HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-08-20 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa•
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DAILY PILOT ·
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 20, ·1968 10'
Sea Here!
. .,.
DAILY l'ILOT P'Mtet ltY' 0..le k llllbr
PHOTOGRAPHER SIGHTS MERMAIO, SHOOTS SAME
Kathy Kraemer, 17, Poses for Beach Scene
OOPS, SORRY KATHY, SURF'S UP
Photographer Got Drenched, Too
. ' . ..
Beach
Physician
Still Fighting
For Hi s Life
A l-Juntington llarbOur do c to r
critically wounded in a gun fight with
his wile Sunday night continued to
fight for life today as Huntington
Beach police puzzled over his exact
occupation.
Dr. John Fenner. 36, of 4162 Trum·
bull Drive, in the ex p e n s i v c ,
waterway-laced subdivision , is in lJun·
tington lntercommunity ltospital with
t1-1·0 bullet wounds in the abdomen.
Investigators say he was wounded
by his e9tranged wife, Sylvia. 39,
"'horn he apparently killed with one
shot in the heart from a hunting rine
vffiich he Y.Testled from the screaming
woman. ·
· Police Capt. Earle Robitaille gaJd
l\1onday that ii appears Mrs. Fenner
attempted to kiU her hu sband and the
wounded physician rinally acted in
self-defense.
Neighbors telephoned JXllice after
hearing a series of angry &hout.s,
screams and shots and first Officers
on the scene found little Nyle Fcrmer,
3. daughter of the couple, sobbing over
her dead mother's body.
Dr. Fenner -who is not presently a
practicing physician -was &ble to
guide police officers in giving him !inf
aid and later helped diagnose the
grave extent of his gunshot wounds
when hospitalized.
Investigators said Dr. Fenner listed
his occupation as lecturer for James
W. Newm~n and AssOciates Inc., a
Beve rly Boulevard company listed as
an e<1ucatiooal organization by the Los
An_geJes Chamber of Commerce.
Exact nature.pf the firm 's edu~aUon
is what Is apparently in quesUon to-
day.
A neighbor of the Feooers told thl!
DAILY PILOT today that Dr. Fenner
had given her a brochure abOut the
company, advertisin g PACE
... Seminar1, reportedlY. designed to build
Infant Rolls Out Of Window, Killed increased c:onfidence and creativity. The brochure went on to say the
LOS ANGElL"ES <UPI) -An 11· placed her daughter, Maria. on thtt seminars were for couples and that
month-old glt1 rolled off her bed and bed Which was level wilh the window they encouraged parUdpaUon, but, In
/ell three stories out her apartment to change het diapers. She heard a Uieir words, no student W31 evtr em·
wtndow Monday. suffering fatal in· siren, looked up to see what it was and barrassed or put Ol1 the t1pot.
juries. ·'t:i.. during the interval the chlld fell out6 The pamphlet S-llld nothing about
l\1rlii. Elviril Ouesas told policc~e the window, she said, (Set SHOOTOUT, Pagt: %)
Vietna1n Flight
••
Piecing Together
Shooting Drama
4 Youtl1s Killed
Girl's Death Halts Vietnam Flight
A jct transport about to taxi into
takeoff for Vietnam was halted on the
runway at El Tor·o MCAS Monday to
in!orm a 1najor aboard that his step-
daughter had been killed shortly
before in a nearby car crash.
The teen-a ger and her companion
1968 County 1·raffic 196'.'
137 l)calh Toll 126
\Vere among four youths killed in th1·
~amc geo~raphical area during a 12-
ho ur period. '~'ith two of the three onc-
car accidents involving small cars.
Dead following the accidents are :
-Chrl1tinu L. Nowak, 17, of 17962
(:illman Ave .. Irvine.
-Robert 8. UeUstrom, 17." 0£ 18200
Mayapple \Vay, Irvine.
-Laurence H. Baker, 16. of 16612
Silkworm St., Fountain Valley.
L/Cpl. Jimmy Bctburun1 , 20, of
Dal las, Tex.
California 1-fighway Patrol officers
said Mjss Nowak and lleUstrom died
almost instantly when the car driven
by the boy blew a tire on Barranca
noad near Culver Drive Monday after-
noon.
The ~mall car veered out of control
:ind hit a utility pole along the
roadway, crumpling like a ping .pong
ball and crushing the victims inside.
Both Miss Mowak and the Hellstrom
youth were J une graduates of Mission
(See DE1\THS, Page%)
Newport Council Calls
Ocean Front Emergency
By JEltOME !'.COLLINS
04 !ht Dall~ Pli.t Stall
A state of limited peril exlsls of·
ficlally, w; well as in fact , along West
Newport's crumbling ocean front to-
day.
Battered Body
Of Gi1·l Found
SAN MATEO IAP) -The nude
body of a pretty, blonde woman who
had been s~bbed , Nlrangled, ber head
ba1hed io and throat 11Ut was dumped
Tue!lday In the parking lot of a San
Mateo printing firm.
Pollco said U-.cy had no immediate
clues and were attemptl_og t o identify
the victim through flngerpri.ots and
other rtt0rds. •
ihe woman wa~ dc5cribed as well·
tai'ibed with a petite ngw·e. ·•
Newport Beach city councilmen
formally declared Ule emergency late
Monday night
They acted in response to urgings of
\Vest Newport homeowners. including
Councilman Donald A. MclJmis. who a
year ago Jost a patio waU to the forces
of erosion . The wall w.M never replac·
ed. and the sea came back late Mon·
day.
Booming surf. borne high on a S.ft.
foot tide. clawed away great chunks of
beach from 4-0th Street to the Santa
Ana River jetty. a distance of 33
blocks.
Con I-lelcl in Slaying
LOS ANGELES (UIJ)) -James
VernOn Lewis Jr., 36, was arrested.
Monday by FBI age<nU on a charge
of killing a fellO'W convict In a cell in
Atlanta prison last Dec . 10. Lewis was :
rt!leased from prison shortly before
the ~as presented to a federal
grand Jlf!'y in AUanta 1 ... 1 spring.
Ike 'Guarded'
'
In Life Fight
WASHINGTON (AP) -·Army doc·
tors reported todSy ·that former' p,resi·
dent Dwight D, Eisenhower'• pro.
specls for survival .are guarded -
n1eaning an unpredictable margin'
between life and death.
This was the condition report shortly
after ll a.m. at Waller Reed Army
1-fospilal. It was one o( several replies
to questio~ .submitted by reporters to-
the doctor. ·
At the same time they said 'iJi a
formal medical bulletin that UH!I
general's condition remains critical
even tbough there ha.s been a
favorable trend in the plttem of ab-
normal heart rhythm action which i1
the basic problem of pis heart attack.
They left <>Pen the question whether
the "gradual worsening" of his con.
dition wbieh they had reported in a
midafternoon report Monday had beea
(See EISENHOWER, Page Z)
Orange Coaac
Weat~r
We may have a bit of a drizlle,
the weatherman . says damply,
but for the most part It'll be the
Same as before, with the sun
arriving about midmofnlng and
coastal temperatures in the
mid·70·s.
INSIDE TODAY
Orange County ii fa.st becom-
ing n center for the muricaL arta
in Southern California. See En·
tertainmt:nt, Page .9.
(•MftrRle 4 _.. .
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•
.
LBJ Rejects Bomb Halt;', Next Move· Hanoi's·
DETROIT (AP) -Pr• s Iden t particu!Jlrly S.ns. Eu I en e J. the ohota and wU1 not hood "to some
Johnaon, rejecting a total bombing McCarthy and George McGovern. who of us 'Who appur to be searching for a
hta Texas r"11dl, lben now to to be found wantlnf," he lx>ld the clreH could only holp Vke Pr<llldent
halt of North Vietnam or other de· _,1 .. --iau.n 0( tho war, says "' will 10 have mode oppos-to tho war mo-formula wblc.11 • ..,... 111 UJ out of
Washingtcn. He had been in Ttxu dletring veterans. ilubert H. Hum~ey. front runoer for
moll ol tbl1 month. lltluniD( to pollllcs, Johnoon ntd the De!llocraUc -ldmttal nomlna·
DO f~r in the search for peace un· jor parts of their campalgns for the Vietnam and Asia on any terms •• ,''
Ul Hanoi lbaw1 sincere li~a or wen-Democratic pres,idential nom.Jnation . In one of his strongest defenses of
ln cleorly emoUonol -·· Jol!DIOD of Ibo U.S. troops doillg 1ilt ftght1111: Uon.
said nolJodj' W3IJIJ pel<e moro lhoa bt '"Ibey an "'"''to bow a~ .. 111 llW '!'1111 wu -c tilt ~ !bot
Ung to end the fighting. Pointedly referring to the fact that American actions in Vietnam, Johnson
Spnkµtg Monday night \o-&_(:()A.-~h!t--term doesn.!.t-~re--until-nexl--'" .. c!J!redict.14..that-hll..tucceAIOl'--W.ill
and lie damned Hanol for wllat hi c1m~o belOfl tt'1 owr.11 .:-H\llJ8lbrtY'• vi.tta ~~Uon 11 fll'
cM•Jed.-wu.. ljl tolhlt<--">-relpo•~od~-c-'I'!'o-'lll'!.lhdrllwlna-fnlm..11111.fn•Uloo; '1'Jooll: IA J-'a -: tbaLol.1111
vftltion of tbe Veterana of Foreign January, Johnsoo sajd, "This ad-wind up with the same policy, once he
W.ara, Johnsan 14lid all moves by the rnin1Jtration does not intend to move hu all the information and clearly I. d lllflnnoUvely "' h I• llal pol!Ucs -ly n .. monU.. 110, d>ltf rlvll for ... nomlnotton, St•.
March 31 order reatrtctlng bomb!J>g Of Jolla.On sold ho wlllll>d to dlvo..:e hfo M<cor1by, -h eallln1 for 1 ~ UnJted St.ates t.o end the fightlng have fw:ther until it has goOd reason to respooslbilty that comes with the
l(lne urtanSwered by the North Viet· believe that the other side Intends presidency. tho North. . -for po1ct -aod humony and uacondltlooll bomblnl bait. '"Let's don"t ho hoodwinked. Let'• ot bamo·from porttwi _,1Uon1. But oomo olhtn, outalde lh• Wlllto
Dl.mese. seriously to join with us in de· "It's one thing to be seeking
"'nle next move must be theirs,'' he escalating the war and moving responsibility and it's another thing
not be milled ••• We'r< oot golllg to But in 1111 Dotrolt l}lffdl J-Holioe, wondottd U the IOlntr mlpt
told a eheertng .audience. 1eriously towardl ·peace." when you've got it," Johmon said
'Ibe President seemed to be arwwer· While he i.s in office, JohnSon em-eboot bis critics.
stop lhe bombing Juet to let them step mode It doar ho -~ like Ill 'lh1I n o t bo tho RtpubliceA nomlnH,
up lh•lr ·bioodahed," Jolwoo cleclarod. ho i-s In Ille t111rt11t cllllPllJD. 11k11an1 M. Nbloo, wlloo1 V"ln•m
"So looll .. I -your Am•rlcan Some While HOUH lldM ar(Utd pollcy ID ....,. re-" II clOff to a
log critics wilbln his own porty, pbasized apU! end apln, he will call The Pnoldent wen I to De!l'Oit from -in dllef, we .,.. DOI goil>S altenoarc!s that hi< bold·lhe·line ad· carton copy ol J-'s.
* * * Nixon Backs
Presi.dent on
No Bomb Halt
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -GOP
presldenUal candidate Ric.hard M.
Nixon today gave down-the-line sup-
port o( President Johnson's refusal to
order a total Vietnam bombing halt at
this time.
Nixon said he wias interested in the
same thing as Johnson -a clear
5ignal from Hanoi that it would take
some action to de-escalate the war on
iU part if Ute UniUd States ended the
bombing.
· "I think the United states is well ad·
vised not to stop the bombing unless
there are reductions of enemy attacks
on U.S. and South Vietnamese forces,"
Nixon told a news conference.
PrevlOU&S bombing pauses, Nlxon
said, "were one-way streets in which
the United States gave something but
received nothing in return." _
Johnsoo announced Monday night he
had not received any indication from
Hanoi It was ready to reciprocate and
he would therefore not endangel' lives
of U.S. servicemen by ordering a total
bombing ball.
U.S. planes are bombing only below
the 20th parallel.
Nixon held a news conferea<:e after
conferring in the state capitol with
Ohio Gov. James A. Rhoces. M.inutes
later he drove to the .airport for a
fligtit to Harrisburg, P.a., and a
meeting with GOP leaders there.
Nixon began the final day of a two-
da-y campaign swing with the annual
exhibitors breakfast for the press at
the Ohlo State Fair Grounds.
From Page ·1
DEATHS ...
Viejo High School.
Investigators said the car had been
leased by USMC Maj. Chester L.
\Vbipple. the Nowak girl's stepfather.
wbo was notified of her death on the
runway and delayed bis trip to Viet-
nam.
'!be Fountain Vallev youth was dead
an arrival at Hoag Memorial Hospital
in Newport late Monday night after a
1porta car driven by his brother ram·
med a parked truck on the San Diego
Freeway in Costa Mesa.
Gregory Baker, 18. escaped with
minor injuries, but their girl com·
panion, Ann S. Novratril, 17, of 16591
Ross Lane, Huntington Bf>ach, suf.
fered a fractured skull and neck in·
juries.
Patrolman G. \V. Olson i;aid the
Baker car was northbound near
Harbor Boulevard when it hit the
truck, which was parked in outside
lanes, possibly without Its lights <1n.
Driver Billy J. Adams. 18, of 11632
Stuart Drive, Garden Grove, saw the
car coming and leaped off Ule truck
bed, escaping harm.
The young Marine lance corporal
was killed early today when his car,
southbound on the Santa Ana Freeway
between Culver Drive and Jeffrey
Road, went out of control and struck a
Ire•.
DAILY PILOT
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CAUPOINIA
ORANGE C04ST PUlllltllHO COMPANT'
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MeCarthy Disagrees
Humphrey Vows
First Ballot Win
' Cll!CAGO (UPI) -Humphrey
f«ces contJdently clal.Jned the votes
today for a ftnt..ballot vl<tory al tho
Democratic convention reeardless of
the outcome of a aeries oI party
s9uabbles. They began talking about a
vice prestdenUal running mate.
A spokesman for Hubert H .
Humphrey said a "very h a r d ,
realistic" rundown bued on penonal
contact& with individual delegates
gave the vice president 1,400 votes
with 1,312 needed to win. He predicted
the total would grow before next
week's balloting.
discrlmlnation.
Tlle Humphrey delegate count was
made public by. Lawrence F. O'Brien,
former postmaster general, who said
it would be very difficult for the
McCarthy camp "to tum this around."
He gave McCarthy femr than 600
votes whereas Mitdlell put the figure
at "betwee11 l500 aad 700."
Red Guerrillas
Overrun Post,
Kill Defenders
NIXON IN ILLINOIS -Republican presidential
nominee Richard M. Nixon greets well-wishers on
steps of state capitol in Springfield. Nixon spoke to
3,500 persons in first public rally since receiving
GOP nomination.' Former vice president told crowd
GOP was going ''to carry Illinois like it's never
been carried." ·
Stephen A. Mit.cbell, a former
Democratic national chairman and now a top strategiat for Sen. Eugene J.
McCarthy, retorted that the Hum-
phrey claims were exaggerated. He
said Humphrey ''peaked" a week ago
and now was "making all that noise"
to h.ide the erosion in bia strength.
Mitchell al110 raised the possibility
that the con"'ntlon mJgbt not be able to open on schedule Monday if Otlcago
transportation, alroady bampered by a
cab strike, is hit by ct.her walkouts. He
also mentioned the inneas of former
President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
SAIGON (UPI) -About 800 Viel
Cong, using homemade grenades ol
soft drink cans filled with explosives,
overran a tiny American-South Viet-
namese outpost south of Da Nang t<>·
day and killed all 34 defenders. Nixon Sees Landslide From Page I
SHOOTOUT.
Killed were nine U. S. Marlnel, a
Navy Seabee and 24 Vietnamese
Popular Force (PF) troops. The last
radio message from the post, 2.0 miles
south of the bl" Marine base at Da
Nang called for U. S. air and artillery
strikes on the post.
••
,Win for Republicans subject matter or cost.
Cont.acted by the DAILY PILOT to-
day, a spokesman for the Los Angeles
firm offered to have someone more
familW with the operation return a
·call to offer iol'ormation.
"There hne been recessed con·
ventions before," Mitchell told a news
conference. He denied, however, that
McCarthy forces were trying to drag
out ttie convention w i t h t h e i r
challenges o( a big bloc of delegates on
grounds of disloyalty and rad.al
Other Marines, it was disclosed to-
day, invaded the Demilitarized Zone in
a helicopter assault but could find no
Communist troops in a day)ong sweep
through the southern half of the swam-
py no-man's land.
. . -
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ricbard
• M. Nixon says his first full day of na-
tional campaigning h88 convinced him
he can wfn the presidential election by
a landslide.
"Across the CQlmtry a tide is begin-
ning to run," the Republican candidate
for president told a reception of Ohio
Republicans Monday night. "All we
have to d<> is push it day and !light and
it "'ill be a landslide."
Hi.~ voice hoarse from a day o( spea·
king in Illinois, Michigan and Otuo,
Nixon preyared for a meeting today
with Ohio Gov. James H. Rhode!.
He met on Monday with Gov.
George Romney of Michig.a.n , once an
oppcnent for the GOP norrtination, and
carried away the governor's promise
to campaign for him in other states.
Nixon aidtt; said the object of the
meeting with Rhodes is to win the full
support o( the independent-minded
Republican organization. R~ held
his favorite son delegation behind him
at the GOP convention.
Nixon's strategists said that while
they hope Rhodes will make some na·
ti<>nal appeaf!aoces for Uie ticket, they
are CQUJlting most on his organization -
delivering the key state to Nixon in
November.
LateT in the day, Nixon meets with
Gov. Raymond P. Shafer in Har·
risburg. Shafer supported New York
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller for the
GOP presidential nomination. Nixon
mee~ Wednesday with Rockefeller in
the New York City apartment house
where they both live.
For Nixon, Monday was a day of
flying visib to state CapiWb, hasty
news conferences in I e g i s I a t I v e
chambers, closed meetings with state
Republioan leaders, and handshaking
with crowds who turned out to see
him.
Once. he talked by two way radio to
President J <> b n s o n a,., their
niotin:ade11 aped in opposite directions
on a freeway out&ide Detroit.
Nlxon was leaving the Veteraru or
Foreign \Vars convention and the
President was going there to speak,
Secret Service men put them in touch
with each other and Nixon assured
Johnson he would face an attentive au-
dience.
Rocky Declares
He Won't Take
"I'm new here, so my knowledge is
limited," she said.
Another source Monday reported a
·spokesman for the firm flatly refused
any information about Dr. Fenner or
a•bout what type of educaU<1nal work ls
involved.
Dr. FeMer was shot with a .283
caliber hunting rifle shortly before 11
'Jl.m. Sunday, afftt neighbors heard a
violent argument lead up to his wife's
screaming:
"You have ruined my life. I'm going
to finish you off for good," according
to Mrs. James Keefe, a next door
neighbor. .
Kennedy's Seat _,/} Another witness told poll"' Mrs. Fenner screamed: "I can't go on like
this, day after day after day."
NEW YORK (UPI) -Gov . Nelson lnvestigat<>ra believe Dr. Fenner -
A. Rockefeller has denied he will whose pelvis was shattered by slugs -
resign and acrept appointment to was hit once and took tile rifle from
Robert F. Kennedy's Senate seat, and his wife, ·who then snatched up a .357
ha~ indicated he "'ill !ill the vacancy magnum pistol and shot again.
Friday. At that point, Dr. Fenner fatally
Rockefelltt Monday sq u e 1 c l1 e d "-'ounded her almost in11ta.ntly.
rumors he would resign and be named Five shots or more were fired.
by Lt. Gov. Malcom Wilson to the seat 'Ibe couple's daughter and 1-year~ld
left vacant when Kennedy was son, Kiel, were talren to the Albert SJt·
assassinated in Los Angelefi June 5. ton Home, for juveniles taken into pro·
"Don't W<JITY,'' Rockefeller said. "I tective custody after sucb tragedies,
v.·u never a legislator by tern· pollce said.
perament. I a.m an admirtistrator by No fWJeral ll1\9Jlgementa have been
temperament." made yet for Mrs . Fenner.
unique Jailbreak
Tried as Thief
Attempts Entry
Orange County's lockup bas suffered
a number of Jailbreaks, but lod•l
Hher.fff'11 officers disclosed romebod1
tried to break 1n .
County jail wDS broken into at about
11 p.m. Monday by an unidentified
penon who scaled the sheer north
wall. He climbed four stories to reach
the sherifrs crime lab.
Using the drain pipe as a hand hold,
the jailbrea·ker entered the crime lab
through a-sereened window and then
broke open tnree locked doors to reach
Ibo lab.
Capt Jam« Broadboll of the Sher•
if f's office said it was llard to tell wllat
tti.e thief wae: after but tnat all the
evidence for sheriff'• cues wu held
in the crime lab. 'Ibis would be of
great v.alue 'kl certab:i persoos, he 1ug·
ge<ted.
"We're pres<nlly checking a:U th•
evidence for any loss, we don't know if
anything is missing right now,"
Broadbelt said.
U. S. spokesmen said elements of
the 1st Marine Division were airlifted
at dawn Monday to the banks o( the
Ben Hal River, which divides the six-
mlle-wide buffer zone and serves as
the north-south border. It was one of
the rare times in the war that
American troops had invaded the
DMZ.
The spokesmen said the Marines
drove s<1uthward through the swampy
marshlands in the southern half of tlle
DMZ but rn.ade no contact with North
Vietnamese troops.
When night fell , the Marines pulled
out and set up positions at Con Thien,
an isolated border outpost which has
come under numerous Communist
rocket and ground attacks in the past.
'!be spokesmen said the Marines
...,.ere dropped into the DMZ aboard
helicopters after Red t r o o p
movements were sighted. Marine
tanks last week 11pearbeaded South
Vietnamese troops in a battle inside
the DMZ In which 215 Communlats
were killed.
On July 10, Marines based at Cm
Thien chased an estimated ~ Com-
munist troops into the DMZ, kllllng ZI
and destroying 24.2 bunker1 witb<lut
suffering a casualty.
nie governor Monday interviewed ;i[;;;;;;;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;,f six men being considered for the J)05t.
From the interviews, Rockefeller's
first government business since he lost
a bid for the Republican presidential
nominatioo , two prL!ne contenders
emerged.
They were Reps. Ogden R. Reid of
\Vestchester County m'td Charles E
Goodell or Jamestown , b 0th
Republicans.
C>Ulers Interviewed included Court Of
Appeals Judge Kennetti B. Keating <>I
Rochester. wh<> lost his Senate seat to
Kennedy in 1964..
•
only . ·
~""'~
ll"ON;K: has it!
DEEP S__,te=fr.=--m-·
CRKP£T CLCRnlnd
THE ULTIMATE
in CARPET CLEANING
From Page 1
ICONOMICAL reduce• the need for
frequent profeulonel cle•nin9 be·
c1u1e It remo•e• tile deeply emb•d·
ded 1oil and leeve1 no re1iclu• in th•
carpet fib•n to coll•ct dirt.
CUA.NS Dia' actually remov .. 1011
from both tfrl• pile of th• c•rpet encl
the c•rpet backhuJ.
SAA PIOCUS 1cientific11Jy devel.
oped .,1cielly for the prof111lon1I
c•rpet cl•1ner. It 11 completely 1efe
for all cerpet flben, EISENHOWER ...
either halted or 1Iowed in pace.
The doctors dlsclosed Mondoy night
they bad rejected, after aerlow con·
slderation, the idea ol attempting a
heart lrMsplN>t.
The rext ot today's medical bulleUn
follov.'S :
'"Sinco Ian night'• bull•Un, Gen.
Eisenhower has continued to rest com·
fort.ably, The pattern of isolated lr·
regular beats continues. Then have
been no lnstances of sustained ven-
tricular Irregularities requiring elec·
ttlcal conversion during the last 24
hours. Whlle thll tread h favorable
the general's coadltion re m • t n ~ aiUcal. "'
The lrrefll}or lltlrt boat hid
broupt him neu d,.lh afrer i-. 1evtnth heart attack
One 0( the ques.Uons aiked by
newsmen inquired as to tht "other
major medkal condlUona·t .a;e.h th
doclan t"OpOriod Moodoy ~ ... ..!
ooe of the !act.en involved in their rul·
inl out a tranrpl.a.nt operaUon.
A.nd the doctors reterred only to the
''chronology of Gen. Eisenhawe.r's ii·
Jnesses" over the years -including
his ileitis, fall hladdor, -•I
stroke, ~ gland trouble ond other WDHse•.
Another questkln asked -thla ooe
by tl>e Associated Preoa -was lhla:
'"In the Ughl of your 3:30 p.m.
report yesterday that the general's
C001-2ttJon. abowed 4 'gradual worsen·
log,' does your la..,. report al 10 p.m.
-notLng .'fewer inltance1 of ven·
tricular bngularity' -mean that the 'worsen!IJC' bll beeD halted ; 11 1•111
•l.....S bl pooe: er, Indeed. kepi bock
10mewh11! And whit II lbe rltuoUoa
on th1J llDMI score right nowf"
Without tll>ina 1 direct ancwu, doc-tors refm"ed roportt(s to the text of
tho f'""'al med!Cal bullelln, which did
not ._., to speclfically 1111Wer lb• quulfui. g.
IUTOIU PILI the powerful oxtrac.•
tlon proce11 r•mo•et moi1ture im•
rnedlttely, thu1 evollilt19 1hrink19•,
and lifts matted pile to 'li k• n•w'
1ppe1r111c•.
WHIN TOU
WANT THI
FINEST-
GINTU ACTION u••• no brv1he1 or
1crubbln9 action, 10 It doff not dlt·
tort the pile of the carpet.
SOIL llTAlDIN6 AND MOTH
nOOFING ere included at no e11tr1
ce1t,
FlD
ESTIMAn
CALL RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS
Our 21 ot Y Hr of Sorv ico in Or1n90 County
2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA
PHONE 546-3432
· I ' I
..
•
---• . .
H11niington Bea~h Your Hometown
VOL. 6 f, NO. 200, l SECTIONS, ~ PAGES
'
·'
·""
~· . -OAU..Y JltLot......,.. W ~.~ff
PH!>lOQILU!Hlill .JIGHTS Mi~D, .$HOOTS~
Ket_h'f' ~aemer, 17, Poses fOr 8Mch Scene
OOPS, SORRY KATHY, SURF 'S UP
Photographer Got Drenched, Too
Vicious Surf Continues
To Pound Beach Shores
Heavy surf continued lo pound the
Jluntington Beach shoreline today
causing llfeguartb to for&et the
wetkend has endod.
"It was like Sonday all over again,''
said a J!untington Stach c I t y
lifeguard, who said hi& cohorts pulled
175 person$ from the raging waters
f.fonday.
City lifeguards had ca1Jed the
weekend's resrucs a rec:ord , with 93
close calls instead ol the JJ they
usually record.
Weguards on tt\e 1runtJn~ton State
and Bolsa Chica State beaches ~ a
I '
''very light crowd" Monday but rated
their number of rescues ~ "very
h<>avy."
Monday ind Friday are the slow
days for the beach, one llleguard
not6d, but the S-to-t().foot 1 u r f
measuttd then necessitated S o
reacues Monday, which would be par
ror a slOW·to·avcra.ge weekend.
The roaring combers, measured as
high as 15 feet near the JluntJngton
Beach Pier, are to oontinue pounding
the $hort!; for the oext lwo or three
days, city beach oUldala 1ay.
1
Dally Paper
TUESDAY, AUGUST 201 '1968 TEN CENTS
llie's Chances Guarded
Doctors Report Life, Death Vnpredictab~e
WASHINGTON (AP) -Army d0<·
tors reported today that former Presi·
dent Dwight D. Eisenhower's pro·
spects for sw-vival are guarded -
meaning an Unj)redictable margin
between life and death.
This was the condltion report shortly
after 11 a.m. at Walter Reed . .\rmy
Hospital. It was one of several replies
to questions submitted by reporters to
the doctor.
At tbe same time they said in a
* * * Noted Heart
Specialist
'Optimistic'
BOSTON (AP) -Dr. Paul Dudley
\Vhite, the noted heart specialist who
has treated former President Dwight
D. Eisenhower for heart attacks, said
today Eisenhower's current condition
offers some basis for optimism.
"ills situation is a common one. "''e
have hundreds of patienU in intensive
care units across the country who suf.
fer such complications from heart at·
tacks but may survive," the 82-year·
old \Vhite said.
"His condition is very hazardous,
but he may survive and 1 think it is
well to maintain an optimistic attitude
while remaining concerned that he is
very, very ill."
White s~id he talked w it h
Eisenhower's doctors in \Vashington
from time to time, but has seen "no
need to enter into the picture because
he is receiving excellent treatment."
Even when Eisenhower bad his first
attack, White said. "l didn't stity in
Denver because he had such good doc·
tors there that I didn't think it was
necessary for me to be there all the
time. I think it is good for the coWltry
to have confidence in the many heart
specialists we have."
White said he also remains hopeful
aOOut Eisenhower's prospects because
"Ire's pretty tough."
"He was born that way," White said. ·•r think at times we don't pay eriough
attention to hereditary influences and
don't give our parents credit for pass·
ing on health and longevity. Many
persons with long.lived ancestors can
stand more in general than others."
White also noted that Eisenhower
has "taken good care of himself."
"First, and most important I think.
he's kept his weight down, he's also
gotten regular exercise, and he hasn't
smoked," White said. "These three
major achievements also help to ac·
count for his toughness."
Talbert Water
Dist1·ict Fate
Near Decision
Agreement on the f2Sle of the tiny
Talbert Water District in southeast
lluntington Beach is near. Councilman
Jerry Matney told the City Council
Monday night.
The irrigation water district which
serves only about a dozen farmer
customers bas been under fire from
residents or the Drea who claim they
are paying taxes to keep the farmers
in irrigation water.
Dissolution of the district has been
asked by the city and a proposal
before the Local Agency Formation
Commission (LAFCJ is awaiting a
hearing.
Matney said that a proPosed solution
has been offered by Rodger Howell.
attorney for the water district and
that "I agree with most of the points,"
J~e added that there ue some
changes he wants to make before
returning the document to the Talbert
\Vater District board for approval.
Matney said he is still for elimina·
tion of the district entirely and sup·
plying the ranners with city water for
i.rr i ga lion.
Howell and his group have sug·
gested leaving U1e district in operation
for a year or two to see how well the
city supplies water and to administer
repayn1ent ol outrtandtng bonds.
Matney called for a complete
reviskm of the suggested settlement to
be presented to the cOUDCJ.1 Monday
night.
Phone Talks. Resume
CHICAGO (UPll -Bargaining
teams of I1llnoU Bell Telephone Co.
and electrical workers meet again ro.
day on the 104th day of a strike that 1,
hampering Democratic Na t 1 on a I
ConvcotJ.oo communications.
formal medical bulletin that the
gerieral's condition remains critical
even though there has been a
ravorable trend in the pattern of ab·
normal heart rhytlun action which is
the basic problem of his heart attack.
They left open the question whether
the ··gradual wocsening" o( his con-
dition which they had reported in a
midafternoon report Monday had been
either halted or slowed tn pace.
Tbe doctors disclosed Monday night
they had rejected, arter serious con·
sideTation, the idea of attempting a
heart transplant.
The text of today 's ·medical bulletin
follows :
"Since last nighrs bullettn, Gen.
Eisenhower has continued to rest com·
iortably. The pattern of isolated ir·
regular beats continues. There have
been no instances of sustained ven·
tricular irregularities requiring elec·
trical conversion during the last 24
Girl's Car Death
hours. \Vhilc this trend is favorabl~.
U1e general's condition remain s
critical.'"
The iITegu\ar heart beat bad
brought him near death after his
seventh heart attack.
One of the questions asked by
newsmen inquired as to the "other
major n1edical conditions" which the
doctors reported Monday night were
one of the factors involved in their rul·
(See EISENHO\VER, Pa&e %)
I/arbour Man
'Critical'
Halts Viet Flight In Shooting
A Jet transport about to taxi into
takeoff for Vietnam was halted on the
runway at El Toro MCAS Monday to
inform a major aboard that his step.
daughter had been killed shortly
before in a nearby car crash.
The teen·agcr and her companion
1968 County Tra(flc 196'1
137 Death To ll 126
were among four youths killed in the
same geographical area dw·ing a 12·
hour period, with two of the three onc·
car accidents involving small cars.
Dead following the accidents arc:
-Christina L. Nowak, 17, of 17962
Gillman Ave .. Irvine.
-Robert 8 . lfcUslrom , 17, of 18206
t\fayapple Way , Irvine.
-La urence H. Baker. 16, of 16612
Silkworm St., Fountain Valley.
L!Cp1. Jlmmr Bethurum, 20, of
Dallas, Tex.
California liighway Patrol officers
said Miss Nowak and Itellstrom died
almost instantly when the car driven
by the boy blew a tire on Barranca
Road near Culver Drive r-.tonday after·
noon.
The small car veered out of control
and hit a utility pole along the
roadway, crumpling Uke a ping pone
ball and crushing the victims inside.
Both Miss Mowak and the Hellsb·om
youth were June graduates of Mission
Viejo High School.
Investigators said the car had been
lensed by USMC Maj. Chester L.
Whipple, the Nowak girl's stepfather,
who was notified of her death on the
runway and delayed his trip to Viel·
nam.
The Fountain Vallcv youth was dead
on arrival at lloa~ Mcmorial J~ospltal
in Newport late Monday night after a
sports car driven by his brother ram·
n1ed a parked truck on the San Diego
Freeway in C-Osta Mf'sa.
Gregory Baker, 18. escapcd with
minor injuries. but their girl com.
panion. Ann S. Novratril, 17, of 16591
Ross Lane, lluntin~ton Beach, suf.
fered a Cractured skull and neck in·
juries.
Patrolman G. \V. Olson said the
Baker car was northbound near
Harbor Boulevard when it hit the
truck, which was parked in outside
lanes. possibly without its li i::hts on .
Driver Billy J. Adams. 18, of 116:12
Stuart Drive, Garden Grove. saw the
car coming and leaped off the truck
bed, escaping harm.
Newport Council Calls
Ocean Front Emergency
A state or limited peril exi!ils of-
ficially, as well as in fact, along \Vesl
Ne"1>0rt's crumbling ocean front to·
day.
Newport Beach city councilmen
formally declared the emergency late
l\1onday night.
They acted in response to urgings of
\Vest Newport homeowners, including
Councilman Donald A. Mcinnis, who a
year ago lost a patio wall to the forces
of erosion. The wall was never rep\ac·
eel, and the sea came back late Mon·
day.
Boe.ming surf, borne high on a 5.5·
Vera-Ellen Divorced
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Former
actress-dancer Vera·Ellcn Monday
was granted a divorce to end her 14·
year marriage to Victor B. Rothschild.
an automotive service operator.
foot tide. clawed aY+•ay great chunks of
beach from 40th Street to the Santa
Ana River jetty, a disfla.nce of 3.1
blocks.
Chamber Plans
Quiz for City
Fifty Questions about l-luntington
Beach will be asked of a selected l,000
persons by the Junior Chamber of
Commerce in late October,
The city Council Monday night ap-
proved the Idea of Jaycees conducting
a community survey and offered to
print the survey forms for the
Jaycees.
Jaycee spokesmen said the grour>
will hand out the survey forms to the
selected persons and explain how to
fill in the answers.
$68!)000 Proje~t
Huntington Pier Bathed in Light
The surf roared through the Hun·
tington Beach Pier Monday night , bu1
no one saw it until Mayor Alvin M.
Coen threw a switch activating Ult.
$68,00> pier lighting system.
AJteT the switch was thrown the pier
\\'t6 bathed in light which grew In in·
ten!iilY as the 49 new lights warmed
up. Nol only was Lhf: pier lighted, bul
the water under the pier as well.
From any Vantage point ln the city
the pier lighting was clearly vialble as
the new lighta put out more than 10
Umes t.be intensity or the old ones.
Marw Coon told a large crowd of
pier walkers that tt\e lighting 11 only
the beginning. "As fantastic u this is
there will be many more im·
provements In store over the months
to come."
Part of those lm.provements Ukely
will lnclude widening of the pler and
bulldtng of commercial treas on the
structure. A New York firm already
has become Interested In completl!:
' -
development of the structure and the
ci~y expect! others W follow soon.
While the dimly lighted pier has
been shunned by night vlsitors in the
past, trials with the new lighting
system have resulted ln a marked in·
crease in night time traffic out on the
pier. according W Htrbors and
Ucaehes Director Vince MoOrhousc,
lie pointed out that Ughtlng is just
one step in modernizing l h e
waterfront
"AU of the beach concessions have
been modernized , the lifeguard t.owers
replaced with new ones, Ule Pavalon
rebuilt as the Fl.shennan Reetaurant
and plans completed ror a new beach
parking lot.
"On the other side of the pier (to the
north) 1-luntington Pacific Corp has
completed Its 1~wtit apartment
development and a new beach parklng
lot as well as the oew concession
building.
"There is still much to be done, but
It is be~ done."
A Huntington Harbour doc to r
critically wounded in a ~n tight with
his wife Sunday night continued to
fight for life today as Huntington
Beach police puzzled over his exact
occupation.
Dr. John Fenner, 36, of 4162 Trum·
bull Drive, in U1e expensi·ve,
watcr\vay·laced subdivision, is in Hun·
tington lntercommunity Hospital with
two bullet wounds in the abdomen.
In Vestigators say he was wounded
by his estranged wife. Sylvia, 39.
v.·hom he apparently killed with one
shot in the heart from a hunting rifle ~·h i ch he \Vl'estlcd from the screaming
v.•oman.
Police Capt. Earle Robitaille sald
Monday that it appears Mrs. Fenner
attempted to kill her husband and the
wounded physician finally ac\ed in
sell-defense.
Neighbors telephoned police a~r
hearing a series · of. angry shouts,
screams and shots and Clrrt officers
on the scene found little Nyle Fenner,
3. d.sughter or the couple, sobbing over
her dead mmher's body.
·Dr. Fenner -who is not presently a
practicing physician -was .i:.ble to
guide police officers in giving him first
aid and later helped diagnose the
grave extent of his gunshot wounds
when hospitaHzed.
·investigators said Dr. Fenner listed
his occupation as lecturer for J ames
\V. Newm<:.n and Associates Jne., a
Beverly Boulevard company listed as
an educational organization by the Los
Angeles Chamber of Commerce.
Exact nature of the firm's education
is what is app<::irently in question to·
<Wy.
A neighbor of the Fenners told the
DAILY PILOT today that Dr. Fenner
had given her a brochure about the
con1pany, advertising PACE
Seminars, reportedly designed to build
increased confi~nce and creativity.
The brochure went on to say the
seminars were for c.ouples and that
they encouraged participation, but, in
their words, no student was ever em·
bitrrassed or put on the spot.
The pamphlet said nothing about
subject matter or cost.
Contacted by the DAILY PILOT to-
day, a spokesman for the Los Angeles
firm offered to have someone more
famiHar with th e operation return a
call to offer information.
"I'm new here, so my knowledge is
limited," she said.
Another source Monday reported 1
spokesman for the firm Oatly refused
any information about Dr. Fenner or
aboul what type of educational' work is
involved.
Dr. Fenner wa5 shot with a .28.1
caliber hunting rifle shortly before 11
p.m. Sunday, after neighbors heard a
(See SHOOTOl!r, Page !)
Orange
Weather
\Ve may have a bit of a drizzle,
the weatherman says damply.
but for the most part it'll be the
same as before. with the sun
arriving about midmorning and
coastal temperatures in the
mid·70's.
INSIDE TODAY
Oro.nge Count11 ts fcut becom-
'"a a cenler /or the muaic:nf arU
in Southern. California. Sfe En-
ttrtainnw!nt, Page 9.
Ctllfwllla
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% IWl Y PllOT
LBJ Rejects-Bomb · Halt;· Next Move Hanoi'·s
llETllOIT (!IP) -Pr 1 °1 Id I a I
Jolwon, rtJectloi • total bomb!•&
pall al North Vletnom or other de·
MC.alatloa: ol tM war, aay1 he will go
no further in the seard:I for pea« un·
t1l Hanoi. shows sincere dgcs of wan-llltl to end 1M lighting.
Speaking Monday night to a con ·
vMUon of the Veterans of li'oreign
-Wan, Johnson &aid-&U movea by the
United States to eDd tbe fighting have
gone WWl&Wered by the North Viet·
name1e.
"Tbl nest move must bl thelr1,'' he
told 1 m-tng aucl!enCe.
1be Pretident 1eemed to be aMWtr-
1ng <ritlcl within his own party,
porticodlr!J Som. EU f ea I J;
~ llld °"""' *°°'-·"""'
l>av1 ---"tllo --jor plrU ol lbl!r .....,.,.. ·Hr 1111
Oemocratlc pretJdenu.I nomlna.Uoa.
Pointedly referrln1 to the fact tb.1t
his te rm does n't expire until next
Januaey, Johnson said, "Thi• ad·
ministration does not ui.tend tq move
further until it ha s good reason to
believe that the other side intend s
seriou.sly to join with u1 In de·
eaoalatlna: .the war and movin&
seriou1ly klwardl peace."
While he i1 in office, Johnaon tm·
phasized again and again, be will call
JtlCC:artJay Disagree•
Humphrey Vows
-First Ballot . Win
CHICAGO (UPll -llumphre_,.
.orces confideQ_Uy claimed the vot e~
today for a first-ballot victory at the
Democratic convention regardless o.
the outcome ot a series of party
squ abbles. They began talkin g about ;_
vice presidential runnin& mate.
A spokesman for Hubert H .
Humphrey said a "very hard ,
realistic" rundown based on personal
contacts with individual delegates
gave the vice president 1,400 votes
with 1,312 needed to win. He predicted
the total would crow be!ore next
week's balloting.
Stephen A. Mitchell, a forme r
Democratic naUonal chairman and
now a top &trategl.st for Sen. Eugene J.
McCarthy, retorted that the Hum-
phrey claims were exaggerated. He
said Humphrey "peaked" a week ago
and now was "making all that noise"
to hide the erosion in bis strength.
Mitche.11 also raised the possibUlt~
that the convention m.lght not be able
to open on schedule Monday if Chicago
transportation, already hampered by a
cab strike, is bit by other walkouts. He
also mentiODed the illness of former
President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
"There have been recessed con·
ventioos befDn!," Mitchell told a ne\l.'S
conference. He denied, however, that
McCarthy forces were trying to drag
out the convention w l t h t h e I r
challenge& of a big bloc of delegates on
grouod.1 of dlaloyalty and racial
dllcrlminallon.
The Humphrey delegate count was
made public by Lawren~e F. O'Brie~.
former postmaster general, who 18.ld
it would be very dl!ficult for the
McCarthy camp "to turn this around."
He gave McCarthy fewe r than 600
Special Session
To Discuss Tax
Rate Scl1eduled
A special meetin11: to discuss the 1968
Huntin&ton Beach property tax rate
has been called by the. City Council for
next Monday at 7:30 p.m. ln councll
chambers of Memorial Hall.
The discu!!lon was delayed Monday
because councllmen wished to end the
meetlng prior to 9 p.m. for the
,gcheduled lighting of the new pier
lighting system.
Setting the rate will take some
dltcUsslon time because the council
has yet to rHOlve tbt problems of· a
tax hike for recreation and parks and
a possible increue to help financf'
some operations of the Chamber of
Commerce.
The present rate is Sl .M per SlOIJ
as1e1m vaauaUon, but It ls almos t
certaln to rise to near tbe $1.4& mark.
DAILY PllOI
0"-A1'1GE COAST l"\JellSHJNG COMPANY
ll:oh1rt N, W11d ,,...ldlttl, •l'ICI 1"11.-1""'
J1tlr It. c.,1.y ~la ,,_kllnf W G..-.1 MIMltr
Tll1wiai k11¥i1
Edllor
1~111111 A. Mur,111111
1N111tlllf Ell!io(
.Alb1rf W. l1t11 Wlllit fl'I lt1td
votes whereas MitchtU put the fifUJ'e
1t "between 600 and 700."
The vice president hilp.sel! was
lescribed aa being .so COftfident that he
.iad placed fOW" men at the top ol his
ist of possible runn6ng mates although
ie had not yet foreclosed the PQl!ISililli-
~· of someone else.
Rocky Declares
He Won't Take
Kennedy's Seat
NEW YORK (UP!) -Gov. Nelsoo
A. Rockefeller has denied he will
resign and accept appointment to
Robert F. Kennedy's Senate teat, and
has indicated he will fill the v&cancy
r~riday.
Rockefeller Monday s q u e i c b • d
rlUllors be would retign and be named
by Lt. Gov. Malcom WU.on to tht 1ea.t
left vacant when . Kennedy was
assa.ssinated Jn Los Angeles June 5.
"Don't worry," Rockefeller said. "l
"''as never a legislator by tern·
perament. I am an admini1trator by
temRerameot."
The gavernor Monday interviewed
1lx meJl::being coaaldered for tht polt.
From the lnterview11 Rockefeller's
first government buslne1s itnce be Jost
a bid for the RepubUcan pre1idenU1J
nomination, two prime contendtra
emerged .
They were Re~. Ogden R. Reid of
\Vestcheater County and Charles E
Goodell of Jamestown, bot b
Republicans.
Others interviewed included Court of
Appeals Judce Koooeth B. Keatin1 of
Rochester, who lOtit h1I Senate IHt to
Kennedy in 1964.
Rites Conducted
Toda y for Plane
Crash Victim
Funeral services were held today
for Mrs. WU.ma Kinkoade Wright, ad·
miniltrator of We1tm1n1ter Con·
vale.scent Hospital. in the Peek Family
Colonial Funeral Home Chapel. She
\Vas 55.
Mra. Wright was killed Saturday ln
the crash of a light plane near Mon-terey.
Al10 killed ln the crasll were Dr,
Milton Katt, 44, al Lo• Alamlto1. and
the plane's pilot John Ray Thompeon,
58, al.lo of Lo1 Alamitos .
The trio was en route to Tiller. Ore ..
for a business appointment with Mra.
\Vright's son, J oseph.
Mrs. Wright Is survived by her hus-
band LaSalle : two sons . Bert cf
Rfvtnlde and Jos eph : and aeven
gra ndchildren .
She was buried al Westminster
Me.moria} Park.
Quiet!)
1111 ...... ond will ""' -"to -ol m *.,_"bl -.lllq for•
-""1dl -pt .. out ol v-... "*""'IQ; terml ••• " ' lD Cl)e of his + strongest dtfenttl or
American aoUons in Vietnam, Jolwon
also predicted tbal his suceessor wW
wlnd up with the aame policy. ooce he
has all th e lnformaUon a n d
responsibiity that cornea with 11he
presidency.
"lt'1 oae thln& to be 1eek!ng
respOnslblUty and it'• anotfle r thlrta:
when you've rot it/' Johilson "1d
about b1s critic•.
The Prtsldent went to Dtlroil from
Ul"ITt_.....
p RA YER -Typi•t Dorl• Gor-
don lakes time during lunch
hour for moment of silent
prayer in Eisenhower Memor·
1al Chapel at tho Denver Club.
Former president suffered his
first heart attack in Denver in
1955.
Fl'OWI P .. e 1
EISENHOWER
ing out a transplant operation.
And the doctors referred on1y to the
"chronology of Gen. Eisenhower's ii·
lnesm" ovtt the years -Including
his ileitis, gall bladder, cttebral
stroke, prostate gland trouble and
other Ulnes1e1.
Another que1t1on asked -thi1 one
by the Associated Preti -was this:
'"In the Ught of your 3:30 p.m.
report yesterday that the general 's
condition showed a 'tradual worsen·
in&,' does your later report at 10 p.m.
-noting 'fewer instances of ven·
tricular irregularity' -mean that the
·worsening' ha1 been halted ; .at least
slowed in ptee; or, Indeed, kept back
1omewhat? And what ii tbe 1ltuatioa
on this lame score rtght aow?"
Without liviz>I a dlrect aivwer, doc-
tor• referred report.era to the text of
the formal medical bulletin, which did
not apperar to 1peclfically answer the
quesUoo.
Battered Body
Of Girl Found
SAN MATil:O (AP) -Thi nude
body of a pretty, blonde woman who
had been stabbed, st:an<d, her bead
b11htd in ai:id throat slit wa1 dumped
Tuesday In the p1rk1n1 lot of a San
Mateo prlnUDI firm.
Police 1ald they hid no immecUate
clues and were stttmpdng t o ldentlty
the victim through fingerprintJ and
other records.
Please!
A-ltlt H~"11"tl'Oft lttch IEOl!Ot City E.dltor
,. .. ,...,.. '"" Offtc:1 JOt I th $tr11t
Play Equipment 'Makes Kids Scream'
M1ill111 ""'''''" P.O. I n 7t Q 9J,41 o-om-
,,......, ... di: Im W•tt .. ftlM lei!Mff c:..t1 ~ 1 DI W•I &t¥ !!Ml L.-.. &lldll 222 hfnt Avtllllt
,,
Ex ®tram. and noll.)' cl1Udrll'I beve
brought nothln( but ~lt to the
home ol Mr. and Mtl. Jolll! L. Farrar,
of 9012 Pioneer Drive, Huntlnctoo
Bead!.
Mr•. Farrar told tile Clt1 Council
Monday nl(lllt lhlt tile tnllllllet ho11n
when play equipment 'tW\I installed 1t
Wardlow Park and II>< chlldnn befan
to nock to the park to play.
"'Il'1 Ult kind 0( tqWpmtnt lN!t
make1 kids .cream. Somttbln1 muat
be done about 111 th• nol1t ttom
ployina clllldren " Ille dlcl&rld.
lier home II ;;i..;t 140 f11t &om the
('lay yard , a dlstance wt»ch 11 much
fwther 1way thin 11 tbt Ul'Uel lltn•·
Uon in 1 ntllhbOrhood park. Rfa'ta·
tton IOd Parks Director Norm Worthy
told the couocll.
Councilman Jt:IT)' Matne1, loni a
supporter of play equipment fw itie
two-acn perk oo Pioneer Drive et
l>fa&nolll Street, Hid bt .... "Vlr'f •
mu<;, pleuld wtth lht play equlp-meot."
''EvidentlY you don't hrlvt d\lldren,"
1llotney Hid lo Mn. Farrar.
"I ht.Ve flv. and I'm I IC.'hool
teldler too," llh. Farrar -bock at tllo couocllmon.
"You hi.vi put a carnival tyPe of
park wl'hill 1-tO feet of our house. 1
"'OUld like to Ht the on• play area
moved t4 tbt ct.it.er or· h park or 1
Will built. ..
Worthy uld Ito movllls WOWd eo1t
12,900 end there -oo ll>ODIY· He and police <llllf Jobn Sil--ob-jtclld lo I wall wtJ1ab would ob1trucl
vlllon ID tbl perk.
Alter colllldnble dll<Ullfon lh•
council nffrrtd thl m1tt1r to lbt
Recroatlon Ind Park• C:ommluloa
wllh • IUQllllOO that .. atWl<llnl
ml(bt bo 1..Uoatd at the park on
-k•odl to k111> down nolll and to
m.1<1 wre dllldrtll 1111 lbl po:lt at Ji""
hll Tull ~. ~ tbl• -to w~ He biod hen In 'l'lul
moot ol 111lp 1n0nt11.
ln GIM'ly .,.oUonal tones, John,..
utd110b6dy wants peace more than be
and he damned Han.ol f or what M
charijed was lts failure to respond
clearly a n d affinnatlveJy to h l s
Mnrch 31 order restricting bombing of
the N ortD. • · .
"Let'1 don't be hoodwinked. Let's
not ho mllltd • , . We're DOI Jolng to
•!<JI> tile bomhlof julll to let lb<m step u~ their blood1bld, ,; Jobnloo de<lared.
l,So ·loog at I am rour American
commlDder 1n cbie(, we are not eotng
to bo low>d wanUns," ho told the
dleertmc ·-.... Retunilli to polltlc s, Johnson llld
of the U.S. trOops doing lhe llglltlng :
"They are golng to have a voice in th.is
campaign before it's over."
ln withdrawing from 1968 presiden·
till poHUct nearly five months ago,
Johnson said he warrted to divorce his
search for peace abroad and harmony
at heme trom _parU.su. coa1ideration1.
But In hll Detroit lpeed\ John100
made It clear he doean't Ute all that
be bean In the C'\UTenit camP911n.
Some White House aid• argued
allerwanlc that his bold-tlle·Uno ad·
clrt11 could mi11 boll> Vlco Pnaldent
Hubert H. Humi:tirey, l'!onl TWlllei fOr
the Democratic pregJdenUal nomlna·
tion.
Th.is was based on the the:Ory thal
Humpbrey'1 Vittna mposition 11 far
cl~r to Johnson'• than that ol hi5
chief rival for tile nomination, Sen.
McCartJ:iy, wto is calling for a total
and uncondlUonal bombing halt.
But eome others, outlide the White
Hou.se, wondered if the gainer mi&ht
not be the Republican nominee.
Richard M. Nixon, wbOle VeJtnam
pollcy in many respect.I IJ close to a
carbon copy ol J-'•·
Matney Wins Park Model
Council Approves Spending $1,400 for Project
Coltl>Cilmon Jerry Matney llubed a
1mlle of victory Monday night n the
Huntlnston Beach City Councll op.
proved ~I at le11t Sl,400 for. a
model of a proposed central city park.
Matney hat t>Hn tighUng lor con.
struction of a model of the central city
park which is incladed as one of the
projects to be buUt if the voters ap-
prove a '6 mllllon bond Issue pro-
posiUon at the Nov. 5 General Elec·
tion.
He wu rebuffed in several attempts
to secure council approval of the pro·
ject, but won Monday nJgbt on a 4·1
vote alter Planning Consultant Ted
Adsit told the council the model could
be a valuable tool in selling the bond
proposition.
Only Councilman George
McCracken voted against the model.
gaying that be wanted to see some
spending limit placed on bond cam·
paign expenaes by the Recreation and
f>arks Department.
The model will be of an area near
Golden West Street and Talbert
Avenue which contains several lakes.
The city must buy much of the land,
but aJready owns part of the 400 acres
under discussion.
The county Board of Supervisors
waa to a«iree today to the sale of 5.98
acres of the land to the city for a price
of t16,500. The county land is sw-plus
aad is parUy lDlder the water of Hun·
tlngton Lake which the city Is to ac·
quire as a gift from a riearby tract
developer.
Ad.alt said the need la: "to get a1
Nixon Sees Landslide
Win for Republicans
COLUMBUS, Oblo (AP) -Richerd
M. NLxon saya hl1 first full day of na-
tional oampatgntn& has convinced him
he can win the presldential election by
a landslide.
"Acro11 the country a tide 11 begin-
ning to run," the Republican candidate
for president told a reception of Ohio
RepubUC'IDI Monday nJght. "All we
b ... to do II pu1h It day and nlgbt and
1t will be a land&Ude."
Hll voice boule from a day ol spea-
-klnl in Illinol1, Mldllgan and Ohio,
Nixon prepared for a meeting today
with Ohio Gov. James H. Rhode&.
He met on Monday with Gov.
Georfe Romney of Michigan , once an
opponent f« tbe GOP nomination, and
carried away the eovernor'a promise
to campaign for him in other 1tate1.
Nixon aldee lald the object o1 the
meettn1 with llllodos II to win the full
IUppcrt ol tho lndepeodent·mlnded
Republican ..-sanllatton. R-. held
h11 faYOritll ion delegation behind him
at the GOP convention.
Nlxon'1 strat1g1st1 1aJd that while
they hope Rhodes will make 1ome na.
Uonal appearances for the ticket , they
are counting most Cll hit orgtnl.zation
deHvering the key It.ate to Nixoa in
November.
Later in tht day, Nixon mee ts With
Gov. Raymond. P. Shafer in Hat·
risburg. Shafer supported New York
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller for the
GOP presidential nomin1t1an. NlJon
meets Wtdne1day with Rockefeller in
the New York C1ty apartment house
where they both live.
For Nixon, Monday wa1 a day of
Oying visits to state Capitols, huty
news conferences In J t g t 1 1 a t 1 v e
chambers, closed meetings with ttlte
Republican leaders, and handlbaking
only .
with crowds who turned out to see
him.
Once, he talked by two way radio to
President J o h n 1 o n as their
motorcade• sped in opposite directions
on a freeway outside Detroit.
Nixon was leaving the Veterans of
Foreign W a r 1 convention and the
President wu going there to speak.
Secret Service men put th&m in touch
with each other and Nixon aasured
Johnson be would face an attentive au·
dience.
From P .. e l
SHOOTOUT. • •
violent argument lead up to bis wife's
1creamln1 :
"You have ruined my Ufe. I'm &olng
to fini•h you off for good," according
to Mrs. J ames Keefe, a next door
nelgbbor.
Another witness told police Mrs.
Fenner screamed: ''I can't go on like
this, day after day after day."
lnvesUgators believe Dr. Fenner -
whose pelvis was shattered by slugs -
was hit once and took the rifle fron1
his wlfe, who then snatched up a .3S7
magnum pistol and 1bot aaain.
At that point, Dr. Fenner fatally
"''ounded her almost Instantly,
Five 1hota or more were fired.
The couple's daua:hter and l·year-old
ton, KJel , wtre taken to the Albert Sit·
ton Home, for juveniles taken into pro-
tective custody after 1uch tragedies,
police 1aid.
No funeral uranaementa have been
made yet for Mrs. Fenner.
many citizen• talking about the park
bond proposition as possible. He 1ug.
gested taking color 111lde1 of the model
and including them in pn1entation1 to
be made to many gro1.1ps on the park
needs.
"The model certainly will make a
big difference," Matney told the coun-
cil .
The basic model will cost about '500
and completing Jt with tree1 and
facilities as designated by the council
will add another S900 to the cost,
Matney said.
Councilmen reserved the right to ap-
pro ve a final concept plan before it is
tncorporated into the model.
The model will show also the pro-
posed S3.16 million library for which
bonds are being asked Nov. 5.
Councilman Raps
Trash Deposits
In Huntington
Counctlman Jack Green told fellow
councilmen Monday nigtt that "I r;ee
no reason why the city al Huntington
Beach should have to clean up after
politicians."
Green cited a rally on the beach held
for Gene McCarthy~Jn June as an ex·
ample. "The place w-as a mess after
the rally," Green said.
He also pointed to the Huntington
Center Shopping center as an area
subject to generation of trash. "It's
sort of a public area and there are
many outfits putting handbills and
such on cars."
Green pointed to t.h e pickets
representing unions involved in a Los
Angeles strike who were picketing one
of the stores ln the center,
"We need to control bhose pa1Ssing
out handbills. We should require a
clean up bond or something fOr rallies,
shopping center1 and for those who
would pass out hendbW1 ."
Police Chief Jahn Seltzer, sAld there
was more to the picketing than wa.s
apparent end offered to !illOw tile
councilmen bis report on the matter.
"There's a lot more to this," <hi.el
Seltzer said, but he did not elaborate.
"At any rate," Green said in asking
that an ardlnance be dravm requiring
cleanup bonds, "I .see no reason why it
should cost tile clty anything to clean
up these messes."
Con Held in Slaying
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -Jam"
Vernon LewU Jr., 36, was 8I'l'Mted
Monday by FBI agent.a on a · charce
of ldlllng a fellow convict in a cell in
Atlanta prison last Dec. 10. Lewis was
release<f from prison shortly before
the case was presented to a federal
grind jury In Atlanta lut •prin1.
_. has it!
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•
Laguna _ DAILY PILOT -·---···-Beaeh Today's Closing
VOL. 61, NO. 200, 3 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES
Sea Here!
I
PHOTOGRARHER SIGHTS MERMAIO, SHOOTS SAME
K~thy Kra•m•r, 17, Poses for Beach Scene
,.
,.. .,
OOPS, SORRY KATHY, SURF'S UP
Phofog r•ph•r Got Drencht'd, Too
Capo Schools Hit Snags
Capistrano Unified School Dlstrlct
trustees ran into 11chool building pro-
blems Monday nJght.
They v.ue tnld by the architect th~t
lhe new Marco F . Forster junior high
school won't be completed by the start
or school Sept. 10. Trustees then reluc-
tantly •'1'ecd to house an anUcipatcd
J,050 studenU again for a few weeks to
a month in the old Capistrano Junior
Jligh with 118 barrac~ buildings.
Boa.rd members also disagreed with
arch.itcct5 over plans for Missio: Viejo ·-
Elementary School. Trustees objected
to havlnc toileta separated from the
main building and thought there
should be more windOW5. A committee
of lhre'e was nafned to meet with the
architecUi next Monday to work out
the dilfercnccs.
A lhlrd problem Involved a school
site owned by Brigham Young
University. Trustcei; had initiated pro-
cee<ling15 to condemn the junior high
.<Ute in the Colony Cove area of San
Clomcnte. )
ED ITION N.Y. Stocks
CAGUNA BEACH, CAUFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1968 TEN CENTS
e n .;
ances uar e '
183 Saved
From Surf
Along Coast
Breakers ranging up to 10 feet tall
pounded the south county coast again
I\1onday as harried lifeguards fro111
Laguna Beach to San Clemente pulled
183 swimmers to safety.
While La·guna Bc-ach lifeguards
reported 100 rescues in five to eight
foot surf, San Clemente guards said 8J
s\•timmers were pulled from the
western swells.
Laguna guards questioned th r.
wisdom of parents who allowed their
small children to romp in the surf
despite the danger red flag being
flown.
At Victoria Beach, one guard called
headquarters asking for help. He said
he couldn't handle au the children.
The department's rescue unit made
live back up calls Monday including
three to Victoria Beach.
'PREVENTIVE'
Lt. Dean 'VcstgaDl'd said , "A lot of
the rescues were preventative. You
don't wait until the guy is out before
you save him. If you see he might not
be able to handle himself, that's when
you go into action.
He said, "There was more big sure
Monday than Sunday. Sunday started
as a green (safe) flag day, but it built
up fast, and by the afternoon there
was a red (danger) flag. Monday
started as a red flag day."
Westgaard continued, "We had
great rips. They \o,rere strong, and
there were a lot of them."
He said to his kno~·Jedge there were
no public beaches closed to th<:
estimated 10,000 beachgoers.
Assessing surf today, he said, "Now
the waves are bi g and consistenl. And
there are rips. But I haven't seen any
of the real big tLeavies like Monday.
But that doesn't mean there won 't be
any.
JO.FOOT SURF
San Clemente guards pulled 8.1
swimmers out o( eight to 10-foot surf.
l it. Marty Stately said rescues were
made from Aliso Canyon Beach south
to San Clemente. There were no
rescues at Dana Point.
Stately said the ri 1>s are still harass·
ing the 10,300 beachgoers.
Today's surf was down about t\\O
feet.
2 Art Festivals
To Stay Open
Through Sept. 2
Two al. Laguna's summer festivals
have been given time extensions for
their art exhibits.
The Laguna Beach Planning Com-
mission Monday unanimously granted
permission to both t:ht Sawdust and
Splinter festivals to continue the
shows through Labor Day, Sept. 2.
For the Sawdust Festival, on
Laguna Canyon Road, this will mean a
nine day extension. Its totDI run will
now be seven weeks the longest of the
three festivals.
The Splinter Festival. J46 N. Coa st
Hwy .. will be extended two days. Thi:
Splinters were delayed a week al Lhe
beginning due to objections by a local
property owner. The run will now be
1Jx weeks.
The Fe1Uva1 of Arts ts scheduled to
cooclude Its six week nm this Satur·
day, Aug. 24.
Stock Mer'fceu
NEW YORK (AP) -The 1tock
market eased irregularly lower late
this afternoon in relatively Ught
trading. (See quotations. Pages 1&-17).
Losses outnumbered gains by a.bout
100 issues on the New York Stock Ex·
change and the DO'w Jooes industrial
change and the Dow Jones industrial
average was off about .a polnL
No Rats Loeated Transplant
Study Finds Mice Operation
· Ruled Out
In Ocean A venue WASHINGTON (AP) -Army doc·
By RICHARD NALL
Of 1M ~I" Pllal St•fl
A health survey of Laguna's Ocean
:\venue tias turned up mice and major
structural defects but no rats or Live
cockroaches.
This is the essence of a report from
Dr. John R. Philp, county and city
healtll <1fficer, that 'vill be placed
before councilmen Wednesday,
The health officer reported thet 19
buildings with 34 habitable units were
inspected with an eye to general hous·
ing sanitation conditions.
"OC the 34 habitable unit!, 12 were in
need of major repair or demolition.
nine units were in need Of minor
repairs and nine were in satisfactory
condition,'' Dr. Philip pwrote.
The city had requested the survey
after members Clf the city's Negro
community complained in June of
rodenL"i and vermin.
Dr. Duran Bell. UCI instructor, said
at a council meeting that a little girl
had been bitten by a rat. but her
father was afraid to report the in·
cident for fear of losing his job.
The rodents were attributed to the
lumber yard in the area by Bell.
l·lowever. Ocean Avenue residents and
\\•Orkers questioned later by the DAI ·
LY PILOT mentioned mice but said
there never had been a rat problem.
'l'he health officer reported that 61
buildings were visited to determine if
a rat. mouse or cockroach problem in·
festation existed.
Philp said that only six buildings
containing seven units showed any in-
dicat.ion of a mouse' infestation.
"There wa.s no evidence of rats or live
cockroaches in any of the buildings
visited," he stated.
The health officer recommended
that tils department and ~e city be
authorized "to proceed wiltl mea5ures
ror the u.pgradi.rtg of hc>using and
s-anltation In the survey area."
!·le called for a nieeting of health ur-
ficers and city forces.
Father's Vietnam Flight
Halted by Girl's Death
A jet transport about to taxi inlo
takeoff for Vietnam was halted on the
runway at El Toro MCAS Monday to
inform a major aboard that his step-
daughter had been killed shortly
before in a nearby car crash.
The teen-ager and her companion
1968 Co unty Traffic 1967
137 Death Toll 126
were among four youths killed in the
same geographical area during a 12·
hour period, ~·ith two of the three one.
car accidents involving small cars.
Dead following the accidents are:
-Christina L. Nowak, 17. of 17962
Gillman Ave .. Irvine.
-Robert B. Hellstrom, 17. of 18200
Mayapple \Vay. Irvine.
-Laurence H. Baker, 16. or 16612
Silkworm St.. Fountain Valley.
L/Cpl. J immy Bethurum , 20, of
Dallas. Tex.
California Highway Patrol of(ic~rs
said Mi!is Nowak and Hellstrom died
almost instantly when the car driven
by the boy blew a lire on Barranca
Road near Culver Drive Monday after-
noon.
The small car veered out of control
and hit a utiUty pole along ille
roadwi.y, crumpling like a ping pong
ball and crushing the victims inside.
Both Miss Mowak .and the llellstrom
youth were June graduates o! Mission
Viejo Jligh School.
Investigators said the car had been
leased by USMC Maj. Chester L.
Whipple, the Nowak girl's stepfather,
who was noUUed of her death on the
runway and dl'layed his trip to Viel·
nan1.
Battered Body
Of Girl Found
SAN 'IATEO (AP) -The nude
body of a pretty. blonde woman who
had been stabbed. strangled, lier head
bashed in and throat .slit was dumped
Tuesday In the parking lot of a San
h-tateo printing firm .
Police said they had no Immediate
clues and were attempting t o Identify
the victim through fingerprints: and
other records.
Police received a telephoned Up
from an anonymous caller around 8
ll..m. South of Borors 1nc., they found
the woman. She httd eight stab woundg
In the head, according to the coroner'•
qlfice. ..
The Fountain Valle.v youth was dead
on arrival at Hoag Memorial Hospital
in Newport late Monday night after a
sports ear driven by his brother ram-
med a parked truck on the San Diego
F'reeway in Costa Mesa.
Gregory Baker. 18. escaped with
minor injuries. but their girl com-
panion, Ann S. Novratril. 17, or 16591
Ross Lane, Huntington Beach. suf·
fered a fractured skull and neck in-
juries.
Patrolman G. ,V. Olson said the
Baker car was northbound near
Harbor Boulevard when it hit thi:
truck, which was parked in outside
lanes. possibly without its lights on.
Driver Billy J. Adams. 18, of 11632
Stuart Drive. Garden Grove. saw the
car coming and leaped off the truck
bed, escaping harm.
The young Marine lance corporal
was killed early today when his car,
i;outhbound on the Santa Ana Freeway
between Culver Drive and Jeffrey
Road , went out of control and struck a
tree.
Play house Asks
City to Share
Cost of Clerk
The city is being asked to pick up
half the tab for a clerk-oi·Ule·works
who will keep an eye on pending con·
struction of tile Laguna Moult on
Playhouse.
A letter from Players president
George Gadi: asks maximum cHy sup·
port of $2,500 estimated to be hall Uic
cost or employment.
The Players would provide the re-
mainder.
Lagooa Bead\ councilmen are ex-
pected to take up t.he request at their
Wednesday meeting,
~trey Riker. Players vice presl·
dent, said a clerk-of-the·work.1 would
check technical aspects during COO·
structlon to look after Playhouse In·
terests -also city interests !ince the
new theater will become a cl1y
bulldlng.
Noting that the city had rceQm·
mtnded CTeation of such a function.
Gade said th.a t James Stearn:i of
Laguna Hills is emine1.Uy quaWled
and becausl: 0( interest in the
Playhouse would provide hls servicts
for ·~ per week.
tors reporled today that former Presi-
dent Dwight D. Eisenhower's pro..
spects for survival are •guarded -
meaning a.n unpredictable margin
between life and death.
This was the condition report shortly
after 11 a.m . at Waller Reed .<\rmy
I lospitol. IL was one of several replies
to queslions submitted by reporters to
the doctor.
/\t thi: same time they said in .a
forn1al ml!dical bulletin that U1c
general's condition remains critical
even though there has been a
favorable trend in the pattern of ab·
normal heart rhythm action which is
the basic problem of his heart attack.
They \e(t open the question ,.,.hether
the "gradual worsening" or his con-
dition which they had reported in a
midafternoon report Monday had been
either halted or 5lowed in pace.
The doctors disclosed Monday night
they had rejected, after serious con·
sideration, the idea of attempting a
heart lrnnsplant.
The lt'xl of today's medical bulletin
foll o\vs:
''Since last night's bulletin, Gen.
Eisenho,ver has continued to rest com·
fortably. The pattern or isolated ir·
regular beats continues. There have
been no instances of sustained ven·
tricular irregularities requiring ele<:·
trical conversion during the last 24
hours. While thls trend is favorable,
the general's condition r e mai n s
critical.'''
The irregular heart beat had
brought him near death after his
seventh heart attack.
One of the questions asked by
ni:w sn1cn inquired as to the "other
major medical conditions" which the
(See EISENHOWER, Page %)
Maybe-He Was,
But He Didn't
Need Any Help
··netp. I'm being k.idnaped,'' the
note said.
Schotc:. Dumbadse. Laguna Beach
service station operator. 980 S. Coast
Highway, was lilli.ng a tank when he
found the note Mond ay morning in a
gas cap compartment.
Dumbadse not.ilied Laguna Beach
Police. They notified Newport Beach
po~ce that the 1966 car was north·
bound. Newport officers Investigated.
The upshot said Laguna police Lt.
nobttrt McMurray:
The travelers were newly "'eds. The
note had been planted in their cru-by a
•·rriend" as a prank.
Ora11ge_£~'
lt'eatl1er
\Ve ma.y have a bit or a drizztr,
the we;itherman says damply,
but for the most part it'll be the
same as before, with the sun
arriving about midmorning and
coostal temperatures in the
mid·70's.
I NSIDE TODAY
Orange Countu b fcuc becom-
ing a center for tht murical arti
in Soulhtrn California. Ser En·
ttrfainmC'ftl, Paor 9.
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, JL DAILY PILOT T\ltsd•y, AU9U5l 20, 1'68
1
11
LBJ Rejects Bomb Halt; Next Move Hanoi's, ..
• 1 : JMllJWl)JT (AP) -Pr11ld1nt
· Johllaoa, ~loctlni a !Dial boolblna
Nit GI North Vlelnaan or other ·de-
escal1Uoa of the war, HYf he wUI go
no fut1ber in the teardt for peace un.
·ti} Hanoi abows ablcere sigris of wan·
tin& lo eod Ille llghUng.
Speaking Monday night to a con-
"; veodon of the Veteran& of Foreiin t : t Wau_, _Joha..._ton Hid all moyts by the
;"lluntted States to end the lighting have
:
1 :gone unanswered by the North Viet-;. nemese.
"lbe next move muat be tbelrs," be
told a m-.g audience. The Prelldel!\ --1 to be anower·
lng crillcl willlln hla own party,
'* * * Nixon Backs
President .on
No Bomb Halt
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -GOP
presidential candidate Richard M.
Nixon today gave down-the-line sup·
Port of President Johnson's refusal to
order a total Vietnam bombing halt at
this time.
Nixon said he was interested in the
same thing as Johnson -a clear
signal from Hanoi that it would take
some actJon tD de-escalate the war an
its part if the United States ended the
bombing.
··I think the United States is well ad·
vised not to stop the bombing unless
there are reductions of enemy attacks
on U.S. and South Vietnamese forces ,"
Nixon told a news conference.
Previous bombing pauses, Nixon
said, "were one-way streets ln which
the United States gave something but
received nothing tn return."
Johnson announced Monday night he
had not received any indication from
Hanoi It was ready to reciprocate and
he would therefore not endanger lives
or U.S. servicemen by ordering a total
bombing bolt.
U.S. planes are bombing only below
the 20th parallel.
Nixon held a nai.vs conference after
conferring in the state capitol with
Ohio Gov. James A. Rhoces. Minutes
later he drove to the airport for a
flight to HarrisblD'g, Pa., and a
meeting wtth GOP leaders there.
Nixon began the fioal day of a two.
day campaign swing with the annual
exhibitors break:fa!t for the pre11 at
the Ohio Slate Falr Groundl.
Rocky Declares
He Won't Take
Kennedy's Seat
NEW YORK (UPI) -O-OV. Nelson
A. Rockefeller baa denied he will
reolgn and acoep! appointment to
Robert F. Kennedy's Senate seat, and
has indicated be will fill the vacancy
Friday.
Rockefeller Monday s q u e 1 c h e d
rumors he would resign and be named
by Lt. Gov. Malcosn Wilson to the seat
left vacant wben Kennedy was
assassinated in Los Angeles June 5.
"Don't worry/' Rockefeller said. "I
w86 never a legislator by tern·
perament. I am an administrator by
temperament.''
The governor Monday Interviewed
six men being considered for ttie post.
From the tnterviews, Rockef'eller's
first government business since. he l?st
a bid for tbe Republican presidential
nomination, two prime contenders
emerged.
They were Reps. Ogden R. Reid of
\Vestchetter County and Charles E
Goodell o( Jamestown, both
Republicans.
Others interviewed included Court of
Appeals Judge Kenneth B. Keating of
Rochester, who lost hiJ Senate seat to
Kennedy In 1964.
DAllV PILOT
'-_ .........
ml.I.HG! COAST ru1L.l$HINO CQV<, ... NV
RoMri N. Wtol
,rmktfnl 1M l"\alllwr
J1cli: R. Corloy
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221 F.,..1t A••·
M•m11t Allro1u P.O .... 6'6 '2611 ..--c ... ,__;,.. Wiit..., .,,... M...., lffdl; nu Wiit .. .._ ..,..,.
Hvntlftl"" lnct!; -Ml &ll'Oft
portidlllrlJ Sm. E Q 11 n 1 J,
McOonlQ> aod 0torp M<Oovenl, wlio
haft modi --to !bl war ma· ior psta al !hair campaipl for tbl
DemocratJc preaide.nila.I nominaUon.
Poinleilly relerrlna to tbe !act that
his term doesn't expire unUl next
January, Jobnaon 1aid, "Thia ad·
miOlstrabon dot:s not Intend to move
further until it has good reason to
believe that the other side lntend:s
seriously to joln with us In de·
e5¢a1atina: the war and movtna:
serloualy toward& peace."
While he Is in. office, Johnton em-
phuized ..... md opln, hi '"'111 call
Iba -and wm ""' -''lo IOlll• ., ............... tobo~lor•
lormulo wbldi .,...id ill ua out ol
Vietnam 11114 Alla oo dJ tarm1 ••• "
In <>ne of hi:s 11tronge1t difenaes or
Aplerican acUons 1n Vietnam, Johnson
.iso predicted that his 1ucce1sor will
wind up with thf same poUcy, once he
h<ls all tbe information a n d
responsibiity U1at comes with the
presidency,
"It'ii one thing to be fieeklng
responsJblllty and It's another thiDg
whm you\>'e g« lt, .. J ohnson 1aid
about his critics.
Tb.e President went to Detroit rrom
lAGUNAN BRINGS NEW SLANT TO OLD CRAFT
Woodcarver Heln1 Norh1u11n 1t festival
Arts Festival Newcomer
Carving Career in Wood
By TOM GORMAN
Of fM Dtllr ,1111 <ft
As a young man in Germany, hls
father made organs f« churches and
he studied to be an architect.
Now Heinz Norbause:n ts exhibiting
at the Laguna Beach Festival of Arts
for his first year, as a wood
craftsman.
The world didn't lose a potential
architect. It gained a talented artist.
At least that must be the opinion of a
doctor and lawyer v.·ho bought
Norhausen's fir:st two wood com·
positions.
His third unnamed abstract com·
position is presently on display at his
Festival. booth. It is unnamed for a
good reason.
"It's intell"Sting to hear what people
have to say about it," Norhausen fiaid.
''They all see different things in it. So
it's just as well I didn't name it."
PRICE TAG
lie did put a price tag on it. though.
It reads, "'450."
Hjs second compo:sition, also un·
named, was on display for only a mat·
ter of hours before it sold.
Norhausen didn't just jump from
arch.itecture to compositions.
In Germany he was schooling to an
architect. But. as part or his educa·
lion, be was required to learn cabinc!
making.
lie hasn't studied architecture siricr.
Norhausen moved to Canada in 1956,
and then to the United St.ates in 1960.
He first lived in Pomona. where he
worked for another cablnet maker. He
didn't work on too many of his own
creations. but rather on h i s
empl9yer':s plans.
After two years, ~e moved to South
Laguna. He began to make bis own
jewelry. He then graduated to larger
pieces of work -wall hangings. They
could be scenes of either a :school of
fish, or birds, or sail boats.
They are all in wood.
NOT STAINED
But what surprises the people as
they tour by his booth is the fact that
they aren't in any way stained. The
oranges and tans and brawl\li and
purples are all the original colors or
the wood.is he uses.
Besides working with lhe "typical''
birch and w.alnut woods, be also uses
pw-ple heart, vennlllion, rose wood,
ea.stern maple, osage orange, tulip and
zebra woods.
And that make:s for quite a col·
lection on one, composition. On his
latest, C<>mpositlon, he used more than
ten different types of wood.
Norhausen creates his works at his
shop at 20760 Laguna Canyon Road.
lie will have a new shop in the Art
Center come Oct. 15.
It takes him about a week to put out
a composition like the one on display.
He doesn't make any copies of h.ls
larger pieces, only on some of his jew-
elry. Even then, copies are limited to
about a half dozen.
But by no means ls Norhausen
lin1ited in ideas. Contrary to the be-llef
that the more one makes, the more
limited he is in ideas, Norhausen com-
mented, "The more work you do, tlle
1nore and more ideas you get"
And he has progressed from
necklaces to abstract wood com-
posiUons.
There's no telling \\'here Heln1
Norhau:sen may go from here.
From Page 1
EISENHOWER ...
doctors reported l\tonday night were
ont or the factors involved in their rul·
lng out a transplant operation.
And the doctor• refmed only to lhe
''chronoto0 of Gen. Ei.1enhawer'1 ii·
lnesses" over the yean -includ.lng
bl1 llelU., gall bladder, cerebral
1trolie, pcoatato aland trouble and
other Ulnta1ee.
Another que1tion aJlred -thl1 one
by t.he Associated Preas:-was thJ1 :
'"In tbe light o! your 3,30 p.m.
report yesterday that the 1ener1l'1
coodiUon sbowed a 'gradual worsen·
in&,' does your lat.tr report at 10 p.m.
-noting 'fewer Instances of ven-
trlcular in'<l'&larity' -mun thal th•
'worsentna' has been halted. at lout
slowed in pace; e«, indeed, kept bick
somtY.'hat? And what Is the 5ituition
on this same score rlgbt now?"
\Vithout giving a direct answer, doc·
tors referred reporters to the text of
the formal medical bulletin, which did
not •ppeat to rpeclfically answer the
question.
Phone Talks Resume
CHICAGO (UP!) -Bertalnlng
teams of Ullnola Bell Telephone Co.
and electrical worti:ers meet agaln to-
day on the 104th day ol a strike that ia
hamperi.ns Democratic N a t J o n a I
Convent.ioo communicaUoo:s.
hla TelQ ranch,
WulWlaton. He had
mott of thJs month.
(liea
been
n ... to
1n Teua
Jn clMrly emotional tones, Johnsen
:said nobody wants peace more than he
and he damned Hanoi for what he
charged was its failure to respond
clearly and affirmatively to hi s
March 31 order reslrlcUng bomblng of
the North.
"Let's don 't be hoodwinked. Let's
not be misled ... We're not going to
stop the bombing just to let them step
up their bloodshed," Johnson declared.
"So loog as I am your American
commander in chief, we •re not going
Opera
to bo lowld Wllllllll." h1 Id U11
chearing veteran1.'
Returnlaa to poUtka, Job'!°n Mid
ol the U.S. troops doing the _pghUng:
"They are going to have a voif:e in this
campaign before it's over." 1 Jn withdrawing from 1968 pre1iden-
tia1 polltics nearly five mo3tthc ago,
Johnson saJd he wanted to dJ,vorce hJ1
searcil for peace al:lroad and barmony
at home from parUaan oo,astderationa.
But in his Df:lrp1t speech Johnson
made It clear he doesn't like all that
he hears in the rurrent camfalgll.
S<>me WWte House .aide& argued
afterwards that bla hold·the·llne ad·
Dire~tor
dmc could cml:t halp Vici Pnlldant
Hubert IL Humphrey, &ont 111Mer for
the DemocraUc presidential nomina·
tlon.
This was based on the theory th.at
Humphrey's Vietna mposition is far
closer to Johnson's than that of his
chief rival for the nc.mination, Sen.
McCarthy, who la calling for a total
and w1condiliQnal bombing halt.
But, some others, outside the \Vhite
House, wondered if the gainer might
n o t be the Republican nominee,
Richard M. Nixon, wh()Se Veitnam
policy in many respecl.3 is clo.se to a
carbon copy of JohMon's.
Miffed
Stage Complaints Heard 11 Months Afterward
By THOMAS FORTUNE
01 !hi IMl1r ,ll1t 11111
Surprise and hurt was the reaction
of Velma Sun, executive director ot
the Lyric Opera, to remarks critical of
the Opera by directors of the Festival
Of A<l.I.
She read of complaints that the Ir·
vine Bowl stage wasn't put back in or·
der following the opera season.
"We kept everyone behind three
days to clear the stage and put things
back in order," she recalled. "We
thought we had done ev,erything that
needed to be done and did not hear
otherwise.''
So she was surprised to r e a d 11
months later that Stuart Durkee told
fellow Festival board members, "LaSt
year it took two men about two weeks
to re"I'lg the stage."
BaITY McGee, the Opera's technical
director, asked her when the season
ended iI she had heard any complaints
about the stage, she remembered. She
told him she had beard none.
She still hasn't; she only read about
Durkee's comment at the Festival
board meeting last week.
She said that just last week she
viewed the stage with McGee and thew
noticed it has been greatly improve .
"Mr. McGee felt that many of these
improvements had been based on hi
thoughts of the way the stage ought o
be for broad community use," she
said.
The entire electrical system has
been redone and partitions installed
she noted. "It came as great relief t~
Mr. McGee that he won't have to redo
the stage thls year."
She saii:l the Opera will not be the
only group to benefit because Irvine
Bowl stage is now suitable for year
around use and not rigged exclusively
for the Pageant of the Masers.
The Festival board's production
committee is considering charging the
Opera a deposit from which costs of
putting the stage back in order would
be deducted.
Mrs. Sun thinks the question never
would have arisen if the Festival
board had communicated with the
Opera people.
Forms Available
For Nomination
Of Ai1 Jurors
Newport Council Calls
Ocean Front Emergency
Nomination forms are available 1o
select the Festival Of Arts 1969
ground1> admittance jury to determine
who shall exhibit work at next year's
art spectacular.
Deadline for returning the com-
pleted nominatioo forms is Sept. 2.
Verner Beck, Festival grounds
committee chairman, said any ex-
hibitor or unsuccessful applicant for
the 1968 season may sponsor, circulate
<>r sign one nomination form to
nominate a juror.
Four jUI'Orf, are to be elected along
with two alternates. Two of these and
t.n alternate are to represent the
traditional viewpoint in art. The other
t'"'·o and an alternate are to represent
modern art.
~lembers of the Festival board later
will appoint three more jurors making
ai panel or seven perscms responsible
for judging the keen competition.
Nomination forms may be picked up
at the Festival office.
$2,000 Damage
Caused by Fire
Fire in a basement storage area at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Kahn, 1759 S. Coast Highway, caused
an estimated $2,000 in damage satur.
day, Laguna Beach firemen said.
The Kahns weren't home when
neighbors noticed smoke coming from
the house only a block from the new
Agate Street fire station. Firemen
C<>nfined the blaze to the basement and
quickly extinguished it.
Boxes of excelsior helped feed th e
fire, firemen said. Cause was not
determined.
A state of limited peril exists of.
flclally, as well as in fact, along West
Newport's crumbling ocean front to·
day.
Newport Beach city councilmen
formally declared the emergency late
Monday night.
They acted in response to urgings of
West Newport homeowners, including
Councilman Donald A. Mcinnis, who a
year ago lost a patio wan to the forces
or erosion. The wall was never replac-
ed, and the sea came back late Mon·
day.
Boominf surf, borne high on a 5.5·
foot tide, clawed away great Chunks of
beach from 40th Street to the Santa
Ana River jetty, a disbance of 33
blocks.
The council's unaJ\imous "Umited
peril" declaration clears ~he way for
the emergency mobilization -if need·
ed -of all Orange County agencies
and workers. These would include
sandbagging crews from the Division
of Forestry, County Jail and HMbor
District.
Whether the actual request for th.is
mobilization will be made was left to
the option of the city sarf. Councilmen
also instructed the staff to ask the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to ad·
\•ance a $250 ,000 erosion control pro·
ject slr.ted to begin Sept. 3.
"The situation dawn there," said
t-.1clnnis, "ill as wild as I've ever seen
it."
City Engineer Ben Nolan agreed. 11c
said the beach is in "rapidly worsen·
ing'' cood.ition, and suggested that
prwnpt city approval be given the
Corps project and that a request for
speeding it up be made.
The Corps project -the second in
\Vest Newport in less than a year -
will involve a 150,000 cubic yard
sandhaul from the Santa Ana River
area to the 40th-46th Street area, and
construction of a second 250-foot long
steel sheet groin at the end or either
44th or 45th Street.
Nolan said th.is morning he had ask·
ed the Corps to c0nsider placement of
additional tons of rocks along the
erosion front as an emergency
measure. "They'll do it, if they
feel it's necessary," he said. "Right
now the situation lo0ks a little better
than last night. but we've still got a
six to nine foot surf.
Two weeks a rock barrier was form·
ed by the Corps parallel to dozens of
endangered homes. It helped break up
the surf, but some potiol5 were 5till 1n·
undated by the foaming surge.
Unique Jailbreak
Tried as Thief
Attempts Entry
Orange Cou!lf.y's lockup has suffered
a number of jailbreaks, but today
sheriff's officers disclosed somebody
tried to break in.
County jail was broken into at about
11 p.m. Monday by an unidentified
person who scaled the sheer north
wait He climbed four stories to reach
the sheriff's crime lab.
Using the drain pipe as a hand hold,
the jailbreaker entered the crime lab
through a scr~ned window and then
broke open three locked doors to 11!ach
the lab.
Capt. James Broadbelt of the Sher-
iff's office said it was hard to tell what
the thief was after but that all tho
evidence for sherilrs cases was held
in the crime lab. This would be of
great value to certain persons, be sug·
gested.
"We're presently checkin~ all the
evidence for any loss, we don t know if
anything is missing rigtt now ,"
Broadbelt said.
only .
__,,.-..;;:///
has it!
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from both the pila of the c.trp•" end
the cerpet b•ckfn9.
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SOIL • 1 TA• DIN Ii AND MOTH
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• •
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"
!E ye-catching Hairdo
For a change, it's a Richard Burton who displays unusual hair style
as he and wife, Elizabeth Taylor arrive in New York aboard thr
Queen Elizabeth. Miss Taylor, 36 , is recuperating from a recent
partial hysterectomy.
600 Cong Overrun Post,
Massacre 34 Defenders
SAIGON {UPI) -About 600 Viet
Ccng, using homemade grenades of
soft drink cans filled with explosives.
overran a tiny American-South Viet-
namese outpost south of Da Nang to·
day and killed all 34 defenders.
Harriman Has
Hopes Despite
Talks Impas se
PARIS (UPI ) -Despite the 15-
•vPek-old impasse in the Paris talks ori
\'ietnam. U. S. chief negotiator \V .
Avrrell Harriman is still hopeful about
th,.ir future.
Killed were nine U. S. Marines. a
Navy Seabee and 24 Vietnamese
Popular F'orce CPF:') troops. The last
radio message from the post, 20 miles
south or the big fo.iarine base at Da
Nang called for U. S. air and artillery
strikes on the post.
Other Marines, it was disclosed to-
day, invaded the Demilitarized Zone in
a helicopter assault but could find no
Coinmunist troops in a day\ong sweep
through the southern half of the swam-
py no-man's land.
U. S. spokesmen said elements of
the 1st Marine Division were airlifted
at dawn Monday to the banks of the
Ben Hai River, which divides the six·
mile-wide buffer zone and serves as
the north-south border. It was one of
the rare times in the war that
American troops had invaded the
DMZ.
The spokesmen said the Marine.~
drove southward through the swampy
1narshlands in the southern half of the
DMZ but made no contact with North
Vietnamese troops.
\Vhen night fell. !he Marines pulled
out and set up positions at Con Thien.
an isolated border outpost which has
come under numerous Communist
rocket and ground attacks in the past.
• ::¢4 "' a::.;;:
Shot Doctor
Battling
For Life
A Huntington HarbOur d o ct or
critically wounded In a gun fight with
his wife Sunday night continued to
right for life today as Huntington
Beach police puzzled over his exact
occupation.
Dr. John 1-~enner, 36, of 4162 Trum·
bull Drive, in the ex pen s i v e ,
waterway-laced subdivision, is in llun-
lington lntercommunity Hospital with
two bullet wounds in the abdomen.
Investigators say he was wounded
by his estranged wife. Sylvia, 39 .
whom he apparenUy killed with ooe
shot in the ~art from a hunting rifle
which he wrestled from the screaming
woman.
Police Capt. Earle Robitaille said
Monday that it appears Mrs. Fenner
attempted to kill her husband and the
wounded physician finally acted in
self-defense.
Neighbors telephoned police after
hearing a series of angry shouts,
screams and shots and first officers
on the scene found little Ny le Fenner.
3. daughter of the couple , sobbing over
her dead mother's body.
Dr. Fenner -who is not presently a
practicing physician -was i.ble to
guide police officers in giving him first
aid and later helped diagnose the
grave extent of his gunshot wounds
when hospitalized.
Investigators said Dr. Fenner listed
his occupation as lecturer for James
W. Newman and Associates Inc., a
Beverly Boulevard company Listed as
an educational organization by the Los
Angeles Chamber of Commerce.
Exact nature or the firm's education
is what is app<.irently in question lo·
day.
A neighbor of the Fenners told the
DAILY PILOT today that Dr. r~enner
had given her a brochure about the
company, advertising PACE
Seminars, reportedly designed lo build
increased confidence and creativity.
The brochure went on to s<:y the
s~minars were for couples and that
they encouraged participation, but. in
their words. no student was ever em ·
barrassed or put on the spot.
The pamphlel said nothing abou'
subject matter or cost.
Contacted by the DA ILY PILOT to·
day, a spokesman for the Los Angeles
fi rm offered lo have someone more
fa miliar with the operation return a
•!all to offer information.
llarriman. in an interview laperi
f\.1o nday night by the French National
Television Network for broadcast later
in the week. said while there has been
no "direct progress" so far there were
sii;?ns there might be some eventually.
"I can't say that there has been any
direct progress in these talks.''
1.iarriman s a i d. "I think that many
things have happened that give some
inrHcation that prol!ress may come."
Nixon Sees Landslide
The 77-year-old Harriman expre~sed
<'n nfidence the talks wot1ld continue
:lnd that "neither side wants to break
thf'm off.''
He said he was also "satisifed .. that
'·at some time. t here will be a way
found to establish the fact that the
north will not take advantage of the
mi\itarv de-escalation of the war."
The lack of any a~eement on this
la!>t point has been the cause of the
talks deadlock to date.
The United States has steadfastly in·
!iisted that before it declare~ a total
hombing hall over North Vietnam.
Hanoi must fir st i;?ive some indication
nf "reciprocal" de-escalation in the
):!:round war in the south.
Hanoi has demanded lhe "un-
conditional" halt of the bombing
before the real issues or the Vietnam
\Var can be discussed.
On Monday, Hanoi 's chi e !
spokesman at the talks, Nguyen Thanh
Le. reiterated this demand after ac-
cusing the United States of "con-
linuing and intensifying their war or
::i~gression in Vietnam" while pro.
fe.~sin ~ lo talk peace in Paris.
Le further accused the United Sf;:i!cs
of violatini? tht 1954 Geneva Con.
vention on Vietnam and occupying lhr
~nulhern half of the Demilitarized
Zone IDMZl la!>I week.
U. S. and North V i e t n a m es e
negotiators were to meet for the 18th
time Wednesday.
Win for Republicans
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) -Ri chard
M. Nixon says his first full day of na-
tional campaigning has convinced him
he can win the presidential election by
a landslide.
"Across the country a tide is begin-
ning to run," the Republican candidate
for president told a reception of Ohio
Republicans Monday night "All we
have to do is push it day and night and
it will be a landslide.''
His voice hoarse From a day of spea
king in Illinois. Mi chigan and Ohio.
Nixon prepared For a meeting loda~
with Ohio Gov. James H. Rhodes.
He met on Monday with Gov.
George Romney of Michigan, once an
opponent for the GOP nomination, and
carried away the governor's promise
to campaign for him in other states.
Nixon aides ~aid the object of thP
1neeting with Rhodes is to win the full
.~upport or the independent-minded
Republican organization. Rhodel!i heir!
his fa vorite son delegation behind him
al the GOP conventi<Jn.
Nixon's stratea-ists said that while
they hope Rhodes will make some na·
1ional appear:ances for the ticke!. they
are counting most on his organization
delivering the key state to Nixon in
November.
Later in the day, Nixon meets with
Gov. Raymond P. Shafer in Har-
risburg. Shafer supported New York
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller for the
GOP presidential nomination. Nixon
1neets Wednesday with Rockefeller in
the New York City apartment house
where they both live.
For Nixon, Monday was a day of
flyi ng visits to state Capitols, hasty
news conferences in 1 e g i s I a t i v e
chambers, closed meetings with state
Republican leaders, and handshakini;:
with crowds who turned out to see
him.
Once, he talked by two way radio to
President J oh n s o n as their
rnotorcades sped in opposite directions
on a freeway outside Detroit.
Nixon was leaving lhe Veterans or
Fo~ign \Y a r s convention and the
President was ,l?oing there to speak.
Secret Service men put them in touch
\vith each other and Nixon assured
Johnson he would face an attentive au·
dience.
NIXON IN ILLI NOIS -Republican presidential
nominee Richard M. Nixon greets weU·wishers on
steps of state capitol in Springfield. Nixon spoke to
3,500 penon.1 1n first p~bllc rally 1ince receiving
Uf'I T•lit!tMte
GOP nomination. Former vice president told crowd
GOP wa! going ''to carry Ilhnois like it's never
been carried.•·
•• '
•
u •••• • $ if a a -. •••• ' as== a -.;s:: =· ---
Tuesday. August 20, 1968 DAIL V PILOT :J
HEARINGS UNDER WAY -Democratic Plat·
form Committee. 110 members strong, has started
hearings in Washington. Committee is sharply
divided over how to deal with urban violence and
UP!Tt ......
Vietnam war. Both issues may lead to bruising
floor fights when Democratic National Convention
opens in Chicago next week.
HHH Claims Early Victory
Cl11CAGO !UPI) -J·lumphrey
rorces confidently claimed the votes
today for a first-baliol victory at lhe
Democratic convention regardless of
the outcome of a series of party
squabbles. They began talking about a
vice presidential running male.
A spokesman For llubert I I .
Humphrey said a "very hard ,
realistic" rundown ba~ed on personal
contacts with individual dC'legates
gave the vice president 1.400 votes
with 1,312 needed to win. Jle predicted
the total would grow before next
week's balloting.
Stephen A. fo.1itche11 . a former
Democratic national chairman and
now a top strategist for Sen. Eugene J .
McCarthy. retorted that the Hum·
phr cy claim~ were exaggerated. !·le
~aid ~lumphrey "peaked" a week <1gn
and now was "makin,I!: au that noise"
to hide the erosion in his strength.
Mitchell also raised the possibilit.\'
that the convention might not be able
lo open on schedule Monday if Chica~o
transportation, already hampered by a
c<lb strike, ls hit by other v.·alkouts. 11e
also mentioned the illness of former
President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
''There have been recessed con-
vrnti ons before," Mitchell told a news
conference. He denied. however, that
McCarthy forces were trying to dra,e;
out the convention w i t h t he i r
challenges of a big bloc of delegate!'> on
grounds of disloyally and racial
di!>Criminallon.
Infant Killed in Fall
LOS ANGELES (UPJ) -An 11·
month·old girl rolled off her bed and
Fell three stories out her apartment
\\'indow Monday . suffering fat.al in·
juries.
Mrs. El vira Duesas told police she
placed her daughter. f\1aria. on the
bed which \1•:l~ lr"~' ·····11 the window
to change her diapers.
at your caff
Thi Humphrey delegate count was
made public by Lawrence F. O'Brien,
former postmaster general. who said
it would be very difficult for the
McCarthy camp "to turn this around."
!·le gave McCarthy fewer than 6()()
votes whereas Mitchel\ put the figure
at "between 600 and 700."
The vice president himseU was
described as being so confident that he
had pl aced four men at the top of his
list of possible running mates although
he had not yet foreclosed the possibili·
ty of someone else.
1'he four were identified as Sen.
f'red J . Harris of Oklahoma, Sen. Ed·
mund S. Muskie of Maine, R. Sargent
Shriver. U.S. Ambassador to France
and former head of the war on pover·
ty. and Gov, Richard J. Hughes of
New Jersey,
~lumphrcy wants a running mate
who combines a youthful image with
experience in the problems of the
cities and ghettos.
'2:
.I ~ ~
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IC.. ... lllt' .. ._P._MMfJ
On summer nl&hts, 1111 Moyer
and hi• wUe 11.ke to sizzle 1teelt1
out on the patio of their re1ldence
in Torrance. However, their first
floor apartment terrace fronts on
th e 1idewalk, and recently a thief
made off with the arUJ. When he
bought a new one, Mayer chained
the barbecue IW!d to hi• apart-
ment door. Lui night, someone
stole h11 steak. •
Prett11 Edie Vomtt"Q'Ut dUJ)la111 a Gtnt
~1cCarthy campaign 1ticktr in a
unique position tbhiZ. attending a
r./a mbakt f or McCarthu m Dmnil,
~1as$. Edie is the daughtlr of MUtlf.st
Kurt Vonnegut of Ba.ratable, Maa.s. • Huey P•ul Jon11 of Pueblo,
Colo., is a patient· man .••. but
enough is enough. Jones did not
file a complaint when 10mebody
broke into bis home and stole a ra·
dio . , . or even when someone stole
his new hat. But ht went straight
to the sheriff's office when some-
body stole a botue of vodka fro m
his camper. • Miss J11n Shufflebotham of Man-
chester, England, has overcome a
prime source of embarrassment.
She has changed her last name to
Shaw. • When Mrs. Seiko T1ut1uml'1
purse \Vas sna tched on 1 dark
street, poUce made a quick arrest
and recovered the purse and the
~25 tha t was in it. The suspect,
Masumi Oanno, was dismfssed
from bis post as sergeant of police
in Fukuoka, Japan. •
I) A trio of Ro11al Au.itraltan Air ~ Force pilot& postd proudlll' for
photographs beside their hJldro-
gen balloon, thtn climbtd into
tht carriage for a heralded trip
across Australia. Effort. to get
fli t balloon airbornt ripptd a
holt in tltt sidt. It was de/lattd
alon g with thrtt malt ego1.
..... ., """"'------• New female clerks at Indiana
Methodist Hoopltal took a le5t on
deciphering hand-written instruc-
tio ns by phyllcian11. An instruction
\vh ich r ea d "Ambulate . walk· be-
tween bars." was translated by
one girl as "Amputate between the
ears.••
Tll6d1y, A119ust 20, 1968
Ohio Prison
Riot Flares;
2 Men Shot
COLUMBUS, Ohio CUP!) -Nine cuarc:t. were ..U..d by convictl 11
hOltapl today at tile Ohio Stall
Penitentiary, rocked by a fl mllMon
fire and riot June 24. One report 1aJd
two convictl Wflfe 1hot.
Ohio State Corrections Chief Maury
Koblentz 1a1d the nlne 1uarda were
held hot111e In a .. u block occupied
by 55 inmates who were C001ldered
ringleader• ol the June 24 rtot.
Tbe prilon commlaaary wu 1et on
fire but the flame1 were axtltnaui•hed
quickly by the Columbus Fire Deport·
ment.
Koblentz &aid the d i 1 turb a nee
ltarted when a priacoer bWlg Md out
of a 1bower att.adted • f\W'd, took hi•
key1 and opened cella and releued an
undetermined nwnber of. prisoners.
Koblentz 1aid one guard wa1 cut
during a 1cuffle with the lnmilte1.
Sixty member• of the Ohio IDghway
Patrol and 15 city police~~uiler1 were
sent to the prison. The highway
patxolmen went inside the walls while
the city policemen guarded the outside
of the 137-year4d penitentiary.
Koblentz, State Adj. C... S. T. Del
Cor!o, Highway Patrol Superintendent
Robert Chiaramonte, Columbus Mayor
M. E. Sensenbrenner, C it y Safety
Dlreotor Fred Simon and Police Chief
Robert Baus were at the scene.
Last June 24, hundred.a of convicts
went on a rampage in the prison yard,
setting numerow fires and holding
several guards hostage. City police,
the Ohio Highway Patrol and the Ohio
Nattmal Guard q u e J led the
diaturballce.
Train Explodes;
Ammonia Fumes
Threaten Town
BEATr!E, Kan. CUP!) -Ammonia
fwnea &pread t:hroogtJ tdlis northeast
Kansas commwUty Monday night
aft.er a tank containing ttie gaa ex·
ploded ia.t a grain elevator.
M06t o fthe 327 resldenl.5 of the com-
munity evacuated their homes and no
injuries were reported.
Marshall County sheriff's officers
patrolled. tbe atreet.s later Monda y
night because of trouble with looting ,
the .sheriff's dtspakher reported.
A toain heullng cattle from St.
JOlf!Ph, Mo., to fMryvaille, .IWI., was
delayed at Extol!, Kan.. u n t 11
authorities determined Jt wa1 Nie for
the !rain to pus t!lroulh Beattie.
Properly damage oCller tilon to the
tank -•llllllt. the hl1!1Jw>,y palrol tal<I.
CauM of the exiploRon at tile
Farmer's Cooperative Eley.at.or was
not immedkbly known.
Famous Jockey
Earl Sande Dies
SALEM. Ore. (AP ) -Earl Sande'.
fam«11 three-time Kentucky Derby
wWlinl jocltey and member of th•
Racing Hall Of Fame, died in a
southern Oregon nurMg borne Mon -
day after a lin gering llln~. He wa;;
69.
Sande rode Kentucky Derby winners
in um, 19'l5 and 1930, and \IM S elected
to Racirrg 's Hall ol Fiame in 19M.
Sande, in ill healtti, came to Oregon
about four years ego .and made his
home witlh his tattier, John C. Sande of
Salem, wbo IJ 98.
DONATES HIART
Mrs. O•tptr Ga•ccone
New Transplant
Patient Listed
'S atisfactory'
HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -A SQ.year.
old shoe salesman, the second heart
transplant recipient in Houston ln two
days, was described as satisfactory
after the operation Monday.
Carl Van Bates of Amarillo, Tex.,
became the world's 32nd human heart
recipient in a lOO·minute operation
performed by a team ol Tex.aa Heart
lnatitute surgeons.
The donor waa Mrs. Gasper B.
Geaccone Jr., 37, a Houston mother of
two cttildren. She died aa a result of a
brain tumor.
Less than 36 hours earlier, surgeons
led by Dr. Denton A. Cooley implanted
the heart of an ll·year-old boy In the
chest of Maria Giannaris, 5, of
H.ager1town, Mid.
The girl, also listed as aatuiactory,
played with a color book and com·
plained ci being hungry Monday.
The heart. transfer-a were ttie 9th and
loth performed at St. Lu le: e '1
Epilcopal Hospital. .
Maria, daughter Of Mr. and Mrs.
Nick A. Giamaris, had heart trouble
since &he was an infant. She received
the heart of Jamea Dudley Herron II,
son o( James Dudley Herron. a pro-
feasor at Purdue Univen!ity at
Lafayette. Ind.
The boy had suffered a brain hemor·
rhage and died Sunday alter he was
flown here.
80 Marijuana ,.
Plants Seized;
27 Suspects Held
DOWNEY (UPI) -Sheriff"s of.
fleer• end Downef police rounded up
27 suspected narcotics offenders Mon·
di')' niJbt and confiscated 80 mari·
juana plant. found growing in back
yarda Of the IUSpecls and in vacant
lots ne-ar their homes.
Nine of thole arrMited were women.
All 27 suspects were described by a
&htrlff's office spokesma n as persoos
in their twenties.
Fourteen of the arrests took place in
Downey. and six others were made in
Compton.
In addjti(ln to the marijuana plants,
officers confiscated 110.000 worth of
conceatrated methed.ri.n.
Detectives 1aid that if !tie drug were
converted inb:> pill• and sold on Uie
open market it would have potential
retail value of fl0,000.
All suspect.I were booked on charges
cl nareotlcs posaession.
The marijuana plants were describ-
ed aa about two feet tall. sWl too im·
mature !cw harvesting and oonversioo
I.mo smokiahle fonn.
Fair Locally Today
Scattered Thunderstorm s Plague Rest of Nation
California
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Negroes Imitate Cong~
Hit, Run Tactics Used in Florida Firebombings
ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. (UPI) -
Negro gangs which have been on a
firebombing and rock-throwing ram-
page for four ni ght. In the retirement
city are takin1 a eue from Ho Chi
Mlnb, an NAACP leader said today.
"They're reading the tactics of the
Viet Cong," said Ma:rvin Davi es,
Florida ftetd director of the NAACP .
"Hit and run, burn and run.
"'nlla ls a revolt, not a riot. You'd be
.surprised what they're readmne."
Molotov cocktails found new targets
as darkness closed in on the southllde
Negro district Mond1y nJght and again
the highway patrol's battlwcarred
armored van was called out to rout •
mJI Hng mob with tear g11.
T h e firebombs h I t • warehOUJe,
grocery and a white-<>wned tp>galow .
but none WIS 1erlOUJ!y dama.ged.
Pa11in& oar1 were pelted by r ocks
and b o t t 1 e 1. but there wm no
reported lnjurlH .
A youn1 white man showed police a
Charged With Fraud
ASBURY PARK, N.J. (UPI) -
S1n1er Judy Garland w11 charfed
Mondoy with dofr1udin1 an Asbury
Park hotel ot '528 1he aUe1edly owed
for her bill durin& I two-day
perform.aoce here thJ1 summer.
Edward Stott, general mana&er of
the Empress Hotel, complained that
Mi11 Garland did not pay the bill she
ran up during a J uoe 12-14 appearance
at the Garden State ArU Center
outside Asbury Park.
bullet bole In the door ol his car. Ho
aald be was fired upon whllo riding
throulh tile Negro dlalrlct with his llrl
friend.
City Manager Lynn Andrew•, who
Monday •lapped restriction1 on the
cale of gasoline and liquor 1n the area.
denied the violence crew out of •
dispute with some 200 fired a:arba1•
men, which hu aeen several maas
marches on City Hall in recent weeks.
Davis disagreed. ''City police are
out to kill off the more vital Negroes
In th1a area by putting them In jail and
dlarlinl bllh bond•," he 1ald.
Earlier Monday, Davis blamed
"police brutality and harassment" for
tbe \JDI'Ut.
"As a matter of fact," he 1aid, "I
think it's goin1 to &pread."
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BUSINESS ANO PROFESSIONAL TOUCH -Mn. Emily Strick-
er looks over possible decorations to add a South of the Border
touch to a Mexican Fiesta Party she will host in her Laguna
'3each home Friday night. Offering their opinions are fellow Busi-
Ear ly Club G~ts Prog rams
'Mame' Awaits
Chartered . Bus
Regardless of its name, Monday Morning Club ~
Laguna seems to keep. its members hopping practically
every day of the week.
A chartered bu s, loaded with 34 members of the
club's theater group tomorrow afternoon , will be head·
ed toward the Music Center for a matinee performance
o{ "Mame" foUowing a luncheon in the Curtain Call
restaurant.
The theater group committee planning such excur·
sions consists of the Mmes. R. J. Starbeek, Evelyn B.
Moore, Bess L. Thompson, Elmer A. Wagner, J. T.
Cranmer and Leroy Barton and is chaired by Mrs.
Robert W. Roper and Mrs. Walter J. Sherry.
A future trip for the theater group, open to all
members and their hu sbands, will head to the Hol1y·
wood Bowl for a performance of Gershwin music. con.
ducted by Skitch Henderson on Saturday, Sept. 7.
Arrangements al so have been made for the theater
group to go to Las Vegas in January where they will
catch the holiday Christmas and New Year show at the
Riviera Hotel.
J\1ea nwhile. a new ~eries of p r o g r a m s for lht
1nonlhl y luncheons. which take pl ace the second Mon·
day of each month. are being pla nned .
Some of these programs will be discussed during
a luncheon for board members hosted by president
J\1rs. Frederic L. Siebert Monday! Aug: 26. After enjo~
ing a noon luncheon members will adjourn for a bust·
ness meeting.
ness and Professional Woman's Club members of Laguna Beach
(left) Mrs. Albert Cornelius and Mrs. Burl Lovelady, (.right). The
party will begin with a 7 p.m. social hour.
••"-•·-······ ""'.,. tl •
.. )I.' t
-
JEAN COX, --T.....,..,., ..._, a IMI LI , ... ll
No Siestas at Fiesta
Ole Hea ·rd:
Laguna Beach Business and Professional. Women's
Club members will break their two months period of
.Uence with an "ole" Friday night in the home of their
president, Mrs . Emily Stricker.
The occasi~ is a _Mexican Fiesta p~rty wHiCh wµJ.
Mture a Mextcan .diMer and el'ltertainm..etit for .,,
club members and their guests btginninf With ·• ioclal
hour at 1 p.m. .
''We are inactive for the months of Ju1y and A'uf-
ust. so this party gives us a chan·ce to &et ,together
again before we go active in September,"· the club
president explained.
Senors and Senoritas, dressed in Mexican splendor.
will dine on enchiladas, beans and rice by caridleligtit
on Mrs. Stricker's patio which will bt decorated ·WiUt
colorful murals, blinking lights on the walls and ~ ~olf1
hanging from the ceiling.
Roving guitarist Jason Wineinger, dressed in 1prang-
led trousers, a fancy jad<et and 1 big lloppy bow lit ·le
complete his outfit, will 1eren1de the ,Ueal:I.
Ticket. are $S per person ll!ld NSIMllicm•are-r..
Ing taken by Mrs. Edna Cennichael, 4'1-2866 ·Ol'·Mn.
Stricker, •114-5773.
"' ..
·~ •· " :
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·'
. ,• A Membership Tea for members and ~uests will
take place in the home of Laguna Beach artist CyUene
Carr Monday, Sept. 9, at 2:30 p.m. ·
Highlight of the gattiering will be a perronnance
by harpist Harriet Wood.
THEY HAVE THE TICKETS -Hard-t<H:ome-by tickets to , ..
"~arne" in the Music Center are in the possession of. 34 member&
of Monday Morning Club of Laguna's theater group . Ready to
board chartered bus tomorrow to catch a matinee of the musical
comedy are (left to right) the Mmes. Bess Thompson, June
Sherry and Robert W. Roper. Theater buffs also will enjoy. 1 lun-
cheon in the Curtain Call restaurant.
' ' !
' I '
'Instan t Mother ' Refuses This Title, May Lose
11E . .\R ANN LANDERS: Why do you
1 ::::e your readers to get psyc hiatric
help? Don 't you know the suicide rate
of psychiatrists is the highest .among
the professionals? If you doubt it write
to the Journal of the American
Medical Association and get the
statistics.
I am a physician "'1o wod<I with all
types of specialilla. Th• psydliatriJU
are the balmiest of the lot. I'm rure
many psychiatrists go into the field in
search of solutions to their own pro·
blems. PleaS4? do your reading public a
favor and tell them the truth. -A
READER
OEAR ft EA OER: Bob Klpbulh who
spent 41 years at Vale w11 the v.-orld'1
ve1tett swimming coach. Ht turned
out ma11 y champion• but waa a
mfdfocre 1wlnuntr blm11U. Wbt• J I• '
ANN LANDERS
lo a 11loemater I ..... INt II !di
1boe1. I loot at tbe work ltt ... t.ned
out ftr othtra. Wbe• I so to a
carpenter, I do1't aak to aee tlrie bo111t
be Uvea In. I am Interested only In the
quaUty of the work he h11 done ror bis
cu1lomer1. I've seen beauty oprrAtors
whose hair looka frlt htful, but whn dn
beautiful "·ork on their cUent1. I know
e1ceUent pby1lcl1n1 who a r e
danieroualy overwel(ht and 1mnke
Uke chimneys. I know 1 aW'ieon wbo
bu lltedetl 1 lall illaddtr .,.,UIGI\
--····· -'•·-·---------
fer lov 7ear1. Bavtq the Werm1tion
ud btlaS Die to apply It te oae'a We
llf .. Olt ud tile ..... •1 fritnd.
DEAR ANN LANDERS' My h US·
band is a divorced man and the rather
of two children. I am 28 and tear h
school. We have no childre n.
When my husb and and his w I re
broke up she took the kids. which wai;
OK with him. Yesterday he received a
phone call from hl1 ex saying she was
lu.vin& town for aood and 1ince th•
kids would be a burden he would ha ve
to take them . He said "ftne " without
even aslcing me.
When he hlllli up he turned to me
and said, "Congratulatiqns, you are
now the prood mother of two
children." I told him I was not
prepued f« the "honor" and the least
he could have done was 11k me. w. cot into an ariwnent and he
Aid either I take the kids or Jet oUl
Does the law in Virginia say a step..
mother has to take a husband's
ch ildren by a former marriage? The
kids are 12 and 10 and a real hanctf11L
-FLABBERGASTED
Ot:AR FLAB : The legal aspects of
this problem are tbe least of your wor·
rle1, Lady . You need a tblrd party to
mediate "e war.
. Y-bu-ud 1bould•Hrllillll ilavt
asked you, even tbou&b It appears you
have no choice. I've 1atd It before and
I'll say Jt •&ala: Wben you marry a
divorced per1on wltb 1 family, that
family becomes part· of your We
whether 1ou Uke It or 11.ot.
DEA:R ANN l:.ANDEllS: H-11 1
tickliab aituation. that calll for • Ana
Landen-iab approach.
Scene: A soda! 11thorin1. Clmn)'I
ol. guests are seated or 1tandin1 -
making small (or large) talk. You find
yourself ch atting with two bria:ht peo-
ple. The conversation is fa st-movlng
and provocative. You discover after a
few minutes that the other two cnn·
versationalists are Rddressing each
other and you bea:ln to feel like a third
foot .
" ........... fO/Jd .,..._ D11·"11il . '
I ,
'
" ' •l • ,.
Anot-h.er ~; :1 r
-l ' ~"' ~ to interject hirn1ell into 1 conver11ua,.,
when he feela no one 11 interested _'!l
what he has to say. Does one jUJt I
there and listen or b it be.It to •
away? H you feel Jt 11 IMlt it
away, what does OM "1 ..-.
lllvu? -IGNORED .PA!lt'Y
DEAR JG1 °"' •Ollrl .... .,..
Dr!nklal -...........
you nm Wfth -bof,Jt • JOI "out" fer t-. Yoo ea ...i fl
stay popular. lltad "BOOIO and You .
P'or 1'eenapr1 Only." .stnd 31 cents t
coin 1nd a IOnJ, 1eU • ~ddH~ f stamp~ envelope with your roouest .J.
Ann Lanclera will be &lad to help yot ·,
with your problem1 .. Send the~ to htf'",
In caN of tht DAILY PILOT, toelOI' •
lnl • ..11.addnuad. lllllllP"I •
•tlopf. .• I '" .. I
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J 4 DAILY PILOT Tllf'~Y. August 20, 1968
Troth Told
At Party
During a family dinner
party th~ parent& o f
Patricia Ann Crabtree ao.-
nounced her betrothal to
James Kimball Lockwood.
Settin& for the informal
party was the home of the
bride-elect'• parents, Mr.
aJld. Mr1. Clyde Jacklon
Crabtree o f HlllEngton
Beach..
Mils Crabtree attended
Orange Coast College Jll1d is
a graduate of Los Ahgeles
College of Medical and Den-
tal Assistants.
Her fiance, SOD of Mr. and
Mrs. James Robert
Lockwood of Corona de!
Mar, ts an alwruius of Cal
Poly, Pomona, where be
majored In bwU>eY ad-
minhitration.
The couple have selected
Oct. 12 for their nuptials ID
the First United Methodist
Cburcb, HWllington Beach.
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE -That's what the
Harbor Senior Citizen's Club Ice Cream Luau prom-
ises to memben and guests attending the 7 p.m.
event Thursday, Aug. 22 in the organization's rec-
reation center. Planning for the evening are (left to
right) Mrs. Stella Marks with ice cream, Mrs. Ver-
onica Hanson with cards, Mrs. Aaron B. Christen·
sen with cookbook and Dr. Blanche Luther who is
taking notes.
Sorority
Tea Fetes
Members
Active Kappa Alpha
Th.W will be honored by
Match-mating Good Peeds
th9 torority'a Orange Coun-Rummaging around fo r charity's sake are members of Costa Mesa Rebekah
New AAUW Group Seniors Circle Date ty Alumnae Cub at • tea Lodge, who are ,Planning. for their rummage sale Thursday, Frtday and Sun-
Thunday, Aug.·22 from 3 !<> day, Aug. 22-24 m Costa Mesa. Mrs. Ranie Zuidema and Mrs. Douglas Mor-
5 p.m. In the home of Mll. gan (from left) are showing oH their plan to help the Odd Fellows Home for
Vernon Edler of Newport the Aged, an orphans' home, Eye Bank·Visual Research, the heart program,
Beach. junior lodges for boys and girls and a youth camp. Further information is Ehapter Forms For Ice Cream Luau The executive officers and available by 'calling Mr1. Lola Dobbeck at 548-7417 or Mrs. Zuidema at 5:J9..
commlt;.e cbalrmen of the 4216:
Orange Coast Alumnae Club _;=:;"----------------------------Now forming in ltun-
tington Beach is the newest
chapter o[ the Assocfatioo Of
American University
Women.
The first business and
Ol'ganir.ati.ooel meeting will
take place at 8 p.m. tomor-
row in the home of the
group'• temporary -prea.i-
dent, Mrs. Ralph Bauer.
The chapter, open to all
university or co 11 e g e
graduates, will stimulate the
continued int ellect ua 1
grow.th and advancement of
women, and " encourage the
discharge of tbeir 1pecial
responsibilities l n com·
m\lllity service. 'lbe natioa.al
organization offers women
• Ear ns Wings
The daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Tur·
zian of South Laguna is
a new ste\v ardess for
T\VA based out of Ken-
nedy Airport. M i s s
Pamela Tarzian receiv-
ed h e r wi ngs after
training in Missouri.
~
the opportumty to share
their special interests and
abilities socially.
Other temporary officers
include the Mmes. Robert
Horner, membership; Klaus
Scharz, eecretary; l.nui1
Freska, treasurer, a n d
Rooald Coyne, puMcity.
Formal acceptance of the
new chapter wHI occur in
ear1y fall w:lth the election
of offi'cen scheduled to take
place at that time.
Women interested in at-
tending the flrll meeting
ma1 call Mr1. Bauer, 84:7-
5487, or Mra. Horner, 847-
UI!, for a ddl tl o ·n al in-
f«"JD&tlon..
Members of the J.larbor
Senter Citizen's Club are
busy looking for Hawaiian
garb and phrases to use at
their Ice Cream Luau.
The event 1.s scheduled for
7 p.m. Tbur&day, Aug. 22 in
the organization's recrea·
tion center in Newport
Beach.
Mrs. Aaron Christensen,
the club'• social chairman,
11 ln chel'ge of the luau and
ha1 intenreted 1 Hawaiian
phrase "d.11 holoholo no
klapa-kai" to • mean that
there will be 1ometbln1 for
Annual Sale Offers
Interesting Objects
the enjoyment of everyone.
There will be a booth of
white elephants, games and
group singing. The Ginny's
Gang will oiler musical
numbers. There also will be
a special uhibltton of the
Charleston.
PersofMI over age SO are
invited to attend the event
which will feature home
made cakes and beverages.
The cost is 50 cmt1 per
person. For further in-
formation phone M r 1 .
Chrlst.enaen at 675-3279.
will be iresent u well as
membe" of the Junior Horoscope
Alumnae Club.
Mrs. Edler will be------~~.~~ t~ ::r ~~:'! Ar.1e.s·. Creat1've Including Mrs. David Knobel
and Mrs. Merle Amundson.
Generation
Talk Given
Day
WEDNESDAY prove costly. Be reasooabl• th<y actually exist.
UGUST 21 willlout being extravaganl SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22-A Message clear by tonight. Dec. 21): Good lunar aspect
By SYDNEY OMARR LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): today co i n c 1 d e s with
ARIES (March 21.Aprit Lunar cycle moves up. journeys of the mind. Your
19): Creative activities are Make appointments. Assert intellectual curiosity is fired
ed D t . ! yourseU. Check details of up. You can read, write, The annual Home League spoWght · ay 0 give 0 project which has been advertise. Your horizons ex·
dinner of U!e Salvati'oo yourseU. Apply unique ap-delayed. Now ls time to get p1nd -you come alive.
Army ls scheduled for proach to tasks, projects. things moving. Be specific, CAPRICORN {Dec. 22.
Thursday, Aug. 22 in the ~omanctic~tyls accentleded -.stho confident. Take the lead. Jan. 19). Finish wWlt ~\l
Lafayette Hotel, Lon t ..., .a vi connec W1 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22): :itart Get answer". Do· so ·
Beach. children. Belt to r e m a t n In even if embarrassing ques-
H. h C II Gunt speaker will be Lt. TAURUS (April 20-May background. From tltis van-tions must be put forth. Get
IQ 0 0 rs Col Sallie Chesham, author 21:1): Lunar aspect today t8ge point you can make to heart of matters. So·
of "Born to Battle" and coincldes w 1th obstacles me an.ingful observations, meone may be .attempting.to
Look for the hlgb-ri1lng dinctor of wo me n' 1 related to home, proPerty. Activity shoWIJl tn connection hide essential lnfonnation-
rollar to go into fall and eervices for the Souther! Freth viewpoint may be witti club, group, organiza-act accordingly.
winter .. on everything from California Division. needed. Don't peF pride tion. AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20-Feh.
d --••----, -~'ch 1, part to stand in wa y o progress. LIBRA (Seif,t ~Oct 22 ) 18): If you demand perfec-aytime blouses to long dln· •11e u.1.u.ue• ww Be more flexible. · "". · : tion , you -k for dis"p-of th. 11-~ annual Long Include fam y members in ..... tt ner dresses. i;ii GEMINI (May 21-June any entertainment. Day .. to pointment. Some c6n·
A fabuloua: uwortment ol Board members deci'ded Designers like it like the Beach Camp Meetfna:s, will 20): Stress today on how cement close relations~· s. cessions are necessary.
th kidn mao, or mandarin, or begin at 5 p.m. t Id t k Wh t n -•-•--DI matt ·th clothing, jewelry, furniture, to 1ell candy for e · ey Mrs. Cllesbam'• topic will you pu eas o wor . a .nccent mu.unuastan g scuss ers Wl mate,
l l d l -•-fund IDd wW. help theJr Nehru, whatever )'till wlsh ,.._.,__.._ Wi appears tbe easy way may can be cleared. Key ls your partner. Respond in manner a.PP a n c e I , au-, to call its flat fold or fabric be A \.NUU-UIJWltion th in fact be more expensive. ability to be mature. Extend which denotes wisdom. · ·
a:Iusware MJd other in· Junior membership dres1 that huga the throat. Today'1 Gelleratioo. Know tbil and investigate. hand of friendship. P ISCES (Feb. 19-March
terertin& cbjectl will be on dolls for Operation Merry Going r1g'1t on in female Key ts to l>e versatile. Check SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 20): Accent on people who
display when the Woman'• Chriltmu. fmhions too ht the true HB TOPS Club TAURUS message. 21): SpoUight on career work with and serve you.
Club of Huntington Beach A ipeclel dinner la turUeneck ah~g mOt!lt CANCER (June 21-July p otecrtial. Recognize op· You must strive for greater
frequently as sheer knit or Sa·ronr 2 Gain TOPS Club 22): Be wary cf those who portunity when lt"knocks. Be means of communication.·If
sponson it. annual rum-scheduled tor October and jersey blouse rising above meets every Monday at 7:30 waot to borrow. Keep watch reall~c in appraisal of . Ws you do, then your li!e
maa:e sale Friday, Aug. 23. diltrict ofncer1 will speak in wide fiat coll1r1 on suits and p.m. Jn Smith's Elementary on pogsetisions. Tendency events. Avoid self-deception. becOltles more pleasant and
The day-lone. ia.le will take ..:.;N.;cov_;e::m::be=r· ______ _,_co,,,a!!t'.'.:'·---------'Sc~hoo~J !!ln:_H~un!!tl!!n~gt!!o'.!!n.!B".:•:=•::::ch'.'.;._!!to!!w~a"'rd"-~ca"-r~el":e".:ss'.!!n~es'.".'....!:c"'ou:ol<>_d-"S:":ee:..!pe~rs~o"'n:,s.2si'.!!lu!!a'.!!ti~o~ns~a!Os....!'fr'°'u"'itf!!u<>_l.=~"':!Y'._".il:... __ _
place in the clubhOuse, 420
loth St.
Plaooiila: the event are.
Mr1. Dick Roberti,
~ one! Mn. Pearl
J<bfJIJ, c o·ch a irman-.
Proceedo will bo used !<>
auppcrt Ille club'• plUlan·
thropd.e1.
M.rt. Arnold P od 1 a d •,
president, called her new
boacd and chairmen for a
special summer meeting to
outline activities for \he
coming year.
mw us !lie Cit1• ovw-pcmjs •••
...tty ·didn't aoomeone think of it IPOODer?
ORANGE COUNTY'S
Now, the dress over separate bermuda pants. Smacking of
youth, made for mobiljty. The zingy feel of freedom.
T\J.'O up-to-the·instant dressa, all spiced ""ith .stpa· lr®l1!1'i'.?
•
b
rate bcrmuda pants. Served up by A 'n R Jr.
a. The wtapf"'d·up dr..,, with high ned:
wllar, of Or Joo• acrylic and wool jci><y
al DJ'Oll acztate, ia red aod Da~.C. aQcs :.-u. 28.00
Ii Tbe .... effort cait-atea, wltli """'
allion aa:mt, of. Or!oo• acrylic and "°"'
jersey bonded to rayon =tale, in ml and
navy, Jr. sizes ,_1, 28.00
may co you ng signature dresses 94
order by mail or phone
may co south coast plaza, san diego freeway, at bristol, costa mesa, 51699321
shop monday fflrough saturday, 10;00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
•
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DAILY PILOT JI(
Female Angles of Angling
Casting Flies Catches Men's Eyes
. By GAY PAULEY
NE W YORK (UPI) -Sh<
looks about as rnuoh like the
s t e r eo t y p e of the
weatherbeaten khaki clad
fisherman as Phyllis Diller
looks like Raquel Welch.
sports shows or clinics. talk· orpni.zation ol fishermen. touch my wrist or arm as l beautiful."
ing up the sport &he con-Mias Strobel aald one of cast. Jn my eagernes1 for Mis.! Strobel, who
1
llOW
&idera the worlds' most her pU.pils ooce was a blind hi m to learn I would uy, makes her home in New relaxing and also most ex·
hilarating. man -he had lost use of his 'you see, you see?' and he Orleans, ~d younpte.rt
W.iss Strobel's string of in· eyes in a hunting accident. would say, 'no, but I lln· "are really fabukK11 to
ternational fishing honors _S_h_•_...,_c_a1_1ec1_._"_H_e_wo_u_1d __ d_•_rs_tan_d_.' __ 11 __ w_as __ i_u_s_1_1_ .. _c_h_._ .. ______ _
::;Pinpointing Friendship
Yet Ann Strobel knows the
angles of angUng so W-'ll
that she holds numerous na-
tiooal and internationel
championships in casting,
most oC them won in com-
petitiOI\,, with men.
"If tfie men resent me,"
stie laughed, "they don't
show it to my face. I don't
know what they say behind
my back."
Miss Strobel. a curvey. 5-
feet, 4-inch, bl ue-eye d
blonde, bills herself as the
• only fulltfme professional fly
caster in the United States
today and travels the coun-
try demonstrating the in-
tricacies or using fishing
tackle.
She logs some 100.000
miles annually, giv ing
demonstrations. lecturin-g at
stretches from Lake Min-.
netonka, MiM., l-0 Oslo,
Norway. On Aug . 22 &be
leaves r 0 r Llnzerheidl.
Switzerland. for a world
competition in whi<:h all her
competitors will be mate.
When she set a world
reco.rt.I for fly casting ac·
curacy at Spa, Belgi um . she
\\'BS the lone woman among
106 men. She feel.s that the
men look on her not as e
woman but as a competil<lr
trying to win just as hard as
they arc.
A native of Beckley, W.
Va .. M.i'>S Strobel had moved
to Minneapolis to work as a
secretary. She started
fi shing trips .after a
~irlfriend invited her to join
the Izaak Wa.11on League.
the i..:nuffi cial international
A bounty of good-will to begin Delta Zeta by the Sea's new year is in~icated
by the oversized friendship pin Mrs. Lloyd McCoUum and Mrs. James Rich·
ants are offering Mrs. Dudley Pfaff (left to right). The alumnae chapter will
host a friendshi p coffee Saturday, Aug. 24 at the Karen Margret a Tivoli
Square. Beneficiaries will be hard of hearing children and the Navajo Indians,
the chapter's locaJ and national philanthropies. Delta Zetas are invited to call
Mrs. Richards at 545-0802 for additional infonnation.
Hadd Rings Celebrate
40"'Years of lv\arriage
The 40th wedding an-
nivergary of Mr . and Mrs.
Hadd rung was celebrated
in the Balboa. Bay Club.
Centerpie<'.es of Amerlcan
-Beauty Roses and fre.sh
eprtna: flowers decorated the
guest tables.
Among those attending
were tha couple's children
and grandchlldren including
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Craft
and Eileen, Denise, Cindy
~'ld Roy Craft; Mr 1 .
Dolores Poor and children,
Ni'ck Roemer and Steven
Poor with fiance Bruce
Jaco!;.:; and hls daughter.
Susie ,Jacobs, and Mr. and
tr.rs. Bill Ring a nd their
daughter Susan.
Kirk Hausers
Reside
Planning to make their
first home in Dubuque,
Iowa , are Mr . and Mr1. Kirk
Oliver Hauser .after their
:nuptial ceremonies in St.
A n d r e w ' ' Presbyterian
Ohurch.
The coUpie are honey-
.· inooning in Hawaii.
The tormer Susan Dee
HoUand, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William llolland of
Costa Mesa, exchanged
rings with her betrothed, the
son of Mrs. Edna Hauser of
Oak ·Park, Ill. and Merrill
Hauser of St. PauJ, Minn ..
before the Rev. Dr. Oiarles
Dierenfield.
The bride was escorted by
-her father down an aisle lin.-
.ed with candles and flowers
to an altar adorned with
!lower-bedecked candelabra
and a large centerpiece.
She chose a sleeveless A-
. li n~ gown of white r;Uk
organza over taffeta with
, panels of tiny daisy lace
down the bodice and a
center panel intertwined
· with pink velvet ribbon. Her
"full train was caught at mid
., back with a repeat of lace
panels. A high lace crown
held her shoulder length
veil, aod she carried a
nosegay bouquet of small
pink roses, rtep'1anotis and
~aby's breath.
:~ Resembling the pattern of
ihe wedding dress were tne
kmvns of her attendants,
frocked in long A-lines in
·tlint green chiffon with
satin bows at neck and mid
~ack. WJnt green tulle with i. satin bow formed the
beadpleces.
'.: Matron of honor and the
.
'
' '
' • •
• Iowa
bride's sister Mrs. Dee
Golden carried a cascade of
pink roses and carnations.
N"osegays of similar !lowers
were held by bridesmaids
Miss Oiarlene Newnes, Mrs.
Stephen Bi.I.ls and Miss Sue
Zi'egel. M.i&s Susan Golden,
the bride's nieoe, also was
attired in mint green and
carried pink Dowers for her
role as flower girl.
The bride's n e p h e w
Donald Golden was ring
bearer.
The bridegroom asked his
twin brother K e n n e t h
Hauser to stand as best
man, while Golden, James
Burk and Greg Garrett
assisted as ushers.
Miss Marleen Ski I ton ,
sorority sister of the bride.
sung the vocal selections.
From the church the cou·
pie traveled to the recep·
tion, in the Costa Mesa Golf
and Country Cl.uh. in a 1915
Model T Ford. G e r a Id
Schroder provided music for
the 250 guests.
Taking charge of the guest
book was Mrs. L i n d a
Barlow of Redonrlo Beach,
while Miss Jill Lansill of
Pasadena was in charge of
the gift table.
Gro ndmothers
Auxiliory
At noon every gecond
Thursday the Newport
Harbor Grandmothers' Club
meets in the Newport.er Inn.
Mrs. Verna Pitt at 64.2-3566
may be called for more in.
formation.
AND OF lliE WEEK
,. Whlte aatln r1bbona and lllles of the valley
~ deco rare thla wedding cake kn ife with lta
~ sterling al Iver handlt.S.rr.ted bl~1 l1ttaJnlM1atee1.
'· Gift boxed to m1kt a genulnefy thoughtful and
•.
:· ·-" ..
•
different wedding orohoworglft. lnllla11 and date
inl)' bo ongmocl on tho handle.
Ourapeclol p~ce $8.50 ongmfng extra
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT !EACH 644-lllO
Other relatives were Mrs.
fting'1 brother and his wife,
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hoag
with hls son and daughter·
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Eric
Hoag and Mrs. R in g ' 1
sister, Mrs. Ebba Webb.
Gueru included th e
Messrs. and Mmes. Walt
Sullivan, Bud Blanchette,
Vern Du d l e y , Hank
Mansfield, Paul Palmer, Al
Cox , Bud Caward, Walter
Mellott, Jack Cole , Tom
Hend e rson .Murray
Roberts, Charles Hester,
Marshall Duffield, Leslie
Steffenson, William Henry,
Dick Richard, Al Tiffany,
Pete Peterson, Nor m an n
Kendall, Boo C. Ro o 1 •
1-loward Guth, C. P . Taylor.
George Buccola, John Curci
and Dr, and Mrs. Dave
Nielsen.
Others were the Mmes.
MRS. KIRK HAUSER
Presbyterien Rites
Fred Button, Betty Denison,
Mary Axelaon , Jeanette
M:cCormic, Gordon Grundy,
Fred Hughes. Howland Pad·
dock, Ethel Brewer, Evelyn
Sherwood, Flos Kings baker,
George rneger, Vita Foote,
Vi Pe:ttcrson, Dor o t h y
Yardley, Naomi Kristenson,
Ruth Ficks and Alley Woef-
ly.
The bride Is a graduate of
San Diego State College
u·here she majored In nurs·
lng. She affiliated with Kap·
pa Delta.
Her husband, who Is
presently attending th e
University of Dubuque, has
served with the Marine
Corps in Vietnam.
~~~~--~~~~~~-
Gold discovered on Ghevron ls/and!
Island Gold' ..
Fine China
Island Gold Fine Chin.11. is truly fine china. Beautiful
bell-toned ! It's translu cent, -'th a tasteful edging of gold.
Island Gold Fine China is perfect for you,. :legant dinnen,
yet durable tnough for t vtryday use, too .
Companion piece11 available . At
all Standard Stations and panici·
pating Chevron Dealcn.
• . $129'
4 piece llCUiog
With I pl. purdwe
CHEVRON DEALERS • STANDARD STATIONS
•
--·-· ~ -·~ ---------
' •
ANNUAL SAVINGS
ON
VASSARETTE PAN'11ES
Vall881'9tte briefs, trunks and bikinis
of Antron®nylon tricot. White lily.
Brief and trunk styles
with enca~ elastic waistband.
Briel; slzes:4to7,11g.lJO •••• &IJJI
•. -t~...M+.
Briet, sizes 811119, reg.1.75 • ..llUI
Trunk; sizes 6 to 7, reg.1.65 .. .J/A.21
Tnlli; sl2!s 811119, rei. 2.11 • JIUI
Ungeile,
u
• • .
• • l~ •• l
• • • •
• .. • •• •
·l :1 •• .. •• ;
I
•
;
•• I :~ .. 1 •
• • •
,
•
I• IWLY ,ILOT
Ul'I T•lttllllr.
on Moon Connection Man
l< iiifThis modified version of Boeing 707 will furnish vital relay hooku_p for moni·
Loring critical phases of Apollo moon flight and provide link for air-to-ground
_.communications with astronauts aboard the lunar vehicle. Large radome on
nose of plane houses seven-foot parabolic antenna. other sophisticated elec-
::.tronic gear.
' •
,. On-job Alcoholism Turns
•.
· Into $4 Billion Hangove1·
"
By SYLVIA PORTEii
.,,. On·tht-job alcoholism has
• now soared to a $4 billion
annual hangover, double the
,S2 billion estimated rost of
11nly five years ago and
• equal to .a loss of 116 million
·!to business and industry
;each working day.
This is the latest estimate
;of New York's non-profit
:National Co u n c I I on ~Alcoholism. Specifically:
-AT LEAST 3,000,000
:u.s. workers now sulfer ' from alcoholism -5.3 per-
't:ent of all workers in
,.business, industry a n d
:civilian government. This
tnumber compares to
'2,000,000 workers five years
,go .
The $4 billion figure
covt:rs absenteeism .
tardiness. sick leave, othe1·
fringe benefKs, wasted time,
other forms of i,nefficiency .
accidents, wasted material
and the loss of trained man-
power. T h e absenteeism
rate for alcoholcis is three
times as great as for the
non-alcoholic workers
with the typical . alcoholic
vrorker losing a full month
of working days each year.
-Even more serious is
the problem of "on-the-jGb"
absenteeism, where a n
employe may waste a cou-
ple Of hours each morning
recovering from a
hangover, or a couple of
Xerox' TV Specials:
Idea Worth Copying?
NEW YORK (UPI)
.When a company plunk5
down $1-mlllion for a
television series wit h o u t
commercials, the m&ilman
becomes a mighty im·
portant Individual at cor·
:porate headquarters. ,
Viewer letters influence
company thinking on
whether it made a public
relations bOner or a smsrt
business moved.
In the case of Zerox,
u·hich spent $1-million on
the "Of Black America"
series , the venture cost at
least one customer
Robert M. Shelton, imperial
wizard of the Urtited Klans
of America.
A Shelton Jetter dated July
3. the day Dfter the first seg.
ment in the series was
telecast nationally. arrived
at the Xe rox branch office
in Birmingham. Ala.
'' "Dear sirs." it said. "This
'1is to inform you that we
Y.1ish the Xerox mtchine in
this office picked up at once.
\Ve are cancelling these
( l e a sing) arrangements
because of the company·s
involvement in the showing
of the movie · B 1 a c k
America.' "
UNHAPPY
There were other dissen·
ting votes on the se,,en-part
series Xerox hoped would
·• foster better understanding
between whites and blt<:ks.
One shareholder. the head
' of a Mid\\·est investment
firm , was unhappy, He did
not threaten to sell his
stock. But he did promise in
all future correspondence to
address the company's
• chairman. Joseph C. \Vilson,
\vith a sm~ll letter ''\V."
Another heated op1n1on
came from the manager nf
a bakery in Kansas City,
1'-fo., which uses a Xerox
copier.
"Rest assured," wrote the
baker, "that I h~ve used
your machines in the past,
but from now on I will use
only those of your com·
petitors."
An advertising agency
vice president in Kansas Ci·
ty said he would "recom-
mend th&t another make of
copying machine " be used
in his offices.
FARED WELL
ActualJy, on the basis of
the first 1,500 letters receiv·
ed. Xerox fared well. The
ratio of favorable to un-
favorable comment was bet-
ter than 12 to 1. the com-
pany said.
That 12 to 1 ratio also held
true of letter writers who
identified themselves either
•s cu st omers or
shareholders.
"There is always some
element of risk in such pro-
gramming," sald David J.
Curtin. vice president In
charge of corporate com·
munications. "Some people
will take issue with some of
the theories advanced."
!)n this go-round, Xerox
officials ~e smiling and
breathing easier. Well they
might. They have increased
their Jmage of public service
and social awareness at a
time such a posture is con-
sidered importt.nt. An d
fr om the tone of some let-
ters they also seem to have
increased sales potential.
A Brooklyn secretary,
who praised the series. pr<>·
mised not to complaln tJ1e
next time her Xe r ox
111;ichine broke do~·n . and a
Lex i ngt on. ~K y .I
businessman said he would
"use only Xerox copi t!rs
fr om TIO\\' on "
Over The Counter
IWUTU
ASSETS OVER
$4125.000,000.00
,,
Mutual
INGS
• OTHER llRANai OFFICES
Wnt Arudl• -CovlM
01.ndal•
. A.
A --0
..
• I
I
I'
" •1
'' :~ ·~ ~ " j~
' .,
' ' > • ' > I
' ' ' 1 .,
' ' ' ' ' 1
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·-------~----------:---------~----~~ . ~ .-
fL/UdQ, August 20, 1968 IWLY PILOT 17
Tuesday's Closing Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange List
i= ....... -.i:
-----------
I ~
-
~ --·-~--.......--. -. . . . . .
HOSTS -Ed Ames, above, hosts "The Sound of
t '68'' tonight in color at 8: 30 on Channel 7. Aretha
• Franklin 11 a special guest star on the show which
features nine new teen-age performers selected
· during a nationwide talent search. A group from ~ Buena Park. The Daily Planet, is among the chosen
, young groups. •
I
I
TELEVISION VIEWS
Horowitz
In Concert
I By ROBERT MUSEL
NEW YORK (UPI ) -The man many consider
l the world's greatest living pianist had no_t played I in public for 12 years. One day he walked into Car~
1 negie Hall and asked if he could use the stage. Day
1 after day he came back to play to the empty se~ta
I while the magic that must be the~e t.o enthrall li~~
ing audiences began to return to his fingers · and his
'! body and his mind.
VLADIMIR HOROWITZ was regaining the con-f fidence that bad deserted him. In one of lhe more
~ dramatic episodes of recent musical hi~tory. he ~as j beginning the concert comeback that will bnng him
' into millions of homes Sept. 22 in a CBS-TV one-r hour special marking the 40th anniversary year of
! his American debut.
His first television apP.earance is a cultural
1 event of the highest magrutude and CBS treated it ! that way. The stage of Carnegie Hall was reinforc· r ed. with timbers to take the heavy color cameras
I and cracks in the planking were tilled with talcum I powder to eliminate squeaking. 'rhe camera men
: and technical crew were shod in silent velvet slip-
, pers. The programs for the invited audience were
printed on special paper which does not rustle.
EVEN BEFORE the actual program was ta!>'
ed CBS spent $75,000 on a test to reassure Horowitz
that the music would not be swamped by a display
ol television technique. He spent seven hours at the
piano over two days while the camera angles were
established along with the best positions for the
microphones. When these were settled the piano
was bolted into position.
If this sounds breathlessly pompous it does
Horowitz an injustice. A slender youthful-looking 64
he is jaunty a nd smiling with a tendency not to
take himself too seriously. He.believes music should
be enjoyed not analyzed or revered. Sprawled in a
checked sports /·acket and slacks on a couch at his
rented pre-revo utionary home at Litchfield, Conn.,
he confided that he had a bet of $200 the program
would not win a repeat.
''HONESTLY'', he said, "They'll turn it off."
"There's the Russian pessimist for you," smiled
his wife, Wanda Toscanini, daughter of the great
Italian conductor.
"I MUST ADMIT I was fascinated by what I
saw when they showed me the test tapes," he said.
"It was the first time I had ever seen myself on
any screen. I've had lots of offers from Hollywood
but always I've said 'no, no, no, no, no!1 I had never
before seen my own fingers while I was playing. I
noticed that at one point my fingers were curved.
Curved! And I always tell my pupils they must keep
their fingers straight!''
FDR THE CONCERT Horowitz said he sought
1 musical selections that woul d not be too long in
;1 themselves, that would be melodic and yet not ! hackneyed. He chose three selections by Chopin,
two by Scarlatti, "two by Schumann, an etude by
ti Scriabin and his own variations on a gypsy melody
(rom Carmen, a pyrotechnical show piece that
sounds as though he had 20 fingers.
He explained that he had taken exceptional
pains with the filming and recording because the
microphone picked up more than the human ear
and the camera in closeup sees more than the i human eye does at a concert. 0 Visua1ly and orally
everything is magnified," be said. "You've got to
bit the piano key ri~ht in the center of the note.
They may miss a mistake in the concert hall , but
they won't on television."
I Dennis the Menace
i • • • ' .
' f
!
~
'SoNW"t 'JtllJ srr · -.... ~ .. '~ -' . . l
•
•
Iv Charles M. Schull
IT'S FRO.II LILA! OH,NO,NOT
A6AIN ! i.JHV DOES SHE
laf.P "'166JN6 liE ?
l!IAT_.ULA! ll!fRE WAS
ONE THIH6 SHE C()!.U)N'T
SEEM 10 LEARN ...
NEVER llU6 A eEAGLE !
DR. KILDARE
/IS L°"6 AS WE'RE HeRf
10c5ETH!!R, WON'T YOIJ
'Tai. ME 'l'OIJR NAME.?
I 'M PR. IC11.t¥\Rf-. lltlS
IS DR. NBL50M AHP
'THA1"'S 6TONCWAU. ...
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
TUMBLEWEEDS
ff Ii
MUTI AND JEFF
~ISS PEACH
. ,
ij .. Ii I! I
wni,:i;~,
5WlVEt. •.•
WHY NOT?
Mow, AS AN D'FICIENCY i;;~par;r, 'IOUIZ TYPICAL PW
WILL &iAS rcu.owS': YOU GOTO A CUENT'S OFFICe.
-· '
TMftl& YOll CHECK fjlS COMPANY'S PROCiDU!!eS, IN\15T/G,lofe
ITS M&TMODS AND 51CILLFUU.'I' ANAL'l1E fVElt.Y l'UASe OF
ITS OPEAATiotlS, -MTJ«J~, YOU I.DOI( A BIT WOltltlED··t
By Ken Bald
WHAl PID TllfY ~y KNOCK OfF
WA6 lHE AAmR "THE SWEfT
WITH 'IQ.I ••AT THE TALK, 1.AP'f.
HOSPJTAL,lMEAJrl! IKHQWAU
THE TRICl<.5.1
)
By Gus Arriola
Al/VER. JJAVE I
.SEEN AN !RISH SI<.'./
pO()R OOWN ..ll:) MLICJ/
It.A. IN 7D Pi.A GUI!
MA> UJMMGO/
Iv Ferd Johnson
... CAN You IMA<SIHc
S~IDIN<:; DoWN
"TH' B,AN15TER
AT TH'
WHITE! HOUS6 ?!
By Tom K. Ryan
By Al Smith
By Men -----
I'M STILL..
T~l'i1' TO FINO
'THE CL/EM'~
OFF/CE.~
TUESD A Y
AUGU ST 20
! V f NIN G
•:oo l!I n. I ii !'Im: (Cl (601 Jerry
llunphy. ·
D Kuntlef-lrinki., Report (C) (30)
8 Stey1 All• Sbow: (CJ (90)
Guesb ''' ICIOI Richard Kiiey, comic S!1ppy White, sln21r Slim
G1Ullrd, 1t1n11treu Donna Tll!Odof•.
belu!J expert Donn• Hotm1R.. (R)
0 Sl1 O'Clod: Mnit: "Coafldtn·
tilllJ Coflnle'" (comedy) 'SJ -Yan
John1e1n, Janel lei1h.
m M1rln1 IOJ IC) (30)
ID llt Mastenon (30)
1:30 D Mic " ... Sna CQ 1601
CJ T111 SrDnJ SlllW (C) (30) m a.c11t1or F11i. <JO>
ID MtH1l1'1 1'1VJ (30)
0 "SINGER pr ... nt& * THE SOUNDS OF '6 ,
Starring ED AMES ~
end ARETHA FRANKflN
! U @(])l lflCIA~, Sl·e M11b ~ Sou1ds Of 'SI: (C) )
Actor·slnier · Ed Ames hollJ II
tllm•• to 1 n•lkm•I •tdd for
fresh, }'Ollnl l1lent In tht rl•I <If
popul1r music. Aretha F~1 ll"' "lady Soul," Wiii 1ppear II I Pt-
ci1I 1uest. Nine lin1llsts co I•
in three ule,orln: malt !!st.
fe:n:ll Wl:J!ist ind musltll -VUP· m l.ltrr Crifll• (Cl (90) .,
tr-1 W1ndttlasl IC) (30) ~ m Anlll di Montllllf I
9:oo m A..ie.. w111 (C) C301 I
fl!l 81"' ,..,...., ""'' w lV Stir." RIY RofHI fA t11eµ
Tlme1 modtrtta 1 dJsau.slo• bl--
tween Heiro telwlslan =;flOrt · • 1nd 1 p1n1I of local
111 lV Mulltll Omrt • • ED Sdtnc• ltporter: "Suited for ' Sp~ce." MIT Science Reporkr Jahn 9:30Q13 m CIS ComldJ IPldtf:
ritcll looks 11 types of 1pacesuits1 (Cl (30)0w1yn1 Hickman 11iii8en
designed 101 ApGUo estronauls. Blue slllr In •n ori2Jn1I 1"'' abeut an lndi1n chief who lml ml "otkle11 34 {Cl title to Manll11!1n. (R) .,
0 @ m "'"' IC) (901 rto Brute." OiitectiYe John~ ~ b 7:00R 9CIJ CIU Evtnl11 News:'tC) accused of brut1llty In 1 $1 ooa
(IO) Wlliir Cmnklte. law suit 11111111 thl c:lb'. (It)
0, ,..., (30) Iii -.. '""' tC) <!If m 1 lMI 1.acy (30) m '°'· • ..,.. .... c Ali.,. m 11N1111'• , .. cJo> m .. .,. • 111 tt:30 ~
m 1\e Alllricln Stap: ''Boom and ~
Bust llt th• New Century." Or. Ir· 10.-~~fl!.°' 1"'* ~· '. "in Swerdlow discussu U.S. thtl· ·""' ,. ter 11 the tum of the czntury 1nd ) n 1rch of I hll. It points out rutons lot tlle "artat to Gh1n1 by thrn bled. w1•ln1·
dNkle" In drlP1I 111 that timt. Ion, D.C., Ill~ IChool lhld•• In
-F lip S.ltdl 1n effort to d11awtr how IMftwnt ~ 1 1 ti Africa 11 to loda)"1 bl&ek Ameiclit. • 0 CIOlfl Pm,. RM IC)~
7,30 0 9 CiJ DBt•I' ICI (60) D<. D rllHil 11M ''"''"' (C) ~60) Marsh Tracy t1ies lo brtak • che•· •'fheYlse." Jamn S.rt11, 1 .. ro
t1h of lb wlld lnsl!nch. Judy -the S11Vln1 11 en Jnvestlptor •r 1
chimpanzee t1ku • hand In the Senete subcommJll1e, Is tv,,. IM·
proeeedlnas. (R) tween loyalty to his )ab 1n( hit
D ~@ I Dr11m of Jeannie: {C) race. (R) '
(30) "Operation: Fiut Couple on .:. s 11 ... t (60) : th1 Moon." Jtannie's Impish sister .:. ecr n ;
pGMS II I space scientist SO .she ID Jld: Llltltm ftlWI {C) (3f
un be Tony's partner ind ccn· t
vlncts Je1nni1 that Tony will b• rn "ZODIAC IN FASHIOJ ' illlng to lhe moon with a berutilul u:1 'f
scientist 1nd otters to help prrvent * Zodvs Fashion Show r It (R) I
8 Cr1nd Pr\n Rittln1 (C) (30)
0 @ (J) C111i~'1 Gorillas: (C) m YMlr Zlldilc: In f1shlen: (C'6:3d')
(la! "llun Fro:n Dealh.H Two-time Pr011ram displays fashlont . lfOl'll
Emmy winner Julie Harris auests In Zod7s Department Slo11. l
1 trip1e·lactled ro:e. Tht Gorillas m:o. The Adon Como•-: Fin.t ,.. 1rrive In France to racu• 1n Im. a:.1 HI •
•••• ,., ''''' ''' 111 met b! 1 hearsal b!loll tht perl011111nf ol ..,.... "Macbeth." ~ myslerious women. The1ne, who ex· ,.
pl1lns thal both their contact and @I) Tom dt Esp1111 1
Ille 111nl 1rt dud. (R) ~
O Millitn $ Mwi~: wDmi Pllrol" t
(drrma) '3B -E11ol Flynn, Davidl10:30 m l'll'fl'I: (C) (30) Bill Johl\IJ
Niven, Basil Rathbone, Oona!d Cfis9. ~
m Tnllll or Conwqutnca (C) (301 ll:tlO 0 Elnen O'Clod: Report: (C,;30) m I 1rlCl!L I SWldt end Lovtly: .lerry Dunphy. I (~ (60) The Hal Link1r f~mlly ,yisit 0 Tht tllh H1111r Nm: (C) b>J the l1mous old warship 'Y111 In Tom Brokiw. ~
Sweden. (Fl) • O Th• Weltlmm (30) f ED TIM Fnneh Che!: Julle Child
shows how to prepara brio<:~es.
fI)Sonrba1
lin, Gen• Tierney, Gto1g1 R1 ,
0 Hin: (C) (30) Bart1r w.fl.
0 Movlr. "IJ&et Widow" . f.!11·
tery) '54-Glrlger Ro2ers. Va;· •·
1:00 CJ ~ @ Silawwe "8: (C) {30) ID Lu Cran1 (C)
Comialan London Lee ls special :t 1~est 11 the Grind Ballroom cf ID Movie: "Timp!co" (1u M)
New York's Waldorf·Astori1 Hotel. '44 -Edward G. Robin1t1n, nn
Bidding for st!1clom are The Teach· B1r1. :
1r1, 1 WC1l·instrumanlll quint!\, ~
folk sln2u-composer Andrea Mar-;
cov lcl, \IOClllst Bob C1meron. ind 11:301J Mwll: "'Plratas tf Mlfltttf"
Tht 1910 F1uit Gum Comp1ny. (1dventure) '47 -Rod C.irfron.
IJ Roller Games -Live! (C) * T-BIRDS vs. DETROIT
0 !loller 11i1ma: (C) (2 hr) U
fill1ds vs. Oet101t Devils.
Gilbert Ro l1nd. =
B @ CiJ "" '"""' """ F> 1J rn.M: "f1Ptln1 curdst••" (adventure) '45 -WIH1rd hrtlf,
Anlt1 Loui1r. ~ o @ rn"" .,,.., ... f'!
m Haztl 1c> (30) 12:00 m'" PYlll 1c1
' • • • fD rtn Pl1~hou11: "Thirteen 1
Aa:elnst Fite-The Murderer.'" (Fl) 12:30 ID All·Nlillt Show: ''Oni B~· II·
Ill t1 Prohibld1 l1ir," "Kill or Be Klllld," ' lute
for John Citilen." "Letter r an
Unknown Woman.'"
1:30 8 ft CJ) SM.time: (C) (60) rn Adloft T'illflit: ''Thi Min i.~tr· Sttv1 Allin II host of vu1et:J hour .,.;r
st1nln1 hll wile Je)'lll Mudows. rled." ~
British recordin11 1t1rs lulu and ~
Cllll lllch11d, Irish comlldirn Mike t: Ntwm•n The Rumanian ltation•I 12:50 D Mowlt: .,.,lnRln1 II tlll
Dint1 'eo111pany ind Orchestra, {scl·li) '67 -Petti Gr1vu, ult
lr1nian bal1ncin1 tum Tht Jin C1ri!t. ,;.
Bau Brothers 1nd 1 British music· :
1nd-t'Cl1111dJ rrouP c11ltd the Bonzo •
Doi Doo-Dlh Et11Ml. 1:00 IJ MWil: "Iii JICl" (ldv .. Ull) 0 @00 TllldaJ N~ It ttlt '49-W11!1tt Betry, M1rjorlt filn.
Ml'liu: It) °'"o Mt• ls 111 lll11td" CJ Mowil: (C) "nit I~ If
(dr11111) '62-Jeflrf)' Hunter, S.r· R .. I" (comedy) '61 -Mall
blr1 Puw. .loleilh d1 CordM, MntroisnnL S
M1rsh11I ThomPtOn, Ron.II RemJ, 8 C.•'""' hllttie .... ~ Vic Sal1y1n. Thi trul :itory of 1n ~. 0-(C) ', Anltriclft ullot Ill Wouv II II' ;
WEDNESDAY
DAYTIME MOVIES
l:JO 0 (C} "01111 II ft'll .lft&'t" (drt·
m1) '5' -01111 Andrews. .lllnM
Cr1in,
D "JIQ Mlfltf' (comtdr) '4S-
Tht 8owt1Y Bop. (Cl '"Andre• t11 ..
1\et" (dflN)-Anlonelll lutldi.
11:15 IJ "bllr II .. SN" (ldwntvr•)
• JOB PRINTING
' < < ' ' I '39-&ual1& F1irll1nks Jr., 9'11•·
tft Lockwood. .;
' 12:30 m "5'tlWll'TJ llonde" (roll!lnc•)
'41-Rltt Hl)'WOrth. "~"
(muskt!) '42-Hc•I• ~Pl~·~ ••.
l:JO ID "C•1rt1'"1 Mr. hnR• ji(drt·
m1) '42~1itford Evins. Dfor•h
'''" I 4:30 8 (C) '\n1 tf tht lucufMn"
(1dvtntu1t) '50-Piul Htnrt'4 llcl
Otkit. :
0 (C) "Hercvl• •M llt ClllplM w. .. .-(t4Vtrrtu11) 'U-«-.;itar\
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• PUBLICATIONS
-. • • • • : • NEWSPAPERS • • • • • • i
1211 WllT U.LIOA ILft. N1W>On111.c1t I
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Newport Barbo•· Today's Closing
EDITION
VOL i-r. NO. 200. 3 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES NEWPORT BEA.CH, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, "1968 TEN CENTS
Council Declares W. Newport in Peril
215 Hauled
From Huge
Breakers
People-bending waves up t'O 20 feet
high heaved ashore at Newport Beach
Monday, causing harried lifeguards to
caI'l'}' out 215 rescues and more than
800 preventative measures for an
estimated 55,CXX> beach.goers.
F-oc swimmers, sea cOnditions could
be even worse today. A lifeguard
spokesman said the waves will get
smaller "but the sea will still h&.ive
eoough surl to gent!rate some good
riptides."
He predicted that "more of the
novice type surfers" will be lured into
the tricky ocean cUITen~.
"And we're still getting some pretty
good sets o! waves at five to six feet,"
he added. Wave heights Monday capped out at
about eight feet along most of the
shore. Hundreds of people clustered at
the Wedge to witness spectacular 20-
foot combers crashing across the west
jetty of Newport Harbor.
The lifeguard official compared the
tally al 215 rescues to a typical week-
day rescue log of about 30.
One girl was hurt badly enough to
need hospitalization when she was
knocked down by a wave at Slst Street
shortly after 6 p.m.
.Diane MClane, 15, of 1738 Skaylark
L<Jlle, Newport Beach, was ~ported in
apparently satisfactory condition to-
day at Hoag Memorial Hospital where
she was admitted for a back injury.
Results of X-rays were pending:
The big surf churning up ttle
coc:.'6tline was connected. to remote
ocean storms, ac cord ing to
preliminary guesses of the U.S.
\Veather Bureau,
Maybe He Was,
But He Didn't
Need Any Help
"Help. I'm being kidnaped," the
note said,
Schota Dumbadse, Laguna Beach
service station operator, 980 S. Coast
H.ighway, was filling a tank -:vhe~ he
found the note Monday mormng m a
gas cap compartment.
Dumbadse notified Laguna Beach
Police. They notified Newport Beach
pokice that the 1966 car was north·
bound. Newport officers investigated.
The Upshot, said Laguna police Lt.
Rotiert McMurray:
The travelers were newly weds. The
note had been planted in their car by a
"friend" as a prank.
Stock Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -The 100<k
market eased irregularly lower late
th.is afternoon in relatively light
trading. (~quotations, Pages 16-17).
Losses outnumbered gains by about
100 issues on the New York Stock Ex-
change and the Dow JOIH!s industrial
change and the Dow Jones industrial
ave11age was off about a point.
Oran9e Coat
Weather
We may have a bit or a driule,
the weatherman says damply,
but for the most part it'll be the
same as before, with the sun
arriving about midmorning and
coastal temperatures in the
mid-70's.
INSIDE TODAY
Orange Countv i! faJ& becom-
ing o center for the mudcal crll
in Southern California. See En·
krtoinment, Pa.Qt 9.
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OAIL Y l"ILOT Slttf PIM!ft
Seo Here%
Indeed it is, as Corona d el Mar's Kathy Kraemer, 17 , discovers while
posing for what was supposed to be a conventional "beauty at the
beaCh" shot. Photographer Dale Samoker got a good soaking, too,
as foaming surf roared up suddenly at Big Corona beach.
'"'Leave the Room~
OCC Chief Does; Bonds Backed
Directors of the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce Monday voted
unanimously to endorse b a l l o t
measures totaling $7 .25 million for the
Orange Coast Junior College District.
A discussion on whether to lend
chamber endorsement to the financial
measures was held after Dr. Robert
Moore, OCC president, was asked to
leave Monday's luncheon meeting.
"I remember a couple years ago
when some or our members had at·
tacked school proposals," commented
restaurateµr James Berkshire. He
suggested that the college president
could leave the room and be spared
any embarrassment.
As it turned out, there was nothing
to be spared from.
The business leaders generally
agreed the bond issue and a tax over.
ride we re needed. and carried a
resolution stating so without further
fuss. The election is set for Sept. 17.
LBJ Says No Bomb Halt,
Next Move Up to N. Viets
DETROIT (AP) -President
Johnson, rejecting a tot:al bontbing
halt of North Vietnam or other de-
escalation of the war, says he will go
no furtller in the search for peace un-
til Hanoi shows sincere signs of wan-
ting to end the fighting.
Speaking Monday night to .a con-
verution of the Veterans of Foreign
Wars, Johnson sald all moves by the
United States to end the fighting have
gone unanswered by the North Viet·
namese.
"The next move must be theirs," he
told a cheering audience.
The President seemed to be answer-
ing critic! within his own party,
particularly Sens. E u gen e J.
McOart:hy and ~rge McGovern, who
have made opposition to the war ma·
jor parts of their campaigns for the
Democratic presidential nomination.
Pointedly referring to the fact that
his term doesn't expire until next
Janu6J'Y, Johnson said, "This .ad-
ministration does not intend to move
furtber until it has good reason to
believe that the other tide intends
se.rioualy to join with us in de-
escalating the war and moving
seriously towards pea ct."
While he is in oflice, Johnson .em·
phaslzed again and again, he will call
the shoU and wlll not bend "to some
of us who appear to be searching for a
formula which would get u1 out of
Vietnam and Asia on any terms ... "
ln one of hls strongest defen&es of
American actions in Vietnam, Jotwon
.abo predlc~ that hls auccessor will
wind up with the 1ame policy, oace: he
has an the informat.lon and
responslbilty that comes with the
presidency.
"It's one thlng to be seeking
responsibili1y and it's another Uting
v.•hen you've g<>t it," J ohnson said
about his critics.
The President went to Detroit Crom
his Texas ranch, then flew to
Washington. He had been in Texas
most of this month.
In clearly emotional tones, Johnson
said nobody wants peace more than he
and he damned Hanoi for what he
charged \1;as its failure to respond
clearly and affirmatively to his
h1arch 31 order restricting bombing of
the North.
"Let's don't be hoodwinked. Let's
not be misled ... We're not going to
stop the bombing just to let them step
up their bloodshed," Johnson declared.
"So long as I am your American
commander in chief, we are not going
to be found wanting," he told the
cheering veterans.
Returning to pollUcs, Johnson said
ot the U.S. troops doing the UghUng:
'"Ibey are going to have a voice in this
campaign before it's over."
In withdrawing Jrom 1968 presiden-
tial politics nearly five months ago,
Johnson $ti.Id he wanted to divorce hia
search for peace abroad and harmony
at home from partisa_n coo11lderaUons.
But in his Detroit speed\ Johnson
made it clear he doesn't like all that
he bean ln the current campaign,
Some White House aid~s argued
.afterwards that his hold·lht-line ad-
dress could only help Vice President
Hubert H. Humphrey, front runner for
the Democratic pr-e.ldeaUal nomina·
t.ion.
Super Surf Devastates Beachfront
A state of limited peril exists of·
flcialJy, as well as in fact, along West
Newport's crumbling ocean front to·
day.
Newport Beach city councilmen
formally declared the emergency late
Monday night.
They acted in response to urgings of
West Newport homeowners, including
Councilman Donald A. Mcinnis, who a
year ago lost a patio wall to the forces
of erosion. The wall was never replac-
Eisenhower
Chances
'Guarded'
WASHINGTON (AP) -Army doc·
tors reported today that former Presi-
dent Dwight D. Eisenhower's pro-
spects for survival are guarded -
meaning an unpredictable margin
between life and death.
This was the condition report shortly
after 11 a.m. at \Vatter Reed Army
H05pital. It was one of several replies
to questions submitted by reporter! to
the doctor.
At t:he same time they said in a
formal medical bulletin that the
general's condiUon remains critical
even though there has been a
favorable treQd in the pattern or ab-
normal heart rhythm action which is
the baslc problem of his heart attack.
They left open the question' whether
the "gradual worsening" of his con-
dition which they had reported in a
mldafternoon report Monday had been
either halted or slowed in pace.
The doctors disclosed Monday night
they had rejected, after serious con-
sideration, the idea of attempting a
heart transplant.
The text of today's medical bulletin
follows:
"Since last night's bulletin, Gen.
Eisenhower has continued to rest com-
fort.ably. The pattern of isolated ir-
regular beats continues, There have
been no instances of sustained ven-
tricular irregularities requiring elec-
trical conversion during the last 24
hours. While this trend is favorable,
the general's condition re mains
critical.'"
The irregular heart beat had
brought him near death after his
seventh beart attack.
Credit Card
Crooks Collect
A man and woman in their 20's plied
a stolen credit card into two dresses at
Fashio Island shops l\.1onday but fled
when a dubious clerk at a Urird store
demanded more identification.
Newport Beach police said the two
dresses were charged to a stolen
credit card belonging to a Earl E.
Dorathy.
A clerk at the ;'Back Street" shop
asked the couple for more iden-
tification. She said the crooks told her
they would have to go to their car to
get the ID. They never returned.
ed, and the sea came back late Mon·
day.
Booming surf, borne hJgb on a 5.5-
foot tide, clawed away great chunks of
beach from 40tb Street to the Santa
Ana River jetty, a distance of 33
blocks,
The coundl's Wlanimous "limited
peril'' declaration clears the way for
the emergency mobilization -If need-
ed -of all Orange County agencies
and workers. These would include
' sandbagging crews from the Division
of Forestry, County Jail and Harbor
District.
\Vhelher the actual request fOI' this
mobilization wW be made was left to
the option of the city saff. Councilmen
also instructed the staff to ask the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to ad-
vance a $250,000 erosion control pro-
ject slr.ited to begin Sept. 3.
"The situation down there," said
(See EROS ION, Page%)
EPS Rertita·Atag. 29
City Split 3-3
On TV Election
By JEROME F.COLLINS
01 llMI OtllY 1"1111 Slltf
Newport Beach's police-monitored
television surveillance proposal is
dying a hard death.
City councilmen voted 3-3 Monday
night to place i1 on the November
general election ballot. The tie vote.
reached after vigorous debate, meant
a defeat for former Mayor Paul J .
Gruber's motion.
But the council then decided to vote
again on the issue at a special n1oeting
on Thursday, August 29.
On that date, a full council Is ex-
pected to ~ on hand. Robert Shelton,
vacationing in Oregon with his -family,
was absent Monday.
When he returna, he indicated to the
DAILY PILOT before he left, he will
vote against the proposed Nov. 5
police 1'V election.
The council lineup for putting U1e
issue on the ballot Monday cleaved to
last week's aHgnment on submitting
.a $500,000 "Electronic Protection
System" (EPS) application to the
federal government. The money would
be used to insta:ll 3ome 15 closed-
circuJt TV cameras, monitored by
police, at "hi&'t·crime" areas around
town.
Gruber, councilmen Ed Hirth and
floward Rogers favored "letting the
people decide" the issue, just as they
favored EPS one week ago.
Voting against the ballot proposition, ~
which had been requested formally by
Newport builder George D. Buccota
and about a dozen other citizens. were
Mayor Doreen Marshall, Vice Mayor
Lindsley Parsons and Councilman
Donald Mcinnis.
Shelton last week had joined them in
rejecting EPS.
Monday's discussion began with
Mcinnis urging that the ballot question
be delayed until a full council is on
hand.
Gruber and Rogers, however, ap-
parently sensing v.·hat Shelton's posi-
tiQ.n would be, fought against the
delay. They tried to win over at least
one of the anti·EPS council members
present. That would ha"ve given them
the required four votes.
But they failed. despite the stated
support of ex-Mayor Dora Hill and
others.
Said· Mrs. Hill: "There has been 1
(Sec POLICE TV, Page 2)
Chute Shoots Marshall
Into Yacht Race Lead
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Of 1111 Otllf 'Ill! ll•fl
To fly a chute or oot to fly a chute -
that is sometimes the question in a
yacht race.
But it had better not go long
unanswered, as Gardner Cox of Man-
taloking YC found out Monday in the
second race or the 5.5 meter Olympic
trials.
C.Ox' indecision -or slowness -
cost him an early lead Monday as he
rounded the first weather mark about
two boat lengths ahead of John
Marshall's Bingo II, Stamford, Conn .,
.and Gordon Llndeman's Cloud Nine
from Milwaukee, Wisc,
Marshall! and Lindeman popped
their chutes as they rounded and slid
under the lee of Cox' Cadenza as tus
crew belatedly fought to get the big
kite flying.
And it "·a.sn't until Ule final leg of
the six leg 10.83 mile course that Cox
was OO!e to pick off Lindeman and
move up W second to preserve his lead
on the scoreboard.
Once Marshall got out front,
however, he worked out a substantial
lead of nearly two minutes at the
finish.
Lindeman also had trouble hokting
his third po&iUo n as Bill Ficker of NH-
YC got Chrade moving and chalJenged
him at the last leeward mark, roun·
ding overlapped. Ficker dropped back
to fifth on the final beat.
National Snipe Cllunpion Earl
Elms, Mission Bay YC, with a pair of
ace Snipers as crew, showe<1 that his
tiller touch isn't confined to the 16-
footers when he Mole the start and
fliopped t.o an early port tack for a
hitch toward the beach. He apparently
found some shifty winds and bad drop-
ped to £ourth at the weather mark, a
position he still held at the finish.
Observers at the first weather mark
had a fe weyebrow lifters as the boats
(See TRIALS, Page Z)
S.$ METERS SCRAMBLE' FOR POSITION ON DOWNWIND LEG IN Cl YMPIC TRIALS
Lowell North's Luv (11ftl Fight 1 Uphill Bettle In Second Rec•
_, 1'1 .\
••
-2 DAILY PILOT
DAil Y rlLOT Slit! l"Mtto WEST NEWPORT HOMEOWNERS AGAIN FACING PERIL FROM SEA AS EMERGENCY DECLARED
He•vy Surf, High Tld11 Combine to Erode 81ach11; Army Corps Project Spud.up 11 Asked
F rom Page 1
ERO SIO N EM ERGENCY • • •
?.fclnois, "is as wild as I've ever seen
it. "
City Engineer Ben Nolan agreed. He
said the beach is in "rapidly worsen·
ing" condition. and suggested that
prompt city approval be given the
Corps project and t.hat a request for
gpeedlng It up be mad<.
The Corps project -the second in
Wem Newport in less than a year -
will involve a 150,000 cubic yard
sandhaul from the Sant.a Ana River
area to the 40th-46th Street area, and
construction of a second 250-foot long
steel sheet groin at the end of either
44-th or 45th Street.
Nolan said this morning he had ask·
ed the Corps to consider placement of
additional tons of rocks along the
erosion front as an emergency
measure. "They'll do it, if they
feel It's necessary," he said. "Right
now the situation looks a little better
than last night, but we've still got a
six to nine foot surf."
A week ago a rock barrier was form-
ed by the Corps parallel to dozens of
endangered homes. It helped break up
the surf, but some patios were still in·
undated by the foaming surge.
Early today there was no beach at
a11 at the ecd or <2nd street. At 48th
Street, it was 20 feet wide; at 68h .
Street, 100 feet. A few weeks ago, the
bet.eh width ell along the area was
some 200 feet.
Councilman Mcinnis' home at 4105
Seashore Drive was among those
without a beach!ront. "The beach has
eroded in a very, very critical
fashion," he told his council colleagues
Monday night. "We have rocks there.
but not enough."
Another worried rt6ident, Richard
Clucas, 4403 Seashore Drive, explained
that he was appearing before the
council in shorts and barefeet because
"when l left home water was begin·
ning to come into my house."
He EJSked for council approval to put
sandbags in front ol his residence. The
approvai wasn't needed, City Attorney
Tully Seymour explained. "When one's
home is threatened," said Seymour.
"the common enemy doctrine pre·
vails. You can do anything with.in
reason to save it."
"I hope the Army engineers get
their opet"ation under way before my
house falls into the ocean," said
Clueas as he hurried back home.
Arter the council, on Mcinnis' mo-
tion, adopted the "Umtted peril"
resolution, City Manager Harvey L.
Hurlburt said county assis~e would
be requested should all o th e r
measures, including distussions with
the Corps, fail.
"That will be O\II" a<!e in the bole,"
he said.
Mesa Girl, 11 , Trapped
In Slide, Freed by Police
The intriguing Badlands territory of
Costa Mesa's west side injured
.another youngster Mondiay when a girl
playing hide-4Dd-seek in a small cave
was partially trapped by an earthslide.
Deborah L. \Yiloon, 11, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Wilroll, of 2131
Republic Ave., lay whimpering in tile
dd>ris as her slst.er Paula, 7, stayed
foc comiort and a brother Billy, 8, ran
for help.
"She knew her leg was broke," said
Oeborah'a graadmother, Mrs. Evelyn
Withrow, of the Republic Avenue ad-
dresa, while Mrs. Wilson visited tier
dau~r et Hoag Memorial HOSpltal
today.
Costa Mesa police sald Qi.pt. Bill
Sa.viage and members of his Search
and Rescue Squad blasted the cave in·
to 6&Ddy rubble with dynamite after
DAILY PILOT
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ORANGE COAST PUBLISHING COMPAHY
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Deborah·s ordeal during mid· a f.
ternoon hours.
LOWERED TO SAFETY
F-iremen sent to the scene, behind
Victoria School, about two blocks lrom
the Wilson home, lowered the victim
to safety with a streroher and safety
rope.
A large rock fell onto the girl's right
leg, breaking it, and she has boUt legs
in traction at Hoag Memorial H09pital
t.oday, with ttie uncomfortable position
to cootinue !our to six weeks.
"I imagine she spent a pretlly
miserable n i g h t , ' ' sald her
grandmother, who exyects Deborah to
remain at home another four monttis
in a boc:t)• cast.
The old gravel pi.t where Deborall
was injured Monday is an attractive
hazard to roaming dlildren, who have
virtually complete access to the rug-
ged , bluff-like area, rerniniscect of
v.-estern badland..s
FENCING NEEDED.
The land beloo11< partially tn tile Ci-
ty o( Newport Beach and to Sully.
Miller Oonstruction Co., but there is no
Jegal way to force the OW11ers to com-
plete a fencing job to help keep young
intruders out.
Some o( it bas been fenced by com·
merclal users of the land and
homeowners adjacent to ttie rugged
pit ha~ installed aome fences to help
gol~ the problem.
Capt. Savage said he and his men
usually dynamite c&vefi constructed ln
the treacherous area, but ad·
venturesome youngsters q u t c k 1 y
overcome nratural erosion proce1sies to
cree.te more.
Judge Convicts
Unruh's Son, 19
INGLEWOOD (UPI) -Bradley
Unruh, UI, ion of a11embly speUe.r
Jesse Unruh, today wet convict.Id 1n
superior court of joy riding in a car
without the content ol the owner, a
felony.
Unruh was charged with ta.kins a
1936 Rolla-Royce fTom a IU•fe in
Jlawthorne Wt May 4. Re returned
the car later.
Superior Court Judge Roecoe 0 .
Farley heard the trial without a Jury.
Unruh's attorney immediately f1Jed a
motion for • new bi.el ,,
Dad's Vietnam
Flight Halted
By Girl's Death
A jet transport about to taxi into
takeoff for Vietnam was halted on the
runway at El Toro MCAS Monday to
inform a major aboard that his step-
daughter had been killed shortly
before in a nearby car crash.
The teen-ager and her companion
1968 County Traffic 1987
137 Death Toll 125
were among four youths killed in the
same geographical area during a 12-
hour period, with two of the three one·
car accident& involving small cars.
Dead following the accidents are:
--ChrJ1tina L. Nowak, 17, of 17962
Gillman Ave., Irvine.
-Robert B. Hellatrom, 17, of 18206
Mayapple Way, Irvine.
-Laurence H. Bak.er, 16, of 16612
Silkwonn St., Fountain Valley.
L/Cpl. J immy Bethurum, 20, of
Dallali, Tex.
California Highway Patrol officers
1aid Miss Nowak and Jtell.strom died
almost instantly when the car driven
by the boy blew a tire on Barranca
Road near Culver Drive Monday after.
noon .
The small car veered out of control
and hlt a utility pole along the
roadway, crumpling like a ping pong
ball and crushing the victims inside.
Both Miss Mowak and the Hellstrom
youth were June graduates of Mission
Viejo High School.
Investigators said the car had been
leased by USMC Maj. Chester L.
Whlpple, the Nowak girl's stepfather,
who was notified of her death on the
runway and delayed his trip to Viet-
nam.
The Fountain Valley youth was dead
on arrival at Hoag Memorial Hospital
in Newport late Monday night after a
sports car driven by his brother ram·
med a parked truck on the San Diego
:F'reeway in Costa Mesa.
Gregory Baker, 18. escaped with
minor injuries, but their girl com-
panion, Ann S. Novratril, 17, of 16591
Ross Lane, Huntington Beach, liuf-
fered a fractured skull and neck in-
juries.
Patrolman G. W. Olson said the
Baker car was northbound near
Harbor Boulevard when it hit the
truck, which was parked in outside
lanes. possibly v.ithout its lights on.
Driver Billy J . Adams, 18, of 11632
Stuart Drive, Garden Grove, saw the
car coming and leaped off the truck
bed, escaping harm.
The young Marine lance corporal
was killed early today when his car,
southbound on the Santa Ana Freeway
between Culver Drive and Jeffrey
Road, went out of control and struck a
ltte.
Services Slated
For Edith Arthm·
Funeral 1ervlce1 wW be held at 3
p.m. Wednesday at Cbrllt Chirch by
the Sea, Newport Beach, for Edtlh L.
Arthur, a Ion.Li-time Newport Beoch
l'tlSldent ""° Monday. Mn. Arthur wu active in church
a.ctivttle1, and terVed ln the WOll*l'I
auxillary at Hoa& Memorial Hocpttal.
She was a member ol Chrllt Church
by Ibo Sea, Olld former pnsldont of
the Women's Society of Cbriltian
Sen1ce.
Survtvort lnclode h e r huabmld,
Hln>ld D. Arthur Of the family borne,
4710 Neptune Ave.; doulhten, Mrs.
IAlonard Penn of Burbanl<, and Mn.
Ray Leatbenroocl of Van Nl(JI, and
Mlsl Carol Arthur of Sao Frandlco:
I 11)(1, Harold W. "1tllur of -; nine grandcllildron ..i three grea~
grandchildren.
· lnlM'lnttlt will be at Paclllc Vl<W
Memorial Park.
' .
Cof C Re.minds Counci l
It Favors Police TV
By BRUCE BENSON
Of .... DeJ"' .. \ ..... .,,
Newport Beach city councilmen may
be divided on the prop05ed police
television surveillance 5)'stem, but
directors o( the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce unabashed)¥
support the idea. .
Oiamber leaders Monday decided
they felt so strongly that they took the
unUStJal step ol resolving to remind
councilmen a second time of their
enthusiasm f o r remote-controlled
police TV cameru scanning the city.
Jn a unanimoua declaration, direc·
ton pol'lted out that only ooe year
ago, councllmen bad approved the pro-
jeet in principle.
The implication of the Chamber
message seemed to be that if police
TV was a · good enou&}i idea to win
preliminary approval. last year, it is a
good enough idea to put into practice
on an experimental buiJ.
The resolutJon took shape after Paul
A. Palmer moved for the chamber to
request councilmen to place the issue
before the voters on the Novembe.r
baUot.
Former chamber president John
Macnab headed the motion off by
noting that the 44-man ~orship
should scrutinize the proposal ln com·
m.ittee before taking .a stand on it.
At Maooab's auggestion, Palmer
modified his Idea · and asked for
cban1ber leaders to reaffirm their sup·
port of the police TV proposal, and to
ask for council support.
Because Ule weight of U;ie business
community is reflected by t b e
chamber directors, the debate was
listened to with considerable interest
bl guests l>.1ayor Doreen Marshall,
Councilman Ed Hirth, and City
Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt.
Mrs. Marshall and Hirth several
hours later during a council meeting
voted on placing the police TV issue on
the ballot. The mayor opposed it;
Hirth supported it. The matter, receiv~
ing a 3-3 vote, will be taken up agaln
Aug. 29 when a full 7-member council
is expected to be present.
From P age 1 None of the city officials at the
chamber's luncheon meeting spoke on
the subject. They heard Dr. Nolan
Frizzelie, chairman of the chamber's
study conunittee on police TV, tell
fellow directors the proje~t should be
supported, with some 1 mp o r tan t
qualifications.
POLICE TV ...
great deal of dl&cus&ion about this. I
think it would be wise to let the people
decide."
Allan Beek, a member or a pro-
minent Harbor Area pioneer family.
told councilmen that they would "show
great wisdom ln not taking the final
decision on this controversial issue in·
to your own hands."
Among seven letters received urging
the November balloting was one from
Dr. Nolan FrlzzeUe. representlnJ? the
Newport Harbor Chamber of Com·
merce.
No one in the sparse audience or 25,
nor any letter-writer spoke in Op·
po~ition to the election.
Mayor Marshall did, however, and
with decisiveness.
"We've all R:iven careful thought lo
this problem," she said. "Last week
we had a full and orderly hearing. The
council then assumed the obligation
and duty delegated to it by the voters.
And that was to make the decision on
EPS. We voted against it. It was a
dlvlded vote, yes, but that perhaps
represent! the feeling of the com·
munlty.
"We did our job. And simply
because there was a division of opi-
nion Is no reason to refer the issue
now the electorate. If we followed that
procedure generally, it would lead to a
rather chaotic situation.
"The basic problem here," lihe con-
cluded. "is whether this council, after
assuming its responsibility to make a
difficult decision, should now refer the
Question to the voters. 1 can't support
that."
Rogers replied by sayin~:
"We wouldn't do this whenever we
have a split vote. But you have to con-
sider the size, the implications. of the
item. This is a contribution we can
make far beyond our own borders."
Gruber said in his seven years on
the council, "this is the first time I've
seen such a public clamor to put a
matter of this kind on the ballot." He
reminded the council that action must
be taken by Sept. 6, the deadline for
November ballot propositions. He said
there is no time for an initiative pro-
ceeding.
Gruber said he would favor ap·
pointment of a citizens technical ad·
visory committee to oversee EPS dur·
ing its experimental stages. The
clergy, judiciary, the fields of law,
clergy, judiciary, the fields of law.
psychology and electronics would be
represented, he said, noting that the
committee proposal already has the
endorsement of the Chamber of Com-
merce.
Gruber said he saw no reason for
delaying action until Shelton's return.
"I'm sure you know as well as I how
our missing council member feels."'
Mcinnis said he didn't know. Mayor
~farshall said she dJdn't know, either.
As a result, after the 3-3 vote, Coun·
cllman Hirth moved that the matter
be taken up agein on August 29. That
was approved 6-0.
HirtJl later said he had no idea how
Shelton would vote oo the issue.
Shelton himself, however, made it
clear to the DAILY PILOO' a few days
ago that he intends to vote ag.ainst it.
"For one thing," he said, "there is
some question about how you can put
EPS on the ballot on a yes or no basis.
It's pretty complex. Apart from that.
the counc11 wu elected by the people
to make tough decisions. We've done
that.
"There are remedies available to
the public if the voters want to change
those decisions. 'There is the initiative
procf:6,, f0" instance."
This would compel the council to put
the matter on the ballot.
But it would require, according to
City Attorney Tully Seymour, petition
signatures of at least 10 percent of all
the city's registered voters. A petition
campaign like that is genttally con-
ceded to be impossible between now
and Sept. 6.
With the August 29 vote apparently
predetermined, that means the last
rites of EPS are but days away.
The optometrist said his study group
concluded that an experimental police
television program could be oanied
out successfully in Newport Beach
precisely because o! its relatively low
crime rate.
Newport isn't an "overheated com~
munity" of high crime and tensions,
Frizzelle said. Police coo.Id monitoc
remote TV cameras under the direc-
tion of councilmen and o t b e r
"carefully mm-shaled forces."
These forces would consist of the ci-
ty manager and police chief working
with a five-man citizens committee,
all under the rule of the City Council.
The citizens committee would have
"no authority over the S)'\Stem" but
would play the role of advising tbe
council. •
Frizzelle's group also concluded that
councilmen shouldn't actively seek
federal funds to help set up the pro-
ject. Instead, Newport should an-
nounce its "availability" to accept the
job of administering the experimental
project.
From Page 1
TRIALS . • •
Clpproached the nag singly and in
bWlChes. Behind Elms came \Varren
Parker's Fugitlve, NHYC; Ted
Turner's Nemesis, Atlanta, Ga.;
Taylor Grant's Yankee II, NHYC~ Bill
Ficker's Charade; Ernie Fay,
llouston, in Sundance -a n d w.ould
you believe North and Driscoll Of San
DI ego in 10th and 11th place? Al
Cassell of Voyagers YC was close
bell.ind Driscoll.
Lt was here that North's new Luv
had more trouble. As he bore off
s\ighUy to set a chute Driscoll and
Cassell rode over him, dropping the
San Diegan back to 13th,
Another big surprise was to see
Scott Allan in his new boat, Outa
Sight, come around the mark in last
place for the second day in a row.
But the tail-enders got ttieir lx>Erts
moving on the reach to the second
mark. Result: Some plain and fancy
luffing matches as the skippers fought
for weather berths.
After the triangular lap the 17-boat
fleet began to spread out as the
leaders fought to control their leads
and the tail-enders started to gamble.
Here are the standings after two
r.aces:
1. C.cle"ll, Girdner Co•, Mtnttlol<.1111. N. J,, 1·1-3,
i: ~~':'!J!: 'm"Frc:~·~1H~~~h~O!ll'I. ).1-1·1·
" \loud Nine, Gordan Llndemtn, Mllw111~t•, 7. '-"•' !. •111on1, GtrJ. Orltc1)1l, SOYC1 ~:U. '· Sfl•dow, Etrl Im•, MBYC, t--.rJ. 1. S...n<lance Ern , FlllY, Hou1ton, 6+-73.l . I. Ntmt1l1, Ttct Turner, A!!•nlf. G• .. 1•1-27.
'· Luv, LOWtll Nori~. sovc. 5-11 -27. II. Fugl!lvt, w.,._.. f'1rlc1r, NHYC, IQ-11)-,21.
II. $1v11t. Al C1111tl, VDY•otr. YC 12-t-Jl.
Mrs. J. Coutant
Of CdM Dies
Services are pending for Josephine
M. Contant, 49, a 15--year resident o[
Corona del Mar who died Monday at
Hoag Memorial 11ospital. after a long
illness.
Mrs. Contant, a native of Columbus
Junction, Iowa, spent most of her life / in the Pasadena area where she serv~
ed as president of the American
Cancer Society, vice president of the
Huntington Memorial Clinic Auxiliary
and president of the Mills College
Alumni Club. She had also been presi-
dent of the Orange County Mills Club.
She is surv1ved by her husband,
Marinus Contant Jr., of the family
home, 618 Ramona Drive. Corona del
Mar; sons, Robert M. and 'Ibomas C.
Contant; parents, Dr. and Mrs. R. R.
Miller, Pasadena; and aunts, Miss
Pauline Cotter and Miss Helen Cotter,
Columbus Junction, Iowa.
Services and interment will be under
the direction of Forest Lawn, Glen.
dale. The family suggests con.
tributions to the American Red Cros,..
has it! only _
,,.,,-..:.;:/?' D££PStelmi-
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CLEANS DllP •ctu•lly removn soil
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llSTOllS PILI the pow erful ••ft•c·
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Fiii
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Our 21st Ytar of Service in Or•n90 County
2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA
l'HONE 546-3432
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-·--------~-·---~--------------------------------------~---..,
BEA ANDERSON, Edilo•
Tl#Mf1• A-It .. IMI 111•-cM , ... U
Welcome Mat
Rolled Out
It's never hard to get up in the morning if you 've got exciting things
tn do and interesting people to meet.
With their welcoming mat stretching from here to the ~ges of the
city, Wednesday Morning Club members face the new day wtth pep and
good cheer. for they've more than enough to do.
Ri ght at the top of their \i ~ts stands an important.function-~ering
the welco1ning hand of friendship to new and prospective members in the
beach area.
Enthusi as m will be the keynote when lhe clubwomen introduce the.
new faces at a Champagne Membership Tea in the Costa Mesa home o1
president Mrs. Edwa rd B. English. on Wednesday, Aug. 28 from 2 to 4 p.m.
Mrs. E nglish. assisted by the executive board, the Mmes. Robert
Erbacker. J ames Grose, Ben Brouwer, Robert Clifford, Rodney Fugate,
Chandler Campbell and Philip Evans will present ne.w members the Mmes.
\Viltiam L. Anderson, Stanley Jeranko, Matha M. Miller and E. L. Murray.
The champagne fountain, nestled in a setti~g of faU color_s to car!Y
out the them e is the handiwork of Mrs. PauJ Kne1seler. decorations chair4
man. Other arrangements for the afternoon are being _planned by the
Mmes. w. E. Gilmore, s pecial events; Grose, membership; Clyde Pome--
roy, hospitality, and Fred Johnson, refreshments
Members and prospective members may make reservations until
noon, Monday. Aug. 26, with the Mmes. James Morris, 546--8354 and Grose,
546-4211.
THE SIZE IS RIG~T -Making invitations for the Wednesday
Morning Club's Champagne Memltership Tea the right size will
insure speedy delivery to all friends and newcomers, hope Mrs.
Wllliam E. Gilmore, apecial events chairman and Mn. Willard
Steckbauer. They are placing the important document in 1h1 e~·
able hands of Bob Ruffin. He will see that the word gets out b.efod'
tht Wednesday, Aug. 28 tea. ~~
~IJ ··.·
... • Finding the Time ... . . , Volunteer Servi~
'
College Coed Confronting Challenge
. . .
Fashion Cruise Anchored
By JUDY HURST
01 "'-O•Hr l'll•t lhlff
Bored. Can't continue co 11 t I e
because of a cast on your leg.
This was the problem confronting
Miss Jeanne Brock, who is tanned an4i
surprisingly athletic looking with 1
white cast on one of her 1lim legs .
The Corona del Mar resident made a
decision which may give incentive to
other college or high school students.
"Since I was unable to attend 1chool, I
wanted to do something worthwhile."
lt was quite logical that Jeanne call-
ed the V-olunteer Bureau on the advice
of a friend. "They mailed me a li1t of
various organizations I could choo1e lo
work with," she remembered.
Slender in a short green midi, Mlsi
Brock sports the mod shcrt hair rtyle
which has been attractively 1un
bleached.
"Under the direction ot a
psychiatric social w<irker I worked
with the Bureau of Social Welfare in
Santa Ana. I even went to seminars in
Los Angeles," she smiled.
"I began working with a 29-year-old
woman patient who wa1 recently
released from the Metropolitan State
Mental Hospital."
Jn this person-to-pers'on relation1hip
Jeanne found that the patient wa1
typicaJly very insecure, couldn't relate
to people, couldn't control her emo·
tions and was apt to be depres1ed.
''I worked with her to draw her out
and give her confidenct. I tried to
maintain a friendly relatioship. I wa1
her only friend.
"She still calls mt daily and tell1 me
her problem1. I gue11 I'm a good
outlet because J listen and don't cet
mad."
outdoor sports," she liighed and looked
at the cast which is due tD come off
soon.
"I went to OCC for two years and
was at Cal State (Fullerton) for two
months prior to my accident," Jeanne
recalled.
For eight months, before she enroll-
ed at Cal State, she and a girlfriend
worked and traveled In Europe. "I
went over on a boat and worked In
Germany for three montns. I took
care of little girls and lived with their
family," she said fondl y.
The next five months she toured
Greece. Turkey. Italy. Spain and
Yugoslavia and then new home.
The native Californian, born In
Orange County 21 years ago, also has
worked on other community projects.
The Volunteer Bureau assigned her
to staff the office of the United Fund
of Newport Beach where she said, "I
answered the phone."
Then she was section chairman for
th• Corona del Mar fund drive for the
Cancer Society. "I had to recruit
volunteers to work with me. J rounded
up my friends, my mother's friendii
and the Society gave me some
names."
Jeanne imagined it would be dif·
ficult to find young people to work In
the Volunteer Bureau. "They are busy
with school. However. I believe kids
are interested in person-to-person con ·
tacts. J didn't want to help as a typist.
I wanttd personal contact.'' she
stressed.
The bureau offer• a young person
experience In an actual job ... a chan·
ce to assume responsibility and more
knowledge of hil or her own abilities.
It offers students 1 chance to
participate with adults a1 citizens.
.~ fas hion cruise wiJI ta ke members of Aeronutronics Wives around the world
Sept. 18 at the a nnual new member luncheon to be staged poolside at the New-
port Beach Tennis Club. Getting in the mood for the World Cruise are (left to
right) the Mmes. William O'Bannon, arrangeme~ts chainnan. Willis M~rsing.
past president and Stewart Bland, program chairman. Sped.al entertainment
will be a water ballet with songs presented by Harry Babbitt. N.ew members
and past president wi ll be honored. For reservations for th~ .event. which will
hegin at 11 a .m., members and guests may call Mrs. Wiiham Gannon at
,ll-4949.
The blonde doe-eyed daughter of Mr.
and Mr1. Stuard D. Brock of Corona
del Mar will be a junior In college
come September.
"My leg was hurt in a motorcycle
accident 1a1t December. And I like
"The bureau kept me busy. The pro-
gram with the social worker1 helped
me understand mental lllne1s. Too bad
everyone doesn't have this un-
der1tandin1 and opportunJty."
HELP WITH A SMILE
Ml11 Jeanne Brock
'Instant Mother' Title, Lose -Another:f Refuses This May •
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why do you
urge your reader~ to get psychiatric
help ? Don't you know the suicide rate.
of psychiatrists is the highest among
the professionals? Jf you doubt II write
to the Journal of the American
Medical Association and get the
statistics.
I am .a physician who works with all
types of specialists. The psychiatrist.a
are the balmiest ot the lot. I'm sure
many psychiatrists go into the fie ld in
search of solutions to their own pro·
btems. Please do your reading public a.
ravor and tell them the truth. -A
RE ADER
DEAR READER ' Bob Klpbulh wbG
1peo& 41 years at Vale was tbt world's
ireate.1t 1wtmmtng coach. Re turned
ou• many champions hut --.1 •
m..Uojln 1wlmmer blmoeU. Wll•S I 10
. . ..
ANN LANDERS ~
t"i a 1boemaker I don 't look 1t his
1hoe1. I loot at tltt wort he ba1 turned
out for otber1. Whe1 I I• ee a
carpenter, I don 't 11k to 1ee the boast
lie Uve:1 In. I •m lntere:1ted only I• lb•
quaUty of die 'f'Orll: he bas dont for hl1
cu1tomer1. I've seen beauty eperaton
whote hair loot1 trlfhttul, bat who do
beaaW'ul work on dtetr eUeatl. I bow
e.1.cellen& phy1ldan1 who a r t
daaieroualy overwet1bt ud amote
like cb.lmney1. I know a 1urreen wlto
hH ....... I pJI WI-..........
for foar 1ean. Bavtnt Ute lnform1tio11
and betel able .. appl,J tt i. ooe'1 Ufe
art DOt •H aed Ute 11me, my friend.
DEAR ANN LANDERS > My hus·
band ii a divorced man and the father
of two children. I am 28 and teach
tchool. We have no children.
When my hu1btnd and his w t f t
broke up she took the kldl, which wa1
OK with him. Yesterday he received a
Dhone call from hi• ex 1aying 1h1 wu
foavtnr town for "'°' ml llnco lilt
kids would be a burden be would have
to late them. Ht laid "fine" without
even ukinc me.
When be buns up be turned to me
and 1aJd, .. Concratulatioas, you are
now the roud mother of two
dilldren." told tam I was not
prep&red far the "honor" and the least
he could have done wa1 a1t me.
We cot into an argument and he
said either I take th• tidl or get ouL
Does the law in Virginia say a rtep-
mother bu to tlke a husba.nd'1
children by a former marriage? The
ldd1 art 12 and 10 and a real handful.
-FLABBERGASTED
DEAR nAB: Tile lefal llpedl of
tM1 pl'Mkm '" tbe lta1t of JOU WOf•
rteo, 1A41. v .. aeed 1 tltlM -le
f....U11e Ille war. Wvonr hn1blmt 1Meld eertalnb' •ave
asked you, even tbouc• It appears 1011
have DO choice. I've old It before and
I'll u.y tt aral.n: Whea you marry a
dJvorHd penon wttb a famllJ', that
famUy Hcomt1 part of your We
whether yn llkt tt or 10&.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Hert ls a
tick.li 1h situation tMt callJ for an Ann
Landen-il:h approach.
Scene: A 1oclal catherln1. Clumps
of guests art teated or 1tandin1 -
making small (ar large) talk. You Und
yourstll chattlng with two bright peo-
ple. 'hltl conver11tlon 11 fa1t-movin1
.Jnd provocative. You dl1cover after a
few minutes tlMlt the other two con-
verntionall1U are addr.11lng each
othtT and you be&ln to feel like 1 third loot. .
A JMlratm tJf rnM t11sff' l'f~!ll not wish
......
to interject himself Into a conV8fl
when ht feels no one i1 intere•ted·
wbat he has to say. Does one jult
there and listen or is it best to w
away? If you feel it 11 best to
away, wbat does me Sl.)' whta
leaves'! -IGNORED PARTY
DEAR IG > Ooe 11y1 l_.10-I
Drtnklng may be "In" to tbl
you run with -but It can pat J'l!ll
"out" far keepr. You can cool It aitil
stay popular. Read "Booie ind Yau._
For Teenagers Only." St'Dd 3S ~n~ !!!
coin and a lonf, self .. ~
stamped envelope with your rectU••= Ano Lai\dera will bt glad to htlp
with your problems. Send t.btm to
in cart of the DAILY PILOT, anci. ma a 1ell·addre11ed, •tamped ....
vel<J1$. ,_.
I •
' ---.
'.I
. . -.
14 DAILY PILOT
.. . ..... -... ----~~------. . -
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE -That's what the
Harbor Senior Citizen's Club Ice Cream Luau prom-
laf!S to memhen and guesta attenclin$ the 7 p.m.
event Thursday, Aug. 22 in the orgaruzation's rec-
reation center. Planning for the evening are (left to
••• . .
right) Mrs. Stella Marks with ice cream, Mrs. Ver-
onica Hanson with cards, Mrs. Aaron B. Christen-
sen with cookbook and Dr. Blanche Luther who is
taking notes.
. . .. ....
Troth Told
At Party
Durloe a family dlllller
party the Jl'll'enls o f
Pa,trida Ann Crabtree an-
nounced her betrothal to ,.,, . .,
James Kimbell Lockwood.
Setting for tbe rn1orma1
party was the home ol the
bride-elect'• parents, N"u.
and Mr1. Clyde Jackson
Crabtree o f HUDtinlton
Beach.
Miss Crabb'ee attended
Orange Cout: College and ls
a graduate of Los Angeles
College of Medical and Den·
ta!AssistanU.
Her fiance, IOl1 of Mr. IJ'ld
Mrs. James Robert
Lockwood of Corona del
Mar, is an ..tmmrus of Cal
Poly, Pomona, where he
majored in buainesl ad-
ministratloo. '
Tho couple have selected
Oct. 12 for their DUptials fu
the Firat United M-
<llurcll, Huntington Beach.
• •
Sorority
Tea Fetes
Members
Active x_. Alpha Match-mating Good Deeds
New AAUW Group Seniors Circle Date
~~;:,1be ~~! Rummaging around for charity's sake are members of Costa Mes.a Rebekah
ty Alumnae Oub at • tea Lodge, who are planning for their rummage sale Thursday, Friday and Sun-
TbUl"ld.ay, Aug. 22 from 3 to day, Aug. 22-24 in Costa Mesa. Mrs. Ranie Zuidema and Mrs. Douglas Mor-
5 p.m. in ttie home of Mrs. gan (from left) are .11howing off their plan to hdp the Odd Fellows Home for
Vemoo Edler of Newport the Aged, an orphans' home, Eye Bank-Visual Research, the heart program,
Beach. junior lodges for boys and girls and a youth camp. Further informatton is >Chapter Forms For Ice Cream Luau The executive officer& and available by 'calling Mrs. Lola Dobbeck at ~7417 or Mrs. Zuidema at 539-
oomm!U.. ohalnnen of the -=42=!~6·~-------------------------0range eo..t Alumnae Club • Now forming in Hun· tneton. Beach is the newest
d>apter of Ille AJooolatioo of
American University
Women.
The finlt blmneM and
Organizational meeting will
take place at 8 p.m. tomor-
?<Ni io the home of the
p:<q>'1 temporary presi-
dent, Mn. Ralph Bauer.
'Ibe chapter, open to all
qniversity or co 11 e g e
iraduates, will stimulate the
cooti'nued in te 11 ec t u.e 1
growth .and advancement of
women, and encourage the
disdl.arge of their ipecial
respollldbillties in com~
mtD.ty 1ervke. 'Ibe natJ.ooal
cra:anization offer• women
Earns Wings
The daughter of Mr.
and Mn. Ralph Ter-
zian of South Laguna I•
a new stewardess for
TWA based out of Ken-
nedy Airport. M i 1 s
Pamela Tarzian receiv-
ed. h e r wings after
training in Missouri.
the -rtunity to share
UieJr ope<ial interesll and
abilities tocially.
Other temporary officers
include the Mmes. Roberi
Horner, membership; ·KLaua
Scharz, eecretary; Louis
Freslca, treasurer, e n d
Rooald Coyne, pub'icity.
Formal ~ of Ille
new chapter wUl occur in
early fall with the election
of o{fi(:en scheduled to take
place· at that time.
Women interested in at-
tending the first meeting
mary call Mrs. Bauer, 847-
5487, er Mrs. Horner, 847·
6393, for additional in-
formation.
Members of the Harbor the enjoy:wd of everyone.
Senior Citizen's Club ar1
busy looking for H<awaiian
g.arb and pbrues to use at
their Ice Cream Luau.
The event i.s acheduled for
7 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 22 in
the orga:aization'1 recrea-
tion cecter 1n Newport
Beach.
Mrs. Aaron Christensen,
tile club's social chairman,
ls ln charge of the luau and
has interpreted a Hawaiian
phrase "dis holoholo no
Jcapa-ka!" to mean that
there will be something for
'There Will be a booth of
white elephant!, games and
fI'OUP singing. The Ginny's
Gang will offer musical
numbers. There also will be
a special exhibition of th•
Charleston.
Persons over age 50 are
invited to iattend the event
which will feature home
made cakes and beverages.
The cost is 50 cents per
person. For further in-
formation phone M r s •
Christensen at 675-3279.
will be present u well es
member> of ·th• Junior Horoscope Alumnae Club. / Mrs. Edler will b e
assisted by Mn. Fred
Howser and her committee
hlcluding Mn. David Knobel
and Mrs. Merle Amundson.
Aries: Creative Day
WEDNESDAY prove costly. Be reasonable they actually exist.
wi'ltlout being ertrawgant. SAGrrTARIUS (Nov. 22-
G t . AUGUST 21 Message clear by tonight. Dec. 21): GOod lunar aspect enera !On By SYDNEY OMARR LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): today coincides with
T I k G · ARIES (Mardi 2l-April Lunar cycle moves up. journeys of the mllld. Your Q JVen 19): Creative activities are Make appo.illtments. Assert intellectual curiosity is fired "'•"'ed 0 to g1 1 of yourself. Check details of up. You ceo read, write, The annual Home League tpo"'-'6U. · ay v project which has been advertise. Your horizons ex-
dinner of the SalvatiOO yourself. Apply unique •P-delill'yed. Now ls time to get pand -you come alive.
. Army is scheduled for p-oach to ta.ska:, projects. things moving. Be speclfic, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-
Thursday, Aug. 22 in ttie Romence ls accented -so confidieut. Take the lead. Jan. 19). Finish what you
Lafayette Hotel, L o n g lis activity comected with VIRGO ( tart. G t D
Be,...... c.hlldren Aug. 23-Sept. 22): s e answer. o .so
, .... u . · Belt to r e m a 1 n in even if embarrassing ques-
Annual Sale Offers High Collars Guest speaker will be Lt. TAURUS (April »-May backgrou.od, From this van-tions must be put forth. Get
Col. Sallie Chesha.m, .author 2>): Lunar aspect today tage point you can make to heart of matters. So-
of "Born to Battle" and coincides w 1th obstacles rn e lllingful observations. meooe may be attempting to
Look for the high-rising director of w o m e n ' s related to home, property· Activity lhown in comection hide essential information -
collar to go into fail and 11ervices for the Southern Fresh viewpoint m., be with club, group, organiza-act accordingly.
Interesting Objects Calif-'-Di•"-i·oo. needed. Doo't permit JX"lde lion. AQUARIUS (Jaa. 20-Feb. winter on everything from ...... _ ·-'-of ~-~----, -ch is part to at.and .a1 way progress. UBRA (Sejf,t. 23-0ct. 22): 18): H you demand perfec-daytime blouses to long din· '""" ULU.I~ B re 11-~ble u k I dis of the 11th annual Long e mo ~ · Include fam y members in on, you as or ap.
ner dresses. Beach Camp Meeti."ngs, will GEMINI (May 21~une any entertainment. Day to pointment. S o m e cQn•
A fal::luloul aseortment of. Board members deci"ded Designers like it like the be . 5 XI): Stress today on bow cement clOle relation1hips. cetsions a r • neeessary.
cl-•"1.: ... , jewelry, furniture, to sell candy for the Jddney mao, or mandarin, or Mrgm at"" ph.m. , .......,,; .0 you put ideu to woct. "Mlat ~ent misunderstanding Discuss matters with mate,
VU-UU6 Nehru, whatever you wish 11• "''es am' '"l"c W1 appears the easy way may can be cleared. Key is your plll'tner. Respmd io man.nu:
& PP l i an c e I• d 1 shes, fmd and wiU help their to call its fl:at fold or fabric be A Confrontation With in fact be more e%ptlllive. ability to be mature. Extend which de.ooks wildom.
glurware aod other in· Junior membership dreu that hugs the throat. Today'1 Generatioo. Know this aD1 investigate. hand of friend.ship. PISCES (Feb. 19-Match
terfftiog objects will be on dolls for Operation Merry Going right on Jn female Keylstobeversatill. Check SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 20): Accent on people Vi.ho
cU.play when the Woman'• <Juistmas. ::iions too Is the true HS TOPS Club TAURUS mes1&ge. 21): Spotlight on oare<r work with and serve you,
Club ol Huntington Beach A 1....,.;81 dinfler 1 1 eneck showing most CANCER (June 21.July p oteotial. Recognize op-You mu.t strive for greeter ,..~ frequently as sheer knit or Sa.-rong 2 Gain TOPS Club 22): Be wwy ot tbOM wbo pcrtunity wbm lt knocks. Be meam of communication. If
sponson its umual rum· scheduled for October and jersey blouse rising above meets every Monday at 7:30 wart to borrow. Keep wwtcb reallltlc in appraisal of tbi1 you do, then your Ufe
mage saie Frid8)', Aug. 23. district officers will speak in wide flat collar• on suits and p.m. in Smith's Elementary on pcues!fOC!. Tendency event.I. Avoid 1eU-deception. · becomes mon pleuant and
The day-long l&le will take _N_ov_e_mbe __ r . ______ _:coc:.•:::tsc:.·::.· _______ _:Sc:::::hoo:::::_l :::ln:_H~un:::tia=· ,.g1o:::::•..:B::e::•c:::h::._t::o:::w::anl~..:-::::el:::::es:::::111"':=....::could:::::~::See:=...!per::=.:•::OD1:=.,_sl=tua=.:Uon:::::1c-=•:.• _::lrulU=:::•:.l =..:try:L..:.l:::t. ___ _
place In the -... 420
lOlh St.
Planrine th• event are
Mr1. Did: Robtrts ,
chalnn.m, and Mn. Pearl
Joom, co-chairman .
Proc.m will b< used to
iqiport the club'• iti]an-
throP••· Mn. Arnold Pod1ade,
pNltident, oalled her new
board and malrmen fer e
aped.al swnmer meeting to
outline activities for the
coming year.
now it's !lie drallli over-pants • , ,
why didn't someone think of it sooner?
Now, the dtesa OYtl l<puUc hcnN>da J*>'S. Smaclring o(
)'OUlh. made foe mobility. Th< zingy feel of. &t<dom.
Two "J>"h>-the-insbnt dcess<s, all spiad with "'I-"
nit bttmuda pants, Scr...i up t,,. .A "• R Jr.
I . The ... apped-up drtS$, with high ottt
oollar, of Orloo• acrylic and wool ierl<Y
to rayon aC'rla.tc, ia red and Dal'J .. Jr. sizes
}oil. 28.00
Ii. The -ei1ect coatodiieso, with med-
allion acast~ ol. Orlan• acrylic -i """'
jency booded to ,.,.,. acel2tt, in red and
.. .,., Jr. sizes l-ll 28.(J(I
""'l' .,, """'' ·-...... 94
oc<loc bi' moil CIC J>b-
co
may co south coast plaza, san dlego freeway at bristol, costa mesa, 546-9321
shop rnolHay fflrough saturday, 10;00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. '.
•
J
.J._ -------------~-~--------------------______________________________ ..........
' .
Costa Mesa
VOL 61', NO. 200, 3 SeGTIONS , 46 PAGES ---..,:;:;;...._;:.............:t
Sea Here!
PHO'TOGRAPHER 'SIGHTS MERMAID, SHOOTS SAME
Kathy Kraemer, 17, Poses for Beach.Scene
'
OOPS, SORRY KATHY, SURF'S UP
Photographer Got Drenched, Too
Newpo11 Lifeguai·.ds Haul
215 From 20-foot Waves
People-bending "'aves up to 20 feet
high ht>aved J1hore at Newport Beach
Monday. causing harried lifeguard!i to
::arry out 215 rescues and more than
1lOO preventative measures for an
estimated 55,000 btachgoers.
For twimmers , sea condlUon11 could
l)e even wane today. A lifeguard
l)X>keS(f4ll &aid the W9Vf!S v.iV itf!l
smallt'f "b11t tht sta will stlll hEve
r-nough surf lo generate some good
riptides."
He predicted that "more of the
novice type surfers" will be lured into
the tricky ocean currents.
"And we're still getting some pretty
Jrood sel~ of waves at rive to 11\x fe et,"
be added. ~
COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1968 TEN CENTS
llie's Chances Guarded
20 Offer Hearts But Transplant Ruled Out
WASl~INGTON (AP) -Former
President Dw ight 0 . Eisenho~·er was
rerorted still critically ill Tuesday and
faced with unpredictable odds for
surviving his seventh heart attack.
At least 20 healthy Americans have
called, offering their hearts as trans·
plants for Eisenhower, it was learned.
However, Ei.senho~·er's doctors at
Walt.er Reed Anny Hospital have
ruled definit.ely against such an oper·
ation. TI1ey disclosed they had coosid·
'Fiscal Dooui'
ered It, presumably soon after lhr
latest attack, ""hlch occtuTcd last
1''riday. _
Eisenhower's age-77-and his his-
tory of major ll\Cdical and surgical
ills were given as the rule.out factors.
Eisenhower's condition as of 10 a.m.
\Vas reported as still critical. How-
ever, his doctors said U1at there had
been a fa vorable trend emerging
during the past 20 hours in the occur·
renoe or the life-threatening twitching
Mesa Denounces
Watson Petition
Citing fiscal dooin, financial chaos
and surrender of local co n tr o I
measures in the teeth of a vicious tax
trap, the Costa Mesa eity Council
Monday condemned bitterly the con-
troversial \Vatson Amendment.
The initiative which goes t n
California voters in November would
amend the State Constitution and
thereby limit property tax rates.
which makes an appealing package at
first glance.
Ultimate effects on California's
localized growth and managemenl
however . would be virtually suicidal in
terms of what is now enjoyed, city of-
ficials believe.
Vice Mayor Robert M. Wilson said
all 2.5 cities in Orange Coimty are bit·
terly opposed to the amendment, nam·
ed for Los Angeles County Tax
Assessor Phillip \Vatson.
Costa Mesa Finance D i r c c t o r
Robert Oman appeared before the Ci-
ty Council to further clarify a detailed
memo to City Manager Arthur R.
McKenzie, outlining just what the
Watson Amendment could do.
Oman says the initiative. if passed
by voters. would phase out property
taxes for the so-called. people-related
services -over a five-year period -
cutting the maximum property tax
rate to S4 per $100 of assessed valua·
tion in the total packa@:e.
Costa Mesa's leJZally-set rate is SI
per $100 of assessed valuation. but the
actual figure climbs up to $10.660 in
one new sec Hon of the city. through
added assessments.
This packa ge is comprised of
various assessment districts. whi ch
;i re required {(l pay for assorted cilv
services needed in a t!e neral law cit}i
\\'hich can't raise its $1 rate.
Woman Injured
In Hit and Run
A Costa Mesa woman was injured
Monday night when her car wa s
struck from the rear by a red sedan
driven by a helly you ng man who then
fl ed the scene, police said today.
Mrs. Thelma B. llolland . 50, or 3125
Roosevelt \Vay . suffered apparent
neck-injuries in the 5 p.m . accident on
Palisades Ro ad at Ne w p or t
Roulevard. She was waiting for a traf·
fie li ght to change.
"-1rs. Holland told police she asked
the man to follow her through the in·
tersecti-0n and pull over to exchange
insurance data. but he turned north
and fled up the Newport Freeway.
Oman's fi gure of nearly $10.7 in one
section of the cify -reduced by the
\Valson Amendment formula of drop-
ping area education and weUare costs
-would leave a $4 .9323 base rate.
..".ttd thi s is nearly 10 cents per $100
in val uation above the forecast legal
nlinimum under the Watson Amend-
1ncnt.
\Vhat this would mean to Costa
(See WATSON, Page %)
Dad's Vietnam
Flight Halted
By Girl's Death
A jct transport about to taxi into
takeoff for Vietnam was halted on the
runway at El Tor(l MCAS Monday to
inform a major aboard that his step.
daughter had been killed shortly
before in a nearby car crash.
The teen-ager and her companion
1968 County Traffic 1961
137 Death ToU 126
were among four youths killed in the
same geographical area during a 12-
hour period, with two of the three one·
car accidents involving small cars.
Dead following the accidents are:
-Christina L. Nowak, 17, or 17962
Gillman Ave., Irvine.
-Robert B. JJellstrom. 17. of 18206
Mayai:t-:e \Vay, Irvine.
-Laurence H. Baker, 16. of 16612
Silkworm St .. F'ountain Valley.
L/Cpl. Jlmmy Bethurum, 20. of
Dallas. Tex.
California J-Iighway Patrol officers
said Miss Nowak and J~ellstrom died
almost instantly when the car driven
b·y the boy blew a tire on Barranca
Road near Culver Drive Monday after·
noon .
The small car veered out of control
and hit a utility pole along the
roadway, crumpling like a ping pong
ball and crush ing the victims in.~ide.
Both Miss r..1owak a nd the 1Iel1st:rom
youth were June graduates of r..1ission
Viejo •figh School.
lnvesti::?ators said thr car had been
leased by USMC Maj. Chester L.
\Yhipple. the Nowak g:rl's stepfather.
\\'ho was notiried of her death on the
runway and delayed his trip to Viel·
nam.
The Fountain Valley youth was dead
on arrival at Hoag Memorial Hospital
(See DEATHS, Page %)
of U1e heart muscle that characteril.ed
his atlack.
The doctors also said his chances
for survival are "guarded"-meaning
unpredictable, as they previously de·
fined the term.
A sp-0kesman at the hospital said
that •·at least four or five would·be
donors have telephoned each day since
the general was hit by the newest
attack offering their hearts-and their
lives-as replacement for hi s.
"And they've all CX1me from pe,ople.
who sound like earnest, serious mind·
ed people, not publicity soekers or
eccentrics," said Lt. James Davis of
the hospital's public affairs office in
answer to questions.
Olfers have c<>me from both men
and women in various parts of the
country, including "California , Colo-
rado and Te·xas as the examples I
can remember offhand," Davis said.
(See EISENHOWER, Page !)
UTILITARIAN SCULPTURE -Con trary to what it might look like,
this shiny display i.s neither pop art ~or a new 10.c.ent telescope for
viewing Orange Coast landmarks. Fire hydrant display. as Frank
Schaffer, later learned, was part of Costa Mesa County Y?ater Dis-
trict exhibit in Costa Mesa Park Sunday, during Old Timer-New
Timer Picnic and Art League competition.
Judges Sele.ct 13 Wi1111ers
In Art League Competition
Thirteen persons were declared win·
ners in Costa Mesa Art League com·
petilion judged by a panel or three
Orange Coast art world figures during
Costa Mesa's Old Timer-New Timer
Picnic Su nday.
Professional class "'inner:\ were
Phyllis McCarthy, Eel Johnson and
Florence Viscetto. while Be tty
F\'lcClellan won honorable mention.
Stock /tJarkeu
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock
market eased irregularly J()Wer late
this afternoon in relatively light
trading. <See quotations, Pages 15-17).
l"irst prize was $25, second prize
was $15 and third prize was $10 in
each catergory.
\Vinners in the non-professional
clas1 were Jan Cook , Lucy Sanford,
Mary Long iliid Kay List, who won
honorable mention recognition.
Craft s winners were Do n n a
l•'riebcrtshauser, batik work: Charles
Doswell . rug-hooking; Fran Nlsenh(lff,
stitchery. and honorable mention wen t
to Dorinda Cook, stitchery and
Bernice Barlow, mixed media.
Judges for the competition in Costa
Mesa Park were Floyd Cornaby,
Rheta Gillette and Victor G. Casadoli.
Slide Traps Mesa Girl Oron:A:'
Leg Broken; Resc uers Lo·1vcr Victi 1n to Safety
The intriguing Badlands territory of
Costa Mesa's west side injund
.another youngster Monday when a girl
playing hide..a.nd·see.k in a small cave
was partially trapped by an earthsllde.
Deborah L. Wilson, ll. daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy WU..O.. of 2131
Republic Ave., lay whimpering in thfl
debris a1 her sister Paula, 7. st..yed
for comfort and a brother Billy. 8, ran
for help.
"She knew her leg w.as broke." said
D<'borah'1 grandmotkler. Mrs. Evelyn
Withrow. of tile Republic Avenue ad·
dress, while Mrs. Wilson visited her
daughter at JJoog Memorial HOlipltal
Wday.
Cost.a Mesa police said Capt. Biil
Savage and members of his Search
and Jtescue Squad blasted the cave in-
Lo sandy rubble with dynamite after
DeboratJ 's ordeal during mid· a f.
lernoon hours .
Firemen litnt to tile scene. behind
Victoria School. about two blocks from
the Wilso n home, lowered the victim
to safety with a stretcher and Alet.y
rl'.J!)e.
A large rock fell ont(l the gir1'5 right
leg, breaking it. a.cl she has ~ legs
In trattion at lloag Memorial J-lospital
today. with th~ uncomfortable position
to continue four to six weeks.
"l imagine she spent a pretty
miserable n I $t h t , · · said her
grandmother. who t>Kpect.c; Deborah to
remain at home another four month!I
In a body cast.
The old gravel pit where Deborall
w01,s Injured Monday 1!1 an attractive
)#ard to roaming children, who hf.ve
virtually complete access to the rug-
ged, bhlff.Jike area, reminiscent of
western badland.s
The land belongs partially to the Ci·
ty of Newport Beach and to Sully·
Miller Construction Co-., but lhe,e ia no
legal way to force the owners to com·
plete a fencing job to help keep youn&
intruders out.
Some of It. has been fenced by com·
mercial 11 s e r l! of the I a n d and
homeowners adjacent lo the rugged
pit ha ve lns trillcd some rences to help
solve the problem.
Capt. Savage said he and his men
usually dynamite caves constructed in
the treacherous area. bu t ad"
venturesome youngsters q u I c k 1 y
nvercome natural erosion proeess-es to·
~rcatt1'Jnor,.
1l'eathe r
\Vf! m ay have a bit of a dri1.zlc,
the weatherman say~ damply,
but for the mos t part it'll be the
same as before. with the sun
arriving about midmorning and
coastal temperatures in the
mid-70's.
I NSIDE TODAY
Ornnge County U /Mt becom-
fnp a center for thr: musical art.I
'in Southern California. See En·
krf.4fnment, Pagr, 9.
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% DAILY PllOT Tunda1, AU!JUSt 20, 1'6!
Hanoi's Move •
·Johnson Rejects
Halt to Be>ipibing
"DETROIT (AP) -President
Jobnaon. rejecting a total boJDbln&
halt of .North Vietnam or other de·
t"SCalaUon ol the war, s1y1 he will io
Costa Mesa's
Social Arts
Week Unfolds
The art of socJaliz.lng on every level
contin.les today, u Costa Mesa's cur·
rent Social Arts Week unfolds oo the
eve of the city's zaniest annual
baseball game.
Action will get under way in Te
\Vinkle Park at 7 p.m. Wednesday pit·
ting civic leaders against an all·star
team of youngsters from eech city
park in the gruelling softball classic.
A watermelon feed will follow the
game, but if past experience is any in·
dication, some of the adult softball
players m a y have to be fed by less
tired teammates.
For yoonger ch.ildren, a Make I t-
And-Take-It Day ls scheduled Wed·
nesday from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. at
the Community Recreat.ion Center at
Ule west side of the Orange County
Fairgrounds.
Teen·agers will be offered a dance
Wednesday night at the same facility,
with admission 1et at 25 cent:!: per
person, according to the Costa Mesa
Recreatloa Department.
A checker tournament is also
IObedul.ed the following day from l:SO
p.m. to 3:30 p.m., with competition
d.Jvided into two groups, thGSe 10 and
younger and those 11 and up.
Scheduled both Thursday and Friday
is "Summer Fun," the third annual
aqua 5how, a splashy presentation set
for 8 p.m. both nights in the Estancia
High School swimming pOOI.
Fee for the show is 50 cents for
adult, and 25 cents for children, who
will be taken on a guided tour of Sum·
mer Fun along the Orange Coast, as
well aa to the mountains, Paris and
even a UCl concert.
The girls will swim to Mozart's
Symphony No. 1 ln E flat major, such
as that affered by UCI in conceru-on·
the·grass during the aummer months.
Joan Toeppner directs the show,
assisted by Leslie Motschman, Karen
Ro.ss and Janie Shaw. \Valer polo and
comedy diving demonstrations also
will be given by the Coast Clippers
Sw!Jn Club.
Supreme Court
Says Dog Cannot
Be Benefi ciary
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The
California Supreme Court ruled today
that a dog cannot be a beneficiary
under a will.
The ruling came in a 27·page
decision concerning the estate of
Sebna Russell. a wealthy eccentric of
La Mesa.
Her hand-written will . made out in
1957 and discovered st the time of her
death in 1965, left half of her estate to
her beloved airedale, Roxie.
But the will was contested by the
dog-lover's niece, Mrs. Georgia Nan
Russell 1-lembree of Alpharetta. Ga .
She was appealing ..from an adverse
decision by a lower court.
The Supreme Court. ruling that half
the estate must go to Mrs. Hembree,
said, "As a dog cannot be the
beneficiary under a will, the at·
tempted gift to Roxle ... is void."
DAILY PILOT
OR•MG£ COAST PUBLISHING COMPANY
Rob•r+ N. W•1d
Pm~'ll Ind P11blll""
J1dr R. C11rl1y
Viet ,.,.e,~1 •"1t ~•I Mt11tttr
Thom•t IC11Til
l!dllor
l ho11111 A. M11•ph1"e
Mllnttlnt ECl!IOt
P111I Nin•n Altlllrll1lno o ;tf(IO•
c, ........ Offlte
llO W11t lty Strei•
M1 ar~; Addr111: P.O. 101 IS&O '1 '2'
O'ller Offlus
NtwP911 l tl(l'I; n11 W"f ftlbCt &o,il~~lrd
L•flli'll ~: 111 F'Ortll .IYf-H11nlkltltn h1tP!: X:. jth 6"'rtl
no further In lbt search for peace un·
tit H_anoi shows sincere si&Kls of wan-
ting to end the fighting.
SpeakinJ Monday night to a con-
vention of the Veterans Clf Foreign
Wars. Johnson said all moves by the
United States to end the fighting have
gone unanswered by the North Vitt·
namese.
''The next move must be their1," b&
told a cbeerinc audience.
'Ille President seemed to be aniwer·
ing critics withJn bis own party,
.particularly Sens. Eu g e De J.
Mc0ar111y and George McGovern, "11o
have made opposiUoo to the war ma·
jor parts of their campaigns for the
Democratic presidential nomination.
Pointedly ffierrlng to the fact that
his term doesn't expire until next
January, Johnson said, "This ad·
ministration does not intend to move
further until it has good reason to
believe that the other side Jntends
seriously to join with us 1n de·
escalating the war and moving
seriously towarda peace."
While he is in office, Johnson eni.·
phasized again and again, he will can
the shots and will not bend "to some
of us wbo appear to be searching for a
formula which would get us out o(
Vietnam and Asia on any terms ... "
In one of his strongest defenses of
American actions in Vietnam, Johnson
also predicted that his successor will
wind up with the same policy, once he
has all the inlon'hation a n d
responsibiity that comes with the
presidency.
"It's ane thing to be 1eeking
reaponslbility and it'1 another thing
when you've got it," Johnson said
about his critics.
The President went to Detroit from
his Texas ranch, then flew to
Washington. He bed been in Texas
most of this month.
In clearly emotional tones, Johnson
said nobody wants peace more than he
and he damned Hanoi for what he
charged was its !allure to respond
clearly and affirmatively to h i s
March 31 order restricting bombing of
tbe North.
"Let's don't be hoodwinked. Let's not be misled .•. We're oot going to
stop tbe bombing just to let them step
up their bloodshed," Johnson declared.
* * * Nixon Backs
President 011
No Bomb .Halt
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -GOP
presidential candidate Richard M.
Nixon t.oday gave down-the-line sup·
port of President Johnson's refusal to
order a total Vietnam bombing halt at
this time.
Nixon said he was Jnterested in the
same thing as Johnson -a clear
signal from Hanoi that it would take
some action to de-e!ca\ate the war on
its part i! the Uniled States ended the
bombing.
"l think the United States is well ad·
vised not to stop the bombing unless
there Sl'e reductions af enemy attacks
on U.S. and South Vietnamese forces,"
Nixon told a news conference.
Previous bombing pauses. Nixon
said, "were one-way streets in which
the United States gave something but
received nothing in return."
J ohnson announced Monday night he
had not received any indication from
Hanoi it was ready to reciprocate and
he would therefore not endanger Uves
of U.S. ser'vicemen by ordering a total
bombing halt
U.S. planes are bombing only below
the 20th parallel.
Nixon held a n~s conference after "
conferring in the state capitol with
Ohio Gov. James A. Rhoces. Minutes
later he drove to the airport for a
night to •tarrlsburg. Pa.. and a
meeting with GOP leaders there.
Ni."<on began the final day of a two-
day campaign s"'ing with the annual
exhibitors breakfast for the press at
the Ohio State Fair Grounds.
Thief Gets $450
In N tu·sery Heist
Other customt'rs were indulging
their green thumbs, but someone was
helping himself LO green txicks worth
$SO and an add\Uonal $400 In checks
from a Costa i1esa nursery spfc , vie·
tims told poUce Monday.
Felix A. Baaabe, manager of Green
llaven Nursery. 2123 Newport Blvd ..
said the thief must have known the
location of the hidden safe.
Mayor to Address
Verde Homeowners
CClata 11-ttsa Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley
will speak be.fore the Me111 Verde
Ht>meowntr11 Aa.soclalion at 7 !30 p.m.
Thursday at the ~tesa Verde Country
Club.
Ma)'or Plnltley wtll share the pro·
g:nrn with Orange Cotst Colle&e
Prtlsident Norman Watson, who wUl
diJcUH Ill• S.pt. 17 OCC bond elec:lloa.
•
\IPIT .......
Dr. White
Rem ains
Optimi stic
BOSTON (AP) -Dr. Paul Dudley
White, the noted heart apcclallst who
has treated former Pres.ident Dwight
D. Eisenhower for heart att;::icks, said
today Eisenhower's current condition
offers some basis for optimlsn1.
''llis situation is a common one, ~·e
have hundreds of patients in intensive
care units across the country who suf·
fer such dompllcationt from heart al·
tacks but may survive," the 82.year·
old White said.
5.5 MET ERS SCRAMBLE FOR POS ITION ON DOWNWIND LEG IN OLYMPIC TRIALS
_________ Lo_w_•_ll_N_o_rth'a Luv (left) Fl9hh Uphlll Bettle In Second Rece
"His condition is very hazardous,
but be may survive and l think lt Js
well to maintain an optimistic attitude
while remaining concerned that he is
very, very ill." From Page · l
WATSON ...
Mesans would be an add.itlonat 19 per·
cent cutback in property taxes,
amounting to $.m,<XX>, a crippling sum
to lose.
Just .at a glance, Oman said, here Is
a hypothetical 1968.-69 city operational
budget.slash representing the Watson
Amendment's particular structure.
-Civil Defense. $24,264.
-Minor Construction ( a 11 e y s ) ,
IJ0.024.
-Street nesurfac:ing. $145.IXXJ,
-Central Services, $34,902.
-General Cutbacks, $65,IXXI total.
"The limitations on bonding would
be especially damaging ... " Oman's
memo said, uwe do not now have any
general obligation bond issues and
would be unable to take advantage
even of the five percent limitation (of
the proposed Wat.son Amendment) sin-
ce other agencies in our area already
exceed the 20 percent maximum
limitation applying to the combined
bonded indebtedness of all agencies."
Oman said that except for gas taxes.
city revenue would be critically
limited.
''The city of Costa Mesa would pro·
bably never be able to make any
capital improvements during the life
of this irresponsible amendment," the
report continued.
He said the Watson Amendment
would also include long-term leases
exceeding five years. therefore pro-
hibiting any new non.profit cor-
porattont 111 a• method, of financing
needed improvements.
"I recommend that our City Council
~o on record as vigorously con-
demning Ibis disastrous amendment"
he said.
"And," he added, "that we utilize
every appropriate means to convey to
our cltlzens the vicious tax trap that
they will be caught in if they approve
the Watson Amendment."
Vice Mayor Wilson also said durinJ!
the discussion that tax money would
have to come from somewhere to
meet the cutbacks posed by people·
oriented service.~ being removed from
pronerty tax rolls.
The point is. he posed, where
would it come from? The tax bite
could hurt el!ewhere. perhaps hitting
those who would be hurt more.
One area of the community which
would benefit through passage of the
\Vatson Amendment. the city finance
director said in remarks Monday,
would be big business and industry.
Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley said passa~e
of the controversial initiative would
result in utter chaos in the state.
Frona Page l
DEATHS ...
in Newport late Monday night after a
sports car driven b7 his brother ram-
med a parked truck an the San Diego
Freeway in C.Osta Mesa.
Gregory Baker, 18. esca~ with
minor injuries, but their girl com.
panlon, Ann S. Novratril, 17, of 15591
Ross Lane, HunUngton Beach. suf-
fered a fractured skull and neck in·
juries.
Patrolman G. \V, Olson said the
Baker car was northbound near
Harbor Boulevard wlten it hit the
truck, which was parked in oUtside
Janes, pcsslbly without its llJt:hls on.
Driver Billy J. Adam s. 18. of 11632
~tuarl Drive, Garden Grove. saw the
car coming and leaped off the truck
beet escaping harm.
The Young Marine lance corporal
was killed early today when his car,
1>011U1bound on the Santa Ana Freeway
hctween Culver Drive and Jeffrey
Road, went out of control and struck a
tree.
J udge Co nvicts
Um·uh's Son, 19
INGLEWOOD <UPI) -Bradley
Unruh, 19, son of assembly speaker
Jesse Unruh. today was ean\licted in
superior court af joy riding in a car
without the constnt of the owner, a
felony.
l lnruh was charJt:ed '"'IU1 takJng a
1936 Rol11-Royce· from a garage In
ltawthorne la.st 1'1ay 4. lie returned
the car latfr.
Superior court Judge RotcOf 0 .
Farley beard th e trial without a jury.
Unruh'• attorney immediately tiled a
motlon for a new trial •
Chute Shoots Marshall
Into Yacht Race Lead
By ALMON LOCKABEY
01 ltlt OtllY Pl ... ll•lf
To fly a chute or not to fly a chute -
that is sometimes the question in a
yacht race.
But it had befier not go Jong
unanswered, as Gardner Cox of ~1an
ta loking YC found out ~1onday in U1e
second race of the 5.5 meter Olympic
Lr la ls.
C.Ox' indecision -or slowness -
cost him an early lead Monday as he
rounded the first weather mark about
two boat lengths ahead of JOhn
Manhall's Bingo II, Stamford, Conn.,
and Gordon Lindeman'.!! Cloud Nine
from MiJwaukee, Wisc.
Marshall and Lindeman popped
their chutes as they rounded and slid
under the lee of Cox' Cadenza as his
crew belatedly fought to get the big
kite flying .
And it wasn't until the final leg of
the six leg 10.83 mile course that Cox
was £ble to pick off Lindeman and
move up to r;econd to preserve bis lead
on the scoreboard.
Once Marshall got out front,
however, he worked out a gubstantial
lead of nearly two minutes at the
finish.
Lindeman also had trouble holding
his third position as Bill Ficker of NH·
YC got Chrade moving and challenged
h!m at the last leeward mark, roun-
ding overlapped. Ficker dropped back
to fifth on the final bcal.
National Snipe Ch~mpion Earl
Elms. Mission Bay YC. with a p~ir of
ace Snipers as crew, showeci that his
tiller touch isn't confined to the 16-
footers when he stole the start and
flopped to an early port tack fiJr a
hitch toward the beacll. He apparenUy
found some shifty winds and had drop·
ped to fourth at the weather mark, a
position he still held at the finish.
Observers at the first weather mark
had a fe weyebrow IUters as the boats
llpproached the flag singly and in
hUI1ches. Behind Elms came \Varren
Parker's Fugitive, NHYC; Ted
Turner's Nemesis, Atlanta. Ga.:
Taylor Grant's Yankee II, NHYC; BiU
Ficker's Charade; Ernie Fay ,
l-fouston, in Sundance -and would
)-ou believe North and Driscoll of San
Con field in Slaying
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -James
Vernon Lewis Jr., 36, was arrested
Monday by FBI agent.II on a charge
of killing a fellow convict in a cell in
Atlanta prison last Dec. IO. Lewis \va!I
released from prison shortly before
the case was presented to a federal
grand jury in Atlanta last spring.
DJ ego in 10th and 11th place? Al
Ca~ell of Voyagers YC was close
behind Driscoll.
It was here that North's new Luv
had more trouble. M. he bore oU
slightly to set a chute Driscoll and
Cas!ell rode over him, dropplng the
San Dlegan back to 13th.
Another big surprise was to see
Scott Allan in his new boat, Outa
Sight, come around the mark in last
place for the second day in a row.
But the tail-enders got ttieir boat&
moving on the reach to the second
mark. Result: Some plain and fancy
luffing matches as the skippers fought
for weather berths.
After the trlantular lap the 17·boat
f1eet began to spread out as the
leaders fought to control their leads
and the t.ail·enders started tp gambie.
Here are the standings after two
races:
1, Clclenu. Ci1rdr11r Cox, Mlnt1lok!nt, N. J,,
1·2-3.
'· ll"to 11, John Mtrth•111."•mlor\ll Conn. ~l-S.r. l . ll•rffe. 8111 Fldltr. N11YC, 2·i-l.
'· Clo<ld Nln1, Gordon Llnd"'11n. Mllw1~~"· 7-..... ,.7. J, 1mon1, Gtrrf: OrlKoll, SOYC1 4:1-22. •· 1h1dow, E1r1 in11, M.llYC, t-.il, r. ufld.ll'ICt lir~, "'""· How"'"' U-lj·'· .. N-11, 'rid Umtf, Allan11, Ge ..... -11.
t . Luv, Lawttl Horth, SOYC, ,_11 -17. 11, F11111tM. W1nwn Perktr, HHVC, 11>1o-J2,
11. S.vffl, Al Ce•HU, Vo~-· VC 12+-33.
11. Ou!• ~19111,.kotT Allen, u.1. HIVY, lt·l2-l5.
11!:..o COllllP Ill vi, e rltTon CP!enc:1, Pl'!Jlld<llPl'llt, 1 ...
Tl. t.,,,1nl, OOl'I Cdl1n, Afff')IJllllll. l'"IJ.--40 U. Gr1u, ElllolT Old1k, Knldctrbod<lf', H.Y., U·
16--0. lt: ~:.11:·.(:kf • .,i~iozt~.~,;t~.Jt.1b~l5-4. , .
House Shootin g
Leaves 2 Dead,
Infant lnjtu·ed
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Two
women, one of them the motber of a
Marine killed in Vietnam, were shot to
death and a four.month·old boy
critically injured today in a pre-dawn
shooting rampage in a house in the
Germantown section of the city.
A suspect identified as Paul Jones,
59, husband of one of the women vic-
tims, was taken into custody in bis
television repair shop on the fll'st floor
of the house. Police said be was clad
in pajamas and carrying 1 rifie.
The dead women were identified as
Marie Jones, 47, wile of the suspect,
and her daughter, Mary Eubanks, 22.
The infant, Lawrence, the younger
woman's son, was shot in tile left leg
and was reported in cNtical coodition
at the pediatrics section of German.
town Hospital.
Police were alerted after another
.Jones stepdaug1lter, Sharon. 19, fled
to a neighbor's home after being
beaten with a wooden mallet.
\Vhite said he talked w i t h
Eisenhower's doctors in Washington
from time to time, but has seen "no
need to enter into the picture becAuse
he is receiving excellent treatment."
Even when Eisenhower had bia first
attack, White &aid, "I didn't stay In
Denver becau.re he had such good doc·
tors there that I didn't think it was
necessary for me to be there all the
time, I think it is good for the cOUlltry
to have confidence in the many heart
i;pecialists we have."
White said he also remains hopeful
about Eisenhower's pr()(ipecU because
"he's pretty tough."
'"He was born that way," \Vhite saJd.
"I think at times we don't pay enough
attention to hereditary influences and
don't give our parents credit for pass·
ing on health and longevity. Many
persons with long.lived ancestors can
stand more in general than others."
White also noted that Eisenhawer
has "taken good care of himseU."
"First, and most lmportant I think,
he's kept his weight down, he's al!o
gotten regular exercise, and he hasn't
smoked," White said. 40These three
major achievement& also help to ac·
count for his toughness."
Frona Page J
EISENHOWER
"None ol them were folks who were
on their death beds. 11ley all are
healthy people who say they love and
respect the general and that they
would rather have him Uve than them.
"I recall especially a man who
phoned from San Antonio, Tex. and
said, as I recall it: 'I'm just aboul
the general's age and l know I have
a healthy heart. I koow I haven't too
many more years left &o I'd like hin1
to have my heart.' "
Davis said that up to Monday ni ght
he and his associates had told such
volunteer&. that Eisenhower's doctors
had not considered the matter or a
heart transplant in connection with
any of. his recent attacks and that they
assumed the same was true for the
current one.
Monday night the doctors announced
that they had carefully conslcrered
such a po6Siblllty in the present
attack, had talked it over with mem·
hers of Eisenhower's family, and then
decided to rule it out.
"And at one o'clock in the morning
Tuesday-Washington time-I got a
call from a woman in Denver, offer·
ing her heart," said Davis. ''I was
able to tell her about the doctors'
statement."
P hone Talks Resum e
CHICAGO (UPI) -Bargalnln&
teams of Illinois Bell Telephone Co.
and electrical workers meet again t()o
day on the 104.th day of. a strike that l!ii
hampering Democratic N at ion a I
Convention communications.
·.
only ,
,...,....:.;.///
has it!
DEEP s--WEJii==---
cRlfPEr CLERnlnU
THE ULTI MATE
in CARPET CLEANI NG
ECONOMICAL reduces the need for
fr•quent profe11lon1I cleenln9 be-
c•u•e it remow11 the dteply embed·
d ed 1011 end leewe1 no residue In the
t•tpet fibers to collect dirt.
CLEANS DnP actu•llY remov e• 1oil
from both the pile of the cerpet end
the cerpet b1ckinq.
alSTORES PI LE the powerful ewtrac·
tion proct11 romow e1 moi1 fure im·
m1di1tely1 thu1 evoiding 1hrink19e.
end lift1 matted plle to 'like new'
appearance.
WHIN YOU
WANT THI
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SAFI PaOCISS 1cl1ntific1lly dewel-
oped 1pecielly for the prof111ion1I
c1rp1t cleaner. It 11 completely 11f1
for •II c1 rp1t fibers.
GINTLI ACTION u1e1 no bru1llt1 or
scrubbing: t tfion, 10 it does not dit·
tort the pile of the ttrpet.
SOIL l IT Al D I NG AND MOTH
P•OOflNG trt included 1t no e1tr1
cost.
FlEE
HTIMATI
CAU RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS
Our 21s.t Ye1r of Service in Orange County
2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA
PHONE 546 -3 432
----------
BY
WILLIAM
REED
Reeds •••
In the Wind
City Attorney Don Bonfa, who is
solidly opposed to the present char·
ter provisions for election of a city
attorney, has some pretty good
reasons why the city's lawyer
should be appointed by the C i t y
Coi.Jncil and is ready to discuss
the1n at the drop of a writ.
The first distinction which must
be made in order to understand
the city attorney's position is that
the city attorney is the legal ad-
viser for the council, not for the
entire city popuJation.
As such he interprets the law to
councilmen and must defend their
;ictions shou ld legal action result
from decisions of the council based
on his advice.
* Most of the legal advice in the
day-to-day operation of the city
legal department is by lawyers
who do not advise the council
directly.
Bonfa believes that the city coun-
cil should have the right to hire,
or fire, its own lawyer rather than
to have the people hire the lawyer
on whose advice the council relies.
He pointed out that the lawyer
has very little contact with the pub-
lic in the course of his duties. "J ust
like every other lawyer. my duty
and is to my client and my client
in this case is the council," Bonfa
said.
* Al though there has been no
problem so far as is known. there
exists the possibility that the law-
yer for the city could be subject to
heavy pressure from donors to his
campaign fund should the present
election provision remain in the
charter.
"If the selection of the attor ney
continues on an electioneering
basis then money must be raised
for a campaign. It is difficult to
convince many campaign contribu-
tors that their $50 to $1900 contribu·
lion does not entitle them to spec-
ial treatment or some favor," Bon-
fa pointed out.
IJp, Vp , A'""!I
Children enjoy play equipment
at Huntington Beach's Ward·
]ow Park. Ci ty is seeking more
money for park develoP,ment
"'Ith $6 million bond measure
' on Nov. 5 ballot .
'
Surf at the Pier
Small girl pauses during walk along beach lo watch surf roll past
pilings of Huntington Beach Pier. Big waves all along the Orange.
Coast brought joy to surlers. but kept lifeguards busy. Heavy surf
is expected to continue for several days.
LA Airways Helicopters
' Set Flight Resumption
By JACK BROBACK
01 tflt Diiiy 1'+191 Sl1ll
Los Angeles Airways' helicopters
will be back in service Wednesday,
Clarence Bellin, president of the
airlines, sa!id today in a special press
conference at an inn .1ear the Los
Angeles International Airport.
Bellin said the return of t he rotary·
wing planes to ser vice would be
gradual with 50 percent of the flights
expected to be in service by the
weekend. He S'aid there were no plans
to scrap helicopter service.
Bellin emphasized that there was no
doubt of the "integrity" of the aircraft
Airport Workers
Doing Slow Bu.rn
Over Sideburns
NEW YORK !UPI) -It may seem
irrelevant. but th e International
Association or Machinists a n d
Northwest Orient Airlines sat down to·
day to try to work out a su1table
definition of sideburns.
Jt seem s ttiat Northwest Orient's
cargo manager at Kennedy lnterna·
tional Airport, George Parker. issued
a definition-directive last Wednesday
which said: "Sideburns should not be
below the middle of the ear."
A number of his cargo handlers had
been going by the Random House die·
l.ionary definition that sideburns are
"short whiskers extending from the
hairline to below the ears .. .''
But Parker wasn't impressed. At
midnight on Saturday, he told 14 of hi.~
hirsute cargo handler! lo go home
because they had failed to trim their
sidebW"M to the specifications in his
directive.
The suspended men contacted .Julius
Brodsky of Local 1894, lntern.ational
Association of Machinists and com·
plained that "our haircuts are in style
right now, and we 're presentable.
"That should be enough," they said.
especially since "we 're not even seen
by the public."
Brodsky scheduled a session for to·
day with company representativ~ to
come up with an "authoritative"
defirrition of sideburns.
Until they do, the cargo handlers
have sideburns, but no paychecks,
Drilling Request
Before Planners
Fountain Valley planners consider
Wedrlesday the approval of .a use
variance which would permit Shell Oil
Co. to coosb"uct a temporary oil.dfill·
ing site at the southwest corner Of
Warner Avenue and Bushard Street.
The Planning Commission meetl1 at
7::10 Wednesday at City Hall, 10200
Slater Ave.
and there was no problem involvin(
maintenance. He said the crash into a
Compton playground last Thursday
whioh killed 21 persons had no con·
necfjon with 'the first crash last May
22 which killed 2:1
The airline executive said informa·
tion on the cause of the second crash
-metal fatigue in the 5prindle
assembly of the rotors -was released
whereas such information on the firgt
craft had not been because it was
much simpler.
"The last .accident had nothlllg to do
with maintenance," Bellin stresseQ,.
"It was something all the experts,
governmenl i n v e s ti g a tors and
maintenance could not ha v e
prevented.''
The executive said his company's
maintenance guidelines were mort.
conservative than the military and
than government or factory re·
quirements. He s!Wd the craft were
disassembled every 1,200 hours.
Bellin said helicopters were in the
air Sundry flying without pa1;sengers.
He said none of the company person·
nel had declined to ny in the er.aft.
· "Aircraft put into service w~.
nesd.ay will all have new &pindle
assemblies," the executive said.
Bellin said many persons in Orange
County saw the planes fiying Sunday
and called in about fight resumption
schedules.
He said the company has plans to
augment helicopter service with Short
Take Off and Landing (STOL) planei
but no date has been set.
VW Dealership
Remodels Shop
An old building at the northwest COT·
ner of Olive A venue and Third Street
is being remodeled and wilt 1oon be
occupied by the I n d e p e n den t
Volkswagen Service, now in operation
at 7842 Warner Avenue, Huntington
Beach.
The old building was vacated
recently by Nelson Auto Service and
Western Union. These two buslnesae~
have moved to E llis Avenue jtl!t east
of Golden West Street,
Tiie building was ~old to Rudi
Weislein by the McCallen Realty Syn ·
dicate, according to Loretta Cosgrove
Terry, an associate broker with Ted
Way Realty.
Personnel Group
]\feet Set Thursday
C1a.o;sifled personnel of thf' f'ounUin
Valley School District .are asked to •t·
tend the next meeting of the Personnel
Com mission .
The session is carded for 7:30 p.m .
Thursday in the Curriculum Material~
Center, l Lighthouse Lane, Fount.a.In
\1a1Jey.
'Butnanizing Huntington'
Cultural Meeting Slated
W11y1 to foster the arts in Hun·
tington Beach and to find city.
busthcis1 or private support for tbM'I
will bt disci.a1ed Aug. 30 at the
monthly meeting or REACTION.
Packetl of recmt arUcles on
"cuUvral enUghtment" in Huntin~11
Beach will be presented , to e,C;h
perMWI planning to •ttend tht 7:30
p.m. discussion themed j<Humal'Kzin•
the Clty : Mle Aru in Huotiniton
Bearch."
Pers<>ng who plan to attend 1hould
aign up 11t tbt Huntington Beach
PubUc t.J.brary.
Valley Boosts Schools
Will Double Number by 1978 if Bonds OK'd
By SANDI MAJOR
Of ""' o.ltf I"._ II•" A achool dislrjct Uta-.. tn Ill! centw-y
nf exUtence. accumulated only 11
scboolJ plant for more than double
that number within the coming 10
yean.
If its proposed '8 million Dond Issue
is approved Sept. 17 bf voters, Foun.
tain Valley district will have 23
schools in um for twice the number of
students it is ex.peeting this fal,l.
School officiats say this means 1hey
will have a school within walking
distance of nearly every child in the
di strict.
Fountain Valtey had only one school
for i~ 660 atudents in 1962. The next
year, the new Fountain Valley ·School
Douglas Seeks
Japanese Aid
--For Jetliner
TOKYO (UPI) -The McDonnell
Douglas ~orp. .ann~unced Mo~ay it
was looking for J..apanese supplters for
materials to be used In the DClO tri·
jetliner, scheduled for service in late
1971.
Donald W. Douglu Jr .. pl'esident of
lhe aerospace corporatioo's Douglas
Aircraft Co ., said the DClO busines."i
potentially .available to .Japanese
m'anufacturers cOuld .amount to more
than $50 million during the next five or
six year&.
Douglas said it was the first time
the American aircraft industry had in·
vited Japanese participation.
Asked if this would not further
damage the UnJted states' balance
payments p<isition, Douglas said hi~
firm had always supported the prin·
ciple of free trade and that the
balance of payments problem is a two-
way street.
"'~" DCJO will carry up to 345
passengers on routes up to 3,200 miles.
It will be powered by three engine.~
made by the Genet'al Electric Com -
pa1ny, which has been doing bu11lness
in Japan for more than 60 yefll's.
• 1
'
was completed at a cost. of $299.792.
With the new school. and two homt>s
the district remed f&r clz.sses in ntw
tracks. the s y s t e m housed three
time! the Jl\lmber of studen-ts enrolled
the year before.
1'hrough its bond program. the last
the d.is.trict expecli to ever have to
have, said Dr. Charles Woodfin,
associate superintendent for business.
tile district expects to build 11 new
schools. Eleven schools are now open,
with the on~y one under construction.
Robert Gisler School, to be ready May
1969.
Ace-0rding to Jack Mah nken. direc·
tOT of business services. who ploUed
out the tentative sites for the new
Cisco's Misfits
Win Gals' Crown
Champions in the Huntington Beach
Wnmen's softball leag_ue are members
of Cisco' s Misfits. who won all nine of
their season games.
The 10 top league hltter5 .are Jerri
Watters of Terry'• Wildcats; Chris
Herrera. Misfit.~; Mildred Dowdy,
Misfits ; Jane Allison . Aquatic Shell :
Roberta Denato, Wildcats : Marge
Fulton. Wildcats: Anna Harvey, Shell ;
Sue Ciarelli. Misfits; Sharon Springer.
Shell: Dodie Wa·y. Misfits. and
Monalee Myers, Shell.
i::chOC)ls. the !irst. to be bullt wiU bl
.James Cox School. followed by Moiola,
Masuda , Talbert and one yet unnamed
north ol the Bushard School.
Enrollment in June of this year wa•
7, 784 students, and classes t.re to
begin in September with 8.590.
.o\.dministrators estimated this Is 210
fewer studef)(s than the maxi.mum
their schools can hold, but by June
1969, the picture changes.
Mahnken told trustees Thursday
tha t although only two schools will ac·
tuc:'ily be overcrowded at the beginning
of school. six are to be filled beyond
capacity by the end or the term.
The total "useable capacity" of all
district schools is 9.030. and 8,590
stud~nts are to register for this fall.
Fountain Valley cmd Harper schoolJ
are to be over the desired limit.
New families moving to the district
wiJI further crowd the situation during·
the year, and Arevalos, Bushard,
Fountain Valley, Harper, McDowell
and Newland schools will go beyond
the limit, the business director'•
report shows.
Dr. Woodfin is projecting a total
enrollment of 17.700 when the district
reaches its saturation level. about
1978. He estimated the district will
need the 23 schools at that time.
Fountain Valley schools curreritly
own three of the 11 sit.es future schools
would be built on, and ofhcial1 are
negotiating for two others.
The remaining six were reviewed by
district trustees last week, but no ac·
lion on them was taken.
Constructioo of schoolB alone. ls
already costing the district four times
more thz.n the Fountain Valley School,
which was com]Xeted in 1963. The
Gisler school is tootaUng more than
$900,000.
The $8 milUcm in bond s. plus a loan
from the state building Jund of Sl7
million. is to take care of the costs,
and is not to result in an increatU! in
the ta~ rate. Dr. Woodfin predicts.
Surf Dinner Slated
The fifth .annual Huntington Beach
Surf Lifesaving Assocl·ation ewards
and steak dinner will be held Aug. 29
at Harbors erid Beaches Department
headquarter~ building. 103 Ocean Ave.
Dinner begins at 8 p.m.
PHONE COLLECT
213-728-7283
FREE ESTIMATE
CHARGE IT!
'~ T t, ~ ._,
, .. ,,.,
We'll clean your
draperies for only. ••
100
l'ER WIDTH
... 11 .... "" "' 3' long 150
PER WIDTH
... 11 .... 3'"' 5' 101111 2 50
l'ER WIDTH
unlined I ' le 9' i...,
l'llCI INCLUDES TAKING DOWN AND REHANGING. 48 HOUR SERVICI
Ptnn1ys exclusive new process cle•ns ,n types of draperies beautifully,
dr•p•rits thet could never be cle•ned before (even beauty ple1t1 tt no •rir• cher91). M1k11 them look ind 11111lmost like new.
PENNEY'S CLEANING SERVICE
a..,,.riet • lloclsp'""1 • blank11s • de<orater p1lloW1 • qu1nl rvgt. ~~====
·. . " ........
•
.~ .... ...., ... ....,
On 1wnmer nights, Biii Mayer
and hi• wile like to sizzle steaks
out on the patio of their residence
in Torrance. Hi;>Wever, their fir1t
Door apartment terrace fronts on
the tidewalt, and recently a thief
made of:f with the grill. When be
bou,ght a new one, Mayer chained
the barbecue stand to hi• apart-
ment door. Lut night, IODleone
stole hi• steak. •
Pre tty Edit Vmrnegut dfaplous,o Gt111
1\fcCarthy campaign · ..ucker •n a
ttniqtU porition tohU. . ~ndiftg . a
clambake for McCarthg ia Dmn11,
1\fass. Edit ii tM daughW of flOUClilt
f·:iirt Vonntgut of Baratablt, MGJ(, • Huey Paul Jones of Pueblo,
Colo., i• a patient man •.. but
enough ii enough. Jones did not
rue a complaint wheu 10mebody
broke into hi• home and stole 1 r•
dio ... or even when someone stole
his new bat. But he. went straight
to the 1berifr1 omce when aome-
body stole a bottle of vodka i r o m
his camper. • t liss Je•n Shufflebotham of Man~
ches ter, England, has cvercome a
prime source cf embarrassment.
She has changed her last name to
Sh aw. • \Vhen Mrs. Seiko T1ut1uml'1
purse was snatched on a dark
street, police made a quick arreit
and recovered the purse and the
S25 that was in tt. The 1uipect:.
Masumi D•nno, wa1 dismf11ed
from his post a1 sergeant of police
in Fukuoka, Japan. • ~ A trio of Raval Australicft Afr
Force pilots posed proudly for
1 photograph.a beridt thdr h¢ro-
gen baUoon, thva Climbed into
the carriage for a heraldtd trip
across AiutraUc. EJforb io gee
the balloon airborne ripped a
hole in the iW. It toal Mflated
along with three maU egos.
• New female clerks at Indiana
Methodist Hoopital took a test on
deciphering hand-written instruc·
lions by physic:i:an1. An instruction
which read "Ambulate· walk -be-
tween bars.," was translated by
one girl as "Amputate between the
ears." -
Ohio Prison
Riot Flares;
2 Men Shot
COLUMBUS, Oilio (UPI) -Nine
guards Wtll seized by convid.I U
hostqes today at the Ohio State
Penitentiary, rocked by a $1 million
fire Md riot June 24. One report 1aid
two convicts were shot.
Ohio State Correction• OMif Maury
Koblentz said the nine cuardJ were
held bMtage in a cell block occupied
by M inmates who were considered
ringleaders of the June 24 riot.
Tiie prison commissacy wu set on
fire but I.be names ll'ere extin(UiJ:hed
quickly by the Columbus Fire Deport·
moot.
Koblentz said the disturb a nee
started when a prisooer being led out
ol. a shower attacked a 1Uard, took hl1
key1 and apened cells and releued an
undetennined nmnber of prisoners.
Kcblantl said one guard wa1 cut
during I IC1ltfle with tlte inmates.
Sixty members of the Ohio Highway
P.atrol and 15 dty police cruisers wen
sent to the Jdloo. The highway
patrolmen went iulde the walls while
the dty policemen guarded the out.side
of tbt 137-year-old penitentiary.
Kobl-, state Adj. Gen. S. T. Del
Ono, Hllh••Y Patrol Sup<rlntendent
Robert Qilaramonte, Columbut Mayor
M. E. Seosenbronner, C It y Safety
Dlreotor Fred SimlXI and Police Chief
Robert Baus were at the scene. Lut June 24, hundreds ot convicts
wei:t on a rampage in the prison yard,
settinf numerous f1ns and holding
several turds hOlt&Ce . City police.
the Ohio HJJhway Patrol and the Ohia
National Guard q u e 11 e d the -·
Train Explodes;
Ammonia Fumes
Threaten Town
BEAlTIE, Kan. (UPI) -Ammonia
fumes apread throogb 1bi1 northea9t
-eommunlty Monday niaht
after .a tank containinC lhe 1a1 ex·
ploded at • grain elevator.
Mott o fthe 371 re1ldenta of the com·
munity evacuated tbril' homes and no
injurie.s were n!:parted.
Mar5hall County sheriff's officers
P,atrolled the streets later Monday
night beoe:u.e ol trouble with· looUnJ, ..
tbe 1herttr1 dl1J18tcber reported .
A tr.In bauJinC oaltle from St.
Jooeph, M•., 1lo Mlryvlille, ·!WJ., WU
delayed at Extell, -·· u n t 11 autbcritiel: determined Jt wa1 •• for
tho iralA tc pus tllroolh -·· Property -...,, <>Cher than 1lo the
-.... •liall~ the bi.,,...,, patrol oat.I.
Cause of the e:x.plostc. at the
Farmer's Cooperative EleYator WIS
not lmmedialtely koown.
Famous Jockey
Earl Sande Dies
SALEM, 0.... (AP) -Earl Sande.
ramoue three.time Kmtucky Derby
wWiinl jockey and member of the Racina Hall ot Fmne, died in a
soutt\ern Oregon nur•lnl home Mon·
da'Y eft« a linguine illness. He wa~
69.
Sande rode Kentocky Derby winner~
in 19'l3, 19'l5 and 1930, and w.1 elected
to Raeioe's Hall ol Fame tn l~.
Sande, iD ill beell:i, came to Ort1on
about four Yffl'I ap end mede his --'*-· Jolln c. Sonde or Salem, -II 118.
DONATES HEART
Mrs. 0•1per Giaccone
New Transplant
Patient Listed
'Satisfactory'
HOUSTON , Tex. (AP) - A SO.year·
old shoe salesman, tbe 1econd heart
transplant recipient in Houst<in in two
days, was dHcribed as satisfactory
after the operation Monday.
Carl Van Batea of Amarillo, Tex.,
became the world's 32nd human heart
recipient in a 100.minute operation
perfonned by a team of Texas Heart
Institute aurgeons.
The donor wu Mrs. Gasper B.
Geaccone Jr., 37. •Houston mother ol.
two dilldren. She died .. a result ol a
brain tumor.
Le11 than 36 houri earlier, 1urgeoo1
led by Dr. Denton A. Cool<y Implanted
the heart ol. an 11-year-old boy iD the
chelt ot Maria Gia.nnaris, 5, of
Hagerstown, Mkl.
The girl, also listed as sati.sfactor;y,
played with a coloc book and com·
plained~ boiD& hun&rY Monday.
1be heart tranll:fers were the 9th .and
JOtb performed at St. Lu k e '1
Episcopal Hospital.
Maria, dautbter Of Mc • .and Mr1.
Nick A. Glamarls. had hurt lrouble
since •he W&I an infant. She received
the heart of James Dudley Herron 11,
aon ol. James Dudley Herron, 1 pro-
fessor at Purdue Univemty at
Laf~tte, Ind.
The boy had suffered a brain hemor-
rhage and died Sunday altll!r he was
flown hen.
80 Marijuana
Plants Seized;
2 7 Suspects Held
DOWNEY (UPI) -Sheriff'• of.
licer1 and Downey police rounded up
"¥1 IUlp8Cted narcotics offenders Mon·
day nigtit and confiscated 80 mari·
ju:ana plants found growing in back
yvd:I ol. the lll'!pects and in vacant
Iota Deel' their homes .
Nine of those arrested were women.
All Z1 suspects were described by .a
sberlff1 oi'.fice ap:>tesman as persoos
in their twenties.
Fourteen ol tbe&arrests took place in
Downey, and 11.1 others were made in
CoruJ*n1.
In add.Ilion to the marijuana plants,
officers confiscated $10,000 worth of·
conceatrated mettledrin.
Detective• said that if ttie drug were
converted 1nbo pllJJ and sold on the
open rnt.rket Jt woold have potential
retail ..rue of 110.000.
All swpecta were booked on charges
oC narcotics poa:session.
The marijuana plants were descr.ib·
ed u ebout two feet tall. still too im·
mature for harvesting and conver$ioo
i.nto smokable tonn. ,,
Fair Locally Today
Scattered Thunderstorms Plague Rest of Nation
Calli om I• ....... WU11WlltRll .... Jllll•nllf:lt ••.llT t·•·•
Mer";"' low cloucb •~•!fl!
lom! «lin.. Jftll "'ll' 10 !M C:0.1111
11-ffrlY hoda'!'. El_,.., ¥1rllob1t
l\lell t'°'* ..,.t V1iled wl~ f\ltfy Wini!>
In -'.in 1nd *toff1 1•tK.
Ti. neOor,.1 nioMtt t...,Pe<tturt
,,_., Wl l Hll I I lm ... rl•I.
E1rtv morn1.,. In L• A-let incl
vicinity ••• t leioUd'f witl'I local l <lP ltl.
$.!<lea Wl'tt "'°''IV Wf'll\'f' 1n1t mldlt11
•• -......... 11 ... tM(-1' • ..,_
"""' ~-Iron\ ll\Orldll1. T...illllf'1
... k
Tl'll,...WtlftCl-loo~lM ... ,,...i.s a1.i11.
He..., ..,rt -ti""'" ti ....... '°"'"""" c11....,..;1 ~l. Slli.. -•
tleud'r """' -" ................ ,,_..,., -
ti'/', not """' "-''"'"' ~ ,. wtlfl ... ,.,. .,.,....1... w .....
Foe "' *'WI' _. "'"'""' ""' s.... Moo11 rs .. -· ._...,. C0-1"1 ....._ HI..., 11t>Yttlorit f f ..C
_.. ltlr \lllltl Mtr wlntt 11'11 "~ , ........ .,
..... iw..1.a. 0e.m ~ _ _.. _. ..... ,.,_. ... , ............ 11Jt1.l!'l.1.I
Ill.it ~ .... 911lt"t' wlflClt. Hltfl ~ """ 1~Q •·"'• I.I =r.tu,_ _. ,_, a. 111· -"""' '-'" ........ . WIOMlJDa'f ..... """' ~... ..... ..._..,
IM
.... --~~··;~~ ,.,,, ................ 1; .......... ,
·~1 ,.. ... ~;; ''"' ...... • ............ f:)1 ...... 1,1
, Ml. WI~ 111161 l't tit... ........ ............ , ... Jr• I .IOI,'·' :,. ~~~.-.:= H .. ..,. Miii .• !,, ...... ,, , .. ...,....... ......
._., fl'WllN •rtme ~ _,.
.... ....,...,. cf' 'aw. LlllM .....,'ftitU_......T....-1tt••• ..... ""*'•J'"t ............ .1 1 II II llf
.,.. I ...,.. f/I ,. tt I -f/I 61, ... ........... ._ ,.... -... "· ::.. ..... ··---r ., ....
._ ""'-1:0 1.M. .... l :N '"" ... • .... '·" '·"'· ""'1~• '-""
..... l'W •• NII Ull •.
1tw. H Ave. • '-!. 1 s.t. u
IJ.S • .s •••• ,,,
........... ---'"""" .. l'wltleP$ '"""" ""' Mr1tlfflle"' I M
c...tr•I -"-.. IM 1"9le. Swra "'
........ W. ...,.,W W ~It It .. -...
\'l<M _,..,..-oln.ck -•I _,.
i!ll IM 111'""91 n tlw tw9 ....... ........ <•...... ...."' ,....,.. -'* .. """' " "" .. ,, ., "" .......... -""'·'
Jt clt """' J-"""'.......,, ,_ '*'IY ............ -........... ~
.......... -hllt.rf41 --......... le""4M ll'ollf ,_ """"' ,_.,., ~ ··-
Tet1tperat11res
l•lr.Wlfltlol ·1-/'dl. ••• .....
o ic.1•
""'""'" "'""""" .,,_, ... -....... ......
·~·--.......
~ ..... City
L•t v"'' Let A""lft
Mleml lffUI
Mllw11Jk•t
MlnnffHllt
.... °'1M•!I -· .. ....... -"'" 11""11"1 ""' ........ _,,,. ..... .,.,,..,. ·-"'""" CIW ... '""' ·-... __
It. l w lt
J,llNt
Nft L•• ~ ... -...... ,..~ll<t
Sffll .. '"'' --·~ -·-
Hltll Uw l'nc. .. ..
" J7
tl 11 1..-
~ " " .. .., "' .n
,, '5 ·"' .., ,, .• o
n " ~ " . " " n t1 11 .n
ilJ 56 .2J
" " ., ., .. " " .. " .
tt " .. -
II 11
97 n 1.H .. " .. 111 ·" . " ,. ., ·"
" n II J) N
" n ...
~ .. ~ " '° 1.11 .. " llO Jt ·"' .... n n . " 111 12 •• . .. " .. .. " " " •1 s. " 11 ll .II .... • ,
•
Negroes Imitate Cong?
Hit, Run Tactics Used in FWrida Firebombings
ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. (UPO -
Necro llDC• which hive been on a
firebomblnc and rock-tbrowh!c ram-
page 10< f•ur nilhll In tho retirement
city.., are tak!ng a cue from Ho Qd
MUii, an NAACP leader 11id today.
"Tl!ey're readlnl the tactlc1 of the
V)d_ C!ll!I," taid Marvin Davleo,
Flcdda a.Id -of tile NAACP.
''Htt,and nm,~ and run.
'"ll>ll 11 anvolt, not a riot. You'd be
surpriled wtm they're reiMIDg."
M.okltov eocttaUs found new targets
a.s darkneu closed in on the IOUtblide
Negro district MCJllday n!lht and aglin
the blghw1y patrol's bltUe·ICU'J'ed
armored van waa called out to rout a
mlllinz mob with tear gaa.
T h e firebombs h i t a warehouse,
grocery and a wrote-owned bungalow,
but none was 1erioully damaged.
Pulinc oars w..-. pelted by rockl
and b o t t I e 1, but there we.re no
reported lnluri<•. .
A YC>Wll wblte man showed pollct a
Charged With Fraud
ASBURY PARK. N.J. (UPI) -
~1er Jud)' Garland wu cba1sed
Monday with delraudin1 on Asbury
Part hotel ol '5211 she allegedly owed
fer her bill durinl a two-day
performance heft ttdl summer.
Edward SI.ct, 1eneraJ manager ~
the Empren Hotel, compWined. that
Miss Garland did not pay the-bill &be
ran up durinC a June 12-14 appearance
at the Gartten State Arts Center
oomde Albury Park.
bullet hole In the door ~ his car. He
said he wu fired upon whlJe rldlnt.
through the Negro dl1t<lct wlJh bl& J1ri
friend .
City Manager Lynn Andrew•, who
Monday slapped restrteti.Clftl on the
sale of gasoline and liquor in the are.a,
denied the violence grew out ol a
dispute with 1ome 200 ftred garba&•
men, which bu seen several mass
marches on City Hall in recent weeks.
Davis dilagreed. "City police ate
out to kill off the more vital Neo'oe•
in this area by putting them In jail and
charging high bonda," he said.
Eadier MoDday, Davil blamed
"police brutality and haranment" for
the unrest.
"As a matter of fact," he said, "l
think. it's going to 1pread."
Ba.clc-to-School Values
ONE WEEK ONLY
at
SINGER
'
Faehion your mo1t exoluaiv• wardrobe
"d.re8.mat Bel.at fabrics at BINGER. Now
you oa.n hav• special ohio and charm-and
atreduOfld pri04IBI Shop at BINGER today.
mgh fashion haa n•ver b•en so eaay-
and eoonomioalt
VELVA WALE
CORDUROY
!OO'fo Cotton 4f ' Widr.
REG. $1.19
Good range
of colors
SINGER*
SUPER FLANNEL
Blo/o Wool, D'fo Nylon, l4" Wide,
Washablo.
REG. $2.98
For Back-to-Scliool
Jumpers and skirts.
See ow complete selection of lOO'fo
Polyester Knit>-Wide $698
range of colors. Guar· ·
antced-Washable l4"
to 6o" wido. ftC· yd.
SINGER*
SUPER PRINTS
Stripes, Paisleys, Colorful . Striking
print>. Sew up Happy Badi-to-School
Dre...,, Machine washabk.
4l" Wido.
'Oo/o Zantrel 9 9 'Oo/o ~on 7"-C
REG. $1.29
AN EXCITING
NEW DENIM
'<>% Dacron Polyester, l<>% Combed
Cotton, 4l" Wide.
Stripes •nd coordi-·129
native solids. Ont of ~
the most vusatile fa):,.
l1CJ. ftC· yd.
... dleawwaMTOOCB• ....
-..smMJlla•--~------aD•"'• .. ot-m.i-.. .-!Pt. ::=-a aow,ellala-
odtoli. -· -91lfGD• ' ---.·ee!t•ra• r.-•59t10
Wllati "11t111.fort-u at SI NOE R todarl*
SINGER
\, -
1 I
-----------
T11tsday, August 20, 1'68 DAil Y PILOT Ii
The FAMILY DISCOUNT
. ~
SAVING C.ENTER
'
No Games * Mo Stamps * No Gimmicks
• ons°Eft
' TOPPIN.G
PRICES
IFHCTIVI WEDNESDAY THROUGH TUESDAY AUGUST 21 THROUGH AUGUST 27
..--:; '
-"'·· ".i "· I :
1"11 EYWJPy lew·Prlc"
PLUS 4-Stw Sptel1l1
FAD will cut your food
b i I ls 10% ind more
because we have cut out
1tl frills; no slamps .•. no
oimmicks ••• no games.
Our aim is simply higher
volume et lower profils-
and the difference goes
right in your pocket..Come
in and get acquain!edl Be
prepa red for big surprises
when yoo see !ht lillle
prices everywhere you
1urn!
WITH THIS COUPON ON£ PACK ONL y
LADY SCOTT • 2 ROLL PACK
I TOILET
: TISSUE
limit J CO<J I pon ~r am1ly • Aduha Otily
1111\ ~
I
COU PON GOOD ON
AT YOUR FAD-SANT~ :~:·A~;~~~:..u~f~
< I
I
I
I
" •t:a
DISCOUNT COUPON l~·OUNCE 35c SAVE 4c
'4 STAR SPECIALS ire
extra savings made
possible by special pur-
chases from the mantr
fa clu rers and passed on
to you. everydayl
STORE HOURS, DAILY 10 AM. TO 9 P.M.-SAT. & SUN. 10 A.M . TO 7 P.M.
lruy411)' DfRount Pro•••· loM ftrfcos
Ol'I• IDA • ,f:.OVNCE. 2a..
HASH BROWN POTATOES .. u·
KOLD KllT • ~4-0UNCll 63· SIRLOIN TIPS ........... .
•AN.QU•T •I-OZ.• VEO•TAal.• 27•
COOKING BAG DINNERS ....
MOl'ITON • I .OUNCE 22 MACARONI & CHEESE DINNll . . C
IMOl'ITON • 11·0UNCI: 65
PECAN COFFEE CAKE • . . . • c
MOl'ITON • ,l.QUNC• 65
MELT-A-WAY CAKE • • . . . • • c
MOl'ITON • 12·0UNCIE 65• DANISH PECAN TWIST ...•.
1-4 oz. 811.
_ ..
~ .. CHRIS & PITTS i
' BAR·B·Q J •
~1 SAUCE ;t .5 VARIETIES ·32c .... I
.1 I
. l
SAVE llc • .. ' .. . -~~ ~· 4..
'· '
. .......-z... . :CJa';.
IVl•TDA Y' I
DISCOfl!IJ P•ICll ,
FOREMOST • ~ GAL.
FAMILY PACK
. ' ' • I • ' It '! . . 1 ,,. t.. • •
~ SAVE
10c
•
Stor• Houri
Daily 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Sot. & Sun. 10 A.M. to 7 P.M.
lrorrdllJ' Discount
Doffcatosso11 Prlcos
MANHATTAN e ,.La. Pl<O.
ALL MEAT FRANKS .....
DAILY l"l'llEIM e l ·L9. PKG.
CHEESE LOAF ......... .
l"Al'IMlll'I JOHN e I -OUNCE
BRAUNSCHWEIGER .....
·~ Y,, PINT e ALL. l"LAVOl'll
YONSON'S YOGURT ....
ALEX • 1f·OUNClt:
GELATIN & Fruit Salad ...
IPRINGl"llELO e 1·LI. CAl'ITON 33·
SOFT MARGARINE ..... .
Kl'IAl"T lndlvld. Wr•pptd, 1·01. 35·
AMERICAN CHEESE ..... .
I lLICEI
'
LADYSCOlT
EAS
24-0UNCE
j,·' FACIAL
:-• TISSUE
200 COUNT 26c r-
•
SAVE 3c
'
[.I
USDA CHOICE BE
at DISCOUNT PRICES
FEATURING QUI! OWN ''TEND!RFUL" BEEF. GUARANTl'EO TENDER ANO FULL Of FLAVOR!
• EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICE FEATURES •
CHUCK U.S.D.A. 39lli. CHOICE
ROAST BLADE cur
GROUND U.S:D.A. CHOICE 4 3 c . BEEF LEAN, DEPENDABLE lb QUALITY •
ROUND U.S.D.A. 79lli. CHOICE
STEAK FUll
cur
Shoulder U.S.D.A. 79lli. CHOICE
CLOD BONELESS
EXTR A LEAN
T-Bone or TAILS •119 REMOVED
Club Steak U.S.0.A .
CHOICE lb.
SLICED
BACON
Fir11 Q1.1ality 591b. Your Choice
• Former John
• Luer • Fad
EVERYDAY LOW DISCOUNT
GROCERY PRICES
1Yi CAN e HALVIEl /SLICEO 28•
HUNTS PEACHES .....
~rtAD MOTTI • JOO JAl'I --22 APPLESAUCE . . . • • • . . c 15-0UNCE
HEINZ .e 20.0UNCll IOTTLIE 33·
KETCHUP l'"AM1LY 1111: •
l'l'll:NCH'S e 24 .QUNCI. 35·
MUSTARD ........ ..
•CHILLING • •v .. o uNCI: 37c
GARLIC SALT ........
CHIPI AHOY . 14y,.oz. 49•
NABISCO COOKIES ••..
m Fresh PRODUCE 1.La. e ALL Gl'l lNOI 69
HILLS BROS. COFFEE . . . c
! LI, .......................................... $1 .JT
AFllCAN
VIOi.iT
;17N~H s111 POT
l"l'lllSH e Cl'UIP
IOMAINI unuc1
9~NCH
. "' ,
GA.ROEN FRESH 2 :29C BELL' PEPPERS
BUTTERY RIPE 25c AVOCADOS ...
GaEAT fOlt SUMMEI M.l.AD$ 7~ .. RED ONIOllS
STEAK SIZE 3~,ll BROWN MUSHROOMS
G~f1'T fO-PIES, SAUCE & U.T!JllG 3~. Grawenstain APPLES
U.S. NO. 1 I 0 LS. 3 9 WHITE ROSI BAG (
POTATOES
SWEET • FLAVORFUL • SEEDLESS
THOMPSON 5 :$100 GRAPES
,.. .. . .· .
--
HILLS •l'IOI. • 10·0UNCll $119
INSTANT COFFEE ..... .
4-PACK ALL l"LAVOl'll 79
CARNATION SLENOER .. c
ALL. FLAVOl'll e 1.0UNCI: 19·
JELL-0 ........... ..
Kl'IAl"T • 1.1..1 . 25• MARSHMALLOWS .....
Siltl'llNGl'll!:LD e 12"•1&' 24<
ALUMINUM FOIL .....
1 1..UI: GINGHAM e QUA"T 29 LIQUID DETERGENT . . . c
ITA·PU I'" e GALLON $119
FABRIC SOFTENER ....
CINCH e 22·0UNCI 73< SPRAY CLEANER ..... .
IA.l"l:OUAl'IO e 9ATM llZI 20< DEODORANT SOAP ...
l'llQ, llZ• e COM 1 LIEXION 11 (
CAMAY SOAP .......
9U19LI eATH e 12-0UNCIE 35<
MR. BUBBLE ........
and
. U.S.D.A. Choice Gourmet Speci1lsl
U50A CHOICE e ClNTEft CUT &9'
7·1one Steak .• , • , . , , . . lb
USOA CHOICE 19~
lump Roast .. , •• , , , • ,
USOA CHOICE s 1 71)
PorterhauM Steak . . . • . lb.
'">•aiooed • Ready lo Cook 59~
Meat Loaf .......••...
TOP SIRLOIN STEAi ·~;,: ' I ~!
NEW YORK STEAK 'I ~~
SPENCER STEAK '1 7,~
FILET MIGNON '2~!
ll!ISH • EX'llA ltAN 19•
Corned hef lrlaket . , . , . •
FRY and SEM 89'
Salisbury Steak . . • • . . . . lb
a,.aO.d or l utt•..d • 1.!b. pltg.11"
Veal Steaks , . . . . . . . . . . •
Family PQck • [glt••l'I Qvolily 79'
Sliced Park Loin , • . . . . lb
PICNIC smE • Eal11rn Quality 39•"
fre1h Pork Rocnt . . . . . . . •
FARMER JOHN e PUl!E PORK 29'
Unk Sau1age 8-oL pkg. •
lUE I! e l ·LI. CAN $& 98
Canned Ham .•••••• , , . '
200-COUNT
REGULAR 89c
Filler Paper ·
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• TYPING RU LE
GOOSE N~CK
HI INTENSITY
Desk Lamp
EQUAL TO IOO·WATT I VL9
6·FOOT CORD
REGULAR
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GIRL TAUC , 97
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BINDERS ::~;
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ROLL 10P o REGULAR B9c
PENCIL 79c
CASE REGULAR 2 FOR 25c
PEE CHEE
FOLDERS
CLIPMATE o REGULAR $1.29
9c
CANVAS 99c
BINDER CARTRIDGE OR BALL.POINT
Sheaffer 99c PENSREG. 11.00
REGULAR 39t EACH
10 Pak No. 2 4!100
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~ FIN! OR MEDIUM ·~CK OR BLUE • Lu""l .
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REGULAR 19C 39,
VALUE
SANTA ANA-2120 SO. BRISTOL AT WARNER COSTA MESA-2200HARSOR BLVD. AT WILSON
• • . ' .
-·
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• ... . ' " '
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I
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f DAn. Y PILOT
----------. -. .... .... ·-\.-• . ..
P...,,ue Warta.ed Arnied Camp
Reds Renew Threat Bogota Awaits Pope's Visit
MOSCOW (AP) -Tht
Soviet Commun!>! p I r I y
gave • s.barp warning today
that lt will stand firm
against any challenge to the
Ciecbo&lovak Communist
party's leading role 1 n
Pracue.
Voicing 111 aupport for the
pledges ol the Bratislava
Communist summit
meetln&, \he party
newspaper Pravda ntd un1-
ty againlt • chmnce in any
Communt.rt caftal would be
"l.Dlbreabble' and would be
met with "bllb vigilance."
Pravda avoided men-
tioo!ng Czecboolovakia by
name, but its reference to
Brallalava and the coDtext ot the currtnt press cam·
paign made it clear Ulat lt3
message was intended for
Prague.
In it.s lead editorial Pr2v-
da said the Communist bloc
considers it ttm "duty to nip
Imperialism'• designs ln the
bua."
An ''onslaua:bt of
boureeoia ideology" 11 al!:1-
ed at aplltting the Cc1n-
munist world, it sald,
Capltalllt powers w i 11
make uae of "any iro-
paganda tricks" to cause an
erosion of Socialism," Prav·
da said, with the hope of
restoring capi.talilm t n
S;· :allat countrlts. BOGOTA, Colombia (AP)
Uut, the edltorlll uld, -Security meuure1 lor tho
Communist.I wW not allow vtJit ot Popt!: Paul VJ Tburs-their countries to "revert to
the old system of oppression day have turned Bosota into
and exploitation." an armed camp.
The editorial appeared to ' Some 14,000 troopt and
be 1omewbat softer 1n tone police, armed with rifles,
than tf\e 9ofemic1 of recent have been deployed ln the
days, but it kept to the buic city, 1lte ol the s 9 t b
theme of earlier atta:ck• on F S EucbartsUc Congrta1.
Prague's outspoken liberal ranee et Troopa have shown sharp
forces. holtillty to anyone who C&n·
In Prague the Presidium T E }od not produet' the proper
of tht CUcb National Coon· 0 Xp e patses.
cU approved propo .. 11 to · Monday, po~ct 1topped
turn Czecb01lovakla into a · lreland'f William Cardfna1
peuants 1tatine what the
R0111Jn Catholic <liurcb is
going to do about promoting
social chtn&•·
Thil ta viewed as the moat
crueJal phan of the Pope's
three-dlly vli!t
Saturday, ht II t o
calebrate Mus for 15ome
50,000 worker• ln the suburb
of Venice and will tn·
au&urate the aecood general
conference of L a t l n •
Americu bilbops befOJ'e
departlng for Rome.
More than 60,000 persons
attended the optnin& setslon
ol ttie eJgbt-day cong. f'S$
Sunday. Roman C&thollc
leaders from nveo con·
Unentl are bl Boeota.
Arabs Bomb Israeli Post;
Troops Exchange Gunfire
"duallttic fed<rratlou" of Big H •Mmh Conway !tom laldng his
Czecba and Slovaks. place in the cougrusiooal 81 U.lllted Pre 1 s la· area11. Kollek appeal'ed for peace
* * * * * *
Tb e Czechotlovak ·news PAPEETE, Tahiti (UPI) dlgnltariea' 1ect1on until he Wna•Uooal A communique from between Araba and Jews
agency CTK reported today was able to locr.te hi.a tem· A terrorlSt mine blew up a Jerusalem said ttie com-the cor¢itutiooa~ act for the -France will explode a one porarily m.11placed creden-command post in the Sinai mand post was lllown up and Arab 1 ea de r s con-
1 new federaUon would be en-to three megaton H-bomb tials. Desert to d a /, killing an three miles north Qf Beer-gratulated Israeli police for
dorsed by. Parliament oa Wednesday 1f weather Three rep0rter1 of the Israeli soldier, the Israeli Menuha halfway between "pr~vent:lnr mere ltrious
Oct. 28. perm It 1 , ~·en.informed newspaper El nempo who government said. Jordanian Sodom on the De ad Sea disorders" in Holy City Czech Communists
Czecbo11lovakia is com· sourcea said today. were unable to 1how the and J1raeli forces ex-and Elath on the Red Sea. rioting that injured nine
prised of about two-thirds proper palltl were clubbed changed gunfire in two other In Jerusalem, Mayor Ted Czechs and 0 n e. th Jr d It is expected to be follow· by police~ persons Sunday.
Slovak!. The Czech lands v.·eek -by one or two other "I have no fear for the Israeli Defense ·Minister
are made up of Bohemia week by one or two other safety of hll Hol1Dts1," the Chin Ar L h Moahe Dayan walkt4 the Ban U.S. Newsman
PRAGUE ( UP I )
Czechoslovak Cominuniat
authorities said today an
American new~paper cor·
respondent has been barred
from the country for writinl
"provocative" 1tories.
The p a r t y newspaper.
Rude Pravo, Hid Henry
82 Crewmen
Of Pueblo
'Homesick'
(UPI) -The 82 crewmen of
the USS Preblo held in
North Korea are v e r -y
home.sick .and eager to
return home, North Korean
newsmen 1aid today.
Some of the Communist
newsmen, at this truce
village while the Z76lh
meeting of the K or e a n
Military Armistice Com-
mission was under way, said
they were on hand when the
Puebla crew met the North
Korean press Aug. 13.
''The crewmen 1a.id they
vt'fTe very homesick and
eager U> return homt," one
of the North Kortan
newsmen said.
"Some of the crewmen
complained that the U.S.
government was not taking
action to facilitate their
reurn home," another Com·
munlst said.
The North Korean
newsmen refused comment
when asked where the
Pueblo crewmen were being
held.
The Pueblo was seized ofl
the North Korean coast Jan.
23.
2 RAF Jets
Crash, B1un
HOLT, England IUPI) -
Two Royal Air Force jet
ed -perhaps later t b i s
near here Monday night, ex-
ploded ln a ball of Dame and
scattered smoking wreckage
near a hospital and school.
and Moravia. lhe<monuciear blasts. Pope'necrelary 11ld, of the ese my aunc es atreell of the old city Mon·
Jn another development. The sources said that so security precaution1. He d 1 ht ling 1 r Kamm of lbe New York CTK disclosed a poll thrrt is.id he had never seen such ay n g appea 0
Times wrote "untrue distor· sho'l1:ed more Czechoslovaks far the weather looked good stringent mea!UI'ea on a ny c kd Ri calm. He said the wave of
lions ... about relations feel the country should take for a Wednesday test, which previous papal trip. rac own on oters bombings was "sabotage
b a loan from capitalist coun· l1 successful would make The journey will be the and criminal acts of ln-
e twee n 1 e 1 d 1 n g tries than from the Soviet France the fifth nation to sixth and longest tr i P d.ivlduals" rather t ban
personalities ot the Com-UnJo n to help bol5ter the na· have the H-bomb. abroad by Pope Paul who HONG KONG {AP) -'The from Red China or helping groups.
munlst P arty of Uon'a economy. The others are the United has said the trip to close the Rtd Ohlnese army has sue· others try to flee. Jordanian and I s r a el 1
Czech06lovakia and leaders The news agency aald the States, ttie SOvtet Union, conereas is "Of exceptional ceeded In supp res s i n g De s Pit e the army troops exchanged runfire ln
of other socialist states , . , Poll was conducted las.t Britain and Commun Is t JmpOitance." fighting in Cunt.on and is crackdown, robbery and two separate incidents early
month by the Czechoslovak China . After his 12·hour flight hunting down Red Guards, rape are on the increase 1n today, an Israeli com~
''According to information Acsdemy of Sclences. The bomb probably will be Thursday, the Pape is criminal.! and rioter 1, lhe city and Red Guards are munique said. It said there
of the foreign ministry the The poll 11howed 23 per· closer to one megaton than scheduled to vi.sit th e Chinese travelers said to-continuing guerrilla-style were no casualties in tither
New York Tim t s cor· cent of those questiooed to three, according to the Basilk:a Primlda and make day. resistance in rural areas, case. One incident was at
respondent, Henry Kamm, fav<nd getUnt: a loan from sources. the f.lr-.t of some 23 1peedles The arrival.a, w h o 1 e the travelers said. ' Tirat-Zvi in the Belsan
author ol provocative inlor· tome capltalht state, 15 A change in the weather or mes1ages. reports: cannot be verified, They sr.id the Red Guards, Valley and the other was 1n
percent favored the Soviet could agaJn delay the test, In the atternoon, at the said soldiers have .arrt'Sted members of youth groups Ummshurt in the northern
mat r o·n ab 0 u t UnJon and 14 percent as it did Jut weekend. congress, he will celebrate several-1.housan&-persons in formed to spearhead Mao Jordan Valley.
Czecbotlovakia, bas left the favored the United states. Strong, high altitude winds Mass and ordain a group of the lust few days and taken Tse-tung's Cultur81 Revolu· In Cairo, a newspaper
country, and it was officially On an<>Uler question, 70 over the Fangataufa atoll Latin-American prlests. them to forced labor camps. tion purge, now have put up suggested that Israeli gun-
announced that be will not percent of those polled sad test site 6'JO mlle1 from here He is scheduled to visit Other travelers said some wall posters attacking Mao fire ma yhave caused th e
be allowed to return." percent of tbote polled aaid wouJd risk spreading the President Carlos LI er as 20,CMXI persona have been de· and declaring "we refuse to crash of an Arab airliner
eeonamic lituation was nuclear fallout to inhabited Restrepo on Friday before tamed in a labor camp near be exploited further by near Cyprus, killing all 40
The stories referred ta caused by bad management. areas. making a speech to the Canton for trying to flff others.'' persons aboard.
were published Aug. 14·15,.----'-----"----------------''---'------------'-----------------------
Rude Pravo aa.id.
The Wipatches said that ,....--~ .......... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-----------------,
Rude Pravo'a chief e<Utor,
Old.rich Sveatka, cut down
the amount of apace to be
given to the vtMt o I
Yugoslav President Tito to
Czechoslovakia. Svestka is a
member of the Czech party
presidium and has come
under attack from the rest
of µte Czech pres1 for his
conservative view 1 ex·
pressed in the party orran.
Kamm left Prque three
days ago on home leave he
had planned before the
publication of the Svestka
story. The Times' Tad Siulc
had returned from hfa vaca·
tion and resumed hi! duties
as the newwpaper'1 Prague
correspondenL
Russ Meet
On Czechs
MOSCOW (UPI) -A
special session of the ruling
Central Committee ot the
Soviet Communist Party
was held in the Kremlin to-
day to discuss the situation
in Czechoslovakia, informed
toUrces reported.
The apparent urgency of
the meeting was underlined
by tlle Met that Party
C'.hainnan Leon 1 d I.
Brezhnev, Premier Alexei
N. Kosygin and Prelident
Nikola! Podgorny in-
terrupted their vacations to
.attend.
. . ' .. ' ,
.. You can't take it with you.
. ........
Police today said six
airmen had been found
dead. There were no
casualties reported among r;:::=========,11------~-r'--<::"----\
c ivilians.
RAF and U.S. Air Force
helicopters were circling
areas of the North Sea. only
a few miles from the crash
site in search of a seventh
RIDI OUR HOlSISI
W•RI J aa HffN -
N...,..,. ·-~ "'''' lhcll•R" fol'
MALllU UNCH w...,.,_._..,..tOMI
C•ll: (J1J 671·2'4J flier.
• WISTIRN STATI UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW
In o....,.. c~
flOW acceptln1 ....,. -" won..,.
wfto are elthen ._,,.,...,,_.. .... ..... , .. ,, . . _,, ........................... ..
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APP\ Y NOW fOR SEl'llMIER 16th
DAY OR MNING CWIU ·-·-·-1717 I. •• ,, ..... ,
........ 1 ...
635-3454
, ..
•
...
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The phone, that is. But
if you're moving anywhere in
Bell System territory, it takes just one
call to have phone service stopped
at your old address and started at
your new one . Just call your local
telephone business office and tell the
Service Representative you're mov-
ing. She'll make all the arrangements.
We're here to help.
Pacific T elephant@
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, OAILY PU.OT T
Nareo Agent Beaten
SF Policemen Under Fire
Dead Officer Scored
Threatened With Gun , Witness Says
SACRAMENTO (AP) -the concealed weapon in hl.i b.1J back." OAKLANl)'(AP) -A wit-
ness 1n the Huey P. Newton
murder trial says the white ·
policeman Newton la charg.
ed with murdering once
threatened him with a gun,
cursed him and boasted "I
am the Gestapo."
Belt<lrd Dunning, a Negro
life insurance salesman,
testified Monday t h e inci-
dent occurred while he was
being questioned about a
traffic violation two days
before orfice.r John Frey
was slain.
The Black .:Panther leader
is charged with the Oct. 28
slaying of Frey and the
wounding of another police
officer.
Newton's at l o r n e y ,
Charles Garry, opened the
defense with a series of
witnesses who be said would
show that Frey provoked
Newton the night of the
slaying.
Daniel King, 16, Negro
grocery clerk, testifie(l tbat
a year. earlier Frey bad held
him iagalnst a patrol car
while a white civilian beat
the youth for the suspected
theft of the civilian 's
trousers. King said J<"rey
called him "dirty names."
Garry abo sought to have
a white yollth, Tom
Parsons, 18, Concord, testify
U1at Frey, while speaking to
a high school class about
police work, referred to
Negroes as "niggers and no
goods."
But when Parsons said he
didn't remember hlr certain In an UllU$Ull action, the jacket pocket while hia Storer told Cahill thlt
what Frty had aald, Garry state'.!i narcotic! law eo-banch were r&l.sed. ID a low since the two <>ftioen w.
h h d hi !orcement chief bas pubUcly 1 ol ~-h ld .-. f E t en a s co-counsel, . declared ht.!i dl.!isaU!!actlon one vW\o--.: e to Wiil o · volved. -lbert Boyd and
Mr.!i. Faye Slender, take the with the San Fra.nclaco fleer he waa a narcoUc Raymond MuJal'lte -ap..
stand. pollce investigation oi the agent. He was then knocked parenUy have been cleared
She testified that Parsons beating ol a state narcotics to the ground. of any wrongdoing, be wu
t b th ' Offi "While rolled ue in • ball· malting bit viewt public "to had told her in an Aug. 3 agen Y eu ce.n. like fashion with hJs hands prevent our lilenc• from
telephone call what Frey ''We have certain mlsgiv-on his head to watd otf being construed as agree.
reportedly had said. but two lngs about the character and further blows, be recejved ment with the reault you
days latet ln an interview 'cope of the lnvestigaUon turtber blows upon his have apparently reach·
the youth retracted his eoctducted by your depart· A ult Mr
statement and indicated he menl," J<fm E. Storer wrote person. s 8 rea • · ed · · ·"
feared his house would be ln a letter to San Francisco Gilbert, suffered two soolp The state agent uked tilet
bombed if he testified. Police Chief Thomas Cahill. lacerations re q u l r in g the tnvetttgation be reopen·
Earlier, Garry had Storer, chief ol the St.ate,._';;";;IW';;;;";;';;;;an;;d;;;;a;;b;;r;;a;;si;;o"';;;;;;';;";;;;;;'d;;;';;il;;;;lt;;h;;a;;a;;bee;;;;;;n ;;c;;loeed;;;;;;'~
another motion for mistrial Ju 1 t 1 c e Department's II
turned d6wn .after telling Bureau of Narwtic Enforce.
Superior C<lurt Judge ment, released the letter
1'-1onroe Friedman that he Monday.
had received an anonymous , ·It pointed out the dllferlng
threat to kill him and hls versklns of the beating given
client. This threat. he said, "Other than the fact that I'm & 'big grouch', bow by the hV'O officers and tile
reflected the atmosphere of do yo u like the job?" a~nt involved, and Storer
hate in Oakland, which -~-------------------said his man stands re8dy to
made a fair trial impossiblt. take a lie detector test on
Garry said the writers the incident. if ·the San
identified themselves only Cycli' i~g B a·ndi' t, 16 , F"ra•ciseo policemen will do as "four retired Marines. . It likewise.
U.S.A.," and said: "You or The agent, Myron Gilbert,
Newton will not be alive 10 v.·as subdued by force on
I See by Today's
Wan! Ads
• Here's a little ~aucy! ·es
T-Blrd all power le 9.ir,
new tltt1, one owner, •t a
rcaaonable price.
e Nef!d yoor drive wicy r..
paved? Here'• a company
that gpectallin' in upbalt
5'61. coating. "Vay wdl
days after U1is trial is sh t D d b v • • June 24 when he wa"S stop.
over," no matter which way 0 • ea y fCtlffi ped by the poUce as he was e A ~Jll«e ""1lonal -
the verdict went. en-gaged in an unOOTcover j beige) Is bring IOld 1ot
done."
Garry said this a n d assignment in plain clotties. only SS0.00. Good buy U1
2. Youths. Go on Trial
In Triple Death Spree
another similar letter had SA.CRAMENTO (AP ) -A a grocery store on his bicy· The police said they wed this one.
been turned over to the FBI. young ·would·be robber ar-cle, entered and took some forte because he kept hi s e Here att tv.'O REAL Win-
Arguing against a mistrial rived on a bicycle and left in money from a cash register hand on ttie gun he canled nen!! <won on a T.V. pro.
prosecutor Lowell Jensen a commandeered car -v.•hile holding clerk Doug in his pocket, and resisted iJ'atn). Speed Queen Wuh-
said the presence in a corp-dying of a gunshot woond. Yo~ng, 31, at gunpoint. violently when an officer er and GiblOl'l AJr o::.dl·
munity of "psychotics, hate-The brief, fatal drama Young said the youth shot tried to take the gun. tlcmer. Brand """'"'·
filled people" was lamen-v.·as enacted in Sacramen· at him once; but mlssed. Storer .!iaid Gilbert bold his e Too bury tG ~ that lrm.
table but that did not mean ta's south area Monday When the boy ran out, superiors another story: tng done? A lady in a.ta
SAN JOSE (UP!) -Two
young men v.•ere led into a
courtl'oom M<>nday. O n e
wa! pale a nd frightened; the
<>t:her jaunty, poised, and a .
picture of seU-coofidence.
Calm Thomas E. Braun
and edgy Le<inard E. Maine,
both 20 and from nttzville.
\Vash., are accused of
murder and a vi c i o u s
assault last year n e a r
Uldtil. The crime was so
horrible the Cali torn i a
Supreme Coort. ruled they
cooldn 't get a fair trial
there.
The two men are charged
Policeman
Wins Battle;
AJ:m P eriled
OAKLAND ( A P )
Although his 1eit arm v.•as
shattered by a bullet ,
veteran Oakland Police In·
spector Gilbert Z we i g I c
managed to put his assailant
<>ut of action in a close-
range shootout Monday.
Doctors said Zweigle may
lose the arm.
AlfonS<> Ranson, 23 , of L-Os
Angeles, was listed i n
critical condition with chest
and abdominal wounds. He
\Vas booked for investiga'tion
of robbery and assault with
intent to c<>mmit murder.
A companion, Jame s
Gibson, 26, also of Los
Angeles, was armed but of.
fered no resistance when
c-aptured by other officers a
short distance away. He was
booked on a robbery charge.
Two men had robbed a
market earlier and fled with
$100. The owner got the
license number of their car,
a bronre-<:olored Cadillac,
reported to have been stolen
in Los Angeles.
Zweigle, on patrol in an
unmarked vehicle, spotted
the car and hlllowed it.
The men parked the car
and v:alked away, one car-
rying a ~per bag which
later turned out to. contain
cash.
Zweigle ordered them to
halt, police said, when
Ransmn .!iuddenly whirled
and fired. The officer then
drew his weapon and return-
ed fire.
with k i I I i n g 17.ycar-old the 'community at large was afternoon. Young grabbed a gun , "That upon being stopped Mt'A can he-Ip :you out, for
Timothy Luce and shooting racially biased nor did -it "Police said 16--year-old foll6wed. him and shot him ... he" submitted to a routine ror only 80c &n hour.
his girl friend, s us an ...!p::r,::ec~l:::ud:::e~a:.f:_air:;' :.tr:;i::•:I· ___ _::Or'.'.,'.'.lan~do~T::.·:.B'.'.e':'.a'.:.n..!r:'.od:::e:..:'.u!'.p..!t:'.o__:af~t.r:_:th'.::':.!YO\l~.~\h~flr~ed~on~~him~.-f'.'.r!:lsk~sear=::'~h_:w::hictl::'~!:P'~odu:::;c::ed:::.,:~==================='::!
Bartolomei, 18, four times
before leaving her in a
roadside ditch to die.
~1iss Bartolomei was in a
cc-ma for seven months
.after the attack and still lies
motionless in a hospi.tal bed.
Braun and Maine have
pleaded innocent by reason
of insanity to the chtrges.
They also are accused of
killing a \Vashington woman
and an Oregon 11alesman
during a three-state crime
spree lalit summer.
As the tri<ll moved into iU
secmd day, defense at·
torney John Poulous took
extraordinary procedures to
in~ure an unbiased jury.
Poulous said he wanis one
jury to try the case and
another panel to decide the
penalty if a first degree
murder verdict is returned.
Poulous is defending Maine.
'vhile Merle Orchard is
Braun's defense. counsel.
Poulous also argued fbe,' ••• panel should include jurors\
who have '' scruples•'
against imposing the death
penally.
Students
Wary of
New Prexy
STANFORD (AP) -Stu·
dent leaders at Stanford
University tiaVe voiced
reservations about the ap·
pointment of Dr. Kenneth S.
Pitzer r.s the university's
sixth president, effective
Dec. 1.
De!Vs Hayes. student body
president, said Monday he
had "grave reservations"
but would withhold final
judgmetl'!. until Pitzer, now
president of Rice University
in Texas, meets with stu·
dent leaders here next
week.
Hayes said the Associated
Students or Stanford will
hold a referendum on
Pltzer's selection elirly this
fall.
Daniel Snell. editor ol. the
Stanford Daily, urged
reconsideration Of Pitzer'.!i
appointment by the Board ol
Trustees because or lack of
student involvement in the
selection. Snell said he
would circularize a state·
ment to this eUect c;.mong
the trustees.
lfT'S BE FRIENDLY
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Jf you have new neighbors Ill•••••••• or know of anyone movl.ng 11
to om area, please tell us
so that we may extend a
friendly welcome and help
them to become acquainted
ln their new surroundings.
Huntingf on Beach
Vlsifor
536-9626
Costa Mesa Visitor
642-2472
So. ColSI Visifor
494-1>579
Harbor Visitor
642-3535
FRll CHlCKIOOK IALANCING QIDIT CARD lllVICI
FOii THI
INDIPINDINT -
£.0. IOllllllt !mored !lo SlS,(O), M1111bet f .DJ.C. THI conn POT II Al.WATS°"
Enjoy Boni SlfolJ 11111 llnl -7 SUVING oAANGI COUlln •• ' 7 CONVlllllNT omas
% AllPOlll Ofl'IC[ ............... 11 •-· - -... Mo .. mt '""" Hllll OfFlt;( ................. •-.i ""· - .. m .72111 IAYSIOC OfTIC( ........... a.,slde al .lllllMrM. JI ....... Ml.1141 SUPERIOll OfncE .......... S\IPtriof1tP'llellltl1 , Ntwplllt a..dl .•. wt•tl 5 COU!ct'. PAl!l Clf11Ct. •••• ·"""'°°' • tomlMflllN:ttr.1w11.m. .•• 171·2'0!I llPllVERSIT'f OFflCC ...••••• ttst CMpmlA tt ... eoa.. r.,.., ......
S500 minim"" depos;t. 90 u, timt cmificltcl llUICUlf omc:L ........... wtot"• ~ -· ._, ........ M2J111,
I ' "· \
f
,_ ...... , -
I DAil y PllOT l~. Aupst 20, 1968
Heavy Surf Due
To Ease Tonight
D 0 H E NY PARK -
1 leavy surf that has pounded
Southern Catilornla beaches
since Saturday wa1 ex·
pected to subside tonight
and return to near normal
on \Vednesday.
More than 1,100 swim·
mers were pulled from rip.
tides and high waves Mon·
day by lifeguards at Orange
County and Los Angeles
beaches v.·bere about 200,000
persons spent the day.
Two persons were
hospitalized but there were
no reported drownings.
Gordon Shields, U. s.
\\leather Bureau m a r i n e
meteorlogist, said the
high waves that crashed on
the S o u the r n California
coast were generated more
than a week ago off the
coast of Antarctica, some
6,000 miles to the south.
He said a series of intense
storms swept the area
beginning Aug. 7, building
seas of 30 to 40 feet. Shields
said the Jong period between
the high swells, from 10 to
12 seconds , indicated they
had traveled a gr ea t
distance across the Pacific.
At the south bay beaches.
l ifeguards made 108
r('sc ues. Deep tr en c h e s
v•ere cut into the sand at
Redondo Beach wh e r e
dredges have been v.·orking
to repair erosion caused by
winter storms.
There were 120 rescues at
Santa Monica, 191 at Will
Rogers State Park and
another 85 ·at Venice. Seal
Beach. Huntington Beach,
San Clemente, and Laguna
Beach also were the scenes
of numerous rescues.
As tronon1c1·s
Set Sessi on
GARDEN GROVE
J\.1embers of the Orange
Cou nt y Amateur
A s tronomers Association
"'ill meet \Vednesday at 7:30
p.m. at Santiago H i g h
School here.
Police Hold
4 Suspec ts,
Loot Cache
ST ANTON -A Stanton
raid by 25 officers from
combined north 0 ran g e
County police departments
early this morning on a ring
of sus~cted thieves netted
four suspects and a cache of
as yet unidentified property.
David Naranjo, Jesus San·
doval, Bobby Saldan~a and
Larry Martinez. all of Stan·
ton, were arrested by police
on warrants cha r g in g
member s of the quartet with
re<:eiving stolen property.
selling stolen proper.ty and
petty theft.
Officers from Anaheim,
Garden Grove, Placentia,
\Vestminster as well as
Orange County district at·
torney's inves t igators
participated in the .4 a.m.
raid which · encompassed
three different residences in
Stanton.
Suspect Held
In Slaying
GILROY. caur. (UPI) -
Police early today captured
a man wanted in connection
with a San J ose slaying.
The meeting. v.•hich will
be held in room 306 of the
school located at 12342
Trask Ave., is open to
anyone interested in
astronomy.
Officers said they ar·
rested John Cruz Santos, 20,
of San J ose. after spotting DEATH NOTICES his car driving tllrougll the
HAIGHT -='=i!=Y·========il
WUif!! Mlllt• H•l1nt. "'ii! n. o1 1u111r
N. F ~n<:h, 5tnll ""'· 01tt o1 d•llh,
"u•u•I 11. Survived by wlt1, Edllll
E, H1l11111 IOl'I, H•rvev F., ol Cost•
Mes,; sl•ler, Mn. Florence L, Wiiton.
Veflrur•; bro!Mr. Clltrle• E, H1l1M,
Ntw Jerttv; !cur grtnOCMldren 111<1
ol\f 11rt1!·1r1ndclllld. Servlcet. Tue• d•v. 1o01v. BllU Cll•l>fl, 11•1 Su· P•rlor, Cot!J Me11. Dlr«lld bv B1lt1
Mort111ry, (Dll!I M~•.
CONTANT
J0»ephl1>t M, COl'l!tnt. 611 lltamon1
Drlv1. CorOl'lf !!ti Mllr. Age •t; born
In Columbv• Junction, low1, Junt 7.
1919; died, A111111• It, 1'61. Survlwd
b y "usl;>and, M1rlnu• COl'l!lnl; iCl\I,
llt<blrl M. 1nd Tllomn C. Contini;
P•nnts. Dr. 1nd Mrt. Iii. R. M!ltor,
P11••do<11; 1unll, M!u P&UllM Colltr
11nd M!n Helt" Coll•r. Columbut
Juncilon, 1ow11. Strvltn ~nelll>!I.
Forn i Llwn, Glfr>dalo. F1mltv Miii'
o''" !!'>cs' wls"ln9 to m1~e momor-••I 1;1111lrlbvtlonS, P~IK contrlbult lo
rile A-rlc1n Rf<I Cron. ARTHUR
Edilfl L. A1Tl'>u•. 0 10 Nrotul'll. New.
per! Bo1tll. 0110 o1 d•1lll, A"91111 lt,
Survlvf<I by flVJblnCI, Htrold 0 .
Armvr; dauohton . Mrs. L..,.,1rd
Ponn. fturb1nk 1 Mn. Riv Lo1n..r-
wood. Vi n r<u-n, 11nC1 M!H Ctrol Arl~u•. St n F r•MllC01 lOn. Htro!d
VI ..,rtllur. Ro1ed11 "'"" 9r1nd<.hll-
drr<1 ""' lh••• 9rr1t.9r1ncklllld,.n.
S•rvlc•s wlll ~ fleld Wrdr>ndtY. Au·
9v1I 21. l PM, t~•l1! CIKlrcfl bv lht Se•. N•WPorl Bt•C~. ln!frmtnl, P1·
clllc V•tw Memorial Pu N, Dlrecled
tl• P•cllic Vl•w Mor1u11rv.
NEllRING
M•rli C. tolel1flnt. 91Sl Ruuell Av• ..
G•rd•n Grev•. Survlvlld bv wn. A~
'"" F. Non tlno, !rrvlct•, Wf<1nud11v,
lQ ,lQ AM, Pee~ Ftmllv Colonill FU·
nor•I Home.
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Co rona del l\1ar OR 3-9450
Costa !\lesa l\U 6-%4%4
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUA RY
110 Broadv.·ay, Costa fl1esa
LI l-3433
DILDAY BROTIIERS
lluntlngton Valley
l\lortuary
17911 Beach Blvd.
lluntlngton Beach
84?·7771
PACIFIC VIEW
~IEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery e 1'1ortuary
Chapel
3500 Paclllc View Drive
Ne••port &1cll, California
C«-Z7ot
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7811 Bolla Ave.
we1lntln1teT nwsz.s
S)IJ'l1l'S MORT\JA.RY m Milo SI.
Hulin""• S..c)
LE,_
WES'J'CLIFF MORTIJARY
U1 E. 171l SI., Co1ta Mtl• ......
B.10111
CHANNEL 1
IBC-TV
INCDLOH1
S££A/Vo •
tdA/11 H£AR
Al'9th •s •nd • "'•n•" "''n
"A,..._,. 9' nH SINOfl COMIAHT
ANAHEIM
515 N. lo1r1 5)5·11211
A11 1t.1im C111l1r
LA MllADA
15014 l 1 Mir1d1 LA l·l5J2
SANTA ANA
Oow11low11 -305 W. 41h 51.
1(1 2.J,4$
COSTA MISA
l dtlol & S..11flo ... 1r 540.2•ll
Soulh Co11t 1"1111
GAIDIN GIOJI
''JI Ch1pl'll1<t 510-4010
0 •1119• Cou11ty Pl111
I UINA PAil
t J)O 0 11 Thi Mi ll TA 1·7540
8~111 1 P11k C'"'''
HUNTtNaTON llACH
Ed l11t1r 11 l11eh 1•1.1041
Hu11tl11tto11 l11ch C'"'''
COSTA MISA
2]00 H11bor 11~111. Kl '·11'5
Herbor Center
it·
Schmitz
Assail s
'Chiselin g'
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Sen. John G. Schmitz (R.
Tustin), today said Gov .
Ronald Reagan talks tough
about stoppin g w e I f a r e
chllieling but rails to matcb
deeds to his words.
Sen. John Schmitz said he
"admires" the governor's
speeches about c u r b i n g
wellare abuses but ques·
tions the .activities of the ad·
ministxation and S o c i a I
Welfare Director Job n
Montgomery.
Sctunitz cited a dispute
between Montgomery and
Mrs. Mary Quitorlano, we!·
fared ire c tor of Su tter
County. lie said M r s .
Quitoriano deserves high
praise for her efforts to trim
chiselers off the welfare
roUs.
But Schmitz said
1'1 o ntgomecy "repeatedly
overruled h e T decisions,
thus enabling persons to
receive welfare c h e c k s
whom she had found in-
eligible."
··in my own office he had
expressed scOrn and con·
tempt for her," Schmitz ad·
ded.
"Those who admire what
Gov. Reagan says in public
-as I do -may well
wonder wby his words in the
area of welfare in general,
a nd in the case of Mrs.
Quit.oriano in particular,
seem to bear so little rela·
tionship to his actions,"
Schmitz said.
"J·lis words have praised
her work and condemned
welfare ab u s e s , ' ' the
lawmaker added. ''l-lis ac·
tion has been to appoint Mr.
1'1ontgomery as his social
v.-elfare direct.or and keep
him in th:at position despite
every indication that be
does not share t h e
governor's avowed beliefs
on welfare."
.,.. ..
MR. UM
SANTA ANA -Decen·
tralization of the Orange
County Welfare Department
has been proposed b y
Welfare Director Granville
Peoples in a report to the
Board of Supervisors.
Al~bough the W e I f a r e
Department is now i:n five
locations only two a re
permanent and four are in
Santa Ana , Peoples said.
Co n sulate F ire
Attempt Fails
MELBOURNE, Australia
(UPI) -An attempt \V8S
made Sunday to burn the
U.S. consulate here.
The attempt f a i 1 e d
however, w h e n a borne·
made fuse leading to a
gasoline soaked room went
out.
·-·..-• .... --.... ... .... "'·~ ~
j
·-'"·'•j
: 1 , ,,,,CRllE -~
CDllUJlrt 1 ,,-m
is llYing 32
flights dailY
between orange
county Airport
and LOs Angeles
International.
.,.EMl'OfU.ltlLY WE: APll£ UNAB\.E .,.0 CARRY l'ASSEl'iGE'RS WHO Alltl TRAVELING WHOLLY
'WITHll'i THC STATl 0,. CA\.IFORNIA. 1
Trial Set in Pl ane Th efts ..
SANTA ANA -A man ac-the theft ot a $12.COO Piper in Texas, the S her l ff ' s
cused of steall.ug planes Pawnee and a $ 2 5 ,.O 0 0 Department reported.
from the Orange COU!lty Cessna 310.C from the Foster w a 1 accompanied
airport last April 24 . by Howard Joseph Phillips,
Airport has been ordered to Investigation-turned up 25, formerly of Detroit ln
stand jury b"ial Nov. 6. the Piper in Mex1co and Ule the thefts. Phillips will be · ..
Norman Edward Foster, Cessna, partially stripped, tr led separately Sept. 10.
29, of Orange. was arrested ;;;;;;~;;;;~;;~~;;~~~;;~;;;~;;;~, June 26 by federal agel)ts 11
and Orange County Sherilf's
deputies. He is ohaTged with
NO. I
011e of the f'llOtt pop11l1r
•ewsp1p1r f11turo1 In tho
011tlro Jnit1d St1t11 le tho
A1111 ltnd•r• colu"'"· lt't e
Jilly f11ture of th1 DAILY
PILO"' 111d our re1d•r1 tell
111 it't our No. I colu"'"·
.. ••• .. ..
" Harbor Area R eform Temple
I A Refor111 J ewish Co119r191tlo11 I
COMPLETE RELIGIOUS SCHOOL
HIGH HOLY DAY SERVICES
SAB BATH SERVICES
HEBREW SCHOOL :i~§~§§~~§~~~~~·~·~• ~ln~f~o•~m~•~tl~on, C•ll: ~140 flt 6!54442
SMlnt CORONA . ELECTRJC TYPEWRITER
e N'-400 efflui
•IM
• 11" com.,..
w/tft"d fMd
Sofd N-for o_. S450
e G11 ot•11t•d
$108 88
•
NEWlTC c IT I z EN ADDERS
• ELECTRIC
• LIGHTWEIGHT
• ADDS· SUBTRACTS s9950
• CREDIT BALANCE
~ • 2 .COLOR RIBBON Requla< io,.n
~~~ .. ~ .......... z:i,..,.,~ .......... """"''"" ..
TOTALIA CALCULATOR
• AUTOMATIC DIVISION
•·AUTOMATIC MULTIPLICATION
• AUTOMATIC MEMORY
• ADDS & SUBTRACTS
• 12/13 COL. CAPACITY
• FULLY GUARANTEED
REG. 595.00
Like New. Demo Models 394 88
""""'~-=--"
•
Remington Rand Calculators
e Automatic Division
e Multiplication $ 88
• Add . Subtract
e Cred it Balance
• Model ox.94 & 98
You Would Pay Over •00.00 for a New Onet
. ':J
FULLY ADJUSTABLE
STENO
CHAIRS
CALL US FOR
REPAIRS
ON IOTH
Re9.
$29 .95 1988 ~ ;;(-;.;;~5
-=-.
EXECUTIVE CHAIR
e TILT AND ROTARY ADJUSTMENTS
e GROSPOINT SEAT FOR COMFORT l LONG WEAR
e WOOD IASE
Regular
139.50 99ss
Ga I • -NEW 30x60 DESK
COMPLm 5 DRAWER DESK
• FILE DRAWER ON STEEL SUDES
• SELF EDGE FORMICA TOP
Regular 10)88 140.00
UNIVERSITY Off ICE EQUIPMENT
A DIVISION or fl.~RVEY SOMERS
1913 HARBOR BLVD ., COSTA MESA • 646-7118 • 540·1272
~ • • J •
.'
'
For· The Record
Tutl!U)', AutWt 20, 1'68
Anclaeina Leading Wa11 -· ' .. • • $ ~~ ~· .-........ -' . ·-
Music Arts Boom in County
Predictionl are b e I n C
made, by lbol• with an eye
f« I= II and I.ti ear to sound, th&t
Oranp ii on ttl way
to bet;(Jmlnc S o u t b e r n
Cl.lib1da '• center f o r
petfonnanct oC the musical -· Alroaey llrmJ,y e1tablish·
ed u a major eonventlon,
trod• 1bow, oporta and
r~atlonal -entertainment
t uu, tht county may well
look forwwd to development
Of mon c~al activttes -lb wider ...., of the
ye•-old '15 mlllJon
Ana!Jeim Convmlon Center
Md t he mulU-purpose
Anaheim StadillJll.
Tom IJetter, director of
th e S t adium-CClnventlon
Center: EdStotereau ,
·operations meager for the
e<mYeDtlon center and Jim
Mena, who hold• the ume
pQSidon at the st.Hum, en-
vision the Anaheim eomplex
a.s pre1entini muftcal pro-
duction« anCI concerts to
rival · tllote of o t h e r
Soutllland facllltiea.
For four yur1, the round ,
'2·foot diamttt ltll• of
)hlodyland ni..-.r h ~ •.
bftn the stttinc f o r
d r a m a t I c productions,
children'• lhow1 , muaicall,
concuu an d symphonic
pruetaUon1.
Even 01-yland, witb HI
,..alth <14 ..urtalnment oad
adventure1, h a 1 com-
plement.ea these activities ih.tquat>out the 1 u m m e r
J!KlOtbt with a complete
vartetr of m. u 1 1 c a 1 tn·
tertalmntnt from roct n'
roll to IW!ni and Dixieland.
But, It la U>e facllitit1 of
Anaheim'• Con ven ti on
Center .and Stadiwn that of·
fer launching p&d• for the
expantion of evuy type ol
murical p!'oductions. Au·
diences ol lrom 50 to 50,CM))
can be accommodated in
tbeH two structures.
1be Ccnventlon Center,
for exmnple, bu 25 meeting
rooms all capable of bandl·
iDg •mailer audiences and
the Anaheim Assembly
Room, -114 fixed plat-
form atap, haa a capacity
for 1,500. The Cecter's
A.rene can accommodate up to nearly 10,1'.m spectators
With ita dramatic architec·
tural form acoustically
treated to provide versalili·
ty for a wide variety ol
eventl and out:C~ with the
U.S. Anthem Unslngable
'So Proudly We ... What?'
•1 VERNON llCO'IT
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -
"Oh. 11y can you 1ee, by the
dawn's early llcht, whit aa
proudly we hailed at the, uh,
er, tum-de-dum-dum gleam·
ing .•• "
That, unhappl.ly , la the
wretched. history of the
American c iti1 tnry at-
teinpting to muter the na-
tional anthem.
It hat been a COO·
troveral1l anthem 1 I n c e
Francis Scott Key wrote the
lyrles in Che1&l'Ul<• Boy
du,rtn1 the ra u bom·
bardmeot '11 Ft. McHenry
by thoae blilhler• from Bri-
tain.
Tboulh Key penned the
difficult lyrics, rr.~st citizens
haven't a clue u to the
orlein• of the unsingablt
music.
Dwight Townaend, whose
bobby ls alnlinl the anthem,
is a &-fool, 4-inch, Yale.
educated p, a t r i o t who
bellows the son& at sporting
events and on other OC·
casioris.
"I don't find the anthem
unsina:able, althoui't it does
have a rana:e of ahnost two
octraves," said Townsend,
Paul Petro.ff Joins
Laguna Civic Ballet
World·t.mo111 d a n c • r
Paul Petroff, once called
"the world'• I r e a t·e 1 t
partner:, u iJ now uaoclated.
with lJla Zall and the
LalUJla Beach Cl>ic Ballet
COmpany.
wbo aho sings in clube and
mutical shows.
''The only proper way to
line it it to really belt it out
-like a Marine Corpa band.
You can't croon ft.
"n..te are four 1tama1 in
all, but most people don't
even know the fir1t verse,
much 1es1 any of the others.
l don't 11!lnk it la taupt in
schoola anymore.
"Most Americaru j u s t
mumble their way through
the anthem and there is a
common error a 1 m o 1 t
everyone makes. They sing
'through tbe perilous night'
instead of 'throu1h the
perilOUI fight.' 11
Townaend -who blew the
lyrics on a radio show
recently when he was simp-
ly recitin& them without
music -is aga.iru:t those
forces attempting to replace
"The Star Spangled Ban·
ner" u our national 1t1them
with "God Bless America"
or "America."
Vi"'' ltlw1rd1 ,,
''H1mmtrhead"
Alt•
R1it•rt Mitcltw111
''An:do"
Start1 Wod.
Doris{!ay
Brian Keith
'W"dh Six l>u
GetEggroJr
:.t"1o.tu..n...1 ...... .w--....
CONTINUOUS SHOW
Wed., n.n.. "'" s.t .. S•.
Stem 1 I'·"'· Me11. • TMS.
e Posltl..ty hft T"'"1 e
llOMrl Ml!Olum Incl Del" Mlrtt"
"S CAlD STUD .. .,,.
Crossword Puzzle
Talk Scheduled .l":tt J:;ed~C
A~llo fmn "Paqulta" m On Grape'Strl.k.e lead dancen Mary Hanf and
O.nt Wilk•• to perform u a
"We should a.tay with 'The
Star Spangled Banner,' "
Townsend said. "It still
lives the people goose
bump. when it's pllyed and
1ung correctly." " nm SlfMl MllIIIT. ACROSS 45 SchNlrto•
111111 l l'rtstrvtd 47 Tra•p: S 'fist aute Colloci.
10 !~111len er .et ''Nf lat•tl
COlltallrl . 50 lllttf ef 14 Cka11papt Educ:atieft:
!Wclttt Abbr.
15 By ontstlf Jl Toual!, I• :lst ctntury ·-vi rift
,HIPtfOf •llH 17,Treys SSll•rr•
19 8rltf trteVt
'"lllltmpl: JS Un•tr:
, lnftt111! Pit fix
20 1111111 11 s• Ki•d tf ,,.,., JRilk:
Zt Chtrlst!td ll Otf
Jll!Hn 6Z Carlftf\'I
22 ~Ir: CIL!rlt:
Ct1111'. 11111 2 wtris
ZJ ley's '4 Daythtll' tf
ftltlll ''"''''' 2J Hair: '' Gtn111n Co1111t. ftr11 hl1t.rt111
Z' ... -the " Day 11.Mrtr 11ln11l1: •7 Dlstrlbple
Z words ltJ ••uurt
l O Part ti 1 •I S.tll ctrtaf pltnt cflllldr111
11 Ht'llnt ''Trees exlsltil tfMo
111011 '"'' 34· Nl9h
ht1Hrns
)··/nlfl'IUOUS Ja Scltnit:
Abbr,
lt Twt,Jw Ulla:
2 •NI• ~t C-trKt .. , ........... 4J l'tllt
thr1M19'1 ·-· "alvH of ,, .. ,,
m
DOH
7 Snhtfl l
Inn 1uoclttltn: Z-• I ll'utln ·
t a1frn"lhf 11ul1t 1f ,,.,
10 Tacit llS,lrihl .
UllllY
carrl•t• 11 Mltfltitty -.. 11 , .. uc ....
14 S11hltu1I ....
25 Tflt Clllllll.911 ,..,,,
26 Useful
17 On• wit•
l111tulsh•1 11 !11U•I 2t 'otr.'Sp. Jllto• l1Ref1i1 JJ IMt, fl•ll
1nll11"'
IRVINE -Joe Serda. a bont11. item in ' ' B a 11 e t
Northenl Callfonila crape Allr'ltco" at 1:30 p.m.
work.er, will c&cuss the Saturday, Aue. 31, 1 n
-· ·and coiidlUCllla for La,...., Irvine Bowl workinl men of Caltfomla't Born in Dtnm•t, Pet-
vineya:rU t.oni.pt in tbt In· roff1 name wu· oril1naUY
terfaith Lounl• at Irville Paul Plterttn. Jt wU Bal-
Town Cent.tr on Campu1 anchlne, then ballet muter
of Colonel de Baail'• Ballet Drive, .acro1s the street Rwae de Monte Carlo, who
from the matn entrance to selected tht Rusatan name U~ talk, aclMdultd for I of PetroU. It WU Ru11ian
p.m., h iponiored by the dancer Leo Fotine who call-
1/H/61 Catholic Human Relations ed Petroff "the world's
Council. Admission ii a 11 r:reatest partner."
15 Ftl(ftt4 donation whlch will 10 to the Aftior extensive tr1ining 37 A ·rtlltlou1 with many of the lead.inf tal9' srape ltril:er1. 41 I• lnctntct dance mntor1 In the world,
41 1111'1 Petroff found himaeU with a "'''"'"' Kicls like to repertoire of 22 loading 4' 1umltur• roles which be danced on an
416\d"•.,11 'As\: Andy' extenaive tour that took him
cimlvotH around tbe world three
U OOlctl !;::~:;:;::;::;:;::;;:~======~~=I ,1 .. •d ustll f11 II 11t11tJvt ,i,rasn :tc· ..... ,..-,. S\Mlllto -· 17 ~-" llttlll'tf
51 real, •·•· ,, Jtt
60 C1rtlil11 · 1r•111iuc.kr 6J Prnl4•tlal --·
The Luxurieus New
ll•ltell A..-&n.
'"' w. '"" ..... Mm ..._. .... 141..fll7
---..
,.._....., ,.....,., ...... .... °"""' 0,... 4r41 • ,....,..llM •
•• ,.9 .. 11
OflN MOON
C..ltanc•
.... ... le
------~---------'---
.....
WITH LAGUNA BALLET
P•ul Petreff
times. 1';:=:;:::;:::;=:;=:;:::;:::;=:;=:;:=",\ Of hia association wlth tbe li
La(Wll company· Petroff
aaid, "It 11 • treat ple.aame
to work with Lila Zall. She
it a perfectionist and It ia
not aurprislng that her
group recently l".'On the title
of National Honor Company.
other Jtem1 in "Ballet
Alfresco" are "Moods of
Ancient Ru11ia," "Fugitive
Via·ion1 ,'' and "The
Enchanted Toy Shop.''
Tlcketa ire on sale now at
Irvine Bowl box office, 650
Laruna Canyon R o a d , Litruna Beach.
~ llEW.~ll.
~ATRE
H•"'• •f l:•t.•i"t Clt•ir
L•t••
1.11, •• '•"l1t11tl•••1).4041
Ch114 Witt-'•''"' o"r., a 01M1t Nlthtly 6141 e
e INDS TONIGHT e
& p,...Jdent'a Analyet
• Starla w..i.-ly fi
]JllWIMU.
Jlllm'~ ,,
'"lflin.Jllne ... OOli. wan.--•
·-ca,.,..,.,.
HARBOR at ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546-3102 -~ Now Daily-1st Area Run
ACADEMY
AWARD
WINNER
•UT DIRICTOR-MIKI NICHOLS
• Ptrformancn •
1-3-5.7·9·11 p.m.
Dilly
10 DAILY PTLDT
~ig Day for U.S. Tennis
.\rt.bur Ashe (lop) returns a shot to Spain's Man·
tel Santana during Monday's portion of the Davis
Cup zone matches at Cleveland that was called
s u n day because of darkness. Ashe beat
Santana of.Spain l bottom ), 11-13, 7-5, f>-3. 13-15 and
6-3. The U.S. won the inter zone event, four games
to one.
lforks Out Daily
Voss Bouncing Back
After Being Fla(tened
Pul ,\•nurseU in the plnc.e of a fello"'·
who's had his race caved in by a
speeding baseball he never 53\\' com-
ing.
You've been "''1thout a square mt>a l
tor a month or so while your shattered
jaw mended. you've lost 15 pounds
rrom a frame that can ill-afford a n Y
dips in weij?ht
You "·ere in dani::er of losinl? your
sigh1 -ml'an1nc the end of the major
league career you v•cre barely begin-
ning to enjoy.
tr all those thinl?~ had happenf'd io
you, it \\'OUld scctn ~ille lo opine you
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.
WHITE
WAS H .,,,,,,,,,,,,,.
GLENN WHITa
r1i ght ~ a hil gun shy if lhe occasion
arose where you would again be st:in-
ding at the. plate. wailing for some
cl od to try and throw strikes past you.
However. such is not the case with
Bill Voss. former Orange Coast area
athlete now doinJ: duty v.·ith thc
Chicago \Vhite Sox.
All those things 1nentioncd above at -
tual!y happened to th e co-v.·1nner of th<'
!!)58 Yardley ·rroph~·-
Yet he is currently >.1·ork\n,e in ,ec1
off the Pale Hose disabled roster and
back in the lineup by Sept.ember I.
a Ionic ear flap and that .(i\'PS mp mnrr
prntectlnn around the temple.
"But I'm not the least bit "'nrricd
Hbout getting hit aj?ain. When I walk nr
In lhe place f simply concentrate on
hitting the baU. If I start worr~·lng
about being hit. 1 may as we ll quit.
"And ir I do j?CI hit again, 1"11 think
. :i hout becoming a sport! writer nr
something.''
* * * \'os.~. star athle!e at N fl w fl n r 1
Harbor llii?h and Orange Coast
Colle1?e. >.1'as quizzed about his vieu•s
nn I.he replacen1en1 of EdciiP Stanky as
\\lhite Sox manage r and or Detroit 's
chancel\ t.o win the pennant.
"I won't say anything ai?ainst
Stanky." he states. "But 1 \viii say
that Al Lopez (Stanky's replacement l
can handle his men better.
"Detroit is the team wilh the bi.ii
lead 161-1 games) bul il's tough to i;a~
the pennant is in !he bag with six
11,eeks left in I.he season . One had
~lumr and Detroit could be in trou·
:1 I e "
* * * .\llantir Rrsrarch is tht "'innrr nl
1 hp Costa 1\les11 Industrial softball
lra~ue this s11mn1cr, dethroning the
.\lesa Politr for thr titlt. The champs,
~--0 thus far, v.·rap it up tonight a=:atn~t
thf' Policr and their hf'raldf'fl hurler
(;f'or~e l.<lrlon.
ftpi;earch ilnv.·nrd l.orlnn, thr nn ·hil
rJlf'Cia list . twlef'. The nPV.' champion ...
11 rrf' v.·lnless In '67 .
Balti1nore
Draft Choice
Throttles Halos
ANAHEIM ~ The 20 major league
teams, current!y tryin~ to figure out
whom lo protect in the expansion draft
this fall, shudder a little when they
hear the name .Jim Hardin.
Hardin is a 25·year-old righthander
\i;ho spent four seasons in the New
A 119el Slate
Au9 '10 o\~9el• v1 lla!tlmori 1:'5 Pm Klo\PC 11101 AuQ. 11 Angel• YI lltlllmore 7•JS pm KMPC Ila! Aut. n A"9~""' Oa~t•nd 1:15 P.m. KMPC fllO l
York J\1ets' farm system before being
left unprotected in the 196.'l draft.
I-le was grabbed by the Baltimore
Orioles.
It '>l.'asn't un til .Jul.v 28. 1967 . Iha!
llrirdin won his first major Jea,1!:11e
.i:ame. In !he year a.n<i thrri> wpeks
si nce 1hen. the ·6-fooL JiS-pounder ha:;
developed into one nf baseball's most
\'aluable properties, winning 24 games
and losing only seven.
l'he right-hander pitched a !V.'O-hit-
ter Monday night and doub\e<i home a
st>ve nth-inning run to lead Baltimore
to a 1-0 victory over the California
An,l!:el~.
Rallimore "'ill send Tom PhOf'bu~.
Jl-11 , against Califormia 's Rick Clark.
1-11 , toni,l?ht in the second game of the
lhree-game set.
IAlllMOIE CALl,ORNtA
al!•h •bi •~r~rlll
huf(!O'd <I J n 1 o ICr~plnc-r1 • D f o
l•lr ct 0 D 0 D "'""''" .. • 0 D n !11lan<1~ ., • n 1 D D•v•llllr> (I J D 1 t
~ llolln"" •• D 0 D lltl<~•·at !I l G 0 0
Pa-II 111 0 D 0 Mln<l>I'• ID l D 0 0
l'lllobn•nJll •DID ..... trlano c JDDD
!l~-'••y !! J 0 0 t lll!fla• Jb 3 0 O D
0 Jol1n1<>n lb • I l D IC,_ 1b J 0 I 0
"'""'v <. • O 1 D M<Glotl>lln " I n n o M•rtlln n I 0 1 I II•,,.,, p~ I D 0 D
lnl•I l•l ,l l nt•I llDl D
l\ottl"'~" 0 0 0 D D 0 I 0 0-1
Collln•ni• o " n n D n n t O-D
E-!l•lono'f. Ll•n•• OP-llolh"""• I. C•llklrnl•
I lOB-l!ol!i>'!'~'' !. C•IU~rnla l 18-D. Jol>nto•1, l"Mdin. !11-!lelan~tr l. S-McGlo!~!in.
Drange County vs. Japan
Verne Konig (right) o{ Santa Ana doesn't seem too
happy over the prospect of batting last against
the Japanese Wakayama team at the Little League
World Series in .Williamsport, Pa. Konig is a mem-
her of the Bolsa team, representing Garden Grove,
Fountain Valley and Santa Ana. The Series started
today.
·Torn Shoulder Muscle
Hits Detroit's McLain
NEW YORK l UPI) Denny
McLain, baseball's premier pitcher.
has come up with a torn shoulder mus·
cle.
Detrnil's 25-game winner dropped
lhe shocker himself on an off-day visit
here and also let it be known that 30·
~ame goal or no 30-game goal, he's not
1>ushing that much to reach jt because
there's always next year and what
good is next year if you have no arm
left.
McLain disclosed the news of his in-
jury in almost casual fashion. He was
here on business plugging the Ham·
mond organ, which he plays ex·
ceptionally well by the way, when he
iuddenly hit a clinker.
A simple question about how his
arm felt did it.
"My arm hasn't been giving me
!rouble until Lately,'" answered the
Tigers' candid 24-year~ld r i g h I •
hander. ''but I've got a torn muscle in
hack of my shoulder and that's giving
me a lot of pain. The pain is there all
I.he time. That goes whether I'm
playing I. h e organ. playing cards or
doing anytmng which requires moving
my shoulder.
"When I go out to warm up. I have
to throw sidearm at first because it
pains so much. Then I gradually begin
throwing overhand. I gel this lcind of
trouble at the begiMing of every year
but this was the first year I didn"t
have it until five weeks ago. It was
cold one night and all of a sudden I felt
the strain."
McLain, who has been pitching
rvery four days in a dual effort to
keep the Tigers on lop and become the
first major lea,l!:uer to win 30 games
ll i n c e Dizzy Dean in 1934. isn't
hroodinj? about hi1; injury but it cer-
tainly i.~ on his mind.
"L ook, I w 8 n I 30 ai; bad as
IH ESA. VE RDE GETS
H A.JG TOURNEY
Mesa Verde Country Club of Co.sta
~1e:;a . birthplace of the late Cham·
pagne Tony Lema. will be the sit.e of
the 1968 Haig Scotch Foursome cttam ·
pionship October 23-27.
Mesa Verde Teplaces Costa Mesa
Golf and Country Club as scene fnr
hostilities so the latter could have
more time to mature as a course for
major tournament events, and t]le
1969-72 classic will be held at
CMG&CC.
Lema. who later died in a plafle
rrash. earned the nickname "Cham-
1>agne Tony" in 1962 when he won the
Orange County Open at Mesa Verde
rind m·ade good on an earl.ier promise
tn su pply the press with champagne in
the event he did bag the title.
anybody," he said, "but whether it'll
JO or not I've got tn think about next
year and r don't w.ant to throw my
whole arm out In one year. tr we get a
good enough lead I 'll take an extra
day's r est. So far, between aspirins.
pilli; .and rubdowns I've been able to
keep going. J don't want to sound like
a disabled veteran or anything like
th a I. But I hope it doesn't get an y
worse.''
McLain knows how much it will
mean to him financially if he's able to
win JO game.'>.
"II has got to be worth quite a bit,''
Sports in Brief
he said. brightening. "l couldn 't even
imagine how much. They've been
throwing some big figures around .at
me and I'm awed by big figures. J'm
a country boy. I'm trying to learn big
city tactiC'S as fa st as I can.''
McLain is learning fast, all right. Ask
any of the American League hi~rs.
They say he's unbelievable. Right
now he 'll not only a cinch for the
league's Cy Young Award which goes
annually to the outstanding pltcher but
he's a I s o in line for MVP and the las!.
fellow to g r a b off both awards w a s
Sandy Koufax in 1963.
Bengtso11, Green Bay
Down After Bear Loss
MILWAUKEE. Wis. -The world
champion Green Bay Packers. hopin~
to prove they c a n win without a
taskmaster head coach. have dropped
a second straighl National Football
League ex-hibiticm.
And if anyone felt worse than new
coach Phil Bengtson after Monday
night's 10.7 loss to the O\icago Bears,
it had to be Bengtson's playen.
"When you like a guy, you feel much
more responsible." said veteran guard
.lerry Kramer. "We 're all extremely
disappointed in ourselves."
The Bears scored on Gale Sayers'
76-y.ard touchdown run on the second
play of the game. and added a 42-yard
Mac PC'rcival fied goal before the half.
A 14-yard Bart Starr pass to Boyd
Dowler capped the Packeri;' only sus-
tained drive Qf tile game a1 the start nf
the seC<lnd half. II was a final gasp. A
fiehl goal attempt by W.ade Traynham
from the 37-yard-line with J :56 left
w;:i.s off mark.
NEW YORK -Rnn H11nl was there
Lht. lallt time the San Frantl1co Giants
and New \'nrk 1\1els gol ta11gled In a
marathon 110 ht. decided to dn
somelblnt about It.
The scrappy Sa n Franclst• 1t.cnud
baseman, who played ror New York In
the Glant1-l\.1et1 %3-i unlng-fiasco rnur
yean ago, laced a 11ln~le In the 17th In·
nlng Monday ni ght to !ltore Hal Lanier
with lhe i:a me"5 only run and givf' San
l''rantls1'1t JI 1.0 victory.
SA.N DIEGO -Ataulfo Sanchet
turned in his ninth shutm1! of the year
Monday as the San Diego Toros
defeated Vancouver 2-0 in a North
American Soccer League game.
Cerilo Sanchez scored his 25th and
26th goaJ.o; of the season before a
crowd· of 6.322. largest here this year,
LOS ANfiELES -The IAis Aogele1
Ram1 signed starting flanit.r BeniJe
Casey ri1onday at an uodJsclo1ed
salary. a spokesman reported .
The 1pnke11mao for the Nalinnal
f'ootball Lt.ague said the team also
wRlved rookiP Cephus Jackson, a
defeni;ive back from .Jackson, !\1111.,
Stale.
RIVERSIDE -Fort Worth, Tr.x.,
won the 1968 Colt Lca,l?ue \Vl)T"Jd Series
OOseball title Monday night. coming
back from a 3-1 defeat to whip Santa
Clara. Calif., 8-6 in the doubleheader
nightcap.
Dodger s Grab
Fir1ner Grip
On NL Cellar
HOLJSTON -\Vhen The roo( fall~ In
on you in the Astrndome. Yflu've been
dealt a mortal wallop. ·
And that'~ how the l,ns AngclP'
Ood$!ers f!'el today aftrr the liouston
A~tro~ rubbed their noses dE!eper inti)
~-~~~~~'--~ Voss was deckPd by a pitch in
Baltin1ore on the Fourth of .Jul y Anci
resulting injuries kept him out of ac-
tion until 10 days a,eo v.·hen he began
the getting back in shape process. Pro Golfers Make Break From PGA
Dodger S late
Aut l'!l 8od9en •I """""'" J·1' •"' ICFI f'd\ •u• ll od .... •t i"lou1!or1 J 11 D ..,· KFI uo
A ..... n Oodnn •• ""' '••nc!-1:u • "'· 11:,. l•«ll
last place in thf' National League Mon·
day night. * * * "II wa1 likt 11prin.r tralnin.I( all tl\'f'r
1,caln." he commtoted flurinl 11
ttlepbone lnlt rvtew from his Chlcnt11
apartment l\1onday afternoon.
"But I'm celling back In t'ondition
pretly qulckly. rt1y batting ha1 plck('d
up conslderably. And I'm dnini 111 lot of
running, lhrowlot and fleldinit. 'fhr
ble' lhlnt It lo tel my "'eiitht back to
when It '#11 when I jl'.ol hurl .
"( wu down to 1'5-but no"' 1'1n
• blck to J5!. My retiular playln.r "'tl,i:hr
11 JM." he 1ay11.
''I cUdD'I re1llir ho"' mu<:h I t'nuld
ml11 e1tJJt.f undl thl1 happened. I r.ut
the rabOtr band& boldlaf my jaw
toptJN!r )l:st week and ate a 1teak. ~fy
mt1UI wat aw(ully ttllff and It w1111
bard ta chew. Bui It re1lly ta11tcd , .... , I'!!::~°"· ,..J\ •1'• a 1,Wal he"llP wl01
\'J·;\\' YORK <Arl -C.nlf's \ourini::
pro,<.. their hre<'lk 'A'ith thci Proff'ssiooal
Golfer" ... Association an a rNlmpl~hrd
fact. a~ in buslnPSs for fht>msth,1p5 1.0·
day. negotiatin,I? for t•on trat·ls and con-
lacting ~ponsQrs.
The split bel'>l-'ern !hr ~2-year -01<1
PC.A a?ti the rtbfil tour1.~ts ~came of·
firial Monday "·hrn thr playM'~· at-
11,rne.v. Sam Gates. announN'd forma-
!1011 or Amrri('an Profl'SSIOn~I Golfers.
an org-a n1 zat1on he saiO 1ncl11de11 all 1he
1op names in lhe J?Olf wnrhl.
" [ havf' 20.'l clicnls -I have ctlunlcd
thrm,'' he ~aid. "\\It are ncgotlatini?
fnr IOurnamrnl~ ianfl tr\evigioo con·
tr!!rl~ nnw . \\Ir will havl" an·
nounrrmcnls "'hrn lhey :ire crnn·
pleted.··
The n~w 5lroup 1ns1su. h~ve.r, 1l
\\•111 honor all co1nm1lmMll s for thP. rf'·
1naindt"I' of this veaT and for two
lnurnamenls already undt'r cootraC"I
for 1969.
That Ill. if they're allowed lo.
Max Elbin, pres idenl of the PCA -
which also reprc-soots some 6,000 cluh
pros -said earlier that all the lourinj!,
pros win be polled. askrd if they wish
to rf'main members of !he PGA or of
Olr rival group.
H they say the • dn not wiFoh In rr-
tn a l o in the PGA a n fl abirtf' by ii~
reRulatlons. "They presumably will
have forfeited their rig~t lo play,"' he
said.
"Our hoy~ havr no ln lentlon nf
rC'si~nin~ from the PGA.'' aaJd Gate~.
"l;ht'y hope !hey can remain memb,¥5
of the PGA." !._
Both sides insist money ii; not the
principal issue in the dispute
<'lllhough millions of dollars are at
stake.
''lt"ll a matter of control of the
tour,'' Elbin said. "The louring pros
don't a g re e to our (the PGA ex-
ecutive committee) control. We have
the PXperlence, the know.how. the
organization.
.. r can't see their desire lo escape
!hf' PGA . I don't understand it. Th,
PC.A has made millione1ireg of some of
these men."
Gates, aitJked about a rumor that
Arnold Pa\mP.r and Bob Rosburg
might break away and form a tour of
lhelr own. ~•Id : "We h1vt1 no
rent?gade~ I hive hid long talks with
Palm~r and Ro!bur&. You don't have
lo worry aboul them."
The PGA. meanwhile. insist ... 1t will
continoe in the tour busine.55 . "WP will
continue to play tournament golf. 11
will be tough al first, bul we will con-
tinut." Elbin said.
And Leo Fraser. secretary nf lht
PCA. 1ald. "We've l!OI 6.000 little rac-
toriell (clubs) turning out potP.ntial
st::.rs for us.'"
Then, too, thert'~ television. A two.
year contract with the American
Rroadcastin~ Co .• covering lhl" PC.A
championship and nine o t h e r
tournaments, recently was ne~otiatf'd.
"We nefot.iated wtth the players and
the PGA. ' said Roone Arledge. vice
president in charge nr JJpnrl'i for lh~
networlt, "There may be 11nme leial
\,.difrlcullies. I don 't know what the out-
-c'Ome will be ."
Don Orysdalt i 14-10 ) hope!! he can
Pfevent another such fl isa!lter tonight
when he takes nn LarTy Oierker 111 -
IOf . In the Astros" indoor basf'ball
palace
Monday night. thl" DOOgt.r!I had a J.fl
lead goinJl: into the fourth but the
AstrM M"orrd seven times off Bill
Singer and Claude Osteen.
~0, ANCILfl lfOVJTON •• r ~ ,_. ... ....
''""''"'d " • ' ' ' Mo..,...,o " • ' ' ' r •• 1ir.,,t,11 " • ' " N ,..1~,, rl • ' ' • l•fo~~·· flf'I • ' ' ,.,,.,,_ .. ' ' " W D••I• r! ' ' ' w.,,...,,, ' ' • •Ul!ot • ' ' ,, ... ~ " ' ' ' ~•It!• .. ' • •••• .Ill • • " It eo111~ "' • ' ' lrf<•flk• 'b • ' ' ' r-1t~ )b • • • ........ i. ' ' ' ' ' V•• .. o!I" ,. ' • ' !I•'"" ... ' ' ' ' ' Slnt1• • ' • • • tl+uol " ' ' ' ' c o"-11 ~ " ' • • ,_h • ' ' ' • ~•v••• "" ' • • " '°Vrdln ,. • • • " I( llev•• .. ~ ' • • • ,., .. " • ' • 11110! .~ • • ~eflH • ' • • • ' ' ' • ' • I ' • • • .....
-~-"----
Tuesday, August 20, 1968 DAILY PtlOT ll
South Grid Co-captains·-~-'--'----;:;;::;;~;;;~
Tamiyasu,. Patton _Tabbed
LOS ANGELES -I had alway1 thou1ht I would clle
with an unllnl1hed column in the typewriter.
This I· ~ccepted on one condition -that lt ·dlcln't
happen on the road.
Now It comes to pass the end will be enUrel;y dif·
ferent, because the end is already here. This Is It. You
are reading It.
Strange, the last one figured to be the easiest of
them all. It would simply be a matter of pouring out
15 years of memories. .;'. It isn't easy. It la damn tough. There are too many __ M_IK_l_T_AM_IY_AS_u;__
,memories and I am afraid I will not get them all in ~and I do not know where to start.
· I go happily. At the same Ume, I go saclly. I io to
wondrous new thtng1 and great new challenges. O's Boss
Mike Tamtyuu of Marina
and Eflc Patton from Ma·
ter Dtl hav• been elected
co-ceptalns for the South
All-Star football team which
duels a atmllar aggrea•·
lion from tlie Nor111 Tbura-day night at-Orange Coast
College.
The ninth annual Orange County cWalc wlll have a
number of bead OD clasMs
lnvolv~.
First, of course. the ob-
vious matcb. between North
fullback Tom Fltzpotzlck
and Patton. the South'• de·
lentlve gt.ant.
Fitzpatrick Is tbt bulldoz·
Ing fullback wbo gained
Player of the Year honor•
for the CIF l'bamplon Ana·
he!m Colonl1ts.
Patton, although on a so-ao team (considering final
tabulaUons of won.Joe• rec·
ordJ), gained All·American
laurels as a linebacker·
center.
But there ls another as·
pect to ibis heod·to·h•ad combatc thing.
Take the co~h~s thetn·
selv,..es. Neither has ever
faced each. other across a
football fleld.
Jim Coon of the South
wat a raz.zle-dan.le quar.
terback in "his playing days.
Herb Hill 9f the North was
a tough guard, spending
· most of bis time on the de·
·tense. Two exact opposites.
Howe ver, It is Coon who
hu the defense that wW
Albacore
te1t· HUI'• vaunted ollen.te.
Clearly, the power ol the
North la In ill exptoalve
backfield with Fltzpalrld:
and Marv Owens of P'Uller·
ton as set bacb and Harvey
Winn of Loara and Brad
Wekall hoklJng tb1 quarter•
·back dutles.
The South, whlle holdlnJ a
cndltable hand In tbe of-
fensive backfitld sltuaUOD,
st111 holds tile majority of liRl't PATTON its carcll In Ill dlfe111e. ___ ;_.:..;_:;..;;~:.__-
At Kona Lanes
But one does not leave without a fetling of.aadness
when he departs something that baa been part of hi•
life_ for so many years. Perhaps a little of me now dies
-at that. The grind bas been daily for more than a decade.
'The writing is not the difficult part. It is the angle. The
angle is elusive and must be relenUessly pursued.
A daily column is a monster. Feed it, or it will eat
you .
Sees 30 1. Run to Last
3-4 Weeks
McCueNears
· l(egler Crown
Still, I shall miss it. I may even mis• opening my
eyes every morning with the same thought in my mind
-the angle.
But one cannot look back. One cannot so much as
think of things that might have been. This Is a lWlury
no man cart afford. I go and I go happily. 1. go to wonderful new adven·
tures with a man I admire greatly. Perhaps I admire
him more than any man since the n.rst man I ever
loved. My father, who did nat live to see any of lhls
happen. But how do you find a beginning for the end?
I had thought perhaps the pages could be filled with
names. I had thought to mention my traveling compatl-
jons and roomies over the miles and the years, but I
can't. There are far, far too many and there would be
a danger of missing perhaps only one.
Too Manu Thrills
I had thought to recall th• tim•• Wt hacl •
gether. The drinks end the laughs and hardships,
which I now know were not r1i1lly hardships at all.
Thtr• were too many of the11, too. And b1side1,
they are now only Important •• memori11 to bt
stored away 11nd dl1rl1hed.
I had thought to tell you of the excitement and
the thrills and the 9ra1tn111 I have '""' but I
can't. There were too many of these, too.:
Perhaps it Is enough to say that the pl1a1ura of
knowing gr••tne11 pt:r1on1lly It ov1r1hatiowecl only
by the prlvllegt. '
I have angered people by my writings. I have
bHn threatened with guns and knuckles and words.
To these people I 11y I'm sorry, but I fffl no
r1mor11. There was never any mallet.
Lonel11 Stroll Through 1<ife
I have brought joy with my writings. Perhaps this
is an immodest thing to say, but I too found joy in the
letter from the cripple who said he looked forward to
the column every day. To those, however few, who enjoyed I say the plea·
sure bas been all mine. Only one sort of reader ever upset me. I was upset
with pity for those who became angered at things said
in obvious jest. I do not think I will ever forget the
letter from the man who took almost violent exception
to a Christmas column about assembling a child's tri·
For Mac
By EARL GUSTKEY br 91t ~tr PHtl lllff
Yes, Earl Weaver thinks
o.nny McLain will win 30
game• and yet, E a r l
Weavu th1nb hil Baltimore
Orioles can win t h e
Amerkon uaiu• pemwil
. Wbo ll l!lul w-er? Ht'1
the guy Ill• Ortoltl hired to
run tile taam after Hank
Bauer WU fired. Under
Weaver, a minor league
maoager for 11 years, the
Orioles have come alive,
playing ovtr 6SO ball.
1!11 taam Ls cumnUy
engaged in a bee-game
series with the Angell in
Anaheim and ht stopped oU
at the Southern California
Sports Broadcasters 1un·
cheon at Anaheim Stadium
Moodily afternoon.
"Yes, I think Mcl"ln will
win 30," he said, in .anawer
to the first question of the
....ion.
"I didn't think be could
earlier but he 1ttm1 to have
goCten bl!Melf Into • poll·
Uon where he has an es·
celleat ehmee at it. But a
couple of monlll• ago, ii l:.~ like an 1mpoaaibl• Promising Rookie
Al for th• pemant race, weaver seems unperturbed Forme~ Coeta Mesa High pitcher Buryl Hemerick
I
over the loss of bis catcher, 1s offenng his talerrts to the Minnesota Twim:' Goll
Andy Etehebarren. The __ c_o_a_st_Le_a..:g_u_e_en_t_ry:_fro_m:;..;;S.::ara:..:::•.:.ota:::::.•.:.Fl.:.o:;n.::'d:;•:.:· ___ _
f«mer Soutllland prep 1tar
cracked a knuckle last week
arid 11 ln the pits for tbe re•t
of the aeaaon.
"We have tbrtt otbtr fine
catchers who can fiD. tn for
Andy," Weaver explained.
Olympic Diving Trials
Under Way Wednesday
cycle. ~
A stroll through this life-must be terribly lonely
without a sense of humor. At any rate, this is the end. The one I thought would
be easy, wasn't. I am not even sure I have a aid the
things I wanted to say and In the manner I wished to
say them.
"Larry Haney may be the
best defensive catcher in the
American League. Curt
Blefary eon play behind tile
ptate and we alJO have
Elrod Hendricks."
LONG BEACJ{ -TI1e better internatlonal-t·lass
United States selects the diving than will the people
probable Olympic Games who jam Mexico City's
gold medal winners in div· Olympic Pool in October.
ing this week in the new $.l.7 Of 46 gold medals award-
Perhaps at a Ume like this there is only one thing OCC SETS
PHY SICA.LS
mUUon Belmont P 1 a z a ed in Olympic competition
Olympie Pool. since 1904, all but ten have to say.
Goodbye and God bless. Ctnrltllll THf, leV Tt"911f fllC,
The 1968 Final Trial1 ln gone to United States en·
diving open Wed n e 1 day trant.s .
Deep Sea Fish Report
Phy8cal exams will be morning and c 0 n t 1 n u e The Long Beach schedule
held .and uniforms ta.sued through Saturday night to calls for prelims each morn·
to Oran.ie Coast College select three U.S. divers in ing starting at 11 t 0
viNTUllA _ 11 ,111i.r11 m Im-•· •1111 -n .,,.1tra: 102 wrr1c1.1111. ito football aspirants on each ol four events -men's determine 12 flnau-11 for
115 nKll: tl•h~ tt bonlfio, 2' Nrr1(Vd1, s bonito. 117 Nu, 2 h1 ntiu1. Aum••t 28-29, 7-9 p.m. at • ~
111
nw
1
. •AN PIDllllO 1Norm'• ..........,J -..... ->"'meter springboard and 10. three final competitive dives
s.r.NTA MONICA _ 40 11111,,..1 64 tee 1111ltfl1 '' 11Hcort. • blwfln NM. the OCC field house. me•·r plaUorm dl-•-g and th
..
........ .... 1 r1110WT1ill. 11 Hrrt<Vd•· ..o url(a "-tact ti ts i.o:: vw e rame ev-.i~g.
"• • ""''''~· .,.,., 1 .. 1111 "-••· •H tiontlo. (2W 11. \.Aln prac ce ge "'
1
11.1
1
oxN.r.110 -HM 11111i.n1 lto bllu. L•Mll•J _ ,12 111111tra1 '" 11on1-. 111 der way Sept 2 for women'• 3 ·meter 11pr· 7llte evening pro-ams, :,~1~ 11*"· 22 11"' coc1. 12 11tll1M.11. ' ;1~:.n ·~· 25• ullco NH, :;:;-ach Dick T u c' t er' 1 ingboard and 10.meter plat· beghm.lng at 7, also i~clude
POllllT HU•NIMI -lH 11111ler1: l.ONO llACM IPKHlc S.ortnlMltl Plrages. sub •• ,, u t n t form. 11u t •llco 11111. " Hrr•cuc1•, ,, llDn--no -""' c 11H"'•· ' ,. an exhibition by the di\'er1
110. • h111w1, 1so rodl coe1. w uow1111, 111 bllrr•tv<1•. 10 h•llbut, outside 1crtmm1ges will These are event! the of the nr'WV\i.ite se:v (men
MAL1au Pllll -S4 t1111len1 I :MO• ~ttko bt1o1, IO llonUo. l,111'llllf be held <_, 7 (0CC VI U-"·" S'J-bas d ' led di •yy• ' t..1111u1, 11 bon1io. ,.,. c1r1C10 .,.... u.1111) -,,, 111111r11 !4 111>11cor1. ~Y.. 1~ ~~ omma ving off the 3-meter spr-8•••• _ n '"' .. '"a bonito.'° rock 1os 1>11rr1cuM. nn HA. sa.c bonito. 1 Mira Costa .and Groll• in Olympie competition, and tnm.~nrd, for example , the
aMI Y91111W"it11 •• rd. *· 1 htllbul. (It). ont 11 ) -~ Sept ain th I ·-N.lllllMOIA ••ACM -.o '"'1tno1 '° """'"11!'J -,. '"'1tno1 so1 kn. 21• m • •.m. -.iiu • ~ ag e e'lpeetat on same nJght as the \\'omen's
bonito. to u11to llNI. 11 t11rl"Klldt. bonflt. 11• Hrrecudt. 1• ri.11w1, 11 14 (OCC Ill Whitt 1 tr i1 that ~ora in Long 3-meter spring"-·-d flna'-)
lllDOMDO a l .t.CM -lib '"'lert' 4f fMdltNt, 2t l'9dl flll'I. .,,... -U U\1-tU" ~ •lblcore·, .,.11oWt1n, ,, -.me. ..... ,., 1n1i.n1 s11bolltto.11 ...... 1 111nM. C.Ollege). Beach see more and and comedy div:lng.
ullCO M•, lt2 bonito. A hll!IMlt. _.::;:::;;::_;;:.::;:;::;.::.:=c.,;;;.=:;_--~-'-----------'"-:.::_:;;_:;:_:::;:_::::.:::::::::::..~'.!'.!:_ __
'''"' -215 '"'"'" 53 11nc1 Nu, Jl1 bonito. 411 ITlllCUl"tl. u hllllllll. flt
"""'· llAL SIACH -lOJ '"'ler.1 1U bt1TICUlll1, 1...i llonfto. m und blu. :xi
Baseball Standings
h11111u1. '''" -Jr '"'""'' "° bonito. I MMI MJS, lf lltl!klt. lAH Cl.IMINTI -1M 1neleno1 SU
Mu. • 111ttn1 ae1 o.1o1, m bonll~. 120 b•rr1~. I lllnb\rl, 1 Yt111rwTlll. l
N-aluarue Woa Lott Pct. GB
80 45 .640
Amertean Leapt
Woo IAlt Pct,
78 41 .639
72 51 .585
68 57 .5«·
66 81 .53l
blutfln tvn., 1 OOiPh1n. St Louis OClANllPI'. -2• •ntle"I !'1S Ml' • .
r•CVd•. xi bltt. '11 bonito. H wt11i. Cincinnati
-.... ,., • 11111tiv1. t ...,,......,.n. San Francisco PAllAOll• COY• -ll ll'ltltnoi 1Jf u11co .. .., 1u ~ ,, 111ntiut. '°' Chicago
"":oW:o"a'rt ~~>-n Atlanta
'"'""' ' II.Int Mlr'non. ' Mllbuf, 111 PJttl:blU'gh 11,,. • J11 rod! •· m .... now110 Philadelphia
""· H IAM 01190 <"f. LIMl•MIM· otlltoft
"'•""•" ~, -101 •nt1ttt1 u__ York tSl 1tti.cott. 1 .... !ft, f rellfWflft ''l'lll;:W
111111. ""'""" ....,., -111 '"'""' IA1 AD&eles lS Y•llOWllll, U4 IM!lli.. 111 blrrKVU,
7' blH. Nl!WPOllllT fOtwrl ........ ,_,_
•~ei.ru '" ,,.,.,_, 1 'l'lllewfl"fl lufl.I, JOI bt-. ,., btnltt. 111 Wr'9Cllfl, •
Wflti. ... btrM. l2 M1111uf, Atn ~
I Breakfast Set
I Saturday at HB
64 56 .533 131>
115 58 .528 14
65 61 .518 151>
63 SI .508 181>
59 65 .476 3)1>
56 66 .459 221>
57 69 .452 231>
57 70 .449 24 S4 .. .411 . is
Detroit
Ba!Unton
Boston
Cleveland
Oakland
New York
Mlnneoota
Calllonla
OUcago
W1$hlnglon
Johnson I Son
6% 81 .50!
57 62 .4711
58 64 .175
II It .UZ
51 71 .418
'5 75 .380
GB
81>
11"2
111>
161>
191>
3)
Z3
'11
311>
WHY IS THIS YfAR
ANY DIFFERENT!
Tradltlonally
A1191ut '"d S1pt1,,,b1r 1r1 the 1111nth1
th1t yeu 1r1 ltol'llbtr,•d with ,,t11hy
"r••t·•"d cl11re"4•" 1111 1dv1rtl1fn9.
Ye11 t•t It from 1v1ry cllr1ctlot11 ti•••·
,,,,,., r1dle •ncl TV. Ye1r In •~d
r••r eut It'• the ''''" •lcl 1tery.
But Thi• Y esr II
Different At Johnaon's
114111JI fhh J. the fllr •f tllf f'llf
MOVI. Aff1r llfte1n y11r1 1t tfic1 ••m•
l•c1tlon •• wlll li• l'lllYlnt •••n t• • lfll•tnlflc1nt 111w f1tlflf"t en H1rlier
te11l1vetlll ltt C11t• M1ae,
Naturally
WI ~., ••• c11.,. ••• , .,, INTlltE Jn.
•111fery 1f 6S "''''' 11t1 lll1f111 w•
Miff -II ff\1t 0¥t lllW f14Ji1ty 4111
"' 1t1cli14 with hr1nd now lt•t m.14111.
Naturally
I• '• thl• w1 '"''' iii rvthl1t1lr ••m• ,.t1t1ve,
Naturally
-----...... -.-......-~----· ----....
The current run o f
albacore looks like it wlil
run for "atiother two or Three months ag('I , 120
lhre. bowlers &llart.ed tiring in
e weeks," according to Kona Lanes' eightlh anooal
the two ff.arbor are a W~t. .. Coast Match Genie
sportiishing landings. Elimin$ns event.
Both landings are sending Ncrw, alter a steady pro-
albacore expeditions ·out cess of elim.lnatiom, tlhere
daily for 65 to 70 miles. are (our I e ( t • 'n!e semifinalist clu&ter of l&
"U we could get 1ome col-bowler.s was pared down to
der current! oot there it 'the finalists after Mionday
would drive them in a little night's action-packed round
closer," an Art's Landing at the Cost.a Mesa bowling
spokesman reported. -house.
Biggest caich of the week The leader is 19-year-ald
at Art's was a 39-pound Joe McCue of Buena Park,
yellow!in tuna by Joyce who. ~g into next Mon·
Perkins of H u n ting to n day's Cini.la, has an 11,249
Beach. total piriiall cOW"lt for the
A Davey's fisher m ii n tournament. He posted an
lanfied a 168-pound m.lrtin · imposing 145-pln lead over
with a rolling rod ta:st wf!ek. Fred Eastwood of Gardema.
Coastal tishln,g remains Sbanding third and fourth
constant, w1th D a v e y ' s are Fred -Riecllll o f
reporting1 664 bonito and 417 Westrninster and Lamar
bass being landed by 411 Keck of Reeeda .
anglers SUDday. A near caP?.clty crowd at
An albae«e party Sunday Kona wt,¢ltd the four men
of 110 anglers boated 124 enter the final frame of the
albacore, four yellowfin f.i!l'al game Monday night on·
tuna and one skipjack. ly seven pins apart. ~--=--
Lt ...., Keck wllo ltole tbe
show. He wu llt.h when the
night opened end waa ac·
tuially the first to win one. of
lbe tlu'ee · flDal spots up for
grab<. Keck rolled a 222-257·
217·238-934. evenlng.
The lour go throug~ ille
mill again Monday nigh~
starting at 9115. 'fhey dis·
card all previou1 pintail with
the last three bowlen going
into a round-robin !tries to
determine who faces McCue
for the dlampiondll_p.
McCue faces a jlnl'. No
Elims bowler, leading going
int.o the final nl6flt, bu ever
won the tiournament.
Record Broken
Navy quarterback John
Cartwrlgtit completed 129
puses last 1euon, breaking
the Naval Academy record
of 119 aet by Ro1er
Staubacb In 1961.
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,-
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Los · Alamitos
... T99U,, ""' .. ,,..
C...,. & P'..r, Pini ,._, ,,41 P.M.
PIAIT AACI. »o yt,._ Mlldell 2
~•r •'--Clal!o!.._. PIH'M 11100.
Cla!lft.IM ~Ice PD00. W...,.., ltedltl 1• lrlllkllY) 111
1.l't Mind' .. , (C Smh"I 111 lttdl " •11• (It •Mia) 12') lta1l Dedl IJ ltabl-) 110
Mlo!W' LMI Jr IJ Wlltoll) Ito
C19'ttt' ... , Lit IP C...WI 117
MIH Caltlr aar CH Cr-.lwl 117
Glorv Be I fO M«TIO Itel 0.-trMl'n Gal l it. Adatrl 111
Dvl'll\ltll t.Mtfan 1:10
,.... 11111111111
Geldtft \f1H1y CL Wrlthtl 117
T1V .. Allnnt (J l rookli.td) !JO
llCONO l:ACa. el yardl. ' VII•
e1<111 1nd ..., 1n Grm a ,....,._ Pu'"
1150I. Jaclcll Hit~ fJ arookllekll 111
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Siar f,..an CD Morr\11 116
Jlawllldl T°"y (JI. FltWrOI) 116
Amitant Sir ca arlllkleY) 11 6
,..,.nlv l1r Ct A M iu ) 11)
Mr. L-Shol (J Ktnlll 116
Mr. Ja111 IC Smlllll 116
Jlevtl Candy (T LIPhan1) 111
AIM lt:Mtlll'lt
Mr. Hla~ Giii cw SI-) 115
MOOll Bartay CJ WllMlll llJ
Bakllnado !N Paltlol llS M~ov'1 11i.. (I A Ar1l1a) 111
TNIJl:O Jl.ACI!. l.SO vanh. M11det1 2
~r pldi. CialmlM. P11rt1 1\100.
Claiming Prlct l:IOOO.
HldllfO Bar tit BtMI) 1?0
Mark Mt 0awn 170
,.,,~.,. Hm1111 I• Ktn\1\ 111
Watd'I Mt Trivet IJ Dreyer) 110
lt:ltlll Jtodt• fl C6llln1) 111 W~IP'I ~ fJ Wl11011) 170
Old Sllux IP Cr'D'bvl 110
l'-anl lttltry (H Cr'Cl'bYl 120 ~ Reed Cl J lrookf!e~) 111
Goode'I .Twit IC Smllfll \IO
.. ,., l llt lble
l f\.IU'I Jtl •·r CJ J arooiLHtkl) no
Ya Oltrt cw Strauul 110
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POU•TM •AC!. 150 y1rd1. 3 YHr
610• t nO UP In Grlde A Piii!.. •urst
iitc.o. Mctnlt rll' G1"SV IT LIP!ltm) 111
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Ct ndo lav ltr cw ltt ii"el 1n
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CtJdl De« CJ B"errt) 116
$1 .... A LH (( Smlllll 11\11
Miu Cl>e<ll>e DKll. fl lr!nt.lt Y) lU
T•trac.htl'lt rJ arookfltkll 111 Allt INelblt
V1ndy IEll"n p A ArllH) 111
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SIOfl Tiii Mu1lc (I P CrcnbY ) l lS
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P• ............ ,. .... 11, ,,.
C ..... 1114 •ad, Pini ""' I P.M.. O.llr ~In! tlld llCIN II.tea
.. I.ST Jl.AClt:, I 111r1Mt1. Twto year
okl INllden call1 and tekU,,.., Cl11m-
lno price 110.ll(IO>•.GI». P:urM U.JC.O.
Jt.l1hl Cller .. r IM V11eft111Cl1J 11S "auniMCe ca 111nco1 '" Fakltt CG La....way) lU
C111'1111ll• 11 E Mtcll1111) l 1i
Fl11C11!l1 {W H1rl1Ck ) 11,
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Grant.. Amigo fM Ytnul 116 Sandy ltabblt IS TrtYlllCI) Hi
l old l"l>i!C'I' ID Halll Hi
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An1r1 Ettie 116
Fun Al>ttd co Hall) 11• $tin Jl.uM1r {I A L 0111) x iii
Prl T11x (J L1mbtr1) Ill
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$1al'1iltoal 10 Vtl1t•ue1l Iii
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THIJl:D Jl:ACll. I lvrl-1. 1 ¥t1r
BIOi. Cl1lml111 ••let $.!i,OOll, ,.Urie n,son.
Manv M1n11-(W H1rm1tr) 111
Prln<:• l •mb le IM l'tneU lU
(;.ty Wlll!1 (M \t1len111Jl1I 111
1111111111 Gold (W Htrll<kl IU
Tried 'N lrue (0 ,."real 11'
Molnlnt lht l luet. (A Plnt01) lU
HOlltY'1 Vrthln l-" l DlrrJ lf1M
Moeut'1 Gift (J' Gan 11 x10.
•OUll:TM •ACI. On+ mll1, I ¥•tr
61dl. c11lmln1 •rk• M,l!00-$1.00.
l"urw n .50C.
Kklcltt"I Lore (W Mll>oNllY) lU
•ortra!I XI~
Deedloi;ll. fl J °"""'"etul 111
ltlondllle J-• lJ L1mberll lU
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AIM l lMIMll
Sl'>e MIN Jl.Ull IA Htr .. rt l llt
Native llW 1111111 C' G1n 1) x11f
SOFT SELL SAM
POGO
S1 IC~~
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--
'
Entries
•tPTM ltACI. 150 Y•rA, MllOtn 2
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eontllo. I.Giii {I lrlMll'll 120
Connll'I V1njty (P CrOlbYI 111
M~I ... ••r I ll SlrwdJ no
Trlpplnr Llthlll' Ill AdalrJ 110
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Cu:Uom 'ut\t (A AraluJ 111
l'EYINTH llACI. 150 y1rd1. t yetr
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1,.. price UlOO.
Thttt Ci lls CT lllllltml 111
Mr. MlllX (( Smlllll 120 TOP AllmD (II lrlllklrrl 111
Sax. O' Trouble CJ Ortvtr) 111 Amt>lr ~Ill (N ••ttlP) 111
Min AlamllOI (R alnkl) 111
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Ch11 Chu 8ob 1 tW Slr1u11J 11l
1!1GKTH Jl:ACI. )50 Ylflh. 3 vear
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Alir.a 1t:n1llll>i.
-Ctkhtr (I llrlnkleYl llJ
NINTN aACI!. «IO Y1nb. ! Ytar
old• alllll Ill' In Gr10t -" Mlnui. Puroc
111CO.
JICl'f J1ne {C $mllt!) 111
Corll't S!rtwt>oss IW Slal>f') Ill
SUOer S-IN Pttlkll I 1' Lel'1 Or11 C2 P Crosby) 116
Niner'• Gold (J Dr1.,.,r) ltl
Rlcktor IL Wrt1hll llJ
lob'1 JI.al""-CR Stroud) 111
Leno Mld (2 J k•lll•I 115
Chldi:;er ~ Cl JI Btllk•l 111
'UllUI ,,,_., (0 Morris! HI
Altt Slltl•le
G ... 1ft'I R1t11.1ett (W SlrtU"l 116
tunr>Y'I Wtrrlor f2 JI. e111kO 11 6
l"artler eve t1 P Cr111DY) l!J
Gt llt nl Vtlor O J K1nll) 117
Del Mar
Entries
•• ,TM RACI. I f\lf'tWlt'I, , yUf
tla and WO fllli.. Ind lllolrlt. C .. I,,,.
Int •r1ct SICOO. ,.une U,lllXI.
S....,,Y ll:K..,.,.,. (Jlt CaNlleraJ 111
Ellwtllda Mtkl IM V111N:utl1) ill
Ktllnk1 (F G1n1J xlOf
t1but111 ID Pltrcel 111
OltCICIV'I c.-.am iJ Ptlomlna) l ll
OIYlr• Rull (A ,.lnedll ,,.
•rimer Amor CA L 01111 xt17 Polly Pit (W MtharMYI 111
llXTN AACI. l 1/!l mlles ~n turl.
J y"r oJll1 11\d up flllles a,,a m1r1tt.
Allaw•MH. Purs• U,000.
Miiiwood 2nd CD Htlll 1?1
S•-Ta C-IHt CA •lnectaJ in A·Ml!.rrv M11tle (J Lambert) 1n
A·l1111Wr l 1bt CJ LambtrtJ !15
911 Df Jam (W MthorntY) Ill
CiPhtr IA L 01111 i ll!
Mrt. Joe f'. (A Mat"-Se) 111
lltdl Attln (M Y1n11) 11t
l"llC'f' Gtl 2nd (M Valenzuela) l U
l ye l l't ltrblun (0 Pltrce J Ill
llVINTM •ACll. 1 1/1' miles. l
yffr olds t ncl UP. Alklw1nces. Punt
$5,00C.
;
OU! ()f ,0(111 (M Ytntl) lit
SM!drtl<t (It Caml>&IJ 111
C ...... 11!1 CE MtdlM) 111
11111 Johll A. CA L Dl1rl x111
R""'anullth (G l 1noway) 1n
Gokllll Hor111 (D Pierce) 111
Trawl Orti (It Yartll 122
'ElGKTN aACE, l furl-I, Twa
Yetr Pkl C1lbred1. 151~ runnl"O col !flt Call~!• Tllan!Ullhbred t.-.f'd•"'
A$11Klllloll !tll1 St•kO'I. •urw 110r
DOii tddecl. GrOll 111,l2J, net to Wlnlll!r
11.4.!ll. SKO!ld n.ooo. lfl!rd SIU5,
IOt.Jrlh t1UO,
Het'• &ti cw Herm1l1) nt
Fleet Atlltd {0 Htltl llt
Apc1llCltOI' llt Cablllltl'O) 116
H111V R~ltr (M Vinti) 1'2
Jtava!s Kaltd (D Pltrce) nt
klnll Lon'MI 11!: Med in•) 112
NINTN Jl.ACI. Ont mllt ... lwrl. l
""'r okl1 1nd ""· Cl1lmlnt flr>Ce 1noo.moo. Pune .,,.
Tally 2nd {F Garrll •IOj
Ft!r 0.11 IM Y•nt1J \ll
Makt!UP C"'"'" CA L 0 1111 •IGI
Tt11 Fool Hl9h (Ill llOStlei) ~I U
Tulvl l"I \ftH IW M•hcmeYJ IU In &udclt (W Harmotrl IU
t it Amok! IA Monltrel )lot
l"rlcltt of Currtf!I (J Glbben1I H•
Y•lmo CM Vtltnl...,lt) UJ
Ben:tmt (l J Du•DUHelu) "' AIM EnttMti
Old lld"' IR Yor911 IU
Oaublt Ctrltln fG Lt nc>WIY) 115
Tul'1ill Clluk (A •lnecl1J 111
ly Marvin Myen
'
Los Alamitos
Results
MONDAY, AUO, If, INt CIM, & Paat
PllttT llACll, MO 1trdl, Mtk141" 1 ~1r a~ bred In Ct lll. Ci.l"'I"',
""''" 111111. Chub'I """"*' IS"'lllll It.It t.K l.lO Dell K11r (Adair! t.lO :S.111
1111, MKUY lklv C5t••"'"l 2.2t r in..-w 1111,
No 1cralchti1-
SICONO Jl.,l(I, olOO yards. ) ""''' plot Incl Ufl In Grldr 11 Pklt. Pur ..
tUllll.
Go;n Smak1 DCK. Clif>htmJ 11.lO i.2t J.IO
OanOV't HJ•rt (FltutrotJ U.20 7.to
Jltodlel V .. a1 (51rt\IHJ J.IO
Time-ti 1111.
N• acr11cn. ..
DAILY DOUILI -1.C:lll*'I ae-
•WMI & MJ1111 llMlle OM. Ptkl 11),61,
TNl•O kACI'. J;50 warcll. M11d111 2 .,..r okll bred In Ctllt. c111m1111,
Piln.t 117'00,
DI'• Jot (Morrl1l Ml •raltlo (Kanlll
•t.40 U.211 l.IO J.10 3 • .0
Ot4-0r. Mltltt Cl1nkt1 OH-•uvm Slltron (C6llln1)
Tim-.11 t /11. No 1erekhlt.
DH-0..ctMll tor llllrd.
'" ,,.
... OURTH Jl:ACI. lOO v1rdt.. J .,..,
oldJ tnd UP In Grtdt II •1111. Purw
t 1500.
Olillcat1 MIU fWlllOrt) llr111 L•nO fMllrrl1)
f llPrlll Mtn f.O.Otlr)
Tlme-21 lltl,
11.60 '·'° '·'° 16.60 1.60
·~
Scr1tclltd-A Girl Tp Wildt.'
•• ,TH Jt.ACI. i$O y1nl1. J ye1r
old' tnd UP Jn Gr.ill A Mln;.11, Purst
11100.
Miii TOfl Pfca lllPhl m) 17 . .it $.0.0 l.IO
Thtnkt Doc: ($mil~) 3.00 2.60
Donn• Ju,.. !Adair) 1.60
Tlme-11 a110. Scr1td'leC1-Qylc• !last. llob'i Jt1t-
tu1, 81ti. Charge 1nd L1!'1 Dreg,
SIXTH R.t.CI . l50 Ytrdi. I yur
ald1. Cl1lmln11. Pu•St $11()1),
S°"le Moo11 C5mllll! 7.00 ,,lO 2.IO
APK"9 Pallllm (Ar1l11} 5.20 2.10
L"'1•IOll (Palllo) 2...0
Tlme--11 5/10.
GOLFING WITHAWf.d P~
.-
LET LEFT HEEL "START"
YOUR DOWNSWING
Golfers who have trouble
swinging smoothly Into the ball
may !ind .that. l'!'proper shifting
of weight 1s ru1n 1ng their r hythm.
More specifically, s tarting the
d ownswing with t he hands or
s.ho.ulders might be hurting the ir t1m1ng.
An aid in p roperly timing a
~mooth d owns wing is to make
1t start w ith a lowering of the
left heel. Place 21n imaginary
"starter button '' under this heel. Th~~ ~tomp down on the st21rter
to 1n1t1ate your downswing.
Star.ting by lowering the left
heel will help make certain that
your w~ight shifts left in your
downswrng. Also, it will help in·
s ure that your lower b ody pre-c~d.es your hands through the
h1tt1ng area .
Big Bass
Taken
At Irvine
-------------------
Ex-Bruin Star
Joins Ramblers
Andy Von Sonn , Conner nounced recently.
UCLA and Nt(ional Football The 220-paundcr played
Four Irvine Lake b ass League linebacker, has join· with the Ramblers du.ring
fishermen j 0 I n e d the ed the Orange Co unt y the pre-season lt~t year but
"Whopper Club" last week. Ramblers of the Continental suffered a head lnjury and
John Moore of Santa Ana , Football League the club an· doctors told him to sit out
the '67 season.
Sonny }lenry or Orange, Von Sonn , a U1lrd year law
Fred Lefeures of South Gate Costa Mesan s tudent at UCLA, has had
and D ick M i ll e r o( NFL experience with. the
Bellflower all landed bass Rams, Bears ood Falcons.
weighing more than six a nd-Favorite Coach Homer Beatty's
a-quarter pounds. club , drilil.ing hard for its
Irvine L ake 0 p e r a t 0 r August 31 opener a t
Russ Cleary says the bass At s edway Sacramento, is picking u p a
fishing is the hot ite m at the pe few injuries at the hard-hit-
Lake now. Many anglers are ting nightly V.'orkouts at
limiting out on the fish with Bill J ohnson of Costa Chapman College.
average catches reported al Mesa. with a foreign stock The most serious is tackle
aroun d t w o -and-a-haU car, is one of the favorites Bruce Day, who suffered a
pounds. in a triple-header show at ruptured ankle muscle. lte's
CaUish angling in the Orange County Speedway out for 10 d c.ys. Receiver
weedy areas of the lake h as Saturday evening. Craig Scoggin~ is out a week
also been produc tiv e. A special d isc jockey w:ith a leg muscle tear.
Several checked in at over s tock car race will be A juggler of the first
eight pounds. fe atured during the evening order, Beatty hru; twitched
The largest, a !()..pounder , with Bill Ford of KEZY and flanker Gene Williams t o
was boated by Joe D eOris o f L arry Huffman of KWlZ tight end and M ark \Vicks ,
Torr'ance. going in a five.lap stock car formerly a tigh t end. ti.as
Cleary a d ded that r ain· r ace. been moved to lineba c ker.
bow trout are being caug h t The triple-head e r will con-The Ilu mblers are ex·
in the deep w ater n ear the s is t of full midgets, foreigo peeled to p ick up some fresh
dam. s tock cars and m i c r o . talent soon -players cut by
The Jake \Vill c lose to midge.ts. the New Orleans Saints.
fishermen on Sep tem ber 15. Each e ve nt will complete R ambler season tickets,
The hunting season opens .a trophy das h , two heat priced at $28.50, are on sale
1-------------------_J September I, V.'ith a $10 fee races and a 30·lap m•;n at the team's olfl-l 355
llYlt:NlN 9AC•. lSO y•rd!.. J vear ..., '-" a
61d1 1nd up 1n Gractt ,.,. Mln"",i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"".~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~l~e~v~ie~d~fo~r~d~o~v~e~h~u~n~Un~· ~g~.;;;;;;;;;;;;~e~v~e~n~l.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;W~e~s~t~4~th~S~ti;. ~in~Tu~s~Un~· ~·;;;;;;;;;.
NP scratdln.
Pur~ 11100.
MJq Parr lltr !Wiison) oil.OD U.711 1.1'0
Pl'lllblr rstr111111 n.to 9,70
Gllld lntlll (lrlMllYI 3.0D
Time-II l /10.
Scr1tcJ>ec1.-t(lptv'1 Ch•nt. Mr. Pal
Ja, TrlPlt Gl""'r. Bald Hos!.
•IGHTN aAC!. 100 y1...t.. 3 YtB•
PIOI and "" In Grade AA Plu1. The
Grt11 V•11ty. PUl'$4! $2:JOO.
Olre<I SPOI (Ar•lltl 11.10 !.60 (.'ft
Shadow Mt11 C1t1nltl 1.00 l .lllJ
Ml Pie (Robln1on) !.OC
Tlm-10 7/10,
Al10 1t1n.-R1ed Chtrte ll1r, Min
Jaslt Ga. Hy Re~UHI, Bab e1rcfee.
Na Kr1tch11.
NINTH Jt.ACll . ..00 v1rd1, S year
ok:ll and YP ln Grille A Plut. •un•
111'00. Vt !lev ll Yfloon fDreYtr) •2-'° 22.1'0 t.~o
'TIPlac> D~ck f5l11>e) 2l.l0 10.0C
SIYtn Strtws (Llpllam) t.60
Tlme-10 t/10.
AllO ltt-Jt btll llu!lt F.ye. P8lht
lllue lltl!. Nolo<1ul, Gmdlt Nole, Sur·
•und't' Jl:ou, l 1yco De1kret, Realm
,.l•Y.
NP Kr1lche1.
Del Mar
Results
Olll Jr.-.~· •ltUl.TI MOHO-"Y, AUGUSl 1', IH41
CIMr & "n1 "IJl.IT llACll. l furlonft. ,.._., Yff•
p!tl fltllel. ClaJ,,.,1111. Pu"" '7,JOO.
Sln•I"' Surl ( It Ctbllterol 17.IO 10.40 7,60
311.0C 71.IO Tavoto ll<»e fR York)
Miu PlrlBd•• CM Ytl\tl}
Tlm-1.10 l/5. ··~ Sc:rtlchMI -Off Ttcklt, Wom111
Driver. Vtllo.
.S'ECONO llACI. 6 furlo1111. 3 year
oklt. Cl1Tmln9, Pur•• 17,:IOll. Du1!avou !DYtPusn 111) lS.20 J.OC 3.IO Murph (W M1hc r11tYJ •.•O 3,10
P1rtv Ha1t (W H1irl1l 6.111
'Tlmt-1.11. Na Scr1tct11s.
DAILY OOUILll. l·lln1lnt lllft t9
6-0UllflYMI, •a~ IUJ.41.
THIJl.0 11.ACI!. I turlot'ltl . 3 Yfllr okl
Bnd UP llUIH •nd mt rH. Clalml111
11une Sl.600. Tarry (0 Plercel 1 . ..0 l.IO L..i P1v1 to Sln11 (H&rmettl J . .ict ~.IO
Prill Kll!tn f0Y•OUHHU) l.00
Tlme-1.M 2/5. Na Scrtldlet.
POUllTN •AC•. I turio....1. Twa ¥Hr old milden llltle1. •une $3,000.
RetlllH LllYI (l Glltl9111) '·'° 3.60 3.0C F1lllllul Candle !Plllldtl a.OD •.10 FllWI Pl'y IW ~harMYI l.10
Tlmt-1.10 l/J, Scratchf:d -N1111r1~tk. llu1!\l!I pf
Cherries, Ju111le (hatter, P111'1 ll•lde,
lrlsh Vtrdlcl, R 1~hln1.
'IPTN RACI. i lurtori;s. Two year
aNI m1Tdtn colts and t tldlmrs. Calbr,.;ls, Pu,.t U.000.
Chltl Rultr (O!atl 6.lO J1yen l1 (Pitre!)
Conc.erned !Mtdl"tl
Tlme--1,0t 315.
].60 3.00
1.00 •.10
'·~
Scralt~ed -El l'ar8t~1. John \fin
Ml!1wooll. Can~v9a. v~ladar. Oark Sll'ltl'l!lgn, ll'Yllnl Knight. VlchaU,
E11~rn Idol.
SIXTH RAC'E.' lur~na•. 3 vetr aids. r1111e1. Clalmlnt. Purll! u .600.
TM Word fOlerl u . ..i ,,Oii 3.ln P•lnces1 ll!nlt !D Hell! lC.IO 11.00
Jll·Ja" (M v~ntl) 7.•0
Tlmt-1.lO 1/J. ScrBlc.hed -'"a"'IH Her. Fltfl
PttOY.
Sl!Yl!NTM Jl:ACll. 6 furlar191. 3 Ytl '
"lei f\lllH. Al1aw1nc"'. Pu~ Sl.500. MIH Cat'Mr fH1r11clc) 6.10 3.&11 2.eo
A·Taucllle C>'AtllarMl'I l .CIO l.00 OH-A-Culol1n !ltottlell C.OC l.00
D~lJ Purtf COltlJ l.OC
Tlme-1.ot •IS. A -It c.-.tt.frllned e11tr¥.
OH -f)q(I llHI f&r llllro.
l'IOH'M •ACI. Abollt 7'~ "'r'-1. Ol'I turf, ) "'If Oldl 111111 Ull. AlloWt llCH. ,.unt 1!,000.
OKk H .... CPltr(t l J.IO •,?II •.•C Tiil Mc.rrtJW 1•11'td1l •.Olt •.co
Saenm•n 21111 !II YC>fkl 1.IO Tlmt-1.7' l/S.
NP Su1lchet. A-D. Porter-lrtllltd tnl"'
NINTH IAC'E. I'' ""1'"1. l ~tl r aldi
•llCI "" Cl•lmlnn. •Y•U l?.olOO,
SI¥ L111 lYlntJl oil.OD 11.JO 10.'I\ MY Stn f' G•rJ•) 11.'60 t.60
Quilt Ol>Clt IW H1'"'1t1f 4.IO Tl..,.,..-1,50 I J. Alto ll:t~ -Ma~ta,o fncl, Sl•lh 111 '"·old, H.,...y Mood, Jlld Soltl\CIOllr,
Straw Lan, Comrtltte Centro~ El
Ctnalt. No Sc:rttcl'lll.
'
* JONES TIRE *
BRAKE REL1NE
30,000 Miles or Y "'
Gr.iarantee
1968
PRESIDENTIAL
ELECTION
GUIDE
NO OBLIGATION
PICK YOURS UP AT JONES TIRE SERVICE
Wheel
Balance
FOR
650/700.11
Fff. 1.78
EXCHANGE
99~ WHEEL
ALIGNMENT
INCLUDINGo Wl!IGHTS
~:; 40,000
MILE RADIALS
PHONE ~~~~
2049 HARBOR BLVD.
• -
Stire H111~: I 1.111 ... t ,,., ............. r.w..,
Sahrffy I '·"'· M I 11.a.
lat layl COSTA MESA
-.. •
--=------==---==-___
J ODEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321
r11 .... 1t, A-•I Jt , ,... MS "-U
Golde.n Key
Clears House
Bargains at any price will become bargai.ns at half-price whin
t.he Golden Key Auxiliary's thrift shop conducts its s ummer clearance
sale beginning Tuesday, Sept. 3, at 7201 Westminster Blvd.
For the convenience of customers. the shop will be open from
10 a.m. until 2 p.m. every day through Saturday, Sept. 7.
Chairman of the thrift shop is Mrs. William Hanna, and com·
prising her committee are the Mmes. Jack Greeley, Cy Peterson ,
Richard Teske. Jim Hughes and Raymond Morehouse.
Staffed by volunteers, the thrift shop's merchandise is donated
by members and other interested people in the community. All pro-
ceeds from sales are used to assist the Child Guidance Center of
Orange County, the only facility in the area which offers counseling
to troubled children and their families on a low-fee basis.
Depending on donations, the thrift shop might be stocked with
such varied items as lawn mowers. paint sprayers, TV sets and small
electrical appliances. Ther~ always is a large assortment of used
clothing, shoes, jewelry and assorted bric-a-brac.
When no special sales are in progress tbt shop is open each
?vJonday, Tuesday and Friday between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m ., and on
the first and third Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m .
Anyone wishing to donate merchandise may leave it at the shop
or call Mrs. Hanna, 847-3341, or Mrs. Hughes, 847-4676.
PRACTICAL l'ORMALITY -Among the large assortment of
clothing offered for sale at reasonable prices in the Golden Key
Auxiliary's thrift sh<5p are evening gowns which have had very
little wear. New additions to the racks of reconditioned clothing
are being examined Dy Jim Hughes (left) and Mrs. Robert Hel-
man. The shop will be open every day during its summer clear ..
ance sale which begins Tuesday Sept. 3, and all proceeds are used
to help support the Child Guidance Center of Orange County.
Finding the Time . • • • .. Volunteer Service
College Coed Confronting Chall.enge
Fish Sizzle in Seal Beac h
By JUDY HURST
Of "'9 O•llY "llol sti ff
Bored. Can't continue t: o 11 e I•
because of a cast on your leg.
ThiJ was the problem confronting
Mlss Jeanne Brock. who is tanned and
1urprisingly athletic looking with a
white ca&t on one of her slim legs.
The Corona de4 Mar resident made a
decision which may give incentive to
other college or high school students.
"Since I was unable to attend school, I
wanted to do something worthwhile."
It was quite logical that Jeanne call-
ed the Volunteer Bureau on the advice
of a friend . "They mailed me a list of
various organizations I could choose to
work with," Ille remembered.
· Slender in a short ~reen midi. Miss
Brock sports the mod short hair style
which has been attractively sun
bleached.
"Under the direction of a
psychiatric soc ial worker I worked
with the Bureau of Social WeUare In
Santa Ana. I even went to seminars in
Los Angeles." she smiled.
"I began working with a 29·year·old
\\'Oman patient who was recently
released from the Metropolitan State
Mental Hospital."
In this person·to·person relationship
.feanne found that the patient was
typically very inSecure. couldn't relate
lo people, couldn't control her emo-
ti ons and wag apt to be depressed.
"f worked with her to draw her out
~nd give her confidence. I tried to
maintain e friendly relatioship. I was
~ier only friend .
"She still calls me daily and tells mP
11er problems. 1 guess I'm a goon
outlet because I listen and don't gel
mad."
outdoor sports." she sighed and looked
at the cast which is due to come off
soon.
•·I went to OCC for two ye arr; and
was at Cal State I Fullerton) for two
months prior to my accident," Jeanne
recalled.
For eight months, before she enroll·
ed at Cal State. she and a girlfriend
worked and b\aveled in Europe. "I
went over on a boat and worked in
Germany for three montns. I took
care or little girls and lived with their
family ," she said fondl y.
The next five months she toured
Greece. Turkey. Italy, Spain and
Yugoslavia and then flew home.
'l'he naUve Callfornian. born in
Orange Cou nty 21 years a go, also has
worked on other community projects.
The Volunteer Bureau assigned her
to staff the office of the United Fun,tl
of Newport Beach where she said. "I
answered the phone."
Then she was section chairman for
the Oorona del Mar fund drive for the
Cancer Society. "I had to recruit
volunteers to work w!th me. I rounded
up my friends. my mother's friends
and the Society gave me sume
names."
Jeanne imagined it would be dif-
ficult to find young people to work in
the Volunteer Bureau. "They are busy
with school. However. I believe kids
are interested in person·to-person con-
tacts. I didn't want to help as a typist.
I wanted personal contact." she
~tressed.
The bureau offers a young person
experience in an actual job ... a chan·
ce to assume responsibility and more
knowledge of his or her own abilitie&.
It offers students a chance to
participate with adults as citizens.
Whipping up all the trimmings to go with fi sh fried . by members of the Seal
Beach Uons Club are auxiliary members (left to nght) Mrs. Dorothy Leon-
ard, Katherine P<Mndexter and Jackie Stockton. The Lioness, with other civic
organizations. will participate in the citywide . event taki.ng place Saturday,
Aug. 24, on the pier at Ocean Avenue and M~1~ Street. 01~ners, a~ $1.50 each.
will be served from 11 a .m. to 7 p.m . In add1t1on there will be pnzes and en-
10rtainment provided by tbe Fire House jazz group.
The blonde doe-eyed daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Stuard D. Brock of Corona
de! Mar will be a junior in college
com·e September.
"My leg was hurt in a motorcycle
accident bst December. And I like
"The bureau kept me busy. The pro·
gram with the social workers helped
me understand mental illness. Too bad
everyone doesn't have this un·
derstanding and opportunity.''
HEL P WI TH-A SMIL!
'Instant Mother' Refuses This Title, May Lose
DEAR ANN L.A..NDERS : Why do you
urge your readers to get psychiatric
help? Don't you know the suicide rate
of psy'chiatrists is the highest among
the professionals? If you doubt it write
to the Journal of the American
Medical Association and get the
statistics.
1 am a physician who works with all
types of specialist&. The psychiatrist ~
are ttie balmiest of the lot. I'm sure
many psychiatrists go into the field in
search of solutions to their own pro-
blem&. Pleue do your reading public a
favor and tell them the truth. - A
READER
DEAR READER: Bob Klplluth who
spent 41 years at Yale was the world'•
gre1te1t 1wtmmln1 coach. He turned
o•t many champion• but. waa a
mtdlocre awtnuner lalmaelf. Wbea t 10
•
ANN LANDERS ril
lo • shoemaker I don't loot al his
1boe1. I look at the work be ha• turned
flUI for others. When I 10 te •
carpenter, I don't ask to aee the bou1e
he llve1 In. I am iatere1ted only la tht
quality or the y.oork he haa done for his
customers. I've attn beauty operator•
whose hair looka trt1btful, but wbo do
beautiful work on thtlr cUenll. I know
excellent pby1lclan1 who •re
dan&troualy overwtlcht and smote
Uke chimneys. 1 know a aur•eon wbo
h1 ....ied 1 Jiii blldder oper1tloo
"
for four year1. H•vt.n1 tbe lnformatlun
and befn& able to apply It to oae'1 lift
are Mt ane •Del the 1ame, my friend. •
DEAR ANN LANDERS' My hu s-
band is a divorced man and the father
of two children. I am 28 and teach
school. We have no cbildren.
Wben my huiband and his w 1 f e
broke up 1he took the kid1, which 'WIS
OK with him. Yestei'day he received a
phone call from his e:r 1ayina: 1he was
loavtn& ""'11 61< pod 111<1 &IJ!tt tilt
k.ids would be a burden he would have
to take them. He •Aid "fine " without
even asking me.
When ht: hung up he turned to me
and 1aJd, "Congratulations, you are
naw the proud mother of two
dlUdren." I told him I was not
prepared for the "honor" and the least
he could have done was ••k me.
We got into an argument and he
said either I take the kids or get out.
Does the law in Virginia say a step·
mother has to take a husband's
children by a former marriagl!:? The
kids are n and 10 and a real handful.
-FLABBERGASTED
DEAR n.AB: Tbt legal a1pect1 of
ltda problem are Ult lealt of yoar wor·
r1e11 Lady. Yoa Dted a third prty to
mediate tile war.
Yaar l1111baad •bould t•rtalnb' have
asked you, even though It appear• you
have oo choice. I've said IL btfore and
I'll say U again: When you marry a
divorced perton wttb a famUy, that
family becomes part of your life
whether you Uke It or not.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Hert is a
ticklish situation that calls for an Ann
Landen-ish approach.
Scene : A social gathering. Clum pt
of guests are seated or at.anding -
making small (or large1 talk. You find
yours.ell chatting with two bright peo-
ple. The conversation is fast-moving
and provocative. You discover after a
few minutes dial the other two con-
versatimali3ta are add:rltssirlg each
other and you begin to feet Uke a third
loot.
A person ol &ood ta.ate doea not wish
•
Miss J eanne Brock
Another
to interject himself into a eonversati.Oe
when he feels no one is interested In
what he has to say. Does one just' lit
there and listen or is it best to w~
away? lf you feel it is best to •alt
away, what does one say wbea h,e
leaves? -IGNORED PARTY
DEAR JG : One 1ay1 good-bye.
Drinking may be "in " le the kids
you run ~th -but it can put you
"out" for keept. Yoo can cool it and
stay popular. Read "Booze and You -
For Teenager& Only." Send SS cents ln
coin and a long,' self • addresect.
stamped envelope wttb your request.
Ann Landers will be glad to htlp you
with your problems. send ~m to bet
in care of the DAILY PfLOT~ en~log..
Ing a self-addressed, stamped ea.
veJope .
-.. ----·--------------------...... -·-------------~-----------------------------------------.;._ ______ _
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DAILY PILOT
SOMETHLHO FOR EVERYONE -That's whet the
Harbor Senior Citizen's Club Ice Cream Luau prom-
i•et to memben and guests attend.in~ the 7 .p.m.
event Tl).ursday, Aug. 22 in the orgaruza1ion's rec-
reation center. Planning for the evening are (left to
New AAUW Group
Chapter Forms
Now forming in Hun· tiDctoa-Beach ill the newest
chapter of the Associ:a.tlon or
American U n 1 v er s i t y
Women.
The firlt bulineai and
org1..DiZ1t1ooal meeting will
take place at 8 p.m. tomor-
row in the home of the
croup'• temporary presi-
dent, Mrs. Ralph Bauer.
The chapter, open to all
university or co 11 e g e
graduates, will stimulate the
conti"nued int ellectull I
growth and advancement of
women, and encourage the
dacharge ol. their 1pecial
respomibilities i n com-
munity &erv!ce. The national
organization offerli women
the opportunity to 1hare
their 1peci'al interea:tl and
abilities socially..
Other temporary officers
Include the Mmes. Robert
Horner, membership; Klaus
Scharz, secretaiy; Louis
Fresk>a, treasurer, and
Ronald Ooyne, pub1icity.
Formal acceptance of the
new chapter will occur in
early fall with the elect.ion
of Offi'cers scheduled to take
place at that time.
Women interested in at·
tending the first meeting
may call Mri. Bauer, A<\7-
5487, or Mrs. llorner, 847-
6393, for add I ti on a I in·
formation.
right) Mrs. Stella Marks with ice cream, Mrs. Ver-
onica Hanso n with cards, Mrs. Aaron B. Christen-
sen wittl cookbook and Dr. Blanche Luther who is
taking notes.
Seniors Circle Date
For Ice Cream Luau
Members of the Harbor
Senior Citizen's Club are
busy looking for Hawaiian
garb and phrases to use at
their Ice Cream Luau.
The event is scheduled for
7 p.m. Thun;day, Aug. 22 in
the organization's recrea-
tion center in Newport
Beach.
Mrs. Aaron Christeni;en,
the club's social chairman.
is in charge of the luau and
has inter~ted a Hawaiian
phrase "dis holoholo no
kapa·kai" to mean that
there will be something for
the enjoyrnmt of everyone.
There will be a booth of
white elephant&, game• and
group singing. Th• Ginny'a
Gang will offer musical
numbers. There also will be
a special exhibition of the
Charleston.
Persons over age 50 are
invited to attend the event
which will feature home
made cakes and beverages.
The cost is 50 cents per
person. For further in-
formation phone M r ' •
Christensen at 675-3279.
Troth Told
At Party
Durlna: a family dinner
party the parent. o f
Pabicla Ann Crabtree an-
nounced her betrothal to
James Kimball Lockwood .
Settlng for the fnformal
party was the home of the
brlde·&lect'a parents, Mr.
and Mra. Clyde Jackson
Crabtrte of Huntington
Beach.
MJss Crabtree attended
Orange Coast College and is
a graduate of Los Angeles
College of Medlcal and Den-
tal Assistaob.
Her fiance, SO!\ of Mr. and
Mrs. J ames R ob er t
Lockwood of Corona del
Mar, is an alumnus of Cal
Poly, Pomona, where he
majored in business ad·
ministration.
The couple have selected
Oct. 12 for their nuptials i'n
the First United Methodist
Church, Huntington Beach.
Sorority
Tea Fetes
Members
Active Kappa A l p h a
Thetas will be honored by
the sororlty'a Orange Coun·
ty Alumnae Club at a tea
Thursday, Aug. 22 from 3 to
5 p.m. in the home of Mrs.
Vernon Edler of Newport
Beach.
The executive officers and
committee chairmen of the
' __ ... ;;:
\
Match -mating Good Deeds •
Rummaging around for charity's sake are members of Costa Mesa Rebekah·:
Lodge, who are planning for their rummage sale Thursday, Friday and Sun-
day, Aug. 22-24 in Costa Mesa. Mrs. Ranie Zuidema and Mrs. Douglas Mor· '
gan,(from left) are showing off their plan to help the Odd Fellows Home for ··
the Aged, an orphans' home, Eye Bank-Visual Research, the heart program,~·
junior lodges for boys and girls and a youth camp. Further information is -·
available by calling Mrs. Lola Dobbeck at 548-7417 or Mrs. Zuidema at 539-
4216.
Orange Coast Alumnae Club ------------------------------
will be present u well as
members or th• Junior Horoscope
Alumnae Club.
Mrs. Edler will b e
as si1 ted by Mrs. Fred
Howser and her c0mmittee
including Mrs . David Knobel
and Mrs. Merle Amund5on.
Aries: Creative Day .. WEDNESDAY prove costly. Be reasonable they .act'Ually exist. ';
without being extravagant. SAGl1TARIUS (Nov. 22. AUGUST 21 Message clear by tonight Dec. 21): Good lunar aspect
By SYDNEY OMARR LEO (July' 23-Aug. 22): today co i n c ides with
··,
Generatio.n
Talk Given ARIES (March 21.April Lunar cycle move• up. journeya; of the mind. Your
19): Creative activities are Make appointments. Assert intellectual curiosity is fired
spoUighted. Day to give of youraeU. Check details of up. You can read, write,
The annual Home League yourseU. Apply unique an. project which has been advertise. Your horizons ex-dinner of the Salvation r d i.-,ed N 1J ti to t nd li · proacb to tasks, projecta. e-; · ow me ge pa -you come a ve. Army 1!1 scheduled for Romance 11 accented _ 10 t.hlngs moving. Be specific, CAPRICORN 1Dec, 22·
Thursday, Aug. 22 in the 11 .activity coooected wltll confident. Take the lead. Jan. 19). Finish what yQu
La!ayetfe Hotel, Lon I VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): starl Get answer. Do iso
Beach. children. Best to re m al n in even if embarrassing que's-
Annual Sale Offers
Guem speaker will be Lt. TAURUS (Aprll 20-May background. From this van· tJons mu.!lt be put forth,·Ge.t
Col. Sallie Ches ham, author 2()): Lunar aspect today tage point you can make to heart of matters. S<l·
of "Born to Battle" and coincides w 1th obateclea meaningful observations. meone may be attempting tO
Look for the high-rising director of women' 1 related to home, property. Activity ahown in connection hide essential information·-
eollar to go into fall and services for the Southern Fresh viewpoint m8Y be wittJ club, group, organiza· a ct accordJngly. ~
winier on everything from California Division. needed. Don't permit! • pride lion. AQUARIUS . (Jan. 20-Feb,
High Collars
Earns Wings
The daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Tar·
rian of South Laguna is
a new stewardess for
TVVA based out of Ken-
nedy Airport. M i s s
Pamela Tani.an receiv-
ed h er wings afler
training in Missouri.
~
Interesting Objects ~-•'--·r, which 1.5 part to stand in way o progress. LIBRA (Se:f.t. 2'-0ct. 221 .. 18): If you demand perfec· daytime blouses to Jong din· i 1n; u.1.01n: B ore ne-'ble • of the 11th annual Long em A.I • Include fam' y members in tion, you ask for disap._
ner dresses. Beach Camp Meeti"ngs, will GEMJNI (May 21.June any entertainment .. Day to polntment. Some co'n!·
A fabulous assortment of Board members deci'ded Designers like it like the be . 2,0): Stress today on bow cement close relationships. cessioM are necessary.
clothing, jewelry, furniture, to sell candy for the kidney mao, or mandarin, o r A~.atci.e~h~~·s topic will you put ideas to work. What Recent misunderstanding Oiscua1 mratterl!I with mate;
a pp 1 i an c e • • di shes, fund and will help their Nehru, whatever you wish be A Confrontation With appears the easy way may can be cleared. Key la your JXlrtner. Respond in manner · to call its n,at fold or fabric in fact be more expensive. ability to be maJure. Extend which denotes wisdom. ·
glassware and other in· Junior membership dress that hugs the throat. Today's Generation. .Know this and investigate. hand of friendship. PISCES (Feb. 19-March"
teretting objects will be on dolls for Operation Merry Going right on in female Key i.! to be versaWe. Check SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2,0): Accent on people who~
dJsplay when the Woman's CbristmM. fashions too is the true HB TOPS Club TAURUS message. 21): SpoWght on career work with and serve you.
Be h A 5,._..ial dinner 1 s turtleneck showing most CANCER (June 21.July potential. Recognize op. You mll!t strive for great.M"
Club of Huntington ac r--frequently as sheer knit or Sa-rong 2 Gain TOPS Club 22): Be wary ot those who portunity when it knock.I. Be means of communication: Jf
sponsors itc!i annual rum· scheduled for October and jersey blouse rising above meets every Monday at 7:30 want to borrow. Keep watch reali&Uc in appraisal of th11 you do, then your life
mage sale Friday, Aug. 23. district officers will speak in wide flat collars on suits and p.m. in Smith's Elementary on po6$essloos. Tendency events. Avoid self-deception. becomea men pleasant and
The day-long sale will take _N_o_v_e_m_be_rc_. _______ ..:c.::o•::t::•:..· ________ ....::Sc::h:::ooe'.01.'.'.in:.::H::un'..'.'.'.lin:Cgt""'on'.'....'.B::•::•::ch::·c_~t::ow:.anl~'-'""':=:•::l::•s:::m~es:::s'.....:c::o::u::ld:_::See~..!pe".::!.r:::•o::ns:::..· ..!sl::t::u::•ti:::·o:::n~s~a'.!s...!fru~lt!~ulc:::..try!!!_:i::t.'---~
p\ace in the clubhouse, 420
1001 St.
Planning the event are
Mrs. Dick Roberts,
chairman, and Mrs. Pearl
Jones, co-chairman.
Procee& will be used to
support the club's philan·
t.hropies .
Mrs. Arnold Pod's ad e,
president, called her new
board and cba.irmen for a
special summer meeting to
ou~ activities for the
coming year.
.. ,
now it's the dress-over-pants •• ,
why didn't someone think of it sooner?
ORANGE COUNTY'S
Now, the dress ovtc separate bcrmuda pants. Smadiag of
youth, made for mobility. The zingy f~l of freedom.
Two up-to-the-instant dresses, a.LI spiced with scpa-U1®11L!i)J
~0rnroot
PllVATE COu.EGE
for .
~ Nolt'••• Sbrt '3f HKJifl 9 AtowtlN
Al"' Gt>duotionl t
' •. ..
b
rm bc<muda pants. Served up by A 'n R Jr.
a. The wrapped-up dress, with high neck
collar, of OrJon9 W}'lic a.nd wool jersey
to rayon acetate, in red and n&'Yf, Jr. sizes
).!). 28.00
b. 1bc vest effect coat-dtts.s, with ftlC'd.
allion acce nt, of Orlon& acrylic and wool
jersey bonded to rayon acetate, m red and
navy , Jr.,;,., ).1) 28.00
may co )'OU.Og sigmtve dresses 94
Ofda hr mail O< pbooo
co
may co south coast plaza, san dlego freeway at bristol, costa mesa, 546-9321
shop monday through saturclay, 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
'
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-. .,.. ... .,..,.. ... __ .,... ___ .,....,,...,..., ____ .... .,. ... -------·--------------------------'"T--.,--""'i:-""..,,.-~---~.--·r:r--o;--t~-~.-.......... -.. -."----..· ..--.. -..
.::
Pinpointin g Friendship
,
Female Angles of Angling
Casting Fl ies Catches Men 's
By GAY PAULEY
NEW YORK (UPI) -Sh<
looks about as much like the
s teregtype , of the
weatherbeaten khaki clad
fisherman as Phyllis Diller
, looks like Raquel Welch.
sport3 shows or cUnics, talk· ru;-1aniuitJ.011 of 61bermtn. touch my wrl9t or a.rm u I
ing up the sport she con· MJsa Strobel Nld one ot cast. ln my eagerness for
siders the worlds' m06l relaxin~ and al.so most ex· her pupila once was a blind }\Im to learn J would d)',
hl\arat.ing. man.-he had lost ua& of hi& ·you see, you a.ee!' and he
W..iss Strobel's string of in· eyes in a hunting accident. would 11ay, ·no, but l un·
ternational fishing hooors: She rec&Ued, "He Would derstand.' It was ju s t
Eyes
beautJ.tut."
Miss Strobel, who now
makes her home jn Ne"W
Orleam, sal.d youniater1
"a.re really fabu'9us to
teich."
Yet Ann Strobel knows the
angles of angling so well
that she holds numerous na-
tional and internati'onel
championships in casting,
most of them won in com-
petition with men .
stretches from Lake Min-------------------~-------------
"If the men resent me,"
she laughed, .. they don 'l
show it to my face . I don't
know what they say behind
my back."
Miss Strobel. a curvey, 5·
feet, 4.-inch, b I u e · e y e d
blonde, bills herself as the
only fullti'me professional fly
caster In the United States
tOOay and travels the coun·
try• demonstrating the in-
tricacies of using fi shi ng
tackle.
She logs some 100.000
miles annually, giv in g
demonstrations. lecturill'g at
netonka, Minn., to Oslo,
Norway. On Aug. 22 she
leaves f o r Llnzerheidi.
Switzerland, for a world
competition in which all her
competitors will be mate.
When she s&t a w or l d
record for fly casting ac·
curacy at Spa, Belgium, she
was the lone woman among
106 men. She feels that the
men look on her not as a
-woman but as a competitor
trying to win just as hard as
they are.
A native of Beck·ley, W.
Va., Miu Strobel had moved
to Minneapolis to work as a
secretary. She 1 tarted
fishing trips after a
girlfriend invited her to join
the l11aak Walton League,
the unofficial internatiooal
' •
A bounty of good-will to begin Delta Zeta by the Sea's ne"' year is indicated
by the oversized friendship pin Mrs. Lloyd J\.1cCollum and Mrs. James Rich-
ards are offering Mrs. Dudley Pfaff I left to right). The alumnae chapter will
host a friendship coffee Saturday. Aug. 24 at the Karen M a r g r e t a Tivoli
Square. Beneficiaries will be hard of heari ng children and the Navajo Ind ians.
the chapter's local and national philanthropies. Delta Zetas are invited to call
Mrs. Richards at 545-0802 for additional information.
Hadd Rings Celebrate
40 Years of Marriage
The 40th wedding an-
ni versary of Mr. and Mrs.
Hadd Ring was celebrated
in the Balboa Bay Club.
Centerpieces of American
Beauty Roses and fresh
spring flowers decorated tbt
guest tables.
Among those attending
were the oouple'1 children
and grandchildren including
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Craft
and Eileen, Denise, Cindy
and Roy Craft; Mrs.
Dolores Poor and. children,
Ni'ck Roetner .and Steven
Poor with fiance Bruce
Jacobs and his daughter,
Susie Jacobs. and Mr. and
Mrs. BiU Rin.g and their
daughter Susan.
ANNUAL SAVINGS
ON
VASSARETTE PANTIES
Kirk Hausers
Reside
'Planning to make their
first home in Dubuqu@,
Iowa, are Mr. and Mrs. Kirk
Oliver Ha user after their
nU}:ltial ceremonies in St.
A n· d r e w ' s Presbyterian
Church.
The couple are honey·
mqoning in Hawaii.
The former Susan Dee
Hoiland, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William Holland of
CoSta Mesa, e xc h an ge d
rings with her betrothed, the
son of Mrs. Edna Haus.er of
Oak Park, Ill. and Merrill
Hauser of St. Paul, Minn .,
before th e Rev. Dr. Charles
Dierenfield.
The bride was escorted by
her father down an aisle Jin-
ei:l with candles and flow er s
to an altar adorned with
f!Dwer-bedecked candelabra
aiid a large centerpi'ece.
She cho)e a sleeveless A·
line gown of white silk
organza over taffeta with
paneU of tiny daisy lace
doWll the bodice and a
center panel intertwined
n•ilh pink velvet ribbon. Her
full.train was caught at mid
batjl: with a repeat of lace
pa.Deis. A high lace crown
held her shoulder length
veit and she carried a
nosl!gay bouquet of small
pin t roses, Btephanotis and
baitY's breath.
f\!se mbling the pattern or
the-wedding dress were the
goWhs of her attendants.
frociked in long A-lines in
min't green chiffon with
satfn bows at neck and mid
back. WJni green tulle with
a Satin bow formed the
heall pieces.
Matron of honor and the
•, • •
•,
•,
·,
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' '• ,, .,
'• '• ·-'• .•
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In Iowa
bride's sister Mrs. Dec
Golden carried a cascade of
pink roses . and carnations.
Nosegays of similar flowers
were held by bridesmaids
Miss Oi.arlene Newnes, Mrs.
Steptie.n Bills and Miss Sue
Zi"egel. Miss Su.san Golden ,
the bride's nieoe. also was
attired in mint green and
carried pink flowers for her
role as flower girl.
The bride'• nephew
Donald Golden was ring
bearer.
The bridegroom asked his
twin brother K e n n e t h
Hauser to stand as best
man, while Golden, .James
Burk and Greg Garretl
assisted as ushers.
Miss Marleen S k I J t on .
sorority sister of the bride,
sung the vocal selections.
F..rom the church the cou-
ple traveled to the recep-
ti011, in the Costa Mesa Golf
and Country Club. in a 191 !'i
Model T Ford. G e r a 1 d
Schroder provided music for
the 250 guests.
Taking charge of the guest
boo k was ~1rs. L i n d a
Barlow of Redondo Beach.
while Miss J ill Lansi\l of
Pasadena was in charge of
the gift table.
Grondmothers
Auxiliory
Al noon every second
Thursday the N e w po r t
liarbor Grandmothers' Cluh
meets in the Newporter Inn.
Mrs. Verna Pitt .at 642-3566
may be called for more in·
formation.
AND OF THE WEEK
White utln ribbons and 111181 of the. velley
decorate this wedding cake knife with Its
sterllng silver handle. Serrated blade Is stainless steel.
·· Gift boxed to make e. genuinely thougfitful and
:. different wedding or showergifl lnille.ls and date
•
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may be engraved on the handle.
Ourspeclal price Sl.50 engraving extra
S ~VICK'S
c/~~m.1
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH bH· 1110
Other relatives were Mrs.
R ing'1 brother and his wife ,
Mr. and Mn. Otto Hoag
with his son and daughter-
in·law, Mr . and Mrs. Eric
Hoag and Mrs. Ring's
sister , Mrs. Ebba Webb.
Guests included t h e
Messrs. and Mmes. Walt
Sulli van . Bud Blanchette,
Vern Dud le y , Hank
Ma.tl6field, Paul Palmer, Al
Cox, Bud Caward, Walter
Mellott, Jack Cole. Tom
Henderson , Murray
Roberts, Charles Hester,
Marshall Duffield, U:slie
Steffen.~oo. William Henry,
Dick Richard, Al Tiffany,
Pete Peterson. N or m a n n
KendaU, Boo C. Roos ,
Howard Guth, C. P. Taylor.
George Bucx:ola , JOO n Curci
and Dr. .and Mrs. Dave
Nielsen.
Other.s were the Mmes.
MRS. KIR K HAUSER
P resbyteria n Rites
Fred Butlon. Betty Denison.
Mary Axelson, Jeanette
McCormfc, Gordon Grundy,
F'red Hughes, Howland Pad·
dock, Ethel Brewer, Evelyn
Sherl\.'OOd, Flos Kingsbaker.
George Pfleger, Vita Foote,
Vi Patterson, D o r o t h y
YardJ"y, Naomi Kri stenson,
Ruth Ficks and Alley Woef·
Jy.
The bride is a gr aduate of
San Diego State College
v.•here she majored in nurs-
ing. She affiliated \Vith Kap-
pa Delta.
Her husband. \l"ho i~
presently attending t h e
t.:niversit.v of Dubuque. has
served \1-'ith the Marine
Corps in Vietnam.
Gold discovered on Ghevron ls/and!
Island Gold
Fine China
Island Gold Fine China is truly fine chlna. Beautiful
belJ·toned ! lt'5 translucent. with a tasteful edging or gold.
Island Gold Fine China is perfect for your elegant dinners,
yet du rablt tnoush for t vtryday ust, roo.
Companion pieces available. At
all Standard Stations end partici·
pating Chevron Dealers .
,
$129
4 piece 5CUing
Wilh:: pl. purchase
CHEVRON DEALERS • STANDARD STATIONS
Vauarette briefs, trunks and bikinis
of Ant ron®nylon tricot. White only.
•
Brief and trunk styles
wit h encased elastic waistband.
Bliet, sizes:4 to 7, reg. UO. ... alJ.Ji ·-
Briel; sizes a and 9, rei. l.7S • .JIUI
Tmnli; sizes 6 to 7, "lo US .. ~
Bllcini, silts 4 lo'· It&. U5 •• Jl1M
Unl9fie,
u mS'
'
,
• •
I
I
f
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18 DAll.Y mar
Ul'I Tt~ ..
Man .on Moon Connectiota
On-job Alcoholism ~1:1~ns
h1to $4 Billion Hangover
By SYLVIA PORTER
On-the-job alcoholism has
now 80ared to a $4 billion
annual hangover. double the
S2 bllllon estimated COl!lt of
only five years ago a11d
equal to a Ion of. $16 milliifn
to bualneu and industry
each working day.
'Ibis ill the latest estimate
of New York'• non-profit
Natlonal Council on
Alcoholism. Specifically;
-AT LEAST 3,000,000
U.S. workers now suffer
from aJcoholim1 -5.3 per-
cent of all workers in
business, industry a n d
civilian government. This
number compares t o
2.000,000 workers five years
age.
The 14 billion figure
covers absenteei s m ,
tardiness, sick leave, other
fringe bene!W!, wasted time,
other forms of inefficiency.
aceident:i:, wasted material
and the loss of trained man-
power. T h e absenteeism
rate for alcoholcis Is three
times as great as for lhe
non-alcoholic workers
with the typical alcoholic
W()rker losing a full mooth
of wocking days each year.
-Even more serioua U
the problem of "on-the-job"
absenteeism. where a n
employe may waste a cou·
pie of hours each morning
recovering from a
hangover, or a couple of
Xerox' TV Specials:
Idea Worth Copying?
NEW YORK fUPll
·Yhen a company plunks
,\own $1 -million for a
teievisioo series w i t h o u t
commercials, the mGi.lman
l>ecomes a mighty im·
portant individual at cor·
;:>orate headquarters.
Viewer letters influence
company th in kin g on
whether it made a public
re lations boner or a sm<:rl
business moved .
In ttle case or Zerox .
\\'hich spent St -million on
the "Of Black America"
series, the venture cost at
least one customer
Robert M. Shelton. imperial
wizard of the United Klans
of America .
A Shelton letter dated July
3, the day s:-fter the first seg-
ment in the series wa s
telecast nationally. arrived
at the Xerox branch office
in Birmingham, Ala.
··Dear sirs,'' it said. '"fhis
is to inform you that we
wish the Xerox mtchine in
this office picked up at once.
\Ye are cancelling these
I J'e a sing I arrangemen ts
because of lhe company's
in volvement in the sho\ving
nf the movie · B I a c k
.\merica.' ''
t.·NHAPPY
There were other dissen-
ling votes on the seven.part
!\Cries Xerox hoped would
fos~r better understanding
between whites and bl£cks.
One shareholder, the head
of a Midw est investment
ftrn1 , was unhappy. He did
not threaten to sell his
stock. Bu t he did promise 1n
all future correspondence to
address the co mp a n y ' s
chairman, Joseph C. Wilson ,
~·ith a sm<:>ll i(ltter "W.''
Another heated opinion
r ame {Tom the manager of
n f>ll;ery ,n Kansas City,
Mo .. which uses a Xerox
copier.
"Rest assured," wrote thf'
bake!", "that I h£ve used
yoor machines in the past.
but from now on I will use
only those of your com-
petitors."
An adverlisin~ agency
vice president in Kans.as Ci·
ty said he would "recom -
mend that another make of
copying machine" be user1
in his offices.
FARED \VELL
Actually, on the basis of
the first 1.500 letters receiv-
ed. Xerox fared well, The
ratio of favorable to un -
favorable comment was bet-
ter than 12 to I. the com -
pany said.
That 12 to l ratio also held
lrue of letter writers who
identified therru1elve s either
as customers or
shareholders.
"There is always some
clement of risk in such pro·
gramming," said David J,
Curtin. vice president in
charge of corporate c<l m-
munication.s. "Some people
will ta ke issue with some of
the theories advanced."
On t.hi.J go-round. Xerox
officials i'l'e smiling and
breathing easier. Well they
might. They have iocreasod
their image of public service
and social awareness at a
time such a posture i5 con-
sidered import~nt, A n d
from the tone of some \el·
te.rs they also seem lo have
increai;ed sales potential.
A Brooklyn secretary .
who praised the series. pro·
mised not to complain the
next Ume her Xe. r ox
1nachine broke down , ;:ind a
I~exing t.on . I K y.l
busine!>sman said he would
"use only Xerox . copiers
fr om now on.''
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Over The Counter
NA.SD listings for Monday, Aututt 19, 1961
.13' NIU TU
' ' ..
ASSETS OVER
s..425.000,000.00
HE.A.0 OFFICE r;!°~
315 E••t Colorado l!loul...,_,,,,.(,,.
P•ud•n•. Callfomlll 91109
' •
-A-
INGS
• OTHEt BRANCH Of'l'lCES
Wut Arcadia • Covtne
Gl•ndal•
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A119111l , 1968 DAILY PILOT
Monday's Oosing Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Stock Exchange Oosing
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HOSTS -Ed Ames, above, hosts "The Sound of
'68" tonight in color at 8:30 on Channel 7. Aretha
Franklin is a special guest .star on the show which
features nine new teen-age performers selected
during a nationwide talent search. A group from
Buena Park, The Daily Planet, is among the chosen
young groups.
TELEVISION VIEWS
Horowitz
In Concert
By ROBERT MUSEL
NEW YORK (UPI) -The man many consider
the world's greatest living pianist had not played
in public for 12 years. One day be walked into Car-
negie Hall and asked if he could use the stage. Day
after day be came back to play to the empty seats
while the magic that must be there to entb.rall liv ..
ing audiences began to return to his finger s and bis
body and his mind.
VLADIMIR HOROWITZ was regaining the con·
fidence that had deserted him. In one of the more
dramatic episodes of recent musical hjstory he was
beginning the concert comeback that will bring him
into mill1ons of homes Sept. 22 in a CBS-TV one-
hour specia1 marking the 40th anniversary year of
his American debut.
His first television appearance is a cultural
event of the highest magnitude and CBS treated it
that way. The stage of Carnegie Hall was reinforc-
ed with timbers to take the heavy color cameras
and cracks in the planking were filled with talcum
powder to eliminate squeaking. The camera men
and technical crew were shod in silent velvet slip-
pers. The programs for the invited audience were
printed on special paper which does not rustle.
EVEN BEFORE the actual program was tap-
ed CBS spent $75,000 on a test to reassure Horowitz
that the music would not be swamped by a display
of television technique. He spent seven hours at the
piano over two days while the camera angles were
established along with the best positions for the
microphones. When these were settled the piano
was bolted into position.
If this sounds breathlessly pompous it does
Horowitz an injustice. A slender youthful-looking 64
he is jaunty and smiling with a tendency not to
take himseli too seriously. He believes music should
be enjoyed not analyzed or revered. Sprawled in a
ch ecked sports jacket a nd slacks on a couch at his
rented pre-revolutionary home et Litchfield, Conn.,
he confided that he had a bet of $200 the program
would not win a repeat.
"HONESTLY'', he said, "They'll tum it off."
"There's the Russian pessimist for you ," .smiled
his wife, Wanda Toscanini, daughter of the great
llaJian conductor.
"I MUST ADMIT I was fascinated by what I
saw when they showed me the test tapes," he said.
"It "'as the first time I bad ever seen myself on
any screen. I've had lots of offers from Hollywood
but aJways I've said 'no, no, no, no, no!' I had never
before seen my own fingers while I was playing. I
noticed that at one point my fingers were curved,
Curved! And I always tell my pupils they must keep
their fi ngers straight!"
FOR THE CONCE RT Horowitz said he sought
musical selections that would not be too long in
themselves, that would be me1odic and yet not
hackneyed. He chose three selections by Chopin,
t\VO by Scarlatti, two by Schumann , an etude by
Scriabin and hi s own variations on a gypsy melody
from Carmen. a pyrotechnical show piece that
sounds as th oug h he had 20 finge rs.
He explained that he had taken exceptional
pai ns with the filming and recording because the
microphone picked up more than the human ear
and the camera in closeup sees more than the
human ~ye .does at .a . conceM. "Visually and orally
everything is magruf1ed," he said. "You've got to
hit the piano key Mght in the center of the no1.e.
They may miss a mistake in the concert hall but
they won't on television." '
Dera11is the Memree
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GORDO
MOON MULLINS
TUMBLEWEEDS
:,Ji,, -----
MUTI AND JEFF
ll.41SS PEACH
f 01'UF-E
tFFICIEN<Y
£,it PE~TS
Of
A11oE'-l '"
,Ml'(T
EU"
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IT'> FROM LllA!()!j,NO,MOT
A6AIN ! WH~ DOES 51tE
K!EP "'1661N6 /IE ?
1HAT_j.ILA! 1HERE WAS
OllE ll!IH6 5HE COl!i.DN'T
SW\ 10 LEARN.,
'IB•'>t>tl llAVf ~MOOl.WORIC , l(AYo.
5TODY HARD! L•ARN
TO B• A LEAD!!~!!
WRL,~U~1 SWIV~L ...
WHY NOT?
NEVEi\ llU5 A 6EA6Lf!
WHAT OIO THfY SAY l<'NOCt< OF~
WAS THE MATTER Tiff SWEEi
Wmi 'l()U••AT THe TALJC', LA.DY.
H05PITAL1 IMfAM! lk'HOWAlL
™E TRICK.5 .'
)
By Gus Arriola
Iv Ferd Johnson
... c,IN You l/MGIHI!
5LIDIN<; C>oWN IH' BAN ISTEi;:
AT TH'
WHITE! HOUSE<?!
By Tom K. Ryan
By Al Smith
I 'M S'nLL ,
TltYING To FIND
THE CLIENT'S
OFFICE-~
...
,. .~ "t.JTJ _. ' .
TUESDAY
AUGUST 20
r v f N 1 r~ <,
1:00 IJ Tiit •le "f'llN: (C) (60) ''"' Dun[)hy.
D Hunti.r·l lfnkllJ lll•ri (C) (30)
II S\m Ali. Sllor. (C) tl0)1
GLltSb 111 tctor Rlchtrd Kllt1,
comic Slappy Whit~. alnpr sum
Gtlllard, 1Dn11treu Do11n1 Thtodort,
btt11ty t:11Ptrl Donni Normtn. (R)
0 SiJ O'aodl M0¥1t: "Coftfld ... iliilJ Connie" (comedy) '53 -Yin
Jotm110n. Jantl ltlall.
m M1tlnt lfJ (C) (30)
ID Ill M1tllrl011 (30)
fl!) Wlltl'1 Jfn!
Gil AIHf' Subll111t
l:lO D Kftl C Ntwt s.Mce (C) (60)
0 TIMI lraD'IJ Sllow (C) (30)
who COIHIJIOlllJY promott4 lnlU~
rtctiol 11llntl tht ltptMll llllli..t
hlJ force oc:cupylnt Cutm ~
1111Jln1 w11 bull.tint from 1 dtnl
D :I:;: ; .... 1. I * THE'SOUNDS OF '68"
Stirring ED AMES
and ARET HA FRANKLI
D cm(})' ''!SPO ll111t' 1t11bthi So11ndi 11 'II! (CJ (60
Actor·iin&tr Ed Ames llost1 th
dlmu lo • n1tlon1t ntrch lo
r1tsh. ro1m1 taltnt In !ht neld
pcpul11 music. Ar1!h1 F11n~13
~udy sou1." wm •PJ>t•t •• • • ci1I tuut. Nine lln1Jllb COlllPI!..;
In thrH cat1ao1lu; 111111 watl .. ,
flmalt·voealllt ind muslell 1rvu .. m M.,., crH111 tc1 <90> :
IEJ Waftd«hrll (Cl (31)) C
Im Anltl &It M011tltnll' ~
j
t:OO: :'a~:!:N~~ ~~ 811~ •
TV Star." R1~ Rocers ot 1111 ~
TI mes mod•r•t• 1 dlswsskln . ~•(
twtfn N11ro ltlt'llsion per10n1lltl•
t nd 1 p1n1I of local MW3111tn. ! m ltclllllor ftlller (30) ID TY Music.II O.rt :
m Mdt•I•'• ""' (30) • • fD Scltnct Rt111rter: "Sulttd tor ,
Spice." MIT Science R1porttr John !:JO fJ 9 {]) CIS Co,.,.;, fpedelC fltclt looks 11 types of 1p1cesultt ~ (30)Dw1yn1 Hlckmtn Ind Btf
d1S11ned fM Aoollo 1flronallll. Blut ttlr In 1n orl1l111I corntdf!
_ N "·" ,. (Cl 1bout 1n lndltn thief wflo cltl'"'
u;i Du...-rl tltlt to Manltltlin. (R) •:
o ~ m .,,., <C> <30> ·~ Brute.' ]'ittctlvt .lohn117 Col'IO 7:00 IJ 9 {i) CIS Emlna Nm: (C) attustd o1 brut1llty In • i 100,
(30) W11frr Cronkite. law suit 1g1lntl ttlt tlty. (R) f
fJ F TrtOP (30) OJ PU1POrt II TIMI (C) (SD) j
m I LM LllCJ' (!O) fl) lliw. •Ml• lfnn CM'--i
m lllllpn'• llllftd (30) IE Mlftll: I ... 21:30 ; m Tiit Ar.triuft St1p; "Boom 1nd ~
Bud In lht N1w Ctntury." Dt. Ir· IO:GO ~~~Of 11.o: AH'la· td win Swerdlow ditctlSUJ U.S. t!ltt· , .. •' ~• ter at ttle tum of th• cenlury ind ( ) n 11rth of • Pltl. ..,,...,
polnls out r1eso111 for tilt "irirl to Gh1na by ttlflt black Wnhlnlf
dl'lid• .. In drtm• .t thit llmt. ton, D.C., hid! xhool studtnlt~
111r1 Ftftpt S.ndiu: 111 lffort to dltcxwtr how pertln ..., Afriu 11 to toclar't black Amtrlce
7:11 D 9 (I)'"""' <Cl 160) . Do.
Ml1$h T11cy trln to break 1 dl•t·
tall ot Its wild lnstincU. Judy Ill•
chlmpanzet t1ku 1 hind In tht
proceedings. (R)
O ~Cl) I Drum ol Junnlt: (C)
(30) "Operation: first Coupl1 on
the Moo n." Je1nnlt'& Impish slslu
poses u 1 11)1Ct scientist so 1h1
can bt Tony'• partnu tnd con·
vlncts Je1nnlt that Tony will be
iO!ne to the moon with 1 beautllul
scitntlsl tnd offers to help prftent
It. (R)
e , .. ,.. Mi•• "• tC> <eof
O l!llGJ IM '""""IC) 1!0$ ilfhe Vlat." .ltm11 Baxter, I N~
11rving 11 111 Investigator for-6
Stntlt subc:crmmlttee, is tom llrl!
t'#ffll loy1lty to hl1 }ob lfld hi•
ract. (R) !
0 Sault AlllTt (60) !
m hell latilll " ... CC) (SO) ! • ' > m "ZODIAC IN FASHION" , * Zodys Fashion Show (C):
1J lirtnd rrim ll:1tin1 (CJ (30) ;
0 @00 Gtrrlton's l orlll11: (C) ID Your ZodLtc ht fublon: (C) (!OJ
(60) •·Run From Dtath." Two·llm t Proeram displays l1sllloM frof!
Emmy winner Jullt Harris guests In Zodys Dlpartment Stora. •
1 triple·hceted rti le. Tiit GoriUas ~The Acton Compin-: Flnil 11: 1rrNe In Franu to ru:u1 tn Im· u:.i •·
'
rls:Jned •Kent i nd 111 met b• 1 haaisal before tht ~rform1nc1 Cl( "Macbtth." • mysterious woman, Therese, who et· •
platns th~t both lhtir contact 1nd fII Tor" d1 &p1n1 :
the agent trt dead. (R) • • 0 Millkln S Movie: "Dawn htnr' . • (drama) '38 -Errol Flynn, David 10:30 ID Nm : (C) (30) 8111 Johnt. !
Ni'len, Basil Ratllbooe, Dontld CrJsp.I •
m Tnrtlt or Conwquencet (C) (30) 11:00 £1 Oe¥tn D'Cltd bPtlt (C) (S~ m l 1lill1i\~ I Solt tnd lofftJ': Jtriy Dunphy. •
(q (60) Tht Hal linker f~mlly .~isit 0 The tltb Hollr Ntwt: (C) (30t
tht f1mous old w1rshlp 'YIM In Ion Brokaw • Swtden. (RJ om · t
fD The French Chtf: Juli• Child
shows how to prepart brioches.
@m Sonrius
1:00 0 9 (l) Sllowcut '61: (Cl (30)
Comtal1n London le• Is 1Pldtl
tu•st It: th1 Grind Bt!lruom of
New York·• W1ldorl·Astorl1 Halal.
Bidding for 1t1rdom tre Tht Teich·
ars. 1 votal·ln3bumenl1I Quintet,
U Tht Wesllmtrs (30) ~
0 Ntwt: (C) (30) Saxt•r Wtrd. ;
0 Movlr. "l l1cl Widow" <mYlri
tery) '54-Gingtr Ro111rs. Van Heft.:
lln, Gent Tierney, Geo111 Rift. ~ m Les Crtnt (C) ~
IE) Movlt: "'Jimpfco" (lllqllntt~
'44 -Edward l:il. Robln1t1n, Lyn~ Bari. j.
'
folk sln1tr-tt1mpour And rtt Mii· >
COYicl. vocalist Bob Cameron, and 11;30 11 MO'llt: "Pktfll of Mtntf""
Tht 1910 Fruit Gum Company, (adventure) '47 -Rod Ctmtrorf
Gllbtrt Rol1nd. )
0 QJ (l) The Ttnltflt lllfl' (C) ~
0 Mowlt: "F11ht1n1 l u 1dtnl111t
(adventure) '45 -Wiiiard Ptrk•'
~ilf ll)IJiilll. :
D Rol ler Game1-Livel (C) * T-BIRDS VI, DETROIT
ft Rtller C1111u.: (C) (2 h1) U.
fBlrds 'I'S. Detroit Devils.
0 @ Cil Joq l llho' lllo1' (C) ! • • , m Hull (C) (30} 12:00 m lot Pyne (C) • • m ftET Pl1Jhtus1: "Thlrtaen :
Ai:1in1I F1l~Th1 Murdtr11. ~ (R) 12:>0 m All.ftlahl 51tow: "Ont Bi& ~
fl) Lt Pt&Jubldo !1ir," "IUll 01 B1 Killed.~ "Stlu'.I
ror John Citl.11n1" ''litter from II
Unknown Women." !:
,,., D 9 Cll """"'" <Cl <"'l m ' St1v1 Alltn b tlost of variety hour ~ Tlllltta: '1ht Min I Ml~
st1n1n1 his wilt Jayne Mudows. rltd. ~
Sritisll recordln1 stars l ulu ind ~
Cliff Richard, Irish comedian Nike . ,,. _ _. Newmtn Th• RumanLtn Nrtlona1 12:50 0 Movlt: "llJ11111rn1 ti tilt c-.
01nc1 'c.:i111p1ny i nd Ordi1str1. (sci· Ii) '57 -Ptttr Gr11ves, pf.Id
Iranian ba11ncin1 team Tilt .ltn Ctttlt. --~
Baz.t Broth1r1 and 1 British music-~
tnd.comtdy group ctllld lht Bonzo ! Doi Doo·Oih Bind. 1:00 f) Movit: "Ii& Jld" (11Y1nl11r
0 1i) [J) TIHCIQ "llfrt at tllt ·U.-w1l!1t1 BHiy, Marjorlt M•i
lrlO'rin: l'Cl ''7to M111 Is 111 llltftd"' D Mftlt: (C) "'Jiit l llDltl
(d11 ma) '62-Jiflrey Hunltr, Btr· fittt" (comedy) 'II -Malilllt
btrt Ptrez. Joseph dt Cordovt, M1strol1nni. •
M1rsh1ll Thomp110n, R0111I Rel!IJ', IJ eom111unn, l utlttln loenl :
Yic S1!1y1n. Thi but story ot tn •
Atntrlc.tn u llor 111 World W1r II fJ Nm (C) :
l ,
WEDNESDAY I .,.....,.,,, .. hi~ ........... {
rtl Lockwood. >
1%:JO m "ltr""*'l llonde" (ro1111nci '41~111 Hl)"ll'Orth. "s,nc.pauoj
DAYTIME MOVIES
l:JO 0 (C} "Ollll hi tM -~" (di•
1111) 'S4 -D1n1 Andrtwt. *""'
Cftin.
fJ "Jiu MONr" (tolflldr) "•S-
Tiit 8owtl'Y loJs, (C) "W r., a..
111tr" (dr1m1}-Anto111ll1 l u11dL
11;15 0 ...... lllt SN" (1dv1ntur1)
• JOB PRINTING
{111uaic.tt) '42-Jtckit Cooptr. ~ • l:JO CE "Coi1111,.. Mr. P11111" (di•
Mt) '42-0ltlord £v111t, Dtbor'
KllT. ~ ,, .. u 1q ...... " ............
(ld'nntUll) '5()...-11111 H111111d, Jti
0.klt. ~
0 (C) "M•ch ..... "". W..t•" (1dottntur1) '6S-bl P•iJ.
r11 ~In.. ~
• PUBLICATION S
• NEWSPAPERS
Ot1t Of Tli• l..tr911I P:•clllll1t 111 Or11111 Ceuflty
Ul 1 WBT U.U OA ILYD. HIWPOIT l lACJt
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FAITHFUL AS •••
!!-
0
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#;1
Okay, so it's corny. But it's also true, the DAILY PILOT is
es faithful to its readers as this famous old geyser is to the
hundreds of thousands of tourists who trek from across the
nation to see it each year. There's someth ing else to keep
In mind this summer while you're on vacation -whether
you go to Yellowstone National Park to see Old Faithful or
not -the DAILY PILOT doesn't take a vacation .
We'll still be here keeping public issues "hot " and provid-
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CaPYl'llht rncmlXYll 41'
ing the best way yet invented for folks to let off steam -
communication. We communicate with readers end poli-
ticians ; they communicate with us. The result is a veritable
"geyser" of information. You think about that and about
where you're going to find out most about local schools, lo-
cal sports and local politics when you get back from vaca-
tion next fall . When you do get back; "Old Faithful" will
be here waiting for you.
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---· ft ft • --ft -• ---ft--~-~-----~-~-............... -........... __ , ........ ft .............. _ ............... , • ., .......... ,.a .. e1111r•r•c111P••s••1•2 .. a111121a .. 21111n1111•1F .. F••s .. z•r
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WU 04 0
~ DAJ\.V PLOT _ Tllftday, AUf'Sl 20, 1968
. . '
Education
Fills Gaps
In Historv
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LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
HOTIC• O' TaUlTl.lo U.L« aA• t:tJ tA• Ml
LOAN NO. 1b2N7.. NOTICI 011 UL• 01' NOTICI. TO CalOITOILJ OH S.lt11'bl• IL lHf &I ID:OO AM lll AL l"ltOl"EaTT AT $U,£1ll0111 (OUIT 01' l'MI l'ltOll'EaTY PltOTICT!ON l'ltll/ATI. SALi lTATIOF(ALl,OltNIA 'Olt
COR.POltATION, •• T•'llflN, (ttlt~hOM No. A Ht1' THI COUNTY OP OllAHOI
•n-4111 "',..' e!Jll 1111ra~unt to Irle Ottd l!IP9•1or Court of fl'le $llllt qi CtlJtOrnla tt.. A mu
of Tl'lltt ••MCI Avtull !IO, 1"' t•tcultd tor tM COU~f\I of QR ... Nt;.E In me Miller Etltlt of aEJtNICe W. FAit NAM 1,k.u, 1w MALCOLM W, HASl(ELL NeoroHd Clf tr.. l1!1l1 JOl'jN W. 'NYOER. IEfllNICI WARREN FARNAM. OK•U·
Sfflf4/ftl!ltr IJ, '"" 111 90llll IOU l"ttl 61 \. ~.-. Nolt,.. i. lltftlw afvfll tNt tt.. td
It or Ollld•I RKOrctt. In ltlt offlQI of Ir.. u"4t,..l1n1C1 will wll 11 frlv11e .. 11, on or f..OT1CE IS HI RllY OIYIN hi t1M
ll:fC.01111• ol Or1n111 COt.1111'1' wm o.tll •' 11i., tl\Ot :lfd d•v ol klolembtf, 1'61, •I cr ... 1100 o1 n. 111o111 f141mtlil clite.O.nl 1llbllc 1\ICtlotl to !tie Illa""-! l:llOIH'r lor .... Ofllct ol 9UR(I., WtLLl.t.MS 11\d thif 111 p1r-NYlfll clllm1 1t1f111t ttlt
(1111 !11v1blt ., "" lll!W ot ••It Ill SORl!NSEN, $vllt m Ro ..... 81d9., 'll .. 1c1 dt¢tdtorll '" '""'I'" '° fill tltltl'I.
llwflfl rnotllY of tht U11ftt'CI Si.till 11 1111 '°"'th SPtlnt 51 .. Lo. M••lu. C:-ly ol With "" ...u-nt 'IOIKfltf'L Ill 1"' tofl'lct
\y • ••llNGTON (UPI) 111lrall(t of IM Sol.rth lJ'Ol'll Cll'lk• OOOt ol Loo Ant•~ Sit•• of C111fw11l1, to tllt ol lh9 clerll.., Hie llOCI ... .,.,"led C'Ol.lrt • .,,
n..31 -tllt COllll .... Cou•~. 111 .... Cl .... ol s. ... ll!gllftl Incl ~· bldd~. •no '"'bttd to to ,,,,_, flltm. with "" _ .. ty
Back to school could mean II AM, C11!1o<'nlt. Ill rllhl, llllol 1r.d 1 ... co11tlrm1llon by ••Id $YMrlOr COi.iN, Ill ~ ..... , ... uncte~l•ntd II ,,,. OI· • h:r'ftl con ... Yed lo Ind llOW lllld lw 1114 .... rl1hl, 1!111 111111 11111rt$I ol .-111 fl(ff ot 1111 AllWMYI• li;'Ef~JIS, ~Cl)$ and books f 0 r Tn.111 .. lllldtr .. Id 0"4l ol Tf\l.i In Ind Dtoee1HCI 11 h time al de1!1> Incl 1LI llM! '"ALMER, ICJO$, f, GI.ASS, 2600 El
Parent" too 85 they take ro th•t cer11111 or_,,., •*lll•'td In 1r.. .1,111, flfi.t 11111 tnr,,.11 ""'' 11111 ,,,.,, o1 cimlrio It•••· "'"' •10, 1"110 Alto. -.i, • · 6t1t1 " etmonii.. c.i111y of O•lflllt de: Mid dt«1tl<I !'I•• tCQulred 1>1 -••lloro C•1llornl• foo.i, wlllch It th• 'IKt of the opportunity to find the "rlbed 11 10110 .... : o1 11w or olllttwlM, olMI '"'" or In 111-bu$IM» o1""' 11nc1e,...1111..:1 111 1u m•".,'
• th • bildf 1 Loi U of TtlCI 46'2, l(lgll!'ltf Wltll t.n d!llO!I IO 1'1111 ol H IO oeq.&sftl, ti rr.. H<1-lfl11\f lo tht tolllt of tlld clfu<llnl, gaps 1n elt C ens \mdlvldtd 1/91111 lnler.11 In l.ol \It ol time o1 d11th, In tnd lo •ft 11\1 ctrl1l11 wll'llln ahr monlhl Iller tti. llrtl "ubllc .. bistorj' books, Hk:f T•1ct _.,.,, A Hf mlO r1coroed In 1111 PfOPet'l'I lll..,•11111 Ill 11\t CO\lft!Y of lion of lhll nollct.
lt' J &DOI! 16'1, Pith tt lo 2$ al MIPS, Ill 11\f Or111M Stilt ol C1ll!01nl1, Pl,fl(ul9rlY Otled July 26 1"8
S up to parents to et on1c. a1 t11t CO\lf\IV reurdtr ot MIO tkK•lbltCI 11 1o11ow1, '°'*It: W•rren E:. F••n•m
td:UCatOrS and pUbliShetS aiuntv. Th• Norl'IH11l1rly to IHI of Ille Admlnlllr1ler wlfll.tr..-wlll-S.Jd Slit w\11 btl .... .,.. b\11 WltfWWI SoYl'llwelft•IV )311 Itel fl I". ln1141•1d al "'' E1t1te ol "'' knOW about the lack Of non• COVef\1111 or Wlrr1ntv, 1.UfHI or lmpli"', $00,rllltlli.rl~ 1•1 lffl of lot l4 ot ~ lbo•t .... m ... llleCM.nl
white history in school text· •1111•d1111 11111. ""'"1"' or -0111 o1 111b01v111oro ot "" o1 ••""'°' Tl!tTt•s. ll'•LMl!R, KJOS • aL.AJI cumllr111tt\, to ,., Ille '""'''"11111 P•l11> Sift Jo1<1Yln, Lon111 d• S.ntllfO •NI IV• Jt"'" o, 11'1lm1r Jr,, books says Ole National c111111...m of tr.e ukl "°'' •K"'" bv 111d s11111auo cs. S•"" ""'• k,,.w,, '' P1a1 ,... I!• c11111111 1 ,.1 11111, '"
E , U t • A · ti , Otff, with lnle•nt lll•reon 11 o~vllltd 111 No. 2 ot lht Red HUI Tr1c:I. 11 pe, m1P Pile A"•· ciMlllrllll "*
\l C 8 lOn SSOCUl On S uld Nolf, 1ov111Cft, II 1ny, unOlr I~ ttc0rclt0 111 l:loClk U, Mlle 17. TE\.: tOS> tJl•SSJ5 (NEA) Center for Human 1er1m of ••Id DH<li ""' dl1rt1•• •M ·~· MIKe1+aMl)l.l1 Recoro1, 111 tl'lt onic1 of AllortMYt ,.r AOml11latril•r PtftllS of l/>f Tr11slft Ind Gt !f'9 Tr111t1 ttlf (Ol,ln!Y llKorlkr ol l.0$ AllSlll'S Wllft.Th~WU~Allllll(MI
Relatlorui. cre1ted bV 11111 Deed. c....,n..,., ca111011111. , PublltlleO or1111• Co.ti Dafly, July )(I
Because h:N-ry books Tl'lt 81nt11(tt1Y undtr .. 1c1 Dfld br Tr.. Nortnff1t••IY 30 1111 01 11i<1 ind""''"''',, 1i, No 1,.. 1315-41 -.u re•IOfl al I bretch er deftull In tr.. klulllwe1terly 360 fffl al I II t
h ave consistently ignored o11111111o111 1tt11rire1 '"-''""' M•eto11>1'1 ~tr.e•lf•rlv 161 '"' of '"' 1o11ow1111. -LEGAL NOTICE
h I of IKICll!«I I nd dtllvertO to tM Tr..,tlfi Tr.. kl\lllle11tarlv recl11111u!1r •.20
t e roe the Negro wrllltn Nollet ol o.ltull "'" ElttlfOfl lo lfCltl of tl'l1 toll0Wln9, ulcl '·'° ICrttj---,::::;;::::-,;::--;;;;;;;;;;;;---
' througbout America 's past c.tYt1 "'' 11nlkr11111tC1 10 1111 \1ld Pio. bet~ cor•11..,1H1 1o 111e tenle• of lh• NOTtCI! TD C•l!D1ro1ts , ' perty lo Nllftv "lei obll11tloro1 •nd roao1. 8tfllnnlllt 11 1111 W11ter!v ~rncr SU,ElllOI COURT OP THI STATI mOSt parents are a s Jg. lfl<lrt11lor °" MIY I, 1'61 !ht undenl9ni!'d of LOI ).d of Pill ! of 1 1ub<llvl1lon of a OF CALIFORNIA ,.Olt THE
DOrant as their Children C.YM<I 111d notice of b•l1Clt It'll! •Jec•llPfl p1r1 of 1111 R1ncl'10 S.nllao<> o. S1nl1 COUNTY OIS OltANGI . lo be 'e«!'ded In Book 151, P••• ~ of Ana. ltld ICllO'•'" II fled Hin ..... ,. .... M about Negro history, the Yid Oll!Clll R~ordo. Tte<t, t"'rvtvtd 1nd planed DY Ch1r1es E1t11t of WILLIAM C. RAN EY,
NEA .. ys Oiied, ,t,IJ{l..,11 $, IHI T He11ty tn AUGU11 1"3• th1n<t 6oulh Of<Hltd
• PROPERTY PROTECTION sci• 30' e1ot •lOnl tM 11~ clfvldlnf Loli NOTICi II MIRla'f OIVIH 1it It.I
J-1.ow many parents know ~o•;oRATION :u1111c1 :ut,,. chltn• •I'd, u"k' ta tht erwi1or1 ·o1 1tie 1bo¥9 11111'11d "'°"""1 !hot Ne~es were on the a:·. He 0111 E•tlern corMr Off .. 1c1 l.ol $17J tt11nc. lll9t 1n Hr10111 hl~l"' (llh'l'I• •••Ir.I 1111 ~"" · • North :It' 'JO' E•lt •lone rr.. .,1c1 ~nt 1,. r.c111lred Ill f!f1 ,..,..,,,
Mayflower or that the first Viet '~.;~~•nl louthNtfll•n 11111 of uk:f Loi l.4. • with tM """''"' VO\ld'le~, 111 lfll ofl'lc•
I I ' d'l1!n1 •nd l t llnkt; thence Notlh so• )O' Off "" clerk (If !ht 1brW• tnlltltd c111.1r1, or success u open h e a r t l"ub!lthtcl N1WP0r1 H•rtoor Newa-"'"' west '' d\11111 1nc1 to nn11;1 10 ""' ta 11re1en1 """'· w1111 t11t MCtuerv
surgery was per formed by eomllll!ld w1111 01u1 J1l1o1, H•woorl NorthWe1i.•11 11ne or 111d Lot :ut. vO\fCfllr1, to 111e ..,nc11rs1111ec1 11 i..w QI-
N ,. , 8e1dl, C1lUor"l1, Awust 1i. 211. J7, llwnct kl\111'1 :M' » W11t I chaln1 111d fie• o1 Gilvln It. Klfn•• AltGor...., 11 l.1w.
a egro uoct-Or, or that a INI n 1.w. 22 1ll\k1 1o "" POlnt of bt9lnn111t, ,1, North HtwPOrt aou1ev1ra. NIWMll Negro organized the blood s11d ,,_,,., 11 mor1 commonlY •••di. c1111W1111, whldl 11 tM oll« of
banks Sy~ m during Wo 1.1 LEGAL NOTICE kng#n II 11611 Arrovo Avenllf, a. ... 1. bUll-ol IM undel'lltntd 111 •II mitt. .. Me f U Af141 C1lllornl1 perl1lnl1111 to !hi flll ll ol Nici Cl•Ctdlnl, War JI ? T,,,;,, o11111 (11h 1n l•wtul mOtlt'I' el w1111111 the -iM eti.r t11t 11r1t ,.111>11a. •'Pr · d. d l d 11'-Jtm lh• IJnli.d St11e1 °" conllrm1tlon Off ule, tloro of 11111 110llc1.
e j u ice oe~ DO ~u • ClltTIPlCATR' 01' IUSINl!ll, or P•r1 u 1h •!Id blll l'Kf tvllknc-td "" Dlltel A11tu1I u. lNI
denly break out like poison '"ICTITIDUS HAM• nntf llCYl"flf lw MOll~lff or T""" o-:: ~~~~.~ ltANEY
jyy" said Samuel B Thi undeu 11nld c1on ctrtllv !MY ,,. °" IM P(", 1e~ :C.:~tta T.!~"'P:~!fflt Of '"' Eit•t• "' lht ' , . ' CO!lducllfll • bll1lneu II 1t.S5 Chyrd! 1rnG1.1nl b · in Abo,,. Ml'llld "*..,' Ethndge, the assistant ex-STrHt, to.ti Mew. c1111or1111, Ynder !ht s 1d1 or ""'" le ~}" w,,•1~, .·~ :nv OALVIH It ICllHI ,. -•--t th l!Cllllous firm ntm• o! C&W ~AINT ANO be ftCtlvtd t i lllt ,,.,..... "" C • eCUllVe secrlt:Wll-y, 3 e BOOY SHOP •NI !hit llld l!rm lt com· II""" 1fttr tht 1!r1t rt11llllc1tlOt1 ht real tl'ld Attt,,1111 ml Uw
center. "It starts when a POMG of th• 1011ow1ne p1non1. wtiou btto•• d11e of 1111. NI ~;.;:;:~~r.::.'iiii .,...
child open up his first pie· n1mn I~ !1111 •NI Pllcet OI N:sl~flCI 1(1 Otlad AUll,J~ ~'J ~ 11· 1 E s N y 0 f • Tt....._i 6"-it11
book ,, f6llOWI. SORENSEN AttlN'MJ Mr Admlnlttr•llr
ture and sees only af. oo...i~ w. w~11• 1
1°• cioon s1'"1• 11oc1minl••r•trl• of 111e e111tt ,.ut>l!llltd o r111111 coe1t 01uv '"11o1.
fluent white children instead to;::i,1~"'W~~. Ol',~U: ttnt111 &tl'fft, o1 JOHN w . SNYDER, AU!lutt JO, 21 1nc1 Mttmber ~ ...... • 10. r . t h • th tDtct1Nd) 1'61 0 pie ures s owing e w o n· COii• Mt, .. , Ctlllornl1. •U•k• WILLIAMS AND IOR•Nltf'I IC"---:-=::-:-::--:::=:===---
drous variations of skin col-011"'~'i:iJ',.:: W'ocd. ""__,:, LEGAL NOTICE
or and hair texture that Rkh1r11 wooc11 Sufi• m •ew•ft ''"· . Sltll al CtlJfornll, DrtnOt COlll\IV: U• I, Stf11t1 llrMI aAlt ftf
make up the American Oft Aututf I, lNI, btlort me, • Not•N LOI Allfl)tl, C•ll-11 tWU NOTICE TO CRl!DITOltS
"'"'ene " Publlt I" •l'ld 11>• ••Id $1ttt. 1trwn1ltv feh 11111 ,:IJ .... IW SUll'l!ltlOR COUIT 011' TK• STATI OP ""' • 1ppe1!'fcl Donald W Wood1 i ncl Rlch1rd Publlsl'led Or1111t Co.11 DtllY Piiot, CALl .. DRHIA ll'Olt THI COUNTY 01'
Senators, like Hugh Scott, wooe11 know11 1o ,,.;, 1o .,. t111 "".,,,, AUii"''' 20. 21. 11. '"' Ji.Ml o•A1101
(R·Pa ) are calling for a wh<>H 111mes ire 1u1»cr1bec1 to t~t wnM" LEGAL NOTICE 1rt1. A·s,nt • 1.,.1romtnl ff!d 1eknowilcllled l'lllY I J• Eilill ti' \IEILIN A. U.STEnll, n~w commission on Negro K,,',',"•c'rtzt·~-;1;1 0tt111ec1.
hlSitO'""' and culture. and Jo-E~ 01v!1 1'·'°"4 • NOTICE IS HERE&V GIVEN to "" • J CIRTlll'ICATI! O' •UllHllS credl10r1 of Ille 1bov1 f'lmld dtc.10•t1I parents can d O their Own Nolirv Pvbllc·C•llfornll ,_ICTITIOUS MAMI that ~ti oerten1 htvlno cltln'lt 1111111t !ht
. . Prlnclo1t Otl1c1 In Tiit ul'ldltllllnad don C•rlllv hi Is con-uld decld!lflt ''' r1<111lr..:I to Ille llltm, pa-rt, by m o nitoring thell' O••l'IU• Couft..,. d\fC'llnD 1 11u,1,,.11 a t 111'1·70 Got111rd, with "'' ntetnarv VOll(h•r•, In thl ofllct
c hildren's books to see that My co;nm1111on E•11lrn Hvntlnoton se&d!. c111torn11, vlldtr tM o1111e c11rto. o1!fie •l>PY•1111111ec1 court. or
th • ~. Jct f Junt l • 1970 lktlltoul firm nlmt of LORETTA JAN to pr11tnt lllem, wltll thl n1ctu1rv ey give a w ue p ure 0 l"Ybllttlld Olano• COii! OallY Piiot, GIFTS •NI th•I .. Id firm It comPOSHI of VOVClll,., to tr.e ... ne11rtl1n"' ., Ille otliCI
American life today, urged :9':u" i:i, 20. 27 •ncl k'Pttmi:-m.ii th• 1011ow1n1 .,.,.on, w11o1t "'m• in NII "' h•r •tto•MY. RICHAllO o , Ind llllU Of rtt!de11ct !• II fol~' G.1,ltDNE lt .... Norl'll Mt!" $1rHI, S...11• Ethridge. w. It. w-111, 17261·70 Golll•rd SI., 61)(), s111t1 AM. c111larnl1 '2701 which !1 LEGAL NOTICE Hl.H'lllnolon Be1ch, Ctl1lor1111. the pl1e1 ol b\r1!<1111 or ti!• yn<11r1loned 111
NEA Backs
Lower Age
For Voting
01ttd AutUlt t, 1961, 111 n'\lfftrt H<lllnlnt lo llll t1t1t1 al llld
W. R, Wood•!! llte"'ent, within ti• monl~t 1t1tr 1111 flr1t ClllTIPICATI! OP aUSINlll, Slaft of C1Ulor11J1, Dn1"1e COllnlv: pybllutlOl'I of 11111 nolle1.
l'ICTITIOUI NAMI On 1.utUlt '· 1'61, klort me, I Not1rv O•lld AllOUll 16. lNI Thi Ynder1l111ed do ctrllt'I' 1 tm ~ l"ublfe In •nd fol' .. Id S!att, parto111!1Y ILA 8. CASTITTEI
Ov<:lln1 I bl/11""' 11 2M2 NtwD<>l'I 1ppearird w. It. Wood•ll knowl'I le "" to Adml"llfr1trlll
8oultvtrd, Cc1l1 Mt ... C111forn11, uf!dtr be th• '""'°" w~11 111me 11 tYb$Crl btd OI 1111 E1t1!1 el 11\1 IM IJcl'ltlou1 firm n•m• of BAY CENTElt le !tie wllll!n ln1!romtnt I ncl ICll.llOWled.. lloboW n1mK1 dtc"''"'
T.V, aNI 11'111 ltld firm 11 comPOMcl (If HI ht lltCYlld tr.. Mmt , llilCNAl;D D, GARDNl!lt lht folklwlng PllfllOl'I, whole ntmt In IYll !OFFICIAL S!.1,Ll A"-rMY It l.lw
I nd Pllct or 'Ht61!nc1 II 11 tolloWI: Vlc!Ol' J, RvlOY .. Hfrt11 Mflll St,..!, IUlll tit
BILL HOPl(INS, 21)4.11 B1~vltw Hcllrv Public· C1lllomll Si"tt A111, C1ntt.r'ftl1 '2111
AYtnlfl. "'"'' ....... C1lllort1!t. Prl11cl1al Ollie• In T1F1 '"o 147.1141 Dtled Awu1t 1,, 1961 O••~oe Countv "~' fl• Adml11l1tr1tl'll
Slll HOPl(INS M1 CommlUIOl'I E~olrn PYbllthed Drtl'fl Coar! tltllY ll'llol,
Stile ol C1tlforn11, Or1111e Coun..,.: se11e!'nDolr 11, 11n Autuit 70, 21 111C1 Stt1lemDolr 3, JG, 0.. Aut"'ll lt, 1961, bllott mt, 1 Nct1rv l"ub!llM<:f Ora11111 Coa1t Dilly Piiot, lffl lOt·'ll
\VASHI NGTON (UPI) -l'ubllc In tnd lcr uld $1111. "'l<>ll•llV AUllllll 13, 70, 27 incl .stptembt:• '·1 '.:=---,,-,-.,-,,-:c:-===:---
lr You feel Old now better IP.,.tfed BILL HOPl(INS know11 to mt to 196* 1'4MI LEGAL NOTICE
, be 1'111 Plroon wt\Qft name 11 1ub1erlbedJ -"---;;:J;(i°AicNi'VT1f'ie---1--:c::-:;.~~~~:;;;;.:;-;;--get a firm grip on those lo "" wllllln tn1tf\lm1nt 111111 tcknowlHI•· LEGAL NOTICE C•ltTIPICATI OP •USIN•ss. . bl h d . ·11 ed M U9Cllled "" u mt, "' sens1 e s oes an tron pl s . (OFFIClAL SEAL) ll'ICTtTIOUS NA
Th N t • 1 Ed t ' JOHPh E 01 1 p .Mftl Tll• und1rilontd don tertltv I t m cct>-e a' I 0 n a UC~ J?n Not1r11 p·..,bll;~.nfor"1• CIRTll'ICATI OP IUSINlll. 11\lcil~ I ~ .... ,. II ,. • .,, H••llor
Association (NEA) has }Oln · Prl11clp1I OlllC• Ill l'IC:TITIOUS NI.Ml 9oult~••d COlll M•••· C1!1lornL1. """"'
d th · • rt Of O•ll'tt COlln!V T~t 11ndlt1!11nad do «Mltv lMY l rt ""' flct1c'1°"' !!rm ntmt r:tf llLl.'1 e e v-01ces m suppo M' CommlHIOfl E'i~lrt1 (MOUcllM • bu1lnnt ., 1.)DD w, Golt! lloPPL!ANCI' CENTEJI 1nd 11111 ,.1c1 """
giving 18-yeaf Olds the VOle. Junt 21, 1970 Hlw1,, Ntwl'Qrt 8e1ch, C1 tlfar11l1, vfttf1r It coml(lle(I ol ~~ lollOWllll 1Mrson,
, • . • . PuDJl!llftl Ore"'' Coasl Otltr l"llot. 1111 llct!tl-firm n1me ol TT wl'IOM Mml 111 11111 end ,11c1 of rnl-The NEAS pos ~t:ion lS that AUii"''' 20, ,, •nd ~Plfmber l. It. ASSOCIATES •nd tllal u ld firm I• '°""' dtnc:t 15 11 follcvt1:
Young people today are bet· lHll 107'41 POlfd ol ll'te fallowtng perlOnl. wi'Hlll WILLIAM I!, CUMMINGS. 1510
, . n1tn11 In f"'U t nd ,.11cn r:tf ruldtnc1 11'1 Mlrl mtr Drive, lllbot. C1lllor~ll.
ter informed than thetr LEGAL NOTICE 11 1o1iow1 : 1 ,.. 011ec1 •wu11 1t. ,,..,
I h t th Garv Lii Trllntt1, lltt W, II WM e CUMMINGS
at ers were a . e same 111vd .• N.wPOrt Beac.11, c1111o•n11. S!•t• a1 c11110,n11; 0 ,.111, count'!:
age and far more interested ll'·lllM Mlk• Allfn Todd. 12fl 2111. Aot A. COii· 011 Autuit 1,, "'*· before,.,.., , Nolfrv
l·n campus politics as well ''''"''''' 0, '"''''''· 1' Mt••· c111111•nlft. Public tn 1nd i..r 11ld st1tt. '"'°n•11Y '· • " Olltcl Awu1! 1, lt6*. IPPflrHI WILLIAM E, CUMMINGS Others have pointed out F1CT1T1ous NAM1! G•rv Let T•lb1e11 known 10 m• to lit "'' ,,,,.,.. whoo•
' . Thi 11nde<1tontd dou rertUy l'te h (Ofl• MICPl11I A, Todd I I lltcrlbld lo th• wlll'lll'I In·
that if l8·year-0lds can die 1111e11ne • bl/1!11111 •t 111~1 North Al"'°" stttt Cll c1111or11t1, or'"'' Cc11ntv: "i'fM et1: ,.:'tr •ck!IOWladetd hi ixtcv!•d
for their COUD1J'y t!Jey Can WIV, Or1"11t Cou111Y AlrPOrt, S.nt1 ,t,n1, On AYllYll 1, lff&, belort me, I NOllfY l~\lm
'. , C1111orn11, under 1119 llc!\110111 firm "'''" PuD!lc In Ind for 1tld Stale, pe,.o~tJIY loFi~2l~l SE,t,L) have some say tn WhO IS ol ORANGE COUNTY WEI.THEii: appeared Gtrv LH Trlb1t11 t n-d Miki Joieoh IE OtV\\ · ti t t t CENTRllol, WE,t,THEl't CENTRALS INC., AUtn Todd k!IOWn lo mt la Doi Ille Ptr1Cn1 NollfY p'ubl!t·Cl!lttrnlt running \a COUO ry, 00. i nd Ille! u ld firm II ton'IPOled al tM fpl. wtio.1 n1m11 1r1 t\ll>1(flbecf IC the wl!hln p lnCl»I Offlct Ill
Som e p oint out that youn g 1ow1111 Pinon, whou n1m1 111 full i nd 1n1trum111t 11'1d ecknowltd1t0 1~•v ••· 0 ;,no• eountv
people under 18 can drive Pl•ce "' ronkleflCt 11 11 1onow1: K<O~~c~IL ';~;Ll MY comm11slon l xPlrn Jch" •. Stewe, ~131 Vt !esoo lt111. Ju111 11. lf70
cars. marry and pay taxes. cos11 MH•, c111forn11 f2•2• g;;.~ ~~b~I~. C•Hlornl• ,.ub111hec1 or1rioe coa1t 0111Y '"11o1.
A nd anyone who has been Daltd Awint 17• 1N1 Pr1nc:1p11 oi11ce tn A .... ..,,, '°· 27 •M Stpllmber 3• ..,"· John A. Stowe C I 1'61 1C.
r eading the newspapers can ~iAT~~'cgt~1;~.RN1,1., Z'v'"l!..~~~1~ Exoi,., LEGAL NOTICE
have Httle d~ubt about !he o~Nl.utul! 12. 1"9. btl.,... me.~ Noterv Publlt~~cg,!~u~9~°"'' 01111 Pile>!,
effect youngsters are having Pybllc In •nd tor •110 S••1•· ot•50n11rv • 1, 13 20 27 1961 1.1474 '"·J!M7 • • . tP1>11rftl John A. Slowe k110wn to me "" .. wvi • • • '
on the national pres 1dent1al be "'' "'"°" w11o1e n•m• 11 1ubtc•ll>Hf -'----~-~~,.-,,,,----c11tTIPICATI Oii' au11N•S1,
11111 l ' nd LEGAL NOTICE ll'ICTITIDUI HAMI elections, even without the : : 1~~uito:r";~u:,e,;~,1 •cknawlad•·1 ______ _,.,,,,,------·J Thi vnd1ra11111C1 do cer11tv 111tv •re
vote. {Oll!Cl1I St•ll p ->0"'9 t;11nd1XTl11g • !)1111/llH '' QV. l?nll St .. Ir t h th l t l JOU!'Dh t:. D1~lt CllTll'ICATI 01' •USINISI, N._rt aHch, C11UornT1, unc11r Int. tic·
e . 0 1l g l 0 Not1r11 Public. C1Hter11i1 PICTITIOUS NAM• 11110..,1 firm ftlmt ot Oll'INION and thtt
miniskirts and bell bottoms Prl11cl P1I Offl<• In Tht vnde,.lonld <IOI• culllv he 11 COf'lo 1e~1rmwi:,1co:;~1 .. ~u~lh~:1:;:-;:
in the voters' booth is h a rd ~'.,'"~~~"f.~11: .. e.,1,,1 ovctlno • l>!Jslntt• it P. 0 · BoM '01~· co .. ~ r"1~'111c1 ,,. 11 f611ow1:
t 11 . h the e's J\flll 2!, lt70 11 Mesa, C1lltornl1, undtr 1ht llctlllov1 1ton1ld Rayltlford :ml P-tll'lh•tll'I
n swa o~. nwever, . r PublliMO 0,1111, C01it Ot!IY Plklf 11rm n•m• of EUPHOR111o •fld '"'' 111d l cost• Ml1• • slill plenty "'-f time to get US· Awv11 1'. 10, 21 •Piii SePr1mbtr l: ITrm 11 comPOted of th• lollowln• "'"'"' 'o":;,1111 Mc1<tt1i.1. nn P1cmc Ayt., v Wl\oSI n•m• In full Ind 111c• of ,etldfll(I COlll Mew ed ~o the idea. A lowered lHI 13,.... I••• f6l10w1: 0,1111 """ 11 1'61
V·oti·ng age '• st.,·11 far lrom LEGAL NOTICE 01v1c1 Aoreu. 11•9 1111rw111 Strttl. .-_-Id lt1vn1tord .., C0$!1 M111, C1llfornl1 "'''· Oenn1t Mc1Ctt1ltY Jaw. Da!IO Au1uit S, H6t. STATE OF CALIFOl'l:NfA.
01vlll Aaren QFf:.,1.NGE COU NTY· LEGAL NOTICE l"·»otn $!tie ot C1lllornl1, Or111tt Coun..,.; On ""''· u . 1'61.' btlot• ,..,, 1 Nettrv CtlTl,ICATI! 0,_ IUSINISS, On .1,119..,11 $, ,,.., Dollot1 "''' 1 N1>llrv Public In 1NI !or ttld Stitt, i!>tr1C111llY P·JOfU 't(TlTIOUI NAME Public In llld for 11111 Slit~, PtrtanfllY l!)Pllfftl ltonald ll:tYl'lllord tnd D1rml1 CERTl~ICATE OF I USINESS, Th• Uncl trlltnHI do ctrrll, •r..v ire con. 10011...:I 01vld •11r•1• known to,.... to lit McKlnl•Y known to .... lo be the "''"'"
FICTITIOUS NAME llVCllllll 1 llutlneu tf 431 Hlllofr_, 1111 P•non WhOle n•mt 11 IYbt(rlbtd to wllou l'ltrnfl ll'I 1ublcrlbfd to tl\I Wllhlll The u11<le•1l1nN1 do cedlh thfv are Coron• del Mir, Ctllfomli under IM ric-tr.. within Jn11r..,m1nt •nd 1ckriow11Qied lnitrum1t1t ind t cknowlecltlO tMv •x·
cor><lvdlno • bvJin~n Al ll• Ma,lne Ave .. lltloui firm n•mt of' EMPLOYEE ht t~tc..,ltd the .. mt . ecvled Ill• 11mt.
B•lboa htal\d, Callfornl1, under th~ lie· BENEFIT PLANS Ind tflit tlld 11,... 11 IDFFICllloL SEAL) !OF,ICIAL SEAL)
tl!I0<.11 llrm name of THE W!GWl>.M ann comoo•ed al 111, lll!klwlno peJ'IM1, Wl!on JOMPh IE. D1vl1 . ROlt llt C. knol! thet 1&Td IJrm 11 com11C1«1 ct. th• loHcw. n•met In 11111 l f!d Pl9tn Of rnldenct lrt Not1rv Pvb!lc • C•l1'6r"l1 Neterv Publ!c. Ctlllcr11t1
Inc ,..,....,,, wl'lose nam•• <n full •f!d 11 lnllGw'' Prlnclo•I OlllCI In P•lne!Pel Oll!ct In
11!1ctt or tfJl!lenct a'! •• lollGws: Emmoil w 11.lclltt'd'°"' '°", survo Orll'ICt Countv o.,,,., C011n..,. GlloYLE HUNTER ct •1n1 TOtJtBn L1111, "un!lnfto.n fl••c~. c'11tlotnll. Mv Commlnloro E~pl~1 My comm!ulO!I E•Pllto Avon11t. Fou~Taln Valltv, C•llfornl•. G F Creo11t Wolvrrton ?<15' T Sl!n JUlll 21, 1•70 JulY 1, 1'n
LllllD4 SAOLE,11 ol !:!l 0 th Wtv, St . ."NtW....rt lhach, C:ttlle~nlt. u Pub!l'.l\lcl Or•noe C011t 01llY .. llol.. "ublllfled Or"'°' COid 0111'1 '"Hot,
Lot10 8•1Ch, C1hlornl1, Oiled JulY lJ, lNe, AIJ{IYll II. U, 2'0, 27, lNI 1l5&-H "-"'Gust U, 70, 27 i nd Septtmbtr f,
DGH!d Auou1t s, \968 emmtn w. IUt~••dtOfl LEGAL NOTICE IHI Ut7"61
GAYLE HUN1EFt G. F. c'"u. WolYtrton LEGAL NOTICE LINOA $11.0LER State Of C1lllor11lt Or•"lt COl.lntv•
S!tlt ot C111fornl1, 0,anoe Cnunlv : 0.. July 25, 1f61, befol'I mt, 1 .Nola"" NOTIC• 0 1' TP!USTl!l'I IALI ll'·>tt4I
On Autu1I 5, 1961. Mlore ""' 1 lllollrv Public 111 tnd tor .. 1d !Iott, perw111!1v NI , D Jiff) Cl ltTIJllCATI OJI aUSIMISS Public In and for 1fl!I Stott, P<t!IQnAltv •-••tel Emmett W. l lCl'llfd\Of\ Ind G, 0" AUllYll 21, 1 .... It 1:00 G'Clock l".M~ PICTITIOUI NAMI '
•<><>•ffNI GAYLE HUNTER Bn-d LINDI>. F. Cr'°"uo Wolvorton ~nown to mt fo bf at 1111 SOllll'I tnl,lflCI ot' ll'te Ortntt Coull< Thi ndl l ntd doel ctrllly M It Ctlrt-
Sll.OL ER known to mt lo l>t lht oe .. an• tkoi .,.~.,,,, wllOlt "'"""' 1,. 1..,bicrlbed IV c....,rth<>\llt.._!~11!1 ""'· c1ntorn11, " n1 w!>o!.e namei art 1ubtu !l>Hf 10 lnt within tom. Wllllln ln1trum.M nd k lld SECIJl'l:ITY p.#,1!Jm NAllON.1,L aANI(, du<:ttne t bli1l11111 II P. 0. Box $'71, ln11rum~111 Ind lt \,,.wledfftl tl'le~ e~· ed tllt't' e•tc1t!ld 1111
1 IC now ,. 11 dYIV •PDOlnllfCf lrvthie undtr f11t dMCI G•r"'" Grove, C11!1'o,n!1. llllClll' Ill• flc-
Ku!ed Ifie u me, (0FF1Ct,1.L SEAL} ,.,.... "' ""''' d1tfd .l,Prll 3, 1"3, m•dt I»' 1!1!111.11 firm "'"'' of THE Gll'T NE'T Ormah V. Liii 11 GEDllGE p kltEl81CH Incl aAll8ARA 11'1d 1'1111 .. ld firm 11 comPmed al th•
Note,.. Pvbllt<C1lllor"11 ~ot~ll-1';, ~T" J KRElllCi-1 recorded °" Aort! t, 1ffl. lollowlng """'"' Wllolt fllme tn full l l'ld "•fftCIPtl Offlrt '" 0 ry Cu i fo 1~ hccll 1500 j.10e 531 ol Offlcl•I Recor<ts 1111c1 of re1tdence 11 •• f61klwt! O•anoe COllnlV ~1"!.1 Oi' 1 •ll •nil In !ht olll~ of tlle CDllnlV Retarder of JOtffh $. O'A11tony, '1!l 11\cnmond
Mv Commlulon t~olr11 J~v ~";1";9~1 0" t•Plr•i Or•nl• ,0..,,,..,. Ca!lfornl• tw reatan al Ave,, Gl rdtn Grove, C.lltornl1 '1 ... 1
PYbll • .hl"O M:;::.~."~oetl D1llv Pile>!, Pubtl111.::· Or;nv•
0
cc111 DtllY Plfal. Jv-::~ul:i!' .... ~~·:i:,:;~"'r!°r=r:.· ~ Dlltd ~=~'~ 1:!.tito"Y
... UtUll 6, 13. 2'0, 27. lhll llSI~. IV lO •"II Aututl ,, ll, ?Cl, lt61 lllMI 0.1::11 1~1Tiectlon to Sei°I Ul'ldlf Dlt'CI $1111 of Ctl!torn\1, I.Of Ariotle• Cou11tv:
OI Tn.o1t n1vln9 t1e1111 ,ecorclld 11 provided On J "'IY n . !ff.I, f>tfor• l'M, • NO!tf'\I LEGAL NOTICE tor lw llw It'll! mor'll 111111 lllrte mo111hl 1"\lbllc !II •!Id lo<' u ld llUt, Jll•Mntlly ---=:..:.:::_:.:_:..:_::.::. ___ I--------------I 111v1"0 1lap1ed tine• t!H;h recordllfel\. •-••lfCf Jo1t'Ph $, D'Amo"v kfl<>Wft to
,._,lllOS will 1ell 11 Pllbllc 111Ct1oro to thl tllolllll ,,,. to be !ht "''°" w1191t n1M1 It
CEITIPICATI! OP I U1tNllS, l.l,I Ill b!ddtl' for u1!1, P~Ylblii In l1Wlul fl"IOMY 111blcrlbld lo tl'lt within lntfl'Umtnl t r.d
P!CltltOUS NAM! NOTICI' TO CRl!OtTOIS al 1111 Ut1llHI S!•ltt of Arr,.rlCI 1t tlmt If 1cknowltdotd tit lxtculld tllt .. me. I U,l'lttOI COUIT 01' TM• 1•lt• wlltmyt 1;0Ytn1nl or w1rr1n1V t•· tOFFICl,l.L SEAL ) TM uf>de'1IOMd do Ctr!Uy "'" ••c ITITI! o .. (,l.Lll'OJINIA POlt PflltlfCf or lmPlltcl 81 lo 11111, poneulan llo!lee L, Q11l11n (f)ndUcl!ne • bu1ln•n ,, l~(t l"l•t•nll~ l MI COUNTY 0' D•ANOI or 111cumbr1nce~. Ill• ln'-11 ClflYfYtd"' Nol• .... P11bllc . C1lllor"l'
Avent.'t. NtwPQ~ 8ttth, Clh!Ol'nll , U~ N .. A-411SH Incl riow htld b' !t UfMSet ll ld dPld ot Jlrlr>el11I 0111a 111
I"' llCllllOllt firm 111mt ol NEWPORT f'tl.tt of $. MEl\llN SALVESON. truit, In '"° lo !ht p,.,...r1v 111 0•1111r Lai Anttltt, C1lllornl1
lltUCK I.EASING lf>d lh•I 111<1 llrm 11 °'""'"· COlll'llY, S11r1 ol C111!01t11•. dc•CrlblO •• : MY COl'nnlllllon bplru
(OfllP(li.ed QI lllt fol kl"'1nt oertoni, .... PWn• NOTICE IS Htltl!BY CIVl!N le Ille Tnt Norllle1111rtv enM~N' ol Let 11 J~IY 10.. 19111 ~:~~ull Ind llt(•I of rttl<Ulll(t 1'1 erO('dTlera of ,,,. •bovll nimt<t d9Cffltm o1 lr1d No. JOO. I" 1r.. CllV al Cotti Publl1hld Orin.it Co.ti Dl!tv Pllof,
R1vrroOM G Mll•l'll 1)11f Eltlbrool< ll'llt Ill""'°"' IMYl1111 (le!m1 •••11111"" Mtlt ••• snown on I m11• llltrwol Allf\llt '· I). 111. 17, ltM 13S4•'f
Downt: c.ut0.11i1 ' ' .. id dtCtdtnl '"' r•11<1lrtd to fllil 1Mm t-dtd 111 boC*: If. 111911• 11 •11111 11,
... ,,.,,:;,. CltC-1. 1).U Pl•c•nlll A'ft .. wllh ""' MCHllfY VOYChefl, In ""' ofllc~ Mloctll•MOlll Ml•t.. •tcord1 al u ld N-1 8eldl Ca lll of ""' <l<t•-of ll'lt •ll<lVT rntilted (O\lr1, or Or111tt C.ou111'1 DelH Autllll \, 1,.S to ti••••nl lhtm, wl!h 11\f 'll«'lllrv Said ••~ wilt blO m..,. to !>fY tlle
JI mo:..i 0 Mlllm """''~"'·lo Ille Ul'ldt'111""' ,, tl'lt lllllC"' obll••llon!o IKY•e-d bY 11\d CS.e-d of ''"''' A~ (ec:i n! her Allo•ntTI H.11.il!MON & Jl!NSEN, lrw;!udlf'ICI Ill t0\'1, fffl Ind IKl>e."l•t OI
StATt OF U.t.tFOINIAt UI North Mel11 "'"'' S\1111 IOOd.. klll• tr1111M tnct Of !ht l•u1t crt~tff ov U IO l)ltAlllGE COIJNTY · llont , Ctl!fornll, '2101, Wllkfl II !flt tlKI fttd of lnllh Ill tumt IXPlndtod llndlt
°"A In .... Mfort mt • NOlll"/ or b\rtl11<t11 ol lht ur>dtrti.ntd In •II ,,.,., IM i.rmt "' .-Id dffd of '"'''· 11(11 "'"" hlblk ~ .... nd ·,.,.. ~Id $1111 ·!Mr'IOnl lfY 111'1 11r111111111 l'O"" "''"' frl llld ~ .... i.1 Ind $1.J'4.<IJ ''"''lnlll(I "'lllCIPt l
' , .,.,., 1111111 r • --• Cll !ht. rwitto H<'llrld bv ••Id "'"'fl trutl, VJNG THE -rtll ••"""'°""' G. M/191'11 I nd Af>dr•w • w • • men I """' • flrsl with 111te,nt ttom ""'II U !NI 11 !ft ltld SER Gect t-.'t 1e me to lit !ht """'' publlutlon ol ll'llt ""1\ca. noi. oro k:lect '
.........., -.,. wblcrlbld lo 1111 Wltnln Ditto ""'utl ~. ''-· Dl"'-1 ~ .... ...:St a ltll PUBLIC .,.,,_.,, lfld •ctflo'Wlldtld thtv ••• Attor.. Knoc S..l'ft-s1cuii.1TY PACIFIC "°"""' !'I'll .. ,.,... l!•~lr1• ot tl'lt Wiii NATIONAi. aAN K
IOfflCW. ='• Ot It MARMO': :'J;':;:.,.nemtd ttcfftnf l"ormer..,. SECURITY Fll&l AND
,..,,,,., ll'Vbtlcv• C•lllornli AllOflorn Al L1w, NATIOHAl. 8"-NK TRADE
Prff'ICJ"I Oftlet 11'1 .. Nwth Melft "'"'• 11 1',..,llte °"-c-fY S•fl• IN~. By Ltwl• w. McM~lltn Phone 642·432.1 MT t.,.,,....left Eolr• l1111t Aft.,. C•ll'-'1111 ru 11 11ou 1111nt Tr"'''
-
H lt.1' Ttft C'"' SU·1NI Jtr•I ill••• Olfklr 2211 W. Bfi fboi Blvd. ~ o.-t c;..., 0,1,., ~not .,,,._.,1 -.. 1x•cuT11x 11111 Newport leach ~--n, tfl fl Ml .... ,""fm!....:':'-:-ra.~i~-1 D11~1= .. :.~~!~).~~ Col•t 0.11¥1~~''-------------"
LEGAL NOTICE
l 1tjlijiji(j.
I
------
WAMJ
TO
CLEAN
UP
ON
YOUR
CLEAN
oun
FOR
FA.m
FASTI
ACTION I
CAU
DAILY
PILOT
CLASS·
IFIED
DEPT.
D
I
A
L
D
I
R
E
c
T
-
6
4
2
•
s
6
7
8
. . -. •• "":' ·---.
DAILY PILOT
WANT ADS ' .._~ ,.
·'
. . ., .....
HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSU FOR SALi HOUSES FOR S-'L I HOUSES FOR SAL°l'
General 1000 General 1000 General noa
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
VACAN'l' • lMMEDIATE
POSSESSION. Large living
room with fireplace, big din·
ing room. spacious kitchen.
Cedar lined closets • double
hardwood Ooora. Genuine
lath and plaster consu-uc-
tion. Room to build another
unit on this large lot with
alley acceS!I for boat or trail·
er. Owntt wants a fast sale.
Bring your cheok book and
steal this well built home
for ONLY $24.950!
IMMACULATE·
5 BEDROOM
Jderu for the la!'&\" or grow.
in&: family, 2,liOO square
feet! 3 baths, formal dining
room, spaciola family room,
all e-lectric kitchen ..with
breNdast area and »large
pantry, Beautiful carpet& &
drape s throughout, lovely
patio, pool size yard -pride
of ownership landscaping,
Offered· at $36,500, Submit
yaur own home on our
guarantee trade plan.
3>&3 WESTCUFF DRIVE
646-7711 Open Eves.
REDUCED $3000
Ov.r!wr moved and will W"ll
VA NO DOWN. This comer
home is vacant & ready for
YoW' occupancy, 3 BR, 2
baths, with .shake roof, lo-
cated in Newport Beach
U~r Bay.
New Price $29 ,500
Newport
ot
Victorl1
646-8811
CO pen
Evenings)
No Down on
the Eastside
Charming and roomy :! BR
with bdwd Dors. brick FP,
covered patio. Obie gar on
alley • boat or trlr stor11ge.
Close to schools and West·
dill ·shopping. No down to
Gls -low down FHA. Only
$20,500 -Hurry!
Colesworlhy & Co.
642 ·1777
1901 Harbor Blbd., C.M.
Open Eves,
BALBOA PENINSULA
DUPLEX
Up~ unit has 3 bedrooms
2 J:>ath!, lower has 2 bed·
room. Electric kitchen \vith
bui!t·irui. Large doubll'! gar-
age with laundry area. -
$17,500 -always t't'11led.
646-7171 546-2313
OPEN EVES.
THE fJEAL
EST A T ERS
A CHARMER!
Immaculate -Early Ameri·
can. 3 Bedroom&', Family
Room, Double Fireplace,
Double garage. Work Shop,
&srf~
real~
2414 Vista Del Oro
Newport Beadl
The ~lcGills would like
you to buy their charming
"Blulla Francisca" plan
home, They will take
$35,500 -ma.ybe evet1 a
llttle less. You will
be getting a choice end
Unit on major Grtenbelt.
3 BR, 2~ bath&, Sl)lit·level
with -· pool """ 11.Wl.Y, An exceptionally
fine value, Plee.1e · do
not miaa their home if
You are contidering the
Bluffs· easy way of li1e.
OPJN DAILY
CALL 644·1133
and see fur yourself.
SPANISH HACIENDA
?t1uy Bueno 3 BR 2 bath home
that O\\"ntr ha~ used imagin·
alion in creating this clever
Spanish doc<or with loads ol
expensive wood panelling in,
most rooms. 2 fireplaces, a
~lt·in kitchen, outstanding
yard with unusual wood
home at only $25,500 • EZ
terms,
tJ• 1093 Baker, C.M. S4£>.5440
Eastslde Tri-level
Quiet cul-de-sac ltrfft. This
home is extra special ~ ha~
2 P8tiof, a large lot and
quality deluxe f e a t u res
throoghout. Call now to see
this large home.
$34,500
New port
ot • h Vlctorl1 10 n macnab 646•8811
Dover Shores (Open
A large View 1-lorne plllnned Evenings)
for relaxation and com.fort. J •!'l:'"'~!"~!"~"'"'""' Every room enjoys a mag· for The H•ndyman
niHcent Bay and Mountain A llttle paint will m ake ii
View, a fairyland at night. "Home Sweet Horne." Va·
Sliding glass walls open on-cant and will &ell FHA and
to 8 large landscaped ter· VA end pey your costs to
race bordered by omam en. allow for painting, Modem
tal balum-ade, A delightful 3 bedroom, 2 bath, bard·
~ spacious home, Room wood noon Jully carpeted.
tor billiard table, and fam. SACRIFJCE.
ily room with fireplace and
walkin wet bar. 4 or S bed·
rooms, 41,.1 baths. 0 w n er
may exchange for smeJler
Baycrest Home or Lot.
Only 189. 750
Call for •r>Pt.
642·8235
THE BLUFFS·
BEST BUY
You can"t beat the low price
on this ,beautiful pride of
ownership home. F our spac·
ious bedtooms, 3 Queen siz-
ed baths. magnifi~t living
room with open beam ceil·
lngs and restful view. Own-
er transfe1Ted out of area •
sa.ys sell NOW! Only $36,500.
Submit ~r smaller hon1e
on our guarantee trade plan.
2043 WESTCLIFF DRIVE
646-7711 Open Eves,
Waterfront Homes
With Slips
in private comm~ity of
single family homes. Pr'°
vate slips for large boats.
3 BR, 2 bath •••• $52 ,900
2 Bdrm + den , , $59,500
Waltel' Haase ...,.,,.
Coldwell, Banktr & Co.
2211 •• c-1 HllliWfl' N...-t •11dl. Clllftnlll
10 .. JUI Ollt J.?M
INCOME UNITS
CC>SrA MESA OF1'~ICE
2100 Harbor Blvd.
545-9491 Open till 9 Pl\!
15 UNITS
I ACRE
PARK LIKE SETTING ·Top
Costa Meaa rental area, con-
sisting of't.1 • S plex and 10
individual u'.aits plui garages
-13 - 2 bediqoms and 2 • 1
bdirooms • Th~ price ? Law.
er than you tllink! All tax
advantages YoU JteE'd •
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. 17th St. 646-4494
$500 DOWN
On this 4 bedroom 2 bath
family home. aose to every.
thing. Just inlroduced to the
market -won 't be aroW1d
long! $130 per month in-
clude&' principal &: intei·est
ro43 WESI'CWFF DRIVE
616-7711 Open Eves,
lei's Join Forces
and Grow With
Our Community
~ Estate Protes1iionals -
We ean offer you a pica·
sant, active at.n1osphere fol'
REAL 'Production.
BOYO REALTY
3629 E. Coost H°"-y., Cdtlt
675-5930
Boat Ye.rd. Call for appoint· I"'!!!!!"'!'""~'!"""~~!!
ment 10 see this spack>us H rb y· H'll custom bum home. 114.500. a Or leW I S
JEAN SMITH,
REALTOR
400 E. 17th St .. C .M. 646-325.S
For.closure
Nl'f'ds paint & ya1'tl wo rt,
but here's a great boy at· m.aoo wil_h 10% down & a
90% loan at G.9% interest
-SZ19 n10. includC'g every.
thing, 4 BR, fan1ily room
& semi.formal dining room.
Good carpeting througbout.
Don't delay on this Dill'!
COLLJ!X;E REAL 1'Y !;46.5880
By Beach 10% Down
3 BR 2 balh home, Ja.rg~
living + fan1ll)' room, fi~
pla~. built· ins. cpts / ctrpg,
liu'&e glll"age, VaCMI ,
Rltr. 646-39'28 EvH, 4%9:Q
*LACHENMYER
Neat As a Pin
Good Elistslde locatiOll, 3 BR + den. Ahllmr 5~ <;~ Joan.
St56 Prrr. ~"hown by appt.
ONL~' $2'l,!ti0
~tlZEU.. ~lLliy
"13-ml
*Country Club Home*
~ 1q. 11. Unu~ual. OnC' of a
kind. A way of lift. $62,900. -
Corona del Mir
Lusk built homes located
in the Southland's most de-
sirable &: fascinating area.
Schools & Calli. Irvine
campus just mo m l'n t s
away, Sensibly priced from
$34.000 to $48.90:>
LUSK HOMES
Directions: !\1acArthur Blvd.
from Pacific Coast Hwy, or
Newport Frwy. Turn on San
Joaquin Hills Rd., t h e n
follow riigns to model area,
$2500 BELOW
FHA APPRAISAL
Newport Ucia:hts view home .
2 Bdnn,., 2 baths plus family
room. Extra guest house
v.1th bftth. Oul of !own oWTicr
says acll. FHA appraised
for $26,SOO. Priet'!d at $24,0ll
• $1000 down.
!j;l;6.2313 6'J6.nn
THE fJE.AL
ESTATEPS
NEEDS FAMIL y
Vacant 4 Bdrm, Newport
Beach home with extra
large famllY room . Patio &
roomfurbootortrailt't'.-
Top value al Sl>,950.
64&. 71 n 546-23U
T HE fJEAL
ESTAT ERS
FANTABULOUS
FAMILY ROOM -
$22,500
Family room covers entire
length of homp, Rich pruiel-
ing, firt'pl:&('t. 2 baths, King
s\7.e bedrooms. All built·in
drf't1m ldtchen. Sliding doors
to lovely yard. 540-l'T:IO
TARBW. 2955 Harbor Bl.
4 BEDRM -$23,750
SUBMIT NO OOWN
liiij!jiijjijiiiiijiijiijijiljlii JG.I. or low down to othert • DELUXE DUPLEX Completely refumi~hed fn.
208 • 39th St., NB aide & ou<. 2 both•. Quall"
COM to De&ch. Otanne1, <VJ>etlng. 2 Pt1tioa for out·
and Pl.aygl"OWld, $49,500 door U\'ing at ils ht-st, Built·
Georae \\'WIAmson, Rib', tn r11nge & Cl\'PTI. Estate 673~300 OPE:N t;\'&5, Al.zed y.JIJ'd, 540-1720
TARBELL 2955 Horllor
• •
NEWPORT BEACH
~ra sl\arp 4 BR, ·tt'
bath home in!"'1>011'• finest area. W ~~
iner's "& Ha ~ • f!
School. Laz & ~
around the 15x32\~lfd
POOL. Party & .. ~.)n
added recreation 'foOtji.
Pa.ymcnts ot $166 pu
month on $92,209!, kji.O.._
1itAI<E YOUR ·y-09£
BEFORE SOHOOL
STARTS. ::-
ft!iil,,. COATS .
~WA~ REAt RS
-546-4141
fOJ>Oft E.,.nl~
Westcllff Bargtlnl
Sparkling -fresh a: ne-wly
decorated 3 BR Z bath
hon1e-with family room &
separate-large i::tasa en.o
closed play room overlook·
ing 18x30' pool & ~y
p.stio: Unde!lll'iced fot"'tldl
area! Only $42,750., ,,_ ·~
Ruth Pardoll, ~ .. ,.
1605 Westclill Dr. 6d&2oo
A Friendly Home
in a good neighborhood New•
port Heights schools 3 BR,
J ~~ baths, earpets, drapes,
dbl gar, Only ,
$23,900 • 10% down..
DON'T 1'1ISS THJS!
Graham Realtv
Near NB Post Ofc, 646-241.J
•TRANSFERRED •
Leaving August 16th. Must
seJl 4 BR, 3 bath near school
& park. Lo\v down. 646-4414
4 BEDRM·2 BATH
$23,750
Quality carpeting & euatom
d!'apes. 2 patios. Dree.m all
buill·ln kitchen. Jr. Eatate
sized groUnd11. No down G.J.
or low down Non-Vets.
540·17ZO
TARBELL 2$5 Hd&r
Ivan Wells'
Newest Model ~
4 BR 4 ba, formal din rm.
fam rm w/wet bar, 3 car
gar. Contract now tor Aua-.
completion & chooiS~ )'our
own colors & carpeting.
Roy J . Ward Co. 646·1550
1-lomes for Trade 642-2221
PRICE LOANS EQUITY
$19,500 $14 ,{XX) JS,500
120,500 $14,500 IEIXXl
$21,500 Sll,500 $10,00J
$22.500 $12,500 t lO,OOJ
$2.1,500 $17,500 . $6000
Bill Smiley, Pr!nc. &. Jtkr.
REAL VALUES
3 BR, l;,I. ba, ~ blocJr
To Beach $3.5,500
2 on Joi, Corona del Mar
S43,950.
Newport Be1c~, )Oty.
675·t642
Priced Right $i0,9JO e FHA VA
• 3 BR + fam rm w/frplc
• Cpts/drps, stove & refrig,
Rltrs. 642·9730 Eves. 54Uma e KENN~DY
DAVIDSON Rea!fy
LIVE RENT ~REE"
Triplex with inclividu.sl ptlio1
2 completelY fumi.sbed.
S39,950.
Rltr. 2750 }!arbor SB. CM
536-5460 Eves, 543-8SM
DELUXE -: '•
PENN. PT, home. 3 BR. hm
rm., frplc. E.xceptiOn)l Vil•
ue. $5t(OOO. ;1·,•
BALBOA REAL DITATE
700 E. Balboa. Blvd.; Balboa
673-4140
NOW'S THE
TIME FO'if
' '. •• QUICK CASH
THROUGH · ·A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5671
•
-
•
• 171
• -.--1000 --
H
E
•I
,ew1y
b•Ut
lM .. ' .... rlook·
lllJ111Y r lldl >
lier
™'° """" •1119
New•
l BR,
'l.pes,
' " " lty
S-2414 o•.
Must
""°"' S--4<14
;J
H
"""" m'11
::state
:i G.I.
••
oltor
. 1 nn. s -car Auz.
yrur
ling.
5-1550 :m
Ul'!Y
$S5(JO
$6IXXI 10,000
10,00J
$6IXXI
Bia.
• ck
'"'
l ty.
~ .950
"" 'e!rig.
8'l1'0 r
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L
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l'&m
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SH
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Bl
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'
-
4 4 4§!! <Ji •eov-=••= 0"1' ~t4. .. ·~-• '· $ ,, 4 _ • ..,./'fr • + .· -.
•
" ~· ...... ~·
HOCISIS Pot SAL! HOUSIS POii SALi HOUlll l'Olt IALI RIHfAl.-t ll!NTALS •INTAl.I lllNTALI RliN
jilienoriiiii~11ii;j;iiiiiiiiii~l~OOO~·I Nowport Holghto 1211 H unH"'""' -1400 Houln Pumhhod Ho-Unfumhhod
SAVE 1"421,150 ATl'RAC. NOV<S THE TIME OF B1yshorM 2225 Cool1 -"100 General 4000 l 8 h 47115 • Offl R I s Br. l ba. MAKE OFFER THE YEAR TO BUY 0 otuna Ole ,.,, L19una Botch 5705 co inl•
Aph. Furnl1htd Aph. Fvml1htd Apto. Unhlml"'°"
Udo Isle' Biyf ronl
New Medlltmntan Homa
with lf!Ytn bfdroom1
81.)'.Jde fwmal dlnlnJ room
apack:lu.s .~nt living rm
pti:ntlled dm
whV.e sandy Btecti.
J car a•rnge
$185,00J
Attractive tln&nclna:
°"''""' i\1n.fav1ovich
6~6
O()(I Pirate Rd, 646-0079 THAT HEATED P OOL f BR-, 2 BA, avail 5tpt 10. HOLIDAY Pl.AU NEW J'urimbed 2 BR 2 Ba •1ooo•u r.~,. ipr ..,._. .. AtED Ii .Attomf)''• attlce;
Hrbor 4 BEDltOOMS+DEN 9MoosJ;"':·""•·beecb. I /I ~~~ru.~ Ill doc built · '•""...i7';,.,.-,·aR11iik"j1.000-15001Q.1t.,-
1 Hlghlindi 1235 + DINING ROOM • m-B2l2 AVAIL INMED. Mt• Vmle --,,._.,..view o-. '
1
' ' ' Goo4 loo-Low ,...l !MM1Cl +
21
uxw1oul Nthl mut 4 BR. l BA.. Prlvale com-+ dm S180 + udl Allio Bt-.c:ll.. Ms.ture adults aundec.k1, pr, 1 blk ahop-1..,:==;..:::;;..:.:;;::,;.::..;;,;1 ~-•· hu&e c.th .~r munltJ • bffch. S.pt-JWM 4 BR, 11 • 1lvinc rm, Htd. pool. AznPe park:las -'1 no ~ $115 Plna·Mch. Veey plu.h. WW 1500 SQ, PT. tie. lM
1417 M1riners Dr.
Come ~ thlJ new list.in& to
lie held open
DAILY 1.5
It bu !) Bcdroom1, tam rm.
3 """'· ldeol I« rho """' family.
Pele Birrell Riiy.
-.uvuu. ,. .... 1 r $2*> 6U-62ll spaciou. lam I dJn1ns nu, No childrc No pm ~ · tum. $2Zli. $9982 0r-.e Aw., C.M., comm'
vate bath with dooc to 1tun-' bUt·ln kilclwn, btautlfulb' 1965 p 6.r. CGaSa bids. nr 11th IL M3-Cl1I nlna COVD\ED PATIO 1 t.ndtc•l*f 1 a.rd. Ycvb omooa, S BR 2\.i BA, all tlec LOVELY Whitewater vtew, 2 .:::::.;:::..:;.::;~;.:;=~:i:I
romantic w •rm w at.,: Bllbu 2300 leaH $325/mo, Incl water CHAtlAU Le POIN'11 bullt~illl. Pamrs.m.Sc view BR 2 B• w/1&n1~, 1 blk to lndustri1f Rent1I
SWIM.WNO POO.L. HAPPY PENINSULA. Wlnttt ot and prdmt1t 9tl'Vkt Lovtly furn. 2 BR. aptl. Off. over:looldq A1»o Be•ch. town & btach, Adul!a. Lease :.~ __;::.;;.>(
DAYS! Your WnUy de,._r-Yee.tty. ~pier, mas Evea.s4s.«lti6 1trett partdnr, mrporU. Mature 1dultt only, no $165mo.fM-T89'1 SOUTH SANTA ANA
vt1 tt 1'u11 Price ONLY noo.t. 5 Br. , bL 2 fl.nac:ta. Heated pool. $150 sitr mo. chlldrtn. SD>. 49CJ.3756 Approx. eoo IQ.. ft, with di:
$24.,?W. wbrldrJT, tti9l. ht Clua. WEST aa. HQ. Madera f Adult., no peu. RENfALS Rent1lt Wan..-5990 luxe alr-cand. offtet:L nr.
673--2039 BR.~ coodo.: balcony _1_9ll_PO_M_ON....;.Ac.A;;.Y;.:!!:;·•:..CM=. •att.. UnfurnlsL-..1 prootrooat•. $Btpermontb. muter Bl. IUlte 21,1 bt,.;a, -"'s:;.:.;; .,_ NEED lJOUM for rtnt 11'1 AvaU. lmmed~tely. For Jn-··--"~ •·-Cosl• MM< 4100 :... l SOOO Com ..... , prefer M61 lorm1tlon c'11 K. W. SIUll ••51 t'-'~ ~. nn. trplc. -Mrl U patio; t.xeeflOona.l rec . Vtrde, Sept ltt lot lnlne wtth
2 BR., 2 ho., •veil. 9110 9 tadlltleo pool "'"'•": $25 Wlc. Up RENT lacully m•mber l lsmlly of Eckhoff & Alloc., Inc.
7682 EDINGER mo. I.I .IDquU-. at 211 Via prtv. adult/teens. $260 ?.fG. • studio a Bach .,... '· Prlct r.nie $200 to $300, 6 1818 w, Ol•pmM Av .. ~ or 540-SJ.40 Dijon, Lido hle Avail. now.~ or (213) e bid Udll • PboDt _.,, I Room& f umltura moe to 1 yr~ 2U: a:zs..e.2.80 ot Orang", Calli,
3 BR 2 '11 BATHS 593-11'6 e Mold -• 'IV ..... $25 Month 213: G~ 1·2362 5'1-Ev••wknde 5!$iirl1
Lido Ille
$30.SOO VA no down • nlA Balboa ltland 23.55 VERY a..EAN 3 BR 2 bath, e Nn Cs.la A Sar l'UU. OPTION TO Bl1Y l YR ltUP. 3 • 4 Br. unlum fll-1 on °Plactt1tla 2,flOO eq ft. 4 STARS $2100 down. s year old. 60 x W/W carpets. fl.replace, zm Nt'WPOl't Blvd. ~ No depoalt o.a.c. btn, WI 2 ha. bltns. dwlher, $1'15 cm lea11 6 TS-4 5J 1
, -·e•·· s-·•·" Bl""I home 130' lol ·biggest o1 the big BAdocYkfRW~-~--Br. 3 ba.-, stoW, n-tr!1. Jmm@diate SPACIOUS 2 Br. Imm.c. H .P.lt.C. D:> °!'~· by SeP). .. ~· WU.I, ,:IM~uy=);...--:-.,,--'°"':I LNVv t"W"°'' ...., backyardi.Shakeroof,car· · m~~·AvallSept pos1e11lon. $160/mo. Adulll«MUTled-1 Nt F II R I I p~....,...momu. ...... ,fue•r;
4 BR, 3 bl., View from every pet!, dr•pea. Truly exci_.M_ 9. CaU 1 • 525-44« COATS A: WALL ACE Hrbt .mp•1 mr 'iit C g 1 w"~h uCraM en.~.a•••J prd. Write E. D. Mathit,
2
LOO:S on S&nt1ll0, NII Llvb>g rm. -.,, __ .. ·-.. ,,.. ""16 D"""-''""RS, ·-.. 11 MIPI• · .... _, · • V"I0",)'1(1 835 Ashley Dr.,••-• Colli., caah, terma or trade· F• ""'"''al uuu"" designed landacapin&. Uled ~'v 11'11.J"'U. • 156& W Lncln Anhm TJ"'2«J(l .... ..,. tmpl •~ -••
OwDtr S.Critice Sale! $40,00J. brick flrepll.ce wllb walDut Huntington Beach 2400 :=:==::==:==:::== 1140 UTIL. paid. Lovely • ' 930GS
1
e. vsv--
Lovely J.e.Mscsped, 2 BR l paneUtna: In living room & 2 BR, nr. •tores ii: beech. Yr-Newpert leech noQ 2 BR .. blk. IO IC-Mart. C01t1 Miu 5100 SEPT ht Butlntu Womu,.L:;ola;:::. _____ ,:6.:;100:;,I
Coota/Mu 1100
"'" -. with view, , in· CORBIN.MARTIN .... plen1y"' .... '"""· I> ... ta1. Ekledf, "'' mo. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;; sn Joun. M8-078Toc536-180I n..., ' Br Wl!Urn .,,,,. come unita in rear with ... C.M., New-port, Corona Ml R--1 CORNER Lot !Ktd2T to
l'OOnl to build mor-e if REAL TORS 536--8lll,ms..3l.06 FUllN or UNFU"'H D&WXE l bdmt. $110. Ideal HARBOR Mu or Laguna. To $100 mo -1.hey. $13.~ net. T11atiD 6
desiled. Located at
289
3036 E. COltt Hwy, CdM LavelY ' Esedroom Vi~ for bachelor. 1993 Church St. Gar or carport neciuacy: Clay St. Newport Htl.
Me11.Driveacro&s fi'Otll 675·1662.ANYTIME 1 ,L.._o_,g:.;u.;;na;;..;Bo;Ol=ch~_.:2:.70:;5;! Home tit Dovtr brt1. CM.~ GREENS 64J.0086a1ter5p.m. Owner.M2-2666
Sa.q.a Ana Country Cub. 96241n __ -cc~~~-'546-31"-"--"-al E:MERALD TEJUV.CE ~~ ~~~~~ MlPot;OK,l BR. oo ... ~·· .tncd )'d. FAMILY Of 5 returnina: from Acrel.. 6200
CM&inal askini' P r I c e KHp Your Cool NEWPORT DE &(ff 3 BR. 2 BA, $225 mo 64U235 one A\IW.t. .,,,,__ ft9 overset.s Em b a 1 1 '¥ Post 1::::.::::?:~---.::::;
W.900. Two ""'"' dr&tlc in thla ' BR, 2 .. belted IKA * 49'-"'691 * 280-A Avocodo ~ -~n • UNrUJIN, """ • BR umum. ..,.,,.: w ANT TO ST ART :'°;ti: 'f:::...°7 .;_ """'-' Quk:k......-, 2 STORY Summer Rontal1 2910 , .;th•:;_,!.8u~ ~.!,.°'~":';,;". "°,: !IOO i~~. i .... , loco! "
1
'•. A BEE FARM?
portunlly I« rlght perry C.Lancik:!1 Eollto 3 BR 2\1 bolho, 12xl8' lam-LAGUNA-Ocesnmlnr ,...,. Otllhaven, NB. IV· $15. 64a-1082 ell 6. 1 ·I A I BDIUI. l:y;;;o,;.UN"°"c'°'A°'tt'"·y-._-wile,,...A""'"1n""1an-1 GROW ALFALFA?
alert to appreciate uid 11ble m8 E. Coast Hwy., CdM lbt room, with fireplace, t.cular Villa, prlv'. be.ch, 300 yrJy, 1udener included FUM S~. ulil ,_Jc!, l n.mN •• UN1'1JRN. de1!.re lnttrtltlng f\Im, cot· WHAT Better Place than tl'I
1M0 tilik •wif
1
1
1
ac~A .. ~!~ 67J..3770 lormlll dinlnc raom, com-huge rooms, park·like gro-Chet Sallabury, Rltr. 6'13-«IOO wwkine Adult. 1$615. 27• E. ~~ted AP_:Ja, ~ Can tage tor year leue 911 CdM Silver Valley? Loc•ted tn
a e o er. ~ ~~~~!!'!!!'l!!'l!~!!!I pletelyc•-+ed.SellGior u·•·.2 W•eka•~s900.,• i~slCM ,,,..,,....,. ~ter ...... '°"'l"'IV"'"·-'"'-•M•"'• .. A..... . 00..+&.53 -t"-• uua -4 BDRM plU& den or Mb JUI • ....,...,.,"" • • .... or _ ...... '1'1J-.-.. high desert 18 mile• eul or
FllA. WttD $1400. • •·· Vktor!a bd No petl a11owed B 80 ·~ lrvln1 Terr1co 1245 9n•SHE •R R tuau nn. a.l"4e-ac. School.I, REDECORATED 1 br. •lw -p,•--W•• al ~·-M EFORE the lst need 3 or 4 Barstow -Ac:reti ,...., Wooded Retreat '-=...;.;;=:.:...-=~I ~ K EAlTY e."b """"'"BR.! BA, "~v·•·-~ ~ ••w ---· -B u-··· •...• land u"' • ...---847-3531 5414442 968-U ..... __.., ... ~ CdM High. ...l' .. , -1'"'. conttnltnt }oca.. D 6 Adams:. o.ta y..,. r. ~-~. ' we pump
Have you tbougbt &boot OOWl· BY owner. 3 BR, 3 BA, lg. 78 Sept. $1000 .Owner. 494-4653, ~ at UiO mo. includinJ' tim $120. 523 Bernard St. 546-G3'10 * 646-6484 * volt. Hu been in allalfa. -
try living in & spacious S Family rm. $45.000. Gd 4*"4957 or 49f...5589 ran!ntr. Agent 646-3%6 BACH cl I t .Ualf• srowlni in abundaaol 'I e&n, qu. t ; park. V·" • .. ___ ..
bedroom home on a lar&e terms. 673-4204or67s-o479 BEACH PEACHI 1 & 2 Br. Furn Apta. J,i GREAT Fam..lly BE Ac H q , $80 • Utll pa.Id. Man Roomt for Rent 5995 in ... ey, bill: e1t .,.__.
wooded kit. Retu in this C d I M Only $20,750 full price for blk to oce-.n. 1209 W. HOUSE 4 Br. l 1ue to bch 1637 Irvine, C.M. 646-6736 ~:~; 1~..:_,11k• aur-ROOM F 1 _ 111 WanywAhue arounc!O 'RAISE
country atmosphttt for oron• • er 1250 liveable 2 BR en R-3 lot, Balboa Blvd. Balboa. $75 w/oceui vie'w. Great tor ro • or auu.iU: requlro or ren ·~mo u NT T
$23,900. oil royalty income & 2 wk-$150 wk. 494-5189 d!J:lclmt. $350 mo, :yearly. NewlMU't Beach 4200 1ng peace " quiet. paid. H.B. art•· S42-&32 alt FISH FOllt L.A. MKn
•
''rl7lg" Cameo Shores hlaci: to the bH.c:h. p;oo NEWPORT·Btiboa beach 60-3523, 642-l.SSf :.::.:..::.c.:. i.°'2.........,.3 Bu!'..~;m1.nt. 1,:'~·~m=,·=---~-. BUILD Yoursell a la.la!! fQr ,_..,~SPRING 5p1cl1<ul1r Vl1w will hand!<. hoose. 3 BR II blk "' bay. BAYSIDE vm.,., 1115: 2 POOt NO~~ PRIVATE "'rrano•. bath, •"Y littl• _., ~ you'1tln
.. ... Lovely custom 3 BR, 3 bath!, Pacific Shores Real~ $125 wk. 673-8793 Br 2 Ba ltti * Chinner Reef * very comfortable & quiet. bU!iness! 90 Lake• in aret-...... REALTY pool, lmma.cul11te. Immedi· 847-8586 Eves. 842-4731 1 BR. turn. Apt. alps. 4 c~. d;.:.v!du~ 0.,: MARTINl9UE Cotta Meu. 548-5750 man·m•de • 'oe•uttul! niere
W I "anytime" ate possession, 1 Block to beach. Weekly ly. No pett, Pool. slip; call APARTMENTS GARDEN APTS. art SO acre lakes A 40 am 2629 Harbor Blvd CM THE FOX CO •111e N rt Bch ... ., ,,..,... ""'"'1054 Air-' PM SPECTACULAR VlEW Guut Homn 5998 lllke• and 0 acre llkeo, J•, ·• · ·
67
3-94$ •
642
-6
969
3 BR: tam. rm 3 ba. 2 yn old .,...., ewpo ,..._,, ..... v vr...-..-. W•terfront/Loc • Boat 18th I: S•nta An•, C.M. etc. A watu aid wtrucb
$140 MONnl INCLUDES ==~=~==~c l 1 nu. from ocean, 61' FHA Kt:NTALS OCEANFRONT 2 BR., gar., Slip1 Availlible Call Mn, Hendenoa M6-5M2 LADY, Priv•te room, 1V, lake ls lllmost tinl!h!d, and
TAXES , Excellent s %. % A~OVE THE BEACHES Joan. Call for aippt. aft 5, HouMI Unfurnished frpl.c., carp., dr•pe•. 2 BR . 2 Bath Apts. 1777 Salita Ana, Apt 113, c .M. liaht ~. ldry, r A: b, Ex· • p ni.-eaian restaurut
loan-JO loe.n fees. Im. ?o.1illlon S View from 178() IQ. 962-7569 $250 Mo. )'tarly 675--1536 LEASE-or-BUY ceptlona l home. 6TO with....,. ..
maculite 3 BR 2 bath homt. ft ot roof deck. custom ce-I =========I <nner1I 3000 '"5 Mo. & up. $$,500 up ''THE GABLES" Catalina, Leg Bch, 494-2425 lak C::~ ~ tlablna
Excelhnt carpet, Ire.shly ment block 2 Br. 2 ba. By Faunt1in Valley 1410 I ----Corena cfi l Mar 3250 2525 Oceu Blvd., CdM Movin&: Sept. 1st; 2 BR. w/ ELDERLY a.rtibul•tory lady. tlm:~· MU~ MORE d=
palntei I.: quiet cul-de-sac 0 w n tr $69,00J. 546-8693. AVA L, FOR LEAS& t TJ.1188 -for furthtr Info gara.1• $135. Adult.I only. Private room. Loving care.
strttt. Large kitthen & * 673-4953 * Nie. 3 BR By Owner, 1%. Apt 3 BR 2 ba crpts drps OCEAN VIEW Deluxe 2 BR. HetmM Trott, Mfr. Cerp., dllis, bltns, petlo. Good nub1tious meal •, opment &Qin&' on 1D. .,_,
famiJ..¥. room. ; 0 w n er Beautilul 3 Br. So. oI BA, bl.tin1, aoft H20, crpts, tplc, raM: • .. .' .... $iso mo'. 2 ba, home, fplc. dining rm, 2437-G Ora.nge Ave. 548-47" lovely home1, school, chureh.
trans'.en'td -pr 1 c e d for hiihway. By owner only. drpi, trplc, panelled tam. Bachelor Houae, CdM , , $125 blt·lne, Jl&tlo, crpts, drps, TEAOfERS, avail. Sept. 4th, c.n Betwetn 2 &: 5 etc, etc. Route
66
SO. of ttli!
quick sale. CALI.. 540-1151 RtasonAble. * 673$lS rm., scrtentd p&tio, )&: fncd House. 3 BR, 2 ba, CM $275 near bch. $300 mo. SEMPLE mod. l BR. a: 2 BR.. front. • 636-WO • Mite. R1ntilt .t9f9 Valley a now a compltt.t
(open eves) Httitage Real lot. $25,900 w/$2200 down CORBIN-MARTIN Real Eltate 675-nll1. Nr. Ocean " bay Bltnt· Freeway, No. ol valley 11
Es.tale Balboa P1nin1ula 1300 6%% loan. Call for iappt. R8ltors 675-1662 diap., frpl. F.A. ht:, patio; l BR ~· apt. 1% CAR Glll'qe near La.1 Vqa1 tttewl.Y. ~
IMMED. occ. Attr.
2
ltory, 961·1678 eves. & wknds only Huntington Buch :MOO carport. No pets. Gu &: Realtor S4~Tr.l0 Newport City Hall. S25 tmaller percdJI available!
Balboa Cotti Miii 3100 water pd, $130. 1132 w maolh Perron Rlt;y Co, This land can be~
FHA appr $30.200. Consider . Out of County 1605 FREE RENTAL BOOK Balboa Blv Apt C 2 BR. Mature Adults. $UO. 00..1m. very reuonably-call I: talk
much les1. 3 BR, 28A, step-SW'ldeck Wlth view ol bay. 1 AVAil. IMMED. Mt•• Verde Drop In and BrowM ., · Crpta, drpt, bltJll. Walk 10 STORAGE G f 1 to OYlll~T.fiMO aft g Pl!
dn. liv. rm, 19x25' tam. rm, BR upstairs plus 1Uest ~ SALE Or trade 2 Br. mod. f BR, lge ltvln&' rm, 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, eo:i:y BEAUTIFUL Waterfront apt. lbopl. No pet.I. 540-.8100 a.rage or ren · or wknds. -
blt·in sttteo, intercom, AOll room and bath dO\vnstail'S. hse Yucca Valley priced •pt.e.ioua f.amldinlng rm, Fireplace. Double Garaae, 2 BR,. patio, boat doclc, 2 BR 1% bl.. Drsp/crpt1. ~~ ~~ Close·ln, llke 21,S ACRES. So at b tl'n wate~lum. LC t'\ll..de-sac lol Room to build. S35,500. $10,500 eq. $0Xl. 499-41.n bllt·ln kikben, beeutilully Completely Fenced. Leue. Winter leue. 3403 nntey Bltna, prl au/patio. Adulta REAL •STATE California. $3.00 down, 13.00
Nr. · Cout PI, •chls & J EAN SMITH, Realtor eves. ~ped yard. Yl!'lll'IJ $187.50 per month. e f15..ll1I e S140. Ma..Gl33 54&4021 ev• ,.. per month, $295.00 full priq,
freew1ys. 31CG Roosevelt 400 E 17th, C.~f. &16-3256 le•• $325/mo. incl wata' CIClEAN1'ROm', W 1 n t er SPACIOUS 2 Br. Bltlll, Clll'lJ, General L, Sbewfelt, S26 w. 3rd st., l;;;W.i"ii'i.°"iiinii~i;'i;546-i.ii34ii30i.. .... I BAY AVENUE Laguna le1ch 1705 and i&rdener llfl"V:lct. Kse. 2 Br. $150 mo.: 3 l3r. .....,. I 0 • • Phone· (2l.ll ~M
1
, ~15 ...... s. 11 . Income Pro-rty 6000 _.... • ~ .
Urgantl 'l\vo Vacant loll Cl ""' OCEAN VIEW 67J.366l Eves. MM968 ...... mo, Awll lept. 8. ==..:*~-~~2*~~~1·-;;~;;.;;;~;;~;:;:;~ I:'=:=======§'=:!
Di vorcll! anxlom
10
m
0
v e near Bay&: Qc.esn, good BY OWNER* Temple Hills 3 BR Townotruse, tam rm., 9tl2-5056 AVAIL. Sept, 1, 11. 2 BR, l'n NEWPORT BEACH R. E. W1ntlld 62
from arts. Haa neat, small k>cation for Duplext$ 1'55 Terrace W.:y, 3 BR, 2 Bi pool, clubtlouge, Nwpt 1682 EDINGER :z BUCS. to bledi: a BR. ?>., G.E. blt·lni. Adults. 2«1 TRAV~LODG! WANTED: small hou1e, wey
3 BR, :z be.th, family room at '1>ith vt.rlan~. $42,500 elec kit w/blt·in rana:e &: Riviera'. t'hRdren OK. l.M. 842-44~ or S40-5140 2 &. duplex. Leue E. 16th Pl., c .M. 5.fs.&l32 DepreclaUOn $18,fiOO ntar catholic Oiurch, Sor
only $:23,500 in Back S.y R. C. GREER, Realty dlshw•lher, l&e liv nn.·, Avail ~l. $2'25. 646-1248 1225. Call: 642....a38 19116 Grou •••••••••• $87,000 $9 CICIO CMh. 21!· 25M583 ~
area. Ready · for oiler! ~"::"=Y;!{"S:Lldo=:==="'=:~,:9300: trpt11ce, be•mtd ceilings. EX·MODF.L Home 3 BR., 2 L1gun1 leech 2705 Newport hach 5200 1967 Gron •• • •• •• • $110,000 ' · · COu.EOE REALTY 546-58SO ;; Lge corntr lot w/156' trnnt. ba, carpets, drapes, blt·lnl, MONARCH BAY ARE A Corona d1I Mir 4250 1968 Grou •••••••• $125,00) 8US~ESS Ind l?c~~T,~~~~~l ~l~ld~o~l1~lo;;;;;;;;;;;;d1~3~51~1 Land1c•ped I: Wubs. Prlc· fenced, prdener incl. S2J5 LOVELY OCEAN VIEW. 3 1 Bdrm Furn Apt. Available B/B C. R. Gangi ~615 Fl ANCIAL /FOR SI.le by owner, save!!! ed rl1ht1 $39,700. P.O. Box Bk:r545--2424E\rel5.f6..948J tmmedl11ttly'til0ctoberllt. INCOME &: Home-Owner. Buo. OpportunltlOI 6300
3 bdr, full cpWdrp1, nice BAYFRONT DUPLEX 914 Laguna Beach 494-4726 BR A den, 2 BA, cpts, Drp1, Ra.I rent. 503\1 Aca.cl& UNF'URNlSHED 2 bedroom, Exel. lnc.-deiirec/ invt. 411 ::.:.::...:;::i:.;:;.:.:.;::;:::;..:;;;:;;( .~ Xln ,___ -"'~'-""'c--'-'-,.~---1 ATI'RACTIVE 3 Br. 2 Bath. frpl, pool. $300 mo. Also 2 beth unit H H B y...... t tualtioo neu Enclosed petio. 2 • 3 BR. S1crific1 of Homes Close to .choall. on avail. 2 BR. l~ ba. $Z25 mo. ORANGE COAST near oea: 0> r. 2 ba. rtt. lo.2 Br. apt., MELODY
sthls/lhop1. ~ Miner St. Fireplaces, $115,000. MUSf BE SOLD! Cul..de--&ac. a-pi., drpe, all adult.I 496-1243 betw 10-5 pm PR2;~1'Y =: Avallllble Sept. lit. ~Y ~~~· oid Box P-l7' CLEANERS
C.tlf. 548-7313, 642-0?'ll Walker Realty Fully Furn Model Home View bltns. Cov pe.tlo. 545-00 MY Loveb> lar&e 5 BR. 3ba .,,............ ALSO
3336 Via Lido 675-5200 ol O!Mn, 3 BR, 2 ba, never ™ED n.--..-. I ho ......,_1 OWNER'S tum. 2 BR. apt. 0 BeA(IMI lived ln. Home under notice . . v.. ... ...,.........,. mmac. me to rH.,.--ble Um with ,... •undeck. AvaU. 3 BEDROOM, 2~~ bath, face luslneu Property 6050 Newr-~:.::!'...
• $33,SOO incl all. Owner aid 3 br, bee, blt-IM, dw, w/w only $300 mo. Owner/Alt. ,. pooL $250, Available Sept. ---· -~
BEST BUY BAYCREST Huntington Beich 1400 flnanctn& , cpl!, l lA ha., nr markei. & 54().386'l Seistt. let. to June 15th, 1969. 15th. Adultl only. Uve High
Quick Possesion LOS PADRES RLT'l .roooi. $18(1/mo. 548-33Sl Condamfnlum 1950 ~.;_:r or peta. Call lay & leach Store Bkla:. 8&lboa Are-a, New store owner• noW
Spacious 3250 sq. ft. cust., GI LOAN Laguna Bch. m.8833 2 BR. Ftnetd back yard, ll1alty, Inc. IUltable for anythlnc. Real a.ppointed. L.A. A Oranp
Newport Beach 1200
~r:°~~·~~~~.in:~..db~; Owner de~r•te, will •CCtPI THE 0 All utilltie1 pd. $125. TilE Blutf1. Avail Sept 1. 3 2 BR, Flttpl., adultl, no pt!a. 2025 w. Balboa Blvd., NB Estate, Bank, Fllhin& Tac· Co. location• available
at $6!1,500. s:~'l~ L 0 a n l..'>100 for ru. lovely 3 BR A Sprawlin&' 5 ~~ &: N:en. Del • 543-<mS • Br. 2 b&. Like new. $235 mo. =~·~~2 BR Wt-673-3663 Eves. 548-6966 k:le, etc. Llvin.& quarter• up. ambiUOUI men tetkhl.& sub.
tranferrablt. Not on leue dHl home. Den bt•utifulb P1!lO tile floort, Cathedral 4 BDRM Plus Den. 2 Story. Yr. Lle.6"-067S aft 5;3> 1talr1. B&11ain •I $56,500 -ltantial Income.
land. 646-2828 Evet. panelled with mstchlnJ bU'. be• m ctllbigs, liv rm, l>iesa del Mar. $260 mo. • ... c:i-.1 A LS • Huntl-'-Baich 4400 DELUXE, upper, new 3 BR 2 ~1ll leaae. Top quality cleanlnl A: latm-
2100 WINDWARD LANE Fully carpeted. Bright 1tep Spanish Fplc, w/w crpta, 646--9683 Apta. P:umiahed ,._,_,, Ba., blm., carip., mp.. BURR WHITE, Realtor dry agencl!I compl.eteb' ltt
CUSTOM VIEW HOME aa.ving kitchen with ell ~e ~t·ln ran1e & oven. $31,fM . CLEAN 2 Br. w/crpts, f!"Plc, l·BR. tum. apL ISUlt. for cple. Sundecb: "' bllc. bsy & 2901 Newport Blvd. up ready to do b\lalnell. We
NEWPORT BAY CONDO ~odern . appll.nces, ad~m· 0 f r er your down pmt. iar~. Pri patio. $1.50 mo. General 4000 W•ter & ru fw'n,, $1), 918 be•ch. $175 Mo. yeari,. Newport Beach train tborou&hb'. NO SELlr
MEDALLION 3 BR 2 BA mg family room. Onlyyat. M1uion Rlty. "94-0731 833-1359 * $79 MO. * P•lm St., H.B. Rtferencea req. 545-7098 615-4630 f:\'1?9 : M:l-2253 ING.
Db LISTER REAL T """~"!' ... iiOi .... i..iiiiil 48R::l'i1E<::-;;a;;;::<;;:;;;; 5J6...4678 5J6...49TI BEAtn'IFUL ocean tront 36 " 30' REDWOOD '-·Udlnr CUb !nveilmtnt $taiO tu11 l i;U, poolJ, irou. etc l&ru B "h Bl HB 842433 f BR., 1%. a.., carp .• drapes. A . uu price. (Fully litCUftd by
ONLY $J6,500. 673-4356 eac ·• OME OCMEAAGNNIFIEWCENT Clean. Nice •tt•. COie in.. 23cl,~lng"urutN~B~~~r. L-uno leoch 4705 pt. 2 Br. flrepl•~. patio. to be moved. Mll5t sell tlli• equip a: auppUnl Start now
BAYCREST-0...er.
3
B<.
2
CUSTOM H VI LOT AvaD. 9/1. 642-0076 ~ • ~-.... -• "50 Mo. ,.ny. 6'Ul60 ell 1 mo. S"'1 or be!! otter Loe Eun Big"""'''; in ,. ...
Ba .. family nn.; be11uWully Vr:ry spacious 3 BR :Z b•th $5,$0 • anal!, but level SlCXO PLACE your want ad where ':o damlllt depoelt req, * JAPANESE MODERN * p.m. l'V cm Ward St A Calle citinc bu1!nt1& of ,your°""
carp.&: draped .1806 with huge aeparate family down, bal $55 mo. Lqun• they are looldnr-DAILY Bill Smiley, Realtor $1Cli. 2 BR. view, NEAR NEW!oundproo12BR..2B11. Madero. (2l.3) 633-1124 or For intervtew • phon~
Leeward Lane. Open week· room, wet be.I' & 2 firepb.c· Bcl1. <nt> 497·1210 P1LOT claulfltd 642-5671 646-9666 642-Zl'Jl BEArn. Adultl. ~79 Acra11 tm. Coco'•· 1665
6
54-J.3
47
635-f723, 9 thru 15, Mon b:i ~nds 1-5. MWJ'15. 548-0970 es. Built on 2 tree-1haded SPECTACULAR VI 2 itY In1ne IW/$200. 642-0239 Office Rentil 6070 Fri., or write NIELCO, P.O .
1812 HIGHLAND Dr, Hrb"t lotl. A lot o1 house for only 3 BR 2 BA tam ,;· d@clc Newport 8e1ch 3200Newport 8Mch 3200 Newport Beach 3200 Box 3010 Anaheim,, callf .
Hindi 4 Br 2 ba, t.m rm, all 128 900 135 ~ Tra0d< ,:... • ' . EHi Bluff 5242 LAGUNA "IACH 9'l803
bl,,,., '"''· 132,900 10% d" Paui J onn Rosily .~. · ~m drill ~lA °' ~ PRESTIGI Town Ho!MI Air C..ndli lontd -'---,C~A°"N"'D"'Y:---I
Owner. ~2847, I-'m-2908 847·1266 Eve1. 847$78 Ap1rtmentt ~\!::> l\.. ~ -t, Q. e For le•ae. 2 br & den & 3 br ON FORES'.i' AVENUE SUPPLY ROUTI
MOVE In! Near new 4 BR,, VA APPRAISAL For Sal• 1980 iJ with 2 or 2~ betbs. Gold 0..k spacee available Sn Excelltnt income tor few
frpl., new cpts. nr. beach. $25,400 • no ~ pa.yment. E Solve a Simple Scrambled Word Puzzle for a.Chuckle Medalllcn .U electric. POOL nrwelt office bulldin& at hn. weekly woric (di¥1 or
$28,000. Open *-eekendl; 351 3 BR, 1% be.th. Wlllk to the Wh UROlnP~ RIVIERA'!' kar au. Rent staru at prlma Soc•tlon tn downtown eve•> refillln&: and coUecUna
62nd SL "---R 675-01« t>ea.dl. Bulll·in nnie and Y'!' ...... th 1Aiun11 there OR ~ 6 b'-' -mo. Laauna Be:•ch. A1r eoOOJ. money Imm ~-...,., •• v .. u« la compareble llvini in Own-eanvnge '"1 aom ,_. -tiontd catpettd beautiful "viu eu O'llen. FA heat, frpic, crpts, Y-Own luxuriout
3
BR
2
BA words below to moke 6 ~-.._ _,... 83T.sTI Amico Way, N.B. • • dlspeniser1 in l'OUt area.
Waterfront 3 BR, No. 62
S.lboA eoies, $60,000.
$30.000 cuh b)' loan.
Bal. 1n •creage LI 8-Tm.
LUXURY 3 I;;; 2 bath condo,
frpl, poot, rolf, lee land.
°""'~er tranlferttd. $32,500
By Ownn'. W--3371
DUPLEX: Oetllll •itw. Up-
pe r on yrly lease. Lower
on JO !mo. Cron' over
$6100/yr. 213: ~67
BY OWNER: Nice 3 Br. -2 &.
home. Newport Shor••,
$25,000. Tmru J le x lb I•.
~
LAllG!: ?o.fobUe Hamt, 2
Baths. patio, c I u b ho u a~
pool, private beach. 61$-.1672
Bt.Uf'F'S Spacious 4 Br. l
'Ba. Spilt level. $37,9$0.
By Q'Nllf!r * 644-0740
OELUl<E Oomdo. V"" ol
pool 2 eR. 2 BA. Firepi,
l2500. dn. $21.9'0 . ..s.m;
drpa, fenced. land1eapinJ, El M111ple words, Prtnt letteri of I ====::;=:;:=:=;;,,,I paneled partitionlna. Two <Handle• N•tlonall:y MVflt.
lg cul..de-sac Jot. The lowest apt. e1•nt bldg oa be•ch each In ltt /Jna of ,q11arn. Coron; Ml Mar 5250 entrancu: J'rontq1 on ttatd Snacb t.Dd Candy
....ice in Newport Weil. w I unlW'Ptued view & I I I i~~~iiiii~iiiiiiii~il Forut A•e., rev ltadl to Ban) $1.350 to ft'XIR C&lb ~' pool. Unlw-n 165.000. tum R E T M E p Mundpll perldnc tot.. $.ltl . -
Village RHI E1t1te avail. For 11ppt, f99-3451 ·1 I I I per moath for apace. De1k ~ Tor PerlOIW In-
962-44il 546-3100 KENTALS I I ~-and chlln a•all•ble for $5. terv1ew. ltndnamt,~
Fa "(" W ._.. · · II. ,..::. B.....,,. houl'I 1n1Wertnr *"" '"°"' numbor '°' ml JeS GftTSU HoUHI Pum11hed • • 1trvict available for $10. "ROUTE DEPARTMEHT"
• VACANT HOMES IGONHUE I PO Bo• 8846
FO
R""' Ea: LONESOME 4 Costa M9s.s 2100 • All utWttu paid except · •· -I r I' I ON TEN AOU:S tel~. Anaheim. c.ut. 92D
3.-4-0 B'EX>ROOMS. BEAtmroL, new,. BR, U · 1 • , BR, Furn ,, un'rum DAILY PILOT Nt1I'VlLLE, U.S.A ... DOW
HAFFDAl REALTY ecutlve tyyie home . tromJlSOmo.F'rplca /PrV 222 FORESl' AVENUE accepttns appllet.tk:nli tor
"Homes to M•tdl Income" Ftrepla.ce, larrt 1 a rd, IK U RB E I I "'.,J'1'" B/w~1 T~ ·Pu()m.rt/ LAGUNA BEACH hnchlats Jn Orua• eco-
8470 Wamer M244Cfi dLlht•, liner.. w 11 her, . \ ,...'" ,......., flM..9'66 ty. Location• •re watt:1Q tn
13) HUGE wrs. neu °"""' """· ,,.., Mzy <Jo. • I 1• I I I c,..,.. SECRETARIAL Allahdm, W.U..Bcb.,s.a.'
60' x 200' (fee 1lmple). 1>t1bUc le C.ttdk ...00011. • -• • • • 'X/Ja~a Lane, CdM 544-Jnl SERVICE t• An&. Orana:e, Huntitlrton
PLUS u:xi mo. 978 Dmvu Drive.. IW I IM eAttbur nr. Coast Hwy) Mod:rm oftku, c•rpell, t..lr Bcb. ,. otbu ueu. '14.950
3 • • Bedroom•-l.wrur> C. M. 549-2111 fo~L;.:Y.;8:..;A.;.,;I~-~ Auctloheon "What om I o(. I :========1 oOodltlomni, porkthr. IWm Cull "'•· "'111 _,,.la.
BIXX.'CLA·BUlLT h0me1. I I r• I ftred' for this btoutlful bust Huntington leach 5400 SGS per month. 0rU(I Q)\ll)o •tit. lhouJd mum Ut "·
SHERWOOD ESTATES Newport a..ch 2200 '::::· =·==-=-===· of Robert Burnt?"' I-';;.;.;..;.;;:::.;;.;..;:.:;;;;;:...;:.;.:.: 11:7' BW Bldl. 230 E. 11th St., Call tor appt. &U.-2'n3 • Bndhurst tt Hamilton r EXTRA 11" •2 BR. $~. ea.ta Meu.. 642-1'85 write to 1611 Wt11tcllft Dr ..
Hunttngton Bnoh -OCEANFRONT 2 Br. lowtt I' E.L DI A I Mon In aowd, '7lxil oln't UtUltJe• pel4. ~ml or Alr~ondl11--• ~~ ... ..,!;~ N•wport lleld,
$49•50 DOWN
dupltx. Dlap .. •"· AvoU. h· ;:;.:T.:..;,.r.:c;.-.,.....~-1 Burno, thoY• Shok11peoro.• 543-0787 --. ~ _ ·-S..t. 10; """ or ,.ny I I I' I I* I AUcllonff~ "'Will, folb, Otllcn & Dolk Spica 1..;:::::.::.:;;;;,..,=.,,..---
To qualllted """-I bomto 6'6--5&'!2 1-.J. . ....J.'-L . ....L • .....L.-1 tho lok1'1 on mo. That shows· L.,un1 -f 70I with central """"lrlaL '" Goo4 to!"u..STORI""' IOr
to cboMe from, all twl,y car-OCEANFRONT 3 BR., 2 car ....,.,..,.,=,.,.,...,...---. what I know -.the-· ;;;;:=:.:;.;:;:;;c::.:, _ _:.:.:.:1 ax and ttlepbone anrwertna: • 09PO&'t t1 ....., "'th""°'·""·.-ro -· . ....,,; -.,_,. IM YT N 1 E. I •·18· . 100 CLIPP 0•1v1 ..,.,.., •Pro 2,000 oq. 1• "'° ,..., .. m '"" .. ,..• .... "WI acbool-. •-..... ,....,.,..., ~ • ...,,-,_;."ft,-,-.--! 0 c..pllfe th. diuckla .. LUXURY ru1Uf/UH7URN 1be Mutual Bid£ equlpmmt. Aho bu u
C&Dlc<tn!OnnAtloo _,,, I I I 1• 1 I """""""""~--Y'"'1y!M ... 1A2Bdrtnl. "'3E.Coutlhly.OIM ..... --Newport HJ11: 121 0 LISTER REALTY e ST>-W6 e • • • • • ,... ..... 1oo 1tom ... No.Sbeiow. Yw\y ..,_, 1 bedroom Calli AMtoOPM&1Uml CORONA dtl Mor, E. ~J
1&612 Stich Bl., HB &CUU1 ATJ'R.ACl'IVE ntttfronl & •• ,,,. ....... ....,.... ~ ~:;~:-;;~~~~MBA•• A :::.me,bolt~wlnw -~-·.1~~·,·.11 I' I' I' ~' I' I' 1··.F I ~~;:"i!: $40 MOllJH ~~~':~ 8;;'...; DAILY Pl1Dr DDIE-... !.. -;:., ~ c.tl M7.0CJ 1%11) OW ?al i 494-"'9 l'Urnbl>td olb _ .. HC1floy"A:etrl'="S11""e1~0l.~~"•-IJO.-I
LINES You cu Illa tham WINTER· BAJ Bt:•ch l'ftlnt. e DELUXE 2 8R mNrn apt SPOTt UtllldH ~ Prt-power 6 bb'I, l:ld. wUsr
lor lldt pomita • da7· Diil THE QUICKER YOU CAU.. • Bdrm • ' bath . ml .., SCRAu ' ,,,_ ANSWER IN CLASSIFIC .a "'ON -OO .-ro ....,,_ ••le '""""'· lac. All/port. Bal N11 1C-$11 THE QUICKER YOU SELL -fl5w.11o1,0RWT.11 ..,.w;1• ,.., 17 • ruiu<.-417..US 569 W. 19tlt,CM DoO,Pllol
\ '
~.._~:.0>:•c11a .. 0-----··-·~ .. ,,.....-• .,, ........... -""""""~~'"''"'"*'""··¥!"•-·•l!' ........... q;""q'""'"'-·""'"''""'-"Ql!!f•211;1112114"'"-!"llC!£11!i-":U"'·"''""Z£IO!J'!IZ"L-•P--•'""!-.. i!!"----..... ~.-.. ,-.... ,'"!'-···~---·---.,..,,itr---;-r--;-~-.-~-. ----" . . . . . . '
TR AN5POitTA'riON TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -UI·• rus ' /. 990I U ·• C -U··• c... -;;;;;;:; _. .,. ,..,, •n: 11'""' 1-'--=~=----"._-, I U11td C1r1 9900 UHd C1rt
__ c_o_M'E'r __ ""'.~_D_O:-D,.,-G_E __ , __ M_E_R_C_U_RY __ "'""o;.;;Lc;.;DS"-M-O-B-ILE--1
'61 COMET. Sthndord . lhlft, 1963 DODGE DART '61 Mercury, S"tlon Wagon.
R&H. $295. 548-8589 or Silver blue with beautifUl con-Third &eat, auto trans.. NEWPORT wm
&12-4132 trasting interior. Automatic, whhtwalla, Pow. atttrin& A •,~t .. ~ix. ·0n'1"vat •• fresh as disc brakes, F1ctory Air, POLKE CARS COUGAR .... , ""= dual action tall gate, AM
$995 radio. Brand new MO•lle&O
,68 Cougar {XR·1l Air ~ Can finance all or part Pay. model. Buy today for $3793 1967 1'~-85 Olds:moblles. }Ii·
wtl! equipped. Must sell or mcnts as low Ill Sl9,00 per or lease for SllT pe:r monl.b performance black & white
leiN my dtmonslretor be-mo 0.A.C. with 40.000 miles of totally with illte~tor equipment,
tore Aug. tl. CAij \Vayne ELMORE tree service from Johmon &. loSI condition.
Squin e.t Johnson le Son, Son, Orange County's oldest Full Price
Orange Count:Y'• oldest es-established Lincoln • Mer-$1177 tabllahed Lincoln • Mercury ~fOTORS cury • Cougar dealership.
• ~ dealtrtb.19. New· TOYOTA Newport • Costll Mesa. 900
poi·t • Coila Meu. 9M W. Pb. 89-1-3320 \Y, Coast Jlwy., Newport University Oldsmobile
Coast Hwy .. Newport Beach. 15300 Beach Blvd., W1tmru;tr Beech. 642.ooBl or M5-8278 2850 Harbor Blvd.
642-0081 or 54,5...8278 Costa Mesa
.67 COUGAR. 16,000 milu, FALCON MUSTANG >16-5560
Stick 4 1peed. XR7 interior. 1----------1----------J ·r,a CUTI.ASS F-85 Holiday
\Yite wheel •covers. Tape 1964 FalC'OO Future. Convert '65 MUSTANG cpe. 28,000 Ml. by orig.
& AM ra.dio Air V.8, auto trans, ps. wsw Spt Cpe stick 1ix. Goldl.'n rod owner. AJC, all J>'Nl''d .. all d~ ,.·r:r1 N ,• · · Xlnt cond., blue. f>45..4293. yellow with G.T. decor in· extras. 675--1354 aft. 10 .U.1 Gold-greftl. co or. ew ures
& brakes. $2995. 646-4428 9-5 terior. Absolutely lhowroom Q\YNER In Viet N a m .
·o! COUg' 8J" XR·T, GT, fact FORD fresh. Sacrifice 65 Cutlass. Xlnt
$1495 cond, PS, PB, air. 36,000 act
air. Loaded! Under war-'63 FORD FAIRLANE C.an finance all or part Pay· miles. 54~2425
rant)'· 2-dr. factory air, 260 "1.gine men ts 8B low as S22.00 per =R='',;\:....,.,~""=·=n,_"=°'=til=· =';.....,"~:'-""="=5.=1 :~t~ti:e~~~~~t: :~~ mo EO .. AL.CM. ORE
or run around town. Full CORVAIR
PLYMOUTH
'63 Plymouth Sta Wag. Ex.
Cond. Orig owner S900 or
best offer! 4!8-2481 aft 5.
, ______ _
$695
l~t car lot on llarbor Blvd.
JOHNSON & SON
'62 CHEV. Monxt Cpe.
(.old l\iletalic finish with
niatching vinyl bucket $l'llts.
Auto, R&H. A real tine back· Lincoln-1\tereury
to-achool car tor Costa i\.1esa Branch
$595 l!Wt Harbor Blvd. 64:Z..7(f)()
lsl car lot on Harbor Blvd. 1956 FORD
JOHNSON & SON ' °"'' harntop, good "'" & brakes. Padded dash &:
Lincoln·Mercury headliner are like new. Has Costa M-csa Branch powl'r window, brakes,
1941 !-!arbor Blvd. 642-7(S) steering. It also has a fac.
·s~ SPYDER-Tan 150 hp, tory air conditioning unit
Turb<rCb.arged. ~ IP d • plus radio &: heatef'. Total
R/H, ·w-w. xlnt cond. Ask· · ~ 00 NO LOWER pnce .,.""'. . .
ing $9'15 CM .eves &. Sun. Call ~11 H.B.
642-77-76 1 ----=~~~~ * f\1UST SELi,.. '00 Ford, 2 '65 ?.tONZA. Ori&. ownef'. d ood bod ·-"!36 r. hd top, runs i , Y Xlnt cond. $975. _., in Xlnt cond., new battery
Before 7 .V.t or eves. etc. Sacrifice $200 or ollu.
CORVEm
'63 CORVETI'E 2 TOPS. '66
Must Bell. Best o f f e r .
eng. & body. Many Xtras!
774-illO or 675-1307 ask for
Chuck.
~3 FASTBACK, v.ilite, 327.
370 hp. r.tust sell $1900.
&16-3085 aft 6 pm.
548-3113
1958 FORD Station wagon,
good t1·ansportation, runs iood, needs paint, $250.
~7143
'&i FORD 500XL1. hi perf.,
390. Pwr. 1teering & brakes.
Lt. blue. Best oUer. 546-0821)
MERCURY
f\10TORS
TOYOTA
Pb. 894-3320
}j3()() Beach Blvd., \Ystmnstr
PRI Prty \Vill 6aC $300 under
blue book. '68 ~Just1U1g stk
shift, fac air. Lo mi. Tc-rme:,
or consider trade for sm sta
o,i.•agon. 646-2388
'67 Mustang $1750
4 spd, V-8. Xlnt. 54.S-6955
OLDSMOBILE
'63 OLDS F-85
Cutla111 2-dr. Cpe. A spati<·
ling coral with while vinyl
b.icket seats. V-8. e.ulo con-
Bel shift, P, »tttring, R&H.
Excellent thru • oot. Full
PONTIAC
'63 PONTIAC LtMANS
c.)>e. Beautiful bronze metalic
finish with saddle vinyl buc·
kets interior. 326 engine, P.
·steering, P. brakes, R/H,
Reduced th is week to
$1095 •
1st car lot on Harbor Blvd .
JOHNSON & SON
Llncolf>Mm:lU"Y
Costa l\.fesa Branch
1941 .Harbor ,Blvd. &U-7Cli0
ROY CARVER
PONTIAC
Price · 2925 ~ Bl., Costa )(-
$995 Kl 6-4444
1st car lot on Harhor Blvd. Orange Cow:lty'i Exch.:IYI!
JOHNSON & SON 0 .. 1 .. ,,.. &u.. "°"" onc1
Lincoln-l'llercwy Bently.
Costa 1'fesa Branch S'cA"v"E'"-=$500=!~1967=°'G'°T0""°72-,-dc
l!Wl }!arbor Blvd. 642-7(k)() 1-lardtop fully equipped, 4
'66 OLDS Delta 4 Or. f.tust spd. floor shill, just like
sell our beautifully cared fo r nev<', going in ~cc, l\1ust
merry oldsmobilc. It has sell Jmn1ediattly 18 ,00 0
factory air oondJUoning and mileg. S2425. Call 642-69-13,
other nice a c c es 5 o r i e s after 6: 30 548-8128
'M Mercur)'. Brand new. Plea.~ call today for PRIV. Party 19&i Pontiac
$3586. Factory air, pow. ~acrthcc sale D!r. Phone ttll $1400 uoo .. _. DODGE
67 DODGE Sprtsman Van 6
cyl Auto R/11. ExtraB.
Orig. Owner 548-1112 aft 6
PM
1966 Monaco, factory air, 2
speaker radio, 2 Door, ·all
extt·as, like new. One owner.
714: 846-9464
1963 Polara • xlnt cond.
383 eng., 2 door, all extras.
One owner. 714: 84&-~
steer & disc brakes, auto 5'1.5-8278 or S4:i-098t extru. . · ~ ....... er
trans Al\.1 radio delux n1on· Grand Prix, silver grey, blk
!ego '2-Dr hardiop. Buy or 62 <?LDS . 98 Holiday sedan, vinyl 1op, fact. air, full pwr,
lt'ase today on inventory 46•500 nu, full power. 6 v .. ay BIB. 546-3496
J hn & So po,i.•r seats, many cxtru. IF CE J clearance at o. son n, Xlnt cond $795. 968-4378 1'1UST SACR I ! lk> ow
Orange CoWlty s oldest es· · \Vholesale book. I ownt'r blk
ti1bllshed Lincoln· Merc:ury 1968 TORO, loaded, save '63 Grand Prix, full P'''r, air
• Cougar deall.'rship. Ne\v· $1300. Private party, l'JOO, good tires. 673-J.127 or
port • Costa Mesa. 900 \Y. • 546-9426 • 673-ti733
Coast J1wy., Newport Beach. '63 OLDS F ·85, auto. R/H. --~64""'G"T°'0°'4",-....,-,--
642-0981 or 54a.8Z78 Lo miles. 646-fi698 Excellent condition $ l 3 o o
SOCK IT TO 'EM! Mute elephants? Dime-a·Une 646-2998
PONTIAC --------1964 PONTIAC
G.T.O. COUPE
Beautiful buriandy w it h
white bucket teatL Air
ccnd., automatlt:.
$1695
Can tina.nce ail or put ~·
menu as low u $22.00 pu
mo 0 .A.C.
ELMORE
MOTORS
TOYOTA
Ph . ....,,,.
15300 Beach Blvd., Wrtmnstr
1962 PONTIAC
LtMon1 Spt. Cpe.
Autoniatic, arctic white with
red bucket seats. Beautiful
conditiori.
$795
Can finance all or part PQ·
1nent1 aa low 81 $17.00 per
mo 0.A.C.
ELMORE
l\tOTORS
TOYOTA
Pb. 8:94·3320
15300 Beach Blvd., \Vlbnnstr
4 SPEED
SPECIALISTS
HIGH PERFORMANCE
CUSTOM CARS
LARGEST SELECTION rn
ORANGE COUNTY
Selected Au1o
Center
13032 Harbor Blvd. 5374646
RAMBLER
1965 RAMBLER
4 dr. 6 pe.11 rtation wagon.
Polar ivory with contrasting
interior, air cond. A gor&e·
ous automobile. Only
$1395
Can finance all or part Pay-
ment11 as low u $22.00 per
mo 0 .A.C.
ELMORE
r-.10TORS
TOYOTA
Ph. 894·3320
15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
T·BIRD
e '62 T·BIRD e
Xlnt corid
• 674-1584 •
1700
e '66 T BIRD all power &
air. new tires, pri. ply.
$3000. 962.-46.S4.
VALIANT
'61 Olx Valiant. r& h, new
battery, tranl, good tiru.
$395. 642-8013 alt 6 PM
New Cir• 9800New C1r1 9100 New C1r1 9800 New Cars 9800 New C1r1 9800
NEW DEALER
NEW TRADES
NEW IDEAS
NEW LOW PRICES
NEW LOW FINANCING
NEW HIGH TRADE-INS
BUICK
SERVING THE HARBOR AREA WITH
tids off Deals on '68 Close-Outs
EXAMPLE:
1968 EXECUTIVE BEAUTY. LIMITED ELECTRA
4 Door H•cdtop. Absolutely lo.ded with •II th e power equipment and factory air condition ing.
Beautiful c•r with l•nd•u roof, AM-FM stereo l•pe system . Stoel number 18.
ORIGINAL LIST PRICE $6478.99 LIDS OFF
SALE PRICE $53 7
ONE STOP AT POOLE BUICK DOES IT ALL
SAW-SfRYICE--PARTS-flllANCE-!NSURANCE & SAnSfACOOll
Open Monday through Frklay 'tll 9 p.m.
Open •rn 6 on S.rucdty -CLOSED SUNDAY
BUICK In COSTA MESA
Your Authorized Buick • Opel • Ja9uor Dealer
234 E. 17th St. 548-7765
\
•
rut5diy, August 20, 1968 DAILY PILOT
New Ctrt 9IOONtw Cora 9 New Cira ...
CHRYSLiR/l'l.YMOUTH/IM.f.!J!!.!!! C S!l.\'~
In the polite city ol COSTA MESA
I BRAND NEW 1968
PLYMOUTH FURY I
2 DOOR SEDAN
2tochoostfrom.
N"'"bon llD1J987t It llD122505
LOW AS eae&
DELIVERS
Pl.US TAX • l lCll!NSlf.
ON APPROVED CREDrt
Number KBC335714
luxurious Sr•n~ New 1968 Chry•ler New Yorler 4-Door h•rdtop -Absolutely
loaded with every conceiv1ble 11tra -Air Conditioning, Automatic Pilot, AM/
FM ~ultipl11 stereo radio, 3 in I Bench seat recli ner, vinyl top, tilt-telescope steer•
ing wheel, full power rte1rin9, brakes, seat, windows, wh ite sidewalls, front right
he1d rest and many more. A truly outstanding automobile.
Huge Price-Cuts on Fine Used Cars
I '66 DODGE
Ch1ni1•t 2 door h1rdtop. VI, 111!0·
"''tic, r1clio, h11!1r, pow1r ,,,,,;,.,
i nd b11k11, buck1t 111h. ITSF270)
'65 Chrysler 300
4 Door h1rcllop. VI, 1ulom1lic, ti•
lllo, h11t1r, pow1r 1!11rin'i &
br1k11, pow1r windows, FACTORY
AIR CONDITIONING !OVXll41
'66 Chrysler 300
2 Door h1rdlop. VI, 1utom1tic, t i ·
cll1, httltr, pow t r 1lt1rin9 I br1k11,
1t•w1r win dowi, FACTORY AIR
CONDITIONING ISVNI 77 l
'65 FORD
Futur1 2 Door h1rdlop with FAC.
TORY AIR CONOITIONJNG. Hurry
or you 'll mi11 tlii1 0111, !PGT2411
'63 MERCEDES
l111r 220 SE 4 Door with Yinyl in.
t1rior. U11m1ich1d qu1lity 1ulomo.
bile. IOJV92l )
'66 PONTIAC
GTO 4 1p11d. VI. trl·pow1r, r1dio
t nd h11ltr. IRVL4571
'63 DODGE
Dirt 2 Ooor. 4 cylind1r t co11omy
will! b1l1nc1 of f1ctory Wt n 1nty,
IHWDl>221
~199
'65 PLYMOUTH
2 Door h1rdtop l1IY1d1rt II, VI,
1ulom1lic, r1dio, h11f1r, pow1r
d11rin9. A lnoly fi111 t vlomobilt ,
I PICN599 I
ATLAS
Fi,.st in SERVICE
lnr .11/111 9Rll'\tt;I (;DI J\'J I
We meint•in one of t he l•tg· ••f •nd most modernly equlp-
p1d 1•rvic o f•cilitio• in tho w •••.
All t~ <1<1 ire llllll«I la ...tor Nie.
A!! ~rlbl'd prices 1r1 111\11 t1.-l!'ld llCIMI
11M1 1r1 Ylllkl unru Wfd~ """' n 11 It "·""
i
" •
• ...
. l
· l
• t
,.
I
I
·,
\' I
1·
I
I;
'
,.
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I
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~ ~-----------------.. --------------· ·-~-~-~-~-~·-----·----·--·---.. =--··---·-·---................ __ .,, ___ ,~·-··--.... ·-·------------·-·..I)
I
I
•
r r
'
DAILY PCLOT Tl.IHdu, August 20, 1908
r
• M ERCHANDISE FOR TWSPOllTATION TRANSPORTATION T_R_A_N_S_P_O_R_T_A_T_IO_N __ 1 TRANSPORTATION
_._,_•-_E_-A_N_D_T_RA_D_E __ I BMtt & Yachts 9000 Motorcycln 9300 lmporttd Auto& 9600 Imported AutOI 4MOO
TRANSPORTATION
lmportod Autos 9600
I FREE TO YOU 16' PLYWOOD GI a", .~0J~-•n111<SCRAMB, N-• LERN-MERCEDES BENZ llomellte !6.19&1 outbolird, J.3UD.. ..... .... ., ..
TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN
FEMALE, F\xtd cat. tralMd
to •ta.Y In home. Af·
lrcttonate ' lovln&. URd to
med 91 tw. X1Dt cond. oven\U: litft. Extra a:ear
American tralltr, muM aee lor din. Motor jult rebWJt.
to 1.wrec. £.ntire outfit Wts d. chrome. $460 or best
offer. 962-7689 $1600. 545-8998 I woman aloa!. Sl6-9419
evK. 8/22
CUDDLY &ood natured black
14' SKI &:. fish. just refinish-'61 HONDA 305
ed J~-35 h trlt Excel. cond. $475. ' uu•.•son p, ' 546-4933 alter 5 PM. lighls, aid&, anchor et<:. $400
546-018'
Sl"ORAGE, Trailtn, boats,
etc::. ST.50 per/mo. Work
space. 642-2001 & 54a-.3261
FOR Sale: '66 Honda 450 cc
excellent condition. $550.
Call 962-1528
Trailer, Trevel 9425
female kitty and one cute
beige male. Lookin& for
good home. 2 mo. old, traJn-
td to box, $4~02 8/22
1 PERSIAN, Angora male
(altered) ~ home. Al.w
ll!tle 4 mo. old male ~-
1 tr Ip e d nee da On!.
~32 8122
MUST find good home for
beautiful male cat • gold an
v.-te. Very affectionate and
patient wilt. small children.
962-5143 8/21
WANTED gd hm for very
lovable yng man l chu. miir
terrier. Sm breed. Old.Pr
chldm pre!. 531-5614.
9010 Sallbq1tw l96S 14' NORTI-IWESI' Llnle 8;;EA=U'l'l'.FUL=~-,-.. -1,-Rog-e_r_2S_' I Dipper, See a Pal or Ernie
at Fairview Ehco Service,
AUSTRALIAN Shepher d
female, 8 wee:.S, purebred.
962-5332 l&S28 Santi
1.tariana F.V.
sloop, 1'.1i yn old. perf. cond, Fair & Fairview CM.
sleeps 4 wfhead, ga.lle)', 54G--5lm
atove, new 5 hp Seagull
motor. Sacrifice $4,500 tU"m. 13'.1!' CUSTOMIZED Trailer
CAii !or app1 673-$492, wfgu refrlg., range &
fM-i+lS oven, elect brakes, hitch,
SNOWBIRD # 379 spare sleeps ~. mini cood.
with trailer. $325 $951). 675-1952
Oceanic Yacht Salea Ul53 Fleetwood 14' e 642-S15l e house trailer. S3'15.
• &tT-3432 • HOURLY RENTALS
Trucks * Rhodes 19's *
Fun Zone Boat Co. &Jboa YSOO
LEHMAN 10. Gd. cood. alum
s(>an Fiberglass sm. sac.
6Th-2S81
'61 GMC % ton pickup. Top
mechanical c o n d i t i o n
64~119
1 BLUE Kitt•n with light
gray eyes, 2 black Ii white
kittens. 4 months o J d .
543-4079 8/ 17
WELl.. trained: mix Toy
Manchester Terrier, l yr old
female. Prefer ad u Its .
962-5061 8/22
C'l.ITE 6 week old kiuens.
Calico mother. Afternoon!>•
642-1323 Eves, 543--7786
LIDO 14, 2 sets of sails,
trailer, good cond, $950. JHps 9SIO
REDISH Brown Angora 8
wks. kille.IU!i PrK Tips.
546-0272 8/20
LOVELY 8 wi old
Part Labrador Ar
675-1476
puppy.
Boxer.
8/31
CALICO Female oat 2 yn:.
To apecial home. 642-1323
aftns; 543--7186 eves. 8/22
3 MOS. Old he.If Persian
calico f emale cat.
635-792;, 8/11
2 LOVABLE Female beige Ii
blk tiger striped kitten 10
wks have shot.s. 333-0042 8/11
in-SIAMESE kntens, 7 wk.s
old , housebroken
968-1877 8/22
CHAMPAGNE male cock.a-
poo. All shols, lovable. To
good home. 642-5880 8/22
MOVING, must give away
beautiful blk. fem. (eJ1ered)
Persi111. 494--83<6 8!22
4 GIANT Type yuCC:lllli, ideal
for landscaping. $8632 sm
3 SLK & wtit. kittma. trained
6 wks old. 646-1361 8!22
FEMALE Y.'h ite rat with
cage. 646-7375 8!22
FIRE\VOOD, YOl.l pick up.
4<ll Huntington 5J6.8148 8122
FREE Mixed Collie puppy lo
good home. 537-0860 8/22
PETS ind LIVESTOCK
882S
2 BEAUTIFUL AKC lOlf.r"
Tay bred black poodles. snota & worm1. 175. l·
528-8188
Horses 8830
BAY t.1are. Xlnt corn:!, a:entle
westem saddle & tack. * 536-1986 *
TRANSPORTATION
8011ts & Y •eht1 9000
We havt accumulated several
small trade-ins that must be
sold. No reasonable offer re-
fused!
'66-16' Lone Star, Johnson
40 hp ............ Sl5$.
'60-21' HoUywood Craft. 75
hp Johnr.on, SS trir. SlSOCJ
'61·~'0' Burchcr:ift, 160 ONC,
110. trnJil'r etc ..... $2195
'6l-\9' Jl.1cCullough Crall,
f'lyin11: Sco t ,lrlr .... SI~.
'5,<;.lli' Century Rcsor1cr,
Needs/cng. Nice cooditlon!
$"5
1s· Utility, V Bunks, 60 hp
Fisherman. Spec, trlr $1250.
\VESf ('OAST Y 1\CHTS
Nl'Wpon Arches .Marina
333 W. Coasl Hll'}'.
Nl"Y>·port Bt>arh * &12.n11
AUGUST SPECIAL: Haul
out. paint jobs • bf.st price
oo the w11ter front,
NE\VPORT DRY DOCKS
on the Bay at 20\h
• 675-15<6 •
READY to go-19' 3" Glutron
wll-"0 HP Mere. In.out
drivt, inboard bait tank, till
bed tra!lcr:Comp. eqp'd. for
fishing. 842-1239
l\fUST Sell -make otter. 20'
O....·en inboard-lapstrake
uUl!ty-last, seaworthy-bah
tank-hydrolict-full covers.
67!t-4TI3 or (2131 691~1
1964 29 Ov.·eN DC. Fiybrid@:e,
f\llly equ\pp?d. NNr pa1n1,
50 hrs oo ovtrhloul. f.1ake rJ..
fu. 548-J973 aft 6 Pf.1
13' B. Wha.it":r
'67. 40 hp $995.
LIDO 14 No. ms xlnt $1150.
Days 6«2-9784 Eve. ~
14' BOAT-Trlr I. l9li7 llhp
Evtnnxle. Xlnt con. SS25.
St5 E. 19tb St. CM . 642-1269
JO' OWEN'S Cabin Qi:JIS<"r,
triJ .:rew. SI.pa '· Many
Xtru!tCaD &fl 4-5&-4283
r DlHGHY ,.,.,.,......,,
Pb'#OOd with 09rt. $Q. ·-· 12 FT. Alum i num
_,_ ... -l ,.,..
Xlal .... 1 f2I& 8'Mlll
1r AKER-JWc st-,,.., '*° HD lflt 1100. OUYtl' 35
hp motor IU>. '1Mlll
•
MG-4944 62' INTERNATIONAL Scout. ,~ ... =~Col~,-m7b7ia-2l"'°w,..,./ ~J~ohn:::::,..::: I -4 wheel drive -travel top
outboard. M a n y Xtrll5! -new tirel • ucellent con·
SZ100. * IHZ.2494 dilioo $995. Will consider
41' SCHOONER; k e e I. trade -642-0297
ballast, molds set up, >'00 0
finish. $600. 805:252-7&34 CAMPERS 952 -=~,~47'• -':51:7,,.,.;1"'1;1'°•--I SALE
"""· * 642= USED TRUCK
Power Crui.-rt 9020
OWENS 26" cabin cruiser,
'66. Low hrs, fully equip.
Sacrifice! snoo. 842-0789
~_peed~ki Bo•_ts._ 9030
A True Winnerl
CUSTOM BUILT Thunder-
bird Formula 233. This 23'
all fiberglass V -bOttom beau-
ty has America's most fa-
mous racing des\gn. SAF·
F.Sf SKI BOAT BUILT. Jt's
rough water tested and
equipped with a Berkeley
jet . , . powered by a 450 hp
Aero Marine. Cruises at 45.
All of the extras incl. 11/s
radio, 4 speaker stereo & 4-
wheel custom trailer. Cost
over $12,000. Owner sa)'l!I
best offer takes & it's nearly
new. 642-4321, Ext. 240 Days;
644-1742 Evenings and Week·
""''· VACATION Special!
1966 Cris Craft 17' speed boat
65 VW sunroof Ask Sl,000
-Olev VS eng, inboard -40
hn. original -radio -all
leather int, Ski bar mounted
in engine -plus brand new
Coleman camping outfit.
0Mis tent - 3 way ronv.
cooler -2 gal snow lite jug -
3 burner camp stove -
lantern 300 watts -2 ~~
ing bags -all for $3295.00
100 % financing O , A . C .
675--Zl47 (private party)
LATE '67 GLASSPAR
Like new, 120 HP & ne\\'
Lrailer. 642-5233 aft. 5 PM.
Bo•t Slip Mooring 9036
MOORING, Newport Bay.
$5200. Ind's. Santana 22, full
race, 9 mo's old. 847-4525
Bo•t·Y•cht
Charter s 9039
IT'S SMARTER
TO CHARTER
Cal 25 • Rawson 30 • Alberg
35 -Bouncy 40 -Newporter
ket ch • Mariner 40 .
Schooners · 27' Fairliner -30'
Trojan • 38' Spt Fisher • nu-
n1erous o1h!'rs.
CALIFORNIA CRUISES
20 years in Newport
Ernie Minney 548-4191
e CHARTER THE FINEST
New 40' Ketch
673-2517 • 675--2400
BLUE\VATER OIARTERS
27'-40' U-Drive Skip. Avail
Day/ll'k. 646-9000 24 hr.;,
Mini Blkts 9275
MESA MINT BIKES 39.95 up
Sales • Parts • Rel)!Llr1
2267 Harbor, C.1\1. • 54$.3007
MotorcyclH 9300
1967 TRlUMPH 650 Bon-
neville 2.000 mi. Best offrr
takes. 67>2617 eves 6T:>-24!n
'68 Bul1aco Mabtdor l\1K1U
5 sllt'('d, '1 l1l06 <lid $&5(J
• l.J 8-4553 •
Honda 250 Scrambler
Oean & 11rtt1 l"pl l29'j • ~7ll7 .
'65 HONDA '.m StJperhawk,
400'.I ml. $3Th.
548--7943
'66 TRIUMPH m 6-650 Vl"ry
O~n $800. 82') Balbo11
Blvd. Apr. 1
AND
CAMPER
SALE
We have a large selection of
clean 8 to 10 foot cab-over
and non cab.over modela
priced from $400.00.
TRUCKS ·TRUCKS -TRUCKS
1959 · 1966 · Camper equl~
heavy duty Fords and Chev-
rolets -From $499. All pric-
ed to sell NOW!
BANK TERMS
Trades Welco,,,.
OPEN ROAD
830 S. HARBOR BLVO.
SANTA ANA S31-465S
Housecar
The fabulous Open Road,
Carmiel chllssia mount with
features tound in models
twice the cost of this unit,
including new space age
mono toilet ~-yslem.
$5495.
OPEN ROAD
830 S. HARBOR BLVD.
SANTA ANA S31-46S5
OPEN ROAD la' Custom
chasis mount on I Ton
truck, 4000 W gen. plant, air
cond .. sterro tape system,
self contained. Pressure
water system etc. Excel
cond. $3000 down-take over
$50/mo paynient. a46--0750
Dune Buggies 9525 ----SEE TI IE KA VOTE
e I.A PAZ BUC:GJES e
962-0538 or 962-2273
Imported Autos 9600
• Spot Cash for Imports
\Ve pay more for any impo11
regardless ol year, make
or condilion. Try us before
you sell. ELf.!ORE
r.tOTORS, 15300 Beach Bl\ld.
Westminster. 894-3322.
CORTINA
Lotus Ford Conina '61
675.3963
tATSUN
'65 Datsun Sport PU
4 Spd. dlr. oac, u~f'd only !or
pleasure. Special p.11in1 & pin
strtpt'd. S17a. Cash del:'4,
pymn1 ~ $39 .86 mo. Alter 10
494.9773
'li6 DATSUN Roadster 1600, 4
spd. Bron~.l'. rog l1s, trunk
rack. $1800. 548--5663 alt 6
pm .
JAGUAR
'63 JAGUAR Mark 2, acdan,
suto/p~·r. 1ir, chrome
•'hPell, $2.2.10. 67J..6900
KARMANN GHIA
l96t. KAID.1EN CHIA, lm·
m&c. cond low milcaee.
$1850. 675-55TI
MERCEDES BENZ
MERCEDES
1!164 2200 4. door 1edan, t11to
trane. pow/S, m 1,r o on .
Pcrfttl mech. cmd. DJOO.
Call 673-'138f 9 to S
Wt"f'kdl)'I.
•
'66 230 s
PIS, TIC. Bc.-autltul lt beige
w/ dk bronu vinyl lnt. One
~. Must set .t drive.
10% doY1n oac handles.
S8R4ll
Jim Slemons Imps.
W Krntt I Main St.
SMla Ana 546-4114
01 an'Je County's
L.1 r9est Selection
Ne-w 8. Used
Mercedes Hen:
Jim Sl emons Imps.
Warner & Main St.
Sant a An.l 546-41 14
'63 220 SEDAN
Ail'. U/S, air, AM·FM. Lt
grey wi red leather interior,
Obviously a car weU cared
tor.
Jim Siemon• Imp.
Warner &: Main St
Santa Ana !i4&-4114
'66 200 Sod.
A/T, Af.1-FM. air conditioo.
Like new condition. Graphite
grey wi red vinyl int Tf'I"940
Jim Slernon1 Imp.
\Varner & Main SL
Santa Ana 546-4ll4
MERCEDES Benz. Brand
new 280 FL sport coupe.
Only 250 miles. Tobacco
brown w/bamboo interior.
Will sac. Pvt. pty. Mra.
Hodges TI4': 541-4131, 213;
62£.,1187
MG
MG
Sales, Service, Parts
Complete new MG inventory
See the new Austin America
Here Now!
N•wport Imports Ltd.
3100 W, Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
642-9405 54~1764
Authorized MG Dealer
'68 MG
CET OUR LEADERSHIP
SAVINGS BEFORE
YOU BUY~!!
41l>ftlll Lemi6
• IMPORTS
TOYOTAS
Sport Sedam, Coupe•, Wag.
ona. We've gol thrm. AU
types, 11kk1, a1.1tomatic1.
MOit one owner with low
mUe1. Ctn finance all or
part paymen11 u low as
$22.00 per mo 0 .A.C.
ELMORE
MOTORS
TOYOTA
Ph. 894-3320
15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnatr
'68 TOYOTA
GET OUR LEADERSHIP
SA VIN GS BEFORE
YOU BUY !!t
41l>ftlll Lemi6
• IMPORTS
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303
'67 TOYOTA
Corona sedan. Red ex!erior -
Blk. int., rad., htr., std.
trana. Sale Priced ll.595. Llc
TUPl17 e E-Z TO BUY
JIM SLEMONS
TOYOTA
411 W. Warner, S.A. 540.2512
'61 TOY L1ndcruiser
Soft-top. Immaculate rondi-
tion -Lo. mi. One o'vner •
Nly equipped. Llc TRJ019-
10% down 08C. e &Z TO BUY
JIM SLEMONS
TOYOTA
4.17 W. Warner, S.A. 54().2512
TOYOTA
HEADQUARTERS
ELMORE
15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
Phone 894-3322
TRIUMPH
1967 TRIUMPH 2000 4 dr
sedan. Private party $1950.
Good rond. 675-4214
VOLKSWAGEN
Dune Buggy Builders
1968 wrecked V\V, 300) mi .
Comp! except lires & radio,
$950. 83J..-0812 1966 harbor, C.M. 646-9303
* 64 ~1GB * 65 VW $1049 R/H De.Lux
Sl,100 Model Extra Clee , Like
New, Going ov er a eas,
8'7-5955
Xlnl '°"" 842-2186
'51 MG-TD, black sports
r::-~ a:~= shape. '66 VW 2 Dr. 1300 Deluxe. Lo
=~=---~~--I nillage, Very clean. Must 1967 MGB Must sell, leaving sell lmmedi.ately. $1300. Pri
county ca.U 548-4040 patt')'. 968--1039
PORSCHE
'65 PORSCHE C O>upe, lime
green, new tiree. rebuilt
engine. $3300. 982-1909 or
982-1577
'57 PORSOlE, \Vhite, good
interior. Priv, pty, must
sacrilice1 494--1354
PORSCHE '67, 912-5.
Red. $4700. Private
party. ~1int. 646-6764
PORSCHE
'63 Super 90. Excell. cond.
After 7 PM call ~7
VW engines, Steady in 1tock.
1500 cc -$395. 40 hp • $235.
1300 cc • $325. 36 hp -$155.
642.()350, 646-7670 Eves.
1 OWNER '6.5 VW. Beige
w/tan Int. R&H, Xlnt cond.
$1,200. 642-7241 or eve1.
673-7032.
1965 V W Xlnt Cbnd. FM. A~1
Radio, Wood \Vheel Gd.
Tires 642-4780
'67 Vw Xtra nice car. S50
dwn OAC. Pymts Sal mo.
Dir. 842-4615
'66 VW 1300: exceplional
cond., 15.!XXI miles. S1450.
RENAULT "2•1161 644--039'
----------'64 VW Conv<'rlibtc. Xlnt
'63 REN. cond. Must see to a~
Caravellt' • One owner. Ex·
cellent condition • Priced to
sell at on!y ~.
e E-Z TO BUY
JIM SLEMONS
TOYOTA
417 W. \Varner. S.A. 540-2512
SUNBEAM -------'64 SUNBEAM
Imp. Nice car · Sale Priced
$395. 10% down oac.
e £.Z TO BUY
JIM SLEMONS
TOYOTA
417 W. Warner, S.A. 540-'1512
precia1e! 642.0137
'&I VW Bug. Xlnt cond. both
in & out. Hrdtop. Must sell
$950/hest oUer. 548--9747
'67 VW Bug, AJl.1!Fr-.I, 8
I.rack stereo, sunroof. $14.75
• 644-2660 •
'65 VW Deluxe. Very sharp
car. No dwn OAC $40.60 mo.
Dir. 842-4615
'63 VW Camper low 1niles
Xlnt cond. $450. dn, $36. mo.
pri pty. 548-4288.
'64 VW Deluxe $59 dwn OAC
Pym!• only $33.50 mo. Dir.
!J.12-4615
'66 V\Y Xtra clean car.
No dwn OAC Pymts only $47
mo. Dir. 842-4615
TOYOTA '66 VW Xtra cle11.n car. No
,67 TOYOTA dwn OAC Pym11 only 147.
mo. Dir. 842-4615 DELUXE Sl-::DA.i'I
Dir, oac, automatic, radio, '65 V\V Deluxe. Very sharp
heater, whlle side walla. car. No dwn OAC S4{J.60 mo.
Like ne\\'! High gas mileage, DJr. 842-4615
J~· pymnls. $175 Deis or '&I VW C.Onv. Ree.l nice car.
trade. Pymnts $46.86 mo. No dwn OAC. Paymts
494.9773 ONLY $31 . mo. Dlr. 842-4615
-.6~77',\~T~o-yot-,~C-ro-wn--,po-,-t 1 '64 VW, good condition!
sedan, air etc. Offer! $950. Call: John Mohler
• 968-436-t • • 646-4303 •
'66 vw
The Popular "Bug"
Co1npelltion Orange. Loaded
and o\blQ!ute.ly immaculate.
can tinanct all or part PQy.
mts. as I.ow u UZ.00 per
mo 0 .A.C.
$1495
ELMORE
MOTORS
TOYOTA
Ph. 89-1-3320
15.100 ~ach Blvd., Wstmnstr
'63 VW pert cond 35,000 mi,
nu tires, rbr bumper pro-
tectrs. Mus! see to appree.
Sunrool SllOOfbest offer.
Please call 543-9747
VOLVO ---'68 VOLVO
YEAR END
Clearance
AND
DEMO SALE
41l>ftlll Lemi6
• IMPORTS
1966 Hari>or, C.M. 646-9303
'68 VOLVO
GET OUR LEADERSHIP
SA VIN GS BEFORE
YOU BUY!!!
.J)tGlt lemi6
• IMPORTS
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303
'63 VOLVO
122S 4 dr sedan. Brick red
wl be.ige int. Excel. condition
thru-0ut. Must see and drive
this one at only $1095. 10o/a
down oac will handle.
e E-Z TO BUY
JIM SLEMONS
TOYOTA
417 W. Warner, S.A. 540-2512
'60 VOLVO. GOOD TIRES &
ENGINE. $325. 540-ll9S ear.
Jy AM or aft 6
1965 VOLVO PHllO. Radio,
overdrive. Xlnt cond. S2300.
842-7347
Sport Cars 9610
'66 Datsun 1600
ROADSTER
4 Spd, dlr, oac, Honduras or-
ange, blad< plush interior.
SUPERB CONDITION! $175
Deis, or trade. Pymnts $46.86
mo. After ll, 494-9773
Autos Wanted 9700
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOR·
USED CARS
CONNRL CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 546-1203
WE PAY ..
CASH
tor used cars &. trucks '1111
call us tor free estimate.
GROTH CHEVROIH
Ask for Sales Manager
1821.1 Beach BJ.,
Huntington Beach
KI 9-3331
Will Buy
Your Volkswagen or Porsche
& pay top dollars. Pa.id for
or not. Call Ralph
67 3-1190
\Vll.L Trade 20' lnbrd with
completely reblt eng & other
equip. Value. Sl.000. 5"8-ll31
Us.a Cart
NEED A CAR?
CAN'T BE FINANCEDT
•Bankrupt! •Repcmesslon!
e Bad Credit! e Divorced!
e Military •New in Area!
MakP Payday P aymen11
McCARTHY MOTORS
1420 So. MaJn 6 Edinger
(2 blocka N. of Sean>
San ta An• Ph 54.2-3501
New C1rs 9800 New Cars 9800 New C1r1 9800
TERRY
BUICK
12Z·S1' ST., HUNTIN~TON HACH
Y1 lltc• •N '9cHk C.... H.,:,
, ........ 536-6588 Cl .........
P-EXT TlME 8UV
A THOROUG,.._V
12'fCONOITIONliP
IJSeD.CAe FROM-
80BTERRY
BUICK
c;,, ,,.~.,
$1849
U11 Fro"t
Pe,fo1"''"c•
P•ck•••
Sho11ldtr
l•lh
0~1t1!1•d
Wt.It. W11J Tlre1
H••"Y Duty
l 11t1ry
lmm1dl1t1 D11iv1ry. No. l 1
l'lu1 T1• I Lit.
-:-.;---. ---\ -.,, =-.-::. :: .. -_ --,llr'IO:C,~.~.--. ... ... . --
TRANSPORTATION ;.;.;.-------1
Used Cars 9900 Used Ca" 9900
~~~·~.II '·, !..• • t •
FLETCKER
JONES ·
:CHEVROLET
t.t.ll W(SIMINSTlll A't'l ,
Brand New
'68 Chevy
II Coupe
E-Z-1 glas11, vinyl trim,
2-specd wipel's, t u 11 y
factory equipped. Stock
No. 1206. $1998
plus Tax A Uc.
Brand New
'68 Chevy
Impala
SPORT COUPE $2438
FLETCHER JONES
AYS •••
We are the only dcale
whose used cars are s
perfect that we can
guarantee them like a
ew car. Al I of our
"Gold SeaJ" used cars
are guaranteed uncondi-
tiona11y, just like a new
car guarantee -4,000
miles or 100 days -We
are the only dealer who
takes all the risk out of
buying a usro car. So
why take chances.
'&1 T-81RD
Power steering, automa~
tic, radio, heater. 1ZE 39.
'&7 PLYMOUTH
AIR
Sports Fury ID, 4 Sf'JC'Cd,
fact. AJR, R&H. Like
new. TT\V 029.
$1988
'&2 IMPALA
Coupe, R&H, fuH fact.
uip. f'DS 308. $788
'U MERCURY
STATION WAGON
Automatic transmission.
radio, h ea t e r. very
clean. Lie. ~IIS770 $788
'&S IMPALA CPE.
Automatic, power steer-
ing, V-8, radio and heat-
r. ROD497.
$1388
'64 CHEVELLE
STATION WAGON
V8, automatic. radio,
heater. Lie. ONr-m $888
'&5 PLYM. -AIR
SPORT FURY
CONVERTIBLE. Power
steer., auto., rndio, heat-
er, factory air. HDL265.
NICE CAR BE L OW
WHOLESALE BLUE
BOOK. $1188
'64 FORD
F'nirlane. Fact. equipped
Radio Iii heater. PAE526
$788
'&l vw
SUN ROOf
·I spe<'d, radio, heater,
harp. U e. JJC-640 $988
'&6 FALCON
2 Or. Automatic. radio,
heater. Lie. SYll-214
$1388
'59 EL CAMINO
SURFER'S SPECIAL
F&ctory equipped.
KRR:\21 $599
BUICK CHEVROLET
'6S BUICK
Skyl&rk Conv. 4 sp. big en·
glne, maroon w/whitc 109 •
blk vinyl inleriol' -inunacu-
late. Sale p~ SlJ!k}, e E-Z TO BUY
JIM SLEMONS
TOYOTA
417 W. Wamer, S.A. 54(}.25U
'67 WILDCAT 2 dr. ITT. Lan·
dau top, buc. sea ta. power.
54<>-9939
CADILLAC
1962 CADILLAC
Couf>9 De Ville
Polar white. Full po'4'et, air
rood. lmmaculate.
$1495
Can finance all or part Pay-
ments as low as $22.00 per
mo 0 .A.C.
ELMORE
t.1<Yr0RS
TOYOTA
Ph. 8"1-33>l
l;,JOO Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
'60 CADILLAC
CONVERTIBLE
For sale by PRfVATE PAR.-
TY. Silver gray with excel·
lent black top. Engine, trans·
mission, shocks, brakes, all
in top shape. See at Lido
Motors, 1300 Coast Highway,
across from Bay Club apts.
Call 6734689. WILL DICKER
ON PRICE.
1961 CADD...LAC 4 door Sedan
de Ville, 6 1vindows, P<J""er
seat, ?W>'er windows, f>O"'er
steering, P'"'er b r a k e s ,
power trunk opener, air con-
ditioned_ Nice body no
den111. $750.00 Pvt. party.
81S-6088 (Fullerton)
'67 EL Dorado, white, Blk
padded top, blk int. lmmac ..
under warranty. See at
Balboa Marina. Mr. Hovey
67l-8840
• 1967 EL Dorado, leather
in!., AMIFM stereo, ele.c
vents & trunk. Climate con-
trol, air cond. Mus1 he sold.
$6150 or best Qffer. 673-fi635
l968 EL DORADO, 5,000 mi.
Prem tires, lthr, vin top,
AM/FM, like new. $6950.
673-6635
';,G CAD Funeral coach. Good
cond. Equip w/ surfboard
racks. Best otter 642-8598
CHEVROLET
CHEVY Impala hard top '62,
low mileage--Xln't conditivn,
Pvt. party. can after 5:30
p.m. 962-8964
'55 CHEVY 4 dr. Only 40,COO
mi. $200. Call aft 6; 646-6698
Di.a.I. 642-5678 far RESULTS
'66 CHEV. MALIBU
Ct\l-veUe 2 dr. H.T. Cokwrlal
cteQffi with full bladt vin,yl
bent.ti llMUI:, tltriflY 283 cu .
in. engl.nc. P, stttrini, R&H.
Th.11 btauty, low mlleaae,
ooe owner car full price is
just
$1795
1111 car lot on llarbor Blvd.
JOHNSON & SON
Llncoln-Mm::ury
Costa Mesa Branch
19n }fartlor Blvd. 642--T«iO
'64 CHEV.
lmpala 2 dr. H.T. AIT, P/S,
R/H. Sa.le Priced $9'li. JO«.
down oac. · e E-Z TO BUY
JIM SLEMONS
TOYOTA
411 W. Warner, S.A. 540-2512
65 CHEV, Jl.falibu station
wagon. MU91: ael.I our 37,000
mile sweetheart. It ha1
a u t o ma t i c tr&nllmill!ion
power s!eering and other ex·
tras. Will sacrifice. Dlr.
Phone 545-8278 or 642-0981
'63 CHEV.
Bel Air Wgn. One owner
Excel. cond. Sale Prictd
$9$. 10% down oac. e £.Z TO BUY
JIM SLEMONS
TOYOTA
411 W. Warner, S.A. 540-2512
1952 CHEVY. New radiator,
Good body & tires, engine
needs work, Best offer
take.s. 611 Kings P I . ,
Newport Heights. 646-4032
'60 NOMAD Wgn R/H, euto,
tr, PIS P/B, low mil, orig
owner, xlnt cond. 8J0.0541
'62 BEt,.Air, red, xlnt cond.
Ret. N,Y, 8!27. Must sell.
Best offer. 49S-1439
'63 CHEV. 11 Nove. Sta.
\Vag. Excell. cond. S890.
Call 842-4850 aft 4:30 PM.
'66 CAPRICE, vinyl top,
auto. trans., pwr. brakes &
steer. $2,350. 67J.-5857
'65 Corvette Rdstr
Clean, 4 spd. 327 Hypo
S2995 • 675-5787
CHRYSLER
'67 NEW'PORT CUstom, fact.
air, vinyl top. Priced lor
quick sate. (11 637-7496
CONTINENTAL
1968 CONTINENTAL. Must
sell -very immaculate
4,000 mile demonstrator ,
equipped for the Continental
connoisseur. Call Peter the
Greek at Johnson and Son,
Orange County's oldest
established Uncoln,
Mercury, Cougar dealership.
Newport -CM &12-0981
•
·-··------~ ---------.. ................. ~--.......... ,~;----.-.--------------... ---------~-~--~-----~ ----. ---------..---
•
• SEWING
INSTRUCTOR
• SAWGIRl
Ar• you th ... womtn?
It you are, lb.-Sinl;f'r
company need.1 you. You
ma.Y oow ~ employed
bUt want to improve YoUt
present posftioo. Salary
plus eom.mjulona, Pf.Id
vacations pl u 1 many
olbet bentfits.
Apply In j,er90n,
Mr. John Ferr1ro
THE SINGER CO.
7771 Edinger
11 Huntington Center
H untington Beach
EXPERIENCED
PART TIME
PROOF COMMERCIAL
TILLER
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK
4525 MacArthur llYd,
Newport Beach
S4G-4424
An equal opporrunlty
t'!mployer
STORE MANAGER
Chris' openlni aoon in South
Coe.st Plat&. R.eqUitu tuUy
experienc@d women'• spee-
l<y thop manapr. Oppor-
nmily to grow with expand·
Ing laah1on organization. Sal·
ary be.sed on experience +
1----------1 vo-lume. See Mr. Berohn, Oiria' Fashions 9821 Chap.
man, G&rden Grove. tt0srus
Over 21
Apply In Peraon
9,5 p.m.
REUBEN E. LEE
151 E. Coaol Highway
Newport Biiich
New Store Openin9
Hlritlc.&11 phues of help.
TOP PAY! e Managers • Cashiers
• Sales It. Stock Glrls
LOCATIONS:
Newport Bee.ch
Town & Country, Orange
La Ha.bra
Telephone BACK STREET
[ ......................... [ <n0838-4890
MAIDS NEEDED
Expedenced or will train
for stead)' work.
EXTRA GOOD WAGES
Good v.·oril:ing ('Qflditions.
Apply in person to houR-
kceper Mrs. Joyce Miner,
bet 9 am & 3 pro.
Laguna COl.lnlry Oub Village
lll06 S. Coe.st Hy. at Aliso
Beach, South LagUZlll
TELLER
Experience prefet'f"OO
BANK OF AMERICA
615 E. Balboa Blvd.
Bal"°"
Equal opportunity empl()fe:r
HOSPITAzLITY H0&t61 Is
looking for a mature woman
\vilh a g'nuine interest and
love ol people to welcome
GIRL FRIDAY
Part time. Some exJ)t'!f'i..
£nee required. 60 w.p.m.
electric typewriter. 10.
Ikey adder, good with flg-
w-es. N ea t appearing.
Send letter with Eluy
expected IO H.M.F., P.O.
Box 2115, N~ Be-ada
WaitreHes
-Al-'O
Cashier Hostess
Neat appearing.
No exper. n~sary.
(No students Please)
Apply in per90n
Bob's Big Boy
154 E. 17th St., C.M.
n e w families. 1'-1usl h a v e ---------
EXUPllOIW
OPPORlUNITYI
for •tcperlencecl
e W1ltrent1
• Cockt1ll Welt,...,..
Wu Bel\'1 ts 1.cot9dn1
it.ppJ.l.Clltlons for tbt.M po-
lit10n1.
Apply In p1rson
Wu Ben's
333 l1y1ld• Drive
Newport leach
J.C. Pet'IMY Co.
tuhk>ft Ill.and
Newport Bet.ch
N...i•
PART TIME
SALESLADIES
Housewives and Mothers
~ YoU ape.re & t"' hours e1cb day and e.dd to the
family income at the .. me
time? Scbed.is convenl-
eat for yoo, mornings, &ft·
emoon1, ewnings or combl-
nation1 of all. Work ln a
fun store. under the finest
ol condlttons and toP super-
vixlon.
Apply In penon.
P~ey'1 Fuhlon Island
9:30 a.m. IO 9:30 p.m.
Monday thru Friday
An student positions tilled
Equal opportunity employer
TEWR
Savings I. Loan
experience J)l"t'ferred.
RECEPTIONIST
Typing required
Apply in person
No phon1 c1lla pl11M
MARINERS
SAVINGS & LOAN
1515 w .. 1,1111 DrlYO
Newport B11ch
• WAITRESSES
•HOSTESSES
• BUSBOYS
• DISHWASHERS
Pull a part &Ima
Apply in par.on.
2130 • 4:30 dally
Coco's
Famous
Hamburgers
17th & Irvine
Newport Beach
e Fry Coolc e Busboy
• Dishwasher
Full time: bfl.sls. Qu&Wled
to work in high grade reat-
aurant. OUen pleasant en..
vln:inment, good company
beotftts. Apply:
PERSONNll.
AQINCY
4U L 17tfri St.
c .. t.1 M ...
'4....al
1104 L 11th It.
S..nta An•
147•'721
MALE
P.WIOftnel CounMtor
fer Coshl MIM Offlae
Nffd to j)in upel'ie~
p r o ttulonal empleyment
~· Mull M aagreulve.
rood <I' pbone«, and work
well with ()eaplt. St.le&
8kpnd be~M. bUt DOI. _,,,.
Mothanlcat Tedi
Trainee
.. $2.69 ...
M~ b.avt coOd mtehankal
ability to train to llS8effible
and di&assemble o f 11 c e
machines. Mllltar)' com.
plett.
Elocttl..I ....... Mo•
.. $4.&0 hr
lleavy e:lectrlcal e x p •
Mil~-type work. Toot.
~. Able to break down
me.d!.lnlM'Y and r e b u i I d •
Troublelhool.
1...ri Eloctrlclon
BUFFUM'S
Fashion Island
Newport Beach to $3.75 hr
w·=ANT=~Sh'"1>~-lull~-nm~· -,-Book"'_,._. 1 1'l1ty e.xptrleoce.d ~
keeper to do payroll, pur-e1ectrlciat1. Know 440 volts.
cbue orders, posting, bill-Eltctronfc Draftlnt
ina. Muat have form.al train-to l .7S lw
ing and aood references. Good backgroUnd In draf·
Abillcy to set up budgetJ, in-must ha~ experience in
ven!Ory control system.I et!:, electronkl.
helpful. Send resume. to 1545 Sr Draftsmon
Newport Blvd., C.M. Call IO
642.(Wlll for appointment $5 ~$750 mo
Tool d..tp. Eap and im·
Collector Trainee
S1l1ry Plus Commls1ion
Loc1I Colledlon Agency
C11I Mr. B11ler
642-7352
TELLER
Savlna't & loan experientt dt-
1irable but not nttt'SS&r)',
Call Mn. Motel for app't.
Mutual Savinp • Loan
Auoc:., 2867 E. Coe.st Hwy.,
Ol:M. 675-5010
iaginatSon. Able to take
machinery items and la)'l:l'.!t
oo board. Will be manager
d. engineering dept.
Accouatents &
Cotr AccounhMts
$600-$783 mo
Some re:qulre a delP'ft -
Othtra do not. 3 yrs txp bl
1tandard mfg.
Plumben
$5.00 hr
2 - 3 )Tl exp. Repe..lr and
replace. Must have awn
tooh. Advanc• to fottman.
Decorator
Receives
Cancellation
of
$22,000.00
Spanish · &
Mediter-
Tut.sell)', Auousl 20, 1968 t AILY P?LOT %lJ
MIRCHANDISE ,Oil MlllCHANDSSI FOR MiitCHANDISI FO•
SALi AND TRADI SALi AND TRADE SALi AND TU.DI
Furnltur"9 8000 fu;nlture IOOO MJ1eell1neou1 8600 , •••••••••••••••••
SpaniJh & Medlteminean
Bought Mtnuf1dur•r'1 Showroom Simples
At TerTific Savings!
SWIMMING POOL
11 Ft Pool, FUter. Surfael
Sklmnv:r, Malnten&DC9 Kit.
~·REE Ground Pad..
$149.81
S&CAltD POOL
-••
'
'
8' Wood carved ann divan , lg. man's chair;
beaut tabrica. 5 Pc hex-aeon dark o•k din.
set, w/black or 1vocado framed cha111; 5
Pc BR set. 9·dr Mr. & Mrs. dresser, lg mirror,
2 commodes, decorative headboard in Spa.n·
ish o.ak or avocado deaia:n.
Item< Sold lndlvidually
323 S. Maln, On.Di•
113>-I ... 1-"""'!".I!!'!!'!'~~ I • *AUCTION*
Shop Around-beCore you by see US!
VALUE $895 -PULL PRICE $429.95
or terms 11 low 1s $3.00 Wffk
No Down-Use Our Store Ch arge Plan
U )'Oil will RU or buy stv• Windy a tr)'
Aue&u1 J'rid.ay 7:30 p.m.
Windy's Auction Sam
Behind Toey'• Blas. Mal'I
2m5% Newport, CM 646-8686 No Fancy Front-BUT Quality Values Inside
APPROVED PURN, 2159 HAR&OR CM 12 Years same location-same own'trs Pu1 )'ou~cu 1n -our Place Dilly 9.9 10.$ Su d e .. ,9660 H11rbor Blvd 0-I The•trt • n 1y ~.-3100 McFaddtn SA
•••••••••••••••••• SWAP M.E.ET
Furniture 8000 Sewing M1chlnu 8120 Sl•rt1 AUi 17
• • • • • • • • • • 1967 SINGER, Wal con.ale 531-1272 aft 7 ranean
Furniture
$ave Save $ave lm:l. Transfer oi service u NDERWOOo Typewriter ·'
Why Rent Furnished? m • n f orce• r t p o . S2S, blonde ki~y lhaped
All New Top
Qu1llty Brand
Namesl A
liecorllor's Dream
You can bey fl c:.unpltlll apt. To u e h-o-m • t I c , auto, colt~ ta.tile a.nd matching
full oI fW'Tlili.n for only z1g--zaa:
1
• button hol<'8, blind lamp !•blct $25, desk $3 kit· ;-;
$11.88 per mo. No money h<'ms, 11.ncy stltcbrs. No at-chm be.r, need rtfinlshing
dawn. Puymen!s include &II tachhmtnlJ needed. S37.!S $3, flrt!f)le.ce wood $10 320 1 ~
taxci & interesi. ca.a or MIUme U.10 mo. Ramona Pl., r.osta r.1es1, '
7-piece living rm. stt. Guar irood. 526-6616 ~&-.91123 ===~~~~-1 5-pW.>ce living rm. ~t. 8125 BEAUTlP"tJL Bi-fold interior
l"1>iecc bedrrn, set. Mu1ic•I Inst, doon (4 panelll each panel
FURNITURE 120 .... Aocor<!lan , 3 """'' ml°· x " 61\" q"ality Ll"'UIDATORS •wl•"""· Xln< cond. ldeol hot""ood Nttiq\lo I'" Y ,,. tor beoglnner. $00. 646-4428 with 11>ld trim. A 11
1807 Newport Blvd., C.M. s-5 hardwood. Re & I 0 n. b I e
Open Eves. ELECfRIC ''"itar, coil cord -4gg....2151 or 837--0791
H • Di I • • • • • • • • • • .... COLOR -· p k d B-" ome IS on spay FAMILY Movina-sa.crlficr. 2 $45; ampllller $25. Both A-1 .l.Y, ac ar .......
nautical la~. 2 batch l~coodl="";";·=,.._.=;"';::,=== walnut console, remote, exc.
•
Over $100,000
worth of
Spanish &
Mediterra11-
ean furn. to
choose from.
(EXAMPLE>
d --• bl cond, $250. ~al pain.-cov' · enu ta ti, 1 hat. 8130 lings f125 (1.pPt. $400) •
ch cov'd. cott. table, Uke Pl1nos & Orgins Ladle1 qu8l. clothing, like
new. 846-0076 ¥.> • C.:.---S 15 7 8 ( son s lei new, l to .. szs. • •
MODERN bi!'clt tJ,op '"' Jel i , 8-10. Mo" Vml•. >fG.-0625
dining table w'lth z host &. 4
side chairs, 1 lee.f. $75.
67~22
l DANISH mod end tables, 1
1m lamp in gold It blk. 1 lrg
1lill lift, frarqed picture.
Make offer! 54~1n3
CASH for tum & appliances.
We sell good uMd fum. 1772
Npt m. Od 642-7015
Thll !ihipmcnts ol Baldwin D~NCAN Ph~e 4 pedestal
Pianos & Organs 00 the din rm or hv rm ,table, 3
way Our floor &: discon le a f &, magh $40 mod~Js must go. Price• Encyclopaed.la Br1tamlca 52
alashedl Doesn't it make ~ka complete w/ yr book!
aenM to ahop us before you -$~'4_&-_580_7 _____ ,
buyf CUSIDM Velwt d rap 1 e:,
WARD'S BALOwrn STUDIO never bfe.n Ultd made to ftt
1801 Newport, C.M., 00-84M a 9' opming Cf lo tlr,
C
, Sea.spray pi\. $75. Avocado Orange o I Largest gm heavy mclih drape1 Ota
CHAIR A Ollom&o $25 Lea.I On•Stop Muaic Store u· openlna:, itri. 549-1713
de&lc $25 Step table $1 W ti Ian & Lampl f2 646-4751 ~r tier P os . organ1. 0.'IJE Set ol Box Spring11,
F1.1eher, .KAnabe p 1ano 1, $.JO.DO. Kitchen door, 6 ft.,
Items as follows : Gor-3 PIECE sectional aola, Player pianos, reblt1 auar., Tliii lnchea lore by 29 lnchea
geous 8 ft. custom quilt· ~1-::>flgood .:ood.ltion. $50. G~a~~CHS-MANNING'S wide, ,".00. Table. modtl TV
·==_,,,,-.,.,-...,,.---,.--,--MUSIC CITY doean t weft} Io o d for ed sofa with separate MOVING! Uprite piano, An· 3400 So. Bristol i,;,"""',.,.:'-' .;.$!10..00:,c,. ~~---
•1 Ill · tlqu.e, bUnk & twin beds, GOLD COINS B U M . oose p ows with heavy misc. fW'n. S49--0462. ••cii"'iiiilAiiM.i'ii"'&.*iiiii.540-i.i21ii6SO.. -· • exican ' t,old pieces. 50 ~so ($!3.50), , :
oak trim decor and APPROX 19'.{I Oreale:r, chest, NO\V HERE -the MW 20 Pl'IO ($18.50) and 10 peso
• chair. can &fte:r 6 pm. Supe.rsoundlna r .200 CS15.2S) or all threot for $104.
car, lypN>riter, &&les exper-
ien~ and bondable. Call R.N. 3·11 & 11 .7
Part Time
AIDES
Experience preferttd
7-3 and 11·7
Park Lldo
O,nvalescent Hospital
---------1 Equal opportw\iry employer Shlp-RecolYI Cieri! matching chm, 3 match· 646-J050. Hammond Spinet ora:an Call ~9 -the finest ytt! G"°AS=~RM,.--.. --,30'=·-y-e~l ~lo-w-I
544<9'JS.
POSITION OPEN
in packing and inspection
!or ceramic industry . A~
ply between 8 am, & noon
industrial Clay Products
l87ffi Fiberglass Rd.
Hontington Beach, C&lil.
WOf\lAN To work in donut
Shop Apply in persoo, no
phone calla please. Win-
chetl'a Donut Shop. 2947
Harbor Blvd,
LITE daywork, ans, phone,
some muling aloud. Over
30. Must drive. U .66, 3-8 hr
day, for elderly invalid
lawyer. XIO E. (bas! Hw,y Sp
1445 Superior
Newport Beach 642-ltlO
Saleswomen
Fine ladies clothing.
1UPPAY!
Apply in person
No phone calls pl.eas.
BAO< STREE"r
25 Fashion Iiiiland
Newport Beach
7, NB. sti-7331 --:=:-:::==,.,,--
SECRETARY WAITRfSSES
To assist Manager, Good ExJ)erle/'ICt'd onW!
typing & tihorthand &kills Apply In Person
"'I· !In l·S. Moo-Fr!. ApPly SURF & SIRLOIN 612 Terminal Way, c.~f. 5930 Pee, Cst, Hwy.
OITICE Girl T.V. Store. 6 N9\1!port Beach
day week. P 1 e a a a n t --=:=:=;;:;:;:~:;.:~-
pcminality, booost. Good GIRL FRIDAY
oppty for adva n crot . ~Yeanwell roundedof.tke
675--1411 ~xperience. fiO wpm electric
BAR MAID -typewriter. Aecuni.cy naen-
GO-GO DANCER tial. Cape.hip of assuming r-e-
Apply in pergoo. 2901 gponsibillty. Salary commf!n-
Harbor. Sassy l...aSly. surate with ability. 547-0038
545-9983 * or 644-1234 1-................ -=--CHURCH StenogTapher, full WAITRESSES
time. ExoeUent typist. Some Experienced only need
shorthand desirable. Write apply. No p b one calls
General Sales
Full tiJM or 11 to 3 basis,
Qua.lltled to worlc in high
grade fa.ahlon store. Ex-
perience prele!Ted but not
nccessacy. Offers immedi·
ate: liberal diacount Md
pleasant environment Ap-
ply'
BUFFUM'S
Fashion Island
Newport Beach
l!OUSEKEEPER. Live in.
Young man in f&mily haJ
lmpered t1gbt Principal
dut1e1, cooking for him &nd
maintaining hla qtrs. Must
be capable of being !econd
molher. Ideal for woman
wishing perm. home. Very
desirable quarters. Salary
open. Must ha-Ye ucell.
references, no drinking or
11mokini. P.O. Box 388
Corona del Mar.
T eleptione Girls
$100 WEEK
Experienced or not • tuU
or put time:. Apply 9 to
4. 1500 Adami, U te m,
Cost& Mesa.
OFFICE WORK
P. 0 , Box 1536, Newport plea&t". Young lady for light outce
Bool..i\. DENNY'S & telephone 'WOlit. Net1t ap.
WAITRESS. Experienced, 1600 S. Coast Hwy. pearan<'e. Ask tor Mr. Ken·
mature. 3:30-8 p.m. 6 days. Laguna Beach nedy, :K134 So. Kilaon. S.A.
Sunday off. Apply in person EXP~CED Automotive ~76 or 540-6677
HAMBURG.ER HENRY M!rvict> ca.shier and relief e A Ukabl.e posib:Jn for a
2135 Placentia. Costa Mesa PBX. Conta<;t Mn. Be 11 likable person. CASHJEJt..
BAB y s ITT ER For 2 842-6611, Wilson Ford Sales, convenient hours, First nm
children, s & 8, 4 nights per 1~ Beach Blvd., Hun-UDO THEATRE, Newport
v.·k. Own tran6. not nee. but tington Bee.ch. Be a ch. Mr. Hawkin.on,
pref'd. 675-4948 btf. noon. B A BYSIT T ER wanted, 673-708l
Balboa mature woman with own RECEPl'IONIST wanted for
RECEPT.-CASHIER trans for 2 boys, ages 5 & 2. doctors office. Must be neat
Llght typing & filing: 5 Yr old in a:hool % day. 4 appearing, age 40 or ~r.
hours 9:30 ~ 5:30, Sat. Dey wN!k. El Taro area. Typing necessary, will train.
PETER CHRISTIAN
of the
N1wport1r Inn
Hai an opening tor
BEAUTIC IAN
with following
Call 64-4.0340
YOUNG men Ir. women 21-~
Polltlona open for whiter
employment F'Ull &: part
time. Apply The J>omnen
l'imh I-Otipt . .2100 Ocean-
front NB btwn 2-5 pm.
• W1itre11 over 21 •
•COOK•
Apply in penion
'28 E. 17th St., C.M.
Amiro& Restaurant
MAINTENANCE MAN for 36
lnlt motor hotel in ~
Beach. U manied, wile
could do maid l\>Ork. Salary
& apt furnished. 494-4563
EXPER. drug clerk; 40 hr.
week ; no eve« or Sun,
ALSO, exper. drug delivery
& stock cleak. COI..J..EGE
fHA,RMACY 54l)..4580
MEN Ii: women. U A ovrr,
full a: part-dme; cook, let'
~&m IEIViclt, & 11 ' t ,
manqer. Call 548-6681 After
1 PM
NEED handy maJ'I. ~
oouple pre:ten-ed. Exchange
minor apt maint. for rent.
673-472-4.
RELIA13iLE co u ip I e to
man~ 15 tmlt apt. hoose.
No pell • Exp. prtf. Call
S.16-3634 for appt.
GW..EY Cook. Part Time
Oii 8p)rt F1ahinJ 00.t. ·-· Agencies, M. W. 7550
ARGUS
Work Near the a.~h
Mktg secy. Lite. S/H .. '415
Rest. Gal. Friday ...... $-100
Janitorial, FW1 or pt trn $346
Dlllhw'ber, Dy or eve Sll sit 9:30 • 12:30. Age 25...(5: 837-1247 Awf.. e&ll 548-9511
Call ""° app't. 644-1114 I --S~E~C~R~E~T~A~R~Y~-TEMPORARY typ\lt. SJ.65 ARGUS EMPLOYMENT
l\lATIJRE Woman for Af. Lile in!IUl'MCe beckg:round per bour. Rec:iQ P.O. Box CONSULTANT AGrnCY
le.moon care for 1 yr. old; prefen'ed. Extensive train-US, Costa Mesa, five phone XN3 We1t1eUft, N.B. 5'8-7T96
Killybrook Sehl. ar e a Ing to right girl. Newport ~""=m~""=·-~-----11&211 E. 17th St., S.A. 547-&338
546--5426 Beach area. &42~ NEED & t t er I C h 00 I
VERY attractiw girl to EXPER. TELLERS bllibysi~r. Prefer matutt School•lnstrvctlon 7600
model lingerie, 3 or -4 hn. a Exp. S1fe O.poslt Clks ~:S~6~~ ol NB Own SCHOOL Childrt11'• vacation
week, not ln publk:; 5ingle BANK OF AMERJCA 1 ----------1 r•tei. Qillooat 10 •. l.Haon
or married. Reply Bos M· MSW.19th St., Costa Meaa. MATURE woman lo bab)oail Typing Sc:bool. 5U-28S9. l7l
in, Da.lly Pilot Equal Opportunity Employer for reducing progmm. Small ,_ ~ Mar, C.M.
\!OTHER'S Helper, no LJVE-JN liOWlekttptt and u-.;u,,e, own trarw. Call
cook'c. IJvp.tn: 2 tchl child care. Pri•ale room 64.2-JGJ)
ch.ildren, Se.11 + pr! rm &. and bath. $200 mo. 5" de.yJ McmmR'S ~. Mq, Uv.
be. 847-T.?54 wtr. Perm. po11Wion w1th rd. In. MUMM booelt. ttl1able.
DRUG StoN Oerk, full time, No smokinc. 545-6970 Room, bOt.rd' I aalAl'J'.
neat, vcper. Mld.qed P"'f. WAITRESS 54~
Apply lJ!i penon 31582 s. Olt Eicpor. JI.ff) hour. Apply lfl BABYSmER run time; Illy
llwy, So. l..lijtuna p er 1 on Lee'• Rcctalrllflt, bomt, Mesa Verde.
\\'AJTR.EX5 Nffded, full time. rr.m Brookhurst st., JV nr. • 5464164 *
ilUmmK, part tim. wtnlf!l'.1 ..:""""°'==~~~---Jab1 Men, Wom. 7500 ~-H.B. are1. ~712 P art Tinw
"'543-3757 BookkMpar/Cuhler HADU>RESSER. ..... .,.,.
CHILD -I I tchool .... Apply In --· ~ ,......... My i.om.. °'"' tnn&. Nr UDO CUt WA.SH S.S.. Xklt appcrti,mll:)'l ITJ.
Ad.,,. It }l(qncUli HB. Cl '£. 17th a.ta V• 5)G .Atk f« Tom
962--0623 SALl!3::IRL w I ~ ft. * COOK. ~
BABYSITl'ER tor ieeeher'1 6 pu. Part. poulhlJ t\Jtl time, a.ta M,.. K e m o r i a 1
mn. Old too. J>m. ncy .NpL PERMANENT, UNDER a I~ ~ Jl1 E. Vk·
ltta.._b:mt. w 6IXB v..ic... i..,una. m-im .-.. CM. Ph.. IA41M
I
THEATRICAL 7900
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
TempPt; Dw>ulb; Rfbuke:
Wlhbly: ee.rflit; llwntty;
ABOUT lbe emu:
AllCtioneier: "What An\ t ~
ftr'ed for thll tlesut1fW hml
vt~Bumlt"
....... avwd: ...,,.t ain't
Bums, 1ht.t'• "' ..........
AOCtionft'I': ''Wtll. foDcl,
tht Joke'• on me. Tbat ..,.,_
"'9t I !mow ABOtJT the
81BL!;."
SCllMlDT-PHILLIPS CO. deluxe. ~x7 Oriental ru1,
190T N. Main 0 20th drape!, ca!e curta i n •.
Santa Ana 664-STIO "'"'!t""'~~"!"'.'"""''!""' I • v Ac u UMS •
• YAMAHA • 110 "'· Repatn & paru.
to $450 oak occasional tables, (2) WAWUT dining table, &Ix
Eiq> clrl1r: wOO knowt paper cha.in, 3 leavea + custom
work klvolwd u well u !SS'' tan decorator lamps, pads $275. 642-0068
•""""'"· hanging chain , w a g ;i--11-:--E 1 IOl l S.le1 trolnu ice qu pment
$l7S lamps in wrought iron, FOR Sale A.B. D t c k table:
2 yn college. St.ble Job an 8·piece king size mas· model 320 01faet duplicator. Pianos and <>!'Ian• --·~1 All 1tylt1 available now at.
Rea10n able. Coast Vacuum
333 E .!Tlh, CM, &41-1'60
·.i
I
hlatory. Xlnt ~ ...... ty t bed . 1 2 yrs old. Good cond. $100. CO S I with , .. .-io-kDown er room swte n p.. O>ntact >fiaa !'hrl•I-,. _ A T MUS C FURNITURE, appliancH, H · .,.,, A,_ 1.~ N rnlK'e.ll. household tt.e:nui. ~. a:mpany. ave own car. can paneled mediter·1;;;~.,,,~,....,,_·~~~~~~ o.>lll ewport Blvd., C.M. Can be seen bet.10 AM&: 8 ••
l'rojoct et1glneer . FOR Sale A.B. Dick table '"==,.:84&-0'l71.=;,::::,.=---,,-I PM 501 F --• ·• c ' • Trainee ranean style wtth top model 320 offset dupltc1tr>r. WANTED: Beginner ori an '· ..... ue ... , .M. ~-j
to $600 lit 15 t 2 yrs old. Good cond. f700, students. FREE CLASS. ':57 ?o.fERC Sta wac $1?(), 10 Detail draftsman. Engineer. qua Y yr. warran Y Contact Miu Chriatensf'n 6 weeks. start Tuesday metal lhelvina:a 8'x3'x14" $18 4
In a: d r aw In i, rt ad king size mattress &: box,="~'--~-------AUg. 70th at 7 PM. ea. 2 add mach. S lpd
blueprint.I. Must have tech • . IBM T~rlter, model I C. HAMMOND Dcralle.r bike $30, 6'2-1269
IChool or collea;e math and springs. Spanish decor 19" caniag.?, deecimaJ tab. tn CORONA DEL MAR UPHOLSrERlNG • $79.50, 2
physics. Set up drawlnp, dining set, etc. Etc. Any Artlaan type. X1nt cood. 2854 E. eoe.a.: Hwy 673-8930 pc. (European craftsmen)
work from ueemblies. ' $215. 646-+128 9-5 WURLITZER Console Piano Free est, de!, pickup, 215 i •
piece can be purchased Xlnt cond. Like new $495 Main, HB "Bemy" 536-64<5 1 S1nlce Entlafff
Repre1entatlY•
to $575
2 yrs colleg, cbemlS!ry Bnd
math bkgrod. 2 yn elec·
trical work bkzrnd. Military
complele. Fee pekl.
FEMALE
Flla Cieri!
$l00-$l5G
We have 10 opeoinp tor tile
de.rim. A few require. lig~t
typing_ Xlnt opportwllty tor
&dvaoct!ment.
Rocoptf .. lst-PIX rollef
$375
Type 40 plus accurately.
Will relieve on PBX oo.rd.
Some typing and tiling.
Acctl Receivable
Auto Exp
$424.67
Handle contracts and papen
b' transfer.
Cle<k Typist
to $ln
Feto Paid, Type 45 plue. This
11 for the girl who wa.nta
IJ!abllity and opportunlcy to
advance In !he eotnl*llY·
Accts/hcel.-lo Cieri!
.. $476.67
Aa&lst tn clearing of cash,
time c:ardl, and l)t.yroll •
ColMM·ReceptlORllt
to $32~
Type ... G<neral olflc<
dulin.
G•erol Office
$]55
Tyipt 60. Will !>fl t yptn1
"'flll'U and le:tten. Good
phone YOkt: and fta\ft apt.
A4mhtl1trwttY•
Ole Sup.m-
$475
Good avpervl.tor')' P'P· and
abWt:J'. wm train. Rabe Ill
6 monlhl. No t)'plng, no -· •1r1 Friday
$500
MQlt ha.Ye hcf.V)' upr.1'
with • dtatal otlkt. w 111
"""'wtNllChodulaa ale.. willl ,.....,, U!o typ. ....
Abo Fee Jobs
•
individually. Drop by G o.::a;.;ra:.gc:•..::S;:a;;l•:..... _ _:8::0:=;:22 ~=:*=":o2--0=ll3=*==:ilf Olrl'BOARD, 28 KP $250 ;,· ~ Rexalr Rainbow Air-elem-!.
GARAGE aak: Children'.! T•l1vl110n 8205 n. vaC\lum cleaner, -I
and 1ee our selection of item• Jrom bed.I 1o toys.
t alit S nish d Mlle. adult articles. 344 FINAL WEEK OF ~. sell S:ZOO. 54M50f ; 1 op qu Y pa an Holmwood , NB. 5'18-670'1 Midaummer Cle1r1nce KIRBY vacuum cleantr le
Medit.erranean furni· MOVING-Everything Mu• l All Col.or TV's Must Go! art1chment1. Take over ,.1
F t
. ll Go! 6801 See:More Dr. NB. RCA Victor, Zenith, Pack· small payments or $57.20 '"i
tu r e. an astica y Thurs, Fri Ir Sal. ard Bell & Admiral. Some: ea1h. Credit dept, KE 5--7289 ,
priced!!
Complete houseful
GARAGE Sale: ~ all week ,
Wonderful barpjnl, 1241
Baker, Apt B. C.M,
Appli1ncn 8100
new • some repossessed. BUY YOUR FmEWOOD
Pr1ce1 start al • • • NOW I. SAVE!!
$149 135 a CORD. -9807
Tftt:D~V:S~N'LSE OOUBLE bed com_plete with fr ame. C.ood condition $25.
1rn Harbor (downtown) 01' * s.t).!li82 *
$152800 AOMlRAL 3 rm. "' • roo· * 548-0l!D * BOY'S bo& 5 ~ !n~·-w. ......... ''. ditioner, 8500 BllJ, used 3 e~ ~-..
MUST
SACRIFICE!
mo'a. Obr. car air-oon· HI-Fi & St1reo 8210 bike! '40. * 548-7362 * dltloner. Bell offer. Pb &It. STEREO 1968 solid state: 1~'~P=M~54&--0l~_111 ____ = I conBOle model with AM/FM Misc. W1ntftd
SPEED Qoeen w11-S/Jer, $247. radio, 4 apd changer. Take w A N T E D Glbf!on room air cond. $2~0. over small payments or
Botf1 brand new. Wea on TV $93.20 cash . Credit Dept.
program. Call aft 8. 673-3876 535-72ll> WE need qu&llty (no junk
8610
'69800 WASHERS .$29.95: dr)'en -please) ~Furniture, oolor FOR $35; Freezers 175; Refri&., C1mer11 & Equip. 8300 lV'1, stereos, appllancu,
ONLY :;';!',.
1095
rtone Ir Avoc.; Guar, tools &: ot!lce equiJ>mtnt .......... CINE SPECIAL Il, Ektar TOP CASH IN XI Minutes
Jens. Chttked out by El(. 531-12U * 8934i55
Any piece can be pur-
ch11H lndlvldu1lly.
Terms Available
Newcomers
to California
Credit Approved
Immediately
We carry our
own accounts
fill]
f'urnftn:re
ONLY AT
BEAUTIFUL G.E. range.
Like new! 2 avt!IVI, brotler l
rotl98erie. ~30"15
HO'l'POIN1' 12 cut 11 . White
refrigerator. Top free:rer.
$50.545-3646
SERVEL gas retr!geralor 14'
double dr. New u n It,
M0-6670 or 54!H625
Norse Electric Dryer
$50. • 337.2856
Antique& 8110
WE Now have in stock an
nulst&ndina: r r c n c h bed-
room aet with 2 melchlng
armolre.I. A vt.l')' line Wp
mahopny roll top desk
from 11.n old bank. Pl.ua our
usual line ol fine E\lrop! •
Amer furn.
LARRY MORGAN Antiques
24.211 Newp:rt Blvd.
Colle M<"Sa * 54S-73S3
$3S(I with C&!ll!. &16-5411
Mlchlnery etc. 8700 Sporting Goods 85001! -'-"'=:.u.• =:-.-_::::::1
ELECTRIC Trolley .in. ton
SURFBOARD 9'8" Jae.obi, 3 12~ KW AC3 pbai~
mahog stringers, mahoc tall gwlerator. Ski boat With
block, 1imi-1peed Skaa:. Xlnt motor, Shop tooll. 642--4610
"""· n>-!!154 PETS and LIVESTOCK
10 F7 HOBIE
SURFBOARD Cet1 1820
Excellent condition
$50 * &42-0JZ2 SIAMESE KlTI'ENS, Seal :-;,=-'::0.,:--"-C7.':;::'-"71 Point, trained, T Weeki $20 9 IT Surfbolln:I. N ri'er used, M2--39S1 ' •
original price $200. SU5 cxl :::----------1
heat olftr caeh. ~9--24.25" Dop llU
SURFBOARD 9'8" SACRIFICE AKC wblt.
"Jada". Excellent condition Pood1e pupeMet 'Dall t
$50. 54>-3014 line breeclini-~749& en
S~ARD. 8't ", J o e POODLE PllppfM I wkl 1
· * lll1·2907 * male 1 tern.ale AKC I: Cdl sso. 545-350'J
Golf Club Set, McGregor.
4 Wood.I, 8 lrona, putttr.
$100 • &46-5477 FREE TO YOU
1844 Newport Blvd ROLL Top -"'··chino Mloc•ll•noous NGO FRIENDCY .,.,. •ra d ' cabinet $65., rourw.1 oek ta.bl. fem&&& Oobtrman. Loves
I H rbo Bl d $55., barrel tav trunk $15., 68 SOUD 1ta1e atereo con· o h I d r n • A 11 Ibo t s I I r v • ok!. l!hlp' .. whccl, old dentilt sole. O!amolid •tylua, 4 147-2956 1122
cbalr, :J.36 Newport Blvd.. lflff(l $'f9. Will llCCtpt f2 ADORABLE KittMI with
Costa MeSI
Wed., Sat., Sun. 'Ill 6
C.M. Wetkl)'. Frtt bomt trial. white mittm1! Mutt llH, ~
QUrrnNG BUSINESS tine 5JO.U1' Jy I ldL '57 Ollo SL,
F.-:tJ At1H!r fUmibln. Griest-RUGS ~ drruer SClo-Sl, C.M.. 81'12
ttl. bra6td I: boc*:ed nip. trunk S3. Zl3 Ddei 0L PAR.T Cock-A.Jim I mo oli
Capper brk!-a«tic etc. 2758 ~ • Aleo 2 h.aU Pmiul ki~.
E. Cout H"71 C;oroaa. del J'ar De.lb' Pnot Wut Ads. 1911i Ml'Jllt Ave., CM. afttt
Mar. OW 6'2-511 6 p.m. t122
• I
•
-------~ ------------~~-~~--~---~~---------------------------------..:
DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Reagan Should Sign It
California's leeal penalties !or possession and use
of marijuana are quite unrealistic. They are so drastic
as to put them in a class with penalties for sale, use
and possession of such hard narcotics as heroin.
The trouble stems from 1961, when the Legislature
had a "tough drug Jaw" binge. This resulted in failure
to apply the laws unilormJy and equitably.
Marijuana use or possession became an automatic
felony, while use or possession of other, more danger·
ous drugs was merely a misdemeanor. As a result,
many 8 Venturesome youth, unaware of the lasting
consequences of arrest and conviction. has been hancli-
capped for life as a resuJt of a si ngle experience with
a marijuana cigarette.
A felony conviction can deny a young man admis-
sion to certain educational opportunities and profes·
sions, to political office, to a military career, and to
many preferred jobs in business and industry.
Th.is year the Legislature again came to grips with
the problem. A bill was introduced which gives the
judge jurisdiction over whether a marijuana charge
(other then sale) is to be considered a felony or a mis·
demeanor. It also p uts dangerous dr ugs such a1 LSD
and methedrine in the same category.
The Assembly and the Senate passed the bill alter
hearing from both the DistMct Attorneys' Association
and the California Peace Officers Association. B o th
groups testified the measure will not weaken the law
but should increase convictions. Judges will no longer
be forced to inflict a felony conviction in circumstances
where the penaJty would be out of all proportion to the
seriousness of the offense.
For example, with a state prison sentence manda·
tory under second offense under the old law. judges,
juries and prosecutors, being huma n too, have thwarted
convictions or reduced charges rat~er than to 1end
Pro Athletes
Are Moderr
Hessians
One glaringly obvi005 reason pro·
fessional big-league baseball hasn't
appealed to me since I left my teens
was the rumor early this summer that
the Chicago White Sox might move to
Milwaukee i1 the team con'liinued to
play so poorly and attract so fev•
CU'5tomers.
Now. I can understand, and admire.
loyalty to a genuine "home· town"
team; but bow cheap and synthetic
and commercial is the loyalty to a
group of mercenaries who have been
hired merely to wear the name of a
strange town across their chests.
IF A CITY LIKE Chicago, for in-
stance. carefully developed its own
high school playen: and grtNI a big.
league team out of its native soil,
there would be occasion for esteem
and civic eupport -just as the ancient
cities of Greece took huge pride in the
accomplishments of their l o ca I
athletes in the annual games.
But the modem baseball player is a
Hessian d the sports arena, playing
anywfttte for anybody who will pay
him a higher ialary, transferred every
couple of years, and lacking any real
intere6t or roots in the town he sup-
posedly represent:&. Money, not com-
munity endeavor, is the determining
factor for a winning team.
SOME YEARS AGO, John Allan
May pointed out, in an illuminating
article. the difference between our
artificial baseball "loyalty" and the
truly regional character of cricket in
England, v.tien he asked what would
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
I've had it wi:th left-lane slow·
pokes. Jf the only cause of .your
not driving as fast as the Jaw
allows is your own inability to
drive that fast.. then either stay
in the right lane or get off the
road.
-P. E.
n.1, te1tv,. """""' --1' Vlawl 1111 Rtcet.WrllY !Mw ~ !IN -·~•t. SIM
r111r IMf -• ,. OINlllY Qu11. 01JIY l'lltt.
happen in England it someone decided
to move the Yorkshire team to Buck-
inghamshire?
In the first place, he pointed out.
there would be no place to take it:
''Every man who plays cricket for
Yorkshire has to be a Yorkshireman ,
born and bred. Obviously. you coo Id
not transfer Yotks to Bucks, because
the team w o u I d remain Yorks.
however hard anyone prete71ded."
FURTiiERMORE, May said. even if
members of the team w e r e
transported to Bucks, they would h1&ve
to wait five years in order to become
naturalized Buck.inghamsniremen and
qualify for h privilege Of playing for
Bucks. Anything else wouldn 't be
cri.cket. in any sense of the word.
The same objection applies to m y
cont.empt for college football. What
merit is there in a college going out
and buying high-school players who
represent nothing but fheir own desire
for gain, and who have no more mean·
ingful CQnnect.ion with the ·school tllan
the man who supplies cafeteria trays?
The infantile alumni who raucous ly
support and encourage such shoddy
transportations may know sports. but
are oblivious of the basic meaning of
sportsmansh.ip as it is obvious to the
lowliest Yorkshire yeoman.
Rock for County Fans
,
To the Editor:
To D.W. (Mailbox. Aug. 14) who ha·
noticed the lack (I( good popular en·
tertainment in Orange County:
Tlhe Second Step Theatre, 281& Villa
\Vay, Newport Beach., is present.int? a
series of rock concerts on Monday.
Tuesday, and \Vednesday night. until
the end of &Ummer. The admission
prioe U only Sl and the show feab.ires
very good local bands and a very in-
credible light •how.
PHIL PEARLMA N
Nigerian Civil War
To the Editor:
The Nigerian Civil War i1 fast ap.
proaching an end. In fact, the Nigerian
Army has woo and if the BiAf.rans con ·
tlnue to fight they may be ex·
terminated. \Vhat is so ironical is ttiat
the leader1 of the fbo5 formed the in·
dependent nation of Biafra becaUSf'
they claimed that the Nigerian govern·
ment wag going to exterminate the
lbos.
---B11 6-rge --~
Dear Gforge:
My 80ft lMiJU ht-want! to be 1
newgpaperman. Is there any
money in tht ne•s,paper
buJiness ?
E. E.
Dear E. E.:
A& J keep telling people, there
ii bound to be a Joi of money In
the DeWJpiper bu1ine1g -no
DeWJpipuDlaD bu ever tak.Mi
any out ol lL
---·~-.
' '
I Ma~x . '
' ; I .,.
+ 11!1~ from rr lldtrt; ,,.. Wllcomt. Norm1!\y wrl!•,.
.,~Id co•we~ fflr.lr m'""'' tn JOO -nh Cl!' lo!n
•1r rl81'11 to COllCNRH lellers te Ill WK4I or eUml111r•
".ltl 11 ,_,..,.ed. At! letters ""'" ln<:ludr 1l11••lu•· .., ,,..Hiiie lddr1•1. llo,rl 111me1 will bl .,Jtft""" , r..iunr.
·rhe s p e c I e r of seeing tens of
thou.sands of Bia.frans starve to death
hall aroused world opinion to a fever
pitch. The pressing problem is how to
get food to the starving and how to
stop the war. Yet. there is also thf'
problem of trying to find a method for
prtve11ting future civil wars.
ONE POSSIBLE so-luUon would be
lo form a fact-finding organization
lhal would be supported by volWllary
contributiom. Tins «ganiudon could
be req~ted to i.nvestig~ auq>ected
abridgment CJ( dvtl rights by any
group in the rountry to ht ln-
vesUgated. .
T'bt object d an investigation would
be Ul determine if there wa5 a clur
ca5': of abridgment ot the d\."lJ rights
of a minorlty group or Jf tht charg'
was unjust. Thtn the organization
would issue a gimp}e report with con·
clusions. This report wouJd be
available upon request and without
charge.
P erhaps .a report on tht auspttted
Intention of the Nigerian governme:nt
would not hp.ve prev,nted the civil war
but the report would surely hav• ex·
,.,. ... Ill• •ult>riW lo .,,. -Id.
IWIBY 8. McPONA!l> /R,
young people without known criminal tendency ta state.
prison.
"The penaJty should fit the crime'' is an old clicbe,
but it has never had more ring of truth than in the
pointless overpunishment of youthful transgressors.
Obviously, the law, written a.s a "strong" law, bas
actually weakened enforcement and bred disrespect 1or
Jaw.
Governor Reagan should sign the bill into law. But
in view of his recent speeches on "law and order," some
doubt that he will.'despite the merits of this case. If h·e
tails to sign It by September 9, when the Legislature
reconvenes for its veto session, it will becomeillw un-
der the recent constitutional revisions.
If he vetoes the biJI in the meantime. the Legisla-
ture should override his veto on a top priority basis -
ln the clearly demonstrated interests of Jaw and order.
America's Beloved Ike
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower was slowly tinking
from his latest heart attacks as this page went to press.
Jt is hard to realize that only half of the Americans
living today will r emember, without reading about it,
the onward and upward career of the boy from Texas
and Kansas.
The lriendly, ready grin ... sincere and lifelot]g
dedication to the service of his countrymen ..• quiet,
plugging pursuit of constructive accomplishment •..
the rise from humble beginnings to the pinnacle of
world leadership . . . these are the elements of the
American imagr at its best -the image uniquely ex-
emplified and personified by Ike.
MeCnrthy Represents 1\1 ew Kind of lsolationisnt
The Two Worlds of Washington, D.C.
WASHINGTON -We live in tWtl
W'Ot'ids in Washington. In one there is
a lull in Vietnam as an earnest of
Hanoi"s desire to negotiate. In the
other Hanoi has positioned 100,000 men
for a general offensive to achieve v:ic·
tory in 1968.
We stflou ld know shortly which is tile
real world. Intelligence estimates time
the p.robable beginning of • ge~ral of-
fensive in the Aug. 19-23 period. Give
or take a few days or a few weeks
Hanoi's 1968 intentions ougnt to be
known soon and perhaps during the
coune of the Democratic National
Convention.
The presidential candidates live in
war!~ of their own making where
words ha,ve a S'lithering quality.
Senator McCarthy's Vietnam method
of ending the war defies clear defini-
tion. From one day to the next Vice
President Humphrey slips and .slides
on new words only vaguely dilferenl
Crom President Johnson's.
BOTH AR~ TRYING to makr
themselves into peace candidates
without being either spe<:ilic or credi-
ble on how to do it. They only know
that they wish to emerge at the end in
contrast with Richard M. Ni.lon as a
dangerous man who won't be flexible
enough in dealing with Co111munists.
Somewhere behind all tile slipping
and sliding lies the real issue of the
commitment of the United States to
collective security in the world, or a
withdrawal from that commitment.
The same people at high political
levels who wish to liquidate the Viet-
nam war are those who wish to bring
troops back from Europe. In their
witbdrawal symptoms there is but one
exception -Israel.
TIIOSE WHO WISH to stop sending
war material to Vietnam do not boggle
a1 sending supei&on!c fighte.r:bombers
to larul. Where Israel i.& concerned
there it5 a double !tandard by which a
nation with ia population of 2,634.000 on
the Mediterranean Sea is deemed
more v.ita1 to our interests than a
dlvided nation of 35,CXX>,000 where the
future role of the United States in a ll
of East Asiia and the Western Paciiic
is at issue.
This is beside tlhe point. The point is
that the election of 1968 has brought
forth a· public demoand more .si.:iable
than could have been imagined for the
withdrawal of the United States from
far-flung positions of world power.
SENATOR McCARTHY'S candidacy
represents something f'ar more than
the expression of a desire to get out of
the Vietnam war. It represents a new
kind of i6olationism. Influential people
in and out of the govermment now con-
sider the world power role of the
United States which they so avidly
supported in the post-World War II
period to have been a delusion a nd a
mistake. These people talk oow of
spheres of influence -the U. S.
sphere in the Americas, R ussia's
sphere in Eastem E urope and all
nearby er rontiguous areas. China 's
sphere in Eastern and Southea"Stern
Asia, and so on.
Th.is is not the collective world
security idea to which the United
States dedicated itself in the United
Nations and in its own post·war
toreign policy. That policy was based
upon a series of alliances and treaties
world wide in scope to be implemented
through various regional organiza-
tions, such as NATO and SEATO.
WHEN THE PRESIDENTIAL elec-
tion is over we are likely to have a
President, either Humphrey or Nixon ,
wh.o has been committed to the ideas
of the past. }le will be confronted by
the sentiment which the candidacy of
McCarthy surfaced and which bas lit.4
tle relativity to the ideas which
prevailed during and after the end of
World War JI. 1-lalf of the people now
alive in America have no memory of
World War II,· and even less of th•
rationalizations of that period.
These people were born into an
America which had become tll•
world's leading power in the process
of winning World War II. They ex·
pericoced none of the exhilarating
grO'Wth , none of the ~gerness to
reorder and stabilize the world follow.
ing the holocaust of World War II.
They never knew the thrill and pride
Of being an American at the victorious
conclusion of the second world war.
WHAT THEY SEE NOW is an im-
perfect world built by a previous
generation and resting on coocept3 of
world power which cannot be realized
and which divert the correction of
evils in our society.
The next President of the United
States, himself a· product of .America's
dazzling rise, will be compelled to take
seriously into account the desire for a
break with a past which he shared in
his youth with Franklin Roosevelt and
Winston Churchill.
McCarthy to Run With Humphrey?
WASIINGTON Sen . Eugene
McCarthy is g1v1ng a gr a p h l t
demonstration of an office-seeking
politician talking out of both sides of
his m<lulh .
Publicly. he has repeatedly sought
to convey the impression he would dis -
dain taking second place on Vice
President Humphrey's ticket. While
car efully stopping short of actually
saying that. McCarthy has clearly im-
plied it With varying degrees of con·
descending scorn. he has brushed off
1e idea.
But privately, it'6 a far differen t
ory -and an astonishing one.
As the Democratic nation.al con -
vention approaches. a f u r i o u s
backstage drive is under way to put
over McCarthy as llumphrey's run-
niog mate. Humphrey's campaign
managers and inner advisers are
being besieged with arguments. pleas
and pressure from McCarthyites
throughout the C'OUJltry urging his
selection.
.
IT JS ARDENTLY contended that
with McCarthy"1 youth and anti.Viet :
nam war following he is tht tDNI
logical choice, and ttlat fl Humphrey-
McCarthy combination would make
the straogest ticket.
Brulhed aside ~ a ' ' 1 e_ g a l
technicality" is the faci that botb art
Minnesotans. ll'~ clatmed this con-
stitutional obstacle couJcl bt overcome.
Also not men ti on ed by the
M:cCart.hyjtes is the huge debt he piled
up in hls eight primary contests lhe
won only three) and other campaign
activities. The extent of thi1 debt is
unknown to McCarthy's managt'rs. In·
side estimates put it at more than SI
million.
There are stacks of unpaid bills
lrom New Hampshire to Cali fornia.
ranging from an estirna ted $40.000 in
the former to stvtraJ hundred
thousand in the latter. \Vho is going to
pay them and how is tfle thorny
unanswered question.
IF' TUIS IS worrying McC..rthy,
there bas beM. oo a.Jen o< 1t.
On tbl ... lalod. tbe &81 ~
accumulation of red ink may explain
the strenuous sub-rosa drive to induce
the Humphrey oarnp to take McCarthy
as running mate. 'Rlat would ht a han·
dy way to ha.ve tliese nwnerou.s pre·
convention debts taken care of.
As the vice presidential candldate.
hi ~ obligati'ons could be unloaded on
lht Democratic Nation.al Committee.
That's been done before.
So far , this undercover sch.eme has
gotten nowhere.
Humphrey personally is cold to it for
a number of reasons. Foremost among
them is President Johnson's di slike of
McCarthy, a sentiment that is heartily
reciprocated. Another U Humphrey's
strong misgivings about McCarthy's
capacity to handle the tremendous job
of President. By temperament and ex·
perience he lacks the essential
qualifications.
IN McC ARTHY'S 20 years in Con-
gress (IO in the House. 10 in the
Senate). there isn't a single piece of
.significant legislation to his credit.
Also he has never led a noor light on a
major .tssue. ThrGughout, he tias
always been an innocuous back-row
member. Even the Americans for
Democratic Action, which endorsed
him, rated his record as only 62 per·
cent in 1967.
Some of Hu mph.rey's ADA backers
are inclined to the proposal to have
McCarthy Gn the ticket. But they are
very n1uch ln the minority among
Humphrey's advisers. Barring some
unforeseen development. there is no
likelihood of a Humphrey·McCarthy
slate.
Robert ti. Allen
and John A. GoldsmJtb
Comic Book for the Retired Couple
A re«der whose busines' i.s financial
planning recommends tD us a perusal
of the latett edition Of the U.S. Depart·
meDl of Labor's booklet, Retired
o:..ple's Budget for• Moderate Living
Slieindani. "It makes ." he says. "more
pleasant reading than .a comic book."'
His point is well taken. Although ttle
booklet contains no comic strip.type il·
lustratlons it does include several
pa-ges on the cost of food. clothing.
housing and other budget items which,
in a way, are amusing. For !his
publication was is sued in the fall of
1966, and u a result of ttie
government's gucc:ess in achieving in·
nation many of the cost.II cited art-
ridiculo~ly out of date in terms of to-
<lay.
l\10REOV1i:R. in addition t.o a 1en.s.
of humor 11 retired couple. in ord~r to
extract usable information from the
booklet . should also have a working
knowledge of what. for lack of a better
term. may be called ('.overnmt:nt
English. The booklet'• ine"oduction. ~ for instan<.'t. c o n t a i n e d this
pMagNph:
"The moderate livi.ni standard dM!!
not shOW' how an '•verRI•' NJtired
... ICllllllr .,... Its ......... -
• .
~Ue8l ii~~A:; ' . • ! -., •
does it 5how how a couple should
spend its money. Individual families
may spend more on one Item and less
on others than the amounts indicated.
Families can and do spend less than
the total specified in this budget with·
otrl feeling deprived and without Im-
pairing their health or their ability to
contribute CQnstructively to our soc.
1ety ... "And l'IO on .
IN AOOITION TO ~-20 vision fthe
booklet's tabulatons on prices arr.
printed in ti type about the size or that
used in newspaper wan1 ad!i) a ret1rt'd
couple needs to have considerable
matnematlcal skill . Footnote No. 2
under "healing fuel.'' for instance,
gives a formula for finding the
aver.age number of B.t.11. 's requfrt<t in
a given city. For a two or thret·room
unit: "Million of B.tu.'s equals 0.7S
CmlntU 302.817962 plus 100.2858001
linw tll• log.mtim of the l!"""lll
IM!Dlhor " AIDlll declft d'e,1 •
Maybe these diversions offered by
the Retired Couple's Budget For a
Moderate Living Standard are not
quile up to comic book quality. But
certainly they are ruverting enough. to
encouN.ge many a couple on the verg'
of retiremtrrt to keep right on work·
ing.
WaH Street Journal
--~--
Tuesday , August 20, 1968
The editorial pogt of th.e Dailr
Pilot seeks to infcmn and 'tim-
11Uite rendef'.t by ·presenti"O' thil
netospaptf''s ophtioni and com-
mtntory on topia of inUf'est
011d significance, by J)'roviding a
forum for the expression of
our readers' opinion.a. and by
pr«senting the divtrse vin>-
point.t of tn/Of'med observers
and tpoktsm~ on topics of the
dau .
Robe rt N. W•ed. Publilbu
I