot' lbng steel
groin at the eDd ol 40th. 'Street.
"Two guys were caught up In tlle
wave," said 'Reed, "alid it carried
them clear across the groht to the
other side. They were 'dumped there
without having hit ·that steel. They
could have been tilled." .
WegU'lrd Logan Locka&ey recalled
seeing a lll'ge,group ol. youngsters sit-
ting unconcernedly 1n a channel cut
out on ooe side of the groin by wave
action. The surf plunged into the chan·
nel, carriel t b e tumbling gr o u p
through the channel and around the
upland end of the grbin. all the way to
the other side. Everyone staggered out
of the water unhurt.
Orange , Coat
we•fler
lf you're· JOok.lng for a
changt, foreet it, advises the
weatherman, who'• offering up
the same old package or morn-
ing clouds and sunny afternoons
with mid· 70 temperatures tor
Tuesday.
l NSIDE l'ODAl'
"Acapulco tcaathtt" preoallt
in Newport Btacl~ °" the Oltrn-
pic yacliting trials open wftk 11
top 1k.tpptrs competing in the
first ''"" Su Booting, PIJll< 24. ......
Cllll'Wtl .. CINlfltll
CM .. ·-0..ltl """" -lllllfMlll , ... &:;:;.-~· "'"·"~
..
I ....
11 ,,
" .. .. ,, .. .. .. .. ..
' I
I
,
---
2 DAILY PllOT Monday, Aug11$l 19, 1968
Surf Sweeps 20 Off Dana Point B.reakwater
-.,. Ul1Cl!l BENION ...........
lUainc, w1ld wave1 aurged over tbe
Dma Pein! Harbor main breakwater
again this morning, threa.teni.M to
1urpu1 th• intenalty of combers
wb.Jcb swept 20 people oU the
breokwater .ild int<> the harbor Sun·
di)' at dulk.
Seven per&OM were slammed 1n111
tbl harbor at 5:,, p.m. Sunday &nd
wve IUtn to South Cout Oommwllty
HoopHAI, South La(llllL They wet•
-~ ID llltllfAcl<lcy cooditiOD
wt.th usorted injuries.
Miraculously. there were tpparently
no f&talltiea from th• sudden upsur1•
o! the ocean. AJ of noon today, of·
ficlalJ aald, no persons had been
reported ml11&ing.
Meanwhile , San Clemente lifeguards
patrolling Dana Harbor today 1ald
they sealed off the breakwater at 10
a.m. to prevent a repeat performance
of SuDday evening's 1pect.acutar..mas1
dunking.
"nte_ surf out there is lnc:reasln1 at
Three Facing Charges
In Jailbreak Attempt
Complaint. agalnal -men who
pulled an almoot-1ucceaoful jailbr•ak
with a crude, homemade knife Sitar•
claY night were bauod todoy, While
each man wu confined to an ilolation
• <ell In Orange County Jail.
The trio made ii from tho tblrd to
th• lint lloor of the old facility while
holdln& the lmif1 fashioned from a
met.I bunk strap a plnst the throat of
~year-old 1herlff'a deputy Ronald
Finch.
Charge1 againJt the a 11 e I e d
jailbreak leader and two men ht
subsequently relea1ed from a holding
tank include kldnlplng, assault on a
police ofifcer and attempted escape.
Jail Sgl Jim Middleton said the
principal suspect is Thomas C. Cl:ifk.
19 of Miami, Fla., who took Finch
hdstage and then freed Charles R.
Pulliam 20 of Holton, Tex., and . . ' Michael A. Tracy, 21, of Anaheim.
The incident occWTed during a trash
pickup by Clark, who apparently was
doing trusty chores while serving a 90-
day sentence !or unpaid traffic ticket!i.
deputies said. Investigators said a.ark, Pulliam
and Tracy made it to the ground !loo·
of the jail using Deputy Finch as theJ~
piss, but other deputies talked tbem
From Pqe J
SHOOTOUT. ••
bing uncontrollably.
The Fellllen, wtio moved to Hun-
tington Harbour one year ago from
Fairbanks, Alaska, had • one-year-old
boy, Kiel. .
Also in the hollle when the tragic
gunplay blazed was Miss Marla
Martin, 24, a live-In maid and ~exican
naUonal, who fled in hy!tena to a
neighbor's home.
Miu Martin ran to the next door
residence of Mr. and Mr1. James M.
Keefe where she fainted in the en· tranc~ hallway, police said.
Costa Mesa Man
Held in Assault
A Costa Mesa smorgasbord owner,
angered by a non<u.tomer making
use of h1' rest rocm. was jailed Sun-
day on suspldoo of assault with a
deiadly weapon after chasing the youth
eway. John A. Atldersm, 54, owner of the
Vildni Smorpsbord, 145 E. 19th Sl, I•
free on '31& bail today, awaiting ar·
raignment nurlday in Harbor
Dl9ttlcl Judicial Court. Anienon told police be ge1tured at
• youlll who talked bad< ·to him In a
dbpute over rest room .use, while
holdinC a wooden 1poco be had been
using cleen <ODWoope.
Thomas Oreba<d, Of 791 W. 18th St ..
Costa Mesa, told police however that
Anderson threatened him with a large
butcher knife after stepping on his
bare toes in the r~ room.
DAILY PILOT
CIANGI COAST PUILISHING COMPANY
Ro\ttrf N. Weed
Prftldtlll 111d l"ubHl/le!'
Jeck R. C11rl1y
\ITU PmlOflll Miii Gfneirtl MINttr
TJio,..•t Ke1"il .....
Tk1io11t A. Murpkin•
Menttlnt Ed!lw
P1ul Ninen
Uw!'lltfllt Ol~IOI'
out or completing the escape.
Tracy, convicted of armed robbery,
was acbeduled to be transferred to
state prison at Chino on Tue1d1y,
while Pulliam wu putting ip a nine
month•' sentence 11 a btr&lar.
Dems Debate
Viet Policies
For Platform
WASHINGTON (UPI) -McCarthy
and Humphrey backer1 debated Viet·
nam policy before the Democratic
Platform Committee today tn a
prelude to what appeared to be 1hap·
ing up as I' major convention floor
fight over the issue.
Roger Hilsman, a former as!l.stant
secretary o! st.ate and chief foreign
policy adviser to Eugene J. McCarthy,
said the United States should in eUect
declare a cease-fire by halting the
bombing 0£ North Vietnam and ending
offeosi.ve operations in the south.
He acknowledged that 1uch a plan
was a ga.mble and the Communists
might try to "take advantage ·of our
restraint," but said that pollUcal
pressures from neutral naUons and
from within the Communist bloc "are
likely to make their escalation tem•
porary.''
Hearing Reset
To Wednesday
For 8 Hessians
Preliminary hearing for e I g h t
1-lessian motorcycle club members
scheduled to enter pleas today in the
gang beating of a Costa Mesa man
nearly two weeks ago has been con-
tinued until Wednesday.
The group's hearing was re-set for
9:30 a.m. in ltarbor District Judicial
Court at. the request of the District At·
torney'1 office.
The men are charged with a variety
of .offense!!, from assault with intent to
do great bodily harm to burglary and
assault with intent to commit murder.
They are suspected o{ being among
a gang. of 15 to 20 hoodlums who broke
into the home of Robert Glazier, 30, of
2224 Placentia Ave., on Aug. 7, ap-
parently in Nengeance for an earlier
confrontation.
Investigators said Gla:.ler, whlpped,
clubbed and wounded by a bullet in the
ban( was involved in a fistfight with
Frank "WJJd Mouse" Rundle, 24, ol
lZT Albert St., Costa Mesa, a rank.inf
HessY.,n 'cyclist.
Not His Seat;
Suspect Arre sted
A Costa Mesa bartender who said he
{ound a customer sitting In the wrong
seat -namely that of the bartender's
car, parked out back -called police
Sunday night and had the man ar-
rested.
Jay A. Hebard, 24, of 415 N.
Newport Blvd., was booked on suspl·
cion of auto burglary after returning
to the scene while the vlcUm and a
police officer were discussing the
case.
thi• time," said Lifeguard Captain
Phllllp-Sblbba.
''Tliere'• a handlul of people al the
end of the bNakwater, and we've
dlapat<hod a patrol -to take them
off." stubb1 said the people would be
taken aboard the vessel if surf made It
impossible for them to walk back to
shore. He said the people were in no
immediate danger, but wert being
aa;ked to leave the breakwater u a
precautionary measure.
The cause of the craebing aurt is
Swinging Nun
still unknown. Heavy combers bea:an
powidtng the •bore alooi the Orange
County coasUlne about 5:30 p.m.
The U.S. Coast Guard sa.•d it had no
tnfonnatJon on offshore storms that
possibly could be held responsible for
the 10 to 15 fool waves.
Reported one Newport Be a ch
llieguard, "It's higher this morning
th.a-a it was yesterde.y at thi9 time. so
we're expectina it to get worse right
through the day."
The retcue1 at Daoa Harbor were
Roman Ca tholic Notre Dame Sister Jere Pekas looks like any
other coed a t the University of Colorado where she is graduate
student this summer. Photo inset shows her as she looks in her habit.
Sister Jere gives up mini~skirts and returns to convent in Minnesota
this m onth after a leave of absence.
AutopsyOrdcred in Crash
Which l{illed 3 Countians
Autopsy reports today are being
completed in an attempt to help e,;-
plain a Saturday plane crrush at
Monterey which killed three Orange
County residents, i n c 1 u d i n g a
\Vestminster physician.
Dead are Dr. f\.1.iltoi:i Kati, 44 , of
11161 Martha Ann Drive, Los
Alamitos. his neighbor. John R.
Thompson, 48, of 11151 Martha Ann
Drive, Los Alamitos, and Mrs. Wilma
K. Wright, SS, of 13202 Hoover St ..
Westminster. '
Investigators said Thompson was
·pUoUni a lingle engine Cessna 210 on
tts approach to Monterey Peninsula
'Airport Saturday afternoon when the
Woman Nearl y
Got tlie Point
A Cost.a Mesa woman complained to
police Sunday that her hll!band
ordered her to get her teeth fixed,
then literally put his point acrosr with
a butcher knife.
The alleged victim -who refused to
sign a complaint against her spouse
although she wanted police to be
aware of what happened -went to
Hoag Memorial Hospital to be patched
up.
Investigators said the woman told
them her husband hurled the knife
acro5S a bedroom. slightly wounding
her in the back.
craft appeared to stall twice.
The plane clipped a tree and plunged
to earth in the heavily wooded region,
but did not burn on impact, .according
to the Monterey County Coroner's of·
!ice.
Mrs. Wright was hurled through a
\l:indc.w and her body came to rest
out!ide the crumpled wreckage, while
Dr, K,atz and Thompson were caught
in the wrecked plane.
AU v.·ere dead at the scene.
Coroner's deputies said the victims
were flying to Medford, Ore .. in the
Cessna 210 owned by William C. Ulett,
of Fullerton wt.en the fatal crash OC·
curred.
The bodies were taken to Cook
Mortuary in Monterey on Saturday for
autopsies and later transferred to
three different funeral homes in
Orange County for .arrangements.
YOUR
made by two San CJeme:IM Ulepards
nn boat patrol: by two Orange Count1
Harbor District patrolmen and by two
snlall prJvate boats.
"The patrol. boatl got a lot or epray
Uke being in a rain storm," accordlna
to San Cle.mente lifeguards.
"But Jt was more of a spectacular
thing than anything dangerous for the
men in the bolits. There was very little
sure:e in the Jee of the breakwater,''
the guard1 said.
Hat1Jor Dll1l1cl Patrolman Harry
Gace was an eyewitne1s to the drama.
"Wo Jlllt oomo In from · petrol
outside, u he told the DAILY PILOT,
"and h'd tie<l up to refuel the lioat. We
heard the nollo of the Lir1t wave and
saw the water coming over.
4'Vou would see people trying to run,
then be swept oft. Jt wu like going
down a wateriall. Tiley Just sort of
went with the water."
He said he heard no screaming, and
remembered there was little talking
among the rescuer• and t h o s e
rescued.
Plnylwuse Theft Suspect
Loses Plea for Bail Cut
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of tflt Dl llY 1"1'9t ,, ...
Frazier SmJth, suspected of fleeing
with '9,475 drawn on forged Laguna
Player1 checka, lost an appeal today
~arriman Says
Progress May
Come in Talks
PARIS (AP) -Ambassador W.
Averell Harrimtm says he believes
that at the peace talks with North
Vietnam "there will be a way found to
establish the fact that the North will
not take advantage of the mWtary de·
escalation of the war."
Harriman was interviewed Thurs·
day by the French state television
before sharp new fighting broke out in
South Vietnam. The interview was
released today.
Asked by interviewer Maurice Ferro
if there had been any progress in the
Paris peace talks, the chief U.S.
negotiator replied: "I can't say there
has been any direct progress. I think
that many things have hawened that
give gome indication that progress
may come."
Harriman did not elaborate on this,
but Nguyen Thanh Le , chief
spokesman for the North Vietnamese
delegation, agreed there had been no
progress.
Le told a news conlerence that
negotiations so far have been like
"talks In a closed room with all the
doors locked." He added that only a
halt to the U.S. bOmbing in the North
"would permit the doors to be opened
so we can see what is in the room."
Harriman recalled that President
Johnson bas promised a complete halt
in bombing of North Vietnam iI Hanoi
ahows some military restraint.
U.S. officials have sought without
success to obtain such a commitment
from NorUt Vietnam or at least some
indication of what would happen if the
bombing was stopped.
Harriman thanked the French for
making arrangements far the pe&ce
talks and said: "I a m sure they are
r eady to be helpful in any way they
can to promote peace in ths.t Vietnam
area. But, one cannot tell. For my
part, I am satisfied that the talks will
go on. Neither side want! to break
them off."
Harriman gaid he thought the North
Vietnamese had come to the peace
talk.s, vmich opened May 13, "ex·
cessively confident, and, Instead of
showing some restraint at thi• lime
which would move us very rapidly to
substantive talks, they escalated the
fighting in all areas."
He said the Hindiscriminate shell·
ing" of Saigon alter tlle talks were
under way W&S stopped after the
North Vietnamese seemed to realize
they made a mistake.
for reductlon ol JI0,000 bail.
Appearing in Laguna B e a c h
bfuniclpal Court this morning, Smith
complained fhat the ball is probibiUve
and asked.that· it be lowered.
Judge Richard Hamilton re!uaed
and ordered Smith to return. Friday
for preliminary hearing on three
counts of forgery.
Smith did not enter a plea at today's
arraignment proceeding.
He was told a public defender will be
appointed to · represent him after
answering "no" to Judge Hamilton'•
questions asking if be bas any income
or any assets.
Smith, tall and distinguished, wore a
blue suit coat, dark gray 11lack1 and
white shirt open at the neck with no
tie. He looked composed.
Only as he turned to talk !rom the
bench after bis request for a lower
bail was denied did be show any emo·
tion. lie scowled slightly. Through the
rest of the proceedings he maintained
a dead pan expression.
To Smith's complaint that $10,000
bail is prohibitive, the judge replied:
"That's what it's intended to be. Sin·
ce tile alleged crime was cornmtited
here and since you had to be taken in-
to custody in New York, it is the
court's inclination to keep the high
bail. I have to .assume that if you do it
(flee) in one case you will do It again."
Smith remarked that by waiver of
extradition "I hoped to indicate my
willingness to come back."
"I can think of another reason for
waiving extradition," Judge Smith
said. "It makes the total time tn
custody less. In other words your ex·
planation does not make too much
sense to me."
Following his court appearance,
Smith was returned to custody at
Orange County Jail.
He origlnally was admitted into
Laguna City Jail, but was transferred
to Orange County Jail Friday night
because Laguna police do not have a
full time jailer.
Mes a Jeweler
Loses $450 Watch
A Costa Mesa jeweler who ap-
parently didn't watch aut is apparently
out a watch, police said today. The
$450 timepiece apparently wa'S heisted
several days ago by two con men.
Jotiieph C. Humphries, owner of J .C.
Humphries Jewelry, 1823 Newport
Blvd., told police two met1 in dark
glasses entered his store last Wed·
nesday, separately, to ask about V.'atch
bands.
lie said the larger man stooc'I
shielding the shorter suspect and they
later left together, driving off In a big
luxury car.
Humphries said he later discovered
the $450 watch and band missing from
a display case and linked the men to
the case due to t h e 1 r ac·
tiom.
0
OMEGA
Your O'Mgra:
Solei & Sertric1
Agency
------·· C.... M ... Offln
)JO Wist l1y $tr1et
M1lli11f Ad~r111: P.O. In 1560 ,262'
Ol'Mr Offtal
From P r.g e J WATCH'~
t Cloontd ' Oiied -Clt>Md FREE w11n1 You Wiit
tlftllll'f htdo: 2211 West .. lbN lovltftrll L.atUM b..etlt "2 ,,_, ... -... HurltlnelOll 1"'11: M ,jfll flT'llt
SWEDISH .•.
delivered my letter from the mayor of
Costa ~fe sa to the mayor ot Vanna11
he gave me a tree pu1 to the town
swimming pool for the summer, so we
spend a lot of time there."
A trip to the 1um.ll'lfr home of an
uncle, aunt and cousin' in Lapland
found reindeer vlsltlng daily. The
trees along the road, she found , were
reminiscent of acenes In ' ' D r .
Zhivago."
"Papa put nell ou.t ln the lake
ovenUght and nut morn1nc wt had
about 20 flab . Mamo cleaned them and
I a:ot to wub them off in the lake. We
amoked most of them and had 1omt
for breald'ast."
Tele\l'ls&on. with one channel )J'oad·
cuting from 6 p.m. to mid.DI~ '11 a
favatJte family dlvorll..,, w Ith
American programs like "The Virgi·
nlan," "Ml11lon Impossible" and
"High Chapmal," all presented in
English with Swedish subtitles.
Thia, Sandy nott~~ ts tortunate,
becaUJe her prOl?'flSS with the Swedish
1anaua1e has been palnful. Sh•
describes it briefly u , "murder" and
adds, "Spei1h 11 much easier. I think
I'd bettor ,o bo<k to thaL"
Sandy will be tcylng home at th• end
ol tbt month to her Costa Mesa home
at IMO Gu1n«ford and tho besinnlnl
of her senior )'Nr at COlta Mesa Hilb
School. The aecoad phase of her life 11
an AFS representaUve wtll lnclude a
11rl11 ol Illustrated talta to schools
and ciubl on her personal experience•
u a teenaae member or a Swedllb,f
lamJIT.
•Adi-
$5!!~E
PEARLS Sl.99 RE.ST"UHG
"IH'5 $2.49 SIZEO, frM -Missll'lf DtlmOlldl -$4.99 _,., ..
"tplxtd, '""" ,,_ tnt.
J1W1lry Dooltnl .. ---~ .. A Sflldaltyl ---_ .... --
I,
•
-----------
MoftdaJ, A ...... t l•, 1968 DAJL Y PILOT 3
BY Attorney Question Ag~in on Ballot!
.
WILLIAM
REED
Reeds ••• r
In the Wind
Some years you just can't win
and this must be one of them for
Norm Worthy, direclor of lhe rec·
reation program In Huntington
Beach.
Altbougb bis bas become a big
business with all the new tracts
and all the five bed.room homes,
Nonn has tried to keep his hand
in on program selection.
But he has been ovemtled. It
seems he bas insisted that marbles
remaln a part of tbe childhood
scene. It bad to be dropped recent-
ly, howe¥er. It seems that kids
just don't play marbles any more.
Too bad, Norm. l tbougbt Ibey did
loo.
* That big business is always big-
ger in the summer. In July there
were 202,230 participants in the
summer recreation programs. A
year ago during the same month
there ~(r!re a mere 177,309 kids
par.-:.<J>i Ung.
The impact of children has be-
come greater and greater in all o!
West Orange County and in re-
sponse to the pressure the tu
rates have gone upward and are
likely to continue upward for a
while for things like parks and
schools.
Fountain Valley School Disiricl
Board President Dale Stuard not·
ing that there are already 220 chil·
dren in an area where a new
school is planned, but yet to come
off the drawingboards and that the
amount of children is expected to
double in a year, suggested some-
thing about a pill to cure school
expansion headaches.
*-•' From the audience came a lone
female voice, obyiously that of a
1notber with many small children.
"It's already too late for that."
Stuard was talking about Cox
School. Now there are 220 children
in the area. In a year there will be
450. In 1962 there were 660 children
in the district, but by 1976 there \Vill be 17,770 •.
F ulton School
Honored Again
,Fountain Valley's Harry C. Fulton
School, chosen last month as one of 50
schools for a nation·wide display in
\Vaoshington, D. C., has been picked for
another honor.
Editors of the American School
Board Journal chose the 1ix·month-old
school for a feature story in their Oc·
tober edition. ·
The school, named for a pioneer
rancher now living in Htmtillgton
Beach, was selected by a touring com·
mlttee of the Council of Educational
Facility Planners for the Washington,
D. C., display Oct. 7 to 10.
The display will feature three by
four foot photographs, scale models
and drawings of the school.
The Los Angeles archftectural firm
of Carmichael·Kemp designed the
space-age .chool, made up of five
satellite clusters of classrooms, and
recommended it for the magazine arti-
cle.
By WILLIAM REED ....mas tllo tiihl ol reclll to Ibo -
Of "" _.,, """' '"" ple. U lt pu,tel, tbt e ·unUqton
There is no doubt that the resldeou llMch Clt,y attorney llktly wW be the
and voter. ol Huntington Beach like to oal,y ono ln Ul4 state Q>eclllcally 1ub-
elect their city at10!'!IOY. Je<t to recall by dty .chM!er.
Tllere ls also no doubt that the City Tba ....,.., dty attorney, Don Jkm.
Council would like to appoint the at. fa, wu appointed to hlJ pollUOll and
tome)' on whole .advice ita: members hu .ad tblit-he doe1 not want to con·
rely. duct a election campalp. every four
On several occasiont the votet1 yura to Uep tbe poildon o! ltpl ad·
have ot<ongly told the city that lhey vl>er to ll>e eouncll.
will retain lbe tiibt to eiect lllO dty ''Tilt pnnnt ell<ttvo 1yll<m lhoold
attorney. be <hauled becauae.lt ls archaic, In·
Now the council Is trying &lain too effldent and W&lleful. The people are
convince voters thlit· the attorney not best aerved by the 1y1tem.
should be selected by lhe council. "OI 25 dtle1 in Orange County, "'1n·
Vote.rs will find on the Nov. 5 ballot tiaiton Beach h tbe only one that
a propooition which would change -elects ill d\y attomoy. Only 10 in lhe
from el..Uve to appoinllve tbe city enllH 1tap elect lewyen and only
attorney's posltioo. one ol thou ii of tbe lize of Hun-
It is the same proposition, but with tiqton Belcb,'' Bonfa ·said.
an important cbange. Donia · .,.gued that lhe council'•
Thia time the council in aaking for Lawyer 1bou!d ~ appointed because:
lhe right to •ppoinl ill lawyer ls -'!be attorney • a proleuiODRI
Edison Reducing Rates
To Seal Beach Homes
Southern California Edi.Ion Com·
pany rates for residential and com-
mercial service to S e a l B • a c b
customers will be reduced. .about
'63,0CK> annually. according to Ra 1 p b
Kiser, SCE district manager.
The reductlon, ettecUve this week,
will produce an anmial savtnp Of Jti. Tl
per customer.
!Gier said the savillc• resulted trcm
an m.:eue in the number of
customeri; in the Seal Beach area.
This decttan is aside from an
overall inci'ease in rate• tlbt company
has opplled for to the Public Utlllties
Commission. Kiser •aid. it would be m
to 12 months before commia1ioaer1
act on. the comp.ari1'1 t.6 perctat rate
iocreaae request.
Unruh Mum on Choice
-But It's Not Humphrey
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Jesse M.
Unruh will go to the Democratic Na-
tional Ooovention next week at the
head of the largest bloc of un-
committed vptes.
If things break his. W1f'/, Unruh could
become the party's kingmaker and
rebuild his own flaggiD1 poiiliw
fortunes in the process.
But U Vice President Hubert lL
Humphrey win& a first ballot victory,
Unruh will be left on the 1idin1 when
the bandwagon pulls out.
Unruh, speaker of the a t a t e
Assembly since 1961, is chairman or
the 174-member Callfonria delegation
which was pledged to the murdered
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy but ii now a
slate without a candidate.
The delegates voted at two caucuses
to remain noncommitted to any
presidential candidate until they reach
Chicago. A few members have ex·
pressed a preference for Humphrey,
Sen. Eugene J . McCarthy or Sen.
George s. McGovern, the three an-
nounced candidates for the · nomina-
tion.
But Unruh and a majority of the
delegates re~ undecided. .
In an interview, Unruh said be
would announce his own preference
"sometime before Ute first ballot."
"1 would hope that my choice would
be the choice of a majority of the
delegation," be said. "But I can't
parutee that."
Aittiougb Unruh declined to •IY
whom he would support, he made it
clear his candidate would not be
Humphrey. .
"The vice president has very little
natural' 1upport in the California
delegation," be nid. ''They (Hum-
phrey forces) are working awfully
bard now and puttmg on a lot of
pressure. It ia conceivable they could
get a large chunk or votes but he has
very little natural support."
Unruh admitted in an interview th.at
HM Callf«nia delegation may shatter
when the roll is called in Chicago,
splitting ill votes among Humphrey,
McCarthy and McGovern .
If that happens, California and
Unruh would both lose any influence
they might have.
"The delegMion WJS elec.ted. to sup-
port Bob Kennedy, not to support Jest
Unruh," he said. "It is Silly to ttrlnk
that a delegation. which is elected to
aupport one candidate, if that can ..
did&te i1 killed, h·aa very much to
unify it."
Unruh said after a caucus: "Th.ii
delegaUon cannot be delivered but it
can be Jed."
U Unruh can lead the delegation to
the right candidate at the right time,
he could a-gan become the de facto
leader of the California Democratic
party, a status he btld durinr the Ken·
nedy administration.
He could become the Democratic
candidate in 1970 for the governor's
chair now held by RepubUcan Gov.
Ronald Reagan. Unruh has made no
secret of his -e to nm tor eovernor « U.S. Senator.
Wbe.n Unruh was elected speaker
after a quick rl!;e through the ranks,
· most political pr<il thought he would
~ there only brtefiy Oil hia way up.
But he ha. been speaker looser than
any other man in. caJ.Uornla ldltory.
Meadow Viewers
Nab Huntington
Baseball Crown
Meadow View Baseball team took
the Huntington Beach Baseball Otam·
piooohip for fifth and sixth trade boys,
beating Rancho View Team Two 8·7.
Frank Peter1 scored a lie·breaking
run in the seventh liming to guarantee
his team tbe ~pionship.
In the championship competition for
seventh .and eighth gr~ boys, Hun·
lington Beach Team One between
Team Two when Mike Pinter rt.ruck
out 18 batters to lead hia team to a
10· 1 victory.
Pinter was the leading hlt'ter on his
team with three, includ.lnf a home run
and a tri~e.
The Oty Baseblill O)mnpiorl!hips
were rponaored by the Huntington
Beach RecreaU.on a.net Parks Depart.
meot. FliMl competition, lrit!t the
namin1 of lhe city dlampions, wu
Wedned1ay.
Rea der s Plan
Costume P arty
About 400 younasters who
participated 1n the Huntinzton Beach
l>ubllc LlbN.ry'1 aummer Billy Bet
readln1 club .are to Mteml a costume
party at Lake Parle Wednesday.
Bond Backer• Sign Vp
Hosted by tilt library, the children
are invited to come to the 2 p.m. party
dreued u their favorlte atory boot
m1r1cten. Huntmgton Beach city ol·
flclah are to Judge the cortume con·
test.
Bobo the clown, Oran•e Coast
Collea• 1111clent Bob Thompson or
N..,,..-t 8-b, and guitarist Glenn
Chrllten..., or Newport B<1cb will
provide entertainment for the two.
hour party, tbe lacat1t ever &ivtn by
lhe llbr &r)'.
Huntinglon Beach residents are busy signing up volunteers lo cam·
palgn !or tbe $S mU!lon library bond wue lo be placed before the
voters Nov. 5. Mrs .• .Doris Dodson (Jell) ls one ol 24 womeo enUs.ting
volunteers at lhe Huntinglon Beach Public Library, while librarian
Mrs. Jerry Hollman Is signing up te make telephone calls supporting
tbe bonds.
lbould bt removed from politic•.
-'lbe CoUDclJ. can beat evaluate pro-
f ess.lonal qu~oM of candidates
for attorney by written reiume and
personol Interview.
-'Ibo attorney lbou1d be qualified
mumclp&l expen •od while tlec-tiooeeriJll mld>t result In hiring the
most· popu1lr Jawyer, It b not con·
dudve to -.i., the most qualified
person.
-Tho nlidence requtrement of two
years unduly uarrowa the field for
selection. and bu nothing to do with
profeuional requlremeata .
-It it dlUicult to obtain a pro-
fessional per.1011 who will serve full
time, thus precludll:la: a private prac-
tice, if ~e b a nffd for facing re·
eleclloa battles every four ye:ara.
-An elected attorney cannot be a
car~ mwllcipal employe and thus be
will not be able to ~t 1erve the coun·
ell and' ~ if subject to lhe UD·
certainties ot nmnlnl for municipal
otttce every four · years.
-Fundln& ·of election campalps re-
quires cash gifts and the ettomey may
have found It diUlcult to convince con·
tributora that eontrtbuttons are DOt
buying favorable consideration. 1
-An elected attorney may not be
responsive to the council and city ad·
mloistrator tince they do not employ
him. /u1 appointed lawyer must be
nspc>Mive to both 11 well aa to the
people.
Bonfa said a study. of reasons wh~
the attempts of the past to change the
charter have been rejected reveals
two main reasons: fear the lawyer
will become a captive of the council
or the administratt.I' and fear that
the people could not remove a cap-
tive attorney.
In order to remove some or the fear,
Bon!a suggested .a five poi.Dt cbuter
amend.m.fflt provision.
-'!be City atiorney Will be 111bject
to reclll by the people. '
-lie will be lndependmt of Iha
authority of the adminJstrator:
-Councll. may remove the attorney,
ooly by 1w .. thlrds vote.
-Notice and • public boorlni must
be provided.
-A cooling oU period !• r<qolred in
the event recall proceedlng1 begin.
"I cupp(lrtthe principal -the city
auorney should be appOlnted by the
council, thus removing him ,from
politic& and enabling him to serve full·
time as profess.ional legal counsel and
adviser to the city council and allow-
ing him to concentrate on his legaf
duties and the supervision ol the legal
department, ~er than upon elec·
tioneerlng and campaigning for office.,
"The attorney saves the people beat
when he is directly responsible to their
elected representaUves, the City Caun·
il .. • • •
Darkest Horse
Little Hope Seen for Mc Gove rn
City Officials
Set for Parley
Almost all of tbt leading Hunting.
ton Beac'1 city employes will be out
of town from Oct 13 through 16.
They will be ill Los Angeles attend·
ing tbe ·10th annual conference of the
League of California Cities.
Askink approval from the City Coun.
cil for the trip wW be the city admin·
ist.rator, attorney, assistant attorney,
treasurer, finance director. clerk, po-
lice chie.I , fire chief, public works
director, ·building director, planning
director, purchasing agent, recreation
and parks director and one member
from the Recreation and Parks Com-
WASHINGTON (UPI) -As a can·
didate for the Democratic presidential
nomination, about the most Sen.
George S. McGovern can hope to
achieve as of now is to be in-
strumentral in nailitlg a peace plank in·
to the party platlorm .
Party handicappers give th I s
darkest of dark horses next to no
chance of making off with first prize,
and only an outside chance of being
second on the ticket The latter, they
say, might come about ir his can·
didacy blocked a first ballot victory
for Hubert Humphrey.
This ls the concensus among at.ate
Democratic leaders regard:irJg the can·
didacy of the South Dakotan who an.
nounced Aug. 10 that he would seek to
rally supporters of Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy at the party's natiooal con·
ventlon starting Aug. 26 in Chicago.
The state party leaders agreed in
general that McGovern would draw
away little of the support already
committed to Humphrey and Sen.
Eugene J. McCarthy. And doubt was
expressed that those who backed Ken·
nedy prior to his iassassination in Los
Angeles would swmg to tbe late·
lilarting candidate.
Kenneth P. O'Donnell, a close
r
COME IN and BE PAMPERED '
:::»~,,,.,,~ .,,,,,.,.,..
'
wi t h YOUR OWN CUSTOM
HAIR COLOR
Clever people, Roux! They've produced a
pUJh·butlon dispenser that Jell us custom·blend
hair colors with the most subtle nuances-
and duplicate them every time you come in!
. . . your own hair color. With
Fanci-tone, the tint that coven gray
romple!ely. with a comple!ely natlll'al look. ·~d conditions as it colors. And doesn't
wuh out. Is !here any olber tint?
COSTA MDA. CAUP.
11t f. '7tfl ''""'
COSTA MISA. CAUP.
1211~ ttflbol' IMI.
IC: ....... rt ~1tlt '"'*"' ..... u
COSTA MIU. CALJ,, ,. W. Ultl 1·,f11 --M91'felr C•Rtlf" ·--NIWPOIT tUCH, CAUf.
11\J '"-'I ll<&. ""'"'" ... "* ..... ,. ,...,.. .,. .. "
'
POUNTAIM YALUT. CAUP.
1"31M._llt v1~c ...... f'hotll ,,., ...
I
SANTA ANA. CA.UP.
l"""WHIYIWhlttf l-C...-r ,.,..,_ UI·'*
•
associate of Kennedy's and a delegate.
to the convention, put Jt this way:
"Most of the Kennedy people rve~
talked to have remained uncommitted..
and .are going to be uncommitted when.
they arrive in Chicago."
On lhe other hand, Utah State Party• ' '
Chairman Wally Salldbaci. said,
"McGovern's entry Will tend to
polarize the Kennedy people wbo
migbt have gone to Rurnphrey."
Jn the view of William V. Browne,
executive director Of the New Jeney'.
Democratic state committee, the
"whole thrust" of the McGovern C811·
didacy was designed to get Robert
Kennedy's stand on the Vietnam w.ar
1Dto the Democratic plaUorm.
Warren Spannaus, chall'man of the'
Democratic farmer-labor. party ilr
Minnesota, said he believed McGov··
en's efforts "would give Hwnphrey-
supporters who are doves something to
hang their hat on."
In Maine, Party Chairman Severln-
M. Beliveau commented : "McGovern-.
wit! have no real impact on the con··
vention. I do think he will have SOll}I!
influence on the Vietnam plank but I
don't think he's bringing anything
new to the convention."
{
'
•
CREME HAIR TINT: I
Tint, Sh•mpoo an<! Sot
ANYTIME $5.75
OU.Nel. CALIP.
IOI W. c.11.,.,...il ,__m·Ud
-
i
fOUNTAIN •Al.UT, CALlJ.
.IQ2) 1'111fW, II (.lldlO
Y•l'-f (l!fl!W l'!llft u1.-..
•
' -
DAILY PILOT Mond.11, AutvJt 19, 1968
..
(~ .... Dllr ,.. ...,.,
Ricky Doyl9 of Garden Grove
• ,tipped school all this summer in
'.favor ol 1wlmmlng, fishing and
.water 11dlnf. But he received a
report card saylnJ be had earned
'""'B" grades tn sciMice and health
,i:ourses at Los Alamitos H I g h
-Bchool. Ricley, 14, protested to
Fred Bums, who supervises the
data processing computer t b a t
• .i.urns oul the report cards. Togeth-
~r they located the right Richord
· C. Doyle. ••t don't want somebody
. 'else's IJ'ades," laid the W f 0 D g
• 'Ricley. •
-'
·-Bawling Vtetnamtse baby doesn't
·. seem to care for thU 1ort of action
at all a.s hf " emmined bJI Capt.
TefTJ/ Schwartz of Rego Park, N.Y. at
Tau Ntnh, Capt. SchwaTtz ii part of
the Medical Civil Action Program
team and ii attached to the 4th Bat·
talion·, 23rd Infantru, 25Ui. Divisicm. • A coroner in Finchley, England
last week ruled that the death of
Mrs. Marion Bryer was acciden·
tai, although caused by a "lethal
piece of equipment." Mrs. Bryer ,
Was electrocuted by her h a i r
dryer after her husband, a dental
surgeon, had put a loose wire in
the wrong socket. •
"When you go boating, be sure
to take your L·S-D" was the
1n4!'ssage ning ovtr an Albanu,
N.Y. radio •tation. It toa1 a
"public 1ertrict announcement"
from the U.S. Cocut Guard, acf..
vi&lng water &portimen to take
alang an "authorlitd ltft·iavfng
device."
• After a recent operation, Mrs.
M1t~lldo Clom, 59, sought fl'IS,000
in damages In the Superior Court
of Los Angeles from her doctors,
Jlmos I. Wergin and Wlll11m G.
Coldwell. She finally setUed for
$64,000 for the doctor's mistake.
They left a pair of forceps In her
abdomen. • Showgirls doing a quick change
"al the beaclt resort revue ·sWl had
an enthusiastic audience. The 1ea·
side theater in Filey, England was
glass • enclosed and dozens of
bathers on the beach had front·row
~eats for the unscheduled perform·
ances. Revue managers h a v e
whitewashed the windows. •
A 1winger i& hoping it pa~• to
cdvertiit. 'Vhtn he arrived fn
Awtin this week, ht placed thi&
, ad in a local paptr "Ha1>t been
transferred to Austin for t/1.ret
mo71ths, Family stayed in Dal-
i las . Swingers get tn touch ."
• • The head of the New England
Citizens Crime Commission in Bos-
ton has suggeated attaching a ra-
dio to a parolee to monitor hi s
movements as one possible way or
preventing his return to prison.
"Maybe rather than send someone
to an .institution, how about "'irtng
him for a period of six montha and
wben1 be feels ~epre1Sed1 when he
feels lllce be needs help. talk to
him, meet with him, pick up his
spirits,'' John. Buckley said. • Vandals In EvAD$!on, Iii., caused
more than $100.0llO damage and
perhaps .. mucb as $500,000 lest
week when they duecrated Cal·
vary C e m e I e t y amashing 300
tnmbllood and atalues.
·"· '
Fired at Trait•
Sniping: D.eath
' '
Jails Boy, 16
'
NEW YORK (UPI) -A 16-year.-old'
boy who liked to d:Ua up u a 'fireman·
and go to fires oo bll blcyo!e was held
witllout bail today in tllo sniper killing'
of a Long Lliand Railroad pasaencer
and the wounding of another-.
Police aald John 'whitmore admitted
fir log into tbe b'idn "on 1'. whim.",
Whitmore wu cbarJed witll killing
Vincent Maher, 31, ot New York and
wounding Gabriel Janaen of Point
Pleasant, N.J.
Both men were b.it by the same
bullet !ired from a sawed oll -~-06 ri-
fle wielded by a sniper on an em·
br.inkment. Maher, an e 1 e v a t o r
opefator. was struck in the neck and
died instantly, He was manied and
the lather ol tllree chlldren.
Jenaen, who was en route home
from his job as a iCOWJDao on a
dredge at Jones Beacb, wU. wounded,
in the arm. He w43 repot-ted Jn aood
condition today.
Police said the , bµllet smashed
through the car, striking Jeo.seD, theri
ricocheted across the aille and struck
~aher. Tht sniping occurred after the
Manhattan-bound train had entered
the borough or Queens and was about
eight blocks from Whitmore's home.
Pollce &aid an outbound train had
been fired upon from near the same
spot mfDutes earlier. The first train_
Wu not cirrytn& puaenprs.
\V~tmore WJl atte1te!J near the •
SU()llrl1de y~d Jl>,\lu<ena. •t>out • ball '
}}ow: after tht shOotlng. S6veral houri
later, police found the rifle hidden
below railroad ties with 1iven unspent
bullets scattered among stones around
t,he tles.
Pollee said Whitmore would not ••Y
whtre he got the rlfie.
Neighbor& des.crlbed Whitmore a• a
quiet, shr boy who was a ham radio
aperiitoi', They said he t>Gasted Of
being an auxiliary fireman and a civil
defense wlunteer.
He carried a fhortwave radio 1et on
hi1 b(cycle and often sped to the 1cene
o1 nru 1n bis nelghbcrhood.
The youth'• ·father committed
suicide· several months ago .
The Long 1'1111<1 Railroad; like
other& in the area, haa been p)agued in
recent years by snipl•J and rock-
lbrowing by younptv1. But this was
the lint fatality w tesult from ouch
incidents.
The railroad baa bee.n operaotinl on a
reduced ICbe<hl1e the put two weeks
because of what tt charged wa• a
slowdown by carmen who conduct
safety illlpeotion on trains. The
carmei were protesttnc plan1 to fn
18 men becauae of automation.
Riots Hit St. Peters~urg .
For Third Straight Night
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. CAP) -
Shotgun and pistol fire rang out
tlrougb SL Petenburg'1 Southside
Sunday night as the Gulf Coast di!
went through a third successive night
of r.acial viqlence. ·,
·Police· said there were no reports of
injuiy rrom guilfire during the night,
but at least one blast from shotguns
fired from ambush struck the Florida
Highway Patrol's specially deslgned
riot-control armored truck.
Backed up by the armored vehicle.
law enfc:.-cement of Ac~"" employed..
tear gas to ~ up tnree large
gatherillgl!i of Negroes in the troubled
area. On each occasion, officers on
foot swept through the area to drive
out straggler1.~ . +1
Lt. M. G. Cotman, who has led ·the
city'a rlot-trailied oflicers an ~the
street, said 25 ~rsoos were ~e,ted
on charges. r4J)gjng fJ'O!ll dj.lo/'d<r,ly,
conduct to carrying c o n c e a 1 e d
weapoos.
Colman 1aid the patrol's armored
vehicle, which can send out cloUda of
tear gas to either eide, proved a major
flllCt« in dlsperaing the aowds.
"ft Is extremely effective. We
haven't had a fUU~cale riot here, but
if we had you would really know the
value of that thing," Oobnan said.
Colman said that although the
violence began earlier than · on two
previous nights and for a time ap-
peared to be spreading, "it wasn't
rf!ally bad Out -there ton.ght other than
in two areas. And once we put the gas
out, they all went home."
Colman said all of the gunfire has
been civilians. "\\'e haven't fired a
shot yet. 'Ve just want to get out of
this thing before v.·e have to kill
wmebody," he said.
· The violence began about 1 a.m .
Saturday after a street fight outside a
dance hall patronized by Negroes.
Looting, rock-throwing and some win-
dow-smashing was widespread the
first night, but police have attentpted
to ·break up any crowd formation since
theo . .
Npitber auth~ties '. iior N e g r o
spoke$llle n have given any reason
publicly for tile m.turbonce.
Gov. Claude Kirk, who flew to St.
Petersburg Saturday night and again
Sunday morning, mobillzed t h e
highway patrol and other law en·
Corcement agencle1 to help the c 1 t y
and Pinello County officer1.
• Ul'I Tt18 .....
THROUGH TH'E WINDOW· -SI. Petersburg policemen cllmbs in-
to liquor atore through a front window that was smashed during the
third successive night of racial violence in the Negro district. The
rioting began about I a.m. Saturday after a street fight outside a
dance hall. LooUnJ ,rock-throwing and wlndow·smashin& was wide-
1pread.
--
U'°'I T .......
YOUNGEST T~SPLANT
M1rl1 Gl1nn1rl1, .. , 5
Five-year-old
Heart Patient
'Awake, Aleri'
HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -Within
houri after ber heart tran1pllllt,
Maria Giannaril, 5, wu awake, alert
and able to 'rlait with her
parent..
The Hace r stown, ~1d., &ifl,
daughter " Mr. and Mr1. Nick A.
Giannari1, was reported tn Mttlfac·
tory condition at Texa1 Children's
Hospital today.
She became the se(Xll'Cl child reci-
pient in bh:tor1 Suliiday when aureeoos
transfetnd the heart of another
youngster who had suUered brain
hemorrhage. The girl was the world's
31st heart recipient.
The doocr was Jame1 Dudley Her-
ron Il, II-year-old son of James
Dudley Herron, a chemistry professor
at Purdue University, Larayerte, Ind.
Young Herron suffei'ed a brain
hemorrage Friday and lapsed into a
coma. When Dr. Robert Carpenter,
the family phyoldan, told the perento
the boy WM a patential heart donor,
they agreed to his transrer to Houston.
The boy wa1 flown here early Sun·
day anti died several hour• later
without regaining consciousness.
Maria was referred to tbe Texas
Ht:art Institute by the cardiac cllnic at
Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore,
where her case wa& diagnosed as
severe heart failure.
The ~1 had been in Texas
Children s Hospital three weeks before
the operation.
Her father, who owns a restaurant
at the Hageratown Airport, said Maria
wa,, 5'12 month1 old when doctors
discovered she had heart di.lease .
Dr. Alex Haller of Johns Hopkins
"tOtd me the heart transplant was our
onJy hope," Glannarb said.
* * * Heart Switching
N'ew Industry?
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A llO<rel
·gove:mmen~ed study 1 a y 1
artificial heart& soon will be the na·
don.'1 No. 2 industry, behind
automobile•, a Stanford Univer•ity
heart 1urgean revealed.
Dr. Donald C. Harrison, chief of the
cardiology division at Stanford, told
the convention of the NaUooal District
Att.orneya AJaociation that the govern-
• ment commissioned the study "by in·
dustry" on the pote:tjal number or
heart transplant. In tho future,
"This report says the manufac-
turing, lm:ertiou and servicing of
artillcal hearts will be the second
largest lnduatry in America in 20
years.-aecond. only to the auto in-
dustr)', '' Harrison &aid.
104 Killed
World's ·Worst
·Road Disaster
' GIJ!'U,' lape (UPll -Driver
Mlt.iuru K•washlma 1tralned to 1ee
through hl1 ralnawept wlndahleid t h e
two buse• ahead of hia.
"SUddenly there wu this big roar .
Mud struck the buset and they were
awept. away. I ahouted, 'they're gone.'
Tbe area .where ~· busea plunged wt11 completely dark ud everything jUJt dl&a~~ inw the •Wilt muddy
rivv, be Said today.
A landslide wroutbt by rain• ac·
companying TypbOo• Polly Sunday
had 1t)oved two buses carrying 104
persons off highwy 41 and into the
flooded Hida River. Three perscns
surviftd-.: history's worst highway dlautet. t
The pre\tious reconi death loll for a
highway accident had been 83, set
when two buses fell off a mountain
road tu the Pbllippinea tut year. Moat
of Sulk!ay's victim& were women and children.
Yoshhnasa Narlta, I4, p u 11 e d
himseU out of the Hlda, a river usually
I5 feet deeP but swollen by flooding to
00 feet "Tb'ey are all gone. I manafed
to come dut alive but they are all
gone," he aald, and the boy wepl
Hia mother. father and 1i1ter perish·
ed. They, like oUle:r residents of
nearby Nogoya, had accepted a
maguine'a offer of . 1 trip to Mount
NorlkurL Polly's raln1 eame and. tbe
buses turntd back. They had stopped
at a roadblock, iet "-UP because or a
fir1t landlllde •
"'Suddenly we were heaved lnto the
river. And before I knew it, I waa
thrown into the swift water. J swam
frantically lo the surface. grabbed
something like a tree branch and wa.t
-able to crawl up on land," sald Aklo
Takeahita, 30, driver of one of tbe
doomed bu111.
About 500 resJdenta of local villages
poured out to bet;. but the ADIU'Y rivet
swept moat victim• away. Soon the
relatives came up from Nogoya to tbe
makeshift morgue where Buddhiat
monka burned incense.
Teacher Mamoru Fukamlzu kne1t by
hil wife'a body and said. "You must
h a v e suffered tenibl~ p a l n." He
waited for the arrival of his 1on'1
body. Hiroko Amano, 15, approached,
weeping. Her parents, brother and
sister had ,-one on the excuraion and
dled. She had been too ill to co.
Publi1her Takeshl Takasabara, one of
the outing aponsors, said he 1hared
their sorrow.
His wife and son were amont the
victims.
'Fraud' Charges Rock
Miss World Selection
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Amid cries of
"fraud" and "favoritism,'' the
outw,aro smiles and camaraderie of
the Miu W o r 1 d USA 1968 beauty
pageant dl.1&0lved today in.to frowns
and recrimil>&Uon•. (Seo photo, Page
8).
· All l!ieemed well until the climactic
moment Saturday night when Bob
Hope lowered the coveted crown on
the blonde head or Johnlne Leigh
Avery, 23, Ml11 Wa1h1ngton.
"Sour grapes," said pageant direc·
loser& flounced. off the stage in a tizzy
instead of giving the winner a tearful
embrace in the tr-adltlon of American
beauty contest!.
Leader of the dissident.I w~ Jade
Hagen, Ml1s Kans.as , who called a
news conference Sunday to charge the
judges with "favorllllm." ·She hired a
lawyer, Stephen J.' Dlmeff, to in·
vesttgate the pageant.
"I retained tbe lawyer because all of
ttie girl1 knew by midweek who the
finalists would be," 1he 1aid. "ll 1
waited until after the semlflnals to
contact him, then pageant officials
would have said we had sour grape•."
show proof that thia page8llt waa rig·
tor Allred Patrlcelll. "This ill what you
will find with girls wbo bt.ven't won."
Patrtcelll Mid jut before the finala
he became aware of rumors that all was not good fellowship behind the
1cene1 and that 0.l!ome. or the beauUe1
even felt there Wat a fix.
He took the girls, clad in evening
gowns, into a back. room and told
them:
"Jf anyone can eome forward to
show proof htat this pageant was rig-
ged or lb1t the wil'lner has already
been determined, I'll five you fl,000
cash."
"There wun't a peep out or any of
them," he said.
But there were a few •quawka when
Miss Washington won the crown and •
ticket to Lon<l.on to compete in this
November's Miss World con.le.st.
"Min W••h!orton wu standlnl In
the aisle and walking up before her
name wa• even announced/' Mils
Hag.., said. She said that during the
week just a few aelect p-11-were
chose n for picture se11lon1 and radd.o
and televi•lon spo.h .
Dimeff -who also ls: representing
~tiss New Jersey, Betsy Swain; Miss
New Hampehire, feggy Eckert; and
m a y be retained by "four other
girls" -said he rec1!Jved callJ from
seven CO!lteatants before the Saturday
night semHlnals complaining the
pageant was rigged. ·
He asked·-tllem to 1ubmit lilta of
whom they thought 'Would be Uie
finalists. He said two of the girls pick·
ed three out of five and one picked
four of the five .
Miss Avery said the prote1ta were
"par !or the course but a little louder
than usual. My mother &aid it W'll just
jealousy."
For the record, first runner up was
llliM Vtrgirlia, Deborah Shelinn; H·
con<1, Mias Hawaii, Leslie McRae;
third, Mias Callfomia, Diane Dye, and
fourth, Miss Texas, Judy Bowman.
Electric Guitar ·
Kills Musician
-DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -A :lZ-year•
old-Irish pop musician was electrocu·
ted in front o ta crowd or screamine
teen-agers In a Dublin ballroom Sun·
day pight when his electric ruttar
&hort-clrculted. · ·
Ronald Duff was dead on atrival at
a Dublin ho1pltal.
Dufl'• flance, Sandra Grey, saw
Duft being hurUed about the stage by
the shock from the guitar. He Col·
lapsed on the stage floor and effort.a: 11t
arlil'icial respiration were unauc·
Ce!Sful.
Twisters Slash Midwest
6.20 Inches of Rain in Fairbury, Kansas
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Social Reform
Pope's Keynote
CAST E'L GANDOLFO,
Italy (UPI) -Pope Paul
Vl'1 appeal on behaU of the
"immense populatiott that
has no honor or bread" gave
assurance today that social
reform will be a keynote of
his visit to Latin America
later this week.
The 70-year-old Pontiff
called Sun<tay for the wiping
out of "idle privilege" that
exists alongside
"frightening misery" in
Latin America and the rest
of the world.
The pope leaves Thursday
for the closing stages of the
39th W or Id Eucharistic
Congress in Bogota. Colom-
bia. He will return next
weekend.
Another indicttion o·f
Vatican concern with the
differences between po0r
and rich and with social in-
justice came in Bogota.
Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro,
head of a 10-member Pon-
tifical m1ss10n to t h e
meeting, said the Roman
Oathotic churclt "must in-
volve itself with the social
change that Latin America
needs ."
The p·ope leaves Thursday
to attend the closing !ilages
ol the Bogota Congress md
to open a conference of
Latin American Bishops -
the first visit by any Pope to
Latin America.
He did not mention revolu-
tionary movements in Latin
America during his speech.
Sunday, but threw himseU
firmly behind the demand of
the contjnent's poverty
slrlcken millions for social
Justice.
"We wtnt especially to
meet the poor, that whole
immense population that
has no honor or bread,"
Paul said.
He urged the "rich and
advahced" peoples a n d
economJc and political
leaders to resolve th.e pro·
blem of "idle privilege on
one side and frightening
misery on the other."
Paul did not refer to the
Catholic church's holly cOn-
troversial position in revolu·
lions in Latin America. n<>r
did he refer to the fact some
priests there are involved in
ttiem.
But he said he hoped the
Congress, latest in a series
of such meetings to pay
nonor to the sacraments of
the altar, would honor "the
g 0 0 d people or Colombia
and all peaples al Latin
America."
In London heated ex-
changes and scuffling broke
out on the steps o r
Westminster cathedral, em·
pbs.sizing the st r u g g I e
amang Britain's Rom an
Cathalic clergy over the
Pope's birth cootrol en·
cyclical.
The hostility flared when
two groups or youthful
demonstrators met. One
group supported the Pope's
ban on artificial con·
tl"aception and tile otber op·
posed it.
Marines Halt Brig
Riot With Tear Ga s
DA NANG, Vietnam (AP)
- A U. S. spokesman said
today that 40 "agitators"
had been moved from the
riot-torn marine brig in an
attempt to restore order.
The 40 mefl were guarded
by 120 milillary police, after
being cut off from the other
prisoners with a teargas
barrage Sunday. t h e n
marched to a smaller
bardetla, commander of the
nearby.
Lt. Col. Joseph M. Garn·
barbed-wire compound.
JOO-prisoner brig j u s t
northwest of Da Nang, 1aJd
there were no injuries in an
outburst Sunday. Lt erupted
when about 70 parolees &Dd
trusties began packing their
gear to be moved to another
area.
Resentment built u p
press the riot.
a mong the other prisoners,
a spokesman said. and
about 40 began rampaging
through the compound.
He said GambardeUa sent
in his riot force of MPs, and
they fired rome 20 can·
i!lters o ftear g a s to sup-
Trouble first broke oot in
the brig Friday night when
many prisoners began a
noisy protest against cold
food, long delays awaiting
trial and prison regulations.
Eight prironers and one
guard were injured, norie
Bomb Blast
Hits Liberal
Party Quh
NEW YORK (UPI) -A
bomb today exploded in the
doorway of a building hous-
ing a Libetoal party head·
quarters. Two patrolmen on
their regular rounds less
than 50 feet away escaped
injury.
The bombing appeared to
be the latest in a series at.
tributed to anti-Communist
Cuban terrorists.
Almost simultaneous with
the explOl!lion an anonymous
caller. in heavily accented
English, told United Press
International th a ta bomb
had been planted at the
West Sidi Liberal Club as a
"protest against the Liberal
aovernment of th• United
Statf:s 1•.tilch we beUeve is
@nCOUraging and fOfltering
Communbm. ''
The callt'r I den t If i ed
himself u a JpOkesman for
the "Cuban Secret Party."
The explosion wrecked the
door and heavily dam1eed
ttie entrance way at tht
building on Broadway
betwem 84th a n d 15th
streets. A large glas1 win·
down on the ground noor
wa blown out Md glass
strewn ~1'CIS dle Jldewa.Jk
and into Broadway.
No OM W'IS injured.
There was no daJnage to
the Libera.I Party Club on
the third (loor or to A
Spa.nis.h Club on the second
n~. (I •
seriously, Gambardella
said.
The prisoners tield the
compound for nearly 20
hours, freeing 17 inmates in
the maximum security
cellblock and burning the
block down before order
was temporarily restored
Saturday Dighl
The S u n d a y afternoon
flareup was ovu in less
than two hours.
An investlgation is under
way to consider I he
prisoners' grievances and
possible disciplinary action
against suspected
ringleaders.
The Marine command has
refused to griant newsmen
permiSS'ion t.o interview any
of the inmates or guards or
to take photocrapbs inside
or near the brig.
Laos Troops
Kill 50 Red
Gu errillas
VIENTIANE !UPI)
Royal Laotian troops killed
at least 50 CommuniJ;t
Pathet Lao and Nocth Viet-
namese guerrillas in two
days of "very fierce fighting
in south central Laoa last
" e e k, a Laotian dMeme
minlstry spokesman lliid to-
day.
H1 &lid It wu one of the
biggest battles ln Laos 1ince
ttie Communist offensive in
February.
The spokesman said the
lighting took place F'rida~1
and Saturday south of
Muong Phalane s ho r t I y
after government troops
recaptured the strategic
highway (Own fur the second
time this year .
A total of 2J government
troops were killed and 40
wounded when an estimated
battialion of North Viet-
namese and Pathet Lao hit
the government troops In a
night position af-ter d a r k
Friday. he ·said.
Fighting raged through
the night .and all the next
day with the Laotian forces
calling in artillery support
and air strikes by T28
fighters based at Savan·
nakhet to the west.
The communists finally
broke off contact late Satur-
day, leaving 'the bodies or 50
comr1des behind but taking
other dead and wounded into
the jungles with them, the
1pokesman said.
The spokesman deacribed
the fighting•• "very fierce"
and from all accounts It was
the heaviest since the Nortll
Vietnamese and Pattlet Lao
overran several key govern·
ment ou1pos:U !n the of·
fenslve last February wh.lch
coincided w1tb the heavy
righting i n neighboring
South Vietnam.
A column of .rovernment
tanks WM ordered into the
Muong Phalane reJ)on to
reinforce the 1.roopt and
pur•ut die neeing Com·
mwW:tl.
•
Where Seven Peri she d
Burned out kitchen of the Dorris Latham home near
Hazelton, 16wa, where seven of the Latham chil-
d~en, rangtng in age from eight months to 14 years,
died early Saturday in a blaze that destroyed the
•
h.ome. According to the Hazelton fire chief, the
fire was caused by a burner on the gas stove betng
left on all inght. Mr. and Mrs. Latham and eleven
children were in the home when tne nre started.
Blast Triggers Israeli Riot
DAILY '1LDT IS
Ru.sia M ay Act
Czec h An ti-Red
Se ntiment Gr ows
PRAGUE ( U P 1 ) Pr&fue'1 fop o d 11 o r 1
Czechoslovak Cornmunlat together Saturday and uked
leader Alexander Dubcek to-them to lone down their at• day concentrated on keeping control o: his ref 0 rm tacks on commun.i.!im'1
gover;unent which th e more orthodox nation• but
Sovieta insist Is threatened journa listic sources said the
by forces bent an destroying editors politely refused to
Czechoslovak communism. accept ruch limitations on
The Soviet press 1ald their new press lreedom.
"reactionary elemenll" o~-Dubcek did not show up at
posing communism had got· the meeting but pre 1 1
ten so powerful t h a t sources said he would be at
Czedloslovakia Is going to a rimilar meeting Wed~
need the help of its Com· nesday to use his well·
munist bloc neighbors to known persuasive powers.
fight it. Czechoslovak leaders also
The Soviet.s said t h e put pressure on the h.un·
Prague reform governml!!nt dreds of persons w h o con-
wa1 · also in datlger from gregate each night a t
''imperialist propaganda" Pt'ague's ''free speech cor-
from West Germany. ner" to sign petitions and
Dubcek's first coocern deliver soapbox speeches.
was to pull the nation's The speakers ignored a
press back into line and decree last week outlawing
build support for a crucial speeches at d o w n t o w n
Communist party congress Myslbek Park and ordering
starting Sept. 9. such political activity to
Dubcek and his followers Letna Paiain, where a
have often said they need a statue of Josef Stalin, the
"period of calm" to gel Soviet wartime leader, used
ready for the party con· to stand.
gress. They fear continued Premier Ollhich Cernik
press criticism of the went on nation w id•
So viets would erupt into a television Sunday night to
new Czechoslovak-Soviet criticize persona who gather
crisis that would prove fatal in ,the park and admaniAhed
· to their plans at t h e party them for demanding that th•
congress. peoples militia be abolished.
Dubcek turned to internal The militia iJ; disliked for
affairs following a month of its ruthlessness 1n bringing
diplomacy in which he con· communiml to power .and
ferred with all tt'le top for its unquestiGned support
leaders of eastern Eur~an ol the repressive Stalinist
communism and won ·at regimes for 20 years,
JERUSALEM (AP) northern end or the Suez source~ said an unspecified new over Israeli territory least temporary tolerance of Despite Cernlk'• .appeal,
Mobs smashed Arab cars Canal and crossed Egyptian number of Egyptian MIG between El Qantara a n d his reform brand of com· more than 200 penons
and attacked Arabs in the territory. jets were chased by Israeli the Great Bitter Lake, on munism. gathered in the park again
streets Sunday night after a In Tel Aviv. Israeli army interceptors after the MIGs the Suez Canal. The government called Sunday nlgtit.
series of bomb blasls touch· I-----------'------'--------------.::._ ______ :.:;::_!:;.:.:::_::::::::::_:::::::::_:::::::::::;..::::!::'.;. ____ _
ed off a riot.
Three explosions rocked
the city Sunday injuring at
least nine persons, two
seriously.
Armed riot poUce were
cal\ed. in to disperse bands
of young lsrc:elis who ran
through the streets for more
than . an hour s e e kl n g
reprisals for the blasts.
One Arab, who w a s
beaten, was in critical con·
dition in a hospital, in·
fol'med sources saJd.
Police equipped with night
stkks, shields and steel
helmets closed .;.U seven
gates to the Old City and
allowed nobody through.
Informed sources said
some JO Arabs and 20
Israelis -mostly young
people -were arrested dur·
in,( the disturbances.
Explosions occurred in the
city bus statian, in a gass
station nea!r the railroad
~tation and at the in·
tersec.tion of King George
and Allenby roads after
police found two unexploded
grenades outside a movie
theater and in a public
toilet.
In other Middle East
developments:
Israeli and Jo rd a n i a n
troops exchanged machine-
gi.m and artillery fire Sun·
day afternoon across the
Jordan River. near the
Allenby Bridge. about 15
milea 11ortb of the Dead Sea .
Each side said the other
started the shooting which
lasted almost an hour. No
carualti.es were ~ported.
El)'ptian army officials
said Sunday night that two
of Israel's Mirage jets were
driven olf by antiaircraft
fire after they flew over the
41 Kii.Ied
In Egyptian
Air Crash
NICOSIA . Cyprus (AP) -
An Egyptian alrhner fell in·
to the Mediterranean Sea
between CYPrus aDd Egypt
Sunday, killing all 4 I
persons on board .
The Soviet built Antonov
24 was on a flight from
Cairo to Damascus when the
Nicosia air traffic control
center reparted losing coo·
tact.
British Royal Air Force
planes began a search and
five hours later spotted
wreckage and bodies abou1
120 mUes south ol Cyprus.
United Arab A I r I i n e' 5
reported in Cairo that !ht
plane carried 34 pessengers.
all from the Middle East
and Africa, and a crew of
seven.
lnfomied so urces sa4d
contact wtt.h the twin engine
turboprop plane was losl
without explanation.
One RAF pilot $ a I d
YfTeCkage was 11pread over
an area abou1 a mile long
and 400 Y""!il wide.
r--------------------------------, : famous recipes tram famous citiesl :
I El Rancho continues to bring you interesting meals from around I
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fret recipts a.t our 1ervitt 111.«lt totUthr1l
Chicken ..... =RS .... 4 9~
Big ••• tender • , • aaturated with the juicy roodnesa that will
make "Gumbo File" a real treat I Get our recipe t
Filet of Sole FWESHI 89~
Get our recipe for ""Sole Amandine11 •• , Creole cooklns with a \
French accent • , , your famil7 will lovt it!
Ham Slices ... ~· .. 98~
Lean, •• flavorful ••• tonirht, trr ... Creole Jambalaya"!
Luzianne Coffee ................. 59~
A blend that'• t?'Uly different .•• try ft and be 1urprised! • •,
and surprise your l'Utst:A, sometime, with "Cafe' Brulot" t
Lejon Brandy ................... ~5.29 •
Traditionallr for after dinnflr .•• sip Jt ••• or aerve it mind
• , • but do try "Cale' Brulol" I ••• 80 proo(.
Prices itt. tffect t1t ttU at()1',tt
M o7t.., Tu.tf., Wed .. ..tug. 19, to, ti
AaCADIA: Sunset & Hllttin(IOl llr. (0 blll:llo Cel!le~
PAS.lllllA: 320 Wtst Cl>kndo BIYd. • 9111 PASMlllk F"""" & IWilltal Dr.
•ORTl•ITOI IUC•: w.mer and AllJonquift (Just East ol HuntinaW ""'-'
llEWPGIT IEAClt ·2727 Newport Bl'ld. • 2SSS Eastbluff Dr. (Eastbluff Yillo&t CAl1lrl
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I
Q DAILY .PILOT
''
-. -
Monday, August 19, 1968
. O.E.R.*
Shock
Absorbers
Sean Low Price
INSTAlLED
•Qr!zinal Equipment Re-
placement !!hocks , • •
designed to outlast and
outperlonn thMe on new
cars. Fit.a m01t cars.
4·Traek Stereo Tape Players
SAVE $10!
Deluxe stereo fits 12-volt · ·nega.-· 4· 988
t ive ground, Built-in noise fil tt!rs.
7x8x3.1;2 i.n.
. .
•••
SAVE $5 .
Ribbed Vinyl Seat Covel'8
Deep quiltinr for extra comfort. 3~2. fS'·"9 Cushioned channels permit cooline 9
aiz:..to circulate completely. IN!TAU.JW
--~--..... '-""
SAVE $3.90
Sea1'8 Basket Top Carrier
Ail heavy 16-raure st .. t Carrles
250 !bl. ~inch rubber 1uction cups.
Siz« •lx35x7~ Inches,
__ ..
588
Sears New Santa Fe Springs Store, Telegraph Road at Carmenita Ave. Opens August 21
,,
'
La Palma at Stanton
5214530
Santa Ana
In7 S.Main St.
KI 7..'1371
Costa Mesa
Sri.tat at SadoWtt
In Soath <Amt Ploa
UO..MS
'iii,
Tustin at Meata
Orange Count1
I •
1
:AWTATE. Passenger Tire Guarantee
Tread Life Guarantee
Ouranteeit ..ti..in1t : All fallurt• ot the tire re11.1ltlnr
f'rom· normal roA.d hazard• or defect. In materi&I or --.. •-Bow LilllK: For t.bl life of the or!pnal tread. wi.• &iu• WW Do: Repatr nail punctntt1 at no
charge. In case of failure, ln exchan.re for the Ure, re-
, pJaee tt ch&rJ'inl'·Only the proportion ot current regular
, alUng price plus Federal Exclff Ta.x that upreaentl
, tread Uled.
Tread Wt8.1'.·0ut Guarantee
' ! daarant.eect Apln1t: Tread wur-ouL
•• How LoJll': The number of month• specttted.
1 Wll&t Bear. WW Do: In exchange for the Ure, replace
It, charging" t.h• curTtnt regular aelHnc price plu. Fed·
er.i J:.x:dA Tax IMI the followlrlz allOWJU11:1!;
~-· ....
. '
. ..
~.
MonUl1 Guanaiteed
12 to 2&
27 to 19
AUowuce
"" "'"
•
.. _. '"'"' 19, 1968 DAILY PILOT 1 -
Sears Most W arited Tire . ' .• and with Good Reason!
. ' "
Full 4-Ply NYLON
t ' f
• Patented Contour Sboalders give of' positive oomerinr control
' '
• Patented Silencer Button. keep tread rroovea open when comerinr
' '
• Pateited Interlocking Tread produces thousands ·of biting edgea for
maximum startmg .and atoppinr power in ....,. 'weather
• Plus full 4-ply nylon for rreater carcass strtnrth
Available
Your ALLSTATE
Tire Purchue
Includet:
FREE ........
Tin MoaUnr
FREE
AU1tat.a ~
J\of.at&oD IJVfll'J'
6,000 HUM
at Sears;
st.001 ·eord
Radial Tires
Ask ~Y Sears
AWTATE Tire
Salesman' About Them!
SIZE Tra•e·I• Frin
TubeleM
6.50d3 14.88
7.35/7.00s1' 17.88
7.75/7.50d4 19.88
8.25/8.00d4 21.88
7.75/6.70s15 19.88
' ' r.z.r. SIZE
·1Tineless
1.81 6.5Dd3
2.06 .35/7.00d4
2.19 7.75/7.50d4
2.55 8.25/8.00d4
2.21 8.55/8.50.14
7.75/6.70s15
' '
Tradt·la J'.s.r., "'"
t
17.88 1.81
L.2o.s8 206
22.88 2.19,
24.88 2.35
26.88 %.51, --22.88 Ul
' I
' I !
!
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I
l
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I
r
T \
8 DAlL Y l'ILOT
Panther
Defense
Opening
OAKLAND (UPI)
Testimony lo the murder
trial of Black Panther
founder Huey Newton may
take less time than was re-
quired to select a jury ror
the dramatic case.
It took four Weeks to
select the panel of seven
women and five men, and
lhen live days for the pro-
secution to parade 26
v.•it.nesses to the stand. "I'he
defense. scheduled to open
its case today. txpecls to
complete it in 10 days.
Newton. 26, was accused
of killing Oakland policeman
John Frey, 23, wounding
another officer and kid·
naping a bystander to take
him to a hospital. Newton
was wounded during the
Oct. 28 shootout.
Before defense attorney
t.'harles Garry ca:!s his first
.vitness, Superior Co u r t
,Judge Monroe Friedman
must rule on defense mo-
tions for directed verdicts of
' -
.1cquittal on all charges fac-A H H
mg the black power leader. '"t'ueeti as ope
-
:\ssistant D i s tr i ct At· torney Lowell Jensen, who Comedian Bob Hdpe kises J. Leigh Avery, repre-
completed the prosecution's senting the state o! Washington, after her corona·
case last Thursday, said he tion in San Diego as Miss Wolrd-USA. Runners-up
\\'OO!d go along on a are Deborah Shelton (left), Miss Virginia, and
dismissal of . the kidnaping Leslie McRae, Miss Hawaii.
charge since the key pro· ----------------------
secution witness refused to
testify before the court.
Father to Get Boy
Celebrated Custody Struggle Ends
BROOKDALE, Ca I I f,
(AP) -The Harold Painter
household waa filled with
joy today because IO-year·
old Mark Painter's
grandmotheT in I o w a has
said he can stay here with
his rather 2nd new mother.
"There's no way to tell
you how happy this makes
us all." said Harold Painter,
Mark's father, foreseeing
th! peaceful end to a loog
custody bat,ie over the boy.
Pointer, a wr iter •
photographer who liv!:s in
Ws Santa Cruz Mountain
village 50 miles south d San
Francisco. said he had
heard Sunday from the Rev.
Clay Lumpkin& of Gilbert, in the "st~ble . dependable,
Iowa. pu;tor to Mark's conventional middle . class
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Middle West home" or the
Dwight Bannister o( Ames. Bannisters than in Painter's
The Rev . Mr. Lumpkin'!! '•romantic, impractical,
unstable and arty'' en·
vironment which ll describ:
ed as "Bohemian and pro-
bably lntellectuall1
5timulating."
This sum.mer Mark came
we1t to spend h.is usual
vacation with his father. He
said he liked it here, wanted
to ltay and· didn't want to go
back to Iowa.
Painter meanwhile got a
Santa Cruz court to issue a
temporacy ·order assigning
him custody, with a hearing
set for Aug. 28 to determine
whether it sbould b e
permanent. He argued that
the Bannisters, both now 6.1,
have undergone "changes in
the mental and physical con·
dition ... which would en· I
danger Mark's welfare if he
were to return to live with
them."
vis ited the Painters here =ji;jijj--~jliwiijijiiiijjiijjijj"jiiijj--iijijiiiijjiijjijj last week to ask the boy ..
whether he wanted to sta' J
on with his father or return ~ lo his grandparents i n
Iowa .
The custody strugg le
began aft..-th• death in 1962 School of Busi'ness
"Prtpart for
the future ...
Todau! ..
of Mark's mother, the
daughter of the Banni.flers. ~·.-
Painter sent the baby to JZ~~ them, then remarried and ~C
sought to get the boy back.
The case went to the I ow a
Supreme Court. which ruled ABC SHORTHAND
e M•di,•I
ln1..,r•11e•
e l ookk•tpi11g
e Ot 11tal
A11ilti11g the boy would be better of!
118 w. 5th
S1nt1 An1
Phone
543-1753 or 543.J721
•
Sears SAVE •ao?
Eyeglass Hearin.C Aids
Rtgular $241.50 Trim
Lite Ill, active right
or left temple only.
Reg ular $281.50 Trim
Llte V, active right or
left temple onl1.
Regular $191.50 Trim
Lite JV, active right
or left temple only.
NO ltlONEY
211 50
25150
16150
DOWN
SEARS COSTA MESA
Brl1tol and Sunflower -South Coast Plaza
Phone 540.3333
The witness, Del Ross,
,c:ave lengthy testimony to
the Alameda County Grand
.Jury earlier this year abou t
the alleged kidnaping, but
y.•as unable to remember
anything when he got on the
witness stand.
She Lived a Pauper,
But Left a Fortune
Crash Rash
Kills Two;
20 Injured
Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
Garry has Indicated he
will call Newton to the stand
to testily in his own'defense.
1-ie also hinted last week he
might seek to prove to the
jury that Newton "fired no
rirearm" during -the in·
cident.
Mia Asked
No Alimony
HOLLYWOOD IAP) -
Actress Mia F&rrow says
she asked for n e i t h e r
alimony nor property set-
tlement from Frank Sinatra
in her speedy Mexican
divorce and will accept
nothing from the millionaire
entertainer.
Richard Spittel,
spokesman for the former
stur of television's "Peyton
Place," also said the 23-
~·ear-old actress charged
Sinatra \\'ith incompatibility.
Miss Farrow and Sinatra,
52, were mm-ricd in Las
Vegas. Nev .. on July 19,
1966. They separated last
November.
OAKLAND IUPI) -An
elderly widow who roamed
the streets In tattered rags
and scavanged for botUes
a n d junk managed to pile
up a fortune of m ore than
$110,000 before she died.
Mr s. Ursula Branch lived
the life of a pauper, but she
had $70,000 in cash and
$60,000 in bank savings
when she died last v.·eek_ at
the age of 75.
Officials have been unable
to contact any relatives of
Jhe woman who wa s born
1.lrsula Cotta Shunk on July
4, 1893, in \Vest Virginia,
where she Jater attended
teacher's college a n d
graduated in 1916.
In her last years, she was
a familiar sight in Oakland
as she shuffled along the
sidewalks clutching a paper
shopping bag filled with
discarded bottles, pieces of
used cloth and the assorted
discards of city dwellers.
.. All .right, you give me a
penny a bottle." she would
tell Mrs. Gladys Motta on
her once a week visit to the
Maketbe
FaOScene
Bitba ~r
(JJlachine
WATCHtbeaew.music
maketbescene
wben"S I NG ER presents
De Sounds of~"
Alll lbol.c cu credll plan-
d r '1 _, to II )QI' budget.
0AT~ofTMC S1Nt:£1'COl.l,.ANV'
~UINA PAIK ANAHEIM
IJJO 011 Tit, M•ll I ll N. lo•r•
TA 1°7141 lll·I r1• ...... ,.,. c; ... , A<11htiM Ca11fa1
COSTA MW HUNTINCHON
IEACH 2100 H•rb•' 11¥J. , EJinga r al ltacli ti ,_, ,,, ,,, .. 041
H•rioer C.11t•r Hu11ti11gten C1nlt•
i~ ,,
'
Mottas' rummage and bric·
a-brae store.
Mrs. Motta recalled she
"lways bargained with the
rlderly woman and, in the
end, alway.s bought the
assorted junk.
When Mrs. Branch died in
~lighland Hospital, officials
found a sealed envelope ad·
dressed to Mrs. Motta.
.. In the letter she told ho\i.r
she wanted the funeral. tha\
she didn't want any flower.~
and what funeral h0me to go
to," Mrs. Motta said.
"She also appointed me
the executrix of her e state.
Then I remembered when
we had talked about money
once she told me she had
put so me away and if.
anything happened I should
go to her room and look
under a red box on a shelf.
"Under the box there was
a safe deposit key." Mrs.
Motta said. She and her hus·
band obtained a court order
and went to the bank.
"She was strong willed
and very proud," Mrs. Mot·
ta said. "But I stilt don't
understand why she lived in
poverty when there was all
that money."
TRUCKEE, Calif. (UPI)
-Four persons remained in
serious condition today in
t h e wake of a r a' h or ac·
cidents along a short stretch
or Interstate 80 that 1eft two
persons dead and 20 injured.
A bridegroom of a few
hours and his younger
brother were kiUed Satur-
day when their car went out
of control after a blowout
and crashed headon into
another vehicle.
Killed were James .H .
Meyers, 19, Oakland, ~d
his brother Donald, 15, His
bride, Jewel, 22 of Oakland,
was listed in satisfactory
condition at a Reno hospital
Meyers was scheduled to
enter the military service
todtiy in Oakland.
Five person'S in the other
car. driven by James C.
Andrade, 59. of Livermore,
were injured.
As both California and
Nevada highway patrolmen
worked to clear the road, a
pickup truck. unOOle to stop
for a police flagman, swerv·
ed to avoid the wreckage
and plunged over the 200-foot
enbankment. seriously in·
juring its two occupants.
• New Built-In Buttonholer makes perfect
buttonholes easily
• Electronic Speed Con!rol ~ se.vin<J
speed constant as fabric weight changes
• Sews straight. zig-zag and chainstilch.
There are live newest TOUCH I SEW
sewing machines from $14995
l39/8,
SINGER" sewing
machine with convenient carrying case
•Heavy duty, sews on en typesol
labncs-sheers to heavy woolens °"''$6995 • Quiel and vibration free, smooth
sewing forward and reverse.
,,.,, _ _.,. __ .lllllllNGIJl .... J t
SINGER
LA MIU.DA
GARDIN GIOVI I S0?4 S. la Ir.fir ad a
LA I-lilt
,,, I ChtpM&fl Lt "'4iratl1 Ct fll t •
ll0·40 t 0 °''"'' c ...... .., P'l11• COSTA MHA SANTA ANA
Dewnfown l rhfel & S11111f1,w11
lOS W. 4111 St. 540·1•1 >
" J.Jt45 Seulli c;:eatf ''••• ,, • ' '
THRU SATURDAY ONLY •••
I •
Penncrest~ portable entertainment
value ... save 16.95 on solid state
stereo componette!Rege 134e95
4 piece 101id 1tole AM/FM, PM •t•r•o tomp-tt• b
hondM>rnely siyled In rich woltM finish. 2-6'/t" 1peokW1,
10 watt .olid mm omplifl9f, 8Slt mini dMwigar. 6 ~
••• tone, 'tdurne, bolanct, Al-C, fvnction, rodio lvnino.
10.95 1avin91
on all channel
portable TYi ·
"" _,,. •• llO wot!, ... th ''Ol.l!M'icl" 11• llkM'e -"""° cliaponelly, vtif
. fl'li U!* ....-. 1-r
~ ......
Reg. 79.95
Now•69
Save 7.07 on
clnip clown aolicl
state ster.ol
s _,. ior.d lllOhi -.pli.
fllf', 2 fvH r•llf' S't.•
.-kan11t..-.i.-
ci-...A .... ~· lhis low ,.,.....
Reg. 69.95
Now62.88
NEWPORT BEACH
!Fuhion Island}
NOW $118 /
11.95 savings
on black/white
portable TYi
,,,_ ~ TV wit+i 15"
~-..t.,_
ol!y. ~ vtW _,
..,.., UHf ........ ,POl'I
................ Msh,.
•es· 99.95
Now•aa
Save 5.071 3"
Capstan drive
tape recorder
loaltl " ........ , ..... 3'/.•
clynemic lflff~lt', tluel
trod: _,i F*tY ••. "' to 40 111in •• .,..,, ioti!fel
l!lia-ephoo ...
Reg. 29.95
NOW 24.88
HUNTINGTON BEACH
!Huntington Center}
:
---~ --..:..=--=======-=---::----,-:--:~=-=~---=-=-=-=::;=-o=:;-:;;-·--~,,_., __ .... .,, ___ .,... _______ ~--.--~~-----------..
-· ..
'
... .--• ML MUM
. '"'
Violence:
Of Mice .
AndMen
Pope
Britain's Far East
Position Questioned
JFK In-law
Petitioned
To Testify
LONDON '(UPI) -Bri·
lain'• declJloa to bow out as
• mlJIWy power In the Far
Eut \I bolling Into a hot
pollUcal lslU< •lain.
Lui Y•IO' the Labor
,.....,,.,_ --it
had decided to brtnl hmn•
British military forcea east
of Suez by the end of 1971,
·-except for a small S:arrilon
in the colony or Hong Kong.
It estimated this would
slash $7'20 million annually
from defense costs. It said
' 'tite
NASIMILE. Tenn. CAP)
-SUphon Smtih, a broltler-
in·law ol tbt late Prtlident
Jolln F. Kom>edy, hlll been
named In a federal court
petition u the man wbo ·pro-
vided 13,000 to set evidence
agalnlt 9D attorney for
Jameo II. Hoffa.
Maclin P. Davll, attorney
for Z. T. 08bom Jr., hu fil.
ed a m.otl<m.. asking that
Smith of New York be re·
quired to tenify at a f9deral
court bearing h~ on Mon·
day.
'Ibe motion for subpoena
said Smilll provided 13.000
which government in·
vestigator Walter Sheridan
paid to a fDrmer Nashville
policeman for informatlon
on Otbom. However ,
Sheridan took back the
mone,: a day later, the peti·
lion said.
Osbom'':was attorney for
Ttamlke's Pmldent Hoffa
when tbe latter went on trial
here in 1962 on a compiracy
charge. . A mifitrial was
declared and Hoff• and
Osb<rn later ~re convicted
of j~ry tempering.
Robert Vlck, the former
policeman, tesWied Osborn
asked him to offer $10,000 to
a prospective .jUror to vote
for acquitting Hoffa .
The 13,000· payment lo
Vick allegedly· was mtd<o In
lllM -after C!le late Robert
F, Kennedy bad resigned 1.1
U.S. attornty genera 1.
eche you
wantea moo
. ,
-:
•
For$2. Or.$1.
for e.
The bigger your account the lower your service charge.
'
If minimum ~is • . Your charge is
0·$299 ___ $2 per month
$300•$499 $I per month
$500-plus Free
Fint·Rate Checking .Account ..........................
. -'
11,.irst
·~;1111,
MO/ldo1, "*ll 19, 1968
Paul: on
J Move"
derltandable.
St. Peter, cOnJldertd by
Catbotlc1 to be the first
Pope, WU b<rn In Iha Uoly
Land and spent most of bis
life worldn1 and preachinl
there before bit nputed
martyrdom In Rome.
Church recordl betwee~
Peter and Pope Victor I
(189-199 A.O.) are otetcby,
and the Oral Pope defli1lte1Y known to have gone abroad
was Llberlu1. He w a 1
banl<!ied to Thrace In ~ by
1l1e ... of the Einperor
Constantine the Great.
For the nen doun Popes,
exile and imprisonment in
Conotantlnople or Syria or
the Island Of Palmarla was
the rule rather than the ex·
ceptlon. The unlucky ones,
1uch as John I (m.u6),
were torlured.
All Penney Stol'9s Open ·Every Night Monday Through Saturday
!low 1011 NI It' •••
ZI,.,.£ ..... complt!ffv dOll IWIY with thl need fOf 1 placket. Your ,..:Ult It I truly lnvl1ib!1 :dpp.r
tfrllt loob JKc• I"'"' ••• zipe lik• 1 d111m. SH 1
comp1ttt .,,.., rJ colon in aiut from 7" to 24", so· to 1.20
zlppodootlor 9<1Sy opplicotion •• $1
Polyester double
knits in fall tone
solids for back·
to-school sewing
4.99vD.
MoohiM wa1hob'9 polytlftr double Wnit1 art oreot for year 'IOUl'ld
WHrlng. Top rt1lliency and crto• rt1htont qualltt.s MOU. 11 •
mutt folHlc for dr .... 1, onk!. pantt, sklrh, shlftt, ond your entire
cowol wcirdrobtl In textured wown soUcb of turquoise, lwcrwn,
li>lodi, moN and olympic goJcf. "4" wlH.
TCICAYI
Total performance
bonded knits cut
sewing time in half!
2.98 YD.
loq to cut ••• to1y to MWI 100% tOtton knits .. ,.,..
"'°"'"">° Mf\cltd to Oft ontoft lln/!'lf • • o "'°. I ..,..
Nrt9 llnl1t1 vnnKtuaryl fdffl for 1uih and 1pomw.or •
"'-,.. --of ~1 .. ~ -· turque09 .... ..,.,.. .. _, ,i.w.. w wld..
'COSTA MESA
• Harbor Slloppln9 C.ntor
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Huntlf191on C:.ntw
NEWPORT BEACH
Fashion lailnil
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Meetings
MON~Y l>nl..i F_.,. ll!JIKVfM ~ COl'•I It"' ftilMN'lfll, "'5 H1rtllr ll'ftl~
C..11 Mtta. flOOll,
N.-.wt ..., An• V... """"''' Clull,
OdlO. 212 I. 1"" ~. C:.11 Mew. 1 •. 11'1. Ellltiortr $COUt&. .. lode llfctrotola Eu-,..., 19', hbQOCll El«·
trotila. 350! Hltbor aJvel,. Cosll WU
J:U '·"" DeMol1w, Or11111 C.lt CN>plet,
MasonlC T-11 15111 $1., 1ftd St. ...,..,...... ,. .. .::.. ... ......, ._... ,,,.
··~ DM\OLl\I, H!,ofillfltkwl aftdl C..,_f'fr,
MQMk T-llt. JIM UU A-. Honllntlell hKh. ,, ....... Cmll ~M ....,,,_.,. L..,.. NO. )I,
Odd Ftllowl I-till~ :!J6.I N--1 l !Yo:!,,
Cosl1 MeM, I'·"'· TUISDAY
Cot'-~ Exd'WI-Club, Corel ltff'f
rtall!l ... 111, 2645 Htrtlot 8iv(I~ (NII -·-N~ Karbi:r<" Ac:trw 2Wi Clllb.
vui.,. IM. 11' Marlnt. kllloe lolafllll. -CotoM de1 Mar l( .... nh; Club. VIiia $~ llX E. Coul H1t11w1~. C.W-
del Mllr, lt:ll '·"'· Huntll'll-lffdl ltot...., Club. ~
F°"' WI""' rnl1ur111!, 1"2t 8olM Cflkt ltMG. Hvntl,.tlln 8Ndl. 12:U •.m. Hu"'11'191on INdl Klw1n!1 Ck/ti, HIM>
Un1!0ft ltadl Cw"'rv Club, m 11111
SI., H""lll'ISllDll II~, U:U 1.m. N.-1 H1rbirw OPtlmlsl Cl\lb. Vllll
M..n .... ltM5 ••nlds Drlw. NewPW1
•~ 12:1!1.m.
Cosl1 M~ Klwlfll1 CluS. C-!111
lite1!1\lr1nt, 161' N,_, lllod., Co"•
"""""· n:n1.rn.. ltct1rv CIV& ol Costl ~-NOt'tt. .
Cost1 MPH Golf lfld (Olltl!n Clue, 11'111
Goll Courie DrlW, Cott• ,,,..w, l2:1t
f'.m.
Divorces
Dl\tORC•S l'ILEl'J Y!.-,lnll LIPSlfnskl VI WI I I f t
UDll"l'MlcJ JM11 C. EIHf YI Llel'll ElwY Lindi Lt1! MOn VI 0.vld Jcfln Mott
Liiii•" W. LUCI-vs G-LutlMCI LYllCll S. Wooclwma VI Dfnlel 0 . Woocll11m1 °""' J•en ~ v1 l1vmoni1 9•r .. tt
wl?1r.'.;'"Ll>W1 l•mldtll V"I Pfnnv Ju n Rim-II M"'''"' M. Prlvl!I YI Ltr..., L. Prlvltt Nilt~I Anf11 9rodr. YI Cllff«d M.lr1h1ll
J.:~ L. ~lrd YI $.ulMlt IE. ... .=:...:. GW..tnlll YI Flol'li. G1ov1nnl DtiottS J, Holley YI fltYmond I..
HolltY
J olln A. Fl!zttr•ld Y1 lnu M. 1"111·
~·•Id Mtd!Yn J. "'" VI Jol'l<I Arlllur ll•Y St•• C. C1"9r v1 Norm1n E. Clrt., Robert P. Roundlr" VI Wlllltm IC.~n-
... !11 RoundtrH Jecouel\ne o. Ander11111 v1 Wlt111m H.
LI~ lltclllOt YI Ernest Allell
v~T:i..sot Lff 9-\lfr YI Rklltrd
DEATH NOTICES
LUCAS
Myrtle Luc11, 2IM E. 11111 SI., Co1l1
Meu. D1tt ol dt1!h, Au11u1t 16, Sur·
vive<! by 1011, SYdnev A. Luce1;
brt>~r, Jolln Gr1nl Jr .. ia. ,,_
.,.,... ; trld two trtnckhlld..,.. ......,.
Ices will bl llllcl Tll9,.,..,. 11 N4
PKtlic YlfW CMl>fl. wlltl Ml. W-
reoi IE. Hewlend ol!IC!t!IJ19. Entomb-
""'"'· M1111t1llllm flf tilt Ptd lk:. D~ notted b't' Pttlllc Ylr« Mortu1ry,
MARKS
JUN I . M1rk1. olM 0 C11lt C1dl1,
Lttunt Hl111. Dtlt flt cle11h, Aug. 11.
Survived by hu1blor.ll, Morion; brolfl.
en. Arnold lllum.nlh1I. LOI An11e1~1.
•nd Jttk 1lumen1h1I, Sin FrtMlilC:Ol
i lllen. Ethel $mltll. ArlrOlll, 1rod
Dorothf Hohl, Moun!llll View. Serv-
ket will bl lMld Tuesclt Y, l PM,
Pl>dflc vi.w ChllHI. OIActed by
PtClfk \Iii,. Mortutrv.
LEITFRED
ltobert l.1111,_,, ~l lrd S•., LI·
ouf\I I'~-D•'-ol dHlh, Auvv1! 16.
surv\YM by w1fe, Miidred: lllKt. Mtl.
J1,,. We111:!...ak, L1111n1 Be1cll. Suv-
1ctt will ~ Mid 101!.'1'. Morldtv. 2
PM, Jn tfte c_,..,..tton1I Chu•tll of
L1.,,n1 lffdl. lt!~metol, Ptclllc
YI-Mf,,_111 Pt.t<. Dlrteled by
P1cffl< VIP' Mor1\llrv.
SECK
Gtc/'91! J. kct. Ntl 5111ff Clrd.,,
Huntk111tot1 leKI!, lurvlvf'd by dtU111'1-
ter, M1n11ret Tebetu. servic~• will
bt l!fld In K11111s Cit-,.. Mlnourl .
Loni .... (lte'mtnll bY Pt ek Ftmll~
ColOnl•I l"unerel Home.
WRIGHT
wu.... J. Wrl11ht. lno:2 HOll""r St .. Wtl.lmlfls~r. Survl'ted bv llu•tMU'ld,
L• S.llt B. Wr'91111 !1<1111. f"rt 1rod
Jot"°" I'. Wrlthl. 5trvlct1, f,,.....i1y,
' PM, P-F•mltv Coi...1111 Funt"tl
KING
l'l er! B, 1(!"9. 1111 Stanford Avt ..
Gtrden Grov•. Survlvtd bv wilt,
Jose1>/11M:I son1. Lurhtr S. And Reb-
ert I.I. l(lnw1 dtU'fllltr, Jo An" Grit·
!in. Ser•lcf!t, WedMwffy, ' PM. Jn
R!<lor. Arl<1nw1. LOUI •rr1n•en1t~
bv PHI< Ftmll'I Colonlt l Funtrl l
ROBINSON
1(1~n Sue Rob!-. ftl IE . ,Isl !I ..
Sinll All.I. survived '" 01rent.. Mr .
1nll Mn. Elwood llcb!nsOll. Gt•"""
K!de t!...,lcel, TUMdlV. 10 AM. tt
Wt11mln1ter Mtfl'IOl"l•I Ptrt<. Directed
bv Pttk Ftmll• Colonlel F1111er1I
H~.
CROSSEN
,...,..., J•M Croswn. 211 l rd St .• H.,,,t.
lt>Vlllll llttdl. $urviv9d ~¥ ,..,,_ DI~
F. CrGIHfl, Foun!1ln Ytll1y, tnd
Wtlrt r J. CrmHn, c;.r0en Gr<NeJ
brnlller. Em-It Zfrl<lt, GI Sun Clt¥,
•!'Id llW t,.nd,1111111'1111. IOllrv. Mor>-
Gev, I PM. Smith\ Cht!>tl. Rf<1ulem
M.1$1 r ... w.v .• ,.M, SS SlfnOll •"" Jud~ (t!llOl!C Cll11rc~. lfll'l'lllt~!. Good
Sh..ol'frd Ctrm>tery. Smllhl Mortv•rv .
OlrKton.
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del l'ttar OR 3-9450
Costa !\1esa !\11 6-2424
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, CosUI !\lesa
u g.3433
DILDAY BROTIIERS
lluntlngton Valley
l\tort11ary
17911 Beacb Blvd.
lluntlngt.on Beach
s1i-m1
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery t Mo11ullr)'
Chapel
:sot PadDc View Drive
Newport Beacb, Callfol"Db
.....-iot
PEEK FA~ULY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
ROME
7111 Bolu Ave.
We11mlaller ~
SADTll'S MORTUARY
L'I Mala SI.
Hnllafleol Bud! LE._ ..
n:na.D'P MORTUARY
tJ17 & J7dt 81., CMo Mt11 . ' . ··-
-
SANTA ANA -"All the
world loves an athlete" may
soon be joining other max-
ims in the extinct world of
dodos and dinosaurs .
According to 0 r a n g e
County's Superintendent of
Schools Robert Peterson,
laurels once the prerogative
of victors in physical con-
tests are also to be bestow·
ed on academ\c combatants .
A first annual Orange
County Academic
Decathlon is s e t for Fri-
day, Nov. 29. the day after
Thanksgiving.
Approximately 300
students selected from all
high schools in Orange
County will compete in 10
academic events .
Each sohool will select six ..I said 'smile', I didn't aay 'leer' ••• •
seniors and then place them -----------------------in one of three contest
divisions -average, good
or excellent, explained
Peterson.
The Orange County educ·
tator said that the divisions
were Jn order to insure the
recognJUon of what he term-
ed, j'the forgotten average."
Youth Makes Sister
Help With Suicick
Traffic Accidents
Kill 3 in County
Two po<a0ns were killed The Calllornla Highway
in Oranae county trt1ffi.C ac· Patrol 1aJd Jone1 was in-
cidents over the weekend jured wben h1a pickup truck
and a Newport Bttch man hit tbe · Pearce S t r e e t
died of Injuries received in pedes.trlan ovrepass abut-
an earlier mishap, tbe cor· rnent on the Garden Grove
oner's olfice reported today. F'reeway.
WebClford D. Jones, 29, of Francis E . Carlton, 42, of
124 45tb st., Newport Beach Gardena, was killed Satur·
died Sunday at tbe Orange day night at the aame
county Medical Center of----------
trallic injuries Nlfered Juzy
ZI.
T .. ra1n1ng
Grant OK'd
TUSTIN -Approval of a
$149,219 grant to train 80
unemployed workers a t
Orange Coast College has
been announced by
Congressman James B . Utt
(R·Tust!n).
11111
13S
Ceanty TralDc
Deatb Toll
1M1
1!4
overpass when he wa1
struck while changing a tire.
The other car was driven by
Delilah Ann Taylor, 44. ol
Redondo Beach. She Wifi not
beld pending investigation.
The other traffic fatality
occurred early Sunday on
Llve Oak Canyon Road 400
feet southeast of El Toro
Road, the California
Highway Patrol reported.
Killed when Ule car in
which he was riding
overturned ejecting t h e
passengers and coming to
rest on top of him was
Elmer C. Besaw, 46, of
Anaheim. -
Utt to Get
Honor
SANTA ANA -Rep •
James B. Utt CR·Tustin)
will be honored by the
Board of Supervisors
Wednesday.
Congressman Utt will be
given.a plaque for services
rendered the county. He
plans to hang tlle plaque in
his Washington, D. C. office.
The 35th District
"It Is necessary that the
ha nds and the mind of the
average man and woman be
fully developed," he said,
The breakdown of the
total grant shows $11).),298
for 40 woriters to receive
training for an unspecified
time as auto body
repairmen and auto service SANTA ANA -A bizarre She vainly tried to persuade station mechanics. Of this
The CHP said the car fail-
ed to negotiate a curve.
legislator has represented
ON>nge County and part of
San Diego Coum.y i n
Congress for 16 years.
.. Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi=iiiiiii! suicide was carried out by a him to give up the attempl total, the government's
Santa Ana youth Sunday I-le then forced her to get share amounts to $98 ,608.
included in the day.Jong
event are four demonstra-
tions and six tests .
when he forced his sister to the shell for an 8 mm. bolt An additional $4&,930 will
· . action r ifle from a box go for 11 weeks o f
Speeches a nd essays and
extra curricular activities
comprise the demonstration
portion.
be an unwilling assistant m under a desk. He loaded the groundskeeper training for
the shooting, police said to-gun, had his sister sit at the another 40 workers. The
day. foot of the bed and then ahot government's share is $44,·
Richard Dale Sanders, l&,1_h_im_;•_;•_ll_. ________ 4::1;.;7·_; ________ =====================~
of 933 Marengo St., died of a
single shot in the right
temple. PoUce said he was
despondent after a fight
with his girllriend.
\Vritten examinations in
science, math. soc i a 1
scie n ces, Engli s h .
literature, current events.
esthetics and practical arts
ma k e up the decathlon's
formal test area.
Winners in each of the
three divisions are to be
honored at a banquet whi ch
will follow the competition.
Sanders first had his
sister, Mrs. Mary Lynne
McCormack, assist in spell-
ing words for a suicide note.
Hanna Off
To Far East
TB Seal Stamp
Contest Open
SANTA ANA E t I Congressman Richard T . - n res for the 1968 Christmas Seal l·lanna <D-\Vestminster) is
design competition are due in the Far E as t in-
Ocl 1, according to Bill Hill, vestigating excessive in·
pre s i den t o f the terest rates and other areas
T u b e r c u I o s i s a n d of exploitation possibly fac-R esp i rat or y Disease
Association of Orange Coun-ed by U. S. military men
ty. serving overseas.
All professional artists, Hanna is a member of a
w11,,,.1 ... ..,. designer! and art students Banking and Currency Sub-
12:10 ...... s.rurc11,. nre lrn'flt11.. are eligible to enter the commi·ttee or the House ol
u..,, a1 Ulfl Sr. titi 1100 ·u be 1,11 ,.m~ nwc11u1 11o1, 1.u1 w111ow compe on. WJ •1 L•... awarded to the Orange Representatives which w1 I
J:Jt p.m., •lnlC:TUrc ""'· 7~u Mlln County winner who will be visit military installations,
,,;;· 1.m. sund••· w•.ritlown. writ-eligible for the national urge establishment of credit
mln1l•r A"fflllt Ind Ne,.ltrod tit• 1:0 1.m .• Pubtl< 1s1111, 1~111 Svrfnt-compe ion. unions and examine credit
d111 st. Fur further information J th
2:10 p.m .• '"" nre. 101 Edlnve• call or write the association problems in apan. e l:~,w~.m. Molld.I~, lln>("tur• 11r1, son at 1104 \V. Eighth St., Santa Philippines, Korea, Taiwan,
ovnun"°" Ana, phone 542-7213. Hong Kong and Thailand.
H111tllfl111 ... h1Cll ·~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I 1 :IM o.m. S1rurd1y, mf!liul •Id, II inn Ch1i>err11 L•"' 1:)9 •.m. SuO'ld.lv, tlr111:lur1 tire,
111J1 Btttll ll!vd,
12:!1 p,m .. 11rud11re ti••· 1m1 Hird·
11111 Ltn.
4:,J o.m .. llrt lnvonUg1Jlot1. 80111 •fld
Hell Avenve
n :u1 •.m. Mond1v. mtdictl •Id. 7"12
RP!one Lt,,.
7:14 1.m., 11Wt1rc1T •Id. m lOlh Sr.
Fwnl•lll Y1ll9Y
t:S1 1.m. St!urd.Y, rti.cue, lrookhurtt
t!ld Edlnver
1:05 p.m .• I•••~ tlrt . ,.,Jr Ml;ncllt
Ave .
1:1! •·"'· Sund1v. 11ru,TU•e fire. Geld·
en Tritn91t Ctnlt•
COllt Mii•
l :4• p.m. S1Nrd1y, lllH 111,.,,,, Pt.t<
1n11 Cenltr S!rffl
6:ll p.m., rescue, :IOU Cll••k SI.
•:.1-t 1.m.. reKue. J1tt Gell Cout$t:
Orlvt
11 :'5 11.m .. rutu~. 7015 C~trle St,
l :U t .m, Sundt~, tUtUI, HH Min·
o•C• Orlv•
.10 ,12 1.m., 1tructurt llA , USS lrvlt1e
Avt. '"° d1m1tt ll:Sf 1 .m .. 1111e 1 l1rm. XII E. 11111 si .
I :Ol p.m .. !tlst 1!1rm, 9r1Jlol Strttt
11rod PtUltrlno •:J5 p.m., lrtsll lire, 111• MonroYll .... ,_
7:ff 11.m .• ci r llrf, Sin Olqo Frtt-
WIY •nd Htl'Vor Boultvtrd
Pilot Visitor'
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e Herc's jtL'>I \\"hal you J1£'ed
ror those hot weather rid-
es. , .Delux~ car air-Olll-
ditioner going for the best
oUer.
e AllOY SALTY S.MLORS! !
23' Double ended \\-cod
sloop; head galley, many
extras. must ht sold due
to emergency.
• '&8, Toronado Olds, loaded
with cxtt·a.~ is being sold
for an unbelievably low
"""'· • A quiet middle age couple
desire general deaning, 2
mornings • week. (You
could sleep in those mom·
in gs.)
e '6.j Honda 3ffi Superhav:k
4(X)'J can be yours. A real
bargain!
NIGHT •nd DAY SERVICE
9,30 A.M. TO 9,30 P.M. -SATURDAY 10 A.M. TD 6 P.M.
-'~
A Ail Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
AL£s~!!RlfJ
..
?,f. .
I
COSTA MESA
Harbor Shopping Center
USE OUR LAY-AWAYPlANI
luy r-~ girl oU W. .-chi A -n Dtp.tlt
will hold lht d,_ of yovt diolca
'ti1 lht .,..,.. ttmi b.gfnal
OUR FABULOUS BACK-TO-SCHOOL
GIRLS' DRESS
CARNIVAL!
Send her back to school
in easy care knit dresses
A. Nubby •na 1•immer of 100% Orlon"' ocrytk bonded fobrit.
Smartly 1tyled chu hen fo.hionol:tl• flat• 1lnw1, J*ky bow
trim. Choo1• pink or ttal. Girlt' 1ins 7 to 1~ • ~
I . Plotter CG!lor dl"HI with contrG!.tlng bow trim Is un oll•tim; '$5
achoolgirl fO'IOfit.. E,...pl.cH;ng ocrylk ~ knib ore O¥OlJ.
obi• in o talorfvl assortment of hoppy ploidt. ~·lites 4 to 6.o:.
C. 2 piec. .n1embl• for ~ttle gitir. f90hlrn ~Orlon• ocryl'tC $
iumper with U·thoped Mek, pl'll'Cft1 womiog. Dointy cotlon 5
bl<MM is trimmed with nlffl.s, b\ittons ond lot.. Pink tit" lim..
Girl1' 1i1n 4 to 6x. ,.
D. Sporty t his turn out in filhwman-look 1we<rter drftll1 of 1009'.4
Orion tu.lured kniti. 8oo111 popular turtl~ rnlk.-and co. $6
fortabl• short sleevu. Choo" from OVI' ouortment l'Jf fashion
colors. GWl1' Iii" 7 lo 14.
l . l ri 9hlly colored plaids llort her bodt to Khoo! in ilyl•. &cndecl $6
ooylit knit lt"P' ib shctpe. Short 11"""' charmer hot bow trimnwd
,o11or. bvttON. occent on low ploced podteb. Girl1' 1i1es 7 to 14.
HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
Fe•hion Island
--.. ~~------------·---·--•
.•
' .. Khrushchev Tries
·ff and at Tomatoes
MQSCQW ( U P I) -
Former Premier Nlklta S.
Khrushchev was so bored
two years ago he tried to
Wt only feed tomatoes to
tht COWl.'1
. .•teach a Jackdaw to talk.
Khrushchev dJd convince
Bulgari•s to try It. 'The
Bulgar ians are now
reported prospering in
faster grown, cheapter
tomatoes. Down on his
11ublD'ban dacha, the prophet
of bydropony is busy now
trying to prove to his coun·
trymen he was right after
all.
:... ~ !Pfie bird · ~proved reac-
"· t1onarr aM Khrushchev lost
paUence.
But informed sources say
Khrushchev, now 74 and out
of power almost fQur years,
is buay with a new hobby.
The man who made the
wocld tremble is now rai1-
ing tomatoes on pebbles and
water.
lt is called hydropony and
has its roots in
Khru.sihchev's character. He
was a natural politician, a
shepherd who learned to
hold his own with the
world's captains and kings
and commissars. He also
had a green thumb.
Farming was ever a
~uabchev thing. During
his visit to Iowa he stood in
a field and told millionaire
farmer Roswell Garst how
to raJse better corn :
At home, as premier, hls
own farm program proved
almost a disaster ood when
He bas broken up the land
around bis government-own·
ed Yilla illto square pebbled lote and waters them with a
pipe system he b u i I t
hlmsell.
Occasionally the o l d
Khrushchev surfaces.
The sources said he will
display the once famous im-
patience and capriciousness ,
tear up his water pipes, NEW HOBBY -Former Soviet Premier Nikita S.
rearrange the pebble beds Khruschev in the 7!1th year ot his ·life and the
and start his fanning anew fourth year since his fall from power, has acquired
With fresh seed. a new hoby of Hydropony, the science of growing
There's more to it than plants in solutions containing necessary minerals,
tomato growing. The hobby instead of in soil.
baa brought Khrushchev out-----------------
fesslonat. llDI OUI HOISUI
w ... 1 a •11 M19M-
,,._. •t1e11 "'"
. be tried to sell hydrophonic
. farming to President Gamal
.:-Abdel Nasser, the Egyptian
::~ .. leader replied, "What tor?
Of the years of sulk that
followed his fall f r o m
supreme power. Besides the
tomato hobby, there is bis
photography. He goes forth
anned with several
cameras and some of his
shots are n e a r 1 y pro-
Khrushchev sends his film
abroad for developing. On
rare occasions, Khrushchev
and his wife Nlna ' Petrovna
ride into Moscow, where he
bas a five-room apartment .
•xct11n91 fw
MA\llU RANCH
w.ic .,. "" ......., ""'"'
c.11: (J1J 677·2MJ
. ....
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
Shop at
home!
• Free consultatlonl • We bring samples!
• Free estimate! • No obligation!
Call collect (714) 523-6511
Carpeting gives lasting
beauty for your floors!
/Only nylon carptting can giw you such excep-
, tional durability at such a low pricel Choose
DuPont 501 nylon or 100% contt~ fila -
ment nylon In a colorful array of ct>bblestone
pattorned oollds.
~ylon shag aupotlng adds a look of l"""ry
to any roam. Dtep, dense pllt is quality
/ madt to koop Its beauty throughout tho years.
Choose from 18 magnfficont colors In solid•
or two tont'.
T..iyred carpets of long-weari119 fibers ore
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high low loop nylon shag In 8 colorful tweeds.
6. 99 SQ. YI;>.
INSTALLED
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INSTALLED
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DICOllA11 NOWI USI PINNIYS TIMI PAYMENT PLAN.
r
I ----------·------~---------
-...... 11\9,1968
PRICES EFFECTIVE
AUGUST 26-27°28
COSTA
MESA'
STORE
.ONLY
WOOD FRAME PICTURES
OUR REG. 7.54
3 DAYS ONLY 5.88
Choose from out door scenes of domestic
and foreign lands.
PICTURE PRAMi DIPT.
MOTHERS
COOKIES
3/99~
Our Reg. 49c ••·
A.sot. cookies.
POLAROID 210 CAMERA
OUll PEG. 39.18
3 DA~S ONLY
Color pictures ln a minute. Black and white
In seconds. Don't mlzs out on this big
ch·ance.
CA141JtA DIPT.
,
.GENERAL
, , ELECTRIC
POCKET
RADIO
4.38
Our R19. 4.H ..
Includes carrylng-a.o,
batteriea1 1 n d ear-
phone for private Us·.
tenlng.
'
Girls' Casual Sport Tops
66¢
OUR REG. 97c
100% cotton knit short sleeve and lleevel ...
tops In a wide vulety of prints and solidi.
Also lovely paatol crop tops. Sizes 4·14.
LADIES WIAa Din.
Glrh' · 86 COTION SHORTS Re9. 1.97 C
SHOWER HEAD WIRE RftCING
1.97 2.33
Our R.g. 2.97
Fully adjustable head fits
moat any ahower.
Ou r R19. 3.66
25' of coated wire fence.
14" hillh. 1fi'~1r1!1ori net tXlct
·PATIO Din. HOMI IMl'ROYIMINT DIPf.
'
'
HIAYY DUTY
BINlllER FOil 33¢
Our Rig. 44c
Big roll of heavy duty Bring in those hard to pl
channels. foil. ·
PA.I'll GOODS DIPT. APPUANCI DIPT.
OUR u•. •7•
Brigbtem and protect.I. Col·
ors avlllabla.
HOUllWAlll DIPT.
MONTIRIY PINES
2.27
OUI .... I.ti
24" ,plnea
PATIO DIPT.
••
,.
Fisli Dish
The odd-looking fellow in foregrounrl is rare n10Ja 1no!a fi sh recently ca~tured
and put on display at Marineland of th c Paci fie at l') a _l o s Verde._ !·le _ 1s fed
special formula of squid , jellyfish, crushed bone and fi sh gore \Vh1ch is shot
into his mouth 'vith slush gun.
New Cas t of Candidates
J(eeps U.S. Agents Hopping
\VASJJINGTON /1\P) -
The shifting cast o f
characters on the political
stage has kept the. Secret
Service hopping in its ncv•
role as protector o r
presidential and vi c e
presidential hopefuls.
There \vas a 111ho\esa1e
changing of lhe guard, for
instance. after the
R c p uh l i can National
Convention and another \.\'ill
follov.• U1e Democratic con·
venlion.
Since they ended up in the
GOP losers' column at
Mi.imi. l~arold St as s·c n,
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller
and Gov. nonald ncagan no
longer q11alify for shielding
by the Secret Service.
'l'he delai\s o[ agent~
assigned to them have been
'tl'ilhdrawn and dealt out to
newcomers on the candidate
list -GOP vice prcsidenli.i!
non1inee Spiro T, Agpev.·. for
instance, a.id Sen. George
McGovern of South Dakotn.
who blossomed as <l
Den1ocratic contender.
The assassination of Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy in Los
Angeles while he 'vas ca1n-
p:iigning for the Democratic
presidential nontination in
June was the event th ;1t ad·
d::-d candidate protection to
the chores or the Secret
Service, traditiona l guar-
dians of the president and
vice president.
\Vhcn he assigned the ncv.'
role, President J o h n s o n
acknowledged he had no
specific authority to do so.
But Congress backed hin1
up, quickly supplying a la\\'
extending Sccert Service
protection to '"n1ajor c:1n-
didates" for the presidency
and vice presidency.
Some $2 n1Jllion was voted
to cover increased Secret
Service expenses through
the election. A !ipokcs111an
for the agency said Tuesday
it is not kno\1•n yet V.'hctlH~r
this \Viii be enough . TJ1e
amount v.·as pi('ked by using
data from previous cam-
paig ns in \Vhich th<' Presi-
dent or vice president went
on the campaign trail.
The decision .as to \vho
~ets the protect.ion and who
doesn't rests under the
statute with the secretary of
the Treasury, advised by a
commitce made up of the
speaker of the House and
the R e p u b I i c an and
Democratic leaders in each
chamb0r of Congress.
McGovern brings the list
of protected candidates to
six. includin g Vice President
llubert H. Humphrey. who
comes under the Secret
Service umbrella on tv.•o
counts -as the vice presi-
dent and as a candidate for
the Democratic presidentia1
nomin;iUon.
800 Guards Will 'Drill'
At De1no Convention
CJIJCAGO !UPI) -About
800 National Guardsmen
v.·i\J be on • · re g u I a r I y
scheduled drills" l)aCh night
of the DemQCratic Natio nal
Convention.
Security a'rrangements for
the convention provide for
these troops to stop drillin~
near th e lntern::1.ional
Amphitheater, and move in·
to the streets if there are
severe racial or anthvar
disorders.
Opponents to tl1e. Vietnam
war predict 30 .000 to 40,000
protesters may come to
Ch i c a g o during the
Democr<:<tic convention and
various groups of hippies,
yippics . and black militants
could S\vell the assembly of
dissidents to 100,000, ac·
cording to some estimates.
In 1956, the last time the
Democrats held the i r
nominating convention here.
security arrangements were
f<:'r less stringent than those
planned this year.
"The soci al condilions in
the United States are dif.
rcrent today than they were
in 1956." said Capt. John
Kelly . coordinator of securi·
ty for the Chlcago Police
Department. Kelly c:.rnd a
contingent of local police.
federal agents. and guard
officers have met da ily for
the past week to complete
the security plan .
II · II ..
Butler Crea1n Bread
Rich with fresh butter and cream yet light i11
texture. SOC
•.•...... • Polly ~~~i·::;~~h!!~:t~h~ !~!~Sdioo" •.. L · favorite. 6 for 33c: .
U9hl ood .flok~, fillod with olmood P"" ood -.
loppod w,th •litod olmood>. "· 19e · ,1 •
~~le.~~~!~~?
If your birthd ay is in September, October or Nov•mbtr,
stop in and fill out an entry , .. a decorated 2-layer
c•ire to 5 lucky people ••ch month!
'£.~L I DO CENTE R
3433 VIA LIDO 'NEWPORT BEACH 673·6360
I,
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save on wonder buys durinq our qreat Auqust sale
MASTERPIECE
'FUR SALE!
desi9ner fur coats!
natural mink jackets!
finer let-out mink capes!
even Canadian beaver jackets!
388.00
Young elegance in oyster "'hire dyed Canadian Beaver jacket", natural mink
collu AUGUST SA LE PRICE 388.00
~'l ink lavished! Black dyed broadtail processed iainb stroller coat, natural
m;ok tc;m AUGUST SALE PRICE 388.00
Our ele~ant Oaroness cape '"ith opulent soft lines in natUial pearl or pastel
m;ok AUGUST SALE PRICE 388.00
lull length natural mink coats
999.00
[very pelt prime, densely furred, silken and sparkling '\Vith. natural
t"olor. 1"hc beauty and quality of these mink coats will amaze you.
·rru!y a fantastic ''alue tbat only ~.fay C.O can offer you. Don't
miss this opportunity! Tomorrov.1 ! Save,
stroller length natural mink coats
699.00
No Dov•n Paynient-T ake L'p to }(i ~fonths to Pay
may co fur salon 47
*TI1esc furs no"'' priced lo"·cr than they usually would have
bet"n. Fur pr uJutls la.bled to sho"'• country of origin of im -
port~d fur!i
may co Miuth coast plaza, san dle90 freeway at bristol, costa mesa;
shop monday thru saturclay, 10 :00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
/'• '
388.00
999.00
546-9321,
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JODEAN HASTINGS, '42"4n1
M911Hy, Avt\llf If, 1"41 HI ,. ... ti
Surprises
Unmasked
Ready for Halloween?
If you aren't, the place to go is the ~age sale
being sponsored by, members of the Huntington Beach
Police Wives Guild.
The summer saJe will take place from 8 a.m. to
3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 24 , in Odd Fellows Hall, 226
Main St.
A feature3 iteth will be 100 first·quality, new Hal~
loween costumes for patrons who like to plan ahead.
Also available for shoppers will be assorted toys,
articles of clothing and many other items. Mrs: Stephen
Ballock, sale chainnan, has announced that pickups of
donations will be made on request.
The next meeting of the group will take place at
7:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 29, in the Boys Club of Hunt·
ington Beach. Pat Downing, executive director of the
club, will explain the functions of a boys' club.
Guild members also are sorting through their
favorite recipes to donate to the club's cookbook whicta
will be published next month. All recipes should be
rlonated to Mrs. James Mahan, chairman, or other
committee members by the end of August.
The annual membership tea will take place Sept.
28 in the home of Mrs. John Smith. All police wives
and department employes are inv;ited to atte_nd, and
additional information may be obtained by calling Mrs.
Jack Reinbolst, chairman.
UP FOR GRABS -Everything goes when members of the Hunt·
ington Beach Police Wives Guild sponsor their summer rummage
sale on Saturday, Aug. 24, in the Odd Fellows Hall. Reaching for
some of the more unusual items collected for the sale are (left
to right) Mrs. James Wehr and Mrs. Stephen Ballock, chair·
man of the event. Residents who wish to donate useful articles
may contact the chairman for pick-up.
Book Beat
Novel Reading
"The Confessional" by Georges Simenon -Ameri-
..:an novels dealinJE-"\Vith adolescents tend to be either
archly comic atiOU.t those sweet teen years or sweat
baths of psycho-sexual trauma. However, these shrewd
observations of a careful, quiet 16-year-old suffer no
extremes in the master craft of Simenon, who delicate-
ly unwraps Andre Bar just as the boy begins to awaken
from the long half·sleep of childhood. Simenon's short
psychological studies have always been worth shelf·
space.
"Hunter's Green" by Phyllis Whitney -Eve, an in-
sistent I, anticipation ascending, her heart sinking, re-
turns to Athmore where she had lived as Justin's wife,
\vhich she still is, and w h o m she had Jelt after his
brother Marc had occasioned an episode. Now Alicia
is planning to marry Justin, while she also is obviously
involved with Marc, and Eve becomes the objective of
someone who is trying to get rid of her-forever. Very
good of her kind, which is to say that girls of all ages
\vill find it toothsome.
''To Hell in a Day Coach" by Peter Lyon -A
roomette with a view, "An Exasperated Look at Amer·
ican Railroads," cites the rogues, entrepreneurs, build-
ers and also indicts their later successors, the corpo--
rate managers. While touting free enterprise, railroads
are shown to have benefited more from public grants
than any other sector of the economy in history
The author is particularly cornminatory toward the
Interstate Commerce Commission which he considers
to be little more than a captive of the railroad indus·
try. Railroad buffs, students of Americana, and any·
one else interested in this country's social and econo--
mic history will find this a nice way to go -it's a
Delegate Ret urns
Republicans
View Miami
Views of the Republican Convention in
Miami will be shared when Mrs. Hampton
Hutton speaks to members and guests of the
Huntington Harbour Republican 0Women'1
Club, Federated.
Mrs. Hutton, secretary of the executive
board of the State Central Committee and
convention delegate, also is past presjdent
and founder of the Huntington Harbour club.
All area Republican women and their
guests are invited to attend the luncheon and
meeting which will begin at 10 a .m. Wed·
nesday, August 21, in Sam's Seafood restaur·
ant.
Price of the buffet luncheon, which will
feature a hot Polynesian dish and assorted
salads, will be $2.50.
Sunday, Sept. 1, is lhe·final date for join-
ing the club according to Mrs. John Arm·
strong, membership chairman, and for every
50 members in the club, one will serve as a
representative during the convention which
will take place during November in the Ana·
heim Convention Center.
'
spirited expose. Juniors
41The Clinic" by James Kerr -"The Clinic's" a
<;crul)...swab commercial novel one incision above Frank
G. Slaughter about medical mal-practic·e in California
'vhere a Dr. Matt.hew Hatch picks up the knife faster
than you can take a temperature. Dr. Peter de Haan
joins his clinic and his first case, a youngster, is one
nf Match's casualties, followed by a woman with two
children. Kerr is a pseudonymous doctor.
Prepare for All Emergencies
The next ways and means project pla~
ned by the organization will be a block party
and old~fashioned eatout for Americanism
Day on Saturday, ~ept. 21.
Aids to a speedy recovery are demonstrated by
(left to right) Mrs. William Ziething and Mrs. !Wn·
ald Cowper, members of the Huntington Be a ch
Junior Woman's Club. Several years ago the Jun·
iors began stocking a medical aid closet which now
contains such items as a hospital bed, wheel chairs,
crutches and other items which are available to
the public free of charge for temporary use. Chair·
man of this unique community service is Mrs.
Ziething, and anyone needing the items may call
her at 847-1087.
New registrars for area Republicans in·
elude the Mmes. Glenn Richardson, 847-4127;
Robert O'Brien, 846-0072 ; Robert Wheeler,
842·1829, and Dave Mayberry, 842-1129. Dead·
line for registration is Sept. 12.
If Vehicle's Out of Line, You May Decline to Go to Dine
DEAR ANN LANDERS' Finl let'r
get one l:b.ing straight. I am not a
teenager. I'm 41 years of age and I
hold a responsible position in a bank.
My husband died five years ago and
I have been going with a · mtn wh.o
owns a fertilizer bwines. (I'm fed up
on jokes .about his business and I have
beard them all, &0 please don't come
up with ... y.)
Last night was Horace's lodge din·
ner. He belongs to ttle Moose. I got
dressed up in&' silk outfit and bad my
hair set and my nails manicured. I
even bought a hr"ocaded •boulder stole
tor the affeir,
Horace came for me a little late but
I didn't say anything. I alm01t died
wheo I saw he W.S drivina hll dump
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ANN LANDERS [i
truck. I'm not sure but I think it had
somt fertilizer in it. All be 1aid was,
"I sold the Buick and the new car
won't be here till nei:t month.''
I am not « snob but I don't think a
du.mp truck is proper transportation
for a middle·aged couple. Should I
refuse to ride in it in the ruture?
-EMBARRASSED
DEAR EM ' A damp truck 11 all
right for a trip &o the btacb, m1ybe,
but 1urel7 not to a banquet-with you
la 1 bracade41 It.Ole, yet. Tell Horace
•
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you'd prefer to t.ate the bu1 until the
aew car comes la, If It's all the same
1o him.
DEAR ANN LANDERS' I am 21
years old and the mother or a
beautiful little daughter. The father of
my child refused to marry me.
Although l WI.I hurt at first I have
come to the conclusion it WM all tor
tile best. He wa:a a bum.
I am very proud ot Rochelle and my
family and friends bow 1he has no
•
legal rather. They treat her kindly and
nothing Js ever said about it.
RecenUy J took a new job and mov-
ed to another section of town. When 1
was sh.opping in the market Saturday
a new nelghbor asked, "What does
your h.usband do?" I repUed. "The
baby's father dld not marry me . She Is
an out-of·wedlock child."
The woman'a mouth dropped open
and she yelled at the top oC her lungs,
"HOW DID IT HAPP~?" She knows
very well how it happeae<I . Why would
1be ask such a dumb question?
Pl~a.se tell me what to say to cruel
people who asi questions that are none
of th~" buainess?
-ALONE BUT PROUD
DEAR A BUT P: "Wha& does 7our
husband do?" ml«bt be a ta1tele11
que1t101 from a ca111al acqualalllnce
but lt It oM cruel. You invited the
cruel quesUon ("How did It happen?")
when you voluntttred the Information
that tbe baby's father did not marry
you.
ln the future If you are asked about
the baby's lather, sfmply aay, "He 11 1
plumber -or whatever be 11 -but
we are Uvtng apart."
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I r.,d with
interest the quote in today's column
from .a French philosopher who aaid,
"There ere no !rigid women. Only
clumsy men."
Here's another one, from a
Hungarian poet: "lf a womwi does not
get the man 9he w&nta, God help the
man she gets.''
If you f.ail to see the connectlon, l'U
pain:.: it out. Some men are clumsy
because they don't get the cooper&·
tion. And the reason they don't get the
cooperation is because the lady didn't
e:et the man she wanted. Get it?
-THE HUNGARIAN POET
DEAR POET: Are you eommenUng
or apologlzlng? Tb&W for the pearl,
Dad.
ls alcoholism a dlllease? How car.
the a1coh.ollc be treated? Is there a
cure? Read the booklet "Alcoholism -
Hope and Help," by Arm Landers.
Enclose 35 cents in coin with your re-
q.,.t and a long, stamped, ..U-od·
dnssed envelope .
Ann Landeu will be IJad to help you
with your problems. Send thom to her
tn care of the DAILY Pn.oT, enclos--
ing a stamped, aelf-addrused eo·
velope .
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MondQ, August 11t, 1968
Linda Diane Davis New
Mrs. Michael Mansolino
MRS. MICHAEL MANSOLINO
St. Andrew's Rites
Couple to Live
St. Andrt1w'1 Presbylm'-
lan ChlD'Ch w11 thfl setting
ror the double ring service
llnkin& in marriage Michael
Man10Uno and hi• bride, the
·onner Llnda Diane Davis.
The Rev. Dr. Charles
)ierenfield performed the
·fternoon nupUals for the
laughter of Mr1. Lorraine
)avi1 of Newport Beach
md the son of Mr. and Mr1.
talpb Mansolino of Tustin.
The couple will make
heir home ln Costa Mesa
ollowlng their wedding trip
o northern Caillornia.
For her wedding the bride
3elected a floor length white
taffeta gown covered with
net app1iqued with Swiss
embroidery. Hf!!' illusion
vel.llnf was attached to· a
headpiece of embroidered
flowers and seed pearls and
she held a bouquet of white
glamelias and orchids.
She was given in marri·
age by her broth«, Ronald
Davis.
Miss Pamela White was
maid of hOnor in a mru;s
green floor length gown with
a matching headpiece. She
cllITied yellow daisies.
Gowned identically were
bridesmaids, Mrs. Charles
Koistra and Miss Shelia
Trovarelli, the bridegroom's
niece.
Best man was Dennis
Deovlet of Los Angeles.
Ushers were Robert Dewar
of Westminster and Joe and
Richard F«tunato of Los
Angeles.
The reception followed in
the church hall. More than
2.00 friends and relatives
congratulated the newly-
wedJ. Circulating the guest
book was Mrs. Davis, the
bride's 1ister·!n·law.
SHUFFLING AGTIVITIES -Members and guests
of the Women's Guild of Our Lady Queen .of An-
gels Church have planned a dessert bridge and
fashion show for Wednesday, Aug . 21 in the Cameo
Shores home of their president, Mrs. William H.
Wedding
Planned
The engagement of
Evelyn Gail Howard and
Donald Eugen~ Short has
been announced by the
bride·to·be's mother, Mrs.
Helen Maciejewski of Costa
Mesa.
Parents of the
bridegroom~lect are Mr.
and Mrs. Oren W. Short of
Adel, Iowa. He is a graduate
of Amphitheater H i g h
Scho<>1 in Tucson, and is
serving in the U.S. Marine
Corps. Miss Howard is a
'graduate of Costa Mesa
High School.
EVELYN HOWARD
Brid•t~b•
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• • picture:
peeks:
• ~y M-p• • • • • ••
Fresh from stardom In the
TV series "Please Doo'l Eat
The Daisies" plus the tJtle
role in Walt Disney's "Tbe
Shaggy Dog", comes veteran
screen actor Lord Nelson in a
co-starring role in the new
movie WI t b Six You Get
Egg:roll.
This camera-wise char·
acter t a k e s the par.I of a
sheepdog, who is buddy-com-
panion to ttiree boys playing
roles as sons or Doris Day,
who .appears as a
sophisticated widow. Lord
Nelson's romantic opposite in
With Six You Get Eggroll is a
pcodle, who belongs to
Barbaria Hershey. She is the
daughter of Brian Keith, a
widower who falls for Doris.
Rambo. Getting in practice for the bridge are (left
to right) Mrs. Rambo, Mrs. John Kehoe, and Mrs.
John L. Connell while Mrs. E . R. McCoy models
one of the fashions.
Their plans to get married
run somewtiat askew when the
couple's various and sundry
youngsters get in vo 1 v ed !
Those two pets turn out to
help a heap, believe it or not.
Guild Readies
Summer
An interlude in a summer
of boating and vacation will
be the annual dessert bridge
and fashion show sponsored
by the Women's Guild of
Our Lady Queen oJ Angels
Church.
The party is scheduled for
Wednesday, Aug. 21 at noon
in the home of Mrs. William
H. Rambo of Cameo Shores.
Lorraine Sutherland's col-
lection of fashions, modeled
by members of the guild,
will entertain guests during
dessert and coffee. as well
Event
as provide a preview of
fashions for the coming '"IHAGG'f' GOO' STAI
season. Bridge fans will
compete !or prizes during But not that simply, though.
the remainder of the af· There is many a slip 'twixt
ternoon. the lip and the altar. Wait un-
Mrs. Rambo, who is serv· til you see the poor man. clad
ing as guild president for a only in · undens-horts, being
second term, is chairman of chased by a hippie motoroade.
the summer party. She is with his very own wife among
being assisted by the Mmes. them. All this in a. lau.gh-
C. W. Elliot, John L. Con· loaded film coming next to
nell, L. J. Finley, John the Udo.
Kehoe, Edgar J. Carpenter,
Burton J . Lowe, A. M.
Coker, Elton R. McCoy and
G. H. Kuhl. In Costa Mesa
The former Mils Davis is
a graduate of Glendale Col·
lege and received her BA'
and MA from the University
of CaWornia, Santa Bar·
bara. Her husband received
his MS from the University
of Southern California. Both
are lHCb.inl-
An October wedding in the
First Baptist Church of
Costa Mesa has been plan-
ned. Fare Feeds Orphans
Proceeds from the event
win benefit ttie guild's
chair,ties.
Kramer-Anderson Vows
Recited • 1n
RUTH BRYANT-Beauty Consultant
pro1ont1
MHLI NORMAN COSMITICS
CALL FOR A,,OINTMENT
For cemplimentary color&: ma~•-up anely1i1 •..
646-4026
Brin& .Ad for Glft with 1ppointmenl
HJ I. 17 .. St., C-M-
Jtwelry I: Bout.IQUt Itt.m.s
,
Afternoon
VISIT US
Before
tho
Stork
Visits
You
For Yo11r
Co'"pl•t.
Mato111ity
WarJrabo at
raato11•!.la
prlcet , ..
CATHY'S
• • •
MA TERN I TY SHOP
M.,. C.......-11t I . 17tlt St.
C.1t. .... ..., •• , ••
let us copy
your favorite
old picture ...
Preserve fond memories
for all the family ••. let us
make fine copies to share
with them now.
SALEI
LAST 12 DAYSI
only 395
5,1 copy of plct1,1r•
In 9ood cor1ditio11
II JlttvN Ito 1;"'-'"· ltl• eddl·
llofltt ell•'9•• ler N•lotetion -
nc>• ••l•·""oed, M l Yevr 011,. ln•I ,1,,1,1 .. ,.tur11ff 1,1nheu1104.
'"•"• 1•2·lJl I bt. 211
P'l!ot•f''Pll Stwdio Id Floor
TOPS Club
Buffums' introducee
the La Habra Cut
Our silky swinger loves to shine 'n wave
wherever you go, Only a.•. And,
when you cane in for your la ~abra (01
any other style), receiY8 a canplimenla!y
5.50 Restor hair cmditioning treatment!
Come soon.
Beauty Studio, all stores oxcept llasina
Buffums·
Newport'#. I Fuhion l1l•nd Newport Ce.tor
IM-2200
The Pink Jun1le ts based on
the novel "Snake Water" b,Y
Alan Williams. Filled with .ac-
tion and suspensa, viewers
will enjoy plenty of comedy
si·tuatiOM as Berlin-born :WJss
Renzi makes her Hollywood
film debut.
Hammerhead leaves the
Lido tomorrow evening after
ir.troduclng a brand new es·
pionage agt,nt-Charles Hood-to
the local film fans. He
operates in the highly ac·
ceptable James Bond manner.
Yoar, Mlk: And Our1 takes
its leave of the Mesa tomot·
raw eve,. when Henry Fonda
and lAJcille Ball pack up their
brood5 and hit th< road.
There are a lot or people
who love to see the mmes.
But their e~ning schedules
are 10 filled ~ social,
busine11 and home-making .af-
fairs that they are tempted to
forego the enjoyment of the
films. That's \\fly Me g a
Matlneet are 50 very popular.
Take a mid-week break in the
atternom and see a lood mow
at the Mesa.
FREE PASSES ID !ht Lido
or Mesa wm be mailed today
to Joaimt Hatarlck, 2108
Sterling, Costa Mesa, G. J,
8Hman, 4371 Seton Rd.,
Newport Beach, Glad71 Quin-
cy, 1700 Miramar Dr., Balboa
and J. E. P7lo, 613 Poppy,
Corona del Mar.
Don't let the summer lltlort.s
of cash It.op you ftom seeing
one of ttie fine fi1ml at the
~do or the Mesa. For instant
idmiMion to the movJa show
your Master Char&e C&rd or
your Bankamerlcard.
I
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Ho roscope
. ' ' ·~ ~ , ' ' ',. .
ffonday, Au9111t 19, 1968.
Winter
... • I.
Pisces: Accent on Children Wedding
Planned
MRS. JOHN ROBERT WEBER
August Nuptials
Puerto Vallarta
Honeymoon Site
Honeymooning in Puerto
Vallarta are newly married
John Robert \Veber and his
bride, t.He former Rosalind
Jane RiChards.
They will make their first
home on Balboa Island upon
their return from Mexico.
The Rev. Dr. Gharles
Dierenfield performed the
morning nuptials for the
daughter or Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Richard• of
Newport Beach and the son
of Mrs. Francis Kelter of
Corona del Mar and late Mr.
Paul Weber.
For the double r in g
ceremony the bride selected
a silk organza cage dress
with trimmed yoke. Her
cathedral length i I I us i o n
mantilla was bordered with
chantilly lace which also
adorned her sleeves and
hemline. A crown of chan-
tilly leaves and tiny pearls
caught the mantilla.
The new bride carried a
cascade of white roses.
Miss Merilee Hannahs of
Newport Beach was maid of
honor in a pink crepe chiffon
floor length gow n trimmed
in pink satin. 11er headpiece
featured clusters of crepe
rosettes and gathered il-
lusion veiling. She held a
cascade of n1iniature while
carnations. pink sweetheart
roses and pink b ab y ' s
breath.
Gowned identically \\'ere
bridesmaids Mrs. V a n
Johnson of Newport Beach
and the Misses Sally Weber.
the bridegroom 's sister. and
Teri Caspary of
Westchester.
Best man was Michael
Metz of Balboa. Ushering
the guests to their seats
were Pat Pohl of Newport
Beach; Scott Gatzke, Costa
Mesa; Randy Metzger and
Greg Marlow, both of
Balboa.
The church hall was the
setting for the reception at-
tended by 200 well-wishers.
Special guest was Mrs. A. L.
\Veber of Claremont, the
bridegroom's grandmother.
Circulating the guest book
were Mr. and Mrs, Carl
Bat 11er of Costa Mesa. the
bride's cousins.
The new Mrs. Weber and
her husband are graduates
of California State College
at Long Beach where they
will continue in the fall for
their teaching credentials.
TUES DAY
AUGUST 20
By SYDNEY OMARR
1\RIES (March 21 ·April
19): Individual from past
could make appearance.
Bui1d on solid base. Realize
that futu~ requires
preparmion. Give atten1ion
to home, property interests.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20): You can't leave
something before you have
arrived. Thlnk. ~1essage
becomes clear by tonight.
GE!\1lNI (~lay 21-June
20): The money you seek or
ask about comes only when
you h&'\fe conviction
necessary to be a pioneer.
Think. analyze. Cheap way
provides inferior results.
Way of principle resuUs in
quality.
CANCER (June 21·July
22): Your intuitive feelings
apt to prove reliable. Know
this -have inner con·
fidence. Take initiative.
Give special attention to
personal u;>pearance.
LEO (July 23-Aug.22):
Look beyond tbe obvious.
What you need is available.
But a more subtle approach
appears necessary. Take
time to experiment, in·
vestigate. Accent today is
on cUscreet inquiry.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 2'll :
Desires come to forefront.
What you w.ant requires
coopero.tion of allies. Know
this -turn on charm. You
are capable despite modest
protestia.tions -go to it.
LIBRA (Sept. 2J.Oct. 2'l l:
Accent on ambitions. Ideas
come forth. Ohoose ttie best.
Cooperate in community
projects. Prestige rises. You
are asked to lead the way -
do so. Set fine example.
SC.VRP IO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21): Keep eommunication
lines open. May be
necessary to put intentions,
pl£11s on p<iper. Be receptive
and patient. Let others state
tlleir aims -then respond
accordingly.
SAGl'ITARllJS (Nov. 2'l·
Dec. 21): Your way of ex-
pressing thoughts is
sput.J..ighted. Making ideas
crystal clear may be d.if·
flcuM for you . Don't feel
everything must be ac·
oomplished at once. Take it
easy.
Presbyterian Rites
•
Doria Chenoweth Weds
Traveling to Lake Ar·
rowhead are Mr. and Mrs.
\ViWam Francis Cali follow-
ing their evening \vedding. in
St. Andrews Pr~byterian
Church.
The former Doria Lee
Chenoweth , daughter of N"..r.
and Mrs. Henry B .
Chenoweth of N e w po r t
Beach, was given in mar·
riage by her father.
The Rev. Dr. Olarles
Dierenfield presided at the
double ring ceremony.
A candlelight satin fitted
floor length gown bordered
by wide bands of alencon
lace at the neckline, sleeves
and hem \\'as chosen by the
bride. Her cathedral train,
bordered in the same lace,
fell from her shoulders. A
pearl and crystal crown held
the three -tiered bouffant
veil.
Her bouquet was formed
of a cascade of White carna-
tions, baby's breath and a
single rosebud, which she
presented to her mother
before the recessional.
A cascade of pink and
la vender carnations was
carried by maid of honor
Miss Dianne Chenoweth of
Newport. the bride's sister.
She wore a floor length chii·
fon gown with flowing
panels and tucked bodice, rn
shades of pink deepening to
rose.
Atlired in fiesta p i n k re·
embroidered lace f I o o r
length dresses trimmed in
satin were bridesmaids Mrs.
Stephen B. Chenoweth £rom
Phoenix, the bride's 5ister·
in-law: Miss Mary Brewer
of Dallas, and Miss Heidi
Revolution
Discussed
•
-.
MRS. WILLIAM FRANCIS CALL
August Bride
I lf'
Mllltr Phor•
West of Palos Verdes Robert Ladd, sister of the
Estates, tlte bride's cousin. bridegroom; Mr. and Mrs.
The benedict, son of Mr. Clarence E. Severson,
and Mrs. Haskell Call of ·grandparents of the bride;
Fairfield, a.sked Duane Fair W.r. and Mrs. Donald B.
Jr. to be his best man. West, ttie bride's aunt and
Ushers were Chenoweth, uncle, and Mrs. Mark Baum
l\.1ichael Teeple, Michael of Idaho Falls, Idaho, the
Donovan and Stanley Curbo. bride's aunt.
A reception in the church The benedict is stationed
was attended by 100 guests, \vith the U.S. Marine Corps
--•p wpwps12 M&QM•M• l
Change and Revoluti on in Locluding special guests at Camp Pendleton. His
the Church will be the cen· Mrs. Gary Turner of Santa bride was graduated from
tral topic of Orange County Ana. the bridegroom's Newport Harbor High
Catholic Alumni Club when sister; \Valter B. Miller. the School and Orange Coast
it meets \Vednesday, Aug. 21 bride's godfather; Mrs. College.
•,
What's Doing at 7:30 p.m. ,;:=====================.II Meeting in Fullerton, the
group will be led in
discussion by the Rev. Tim
Kennedy, assist.ant pastor of
St. Juliana's Church.
MARY DAY, 6-42-4321
The discussion is open to TOOAY FRIDAY
Hunrlftll.., ••ach TOl"5 l"ound Founllln Vi1i.v Huls tit H!bbi.i Single Catholic Students, COJ-l"l:'"..::Ctt.,:l~n:~1;.; PC'h~Pltr •• :i:!n c~~!c~ 1~e~·~•.!lon crnter, Hun· lege graduates or regi6tered
, ... , Ad•llM• -Minim v1e10 H19n "'"'"'"'' Frld•v Lun<""n Club_ no nw·ses. Further information k;;"~5 1=:.~~· uihttrs _ Har~r wo,!'11..V,.""11~~~1~1~:~':'~-_ aoii is available by calllng Miss ~I. Cotlt Mt11, 1:3CI P.m. Schoal, G1raen Grove, I p,m. Patty M:'eehan at 879.3772,
s1-r11119 t 011n Tol"s c111b.-smnh ir~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:;=~~==~=i!I eiementarv School, Huntlnv•Dn Beien,
1:3CI p.m.
OY111111t1rs A11111wm0V1 -ANlerson
k""°I, Westmlntler, I P.m.
H•r-lllft (r..phlr, Sw"I Adtllnn
-Ccl'"e Park khool. I 11,m.
TllESDAY
C11l1 M.U Stnlor Clll111>1 -Com· munl!Y JIKrttllDll Cet1~r, Orante
County Fa!rtroul!Cl1, 11 t .m. Au~lh•rY II 11rr1ck1 lU,, Vtltr1n1
of World Wlr I -Amtrlc...n lNIOI"
Htll, Cotla Mest, ' 11.m. Tw..,tltttl CHtturv Cl\ltl of H11nnn1t..,
Bttdl -ltkt P1rt. Clubhc!Jte, 1:>0
o.m. °"""'-" """°"'-' -L.Huna Hlll1, L1!11,1rt wcrld, Ckibl>Du•t ,, t
"·S:ivor S1nd1 JU, HtllYt Dlutolll•ri ct
oeMtn w11t -L!Kt!IOI" 11 , ... ,uablt! bv
ttlllllt Mrs.. JKll Wl!IOll, $41-U1', I
P.;0....,11•1 AlfllHI" i. l111tn1111 .... 1
1 .. 11te""°""' of l!IK"1UI W.,,.tn,
Local uni.11 441 -Union H1U, !.Intl
..,,,~.I P.m. Htl'bor Clll l'ltl' of H..UU.h -Loxa-
llon 11 1v11l•blir bl' a!ttflt Mri. Jtck
(l'lflPml"· 5'9-111', I P.m.
""'"'"' C..,b HI of Latvn• Bttc!I -Elll:I LPdtt, I 11.m. Mot• l"""'H ~ -Odd Fetloiws
Htll, Collt Mev, I fl.m
Wl!ONl!SllAY
Alftlrtc..i llfllMH W-'f Au.tl ...
!loll -lOClllon •• aY1lltblt bll c•l!lnt
Mri. O..klnt Cran!n, s:w-tinn. ' p,m. H11lltlnttotl BtKll TO"'S StMll SHll
-Hunl!Mlon !ltadl Hltlll Sc:l'lool, 1
'"'TOH JM llrt111 -ICUl¥b"fllll:•
Sc!'lllCI. Codt Mtst, 1 fl m.
G-!tn Al!t....,_ -lie.tr SITttl
ScflcOI, Co.fl Mftl', t 1.m.
THUllDAY
TO'"' ...... Hunt11111t11 lltMll -
CDml"T11l"rtv Mtlhccll1t c11urc11, t ;)O
''';ftt, MeM lltnn' '""" Hwr -C•I• MeM \.lbr•"• 10~• 1.m. T ....... y .. TO'"S CM of W""""'9t«
-Flflln Sdlool, 1 '·'"· TD'"S Wlhl Wik""" -(lrcll View
Sc""°I. Hun""'"°"' h1f;fl, 1 11.m,
TOP"S ~ MHen -'°'""' kl\ool,
"""11"''°" !lttch. 1 "·"'· Amttk"' Ulfln A111ll'" 'If ~
ktO -Lftlal> Hilt. t "-"'·
The DAILY PILOT
Coven Boati ng
Bert in Wu t
SL~~·~
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH 64'1·1380
-'\ 7 ~~
~"'f r ,.7' .
Duart's Soft Per man ents
1/2 Pric e Special
Compt1+1
with
cul,
1tyl1 ... ...
" The sent beauty or curls that
last can be yours now
with special savings.
$20.00 vo lue, now
17 .SO value, now
$10.00"
8.75*
•Complete with 1tyle
•nd shapin9 by stu·
dia •ty/ilt 28.00
naw $1'4.00
Beauty
Salon,
601
Phone:
Hunting.
ton
Beach:
892-3331
Newport
714,
644·1212
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jan. 19): Certain conl·
mitments came home to
roost. Now Ls time to decide.
Act in forthright manaer.
You are being observed. lf
you keep promises, response
is definitely in your favor.
AQIJARllJS (Jan. 20·Feb.
18): Finish what you start.
Give attention to basic
chores. Some confide pro·
blems. Be sy.mpathetic -
but don't involve yourself in
complicated situation .
Message clear by tonight.
PISCES (Feb. 19·March
2:0): A~ent on children.
creative hobbies. S t r i v e
toward origiDality. Express
}'QUI'Self. Help thooe who de·
pend UPofl you . Key is to be
analytical. Piece together
bit6 of information.
The betrothal of Elizabeth
Grey Northrldge and Lt.
(jg) Chari,. Walter Supple
has been announced by the
mother of the bride·to·be,
Mrs . David Colby
Northridge of N e w p o r t
Beach.
Mlss Northrfdge, also the
daughter of the late Mr.
Northridge, is a senior at
Mount St. Mary's College in
Brentwood.
Her fiance , son of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Supple of Los
Angeles, is a graduate of
Loyola University in Los
Angeles and is serving in
the U. S. Coast Guard.
ELIZABETH
NORTH RIDG E
December Rites
A Dec. 21 wedding in Our
Lady Queen of Angels
Catholi'c Church of Newport
Beach has been planned.
Is Your Business Conducted Under A
FICTITIOUS
FIRM NAME?
IF SO IT IS .MANDATORY UNDER THE LAWS OF CALI·
FORNIA THAT THE FOLLOWING REQUIREMENTS OF
THE CALIFORNIA CIVIL CODE BE COMPLIED WITH:
LAW ON PUBLICATION OF CERTIFICATES
OF BUSINESS, FICTITIOUS FIRM NAME
(Clvll Cod• Section 246UB-69l
Sec. 2466.-Except 11 otherwise provided in the next
aectian every person transacting business in this State under
a fictitious n1me and ewry p1rtnership tr1ns1cting business
In this State under a fictitious name, or a de1ign1tlan nat
showing the name of the person interested 11 partner In
such business, must flit with the clerk of the county In
wh ich his or Its principal pl1ce of business is situated, •
certificate subscribed and acknowled~ed in the manner pro-
vided in Section 2468 of the Civil Cod•, stating the name
In full •nd th• plac• of resldenc• af such person and stating
the name in full of all th• members of such partn•r1hlp
ind th•lr places of resid•nce.
Such subscrlb9d and acknowledged certificate must be
published subsequer.t to the fil ing thereof with the county
clerk pursuant to Government Code Sectlan 6064, in a new ..
paper published In the county, if there be one, and if there
be none in such county, then in a newspaper In an adjoining
county. An affidavit ahowinq the publication of such c1rtifi·
cate a1 In this aedlon provided shall be filed with the county
clerk within 30 days after the campletion of such publication,
but in no •vent shall such publlcatlon be made prior to the
fllin~ of such certificate with the county clerk.
2468. -The certificate filed with the clerk 1s provided
In section twenty-four hundred ind sixty-six must be signed
by the persan therein referred to, or by the partners, 1s the
case may be, and acknowledged before some officer, author·
lied to take the acknowledgement of conveyances of real
pranerty . , .. Where a business Is hereafter commenced by •
Mrsan under a flctltio,us name or a partnership Is hereafter
formed, the certificate mu st be filed and the publication
d11tsiqnated In that sectian must be made within one month
after the commencement of such business, or after the forma-
tion of the p1rtnershlp, or within one month from the time
desf~nated in the 1greement of its members far the com·
mencement of the partnership. Where the business has been
heretofore conducted under a fictitious name or where
the partnership has been heretafore formed, the certificate
must be filed and the publication made within six months
aft11r the passage of this act. Na person dalng busin11ss under
a fictitious name or his 1sslgnee ar assign .. , nor any per·
son doing business as partners contrary to the provisions
of this article, or their asslgnH or assignus, shall maint1in
Jn the courts of the State of California.
Sec. 2469-0n EVERY change fn the member1 of a part•
nershlp transacting business In this state under a fictitious
n1me or a deslgnatian which does not show the name of
the persons interested as partners In Its business ••.• 1 new
certificate must be filed with the County Cl•rk, and a new
publication made 11 required by this articl. on the formation
of such pa rtnership.
If you hive neglectlld this procedure, you should r111i1e that
the n1me of you r firm 11 not protected and that you are not
entitled to maintain suits for collection, or for other purposes,
any adlon upon or on account of any contr1ct or contracts
their p1rtnershlp n1me, In any court of this state untll the
certificate has been fifed 1nd the publication hat bffn made
11 herein required. .
Take care of this Important matter now, by having the
DAILY PILOT, 1n •djudlcated legal newspaper for Orange
County ind distributed In COSTA MESA, FOUNTAIN
VALLEY, HUNTINGTON BEACH, LAGUNA BEACH, SEAL
BEACH, NEWPORT BEACH, WESTMINSTER, publish your
qrtfflcate, The cost Is small but the flllng and publication It
something which should not be overlooked.
Forms for Fictitious Firm Names and Certificate of Abandonment of Flcfl.
tlous Firm Names can be obtained FREE from any of the DAILY PILOT
offices shown below:
330 W11t Bay SlrMI, Cosio MOii 92627
2211 West Balboa Boulevard, Newport Be1ch 92660
309 Sth Street, Huntlngtan Beach 92646
222 Forest Avenue, Laguna Beach 92651
BE SURE TO CONSULT OUR
LEGAL ADVERTISING DEPT. AT
DAILY PILOT
642-4321
The Great Orange Coast's
No. 1 Pape r!
Read ership: You Spell it A-n-n L-a-n-d -e-r-s
• , ..
•
•
J 8 DAILY PllOT
MISADV ENTURE -Roddy McDowell, above,
stars on "Comedy Playhouse" tonight in color at
9 on Channel 4. A series of comic misadventures
result when a daffy research scientist makes a
number of errors in his calculations leading to near
disaster.
TELEVISION VIEWS
'The Scientist'
Debuts Nov . 29
By ROB ERT MUS EL
NEW YO RK (UPI -The children ga l he red
outside their father's place of work and shouted:
"Did you fi nd it yet, Daddy?"
A CHARMI NG domestic scen e except that the
place of \Vork was the Harvard Biological Labora-
LOry and on the answer to the childish question de-
pended some of the most important work on which
science is now engaged anywhere.
HDaddy" -Dr. Walter Gilbert, 34, a brilliant
theoretical physicist -was leading one ol the
teams searching in livi ng cells fo r signs of a "re--
presser." If thjs existed and could be isolated it
might be invalauble in controlling some of the
harmful characteristics passed on by heredity, per-
haps even lead to an attack on those vi.ruses be-
lieved to cause cancers.
HIS THR E E CHILDREN, lhe eldest nine,
kne\v only that Dr. Gilbert came home tired every
night and he could no t wait to gel back to the lab--
oratory because he \vas looki ng for something ter-
ri bly important. If he found it he might have more
tim e to play with them; that was th eir interest.
The dramatic search for the "represser" -and
the moment of qualified triumph-came as a bonus
lo Ernest Pendrell, one of the more imaginative
of our documentary producers. whose close-up
study of "The Scientist" will have its first show-
ing on ABC-TV Friday Nov . 29.
HIS OR IGINAL intention was to fil m the com-
munity of intellect dra\vn to Harvard by the pres-
ence of Nobel Prize wi nner J ames Watson who,
with two colleagues. solved one of nature's inner-
most secrets, the shape of life itself. This is the
"double helix''. the giant, double-stranded . spiral
molecule which has been passing on the gen tic
code for all living things from father, to son , gen-
eration to generation, eon to eon.
Pendrell wanted to show the scientists around
\Vatson, and the great man himsel!, as hwnan be-
lngs. How did they go about their resea rch, what
did they do when the day's work was done? If he
had any nagging doubts that all this might be too
]ofty and high-principled to make good TV view·
lng they disappeared in the first few days.
#'THE SCIE NTIF IC community is the same as
any other,·· PendreJJ said as he pieced the program
together at the ABC laboratories. "It 's the same
jungle. They have the same problems that people
have any\vhere. The competition is just as tough
except that in this case the rivals are arguing and
. contesting over the best way to bring about more
understanding of our worl d. The academic calm
belived to exist in ivory towers is absolute non-
sense. a sham."
Pendrell \Vas permitted to take his cameras
everywhere. He filmed \Vatson, who is 40 and mar-
ried to a pretty girl half his age. racing about with
his characteristic half-run. listening. advising. en-
couraging bu t permitting Gilbert and the 27-year-
old leader of the other team in the represser hunt,
Dr. ~1ark Ptashne. to follow their ow n hunches. He
looked in on champagne parties, eavesdropped in
homes. ·
D e tatais t he Menace
• -....
PEANUTS
•· -
DR. KILDARE
&CAPt.e COLE. TMatWE. te H~ ill£
81..AlR l'IOSPITAL MOBILE ~IT tSTAFF GM'llVf. •••
1F llif COPS COME
DONN Tl4AT ROAD, I
DON'T WAl<IT TO HfAA DW,~
/>.MY QIJE OF 't'otJ 6~EATHllll6!
GORDO
ly Charles M. Schull
' J-06611<6 IS IN{ -rn1N6 !
ly K•11 lald
1 WE'~ W ... STING TIM! ~Rf . LE-T'S I 601' $K Q UGS IN Tl415
6Ulr<I -tN006H FOR. YOU
ANll llf™!'A,'r ........... il HEM> ttita<' 10 THe MAIN
HlfHWA'I.
ly Gus Aniala
--~~~--~--. .,...~------~--•i tt-l TAAi
JUDGE PARKER
WHAT TI ME WIU SM\ PRIVEK k PICKING US UP FOlt L4i P11r01Elt, ~L.A.N?
MOON MULLINS
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTI AND JEF'
:VTT, WHPii
•\AKES PEOPLE
FALL. IN
L.OVE?
WELL.,l'IRST,
Pll\"SICAL.
ATTRACTION ..
LOOKS!
~ISS PEACH
,,...~
pi,oi
' ()o I
CJ " "
~ •• 'THATS FINE ~ I MAP AM
INTffE5T'IN6 TA.LK WT'1lf SMEIU
lHIS lo\OltNIN6! I P'IOMI~ ME«
I WOlll PM"r SAY A.N'YTWIMG 'R) ¥OI
•• llUT I FRI.I ~LP~
J ,
I < 151.}T rrf.s , CflSE, % TRUI. RIJSl"!'. &T'T!:R: .SIT
't Re.ALI.'/ Al-JD J..l$T.EN1
111•1>!
ly Harald Le Doux
ly Ferd Joh11son
ly Tom K. Ryan
I~ Al _ Smith
J:TOoK A
~CUT 1'11ROU61\ T~CrTYDUMP!
ly Mell
'·
I
MONDAY
AUGUST 11
1:00 D Huntlflf·lrl11Uer l.,.rt (C) (301
II StM Allt11 Shew: (C) (90)
Goitl11y C.lmbrid11. 1ctat Ed B111ty,
1011ptr111 Jay1 P. Mor1111, 1n4
Tiit Moth1n of lnl'tnlion 1utst.
0 Sil O'atct Morie: (C) "CW
8'y lw 1 H111&ill(' (wutern} '59-
frtd M1cMurr1r. M1pl1 H1yu. m Mtrilt hr (C) (30)
OJ W Muttne11 (30)
fl} tn•rt Ntwl
Cll hltr Sublime
1:30 119 (j) NFL focl11: ICJ {! hr)
Th. "?hic110 Be1r1 vs. Tht Qreen
Bay Pickers 11 Mitw111ke1 County
St1cli11111. R.y Stott calls tht pl11·
·bJ·pl1y 11\d l'1ul Christmt n aeM.t
H 1n1tytl.
II UllC Nt'ft S.rrict (C) (Ml)
0 n. '"°"' stew (C) (30)
.... f•tk (30)
tD Mdtllt'1 Jlavy (30)
GD Scilnm lteporttr: "Powt1 101
tlit Mot111 Ship." Scienu R1porttr
Johll Fltcll hoth 1 pro1r1m tllm·
lnlnr th• power behind th• Apollo
ap1t1curt.
Ill NttidM M (C)
1:00 a ' r,.., t30l . m I lM Liq (30)
llJ Ciilllcat'1 IUN (301 ., ........ 11 ..-(C) ., ..... .......
7:50 b Tht MonU..: (C) (30} ''Somt
lli1 It Lukew11m." D1vy is per·
tu1dtd by his sidekicks to dress
Up I~• I fitl lo make th• lfOUP
1!i1ibl1 to 1nt1r • rock ind ro!I
contest 1pon.,rtd by 1 radio st•·
tion. D•n• Mutin rutsb. (II)
0 'old111 VtY11t: (C) (30) "Mor·
oc.eo." Tonithl'1 hillh~aht ls 1
rarely plloto111phtd d1ntin1 ptr·
lorm1nc1 by the bl11e·skinntd Btr·
b1r peopl1.
0 @(}) CowboJ ht Afritl: (C)
(60) '1he Quiet Death." A nat!v1
l11dtr threatens lo burn the Hayes·
Sincl1ir 11me 11nth when it Is
quuantined for sl1epin1 sickness,
(R)
ran1n • Mal acddent fOf UM 1111-
b11t1ne1 t!Mlt t1rri• hit tbtre.
Roddy McDowt ll, 1.Jn6a Dfl, .loft
Sll111k 11\d M;chMI air11t111 l'*t-
tl)
ID HtlidiJ (C) (30)
fm h lltt l'lwtr. "Th• MtcM11lu ~I Co11'¥#1t1o'I-" A flilllll ot eon·
t.trnld tlltfts dl$GUUU the 111·
ter111I workincs ol 1 PD!ltlc.ll con·
Vfiltion. Tiit)' u.mlnt th• d1lkt·
dtt of d1l1pt1 M1tln1. Ille dlJ·
to·d•J puls• of th• conl'tntlon. 1nd
Ille thtckin1 of de!e11t1 trtd1ntl4!L
GI M11tlu 1 E.str11!1• Mut11rt
t.JO II 9 CiJ l UC'J Shw. (C) {30)
Guat Ceor11 Burns, 1ppu1ill1 1t
hlmWI, l1m1nts th1! 1 com1dit1111t
•cld!td enourh to be 1 wtisf1t1011
p1rtnt1 101 flis uniqu1 br111d ot
flumor ii h1rd to linHnd tMn
ht mHU Lucy. J1tk Btnny's l'Clk:I
It hu1d In 1 bri•I teltphont llOJI"
vtr11tion. (R)
Q (j}J CIJ Ptyton Pltu: (C) (30)
Rocfntr tx.ptrienus senu tion In his
!land; !ht Riv. Winter nerltcb 111•
con1r111tion: JHI rtfu11t 1dvlet
fnim Or. Rwi.
m n. ••e• t61lJ
fI!) NET .l.urilt!: "NrvW' • Bick·
w11d Step." A prolllt of mtdi1
mo1ul l01d Thomson of fletl strltl
Thi film dowmtnb the apmd of
Roy Thomaon'1 publishln1 1mplr1
lrom En1l1Bd to th• U.S. Comment·
int Oft Thomaon 111 M1rsh1ll Mi>
Luhtn, Prim• Ministtr W1110n, ex·
Czac:h president Antonin Howtny,
et1mp1tit0rs 111d U10Ci1tea. (R)
QJh¥1ttt ......
i•oo D QI! lil"" ,....., !Cl !IOl
Howard's mother remarries tnd
move1 tw'f, 10 How1rd nniodell
thtir home Into 1 NdMJ6r 1111d
1nd tril& le throw • mnr1111 Pt~ .
(R)
Ill @ CI) I ... (C) (60) ""'· Wl111L" In k1pulco. 1 aomt'llltllt
wtterbrelned female 111nt }o!n1
Roointon i nd Scott Oii tn lfli1n•
ment. Arlen• Golonltt tu•sb. (II)
0 ,..,. hlMll ,.... (C) (etJll
0 @(]) Tiit Ii& Vtlltr. (C) {60)
''C°uilly!" Janod riskl his lift try·
inz to Sirve 1 client. Convld.ed
murderer Jell Bowden est1p11 cus-
tGdy and tlkes refu11 in 1 ciowded
sdlool. Ja1rod. un1rmtd, tnlm tht
buildin1 and tries to talk him lnte
surrendtrin1. Norman Alden 1utm.
(R)
0 Stult A1111t (60)
m Jact lllh1t111 Nm (C) (60)
@m T1.tro ,unililr
fJ Mlllio11 $ Morit: (C) "Cood
Mom!n1, Mill Dtv..-(d11m1) '55
-Jtnnifer Jones, Robert Sl1dl. 10:30 ~ 9 (jJ C~nP10kl: (CJ (60) St-rie.s .stamne: Jim Ames.s ind Am•n· m Trutll w toMeqvenc.n (C} (30) da Blsk1. (R)
IE Perry Mnon (60) m N~!: (C) (JO) Bin .lohnL
fll) M1-lftf Tillnp 'row: (C) "Dutch
Bulbs." Th1lau1 Cruso 1xpl1ins
how lo hrinr popul1r outdoor bulbs
inside. Tiie Plant lody damonstra\es
how lo pot d1ffodils, hyacinllls. 1nd
early tulips.
ti) c.tlticet ' C.llCioMs
fD So ifl Amtriu: (C) '1he SaJ.
ual Rebellion." 01. John Bwtoll
out!lnu the slepi In saiual dtv•I·
opment. and Points out litnillunl
eonclu1io111 1boul !ht dlYelopflltnt
of th1 personality.
11:00 0 T1le llHI Ho11r Nm: tc) (30)
Tom llniUw. l.'00 D n. Ch111pion1: (CJ (60) '1h11
Hiltlt Peoplt." Tht Ch1mpions i11·1 1J TU Wlllmtn (30)
vesti1rt1 111 Enrttsh Lord 111d his wit,hcr1tt·pr1elicin1 wll1 who 111 0 Hin : (CJ (30) Bad1r W1 rd.
suspecttd of IJ}in1 lo upslt Iha O Mnle: "An.v;tl l ab(' (drtmt)
m11•et on u1111ium. Trrtnet Alex· '61-Mtrttdes McClmbridte, Geor1•
andtl ind Adrienne Corri 1111st. Homillon, .!Gin BlGndtl!.
O Morit: "'Siity O'Rourk1" ('d·
venturi) '4>-A1111 ltdd. Gil! llus·
xii.
m M•lll tC) (30)
m ln Ct-1111 (C) (60)
m lal!lbtw QUiit: Softts of lrlVll •11 l11tu1td ts Sonny Tt rry on111:30 I.I Etw111 O'a.d: h,ort: (C) ~
harmonica i nd Brownie MtGhet on Jerry OunphJ.
ruit1r )Gin ho9t l'ete See111.
Ill LI Pnlllbl4t O Mowit: "Cll 11111" (dr11na) ''4-
SuS1r11n1 Foster, BMil K•rlotf.
l:JO II (ff.I CJ) ltlt h tr&I: (Cl 130) D (li) (I) Joer l ltbt!I sttow ('C)
"Th1t i1lif.ol·Dt1tlt Rtid." The Ger·
m1n1 UM Sil Tn:iy's bnilhtr 11 bait
to c1pture .!tie . Rill. A pictur• of 12:00 1J Movie: '1lit Loni Harl'' (Id· T~oy •.nd lt11 ktd brotht1, an RAF v1nt ure) '57-Vlctor Mature, ~an1
pilot, 11 found on the bod1 of a Dorl.
Btdotrin who 1ttadttd Ille dt&ert
rt iders. The Rib tack11ttk and !ind m * "'"' (C)
C.pl. Dtl'id Tniy st1ktd OIJt in 1
min• ti1ld will! Gtfm1n soldiers
waitint in mbush. Ni•os Geor1t 11::30 m Ollter Utnits
111nt1. (R)
m Mtl't' lriffill fC) (90J ~~iH Tllutra: "Don Ju1n QuR·
m W11kl If WOtMn (C) (lO)
l:00 1!1 9111 Nit c-dy "'""u' (°fj (l<l)'~r. Biddl1's Crimt W•~•."'
12:55 fJ Mwit; "St;l Troop AtDdi;" (Id·
l'tnfllr1) '60-Mlch1tl fortlt, Shlllt
C.nil.
A dttty rese1rdi scientist becomes 1:00 O Mo'lit: CCI ''lttftlfllOOfl" (ro-
ilwolwd i11 1 ttrills ol comic mis· manu) '66 -Anthonr Stu!, llld·
1dv1ntur•. Roddy' McOowt ll st1rL 111!11 Tch11i111.
D IHI ()) ,_ ''"'' tcl tlOl 'l'fllt tlip Sidt of Fttr." ConciU·
lion. "' Sri:. Sto111 builds • Ult
•t•hlSt Olllt Oti1, t11• JUIP«I dru1•
1nd mtrrits linttr Jullt llrown, tht
IJ C.11111111nib lullttlll lktnl
0 Ntw1 (t)
onlt JHlll)ll who u n link him to th11 l:JO 1J Movil: "Onl KtlvtnlJ ffll'llt"
dtttll of Mr lftllt. 01111 h•s Jullt (romance) '31-t:velyn U}lt, .lolll
atmmlttff te 1 •11lt1ri11m ind tr· Boles.
TUESDAY
DAm lllE MOVIES
l :JO .(C) ... .,.. .......... ..,,..
(11111titll) '40 -J11111 HMf, Mlfli -llJ -Lft ... l"""l • .,_
ltthltd Todd. oi.it fl .. Witt'
(lidwM\lt .. 'J~lt M IL
11:00 e "f«NWt• JwaW" <•Mntur1>
'SO-Oon l-ill'ltJ. "WW I Ulll"
(comtdy) '39-lldit Coo9fl'.
ll::SO Q) "P1blk Enttnf' (drame) 11-
Jtmn C.t nty. ''lt11lftOI • W.
Hl(tl ,_,.. (r'O!ll•llCtl '4'-0ortl
01y.
l:JOm "Cit tM ._..(II,.,,) 'IO
-l11 P1tttr1D11, Attn Setra.
4:JO . "nit AditAtlrte II ..........
(tctvtnture) ·~ eoo,.r. W ·-• '"Hiett!" (ck•1111) 'U -ldwtrl
c. lltitlllSlll, "'"' Fec:ll. --------------~------
• JOB PRINTING
e PUBLICATIONS
• NEWSPAPERS
Ont Of Tlit Lartt1t F1ci1itl11 111 Or111t• C1u11ty
Ull WIST U.LIOA ILYD.
)
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Monday, A119u1t l'l, 1968 OAILV PILOT 17
B11t No Bu1a1aies Tryouts Set
For Comedy
.
SHARP • • If J•u'rt • •hul' .,.,.,, 11u th• bAJL't 'ILorS t .... , DI...!
A.LINE ~l•ttlfl•4 •41 Setur41y,, Mt kt • lt•ff•r 4MI, • ....... ..
fft'r• tiuyl111 ., 11111111. ~ . , 'Playboy' Invades
Television World
·Chamber · Society
Announces Slate The Huntington BeachJ;~~~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Playhouse will c o n d u c t
tryout! for its first play o1
the 1968-69 seasoo, "Sunday
ln New York," on Monday ,
Aug. 26.
By VERNON SCO'IT
'HOLLvWOOD (UPI) -
Hu&h Hefner, Ult ma1u:ine
' publhher who gave 1 ae:ry
new definitiOn to the word
"centerfold,'' ts no lonpr
content to get his mesaai•
acr<111 with the written
word or tbe nude female .
T b e pipe:-1mokln1 pro.
Prietor of Playboy mafuine
and the Playboy clubs baa
tumed !Iii attention to
televWon.
Beginning .ometime in
·October Hefner will host a
weekly fYJldicated hour-tong
variety-interview eeries titl·
ed "Playboy After Dark."
. No, there will be no bun·
oliK hopplJ!I around.
Until now He!Der has been
content to appear al a 1ue1t
.., oai.r late m&llt •how• or
J>n>PoWldini bil phl!Olophy
in hia ma1u.int. Aho he en·
Joyed frollckin& around hia
Cbica&o mansion with built-
in everything ..•
Now his personality -
which II tomewbat shy -Js
roing public.
For Ua ninth sea&on, the
Laguna Beach Ch amber
Muslc S~ety will again
present four dbtlnguJshed
chamber., enumb1es in con·
cert. The membership drive
formally &tarted Sunday.
Opening the society's 1968-
69 season on Nov. 3 will be
lhe Concentus Musicus. An
Austrian chamber orcbeatra
Negro Writer Stars
In Major Production .. There's a dramatic
c:ftange in life style for me
now that I'm into m1 40s," Hefner u.Jd from hiJ pen-By GENE HANDSAKER University J n Nashville,
tbouae pad atop his Sunset HOLLYWOOD (.o\P) -Tenn. to give the keynote
Strip club. Trade columns chronicle addres.s at the annual black
"The m•1ulne ts 15 years continuing progress for wrlten;' conference. Frank
old, and I'm takinl itock of Negroes in show bwiness: Silvera" -a star of the cur.
myself. I'm going to start Diahann Carroll, starring rent film -"said he was
enjoying myself." in the wee.kly "Julia" series impressed by my syeech on
filming for fall televisi'oa, tlhe difference ·between a "Imt&ad of having a bla k J ti ho I says: "I'm alm06t too busy c revo u onary, w s
formal settinc with guests to think about being 8 a thlnker, and a militant,
19 La comin& in one at a time, we wh · st fi bts H 'd I guna t I at-h Negro".,, o JU g . e saJ •, wan a par y """sp ere 10 Producert of Rowan and ought to meet Jules Dassin . , that the viewer feeb he is a • 1 • D part Of the activity," Hefner Martin'• "Laugh-in" series 'When did, in New York, '°' ancerS at · an lhoollng netwDl'k TV'• Dassin said, 'Frank tells m1
llld. fint all·Negro var 1 et y you're an actor. I said,
"I want them to give 1pecial, "Soul." Lou Rawls 'Yeah, but I'm not ill"
Workshop them the atmosphere of one arid Nipsey Russell are tef'e6ted in that any more.•
of my cJIJbl « my pad in among the rtars, a n d A few minutes later be said, r aue1.10." •--1 th Negroes have key pro-'How about reading for me?'
· Nineteen mem11e1• 0 • Yeah, well, there are plen· dcution Jobs behind the and I ~ 'What am I
J..aruna Beach Civic Ballet ty of bunnie1. hop pin 1 tcene!:. fighting tms for? He's a top
Company will journey to thf ar~ those places. Movie producer J u I e s producer.' "
College of the Holy Names "But not an tbt 1how1
11 ht Dasstn ("Topkapi," "Never The film, "Up Tight,"
tn Oakland next week to iDAst.ed. on Sunday") is ftming ror mark! bis: first film acting
of ?D musicians will present an all-Bach program. Dr. H.
Colin Slim ol UCI will con·
duct a concert preview at
7:30 p.m. la th• blgh school
auditorium , and the
performance will follow at 8
o'clock.
Jn succe:ssive concerts the
society wil1 present the
Borodin Quartet, Feb. 2; the
Smetana Quartet, March 16;
and, the Alma Trio, April 13.
Direct.or Ron Albert.sen
announced that the comedy
requires a cast of four men
and two women, ages 22 to
30 .
The auditions will be held
at 8 p.m . at the playhouse,
2119 Main St., Huntington
Beach. The production wiU
be staged for five weekends .
Ho111• •f Rodcln9 Cli•ir
logei
• Op•11 Nightly 6:45 e
ENOS TUESDAY
.1uur 4Nl>llrws
"441lY TYLrll MOOllr
C41l()l CH4NNING
.J•Mrs rcx
The Luxurious New
IJ1dted Artist•
1161 W. lM. S-,. AN
... __
hlt,:-IJ ...._
.... o.tr-11 .. 1 ....
•
H.w "•• 141·9117 , 'IOCllN• CHAil" ~·s..i
U.!hlllt.t ,,,_ ,.,.....
ACADEMY AWARD:
WINNER
IO-f, LfVIN! -• MIKE NICHOLS ~ENCE TURMAN
,/I~\
I ··,. \
' ' \ / '\ . ~~ " ~ L_ ..• DUATE
AN AVCO EMBASSYFl.M LlllllllFT-•:•-. · u11U11 m 5mN. WILUNGHAM-BU,CK HENRY !!AOL SIMON
nIDP -GARfUNKa ~TURMAN
11'111\C NICHOl.S 'JIONCXlal' --
participate in a chreography "Guettl will be m y Paramount, witll. a Negro sinee a bit part 10 years
workshop. frieodl in and out of show cast, a drama ol betrayal ago. Mas6ive, easy t:oi.ng,
Sponsored by the Nca.tional bu1ine11 comedians, among civil rights militants. lightly bearded, Mayfield '
~·~~,;;~::: /' r-,-,.-.~-';'-.-.~-'!'-.-lto-"•-~-~-.-..,
9100.11100 p.-. 12·2-44+10.IJ LIL
RIOTOUS CO.FEATURE ll!::~======;g;=====~;;;j;~
Regional Ballet Association musician.!, Io o d con-And perhaps the unlikeliest 1ay1 he's in every scene but
and presented by the Pacific veraationalists. For in· figure to emer~ among about t"Ml. He plays "a man
Western Regional Ballet stance, there is ooe dialogue Currently ascendi!'lg Negro who is essentially over the
Festival Association. the about sex and cinema with playen is the man who hill, drinks too much, a slob
workshop is a pilot program Roman Polanski and Sharon pla)'I Dass.in's cent r a I broken down by society, who
1 geared to raising the level of Tate. character. as a result betrays his best
CONTINUOUS SHOW
Wed., Thun., fft., Sert., 511•.
Stwb 7 p.111. M ... I T9", choreography in the United "And I'll discuas the new Unlikely because , says 6-friend, a young militant, for
States. rt runs from Tues-morality with Fa th er foot.I, 200-pound Ju Ii an a reward.'' l~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiii~I
day through Friday. Malcolm Boyd, and race Mayfield: Mayfield and costar Ruby!; . ·
Internationally kn 0 w n and athletics with Bi 11 "Basically I am a writer. Dee helped Dassin write the tQ. -· .. • Po1ltl••ly hft T•MHJ •
dancer Pauline Koner wi11 Russell. That IOl't ot thing." J never really wanted to act. script. Q7 ~ 111"~ Robert .':"11c1>um •l\d D•.i:. Mtrtln
officiate at the workshop, But the bunniu! I see people working at ac· I • 5 CARD STUD
" be d bu tin ' ' d '• Al .. while Fernand Nau 1 t ' Oh, they'll aroun ' t g in an organize war, COMI• -•I'° Oorll OIV •nd 1teblrl M-
• associate director of Les not in costume,'' ht finally and it seems almost unfair "WHE•• w1111 vou WH•N
Grands Ballet! Canadiens. admitted. "We hope to bring for me to have tttls role. • •ucH . AT 1LLie • THE L10Hr1 wrNT ouTt"
conducts ballet classe.s. some sex and sophlatication But," be grins, "I'm not tUNTINoToN ••a.cH • .. , ... °' Shim WNMldrf
Among the Laguna group to television, whi'cb it surely complaining."
which will attend are Lila needs. Mayfield, 40. born in South
Zali. artistic d i r e c tor : "We've struck a respnlive Carolina and reared in
Barbara Stuart, president of chord with readers. We hope Washfngton , D.C., has a
· the company; and dancers to do the same w Ith varied background. He is
Mary Hanf, Hal O'Neal, viewers." the author of three publish-
Kristi Moorhead. Odile de Hefner's Mow will be ed. novels, a pr~~ing
Witte. Merilee Magnuson, syndicated by Screen Gems. college orator, actor in""'ttff.
I • .:. · Damar.a Bennett, M a-r y So far he isn't sure how Broadway plays while also ~..._, r
Catherine Kaminski, Loui:se many ltatioos tt will find as drlvlng a ta.xi, rad.lo disc Plus ''BAMBI"
Frazer, Leah Harln, Kathy customen. He was advised jOckey and feature writer on DISNEY'S
Jo Ka h n , Me 11 n d a th1t if he waTrted top ratings ·an Eng 1 i sh. language ''THE 3 LITTLE PIGS"
Chenoweth. Hope Sogawa, he'd better think twice about newspaper in San Juan, I~~~~~~~~~~
•Joy Sogawa. Cheryl Mann. stocking the 1bow with tots Puerto RiCo. J..:
Pam Sims. Gina Geer, and and loll of bunnies -in cos-"Last April I went to Fisk ~T-"-'-~-Le~•-li•-·~~~~~~tu_m_•_·~~~~~~~,;,~~~~~~~~~ill
Crossword Pu.We
ACROSS
-f 1 And elst-l wtltrt: J Latin: 2-• S City ..
Utah
11 Ulttr
14 l"olson
lS 1"1rt of a stat• 1' BJKt
17 CtrQln
weapon
discharges
lt Rt;ul1tlon
20 Assign to
a position
2l Roust by sudden 1hr111 :Y Co111n to ., ...
25 Tl•• Pftlod 2' E1111111o
a1111st 2' U.S. lllpl•at J4AW-d """" '5 Sll .. t
37 FttQUMt
•fnntn1 ••1ln:
t ••rd• 31 IOl'stl left
ata •••I lt lrld .. ,,.,.,.. -· 41 A•tr1CM
Ind Ian .
42 Spotts ......
44 Nov••"'· .upwMI
•
•
45 "It's • -Tt
Ttll A Lit": 2: words
4' Change In
lrtfculltlOll 41 Grain
proc1ssl119
•Khlnn JO Food
p1ck1gln11
•alfritl !l Eitr•~Y
cold
JJ Rldt--: 2 words
'7 Bath of nrolltn lln: 2 words •1 Avatar of
Vishnu
62 Part of
earth's
afllosDlttft M C'iot off an
alrpl•• l5 Acc.,t 16 Of a tl1tt ..,, ..
17 Tittle
'8 Calls M Rtcllct tt
"°"''"'
I Cr•k r.slst· J9 Relallon of
antt group ont thing ..
9 Cattlt to anotl'ltr
b1r11n's 40 Pr1 cllc1f
tntmy: !toplt Colloq. 45 111 of
10 Ground nlltlc Kid U lordtt Oii 45 lfow--: 12 Tatt It..., 2 wards
U Joint 47 Haran llTV• orCrtt ZZ. larshal 49 S.111 24 Shtddhtf handful
rldlantt 52 lany wflhout
26 At 1 lftlllow c1rtt11onr
dtpltl SJ l'ubllt
27 Eartll: ''· con-,.yanct 21 Chtwtd •P J4 hrlty JO IMKta sylttiol
Jl --.l1'!t ._ 55 Dlsdlll'ft StslllQln'M 54 -Jett
• lowl.. SIS. A11•k111 "*'' n1tlon • Ctftolo M Klftd of
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c.wtt ..... ,...... ..
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HARBOR al ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546-3102 -S Now Daily-1st Area Run
ACADEMY
AWARD
IJWINNER
•UT DIRl!CTOR-MIKI! NICHOLS
-• MIKE NICHOUI /'~
ft\ U TH
• Ptrformanc• •
1-3-5-7·9·11 p.m.
Dally
c.A'Whole
Wew'Wor/d of ~ntertainment!
TONITE thru FRIDAY NITE
"ON srAO.I U.S.A."
i n1;;~~u;~~~,.,-
TERESA BREWER
THE FOUR STEP BROS.
Shows 1t 9:15 1~ 11 PM-On the TOMORROWLA.NO STAGE
Comint: Next Week ••• TONY MARTIN
• • *
Uisneyiand On Parade
7:30 PM
A Merry, Musical Promenade through the
Ma1Jc Kin1dom starring Mickey, Pluto, Goofy
lfld 911 your Disney Character Favorites
EVERY SUNDA Y
COUNTRY MllSIC JUBILEE
HOMER ·AND JETHRO
H!NION CA .. GILL • CATHll TAYLOft
NOEL BOQQI Mid hi• BAND
HAflRV NEWMAN and BRAD MELTON QUEST MCI
[VE RY NI TE .11 1 PM
Fanta111 in the Sk11
Tlnktr ee1r1 lll1ht si1nels thlt st1rr
al • Spectacular Aerial FlrlWOfks Dlsp/11Y
* *.
.............. ~ .. Ml1lc ..........
TODY IUClll£1•Tlll MUST.utU•FlllMOUSI Flft+t 'PK 1111 Of Tiii lfNIDOM • Tiii CLAIA WUD SIMl!IS
llU nuon • Ill! DISllE'!IAllD DAit NIT!a
Tll IOTAL TAIUJIMS• T1ll .wum nm -Tll AMUICMA IWS ... ..., mnl
Jtr I...,, ..... flllN WJ II 9IJt1111 tlle tUl'-l•-,
DJllllTLAllO Af1U DAiii TICKET IOOl
lllCNflt .......... lll(f I Al'tl'ICtltlle If T-etitiot
AduH $4.00 Junior ,,.m $3.00
!N.Jlwiu.t !N,10ftll,teJ . ....... .. Aftw.,.. -
01i111 .... n.. I Ml lit U ... 1'9-111. I lilt. I • Iii 1 •
' '
•
• • ,
•
•
Disneyland '----'&Unam ~ llEUllCllFT~IUll••:U·...,_m , ______ •---------.----_._ UTH lllCTUllU '"COLO•
•
. • . ..
.. ,
Oil City: How Many Years Till It's Dry Hole?
j !£ra of Black Gold Coming
To End in Huntington Beach
I
'
,
Text •nd Photos
By JAMES McNABB, JR.
•"· Of tM 0.11'1' Pr•r Sllft
'I'wenty-five more years and Hun-
tington BE:ach's liquid gold well will be
down to its last oily droplet.
According to Standard Oil Co. ex-
ecutive Fred Kalenborn. that's when
the Huntington Beach oil £ield will go
dry. economically speaking.
"\Ve still don't have the mean.<; to
profitably remove oil from the vast
tar reserves." he said. "\Ve'll have to
have a technological breakthrough ."
At one time Huntington Beach was
oil.
The lirst well was drilled in 1920
That year three-quarters of a million
barrels were produced. In 1967 , n1ore
than 21 million barrels were pumped
from beneath Huntington's sand and
shoreline.
Today HWltington Beach's oil pro-
'cj
J
duction Is a thoroughly modern,
methodical operation predominantly in
the hands of Standard Oil on shore and
Signal Oil and Gas, whlcti pumps from
off-shore leases.
Independents, of course. continue to
play a role; active backyard oil wells
remain a feature of the Huntington
Beach landscape.
Last year, 57 ,000 barrels were pro-
duced daily. \Yhile the revenue realiz-
ed from such an output is considered a
·top corporate secret,' oil tax monies
amounted to $4 .4 million to school
districts' coffers; $500.000 in direct
property tax and $700,000 in permits.
The oil industry's contribution to the
city 's property tax revenue amounted
to 18 percent of the total.
\Vhile the city men and oil men's
relationship halS not always been rosy,
a spirit of social awareness and
mutual tutderstanding has obliterated
overt past hostilities.
'
'
• .. ~ '
'
RIDING RODS -Multi-rods are inserted 11,000 feet deep for pump-
ing oil. Above rig and rods belong to SignaJ Oil and Gas Co.1 whic h
holds leases on much of Huntington Beach's oil rich offshore terri·
tory.
DIRTY YOUNG MEN -Oil fields aren't the cleanest places for men
to work. But peroleum field \vork has become a way of life for (left
to right) Headman A. L. Germain, Ed Taylor and Jim Graves seen
here adjusting a •ipulling rig.''
'
MAIN STREET -Abandoned trucks attract more debris. Oiltown'i
junky graveyard borders Huntington Beach's Main Street near Clay
Avenue. It's one of the more ug1y aspects of oil work, but much land:-~ -
scaping bas been done in recent years around wells,
PUMPER GARL -w .. t American Oil Co. employe Carl Clakford
adjusts pump that transfers drilled oil one-quarter mile to another · ·
tank. Operation is on east.em side of Golden West Street. · ·
..
• °, ilEVER TO TURN AGAIN -Metal perts beco me
·Indistinguishable on an unused valve. Oily du st and
grime together 'Nilh salty air quickly desLroy, when
man's protective vigilance ceases.
CREAKY MAZE -Abandoned tanks present an
eerie display of rusting metal and uneven, splinter·
lng stairways. Area that once turned a handsome
••
' LEGAL NOTICE
CONTINENTAL WINNER -Llncoln·Mercury sales in the Los Angeleo sales dis·
trict earned W. A. Little, district sales manager, the month-long us& of a new
Continental Mark III . Lincoln-Mercury.Sales through July reached 19,151,
among the highest in the division'e 19 sales districts in the United States.
.· LEGAL NOTICE
•, T llM1 su1"a1t tolt (OUltT Ofl Tit• IT.I.Tl. 01"
CM.ll'OllNIA ll<IR. THI COUNTY 01'
OIUHGI! .. .... ....... ,..
1te'tlCE 01" MU.IUMG OP "liTIT10N
Peil l'lllOl.Afl Ofl WILL AND flOlt
&.llTT•lllS 0 f' Al>M!HllTltATtoN
WITH THI! WILL AMHl!Xl!D ~::.,, ~ ltUIY It. lllC~AltDS.
NOTICE IS Hl!lllE8Y GIVEN Tl\1t
DANA F. lllCHAllDS •l!d JERREL T.
ltlCHAlllOS h.tt lllld llertln I p1!1tlorl for ProlM1' of WJll and for lllUI MI of lll-
IHI el Admlnl1lr1llon w!l!'I Ille wltl .,..
n••ld In Ille Hlltlontr, r1~rfl!U ro
whltf'I 11 -~ for further perlltulArs. Ind 11111 lf!e !!,,,_ 1nd PLIC. ol ht1rl119 tlw
,1,.,. 11e1 bffn ut lor S.11'9mber '· 19111.
11 t :llt 1.m., In m. COllrtr-.. of Dep1rl-mf!ftt No.' 1 of w ld ~rt, 11 Mil North
8ro.dw1y, ln Illa Ctl'I' ol S1ntw Ant,
C1lllornl1. DATl!D; A111111SI 1', 1t61
W. E. ST JOHN,
C011n1'1' Cltrk
W.lLLACI., lllOWH AHO ClllAIM
m Deftl' Orin , lvllt 1' Jrl-rt lwc.11.. C1lfwlll1
Tth """'"" i>ubll1l'led Or1nw1 Co111I Dally l"llol,
AU9tnl 17, 1t, i1, 1KI 1431°"'
SHARP,
II y1u're e 1harp tradar, u••
'\e DAILY PILOTS fa11101.11
Di111•·A·lin• elauified ad1
Saturd1y1. Melce • better daal
• • . whether yeu're b1.1yi111 ef
11111119.
. . ·~ ! ·-.:: ·-.,
, '
. -
:
~
9AFECO
INSURANCE
for special
GOOD STUDENT
DISCOUNTS on
your Family
Auto Insurance,
Bob Paley
•nd Auociata
INSURANCE
474 E. 17th ST •
COSTA MESA
642-6500
Chevy's 1968 Units
To Total 2,753,200
By CA RL CARS1'ENSEN record of 27,720 produced in
Chevrolet Motor Division 1966.
has been quiet about it but Other C h e v r o 1 e t pro-
is closing out an impressive duction in the 1968 model
1968 model year of pro· year 1.ncluded 1 , 2 3 6 , 4 0 0
duction, including the se· regular s i z e Chevrolets.
cond best year for truck out· 201 ,000 Chevy II's, aod
put in the division's history. 15,400 Corvairs.
E. M. Estes, genera-I Chevrolet be g .a n pro·
manager of Chevrolet and a duction of 1969 model trucks
General Motors vice presi-on Aug. 12 Zlld is scheduled
dent said 2 , I 3 9 , 4 o O to start assembly of 1969
etieVrolet automobiles and model automobiles on Aug.
613.800 Chevrolet tr u c k s _26_. ---------
were assembled in U.S.
plants during Uie 1968 model
year which virtually hi.-s
been completed. T o t a I
assemblies will reach
about 2,753 ,200 units.
The only 1968 m o d e l
Chevrolet assembly line still
opera.ting is the Corvette
line at St. Louis, which is
due to shut dO'Nll for modet
changeover shortiy.
The 1968 model yeer pro·
duct.ion wa1 13 percent
greater than ttie 1,900,049
cars and 536,304 trucks, or
2,436 ,353 vehicles, produced
in the 1967 model year.
Chevrolet'& all-time pro-
duction records i n c 1 u d e
2,382,511 cars and 2,961 ,988
vehicles produced in U.S.
plaW in ttie 1965 model
year and 624,800 trucks
assembled in tile 1966 model
year.
"Our 1968 model year out·
put 'WOUld have been con-
siderably higher were it not
fO< lhe frequent production
stoppages because o{ labor
difficulties early this year,"
Estes said.
Production peaks were
established during tile 1968
:model year fur Utree. of
Ohevrolet's six series of ... automobiles, Estes pointed _m_a_n_a_g_er_. _____ _
Sales Manager
Randy Combs of Foun-
tain Valley has been
appointed sales mana·
ger of Servisoft Water
Conditioning, head·
quartered in the City
of Industry. In 1967
western region district
Combs was appointed
out. '
Chevelle product.km total·
ed 422,880 units, sm-passing
the former record of 412,245
assembled in 1966; Camaro
output reached 2 35,150
vehicles, exceeding t h e
previous mark of 220,906
unit. built in 1967, and 28.565
Corvettes for the 1968 model
year will exceed the former
LEGAL NOTICE
IMI Ill•· 1' Tht Sldd~dt Junior Col'"' 0 11t•kl
of Oranvt CovnlY wlll ...celw Hlltd btcl1 UP lo but ...,11aw It! .... 1:00 P.M .. Fr~v
n A1111usl, lHI, ., '"" I UllMU otfkl JJl»I LI P1r Rud, Minion Vltlo,
C1lllot"la '7'75, tor 11W furnlth!"" of two
(2) Sltllon Wl90llS. Incl OM (II Half T°"
Pldi:UP. F1,1U 011111t •ncl S,..Clf!utklM m1v bt tKVrff lrOIT'I tl>t llUl!lllU OffiCI II lllt
.111 .... ftlclt"'5 ROY M. llAillLETTA
81.1111\tU Me-er
Pl.lllll.iitd Of"lntt Coatt 01llv Piiot
A1111U1I U, lt, 19'1 1431).61
Computer Firm
. Bares Earnings
Oatifornia C o m p u t e r
Products, Inc.., Anaheim,
reported earnings o f
$1.209,000 on sales and other
income of $16 ,648,000 for the
fiscal year ended June 30,
based on unaudited figures,
compared· with earnings of
$,136,000 on sales of
$11,318,000 last year.
Earnings per share, adju-
sted for a 2-for·l stock split
Nov . 1, 1967, amounted to 55
cents per share oo 2,200,575
average shares out.standing
in fiscal 1968, compared
with 61 cen~ per share on
1.898.134 average shares
outstanding a year ago.
American
Unveils
'69 Models
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
longer, wider , restyled
Ambassador f e a tu r e d
American Motors' preview
of its 1969 model
automobiles here last week.
It wa.s the first preview of
new models by a U.S.
automaker for newsmedia
this year, and for the first
time there were no con·
vertibles in the lineup.
Embodying what the com·
pany '-termed "hundreds of
i mprovemen ts and
ref inemenUi," American
Motors' five lines of cars
will go on dea-ler display
Ocl. 1. Besides t h e
Ambassador, they include
the AMX and J.avlin
siportsters, the Rambler -
formerly Rambler
American -and Rebel.
Both the wheelbase .and
over..all length of t h e
Ambasador have been ex·
tended ·four inches .and its
tread widened to 60 inches.
Its hood has been given a
oculpturod lool< and it. grill
redesigned .
Air conditioning. which
the company says has betn
increased in capacity, again
is stand.ard on all
Amba668dor models, and all
AMC's 1969 cars wiU be
equipped with head rtsts.
Manufacturers are not re·
quired by federal safety
standards to begin l.Mtalling
head res'l$ before next Jan.
l .
William Pickett, v i c e
president for salM, said the
Ambassador line is designed
to "fill a market gap
between the t o p iJI.
t.ermecUate and standard·
size car . ., Tt is termed a
"luxury car" in company
publicity.
Prices will not be diacloe·
ed DWI new mode.ls hit
dealer showrooms, bu t
higher price tags generally
are forecast for .all U.S.
makes . T he 1968
AmbaS511dor ranged from
$2 ,280.20 for a four-door, six·
cylinder sedan to $3,313.20
for a four-door V8 st.atioo
wagon.
New Ambauador models
have a wheelbase of 122 in·
ches and an over-all length
of 206.5 inches. Ttte distance
between wheel treads on
both Ambauadors a n d
Rebels bas been widened to
60 inche6.
Wershow
LIQUIDATION SALE
8 Interest from the l st of any month on
funds received by the 10th. 8 Interest from date of receipt after the
!Olh.
C) Interest to date of withdrawa l on
funds left 3 mooths or longer if account
111mains open until quarter's end.
5% per annum compaunded dally current
rate on passbook savin1s.
S.25% per 1nnum on bonus accounts.
" If :rou're not r«eMDg lhe.. benelib your
... Uoojd he with •••
BY ORDER OF OWNER
32 LAGUNA BEACH
OCEAN VIEW LOTS*
•Buy L11un1 lle1eh residen· ti1I proptrty rt a li4uid1tion
price! All these lots ire fully improved with under•
ground utlliti1s. They are
loc1ted ju1t East of the ten·
ter of town, lesl than J mile trom Patific Coest Highway.
M1ny of these lots com·
m•nd • m•1nificent viaw or the P1clflt 0«11n.
Easyterms-
owner will finance
with releases.
For .c!ditional infarm1tiol'I,
c•ll any of the Werahow
OceansiM ft at I Estate Te1m:
Carolyn, Mil11•, Rit k, Ktn
or Cd .
'"" #4114, 1'11 l lllnl ll T••• Cf'lttlt. to Slue.ird C•n)'lll
illo•d, tri.n eontl111.1t .,, t• Iott.
T ... lob 1111 11tuate4 ell "•S•ll• lllti.. 11.,.1Ht11 CtnJOll llltl. 1ftd MO<lli"l~I Otlvt , 1.,,..0:.," .. tetr
I mHt '"' ol "" Co11t Hl1ri ... , .. MUTl,!~.k .. §~Y.I N GS
a&Y11St80llttlighway • Coron• Del Mir, C1lif. 92625
'hlephon• 175·5010
Milton 1. Wers OWGo,
&UCTIOHUU • llEAL TOH
1012 S. HUI 11.•0caantkfe, C.llf. 920Sil •(7 t•) 122·1.JOI _.. onte1 • HIMflll
31S [, COLOMIJO ll'fD •• PAWUIA, c-.ur. 111119
Mandil:y, August 19, 1968 DAIL V PILOT Jlf
Spe11ding Patterns
Weave Crazy Quilt
87 Si'LVIA PORTER
You, the American con·
sumer, ipend three times at
much for beer , wine and
hard liquor eaeh year as you.
spend. to .send your children
to private cqlleges.
You spend more , aMually
for .jewelry and watches
than yo1.1 q>eOd for all books
and magar.lnes, or all dental
Care, or for all pri·vate
elementary and high school
education.
YOU SPEND nearly four
times u much for cigaret·
tes, clgars and other tobac-
co produM~ as you spend
each year tor health in·
surance. And you speod far
more each year on pe'rsonal
care -hairdos, haicuts,
cosmetics, bath equipm't!nt.
etc. -th<Ul oo all religious
and welfare .activities.
We are now crossing the
historic half-trillion mark in
annual coasumer spending,
one more symbol of our fan·
tastic affiuence. In all of
1967 we spent $49'2 billion-
'8nd our spendJng is now
surely aver the $500 billion
or tlalf-billion line.
How are our spending
habits changing?
WE ARE ever more ac·
tively seeking creature com·
forts a:::! i ndu lging
ourselves in the n o n ·
necessities o( li fe . Since
1957. the rise in our spen·
ding for most of the tradi·
tional necessities. f o o d ,
c Io thing, transportation,
household operation, has'
been significantly slower
than the ri'se in our overall
spending for all goods and
services.
We are at the same time
devoting more and more of
oor spending dollars to
services, ranging f r o m
education to foreign travel,
medical care and funerals.
Sinctt 1957, our spending for
""'
all aervices has nearly
doubled.
We are "trading up" our
cultural as well as our
materialistic standards. The
175 percent 10-year Jump in
the amounts we spend for
private education surely
reflects our rising educa-
tional ambitions for . our
children, as well as the blg
surge in World War Il
babies now mCtVing thrOugh
their teen& and early 20'1.
And the 136 percent jump J'n
our spending for foreign
travel surely underlines our
yearning to learn h o w
others live and inform
ourselves on the cultures of
other natiOn:s.
ANO WE ARE investing
in our future f i nanc i al
security a.s never before.
The 125 percent rise over
the past decade in our
spending for "personal
business," a catchall inc4
luding brokerage fees. bank
service charges, life in·
surance handling co st s ,
lawyers' fees, etc., testifies
to our unprecedented levels
of 9tock market .activity,
bank savings and purchase
of life inwrance.
To show you just how
much we are oow spending
on What, and how fast our
spending is rising. here is a
chart drawn up by the Com·
merce Department's Off.ice
of Business Economics trac-
ing the amOWlts (i n S
billions ) and the percentage
rises from 1957 to 1967. Note
where the biggest increases
have taken place.
Prlw1l1 Eel~. '-
rtKl rtfl I 2.1
, .. Ill 1fS1
Fott!1n lr•v•! I.I
PtrlOl'l•I 111.>sl"tU 11.t
Medk•I c1r1 1&.2 Recrta tlori lS.J
Ptrson•I Urt •.l
Hou1lnt1 ll.S
R'llt lou1 j, Wollore l .I
Clotllel j, 1r;i;t1M>r!.1 l'f,J
Hou11riold ooer1tlori •1.2 Tr1....,orr1tlori Jl,t
l'ood " tob•cco 1t.2 Toto! c-umu
,, .. nc11"'
I l,t 1 IS.1
1N7 '!i.llltt
ol,O lll.1 "·' "'·' :i.o.o n• 1 311.,. "·' l ,S 91.7
10.t U, 1
'·' "·' ,le.I 11.7
''·' ''·' u.s ''·' 111,, ....
Tax Questions Answered
On Deductions, Auditing
Returning vacationers,
convention delegates and
working persons over 65
years of age all have
something in common. All
are available for income tax
deductiom or exemptions.
The followi'ng questions
are designed to answer
questions concerning taxes,
auditing, exemptions and
deductiolllS .
Q -I've been audited
several time.!. but none of
my friend.! ha.! been aud·
ited once. Am I on a
blacklist OT something?
A-No, you are not. Com-
puters screen all returns
and identify those with cer-
t.a.in characteristics for ex-
amination.
Q -Can 1 have m11 tax
withholding reduced whtn
I reach 651
A-Yes, persons 65 and
over may Dialm ai ad·
dftion.al exemption for in ·
come tax withholding
purposes. To do this fill out
a new FormW-4 , Employes
Withhold.tac E x e m p t i o n
Certificate, and give it to
yoor employer. He will tell
you when the change will go
into effect.
Q -Our apartment was
rifted bu burgl4r1 while we
were awa11 on oocation.
Since we do not have tn-
iturance, can wt deduct our
Lo1ses for toz purposes?
A-Yes , a deduction for .a
theft can be taken on your
return. However. ooly the
loss In excess of $100 can be
deducted. To establfsh a
theft ION voo must be able
to show the da1e the Uleft
wa-s discovered, show U!e
property was s t o I e n ,
establish ownership. show
evidence of the cost, show
amount of depreciation and
the amount of insurance or
other compensation for the
lo ss received or
recoverable.
Q -My mother gave
me tit~ to htr home as a
present. Will any !a.::t be
involved~
A-Gifts are not taxable
to the person rece1vtng
them. H<nVever, the persOn
making the gift may be
liable for gift t.ax ii the
value or the gifb to one
person is more than SJ.000
in any one year.
Q -Do I havt to do
anything wit h the stubs I
receive when I depo&it in-
come and social security
taxes I takt out of my em· .
ployes' wagt.s.
A-The stub you receive
when you make a deposit
through the Federal tax
deposit S}"6tem ls for your
records only. It should not
be filed with your quarterly
Form 941 retWTI .
Q -I took a second job
this summer and social se·
curity tax is bein11 t,ake1t
out of my pay. Can I sto p
this withholding .tince the
maximum will be taken
cut for social iecurity 011
my regular job?
A-No. The law requires
each employer to withhold
social security tax on the
fir st $7 ,800 fn wages paid
each employe. If more than
the maximum has been
withheld from your com·
bined salaries, then the ex -
cess may be taken as a
credit on your income tax
returri.
MERITS & BENEFITS OF
LEASING THE FAMILY CAR
IMf'Mllllt lt•llllMrt .. AINflun HW ~ ttle felldly ••· Ap-
~· tM WM It: "•Mt's or ce1t.ce111ele•• a. •• 1....,
.,.. II .... ~ fer Mr. '41MltY"' ," & • ...,.._ •• C•leny
, ........ e ..... wfttl olr ce ..... l11t COii M i..tff f•r S121
...tMy (tile hb•I••• llttte c .. ,. '"" ,_ .tt.•t Stl , wllkll
lwcl1 .. •II ,,.._,,... Mnkl ..., lnfft•K• fw 40.000 111llot1
t•H ........ ,.,....,._ etc.I. ..,_, H,. .,.., ""'"' ,.,,
"-'1tt gptt.I "' l..W.... "" ...... ., ..... ffCetfe11
,,.,..,. .. "' ,..., ' ...,, J ,..,. .,.. .......... .
, 18EYOlt MITA W
-""'co.ur ......... , •• ..., llA0.• 141.a71/ta ......
\
_,, --'
---
:4 •
---.....,.
~ ·---
' •
••
~ 'C I : I ' "'
Gives Soldiers Lift
New high -speed powered lowering-retrieval de-
vice for lifting weary troops from jungles and
swamps is demonstrated aboard hoverin$'. CH47
Chi nook helicopter at Stockton, Calif. Device can
haul 20 men aboard in four minutes as compared
to present average time of 40 minutes required for
men to climb presently used troopers' laddeD.
Suggestion Box Now
Brings Big Rewards
NEW YORK IAP ) -Tlie
suggestion box has come a
long WfJ'/ since World W;rr
11, when it hung. near the
factory washroom. an in·
spira'l:ioo, swpposedly, to the
war eifOJ:'i, but Often •just a
reposi-tory for i m p o. I i c e
remarks about .the boss.
Last year at San Jose .
Calif., R. R. Minden, 30. an
asaembler • .,:id R. A. f:i1.ad·
dox,·42, a· technidan, &hare:d
$41,026 for lbdwing their
e m p 1 oye.r, lntemational
Business Machines. how to
fabricate metal covers so
'they c:ould be used on two
ratbe.r than just one type of
computer unit.
rt wa.! one of 250,000 sug-
,::estions at 1BM last year. 15
percent o! wtiich pa•d off.
The aU-time high payment.,
$72,186 in 1963, also woot to
two IBM men. Charles Gian·
cey and Lawrence Lavigni,
for explaining'how to reduce
the number of circuits in a
tape drive uhit,
At United Airlines. a San
f. r ·a n tis co maintenance
specialist. Dean Webster.
42. received a $14.645 check
last year for working out a
process tihat · erui btes jet
engines to be examined
witho~t dismantling.
PLUS CAR
Two year6 ago Dean
Kinsman. 'Mien 52. a body
layout man in F<rd Motor's
pi'lot assembly plmt at
Dearborn, Mic .. won three
maximum awards. each for
$6.000 and a new car.
Earlier, he had won four
milximum awards in five
years. ,
f'ord last year pa!d out S3
mi.IHon for 28,-492 winning
suggestklm. bringing to
more ~, flO. ~illion ~e
total a.warded in 20 years.
Several or the maximum
award winners have been
repeaters. including sOme
women.
eliminating the lower temal
trol panel consoles, and
Uong Included using fiber
glass instead of metal in con-
windshield molding on all
· can built by the company.
"No matter how silly an
idea might seem. write it
down." •aid K i n s man
shortly after his seventh
award.
IGNORED
Such awanls lndl!cate ttie
suggeslion box hee indeed
come of age -almost
despite itseU, for durifll Ole
early d a y 1 .management
didn 't always foUov;-up on
recommoodations. Good
ideas ~11 ienored ; even
thank you notee tailed to go
out.
"We ~ • terTible image
and rightflilly,'' says Eric
Ekslrom, o< the Nationel
Assoctatlon of Su estion
SHARP
If yeu'r• • •h•'l' trader, 111•
the DAILY PILors fell'lel.I•
Dl111e-A0Lln• cl1ttlft1d •dt 51+.
'""'!''Mak•• liieff•r deal •• , whet t f Y9U'N Myl11t ., t•lllrit•
Syst..ems, based in Chic~o.
"It was mangement's fault.
They didn't know wha( they
were doing."
Even ttlough suggestjO,n
systems today ma')' mis·
querade as. creativity or in·
cenH~ programs. the idea
is the same: a bulletin
board, suggestioo formA, en·
velopes, and ofte;n a 'b!;lx,
even ~ou&h mall i1 be1nJ
used Increasingly.
The sys t em s are
especially successful l n
mass product.too jobs, where
small per unit 11avings efqw
into m-a s&ive amounts. M,an_y
companies are just lfOw
learin·g t h a rt imaginatibn
rather than indolen<:e exist&
on their assembly lines .• ,
A manufacturing savinfpf
IO cents a unit seems ~e
peanlJts . But after two
million cars have gooe ~
the assembly lines, ag Will
happen at Ford ttiis yN,r 1
the saving iJ $200 ,0de',
perhaps to be repeated year
after year.
"Nothing is more sensi·
hie," says Ekstrom, ~·~n
to underBtand u,a the 'f\ly
on ttie line h~ creaUVity. if
it is tapped. Working· day in
and day out he's going to
know mOre ttian a·n y
engineer. He '& got a feel for
his job."
PAYOFF IDEAS
Ekstrom, NASS executive
director. estimates -~hat
payoff ideas af'e at ~ ttto~
ment movµtg through:J!l~
Company &ystems. Ji~ repres~ about 1,lOCJ;'.· of
these. and E ks t:z:ll m
estimates the companfti(in·
volved saved $500 ~gkia
last year. -.•
. eligtbiJity .. v~es .. .., In
almost all instance& -11:0io:"IY'
paid worlcers ere ~
But tihere · is no se\ Clltolf
point. ln iOllle 5nn~. !"Y
employe witf\ ~y
control is ruled ouf. 1 In
others. e v e n ei:ec:udVes
compete. ' ~
Operatin!I me<hods dilfer
also. Jn some cunpcmieslhe
recommendalt!ons ani ftrst
screened, by an imm~te
boss. In others. such ~ M
IBM, t.he 1uggeshnt •lo, to
manait'ment diredly: '1td
are referred back t8 j:he
operating level. '
In molt companief illhe
successful idea rewards the
worker wittl a .peunllllge.
usualty 20 percerK, of the
first ye.r's 11.vings. A tetur
o( explanation and ap·
preciation aimo!ft ~•YI
eoes to auttrora of other sub-
rnisstons. ·
But Cash 'saved or award·
ed isn't the only incentive.
Morale Is improved. by a
-ly _..ted system.
And promo18ble employes
ofttn make their prti11nce
known ., •IJ!l<ri«• ll<'Oulh int<lligenl IU~C.11.
Says Don.id Schultz,
NASS president and head nf
the Illinois Central Rallroad
sUgff'!stiOll <)'Item: "A tood
many officers ol tbis com•
pany came up that route.''
1
j
2f) DAILY PILOT Monday, August 19, 1968
DAILY l"ILOT Atrltl ,.,,. ..
Laguna's 'Other Side'
•
Democrats Fear Convention 'Bolt''
CHICAGO (UPI) -Politi·
clans dread the national
political convention which
ends in a i'bolt" -a
walkout by disgruntled
losers.
The Democrat« filce a
definite danger of a bolt
when 1'.hey meet in Chicago
Atig.•26-29 to choose a can·
dida\e for piesident.
Vice President Hubert ll.
Humphrey is the
o v er whelming pre-con-
vention favorite for the
nomination. H.iS only major
opponent, Minnetiota Sen.
Eugene J, McCarthy, con·
cedes he's the underdog.
However, Humphrey may
have greater difficulty in
uniting the party behind him
for the election campaign
than in wi.ming it.s nomJna-
ti.on for president. He is fac-
Negro Business
Program Starts
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
The Sa7nll Bu si ness
Administration has begun a
program designed to in·
crease by 20,000 a year· the
number of urb&n businesses
owned by Negroes and other
minority groups.
'
ed with certain defections
from the right and possible
desertions from the left.
Third p a r t y candidate
George C. Wallace has
already won the backing of
many conservative
Southerners who normally
would v o t e Democratic.
Now, tile re are o.minous
rumblin1s of a fOurth party
in tbe making.
Democratic conventions
have had their share Of bolts
since 1860, when the party
split over an antl-s-lavery
plank. Southern delegates
walk~ out of that
Oharleston, S. C., convention
to hold a rump meeting of
their own.
Humphrey himself was
the direct cause of one bolt.
1n 1948, as a delegate from
Minneapolis where he was
mayor, he led a floor
•
when a large segment of the
party, for one reason or
another, decides to sit out
the election and stay away
from the polls.
That happened to the
Republicans in 1940, when
Franklin D. Rooseve}t was
seeking an Ullprecedented
third term. Wendell L.
Wi!Utie came from nowhere
to take the nominatfon away
from Thomas E. Dewey.
Party conservatives felt
Willkie was an intruder.
They sat out the campaign
and the Democrats walked
away with the election.
Even if no fourth party
m at erializes, Humphrey
faces a real po&sibility that
McCarthy supporters will be
so di'senchanted w i t h
"establishment politics" at
the convention as to sit out
the 1968 race.
rebellion against the pro· -----------1
posed Democratic platform
and got the convention to
adopt a strong civil rights
plank. Delegates from two
Southern states -~ississip·
pi and Alabama -walked
out.
In 'hope of averting that McCarthy forces full . op.
danger to party unity, the port unity at the convention
H u m p b r e Y. camp is to air their charges of '1rig·
determined to give the glng" and other grievances.
FASHION
SHOW
and
DANCE CONTEST
lV ITH PRIZES
COMMENTATOR-GWEN WlltlAMS
of Gwen's Sch~ of Modeling and Charm
Tuesday, 'August 20 at 2 P.M.
Wednesday, August 21 at 2 P.M.
Thursday, August 22 at 2 P.M:
This unusual view of the Art Colony offers view of the "other side'' of Lag·
una Beach's famed bills. The road snaking from bottom of photo toward the
sea (top) is Laguna Canyon Road. All of do\li1ntown Laguna is clustered along
coastal plain at top of photo.
Named ''Project Own,"
the program is a s k i n g
banks, industrial and com·
mun:ity organizations t o
furnish funds, training and
guidance for expanded
urban bug_ in es s develop·
ment.
McCarthy has disavowed
any intention of leading a
bolt from the party af~r the
1968 convention. He has &aid
he would not head a fourth
party ticket. But he did not
rule out the possibility that
a fourth party might be
formed if dissenting
Democrats feel they are
"steamrollered" at the na-
tional convention.
Frank bolts are.less com·
mon in political histor:y than
"sit-outs." A sit-out oc_curs
South Coast ?Im
Bristol 1t Son Diego Freew1y, Cost• Mtll
Temperance Leader
Hits Home Drinking
blllion gallons of · hard li·
quor, beer and wine
reported by the Internal
Revenue Service to now be
consumed annually in the
United States is being s~d
bottled or packaged for
carry-home to be consumed
there," Mrs. Tooze said.
ANDERSON, Ind. (UPI)
~ The president of the Na-
tional Woman's Christian
Temperance Union
(WCI'U), charging th a t
millions of Americans have
become alcoholics in their
homes, has called for legal
curbs on alcoholic beverage
promotion and i;ales aimed
at home drinking.
Mrs. Fred J. Tooze of
Evanston, lll., addressing
tile WCTlPs 120-woman ex-
ecutive committee on tbe
eve o! the union's 94th an-
nual convention, said "(five·
sixths) of. the nearly 33~
"Beer has become the
cowitry's major threat to
temperance, with brewers
leading the drive to make
drunkards ol the American
family , .. ttie alcohol habit
is with ruthless promo:tion
under political laxity being
pinned to more people than
at any time previously ...
1000 BEAUTIFUL
STICK-ON LABELS
' $1.00 ... ,,.,, ••
May be used on envelopes as return address
lobels. Also very hondy os identification lobels
_for marking personal items sueh as books.
_records, photos, etc. Label s stick on gloss ond
moy be used for marking home conned food
items. All lobels are printed ivith styHsh
Vogue type on fine quality white gummed
poper ond pocked in reusable mogic
seal top Gontainer.
Mr1. Clw-istine 8rown
969 Post Roed
Coste Mes•, C•lif. 92li26
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543.9457
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• •
DAILY •ILOT JJ
Cubs Seek Court Action in Illegal Pitch Hassle
,
DAIL.T PIL.DT ....... W Rldlft 1(9'Nw
SAFE ARRIVAL -Ed Kirkpatrick of the Angelo slides past the de-
fensive effort.6 of W·ashington catcher Paul Casanova during Saturday
night'• game at Anaheim . The Angels
pennant hopes at the Big A tonight.
hope I<> derail Baltimore's
. .
Frantic
By EARL GUSTKEY
Of tM D1llY P'll1t Steff
Th< frantic Baltimore Orioles. the
only team accordi?d a genuine chance.
at catching the American League·
leading Detroit Tigers, i n v a d e
Anaheim Stadium tonight.
Awaiting them will be Angel
righthander J i m McGlotJllin (8·10),
~ happens to be the Angels' best
pif!cher at the moment.
Opposing the redhead will be one of
the Orioles' best, J•m Hardin (15-8 ).
Manager Earl Weaver's outfit com-
Wea ver Says
O's Need Help
To Win Flag
MINNEAPOLl~·ST. PAUL (AP) -
Baltimore Manager Earl Weaver con-
cedes .h.is Orioles need some help from
somebody else if t.hey are going to cat-
ob Detroit'i apparently pennant-bound
Tigers.
Frank Robinson . the hero of the
Orioles' d a sh to the 1966 American
League pennant, 818YS it's not too late
-ii he and some ol the otller Birds
can have a few more. days like Frank
did Sunday.
Rahin'SCfl . biple crown winner arid
most ¥a\uable player in 1966, drove in
four runs with e homer, double and
single Sundray to lead Baltimore to a 7-
1 victory over MiMesot.a.
Face Angels Tonight
Orioles Invade Anaheim
es into Orange County conf.i.deot h.is
club can overhaul ttie Tigers, wtiose
pitching staff, so s a y the railbirds.
will collapse during the September
grind.
Baltimore gained a lap Sunday.
Witi.le Detroit was dropping a 4-1 game
at Boston, the Orioles were whipping
Minnesota by 7-1.
Natur.ally, Weaver hopes the Orioles
can gain more ground wiffl. a t.hree-
game sweep oi the Angels.
Baltimore now Q.ails Detroit by
seven games.
Sunday's developments at Anaheim
Stadium were both encouraging and
disheartening OOr skipper Bill Rigney.
His great young pitcher. Tom
MurJiiy, performed brilliiantly in turn-
ing back W-ash.ingt(ln. 6-t:, after a
shaky starL He was lifted ... a pinch
hitter in llhe eighttl inning.
The d isheartening part about all th is
is that it ws Mur~y's last 1968 ap-
pearance. He left last nig1lt for six
months of Army service.
Murphy gave up foor hlts in ttie se-
cond inning before he settled down and·
Worst Loss -Allen
Chargers Next on Tap
After Dallas Rips Rams
LOS ANGELES (UPJ) -"Thls was
probably our worst game in three
years.''
Coach George Allen spoke after hi ~
Los Angeles Rama were humiliated 42-
10 by the Dallas Cowboya before a
Memoria1 Coliteum crowd of 64 ,97'.;
Saturday night,
Los Angeles is at San Diego Satur·
day night for its fourth exhlbiticn
game Of the season.
lf it wasn't the Rams' worst game in
three seasons. the result was the
worst. The pTevlous worst defeat was
a 35-7 t?eating at the hands of the Min-
nesota Vikings in Allen's first season
With the club in 1966.
Veteran quarterback Don Meredith.
used by Landry only in the first half,
ilit Bob Hayes and Lance Re11tzel oo
58-yiard scoring passes for Dallas' first
two scores.
Meredith, who was replaced in the
second hall by Craig Morton. also
threw 12 yards to Rentzel for a
touchdown in the second quarter. The
Cowboys left the field with a 3S-10
halftime advantage.
The Rams' &coring w a a ac-
complished on a SO-yard touchdown
pass from Roman Gabriel to Bernie
Oa~ey and a 42-yard field goal by
Bruce Gossett.
gave up only one hit through tfte
eighth. One of those second-inning
Senator hits was another tape
meaw.re home run by Frank Howard,
A Stadium custodian stepped the
clout off at 452 feet behind the left-
center field fence.
After the game rugney dodged a
Aiilel Slate
,.,,.., lf An .. 11 v1 11tin-1 7:15 t.111. KM~ !"II Aue. 10 All~1 V• •tlimor' 7:15 1>.m. KMP 71 Aut . 21 A I VI I ll more 7:ll p,m. KM T1 Aut. :12 "'"".II 01•11!1d 1:25 P.m. KMPC I 01
pointed question as to whether he'd be
back wit41 the Angels next year.
The question was : "Are you looking
forward to managing Murphy next
year?"
The response: "I'd like 00 manage
nine like him."
Rigney also like$ th• looks of. the
new third baseman just puroha!ied
from Jalisco, Mexico, Winston Llenas.
"This kid wants to stay up here
something awful," he said.
''T·he first night he was here last
week .tie looked up at those lights and
said : 'Look at thooe lights! Nothin'
like that in Jali'Sco, nooooo.' "
L.OS AHOIL.IES PlnSI U•OH
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Arbitrator PelekoUdas
Key Figure in Dispute
CHICAGO (AP) -Tho Chicago
Cubs want a hearing over the alleged
Illegal pitches of their .ace nUever
Phil Regan Md umpire C b r i 1
Pelekoudas saya he'll be there with
"God as my judge and witness."
"U they wlnt to go to court, '1 said
Pelekoudas "just give me the time
arid date. J'll be there with my M-
torney and God will be my judge and
Witness."
The big hassle over illegal pitches
thrown by Regan began in the &eventh
inning of the first game of a
doubleheader, which the Cubs dropped
to CLocinnati 2-1 and 6-3.
Regan h ad a 1-2 count on leadoff
batter Mack Jonek.
Pelekoudas went out to w9rn Regan
about illegal pitches and then oame
back and signalled a 3-1 ccunt.
Cub Manager Leo Durocher stormed
out and the' umpire admitted he was
wrong and said tlhe ccunt should be 2-
~ .
Jones fouled off a pitch and then
filed to center. But he wasn't cut.
Packers, Bears
Meet Tonight
In TV Clash
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -Two
"I o s er s" clash ton I g ht in a na·
tionally-televised National Football
League exhibition at Milwaukee Coun-
ty Stadlum.
The Green Ba.y Packers, losers last
Tonight on TV
Channel 2,' 8:30
week to the New York Giants 15-14,
meet the Chicago Bears, who ran their
pre-seaaon record to 1-1 with a 11).0
less to Baltlll'lcre \Mt weekend.
"We both hive something to prove,"
Bears defensive end Ed O'Bradovich
said Sunday, "so this should be one
heck of a game."
The battle, pits for tht first time
Packer coaich Phil Bengtson· and
Bears mentor Jim Dooley.
Both are stiiting their first year as
head coaches a fter serving a 1
defensive geniuses for two living
legends - Green Bay'.s Vince Lom-
bard.J and Chicago's George Halas.
Chicago will test Jta new "total of·
tense" while Green Bay is patchlng its
aid defense.
The Bear attack evolves around
veteran Gale Sayers, a touchdown
threat 8flytjme he touches the ball,
and rookie CecH Turner, a speedy
flanker from California Poly.
The flip-flop offense, with Sayers
moving aroundtMn the backfield, is
designed to give the Bears "a little
edge, a little something extra for the
other side to worry about in critical
situations," Dooley said.
Pelekoudaa had callN an me1al pitch
whlcb now made the count 3-2.
Durocher stormed out a I a 1 n and
after 1 he~:r.change he was toned
out of the game. Jooes grounded out
and minutes later third bue umpirt
Shag Crawford thumbed Al SpanJl)er
out of the game from lfle bench.
Before it was all over Pete R.oH
struck out in the ninth but again it wu
an illegal pitch and the man batWn.C
for the Nationat League batting cham~
pionship was given anotber chance
and he came through with a single.
This incensed, Cub catcher Randy
H u n d I e y was thrown out by
Pelekoudas. Rose got into the 1ct hY'
unsuccessfully trying to steal 1eco1l4
and when he threw his helmet, wnpire
John Kibler tossed him out.
Regan, between games, complained
about his livelihood being in jeopardy
and Durocher screamed, "They'll hot
get -away with this. I'll take it to tb1
commissioner."
John Holland, vice president of the
Cubs, said he has requested a beaclns
before President Warren Giles.
"After Pelekoudas warned Regan, ..
said Holland, "he should have fOllowed
the rule and thrown him out of the
game. Instead. he kept giving them
extra outs. This incensed. the crowd
which was getting more difficult to
handle."
Holland la.id it would have been
ridiculous to protest because "our
point of protest would have been to
have our pitcher thrown out of the
game."
Pelekoudas, said, "I thought about
throwing hlm out of the game but then
I decided to let him stay in Md sutler.
He w~ usiflg .an illega1 pitch. We
found vaseline inside his cap e d
forehead." ·
During the inning, Crawford called
for a towel a.nd wiped oU Regan's
bead and inside his cap.
"Where's the evidence," c r l 1 d
Durocher. "They don't have any."
"They ridiculed our man," aald
Holland. "They were invited to tab
Regan to the clubhouse and examine
him. But no. They wiped him off with
a towel. Not thek fingers, mind you,
but a towel. They accu1e a man of
cheating but have no evidence."
"I know an UlegaJ pitch when I He
one," said Pelekouct.as. ''A sinker
spins when it breaks. A pitch with
foreign substance sinks without 1piIJ..
fling."
"It's a c r l me," said Crawford,
"when you !have to go out and search a
pitcher. It's a disgrace to the game
and the players."
"But what the hell can we do," 18.id
Pelekoudas. "They gripe about low
batting averages alld illegal pitches.
Then when we enforce the rulea, they
still cry. He was out there defying WI.
So ail we did was our job."
Regan wa1 mum a.bout it all liter
tile doubleheader and took the ''talli to
my lawyer" attitude.
"I'm not going to say anything until
I've talked to some people," said
Regan, who seemed embanas11d
about the matter and actually defiant
when asked if he was using anytbtng
on the ball.
U.S. Bags Zone Title
In Davis Cup Net Play
CLEVELAND (UPI) -They write
the postscript to an American Davis
Cup triumph today when Lt. Arthur
Ashe and Manuel Santana complete
the usual ''meaningless" set which
turned into one of the finest ex-
hibitions in amateur tennis.
The U.S. ousted Spain from 1968
competition Sunday as Clark Graebner
t>ecame a hometown hero ooce again
by defeating Juan Glsbert ti-7, g..3, 6-1
in one of two scheduled s~les
matches to give the American Davis
Cuppen an unbeatable 3-1 lead in the
interzone &eries.
In a following 3'n hour marathon
ha1ted by darkness Santana and Ashe
st.aged their brilliant serving duel at
Ille Harold T. Clark Stadium.
The match could have no bearinr on
the outcome, )'el the veteran Spaniard
refused to budge under the pres1ure ct
the young Army officer. •
Santana won the first set 13-11 in an
hour and two minutes. Alhe returned
the fire with 7-5 and 6-3 victories in the
next two 1ets. UUlizing the finesse ac·
cumulated over a decade Of com•
petit.i.on, Santana, refreshed by a 10. minut.e intermission, staged a volley•
ing performance that drew the ap.
plause from a capacity crawd of 6,200
who 1tayed on to watch the Spaniard
win the fourth 1et 15-13. Then darlme.,.
closed tn.
Tite U.S. will m 1 e eitbef Wet t
Gt!:rmany OI' the winner ol the India·
Japan aeries in its next test. The
survivor then taJces on defending cup
bolder Austrda in the challe.na:•
round later th11 year.
M a r k Belanger added a two-run
dod>le &nd Dave Leonhard checked
t.he 1\lrins on seven hiU -losing his
shutout in the ninth inning.
"The kind of year I'm having,'·
Robinsoo said, "It's got to feel good to
get thne ruts end drive in four runs. I
haven't had very many day& that good
tilts season. "
"Dallas played fine football but we
just made too many mi1takes," the
Los Angeles mel'rtor said. "You can't
make that many mistakea and beat
anybody. A l<ll!is is never helpful until
you play some more football games
and time wiU tell whether the toss will
help us."
Boros: 'I Get Excited-At Times'
"Thier• ii still a lot ol time,''
Robinson .taid on the pennant race,
v.tich Detroit continues tD lead by
RVen games even though ltle Oriole&
picked ~ one full game Sunday as the
n,era bowed 4-1 at Boston.
"We've got ttie pitching if we can
ICOI'& the runs," Frank added.
Weaver, naturally. would like to &ee
IOllle other American League teams
mck De.ttorit a little more frequently,
"We've got six games with them,"
raid Weaver, wllo rep~ Hank
Bauer July 11 and under whose
tuttla(• ilii!tlm<n st.ond• 23-14. "But
w. can't teem to &et that Cl<,f4 t<l tMm:" . l
•
The deftat snapped a 10-game ex·
hibition wiMing string for the N1tional
Football League club. The Rams had
wins over New Orleans and Cleveland
in previous preseason cont.eat& this
year.
"We ptaytd 1 perfeet a:ame of of·
tensive rootball in the flrtt half ...
Dallas coach Tom Landry Commented.
"Defensively, we held up tile Rains'
prime receiver which mearit that they
had to a:o to their aecondary receiver.
They Just d.Jdn't have the time."
The oatcome actually wg decided in
the first qmrter when the Cowboys
tooi • Zl-0 -· •
HARRISON, N.Y. (AP) -Wot<hing
him play, all lOOle end relaxed and
smooth-swinging. you'd think there
w~sn't a nerve, not a one, in Julius
Boros· middle-aged, over-weight body
N'ot so, admitted B J g Julie after
surviving a five-man scrunble Sunday
and nailing down the $50,000 fll'st prize
ln ttie $250,000 Westdlester Classic
GoU Tournament. the richest oo the
pro tour.
"I know what it looks like," the 48·
yeer-old Boros Nid. "But 1 get the
nutters ROmetlmes, just llk:e anybOdy
else. There are times out there when I
fel excited." ·
Boros. who became the eldest man
to win ttJe Prdt.lli.onal Golfer•'
Associat!on cbampionst»p earlier this
year, came from three strokes off the
pace wlttl a final round 68, four·under-
p a r foc the t i ght, 6,648 -y ar d
Westchester Country Olub course, and
finished with a 72-hole total ol 272.
Jack Nicklau1, de~ncmg dlampion
and seeking his third conaecutive tour
victory, veteran Dan Sikes and red-
headed Bob Mu~~ the rookie who
led all ol Ule first ,,,,..t'n>Undt, flnloh·
ed In a tie for secood, at 273.
Nlcklau& bad I closing 85, Sik:~§B
and the obvJously nervou1 Murphy a
par 72. Th<y picked up '20,418.86
apiece.
'!>lllll Claper, wllo wu in th< tlllck or r a11 bolor. 1ac11n1, wu a1«1t tn flltb
j
Wilkinson
May Head
Pro Goliers
,.
NEW YORK (AP) -Bud Wilkinson,
rohner Oklahoma feotball coach and
formerly a candidate for the U.S.
Senate j1 the mao the pro tournament
golferi w.nt to run their organization.
The handsome Otllhoman, now a
buainela u:ecutive and part-time
--announce<, may be tapped f or the poet today when the touring
pl.ayen 81lDounce the plans and
format of tbeir new set-up in com·
petition to tne_ Prolessional Golfers
A.Jindwt1on.
Wllklnloo could Dot be reached Im· m~ ·for comment. Several
Colftt1 •Y they think he is receptive.
Hi& new position would be that of
commissioner of big time tournamer:it
golf.
Both tbe PGA and the players who
llllllOuneed wt week that they planned
to break •way from the parent orgaoUation and nm their own tour
have called press conferences today.
'Jbe PGA gets first crack at presen·
ting its case.
It hu ·aummooed newsmen ta a mid·
town reataunant where top PGA brass
-Pre&ldeot Mu Elbin, secretary Leo
FNtser, executive director Bob Crasy
and.the new tour manager, Joe Black
-Will be in attendance.
Principally, the PGA will amounce
u.t a number of the tournamerit pros
ate not in sympathy with the playen'
revolt aDd will probably atick with tbe
PGA.
The PGA olficial.J also will enun•
elate a detennina.tion to continue a
golf tour under the PGA banner in
competition wttb the ao-cal.Jed rebels.
Tb• pla)'ft's' New York attorney,
Sam G at e 1 , will preside at a later
conference at the mJd. o ff l c e •
·of Nat Field.5, who lwtacted a.s
public relatlont ~ultant for , the
tuurll>I pros.
Gates bu promised that the players
wiU divulge at this time the name of
tbe new orgamiz::ati.on, its framework
illd ita aims.
The new commissioner may be nam-
ed at this time. er the players may
wail Wilkimoll ii tbe man mo&t of
them wanl
GatM ii expected to mnounce a new
deol far u. _., pnnnilinc u..
men who pit up 1be money that tbty
will baYO bettor --cl gettiag lop pMyer1 for the tournaments.
Some 1chedul• 1DZJ be amounced .
The new crouP also• is expected to
disc-a plan fir oignlnC club !"'"'·
1 7 -year-old
Equals World
Dash Record
DENVER, Colo. (AP) -Margaret
· Bailes, • 17-year-old sprinter from the
Oregon Tract Club, tied the world's
record ln the 100-meter dash Sunday
night with a 11.J second clocking in the
AAU Women's Track and Field Cham·
ptonshfps.
Tralllng Miss Bailes was the
coholder of the world ncord, Wyomla
Tvus of Tennessee State. timed in 11 .3.
The other coholder of the record.
Barbara Ferrell of the Los Angeles
Mercuryettes, finished fifth at 11 .4.
Miss Bailes, however finished te·
cond to Miss Tyus in the ~meter
dash.
The Tennessee sprinter had a time
cf 23.5 seconds; Miss Bailes wa1 two
tenths of a second behind.
Pat Van Wol verleare of the Angels
Track Club set a new American
record in the m.meter hurdles in Sun-
day's semifinals at 27.3, then tied Mr
own mark in winning the finals.
Saturday. teammate Janene Jatcn
tied the old American 200-meter
hurdles record of 71.7.
Marlen Seldltt of the N e w Jerse~
Athletic Club succeesfully defended her
shot put championship wtth a 50-3~ ef-
fcrt.
Two of the wcmen who qualifier'!
Sunday are aiming for their fourth
Olympics.
They an WUlye White in the long
jump and Olga Connolly in the discus.
Mrs. Connolly of the Crown Cities
Athletic Club wen the ~old medal in
lt!M while on the Czechoslovalrla
team. Mrs. Whl~ of Chicago has two
1llver medals to her credit.
TM top 1iJ: quilifien in each of the
evepts in Denver are eligible for tbe
Aug. 24-26 Olympic trials at Mt. San
Antonio College in Walnut. C;ilif.
From those trials. a gquad of 3.'>-:1'1
women will be cbolen fer the U.S.
OlYftlplc IHm.
Mowed Down at the Plate
UPIT ...... DEAD BUC -Pittsburgh's Gene Alley is out at the plate !lfter Dodger to catcher Tvm Haller Stmclay. Umpire Ed Vargo prepare to call
_•_u_tlil_ed_e_r_W_illi_· e_c_ra_w_1_on1_un1 __ ••_s_h_ed_a...;gr;_ea_t_thro __ w_from __ tb_e_out11 __ e1_d __ All_ey.:._out. __ Dod _ _,l;..en_1_oo1_to_tbe __ PinrW_· , $-L
Marathoners
May Decline
Team Berths
ALAMOSA, Cc I c. (AP) -George
Young and Kenneth Moore won berths
on the U.S. Olympic marathon team
Sunday with a 1·2 finish in the Na-
tional AAU Marathon Olampion1hips,
but both indicated they may not com-
pete in that event.
Young, of Casa Grande, Aril .. is
America's top steeplechase runner
and be said he will attempt to qualify
next week for the Olympic
steeplechase. Moore, from Eugene,
Ore., &aid he may try to qualify et
10,000 meters instead o1 the marathon.
Ronald Daws of MinDNapolill, who
finished third and also earned a spot
on the Olympic marathon team, said
unequlvooa.bly he will a ccept his
reward.
"I'm a marathooer.'' he 1aid. If
Young and MOOl'e decline, then Rebert
Deines of PaJladena, Calif., and
Stephtti Matthews of Denver, whc
finished fO\rfh and firth, would join
Daws on ttie Olympic marathon squad.
Young shaved more than nine
minutes off the record fO!' Alamosa's
26-mile 385-yard marathon course in
the rarifled atmosphe!"e at 7 ,540-feet -
much like the atmosphere athletes
must cope witti at Mexico City.
They Lead
The Majors
Sports In Brie~
No-hitter for Belinsky;
Steelers Nip Chargers
Bo Belinlky htrltd I no-bitt.r Sun-
day aa the 11.waii. Jslmden downed
the Tacoma Clubs 1--0 In Paclllc <;out
Lo"'""~·
Belinsky, 8-12, struck out 10 and
ewve ~ 10 walkt. The· Cl.tit; rtarted a
tlen&ioii-packed rally in the ninth, leev·
ing ttie ~ loaded. Belinsky's
performance waa the tnt no-Ditter by
an blander. ... ... ...
SAN DIEGO -The San Dlefo
Cbarger1 and the Pltt1burgh Steelen
amassed aboat 1,000 yards on offense
between them -yet It wu a J3..yard
defensive play that detennlned tbe
cutcome.
The Cbarcen of the American Foot..
ball I.tape ud the Steelers or the Na·
ttonal Football League had battled for
almott st minutes Sunday and the
score was U-33.
Then Charier qaarlt.rbact Jebn
Hadl to11td oae cf b11 SS-pa11e1 -aJSd
Stetler linebacker &.y May picked It
off. He ru k from the ~yard Hite lo
the Cbarcer 11. Two yardt duer ud
four downs and 4% seconclt: later. Bm
Shockey booted a fleld foal a.nd
Pltt1burgh bad a S6-3S victory.
The Cliarren' lost evened their
record a&alntt oppo1ftJoa ha this ex-
hibition season at 1-J, Twe weeb ago
they defeated Saa Frand1ro 30-%8,
wlnnln& tltta &he way the7 Iott SllDday
-on u lntercepU01. ... ... ...
LONG BEACH -G"'"'ge Wood of
the Pacific Coa1t Club lbrew tbe lhot
66 feet 2'{, inches for a vict.ory iD an
all-comers field meet a t t r a c t i n g
several Olympic hopefuls.
kl th• imet &mdoy al Ca1ilomia
State College at Long Bera.eh , Gary
Carlsen cf tile Southern CalifO!'nia
Sb-iders tcssed the discus 199-e. Bill
Neville, unattactled, was second at
187-3.
Frank Covelli of ttie Pacific Coast
Club won tbe javelin ttrow with 267_..
Chuck Polici ol. the Pacific Cout Club
waa second at 244·1 And John Burn• of
Ole Alhent Athle<ic Club third at >U_..
... ... ...
PASADENA -Oatiand't Adtmar
Seoooae, who hid 9COred but four
goab all sea!On, tallied three more
and the Clipper• rolled ow:r tbe Lot
Angeles Wclves f.1 in lltir toccer
came at ttle Rose Bowl. ,
The Clippers' victocy Sunday, their
ei.xth strlUght, pve them th•
Governor's Cup tnd moved them
within five points or the leading San
Diego Toros in tbt: North Americall
Soccer League's Pacific Divlsicn. ... ... ...
WAUKEGAN, m. -Bob Strampe, a
31-year-old Yeteran lr•m Detroit, roll·
ed 11J: strikes Jn a row ln his final
game to defeat BWy Hardwick of
Lou11ville ind late the $S,Oll ftr1t
pr.fq la tbe '31,00I Prote11toaal
bowlen Toanameot Saaday alrht.
ne mate• came Bult: tm1led late a
two-way battle btewen tbe ftkran
Strampe nd OM !'7·year .. ld
Rariwid:, wllo e1dia•ced th lead
--•• the llnal day.
~~;: , ... ,
Pro Soccer
Standings
Singer Tries
To Move LA
Out of Cellar
HOUSTON (UPI) -The ridJel.fo.
rap Loo Angela Dodgtn open a
ttree-game "sbowdown" terits with
U. lioul1oa ArtrOI tonigbt -with lall
place riding on the line.
The Dodgon currently ~ that
lgnomlnloua pooltlon -diopplng
-out at three ,.,,,.. to the ~ Pi!-ates durinf th. weekend .
Houston is in n.iatb place, one-half
game ahead at Loo Ang<los.
BW Singer, 9·12, will try to hurl the
Dodgers out Of sole occupation of the
De4fJn Slcte
....... It = •I Houttorl /!ll ""'· KFI l"'I ....... » It..._.., :2$ 1.m. Kiri .. At.11. ti ""°iter1 11 Hout!M J:IJ 1.1'1'1. ICF UO) ..W.. 22 ~"' n San Fr1nclsce 7:U 1.m. ICFI '"'' cellar tonight. Ilia O{>!JOl>Ont wW be
Dave Git11tl, 7-12. ·
Loi .Angele.s solidified its bold en its
lowest posltloo in history Sunday when
it c;tropped a ~l decision to the Pirates.
The Bucs' Bob Veale IDd the
Dodgen' Don Suttoa engaged in a
se«eless duel for the first six innings
befcn the Pirat.et tallied tbree Umes
in the sewnth.
Sutton gave up a leadoff single to
Willie Stargell, who advanced to se-
cond on • sacrifice .and scored on Fred
Paek's single. Patek moved to third
on a double by B i 11 Mazer01kt a n d
Chris CannJus-o was lntentimally
walked to load the be,...
Maury Wllls bunted to t h i r d
baseman Bob Bailey, who threw wild-
ly to Ute plate !O!' a two-run error.
Sutton, who got only four-hit support
from Ills teammates, was the JOier,
making hll record 5-12.
WAIMIN9TOM CALl,Oltl(IA
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In the triple jump, Gerald Horn of
ttle Athens Club grabbed a tint witih
52--0. Baseball St~ndings ... ...
FORT WORm. Tu. Kea
RosewaU pounded or.rt a M , 6-3 vldory
over Spal11'1 A•dret Glmeno Sad1y
night and wo• the $20,00I Co..,nlal
Tennis Tournament.
Brttal11'1 An• Haydo1 Joee1, raked
Ne. 3 lnternaUnaJly, Cl'Ulbed Dttle
Billie Jea.a King: 1-1, &-! to capture the
womu'1 crown.
Te victory ever the rtlpinc Wim·
bledon ~hamplon ••• ~ $1,000 to
Nlthnal Leape
Wn Lott Pel.
St. Louis
CinclnnaU
San Franciaco
AUanta
Chicago
Pittsburgh
Philadelphia
New York
Houston
Lot An1e1et
79 4$ .113'1
~· se .529 &4 :II .523
I.I M .512
&4 61 .512
59 &4 .480
56 M .483
57 69 .452
56 69 ....
54 " .441 ...... "' .......
lf. lllllt 10, Atl1n11 I
GB
13\\
14
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Detroit
Ba!tlmor•
Bolton
CJ.ewtaod
Oakand
New YOl't
Minnesota
CaJlfenria
Chicago
Washfnitoo
71 .. .631
71 51 .582
67 57 -~
116 60 .524
62 M .508
57 61 .483
57 &4 .471
51 17 .us
51 11 .411
4$ 75 .375 ......,.... .. _..,
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Stengels Top DiMaggios, 3-l
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the league's pennant two decade& ago.
again g()( the better of Lefty O'doul.
who piloted the Seals then and Sunday.
Lefty looked good when Dom DiMag.
gio opened the game wtth a slngle and
moved to third on a single by Joe, th'
former Yankee Clipper, now 1 coach
with t.ht <nkland Athletics of tbe
American l,eague.
JactJe Tobin's sacrifice fly scored
Dom -but then it was Stengel's turn
to weave h.is wizardry before tbe
14,000 fans who came to w1t.cb the
prtlude to the same betw'&n tile
Athletics and the New York Yankee•.
He lti'll Mel Deazabou to t.ht plate.
and the single which followed scored
Oakland's first two runt.
Stengel, not to be out.done by the
Seals' brother act, brought on hit: own
-Will lllld Tom Halley. Will tripled
and Tom sacrificed him home for the
Oak&' final ron.
Regardleis Of the number or stars
on t.ht field. it was a day for Casey
and hi• wife, Edna. They celebr-
lhelr 44th weddinf annlvuaary.
SI. L.llflll 10.,_ IN! 11 l"flfl ....... ,,,.,,,,_.,
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Johnson & Son
900 W. COAIT HIGHWAY, HIWl'OltT llACH -·
U.S. Spiker~~
Impressive; ..
Burke Wine
sou:m LAKE TAHOE, c.lil. (!JI>!)
-At Ille ral<J the U.S. men'• tr~
and fteld !Nm la 1oin1, the hlP
altitude In Mui<o City won't llop, It
from makin& a mau assault oa wt¥Jd
rec:onla ot the ui>comlnl Olym'plc
Gam•.
The American team ran ttroulh.:'itt
llnt fuD diatanee meet at the 7,:m-
loot blah Echo Summit trair.;r g t · "'-:k
Saturday and came away with a ""~. ~d
record by Jay SllV<IU< ln th• dii~•
and the equaling ol the world mark:by
Mel Pender in the 100 met.er dub:.
Newport Beach'• Ed Btrb got ;ott
the longest American hammer thn>•
al !ht ...... to win hil 1ped:alty.
Burke, bothered by shoulder injurj.e1
fc::.-much of the campaign, burle4 ·~•
hammer 225-8 -two feet lonfel' ~D
his previous '68 belt.
Silvester, who bas a peadin& wQrld
record of 213-4 in the diacul, be.avt:d
.the plaiter 215 feet to top the recogniz·
ed. wc.-ld mart ct 113-llJM held . l'1
CUchoslov.ak:ia't Ludvik Danit.
A trailing wind cl eight milee . an
hour helped P«lder to his IO.fiat
clocldog in the 100. Because of .. the
tailwind, however, the Ume w:l.11 n6t be
IUhmltted to Ille recordl commlU..
for ......,Ution. .
Other notable time• wwe bned. in
by •printer John Carlot (ll0.3 In the'200
met.n); Lee Evam (44.1 In k 400,
bis fMtelt ever far the event); Wede
Bell (1:49.8 In the 800); Dave PaUlck
(3:52.1 In the 1,500); and Bob .I!•Y.
(14:31.f In the 5,000 -•). '-:-., ~·. * * * ~=:. 1• MfTallJ-1. ......, IU.S. """'), .4. .. .1,
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v• •
BOLSA YOVTHS < . ... ~ .. ·
IN WORLD SERIJii
1!'1 oil to Willlam1p<rt, Pa., ancl'Ote
Little League World Serit:J for
Western Regional playcll winnop df
1be Bol1a UW. LNgue Ram -•i
COlllpOll'ed of y<U1pter1 from l.'fxut-
tain Valley, Gard.en Greve and Sant,
Ana. .
Boba earned a trip to the cot1.t.a
youth classic by edging Santa CJua,.
Calif., 4-3, scoring the decldinf run i.
~· seventh .bming ~ the reg!OINll finale held at Pot11and, On. :
Turk Schooert tripled In .. ltJt
Schuman In the top al the innlnJ ~
the winnlnl tally. •
WHY IS THIS YEAR
AHY DlfffREllTI
Ttadltlonally
...
. •
A•91if '"" S1p+1Mli1r 1r1 th1 """"" tl11t yo11 •tt ... .......,,.,,, with tploPy
"y11•o1N14 r.lo1r0Rc:o" w!. 1tlnrtl•ht9.
'rt• tlf ~ f•tJR .... .,,. 41NCJkl!: .......
p1por1, r14io o....I TV. Y11r K elMI
r••r ewt If• lfl1 , .... , oltl 1tery.
But This Year It
Different At John1on'1
111.111 .. tlrol1 f1 tho ytor tf o!H' tr11t
MOVf. Aff1r M1111 .,..,.. ot th1 '""'• I ,
1c1tl1R •• wlll IM "''"iltf ''"" ..
• lftlf1tlfic...+ 111w foc.Jl ity-OR H~ .... ,, .. ,,., .. C..•• w •••.
Naturally •
wt he,. to tlh,, .. of '"' f~llll 11-~•"*°" of '' fPIHl•I 11n \1f.,1 -... .... -•• th1t ......... f1r.llfty .....
l.1 lfK .. -4 wffti. ~1H 01w ,,,, ~
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Naturally
ft tlo tllh •• ••ti IN rvthl1o1Jy •-p1tltf,.1.
Nalurally
r•• wiN w111f +. *•"
fhlt 1•111011' Mho1tiM,
Tfllay
Los Alamitos
Entries
lC111•tOl'I (NOl«ln l'1lllol ltlol Maker IW!Ultm S111....s) SoiS. Sem Btr u• CroilbloJ lltY Glltlv !Terry UOl'wlm/ Jim Swltl fJtck ltObllllOll
I" i!! '"
MINTM ltACE~rd$. l ve~• old• Ind ..... Ill ortot A ptu•. PllrH lttOO.
J1b.oll Bull! Er• (R B•llk•I 11• Sevm Strlwt Div' ~rrl1\ lli P1ttv Bl~bell /Willl1m 51111111) Ill
NolOC1u! !Jot wll'°"! 111 Goldlt Nott (Rot>.rt Adllr\ /" 8ur911ndV R~ (J l r..,.,_lltldl 11 llY(O OfS(~rff 111 lhttm PltY !C"9rlt• 'mlthl 111 Ytllt Y 811HOOl'I tJoM 1(1nhl 116
Deep Sea
Fish Report
SANTA MONICA -1).11 •"11 1 .. n ; 111
b.IH. ll)J bon!lt>, 10 M !ibul, I ..... lit ...
. '
GOLFING
WITH All.Ml.d Pa/Ma __________ ...., ................... .._,
STRENGTHEN
YOUR
LEFT SID[
Mbst lead lnc 1olftn ind ln·
1tructors 1&rff th1t the left 1td1
t hould clom in1tt tht 1wln1 of
r i1ht·h1nded pl1ytra (vlct
v1 rs1 for southp1ws). Straighter
ind lonaer shots resutt when
the left s ide pulls the club Into
the bill. Mi t ·hit shots with little
power result .when the rlaht
side takes over.
Thul if is important to
strtnathen th• norm1lly we aker
left hind ind arm. Pr1ctict
some simp le exercises when·
ever circumstances allow.
First, press the . clubf1c1
against an Immoveable object,
s uch t s 1 wall or a tru, 11
hard 1s you can (111 lllustr•·
t ion) for sever1I stconds, hOld-
ing the club onty Jn your ltft
hand. Keep the back of th is hand
fa cing the res istine object.
Second, as you walk down lht
fa irway, or ·wait for tht croup
ahead to move ·on, take pr1ctlc1
sw ings wh llt holding the club
only in your left .hind. KttP a
straight left arm at all times.
Soon you will develop 1 much
greater control of the club tnd
build-up of power In your swing. I •e· ... ~~-......
t..~HTU1lA _ 12'1 1"'~": m blu. •HON TO IMPIOVEYOUI MTING•J ""9 hAmoW ,...._..fulliy
4lS rock f]\h, 11 ~1tlbut. ' bonito, 1 lllvthated ..,, •. to putt!"'---· n'*""', ••• S.-.2C1$•S...
w 1mon. \ 'lfiril a tt~, •If addlG•~ GfM..,..,_ ArMW .....,,.It'! ... tl
SANTA IBAlllAll A -"1 e,,.len; .. ,
lMO rodt cod, 711 111>11 cod, (50 u l!i:o l...!!~'~"'~~~·~·------------------.J bin. 2'JO bonllo.
OXNAll D -, ... tfltllen; lOlll bin. ·------------------------·! 105 rodt II.ti, :U If,,. cod, 20 whit. 11111,
1J M llbut, 10 bonllo.
MOllllO •AY -153 l,,.lertl 1
i.1tmon, lJ h1llbul, tf7 llM eod, •!2
ytl1owT1ll bfln . ,ORT HU ENEME -1•? 1,,.1trs1
1950 c•llCO blH, 11 bonito, 41 blr·
r1cud1, 11 h1tltllrt.
MALllU -1' 1119ler11 tl u l!oi
blu, 32 bonito. 4 h•llDut. 81r1H1 -1!5
11111len; uo bonll<>. 1'11 rock cod, 1
h1tlbul.
HERMOSA lt:ACH -d 1,,.leru
2S b1rt1CUda, 45 c11ko 1>111, :n botl!lo.
Del Mar
Entries REDONDO 9EACH -331 J119ler1: U
11baoire, 1 ye!lowlln tuna, 1 blllt1'1n
fvM, S9 barracuda, 511 c1llt0 bin, ;1 1
bonllo, 81r11es -Sll •nt l<'r1; 117 u nd
bin, 48 t.:inllo, 16 halibut, "13 •••••••••••••••••••••••••r m•dcerel, 1~00 rode cod.
SEAL lEACH -II• I J\lllers/ JI
bonito, '166 wnd bl,1, :H h11lbul. l1rH
-110 •ntlen; 10 blrr10Jd1. ll'OI
bonllt>. 20 sand bl11, 26 h1llbul.
.~ --" MMCO 9111:iafle. morw u-. 10,000 trwnwmlsalon ~ ~ 'i.-aet ,,... "'"""" • f1" o;eM--dMt:k. , .. t. .tllc:i...t -ie-t
~ "' just -fh1. Ntd with .-..CO. ~ t..nsmlukNt ea" be
~lld ~ oter 500 MMCO C....
~·coat to -t.
'. ,.fury ml1'111ho ~ I ..... -· "0¥;ri-···
•l~~Matl'..c,.... , . .,.,. •a nfulM .. AAlfCOI
" ••: · ' COST A MESA
":t14S th~ II. M"-1666
G1rden Grove
twl G•r~tll Gl'WVt 11¥11. IJi..HIO
Santa An•
m Ii. l"lnt 11.
OllER 60 AAMCO ~i-.QP S
IN CAtlFORNI A
...
OCEANSIDE -,,. a..;len: u
1lblcort, "' blrr.aJd1, )15 blu, 157 bonllO, ! whit .. HI bin, l yellowleU, M
hlllbut. J blvr:fLn tuna.
SAM DIEGO '''· L1m1 -HIM -l'lltl1mun'1 LeMllfttl -1021 111111 • ..-;
74 1lblcore. 2 ye1'-11ll. 2 clok>tlln.
NEW,OllT !DlnJ'I LlcklO -:wt
11>11len; •7 h11;11u1, "I blrr1CU111, 661
bonito, 117 bin, 124 I ~.. '
vellowt111. !Art's LaNl119l -70t
11111i.rs; 'H l\l~buT. '9 11bacort . 1
'l'e4bw11il, 1 blllelln tun1, 1 dok>ll!n, 1511
blrr1a,ooa, 161 bonito, ,.7 bl1s.
SAH ,EDllO f!2flll St. Uftdl ... l -
UO 1r19ler1; 11 l""'cort' U blrr1cud1,
620 ClllCO bl~I. I i'lllllbut, 1'.20 bonflt>,
Hwm•1 Lalllfintl -207 1119len; 6
Mind blu, IM bon!lt>, :tSoi llblcao"I• l
yellowlln l\IM, J bkNfln lvM, I Ytllowl1tt. l blrrlClMSI. m o;allm Hu.
I hlUbut. LONG ll!ACH {l'KIAc S...-ttilllllllll
-'"' anoll!'Si • elblcon.. • fellowlln run1, ' Ytl-1111. • blrr1cude, 1"'
cel!co b1lS. 176 bolillO, • ~111tov1. 11"1.,.( l'Ollll Lllldlnt) -'3li .,,.1en; U
1lblcore, 3 blrrtcudl. lo:lS bl11, '33._ bonllo, U'I roddflh, 11 h1llbul, 1 bluefln
tvn1. ll tlmont Pltr) -136 1"11leri; •
b1rr1cud1. t70 11111, lU bof>IM, 10
h&llbuf. 12 rod: lli.h. B1rtt -tl
1ngltral 30 bin, m bon!!tlt
Driver Killed
In Accident
SYDNEY. Australia (AP)
-A New Zealand driver
died Sunday from head in-
juries received in a tw<H!1lr
crash on the Catalina circuK
at Katoomba. He was J ohn
Ward, 30, married, o f
Gisborne. N .Z.
Ward's Lotus Ford
Cortina collided with a Ford
Falcon GT driven by
Australian Ken S tac e y .
Stacey was not hurt.
::Golf CLUB Sale
'··~'·
..---1968 MODUS ---
. " ..
l ,WOODI f l'llOHS
•FIRST FLIGHT
1111. IALI lttl. SALi. R11. IAL•
1'.!G 5' ... J WOODS 16.,S •f.tt l WOODS M.00 II.II
111 oo 1n.u ;'c'~":"~'c_...c'~c·:•c_"_'_·•_;.• _"_0c"c' __ ,_•_•_•_•_·•-,
,., T-"r• Aut. ,., l Nt
Cltar 11M1 1'111. l'lnl '•I J11t ... M.
Dally OMIMI. l'lnl 11111 Sec911111 Illus
'11lST ltACR. 6 lurl-1. 3 n1r
old• Ind \IP. Cl1lmlnt price "'200.
""'" 11,:IOO. Columm 1lltM !AL Dl•U 111 12
A·Hold Me (M V1len1uel1l 117
l ·Turn To PtKI (M YIM?) IU
Gtlllnl SIMI IA tl«rtrl ) IU
l'lOlll J1;11 IA Plneclt ) 114
9·1Cla#t Kip (F G1r11\ 1110f
&urning SINI IW MlhorntYl 1U
ltlU J1 ... le1 !II Yort;J 119
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G11tnl G. W. ID H1lll ui
5ov S..uct (A Plnt<U>I 111
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SeemHWIY (L J Dllrovut11J) 11•
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tlrlr To Femr rw H1rt1ckl 1u
Advent1rco !W MlhorntY) 114
THl1l0 1lAC•. Ont mil• Dl'I lurt. J
w•r okb. Clt lml,,. Pr!ct M150.
Purw U .IOll.
IC\r191word IW H1rm1!1l 111
tlenrv Mc IJ P1loml11ol 111
W1r Fltl CA P lntd1l lU
TemPnl\IOlll l lnll (II l l1nc:O) 117
8 1\lt T1rt1r !It c;....,,.,11) 117
Fr!ddle D. P. IA l Dl1J) viii
l'OUttTtl ltAC•. 6 lurfon9s, J Yt1r
old fl'lllcleft llllles. ,Uni! $3,flOO.
Petllw Ll1rtt1 !A Pined•) 11,
5e1 Liie cs TreY!no> HJ 111 T1'le lltln IL Gllll,1nl 11'
DIHndl1 ID '!trul lU
Ollls'I Gal 111
A·Jftl Pundl !II 1l-let) •111
Trlfflc Clovd {A M1u ... ) 116'
Coed (M Y1nt1I 116
CICH IBthlnd IA L 0 111) •Ill
C1tcl! Mt Bov1 IF Glr'fll •111
11.vtr~ !J Ent!<') 116
All• Eii.i" ..
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AIWI YI On Sund1y (W H1rm1t1 ) 11]
1Ctl·S .... 1en. tl Gl1tl91nf 11'
A·ICICY Glrl (II. 11.otl ltll •111
A-It. Cr1lt·tr1l11ed enlry
'"™ ttACf:. 4 furlDl'IOI. TWG n t r old m1kl1t1 11111., C1lbred1. PutJt
Q ,000.
Noll11ut !II. lll111U1l 11•
Hlbb~ ID l'iofrt~I 111
A·Lo~1ble sr1r iw H1rm1tr1 11•
L1ur!1'1 Turn (0 tl1lll 11•
Mlrll)(le'I Girl 11,
ll!tl Ch&lct O IE Medl111\ 11'
l -!o\11le'1 Cl'l•rm "" \lt l1t1ru1l1) 114
I've Sin IPOll'ld (II tam•11) 116
V1 ll1nli1 IA L Dil l! xlll
Tht 1lf111t Sift ID v11111ue11 11•
Gel llt111rch (M Y1"'1) 11•
Moll .. Nori 11•
Al .. •11tllolel
llD'l'll Tff!IPO U E Mrdlne) 11,
C1n'I Wt ll TUI (W Ml"°'"'YI 114
C·SIN<ltltUI Miiden tit C1bltler1I 11•
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old nlllu. Allow1QU•. Punt M,000.
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CN!tt l Dvthe$1 !It C1mo111 IU
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Olt mand DIP IW Herrltl 111
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I IOHTH llAC•. 6 lur~OI. l Yter
Did anti "" fllllts Ind .,..rft, Alklw-
1nctt, Pu•w \1,000.
Mr Lt"' (W H1r.,...l1 ) 117
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Fr1ncine M. (0 Pltrc•l 11•
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Ellen Gnicler ('If M11lomey) HI
A-MorNltt IM Y1nt1) 113
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Cleo '1! {G Lt t>OWIY) IU
HOPef\llt tltl..,11 {0 Vtll11ue1\ 111
A-1l. L. W....ltr·l••lntoll tnrrv.
HIHTM Ill.CR. Ont m liof. l 'f'Mr
01d1 1nd ""· Cl1lmlnt1 prlct 116,000-
Sf,OClll, ,u... ll,506.
8r1nd 1lov1I ID Pltn:r} 112
Ce..in!Y ArtorMY (A tlerr1r1J I ll
Oevil'1 Eto IW H1rrlU 111
Clltndlller 1ey !M Y1,..1l 111
Mon llf<Jt (M YllMll) 111
El LODO (W M11\omcY) 114
Gotdftl t nlrt !A L. Dl11l •117
Arttul Oodttr (A 'lntdtl i u
Kids like to
'Ask Andy'
.. • 1ltf-SALi
""llO H.M
Sl'lCIAL FACTORY U9UIDATION
1967 PGA IALI.
t\nne'fJ
j AUTO c•...,....
] wooos
t tJIONS
MODELS : ~~~s
1•.00 u•.M L---------------'
••••lloltte 111 "• Sh•JK 011ty. l'eno .. lbH flttl119 r.., P.5 .A. "•·
frffllaHb. Cl1h nallabla 111 all lhofh. w1l9lttl aflll le119tM. ··-TIY THIE NIW ALUMINUM SHA"S
GOLF BAG SALES 25°/o OFF
T 968 Doug Sanders
Aluminum Shaft•
ltH. HIW
U<G 01 1141.•
,111).tlO ......
OUR Sl't:CIAL
INTIODUCTOI Y 0••1•
JI l'OU -dt-bllrti wood! 1nd l-.
(V•lut 1)11.00) s 199 95 'P"' "'" •
SHOES
GOLF
Mt,,·1.L.e<1le1'
25% off
$.TAtTll
HTS
1·] wood. l-5-1·
I Iron PUllH
from UP
$39.95
USID sm
AL.SO AVAILAILE AT LARGE SAVINGS
CtlDn CAUi
IAHICAMl!RtCAllD e MASTEi! C .. AllGE
TUDl0 INS ACClmD
GREENS FEE
w ... ...,. ........ $3.00 I w ................ $4.00
T ........... ~~,._.
MONTHLY
etllN Fil TICKET S 11.00 , ... ,I ........ ~
..... ~Mell. !In
'"· •• , .. "911MTJ
Costa Mesa Golf Club
·1101 Golf Course Dr.-Co1ta MeMr
......,. (714) 5-40-7200
, ••
t1I ACTIDNaRSJa
D1I INDDOI
'tlRDVIJll lltOUNDt
aUICKLY TILL YOU TMI
IXACT CONDITION
M YDUI CA•
hl1cM
tG!"'S WHAT Wf CHECK -•• .._ .... ....,....,,,_.,...._ .. _ ---...... --...-.. __ __, .. ___ ,_ _..._ .... _ ....... __ _ ___ ....... _ .. _...,
HUE'S WHAT YOU ftt«I OUf ••• •'-__ _......,_..~ .. __. ......... ,_ __ ..... ,. ..................... ___..,.
HElE'$ HOW Ir WOU'S ••• ,_,, ...-.--...,__ ... --.......... "'... _....,. ... ,._. .. _,,, __ ., __ _
............. \-·-·-----_ _,_.., _______ _ __ ......... , .... -.. ......--_ .......... -..........-.. _.,. _ ...... ._.... ...... ,..._ ...... .., _ ............ ~-· ----... -__ .. .. _ .. _., _ ..... 1. d .... -----............ .,....... ... --
•
..
MOl'MUJ, A~t 19, 1968
Mitchell
Tops Field
AtOCffi
Wide-operi Tilt Predicted
For North-South Classic .
Mike MkcneU, 1 San
Francisco • based dtag&te.r
driver, returned to the B a y
Area •1.000 wealthier today
after wlnninc the A·gas
SUP«ohaTfed eliminator's
prhe at. Orange County
International R 1 c e w a y
Saturday,
Mitchell recorded elapsed
times of 9.04, fl'.:.!O and 9.2(1 lo
go w it h speeds o! 154.90.
lM.90 and 153.06 lo turn
back Hie bid 01f favorite Gas
Roocl.1,
Al it was, Mitchell'• main
competition came f r o m
Garden Grove's G a r y
Burgin.
Another pre-race favorite.
Wendell Shipman of Long
Beach, disqualified himself
With two red light starts.
Shipmon <lid nab top speed
honors, however, with a
188.66 mph.
Next Saturday night, eight
of the western U n i t e d
States' top funny car drivers
.and their machines will vi9it
OCIR. Garden Grove's Dave
Beebe will be s.hooting for
three mort match net vica
tor-ie1.
I!}' EARL GUb'TKEY
Of M9 OIOf' ''"' lteft
U you choose to take the
word of the two head
coaches, Thursday night's
North-South all-star foo tball
game at Orange Coast
College wilt be one of thO!e
o 1 d ·fashioned, wide-open
donnybrooks .
North coach Herb Hill Is
preparing his defense for an
all-Out attack from Jim
Coon's sou t b er n 1g-
gregation.
"That's the kind of foot-
ball Jim teaches, 1 so we're
e:r:pecting a wide-open game
from him," Hill commented.
"We'll be very surprised to see anythlng el!e."
Predicts Coon :
"Ba.,ically, _Herb is a preUy
conservative football coach
but with the kids he's got for
this game I look for an
opened-up offense f r o m
him.
Both teams report an A-
OK on the injury front. Hill
says he doas n't have a soul
cm tbt gimpy list and Coon
says what players he has
who are hurt will be ready
Thursday evening.
South fullback D 11 v t
Buchholz from S..U Ana
'
Valley Hilb ~lled a leg lIUI , slid. "Wt bed wi
muscle last week but sbould scrlmJJl.age i,.1t wen: and I
be at full 1trength Thursday. th1nt we've ptOP't:ued -It • Coon sald. Rt)' llunt , the teest 1 hope we hav!.1
' s,
24() pound tack)e Crom Hun· Coon ocrlnul\l(ed h I I -
lington Beach, is woozy with troops s"'al:urday and 1akf·be
the flu but will also play was sati.$fied wi th bla d..•
Thursday. feMe. "Wt 'rt 11 ready &4-,
Coon says a trio of grid-we 'll ever be," ht remarll·
ders from Mater Dei will _ed_. ________ _
figure prominently in hls
club's fOl'tunes .
"Eric Patton &nd Jim
Berg are our two
linebackers and tbey really
~ good in practice. Carl
Hernandez is another who's
been impl'eEisive, at of-
fens ive tackle."
Coon also lauded the
workout performances o!
his own end. Rick White.
Both coaches plan rugged
workouts today a n d Tues-
day. Hill, drilling the North
at Loara Hi gh in Anaheim.
will give his stalwarts the
day off Wednesday but
Coon, at Marjoa, will suit
his group up in shorts
Wednesday f1nd do nothing
more than run through plays
and go through a chalk talk
session.
"We're ready to play,"
Hi9h Ryin9 l lrds
W in9 Into l i9 A
IALTIMORI Ollot.IS
Tonight, Tuai., w.tJ.
All Gamas at 1:00 P.M.
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
3 DAYS ONLY!
.SERVICE SPECIALS!
Mon., Tues., Wed.
l:/· • .. '
!:;.:;,_.;.::;:: ••
TDD.CVI
Penneys professional motor
tune-up includes all
parts and labor!
Pll!Cff INClUDI PAUi AND IAIORI
YOu git fl•W points, plugs, rotor,
eonden .. r and distributer cap; ex· ,,.rt adjustment of cam-dwell, tlm·
ing and carburetor. Rtsult ••• more
'ptp,' better mlleoge, more •nioy·
able driving. Tun• up now ond save!
•A "'h"'°" "' Yit1•1w..,.'..i ('tJ •nll u,), f 17H!MMf
....I I ~"411' W J._,.._ •n ~
Not iust a reline ...
complete Reliant brake overhaul t
Yla m:.toll tlt'W beftdM. Nnlno11 ,.i,1,1ild •II
wheel cyllndart. ,.,,,._t l:wek• drvlftf, bl..tt
9fMI Nflll l:iroke eyn.111, r9p0d: frol'll wh..I
Morinp, ln1toN l'ltw front lf'"N NG!J, lftOfal
flfl llAKI ADJVS'FMINT POI UPI OP UNIHOI
NEWPORT BEACH
(F•shion lsl•nd)
29.88 .... ,.,.,a.. ....... _____ ,...
HUNTINGTON BEACH
{Huntington C.ntor)
'
r
• . ,
' ' '
Older Boats Shine in Newport Olympic Trials 1
OPENING GUN -Seventeen Olympic, yachting 5.5 meter final trials ofi Newport Harbor Sunday.
aspirant hit the starting line In the frlat race of the
Ronjamar Scores
Lipton Cup Win
Fred Woodward's Ron-when San Diego Yacht
jamar II from Long Beach started the power boat& on
Yacht Club won Balboa the 17th annual international
Yacht Club's Lipton Trophy predicted log race into Mex·
predicted Jog race fro"f!{' ican waters. The event wes
Newport Friday. won by Ana Palou, stip-
A southerly breeze which pered. by Tom Swift of
failed to lay down a wester-Southwestern Yacht Club.
ly chop caused the fleet to Final results:
buck headwinds with a BYC IJPTON RACE
lollowing sea over m<>st of CLASS A -(1) Ron·~
the e<>urse. The result was jamar, Fred Woodward, IL~-.;,.
some high percen\ages of LBYC, 1.700; (2) Lar&:o,
error for the veteran Class Thol Simonson, Hollywood
A con,.stant.. YC. 2.479; (3) Cres~ Harry
Somewhat the same con-Palmer, H u n ting ton
ditioni emted on Saturday Harbour YC. 2.651 ; (4) Hap-
Outrigger
Race Draws
Nine Teams
At lea&t nine teams -
py Hours, Kelly Wllllama,
LBYC, 2.343.
SDYC INl'ERNA 110NAL
(1) Ana Palou, Tom Swift,
SWYC. 3.:lll6 ; (2) Bomar,
Bob Martinet, MBYC, 3.548;
(3) H·appy Hours, Kelly
Williams, 3.931 ; (4) Kalua,
Gil Henry, BYC, 4.048.
Davis Takes
Crown for
Catamarans
r including one all-star group
from -all and rigll( from Southern C'alifOrnia clubs -
will lake' port in Ille flrat
Loog 8-:ll·Avoion Outrlg·
O!lf° Canoe race Sunday, it
-announced by I b e c o pspoMOring Kalifornia
Outrigger Association.
TIGHT RACE -Gardner Cos' Cadenza leads Bill
Ficker'• Charade as they set spinnakers after
rounding the weather mark. Cox won the opener of
Joe-Ed Davis of Mission __,;th:;•:....:5._.5~m._et._e._r_lri_·al_s_a_n_d_Fi._ck'-e-r_w_a_s_seco __ nd_. __ _
Tho channel cr<>IMI by
the 1:q ais:·IDlll canoes ha•
been an Avatoo.Newport
Beadi tea in ~ years.
Departure fbr this year's
race will be from Leng
Beach's Cherry S l re e t
Lifeguard Station.
Ha wailaa-ltyle mutic1l
entertainment and a luau on
t!he bead! at Avalon will
greet the islands-developed
canoes as they arrive. The
Avakln Olamber of Com·
merce will present trophies
l'o the winners.
A preview race from
Malibu to Sant.a Monica will
be staged Saturday.
Police Will
Open Center
OAJ<UND (UPI)
Police Chief Charles R. Gain
has announced the establish·
ment of tour neighborhood
information c en t e r s in
ghetto areas of Oakland.
Gain said the first center
would open in a fcrmer
retail store.
He aaid Ile ct.nters would
"provide citizens in the area
with a place where they
may go to discuss problems
rela.tinl to the police and ob·
tam lnfonnatton about the
police department."
'Ibe chief said the centers
will be lt&ffed eight hours a
day by police officers and
ne!Jborbood volunteers.
Scruggs Tops
Balboa Sabota
Pa I Scnlgfl ct Newport
Harbor Yacht Club won tht
Balboa Fleet cbamplonahlp
Bay Yacht Club is the new
national champion of the
speedy Pacific Catamaran
Class.
Davis copped the title
from defender Bob Baker of
Mission Bay Yacht Club in a
three-Oay five-race series
sailed at King Harbor Yacht
Club, Redondo Beach, Frf.
day, Saturday and Sunday.
BU.er finiahed second in
the fieet of 35 starters. The
regatta wu sailed in light to
moderate airs -oot exacUy
lo the Jlling ol Ille P·Cat.
which prefer thfl brisker
breezes whi'ctl can push
them up to 20 knot!.
T<>p five in the resatta
were:
I. Nlrnue, Jo-Ed Davis.
MBYC.
%. Copy Cat, Bob Bu tr,
CBYC.
3. Brocatt, J o e Riddick,
ABYC.
.f.. El 'nburon, Pat Car·
liker, Oveanside YC.
5. Paclfica, R. Paul Allen sssc.
The Girls
Are Coming
Guess who's coming lo
swim?
At the Boy1 Club of the
Harbor Area.
The girls.
Aquatic& director J o y
Start 1ay1 sw immi n g
lessons are offered for boys
and Clrll 2 years old and up
at the Boys Club pool. More
information ia available at
the club.
Pacific Crown
To Springstead
in the Sabot Cius Sunda7. WallY Sprln1s,.ad or S1n
'Ibt event wu open to the 17 Ole10 ed(ed d e f e n d i n g
local 1klpp<N who quallOed champiot\ Phil Chase of
for lllt .. ticmal ch-· CaUfornla Yacht Club to
pion1htp1 held 1 ever a I capture the Pacific Class
wet.k:1 ap. (PC) natfqnal championship
Top tlve place• ID the tleet Sunday at Santa Monica
• went to: (1) Scn&UI: (2) YllCbl Clab.
John McCl~. NHYC; (S) Sprlllptud beat Chu• by
Nill& Nltiltn, NHYC: (f) ont point. In lhlnl l.~oe was
"'in;i llutpnn. BYC: (5> 1 Georr• llorril of Die&•
Dennis DJPll. BCYC. 'Wacht Club,
Gem Captures Three
Races to Win Title
Gem , .a Columbia-SO sloop
owned and skJppered by
Olarles Hathaway of
Callfornfa Yacht Club, w<>n
three of a scheduled five
races Saturday and Sunday
to bring the California Cup
back to the home club.
Gem was pitted in a
match race against a sister.
ship Cygnus, owned by
Ernest Qllpman of Loog
Beach Yacht Club and sail·
ed by a San Francisco crew
headed by Henry Gra11din
Jr .. St. Francis Yacht Club.
Gem won the first two
races Saturday by margin5
Head Start
Helps 900
Children
Nine hundred O r a n g e
County pre-schoolers Crom
disadv.,...ged backgroondo
will soon complete their
ei&ht-week summer H e ad
St.art ezperience.
As a part or a com·
prehemive program of
educational end I O C 1 A 1
lel"Vtces, each chik1 ha1
received a c<>mplete
physical examination and
dental examination from
puticiPolinl ~e ()ounty
phyliclanl and -ts.
Jn order to remedy any
defect.a dbcovered from ex·
amtnaUona and to complete
all den&.al work neces&U'J,
the Orange County Com·
munlty Actioo Council will
launch 1 medical-dental
follow<hroug!I inogram at
tht conclusioo or summer
llead Start.
Approxlmately400
children participated In lut
year's follow. through pro--
IJ&m, and a 1imil&r number
.... •l,lected to panlclpate
111!1 ~.
of one minute 40 1econds
and one minute and seven
9eCOndS,
Cygnus began to make it a
real con.test in the third race
when she grabbed the start
and won by a margin of one
minute and 10 seconds after
staving off a vig<>rous tack·
ing duel initiated by Gem.
The fourth and decidi'ng
race was an even clDSer
contest. The two boats
started dead-even and im·
mediately engaged in
another furious t a c k i n i
duel. Turn.Ing point in the
race came when Cygnus at-
tempted a couple of fahe
tacks but failed to trick
~m in the maneuvers.
Gem won the race by 15
seconds, thus bringing the
cup back to the sponsoring
Galifornia Yacht Club.
Firemen
Rescue 10
In Sinking
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Uke many a s:aili'ng ship
before her, a 38-foot cruiser
wlth 10 people aboard ram·
med into Duxbury Reef 15
miles oorth ol here Sunday
in • fog .
The Sportsfisherman sank
within minutes. Her 10 OC·
cupants ~er.ambled on to
roe.kl. But a Coast Guard
cutter and helicopter
couldn't !ind them in the
fog .
Th• Ude obbed, and the 10
stranded person.. p f ck e d
their way to lbore -only to
rtnd them1elves on • nar·
row cliff-rimmed beach.
Floally the BollnRI S.,
Fire Department lowered
ropes over the cliff, t.ad
-tbe 10 to l&fet,y.
·cathnza Captures 1st Event for 5.5 Yachts ·
B1 ALMON LOCKAllEY ...... ,. .... ....,
II Ille U m<ter 1klpper1
, .. ldng lo represent the U.
S. in the Olympie yl<btlnl
games at Acapulco next OC·
l<>ber....,, -1n1 for
wllltbe!' condiUonJ almilar
lo Mexlc:o, llley couldrl'I
have made: a better choice
-Newpon Buch. SOll-Slmcla7Wb<D
17 lop U. S. Ulppera -
IODle al, them ai the btlm of
eJpenliTe new boata -hit
the oUo1Jns line in the first
fl .. ct the llnal 5.5 trW..
The .... --light --U 1&111 U they CID expect in Ac.tpulco.
When. the gun Wal fired
heraldillg th• winner of th•
fir.It of seven r a c e 1 ,
Girdner Cox' Cadenza -
one of. the older boats -wa1
first across the line.
But the Ouky winds and
lig'bt chop gave even the na·
tional champion a few anx-
ioua momenta -especially
on the final weather leg of
the CO\D'Se. H;rd 0 n
Cadenza's transom and cloe-
Jng fut WU Qiarade -
-old boot -_,
eailed b1 Bill Flew o1 Newport Hvl>or Y a c h I
Cluh.
ANXIOUS GLANCES
And causing Ficker to
cast a few anxkvi.11 &18nces
over biJ lhouldv waa John
Marshan from Sbmford,
Conn. -sailing Bingo II , an
old boat with a new sail
number.
And where were all the
sleek new machines? Well,
one of them, Ramona -
de1igned by Sparkman &:
Stepbeol -.... in fourth
place with builder Gerald
Driscoll at the helm.
Close behind Ramona wu
Lowell North'• new Luv,
San Diego, fl'Om the design
board of BriU.on O:wice.
North, wllo rot off lo a
miaerahle l'larl, fought an
uphill beUle to finish in fifth
place. Noni> bad rounded
the ftrst wnther m•k :in
ninth place.
Jn l'ixtb place wu Ernie
Fay, Houston, a former
champon in the class,
sporting a new boat Sun·
dance. Gordon Lindeman, a
n.Uooally rat<d 5.5 •kipper
from Milwaukee , W 11 c.
brought hit ctoud Nine
home in 1eventh plact, and
Ted Turner of Atlanta -no
stranger to 5.5s -was
eighth 1D Nemesb.
ELMS fl'll
Earl ElmJ ol Mislioa Bay,
fresh fr<>m winning his third
a:tratg.trt S n i p e cham·
pioom.lp, WIS I • i 1 i n g
ShOOow, one ol the older
boat., ond flnlsh<d ninth.
Donald COban's Truant, An·
napolla, Md. and Skip El·
llot'a Golsing, NHYC.
And SO it Wtilt with the
favorites and tlle dark
horses. Some up, some
down.
"But ~ f1na1 results do not
reflect t h e maneuvering
that went on throughout the
race to save precious points
under the Olympic acorlng
1ystem. I
Actually, Ficker tot the
best .tart at the leeward
end of the line, but WIS
serloualy hindered by the
judges boat and a few spec-
tator boats that failed to
move away quickly after the
1tartin1 gun.
But Cox, Ficker and
Marshall were one-two-three
at the first weather mark,
and that's the way they
finished. Driscoll also held
ooUI hia fourth position but
wu being challenged by hi$
old home rival North at the
finish.
It has already been men·
tioned that North's picking
ort of four boats to fini sh
filth la ooe of the reasQDI be
wu rated aa a pre-race
favorite.
Parker sailed a brilliant
first leg to round in fifth
placo, but ~ 111<•
cumbed to experience and -"°ed in dropping lo
10th.
Undeman improved his
position from 10th at the
lint mark to commendable
seventh at the finish. Allan
methodically picked of! five
boat.. lo pull himsell from
last to 11th. Fay and Turner
about held their olvn posi·
lions 'filom the first weather
mark to the finish.
In the final analysis, the
top half of tile Aeet bas
pai'nt.s that it may be proud
to keep. The others are
hopelul ol using the first
race u a diacard and bet·
tering their standings in
races to come.
The Olympic scoring
1yrtem gives weigbt to the
top &lz llnlsben. .,....JU
&eVenth place oa tbe1·.mu1t
take the place they fidrb
and add &lz point..
scoreboard looked at the
scoreboard )ooked at tb
finish of the opener:
I. C.dema, Gardoer Cox,
Mantaloking, N.J., -o
t. Cbl:rade, Bill Ficker,
NHYC, - 3
3. Bi DI o 11, John
Marshall, Stanford YC, &. 7.
Marshall, Stamford, Conn.,
5.7.
4. Ramona Gerald
Driscoll, SDYC, 8 .
5. Luv, Lowell North,
SDYC, 10
6. Sundan~. Ernest Fay,
Houston, 11. 7
1. Cloud Nine, Gordon Lin:·
deman, Mllwuakee, 13 .
8. Nemesis, Ted Turner,
Atlanta, 14
9. Shadow, Earl Elma.
MBYC, 15
10. Fugitive, Warren Par-
ker, NHYC, 18
11. Out.a Sigbt, Scott Alan,
U.S. Naval Academy, 17
1.2. Savage, Al Casal,
VYC , 18
13. Yankee II, Taylor
Grant, NHYC, 19 ·
It. Complu VI, llrition
Chance, NYYC, 2>
15. Grass, Elliott Oldak,
Knickerbocker, N. Y., 21 .
Annapolis, Md., 22
11. Gosllng, Sklp Elliott.
NHYC, 23
In loth place, perhaps
aurprlsing 1omt of the
eastern hotshots, was War·
ren Parker's Fugtt.ive from
NHYC. But local observers
who bavt been watching
Parker's performance dur· ing the paet year were not DAIL., ,.,\.oT it.ft ~
too •UI]ll'ised to see bbn In OPENING CEREMONIES -Newport Harbor Yacht Club's s\att of boe~bQO
the lop 10. and girls stand al attention as Olympic ~ag 11 hoisted lo signal start ol i.S
So much for the top 10. meter trails. Competingboata: lie alongside the dock. What M>out the boUom _______ ....;.._.;;... ____ ....;;; ______________ .;..
seven? Scott All8D o t
Newport Beach, now &ailing
for the U. S. Nava J
Academy, Annapolis, Md.
wa,, 1urpri1ingly in 11th
place witb lU& new boat
Outa Sight. Also tile victim
of a bad It.art, Allan was
dead last around the first
weather mark but worked
his way up to 11th at the end
of the seven mile Olympic
course.
Al Cassel, Voyagers Yacht
Club, was at the helm o1
Savage, a new boat designed
by Newport Beach desicnu
Bruce King llDd built bJ
Kettenburg of San Dieco. He
finislled 12th.
BIG SURPRISE
Yankee II, sailed by
Taylor Grant of NllYC wu
13th. One ol the b l g
aurpiael Wll to let the
famed 5.5 designer Brl-
Olance o f Philadelphia
bring hll new hard-chine
complex V1 acrOll tbe fhdsb
in l~ place.
Behind Chance WU Elliott
Oldak'• Gr·aaa from
Kn Jc k er bocter, N.Y.;
Puff Wins U.S.
Cal-28 Honors
Glenn Thorpe'• Puff of
California Yacht Club Sun-
day won the naUonat cham·
ploDJhlp of the Ca~21 Clan.
Tht regatta wu sailed from
Cabrtllo Beach Yacht Club.
Top fini1Mr1 ln the cl.ua:
were :
(1) Pull, GieM Thorpe,
CYC; (2) Chalupa, LarT7
Helscher, CBYC; ( S)
Westerly, Rt.y Corbett,
CBYC: Ill Camelot, Lloyd
Powell, CBYC; (5) Vlctara,
Jamu ~ .... PAIYC.
Finn Championships
Start on Tuesday
The summer's fiftll major
y a c h t i n g championship
serie1 &Wis Tuesday at
Alamitos B11iy, Long Beadl.
when the North American
ll>llnpiooships fw the Fino
Class gets under wwy.
The Nor1b American
d>amp!onships will pre<ede bf one weet the final Olym·
pie trlah in tile Finn Class
It Mlssloo Bey, San Diego.
Over 500 sailor• from Ille
United States 9Dd elJe"Where
are expected lo participate
in the d>amploM!bp eveot
at 1-Beacll.
Heavy fwvorltes will be
P ... r Bamott ol ABYC, 1964
Olympic medalist in t h e
class. and Joerg Bruder of
Brull.
Bruder, builder ol the
Bruder Finn muta, earlier
this 1U1D1n6 WCX1 tbe Finn
ne.lio:lals at Charleston, S.C.
Two top-ranked Finn Sidi>'
pers from Newport Beacb
al9o will be contenders.
They are Fred Miller Jr. d
SOUlh Shore Saillng Club,
and Henry Sprague Ii!,
N...,,..t Harbor Y a c b I
Riots Studied
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The NaUolal QxnmiJ&ion on
the Caules and Prevention
ol Vlolenc:o 11 to be!llo bear·
Jngs nest month. Th t
po .. 1dentlal17 OJIPO!nted
panel will m .. t Sept. 11 and
ls expeded to be In ,..,Ion .-.u-..
CI u b. Both are former na-
tional and North American
champions.
The fleet started arriving
in Long Bead\ today. Seven
races will be sailed with
skippers being allowed lo
throw rut tiler poorest race
in final ICU-ing.
Sports Van
Given to
Rehab Unit
A blue and white sports
v&.D, custom designed with
Jp&ce enough to carTy two
wheelchalr paUent! a n d
three ambulatory paUe nts
has been d<lnated to thl!l
Rehabilitation Center for
Crippled Children a n d
Adults In Orange by
members of the League of
the Easter Seal Society for
Crippled Children a n d
Adults: of Orange County.
The 50-member afiillate of
the Euter Seal Socll!lty of
Orange County is composed.
of residents of Newport
Beactl, Tustin, Senta A ..
and Orange.
Thl!l cua.tom-desl&ned bus
I• equipped with a special
hydr...Uc JI ft permltUn1
wbeelchalr patients to mte.r
•nd leave the unit vii the
double r~ door '"1Ue
outed in lbe!r cbaln.
..
Lido Isle
Club Plans
Regatta
Lido Isle lacht Cluti.-.im
hold its August Regatta tor
centerboard salting bcMlts
Saturday llDd Sunday. ' ·
Invited to p.nlclpal< ..
Li.do-14 A, B and junt.or;
Flippers, Klte1, SnoWWdl,
Sabots A, B and c and oJher
centerboard boats daises
that can come up w1tb three
or more entries.
Two races will be held
Saturday sta:rttng at noon,
and tbree races Sunday
starting at 1 p.m. There will
be three·mlnute intervals
between atart.s of classes.
Entries must be filed by
not later ttian one-half bOUr
before starting lime for
each day's racing, .
Guest boats maiy b •
launched at the Via Genoa
Boat Garden on Lido Isle.
Troph7 pr-.Uoo will
be held Sunday evening
tonowtng t h e trediUonal
clam chowder serving at U.e
LlYC clubhouse.
Crash Kills 2
BAKERSFIELD (UPI) -
A violent truck-car coUisloa
north ol hen !all week ldD·
ed Mrs. Raul L. Mattheft,
~, of Springville, a n d a
pauen.ser !n her •uto.
Rabtr1 H. F.wulOJ, n, of
Oroville.
l
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I
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fl"l11ri~y, l!Ul)U\l l'J, J%fl
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE nvv>c> •OR >ALt
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOT ICE Gener1I 1000 Gener•I 1000 Gener1I 1000 General 1000 Newport Reich 1200 Huntington IH<h 1400
ROUGH AROUND
..._,
Cl•Tt,ICATI OJI I UUNIS.l, P'U:t1r1ous NAMI
TIMI UNfen'9ntd 119 ttrtltv ll'lf¥ 1rw
........ a.riducth• • ~ " ... 0 .... *'
f ~t1 Mt ... C1Hternl1 "'11 C..llfornLo, SW.,,..,.,. ""' lkt11'°"5 flnfl ... in. of M M G
10_.-<0MflANV 11111 ltwol MIO lll'fft 11 t-~ of tht -.,uowi,... "'-· wt>osa .,.Mel In lult llld Pi-(IQ ff "'l<Mnu 1ni
*IOI-.:
ANTHONY A. GE•OME, MO • 1•111
Pl,. ""'· 14, Co.11 M~. 111.Anlf It GEROME, t• • 1'111 Pl ..
Afll. I~, C111ot1 ~
• DATl!O A11t111! '· '* ~ • ANTHONY A. GEROME
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$t1 .. ol C.l1!ornl1, O••"" Count..;
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• ter!bee 111 1111 wllhln lnatrumtnl i nd tt-
knowledVl'd ·~y tXKl/ltd ~ MIT!I.
'
Cloml H"lf No,.rv PubHC..CtM!otOllt
PrlflClNI OtflU In
O•tl'ff CounlV
My Commlulol'I Enlres
Julv H, 1"9
"ubl!ll>ecl Ort"'t C.0.SI Otl"" JIOot, , .. ,..us, 12, lt, " trld September ,,
l'tO 1*4
LEGAL NOTICE
. ·------------......
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TJ.<E UNDEllSIGNED do ,..,...,.,
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• ,or111111. s11t1 of C1UfQr"!1, uncHr tht lit· illla~• firm "'"'' of ME$,t. ,t.UTO WllECl(Ell5 tl'ld 11\.11 111d firm II com•
Poled M 1111 lolklwlmi 1>11rton1. WIM>'ll "'!'l'lft 11111 itOdreoe. 1n1 11 lllllow1, fo-wl!:
ChrhloPMr S. Wllller. lXIO B1rll•hl•t
" LtM, Ntw-1 18.etd'I. Ctlllor"ll
WITHE$$ my htnd lhl1 lOth dty o1 J,,_
ho, IHI
' : ' Chrl1IC1Phe• $ Wld~r ST,t.TE OF CALIFOllN l,t.
,COUNTY OF 0 11:,t.NGE
•; . On 11111 JO!h dtV OI July, A.O .. lffl,
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• : Publfc I" arod tor Mid Co1m1V t nd St1l1"
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, , Wld~r •nown fa me to be the ,...,...,.
•·• .. no .. """' !1 1ut..cr!bed "' tM wll~I" · !"1tri,nnet11, af!d 1cknow""'91!d lo mt 11111 he ••«ull!d the &1m1.
; '• • IN WITNESS WHEllEOF. I htvt ~'"-'"lo 11! my hand tf!d 1Hbe<1 my of·
fltltl ~al tlli! dtV t l'ld Yetr I" lhl1
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'
(Set i)
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Not1rY Public 1., 11\d
For said CounlV ll'ld St1t1.
My commlul"" exitl•tJ
Mar. 71, 19JD.
lllOllEllTSON, HOWSElll & GAllLAHO
'S41 C11111u1 Orlw,
"'-" BMC~, CaH..,,,11 t1UJ Tt l: M•S4M AINrMr•
Publl .. lf!d O'lf'll! CG.o•I O~·lv ltlltlt,
,f,IJ9Ult )1, It, 16 I"" S.,pltml>"• ?,
1961 1311-61
LEGAL NOTICE
NOT ICE OF TRUSTEIE'S SALi:
Nt. 1$111-F·'YLI:
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l11t lol In lr°"I of 01 South 8rookhurif
Str11et, An1Mlm, Ct lllornla. S..ld t ntr1nc1
h loc1te-d 5n letl •oulh of 11>1 Aime~
Morfg1of. Co. oerm1nent two P01ll!d s!eiil
Sign. MAYFLOWER INVESTMENT CO .•
•s Trusiee under lht dl'f.'d ol lru11 m1llt
bv WtlHELMlHA .... PYLE, as Iler 1011
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O!llclal 11.e.:ords el 0rt"9t Coun,.,,
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SWAN, I ll'lrrlt>.d !Nin, mother 1...i son
11 !olnl ltneJ1t1, bl' rttiOll ol lht br11c~
., • ol ttrtalfl obtl11l1on1 se<ufll'd lhe•tb~,
: notice of which was re-corMd ,,,,.., lJ,
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• lo I/It hlOl>ell bllldtr for Ct•/\, PIYtblt !n
· l8wtul m-y ol lht Uni!~ $t11t1 11 lht
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DaNd: """'"' ll , 1"611. MAYFLOWER IHVE1TMENT CO.
''1 Sol/Ill WH~rn Alletl ....
Lo. A,,...le1 '· C1111oml1 lruslH
By Cvnlhlt SlevtM
,t.11l1t1nl SecrellrY ' , ... ~" PL1bll11led Or1...;ie Coast D1Uv Pllnt,
•;:Auvu11 It, l6 •rid SePltmbtr 1.
~ 1961 1t ll"""' ,~.
·-
P-IJll
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01" Ull ANO/Oii AIANOONMINT 01'
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lltr "'-1, 1fft(ltv9 A"'tuil I, 19'1 LI CM ..
tel to ff Mlrit11 uftdtf lht llc11t>ou1
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(~ of •h• 1011-1111 lleflO!I. "'"°"' Mmt In luU 1nd ttlt« II ruldtnt;t i.
11 loli-1, IP.Wit'
E. 9. GrlmM111rO lnllfpfl..,1, If!(., I
C1Utornl1 CWP<>rtlkwl
..o.>-9 ~tr!\INI A-. CDront 11'11 Ma,,
(1U1ornl•.
Citrlllktlt for l(t .... CllOft of bullntll
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ftdtYll of lt\lbllttllOft lhertol, I~ Oft II~
In llM ttHl<t of !hi CounN (Mt"' of
Ortntt Countv. \lllOI• lht provisions II
*'IOft 1~6'1 of ""' Clvll Code. WITNE,S rn't' htnd !hit :IOlll llllY of Ju-
""' lHI. l , •· Gr'lrnstltrd l'"!i.rtrlil!l, ·~· BY 1!1t'l>tr I Gr1m19011d. .... ,1111"1 • ...,_, NtwMr I e1rl.tllf, .........
~,... Ct mtvs onw
"'-"" atacll. "1Nler11l1 t1U.1
Tth 54 .. .MOI
'ubllll!eo Or1no1 Cot1I 011ly Piiat.
,t.u.u" 1?, If, H Ind kPttmO.• J,
l tOI I :Je0.611
LEGAL NOTICE
,.,.,.,
Cl•Tll'ICATI: OF I USINl!$S
fl tCTIT10US ~1111M NAME
The Undttsll...., do hlreby c1rt\IY tlllt
W1! 1rt COf\lh1Clln1 • COMmodl .... tr•dlfl.8 bY1lneu •• Co-Ptrlfllrl, t i l•l52 8ow~n
Strett ln Gtrllen Gro~. C1lllornl1, under
tt>t llttlllo115 firm J\1-of COMOD CO,
1nd !hal Mkl II"" II C°""'°'l!d of IM
lollowl"g 111r•011•, wt>"" ,..,.... In tull
1nd 11l1cn ol rHlllttK;t l rt 11 l!lllow1. IP.
w\I :
ALl'ltEO J. FISHEii, hlU &owtn s1 .. G•'"'" Grove. c1mornl1.
FRANCES ,t.. MOSS. SCH E. IC1tel11,
,t.pt JB, Ott""e, C•Hlornl•.
OONALO P. WILSON. l1ll LO,.•'f
ltntd, L<11 "-"'•le1, C11ilornl1.
D. P. WILSON dbl Astra llle1t1rt~.
J117 Lowrv llo.11, Loo Ante•es.
C1lllornl1.
JOHN A. FLEMING. •?ll Slffltbi.irYt
Shf.rrn1n Oak•, C1tll11rnl1
HAltRY SHESTON, IOJU Moorp;r~.
Sllorm1n Otk•. C•lflornl1. wu.,. .. !heir hlndt 11111 :lrd dlV of Auo-
u11, tHf.
OON,t.LD P, WILSON
0 . P. WILSON
JOHN ,t., FLEMING
HARRY SHESTON ,t.LFRED J. F!S.H£11:
FR,t.NCES A. MOSS
ST•Tl OF CAtlFORNIA
COUNTY OF ORANGIE 1 U
0.. thl1 Jrd dt Y of ,o,.,.ust. ,0,.0 .. lt'-11.
bo!lort "'"· ltlf! u"°"rslolltd. 1 Hote•Y
Public In •nd !Or s11d Coun"' 1M Sta!~.
rnldlmi therein, dull' commln!-t rot
tworn, fft'l<>llallv 1ppe~r...t DOl{ALD P,
WILSON, ,t..LFRED J. FISHEii 11\d
FRANCES A. MOSS known to me lo ti..
!ht 1>er1on• whose ntmts '" 1ub1crll)ed lo tMe wl!M!n lntTrume.,1. 1nd 1cknowled·
11d to mo 1"81 tl>eY exKut<'d the 1ame.
rn wllnt!SI whereof, I htvt h<!•ti1J1to .el
my hind '"" alll~l!d mv 01tlcl1t ~•• lh~
dlW ~...i Vlt f In ltl!s certlllc1l1 llr1! 1bove
written.
<OFFICIAL ~EAL!
Oonatd G c~•
Nola,..,. P ubtlc
s11•e of Celllorn••
Principal Olllct In
Or•nnP Cnunlv
Mv Cotnm!HIO!I Expire,
AU§, 11, \'11
ST/\TE 01' CALIFOi:tNIA
COtJHTY OF LO$ ANGELE1 ) sl
ON AUgUsl 4, '~611 bl!or<. lht un.
der1l1nl!d, 1 No~,,..,. Publlc !n •nd ;,, ~·Id
1!~"' Pt•IOMllV IPl>llftd H,t.i:tllV
$1tESTON known lo "'~ to be 1111 o~•i~ .. whose "•"'4' Is 1ub•trlti.d t.. Ill• wllnl~
ln•lrument, a"" •ckn<>wle<lgl!d lo me lnal
t.e ••··~!•d Ill• .,me. 11 '~NESS mv Mend 1nd olllcl•t tttl.
!OFFICIAL SEAL\
,t.llen w. Walter
N.·!lrY Publlc·Calllornlt
PronCIHI Olllce In
Los ,t.noelH CWnf'r
My Commission EllP1ru
.&119L1SI 10, 1961
St,t.TE OF CAtlFOllNIA 1
COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES) n
ON ,t.111u•t J. !Ha, bttort me. Iha
Ondertl•nl!d, • Nolarv Publ!c '" AM lor uld Sl1te, H•sonaltv appee,ed J0'1N A.
~LEMING, know" to me, lo la the ""'"'n W!\o1t fltme h 1ublerlbecl "' tlll witt.IJI
ll\l!ru....,.,1. ennd acknowledotd lo mt •~at
l'lf •~«llfM tti. same.
WITNESS m'f h1rid &rid 0H!cl1I Hll.
tOFFICIAt SEAL!
Su11n IC. PrlJllle
No!trv Plll>llc C1llf0f"i1
Pri"c!111r 0tt1c1 !n
LOI A119eles COlln ....
Mv Cotnmlnlon Explre1
Nov. 6, 1'11
Jl»l·OC
ttubllshed Or1r>11e C~t5t Dally Pllo!,
..,.,,u1t 11. !9. 16 '"" Sep1fm~tr 7.
"" 1lal"'611
$60,000 HOUSE
$40,000 AREA
$34,500
Split \e\'cl dcli~h1 on B quiet
cul-dc-uc ,tttet. 'l patios
on two levels, l'llS)' to main·
taln yard with spnnklirr.s
!ront & rear. S!X'Ci;tl lurn1-
tU!'t' that Uts only thi! houi;r
will remain. Panelled farnlly
room with fireplace. So
many bc1utlful ll'>p(llnt·
ments you must st"c? Please
t"all:
Newport
at
Vlctorl1
~6-6811
IOpon
lido Isle Haylront
New f.1editerranean Home
with SCVC'.n bedrooms
Bayside formal dininJ: room
spat:ious B.iyfronl living rnl
p.l neUcd den
white sandy Bf'ach
3 car 1-:arai;e
SJ.llj,000
Attractil'C linancin;
DlntarL .
l\otrs. PavJ01·irh
THE BLUFFS·
BEST BUY
You can't beat thP low prier
on Lhts bea utiful pnd~ of
ownership home. rour spac·
iou.s bedrooms, 3 QucMl siz-
ed baths, magnificent livini;:
room \\'ilh open beam <'cil·
ini;s and restful \'icw. Ovro·
tr transfe1Tcrl nut o/ area ·
says sell NOW: Only S36,j0:},
Submit your smaller hnmc
on our i;;u.1rantrc tradl' plan.
20-13 \VI::STCLIFF DRIVE
6$-7111 Open Evr.~.
INCOME UNITS
Harbor View Hiils
Corona del Mar
Lusk built homes locatC'd
in 1hc Southland's mo!'lt fir.
slrablc & lasrinating Arca .
Schools & Calif. Irvine
Dimpu5 just n1oment~
away. Sf'nsilily pricl"'rl IJ"\'.lnl
S.1 ! .~:io to S.18.!JOO
FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE LUSK HOMES
IOOu General 1000 General ~~-----:~N~EE~D~ROOM~!~
Dircclions: t.h11·A1·1hur Bh·ti.
1000 from Pacific Coei;t lhvy. or
Newport Frwy. Tt1111 on );an
.Joaquin Hills Rd.. t h C' n
lnUow sii;::ns 11"1 modrl arr11 .
. ~ j)"" f}J,f'
?;~
2~1 ·1 Vlsla Del Oro
Newport Beach
·«t" PLAN SPECIAL
\Veil IO.'Orth your inspection
Popular EstrcUila Model. :i
bdrm., & family room on
fiO~st green bell. with par·
This ;:, BR home is your an·
swer. Ideal local.ion near all
schools & shopping. 2 baths,
built -in kitchen. Assume
~'i ',~ loan at Sl30 [Y..'r 1nonth.
Owner will sell GI or J<~HA
with no down payment.
Prier only $24.900.
109J Baker, C.M.
Ea1tside Co1ta Mes•
$20,SOO FHA
\\' AL K TU \\1t:srcwrr
CENTER • Two B.R. Hdwd
Doors · alley entry for trail-
er storage.
Corona Dr! M~r l!igh
~BR 3 Baths. formal Dn sep.
arate ma11tcr sulll'. Best bu.I'
at $35.500.
Colesworlhy & Co.
642-7777
1~0 !lnrOor Blvd .. C.M.
1112 Estelle Ln.
BAYCREST
OPEN SAT./SUN . 1-S
Drlightful 1 BR :J bath ho1;1('
with family room & form11.l
rllning room. Dott'I miss lh is
""'. .lerry Freud
Charles Arnold
Rc:iltors 6 ~5-11:.:1
-Opi~DailYfto 5
... , tMI bay view. Few steps
•' ·il'Dm pool. Under market at
$42, 750.
Homes for Trade 642-2'221
PRICE LOANS EQUITY
$19,500 Sl4.0CO ~
0!M'n Evr!<.
~P~r7ic-e~d~R ight-$20,950 ·
e FllA VA e 3 BR + fam rn1 ,v/fr•plc
• C'pts/drp~. t.tovc & rell"ig.
RlU's. 642-97::0 Evrs. :l4:t.0720
219 J asmine, CdM
Vir w h11n1C'. step.~ to hr •th. 3
BR 2 Oaths. living roon1 +
family. firrpl;i cl', bl1 · In~.
Sep. dinin;:; erca. srrvi<·r
porch. carpets & drapr>s. l
car .i:-srase on 11llf'y. Lar&•'
lot. V11r.111t. JO't,, down
•. . "
PH. 644-11 33
EVES. 644°1S41
$20,500 Sl-4,500 $6000
$21.500 SIJ.500 SIO.OCO
$22,500 $12,500 $10.<XXl
$23,500 $17.500 S600il
e KENNEDY
For Daily Pilot Want Ads.
· Is-"Your Ad In our classifieds'!' BUI Smiley. Prine. &. Bkr. Dial 642-5678 .. ,,
. ' .. .,
•
.. ,
' .
'•
.,
STAR GAZEK~i<~
Br CLAY J. POLL\
H r-o.;7 ,...., °"""' '<
V ,t.ccortli~o I• 1/11 S/111'1. V
To deYe lop rnessog1 for Tue~doy,
read WO!'ds corresponding tic ruTtberi
uf ~ Zodioc bitth sign, ,,_ ,,_
Jln.w 34 E.><etl-
""" """ 31 y""" "w"" J<i NM "'"-4 ! To ., ......
43Y-
41 ll""'"'t
4,S Y-
46 --
4 7 S.0."'4
t8W ...... 49E....,._
\()•~
SI _..'"Ii!
52 Meir...;! S3"" '"• S~hoe ,., ...
'" ......... ........ .. ,_
•
RHr . 6-tS-39211 Evf''I. •1!1 1·!1308
*LACHENMYER
4 BEDRM =-$23,7SO
SUBMIT NO DOWN
G.I. or low do'-"·n lo others.
C?m;lrtrly refumlshf'd In·
aidr k. 0111. 2 baths, Qu;ility
r:-,.prting. 2 P9.llfl5 for out-
door living at irs bt'!t Butlt-
tn rans:e & l)Vtn. Esratc
~lzM yard. ~1720
TARBELL l9SS Horbor
COOL POOL-4 BEDRM
$23.SOO "0" DOWN
2 bath11. Built-In klh·hen.
C1rpclin~. drnpcs. Covcrrd
pa!io with BBQ. Anthony
pool. Water sof!Cn('r, Submit
no down G.l. ~1720
TARBELL 2955 Horbor
oELuxE BbPLEx
Open Deily 3 • 6
208 • 39th St., NB
Cose to Beach, Chann('I.
tnd PlaYiJ'OUlld. S49,500
Georie William10n, Rltr.
673-Q50 OPF.N EVE.I\ .
THIS WEEKS
10
£EST BUYS
TOWN HOUSES
$17,SOO
COSTA MESA · JIUNTJNC-
TON OJ::hCH • 2, 3 and 4
bedrooms, "! blllh~. on~ and
2 31ory. PRICED t'ROM
$17.:500 (;ooci tV"m~.
Sl 9,670
Sll:l per n1onth fo1· this :1 bctl·
1w n1. 2 hath Adult hon1r
With your nwn private f1 'Uil
J;rove a n d maintainrnt'<'
fl"'t'f'. yard. Near new shnp.
pittll: r.rntcr -OUTSfAN[).
ING VALt;t:,
$19,950
l ·HOUSES
$1 21 PER i\tONTil :!·hou:!IC'S
Ott one lot ·Top Co.;;;1a l\l~sn.
area. BE A LANOLOkD and
live in other .
$26,900
College Park
ACROSS 1'' R 0 l\1 GRADE
SCHOOL · One o[ a kind
clean, 3 ood1'00m 2 ba01
family homl'. Huge family
nlOm with l'atinl'.: a.rca, plus
all Ple<:tric buill·in kitchen,
ASSUt.lE 6 7~ }?HA LOAN.
PATIO KITCHEN
$30,SOO
whf'n you vlt'W this mod el
home clc11n 4 t>rot•oom home
with master bcdroon1 dress·
ini,. room Hod 2 full baths.
A park likP st'lling Tear
.)'ard that will amaze yoo.
COSTA MESA
1/3 Acre
4 BEDR00t.1S in a rural srl-
ting with city <.'QnvenirnCC's
nr urby. Over 2600 frl"'t of
living area, wth plt'nity of
ou1 doors hobby areas, and
dark room in 2 ca.r garagr.
l'vllGHT TRADE.
COOL· POOL
$26,800
COSrA illl::SA • 0 11 rhis trrr
lined stl'cel you \11tll find a :l
bC'droom family llOme \\'ilh
enclosed patio over lookin::
B run ltllNi ,vard and pool
ll"i1h tintrrl patio and trop1·
cal planti;.
INCO M~
PROPERTY
S UNITS
on !h(' bcac~. all !urnished -
Terms $47,:ioD
DUPLEXES
• 2 i;tor.1·. ~ bC'droon1
ba ths
up, 11,.,
S30,500
• 000
tin;::
lS UNITS
11cre park like gct.
Sl5..l,OOO
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. 17th St. 646-4494
john mac:nab
Balboa Island
Choice Soulh Balboa Island
Home \1·\1h fantastic Bay
Vir w. pr•lv.1tr pier. sundeck
and nt»!1. 4 RR. ~ ha, bcauti·
ful!,11 drroratl"'rl. l\.1ovr-in ron-
rl1lion. Ownrr \\ill !inancc,
~1 ~.i.0"1.
f:.E.\LTY a>~JPAN Y
AAl DOVER OR.
r-.·t:'\'PORT Bl•:\OI
(7141 6<2-8235
Foreclosure
f\r('{(s painl k yard 1vork,
hul hrrc·~ 11 i:real huy a!
S'.!i.~l(lO 1vi th 10', do1vn & a oorr loan 111 li.!1':0 intrt•cst
· $'!19 1110. inrlud!'S r11e1·.11·
lhin:i;. 1 RR . fa mlly roon1
& srn1i.f1wrna l din1ni;: 1·oon1.
r.ood C'arpc!ini.: 1hrou1;hnu1.
Don 't dt'lay on lhis onr:
COLLEr.E rt~LTY
J46-58llO
$40,000 Ocean View
for only $34,75:>
J Bit , '} ha, dhl ;:: •r 11·/HJn
cll'<'k. t::i~y fin~ :1·1r.~. See
U1\°" pre<1ti;,:e hOnlr Joela.I'.
Graham Realty
Nr. NB Pw..I Of1· 6!!).~~11
DAVIDSON Realty
FHA RESALE
ASSUt.11:: ~~'7. INn:REST.
3 btdroorrn, 2 blthJ, din.
lni:: •rra, hrrMkfai l b11r l
built-In kitchen, o nl y
$23,500. . ...... .
tlEWPDRT HEIGHTS
CONSTA..NT JN COME .
B<tnk thoae mn! checks
n1onthly from thls I bf'd.
n~n1 homt plus bat'h<'lor
vllll\. $2400 .)'Carly incon1t'.
Subn11r S23."l0 down.
i-;vrn\ngs Call 5.tll·7S.'JO
SPARKLING
POOL+
FAMILY ROOM +
3 t.:pacious BEDR00~1S,
111nrm ~Jd carpetlng. 2
haths, gleaming kitchen
and stu11nin~ stonr lirl"'-
place in ran1ily roo111 open-
ing to maSfii\lf" d ~·king
around tfO;)ical POOi .. I)('.
ligh1ful ncii;:hborhood only
l bloc·k lo shopping aod 2
hlocks to ~·hool&. r or the
particular fumily that wish-
f'~ Lhc hcs1 in !he best area.
ONLY S'lli.900 with NO
IX>\\IN to Vf'1S anti Only
$2.000 to 111! c»her qu11lifiC'd
btJyrt·s.
COSTA i11ESA OFFICE
2790 H11rhor R!11d .
~~!W91 Open !ill 9 rM
LARGE 2-LfVEL
\\'ith RUMPUS ROOM.
custom carpels, h 1 i::
rotintry s1yle kitchl"'n
IO.'i!h all built-ins. rlrap-
M: ('tC. l huge Bll.s.
shaJTI sharp home 2
miles to BEACH. Cif'an
rnol ocran a ir. ABS()..
LUTELY NO oov.rN
VA or St.IALJ~ DOWN
FHA. J<UU price S29.51Y.l.
Be first in linr. call
nolO."
<e•wr1 CO~TS
WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0ptn Evenings)
NEWPORT •
BARGAIN BUY!
3 + Den or 4 Bedrooms
wlth 3 baths. \Valk\ng dis·
!11ncf" In all ~.-hools 11nd
\VN!cliff Shc.wing area.
Hardwood floors. fireplace,
lari;:c doublr garagr on tii.c
corner lor. Rotun for boar
or t1·111ler. Needs IO."Orlc, hut
our hcst buy in this flnr
Nf'wrmrt Beach atf'a ~at only
$19.~.
:!(HJ \\'ESTCL.JFF DRIVE
6-IS. 771 I Open 1::11rs.
Waterfront Homes
With Slips
in Pt'l \'alr community of
i;in;::Jr faniily homes. Prt-
va1r slips for largr hoals.
:l BR , 2 halh . . . . ,-1~.!KIO
2 Bdrm + den . . s:i9 ,j()()
\V11llrr lfa;•l"!!.
~
(01J1·1ell, Banlier & Co.
UM I . CNS! "•thwl ¥
NtWPOtl l t•ch. C•lllOf"I•
ICI f .J)S1 0111 S·?OOO
5 BEDROOMS ·
$950
TOTAL CASH
P.f'(IU1t'f.'d to movr \n ln thii;
l11rgr ren1ily hon1r. Clnsr
In shnp;iini.:. ~chools. 11nd
1•hurr hrs .. 111.~1 ptlt nn llw
n1,1:-l•r l, 1h1s onl"' won·1 la~!.
$16.1 Jlf'f mon th includes
ta:H'5 t1nd insu1·ancc~
~!H~ IVESTCLIIT DRIVE
li·l6·7711 Oprn E11rs.
WIDOW HAS HOUSE •
WANTS
TRAILER HOME
fil"'&UL 3 UR . .._: \ni·!. p.1110.
'l tllr h11 . l;::r . !iv. rm. k
tiin. rm All rm~. r plrl.
S'.r1..'100 \\'11n1 nir r 1rallr r In
t:Md loratlnn.
Leon Vibert, Realtor
J.l~OjltS 11nvtimr
2 STORY -$30,SOO
BNiutllul\y drt'Or.1h'f1 3 BR
film rm . tiln rm. del pii;o rile
& mirrtm:'d rntry I•----------Rl!r. Z7j(l Jl;u·tior ~18. Ct-.1 Westcliff Bargain!
546-.l~ Eve~. ;,·1>51~1 Sp11 rlc;l"1" · frrsh & nrwly
iiPrQr11tr d l RR 2 bath A CHARMER! tiomr \\·irh ramuy 1'ftnm 1..
lmmaculale -E:i.rly Amrri· 1cp11rH I!' lari::1~ glas' rn.
can. 3 BMroom~. Family clCl!it'd play mom overlook.
Room. Douhlc ••irrplacr, ln;t 18x30' pool Ir. sunny
Douhle i::ar111:,., Work Shop, p.1Ho: Undcf1lric1<rl for !hit
Boat Yard. Ca.11 for appoinl• A.rf'11~ Only 142,TJO.
mf"nt to M't! 1ht1 •p.i.c:lous Ruth Perdoll, Realtor
cuslom built hon1r , $74.500. lliO':i WcstcliU Dr. 612-S:zon
JEAN SMITH, -Ivan Wolls'
REALTOR Newost Modol
400 E. 17th St., C.t.f. 646-:tr-,S 4 BR 4 bll., Jonn&I din rm,
lam nn w/wet bar, l cat
*Country Club Hom•* 11:ar Contract now lor Aui::.
2860 ~q. I!. Unusual. Onr of i1 completion Ir rhmM> your
kind. A way ol life. $61.900. own Mlnnr &. cnrp,..rln;i.
~4()'1 Rily J. W11.rd 0,. 646·1560 ----""----
•
15 UNITS Bt:ST BUY BA Yat&S"l'
Quick Po1&eakin
1 ACRE . Spac\oua 3250 &q. ft. cu11 ..
PAR.!< LI.KE SETTING ·'fop proftis. dt cor. & ~ .. 5
<:osta Mesa rent&l 11rca, con-tg. BR. Xlnl eond. R•e buy
1h1tlng of l • ~ plex and 10 at $69,500. S~t':·f Lo a n
lndividu•l units plwr garages 1ranterrab!!. Not on lease
• ll • 2 bl'droom~ and '2 • 1 land. 646-2828 Eves.
bt•drooms • 1'ht> pril't: '!' 1..-0W· 2100 WINDWARD LANE
er lb&n you think! All tu (U$TOM VIEW HOME
t1dva.ntage1 YoU nrl'd., NEWPORT BAY CONDO
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. 17th St. 646-4494
NEEDS-FAMILY
MEDALLION 3 BR '2 RA
Dbl 1ar. pools, roll. rt<'
ONLY S.'!6.500. 673-ot~
OA YCREST -Own~r. 2
Ba .. family rn1.: bl'aulllnlly
ct1rp. & draped.IH06
l...rt-10.'IH'rl Lane. ()p('n wr rk·
Pnti~ 1-.';, 5'1S-OK75, .;tll-0970 Vacant 4 Bdrm. Newport
fkach ham~ with cxlra Jar~c U\l:? HIGHLAND Dr. llrhr
tamily ronm • P1tr lo l\nd lllnds 4Br1 M. fRmrm,1111
room for hrn.11 nr !rail<'r. • hhns, frplr S32,500 lO';l-dn
Tl)p vetue at Sl'!,950. Owner. 548-2847. l-7:!'9-2!lrn!
fHS.7171 546-2313 l\fOV E In ! Nrar nrw 4 BR., . -.
THE~EAL I
:J::STATERS . .
frp!., t1l'IV cpts. nr. beach.
$28.000. 0J'lf'l1 wrrkcnds; lll
6?nd St. Owner 675--0144
Waterlront 3 BR. No. 62
Balboa Cova;. Sfi0.000.
!>. r riendly Home sJO.ooo cash by 1oan.
in a good 11('lghbott1ood Nrw·l=o"="="=''='='='='''0'0'='=L=f=g..=17=1=1=
port Height~ schools 3 BR. .
i1i, bath~. carl){'ts, rlra.pes, Newport H e1ghts__!21~
dbl gar. Onl,11 SAVE 7';~-$-'lfi,1511 ATI'R.AC.
$23.m • 10'1: dnwn, J Br. 1 ba. ?.tAKE Of'f'ER
DOf\"T .t-llSS TillS~ 400 Pirate Rd. 6.\6-3079
Graham Realty • PLEASANT c1uJ tfa"n l
Nenr NB Post Ofc. 6--IS.21ll Br, 2 ba + 2 Br Ocean Vu
• TRANSFERRED • incom• Apt. 149'500 "",._"''
i...C'avin~ Augusl 16th. f.lu.~t
sC'll 4 BR. 3 ba!h nl"'ar school
& park. Low do\\'n. 64&-4-111
.Dtlto !Ital £stott
Newport Shores 1220 -----~·--
3 Bedroom 2 Bath
2 S1ory
Good Conti, New ra.rpets
11~ DOWN I ;;;;;=;;::::;;;~;;;;::;:=;;:;;~ lmmcdi;i1c Occupancy
--61~.:!Jl:t"i 540-:!!l!ll Cost~ Mesa 1100 :1 BEDROO~t 1 t>aths, 'l story
Wooded Ret e t ~' blk to cluh house, .)'early
f Q ]C8.SP only. 112:) pr. month.
!lave you thought about roun-642-2835 or 540-2991
tr,v Jiving In a spaciou"' 3 ===========
bedroom hon1r on a largf' Ea1tbluff 1242
wooded lot. Relax in rhis -----------
country almoi:phrrc lo r TI-IE BLU~'FS. Condominium
$23.9CJ. 2 BR. 2 BA carpets &
"rit1g" drapes. Caloric applianCf'll . .!9!~ SPRI.NG ,., "' '" ha• fini•hcd in-• ,,.,., ._ lrn or & rll'C. t1001· opener. n''"• REALTY Nr Cd~! i-li. Beautiful ..,.,.., ori~l>h~;hoorl $2>1.!IOO. Jim
•• .. trnyli1>1e " t..1orriwn 641-0736 or
:";:;1 !!arhor Blud., C.:'IJ. ft.I~..()();,~
RANCH STYLE Irvine Terrace 1245
Kaep Your Cool
in this 4 811. :! ba hralPd
pool hon1r . Oukk ross<'ssion.
DeL1ncy Real Estate
2R2~ E. Coast lhvy. Cd1\!
673-3770
Heavy sh:1kc roof, Easlsid r J
BR 2 ba!h. firl"'pl11 r r. built·
tns. 11uiel ncii.?hborhood.
near school. 13x27' lamil~·
roon1, (;fil'JlC\5, drapes, l'.'I'.·
tra ~toragc. F'ull prier
$~1£.!!50. submil !ern1s. CALL
DAVI:: MY HRE ~~0.1151
~OIX'n eves) Heritage Real
Es!ale. I'.::~,.. .. ~..:~"!'~!!!! ... [ ~=~--------1 BY owner. 3 BR. 3 BA, I~. IM~1ED. occ. AHr. 2 story. FamLl.I' rm. $45,00J. Gd
FHA apPr '30.200. Coruidrr 1rrm!I. 67:\--4.10·1or673--017!1
much less. 3 BR, 2BA. step.
dn. !iv. rm. 19x'Jj' fan1. rm,
blt-in sterf'J. Intercom. soft Corona del Ma r 1250
wa 1cr plum . Lg cul-de-sac Jot l••A!l!!!!T!!T!!El!IN!!T!!l"'O!IN!IJI•
Nr. So. Coast Pl, schls l
fN't'ways. 310f> Roosevelt
\\la~'. Owner. 545-.~!30 Now Hear This I
Now Hear This I
!\'ow they can bl"' ~hown.
Shrt rpcst '.! on a lnl. in
Divorcrf' anxious 10 move all of Corona df'I 1\1ar -and
from ;irra. llas nr.al. sn1all lhtli inc lude.~ outlying
Urgent I
J BR 2 bath. lan1ily 1•oom et ('O mmunilirs ;iJso.
only ~23.500 In Back Bay :z _ nc1v~ 2 Bdrm plu11
area. RC'ady for o/fcr: massivr gar11.i::r
aJLLEGE RF.ALTY 5-l6-58S0 ,511!Y.iO -ANf1 \VORTll IT!
NEWPORT BEACH BEST FOH lllE MONt:Y • nEALT\'
EASTSIDE. Quirt rcsidrn· 675.1642
1ial area n c B r Nrwrlf"lr1 il!l•IDIJ!!rsi""llm••~ I Heights. 3 BRs, huiltins,
l a r i:: P yard & ha~·ood
floors. Priced to M:il ;if only VIEW OF HARBOR
$20,950. CALL 540-1151 Quaint" hon1r. l.ari;t> Jil'ing
lnpen ~·csJ llrrilage Real room & fireplace. Reduced
F:ste!r. to s.~.900. * BEAUTIFUL
PROVENTIAL *
Stnne front. raised stone lire·
Pl. 2 ha·s. 4 br.drms. lam.
rm. all clM'I. kitch, comer
Jot. 6-16-:i.543
CORBIN-MARTIN
nf:ALTORS li74.!fll'i'l
Y oun9 Executive
}f0,\1E · ONLY $22,950
l\1odcni 3 BR plu~.
Shown by appt. ottly
FOR Sale by nv.·nC'r. sevr!!! l\l!ZELL Realty
3 bdr. full cpt~/drrm, nice 54ll-22M
y111'tl . Xln! toca1 ion n('ar ABOVE TH E-BEACHES
~•·his/shops. 220~ l\1lncr St. l\1illinn s View trom 1780 Rq.
C.1\1, ~111-7.11:1. fi42--0721 !! or fTll)f fleck . Custom Cf'o
mf'nr til(){'k 2 Br. 7 ha. By
M_•_11_V_e _rd_• _____ 1_1_1co o w n ,. r S6!1.IXXI. a-16-869.l
• 67:1~1!f:t,1 *
THE EDGES
Bui • little paint wW make
11 "Homt Sweet Home." Va-
r:artt and will sell nu and
VA 1nd pay )'OIJr COila. 10
•llow !or P¥.lntln1. Modem
:\ bt'Clroom, 2 bfllh. Hf.td.
wt'IOl1 noor~ hilly carpeted.
SACRltlCE!
16.rl EDINGER
S4t ... i..1:-.1..'i or 540-5100
ASSUME
GI LOAN
Ownrr desperate, will accept
S2100 for his lovely 3 BR &.
den Mme. Den tx-autifully
ponelll'.'d with 1natchin1 bar.
1"ully carpctl.'d. Dr\gtit step
saving kitchen with all the
modern Rppli1oces. •dinln·
in;: family room. ~clusivl'
at:
LISTER REAL TY
16612 Beach Bl,, HB 342.&\1
NAME YOUR TERMSI
90•,.; loan Bt 6% "Ai, no down
V,\ or FllA on 1pacioLl.5 3
BR with 20x27' family room.
shake roor &; electric built·
ins including dishwasher.
EXr:t'llent location & priced
under the original sales
priC'e.
Pacific Short's Realty
~?Ji.&119-t Evrs. ~
**** LISTING
Ownf'r tried or driving 200
milrs a d~y & must 9ell al·
mos! new 3 BR home.
Bcamrd crilingll In living
room, firf'place, i;l;ile entry.
Large !ami\y kitchrn with
11vocado built-ins, dreuln;::
room in master bedroom.
Carp<'t«i & draped. $21.!M.
LISTER REAL TY
16612 Beach BL, HB 842-6633
$30,SOO
3 BR 3 lia!h, 130 fl. deep lo!.
shnkl' roof with used brick
front l'.'\terior ca.iTied into
firl'place with panelling in
Jiving room k den. Prores-
sionRlly {:erot'atcd & with
wall paper. Car~rs. drai>
rs. lou11r.rcd shutters, HI
1''1 s!)('akers. \\•atersoftener.
Don'! buy until yoo see this
homr:
V i:!.:ige Real Est1te
'.r.i'l· .• ! 54S-810.1 ----. CUSTOM HOME
VC"ry spacious 3 BR 2 balh
with huge separate family
mom, wrt har & 2 Hreplae-
t'S. Cui l! Of\ 2 IT"te-shaded
lots. i\ lot ol house !or only
$2R.:i<l~.
Paul Jon11 Re1lty
IM7-lZ"uG Evci;. &47-6978
3
Minutes To Beach
Take over 5 \4 'lo loan. 2 story,
:l BR, 21,.1 ba, elect. kitchen.
lg rm. rm. \Vi!h frplc.
BRASHEAR REAL TY
S47-&l.3l Eve. 541-2442
OPEN HOUSE
~IEREDITH CARDENS 10261
Jon.Day. Prestige area. 4
BR 3 ba, lam. rm. llv. rm.
din rm. rumpus rm. 2500
sq . ft .. carpeted.
R. D. Sl1tes Ra1lty
M7·:ti19 Eves. 962·7369
~~~ HUGE wrs. near Ocean
60' x 200' !fet" simple).
PLUS
3 !..· 4 Ber!rooms. Luxury
BUCCOLA-BUILT ~1.
SHER\'v'OOD ESTATES
BrookhUl"51 .111l l!amilton
Huntington Beach 968-3006
$49.50 DOWN
To 11ualilied vctR. 3 homes
ro choose from, all fully car-
~tro with bullt-in11. dOSf! tn
s:c:hools. Call for inrormAtion
LISTER REAL TY
166J2 Bc!lch Bl., HB 8-12-6633
Hour. Of Th• Month
Lovely 5 BR nnly $27,6.50.
""""\il"I J Br 0 -f Ov.·ner is transferred &: hi• OPF.N I !OUSJ,; ,1'lJi! .Minne· °""" " · <N· o '" •oil.
* DRIVE BY*
highway. By owner only. ., l!Ora , F.);tra l11ri:r 3 BR. 2 ,,,. HAFFOAL REALTY
h Rea~n:iblc. * 67~'<1ttl6 hat • lamlly room, 2 fire-"Homes to Mitch Income"
placts. Fine location. $1493 Balbo• Peninsuli 1300 ~170 Warner 842-4405
down • Vacant · Mo11e lo-1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. I day. C1\l.L L.ARRY or!• 4 BEDROOM
DAVE ~0-11 51 !open evesJ No Streets Fireplace. hltin11. 2 BA '1 &
H ·t R 1 E 1 2 c;ir garagp, Call 847-424:'> tn ai::e cA "5 arc To Cross or 213: 4l l·39'll
.1 BR. 2 BA, lam rm.. 2 d I I .1 l h
rr .. 1rs. bhin~. C'rpts. drps, Jus.t ma e 01: a ;i.n11 Y wt ASSUME 51.4. % FHA. 3 Br. k
1700 ,.q. ri . fl'nccd cul-de-l"'hildrrn. This la~ge ddpr fBm rm. Close !o 1111 schools .
s11r st. I Blk lo schools. Xlnt Ocrunlront house ts conven-Co11 palio. Many E:'l lra.t!
n;::hbrhd $25,500. 5'15--0622 irnt !o schools. groct-r)' Sii.500 By <M'TICr. 842-3181
==========o I 5!0l'r!, library & rN'rcation.
1200 5 Bedroom~. 'Z h.'lths. & I C·
1;cSA In ~{I 11crl"'s of sand.v
LUXURY 3 br. 2 ba1h oondo, play ~·11rd in Iron!. 11t1jnln·
frp!, pool. i;:oll. fee l•nrl, ln~ lh<' whol<' Pacif ic OcC'an
~!_>Ort Bea ch
Ownrr trBn~lrrrrd. $32,:-,00 • $5.~.500.
By owner. ""·'m 1 ~urr· Wh'le R II
6DPLEX; (}t"t'(ln \'l('W, U1~ D I ' ea or
per on yrly lease. Lower 7.!01 Nri•:port Blvd.
nn 1n mo G~o~s· o v tr Nc1vport Bf'lll'h
Fount1ln Valley 1410
Nlce 3 RR By Owner, 1%
BA, bltin.11, soft H20, crpts,
drps, frplc, pB~led ram.
nn., st.·f'('('ncd p11tio. lg fned
lot. $25,900 w/$2'100 do10.'TI
6~% loan. C'llll !or 11.ppt.
962-1678 evcR. I.: wknds only
SSHXl/yr. 111: :l.ill-4167 675-4630 Eve1: M2·2253
B 0 Out of County 1605
Y \VNF.R·: Nll'f''.l Ar. 2 Ba I~~~~~~~~== I
home. Nt>wporl S h o re .11. I' SALE Or trad~ 2 Br. mod.
$25.00l. Tcrm.11 l \ex I b J e . Lido Iii• 1351 h~ Yucca Valley priced
W-3059 Soud 8 1yfront $10.SOO tQ. $4300. 4~Tl
LARGE Mobile llomc, 2 :z.~tory 3 Bd, 2 ba, rJ« kil, t'VCS .
B1ths, patio, c I u b h 0 u ~ e larlf{' l1u rm, uniqur aplr11.I
pool, prlvat.t bf11.ch. 675--1672 ~tnirc~~-Sa.ndy beach, pitt l1gun1 8e1ch 1705
BLUFF'S Sp11.rlous 4 Br. 3 /allp, SISS,COO THE BJG ONE
Ba . Split lrvel. SJ7,!l:il. R. C, GR!.r:R, R.eftll y Spn!.wllng 3 BR & den, Dd
By owner * 644-0740 3~16 Via Lido 67J.9Mt'I Pl~ ui.c noort:. C11tl'ltdral
CHOICE Park Lido condo. 2 BAYFRONT DUPLEX b ~am celllnp, Uv mi,
Br. 2 811. pool, tr,il. $3500 Endolied ptUO. 2 • 3 BR. Ss>tnish F'ptc, w/w crixs.
On. $27.500. 675-28Cli Ftrrpli.~i. SlL'l.OOO. blt·ln rann le O\lm, $31.960 -
DIAl. direct 642-5678, cbarie W•lk•r Realty of I t r )'Olli' down pmt,
your tct, then Iii bltck &nd J.t'Ai Vl11 Lldn 67!J..Slm MIRion RI!,)'. 49-1.otll
lWft to the phone rlng! l•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l•P I White elepbant17 Dimt-&"!llM
!. I
•
'
I
I
l
J
I
. . . . . . ------------~--~-~----~--~--------------------------------------
• ' . , ' . . . . . . •
!&, DAILY PILOT
RENTALS I l ENTALS
HoUH• Unfumfthed Aph. Furnished
SISfOllilLI MfNTALS
' HouMI fumlthod u,.... _,, 1705 _,;.=c.;.._;...:.;.;..;.......--
RENTALS I REAL ESTATE,
Aph. Unfurnished _.:.G..:.nc;•:.:r.:.•;.I ----
BUSINESS aod
FINANCIAL * * *
4250 ~-..;S.C: .... _rl_fl.;.ce_of_H_____ Summer R•ntal1 2910 Hunting~ INch 34~ Corona cl•I Mir Ee.t Bluff 5242 Office Rentel 6070 BuL Opportunltt• 6300 ' • 'el'' •
MUsr at SOl.D! !"1£WPORT-Bal~ b c • (' b
l'\aU)' 1'm1I Modd Home Vltw houst. 3 BR ~ blk to bay.
ol Oott..rl, S BR. 2 bli, never _~:::..:,,w_k_. -m-1193-'-'--'---
liwd in, Home undu notkt I BR. A I f turn. pl.. pl.
• SSl,!00 ind t.U.. Owner aid 1 81.ock to beach. WtcklJ
ftnlndn& · $&). Newport 8ch sc.-0316 LOO PADRES RLTY
FREE RENTAL BOOK I Bdrm .F'u!'ll ApL Avallable
Drop In ancf Brown lmm~lat~ly 11U Octobtr ltt.
3 Bedf'001n, 2 Bath, Coz.: Reas rent. 503'°' Acacia
Flrepla~. Double Carq:e, ORANGE COAST
COmp:lettly Ft:nced. Least. PROPERT\'
$187.50 per month. 673-&\50
PRESTIGE T<twn Homes
For lea ... :l br &. den It 3 br
~\Vlth 2 or 2\.i baths, Gold
tdedl!Jlon 1..11 electric. POOL
2<:ar ear. Rent 1t1rts at
$250 mo.
!.17-S'Tl Ami;o \Vay, N.B.
------LAGUNA BEACH
A ir Conditioned
ON FORES· ... AV ENVt::
Of'sk i"pacts avalh1blt In
newest office building 11
prlrne location l.Q d°"-'fllOwn
Lai:una &ach. Air condl-
lloned, c:1rptled, beautlfu1
MELODY
CLEANERS
Openln~
New Stolft
t..aun• Bch. fit..wl RENTALS
DELUXI HoUMS Unfurnl&hed
OWNER'S rum. 2 an. ·~
with Ir:· a~lc'. Avail.
SC"Pt. lat. to June 1S1h, 1969.
No children or pets. CaU
675-3518
Corona del Mar , 5250 paneled partitioning. T w o New ato~ ownen now be.In;
1ppotnted. L.A. ' Ot-.nae
Co. IOCB.tions 1Yallable for PENN. PT. homt. l BR. Fam
rm,. frp)c. Excepdonal val· General 3000 ---·--------7682 EDINGER
!m-4455 or 54().514 ~~iu:AL ESTATE 1 BR Bach. Noy~. Private
E ...... 1 d Balboa SOO mo. All ulilltle:a pd. 4 en. 2 Ba., carp., d;p;.-
$70 BACHELOR Apt. No
kitchen, util pa.lo. 1 Adult
only. 673-$936 700 · .u.i..-. B v ·• 642-4060 Patio. Le86e: $2~ Month.
.,,..,., I==-"'·===== -1 Costa Meal 3100 , _ _,,•,,,vall;:::',,-· -"'-"''-t i._1.,,. ..... ==-. ~--=' B1lbo1 4300 l•~:a:: VI E~705 =::::::B;:/;:B::;;::;;;:i: _•_,g,_u_n•_a._oc_h __ ~705 OCEANFRONT-;-
MONARO-l BAY ARE A Yearly Rental
BY OWNER * Temple !tills AVAlL IMMED. Mes.a Vtrdt LOVELY OCEAN VIEW, 3 No pets or children
l: T~ce J:~btS BR, 2 B: 4 BR, 11 e livin&: mi. BR & dtn, 2 BA, cpl3, Drps, $100 & J12j mo.
ec t w t· rana:e spacious fam I dininc rm, lrpl. pool. $300 mo. Al9o 925 E . Balboa Blvd.
ON TEN ACRES
1 I 2 BR. }-um ' Ufllurn
from $150 mo. Frplct I Prl!
P1tkl1 I Pool.s. Tennis • Con-
tnt'I Bkfat. 9 bole Putt/
Green.
900 St'Q. Lane, CdM S<l4·2611
IM:icArthur nr. Coa.~ Hwyl ~-washt~'... I&~ liv u·rm ., bill·ln kite.hen, bt1utifully avail. 2 BR. l~~ hA. $.225 mo. YEARLY l BR I tll' ~·~Ct, u.;1imeu ,...,~ ~s. landsc•ped y •rd. Yearly adults 496-1243.betw 10.-5 pm ...i, tl25 & l~.mg2~ E". 1----------
-e corner ot W I ""' uunl. le•·-$325/mo. incl w1ter "" <f ~w H I 8 h 5 0 "·' ~ & h ~ Prl .....-MY Lovely lar&e 5 BR, 3 ba BaJbo11 Blvd. cor e. st. unt ngton NC 4 0 """'iqlCll""" I ru.,.. C· __ .. g•nf<n•t r•-•lcf!. ~ ri~t' ·-100 PO Bo ''""' ~· home lo respoonsib le flm''========== eu 51' ' ..,,,, • . ' x 673-3663 EYell. 548-6966 . 1
914 r..,un.. Beach .fM-4726 only V.00 mo. Owner/Agt . Huntington B•ach 4400
"""" MAGNIFICENT
OCEAN VIEW LOT
Ii.Bl • amall, but leVf!I SlCOO
down, bal SSS mo. Larun•
I Bcli. CTI-41 497·1210 I
SPECTACULAR View, 2 sty
3 BR 2 BA, fam, frpl, deck.
$35,,500. Trade. 494-6187
• 5 BR formal home *
OCEANVIEW e $54.500
EASTSIDE 3 BR 2 bath,
13 x 27' famll )' room,
tlreoplace, fully ca.rpetM &
draped. built-ins. Like new
inside & out. Lar&r yard.
$215/ptt month. CA L L
DAVE MYHRE 54().1151
--lt·BR. fum. apt. suit. for cple.
Lfgun• Niguel 3707 Water & gas turn. W . 918
FOR LEASE. Reference1. !'.~P~•~lm~~st=·=· H=_=.B=.=;~~~ ;J&..4979 BR. 2 BA, cpts1 drps. frpl.
!dry rm. lar:e back yard.
$200 mo. 495-4690 Leguna Beach 4705
(open eves) Heritas:;e Rtal F d B B "·'·t• 395 NEW urnishe 2 R ~ a -~-~~--------I ;C:o~n;d:o~m~l~n~lu~m::_ __ ::,::':.:'1 all clec bu 11 t ~ t n 1.
WEST Back Bay. Modem 4 THE BluU's. Avail Sept l . 3 Panoramic view overlookine
BR. corner condo.: balcony ~H!!o Beach. Mature adults
muter Br. suite 2~ baths Br. 2 ba. Like ntw. $23.'> mo. Mily, no children. $1&5.
EXTRA
UUHl.lrs
54g...o?87
lg. 2 BR. $J2j,
pa.id. SJG.. 7801 or
L :.:;•g"'u:.:n;;:•_B:.•:c•c:<:.:h _ __cs.70!
100 CLIFF DRIVE
LUA"URY FURN /UNFURN
Yearly Lease. 1 & 2 Bdrms.
Yearly Lease. 1 bedroom
steps lo Shore & Shops
Oceanview from every Apt.
from $150 mo up. lease
-494-2449
entranct'1:., Frontace on
f'oreat Avt., reFU' Jee.di to
Muncipal parkinJ: lots. $50
~r month for space. Desk
anJ chair1 available for $5.
Bualneu boura answering
1t:rvlc1 1valll.ble for $10.
All ulUitJea paid except
1elephorte.
DAILY PILOT m FOREST AVENUE
I.Jr.CUNA BEACH
4:M-9466
-SECRETARIAL--
SERVICE
t.lodcn1 ofllccs, cai'J>CtS, air
l'Ondlllonir\I;. parking. From
$65 per month. Orange Coun-
ty Bank Bldg. 230 E.11th St.,
Costa Mesa. l)j2-1485
Air,Conditioned
Offic•s & Desk Space
with central secretarial, zer-
ox and telephone 1nswt'rini::
service, up to 2,000 sq. ft.
Tht Mutual Bldg.
2863 E. Coast Hwy, CdM
Call 8 AM to 5 PM 675-4070
I300 SQ. FT. $165. 1765
Orange Ave .. C.M .. corner
bldg. nr 17th St. 548-8118
ambitious men attkia; IU~
s1antial lncomr.
Top quality cleanina; & laun-
dry sgencies eompletely set
up ready to do business. We
tralrt thoroughly; NO SELL-
ING.
Whadcfya W•nt? Whaddya Got?
SPECIAL CLA5SIFICA TION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Special Rate
5 llnu -5 tlmas -5 buclu
llVlEI -~ 4\Vlt IHCIUDE
Cash inve11tment J-1!1j!) hill
price. IF\llb ltCUred by
equip & st111Jllies,. Start !)OW
Ean1 Big Money in an e11-
citing buslneu of yoor own.
l-WIW1 .... hlVO' tCI ...... t--11>'1\tl l'MI ""' "' tr .... 1-YW• ._,. ll!Mlflf .o-.... ._l 11nH 'IA -.JVtf'lltlnf.
' ~11'41NG FCIP U.ll •• lll:AOEI QHl..'f'I
PHONE 642..5678
To Plac• Your Trader's Par•dise Ad
F'or interview • phone LAKE Tahoe View Lot Na·
Gli-4723, 9 lhru 5, Mon to vad1 .side, paved Sl.2.300
rrL, or write NIEL.CO, P.O. clear. Exchange for some-
Box 3010 Anahelnl, Calif. body1 headache! Units,
92803 TD'a, ar 1 Bkr. 675-5726
CANDY NEED MOTORCYCLE
SUPPLY ROUTE HaY& 1964 Simca. rebuilt
Excellent income for few ell.iine, new tires. $450 or
hrs. weekly work {days or 7 .................. 494-72().1
eves) refilling ~d collecting Ocean Virw • Nr Npt pier.
n:ionry fro~ coin opera!~ 4 units furn, best rental
dispensers tn yaur area. area $58 500 • take sm hse i~andles Nationally Adver· in 1 'rad, e. Ownrr 700!ila
hsed Sna~1 and Candy Court AYe., 673,ss27
2 BR tum condo. on Bch
nr. Venice, Italy in t:xclu ..
Ive resort area. Trade for
local area 3 or 4 Br. home
or vsc. Joi or boat 646-L277
0 S4,800 TD 0 .
Trade on 4 or 5 BR hoCtlil!
N!'lt·port or Corona dd Mar
"'""" '65 Lotus Convertible, $1900
equity. Will trade for Sl('O)
car & you take over paY·
ments of $95 month. 537-
6901 before 1 PM
Nett Rnlty e .cM-9318
Aportmonh
For S.le
p1nelled fam. rm . trple. Yr. Lse.644--0lm aft S:JO 499-3755
patio: t'.'<Ctoptional rec • S BR 21~ BA, all elec facilities pool 1f!fv\crs; REr>lT AL
MODERN Garden apt, north Commercl1 I 6085
end, 2 story. 2 BR, 1 IJS Ba, 2 -C:.:--'..:C---.:C:.:C:
Bari.) $13j() to $5390 cash•l==:....:c..:.:....cc:.=-~~
required. For Personal Jn. TRADE cqulty nice 3 BR.
terview: send name, address for \a'.ge 4 or 5 BR. with
and phone number 1o: or without pool. Prefer
"ROUTE DEPARTMENT" Huntington Beach 01· Foun-
P .0. Bo:>1 3846 tain Valley. 847-4378
Anaheim. Cali!. 92803 3 Br. & den, sundeck. Ocell1l
3 Acres. Big Island. Hawaii.
Will tradf! tor down on build-
able R·l lot. home or ?T? in
Newport Beach area.
OWNER 842-5184
1910
EUltOPEAN RIVIERA:'
Why! Di South Laiuna there
I.a comparablf! Uving in Own·
Y -Own lwrurk>us 3 BR 2 BA
a.pt Eleg1nt bldg on beach
w I unllll'])assed vltw &
pool. Ullfum $65,000. tum
a•ail. For appt, 4~3451
RENTALS
HCMIMI Fumlshed
Newport Beach 2200
9 MOS. lease Sept LhJune IS
Comp! tum. Beaut 2 Br, 2
BA, fireplace. bltln kit. hugf!
priv p1tlo, clubboase, priv
beach, healed pool. Adults.
No pets. $200 mo. See Sun·
day thru Tueaday. 143
Bayside Village 300 E. Cout
Hiway.
AlTRACI'IVE W'Aterfront 4
Br. home, boat dock. winter
Ira.st.
tZ13! ow 7-6M7
WINTER • Bay Beach Front.
4 Bdrm • 3 bath -$300 per
mo. 9'l5 w. Bay, ORH721
2225
-4 BR, 2 BA , avail Sept 10.
9 Mos lease. Priv. bee.ch.
$250. * 5(s.n32
4 BR, 3 BA., Private com-
munity &: beach. Sept.June
$2111. 6-42-5211
lido l•lo 2351
NEWLY decor. 4 BR. 3
Batha. Av1D. Sept. 7th thru
June. S3SO Month. 6T3.fi643
priv. adult/teens. $260 Mo. ___ A~p_t_ .. _F_u_r_n_l• __ h_•_d__ built-~. Panoramic vif!w
Avail. now. 642-6906 or 1213) -........ overlooking Aliso Brach.
593-3166 General 4UUI Mature adulst only. no ;:::.:;::::.:;~ ___ _:.:;;:I children. $Zll. 499-315.'>
AVAIL lMMED. Mesa Verde HOLIDAY .PUZA * JAPANESE MODERN *
4 BR, lge Uvin& rm, DELUXE s~ac1ous 1-BR. ;l85. '2 BR, view, NEAR
spacious tam/dining rm, fum. apt. $135 + utll. 2·BR. BEA0-1 Ad Its 4!14-35rn
hilt-in kitchen, beautlJully + dt:n $160 + util · u ·
llJWbcaped yard. Yearly lltd. pool. Ample parlrina: :ENTALS
lease $325/mo. Incl watrr No children. No pets
sundttCk&, 1ar. 1 blk 1hop.
pine-beach. Very plush. Will rum. S225. 494-9982 ...::.:cc_ __
LOVELY Whitewater vlew, 2
BR 2 Ba w/garage. 1 blk to
town &: betlch. Adults. Leage
$165 mo. 4'4--7891 ----• DELUXE 2 BR unfurn a.pt
close to ocean.
• nJRN. studio. 497-1056
C2 Zone. Lot 70xl4.'i. Ex~l
lenl location for small busi·
ness in existing 2 BR Pause.
Cose to 17th Street Bllsine&s.
S<S.000.
JEAN SMITH,
Realtor
400 E . 17th, C.M.
:.!192 PALISADES Rd C·l for
Rent 85 x 237 SJ.50.00 mo.
NlITVlLLE, U.S.A. is now View Dana PoinL $1-4,000
accepting applications for eq .. Trade for 60' Expan-
franehise1 in Orange Coon. able Trailer. (TI4) 496-2491
fy. Locations are waiting in e~v~'~'·~----,----
Anaheim, Laguna Bch., San-Capistreno Are•
and gardener stt'Vke. ~'"';~Ptom~o•~·~· =c=.M=·=....-1~~~!A~p~t~ .. ~U;n;f;u;rn;l=s=hed~~ 673-3663 Eve1. 548.e;6 • Gen•r•I 5000
3 BR Tolo\lnOhu!lt', htm rm., Costa Mui 41
pool. dobhoos•, Nwpt RENT _R...:•...:n_t•...:b_.W_•:.:n...:t~od;:.......::.5990;..;.;: 0~~~~'°"~~~~~--
219'1 PALISADES Rd C·I for
Rent 85 x 237 $350 mo.
548-5044
~ Ana. Orange, H1Jntington 4 ac undeveloped !anrl. Off ~h. & other areas. $14,~ Ortega H~')'. Trade for in-
Cash req. Fully secured In· come or M-1 or sell. 549-242:i
vest. should return 1st yr. I~==~=""~_.,..,-,..
Ca.II for apPt. 642-m3 or 21 UNIT MOTEL, We~t L.A.
write lo 1617 Westcliff Dr., $125.000, g-ross appro:>i:.
Suite 210. Newport Beach, S2Q,OOO yr. EXCHANGE Re-
Cal. 92QiO no, Ne vada.
ruv;,,., "'"""'" OK. !M. $25 Wk. Up 3 Rooms Furniture
NEED House for rent in
Costa 1'-1esa. prefer Mesa
Verdt, Sept 1st fvr Irvinf!
faculty member & family of
-4. Price range $200 to $300, 6
mos lo 1 yr. 213: 825-6280 or
213: GL 7-2362
Avail 9-1. $2'25. 646-12-48 • Sludio & Baeh apl.i. $25 Month L~E 3 BR 2 BA frpr. e incl Utila: It Phone Rf\I.
fenc'd yd. new crpts, drps. e Maid SeIVic. • 'IV avail FULL OPTION TO BUY
Mesa Ve r de. $235 mo. • New Cafe &: Bar No deposit o.a.c.
~ 2.:_76 Newport Blvd. 548-9755 H.F.R.C.
EX-MODEL Home 3 BR., 2 $1-40 UTIL. paid. Lovely Furniture Rentals
•· •-,_ bit · 2 BR., blk. to K·Mart. isl7 W. 19th, C.M. 548-3481 J YR tease, IA. Br. unfurn
hm, w/ 2 ba. bltns, dwsher,
220 wiring, by Sept J3. Will
""'• carpt:..,, ....... pes, -UIS, "~" """ 1~ W '•C]n Anhm 77' 2800 fence<I, gardener incl. $235 5n Joann. 548-0787 or J.>0-7ow; JUO ' ..... ' ...
Bkr 545-2424 Eve! 54&-948'.I
1 BR. Duplex. Stove, sm
yard. Near store1. $75 mo.
• 6-46-2'700 *
3 BEDROOM house for ttnt.
$180/per month. No pel3.
1940 PomonA, CM
2 BR. House on Irr lot. $117
per mo. 1984 Anaheim Ave.
CMC.11137~
2 BR, den. carpet1, drapes,
water paid. Garaae. Avail
Aug. 24. U-45 mo. 64.2-3375
DELUXE 1 bdrm. $110. Ideal pay sz,o mo max. CdM art'&
forbachelor.1993ChurchSt. Costa Mes• 5100 pre_!. Write E. D. l\1athis,
1 c::;D~~~ older people ... ARBOR ~Ashley Dr., Simi, Calif.,
prtff!rrecl. $85. ~. SEPT lst Business Woman
• 642-1804 •-Q"l•t GREENS needs I Br unfu111 Apt. NE\V 1 Br., garage, .. C.M., Newport, Corona del
adults. Reasonable! 2589 M!iror Laguna. To SlOO mo.
Orange Ave. CM 548-4360 BACHELOR • UNFURN. Gar or carport necessary.
STUDIO. Quiet person only. from $100 642-0086 after S p.m.
Util pd, $90. Nt1r 17th I< \ncl, utit e NEED IMMEDIATELY:
Irvine. GU-0538 t . 2 Ct 3 BDRM. J or 2 BR unfurn house or
$105; 1 BR. Util pd., tncd yd. ruRN. I< UN~RN. adpt. wll/4y0ard, Have_~.hildlttl o.
Pf!t OK, one Adult. Heated PoolS, Oilld Care og. mo or m..,.e o er.
· 3200 28(1.A Avocado 642-t112 c.tnttt, Adj. to Shopp~ -494--4467 Newport It•~'!._-c:.:.:....:.~~....:.----~I No pets allowed l -Y-O_U_N_G_A_u_·y-.,-w-ifc-&-io-1•-•tt
COLl..EGE or w~ing man t 1700 Peterson Way. 11 Hu de?sire interesting furn. cot·
FURN or UNFURN shatt apt. Swun pool, pvt.. bar &: Adame, ea.ti Men. tage for year lease 9/1 Cdi\1
Lovely -4 Bedroom Vlt"W gar. $75. 642·11'.m aft 6. 5f6~ or Laguna &13-42'll.
Home in Dover 51\ores. =1~ ==='=======
Yell"I i..e.se $850 mo. C&ll: Newport Beach 42~ Room• for Rent 5995 Excellent, park • like sur-
JOHN MACNAB, Realty round;,.,.1 for adults r...,uir-
64,_8235 (h f R f * ~.. "" ROOM For rent. S50 mo util
l ........ ~~"'!"!~!!!!!!I * anne ee "'•"'"'.quiet. paid. HB ....... &12-3132 oft
lndu.strial Rent1I 6090
M-1 on Placentia 2JJOO ,sq ft,
$175 on lease 673--4521
{Maryl
:? LOTs on Santiago,
cash. terms or trade.
simple. 646-8565
N1l
Fre
Loh 6100
R-1 CORNER Lot 50x127 to
a!!cy. $1 3,SOO net. Tu:stin &
Clay SL Ne\Ypol't His.
Owner. 642-2666
TV STORE--Perron R!!alty 642-1771
Good location: opportunity for LOVELY Accessory & Anti·
two prople. $2500 stock and que shop, appro:>i:. $3500
equipment. Also has lloorln;; slock & fi:>i:tures; u·ade for
plan. Phone 5'18-a294 late model car or what
CORONA de! Mar. E. Coasr have you'! 673--0598
1-Jwy, Br.auty Salon . ·1 BR. 3 BA home. La Ha-
eslablished 6 yr1. 646-3523, bra lits. Horses ok. Lg \J
673-7159 acre aYocado. $15.t'.XXl equity
YACHT Sales Co New sail. trade for R.E., car, boat,
power & bkr;.. Exel. watrr TD's etc??'! 4$-7931
Joe. AU/part. Box P-175 Great Lakes Tr\r. 18' Eltt.
Daily Pilot brakes, 2 butane gas, heat·
PRE-School lic'd. we 11 ing stoYe, ice or elec re!rig.
established.' Owner leaving Newly painted. Trade for
state. Priced right. Call can11>t'r or P.U. 548-1945
Gladys Wi!llams RI tr. '59 CABIN Cruiser 24' Chry-
~166. Ans'g 542-6006 Sier eng. $500 value. \Vant
Ranchu 6150 truck, car. or down on house ;;;,;;;:;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;:;;;;;;;; I =B::"::'·c...:W:.•::n:::l::•::d ___ 6::3::0:::5 1 or '! C a 11 6~6-5486 or
HOR.SE RANCH CASH For amall Sheet Metal :~51~1 3 BR 2 ba
25 Acre ran..:h in No. Calif. Shop. prefer \\'ith product. P · s. · · eug,.
with % mile of frontage on Newport·C.M, atta. 54S-2381 tom bit · · crpl3, drps, gar
'I AU I ' BR :==-==:::::::::::::::: !door opener $12,000 equity main r wy. e !!C. • .
.. 1 -Trade for boat, P.eal Estate, hon1e. This place comes f..,. Real Estate Loans 6340 or TD. Owner/Bkr 646-748-4
Jy equipped to operate a.nd
is ideally laid out for a good BORROW on Your Equicy ! DUPLEXES val. $37.500
horse operation. Full price Private 2nd Mortg. money in Costa Mesa. Trade lo r
$65,000. For further in.lorma· F"REE APPRAISAL & house or trust deeds. ln-
* *
tion p I ease call Glenn PROMPT SERVICE come S425. Owner.
Thompson with Reputable Company aervin1t * 549-0833 *
Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. Orange County 18 years.
*
10 Ac mobile home park
in orange grovt'l!I: e.ir-eond.
clu bhouse, res. Sp. unfin,
Trare for local vac. sub div.
land . 646-1676 owner. ,
e 1960 OLDS e
4 door sedan, all JlOW"-'
equip., new tires. Will trade
for 10' glass outboard &
motor. 548-7391
Small mod trailer park. riv-
er & hwy. trontage, nr. Den-
vcr, SJCJ,000. clear. F'or Or-
ange, SD county prop. Prin-
cipals only. ~7017
2 BR 2 BA Twnhse 51A 10
Brookhurst Adams $2700 eq.
Total $13,980 P&I S62 Tax
Ins Maintance $43 for home
or ! 646·3389
Trade-Just surveyed ~e &
clear 24' auxiliary S!Oop.
For-Beach hse, dplx, apt.,
income prop, TD, mobil
home or ? . Eves. 54:>4-412
Commercial Bldg E. Cbast
Hwy, CdM. value $95,000
Inc $13,980 Equity S68,00J.
Take mature 1st TD & cash
673-0173 Bkr. •
$15,oo:J eqtJity in Dana Pt.
3 BR 2 BA home, w/eeitt.
glass C"ncl. sdrean, alt'. ln
kltch, w/w cpts, pool.for
Newport Bch a~a. Owner.
642-2823
TRADE -4 BR -POOL
BA YCREST Home, for
5 or 6 BR -SM1E AREA * 646-8565 *
DIAMOND approx 2 ct
.::;uaranteed $2.0CXI value for
Mercedes, property or !?
i4&-3389
* * 2355 2 or 3 BR Discriminative Tmants 5 pm.
'
.. th U APARTMENTS 1, 2 & 3 BDJtM. API'S. Balboa Island
BAYFRON"I' 4 Br. 3 ba.,
docll:. Winter l&e. Avail Sept
9. can 1 • 525--4444
home nfum SPECTACULAR VIEW POOL. NO OllLDREN EMPLOYED man only. Nice
1818 W. Chapman Avr, Sattler ?.iorlgage Co .. Ine.
0 ,.,_,. 335 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa •
range, .....,11. 642 2 7 "' l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll 541-2621. Eves-\vlmds S38-6777 • 1 l .... 5--0611. Nights .r *
2705
EMERALD TERRACE
3 BR, 2 BA, $225 mo * 494-ll691 *
Summer R•nt1l1 2910
&: wkends 673-7865 642·1157
======='«=ANNOUNCEMENTS
Mortg•ges, T.D.'s 6345 ind NOTICES
Oiffhaven NB w f t/Loc Boe MARTINI Ir~ rm, semi pri ba. SIO "'k.
300 yrly, g1rde~er in~luded at~~;nAvailabJe t QUE 1789 Crestmont CM . 548-8.119
Chtt Salisbury. Rltr. 673-6000 2 BR . 2 &th Apts. GARDEN APTS. PRIVATE entrance, bath, Acr••a•
BAYSIDE Village, $175: 2 LEASE-or. BUY 18th & Santa Ana, c .M. very romlortable & quiet. 6401 B
'
•-lrl Co 1 "'° 750 SAFE 12% PER YEAR Lost r. oe., stove, re g. $445 Mo. & up· $59,500 up Call Mrs. Henderson 646-5512 sta 1\-esa . ,,..,,..5 WANT TO START ,... ______ ...;:..:.:.;
6200
SERVICE DIRECTORY
Appliance Repain
P1rts 6510
Carpets, drapes, Adults on-2525 Ocean Blvd., CdM 1m Santa Ana. Apl 113. C.1\-I. -=========== $5,250 1st TD on spec1acular . .
I A BEE FARM? Oceanview lot. Sold for BIG, F'at Tiger .cal wllh l,y. No pets. Pool. sllp; call 67J.17S8 -lor further info Guest Homes 5998 h d u il al Babysitting 65.SO
675-JC&IAfter4PM Henna.n Trott, Mgr. "THE GABLES" -GROW ALFALFA? S7500. Payable I'i:O per c oppe .o ta, m e. --------~ "'""""""""""""""""...j ELDERLY ambu!alO"" lady. month in C'!Ud;"g.8'>. AU d""' C67o,rn,"1'74 Highlancls, Reward. R 11 bl b b 'It ' LARGE 4 BR. home in West .::: Movini: Sr.pt. 1st; 2 BR. v.·/ •:r "' " ,.... ,,... · e a e a )'SJ mg, my TEACIJERS, aYail. Sl'pt. ~th, I ~~ PriYate room. Loving carr. Wl!AT Bel1er Place than in 3 yrs. 107'• d Is count. ~;_:c.:.;_______ home, College Park area
Newporl , 1 house h·om garai;e i.,,;;. Adulta only. Good nutritious m f' a ts . Silver Valli.')':' Locatr.d in 4:»-11::1 Personal.s C.:\1. Reasonable. 546-7090' LAGUNA-Oceanfront, spec-be1ch. $350 J\1o. yrl)'. 6801 mod. I BR. &: 2 BR. lront. Carp .. drps, bltns, patiQ. ~O.S .. , ,..__ • .... Bl 5-l&-47:-13 • high desert 18 miles t:ast or I JOO 2nd T •'-d •• ,., BABYSIT Pr --~• taeular Villa, priv. be1ch, Seashore. ~2-3523, 64'2-l»I o•r. U<.-.:ln "" .,..y. tns; 2137-G Orange Ave. I D beuu1 .,.,,,,,,.,, . e-""""a.>Ut a,ie.
d. I I FA h · Barstow -80 Acres, level 1 TD bl l" * MUSICIANS * M c •1 ho b d huie rooma, park-like em. 3 BR. 2 Bth Dupltx Bit ins. ap.. rp . · . t . patK>: Call Between 2 & s st pa.ya e ,o per · Y • ,. • me. Y sy or nd5 2 w ks e,,_, $900 4 carport. No pets. Gas & e """ • "" Misc. Rentals 5999 land, well & pump & rescr· mcn!h incl. 10% all due j and piano player. ac«irdian v.·eek. 545--6734 u · ee ...,-"". ·• $73.'i yrly, 133 45th St .. N.8 'l--~~=-...c...:1~w:.._•:___ ·---------voir. Has been in eJJaJJa -Weeks $1400. Also Victoria e 64~1627 e water pd. $130. 1132 W 1 BR Uni. apt. 1,1 CAR Garage near yrs. Covers exc Ocea.nview or organ. for trio. Do &tan-BABYSrIIING, My home,
Beach House. 3 BR 3 BA. 'N~ICE=~,~B~R,..;.;2~b=th....::..__~ Balboa Blv., Apt. C $80 Ncivport Ci 1 v Hall. $'.?5 alfalfa growing in abundance lot. 20';-0 distcount 4M·ll37 dards, pop, rhythm & blues. Mesa de! Mar. Any &ge
0 • t 11000 Own 4'..., .,,~~ a , carpets & ~ irt Valli'.')', highest in protC"in Malo '' femal". For im-1 ••o ~, OX'p · · rr. '"'"""""· d N \V 1·u Sho BEAUTIFUL Walerl.ront apt. Realtor 5-18-""?' month Perron Riiy Co. 12~'l"o ~IELD on season se-.. we come . .J'tU"'J'JVJ
494-4957 or 4~ rapes. r. estc 1 . p. • •~v anywhere around! mediate work ITI4l 689-ZOll pin~ Centrr. 548-000I 2 BR .. patio, boat dock. BR 1., b D 642-tnl WANT TO RAISE cond lrust deed. $4 ,000 cash.
I •· 2 a ~·-A ,, \Vinter lease. 30-13 F'inleu · " a. rps/crpis. '" 7508 M c Th FLY TO CATALINA • r. ,....,u pt.s, 711 e 67j.-40J9 e ~ Bltns, pri gar/patio. Adults STORAGE Garage !or rent. FISH FOR l A MKT? · -· • oren
Brick, Masonry, etc.
6$60 bllc to ocean. U09 W. Coron• dtf Mar 3250 ~~--------$140 ~9-0433 546-4011 eve. Ca&ta Mesa. Clo~·in, like • ' DAILY FLIGl-ITS FROM
BalbQa Blvd. Balboa. $75 ---------BIG bay view; t Br. upp~r .. l !===~-=-'~--''-'-'--S48-"rn BUILD Yourself a lake for ANNOUNCEMENTS ORANGE COUNTI AIR-BRICK, Concrete. Carpentry
Custom Cabinel.'l. Small Jobi
OK Free Est 962-0$-15
wk-$150 wk. 494-5189 OCEAN VIEW Dt:Iuxe 2 BR, Wintt:r $160 Mo. incl. util. SPACIOUS 2 Br. B!tns, crpts. new. . "' .. Vl'ry little money & you're in and NOTICES PORT. Catalina · Vegas
BALBOA Pt. • Lovely 2 2 ha. home. fplc. dining rm, 10th & Say area. 6'n-2012 drps. S~lO~ * REAL ESTAT E business! 90 Lakes in area--Airlines. • 546-6612
BR/Ideal Jamily \'lt:ation. bit-ins, patio. crpts. drp~. NEAR Beach. Lg t BR . Avail G•ntral man-made & beauiful! There F~u!:'~C.~~9!. Ad~)_ 6400 AlL'OHOLICS Anonyrnnua
l blk. bay ,. ocean, no traf. n~ar bch. PX) mo. SE!\.1PLE 9/1. Adults no pets. $125 AVAIL. &!pl. I. lg. 2 BR, l '~ art" SO acre lakes & 40 acre Harbor Area. Phone 673-8724 C -6$90
'
.,·. A"g. 24-31. llTh. 544.3277 Rea.I Estate 675-""'0t util. ~. 67'3t8l b;z , GA bit-ins. Adul1s. 2.10 I p rt 6000 lak!!s and Sacre lakes. etc. FOUND, Sun. Aug. llth on ~ntering " • -==~=~~"~~-~ ,,... E 16lh Pl C o " ncome rope V Ba lboa Island. silver & gold P.O. Box 1223 Co.1ta P.1esa. • NO JOB TOO SMALL •
NPT "·h. 1 Br, ,1,. <. 1 blk NEW 3 BR. _., both. ,1,, bit. pu~· d · .. .r-.t. a4,.....,43'2 -etc. A water ski inslruction d b d .. 1 . °" ......., yuur want a wller NEWPORT BEACH \\'e ding an , in1l1a son 1n· R•••'dcntial • lnd·-~at ~m. ocean, $85 wk. Avail Aui 24 in~. &>. of Hwy. $275 mo. they are lookillg -DAil.Y N 8 h lake is almost finished, a.nd side. Call & id en ti I y. A.nnouncem•nts 6410 ...,""' ....,
. "·pt 1,.th . ., • ., 1272 A""' 67"' 5.,.,., PIL~ clu•I"'· .. ,. .... 56..., -~w_port . tac 5200 TRAVELODGE a Polynesian restaurant 30 k f mercial. Repair & remodel.
OX' "'*#' ••· ,,... '"° v • ..,.,.. .,... '0 --•• Depl'cciation $18,600 with can1per sites. lishini; 642-5678; 9 10 S: ' As m· Lifttte Health Studio Reasonable. Lie. bond~. 1n.
Gener•I 3000 1956 Gross .......... $87,000 h\kcs, bet>n in busi ness lonr. Nita . Hospitality is Our Motto 5ured. •.B/8 1967 Gross ........ SUO,OOJ time. ~fUCJ-1 l\10RE devcl· FOUND July 23 Black Poo-FREE STEAA1 \VITH e 962·1961 e 962-83n e
SoltH! 11 Simple Scrambled Word Puzzle Jor a Chuckle
O S:110rrang1 le1111s ol !he
four Krambled words bs·
low to !Ofm fovr iimp!1 Y<'Crds, I EGETOA 11 I I' I I
l ~UDOE I
h-.' ~I ~I ~I' .,.......1
-
'
'
J
llUTIC I
I I I I I Husbond'1 comploinl: "My 1
, wife is suing me for d ivorce .--------8=-"~ ond Osks --of my money."
llEYUDO j
lj 1 I' 1 1 G Complet1 th• chuckl1 quoted by fiUin! In the mii.ing 'WOfd
-YOll d1velop rom 11ep No. 3 btlow.
• PtlNT NUMIElfO ltnElS 11
IN THESE SQUARES rl'tl'/'/'I
. -,...~ ...............
~CRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 8550
,
UNFURNISHED 2 bt><lrooni. 19.'.>S Gross ...•..•• S125.00l opment going on in &rea, die, male 7 to 8 months old. S\VEDISH l\WSAGE MASTER CARPENTER.
2 bath unit near Hoag l!os-C. R. Gin~ 642-1615 lovrl" homes. school , church. Vic. of \Vestminster & Open 'vkdys 10 am -11 pm · I il ' G New & repairs, S4 hr p1t11.. Ava able Srpt. 1st. lNCOME & Home·Owncr. etc. etc. ROtJte 66 So. of the: Brookhurst Ave .. G · . Sundays 10 am· 8 pm 5J6-J900 &ft 5 PM
1200. o\LSO Exel. inc . .deprec/ invl , 4 VallC"y is now 1 completed Sl>-2616 519 E. Broadway TE T 0 Fl'!!eway. No. of vaJJrv i~ FOUND ·. Siamese C 1 1 , Long Beach (2131 -437·71li9 REPAIRS * AL RA I. NS
l B<·or.OOll, 2•, ball•. lo"" Br. 2 ba . rts. 10.2 Br. apt.. J CABINETS •-. ,.. b 0 " I 3 y Id Bo .,.., LaS Vegas tree~·ay. Other female. Vic. Edinger St. & · · ~uy 5ize ·
pool. I~~. ,,,,,·1,•bl• "·"t poo r. 0 x p.J,..1 F I 6412 ~ •r -"'°'713 ~.JV " " ""'•' Daily Pilo! sn1;11ler pn.rcds available! Puritan Cirelr, Hunt. Beach. unera I .., J II'. en,.~r. .>'tO"V
15lh. Adults onlr. .. This land can be pu rchased Call & identlly. 897-7007 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;:;;:;;;;;;: I
B:.y & Beach Busineu Property 6050 \'ery i1'!asonably-cal1 & talk \VHITE Kitte:n. flea collar, WESTMINSTER Cement, Concrete 6600
Re•lty Inc ---10 o"'ner--847.fiG.IO af1 ti Pl\1 blue ry~. vie Eastbluff.
' • '" ' 30' REDWOOD building or wknds. N.B .... ,,~ MEMORIAL PARI< CE!\fENT Work. au types. 2025 W. BAlb~a Blvd .. NB I"" ..-~1;1 No job too ~m1!1, Frt-e est.
SiJ-3663 l:ves. 548-600G 111 be nioved. ~tust sell this 21, ACRES. Sou thern STRIPED Tigtr k i I ten Mortu•ry & Cemet•ry It STUFLIQ{ 548·8615
n10. S500 or best offer Loe c Ill l SJ C I t f I 11 om •· .00 down, $3.00 11·/1,1•hr nea coll11.r. 3 or 4 omp • a un1r1 I • CUSTO?.f PATIOS e
DL.X 2 BR studio. <\dulls. no I t"V ern \\'11.rd St I.. Callr per month . SiSJ.Q:I full price. nios. old. 548.(gll from $245
pel s. Ref'~. r..,.'d-Lellv i\IAdf'ro. 12131 633-1124 or L. She11t•fell. -'"· 3~ St.. C I I CU1Crelt: &i.v;ing I.· renlOVal Sl50 c1 11 f;.'j~ili() nr 6.:il-3347 ""<;! l'U BLACK & Whitt: kitten round •me try ots Stile lie.• 8-42-1010
L.A. Phone: (2131 62J.-.SIOI vir. Brookhursl I: Adams, from $130 ~~2·!W;n. ~1uirt: r>1gr. 140l Business Rental 6060 -11 .B. 54fi..$7Sll Includes Endowmenl Care Bloc.~~~ ~O~rete
upcr or. . . _ ::..;c;:;.::;;::..;.:.;;c;_;.;..._..;..;.. R. E. Wanted 6240 DARK G..... Jemale kitten Everything in one beautiful llOWlo• • rt.moval. .§.42•1010 BEAUTIFUL O c,. a n fron1 \VANTED: Business space. ·~.~ pla~ means lesa cos!.
ApL 2 Rr. lircp!arl'. p~tio downtown l.agun• for aquar-
1
\\'ANTECD•lhSm11 allChhousth, "," "',-~n~~rv~ Terr a c e • No tralfie prohlem1. BEST In concrete. Walks,
Sl:>O i'wfo. yrly, 642.9760 11111 lum ~bo11. $150 494..f.167 nrar a 0 c urc · or •:>-:> 14801 Beach, WtAminstl'r pool deC"ka, noors, pa.tloa.
p.m. ·-·----I $9,000 Cash. 213: 254-4a93 ADORABLE or8Jlge kitten. 5.11-1725 893-2-471 642-8Sl4
NE\V Soundprool 2 Bit. 2 &. Offica Ren!~I 6070 BUSINESS ind 94-0 P11ularino, CJ\.t --~L~l~,-,-n,-.-d---~Quallty
Acrou tm. c""'·s. 1665 $ jO MONTH FIN.ANCIAL Lo•t 6401 i:A:::•::l::.o _T:,:r.:.•n:::•zpo.:.r:.:l_..::644::::::5: I C•ment wor~ 839-0056
Inine Sl85/L'!OO. 642--0'139 4 "-'.;c.--------1\9NTD. ride Goldmwcst & -:--,._ --=-Bus. Opporl\Jnftift 6300 BROWN Alllpror bilUold in F.dtnger lfB • 1'!11.in & Child Care 6610
Newport B•ich 5200 rumllhed office spa«. 1101' h booth SPOT: Utilitin pAid. Prl· BEAUTY Salon. Prl~ for p one ~:<I 1 o Broadway S.A. 8 i\M f'l!:I 5. CJOLD CJltt Ill my bomt:.
DELUXE, upper, new 3 BR 2
Ba., bltns, C3f11.. drps,
Swidtckl; 19 blk. b.1y k
beach. Srr.; Mo, yearly.
R.efe,..nccs ~q. ~ 709!
Someon& will bf! Jookina for
It Dial 642-56n
\'Ile entl'8ncr. quick n.lr. EI ea an 11 )' AlbcrttOn·a mk'I. l9th • 897--0850 rmced yard, hot lunches. 569 W 19th CM decorat~. Cariicted. J»• llt1rb. Roi. ~7890 I•·========= I 112.50 ptr week. SS. tach ad
· • ' nelltd. Good clienlel. Nr. STERLING Charm Bracelet. Legal Notieas 6450 dlllonal child. Jtuntlnrton
MEO & Attorney's office: Bethel Towers. $6,950. Call Somewhrre bet. Brdway. & AS of S/lS. '6S, no IOOJ:tt Beach. 146-1933
1.000-1500 •q. ft., 3ir--cond . DuAne \Vicklund, Walker A lA.s Femme Fuh. tile. n~slble tor 11ny other DIAL direct 642-5678. ch.a.rat'
Good loc. Low rent. 543-67tiI Ltt, 545-&491. 8/14 Rt'ward. 879-6814 debla but my 0\\'11 Charlu your ad, the:n ait back and
50CK rr TO 'EM! Wl!Jle f'lepl'.WIU! Dlttlf"-ll.Une White eJepbaDtl! OUM-1-dnt W. Harden. 11.attn to the phon. rinCl
•
•
----• ~'V'"lc-:~·::r"""-"'"'""...,.,<,....,.•.,.e~-"""~"""O.,.W""'"""'" .. '""'"~•'""*""'""~"""'""'"'"-*~""'"'"~=~•,....~•,.....•~-·~•~·~~~~~-·~~· • ' • :
I
DAILY I'll.OT S2
SllY1CI DIUCTOIY SllY1CI DllllCTOIY JOU & IMl'LOYMINT JOll & IMl'LOYMINT JOll I IMl'l.OYMIN1 IOIS I IMl'LOYMINT ~JOl!!_l_!l~llMPLO!!!~Y!!!!!··l!!~ITi~!!~ -~~!!!·~!R'ti!ff
a.iw c:... 6610 ~omntlnt .w. w--noo "°"' Wlft!Oll.-noo 1,1to-1piiwiiii'"ii""iiii· ......,iiiiiinooiiiiii'ii'"'~"iiiWii•iii•ii""iiii· -iiiiiiinooiiiiii 1to1e W••""· -noo iw,. W•-""#, wontM ALERT. matme matt. will ntl"I 6ISO Fore man Mac:MDllia 11 _.w,...,=,...._ ___ 7_400...;. -·
r:~.:=:= p= ... ~~ • Strike C:.ndltlolla MACHINISTS : ~=blaro
7400
--i.. fw'd.. --. ... ... ........ rocess hist . • '"""""
,.S. -ill --'l'rJ' mo ud -NWm Nlll>ED •m '° -
* EXZCUTJV&
mau:I'ARY to eompui;:
Pr•sSde1t •. Mtllt ' ohorthandand-.,..
_., •• $15 .... -PAJm'ING .... • ....... , Foreman .-DrATELv Req.m. -era1 yurs txl>lrle•« J-Morini eor,.
B.B. -. ......, ..., lie. .,.-, 2M ShHt in 1et up and operation of pro!OI' 2lll ,,_, °'""' -l'llOOF COMMEllCW. """"' and ~ """ Important than ..-. 11111 s:~ :·~ ·.:,..""::;';; =:~Oil lacont _ .. 1 .. ry : ~'EM.~ ::~1!b1!"i~ la2_•~b':k~Ul:h:n • 1A>m'OB. -· p..m. $11 ftd. Cla•S• PaJmtlal. rr.. tit. experience owr 1lr-'* KA.llft'l:IUNCI: r-• Colat Mita Y'•ID•rlal UNITID CALIFORNIA
TILLll P" month.
* PURCllASING AGEN'l ASSISTANT. ~ and
typl.n& required. WW de
Mm• bu:7ln1. p .oo ,.. -..
~ •llrl.
M:cmltlorri lcboak. 1SZ N. Uc.· • , ... Oror:lr' 504.Sl' craft type ....... ,,.. MECllAHlC wort. HOlpil•I APPb' 301 E. Vk> IANK
..... Amo, ClL MHIOI. HANDY .... ..... .... a -1"'' plot! ... ..w. • lllAllfl'l!2'ANCI: CentcKt Jim ZampelU ....... C.M. Pb. --
centrectort 6620 dtu up work. trio .toll too Ing, he1t ,,..t, ttc: ELIJCl'RlC1AH 1--------· I lmll1. Call Pancbo. IO-n.58 * STOClQfAN-Sl'OR A
4525 MocArthur llvd.
Apncloo, W-noD Newport -1714) 546-1030 Open Sot. ' em to I ""' UNI:
R I * TOOL auB ATI:DlDANT UH H•rbor llM., Coote Mou, Collf.
54M424 r
I A newport
* FACTORY ASSEMBLER!
AND niSPF.CJ'ORI o f
machlnt part.1. oya • ...:rAL •S!!DOll.ER
• IUVE'l'ER Mlaallo S11to1M Dlvlalon lU::C: Industries : ~~, .. ~""11"="' Plcut. HDd mm:-to
Box "11' D'1l1 Pilot ' Atlantic Research Ert91,...re4
Productw Div.
2040 I . Dyer Id.
S•nt1 A.n1 1714) 540-3210
.. oqual-... ,..,,....
OPERATOR * PUNCH PR!SS OPERATOR * ENGJNE l.\'nm 1
OPER.A.'I()R * Tl1RllET l.\THE OPERATOR * HILLING MACHINJ: OPERATOR
CORPORATION
A Div! ..... of tho
Suaquehannl Corp.
IEACH AHA
SECRET AllY ........ to l>OO
For a CPA traJncd sitt wtth
S/H, Dk:lqibon• 4 Pl b'P'
U. S. Cffb•itthll' lMJ•lr•4 • All IJtval 0,,.n.llffy hpl•Y•' inf. You tu )oak torward IO
""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' I .eta dq la Uda wCll'lderM ~ oftk:a, Con.-1\J l*Y• tM..
Now Sto.o Openi"9
-ill -"'bolp. TOP PAY!
• Muapn • Cuhiera e Sale• A Sloclt: GUW
LOCATIONS:
Newport 8-da
NEW nwJNlactlllirlr con\·
panJ wU1 .,.. ... Colla
Me1a within tbt next tcW'
wttkJ.
PATICll e Patio Conn
Room-LI<.
PAINTING Jntmar!Extuiar-
Free Estimatts!
* gc...e * 5tM7J2 * 1--------· I* BENCH KACHnnSX' * llELllJM AllC WELDER * MACHINE WELDER
llEW PIJJllED
fAOORY
WELDER
stt'RETARY •••••••• llD '5IXI
Newt a dull tnGalltDl when
~ Wlft far tbes.t 2 YGWll
...._ ........... Good
Town A aunr,, Oranae
La Habra
Ttlephont BACK STREET
ITI•) l3Ml90 STORE MW&IR ---PAJ>rrING, Ext • lat, Ext MATBllAl
house trir, l T Yi'l up, frtt
Carpot CIMnl"I 6625 ="t="""""=='cell.=......,,.==1 FOllOW-UP OfRK
Revolutlon1ry Host
Dry Claanll1ll Mothocl
Rup. ..._ 11-.,,
Can ho .... Immedlalely
after wort ii compldal
Sale1, Service
and lnf.t1llatim
• Jluter Cl:Lari"• ·-•
Mod•rn Rutr & Cerpot
43.Ji Cnnsbaw, U. Anceln
nJ • 296-SJ.OO CoDect
AN!HONY'S
Gordon Service
646.1941
LANDSCAPING
LAWNS REMODELED
Ezp bortk:ullurbt.
fteaa. mmtl>ly Ganlmlnr
GEN'L <lean-up. trft arv,
Plumlolntr 6HO
* 24 HOUR SERVICE * PIWllbln& repe.ir remodel
Guaranteed * 6*-1407
Marv'1 Phlmbinc Se:rvict ---M4'·11m•
Plumbm& 24 ht. terY. Wed
...... Uc .• bur.: .........
npak, rooter stn. '31-'r.iGS
REMODD.. I: !lll"AIR
Carpen.try • PaiDI -Pluter
• Coacnta. Dick I0-1711'
AIJrtllliYe hldlvkiuU to
a.lit in .chedWiria. ma..
....... follow.up .... amall
pncidon manufadwinl
com~. Mual like de-
tail, be ablt to wen-in-
d-Uy and '°""""
ll&te wortr: wilh all de-
partments. Apply
STACO, llC.
1139 lekor St.
Coat1 Mell
549-3041
::=:· ~-mp~~: 1.J_ob_w_ •• _,_oc1..:,_L.Hr_.,__1020 __ 1~ ~=ru: ;
6f6...6MI JAPANESE MtN. within the next few
Ort 1: Edp Lawa SCHOOL GIRL wet.kl. Please Rnd hlslDr7
Maintenance. JJce:Dled Domestic work live in with of plat wm. exptrlenca to
'S43-4808, 5f5.3510 aft t PK American ~. Goes to Box M17J Dally Piiot
Ja~ ~ acc. 646--008' ar-548-Sl.82
ProftaQ::ml 'V.inta>anoe Prac:tical nurse-companion..
LanNcQms 64&&3 Drive. Good cook. Utt
MOWING, F.dsfns, nc&lawn. bowework. 83a"6ll
Get:i'l cleanup. Hauling. MATURE lady part time
Odd JcU. * 5tU9!i5 compmion to aame er child.
, .. Equal ~"' Employer)
Thla ta not an aceney.
MAC DOIWD'S
1JJW ~ ... ·-·-~ Cu • rd!. 49f-57().1 .....,.,.a. amoc._,... • kdclna for full er put
MOW -EDGE -SPRAY NURSE. w/ap. care ol time wcirter. Cleu,, ec&-
FERTILIZE. 962-7349 lady. pt. time. No Uw In, lenial mrraundinP. Ex-
e JAP~ GARD~G 1,o:m::,c1o,,,. '°'".,,·"',,._"'-· .,,548-~T123.,.....,... I cellant woridnc caocUtioN.
Servk. Oee.nup, Land1eap-DAYWORK. H~ paid vacation 1: profit ahar>-
ln& 531-'70M alt 1 p.m. Rella.bit. SC.-91163 tnr. Apply 1 PM to 5 PM,
REUABLE: RMI. Oriental Mond~ thnJ 1'11daJr, 16866
can. 08.lltlp, odd job9. Job W1ntecl Beach Blvd., Htmt:lnrtoa
Vincent IG-4m Mon & Womon 7030 Bead>.
-·~V&<UWn Uafit Haulirlz: I: Can-op
·~Eves•
EXPERIENCED APT MGRl--------
eoopie with m.dY ~ 0-
.......... .. Orwnge Co. __ .. _
)'OUl' property. m-1769
MACHINISTS
~INELATHE
Mlnlmum 5 years expni.
enc.. Qmpuiy beMftta, ,,,,.. Gonorol Sorvl-'612
PROFESS. Windaw', wall& 6
ftr. clffning; ba1lnes1,
mid., A OCllltruc:tlm
Crystal Window Oeentn1
Domestic Help 7035 erttme, paid life 1 medical. ===..;_;-'----I Bonus pie. Apply 1n p!I""
Frft Eltlmats 548-173'1'
e 1 DAY Mf'rict. HOIM 6
LIVE INS
Employer~ feel
"""" Byland -100 B E. 16th, S.A.. Hr-«195
...
TROY ENGRAVING Co.
2322 S. Pnllmu St.
Santa Ana, Calif,
apt cltanl.nc. O'pb, wa11:I, CHAlllTER-BodJ G u a rd · 1--------
wlndowa, _.... o<U520, R«h'ed L A P D -
stfti.ins for~! aine:le, frH to tr ave I • t===========-1,n..168)
1,H"'-•-'-u.,..ll!'!"'-----'-730-I .::;:cim-.::· :::..,,_..,.,,tna."""C11Hr1Ul==-I
Permanent. Experienced. Lite Hauling·Trimmlnp.
Truh, Gar&&< 0.......
Name itl Reu;mablt
BIG JOHN 64U030
a.EAN Lota. praau, etc.
FuEutA.sency ~
Holp Wo-. Mon 7200
TrH .......i. -"""' START WORK .......... 1lll, ,...a.. 112-11•
LITE HAUUNG •WUN TUESDAY
UP FOR
ntEI: ESTDIATES. 4 LOCA. TIONS IN * 5*1MI * ORANGE COUNTY I=======.,,.,~: I Sent• Ana, lloech Cltl"
H_n..., Aneholm & Dn"I' * APT. a..EANING * NEID 15 NEAT APPEAR-
P'ul A ,,,.,.,,.,P. I fUmlol; ING Mm TO WORK L().
Eve:11thfnl. MU11t CAL OFFICE DJSI"JUBUT· 1======::::==::=::1 JNG ELECTRICAL MAIN· lntorlor Docor•tlnv 67>7 TENANCE EQUIPMENT.
e R-· Comon1 e No e>q?Orion<o -11ry
a Painting, Int. A ot. Averl .. Nmlnp
e Woll ~ $5.IO por """"" e tblor Ooonlb>atloo INTERVIEWING MON A
FREE EmMATE MONDAY £VENING ONLY
Lloeo"" a In....cl Cell Mr R-y
Dislrwashen
Over 11, N!Pts on!)r.
AJlllb' dter s p.m.
SEE MR. SHIN
FIVE CROWNS
RESTAURANT
5801 E. Cout Hwy.
CoraM dd Mar
Gonoral Woodworkl"I
Mechlno Woodcervl"I
Wood Perft AsMmbly
Artlffclel Limb f•b.
Mahn, experlenctd tn
~-Good mech-
an.lcal ability. Othmi need
not apply.
Kingsley Mfg. C:..
Cail MS.CUI for appt.
PRODUCTION
WORKERS ror-Ctn.mlc Ind1.lltr)'
DoYol>lft.
Apply
lndumJal a., Producto
ll'lllS --Rd. HuntlnPln Beach, CaBt.
MODEIN 639·2503
DECORATORS --------·I otatrlbutor tor w ... <»ae1 I====-====== I """· '"' ..,. blrlnc ......
Part tlnM Eves.
'755 n.ap 11 "'""" ... for """ .......... 111. .HIV "'',. we& Mcm thrv. Frt Hours
1-10:30 p.m. Phone 5f7.TJU C1rpel & Dr1pery .. for P-1 °"""
IUSIOYS
* EXPERIMENTAL MECHAHIC * J'ABRJCA'nON n!\UC·
TURE DEVELOPMENT
MECHANIC
SARGENT·
FLETCHER
..., P'!aJr Drtrt
El. Monte, c.Jif .
(213) 2U.7171
(213) .wi.1111
EXPANSION IN
ORANGI COUNTY
PttlVIM
Dopt. Oponl ...
MEN ARE NOW BEING
JNTEllVJ£WED, BmID
AND TRAINED TO nu.
GOOD P06ITI(t{S wrm
'IOP SI'ARTlNG PAY •
$512. lllO. & Ill
Wiii work on m19nn-
lum, 1lumln""' end
atMI utlnt ll)'OUtl to
work to 1pecff)c1tlon1.
Requlr*' 2 yurs weld·
Ing experience or (1,...
Hftcellon.
Cwotoct Jim Zompolll
1714)~
Mlulle System Di•.
..... -· Cmqeny -------ChN' --• -~ fa. C.0...t Plaa. Requlns flaD1
AttrG CLK ........ "'l4IO R.N. 11·7 _......, __,., _.
Exp Ill Mfr, Hal UD, AIP, Full or part ttm. Wty mbop ID&lllt&W· ~ """',,.,,... °""""""..,. AIDES """"' "'.,_ --nJ.f .... Expe<ionc< pruornd .......... ....--w.
G:EN'L Of'C •••••••. to $litl 7.3 and U·T &17 hued cm ~ +
Xhrt berdb Md potentta1. f'9.rk Lldo vc:Wme. See Mr. Bmilla,
Ufe or smrp !natranct Omvalt1«nt Hosplt&l Ouia' ......._ 1121 a.p.
~. pleue. Com· 14e ~ man, Garden Grow.
.... .... .... N•..-BM<h ..,_..,, -GIRL FRIDAY
F/C BKKPR ••••..•• 10 '800 , ..-_
Opp::ftmUy b crowtll lor --------1!-5Yeanwell~~
.....,.._....,. I!qualllledand-..
~ on tht J1Q1'C1D. ttm wee«. ATLANTIC
RESEARCH
woman wt1ll CPA or PA .xp. exparimct. to wpm. -:::t
Qnp&n,y N'lmbarw '"· S.leswomen tJprwritd'. ~ CX>Nsr sn:Y" ••.••••• to $f75, F1M ladim dothlria. t1al. ~ ol ·-.n~ •
----'-"----I llolh -..i Md analdlled A pleaaant estabrliahld 1lrm TOP PAY! IPOflllbWty. S&lary
nMd:t up ..::y wUb atroq Appl.y In per.-1tnte wtth ability, Mf..a11311 Preas
Operators
Rubl>or -rf•nce
enfy. One en 2nd
ohllt, -... in1 ohlft.
Apply to:
U.S. Divers
Company
3323 W. Wantet'
Santa Ana
Aa ..... _
emploYU
CAFETERIA
POSITION
1'\111 er part time. llmdl •
dimer. 18 «over ok. WW.
in& to INrn to cane nutli
Cl\ tbt: llne. No ~
nectUlll')'. J:xttUnt eppot-
tunlty to advanc. ~ dlala ... ---tlon,W.--"'· -APl'LT-
2,30.,_,S!IOollY
OlltN Cafeteria
N...__o..i..
Padftc <Mn JDpwqr a MecArthur -.
BUSBOYS
DISHWASHERS
.,,.,. bl -N p.m.
RBJll8I l lfE
151 E. C-Hlthwey
Nowport .. ech
MAC DOWD'S
cury out rnta\D"Ut ii -.. ....... .-
JANITOR
full-. l>o:tilent -
--p'1d vacatloo • intit 9harlnc. Appq t PM ., ........ _ ... ""' ....... --.. Hwittnaton BitAdL
~ .... apeimetl
im'I IW' zy, and we .re
..... epportlftty ...
playtr.
MINIMUM
QUALIFICATIONS:
• Aae 20 er aver.
• Hf. school grid •r
equfv1t1nt
• Or1nee County
r.ldent
• Mochenlcelly lntUnocl
• Al?I~ te 1t1rt work
now
CAlJ. MON.
I: MON. EVE. ONLY
Kl i.9219, Ollf, 23
Alkb"Mr.HW,
PdiiCUDd Deparlment
nntterW Blvd.
Cotta Me11, C1llf. .. _.._., .....
employer
* * REXAll, INC.
NOW HIRING
42 t,fEN
--------1 WE NEED '2 MEN WHO
Sales &
Service
Are you lhis 111111!
AJtE Nat Al'RAlD or
HARD WORK AND ARE
ADLE TO SI'ART IMMED-
IATELY. NO EXPERI·
ENCE NECESSARY AS
CDMPANY WD..L Tlt.AIN.
GOOD PAY
Plf"IC!Ulity. ~ reim-Na~ ca1hl p1.,... tit 6"-12M bunt• feoe. BACK l11lDT ..;;,._.,.;,. ____ _.
OJ,W <U>1K ... ,. ..... '511) II F-lalond
Some up m CC*dq, plturer Ne-wport Be9dl
ApPlcant ~ h ,
CUSl'OM SERV .... to ..,.1-------
For a _t _cam_ SECRETARY
herKb tedWcal data a n d To s1dd: Manqw, Good
....... --.................. ahortband aJdlla plieant ~ fee. l'tq. Hn l-6.. Mon-Ftt. Apply
BKKPG 11lNE •••••• ,, S-612 Tern:U.MI Wa::J, C.M.
Xlnt opportwtlt)' tor airl wbol.:::===---:-.,,.-1
Uket ~ Applicut pays ~KKEEPER wanttd. Ex·
kit. pet~ MOl!UIJ')'. Mut bt:
133 Dovor Dr. N.I. abl•tohudle.._,.rblllty.
642-3&70 549-2743 Good P•Y· REVA 'I
------~--1 FASHIONS &r;H161 MISS Elf( A6EllCY OITICE Girl T.V. s-. •
day W't'lk. Pleaaa•t
FH Peld pmanallty, b<moot. Good
Waltnues
-Al.90
Cashier Hosteu
N-i-....
No exptt. neee...ry.
(No-tol'lftM)
ApPIY 1n pera:in lob'•'"..., 1M E. lTth St., C.M..
CASHlllt.llCIPT.
Xln opportunity U )'OU ha.ve ---· pa6lt ti blrdltc ftlblaer
contacbl. Hieb .:bool srad·
m.tlon I eqatred.
PACIFIC "NANCI A.Ill Bklrllr • • • • • • · .... • 9!I oppty for a d " • n c m t • Secret.at)' • ...... •••.,. • MO m-1m 219'J H.ar~~vd., C.M.
~II "·t··,·······F· · I Jrl'EED a llw in litter I: Equal oppc:cbadt) employer ,.._pp Clft lyt M . Wqr. wb& medi a bomt; Sic:Yl&ea.'I olo ........ $5il0 p mo io ltart.. Nr .a. WAfTltlSSES
'f'/C &'*Pr • ······••··· "5iOO CNl l64ZI Men-~ lnll ~c9d cm\J DM4 Seey/encr or .t.c ••.••• • ... 5 uk for Mn. HQeL QPl;Y. No p b on e call.I
Seey/Bkkpr •········· • •crnrat'I Helper, "o pLtaae.
Secy/Rocyt ............ $400 '°'*'•· 1.1v .. 1o; 2 ochl DENNY'S
If yoa al'I, '!be stneer L 0 T S OF OVERTIME Clerk type '·• •• ······' $3&0 chftthwt. !all + pr1 rm A l&OO S. Coast Hwy.
Compu:y needs )'OG. Yau. DUKING NEXT I Girl Fridq •••••••·•• $111 M..80-mt lAaunA.BffCh
may .., .. ~ but MONTHS Nler ·" · .. • •• ····" •• • P50 C.r'Mtlc Girl want to improve )'OUI' pn.-. ~ •••• ,, , , , ••• pZ DRUG Stor. Qtrk, flll1 timt, .
... pool-Salm> ,.,. CW. PERSONNEL DEPT. -·· ....... M>i·'l«I pnl. GOod ~ -
eomm.lulon, compuiy car ilD W. O:iut ffwJ. APlllr ill pel'IOD 11512 I. CM Call l:r anotntment fllntlobod,oD.,,.....,~-77 ... 7251 Ntwport llffdl llWlll9 H"1,lll>·lAclma _ ... 30 .
dlto and paid -,.... * * EXPElUmCm -.i -JONph Mognln .,..,.. ~------~ BookkeQll'S •••••••• to '5fl> d4rk. PBX. tn'lt. ap Z. Eqm.J oppartu:nft1 em
SecreW1e. ···•·· •••• 1o _, e. ~ dQs: Lquna Experknctd: Matan ; T>'Plt PD fllo •••••• to $5lO VWaae, W01 S. Cbut Hwy. PIX Operikw
~ preferred DMV • •• • • • • • .. ••• • • • to $tr5 RECEFl' . .c.ASHIER P&11 tlm Sat A S 4m.
Amerlc1r1, Inc. Sttno •••••••••••••••••• M15 Lllbt ~I: IWnc;. t. ~ tn,...: '
2lf H09Pital ctrcl• Ma41b'ant:A bldl: •••• to St50 houri l:l'J-f:30, Sat. Sher1ton le1ch tnn
HOUSEMAN
THE SINGER CO. w-... -"""" ........ ""° .. 30 • 1':30. "" -21112 a.-.. 7777 Edi..... im.4511, Ext 331 R«optlonlat ............ 1100 Call lor ..,.l '"-ll1' __ .:.; ,
11 Huntington Center ...._ ClppCll'tUnit;y I' ow Tmt wt bklrpr '' • '' '· • $U1 INVOICE 'J'ypt8t. ,en. fdkie ' Huntl....._ ... ch 'l'n>o 1'edory .......... "'9 wwk; IUU -· ponn. LITE ......... w .... ~
.... -. --------Tme .....-W.tieln9 •••• $303 ~·•Ml.lie Wand ....., ~aQoond. ...,...... ---=,,,,.----1 lusboys & .,..... .............. $2&9 ... W.lllb,°""'-:.~ ~:-..:: COST 01..L.... ALLSrr ACUICY HOUSEWiFE )(«did ... .. ...... JOO£.°""" Jlw7 Ip .
ACCOUllTAHT
Must haw lll1nlmum 1
yean t'Xpl'l1elct: 1n dt.fen11e
oriented~
Inc llmi, °"'" ........... Open Set 9 .,,, to I pm
ROYAL
lllOUSTRE
ronwaslMn '3'1 w 19th, C.M ~ .. ,. tine mild ..,...,., llwn T, NB. '*''331
"111 time, overll . . ~ '1. Ir. caJI BAB•IITT•Jl tod
Apply tn Perwon IHch Al'H Openl"91 IM--1441 aft S P11 ~ ~ wt:U ~
lob's Big loy EMPLOYER PAYS FEE MATURE Woman for af. h'UI for 2 boJs. ... 5 A J.
151 E. ll'lb St., C.11. Gld Frld.m.Y, ~ •• P'Z5lttOO ttm00n can b' T -,r, old; 5 Yr eW a. a:boo1. Si6 Uy, '
lnvmtory Cbntrol ••• • • • $3IO KiU)'bra ldll. a r i l O.y wHk. D Toro area.
--------DMV Cieri< ............ $mO ....,. &11-mt
M'R.ICANT PAYS FEE -======---t 0.llwry 1ey Acct'a. PQ. dfork •••• $450SNAOCBarAttendant• WOMAN WANTED
Over 18. Must know local Aoct'&· Dept on ... , MIO wanl9d. J'u1I dme no a· TO an fir
artt. ApP,)r in Pmon. J, R. ~ .uaoc. Acencr perlftlct '*-'"'&t1 call ferDait ~ patilntDllt
Crowl_•,.,.rm•cy ll!llN...,..,c.M. NUl2l m.mGforbl"""" ~~c~
1IOf, Newpc:mt Blvd. W A?ft'm, reliable womwt to ....an °""' ,._ Holp W-.._ ,_'"'Fri. IUO lir. --.====,--I 1,,.1_... MEN w-7400 N. llB loc. Own tramp. SICRITAIT
ltroduct1 Div. Ref'• nq'd, I0-4"9 Wit lnmuoe twlcat I
2040 I. Oyer ltd. Good worlten. Start •ori< Jm.. !SEWING Madrlnt ~ton, pnfft'ftld.. Exmwtw tn.llto
S1nt1 An1 540-3210 ~~:.r_(;ood pe)' paid • nwtNG .xptr. on dttast1. Top pay; lrW IO rtabt atrL Nwpwl
AD 9qU&J. opporbmHy onN --of eecb Jab. Aftl 1teady. Apply 190 W, 11th, 8-eb -· MMml
omployu c:n _._, ........,. Coota Meaa. EXPEi!. TELLERS
----'-"-----I Mr. Reid n ... 7251 llSTRUOOR wOMEN PIT w ''" r. ,.,. Sm DopMlt Clb CAREER NI•""' HB. 12 hr """· BANK or Ala:RJcA EloctronlcS•loamen • 511n61Rl i.,n,,.Brvwas10-1ts2, !lllW.lltllSt.,Ooota-OPPOITUNITYI With knowtodrr• olport• •ndl AIU 11>:'169l Equal Oppodmdly
Jotn tl!ld ,..,_. """'""• or TV npair. A,. yeu ttt... ...,.,.n? 1nvuSEKEEPdt U.e -In. Pert Time ~utul hncl ..i.N H. W. Wright Ce. Worldnr motlll•r, I )'tu 1ee1cn.,.r/C11h'9r Neu~~ l170 NfWP(lft Bhd. CM U you u., the .... old dauptlr S.A. Ane. A~~ penon
PUSnc lndman able to w. tnM -Ml or part t1mt SERV It& ••• Salary A Campuiy ~)'OU. Yau. 835--732? UDO CAJt WASH
pcfcsm A IUPll'9iM ~ Mutwl llund AthtNrt, comm. M I: prt timt. Tom mq now be ~ NEED Jlte&W. op, hltpr m. E. 11th a.ta Kt.
la1UP w/ lrnowled&e I: a-Inc. SbU'p Unkn, OR s-3,!30. bul wane to f1nlirow}'OQI' .... IO _,., d·-M-~ e.• IWD
por bl '11 ...... ol plutlo llpt IL 10 W-llfr -2'01 E. Cout Hwy, CdM. ,._, pool-lalary ~bor : mu.:O... o;;.;;: ao:G0 DAN~
fabrkatkm. Arben Marine IA.. 12U N, Btowt•Q *FRY COOK, experienctd. Jllu• <'Ollll1rlaakN, pOI Mf..Om Applr tn ,..._, 2IG1
Products, Inc. 20» W. 11th,, 147-ISSl No Sun'• Cl hollday1. ~ly v•cat1on1 PI u I QllQ1 Harbor. SU., IAllJ•
1-Boaeh. 1m1 .,.._ "''-u AM, su w. 19th. --IL Doniel Ofllco Mo ..... r _, *
Maintenance Man C.M. ~,._~ Z.:S-BABYIITTER F• I ~• ---~ flY COOi( 2 SERV Sta Attendanta/Salea-APP(y tri 'PlfMI. .,.. _._,......_ ~ 11uu -_......,-. •• .Ex-u-. •~n forrere •·· M·u -... Ql.LUlWI, 51: I, t ~ ,_ ttflorl.lntc1or. P&tuanc ..... ____........ mem. f'nJJ I: JUt ttme. Ex· '"'" _, ~ --' wk. Own ~ not DIC. bat ~--lt&y ea.. Ct...... --.... Ooota nM!dlnp, s.'°1 mo. Pll. Mr. Appty at per. '-Y • JHf SJ-CO Mesa. -...:B Pftfd. m-4911 W. .,._
Y...., 51&-'1360 THI lllGGll '°' s. Cout Hwy., i...,.... nVY , * COCKTAIL WAITRESS * -
MAH to""""'" fuJ1 tlmt .. U. No. JI F1..1b1aa Jlludl ASllSTAHJ' MANAGER. Appb' hi 1fl'ml. M"-IAml. vn:·='°'Y,_.anctl.,,....,,. .. --sld,.,.-...,.,-1
HAUL RENTAU . ..,., .. N ...... 0.... 1<.a. Coot& MH& Car Wuh, lino 7777 ldl ... r , .. -· C.M. -I-· I lilt. Jn. a 11,..,. or oldwr. _. Jn _.,._, 11a.. -AllOl> la -10i11 11 HUflll""'" Contor ~ -• .,. 1n ..-: ..,. L8""oc•plnt 0.,., part Unw. wl u..i.m-. WIU tn1n Harl>or, C,M, HvnH_._ ... ch llOUOEUEPER, ltn Jn. -~~ -b ~ Specilllsts "ID
GAYNOR'S LANDSCAPING ~ 8&1• _...,.. o C>ll l>&IW 1 a J PM --. AP.11 1 UO II' )'00 "" '" -CLEAN UP &OY ... ~. Exp'd. w/ddldtto (SI ~ ~ -
I: GAJU>ENING SER.VICE muat. Draptr7 opesimce S36-888S for apl)Oinbntrlt Newpol:t Blvd, CM. MadlM au enclnt mu wUb Part time apprca S bourt HOSP!TAUTY Jbt:iNI k Ev.lo wk. end of!. MS-.cms m can; I ldlOlll ....
stateUOOllfdcmtrctt, pntemd. ~t eoat-~=Ou1' REAL ESTATE. lboalawt't =~~:..:::~ nlte,5 nlt~wk.sa-3:115 Joddncforamarur.,wwnYOUNCMbfatttermu.t• M.J home. <>.m tru& Hr
ltftklimtial -~ ptJl1' blMftta. AJllll>'. ===---'---1 1CIU tJot eeDlrw Ila. hoHM tM1aD.1nc equtpmm1 CID MW SDlVICE leatloa.Atltnd. ~11 with a pnuine inl.lrtlt ud adaanp IClt nn. boN'd A A.... 6: M'•S ih 1111.
Yard clftnup.. :rr.... PART 'I'1ml CNW manllltt'. &fttl I Huntmrtm ~' p M. --~ OY n .... "' -......... amall asl. IM--fJ'Jt aft I. ----··-llROS. ....._ S t bomw call tor -.,pt. VUlAI' Jt. S. '1oat:s ed ot tuae bJ Wtlt · --... er -No Job mo blC ~ ..., « -..m. 5tl-ll01 Ooul Yacht.I !Dc., s:m w. 490 &. ltlb k 01 • • w f:aralUn. Mlalt 111 •"' • WAITltlSSU QUIET _.. q1111
' HEAVY Jard won • ..a =----=~ ~ ~ . Cout ~. N.& •nu * BAR'I'DiDER * CW, t1fe•dtu......... Oal ,.,, 1IW' d..sn ,_.i dn" .. '
...,.t1on.11CCanDAlon U Huntl ...... Center mtMlcw,, 1W lntanNtklB Dl.9RWASHER. 3 4.,.. -1 ---.... .. .....o.1--Tr·' I Ai:iplymJlll'tClft.MuaLl.MI, lilllCI t.Dll llr!·!lll1 Ct.JI ... Dolfihin AM1110t ....... a w& o. * -* Huntl..,ien -coll -...i .. .,. -• -. _.,.. r~""";' ~-1103 -· c M. IM-. SECRITAlY -Oil a,llll '
CORRAL'S -• -A> -1 -111o111 -;:a;r 1't:· t:_ ,!':l :,: TIOY TNGRlYiN'o c.. TECHNICAL .......,. ...i ltlllD' L'Vlf u.r • a.u ,_. Jaw ol!la: ..oa a111 MUw:tN. ,. / lldllll •
..v. n. .... U.vt on ~ 1-"""=~=,-::=::-·I NllC ' 23221.Nnalt. puUH*rl,GJW•k+1d. lbff'tl H.B. U.. G.od 6tnlldlllnq....... per.Part.pwllll:rflll*-' ...,,,_.. -PART Tiil HBP -..... Calif -...,,, -.......... PA!n'-'llmo • Md -l'lmWIJ!NT tnm • IB lOUll ~ '" a.um· "'oAIL=r=--=PiiDf=:--=Piiik=I":' II ELL T II o" IU> 'QOOl C I MOTIL MAIO -Tim. thN lit. -.-_ 411-uit mt _,_ wlll • LINE& r ..... • -.,,.., -., n ,.... "' LAMlllATOI\.:. on11 . .,. IPJRVICE """'" .., -. LI L RIC Part -NL -~RDITAU -.1a THEN~ 'i(jij :err ft. Olel -1or i. -* e ..,. OW -Cit E. lfftl M., CM.,._ 1111' El hlPo 111' Placatla .._ _.., Elt -_., --...... ....,. --,===..-=~1:...,...==....,.--:::== I ~v-...._
.• ~-dlldlol -1~ MU1f1 P11 altar I P.M. • Aw. CJ<. 54&$(1) "21 E. Oout Hwt OIM. Wiit• "°" M lTI OollY Jlllot. aljftCJ! ifi Dial ICMITI lor ~ THE , '!00 mi,
•
·---~ ----...... -·--------~-..-.--~-~~-· . ~-~~~. -~-~~~-------_ ..... ._ ___ .... _~~~-~""-----------------
l
•
• !I DAJl Y PllOT _ •
10iS & tMl'LOVMiNT MERCHANDISE FOii' .MERCHOlNDISE POR
SALi AND TRADE SAL! AND TRADE
MERCHANDISI FOR
SALi AND TRADI
SALi AND Tl!ADI MERCHANDISI FOR PITS tnd LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
MERCHANDISE FOii SALi AND TllADI l!-p 9125 klt·Yech' Help Wenhld Womon~~--~7400==1~'~·~m~INc;;;:N:......, __ ~•~110~~~'~·~ml::::.:N~N=-~-~IOOO== Furnttul'9 IOOO Mus(e1I Inst. 1124 Ml-II•-l600 I--'-'-----'"""' Ch1rtors 2 BEAUTIFU" A!CC 10\I" .....:=:.;.;::.;_ __ ~:;;.:.I
ELECl'RIC """"' coll ad Toy Mod black J>OOdl••· e OtARTER THE rn<EST
EXCEPTIONAL
OPPORTUNITY!
1 •••••••••••••••••
Spanish & M.4ilterranean
--~---~----~-~~~~-=
Decorator
Receives
Cancellation
of
$22,000.00
Spanish &
Mediter-
$C5; ampUfter $25. &om A·l SW1#flMJ~O POQL Shot& A: worms. S'1'5, 1· New fO' Ketch
coodllloa. MM35S 11 Ft 1'oot, l'lltu, &aface 52Hl88 S1$.251T e 11$-"°"
Pl._ & °'1"" 1130 ~~ Kit. H°"" 1130 BLUEWATER CHARTEllS Bou;ht Mlnvfacturer'1 Showroom S1mplft
At Terrific Savings!
8' Wood carved arm divan, lg. min.'1 chaJr;
beaut fabria. 5 Pt hoxagon <!Mt oak din.
set, w /black or avocado framed chairs; 5
Pc BR set. 9-dr Mr. & Mn. dresser, lg mirror,
2 eommodes, decorative headboard in Span-
ish oak or avocado design.
$14t·n 21'-W U-Driw Skip. Avail
for experienced
e Waltl'ft•••
e Cockt1ll W1 itrUH•
SICARD. POOL BAY Mon. Xlnt cond, ,.,.u, o.,,,.., 64&-9000 u i...
wettem saddle A ta~
m 8. Mtln. 0rup * 5J6.1Jl86 *
532-lS92
Season Sile!
hU shipments ol Baldwin
f1t.ne11 Ir Oraasa on th• I"""'""'"'!"''!!!!!'!!!!!'"'""'""" I
w•Y· 0ur noor , dlsooo * auc .. ON *-------C..:C'-'"-
Wu Ben'• is acof'Ptina:
•pplicatiool fM tbeM ·P<>-
sition1.
Items Sold Individually
Shop Around-before you by see US!
VALUE $195 -FULL PRICE $429.95
or terms •• low •a $3.00 Wffk
mod•ia mu•l ... Pricu ,. 11 ... h & Y1thh
!lluhed! Dota:n 't lt make U JOii will ..U • bQJ
lltl1M to thop UI before )'OU liVt Windy I try THE
bu)rf Auctiona Friday 7:30 p.m.
Apply In por .. n No Down-Use Our Store Charge Plan
No Fancy Front-BUT Quality Values Inside
APPROVED FURN. 2159 HARBOR CM
12 Years same location-same own'ers
Delly 9.9, 10-5' Sunday e $41-9660
WARD'S BALDWIN srunto Windy's Auction B•rn
1801 Newport, C.M., Ml-MU Beh!Jld Tony's Blcfa. Mat'l
FAMOUS "JIM WEBSTER"
CammJttee boat for Newport
Harbor Yacht Oub for
many raoet. For &I.le "ea
is". Diesel. T20 W. Bay Ave.
Bolboa. $4.750. S1$.!730
SEE ntE KAYOTE e LA. PAZ BUGGLES e
962-o53& or 962-2'173 Wu Ben's
Or1nge Co's La,.,.est 2075~ Newport. CM 6t1i46811
On•Stop Music Store Put youneU in our Plsct:
Wu:rlltzer Pia.not • otlal'll. Harbor BlYd 0-I 1beair.
3~.!"~~d~~~· ••••••••••••••••••
I--------JOBS & EMPLOYMENl JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Filcher, Ka.nabe pt an o 1, 3700 McFadden, S.A.
~~:.""""· ,..,~ 111"· SWAP MEET
AUGUST SPECIAL! Haul
out. paint jobe • best price 9600
on the water ltorit. e Spot Cash for lmports
NEWPORT DRY DOCKS We pay rnore lot any import
J .C. PeMe.Y Co.
Fa.s!tion Island
Newport Beach
Jo~•n, Wom. 7500 Jobs-Men, Wom. 7500 ranean
Furniture
W AUJCHS-MANNING'I
MUSIC CITY
3400 So. Briatol
Costa Me1111. * 540-2165
Starts Aug 17
5n.im aft T
on the Bay at ):)th regardless ol year, make
• 615-1500 • Mobile Homes 9200 or condition. Try us before
PA:i:°1iME
SALESLADIES
Housewives and Mothers
Can you spatt a few boor&
each day and e.dd to the
fa.mily income at the .a.me
time? SclJeduelJ CIOl\Yerli·
ent for you, moming1, •ft·
ernoons, e-venings O£ comb).
nations o1 all. Work in a.
1un stor. under the tines!
of conditions and top super-
""'""· Appl)o in pen.on
Penney'• Fultion Is.I.and
9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Mmd-.y thru Friday
All student positiorui tilled
Equal opp:trtunity Mnploye
Savinr1 It Loan
experience prefttred.
RfCEPTIOHIST
1YPinl required
Apply in p.r10n
No phone c1ll1 pl••M
' • ,. MARtllRS
;SAVINGS & LOAN
· 1515 w .. tellff Drive
Newport le1ch
ACCOUNTING
QfRK
Vena.lilt individual to
work in Acc0\lnt11 pay-
able, Receivable&. Should
have experience on print-
ing calculatvr, 10 key ad-
ding machine-, 1t8tistical
typing.
COST ACCOUNTING
CLERK-ANALYST
Will 11.Mume cost account·
ing duties includina: di-
rect labor dirtribution, in-
Y@ntory Co It M«l'fd1,
work -.in -proceu in-
ventory, co&t ~.Pre
vi0\.15 accounting •xt>Ui-
cice preferred.
-AN=U.Y-
STACO, INC.
1139 B1kor St.
Cotta Meaa
549-3041
An equal opporhlnity
employer
e Frf Cook
• Busboy
--'---~-.-..1 · • Dishwasher
ClfRI(
F0< Blllln9 Deport·
ment. Light typing,
eddlnt m1chlne ••·
perlence. -' CLA-VAL CO.
17th & Placentia
C01t1 Me...
541-2201
An equol _NOi,,,
employer
General Sales
Full time b&si1. Qualified
to WOl'k in high sn.de real·
aunnt. Offen plffunt en·
vironmt!!lt, a:ooct eompany
benefits. ApPly:
BUFFUM'S
Fashion lslancl
N.W,.rt ... eh
Collector Trainee
S1lary Plus Commi111on
Loc1I Collection Agency
C1ll Mr. Beiler
'42-7352
TELLER
Savinp A loM Eqleri.ence d•
s!tahU but DClt Bllllrrary.
Call Mn. Mat8 h' app't.
Mutua! Saving• A Loan
J.Moc., IZ867 E. COUt Hwy.,
OlM. 875-5010
WANJ" Sharp tull time Book-
k~ to do payroll, pur.
chase arden, p:lltlng, bill-
ing. Must.have fonnal trai~
in,g and load referenees.
Abilit;y to tel up budgets, in-
ventory control mtema etc,
helpful Send resume to 154.5
Newpc:n Blvd., C.M. C*11
642-0811 for appoinbnent.
All New Top
Ouallty Brand
NOW HERE -the new
Su-'"& T-:IOO
HammOlld Spinet orpn
-the finest yeV
SCHMJDT.PlllLIJPS co.
1907 N. Main e 10th
Sula Ano
BEAUTIFUL Bi-fold interior
doon (4 paneil) each panel
17%" x 6' 6%" quality
hardwood Antique i v o t y
with gold trim. A 11
hardwood. Rea1ona ble
499-2151 or 337~1
READY to go-19' 3" Glastron , you sell. E LM 0 RE
w/120 HP Mere. in.out 12x5~ ~YFLOWER 1 BR, MOTORS, l5X(l Beach Blvd.
drive, inboard bait tank . tilt front kitch., comp!. furn. Westminster. 894-3322.
bed trailer. Comp. eqp'd. for $6,500. M&-8242. e ve 5 I=='==='='=======!
"'"'"•· 842-1239 l="'-=1""=====oi AUSTIN HEALEY ~~ ~~e 1~~~~ Mini Bikes 9275 '63 AUSTIN HEALEY
COLOR TV, Packard Bell, utility-fa1t, .seaworthy-bait MESA MINI BIKES 39.95 up "300)'' rdstr .. overdrive, wire
walnut console, r.mote, exc. l&hk-hydrolict-tulJ cover1. Sales e Parts • Repairs wheels, Beautiful Blue. ""'~'!""~~~"'""!'!!'! cond. $250. Original peln.. 615-4.n.3 or (713) 691-0751 2267 Harbor, C.M. • 548-3007 $1795
• YA MAHA • ting• 1125 ''""'· $400) · STORAGE, T"ilon, boat., Schoal1-Jn1tructlon 7600 Piano.a and Orrant I.Adie• qual. clothing, like etc. $7.50 per/mo, Work Motorcycl•
l new, n to SS .. au. 7 -8, ~ultmia A Names! 9300
SCHOOL cmldren'• vacation Decorator's Dream All sty es available now at 8-10. Meta Verde. 546--0625 IJ)8.C'e. 642-2601 & Ml-3261 HONDA 3Q) SCRAMBLER
rates. Oillcoat 10 -LehOll COAST MUSIC CUSTOM Velvet d I' ape 1 , 14' BOAT-Trlr & 1967 33hp 1966. JulJI like New! New 1 • IMPORTS
TypinJ School. 548-2859. 173 H I D' I 1839 Newport mvd., C.M. never been used made to flt Evinrude. Xlnt con. $525. oversi:ze tires. Extra gear ~D~·~' M=".;.· ~C~·M=·~~~-I ome s on ISP IJ -,,,==~646-0111-=-~---a 9' operzing c/ to Dr, 345 E. 19th St. CM. 642-1269 for dirt. Motor ju~t rebu~lt. 646-9.303 MERCHANDISE FOR -WANTED: Beginner arim Sea.spray &m. $75. Avocado 30· OWEN'S Cabin CruiSt>r, Must see to ~preciate. $450. ,1="'="='='.=""'=· =C=.M=.===
SAL! AND TR.ADI stuc1ient1 -FREE~. int heavy mesh dra~s lita twin acrew. Slps 6. Many 1-"'-'--7"619'""=~~---0ver $100,000 'w ...... SW't Tt""""' 11' """""'· $80. ,. .. 1113 xn ... ! Coll oft 4-54H283 '6& YAMAHA I.25or. lmmoc. ___ c_;_O..:R_TI_N_A.;.___
Furnitul'9 8000 Aug. 20th at 7 PM. 68 SOLID state stereo con-17' AMER. Mare' class boat Xlnt cond. $210. Pbone Lotus Ford Cortina '61
FAMILY Movibg-a.crifice. 2 worth Of HAMMOND sole. Dimnond r1;ylus, 4 $500. HD trlr $100. Oliver 35 c6..;!5"8c.:.;.7,10;. ==,.,-:::::---675-3963
_, i..-in CORONA DEL MAJl lflleed. f19, Will aC'(l:ept S2 hp motor pro. 6'!5-4214 . '67 HONDA 3C6 l========-1 nauttc.. ...._, 2 batch 2854 E. Ola&t Hwy 673-89311 weekly. Fre. born• trial. Th. el _.,, "'A15
..,.,. ""' ....... 1 "''-Spanish & WURLITZER """"''' l'Wlo 1»-1212 . · M6-4k' ::;;;;: 5 PM. r.ATSUN :!w~~tt. t.ble. Uke Xlntcond.Llken!w$49!5 t~RNri'iJRE. appliailces, Sailboats 9010 1967 TRIUMPH 650 ~· --,..:67:.:.;D.:A..:T_S_U_N ___ ,
2 DANISH mod end tablet', 1 Mediterran-* 642--0133 * mi&cell, ~ bnu;. AHOY SALTY SAILORS! neville 2,00J mi. Best oHer 4 Or. Sl'ATION WAGON.
mn lamp irl gold .l blk. l lrl Can btt Itel bet. 10 AM & 8 23' Double ended wood aux. takes. 615-2677 eves 675-2492 Automatic tr a n 5 mission,
•till life, framed pidln. eGft furn. fO Televlaion 1205 PM, 501 FemlMf, C.M. sloop; &l~, 2: head, galley. '6.5 HONDA 3f6 Siiperhawk, radio, heRter, white wall
Make dfer! 549-1n3 FINAL WEEK OF New dac 1 1961· Many ex-4000 ml $375 tires. A beautiful one owner
BLUE C~l~pc:rary couch Ch00Se from. Midsummer Clur1nce _Ml_1_c._W_1_n_ted ___ l6~10 =~=er ii:~~ I.===· .,;""''-"". 794~3~=,...-Tet1l Blue$. 1795
: ~~~-Wl~~ =table ~ c,;:~or~;;:;tp~~-w A N T E D anyti;~LRD # 379 ·~:ru:;~ ~ ~_";~ ej• lt.mtA"
1WM!twm• Sofu. <EXAMPLE) ~B•ll•Admu.I.Somo with trail<<.132' "-''~d.~A°'''~·1~~-~-1
'
" ft 19!) ..... new -10111e r--•eued. WE need quality Cno .i..~i. ~
.,,_ • ••"" '"l""""' 1 ) Fu '"'"' Oceanic Yecht Sales 74 HARLEY I>avid&on. Fully ___ _::.•1'-J639:.::..::=---I Items II follows: Gor-Prices start at · · • P eD.IJl' • miture, color • 642-5151 e dressed with loll of Extras~ IMPORTS
S 0 FA .. 1:16 ; __ ............,__._,, $149 'IV'a, •tereoa, applianc:n. 546-47Bl
_"'"" .. "'Y-=ull geou1 8 ft. cust<1m quilt· TERMS AVAILABLE tooh; • Qftice equipment HOURLY RENTALS =,....,,,,...,....-=.,..,I good condition. $25. HENDERSON'S TOP CASH IN J'.I Minutes . * Rbode1 19'1 * '67 YAMAHA 500 cc. Good CM "° ~·
* •~3003 * ed ofa w1·th -· t _, · 1300 1966 Harbor. · · <n<r"-JW ~ I Ser"" I e lBn Harbor (downtown) CM 531-1212 * 893-0055 Fun Zone Boe.t Co. Balboa. COuuitiOn · I :.::.:...---~--=o-1
EAltLY Amule•• 1 ill ·thh • 54S-OI56 • l9680i1u.-l!lwt J00n"'"'---"n961 '65DalsunSporlPU n--n-· c-··~ ·~ oose p ows Wl eavy I ========:I PETS ind LIVESTOCK ,,,.._...°""1ge. """" ..,..... 1 . outboard. M a n 1 Xtra1~ FOR Sale: '66 Honda 450 cc
548-4613 oak trim decor and HJ.fl & Stereo 1210 Cats 1820 S2700. * MZ-'2494 excellent conditioo. SS.SO. 4 Spd, d!r, oac, used only for
CASH for tum &: annllancn, h. h . S h SN 0 W BIRD, -Uy• ___ C'°'ol~l~96=>~1528o'----I pleasure. Special paint & pin ...... mate in• c arr, mate · STEREO ·-lld t t ·~·.. ,. 15 c d-'-W• aell good used fum. 1772 e ........., so 1 a e SIAMESE KITTENS, Seal refinished; 2 sail& & trlr. GO-KART striped. SI · ash o:a,
Npt Bl-CM 642-1015 oak occuional tables, (2) ,',',""',·"·''• ~•,lh!'~th.,rAM. Ta/kF•M Point, tralned, T weelns. s20. $395. 541-4437 Mon.&: after. ·t spd, 90 cc engine.. pymnts $39.86 mo. After 10
MOVING! Uprlte piano, An· " "'""' .... 842-3961 $125. 673-5453 494-9T13
tlque, bunk & twin beds. 58" tan decorator lamps, ,;;~ ~:~ ~::n~e; D091 8825
4ialla~~~~;~~t u~~ ;!.; '66 Honda 160. Perfect '66 D•t1un 1600
miAc. tum.~-hanging chain 1 w 1 g 535.723) finish. $600. 805:252-7834 $375 642-3808 ROADSTER
APPROX 1920 Dreeser, cheftt, !=========~· SACRIFICE AKC, white, WNER 18, al 11 -4 Spd, dlr, oac, Hondunus or-cha.Ix Call aft 6 lamps in wrought iron, 1300 Poodle puppies. Excellent BY O · oop, ~Pl Auto Servi~ ange, black plush interior. 646-ll.a: er pm. C1mer•1 & Equip. line btteding. 546-7'4S4 2. Xlnt cond. Outboard me. . & p rts 9400 SUPERB CONDITION! $175
an 8-piece king size mas· fl450. 494-6242 • Deis, or tradt!. PymntB $46.86
Offleo Eqllipmtnl 1011
FOR Sale A.B. DI c k table
model 320 offset duplicator.
2 yn dd. Good cond. $700.
Contact Misa Christensen
642-4(8).
FOR Se.le A.B. Dick table
model 320 ottm: duplicator.
2 yr1 old. Good cond, $700.
Contact Mia Christtnlt'n .. ,__
G•r•1• Sale I022
GARAGE sale: ow~·1
item. from beds to taya.
Mile. adult articles. 3'4
Holmwood, NB. 548-filO'l
CINE SPECIAL rt, Ektar BLACK Cockapoo puppies $10 SNIPE 16' 9'', no .... aln. S395 TRI-PWR tor early Olds f -ter bedroom suite in pe-. Jena. Cheeked out by EK-~~;h.-..:;;79 Willow Lane CM. inc. trailer. GJ;;sed bull. linkage, fuel lines & block. mo. A ter ll, 494-.,.,,,,
I d '350 with Cll.31!. 646-5477 ..........,....., Good --'. 4"' ~~ $25. 540-4748 ,,,. 3 12 9 can pane e mediter-========o I "==c--=-~~~-.. ..,,"' ~ .... ~ FIAT POODLE Puppies I wks 1 12' SNOWBIRD, f!bergl.11.i s: 7 Barbados Pl., CM
ranean style with top 1S-'po,_r_ll_nz9_G_ood __ , __ 1_s_oo_ 1 male 1 temale AKC a: shoU crifi S•m-no n~ g••• J---•-, 3 $So. 545-3502 mos. old. like new! SR ce Tri'ler Travel 9425 63 FlAT Spt Roadster 1200
qualty t• yr "--anty u"-".ovlU\U ., ... .....,. ----------$400. 546-6518 .·:..:::'=:.•:...:.:..::.:.c;c_.....:..::.: cc, comp new efltl, new 1 .., · .. _, mahogatringen,mahoftail 14, Slltellit• ~5 FT. '63 Oasis Trailer. tires, perfect uphol. $600
king size mattreu &. box block, siml-speed Skq . Xlnt FREE TO YOU $850. * 642_5151 Sleeps 6. Elec. brakes, easy ~c="=h=536-==990i=====I
springa. Spanirb decor -"':.:...."";..·7830-,-,,1954~==--,=,;::====:===I Wt hilc,.h, gas, refrig. Stovk'· JAGUAR
10 FT HOBIE REG. femllle Basset Hound Power Cruisers 9020 oven, ga water tan .
dining set, etc., etc. Any SURFBOARD I: reg. female min. Poodle, ;_:c:.::;__===--'-·-.~-~~2"'~'~===~--1 ;;;;-;:~:;:;;-;;:::.;k-:;-'::;::-I , E.'ICcellent coodition to good homes. Both pret''r OWENS 26" cabin cruiser, 13%' CUSTOMIZED Trailer '63 JAGUAR Mar 2. sedan,
piece can be purchased $50 * 642-0022 older children. 545-SIWR 8119 '00. Low hrs, tully equip. w/ga• refrig., range & auto/pwr, air, chrome
· d" "d U D b l 7,~rr=Su~-~-.~N7ov-.,-,,.~ed. Asking $7400. 114: W-5789 oven, elect brakes, hitch, wheels, $2,250. 6'13-6900
m lVl ua y. rop y MUST find • home for my -~ -spare sl~ps 5, mint cond.
and tet our selection of ~ ~~~ .. ~-.,!!:5 ar am imooth hair P\41PY who Speed · Ski Boitl 9030 $950. 675-1952 KARMANN GHIA ...., ...,....,,..;i-~ IOVM everybody. Mrs. . --~------l=========~I
lop quality Spanish and --su=RFBO=~ARD~-.~ .• ~ .. --I Martinez. 675-4817 a119 A True Wlnnerl T kt 9500 l96ti KARMEN GHIA, Im-
"Jacks", Excellent condition 2 BEAUTIFUL kitte.iU,lo CUSTOM BUILT Thunder-rue mac. cond low mileaa:e-
.$50. 56-3014 wka, silve-r/blk miped A: bird Formula 233. Thi.a 23' '61 GMC % ton pickup. Top $1850. 67S..55TI Mediterranean furni·
Full tirM or ll to 3 bui1.
Qualified to work In high
cractie fashion &ton. Ex-
perien~ prclen-ed but not
nece!SAr'Y. Offeni immedi-
ate liberal diacount and
pleasant environment. Ap-
ply:
SURFBOARD 10' Uaed twice blue grey -one home prtol. all fiberglass V-bottom beau· mechanical con dit ion I ==========I
Like new. $SQ. 642-4283 aft 546-9174 8/19 ty haa America's most fa. 642-8l19
ADMIRAL 3 nn. air· con· priced!! 5:30 WANTED gel hm fot' very mous racing design. SAF·166·=CH-=EV=-~%-ton_6_cy_l_.u_to
Equal opportuni~ .mployer
YOUNG men .l women 21-35. :.;A;i:P!',o:;.ll•::n;.:coo:::. __ __;l:.;1.:.:00 t U r e. Fantastically MERCEDES BENZ
BUFFUM'S
Fashion lslancl
Newport Beach
Ptmitiona open for winter
employment Full A: part
time. Apply The Dorymen
Fish Ir: Chips. 2100 Ocean·
front NB btwn 2-5 pm.
HOUSEKEEPER. Live in. EXPER. dnig derk; '60 hr.
Young man in family hu week; 1'IO eve& or . Sun.
impared iigbt Principal ALSO, e.xper. drug dehvery
dutis, cooking for him 11.11d & 1todc ~leak. a:>lLEX>E
mainWnirig his qtrs. Must PHARt~ACY 540-4680
be cap1ble of being lecond ----------
mother. Ideal for woman A;encies M, W. 7550
V.i!hing perm. home. Very '
desirable quarten. Salary ARGUS
open. Must h11v~ excelL Work Nea r th• 8e1ch
l'.Pferences, no drinking or
amoking. P .0. Box 3811 EXEC SECY
Corona de! Mar. Administrative job for young
e A Ukable position fOZ" a boss .. • •· • · • · • · · .. • • · · S650
lik11.ble per90n. CASHIER-JR ACCT
convenien1 hour!. First run 2 year oollegr 1cctt: .. S600
LIDO THEATRE, Newport CONSTilUCT ION SECY
Bl' a c h. Mr. Hawkinson, Per~onal 1ide 10 p~l · · J7W
67~7081 PAYROU. AIP
1----~-----I ~r opportunity "i 1 h
1---------I CPA .................. s.135
Joba--Men, Wom. 7500 DICTAPHONE SECY
PETER CHRISTIAN Like phone work. N(I
of !ht-S/H , , , , •... , , , , , •. , , , S400
JR STENO
ditioner, l[i()() B'n.l, uaed 3 GoU Club Set, McGregor. lovable yng man&. cbu. mix EST SKI BOAT BUil.T, It's tr, 6' bed, 27000 mi. si2oo or
mo ·s. Dix. car Air~ terTler. Sm breed. OidPr rough water tested and best offer. 494-1644
ditioner. Best otter. Ph aft. Complete houseful 4 ~:s, ~1n:s.:;ter. chldm pref. 531--5614. equipped with a Berkeley -·-··--
7 PM M&-0107 AUSTRALIAN sh • Ph er d jtt . , . powertd by• 450 hp CAMPERS 9520
WASHERS $29.95; dryert '152800 Binoculars, Scopel 1550 female, 8 wHb, purebred. Af'l"O Marine. Cruises at 45· --------
J,15; Frttun S75; ltefria:., .,. ,.... ••.• , ., , . 9 6 2_ 5 3 3 2 l8!28 Santa All ot the extras incl. &fl~ SALE
""'""""' l A~.; Gou. SCRAM LETS Muiono F V rodio. • -"" '"""' USED TRUCK
540-l095 ANSW.ERS l BLUE ~~en with light :V~': ;.;,~;:. g::· ~ AND SOFA rol11way bed sa>. MUST 2 bl ck & hi n-i,·n~ ciW• ISO. ,,,.,_9459 R'!AY eyer, • w te he-st offer takes & it's nearly CAMPER °"'"'" .. ., vu kitteiu. 4 month!I' o I d • 642 "~ Ext 240 Da
Eves. S'ACRIFICEI Goattt -Dou5P -Cubit -new. .....__., . ys: SALE ~~~--~---,11,,, I , """Y-' _ ~ 'STOOY 543-<1119 . 8/17 6#-1742 Eveninp and Week-SERVEL gu rebi11:erator "" ""' ~u ~· __ .. w h I ·" • f
'
,,, ..... __ ... , comla·-t· ··My 4 n•••£«•S. Jq-baired, 6 ..,.rus. e ave• aJ'ge ...,,tttion o double dr. New unit. ~ ............ "' "' 1 .. _ S40-fi670 or ~3625 wife ia suing me for divot"el' wkl. old. 2 millet, 2 females. VACATION Special! clean 8 to O foot ca ........ ver \6 9 800 and asks CUS'T'OOY ot m,y 894-3044 8119 1966 Cris Crall 17' speed boa.t end non cab-over models FOR mont'y.'' CU'J'E 6 week old kittent. S5 VW sunroof Ask $1.000 priced from $400.00.
Calico mother. Afternoon•-• Chev VS eng. inboard . 40 TRUCKS ·TRUCKS-TRUCKS ONLY Miscellineoui 1600 642-1323 Eve11. 543-77F.6 bn. origin&! _ radio _ all 1959-1966 -Camper equipped
1110 Antiques
'66 230 s
PIS, T/G. Beautiful lt beige
w/ dk bronze vinyl int. One
owner. Must see & drive.
lOo/., down oac handles.
SBR411
Jim Sl•mons Imps.
\Varner & Main St.
Santa Ann 546_..Uof
Or a n~e County's
Largest Selection
NeW & Used
Merc edes Benz
Jim Slemons Imps.
Warner & Main S•
Santa An ,, 546-4114 GRAND OPElllJNG SALE
Tiftany Houae. 3 big days, 11
\o 9 p.m. Signed Tiffany
piece&, Tiffany masterpiece
· I of 11 kind, Tittany hang·
ing shades & othef'll. Signed
marble museum piP.« ol
nude be11uiy, Iota of gla!lll It
china. Lovely c arved
f\lmiture, Chevelle mirrora,
roll top deaks, ha.JI trees,
ll'\loks, etc. A truck I011d to
choaw trom el opening nl~
Any piece can be pur·
cha1ff Individually.
-----'---"'~ 4 CUTE an black kittens. 6 leather int. Ski bu mounted heavy duty Ford!" and Chev·
GOLD COINS -B-U. Mexican wks. old, Sandbox tnined. in engine _ plus brand new rolets • Frnm $499. All pric· '63 220 SEDAN
Jold pittea. 50 peto 1$63.50), 548-011! 8,.19 Coleman camping outfit. ed to sell NOW) Air, UIS, air, AM-FJ\1. Lt
Terms AvaRoble
Newcomen
to Colifornia
Crecllt Approvecl
Immediately
20 peso <$28.50) And 10 peso 20 CHICKENS Ir: 110me rabbit Oasis teit _ s way cmv. BANK TERMS grey wi red leather lnterior. ~1~-:..~~ll three for $104. hutches for clcenina up N ,_cooler_ 2 cal snow lite jug -Trades Welcome Obviou&ly a C8J' well cared
Ac hauling. 543-5497 8/19 S burner CM1P stove -OPEH ROAD forJ.lm Siemon• Imp. • V UUMS e \Mtem JOO wam -2 sleep. no up. Repairs & pe.rU. BEAUTIF1JL long I short Ing bags _ all for $3295.00 3 $ R O Wamcr & Main St .
Reasonable. Coast Vacuum haired cats Ir: kittens. FrH 100 % tinancina: o A c I 0 -HA B R BLVD. Sanla Ana 546-4U.(
333 E .l?th, CM, 642-l560 to good home. S.U-2002 8119 675-2147 tpriv11.te par~l . ' SANTA ANA 531-4655 ,66 200 Sed.
'57 MERC Sta wag $150. 10 WANT pod homt_ tar IWl?f!t, MusT SELLI Walk Tbru A/T, AM·F'M. air condltioo .
Newporter Inn Much public cottt.ac:t. u1e
Has an opening ftt ll10 ·
BEAUTICIAN SI H ................ to . pnce11. We corry our
own accounts
mel8J shelvings 8'x3'x:24'" $18 lov1ble, long haiN!d calico 16' FLEETCRAFT 75 hp H Like new condition. Graphite
e1. 2 add mach. 5 spd cat. spayed. ~ S/19 John900, all elK'fric l tri~ OUSKGr grey wi red vinyl int. 1'FT940
Detailer bike S30. 642-1269 %: GERM. Shep., 1Ai Springer + many Xtraa. $500. The fAbulou11 Open Road, Jim $lemons Imp. TRAJNE'F,S n36 Newport, <bits Me111
with following Many, Some 11:lth no typ. &1~22:11
C1ll 644-0340 ing ................ to ,_'t5 :RO~U.-~To-,-,,-,k,....Ct<0-.. -,,.---.,-,1
COUPLE or ainaie man for RECEP110Nl~7 cabinet $65., round oak t11ble
36 unit moklr hot@.! in J...a. Fun job. V1catkri tpOt $..\.10 SM., barrel top trunk $15 ..
&UM Beach, man to do full LIQUOR SALES old lhlJl'.-whtt\, old dtntlat
maintenance. wife for ""'Id Exp reuill tradr • ..... $!l60 cbslt, 2136 Ne'NpOl't Blvd ..
-wortc. Salary ' apt tumlllh· FURNITURE SALES C.flf.
rz11J
Funaiture ed. 4IW-4563 1 ~ yn exp · •• ·' •• • to $600d -Qu'=11~1~1N7G~~.U~SIN--Di-S_O_n.
Mnt ii women. 1J A over, SCR£W M.AOt OPER Ear1,y Amer tumitUft, erien·
ftl1I • put-time; «>Ok. le. Must do,O'Wn w,fup1 • • • • S400o ta! . hnlded .t. htdctd nip.
CrHm ~. a 11 'c . PROF S1'AFFING ~r bric-s~c tic, 2756 ONLY AT
---. ~" ·--" "to< BS or MS In mgmt .. tlO.COO • __ ... '""""'~~"' E. O>aat Hwy, Corona del
1 zi <DOK. _.....i ~;~~:~ .. 116.coo "M="=· ====== 11 W Newport Blvd.
· DEBJT SALES IWP'•~':..i."':Xm~.'~~1 ns.,....,... .. bk •... SEOO S.wl"t Maehln" 1120 II H1rbor Blvd,
twla. CM At. tG-JT.K PHARMACUETJCAL TRNE 1961 8ING&R.. ~'al tcl'UIOle
· Cared' opportunJ\)' .... J.lMi tnd. Trwte.r ol aeniee Nm>...,.,,-· -D~ .. A'M'DI m .. foru• ,.... Costa Mesa .... P.••aed. ~ Dcdwdw bM.cb rm f1Sdt TouC'h-o-matlC', 1uto,
....... apt .,..,_t. D nsJL ii1•aa, buttcsi bokil,, blind
-A•GUS EMPLOYMENT ''""· faney st\ichH. Ho •I·
Oii*. p.,t 'f1m9 ('OtJSULTANTS ACffiCY lad'tm~ nHdfd. sat.IS
• lpm't 1'lilblnl lloaL IMS Westcllft, N.B. 5'3-7796 ce.h « utum• $4.10 mo.
•' I ' 1' i·-. ' -'L,1'111' St., s.A. "'1-Guu ...... 52MS)l
I ' • -j :~ f,.,. ·!
~
lnry nlt1 111 9
Wed. Sii., lvn. 111 6
Spaniel female pup 1 . 935-m or 494_1.544 Carmi!:'! chll.Mis mount with Wnrner & Main St .
UPHOtsrERING • S79.50, 2 673-4003 8/19 1eature1 found in models Santa Ana 546-4ll4
pc. (Europeu craftsmen) 3 KTITENS 6 wka. old. LATE '67 GLASSPAR tv.ice thtt cost of this un il,
Free est, dtl, pickup, 215 Habrkn. Vt"" 10 v•b 1,. Like ntw, UO HP A new lnclOdlng """' 1 .. ,.ce age MERCTJJES Benz. Brand
Main, HB "&my•· S36-641li c...., •1~ ., 8/19 trailer. &42-&13 11.ft. ~PM. mono toilet ""Ste;;;: new 280 FL sport ("(11,lpe. .......-. w "" Only 250 mill!a. Tobacco 14' Otn'BOARD, 28 HP $250 REDISH Brown An 8 B Sii M I 9036 SMOO. brown w/bamboo Interior.
floxol< Rainbow Air . d..,._ ""'' oat P oor "I OPEN ROAD Will p M -VICUUm cleaner, eoat wk1. kitten& JPI'I< Tfps. IA(, VI. pty, Mn. 5.f6..al7'2 8120 MOORJNG. Nl'WIJ(lf1 Bay. Hodge& 714 : 541-4131. llJ:
$350, tell $.200. 548-4504 BLACK Cock-A-P<w> puppy. $5200. Incl'~· Sa.ntana. 2".2, tull 830 S. HARBOR BLVD. 6~87
KIRBY vacuum cleaner A Female, 12 wkl, ~a. race, t mo 1 <Md. N'f-t5l5 SANTA ANA 531-4655 MERCED'ES-
attachm~nts. Takt o v • r 1964 .,..,_ • •--11 646-32i4 8/I9 Boat·Yecht OPF;N ROAD 15' CUstom ~ ..... Nr sedan, auto 1m11. payments or $57.20 BABY G . 1>1.. tr11.n1, pow/S, mar 0 0 n . casb. Credit dept. KE 5-T.!89 umea • ._, 2 mo1., Ch1rters 9039 ch1sl1 mount on 1 Ton p rf h d Lonit hatr, beauUtul. No truck, 4000 W 1'-"· ph1n1 . air e tct mec · CUI · $2300.
SHOPSMJTH Marti 5• budl,y cage, 673-1133 IT•S SMARTER cand., ~•tn-o !:ipe 5)'1!<"m . Call 673-738.( 9 to l ~75. Back Bly Arff, ~1.0-""VEL""'c,Y,.;._l,..:.:.wl~ol~d-..,-...,-.1 TO CHARTER al"lf cont-9.i.ned.'Prtssu re owc;-"-,,,kd;;',c."',,·=,,,-:o--~-1
Part Labndor " Boxtr. C.l 25 • l\.aW*M'I :.> -Alberg WlltT syztem etc. Exttl '63 MERCEDES Ctinvtftible.
WASHER, d,,..,., )otJ « babJ 6'l5-1476 &Ill 35 -Bounty 40 . N•wporttr cond. $300') down-Ill.kt O'tlT 190 S.l.. lmman11Alt. $2t50
furn. 242S2 Spe.rtan, Mi.M.iClll k e I ch • Marlntt 40 • S501mn paymmt. S46-0750 + 4!M-~4 *
Vitjo, 83'1~130,1 t · 6 WKS old ktttfml. b!Jr a, Scboonen • 2'1' f'&lrlinitr • 30' DON'T (ive h away, pt THE SUN NEVER SETS en
BUY YOUR l'IR£WO<X> wht. 54&-LS'JO 8/lt Trojan -38' Spt l'WMr • DU-quick cub tor II "1th a Oasatned'1 1ct1on PQMT'·
NOW I: SA VEI I FREE Uttlt ~ldl ldttena. merout othl!l'L Dally PUot wtrrt Adi F'or an ad to st II ar"Olmd
l3S. CORD. -mo -8/11 CALIFORNIA CRUISES l-"'"'='--~===-o-r-:-:-... dock, di~ Mum. ROUSE '° bl: mof'ed mt HEAVY duui twin& tet 20 Y\'1U'I ln Ne'WJIOl'l Dally PUot Wllrf Ada11 Need a GartJiellfllllllt1'
Elden iso, -... MMHI tram.. Ml-.10!! W lmle Minney 541-4191 --ll="""=..:•_Go-Go:;.;;_::.;o' _ _,_....;:.Find=.:."..:"'..:°':.':..::" .. ~' :..S::,l -I
1"
I
I
.. 111!1~""~-·~ -•..
TRANSPORTATION -MG
MG
1966 Harber, C.M. 6t6-DJ3
'15 MG 1100. Om1>l .. e\Y nblt ma New p!l'f:llie1. $1500 m.
vnttd BFST OFFER, -· $1,100
• • •
TRANSPORTATION
VOLVO
'68 VOLVO
.YIAR IND
Clearance
AND
DEMO SALE
METRO
'58 METRO eonv.n, .... fl°!ol="
top, good wwk tar. $50. ,......,
With
"STRIP DOWN"
PRICE
ADVERTIZWIG
LI•• 111 other d11l.n,
WI .,.. now clo1in,.
out our 1961 lnv•n·
tory, bllt we •r• not
11tlin9 below our cost
(AND MmHll IS ANY
OTHll DIAUl.J
2828 Hariior Blvd.
, 0.ta Mesa 5*-1203
WE PAY ,
CASH
'tar ued can • trucb Jmt call._. for fret utimate.
GROTH CHEYROLH
Allc fDr Sales Manaav
18211 Beach Bl.,
Huntington Be:ach
KI "3331
WW.. Trade !20' inbrd. with
eompletel:Y reblt eng & other
equip. Value, $1,000. 5'8-1131
Ulld Cars
NEED A CAR?
CAN'T BE FINANcmf
9Bankrupl! eRepoaeaston?
es.d Credit! • rnvorcec11
eMlllbry eNew In Atta?
Make E>Jyday Payment.
McCARTHY MOTORS
lGO So. Main A Edfnl9'
(2 blocb N. of Sean)
Brand ,N,
'68 Chevy
II Coupe
E-Z·I JW1, vtnyl trim' ~peed wtpfrs, full '
factor)' equipped. Stock
No. l~: $1998
plus Tax A Uc. ,
Brand Ne
'68 Chevy
Impala
.Sl'OIT cour1 $2438
1=======1--·CJ'.. 616-9303
PORSCHE ~ '68 VOLVO
PORSCHE '68, 911 Webers.
21,000 nil; wbtte w I bit
int. AM/FM, chrome whJL
GET OUR LEADERSHIP
SAVINGS BEFORE
YOU BUY!!!
THE STRIP
11
__ ... _ .. _ ... _Pb_..,..,.,, __
I
--1589 '65 PORSCHE C Olupe, lime
JTffn, new til'M, rebuilt
eni!Jle. $3300. 912-79(9 or
9112-1517
'55 PORSCHE. Dralb!d, must
1ell Reblt. •nr. A tra.n1.
$600. 5'>-<611
'57 PORSOIE
Good ca>ditlGo 11000
6.15-5761
POR!CHE
'63 ..,,.,. 00. Excd. com!.
Aft.et 7 PM call 568-0547
'67 PORSCHE 912, 11,000
miJa. Xlnt cond. Call Tom ......,., .. .......,,
RENAULT
'63 REN.
Cara•elle -One owner. Ex-
cel.lent ccRlitkln • Priced to
ltll at onlY $595. e E-Z TO BUY
JIM SLEMONS
TOYOTA
417 ~-Wamtr, a.A. 541).2512
1961 RmA\LT Clrlwlle.
ralr """'·· .......... ""'· A1tl!t 8 PM U M317
SUNBEAM
'64 SUNBEAM
Imp. Nice car -Sale Priced
'3915. l°" down oac. e E-Z TO BUY
JIM SLEMONS
TOYOTA
~tMltmiA
• IHPORTS
IM Harbor, C.M. ~
'63 VOLVO
1225 4 dr aedan. Brick red
w/beige int. Excel. coodltion
thru-oot. Mutt .tee and drive
this one at only $1035. 10%
dawn oae wm handle. e E-Z TO BUY
JIM SLEMONS
TOYOTA
f17 W. Warner, S.A. 50-2512
VOLKSWAGEN
'66 vw
The Popul•r "Bug"
Compedtion Orus:e. ~
and ab90luteb' tmmac\llate.
CU tlnance aD or part ~
mts. as klw u $212.00 per
mo O.A.C.
$1495
ELMORE
MOTORS
TOYOTA
Pb . ....,..,
15300 Stach Bmt, Wltmnltr
'63 VW pert cond lS,000 mJ,
nu tires, tbr bumper pro-
1'drl. Must att to apprec.
Sunroof $1100/bnt offw.
Plf'ue call 548-9741
Dune Bu91y Builders
1968 wrecked VW, :Im ml.
Compl except tires i radio.
U7 W. Warntr, S.A. M0-2512 $950. 833--0812 =--.,...;-~--
TOYOTA
vw engines. Steedy in stock.
1500 cc . $395. 40 hp • $235.
UlO cc . -" hp • $150.
TOYOTAS 6424l50, 646-1610 ''""
Sport Sedans, CoupH. Was-1 OWNER '65 VW. Bel1t
om. We've aot them. All w/tan int. R&H, Xlnt cond.
types, •ticks. automat:iC9. $1,200. 642-7241 or evee.
Most one atrtWr with low ~703:2.
.................. ................... :
Stock No. 4124, '61
Couger, 289 cubic V8
• n 9 i n e, conc11!1d
h•adlight1, 1equ•nti1I
tun 1i9n1l1, E 70x 14
wide tr11d tir1s, buc·
kit 111t1, I 00 •t. nylon
c1rp1t, 4 11t1 1 e • t
be If 1, shoulder h1r·
n•••, 3 • • p e • d 1fd.
tr1n1., life 9u1rd 11f1.
fy feefures d e I u x •'
Wheel covert. This
li9htly equipped car
11111 for ju1t under
$2100 b u t obviously
the c•r would h 1 v •
limited 1pp11I.
THE POWER
How about this on•
Stock No. 4171 '61
Cougar: Add to above
equipment p o w • r
1teerin9, • u to mafic
tr1nsmi11ion, w h i t •
wall11 AM radio • , .
Now we're tal•in9 •
little. over $3000.
COLD AIR
Perhap1 you went air
conditionin9. let' 1
loa_k at Stock No.
4123: Add to above
1quipment eir condi.
tlonin9, tinted 9las1,
sport• con1ole, power
d i • c brak11. $3396
kills this Cou91r. And
10 on th r o u 9 h our
1cor11 of b r a n d n•w
'61 Cougars. mile1. Can finance all m .;;;;,.;;-i;;--.=-::--,-=-part payments u low u 1965 V W Xlnt Omcl. FM. A1d
$%1.00 per mo O.A.C. Radio. Wood Wheel Gd. Then, of coune there
ELMORE i;Tlri"i•;;"'-';;:;.,;;:180:,:-;=-::::-=:lare our d1mon1trator1.
"87 VW Xtra nice car. t50 Th1y must 90 too.
dwn OAC Pymta $5:1 mo.
MOTORS lr ·~" ~,,.., TOYOTA D .~•5
Pb. ~ , ·~ VW151300.000; a:epu..I
15.1!0 l!e<dl -.,_ -~.. mlla. $1f50. ., 642-1161 &44-0092
'68 TOYOTA "· .. ~vw;;;;:..::,;eonc..::vert1=.,"'•1-•. ~JO=-.,
GEr OllJI. LEADERSHlP o:ind. Muat aee: to ap.
SAVINGS BEFORJ: procl.ote' 64><137
YOU llOTI 11 'M VW Bua. Xlnt oond, both
TOYOTA
llEADQU.um:lt.S
ELMO IE Wiit---··-.. -
in A OUL ~. Must Mil
$950fbe~.t off«. 541-6747
wm 11y
y_., ............... ..... -PU! .... ..... OoD~
6l3·1190
BUT MAYBE
You need or pref•r a
full 1l11d 4 door Mir·
cury. Her• i• Stock
No. 2101 with 1ir con·
ditionin9 at $3411 -
that's ch11per thin
1ome Mu1t1n91.
BUICK
'50 BtnCK 4 dr. Comfortable.
Reliable tran!lpOl'tation.
6'15-3963 ' ,,,60;;.,-LA~SAB.,.;,RE=::.::N::_e-..--trr~,.-.
paint, Excell. con d I ti o n
$500. 546-301! ---
CADILLAC
1962 CADILLAC
Coupe Do Ville
Polar white. Full power, alt
cond. Immaculate.
$1495
Can J:Ll'lance all or i-rt Pay.
ments •• low •• $22.00 per
mo O.A.C.
ELMORE
MaI'ORS
TOYOTA
Pb. B!M-3320
15.100 Beach Bl.cl., Wstmnstr
'60 CADILLAC
CONVERTIBLE
For ~ by PRIVATE PAR-
TY. Silver ~ with excel-
lent black top. Engine, trans-
millioo, shocks, bnkea, an
in top abape. Sec at Udo
Moton, 1300 Cout Highway,
attoa from Bay Oub apts.
Call 673-4689. WllJ.. DICKER
ON PRICE.
1961 EL DORADO, 5,000 ml.
~m tirM, ltht, vtn top,
AM/FM, like ~w. $6950. .,,_..35
'56 CAD Faneral coach. Good
CQOd. Equip w/ IUrfboud
nckl. BM offer &t2-&ll
CHEVROLET
CHRYSLER
'11 NtNPORr er.tom. fact.
atr, 'l\nyl top: Priced ftlr
qUiek ale.. 11) 631·7496
'61 T-llRD
Power steering, automa·
tic, radio, heater.
ssss
''7 PLYMOUTH
AIR
Sports Fury m, t 1peed,
tact. AIR, R&:H. Uke
new. TTW 029.
s19ss
'62 IMPALA
Coupe, R&:H, full fact.
equip. FDS 308.
' $788
'M MALIBU CPE.
Powergllde, rad lo and
healer. W AF 962.
s1188
'65 IMPALA CPI.
utomatic, power 1teer·
Ing, V..S, rndio and heat·
ROD497.
$1388
'M CHEVILLI
STATION WAGON
VB, &Utomatlc, radio,
ater. Lie. ONP-TI7
. sass
''5 PL TM. -AIR
IPORT PURY
CONVERTIBlE. Power
stffl"., auto., radio, heat·
~!'l~ory air. HDI..265.
N.U.:1< CAR BEL 0
WHOLESALE BLUE
BOOK ..
$1188
'MFOlD
Falr1a~. Fact. equlJ>Ptd
dio A heater. PA!Z26
$788
'H YW
SUN IOOP
1peed, radio, hff.ter,
harp.,U c. JJc.MO
$CJ88
'H FALCON
Dr. Automatic, radio,
heattr. Uc, STil·21f
$1388
'H IL CAMINO
IUIFIR'I 1r1c1AL
Futocy «tulpped.
K88321
s599
.. . . -. --. .
. -
TRANSPORTATION TRANSl'OltTATIOff 'TRANSl'OltTUiON
• OAILV •JI.OT ~ j
TlllNSPORTATIOH i
Used C•n 990C Uted c... 9900 u··· Cert -...o.==--_;:.::.:; ===--....:.=I =-==--....:.9900~ .=U::M<l=-::C::•".:...--~:.::: •
COMU MUSTANG PONTIAC __ P_O...:.N...:.TIA.::...:..C:..__ 1 i
1964 l'ONTIAC . 1.962 PONTIAC ~ ''1 i:i>~. 5...,.iard -. l'IU -will ... 1300 .....
Rl:JI. $2£15, ~ or ~ue book. '68 Mustang Ilk
1)42.4732 1hitt, fac air. Lo ml. Tenn.s.
G. T.O. COUPE LeMlont Spt. Cpe. 1
Beautiful burgandy w l t h Automatic, arctic white with :
white bucket seats. Alt red bucket eeats. BeautitUl \ or con1ider trsde for sm it.a
CONTINENTAL """" .... ""' caod.: automatic. • oonctitiat. • ;
$1695 $795 . ;
1968 CONTINENTAL. Must MUSTANG
~n • very immaculate -·-4.000 nUle demonstrator. '65~ MUSTANG
Can ftna.r>ce all or part Pay-Can ftnanoe all or part Pay-:
me11ta u low u $22.00 per , meol.I u kJW 11 $17.00 per '
mo 0 .A.C. mo 0 .A.C. : equipped for the Continental Spt Cpe stidl six. Galden rod
connoisseur. C.U Petu the yellow with G.-T. decor Jn.
Greek at Johnson and Son. terior. Abaolutdy lbowroom ELMORE ELMORE 1
Crance Ccw'ity'1 O Ide 1 I freah, MOTORS
TOYOTA
Pb.894-3.1'0
MOTORS i~
e•t•bli&bed Unco&n, $1495 TOYOTA '
Mercury, ColWU' deelershlp. can finance all or part pay.
, Newport· CM 64%--0981 ments 81 1o'{t'' al 522:00 pet
Pb.89«320 '
15300 Beach Bl'fd., Wstmnstr 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr I
64 CONT. wb. Xlnt ccnd. 4 mo O.A.C. t.:;_~,:. Prlvat< puty ll950 ELMORE 4 SPEED
MOTORS SPECIALISTS
COUGAR TOYOTA HIGH PERFORMANCf
Pb, 8'l·33l0 CUSTOM CARS
'68 O>upr (XR·7) Air and 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstnwtr LARGESr SELECTION IN
well equipped. Must sell or ORANGE COUNTY , .. ,. ""' ••m0•"""" .._ OLDSMOBILE Selected Auto
fore Aug. 22. Call Wayne -C Squire at Jo~ A Son, 'fi6 OLDS Delta 4 Dr. Must enter
Orange Courily'1 oldelt ff-1e1J our beautifully cared for 1~ Harbor Blvd. 5374646
tablistied Lincoln • MercW')' merry oldsmoblle. It has ROY CARVER
• Olugar dealenbip, New· factory air cttldlUoning and
port • Costa MetL 900 w. other nice a c c e 11o rI e1 PONTIAC
Coast Hwy., Newwt Beadl. Plea~ call today f or 1125 Harber Bl .• Cotta Nea
fi42-0081 or 545-8773 =8e :~· Phone Kl 6·4444
CORVETTE
62 OLDS 98 Holiday sedan Orange County'• bc1uadvt
46.500 mi, full power, 6 wa; Deale tor lwU. • Ro$'lll ad
pwr 1eat1 many extras , ... ;;>;;d>;;·=;c-;c_°"~~-'63 CDRVETI'E 2 TOPS. '86 Xlnt cond. $795. 968--4.378 • '63 GRAND PROC. full pwr,
1965 RAMBLER
4 dr. 6 Pe.st station wagm. ~
PWar ivory with contrasting '
interior, air eood. A ccq:e-)
ous automobile. Only '
$1395 '
Can finance all or part Pey· I
ments as low u $22.00 per :
mo 0 .A.C. '
ELMORE
MOTORS
TOYOTA
Pb. 894-3320 •
15300 Beach Blvd., W1tmitatr ~
'
T·BIRD . : __ _..:_..:.:.:. __ ,.
Muat N"ll. Best off• r .. 66 CUTLASS F·8S Hol'"'· air, xlnt cond, goOO tires. • '62 T·BIRD • eit. & body. Many Xtru• .... y 11250 .,..., ~..... Xlnt cond ' 774-U.10 or 67S.130'l' uk b-q>e. 28,000 Mi. by orlt. . ... ,,......,,..or 673-6733 $'700 ;
Oluck. ~:.::·. 6~~~11 ..ft~~dAM all Excelle~t G~~!~eedS 1 3 o o 1 •;--;,c;;,.,..;~_,B;~~f.;l584::.u~:..:._-,.-&
OWNER In Viet Nam. 646-2998 alt, nf'W tire9, prl. pty. '
·-·ril ·0<===-=--~ """· ...-. ' .,..... ice 65 CUUau. Xlnt 'GS BONNEVILLE, air cood,
'64 SPYDER·Tan !SO hp. cond, PS, PB, air. 36,000 act all power, luxurious. Last 196f T-BmD: power brake• '
.... ..._ ------miles, 54g...2425 chance n ,750. 494-3412 wl.ndow1, steering. Priv .... ~ . ~ ...................... 6-="• 4 • pd .1.:::=;::,;:;:::,;:::.____ ty Beet u .. -
R/H, w-w. xlnt cond· Ask· 1968 TORO, loeded, save '63 Le MANS 326-VS 3 speed. . o er. 540-1355 '
CORVAIR
ing $925 CM eve• I: Sun. $1300. Private party. Bucket Beats. Stereo. Exclt --------• oc.,,,. • 546-9'26 • """"· ........, VALIANT : '~COR.:'.R, ~HP·i,,:\·. PLYMOUTH '~NTIAC 4 dr $12S. Runo ~.:-61D_lx..:V.:..n..;::: .. .:.t,;;r.:.&.:.h_, -..,.-I ~
cmd. $525. 545--7301 ,63 p ..-=,,.:::Call=-o::..,_""ll59:::___ battery, trans, good tirel.
1
'65: MONZA. Ori&; •. owner. Cond~th !::;;oo Ex. PLACE your nnt ad where $395. 642--8013 aft I PM
• Xlnt cond. $975. ~ best ~er! 499-2431. ft S or they are lookina -DAILY THE QtnCKER YOU CALL.
Befort 7 AM or eves. I ~;;z.~;;:;;;;~·~~· ~~P!LOT~~cl~aul~fl~e~d~"'2~-56'78~~~1~HE~Q~Ul~C!<ER~~Y~O~U~SJl!!~J:i,
DODGE INew Cert 9800 New C•rt 9800 New C•rt 9800
1963 DODGE DART
IOver blue with beautiful cm-
trutmg Interior. Automatic,
slant stx. Jlllt u trelh u
cu be. Only
$995
Om ftnanee lll or part Pay-
ments aa 1ow a• $19.00 per
mo O.A.C.
ELMORE
MOTORS
TOYOTA
Pb. 894-3320
15.100 Be&ch Blvd., Wltmnltt
67 DODGE Sprt.sman Van 6
cyl Auto R/H. Extru.
Orie-OwMr 54S.'11U aft 6
PM
.19156 Monaco, lactory air, 2
lll)eaktr ncllo, 2 Door' all
utru. like new. One owner.
114: 846-9464
1963 Polan • xlnt cmd.
383 mg., 2 door, all extras.
One owner. n4: 1146-9464
FORD
* MUST SELL-'fiO Ford, 2
dr. hd top, rum good, body
in xtnt owl., new battery
etc. Sacrifice $200 or offer.
548-31l3
1008 FORD StatlCll wqon,
good tranaprta t1on, runt
..... •e<ds paint, ""'· MS-ntJ
1957 FORD STA WAG. Runs
..... $100.
$40-2535
57 Ford Station Wagon.
Stneo, 3 ap, Best Otter.
• 675-5002 •
'&I FO~_D 500XlJ. bi perf.,
390. Pwr. *«ins I: brakes.
Lt blue. Belt otlf!r, M8--08'.IO
1963 FORD Falcoo Futura, 2
dr. black, autom. Moville to
Md. fiOO. 4K-61'21
MERCURY
'68 Mercury, Statkln Wqon.
Third. 11e&t, auto trans.,
•hi~alls. Pow. steerin& &
di.c braku, Fact«)' Air,
dul action tall pte, AM
ndio. Brand new Mootego
model. Buy today for $3793
or Jeue for $117 per month
with 40,tm miles of totally
he .en1oe from Johmon A
Son, Orange (bunty's oldest
t'ltablhbed Ltncoln • Mer·
eury • Cougar del.Jenhip.
Nf!WJICl't • Cotta Men. 900
. W. Cout Hwy., Nft'NJ'IOrt
Bet.di. &l2.Q181 Cll' 563278
'68 Merew'J'. Bnnd nN.
13516, Factory air, pow.
steer I dltc brakes, auto
trans, AM radio, dclux mon·
teso 2-Dr hardtop. Buy or
lease today on Inventory
clet,rante at Joflmon a Son,
Orup Coullt;y'1 old.Ht es-
tablUhed UDco1n • Mercury
• O'.Jui:ar dealtttiblp. New.
pert • Costa Mm. 900 W,
O>aat Jfwy., Nt"'lf'Jl(Wt Beach.
&U-<1911 or 5f:5.C27I
'53 MERC Mei--wq., Pl,
fltt air, l'l1ck eblft, 11xtru,
lllO. -bet 11 ~ 6
USED CAR
CONTINENTAL
'63 AIR CONDITIONED SEDAN
UATHER UPHOL5RRT
~~~~~D .. SEAT $1480
THUNDERBIRD '64 LANDAU HARDTOP COUPI
Air Conditioned, Power Extras.
NEW-LIKE $4370 INTERIOR I
PONTIAC VI '65 AIR CONDITIONED, POWll
mRAS, Do• lotle TIRES.
l~~ r. LAIOR $2250
WARRANTT
AMBASSADOR 8 '66 '90 ... DOOR SEDAN AIR CONDrrlONID ITC.
PREMIUM
CAR ~960
MUSTANG 8 '66 .AIR CONDITIONID, PM RADIO,
POWH STllRING, CONSOLI
lOOo/o ~180 PAlTS •LA-
WARRANTT
HOLIDAY Rambler
1969 HARBOR e COSTA MISA
OPEN $UND~ Y~H. 642-6023-0llVI IN
"
I
I
1
•
~~~~~~~~·~·~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.~.~.~.--:.-:.--:.~-:~~.-:---.~.-:-~:-~-:~--:.~.~:::--::---7'":;::::::-. . . . ' • •
l)AD.Y PILOT.EDITORIAL PAGE
An Opening f or Ah.u·s~
A new atate law, 1igntd by Governor Reaian \11t "Wftlk.. llrites a blow at the confidence of new car buy·
.. that the vebide ls, in fact, 11new."
HeNtofore II haa been illegal for an 1~tomobil1
.... r to either diaconnect or turn back a car's odo-e• Buyti"I bad good reason to believe the mileage
wa1 honest. Only the shadiest of 1eller1 would
Ibo dlanee ol penalty by breaking the law.
)fow the deeler can have a new car driven from
to California without showing the mileage. 11
r lt1ll new in such circumstances? Also, car
umeri JllBY run up as much _mileage as they p~ease , tt beiQg shown. . , .
Ont reasOO given in support of the measure was
that a new ear warranty covers the miles driven by
the buyer and does not include the mileage run up in
tielU_ng, transporting or selling the vehicle.
Why not simply have the warranty show the mile-ac• figure at the beginning of coverage? Now, under
the new law, the dea1er is supposed to give the buyer
a statement telling him approximately how many miles
the car bas .been driven.
Most dea1ers, like most people. are b<lnest. But this
unneeded new law provides on opening for abuse by
the unscrupulous few. And that inevitably will hurt all
dealers. ·
Thoughtless Dog Owners
~Y all odds, the gripe most frequently expressed
in messages to Gloomy Gus on this page concerns the
irresponsibility of dog owners in allowing their pets to
befoul neighbors' property and public places.
-Lept.J.sPiroru: usullly transrililted thrvu1h the
urine of i!>f~ted animals ••
-Slrongytotdlasls, caused by inlection with tht
parasitic r:iematode, StrongylokSea atercOr:aUs .
--Salmonella, occurring in the intestinal tracts of
both man aod animals. Poor personal hygiene en.
bances the chance of human lnlection.
More iMportant than the avoidan<:e ot such rare
infectious dis~ses in the control of animal nuisances
on public 111d private property, however, is the esthetic
aspect, according to Dr. Humphrey.
Signs reading, ucurb Your Dog," are posted all
•..: over New. York City, often puzzling visitors. They mean
keep dog relief oU the sidewalk, on penalty of citation
and tine.
Many a local resident has had it as far as thought·
less do( owners are concerned. Unless there is more
sell-di1c1pline by the owners, not their blameles"S pets,
local Jaws and penalties are likely to be stiffened.
Help from Racial Bigots
A CBS-TV serie1, "Of Black America," seeks to
update Negro history and correct widespread miscon-
ceptions about 'the Negro race.
The program's audience ratings should zoom from
here on. It bas bad the best possible kind of boost.
Because the program's sponsor is the Xerox Cor·
poration, the imperial wizard of the United Klans of
America has ordered the company to remove its
copying machine from Klan offices in Birmingham,
Ala.
--
... l¥\AM %°',._ George L. Humphrey, California's public health
veterinarian, reports infections with jaw-breaker
names are transmissible from dogs and other animals
to man. Among them:
This is to Xerox and the TV program as a Boston
book-banning is to an author -a surefire sales stim-
ulant.
Bigotry, as blind to truth as ever, serves its op-
ponents well. 'A~T[~DES ~PLAY£b H£Rf ARf NOTNKfS5ARltY Tll&f Of Tllf , • .,
Ree king Mess in A nti•povert11 Program
Fantastic Misuse of Funds
WASHINGTON -The incredibly
~hocking use of anti-poverty program
fundJ to promote race hatred, Viet-
nam war opposition and revolutionary
activity bas been carefWly outlined
and documented io the House of
Representatives. _.
It is .a classic example of good in·
t~tions gone wront . and Of con-
gressionaJ intent twisted into ugly
shapes not remotely dreamed of when
the Office of Economic Opportunity
was set up.
A confirmed liberal and opponent of
the V~etnam war, Rep. Edith Green
(Dem., Ore.) related to the Houge, to
her OWll horror, the fantastic misO!se
of funds under auch ldealiltically
named programs as "Upward Bound."
''UPWARD BOUND" was intended
by Congress to help "disadvantaged"
student,, or drop-outs continue their
secondary and post-secondary educa-
tion with the help of tutorial services
and financial aid. Jn the crNtive
hands of OEO, "Upward BOUl'l.d"
soai;:M inUJ a program giving school
drop-outs a summer abroad at the tax-
payers' expense. ). highly moU.vated
youngster making good or satisfactory
grades was not eligible for such an
educati~on ark. A yo girl in MassachU!ietU wrote
to Repr itA_lative Green: "What does
a person have-tu-do to get into Upward
Bound and receive help jo go on to
college? Doe1 he have to flunk all of
hi! subjects? Does ht have to commit
burglary and rape and burn down a
building? U he had done these things
he probably would have been fOUnd
eligible for government help!"
BUT THIS WAS NOO' ALL . Under
the cloak of "Upward Bowld" the most
virulent racist propaganda w a 1
diatributed, dr.aft-dodging wai ad-
vocated, and litera~ure was circulated
on how to construct Molotov cocktail~
and incendiary time bombs, along with
methods of sabotaging automobile
tires and automobile · gas tines. An
"Upward Bound" program in .ttie
Oregon State Prison produced a
recruiting poster: "Become a member
of the world's highest paid black
mercenary ·army. Die nigger die -
you can't die la•t eooulb in the chet-
tos."
"I happen my1e.ll not to agree· with
our ·policy in Vietnam." s al d
Repreuntative Green, "But J think it
is indffii shocking that we in the
Congresi are finan<:ing programs
which distribute and circulate (sucb)
material."
WHAT MRS. GREEN related to
Congress might be accepted N
Isolated instances if it were not for the
Nashville, Tenn., "hate s c ho o 1' '
defended by former OEO Director
Sargent Shriver, if it were not for the
finaocing of the Blackstone Rangers
gang in Chicago, if it were not for the
repeated and flagrant misuse of funds
disclosed by the Ge114!ral Accounting
Office.
These programs att widely regard-
ed in Congre1s as a reeking mes I;
they are an embarraumemt to Hubert
Humphre)''s cam)J9i(D for t be
presidency. 'Mi:ey pernllt Richard Nix-
on to aay with credibility:
"For the past five years we have
bun deluged by proRNms for tt)e
unemployed; Jll"'Ogram1 for the cities,
programs for the poor. And we have·
reaped from theae programs an u&ly
harvest .of frUltraUon, violence tnd
faflu.re acrosa the land ...
"NOW 01111 OPPONENTS will be
offerina: more of the Nmt -more
billlona for a:overnme-nt jobs, rovem-
ment housing, government welft.re . It
ii Ume to quit pouring billllons of
dolMlrs into programs ht have fall·
ed." .
The myth ls warmly cherished by
the peace and permissive elements
that if we can just run out of the Viet·
nun war then there will bt t torrent
of new billions for mo~ "Upwar!l
Bound" programs and their like, and
anything el:1e tbat can be dreamed up
to solve all our social problems
overni1ht.
UNFORTUNATELY FOR I h·•
dreamers, but perhaps not for the rest
of the nation, that myth bas been u ·
ploded. A group of. economic experts
has advised Vice President Humphrey
that he will, if he becomes President
ai"ld the Vietnam war ends in 1969,
have a paltry S2 billion more to
satisfy demands for federal pro·
grrams running into scores of billions.
If the Democrats who go to Chicago
shortly are willing to ignore or to gloss
over the kind of abuse which
nauseates dedicated liberals they will
have badly millWteft the mood o(
Conan11, and probably of Ille co-y.
Rulings Protect ·innocent
1 the Editor:
After seeing many letters de~rying
"pampering" of criminals and "un·
.~Ir'' gun control laws, I must reply .
The pampering of criminals -pro·
bably the Escobedo and Jv.iranda
cases, if ttim e who make this cry
·:ould or would cite specifics -is
'imply not true. The rules of cour1
'ltablished in those rulings do not. ex·
·pt as they are used in c.ases com·
· eted before the rulings, apply to
imina ls.
Ralher, they apply to suspected
lminals -and the ma~ in which
~y are interrogated by police and
,vised of ttlelr rights. Unless these
·Hies of the Supreme Court want to
·bridge our "Innocent'' u n ti 1 pro·
· . .en a:uilty " tradition, they cannot
· • zaDy or factually refer to such
1.spects as crimin&!J.
•
• Ltllttl lnl!'n re~ .,,. .. ICDnM. NonntllY writ..~
•'-Id mn....., ""-Ir met-In JOO Mnll w 1tt1
fM r11hl 1'0 condeft .. 1'1tt.A .. flt DK•., t llm!Nlt•· U~l h rtMrv.d. All i.tten mlllt Include 11tlletltr
i...il mt ll""" 9ddr-tu, bvt M1nM Wiii M ~k•
~ '"""'·
TllE EFFECT OF the Escobedo ar. ·
Miranda rulings has been to create fo.
the first ti'me, a situation in whic h our
lawa are worked evenly for all petfOftS
-not in relation to their wultb, or
political influence, ., knowledge di tM
law. The ruUncs did not. create Mw
law1 that "1b.ckle" police. Rather,
they pointed out that police in many
instances hive befll violating our
Con.stftution ever 1lnct it was written .
The brigbt policeman, the efficient
and fair ooe, doesn 't need 1 confession
torn from a 11.upid or frightened or
weary suspect to build a case. And a
lood prosecutor doetn't need sucb 1
confession to get a conviction. It's a
lizy way to put a man behind bars and
the courts property ruled so. Is the
writen of our Constitution lntetided.
Infonnln1 a suspect of hit con-
sUtuUonaJ right to an attorney and not
to make a atatement 11 not pa mptftna
him . It it only telling him whal 1
rid\er. better~ucated or more
politically PoWerlul auipect would
blve a.trudy known.
AS TO GUN LAWS. I '""'Id OJr"
with those who say they will not teep runs from Ille haodl of or1anlud
crime. However, to 11.1 th.It they en
therefore no Coad Is r1diailou1. The
&rlUJn•nt that "law·•bif•" dtluni
•
must not be rer;tricted in 1un UH ts
also ridiculow.
The man Who hauled a small arsenal
to the top of the Texas tower in Austin
was a law-abiding citizen until he kill·
ed the first of hls many victims. ls
that when we should have sought to
rabid his gun use? One who kills
with a gun is usually a J.aw-abiding
citizen who lets his jealousy or rage or
envy or hatred boll over until ht l5
capable of taking the life of aoothtr
P'"'°"· Ml.II)' lim .. lhll -then
goe& ta a •ton .aQd e11ll7 buys a gun
and then Ulls "law·abiding" cililen
cu IO ·huntlq for hb v l c t i m ,
Responalble sun • control leg.lslaUon
don not prohibit gun poesesslon by
moct penons. However, the l'elbiC·
tlona of such laws do permit a c00Un1-
otf period that would c<rtainly prevont
some killings.
VIBGIL SWING
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Our Junior colleaes nffd more
money to ~rate. Since much
of the increased enrollment
comes from ntwcomer1 to the
It.ate, whi not make atudenll
who have.n't lived and paid
Laxes hue for at ltut nw
years pey tuJtlon ? Th.U: would
ttault In more support fm bond
illllflS.
-B. D. W.
Examining
Flying Sa ucer
Myst ique
A column notes a Pasadena space
study indicates ~e Russians are mucb
mort serious about flying saucers
than are we.
About 20 years ago we set up the Air
Force to receive 1aucer, or UFO
reports, which ·have run into
thousands. 'Ibfi Air Forc,e haa iiever
auttienticated 1 report, and dismissed
most of. them ' as optical illusions,
ttiough a small percentage remain
unexplained.
The Ruasianl have establi1hed a
civilian bureau which has the support
of a considerable segraent of sclen-
tisb. Some belle~ saucers real, oc·
cupied by apace visitors, But the
Russian have a flalr for fantasy, and
are space-nuts, anyway.
IT SEEMS IMPOSSIBLE for a com·
petent astronomet to imagine U!e
origin of these "visitors.'' Let u~ con-
alder the known. Mars and Venus have
always been the most likely sites for
intelligent beings. But the Martian
crult resembles the moon, though we
have not yet photographed the po1'ar
regions, which may ..tore some water.
Venus awarently has a surface
temper aturt of 500·fKXI d e g r e e s ,
Jupiter and probably Saturn have an
atmosphere d. ammoli.a and methane
gu. All tile big OIMor plaa<U h"""'
temperatures ol tht order d. minus
250 degrees.
The earth Stell\5 to be the only body
in. th• Sol• System capable of. au1-
toinlng ·Iii•.
MOST COSMOLOGISTS now agree
life ii univensal in our Galaxy and
"'1or pluits, that planet·fonning
IW'I numblr milioas if not billion•. U
we use our Solar ratio, <Int in ten
might bear lile in some stage.
But our Solar Sys'tem lies in an
Isolation staggering the irm.ginJ!lt.lon.
The nearest star, Alpha Centuri, is
distant 4 H.ght years plus. 1he period
for its light to reacti us traveling at a
velocity ·of 116,000 miles, a second.
Alpha Centwi, hOWever, is a binary
(double) star: we see the bright: body
but not its dark companion. They
revolve about each other on i common
c~ ol gravity.
There are many binaries ln the
Galaxy.
COSMOLOGISTS ARE unablo to
fi(l.lre how a binary can navt a
plMletary system, which further
reduces the planet population. Thrre an only a handful Of star• wltllin 50
light yeart from us.
Nor will physlcista admit a material
body cao approach the IPOtd or Ut111t,
though aome dJstant galnleii SHm to
recede at thousands of miles a l econd.
But how can a sauctr. so c&lled.
tnverse the dislances indlcatrd, ewn
at h..U tile speed of li ght! And why!
ONE MYSTERY unexplained by
lill..lctr fa nciers Is that their saucers
have lnnicted no harm on the earth
and Ml Inhabitants. The sauCflr people
dete:ribe saucers wblch make a B.s.2
}ooll; Uit t1 pat. But all the nucer oc-
cupeMI do ts barn! around,almle11ty,
J*Wina at ut or soarJns away in ter-.
rw"'" when '°1lll dumm7 Wt't"f:I a
-m:hle! .i 111om . <or COIUjl•,
aomo .. ...,. people tau Iii taking
rldet, probably 11fer than Jruway
commutb>J.) l'\I
Confusion Over
Mental Illness
Although the public attitude toward
mental illness, and e m o t i o n a 1
distur.ban<:es, has changed a good deal
for the better in the last decade or so,
jt is stijl somewhat surrounded with an
aura of suspicion, fear and shame. w ..
have come a long way, but not far
enough..
One nason fQI' our slow ·pace, I
think, has been the use of the word
"sickness" in a confused ind
mysterious sense. Many still think that
"sickness" in the mind or emotions
represents . something toxic, . or
twi1ted, or mechanically def«tive, in
some substantial way.
' BlJT i THINK WE have to look at it
in a much diHerent., and more
salutary, way. We have learned that in
the case of the body we have· what are
called "deficiency diseases." We ac-
quire some of these deficiency
dise8ses -scurvy, for iru;tance -if
we don't eat enough fresh fruit, or
don't get enough iodine or vitamins of
one Sort or another.
There is nothing e s p e c I a l·l y
mysterious about such deficiency
diseases. The body needs and craves
certain forms or . nourishment and
susteilance; when It di>4!sn't get them,
it responds by falling into illness o(
one type or another. Providing the
missing element usually restores the
person to full health -i1 tnatment is
not too delayed.
NOW, WE HA VE TO begin to look
upon "mental illness" also as a kind of
defteiency disease. Something in the
early emoUonal nourtsbmenl cl tiltl
cbild wu mi1Jin&, or was not
transmitted properly or absorbed pl'Qo.
perly -with the.result that the child
grows. up with a neurosis, instead ol
scurvy er goiter, m-some ether
physical deficiency di!east.
Some basic needs and 1atisfaction1
-au centering around ,the !ff.ling of
being loved .and bei:nt Nfe -have
been cut off from the source o!( aupply,
in one way or another, and th• clSid
acquires sOme symptoms <I. neurosis
as a defense aiatut thNe Ia~, Just
as some children deprived of calcium
will begin nibbling blackboard chalk.
OBVIOUSLY, I AM not speaking
here of cases whe'J'-t there may be
organic brain damage, or some other
neurological impairment -but ol the
ordinary, garden-variety neurotic, who
seems so "normal" in some ar..as and so distressed or perverse in ·others. (It
.is not the "deranged" people who
cause so much trouble in the world as
the haU~ick.)
Our progress in coping with what we
call "mental illness" -for want of a
better term -will come only in part
from medical science; the other part
depends upon public understanding of
this "deficiency disease,'' and the
reduction of the feelings ot fear,
aha.me, resentment and scorn. Love is
what they lack, more than vitamins.
and love is tbt most effective tberapy
to bring them to a lull, productive life.
Protect Whose Rights?
Whether the rigid cmtrols applied to
!}eWS media by the Memphis judge for
the trial of James Earl Ray in Novem-
ber will produce a "fair trial" remains
to be seen but there is no doubt that
these are t.he most restrictive rules
ever applied ·to such a trial. We agree
with the· chairman of the Freedom of
Inforination CommJttee of\.. the
Associated. Press Managioe ?;ditors
Association that it ill time to get a
high cCMri ruling on the con-
stitutionality of these and other regu-
lations being applied by bial judges.
Memphis Judge W. Preston BatUe
decrees that:
Th• parting lot, allt}"'Nay1, yards
and grounds, al well u the Criminal
Courts: Building. are off-limits for
cameramen;
A 11 per 1 o ns~pectators and
reporters-will be 1earctted before
entering the courtroom.
No one can enter or leave-Including
reporters-while court iJ in session:
THE PROHIBITION against malting
staternenta or sr.-Klng illtervlew1 in-
cludea "ail lawyers, their usistants,
office anoclates, staff members, ln·
Quotes
Edw1rd P. Simmonds, La Jalla, on
co1(1'enlo1lal Junlttla -"I had th•
silly ldoa Cbot public flsure•. e1-d
and' palit for by the tupiyer1, were IUPPHld to•run the country.''
C.Cl'QPD&ll Jerry Petth, Lema
UMa -"We ctnnOt take lat law Into
our °"" lumds or choost lo obey only ctrt.ain lw1. Oii our Mtiotl win surely
faU as dkt Romt ." •
vestigators and employea • . . • the
county medical examiner; jury com-
mi&&ioners . Criminal Court: clerk
couuty sheriff, police Officials and
other law Mfort,em11nt ,off I c er 1 ,
employes of this coort, all other
persons employed ln the CriminaJ
Courts Buildma:s, 'their · associates,
deputle&, as8istants , stiff memuen
, •• all witnessea, pertons subpoenaied
to grand jury or co~ juror1, and
those persom summoned but excused
from serving as Juror1 ...... '"
This sweeping prohjbitlon ralHs
grave questions about the fi&bls of in·
dividuals whose privileges are belnc
r;o proscribed and about wheftier tht1
protectioo of one individual's right to ti
fair trial may not bt endangertna tht
public'• rlgb.t to the 11.uie thing.
EdllGr • 'PiibUllH!r
r---811 9-rre --.
Dear George :
My girl £rind md I pl.an to
elope and t havt been studyina
up on how to do this praperly,
but everythin1 I read or see on
television 11y1 you must use a
ladder . My problem Is that 1he
lives in a one..tory house. Do
you have any advice 1
Dear Anxioua : ANXJOUS
Either Ult a very short ladder
or have her wait on tne toQf far
you . (And good luck with 1our
marriage. I've Io t • 1trona
hunch you're going to nted it.)
)..