HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-08-26 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesat-
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 26, 1968
VOL 61, NO. tts. J S•Cl10N5, 11 PAO•S
Jane Russell Weds
I
.. •
:aet. Tro9ps
.---··--. --HHH Lead Shaky · · :tro Leave
•
Johnson, l(ennedy ~tir Enthusiasm
l
CHICAGO CAP) -Hubert fl.
I-lumphrey held a heavy -·but highly
uneasy -lead for the presidential
nomination today as a deeply divided
Inmoc:ratic party headed into its 1968
convention.
The Vice President had in his hip
pocket two-thirds of tile first-ballot
votes needed for the top prize, but
mos t Of the talk and much of the
enthusiasm were for two m>TI-can·
didates hwidreds of miles from this
fortified city: Lyndon B. Johnson and
Edward M. Kennedy.
The President. home on the ranch
near Johnson City, Tex., was giving no
hint on Whether he'd even show up in
Chicago -t.hoogh his 60th birthda}·
anniversary tomorrow ol'fers a
dramatic opportunity to put real
ateam behind a budding "Draft
Johnson" movement.
Sen. KeMedy , like Johnson an avow-
ed non-candidate, was relaxing at
Cape Cod, Mass., but a perhaps more
.insistent "draft" movement appeared
to be swiacing here.
Forces in the Texas delegatioo are
ready to put Johnson's name in
nomination. Former Gov. Michael
DiSalle of Ohio is ready witti Ken·
nedy's -and this morning important
JJCW strength turned the senator's
way.
Orange
WeaiJan
The weatherman has a damp
ouUook for the Orange Coast
Tuesday -like cloudy with
occasional shower• -while the
meitury ata.y1 in the 75 range.
I NSIDE T ODAY
Long.shot presidenUal b o p e f u t
George S. McGovern said if Kenned)
"called me and talked to me directl1
and said that he wanted the nominll(
tion I would probably throw my &up.
port to him." ·
McGilvem, a South Dakota senator,
added, however: "I doo 't expect that
to happen. I don't know about any
Kennedy movement."
A second liberal senator Irom Ute
.ffiidwest, Philip llart or Michigan, en·
dorsed Kennedy for the nomination -
and Sander Levin, chairman of tlle
Michigan delegation, said he would
"leail to Kennedy if Kennedy became
a candidate."
Like McGovern. both Hart and
Levin spoke cautio usly, saying tlley
were not urging the last of t!le Ken·
(See DEMOCRATS, Page 2)
Army Doctors Say Ike's
Condition 'Unchanged'
WASHINGTON CAP) -Army doc·
tors reported today that former Presi·
dent Dwight D. Eisenhower has shown
"further increase" in heart irritability
since Sunday and remains in critical
condition.
Doctors at Walter Reed Army
Hospital said that extra heart beats
have been occurring with "increasing
frequency" since Sunday.
But they added that the~ had been
no further episodes of "rapid heart ac-
Huntington Man 1
.EscaF Injury 1
As Hom e Bombed
A 61).year-old school teacher and hi&
wife escaped injury Monday when a
Molotov cocktail was pitched through
tbe living room window o€ their
residence at 2143 Dockside Circle,
Huntington Beach, blowing up the
television set and damaging the
carpet.
Anthooy Celeste and his wife.
Rachel, police said, were asleep in an
upstairs bedroom when Celeste was
awakened about 12 :10 a.m. by the ex·
plosioo.
A t..,cl,.. at the Whit. Junior Hlgh
School, 2211t Street and Figueroa, Los
Angeles, Celeste estimated damage at
1950.
Police stated that Celeste didn't see
any susvects and that he <tidn't know
of any eneml.~1 or anyone who bcn a
crud1• agalnat b1m .. blJ wile.
ti.on," which eonstitute the more
s<rious symptom of bis condition.
Tbe bospttal iJsued this morning
bulletin :
"Gen. Eiaenhower has s b o w n
further increase in heart irritability
since ye&terday. Extra beats have
been occurring with increasing !re·
quency. However, Clere have been no
furttler episodes of rapid heart action.
"The generai'1 condition remains
critical.
"He enjoyed a light breakfast this
morning and continues to rest com·
fortably."
A medical bulletin SUnday night said
Eisenhower's condition ·remain e d
"essentially unchanged" from the
day's earlier report!.
The after.noon bulletin had reported
no new instances of the rapid heart ac·
lion .
The morning bulletin had said th&
"increased heart irritability -extra
beat -which began Saturday a.m.
has persisted through the day and
night and there have been several
episodes of rapid heart action re-
quiring further treatments."
The bulletin added that Eisenhower
"rested comfortably during the ni ght
and 11 in goOd spirits this morning.
Mrs. Eisenhower continues to visit the
general briefly at frequent mtervalt."
In answer to a new1man'1 written
question as to whet.her Eisenhower'•
condition wu worse than at aay Ume
since the late1t actual attack, the doc·
tori saJd Sunday night he was
"holding his own."
tn answer to another queetlon, the doctors also indicated for the first
tlmt· they do not believe medieal
statbtlca are again.st Eisenhower's
banees for aurvlvaJ.
Gradually
MOSCOW (L'PI) -The Soviet gov-
ernment has agreed to recog.nize the
regime of Czecho6Jovak Communist
Party Secretary Alexander Dubcek
and to gradually withdraw troops
from Czech soil, Communist SOW'cet
sai:t today.
The agreement came after four
days of crisis talks between the So-
viet Politburo and President Lud vik
Svoboda ot Czechoslovakia, Dubcek,
Premier Oldrich Cernik and most
other members ol the Czech party ire·
1id'ium.
Official Com;uonist sources said the
Czech leaders ~re expected to fly
ba ck to Prague tonight.
The head& of the other tour Warsaw
Pact powen with t:oops in Czechofllo.
vakla -Poland's Wladyslaw Gomul· k~a.st Germany's Walter Ulbricht
-BU1111Saria'1 Todor Zhikov and Hunga:
r y's Janos Kadar -were reported
waiting in the wings in Moscow while
the Czechs and Soviets worked out
their agreement.
JOINT DECISION
Since Ute dispatch of the Warsaw
Pact troops into Czechoslovakia was a
Joint decision, agreement to pull ~m
out also would reqllire collective en·
dorsement.
The settlement appeared to have
come juat in time to prevent violent
clashes between frustrated Soviet
troops and Ctech05lovab who have
taunted them slnoe they moved in a weelr ago.
Dubcek and Cernik, denounced by
tl>e ~viet press as "traitora" to com·
mu~1sm, were taken into custody by
Soviet OCCtJpaUon forces shortly after
the invasion.
Source• said Dubcek went along re •
1uclantly with the plan for the gradual
withdrawal of the Soviet and other
Warsaw Pact troops from Czech soil ~ey sald the leaders o( the Kreml~
lint rtached agreement with Svoboda
and Cemlk Eilld then Dubcek finally
went al .. og. .
llEA V1' PRICE
Diplomatic 1ources said earlier the
Soviets w~ asking a heavy pr'ioe for
an end to the occupation o( Clleebosk>·
vakia. But Yuf06lav and Czechoslovak
reporU aa.ld the Russians already bad
agreed to a •~P by step witbdrawal of occupotloo tn>opo.
The rt~ clmllated as Sovlel and
Czechoslovak loaclen held their fourth
clay of crilil ~ lo· tho .Kremlin.
'lbe dlplom1Uc 1ource1 laid tbt Rua·
slam -• detnindlni' Ute .t,rtual end
ol Czecboclovakla'1 liberal reform progrmn u tl!e prlte of endiog tho
-t..long occupation. They aald So·
vlet deihancla lnclllde Pr•CUJ .relm·
fk>llni oenoorlhlp ind clampioc do"11 ~n i>oa><:ommullt acllvlty.'
Uf'IT ..........
Actress Jane Russell of Newport Beach and new bUJband, actor
Roger Barrett, exchange affectionate glances after their wedding
Sunday in Beverly Hills. Miss Russell's· divorce from former football
star Bob Waterfield , to whom she had been married for 25 years,
became final late last month. ·
Novice Diver Loses Life
In Air Tank Malfunction
The body o{ a novice diver who was
using borrowed equipment was pulled
from the oCean Iloor olf Laguna's
Crsecent Bay Sunday a.tternoon.
The vtcUm, James 8. Jensen. 22, of
. Norwalk, was pronounced dead on ar-
rival at South Coast Community
Hotpltal. · ·
The buddy system faUed to •ve the
young man. Despite one dr tank
failure, lifeguards sald, Jensen tried
again with a reserve tank.
When his reserve tank emptJttt, bis
buddy appennUy gave Jensen hi.J
mouth piece for the two men to share.
according to llfi?euards. Both men
panJck«I, ttiey 11.14. Jensen's uniden-
tified diving cwnpanion l'Olle to the
1Ul'face end 1wam to Rocky· POint
wttere beech &Otln pulled b1m'411shore.'
Ll!eg.....i1 BUI Roley and Stave
Knauer, ran to hi• assistance. Roley
Dorrowed a · face m'ask, and after
several dives ~ Je~5en, fact
down, 25 fltt below tht,lft.ITVaCe. Ro: altempt.d UllJUc«sslully to
revive Jensen with mouth-to-mouth
resuscitation. Lt. John Cunningham
and Capt. Eugene DeP-auUs ad•
m.in.istered resuscM.a.Uon and heatt
massage while Jensen was taken In
ambt.Jance to the bospi.tal, where he
was pronounced dead.
A ccron«'s report ol the actual
cause of death Is pending.
Cunningbam aakl .a possible cause ol
dea."th, besides drowning, could ha¥e
been air embolilm. Air embolism OC•
curs if a diver rising to the surface
doesn't ubale air Crorri hl1 lungs. With
le$s pressure qn the surface, the lune•
expand U they are full of air. ,uAnd
,fhey .can only exponcl so far, beloi'e
they pop like 1 balloon," Cllnnlil&ham said. ' ' '
Lt. Deen Weo!iaard Mid, "Mott
Ca\aJ: dJving accidents occur when a
non-certified .iilver attempt.I using 9Ctlbo• : llj)uiprM\it, and •• ,, u. 11 y
fatalltles occur because of a1r em·
boll,." '
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:> oAft Y PILOT
CHICAGO (UPI) -Democretlc
plallonn draften ailendoned bope to-
day of eod>promialoi their spilt Oft
Vieu-. M--111e lloue w111
be put to tbe prartJ•s convention Tues-
day !O< tile IA!evbed .--.. Ibey
wanted '° much to avo1d.
Vice ~Bullert H. Hurnplluy
WTOclted ·-camj>r<lmlH jlro· specU r em a in e d with bis most
bawki:!lb eseertions. Humphrey en-
clor&ed Prellident J-'• cooduct o!
1be -end peace Ulkl end served
Allies Claim
Killing 6,000
Reds in Week
SAIGON (AP) -Allied ((Im·
,.-a ·~ MoDllllJ men ~ s,ooo enemy-· --ololn
ill .U>e pelt eight • "' -fl&litina, 11111 -...... Y 1n 111e
n«tbemmOlt 1JI Carpi ... L
U.S. Morine element. fi&l*lc lo
maW.tn a Conlon aroullll an. enem1
!or<e .... Qili 'nllen reported ldlllllC
52 of U>e foe. Marino c,...-w ..
termed Ugbl -lb the oulpoll
came under sustained artillery fire to-
day.
Scattered llghling also waJ reported
in Tay Ninb. Provmce, 45 mDes
northwest Of Saigon, ad In the
Mekong Delta to the south.
U.S. spokesmen expressed doubt the
U:rge enemy losses in major battles
acr06S the country bad blunted the
even bigger assaults. They said more
bard fighting is expected, particularly
1o the five northern provinces.
The enemy casualty toll ol more
than 5,CXX> killed last week _ was the
highest since tbe week ending May 18
when 5,MS Wf.f'e reported killed during
tbe second major enemy offensive Of
the year. ·
More than l,IXX> enemy troops were
tilled Sunday ood today when allied
urats amaflbed enemy thrusts across
the cenlral hlglllandl ..i the """""'1
lowlands. Allied carualti~ were Ugtit
because Of massive U.S. air and
artillery support.
In one Of the biggest engagements,
reinfwcements broke through to a
besieged Special F<rces camp at Due
Lap, near the Cambodtan bonler, and
rescued 600 Green Berets and Mon-
tagna.rd mercenaries who bad been
hoilliDg olf 3,00> NorUJ. Vie1Damese
regula<s for ttr.e day1.
The siege at Due Lap, broken late
Sunday, cost the enemy 643 1okWers
&lain sod more than 200 weapoos cap-
tured.
But tbe allied cost also was high: an
FlOO Super Sabre jet fighter-bomber
aod stx helicopters shot down , six
Amert:an advisers and 61 Montagnard
mercenaries killed, and 15 Americans
and 119 Mmtagnards wounded.
Two more American planes, an Air
F~ F4 Phantom and a Navy A6
O:rsair, were announced u; shOt down
in attacks on North V1etnam. The pilot
of the Corsair was rescued after he
bailed out over the SoUth China Sea.
The two crewmen of the Pball.tom are
listed &< mlssing.
These losses raised to 885 the
number of U.S. warplanes lost in com-
bat over Nortih Vietnam.
The Navy reparted two U.S. ship19
were shelled by enemy gunners Sun-
day. A chartered cargo ship, the
Transoorthem, was bit by rocket-pro.
pelled grenades and machine-gun fire
while transporting munitions up ttie
Long Tau RJ.ver 22 miles southeast of
Saigon. Damage to the 1bip was term-
ed nDn<r, '""1 Navy river patrol boall
5.lleoced the enemy gum.
Enemy gunnere !Ol>bed 25 lbells at
the 'Ith Fleet cruiser Boston as she
steamed nine miles off the coast ol
North Vietnam. None hit the vessel.
The Boston returned fire, reporting
two secondary explosions on the
beach.
DAILY PILOT
N"'P•rf luc.. C••'• Mei•
H1111tl119to11 hGch U.91111• IHCll
Wntlftl111tH P.0•11hll11 Velley
CAUfOlNIA
OR.4.HGE COAST PUBLUHING COM,Atf'I'
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J 1clr II. Curley
Vici Prnldlrnt 1nd Gf'fllllf•I ~llfttr
Thol'l'I•• k•1Yil
IECllor
Thol'l'l•1 A. Murph;,,.
.M1n1t1n1 EO!tot
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C•t. MeM; UI Wnl .. ., lffttl
N.-.i .. 11(11: 11'1 WHI lelllelil ~frd
l-&Mtil: 11? F-1 A.,._ H1111tlns1011 ... Kl'I: JOf Siii Strftl
Hopelessly Split on Vietnam Plan~
• • •
notice Hanoi ''ii not going to get a
be<.ter..~l out ol me."
The Vlce President's ap>keaDifn
here liod -Jlumpllrey ~
&tay out ol the plaUorm draftiDg batue
that already bad gone into overtitne.
But ln a netio,,ally-broadco1t In·
tervtew on the eve of the convention's
opening seulon.-Humphrey said he
wanted no word in the party policy
statement that might encourage Hanoi
to hold out foe a better &etUement thao
they DOW caD opecl.
Actually, most members ol. the 110-
member platform committee had seen
llttle proopect o conv<nlion D1$1t on
V-could be avoided. -....,
11 inembers eaa take a mmotJty plant
"'the~.
But Humphrey'• s11atements were
seen as guaNll\teeing bt two, and
poosll>ly ttree, Vietnam S1>iUlds will bo
offered the delegaWs.
A majority of the comm.lttee •1P-
ports Humphrey's bld !or the
preeidenti.al nomiDaUoo over tho5e at
Soni. Eug McCanlly and George
McGovern. 'Ibe Hwnpirey backers
now m efptcted In proceed to draft
• plmt e.twlll DOt Gllencl l!umpllrey
or Pre1ldent J-.
The cominUtee.'s 22-man dratting
llUbcomnUttee oealil wwked paet mid·
night w:-:n agreement reportedly in
prospect on IDDflt domettie · and non-
Vietnamese issues3 The group was
said to be in general accord oo a call
for "law and justice" as opposed to
the m«e<"OmfDCllly heard 41law aad
U'I TtNpltell
order" theme that some memt" ·~
said bad-raclal overtones. Jloweveo, 1
dispute over final phraalng on thls sec-
tion on Sbttlo vlolence delayed 1
showdown on the Vietnm:n plank.·
'lbe subcommittee wa1 to llave
fioilhed Its handiwork SUnday nlbi.t.
Today-Rep. Hole Bogp CD-La.),
chairman of the full eommittee, was
shooting for o drafting cleanup in time
for full committee consideration by 3
p.m. He hoped to make public the
completed d«:liment l\loncla,y niShL
HUJ111>1ny olf1red bis firmest -
dorsement yet Of J oh n t o n act-
mtru.m.a.Uon poUclet botl2!. at home ani
abroad. He proj<cted IHmeelf II I w4
dldale wbo wwld build OD Joi.....•,
achievements and unify d.lssidenl
segments ol tbe populatilln. "
He 1ald he -.Id ''walk the extrl
mile" to get Ill hooor'8ble settlement:
iJl Vlotnam. But he ·rejected thi
McCarthy-McGovern concept ol. t
unilateral. bombing halt, in tW
a bsence ol "IOIDe little a:J,gn" Hanol
will~.
5 Persons Killed
" .
On County Roads::
F'tVi! peraons. including a C(rona del
Mar worn.an, died in Orange Coonty
weekend traffic to m a r k one of the
b»odtest two-day periods of the year.
'Itie dead:
Kailryo B«g, 53, 218 N. Jasmine
1968 County Tra!llc 11&7
143 Death Toll I.Se
Ave., Corona del Mar
Merrell Dean Pullian. 6, 920 W. Cub-
bon St., Santa Ana
William U. Fowler, 54, Los Angeles
John Pillon, 13, 12.881 Olympia W-ay,
,, ,.
Melvin C. Stewart, 24, Hawaiiaii'
Gardens
The Pullian boy w .. killed SaturciaY
when the ptck·up truck in wbicb h'k
was riding was struck from tbe rear
at Bristol SCreet and Segerstrom
Avem.ie in Santa Ana.
Fowler died Sunday when he lost
control of hls car on ESper&flza Road
near Fairmont Boulevard in the Yorba
Linda area. Police said he ran off th&
road, over corrected and swerved
a<.TQSS again hitting a power pole. ·"
The Pillon boy and Mrs. Berg ot
Corona del Mar were killed Saturday'.
morning at Dyer A venue .and Red Hill
Road in Tustin. They w~ ejecte(£.
from the colliding cars, police said~.
CALM BEFORE STORM -Messenger pauses !or
breather on quiet convention floor prior to opening
of Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Con-
vention, marked by tightest security in history of
American political gatherings, began this afternoon.
Homeowners
Present Case
Against Airport
Fighting against selection o! a site
1n West Orange County for a county
r egional airport continues today in
Hwrtington Beach as members of
Prestige Welli Homeowners Associa-
tion prepare to take the battle to the
HOME Council.
Stewart. was dead on arrival at
So-..!il Coast Community Hosp!taf
Saturday when his car slammed into
the center <tiv:ider of the San DiegO'
Freeway north of Ortega Highway, of.I
ficers reported. He was alone and ~
other car was involved. · ;•
Blaze Attacked
By Firefighters
After 8 Killed
..
Poll Shows Nixon Leads From Page I
DEMOCRATS .. •• ' . -
'· HHH, But Not McCarthy nedy brotti.era to get into the race.
But a boom, or at least a boomlet,
has been launched. Attention was
centered particularly on the vote·
heavy Illinois delegation where, at the
direction of Mayor Richard J. Daley. a
presidentiaJ preference vote was put
off until \Vednesday -obviously to see
if either th.e Johnson or Kennedy
drives catch fire.
A full page of maps, photos and
stories on Orange County airport
plans and how they affect the Hunt-
ington Beach area appear in the
DAILY PILOT today on Page 11.
.
GLENDORA (UPI) -Firefight.ii
made a ,"determined stand" on ~
bank of a river today to nalt the ad;
vance of a brusn and timber fire that
has claimed eight lives and C\stroye'Cl NEW YORK (UPI) - A natioowide
poll of voters indicates that Richard
M. Nixon could defeat Vi ce President
J1ubert H. Humphrey but would lose to
Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy.
But the poll, completed two days
before the Democratic National Con·
veation, snowed that the r espondents
favored Humpttrey as the Democratic
candidate by a narrow margin over
·McCarthy.
Sindlinger & Co. Inc. conducted the
poll among 1,696 voters by telephone
Thursday tttrough Saturday.
The poll showed Humphrey prefer·
red for the Democratic nomination by
25.9 percent of the voters questiooed,
McCarthy by 23.5 percent. Sen .
Edw.ard M. Kennedy by 10.7 percent,
Nixon Vacations
On Bahama Isle
MIAMI (AP) -Rlchard M. Nixon,
the Republican presidential nominee,
contim1ed his holiday today on the
British oolonial island of Walken Cay
in ttie Bahamas.
Nixon and his party will return to-
day or Tuesday by yacht to bill retreat
at Key Biscayne, near MiamJ, an aide
said. He flew by seaplane to the tiny
island Friday. The al de said the
chartered yacht left Miami Sunday.
~ former vice president was
reportedly stay.ing in touch with
medical bulletins on former President
D"'ight D. Eisenhower and reports ol
the Crechoslovs.kian crisis.
Nixon was expected to remain in the
Miami area for several more da,YS ,
taking a respite from campaign.mg
while the Democrats convene in
Clticago.
Mesa Burglars
Get $400 Loot
Burglars cut their w1.y into the Glrls
Club of the Harbor Area and a Cost.a
Mesa home over the weekend, escap-,
ing with $400 worth of c~thing and P> in cash, police said today.
Student Ann R. Mirems, ol 131
Albert Place, lost S400 In clothing, in-
cluding flve evening dressea, when
1omoone cut a screen and removed
louvers to gain errtry to tte home. '
Gleam R. Murphy, counselor at the
Girl$ Club facility, 1815 Anl.heirn Ave ..
1aid $30 ll1. cash was taken from a desk
drawer by someone who broke in
througn a kitchen window.
A quantity of checks Jn the same
drawer wa1 Je!t, loveatlgaton said.
Robbery Victim
Slain by Bandit
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Abe
S!lbennan, SI , man,ger of a
dellcates1rn w11 ta1al1y shot la(e
SMunloy n!tht durlna •• ll1lled rob-
beey,
•
President Johnson by 10.6 percent.
Sen. George S. McCGovern by 4.2 per-
cent, Md George C. Wallace by .4 per-
cent. The remaining 24.8 percent ex·
pressed no opillion.
When the two leaders were matched
against Nixoo, the R e p u b 1 i c a n
presidential nominee however ,
~1cCarthy emerged as the one who
could defeat Nixon.
In a Humphrey-Nixon r ace, 41.5 per-
cent of the voters polled picked Nixon
to 31.3 percent for Humphrey and 13.7
percent for \Vallace, a third-party can-
didate, Vr1lile 8.1 percent nad no opi-
nion and 5.4 percent wanted none of
the three.
In a McCarthy-Nixon race, 42.0 per-
cent o{ the re'spondents ch o s e
McCarthy to 36.5 percent for Nixon
and 11.1 percent for Wallace, with 6.8
percent having no opinion and 3.6 per·
cent wanting none of the three.
* * * McCarthy Meets
Unruh in Bid
For State Votes
Blair Clark, campaign manager fDf'
Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, cooteoded
at a news conference in mid-morning
"it now is quite clear" that Humphrey
is not going to win on the first ballot.
Clark cited particularly the
postponement by the Illinois delega.
lion. ''This convention is not going to
prO<."eed hastily to tne business of
nominating a president," Clark said.
On paper, at least, the strengtn of
the declared candidates remained con·
stant. The Associated PreS8, basing ibi
count on primary results, public
pledges, checks with delegates and
cauC"Uses. gave this standing in mid·
morning:
Humphrey 889
Sen. Eugene .J. McCarthy: 177 1/,
McGovern 371h.
Favorlte SODS 4191h
OUiers 13
Uncommitted 78S:Yt
The HOME Council meets at 8 p.m. 21 square miles of national forest. ·:
\Vednesday in council ctiambers of \Villiam Dresser, who commands
l!-1emori-al Hall and President Ben Lon-the firefighters, said the blaze was 50
deree has invited tne aiJ:port op-percent contained, generally on the
ponents to discuss pie situatioo. southern perimeter. but flames on thlS
Preparing the case against locating north were threatening the new San
a major airport on the Bolsa Chica Gabriel wilderness area, Dresser said.
site just east of Warner Avenue on If the firefighters are unable to s~
Coast Highway are Joe Halisky, Victor the fire at the west fork of the Sail
Horton, Stan Krom, Dick Miller and Ga-briel River, officials said they
William Woltz, all members of the would have to drop back eight miles to
Prestige West homeowners. a hignway before making another
Also invited to the meeting is stand.
Airport Commissioner Roger Slates. By midnight Sunday, the flames had
Prestige West homeowners nave burned over 18,000 acres inside a 32•
been joi~d by hundreds of residents mile perimeter, destroyed. about a
in the western 8Dd northern portions dozen cabins in the Fish Canyon area
of Huntington Beach who would be in of Angeles National Forest and burned
the flight pattern of a large airpOrt an abandoned lookout tower on Pine
should it be located on the land belong-Mountain.
ing to the five Bolsa Corporations More than 1,500 men remained on
along Coast Highway. the lines today. They were backed up
The group opposes the ab'port slte, by 100 trucks, 19 bulldozers, eight
one of five whlch has been suggested helicopters and four air tankers which
as possible locations for a regional dropped fire retardant solution on the
airport capable of handling large jet flames.
aircraft, and is taking Its case to all Tne blaze, named the Canyoa lnn
available ears before a public hearing Flre, is centered about 25 miles north
scheduled by th e Airport Commission of downtX>wn Los Angeles . A pall of
on Sept. 16. smoke hangs over the mountains i1J
Tnat hearing is scheduled for 3:30 the distance. • Boy Electrocuted p.m. in the boeI<I room of the county All juvenile crews were ordered orr
supervisors in Santa Ana. the lines at midday Sunday in the
RlCl-IMOND (UPI) - A 12-yea.o\d HOME Council meetings are open to wa·ke of Saturday's 'tr1agedy whe)l
CHICAGO (UPI) _ Sen. Eugene J. swimmer was electrocuted Saturday the public and all homeoWrters are en-seven teen-agers and their supervisor
wnen he touched a live electric wire couraged to attend, according to were burned to death when flames McCarthy met for more than ao hour B President Londeree. raced up a "funnel" canyon.
today with Jesse Unruh in en effort to \i=a;f;;ter;:e;m~e;r~gm~· ;g~f~r~om~San~~P;•;b;l•;~•Y~·~~;;:~;.;~:=========;~~======::~==== keep Callfornia's 174 vote delegation
from going for Hubert Humph.tty oo r"\. Your Omtga
the first ballot at the Democratic Con-~ ./, Sale.! & Strvict
vent.ion.
Unruh emerged from ttle session 0 M EGA with kind words for McCarthy and in-
dications that he has forgiven the
senator for saying that the invasion Of
Czechoslovakia was not a great world
crisis.
"The senator has a great deal of
support In California, t2le most support
of any Of the candldatet," Unruh said.
But he sajd there still were many UD·
committed California delegate&.
The powerful Oalllornla politlcel
leader said the name of Sen. ~ward
M. Kennedy "came up during the
course of the coriversatlon," but he
decUned to say whether a possible
presldem.tal bid for Kennedy was
dlscus1ed.
Those Russ Bears
Getting Hungry
PRAGUE (UPI) -An underground
''treedorn" rad.lo today 1 d vised
Czechoslovaks to lock up their cats
and dogs to save the pets from Soviet
army cooking pol~.
The statioo, describing the effects of
a Cz.echoclovak campaign to re.fuse to
feed Invasion forces, 1&1d Soviet
10ldl.er1 have been aeen h&n'esting
54.99
Jtwolry Dtslgninf
A Speclaltyl
and eoun, raw mu!hrooms and Now 2 Grut Stores To Serve You
potatoes. HAUOI IHontN• . HUNTIN•TON CIHTtl
''We would ldvise our listeners to , CIWJll tu.CH • u1Me11
lock up thclr cats and doas lest they Uff HAllOI ILYD. HUHT1H&TON IUCH
Jose them Jn the course o( the oc· conA MDA MM•ll 1•2-1111
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Huntington Bea eh
VOL 61', NO. 205, 3 SECTIONS, 32 rAGES
HOUSE OF MUSIC -In the 1920s, borne of John
and Minnie Killinger became the Huntington Beach
Conservatory of Music. Twelve.room house stood at
16th and Oli\'e. It's gone now, and in most ways, so
is the music.
HHH Retains
Shaky Lead as
Parley Opens
CHICAGO (AP) -llubu! II.
}lumphrey l!eld a heayy -buf1"1ghly
uneasy -lead for the presidential
nomination today as a deeply divided
Democratic party headed into its 1968
convention.
The Vice President had in his hip
pocket two·thirds or the first-ballot
votes needed for the top prize, but
most of the talk and much of the
enthusiasm were for two non-can·
didates hundreds of miles from this
fortified city: Lyndon B. Johnson and
Edward M. Kennedy.
The President, home on the ranch
near Johnson City, Tex., was giving no
hint on whether he'd even show up in
Chicago -though his rot.h birthday
anniversary tomorrow offers a
dramatic opportunity to put real
steam heh.ind a budding "Draft
Johnson" movement.
Sen. Kennedy, like Johnson an avow·
cd non-candidate. was relaxing at
Cape Cod, Mass., but a perhaps more
insistent "draft" movement appeared
to be surfacing here.
Forces in the Texas delegation are
ready to put Johnson's name in
nomination. Fonner Gov. Michael
DiSalle of Ohio is ready with Ken·
nedy's -and this morning important
new strength turned the s~ator 's
way.
Longshot presidential h ope f u 1
George S. McGovern said if Kennedy
"called me and talked to me directly
and said that he wanted the nomina·
tion I would probably throw my sup.
port to him."
McGovern. a South Dakota senator.
added, however: "I don't expect that
to happen. I don't know about any
Kennedy movement."
A second liberal senator from the
m.idwest, Philip Hart of Michigan, en-
dorsed Kennedy for the nomination -
and Sander Levin, chairman of the
Michigan delegation. said he would
"lean to Kennedy if Kennedy became
a candidate.''
Like 1.1cGovern, both Hart and
Levin spoke cautiously, saying they
\\'ere not urging the last of the Ken·
nedy brothers to get into the race.
But a boom, or at least a boomlet.
has been launched. Attention was
centered particularly-on the vote·
heavy Illinois delegation where, at the
direction of May9f Richard J . Daley, a
presidential preference vote was put
off untii \Vednesday -obviously to see
if either the Johnson or Kennedy
drives catch (ire.
Blair Clark, campaign manager for
Sen. Eugene J . McCarthy, contended
at a news conference in mid-morning
''it now Is quite clear" that Humphrey
is not going to win on the first bahot.
On paper, al least, the strength of
the declared candldates remained con·
1tant The Associated.Press, basing its
count on primary resulU, pubUc
pledges, checks with delegates and
cauC\lses, gave this standing in mid·
morning:
Hwnphrey 889
Sen. Eugeoo .J, McCarthy : 177'~
McGovern 37 ~;
favorite sons 4191h
Others 13
Uncommitted 785~1 ,I
Musical Note
llunti1igton O~ce Had Conservatory
By SANDI MAJOR
Of tll• D1l1Y l'llol 5!1ff
Huntington Beach may never have
become a cultural center, but back
before oil and booze flowed as freely
as Prohibition auowtd, the city did
support a conservatory of music.
Voice and piano instruction were
brought to the city for a few years at
least by a teacher from an easlern
music school, recalls Los Angeles
leather dealer Horace Boelter,
Boelter, now 66 years old. spent the
sumn1crs of his early youth in Ilun-
tington Beach. 11e came to the coa·st to
vi.sit his aunt and uncle. Minnie and
Jolm Killinger, whose 12-room home
on the northeast corner of 16th Street
and Olive Avenue became the house of
music.
The house is long since gone from
iluntington Beuch. but the lazy days of
1905 to 1920 live on for Boelter.
As a traveling salesman for a Los
A.ngeles leather compar.y, he has
maintained his familiarity with Hun·
tington Beach and on trips through the
city has waitched it change.
He recalled frot.n his childhood trips
"into town" to the post office ..nd to
buy milk jind. cookies at Eader's
Bakery, ·
He was around before the flun·
tington Beaoh pier pierced the surf in
1914, when a smaller wooden model
jutted from the shore at about 20th
Street.
In those days, he said, his aunt a11d
WJcle paced the beach on horseback,
looking for driftwood to fuel their
honi.e stoves.
Boelter said his relatives sold the
house in 1920 to the music teacher and
moved to property they owned in Los
Angeles because of their health.
No city records could be found to tell
how long the conservatory lasted, but
old·timers say the house was probably
razed in 1925 whe.n oil <;pewed from
that part of the earth.
'fhe oil and water mixed. in this in·
stance, drowning the sound of music.
Harbour Pl1ysician Better,
Facing Additional Surgery
A Jfuntington Harbour physician
critically wounded a week ago in a
shootout with his enraged wile, whon1
he killed. continues to improve today,
but may face additional surgery.
Or. John L. Fenner. 36, of 416'.!
Trumbull Drive. is now in a private
room at Htmtington Intercommunity
Hospital. eating weU and receiving
family visitors.
Mrs. Sylvia Fenner, 39. was buried
in the meantime by her family in 'the
city of Dayton, Indiana, followin g
Man Leaps lo Death
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Th•
body of a 47-year-Old Alameda man
has been recovered from tbe waters
beneath the San Francisco-Oaklanel
Bay Bridge.
lnvestigatoc·s said John Sm yth, -47 . a
janitor foreman at the Oakland
Ttibune. leaped 10 his death early ·Sun·
day.
01aly .5 Rescues
services Saturday. police said.
The ca,se has almo'st been closed,
since Dr. Fenner acted in se}!·def~nse
\Vhen he shot his wife in ttie hea1t wit11
a hunting rifle, after she had wollnded
him twice. -
Dr. Fenner underwent emergency
surgery after the gunplay and doctors
removed two slugs from hiS abdomen,
one fired by the rifle, which he took
from Mrs. Fenner, and one from a .357
magnum revolver.
Police Capt. Earle Robitaille said in·
vestigators have concluded that Dr.
Fenner shot his wife in self-defense,
after she fired .at him with the .351
magnum revolver.
Neighbors reported hearing the
woman vow to kill her estranged hus·
band, owing to dissatisfaction with th('
way they were living, then the physi·
cian began crying "No, no."
Dr . Fenner has not been practicing
1nediclne . but working as a !e(turer for
some type of Los Angeles foundation
whose business and methods are not
clear.
Breakers Take
A gentle surf of only ont to three fttt
lulled tht Huntington Beoch morellne
Satunlay and Sunday, g Iv 1 n g
lifeguards a break frun the ram·
paging rlptides ol las~eekeod .
Lifeguards at Hun~on and Bolsa
Chica Stat' beaches dragged only Hve
endangered swim.mt-rs from the surf
over the weekend. Saturda.y <l!ld Sun.
ctay last week they recorded '48
t"escues.
They measured I.he surf at only onJ ..
foot th.ls weekend, compared. to the 10.
to-IS fOot break.en swelling in to shore
during the county's super surf of last
week and attr.ibuted the law number of
rescues to It.
At J.IunUngton Beach's city beach.
lifeguards polled 64 wea.ry swimmers
Crom a two-to-three.foot surr. a
number higher than ttie . beach's
average of 30 rescues a weekend.
But the log w.a.5 still 5-hoM. of la,.;t
V.'t"tk's figures when 11 ! e g u 11 rd$
•
1:" our Hometown ·
Dally Paper.
MONDAY, AUGUST 26, '1968 TEN CENTS
Dubceli Restored '
Russ to -Withdraw Troops Gradually
MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet gov-
ernment has agreed to recognize the
regime of Czechoslovak Communist
Party Secretary Alexander Dubcek
and to gradually withdraw troo~
from Czech soil, Communist sour~
sai;i t.oday.
The agreement came alter four
days of crisis talks between the So--
viet Politburo and President Ludvik
Svoboda of Czechoslovakia, Dubcek,
Premier Oldrich Cernik and most
other members of the Czech party pre-
sid:iwn.
Honwowners
Rally Foes
Of Airport
Fighting against selection of a site
in West Orange County for a county
regional airport continues today in
tluntington Beach as members of
Prestige West Homeowners Associa-
tion prepare to take the battle to the
HOME Council.
A fulL page of ni.aps, photos and
stories on Orange County airpoTt
plans and how tlley affect the flunt·
i ngton Beacll area appear in the
DAILY PILOT today on Page Il.
The HOME Council meets at 8 p.m.
Wednesday in council chambers of
Memori<&.I Hall and President Ben Lon·
deree has invited the airport op-
ponents to disc,uss the ,sitUation.
Prel"'$' 'the "8,. again rt locatiilg
a ma1or mrport on the· Bo Isa ChJca
site just ·east of Warner Avenue on
Coast Jligllway are Joe Hs.lisky, Vietor
Horton, Stan Krom, Dick Miller and
William Woltz, all members or the
Prestige West homeowners.
Also invlted to the meeting is
Airport Comn1issioner Roger Slates.
Prestige West homeowners have
been joined by hundreds of residents
in the western and northern portions
of Huntington Beach who would be in
the flight pattern of a large airport
should it be located on the land belong-
ing to the five Bolsa Corporation~
along Coast Highway.
The group opposes the airport site.
one of five whieh has been suggested
as possible locations for a regional
airport capable of handling large jet
aircraft, and is taking its case to all
available ears before a public hearing
scheduled by the Airport Commission
on Sept. 16.
That hearing is scheduled for 3:30
p,m. in the board room of the county
supervisors in Santa Ana.
HOME Council meetings are open to
the public and all homeoWTl(!rs are en·
couraged to attend, according to
President Londeree.
'Nixon Vacations
On Bal1ama Isle
MIAMI 'CAP) -Richard M. Nixon,
the Repu~lican presidential nominee,
continued his holiday today on the
British colonial island of Walkers Cay
in the B111hamas.
Nixon and his party will return to-
day or Tuesday by yacht to his retreat
at Kev Biscavne, near Miami, an aide
said. 'He fleW by seaplane to the tiny
island Friday. The aide said the
chartered yacht left Miami Sunday.
The former vice· president was
reportedly staying in touch with
medical bulletins on former President
Dwight D. Eisenhower and reports o!
the Czechoslovt k.ian crisis.
Nixon was expected to remain in the
Miami area for several more days.
taking a respite from campaigning
while the Democrats convene in
Chicago.
a Break
recorded 9S rescues on tlle weekend.
and oo thelr u,h\est crowd day -
Monday -saved a record 175 persons.
Sunday a week .ago was bad enou~.
but beadl ll!eguard! smd Mondoy and
Tue~day were llke '"the weekend all
&ver agalr!," ar1he tumbling combers
PoUnded ashore,· ttraeging even
waders out beycmd tbe Qrea);er11.
The surf 'i/'bsided W-•Y, lh<y ·rd
Official Communist sources said the
Czech leaders were expected to fly
back to Prague tonight.
The heads o( tbe other four Warsaw
Pact powers with troops in Czechoslo·
vakia -Poland's Wladyslaw Gomul-
ka, East Germany's \Valter Ulbricht,
Bulgaria's Todor Zhikov and Hunga-
ry's Janos l{adar -were reported
waiting in the wings in Moscow while
the Czechs and Soviets worked out
their agreement.
Since the dispatch of the Warsaw
Pact troops into Czechoslovakia was a
Couple Escape
joint decision. agrcenient to pull them
out also would require collective en·
dorsement.
·rhe settlement appeared to have
come just in time to prev.ent violent
clashes between frustrated · Soviet
troops and Czechoslovaks who have
taWJted them since they moved in a
week ago.
Dubcek and Cernik, denounced by
the Soviet press as ·'traitors" to com·
munism. were taken into custody by
Soviet oc cupation forces shortly after
(See CZECHS, Page %)
Molotov Cocktail •
Jars Beach Home
A 6G-year-old school teacher and his
wi{e escaped injury Monday when a
Molotov cocktail was pitched through
the Uving room windoW of their
residence at 2143 Dockside Circle,
Jiuntington Beach, blowin g up the
television set and damaging the
carpet.
Anthony Celeste and h.is wife.
Rachel, police said, were asleep in an
upstairs bedroom when Celeste was
awakened about 12: 10 a.m. by the ex-
plosion.
A teacher at the White Jqnior High
School, 22lst Street and Figueroa, Los
Angeles, Celeste estima~ damage at
$950.
Police stated U1at Celeste didn't see
any suspects and that he dii:lp't know
of any enemies ·or anyone who bare a
grudge against him or his wile.
Girl Rescued From Surf
.......
Week Ago Still-~irr-&1119
A JS.year-old Lancaster girl remainir
in serious condl.tion at ~loag Memorial
liospital today, still unconscious after
being washed out pa1>t the breakers at
lluntington State Beach one week ago.
PhyUis Echenique, who was picked
up unconscious by a lifeguard boat
after she was caught in a riptide in a
slrt"!tch of public beach, where no
lifeguards were on duty, is in the in·
tensive care unit "now breathing on
her own," a hospital spokesman said.
The girl's uncle, Frank Webber, of
2857 Stromboli, Costa Mesa, said
Phyllis and his daughter, Patricia,
Eisenlto'wer' s
Heart Continues
To Beat Faster
WASHINGTON (AP) -Ar:ny doc·
tors reported today that former Presi·
dent Dwight D. Eisenhower has shown
''further increase" in heart irritability
since Sunday aind remains in critical
condition.
Doctors at Walter Reed Army
Jiospital said that extra heart beats
have been occurring with "increasing
frequency" since SWlday.
But they added that there had been
no further episodes of "rapid heart ac·
lion," which c0nstitut-. the more
serious symptom of his condition.
The hospital issued this morning
bulletin:
"Gen. Elsenhower has s h o w n
further increase in heart irritability
since yesterday, Extra beats have
been occurring with increasing fre·
quency. liowever, there have been no
further episodes of rapid heart action.
"The general's condition remains
critical.
"lie enjoyed a li ght breakfast this
morning and continues to rest com·
fortably. ''
A medical bulletin Sunday night said
Ei senhower's condition rem a i n e d
"essentially unchanged" from the
day's earlier reports.
The afternoon bulletin had report.ed
no new instances of the rapid heart ac-
tion. ·
The morning b1illctin had said lhe
''increased heart irritability -extra
beat -which began Saturday a ,m.
has persisted through the day and
night and there have been several
epis«les of rapid heart action re·
qulrlng further tre.atment.s."
The bulletin added that Eisenhower
"rested comfortably during the night
and is in good 11pirlts this mornlng.
Mrs. Ei.senh()wer Continues to visit the
general briefly at (requent intervals.·•
In answer to a newsman'J written
question as to whether Eisent.ower'ii
condltlon. was ""°1'se than :it any time
since the 1ateri actual atti:ick, the doc·
tor~ said Sunday night he was
"hold~ his own,"
\:I
also J!"i, were "wading, I'd guess ju6t
over their knees," in tbe sl,ltf near
Br00Jd1urst Street Aug. 19.
"Evidently a riptide caught them
and carried ltlem out past the
breakers-"," he said. "My daughter had
the presence of mind to remain calm.
But Phyllis must have tried to fight U." ,
Webber's older daught(lr, Janette.
21, saw the two girls struggling from
shore and ran to find a lifeguard.
''There weren't any in the area, S'O
sihe had to run to the snack bar, and I
guess they called the patrol boat," the
girf s unc le went on.
Patricia harl let the tide carry heT,
he said. and she was safe when the
boat arrived. but Phyllis was un•
conscious1 floating face-down in the
water. ·
Webber said he later called the state
beach lifeguard station 'to a.sk why
guards were not on duty at that part of
the beach.
A supervisor told him all two miles
of state beach are not aJways manned,
especially on the light-crowd days, like
Mond;ay.
Webber maintains, however, "there
should be someone there, especially
on days when there's some danger.''
A Week ago. the county was pounded
by the season's super surf, which rose
to 18 feet heights along the Huntington
Beacb shoreline.
Lifeguards on the part of Huntington
State Beach that was st.afled pulled
some 50 swim.men ashore Monday.
The number they say they usually log
on a slow·to-average weekend. Hunt·
ington city beach recorded 175 rescues
that day.
Beach supervisor Glen Lavine said
signs are i;>osted in the unprotected
areas warning surfers Iileguards may
not be on duty.
Ora11ge C'oast
Weather
The weatherman h11 a damp
outlook for the Orange Coast
Tuesday -like cloudy with
occasional showers -while the
n1ercury stays in the 75 range.
INSIDE TODAY
front runner Gardner Coz
sails ihto ths hmne1tretch of the
Olympic 1J0ChUng lrloll todor
with two othtr skipptrt In clo.Jr
puriuit. See Bpa&ing, Page 2S.
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.:? OAILV PILOT
aDCAGO (UP!l -llomoor&Ue
i>lotform -· -hoi>I "'" day of oomprom11tng tbo1r split on
Vietnam. Membut: said the issue wlll
be put to ttie party'1 convention Tues·
day for the televised showdO\\'n they
w.anted ao much tQ avoid.
Vlce President Hubert H. Humphrey
wrecked whtever compromise pro·
&peels rem a 1 n e d wlth hls most
baWtull assertions. Humphrey en-
dorled President Johnsoo's cooduct of
the .,,., and peace lllkl and served
Allies Claim
Killi11g 6,000
Reds in Week
SAIGON (AP) Allied com-
medera claimed Monday more than
6,oo:> enemy soldiers have been slain
in tlle past eight daY' ol bi!W
fig1rtling, still continuing today in the
narthernmoot llUJorpi area.
U.S. Morine elemont. fighting to
maint,atn a cordon arowid an enemy
force near Con Thien reported killing
52 of the foe. Marine ca.ruatties were
termed light although the outpost
came under sustained artillery fire to-
day. ·
Scattered fighting also was reported
in Tay Ninh Province, 45 miles
northwest Of Saigon, and in the
Mekong De1ta to tbe south.
U.S. spokesmen expressed doubt the
Io.rge enemy losses in major battles
across the country had blunted the
even bigger assaulta. 'Ibey said more
hard fighting U expected , particularly
in the five northern provinces.
The enemy casualty toll of more
th<:fl 5,000 killed last week . was the
highest since the week ending May 18
\\'hen 5,MB were reported killed during
the second major enemy vffensive of
the year.
More than l,000 enemy troops were
killed Sunday and today when allied
units smashed enemy thrusts across
the central highlandi and the CO(i.fital
lowlands. Allied casualtieis were light
becaUiSe of massive U.S. air and
artillery support.
In one Of the biggest engagements,
reinforcements broke through to a
besieged Special Forces camp at Due
L<op, Dear the Cambodian border, and
rescued 600 Green Berets and Mon·
t.agn.ard mercenaries who had been
holding oU 3,000 North Vietnamese
regulars for three days.
The 1lege at Due Lap, broken late
SUDdly, coat the enemy M3 1oldiers
slain &Cd mvre than 200 weapons cap·
tured.
Blaze Attacked
,__,,.By Firefighters
After 8 Killed
GLENDORA (UPI) -Firefighters
made a "determined stand" on th~
bank of a river today to halt ,the ad~··
vance of a brush and timber fir e tha't·
has claimed eight lives and destroyed
21 square miles of national forest.
\Villiam Dresser, who commands
the fire!ighlers, said the blaze was 50
percent conta.ined, generally on the
aouthern perimeter, but flames on the
north were threatening the new San
Gabriel wilderne~ea, Dresser said.
If the firefighters are unable to 1top
the fire at"the "'est fork of the San
Gabriel River, officials said they
would have to drop beck eight miles to
a hifhway before making another
1tand.
By midnight Sunday, the flames had
burned over 18 .000 acres inside a 32·
mile perimeter, destroyed about a
doien eabinl in the Fish Canyon area
of Angeles National Forest and burned
an abandoned lookout tower on Pine
MOUDt6!n.
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H~pelessly · Split on Vietnam Plank
notlot Hanoi "II not &olol to get 1
betlor•aloutotme."
'Ibo Vice -Prtoldtnt'1 1p0kttmen
hert bod lllllloaled Hwnpbrty WOllld
stay out of the pt.i.ttorm draftlnl batue
that already had gone into overtime.
But in a natiooally-br~cast ln·
tervjew on tb~ eve of the conveotlon'a
(lpening session. Humphrey 15aid he
wanted no word in the party policy
statement that might encourage Hanoi
to hold out for a better settlement than
thty now can expect.
Act\lalll', molt memberl of tllo 110-
memblr plalf..,. 001Dmlttee bid ouo
llWo proopocl & CQllYU!bi lllbl OD
VltWm <Ollld bo avoldtd. ~ ..,
II member• cac tall• I mlnorlcy pllnl<
to the naor.
But Humphrey 's statements were
seen as euaranteeina: that two, and
possibly three, Vietnam stands wW be
offered the delegates.
A majority of the committee MIP·
ports Humphr•r'• bid for the
preaLdential 11.ommaUon over those of
s.. lupoe Mccartcy and Gtorae
~ The Humphrey bocltlr1
DOW wtrt e1pected to proceed to draft
a plaU that wUI not offend Humphrey
or Prtaldent Johnson. -
The committee's 22-man drafting
subcommittee agaln worked past mid·
nie:bt with agreement reportedly in
prospect-on-most· domestic -and--non...-
Vletnamese issuet. The group waa
•aid to be in &eneral accord on a call
foC' HJ.aw aod jUSUce" a1 opposed to
tho more-commoaJ¥ heard "law and
order" theme that &ome members
11id bad nc1a1 ovwtoou. Howevv. •
dispute over tlnal phrutng on thb: 1ec·
tion on gtit:tto violeoce delaytd a
showdown on the Vietnam plank.
1'he subcommittee was to have
finished Its handiwork Sunday night.
To<las Rep. Hale Boggs (D-La.),
ehairman of-the full coinmittee, wu
shootinC for a drafUn1 cleanup in time
for full commJttee conaideration by 3
p.m . Ht hoped to make public Ille
completed document Mon~ Dl&hL
GWC, l!Cl Unk
Humphrey offered hl,I llrme•t en-
c1or-1ct yet at J 'b • 1 o • ad• minlstraUon poUcle1 bot1t at home and
abroad. He projected hlmseU u a can·
didate who would build on JOOnson's
achievements and unify dissident
segments of the population. ·
He said he would "walk the extra
mile" to get an honorable settlement
in_Vlet.n:a.m. But he reject{d the
McCarthy·Mc<iiJvern oo ncept of a
unilateral bombing bait, ln tl1e
absence of "tome litUe 11gn'' Hanoi
wW roclprocale.
OCC _Computer
Program Slated
By moMAS FORTUNE
Of .... o.ltr ,ll1ot l .. ft
O<ange Oo11t Junior ColleJe Dlttrlct has cl!arted for lt.eU a leading role Jn
the coming reYOlutilon ol. computer
teachlng.
Junior college orflclals have decided to link up wittJ UC Irvine, already in
Ille forefront of Ille teaching by com-
puter movement.
Orange CoMt College will have its
own computer, a highly sopbhtiCated
third-generation model ~ be illstalled
on campus in December.
But the two lmtltutioas will 11eek
joint fiDanc!Dg for their twin computer
programs, and al r '~~ d y are
cooperatlog in writing Computer
language.
omER USES
wm be leased a.t a coot of '20,000 to
$25,000 per month. Purchase i1 not
practical, said King, because a
generation of computers become:i
obsole~ about every ft>ur years.
Supt. Norman Watson said Ule
prime justificatim for the computer is
for use in ttie data processing courses.
Not hE.'Ving an up to-date computer is
like having auto shvp studenta work on
a Model T Focd, he said.
lt is expected that through the ef·
fllia.tion witb UCI, grants and foun·
datlon support will be forthcoming to
reduce the local cost. Wat.son is
hopeful tl1e computer will be fulld<d
100 percent from out8lde sources,
CALM BEFORE STORM -Messenger pauses for
breather on quiet convention floor f!IiOr to opening
of Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Con-
UPI T,..,.._
vention, marked by tightest security in his tory of
American political gatherings, began this afternoon.
Computers at both insUtutions have
other uses . For instance, the new
Orange Ooast College model, which
will replace two lesser cornputer1, will
be used for instructing 700 data pro·
ce9.Sing students in computers and for
administrative tasks like preparing
tbe di:atriet budget, grades and
INN<rlpta.
The federal government met Na·
tlonal Science Foundation have wld
they prefer to underwrite joint com·
put.er projects involving institutions ()f
different levels, King said. Junior col-
leges are orierrted to iMtructJon while
un:ivel'Sities tend toward emphasis oo
r~earch , he suggested,
Poll Shows Nixon Leads
HHH, ~t Not McCarthy
NEW YORK (UPI) -A nationwide
poll o! 'voter• indicates that ruchard
M. Nixon eould defeat Vice Pre!ldent
Jlubert H. Humphrey but would lose to
Sen. Eugene J . McCarthy.
l1ut the poll. completed two days
Lefore the Democr&tlc NaU onal Con-
''ention, showed that the respondents
fa~ored Humphrey as the Demoeratic
candidate by a narrow margin over
~lcCarthy.
Sindlinger & Co. Inc. conducted the
po ll among J,696 voters by telephone
Thursday through Saturday.
The poll showed Humphrey prefer·
red for the Democratic nomination by
Junior Guards
In Hunti11gto11
Feted Tonigl1t
The 160 JlunUngton Beach boys
enrolled in the city beach junior
lifeguard program will r e c e i v e
certificates or completion tonight at
the Recreation Center, 17th and
Ora.nee Streets.
Beach and Harbors Director Vince
Moorhouse will make the presen·
tations al the 7:30 p.m. ceremony.
The boys, aged 9 to 15, 1pent 10
weeks this !1.lmmer. five days t. week,
learning first aid, ocean hazards,
beach 1alety, swimmlng and overaU
endurance. They also mu!tered for a
daily inspection, ran two rr1Ues and
entered swimming .races and surfi ng
and volleyball competition.
l\1oorhowe maintains the junior
llieguard program pays off because
some of the boys ''have aaved some
lives" after taking thf! course. Others
have gone ()n t() become regular
lifeguards after they reached 18 years
o{ age.
25.9 percent of the voters questioned,
McCarthy by 23.5 percent, Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy by 10.7 percent,
President Johnson by 10.6 percent,
Sen. George S. McCGovern by 4.2 per·
<.-ent, and George C. Wallace by .4 ptr·
rent. The remaining 24.8 percent ex·
pressed no opinion.
When the two leadcr11 were matched
agalnst Nixon, the Rep u b 11 can
pre11idential nominee h o w e v e r ,
McCarthy emerged as the one who
could defeat Nixon.
In a Humphrey-Nixon race, 41.S per·
cent of the voters polled picked Nb:on
to 31.3 percent for Humphrey end 13.7
percent for Wallace, a third-party can·
dldate, while 8.1 percent had no opi ·
nion and 5.4 percent wanted n()ne of
lhe Uirec.
In a McCarthy-Nixon race, 42.0 per·
cent of the respondents ch o s e
r.-tcCarthy to 36.S percent for Nlxon
and II.I percent for Wallace, with 6.8
percent bavlna: no opinion and 3.6 per·
cent wantint none of the Uree.
Soutl1 Af rica11
Coming to Valley
Fountain V.alley lti&h School may be
a long woy Crom Johafllltsburg, South
Afrlea, but the two-year~d high
school aoon is to be the alma mater vf
Tamara 11Tammy" Bonnell, th e
Valley's 1968-t\9 American Fie 1 d
Service (AFS) student.
Mias Bonnell, a native South African
of English descent, is the honored
gue1t, alone wrt.h her American famUy the Keith Crotiers, at a pool and pot.
luck welcome party from 7 to 10 p.m.
\Vednesday, (Aug. 28) at the Fountain
Valley Hilb School pool.
Another famlly to be honored at the
party ii Jame• Burbeckl. hosts to last
year's forelal'l student Ruby Moraga~
ol Chile.
Fun for Fan1ily
Va lle y Plan s Labor Da y Luau
Labor Day in 1-'ounUUn Vl.!Jey "ill
sptU run for t:he whole famdy, ac·
ct>rding to Sten Hamblin, chairman of
the firlit annual Labor D'Y Luau
sponsored by the Valley Kiweriis -Club.
Acl.lvitiet include a teMls tourney.
beglnnU!J at I a.m ., roll chlpplnt at 10
a.m ., horseshoes at 11 a.m. and acck
raices at 1:30 p.m.
More eventt are 1 watermelon·
eat.in& contest at 2:30 p.m. with the
maln event, lhe lua ·of·war. 1t.t for
3:30 p.m.
llamblln addl that the serving of a
chi<'ken dinner wW begin at 5:30 p.m.
to be followed by profe,slooal
polyneslan daocln&.
More erltertainment ii a ~tut of
!ht bonds fealur lns U1e }louse of
Noah. Soul O"'llersbips and the Sweer
<1.nd Sours.
The day·k>ni picnic will be IA Foun·
t11in Valley High School.
Ticket donation is $2.25 for adults
and i1.:z5 for childr1¥1 Wider U. Specl>I
SI Ucketa are avallablfi to tho&e
pent0n1 who only want .adml11ston to
tl1e Boltl< ol Ole Bandt.
'ncketa may be obtained at the
Crocker·Cilizens National Bank, 17211
Brookhw:at St.; Dr. Robert Longman's
olfiet, 17215 Brookhur&t St .. a.od Twin
Castle Restaurant, 17217 Brookhu.r1t
St.
For mcrt lnfonnation call 9624'411,
968-'.1648 or 962·995.5.
)
From Page 1
CZECHS ..•
the invasion.
Sources said Dubcek went along re·
luctanUy with the plan for the gradual
withdrawal ot the Soviet and other
Warsaw Pact troops from C~h soil.
They said the leaders of the Kremlin
firrti..reac~ agreement with Svoboda
and ~rnik and then Dubcek tl.nally
went along.
DlplomaUc sources said earllf!r the
Soviets were asking a heavy price for
an end to the occupation of Czeehoslo·
vakia. But Yugoslav an d Czechoslovak
report& said the Russians already had
agreed to a !tep by step withdrawal of
occupation troops .
The reports circulated as Soviet and
Czechoslovak leaders held thelr fourth
day of crisis talks in the Kremlin.
The diplomatic 11ources said the Rus·
slans were demanding the virtual end
of Czechollovakla's liberal reform
program a1 the price of endlng the
wee~Iong occupation. They 1ald So·
vlet demands include Prague relm·
IJOsing censorship and cla mping down
on non.Commuist activity.
But In Belgrade. the Yug08lav newi;
agency Tanjug. in a dispatch from
M05cow, said the Soviet leaders had
agreed in principle to pulling out of
Czechoslovakia. Tanjug said the Rus·
11ian terms were thOl!le agreed upon at
the Cierna Nad Tisou conference tJ1at
preceded the Soviet bloc invasion las t
week.
At the Cze4:hoalovak town of Clerna
Nad Tisou, Soviet and Ciechoalovak
leaders ~reported to have papered
over U1elr dJfferences -chiefly Krem·
lln anger and fear over the Czechoslo-
vak eight·montp-old drive to m.lx their
communism with democracy.
The new cooperative program is in
computer assisted inst.ruction. It is a
method of actually replacing the
te-&eher for cert.a.Jn tasks. The student
si~ .at a typewriter-like console and
answers an automatic typewriter.
The typewriter is wired to the cen·
tral computer which cause.,: it to res·
pond according to a programmed
lesson stored ln tts mem()ry.
Temporarily, until Orm1ge Coast
College's computer arrJves, t he
Orange Coast aOO Golden West cam·
puses will be wtred into the UCI corn·
puter with three terminals, as the
automatic tY]>e\\Titers are called.
The new comf)\lter initially will h&ve
25 terminals, 15 at OCC and 10 at
Golden We.st.
MAJOR PROGRAM
Throu1h ita relationship with UCI,
the junior collea;e d18trict hopes to
make lbJ computer teaching 1et up a
major ri!gional program. The facility
will be llV'allable to an)'llle from high
school youngster• to atudenta at four
year colleges.
"Anyone who can pay the terminal
and distanee rate will be able to u.so
it," says Jack King, director of the
district's computer program.
To drum up interest, the district
plans to teach a symposiwn in com·
puter instruction next summer. If it is
done, it will be necessary during the
ne~t year to prepare persons to teach
the symposium.
Junior college trustee.s this week ap·
proved submission of an a,ppllcatlon
for a '90,000 federal grant to cover
tooling up for the Qmposium. No local
money is mithorlzed should the ap·
plication be turned down.
The new Orange Coast College com·
pu.ter does involve local tax money, It
Eleven junior college instructors
already have written lessons in the
computer language for use jn courses
this fall.
Jury Trial Set
For Operat.or
Of Teen Ouh
Jeanne Covell, wife 0£ Huntington
Beach teen night club operator Gilbert
Covell, pleaded innocent Friday to
ch arge! of criminal conspiracy and
obstruction of justice. Super!or Court
jury trial was set for Oct. 21.
Mrs. Covell had been bound over to
Superior Court after e 1 o n g
preliminary hearing Aug. 14 before
Munlcipal Court Judge H arm o n
Sc<>ville in West Orange County Court.
She ls charged with two counts -to
slander and libel Officer James
Mahan of the Huntington Beach Police
Department and to pervert the ad·
minlstrarUon of justice.
Charges stem In part from a May 28
11tateme-nt which was printed In Hun·
tington Beach newspapers, ln w&tlch
?-.1rs. Covell charged that Officer
Mahan had threatened via telcphone·to
kill het· husband.
She was arrested .July 20 after the
District Attorney's office investigated
the cha:rge11.
Mrs. Covell and her husband operate
the Syndicate 3000 Club. They have
long been at odds with the city and
police.
Since July 1967 charges of narcotics
sales in the area, the club being a
haven for drug users, accusatJ.ons ()f
harassment by both sides and marl·
juana "planting" have been made by
both Covell and the police.
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Lago~~ Beaeh Today's Closing
vot. n, NO. 205, 3 SECTIONS , 32 PAGES t:>;GUNA BEACH, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST 26, 01968 TEN CENTS
Laguna's Fired Postman Bacl{ Carrying Mail
. By RICHARD P. NALL
Of t11e 0.11' P'llM Ii.ff
Paul Arct, Laguna Beach postman
fired eight months ago because of
religious objections to w o r k i n g
Saturdays, was beck carrying the mail
today. .
The 48-year'11d father c( three, a
Seventh Day Adventiit, held no
~ft~~:eitber does the po6t office. · Arct a valued employe, Don
Rose, .acting postmaster, said. "We're
very glad to have hlm back at work:
he's been a friend and neighbor for
many years."
Rose recently replaced retiring
postmaster Eugene T. \Vhite who
discharged Arct Dec. 20 because be
would not Work Saturdays.
Arct, 547 Alta Vista Way, bad 17
yeats service with the department.
Aided by his church, he twice ap-
pealed his discharge. ,
The second appeal is still pending in
Washington, D. C., according to
William G. Baker, a 1 s is-tan t
postma&ter'
The outcome of the appeal will ap-
parenUy not affect Arct's employment
but will relate to eight months back
pay and. employe benefits.
Baker..-said Arot bolds a new
designation, career special delivery
substitute mess.enger, which does not
require that he ~wk Saturdays.
Baker said Arct will receive the
same pay but it will be on an hourly
basis. He was previously paid on a
monthly basis.
Arot had been working as .:i laborer
at El Toro Marine Coil>S Air Station
while he awaited the outcome o! his
appeal.
Postmaster Rose said whatever the
.appeal outcome:
oviets 0 u
Records Broken
Sellout Crowd
Views Finish
Of Best Festival
L~a Beach Saturday night closed
Ll1e 33rd annual running of its in·
lrrnationally famous Festival of Arts
<ind Pageant of the Masters.
Festival officials prGmptly lebe1ed
the run the "most successful '' in the
Novice Diver
•
Dies in Bay
Near Laguna
'J1he body of a novice diver who was
using borrO\\•ed equipment was pulled
Crom Ule ocean floor off Laguna's
Crsecent Bay Sunday afternoon.
The victim, James B. Jensen. 22, of
Norwalk, wu pronounced dead on ar·
rival at South Coast Community
Hospital.
The buddy system failed to save the
young man. Despite one air tank
failure, lifeguards said, Jensen tried
again with a reserve tank.
When his \1eserve tank emptied, his
buddy apparently gave Jensen his
mouth piece for the two men to share,
according to llieguards. Both men
panicked, they &aid. Jensen's uniden·
tified divjng companion rose to the
surface and swam to Rocky Point
where beach goers pulled him ashore.
Lifeguards Bill Roley and Steve
Knauer, ran to hls assistance. Roley borro~·ed a :face mask, and after
several dives located Jensen, !ace
down, 25 feet below the survace.
Roley attempted unsuccessfully to
revive J ensen with mouth-to-mouth
resuscitation. Lt. Joh n Cunningham
(See DIVER, Page Z)
more than three decOOes of existence
of tile art show which began on a back
fence Moog El Paseo street.
A brief cloudburst fell on the au-
dience before t:be final presentation of
"Living Pictures" in Irvine Bowl
Saturday ni.ght. But the crowd of 2,512
in the final Di.gbt .E.udience sat through
to final cUI'tain.
Comment cards indicated it was the
best ever pageant.
Final tabulations showed that ap·
proximately' 113,800 people witnessed ,
the presentation of the living pictures,
while another 100,000 toured the
Festival of Arts. The l<~estival crowd
was up 3,000 over the previous year.
"It was a record year," said publici-
ty director SaJly Reeve. "Festival at-
tendance started off with a big bang,
then dropped off and then _picked up
again."
She added, "Certain artists I talked
to were delighted by the response of
the crowd. And Pageant comment
cards have been 'rave, rave, rave.' "
Eisenhower's
Heart Continues
WASHINGTON (AP) -Army doc·
tors reported today that former Presi~
dent Dwight D. E isenhower has shown
"further increase" in heart irritability
since Sunday aod remains in critical
condition.
Doctors at Walter Reed Army
Hospital said that extra heart beats
have been occurring with "increasing
frequency" since Sunday.
But they added tnat there had been
no further episodes of "rapid heart ac-
tion," which eonstltute the more
serious symptom of his condition.
Art Sl1ow Heist Brh1gs
Arrest of 7 on Drug, Rap
An arl grOWlds robbery and a tossed
purse full of drugs triggered the arrest
of seven persons on suS"picion of
narcotics violations in Laguna Beach
Saturday nig.ht.
U. Robert McMurray said officers
entered a residence at 1195 Victory
\Valk after Officer Arthur DeLoea saw
a purse thrown out a window". Jt con·
ta ined marijuana. n a r c o t i c s
parapllernaUa and drugs, the officer
charged.
He identil.ied the arrested occupants
of the house as Ralph Diamond , 21;
Paul llarry McDonald, 21: John
An thony Ta}tor. 20: T:l'mothy Richard
J·londorf, 20 : Doooa I.,oo.dse Thomas,
4n; Shauret Larraine Tierney. 22: and
her husband, Robert Edward Tierney,
21 . .....
r\ll gave the Victory Walk house as
their residence ettept Taylor who &aid
be is from Everett, Wa$b., McMWTay
aald.
McMurray IWl.id po~e went \o the
residence alter t~'O brothers com·
plained , ol being rOObc<I on tile
Saw!just F<Stlvol grounds.
Eilc R. Lisbin, :a>; and s£.n R.
Llsbin, 17: both of Paramlll, N.J . ~id
they were robbed by .a men they met
in Hollywood who placed a sharp ob-
ject against the younger brother's
back.
"Give me yoor money," they quoted
the man called "Rusty." He escaped
with $67 from the older brother and
$100 from UK! younger. McMurray said
the bandit was about 36 with long red
hair and a red beard.
Police went to the Victory 'Valk
residence because a red-bearded
suspect had given toot address two
weeb earlier afler a misdemeanor ar·
rest.
Seized inside and outside the house,
Utie lieutenant said, were 91 capsules
with wihte Po'Wder , tflne yellow
~. marijuana, syringes and
various other parapherr.Ua.
The seven were booked on suspicton
ol mar1j""'1a po<se5i1<>n: ......,.Jon of
dangerous drugs for sale; and
possessioo ol narcotJcs pe.rapbernalia,
said McMurray,
The officer &aid police woold 1eek a
complaint from !be district a~
today. .
Youthful Sculpture ·Grows
Adding final touches .to their original sculpture are
Laguna Pre-Schoolers Charles Geib, 4, his older
sister, Daphne, 5, and Ricky Drexelius, 3. They will
be among exhibitors Sept. 6 when school conducts
show of student work. Public is invited.
DAILY ,!LOT l"fl9tw I' T .... ~
Don't Pop, Please
Elitabeth Wilcoxen , 4, and Evan Chalmers. 3, get help In the art of
balloon decoration from Laguna Pr"*hool Instructor Judy lletty..
Art show iJ scheduled for Sept. 6, at the school, 616 S. Coast Highway. -
Stock Market Continuing Higlier
NEW YORK (AP ) -The otock mar·
ket cotJtinued hJgher this afternoon in
moclerata tradin1. Gains outnumbered
l0&ses by some 300 las<1e5 on the New
,York Stock Exchan11<. (See quotatlona, ~., .. 10.11).
Humphrey Holds
Shaky Lead as ·
Demos Convene
CHI CAGO (AP) -Hube rt 11.
Humphrey heJ4 a heavy -but highly
uneasy -lead for the presidential
nomination today as a deeply divided
Democratic party headed into its 1968
convention.
The · Vice President had in his hip
pocket two-thirds of the first-ballot
votes needed for the top prize, but
most oC the talk and much of the
enthusiasm were for two non-can-
didates hundreds of miles lrom this
fortified city : Lyndon B. J ohnson and
Edward M. KeMedy.
The President, home on the ranch
near Johnson City, Tex., was giving no
hint on whether he'd even show up in
Chicago -though his 60th birthday
anniversary tomorrow offers a
dramatic opportunity to put real
steam behind a budding ''Draft
J ohnson" movement.
Sen . Kennedy, like Johnson an avow-
ed non-candidate, was relaxing at
Cape Cod, Mass., but a perhaps more
insistent ''dra!t" movement appeared
to be surfacing here.
Forces in the Texas delegation are
ready to put Johnson's name In
nomination. Former Gov. Michael
DiSalle or Ohio is ready with Ken-
nedy's -and this morning Important
new strength turned the senator's
way .
Longshot prt!:sidential h o p e r u I
Georgl!!: S. McGovern said if Kennedy
"called me and talked to me directly
and said that he wanted the nomina·
tion I would probably Uitow my sup-
port to h.lm.''
McGovern, a South Dakota &enator ,
added, however: "I don't expect that
to happen. I don't know about Jf'.IY
Kennedy movement."
A second Uberal senator from the
mldwest. PhJllp Hart or MlchlgM, en·
dorsed Kennedy for the nomlnatJon -
and•nder Levin, chalrman of the
\See DEMOCRATS, P11e l )
"So long as be wanU to continue.
he's got a job. J hope he atay1 with
us."
Rose said he was pleased and reliev-
ed that the matter had been worked
out.
Arel wasn't immediately available
to comment today. He was bus)'
delivering the mail
ce
Also Agree
On Troop
Withdrawal
MOSCO W (UPI) -The Soviet gov·
ernment has agreed to recognize ~
regime o[ Czechoslovak CommWU!it
Party Secretary Alexander Dubcek
and to gradually withdraw troops
from Czech soil, Communist soW"ces
sai'1 today.
The agreement came after four
days or crisis talks between the So-
viet Politburo and Presi<rent Ludvik
Svoboda cf Czechoslovakia, Dubcek,
Premier O\cirich Cernik and most
other members of the Czech party pre.-
'idium.
Official Communist sources said the
Czech leaders were expected to fly
back to Prague tonight.
The heqds of tne other four Warsaw
Pact powers with troops in CzecbosJo.
vakia -Poland's \VJadyslaw Gomul·
ka, East Germany's Walter Ul bricht,
Bulgaria's Todor Zhikov and Hunga-
ry's Janos l{adar -were reported
waiting in the wings in Moscow wbile
the Czechs and Soviets wofked out
their agreement.
Since the dispatch of tile Warsaw
Pact troops into Czechoslovakia waa a
joint decisicn. agreement to pull them
out also would require collective en·
dorsemcnt.
The settlement appeared to have
•come just in time to prevent violent
clashes between frustrated Soviet
troops and Czechoslovaks who have
taunted them since they moved in a
week ago.
Dubcek and Cernik, denounced by
the Soviet press as "traitors" to com·
munism, were taken into custody by
Soviet occupation forces shortly alter
the invasion.
Sources said Dubcek went along re·
luctanU y with the plan for the gradual
withdrawal of the Soviet and other
Warsaw Pact troops fr'om Czech soil,.
They said the leaders of the Kremlin
first reached agreement with Svoboda
and Cernik and then Dubcek finally
went along.
Diplomatic sources said earUer the
Soviets were asking a heavy price for
an end to the occupation or Czechoslo.
vakia. But Yugoslav and Czechoslovak
reports said the Russians hlready had
agreed to a step by step withdrawal of
occupation troops.
The reports circulated as Soviet and
Czechoslovak leaders held their fourth
day of crisis talks in I.he Kremlin.
TI1e diplomatic sources said the Ru s-
sians were demanding the virtual end
of Czechoslovakia's liberal reform
program as the price or ending the
w.eek-long occupation. They said So..
vie~ demands include Prague reim·
pGS1ng censorship and clamping down
(S.. CZECHS, Page !)
Orange CO<Ut
Weather
The weatherman has a damp
outlook for the Orange Coast
Tuesday -like cloudy with
occasional showers -while the
mercury stays in the 75 range.
I NSIDE TODAl'
fro111 runner Gardner Coz
sails Into tlie homestretch of the
Olyn1pic IJ()Chting trial! toda11
wilh tico other skippers in close
pursuit See Boating, Page 2S.
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•
' I
Z DAIL. V PILOT
Five IGlled
In Weekend
Accidents
Fhie persons, includin& a Corona del
Mar woman, died in Orange County
weekend traffic to m a r k one of the
bloodiest two-<Jay periods of ttle year.
The deed :
Kakyn Berg, 53, 218 N. J.asmine
1968
143
County Traffic
Death Toll
A~ .. COrooa del Mar
1161
130
Mernll Dean Pullian, 6, 9'lO W. Cub·
bon St., Santa Ana
William U. Fowler, 54, Los Ani:eles
John Pillon, 13, 12881 Olympia Way,
Sanla Ana
Melvin C. Stewart, 24, Hawaiian
Gardens ·
The Pullian boy was killed Saturday
when the pick-up truck in which he
was riding was struck from the rear
at Bristol StTeet and Segerstrom
Aveooe in 5anta Ana.
Fowler died Sunday when he lost
control ol. his oar on Esperanza Road near Fairmont Boulevard in the Yorba
Linda area. Police &a.Jd be ran off tbe
road, over corrected and swerved
across again hitting a power pole.
The Pillon boy .and Mrs. Berg of
Corona del Mar were killed Saturday
morning at Dyer Avenue and Red Hjll
Road 1n Tustin. 'Ibey were ejected
from the colliding cars, police said.
Ste'\\-·art was dead on arrival at
South Coast Community Hospital
Saturday v..tien his car slanuned into
the center divider of the San Diego
Freeway north of Ortega Highway, or.
Heers reported. He was alone and no
other car was involved.
,. From Page l
CZECHS ...
on non.Commuhit activity.
But in Belgrade, the Yugoslav news
agency Tanjug, in a dispatch fron1
Moscow, said the Soviet leaders had
agreed in principle to pulling out of
Czechoslovakia. Tanjug said the Rus-
sian ttrms were those agreed upon at
the Cierna Nad Tisou confereoce that
preceded the Soviet bloc invasion last
week. At the Czechoslovak ~wn of Ciema
Nad Tisou, Soviet and Czechoslovak
leaders were ref>orted to have papered
over their differences -chieny Krem·
lin anger and fear over the Czeclloslo·
vak eight~mon~~ld drive to mix their
communism with democracy.
Despite the sweet words from Cier·
na Nad Tisou, however, troops of the
Soviet Union and her hard.line allies
marched into Crechoslovakia last
Tuesday and arrested reform leaders.
Radio Free Prague, one of the UD·
derground "freedom" stations operat·
ing deEiplte Soviet bans in Czech051o-
vakia, today said also that the Soviet
bloc had agreed to pull occupation
forces out of Czechoslovakia. The sla·
tion said the withdrawal would be step
by step.
The reports from the Yugoslavs and'
Radio Free Prague confllcted with
the less optimistic worn from the dip-
lomatic sources here.
Bee Sting Sends
Youth to Hospital
'The venom of a bee sting hospitaliz·
ed a Laguna Beach boy briefly after
he went into shock near his home
Saturday.
Police sald DougLas S. McClean, 14,
of 711 Cliff Drive, was stung near his
home at 10 :30 a.m. Saturday. lie was
taken to South Coast Community
HospiW, treated and released in good
condition Sunday.
A hospital spokesman said the youth
apparently has an allergy to bee
venom.
DAllY PllOT
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BIGGEST CHARACTER OF All -Polly's Ark,
entered by Polly Pierce, was judged "Best Charact-
er Boat" in 8th annual Character Boat Parade Sat·
urday in Newport Harbor. An estimated 135,000
DAILY r1l.OT 511ft ""9"
persons jammed shoreline along parade route to see
40 entries. Some eager youngsters leaped into bay
for better view.
Real •chara~ters~· All
135,000 View Over 40 Boat Parade Entries
By BRUCE BENSON
Of nte 0.111 P'lllf ll•lt
A big, black Lincoln with out~f-state
liceMe plates rolled from Balboa
Island onto the Newport Harbor ferry
boat Saturday afternoon, just in time
to see a vessel come floating by with a
crew Of Vikings.
Behind it was a 70-foot motor yacht
with a combo calling themselves the
"Retrogressive Five'', putting out
melodic strains of "Avalon."
The driver of the black Lincoln
stared nonplussed at his wife, then
began studying a road map, hoping to
get his bearings.
The two tourists had arrived In
Newport Beach in· the midst or the
eighth annual Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce Character
Boat P.arade, witnessed by a n
estimated 135,000 people jammillg the
shoreline.
Additional Utousancb took to the
water in practically anything that
would float to get closer looks at the
more than 40 strange and gaily
decorated parade entries.
FLOATING ISLAND
The character boats included a
floating island with thatched hut,
waterfall, volcano and hula girls.
There was al.so a vastly shrunken
version Of the Queen Mary.
Even politics got into the parade as
a group of sombec·looking fellows in
World War I vintage unilortn3 putted
along in a boat bearing ensigns that
read, "Remember the Pueblo" and
"Don't Give Up the Ship."
The theme of tile 21h-hour parade
Wl86 "Adventla'e at Sea" and winner of
the theme award was Rex. Bixby's
Poll Shows Nixon Leads
HHH, But Not McCarthy
NE\V YORK (UPI) -A nationwide
poll of voters indicates that Richard
1i1. Nixon could defeat Vice President
11ubert H. Hun1phrey but would lose to
Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy.
Dut the poll, completed two day
before the Democ ratic National Con
vention, showed that the respondent··
favored Humphrey as the Democratir
candidate by a narrow margin ovei
r.lcCarthy.
Sindlinger &: Co. Inc. coOOucted lh
poll among 1,696 voters by telephor1
'fhursday through Saturday.
The poll showed llumphrey prefer
red for the Democratic nomination by
25.9 percent of the voters questioned,
McCarthy by 23.5 percent, Sen.
Edward M. Kennl'dy by 10.7 percent,
Presidoot Johnson by 10.6 pefcent.
Sen . George S. J\.fcCGovcrn by 4.2 per·
cent, and George C. Wallace by .4 per·
From Page l
DEMOCRATS • •
~lich.igan delegaUon, said he would
"lean to Kennedy if Kennedy became
a candidate.''
Like fvfcGovern, both Harl and
Levin spoke cautiously, saying they
\\·ere not urging the last of the Ken·
nedy brothers to get into the rncc.
But ·a boom, or at least a boomlet,
has been launched. Attention was
centered particular ly on the vote·
heavy Illinois delegation \\'here, at the
direction of Mayor Richard J . Daley. a
presidential preference vote wa! put
err unUI \Vednesday -obviously to see
ir either the Johnson or Kennedy
drives catch fire.
cent. The remaining 24.8 percent ex·
pressed no opinion.
When the two leaders were matched
against Nixon, the R e p u b I i ~ a n
presidential nominee how e v e r ,
McCarthy emer ged as the one \\'ho
could defeat Nixon.
In a Humphrey-Nixon race, 41.5 per·
cent Of the Voters polled picked Nixon
to 31.3 percent !or Humphrey and 13.7
percent for Wallace, a third-party can-
didate, while 8.1 percent had no opi·
nion and 5.4 percent wanted none of
the three.
In a McCa."1hy-Nixon race, 42.0 per·
cent of the respondents c h o s e
McCarthy to 36.5 percent for-Nixon
and 11.1 perceot for Wallace, with 6.8
percent having no opinion and 3.6 per·
cent wanting none of the three.
Laguna Actress
Wins Top Trophy
At Mesa Awards
The comedy · drama "Claudia" prov.
ed the most popular production of the
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse seaoon
Satur<la:y night as it SW<!ll lllrH of Ille
year's top five acting awvds.
At the secood annual C i v i c
Playhouse awards banquet in the
Chst.a Mesa Country Club. "Claudia"
cast members were awarded trophies
as best actor, best actress md best
suiJporting -.... .
boat, Brandy. In addiUon to a huge
brandy snifter planted amidships the
boat was occupied by Jarge New~
roundland dogs.
Winner of the Lea.kin' Timbers
award was the JO..foot model of the
Queen Mary. She was entered by Joe
Beek, owner of the Balboa Island fer-
ry and secretary Of the State Senate.
The Vikings were aboard the Espita
Mar, entered by W. C. Peltier. While
not much could be said o( their
seamanship, the crew did manage to
walk off with the Swaviest Swabs
award.
DECORATED BARGE
The Bilgy Binnacle award went to a
barge decorated as a floating island
and tiUed, "Paradise."
The floating float. entered by
Newport Natiooal Bank, cani.ed. dan-
cing girls end South SeM decor. The
men aboard were visibly unhappy over
Ute parade coming to an end.
Amldst a flUITY of live doves and
animated animals, the Island Princess
d Richard Panish got Ute Loose
Screw trophy.
Musician David Rose's Norweglan·
built steamboat Koberhavn copped
the Wheel, Steam and Bell Award.
Other winners were Polly's Folly for
best character boat, laden with stuffed
anim":", by Polly Pierce: Wa.I.rw; tug,
for Dirty Old Manifold Trophy with
hula girls, by Orange Countf Sea
Scout Base; Michigan tug, for Ancient
Mariner Award, by Dick Shaw and a
houseboat. for Big Toot Award' wtth a
li ve band aboard, by the Ne\\'J)Ort
!·!arbor Junior Chamber of Commerce.
MUSIC HEARD
The "Retrogressive Five" ~
along with selections of aocioot music
from the a>'s, causing one little boy on
an inner tube to yell Bl!i they passed
by :
"Don't you kinow anything besides
that junk?" llowever, the combo's ego
was bolstered a minute later when a
heavy set man in his late 40's, sitting
on a dock in ao easy chair, yelled out,
''Boy, that's my kind of music fel·
las," his foot and belly bouncing up
and down In tempo.
GWC, IJCI Litak
OCC ~omputer
Program Slated
By rnoMAS FORTUNE
Of !tit 0.llY 1'1111 llttf
Qr.ange Coast Junior College DistricJ
has charted for Itself a leading role in
the coming revolutton or computer
teaching.
Junior c0Uege officials have decided
to link up with UC Irvine. already in
the forelront of the teaching by com·
puter movement.
Orange Coast College will have its
own computer, a highly sophistiCated
third-generation model to be installed
on campus in December.
But the two institutions will seek
joint financ.l.ng for ~ir twin computer
programs, and a Ire ad y are
cooperating in writing computer
language.
Computers at both institutions have
other uses. For instance, the new
Orange Coast College model, which
will replace two lesser computers, will
be used for i.n5tructing 700 data pro·
ceasing students in computers and for
.administrative tasks like preparing
the district budget, gNkies and
transcripts.
The new cooperative program is in
computer assisted i.Dstruction. It is a
method or actually replacing the
tec.cher for <.'ertaln tasb. The student
siUi at a typewriter-like console and
answers an automatic typewriter.
The typewriter is wired to the cen-
tral computer which causes it to res·
pond according to a progranuned
lesson stored in its memory.
Temporarily, until Orange Coast
College's computer arrives, t he
Orange Coast and Golden west cam·
puses will be wired into the UCI com·
puter with three terminals, as the
automatic typewriters are called.
'The new computer initially will ha'Ve
25 terminals, 15 at OCC and 10 at
Golden West.
Through its relationship with UCI,
the junior college district hopes to
ma~e its ~omputer teaching set up a
ma]or regiooa.l program. The facility
will be available to anyone from high
school youngsters to students at four
year colleges.
"Anyone who can pay the terminal
and distance rate will be able to use
it," says Jack King, director of the
district's computer program.
To drum up interest, the district
pl.am to teach a symposiwn in com·
put er instruction next summer. If it is
done, it will be necessary during the
next year to prepare persons to teach
the symposium.
Jwtior college trustees this week ap·
proved submis!ioo of an application
for a $90,000 federal grant to cover
tooling up for the symposium. No local
money is authorized should the ap·
plication be turned down .
The new Orange Coast COiiege com·
puter does involve local tax money. It
will be leased: at a cost of $'l(l,000 to
$25,000 per month. Purchase is not
practical, said King, because a
generation of computers becomes
obsolete about every four years,
Supt. Norman Watson said the
prime justification for the computer is
for use if) the data processing courses.
Not h&'Ving an up to-date computer is
like having auto shop students work on
a Model T Ford, he' said.
It is expected that through the a!·
fili ation with UCI, grants and foun•
dation support will be forthcoming to
reduce the local cost. -Watson is
hopeful the computer will be funded
100 perce.nt from ouUide sOurcea.
The !e<ler.a.l government md Na·
tional Science Foundation have said
they prefer to underwrite joint com·
pu~ projects involving institutions of
different levels, King said. Junior col~
leges are oriented to instruction while
un iversities tend toward emphasis on
research, be suggested.
Eleven junior college instructors
already have written lessons in the
computer language for use in cotD'les
Ibis fall,
From Page I
DIVER • • •
and Capt. Eugene DePeulis ad·
ministered resuscitation and heart
massage while Jensen was taken in
ambW.ance to the hOtipital, where he
was pronounced dead.
A coroner's report of the actual
cause of death is pending.
Cunningham said a possible cause of
death, besides drowning, could have
been air embolism. Air embolism oc·
curs if a diver rising to the surface
doesn't exhale air from his lungs. With
less pressure on the surface, the lungs
expand il they are full of air. "And
they can only expand so far, before
they pop like a balloon,'' Cunningham
said.
Lt. Dean Westgaard said, "Most
fatal diving accidents occur when a
non-certified diver attempts using
scuba equ.ipment, and u s u a 11 y
fatalities occur because of air em·
bolliim."
•
Planners to Eye Zoning
For Hotel-Motel Control
Laguna Beach p J a n n i n g com-
missioners tonight are to study revis·
ed standardl of a proposed com·
mercial-ttotel (CH) zone to allow and
control hotel-motei devek>pmenl
The study session w:iU take up a
fourth draft or the somewhat touchy
proposal.
"\Ve need to get moving with this,"
said Al Autry, city planner.
He said the fourth, and latest, draft
of the C·H Zooe ordinance reflects
recommendations from groups such as
the Citizens Town Planning Associa·
tion, Laguna Beach Civic Le-a·gue,
chamber and from individuals.
There is no specific he.ight max·
imum for hotels. Height control would
be a formula funotion.
A.utry said height could equal tile
front yard setback ol the building plus
one half of the frontage street rlgbt of
way.
There would be other contl'OIA such
as sideyard setbacks to maintain open
space from other properties.
Front yard setback, said Autry, will
he a v-ariable established b y
ordinance. It would depend on
topography and other conditions and
might range from five to 50 feet, he
said.
The same l\'Ollld apply lo areas
oceanward of Coast llighway, the dty
planner said. He said this would not
exclude other areas from carrying the
zone later as the need is established.
The ordinance is to correct an ex·
isting condition, mixed wrung of land
suitable for hotels, that has camed
developers to seek variances: to aUow
construction.
Tbe ordinance as proposed, said
Autry, would require planning com·
mission slte plan approval of • pro-
posed new hotel or motel development.
0
OMEGA
Your Omega
SaU1 & StnJicr
Agency
.. _ ·--··-..,_ •121
t11 • """"' • dlllf ..
·--·
Blair Clark, campaign manager for
Sen. Eugene J . McCarthy, contended
st a ne\\'S conference in mid -mominJ!:
"it now is quite clear" thal Humphrey
is not going to win on the first ballot.
C!ark: ci ted particularly th e
PQStponement by the Illinois delega·
tlon. "lll.iJ conventiOfl is not going to
proct:ed hastily to the busine:ss cf
nominating a p~sldcnt." Clark 1.Ud.
Pat Neederman -also a member'ol
the '1Claudia" cut -captured tbe
c0veted 'IbeSl>ian Awr.ird for the best
pert'onnance in a role ot any she. The
Laguna Beach acCress was honored
for her portrayal 0( Lottie in "The
Dark at the Top of d>e Stairs."
Linda &aum of Olrona del 1.1•, who
played the title role in "Claudia," was
named be~t actr<'M of the 11cason,
"'hile Nell Sawers took the best actor
a"·ard ror hk performance as her bus·
band In u.. play.
Missllt DI.,,_. $4.99 .. ,....., '""' -"-1111.
On paper, at least, Uit strength or
the declared candidates remained con·
11t.a.nt. The Associated Press. basins its
count on primary result.~. pubU~
pledges, checks with dclegat.e:s and
cauet1s t s. gave this stand.lng tn mid·
mornln.g:
Humphrey 889
Se n. Euge ne .I . McCarthy: 177 1'4
fi.fcGovun 37~i
}~avortte sons 41914 ~
0Ulen13
Unoommitt.d 78511
Martllella Randall. abo or Corolla
del Mor, was judge<! best •uppotllng
actress foe her role as: etaud.la•a
mother. Be91 •UWo<tlng acto. honors
weril to Ed Utta: Of Newport Btech .as
the dts!Jlualone.d lover In "The Little
llut."
The Civic Playhouse currently ls in
rebtarsal for ttie opening i:roductJon
or Its 1968-'9 season , "Dream Glrl.'f
which opens Sept. 'l1 for two
weekend£.
Jewelry Dool1nln1
A S1"<11ltyl
Now 2 Great Stores To Serte You
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CINTll IU.CH ' IDINall
IHI HAllOI Rft. HUNTIHSTON llACH
COSTA Mll4 ........ 1y.1Ml
Open Mon. Thure. Fri. flll 9 p.m.
--,,_ " .. --... _.,» --
TUMS
TO
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IVDMT
'
J
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j
• ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.-----~ -·---·--.-
\
•
U~I Ttltp .... 19
Bride and Groo11i
Actress Jane Russell of Newpor1. Beach and new husband, actor
Roger Barrett, exchange aUectionate glances after their \vedding
Sunday in Beverly Hills. Miss Russell's divorce from former football
star Bob Waterfield, to whom she had been married for 25 years,
became final late last month.
Allies Claim 6,000 Red s
l(illed in 8-day Period
SA IGON (AP) -Allied c<>m·
manders claimed Monday more than
6,000 enemy soldiers have been slain
in the pa.st eight days of bitter
fighting, still continuing today in the
northernmost 1st Corps area.
U.S. Marine elements fighting to
maintain a cordon around an enemy
force near C.On 'Thien reported killing
52 of the foe. Marine casualties were
termed light although the outpost
came under sustained. artillery fire to·
day.
Scattered fighting also was reported
in Tay Ninh Province, 45 miles
north\vest of Saigon, and in the
Mekong Delta to the south.
U.S. spokesmen expressed doubt the
lz.t"ge enemy losses in major batUes
across the country had blunted the
even bigger assaults. They said more
hard fighting is expected, particularly
in the five northern provinces.
The enemy casualty t.oll of more
th<:n 5,000 killed last week was the
highest since the week ending May 18
when 5,348 were reported killed during
the second major enemy offensive of
the year.
More than 1,000 enemy troops were
killed Sunday and today when allied
units smashed enemy thrusts across
the cen1I'al highlands and the coastal
lowlands. Allied casualties were light
becal.15e of massive U.S. air and
artillery support.
ln one of the biggest enga.gemcnts,
reinforcements broke through to a
besieged Special Forces camp at Due
Lzp, near the Cambodian border, and
rescued 600 Green Berets and Mon·
tagnard mercenaries who had been
holding off 3,000 North Vietnamese
regulars for three days.
The siege at Due Lap, broken late
Sunday, cost the enemy ,643 soldiers
slain and more than 200 weapons cap-
tW'ed.
Sei::ed on Roof
Despite tight security in Chicago,
Thomas P. Laine, 19, n1ade it to
roof of Conrad I-lilton Hotel late
Sunday. Police discovered rifle
in 1'.1ilwaukee youth's car park-
ed near hotel, headquarters for
several top Democratic candi-
dates.
I
McCarthy
.
Bids for
State Vote
CHICAGO (UPI) -Sell. Eugene J.
McCarthy met for more than an hour
today with Jesse Unruh in an effort to
keep CaWornia's 174 vote delegation
from going fOr Hubert Humphrey on
the first ballot at the Democratic Con-
vention.
Unruh emerged from the 1e1sion
with kind words for McCarthy and in-
dications that he has forgiven the
senator for saying that the invasion Of
Czechoslovakia was not a great world
crisis.
"The senator has a great deal of
support in California, the most support
of any Of the candidates," Unrll\l said.
But he said there still were mcyiy un-
committed CaWornia delegatet..
The powerful Oalilornia political
leader said the name of Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy "came up during the
course of the conversation," but he
declined to say whether a possible
pres.iderrtial bid for Kennedy was
discussed.
Get>rg ia Governor
Maddox Resign s
From Delegation
CHICAGO (UPI) -Gov. Lester
}\~.addox. today resmgned from the
Georgia delegation to the Democratic
National Convention. He said he
wanted to devote full time to his role
as a c<:fldidate for the party's
presidential nomination.
The; I was no immediate indication
whether the, move by Maddox would
solve the contl"Oversy over seaUng, the
~gia delegation, whlcb is being
challenged by a rival group headed by
Negro State Rep. Julian Bond.
J oe Sports, Georgia Democratic ex-
ecutive secretary, would only say that
Maddox "appeared to be an is~ue with
the credentit.\s committee -serving
as a candidate and as a delegate."
A spokesman for Bond s01id Sunday
nlght that just the removal of Mt.ddox
from the regular delegatioo would n01
be enough to avert a fight over the
Georgia seats.
Those Russ Bears
Getting Hungry
PRAGUE (UPI) -An underground
"freedom" radio today ad v is e d
Czechoslovaks to lock up .their cats
and dogs to save the pets from Soviet
army cooking pots.
The station, describing the effects of
a Czechoslovak campaign. to refuse to
feed invasion forces, said Soviet
.soldiers have been seen harvesting
and eating raw mushrooms and
potatoes.
"We would advise our listeners to
lock up their cats and dogs lest they
lose them in the course of the oc-
cupation forces' supply operations,"
the station said.
Mesa Burg lars
Get $400 Loot
Burglars cut their way into the Girls
Club of the Harbor Area and a Costa
Mesa home over the weekend, escap-
ing with $400 worth of clothing and
$30 in cash, police said today.
· Student Ann R. Mirems, of 131
Albert Place, lost $400 in clothing, in·
eluding five evening dresses, when
someone cut a screen and removed
louvers to gain entry to the home.
Gleam R. Murphy, counselor at the
Girls Club facility, 1815 Anaheim Ave.,
said $30 in cash was taken from a desk
drawer by someone who broke in
through a kitchen wind aw.
A quantity of checks in tlle same
drawer was left, investigators said.
Firefighters Make Stand
Blaze Clai ms Eig lit Lives, Destroys 21 Square Mi les
GLENDORA (UPI) -Firelighters
made a "determined stand" on the
bank of a river today to halt the ad·
vance of a brullt"and timber fire that
has claimed eight Uve..s and destroyed
21 square IQ.iles of naUonal forest.
William Dresser. who commands
the firefighters, said the blaze was 50
percent contained, generally on the
southern perimeter, but flames on the
north were threatening the new San
Gabriel wilderness area, Dresser said.
If the firefig'bter1 are unable to stop
the flre t'lit the west fork of tlle San
Gabriel ruver. officials said ttiey
would have to drop back eight mtle! to
a highway before maklng another
stand.
By midnight SUnd.ay, the names had
burnt, it over 18,000 acres insldt. .a 32·
m.Ue perimeter, destroyed a&tut a
doien cabins ln the Fish Canyon area
of Angeles National Forest and burned
an abandoned lookout tower on Pine
Mount.ain.
More than 1,500 men remained on
the lines today. They were backed up
by 100 trucks, 19 bulldozers, eight
helicop_ters and four air tankers which
dropped fire retardant solution on the
flames.
The blaze. named the Canyon Tnn
Fire, is centered about 25 mile11 north
of downt.own Los Angeles. A pall of
smoke hangs· over the mountains in
tlle distance.
All juvenile crews were ordered ofl
the lines at mid1:1ay Sunday in the
wake of Saturday's tragedy when
seven tccn·agers and lheb: supervisor
were burned to death When Dames
raced up a "fonnel" canyon. · 1t
Authorities said the probart:ion crnnt>
crews were withdrawn ''for re$t
purposes" and would not be returned
to the fire lines.
The boys, all juvenile delinquents Clo
probation to the Los Angeles County
Fire Department, and their foreman,
George Thomas, 36, tere running a
hose up the side of 1.ht'canyon only 200
yards from the Azusa College of the
Pacific football field.
John Sanford. 16, one of the five
boys who escaped, described what
happened from his h06pital bed.
"We were cutting a Une 81'()Uftd It
when suddenly the fire came over the
hill behind U5. I heard the frremen
(Thomas) yell 'run, run. run,' but
th<>se fires go like that." lie snapped
his fingers.
"I ran in 8: dirferent cUr:ection but 1
could hear the screams of the other
guys. J never saw them 4fter that."
• ' •
•
Monday, Aug11st 26, 1%& DAIL V PILDT :J
. "Ul'IT..,_...
CALM BEFORE STORM -Messenger pauses for
breather on quiet convention floor prior to opening
of Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Con·,
vention, marked by tightest security in history of
American political gatherings, began this afternoon •.
Platform
Cl-llCAGO (UPI) -Democratic
plaUorm drafters abandoned hope to-
day of compromising their split on
Vietnam. Members said the issue will
be put tio the party's convention Tues.
day for the televised showdown they
wanted so much to avoid.
Vice President Hubert H. Ilumphrey
\vrecked whtever compromise pro·
spects r .em a in e d with his most
hawk.iSh as-sertion.s. l-lumphrey en-
dorsed President Johnson's cooduct of
the war and peace talks and served
notice Hanoi "is not going to get a
better deal out of me."
The Vice President's spokesmen
here had indicated Humphrey would
stay out of the platform drafting battle
that already had gone into mertime.
But in a nationally.broadcast in·
terview on the eve of tile convention's
opening session. Humphrey said he
wanted no word in the party policy
statement that might encourage Hanoi
to hold out for a better settlement than
they oow ca n expect.
Actually, most members of the 110·
member platform committee had seen
little prospe<:t a convention fight on
Vietnam could be avoided, since aay
11 members can take a minority plank
to the floor.
Biit Humphrey's statements were
seen as guaranteeing that two, and
possibJy three, Viet.nmn stands will be
•••
Showdown Due
offered the delegates.
A majority of the committee sup-
ports Humphrey's bid for t he
presidential nomination over those of
Sens. Eugene McCarthy and George
McGovern. The Hwnphrey backers
now were expected to proceed to draft
a plank that will not offend Humphrey
or President Johnson.
The committee's 22·man drafting
subcomm ittee again worked past mid·
night with agreement reportedly" in
prospect on most domestic and non·
Vietnamese issues. The group was
said t.o be in general accord on a call
for ''law and justice'' as opposed to
the more-com·monly heard "law and
order" them• that some members
said had racial overtones. However, a
dispute over final phra.sing on thls se<:•
tion on ghetto violence delayed a
showdown on the Vietnam plank.
'I'he subcommittee was to have
finished its handiwork Sunday nighL
Today Rep. llale Boggs (D·La. ).
chairman of the full committee, was
shooting for a drafting cleanup in time
for full committee considerati<ln by 3
p.m. He hoped to make public ~
completed document Monday night.
Man . · ls Wife, Companion, Self
police said ay a 42·year-o!d Har-
risburg, . man shot and killed his
estranged wife and her male com.'
panion as they walked out of a hoose
Sunday . Officers said the man then
Faulty Switch Blamed
CHATSWORTH (UPI) -A defec·
tive switch was blamed today for the
deraJtment of eight cZ<rS of a 65--car
Southern Pacific freight train Sunday.
put a pistol to his bead and shot
himseli to death.
Authorities said Roy· Roberts was
apparently lying in ambuslh in a clump
of shrubbery Sunday morning when
his wife and her companion emerged
from the house.
Mrs. Wanda Lee Roberts, 36, and
her companion, CaJvin Taylor, 43, ot
Harrisburg, were at the house ol Mrs.
Joyce Owens, the dead woman's
sister. As the pair walked onto the
pordl, police said, Roberts raised up
and opened fire on them wirth a .30--06
rifle .
LAST WEEK
TO SAVE ON
INTERNATIONAL
STERLING
,
I
Save 8.00, 10.00, 12.00 on pl ace sett ings
Save 2.00 on individual pie~s
Save 2.50 t o 4.00 on serving pieces
This is your last chance to take advantage of Buffums' big
savings on this famous sterling, Select from fifteen lovely
patterns. Start, add to , or complete your sterling service.
Buy now for future gifts. All prices on lnternationa1•s1erling
will increase on September 7th. So don't delay. Come in now!
Use Buffums''Silver Club. Nothing down, no interest
and no carrying charge. Silverware.
u umS '
Newport Ccnte1 _11 FashiC11 Island • 64'4-2200 • Mon., Thu<s., F1i.10:00 ti~9:30 Olher days~:po till S:;J
I
.f DAILY ,!LOT
~ ... Dllf,,.. .. ....,
E1rl 8~ a SL Louis a u t o
paru company executive has won
a barrel of monkeys. "I'll never
use that expression again," s a Id
Breen as be pondenod what to do
with a barrel filled with five lively
ringtail monkeys be won in a na-
tional contest. He managed to gel
rid of one of the animals by offer-
ing it as a door prize at a celebrity
bowling nlgbl •
Brandy, a Pomeranian puJ)PJI, moozts
in this cofftc cup 1hortl11 aft1r bting
born. Bnmd11 toa.1 om of thrtt pupa
in the Litt.tr. AU th.rte toef't able to
easilr curl up i~. the cup. Owmr
Andrtta Matift!, of Golden Volley,
Minn., l4'd moth.tr and pvp1 art all
doino fine. • The Princeton, Mo., state High-
way Patrol aaid Willl•m Leo Fri""
bie, 16, wu parked on a country
road at night when his car was
struck by one driven by Wll li1m
Albert Frisbie, his father. Neither
was injured but the father was
charged with careless driving and
the son was referre4 to juvenile
authorities for improper parking. • Diane Johnson, 17, of White
River Junction, Vt., pleaded no
contest to a charge of painting the
bridge over 20 Mile Stream in a
bright pink to which was added red
and blue hearts. Her attorney told
Judge P•lmer Ainsworth that the
girl had told her parents that she
thought the bridge's dark green
color was horrible. She was fined
$25 and court costs. •
A 250-yard drive with a 3-iron
wasn't bad gotng for a 15-year-
oLd , but the ;uctoe (probablt1 a
non·golfer J WQJ' not impressed.
He ordered the youth to pay $1
for the window that was broken
by th e ball he had Jofted out of
a playground. He further iJ>
structed the youth to do hi5
practici11g on the driving range
or un the golf course.
• The glass display case contained
an open Chinese Bible. Scrawled. on
the outside of tbe case was a mes-
sage written in Chinese. Visitors at
the Disciples of Christ missions
building in Indianapolis, Ind., won-
dered about the message for days.
Finally, Dr. J oseph M. Smith, ex-
ecutive secretary of the United
Christian Missionary Society's de-
partment of East Asia, deciphered
the message. It read: "This Bible
is upside down.''
•
26,000 itlob ili:ed
T roops Arrive
For Convention
CillCAGO (UPI) -SOme 7,500 U.S. e<I hotels and mingle<! wllh crowds;
Army soldiers have beea brought to and Chicago's 11 ,900 Policemen wtre
military installations ringing CbJcago on 12-hour shifts for the conven.J.ton.
in cue of 1ericm violeooe during the .-(Despite stringent &ecurlty at the
Democratic National Convention open·' convention'a main hotel, the Conrad
ing today. Hilton, a Milwaukee, Wis., youth was
Security arrangements were the arrested on the· roof Sunday nighl
greatest ever fer Sum a meeting. Police said ttiat when they toot the
More than 26,000 men have been youth, ThomM Peter Laine, 19, to his
mobillied to keep the peace during auto, they found a .ZZ caliber rifle 1n
the four-day convent.km. the trunk.
In the oity, 5,600 N a t i o n a 1 Laine told police and secret service
Guardsmen were oo stand-by duty in agents be did not know the rute was in
armories; l,CXXI federal agenta guard-the trunk. He was cbarged with
unlawful use of a weapon and released
Go v. Godwin's
Daughter Hit
By Lightning.
VIRGI NIA BEACH. Va. (UPI) -A
lightning bolt injured Gov. Mills I~.
Godv.in's 14-year-0\d daughter, Becky,
Sunday when she and a companion
were trying to flee a sudden thun·
derstorm which caught them swim-
ming.
The girl was hospitalized in "poor
condition," but offioials of General
Hospital said Sunday night &tie was
••respm:wiing to initial treatment."
Godwin flew in from Chicago, where
be was attending the Demoa-atic Na·
tiooal Convention, to be at his
daughter's bedside.
A spokesman said the girl was
swiJnm.ing in the surf at Camp
Pendleton, a Virginia National Guard
reservation here, and w a s ac-
companied by a loog-standing friend ol
the Godwin family, Grady Norfleet, 54 ,
of Chuckatuck.
~ two saw a storm out at sea, a
spokesman said, and were leaving the
water, heading for the car to go back
to tbe ezecutive beach cottage on the
reservation. Becl>y was still in water
about ankle deep when a bolt of lightn:
ing struck. knocking both unconscious.
"I'm oot sure whether the lighting
struck tlle girl or just struck near
tbam," tlhe spokesman said.
Two National Guardsmen, and
Norfleet, when he recovered, ad·
ministered artificial respiration to
Becky until the rescue squad arrived
to take her to the bcspital.
The governor'• spokesman said he
"has no idea" whether Godwin w i 11
return lo the convention, where he
was head of Virginia's 54-vote delega-
tion.
Godwin's name was to be placed in
nomlnation for the presidency as
Virginia's favorite son.
2 Youths Blamed
For Train Wreck
FORT BRAGG, Calif. (UPI) -Two
boys were respoosible for the Satur-
day derailment of the Diesel "Skunk"
train in Which four persons We!'e in·
jured, according to Mendocino County
sheriff's deputies .
The youths, aged 10 and 12, Sunday
admitted they used rocks lo bl'eak the
padlock on the switch at Glen Blair
Junction and Ulen threw t11e switch
which diverted the tour train loaded
with 61 passengers to go onto a side
track and plunge over an embankment
into a creek.
Three women and a young girl sus-
tained mi.noi' injuries and were treated
at a local bospttal.
The boys were rtleased to t he
custody of their parent.! after ques·
tioning by sheriff's of.ficers.
on $1,CXK> bond. He was to appear in
court Sept. 3.
The soldiers, .in combat gear, car·
ried Ml4 rifl e.s. Anny officials would
not say exactly how many were
brought to Chicago Sunday, but up to
5,000 came to O'Hare lntiernational
Al r po rt alone. Air Force Cl41
Starli!ter jets and Cl31 Hereules
turboprop transports landed in 10.
minute intervals at O'llare from Ft.
Hood, Tex., Ft. Carson, Colo., Ft.
Riley Kan ., and Ft. Sill, Okla.
throug11out Sunday. .
J eeps, ambulances and '\\-eap<>ns
carriers also were unloaded from the
planes. The soldiers were deployed at
military installations wt.side Chicago.
Governor's J ob:
Try to Squelch
Dem-onstr ations
C!UCAGO (UPI) -AD att.mpl is
being made here to turn noisy
demonstrations at the Democratic Na·
tional Convention into s c b o l a r 1 y
seminarS"' in which the delegates
leisurely pace the aisles and create a
utopia where everybody speaks softly
and with sweet reason.
No more hoopla, no blaring bands,
no more teen-agers hired at a dollar a
head to yell their lungs out, no
miMk.1rted beauties trying to lure
votes, no clovms, no acrobats, no
refugees from nearby saloons who
don't care who is nominated so long as
he joins them in a chorus of "Sweet
Adeline."
This noble crusade is sponsored by
Gov. Samuel H. Shapiro of llllnois,
who in .a weak moment got suckered
into becoming cba.irm.an of the rules
committee of this convention. One of
the functions of the rules committee is
to try to persuade delegates to act like
human beings. Shapiio will ask the
convention to approve rule No. 6:
"Delegates and alternates shall re-
main orderly following nominations
for the offices of president and vice
president. and no o r g a n i z e d
demonstration on bchaU of any can.
didate shall be permitted on the con·
vention fl oor.''
Everybody except Republicans say
Shapiro is a nice fellow. Kind to his
family, pays his taxes. shakes hands
with voters of all parties. Th at is why
it is so sad to see him deliberately
commit hara-kiri by trying to
persuade the delegates to abandon
their \vild and wondrous ways. By
week's end he will be in a st.ate of
shock, he may have taken to his bed in
pa.in. he may be sadder but he \\'ill be
a wiser man.
Nobody can prevent a delegate to a
political convention from making a
fool of himself when he hears the
words "a man who ... " and b.is can-
didate is placed in nomination. An in·
visible and irresistible force impels
him 1nto the als\es. He begins wa vi ng
a heavy placard. He starts screaming
"'·ords nobody but himself can hear.
He sweats .imd he strains. He hauls
that barge and he lilts that bale.
Cool System Fans Midwest
Temperatu res Drop to 41 at lnte rnutional Fal ls, Min n.
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L o Te•in Be~omes Hate-in
\ Police and Yippies Clasli ·in Chicago ·Melee
6 u CAGO (UPI) -The "Festival of clemoottrolon. Police roinl<lrcem""ts !.\! " died. w<r< sent to tile part. 'lbe ylpples and ~out 7 ,000 penona -l ,000 of them hipptes ttirew stones and bottles.
genuine yippifS -came to Lincoln Police roc:rtd through the crowd on
Park Sunday for wt?a.t the Youth ln· three-wheel motorcyclee.
tetmX.loul Party had billed as its At one point, about JOD youths cor-
ll¥Wer to the Democratic National nered 10 policemen ln tbe park and
cdnvention, opening today. threw stooes, hot flash bulb& ~d
People were milling around , looking lighted clgar,ettes at ttiem. Fifty other
at each other and listening to a very olficers wearing helmets ch.-ged tbo
amplified rock 'n' roll concert when a youttts and scattered them.
youth was arrested for bloc king traffic Polke reported a dozen yipples were
-be wouldn't move so a truck car· arrested ln the melee, which lasted
rying yJppies and hippies cou! 1 drive several hours and ended after p0Uce
to t:he band stand. cleared the park at 11 o'clock, the
The crowd turned h~tile, so did tJ1e nigbltbne curfew.
police and clasbes followed. The yippies, wbo had brought their
"Pigs. Fascist pigs," shouted the own medics and bandages, said 10 to
. I . I Tra11s plant Gir , 5; Di es
Of Sudde11 Cardiac Arrest
HOUSTON (UPI) -Five-year-0ld
Maria Giannaris, the world's youngest
living heart transplant recipient, died
suddenly at 11 :40 Sunday night, only a
week after receiving a new heart
Officials at St. Luke's Hospital said
the girl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Nick Giannaris of Hagerstcwn, Md.,
suffered a cardiac arrest unexpectedly
Sunday night. The spokesman said all
att.empts at resuscitation were unsuc-
cessful.
Maria was Dr. Denton A. Cooley's
tenth heart transplant patient. and the
third of his patients to die after the
operatlt\D. Five other patients still
hospitalized remain in saWfactory
condition today.
Doctors said the girl had been mak-
ing an unusually successful recovery
from the operation before the sudden
arrest She was expressing hunger
hours after her operation and ate a
hearty breakfast the following day. A
week ego she was sitting up in bed,
talking with her parents and scribbling
in a coloring book.
Maria had been suffering from a
heart disease from birth which causes
part of the lining of the heart vessels
to become like leather. Most Victims
of the disease die before the age of 10.
··-
l5 of thdr D!llllbtr mmtuolly wert It•-for lnjuriel.
Police at llnt ureod the )'lppl,. to
move, tf1tn pu.sbed them, then clubbed
them. The youl!io rellpOD<ted with
stmes, curses, shouts of "pigs" and
other taunts.
Meanwlllle, about 300 ylppies and
hippie• peeled oU from Ule ICflne a-t
lJ.ncoln Part and . marched down
Michigan Avenue toward the Conrad
Hilton, hotel heDdquarten for U1e
Democratic National Convention.
Traffic was tied up around much Of
the near north side because of the
marchen. At the Michigan Avenue
Bridge about two miles south.of Lin·
coin Park, 'police lowered the gates
tlDd tokl tile yippies: "We're gonna use
gas. If yoo doo't get out we're gonna
use gas."
The yi:ppies stood cloew: to the blue·
hebne'Tud policemen and shouted,
1'P.fgs! Pigs! -Pigs." 'Ibey cballted,
"Bring on the gas. Bring on the gas."
The youths began diapersing when
five busloads of Police reinlorcemell4
came up, moved northward. toward
the park, and several wtndowt were
broken and garbage cans tipped over
in their wake, police sa4d.
The park was cleared <nA shortly
aft.er 11 p.m. -the yippies 1.DUC·
cessfully had asked the city to let
them camp 1n it during the convention
-but ~ othon ran back into the
park. ~e on motcrcycles routed llu•m,-
Noo< of the inJur<d -two of 1'1!om
were sprayed with Mete -was
belieYod to be serioooiy bur!, tile yip-
ptex said.
"Walt tilt tomorrow l:light," l&id
OCl>en!.
A All Penney StorH Open Ever y Night Monday Through Saturday
,.,!.~.!!~~·
Back-to-school fabric casuals
..• the perennial favofite
for kids of all ages!
Rugged 'boat shoe' casuals
styled fo r men and boys
l o)'I Vo bock to Khaol In 'boat dy~' fobric "-s. Grtlll for 81'" elem or ..,_..,
doy -1 Sturdy cottori Cll'lll}' duck' upper w1thttonch the"'°'* 8dhw UM. Gvm
rubb.r Ollt1C>lt, comfortobtt arch 1uppor1. Choote J'lll¥'t'/· lodtn DI' ....t.111. loya'
1i1t1 2'/, to 611111n'11i1et 6'/1 to,,,
4.99
Abov• shoes in youth's 1i1es I Y.a to 2.
Loden a nd na vy only ........................................ 3.99
Law cut basketball
shoes fo r men and boys
~ -*'• ""' """""' ...... --,. ..... """""-~ 1-Mt.. W<h ....,.,....,.. .-.;,, _.... -........... ~ ... "'°"' ..................
Miltt't tK t.12
~2"'"' Ywttw> I~ It J , 3.99
Women's and girls'
sn ub toe casuals
'*" ........... -............... _,.,......,.........,,boolf~-. .......
-...i...a-. ...... i-w....i..~
................ Wok\. .. ""'""""" ....,. """"·
Girl .. IQ t• J
W"'*''' I M 10 2.99
Co mfo rtable fabric
oxfords for wome n
0..11,.t..1-..w. ..............
~---w...1.~ ...... .. ................................ "'""'
~md!. .. w.. • ...,,...
W....'1lt110 3.99
COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
Horbor Shopping C.ntor Huntington Center F11hion l.Jond ..
~-.... -----
U>roners
Elett
Brandt
ANAHEIM -0 .r ange
<Jowq COl\Dr Dr. Illy·
-A. -bu beep dlOOI!! _pre<l=.i~=-~ -Jntl!rnatlOnal al.UAI ~
Corooors and Medical Ex·
amlners at the group'• eon·
ventlm wbldl eoded !la
meeting today here at the
Grand Hotel.
'lbe oeleetlan, &llOOWlCed
at the corcoer'1 banquet et
which recerrtly m • r r i e d
Erle Stanley G a r d n e r,
mystery· writer, was tbe
guest speaker, waa made
lor e year·loqg period ~·
Ding that n!ghL
Recently renamed from
Natiooal AsloclatiOn o f
Coroners, the ~~ ~ S •-Yard S·-_.._.._ -Gardner, OOW· m hl8 70 I, Uffn;eff ·~·
'11in yarns about his tx· H U A Gard periencecs with rnysteri et Mrs. Robert Neare, of 59'll un ~ey ve., en
and adventures throughout Grove views without m uch enthusiasm her sunken
bis lifetime. backy>ird while Garden Grove officials Friday con-
Warning the 200 coroners sidered ~hat to do. Water in old, cap~ line was
and their wiws to beware of turned· on popping out lid and undenmrung newly
jumping t 0 conclusions, decorated' yard. Cave-in and ~~ followed, sen~·
Gardner related personal ing family dog Clem dog-paddling into the house tn
aneedotes in which hi's coun· 10-inch tide. Insurance investigator s are now total-
try dootor "discovered" that ing up the tab. malaria was caused by _:~~'-..::::.:.::.:.:.:... _____________ _
water melon hearts.
-
• Enroll Now-Fall Semester •
ALL DAY CLASSES
kindergarten thru 8th grade
DOOR TD DOOR BUS SBRVICB
.LEE WALLACE, 7, GETS Ml ~KEY'S ATTENTION
. ·:.C)eorge Wallace Celt brated Birthday at Disneyland Fire Calls Inno cent Ple a in Assault CHILD CARI: BEFORE AJID AFTBR SCHOOL
6:30 A.M.-11:30 P.M.
;::Wallace Has Birthday
., ···' '
SANTA ANA - A 39-year· We stmlnster Oomm.unity
sit1.1>$il" !':'.''.i11•&::if•:.~ .. ~r 1111: old Westminster man ac· Hospital last July 7. Johnson SU~Yi... dl":.' 25~·•~:.Jl' ,.m .• mtc11a1 cused of assaulting another allegedly tried t.o s t o p 11d .-,ao Hell Av1. lVi:'i.chaeJ:-Crom taking ~ •• ~~111V .r.u1 16, 12:iift 1.m .. 111-·th d -••v weapon · ut
TEACHING "4 R's" WITH PHONICS
IEISOllllLE TllTIOll-lllDIYIDUIL 1mm0tt
call (714) 962-3312 today ~u114'11on, ~1 oocklld• C1r,1e man W1 a el:lU!, from a car 1n an a o sund1~ Au1. 2J, ~~is~ .. 11111 1!1rm, pleaded innocent here in salva~ lot. to~ •. ~.:'°~11~1~ 1u111, fJOO H1rbol' Superior Court Friday. Michaels also pleaded in-Hon·d•nomlftatlon1I n~Jl";.m., "'" ""· ·~· ,, .... Louis Patrick MlchaelB , of nocent to charges of pe tty * HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS * -~Iii Disneyland Tour
·~AHEIM -George c .
W."1ace turned 49 Sunday
and observed the occasion
' -
__ For The ,, ... .. .,,,
:_::.Record
... ·'
PETERSON
R.iv Ptleroo;n, Ml11 S1n!1 C1t1!1n1
Aw Gi n:len Grow. SVrvlved by wlf~; Lois: "°'"' Don•ld R. 1nd Oa!e M. 1"tloenon: dl,,,Mtrs. Glor!• L.
. WlllOi ind V•1-A. J 1t11klni; brclt.·
er Errol Pelerson. Service w1s held
. 1ef1v. Monday, 10:30 AM, Pftll Fam.
. \ly .CPl<Ml&1 Funeral H~e.
BALTZ MO RTUARIES
Corona.de! l\lar OR 3-9400
Coi'ta Men MI 6-2424
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY :no. Broadway, Co1ta 1tle1a
. • ;,-;. LI 8-3433
-,;:.DILDAY BROTHERS
:·::·Huntington Valley
~. ::·. Mortuary
"~~· · 17911 Beaeb Blvd.
Hund11gto11 Beaeb
Ml-7771
PACIFIC VIEW
JllEMORIAL PARK
·~metery • Mortuary .~ :· Chapel ::·'aOI Paellle View Drive
. Ne*POrt Beach, Callfornla
644-!700
· PEEK FAMILY
COUINIAL FUNERAL
... DOME
7801 Bolsa Ave.
lltW511
.::.::sMmi's MORTUARY ...: ... , U1 Mala St.
.... Ruatlllcto• Beach
•.. LE MAI
WBSTCLIFF MORTUARY
}II J;. 171h SI., Colla Me,.
. -· 146-,,,..; ...
or1v1 ••st·°" Est1nc11 H1111 sdlool, , 1~52 Mit.._n St., is aCC'UISed tlW'ft in the &aIT\e instance. b tak• g bis { Uf ch1"fdren Mcnd1y, AUi. 2'1\, 4:2' t .m,. I It ol l 1W t
Y IO O 111rm, P:ull~on 1nd C1bru1o of the SStSault which p ut Jury trial on both COUD S 161115 9rookhurit, Fount1!n V1ll1y, Cali f., 92701
to Dfsneyland here aiid then' _:"~'~""~'~'i~•i:~".'~';.~~;·,~:';['~'':'~.m~.,~m:"~'~~~• _JJ~ohn~~L~. ~Johooo~~·~·:....:ao~, ~m~· ~~w~as~s:et~l~or~N~o'.::v::_. ~18~·---.!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ having a quiet dinner. f. •Id, 1;'" ush1rd SI.
The third party presiden·
tial candidate resumed bis
campaign tooay acid plallned
to address another raUy in
Long Beacti tonight. He
departs for Phoenix, Ariz.,
'Tuesday.
His three daughters, Bob-
by J oe, Lee and Peggy, and
his son, George Jr., came
here to be wi'th their father
on his birthday. They toured
the po p u l a r amusement
complex in Anaheim Sunday
afternoon, iShepherded by
Secret Service agents.
The former A l a b a ma
governor attacked ruchard
M. Nxm, the Republican
presidential oomintt, at a
$'l5-a..plate dinner Saturday
night in Long Beach.
He told the enthusiastic
gathering of about 4 0 0
persons that "Nixon told
Southerners, 'we're not
gQin g to jam anytiling down
your throats.' He's right in
cne sense. He and the na-
tional Republicans and na-
tiona l Democrats h a v e
already jmmed everything
down our throats there is tc
jam."
Meetings
!leach. 11:15 P.m. C ' Co~t• Mt~a k lw1nh Club, ••P I n FIMl•11••nt, 1610 Ni!WPOrl BIYd., (01!1 Mf1i1. 17 :15 p.m.
Hunllntton Bf•th Rotan' Cl11b, Nortt.. Four Wlnt11 fh .1tt11r•nt, 16,)1 BPI••
Chic• RQdd, H11nllnvron Bttch, l~:\5 p,m.
DEATH NOT ICES
KLAGES
Alltt A. kll!lf'S. 1600 Corti Pl•«·
NewPOrT Beach. Date of OH!t.. All·
1111•1 14. Survived by ton, Ralph P •
kl1Vft, cf Whllller; 011111Mer, Mn. "'-'rt S. Pyle, Nt wocrt 8Ncil1 115-
~r, M,... S1mue1 T11omton, lll!nolt;
brolht ,,,, Ch1rln G1•h, unnolt, i ncl
Perey Gt •h. Mluovrl; 1MI nl~ trtMI•
dllldren. Servlc.t, Tlli!sdlY. l PM, In
fht Ch1111<1I 11 P11Clllc V IN, wllh Rr.,
VIH'I l !11<1ley olllcl1t1111. ln~rme111,
P1c!flc v1,w M..norlll P1tk. 0 1...:1·
Id by P1ciflc \tlew MOrt111rv,
McMAHON
· H1rcld W. McMlhtll'. «17 Svn1I ROid,
Nl!'WPOl'f e,1tt11. O< of ~1th, A.,.
111~1 2l. $1,1rv!Vf'd by wile, JG'/, of
n,. hcmt; 0111ehtff, Mr1. P1ul Ric·
clan:ll, S1,., Ani.elmo; shltr, Mr1. JM·
l!1>h kellv. cf w-H1vt11, COlln., &I'll
lour vnl\dchlklrtll. ServlcH, 1od1v .
Mondty, 11 AM. 111 !tie Ch-I t i
P1clflc \t~w, wl!h Rt v. WllU1m
l!Cllel cf!lcl1t111v. l111tr1T1e11t, P1clflc
View M-1•1 Pttk. Olrtt.ltd by f a·
clflc \ti-Mort\larv. BEHG
kllhf'Vfl flf!'ll. !11 JtsmJM, CP!"onl
dltl M1r. Otte cf ot•!h, A1,10111t 2',
S.Urvlffd bY hv11>tnd.-w nn1rn J.
Ber'I; d1uet.ter, Sl!ler C1rot e,tra.
a vM, S.n Ft,,...ndoi IOll, L1rry
fltf"ll, COl'Olll del "'-'r; brother, 11.tv.
Anilre /l0$W, C, P., Slffrt Mldre;
11t1er._ Mf'J. Meme Smltt. and Mf'J,
Grovl!f' Sltrlt, Glffldtle. ROMrv. 1:311
PM, tonlthlJ Rt'IU'-m Miu, 10 AM,
Twoclty, bell! 1t Our Lldv Ot!Nn cf
/l""ll Ctlhollc Chllreft. lfllfll'IMfll,
Kotv S...Uld'rtl' Ctll'llttrv. OlrPl;lftl
b'I' lt!IJ Mortull"I'• ll:IO E. (Ollll Hlt ll-
Wl'I'" Cor-del Mir.
SIJTl'ORA
Fr'lfllt G. Sllltor1. AH et, ril )00
H .. 1 ... St., Coat1 Mesa. ll"'lclf!ll ril
Ht11MM" ,,.,.. tor .o -"'· surwlwd bV ..,.., AfttiDM, Atlthflrrr1 rhree dtuell-
twn;, Mn. "'11111 Lll'ldleV, Mrl. AleM
C•ridr, COllll Mt.ti. and M,,,. JOI~
Doort, Vllfllul'llJ and 1~ tl'llndd!110rl!I\.
setvlc:M. T1,1nct1y, IO:JO /lM, Wed•
c!lff cto1H!. 1n~rlfttftt. Holy s.t,.,khtr
Cl.,,_tei'V. V111t1!lon. W•5t<llff Cl'ltHI,
Marldll' e¥t'flfnt, 1 lo tPM. Olf'Kled
b'I' Wn!Clllf 0..Pll Mortutry, 64--· VOSS
Hl'ttlt MM ""' 1Hnv. "" $!., Ci r· den G-. $vrvlved bv 01vt111ers,
EV'ffvn ausll 11111 CPl'I Mor1Gt'I. krv-
kitt, Tlleldlv, a PM. ,._ l"1mlly
CMnll l l"U"""'I Ho!N.
H~L All lSCHIR
HEARING AIDS
C111tom A.11ral All'lplif1(1ti•"
NO •ALI SMIN
14ff I . COAST HWY. '-'"-67S.llll
r--·····---·····················-~
: famous recipes from famous cities! :
I El Rancho continues to bring you interesting meals from around I
I the world, with recipes from famous cities, where food is an art! I L•••••••·~-~---·•••••••••••••••••~
••
F·roni the House of the Seven Moons .• .; in the shadows
of Fujivama .•• tantalizing foods 1vith faacinating names-
and t.:totic fla vors! The ch.arm of the orient is yours in the
f ree recipes ava.ilable thia week at our aervice meat counter11!
F h E GllADE 'Al' 43 res ggs ....... ................... ..... £i
El Rancho's extra large •.• ega-s are basic to the Tokyo diet ?
Peanut Oil ............................. 59c
Planter's •.. 24 oz. bottle ••. for fryina: foods Japaneae ltylel
• :OP~c~TE Fruit Salad ..... 31
Dft s1 .oo
Del Monte ~lends Wea1tcrn and Eastern favorites!., .16 oi.'can!
Kiki Sake ........................... ~S1 -90
Golden rJce wine , .•• use it as you would use Sherry I
Plum Wine ......................... ~'.~s2 .. 39
Houae of Koshu ••• perfect wa~ to top off yo ur Tokyo 1innerl
SIRLOIN
STRIPS FOR Sukiyaki_
Lean, tender ••. thin slices from the t riangle t ip ot V.S.D.A.
Choice Beef , • our recipe tells you exactly \vhat to do , • and how f
TOP ROUND
STEAK FOR Teriyaki
Get the hibachi ready . , • follow the reci pe .•. and enjoy beet
terriy2ki ••• tendei.· r ound steak I ••• .specially cut for ,YOU I
Mushrooms 59~
Hothouse fresh •• , add the magic of mushrooms to your tablel
Spinach 2for29'
Try our recipe for Yasai-Suireono (or vegetable soup) I
Soy Sauce 39c
J an·U-,Vine ••• 12 oz. bottle ••• inim itable oriental flavor!
Pricu in effect at all 1tore1
Mon., Tuu., Wed., Auq. ta, tr, ta
ARCADIA: Sunset & Huntinrton Dr. (D Rancho Center)
PASADIM: 320 West Colorado Blvd.• SllUllt PASAllOO: Fremont & lhmtlnrton Dr.
HDNTINITON 1£ACH: Warner and Algonquin Oust East of Huntington Harbour)
• ltEWPGIT WQI: 2727 Newport Blvd;:• 2555 Eastbluff Dr. (Eastbluff Village C..ter)
•
pAl l Y PILOT fj
MUte.
CAUFORNIA
FROM o•r.oum
11111
TO
--r=:co-~_
Sii JOSE I
DUR OC.9 AND WCIM
SUNJm
D!P~RT 18 TIMES DAltY
FDR TllE IXtlTINQ
SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA
·s14ae
one wa y fare plus tax
FDR RESERVATIDllS
CALL YDUR TRAVEL AGEllT
DR AIR CALIFORNIA:
FIVlll 01111(1 CGmlty
(714) ~550
Toll·frll lnol LA.
Zenilll 70799
AIR-CAUFORNIA
TllE fA!! WIYI
~·
•
I 0 D,l,IL V PILOT Mcmdly, A~st 26, 1968_
Growth Rate
Still Soars
R e c o r d -breaking in·
d u s t r 1 a 1 production, ac-
cording to Security Paci!ic
NaUonaJ. Banlt, is "probably
the most significant element
in Southern California's
economic growth rate dur·
ing the first half of 1968."
In a five-page summary or
first haU economic develop-
ments, the bank's Economic
Research Department cites
manufacturing employment,
manufacturing payrolls and
industrial power sales as
sl '!niiicant indicator's of in-
creased industTiaJ activity.
i'he volume of po"'•er sales
:o industry, as measured on
the bank's seasonally ad-
justed index or kilowatt hour
sales, averaged at 219.0
(1957-59 -100) during the
first ball of this year, up 8.2
perce nt from the first half
of 1967. The index, based on
sales by the Los Angeles Ci-
ty Department o( Water and
Power and by the Southern
California Edison Company,
reached an all-time high
level of 219.8 in April.
First half manufacturing
employment in the Los
Angeles-Orange County area
averaged 995,900, up 2.9 per-
cent from a year earlier.
Aerospace employ ment in
th e two counties accounted
for 429 ,800 workers, in·
creasing by 4.5 percent over
a year's time.
M anufacturing payrolls
were 6.3 percent hi gher dur-
Jng the first half of 1968 than
during the fir st hall of 1967. H
The Security index for anga1·
manufacturing payrolls in
Los Arfgeles and Orange The new Lockheed L-1011 jetliner recently under-
Counties averaged at 164.8 went trial demonstrations in the full-scale mockup
during the first half. A cabin. Dining aboard the craft promises to be a
record level of 169.9 was pleasant experience for passengers. Food and bever· established Jast December.
lllM Nlf • U..l Hfltl .... t11M9 Cll.1
-c-
:.."I' "f.' .I ! ~ mi = :: ~,r~wy~Rfr-!~'tu='~1c~ •• • ii~·~~ ~ : "~~ ,~ ~ ~ ~ ·~ ' tlrwk.l Mlt' WW c-. U1. •r• H I., 7 \i ~t_~ -;~;; IM mt+ tt =~~ C~ filj ;; r"' m ~~
-A·
a ge service wilJ be streamlined due to Lockheed's
new underfloor galley and cart service system. The
airliner is scheduled to enter commercial service
in 1971.
" ~ ii:: f, -!';:,;,~~ ... ~ii'!· -a' I·· Jl!!i!ii .. im~· • ~.· ~ Acme-· 2b '~ltl Cl Q\11 ~ ~:~ ,. ,...., .. . .. 1? -··n ·'l!l " r "" "" ..... ! ~ .. ~I •1.z ,n lt~ lt\\ +·"4 KO (• , 10 XI 2t _!!•14 Ailm1r11.~ i1 ' fl~ n" -y, =~·.~ ;;~= ~ ~-,~ •r..~~!..-,J :i:: ~· lil:-H ::l~!~" 1!i I •t,~~1·'..'i 1 1!! l!f: 'll . ... . "' liuci , .. l 11~n ·• -' -A fd!R .Jll l~ fl"' fi fi "' -1? 1nUHLI i.U 11f 2"'°' n... lll u .'RI , ,~ u~ 1i~ = ~ =~:l1 ,jf J m: "" .• -.. :,
Ai=Jn ·'I' ,Jf ~ L n:: ~"' ::'~ l:~ )f 1't !S ~ :!~ ~i::c:,,.1.u l{ \ti S I :...1 · :':O"'r.L.i• ~ W' ~~ ~::.:~~ ~l':::I ~.. 45. oC ...... +··L lrl•lftd Ill 1"6 :IN ill: -''-"' A LPw i.J 7t ~ :n" tt:i.: + i\ M"f-1911 Pii.to 11213;9.'J lS r,{"V.
A Ind 1 . ..0 .Q olNo 41'4 4JV. . ···. Jf"t11 l• ! 11~1~11 -~-:LAI ~ 1~ ·~.r~ 1M ~5 ff~ ~ -~ 11•dbn Golll 111 im l'Hl !f~~:~ : 1i:it'o11 ~, 3jl '' W° 3Wo =l'4 ~=~l \·= lH ~ ""'° QlI .• !t\ A q"nr ,... 10 il111o .uw. ~ \;'111 11 ... a~ r.. Z2 111\11 IQlll IM" \• A~IMISuo .Ml 32 U 1~ 1.-i. -~ 1~-'!:. ~.~I 64 231'!1 22tt ~t+·\11 AJ!!??•I .50 Xlff ~ 1~ Ult. + '4 ,...,,,..m 3'1 •l 3''14 ~"-"·~ A;i;:, p (9"1 u Jt 1¥. lt + ~ lltmWIY : 17 \61' 1'111 ir.•l+~'f :lcof, i'.li 141 i!" 11m lm +·;,.; ~1o1.ri r, ~~ ~~ lm :::~ ~~!.1~ .• l... ..~ 1"11 nl\o + v;, Clllc£•r••' fit 7J = 11111 Ulilll'r,,!,._ -~, \Ii ~ J\11 \lilV. ClllMI SIP p )7 '"'· .. Anwr1e9 l.20 17 if!lo ~ \ii 111 Cl'IMSPP l'f J ,..,.. ~:W. ...... Ve 1..."t~~ ~-1, fl \11 J, .. "ft: ::1~ C111,,M111le I ~~ '~~ ;¥\? ~*-ii Am Alrlln .ID llj ?in U .. ~ii... + 14 Cll ne~ 1.IO .sf ~11.i 39\4' «I ' +ie
Arn Blkff I lm 291; lOV. + 41o fhl Ill r•e ' 25'4 ?S"i 2!' "'°.\\ ~rt.! J u'" I:" :~~ =1t: ~~~i1f1ef'.~,:: l~ j!~ ~ b.=-~~ Am C1t1 2..:111 # 'Mi 4 14' •Vi + "' l'-lt~i.ll ~ ' 's 4J '5" ·..:. "" ~~anc:! ']J 1 31ffi 11" 311'.1 -\\ c11,11c,,11 ·11 X: 1: I:" Jr.'·Z::t
A CMln l.60 I~ ~ Jl~ ~~ = ~ ~C~~ ~=1·:4' ii ~a ffl? 31.;,' + ~ ... rneorn ,651 10 1t 11'111 11¥. -4io 11rom•ll '° 21!l S5'I "" i,,,,,.,;... ..• ... ~=-1:: 1: ~~ ~~ ~:;, ·~ rvmel r· S 10 1'1 1flv. 1~, ~.:,:c·• AmCY•n l.:U 2U 21'~ nv. 21''4 + \4 8'n~'1"', •• -7.ZS UV. 6.11'.1 '~'t1' Am011t 1 . .0. H V 36-'AI 36Vi ..... Cln GqJ ot"7 14 2'\11 211\'t 21 .. ij. Am OwlVHt 2S 1''4 U 14V. + l'lo Cln M'iij 1.2Glo i:i c"'1 rs~ ~ > · Dual ,,...,.. 14 14'4 lW. 14'11 + ... CITF!n 1 io " .jf\.'J ~ 4 AmEIPw l.lt 13' JAii 31 37'4 -14 CIT F ~:S.50 1 lU 115 1~. :i.·.: AmEnll• 1.30 4J -44 '3111 ~ l " illle1 Svc 2 1112 5W. l5'llo '--\\-Am Exp lnO '' 41\!o '6¥1 41 l 115 tvo12.2J .. " tt • .-~ AmHolsl .10 11 llr. II~ IW, Vt llY Inv JOb ..,_! ~ -44 "'Ii
A Ho,... l.3' 14 "V. 5'V. ll" -\'> IYlnv Pt wl l! • u • • ""! ""' Ho.p .n ,,, ltfl<t 311'4 3014 -1'/o !lfy Sirs 15e 12 UV. lm'AI 24\i . Am Intl l.s.t x l lit.\ 1M lf>oi + \• •rk Eq "i.;o 132 21!"' '6-~ Amlnv•I 1.14 .W ~ 21" 21"" ..... l•rk OU AO U &2'6 M 1••" ArnMFIN .l'O 205 21"4 21\li 21~ .•• (le\rCtffl 1.60 X4 li'Jo !ll4 11.·~ (It. AMII Cl 1.fO 329 4.J'IO 43 .0'11 -~ CINElllt l.'2 21' lMli l8\'o ~ .f'"'A Am Moto<1 JU 1l U\lt 12'1' + V. Cln Pf! 3i50 r10 s,rnr l m ·~,.,_ NnN&4GIS 2 :It ~ ::II'• l'I -\lo 11ey P I P 2 1100 32'4 32\li ..._,_. Am News i ,, .f.1'4 "2'4 '°'" + * l•v!I• 2.10 1 mo 1114 ""'"".* Am PJ\o! .06e IJ7 15\t. UV. 151/0 ... .. lora~ .Me 2' :M>to 21 Jii ,,, ARtlrctl .Del u \~7 JU'.io 16.Wa -""' luellPe• .fD " 36'ilo lll'lll . .,~ Am Sell 1 H l~ ::iov. 30\/< + VO Cluf'ltP ~ 7 110 111"\4 lit"' 8 .. "' Am 511111 .to i. ~ 2S>'t 25\41 -\< Cluet!P 11'1 I n 2"1'.t u 1oA'I ·+ ... Am Smell l 14 5t\• ~~· 5'V. + ~ CstSIG1 5.171 ll '3 611'.I t.3 ............ .l.mSo.-.!r .70 1(1 •1 ~>,:. 60'n -'h Coe• Col l.l'O Sl 14 7l'ho ~-.~~ Am6Afr fn.10 1 ~·to ~·.i. 54\:o •... t:;:•Bltq 1.111 !3 ~ JC\\ . .._.-~
!:i:sfu'dri •. u ~ ,11,~ 1a~ 1 1~~ +·\(, co1Rt ... ·~ t~ fo .;hi, #~ mot .Z
TH E NEXT SIX
MONTHS •••
WHAT'S HOULD
E•rnfngs •••
"'°"'• .... Dlrfo'-.
The increase in Southland
production is part of a na-
tional trend. as evidenced
by the Federal Reserve
Board index of industrial
production, which registered
at an all-time high of 163. 7
in May.
AmSlerU .41 ~1 ::.~. 3' l6 -''> iolllnR1d .In "llt 5"9 5''111 5' +1"-.1. Sugar L.O 5' Jne ll'" Jl -\• ololnlG 1..0 x55 55':t ~ 5!14< _ ~ .1.Sll!I pl.l.J,6S l •I •7\lo ~1'-'i + \4 1110 Sou pl .t 1311 5$ $.RO ~~ \0 .l'o AmSuv pf .61 II lll't 11 II ••... ~ri' ~~ol0ti6Qe, ,,:n ~ -!!:·~ ~~ ..... Am Tl.T l.«l ~1015 51''t ~· SG>,;, +~:,Cs Ill I x2 7''.lo iJ;z 2JMc "";,. .• Am Tob 1.90 123 ~ 3:1'tli ll'\'< -!t't CoruGa, 1.52 154 JO ~I· ·:t''llo,.._ ~roW::!l1.rs11~ i:~ 1:~ l::i :-:.~~~..g:.-~ 1
; ~~,·~ ~"" 14~··1~ Credit Card Thefts Increase
WE EXPECT? e.,,.% ,,.,...··t.
:1-.-,,.,,,,
WHICH INDUSTRIES SHOULD
BENEFIT MOST! ••• LEAST!
For your frH copy of the Mld)'Mr
f.C011omle. 8ualn•11 i nd F11111ndlil
OUTLOOK, p,..pmr1d by thl [co-
nomk::I De1»rtm1nt DI' one of th9
country'• IMdlna lnvatm1nt ln9n· •a-ment orp~ 9'ftd this
Gl)Upotl to:
Shearson, Hemmill & Co.
M1mb1rt N1w York SI c.k E1tc.han9•
fiO I Do,.•r Ori"'
N•wport l11cl1, C•lif.
641 -4010
Rich•rd D. Broom•
....... ~~~~~~~~~
EACH YEAR
Seminar Set
For To1tl gl1t
A financial seminar \.•:ill
be held tonight at
the Newporter Jnn , 1107
Jamboree Rd ., Ne w po r t
Beach, according to Finan·
cial Concepts, Inc., Los
Angeles-based investment
firm .
President Lawrence M.
Schulner ... \.\'ill discuss "Tax
Shelters" and Financial Plan-
ning" at the free-admission
8 p.m. meeting which will be
held in the hotel's Executive
East Room.
NEARLY ONE MILLION
~EW INVESTORS
BUY STOCKS
ANO BONDS.
ATIEND THIS
FREE LECTURE
AND FIND OUT WHY ...
Itere's yo ur opportunity. At tend th is spec ial
lecture on ~1utu al Funds before you decide to
invest. Learn the advantages and disadvantag.
es and how to judge performance. The lecture
v.1ill be delivered by an account executive with
Dean \Yitte: & ~o., and. \viii be follo,ved by a
half-hour discussion period. For reservations.
phone 642-6050 or 540-1713 or v.1rite to the
Newport Beach office of !lean \Vitter & Co .. 88 1
Dover Drive,
DATE:
Tuesday, August 27
TI ME:
Starting at 7:30 p.m.
PLACE
Newport Beach Offic e
881 Dover Drive
INSTRUCTOR.
of Dean \\litter & Co.
F. Kimball Conrad, Account Exe<:ut1ve
DEAN WITTER. « C:o.
. . . th• pooplo whtl'.<Jiflldeep
.......... Y..t ........... • ,_fie r.-t St.d lo<AI...,
881 Dovor Orive 642-6050
NEWPORT ¥ACH •
By SYLVIA PORTEil
Your credit card is now
more vulnerable to theft and
misuse than ever before.
Wi.th an e s t i m a t e d
200,000,000 cards in circula-
Lion In the U.S. today and·
with yearly card losses as
high as 1,500,000 the chances
that your own credit cards
will be stolen have soared.
The m3.{ket for stolen credit
cards h<is in fact become so
lu crative that some card s
se ll for $500 or ntore each. A
card thief can run up $5.000
to $10,000 of charges for
items ranging from auto
Tlvo Missio11 Viejo
Men Win Pron1otion
PROPERTY MANAGER
Robert E. Maurer
Two Mission Viejo men
have been promoted to posi·
tions with the Mission Vi ejo
Co., developer of the 11,QOO...
acre town.
Robert E. ~1 a u r e r .
formerly purchasing agent
with the company, has bet>n
appointed property managrr
a nd director of purch.asing.
He will be responsible for
managing all company-own·
ed properties, includin g the
shoppi ng a n d recreation
centers. and d i r e ct i n g
purchasing for au company
projects.
Robert E. 0 s b o r n c ,
CONSTRUCTION CHIEF
Robert E. 01born•
former field coordinator of
construction, ha s been nam-
ed manager of construction.
lie wiU be responsible for
all residential construction,
approximately 1,200 homes
per year. and all commer·
cial construction.
Both men, l\1 au rer
formerfy of 329'2 Arizona
Lane , Costa J\.1esa. and
Osborne, formerly of 143°.:!
Kenneth Dri\'e, Tustin, are
in the process of moving to
Mission Viejo with their
families. Both are ,graduates
of Qy nge Coast College.
Wershow
LIQUIDATION SALE
BY ORDE R OF OWNER
32 LAGUNA BEACH
OCEAN VIEW LOTS*
• Buylasun1 Beach residen·
ti&I property 1t a liquidation
prlcet All these lots 1r1
fully irnpro11ed with under·
ground util!lfes. They are
localed just East of the cen•
ter ol town, less than l mile lrom Pacific Coast Hfahwty.
M1ny of these lots corn•
mand a magnificent view
of the Pac1tlc Oce1n,
Easy terms-
owner will finance
with releases.
ror 1ddltion11 lnfomi•tion.
c1ll eny of th• Wers how
Oct1nsklt R••I Estete l e1m: Ca rolyn, Milli•, Rick, l(•n
or Cd.
Milton J. wers
\ ! :.t\ eltOAOWA't ~
,_ LAGUNA BEACH •
lr~d *4514, lots l ll'lf11 32 Tilt C•111$t. to (l l~tb•rd C..ny1n llo1d, llltn ~ont•nut on to I011. 11\i I011 ••• tilu•t•d on lt•1•t1• lta~ l l111bord C1n)'11n ltd. 1nd Mornl11&.1ld• On"'· •Ppr11•1m11111 I mll• •••t ol 1~ CC••I t'l(l hWI)'. ow eo.
AUCTIOHllltl • lltALTOltS
1012 S. tllll St.•OUiaMldt, C.Uf. 9 •(11•) 122-1106
batteries to diamond rings
before U1e loss is even
reported.
AS A GENERAL rule.
you, the card holder, are not
responsible for e h a r g e s
made against you r card by
someone else -if you
rece i v ed t he c a rd
unsolicited. These charges
must be absorbed by the
hank or other organization
issuing the card s.
Nevertheless, you are still
under obligation to report
the Joss of the card im·
mediately ot the issuer.
The American Exp ress
Co. limits ltle liability of its
credit card customers to
$100, but again, you must
report a loss at once and in
writing to be eligible for the
liability Limit. Se v e r a 1
states, too, have passed
laws in the past couple o{
yean to limit the card
holder's liabiLity, but in
most instances, this limit
applies only to unsolicited
credit cards.
Nevertheless. also as a
general rule, you, the holder
of a credit card, are lia ble
for losses during the period
between the time the card
was lost or stolen and the
time you report this fact to
the issuer.
You are vulnerable, in
:short -and thus. here are
basic guidelines for pro-
tecting your credit card
against abuse by others and
15 Children
Win Prizes
Fifteen Orange Coast area
res idents received boucing
balls from Fashion Island in
Nev.1>0rt Center last week.
Each week 20 of the gjant
balls are awarded to
youngs ters during th e
c e n t er' s back-tos-chool
events.
Winners are Ju lie
Tolstad , 461 Bolero \Vay ;
Jenn y N i sen off, 2652
BaSS\\'ood \Vay ; J ordan and
Jen nife r Schwartz, 1 9 2 1
Deborah Lane; C h r ls t y
Borden . 433 Car nation Ave.:
Pat Bates, 226 Diamond
Ave.: Sue \Vilson , 2531 Bam-
boo SI.: Paul Maddux, 2375
Redlands Dr i v e ; and
Anthony Gath, 140'7 Santiago
Drive, all o{ Huntington
Beach.
Others are Robert L.
Carter. 1616 White Oak St.:
Scott Clapet. 2776 ~1endoza
Drive: and Judy Lynn Duf-
fy. 352 Victo ria St., all o(
Costa Mesa. Also, Pauline
V. Karge!, 620 ~lartford
Ave.: Stcpilanie \Velis. 6032
~1edford Drive : and Bia.Ir
ll elsing, 9141 \V a r r i e Id
Drive, all of Huntn gton
Beach: and Brian Benham,
31552 \Vest Street, South
Laguna.
AW 4 I~ 1 43 zJ00.....16 26 '2i6 ••••• c-• •,01 40 ,... ii J.( Am l ine s :12'"• 7'1''< 22'1/o -'Ill c'""5o1" .70 3 3'J ·??-~J.
. !~r~~ .~ 1 1:10"~v..Q~l't64m.;·141. c:::1Sor d.~ '1 2&\.\ V\11 ~-·· fo r 'limiting the possible .1.MK ccro 121 "' u~~ .....,,,_,,..comw E11 :.:io n,,1 Y~ H"',"" 4"~.·;~:;:
Id uff " .l.JAP Inc ... ,1 l:l'"t )I m. 14 Cfom E Pll.(] ...,,, ...,'J.i losses you cou s er u Am11<1~ C11<11 16.1 m. l'l._ w.r. v. omwou ·'° '° ?SV.241'.1 i.t ··:'.::·''
d . t I Am•tfd )<() U u Qh ~ V. omsat 57 ~SG'h 1-" your car IS S o en : .1.nacond :i:so 111 "'~" ,S\'o 411 .... !one Mms 1 rl no;., :tl "t\J~ -Don't leave you• c•cdi't •,•.,'",",•, ',·.~ 16 i... 67b ''"" -1"" Ol'IQOlvm ·"° 15 l:!l-4 l1~ --i:-1 ' ' 1 .., I 371~ 37''o '.l7Vo -V. onracCp .ll6 '""' 5o! SS ·-,,, Card
'
·n the glove com-Aoco 01 .1'11 M 36-h l5V.. M _,,. c"" Edis 1.to 143 :w1o l~ ·-·"' -ADYI Chem ?7 (:I'.• ol?';"t ol?V. _ •1, onE~l1 pl S t 8011 IO•M. llO'it +·~ Par tment of yo.ur car. 111is ,',',',",~.·.•, .. ,'·", 13 S5'~ S5'~ sJv. -'4 cone, crc•.6s i110 15 14 1' --1 v • 36 z;ov. '11'4 21,~ v. Con leclnd l 71 JH!i lillo :J.mi·;... ~ 1s one of the frrst places H .1.,•11n1 os .10 :n ~,~, 11•1 )1• ~ 1c:::~:O,,,•.,sg ': 61, ... ,','•'· •,,,._.:..~ · . d rmco S!I 3 160 so.,., •11 st\'o U. ' , •• ,· 0 ~.. " professional credit c a r Armour 1.00 10 ~ ,,,, .,~, _ v. 1:::.•,•,0-·1 ,•, 4 31 JDl.l :w.-.. + ~ ArmCk Pl3 75 d o 61''> 111v, o!.ll'lt • . · ti m'o ~ t'.lo +·S't thief looks. .1.rmRub i.to 5 so '9•\ .-... ''t ...,.P...,., 1.t0 JI 43-h .fl'" et. -14 Aro C11< !'O 7 l't.\1 1...., 1'1"9 ~• ConPw oU.50 z1.f0 . 77\\ 76 .... 7WI -1 -Don •t underestimate the .1.r .. 1~ 1..0° .ta 10 11'1 31,_ 11 .... , E::111r~L 1.., . ., tz 'Mio ,, ... •1"'--~
value of your card because ~i~11o;~n.'io10 170 ~ '2l• '°"" .,,. coniee~ 1 JO 1~ ~~ Y~ 11"' • .t.1,..
A dB 1 «I r~~~ '~~ r~~'o .:._:"lo Cllla~ pl J:j(I rtlO 11\" 17'!, ift? '!/1~ it's made of heavy paper or A;~., ck · ~o 31 "' 41 • + "" con1 c1~ 2 si lS'lt "1~ 5S'lt. _ u:
Plastic. Con sider it as the .1.,•,~§1>•,•,, • "• x1 4 ™'" J.to\\ JS ''• ~oni Copp .10 36 ,, 11\li ••· +."' ... r :io M u i.s u. c°"'ccp~'°" ': ~:1 jfil 'j!j -=-•"'" equivalent of cash and i·u~t Associnv 1.':o so <"''• 11 2!'11 _,,,. on"i'l'-" •2.50 ,,.,. ~ _,.. . • • Atchhon 1.llO t i 1110 3::01, J)V, _'It. coni'Mio· i~v 22 105\lo I '" 1 -1\'J as tempting to a Uuef. :1~7/',r i·~, 11 n 11.,, ,.,~• .~ co"' Mot "° ~ 26 ?~ ~·. j{ ., 1' 'I"• 1! '8 -1't Cont 011 fto SI r,J;± ~ . ' ~ -DON'T LEAVE credit :ll 11 1~ o1"°3 l-il 9}1' nu. "" -1~ cont 011 Pi 2 s """ "\Z 1t;: :::·"° A•I c '.)j l,\lo U9 15' ·· Cont Sii 1 90 r.1 ~ ~ ~'-"J'o cards lyi ng around in your .1.u:: c:.p"° 1ff 21~i: ~~-' 20•~ -"It. c""' Tet t.o 11' n ~• 77• 1' ~ ff. h I Au Pl 'O 34 22'~ ... 22"',, + ... s_oninol 0111 155S \JI~ l:IJ'.\ 17'~ -ll,;\ o 1ce or ote room any ..... ~~~~~ .Mlt. 16 14~ ;u • ... l onwo11 1.~ 1 3'\ro n:w. :u ~-v.
more than you would leave ~~~.,.:r,c O:: 1lf ;;1i ~'~ ~ ::1 c~~ 1~ 1121 :n; ~ ~\·••-to;~
a stack of ca sh lying~~~~~ \'.'fo ,!: ~!"' 11 v, ffi~ +1~ ~="°T~-~ ll ~""' f{: ~ .. ':;;,;: around. Instead, keep your A0vco 110 .:io , ,o·• :?1~ ~v, ~1" COPPRnq .lO l 39 :ia"" • .., ;;·~
. Vtr; Pd .24 13 'S'i '~"" 4""'1 _ '> C~ISll 1.M 19 1 .. ~. U'lo U~. '' cards securely 1n your A1111f't 1ric: .so n• ,.,,. •s 45,, + ,... ccror11t1 8 .'1'111 n 35 :U\.'J h
]I t .I.VIit'! Inc wi 57 ",ii , :lO'h 3'\':i 1 Corn Pa l.IQ 24-1 dh ol04li 41\):. I wa e or purse. Avon Pd 1.60 n 1.~<t 121 11o 11114 =a C11<Gw 2.50o "l'H 295v, w. ' D ., t f 8-Coronel .411 1J • '6\li • -.,,~ -on preserve ou o -cow1" .so x11 ,.~,. u 1•·. -·v. date credit cards or cards ,',""••g',w,, '.·~ ss l7'\ :w>;, 11 -v. coxfl.dut .so , si11o w,~ l6bo .-.1Jo ,,.. 1•1 1? 20~ :12 "-1 Craflt'Co 1.60 I .tn. •'Ito " .+ It You don't intend to use. 0,•,','•••'• ',·l!J'.'A 11 m i :n,.. :nv. + 11o er-Pll.7J • ·· .., 1110 76Yt 161/i 76\.J ... 116511 IS 1S 7' +t Destroy the cards which you ean G ~c• zuo -66'-' M>l _ ,,. C•Ol'hPKn .ao xt6 H'h 21~• 2ru· .:.•.41 . Ba1111Pun1 60 l'6 (IV, .o•. •l'.lo \.\ ~ crou .. Hl11 lD 7 Jl\11 *" XN .... '4 do not use and per1od_ically e,,•,oo,•, •"••'··" s •5V. '5:0. ..sv, ..,,,,,crow con '° ~ 38\'a :111~ ~ ro
d t It ti I SJ Al .tl +>t.CfOWC 1111.M 2 ,. 5A Sl..-Yt wee ou your co ec on lo Bart011 L!!t 16 50\ro "'It. "'li _ 'It crown con: ,, to11o 1'\11 7'¥1."'.+· 'l't ·•· k · Beile Int 10 n 23 21'>11 73 + 1:. CrcwnZ• 2.20 200 .Wl(I s. SAt ·+14'< m'""e sure you are eeping B~:.!tlif 1:}0 zi.o SS'• s11~ 5n;, + ~• C•n z llf(.?o 1100 , ••. ~ 1~'-" '"'' "-"'14 only the cards you do need ft~"' 1:..i ·10p ~ ~~"' 1 ,.. 1µ;, -1~ cruc s11 1.xi n 41Vt 41 •1& -+: 1~
an wan 11 ·"" ' '• 6n1 61 . CUO•h! cc SJ 2:w. 2J , · ~ d t Bau'lChLD ~ 0 r 36\lt :ti + '.lo CTS Corp .40 M 7&'llo 2S 21 • 1· ...
. casually thrO"· Be~rrt.ab .16 U l •S u;, .,,~+I'> Cumm"' .~o 15 ,,~ 17'fo 37\li ~'" -Don't "' IYl!~Clq .50 l 13'~ 13•~ 13'1, . C1tnll0Pr 2IJf' "' 15\, 1m. IS ~ ti ·1 d d't d · g11::J~1·: ,~ If~ l n. i.-.... -v. ci.nnor,; 10 10 n1i n ... 221.1o -1 .. ~:0\\..~~t~ b~:~e~. c:~e:u1l~ el:: B~~r~:J ~ ~~! ll~ if:+~ .. l~U"~r ~· ~ 'f ~ ~ ~~~ Bobbit" Brits lJCI :ll'l'o :!t'li ?JU • Cut~r M 1.:00 J!4ooi 3'Y, laVt ~ ........ destroy each card f1r~t. floeif>ll 1.10 (O.f 5-1'11 53, .. 5-ll't + ~ c,c1001 1.10 4 Wit 3..,_ is , ., ..
Trash bins are another ft~~· pt~ ~~~ wt *f~ ~'"' ~ CvPFYIM l . .40 .!!_r)!_ 54 SN. T 'Ill
favorite hunting spot for g~~,,.s~r•1.J, 1f ~~~ ,, ~:~ +i D8n 111v 1.l'O JO n •11 :n '•:iv;.'..,_.~ Credit Card th'"eves B11<~n 1 :io t0 :;ov. ~~ 1<1•'; + "'oa,.,. Cp l.l'O • ",,~ ,•,~ .,,i. ±. ~., . BorgW1r ·, 25 (IQ ll JCI'" JO;. + ,. 08VcoC~ 1.60 2 •• ... *" .. -Do, in a separate place, R:~7F 2_..:"° .s2 75 , •• ,, 1~·~ _ ,; D1Yc11 pl•.u 110 ;t " ;t.k.=,~:
keep a list of the names and 01111 ~ co 12 •s11o u v. •5 t '11 g:;,.eP~o 1;n ,.,~ so>• .#/,"",,•, ""'+ " lkl1!Mf(p pf 2t ~~\io ~lfo ll .._1'11! '1elP""Lt 1.0 ~ ll 7n ·• 2"4 +Iii numbers Of each Of your Bourns Inc: l't 73>1. tt>i tt'i -1~ 8:11~1': .'.JO :1 ~ U\fo ~:+:_::
credit cards. This v:ili pro-grl"...n!!.1.,,",.·.50 1' 10'> ,,...., '''·' -'•Denn Mlg .60 ll ss•:. ss ""''+""' ,,. Xl 51\\ Jll'.I SHo -'> 0ent$v 1 70a 7 CR\ 40 _. ..... i't vide you with an immed'.a te ft~l1,:.•,• •'·", 's 7 • m\ 17"> -\\ ~nRG• i 10 :io , ...... 11-1~ 11~ _.,. 10 ll"'1 5lV. J.'ll\ + ... rtco of.A 1 snI 57 ~ t°' reference should you find """"' M•I• 1 • 39"• :i1 lM:. + .,., e•eco 111 l'l ,, S1'" 55'.~ Hi . Bkl......CG 1.6'1 t1 "1i :19\'t xi·.~ . DeStllolnc .llO 1 2!<lo 28'11 -'" that one of yout ca~ds 1s Bearlni>s .eo 2<t .,J"'' 37\ro J•l< +1~ o.tE011 I'° 12 16,,, 16 '"'""+ .-.. . . . ll•lc~Pet .3'1 ll'O UV.J11'>-1 0e!EdP i 50 11 1Cl'2\lt t01 \11 10\l'>-'\lo missing. ,•-",',',,'',·.~ J1 41\lt ... J~"' -1·n o..i s1"' ·'° '° 21"' ,11 .. 21\\ _""' •• 21 73 7!'1o n 'h -.\lo Oex!er ,21e 47 lS'I 3J'~ 33'°" -l'i~ -DO CHECK ove r all 11,~,H~~.:70 .• I>,. •1J l• 32'• .u + ""'Df1s111m 1.• iu J~ J1"'11 '"' + ~ ., .....,. "" If 73';, 71• 1 71·'• -1"" 0!ASI\ l'f (2 J 41 4! .£1 .. Your credit cards regular'y Beu tnie-rc"" 'o 141• 1•v. "v.. + \< g11s 111 0 1.10 lli 11'" 21-. H'' + '' ' Bvml•Co 1.60 s sne JI S7 _ v. r1m1n11 1.eo 12 """' 43'4 '" -v. to make sure all you own e-1" 1.-0 105 ll'• ll'llo JalO. +iv, 01 ..... s1r .20 1.u U "A 1r..i " t"' • • . Bttldlx of 3 7 M ff ff + ~ Olcl•P'-.'9 let 1"14 '~ ~· "" are there. If one is m1ss1ng, ~-·1F1rY , .ft ..st a fK. u ..... ""~e 01,1>1110 .ai 24 xtA 11v. :!t ' '"
report the fact immediatelv e.:;;"i1F ~1s ".!O' 11! i;J ,~: 1:ll'> ~~I'.! 0g\ft1~~~ ·~3' x: ~ W' 31" ~1t;
o 1.ue issuer -y e ep one P.e<>f1F 1111)0 'l1 "'·• 7,,,., 11,11 _ >!. Dl•nev .JOb 1t 10 '' .~1 t "' · b t I h -BenllF ..t4 SO 1&0 6t'~ ff 6, +1 Tllf!t1C1 .sob • n._ SJl'I ~r'i.~~
· F ti "tt flf"!F !Dl'l lO J380 39.ft "'" .... ,,. +''I Or P•l>Pt• .ID l ~ <151'1 ':~ Or Wlre. 0 OW~ \\'I • a Br.1rue'r • 261 11"1> lO'o fl••_* Dll<neMI" .SI '' 9'1~ 5' !/fl -\' letter giving your ame and B•~'1VH •n s2 1oi. 1~1 lti\.I o..... F~ .111t 15 1"4 14 ie1i.. •• Berte..,. ""° 102 l9 ll•'o lt + >11 ~l~ .60 !4 311"-3726 lint·,-a address, your edit rard ft:~"ir~mL~~ ~ H r;,~ ~ ;1~ ~~.~ v[)o ? 1~ If' D.... : . num ber the date on which 11e111 /'I 1.'° 251 ,.., 11~ 2111 D<>wet>m 2.10 1'5 m\ nt9 11'-. .o.I\" ' • Own o .ISP 15 16\lo 151~ 1$Vt : .. ::~ Or•,.oCP 1,1(1 7 l90lo :Ill'> ~. . the card was Jost and bow 1l 1......co of1.se 10 tt'• ~ 21,11 + "' Dr•nlnd ,_.., s1 :w1,., ~ ~.+."II
I '""" Sh"r , s. 1,.,·, n•• ''"' +J•.i. o~ur .n211 i~ '°'" '3 · • + 111o was osl. '""'Sl'loe ·"'° 1 !Jv, ss·~ SS\'> + ~ '">rfs•• "'ih • «I\) ~·~ ;...·-..
-Do, each ~imr. yo n use :~,:~t1.10 ~ ~" ~~~ ~~ + ~ Bl1:.W:. ·re '; ~ .. U~ 2 ::. ~
your credit card, make sure lucYEr 1.10 '' 11;; 11 : 11·~~ + •,1 8:!:~~ ·f2, 1: n:z ~ It ~
b , ~udd Co .10 41 J.I'~ 33•• ll'• . duPO<Ot ) 7Se U lbQ 1571/i l ·+1~ you get It ack. This 1s Rudo F ..t.i.o 1 ,,., l\l I''> + '" «uPont l'f•.50 1 12·~ 11\) 1 \ · . l I . I h Ruf'llH lft .6" 71 111'1. 16 16"1 + ~• """°"\ f'l'~ 1 6'\fo 6.._,. ,.,..,.. +·'Ill particu ar y 1mportan w en Plutt Foroe 1 11 J.7'• ll 33 -~~ Ouq L .tw 17 xv,, 304ll f:!! + i · th d · lu!.,...1 .IOb » lJ'I) 31'\ 13 -·~ Duoll 4of-l 1540 3'1fo 33-loi + you are using e car 1n e.u~~ Rama 2S6 11 16'• 16-lfo -lfo o,mo1nc1 .7tlf •s ,~ ,,1~ ,,1,. +
out-of-town place<;. \Vhen =~r~ ... i"'l::l 10 s1 ..ou. "'u. -v. ov~• .1.m .c 11 ~ ,.,_. " -1f: :f ::~~ ~ _ ·~ -E-F-. you have to wait several l\:.~11160 , llS 2,,,. :ooe·; :l'lr1~ _'Ito E1olePcti .to 11 31v. 30'!I ~ :...1 minutes for the card's Plus~un~ .?Gr 11 111•1 21·~ n·~ E••t .1.ir .so s:it 711'1 21 ,, · -."•
. llul~rs.S~ .IG JO :W JS\li ~ + \II Ea1t Ge' F • ~ .o "'° • . ·. return , it's far too ea sy to -C-E•11 s s11 ·'° :ro n'." 21o;. Jm' i . E•st urn 1.e J n..., 1111'1 \'f. • torget what you are wailing c1tiot CP .60 •3 4'" ,,..,. 42"' + ~~ e Kc.Uk ·" 1111 "'i 11 ..
ror and to walk or drive ~:l Lf~a~n1.60 ~ ~ j1~ h~ .:.2.,,., ~~~~,.,J·'; !J li"" ~111 g1 ~
away. CCoom'""•"c .... 7!! 15 'lit 12.\{I 22"" -11 EchltnMI .... 2'5 1"1'o let't 1"-' -T mt J.r lJI• n.,, ~ -I<\ Edem! Or119 l:t .iiV. ~ "6 .+~ -Do consider bu y ing cam(I Soup 1 t.S 7'\4 ~, ... xi.+1,,,.eai.11ro1 .u ,., "'''of.I •;-con l rtw ,40 ~11 1°"" 1~ \~\'> EG .. G .lo 195 S?..,, 50\\ ~R -. credit card Insurance, eithe.r ,",",,', ',' > 1 ""' •' ,,,~ + v. Eln stoP 1 12 Jt..., y._ s.it ...... fi ... t 5l"h 511'> SI'.> • EJM111•c .Oft! 1' J\lo S\'I m -~ as part of your home owner s ='"-'-~"'"'--'-''-.--"-'-'=-'--"==-"'"'"--'-'""--"'-'-'-.,..,;
insurance p o I 1 c y or
separately. Typical cos ts
are $8 to $10 for $1 .000 y;orth
of insurance coverage for a
three-year period and about
$18 to $20 for $5,000 of
coverage.
IN SUl\BtARY. f' I th e T
give up the advantages of
owning credit cards and
return to cash..:hec.c: li\·ing
or treat these cards with the
respect which th ey. a s the
equivalent of cash in your
,.,,allet or purse. deserve.
IOCOIH--T-J-lll'i'
950H:=-t--t-
Stops Tormenting
Rectal Itch
£1dusivc Formula Promptly Stopt ltchina.
Burning and Rclicva Pain ol Pila In Moot (&,..
Ne"lll' York, N.Y. (Special): The
~rnba rra1slng Itch cau1ed by
hemorrhoids i1 mOtt torturous.
But science hu found • 1peclal
f ormula wi th the ablllt11 in
moal ca1e1 -to promptl7 1lop
th, burninr ikh, nlleTe pai.n
and acluall1 1hrink hemor·
rboidt. A.nd aU wllbout nar-
totlca or 1tlnclnr utrinpnll
of an)' kind •
Th• MCnt 11 P,..ps,..tln B•.
Thert1 11 no other bem.orrho1d
tonnula llk1 IL Preparation 11
also lubrlca tu, 800t.hel inlta ted
·t;u uN and belp11 preTtnl 1ur-
thu In f P.Ction. Jn ointmeni or
suppo1lto17 form.
..
.-Monday's Closing Prices :....... Complete New York
--------------·---·
MondaJ, All9Usl 26, 1968
Stock Exchange ... "'" 0.*-.1 111111 L• C:lltot CYlt
List
DAILY PILOT II
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,
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•
JZ D41LY '1LOT
FREE
AIJ1t&t. Tlr•
Mou.ntlJlr
FREE
Allr.tate Tlr•
Rob.tlon v,,·er:r
~.ooo ~UIM
FREE
0
Check .,, Toar Wh~
.,llrnm•11\
0 -
Monday, A119ust 26, 1961
Track Owntn! 8Mn -.rri•• a eo11plele KM er Tins for 701r
Camper.
Panel or Pick-up
Express Nylon
TIRES
TRUCK
6.70xl5 Tube-Type
14 8!!;~~-
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6.00xl6 Tub•·Typt .. l%Jl8 1111 I .It r .J:.T.
6.oOxlS Tube· Typt .. J •Jl8
pl•1 l .H F.&.T.
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• Recommended for nor-
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• For panel11 anrt pick-up
trucks
liO TRADE REQUIRED
...
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"
36-MONTH NATIONWIDE GUARANTEE
Buy 1st Tire at
Regular Low
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of $22.95 •••
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NO
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P•luted Interlock-
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ly.
lot T iff
SIZE • .,.w
T ..... ·lll h'• .. x
I ::115 6.96xl4 I
7.:15xlf I S23.9S !
1.75114 I $21.0li I
8.~xl"-I $29.95 I
8.53xl• I $82.115
5.601.15 I 121 .915
7.15xl5 I $21.96
8.15xJ5 I $29.95 I
P•l.ent.ed Slleacer
eutton1 betwetn ribs
alop the 1 qu 1 al
around tums and
when brakin(.
J.\YI
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Tiro -wAo.•
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11.98 I 11.91 I J.95
1%.98 I 12.91 I 2.06
IS.98 I JS.97 I 2.19
lf.98 I Jf.07 I 2.85
J6.f8 I 16.41 I t .56
J0.98 I 10.07 l .14
JS.93 I JS.91 I t.21
lf.98 I lf.91 I 2.86
ALLSTATE J"u.enrer Tlre Ouarantoe .
Tr.•• Lit• G••r&at.•
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Wlrl•t Sean Wiii De: RtP-91• nall punc lul"I!• •I no eh&rl'f.. l n the C&H ol f•llun11 Jn e1:ch&nl't tor the Ure. rep\~ it. charsi111 on 'I the proportion nr cu~nt rel'Ul•r 1elllns price plu11 Federal E xel•• T•1: th•I repreaenll! tre&d u1ed.
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Santa Ana
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apir11t roa"d bas-
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SIZE
6 .wxIS i!&.95
I.I.YI ... ....
~-
1.00xlS $21.95 lS.98
6.95xll $:!6.95 lS.48
7.S!:ixl4 l28.95 14.f8
1.75xl4 $80.915 15.f8
8.Mxl4 $85.95 11. 8
9.5-0xl"-Ml.95 20.98
5.60xl5 $ .915 1%.•8
,.75xl5 $80.95 15.48
8.lllx.15 82. 5 8.43
11.4 :115 $815.915 11.98
In• The Tr•••·• F .E.!l' h~
l!.9i I 111
13.91 I 1
JS.41 1.95
14.47 t.06
l5 . .f1 2.19
16.41 2.s5
11. 1 .56
to. 1 t.
12.41
15.41
16.41
11.91
Tl"N4 Weer.Oil Ga.t.l'Ultel
G..nau.f .Asal.111&: Tre&d wear-out.
r.r Bow l.111: Tb• number el. month• 1ptdt1'4.
~·11•1 Stir• Will De: In exeh.anl'I for the Ure, r1-
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•••Ill• GaanatM• ... u .......
l 'l to 24 l~
:nto 39 ~ ~~~-
at Sears:
Steel
Cord
Radial
Tires
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ALLSTATE
}
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v
wttAT TO DO ABOUT SOMETHING -Plans are beginning to
"g~l" for the Mermaid s~sored new t~achers' luncheon. Work-
ing together on the name list and surpnse packages are (left to
ri&'h;t) Miss Marion Smith, Mrs. Leon Axelrod, Mrs. Robert E.
Prqgrams Varied
~--~--· --------·----~-~----------~---------
•
Clef!lent a~d Mrs. Robert Turner. The Hotel Laguna will be the
festive sellting on ~ .. 4 when city officials will offer a hearty
welcome to the new rnstructors and administrators of Laguna
Beach Unified School ·District and St. Catherine's Catholic School.
JEAN COX, 494-9466 MeeMr, ..... at.: lHI LI .... IS
School -Days
Ring . ' Party
School days are just around the corner. And new teachers art
arriving with notebooks and school programs tucked under one arm
and suitcases in he.nd.
Rolling out the welcome mat and greeting the new arrivals with
smilee are members of Mennaids, the Women's Division of the Lag ..
una Beach Chamber of Commeree.
These active area women are staging the e;tghth annual new
teachers' luncheon at noon in the Hotel Laguna on Sept. 4.
Forty new instructors and administrators will enjoy the oppor•
!unity of meeting the business people of the community, dignitartec
and city officials including Mayor Glenn Vedder. Each teacher will be
sponsored by a chamber member.·
At the orientati.on1 instructors new to the Laguna Beach· Unified
School District and St. Catherine's Catholic School, will be presented
notebooks, pens, sewing kits and other souvenirs donated by business-
men members of the chamber.
Mrs. Leon Axelrod is chairman and assisting her as co-chairman
is Mrs. Robert E . Clement. Also helping with arrangements are Mrs.
Robert Turner, president of Mermaids and member of the chamber's
board, and Miss Marion Smith, secretary to Dr. Wtlliam Ullom, super·
intendent of Laguna Beach Unified School District.
•
Monday Club Chili-A Roaring S.uccess With Cowboys
• Booking Dates
It Is generally understood and aecepted fhat every
fall the modern-day woman must see ·the latest in
fashion.
So, it ju•t naturally follows that 11te M~nday Mo_m·
ing Club of Laguna will spotlight a fashion •bowing
in early fall, Oct. 14.
Mrs. Martin J. Gurney, first vice president and
program chairman, has mad~ arrangements for the
commentator, models and apparel from _area shops.
The following month1 after the women. have had
their eyes filled with fashion1 November will light up
their eyes with stars. Caroll Righter, famous astrolo-
gist and newspaper columnist, will tackle the stars
when he addresses the group on Nov. 11.
Continuing to plan ahead for lhe months to «!1111f
the Monday. club memQers will enliven tht boiidAy
spirit with a musical note.
To keep in tune with the festive season they will
host 'the Chapman College Choir, The inspirational
voices will be heard in December. In addit.ion1 Dr, John
Davis, college president, will highlight 1/!S dl.scusslon
with films entitled, '~World Campus Afloot. '·
To start tho Now Year oft rillht, the Rev. Dr. Frtd
M. Judson will be the guest speller in January. _
During the first of 1969, a man of international rec-
ognition, Harvey G. Wolfe, will presen~ ,tlle February
program. He has experienced an ~ci'tin_g career 1!1
espionage, according to Mrs. Fredenc L. Siebert, pres1·
dent.
In March the women will offer a Hobby Show. Ex-
hibits will include the works of many talented club
members.
Again spring rolls around and milady's fancy turns
to bright and pretty fashions. April is the appropriate
moo th for the club's second fashion showing.
Thus, 11te cycle has been complete.
'BOWL OF RED' PREPARATIONS
Roger Miller
~ Ohlll Is to cowboys what rice Is to a Chinese, and
they will debate for hours on the proper preparation of
this "Bowl of Red."
Only this year, in Terlingua, Tex., chili buffs from
around the nation gathered for a cooking contest be-
tween two seH-proclalmed chili champions -one a
Texas columnist and the other an East Coast writer. It
was a draw.
Roger Miller, who became a cowboy after be grad·
uated from high school, just left his ranch in Temeculia
· to operate<l riding stable in Laguna Niguel.
During his ranch life1 Roger, now a resident of
Dana Point, did most of the cooking (to avoid the clean-
up detail), and came up with his own recipe for chill
which he said was a roaring success with the other
cowboys.
The secret of good chili, he revealed is "the longer
it cooks, the better it is."
MILLER'S CHILI
1 pound pink beans
2 15-ounce cans tomato sauce
l pound ground round
2 teaspooos chili powder
2 dashes ground oregano
1 hot ortega pepper
4 chiles preparados
1 medium white onion
Salt and pepper to taste
Put beans in a large pol, cover them with about
three times as much water and soak overnight. The fol·
lowing morning add already fried meat along With all
the other ingredients. Simmer for 3 to 4 hours at leait
and all day if possible. Water should be added when
necessary.
The chili, said Roger, is even better when it is re-
cooked.
This 'Checkl.ist Charley' Counts One Parley Too Many
DEMI ANN .LANDERS: Marvin and
1 ·have been Pini iog,,tber for more
than a year. We art• both in our 30s
and oid uougb. to know what we are
doing. Marvin -manied briefly
five years.ago but it didn't WOl'k out.
Twv -1<1 ago Marv!n l>egan to talk
marriage. He made it clear that he
· wai not actDally proposing, just
• "considering lt" because thert wert a
few tlllngs be bad to find out lint.
Tonight he asked me five questions
wtUc:b be bad writl<n down en a piece
of paper. Hent are the quesUoos :
(I) Do you n<ed eey dentol wort
donef
M (2) Do you need any surCFJ?
(3) What kind of ill<urance do you
carryt
ANN LANDERS
lights becaute it hurt.I his eyes. I can 't
study without lights. We live in a one·
room apartment and I sleep oo the
couch-he ha:; the bed that pulls out
of the wall. The bathroom is down the
hall. We share it wtth· two other
families. I can 't rtudy in there. Please
help me . I'm golng nuu. -
MISERABLE GffiL
(4) Are you in line to inherit any
money?
(5) Is there any insanity in your
family ?
l Uke Marvin very much and we get
along fairly well but these questions
have riaised some doubU in my mind,
What do you think! -MISS D:
DEAR mSS: I tbtnt )'OD don't need
a nut like thJ1 for a husband. ·One
thtnc ts certala, It ltn't nece1nr1 to
aak HIM que1Uoa •amber five . Yoa
already bow the answer.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : l am a 13-
year-old girl. My parents were divorc-
ed last year. My mother didn't want
me. Neither did my dad but he took
me because there just wasn't any
place for me to go.
DEAR MISERABLE: No llrl 1bould
have to live Uke that. Talk to your
clergyman about a foster home . There
are 11pect1 of this setup far worse
than tbe Uclit problem.
My fat.her is an alcoholic. He comes DEAR ANN LANDERS : How oJd
home from work at .f ::Mt p.m. and ;,. are you, anyway? In a recent column
1t.att1 to bit the bottle. By 6 p.m. he 11 you mentiontd the Stanley Steamer. l
stoned. He won't let me turn on the bawn't heard anyone mention that oar .
in at lea.st 30 years. My gr.andfather
drove one and I'm no kid. I'll be &'i my
next birthday.
Every now and then you say
something that gives .tway your age.
Why don 't you go straight and take
Utat picture out of the paper and put
one in that loo lea like you ? I'll bet the
picture I'm looking at right now was
taJt:en 20 years ago. -NOBODY 'S
FOOL
DEAR NO: Simmer don, Pops.
I've heard of the covered wa101, too,
but that doesn't meu I came Weit Ill
on\!_iMY ace It ao secret. I've Ja1t bad
a Nth birthday and I've never tried to
hid< H. I do1•1 bow wldU pldoore
1ou're loofdnl at beeaue ID1 eohuu
.•
aow appean In more Olan 70I papen
and the plcture1 vary. We aead oat:
aew plctare1 every two yean ud if
your paper t1 u1hl.i a mat 1hot daat
IooU Ute 111 o1dJe 1ead It Co me ud
I'll take k up wlllt yoar editor.
If you have trouble getting along
with your parents . • • If you can't le&
them to let you live your own life, send
for Ann Landero' booklet. "Bul(ed by
Partnts? How to Get More Freedom."
Send 50 cents ill coin with y0ur nquest a a tong, 1tamped, 1elf'oaddre1Hd
envelope.
Landers wlll~l)ad lo help you your problem . nd them to her
e ol lht DAIL !LOT eaciollnt
a llamped, oelf-ted ~·
•
-
•
I
\
J 4 DAIL V PILOT Monday, August 2b, l%8
Afternoon Rites Orchestra Season · Tone
•
•
Couple Exchange Vows •
Set During Bruncheon
Brooke Diane Hurlbut and
Michael Everett Wertman,
both g:rad~tes ol t b e
University of S o u t b e r o
Calilcrnia, pledged their
troth before the Rev. Dr.
Charles Dierenlield In St
A n d r e w ' 1 Presbyterian
Ch Urch.
The bride ii the daughter
of Mrs. Thompson Hurlbut
ol Newport Beach. lier
husband'• parent& are
.
Marine Col. {ret.) and Mrs.
Howard E. Wertman of San·
tll Ana.
Gowned in a candelight
bridal satin Pim.mer with
re-embroidered aleocon lace
bodice and bim and a
1abrlna neck.line, ttie bride
was escorted down the aisle
by her UDCle , Dr. lA.wrence
E. Heim ol Redland1. To her
gown was attached a
cilthedr.at length train of
SWllllOfl '""° MRS. LARRY DON SCHULTZ
San Diego Honeymoon
double English net edged
with more lace, and she
wore a headpiece o f
starbursf 1 a c e sprinkled
with seed pearll to hold her
illusion veil,
Butterny orchids, pink
rose buds and baby's breath
were mingled in her bou-
quet.
She chose shell pink chlf·
!on floor length dresses with
Jong sleeves and ruffles at
the wrist for her attendants.
They carried pink rosebuds
and lavender carnations, ac-
cented by velvet streamer
ribbons of pink a n d
tavender.
The "concentrated effort
required to meet mem-
-benhip deadlines before the
coocert seuoo begin& Oct.
23 will be d1SCU8sed at a
bruocheoo 11 a .m. tomorrow
by the newly appoint<d
Women's Council of the
Symphony Association of
Onmge Olunty.
MiH Marcelina ArrOl!M,
executive vice president of
the ,S)'ll!pbooy AasociaUon, w.ll.J preside at the meeting
ln the home of Mrs. Ray-
mond Thompson, Laguna
Beach.
The. Symphony Orchestra
ol °'-e County la a fully
Pl'Oleaolonal group tllat will
launch the new seasoa under
ttie guidance ol O>oductor
Daniel Lewis. The majority
of muaictana are rtlidentl
of Orange ColB'lty.
The conoert season will in-
clude five Saturday evening
concerts .and five Sunday
afternoon matinees.
Membership in the Syn>-
pbony Association also belpe
to support the six free con-
certs for young people and
the Young Ards ta ' Audi-
t i o n s . Information con-
cerning aeason tickets or
membenhips is available by
calling or "M"iti.ng t h e
association, 7T1 S. Main,
Orange, 547-6165 or 525-1806.
P18Dlllna: for tb.e .ea.oo at
the brunch will be Newpclrt
Beach residem. M r s •
William R. Muon and Mrs.
Alan C. Stoneman.
others invited to the bru n.
eh include Mr1. Harold
Sienna, vice preRdent and
county chairman of tickets:
Mn. Corl Fritze, oecretary;
Mrs. William kelly, vice
pnsident, Wta)"I and means
obairmao; Mrs. Norman
Selaets, v l c e pusident,
public relati"oos; M r s •
Robert Sdiulze, vJce presi~
dent, county guild chairman,
and N'Js. Hugh Scallon,
president r:A. the Capistrano
Bay Guild.
Wearing a bandeau of the
same flowers for her head·
pieee was Miss Lesley
Hurlbut, attending her sister
as maid of honor.
Flat pink bows adorned
the hair of bridesmaids the
Misses Llnda Wertman, the
bridegroom's sister; Susan
Tatsch of Newport Beach;
PhyJliit Schneider of
Arcadia, Chris Leathy o!
Redlands, Donna Babcock of
Long Beach, and Cherrie
Parker of Redlands.
GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION
Bellt man was John Veeh
of Santa Ana, while ushers
were Lan-y Brennan of
Chino; Stephen L e w i s ,
Newport Beadl; Stephen
Grady, Los Angeles ; and
John Johnston, T on y
Cllamberlain and Michael
Davis, all of Santa Ana.
Frederick Barnes pro-
vided the organ selections.
A reception attended by
250 followed in the fireside
room. Later a champagne
MRS. MICHAEL E. WERTMAN
Double Ring Ceremonie•
..,m_
buffet in the home of the ••••••••••••••••.,,••IM•
' AND FASHION FAii
2750 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
i" th• Coll•g• ShopJWig C•nf1t
New ... fO# tM flf'st ti• -.,.. ca
b11y ft-om tM t.rnaus INTllNATIONAL
YAIDAGI FAii nery Hy of t1M -11:.
Mcrterlal1 9attierN fre111 -111ffoct11Nn
of fl119 cl•thl119 fro111 "loo11d tN Weftd."
CelM _. Y•• wlll .... ..,.,, ..i1trrte
of lt!ll
JUST ARRIVED!!!
bride 's mother honored th< fn"'l
bridal party and relatives. Wh I D . ~5 Come •ff the
SIMPLICITY PA mRNS In charge of the guest book at s 0 I n g Pti .. D"""1"q was Miss Kristen Heim, the • \ ::'~ •. c 0 u. i D from MARY DAY, 642-4321 $\~~.~a~:!~~: .. :NE :.o .. .*._,: c •• :.
Continues
for Another
BIG WEEK!
Tandem
$UITINGS
Silk and rayon fabric. Wrinkle resistant Ma-chine washable.
LtMITID SUPPLY
.... 2.tl yd.
$1.75 yd.
* * * * ''B•c~-to.School"
in These Fine
WOOLS
Fantastic Seleoction
60" Wide
Nuptial Vows Pledged
In Baptist Ceremony
After a trip t h r o u g h ---""-""'""-'""'"'"""-""''""'""-"""",.."""'"' o se«"in'i 1 northern California the cou-rooAY P•rl111 11111. c.,s1. Mn1, 1 P.m. varlst\ol' • S.w 119 M.clthia • 'attenn S 1 80
pie will reside in Pacific Mlllltl119t911 ·-" TO,I '""' Tr11ll LIRk Clllll .. MHI lllMlk•ll l --~"'::"::':;;'";;'---~ • L111e1t1 • NHdlH • 1''"4 ·-------d--' Beach. ~l..clten-Alll'n S.Cllool, , 1.111. L.QI -Loetlll!lll ln~rmalloo 1v1ll1ble '• • Y •
N-...-t •1adl J"'' Dl .... hltn tr, Cl lli'"'9 Mr1. Dootll11 Mll'llln,1 ....
While at USC the bride ••"'-' 1n -MnOll!~ Temple, 1=». _:.,__~~'"'~· ·~·:::·m::· _____ __!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! was a memger of Pi Beta p.m. 1·
Phi sorority while t h e 'r•lllC:t1v1 t.1111 V•111r Ch••••r et
benedict affiliated w i t h ,_, Adtllftn -Mlulo!\ v1110 Hlth
S. Chi Scl>Dot, 7:l0 P.m.
Honeymooning in San Mrs. Ted Peder!!Oll of West igma · TOPS M•rtt.r u1111tr1 -H1~r
Diego were Larry Don Covina, the bride's aunt. The former Miss Hurlbut Sdiooi. cm11 Min. 1:11 P.rn.
Schultz and his bride, the will continue graduate work , .. .....,. 1 0 •tR TOPS Cl\* -Smith
former Carol Ann Exner The bride is a graduate of in education at San Diego ~,';,'";~~,.., khool, Hvn11,..1an &e1cn,
\\"ho were married in a dou-Cost.a Mesa High School and state College and her hus-c-''" ... _,_, -Allder"'"
ble ring ceremony in the Orange Coast College. Her band will work towards his k:"~1!.tm~.~~~ ~!;., Adtll-
First Baptist Cllurch of husband is .an alumnus of masters degree in business -co11ete ,.,r11; Scllool, c111" Mesi, •
Costa Mesa. CMHS and also attended at the 11ame college. She was P.~., ... AllN X1 ai.,..,, u1 1111111
OCC ber nli ting . ~-ber o1 A · t f ""' -Loc•nl!lll 1nfeml1t1on 1v1111bi. The Rev. Harold Anderson ore e s m un:: a mem ss1s een11 o tr.. <•lit,. Ml"I. ciow tt.r1e11, •n--au..
officiated at the eveni"ng U.S. Army. The newlyweds the A1sistance League of • t!'i1 1._1 .. Mam u-. Cltltlk
ritual uniting in marriageJrwi=U=re:s:id:e=in=Sea=ttl=•·===:R:ed=la:nd='·========o.=w=""'=:":"""""=:::::::-:':'·:':~:-::.·;·1 the daughter of Mr. and
Mr 11. Alfred A. Exner' of
Cost.a Mesa and t.he son of
~tr . and W.rs . Don a 1 d
Schultz of Costa Mesa.
LIGHTEN-GO-BRIGHTEN: DEMI-FROSTING BY CLAIROL@
Your halr goes l ighter in a misty overtone of your own
shade's palest shade ••.• a~d suddenly your world seems
brighter! lt's an inspired new technique by our" own color
stylists brought Into beautiful being with Clairol's@
~,~~~~w·
Escorted to the altar by
her. fatller. tthe bride wore a
floor length gown of
seiniempire crepe. T he
bodice and full l e n g t h
sleeves were covered with
lace and sprinkled with se·
quins. The crepe and lace
"'ere repeated in two trains
falling from the shoulders.
Her elbow length nylon veil
was caught to a lace and
pearl bow headpiece and she
carried a bouquet of a whlte
orchid surrounded by red
rosebuds inserted i n t o
gladioli petals.
Miss Suan Mctiernan of
Costa Mesa was maid of
honor. She was attired in a
yellow semiempire gown
with a scalloped neckline.
The bodice and sleeves were
of lace. She carried a bou-
quet of yellow rosebuds in-
serted into ·gladioli petals .
Her headpiece was a yellow
bow with a short veil.
Briaesmaids, dressed in
lime greeD, wece Mi'ss
Pau1ette Danielson of Costa
Mesa, WJ.ss Unda Schultz,
the bridegroom's sister, and
Miss Katen Exner, the
bride's sister.
Best man was James
Schu1tz, the bridegroc>m's
brother. The bride's
brother, Alfred Exner Jr.
was an usher, as were MJ·
cbael 01,on and Fred For-
gie. both of Costa Mesa.
Providing mu.sic in the
church ~rated with bou-
quets of white gla<tioll a n d
stock were Mn. C 11. y
GriJwold, orp.nht and Mr1 .
Mary . Owenby, soloist A
trelliJ behind the minister
WM covered witb lf!Mber
fem and gardenias.
A reception for Ill< 175
weddfng guegU took place ln
the youth ceriter of tbe
Church. A fow-·t.iered wed·
ding Cab tapped with two
wbtte dovee in colors of
-Md yellow with • toudJ of green was aerved.
The table .... de<oralocl
wffb a bouquet of 7Slow
l'Olet.
AnJllina at the rocepdcn
were II",,.. Dale PembeiCl>n
exclusive tint formula. Demi-Frosting, specially pr.iced
for summer, only 15.00. Beauty Salon.
GO CAREFREE WITH OUR 'COMB-IN-A-BREEZE' CUT
It's ours alone ... this new haircutting technique, so
unique y ou can a ctually see the shape and curl come
to life wlth the talented scissors of one of our e><pert
operators. If your hair has a blt of body or curt, 10.00.
Cu rly s et-less wave, complete with cut, 20.00.
i
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l" t . ll'ttl '""' Ml'rl't~i::;' ·-
After our experts feather your
tresses to th is fragile new flattery-
'they eolor with Fanci-Full: instant rinse
,from Roux that colors gray, or adds del icate
color-tone to bleached hair. Just rin:ses
in, shampoos out whenever you wish
-perfect fini sh to our brilliant brush work)·
COSTA MdA, CAUf.
not ... rtlior 11'111.
IC-M1,I ~ .. u -""""
COSTA wnA. C~f.
"'w. ,...., ''"'" ·--ol Weot 0>vtna. Ill< brlde'1 NfWl'OllT HACH, CAU,, POUNTAIN YALLn, CALlfl,
1 "'9 IMertllll c o u • J 11 : Miss Debra flu ,.__, .,.,.... ---Pembe:rbl, COUlin; L~~---------------------------ll ,,.,. "'"''If Mn.,~ ol w
v1•-c""" ·--Oarlna. bor OOll&in ; Mn., """'lnaol'l's Newport ' ... -r _...;_,.. ,,,,_.., .,__., <Elll .... • Fashion Island •
•
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willflitifliiii8
lie ck~'b-.ga'-,
..-. fat: ulc, 1·,
tnetantJ
tlllSf
PLUS SHAMPOO
AND .SET
Mon. thru Tiiun.
IAI+•• I p.m, .2.501
Mi., Set .. Sun. J,l.00
OUN ... CAUi'.
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1
--·-·-
Newport Barbor Today's (;losing.
' .
VOL. 61, NO. 205, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES NEWPORT 8&.CH, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST 26, '1968 TEN CENTS
/
City; Not Buying Police TV, May Sell It Back
By JERO~IE ·F. COLLINS -"
OI "" DllllJ Pl11! Sllfl
Arioc Research Corporation, which
developed Newport Beach's police
television surveillance proposal, wants
city permission to peddle it elsewhere.
The request is based on the assump·
lion that the "Electronic Protection
System'' (EPS) is a dead issue in
Newport. It's a reason<:.bly safe
assumpt·k>n.
A majority oC city councilmen, on
Thursday is expected to vote agaimt
placing EPS oo ttw, November ba\1ot.
They will then probably apprvve the
Arinc request -for a pri~.
That price, according to Vice Mo.yor
Lindsley Parsons, shOu ld be at least
$3,500. •
lie ex.plai.ned that is how much the
city paid Arinc a year 'ago to develop
!;he federal grant application that
councilmen have now decided
biiouldn 't be !onvard'f<i.
"We paid tor the research,'' &aid
Parsons. ''We 5howld at least get our
money back. I see no reason why we
should aub&idize a p:ofiWDUing car·
pocaticn." ·
Arinc ropor1<dly spent aeveral ,
thousand dollar.$ of its own money on
the research that went W tbe
preparation ot 'the application.
Parsons, however, is unimireued.
"They'll get tbeir money beet and
more by doillC 1lle developmeot -k
llfter' ttie funds are lf'ml(ed." uthe exctlltot work that has gooe, into
Arinc's pcol>ltm ii that. it must this e-•DI requut by the Newport
receive Newport's approval be.fore It council, Police Cl.lief B. James Glavas
Oia use elsewhere any olthe data and and others makes it a highly desirable
maWtal it gathered under its contrect basic fremewori: for the system
w!1b tl>e city. develc111nent and testing. It would be
L. B . .McCulin Jr., manqer of the _ most unfortunate net to take ad·
Santa Asia based l!rm, bu submitted vantage ot t11i1 efl<lrl. lt's already
to tbe council a l«mal request tor made a Czvorable impact on the law
release of the material. enforcemeht prolesslon."
"While we mi&lll be eble to start All He said Arlnc would like to forward
over apin tdUI 8illllUier cit)'," he a&id, the '500,<XXI EPS grant request im· . '
ov1ets to u
•
Chilled by 'Drafts'
Humphrey Holds
Shaky Advantage
CHICAGO (AP! -Hubert H.
llumphrey held a heavy -but highly
uneasy -lead for the presidential
nomination today as a deeply divided
Democratic party beaded tnto its 1968
convention.
The Vice President had in his hip
pocket two-thirds of the first-ballot
votes needed for the top prize, but
most Of the talk and much or the
enthusiasm were for two non-ean·
didates hundreds of miles lrom this
fortified. city; Lyndon B. Johnson and
Edward M. Kennedy.
The President, hon1e on the r~nch
near Johnson City, Tex., was giving no
hint on whether he'd even show up in
Chicago -though his 60th birthday
anniversary tomorrow offers a
dramatic opportunity lo put real
steam behind a budding "Draft
Johnson" movement.
Sen. Kennedy, like Johnson an avow·
ed non-candidate, was relaxing at
Cape Cod, Mass., but a perhaps more
insistent "draft" movement appeared
to be surfacing here.
Forces in the Texas delegation are
ready to put Johnson's name in
nomination. Former Gov. Michael
DiSalle of Ohio is ready with Ken·
nedy's -and this morning important
new strength turned the senator's
'"ay. Longshot presidential h o rte r u 1
tieorge S. ~1cGovern said if Kennedy
Eisenliower' s
Heart Continues
To Beat Faster
\VASHINGTON (AP) -Ar:ny d<><:·
tors reported today that former Pres1·
dent Dwight D. Eisenhower ~a~ sh?~n
"further increase" ln heart 1,rr1ta~1;\Ity
si nce Sunday aind remains in cr1Ucal
condition.
Doctors at \Yalter Reed Army
llospital said that ext~a ~.~art be.ats
have been occurring with mcreasmg
frequency" since Sunday.
But they added that there had been
no further episodes of "rapid heart ac·
lion " which c<mstitute the more seri~us symptom of his condition.
Orange Coast
"called me and talked to me directly
and said that be wanted the nomina-
tion I would probably throw my sup·
port to him." ·
McGovern, a South Dakota senator,
added, however: "[ doo't expect that
to happen. I don't know about any
Kennedy movement."
A second liberal senator from the
midwest, Philip Hart or Michigan, en·
dorsed Kennedy for the nomination -
and Sander Levin, chairman of the
Michigan delegation, said ~e would
"lean to Kennedy if Kennedy became
3 candidate." -• -~ -
Like McGovern, both Hart and
Levin spoke cautiously, saying they
were not urging the last of the Ken-
nedy brothers to get into the race.
Novice Diver
Dies in Bay
Near Laguna
111e body of a novice diver who "'as
using borrowed equipment was puUed
from the ocean Ooor off Laguna's
Crsecent Bay Sunday afternoon.
1'he victim. James B. Jensen, 22, of
Norwalk, was pronounced dead on ar·
rival al South Coast Community
lfospital.
The buddy system failed to save the
young man. Despite one air tank
failure, lifeguards said, Jensen tried
again with a reserve tank.
When his reserve tank emptied, his
buddy apparently gave Jensen his
1nouth piece for the two men lo share,
accoroing to lifeguards. Both men
panicked, they said. J ensen's uniden-
tified diving companion rose to the
surface and swam to Rocky Point
where beach goers pulled him ashore.
Lifeguards Bill Roley and Steve
Knauer, ran to his assistance. Roley
borrowed a face mask, and after
;;everal di\res located Jensen, face
down , 25 feet below the survace.
Roley attempted unsuctessfully to
revive Jensen with mouth-to-mouth
resuscitation. Lt. John Cunningham
and Capt. Eugene DePaulls ad·
m inistered resuscitation and heart
massage while Jensen was taken in
ambl.Jance to the hospital, where he
.1_., was pronounced dead.
If.. A coroner's report of the actual
_. cause of death is pending.
Weather
The "'eatherman has a damp
outlook for the Orange Coast
Tuesday -like cloudy with
occasional showers -while the
111crcury slays in the 75 range.
INS IDE J'ODAl'
Front runne-r Gordner Co:t
.snil.s into the homestretch of the
OI11mpic yachting trials toda11
with two other .skipper.s in close
purauit. See Boating, Page 25. .... "". n ..... " c .. u .... 11 • ...... Ill """' ...
Clfflllt!H ,.,n °'"" '""'"''~ • ,_~ " ,, ...... ~ ... ,., " Cr111-l'f • " ,K._I Ntw1 u.u .... M•lke •
_,,
" 14 t:••'•"•' ~ ... •• Sit<• M'l'tlffl 1•11
111torlltl11tfttllt " TtloV"'" " Flfl-0 , .... '""'"'"' ..
Flrt C1l" • Wt1llW• •
l51rt G'""''' " c; ...... _. .. " """ L.., .. ,.. " w .. 14 ,., ... , .. ..... ~ • _,,., .. .. "
Cunningham said .a possible cause of
death, besides drowning, could have
been air embolism. Air embolism OC·
curs if a diver rising to the surface
doesn't exhale air from his lungs. With
less pre!isure on the surface, the lung~
expand if they are full of air. "And
th ey can only expand so far, before
they VoP like a balloon," Cunningham
said.
Lt. Dean Westgaard saJd, "M05t
fatal diving accidents oe<:ur when a
non-certified diver attempts using
scuba equipment, and u s u a 11 y
fatalities occur because of air em•
boll1m ."
Stork /lfarkeU
NE\Y YORK <APJ -The stoc.k mar·
krt continut'd higher this afternoon In
motlerate trading. Gain!! outnumbered
losses by some 300 Issacs on the New
YOTk Stock Exchange. ~See quolation!i,
JJages 10-11 \.
BIGGEST CHARACtER 01' 'ALL -Polly's Ark,
entered ey polly Pierc.e,~ was. judged "Best Chara ct·
er Boat" in 8th annual 1,,.;haracter Boat Parade Sat-
urday in Newport Harbor. An estimated 135,000
persons jammed sboretine along parade route to see
40 entries. Some eager youngsters leaped into bay
for better view.
•
SWAVIEST SWABS -Suave characters aboard W,
C. Peltier entry Espita r..1ar caught judges'. atten-
tion with their costumes during Saturday's Char-
OAIL'f ,ILOT Sl.tf Pflltll
acter Boal Parade in Newport 1-larbor. Judges,
l!owever , expressed some doubts about seamanship
displayed by modern Vikings.
Throngs Vie~ 'Characters'
By BRUCE BENSON
OI .. OtllY Pllft Stiff
A big, black Lincoln with out-of-state
license plates rolled from Balboa
Island onto the Newport Harbor ferry
boat Saturday afternoon, just in Ume
to see a vessel coma noatin& by wjtb a.
crew 0( Vikings.
Behind it was a 70-foot motor yacht
with a combo ca.llJng U1enu1clvec Ille
''Retroifesalve Five", putting out
melodic .trains of "Avalon."
'h.. dri""1C of !ht black U.colo
stared nonplussed at his wife, then
began studying a roed map, hopln1 to
get his bearlngs.
The two tourUt.11 hod arrived in
Newport Beach In the mJdst of the
· etgblh annual Newport 1-1 a r b o r
Chambtr of Commer.ce Character
Bo.al Parade, .witnessed by 1"'
(1
' estimated 135,000 people jamming the
sbOrelhle". ·
AddJt1onal 11\ousand! took to the
wattt Jn practically anyttting that
would float to get closer looks at the
more than 40 strange and gaily
decorated parade entries.
The character boat.11 included a
·floating Island with thatched hnt,
wattTfall, volcano and hbla girls.
(S.t COARACTERS, 1'111t %)
~
.J
-------------~~---~---------
mediately to state and federal aeen·
cies for their conslderatioo and
possibly use "either in Newport or ln
another city."
He said the tSate Department of
Jl.llS{ice. which would be first to pass
on the request. has followed the EPS
project with close• intere&t and seems
''h)ghly favb"rable" toward recOIJli•
mending it to the federal ~vernment.
"Additionally," said Mc Ca s 1111,
(Se. ARINC, Pagt %)
ce
'.Also Agree
On TtQop
~ithdrawal
MOSCOW (UPl ) -The Soviet gov·
ernment has agreed to recognize the
regime o( Czechoslovak Communist
Party Secretary Alexander Dubcek
and to gradually withdraw troops
from Czech soil, Communist sources
said today.
The agreement came after four
days of crisis talks between the S1>-
vlet Politburo and President Ludvik
Svoboda of Czechoslovakia, Dubcek,
Premier Oldricb Cernii: and moet
other members or the Czech party pre·
gidium.
Official Communist sources said the.
Czech leader1 were expected. to fly
back to Prague tonight.
The heads of the other four Warsaw
Pact powers with troops in Czechoslo.
vakia -Poland's Wladyslaw Gomul·
ka, East Germany's Walter Ulbricht,
Bulgaria's Todor Zhikov and Hunga.
ry's Janos Kadar -were reported
waiting in the wings in Moscow while
the Czechs and Soviel3 worked. out
their agreement.
Since the dispatch of the Warsaw
Pact trOOP!I into Czechoslovakia was a
joint decision, agreement to pull them
out also would require collective en·
dorsement.
·fhe settlement appeared to have
come just in time to prevent violent
clashes between frustrated Soviet
troops and Czechoslovaks who have
taunted them since they moved in a
week ago.
Dubcek and Cernik, denounced b.v
the Soviet press as "traitors" to com·
munism, were taken into custody by
Soviet occupation forces shortly alter
the invasion.
Sources said Dubcek went along re·
Juctantly with the plan for the gradual
withdrawal or the Soviet and other
(Set CZECHS, Page 2)
Corona del Mar
Woman Amo11g 5
Highway Victims
F Lve persons, including a Corona del
l\1ar wuman. Wed in Orange County
weekend traffic to m a r k one of the
bloodiest two-day periods of the year.
The tiead:
Kattiryn Berg, 53, 218 N. Jasmine
1968 County TrafFlc 196'1
1~3 Death Toll 130
Ave., Corona del Mar
Merrell Dean Pullian. 6, 92{1 W. Cub-
bon St.. Santa Ana
\llilliam U.Fowler. 54. Los Angeles
John Pillon, 13. 12881 Olympia Way,
Santa An.1
Melvin C. Stewart. 24, llawaiian
Gardens
The Pullian boy w~ killed Saturday
when the pick-up truck in ~·:-iich he
was riding was struck from the rear
at Bristol Street and Segerstrom
Avfnue in Santa Ann .
fowler died Sunday \Vhcn he lost
control of hls oar on Esperanza Road
near Fairmont Boulevard in the Yorba
Linda area. Police !aid he ran o(f the
road, over corrected and swerved
aerogg again hitting a power pole.
The Pillon boy .and Mrs. Berg of
Corona del Mar were killed Saturday
morning at Oyer Avenue and Red HUI
Road in Tustin. They were e.Jected
from the colUding cars, police said.
Stewart was dead on arr1vaJ at
SouUl coast Comm unity Hoapltal
Saturday when hi~ car slammed Into
the center divider of the San Dh!&O
t'reeway north of Ortega lll~way . of·
fiet:r!I reported. He Will alone and ne>
other car was involved.
j
l .
2 DAIL V PILOT
New All eys
Slated £01·
W. Newpo1·t
Two neighborboods in West Newport
will soon ret new alleyt. Asphalt PQ<V·
lng will be rolled over the narorw, dirt
roadways. '
The property owners tJlemselves
wlll bo plddng 111> 11le tab.
Ctty oCOdals are assuring this
through formation o{ a special assess·
ment distr1cl encompassing the area5.
A public hearing on the assessment
~bas been set for Oct. 14 by the
Cll;y Oow>cil. No s!gnillcar>t ~teot
against tbe paving project, loog sougtlt
by West Newport leaders, ls ex-
peded.
Nelghbomoods affected by the Im·
provement project are from 19th
Street to 34th Street and from 61st
Street to ON.nge AveDQe.
A total o! 434 properties will be
assessed to pily for the alley paving
and same cwt> and gutter con·
structlon. All but 61 of these pro-
perties are between 19th and 34th
streets.
City councilman Donald A. Mcinnis.
who was elected Irom West Newport,
said t.he project, initial actioo on whiC'h
was taken by the council this week,
represents ''a good beg.inning toward
taking care <t the problems ln Ulat
area."
The West Nev.rport Improvemeflt
AssOciation has endol'sed the pro·
grwn, according to association presi·
dent John Shea.
The endorsement IollOW"ed a meeting
one month ago between the city staff
or 100 members of the homeowners
group. At that session, Shea noted, it
V.18S agreed that the improvement pro·
ject v.'OUld not include construction oI
an ocean front sidewalk nor in·
stallation (){ocean front street lights.
Councilmen assured Shea that the
city would put In no improvement
unless it Us wanted by the residents of
the area.
Three Newpo11
Performers Win
Awards in Mesa
The comedy. drama "Claudia" prov.
ed the most popular production of the
Costa Mesa Clvic Playhouse season
Satunlay night u It SW<>Pt three of the
year's top five acting awards. . .
At the &eeood annual C 1 v 1 c
Playhouse award& banquet in the
Costa Mesa Country Club. "Claudia"
cast membenl were awarded trophies
as best actor. best actress c;.nd best
suppoiiting actress.
Pat Neederman -also a inember of
the "Claudia" cast -captured the
coveted Thespian Awc;ird for the best
perfonnance in a role of any size. The
Laguna Beach actress was honored
for her portrayal of Lottie in "The
Dark at the Top of the St.airs."
Linda Baum of Corona del Mar, who
played ttie tiUe role in "Claudia," was
named best actress of the season,
\vhi\e Neil Sawers took the best actor
award for his perfonnance as her hus-
band in the play.
r..iarth.ella Randall. also or COT'Ofla
del i\1ar. was judged best supporting
a ctress for her role as Claudia's
mother. Best suprort1ng actor honors
v.·errt to Ed Little of Newport Beach as
the disillusioned lovet" in "The Little
Hut."
The Civic Playhouse currell'tly is in
rehearsal for the opening production
of its 1968-69 season, "Dream Girl,''
which opens Se pt. 27 for twO
weekends.
Boy Elec trocuted
RICl1MOND (UPI ) -A 12·YC<:f·Old
swimzner \\'<'.IS electrocuted Salurday
when he touched a live electric wire
after emerging from San Pablo Bay.
DAILY PILOT
N-p•rt I nch, C•llferfl'4
O~•NC.E t OAST PUllLl~NING t OMP.t..NV
Rob••I N. Wrul
"~·O't'nt t"ll Publl11!r'
J1c• R. Cutlty
Vil' Ptt'l•dfnl tn<I G-tl MANI''
l~o'"'' Ktt•il EOilllr
Thom•1 A, Murphi"'
N.tnttlne [Olklo-
Jtta.tlt F. Colli"' P1ul Nin1n
Nt-wov! 8f tcl'I AllVtfllth ...
cl1r E<l•tw D1rrc.tqr
NtwpOl't hac• Offl11>e
2211 W11t ldbot lo11l1v1rd
M1 itin9 Addrtn: P.O. lox 11 75 t266J
OtMr Offtc"
CCIII ~: »2 Wttl llt't' ~l•H! LI.., ... B...cn m FotTit ............
1<unllfttlllfl BtKfl JOt )on $•-ttl
t
UPI Ctll .... Mlt
RUSSIAN IN PRAGUE -Youthful Russian soldier is confronted by
Czech citizens asking him why Soviet Union invaded their country.
Rebellious Czechs are reported keeping up their r esistance against
occupation forces.
From Page J
CZECHS ...
Warsaw Pact troops from Czech soil.
They said the leaders of the Kremlin
first reached agreement with Svoboda
and Cemlk ao.d then Dubcek finally
went along.
Diplomatic sources said earlier the
Soviets were asking a heavy price for
an end to the occupation of Czechoslo-
vakia. But Yugoslav and Czechoslovak
reports said the Russians already had
agreed to a step ~Y step withdrawal or
occupation troops.
The reports circulated as Soviet and
Czechoslovak leaders held their fourth
day of crisis tallCJ in the Kremlin.
The diplomatic s014'ces said the Rus·
sians were demanding the virtual end
or Czechoslovakia's liberal reform
program as the price of ending the
week·long occupation. They said So·
viet demands include Prague reim·
posing censorship and clamping down
on non..Comrnuist activity.' '
But in Belgrade, the Yugoslav news
agency Tanjug, in a dlspatch from
Moscow, said the Soviet leaders had
agreed in principle to pulling out of
Czechoslovakia. Tanjug said the Rus-
sian terms were those agreed upon at
the Ciema Nad Tisou conference· that
preceded the Soviet bloc invasion last
week.
Retired Newport Aides
May Get Income Boost
Newport Beach's relircd c It y
workers, including a on e · t i m e
manager and many ex·department
heads, may soon get a boost in their
retirement pay.
The city staff is now studying a peli·
Uon from the ex.employes, asking for
the increase because of "spiraling in-
flation."
Final action would have to be taken
by the City Council, which already has
indicated it ls sympathetic toward the
request.
"Through the years," said the peti·
lion. "you have granted your current
employes co st of living increases, but
have neglected to do anything for
those of us on limited incomes who
also suffer from spiraling inflation and
can less afford it."
Vice Mayor Lindsley Parsons asked
for the staff study. saying:
"I think the petitioners have a
point."
Councilman Paul J. Gruber added :
"I'm in agreement with that."
Among signers of the petition were
John J. Sailors of Huntington Beach.
former city manager; J. A. Gant of
Balboa, former city treasurer; J. Bert
Chief Glavas
Doesn't Back
Ticket Sales
Newport Beach Pollce Chief B.
James Glavas said today the publlc
sale or tickets to the Orange County
Peace Officers' Association ball does
not have his endorsement.
"I'm not happy about paid solicitors
being used to sell the tickets in blocks
to merchants," Gl&\.'l&S explained.
He emphasized that he supports ~e
NGv. 8 police benefit in Santa Ana . His
argument is with tile paid soliciting
only. ~
I-le said he is concerned that some
businessmen might feel that purchase
of the tickets would be considered a
favor by h local police department.
Mariners Library
Thieves Foiled
Thieves agaln struck Marinerit
Jj brary over the weekend but all they
got to Show for it was bloodied hands
or arms lrom 11m ashing open $130
worth of windows.
Newport Beach po\lce said burglar1
entered tru!: library so meUme Friday
nigh t or S.turday morning and made a
path to an office where they found on·
ly an empty cash boit.
City Librarian Dorothea Sheeley
s:iid the n1ovements of the trespa.s•ers
were marked by a trall or blood, ln.
dicaling that they 1uffe~ cut.a when
breaking twu wlndow1.
\Vebb of Newport Heights, former city
engineer; Frank Crocker of Balboa,
!ormer fire chief; Percy Pellett of
Newport Heights, former assistant
fire chief; John D. McMillan, former
water ·superintendent; and W. C.
MacDonald, former 41>ark superin·
tendent.
The staff study is expected to be
completed within 30 days.
From Page J
CHARACTERS ..
There was also a vastly shrunken
version of the Queen Mary.
Even politics got into the parade as
a group or somber·looking fellows in
\Vorld War I vintage uniforms putted
along in a boat bearing ensigns that
read, "Remember the Pueblo" and
.. Don't Give Up the Ship."
The theme of the 2112-hour parade
vras "Adve!lture at Sea" and winner of
the theme award was Rex Bixby's
boat, Brandy. In addition to a huge
brandy snifter planted amidships, the
boat was occupied by large New·
roundland dogs .
Winner of the Leakin' Tlmbers
award was the 30-!oot model of the
Queen Mary. She was entered by Joe
Beek, owner oC the Balboa Island fer·
ry and secretary of the State Senate.
The Vikings were aboard the Espita
Mar, entered by W. C. Peltier. \Vhile
not much could be said of their
seamanship, the crew did manage to
walk off l\oith the Swaviesl Swabs
award.
The Bilgy Binnacle award went lo a
barge decorated as a floating island
and t!Ued, "Paradise."
The Ooating lloat. entered by
Newport National Bank, carried dan·
clng glrls and South Seas decor. The
men aboard were visibly unhappy over
the parade coming to an end.
Amidst a flurry of live doves and
animated animals, the Island Princess
of Richard Parrish got the Loose
Screw tri>phy.
l\fuslclao David Rose's Norwegian·
built steamboat Koberbavn copped
the \Vheel, Steam and Bell Award.
Other winners were Polly's Folly for
best character boat, Laden with stuffed
animals. by Polly P ierce: \Valrus tug,
for Dirty Old Manifold Trophy, wilh
hula girls, by Orange Counl y Se a
Scout Base ; Mi chi gan tug. for Ancien t
Mariner Award , by Dick Shaw, and 11
houseboat, for Big Toot Award, v.•ith a
live band aboard, by the Newpor t
Harbor Junior Chamber of COmmtrce.
The "Retrogressive Five" bounced
along wtttl selections of ancient music
from the 2011, causing one lltUe boy on
an inner tube to yell u the1 pas1ed
by :
''Don't you know anything besides
thet junk?" However. the combo's ego
\~1as bolstered a mlnu~ later when a
heavy set man In his 1 te 40's. sltUng
on a dock in an easy char. yelled out,
"Boy, that's my kind of mus ic, fe1-
lu," his foot and beUy bounclnJ up
and down ID taupo.
'i
Planning Fees Jump
Newport Charg es Soaring to Meet Costs
Plamlng and zoning fee& in Newport
Beech are going u~way up in some
cues.
City councilmen tonight are ex.
pected to approve rooUnely tbe first
reading ol ordinance5 boosting the
application fees .
The revi!lons, endoned~unanJmous·
ly by 1lle Planning Commission, .,..
aimed at meeting the actual C06t of
processing various permit and zoning
r e q u e s t s, according to Planning
Director Ernest Mayer Jr.
Here are some of the proposed in-
creases:
-Use permits: From $30 to f150.
-Variances: from ISO to 1150.
-Re.zoning: from $100 to ~.
-Sign exceptions : From '40 to $100.
Mesa Woman
Pleads Guilty
To Drunk Rap
A C06ta Mes.a wwnan whose car col·
lided with four young pedestrians
laces a SuperiGr Court hearing Aug. 30
after entering a guilty plea to felony
drunken driving in Newport Harbor
Municipal Court.
Mrs. Patricia M. Graham, 49, of 716
James St., was released on her own
recognizance pending the Superior
Court date when a hearing will be set
for probation and serrtencing.
The Calilornia Highway Patrol said
Mrs . Graham was driving a car which
struck down four girls while they were
standing at a traffic island on Pacific
Coast Highway in Corona del Mar.
One of the girls was dragged or toss·
ed several feet in the accident and still
remains hospitalized at H o a g
Memorial with injuries of the spine,
abdomen, forearm and pelvis.
The patient, Debbie Zimmerman, 12.
of 4607 Hampden Road, Cameo Shores,
was reported in good condition this
morning.
She was struck July 24 along with
Llsa Nunis, 12, of Laguna Beach, and
!ilinberly Davis, 11, and her sister,
Laura, of Corona del Mar.
The three girls suffered less serious
Injuries, although the Laguna Beach
resident was released. from ttie
hospital on crutches.
From Page J
ARINC ...
"several California cities hzve Shown
an interest in the system dwing the
past month!."
He declined ot say which cities, but
did say one or two are in U:le Orange
County area.
McCasilin $8ld if the Newport council
approves Arinc's request to free the
application and allow it tG be sent on
an "open" buis to the fund disbursing
agencies, Arlnc would stipulate that
Newport "will have Ute first op-
portunity to proceed with the project
in the event it is placed on the ballot in
"Otherwise," he said, "the state
would be !ree to select another pilot
city fr•tm those interested."
Thieves Mix
Work With Play
A thief apparently bent on mixing
work with recreation walked off with
$441 worth of articles from the unlock·
ed garage of Oarol Gusick, 716
Heliotrope Ave., the woman told
Newport. Beach police.
Taken were a vacuwn cleaner, a
lawn edger with gasoline engine, and a
volleyball.
-Planned community zoning: From
$100 to $750.
Do the increases n1ean tnat prop·
erty owners will now have to pay $150
jw;:t to get permission to build a
fence six inches above city code
requirements'?
Mayer says no.
"AU minor deviations lrom ·the
code wW be bandied by a modifica·
Uons committee," he explained. "Th.e
fee will be $35. TI1ese deviatiooa in·
elude fence heights, sign area ques·
lions, c h a n g e s in non.conforn1ing
properties, staircase installations and
extension of use permlU, such as for
beer bars and dancing."
The Planning Commission has rec·
ommended establishment of tbe mod·
lllcations committee. cJmcllmen are
expected to approve it $tpt. 10.
All the proposed -let ocOOdules,
Mayer emphasized; repttsent the
actual cost to the city f~' publication
or legal notices, inv~&Ugftion, prep· aratlon of reports and other expenses
·dil'ectly-related-to·lh&-•PUcatlon.
}le noted that tile fee hikes have
been disctlssed with executive com·
mlttees of the American InsUtull of
Arohltects, Board of Realtors, Cb.am·
ber of Commerce and the Building
Indusµ-y Association. "No significant
opposition by any of these organiza·
lions was indicated," he 11aJd.
Estimated annual lncrea!ie in mu·
nicipal revenue from the proposalJ
would be about 18,000, Mayer added.
School 'Rebels' Learn
It's Fun if Work Done
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of Utt O.Hr 1'1111 11111
"Next year I think I'm going to
learn instead of goofing off."
The reformed school hater had just
finished an unusual summer class.
Older students with a liking for school
had taught him to gain satisfaction
from learning.
-ti -ti -{,.
Harbor Schools
Slate Signups
For New Faces
It's time for parents of new students
to Newport·Mesa Unified Schoo I
District schools to begin signing up
their youngsters for the fall.
Parents should call their local school
to check on times for registration.
Schools are listed under "Schools -
Public'' in the telephone directory.
Children entering kindergarten this
fall must be five years old by next
Dec. 2. Parents must furnish proof or
birth and polio immunization at the
time of registration.
Parents who pre-registered their
children last spring, are requested by
~ school district to please call their
local school and verify.
School begins Sept. 10 this year.
School District
Hosts Community
Forum Tt~esday
Persons interested in the well being
of Newport.Mesa Unified Schoo I
District are invited to meet Tuesday
afternoon to lay plans for a Com·
munity Forum on Schools.
The public forum with school board
members will be neld at 7:30 p.n1.
Sept. 11 at c.orona del Mar Hig h
School.
The meeting for Tuesday was called
by James Wood to handle preliminary
planning. To be decided is how lo
gather 3il audience tor the forum and
what 6hould be on the agenda.
Wood, who challenged the school
board to hold the public forum has in·
vited several persons to the planning
session and urges anyone eU:e in·
terested to come. ·
The meetin·g will be at 4 p.m. at his
office. Mesa Verde Realty, 2850 Mesa
Verde Drive, Costa Mesa.
Thirty' Costa Mesa youngst.er1 with
"I hate school" attitudes were taken
under the wing by student tutors who
showed them school can be fun.
The exposure caused an o t be r
classroom slouch to remark:
"It made me see when you get your
work done it's more fun."
Joan Caldwell, learning analyst for
Newport·Mesa schools. organized the
summer get-excited.about.school pro.
gram. It was held at Maude Davis
Intermediate School during the five·
week r.egular summer session.
Miss Caldwell picked 30 second
through sixth graders who she thought
to be intelligent but turned off on
school. The youngsters came from
Sonora Elementary where she was a
counselor last year.
She put them in a classroom tQ at a
time with five high school juniors and
seniors hired as tutors.
The older students led them In a
discovery and game approach to
education. For example, an English
lesson consisted of cutting adjectives
out of magazines and pasting them up.
For an arithmetic lesson they listened
to a tape recording and filled in
answers.
The students were not obliged to at.
tend. "Maybe that is why they all
came,'' Miss Caldwell said.
She sent letters to parents of 30
students, and every one of them
enrolled their child. "They were pretty
well acquainted with me from m1
role·playing drama groups at Sonora,"
she said.
Parents later endorsed the summer
pro~am. ''I've never seen R. so
enthusiastic. tie seems more sure of
himself," said one. "l hope the school
district will i;iive J. a chance every
summer," said another.
Newport·Mesa school district paid
$750 salary to Miss CaldWell and $1.85
an hour to the student tutors out of its
hot idea fund.
Miss Caldwell said she hopes the
pro{Jf"am will be continued after school
hours during the regular school year.
She has suggested that industry in the
community be asked to underwrite her
plan for straightening out th e
academicall.v alienated students.
She said she has told the school ad.
ministration she would like to see the
youngster-to.yo ungster a ppr o a c h
made use of in a big way. Th.is is the
way. she thinks. to keep students
sou.red on school from __becoming
classroom cut ups or non·tlerforming
sitters. Other students. she believes.
.are the best potential force for getting
them excited and performing again.
New po rt· Mes a school ad·
ministrators are considering her pro-
posal. They are evaluating now the
summer program. To he lp them, Mi ss
Caldwell had her tutors keep a diary
of comments by the students.
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Teachers 'Chalk U • H.a·r·bor
• I
Cruise
-. .
New teachers to the Newl'."rt-Mesa Unified School District will have
a chance to test their "sea legs ' before plunging into their new duties and
immersing themselves in the job of teaching.
The Women's Division of the Chamber of Commerce of Newport
Beach is sponsoring the boat trip and luncb;eoo for the 200 new teachers
who will begin instructing an anticipated 27,000 students reporting to 36
campuses on Sept. 10.
Previously, .participants in this special event were teachers of the
Newpclrt Harbor High School District. Since unification in 1966 the women's
division has continued to sponsor the tour and luncheon including in the
-guest-light all new teachers for both €osta Mesa ·and-Newport Beach,
This year the Chamber of Commerce. of Cos~ Mesa is a co-sponsor
of the ev.ent. The wiique welcome to the coastal area is being carried
through by Mrs. Fay Edelblute, president of tile Women's Division of the
Chamber of Commerce of Newport Beach, Mrs. DeMurl Tosh, president-of
the Wonlen's Division of the Chamber of <'.!ommerce of Costa Mesa, Mxs. Betty Townsend, vice princjpal of Corona del Mar High School, and Dr.
Hilda McCartney Newport-Mesa Unified Schoof District·coordinator.
FOr the bolt tour, new teachers wil,1 take buses from Gorona del1Mar
High Scbool,"the orientation fenter. to the Harbo! Master's Dock at 2:30
p.m, oo Wednesday, Sept. 4. · . . , . After a 45-miriute to an hour tour of the harbor, teachers will retµrn
to the high school for aq, informal new teachers reception and refreshments.
Mrs. Townsend, hostess tor the reception, will be assisted by chamber and
ctvie group members. -The 2.00 new teachers will join more than 1,000 teachers already em·
ployed by the district.. Some are first yea~, second year, third year teachers
while others have several years of expenence. They were se.lect¢. from all
· parts of the United States with a sprinkling from every .designated are~.
West Middle West South and East. By design these teachers were selected
becaUse they bring with them the ultimate in training and educational
1experience. · . ,
Matriculating from univ~rsities and coll~ges noted for ~e contribu·
ti.ons to the academic commumty, the newcomers offer a vanety of teach·
ing capabilities. These capabilities will be drawn upon -to·challenge the .re-
luotant learner as well as the average and most advanced students dunng
the 1968-69 school year. ·
Also technically classed as a new teacher this year, since he i~ new
to the area, is Dr. Williain L. eunnipghMl;. H~ became the new supennten-
dent of the Newport-Mesa Unified School Distnct o_n July I. . . .
A community-minded indiVldual, Dr. ~urunngham ~·be 1nvtted. to
participate in the new teacher tour and the informal reception to follow .
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
POLISHING. THE OLD APPLE -One way to "polish the old
apple'' is by inviting new ~eachers like Miss Sandra Mcintyre
(right) to. a luncheon and boat cruise. Mrs. DeMurl Tosh (left)
president of the Women's Divisi~n of the Chamber of Commerce
of-Costa Mesa and Mrs. Faye Edelblute, president of the Women's
Division of the Chamber of Commerce of Newport Beach are CO-.
sponsoring the luncheon and cruise on Sept. 4. More than 200 new
teachers will be invited,to the orientation event.
MenUy, AlllUd U. 1NI NI-CM PIM ll
BEST OF FRIE-NDS -Books can be anyone's best
friend as (left to right) Mrs, James Dowtr. Mrs.
William Stainfortb and Dr. William L. Cunrungham
· . .iell know. Dr. Cunningham will talk about books
in A Quiet Moment, the topic of his speech before
the Sept. 24 luncheon meeting of the Friends of the
Library of both Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
scheduled in the Balboa Pavilion.
New Superintendent
Ft iends ·Book 'Quiet Moment'
The value of books can be measured in many ways.
Most are teachers, some, entertainers and a few , trea·
sured friends.
One group that never underestimates the value of
books is the Friends of the Library. Both Costa Mesa
and Newport Beach branches will meet for a luncheon
at noon on Sept. 24 in the Balboa PaViTion.
Guest speaker fur the event will be Dr. William L.
Cunningham, the new superintendent of the Newport·
Mesa Unified School District. His topic will be A Quiet
Moment.
"Whether it be searching the array <JI books in the
reference section or viewing a small television monitor
in a private study carrel or listening to a magnetic tape
recording or a record with earphones or reading a poem
or enjoying a work of art, the ind{vidualized quiet as·
pect of the pursuit persists. The participant has the in-
dividual enjoyment," said Dr. Hilda McCartney, presi-
dent of the Costa Mesa Friends of the Library. com·
menting on Dr. Cunningham's topic.
The luncheon arrangements have been made by
Mrs. Dorothea Sheeley, librarian of Newport Beach,
Mrs. James-Dowty, president of the Newport Beach
Friends of the Library and Dr. McCartney.
Invitations are extended. to all interested individ·
uals. Reservations for the event can be made by mem·
bers and non members by calling the Newport Beach
Library at 673-1480 or the Costa Mesa Library at 646-
11845 by Sept. 17. .
Libraries have always p;ovided a unique service in
communities all over the Udited States. Lafge, medium
and small, these collectors of organized knowledge have
been present, always willing and ready to guide patrons
on literary adventures from a critique of Homer to
"King's Row," from a discussion of Plato's 11 Republic"
to Ston&'s "Agony and the Ecstacy," or through chil·
dren's books like "Alice in Wonderland," "Wind in the
Willows" and "Little Women."
Libraries in America have been among the first in·
stitutions to develop and promote automation in many
technical library processes. The computer becomes the
versatile tool for cataloguing', inventorying, circulating
and !ltoring information. Miniature microfich.e and mi·
crofilm used with companion micro-reader-printer
equipment, can store, reproduce and make printouts of
one page from a magazine or an entire book.
In all communities. even in those rich in culturaJ
heritage, libraries have become centers for housing and
loaning book and non.book materials. City and county
libraries are adding films. filmstrips, records, art prints
and other multi.use items to their co llections. Larger
libraries are branching out into other media, using in·
dividual dial access retrieval equipment for audio and
visual presentations through magnetic tape system and
television. Libraries have become an integral part of
the total field of information science.
Where libraries and librarians provide specific ser·
vices to the community, Friends of the Library provide
much·needed assistance. The members of th.is group
often participate in many community functions, yet tha
organization itself has the single purpose of aiding lib-
raries. Their fund-raising venture of the year is usuaUy
a book sale including perhaps objects .of art, records.
journals and related items. Often, the groups provide
important speakers or authors lor the belle.fit of COll'l•
munity groups and school s.
Since both Newport Beach and Costa Mesa are in~
eluded within the boundaries of the ~ewport·Mesa Uni·
fied School District, public libraries of both cities are
actively involved in providing service to teachers and
students of the entire district. Last year the two groups
cooperated in implementing the Junior Great Boo k 1
Program in seven schools. Mrs. John Nolan and Mrs.
Loren Heather worked with Dr: McCartney in carrying
<thi:ough the projects. Thi s year there 'is hope of even
greater participation. ·
This 'Checkli.st Charley' Counts One Parley Too Many
DEhR hl'llo t.ANDERS: Marvin and
J have been going together for more
than a year. We are both in our 30s
and Old enough to know what we are
doing. Marvin wu married briefly
five years •go·but it didft't work out
1'wo weeks ago Marvin began to talk
marriage, He made ft.clear that he
wu not .actually proposing, just
.. considering it" becawe there were a
few things he had to find out first.
Tonight he asked me five questions
wtUcb be bad written down on a piece
ol paper. Hett are the questions :
(~) Do you need any dental work
done ?
(2) Do you need any aurgery?
(3) What kind of insurance do you
carry?
ANN LANDERS
( 4') Are you in line to inherit .any
money?
(5) ls there any insanity io your
family ?
I like Marvin very much and we get
along fairly well but these questions
have raised &ome doubt& in my mind.
What do you think? -MISS D.
DEAR MISS : I th!U you don't need
a nut Ute this far a llu1ba1d. One
tblnf Is certain, ft Isn't aece1nry to
ask HIM que1tloa number five. You
already know the an1wer~
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a 13-
year-old girl My pareotl were divorc·
ed last year. My mother didn 't want
me. Neither did my dad but be took
me becau&e there ju.st wasn't any
plaoe for me to go.
My father is an alcoholic . He comes
home from work at 4;30 p.m. and
starta to hit the botUe. By 6 p.m. he Is
atoned. He won't let me turo on the
' light.Ii because it hurts his eyes. I can't
11tudy without lights. We live in a one·
room apartment and I &leep on the
couch-ht has the bed that pulls out
of the wall . The balllroom is down the
hall. We share it' with two other
families. I c..n't study in there. Please
help me. I'm going nuts,
MISERABLE GmL
DEAR MISERABLE' No girl 1bould
have to Uve like tbat. Talk to your
clergyman about a foster home. There
are a1pect1 or tlll1 1etup far wor1e
than tbe Ugbt problem.
DEAR AW'J LANDERS : How old
are you, anyway? In a recent column
you mentl.ont.d the Stanley Steamer. I
haven't beard aD)'Clle mention that oar
in at least 30 yeais. My grandfather
drove one arid I'm n~o kid. l'U be 63 my
next birthday.
Every oow and then you say
something that gives away your age.
\Vhy don't you go straight and take
that picture out ol the paper and put
o\'ie in that looks like you? I'll bet the
picture I'm Jooking at right now was
taken ~ years ago. -NOBODY'S
FOOL
DEAR NO : Simmer down, Pops.
I've heerd of the covered wagon, too,
but that doesn 't meaa I came West in
one. My age 11 no secret. I've just bad
\'50lb birthday and I've never tried to
blde it. I don 't know which, picture
yau're looklat at because my cohuu
A
now appears Jn .more fban 100 papen
and the plctur~1 vary, We send oat
new pictures every two years and If
your paper Is using a muc shot that
looks Ille an oldJe send It to me and
l'U take if up wllb your editor.
If you have trouble getting along
with yoo.r parents • • • it you can't get
them*> let you live your own life, &end
for Ahn Landers' booklet. "Bugged by
Parents? How to Get More Freedom ."
Send 50 cents in coin with yo\U' request
and a long, stamped, self·addressed
envelope .
Ann Landers will b66glad to help you
with your problems. Send them to her
In care ot the DAILY PILOT enclosin&
a stamped, 1ell .. ddressed envelope.
·• --~ o ~ ---·-·-------------·----
\
J4 DAll.Y"PILOT ,.OndQ' I AUgtUt 26, 1968
Afternoon Rites • Orchestra Season Tone
Couple Exchange Vows Set During Bruncheon
Brooke Diano Hurlbut and
Michael Everett Wertman,
•. bolll cra<1uat.. o1 t h •
Univerdty of Southern
ca!llomla, pledaed their
troth before tile Rev. Dr.
· CbarlH Diorenlteld In SL
A n d r e w ' 1 Pretbyterlu
Cburcl!.
The brkk II the d1u11>1<r
of Mrs. 'l'bompoon Hurlbut
ol Newport Beach. Her
buaband.11 parent& a r •
Marine Col. (rel.I and Mrs.
Howvd E. Wertm10 of SID·
lo AM.
Gowned in a candelight
bridal Ntin. akJ.mmer With
n-embroldered. altDC()n la~
bodice and trim aod a
aabrtna neckline, the bride
wa1 eaoorted down the alale
by her uncle, Dr. Lawrence
E. Heim d Redlandt. To her eown WM attached a
catlledro! leJli!h train of
double E•lllsh net ed&ed
with more lace, and she
wore a headpiece o f
ltarbur9t lace sprinkled
with seed peart.i to hold her
illusion veil.
Butterfly orchld11 pink
rose buds and baby's breath
were mingled in her bou·
quet.
· She choae shell p~ cblf·
fon floor lenllh dresses with
loni 1leeve1 and ruffles at
the wrllt for her attendMta.
They carried pint rosebuds
and lavender carnations, ac·
cented by velvet 1treamer
ribbon• of pint a n d
)avender.
the guidance oC O:>nductor
Daniel Lewie. Tile majority
or musician! are residents
'Mle CODCfllltrated effort
required to meet mem·
bersbip deadlines before the
coocett &euon begi.OI Od. 23 will be discussed at a of Orange County.
· brlincbeon 11 a.m. tomorrow The concert sea80n will in·
. by the new~y . appointed elude five Saturday eveniDg
. WC(llen'1 Council of the concerts and five Sunday
Sytnpbooy . Association of 1 ft e r n 0 0 n ma tinee.!I.
. Onioge Go<\nlY.
Misa · Mlµ'Celina Arroues, MembershJp in the Sym-
, ex$1Utive vice ;president of phony A5'ociation also belpts
. the Sympb~y As&ociation, to support the .six free COO·
will preside at the meeting certs for young people and
' in the home ol Mrs. Ray-~e Young Arti.st.s' Audi·
· nioiid Thomps'on, Laguna t i o n s • Information coo-
, Beach, cerning season tickets or
'nte Symphony Orchestra membenhips is available by
of. Orange County is a fully calling or writing t h e
, JB'oles&ional group that will as5ociatioo, m S. Malll,
launCh the new se.~ under Oranie, 547-6165 or 525-1806.
Planning for the aeasoo at
111' bruoeh Will be Newport
B~h reside.nu M' r s •
William R. Mason and Mrs. ' Alan C. Stooema.n.
Others invited to 'the brun-
ch include Mrs.· Harold
Bierma, vice pceaident and
county chairman o'f tickets;
Mrs. Cari Fritze, secretary;
Mn. Willi&m. Kelly, vice
president, Waya aq<t means
chairman; Mrs. Norman
Selaet.s, v I c e president.
public relations; Mrs.
Robert SchWU, vice presl·
dent, county guild chairman,
and N'.rs. Hugh Scallon,
president al the Capistrano
Bay Guild.
Wearing a bandeau of tf\e
same flower. for her head·
piece was Min Lesley
Hurlbut, attending hu sister
11 maid of honor.
Flat pink bows adorned
the hair of bridesmaids the
Mi!ses Lindra Wertm-an, the
bridegroom's sister; ~usan
Tatldt of Newport Beach;
GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION
MRS. LARRY ·DON SCHUL TI
San Diego Honeymoon
.... Phylli! Sch n e Ider of
Aroad.i.a, Chris Leathy of
Red.Landi , Donna Babcock of
Long Beach, and Cherrie
Parker of Redlandll.
Best man was J ohn Veeh
of Santa Ana, while ushers
were Latty Brennan ol
Chino; Stephen Le w is •
Newport Beach; Stephen
Grady, Los Angeles ; and
John Johnston, T o n y
Olamberlain and Michael
Davi!, all of Santa Ana.
Frederick Barnes prt>
vided the organ selections.
A reception attended by
250 followed in the fireside
room. Later a champagne
--MRS. MICHAEL E. WERTMAN
Double Ring Ceremonies
buffet in the home of the •••••••••••••••••••,,.=
2750 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
ift th• C11ll•91 Skoppin9 C1"t''
Now ... for tM first fflM 9"' YN ca
bwy fre111 tM flMCHIS INTllNATIONAL
YAIDAGI f.All .very dey ef till -....Ii.
Moterlal1 tafMffct fro111 -111ffach1...,.
of fine clothl11• from "lo1111d the Worfll."
Come IN yo11 wlll lo•• rtffY lltl1111,.
of lt!!I
JUST ARRIVED!!!
bride's mother honored the f1lil
bridal party and relatives. Wh I D •
In charge of tlle guest book at S QI ng pri" Oro•i•q
waa Mis6 Kristen Heim, the • l
bride's cou sin from MARY DAY,642-4321 t\001'\a\etlil
Com• see the
SIMPLICITY PA mRNS
* * * * *
Redlands. "1 I 'follf C"o\c• "ONIE STO,.. l9Wlnt Centtr
Continues
. for Another
BIG WEEK!
Tandem
SUITINGS
Silk and rayon fabric.
Wrinkle resistanL Ma·
chine washable.
LIMITEO SUPPLY •"II· 2. 98 yd.
$1.75 yd.
* * * *
"Beek-to-School"
in The1• Fine
WOOLS
Fantastic Selection
60" Wide
Nuptial Vows Pledged
In Baptist Ceremony
Alter a trip through __________________ _,.., o w\ni .
northern CalifornJa the COU· TOOAY P•dth hilt, (0511 MIMI, t P.m. \ls.r\&~';o.~ ... ~~ • S.wln9 M«hlMI • P'ettenit $1 80
pie will reside in Pacific Hum11111ton ••ac" To'' ,...,.,. Tr111ti Unk c1u• '" MQ.I •-•h \, __ ;· .. :;:·":;;;.----e LINfl1 e ...._,._ e T1wM4 • yd. Beach ,.ltle'h.rt-AllM khoel, 1 •·"'· LMft -Loc•llc" lmtirm•ll"" •u•ll•b~ e MotloM e Zf PJMll'I e Trl11tinlnts • ______ .;._..,1
• HIWMrf •·ac:~ Jill'• Dll"9hlt'11 by c•lll"' Mr1. ~111 Mc"~"· --
While al USC the bride l 1!MI 1t7 -Mloonle Temol1, 1::111•. -~-~,.~~~· .'._' .::•·:•·c._ _____ !!!!1!!!!1!!!!1!!!!1!!!!1!!!!1!!!!1!!!!1!!!!1!!!!1!!!!1!!!!1!!!!1!!! was a memger of Pi Beta ....... l
Phi sorority while I h e '••-11Vt AllH V•11•Y Chl!>llt of
benedict affiliated w i t h s-1 .1.H11--Miu1o1o v1111 Hl•h
S. Ch ' School, 7::111 1>.m. Honeymooning in Sa n Mrs. Ted Pederson of West igma 1· TOPS Harbor Llthffln -He~r
Diego were Larry Don Covina , the bride's aunt The former Miss Hurlbut ic11oo1. eo.11 ~. 1~ •.m. Schultz and his bride, the . . will continue graduate "''ork ... ,._ i o111 TOPS c1v~ -smith
former Carol Ano Exner The bride IS. a graduate of in education at San Diego r':":~~rv Sdlecl, H11"""''°" k id'!.
who were married in a dou· Costa Mesa High School and State College and her hus--0 ........ 1'" ..._,_ -""""''°"
ble ring ceremony in tile , Orange C_oast Colle~e. Her band will work towards his ~~.;:_1m~:!:,i;;.,~ ~ ..... .._
First Bapti$. Oiurch Of husband 18 .an alumnus of masters degree in business -cG1-. P•" ktlool, cc.11 MIN, •
Costa Mesa. CMHS and also attended at the same college. She was · "·TlioM Alllh1 XI ch.,.11r, 1a11 '""''
OCC be! nJj tin. . '"' '---f A . I f ""' -LoutlClll '""'""'""" I Vllllbll The Rev. Harold Anderson ore e s g Jn "''e a memUCI· o ssrs eens o tiv ce1~,,. Mrs. Clov<I H"'°'' .,,__.su,
ff . ·-· d th · U.S. Army. The newlyweds the Assistance League of • "·"'· o 1c1""'e at e everung will resi·de in Seattle. Redlands. court 11.111 M1rh 1m c111MHt
ritual uniting in marriageJ ;======================:°':~::':'~=·=··:"'="=-=":· ::'M::"'::""::,·· the daughter of Mr. and
WE FASRIOf:.fTHE NEW FRINGE EFFEC~
M rs. Alfred A. Exner of
Costa Mesa and the son of
Mr. and W.rs. Donald
Schultz of Costa Mesa.
Escorted to the altar by
her .fatJJ.er, the bride wore a
floof length gown o f
semiempire crepe. T h e
bodice and full I en gt h
sleeves were covered with
lace aod sprinkled with se-
quins. The crepe and lace
were repeated in two trains
falling from the shoulders.
Her elbow length nylon veil
was caught to a lace and
pearl bow headpiece and she
carried a bouquet of a white
orchid surrounded by red
rosebuds inserted i n t o
gladioli petals.
Miss Suan Mctiernan of
Costa Mesa was ma.id of
honor. She was attired in a
yellow semiempire gown
with a scalloped neckline.
The bodice and !leeves were
of lace. She carried' a bou·
quet of yellow rosebuds in-
serted lrito ·gladi<lli petals.
Her headpiece was a yeUow
bow wittL a mort veil.
Bridesmaids, dressed in
lime green, were Miss
Paulette Danie\90n of Costa
Mesa. W..iu Linda Schultz,
the bridegroom's 1ister, and
Misa; Karen Exner, the
bride's sister.
Best man was James
Schu1tz, the bridegroom's
brother. The br i de's
brother, Alfred Exner Jr.
was an usher. as were Mi-
chael Olson and Fred For·
gie. both of Costa Mesa.
Providing music in the
church decorated with botJ.
quets of white gladioli and
stock were Mn. C le y
Griswold, orga.niJt and Mr!i.
Mary Owenby. soloist. A
trellis behind the minister
was covend with leather
fern and gardenias.
A reception for the 175
v.•edding guests took place in
the youth cmter of the
church. A four·tiered wed-
ding clke topped with two
white dOWI in colors of
while Ind yellow with a
_of.,....wu..,..ed.
The table wu decoralod
wltll a bouquet of yellow
roces.
A11llllne at Ille reception
were ?ld'I. Dale PembtrtM
of Weet OoviOI. U.. bride'•
cou1Jo; Mis.a Debra p....-, another cou.in ;
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Costa Mesa DAILY PILOT l'oday's Clos ln&:
EDI TION N.Y. Stocks
VOL 61 , NO. 205, 3 SECT IONS, 32 PAG ES COSTA MES A, CALIFORNIA ' .
MONDAY, AUGUST 26, "1968 TEN CENTS
OCC Programmed to Pioneer Computer Era
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of ""' o.lb' '*' .....
Orange Coast Junior College District
has charted for itself a leading role in
the coming revolution oC computer
teaching.
Junior college officials have decided
lo link up with UC Irvine, already in
the forefront of the teaching by com-
puter movement.
Orange Ccwit Co.llege will have its
own computer, a highly sophistiCated
third-generation model to be installed
on campus in December.
But the two institutions will seek
joint financing for their twin computer
programs, and a Ire ad y are
cooperating in writing computer
language.
Computel'IS at both institutions have
other uses. For instance, the new
Orange Coast College model, which
will replace two lesser computers, will
be used for in5tructin& 700 data pro·
cessing students ln computers and for
administrative tasks like preparing
the district budget, grades and
transcripts.
11le new cooperative program is in
computer assisted instrtiction. It is a
method of actually replacing the
teacher for certain tasks. The student
si~ at a typewriter-like console and
aoswers an automatic typewriter.
'Ibe t)"Jle'Wl'iter is wired to the cen·
t.ral computer which causes ii to re&·
pond according to a programmed
lesson stored in its memory.
Temporarily, until Orange Coast
College's computer arrives, t b e
Orange Coast and Golden -West cam·
puses will be wired into the UCI .com-
puter with three terminals, as the
automatic typewriters are called.
The new computer initially will have
2S terminals, 15 at OCC and 10 at
Golden West.
Through ita relationship with UCI,
the junior college district hopes to
make its computer teaching set up a
major regional program. The facility
will be available to anyone lrom high
school youngsters to students at four
year colleges.
"An yone who can pay the terminal
and distance rate will be able to use
it," says J ack King, direct.or of the
district's computier program.
To drum up interest, -the district
plam to teach a symposium in com·
to es tore u
Humphrey Lead Shal{y
Many Demos Talking of Johnso1i, Kennedy
CHICAGO (AP) Hubert H.
Humphrey held a heavy -but highly
uneasy -lead for the presidential
nomination today as a dee-Ply divided
Democratic party headed Into its 1968
convenUon.
The Vice President had in his hip
pocket two-thirds of the first-ballot
votes needed for the top prize, but
most of the talk , and much of the
DAILY PILOT Pi.t. ~' lM ,IJftl
Best Hippies in Costa Mesa?
Not in the strictest sense of the word, but you've got to have real
hip power to win all-city hula hoop honors. Four winners in Costa
Mesa Recreation Department competition (from left) are Suzanne
flolliday, 11 ; Timothy Maxwell, 7; Corey Poe, 9, and Joe Estrada.
11, all o! whom go next to regional contest, prior to national event
in Los Angeles.
Army Doctors Say Jke's
Condition 'Unchanged'
\V AS l11NGTON (AP) -Army doc-
tors reported today that former Presi·
dent Dwight D. Eisenhower has shown
''further increase" in heart irritability
since Sunday and remains in critical
condition .
Doctors at Walter Reed Army
tlospilal said that extra heart beats
have been occu rring with "Increasing
frequency" since S~ay.
But they added that there had been
no rurther episodes ol "rapid heart ac-
tion ." whicb constitute the more
gerious symptom of his condition.
The hospital issued this morning
bulletin:
.Jl'i•Gen. Els8lhower has 1 how n
further increase 1n heart Irritability
since yesterday. Eltra beats have
been occuntng With increasing (tt.
quency. However, tbere have been no
further episodes of rapid heart action.
"The general'• cood1Uon remains
critical.
"He enjoyed a light breakfast thl1
morning and ccmt.inucs to rest com·
rortably."
A fTU!SfJcal bulletin Sunday nig l)js11id
J:.:isenliJwer·s condition re m a' :I e d
' 0 essentially unchanged" fro m the
day's earlier reports.
The afternoon bulletin had reported
"no new instances of the rapid heart ac-
tion:
The morni ng bulletin had said the
''increased heart irritability -extra
beat -which began Saturday a.m.
has persisted. through the day and
night and there have been 1everal
episodes of rapid heart actJon re·
quiring further treatment:;."
The bulletin added that Eise11hower
"rested comfortably during the night
and Is in good spirits this morning.
Mrs. El.sellhower continues to visit the
general brieOy at frequent intervals.''
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock mar•
ket continued higher thi& afternoon in
moderate trading. Gains outnumbered
lo.sscs by some 300 lss~es on the New
York Stock Exchangt'. lSce quotationt.1"
Pa£es 10.JJ ). ·!'
enthusiasm were for t\VO non-can·
didates hundreds or miles from this
fortified city: Lyndon B. Johnson and
Edward M. Kennedy.
The President, home on the ranch
near Johnson City , Tex., was giving nB
hint on whether he'd even show up in
Chicago -though his fiOth birthday
anniversary tomorrow offers a
dramatic opportunity to put real
steam behind a budding "Dr.aft
Johnson" movement.
Sen. Kennedy, like Johnson an avow·
ed non-candidate, was relaxing at
Cape Cod. Mass., but a perhaps more
insistent "draft" movement appeared
to be surfacing here.
Forces in the Texas delegation are
ready to put Johnson's name in
nomination . Former Gov. Michael
DiSalle of Ohio is ready with Ken·
nedy's -and this morning important
new strength turned the senator's
way.
Longshot presidential h 0 per u 1
Geore:e S. McGovern said if Kennedy
"called me and talked to me directly
and said that he wanted the nomina·
tion I would probably throw my sup-
port to him."
McGovern, a South Dakota senator,
added. however: "I don't expect that
to happen. I don 't know about any
Kennedy movement."
A second liberal senator from the
midwest, Ph.ilip Hart of ~1lchigan, en·
dorsed Kennedy for the nomination -
and Sander Levin , chairman of the
Michigan delegalioo. said he would
"lean to Kennedy iI Kennedy becamo
a candidate."
·"..(;( * *
Poll Shows Nixon
Leads Humphrey,
Trails McCarth y
NEW YORK (UPI) -A nationwide
poll of voters inWcates that Richard
M. Nixon could defeat Vice President
J1ubert H. Humphrey but wou1d lose to
Sen. Eugene J, McCarthy.
nut the poll , completed two days
before the Democratic National Con·
vention, showed that the respondents
favored Humphrey as the Democratic
candidate by a narrow margin over
1-lcCarthy.
Sindlinger & Co. Inc. conduc~ed the
poll among 1,696 voters by telephone
Thursday through Saturday.
The poll showed llumphrey prefer·
red for the Democratic nomination by
2'>.11 percent of the voters questioned,
McCarthy by 2.3.5 percent. Sen.
Edward ~1. Kennedy by 10.7 percent,
President Johnso n by 10.6 percent,
Sen. George S. McCGovern by 4.2 per·
cent, and George C. \Vallace by .4 per.
cent. The remaining 24 .8 percent ex·
pressed no opinion.
When the two leaders were matched
against Nixon. the Rep u b I i c a n
presidential nominee h ow e v e r ,
McCarthy emerged as lbe ooe who
could defeat Nixon .
Jn a Humphrey-Nixon race, 41 .5 ptr·
cent Of the voters polled picked Nixon
to 31.3 percent for Humphrey and 13.2
percent for Wallace, a third-party can·
dldate, while 8.1 percent had no opi-
nion and 5.4 percent wanted none Of
the three.
Jn a McCarthy·Nlxon. ra~e. 42.0 per·
cent of the respondentl c h o s e
McCarthy to 36.5 percent for Nixon
and 11.1 percent for \Vallace, with 6.8
percent having no opinion and 3.6 per·
cent wanUne none of the three .
U'I Ctbltl'l\911
"Ivan Go Honae; Natasha Wants You'
Irreverent Czechs taunt Russian occupation troops with signs like
this in Prague window. Among graffiti appearing all over Czech
capt!i.al are messages hinting Russians are desired more at home
than they are in Czechoslovakia.
UPI C:.ltl ...... 11
RUSSIAN IN PRAGUE -Youthful Russian soldier is confronted by
Czech citizens asking him why Soviet Union invaded their country.
Re sidents Asked to Help
Plan for Schools Forum
Persons interested ln the well being
ol. Newport-Mesa Unilied Schoo I
District are tnvited to meet Tuesday
afternoon to 1ay pLans for a Com-
munity Forum on SOOools.
The pubUc forum with school board
members will be neld at 7:30 p.m.
Sept. 11 at Corona d•I Mar lllgb
School.
. r;rhe meeting for Tuesday wa1 called
rt;, .J amcs Wood to handle preliminary
planning. To be decided Is how to
gather an audience fvr the forum &lid
What ~ld be on the agenda.
Wood, who challtnged the school
board to llold the JNbllc forum ha1 in·
vited several persons to the planning
session and urges anyonCl else in·
terested to come.
,.,he meeting w.JIJ be •l 4 p.m. at hi~
o!tlet.Mesa Verdel Realty, 23$0 Mesa Vcrd~~rive, Costa Mesa.
puter instruction next summer. U it Is
done, it will be necessary during the
next year to prepare persons to teach
the sym;>osium.
Jurµor college trustees this week ap.
proved submission of an appll~ation
for a $90,000 federal grant to cover
tooling up fur the symposium. No local
money is mithorized should the ap-
plication be turned down.
The new Orange Coast College com·
(See COMPUTER, Page %)
ce
Also Agree
On Troop
Withdrawal
:..
MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet gov·
emment has agreed to recognize the
regime of Czechoslovak Communist
Party Secretary Alexander Dubcek
and to griidually withdraw troops
from Czech soil, Communist sources
said today.
The agreement came alter four
days of crisis talks between the So-
viet Politburo and President Ludvik
Svoboda of CzechO!llovakia, Dubcek,
Premier Oldrich Cernik and most
other members of the Czech party pre-
sidium.
Official Communist sources said the
Czech leaders were expected to fly
back to Prague tonight.
The heads of the other four Warsaw
P act powers with troops in Czechoslo·
vakia -Poland's Wladyslaw Gomul·
ka, East Germany's \Valter Ulbricht,
Bulgaria's Todor Zhilcov and Hunga.
ry'i; Janos Kadar -were reported
waiting in the wings in Moscow while
the Czechs and Soviets worked out
their agreement.
Sin~ the dispatch o{ the Warsaw
Pact troops into Czechoslovakia was a
joint decision , agreement to pull them
out also "'Duld require collective en-
dorsement.
The settlement appeared to have
come just in time to prevent violent
clashes between frustrated Soviet
troops and Czechoslovaks who have
taunted them since they moved in a
week ago.
Dubcek and Cernik, denounced by
the Soviet press as "traitors" to com·
munism, were taken into custody by
Soviet occupation forces shortly after
the invasion.
Sources said Du~k went along re·
luctantly with the plan for the gradual
withdrawal of the Sovlet and other
Warsaw Pact troops from Czech soil.
They said the leaders of the Kremlin
first reached agreement with Svoboda
and Cernik and then Dubcek finally
went aloni·
Diplomatic sources aaid earlier the
Soviets were asklng a heavy price for
an end to the octupation of Czechoslo·
vakia. But Yugoslav and Czechoslovak
reports said the Russians already had
agreed to'":a step by step withdrawal of
occupation troops.
The re.ports circulated as Soviet and
Czechoslovak leaders held their fourth
day or crisis talks in the Kremlin.
. . Orange
Weather
The weatherman has a dam1l
outlook for the Orange Coast
Tuesday -like cloudy with
occasional showers -while the
mercury .stays in the 75 range.
INSIDE TODA\'
Front ru11111:r Gard1u1r Cox
sails into the home1tretch of t11t
Oll""J>fo yachting tnaZ. today
with two other skippers in cloie
pur1uit. See Boating, Page 25. ' lotllllt ti """"" 11 (tllflnli. • NlllMtl M.ws ....
Cl1nlltM H-11 Or11ttf ("""1 t C.-lu It tJ .... 11 ,_... 1t
CrtU_.. II Stoeltol M.... U•lt Dttlll NtllcH t $ilM1t ll·M
a•rtwt•I Pl.. JI llKll MM11th 1•11 •11twt1lt1mflll It Tt lfollWlll lt ,..,_, 1•11 T!llllltrt 11
Pk'11 Cllh t W11IJM• 4
.... 01111"'' tJ '""" wtlllt ti Allf I.A"*" lJ Wlflf Ntwt t•t ,.,.,Ill\" ' Wll4'q 0.11\t H . .
-
-----------------------------------------~------~
• '
-, .. ------------
I DAILY PILOT
Five IGlled
-In Weekend
Accidents
Ftve-peroons, lncllldlni a Corona-dot
Mar woman, died in Oran&e County
weekend tr&Ulc to m a r k one of the
bloodiest two-day period> of the yeor.
'Ibo-:
~ Berc. ~ 218 N. Jasmine
Ceanty Traffic
Dtatlt Toll
Ave., Corcn1 del Mar
lllfl
131
Merrell Dun PuIIWI, B. 920 W: Cub·
boa SI., SO.ta Ana
Willlau U. Fowler, 54, I.As Angeles
Jolm Pillon, U, 12B81 Olympia Woy,
SonlaAna
Melvin C. Stew.art, 24, Hawaiian
Gardens
Tb< Pulllfm boy wu killed Saturday
when the pick·UP truck in which he
was riding was struck from the rear
at Brirtol Street and Segerstrom
A venue in &mta Ana.
Fowler d.Jed Sunday when be lost
control of hJJ: cm on Esperanza Road
near Fairmont Boulevard in the Yorba
Linda area. Police a.aid he ran of1 Ute
road, over corTeded and swerved
acro5S agam. hitting a power pole.
The Pillon boy and Mrs. Berg of
Corona del Mar were killed Saturday
morning at Dyer Avenue and Red Hill
Road in Tustin. They were ejected
from the collldlng cars, police said.
Stewart was dead on arrival at
South Coast Community Hospital
Saturday when hi• car slammed into
the center divider of the San Diego
Freeway north of Ortega Highway 1 of ..
ficers reported. He was alone and no
other car was involved.
* * * Mesa Man Hurt
As Car Tears
Through Garden
A Costa Mesa man suffered multiple
injuries early today when his car
drifted into the wrong lanes of Vlc·
torla Street. bounced through a yard
and collided with 1 telephone pole.
Dedmon E. Wooldridge. 39. of 989
Victoria St., was taken to Ho~g
Memorial Hospital, suffering facial
cuts. broken teeth and possible in·
ternal injuries.
He was transferred from there to
Orange County Medical Center after
examination.
Costa Mesa police officer Dave
Sorenson was watching nearby when
Wooldridge's car tore out a rock
garden at the home of Gordon R.
Snelling, at 1119 Victoria St., and hit
the pole.
Officer Sorenson e s t i m a t e d
Wooldridge's speed at 50 miles per
hour when he left the roadway and pil·
ed up.
A Newport Beach v.·oman was also
Injured oYer the weekend when the car
ln which she was riding collided with
one driven by an elderly Costa Mesa
man who was making a lert turn.
Diane Tracas. 21, of 1"67) 45th St., is
In good condition at Hoag Memorial
Hospital today with lacerations and a
fractured right leg.
Police said she was riding v.ith John
P. Vaszarl, 22, of Los Angeles on
Saturday, when the UCLA student's
car hit one driven by James L. Brit-
tain, 72, of 1741 Pomona Ave., at the
intersection of Newport BouleYard and
17th Street.
The Vaszari oar was northbound and
Brittain was turning left from south-
bound boulevard lanes onto 17th
Street, investigators said.
DAILY PILOT
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. I
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I
Hy THOMAS FORTUNE
ot ~ O•ltJ l"Mlf Sl11f
"Next year I think I'm going to
learn instead of goofing off.''
The reformed school hater had just
finished an unusua1 summer class.
Older student.s with a liking for school
had taught him to gain satisfaction
from learliing.
Thirly Costa lt1esa youngsters with
Mesa Woman
Pleads Guilty
To Drunk Rap
.. , hate school" attltudet: 'Were taken
under the wing by studen' tutors who
sbowed them &chool can b~ fun.
The exposure caused 'a n o t h e r
classroom slouch to remark:
"U mp.de me see when you get your
work done it's more fun."
Joan Caldwell. learning analyst for
Newport-Mesa schools, organized the
summer get-u:clted-about·school pro·
gram. 1t was held at Maude Davis
Intermediate School during the five·
week regular summer session.
Miss Caldwell picked SO second
through sixth graders who she thought
to be intelligent but turned off on
school, The youngsters 1 came from
Sonora Elementary where she was a
cou'nselor last year.
She put them in a classroom 10 at a
time with five high school juniors and
seniors hired as tutors.
BIGGEST CHARACTER OF ALL -Polly'' Ark,
entered by Polly Pierce, was judged "Best Charact·
et Boat" in 8th annual Character Boat Parade Sat·
urday in Newport Harbor; An estimated 135,000
persons jammed shoreline along parade route to see
40 entries. Some eager yoWlgsters leaped into bay
for better view.
A Costa Mesa woman whOse car col~
lided with four young pede.strlans
faces a Superior Court hearing Aug. 30
after entering a guilty plea to felony
drunken driving in Newport Harbor
Municipal Court.
The older students led them in a
discovery and game approach to
education. For example, an EnglJ.sh
lesson consisted of cutting adjectives
out of magazines and pasting them up.
For an arithmetic lesson they listened
to a tape recording and filled in
Real 1\11
answers. .
The students were not obliged to at-
tend. "Maybe that Is why they all
came," Miss Caldwell said.
135,000 View Over 40 Boat Parade Entries
Mrs. Patricia M. Graham, 49, of 716
J ames St., was released on her own
r ecognizance pending the Superior
Court date when a hearing will be set
for probation and sentencing.
The Galifornia Highway Patrol said
Mrs. Graham was driving a car which
struck down four girls while they were
standing at a traffic island Qn Pacific
Coast Highway in Corona del Mar.
She sent letters to parent.'! of 30
students. and every one of them
enrolled tbeir child. "They were pretty
well acquainted with me from my
role-playing drama groups at Sonora,"
she said. By BRUCE BENSON
ot "" o.ur '""" Sllff
A big, black Lincoln with out~f-state
license plates rolled from Balboa
Island onto the Newport Harbor ferry
boat Saturday afternoon, just in time
to see a vessel come floating by with a
crew of Vikings.
Behind It was a 70-foot motor yacht
with a combo calling themselves the
"'Retrogressive Five11, putting out
melodic strains of "Avalon."
The driver of the black Lincoln
stared nonplussed at his wife, then
began studying a road map, hoping to
get his bearings.
The two tourist.a had arrived in
Newport Beach in the midst of the
eighth annual Newport H arbor
Chamber of Commerce Character
Boat Parade, wit.Dessed by a n
estimated 135,000 people jamming the
shoreline.
,Additional thousands took to the
water in practically anything that
would float to get closer looks at the
more than 40 strange and gaily
decorated parade entries.
The character boats included a
ftoating Island with thatched hut,
waterfall, volcano and hula girls.
There was also a vastly shrunken
From Page J
COMPUTER. • •
puter does involve local tax money. It
will be leased at a cost of $20,000 to
$25,000 per month. Purchase is not
practica1, said King, because a
generation of computers becomes
obsolete about every four years.
Supt. Norman Watson said the
prime justification for the computer is
for use in the data processing courses.
Not h&vlng an up.to-date computer is
like having auto shop students work on
a Model T Fon!, he said.
It Is expected that tnrough the af·
filiation with UCI, grants and foun·
daUon support will be forthcoming to
reduce the local C06t. Watson is
hopeful the computer wlll be funded
100 percent from outside sources.
The federal government tnd Na·
tional Science Foundation have said
they prefer to underwrite joint com·
puter projects involving institutions of
di!!erent levels, King said. Junior col·
leges are ocieoted to instruction while
universities tend toward emphasis on
research, he suggested.
Eleven Junior college instructors
already have written lessons in the
computer language for use in courses
tllis fall.
Frank Suttora
Rites on Tues day
Sentices will be held Tuesday for
Frank G. Sutlora, a pioneer resident
of the Harbor area who died Friday at
Beverly lrtaoor Convalescent Jiospltal
in Costa Mesa. Jte was 82.
~tr. Suttora, owner of Frank Suttora
f'i&h Market and Liquor Store in
Newport Beach from about 1007 until
1950, came directly to Newport from
Austria to ftnd • home for hil funily.
Latu he returned to Austria to bring
his wik and children to the area.
Services will be hekl at 10:30 a .m. at
Westr:lilf ~I wider the dired:lon of
WestcU!f Cbape:l Mortuary. Interment
.... 111 follow at Holy Sep u I c be r
C...mry.
Mr. Sut.tora of 300 He.sttt St., Costa
Mtta, 11 .survived by a t ori , Tony.
~lm : three daughters, Mr1. A.Ma
Undst)', Mrs. Alene Carlch, Colta
Mt18a, and Mrt. Joan Doore, Ventur•:
and 15 gr andclllldml. t
version of the Queen Mary.
Even politics got into the parade as
a group of somber-looking fellaws in
World War I vintage uniform,, pu~d
along in a boat bearing ensigns that
read, "Remember the Pueblo" and
"Don't Give Up the Ship."
The theme of the 21h·hour parade
was "Adventure at Sea" and winner of
the theme award was Rex Bixby's
boat, Brandy. In addition to a huge
brandy .snifter planted amidships, the
boat was occupied by large New·
foundland dogs.
WiMer of the LeaJdn' Timbers
award was the 3C)..foot model of the
Queen Mary. She was entered by J oe
Beek, owner of tbe Balboa Island fer-
ry and secretary of the State Senate.
The Vi.kings were aboard the Espita
Mar, entered by W. C. Peltier. While
not much could be sald of their
seamanship, the crew did manage to
walk off with the Swaviest Swabs
award.
The Bilgy Binnacle award went to a
barge decorated as a floatin& bland
and tiUed, "Paradise."
The floating float, entered by
Newport National Bank, carried dan·
cing girls and South Seas decor. The
' men aboard were visibly unhappy over
the parade corning to an end.
Amidst a flurry of live doves and
animated animals, the Island Princess
of Richard Parrish got the Loose
Screw trophy.
Musician David Rose's Norwegian.
built steamboat Koberhavn copped
the Wheel, Steam and Bell Award.
Other winners were Polly's Folly for
best character boat, laden with stuffed
animals, by Polly Pierce; Walrus tug,
for Dirty Old Manifold Trophy, with
hula glrls, by Orange County Sea
Scout Base; Michigan tug. for Ancient
Mariner Award. by Dick Shaw, and a
houseboat, for Big Toot Award, with.a
liye band aboard, by the Newport
Harbor Junior Chamber of Commerce.
The "Retrogressive F ive" bounced
along with selections of aneient music
from the 20'&, causing one little boy on
an inner tube to yell as they passed
by'
''Don't you know anything besides
that junk?" However, the combo's ego
was bolstered a minute later when a
heavy set man in his late 40's, sitting
on a dock ln an easy chair, yelled out,
"Boy, that's my kind of music, fel -
las," his foot and belly bouncing up
and down in tempo.
One of the girls was dragged or toss·
e<1 severa1 feet in the accident and still
remains hospitalized at Ho a g
Memorial with injuries 0£ the spine,
abdomen, forearm and pelvis.
The patient, Debbie Zimmerman, 12,
of 4607 llampden Road, Cameo Shores,
was reported in good condition this
morning.
She was struck July 24 along with
Lisa Nunis, 12 , of Laguna Beach, and
~ilmberly Davis, 11, and her sister,
Laura, of Corona del Mar.
The three girls suffered le ss serious
injuries, although the Laguna Beach
resident was released from the
hospital on crutches.
Mesa Planners
Meet Tonight
A short agenda mostly comprised of
items held over from a meeting two
weeks ago will be considered tonight
by the Costa Mesa Planning Com·
mission.
Parent.s later endorsed the summer
program. "I've never seen R. so
enthusiastic. He seems more sure of
himself," said one. "I hope the school
district will give J . a chance every
summer," said another.
Newport-Mesa school district paid
$750 salary to Miss Caldwell and $1.85
an hour to the student tutors out of its
hot idea fund.
Miss Caldwell said she hopes the
program \\'ill be continued after school
hours during the regular school year.
She has suggested that industry in the
community be asked to underwrite her
plan for straightening out th e
academically alienated students.
She said she has told the school ad-
ministration she would Uke to see the
youngster-to-youngster a p p r o a c h
made l1M!l of in a big way. This is the
way, she thlnk.s, to keep student.'!
soured on school from becoming
classroom cut ups or non-performing
sitters. Other students, she believes,
are the best potential force for getting
them excited and performing again.
Newport-Mesa school ad-
ministrators are considering her pro-
posal. They are evaluating now the
summer program. To help them, Miss
Caldwell had her tutors keep a diary
of comment& by the 1tudents.
Girl Rescued From Surf
Most items on the 7:30 o'clock
schedule are routine, except for a
variance seeking reduction of required
parking for a proposed restaurant and
bar and a mobile home lot conditional Court Hearings
Set for Mesans
use permit. .
Week Ago Still in Coma
The planning st.ail recommends
denial of reduction of seven spaces for
parking at Kelley\s Prime Steaks, cur-
rently under construcUon at 1927-31
Harbor Blvd., in a commercial zone. Continuances have been granted tn
preliminary hearings for seven Costa
Mesa hippie-types arrested in a double
drug raid July 31 at two communal
homes.
A l!t-year-old Lancaster girl remains
in serious condition at Hoag Memorial
Hospital today, still unconscious after
being washed out p&;t the breakers at
lluMington State Beach one week. ago.
Phylllil Echenique, who was picked
up unconscious by a lifeguard boat
after she was caught in a riptide in a
stretch of public beach, where no
lifeguards were on duty, Is in the in-
tensive care unit "now breathing on
her own," a hospital spokesman said.
The girl's uncle, Frank Webber, of
2857 Stromboli, Cost.a. Mesa. sald
Phyllis and hU dau·gbter, Patricia,
also 15, were "wading, I'd guess just
over their knees," In the aurl near
Brookhurst Street Aug. 19.
"EvtdenUy a riptide caught them
and carried them out past the
breakers,'' be said. "My daughter had
the presence or mind to remain ca!m.
But Phyllis must have tried to light
it."
Webber's older daughter. Janette.
21, saw the two girls struggling fr om
shore and ran to find a lifeguard.
"There weren't any in the area, so
she had to run to the snack bar, and 1
guess they called the patrol boat," the
girl's uncle went on.
Patricia llad let the tide carry her ,
he said, and she was safe when the
boat arrived, but Phyllis was un·
consciOu.s, floating face-down in the
water.
Webber said he later called the state
beach lifeguard st.aUon to ask why
Harbor Schools
Slate Signups
It's time for parenU of new students
to Newport-Mesa Unified Sc h o o I
District schools to begin signing up
their youngsters for tbe falL
Parellt$ sllould call their local school
to check on Umes for registration.
Schools are listed wldcr 14Schools -
Public" In th< telephone directory.
Cblldml entertnc kindergarten thl~
fall must be 1ive years old by rtt!Xt
Dec. 2. Parents must tunWh proor of
birth and poUo lmmuni;ation at the
time of registration.
Parent.s who pre·registered their
children last sprini. are requested by
the school district to please call their
l<>clll scllool and verily.
School beclns &.pt. IO tllls year.~
guards were not on duty at that part of
lhe beach.
A supervisor told him all two miles
of state beach are not always manned,
especially on the light-crowd days, like
Monday.
Webber maintains, however, "there
should be someone there, especially
on days when there's some danger."
A week ago, the county was pounded
by the season's super surl, which rose
to 18 feet heights along the Huntington
Beach st1oreline.
Beach supervtsor Glen Lavine said
signs are posted in the unprotected
areas warning surfers lifeguards may
not be on duty.
Norman Finn, of Foremost Motors
Inc., Compton, is seeking a conditional
use permit to open hls business at 1425
Baker St., a former used car lot,
because his lease is expiring in
Compton.
The lot' would include boats, travel
trailers and other items taken in trade
for mobile homes, Finn says.
Boy Electrocuted
RICHMOND (UPI) - A 12.yetr.old
swi mmer was electrocuted Saturday
when he touched a live electric wire
after emerg1ng from San Pablo Bay.
Brothers Jack and Gary Hahn, both
19, of 288 Victoria Sl, are held in
Orange County Jail in lieu of '6,2.50
bail each and face hearings this
Thursday.
The remaining five persons, ln·
eluding three girlJ, are due to appear
In Harbor District Judicial Court Sept..
18, to enter pleas on their involvement
in the case.
Drugs and cash worth more than
$2,000 were seized ln the double raid at
2019 Pomona Ave ., and the Victoria
Street address.
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Reetls
BY
WILLIAM
REED
• • •
In the Wind
Exchange Club members lunched
Thursday at the Boys Club and di,s..
covered why there are Boys Clubs
and what the club contributes to
the community by providing a
place for boys only.
Club Director Pat Downey em~
phasized that be and the clubs are·
in the business of promoting juven·
ile decency and have a few tricks
up their collective sleeves to aid in
the effort.
Downey did put in a pitch for aid
for the community. He pointed out
that the difference between a full
erogram and none at all is about. 5
c-ents per day per boy . He said
sponsors are needed at $18 yearly
(o see that a boy has full benefit
lrom the Boys Club.
* . Boys pay $1.50 per year dues. It's
1wt much and most every boy can ~ome up with the money. If not,
:;omeone will provide it.
~The full program includes wOO(J.
working, boxing, physical fitness
testing, crafts, weight training,
(Qatball, rock working, sewing,
judo (for the boys who take sewing,
l guess) cooking, flower crafts,
soccer and games such as box
.tiockey, pool and checkers.
, ·Every effort is made to allow the
Qoys to accept the Boys Club as
their own, ,...Downey told the Ex-
cl;langeites. "We have some equip-
ment. including an extensive wood
\vorking shop, and the boys do use
everything.''
* There have been some special
events too, including a sleep over
and a snowball fight. Planned ·soon
are a Halloween party, turkey
shoot, pie throwing auction, a ham
shoot and a Christmas party in
December.
·· There will also be a camping
tfip, a trip to the snow country, and
a· visit to Disneyland. Pat has full
\11for1nation on the activities and on
h'ow the dads of the community can
l,lecome an integral part of the club
operation despite the busy lives we
all lead. The club is at 319 York·
lown Ave., Huntington Beach.
Bands to Battle
At Kiwanis Luau
; "'llouse of Noah," "Independent
Loves " and "Sweet and Sours" will
wage 'a music battle Labor Day as
part 0£ the evening entertainment of
the first annual F ountain Valley
Kiwanis Club Luau.
Club President Paul Berger an-
nounced the contest, which is to rock
the Fountain Valley High School
cafeteria from 8 p.m. on.
·: Tickets are $1 eaoh for the Battle of
the Bands or $2.25 which includes
everything m the day-long community
celebration.
.Orange County
State's No. 2
The state Friday released figures
shO'"-'ing Orange County to be the se·
~d largest county in the state. with
G,316,800 residents, as of July L
: The total state population, 19,782,000,
was 304 ,000 over the previous year's
Jotal. The greatest growth was in Los
·Angeles County with a total count of
,,101,400, 64,100 over the previous
<ota l.
: The new figures for other major
~ountics included San Diego, ~·ith
l .297,200; Alameda. 1,069,900; Santa
Clara. 1.011.900, which was over the
fnillion mark for the first time; and
~n Francisco, 748,700.
A Little Peace and Quiet
Amid . all the world's p~blems -Vietnam, Czechoslovakia -this
lone ~sherman found a bit of tranquility today beside Tidal Basin in
Washington, D.C. Jefferson Memorial provides backdrop.
400 Flee Czechosloval{ia,
Tell of Terro1· iI1 Prague
VIE NNA (U PI) -Four-hundred
persoll5 including 245 Amerk:ans fled
occupied Prague in a special train to
neutral Austria last week and told of
watching ''the terrible, terrible thing
that happened to Czechoslovakia."
They got off ti.he special 12-car train
at Franz-Josef railroad station rumpl-
ed and exhausted from the tension Of
the Soviet bloc invasioo.
Soviet troops waved the train
througih as it approached t b e
Austrian border, they said.
The refugees, including 33 Cana·
dians, 37 Czechoslovaks, 10 West
Germans and those of 19 at.her na-
tions, spoke again and again of their
admiration for the Czechoslovaks.
BURNED OUT TANKS
David Murphy, 30. of CanJblidge,
Mass., a Slavic languages summer
student at Charles University jn
Prague, said he saw "burned-out
tanks and tanks with Swa stikas chra'lk·
ed oo them.
"The Czechs are behaving well,"
Mwphy ooid. "They kept telling me ,
'Remember what you see.' "
"l saw overturned t:ru<:ks and a tank
-a BUigarian tank -in a ditch,'' said
Harry Stanley of Los Angeles. "\Ve
saw Czech flags flying at half mast to
indicate mourning and also black
Oags.
"Women were crying in th e
streei5," he said.
".A.s we traveled on," said Mrs.
Stanley, "at one town ttie people
whistled. At anot>ber town, they threw
bread &Jd salt at the Soviet troops,"
In much of Eastern Europe, an offet·
ing of bread and salt means welcome
but to how it meanis the opposite.
"l heard the so.Jdiers open fire . A
took went into a house and hurt IO
people," Mrs. Stanley sa·id. "Then the
banks Wouldn't let the ambuk1nces get
by."
HEARD BULLETS
"I found out we'd been invaded
when J heard airplan" overhead and
machine gun bullets." said William
Adams of Han<'lulu, a delegate to a
Prague geological congress.
"I was standing in front of my
Prague hotel looking up at the
museum on St. Wenceslas Square," he
said. "From the restaurant opposite
the museum came a couple of shots
and you could see the smoke rising up.
"11tis was the resistance," he said.
;,It was quickly suppressed by a bar-
rage of machine gun bullets. The in-
formation I received from some
Czechs was that ooe of the resistance
members had been killed and anotber
one arrested."
J ohn Blackman, 17, of Sunnyvale,
Calif., got off the train with Leah
Balabanoff. 17, a pretty long-haired
brunette from Arcadia. Calif.
"I first le arned of the invasion at 4
o'clock in the morning when the planes
started zooming real close overhead. I
didn't feel too good."
DESTROYED FILM
"Soviet troops came inside our
hotel," said Blackman. "We'd been
leaning out the window taking pie·
tures. They took all our film and
destroyed it."
Dr. Frank Maresh of Downey, Calif.,
and Mrs, Ruth Maddox of South
Milwaukee, Wis., were on a 12~ay bus
tour of the Tatras Mountains when it
happened.
"\Vhen our bus driver told us at
breakfast that the allies were invading
Czechoslovakia, 1 thoug1lt he meant
the western allies," said Mrs. Maddox.
"But he had to explain it was their
eastern allies."
"I felt terribly sorry because they
are wonderful people."
Mrs. Theodoce Downs, wife of the
curator of earth science's at Los
Angeles Natural HJstory Museum,
wept.
"I fee l extremely sorry for the
Czechoslovak people," she said. "They
are all very, vuy unhappy."
"The Czechoslovak peO}Me wept
openly on ttie streets as the Russian
troops and tanks came marching
through," said Ron Clowes Of Edmon-
ton, Alberta.
"I heard the planes flying over
about 2 a.m.," said John Harbaugh,
42, of Palo Alto, Calif. ''We saw fires
in the distance and could hear a Jot of
machlne gun fire."
Realto1·s llear Dunn
Chamber of Commerce manager
Dale L. Dunn will tell members of the
Huntington Beach Board of Realtors
about "New and Coming Events in
Our City" at the board's 8 a.m
Wednesday meeting at the Sheraton
Beach Inn.
~tudy Cessna Tools
Students Enter Space Age
By SANDI MAJOR
Of TM 01llr Plitt Ii.ff
; Fountain Valley school officials ask-
ed themselves two years ago "Why
3sk youngsters to use a covered
wagon to reach thelr goals when they
ban use an aircraft instead?"
; 'this year, they are e5'efltially giv-
ing the plane to the children.
: It's part of an 18-month study, done
P.itil Ole help of Cessna Aircraft Co.
8nd American Airlines , to develop an
f\,ir Age educaUon program.
~ .The idea ~hind the program is that
1~y's children .a.re .aware of noso
cones, re-entry and the speed al sound
•Od even use those words in their
play.
: ;\VhY not let them use them in their
studie~ too, Ute educators asked ..
The experienced the first year wilh
students at Nieblas School.
This ~ummer , a group of educators
were guests of Cessna on a· flight to
\Vichita, Kan ., to develop a final pro-
gram to test this year in other dist.Tiet
schools. A final evaluation of the pro-
gram next summer is to be done, with
revision incorponited into the Foun·
tain Valley education program.
Rather t.tian being taught as a
separate subject, aviation Is in·
termingled with social science topics.
"In what better way c o u 1 d
youngsters learn complex eoncepts in
economics, for example. than by ex·
posure to h.ig!I interest subjt'cts. like
aviation, Md rel:iUng them to their
nwn city's ecooomic life," said AUL
Supt. ?rtichael Brick.
Today's children may suffer through
math problems, until their interest is
sparked by letting them figure out. the
speed or dlstance traveled by a jet.
To supplement thelr classroom
discussion. the student& took tourg o(
the Orange County airport They built
models of air faciliUes from kits pro·
vided ~ Ole aircraft companies. They
even acted out air termntal sltu:iUons,
taking the parts of ere w men.
passengers and clerks.
Fountain Valley Is one or three
school syMms -with Wichita, Kan.,
and Seminole, Okla. -to participate
iD the pilot program.
'Cesme and Amerl<:ari are bolll con-
tributing $3.500 to t'1e project, so that
it is being te•ted in Founte.in V.a.lley at
rio expense to the district.
•
Mondl)', August 26, 1968 OAIL Y PILOT :J
of Ohje~tions
Minimurn. Size Ordinance Change Due for Debate
Developers and home owners, same
o! whom are opposed to a proposed
Huntington Beach ordinance to in· .
crease Ute minimum size for residen.
tial lots, will have a chance to argue
against it Sept. l .
Hai.f a dozen planners were at the
Tuesday ni!ht planning commission
meeting to argue against the code
change, which would eliminate lot
"averaging" and raise tile minimum
lot size from 6,IXX> to 6,500 square feel
O::>mmissioners delayed action on
the amendment to give other planners
and representatives of home owners
groups a ~hance to discuss the
changes.
Among the protestors Tuesday was
M.aek McC.oy, representing B. A.
Berkus, Los Ange les planner, who
recently got around the 6,000-square.
foot requirement.
Berkus got a variance to COMtruct
65 horn&.: oo 18 acres of waterfront
ltl!ld -which would m.ake each Jot
smaller than the existing mlltimum -
by a~ to add 671 square feet of
open park space to the tract.
Trustees to Sell
School Bonds
In Westminster
Westminster school trustees are
going to sell so me of the approved
bonds while they can -just in case
the proposed Watson amendment to
reduce property taxes carries oo the
November ballot.
"We're not willing to take a chance
on this holding up our building prit~
gram," said School Supt. John Land
Jr.
Trustees have agreed to sell $600 ,000
of the $1.3 million approved by voters.
The Watson Amendment, backed by
Los An,geles County Assessor Philip
\Vatson, as proposed would limit the
amount of tax on property to one per·
cent Of its assessed valuation. Schools
ccmi cWTently tax to five percent, Land
said.
Passage or the amendment "would
mean we could not sell any more o(
our bonds ," the superintendent ex·
plained.
Tile district will be selling its bonds
five months sooner than planned. "We
would not have sold the bonds until
construction of the school got un-
derway," he explained.
The $600,000 will be used for the con·
&truction or Cascade School, the
preliminary plans for which trustees
approved Tuesday night. The school
will he located on a 10.acre lot south of
Bolsa Avenue, between Be a ch
Boulevard and the railroad tracks.
\Vhen averaged with tile space allot·
ted for homes, each lot ttieortically
c<:me to 6,800 square feet.
"He would not have been able to do
it" under the recommended change,
said city Senior Planner Richard
llarlow.
M<:Coy argued against the change,
saying it left "no vehicle for a builder
to take a creative attack." He said
something should be written W. tho
code "W allow for u.moreseen creativo
development#."
Commissioner Roderick R o y e r
.agreed there was "room for further
thought in what you've said."
Devel~r Dennis Martin added ttu:t
increasing the size of lots would in·
crease the cost Of the average b<JIDe
$1.000.
Robert . Galloway , of Galloway and
Assoc., maintained the d!Lnge would
"chatie developers out of Huntington
Beach" O!' "start a drive to pusti the
price of land down, about $4,<XK> an
acre, and the landowner won't "ccept
ttiat."
}\Lrlow, _answering only the charge
a~st the loss of creativ e
de·letopments, ~aid bis department is
working on a "planned devel0pment
zone" idea that would not' "&tifie"-
developers like Berkus.
··If someone with say 40 acres wants
to try something different, he can do
it," even if it violates existing ordinLn•
ces, he said, "but he'll have to main-
tain certain standards.
"rt'' not g~ bo be a blank check."
Councilmen Campaig/i
To Curb City Cleaner~ __
\Vhen is it "time to revolt?" Wtien
Uie "people are rousted. out of bed,"
according to Fo11J1bi.n Valley Vice
Mayor Donald Fregew.
Valley Volunteers
To Push Parks
Bonds ReCJliested
Jo~ountain Valley Parks and Recrea·
tion commissioners are looking for
citizen helpers.
Conunissloner Ro n Shenkman said
today that volunteers are needed on
the newly forn1ed Citizens·for-Parks
Committee whiCh is to canVMs the
Valley for support of the $2 million
parks bond.
City Council last week, ordered the
a 11 • i ~elusive , parks-;development
bond placed on· the Nbvember 5
ge!leNll ballot.
"We're going to need all the citizen
support we can get to pass this," com·
meoted Shenkman today. To pass the
bond must win approval Crom two·
thirds of those who cast votes.
For more information, citiz ens
should contact Shenkman at 962-3242.
F1regeau has joined Councilman Ed
Just to denounce what they describe as
the "crack of dawn" activity of the
city's street-cleaning device.
Just has long been a !oe of early
morlllirlg street cleaning. Fregeau is
joining Just's jOost complained to
fellow councilmen about the loud whir·
ring noises <A. the matfu~ and ttle
clouds of dust that it raises. Fregeau
said he, like Just, had received com4
plaints from residents awakened by
the machirn!.
City Manager James Neal said his
staff is looking into the possibility or
purchasing a street cleaner, one which
is less noisy and more effective.
Swhuming Pool Open
At Wesminster High
Officials of the Westminster Recrea·
lion and Parks Department have an·
nounced that ttie WestrninsteT High
School swimming pool will remain
open daily from 1 to 4:30 p.m through
Aug. 31. ""'
Entry fee !or children 8 to 17 is 25
cents. For thOISe 18 and over the cos&
is 50 cents.
LAST WEEK
TO SAVE ON
INTERNATIONAL
STERLING
•
• g I
Save 8.00, 10.00, 12.00 on place settings
Save 2.00 on individual pieces
Save 2.50 to 4.00 on serving pieces
This is your last chance to take advantage of Bu ffums' big
savings on this famous sterling, Select from fifteen lovely
patterns. Start, add to, or complete your sterling service.
Buy now fo1 future gifts, All prices on lnternational0 Sterling
will increase on Septembe1 7th. So don't delay. Come in now!
Use Buffums'·Silver Club. Nothing down, no intere st
and no carrying charge •. Silve1wa1e.
..._ ______________________________ _.
Newport Cente1 Rl Fashioo Island • 644·2200 • Mon., Tbws., Fii.10:00 till 9:30 Olhe r days 10:90 lill 5:30
I
' ''
-·----·---------------------·---~~-~.l..J
•
'
•
4 DAILY l'llOT
c~ ., 911 DdJ r•• ltMft
Earl Br .. n, a St. Louis au t o
parts company executive has won
a barrel of monkeys. ••t•u never
use that expression again/' s aid
Breen as he pondered what to do
with a barrel filled with five lively
ringtail monkeys he won in a na-
tional contest. He managed to get
rid of one of the animals by offer-
ing It u a door prize at a celebrity
bowling night. •
Brond111 o Pomirontan. puJ>Pil, anoozts
in 1hil cof/t• tvp 1horU11 afkr bdng
born. Br.ond11 MIGi OM of thrte pups
in thf litur. A.U three werr abl4 to
tasilU curl up in.rid~ the cujJ. Own.tr
Andrew Matiftl, of Goldtn Valley.
Minn., said mother and pUps are all
doing fint. • The Princeton, Mo., state High-
way P atrol said Wllllam Lao Prlil-
ble, 16, was parked on a countty
road at night whe n bis car was
struck by ooe driven by Wllllam
Albert Frisbie, his father. Neither
was injured but the father was
charged with careless driving and
the son was referred to juvenile
authorities for improper parking. • Diane Johnson, 17, of White
River JuncUon, Vt., pleaded no
contest to a charge of painting the
bridge over 20 Mile Stream in a
bright pink to which was added red
and blue heart.. Her attorney told
Judge Polmar Aln.worth that the
girl bad told her parents that she
thought the bridge's da~ green
color was horrible. She was fined
$25 and court costs. •
A .2SO-t1ard drive with a 3·iron
wasn't bad goi'ng for a 15·11ear-
old, but the judgf (probably a
non-golfer J was not imprtsted.
He ordered the vouth to f)Otl $1
f or t he window that was broken
by the bait he Md lofted out of
a playground. He further in.
structed t11 e 11outh to do hU
practicing on the driving range
or u1t the golf courae.
•
..
Th e glass di splay case contained
an open Chinese Bible. Scrawled on
the outside of the case was a mes-.
sage written in Chinese. Visitors at
the Disciples of Christ missions
building In Indianapolis, Ind., won·
dered about lhe message for days.
Finally,· Dr. Joseph M. Smith, ex·
ecutive secretary of the United
Christian Missionary Society's de-
partment of East Asia, deciphered
the message. It read: 11Tbis Bible
is upside down."
Monday, J.11911st 26, 1968
26,000 Mobili%ed
Troops Arrive
For Convention
OHICAG-0 (UPI) -Some 7,!00 U.S.
Army toJdier1 have been brought 10
military lnatallaU001 ri!lllillg Chicago.
in case of serious violence during the
Dtmocratic Natlooal Convention open-
. Ing toclly.
security &rTangementa were the
greatest ever for 1udl a meeting.
"1'.ore than 28,000 men bave been
mobWzed to keep the pe-during
the rour-d•Y convention. In the city, 5,600 Natlon»l
Guardsmen were on stand-by duty in
U1Mfies: l,Ollll l«leul agenll IUB'd·
Gov. Godwin's
Daughter Hit
By Lightning
ed hotels and mingled with crowds:
and. Chicago's 11,900 policemen were
OILl.kllO\!t.Sbiltl forJhe convenl\!!n.
Despite l tl"iiigent security al the
convention's main hotel, the Conrad
Hilton, a Milwaukee, Wis., youth was
arrested on tn. rool Sunday night.
Police said that when they took the
youth, ThomM Pet.er Laine, 19, to bis
aut.o, they found a .22 caliber rifie in
the trunk. J.a1ne told police and secret service
ateots he did not know the ri!le was in
the trunk. He was charged with
unlawful use of a weapon aod releued
on '1,000 bond. He was to appear in
court Sept. 3.
The soldiers, in combat gear, car·
ried Ml4 rill.es . Army officials would
not say exactly how many were
brou.ght to Chicago Sunday, but up to
5,000 came to O'Hare International
Ai rport alone. Alr Force Cl41
Starlilter jets and C131 Hercules
turboprop transports landtd in 10-
mtnute intervals at O'Hare from Ft.
llood, Tex., Ft. Carson, Colo., Ft.
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va . (UPI) -A' ' Riley Kan., and Ft. Sill, Okla.
ligtJtning bolt injured Gov, Mills E. throughout Sunday.
Godwin's 14-year-old daughter, Becky, J~ps, ambulances and weapons
Sunday w be n she and a companion carriers also were unloaded from the
were trying to flee a sudden thun· pl~s. The soldi~rs were. deployed at
derttorm which caught them swim· military installatioM outlide Chicago.
m.i:ng.
The girl was hospitalized in "poor
condition,'' but officials Of General
Hooplb!l Aid Sunday night oi1e was
''r<>pOlldjng to initial treatment."
Godwin flew. in from Ch.lea-go, wtiere
he was atteriding t.be Democratic Na•
ti.on.al Convention, to be at his
daughter's bedside.
A spokesman said the girl wa s
swimming in the surf at Camp
Pendleton, a Virginii National Guard
r~auon here, and w a 1 ac-
companied by a long-standing friend ol
the Godwin family, Grady Norfleet, 54,
Of Chuckatuck.
The two saw a storm out at sea, a·
spokesman said, and were leaving tlle
wrat.er, headinc for the car to go back
to the executive beach cottage on the
reservation. Becky was still m water
about ankle deep when .a bolt of ligbt.n-lnf. struck, knocking both uncoo•cious.
'I'm not sure wbet.be:r the lighting
struck the girl or just struck near
them," the spokesman said.
Two National Guardsmen, and
Norfleet, when he recovered, ad·
ministered art1fic1al respiration to
Becky until the rescue squad arTlved
to take her to the hospital.
The gOvernor'1 1poke1m.an said he
Hhas no idea" whether Godwin w 111
return to ·· the. conventioo, where he
'!'as head of Vfrglnia'1 54-vote delega-
1.iOn.
Godwin's name was to be placed in
nomination for the ~ldency as
VIJ;ginja 's favorite son.
2 Youths Blamed
For Train Wreck
FORT BRAGG. Cali!. (UPI ) -Two
boys we.re responsible for the Satur-
day derailment ot the Diesel "Skunk''
tral.n in wtd.cb four persona were in·
jured, acct:rding to Mendocino County
sheriff's deputies .
The youths, aged 10 and 12 , Sunday
admitted they used rocks to break the
padlock on the switch at Glen Blair
Junction and then threw ttle switch
which diverted the tour train loaded
with 61 passengers to go oo'kl a side
track and plunge over an embankment
into a creek.
Tilree women and a young girl sus·
talned minor injuriet and were treated
at a local hospital.
The boys were released to the
custody of their parents after ques·
tioning by sheriff's officers.
Governor's Joh:
Try to Squelch
Dem·onstrations
CHICAGO (UPI) -An att<mpt Is
being made here to turn noisy
demonstrations at the Democratic Na-
tional Convention into 1 c h o I a r 1 y
seminars in which the delegates
leisurely paee the aJsles and create a
utoPl a where everybody 1peaks ao!tly
and with sweet reasoo. ·
No more hoopla, no blaring bands,
no more teen-agers hired at a dollar a
head to yell their lungs out, no
mind.skirted beauties trying to lure
votes, no clowns , no acrobat.'!, no
refugees from nearby saloons who
don't care who is nominated so long as
he jolns them in a chorw; of "Sweet
Adeline." ' -
Thls noble crusade is sponsored by
Gov. Samuel H. Shepiro of llllnols,
who in a weak moment got suckered
into becoming chairman of the rules
committee of this conventioo. One of
the functions ci tfle rules comm.Jttee Is
to try lo persuade delegates to act like
hum.an beinp. Shapiro will ask the
convention to approve rule No. 8:
"Delegates and alternates shall re·
main orderly following nominations
for the offices oC president and vice
president, and no o r g a n i z e d
demonstration on beha!I of any can·
did.ate shall be permitted on the con·
venticm floor."
Everybody except Republicans 1ay
Shapiro is a nice fellow . Kind to his
family, pays his taxes, shakes hands
\\'i th voters of all parties. Tha t is why
it is so sad to see him deliberately
commit hara-kiri by trying to
persuade tbe delegates to abandon
their wild and "'oodrous wayiS. By
week's end he will be in a state of
shock. he may have taken to his bed in
pain, he may be sadder but he \\1ll be
a wiser man.
Nobody can prevent a delegate to a
political convention fro m making a
fool of himself when he hears the
word1 "a man who , , . " and hi s can-
didate is placed in nomJnatlon . An in-
visible and irrestattble force impels
him into the aisles. He begins v:aving
a heavy placard. He starts screaming
words nobody but btmtelf can hear.
He sweats and he strai!ls. He hauls
that blr,. 11111 he 11111 that bale.
Cool System Fans Midwest
T emperatures Drop to 41 at International Falls, Minn .
Callfol'llla
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Love-in Be~omes •• Date-in i
I
Police a11,d Yip pie$ Clruih in Chicago Me"lee
ClllCAOO (UPI)~ The "Festival Of
ti!~' dlecL
~¥.""" -1,(1)) ol them ,.,,..... 1 I -come to Linc oln
l'<lrlj S ,for -tlte YOlllb In·
tern.Uon Pal1y had billed u its
&MWer to e Democratic National
Co1wenllon,.01>tning today .
People wore mllllng arouod, looking
M eacti othtr·&M llfter:dnf""-10--=a"*'Ver
amplified rock 'n' roll concert when a
youth was arrested for blocking traffic
-he wouldn't move BO a truck ear·
rytng yippie& and hl:pp(es coul / drive
to the band •stand.
The crowd turned bosUJe, so did the
Po~ct and claobes follow"'1. "Pl1s. Fuell! pigs," sboU!..S the
demonstretorr. Police rein1orcements
were 1ent to the part. 'lbe yippies and
hippies threw 1tone1 &Dd boWes.
Police rOtJred through tbe crowd on
three-wheel motorcyclee.
At one polnt, about 100 youths cor-
nered 10 policemen in the park and
threw stones, hot flash bulbs and
lighted cigarettes at them. Fl!ty other
officers wearing Hitm:eti ctf&l'ged the
youths and scattered them •
Police reported a dozen yiJJP]es were
aITested in the melee, WblCb lasted
several hours and ended after pal.ice
cleared the park at 11 o'clock, the
nighttime curfew.
Tbe yippies, who had brought their
own medics and bandages, &aid 10 to
Transplant Girl , 5, Dies
Of Sudden Cardiac Arrest
HOUSTON (UPI) -Five-year-old
Marla Glannaris, the world's youngest
living heart transplant recipient, died
suddenly at 11:40 Sunday night, only a
week after receiving a new heart.
Officials at St. Luke's Hosplb!l said
the girl. daughlu of Mr. and Mrs.
Nick Clan.Daris of Hagerstown, Md.,
suffered a cardiac arrest unexpectedly
Sunday night. The spokesman said all
att.empts at resuscitaUon were Wl!UC·
cess!ul.
Maria was Dr. Denton A. Cooley's
tenth heart transplant patient, and the
third of his patients to die alter the
operation. Five other patients still
ho1pitallied remain in satisfaCtOry
condition today.
Doctors said the girl bad been mak-
ing an unusually successful recovery
from the operation before the sudden
arrest. She was expreazlng hunger
hours after her operation and ate a
hearty breakfast the following day. A
~·eek ego she was sitting up in bed ,
talldng with her parents and scribbling
in a coloring book.
Marla had been suffering from a
heart disease from birth which causes
part of the lining of the heart vessels
to become like leather. Most victims
of the disease die before the age of 10.
15 of their number e....tuaU, were
treru:id for injuries. ;
Police a; first urge<! the ylpp! .. to
move, then pushed them, then clUbbed
them. The youths responded with
stones, cwses, shouts of "pigs" and
otm r taunts .
Meanwhile, about 300 yipples and
hippies peeled off from Ule tcene at
Lincoln -Par-k and-marched down
Michigan Avenue toward the Conrad
Hilton, hotel headquarten for Ulc
Democratic National C-Onvention.
Trailic was tied up around much of
the near north slde because of tlle
marchers. At the Midllgan A venue
Bridge about two miles south of Lin·
coin Park, police lowered the ptes
ood toid tbe yippies: "We're gonna use
gas. If yoo don't get .out;w;t're gODlla
use gas."
The yJ:ppies stood cl~ to the blue-
hehneted pOlice:men and shouted,
"Pigs ! Pigs! -Pigs." They chanted,
''Bring oo the gas. Bring on the gas."
The youths began dispersing when
five busloads of police reinf<>rcemeots
came up, moved northward, toward
the park, mid several windows mre
broken and garbage cans tipped over
in their wake, police s-aid.
The park wa.s cleared out shortly
after 11 p.m. -the ylpPes WllUC·
cessfully had asked the city to .let
them camp in it during the convention
-but m othen ran back int.o the
park. Ponce ~ motorcyclee routed
them.
None of the injured -two ol whom
we-re sprayed with Mace -wa s
believed to be serioosly burl, tile yip·
pies &aid.
"Wait till tomorrow oigbt," aatd
othm.
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MondU, August 26, 1968 DAil Y PILOT 5
North Viets Blast, Rettirns to Rome
Pope Raps Russ Invasion Johnson War Policy VATICAN CITY (UPI) -the Moscow t4llQ oimed at world,"&opoltesnMlftW.d. On ht.. r«urn, Ibo -
Pope P•ul VI today wrned resolving the criJls, the Pope Paul returned Sun· called his Latlo AmlriCM
' i.. PARIS (AP) -North Viet.
: :nam condemned President
""'•Johnson's Vietnam war poJ.
Icy today a lew hours be-
IJ. fore the start of the Demo-
;Cratic National Convention
·~ and said it would be "ab·
. ·surd" for Hanoi to comply
• ,with h1a die-escalation de.
manda.
Nguyen Than Le, North
Vietnamese spokesman at
.,. the Paris peace talks, spoke
•t• at length on Johnson's Aug. .....
19 speech in Detroit calling
on Hanoi "to join us in de-
escalating the war and mov-
ing seriously toward peace."
"The U.S. GoVernment re·
fuses to listen to reason,"
said Le. Washington's de-
mands for restraint ln recip·
rocity forthe U:S. bomb1J1g
cutback are "an absurd ar-
gument." he added, and "the
victims of U.S. aggression
and the aggressor cannot be
put on the same footing."
~.:·Poles Sympathize
-.•
·;::With Czecl1 People
,.,.
WAJlSAW, Poland (AP)
:1 ,,_ Many Poles seem to sym-
; ·pathize with the
':.'Czechoslovaks d e s p i t e
•.• arguments by the Polish
: Communist party t h a t
• l· Soviet bloc occupation of
.. :Cz echo s lo v a k i a was •:c~"necess.ary to hold the party
; : together."
One man, referring to the
·Nazi in...asion of Poland in ~ 1939, said: "Shame on us.
Many Called
But Few Are
Registered
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(.o\P) -Hundreds o f
parents can1ped outside 48
Pinellas County schools over
the weekend to sign· up their
children for kindergarten in
a first come-first serve
registration today.
Frank Ciatto, an employe
of General Electric, was ap·
parently the f i r s t kin-
dergarten camper when he
pitched a tent et 9:30 a.m.
Saturday ou tside Blanton
Elementary School.
By 6 p.m. Saturday 19
others had joined Ciatto and
held their places overnight
through a thunderstorm that
blew down Ciatto's tent.
School officials estimate
there are 6,400 children of
kindergarten age in Pinellas
County but only 2 , 9 7 0
kindergarten seats.
Sound of Music
Was Jailbreak
the Poles, who kn ow so vocy
v•ell the meaning ol OC·
cupation."
A fruit seller called the
Russians "swine" and asked
what do they want from lit·
tie Czechoslovakia.
A student, recalling the
student demonstrations in
Poland last March that were
quelled by police said: "No
surprise, at what is hap·
pening. We know what they
are capable of."
A priest said simply: "I
dislike it."
An l8-year-0Id girl said
she went to the
Czechoslovak c u I t u r a I
center and gave flowers to
some Czechoslovaks there.
"Poor people," she said.
A man volunteered that
the Russians should clear
out of Czechoslovakia and
leave tpeir tanks behind as
compensation for the trou·
ble they have caused.
An office employe com·
mented: "Of course I dislike
the affair and think it is a
shame. But l don't feel so
strongly now as in 1956,
when the Hungarians were
bloodily crusMd."
A teacher said : "I am
sure the Czech06lovaks will
somehow manage the af·
fair. They are clever and
level-headed. They will get
out of trouble some way."
A different reaction was
offered by e. policeman who
said: "Troops went there to
stop disorders which their
own police couldn't handle.
We know how hard it is to
deal with one 's own coun·
·trymen. We know that from
Mareh, when we would have
preferred somebody else to
do the work for us."
A Polish tank w a s
destroyed and its crew
leader killed when it swerv-
ed to miss a man and plung-
ed d'Clwn an embankment in
CO R DOBA , Argentina Czechoslovakia, the Polish
(UPI) -Guards at central armed forces newspaper
police station who he~rd 7.olruerz Wolnoscie. Soldier
loud folksinging and guitar of Freedom, reported.
music coming Crom a cell The newspaper did not say
with four inmates thought where the accident hap·
nothing of it until one saw a pened but said it occurred
hand.kerchief at a cell win-as the tank rolled up a road
dow. Inquiry showed the onto a bridge.
s l n g i n g a n d t h e The newspaper added that
handkerchief were being us-no Czechoslovaks have been
ed to muffle noise coming injured in the areas where
from an attempt to saw one Polish troops have passed
of tt.e ~~d~~~!!:s•"·----through the ~tr~._
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'
Le said, "Large sections
or the people of the United
States want an end to the
war -all honest men want
this." Johnson, he said , is
in a "greatly embarrassing"
situation and the "honor of
the United States is being
blackened."
Le accused the Johnson
administration ol negating
the U.S. Declaration of In·
dependence by pursuing the
Vietnam war. He said 31
lf!illion Vietnamese "will not
falter before any sacrifice"
to defeat "U.S. aggresskln."
Mideast
Battles
Continue
hiS 8ttenUoo to t b e SOUfCff iaid, .lnu '-...__ faA by }0 CXW,) trip -dedioat.ed mainly to
Czechioslova.k atsis. Vatican "The ,(Vatican} Secfttari· ._, "" I.I'll p-ee-., '
sources sa.J.d the 7Q.year-0ld at of State is going to be very bandter<:hief-w.aving a n d the theme of 1oc1al reform
Pontll! was amazingly fit busy in these days bece.use sbouti.ng ltallans and foreign -• suocesslul piigrimage
despite the rigors ol his of the situaUon in the touri6ts at the Rome airport ttret would betp bring men
11,SOO.mile trip to Latin and again by a crowd of cloffr togetber. He ad·
America. 3,000 when be drOve into the dre99ed a world Eucbariltic
The pope will speok oot Peregrinating Popat summer residence at Congr01s, I B l I h O p I '
again on Ute Soviet OC· nearby Castel Gandolfo. Conference and a V<
cupation of Czedlosl<Mllda Parakeet Th• leader al the world's gathering of peaMlllta while
at his weekly general au· Roman Ccathollcs was deeply in Colombia.
d.ieDCe Wednesday, the B 0 URN E Y: 0 UT H , tanned and obviously ex-Jn his speectles ht oalled
sources said. He condemned England (UPI) -"Robin," ultant ovtt hls trip. 'The repeatedly for 1 o c i a I
the Soviet moves Thursday a pet parakeet and a good swrees, however, said be OOrangret to end the
as he left Rune for Bogota, talker; is safely home in bit had 9dM!duled DO audie~es "miserable conditkn" of
Colombia, end the first cage a!ter having strayed or other aetlvities for tbe lire of the oont.1.nent's poor,
journey by a Pope in history about 145 miles away to next two days 1IO allow him partly through heavier tu•
to the Soudl American con-Castle Bromwich. The bird to oatcb up on Ms rest. He &tion of the wealttlf clules
tinent. was able to d bclose his wu exipected to stay at Ms .and idle rich. He condemned
Le refused to say whether
there had been any oontact
between the American and
North Vietnamese delega-
tions beyond their regular
Wednesday meetings.
The Pontiff wu following home town and street kl his Alban Hills residence until armed revolution to obtain
By UPI cl'Clsely the development of finders. Sept. 7 or 8. social ju.!tice. Jordaniatl and Israelil_:::::::::_:::::..:::.:.:::::::::::.::::..:::;_.::;:.::;:;_~~~~~~~....:.~~~~~~--~~~'----~~~~
Asked whether the new
outbreaks of fighting in
South Vietnam were the
long-anticipated third m ajor
offensive, Le said that as
long as the United States
oontinues the war the Viet-
namese "will continue to
combat aggression."
Electric
Car Race
Under Way
PASADENA, Oalil. (UPI)
-The nation's first cross
country electric car race
is silently under way today
as two cars whirr across
starting lines at opposite
ends of the nation.
"The' g r e a t transcon-
tinental electric car race"
-pitting students from
Cattech in a cooverted
Volkswagen bus a g a in s t
MIT students in a Chevrolet
Corvair -starts at nooo.
The teams will race in op·
posite directions along the
same sootherly route. The
firs t car to reach 1:he other's
ca1npl•s wins.
'fhe contestants will drive
night and day, stopping only
£or recharging batteries at
prearranged P,Olnts. They
figure the process should
take about 15 to 35 minutes
per stop.
Their route t.a.kes t.hem
thrciugh California, Arizona,
New Mexico, Texas ,
Oklahom.a, Missouri ,
lliinois, Indiana, Ohio, New
York and Massachusetts.
GI Convicted
troops exobanged mortar
and machinegun fire near
the Golan Hefgbts for 20
minutes llri.e Sunday. The
shooting capped daylong
dueling along .a 20-mile
front.
A Jordanian mi 1 i tar y
spokesmoo , announcing the
latest claSrh , charged the
lsrae& started firing Sun-
day from the positions they
occupy in the Syrian Golan
Hefgbts on Jordanian troops
at Aqaba, about three miles
south.
The Jordanians nturned
the fire, the spokesman
said, and the exchange
lasted 20 minutes. There
were ~ casualties on the
Jordanian side, he added.
Earlier in the day, the two
side-s bad battled with tank,
artillery, mortar and
automatic weapon fire for 12
hours along the 20-mile
front.
France May
Sbon Test
2nd Bomb
' P~IS (UPI) -Hinting
France may explode a se·
cond hydrogen bomb soon,
aOOm.ic affairs m i n i 1 t e r
Robert Galley new back
from Tahiti today to report
oo. i'ts first H-bomb test to
President C h a r 1 e s de
Gaulle.,
"One (test) alooe is in.
sufficient to reach a fuD
u nde rs ta nding of the
l;herm<mt1clear phenomena ,"
Galley said before leaving
the South Pacific testing
ground. "There is no reason
that it (the test series) stops
here ... "
G.a~y watched Saturday
c A M p PENDLETON as France detonated its fi'rst
(AP) -PFC John Robinson H-bomb, a one megatoo job
of Westport, Com., who said that put ttie Fr enc h
he "resigned" from the alongside the Soviet Union,
Marines t.o protest the Viet-Red Otina, the United
nam war, was convi~d States and Britain in having
on charges of unauthonzed successfully te«ted hydrogen
absence from cd;:u_::lYc,:· ____ w_arn_e_ad_s_. _______
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I
•
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C DAllY PILOT
• • " "
1o_u;....EEN_IE~~ ..... --a.:.r,_Ph,_il..;.ln.;,;,t•,;.;r;,;;la,;.;nd;;;.i Co11vet1tion Pledge Minister's Wife Vanishes • m •
' • ~
" Republicans Vow
To Dep ose Unrul1
GRANADA HIU.S (UPl) as the !root door -without ground.1 to dir<ct the aeudl
elf-ol 16 polk:emeo, /iiit
mounted ol!l<tr& and 0>• -'The young bride ct a her glaNer."
· m i n i 1 t e r myst.uiously A police command post
disappeared from the office was set up on the church helicopter. 41
of bis church Sunday shortly -·
before the mornlng services.
Police on horeeback and
the fall election. in a helicopter were joined
Reagan made c~ar at U'ltl by me1nber1 of the con-
weekend GOP State Con· gregatian in a s e a r c h
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Democratic A 1 s e m b l y
Speaker Jesse M. Unruh
stood pinpointed by Gov.
Reagan and the Oali!ornia
Republi<:a:i organization to-
day as their No. l target iD
vention that he will do through the rugged foothills
everything he can to carry near the lllllcrest Chrlatlanli";.. ____ .;..;;.;;,;
"Persom.lly, I think you ought to see YOW' dentist
-.,. every Saturday night. , • ~
'frosecutor to Spend
Day Quizzing Newton
Pair Die
Filming
Wedding
LOS GATOS (UPI) -Two
men were killed SUnday
v.•hen t h e i r single-engine
plane era.shed into a home
in the Chemeketa Park sec·
tion of ilie Santa Croz Moun·
tains as they were at·
tempting to photograph a
wedding reception from the
air.
his state's 40 electoral votes aiurch in this sul>urb of Los
oo Nov. s ror the prniden· Man Gunned Angeles .
ti&l candidacy Of Ridlard M. No trace of Mn. Dixie
Nixon. Arensen, 20, wa.s found Bot the R•Jlllblican cruel Al Barber' S when darlcnes< ball~ opera·
executive &tressed even lions. 'The 6eal'ch resumed
more hi!I intense desire to SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) at dawn iboday.
dePQSe Unruh from his key -Police today inve6tigated She was .last seen by her
power po6ition. the sh<dinl of a San Fran· husband of two months, the
Reagan's comments came cisco man gunned down Rev. Jonathan Arensen, 22,
during tbe Saturday con· '1'1lile he sat in a barber acting pastor of the cblU'ch
v e n ti o n , which was chair. witb about 400 members.
unblemlsbed by any of the Offi~rs slid Nap 0 le au He said bis wUe went to in................... fi,,......"g which the~.~ ~ce about 7:15 .... ....,..... ·~ 6 '"""' Dowthard, 3.1, was . shot .. u ... "n tAl'I
has occurred in the past. three times Sunday and the a.m. Sunday to prepar• a
One delegate called it a par• owner of the ca p it 8 I bulletin for the 9:30 a .m.
ty "Jove·in." services. When be arrived Berl>ershop in the city's
Reagan told the 194 of· Fi.Jlmore District, R. A. eboot 9:15 .a.m., sm bad
ficial delegates: "\Ve must Sheldon, 46, was·wounded in vanished.
carry Oaillomia. That must the. leg. 1 Her eleatric txpewriter
be our top priority. Our vie· Sheldon said a man en-was running, her glasses
tory here must be from the t«ed ·the 8b0p aDd,emptied were on the floor and her
top to tile bottom of the a .38 caliber revolver at car was parked outside.
tick.et." Do'Mt:hard and then fled. He There were m signs of a
But most of his speech said the gunman t b e n struggle.
I See by Today's
Wan! Ads
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wire w~. 4,300 miles,
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• And Irish Setter, 8 rMnltw
old male pedigree: hu all
shots, larger than averqe.
Beautiful Dqr.
•"Beach Pad#' .tU1 avaft..
able in "SUmrner Rftrt.
al.s." Still time for tbat
quick vacation. OAKLAND (AP) -The
prosecutor h av i n g un-
covered one discrepancy
between police statements
ed him promptly. Newton
said Frey came up to his
car, rested his arms on the
top, and said mockingly:
The Santa Clara 11heriff's
department identified the
victims as Cllarles R .
Schaper. 36, Campbell, and
Mitch V. Scheuermann ot
Chemeketa Park.
Deputies said the plane
crashed into a house owned
by Mrs. Judith Decker, a
reporter for the San J 05e
Mercury. She was called in
to work on ovel"time just one
hour before the plane struck
the bedroom where she had
been napping.
conoentratt!d on what he has returned w:iitb \• rine but Arensen told police, "she
tried to do during nearly two a gain fled wNeh a large never would have gone
years in Office. He com-· ~c::ro~w~d:_,!~~'.:'.:ed~)~---_:an~yw~her~•~:.;no:::t..'.:e,::ven~a~s:;r~ar'..!:====================' plained that while 56 perce.nt.·
of his legislative program
has been enacted, the rest
-including many major
proposals -has b e e n
thwarted by Unruh -led
Democrats, mainly in the
• and Huey Newton 's
testimony, zeroed in again
today on the 26-year-old
Black PanU8' leader.
Prosecutor Lowell Jensen
said be ezpected to spend all
day, at least, .cross-e.x-
"Well, well, what have we
here? The great Huey P.
Newton."
The defendant said he
then handed his driver's
license to the officer. ASS"embly.
ampng Newton, accused of ·n 4 • "J
muroeriog """ whit• omanal~S
Oaklaod policeman, John
Swap Views
Frey, and wounding Frey'•
bacll:-up Officer,· Hu b ert
Heanes.
When court recessed for
the weekend. Thu r !i'd a y,
Newt.on b.s. spent most of
the ?Y testifying ln hJs own
defense. Jensen's cross ex·
aminatkln pointed out one of
1he m a j o r discrepancies
between Newton's version
and what the police say hap-
pened that dark morning
last Oct. 2.11 lo the Oakl<illd
district
NewW! bad ju.t testified
that Fn!y, whom defense at·
tomey <har!es GaTy b..,
attempted to picture as a
l'OCi8t, bad stopped him
1'ttbout cause Md recogniz·
SAN FRANCISCO (UPl)-
A group ol far-OUt psycholo-
gl!b who call themselvet'i
"dJscipllned romantics" will
gather in San Francisco
Tuesday for a conference
that promises to be exciting
and oomroversial.
Members of the American
Association for Humanistic
Psych<>logy and local partlci·
panf6 will discuss experi-
mentg leading humans to in-
~ in more "love, creati-
vity, play, warmth and tr an·
scendental experience."
For instance, a panel d;s-
cussion by Southern C8llfor-
nia psychologist5 will con·
cem "sensitivity tn.inlng
and thef'apy groups cooduct-
ed in the nude, .. accord!ng
to the conference program.
The emotional release in
such sessions can p-oduce
"ecstatic feelings," the pro-
gram says.
Another session called
''be com Ing more alive
through play" will be led by
a Chicago therapist who
uses preschool art materials to get adults back t.o forgot-
ten lievels of childlike spon-
taneity.
Another session will fea-
ture a "non-drug approach
to psychedelic experience"
oM will be led by Beman!
Aaronson of New Jeney.
Meet three new owners
of the
Gas Company.
1How can you tell?
The methods Include "group
hypnotic proc:«lun!s."
In contrai;t, a panel dis-
cussion with Dn;. Sidney Co-
hen, J05eph Downing and
Tod Mikuryla, psychiatrist..
with much experience in the
therapeutic use of psyche·
delic drugs, will deal with
using such drugs in facilitat·
ing personal growth.
A possibly controverslaI
session will be held Thurs·
day on sexual attitudes, in·
eluding "the acceptance and
expression of sexuality in
therapy." Cloe al the speak·
ers will be Dr. Albert Ellis,
director of the Institute foe
Rational Living in New Yotk
and a noted expert on sex.
•
Matter of fact, you can't-just by looking at them, becau1e IO many owners
of the Ge1 Company look ju1t like your neighbora. In fact, they probably are
your neighbo~ For the Gas Company (like any inve1tor-owned company in
America) is owned by all kinds of people from all walks of tife •
There .,... more than 16 million shares of our business owned by people like
bcrber Vince Cottone. Some of these people bought our a tock in their own
~ Othen, like Patly Cook, may have become owners of the Gas Company
b7 .-ay of inveatmentl their employers have made for their penaion plana. Still
~like Duke Morton {getting hia first hair cut), may have become ownen
because their p-andf'athen bought them shares as birthday pra1antt.
t
• People w)lo have a financial stake in the Gas Company know that any company
that can offer good M!'Tice at reasonable rates is 1oin1 to do all ri1bt. And that's
the way we do buainess. •
But whether you're an investor or not, the Gas Company works for you
anyway. A• an investor--owned company, regulated by the
California Public Utillti• COmmilsion, we depend i
on J'OUf support. We do our best 10 deserve it.
That'• why we work utta bard to plea•• you.
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' ' I
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" • ' •
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Monday, Aitgust 26, 1968 DAJLV PllOT 7,
~~~.1:~~~-~t ~~~~!~~-~l~~y_rnia_.~ oles j~
Vice President Hubert H. "No -tn the Hu_._ p1 ~-.--,..... "-Hwnpl!rey 11 Uwl mO&t Schoof f Bu ' ,_ In ......... , • ~NW the ...... and ad-letter< which he aald .,.. • A poetc ... d mailed !tom valuable -ol tile GOP... 0 siness
1M futMrt •••
TodaJll"
e Stc.r•f•1i.I
Humphrey 1.;1 play I a cool group has even touc:hed dress of a delegation unless typlcel day'• man. It in· Be!keley: "What if they
w a I t In ~ game with me: COO-aald , they "" lnstzucted. eluded two form letter• su~ gave a .,., ••• _......_ Harril llid Humplny Is ~
Calllornla 1 114 • member .UO.mb"m.. 1-. F. ' ~ ...,.,..., 1ookioC beyond tile con-.JZ ~ e Mttllcal
fn•urt11c•
delegaUoa ·ti), the Democra· G olv ~-~-:·."'1 "What lnteresta me le that . porting Hwpphrey, one of camel What U they gave a ventloa to the f.tl campaign. tic NaUonal Convention. reene ~RIO Aid they are able to do ft," which beg ... ' dear delegate, convel.itioo and picked a tru· He IPlidd the vice prMhlent e look.k•tplnt
most ol tbe littter• he h11 Greene Nld. ''They are able and two indi\rldually Written ly representative nominee? .has avoided .-11ure on -0 Memben of the biggest received from Mccarttly to notUy 111at numbers of letters bl.ctwig the vice ... I fOl' one would be r" w• • D•11f•I uncommitted detegaUoo to backers are ,, r 1 t t e n Mc<;vthy suppOrters and pniddent. The rett were surprtsed. Can you, as a cati.forma d e 1 e I a t 1 on AIC SHORTHAND Ai1hth1f the,~cag'oUPconvetttion, con-longhand. • produce areat numbers of pro-MeCartll.v. delegate, help surprt1' me." =-!!, <toe,:'ounnotdswaotthatot 111 w. Sth Phone
tacl.e\I tn • 1 IPOl check. But he Jakl the campaign letten." A man-Jr Venice wrote: A wom~ rn Sacramento -o1
reported little pressure
1
__ '~'is:_~q~ullo~·:_~o~b~v:_:l~o!u!';1'!.~-G~~:!:~~~~d~~~__:·~~~..!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~wool~~d~opll~~t~tbe~~Ile__:m=oct=.:•=U~c~~~'!!!S~1~n!ta~A~ .. ~~'!!!~S4~~~1~7~5~J~o~r!S4~3~·1~72~1~!!!! from the Humphrey camp. r. e en e • D e a 'Pleue, p 1ea1 e atop wrote: uzr.y hurband and t effort in tbe lall.
The vloe pre<ident ob-
viously th.Inks he has the
prMidential nomination 1n
the bag withoot delegate
wtM from Oalifom.ia.
While Humphrey plays it
low key, supporters of Sen.
Eugene J, McOartby have
flooded the del<galel with
mail predicting disaster for
Ille nation and party II their
man does not wlD.
The California delegatioo
was elected fn the June 4
primary to oupport the lat.
S.... -F.~Kemedy. It
became a slate without ·a
candidate when Kennedy
was ~ted.
Wlllam K. Coblentz, a
delegate amt a San Fran-
cisco attorney, summed up
the tacllc.< ol the McCarthy
Backers:
'VEHEMENT'
"l must get 30 or 30 let·
ters a day. They are very
vehement. 'They say it is
absolutely eseentiaJ for the
good of the country tbet I
vote for M'eOarttlY." Harry F. Sublett, a West
Sacramento businessman,
added: "'lbe McCarthy ef·
l<>!'I is el<empli!ied by a fan-
tastic number of privately
written and mai.\ed letters,
not necessarily pro-
McCartily but arrti-Hum·
phrey."
Assembly Speaker Jesse
M. Unruh, cbalnnan of tbe
delegation. said last week
that the Humphrey focces
"are working awfully hard
now 1lllld putting on a lot of
pressure."
Sen. Fred Harris CD-·
Okla.), cochairman o f
Uni1ed Democrats f o r
Humphrey, said the Vice
president tias not pr...ured
California deleg<Keis because
he does not have to.
Harris said Humphrey
can win the nomination oo
the first' ballot even if be
doesn't get a single vote
from California.
"I think they (Humphrey
backer6) are playing a low
key cempalgn becaµse they
think we aft an explosive
'
The new
Mercedes-Benz 220 Diesel: •
so "over-engineered''
you may still be
driving it in 1988.
I
•
11oup,' 5aid •!"~ . ~· ® Some M.....i.s.Benz o;.,. Gf«p Mosooa.a.. ·..t "'Saa "• '"' --• ~ · Francileo. ''I b av e n t scls just won't quiL In lhe
32 yean since Mercedes-
CRAFFITI • Benz invenud the Diesd-
llftaD who ~ a Mercedes·
'Benz. But by ~o mearu does
it tell the whole story. Here
are some more examples:
j
t
I
l
t
t
t
t t
r
I.I.A. W•rld Champl•rnhlp
BY-THE-SEA •
lHI pN,..,_.. ..... ft lfl ,,,.,.ti ~.. wltt. .. -.,
Arn1rlc .. 1 !Met cewkl" nol
•-11rtt"" tlle W..t'• ......... II-t ALL SHOWS -l P.M.
j AUti. Jl-SUT. 1 & J
! CRYSTAL COVE . ..,.....~ ..... I ....... _.
j
powered passenger .car, over 500,000
Diesels have been made, mod 87~ ,.,.
still running/ One ownu nl Stockholm
recentlystartedhissecondmillionmiles. 1
The newest Mercedes-Benz Diesel
is the 220 (soalled because its engine
displaces 2.2 liters). It costs $4,580.'
and from the million-dollar way it looks
and rides, many people believe it should
.. be classified as a luxury car •
An unconnntlonal --Merades·Benz says the 220 Die>el
·is an econom.y car. Yes, an economy car,
because it could save you mote money
in th< long"'" (say, 100,00<1 mUes or
more) than the 8imsiest little emnomy
car you could buy.
The 220 Diesel is so economical it
doesn'i eve1' vse gasoline. It sips inex·
pensive Diesel fuel at a miserly rate,
yet has enough power to cruise at 80
(where the law allows). This amazing
powerplantdoesawaywithcarburetori,
spark plugs, and other paraphernalia of
the conventional gasoline engine.
But the engine is not the only
unconventional thing about the new
Merced..-Benz 220 Die>el. The whole
car is "over-engineered. "That's the way
one;; critic put it. He was right. By con·
ventional standards, it is built to far
more ""1Cling standards than ordinl')'
motor cars.
What .... 11onr-englnlltlng"
Clln mean to 10"
The remarkable lon~evity of the
Diesel engine is one good o:ample of
how "over.engineering" works for the
A 1uperlor bnldng oyllom
Many ordinary cars still
use old-fasDioned drum
brakes.
Today's 180-mph Grand
Prix racing cars use disc
brakes. So does the Mer-
cedes· Benz 220 Diesel. And
not just an the front wheels,
· but on every wheel. Drum
• brakes are cheaper, but tests
prove that ,.WC brakes pro-
vide the mbst precise.Jirak-
ing possiEle-at ••y speed.
So Mercedes-Benz engi·
neers insist on 4-wbeel
disc brake"s as standard foregrowiul: 1IW! world't firnDiex.I passe11ger«r1{l936)¥&dtgrOMnd: JM 'lllOl"ld'1 &ui DksdsCdmt. (1961). Both •1 Mucc4u-8&ftZ.
•'juipm•nt. With 421.l · ·
square in'.ches of braking area, it's vir· vents the ~ar from leaning on hard peclic physicians were consulted in the
tually impossible to outrun the 220 turns. Without it, the car would wallow design of the 220 Diesel's seatssoyouill
•wesome 600 to the thrifty 220 (a car
very much like the 220 Diesel, but with
a reguJar gysoline engine-for ~pie
who are diffident about the virtues of
the Diesel engine). They include:
Diesel's brakes. (or the springs would have to be made ·have pretper suppori on cross-country
so stiff that the ride would be ruined). tours as ~11 as short hops to the ~uper-
10,000 body weld•
Most conventional cars have a sepa·
rate body and chassis, held together
with bohs. Alter a while, the bolts can
work loose. On a washboard road, the
rattles can be dtafening.
Merades-Benzelimi...udthebody
bolts. In their place are over 10,000 in-
dividual welds. Result: a structure of
immense strength and rigidity. Aftet
50,000 miles or so, you'll wondet if your
220 Diesel will ever rattle.
A petentod ·,..,,..,.1on
Conventional sedans usually have •
1 ~little device called an "anti-sway bar"
nestlM in the front suspension. It pre--
-
Mercedcs-Benz engineers took this market: When you 6rst slip into one of
idea one step further. They added a the 220 Diesel's carefully contoured
second anti-sway har at the rear, part of seats, it may seem 6nn, but once you
the 220 Diesel's new-and patented-get used to it, you'll never settle for
independent rear suspension. This al· "marsllmal!ow" seau again. Mercede&·
lowed the Mercedes-Benz engineers to Benz engineen; have respeci for yout
make the reM springs softer, too.Result: backbone.
a vastly superior ride, but still no mush, sway or wallow--even in hairpin turns. Cllp coupon for brochure
For more details on the 220 Diesel
and 6 other Mercedes-Benz mOdels, 11flllgu•proof" .....
600 Grand Mercedes •• , ... $22,472•
300SEL Limoilsine........ 9,489'
280SE Coupe • • • • • • • • • • • • 9,262'
280SL Roadster • • • • • • • • • • 6,568•
280SE Sedan • • • • • • • • • • • • 6,336'
250Sedan ••••••••••••••• 5,150-
230 Sedan •••••• .-........ 4,631•
220 Sedan.... . • . . . . . • . . . 4,446;•
I • ..a.· " ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •
Take a day-long trip in some cars
and you'll wind up feeling lik~ a damp
washrag.
send today for your ccpy of the free 24-: SEND TODAY FOil
page ailor brochure (coupon at right). : FRR BROCHUAI
The Merced ... Benz 220 Diesel is
engineered as much for hu~ancom{ort
as it isformecbanical •flicienq.Ortho-
Better yet, visit our showroom. See : (or be~yet, aimc
and drive the new 220 Diesel. Find out : in and ptctonevp)
how it feels to drive a car built to be : Jim Slemons 1mport1 Inc.
the best-not jwl the best seller. ! 120 Wnt W1rn1r Avenue
-., '14g-ll~-· ,rrom ns,1u• to .. ,448' • The legend of Merced..-Benz Die-
sels has grown to Brobdingnagian pro-
Jl!lrtions. There are some people who
firmly believe Mercedes·Benz makes
n":..J bot Diesels. Not true. In fact,
M ... Benz builds a wide range ri
gasolinc-power,ed models, from the
• S1nt1 Ano, C1llfornl~ 92707
: Pleue oend the r... 24-page, 1un ... 1ot
: brochure lhat td4 all about lb. DIW c:ul
: &oin Merccda-Benz.
• • •
: Name•-------~ • • • • • • • • •
: Sts.u"'------'Z:.lllf'P----1
Jim Slemons Imports, Inc. iaow.w"""•-. ..... Anl.l:lllf0ml•l27Dtl"llone:71• 14•-411,
, -
\
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I u...1.t t'"-"i
Hippies Vow War
To Set Up Shrine
BERKELE Y (UPI)
Telegraph A venue hippies
are -.·aging a revolutionary
campaign to turn America's
original dropout colony into
a national shrine.
The battlefield 1s 1 four
block stretch of commercial
property located just a texl-
book's throw !rom the
Universiaty of California, an
institution that has itseU
fallen victim to two bitter
student protests.
Although Berkeley's hip-
pies have long received
limited support from some
elements of the university
community, a new coalition
with leftists on the Berkeley
campus is waging t b e
present campaign.
The result -the "third
battle of Berkeley," an all
out attempt to "liberate"
the street, establish it as
immune from city control
and utilize it as an exclusive
playground for the hippies
and their friends.
'RAISE HELL'
"We're going to raise
enough hell in th.ls town to
demonstrate our power to
take control," claim the
youthful editors of the "Bar-
ricade Bullet," a n un-
derground news 1 et te r
circulated througtiout the
hippie enclave. They also
promise "total and popular
seizure of the university
grounds and machinery for
our own human needs aad
fuHillments.''
Aligned against t h i s
display of hippie and new
left militancy are the troops
of "the establishment" -
the resident.! of the affluent
"Hill area" north Of the
university, the Berkeley Ci·
ty Council, the chamber of
commerce and the Universi-
ty Avenue Merchant s
Int.rim Committee.
The first big skirmish
came lut month when hun·
dreds of the beard and. 11n·
dal set Joined with their
"new left" (riends to battle
police in three days of
bloody rioting over the issue
of whether to close the
street for a rally ln aym.
pathy with-.Frencb Kudenta.
Police broke up t h e
unauthoriied rally w l t b
clubs and tear gas and that
brought a violent respome
Of rock throwing, window
breaking, barricades in the
street, arson and uaorted
Molotov cocktails. At least
134 persons were arrested, 1~
45 injured and up to 600
police patrolled a cUy under ~ I
curfew. I· J
FINAL REPORT
Many observers feel cer·
lain tile potential for street ,
U,I T•""ti.t.
violence will swell
dangerously when the city
manager issues a final
report on the matter and the
ranks of the dissident.! are
enlarged by students return· East Coast or Bust
ing for classes in Sep· Wally Rippel, a student at Caltech, looks over bat· tember. Emotions were a 1 s 0 teries designed to power his car from Pasadena
heightened by a suggestion across country. Rippel and two at.her students who
from Mayor w a 11 a c e helped design the electric--powered vehicle, are com·
J ohnson to construct a mall peting in transcontinental race with students in
aiong the avenue. Wallace's similar car from MIT in Cambridge, Mass. plan would wipe out three ______________ _::_c_ ____ _
coffee houses, a pool hall, a
book store. a hippie clothing
store and ottier favorite
hangouts.
"He's trying to redevelop
us out of existence.'' ,said
one long"1Wred girl. "We
use all these shops."
The "Barricade Bullet"
was less reserved.
"The pigs, the University
or California, W a l l a c e
J ohnson and a sso rted
merchants have formed an
unholy alliance to clean up
the south campus area," the
newsletter said. "They are
usi11g the devices at their
disposal. We mw;t use ours .
. . direct action: U name
it."
••
Motorists, Beware!
No Idle Tinkering
ST. LOUIS (UP!) -Do-it-
yoursel:fers . beware
especially if you're thinking
about adjusting the
carburetor idle speed on
your 1968 automobile. It's
likely to cost you more
mone-1 than you th.ink you
can save.
Idling adjustment, once a
relatively simple procedure,
now is a delicate operation,
according to experts at
ACF's Carter Carburetor
division. The new anti-smog
carburetor. an integral pa.rt
of the 1968 oar's emission
control system now required
by law, ·has been precisely
calibratea and permanently
set at the factory. From
that point on it should be ad·
justed only by a qualified
mechanic.
Hey Ki.ddies ...
WIN A FREE
RIDE-A-ROG
Bouncing Riding BaJI at
Smoking
Decline
Reported
WASHINGTON (AP) -
For only the 1econd time
since the 1964 Surgeon
General's report linked the
use of tobacco to ca.ncer and
odler diseases, there has
been a decline in cigarette
mwlW!i. l!l;<or_dl!lg t o
government statistics.
The Internal R e v e n u e
Service relealed f i g u r e s
sbowing Americans smoked
543.S billion tigarettes in the
fiscal year that ended last
June 30, compared With
545.1 in fiscai 1967.
Allhoug!i the .28 percent
drop was tiny, the decline
interrupted a steadily grow·
ing increase jn the we of
tobacco in the United States
since the initial fall follow-I
ing the surgeon general's
report four years .a.go.
While the earlier drop was
clearly linked to the cancer
s<:are, there was nothi'ng in
the IRS figures to indicate
what cal16ed the latest
decline.
Dr. William Stewm, U.S.
surgeon general, s a id ,
however, that he thinks ''the
message is finally getting
around,''
"It is a safe assumption,"
he said in an imerview,
"that the message ls being
heard.''
Stewart added that there
was some evidence of the
do'wntrend in studies done
by his department earlier
this year. But he said there
were no immediate plans to
delve deeper into t h e
statistics and perhaps
capitalize on them in the
government's antismoking
campaign.
A spokesman for the
Tobacco Institute, the in-
dustry's lobbying and public
relations arm, said the drop
may not actually mean
Americans are s m o k i n g
less.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
BRISTOL AT THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY
COSTA MESA
•
.......... _..
• MR.MUM
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
lllOTIC• Te C•IDITO•I IU"RIOll C*JltT Oii Tlil: ITAT• 01' QL1,io1uUA l"Oll
THI COUMT'V 0111 OUMtl ·"'·""""" EtN"9 11 ea.LEN M. KING, ~ NOTICE II HEllllY GIVEN 19 lfW ~lhlrt 9' Ille I~ Mn'*I *'""" !hi! tll --Mi"1"' (lllrns "am.I It'll M id cllcedtflt lff '""'lrflll .. flt. #lml, wlltl tr,. n«hM"' wvdll .... In ttw .nlc. ti lhe ci.rk II tl'lt •M¥• 1n111..., eowrt,
Of' 'lo tAitr\I them. Wlll'I fh9 llllUfMry
\'ll!tldll"-lo tl!t -~,.~ ff 00 -S2!1d Slrlt't, N""'°'1 tHd\.-C.lllonllti
wtllch I• ttw t le'9 of b\111-ct IM unclt"IV...., 111 tH INlftfl llttflflll"' te 1111 "1•19 Off Mid ~ IW'!tlllll ,.JI{ "*'""' ,,,.,. ... ""' ..,,bllt.llllotl ., Jlllt .... tt. D1ttlll Au1111•t f . 1N&, EAllL It. KING l!XKUtDI'
OI 1111 l!lt•l't' Ill. ....
AIMIYI 1111Nd CMlldent
H11rwth. Murwtn: .... ·-Allotrlll't't 11 Uw
Ull • Hllll Stl'WI N-f"I ••Kii, (II..,..•
T•itf,Mlll: in.ton
""""'"" fw .-41 ... P1,1bll1..i Or-C011t 01IW f'Uot, Aueuat 11.. It. 1" Ind $ePll!ff\lle• t. ,,.. '"""
LEGAL NOTICE
Plastic Bags Smother
166 Babies in 3 Years
f'·JMI c••l'IPICAT• OP SUllNISI f'ICTITtoUS Pt•M NIJU THIE UMDEllSIGNED da ...,..,
arttty thll I -CICl!ldtK11111 11 11t!o wrtck ltll llual-11 2075 Pllnlltl9 Ay..,...., Cll'I' el' Coshl lo\nl, COll!llY tit 0..1,,... Sl•tt el' Clllfoml1, unUf' 11'.e flc-tllloua firm """"" ol MESA AUTO
W .. ECICl!!•S 1...i !Ml .. Id firm 11 '*""'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
In a span or just three
years, some 166 or 1tle na-
tion's .Mildren were suf-
fOC&'ted in plastic death
traps. The real toll probably
was far lYgher.
This wu the finding of an
Arlington, V.a., crusader for
UCI Awards
Art Complex
Contract
UC Irvine Monday an.
nounced its intention to
award a $3.6 million con-
tract for construction of a
nine·building complex to be
known e.s the Fine Arts
Village.
Contractor will be C. V.
Holder Inc. of Gardena. L.
E. Cox, vice chancellor for
business and finance, said
Holder submitted the lowest
of seven bids.
The contract will b e
formally awarded upon ap·
proval by the federal
government which has con·
tributed $1,459,910 to the
project under the Higher
Education Facilities. Act of
1963. The remainder of the
$3,617,421 contract is to be
financed from state bond
issues.
The one and two-story
building15 will be erected on
a nine-acre site between the
lioMd of 1111 followt1111 "''°""' ~
child &a1ety, retired Col :r,-ind .-Jd•e-.. .,... 1' followl, •
G I~ B Kid C"'lttolll'tet s. Wldi.r. 1200 lltrttahJre ay .... u . well, who L•nt. M•wPOtt audl, c1111orn1•
CUlducted a poll of the 50 1<1~11;.:Ess ""' 111...i thr1 latf'I d•r t1t Jv·
state.s and the District of STATE OF 'c~t:fo":~.~ Wkller
Columbia on the danger.s of c~Nrit 0;,,~~:~! Jlllr. A.O., INll,
plastic bags to youngsters. befor• llM M1c11111 Gt•tner. • Net•rr P11blk: 1n Ind "" 511d Ceu111'1' Ind Sltle. As chairman of the Ari· •Hldlnsr '""''1" d111y '°"'""1WOl'lld 1...i . . , IWlll'll, P91$0l\llly IPMtrM Chtl1"'91>1r S. 1ngton safety c0unc1l s com-Wldllr known to mt to tot tti. --. wi-111,..,. 11 11,1blcrlbed to 11'1111 within m1ttee on home safety, 111ttr-n1, •l!d 1ck ...... 1ec11ec1 to rTM tti11
Kid U I zed Ill lllC\/l9d ttl4 ,.em1. we ana y reports IN WITNESS WHE .. EOF. I fleve
from 42 st.ates, 22 of them ~~:;in~~.";'';;,' ::~ ;:;: •:,1;~ ,;:"' ,:11;
listing plastic bag deaths for urtlfluohl llr1l lbo'l<I wr1tt .... {~11)
three years 1965 1966 1967. ~kh••I G1rtntr I t ' l'flollfY P11bl!c 111 Ind 1n that 36-month period For uld county •rid Sitt"' 1 Mv commltslon npJrn Kidwell's compilation show-Mtr. 11, nro. •Ol&•TSOH, HOWSt:a & OARLAHO
ed, there were 56 adult •M• c""'"" orl.,., . H-f"I l•acll. C.M,.,_ NU deaths and 166 cases or child T•I: s.i•Mtt
uJ I AlllrlMfl s foca<t on . l'llbllthltd or'"" C011t 0111'f f'llot.
""'"'" u . n , M 1rld $eil19111botr 2, Most of the adult fatalities 1ffl 1a1..a
were s u i c id es . The LEGAL NOTICE
youngsters' deaths were ac· HoTict: 0,. 'TRUSTt:l!'I SALi
cidental. Ht. 15"-1'.fOYLE . en Wltdr.eld1Y. $eplotmbotr n, lHll, 11 Kidwell found that some II o'clock A.M ... , irnlru•te to the p1rk· 'nf Is th ed to I ... lot L11 Iron! ol 411 Sollrh l!lrookll1,1rt1 1 an were smo er StrMt, Anillllll'I. c1111Mn11. s.id '"''•M•
deatn when their parents us· 11 1oe1~d so tttt _.Th of TM Atmes Morlt-Co. perm1rie11I l'WO -ltd stMI ed plastic sheeting in cribs 11 .... MAYFLOWER INV_ESTMENT co .• 11 Tn11t" llndlr Ille d..oi ol Inn! 1111111 and playpens. 1W WILHELMIN ... A. PYt.E. u l\lr ooHo ..... -1r1I• p,..,..erty 11\d ~
Others died when they ex· Ftbr11•rr 1, 1,.., 111!.~.1121. Pitt 1•. o1 Otfkl1I Rtconll ~°''"'' Ceunl'I', perimented with p I a s t i c c1n1om11. ,,..,... 1o 111(1Jre tft 1~ dlblednl11 111 l1vor of VIO'-A SWAN, 1n bags from drycleaning left unm•rrlld womtR •nd At.EXANDER H. SWAN, 1 l'M"l9d min, mother tl\d llOfl on the floors of closets and 11 101111 t•111R1J, ..., r111on o1 ttie bl'11d'I ol c1rl1ln obll11tlonl wcured !Mrtbv, bedrooms. nol\ct of Whltll w11 remro!ed M1Y 13. . . 1'61. In !look ljff, 1'19e 794, o1 .. 1d OI· Still other young victims 11c111 1tacvr'll1, w11t ..,11 11 1>11bl1t 111d1o11
b d th lo ll'le lll11tttl blcldtt tor Ulh, Pl.,lbll Ill r o u g h t ea upon 11w1v1 ..-., o1 t111 unned s111es 11 "'•
themselves by pulling the tlm• o1 ••'-· wittwwt w1n1nl'I' u 111 title, -Htloll or e11Cvmbr1nc11, !ht lnltrnl
bags off garments stored in ain,,...eot 111 ..... now 111111 "'" ,..111 Tn11tff 11nde• ,.eld DHd ot Trvst, 111 ind to 1119 closets lollow111t1 de1crlbtd Jrop«ty, ~wit: ' I.Of 2ll ol Tritt No. 216', •I r>tr ITllP
LEGAL NOTICE reconfH In boolr. '2, ''" lf tit M!Ktlll-.tt Mtltl, records ol "ltl Or•MI Collnl'I'. Ctlffornl1, P·HffJ lor tlll "",._' ol Pl¥11111 obllt1llolll c•RTll'ICAT• 01' •US•H•ss, '''"'" by ,.efd Oeetl l..clvdlnv let1, central oampus and Mesa 111cT1T1ous HAME ch•ro•1 11111 ••P11ns11 o1 Ille Trvsfft 111d
Id ' Tiii undtr1!trted 11oe1 c1rl!l'I' tht'I '" of 1111. Court res ence ha l ls . col!dvctt,,., • bllll11en 11 ns Falrl•• 01t9d: Aueu1t 13, '™· Jocluded are a theater a Drl ..... Co,s!1 Me ... C1lllof>n!1, "'""'" !Pie MAYFLOWER INVESTMENT co. • flctl!IOUI llrlll ""'" ol HOOSIER tu Sollllt w111trn AYell\11 concert hall, St U di 0 S • Tll:Alt.Ell: COURT •rod ftlll 11111 firm 11 . t.os Aneeln 6, C1llforn1-
_galleries, a n d rehearsal :"'in:~ r!11ni:...i'°1!':;~:' ;·::;~~~ ~~~~11111 $te¥em
rooms and workshops The " 1o11ows: .-.u1111..i ~c••",.,, . . . MATHEW A. Gt.OZA, ns f'1lrltX mM project lS scheduled for Orl .... , Cost• Mnt Pl.lbll1h9d . Orll'lllt COid 0111¥ Piiot,
completion in 1970 Gt.ORl,r, J. GLOZA, 5'.!5 f'flrfl• AUllUll "· 26 IM S.pternbtr 2. • · Orl"'I, Coll• Mnt, C1lllornl1. 1'61 1•1t-a DeS1gner of the building is Dal9d A111u11 '· 1H11
W'lli L p • d MATHEW A. GLOIA I am . ere1ra ,an GlOIU ... J. GLOIA A s s O c iates Architects. $1111 of C1Htorn11, 0•1"'' Covnl'I': : • . On ,r,ugu11 t. 1m. t11tor1 mt, • Nott,.,.
LEGAL NOTICE .. ,.,., CRRTlll'ICA'T& OP •VJINRSS PICTITLOUS PIRM NAME 1111/ll'l J/Jllll llllll lfllll Campus architect IS Clifton Pllbllc In 111d tor Mid s111e, "''°"'11~ "'II d th U · '( •PPetrod MATHEW A. GlOZA 111d •• Jl'Li er an e ruverSl Y Gt.OIUA J. OLOZA knowrl 10 m1 10 111 Tiii IHHl•r111111d do tte..iw ctrllt'f' 11111 project architect i's James !ht ",_.,. ....,., "'""' ,,, 1ubtcrlbed -••• cOlld11Cll11111 • commod!t'f' t••dl"'
Fill in the frff coupon 1t the bottom of this ad 1ncf
hive mom or did deposit it In the big blue box 1t
the center of the n;J•ll ln F1shion lsl1nd. Or pick up
''" dr•wlng tickets in •ny of the 56 F1shion lsl1nd
stores, Newport Center. Contest ends August 31 for
ttMst e>tcltlng biG bouncing bills.
Clip coupott & lwlt19 to
Fuhlon ldnnd ----------Win Free Ride-A-Roo Ball*
Pll ... f'Ws fNe C4lllpM -4 ~I .. tM IM1 ht t:Hter IMfl
• ........ llltn4. ,.._,.,. c:-t.. Im. tkbh. ..,•ll•lt'4 i. •II
u ,...... 111-4 -.,... Utcq •••"*" ..sn '" "'"'" .., .......... .i .. *-""t .... ••• •• -wlll M ,..... ............
•t4'1t1il V•lu• II.ti MJ
Name
Address ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
' fthone _____ _
,...,_ '"·~ •• .,. .11'1,1., ........ ir f1ll'lill•t ••• •111191.., •• , .f
..,, ,.wJc•H.,.. 11ot 111111111. ----------
AUG. 26th-AUG. 31st
WORLD FAMOUS
BEEF STICK
CUT TO ANY SIZEI
~~II. $159
NOW e LI.
Ilk II. ADDITIONAL
DISCllUNT ON
PURCHASE DI
WHOU
STICK.
OID -fASHION!O
STICK CANDY
3 tBS. $1.00-4th FREE
CUT FROM THE NA TIRAL WHEEL
SWITZERLAND
SWISS CHEESE sl.791 ..
HG. $1.98 II.
7 07, PKGS.
BANANA CHIPS 2 OR$1.00
AN UNUSUAL SNACK ITEM f
REGISTER
FOR ONE OF OUR
DELUXE BARN
GIFT PAKS GIVEN
FREE
Duri ng O\ir Annlver1ory
Cel•brotion ot . , •
I
• FREE
CRACKERS
CHEESE BALL
'
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Bristol at the San Diego Fwy.
COSTA MESA
Op•fl '° ifl,.M. ti I .... M.
&at. • au11. IC A.M. ti ........ .
S.I 10 flla within lfttlrvm1n1 ind irtncw~ bu1!11nt 11 Co-P1r1111r1. tt iun llow•n l Cott. terged llllY IXKl!lod lhl Mml SlrHI II\ G1rden G ....... , C1lltornl1, under
'The complex will h se tOFFICl.t.L SEAL) . "'' l!tllllOll• llrm lllllM of COMOO co. OU II: lit C K ind 1'1111 t1 ld llrm It coml"'$td o1 tM the UCI School of Find Arts, N!i:,.., P~bH~.c";11totnl• 1o11-111, ~r1on1, wl!OH "''"" 1 .. "'11
h ded b De t Prlnclpll Olflce In •lld Pltttt of rnldenc• ,,.. IS follows. ~ ea y an ay on °''"" c"""t.,. w11: Garrison, which now bolds JulY 1, 1'11 ALfREO J, FISHER. 1'3» ·-~ • 1'11bllth9d Orl11t1t COid OtllY rilol SI., 01rdt11 GrO>lt, Cllltom!I. classes Ul other campus AllOUll 11. lf, )I •Ml *lotmbe• ,: FRANCES A. MOSS, 501 E. Ktle llt. ·buildings The sc h o 0 l lffl 1x1"' Aot. 1a, 0..1"''' C1llloml1. • OONAt.0 P. WILSON, 2217 LOW!'Y
e m p hasize8 professional LEGAL NOTICE ROid. t.os ""'e11s. c.111..,,,11. . 0. I'. Wit.SON dbl A1t"' lh1Sttrd'I, level p e r f o r m a n c e in »11 Lowrr II.Old. Liii An9•1"'
departments of art, dance, CIRTllllCATI :i:1"~11COHTINUANCt: c1}b'U~1'A. flEMI NO. 423'1 Sl1111bllrr, drama and music. 011 USE ,r,NDIO• AIANDONMEHT OP Sllerm111 Otks, Ctlllor~!•. PICTITIOUl NAMt: HARR Y SHESTON, Ul15 MO<U"Plr~.
Camper
Wins Award
THE UNOER510NEO <Iott hereby cir· Sherm1n O.k1, C1lllom!1. tit., 11111, tffectl\11 A119111t 1, 1'61 ii tttt-WltntH 11111• llllldl 1'1111 )rd MY ol AV.
.cl !O dD b\11111111 llndltr 1111 llCTlllO<Jt 1,ttl, IHI. llrm MllM o1 MESA AUTO WRECKERS DONALO P, Wit.SON ti 2011 PIKtnll1 Aw..,..., Cost1 Mtll. 0. I'. Wit.SON Ctlffoml1. wllkll lllltllllts w11 formtrly JOHN A, Ft.EMING
COll'IPOl.ed of !ht lol1owlnsr pt~, -H,r,RllV SHESTON Mll'lt In l'IJll tl!d PIKI ol m1clenC9 II ALFllED J. FISHE .. it loll!OM. lo.Wit: FRANCES A. MOSS E. II. Grlm1t11nl Enl1rJ1rlH1. Inc.,• STATE Of CAt.IFORMI A Ctlllor>1!1 '°"°'''Ion COUNTY OF ORANGE J H
John M Su 14 f CJ.fl fe rnltll Avl!Wt, CorDl\I dtt /Nr. On !hit :lrd d1y of Al/91,ttl. A.O .. l~. · mner, , 0 Ctlltornli. botiore mt, 11>1 1,1ndl1rol•nl'd, 1 Nolt•• Newport Beach has been c1r1111e11w ,.,.. 1r1~11ct1ort o1 11v11n1u P11bllc In 1nd for wld Covnl'I' 1M 11111, ul\dt• tt.. •tlOY• flctlllovt 111,,.,e Ind If. rnllll.,. llll•tln, duly conomlulOllld tfld awarded the Boys Camper fldlvtt o1 Pllbllctllon !Mrwl, 1~e on !Ill 1worn. P9<10111Hy •-•red DON,r,LO P. Mark Clark Award for ex· Jn 1111 ofllce ol "'' co. ... rv Cl•rk of WILSON. ALf"REO J. FISH Eil IM . Or1"'1 Counl'I', lln<l•• tP>I ll•ovl•I-of l'llANCES A. MOSS kftowt1 lo mt 10 b11 cellence bi sports, physical s.c111111 '"' o1 flw CIYH coc11. •M "" ..... """°" n1m11 '" 111b1cr1botd
fitness m anners and at· WIT NESS ""' MM llllt lOlll Nr cf Jv. to !ht ""~In 1n11rvm.n1, '"" 1c1t11owle4> • "· lHll. 9111 ~ me lllel tl\ly ut'CUIM flw Mf!W,
Utude. E. 1. Grll!llt'11rd E~tw.,.rr.... l" wllnftl """'''°'· • "'""'""'"to t"
d · b Inc. ,..., Jltl>CI Ind 1lfl•lll mY olflcl1t 1e1I 1111 'J'he awar , received Y lly Elrnlr I. Grlmu11rd, city 1"" ..,..r '" llllt certlflalt !!rt! 1bon
two of the 261 campers. was 11_n::,"~~ • .. ,_,., A.,..,.. W~7fC1•L SEALI
presented by Gen. Hugh ?. u.. c1111"' °"" OoNld G. co,.
H . 'd t f \ h H-" 1-11. C•llwlll1 flUJ Hoh,.., l'uflllc arr1s, pres1 en o e Ttl: s.M1t s111e o1 C1llf0tn11
Citadel Summer Camp for "vii"""'° o.,,... C011t t111i.. l'11o1. Pr1nc1"1 Otflct '"
Boys l·n ~arle-S C ""'"'' 11.. n. 1' tlld SePt~ber 2, 0<1111e Counl'I'
""' 1 • • lHI ,._.. MY Commlts lon ElU>h'ft
Sumner the son of Mrs. • ...... n. 1•11 . . LEGAL NOTICE STi,TE 0' CAt.lfORN ll, Marianne M. Sumner of 1960 COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES ) •
Vista Caudal, will be a """'' ON •1111111 6, 1961 bllort. "'' un
M CRRTll'ICATR Ofll 1\ISIHRlt. okrtl•Md, t Not1rr Public lfO 11'111 lor Nl~ freshman at Corona del ar PICTITIOUI Hl,MR 1111e. ""°"''"' ..... ,r.ci HARltV Hinh Scbool in the fall. TM llllcltt1l1rlld c1o cer111'1' """' .,.. SHESTON ~-111 ~ to be 1llf H•-&'' COl\ductllll I 1111'111111.1 II p 0 flClll 205 """' l\llfl9 !1 lublcrfbed IQ "" wn111 .. Cosll Mew. C1Htor11l1 .,,,, .C11!fornLt: IMtr\tfl\lftt, .... 1dl110wltclttcl "' 1111 !Ml ul'ldel' the lkllllwt tlrm 111mt o1 M M G "-•~ta.ltd "" "'"'·
Get in Swim,
Says Boys' Club
COMrAHY tMI llltl "Id firm II nom. WITNESS 111¥ "9ndl .... oftlcltt Rll.
Ntld " n. to11ow1 ... ,..,...., ~ !OFFICIAL IEALI 1' Allttl W. Witter 111mn In Ml 11111 •i.ctl fll mldel'IQ ,,.. Hot•-p '" .r 1, __ , II '-!i.w.· 'T U C ... I """' ANTHi>MY A, GIEROMI!, , •• 11111 l'rlncl11I Office Ill ,!., ...... H, Cost1 IMll. La. A11111M COtJn!V MATTIE Ill, OlllQMt, Ml . 16111 l'L. Mr C-.luloft l:.»lr11 ...., u. c..11 Mft• ,., ... 1111 10. ,,.. OAi'EO Alltllll t ,.. STATE 0' CAt.l,OllNIA l Registration is currently ANTHONY A. GEROME COUNTY 01' I.OS ANGELES) u
bei. g tak-f swlmm!n11 MATTIE • O.EllOME ON ""'"'' s, 1'61, belort ~. --· n "" OT a ..... of C•lllotftll. ori .... C_....: un11 .. 1l9n111 .• NDlll"J' P1,1bllc 1" '"" !of
CIM!iM Aug. 26 through °" A1111. t. ,..._ b9for9 -· 1 Nof•rv ~(~~~~~ ;',,:'~IY '"":': ,:o"N A,
Sept 6 at tht Central :,U:..~" !~.!O°NY'~. s~~~C:T":~ Wlll»I ,..,;.. 11 ~b.o to 1i.! ':1:
Brancb °' the Boyi' Club of MATTltl It. GEROME ,_ "' ,,,. Ill ::•1;:·~ ~~--" 111 l!M""'
the Harbor Area, 594 Center ~= :''::" wl~M=n:~ ... ': to'1~~~~~ ~ ... ~"" i1111 on1c111 11e1L
St., Ccet.a Mesa. ~ """ 111«111111 "'-Mt'Yll. Slnln ii: ....... i.,
ClaSHS are open to boys ~'r,'!. H,.U:bti«:•"~" .... ,,,.,, ;.u11nc c1111orr11t '• ,...,." Prlft(IHI Ot'fl« 111 and girls two years of age Pr11K1H1 Ofnce '" Lot •111t1e1 eeun"'
and older. For further in· ~i'C'.,.,.~~ ri.,i,., :,,c:-"1';'~t1°" E~fl""
formation tuitlct J o y Jui.. 1'· 1"' '°:n.oc f'ulll\tllttl Or•-COit! Olli. Piiot, '"'blltlltod Ori.... Co.11 1)1\l'f Pilot. Stark, aquaUCI d1rector at ""'""' it. "· "H 1...i 5et>i.mt1tt 1. •ut1u,1 11.. 11, ,,. 1,. StPiem-._ 543.9387, ,,_ l*"'ll Ifft l)IUI
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-~~---~------------------~----~--------------------.. ---------
LEE WALLACE, 7, GETS MICKEY'S ATTENTION
Cieorge W1ll1ce Ctlebrated Birthday at Dl1ntyl1nd
wroners
Elect
.Brandt
ANAHEIM -Ozan10
Oounty -Dr. 1\11· -"--••""9
-pm1daot ot .the ln11ornallonal Aaodalfoll ot cor-r. lll>d M~al ~'
-· ot tile -·· con., wnUm ~cl> ended Ill
meeting today here at the
Greod Hotel.
' n. ~ca, &mlOUDCed al lllo ......,.,., bon<j_~ •f
which recently m • r r·1 e d
Erle Stanley Gardner,
mysleey writer, wae the
guest gpeater, was made
' tor • year-lool period belln·
Dill( !bat nigbt.
Recently rename« · lronf
Natlooal AssodoUO!l o I =· !': t.""611 ~ Suiaken Yard ·Sudden
• =~rns wl~tm~J.J~ Mrs. Robert Neare, of 51121 HunUey Ave., Garden
and advectures throughout Grove views without much enthusiasm her sunken
hb l!leUme. backyard while Garden Grove offtclals Friday con-
'IVanilng the 200 coroners siderticl What to do. Water In old, capped line was
and their wl~ to beware of tU:rned on popping out lid and undermining newly
jumping t 0 conclusions. decorated' yard. Cave-in and flood followed, send·
Gardner related personal ing family dog Clem dog-paddling into the house in
anecdotes in which his coun· 10-inch tide. Insurance investigator!l 3re now total·
try -"dlse-0vor1d" that _ _;ln::g~u~pt::.h•~=tab.:.. ------------malaria wa.a cauged by
wattt melon hearts.
Fire Calls Innocent Plea in Assault
SANTA ANA - A 39-year· We strnlnster Commwi.ty ~i1Y' t:::.'41;?!91':J':.~~ e11r Hre. · old Westminster man ac· llospital last July 7. Johrwon
d1n"r vw,. _ • IMdlc•I ~·.....i of -•uJ•'-• ·-~-r allegedly tried t.o 6 t 0 P ~ ".na:'\1111 w~'"' •· ·• 1 o.:..-:u --ia ....... ~ Mi<:bae\s !rom taking parts
v. Au•. 2', ,l:~., 1·"'·1 • ··"•• d di weapon · t v1it11t1on, l-'i ~ • .'!ff Cl•c • man wAU a ea Y from a car m an au o
• Enroll Now-Fall Semeater •
ALL DAY CLASSES
kindergarten thru 8th grade
DOOR TD lllDR BUI IBRVICB
ClDLD CAlUI JIBPORS .Alm Al'l'll licBOOL
6:30 A.M.-11:30 P.M. . . .
TEACHING"'4 R's" WLTH PHONICS
IEASOllAIU lliTIOl-lllDIYIDUAL ATTDTIOll W al'lace Has Birthday
In Disneyland Tour sune'"TJ..""'· '25, t :ll 1.rn., f111t 111rm, pleaded immcent here in salvage lot. io~.~:oi~fi'c 1u11t, '300 H1rtior Superior Court Friday. Michaela also pleaded in· Non·d•noll'llft1tton11
call (714> 962-3312 to~ay
ANAHEIM -George C.
\Vallace turned 49 Sunday
and observed the occasion
u:o ;,,.,,, •r•n "l"f· lOUfl'I ~ sw.11 Louis Patrick Michaela, of nocent to charges of petty HAWTHOlllE CHRISTIAll SCHOOLS * '''" "l'" '"'~" """ """", 13752 M1·1~n St., Is accus<d theft In the semo instance. * by taking his four children ~r"ri:; l'uri:rton211.,~fJ!11tfi1':'" -it" ol ,._ .":sault wbl~ put Jury trial on both counts
DiS 1 th ,_ .... vl'tli; Ullll! ..., ..,.,, I ~115 lr10U111r1t, Fo~nla'ln V1 ll1y, C11lf., •2701
to ney andhereand en ~·~~~nde~·~~·~·i~-~ "'~'~'»[:•·:·~··~·:~~":'''.._J~ollo~~L~.::::J~ohnson~~~·...:30~,~in~~w~as~o~e~t!f"'~N~o~v~.21~8~.~~.-!~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ... w1aawwr:•1•p;1
having a quiet diMer. I· t 1c1, 1 '" us1itn1 sr.
The third party presiden·
tial candidate re5umed his
campaign today Md p181llled
to address another rally in
Long BeaCh tonight. He
departs for Phoenlx, Ariz.,
For The
Tuesday.
His three daughters, Bob-Record by Joe, Le< and Peggy, "'1d
his son, George Jr., came
hen! tn be wilh their father
on his birthday. They toured Meeting B the p 0 p u I a r amw;ement
MONOAY complex in Anaheim Sunday
s1111or Clll1•n• Club ot Hunl/nD!on alrernoon, sh--"erded bv 8t41cl! P111t 111<1 lle.:rtMlon au llllnD, ~i'"' ., 1Jfl'I 11111 Or11111 11rut1, Huntlngrd" ,..A_ Servi lo N.!::0~ ~a~r S.nlof" c111I'"' Club. ~'et ce agen .
senior c1ni1tr1• c 111D11ou111, ~111 s1re..t The former A l .a b a m a !! lrvlnt "Y•11Ut, H•wioon l••d'I.
S«v!'1c'·!j!'o.,,... .. ,_~1111w111ot k¥>. governoi:;: ~tt;.atjl.ed Richard
""' 1nc1 u.n. '°'''" w.1 .,,,,. M N "" the. Repub"--cw1rn.uen lOIUl'l'lfl n , COr1I Reef • X~.., ~;dlJ
Rt•l•u•fnl, l64S H1rt111r l lvd .. c os11 p-~dential oominee. at a Mt1• '·"'° p.m, ! I , -E•PIOf ... Scou1i1 labcock 11ctron ca. ..," ~-( d. Sat d E•Plor... PQI 1M, 111><odr. Elec· ~-ai>i:a e inner ur ay
tronla, 3501 HtrllOf" · lllvcl., Cos11 ni rl'h.f in Loog Beach. Mtl•, 7:15 P.m. L I 6"' •''"'' co.o1t Mlner11 1r.c1 •P darv H t Id t"-1 -•• .. ·lastic soclfttY, Co•tr Mesa, women's CIYb, e o •re 1n..rr~
tlG w. 111'1 s .• Coit• Mt••· 7:3Cl o.m. ga•·i..,....· g of about 4 O 0 f 01Jn!11l11 valley. Junior Chtmbllr ,',' .,,.,.,..,Ul
cornm1rc1, Kll\9'1 Tabt1, 1 4 pe--•• that "Ni·....-.._]d WestrnlP\Ster "v• .. we11mln111r, l:lD • .,,,....., Avu •v
Pm Southerners, 'we're not Co•it • Mttt Htrrn.ont '"I' NNo. 2'1 d Otld F11Jaws H11. 741 1woor going to jam anything OWtl
eiw .. cast• it'ito~Y·"'· , your throats.' He's right in
Corona del M4r Eru.1nv• Club, Jos~ 1 d the 1t1tt11,1r1nt, 11~1 E. COii! Hlel'lwav, one Sef\liie. He an na·
Coron• dtl Mtr 1~ l'QOM. • R bU and Coul\Gll o1 c11Yrdil'S, f!ewllll't H••bor. tional epu cans na. 'R'::"H'~1~f.'v~~~K.,~.!i.. .. ton1«1 tional Democrats ha v e
Cas!a ·M~ E •ch~ngc Cl Yb, coral ltnt alread• 1· mmed eve ... ,."ing Jle.taur1nl, 16-IJ H1rbor l!l!vd., Co.ti ~ • :1 w• N:!~;, ~~rbllr "'llv• »• c1y11, down our throa~ there is to Vllltgt inn, Ut M1rlnt. a111>o1 jam."
l1lafl!I, llOOfl < -~----------1 Ct11!1 Ml .. A11!1ry Club, N~"',,. m,,.,• Meu• Golr 1nd CD1Jntr1 " Y , 11 Go~ Course Drive. Cos11 Mtl&. 11:10
ctro"'!l.i d.r Mtr Klwan11 Club. Villi Swtdfn, S5ld E. Co11t Highway, to .. •n• dfl Mar, it1·10 o.m. t·hmtln;ton Beach K wanl• Club, l-lu"'
11n;t11n 1le1Ch CounlrY Club, 77' Hth St .. Huntlnetcn llctU., 1:J:1'! ,, •. NrWi>0rt H~rbor OPllml1t tu , VIII! M1rl111, 104$ llt'ft\de Orlw, NtwPOr
DEATH NOTICES
PETERSON
At'f Ptlwrson. 6012 S.nll C1ltllr111
Ave., G1rden Grew. SYrvlvtd by
WI"', Loh1 '°"'' Ool>•lcl A. ftncl 0111 M P~on1 cl1Yghlt'fl, GIOl'll L wii~Ol'I t ncl V11tn1 A. J1n~ln11 bro!"-
••· Errol Ptl•rtOl'I. 54,.,.1ce Wtl held
lod1y, Monc11y, ID:lD AM, P• Ftm-
lly Colonl1I FUM rtl Htm~.
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del Pi1ar OR S-9450
Costa Mesa Ml 6-242<
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa Mesa
LI 8-M31
DILDAY BROTHERS
Huntington Valley
l\1ortuary
11911 Beach Blvd.
HunUngton Beach
uz.m1
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery e Mortuary
Chapel
-Pacific View Drlvt
Newport Beacll, Callfond1
"4-Z700
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7881 Boin Ave .
We1tmtn1&er DWS2S
SllUTH'S MORTUARY
m Mala St.
Hau.pa Jlucb
LEMm
WJISTCLIFF MORTUARY
U7 E. J71b SI., Co1ll Moaa
NII-
•
Meetings
I•~· ll:n plm. . Co"• Miii KIWlnls Club, CllP•ln At1ffyt1nt, 1'10 "4t\VPOrl l lvd,, '°111 Mtu. 12:U p.m. Hunt nttoo'I l•~~h Jtet...., Clu~. N"'"'· Four Wlml1 Ant111r1nt, 16'21 lcl .. Ch!tt llOld, Hunlh'llloft l!lt1U.. 12:U P,m,
DEATH NOTICES
KLAGES
Allee A, Kiie". llOCI Cort i ~llCI,
N•WPOrt Beat~. 0.•1 or de11'11. A~
1u1t l'-Survlftd ~Y ion, 11111>1'1 P,
Kl1;11, or w1111111ri clt.ug1111r, Mrs.
'Miry S. Pv!o, N!woatl l!ltlChl 111·
ter, Ml'I. '-mutl Tl'lornl.,.., 1111~1;
brctMl'I, C~tln G1Jll, llUntl1, Incl
Percv Gtsh, Ml._,rli i ncl (lint t rt,..P.
dllld~. S.rvlcn. T"'ldt'f, 3 PM, 111
1119 CllaPfl 11 P1clflc Yltw, wltll R.fv.
Vri-1 Llncllet ollld tlln1. ln~,.,,...,t,
Ptcllk View M ...... n.r Plrlc. DltKI-
" by P•ciftC Yltw Morlu1ry. l\fcl\tAJION
l-l1reld W. McMtllon. •1 s,,.., Jl:o.d,
N.-ot1 9ttc!I. 0.11 fl clltlh, A~
1ust 7J. Survived by Witt, J&p, ol
lilt ~m1; da1,1<;1hl•r, M,., Plvl ll k-
cl1rdl, $111 AnN>lmo t •!11tr, Ml'I. J111-ltllll ICclly, ef Htw 111 ........ COllll .. Ind
tour 91'11rodchllclrtn. krvktt, IOOt'I',
Mof\dly, 11 AM, 111 ~ Ctl-1 1t
l'Kltit View, ~t~ lttv, Wllll1m
l!'dctl ollfclU lng, ln1trl'l\ffll, Pttlllc
VI-Mtmori1I P111t. 01~ by ~I·
clflc llltw Mfrt\11...,. Bt:KG
N~ ADllCHll HEARING .AIDS
Cu1t•111 A•r•I A•11llfl11tl•11 MO IA&.atll!lll
J4" I. COAST NWT. C-•-MM ,, ......
r-····~----·····················~,
: famous recipes tram famous cities!. :
I El Rancho continues to bring you interesting meals from around I
I the world,: with recipes from famous cities, where food is an art! I L--··••·-~•••••••••••••••••••·•·••·•.I
• •
F h E WDf 'AA" 43 res ggs ...... .................. ...... £t
El Rancho's extra large ~ •• errs &re basic lo the Tokyo diet J
Peanut Oil .......... .. ................... 59'
Planter'• ... 24 01. bottle , •• for !ryinr f~a .Japanese style?
:~~Fruit Salad ... :.3 fDl Sl.00
Del l\{onte blendl Wutern and E1.!tern favori tes! ... 18 oi. can!
Kiki Sake .............................. ~ s1 .90
Golden rice wine •.• uae it u you would use Sherry!
Plum Wine ........................ ~s2._39
Houaa ol Koahu,., ))lrfect way to top oil your Tokyo dinner I
From tli.111 Hoiue of th.e Seven Mo~ ••• in the aMdowa
of Fujiyama. ••• tantalizing food& 1vith. fcucino.t ino name1-
and exotic ./lavora! The charm of the orient ia ~ours in the
free recipu available thia week at our 1ervic111 meat countera l
SIRLOIN
STRIPS FOR Sukiyaki
Lean, tender • , • thin ali cea from t.he trianrle tip of U.S.D.A.
Choice Bee! .• our recipe tells you exactly whit to do .. and how r
TOP ROUND
STEAK FOR s129
lb. Teriyaki
Get the hibachi ready.,, follow the recipe .•. and ·enjoy beef
l.erriye.ki •• , tender round ateak! , •• specially cut for youl
Mushrooms 59~
Hothouse fresh •• , add the magic of mushroom.a to your table!. ..
Spinach 2for29c
Try our recipe for Y1aai-Snim ono (or ve1etable aoup) l
Soy Sauce 3t
Jan~U.Wine ••• 12 oz. bottle ••• inirnjtable 01·icntal flavor ?
Pricu i" •/f1ct at au 1tort1
J/01&., TtU1., Wtd., Aug. Id, 11, t8 •
MrMl.I: Sunle! & Ha1liclull Dr. (El Rllldlo Cln!er)
PASallJIA: 320 Wat Colondo BM!. • SllTI 'ASAll!llA: Frement & Hunlinaton Dr.
IUTIWITIN l(ACI: Wamtr and AlfOllquin (Just East·of Huntiniton HarboUI)
IOPtlf IWlt 2727 NIWP«l BM!. • 2555 Ea!tbiull D((ElllbMf Villlrt Cln111')
-----------------
•
DAILY PILOT 9
Alfirl
QALIFOflNJA
FROM
OIWl&E COITY
AllORT
TO
Sii FRllCISCO
OAlllD DI
WJOSEI
OUR OC.! AND rucru
SUNJEIS
DEPART 18 TIMES DAll.T
fDl !Hf EXCITING
SAN fMNCISal BAIAlltl
s14ae
one way fare plus tax
FOR RE$EllVATIOllS
CALL YOUR ruvu AGEHT
OR AIR CALIFORNI!:
fllOI Onnp i:GllltJ
(711) 540-IS!O
T oll·fno frolll LA.
Zoilll 7D799
...fl
CALIFORNIA
THE l!E'llAYl
I
c -
JO OAllV ,llOT
Growth Rate
Still Soars
Rec or d -breaking in·
d u ll t r i a I production, ac·
cording to Security Pacific
NaUo.nal Bank, is "probably
the most significant element
in Souther n Calil"Ornia's
economic growth rate dur·
lng the first half o! 1968."
In a five-page summary of
first hall economic develop-
ments, the bank's Economic
Research Department cites
manufacturing employment,
manufacturing payrollJ and
industrial power sales as
significant indicator s of in-
creased industrial activity.
The volume of power sales
to industry. as measured on
the bank's seuonaU, ad·
justed ind~x ot kilOW"aU hour
sales, a~raged at 219.0
(19()7-59 -100) during the
first half of tbL& year. up 8.2
pereent IN>m the first half
ol 1967. The index, baood on
sales by the Los Angeles a .
ty Department of Wat.r and
Power and by the Southern
California Edison company,
reached an all·time b1gb
level ol 219.8 In April.
First hall JnaDulacturing
employment in the I Los
Angeles·Orange County area
averaged 995,900, up 2.9 per·
cent from a year earlier,
Aerospace employment in
the two counties accounted
for 429 ,800 workers, in·
creasing by 4.5 percent over
a year's time.
M anufacturing payrolls
were 6.3 percent higher dur· . r
ing the first haJl of 1968 than ~~
during the first half of 1967. •
The Security index for Hangar Flying
manufacturing payrolls in
Los ~ngeles and Orange The new Lockheed L-1011 jetliner recently under ..
Counties averaged at 164.8 went trial demonstrations in the full-scale m ockup
during the first half. A cabin. Dining aboard the craft promises to be a
recor~. level of 169.9 was pleasant e:xperience for passengers. Food and bever-
establisbed last December.
age service will be streamlined due to Lockheed's
new underfloor galley and cart service system . The
airliner is scheduled to enter commercial service
in 1971. ·
'-'~iZ'S/od0c;tl011 .--:•
'' salts ···
E1rnlno• · • • THE NEXT SIX
MONTHS •••
WHAT SHOULD ,-,olit• ..•
The increase in Southland
production is part of a na·
tional trend, as evidenced c d • t
by the Federal Reserve re I
Board index of industrial Card Thefts Increase
Dllo '
WE EXPECT? ~ .. ~"' ... ,,,,.-
llHICH INDUSTRIES SHOULD
BENEFIT MOST!.-.~ L£ASTI
rw your frM copy of the M~r
Economk. Butlnffl •ltd Aniu>dal
OUTlOOK. Pl'~t•d It)' tt1• Eco.
nomlca 0.P9rtrMnl of one of th•
counby't '-dll'IC tovfftm•nl man·
•Pm•nl orpnlutloM, Mnd this --"" Sh•erion, H1mmill & Co.
M•mb•t• N1w Yol"ll: Sto,k Ex,h1n91
'IOI Oo w1r Ori~•
Newport l•l<;h, C1 lif.
642·4010
Rich•rd D. Broom•
.... _, ______ _
EACH YEAR
production, which registered
at an all-time high of 16.1.7
in May.
Seminar Set
For Tonight
A financi'al seminar v.'ill
be held tonight at
the Newporter Inn, 1107
Jamboree Rd., Newport
Beach, according to Finan-
cial Concepts, Inc., Los
Angeles-based investment
firm.
P resident Lawrence M.
Schulner will discuss "Tax
Shelt.rs and Financial Plan·
ning" at the free-admission
8 p.m. meeting which will be
held in the hotel's Executive
East Room .•
NEARLY ONE MILLION
NEW INVESTORS
BUY STOCKS
ANO BONDS.
ATTEND THIS
FREE LECTURE
AND FIND OUT WHY ..•
ltere's your opportunity. Attend this special
~ecture on fl1utual Funds before you decide to
invest. Learn the advantages and disad vantag.
es and how to judge performance. The lecture
will be delivered bv an account executive v.'ith
Dean \Vitter & Co., and \Viii be followed by a
half·hour discussion period. For reservations,
phone 642·6050 or 540-1713 or write to the
Ne\\rport Beach offi ce of Dean Witter & Co .. 881
Dover Drive.
DATE:
Tuesday, August 27
TIME:
Starting at 7:30 p.m.
I '
PLACE
Newport Beach Office of Dean Witler &
881 Dover Drive
INSTRUCTOR:
F. Kimball-Conrad, Account Executive
DEAN WITTER. « Co.
... th• p1op/1 who".Jligfdeep
..._. ,_ T ... IW c.N•I' • r.dtlc C.el Slldl ~
881 Dover Drive 642·6050
l'IEIVPORT BEACH
Co.
By SYLVIA PORTER
Your credit card is now
more vulnerable to theft and
misuse than ever before.
With an e s ti m a t e d
200,000,000 cards in circula-
tion in the U.S. today and
with yearly card losses as
high as 1,500,000 the chances
that your own credit cards
will be stolen have soared.
The market for stolen credit
cards has in fact become so
lucrative that some cards
sell for J>5!JO or more each. A
card thief can run up $5,000
to $10,000 of charges for
items ranging from auto
Two Mission Viejo
Men Win Pro111otion
batteries to diamond rings
be!ore the Joss is even
reported.
AS A GENERAL rule.
you, ttie card holder, are not
responsible for c ha r g e s
made against your card by
someone else -· if you
re ce i ve d the card
unsollcited. These charges
must be absorbed by the
bank or other organization
issuing the ca rd s.
Nevertheless, you are still
under obligation to report
the loss of the card im·
mediately ot the issuer.
The American Express
Co. limits ttie liability of its
mdit card customers to
$100, but again, you must
report ra loss at once and in
writing to be eligible for the
liability limit. S e v e r a l
states, too, have passed
laws in the past couple of
years to limit the card
holder's liability, but in
for limiting the possible
losses you could suffer if
your card is stolen :
-Don't leave your credit
card in the glove com-
partment or your car. This
is one of the first places ci
professional credit c a rd
U1ief looks.
-Don't underestimate the
value of your card because
ifs made of heavy paper or
plastic. Consider it as the
equivalent of cash and ju,'lt
as tempting to a thief.
-DON'T LEAVE credit
cards lying around in your
office or hotel room any
more than you would leave
a stack of cash lying
aroun.d. Instead, keep your
cards securely in your
wallet or purse.
i most instaoces, this limit
applies only to unsolicited
credit cards.
-Don't preserve out of
date credit cards or cards
you don't intend to use.
Destroy the cards which yo u
do not use and periodic31Jy
weed out your collection to
make sure you are keeping
only the cards you do need
and want.
PROPERTY MANAGER
Robert E. Maurer
Two Mission Viejo men
have been promoted to posi·
tions with the ri1ission Viejo
Co., developer of the 11,000.
acre town .
Robert E. M a u r e r .
formerly purchasing agent
with the company, has been
appointed property manager
and director of purchasing.
l ie will be responsible for
managing all company-own-
ed properties, including the
shopping a n d recreation
centers. and directi n g
purchasing for a ll company
projects.
Roberi E. 0 s b or n e ,
CONSTRUCTION CHIEF
Robert E. Osborn•
former field coordinator of
construction, has been nam-
ed manager ol construction.
He will be responsible for
all residential construction,
approximately 1.200 homes
per year, and all commer-
cial construction.
Both men, fl.1 a u r e r
formerly of 3292 Arizona
Lane, Costa Mesa, and
Osborne, formerl y of 143'.!
Kenneth Drive, Tustin, are
in the process of moving to
Mission Viejo with their
families . Both are graduate s
of Orange Coast College.
Wersbow
LIQUIDATION SALE
BY ORDER Of OWNER
32 LAGUNA BEACH
OCEAN VIEW LOTS*
•Buy L1a;un1 Beach r•slden·
tial property at a llquidat!on
pr ice! All t hese lots are
fully improved with under· srou nd utilities. They are
located just East of the Ctfl·
tar of town, 1e!ll than 1 milt
from Pacific Coast Highway.
Man y ol t hese lots co m·
mind 1 masnificent view
of !he Pac1!1c Ocean.
Easyterms-
owner will finance
with releases.
ror additional lnlorm1t10n.
call 1ny ol th• Wershow
Oct1n:.ld1 R11I E.11111 T11m:
Carolyn, MUU1, Aick, Ken or (d.
\ ~
;.i,\ lllOAOWA1 .,
.. LAGUNA IEACH •
Tract #4514, lots l lhrv 32
l •ke Cr••• SI to lll1nblo'll CIM'61'1
l'lo•d. 11\tn C(mt1n111 on to lot•.
l f\9 lol• ••• ''"'•l•d on ll1r1111 Rd.. 81111b"d C•nron Rd. 1nd ~o.nln11k:l1 Orlvt . ICIP'O•l..,Utlf
I ""'' ftst of 1ht Co1S1 H•11\w1r. ow co .
AUCTION[[llt • llUL TOllS
1012 S. Hill St.•Oc•1n1ldt, Calif. 920!M•(714) 722·1306
~-~-~-~~~~~~----~
I
Nevertheless, also as a
general rule, you, the h6lder
of a credit card, are liable
for losses during the period
between the time the card
was lost or stolen and the
time you report this fact to
the issuer.
You are vulnerable, in
short -and thus, here are
basic guidelines for pro-
tecting your credit card
against abwe by others and
15 Childi·en
Win Prizes
Fifteen Orange Coast area
residents received boucing
balls from Fashion Island in
Newport Ce nter last week.
Eaeh week 20 of the giant
balls are awarded to
:youpgsters during th e
c en t er' s back·tos-chool
events.
\Vi.rmers are Ju l le
To\stad, 461 Bolero Way;
Jenny Ni sen off, 2652
Basswood. \Vay ; Jordan and
J ennifer Schwartz, 1 9 2 1
Deborah Lane; C h r i sty
Borden. 433 Carnation Ave.;
Pat Bates. 226 OiamoOO
Ave .: Sue \Vilson, 2531 Barn·
boo St.: Paul Maddux, 2375
Redlands D r i v e ; and
Anthony Gath, 1407 Santiago
Drive, all of Huntington
Beach.
Others are Robert L.
Carter. 1616 White Oak St.;
Scott Clapel, 2'n6 Mendoza
Drive; a nd Judy liynn Duf.
fy . 352 Victoria St., all of
Costa. Mesa. AJso, Pauline
V. Kar gel, 620 Hartford
Ave .: Stephanie Wells, 6032
Medford Drive : and Blair
Helsing, 9141 \Var field
Dri\."C, all of Huntngton
Beach: and Brian Benham.
31552 \VHt Street, South
Laguna.
-Don't casually throw
unsolicited credit cards in
the waste basket. Carefully
destroy each card first.
Trash bins are another
fa vorite huntif)g spot for
credit card thieves.
-Do, in a separate place.
keep a list of the names and
numbers of each of your
credit cards. This will pro·
vide you with an immediate
reference should you Hnd
that one of your cards is
missing.
-00 CHECK over all
your credit cards regularly
to make sure all you own
are there. If one is missing,
report the fact immediately
to the issuer -by telephone
or wire. Follow up "ilh a
letter giving your name and
address, your credit rard
number, the date on wh ich
the card was lost and how lt
was lo9t.
-Do, each ~lmc yon use
your credjt card. make sure
you get it back. This is
particularly important when
:you are using the card in
out-of·town places. \Vhen
you have to wait several
minutes for the card's
return. it's far too easy to
forget what you are \faiting
for and to wallc. or drive
away.
-Do consider b u y i n g
credit card insurance, either
as part of your hon1eowner's
insurance p o I 1 c y or
separately. Typical costs
are $8 to $10 for $1,000 v.·orth
of insurance coverajte for a
three-year period and about
$18 to $20 for $5,000 of
coverage.
IN SUJ\tMARV . fl I the r
give up the advantages of
owning credit cards <ind
return to cash-checlt 11,·ing
or treat the se cards with the
r~specl vfflich they , as the
equivalent of cash in your
wallet or purse, deserve.
Stops Tormenting
· Rectal Itch
Exclusive F onnula Promp~y Stops hching,
Bwning and Relieves Pain of Piles In Most C..es
New York, N.Y. (Specia0: The
embarr111ing Itch cat111ed by
ht1morrholda ia most tortut"Oaa.
But K ience h11 found a aped.al
formula with the ablllt7, In
most ates -to prompUy Mtop
I the burning ftch. nlie•e Pllin
I and 11.ct ually 11hrink hemor.
rhoida. And all wlLbout nar.
cotic1or1tln;in1 a1trlnrentl
of 11.ny kind.
The Aeret. Is P~rvtit11t 11•.
There 11 no othor hemorrhoid
!ormul11. likll it. Preparation ll
11.130 lubricat~. aoothea lrrit.rtted
tiRSUel and llclps prevent .fur·
tht!.r inlectlon. In ointment. or
1uppo1i~ry form.
1969 Model
Cars Higher
DETROIT ( UP[)
Americans will pay upwards
of $1-billlon more tor 1969
model cars than they did for
the ~·s. And that is on ~p
of the $1-billlon more they
paid for new models in the
previous year.
These estimates by
sources close to the industry
are based on sales of nearly
nine million cars in 1969,
compared with about eight
million this year.
Last year's price rise
averagei! about $125 per
~ar: and for the_ 1969 model . United Auto W or k er s
1t is expected to average negotiated a contract in·
close to $100. For 1968, the creasing wages more than
industry was required by $1·billion a year . The steel
National Safety Regulations industry recently negotiated
to provide a number of w a co~tract which also calls . . ne for higher wages.
safety items, mclud1ng side Under g n m e n t
li his Id . o v er
g , outs e mll'ror, com-pressure, the steel mills
plete lap belting and front rolled back some price Jn-
seat shoulder harnesses. creases announced shortly
Auto c 0 m p an i es felt after signing the contract.
j. ur· d · th b' . Until then it had been us 1e in e igger prJce reported the auto industry
boost contemplated adding a n
For 1969, the only new ,..a.v~Ke of $150 to the price
major safety item required tag of 1969 models. Steel'~
by law is installation begin· pri~e rollback revised these . eshmates. rung Jan. 1 of head·rests for J 1 th 1 1 ill us as eseems front seat passengers to faced government pressure
reduce or prevent backlash. on price hikes. so would the
But auto companies have auto industry if its price in·
added engineering safety creases were considered too
features of their 0 high. ~ost observers fig~e w n · a price boost exceeding
General Motors has placed three pereent would provoke
stiff rails along the side g overnment intervention
panels for protection against and an investigation into
introducing a controlled-col. pricing practices.
!:ipse front end to reduce Th is the industry does not
1 m pa c t for c c!"s on \Vant. All companies in the
passengers. highly competitive auto in-
Because th es e are dustry jealously guard cost
engineering developments. figures. That's why the
the cost can't be price-tag. thinking now is a price rise
ged. It is generaUy agreed of about $100 per car on an
the installation of head·rests average, or about 3 percent
on the front seats will add which the gov e r nm en t
as much as $20 per car seems to c o n s i d er
despite µalph Nader's claim reason~ble if it also includes
they could be installed for the price of the newly·re-
no more than $10. quired head rests.
Major factors in the an. In some cars there could
ticipated price rise for 1969 ~e hidd~n price increases
are labor and materials 1.e. previous standard equip.
costs in the basic car ment removed from the
Last fall and winter', after basic car and then offered
a long strike against Ford as extra cost options. Prices
and shorter ones at General on optional equipment can
Motors ·and Chrysler the be expected to increase.
' Some companies, notably
Mail Order
Firms Set
For Merger
LOS ANGELE< (UPll -
The nation's I a r g e s t
specialty mail order firm
and the west's largest
department store c h a i n
have agreed to merge.
Broadway.Hale St o re s
Inc. and Sunset House Corp.
announced that the merger
\\'Ould involve the issue of a
new Broadway-Hale con-
vertible preferred s t o ck
with an estimated market
value of S13.5 million.
Edward \V. C a r t e r ,
Broadway president. said
the acquisition wa s "a first
step in onr announced pro-
wam of c or p o r a t e
diversification. and Sunset
I~ouse will provide us with
new opportunities through
its nationv.•ide mail order
distribution of consumer
goods ."
Broad\\•ay will is~ue one
share of a new $2 con-
vertible preferred stock for
each two of the 599,953
outstandin~ common shares
of Sunset. Each share of the
new preferred would be con·
verlible into one Broadway
common share.
Ford and Chrysler . did this
l:ist year and the year
before.
Jn another five or six
w~eks , the general public
will know for certain. Price
increases on th e 1969 models
will not be announaed un til
just before the new car~ go
into dealer showrooms. That
will start Oct. 1.
2 Promoted
By Collins
Col li ns Radjo Co.,
Newport Beach, has pro·
moted two executives of
engineering management.
Louis 1''. Cowden o f
Orange, was named director
of the Computer Systems
Division at Newport Beach.
This newly formed di vision
'>'i ll develop the peripheral
hardv.•are and software for
the company's computer
systems. Cowden has been
with Collins since 1957.
Robert R. Mooier c (
Newport Beach, was named
director o f Engineering
Development Division A.
Th.i s division is responsible
for design of the com-
m e r c i a I data com·
munications equipment and
g o v e r n m en t·S'ponsored
m i l i I a ry communication
systems.
ICOO'-'-'--L
950H---l--!-
DOW JONES
INl!USTlllAlS
N. Y STOCK EXCHANGE
1'f()l1<,T111AL INO[~
•
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t
' t
,_
f
I
r
s
'" n
,1
r
r
n
f
d
g ,,
• l· ,.
d
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n
---------... --.----~ ·-·-.... ---. -~~---~-------------------------~ ~ ----. . .
-Airport ·S~he1nes .. for Huntington Area:
...............
' I
• J
• . ..
BOLSA CHICA SITE -Among locations suggested
for new Orange County regioi:J.al airport is this un-
ique design on Bolsa Chica State Beach near Hunt-
ington Harbour. Approach would be over marsh·
lands owned by Bolsa Chica Co11>. Gray Indicates
noise zone.
I
.!
,.,,
THIS IS HOW BOLSA CHICA AIRPORT PLAN LOOKS SUPERIMPOSED ON HUNTINGTON MAP
Is Bolsa Site Possible?
Of major concern to resident! of
Huntington Beach is the possibility of
the Bolaa Chioa site becOming the
county regional airport. .
How possible is it? The entire city
became alarmed when Petet Moore,
of County Supervisor David L. Baker's
office, told the DAILY P~ Ulat
three of llhe five lites are nuhtary and
that the military bas shown no in·
cllnation tow.ard releasing the sites for
a countx airport.
The area in question ii just east of'
\Vanier Avenue in a section or the
coastline which Is swamPY and wiils
fo rmerly used as a duck hunting
preseive by its owners.
If an airport ls built, it would run to
sea on twin runways a ml.le apart.
Support Uld termi.Dal facWties would
be on the ma11)land.
The land ls ownod by ti>• Boin
CorporatioM, a group ol ftvt car·
porations rtpretefttlng tbe orlgtnal
landowners and their desendnts.
William Garland Jr., W:o president
of the corporations, told tbe DAILY
PILOT tile land cooU<>Ued by his com-
pany might b6 for 1&1e and that there
hu been no dedllon by bis company
., to how Ille land Should be
developed.
Part or the land is a strip of beach
owned by tile ·-· Slate park of· Oclala a.aid they have no proposal
before tllom concenlilll lht """'
"
beach, but that the department is
generally strongly opposed to lou of
state park prQperty, especially the lr·
replacable beach lands.
'Ibere are about 1,900 acres of the
Bolsa Corporetlona properties. The
Pereira master plan i.ays that a total
of about 1,400 attes Of land is the
minimum needed for a county regional
airport. Since some or the 1,400 acres
would be on man-made runways to
sea, there would be in excess of 500 to
600 acres of land around the proposed
air facility.
'IbO$t opposed to the Bol.sa site say
Ibis ls Ule land wbidl would be "'ed by
iJAi.ustry, thus further taking away
from the residential chanacter of 1ur-
rounding land.
While the homeowners mount their
campaign against the Bolsa lite, there
are those who are counting the new·
hotels, motel!, restaurants aDIJ tn-
duJtrlal plants such an airport could
bring to the city.
These leaders are not speaking loud·
ly because right now the plaUorm ap.
pears to belong to Ule airport op-
ponenti, but there wtll be groups in-
cluding the Chamber of commerce
aD1 the city official• who look at the
possibility of economic eabanctment
Air Passenger Demands
To Skyrocket hy 'l985
Air pauenger demand will increase
from 780,000 Utis year up lo 50 milUOn
by 11185, accordlnf lo tile Pila." I of
the Pereira Master Plal of Air
Trampmation !or Orange County.
To ~Ylde the bodies for this
OrweUitm actl.vity, Orange County's
popllloUon II expocted to triple ln 1lle
next.:!$ ;itm from Its pre-level of
I\
l .3 million to 3.9 million.
By 1993, the CO..-, will be the ten4ll
llrg .. t populetlon center In Ule United
Stalel, eccanltng' to tbe ~elra ·-Part of 111• formula In detuminlng
cou•ty commercial llr trafac by 11185
mma from figuring lht irowltl of Los
Allfele1 latenlational (I.AX).
r• '
. .......
LDS ALAMITOS -Aircraft from Los Alamitos
Naval Air station now fly across the western edges
of Huntington Beach. Residents anticipate even
heavier traffic should this site be chosen from a
regional airport.
Airport Fever
Huntington People Fear All Not Well
Airpcrt fever bas struck in Hun.
tingloo Beodl llllll already resldenta
w11o mlgllt be llftc<ed by a proposed
~ air facWty at Bolsa Chica do
not feel all II wett. H-cl bomeow'1«'s living In a
brood bell north of tile propooed site of
a county reg!O!IM alrporl at BolAa Wea, jult tiMt of Warner Avenue
alorig Ooo<t Highway feel 111ey are liv· mg in the shadow ci a great smoke
apewtng, roarlng jet airplane.
They have joined to fight what Uley
ccmsider to be a monstrous attempt to
dettroy their property values.
Jnv<tved are two al five poeslble
locatioM for • COWlly rogiOl>a) alrport
-o Masl<r Plu of /Or transporla· tlon developed by William Pereira and
Associates say• must be ln operation
in five years.
KEY POINTS
The Pereira t't!port made these k17
points' .
-Orange COunty needs a "regional"
airport, about the Qze of the present
Los Angeles Jutemational Airport,
within five years.
-'nte present county airport cannot
do the job.
-The county has five other potential •
regional airport sites, lnoluding a bold
land-and-sea co~ex on ·Bol!a Chica
State Beach in }luMi.n.gtoo Beach.
-Orange County Airport is fast ap-
proachin11 full capacity and some type
o! U-afiic restriction is tJlmost man·
dalory.
-Full atlelltlon should be given to
developmert of a . SJ,ew_ broad-sc0ped
giant of an alJ'POrl at Camp
Pendleton, an "international'' airport
handling supersonic (SST} transports
ol the future.
-Immediate planning shou~d begin
for interlocking seri« of. smaJl
airports and airperks for local traffic
and private flying.
I MONTHS IN MAKING
The Pereira ~· five months in
the making, ts chiefly concerned with
poinljng ont Orange {;ounty's air defi·
ciendes and lb probable needs. The
answers, it i:a conceded, m harder to
come by. For inst.ance, no mention of
(1D8111Cing the mu1ti·milllon dollar ex·
penditures outlined is made in phase
one of nie study.
Possibly the key element of the
report b its inslstence that a regtooal
tUrport will have bo be in aperatlon in
Orange County very soon , possibly as
early as five years. This region al aiJl>ort would send jet travelers 1n all
directions, but range of Urls particular
type or air facility would! llmlt ntghts to the domestl.c rouUt or to, say, Mex·
ico City or HawaU.
FINDING SITE HARD
Flndlog a site fU' tl>ls repma!
airport was an)'ltllln& but euy 1 Pereira
executives ~eded, Mid each o( tbe
five 1ltes they suuest ha1 drawbacks.
None 11 likely to be odoptod wt1hout
bitter ntth14 from neart>t resident.<
and land owners.
The five sites are :
Bol11 Chica: Imaginative and dar·
1,,., Ibis airport coocept calll ror ex
t<nlson of lwo rumr1y1 from Ille
Cfl'ller cl the 1hree·"'"-Bo!oa Chic•
Slate Be.ch into the "'""1· ,The lud
J)OrtlOll of 111e alt'port site Would be US•
ed for all aif1>(ll't and Urmlnal need•
and tbt runway extmslon tnto tbe
ocean would mlnhnize noiH pro-
blem• oa tbe if'O\Uld, the report
.-..
Why Bolla Chica Stat. Beach!
MAN-MADE ISLAND
P<ttlrA engineers sald tlley -ed
the posslbility of building a man-made
island for an airport but found it in·
feasible because of the amount of land
required for tile airport's support
faclliUe1. So, tbey looked to a com·
binatfoa .laod and aea site, much like
llle lntemati01181 aJq>Ort at Hong Kong.
In order to con&fl'U.ct thl! type of
airport, however, they need«I a
shallow coastal shelf that extended in·
to the ocean some distance. The best
coastal shelf with t2:1e best sur·
roundlngs in Orange County ls at
Bolsa Chica.
Two obvious prOOJems present
themselves -&«uring the state-own·
ed land at a time when pubUc beach
facilities are very limited, and the
predictable uproar from owners of
luxury homes in ne.-by Huntington
Harbour and m«e modest homes to the north.
On the plus side, Bolsa Chica bas an
approach pattern ov« relatively fN
homes and occupied. land and probably
.resolves tile nofse problems more ef•
fectively thtn any of the other lites,
accrding to the report.
LAND UNDEVELOPED
The site involves a PQ?tion of the
1,900-acre Bolsa ~attons' pro-
perty, presently undeveloped except
for extensive oil production.
The land is low and mushy and has
been considered suitable for dredging
and developq-ient as a residential
marina.
By separating parallel runways ex·
tending into the ocean It would be
possible to create a marina offshore
which could o£fset the loss of that po-
tential Inland.
Also, such an airport would have the
unique advantage of being a major
transportatioo center, intercoMecting
the air and ground systems w i t h
higb•peed watercars of the future
such as hydro!oila.
The economic potential of these
facilities as well as the potential for
private develoPment of associated
land uses by a single landowner may
make this site one of the easiest to
finance as a regionel airport, the
report says.
El Toro: The busr runways of the El
Toro Marine COlllS Air Stafjon offer
some possibilities u a regiooal
.airport, but not many 1 according to
the Pereira reptt't.
The El Toro aite ls umible as a ma.
Jor airport !or dvillan pasS<Dgera, but
not without a complete redesJgn ot ltl
entire nmwgiy tyslem.
BADLY LAID OUT
Fundamentally, 1he ldrport I• bodly
laid out aM sutfe:ra trom severe
topographic lnterfer..,.,.. whlch would
limit itl use for hilh volumes of trBUlc
as a regional airport. The only ac-
ceptiabte instrument approach now is
from the south, n e c essi t a ting
downwind landings. Departures are
generally to the wfft to avoid termin
to the north and tbia c:fc1'Js·traffic con·
dltloo would .. be • CUlllralnl
AnoCller major deficiency of Ult Ille
ls lhlll Ill llff • a mdonal &tri>orl wi1h hlib volwnts ol lrafllc would
aterillse • ilrl' .... delllnod tor 1rbeJ1 deYOlO!llllent. 'l1le cmrtng MW
commlllllt!et cl Mluloo Viejo and
'
LMsure World are already barely
compatible with the ahport at present.
'l'1e ocly way tile Ii.tea could be
suitable for an ultlmate regional
airport would be to develop a totally
new runway eyst.em generally parall\!l
to the Santa Ana Freews.y.
Marine Air Facility: Still callod LTA
(for its Wcr'ld War ll use, Lighter·
Than·Air·Base), this base could be
developed. aB a regional airport
Without too much interference M'JI a
smaller airp<rt apeMtion at nearby
Orange COurity Airport, Pereira plan-ners say.
The 1,500-acre facility, now used for
helicopter train1n« and staging, would
not be large enough in itself for an
aUi>ort site. More }allld WQuld be re·
quired from the adjoining lrvlne In-
dustrial coniplex. ·
The a.Jr facility site's chief ad·
vantage is access from three freeways
and proximity to urt>an concentrations
in the center of Or~ge County.
ONE-MILE OFFSET
A regional airport with a parallel
runway system could be developed
htre with a one-mile offset from the
existing Orange County Airport to
permit simultaneous I n s tr u m e n t
operations at both airports. Additional
land would be acquired frvm the
lryine Complex south of the LTA Base
to perm.it full runway extension to the
San Diego Freeway.
The major deficiency of th.is site is
the departure pattern . While this is an
impro vement over the present Orange
County Airport, In that It Is farther to
the nortt:i it neverth~less couJd affect
tlle University of CaUfornia, Irvine
and areas of. exiMing and potential
resl.den.fjaJ developmeDt in Newport
Beach.
Loa Alamlto1 Naval Alr Station: The
site may be &Wt.able for a regional
alrport but It woU1d be desirable to
reorloot 1he runway s)'lllem to th/II
departures would be stritld>t out to
the south over open land bl the Seal
Beach Weapons Slatton.
There are three Nrlous deftclencie11.
First, depamns to 111• sou1ll would
reach an awtude ttiat would conflict
near the coastl&ne with h approach
corridor of 1lle Loni B6acll Alrpor't.
PRESSURES DIFFICULT
Second, Ule preu""" cl urban
development 'll<llild be dlfflcult to copa
wiU1 even ii runway1 are realigned.
Third, llH> alJl10l'I ls near the
w..tern edge of Onnge ~and tu
market aervice area would overlap
1hat cl ttie Lonr Buell Alr1>0r1.
Saa Joaqllfo llllll: Allllougb large
quantillel of earth would bavo to be moved to deft.lop a MLDW&y •)'Item in
1his terrain, this could be an ad-
v~e 1n developlns a multi1evel ac--
ce'n'alld . tom>lnil drculOU<>n l)'tlem
wllkh II delrirll>le In regloool airport
design. Tllo Ille 11 In 111• gently rolling·
coalllal bills be_,, Corona del Mar
and Lagwia S.aeh -all on 1rvlne ,..,.
ch land. This airport would have the least ef•
feet on any existing u r b • n
developments in the county, but It
does have a decided tftect oo. future
lalld .... ml till -plan Of Ill• lrvlne Oo. -111 be lolallJ cbanftd .
Ill dellclandes lnvolvo ..-111
from lht populalloci cei>tere cl tile
OOUl!ly, and Coasumptioo ... Mrllfae·
!loo ol larp --dllllned for nlldentlal devtlopmenl. .
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JODl!AN HASTINGS,Mt-4321
......,, ...... lM. IHI Ma 1 .... IS
Club Keyed
For Cooking
~ Fare flt for a king ls -g olfered all bis subjects by memberi
of the Golden Key Auxiliary of the ehlld Guidance Clinic.
Viva L'Appetit, a colledion of gourmet recipes a!Semblecl by
members of all the center's support groups, is available,
Mrs. Bob Goodson, eookbook chairman, is stocking a large aup-
ply of the boolu wjllch will be a featured attraction' when the auDliary
sponsors its Christmas bazaar in December.
Included In !he vol11111e are "vorlte recipes for all meals ftom
breakfast to late supper. T!lere ii a ftdion for company eMertaining
hoUday cooking, aJld a special s~on called galley cooking for 1-ting
enthusiasts.
All proceeds· from sales ol the cookbook lft used to help·support
the Child Guidance Center,
The group'• fint major fllnd-raialng everit will be the filth .,,.
nual luncheon and fashion show which will take place Oct. 19. Tickets
for the event have been distributed to members and now are on sale,
according to Mrs. Robert Blau, general chairman.
. FASHIONl\BLE COOKERY -Gourmet delights in Viva L'Appe·
;tit, a cookbook compiled by members of stipport groups for the
•Child Guidance Center Of Orange County, are tested by Mrs. Rob-
·ert Blau and daughters Karen, 5, and Andrea, 7 (left to right). r . I ,
Mrs. Blau is general ·Chairman of Golden Key Awriliary's first
major·fund-raising event of the year .. a luncheon and fasb1on show
taking place in October. The cookbooks will be a featured attrac-
tion at the auxiliary's Ghistmas bazaar.
Now working on decorations for the event are Mrs. Raymond
Morehouse, chairman; assisted by the Mmes. William Dawes, co-chair ..
man; Richard Prescott, Chickering Nelson, Cy Peterson, Richard
Teske, Fabian Gomez and Robert Holman •
. Additional information regarding l!ickets may be obtained by
calling Mrs. John,McConnaughey, 897-5781, and orders for t!ie cook·
book may be pieced by calling Mrs. Goodson, 847·3340.
. .
.
Surf Sounds
CAUGHT !IN a whirl of
packing and parties are
MWTay and Ruth Weiner
\\'ho board the Mariposa on
Sunday, Sept. 8, for a restful
month at sea before ar-
riving in Sidney, .Australia,
for a year's stay. ·
"This is something We've
always dreamed of doing,"
said the petite b l o n de 1
former secretary of Little
Mermaid Guild.
The Weiners. whose car
will be shipped with them,
plan to drive up to Brisbane
and tour the country's Gold
Coast, and then fly to Perth
for a brief vi sit before set·
tling ''somewhere in the
general vicinity of
Brisbane."
The couple w e r e en-
tertained a board the
AustraUan shi'p Brisbane by
officers and th eir wives. The
Lee Finks hosted a cocktail
party in their honor, and
Mr. an d Mrs. Walter
Cleveland entertained for
cocktails and 1dinDer ini th e
Ba!bOa Bay Club. ·
Other bon voyage parties
\\'ill be hosted by Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Minnit k; Or.· and
Mrs. Leonerd Peal, Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Fitzhenry, Dr.
Marion and Louis Wysock.i
and Mr. and f\.tr s. Ray
Loga n.
THREE GENEHATIONS
\~·ere on hand to serenad e
f\1rs. Earl Peugh when she
celebrated her 80th birth·
da~. While husban d Al
stayed 1Jere to teud .the
Mme fires, Jan Dowers
made a flying trip to
to find the climate eviden-
ta:Uy agrees with her mother
-Jan claims, "She looks
younger than I do!"
A HOT (but interesting)
trip to the Colorado Rivft!.
was eojoyed by Mr. and
Mrs. Jehl F. Thompsoo of
Huntington Bead!, w h o
were joi'ned for the ex-
cursion by grandchildren
Rodney Kirk Thompson and
Linda Cornelison.
They spent a week at
Echo Lodge near Parker
Dam and then made a short
jatin~ t.o the Arizona side of
the river for some ad-
ditional sight.seeing,
ALSO VISITING tile Col·
orado River were Richard
-and Meg Carter an d
daughters Kathleen a n d
Patricia. The Carters com·
bined bll6iness with vaca-
tioning -stopping off at Del
Mar where they sold their
race horse.
FL YING IN to weekend
with Marie.., and Wally Ahern
were more than 40 members
of the ·Aviation Breakfast
Club. 'llle' group, which
meets once a month, en·
joyed a Swedish dinner in
the Ahern\~ home and a
leisurely brunch y~day
in the Huntington Harbour
Beach Club.
Tennis Enthusiasts Swinging for Trophies
Book
Beat
~·The Balloon Mac" by
Charlotte Armstrong -Up,
up and away wit.h tbia ooe,
in w b 1 c h old-fuhioned
wepense bas given way to
contempocary trawna and
you'll be flipping your wig
ell the way to the last page.
Sherry Reynara c om e 1
home after a hard day's
work as a cocktall waitress
1upporting her e r r a n t
writer/husband Ward and
their child. Ward wanders in
glassy-eyed and incoherent
and proceeds to attack her
and toss 3-yeu-old Johnny
acrose the kitchen. It seems
he's turned out on LSD but
Ward's parents daim it's
Sherry's fault, when she
puts him eveo more out ot it
with • frying pan. All "' all,
Sherry wino oor 1 9 6 8
I>&!Mel In Dirtrels """'11
and you won't wait to finish
it.
• Wiscon!iD td join 13 other
members of the immediate
family for thei!t mother's
celebration.
During her week's stay
Jan alter11ately fried and
froze but she was delighted
BILL AND BEV Testa
joined Betty and John Silver
for a fabulous week of
fishing in San Diego. It was
Bev's first deep·sea ex-
perience and she was the
proud captor of a 24-pound
albacore, her contributi'on to
an impressive fi sh count
which included yellowtail
and dolphin. Joining the
Testas and Silvers for a por·
tion of their stay were Dr.
and Mrs. Russell Spears.
Getting in some eractice shots are (left to right) Mrs. StePhen
Krieger, Mrs. Richard Tom and Mrs. Leonard Lindberg, mem·
bers of the Huntington Harbour Tennis Club. A three-day mixed
doubles tu1.1rnament will take place beginning Saturday, Aug. 31,
and entries for A and B divisions will 'be accepted until 4 p.m\
Wednesday, Aug. 28. Trophies will be awaf.ded winners in all di-
visions, and additional information may be obtained by calling
tournament committee chairman Dick Straten, 847~216.
"Gemini'' by Virgil 11Gus''
GriHom -Guo Grlssum
wrote tlll• book (completed
sllortly befoce bil deolbl for
his children 10 that when
they were oJd enough to
really understand th • y
would know "jllllt what sort
of wild and wonderful en·
terprlse ttleir father was
lucky .....,g11 to have a part
of tulfilliog. '' He briefly tells
tiis own life story before
joining the Mercury pro-
gram a n d aubo<qul!ltly
Gemini. Grll1om admits he
is more · at home with
technical reports than with
lyrical prose necessary to
transmit . the boauly of the
view of entire continentl
1a.ying "You'B just have to
tUt my wml·fer It"
••
'
This 'Checklist Charley' Counts One Parley Too Many
DE~LANDERS1 Marvin and
t !iive been going togettler for more
than a year. We are both tn our :ns
and <Old enough to know what we are
doing. Marvin. WM married briefly
filve year6 a.go but-it didn't work (IUt.
Two weeks ago Marvin began to talk
maniage. He made it clear that he
was not actually proposing, just
"considering it'' because there were a
few things he had to• find out first.
Tonlgllt he asked me five questions
which he bad written down on a piece
of P,&Pel· Here are the questions:
'ell Do yoo need any dental work
done?
(2) Do you need any surgery'?
(3) What kind of ill<Ul'81l<e do YOO
carry?
ANN LANDERS
(4) An! you in line to inherit any
money?
( 5) Is there any insanity in your
family?
I like. Marvin very much and we get
along fairly well but these questions
have raised some doubts in my mind.
What do yoo think' -MISS D.
DEAR !\USS: I t.b.1nt you don't need
a nut Uke tbls for a husband. One
thing 11 certain, It Isn't nece11ary to
•lk IDM que1Uon number five. You
already toow lhe answ1r.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 am a 13-
y~-old girl. My parents were divorc-
ed last year. My mot.her didn 't want
me. Nejther did my dad but he took
_me becau.sa. there just was11't any
place for me to go.
My father is an alcoholic. He comes
home from work at 4:30 p.m. and
sbarts to hit the bottle. By 6 p.m. he ii
stoned. He won't let me turn on the
•
lights because lt hurts his eyes. I cast't
study Without lights. We live in a one·
room apvtblent and I slttp on the
couch-be bas tbe bed ~t pulls out
of tlte wall. Tile bathroom Is down the
hall. We share it with, two other
families. 1 can't atu<IY in.there. Pleaae
help me. I'm going null.
MISERABLE GIRL
DEAR MISERABLE: No litl 1bould
have to live like llt1t. Tait to you
clergyman about. roster home. There
are aspects of thf1 aetup ru worse
than lbe ~gbt problem.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : How old
are you , anyway? In a recent column
you mentiontd the Stanley Steamer. I
haven't heard anyooe mentlon that C9I'
in .at leaat 30 years. My CNJtdfat.her
drove one and l 'm·no kid. I'll be 63 my
next birthday.
Every now and t.btn you 5ay
tomething that giver a.way your age.
Why don't you go llnight and take
that picture out of tbe paper and put
one tn ttiat loob like you? I'll bet the
picture I'm looking at right now was
taken J> year1 ago. -NOBODY'S
FOOL
DEAR NO: Simmer down, Popi.
I've heard of the covered w11on , too,
bat that doe1a 't meaa I c•me Weit la
ODfl. My ate 11 ao aecret. I've just Qd
a 50th blrlbday and I've never tried to
hide It. I don't bow whlcb picture
you're looktn1 at beeaalf!! IBY cOluma
eow _,pean. Ill mm Iba• 7M ,.,."
'
and me p1ctarta "U'J· We tend out
new plctve1 eviery twO; 7ean and lf
your paper II 1111.q' a m•I Dot lbt .
• look• lite aa oldie ••d ft to me ud
J'U take ft ap whit you editor.
If you have. rooble geulng along
If )'Oil have tnivble getting atone
with yoor paenb . . . K )'Oil can't set
them to let you live your own life, tend
for Aon Landen!' booklet "Bugged by
Parenti? How t.o Get More Freedom.''
Send !O ctmls In coin wttll your roque1I
and a tooi, stamped, 1elf-addr11aed
envelope.
Aon Lindert will be Jl•d to help you
with your problem1. send them to her
in 'c#e ot the DAILY PILOT eocloein&
a .tamped, lel'f.ed-d·llM!opt.
.,
• ..
• I
•• t
I
. I
. JI llAll.V Pit.OT ' _,, """"' 26, l "8 '
Afternoon Rites Orchestra Season Tone ·. ' Couple Exchange Vows
-Entlitll net edfOd
with more taee. tnd 1ht
WON a ht.ad.pie~ 0 f
atu'burlt 1 a c • 1priJOOed
Wltll -poarll to hold her
Set During Bruncheon
illusion vtlL
lluttorfiy crchlcb, pinlt
roa• bud• and bl.by'• bre1Ul
were mintfid in 1'er lou·
quet.
She choH 1htll piftk chif-
fon floor l.,tb dres111 wtUt
ION aletvN and ruttl•• .,
die wrllt for her attendollt.s.
1bly carried pink rosebudl
and lavender carnetl.on1, ae-
cuted by vtlvM: atrumer
rJbbona of pink a n 4
lavender.
W~arinl a bandeau of tht
aamt D.owen for her hitad·
piece was Min Le1ley
kurllut. attenctiq .ber slat.et
at !Mid of honor.
Flat pink bows .adorned
the hair of bride1maid1 the
Milffl J..-Wertman, the
bridtowm'• 1ilter; Susan
Talldl of Newport Bead!;
P111W. Schneider of
-, ChrU Luthy of
Redlando , Doana Babcock of
Looi 11 .. c11. and Chepio
Parker Of lledland1.
GRAND OPENING CELEIRA TION
-mon waa John v .. h el 'Santa Ana, while usbtri
were Larry Brennan of
Cllno;-Stephen Lewi a,.
Nowport Jleodl; Stephen
GNdy, ·Los Angeles ; and
Jahn· Johmton, T o n 'I
Otaml><rlaln and Michael
Davia, all Of -Ana.
Fl'ldetick Barnes pro-
YiUct· tht oraan 111ection1.
A reception attoncled by
2IO -Jn tho. llrelid• room. Later a champqne
-MltS. MICHAIL I. WlllTMAN
Deu~le lllftl Cor-loo
buffet In tho home of the,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,. ..
bride'• mothar honored the
bridal pm1y and relatives.
ID dw'p of tho 111est book
wu MiM Kri*n Heim, the
bride'• co u 1 in from -, MllS. LAllllY DON .SCHULTZ -· Doing
MAllY DAY, 64MUI
What's
S•n DI• Htneym11n Altar • trip through ____________ ,. ___ ~,.•:
northern California the C®· TOOAY
pJe will ruide in Pacific ".......,... ._.,, TOP• ,...,..
ts..cb. pa ....... ·-....... 1 '·"" ,.....,. .... ,,.... ewe..,.
While at USC the bride ..,,... 111 -"'-Piiie T-'-· 1:•
Nrllh Mlt, Cotta Mne, I 11.m.
,,,, .. Lim c..,. '1f MIN •tlM*tll
UolfM -ltcel'llfl l,,,.,IMttell •Yl!llblt
""' U llll'll Ml'1. Deulln Merrlll, ..... ,,.,.,,,!ft. Nuptial Vows Pledged
In Baptist Ceremony was a mem1er of Pi Beta "·'"· 1---.,.------Phi torerity while t h e ,._,.,,. ..... 'V•lltY c111o'"" ..
t:ldlct wftl)l¥.ad W 1 t ]I .... M94IW -M*l9ll Yle+e Nlfll -'-7:••.fll.
HoatylnOOlllns Jn San Mn. hi P-"" ti Wiii sma Qli. -• -._ -"'-Diep wert Lln'y Dan omna, the bridt'a aunt. The fonntr Miu Hurlbat ~ c.i. """"· 1:• """'
Schlilta and hiJ bride, tbe -.._ t......1.1-1_ a --.... wtJl CO«ICblai arachaate work .._. I .... _~ -.. -."::'!: former c .. -1 .___ •-"09 ui--• r -la edacltiall lit SU Dit10 ,......,.,., ...,,",. _,, -u AUll ~ ,,.._...,,_ ----UI-,.___1 _.. 7:• """· "1lo ..,._married In• doll· ~ -• ...,. ~ --CGllep and lier -•••••• --,,__...., ~--~......... R ~ ........ ..,. '.,1111.
ble rilll -OD)' In h ~-~ ~-· or -w11 --his ""'"--· - -First ',··BllsJtilt Olu:n:b Of bUlbad ii & ..,.,,,.. of ID.lllnw dtlNI in l!a&INll -c.n.. ''" lcMel. Clltt """"•I Gorta Mesa. ClilHS Md alto . llMudld at tbt AIDI colleft. • waa. ..:" .... .,....., JO a.tw • ..,. ..._ • Tbi~.liUold ~ion OCX:: betcn 1~ la tbrl a mtmlMir fll Alliltetm of :.-.~~,w: off!~. at tho ••ll>lill U.S. Mmr· TIJO now\ywtdl Ille A-1-uo of 1 t:;. - - - -
ritual unltin& In marr!a,o1rwlll==,..=-==ln=. S...;::tld:":·===-==odl=·=======•:•=:=:•:• "::;":;•"':;•::-:•:· :;"':;-~•;1 the daUlhw of Mr. andi I
. M r i . AUnd A. Ezner al
Coot& lo!-and Ille ion ol
Mr. ·a N.r1. DOnald SchlJl!z of CMll Mea&.
Eicort<d to the . altar by
her" 'fatber, tbe bri49 wore a
Door length · 1own o f
1enllempire crepe. 'f h •
''boclic• and lull I an Ith
11ffve1 were covered with
lace and .IPJ'inklN wftb se-
quinl. '!be crepe and lace
were repeated m two tr.aim fAlllili from tht 1houlder1.
Her elbow le.ncth nylon veil
Was caucht to a llc'I and
pearl bow headpiece and she
carried • bouquet Of a white
orclWI aum>Wlded by red
rosebud.a lnHrted l a t o llodl•U petalo.
Mias SllOn Mc'nm>lat al
Colt.a MeM WU maid of
honor. Sbt --in • y.llaw MmMmpire IOW1I
with a scalloped ntekllne.
Th• bodlc. Md aleeyes were
Of la .... Sbt -...... quet ol. )'eUow tOMbudt in.
.. -illto lladlOll potala. Her headpiece WU • yellow
bow with a ahort viii.
f!rldnmoids, dnaaocl In
lime &rtll. Wert Mi'n
Paulella Daalellon of C4<U
Mna, Mill Unda &dntltz,
the bridegroom 11 liltar' and
Mill Karen Elllll', the
brido'a ats1or.
Bett man w.u James
Schu1ta. tht bridecroom'•
brother. The bride 's
brother, Allred Emer Jr .
w11 an uher, 11 w.-. Mi·
chatl 01.toa and Frtd For-
(ie, bOth of Colta Me1a:.
UGHTEN-GO-BRlGHTEN: DEMI-FROSTING BY CLAIFlOI.®
Youl' hall' llDU llg!lter In a mlaty -rtioi-. 01•you,. own
-.ci.•8 pal'ut ~. o ,and ...-.,iy youP WOl'ld a .. ma
bl'lghtel'I It'• an ln.plred ,_ t9CIYll~ by CUI' own colol'
al;yllata bl"OlJllht Into beautllUI being with Clalrol'a@
a>eclualw tlnt fol'"ft'll.lla, Deml-Froattng. apeelally plllcad
fol' summe,., only 115,00, . B-..ty Salon.
GO CAREFREE WITH OUR 'COMB-IN-A-BREEZE' CUT
It' a ours alone ••• this ,_ haircutting bechnlqu•, ao
unique you can actually -the -pe and curl coma
to llf• with th• talantad aclaaora dona of our'· expert
.,,,.,..tors. If youl' l"all' has a bit d bcdy .,,. curl, 10,00,
0u .. 1y aat-1-waw, eM11Pleta with eut, ao.oo.
2750 HAUOlt ILYD.
COSTA MIS.A
i11 th• C•ll•t• Sh1,,iftf C.11+.r ........................... ,.. ...
My ,,._ ......... INfllNAflOUL
YAllA•I PAii ...,, ., ef ... ...._
llcl•W. ............ SI ....... . ...... ...,.... ................... .. c:.--,.. ............. ...... ., ttlll
JUST AltltlYIDlll •••• ""' ..... '"'
\\OO Ma\eti~~
come ... the
SIMPLICITY PAMINS
* * * * *
.. 1 ... ci.ol
ari&uon sew\1'1.I
V ltach}l\f' --
Alter our eXperts feather ;your
Conti1111
for Another
BIG WEEK!
T•11lll111
SUITINGS
SUk and .._ lallric.
wrtnldt rtfidanL lla-
d!lne -. LIMnD SUPPl.T • .. z.n,..
'1.75,..
* * * * "lack·te.Scheel"
in Th••• Fine woou
J'antutk: ltl9cUl:lft
80'' Wide
..al& az: .,
~.-.. ..... ]. .. ....
-
Providinl mUli'c in the
d111rcb -with bou·
quell of white atadioli a n 4
stock wtr• Mn. c 1 •.,
Grlawold, orpniat and Mr1.
Mar, O!reftbr, IO!olat. A
trellll 1Mldnd the minister
WM covered with JeMbft
flnl and prdtolaa.
tresees to this fragile new flattery-
~color with Fanci-Full: ins tant rinse
,'f:rom Roux that colors gray, or adds delicate
color-tone to bleached hair. Just rinle&
in, shampoos ou t wh enever you wish
-perfect fin ish to our brilliant brush worlo. ·
PLUS SHAMPOO
AND SlT
A rocoptlon tor tho 1n
weddlnc ...... -placo In the,_ -of Ille
dlla'dl. A lour4iorod wed.
dln1 calt• t"l'l*I with two
--Jn eolon Of --,--· _of_ .. __
,,,. -..... doewllll -·~al1allow .-. c:CISTA llB(. C.<L,,. .......... • .. ,.,.,the ~i1!~.-t
w ... Krw. l>mle P1•fl1tU. ,,,...,,. .........,
al Wiit °"1laa, Ila ~'1 NIWPOllt HACH, CALI .. e ou •J a ; ia. Dllira ,,,,,......,. .,.,... ,..,....., .,,.. ....... =.•.-:::,~--,..
COITA MDA, CAI.I• •
... 141t'W ........ I(.......,, l'ltu ''*"~U
JOUNTAIN WA.WT, uu•. ,,.. ""'tfltll• ~==
eon• MIU. CALW. .,_ W, 1MI lfl't't ·--
Men, thru Thun.
I Allor I ~""· '2.191'
Jri, Sot, S.. .... ot
POlllTAIN Y.v.&IT, -' ............. == ~· '/l!ltJ Jlal ,~ W.ao!~.----~~ ... ~----~-.-.~~~~~--~--....11
~i·i:r:...;.r.:; ·~'•. Newpe,.. • ll'altllCllll Ialand • ~IOO -------------------------------
" I /\
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' . Horoscope
• . . . ' ' '
Monday, A1.1911it 26, 1968
. -
OAllV l'li.Or .l§
Scorpio~ Don't .Try to Fight City Hall
! uesday, Aug. 27
By SYDNEY OMARR
i:t· Find waye " buildini wlili UJ>tti•DC•. Don't try, -· ll1d aid -1• lo portnerlhlp could m. t .
tomorrow. to be ail thinj:1 at oDCe. dlttlculty. Currtnt c:y c 1 e news.
.• LEO (July 23-Aug. 22J.: • IF TODAY IS YOUR points to c11..,e, travel ll1d
Check plans with individual BIRTHDAY you w o u l·d ~. , ''The wise man controls
.flls de6tiny . . . A&ttology
points the way."
w!lo le at a distance. K .. p make lint a doctor, nuroe. ·>.GEN l!l It AL . T l!l N·
·communicatim lines clear. You are able to .qispire c<ID· D£NCIE8: Brtatup of
ARIES (March 21-April
19): caution is your ally to.
ij:--'Wat , listen a n d
observe. Evaluate. Be sure
of legal rights. One close to
you is apt to appear aomber .
Don't push. Strive tel pro-
mote greater harmony at
home.
Be know~eabl~ about • 1 ,
written material, There J • W d da r Se t 1.-4th I 7•00 I may be or coniiillfmen[-· ein us-e hes y, p emvet' ,rom . 0
wt:U.ch ma·kes impossible a ,....
CUITMlt desire. 9:00 p.m. in our.Neufport Room. Admission by VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep<. 22)'
BRIGHT FUTURE -Helping to pav e the rugged path young musicians
face, the Orange County Musical Arts Club annually runs a u di ti o n s for
promising young countY musicians. Accepting his trophy with gratitude is
Daniel Miller (left), a past winner, who is happy not only for himself but for
all aspiring artists who will be assisted by the newly established H a n s e n
Award, a cash prize being explained by Jack Coleman , (right), Hansen reir
resenlative while Mrs. Fletcher Stew art of the club looks on.
TAURUS (APril 20-May
20): Obtain valid hints from
ARIES message. St re s s
moderation, e spec i :illy
where diet . is concerned .
Avoid going to ememes.
Your job. needs special at·
tention. Complete b ll' s i c
chores.
GEMINI (May 2l·June
20): Faee trutlh -applies
especially to friends and
romantic interests. ·Actual
fa~ add up to stcength. Ra-
tiooalizing could c r e a t e
misery. There is delay, but
pc.itience will win tile day .
CANCER (June 21.July
22): Now is time to tie up
loose ends. Think seriously
of future. Concentrate on
security measures. Home is
spotlighted. Che<:k witb ex·
Musica.I Arts
G·athers Ta lent
The secure jingle of cash nounc~ JJHSldent M r s ,
in the pockets, the sound Josephine Chance, a· ft er
· · ed Jack Coleman, form er every young mus1c1an ne s music coordinator f 0 r
to hear, is being guaranteed Orange County Schools and
to promising youngsters by now a representiative for
the Musical Arts C!Ub of Hansen, notified her of the
Orange County and Hansen grant. "Advisor" for the
Publications. award ·was club member
The club'!I" eff<1rts to Mrs. Jctm Brenner.
Charles Hansen or Hansen reward talent in all age Publications ·requested that
categories every spring is lli'le scholarrship sh o u Id
being given an extra boost become perpetual as a
by ttie Hansen Co.'s an-tribute to his late brother
nouncement that its cash Bill Hansen, who had restd-
scholarship of S300 will ed. in Newport Beach.
become annual. The oldest musical society The annoWlCement coin· .
Protect invesbnents. Guard
pocssessions. Be aw.au of
subtle nuances. C h e c k
details -be thorough. Day
to conserve energy. Finan·
clal request is made. Utilize
logic, oot pride.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-<ld. 22):
Mste or partner may ap·
pear morose. UtUze sense
of humor, but also be
~lsitive to feelings of
otflers. You are tested . Show
that you can be fiexibl&i
versatile.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21 ): . Older individual may
request changes affecting
your employment. Feeling
ol restrictim is but tem·
porary. Realize this -res·
pond accordingly. Don't try
to fight city hall.
SAGIITARIUS (Nov, 22·
Dec. 21): Find oot 'where
you stand with one who bas
been moody. Direct con· ~ is advisable. That
way there is no beating
.about the bush. Answers
received are coostructlve~
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jan. 191' Cook! be coollict
between home and duty.
Reoat<>e it tlirough special
agreement wiUt fa m i 1 y
member. stress diplomacy.
Strive for balance.
AQUARIUS (J ... 20-Feb.
18): Relatives could reveal
problems. Be an interested
listener, abserver, but don't
become involved. Tbere iS;
element of deception here.
Get the f•cOI. Discard
rumors,
PISCES (Feb, 19-.March
20): Again, questions , of
money, investmen t&,
possessions are paramount.
And once more you are ad·
vised llo comult IDdlvldual
cides with the club's rele&ie m the county, the club is
of its requirements for the composed of both active Waist Watchers
"""February auditions so that musicians and patrons of TOPS Wal st Watchers
young musicians may begin the arts, and has presented U6emb1e f!Very Thursday at
to prepare e a r I Y . Re. auditioru for the past 25 7 ln ~ Vi •~1 quirement.s will be mailed·to p.m . vuQ.e 1ew ~ ,
music stores and teacherS.1 _Y_e~ars_. ________ H_un_Un_gtc_n_&e_dt_. __ _
MATCHMATES0 throughout the area.
Now that you've met your match, Three $100 scholarships
will be awarded in-various
categories by the club, an·
put your brand on him with one of these matched
wedding rings. It's an old idea In a brand new des jgn.
from the top, each In 14 karat gold oxidized finish:
His, $85. Hers, $75. His, $92.50. Hers, $82.50.
His, $90. Hers, $80. His, $92.50. Hers, $82.50.
BankAm•rkard I M•li•r Clt1rg•, Too
SL~VICK'S
c/~ .........
You'll Hear
Of Donegal
18 FASHION ISLAND
Donegal tweed is a term
you'll be bearing again and
again come fall.
NEWPORT BEACH 644-1380 It's ooe ol the ready.to.
wear industry's favorites
for suits, coats and dresses.
......
DELICATESSEN
boarsln cheese -from Norm1ndy,
Fri1nc1. A savory soft cheese fl1vor1d with
garlic i1nd herbs. Deli9htful for c1nap1s.
2 :Y. -0 1. 79c
terrine de fols gras trnffee-the
f1med delicacy of Strasbourg. Fois gras stud-
ded with truffles, steeped in brandy, Mi1deiri1
and spices. 7.95
stuffed eggplants -;mpor!ed b•by
eggplants with ore9ano, vinegar, olive oil
i1 nd spic1s. U,,usu•I hor d' oeuvres. 1.10
pastry f.l.agers -thin, crispy rolled
p1stry fingers filled with rich chocol1te ind
h11elnut crem1l 6 ~ -o:r:. 1.79
\V.i hove foocl.$ from 29 co1ir1 tries. Com«
and pamper 11ourstlf!
\ /i
Elizabeth Arden face treatment
is much more than just a faciril
A• Ellzolltlll AnlH expert in llJlfuM'
Rod Door T~al .. nl ROOGl will help yw
discMr dtli9'lful btouly Se<leb. Yw'll
ha,. 1 lace lrulmonl and ,..,., will a
luxurrous new makeup as well as 1 radi111t
lee lin1. c .. p\elo 1ru1 ... 1, wl~ NkillpU.•
Beau~ Slu<lio,
Buffuws·
•
•
reservation only, phone 644 -2200. Bridal Salon •
Use Bay Front entrance, Newport
• l " • •
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' '\ \ l
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' Youtn ~/ cordiaU,
\ invited lo
Buf(uma'
J11.... Brido1
' ~tion.
We'll preview our new~
exciting collection of bridal f0ll11J•
and fashions for the member• of dw
wedding. Ymlll 1ee w ft.IG•
f 01 table settings, home fumi1hl7111
and home decor. lt'1 a bride'•
world in every department of~
u mS'
~--"'--............. 77,l'l _______ _
I
1
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~,
I 1
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!..t 6'11.V 'II.OT -· l utu" l~. 1%8
K••p1ck•s AJd Nostalgic
Nuptial Vows Recited
' . ~ '
Let us copy
your favorite
old picture ...
Pr111rv1 fonjj mtmoritt
fer all the family ..• let ue
m&kt fine c1pi11 to -"tare
~th them now.
SALEI
WT 5 DAYSI . .
. 311.
Ollly . '
w..,.e1~ • ._, ..,.;m.
If ,ld9r• It tir11•w•rt1, th • •'·
•Hi••tl c~rt•• f•r rt lt.rttl •11
,,. ••• ••l•,r lcN, t••l .,_
ttftiHI !Nchir• r•tvr11t4 \111·
~.,...,.
..... lt.t-Jllf ... llJ
,....,,.,,. StHI• lit Pf•er
'l'loe ......... _ ........ ,
"'"""' ....... IMt .... ,._ ._ ...... ... ,, ··---! ..., • .,, el. ......... , lfY(MJ·-·---*"lN··--........... _ . ....,, 1tfill'" ............ .,... .. ., ,, 1 ... ..
; ....... ·n ..C11 I • 1a,eferf .. .......__.,_,. M ...
.,.._. .......................... ,_...._ , .... n
tia,1•:-•1 poMnw1111'-,~poiM.._.._._.,,,,,..__
.,... ..... I ••• f ... Tn ... _...,,,. ... b ... .
wt.Ile ll"llllas .................... .
11,..'re_u,.,y-erlB--'fOO --. ......... __
ta • mialm•m el a..., ..... _. d ....... Oll.1' • ,.. ,. 7 mt.
Tak•tllelnt .. :rtewudla ....... •,lar w.,._. ... IJflil,...
· Cwte~ee ev21~............ ,..__....,.
d11111 ... 11nti .. •ti ..... _..,.. 611.,.... .......... ....,..
Brin& Ad far Gitt wlth appointment
2H I. 11 .. St. -M-
Jewelry A Boutique ltema
•gv_., .,..._ ...-iftl • watlt• ... maw..._ .. wtft ~Mr predet...m.i ..... tritllia
• epedled JWiDd el time. If tile pt r'wl ,..)b. are •ot eU•ined oa ldt1-lak, Gleria 11..-.o will fm ....
=' •• ,., •• ,, •. _..,_.,,,, ........ ... ,....,.'m.
ad .. t1a..a9'1 , t .......... 1••hfalA\H,al ........... .,....__1ellae,.....
NEWPORT BEACH
430 Pacific Coa1t Hi~!way
2 llocb .... ., .... ..,
642-3630
.... 1' ... MY•·6~4nMtl_ ................
SANTA ANA
184-0 W. 17th §net ..
543.9457
• • • • L~ • • • • •
Gue11 ln.0'1 ComiDC To
DIDlr evolvet M a ten.st,
bumu. dra.JM • k followa the
..-"' lb"t four in· volwd people. A algnlftcaot
ro1t In tile ino.t. II played by
Cecil Kelila.way, who 1how1 as
a Monaifnor, and serve1 to be
a wise and witty old friend W
tht family.
Paraphrasing .an old ex-
preaslon, "the more the mer·
rt.er," a slant evolving from
Chinese restaUN.n~ might
well be "with 1ix you get
egrroll." Meaning, of course
that a party of six Will be ·
served ~ggrolls at no extra
fee .
Hence the liUe of the funny
film scheduled to move Ui the.
Mt1a for another popular
week, after departin&: the Lido
tomorrow evening. Let's see,
there it Doris Day and three.
.son1 plus Brian Keith and a
teen..,,ged. daughter. That adds
up to six and the jackpot o{
egfl"Olls.
But Mt i ~mediate J y,
please. Dora plays a widow
and Brian appeara as a
widower. Jn addition to the
sort.andGughter bit, these
two become invoived with a
pair ol pooches, too. That's
quite a bit of involvement
when the two elders make
with the honeymoon plans.
Tune in With Six You Get
Erven for a lot of laughs!
Pt.at J11.D1le and M1dl1an
wind-up a week of excitement
at the Mesa thuter. In the
fcrmtr, James ~er pleyg a
fotor who ii sent to South
American jungles with model
Eva Rent.i. Instead o l
shooUna: cosmetic ads. they
find they are being ahot at by
bad guys seeking diamond1
Mldl1an is llkbai.i Widmark·
key figure in a 3-day cop1..and~
robbe' hunt in New York City.
---TU. a llp from the wiH
IUYI end &all who bit th• ~tine• troiJ fw Ibo Mesa
theatre. Hert'a bow and
where )OU ,.. a. lllpl in 1!Jm
entertainment, during a mid·
week break Jn the afternoon.
c;.t away from it all end en-
joy yourself at a Meaa
Matinee.
FREE PASSES lo the M-
or the Lido will be mailed loo
day lo 1'r<d Jones, 1841
Placenti1, Coata M11a. F. B.
Ackl<y. 5151> Ponlsetta,
Corone de! Mar. A. B. Conniff,
210 La.Jolla Dr., Newport
Beech and A. L. Moncl:, 2(!U
E. Ocean, Balboa.
U'1 ..,, to run 1bort of
c>Mh, upecllltr in 1111 rood
olt Nmnltrlime. It'1 even
-"'pt -ad· mlulon to IM Udo or Ibo
Mea -· Juot _.111 ,...... ~ °'""' Cud « ~·L...~~~~.J· ... ~--------~------------------... --------------------..................... _icr.::.--ncnMa..
• •
\ ---------~.:!!'"~ -'~"-----------------------------------------------------
• ;, ...... -.. '· ... ZJ, .. . ' . ....... . . . '
Monday, 'A.u;ust 26, lq&a , DAILY •ft.OT
M.oving Tales · -.
Gan Fill Books ..
By JOD~ HASTINGS
Of "'-EMll'r l'fltl Stiff
U •:.walls have ears" as
the ancient adage claims,
Imagine the tal~ to be told
by those enfolding the vast
clliwliS used &!5 terminals
I!)'. ma· or st~ge COD). antes
-if only they had tongues.
An articulate spokesman
for one of the largest singly-
ownad companies is E:ugene
\V. (Bud) Keller, office
manager for the Bekins
terminal in Santa Ana ..
state , agencies,
reputable-moving a n d
storage companies adopt
their own strict code of
ethics. Assumlnr
responsibility for o l h e r
people's possessions can in·
volve ma or le al
fieadac es.
Divorce s have created
their share of problems ror
storage companies.
A husband or wUe, an·
ticipating a divorce, may
call a moving company and
order the household goods
stored in his or her name.
Juniors
Getting
Acquainted .
A get·acqWnted luoc:heon
baa beel\ planned by Mr ..
Robert Calderwood, Orang~
District Amer l can Is ml
<llairman for the Calilornla
Federation of Women • s
Clubi. .
The noon lancheoa will
take-pla<e-lhis Wedn-.dl)'.
at llOQn. at Knott"11 Berry
Fami Steak House. Guest
speak~ . will be Walter
Knott whooe topic will be
What We as Juniors Can no l
to Furtbtr the Cause of
Americanism.
"There are a thousand
stories connected w i t h
storage accounts in every
warehouse," P.xplains _ the
soft-spoken young m a n
whose employment with the
coonpany began after his
curiosity prompted him to
"drop in a warehouse to find
out what they did ."
"An order for service is
an agreement between the
company and the individual,
and anyone can s t o r e
goods," Keller explained.
NEVElt A DULL MOMEN;t .
Eut1ene W. Keller and Ru11 Molcfer
Special guests for the
luncheon will be Mrs. Gary
Ratzlaff, Orange District
president; Mrs. Terr y
Thomas. first Yiti! presl·
dent; Mrs. James Round·
tree, district press chair-
man, and Mrs. Donald Vel~
ky. president of West Gar-
den Grove Junior Women's
Club.
Since that day in 1965 he
has become convinced that
the moving and storage
business is not one of dull
routfni!.
!ti contacts with
customers Keller' has dealt
with ·the gamut in human
experiences including major
tr·agedies • suob as
bankruptcy, divorce and
death. He Is a sometime-
s le u t b , advi.sor,
publlc relations man. He
alway.fl Js .a tympathetic
Usteoer. .
When the irate spouse
opens the door and views his
empty house he later is
stunned to learn that he is
virtually powerless to act
toward recovering even his
own perS<1nal effects without
legal recourse.
After the indivi"ual
discovers the location of the
family po s s e s s ions ,
gener.ally through the
neighbors, he soon learns
that the warehou s e ,
however sympathetic, ls not
able to divulge any in-
formation regarding t h e
goods.
ment and let them decide
who get.!I the merchandise."
Delinquent storage a<:·
counts also come under
Keller's scrutiny. After a 90-
day period tbe companies
can execute a warehouse
lien but usually this action ls
a last resort and one in
which the company may
ultimately lose money.
Goods stored in these
delinquent accounts are sold
during a public auction
whJch takes place once •
year but only after the com·
pany has exhausted every
possible effort to work with
the customer.
In some inatances death
has caused t b e aban·
donment of the goods; ht
others, owners a i m p l y
d.i5appear or have no desiA
to redeem their belongings.
search. He che<:k:ed the van
and driver packing and
handling the belongings; he
checked her former apart-
ment. He talked to the
manager and the cleaning
woman. The phone calls
continuK with the customer
becoming more irate and
the Ianiuare saltier with
each oall.
Book Group .
The Book:Dt ~cu s sio n
Group <i N""1>0Jt Beach
Frien<b <i h! Library
galller 11\e lut Wednesday
When the now-familiar
voice once more began a
conversation with "Bless
you, Mr . Keller ... " he knew
she bad found the lost ob-
jects -which the movers
had stored in the folded
mattress of a roll-away cot
for safetyl
PENETRATION
Nt~rly 1¥1tyon1 r11d1 t~1
DAILY PILOT, hom•lown n1w1.
p1p1r for ffi 1 F1bulou1 Or1ng1
Co11t.
of the month in M;arioers1==========' Ubrory 1t lO·a.m.
NB Auxiliary
Representing Costa Mesa
Junio rs will be tbeir presi-
dent, Mrs. Robert Downey
ahd Americanism chairman,
Mrs. Relph Freeto.
Keep Light
sunlight streaming into a
room through a picture win-
. dow can make the room too
bright .and too warm.
One way to cool it : paint
the room in cool colors in·
stead of drawing the cur·
tairu: and shrouding the
Terininals may house ao·
tiqUes, a r t collections,
priceless home possessions
that never oan be replaced.
Companiei!! use them to
store valuable b u s i n e s s
records and expensive office
equipment. They also are
used as junkyards and as
hide-aways for the
unscrupulous who are trying
to evade banks, sheriffs, or
even the FBI.
In an opposite situation
which QC:curred in another
warehouse, goods w e r e
stored in the name of Mrs.
John Doe (a first wife) and
sub.!lequently released to
Mrs. John Doe (a second
wife) which also resulted i.D
complicated legal dispute.
Because of the many legal
entanglements warehouses
face. Bekins' retains its own
legal staff to untangle the
knotty problems that arise.
"\Vhenever a third party
makes an adverse claim we
refer it to our legaI depart·
Prior to the auctions
customers are notified twice The Ladies' Auxiliary of
by registered mail at all Newport Bead\ Fl re
known addresses that action Department getneN t h e
is pend.in&" a n d ad-third Wednesday of each
vertisements are placed in month t 8 Jn .
LINGERIE
FOUNDATIONS
MASTECTOMY
GRADUATE COll.SETI Ell.ES newspapers. a p.m. various
In one case Keller made locations l n ! o r m a ti on I In addition to be i n g
governed by federal and
B'ritish Queen
All 'Dated Up'
Sp1,i1liiin9 in DaDD Cup1
"11 Comfort1bl1 in Your Cup,"
18 personal attempts to · regarding locatkm may be
reach a serviceman's family obtained b y telephoning I
in Colorado only to receive a Mrs. T. C. Da!ley, 548·9835.
last-minute letter and check 1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·;;;;;;:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;.. ___ ,i,
from German)' stopping the
sale.
Between 800 and 1000 peo-
ple attend the auctions in·
eluding used furniture
dealers and bargain-hua-
tCTs. Even packed cartons
go on the auction block
(these are not opened by the
warehousemen) and they LONDON (UPI) - Queen Some t Imes s he ge nerate a fair share of bids
Elliabeth's datebook reads economizes on her precious from people hoping to find
like IRl one else's anywhere. time by'Studying documents spme unexpected treasure. ·
B u c k i n g h a n1 Palace under the ·dryer as she gets KeUer recalled ode such
statistics show she can ex-her weekly hair set and cart.on which sold for an ex-tremely low bid and when pect in an average year to manicure in her palace opened contained $1800 in
aUend about 70 functions in dressing room. She has negotiable 1 t 0 ck:1 . At
different parts of Britain twice-monthly dress fittings a·nother auction 1 cart.on
and ai30 make one overseas for new clothes. Before an which brought $40 contained
trl·p overseas tour , she usually h' bu """" · not ing t "Coa .. >GU6ers! She gives nearly 300 royal devotes two entire days to One oi the most amusipg
audiences, including a once wardrobe fittings.. incidents in Keller 's ex-
weekly session with the Most mornings at the perie~ occurred when he
prime minister whenever palace. the quren sees her helped arrange a move from
P.arliament is in session. h o use keeper and her Orange County to the desert
Foreign ambassadors. steward -he would be call· for a sweet, elderly, retired
govemment ministers, arm· ed the butler anywhere else woman.
ed service chiefs. bishops -to deal with don1estic A few days after the move
and principals of charitable matters and stall problems. the phone calls itarted:
organizations account for Only the tea·time hour is '"Bless you, Mr. Keller, but I
most of the rest. krpt free whenever possible can't find my mirror Or fUlt
:\t the palace she holds an so she can see her children . silver:" Keller in.!ltigated a
average of 13 investitures to \..==================='=:;=:;11 award accolades to new
knights and other recipients
of honors. At each of them
she stands for more than
two hours.
Again at the palace she
holds four garden parties
witb 7,000 guests at each
one, gives 26 formal lunch
and dinner parties, and also
entertains royal visitors at
tea or cocktails.
On 11 occasions she will
sit in one of the state rooms
to pose for a photograp~er,
an artist painting h e r
portrait or a sculptor model·
mg htr head.
In addition , Elizabeth has
numerous state papers. She
spends at least two hours at
her llesk, seven days a
week.
VISIT US
Before
tho
Stork
Visits
_You
,: ... v.w
c.'"'''" M•t1rt'lity
W1rclro\M. •f
tlltlRlbf•
~··· ...
•••
CATHY'S
MATERNITY SHOP
..... c.... -J1t L 17" It. c....... ... ... J ..
, '
Duart's Soft Permanents
~ Price Special
The soft beauty of curls that last
can be yours now with special . 1av1n9s.
Complete with cut and set
20.00 now 10.00
17.50 now 8.75
Complete with •tyle •nd shaping
by 'Sfudio · Styfists, 28 .00 now 14.00
Beeuly Se Ion, bO I.
From Huntington
Beech: 892-3331 .~.,,J..1A.I From Newport: ---i~ 6+4-1212
Wore all Set;
i>rthe Desk. Set!
,. .. )
1.00°/. COMBED COTION
·c WOVfttLAID ~~
GINGHAMS
' beautifu l styled cottons
in 9reat new fill colors.
perennial favoritei with
the desk set and young
sophisticates for clr.ess and
pl1ywe1r fashions.
REG. 69c TO 79c YD. V ALU.ES
36" wide
guaranteed washable 57S
•
HOHP l'LAZA
17TH AT l llSTOL
SANTA ANA
14J.llll
BONDED FABRICS
100 "/. acetate tricot linings
COORDINATED
rayon and acrylic
BLEN-TEMPO
wool and nylon
"KAREN "
MATCH-MATES
\lisco1e rayon
"COUNTRY CLUB "
COORDINATES
great for suits and sportswear
trem endous color range
64" to 60" widths
HUNTINGTON CINRI
EDINGER AT lfACH
HUNTINGTON IEACH
••7-1011
DRAPFRIES
SOUTH COSTA PLAZA
aAISTOL AT SAN DIEGO
FWY., COSTA. MESA
s41.111a
'
Dear Ann landers:
·''What do I do ahout die nobe .
my Huie •ister maku'l"
"Do I reaUy Mell• •ood •••.
lllfr as my ha•f> ...... •llflfl.UP"·
.
"Is 13 too youn11 _to 110 aeatlyf"
"Bow ean I teU my wife ......
a lousy 1tn11er?"
"Bow do I break off .. affair .
with my boss?"
"Shonld I wear a wl11·to
ehlll't!h?"
"Dow do I make my father
stop eurstn11?"
'
"Should I tell my htubatMI he'• .
a bore?''
"l• It rll{ht for a wife to .,....
out her husband's wblakey'l"
I
'· • "Is eheapneu inherited fl'ea
mother to son?''
"Am I a sneker to' invest t.
hormone eream?''
"What •hould a teen-~• ·
telephone prl.,llege• be?" ·
"We were. IH!t!retly marrl8'1
and now I 'm pregnant ••• T"'
"Do yon think I am erazy C.
like soaUs?"
And
"Ann
Answers
EVERl'.' DA\' IN THE
DAILY PILOT
With Insight, Feeling
and Humor ••
-. ..
• ~
t • •
•
•
..
l
\
I
'
'
I '
•
JI DAILY PILOT Monday, August~. 1968
. ~:-Signed f or Film Score . "" .
Webb's Career S oars V p, Vp, Away
'WllJ.llWJ.'
Hflilf I@_\ I ~
"lllats.Mlne ... OOR'J'
lA'D.'lm • .... -: ~
and wrote "Up, Up and
Away."
Now 21, the composer pro.
digy of pop music needs no
balloons or airplanes. His
"MacArthur Park" is at the
top of tile charts and Jim
Webb's career is soariDg.
He has been signed to
write the sCOl'e for the film
musical of "Peter Pan.''
Nearly completed is a se·
cond album ot songs for 11C·
tor Richl!.l'd H.arris whose
first Webb Album, ' ' A
Tramp Shining," was a
runaway success.
Frank Sinatra, a m o n g
others, bas asked for some
Webb soogs. Taping has
begun on a te l evision
special, "Jim W&bb and His
Frien~. And on his latest
single record, "One of the
Nicer Things," Jim Webb -
composer and lyricist -
makes his singing debut.
It's been a fast aod dizzy.
ing ascent for ttle kid who
came out of Oklaho1na in
1964 lrnowi'ng he had to write
songs.
Jim came to Sa n
Bernardino, a desert town
60 miles lrom Hollywood,
when his father, a Baptist
minister, was assigned to a
parish there. Then Jim's
mother died , and hls father
decided to go back to
Oklahoma. Jim, then 18 and
enrolled in college, re·
main ed.
"Sometimes I look at all
this equipment and I think
of guys like Mozart who had
only a quill pen and maybe
some rotJtlt paper."
Webb, with his musical
poems-and long , long songs,
lf you think it's Carol
Channing, guess again.
She's Toni Shearer of
Corona de! Mar, who
plays Charity's side-
kick in "Sweet Charity''
at the Laguna P lay·
house Thursday through
Sunday. ~
Courage Marks
F eliciano's Rise
FREE f\ICKS * 1 ... "hit.,,.._
St•n
ki• H
J•M•t SI
Er11l1 IC• ·-~ sheer courage singer end Compo6el'. Born e c-M~
3nd !al.th in itimself, blind in Puerto Rico and raised in M'Gtl _ .. ,....,..,t J05e Feliciano rose New York Qty, he speaks
•--bOU1 Eng)ish and, Spani1h. "-to . the top of the eo· and his· selections , 'span juz ' s.n & S
terteinJnent ladder. th:rOO .... nnn Qa.J.ladfS. and old !*W. ( .. M H_.,.~ N....-rl --~
H •
.,V,a --... .. ......1 for a lr1~~·~ .. ~·~~~~~~:;~~=~·=~ .. ~··~·i'iic~ ·-..,,.,_._ Spamsh fulk tunes_ one-night.er at Melodyland
'!beater a few weekl'I back,
Feliciano bas been re-signed i The Luxurious New for the RJgh.t.eous Brolfiers
Show which plays the United Artist•
Anaheim round theater for 1 llS w. 11t\, s.n AH
three days, Aug. ~31 and Mo-'kao-54J-t217
Sept. 1.
· · B~~ Office Qpe_n~_
· Daily-l2:4.t~~ . ::i:~· ePERFORMAN~Se
1 • 3 . 5. 7 · 9, (L'f.M.
Sightless from birth, J~e
learned to play tne guitar by
himself oo borrowed in·
struments. When a lriend
finally gave him a $10
guitar, his joy knew no
limits.
Now only 22. he has made
his mark as a musician,
UNLIMITID NII PAIKIHlo .
ACADEMY AWARD\!.'=
J09UH L l.l.YM • ,.~\ --C -~•• i;-~i.;MC)lJ /.. \_ .. _,,..,__.., --/ ' \ ·'-'' . ~-..... .... ·-
THE' ..... , '\ ..... Things did Mt go well. His
grades we re poor, and the
academic regimen appeared
to be hindering rather than
helping him . A professor
suggested that Jim take his
talent to Hollywood .
says, ''I've always resented11;;~~==~~;;~iill being confined in the 32-bar!I
song -writing something
that runs three minutes
because someone wants to
sell to1nato ketchup." His
song "MacArthur Park"
runs over seven minutes ,
the longest playing single
ever to hit the charts.
ltdo
. i\ -"""'"""""" &RADUATE ~-":":-;:;;·--
. .....
,
·--·-
lilMJ!1ll!'l'll
ill ml&I • ..... """""
*"«IX:'. .... ...,..u4""'-" •
& RITA TUSHIN&HAM
"SMASHIN• TIM("
UldDHN -••~YID n'AYNE UAnSSIN
c: C> lJ NT
I)()\\' N
c.,A'Whole
GJVew'W'orld of Cf:ntertainment !
TONITE thru FRIDAY NITE
"ON STAGE JT.S.A."
SHARI LEWIS
THE FULLER BROTHERS
S~ows at 9:15 and 11 PM-On the TOMORROWlAHD STAGE
* * *·
Disneyland On Parade
7:30 Pf.1
A Merry, Musical Promenade through the
Mi!lgic Kingdom starring.Mickey, Pluto, Goofy
. and all your Disney Character Favor ites
EVERY SU NOA Y .
COUNTRY MUSIC JUBILEE
WEBB PIERCE
AUNT DINAH'S QUILTING PARTY
NOEL BOGGS •nd his BAND
LAA RY scon. CHARLES w1wAMS MST Mc,
Shows 11 3, 5 and 7 PM-On tf\e TOMORROWl..AHO STAGE
EVERY NITE at 9 PM
Fantasy in the S ky
Tinker Bell's lligh! signals 1/"n! s!arl
of • Spect~u/ar Aerial Fireworks Display r.
* * *
AM A&lllfil!lllC 1""~1~0\ll t~t Mtflc IO~td~ , . ,
TODY IUCKNEI • TME MUSTANQS • fl REHOUSE rlVl + 2
Jll[ IUDS or THE KIM,DOM. THE cu•• W•RD SIM,llS
llll ruran ' TIIE DISNEYLAND DAT[ HlTEIS
ntl tDYAl TAlllTIDS •TH£ INYADEIS ST££l l•MD
ntl .UllDICDA II.US 1nd 1111nr 11ore!
f• • ""1 'f«Nil •t i• ..., to "''°' Ill IM t•cllt"'fnl .• ,
DISlllTWID mu DAR~ TICKn BOD!(
lllCW. MMIWOll IH ... , s o\nnt.11ef11 ti Vovr C~l»Ct
Adult $4.00 Junior ,,,_," $3.00
tN.n .,.hltl '"·'o ••lij•I
A¥1llttllt .t.ntt' ,M OfllJ
.,_ 111111.•Tllw. I AM It ll Mldrllt.--ft1, & SU, I •M lo I ~M
Disneyland ·--....,-
He broke up with his girl.
made a brief visit to
Oklahoma, and on that
auspicious flight h o m e
wrote the song t h a t
catapulted him to success.
At first he lived in a bare
Hollywood apartment, sleep·
ing on a blanket on the floor.
Then "By the Tfme I Gi!t to
Phoenix" was recorded. Jt
did well, but not a6 well as
the song that followed: "Up,
Up and Away." An airline
eventually bought ttle song
of a commercial. Jim Webb
started making money.
He leased a huge, tree·
shaded old house just off
Hollywood Boulevard wtiere
he Jives with an entourage
of friends, musicians and his
business manager.
Articulate and soft.
spoken, still with a n
Oklahoma drawl, Webb
seems the calm center of
this whirlwind success.
"I try to keep my mind on
my work and write like I
always wrote." He sits in an
upstairs room surrounded
by electronic equipment -
tape recorders, an organ,
playback machines. an elec·
tric typewriter.
"\Ve are trying to go
forward musically," h e
says. "to incorporate the
poetic s t y I e of the
balladeers into e good solid
top 40 track sound.
'MacArthur Park' was a
start."
His abstract, poetic lyrics,
using commonplace images
of American life, have
sfgnaled a change on tile pop
scene. part of what he sees
as movement toward more
meaning f ul l y rics .
"MacArthur Park," with its
image of the park as a cake,
icing melting dCJWn, is "a
framework on w hi c h
everyone could hang their
own experience," says
Webb.
''I tried to describe my
mental impress ion of a
disappearing love affair -
m e 1 t i n g , disappearing,
decaying, and how time has
a way of blurring things."
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS 51 Gratuitous
transfer of 1 Rough lo proper\)' the touch j ) Mort
6 Exclamation sturd ily
of surprist constructed 10 A former lime 57 Having
14 About matu"re seed
the same 58 City near
15 Extremity Ottawa
of earth's 59 Percy
axis Faith's
lli Fa med field
PersiaJl 61 Scottish
17 European furniture
18 Man, for one des i1"" 19 Create false 65':-. Hiie
b1nk child shall
balance lead them": 20 Exam ine 2 words
21 Suffered b6 Ancien t
persistent monetary
pa in units 22 Form or Edi th 67 Sudden
23 Anglo-Sa xon outburst
laborer 68 Schedule
25 December of races
31st 6ii Sensitive
27 Kerc hief mental
31 lncllnation ptrception
downward 70 Obeisance
32 Cutt ing tool 71 Sea eag le
3) Do a mend· 72 Fraternal
ing job 01dtr
35 Automati c 7) Storehouse
device
39 Qu ick sharp
blow
41 Abatement
43 Weight of
contaln tt
44 Bird
46 Imbue wllh
DOWN
1 Moss ··-20nt of a
genus of
plants
3 Outtr
couragt circular
agaln borders
48 Protecting 4 Participaltd
sl1elter in an
49 By tht Olympic
agency of sporl
8/26/68
5 --party 37 Mountain:
6 Part of earth· Comb. form
quake's zont 38 --·ager
7 See 6 Across 40 Inhabit
8 Ill ig -·· 42 ·-··button
9 Transrtrred 45 Not earll et
b)' legal than: Abb r.
docu ment 47 Solt fuzzy 10 Group of fibrous
•ntes: 2 wcrds surface
11 Al'Mlonia 50 Far off
compound 52 Kitchen
12 Fabric Hem
13 Dr iven into 53 Cover wllh
a corner contempt
21 Reco rds 54 TV con!ro l of a yea1 55 Relaling
24 Undermine to bygone
2& The "A" of era
"R.A.F.11 56 Lacking
27 Stri kt soph istica-
violtntly lion
28 Sp indle of 60 Large rec·
an axletree \angular ball
29 .... East 62 U.S. editor
30 Per form ed and publlsher
34 Ring bJ Spinning
Lardner and like·-:
Stephen 2 words
Leacock •4 liavi ng no
36 Lesser admixture
Sunda ls land &7 Pronoun
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• PUBLICATIONS
• NEWSPAPERS
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A WARD.~:··-·
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BUT DIRECTOR-MIKE Nteil&Si .
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COVERAGE -William H. Lawrence, political edi-
tor on Channel 7, will be among the many reporter•
and. news commentators covering the Democratic
NationaJ Convention which begins tonight. Live ?e.
ports begin at 4:30 p.m. on Channels 2 and .f, a dally
roundup is shown at 9:30 on Channel 7. .
TELEVISION VIEWS
·Mike Todd
Special Set
By ROBERT MUSEL
..
NEW YORK (UPI) -Elizabeth Taylor motion-
ed to her lovely little daughter, Liza, and said:
11Look at her. It's like carrying around a phot&
graph."
WE WERE CHATTING in a film studio in Eng·
land and I could see what .she meant. Liza is the
image of her father, the late showman Mike Todd,
wnose death in a plane crash 10 years aao was tne
great tragedy of the star's life.
Miss Taylor loved Mike as she now loves Richp
ard Burton. Against the exuberant presence of Burp
ton and the poignant memory of Todd the other
men in her life are shadows.
SO WHEN MIKE Todd , Jr., set about produc·
tng an ABC· TV special about his father he had no
trouble at all persuading his former stepmother to
tell the cameras for the firlit time the story. of how
the most _famous beauty in the , world became the
wife of a high·stakes gambler near'ly twice her age .
"I'm married to a girl who's a few year1 my
junior," Mike once said. , .. As a matter of fact, she's
a few years my junior's junior." .
THE SPECIA._L, 0 Around the World of Mike
Todd," is scheduled for Sunday , Sept. 8. Gypsy Rose
Lee, Orson Welles, Ethel Merman and others link
the newsreels, home movie! and film footage tilat
help piece toget!ier the life story o! a faaclnating
personality. ·
Todd's courtship of Miss Taylor wa:s typically
unconventionaJ. They had met at sever~ .ffO:lfywood
._f>arties_ while he wa s producing "Around the World
in Eighty Days."
''IT WAS FUN being with him and I was at-
tracted to him, but not overly," Miss Taylor re--
called. "The day after my separation from Michael
Wilding, Mike called me and said he had to see me
right away. He just told me. l mean, that wa s a:U
there wa s to it. He said l was to meet him at MGM
at 2:30 and to meet him outside the administration
building."
Mike was nearly an hour late and Miss Taylor.
hardl y knowing why she simply didn't just leave,
was sipping a soft drink in one of the executive ofp
fices then:
"MIKE CHARGEO IN , rather like a btill. He
just charged in without saying a word to anyone
and he came over to the table and he grabbed me
by the ann, still not saying a word, just dragged me
out of the office, down the corridor, shoved me into
an elevator still not speaking, marching me along
another corridor, almost breaking my arm. We went
into a deserted office. He sort of plunked me down
on a couch, pulled a chair around and started in
on a spiel that lasted about an hour and a hal1 with·
out a stop saying that he loved me and there was
no qu estion about it, that we were going to be
married .
''I just looked at him, I guess, in rather the way
a rabbit looks at a mongoose. I was actually sort of
hypnoti zed. All kinds of thought• were going through
my mind . I said he's out his mind. He's stark
raving mad."
SHE WENT on locatioo for a film and Mike
telephoned her for two hours every day.
•
. .
1
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•
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tAondu, Ail;ust 26, 1968 DAILY PILOT %1
CdM's He_witt Seelis 2nd Olympic Berth Today
By GLENN WAITE
Of .. 0111, 1'1111 s111t
LOS ANGELES -Corona del 1'\ar's
Toni Hewitt battles for a 5«ond berth
on the United Stite& women's Olympic
swim team this afternoon, facing
seven other survivors of morning
qualifying in the 200 meter butterfly.
'nl4t 1S-year-0ld protege of UC Irvine
coech Ed Newland is the tavorite to·
day on the strength ot her American
record best o! 2:22.0 recorded earlier
thls year.
Many observers feet sbe 'li break the
world record held by Ada Kok o!
Holland (2:21.0) in the waters of Los
Angeles Swim Stadium. Finals were
due at 5:30 ip this th.ird day of the U.S.
women's Olympic swim trials.
Miss Hewitt zgreed it might take a
2:21.0 to win today. The first three
rinishers in the rt1ce will represent the
USA in the u~g Olympic Games
at Mexico City.
The O:irona del Mar sensation's
dream-come·lrue (making the Olym .
pie team) was in reality a nightmare.
At least that was the case for a few
moments Saturday after she emerged
from the pool here.
The Corona de\ A1ar High senior had
just covered the 100 meter butterfly in
a lifetime best or 1 :05.0, only three·
tenth8 of a second off the American
record and five tenths over the world
m.:irk .
She was given a judges' ballot
decision ( 11-10) over )964 Olympic
ch<:.•mpion Sharf)fl Stouder. despi.te the
fact the two girls were ziven identical
times on the electronic t.intlJ'lg device,
carrying k out to ooe-hundretli ol a se-
cond. •
Actual timing was l :05.02 for Miss
llewitt and Mi.ss Stouder.
However, there were two girls who
finished ahe-ad of the Corona del Mar
speedster as Ellie Daniel of Vesper
Boat Club won in 1 :04.81 to edge Susie
Shields Crom Plt.ntaUon Swim Club
(Louisville), who had a 1:04.83.
By qualifying formula only the first
two finishers in tbe 100 Jly are assured
a berth oo the United States team
which will perform ln the Olympic
Games this October,
Miss Hewitt was aware of the .,._
r:cgement and w'tlen sM e~rged
from li1e pool, knowlng she finished
third, 5he was extremely distraught.
llowever, there ts a prov~on to the
ruling which makes it possible ror the
third place fi .. ; ....... to be included on
the Olympic squad.
That is if any girl doubles as a
ql!alifier, the third place winner in the
100.meter buttenly goes to MexlcG Ci-
ty.
When that and the ft<:t that Claudia
K<>l.b and Debbie Meyer were cinch
bets to double were ex.plained lo Miss
Hewit!t , the Cororra de! Mar glrl finally
was convinced that whe was on· the
squad.
Sunday it became oificial wheo Miss
Meyer won the 400 free for her second
stt'&\ght victory and ttu11 made it
po$$i.ble to add the name Ton.I Hewitt
to the U.S. contingeot.
Miss Meyer'a 4:24.5 doc.king was
one of three world bests shattered in
Sundly competition. MJss Kolb erased
the 200 individual medley record with
a 2:23.5 and Catie Ball eovered the 100
breastst.roke'ln l:i..4.2. The old marks
were 4:29.0, 2:25.0 and 1:14 .6.
Unda Gustavson (4 :28.2) and Pam
KJil>t tt ,78.7) alJo qua!Uled foe the
Olympic team in tbe 400. Joining Miss
Kolb in the 200 I.M. are Sue Pederse.n
(2;25.C) and Jan HeOJle (2:25.5).
Rounding out the 100 breast's l<>p
tmee tre Sharon Wichman (l : lS.3)
.and Suiy Jones (1 :15.3).
Two world recOrds we.re demoll.~ed
Saturday a~ Miss Kolb cove.red tbe -400
individual medley Jn 5:04.6 and M.iJ•
Meyer bagged the 200 tree in 2:08.7 &I
the first si:it flrUbers bHUed tbe lilted
best of 2:09.7.
Miss Pcdenen and Lynn VidaU Jojo
Miss Kolb on the team while Mt11
Henne and J ane Bar1c1nan and th•
otber two squad members in the 200
free.
Miss Hewitt was tbe fastest qoallfltt
in Saturday's heats with ·a l :OS.4-at
Uiat time her lifetime besL
But she said she h~ • poor tum 1.n
the finals -.. I glided into it" -tbl
explained.
"I actually ttiought I finistied second
in the race. But I guess K d0;esn't mat•
ter. The main thing is to make the
team."
Tliird Time ls Charm
Reif's 282 Wins
SANTA MARIA. Calif. (AP) -Ron-
nie Reif tried three times to win the
California Open gGU tournament The
third time brought success.
The Costa Mesa golf pro carded a 69
in Sunday's final round of the four-
day, 72-hole tournament to finish with
a 6-under par 2.8'l and walk off with the
$1,800 winner's share of the $20,000
purse.
In Swim Trials
Two years ago Reif lost the match
on the final hole . In 1966 he finished
six.th.
Jerry Heard of Visalia saik a 20-foot
putt on the final hole to finish with a 70
for the day and 283 for the OOurua-
ment.
He picked u"p the second-place share
of $1 ,000, hi s first winnings as a pro-
fe ssional.
Electric Timing Device
Robs Girl of First Place
Even electronic timing d e v i c e s
don't take the flaws out of final place-
ment selection in swim meets .
It was thGught that the electric
touch plate system would eliminate
the human error margin which had
robbed many a splasher of higher
placing in close races.
Ho,vever 16-vear-old Susie Shields
of Louisvilie. 'Ky ., would probably
rather take her chances with human
beings aft.er what happened Saturday
So did Miss Shields. So did U1e uniden-
tified person who caught her with an
An1erican record J :M.6 oo his stop-
watch.
l:lut the electronic device rigged at
the end of tier lane had a different
result -giving the Kentucky miss a
1 :04.83, two-hundredths of a secGnd
slower than Ellie Daniel.
1'he only explanations are : ( 1) that
~rvera l gross of human eyeballs were
in error (2) that Miss Shields did not
depress lhe touch plate enougll to get
a recording oo her initial drive to the
finish . The latter seems to be the most
lo gical.
WHITE
WA.SH
So why aU the fuss in this meet,
when the first lhr~ girl.5 make the
-·. -... team; anyway?
GL•NN WNITa
in the U.S. women's trials at Los An-
geles Swim Stadium . . . .
Miss Shields looked hke a sure-win-
ner in the 100 meter butterfly. f'"'riends
at the finish line rushed up to con-
gratulate her on the victory, as a
matter of fact.
Other observers at the line also
thQught she had the win. So did third
place finisher Toni Hewitt. So did 1.
Donohue Wins
Race; Gurney
Stopped Early
CASTLE ROCK. Colo . (AP) -Mark
Don<>hue ran away from a sparse field
and posted his ninth cGnsecutive vie·
tGry in a Sunoco Camaro Sunday L'l the
Continental 250-mile Trans-Americ,an
road race here.
Donohue, 30, of Media, Pa .. start.ed
in the pole position and eclipsed the
track record by nearly two miles an
hour with a 94-lap average of 74.501
miles an hour.
The old record over the twisting 10-
turn 2.66 mile Ccintinental Divide
Raceways track was 72.82 m.p.h.
The expected challenges by Jerry
Titus of Sherman Oaks, Calif.. and
Dan Gurney of Corona del Mar in
Mustangs and George Follmer of
Arcadia, Ca.W .. in a Javelin (ailed to
materialize.
Gurney went out on the third lap
alter oil and temperature trouble.
Titus ble w his engine on the 17th lap
and abandoned his car at the head of
the straightaway. .
Follmer had ten1perature I.rouble
and broke a rocker arm although he
pulled back on the track for the last
lap to finish.
Well , the first place winner will no
doubt handle butterfly chores on GUI'
Olyn1pic medley relay team, Aiid that
foursome will be a cinch foe the eold
medal at Mexico City.
· So, i( there was a 1oul up on the
touch plate, Mi ss Shields no dou.bt lost
a go !d medal because of it.
And that's no small price to pay.
* * * Ob\•lously. lbe Orange County
All -Siar coaching selection system
needs some drastic overhauling,
as den1onstrated by the 19-8 humil-
iation suffered by coach Jim Coon
and his South le arn Thursday night
at Orange Coast CGllege.
By passing the honor of being
head coach around, you quJckly
run out nf experienced. qualiUed
mPn. Re tter to stick with the guys
\.\'ho \.\in league titles-or the ones
\Vho go farthest In CJF play, like
the county all -star basketball
gamt does.
1\nd a ~uy 1111 Immature that he
can't review the game with the
press hardly shows much class.
* * * K-en Docsburg of Newport llarbor
High swim fame has extra incentive
to make the U.S. Ol ympic men's
swim team when trials take place
this week at Belmont Plaza Olympic
Pool in Long Beach.
Doesburg, serving a hitch in the
N.:ivy. was tGJd that he'll be off for
Vietnam in t he near future-unless he
happens to qualify for the Olympics.
Pro Grid Results
Sunday's Resu1t1
Cincinnati 19, P1ttsburgh 3
St. Lou is 18, New York 10
Saturday's Result.I
San Diego 35, Los Angeles 13 1t
Green Bay 31, Dallas 27
New Orleans -40, Cleveland 27
Chicago 45, Washington 13
Min nesota 52, Philadel7hia JO
Kansas City 31, Omtland 2.1
•
California Open
Guy Bill of Oakland also carded a 70
on Sunday's final bole to score a total
284 for fourtb place and $850.
Heard shot a 66 and Bill carded a 69
GD the first day of play while Reif w<:.6
tied for third at 71.
But he shot a 69 his second day to
pull even with Heard, who shot a 74
'Nhile Bill zoomed to a 75.
Heard and Reil remained tied
GLENN WHITE
Sports Editor
Ashe Awaits
Forest Hills,
New · Honors
BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP) -Army
Lt. Artbur Ashe boped for a. cGuple of
days rest away from tennis to d a y
before entering the f Ir s t U.S. open
tournament at Forest Hills aa the first
Negro national men's amateur cham-
pion.
Ashe. a 25-year-old Davis Cup ace
from Richmond. Va., stationed at
\Vest Point, said he was "mentally
tired" Sunday after winning the 88th
U.S. National Championship.
A slender powerhouse. packing less
than 160 pounds on a 6-foot-l frame,
Ashe lived up to his No. I seed by
raUying for a 4-6, 6-3, 3-10, 6-0. 6-4 vic-
toryy over unseeded upset artist Bob
Lutz in the title showdown at hot and
muggy Longwood.
"I've played in the Nationals since I
was 16 and now I've finally won the
championship,·· Ashe said. "Everyone
wants to win hls national cham-
pionship." Ashe said.
"This gives me as much pleasure as
I hope I will get In bringing back the
Davis Cup in December."
Summ1r!n ot !tit U.S. "•1lon1t T'1!nl• Ch1mPion-
thlp1:
Mlll'l l"'91ft
"'"'•
Arl!'lur A1,,., ll!lcl'lmollll, y1 .. Mltlltod llob Llltt..
Los Mtlld. U. W, •tt, H. ... ,.
!'Intl
M1rl1 ·-· lltltH. Ind M1re1r•t 5mllto C:O...rl.
A11tl••ll1, lklfll~ Vlttll'l/1 Wtot Ind Jo,..;t Wll-
H•mJ, £"9!tnd, •>. 1-l.
Mill ... l)f~lllll
l'ln1!
"""ry .,..,. El1el. St. L1111!1. -1111 P'eMr Curni, Eno-
11no. °"'"ltd Tlln' 'retr, L01o ...,,!Miit. 1Fld ltebtr! p,,..,, .... in9fltlld, Mo., ..... 1.f.
UU'Ough the third day, each scoring a
73. -while Bill pulled back into con-
tention, carding a 70 fGr the day.
Bili 1'~eil of Los Angelflfi won the
tournament's amateur d iv is ion ,
beating David Barber of Bakersfield
on Ute first hole Gf a playoff match.
Their final round scores « 287 were
high enough for filth-place honors
an:oog the professionals.
Philly Open
Win Posted
By Murphy
PHILADELJ>HlA (AP ) -It's hard
to believe that eight years ago Bob
Murphy ctidn'l even want to play golf.
Murphy was a pitcher and he had
major Jet.gUe baseball aspirations.
Shortly before he enrolled at the
University of F1'orida, however, he su f·
fered a shoulde.r separation. His
baseball career was dead.
So, Florida U. golf Coach Conrad
Rehling urged Murphy to take up golf.
Murphy went on to t>e.:ome NCAA and
U.S. Amateur champion.
Last January he started on· the pro
tour.
Murphy reached some sort of
~soqal pinnacle Sundny when he won
his first pro hlurnament, the $100,000
Philadelphii! Golf Classlc.
He did it Ule hard wa y, too. in a sud-
den-death playoff with Labron Harris,
another former National Amateur
champion.
Harri.s was seeking his first win
after lour years a6 a regular on the
toor.
The two nonwlnners headed for the
l~h tee and t:heir sudden-death en-
counter.
1'hey each carded pus on 15 an":! 16,
alllhough MlU'phy had to recover from
the woods on tihe first overtime hole.
TWO.WAY THREAT -One-time American League home-run king
Rocky Colavito made his first major lea gue pitching performance
in 10 years for the New York Yankees Sunday, tossing 2 2-3 innings
of shutout ball tG gain credit in 6-5 win over Detroit. Colavito slam-
med three-run homer in second game of doubleheader also won by
Yankees, &-4.
On. the 485-yard, par-5 17th, Murphy
was in a trap to the left of the green in
two. Ji arris was short of the green in
the rough, also lying two.
Rock's One-hitter
Murphy bWted out to within 15 feet
o{ the pin, wh ile Hc:irris chipped eight
feet past t.he cup. Putting first, Ule 5-
foot-10 Murphy calmly rolled the ball
in for a birdie--4.
Harris, who had made a fine, last·
round charge to gain the tie , was
abou~ 18 inches to the right with his
pressure e(fGrt to m<..<inlai.n the
d6adlock.
Colavito Turns Pitcher,
l)etroit Drops Twin Bill
NEW YORK I AP I -The Detroit ~~~r_~'1i1c~l<WI, 1"2-flole KOl"h In 11\1 PhllNll'°"!•
&.eb Mu•l'l'lv1 120.00I ,,_11_"-l'' Tige.rs played the equivalent of six
L. H•rrh., I J,000 1'1...iJ.,..._ 1l • he 72 -d'dn't Dud1.-, wv-·•· 11.• u.1 ..... 111-i n games mt last hoW's. 1uey 1
Jiu "ldll•Y•, s.i.w ,Ut...,.~111 wln any of lhem. Clll•IH COOdV, 1.1,3" 10-~14-271
Fr1M, le•rcl, $.1,JU T.)..12~11' 1 "' f' l'~· · Dt•~ lhfr1m. u .«IO 11 ....... t.11-11, Rocky Co .av1to s 1.rst p """Ing VlC-
LM Eklltr, ».nJ 11111-n ~ · be ~~1~~,~~\o~ttl5».J2.S 1o'.16-1~ii0'. lcry in the majors Sunday might
Georo• Knuc11111n, u .111 71i~l;.~..'t::1"°~ last, but the Tigers will never
Mlll<tr l1t01r. IJ,IOO ll·llHl-12-:IJ.I l " Homt•o 111nc:11, 11,750 JO.IJ..U.1J.-lb1 wgc u..
g~i~k!;,"ri~iJ1·'50 /i~/::rtti~l Colavito. th e ~year-old outfielder
=~~ c::: ::::: ~1;' ..... ~:~ pickfred up by ,New : ... ark hil~ mfirool'hrt as
, ... , Y•..cev. ll·'so 11.1J..1W1-1tj a ee agen . m<:.-Je s ap-~'c,~°'.!~.200 ~i?-1tlJ=lL pearaace on t he mound in 10 years
oid. ·c~~':il.M 'fi?i!~.~ Sunday.
eo11 Lu""' 11.• ff.1~11 ... -m He fired Gne-bit relier for 2 2-3 in-0 ... 111 MooctV .1'1• n-1u '~'It' T••rv 0111, •;1, ~Ji1-1;.: nings and emerged the wimer £8 the l:t l~Ht.lelg1,1' ~R~B:\!' Yankees rallied fOT a 6-5 victory over ~~f!11~,~!jf ·, 111' tl:"J::H:11-~: Detroit In Ule first game of a ~~ ~~11, ~JJ.. !;:~~~Ji:ltl doul>leheader. New York took the se·
Gtllf LUI er. "'» "·!l .. 1·16-m cond tilt S-4 :~: ::!'1i~':' .. ':.u ~~~:rt.:21:i "This is it "nus is the only time I've L1rrv Ntowrv, U1J 7•Ja-10-71-11J •
K11 ""1e, MlJ "·"·'-"-") ever won t'!i a pitcher in profeS6ional ~i:.r=.,~u 1:.l!~'Cl:I baseball-," said ttie 91Jiapping right-
hander, whose only other pitching ef·
fort In t h e majors was a scoreless
three-inning ~ !Gr· Cleveltnd ln
1958.
The Gppo!i.tion ln that one also Was
Detroit. ....
"I t was a llltle strange," he said.
"When you've been m outfieldeT ,all
yoo.r life it bas to tie, 8.lld ·a big Uttill
too. I was very fortunate though. Guys
were hitting the ball up in the air. •t
Yanks manager Ralph Houk, short
OD pitchers after Friday nigl\t's
marathon doubleheader and fa ct • d
with twin bills Monday tod Tuesday,
called on Colavito in the fourth imlirlg
alter the Tigera had· battered Steve
Barber for five runs md seven hit!.
Colavito had been pttching batting
practice intermittently and had
thrown three scoreless innings in a
recent eX'l'rlbition game against the
Yankees' Syr.acuse farm club.
Donohue said after Titus. h.is only
serious challenger, los t his engine.
"We didn't have to run fast in the last
15 laps or SG so we were home free."
The victory added nine more points
to Camaro's already-won Trans·
American s e d a n chamJ:Won ship.
Firebird, which failed to place in its
last two outings. p(cked up six Point~
when Craig Fisher of Toronto, Canada,
finished second.
Mesa's D~Busk 8th in Olympic Trials
"The manager told me to be ready
ye5terday." co•avito said. "But he
said to slay in the dugout until be
needed me."
Colavito trotted to the bullpen in ~
tttlrd. lnni.ng and was ready when the
call came [n the fourth.
Mustang strengthened Its hold on se-
cond plact In the pc>int standings with
Jdm McComb's l.hird plsce Cinish.
McComb is from Hutchinson. Kan.
J>mr Revson of New York City was
fourth in a Javelin but WM later dis·
qualified for a push start.
Only nine cars qua.Ufied In each
division of the race run before a crowd
Of 8,400.
Iry RON EV ANS
OI lllt OIUJ l'lltt Sit /I
WALNtrr -Costa Mesa's Dee
DeRusk lo!>l hrr bid ror a berth on lhe
United Stall'!~ women's Olympic trsck
squad wht n she !lni$hed last in the 100
meter dash Sundny night in the team
trials at Mt. $.:In Antonio Colleg~.
The pretty 22.year-otd housewife ran
12 seconds Oat -far from her
personal best of 11.5 -as Wyomla
Tyus ran to victory in I 1.3 with
Marg•Rt Bailes second In the 5ame
clocldn&, althou&h 1he appeared to be
clearly behind the winner.
Barbara Ferrell was third in 11.4.
Mrs. BeBusk was philosophic after
the race. She told the DAILY Pu.;QT:
"I'm really not too di~appolnted not to
make the Olympics. lt'1 been 1 long
• 1eason. •
"No , I'm not thinking about retiring.
f plan to ·go through the Indoor season.
at leul After the U.S. nationat1 next
March we're supposed to be taking a
team tG Russia ror 11n Indoor meet so
that's something to shoot for.
"1 had my favorite lane (8) ln the
100, fell behind right away and knew 1
wo1 out of It." Dee actually hates lane
8. "You can't tell what the other ·girl.II
are doing ... It's a tm'lblc place to
be." she laments.
She had ruo U .7 to place fourth In
her heat.
llowever. she came back 40 minutes
after the 100 final and ran a snappy 7.5
for a special 60 met.er race in which
Miss FerreU broke a 9-year-old
American record (7.4) with a 7.3
puformance .
Other winners Sunday included
Jarvis Scott in the 400 m~ters (53.5),
Olp Connolly In the discus (175.()),
Sharon Callahan In the hlih Jwnp (S.
71/,) and Barbitora Friedrich tn the
javelin (177..1).
He retired Al Kaline and Willie
Horton, the Tigers' No. 3 and 4 hi:tters,
stranding two runners in the fourth.
lie watked two l.n the filth but did not
allow a hit urttil Kallne dOubled with
two out in the stxtb.
"I threw mosUy rast balls," Colavito
said. ''I tried a COU2le ot curves but I
wasn't get'ing them aver. 1 actually
ha<! a better brealthlJ 'bait In th•
bullpen, atl'd t was try.mg Jo throw a
Uttle too hanl out there."
Colavito gave wt1 to Dooley
Womack after scoring the d~\dini
run in New York's tive·run sixth.
I
L
Q IW~Yl'ILOT
4 Bowlers
Eye $1,000
!At Kona
11'1 Ibo bwrten 111Wt the buntod
~ at the tlnala <ti Koaa Lane•'
Maid> Gome Ellmlnlldons ill Colta ......
Tho f"" --Joe McCue. Fred l!:aolwvod, Jl'nld llk:cilll and
Lamar Keet -are the 1urvlvor1 from
an orlSllllJ hid <ti uo """ atar1ed llowlioc laat Moy.
• Far tho put U « so Monday nilhll,
... lleJd bu -llNd!IY pared c1o ... IUllll -fow are loft to alui it out for a wirmer't .,_e ~around $1,000.
Actim bep at 9:15 tooiib~ with 1 =IJ crowd upecled to watch the
' 'Illa -. -and fourth place bowlorlwlll ___ !Da
---with the -111...i.c all .. -the -· McCoe.
1 x-_.i m-ser and tauma·
ma -Dick S1oeffler vtns Iha
flnak .. a 11ot ••tera p1u..s 11a1n11
the raw, taleatod rootle.
"Moll <ti ... e7eo ... f<lllll "'be ...
Lamar Keet from Releda,'' Stoeffler ..,..
"Kod; lo 1he bot -Jer. He WU
Uth eotns into lut Monday '• -"°'" but -clew ~ "' f-to mau tbe flMlt."
l(cCao la • lt-,-r-old ,_ from
Buena P•k -ha led far moat ol 1he-He'1 trylaC tobeeome
the -,_ -Ill the 11111>1·,_.-, al ll>e event.
-Ill "'nllnl .. " • 1e.polllt lead al Emhtood, al Garde!IL He it
a1ao -C a !Int c1Ms j1m. No
--· ... -the ftnaJ round ha evw wan.,. EUml.
Tho -cf t<dlll>t'• cbam-
plonahlp ........ wtll be pairad -Ille w!zmerala-tournamentbelng
held at L • L Cal1lo Lll>el In San
Fr•ndlCO.
Tho two ---will m..t In • --block Cl1 Sep. -ber 7 1n s... Fr-• and acain
ll>e f~ ....... at Kam with ~ ... -, ... 1a1 ...
Ang~ls Face
Hot Yankees
In Twin Bill
NEW YOllX (AP) -'!be Calffon>la Anceir .... looidal ,,.. "" ..... Tho Nn Ycri: Y-... --,. far a
-ti> .-ilM the Americaa
Leesuo'1 -dMalon. II could let pr~ bot lo Yqbo BladllD.
The Allfell, 11"81h from • 5-1 _,
SundoJ """<tho~ Atllletlcl, ill·
vlde New Yark 1lllllal>I for a ttri-n!al>t
doub-11111 .. ~ "' get ,...., for a rectat -., lley took
• the baada of the y .......
California will -DmnU Bennett,
0-1, and Jim McGlothlin, 8-12, again<!
New York's Al Downirig, 2~1, and Fritz
Peterson, 6-9.
(A\.ll'OINIA
•II r II Ill D1v111li,. d J 1 1 O
Fn-l u 5021
Ml11e11tr 111 J 1 J o ll.i.:Ninlt ti .. J 1 I
ll:l~!Tlctl rf I • • I 11:-ftl .. l !J
HlnliOllJ9 J•eo Ceni.r:111 10 11 EH n( JOit
l niMt• .JllO
OAK~ND
•I r II Ill
c.."'" ..... '' u • 0 •• ll.J1dnan rf • 0 I 0
C.•tff lb •1 11 •..i•-1 c J11 0
l•ndt :Ill ' ••• D.Gr.., :HI J I 1 I Mondllyct ,,,,
Hl"hbtrftf" " 3 0 I I J.N1lll p l O O O
Spr1gu. 1 0 I 0 I
DDn1ldtot1 ..... 1 ' 0 ' 8oole1 0 1 0 0 lfWlt 111 I 1 1 I ~1 11 1 Tot1t 2'11 1
IOI 002 !l»-S aao uoo 001-1
ll'M ll E111a so
l niMI (W, 1)-IJI ' • I I 1 •
J . Nii.II tl. 10-IOJ S 1/l t .J l J J s.r...... ~, •• 0 •• .... ,.,,,,
1'._..19"1"'"!. T-J;11. A-11.1fL
Angels Recall
Catcher Egan
ANAHEIM -1be Ca li f or n ia
Anlolet rec&led ntdler Tom Epi
frcm tbelr Seattle club of the Pacific
COMt 1.eafu• to replace Orlando Mc.
P'arlm». who wu placed on the dis·
&bled Ult.
McFarW» la l1li!<rlJll from a leg
injury.
Makes Oly111pi~s
CZICH CHAMP -Olga Connolly, wile of fomier Olympic hammer
throw champion Hal C<lmwlly, walclles the flight of her <ll11Ct1s throw
Sunday at the U.S. Women's Olympic track trials at Mt. San An·
tonio College. Mrs. Connolly, now a U.S. citizen, wears a Czech
emblem on her uniform, beside the U.S. emblem.
Sports In llrlef
Injury Strikes 'BigD,'
He'll Miss Next Start
LOS ANGELES -1'le Loo Ani'les
Dodeen .-..:ed Sunday 1h&t star
riJlitl>ander Don Dryedale IU-ained a
muocle ill bit rl8l>t -er Saiurd"Y niebt met wm miel .. leut bis next _,.,turn.
Dryldale (14-12) 11\lff<Hd the injury
-he struck out Dick Dietz la lhe
fifth inoing of a game San Francisca woo from the Dodgers, 9· 7. Drysdale
wu given a corti.&one shot in the
-.Ider Sunday.
E:ariier tiJ season, the 3'l·year.old ritll&-bander 1et ....,..-ds 111 bur1ing tlx
ltlWgta ltdolQ and 58 e<mea1tive
scoreless innings. ,, ,, ,,
ENCINO -Jack Simes, the dele•·
dlaJ eatJoaaJ tpl'ID& ellampbl. woo
tile 1,880-yard apriJM SuDda7 ud •
bertb on Cbe U. S. Olympic cycllnf
team.
Simes, a soldier from Closter, N. J .,
atatloaed at Ft. MaeArUuu aeu Los
Angeles, was clocked In 1:11.3.
Behind him In the llDalJ were Skip
CatUn1 ef RJverlfde, Calif., 1:11.3;
.Jack Mountford of Sherman Oats,
Calif., 1:1%.9, and Pete Sem.la of
Brooklyn, N. Y., 1:1%.9.
Slmet' father wu a nadolll cycllnc
champion and bla rrandfatber a pro--
fessiona1 bike racer.
Finall1t1 raced Individually Sunday.
A 111-mUe road race Moud1y wlU
telect roar men ror the Olymptc team. ,, ,, ,,
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio -Carol
Mann, bidding for ber first aeries
championship, moved into a ODe·
stroke le.ad after TT holes SUDday in
the third annuaJ $35 ,000 Ladies World
Series of Golf.
The 27-year-Old Miss MaM, who
started the see-Ofld and ftnal round one
stt'oke behind Kathy W h t t w o r t h ,
birdied the 6econd, fourth and seventh
boles and wias lour under par.
Miu Mann, leadlnr money wi..rmer
on the LPGA tour. ilumbled only on
the nmttJ bo~ when she 't\l'ls in a trap
for a bogey,
Mils Whitwartlt, who lhot a 89
SM.urday for the first-round lead, was
three under-par tbrouafl 11 on ll• par
72, 6,194-yard c:ourse.
"' "' M08PORT, Oni.' -Loo 11111 of
Fullerton, CaUf., drlvblg tlte W111n1
Smothers Brothers Eaa:le, wen tbe 48-
lap 1pof11 ur eup la tU America
Formala A race SudaJ.
1111 tintt IW die 1Jt m1let WM '9t
hoar, II miautH, ftve aeeti.U. b te-
cond pllee wa1 Getqe Wla&entffa of
Vlllaana, Pa., bl aa Ea~.
Third Wll Kart Relaold of Rtckford,
Ill t. 1 McKee-Cllev. AD tlu'ee etm·
pletod 41 Iopa.
"' "' "'
WENTZVD..LE, Mo. 1l o I e r
McCluskey Of. 'I'lxson, AriJ., dirivng a
1968 Pl)'mootll Rood llllmer, wu tho
-<ti the Mid·Amerlca 200 stock car race Sunday.
Al Unser <ti Albuquerque, N. M., in a
'68 Dod!fe a.rger, waa -· Third wu McW AndrolU of Na-. Pa., drivi"lf a 'Ill Fon! Torino. Fow111 was
A. J . Foyt of -In a '1111 Ford
Torino.
Don White Of. Keokuk, law1, wbo had
tile No. 1 pole pollitioo in tllo 24-<sr
field bad mechanic\11 trouble ud bad
to drop out.
"' "' "' SYDNEY, Aatlrala -Slule7
Joteph McC1be, oae .r Antrall1'1 aD
time greats of t.be aickettaa: world,
was tilled Sunday la a »fM& faD ner
• ~ eUff M Che rear of btl lttme M Beaa-
ty Polo~ a Sydlle7 1ab ....
McCabe, 58, bad beft bl -llealdl
aDd •ad only rehlrM4 lttme fnm a
hospital tMee week1 •I•·
·· III.I 132 ill tbe fin< lat n Not-
Uqllam bl 1131 ""' dooal.bM ~1 Doa Bradmu 11 "the p-eatelt lubip I
have ever seen."
McCabe played st tesi ...-. U
aa:alatt England, b11 lalt Mlq II Im.
Re la 1urvlved by hll wUe., a ,.. ud
a daapter.
OCIR Slates Special Show
seoood round.
l'lnl -ndlnc tile Saturdly niJl>I
show will be given an opportunity to
select tile participant& for ocm ·s
November 23 manufacture r's funny
cer championships, B•~ will bre
distributed and fan t11 easi vote for seven
ol 70 tunny can lilted.
Five wit! be picked as team cars
with two al\emetu.
Costa Mesan Km Brown will dOll his
stffJ ltJoff for .another 1part..-wlftg
•klint: <kmoo1tration behind b i 1 rldtrl•• tnotiorc,.cle.
Jell Tyree ..-.nded fr<m a first
round defu t 1Mt Soturday nltlht lo
oaplure tile roood rc>Oln hmny car
ewnt.
Tyree, a l'\Ulerton dragster driver,
loot to Gardea Grove's 0... Beebe Ill
the first round. Beebe poetod an 8.44
elQP&td time ovet Tyree.
But Beebe's oar 1"1S then .ent to Uie
p!U rill an allin( e!1ifJ10 and had to
forego finals compeution. Tyr e e
bounced bed and wldppM Steve
DoV'lln's CamlrO 1o tbt H:Cand race
.,., Rid! -In "' UUrd malcb.
Eventual wfnn<r al Ibo event -
Dlal1lt Allen al Glendora, -lllnl
Jack Qrisman'1 "GT·l Ootntt" and
Deo Ke-·1 M«cury ~ wtlll
elapwl limes ol 1.11 and 1.00 -t1Jo
quk:kest times cl tile evadnf.
Ken Meyers Of Du.rt. won tbt
NHRA stylt 1treet elimlnata prize.
San Diego Celebrates
Chi.els Next in Line .....
For Cluince at Rams
SAN DlllOO CAP) -Tbo San D1e10
OW1u1 havti revtn•td their 74ar-old
ao-1 cloleat at lhl bandJ of lhl Loo
Anr1te1 Ram1, and Mw the Los
Aqolo laam propuo to fl<O yet
..Other Amarlcan Football IAa(ue
1aam 11 boal lut rtar• lbe Kania City
Chlefl, DOw t.O.
The Cbarru1, 1 p a r k e d by
quartarb&ct John Had! aad ldc:ter
Nevele Pride
Captures
Hambletonian
DU QUOIN, ID. (AP) -Nevele
Pride laughed hlmoell to strai&ht beat
vict«ies In the HambletOnian aad all
ll>e way b> tlle bank.
It wu tbat llmple for the great 3-
year~ trott« who brouiht his
driver, Stanl17 Dlncer, bia first
Hllllblelmlon trlumpbl Sunday In
ane atttmpte roe bamts1 radnr'• blg-
cest plum.
l'levele Pride, purcbued pri•alaly
~ a yearHnr for f2,011X:Q by Nevele
A<n< Stab!< aad Louil n..nlct of
Ellenville, N.Y., won with ridiculous .....
Tbo bu1kJ bey -al Star'1 Pride
toot lint -lit -llnCthl 11111 the -111 1\1. Ho -ahead at the start Ill -and the clolelt 1JJ1 horse
came b> him -b)' two lancthl wben he WU muUlac alon( the beck -· In both heats al the ·-race,
lllJlnla Psrteo delivered a :15-13 defeat
to .the Rama Samrdoy nilll>L It meant
two lolte1 In a row for the stunned
Rama who are amoni the favorites to
wia tbe NaUonal Footblll IAarue title .
'.Ille Dallu Cowboys boot the Rams
tn uhlbiUon play the week before , 42-
10.
Hadl dominated play from the flr1t
time th• Char11r1 bad the ball in the
flrtl qoartar .
Dtnnl1 Parte. ticked a 20-yard field
ioaI for th e only period score.
In the second quarter, Hadl passed
4S 7ardl !or a touchdown to Jacques
MacKlnnaa, and momenta later 68
yards for another touchdown to Lance
Al worth.
Then, Rams quarterback Milt Plum
lott a p111 to Charger Kenny Graham
who sped 47 yards for another score.
Two mlnute1 before the half. Plum
pused seven yardt: to Bernie Casey
for a score but Tom Watkin•' slant for
the convtr1lon failed.
At the half, the ICOrt WU 2U. The
Char1m were far in the lead, jUJt as
the Rams were wa7 out in front ai the
ball Jut 1ea1on when they bumUlated
the Charren.
PArtee produced a !!·yard field goal
for the only scon! in the third quarter.
and split the posts from 38 yards
s~nda into the final stam.a. .
Only once did the Rams threaten to
take away the offensive. In the tu t
period, Roman Gabriel, w h o spelled
PIUm after intermission, drove 61
yll'dl to tht Charger thrff.yai:d line.
'Ibln rookie back Mite Dennis bucked
it over for the Rams.
Top Giants,
Play Astros
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Juan
Marlobal ml.)" not achl.eve that
milestone ot ~ vtetorte1 this .teuoa
but he's sure to lead the National
League in complete games .
The agile s.n Fraocloco rl!illt.
handeT went tht distance Sunday for
the 28lh time.
The only trouble wu hf and the
Deqer Slflte
•~ • ..._. ft ....... ''" ··~ .,, 1 .. 1 ~ !7;DodWr• .., HtUllon S:!d I.I'll, ICl"I '411
Giants• lost 5-4 to the Los Angele•
Dodgers on a nintb·inning unearned
run made po6sible by the sloppy
throwing of Marichal and his battery
mate, Dick Dietz.
Los Angeles, which broke an eight·
game losing streak with its Sunday
win. faces the Houston Altroe at
Dodger Stadium 1ooliht wltll tile
Dodgers' Don Sutton, 5-13, opposing
Don Wilson, 11·12.
Jim Brew«, 5-3, got the victory Sun·
day in relief of Claude Osteen, who
was nicked f<r two run&, both une.cn·
ed, in the first inning after a walk to
WUlie Mrays, Willie McCovey's double
and Ken Boyer's -· erro<. IAN l'll:AIKllCO Lof AN••L•I
8' rfl M •• rllM hnd• rl S I I I CrMfofd If J 0 l 2
Hlll'll n. J • 2 1 w.01~1• a s • a o Mlya d l t •IHllJlor( 4 121
fkeoyty l b 2 1 I 0 Fllr"ll.111 • 1 2 I
H1 rt lb I t t I G1br lton rf I G 1 I
Olltlc. ••O IK.8ol'fflll J12 l
J.Alou If # I 0 0 l'apovldl 211 • 1 1 1 l1nler st •12av ... u111su )110
Mlnct.F ' 41 1 15111,,...,M l t lO
C.OI ..... ' 2 I I 0 .,_,, 1 11 0
Total U A f i To!l l :It' J 12 I Two wt wt'ltn winning nm i.cor...i.
k<I Fr1fKIKo 200 000 200--I L.o1 Anilll.. 011 OC11 OOl-S E-K. Boyer, L1n11r, Mll'kl'tll. Dl'..U. ...,...._ 1, l 08--$in FrltldKo 1, L• ,......... 11. 29-Mc-
Cov1••" Cr1Vlford, Llttlff. Hlt-K. Boyw (4). la-....... vt . SF-l'DPOvlc~.
P&-WleU. T-J :.,, A-21,Hol
Snow Speed, drivoo bJ Ralpi> Bakhrin,
brokl 111"ide and WU out of IL
8peed """ the only trotter to defeat
Prido tlU year, In the lint -al Iha
r-Revlaw FolurtlJ at Sprin(fleld,
JU., wllen 1~ locked 11111 Pride
weot otf stride.
Tbo only uc:ilAmtnt for the crowd
of 11,000 WU the battie for tecOnd
pillce. Keyotooe Spartan, pilotad 111
Del Miller, ed(ed Dirt Hao»Ver,
driven 111 SaDd<rs Ruraell, by one·ball
len(th and tb4rl. A DOM to Clpture I f:•
cond botll times.
Orange County's Divers
Take Bath in Tryouts
The 0 • 1 y diaappolnlment WU
Pride's wimling time.
He tool< tile linlt beat ill l o59 3-5
compar<d b> Ayres' Hambletonlan
r ecord ol l oll6 4-5 Cll Du Quoin'• mu.
oval in 1964. But his :27 4-5 Jut
quarter •11 ~.a«ond futest in Ham·
bletonlaa bilt<lr7. ~ Pride capCurtd tbt lfcGDd beat in
l o~9 2-6.
The 10 m.p.b. wind wu in Pride's
face on the beck: ~ and DIDCllT
Nid it Wll a f..:tor' in the tiinet.
"But J didn't have tpeed on my
mind -I jurt wanted to wtn," added
the 4.1-11ar-old reinlma.n who takes
the colt to ttll ' '40,m:t Horaeman 1'llturit:J in lndianapoll1 s-..,.
"Befort th• llUOn •ndl, however,
we wU1 shoot for tbe ).year~ld trot! Un& reoord," Dancer ecDtlnoed.. "And
ne1.t year our target will be I : !II."
MAGNER WST
FOR SEA.SON
NEW YORK -Ga17 Magner, a
rookie linebacker from ea.ta Mesa
trytng lo mate the New Y ort JetJ'
squad, is ~ oat for .,. -· ,._,,, -........., SundaJ. Tbo 23-y-..ici, 24ll-pounilor tore
H1amene. 1a ms ~ -durinfl Sun· d.ly'a exhibition WiCb. Aa.at&·. Ht
undtr"4nt l\D"f9J)' lw tbt iDJury im·
medlolelJ -.... pme.
Maper, -&loo had plaJtd
deltnliw end for Ule Jet&, WU I
looAI! round -pick by tile J.U.
He wu a h1&fl ldlool sensation at
Mater Del 111111> Jn Slata Ana before
matrlculatill( to Oraaco COMI. A• • Pirate. be ployed Ill the 1983 Jlftor
Rose Bowl game and he pGtyed in two
Rose Bowl g£1D11 with USC .
BJ GLENN WID'l'E ........ '"" """' LONG BEACH -Ormre County
di..,.. toot a both In the recenUy coo·
eluded U.S. team tria1I f<r men and
-at Belmcoot Plua Olympic
Pool.
Two counlNnl came cloSe to making th• country'• team, but blew their
Clhances witb faulty perform_ances qn
the !Mt round <ti cooweU~on.
Patti Simo <ti Lasuna BeB<h and
Mela Verde Swim Club (Colla Mesa)
lllNlltld to haw it m.te in women's
p!Mtonn flolil Friday ni111>t. She was
in third plact with ooe dive kit in the
....nng•s compeOOon.
But she 1ot stuck in the middle of.
U. effort, ruulUn& in a short dive and
poor entr,. into Ill water. Judge• gave
the 2.Q..71ar~ a tctal KWe ot. 19.3'l -
low .. lndl--<ti the nig)lt -
and lhe -to 11111 Ill tile •lan-
cllnp.
Similar fau weohed out Larry
Aodreasoo. ol Loe Alamitos, lormer
Western High School ace. Andreason
wu in fourth for Thund.ay spring-
board competition • the last ... of
dives 1ot mder ny.
Ht WU 12.09 points away from
third piace and a spot OD the> team. But
he too Jot oft I sub-par effort, sprawl.
inC fcrward in the wam like a wound·
od bird.
Judge• l'lff him 24.30 polllll!, which
d"troyed any chanc< ol finls lling
among the top -· Fred Whiteford of Mesa Verde SC
-elbnlnalad In ~ trials.
Saturd17 ht .and MVSC mate Bob W-were -ble b> mato Ille tiOOI
in plat.fc:rm di'llng. Wilhite wa1 17th
aad Whitofonl 1Stll in morning trlall.
AndrtMOll. took l etb. Tbe top 12 made
the flnllll.
W-al lbe alnlin1 platform
Baseball Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pri. GB
St. Louis 83 48 .634
San Francil<o U l50 .116 13
ClnclnnoU r1 11 .132 131>
Chicago • 83 .m 141>
Atlanta 114 1111 ,492 181>
Pittsburgh 62 1111 .4'1'7 ~
PhlladolpilJa l50 1111 .469 211>
Howtoa 81 70 .418 :U
New York II 73 .447 :Ml>
Loo Anrelea M 14 .4211 71 ........ ·--If. L...,lt 4 ,llhllwailrrl I ..... YW1. 7, CIM.,,_,. I
....,.,...... 4. AtJ.n 1
C*-I. ...... . lAt ""-" ...... ,,...._ .. ---Oliu91 fHM'llh 16-JI 11 1111 ''MdMt ,...,,, CtJ.111.
l'll!tllwlfl l•i... 11-1) ti AtMonf1 !'AHlll M l, .....
il11rlldtW!ll 1....,. 11-111 "' c.._. (Ml ... ,..., 11·1), ......
M-Twt lMcA ... A NI It l t. Le-. fClrttr.I 11 ... 1 ......
,......_ (WIMll 11.IJ) .. La .-,.... '"""'" ,.,J'.l, """'
Joh11on & Son
900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, NllWl'OltT llACH
642.oMI l4U27I
finals action was Keith Ruaseil of
Arimna State, wbo turned in a spt:e•
tacu11r linal eftart for 77.43 poiotl and
a come-from-behind verdict over
previous leader Win Young of the
University of lndi.a-ia.
Russell'• dJve was a naming 1 Y..
somer&aUlt with three twUU . He end·
ed. tbe d1y with 518.15 point.I while
Young settled for 611.41.
Dick Gilbert of Iu:ttana rallied for
third with a 70.20 last dive -a run· nine 3~ tcmersault. · He was in
seventh alter prelims and fifth going
into the last round o( the finals.
His total score was 486.90.
Tough competition -the hottest the
three leaden> bad ever experieneed -
saw Jim Henry take foortll (486.00),
B<rnle Wrig!itson filtll (4«>.177) and
Mike Brown sixth (487.48 ).
other finishers -Dick Rydze
('64.58), Cbuck Knorr (45270), Jon
Hahn f e 1 d t (445.58), Rick Earley
(444.09), Jim HOlldenon (429.M), J ay
Meaden (3911.5!1).
McNULTY NAMED
TO EDITORSHIP
Patrick McNulty of Corona del Mar
has been named associate edJtor of
Surfing Magm.ine, one of the 14 mag•
azines published by Petersen Publish·
ing Company.
McNulty, ol 213 Goldenrod Ave .,
was a foreign correspondent for the
Associated Press in Europe and Africa
from 1955 to '1965 and for tbt last
three years has served .as managing
editor of Surfer Magaz.lne.
A graduate of the University of Call·
fomia, Berkeley, McNulty has for the
last two ye ars r eceived the Orange
County Press Club award for "B e a t
Magazine Article of the Year.''
WllY IS THIS YfAR
AHY DlfffRElfl!
TradiUonally
A¥91tt 1"'4 S1,t1rnl11r 1r1 th1 rnffttt.
tli1t yo11 1r1 bo111b1r,1d with '"l11lty
"y11r·•ftcl d 11rt 11(.•" 111• 1dv1rlltlJ19.
Yov t•t It '111rn •••ry dlr1ctl11J1: n•••·
l''P'"• r1cli1 trN TV, Y11r ;,, '"' r••r out it'1 tl!1 tllOI• •Id 1f•ry.
But Thill Year lJ
Different At Job.naon'1
1 ... ,. .. this It th1 .,.., •f ,., f"•I
MOVL Aftot AftM1,..att 1 t th1 ''"'•
ltcafio11 •• will IM "''"lllf Mff t•
• 11119"lnc111f n1w f1(.lllfy '" M1rll1r
... ,, .... " '" C.tf• .... , •.
Naturally
w1 h11Jt t1 .u,,.,, 1f ••r INTUl;I '*°'
.... ,,,., •' •• "'"•' f.111 ... ,,, ......
IJll'fl -11 fh 1f II" Jll W f1cility Cl ll
I>• 1!11. .. 1111 witt. b11nlll ••• I••• .... ,,1,.
Naturally
.. ,, thit --·· .,. nitt.l111ly , ... ,.titt.1.
Natura lly
r•v wlll WI Jlf ft f1h 1clv1nf1t1 .,f
tt.!1 •nlft11I tH.1fi111,
Today
.. ., ..... -... ... ~ :.
The Brea Lions Club is still amazed at the crowd
its North-South county pree all-star . gam~ drew at·
Orange Coast's' LeBard Stadium Thursday night: Sur-
prisingly, the game sold O}lt at OCC.
And the way they're talking now, you can bet the
game will become a permanent summer fixture at
Orange CQast.
The Lions seem to favor OCC over the former site,
Santa Ana stadiurp, for two reason -(a) you don't
have to pay to park at OCC and (b) the Llons get a
percentage of concession revenues at Coast.
Their only hope is that future games won't be a
repeat of the debacle Thursday night, when the North
won in a 49-8 mismatch.
One Lions official told Utis writer that bad South
coach Jim Coon of Marina not insisted on using bis own
Marina assistant coaches, it· could have been a differ-
ent story.
Bald..,lt1 W ante II
"We wanted Jim to have Tom Baldwin as one of
his a ssistants. 'That would · have given the South Marv
Whitaker and John Conover of Santa Ana, but as it was
they didn't play for Coon.
"Who knows? Maybe a guy like Whitaker, with his
speed, would have brought ci:o~n Winn on that 1~2-yard
interception return,'' the official remarked, asking not
to be named.
The fact remains that Herb Hill, the winning cQ.ach,
had his Loara High assistants help!ng him, too. But it
was the South, as it turned out, that needed more talent
and the colorful Baldwin would probably have coaxed
some of bis outstanding players to play.
Baldwin, incidentally, is almost a sure bet to be
the head coach for the South next year. Bnt some of
the Lions are known to favor Wade Watts, the Newport
coach.
* * * NAVY DEPT. -Santa Ana College football coach
Dick Gorrie dMsn't know it y.t, but Steve Gilvin, 200.
pound Miter Dei lin9men Of last season, is going into
the Navy.
Galvin had told Gorri• he would play for him this
season but made up his mind only recently to sign up
with the Navy.
* * * GOLDEN DEPT. -Here's a quickie quote from one
of the officials of the North-South game: "That Larry
Golden of Anaheim is a tremendous lineman -he
handled Eric Patton so easily it wasn't even funny."
* * * MUSSEAU DEPT. -Former Mater Del, OCC ind
Idaho football coach Steve Musseau .11dvises us to r•
member the name Jerry Hendren, who will be 1 junior
end with the Vandals this season.
"I guarantee you this kid will be one of the top
three college receivers in the country •nd 1 gre•t pro,"
says Musseau.
* * *
HEAT DEPT. -Tom Fears, the New Orleans Saint
coach is sold on cool-weather training camps like the
Saints' have at Cal Western University in San Diego . .,
"You can't get in shape at a hot-weather camp,
he says. · .
"When I was with the Rams and we trained at Red-
lands I had a terrible time. You'd sweat all afternoon
in that heat out there and then drink a gallon of lemon-
ade. What does that do for you?"
Deep Sea Fish Report
SANTA MONICA -llO u>tlut; 2tJ
bonito. 117 bin, 14 ll1llbu1.
$AN CLIMINTI -14l lftoflertr f
11a1111u1, :Ill IM1rr1c:ud1. •s.1 bonlla, 4n
kel1 bin, 1 blwl!n tvn•. Vl/OITVRA -10$ 1"9lert1 111 Mu,
17'11 rock Ill.II, 1J l!t llbut. 1 ulmon. OCIANllDI -,,, ll!tltrlr m bl•·
r1Qld1, :W 11blcor,, 31' bin. 105 bon-
Ho, J wllll1 ... blSI. 1 Yf!llcwl1ll, 1
h1llbul,
HUNTlNOTOH lllACH -U 1nirlers;
157 bonito, 121 111\d b1H. 11 kelP bin.
15 ll1llbul ...... -110 tlo<!lla, , .....
r1clld1, 17 blss, 31 IMl!bul.
MOll:RO &AY (Vl ... 't L1ncllfttl-111
1ntler11 :it 1lbecor1, 13 klftof wlmon, 16
1!1!1bul, '116 111111 cod. 711' rock cod. POll:T HUINIMI -llO 1nvlel'I;
11.0 Cllk:a blit • .Sl l>lllbut. :It Mr· ••cvc:lt. It bonito.
MALllU -IU l""ltrt: HO bi:w>lto.
:its c1tlca bl». J 1111111u1. m rock cod.
11•1• -UM 1ntltrt1 5111 bonlfo. It
uno:I blss, 10 haHbut. HlllMO$A llACN -71 tnt1ltl'Si 1
Ytllowltll, 4l Cl llal !Mt .. 11 bonlla,
RIOONOO IU.CN -211 1""ler11
' yt1_,11t. II lb9rr11;UH. m ullca
"''"' tll botltto. ' lllllbvt ........ -.. -lerti 1• llofllla. 11 lltllbul. '°' mlCkn-11, IUO rock cod.
llAL. llACH -U7 '""le"'r 1U befllre. lUll l6nd IMIH, 11 lltlfbut. • ,,., -nt '"'""1 JU bonito. u•
SOFT SELL SAM
,,..c1 b•••· 1' h•llbul. MARINA DIEL ll:EY -St lfltlefl;
lU bl .. , l bonito, I h1llbul, Jl llnv COii,
I bonito.
SANTA IARIARA -175 1"'l1n;
\UO r..ck COd, u 11 ... cod. lU Ctllco flmperlll IMcll) -IO 1n111n; fl'.I
IAN DIEGO 11"1. L1m1.-HIM •
l'bllemi1n't Lt""I"') -1111 •"'len; 163 yellowllll, 51'0 1lblcort, 7 CI0'9111n.
lmMrl1I lttcl! -IO 1nvler11 tO
velll!wt1!1, 11 lllrr1cud1. 111 bin.
NIEWl"Oll:T IAfl'1 Linell"') -tn
1nv1e-.: Sl 1lbficore, l bllldln tun1. II
b1rr1cud1. {01ffl''I LKkff) -3'4
1n9lef5; 6t• bonito, olU baa" 20
1lbleoro, 35 l»•r•cudl, 1• ll1llbul.
SAN PEOll:O IN-'• Lln41ntl -
"' 1nvltrt: 1 1lblcort. 2 bluwtl11 IUNI, ]f( bonito, S blrrlCUdl, lJ hill•
bu!,. 30' t t llCO biss, 11 11nd blQ,
1111111 St. L1 ... lrlt)-l.U IMll'U/ 22
1 lblC01"•, 2 yelklwl1ll, ' blrr1cucl1,
571 ctllco bin. ' htllbu!, lW bollllo.
LONG aEACH l"•<lllt s..rttlMMJ
-1t!I .,I'll•"'; 5 1lbtcort, I Vl!llowtln
'""'· J ve11owt111. '° blrr1tud1, 117'1 c111eo bits, 100 bonito. 11 lllllbut.
IP........, Ll .. lttf) -W lntlert1 1 ..
berrK~, ISGI bll" 667 bolllla, 2
'l'tllowt1!t, :rt roct cod. 16 lltl!bul. , .... ,,...,. l'lwl -111 l1>tler1; 1'tt lli!Mlto,
1" blu, 4 blrrlC\ld8, 6 hlllbul, II:•,... -ll 1nt1i.t'1; 1'3 llonlto. I hlnbut, H
IMlrr•CUdt. 2.1 Nu .
....... I -1-1 -i-1-/ I
•••
Mondol)'. Auo1.1st 26, 1%8 DAIL V PILOT 23
itt Long Beae1i
Women
Gymnasts
To Vie
Japan Wins WorldSeries,1-0;
Bolsa l(ids Take Third, 1-0
STRESS STILL HEAD DN TIGHT SHOTS
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa . ~ligashide silence Richmond==========
The best advice I can give
for pl•ying· shots from close or
tight lies is to keep your head
absolutely still throuahout your
swin1. Focus your complete at-
tention on the back of the ball
and never let it waver.
(AP) Twelve-year-old balJi that produced 6-2 and 8-
Hldeaki Higashide proudly 5 triumphs 1n the opening'l--
Mld the winning baseball and semifinal rounds of the and shyly uttered 1 com· LONG, BEACH -Call Jt
5port, art . . • or perhaps
even 11clence . ·. . gymnas-
tics for women is perhaps
the nearest thing in athlet-
ic~ lo ballet, and the Unired Sta~s· finest. practitioner'
compete tor places · on the ·
United State Olympic team
here beginning T u e s d a y
night .
Twenty-eight young ladies
in leotards -curvaceous,
graceful and agile-will per-
form (and that's really the
correct word) at 7 p.m. at.
Long Beach Arella four of
the next five nights to se-
r
M1 inh1ining 1 steady head
gives you1 swing "!l anchor.
lt's_the !?_est insurance tblliour
, Ctu blace will meet the ball
' squarely despite the bad lie .
', It is amazing how frequently
a golfer will make exceptionally
good contact on shots that ap-
pear to b~ difficult. The chief
reason for the success of these
shots is ~ecause the close lie
forces players to pay strict at·
tentton to the ball.
' '
ment traditionally reserved series.
for American youngsters: nie Japanese young.Ster
"When I grow up, I want struck out eight southern
to be a ballplayer." batters, with an odd motion
The crewcut youngster that almost stops when
i,-poke Saturday aft.er his Jligashide's hands reach
three-hit stiutoot g a v e over his head.
Wakayama, Japan, a l-0 Many of the 15,001 fans
victory over Richmond, Va., were surprised at the low
in the championship game score of the contest. They
o! I.he Little League World had seen Japan demolish
Series. Wiesbaden, Germany, 14·2
The Bolsa team from in its opening round game.
Westminster, Garden Grove and shut out Santa Ana,
Fo u n ta i n Va 11 e y , Calif., 3-0 in the·semifinal.
and Santa Ane took third in The contest Saturday V>'as
the series by .e d g l n g sio close, that it took a freak
Canada, 1-0. play to score the game's on-
The triumph brought the ly run.
title to Japan for the second Jt came in the bottom ol
straight year as Wakayama the fourth when Takayu ki
duplicated the feat of last Nishlde walked with one out,
1 year's champs from West and we11t to third when
lect the eight 'women who ~ Tokyo. Richmond catcher Tim Reid
will represent America at ·'I want to be a pitcller," threw into right field on a
Mexico City. · Higashide said through an pickoff attempt.
The program will consist "-c 1,.. tv.n.. ~ i,.., ""-interpreter. "It's easier to When the relay got away
of compulsory exercises in pitch in Japan, because (rGm pitcher Roger Miller,
each of the four Olympic 1 ~=:--===""'=-""""'""'°"'"""";;;:;:-:;::--;::;:--:;-;:::::;:;-, Japanese players are so Nishide broke for home. But women's even ts Tuesday PVT POHEt aACK INTO YC>m SWING! ·-With th. h.lp of Jniold · much s ma 11 er than just when Milier's quick
night, optional exercises -Palrn.r'1 illuJtroted booklet,"'" Shati ond foil'W'll)' Woods_. S.1'1:1 Amerioon.s." recovery appeared to have
BAF•CO
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for special
GOOD STUDENT
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•nd Assoclat"
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Wednesday night. no com-20I; ond 0 11 lf-od°'9•d, lllompKi tnw.loP" 10 Atf.old Polme1; 111 -One would have a hard the runner out at Ute plate,
be of Mii1 nt-r. · bell · f
petition Thursday . cause l:~~:~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::ft1~m~ebE:· •:vm~g~:tha~t ~las~tJR~e~id~dr~opp!~ed~tll~e~th~r~ow~~o~r]~~~~~~~~~~ the ccmpetition is so gruel-statement, after watching his second error on the play. ing a hight off is necessary,
four more sets of compuJ-
474 E. 17th ST.
COSTA MESA
642-6500
50ry events Friday and the
final sets of optional exer-
cises Saturday.
Olympic competition em·
phasizes no single one of
the four events--frte exer-
cise, balance beam, un-
even parallel bars and
vaulting -but, raUter, all-
around skill. The U. S. team
will consist of the eight
women witb the highest to-
tal scores following the four
night& of exertion.
"Consistency is what is
important," reminds Bud
Marquette, c o a ch of the
successful Southern Califor·
nia Aero Team of Long
Beach and director of these
Final Trials. ''One fall in
any of the events and they
haven't got a chance of
making the team."
Marquette was speaking
both objectively and sub-
jectively, really, for two of
his star pupils on the SCATS
are considered p o s s i b l e
members of the U.S: team
despite their tender years.
Cathy Rigby, age 15, and
Wendy Cluff, age 16, both
of Long Beach, have done
well to survive the qualify.
inii: meets around -the . na-
tion which have Darrowed
the Long Beach f.ield to the
nation's eUte group.
Also among pie favorites
are National AAU All·
Around champion Li n d a
Matheney of Champaign,
JU.; Joyce Tanak of Se-
attle, JoAnne Hashimoto of
Carbondale. Ill.; and Kathy
Gleasoil of Buffalo. N. Y ..
among others.
Coach Of the U.S. team is
Mur)el Grfossfeld. herself
a former U.S. Olympian
and now a leader in the na-
tional p h y s i c a I fitness
program and. a television
commentator on gymnas-
tics as well as coach.
Tickets range in price
from $2 to $4.50 for the four-
day event or $7 to $9 for
"s e a s o n tickets" for the
four days.
[Yet)' WHk MMCO Mtl1tlM -
lll•ft J0,000 tr1"1ml111or! probf•m•.
You 1et fr11 towlnf, • '''' roed· · tlitck, 1111, •fficl9"1 MfYlc-...ost
li"'M Ill knt on• di)' ........ 'tritll
AAMCO. yowr tr1n9'"ls1lo11 tin be
prol•tlMI lty OY1r ~ MMCO CM-
t... 10111 lo ea.it.
(.,..,. mlnut• Md 1 ....,_ ..,.... -P""" .. ··· v .......... ,,_
., •• I ., .. AA9Cll
COSTA MESA
1741 ......,, ........ ,,"
G•rden Grov•
fkl .. ,..,_ ................ .....
S1nt1 An•
ftf I, Pftl It .. ... "'"'°'
PHONf
646-4421
1968
PRESIDENTIAL
ELECTION
GUIDE
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Los Alamitos
SECO"O •ACe, d Ytrds. S YMt
oldt •1111 .. Ill Gr ... a Pk4. Pune ..... II,._,. .lodtlV ('N Str•ln-I) 1U
Holllllr llocMI Ill IMl!bl 11•
Chlurl"s HI ._ tR Flo-) 11•
ltrte! Cllrldf CT ~I 111
Etl9'1 lllld< ID QntoMI 111 Cl'ly,_ Hnf1' IC Stnl.,I HJ
Oiidl:w s-IJ Dn\r«l 111
Dlted INolall IJ 11*-1 ll!i Trw Leoti Bat (It Ado.Ir) Ill
Fr!Utr Trudllll Cl ariM""'I 11' ............
F'"''t NfrK CP (.-,.) 11'
Mr, MltM W1tdl IC 5"'11111) n' ANof.,,, Sir (I Btl!1kll'll n•
R1 ...... TOllY Ill Aa.lrl 11•
TMlltD llAClt, :l!ll Yl l'ds. MlldH! !
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Del Mar
Entries
Baseball's
Top Ten
9ASl"9ALL'S Yet> TaN
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ll1WI' on l2S 1t bll'9.
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M.Alou P9" 116 432 46 I.. .Jll
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Nwltl Amerk111 SOC:Cltl' L .. -., T"" Auod11H l"r111
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1PROVIND GROUND'
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HERE'S WHAT WE CHECIC , .•
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fr.try l ln ID H1RJ 111JL-------------------------'
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Al"'•* l•ck1lt.y, 111ti1111I 1w11' wl"111r fOf 1111 cever191 •f
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d11rtn1 !1'11 seconcl 1'1111. the c1'11r .... 111 Ill
1$% ol 11'11 cun 1nl Mllin1 1ttict l111C""""-
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IS<ti .ff pl'"W ...... , .• , , .1146 .......
NOW5 22 ,..IN. ...........
White 1ui..1 ...
Si1e ............. ... F9d. Tax
23.95 ••••••••••••• t.11 650..1$
700-U
695-14
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, .• , • , .• , , , •• ·25.95 • , ••• , ••••••• 1.95
NOW526
Si1e
735.14 . ........... . ....
27.95
F9d. Tax
••••••••••••• 2.06
775•14 o o 0 OOO •' t t oo o 29,95 O O ••<I 0101000 2.19
775-15 ••••••••••••• 29.95 ••••••••••••• 2.21
NOW529
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125·14 •••••••.••••• 11.95 • •• •••••• , ..... 2.35
155.14 ••••••••••••• n.95 ••••••••••••• 2.54
115-14,, •• ,,,, ••••• 15.tS ••••••••••••• 2.15
115·15 , ••••• , • , •••• 31 .95 ••, •••••••••• 2.36
145-15 ••• , • , • , , , • , , 13.95 •••• , , ••••••• 2.54
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·--.• ............ ··-~ ., ...... 1 ........ ~
Co x Under Pressure in Olympic Homestretch
SCREECHING HALT -Sails on Scott Allan's Outa
Sight bang limp as his boat is swept away from
mark current in abortive Olympic trial race Fri-
day. Allan was leading when wind quit.
98 Entries Tlll'n Out
In LIY C August Race
By ALMON LOCKABEY
0.llJ "119t ... ,." •• ..,
Gardner Cox of Vlllaoova,
P•., ~resenting the Man-
b>loldnJ, N.J. Yodlt Club
went into the final race ot
the 5.5. meter Olympie
trials -Y uoder terrifi<
pres6Ure.
He WU sWl holding down
tfle belt score of tbe 17-boat
Oeet, but Ernie Fay of
Hooston, Tex. and John
M"""'"1, S-Wd, CO!lll.
v.-ere applying the preseure
from behind.
On Cle basis Of the best
five out of six races Sunday,
Cox had 16 poua, Fay had
20.4, Olld Manhall 24.7.
An outside cooteOOer with
36.7 points was Gordon
Lindemann, Milwaukee
Wis. who woo Sunday's
crucial sixth race.
Cox started his downfall
Saturday when he finished
12th in a light·weetber race
won by Flay. Although he
could us.e tt>e 12th as a
throwout race. Cox didn 't
help his cti.ances Sundiay
~efl he finished fifth while
Fey came on strong for a
second. Cox was also beaten
by Morsllall w!lo finished -· Sunday's r-ace was a
Utciller for the huge spe<:-
tatOl' fleet as places among
ttie· top five changed rapidly
-especwty at the weather
mark where a strong cur-
SABOT B (10) _ No rent took its toll of those
Fay and Marshall started
their covering tactka on
Cox at the end of the
triangular leg when they
broke off from tlhe leaderl
and oUpped ori Cox who had
rounded the mark and tack·
ed immediately to
starboard. From there to
the finish tile three boats
matched ead\ other tack-
for-tack wiJth Fay c:i>vioorly
having the best boat speed~
When ttie starting gun was
fired for the final and
deciding race at 1 p.m . ~
day, here wae t11e lineup
based on the best five ol. six
races:
1. Cadenza, Gardner O:>x,
Mantoloking, N .J .
1-2-2-1·12-5 -16.
16.
DOWNWIND DUEL -John Marshall's Bingo 11 crucial sixth race of 5.5 meter Olympic trials.
Ninety .. t entries in 11
classes turned out Saturday
end Sunday for Lido Isle
Yacht Club's August Regat·
name, Brad Bauman. LIYC;
(2) T J, Ringo Wagner,
NHYC; (3) Sirius Too,
Carey O'Reilly, NHYC.
who had tacked early on the
lay-line.
First to become a victim
m the current was Fay wh-0
led the fleet tt1 the first
weatiher mark by a safe
maT°gin, ooly to be ft1rced t.o
tack et the lest minute to
fetch tlhe mark he had miss-
ed by oo.ly a few feet. In
doing so he had to take the
sterns of Lindemann, North
and Cox .
2. Sundance, Ernie F a y
Houston, Te I'. , , 6-6-1-3-1·
2-20.4. surges by rival to weather during spinnaker run in
Finn Oass
Trials Set
On Tuesday
Olympic t r i a 1 s com-
petition switches to Mission
Ba.y, San Diego Tuesday
when 41 of the nation's top
Finn Class sailors start
competition to select the
U.S. representative at
Acapulco.
Selection oi the U.S.
single-hander will be made.
on the bas-is of the best six
oot ol seven na.ces. ..
Thirteen ~f-tpe 41 entries
are from California. Four o(
them will be from Newport
Beach. They are Fred
Miller Jr .. South Shore Sail·
ing Club, Henry Spnague III,
Newport Harbor Y a c h t
Club; B<>b Kettenhoffen and
Argyle Campbell, Balboa
Yacht Club.
Top contenden; in tile
class include Peter Barrett,
Alamitos Bay Yaoht Okib,
tile Olympics b r o n z e
medalist in 1964 ; Bob
Andre, Mission Bay Yacht
Club; Gordon Bower, Mio-
neapolis. current holder of
the O'Day 'lnlplly in the
North American s i n g 1 e -
handed cbampkmsmps, and
Carl Van Dyne, Mantolok-
ing, N.J ., who won the North
American championship in
the class la6t week at
Alamitos Bay.
ta.
Spokane Boat Wins
Hydro Cup Racing
63-mile Race
Captured
By Relea se
The event wgs limited 00
centerboard sailboats and
was sailed inside the bay.
Final results:
Y F'LYER CS) -(I) Dip·
pity Doo, Hrarry McKinney,
CYC.
WASHINGTON (AP) -said after the race. "I didn't KITE A (12) -(!)
Fugitive II, Peter Parker,
NHYC; (2) Andale, Pat
Scruggs, NHYC; (3) Chao.
II, Bob Haskell, LIYC ; No
oome, Pat Reaume, LIYC.
Spokane, Wash ., a city, 40
miles from the nearest large
body of water, became the
capital of unlimited
hydroplane racing for at
least the next two weeks
Sunday with the victory of
the Eagle Electric in the
President's Cup Regatta.
The Eastern Washington
thunderboat, whose home
water is Lake Cour d'Alene,
Idaho, beat her cr0ss-state
rival, the MU;s Bardahl of
Seattlei twice Sunday to
clalrn ttie Regatta Trophy
and gain 400 points on na-
tion~ Point leader Bardah.1.
The two meet again in two
weeks in the Gold Cup in
Detroit.
Eagle Electric jockey
Warner Gardner, a 54.-year·
old hydro veteran who flew
P38 f!ghters in World Wa-
ll, made no secret of the
fact he was out l<l beat the
Barctahl ever since the
checkered lady from Seattle
beat her at Cour d'Alene
Aug. 11.
Gardner and B i 11 y
Sehumaciter, in M i s s
Bardahl, tied with 700 points
going into the final heat Sun-
day, were virtually neck and
neck after three laps when
the Bardahl engine threw a
rod and went dead in the
water.
"I didn't realize Bill had
gone dead until I reached
the other side," Gardner
believe it.'' George Sturges'
KITE B (9) -(I) Too
Much, John McClure ,
NHYC; (2) No name, Bob
Small, BCYC; (3) Sulton,
Before the heat was over,
Gardner lest the lead to the
My Gypsy, a Detroit boat
piloted by rookie Tommy
Fult!, but e. second-place
finish was worth enough
points to give the Eagle
Electric the cup.
Gardner had run first
Columbia-SO Release from
Newport H8:f'bor Yacht Club
was the overall -and Clas6 B
winner in NHYC's 63-mile
Coast Chanllel Race Sunday.
The event was the filth race
of the 1968 Ahmanson Seriet
fw ocean racing yachts. Curtis Gibbs. BIYC.
First to finish was Jack LID0·14A. (13) -No
ahead of Schumacher in an N Bill McCord BYC Baillie's 12-meter Newsboy ame, , ; earlie!' heat and had picked . el d tim 190882 (2) Fungus, G. N. Smith,
d I (•-:... m an apse e o · BYC·, (3) Ru1h Audiorium, u p a secon ·P ace .uu.x1 ho R 1 1. .sh d . da tta tal urs. e ease llll e in Blair Barnette, BYC. ~tur Y for a rega · to 9.9751 hours to handily save·.. LID0-14 B (16 ) -(1)
Of 1,000 potn.ts. · her;time·onNewsboy. Julie II , Fred Tiaiepel, VYC;
My GyplSy finished the The race started Saturday (2) Paper Tiger, Dick Allen,
weekend with 925 to retam in light airs, but wtien tile SBSC ; (3) Sole del Lidt1,
third I · th ti I Roy Woolsey, LIYC. P aee 18 e na ona afternoon westerly filled in KORALLE (4) -(1)
standings behind Mis 1 it ~ throughout the even· S chi z o · f. rantic, Chuck
Bardahl and Eagle Electric. ing. Fowler. NHYC.
Fourtil place went to the Class winnen we r 1 SABOT A (17) -(1)
Detroit, Miss U.S. with 850 Ne~boy in Class A , Green M~e. C l i f f
points i¥fld her driver, Bill Release in Oass B, Bill W·ilson, NHYC; (2) Breeze,
Muncey of Seattle. In na-Polly's Conquest, Long Mary Ann Sigler. BYC ; (3)
Beach Yacht Club, Class C; No mme, Obuck Driscoll,
ti.anal standings Miss U.S. is aod John Thome and Dave SDYC; (4) Big T, Tim
fifth behind the fourth-place Smiley's Arriba in Class D. O'Reilly, NHYC.
Notre Dame, which did not Final results:
compete here this weekend. 0 VER ALL (1)
The action was free of ac· Release; (2) Newsboy; (3)
cidenlll. It was two years Jacarel II, Jack Hamilton,
ago on the Potomac River NHYC; (4) Cygnus, Ernie
course that three unlimited Qtlpman, LBYC; (5) Vi·
drivers loot their lives in vant, John Haskell, NHYC.
two separate mishaps. CLASS A -(1) Newsboy;
Most of the drivers in the (2) Jacarot 11.
10-boat field complained of CLASS B -(1) Release;
Washington's heat end (2) Cygnus: (3) Vivant.
humidity, which affect CLASS C -(1) Conquest;
carburelion systems. At (2) Tantara, Hugh Lam6on,
least three crews made LBYC; (3) Agysimba, John
the'ir one allowable engine Hutchinson, NHYC.
change after Saturday's ear-CLASS D -{1) Arriba;
ly heats even though all (2) Sanderting, Kirk &
boats were in good enough Poole, BCYC; Bravo II, Bill
shape to f.illi~. Haskell, LIYC.
BYC Holds
Regatta on
Labor Day
Balboa Ya<ht Club will
hold the yachting spotlight
in Newport Harbor next
weekend with its traditional
Labor Doy Rego& for all
classes of sailboats.
Outside clas6es will sail
twu races Saturdaiy and ooe
Sunday. The first race will
start .at noon Saturoay and
Sunday's race will start at 1
p.m .
Outside claoses scheduled
., start ""' OceM1 Racing,
Rhodes-33, PC, '1'11istle, In·
t e rnational-14, UJders-16,
Eiocalibur, Cal-28, Cal-25,
PlmF and MORF.
Small boats racing inside
the bay will receive tl:leir
starting signals from the
BYC race tower. There will
be three races Saturday and
two Sund<>y. Starting times
are noon and 1 p.m.
InQde dasse6 listed are
Metcalf, Lido-14A, I.Jdo·14B,
Lid~14 Jr., Kite, Sabot A,
Sebot B and Sabot C.
SAllOT C (15) -(I) No
name, Lindy Koll, LJYC; (2)
No name, Madeline Koll,
NHYC ; (3) Kling·Ading,
Ken Klingen9md.th, LIYC;
(4) No name, Dori K<>ll,
LIYC.
FLIPPIDR (6) -(I) Blue
Streak, Cody Small, BCYC ;
(2) No name, Sa 11 y
M·arshall, LIYC.
ARBI'J1RARY (8) -(I)
Sae-Sae, Mike Eisenberg,
DRYC; (2) Fun Bun, John
Leslie, LA YC.
Harbor Sabot
Sailors Win
Fay moved ahead ()( Cox
on the downwind run and
finally picked up Marshall in
a tacking duel over the next
tWQ weather legs. He didn't
overtake North until a short
di.stance from the finistJ.
The sixth race boiled
down to a battle for points
ratiler than for positi.005 in
that partirul.a.r race. Thi!
huge spectator fleet kept its
collective eyes glued on the
tlhr'ee-boat duel b e t w e e n
Fa,y's Sundance, Marshall's
Bingo II and Cox' Cadenza.
The fact that Lindemann
Two Newport H a r b <> r and Lowell N<>rth Of San
Sabot sailors topped the list Diego were fighting ·their
Saturday in Alamitos Bay own privMe battle for first
Y.adht Club's sabot 11 • place could make Utile dif-
Series. ference in the final stan-
Winner was Mark Gaudio, dings,
Newport Harb>r Y a c h t 1lhe &tart was the most
Club, and Dave Johnson, beautiful in the series.
Balboa Yacht .club, was Three boats were over early
runner-up. by inohes. They were Earl
Ofhers in the OOp five were Elms, San Diego; Ted
Jeff Merrill, ABYC, Steve Turner, Atlanta. Ga ., and
Younger, Leeway Sailing Elliott Oldak, Philadelphia.
Club, and John Holme, Long 1\nner made the best
Beedl Yiacbt. Club. recovery to fillish ninth.
3. Bingo 11, J <> b n
Marsf\all, Stamford, Omn.,
3·1-4-2-6-4-24.7.
4. Cloud NU!e, Gordon IJn.
deman, Milwaukee, 7·3·5-9+
1-36.7.
5. Luv, Lowell North, San
Diego, 5-11-13-4-2-3--4.3.7.
6. Charade, BW Ficker,
NHYC, 1,.S-6·5·8.S -46.
7. Ramona, Gerr y
Drlseoll, San Diego, 4-8-7-11·
3-7-53.7.
8. Shadow, Earl Elms,
Mission B a y , 9-4·3·12-5-
IO -54.7.
9. Nemesis, Ted Turner,
Atlanta, Ga., 8-7-12-6-9-
1>-68.7.
IO. Outa Sight, Scut Allran,
u .s. Navy, 11.12,a.1.osQ.
8--76.
11. Truant, Donald Cohan,
Ann a polis, lS-13·11-8-13-
11~.
12. Fugitive, Warren
Parker, NHYC, 10-10-10-14-
16-13--87.
13. Gra....ca , Elliott Oldak,
Philadelphia, 14·16·~10.15-
12-90.
14. Complex VI, Britton
Chance Jr., 13·1-f-DNF-16-7·
14-94.
15. · Savra·ge, Al Ce.1&el,
VYC, 12·9·16-17-14-17-98.
16. Gosling, Skip Elliott,
NH Y C, 16 · 1 7·H-13-JJ.
16-100.
17. Yankee. Taylor Grant,
NH Y C, DSQ·!S.15·15-10.
15-100.
FIGHT ING FOR POINTS -Gardner Cox' Cadenza (No. 68) jumps into early
lead in sixth race of 5.5 meter Olympic trials and is covering John Mars:haIJ'a
Bingo J[. (No. 77) No. 58 was called back for restart seconds after picture was
taken.
Newport Outrigger Champs
NOISY WELCOME -Newport'• outrigger canoe
team bit beacl!s at Avalon to beat Hawaii entry for
first Urne In 10 yeara. Race started at Long Beach.
Rowers Com e From Behind to De feat Hawaiians
Newport's No. 1 outrigger
rowing team fought a come-'
from • behind battle Satur·
day to belt the Hawaii team
ln a da1b from Long Beach
to Avalon, Catalina Island.
The Newport team, coach·
ed by steennan ruma Kala·
ma, hit the beach at AvalOn
at 12:55:30 p.m. for an
elapsed time of 4 hours, 34
minutes and 30 seconds.
The Hawaii team landed
40 second.I later for an ET of
4:35 :10. Closing fast at the
finish wu the Balboa uam
with an elapaed time of 4:-
36 :30.
There were eight teams 1n
thir race. Two ftom New·
port, two from Balboa, two
&om Marina del Rey, one
from Laguna Beach and ooe
from Hawau.
'l1le r-ace started from the
Cherry Street Beach in Long
Beach at 8:21 a.m. in fog
and haze. The Hawaii team
set the pace and led unW
the Newport oarsmen over·
toot them about nine miles
from Avalon.
The racers were welcom·
ed by a large crowd on t h e
beach at Avalon where ela-
borate ceremonies were
performed. Heading the
traditional ceremonies w a I
Noah Kalama.
Paddlers on the winning
Newport team were Albert
Naki, stroker; Joe Kinyone,
Kilroy Nalahe, Bill Vaughn,
Jell Evans, Steersman Ka·
lama, Jim Miller and Tubbf
Kalama.
Grand manihal ol the
race was A. E . "Toots" Mln-
nv1elle, president o( the In·
ternationat Canoe RaclnC
Association.
I
')
. I
L
I I
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2414 Vista Del Oro
Newport Beach
644-1143 Evot. 644-2626
•' A RARE BUY •
, l.oftty large I: clean 2 BR,
hdwd firs, on a 'ffi' beautiful
landscaped rear yard. This
property ls r.oned for several
units in rear yard & gives
ample privacy. Vacant. This
u an excellent home close
to ,llopping nellf 18th &-Or·
... Try $.50XI down with
6'teellent financing. This
prOj:ierty will not last. Call
oow! Full price S22.499.
Lockh•rt Realty
&i;.Z301 Eves. 6t2-0'l67
$l 58 PER MONTH
Qwnet' tramferrei • 5')'S sell
NOW!! Three bedrooms, 2
baths, large fireplace, built
1n. kitchen, 13' X 20' covered
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Excellent location, near el·
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514 % fllA loan may be as·
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would include taxes~ Try
$1500. Down.
~3 WESI'C.:Wl''F DRIVE
7711 Open Evet.
:: OPPORTUNITY
fDr licensed real estate sales-
jeOple in well established
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have your own desk & phcrie.
f,,,,ooi listings to seU. Floor
tlme. Top commission. Plen-f1::ot money to linance your
sales. Call for interview.
W. E. Lachenmyer Realtor
1860 Newport Blvd., CM
646-3928 Eve. 673-4577
COOL OCEAN BREEZE Sm0g tree air, deluxe tftam
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Great location for that fine
living. Huge yard with lush
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$16,600.
7682 EDu~GER ~5 or 541).5140
Commerci1I Bldg.
$21,500
Belle~ us -It ii tl;\Je! Build-
ing 5 years old • 3 suitt'I.
Owner will lease back one
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for yoo. Loca.ted near 11th
& Newport, C.M. Price in·
eludes land & building.
Reach for your phone now!
Never again an opportwUty
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Newport
11
Vlctorl•
646-8811
MESA VERDE
~tf§.!'
2414 Vista Dti Oro
N ew'PQrl Beath
Ready by November
PttsentlY •••
1J nder conslrUction
2 • 3 -4 Bedrooms
Complete kitchens
Double garages
Fpka -custom ~
Spe.nlsh design
Loaded with tile
Oose to shopping • 9Chools
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Would you belie\'e
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Ph: 644-1133
NO DOWN TO VETS COSTA MESA BEAUTY
Transferred owner wantl ac-witn gorgeoos panelled living
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:r6.9i'i13 646-7171 ;:.;e!~ba~
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Family Planned!
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owners anxlOWI
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$$$Maker
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NEW HOME H ~tE & Income; newly decor. 2 BR. 2 BA., 1%.
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&12-2821 Builder. • 1112 Avocado, CdM •
0\VNER $18,500 New 1 y ABOVE THE BEACHES
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THE FOX COMPANY
2863 ·East Coast lliway, CdM
613-006 673-4918
fainvay, Can't )'CU just pic-
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V.illage Real Estate
WOULD-BE GOLFERS call Xlnt area, Fam nn, trplc. Lar So . ii lo I
NOW for appointment to $34,4.50. By owner 54{).4681 ae.~ r~part!: 2 B~.e i 967.:.Wn 54&-8100 ~~--'-'= ... , COLLEGE REALTY College P••k nu .. ch&nn ..... ,.Jn kit. NEWPORT BEACH 546-5JJ80 ;;.:;=.::..;.:;.::. __ = Xlnt cond. \Veil 1oce.t«l.
Sacrifice of Homes
MUSl' BE SOLD!
Full)' Funs Model llome V~
o1 Ocean, 3 BR, 2 ba, never•
llved in. llome under noUct.1
• $33,500 ind all. 0wnfl' aJd1
l..lnanclng •
LOS PADRES RLTY
Laguna Sch. m.aa:r
1707
PAC ISLA.ND VILLAGE
2 BR 2 SA condominium
Elec kit, sun.room, many ex-
lras, 1500 sf, trpl, prden
patio, pool facility. Ex-
tremely nice.
$39,90)
Call to see • 499-2800
Riviera Realty
:IDS. Coruit Hwy, So Lag
Duplexe• For S•le 1975
FOR Sale By <M.-rier • :!
11etuxe 2 Br. Du• 'Xe:: C.M
1% ba. Many extras. Good
lncC1me & fine. Pr:ccd be.10\v
recent apprai.il.I !or quiek
S&io~. Would .!Unsider eq.
t."l'lde for cleaT bldg. lot or
&..f.>d TD'1. D!IY• m.73.Sr:
eves I Sun.. 54>-.r.M
$19 670 3 BR. 2 Bo., bltm, ''"'" to be<d>, tennil. ,,__ 2 STO RENTALS ' o.,,.. Dbl. car. $23,9"1l R. C. GREER, 8'alt;Y RY HOUMO Fuml1htcl
ENJOY TIIE LIVING COM-By Owner 646-1492 3416 Via Udo 673-9300 3 BR 21,i batM, 12x18' fam-1---------
FORT of this one of a kind ======;:;,;,;;;-==-I========= R t I to Sh 2-• ily room, with fireplace, tn • I •re """'
3 BR, 2 bath adult OCCllpied Newport Be•<h 1200 Huntl....ton Bl•ch ~400 •A-•• din. home. Smcll the fndt hi yaur '-';;;;;:;,-;;=;;;;;;:;;;;~:1;;;;;;;;;;";;;•·;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;; I :u.Al•ucu mg room, com-YOUNC woman w/chlld, own baclc yard, ACT NOW! msr BUY BAYCRF.ST pl.etely CU1)eted. Sell GI or desires to have lady abaft:
Qukk Po"""° GI LOAN ~SHEAR REALTY living '""'""'' In a 2 Br. -rarr~H--Spactoos 3250 sq. ft. cust., Owner desperate, will accept 847-8531 541•2442 968-U7S •PL 549-3964 aft 5:30 da.iJT,
profess. decor. & lnds("pd., 5 $2100 for his lovely J BR &
lg. BR. Xlnt cond. Rare buy den home. Den beautifully SA VE'$$$ Newport Bffch 2200
ORANGE COUNTY'S at S69.SOO. 51h% Loan panelled with matching bar. Walk to beach, Newport \V~t 1;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1
LARGEST tranferrable. Not on lease F\illy carpeted. Bright step I.ow 5~ % GI, $174 pays all.
293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 laod ..... ,,,, Ev... . kit hen ltb -" tb ' BR,' BA, fam rm, -Winter Rentals 7100 WINDWARD LANE sa\llng c . w ..... · e -..l -" CE ki t~ FANTABULOUS -'-"--'-'--"'=-='-'-modem appliances, ad10m· .. t'c, au. t, c""~ FURNISHED FAMILY ROOM_ BEAUTIFUL BAY VIEW in& ianiily room. Only at: patio, etPts. drps, fn.800. #1 .. WATERFRONT 4 BR,
$22,500 N. Shore Blufl's 2 &tory VETERANS ;:i~a~s~ .. H.B. 2 ba patio.
~-"·· -e--"'~ 3 Br. 2 Ba. 2,000' condo -"-'-"""'-=-==~--#2 ~VIEW, 3 BR, 2 be, tam ,.,..,,..., room -.v• • ., "'" ..... "' Like new, vacant. Few blks We have a su~r sharp 3 BR -
Anthony pool! Exquisitely
planted & spacious patio •
garden for outdoor enter-
talning. A walled garden
for privacy! Don't miss this
rcmarlcable custom built 4
BR home in Baycrest (not
leaseOO&d). Rare for only
i;iS,950!
Builder's forecloSW't' -4
BR 2 baths. Only $995
down to anyone -$185
per month prlnci»lt', in·
terest, taxes &: insur-
ance. Vacant. Pt&es-
sion before school. Hur-
ry! Hurry!
length of home. Rich pMel· to proposed Marina. Quiet, home, beautilully car,>eted Vacant s Bedroom #J -~RrvATE Btacb, 3 BR
ing, fireplace. 2 bat.hi. King exclusive carefl't'e. Under with t'OVered patio. Clance
673-1164 size bedrooms. All built-in mkt. $3T.5oo. 6134356 o( a lilelime. $23,500. No with 3 baths, lovely yard & Mn. ~n
dr8m kitchen.. Sliding doors =="-='=~"-'=-~I down • m coctJ.. Must earn very desirable area.
to lovely yard. 54().1720 BAY CR~ -CN.ner. 3 Br. 2 $1;J() monlhly to qualify. HAFFDAL REAL TY .._.._._ •-
TARBELL 2955 Harbor Bl. Ba., lamily nn.; beautifully LISTER REAL TY "Homes to Match Income" -
4 BEDRM -$23,750 carp. &. d r a Ped• 18 O 6 16612 Beach Bl HB 8'12-6633 8410 Warner &12-44(!;
COMl"ANV SUBMIT NO DOWN ""'••nl Laoe. °"'" week· , Coldwell, Banker & Co.
G.I. or low down to others. ends l-5. 5<18-0875, 5'1S-0970_ $30,500 Fountain V1llay 1410 me•· C••t Mll!IW•r
1!u~es~:~~'. Re~:~
NEAR HARBOR HI
Oxiice 4 BR+ den, loads of side & out. 2 baths. Quality New pier, float. Storage shake roo[ with used briclc Nice 3 BR By Owner, 1%.
•
COAi.TS R!fiJ.0
00
RS Completely refurnished in-4 BR. Home 40' Waterfront. 3 BR 3. balh, 130 U. drep lot, N':.":'iJi""'c,~•:=:11
extras, new w/w carpets WALLACE NEWPORT BEACH carpeting. 2 pati06 for out-space&. extras inside & oot! ff'Ollt exterior carried into BA. bltina, MJft H20, c:r\llll, YRLY-FURN. A frame 4 br.,
throughout, ex pen g i v e REAL TORS door living at ill best. Built· Fee simple -By Owner. fireplace with llftl\elllng in drps, frplc, panelled faro. k>tt, 3 hths. dishwhr. 'Ai hilt.
French shutten, new dish---:5>44166-44141-POOL HOME in range &: oven. Estate E\>1?111. 96S-3623 llving room I: den. Profes-nn., !Cn!ened patio, lg fncd to bay, 1 bile. to ocean. $300.
washer, built • in kitchen (Open Evenings) Beautiful 3 bedroom, :i: bath alz.ed yard. 540-1720 1812 HIGHLAND Dr, Hrbr sionally decorated &. with lot. $25,900 w/$2200 down • mo. 206 15th St. N.B.
spacious living room, beam'. -All new shag carpets _ TARBELL 2955 H•rbor Hlnds 4 Br 2 ba, fam rm, all wall paper. Car<pels, drap-6~% loan. Call for appt. 675-4169
ed ceiling & custom drapes.'"'""""""""""""""'"""'' TWdclly landllcaped. see GOLF Counae Hon:ie. Glow-bltns, lrplc, $32.500 10% dn es, louvl!T'ed shutters, HI 962·1618 e\'es. & wknd1 onlyN c~EWPO==R~T~Sho~,-,.-.-,~hann-~lng-!~:ly~ ~ ~ pe.· THE BLUFFS • thi.9 perlect free formed pool lng S~ die flrg in entry, Owner. 548-2847, 1-729-2008 FI speaker!, wateraoftener. 2 BR., den, 2 ba. $235 Phu
, down. BEST BUY with .waterfall and acads of gallery, din nn &. kit. Ex-BLUFFS Condo. Dlx 2 Br., 2 Don't buy unW you ltt this IO"-'-ut;...;.ol;_;C.;;o.;;un;;.ty;.,__;;.l;.605::.1 UtiL Sept. to June. Adultl, ~ d~. -. $29,m Owner posed beams. 2 gorgeous be. Encl patio w/ ga1 home! iALE Or tr d 2 Br od no petl. 633-0683 ~-y:.E:?:~::t~ s~;;:3~"" f::7~ ~~i:j~m:::~:: ~r~~~~~ ~··alt ~~": ·~'.' ~~ ~~;_:.!: ~i
1093 Baker CM 546-5440 tOWI bedrooms, 3 Queen sa-OPEN EVES. around beautiful open t'Ourt. MOVE In! Near new 4 BR., 962-4471 S.iG-8103 .""';;;';·======= 64&-5832 ' · · ed baths, magnificenl living frpl., new cplS. nr. bench,lljjjiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiijji----~1 • ~~=~=~~~-· room with open beam ceil-$62.900. 546-4407 $28,000. Open weekends; 35114 L•gune Beech 1705 WINTER LEASE, 2 br, 2 ha,
1ng, and "'"''"' view. aw.. e TRANSFERRED e 62nd St. Owo" 61">-0144 HOME & INCOME! _::.;..;;D..;IR;.;TY=F;..MJE_;_;..:.:; ..;lb Igo l""'ed yud on 3 WTSIDE
DUPl.EXES
on cul-de-sac near Catholic
Church. Excellent rental
record. Call new for appoint·
ment lo see.
$57,500
er transferred out of area • Leaving August lSlh. Must NE\VPORT Shores 2 BR. & Liveable home a: income Belter Qmllty New England channel, with dcyer, 3501
says scll NOW! Only $36,500. sell 4 BR. 3 bath near school conv. den; comer. $23,500 apartment on R-3 lot onJy 3 Cape sl)ie home. 4 BR, Den, ""'"=~'•,,y~(~TI~4)~6T.H2~~·~•.....,~1 Submit your smaller. hmne Ii park. Low down. 6t64414 unfurn. $24,500 furn 633-6683 bl.ocks to beautilul sand lge Liv rm vaulted ceilings. 3 BR. 2 Bath. Lieb Sands-9
on our guarantee trade plan. OCEANFRONT 1 BR winter bf>ach. Lot will hold 6 units. Bit-in Range & oven, $29,!YJO mo lease. Sept. 10. $250 mo.
Let's Join forces
•nd Grow With
2CH3 WESTCLlFF DRIVE Our Community
Real Estate Professionals -
Dilt• 11 .. 1 fsttt• Bach apt., winter or·~br. Fulpl pr~cfeoSohly S:M,~tlcrms. Mission Rl ty, 985 So, Coast l ~642-==""==al=J=7=p=m===::.I
151' W Ocea F t 673 oc.77 ac1 IC ores ...,a ty Hwv, (714) .... , ,..,~
w • n ron ....., 536-8894 EVf'!l~~Ol6-~l.122;: I ~~···'J:~·~~~···~~ DELUXE Condo. View of THE BIG ONE
CARE-LESS HAVEN pool 2 BR, 2 BA. Firepl, Sprawling 5 BR & den, Del
3 BR 1\1 Ba T°"""""' Imm '"""'· $Z7,"'l. 615-2811; CUSTOM HOME Pioo tll• !loon, Catbedrli
OY.'De!', carpeted, draped, ap-I=========='-'== beam ceilings, !iv rm,
2225
4 BR, 3 BA., Private com.
munlty & beach. Sept.June
12811. 642-5211
ifully I Very 1paclous 3 BR 2 bath
pliancei Incl. Beaut' o-Newport Hgtt. 1210 with huge separate fam ily Spanllh Fplc. w/w Cfllls,
caled, maintained. $18,450. • 2 . blt·in range & oven. $3l.950. Balbo• ~300
646-7711 Open Eves. We can offer you a plea-
Ill 1 sa.nt. active stmosphere for
'• Flexible terms, less than * PLEASANT Clill Haven 3 room, wet ba.r J.ll'eplac-offer your own pmt. Mission
rent. 548-m87 Br, 2 ba + 2 Br Ocean Vu es. Built on 2 tree-shaded JUty. 494-0731 PENINSULA. Winter o r
. A 1 .. 9 500 r::Ao .,.,,., lots. A lot o! house for onl,y 1-,,;;,;;;.,~"'====,-y "' •-·~-t p I e , REAL VALUES mcome P · ... • _,_...,...., $28,500. UNSURPASSED VIEW ear.., . .._, .. .,,,' '
-9; I ; I• J t.1 I Dover Shores REAL production.
OPEN DAILY M LTV coMPANv Waterfront BOYO REALTY ·* 642 177 3629 E. Coast Hwy .. CdAt: • l Anytime * c...rom Spanbh dosigned. 11' 675-5930 ~19 Jasmine, CdM =======i: .,.111ng, In""""'-Iv. nn .. ~~~~~~~~I
10% DOWN VACANT EASTSIDE 3 BR =."'"m~:'· :~ ~~ w~ A CHARMER.'
I BR, lil be, % block P•ul Jones Re•lty South Laguna float 5 Br. 4 ha. 2 furnacet,
To Beftcb $35,500 Harbor Highlands 1235 847-1266 r.:vea. 847-6978 3 BR, 2 Ba, Own-Your-Own whr/~, dlspl, ht Class. •*-2039
iew home. Barga.in buy. fl South ot H.ighway, 3 BR 2 2 baths. Family room, tl1'1!-oet · · ·'' ·' ·''''' · Ul5,txXl Immaculate -Early Amcrl-
baths, fireplace, bit. ins, lg place, FA heat, new carpet!, Mrs. Raulston can. 3 Bedrooms, Family
2 on lot, Corooo del Mar , !J) HUGE LOTS, near Ocean luxurious apt., in elegant "'""'!. 1417 Mariners Dr. so· x ooo· 11o. ,1m,1.i. ""11d1ng"" .. "h + Pool. OCEANFRONT ' BR. Newport Be•ch, Rlty. PLUS w;,cm Unfurn. Furniture $130 mo Yrly be. Sm family
$52,500. Anxious vacant. Owner \\1.Il sell VA Double garage, Work Shop,
pr. 4Y Jot. Be6'f. of terms • drapes, fresh paint & it's ~ Room, Double Fireplace, 675-1&12 Come see thi• new listing to 3 & 4 Bedrooms. Luxuey available, For appointment I =only==· =-===Own<=='===-I
Priced Right $20,950 be held open BU<X'OLA-BUil.T home11. call 499-MSl Balbu lsl•nd 2355
Rltr. 646-391.8 Eves. ~ or FHA • $29.750. Boat Yard. e.au. for appolnt-e FHA VA DAILY 1. 5 SHERWOOD IS'J'ATES 2 BR, euily expanded. R-2 1;:;==-"'C::C:C....--"-'-'-'-I
• 3 BR + lam nn w/frplc It Mil 5 Bedrooms, fam nn, Brookhunt al Jlantllton lot. dbl gar. stressed for BAYFRONT 4 Br. ! ba., *LACHENMYER ALSO Coldwell, Baoker & Co. :;:,:~:m'0.:,bomuu..•· ~ •. '500'°"'. l--,.,.---c-.;-,07--l 3 BR 2 both t U Z20C1 E. COlll Hfol'lw•J •• • Cpts/drpe:, 51ove I: refrig. J baths. Ideal for the bosy tfuntington Beach 968-3036 other uolt, 2 blks 10 beach, dock. Winter \tc. Avail Sept
Newport Heights , am Y room, N•~r"HX8:.c.01tc~~11i. JEAN SMITH,
3·DR. JanaJ, beautiful yard, fireplace. double garage.1"'!!!!!'""""'""""""""""" Ritts. 642-9130 Eves. 548-0720 lamlly. 4 BEDROOM panol'amk v:lew, deck, 9. Call 1: 5125-4444
• KENNEDY Pele Barrell Riiy. r1r""''"· •it1n •• 2 BA., & patio. Excelleot """"""''-
' Call 841 ., .. ~ $43,500. Owner. 4M-7508 or Summer Rent•I• 2910 Ch•rm I 11 Only $25,600 car garage. "U.'tJ 494--1572 atler 5 '-""'--"--'-"---.-...--I
• Imma, 3 BR 1% beth I~~!!! 642-4353 or 213: 431-3921 I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_,iiii.,I LAGUNA-Oceanfronl, ~
-"th~~, ~•age p1,, boat $19,850. Terms VA, F1iA orl" REALTOR
•• ~~ ·-O>ovenHooa!. $7500 Reduction! :!1ce~C::ti:.~ ::;,.; Wella-McC•rdle, RltrJ. Illness fon:ea sale or this lux-400 E. l?th St., C.M. 646-3255
ciPs and """ brid< """"'· 1810 N"""""' Blvd., C.M. .,..... Bay""" homo. '"""' VACANT Asking $27,W>IJ. Ws go! 548-7729 &iea. S41J..6713 IJ)9dou.s bedrooms, 3 Queen 4 Bedroom and Family Room
e 'IWO double garages. Sl6,750. 4 Bit 2 BA MAGNIFICENT tacular Villa, prlv. beach,
• Cov patio. new drapes. E•ttbluff 1242 T&.vr.housc, bll ·in R & O, OCEAN VIEW LOT huge rooms. park-like cro-
C I rlh & ( lized baths, magnificent Room fc:r pool or boet. 0 eswo J o. A Friendly Home mmm!ng pool. Wu 152.500, Ready "' OC<Upaocy. w .. 1.
in a good neighborhood New-NOW ONLY $4.5.<XXl~ Call for cillJ. $51,0CiO.
• OWNER ANXIOUS ";i~i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;I re:frig. $T;J(). dn. 41~ mo, $5,950. smell, but level $1(0) undt. 2 Weeks Sept. $900., 4 RJtn.. 642-9730 Eves, 548-073) 1 incl's int & taxes. FHA down bal SS5 Laguna Week.Ii $1400. Also Victoria
• KENNEDY 51{%, 716-1316 Sch. 'mo,,.,.,:· Be""b a ...... ' BR. 3 BA.
642-7777 H t h •-lntm"'t Today. &nnit JEAN SMITH .l.9(W -Jarbor Bl d C M port e g ts &ehools 3 BR, .,,....
I Open FY~:· . . 1% be.ths, carpet.s, drapes, ;your smaller home In trade, REALTOR '
dbl p:r.
4 STARS 4 BR. 3 Ba .• <lio. ,m., '""·I!!~~!!"!!'~~"'"!"""' I Sept. 11000 .Own<r. 494-4653, DELUXE BJPLEX Lovely SJ!Mish Bluff1 home c&rp. & drps . Patio. Block SPECTACULAR View, 2 sty·r -'~-~~7 ~"'~'=94-~"'9=~~-I
201. 39th St., NB 4 BR, 3 ba, View Imm every wall. $33,150. 962--0GlO 3 BR 2 BA. fam, frpl, deck. Eat Dt:ily Pllot Want Ada.
Living nn. Priced undu While elephant.! D1me·•·llne SJ,5,500. w/5% 11!. 494-S181 Dt&l ~ Clow to BHch, Olannel,
""' PlaYJ"OWld, $49,500 $40,000.
$16,500 On\Y 123,900 -10% dowo. 400 E. l1tb. C.M. 646-32&1
TOWN HOUSE DON'T MISS THIS! 4 BEORM-2 llA TH
COl<rA MESA -HUNTING-Graham Realty $23,750
TON BEACH -2. 3 and -4 Near NB Post Ofc. 646-2414 ,,,.'f>1ml1WESTCLlF~RIVEEv-. Quality carpeting & a11tom
C~ra:e Willlamaon, IUtr,
673-4350 OPEN EVES. CORBIN-MARTIN
REALTORS bedrooms. 2 baths, one and V'fO" """"' ... drape1. 2 patiOI. l>rftlm all
2 stories. PRICED FRO~f WALK TO 50 ACRE PARK· 16 UNITS built-in kitchen. Jr. Estate &190 close to shopping & Costa Mesa 1100 $16,500 . Good tt!nns. schoob. Immaculate -4 & BALBOA sized grounda, No down G.J.1-0;;.;c.;;..;;.;.:;::: ___ .:.:.;::
or law down ~Veta. 1140 ··o~H Uniity room & rumpu1 room NEAR "BA y AND BEAC'Jl • S«J.]'120 ,., n • rNCLUDES
3036 E. Coast Hwy, CdM
675-1662 .ANYTIME
OllANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. 17th St. 646-4494
;. Special!
Immaculate 3 bedroom born~
Id IJ\ a park-lllte )'<U'd,
F!'fth paint and fl'nb car-
pea, All lhlt far $18,500.
• "ring"
, ... \SPRING
«""•REALTY ~-"anV(iml"
2629 Harbor Blvd., C.H.
Davidson Realty
O.wrator'1 Delight
I &Ury 3 BR + "'"'"' + din. Tile ftltry. $31,~
Rltr. 11501Jlt'bor 59, CM
--""'"-5041<1
• 2260 aq. ft, Outstanding Low doYm, comple~ furn· TARBELL TAXES Exctllettt 5%. % TIIE BLUFFS. Condomin!un1
gold ·" blue kine: !hag lshE-d, private beths. No -"'===----=:...::11::":.:hor::: loan • no loan ltt1. Im· 2 BR, 2 BA carpets &
C8J'1M!tinl. OUtml 11t $31,9!50 vacancy tactor. Only $lOO,tnJ 4 leclrms $23, 750 maculate 3 Bil 2t.dli home. drapes, Caklrlc applianee1.
• your tmns. COLLEGE • T"' mooo dn N D Excellent can>et, ltt9hly 2~ car gar. has finilbed in· REALTY S46-5880 ·~ • • 0 own Payment Pllrifro "quiet cul . de. aac terior &. elcc. door opener.
PARK LIKE 2 Batht, lovely carpetin1, 1treeL L • r 1 e kilchen &: Nr CdM Hi. B fl au ti f u I
· built-in kitchen, 2 pat101, no family room. Owner nei~borbood S'M.600. Jim
YARD $17,900 ORANGE COUNTY'S d...,, Cl .. Low down .. ""'"'""" -priced ,., ~ 61<-0736 ...
Jr. Estate me lot. 3 bm-LARGEST ottw!rs. 842-6691 CJUkk Ale. CUL 640cll51 =~====== "'°""· 2 bo!bs, •'OOd lq-n. 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 TARBELL 161 l I Bch Bl. 1-. ev"J --Rftl Coron• do! Mu 1250
1nc flrtplaoe, drMm kilch--~----~-->Atat• ------=----'-'
m. compiete bu!Jt-inl. Profeu.lon•I Zona BAYCREST Sl900 Dn, n90 mo, llri«d Cameo Shores
Mt>06Q.1 OPEN DAILY 1 • 5 t0tix1M Comer ftt 1lmT1le $1000 under 11ppraiaal 3 BR,
TARBELL 5824 Edinger 30'2-308 Cabrillo. Comtr San-129.500. Will e:xchfl.nge f~ 19x25fam rooDl. 0wnt'r, Spect1cul1r View
I W II , ta Ana Ave. Ooee to 17th Newport ~ach pmpe:rty, 31115 Roosewlt Way 646-3430 Lcvl'ly cu1tom 3 BR, 3 bft!N,
NEW••EST• MO• 'DEL SL shoppln; •rt•. Ora, den· Walker Rulty pool, Immaculate. Immedl· W ot.rtce1 er tab,. exhibit 3!36 Vt. Udo C'15-5nJ LGE. 4 Br. 3 Ba. Clrp., ate posSH1ion,
C BR 4 be, fomW din rm. ball, ~rina service. ""!!!!!'""~~!!!""~.,,.. dtps., maey extra.I; l yr. THE FOX CO.
film nn w/wtot bar, :S .oar photo 11udio. 11:eneral r~ BEACH PALACi old. St% C.I. i.o.n. Owner 613-94!1i 64Ui9ll9
pr, Contract now for Au1. aearcb. 2 large 4 BR houAcs Mod 4 BR. 2~ ba, mps to -~--------1 HOME & lncom•I 2 bdrm
compleUon &: cboom! your on lot llhll5' to alley. Could Oceen, $33,fl(IO. 4 BR., Eul:llde, ideal achl hom~ with gara«e Apt. Neill'
awn colors&:.~. be mnodf'led tor atxi.e. u•es. Caywood R.eilty locAtton. Owner. $23,500 « Fa1hlon lslMd, Ne'l\'l)f)rt
Roy J . W11rd Co. M&.1550 Leon Vibert, Realtor UIS w. Coast Jtwy, NB make d.lfl'. 646-1952 Center. 1Dl Avocado St. CdM
W1Ute-t:5epbuttl'f Dime...une 54&-aiU aeytimf! 5"-1290 SOCK rr TO,'EMT OiARGE m
I '
I
I
1.
I
l
R TllS
,..._ Unlvml1hod
<Mt• -3100
• ' . -.. ' . .
••""ALS RENTALS RENTALS
Houses Unfurnit.hed Houaes Unfurnw..d HOUMI Unfvrnh.hld
Cott• Mou 3100 Cost• Mou 3100 Cott• Mou 3100
. , . .... " • ~ 'If. • •
RENTALS RENTALS
HouMt Unfvrnl1hod Aph. Fumlohod
Cut• M-3100 Cool• M... 4100
• 0:-( ~ •
RENTALS REAL ESTATE BUSINESS •nd . .,
Aph. Unfurn._ 0.nor•I FINANCIAL "."!l
C0&ta -5100 lutlnffl Pr.porty 6050 lu1. OpportunltlH 6M
• ·''~:--i. AV.ut. DDltn MN& Verde $130. 2 BR houM-in court
4 BR. trt UW. rm, c:arpetlna b\ ttv. Pm. Ir hall.
apacious tanVd!M!; nn, Yard I r•r. 2 mO. rem and
bill·lll ldtdtm. bu.utifuUy ct,anlna deposit In advance.
l.andlnptd yard. Y MJ 232A, Cf'CU Pl.
CHARMING E:x-P.todd CUI
de sac borne. 3 BR. 2 ba,
carpftl, dn.pei, b I t -I n I •
fenced, 11.1"1:1etler Incl, $1.3$.
Bk:r. M>~. Evrs 546-94SO
Don 't rmt! $1900 dafrn buy•
lhl• l 8R borne ...... $10XI BIB
undfl" appr&laal. $190 Month, AVAll. IMMED. Mea Vmle
19 x 25 famlly room. Owriu. 4 BR. t 1 e Jlvinl; rm,
3105 Roosevelt Wll' St6-3430 spacloul tam I d1nlng rm,
$25 Wk. UP.
e StudJo 6 --HAI.OR Uve High Dlslrlbulorsh1~ .·:.' Sttn Bide. Balboa Atta, e lllcl Ut11t ' Pt.me .r.. e tt&ld SUv1cl • TV av.a.
• Nn Cafe A Bar
.Wtable for anytblJta: • Real Full & Part Tims .. (:! GREENS Uate. Bank, Flthlne T..,. No 1elltne · .• <··
~ S32Stmo. ind water ~vE=R~Y~CLEAN=-==-;3-;B"R'°2 "ba""'""·
and ~ suvict. w/w carpets, fireplace,
6'Tl-Sl E'\'PL ~ bullt-lnl. Mesa Del Mar
u:ASE 4 br. l bl., t"XK"UtiVt $23)/mo. COATS II WAL-
iypr bm. Clolt to K'hl1, U.CE REALTORS, ~10
LEASEE * BR. 2 BA. frpl,
fmc'd )'d. new CrplS, drpt.
?afeu. Verde 1225. 546--6203
CHILDR!N WELCOME bUt-ht klt<heo. b<autllully
4 Br, 2 bL home, Id k>cation, landacl,ped Y •rd. Yterly
:me: Newport mvd. 58.ITSS BAOl!lllR • mmJIUI,
kl~. etc. Llvtn&: quarten up-Dbtrlbutor to be appoirrt.1
stain. Barpjn at $56,500 -to mervk:e ~tall outlee. '•
wlll \tue. tablished by the com__.
BURR WHITE, Ro•ltor !Kodak prnductsl -LI $235/mo. 3151 Ktn')' La.. Lt:ue $325/mo.. incl WI~
642-8980 or 546-2801 and ranlentt R?'Vke.
REDECORATED 1 br. w/w
crpU, drpe:, con•mlenl loc.
tlon $120. 523 ~ma.rd St.
NASSAU PALMS; 1 BR
'""" $100
Incl. utlJ.
t-16·SBDRK.
nJRN. 6: UNFURN.
DAILY PILOT DIME·A·
LrnES. You CM Ulll' &hem
tor )111 pennl.es a 61,)t. Dial ..,...,.
=,;.::;.::;;;...:;...:;;:.=:_-[ln.J66.1 Eves. 543--6966 LGE. 3 BR. 2 Ba., ca~ ..
2901 Newport BJvd. opportwlity. ~ 1:.-r
Newport Be.ad! ~ ....
Wtatelltf Shop Oltr. ~1466 BR 2 b r •••• ld "·al 4 , a,,........., e, .u... ~Y appt. onl)'. Ref. req, achl IQC. 318 Ester Sl1 Jm-
$350/mo. lit I. lut in advc, med. avail. 646-l9SZ
dfl>I., bltns. Leaat. No.am.
childrtn or pets 545-8834
Ind. water .t )'d cart. Avail GOOD LOCATION for ff.
scribina ~ TV 1ets you'd
like to ldl: the Oaslified
Section. Dial 642-5618 oow.
PLANNING to moYef You'll
find an amuing cumbtt of
homes in today'• 011df!ed
Ada-Check them now.
9/ti DIAL direct 00·5678, <lw'Ke
DAILY PllDr WANT ADS )'OUr Id, then '1t back and
limn to me -~-, BRING RESULTS! I 114
' v
Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Fingers?
See If You Have Any
Of These Things A
DAIL'.Y PILOT
WANT-AD
1. Stov•
2. Guit•r
3. B•by Crib
4. Electric S1w
5. C1m•r•
6. Wa1h•r
7. Outbo1rd Motor
I. St•rea S•t
9. Couch
10. Cl1rln1t
11. R•friger1tor
12. Pickup Truck
13. Sewing MachiM
14. Surfboard
15. M1chin1 T 0011
16. Di1hw11her
17. Puppy
11. Cabin CrufHr
19. Golf Cut
20. B1rom1ter
21 . Stamp Collection
22. Din1tte Set
23. Pi ty Pon
24. Bowling Ball
25. Water Skis
26. FrMnr
27. Suitcase
21. Clock
Will Sell Fast!
29. Bicycle
30. Typewrihr
31 . Bir Stools
32. EncycloP9(1ia
33. Vacuum Cle1n1r
34. Tropic1I Fish
35. Hot Roc:I Equipm't
36. Fil• Cabinet
37. Golf Clubs
31. Sterling Silver
39. Victorian Mirror
40. Bedroom Set
41 , Slide Proi•ctor
42. Lawn Mow•r
43. Pool T•blo
44. Tires
45. Pl1no
46 . Fur C011t
47. Drapn
48. Lin1n1
49. Horw
SO. Alrplan•
51 . Org1n
52. Exercycle
53. Rare Books
54. Ski Booh
55. High Chair
56. Coins
57. El•ctrlc Train
58. Kiiton
59. Cla11lc Auto
60. CoffM T •blo
61. Motorcycle
62. Accordion
63. Skis
64. TV Sot
65. Workbench
66. Diamond Watch
67. Go·Kart
68. Ironer
69. Camping Trai11r
70. Antique Furnitur1
71 . Tepe Recorder
72. S1llbo1t
73. Sports Cir
74. Mattru1, Box S~
75. Inboard Spoodboot
76. Shotqun n . Saddle
71. Dart Game
79. Punching Bag
80. B1bv C1rrf1gti
81 . Drums
82. Rifle
83. DHk
84. SCUBA Gear
DA Ill P.ILOT WANT -AD
so • • •
Don't Just Sit There!
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678
lJO.UR . CRlDIT IS GOOD>
fum. $135. Pool.
3200 177 E. 22nd Sl ========= BAYSIDE VWap, $175;. 2 Newport INch
Newport IHch Heated Poola. Oi1ld C.,.. 615-463!1 evies: 642-2253 To quallty mult Nt.._..·dl,
Cuter, Adj. to Shoppbl& -Busln ... R•nt•I 6060
bank rt:f. ,.-nd $1m.JDll.
Investment atcured bf~~
ventory. For detail1 ~e
Box M-111 Daily Pilot. In-
clude phone number.
No pell allowt:d
Br. 2 Ba., atove, refria. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Carpell, drapes, Adultl on-I 1
,,. No ..... -. o11p, csll * Channel Reef * 67S-~ After 4 PM
4200 2'ltlO Petmoo War. II IW-STORE ROOM
bar A Adami, Com Mesa. COST A. MESA • Busy 19th St.
546-<0'TI 1200 .q, ft. lease $200. mo.
GREAT Family BE AC H
HOUSE 4 Br. 1 tse to bcb
wtocean view. Grt:•t for
children. $350 tno, y~.
~. 642-1554
2 BR. J'entt'd back yard. S150
mo. on yearly leue. 518 •
36th St. 540-0S2t
Block to bay & ocean. Spa·
cious 2 story 3 br., 2% 1>9,
2 trpl.cs, bll·inl, w/w cp1s,
drpa, 2 car gar, r~
pa.lio. Yrly $275. . ,.._ .
HEArH apt. for ls lge studio
t)'pe, 2 br., frpl c,
cii>ts/clrps. $17S/mo. See
5201 River Apt B. or
530-573{!
NEAR heac:b. 1 BR. 2 l'a.
E :i·y:, patios. DK gar. $240
n!G yriy. 642-3547
YEARLY 2 br + n.unpua, 'Ai
blk to Ocean, no pets. $140.
water pajd. Call 962·9927
Newport Shores 3220
APARTMENTS
SPECTACULAR VIEW
Watertront/Loc • Boat
Slips Available
2 BR • 2 Bath Apts.
LEASE· or · BUY
~ Mo. &: up • $59,500 up
2525 Ocean Blvd., CdM
673-1788 -for further info
Herman Trott, Mgr.
2 BR., llh Ba., drapes, carp.
Bltns, prtv. gar. Adults.
$140. After 6 PM 50-8616
Newport Beach S200 ORANGE. COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. 17th St. 646-4494
B/B FOR Rent ; Small
UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom, AdmillistraUve Professional
2 bath unit near Hoag Ho.. bid&. $140 mo. 548-4416 evu
$200. pltal.. Available Se-pt 1st \:"::w:k:"""======
J BR 2 baths, built-ins, ALSO
carpel.I throughout Steps to 3 BEDROOM, 2% bath, fau Office Rental 6070
ocean. $200/mo yr I y . pool $250. Available Sept. LAGUNA BEACH
Mz..3812 15th. Adult.I only. Air Condition.cl
OCEANFRONT, w I n t • ' Bay & Beach ON FORES",' • VENUE
lease. 2 Br. $150 mo.; 3 Br. Realty, Inc. Desk spaces available In
$175 mo. Avail Sept 8. 2025 w. Balboa Blvd., NB newest office bui\din& at
962-5tYi6 673-~ Eves. 548-6966 prime location in downt~
OCEANFRONT 1 BR., winter I ~~"!"""!""""~~~'"I Laauna Beach. Air c:ondi-Badt apt., winier or yrly. NEW Soundproof 2 BR.. 2 ea. tioned, carpeted, beautiful
1512 W. Ocean Front 673-8577 Across bn. Coco's, lfi65 paneled partitioning. Two
Irvine $185/$200. 642-0239 entrances: Frontqe <n OCEANFRONT Deluxe 3 Br. Forest Ave., rear leads to
J275 A. $300 Pius util Year--3 BR. Apt. Near new, Mundpal puking lots. S50
ly. 675-3428 O'p~, drapes, Bltns. R.d.!i. per month for space. Deak
1 BR., fUm. &: unturn Pool; $l6S mo. 673-fi9t7 and chairs available for $5.
no children or pet&. 24Cfi% Busineq hour• answering
lSth St., NB. 6464&46 East Bluff 5242 service available far $10.
WANTEDlll ••
Reliable party to ttSt<>Qt,~
collect money from ~·.CQin
operated ln8ck vendOn: No ' , sellln&". Handlet Nabiipi prp..
dtrts and nationally ldfft,.
tiled <:and:Y ban. Excetltnt
income fur few hrs. weekly
wort. (Day or eves) ~
To $4lM5 Cash required.. Fdt
penoo.al interview: s e'hd
name, address a n d i*lne
number to:
TRANS.WESl'ERN·
DlSI'RIBUTING 00; ~
500 N. AZUSA AVF;: .
OOVlNA, CAUF. 9l7!:
NU'IVILLE, U.S.A. b 6oW
acceptinc applicatione for
franchises in Oranie .~
ty. Locations ~ waJtiq,
Anaheim, Laguna Bch., SeJI.
ta Ana. Orange, Himtinzton
Bch. A: other areu. ~
Ca.sh req. Fully aecur~ .. m:
vest. should return ht F .
Call for appt. 642-271}~ .«·
write to 1617 Wertclilf Dr.,
Suite 210, Newport ad.di,
Cal. 92660 -~ ••
NEWPORT SHORES
2 BR A: Den on years leue nso mo. 64.2-3430
OCE.A.NFRlXiT PRESTIGE Town Homes AU utilities paid acept Money to Loain
1 bdnn Winter For leue, 2 br A: den k J br teJepbone.
1512 W. Ocean Frmt 67l-8577 with 2 at 21Ai baths. Gold 222 i?o~p~
Medallion all el~c. POOL LA.GUNA BEACH
East Bluff 3242 Corona del Mar 4250 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;=;;;;; 2 BR, Firepl., adults, no pets. B/B $150. Agt. Aoo > BR un-
Avail. Sept. 1st fumi&hed. 675-439'1
Eut BluU. t bedroom, large BACHELOR APT $90 mo.
living room, • dining room , Utll paid CdM.
'8.mlly room, built·ln kitch· * 615-1071 *
en. beautifully landscaped ATmAC11VE Bachelor·~
yard and view. Yearb lease mo. Avail 9/1/68
$425/Mo, incl. water a n d 540-2266, 642-3542 gardener service, ===='=====
' 613·3663 Eves. 54S-6866
Bay & Beach B•lbo• 4300
2-car gar. Rent start.I at 4M--9466
$250 mo. CORONA DEL MAR 83T..871 Amigo Way, N.B. OFFICE SUITES
Coron• del Mor S250 MUTUAL BUILDING
air cond., central recept..
&: tel:ephont service, Xerox
Carpet &: drapes. 200-2aX> ft.
CAU. 8-S 6754070
SECRETARIAL
ON TEN ACRES SERVICE
I a 2 BR. Furn &: Unfu.m Modem offices, carpets, air
from $150 mo. Frplcs / ?ti/ conditioning, parking. J'rom
Patios I Poola. Tennis • Con-$65 per month. Orange OJun..
$12,000 ~ c .
A•ail. f~ iood 1st or 2rid ~
Joan. 1-3 yr tenn. caJl. °Mr•
Adams bier 494-6650 • ·
BORROW on Your Eqyity'.
Private 2nd Mortg. m0,?9;
FREE APPRAISAL &: ~ •
PROMPI' SERVJCt:···~;
Reputable C.Ompany llel"'Nfl
Orange County 18 yeant :
Sattler Mortgage Co., ..Ille:.•
336 E. 17th St., c.ost&-l&M:
542.nn 545-0ill. Ni&bli :
6: wkends 673-7865 ~llST PENmSULA Point tnt1 Bkfst. 9 bole Putu ty Bank Bldg. 230 E, l'lttr. St.,
2 Br. 2 b•, car port, yrly to Green. Costa Mesa. 647·1485 M rt TD / 63.ff
deairable tenants U67.50. 900 Sea Lane, c.dM M4-26ll 3 COMMERCIAL, 1 irdat., o g1gn, ' • I ,
Re1lty, Inc.
:l>25 W. Balboe. Blvd., NB
™' Minmar, 67S-ll58 (MacArthur nr, Coast Hwyl 1 with living qtn. 12~•% YIElD on ~
3250 IJAt:h . apt. wintc: or yriy. Call owner: 540-:ruo 2nd trust deed. $4,000 ~~ ---------U!!l. pd. Ptiv. be• ch . 2 BR.. frpl.. b al c 0 n y ; ='========I 494-7508 M. C. Thoren · · .~ • Corona del Mir
NEAR Beach, CdM, 3 BR, 2 S1251 mo. 9211 E. B:\lboa upe:tairs. Nar ocean. $1!15. Industrial Rental 6090
baths, $315 mo. G. H. 3\vd 322 Heliotrope 675-3645
...
Robert.son , Rlty 675-2440 .::========: 12 BR all I t ki cb LAGUNA Niguel 2200 sq, ft.
Balboa Island 4355 . aptl, e ec · t ens. new bldg. 2 Offices., I baths .
Huntington Beach 3400 ----------patioa, Yery lge pool, $165 & Air cond. on 1 year lease Found (Fr" Ads) . 6400
EXECUTIVE Type upper up. £?3-337B $250. 1714) 49'34198 or
Av&ilab1e immediately -apl on canal, 3 br, &: den, 2 !2Ul 335-406S. SM Siamese kitten vie &Ali
brand new 4 BR, 2 BA, w to ba, all Labor Day thnJ June Huntington IBMch 5400 '2192""'-;P<;AL~ISiCAD""ES""""RD"'"". 'e-"i' I Ana Ave. A: Wilson, :c:M~
w crptg, <I.rps, bit-ins, frplc, or yrly. 67J..U9'9 For rent. S5x237 c.an aft. 6 & identify.,~
fenced bade: yard, patio, 2 BR, 11A. BA, Bit-ins, S350 Month. 543-5044 8715 ~ ... ~ .
landscaped, sprinklers, dble H · B h 4400 wa.sber/dl')'er, ttfrig., pool, I=~~~;;,;;;;:;;,= I l.i'AN'SG<;id"""Wo;>fu~~~I ~.,.,, , • .,. -. 891_2482 unt1ngton eac nso. 536-2W9 Call &tter 6 MAN'S Gold weddinfi ,b1'Q4
•-""" ~ L 6100 inscribed Mon no.&111 · or 841-3682 1-BR, tum. apt suit. for cple. PM. ~°"::O:'-------'--'-' I Newport Beach p I a z'f f
4 BR, fully c:rptd. drpd, Water &: gaa furn. $80. 918 2 BR. blt·inll, cpts, drps, 2 LOT'S on Santiago, NB 496-9279 •:. ~: · ,
dwhr, ~tns, patio, encl yrd, Palm St., H.B. patio, $115./per mo. 1500 C CaM. Terms or trade MR. DUNN, we have .tfbil6d
Av a.ii 9/1 or 9/8. Lse. 2 blk 536-4678 53fr497'9 Alabama St. 64&2636 · Ftt Simple. 646-8565 your fawn male c:hih1*lua;
bch. 536-7480 NICE 2 B.R., 2 blocks to I 'EXTRA'"'"°''L<;;.0 2<BiiiR•. <;1125;;<, LR~-"2.'-60;;,.. :..,=o;135o'.C-iSmall=':;;;-;:bou=se !Found 8/23.J Jean M.0(1.eD
PARTI.Y rum. 4 BR., blt·ins; town or ocean. Permanent Utilities paid. 536-7al2 or 341 16th PL C.M. 213: 675-4363 . ,
fencoed, fltllc.. drps. carp. _o=r ="'=·="=·="'='"'=St.===' I =54W187=======:=='1,;421;;:-""'~:=c=======-IKITI'EN, Redish &: ;;;::Qt;
=""'='==M=""="'=·=646-="'5==== I-w / l)ea co 1 I a r. F o UJl d Laguna Inch 4705 Lagun• B•ach 5705 Citrus Grovu 6175 Begonia & 4th Av. ~
_L_•g,,,u_n_•_&._•_•_h __ 3_7_0S NEW Furnished 2 BR 2 Ba 100 CLIFF DRIVE 1_;;;;;;;;;;;:,;;;;;,;:~;;1 de! Mar 8122· 673-7$9 ·:~:·
MONARCH BAY AREA all elec buil t • ins. LUXURYFURN/UNFURN TAXES HURT? LADIES prescription~
LOVELY OCEAN VIEW. 3 Panoramic view overlooking Yearly Lease. 1 & 2 Bdrnu. Soften the blow ncrw by in-vie. 17th St. S hop p1..a.,
BR&: den, 2 BA, cpts, Drps, Aliso Beach. Mature adults Yearly Lease. 1 bedroom vesting in Real Estate. Pn!-center. 548-3238 ..... :.
frpl, pool. $300 mo. Also only, no children. $185. steps t~ Shore & Shops pay interest for a write-off FOUND: Man's watch: (ti
avail. 2 BR. 111' ba. $22S mo. 499-3755 Oceanview from every Apt. lhls year & depreciate the beach at 47th St. drf 'Ii
adults 496-1243 betw 10.5 pm 3 BR 2% BA, all elec from $150 mo up. lease imprOYements w hi I e yoo identify. ~2464 ·"=: :
: FOR Lease spacious 4 BR, built-Ina. Panoramic view 494-2449 own thi! property. Try a SAMOYED, bull colPred;
I
MYSTIC PARK. Magnili-overlooking Allio Beach. NEW dclux lge .2 BR 2 BA, 1 young valencla grove, such male dog, Caf'ona dd ~·
cent ocean view, small yard Mature adulst only, no blk to ocean &: park. S250 u this 6 acres in a fast 6'13-4429 --.. ' * 494-3621 children. $220. 4~3756 mo, lease, adultJ. 494-4060 ifOWing area. $45,COO Full MALE Si am es e. . ~
LARGE 5 BR, 3 ba b:lme, ATTRACITVE Bach apt $60. NICE Dtluxe 2 BR 2 BA near price. Term1 to suil For Rhinestone colltt. V f'c:
newly dl!C'OC'ated, S300 mo in· Reir, hotplate, outdoor bbq, ocean. tinted glass, dee eye more information, call K.W. Harbor &: Baker. 546-4501 -!
eluding a:ardener. MG-3862 utilities pd. 494--0397 gar, ldry. 497-1056 Small with BLUE ParaJ<eet with ...,
Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. goM1 RENTALS A colored band, found vie. W • . ?E NTALS I 1.-~ Rentals W1ntecl 5990 1818 w. Chapman ve. 19th & Monrovia. 646-I,&:U;.'. Apt1. Furnish.cl Aptl. Unfurn lnwu Orange, Calif. :.i;;
--'-'--------·I NEED Houte for rent in 541-2621, Eves-wknds 538-5971 SHAGGY Dog found vX:)D!~
CMn•rel 4000 G.neral 5000 Co5ta. Mesa, prt:fer Mesa I!!~~~~~~~~! I 19th &: Wallace 543-2500 . ~: ; RENT Verde, Sept 1st for Irvine A 6200 ADORABLE orange itdi!l: HOLIDAY PLAZA
DELUXE spacious l·BR.
furn. a.pt $135 + util. 2·BR. + den $160 + util
lftd. pool, Ample parking
No childttn. No pets
1965 Pomona, C.M. 642-5858
' CHATEAU L• POINTE
Lovely furn . 2 BR. apt&. Otf-
street parking, carports.
Heated pool. Sl50 per mo.
Adults, no pets.
1941 p0MONA AVE., CM.
ATTRACTIVE 2 br. apt.,
w/w crpt, walk to school &:
•tores. No pets. Adults, one
dilld OK. $124.50. 646-5961
nr 5'-!i--3643. KC')' a• Zl60-E
;\4'.a,·, St.
NICE 1 Br. snaI man. $92.50
incl util. 310 Meadowlark U!
(oft' 2300 blk Senta Ana Ave)
After 6 PM Sat., Mon. Ir
Tues. n3: EX 6--0005
2 ROOM tum. gwage •Pt. +
hidff..,Y kitchen. E/Dde
CM. Single employed man
only. Alfo prage1 for rent.
storqe only. 646-8226
1 BDRM tum or S*M.
Garap, patio. $ 9 3 I m o •
......... ""'31.l
SQ;. utU pd .• adulls, over 30.
M.\. 1ml. trailer s.t5-l!i51 aft
g p.m.
1 BR Duplu
Adults S92 56. -1 A: 'J BR rum, adult&, 687
Vk;k'l1a., eo.tJ M ~ I • .
"""""' $94.50 1 BR UUl. Pd. AJ.90
IUD Near 1t0ttt. um
Pomona MS-ans Adult.a
3 Rooms Fumiture
$25 Month
FULL OPI'ION TO BUY
No deopofil o.•.c.
H.F.R.C.
Fumltur• Rentals
511 W. 19th, C.M. 548·3481
1S68 w. Lncln, Anhm 77~2800
5100
faculty member & family °'l ;;';;r;•;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=I !HD Paularioo, c.M .• •·,,· 4. Price range $:200 to SJOO, 6 1•
moo to 1 >"· 213, .,.._or 5 Acres for $5,000 lost :6401
213: GL 7-2362 20% Down, 1 % per month -------.;,.,-
SEPT 1st Business Woman beys lt! In subdivision, BROWN Alligator billf~ in
needs 1 Br untum Apt, Silver Valley, near New. phone booth next : lo
C.M., Newport, c.oron. del berry Sprgs, 18 mlles E. Albert.t0n'1 mkt, 19ai ' I:
Mar or Laguna. To SlDO mo. of Bantcrw. 90 Man-m11de Harb. Rew. Ml-7890 -· • .
Gar or carport neces.sacy. lakes in area · bee.uti· REWARD . Yorkshire l~.
64.2-0086 alter 5 p.m. ruI high-dry desert & lev-10 mo male, I09t SUnday vii:
Want el land. Water guaranteed. Brooka ilt Gaviota,. Lapna
GARAGE FOR STORAGE Call owner 847-66t0 a.ti 6 Be-ach. 494-5322
Excelle11t, putt • like sur· 537...f1'i6 PM or weekends anytime. LOST At C'ryatal C.Ove, white
roundlnp for adults requif'. ~~ female Huskie'.;
lng peace A quirl. Rooms for Rent 5995 2!iii ACRES. Sou t b e r n "Sonya." Rew. 613-7 812
Discriminative Tenants California. $3.00 down, SJ.00 675-0586
API'S. PRIV. room. kit. privileges PEI' month, $29.),00 full price.
l , 2 • 3 BDRM. for atud~nt in lovely home. L. Shewfelt, 328 W. 3rd St, LOST Black and brown
POOL. NO CHILDREN Back Bay atta. $50. 642-1004 L.A. Phonl': (213) 623-5101 Ox:kspoo. Vicinity Tulane MARTINICjlUE and FoiM•w, Coou ,.,...,
GARDEN Am. Mite. Ronl•ls 5999 .. ACRES North San 01.,0 545-3501 ""--""-"=='---'-'-"" Coonty atrus area. $48.000. •· CM _M_ ..__ oc.•n ...,... SIAM~E cat, fem a I e-, 18th l Santa nua, • • l'Ai CAR Garqe: near ""'.,......,....,, ... ~
Call Mra. Hendenon 646-:i642 Newport Ct t y HAD. $25 Broolthunt l McFadden.
1777 Sanla Ana, Apt 113, C.M. month Pert'CI! Rlt;y 0>..1 •R::·..=E::·..=W::.•:::n:::t!od~-...!:62:;40:: l;;"'n«winmW:-. -:-S31;;-""3::i;~:;;;::=
642-lrn I.. MlSSING -male Shellie (tu)'
"THE GABLES" --Ga~ ..... -~.,,-,.,,....,-1 --w~~all=-~ c.,~le.!._~~~ ~;~.,.
Movln& ~. ht: 2 BR. w/ Sinale _ $20 nmtll • .,. · ·~ ·-.. ..-.:: ~ $1~. Adulll only, '42-.366 $9,tOJ Cuh. n3: 254-4593 return. ~.
Can> .• drps, bltn.9, patio. SUSINESS d 243lG Orange Ave STORAGE ~ for rmt. en P1rson1l1
Call S.twten 2 A s °""" M.,.. Oo• .. ht, IUao FINANCIAL
t•D -~ «'•rly 40, DD • 6J6..n20 • new. ~••• Bus. O.._....•nltf• 6300 GSJ'q6 for Rent ,._. ·-dtildrm, mttt lady to ap 2 liR. duplex, stwJ Gt l"ll:lrlg.,
.:ur.. fl'~ i>tli • Newly
R.edec. Adulti. No PfU. May
trade p/rmt for yd can fOr
s apt.I., own equip. 2211 A.
Pom'.ma 5.11-06.il Wk days
AVAIL. ~ 1: .2 BR., niew
cpta., drapei. bltne:. Adults,
no pell. Sl». S4S-6769
AVAIL. Sept, 1. I&. 2 BR, 114
.bl, G.E. blt.lra. Adults. 240
E. ltllh Pl .. CM. -
40, no children. Enjoy social Storact only, CORONA del Mar, E. Co&tl 11 T"eCf'NUonal activttie*.
• 546-8226• Jlwy, Bffuty Sa.kin Photo! Life timt rt:ll.
REAL ESTATE, eni blt.hed ' yn. 6<6-.15U, N..._. Ba. M-176 o.;i,.
G.ner•I ~rue PUot '
e OUclml Delight e PROBl.EMS? Send $3 b-
lnc:ome Property 6000 In ~ Lquna Beach a a m p I e l" 11 on f h
INOOME • Homf!-Owntr. Owne:r. * 494-SSOl Mtttphyrict ~ Penona.1 •
Exel. tnc:.-deprec/ lnvt 4 YACHT Sales Co. Nl!'W ...U. aplrltual htlp. Lenon tecT11f
Br. 2 t.. ~. 10.2 Br. apt., pwr A bkrg. Top watl!I' loc. • The M~ificmt You ..
pool l Yr. old. rB-1.m All/pt Bx P·l'15 Dail)' PUot Martin· 1!0! Miratnbt #2fll
DW &CHIM PU.OT WAH1' ADi i 6G-5671 Loi Anpl8 90C67 _· __ ._:
Dtal ......,. ... RESULTS _...;SOCK:.:=..:rr.:....:ro.;..;"Dl;;..;.I_ For Da111 Pilot Want ML f'ar --...na :... _ _;;OWIGJ::::::.:::::..:m:.;:__
··----~~~~~--~--------------
• •• • •
-,-26,l'IM DAILY 1'11.01'
ANNOUNCIMINTS
ind NOTICES
SlllVICI DIRICTOllY
* * * * IOIS & IM'LOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT .10SS & llMl'LOY
~lo 6405
-_CIJM)l!NGS -
Do-le ~le 70l5 Hoi, W...W, -7200 ""t ~""'""--7200 Hole WOfl!M, MM 720Cl!olp W...W. MM
_. ... Iba"""""""' "" ................ .
"" <:etltlr, .... -Bl""'°"'1a .. _ la -
to &llDDUDC9 tt. tptnln&: oC
iiliillmiOWI --mc .. ftmlllll
...it1:>A: .ervkt Otllt.cr. Wt
'fllql\. adl nationally ad-
:ftlllimd lltu-eot. We l'q)t all
OW' frlenda will •op and Mt
us at BID'a Appli ance
<nt., 19lJ Hutu Blvd, c... 11 .... 5U-4lll
.. , ALONE * ;1! ,.
WHY?
We,uarant.ee to wrltinJ to
REPAIRS *ALTERATIONS
CAlllNi.'lll, .,,, .... joO.
25 )Tl. uptl'. 5tM'lU
• RDtODll. • IWPAIR •
Cupeitry . h!itt. -6 O:nctet.. DIC. S0.119T
Cement, C~,.,_ 6600
CUSTOM PA'nOS •
Block walls. Al*> OOottcte
u.wtng A·f'Ul)(Jftl. IC-1010
BEST Ill CCIDCfta., Walb,
pool decka, tloon, pallOa.
Ml-&514 ---
CEMENT Worl<, all ,,...._
No job too am.au. Free ut
H. srorua<· MM6l5 • . )'OU tht ri&b1 person
" 5 yean or yoor MON·
' . CX Ueu tatinl a: 16' e a.Jstoil P~TlOS e
_.,., w-w.....,. -
S'KIAL CLAIS9'1CATl&f N>11
NATUllAL _,. SWAl'l'llS ,,...., 11119
s •--s--s-•Uln -Aa lfoVl1 IMQUDI
t-#1111 .,., ... • ..... ........... :-.,:-• --.... 'l'OIJa ,..,_ llMIW ....._ ._. • • 1,..._
........o'fKIM9 f'Oll &Ala -TllADQ L\'1
l'HONE MU671
To 1'11 .. Your Trlllor'a ,...... IW
v~tloa teea). Fr<e Jn. coocrele •wing 4'........i r.,<llE Taboo View Lot Na.
.. >I CALlloonSUR. VEY State Uc. e &e.l01I vada lidt, pt.ved S12.:;oG
clear. Excbanie for 80llle-
2 8Jt fllra oando. CID Bcb
nr. Vtnkt., !tab bl adu-
lve reaort lttL tr.de lot
kJcal a.rs S or 4 Ir. llcnt
« vac. lot or boat. U&-1271
;~ ··:· 542-4776 Child Co,. 6610 bodya '"d•°"'I Unlta, 1.• .... +-_'-A-:icc"o"°'RD'-T.IA'"N-;--;*-ICHILD ·-'-'--car-'-. -in-m-,-...... --. TD'•. « T Bllr. ~,,.
9r pull Ot'IU) pla,ytf for Fmctd yard, bot bmOet. 4 BR. 3 BA home, La Ha-
,t(i.a.; Do standuda. pop, m .so per'wet:k. ss each .o. bra Hta. Htlr'IH di. Le %
.~ A: N.ues. Malr: or le-dition&l child. HuatiD(ke acre avocado. $15,000 equity
male. For immediate work. Beech. M&-1933 trad@ for R.E., car, boal,
~cn~Q,C·6">-=20ll~===~ CHILD CARE my MeJa de.I TD'a etc?!? 495-mt
• $4,IOO TD • Trade oa 4 or 5 BR boua
Newport or CoroDa dd Mar .... m
LOVn.T Aeceaory a: Anti-
DOMESTIC
HELP
Uvt la or live oat -..,." . EICOlaklrAltney
00 So. ........... L\ 900U am tl$CIMT m1• m.17!5
'
P"lrHllwe manuf10-
tvring compliny with
nalMnt werklnt
conditlont and frin ..
boneffla .... immodl-
lfe ..,,,,,.. hr:
• '1r11b"
Aulom1tlc Screw
Mich. Open.
Ft.:Y TO CATALINA Mu homo NlatilL
DAILY FLIGFn'S FROM StS-2531
OICANGE OOUNTY AIR-CHILD care, m'J bDme. Hot ~T. Catalina -Yeps 1uncbea a: riap1. Fmced plQ' ~ ... :· ~linea. e 546-ail2 area. S48-4.519
WANf ~ Ol' other bat·
tery parbhle TV. WW trade
27'' TV. Low conaole. New
picture tube. 5.1B-ll31
que shop, approx. $3500
stock ._ tixturt!a: lnde ror •
late model car • what
have )'Oil! m4*
Lille Oper1lors -' j/djiER w/ 2 mothtrl~ ICARE ,,=.c::..:.:c1.,-""INF=ANT=~1n-..,,-
. etildrn. aan 2 • 6 would like h bO
WANT View Home to
""·""· PnMlpala only, Have ID +.
2 DUPU:XEs ftl. 137,!111
in Costa Mta 'JH4a tor e
houe or trust deed&. :r.
come $05. Owner.
Drill Press
Oper1tors NI ·-' board w/ mp qil. lovely N~ac me
nYCIGI' home. M0-4821, Bob. Madae Da•ts, Realtor
60-'IOOI
RT Beach Temls Ci~· Cllarl:er membmbip
1 :~-+ transfer t e e L 1·~·
Contr1cter1 6620 i Lots boomina: Ha.wall,
e ROOM AODi'nONS e U69J ea, ~ equity, $25
L.T O:m.wuction per mo. cm beJ&Dce. ~-
Family · ldtchen or change: all or .eparate for !
uni.a. sf:;:' story or 2; ~mlt. Cbesbirt R. E.
p1ens """"" d<aJaned. tor """"' attmatt'I A: l.Q'out:, Pbom I :lhon==vtt:1ew=--"'N-r."'N,_pt.,-.,p"-,.-·
• 847-lSll • 4 lmlts bn, llM: ftn1lll
Uceoaed Cmtradar UM. $58,500 • take am b.e
• . ........
HEALTH Forces, msent:
Cl comet lnt, val $58,000;
Pll~ I. W. 19th, CM.;
eq. $30,000, tor Palmdtle,
Lancaater afft. OWNER., -ll Units la Orazise. ID 2 BR
2 ba., $«!,IX» equft;y. WANT
Income on or nev water.
-'"""
APPLY AT
STA-fAST, lllC.
640 S. Soot1 Fe St,
S.nt1 An1, C.lif.
Reaidential • C:Ommerdal ht tr• de. OwJN!T D)I%
Ma.int I: Repairs. Free Est Olurt Ave., 6TJ..fi527. M-Davb, Rltr. M2·1'10l ~*-------*~I
40' RCHDs'K F .B. .port REXA.IR INC 613-2129 What do ,.oa lblnlr: oi oar -~-~--,.,,..---l ··TRADER'S PARADlSE" Additiona * RemodeUng
....... ....W! D.F., 215 ' •
Fred H. Qenv:lck, 1Jc. 0nip UI I cud. OaeifW
b.p. a.r,a, 1SO w ndi<o, NOW HIRING
m-<00 * 5G-2l70 Dept, P.O. Sor 1115, Do111 auto pilot '-J'emotn: 42 MEN
l'l3,000 '" tor Inc. -·
Revolutionary Host
Dry Cle1ning Method
Ruga, Drapes, Upholstery
Can be used Immediately
after work is completed
Sales, Service
and 1111tallatkm e Master Charrt
• Bankamericard
Modern Rug & Carpet
4335 Cren&haw, Los Angeles
Pilot, Npt lleb, Callt. stodll etc. OR 3-J513.
* * * * * ----------
SERVICE DLl!ECTORY SERVICE DllllCTOllY
Goner1I Senle11 6612 Popor'llontlnt
1'1intlnt PROFESS. Wlndow, wallll I:
Or. cleanlQI:; bu a in a• r, * PAINTING a:
ttsid., I: cmatruction DDXJRATING *
Crysta] W'mdow CINDlnl
Free Eafunatt'I 5U-8'137 I:nttrior, ute:rior
Lic'd. Jm'd. Gu.rantt'ed.
nl -296-5100 Collect e l DAY Rrrice. Home I: Cullom wm1r: cmly,
HA1tRl8 PAINTING~ CARPFl' A: Furn. cleanlri&: apt clwlll11. O'pt&, walla,
WE NEED G MEN WHO
ARE Nar AFRAID OF
HARD WORK ANO ARE
ABLE TO S?ART lMMED-
JATELY. NO EXPERJ..
ENCE NECESSARY AS
. COMPANY WILL TRAIN.
GOOD PAY
L 0 Ts or OVERTIME
DURING NEXT 6
MON'lm.
I« 1 day service 6: quli-wtndowt, paintine:. ~-PAIN'l'DiG And Pape:rin&. 11
ty w<rl, call Sterlin& for Stuling for ~itnea! JOU. call me we both bentftt. * ~g:;:=====::::= I brigbtneu! 642-8520 i "'H=,,=lt=h=C=l=ubo===6=72=0 Exclusive but DOI expemtve =--------"*
CALL PEljSONNEL DEPl'.
n4-12s1
r: SPRING Special! 5c a ft. Tr)' me and 9". 5fl-m1' EXPERIENCED
6435 Advon<"1 eu.<t -U--N"' -Ing-Mon, "" PAINTING int. 4 ""'-A·l WATER CONDITIONllt
PROJECT
Bl6lllHI
ElcW•• ~In -...r-ot ..u ---·al .. electro-~ ..
HmbUes.~W
achedual a.ad budplarJ
eornntltment; • bl• to
,..a.ke project 1e:wl ~
\m\a. Minimum t h r t e
)'e'llfS advanced ICboolina"
or training in desip eo-
1~1. Apply
STACO, INC.
1139 Boko• St.
Costa Meta
549-3041
An .................
employer
• Engine lathe
Machinists
• Drill Press
Operlfors
(Nr,ht Shift)
J. C, CARTER (0.
671 W. 17th Si.
(Oita Meu
,._21 ........ _
employer
• ~lumber
• C11penter
• C1binel Setter
With mobile home ex·
peri1nce.. Excellent
bonellta. Awly In,.,_
IC!'!1.
EXPLORfR
MOTORHOME CORP.
IUS IOYS
"""'" Shike Coadltlall1
Exist
NllDID
IMMIDIA TIL Y
* TOOL I: D[E MAKER • GEM£JW. D<Sl'llC'l'OR * MAil'fTZMAl'fCE
M!laWOC * MAU<'11:!1ANCE
ELECrlUClAN
·~· L.LlfE * METAL ASS!:MBL.!:R. * IUVETER * METAL Fl'M'ER. * POWER BRAKE OPERATOR * PUNCHPRDS
OPERATOR * ENGINE LA'IHE
OPERATOR
• TURRrl' LA.no:
OPERATOR.
• lllLLING MAClllNE
OPERATOR * BDiot MACHINLT?' * HELIUM ARC WELDER * MACHINE WELDER * EXPERIMENTAL
MECHANIC * FABRICAnON srnuc
TUltE DEVELOPMENT
MECHANIC * 'IUBE BENDER * ELECnlJOAL !NSTALU:ll * Amou.Fr PAINTER.!
Penomel om.. Open
'ram totpm-Tda.,y1
SAR~ENT·
FLETCHER
HQ FlaJr Drive
E! Monte, C&Ht •
1213) 213-7171 <MJ.7171 ... ..,,... __ ....._ -· YOUNG MIN
11 or OYer
Will be: conaidtttd for a
carter p:>ctHon l...atn1 to
manaaemcnt bl the c.on-
aumer Accept~ Dl!part-
mtnt ot our Onnct CountY
Bruicll.
$125 WK. S~LAllY
°"' ..................... will-• Hlch ICbool cra«fuate
with Rood work er schocl
~ e Ex GI'1
• C:Ollece lt\ldenta not re-
tumlnr .. -1llla Hmnter.
• Out ol ltate appticurt.a
~ lntftfttld tn
fftab&blns nGdwt. m Orance O:lunt;y,
MACHINISTS 'i • Jltqultea MVUll Ytlrl upetlen<9
In Ht ap and operalloD ol pnt.,..
1bly In beavy laU.. wort-Miut bo
available for -'hie 2nd rhill
work.
COlltoet Jl111 Z.mpell
(714) 546-
3333 Horbor Br..I., Ceot1 Mo11, Collf.
Mhslle SJ.,_ Dtmllo
AH1nllc R1se1rch
.J
'1
I
.I ii • • ' ' •• . I
' I -·
COUOUllOM
ADIYhlooef ...
s •••••••••• c.,.
U. L ClltMMll• ._..,_ e Alt •-r ~"' .,,......., '
l'!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l l1
MATERW
FOUOW-lf Cl£U
To ullat In acbtdWin(,
mat8'b.l ft:tlknMlp f • r
..... ....-mualact-unnc compuy. Murt like
detail, be able to W'Cd" fn.
depenctmtly Md eonrdi.-
nate wodt" wtlh all de-
pu'tmenb. Will tnin a1·
sruafve indlvidul. APPb'
STACO, IC.
1139 Bokor St.
Ceoto-
549-3041 ........ _ ... ......
1.c. ,......, c .. ......... ....,,..
H ....... lleodl
Hu qmi.lllp for ,lrt ., fvll , ....
SALISMEN
In ""' GAllDEN S-
Recent succeuful ~
ience pretend. Campe-
tltln Mlarits, a:D:ellent
btntftt Jll'Ol1'Mn. ....,. .. _
Ptmty'a J'Mbkn laWld
10:00 &.IQ. to t :3D .... --l'ridey Eqml--
ASSfMllfR
Hydr...tlc v.i-.
•• ,..i. .................
CU·YAL CO.
SALIS, J OHL Y
R ..............
erexpierl.,...
$975 RRST MO.
Potftrtial if you slnc:eN-
Jy ...... to .-II: .... ffm
bll IDOOQ', en IDDo9r _...
!:" ~·~ w::: l:11
1
u )'Ota cu do tblt
1 ca• effer .,..
• $125 weekly .... ,, •l
• -c ... m .. "'"" •1 •w.rt.6hroo~-l: -· ,, • Execvtt.e tr1htl• '' '· • lenutplan ,,
• ... ClftY ... "' :: AJIPb 1500 Adami, Miit JOI, ::
a.ta Ma&. IM p.m. lllD1 ~: ,,
~~l: Ceti1HJ Flllh••r ~:
--l: 1ot alrcnft •"""'-' !: --· Lido Coot!"" 1M.
-Obms .. ,.. CM. ........ ... __ _ •• " l: " " ,.
!1
• 7=;:=""~-::==;-==:I i;
11: A~'!'!!"!!'~ioo,~,!W~-!!!!-!!!i!!!!I ~; ,f
" " ' . " . " •• " " ..
" " BKKPR tD 1'B ••••.. tD ••
a: ctrt .. Tmtlla. ""' t;IXll" :; ,.,.,.. u~ ..,..Wlb'. ::
9pUt: lat. ::
SE™TARY •••••••••• ~:
84 .... Lltlt l/H. Auwale :1 .,..,._.,,.....w,...
Sm' 1 ma l'ee ftfl, :·
.. ach A,.. ::
GIRL f'JUDAY ...... "lll> :;
1 atrt omee. lJ&e ..... + :,
µ.:.:;:.;::_ ___ _::::::;:I ""'· "'3-U88 Tall -Oilropo'actor HWlk aJlllc _., -· Uc. IS'!o4522, SALESMAN
!, CDIPLE Drivina" to M~ . _ Adjmtnirit, muM.Ct, sauna 893-G&O&, a.ta for Pttm.111eot · pot.itlon.
.1 Sept. I Room tor 2G __ •rde __ n_int..:_ ___ '6I0 __ 1 .tam, X-fty, I °"llll'ElU==OR'°. =-=.-=EX=1ERI=~OR~ Must work door to door.
~ l**Dfl'!l'I. 54.1:-7130 ANTHONY'S ~1: ~·!,, PIJntln&. Free at. Excellent opportunity with
Full or p1rt time
Over n. Xlnt lldOf·
Apply in perton ti
MR. HORST OUESI
Newport H1rMr
Yacht Clull
Call between t All I I PM
~IW
17th& Pllcontlo C:..•·-541-2201 .
' .... llH. °"'""""1 -.,
pMn. l'eeNm. ::
S!XJlll?AllY •••••••• lo ' Good.-.• IVIL -:
be penonaWe • sr-t ..... ;~
on. r .. FU&t.· •· TIC BKKPft •••••••••• t1X1 ;;
. AA!' or CPA ....... plouol : ,. .. ,..m. I
~ ~\,.1RV,0 ICE DIRECTORV Garden Service. Uc .• lftl. on 5'1U31.f b6Uonal le'l'Ylce company.
, '"-1 "Paper B\a:Y'' M7-l.C58 Must have uln manage-! ""hill, 0111 6520 646-1941 Houllnt 6730 ,.,.. .... -home colla m<nl pol.,,"'1. ~-~~;;::;g;;;;;;;;;k;;; I LANDSCAPING w ...... __ Rayne Wat~ Cclldlt1.onin1 • Lite Haullna'-Trtmminp, e ... .,..,. -ltll -install t AYS & Parking lob MON'IltLY MAINTENANCE Trull, Garqe Qe1n11p1 PAINTING Ava. room 7526 Put Avenue
: ~A: aeaJ coe.t!d. ~ Exp borticaJttDist. Name it! Rtuont.ble compl. $ZS. 6 up. Neat Gardet Grove, Callt.
; 'M :RK.I. 530-lW Complete Oeanup. Rn.I. BIG JOHN 642-4030 W'Dl'k. LocaJ rdl. Ml-1351 Phone 1197-1093
: QUALITY uphalt 1ea1 MOWING, F.dgi.D£', vaca1awn. LITE HAULING I: CLEAN INT . ut. Avuqe 1 mt apt, General Woodw.rkfng ~ ~tin1 driv"'ays .l parking Gal'l cleanup. Hauling. UP labor I mat'a $ 7 4 , 5 o. Mechlne Woodca"lng
: fbfs; Wm1tr. flS4...l129 Odd Jobi. * 548-6955 l'REE DTJMATES. 00-153, 5'M92f Wood '•rh A•Hmbly
L · y with kinely boy would UJW COOi' Main~ce * 546.7849 * Artlflclal Limb Fab.
'J!20 W. Bay Avenue
betw ll·ll 1-S.T except Mon.
e lo•t A1 .. mW.r1
• Carpenten e Painters
Apply in penan
JenHn Mlrlne Corp.
235 Fiacber, Costa Mta ~ 't:hildren to w.tch or MOW -EIXiE -SPRAY CLE.AN Lota, prq:u, etc. Plumbfnt 6190 Mature, exprrlenced ht
, ...n!, many refl. 642--074 FERTILIZE. ~73t9 Tr!t! removal, dump, skip, woodWortdnc. Good mech-Sq Mol.1-, e JAPANESE GARDENING bocl<hoe, .. ,, -de, 962-8745 * 24 HOUR SERVICE * aniclJ ablltty. 0tMn need UeeW-uwf •,' •-~-y1itt1·-6550 -..., ... -Plum.tune n!lp&ir remodel ..i.. IN ··• Service Oeanup, lAn<bcap-:i Guaranteed * ~1407 JtOt ap....,.. Ex;pe!ienced tqUeUel' • mold. ~ · ·-srrrJNG my home. ·~in~•-531_·""'~-""-'~•-·m_. __ lnterior0ecoratlng6737 Muv'iPlumbi-suvi-KinCJSley Mft. Co. tt f« a1rcraft aluminum I:
DESIGI
DRAFTSMB
Minimum tour )'Mn a-
ptrienm In dtsip "'
amaD dedl'o -mtchani-
cU dt¥ian. Mut h&vw
Jmowted&e al ~
ftlatinl to snaU meta.I or
plutlc parta. a..ctinc"
-helptlll. Apply
STACO, IC.
MAINTENANCE
MICHANICS m!ll:rAJ\Y ····••••to• :: -+po«-·! . ' Immediate emJloymmt tar IDr J N · ..:a. ILi:. ar •
--MedJan. bid&. --l\plll ' k:a wttb ekctrie&I or mt-fee. ::
cha.nical b..ckpvund. Dtsirt S!X'Y/lite bklW •••••• ..., ::
applkant to ba•t experlelce To 2 >'JC .. ......_ .-.. ::
in ptlekaaina machinery cip. Fee paJ4.
etWtionl. ~ and ~ SECY •••••••••••• , ... R
~. Apply or caD l Pi ok t*pnl ........ ;;
WettP1ck BuQ" amca. Goad ,at d n
Machln11 C•r,_ Fee PUil .. -'·G a ...., ...... can 543-611& tor apPl mapestum toandry.
• W!e days 8-5. Fenced yard Il'l'L ee.n-up, tne RIV, • Resldence -Comm1. ~pair-Remodel Lido c ... 1.,.., Inc. 1139 laker St. w Dnw Dr .. N.L .: : ~!;'.!., da7. Westalde C.M. rototil, ~g, .prlnklen, e Painting, lnl. A: ext. fit6-9Sl7e 735 Ohms Way, C.M. (•ta Mell '42-3170 ~4' :
186 W. 15th Street
Newport Beach 5f0.02l1
' ·~,~ lawns, uaul'1. Re a 1 ' SALESMAN "" -· ••9 •041 ' ii'Ali • Wall "'""""' Plumbing .. "'" ""'· Woril ~ ~ ~ mR ~ysrrnm; for working 646-5848 e O>lor Coordinatkll'I guar. Lie., but.; remodel, ExJ>er!enc-«i major •pP)l-An eqw.1 opportunit)I CA MISJ UH lBf ;'
t ........... my """'" ""' cut. Edg< Lawn FREE ErnMATE ttpalr, """'•en" '31-"" """" '"' ...... d""""'' omploy" "" ...... -Ol'PORTUNrrYI .: • ~. Maintenance. Licenaed Ucen1ed &: Insured dlatn. Will train quaHned TY ..-..,.
1 , • '· "'·""" .......,,, .....,,. "' • PM MODERN •---'., ,~A Repairman Jain lod.,. tutat.,..,.. _ ~' • ~ ...,.,_ ~ 10tm1er·men.0Jntact proteakn--MutoalFundtala~Secy •• : ••••••••••• _ I .:Ji&b)'SI-. in my home, , ........ Gudenlng DECORATORS Mr. Phillips 147-5537 Gond _,,,, -..,.. -.--.. "'o•u=c-E=MA="'N~-1 No -._,,.. lleey/matll ........... -•
I ;~~ Beach and nater. Professional Maintenance 536-ZU Alter•tlona-642.!iMS oentqe. 9 Wt train. fall or part thn• Seey/mfl exp ·····••••• -I.
. '· •842-6009 Landscaping M6e3 I-========= Neat, accurate, 20 yn.. exp. INTER==v"'1"'EW=ER~-"'P"an""'n=me-I Nawporter TY ~ to f152. mo. to bt ~ Mutual fuNI Afthen Aat BkJilpr' •••••••••••• *°
I ¢\'l~sITrING, My home, ......._ __ L_1n_d_1_c1-'p-in-'1'-__ ,_1_10_ I TILE, Coromlc ·-4 Nted 2 neat, anrtatve '1111 Harbor Blvd. , julttd. Ace n tD n, up to I ' D'pbone IC)' •••••••••• NM '·~"" d-' M •-·· GeneralS.rYI~ _... •--r1 ...... -..., .'.6 "1th •PPl'Oftd eaperi.Npt• 18111W~-llll•M .. _ ~~·····•••••••••.-:, : ·~ -=-ar. '"'V qe GAYNOR'S • ··--·•me )"OUnl men owr 19 to work 2 '"""'°"'" u-laht 5'1" mlnl ... -"" ............. ~
wr: t.vme. ~ "MR. FIX IT" Can Boll far I GARDENING SER.VICE * Verne, the Tile M&n * ~• .l Sat intervkwing .. >a" .,.. ,..._......... -~ ,..,.... .. _ '"-·---·-DESMOND'S '.'."", . ..;.,~ ~ ---=-.. I ... ·-· N. B~ GPIT ....... _ .............. JO ...... :: ~~-~======='I bomr: maintenance paintinc, State licensed contn:tr, Cult. work. lnataU A repairs. linale siril. Call 534-m S-5 bellht. Phy»cal ft'llldtt-MT.am A.lit Jte .:.,";,,··,.::;....... •
Brick, Masonry • .tc. re~-1-, clea.n "" ......... on'"'·' _ Ct>mmerclal No job too amall Pluter FAST -...1 .... oa•--d-J.... ta H''"h C..."'--• -..... -' 65""" .,...... ~ n.ca11,1 ua1 "'v""''6 ..,..., "'"..., Has -~-full time men : 06 -••-.,.1---------1 : .-.~~.----------I relemice·1. 673-5963 Yard clftnup. Free ut. pa.tch. LeaJdn& 1 h 0 we r nttds 2 permanent ...,.. tt 91.Hd Callfomia Drl 1 1~ repair. 847-1957!M6-«20S maintenance man. Apply: ~-'----,U.S.~---wrttt'"',. l--L-ys • C1t W. Cout Jlw7, :• ; ONac. concrete. Carpentry BRIGHTER-Side Jan. Ser.o No Job too bl& m.3511 l&lnmen, new I. uaed.. Tor #3 'uhlen ltl-"" :=-~ ..... ;;"", ,.. Al l.._lllw II • Newpwt 8-dl -... .:
: 'Q>!!om Cabinets. Small Joba a,. clng, tin, """'""· Ind. CORRAL'S indKV 4 ""°"" 1015 & •u•LovMINl poy -· Call .,.."" atk Now,.rt C--•· D • 111'1 .......:--.....~ ~•o ••~• Uftr" ' for Ge\ M'"' r Wfttmimter Qtv u.u -~·, ~vr. l'ne Eat 9Q...69Ei rea, rea.s . ....,.......,..., aerv. Free Ht, haw own •-.... -.,,~··,..· .,.--~-v nau -.. ........ _ ,. -• u .. I h ,..__ PAR.T nme crew mam.a:u, Wettrc1n1ttr Ave, ao or tit-1'ill lilne, ffll« 11 ~· •••••••• -,' ~E;,....~=""':=';:"";;:..,.;:.·:_Q!AR;:::;:G;E°'""'==·=ant=ad=now:=,,· -=equlpmen=====l=......,..===== I JM Went.cf, Min 7000 '"" tllit ... ,...r1tor ~ to• I ;;;; Ellperienced. 3 Shift.a euy work, S or .f houri Im Sept. 11, 1961. Phone Apply in P9'91n •·••••· • •• ·,
General 5000 General 5000 General 5000 MAlN'I'mANCE plumbhw Martec ~pnxtuctkm ~ntt. workina" with boyt. ~ll. Ext. D . a.11•a IJt ky OMV • ·· · · · · ····' •••• tD NII !, · · cupmtry • Electric _ Full 546-t240 Mmt baw ear. ~ l.St i;, 17U. Sl., C.M. Gen.1 otDet ···••••••••• Ml)
: ·•. ~.~: or put time. 54l-Ol35 -~='""~":~=--I missions. For tnformatkl!I Medical ,_ C ... •••• t1D • ,_~~ "YOUNG MEN call ~ llld ,,. 1or FRY COOK a.at -............ 1111
C!.1111-0 ..&'\-,. ,( -f)'f1 ~a.• Jo~ Win!M,, ...... 7020 wtlllna "' """' • ,..,. • Bob --on11. N•r•ta. l'ort time EYes. -............ 1111 .....
\, ... •
' '.
f •!'· .. '
\ ...... ~-·
l
. ,· " ..
•···.
' --.. :." r' '
• ...... • . . ........ . ' ~· • ':O
t ..... -
t . '
1·1:
P~ 1..'-QU 1."1-'ob P~P -r trade. NI time cmpl. C W th H I .$llary open. No --Distributor b' Wttt Coat TmeM11l*19r •••••••• INf
S, le S bl 'u'onl ~--•-' C"··-L• J1p1-Set-I Girl ,..._ ar a e p coU.. ... ,, 111.r l p.m. mfar. co. -hldnr traJn. PBX ................. .. SolMa. '"'P cram ru. "' ~1e,ora "~' Fuill time or wkenclL ffl tor -•--1: -"-... _. Tnw laetcrJ •••••••• tD SD Oomeat1c Work, live-in with SERV. Sta Atttn w/mecb -. _..T .... ~ .-
American ._-"-. eon to exp. Start S5CXI mo. A-iv Min qe 11, apply In penon P:IVE CROWNS 'ffttk. Mon thnl Fri. Baun Tnae tnilt: ······•·••·· $111 Or:":.':.ib=-wo::.:: ocx:.~:54J..5112. JO.l 18'7 Placmdtl CM".h UDOCARWMll llSTAURANT g.1o::t0 p.m.. Phcoe sn-na 1'nle"71bt 0 •••••••••
low to form folll" tlmpi. word&. SOCIAL S!OU'TARY. Have F..lher 481 E. 11th Costa Mn. J10t l:. Qiut Hwy. 6* kr Pfl'D!nel Dept. 1
ITU ICC E II I ex ct I le n t ...,.l&rtol IARTENDER Sttvlce Slltion Conona del "'" AUAT JJ;a«:t I SALESMAN ,11\' COOK "'w. lt1ll, c.w. -'1 I I' I I r ~Full"' .............. melOP.O.BoxS91. Full tim• Good.....,.+ SERVICE STATION ~ --o.ofilMI
• • • _ _ time. Hunttnitoa Beach. Hnefttl. Ex,.r. ONLY a~ SA1...DMAN Expd, Older APPbr •t Dal.Ol1:R PA'tl ftZ 1
WAITRESS, Z .)Ul' u-DISH MAOUNE opentor, ply. JIM TICE CHEVRON man tint. Top wqes A THI llOGllt Sect'y,ateo ·•••••••••• * I I HY KUS . I pmmce:, St"4>' A depeno. O:llbi MMl Memorial "°"" 2590 N""'1 Bhd., C.M.. comm. Oievron St a t I e n No. 11 l'ubkm 1alallll &oo:•• "'C a.tr: ••• ••• n 1
I r 14 I d&ble. ~ pit.al. '°1 VktorU, C.M. WE Need ftt't.t, mech. i. Adam& A MapoH•, Hunt. N.wport OniW K.B. ~,...pd."' ti ;a 1
-·.. •..,.m<e cllnedmu!O"'*"'lor--.... --······•\ h~ait;iemen mo .JVE-Jn BabYllHn. Pnft-1' wareboUM. HS Cr ad , S!JlV. 1ta. 81.Jnmu, dPR" ~ :.,g
100 I NY o H A I eu.1......,..·. """'" .. h ,, 1r1.;,;j~j "ijf-r-i oponed up an oatory ~~
---izing In flopjcxb. Boy, who! ._.._ ..... -~~f-u a """""'' The f1oi>1a<b .,..
IHOTCEL . 1•1Ungllk1--I' . I I' I f r ·~::i:-... ~-.::.: --. --,.._..._.,...._abolow. 1 ~ r:M.s~ r r r t r r r. r 1
le ='*1 roo1 I I • I I I I 1· .................. _
EXPER.lENCED A.Pr MGR
Couple wD ID.M1 JUfl 0.
perlmet la Orup Co.
want& opc!Ol'bmitJ' '° handle
)'OW' Jll'OPtlV. m.-f769
Call -. 11 . ..,__ "'""°"""·Are"'"· ""'1 -.,_ 21 , -Mochlnhto & 'lotors Student wfmominf claM. in pel'llOft. MCJD-f'ri. J-4. la*7 ttu.d en expcr. I. Srmce cmnpktt. E:llcelllOt Acd'a. PQU1e. 8* •• ... l
Call before u. IG-ITl3 ~indow Oetlana sm !Mrch, MllU.t. a...n. Stab H• ~'7 wtlh ~ Tr± • W •••••••• tm •
SER.VICE Stab Attmdant N.B. bor I: Sa m.p "'""1. c.M. compa.IU' • .lPPIJ in ~ rn.a..,.,,. •••••••••• ~1,
Apply RETIRED Man w\ahlnc to BELLY BOARD M4Tlmdnrt.IW~ i:.~=~= mo Hartlor blYd. C.M. &Qplemtrlt tncome for clNA LAMlNATOf\ Exp mJ7. A~ 0.C. Meta caut.
I--------DELIVERY. Mature driY«,
-k Hot, 7035 -_.I AM.'""' Ploa 1-------= .... ---I Man MJ...ta: af'l 10 P
Applyln-at 1'Hncllco .... cw._ MIN ...... , u;p wort: at rNit BUery, p(y D PIJpo lft4 Pla.ccida ' i1
LlVE 11111 Ell!lllol!>-.. ,,., .. ,.,. , ...
-.. BJ\llld -1111 B E. 1'1h, S.A. U!-STOCK a.ERK -to bour'I.
Extrtrienc• pnfll'nL mo -BJ,..., CM
Pu~. 11111 W. Bmr, c.JL i>llHWAlllER I ..... I_ Gond -· ltut-ln> IWllllnl Eioct .... i. s.1-.. -.. -u.n. _...,_Good,... ,.yr-•-!II
Wtth-*l&eofportatod/ ~~~=-~ • •a :' tloo of --.. llllCY
" ' I
or 1V rwpafr. tt. ...-. M I• DDn'.U.. Alft •••, ,, tt
H. W. Wrtfhl Ce. LIQUOll CLlllK Coll No --a.. -I
1T"l Ne ..... BIYd. OI llotd. NI-· ..... ....,. Mr. RiW 77~1 --· l
• SCRAM·LETS ANSWEl IN CLASSIRCATION 9900
a.--. a.-ful --ed. Fat Eut A1tncY "°4fOS
DAn.Y PDDI' OIJB.A-
1.Df!& Ya1 rm ._ lbaa
... ,.. .......... Dlol -Ntld•°"" • ....,, wntt'Balatul>d)nat. Dltl1 ftcll•• ... , mow Dr .. N.L I n.r" .so. 1 wut.., l>lal 108111 tor 111.iUL'll! .i...,. a Go-CO! M:wl1711 149.274' .1 ·--• . ~ .
-% "
:1 •• •
~
I
I
I
I
I
'
' I
I
--
SO __ IWLY '!LOT M....,, ..... , 26, 1968
SALE ANO TRADE "•LE ANO TRADE SALE ANO TRADE SALE ANO TRADE
jijR 6 ~LuYMCNT •OBS• ~Ml'LIHMtNI JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENl MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR !MERCHANDISE FOR
Het1t W9nted. Help W1nted Jebt Men, Wom. 7500 Joba--Men, Wom. 7$00 1---'..;..-'-------------
! 1_Y!Off!'!' --~ w~_ --~-7400 ,I-Furniture IQOO Furniture 1000 ~j Appli1nces 1100 j l~~;;m---~----.••••••••••••••••• ~I N<w • .,,.,..,_ •
l OfflCI • MARSHALL Spanish & Mediterranean Decoiator n • .,,...::."•:.1"~.w ''"' ; SECRETARIES &ought M1nuf1cturer'1 Showf'oom $1mplft slll.•htly aeratchde or dented • At Terrilic Savings! Admir•I ~rrigreatoi·~ priced
! ........... paMtiMs req•lrt ..... tW.. COMMUNICATIONS g~a~~b~c.:.e~ a;~ h~;:;o~'d::0;Jh:f!: ~~um~~~::~:~~
.
set, w/bl.lck or avocado framed chairs; 5 Receives Admi<&I mod<U "' '""'"'
, ... txp«l1tK1 pla toe4 Alls I• tl.c:.. One of Orange County's fistest grow· Pc BR set. 9-dr Mr. &:: Mrs. dresser, lg mtrror, Itom. F inancing available.
d 2 commodes, decorative headboard in Spu· Cancellatt"on Hurry . they woo'l lut.
Apply lo Poneo ., C.l
17141 146.aOJO
llll Harb« llnl., c .. te M ... , C.111.
Help Wanted
Women
MJ11llt Sy1tem1 Division
Atlantic Research
CORPORATION
A Dlv11lon of the
Susqueh1nn1 Corp.
7400
in9 computer oriente companies hes isb oat or avocado design. Rainbow Fuminn
immediate openings for people with Items Sold lndividuaUy
the lollowinn qualifieetions: Shop Around-before you by see US! 0f > VALUE $895 -FULL PRICE $429.95
or term• 11 low •• $3.00 week
• System Engineers
• Logic Design Engineers
• Real-Time Programmers
• Senior Designers
• Draftsmen
• Electronic Technicians
• MT /ST Operators
No Down-Use Our Store Charge Plan $22 000 00 No Fancy Front-BUT Quality V~lues Inside 1 •
APPROVED FURN. 2159 HARBOR, CM
12 Years same location-same ow!te!s
D1ily 9.9, 10.5 Sund1y e 54S.9~ •••••••••••••••••• JOBS & EMPLOYM~NT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Help W1nted
Women
Accounting
Clerk
7400 Help Wanted
Women
TELLER
7400
Spanish &
Mediter-
ranean
Furniture
2UI W .llth S&nl.a Ana
531-0l)6;
e VACUUMS •
SlO up. Repairs & parts.
Reasonable. Coast Vacuum
33..1 E .17lh, CM , 642·1560
WASHERS $29.95; dryers
s.35; i;Teeiera $13: Re!ria;.,
roppertone & A.voe.; Gu&r.
54()..1005
l'REEZER -chest type • 22
cu. It. gd. cood. Make oller. ,.,...,,
WHIRLPOOL au tomat i e w~her sao, Maytag gaa
dryer $50. like nt>W 847-8115
Hl68 MODEL Apartment-size
Gallen & Sattler stove
s1:; 54.9-1048
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE ANO TRACE
1130
NOW HERE -the 'll"1 • •
Superaoundlng T·2ef~:.!:
llammond Spinet orpa .. :
-I.be finest yet!,,.;,.;:
SCHMIDT·PHILLlPS'(D: '
1901 N. Main O nr .. l
Santa Alla ; .Y -•
Tele'9'lslon
RENT . ' ~h ... ' ---· ...; ....
Color TV .. ·~~: ~
$9 PER MO.-.::;.;
' '
Rent1I can apply t6' :
Purd\IH -,.; .. -:.
ORDER BY PHONB ,1 ;
548-8511 ,,, '
1 ;o-.;i 9 AJo.I to 8 PM
HI-Fi & Stereo
STEREO 1962 aoUd sl", ,
conaole model whh A¥./~M
radio, t spd ch&r1ger. Te.k't·
over small payments #. ;
$93.20 CMh. Credit Dep(. '
5.15-72!1) --Choir
Accompanist
Needed • Assembly Operators Rapidly expanding Or-
ange (bunty electronics
manulacturl'r bas immed-
iale oPffling for a~unt
ing experience in pay·
roll, accounts payable,
and general accounting.
Typing required. Apply
Experie:nced, lor fasle!I
growing independent bank
In the area. Good working
condition. and beriefits. Sal-
ary according to e.xi>eri·
ence. Call
All New Top
Quality Brand
S•wlng M•chinn 1120· Sporting Goods 1;;.;:.='-"-'-"----
•
TELEPHONE
SOLICITORS
P'ull or part time. PleaA&nt
working conditions. Hourly
wa&;es plua bonus. Apply in
Artistry and techrrlqun im-
portant. To apply contact
Penonntl Office, Nt"WPOrt
Mesa UnifiN School District
1901 Newport Blvd., Costa
Meu. 646-3224
2230 S. Anne St.
""""''" Holld1y Health Sp•
Medical Offic•
Experimctd Medical Sec-
Santa Ana, California
2300 HARBOR BLVD. retary or Nurse needed by An equal opportunity employer
COSTA MESA OrthOpedic SUrgecn in N.B.I~
&: H.B. Typing, ln1. billing !~
exp necessary. X·raY help-Eltttrical
MAIDS NEEDED
Experienced or WW. train
for steady work.
'"'· Au<~•""" Good pay Strike Conditions EXHUTIVE for qualified penon. Send
EXTRA GOOD WAGES
Good workini · condltions.
Apply in person to house--
keeper Mrs. Jo)'ce Miner,
bet 9 am it 3 pm.
L.arun• C.ountry Oub Village
31106 S. Coast Hy. at Aliso
Beach, South Laguna
qualifications to Y.P. 2018 Exist
Ba.lira Pl, Cnsta Mesa.
HOSPITALITY Ho.!iles1 is
looking for a mature woman
with a genuine interest and
Jove of people to welcome
n e w families. Must h a v e
car, typewriter. sales exper-
iMCe and boodable. Call ......,,.
N"d•d lmmedi•ttly
ELECTRICAL
ASSEMBLY
Experienre in !IO}dering,
wire 1trippin1, T-B crimp-
ing machine.
WOMEN wanted forl ,;;;;;;;;;;m;m;;;;;;;;;;m;;I Personnel OHice ()pen
7amto9pm-7days telephcmeo work from their bom~s for Newport-Costa
Mesa Blue Book directory.
Full or part time. ApPly in
penon Tuesday al J PM
Luskey Bros. Co. Jnc. 779 W.
19th St, Room K, Costa
M•"
Aui1t1nt
Teletype Of)t!r•tor
Diversilitd duties, broker-
age experience preferred.
Starting salary $375-.$400.
Goodbody & Company
LAGUNA BEACH
Call for appointment
MRS. KIRNER -494-8003
EJ<PERIENCED Automotive
service cuh.ie:r and relief
PBX. Contact Mn. B e 11
842-661.I . Wil&on Ford Sales,
18255 Beach BJvd., Hun-
tin&tOn Beach.
LEGAL SECRETARY
Experienced shorl hand &
WM executive. Start ;400.
Call 67>1530
ASSEMBLER
SARGENT-
FLETCHER
9400 Flair Drive
El r.tonte, Cali!.
12131 mnn «3-nn
Small parts assembly. F\lll An equal opportunity
time. Only those rcliabll' & e-mployer
1teady need apply. Refer-<-----------<
ence required. 64& 1522 or ....-
ACCOUNTS ret:eivable
bkkpr, experienced, able to
operate Burroughs JJ65 da111.
processing machine &
perform AIR analysis. Xlnt
salary and fringe benefil4.
Write Box M-180 Daily Pilot.
MARRIED WOMEN
Fllll or p/time ~'Ork, earn
S50. per Wet-t' or more. Car
ntt. No colltttlng. No
delivery and no canvaMina:.
Olli Mrs. Todaro 893-91-42
Single Young
Woman
International Firm now 11.c·
cepting applications for am·
bitiou! YoUfig woman 10
J>i'rti cipale in Brand ldcn-
lification project. Musi be
neat appearing. personable,
tnjoy deaJing with the pub-
lic and free to travel one
Wl't'k per month.
Cashier Experienced
WalUch Music City -Ticktt -llOUSEKEE:PER • Live out.
dept. P/time with !IOme hill 5 days wk for worl(lng
time. So. Coast Plaza, C.M. PATt:nts of 2 elem achl
$125. f)t!r wk salary
after brief training pro-
gram. l'or appolntmen! call
539-1183 9 Am to 2 pm.
MARRIED Women _ tull or rhldm. F .V. Plea.se> call afl l o--c-~~~~---
part time. Earn $S0 wk. Car 6 pm wk nitf's. 968-.1026 Applicant Fef' Positioos
N -'I · WOf.iAN To work in donut ExeC\Jtive SttrM.ary. Fine nee. o <.vi ectmg, n o
delivery, no canvaa&ini. Shop Apply in perscm no quality posi!ioo, C.M. Loc:11.·
SJS-7612 phonf' cal.ls please. \vin-Uon. Pleasant co~enial 1ur-
chelrs Donut Shop. 29-17 roundinp. $500.
RABYSITJ'ER, My home 5 ltarbor Blvd., Cosla MeAa. Cosl Orek. Industrial exp.
days a wk. Own trans. l LV RN . req'd. S450.
girls ~e 6 & 5. Call aft 6 . or opening., tor_ 2 Accounting Clerk to lull
PM 642-9793 shills, 3-11:30 PM. 2 1h1lta charge bookkeeper Exp,
WIDOWER M-eks mature l!.?:;JO AM: a wk., or ~ay bkkpg. background. $500.
hskpr. Live-in. car~ 2 work" i~ll Ume all 3 shifts Keypunt"h Operator. Rcm-
children 3 & 9 yri. Costa alternating. Newport Harbor ington Rand $350.
Mesa area. 540-2197 C 0 n v_a If' s c en l Home Stenographer • General Of.
BABYSITT'ER nt't'ded by 54&-776!"> lice. lnsurance office rxp.
teacher: 1 . ch i Id ; lt. DENTAL ASSISTANT req'd. S450, Over 25. Some fronl desk ex· Also l'tt Paid Positions hGusekttping. Mu!t have ov.-n trans. 6.\2--4{ir.l J>!'rience preftrrel. Musi HEBER.GER PERSONNEL
have more than one year ex-AGElNCY
646-fl2-41 H OUSE:KEEPER, Babysit· prience in dental office. 902 w. 17th C.M.
ter. 1'.Jature, Live in. Pri 4.94--71.15 aftr 4::!0
•m. * 9&S-4219 *
SPANISH &peakini; babysit-
ter. Live in, light housework
& cookinJ;:. 5 ch1ldM'n. Stan-
ton 11 l 827-3073 111! 6
BABYSITrER. my homr, 1
pre-schl., 1 kindrrgartrner.
1 To'! day~ wk.: nr. F.\li~ &
P.1agnolia, r.v. 962-976.">
Application• Being
TAKEN
FULL ., PART TIME
EMPLOYMENT
CHURCH Stenographer. full
lime. Excellent typist. Some
shorthand desirablr. Write
P. 0. &:>x 1536, Newporl
JMa.rh. Ptrmanenl only
. . no studenls \VAl,RESS. Experienced, Liberal vacation pay. Meril
m11ture. l ;»-8 p.m. 6 days. . 1 d' Suoday off. Apply in person r~ses, emp oyet 1scounl!,
llA :\.1BURGER HENRY five da y week. Apply i\1on·
1135 Placentia. Cns111 Me111
BABYSITrER, maturr. + HOUSEKEEPER. Jt(i. rook
lite housekr,.pin1:. 0 w n fot eldl'rly eouple, I.lie
day, WPdnelday, Thul'!lday
11nd Friday, 9:30 to 4:00.
f. W. Woolworth
SHRETARY
Heavy dictation, good shorl·
hand &nd typing skills. Ex-
rellcnt benefits and work-
ing conditions.
Apply, Mr. Brown
EXPLORER
MOTORHOME CORP.
4000 Co1mpus Or.
Nitwport Be1ch
546.3300
• Commercial
Tellet
Exe!:Dent opportunity!
APPLY IN PERSON
ht National Bank
of Orange County
1650 Ad1ms
Costa Mesa
An equal opportunity
employer
EXPERT.EN CED
PART TI!o.fE
PROOF COMMERCIAL
TELLER
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK
4525 M acArthur Blvd.
N1wport Beach
540-«24
An equal opportunit)'
employer
Brunch Waitress
Sunday only 4 hours.
AJ;:r '.'1 or nvrr, ~izr 11 nr
undrr. Exprrlt'nce prefC'rr-
l'd. Apply In person after
l p.m.
FIVE CROWNS
RESTAURANT
3!KJ1 E. Coasr Hwy
Corona dt'l Mar
No Phone calls please
transp. Costa Mesa. 61:;..(}429 nu rsin.1: duties. Good aa!ar·y. 2300 Harbor Blvd. r---------
a.11 5 PM. Ph. 673-~:;'.!R COSTA MESA
SALESJ.....\DY WANTF:D. toy WOMEN-=P~/~T--w-/7,-,-,. ----------1
store, Harbor S h o pp i n 1: }'ullrrtl\f' l-l8. S2 hr guar.
CenttT: over :ti. :?1>7032 Lynne Brown S ~ 0-111 J '!, HOSTESS
Ask !or ~tr. Pol!OC'k "42-769'1 AJ;:e ovt'r 21. exprritnr e ~R=E=CEPTl==o~N~t~s=T~.~sTEN=~o-1 n =~,~,L~o-,-,.-,-,-3-ocl>oo--I -,-,-e.' pref!!~. si'l.e 12 or 1~.~.
Construction offire. ~ty homP. Own trans. Nr Apply After .f p.m. to MR. * 642-3430 * Adllm~ Ii Magnolia, llB. ONDY1<f: FIVE CROWNS ILITE OOusekttping for ~-&12.1
"d.'f" "dy. Li'' '"· S'"" 't~H RESTAURANT 3 ...., " u~ n '-'' ER'S he]pf'r, hsk~. !;v. ~"" mo. 613--0130 1 .W'Vl E. Coast Hwy n. Musi bP honest , rehablt. Corona rirl M11r
HOUSEWIVES· EARN Room, board ~ &fJA.ry . No phorle call! plr&!M!
$.l).$40 wk. spa."' timf'. 54~
H.B. ll"t'll.. 540-1932 FJl ia llOUSE1''1fE -Ad, pt
AfOTEL Maid, exptr\eneed wlha.nds !O work in Cheer.e
pttf., incl weri<enda. Apply stort. Hrs pt-time-n"xible
in perD'l 221'.S Harbor. C.r.t. Weslel1lf PJua 642--097'2
HOUSEKEEPER wanted for f\t011tER'S hclfl('t. hsk&, liv·
widow. live in, drive. own in. I hA."Pf.)' 14 mo. old.
8R. It BA. Re.fl rtq, 4~ Ftoom. board, It ul11 ry . ~S.3880.
Dentel Office Men19er W'A.111\f:S.C\ • ro:ra ve.yard and Single. Exp. 25-45. ,,. I * 5*-3000 * r,. .. ,,. . Apply in prr~on.
Col\11.~" 0,fftl' Shop
GIRL FRIDAY
Pan rimf'. Somt t lfPt"rl-
'"nt:e requirt'd. 60 w,p.m,
l"lectrlc t.Y?f'Wl"ltf'r, 10.
kc)' adder, good wltb fia-
Un!S. N I" fl I appe11rin$t.
Srnd lettpr wilh eXJ)f'rl-
'"nCI" In H.M.I'., P . 0 .
8oJI 211~. Ntwpor1 Brilch HEALTHY Housdteoeper, live 562 \~'. 191h St. ('.M.
ln., no drinker. For fUrthu BABYSl'ITER bet. hrt 4.10 PART TIME lnll>. Call 5'0-1331 1..::=..;;;;;..;,.,;..,.;...=--I PM V1t.. Bf'•ch Blvd. &: RESTAURANT WORK
MOTD.. MAIDS Slattt, H.B. 8'17-68'17 Ctne.ral du ties. Apply ln pPr·
S dl,)'J. No Sat or Sutt MATllRE. ctpable. wom1.11 to aon Mly. Dt:'li Shtf Delk: ... --=~*~m.<SlS='-==*~---1 eatt for .m. ritl week d1Js. ttuen re1taW'aft!. J0039
DON'T JUST WISll tor~ Refs. Stan Seipt. ~&-0396 Adams Ave. 1t Brookhurst.
\biDtJ to fl.u'lllM J'OUI' borne M~'n.JflE. capable ~..n lo 11·8·
.••• ftnd rrut bcil>'t 11 ~ ft1'f tor mt. irU1 wttll d11ya. liCOitlNNii""o;;••;;•;;cn•n•;-;•o;tl>oo;;
41.Y'• a •iM&d Adlo Rm. St.111 8'$1. 5'0-0.l96 DAn..Y P1l.Of WANT ADS!
'
HOSTESS
Over 21
Apply in Person
9 .5 p.m.
REUBEN E. LEE
151 E. Co••t Highway
Newport 6e1ch
SECRETARY STENO
Exp lnlclllgcnl st'Cl'etaey to
handle multiple responsibili-
ties in new am tech Co. S.:nd
resume or call Ptripher'-1
Data. Machinrs Inc. 3822
Campus Dr., N.B. !Jl.222-t
Attn Mr. Swar1~.
An f'.qual Opp'ty Employrr
Marshall
Cornnunications
2230 S. Anne St.
Santa Ana, Calif.
540.2820
An equal opportunity
employer
J.C. Penney Co.
fashion Island
Newport &ach
Nttd•
PART TIME
SALESLADIES
Housewive1 .nd Mothers
Can you spare a rew hours
each day and add to the
falltily income at the same
time? Scheduals conveni·
ent !or you, mornings, ah-
ernoons. evenings or combi-
nations of all. Work in a
fun store under lhl' finest
of conditions and top !tlPtr·
vision.
Apply in person
Penney's Fashion Island
9:JO a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Monday 1hru Friday
All 1tudent positions fill~
Equal opportunity employer
R.N. 3.1 1 & 11.7
Part Time
AIDES
Experience preferred
7.3 and 11·7
Park Lido
Convalescent HospitaJ
1445 Superior
N ~wpot1 B~ach 642-2·110
WAITRESSES
21 or over
Experit'nced only!
Apply in Person
SURF & SIRLOIN
5930 P•c. Csf. Hwy.
Newport Beach
CASHIER-TYPIST
Fireside Thrift Co. has an
opening in our new Cosla
Me!it off.iei!. This is an ex-
rellf'nt opport. for !he right
girl wbo wants to move up.
Must have min. 1 yr finl'lnc~
company exper. Apply 1819
N. Main. Sanh1 Ana .
Telephone Girls
$100 WEEK
EXJ)('rienced or not • full
or par! time. Apply !I lo
4. JjOO Adam!, suile 303.
Costs. Mesa.
i\1 E 0 IC AL Recept.-sect'y
4 1~ Days a week . Send hand
wri11cn resume, incl. age,
phone number. m 11 r i I al
status, prtvioua e:<per. lo:
1617 \Vestcliff Dr. Suite 203.
A. NeRport Beach
.. REAL FSI'ATE SALES *
If you are new to the RE pro-
fession and art' willing to
IH.m as you eiU"I\ our lovt'iy
new office in San Oemenle
might just be the answf'.r.
for confidential intrrview
t"Ol\lllcl Shari K o p p e I.
492-5J.10
•
M'R. BROWN S40-21 I I
Newport N1tional Senk
Jobs-Men, Wom. 7500
NEW Motel now interviewing
maids: desk clerk & relief
clerk, some exper., good at
rigurea, men pre!erred. Men
tor laundry & grounds
Namesl A
1$7 Sinij;er. complete with
walnut cablntt! Divortt ac-
tion forced ucrlficf:. Auto,
d:·ma. 1oui:b.Q.maric. but-
D t • D ton hole f)(lft:t hems, OVl'I'• ecora or s ream '"'" wt. " •tta<"mm ...
AAUm(' 13.•i mo. or $37.9!1
Home is on Display io='= ..... ~:-"=.....,,='==
Muslc•I Inst. 1125
mainc:. Write, giving phone 0 $100 000 d number to P.O. Box 2129. Ver ELECTRIC gU.ita.r, coil ear • $45; ampWier $25. Botb A-1 LagiMJa Hills, or call 714 :
SURFBOARD 9'8" Jaco\i • ."3
ma.hog stringers. maha&'1.ti.\
block, simi·speed Ska(. 'XWt
conct. 830-1954 ~ ... • .. :
SURFBOARD 9'11°' ' ·.•
•'Jacka" Excellent ~
$50. S4s'.-J01-4 •• •. :
SURFBOARD, 8'4", JO e
Quigi. ·~-•
• 837-2007 * ... :
NEW Surfboard 9'6'' wet .a!
a. conlrst retails for S'.I29.~
will sell for $80. 847-3J6f_ RJ<>-2550, Mn. Hardrn WOrth 0f oondltion. "6-4355 * ACCORDIAN * Pianos & o:i1ns 1130 Mi1cell1neou1 co.. •m•u .,. .. 1 pl•Y" ,., Spanish & ----~----
"'•· 0o •I•"'""''· ..,.. • PIANO SALE e
rhythm &: blues. Male or fe· Mediterran-Final Swnmer Clearance! male. For immediate wori<. All pianos prked to sell now!
ITI4l ~2Qll ean furn. to r.tendelssohn Grand •.• , $645
OPENl.NGS for young. clean Estey Grand .......... S795
cut, bud working, exper. ChOOSe from. Haines Grand .......... $795
hair dresaers. Pref. w/ Brambach Grand .. ., .. S895
following. Hair Hun I er s Kimball Grand ..••• ,,, $895
N.B. 6#-l<M 104 Moo ·F". (EXAMPLE) Wu•llt,,<Spu"t ... •• ·· · 1395
RELIAB LE co u 'PI e to Knabe Console •....••• $596
manage 15 unit apt. house. t.lany more to choose from
No pet.s _ E."<p. pref. Call Ite ms IS follows : Gor-Bank terms -no payment
53&-3634 for appt. 8 ft t ·it till October. geous . cus om qui . COAST MUSIC ADULT Couple, a:Kistant ed sof!. with separate 839 1 c managers: able to do mainl. l Newport B vd., .M.
& cleaning. 2 BR. 2 ba. Apt. loose pillows with heavy 646-0'171
=fo::'=":::~::''::'='·:: .... ::::=u;::-=':::::::: I k trun· d d PIANO SALE
Agenci••._.M._~· 7550
ARGUS
Work Near Hom•
Bookkeeper .......... t'tl $450
PBX Oper .......... to $400
Wa.Jtress ............ $1.65 hr
oa ecor an r.IONTIIS-END O..EARANCE
matching chair 3 match· GRANDS * * SPINETS ' * * * *WAS NOW oak occasional tables. (2) fr Prov gr S1395 S1005
., Sohmer wa.J gr S1600 S\345 58 tan decorator lamps, Knabe 1vx gr S'?595 Sl875
hanging chain s w a g Wurlitzer sp $699 S499,
Kimbal e-0ns S895 $."175
lamps in wrought iron, Studio upr S545 SJ95
• 80 New & Used Sale Pianos an 8·piece king size mas· Gould Music Company
Maint foreman ••..•... l600
ARGUS EMPLOYMENT
CONSULTANTS AGENCY
'204~ WetcliH, N.B. S48-779S
1624 E. 17th St., S.A. 547-6.136 ter bedroom suite in pe-
can paneled mediter-School1-ln1truction 7600
2015 N. Main. S.A. 547-0681
Season Sale!
If you ire
rHnfering the world
of Business ....
CONFIDENCE through COt\oJ-
PETENCE is YoUr key lo
a successful and lucrative
career. This can ~ achiev-
Nl quickly and eUl'Ctively.
Let UJ show you how.
Nona Hollman
Newport
School of Business
83 3 Dover Or., N.B.
646-0153
SCHOOL Otildren's vacation
rates. Chilcoat 10 · Leason
Typing School. :>i8-2859. l7J
Del Mar. c.M. ----Learn To Be A Florist
• 54.').9'156 •
ranean style with top Fall shipments of Baldwin
Prano! &: Organs on lhe quality 15 yr. warranty way. Our floor & discon
king size mattress & box models must go. Prices
slashed! Doesn't it make
springs. Spanish decor sense to shop us before you
d . . l l l A buy? 1n1ng se 'e c., e c. ny WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO
piece can be purchased 1801 Newport, C.M .. 642-8484
individually. Drop by Orange Co's ~argest Ont-Stop Music Store
and 5ee our selection o{ Wurlitzer pianos & organs.
Fischer. Kanabe pianos,
top qu ality Spanish and Player pianos, reblt, guar.,
Mediterranean furni·
tu r e. Fantastically
priced!!
Grands.
WALLICl-IS.MANNING'S
MUSIC CITY
3·100 So. Bristol
Costa Meaa * 540.1165
Complete houseful FREE TO YOU
So
./ BLONDE f.lo . Beagle & Ter·
MERCHANDISE FOR $152 0 ricr female. Had 1 sti.:it
_S_A_L_E_A_N_D_T_R_A_D_E_ t •n ,.,, , . • . . • . . Very cute & J 0 v a b 1 e :
Furniture 8000 .:;.is-2401 8/26
3 PCE aecl'l S75. 2 uphol
livnn chrs $25. N . Rnd.
tble 40" S25. misc. 545·9639
eves.
CASH -cash lor tum., appl.,
TV's, antiques, glasswa.rt,
tools, misc. HousetLll or one
item. 646-1579
PECAN Dining Table 44"
round J12" leaves, 4 blue
upOOI chn:. Contemp. Sac.
Sli5.00 Co!t ;600.00 548-:?716
WALNUT dining table, six
ehairs. J lt'aves + custom
pads $.275. 642-0568
FURNITURE By Interior
Decorttor. Make offer. Pri-
vate J>8rfY. 962-0llEi
Office Equipment 1011
!'OR Sale A.B. Dick table
model ~20 offset duplic::atnr,
2 yrs old. Good cond. $700.
Contact Mis& Cllristens<"n ,.,....,.
8022
MU ST COC-0-POO. beautiful black
& white markini::s. 9 mo. SACRIFICE! ::,~/~;_:; Adull fan>ily
4 DARLrNG Toy Collies·
Shpeherd pups. l'emales. 4
S 6 9 8 00 wk•. old. 1644 La brad" D<. FOR C.M. ""
BROWN It wht. 5 mo puppy ONLY Red Hill & Edinger -nr El
Any piece can be pur·
ch1sed individually.
Terms Available
Newcomen
to California
Credit Approved
Immediately
We carry our
own accounts ,,,,)
Furniture
ONLY AT
Toro , Aug. 20th
64&-9208 8126
4 LOVABLE Tiger strrped
kittens. 6 wks. Mom pure
hr('(! Siamese 633·'79U Bf1
5 p.m. 8/27
THREE Guinea Pigs. P.1om &
3 bablt-f'. Long hair, various
colo ra . fr i endl y.
962-1634 8/'!1
Cl.JTE 6 week old kiHeJ'ls.
Calico mother. Aftrrnoon~.
642-1323 Eves. 5-1J..n86
rEMALE Kil!('flS 2 mo!.
Blue -grey Persi11n .
646-7349 8/26
MALE Puppy -Cockapoo 8
wks, -has had e:hnla.
~ 811(,
2 W ASlflNG maehines. Need
w()l>k. 186 Dtl Mar Ave,
Cmlta ~trsa
rREE Young cats. Xlnl f'<'I.\. eau ~o tc1.:'6
1 B'' Newport Blvd. ',.,:::;:P~,:,"' 10 ~~
11 Harbor Blvd. 1'\10 male rl.bbHs wl <'&.ge1
& I Lg dos; hOuSt . •56--842'1
SWIMMING POOL...::
18 Ft Pool, Filter, SIU'lti
Skimmer, Maintenanet",.&it
FREE Ground Pad. . '"· $1 .. 9.81 ~ •
SECARO POOL ·.
l2J S. Main, Oran&•
532-1992
Put yourselt in our f'•c~
Harbor Blvd D-1 Theatrt
3700 McFadden, S.A.: ,.'
SWAP ME£T· -· Starts Aug 17 ,. , ..
S31-1272aft7 -·::
COLOR TV. Packard-'E!.I'
walnut console. remote; ~C:
cond. $250. Original ~
tings $125 {appr. $41JIQ1
Ladies qual. clothing. -1.ilti
new, $1 10 $5., szs. t ·-.8;
8-10. Mesa Verde.~~ ; * AUCTION '*': U you will sell or ooy· ,
give Windy a try -:.;• ~
Auctions Friday 7: JO·p.ttt •
Windy's Auction Bai:R:
Behind Tony·, Bldg. Mitri:
2075% NeWJ)'Jrt. CM ~
ONE Set of Box Spb.iw,
Sl0.00. Kitchen ®or .. ·«: ft.,
71,~ inches long by 29 inl'ties
wide, S5.00. Table modet•.'I'V.
doesn't work/ good ·foll
parl~, $5.00. ' ..
AM/rr.1 Radb-Stert'O tom.
bin,, l1 M Camera,.: am:
projector: lawn rnmw:•-..+.
catcher: maple desk: pert!
record player, rte. 642~.
834 w. Wilson, cr.t • •
Star Car 1rack Atlas ·'5ij!'.tt
includes power rpackll, ttin.
ll'ollcrs, 4 cars, 180 dC~
bank walJ with extra wl&:
shoulders. Well worth· 4"15:
49:>-5556 "·. ~. :
KIRBY vacuum cleaner~:'i:
altachmcnt1. Take oV'ti-
smalJ payments or $5f.:!O
cash. Credit dept. h'"E s-nllS
ALU!\.11N. patio umbrella..'.~
round table both S35;' · 4~
l'l't'nch doors S4, wall ·~
& faucets S."i. ~99-4111 ' ·.,
68 SOLID s1a!e stereo" con·;
sole. Diamond stylus, ., ~ spcro. S79. n weekly, ·n~
home trial. 3J0..-1212 ~ ... -· .
YOUNG Mynah hirci, ~J.
ning 10 talk: large ca~;
150.49-1-791 7 .• ..
UPHOLSTERING • $79.liJ, 2
pc. (European crattiq,inl'
free es1, del, pickup, 21!,
Main, H.B "Bemy" 536-6405 :
BUY YOUR FIREWOOD-.'.
NOW & SAVE?!•~;'.
S35 a CORD. 541)..9@-!: ;
6' GLASS ShJ.Wca.s~·~ wii Ii~. A beauty at onlS' ~
888 W. 19th. C.l\f. :~
Misc. Wanted 16'f01
WANT E;lj
WE need quality (no;.~
rlcaae) -Furnitur .. , colj;
TV·s. J:lcreo!, applian,
tool~ &: otficr equipment. ;
TOP CA SH IN 30 Mln'Dit•'-'' ..,..
531.1ru • ~ ? ,
WANT To buy aluntin~
paUo cover AT LEAS't. .. ,9
12. Mi.ast be in good
d!!ioo Md r ra 50 nab 1~
54!)...-0674 ' • i::
VERTICAL dble door C"OmGj
rr.fr\g. frrricr ·AIM letttJ
sized f1!11 eablnt'l • top co~
G4S.82'.E Eves ~
l c • ::1C : ·-:~: r1
.... ·--
and LMSTOCK nANSPORTATION TRANSl'ORTATION TRANSPORTATION
f ~ .. 1125 ~M Sid loots 9030 Mini Ilk" 9275 lmpo{fad A•loa . ffOd
:.1 -~-------1 A Trvo Wlnnarl BRl<;!l' • Slral1m • HP KARMANN GHIA.
• •
TRANSPORTATION
DUSH Setter, I tnO oad CUSTOM. BUU.T Tbunlkt-motor ••I Fax tram t .
I <llalo> ,..._,All ...... bird :ronnua m Th!. 23' c .. m1 1..-dirt. llO . '64 GHIA '66 SPITFIRE '83 O<XJ> vw.,.,....,. ~O tha.n •v lhl $12$. &ll fibtrsl .. V-bottom :i:: '1M2tt 1'riunUlb nbtr., radio, hut· cv. Nd 'down. 0 A..C
_ T Daoe "1P· Lint I> bu.!'.:":;:..,..'"°" SAF· llESA ~lKES 5 .li 11P Cob ,,,. ydlow W!IJI hlld! u, wlrt ~J =" oa1t 131 per mo.
«¥d. 1ntun11Hon1J. cbam-=' m BOAT aun.T. tt'• ::1:.!.r c .,: ~ top a: villYl int~. "Lib GI l . ·a vw &tux •. Don't mlM jiliit. 1'1.._ • t t I roulh watar telted &l'ld , • • new" 100'.li mechanical.,.....,. fM fmi4· um ant. No down! OAC
.,,..,.Im. -wtlJI a ll<!lttlq --Clea' · __ nncy. ~ --· ~ ·~· .• , ·-~ ....-oalt 13.l ........ I Adontbl• Mhtl • dacNltunda ~· • • • -~ ~ • -• IC-4la
: AKC O>omplool ttodl. 1... Mro Marlnt. CNllea al '5. 11 HONDO lllO-C Bnnd nn, 0 ~ 1.rt'ORTS 'IT VW Dilii;;;, Paa lfllt..,. t ~ {~ Nleut1> All at the utru tnc1. a/1 onlJ tlO ml. recorded oo ~ ·
; MALE AKC silver toy poodle radio, 4 speUtr lteteo A: .. IPffdometer cott OYU '400. ! 0 1-* HUbor, C.M. 8*m =~ •.:.~? dowo$16.!IJ OJ;;;
1lrbHJ CUJtom trailer. Cott w I 1dd. aec:H10l1t1, wUl ~ ~ --·• ~
I ' moo. ..... • ....-. .... 112.<m. Owntt -.... '"' AOO.' °"""' by ..... Ill· '61 Triumph .. ,,-,...,,-,,,..,=--.,----= ; t15:. 6t2-0383 bHt offer takea .t tt'1 nMJ'ly one week who were IJ'OW)d.. .. ~. ~J 11. 3 'fl VW Xtra me. car. SM ~ SCOTTY pupc for sale, new. 642-4321, Ext. 240 DQ11; ed. M•Y bt tttn at 48.!l "•' , , .L~... dwn OAC. P'Ymtt $13 W. t A.lt:.C. retlatered. ( 71 f ) 544·1742 Evening! and Wffk· GorMm DJ, Caran. deJ N~ P*lJ!t!fd, IVUlll nznnb1C Dlr. fG..M15 t 492-1842 ends. Maf. CCameO Shortt) S4f~ -'7S.-11tt condition. Wire whetle, dlr, '80 VW 'W1th 'f3 truL A·l
\ ~· female Sctmiluzer puPI V~CATION Special! '65 HONDA 3m, Dftam _ $300 1t7W HAlflot ILVD. .e»n·flouice Pl't¥&te puQ'. cartd. $52.5 PrtY pty
I
( :..;.U;C rea. F.an cropped. All 1966 Cris C'rt.ft lT speed boat "2.eiftT COST A MllA ... dth OU. $'"3 call 541-5.i. aft • p'm
, ~· 675-l251 65 VW aunroot Atk $1,001 DI Del Mar, COit.a Mtu. 1965 Hardtop AM I FM '86 TRIUMPH Spltftre N'JC 1.95'1 VW. Rum 15Dt. Xlnt
: WDMARANER pup p 1e 1 • Clev V8 enr. inboard • .t) 1987 TRIUMPH 650 Bon-Many Extras! Top condl Ir, new tiret, batterr, mill-trmsporttt\On.
' ARC. WW be 6 wks 8/5. 5 hn. oripna.1_ ~ radio -Ill neville 2,1'.XX> ml. Bnt otttt Must Sell! $13$. ~2321 Ger. HI', _conYtrt. top, kin-~ * ftt..25TI *
•ftfatles, 3 males. 842-5111' leather mt. Ski bar mounted taket. 615--lfm ~•• 675-249'2 eves. DNU. Exttl. OODd. $1S:O. ,95 VW 1 Q u • re b 1 et
n;r,:; in engine -plus bred new 548-9537
..... ""'"''· ....... 115. 6 Colem11n oampmg outfit 1968120 cc Honda Scnmbl" MERCEDES BENZ --------blaupuNrt AM/FM ndlo, ~,old, m:.!~!_,roken Oasis terit _ 3 way COll'V. with helmet I bubble $t25. --------IDo-l2l5 at U M'1f9
~u., ""''" -2 gal"""" m. "'-1,-======= YOLKSW ACWEN 3 burner camp stove -~ Fox Terrier Pups
champ. •tock. Sbota.
, ~ : TERMS. 642-9939 ··---------. . ···:
: :r:R.ANSPORTATION ' . : 8.).rt • Y1cht1 9000
lantmi 300 watta - 2 1ltep-Motorcycl• 9300
Ina: ba~ -~ for $.1295.00 '65 HONDA .250c1: Scrambler, '61 VWI
100 % Mancina: 0 · ~ · C • low mileage. E:xceL coo-
67"'1<7'p,ivot• ptrty> "'""" 1eo. ,.,_,,,, $199 DOWN 16' REBEL aki boat w/tra.ll-l=========c
..-• """ Excollont <U>d! jlyto Sarvlco 36 AT $60.50
ME Btlanco on 1964 6'73,.3900 & Parts 9400 OR OUR
.-Oweu1 30' Cabin Cruiser LATE '67 GLASSPAR , '61 Mercede1
Y""'· Twm 220 H.P. vs "" M•re eru""' 120 ..... • '· """'' s,,..ow., wld• 190 SL YW Tod1y Plan i!.ngines , sleepe 6, solid tnill!I'. 642-5333 aft. s PM. tread llret. Over % tread Thol'OUghly reconditioned.
mohog. doubl• -bot· "::~~~:==~~l~'"'~·~"'°~·,;960-~1589~=== Exoellont roo><litio~.Db', $199 DOWN r tom & •ide!, All trllk <IKk· Marine Equip, 9035 can llnara private party.
VOLVO
'61 VOLVO
Grr OU!t IZADEltSll!P
SAVINGS BE1'0llE
YOU BUY!!!
GI~
11!11 Jlon,.i C.ll. ·-inf; '"'' loadod. Only 200 ~;;;;;~~';:;;,"i:;;;;;IIT!!ra~ll~ar~,~T~r!a•~a~l -~9~4~25! I 1100 de1', """· <>l-9773 36 AT $44.02
)'IO:un. Call Roa:er Miller EVINRUDE 'l'5 $600. IAblter ====""~=== Inc. l'rtlll. ah' vf!rtl, beat.tr, ·-Wa-f70D Sf&;..1200 skill $350. Fathometer $395. 1968 14' NORTJJWESr Little MG ic~..:;;.::.-'""==-_;.....;..
I 675-7152 OR 3-4370 Dipper. See • Pat or Ernie ddrolta. Low .. ta, vinyl 1 •
, l~' ~ PLYWOOD GI 1 ••,I =========I at FairviAO Enco Service, int. 24 monthll, WE PAY ' ,.__,,, =1!164 ·~-~ '68 MG >l,OCQ Mlle Warn.n,...· I '"=·= ' -ou~u, Boat Slip Moori"I 9036 Fah-l Falm•w CM • ~
..... " ...... Xlnt """"· -YEAR END T&M TOP DO'LLAR ; , .. ricon tnil.,, m"'1 ,.. BAU!OA SUp for <O' boall===== I Cl ·
t ~~·~~ Enti" ouUit :~ ~6~R = pork-Trucka ¥500 eara nee MOTORS
! At!CUST SPECIAL! Haul '67 %. TON Camper Special AND FOR
:; .. , P'ml jot. • bo•l prioo Boat-Yacht <ltov. w I 8\;' ov"h"d DEMO SALE G"""' G""" B!Td. """'" USED CARS • Charter• 9039 camper 16,000 act. mi'•· m..r:.as1 or ~2284 ~ on the ••ter front. I ---------1 i NEWPORTDRYDOCKS BLUEWATERCHARTERS ,_l2950 __ . ..,._ ... ____ SEE US TODAY! ,65 YW tOttua' IUNRNn
;: "orl tlie Bl.y at 20tb 27'-40' U-Drive Skip. Avail '66 CHEV.% Ton pick-up. 8' Gltull LllDlA· nw '"'' ""' ,· • 675-lSffi • Day/wk. 64&-900'.l 24 hrs. Bed, stand. trans. $1500 Or
. ;~EEL cabin cruiaer . ~st offer 54>3003
-.... ""'· >;' ""' loat-Yacht c•uPERS 9520 IHPORTS
Squareback. Fully f'qU!p'd +
radlo. 100% mechanical war.
nt( '. needs ena. & 90me Ch1rters 9039 "'"' -
• ware $5{XI. 25' c:.'hrh
nncy.
t cabin cruiStt, clean IT'S SMARTER 1966 Harbor, C..M. M&-9303 '""). 960-1508 TO CHARTER MG
TIRED OF APT LlVING! Cal 25 • Rawson 30 • Alben?
; Try 35' P\lwer boat tor I. 3S • Boonty 40 • Newporter
' -.~e 5 ....... t.... .... __ lcfd to ketch • Mariner '° · : ~~ Le~·. 1 a 1 e Scboonen: • 27' Fairliner • 30'
: 1fW:6,.3194 Trojan• 38' Spt l'lsbtt •DU·
SalM, Service, Parts
Complete new MG inventor)'
See the new Auatin America
Here Now! ,· rnel"Olll otheni.
: !;,ii', SPANKER clau "'°' CALIFORNIA CRUISES
' witb trlr, run canvu cmer, 20 years in Newpon
: '•'IJill. All Uk•""'· 11750· Emle Minney 54M191
Ntwport Imports Ltd. 14,..., _ 67,.1191
3lOO W. Coast Hwy. 1971 HAltlOR ILVD.
~-~ Newport Beach COIT A MllA , XlN'rJ e CHARTER nrE FlNEST
1 MSR.C. JS~B 8;8'}·1 r~111:'; New W Ketch
642-Nli 544).1764 1---'o=c'i-=~--
Authoriud MG Oealtt 1961 VW
' 673-2517 • ~2400 • lneeds work) $1!i0. 644-1141.
1$1 MGA S4SO sun roof, r /h.. S815.
2513 So. Olive T&M MOTORS : 614.2158
: wfJKI 1 ftlh, Juat rtnnilh-
: '"-" Jolmaan 35 hp, trlr,
: ~. 1ltl1, aDdl1r etc. $400 ::~
; S'OORAGE, Trailen, bolt.I,
• ,A,e.tt. fl.50 per/mo. Work
l I ~ct, 642-2901 I: 548-3261. '. • ' {)UTB()ARD w/JA. HP.
: and trailer S2:50. or·~ o/.-: :i..:-
Mo~ila Ho-9200 D•· n B-las 9525 •·-An ca1i1 _,,,,, • VW & Ponebo
----"------a "•• =~~=·'~-'-· ~~·--1 80Bl GAROEN GROVE BL.
19% x 45 ft. Double Wide WANTED co-driver, for La-1967 MGB M!llt WI, ltavin1 GAR.OEN GROVE
Roadllner set Up in adult Pu race with • JM!IOL county call 5'8-40f0 192.555 I or 534-2214
parll:. Ready to move in. * oo..-0350 * ........ vw -~ .... IDt.
.... ~ ol ••• OPEL ....,.;11 , ·~. tt ra-Ind ~·1enl ... MYERS Manx 40 hp. May dio & be1ter. n3!15.
co ti ditionlna:': dishwuber except !ta.des nm. '6' OPEL REKORD qiort T&M MOTORS ~. carport, patio D11.y1 673-2m0 Speclallzlna: • VW I Pot"ICbe awnlngl , skirting, n e w coupe Direct import. Llke
carpet lined dn.PH Serial VW DUNE BUGGY new. Owner 67>3959 8081 GARDEN GJtOVE BL.
' ' $650 ----···---·-GARDEN GROVE ~ "!':i· ':~~ 67'-"'1 PORSCHE 192.5551 .. 534-2214
Olaplnan Mobile Inc. ========:I~--------'6' VW 2 Dr. 1300 DehlXe. Lo
53l-8ST1. Imported Autot 9600 PORS(ff(S milqe. Very ch!an. Muat
i • 30' TRAILffi, cabana, lg. • C!....o Calh t<r Import• 91.'U immediately. $1300. Prl : ~ER 24 w I c b o Ice ..,,..,. party 963-1039
il""======= : Sailboats 9010
1 Newport Moorlna;. Full race, broth. Some f\lrn. Sl,200. Key We pay more for any import ·66 912 4 Spet'ld · ~ tt $t800 at office, Orange Coast regardless of year, make '63 super 99 VW enitner. Steady in atodl:.
· tlth, ~~ :n:. $70: Bl~~r ~· 16M Whittier or coodition. Try us h0efore 'M super 90 ~ CCCC -~· ~ bbpp • Uli.
7 •w, .....,.... YoU 1ell. ELM R E '66 912 S Speed. ~ • -· ""' • $156. ""==~~~~-,--I MUST SeU 1 Br. Mobile lt10'l'ORS, 15300 Beach Blvd. ~ &o.al50, MS.mu !':vfl.
)Q' .. FBGLS Delta. diz'lih)I. Home. Cl'pts, drap!B. Adult Westmlnrter. B94--3322. '6' VW Mwt •et. Be1utiM
.-aacrm I ail•, Floltatlon ..... ~·~· 84~7~-59'l4~~~==cl~wiSi~ll;!EiAJL[y I 0 d crnn $50. doW?I 0 Ac
: ~·~""" to ...,.. ~OTDR HOMES 9215 _A_U_S_TI_N_H_E_A_LEY__ l,. OJ' :;','~~" only Ill "' mo.
: 11/'V'L 14. good <OOd, 2 =..;.;:"'-'.;,.;..----1 '62 TR3 .,~II ,as ... vw O.lux• Spocl'1.""" ;:m~•. 2 jibs -apinnaker. Ro•diter ·~~" p dean. No down o Ac, : ~ w/ trlr $425. Nrw cua $895 Payments only $44 per mo.
' . l:Q'il!;m o:N $65. 642--0436
28211 Hlrlior Blvd.
<mt& Meu 5t&-ll'03
WE PAY .••
CASH
.,, ...,. ~ • trucks Juli
call ..... free ettlm•t•.
GROTH CHEVROlfT ....... --11211.-Bl.,
Hunttricton BMdl
Kl>'331
wm Buy
Yow· Yona.wtcea w Penchl
A ..., top tlo!luL Paid It;
...... Call Ral,.
' 673-11'°
WILL Trade 20' inbrd with
completel)' rt1»1t ... & other
tqUip. Valuo, 11,lm. 511-WI
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Budcet -Husky -Artl10'j -
Clothe -HOT CAKES
Buaineslmtn'1 comme!!l:
"I opened up M ftltt'f)' spe.
-In flapj>da. Boy,
what • tuinel&. Tbt flap-
jlcb are .ulnr like HOT
CAKES!"
NEED A CAlt?
CAN'T Bl: YINANCEDT
•BlllknlPtt •Re;---*'!
eW o.dttf e omire.IT
eMWW, eKtW Ill aa.t ............. _
McCARTHY MOTORS
lGO ... lllaln A llllnl#
(2 -N. el S...l --Pit-
. c.;a,.n 9520 Campan '62 MX. IT Sprft, nbullt
me .• nu-bralrft, nn &OQd.
$575 4~2684
--Cara tlOD
" '~lt\UST LIQUIDATE
100 UNITS
--& MMals ....... CltoY. Daolto. liMC
DEALERS COST
''l/• T. PICK·Ul'S ...
·Ferd Spac.l1I Camper
_,.(qUipp•d '4 1peed, V-8,
~"Y duty 1upen1ion,
;·~Ji••l1 I tir•1, 10 i mp.
-'biff•ry, , •at M lt1,
;~dde41 d•sh, 91v9e1,
efc.
1966 Harber, C.M. 546-0!3
'Qi -Model 1600 Ro.deter,
43,000 mi, Good cood. $1"5.
!'l>-.lltli
FIAT
'67 J1A1' SS2; $1!50 • TAk'
O'f'et pll'm• d $58 mo.
Private pef11. 50-Jlee
JAGUAR
SEE US TODAY!
~~
l961ll lflrbcr, C.M. l6DD
CLOSE OUT
PRICES
• • '68
'68
Off
BUICKS
OPE LS
••
BUICK FORD
'llO BUJO< IA !AJ!RE < olr.
M!dan, exctlltnl ocmd. f1,(Q)
muff. s:ioo. fM...4370
CADILLAC
1956 J'ORD ' 2 Door hardtop, 1ood fu'ft •
brlln.. Padded d.a&b 6
head.liner an like new. Hu
powet window, brake•,
•r.ains· It a11o bu a fac-
1!181CADD.J...AC4 door Wan t«7 air COlldldonl.na: unit
dt Villt, f windon, power plu ndio 6 beater. Total
& ION le&l, powtr 'llrini!ows, power ~ im.oo. NO LOWER;
~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil•'I steerlnf, powu b r 1ke1, 1 ~Call=ll3M<ll--0-~-H-·~B_. ~~-,.I
power trunk opener, •Ir cm-·a Ford :J Dr. 6 eyl. stand• "WE WILL di....._ Nice body no ant tnM. IOOO. defttt. Jml).00 Pvt. party. • &M.aJ04 *
IT9-0I (Fullerton) •ifi'Oiu> Bronco. like new, NOT 'S.CAD"Paneraleoaeb.Cood oab' ),5(1) ml. Good tem11.
caod· Equip wl IU1'fboll'd PdvMe Oder. 113-7559
INSULT -..a ... olf .. ...._ 1====1
... CAD CPE DE V1IU MUCURY
YOUR hill pwr, aJr cond., •tereo, 1---------l'Mlo. $3:MIO. 6*-J)9(1 'II COLONY Parle Stalkln
19115 COUPE dt Vllle, t.D a. Wqon. 1 will now aacritiee
INTELLECT 11~-= .. · "'=·=·=·::"'=1="',,,$=3:""===-r;: ~:1~ de:~~ )'OU m.liht want Will aell or
ie..at. Can Ha I Sanden
at Johnson ' Son Orana:' Cculty'a oldest esltibllshed
't115 CHEY. Malibu: alMOnd.. Lincoln Mel'CUJ")' Cougar
With
"STRIP DOWll"
PRICE
ADVERTIZlllG
like •II eth1r d1al1n,
we er• now clo1Jn9·
out our 1961 lnven•
+ory, but we ere not
sellin g below our cost
{AND NIRMll ti ANT
OTHll DIA.Lii.)
CHMOLET
Pwr. •tter .. ltereo, IO&ded, detJerlhlp, Newport -Colta
:idnt COl'4 Sl.295. ALSO 'Sf M!!aa.. &t2.t1911
Impala < Dr. bdtp., .... 1========1 steer., new ttre1, extru,
$1tl!l5.1168-3213 MUSTANG
1"'t52""ai=EVY=:-. ""N"ew=-=rad=te"'tor-, '18 MUSTANG " 1 owner, lm•
Good bod)' I tlre1, enflnt maeulate V..S, air co~
needa work. B8t otter dltlonlnc, Pw/S. 9611-3986
Wt-. m Klnas P 1. ,
Newport Hriahta. 6*-t002
·~ IMPALA. 4 door, excel.
ccnd., new tbtt, Pow SIB
Sacrlflot. Can be ftDaDOed.
6'73-6'75!
cvn.
PRIVATE party bu 'fi6 '
Mu.tan& convert. auto,
I cyl, .$300 under Blue .Book,
• 642-7310 •
THE STRIP SHARP '811 MUSTANG.
11,000 Mi. .$1700.
6'73-4281 . 1167 ll. CAMINO 4 Speed,
"'" .. MtHI ... ...,._ disc brllker, b u c le: e t e . -'..,. .. ~ .. .,...: AM/FM. m4 Dti.vil Pl. I =========I
Sieck No. 4124, '6111 -CM-·~-===~=-OLDSMOBILE 62 IMPALA CONV.
C.,gar, 219 "bi< VI Vol'y good cond!Uon. llEWPORJ •l.l(H
• n g in •, conce•l•cf R...,....bl•. 2622 Santa Ana, DUI
h••cffight1, 1equentl•I C.M. POLll'l c•nc
t"'n ,;g,.lo, E 70•14 1984 CORAVAN, XL NT I\' AIU
wid1 treacf tires, buc· COND. $600 ,.,.,,., * 54().IlM 1967 F .SS otdsmobile1. Hl·
performance black &: white
with Interceptor equipment,
top conditlClll.
~.t 1eat1, I 00 ~. nylon
c1rpet, 4 1et1 1 • • t
be It 1, 1houlder h•r-
ne11, l -1 p • •cf 1tcf.
trans., life gu•rd safe-
ty features cf e I u x •
wheel cever1. This
lightly equipped cer ••II• for ju1t under
$2100 It u t obvloul ly
the .c•r would h • v •
limita4 appeal.
THE POWER
How ebout this one
Steck No. '4171 '61
Cout•r: Add to ebeY•
1quipm•nt po w • t
tteerlr.t. • u t • lftttlc
tr•n1mi11ion, w h I t•
wells, AM: r•dle • , .
New w•'r• talkln9 •
little over $1000.
COLD AIR
Perh•p• you w•nt a ir
con41tioni"t· l • t ' 1
loo .. et Stock Ne.
4121: Acf4 to •bove
equipment air con4'i-
tioni1t9, tlntecf 9~11,
1port1 cen1ele, powet
,, I 1 ( bt•k••· fllt•
kills thi1 Cou9•r. And
10 ofl threugh our
scores of h> r • l't cf new
'61 Cou91rs.
Then, ef course there •t• our demon1tr•t.,..
They mu1t go too.
BUT MAYBE
You need or pref•r •
full 1li:N 4 door Mer-
cury. Her• 11 Stock
No. 2101 with 1lr con·
ditionln9 at $J481 -
th•t'1 cheeper th•n
.some Mu1t•ng1.
'5T CHEV. BEJ.,..AIR w It b
'114 283 enc.: clean. 1395
• l4U853 •
'S7 CHEVY 2 dr hardtDp.
Very good cond. $300 or best
offer. 847-1550 a.ft 6 PM
CONTINENTAL
Full Price
$1177
Unlvertlty Oldsmo~I•
2850 Harbor Bl"t'd.
c.o.ta Mna
8T CX>NTINENTAL 4 dr Sfd. 5*6:liO
Antique pd. nOOJ mlies. I '·"01'"'o"'w=-n~-,~f~Dr--·I Under orlgtna.l w1rranty. S ~ta · MUii
CalJ. .a .. -M2-«m or "'~ Mll our bellUtllully cared tor ....,.. mm")' oldamobilt. It bu
lnp M&-1151. No dulen: factory air oondllionlnc and ,.,"~'~.,.=· ~D"~·=~~--1 other nice a c c 1 • • o r I ' 1 61 CXlNTINEtll'AL 4 Dr. Md. P1.e11e call today for
equipped kit the CmUnentlll aaerlflce sale. Dir. Phone
Comolueur. May be inape. 56-3278 or 6G-098'1.
ctff day or nlcht at 600 W. 'M cun.ASS F·!fi Holiday
Colat Hhray N c wp1.1rt Cou ,,_ml · BMch call 64l-tllll Di pe. .....vuu . bJ ong. er ~ r. owner. A/C, all pwr'd., all
emu. 1'1S-13:54 aft 10 ~
'13 OLDS a Q:inyutibk.-
.. Coupr CXft..1) Air anct ONE awner. $1&
well equlpped. Mmt lcll ot e Sf0..6517 e
COUGAR
lea1t my demonatrator be----------1
fore Aur. 2'J. Call Wayne
Squ.ltt at Johnlon A Son,
Orange County's oldelt e•
tablllhc!d Lincoln -Mercury
-Cbotlr dealership. New-
port • Com Mna. tcit W.
PLYMOUTH
'13 Pf1moiutb Sia War. Ex.
Coad. onr owner '900 °'
be« ol!er! &Mil aft S.
Cout H1')'., Newport BadL Usod c.,, '900
6CU9B1 or S45-82"1'1 ----·----·I
6'7 COUGAR IG.T.).... ...... PONTI.AC
Pow •teer I: brabl. Tilt --------·I
aw"' """"' _, _, 4 SPEED = ...:. .. '::, !:~ Sl'ECIAUm
""''" Call ..,.. ...._ or HIGH PERFORMANCE eve. 543-7'151. No df•lm CUSTOM CARS
p&eue. Dlr. L.\RGF.sl' SELECI'ION m
CORY AIR
'93 CORVAIR Moo:&1 4 dr,
air. New palot. Good
mectiuu<:&J concl. $ 4 5 D • -CORYmE
ORANGE COUNrY
S.i.cted Auto
Center
ll>32 Harbor Blvd. 537-4M&
ROY CA.RYU
PONTIAC __ .., __
'63 CORVE'ITE l TOPS. '1111 Kl 6-4444
Mu.t aell. Belt o t t e r , Orutl Ommtt'1 ~
q . • bod;J. 111117 Xtru! 0... .. llollt " ..,._ and nt-m.0 er m-1301 w *-1en1:17.
Owck. PRIV. Party 196' Pontt1c
co=a"v"'E=·r=•"E""·"'s1'""ci;-..,-,-1,-301=1 Grand Prix, rllver ~Y. blk
stick. Cbeny. Muat ffll vinyl top, fact. ah', full pwr,
best otter. &U extru $1400. $400 unMr
• Stll-2711 .• BIB. 546--3496 -=;:,,.:.::..::=-,;:._ __ I
There'• Just ne rftll.irli:y 'Iii Orvette .Rdltr '5' PONT p/a, p/b, RllH.
•t John 1•n 1
•· W• ae:.S: ~~tb'Po ;'~~on.~,:..:
1trive to ~. helpful.II,======== Mk for Ten')'.
We ~.11 ... It.at W• DODCWE •· ... -G~RAND~~ .... "--. ~ .... -.. -..,~~
fvn te li:eep c;em1•••· $1582. Mutt lell thil week.
Ab ndhw• w1ou n1•t1 1tll/ '61 DODGE Polan. 383, 3 dr, Phane 1U418J.. Au. for F.d
• •r• • ter I t•en bucket 1e1ll. 4 on the floor. 8rowJL Dlr.
y••" if w• weren't Top cond. Mu.t ae to .,_ '58 PONTIAC GP. rnn
competlfive, pnda.tt. ~ pcnrl'tr, air. N i I h t 1 b • d •
WHATS MOllE
Titi1 eclvt will net •p·
pe1r in 1ny oiher
new•p•p•r. Our her•
91in1 •r• for • u r
"nel9hbot1,
........
FORD
--------1980 PmtiM: Clt&Jlna Sta
'65 FORD Wq. New -..... cmd. GALA.XII LTD "911. 9!1>-3W, 541>-ll08
Air eondltlonln&:. power st.HI"-i "'========I
1••· _,.. ..._, ...,. T-llRD leont nmn1n& condltkln. otr, 1 _________
1 can flnance prlvatt JIUf.>'. M T-BIRD. Hcmy betae.
S1IO dt'-. c.c. il9'-9TZ3. Drtwn ~ than 15000 .U.1
G l'ORD Galaxlt ~. Pow Pt!' year. Mlllt tell. Clll
ltft'rlnc bnilM air. Dr:lvm Ml-mJ. Dlr.
Example : Genet"a.1
Motors, H.D. Chaula,
pow"' steer .. power
brakes, dual whttl11, lon1
wheel bruie, leaf swpen·
rion. turbo hydro tra111.,
big eng., 40 pl. gu plua
complete self -cont&Jned
coach, hot I coJd water,
1hower, ftU1h toilet, with
hold tank. 50 pl. water,
JO .... bu..,,., complet.
k1tcb. wt.th ps/elttt. ~ frla: .. •trato buc.ket aeau
with c:uttom carpeUnc.
lamllJ perfect.
'62 XKE J lCUU Ro9dsttt
ladorJ ha.rd mp. .... 90ft
t~. raidial ttre1, ndlo,
wire wbttll, xlnt Interior.
43,0» mi. $2450.. t6M328
'60 JAG\JAR MARK IX :
TOYOTA
1"' 1'1111 '1000 miln per ~.....,.,..,.,,62=T-811U>~=-.,,..--l
yew. Bet to beUtn at ll'<I Xllll cond PIO
DAILY RBITAU' lWlll6 ~Cou~ HJ:·= • 6'7.al •
Dlr. M T.BJJU) 1'fil pcNU. hc:o-
.:. ....... ....,.. ,., ......
'
$6914
;All Irides Welcome Speci1l kn• Plin
.. World's 1.arCJ11t Dealer .,._, ____ _,, .. ,
... OPEN ROAD
130 HARIOR BLVD.
531-4650
rtrtit hind dl1w, E>lglilh
ae:no. hhto1'7 rrom new .
$1"50, will tnidt:. 2 I 3 :
"16-<l2f
'&l JAGUAR Mull. 1, ledan,
-.uto/pwt, air, cl ro m'
whftls, $2,000. ITJ.a»
KAIMANN GHl.A
1981. KARMEN CHIA, Im.
mac. cond io.-mlleqe.
1U511. 6'75ml
UEADQUARTERS
ELMORE
19671$ TO)'Ota Qowa, "'°"' ltdu. AJr OCIQd., ..
Offtrl ISM3M
TllUUPH
'62 TRIUMPH 'lit 4 Rollld1ter BrltWi ................ _
xtru. &xcitll. cood. e42!1
--~--------~~--------~· -----
u CK =-..::-:-:=-:-.,,.--.,..-,,... tor)' Air 4 6 I tr.ck atera Poo LE B I 116'7 G4LAZY 2 Dr. bntto. Mill! c.nd. -390 mu, pwr 1tr'1. brb, tac
air. Lo mt. $258$. WMQI • '66 T BIRD 911 powtr l
lfet"M•rty St••ut.•rt l1tic~l an~ aJr, new t1ru. pd. pty,
SERVINO HAIUOlt AUA ~i'ii;iiiiiiiiiii••~\.,.~~. ro=ao~0oun=-.,.-Srd= ... -I • -•
234 E. 17th STREET, -..,..,., .,_ wt1, ........ fllctah-"lortO, • '56 T·Blrd. -m> U.. ...,._, ...... 4 ntw Ura. '4Wt74 dlUan. 1T1U Cammin, H.B.
. COSTA MESA 900 w"' c-Hwy. ·57 roRD °""'"'-... I "'"'= .. =m=======I OPIN tiloMa., thrv ,,lday 'Ill ' .... NIW,OllT llAC!f -· n ..... -a ...... 1-•; I ,145-1271 • MWfll ,.....rr• y ALIA.Hr OPEN '111 6 ,. ... S1i.n1.,-Cl-Jim4ay ' DAlLY Pnm DDIE-A-1--------1
A1t1i.,;.,4 l1tl4-'. 0,.1 l J1,111r D11ltt J •INUATlOMI LINE& You cu Ult thtm 'SS VAUANT 2 door, RAH,
s-r.i, ... Hirt.er Ar•• 141°17•1 I 10 lllft TOUI lw jUlt pennl• • dq. Dl&I 2IXI Serltl. !:xeel. O::ind.
.............................. -11• ...... 11~"'=51'1=:_•~~~_;_~54t>-04--m-~_.~~
11
I
,t •
1
DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
Ballot's
By Wednesday night or Thursday momlnf, voter1
across the nation should know what the top hal of their
November btlllots wlll look Ilk .. They will, that ii, unless ·
Sen Eugene McCarthy, failing to win the DemocraUc
nomination for President, splits off and forms a fourth
party.
That decision might take a Utile time.
In any case, today, in the lull before whatever
storm the Chicago convention may produce, ls a good
time to look al the bottom hall of the ballot as tt will
appear in California.
N:ine ballot measures will be up for voter action. ln
theh-hJl.llot order, the measures are:
l Assei:nbly Constitutional Amendment 30, the
second step 1n the state Constitution Revision Commis-
sion's effort to stream.line California's outdated and un·
wieldy constitution.
The commission's first set of recommendations,
known as Proposition l·a, was passed by 73. 7 percent
of the voters in 1966. That represented about one-third
of. VJ~ total effort to bring the then 80,000-word con4
stitution up-to-date and apace with the times.
That first effort resulted from four years oC effort
by the commJssion -headed by Orange County's
Superior Coun Judge Bruce Sumner -to convert one
oC the most cumbersome ilocuments of its kind in U.S.
history into a modern instrument.
Now, after two year s, the commission bas com·
pleted work on modernizing arlicJes lnainly dealing
with utilities and education. AssuQ,ling voter adoption,
the commission will begin work on the. remaining
articles, hoping to complete the job by 1970. That would
qualify California as the leader in thls important area
oC state reform.
2. This measure establishes uniform procedures for
a ssessing the value of county or city owned properties
located in another juriJdiction.
3. Senate Bill 705, a $250 million bond issue which
Bottom Half
would provide mo million, for blghtt educailon faclllUes
and $50 million to modernlze older elemenlary and high
school facilities In urban areas.
4. Would bring California state income laJ: report·
ing procedures into coplonnlty with federal returns buL
retain control of the tax rate by the Legislature.
5. Would authorize the Lesi:islature to establish sell·
ljquldating, state in.sured qr guaranteed loans tor con--
structiQILoLnon,pi:olll hospitals--
6. Would authorize the Legislature to exempt Crom
taxation premiums on retirement benefits of public and
noo·profit educational institutions.
7. Would penn.Jt counties, cities and other local en·
tities to use state subventions such as cigarette taxes
and automobile registration fees for local as well as
state· purposes.
8. Would perm.it cities and counties by agreement
a nd with voter approval to share various sales tax rev·
enues.
9. The Walson initiative constitutional amendment
on property tax limitation. This is called the "tax trap"
measure because. despite its appealing tone, it would
destroy public school and public construction financing
and could lead to a tax s hift involving drastic increases
in the state's income and sales tax rates.
Instead of bringing the property taxpayer relief, he
would have to dig deeper than ever for other forms of
taxation. The only ones who stand to benefit are·Jarge
landholders a nd owners of commercial·industrial prop-
erty.
In Orange County, the amendment would slash rev·
enues from property taxes by more than SO percent
without providing alternate revenue sources. It would
destroy local control over schools. It is a voter snare
and should be defeated.
The DAILY PILOT will discus!i all of the measures
in more detail between now and the November election.
~ON SECONDT\-\OUEsHT •• .'·
' I ,-.t, .. : ., .
t ". ; ' I._!:,. ·t ·· ,• I ... ,. ':.
. '• .
''.' -.· . ' .
,•
Police Role • Ill Mr. X Learns
A Lot About
Be Isn't Welshing or Trimming
The Community Monikers
Virtually everyone who has studied
the subject agrees that w h a t
American cities need most to keep the
peace. along with attacking the root
causes of crime, is to upgrade the
quality and pay (not necessarily the
quantity) o! their police forces.
Isolated incidents of p o 1 ice
"overkill" or "brutality" can usually
be traced to poor training and poor
pay, whidl together mean poor police
personnel and unprofessional
performance.
One of those contributing to the cor·
reetion of this situation in a literate
a"d substantial way is an instructor in
police administration at Orange Coast
College. He is Thomas F. Adams, who
is also a lieutenant in the Santa Ana
Police Department.
\
PRENTICE-BALL, INC. has just
published his new book . ' ' La w
"Enforcement -an Introduction to the
Police Role in the Community." He
had previously authored "Trainin g Of·
ficers' Handbook" and articles in na-
tional and stale police journals.
Bright young men who might be
evaluating a career as a peace officer
here on the Orange Coast would do
well to read Lt. Adams' book
carefully. Adams reviews the many
roles of the policeman -rather con·
fessor to a young first offender,
refer_ee in neighborhood quarrels, ac·
tor 1n the drama surrounding the
pursuit and capture or dangerous
criminals. investig-ator at lhe scene of
a crime. and the mere director of traf·
fie .
IGNORANCE OF his duties. his true
rol~ in the community. is widespread.
nus produces reactions ranging from
respect to rear to hatred.
Adams covers the whole range of
police life, from a c ad e m i c re·
quirements, opportunities, to selection
procedures. His second section delves
into the philosophical and historic.al
aspects of law enforcement. He even
gets into the various major kinds of
criminal behavior, ranging from first
offenders to syndicated crime.
·He then describes the b a s I c
purposes et major police departments,
winding up with an exploration of the
rights of all members of the com·
munity, including the police officer
hi mself. He ends with a forecast or
We're making real progress," raid
my friend, Geor·ge Washington X.
''Nobody calls me 'Oolored' any more.
"I attribute this to the N<rtional
Association for the Advancement of
Colored People which got folks to stop
calling me a 'Colored People' and
start callln·g me a 'Negro.'
"There was a real t.dvance.
then the Student Non-Violent
But
Co·
ordinating Committee got violent
about Black Power and people began
calling me 'Black.'
"I figured tili.s was about as far .&s
one man couki struggle upward in oae
future trends in police operati~ns. . (\.
. THE. SHIFT to true profess1onalisi:n lifetime. But. ·much to mv surprise,
1s £orc1ng taxpayers to face up to this th , ·th · brand
painful fact: Public s~rvants in all ey ve now c~e LIP W1 a new
categories-p<>lice, teachers, firemen, name for me.
engineers, planners, policy-makers -What's that?
must be professionally-trained and
paid accordingly. The speed cop hid·
ing behind the billboard is gone. The
little red school house is gone. Helter
skelter tow n growth is gone. Personal
favoritism In town government is
gone, or should be.
Lt. Thomas F. Adams of the Santa
Ana Ptitice Department and Orange
C.oast College has made an important
contribution with his book. It could be
an imp<>rtant help in recruiting well
educa"d. high quality young men inte
the totally honorable profession of
peace officer -friend or the law.
abiding.
A. W. B.
"Now they call me," said Mr. X
"1th perdonable pride. "a 'City'.''
A "CITY"? •·That's right,'' said Mr.
X. "You just listen to our leaders -
Nixon, Humphrey, Spiro T.
Whatshisname. Every one of them is
going around saying, ·we must do
something about tqe growing crisis of
our cities.'
"That's me they're talking about.
man. And that's not the half or it.
More often than not, they get specific
and caU me an 'Urbalfl Core.' 'A
Decaying lnnercity' and an 'Impacted
Area.'
Only in Small Groups "Now, I don't mueh mind being an
Urban Core. I guess a mt n cou ld
stand an Urban Core moving in next
door lo him. But would you want your
sister to marry an ltQpacted Area? Thoughts At Large:
One of the realistic aims in college
rebellions is the abolition of huge
classe.6 , for the students know what
t.he faculty should have known (and
acted upon) years ago -th at you can
educate only in small groups, while
with large groups you can merely In·
doctrlnate. • • •
Why does almost e v e r y o nc
nowadays say "anxious" when he
usually means "eager"?
• • •
This summer I have been reading
'"T'he Herring Gull's World,'' a study
of the social behavior of birds, by Niko
Ttnbergen. which s h o w s the
r~cinatlng way the gulls build up
!heir society every spring, and make it
functiOn ; "Jn this respect," the author
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
J lhJnk tM Russjans hive 11,ssur·
ed the electioa of Nixon-Agnew
1n Novcmb«.
-H.J. B.
' )
't'.'"l!l"'..,... ... ---,syciney:it~ · 1,, .. ~~~-.l,) . . ,..i.Jill.::_..__,.,
concludes sadly, "they attain as much
as. and perhaps even more than, man.
who is becoming a serious threat to
his own kind."
• • •
Of the seven million people on
welfare In the U.S., what percentage
do you think is truly "employable"~ If
you guesis more than two percent, then
you haven't the slightest awareness or
th_e actual comJ?OSltioo of welfare
clients, ~nd are just re.pealing empty
cliches.
• • •
Each nation has tht k.lnd of crime it
deser\'e.t and encourages; as Buckle
observed Jong ago. "'Society prepares
the crime; the criminal merely com·
mits it."
• • •
One or the invariable tlgn& of a
demagogue is hi.s tondness ror quotina:
George Wathington's warning agalni;l
"entangling alllance.s ·• -when lt was
Jeffersoo. not Wa shington. who K ·
tu.ally said It: Wuhinaton simply cau·
Uooed agalnst "permanent iWances."
• • •
It Js rar e•1ler to see how we dilfer
from those we c<msldtr our lnfe.rlon
than to tee how we differ from tho1e
who con.sider themselves o u r
wperiors: we tend to make grad&tions
downward lrom us, oot upward.
"Naturally. they got other names ror
me down South. To George Wallt<:e
I'm eittier a 'Bearded Pseudo-lnte\lec·
tual,' wtlich 1 kind of like. or, best of
all, .a 'Power-Mad F e d e r a I
Bureaucracy.'
"How about that! Only in Amer~a
could a little colored boy ~pire to
grow up to .'be the whole federal
government."
HE MUST 8£ tenibly proud of an
achievement like thirt.
"You bet." "said M.r. X. "And it fills
my heart to hear hoW every politician
wants to do something for me. Either
they want to revltalb:e us Urban Cores
or make us Decaying lnnercities
thrive again.
··At first. I figured t was going to
Ret Cree vitamin pills. But it turns out
they merely aim to kick me out of my
house and cut orr the welfare cheek."
That didn 't sound. too promJaing.
"Well ," said Mr. X phU<>«ophically.
"It 9UJ'e beats Reoflt.ablishing Law &
Order in Our Strife-torn Cities."
lie wa$ against Law & Order7
"Do you expect me,'' ~ said with
surprise. ''10 be in favor or shooting us
uppity Nt,gert~"
I TIIANKED Mr. X ror providing a
cleNer under5tand1ng Of wt.at on
earth the candidates "ill be constantly
talkin& about in tbe upcoming cam·
paign. But I couldn't see where il
would contribute much to Mr . X'1 pro-
aress toward full equality.
"MA)'!>< DO~" he •veed. "But I .....
.am buildine one bell ot a vocabular')r."
~
Humphrey Hasn't Change_~
WASHINGTON -Those who have
been accustomed to talking privately
with Hubert Ji . Humphrey over a long
period of time can find no reason to
believe that he is welshing or trim·
ming on Vietnam or U.S. policy in all
Southeast Asia.
There is oo perceptible difference
between his view and that of President
Johnson and Defense Sec. Clark M.
Clifford. l"iumphrey has not changed.
He does not favor a Communist coali~
tion government forced on South Viet.
nam. He does not favor stopping the
bombing O{ the North without an ade-
quate response from Hanoi. ThCre
have been some semantics like use of
the word · response instead o r
reciprocity. It all means the same
thing.
Anyone who has listened to both
Humphrey and Sec. of State Dean
Rusk would be hard put to find any
real dJfference:s between them.
SO WHAT IS JT all about? Wha1. lt is
all about is the frenetic desire of a
minority around Humphrey and the
left.wing of the Democratic Party
which has coalesced around Sen.
Eugene McCarthy to chivvy Hum·
phrey into what will sound like a
repudiation of the Johnson pol.icy.
This tactic is oot going to work.
Humphrey knows tha'l there is no way,
no formulation or words to prevent a
minority fight in the convention next
week for a Vietnam resolution car·
rying an implication that ttie Johnson
Administration has not acted i:n the
national interest.
A resolution of that nature will be
fought by Humphrey and the vast ma-
jority of the Democratic national con-
vell'lion will support Humphrey and
the Johnson policy. The vice president
in ract, has been dooe a grave in
justice by those who analyze every
word he utters as indicating a soft·
er line on Vietnam. This softer line is
a creation of wishful thinking. lf some
Democrats wish to delude themselves
on t:hat point. it is their business but if
Humphrey is elected President they
will be in for a sad awakening.
PRESIDENT JOHNSON spoke from
wisdom when he said in Detroit
recently: "I doubt that any American
President will take a substantially dif·
ferent view when he bears the burdens
of office and has available to him all
the information that flows tO the
President. and is responsible to our
people for all the consequences of the
alternatives before him.·· John sc;n was
speaking Or his determination not to
stop the bombing unless the Hanoi
government makes a de-escalating
response of its own .
The debate in the Democratic Party
has. in fact, risen to the heights of ir·
relevancy so far as its effect on na·
tiorta'l policy is concerned. and its only
effect is to split the party and diminish
the prospects of election elf a
Democratic president. For, it is not
U1e intention «lf either JOhl!»On or
Humphrey to sell out Ameriefm In·
terests in Vietnam for politic~CJt~y
other purposes.
FOR WHAT IT IS WORTH alsQ, the
prediction is made here that a vjable
issue will not be found befyl~en
Humphrey and Rimanl M. NixOn «ln
Vietnam, at least among those-' who
have any discrimination at au. ' 'l'be
Republicans who t..ave been suppo~g
McCarthy will probably have novlhere
to go but back to the Republican ba.TJ·
didate, and the Democrats who·. tiave
been supporting McCarthy will have
nowhere to go but back ta• the
Democratic candid·ate.
The issue is more likely to resolve
on the simple concept that a change in
administration for change·s .sake
might be the only, hope of making
more progress towlrd a Vietnam aet·
Uement. r•
Both major poUtJcal parties have
now amply demonstrated bow ill-fitted
they are to come to grips with serious
problems of military and diplomatic
strategy. The platform writers do not
ha ve enough information. They do not
have enough experience. And they
have no direct responsibility.
When the fight is over at C~ago
the peace elem~ts will have .a very
hard decision . They will have to deaido
on upholding their principles and leav·
ing the party to form a fourth party
and thus probably guarantee the t!lec·
tion of Nixon, or learning to live.Mith
the fact that there is no significant·dif·
ference between Humphrey .and
Johnson policies in Vietnam.
'What Is The Questioni'-
Mr. Marshall McLuhan is making
like Paul Revere. warning a I l
president.iz.~ C8Jldidates, Nominee Nix·
on and Ule Messrs. Hum phrey,
McCarthy and McGovern. that they
are all asleep.
U Mr . McLuhan will indulge me. l
will offer a demurrer. They are not
:slumbering. How can they. with all
television tubes filled with noisy com-
mentators. anDlysts. speakers, and
critics. and the newspapers offering a
multitudinous dissonance o( inky aC·
claim and condemnation?
No ooe is asleep.
There is too much scurrying around
.and loo much change &nd action for it
to be said that sleepwalkers are doing
all of it.
Even ii we at:cept Mr. McLuhan's
message that the medium is the
mf!isage and that printed words ~re
r---B11 George---·
Dear George :
One thina: f like about your ad-
vice column U; that you never
seem to stoop to gettlng an easy
laugh with smutty material. Too
much printed material these
d a y s ·encourages immorality
amllng young people. Why is so
much m8terial aimed at creating
immorality among you n g
p<ople?
Dear A.F,:
Latine:iis oo the part of the
writers. J suppo:i;e. It's !O much
easier than trying to create im-
morality among old people.
(Those senior-c.lti:ten tyJ)t:s cer-
tainly &et set In their ways in the
Colden years. l
Seriously, thank you for your
nice l~tter and 1 do appreciate it.
'
,\
no longer o( that great strength which
once moved heaven and earth. the
message is getting across . Ne ither
television nor the printed pages have
made it precisely clear.
WE ARE AT THAT point in nt t.ionaJ
and world events that ren1\nds one of
the Paris deathbed words of Gertrude
Stein. As reported by those present
when that eccentric woman died. one
of the mourners looked at her inert
figure lying hugely on the bed , and
said in a whisper. sadly, .. What is the
answer?"
\Yhereupon . Miss Stein opened her
eyes and 2.6ked . "\Yhat is the ques-
tion?'.
Death came before the flucstion
could be delineated.
At Miami, the Southern reac·
tiooaries wtio made ttic deal wttti Mr .
Nixon said the questJon was "vlolcnce
in the stn:ets." The streets, they 9.aid.
are where tbe votes are. Violence,
they t-rgue. is "bigger than Vietnam.''
which McOarttiy .and McG<lvtmt talk:
about so continually whlle negotiations
go on.
Privately these people were arguing
that the ans~'tr was shOOting "tt1em"
cl own. Tu suggestions about l'he F'irst
and 14th Amendment!. pJUj other!!
touching on the rights of individuals,
they would say. ''Ta bell. with the First
Amend:menL There are oo vo~ in ll"
LISTENING To !hi> bilk. one C011ld
hNr the dlstam stamp of jackboots -
not so loudly heard since Ule nomina-
tion . hourt ~ the naor Of the COTI•
ve.ntion that nom\mt,fed B a r r y
Goldwa~r. The winning question is
"law aod onler." And Uie Answer ii;
,
"shoot." Everyone knows what that
means. Don ·t let the damned do.
gooders confuse things by asking that
"justice" be added to ··1aw and
order." Don't get into any arguments
about tile ingredients of violence being
left in the slums even after those kill·
ed are taken .away. "Get the votes." .•
. "Violence is bigger than Vietnam."
George W'll~lace has worked that
side or the meet. Polls say ~ has
been able to get the message through
t.o a si:table percentage of voters.
Coming out of Miami, a Rockefeller
delegate said: "You know something.
I just remember something Huey
Long said a king time ago. He, too,
said to hell with the courts and law.
He was t"he law in Louisiana. But one
dt')' he said, 81lswering a question,
'Sure we'll have fascism in this e«1n·
try some day. Only we'll ull it
somethin·g else . . . petrtotism, or
something like that.' "
\Yhat are. the answers~ What it; tbe
q~stion?
--~~
Monday, August 26, 1968
Tht tditorial page of the Uour
Pilot sttlu lo inform and 1Um-
ulat1 renders by presenting th.ii
• newspap(r's optniom and com-
mtntorv on topics of inttrerl ...
and ri17nfffeortct1. by providing o ·=
forum fitr tht e%prt.tsfon' :Of !
our r1aMrl' opiniom, and-11»'!
prtse-nting lht divtrst vfetD-
po(nt.t o/ fnform.td obstrvtrs
and ipokt.smen on topics o/ t1'1 • dn,.
Robert N. Weed, Publish<r ••·
i