HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-08-28 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa-------~-------------~----...,.... ~
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Irvine Heiress Presses
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$200 Million Estate Suit
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 28, 1968
W at~h Blue Light·s~
N ar~oti~s Oiii~er
Warns Lagunans
County Girl
Assaulted;
Ma11 Held
A 17-year-old Fullerton girl, kid~
naped and raped near Lake Elsinore
late Tuesday night, was home today
following reports that a suspect
1natching the description she gave is
in custody of the Ontario police.
The victim had driven to the Lake
Elsinore area with a male companion.
The couple picked up a · hitch-hiker
carrying a Boy Scout back-pack at
about 10 p.m. 'Ibey drove on for
.reportedly 20 minutt!El when the hitch-
hiker asked them to stop and let him
out.
\Vhen the car stopped, the assailant
pulled out a knife and held it to the
girl's throat. He ordered her male
friend out of the car and then made
his victim drive on.
The suspect then ordered her to pull
off the rood and then took her from
the car approximately 20 yards from
the car and assauhed her. After
returning her to the car, be told her to
drive toward San Juan Capistrano. He
began walkiflg toward Lake Elsinore.
LONDON BOOKIES
FAVOR NIXON
LONDON (UPI) -Ladbrokc's
bookmakers today quoted 6-4 odds on
Richard Nixon to win the presidential
election. Odds remained even on the
then-unnamed Democratic candidate.
Officer Wanas
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ALL FOR NAUGHT? -California delegate Vicent Lavery of Merced'
Tuesday was supporting Kennedy draft. Message today from Massa-1
chusetts senator appeared to take steam out of move.
'·
Blue Lights: Narco Nights
TOM GOR~IAN
Of 1M Ot\IT '"" Slatt
\Vatch out for that hOuse Of blue
llghU.
Jt could mean the psychedelic sect
within is particlpolt.ing in a numbers
game, a game where the players get
higher than the numbers.
Jo this case, "'numbers" are mari·
juana cigarettes.
And the wamlng .about the bJUl'I
ligh~ was issued b)' Lagun~ Beach
'
detective Normcin Babcock , at the
monthly meeting of the Exchange Club
o( Laguna Beach.
OOler signs that may lead to suspi-
cion o{ drug use in a house are heavily
curtained windows, always closed win-
dows. and doors that are shut very
qWckl1. .
Signs tltat "speed," or methedrine,
is being used can be bypoderm'lc
needles, often bent in two, in trash
can.s. y
"We rely much on Ole citizens who
phone w, telling us that ttiey r;uspect
&omething is going on. About 60 per·
cent of our arrests initiated witJ:t a
citizen's oaU," Babcock told the
bu1inessmen.
Then the question o! having the
citizens get involve<! was brl)ughl up.
"Everyone tears that if they call
police, Lbelr name will be spread
around. Thi! is not our goa.l, to put the
(Set LIGHTS, Pqo Z)
VOL "' HO. Jtt, 4 SICTIOHl, M PAGIS
a Shoo-in?
'
Fullerton Girl~ 17 ~
Kidnaped~ Raped;
Poli~e Dold Susp~~t
r
OS't • J
Ill ur
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' ' N .. l(ennedy Says ' , o·
Withdrawal Boosts Huniphrey Drive
I By RAYMOND LAHR p.m. opening of the Democratic con-committed v.1ere 488 and 2181h were
CHICAGO (UPI) -H-ubert H. Hum-\rention's third session to debate Viet· pledged to f~vorite sons and other nou-
phrey sped toward triwnph today witti nam, the UPI tabulation showed that serious canC\idat.es.
more than enough votes to win a first the l'.ithdrawal today of more favorite Oppositioii. to Humphrey dissolved
ballot nomination (or the Democratic son candldates had pushed Hum-even more fwith the angry withdrawal
presidential nomination. phrey's delegation total beyond the from competition of Georgia Gov.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy removed 1,312 votes needed to win. Lester G. Maddox who said he could
the obstacle of his pbantom candidacy The UPI count of delegate com-no lor,ger ; "be associated with those
with a "final. finn" disavowal of in· n1itments and preferences gave who surr;encter to beatniks, Coru·
terest and a dNJt·Kennedy move col· 11umphrey 1,3341h votes to 48.'1 for Sen. munists aid misfits." He then angrily
lapsed. F.ugene J. McCarthy and 48 for Sen. packed his bags and said he was leav·
Less than half an hour before rtie l George S. McGovern. Still listed un-(See. DEMOCRATS, Page%)
Lifeguards Seek
Body of Tustin
Y outl1 in Newport
Newport Beach lifeguards to<lay
resumed thW search for the body e>f a
Tustin teen-ager who apparently
drowned after an eight-root wave
slammed him to the ocean bottom
Tuesday afternoon.
Reported missing from his home
alter spending the day at the beach
:was LaITy Ross Martin, 18. Witnesses
-said he was body surfing at 17th Street
wttb two or three other swimmers
twben he ran into trouble about 4:45
p.m.
A friend who saw the mishap, Hal
WiUiams o( Newport Beach, reported
that Martin was riding along the big
wiave when he "went over the falls."
Ufeguards said the phrase is used
when a body surfer is pulled up to the
Lip of a wave, then ls pllmmeted
downward with the weight of the wave
slamming down onto him.
About a half doze" lifeguards began
a search with skln diving equipment in
Tuesday aCternoon's surf. 1-ligh waves
and surr turbWence, however ,
hampered their efforts.
Ure-guards said that Martin and the
oUle-Js body surfing OU 17th Street
gave the appearance of "knowing
what they were doing." A red Oag was
Oying [rom the nearest lifeguard sta·
tion, indicating dangerous sure.
A total of 125 reicues were logged
along Newport Beaches Tuesday, and
108 made tor the day before.
$2.5 Billion Bond
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Los
Angeles County SuperytBors Tuesday
approved subminlon o! 1 $2.6 billion
rapid transit bond plan to the voters f• tile November ballot.
Joan Irvine Pressures
Court for Estate Share
Irvine Ranch heiress Joan Irvine
S1nith laid her demand for a bigger
share of her late land baron
grandfather's estimated $200 million
estate before the Ninth U.S. Court o[
Appeals in San Francisco Tuesday.
The attractive blonde mother of
three. who has homes in Laguna
Beach's Emerald Bay and in Mid-
dleburg, Va .. is challenging a U.S.
District Court ruling handed down in
Los Angeles last December.
The 36-year-old heiress claims 459
Irvine Company shares currently held
by the Irvine FoundatiQn were never
legally transferred when the foun·
dation was set up.
Judges ruled in Los Angeles last
December, hhowever, that ttJe Irvine
Foundation was legally established
and there-Core Mrs. Smith has no claim
to any additional shares.
The shares in question have a par
value of $100 each, with a market
value o( $109.<XX> each.
Her attorney, Lyndol Young. of Los
Angeles, said the trust is simply an
alter-ego of irvine hlmseU and is staf·
(ed. entirely by his own agents.
Attorney Howard J. Privett, oC Los
Angeles. representing all but one of
the founaatidn'5 ttusttcs. said during
the hearing that the foundation has
dlstrlbuttd 16.5 mllllon to charities In
Caillomi1.
"Theft ls no evidence whatsoevtt
... that there was no deliverance o!
the indentures o( trust which CN!lted
the foundation," Privett ~gued. ·
Circuit Judges Jolul c. ~ckeU, WM ·
ren L. Jones and Austin L: Staley took
the :f>eal Wldtr. aubmis5.ion followina
' ' the hearing in San Francisco. Mrsl Smith, wife 0( 1!fortimcr W.
Smith. has in the past argued that two
Irvine' estate trustees, Robert Gerdes,
board' chairman or Pacific Gas &
Electric Co., and N. Loyall McLaren,
a ficancier, should be d.lsmissett
(Set ESTATE, Page 2)
' Orange
Weather
Coast
The weatherman's writing his
rOrecast on carbon paper this
week, and Thursday will be no
dif(erent -sunny with tern~
eratures in the 80'1 along the
Orange Coast.
INSIDE TODA¥
Orange Coun~11 new com·
munity thea(er 1eason gpe1t1
thil weekend with a /amiUar
pta11. "The Odd Couple." See
Entertainment, Page 18.
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% DAll.Y 'llOT
Czech Youths Denounce Dubcek, Seel{ 'Truth'·
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l'llAGlll (UPI) -A,asr1 tbe oocUjlllioe t«ceo, ,.... dfpld q , ..... ,,.... ~ callecl -.., .. wall1.
~11 '1 atotae-.,..,._ Wlloalllldonlll~~-llle
.. pico ... -... N-.• A111~ .......... .., tt...., AM tr Je1 t'rr W't • ·-..._ti. tbe ~~. .. .... , rw:W ~,.__, ... l.
-"'-tllo -no 1-cllenttd "Dullcetl Dobcttl • h& w...., Pact tr<>Opl ~·~11-7'';;.'.'They capiU!lalod In 14o<cow,'! .aid ~a a week qo Tuttday. 1 gard youth in wenees111 Square
t.hlre ,... signs eome CzechotlovW d k, Preeldeftt Ludvik Svoboda
bod loot -io ~k. and o er CUcboolovak Jellder1 wbo
ln 11\&Qy places, ptiotographs of the took p t In the four days of talks.
Oommtmlst party tint secretary, who "It is n to do this end to let
had been & l)'D'lbol of defiance again&t these ( · t) soldier• to stay without
Viet Plank
Breaks Up
Convention
CHICAGO CAP) -'lbe -*!pate<:
floor .ftOt GVtr • Vietnam war policy
broke Opla. Mtb 1Yet1 more than ex·
pect..i llrry ln 11>1 ••11 mornlnl beurs
today llll <creed the Democrat.le Na·
tional CoevatSon into &D abrupt .ad·
journment.
After meeting for nearly seven
-... ......,, dole!lllft soc to tlll propooed party platform, w b l c h
recommends settling the Vietnam CO!I·
!lict along li.Del aet by Pre11dent
J ohnson end followtd by Vice Presi·
~l Hubert H. Humphrey. UWJ leader
fClr ttie Dtmocntic pre s ide D t i a l
llOmlnatton.
As the is!Ve came up, some
6?legates llau.aehed a tumult that
11.nally ended whem Chicago Mayor
klchord J. DollJ'• propooal for an ad.
jour~ lllltll 1 p.m. EDT toda7 wo1
a:cepted.
Fueling the figllt was a determined
wffort by same delegates to stop
8UJ1111hrey frem l'!llning the nomina·
llon.
A mlnorlt;J report calllnl for an un,
condltlooal bombing bait of North
Vie,,_. is wid<ly supported by ro1zaa1 ., ...,,,.., •• JMjor op-
ponents, Sens. Eugene J. McCarthy
and George S. McGovern, as well as
bac.ten of noncau:tidate Sen. Edward
M.-.edy,
a JX'(llest." he 11id. "We ba .. bten
takM to Munich aga.l..a, and led home
with a riog tn Ute nose."
But nwst micldle·aged persona, when
asked how they felt, merely shrugged
th<ir shoalder1 and nld "JI II bed, but
what are wt to do?"
"The tanks are bere,'' said a young
,eoverrunent lawyer. "It is a fact that
must be recogni:ried, Uke the pretldeot
11y1."
The red, white and blue ribbons that
had decorated the lapels and blouses
of virtually everyone in Prague this
Ul'ITt....,,.t.
SUPPORTERS PLEASED
Supp 1 Ma of tbe miDOrity report
were ~lated by the 1udden ad·
jourmaenl.
COMMUNICATION PROBLEM -Actress Shirley MacLalne of
Califorfta delegation watches small television set during Democra·
tic National Convention. Portable TV set.s have popped up in aeveral
spots on convention floor as delegates try to follow the action.
Frtmt Ma•tttwlc z, press
5P0kesman for McGovern, stood on a
dlair end tibout.ed, "We have 11 hours
to get 80 votes." He claimed backers
of tbe immediate bombing halt were
abort on1y that nlHDber of the l ,312
votes needed to carry their point.
When ChairmM Hiie Boggs of the
PlaUorm Commil.U. began reading
tile majority p&uk lie 'Wias interrupted
by loud baddapplrl11bat began ln the
'Wisconsin ~gltion ald sp read to
rhuoh Of the jampaektd floor and
g'2lleries.
·Boggs stopped reading: and Con·
vention Chairman Rep. Oarl Albe.rt of
Oklahoma DDlllJ ~ (I'd.er long
eoough for Boggs to move to let the
debole be&ln witllout furtber roadlng. He callad on R<p. P'11llip Burton or
catuorn1a, a leadhlg propontnt of the
substitute plank, to speak.
"LET'S GO DOME"
'lb"1 another _,., Of dappln; and
moutta,g broke. WiSCf'C!dn IOl recogni·
1ion to move for adjoCU'nment, but
Albert rul.ed. the mcrticm. Cllllt of onler.
~ and lhoats of "lot's go home"
gio<ted the ndlng, Dele(MM waved
standada and milled m u.e eflsles.
, On the convention podium delegates
argued with officials. Sen. Joseph
CJ.ark of Pennsylvania told Albert and
Democratic National ~ John
Bailey that "'Ibis doballo Is so bn-
pbrtant it should be held in the waking
hours Of the American people. It is
very undignified to ~etd in this way
and start ttUi debate ia the middle ol
the night.11
DAllY PILOT
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CALrr;QIMtA
01!.AHOl CO.Ut l'Ukl~HtNG COMPANY
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Unruh Abandons Effort
To Draft Sen. Kennedy
CtllCAGO (UPI) -As 11 e m b I y
speaker Jesse M. Unruh, leader of the
California d elecat io n to the
Democratic National Ocm.vent.loo, to·
day abandoned hts attempt to start a
movement to draft Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy for the presldenUal nomtna·
ti on.
Unruh, wrose 174 member delera·
Uon WU almost totally behind Ken,
nedy if the senatcr had allowed his
name to be put before the delegates.
announced that the Massachusetts
11enator had told him he Is not a can·
* * * McCarthy Says ·
Dem Nod Cinched
For Humphrey
CHICAGO (AP) -Sen, Eugene J.
Mcfarthy's own view of hi! ctmdidaey
for the Democratic presidential
nomi.n.a.tion wes left unclear todey
after he said Vloe ~sldent Hubert
H. Humphrey hlld ~ up tile
race, but then Indicated be w.sn't OJTI·
coding anything,
He went to bed without further corn·
ment Tuesday night as Democrat!
wondered 'Yhether ht was just bein g
pM&lmlstlc or ccine~ng ctie nominl·
Uon 14 Hwnpbroy when bo said:
"I think tt )X'Obably was settled
more than 2t hours ago." The print
was hardly cold on the Kni«bt
Nev.'Spaptrs' y..mUclUon of tbe in·
terview wh:ldl conWned that 1tJte·
ment wt1en • top Mc0al1hy aklfl in~
slsted -after tf.lklna: with his boss -
that ~1cCarthy was not ooncedbig
defeat.
Richard N. Goodwin quoted the Mln-
neiOl& Oemocnat ao M)'ina: bt hid had
"a lengthy pi!JIOOOphlcol dllcusslon'"
with the Knlgl!t ediCors, "and ho osld
liumphrty was obvlow:ly tht frorit·
runner."
Howe\.'t.f. Goodwin added, 11He dld
not conttde. Hr's IO(.ng on , .ae he has
bttn going on since he entered Ule
New H•m[>flhlre primary."
But McCarthy's pttMmlsm, which
has betn incr~atifngly evident of late.
showed tllrougjl clearly u ho told h!J
intv\liewers:
"I don't even think Teddy (Sen.
Ectword M. Kennedy l <"OO!d IOI enoullh
votes to win. But. h Kennedy pet11le
ha ven't come to me, whidl meus
there tre probably 200 votes tblt ht''
eot that I llon't have."
"In other l'-U"Cb," ht was asked ,
uyou mNll it's wrapped up for
Humphrey?"
McCll1tly : ''I t:b1nk '°· ..
d.idate.
"\Vhen I crune to the conventio n l
had hoped we mi&ht hive another can-
didate in the race -a candidat.e who I
felt could Win the nonilnation and
more importantly could win this fall,"
Unruh 1ald.
But he told a momma: meeting of the
Californl.a de'lea:atton that Kennedy
had both l1111ued a public !tatement
removtn1 himself from consJderatlon
and informed Unruh.tll hJ.1 dectelon by
a penooal telephone call.
It wa1 tbe first time th'-! California
dele1al1on leader had publicly ad·
mttted thl;t he wu a J)l'ime mover
behind the draft.·Kennedy movernerit
at the cooventlon .
He told the delegation Ulat Kennedy
promised to come to California in the
future "to help Uli in lht cause1 he
shares with us."
Unruh did not disclose whom lie
\vould back and told the delegates ;
"Any great rlM!ih or st amped e
anywhere probably is too late to do
you any political good."
He &.aid the delegation probably
would meet later today during the con·
vention sessions for a hfull and free
discussion" ol. where lt would throw
Its support.
Unruh was 10 busy Tuesday nJlht
trying to establish a coallUan of peace
candidates that he co uld not attend the
convention session.
An aide, who asked not to be Iden·
Ulied, said Unruh met with both Sen.
Eugene J. McCanhy and Sen. Gtl%gt
McGovern ln an eft<rt to convince
them only Kennedy could defeat tht
drive of Vice President !Jubert H.
Humphrey,
The Unruh aide rejecl!d ootrlght
any move to put Kennedy on a ticht
with Hwnphny as the standord
bearer.
"Ht •houldn't start out with a lOaln&
tJcket," the a.Ide told a MWsman.
An informal poll of tbe d6lea:aUon
taktn earlier th11 week tndlc1ted all
but about a dozen would be will4f>g to
cut a flr1t·bellot VOW! for Kennedy.
f'rom Pa9e I
DEMOCRATS • •
in& ChJc110.
n.-ee favorite sons ln quick order
endorsed Hwnpbr<y followln1 Ken·
nMly'1 finn, new di11vowa.J,.
Gov. Richard J. Hughes of New
.TerHy produced 91 more votes; Flori-
dians nocked to Humphrey when Scm.
Geore:e Smathers 1hfd hb favortie ion
status. and -lh1 bandwacon rollint
f11t now -Louis~ Gov. John
McKe.ltben released his d1le1ate1
f!'0!11 tbetr favorite t1011 oommltm<Dt to
him.
week began to disappear. Fewer than
one ln ev&ry five penons seen on the
street continued to wear the tymbol of
dtfiance and patrloUrm.
And for the ti1sl. ~ aince they ar.
rived eight dayl 010, Soviet OC•
cupaition troops wand•ed. UJually tn
pairs, through the rwh hour crowds
without more than an occasional
glance from. U\e Czedloslovaks.
'"18 Clecbol!;lo'Vak radio compared
the agreement '1dictated" in Moscow
to the "abducted" Czech01lovak
leaders while Soviet Bloc forces oc·
cuped the country with the 1938
Mt.mich Paot which sold o u t
C?.echoslovakla tc Nati Germany. It
<.•ailed on the people to refuse to sub-
mit but 14 1upprt C<immunllt Party
Secre!arkDubc<k IDd President Lud,
vtk Sv a becaute .. there Js no
other way out."
The Czechoslovak cabinet and the
Nation.al Assenlbly met to discuss the
te-rms of the agreement whBe radios
repeatedly c~ed citizens to avoid
"more bloodsb
But ther ere still occasional
'
demon1tratloos by 1tudtfltl In bullo~
searred Weocesla$ Square. Aboui
3,CXXI marched to the Natl o 11a1
A>Rmbly Building wllll bomler1 pr<>
claitnin1: "No compromile for
tr6NOTJI", And "Tell U1 the brutal
fruth ." I
One ot' the prices the Ciechoslovak.1
apparenGy will pay ls Ill• reimJ>06lUool
of censorship on the press, radio and
television on all matters dealing wilb
relations with other Communist na··
tions.
Airplane Engines Roar
At Hearing on Airport
By JACK BROBACK
OI tllt PtH, l'Mt! ttatl
Recorded airplane engines ope ned
Tuesday night's hearing devoted to the
Orange County Airport portion of the
county Master Plan of A I r
Transportation .
The recording, purportedly made In
his home, was played by Daniel W.
Emory, chairman of the Airport Noise
Abatement Commlttee to emphulr:e
his continuing attack against the
airport and ih; managemen1.
Emory aOO his group comprl1ed
moSt of the overflow crowd at the
1mall county planning commlssion
bearina: room in Santa Ana. It is a
1mall room holding 100 penons at
most.
In additioo to the noise abatement
crowd , a few new voices were heard
by the airport commllsloners.
"The Newport-Co1tia Mesa area la
tJle last pbce J would want to build an
airport ," said Joseph F. Pike. Jr .. of
1811 Glenwood Lane, Newport Beach.
Pike, a pilot with Trans World
f'rom Page I
LIGHTS ...
burden on the citizens," Babcock said.
"Namea al'e kept in secrecy."
Along with Ups from adults, often
studenU have informed the police o[
illegs.1 activltle1, he said. "Kid• know
everytlhing that·s happening ln the
streets. They are reliable. But we
don't use juveniles as undercover
agents," he assured the men.
Babcock estimated that about 75
percent o! tlhe arrested drug users and
&eliers are convicted.
DRUG AllllU'lll RISE
In 19el, Uler. wer1 38 drug anwta
in Laguna Beach. In 1961, 85 people
were A1Te1ted on some Il1nd of drug
charfe, And through July of this year,
there have been 9.3 arrestJ, Babcock
said.
Throuih the 2'n years narcoUcs
have become more avall&'ble. But
thln11 seem to be tapering off.
"1'1M problem 1n La'IUfla 1r cooling
off," Babcock a11erted. "In the lalt
three to four weekl, the narcMic1 pro·
blem hun't been as bad .''
OM reason for Ule greater amount
of arrest.a i1 the tact that the police
department ii more enlightened ln the
fie1d. Since the force ha1 becoole more
knowledgeable about the algn.t of drug
u1e, Laruna has had better en·
forcf:ment, accordina: to Babcock.
"Wt mete a tremendou1 number of
alT'fatl in the field, such u when
som~e 11 1topped. for 1 traffic viola·
tion ."
With the strict enfortement, why
would a pusher be so bold?
Airlines, sald the San Joaquin Hill! of·
fered the best regional airport site.
Ed ·Van Allen, president of the
Oran&e County Pllota Assodatlon
struck a popular note when he sug.
geated Utat all airline operations be
moved from th• airport immediately.
He aald they could go to El Taro, Lo!
Alamitos c.-Long Beach and stay
there untll a regional airport could be
constructed som.ewhe.re elie.
Hsvhlg disposed of all but private
nying out of the facility, Van Allen ad-
mitted he had not talked to the
military or Long Beach oUlclals.
John Davies, .n official of the Air
Tran.sport A11o c l•tlon, wh~
representl nation·wlde alrllnes told
the commission that he cmtld assure
them that use of the military airports
wu out and that Long Beach had pro·
blems. "There are homes near that
airport too and people complain ," he
explained.
Davies quieted fears of larger
planes using the airport. The runways
could not be made long enough to han·
dle large planes and that includes the
proposed Air BUI," Davies said.
"Airports cannot be in too remote
an area. They serve the public," R. W.
"Bob" Clifford, vice president for
operation of AJr C11ilorn1a told the
ifOUp.
Ile said his firm, the princlpaJ Ultr
or the airport waa not for loncer
runways or any "wild " expansion. He
did say parking ~hould be increased.
The Peniira report, principal 1ub.
ject of the hearings, was supported by
Jack Mullan, chair.main of the Newport
Beach Air Traffic Advisory Com.
mittee. "Witho.ut any planning the
present airport couldn 't remain as the
only airport," Mullan rioted.
.Paul Elston, Orange County Airport
tov.·er controller, denied criticism t.hlt
noise abatement procedures were not
being followed. He pointed-out that a1r
carriers were oniy five percent of the
operations from the field which hs
said was the third busiest in the state..
liearings continue today in Santa
Ana with three military facilities
being studied as possible regiooaJ
airport sites.
* * * * * * West County Legislntors
Denounce Bolsa Airport
Dy WILLIAM REED
Of tllt Otlh l'lllf Sltlf
Bolsa Cllica isn't the place for a
sprawling regional airport.
That. was the general agreement
amoo.g West Orange C o u n t y
1egi31.&tors attending a meeting called
Tuesday night by the HWJtington
Beach City Councll to d 11 c u s s reflon«i atrport 1ltet.
Agreeln& were Rep. Crate Hosmer
(R·Lona: Beaclt), state Sen. John
Schmitz (ft,Tustinl and Alsemblyman
Robert Burke (ft,lluntlngtm Beach ).
"Anyont would have to be out of his
mind who went& to put an airport
there," Hoerner told tm councflmen.
Schmitz, teWn1 tho graup of
Johnson May Visit
Moscow for Talks
GENEVA (UPI) -Pros 1 dent
Johnson ma~ soon go to Moscow to
open talks on reduc:lna: missle arsenals
In spite of the Soviet lnveaton of
Czec"boslovakia, ranking We s t er n
diplomat.. said today.
'The dlplamatSc sources said' the
Soviet Union t1med an Invitation to
reach John1on just a f'ew hours before
Soviet and Warsaw Pact forces cross·
ed C1echo1lov.ak borders l•t wee k.
They belleve J oMaon ls 10 anxious to
•tart the ta1lu he II 1WJ del!nitely conn
alderlng a personal .appeiaruce.
legislstors he has nown airplanes out
ol. the Los A.Larnitoa Naval Air Station,
"It's pretty hairy now ," he said of air
traffic over the Huntington Beach
area.
Burke, po.lntlni out that "thf!
Pereira report is very preliminary,"
said that •·1 can't see the Bolsa Chica
stte as the final location."
He said ttie potential of the Orange
Coa!l Is "fabulous" without an airport
t.o en<:ourage development.
The Bolsa Chica si te , one of five
named in the Pereira Master Plan o{
Air Transportation for the county, is
strongly opposed by a large group of
homeowners on the northwes~ side of
Huntington Beaeh.
A public hearing before the county
Airport Commission has been scbeduJ.
ed for Sept. 16 at 3:30 p.m. 1n the
chambers or the county Board of
Supervisors in Santa Ana.
From Page I
ESTATE ••.
because they are also foundation
directors.
She believes the two posts constitute
a conruct of Interest, saying they are
not representing her own finlndal
position properly.
Mrs. Smith's personal fortune is
estimated at $45 million.
FROM CALIFORNIA ARTISANS, ENGAGEMENT RINGS OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUTY
DO"°° ...
J. C. fiumpkri e6 Jeweler
!Ill NEWPO~T AV!., COSTA M<SA
lZ Y•1r1 '" Th• S•m• loc.•tio11
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Bea~h Your Hometown
• EDITION Dally Paper
VOL 61, NO. 207, 6 SE.CTI ONS, 68 PAGES WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 TEN CENTS
Legislators Say Bolsa I·sland Will Rise Again
"Solsa Island, sadly sunk into the
_ea, vl'ill rise again, and within 12
inonths," Rep. Craig Hosmer (R-Loog
Boach) predicted Tuesday night in
lluntington Beach.
Not only will the plan to build a
1uclear desalting and IX>"\'er plant off
the coast of Huntington Beach on an
-lrtificial island be revived, the federal
govermnent will add about $50 million
to the resurrection fund, said Rep.
James Utt (R-Tustin)<:
Hosmer and Utt were joined by
Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun-
tington Beach) and State Sen. John
SChmitz (R-Tustin) at a dinner
meeting with the Hunington Beaeh Ci-
ty Council to diSCWiS local problems.
1-luntington Beach Civ.ic Center has takei:i on a_ !lew. and ~righter
look with the completion of paintin~ of police facility, Memonal Hall
and the administrative offices. Pamters here apply last touches to
Memorial Hall. All work was done by city crews.
Cou11ty Taxes Cut; Saving
Of $3.45 Million Claimed
A reduction of three cents in Orange
County·s general tax rate to $1.68 and
an overall reduction in general and
special district rates of 11 .5 cents was
adopted by the Board o{ Supervisors
this morning.
Auditor-Controller Victor A. 11eim
told supervisors it would mean a
dollar saving of $3.45 million to the
county's tax payers.
Airport Meeting
Slated Tonight
Supervisor AJtoo E. Allen pointed
out rt.hat last year':i1 general fund rate
or $1 .71 was the third lo\vest in the
state and this year's reduction should
irnprove the county's position.
Reductions of 5.5 cents or $1.6
million was a cc om pl i s he d in
departments and districts directly
under control of the supervisors.
District reductions included the
county library d<>wn three-fourths of a
cent and the 11arbor District down 1.5
cents.
The tax rate reductions were made
despite increases in the budget. The
general fund expenditure will be ap-
proximately $120 million up $21 million
over last year.
County Flood Control expenditures
will be SIJ.2 million, up from f7 .6
million in 1967-68.
The Harbor District is $6.1 million,
up from '4.6 million.
Hosmer said that die Bolsa Island
project, abandoned a p p a r e n t 1 y
because C06't inc?'i!ased !rom an
estimated $444 million to $765 million,
wfM ''rise from the sea arid it will take
a Jot less time that Atlantis."
Two problems stand in the way of
buUding the island project, H06mer
said. The !Wst is that the private utili·
ty companies involved, Southern
CaW'orni·a Edison Co., and San Diego
Gas and Electric Co., could bave built
a similar plant &long the coast on
shore for about '40 mlWon less than
tQie net cost to them of the desalting
island.
Secmdly, because the p r i v a t e
utilities do not set their own rates,
they needed a favorable attitude from
the Public Utilities Commission in
order to pass to the customer higher
costs for the nuclear island.
Utt sald the nuclear island project
should not be scaled down. "It needs
to be that big," he said of the planned
40-acre island.
lt it wett not for the private utilities
involved, "the federal government
woold have to build it alooe," Utt said,
urging the government to pay an ad-
ditional $50 million on the project.
"\Vithin 12 months we will come up
with a new project which will .include
all the good features of tbe <>Id ono
\\'ith perhaps even better economics,••
said 1-losmer. Who v.'Ss cha.racteri:.ed
by Utt as "a real expert on nuclear
energy."
Sen. l(ennedy Says 'No'
'Final' Disavowal Speeds HHH Win
By RAYMOND LARR
CIIICAGO (UPI) -Hubert ll. Jlu1n-
phrey sped toward triumph today with
more than enough votes to win a first
ballot nomination for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy removed
the ob6tacle of his phantom candidacy
with a "final, finn" disavowal of in-
terest and a draft-Kennedy move col-
lapsed.
Less than half an hour before the l
'Bolsa Not Place'
p.m. opening of the Democratic con·
vent.ion's third session to debate Viet-
nam, the UPI tabulation showed that
the v.ithdrawal today of more favorite
son candidates had pushed Hum-
phrey's delegation total beyond the
1,312 votes needed to win.
The UPI count of delegate com-
mitments and preferences g a v e
Humphr°J l .384'f.z votes to 483 for Sen.
Eugene . McCarthy and 48 for Sen.
George S. McGovern. Still listed un-
comn1itted were 488 and 218',i were
pledged to 'favorite sons and other non·
serious candidates.
Opposition to Humphrey dissolved
even more with the angry withdrawal
rrom competition of Georgia Gov.
Lester G. Maddox who said he could
no lor,ger "be associated with those
who surrender to beatniks, Com·
munists and misfits." He then angrily
packed his bags and said he was leav-
(See DEMOCRATS, Pa&e %)
Solons Join Airport Foes
By WILLIAM REED
Of tt.. 0.llJ' ''" Stiff
, Bol.sa arlca isn't the place for a
sprawling region.al. airpod.
That was the general agreement
.among West Orange co u n.ry
leg1Slators attending a meeting called
Tuesday night by the Huntington
Beach City Council to d l s c u s s
regiooal airport sltes.
Agreeing were Rep. Craig Hosmer
CR-Long Beach), state Sen. John
Schmitz CR-Tustin) and Assemblyman
Robert Burke (fl-Huntington Beach).
Beach Seeking
People to Aid
In Bond Election
Of(icials of the lfuntington Beach
Union High School Distrk:t are looking
far people interested in serving on its
soon·to·be-formed steering c<>mmittee
to support its $12 million bond pro-
pooal.
District trustees Tuesday night
auth<>rized administrators to contact
civic and service clubs "to secure
names of those interested in assisting
v.·ith this election."
The bond proposal -to provide
money for a new school, purchase of
one new site. improvements at
\Vestmirrster High School, expansion of
district offices end Field Act updating
of the Huntington Beach High School
-will be listed on the Nov. S ballot.
Supt. Max Forney suggested the
steering committee be formed because
"experience from past electi<>ns ln·
dicates that a steering committee bas-
ed on wide representation throughout
the areg can be m<>c!it helpful."
$2.5 Billion Bond
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Los
Angeles County Supervisors Tuesday
approved submission of a $2.5 billion
rapid transit bond plan to the voters
on the November ballot.
"Anyone would have to be out of hi&
mind who wants to put an airport
· thece,'" Hosmer told the councilmen.
Schmitz, telling the group or
leg:is~tors he has flown airplanes out
ol the Los AlamJtos Naval Air Station,
"It's pretty hairy now," he said of air
traffic over the Huntington Beach
area.
Burke, r.oinling out that "the
Pereira report is very preliminary,"
said that "I can't see the Bolsa Chica
site as the final locaUon."
He said the potential of the Orange
Coast is "fabulous" without an airport
to encourage development.
The Bolsa Chica site, one of five
named in the Pereira Master Plan of
Air TrMsportation for the county, is
strongly opposed by a large group of
homeowners on the northwes: side of
l-luntington Beach.
A public hearing before the county
Airport Commission has been schedul-
ed for Sept. 16 at 3:30 p.m. in the
chambers of the county Board of
SuperviS-Ors in Sarrta Ana.
* * * * * * Trustees Go on Record
·Against Seaside Airport
Bec,;wse locating the proposed
regional airport in Huntington Beach
would "render education at one ex-
isting high S<::hool practicaJly im·
possible," Huntington Beach Union
High School Di.strict has gone on
record as "unalterably opposed" to
the St~ide site.
District trustees Tuesday night
unanimously approved a five-point
resolution, written by President John
J . BenUey, to be presented to county
Huntington Lions
To Hear Rep. Hosmer
Rep. Cralg Hosmer (R-Long Beach)
will be the guest Thursday night in
Huntington Beach fur a "Reput From
\Vashingtoo" meeting S"pOnsored by
the Uons Club.
Dinner is at tihe Sheraton·Beach Jnn
and tickets are $5, according to James
DeGuelle. 'J'he session begins at 7:30
p.m. and the public is invited to meet
the city's newest legislator, aceordi.ng
to DeGuelle.
supervisors.
Jn the two-page document, trustees
said classes at Marina High School
would be interrupted by t h e
''inevitable vibrations and unbearable
noise generated by low-Dying jct·
liners."
They also claim selection or the
Huntington Beach site for the airport
would "preclude construction" of the
new high school on the board's first-
choice sit~.
The report aiS-O reasons th&t the pro·
posed airport in this city "would affect
several elementary schools."
"Beaches are Huntington Beach's
and Orange County's greatest natural
resource," f\e report goes on, "and
this proposed airport, constructed on
the Bolsa Chica site, would cut deeply
into this valuable resource."
Trustees further reason that \Vest
Orange County would be "changed
quickly in character and the orderly
devel<>pment of tfte entire area would
be diverted from its present use and
OttUpancy as vaJuable J"e$idential,
commercial and recreational area for
many, many families to uncertain re-
development for a relative few .''
NO THANKS
Democrat Kennedy
Harbour Doctor
Said Paralyzed
In Right Leg
Wounded lfwitington liarbour physi·
clan Dr. John L. Fenner is appartotly
paralyzed in the right leg, it was
disclosed t<>d.ay on the eVe of cor·
rective surgery to close his massive
abdominal injuries.
Dr. Fenner was shot twice by his
wife Sylvia, 39, on Aug. 18 in a gu n-
fight which left her lying dead in the
hallway of their plush home at 4162
Trumbull Drive.
Spokesmen at Huntington lntercom-
munity 1-lospital said t.he rapidly
recovering doctor wUI u n d e r g o
surgery Thursday to close gaping
wounds left by bullets from a .283
caliber rine and a .357 magnum
revolver.
P<>l!ce have not challenged the story
that Dr. Fenner was at tac .k e d
murderously by his wife, who was
enJ1Sged over marital problems, .and
he finally killed her in self-defense to
save h.is own life.
Investigators were told he took
away the Title after being wounded on·
ce and shot his wlfe in the heart after
she blasted him a second time with the
powerful revolver.
Dr. Fenner, who had ceased prac-
ticing medicine to work as lecturer for
a Les Angeles firm featuring creativi-
ty seminars for couples, nearly died of
his wounds.
Orange c ..... ,
1\n open meeting on the airport
possibiliites i.n West Orange County
h3s been called for tooi&'lt in council
d1ambers of ti.1emorial Hall, 5th Street
Bnd Pecan Avenue, by Ben Londeree,
president or the Huntington Beach
H0l\1E Council.
During the 8 p.m. meeting opponents
of the Bolsa Ch.lea site in Hllfltington
Beach and the Los Alamitos Naval
Air Station location are to tell the
HOME Cooncil why there Should oot
be a regi<>na1 airport in ttle city.
Schools Study Report Opposing Bond -
Wentlaer
The 'veatherman's writing his
forecast on carbon paper this
week, and Thursday will be no
different -sunny with temp-
eratures in the 80's along the
Orange Coast. * * Bolsu Airpo,-t
Fills Mailbox
No subject ln recent history h3S
aroused as much agitated Interest in
lluntington Beadl as e proposal that
Bolsa Chica State Beach possibly be
utilized for a major jet airport,
The subject h<1.1 been covered tX·
tenslvcly in the DAILY PILOT-and
now residents are covering i 1
themselves.
Nearly a run page of letter-.; to U1e f'dl"lll" on this vital \Vest Court,ly i!i:i;ur
w\tj• be round on lod3y 's ~ l)All.Y
PIT.OT eclilorUJ pase. \
By SANIJI ~tAJOR
04 l~t 01lt7 l'M9' Jl1ll
Roc-ommendations by a property
owirers' representative to "maintain
the present educ'1t.kinal standard at
the le~ cost to af(ected t.arpayen"
-essentially in opposition to Its $12
million bond proposal -are to be con-
sidered by tile Huntington Beach
Union lligh School District,
Trustees commended Joo Ferm,
president of the Property Owners'
Protective League. for making the
report. Tuesday night.
.President Johl J . Bentley ~d
trustee11 "should coo.sider what )10\1
have said in tills report." and Trustee
Dr. Joe Ribs.I asked that the ad-
mini.stration ev-aluete it "point by
tJOlnt" by tl)fl next board meet· ,
S"!'l. I 0.
11le J12 million bopd. propoul w ch
mainly calls for pJrehase of one nt'w
slte -and con&tructJon of a new high
school -i.s to be listed on U..e Nov . 5
ballol.
1118 POPL basically contends that
bhe district Is nearly bonded to It~ "le -
gal miximum" now end "can see no
jusllflcaUon for tht acquisition of new
.tehool sites In the near ruP.irc"
anyway,
"Based upon economic factors and
projooted population densities ... the
Golden \Vest·Warner site would serve
ideally for the next hi~ school,"
Ferm's report to the lx>Grd stated.
If the last bond issue bad pMsed, the
diW"lct would have purchased the
Bolsa Chica site, again favored m: the
flrst-dloice purdlase lf the currently·
proposed bond issue is approved.
The G<>lden West·\Yarner site, some
50 aa"fll bought by the district in 1962.
ii pertiaU, vacaoL Par! ol ii i1 used
by the \Vinter9burg Continuation fligh
School.
Ferm maintains a school on Ul.is
si.le. because o1 its central locatioo,
would e~ the l<>ads on f<"'ountain
Valley, l·lunUngton Beach and Marina
ii; gh School.!.
Fenn also noted In the report that
.. less than $2 million In new bonds can
be sold yearly based upon projected
Increases In assessed vatuatloa coup!·
ed. to the rate of bond redemption," or
that the district iJ nearly indebted to
its limit.
A contingency fund of $1.$ mlllloo ls
set aside in the bond proJ)Osal for
remodeling Jfuntington Btach •Ugh
School to meet Field Act re-
quirement!, 1I the state orders it to be
done.
Fenn suggested that st a t e
legislators be c<>ntacteo to find out if
the bliil ichool, which has been
'
okayed even though it does not meet
the standards, will ever have to be Im·
proved.
"Jf the structural integrity Is below
standard and lHe is In PQtcntl<ll
danger, then updhting should com-
mence without delay, but to request or
the taxpayer $1.5 mJllion for a 'need'
lhat mny not exist, i.$ not prudent," he
arguod.
The roport al5o suggested:
-The district Immediately get rid of
excess land holdings and convert the
sale money into cash for tbe district's
capital Improvements.
-Delay expansion of Westminster
H.igh School and distrltrof6ces "due
to economic corulderatlons, such as
limited bonding capacity", and
-Swltcb from "standardization" of
·~ designs th.at "appears to dis age contr11ctor bidding and
ra s lmltcd supply resources."
JNS JDE TODAY
Oranoc C.'uunt1{1 new com-
n1t4nitu th.eater 1eason opens
ihl$ w~ckcnd with a /rrmiliar
plo11, "Tire OrW Couptt." Ste
Entertatnment, Page 18.
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.Z DAil Y PILOT
Czech Youths Denounce Dubcek, Seeli 'Truth'
PllAGUZ (UPO -A n I r 1
Czocboolovat youlhs today colled on
their leaden to teU them the "brutal
IJ'Uth" -!be Frice the Sovtela are
making tbt.m pay to keep Alexander
Dubcek's repme in power.
For the first time since the Soviet.
led Warsaw Pact troops invaded
Czecbocdovakta a week ~go Tuesday,
there were algna some Czechoslovaks
bed 1 .. t faith In Dubcek.
In maey plac<s, phol<>graphs ol the
Communlrt party first secretary, who
bad -a symbol oi del1111« •gainsl
Viet Plank
Breaks Up
Convention
CHICAGO (AP) -The anticipoted
Ooor fight over a Vietnam war policy
broke opm With even more than ex-
pected fury in the early morning hours
today and forced ·the Democratic Na-
tional Convention into an abrupt ad·
journment.
After meetlllg for nearly seven
hours, the weary delegates got to the
proposed party plaUonn, w b I c h
recommends settling the Vietnam con-
flict along lines set by President
Johnson and followed by Vice Presi·
dent Hubert H. Humphrey, the leader
for the Democrattc pre 1 id e n tia I
nomination.
A• the bsue came up, some
delegates laundled a tumult that
finally ended when atlcago Mayor
Richard J. Daley's proposal for an ad·
journment unW 1 p.m. EDT today was
accepted.
Fueling the fight was a determined
effort by s0me delegates to stop
Humphrey Crom gaining the nomina·
ti on.
A minority report calling tor an un·
conditional bombing halt of North
Vietnam ls widely supported by
followers of Humphrey's major op·
ponents, Sens. Eugene J . McCarthy
and George S. McGovern, as well as
backen QJ noncandidate Sen. Edward
M. Keonedy.
Supporters of the minority report
were ela1.ed by the sudden ad-
journment.
Frank Mankiewicz , press
spokesman for McGovern, stood on a
chair and shouted, "We have 11 hours
to get 80 votes." He claimed backers
of the immediate bombing halt were
short onJy that number of the 1,312
votes needed to oarry their point.
When Chairman Hale Boggs of the
Platform Committee began reading
the majority plank he was interrupted
by loud bandclapplng that began in the
Wisconsin delegation and spread to
much of the jampacked floor and
gcdJeries.
2 Cities Oppose
Tax Initiative
City COUllCils Of tv.ro West Orange
County communities have gone on
record this week oppo5ing the con-
troversial Watson initiative.
Huntington Bea(!h City Council
unanhnously adopted a resolution
Moc<lay whlch opposes the property
tax lim.ltati'Oll measure sponsored by
Los Angeles County Asse=r Philip
Watson.
Similarly, the Westminster City
Coooc:il adopted Tuesday a resolution
expressing criticism or the pOtential
amendment to the State's cons.titutlon.
U passed, the initiative would
s.ub<tal>tlally reduce property tax
revenues as well u stringently llmit
a municipality's capacity to bond
itaelt.1be iniative appears on the Nov.
i eeneral ballot.
' DAILY PllOT
.................. c.ltt....1111
OIU.fUil!: COAll ~IL.ISHINQ; COM,ANY
ll:okrt H. w,,4
P,_lc*lt 11'111 PutMllilrl"
Jeck a. C•rl•r Vfct p,..ldMf #Id 6-1 M111tttr
n-•• K•"il """' Tlttiwl•• A. M•r,hl~• ~flllkir
Albtri W. le... WiUi1'" R•1i ~No H!,Ollfm,1m1 flMtll
1!.iW City Edllw
" ..... " .... Offklll .JOt ltti ltr.•t
M•lfHtt .._.,rMJI PD. In 790 •tMI --,._. ...oi: am.,.,.. ..... ~i.nr4 c.... ,.,..., -.... ..., ltrwt ...--..: m ,...., ,._
tht occupetioa force1, were ripped
from wan..
Wl\tn atudenta marched today on the
NaUooal Auembly Bulldlnl where
depuUel were dlscuHlng lttm1 of the
agreement reached in MosC"Ow, they
no longer chanted ''Dubcek! Dubcek!"
"They capitulated in Moscow." said
a haggard youth in ,wenceslas Square
of Dubcek, President Ludvik Svoboda
and other Czechoslovak leaders who
took part in the four day1 of talks.
"It is treason to do thls and to let
these (Soviet) 1oldiers to 1tay without
a prote1t," bt 1aid. "We have been
tak"'1 to Munkh araln, and lad homo
with I ring ill tho DOH."
But moot mlddle-qed perlODI, When
asked how they felt, merely 1hrug1ed
their shoulders and said "It ls bad, but
what are we to do?"
"The tanks are here." said a young
government lawyer. "It is a fact that
must be recognir.ed, like the president
says."
The red, white and blue ribbons that
had decorated the lapels and blouses
o( virtually everyone in Prague thia
-k berao to dlnppoar. JI' ewer lbao
one in every five persons seen on the
street continued to wear the symbol oI
defl.ance and patriotism.
And tor the first time since they ar-
rived eight days ago, Soviet oc-
cupation troops wandered, usually in
pairs, through the rush hour crowds
without more than an occasional
glance from the Czechoslovaks.
The Czech08lovak radio compared
the agreement "dictated" in Moscow
to the "abducted" Czechoslovak
leader& while Soviet Bloc Corces OC•
POSS IBILITIES -Huntington Beach Planning aide
Jerry Murphy displays some of drawing! showing
possible ways to develop municipal pier as a rec-
reation·commercial <:enter. Economic consultant is
to be hired •oon to take a detailed look at the
possibilltles.
Unruh Abandons Effort
1To Draft Sen. Kennedy
CHICAGO (UPI) -Assembly
speaker Jesse M. Unruh, leader of the
California delegation to the
Democratic National Convention, to-
day abandoned his attempt to start a
movement to draft Sen. Edward ?11.
From Page l
DEMOCRATS ••
ing Chicago.
lllree tavorlte sons in quick order
endorsed Humplucy following Ken-
nedy's firm, new disawwal.
Gov. Richard J . Hughes of New
Jersey produced 61 more votes; Flori-
dians flocked to Humphrey when Sen.
George Smathers shed his favorite son
status. and -the bandwagon rolling
Cast now -L<ruisiana Gov. John
McKeithen released his delegates
from their favorite son commitment to
h.im.
The 118-vo te Illinois delegation was
in caucus at midday with ri.1ayor
Richard Daley, its firm leader, and
was expeoted to join tile Humphrey
movemenL Daley had breakfast with
flumphrcy prior to the caucus.
J\.1cCarthy, realizing the lonely and
once ridiculed effort he had taken to
demonstrate the Vietnam war's un-
popularity had reached it.s end, talked
ph.Uosophlcally about bow to soften the
blow to his dedicated supporters.
He canceled appearances before
caucuses of delegates and held so-call·
ed "emergency meetings" In his hotel.
McGOVERN FIGHTING
Kennedy !or U1e presidential nomina-
tion.
Unruh, v.·hose 174 member delega-
tion was almost totally behind Ken-
nedy if the senator had allowed his
name to be put before the delegates,
announced that the Massachusetts
senator had told him he is not a can-
didate.
"When I came to the conventilon I
had hoped we might have another can·
didate in the race -a candidate who I
felt could win the nomination and
more importantly could win this fall,"
Unruh said.
But he told a morning meeting of the
California delegation that Kennedy
had both issued a public statement
removing himself from consideration
and informed Unruh of his decision by
a personal telephone call.
It was the first time the Cali(ornia
delegation leader had publicly ad-
mitted th.at be was a prime mover
behind the draft-Kennedy movement
at the convention.
He told the delegation that Kennedy
promised to come to California in the
futW'e "to help us in the causes he
shares with us."
Unruh did not disclose whom he
'4'ould back and told the delegates:
"Any great rush or stampede
anywhere probably is too late to do
you any political good."
He said the delegation probably
would meet later today during the con-
vention sessions for a "full and free
discussion" of where it would throw
its support.
Unruh was so busy Tuesday night
trying to establish a coalition of peace
candidates that he could not attend the
convention session.
Group to Stud y
Second Step
Beach P rogram
Second major step in developing a
n1aster plan of development for the
beach and commercial areas along the
beach in HuntingOOn Beach will be
under discussion tonight by the city
Mid-Beach Development Committee.
The committee meets at 7:30 p.m. in
the city's administrative annex just
south of the Public Library at 525
Main St.
Discussion of hiring of an economic
consultant to take a look .at all the
possibilities within the mid-beach
planning area, which runs along ttle
waterfront from Beach Boulevard to
Golden We st Street is the major agen·
da item for tonight.
Committeemen are expected to hear
a report on the criteria for selection of
the economic expert and decide on
when interviews should be held.
Under s-tudy is a large portion of the
city '4-'hich has been considered
blighted eiU1er through age or oil pro-
duction. a policy plan calling for
modernization of the area including
the municipal pier has been developed.
Just how extensively the area is to
Le developed will depend on the
reports from the proposed economic
study. Other experts are to be 'hired to
report on traffic and engineering pro-
blems.
LONDON BOOKIES
FAVOR NIXON
LONDON (UPI) Ladbroke's
bookmakers today quoted 6-4 odds on
Richard Nixon to '"'in the presidential
election. Odds remained even on the
then-unnamed Democratic candidate.
c:upled the COlllllry with the 19!8
Munlch Pact which sold o u t
(,'zechoslovakla to Nazi Germany. It
called oo the people to refuse to sub-
mit but to support Communist Party
Secretary Dubcek and President Lud-
vik Svoboda because "there is no
other way out."
The Czechoslovak cabinet and the
National Assembly met to discuss tile
terms of the agreement v.·hile radios
repeatedly called on citizens to avoid
"more blood.abed."
But tMre were sUU occasional
Ci t i.:en's Protest
domorulratl<>GI by ltucleDtl Ill bUllet-
scnrred Wenceslas Square. About
3.000 marched to the N a t 1 o n a 1
Assembly .Building with banners pro-
claiming: "No compromise for
treason!", and "Tell us the brutal
truth ." r
One of the prices the Czechoslovaks
apparently will pay ls the relmposltion
of censorship on the press, radio and
television on all matters dealing with
relations with other Communist na-
Uom;.
Airplane Engines
Roar at Hearing
By JACK BROBACK
Of tllt 011lr ,Utt Ir.It
Recorded airplane engines opened
Tuesday night's hearing devoted to the
Orange County Airport portion of the
county Master Plan ot A I r
Transportation.
The recording, purportedly n:.ade in
his home, waa played by Daul el W.
Emory, chairman of the Airport Noise
Abatement Committee to emphasize
his continuing attack against the
airpomt and its manageme11t.
llmor7 .and his group comprised mast o the overflow crowd at the
small county planning commission
hearing room in Santa Ana. It is a
small room holding 100 persons at
mosl
In addition to the noise abatement
crowd, a few new voices were beard
by the airport commissioners.
"The Newport-Costa Mesa area is
the last place I would want to build an
airport," said Joseph F. Pike, Jr., of
1811 Glenwood Lane, Newport Beach·.
Pike, a pilot with Trans World
Airlines, said the San Joaquin Hills of·
Cered the best regional airport site.
Ed Van Allen, president of the
Orange County Pilots Association
struck a popular note wtien he sug-
gested that au airline operations be
moved from the airport immediately.
He said they could go to El Toro, Los
Alamitos or Loog Beach and stay
there until a regional airport could be
constructed somewhere else.
Having disposed of all but private
flying out of the facility, Van Allen ad-
mitted he had not talked to the
Chiefs Assault
Trial Con tinues
The assault and battery trial of
former Los Alamitos acting chiei of
police enters its second day o{
testimony today following selection of
a jW"y and prclhninary testimony
Tuesd:ay in Westmini.,ter Municipal
Court.
\Villiam Austin was formally charg-
ed by the district attorney's office
Aug. 7, after a claim of politi! brutali-
ty was made by Robert Whitson, 19,
12131 Martlla Ann Drive, Rossmoor.
Whttson alleged his car stereo tape
player was wrongfully taken by police
as pcxsslble stolen property. When he
arg:led with oificers at police head·
quarters concernin·g return of the pro·
perty, he said Austin grabbed his hair
and pushed him against the wall.
\Vhltson indicated that he suffered
bruises of fue head and face.
Pending outcome of 'the trial Austin
has been suspended from the
force by James Smith. city manager
and presently acting police chief.
mllit:ary or Long Beach officials.
· John Davies, an official of the Air
Transport Assoc I a ti on, which
represents nation-wide airlines told
the commission that he could assure
them that use of the military airports
was out and that Long Beach had pro·
blems. "There are homes near that
airport too and people complain," he
explained.
Davies quieted fears of larger
v1anes using the airport. The runways
Could not be made long enough to han·
die large planes and that includes the
proposed Air Bus," Davies salu.
"Airports cannot be in too remote
an area. They serve the public," R. w.
"Bob" Clifford, vice president tor
operation ot Air California told the
group.
1-Ie said his firm, the principal user
of the airport was not for longer
runways or .any "wild" expansion, He
did say parking should be increased.
All-stm· Array
Awaits Nixon
Vi sit to County
Glittering stars ol. stage, screen and
t.he Republican. Party will gather in
Aniaiheim on Sept. 16 for a $100-a·plate
campaign dinner and rally for GOP
presidential candidate Richenl M.
Nixon.
Master of Ceremonies for the
Anaheim Convention Center event will
be fie-man movie star John ''Duke"
\V·ayne, of Newport Beach, wti.ile Gov.
Ronald Reagan will introduce Nixon.
The presidential hopeful will return
to Orange County, v.ticre he ~this
boyhood in Yorl>a Liflda, foUO'Wing an
earlier Sept. 5 rally in San Francisco.
"As Mr. Nixon bas stated repeated.
ly. California is a crucial state in the
nation and he expects to spend more
time campaigrting here than in any
other state," said Lt. Gov. Robert JI.
Finch, Nixon's actilrg state campaign
manager.
Finch will also appear on the
Anaheim program, of[ering a bric(
talk before Nixon's main event speech.
Final details ol the Anaheim rally
are expected to be announced Thurs·
d·ay at a special press cocktail party
at the Convootion Center, according to
campaign aide Frank Jordan.
The $1()().a-plate dinner will begin at
7 :30 p.m .. follm1:ing a social hour.
J ordan said, wrt}i ttie main eddreES
due beginning at 9 p.m .. with $I-per·
person gallery seats available.
McGovern, a late starter who never
was moch of a threat to llumphrey,
continued his round of appearances
with picas to deny the nomination to
Humphrey and to repudiate Pres.i.dent
Johnson's war policy at the con·
ventioo's afternoon debate on Viet-
nam.
So confident was Humphrey of quick
success tonight that he took time out
to dr.att sections of his acceptance
speech and to confer with party
leaders about his choice of a running
mate.
An aide. v.·ho asked not to be iden-
tified, said Unruh met \•rith both. Sen .
Eugene J. McCartlly and Sen. George
McGovern in an effort to convince
them only Kennedy could defeat the
drive of Vice President 1-tubert H.
Humphrey.
FROM CALIFORNIA ARTISANS, ENGAGEMENT RINGS OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUTY
The conferences were held in the
Conrad 1-lilton. all but besieged
through the night and into the day by
2,500 antiv.·ar demonstrators and
heavily guarded by 800 National
Guardsmen carrying carbines.
The Unruh aide rejected outright
any move to put Kennedy on a ticket
"'ith llumphrey as the standard
bearer.
"He shooldn't start out with. a losing
ticket," the aide told a newsman.
An informal poU of tl1e delegation
taken earlier this \4'eek indicated all
but about a dozen would be willing to
cast a first-ballot vote for Kennedy.
* * * * * * A~~ord on War?
LBJ Fea rf rtl of Stall in Pa ris
AUSTIN. Tex. (UPI) -Prnldent
• J~on hope~ the Democrats will pick
a candidate whose views on the Viet-
nam war balioally match tbose of
Republican nomlnte Richard M. Nlx-
on.
Johnson Tuesday rtv1ewed hi1 own
'War policy in an interview on his &0th
buthday and implied Uie position of
the American peoplt. on Vietnam
would be clear U the war viewt ol the
Democratic candidate were dmilar to
h11 Md Nixon's.
"I om hopeful th.at the views of the
nomlntcs of the two miJor parties will
not be too divergent 10 the world will
not have to wait until November to
pick theootteet 1pot," Jolm100 aald .
lte apparently refe"'f:i~~ m1nlllroUoa supporten' c I
would Nil 11>1 Paris befotl U
the Democrats nomin::ite a dovish can-
didate .
Jotins-0n did not mention Nixon by
n11me .
He conceded little could be: ac·
compllshed ln Paris until t.he con·
vent.Ions ended.
"We are not golng to make much
progres1 in tb!s !leld until the con-
vent1ont get over and until it js
recocnf.ztd that under this American
poUUcal 1y1tem parties select each
one of the nominees .and then the
Amtrican people get behJnd whotver
b the chosen leadtt."
ln effect, the President littmed to
hint the choice ~ a Democratic can·
dldate wtth tough views on the war to
match UKM! of Nixon could con-
ceivably lead to peace b e f or e
NoYember.
t"OWVr,orm ,.., ...
a4HICAMIEJllC.UO tMITllll CHAllGI
.......
J. C. fiumphrie~ Jeweler
1111 NEWPORT AVf.., COSTA MESA
22 Yeers In llt• S.t m• Loc.etion
•~vu t r 111s
I .
,... Lagnna Bea~h -DAILY PILOT Your Romet.ew
EDITI ON Dally Paper
voi:. 6"f, NO. 207, 7 SECTIONS, 78 PAGES LAGUNA BEACH, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1968 ' TEN CENTS
Laguna Narco Warning: 'Look for Blue Lights'
TOM GOR~IAN
Of I~• D•llf P'Hlt Sltff
Watch out tor that house or blue
light&.
lt could mean the psychedelic sect
within is participating in a numbers
game, a game where the players get
higher than the numbers.
In this case, "numbers" are mari-
juana cigarettes.
And the warning about the blue
lig'.hts was Issued by Laguna Beach
detective Norman Babcock, at the
monthly meeting of the Exchange Club
of Laguna Beach.
Other signs that may lead to suspi
cion Of drug use in a house are heavil)
curtained windows, always closed win-
do·.vs, and doors that are shut ver:-
qllickly.
Signs that "speed," or methedrine,
Is being used can be hypodermir
needles, often bent in two, in trash
£_a11St -
' -, •
"We rely much on the citizens who
phone us , telling us that they suspect
something is going on. About 00 per·
cent of our arrests in.itia'ted with a
citizen's call," Babcock told the
businessmen.
Then the question of having the
citizens get involved was br'lught up.
"Everyone fears that if they call
police, their name will be spread
around. This is not our goal, to put the
burden on the citizens," Babcock said.
•
.. Names are kept ln secrecy."
Along with tips from adults, otten
students have informed the police of
Ulega1 activities, he sald. "Kids know
ever~g that's happening in the
streets. They are reliable. But we
don't USt! juveniles as undercover
agents," he assured the men.
BabcOck estimated that about 75
percent of the arrested drug users and
sellers are convicted.
Tn 1966, there were 38 drug aJTest.s
1n Laguna Beach. In 1967, 85 people
were 1ITested on some kind of drug
charge. And through July of this year,
there bave been 93 arrests, Babcock
said.
Through the 2lh years narcotics
have become more available. But
things seem to be t.apering off.
"The problem b;t Laguna is cooling
otf," Babcock asserted. "In the last
emos 1n I er ar e
'Cinch'
l(enne"dy Disavowal Pushes Veep
NO THANKS
Democrat Kenn.dy
By BARRY SCHWEID
ClflCAGO (AP) -Vice President
Hubert H. Humphrey appeared certain
Wednesday of winning the Democratic
nomination for president on the first
ballot.
Humphrey's expected vote total
began to climb after Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy of Massachusetts pleaded
with the delegates to give up an idea
of a draft and to choose, instead,
"from amoog the capable a n d
dedicated candidates already in con·
tentlon."
In quick suc~sion , Gov. Richard J .
Hughea of New Jersey endorsed
ij~y. Govs. '30bn J; McKeithen
of l:Ouislana and Mills E. Godwin Jr.
of Virginia dropped out as favorite
sons and Illinois' powerful political
boss, Mayor RJchard J . Daley of
Phtcago, turned a massive 112 votes
over to the vice president.
Daley bad held out for days. Though
he had been expected to go for
Humphrey eventually, the mayor
listened to pleas in behalf Of other
possible nominees, particularly the
last of the Kennedy brothers.
Joan Irvine Pressures
Court for Estate Share
Irvine Ranch heiress Joan Irvine
Smith laid her demand for a bigger
share of her late land baron
grandfather's estimated $200 million
estate before the Ninth U.S. Court of
Appeals in San Francisco Tuesday.
The attractive blonde mother of
three, who bas homes in Laguna
Supervisors Set
3-cent Reduced
County Tax Rate
A reductioo of three cent.a 1n Orange
County's general tax rate to $1.68 and
an overall reducti.oo in general and
special district rates of 11.5 cents was
.adopted by the Board of Supervisors
this morning.
Auditor·Controller Victor A. Jieim
told supervisors it would mean a
dollar saving of $3.45 millioa to the
county's tax payers.
Supervisor Altoo E . Allen pointed
out that last year's general fund rate
of $1. 71 was the third lowest in the
state and this year's reduction should
improve the county's position.
Reductions of 5.5 cents or $1.8
million was accomp l i'shed In
departments and districts directly
under control of the supervisors.
District reductions included the
county library down three-fourths of a
cent and the Harbor District dawn 1.5
cent!.
The tax rnte reductions were made
despite increases in the budget. The
genera! fund expenditure will be ap.
proximately $120 milllon up $21 million
over last year.
County Flood Control expenditure:.t
trill be $8.2 million, up from $7.6
million in 1967.Q.
The Harbor District l! $6.1 million.
up from $4.6 million.
Beach's Emerald Bay and in Mid·
dieburg, Va., U challenging a U.S.
District Court ruling handed down in
Los Angeles last December.
The 36-year-old heiress claims 459
Irvine C-Ompany shares currently held
by the Irvine Foundation were never
legally transferred when the foun·
dation was set up.
Judges ruled in Los Angeles last
December, hhowever1 that t'he Irvine
Foundation was legally ertablished
and therefore Mrs. Smith has no claim to any additional shares. ·
The shares in question have a par
value of $100 each, with a market
value of $109,000 each.
Her attorney, Lyndol Young, of Los
Angeles, said the trust is simply an
alter-ego of Irvine himself and is staf-
fed entirely by his own agents.
Attorney Howard J . Privett, of Los
(Seo ESTATE, Page %)
Laguna Flag
Trial Delayed
Trial of a Laguna Beach couple ac·
cused of desecrating the American
Flag by covering it with a picture of
North Vietnam's leader lio Chi Minh
has been continued again, uotil Sept
17.
David Gallup, 22. and his wife Patti,
21, both of 141 \Vave St., have pleaded
innocent of the misdemeanor charge.
A bench warrant was issued for both
when they did not appear In munjcipal
court Tuesday. An attorney did.
However, the warrant wall held and
wiU not be usOO unless they fail to
show for trial Sept. 17, acrordJng to .a
court aide.
· Mrs. Gallup ls free on her own
recognizance and M is free on $315
hail. They were chargtod under a rec·
tion of the Slate W.IUtary an<l Veterans
Code after tbelr May arrest by Laguna
police.
But wltti Kennedy's don't-draft.me
statement, Daley beaded Dllnols Into
Humphrey's mounting vote column.
Shortly alter tlhe Democrats con-
vened their third 1ession, a n
Associat<d Press poD of solid first-
ballot strength gave Humphrey 1,4161/•
votes -more than 100 above the 1,312
he will need for nomination Wed·
nes:iay nlght.
His closest challenger, Sen. Eugene
J. McCarthy of Minnesotia, trailed with
491 1/•, while the third man in the race,
Sen. George S. McGovern of South
Dakota, had 00. Another 54.SVc votu:
were uncommitted.
,The tally is baoed on )ll1malY
result.cl , public pledges arxl caucuses
and AP delegate check!. It includes
only firmly committed votes, not those
leaning toward a candidate.
McCarthy, in a meeting Tuesday
night with stephen Sm.lt.h,1 ottered to
swing behind Kennedy, lllce McCarthy
a critic of the ad.minatration's Viet-
nam war poli<:y. Smith, Kennedy's
brother-in-law, has been a central
figure in the draft-Kennedy move-
ment.
Textbook Causes
No Controversy
In Laguna Beach
The hWry text "Land of the Free"
presently causing a flap ill the Orange
County Board of Education hasn't
made any particular waves in Laguna
Beach.
The book is one oC five or six texts
wed in eighth grades of Laguna Beach
Unified School District to teach
hi-y.
Slll;>erinte.rul.ent William Ullom said
he thought the book has limitations but
spoke from an academic standpoint.
State Senator John Schmitz IR·
Tustin), -and others recently found
sympathetic ean for their criticism of
the history book at a county board
meeting.
Cba.rges included assertiorl5 that the
book was inac<::urate and unpatriotic.
It is used by most Orange County
school di6tricts and was adopted by
the State Board of Education after
revisions.
Ullom said the book reaUy wouldn't
meet ttie needs of youngsters if it was
the only text in we. }Je said a variety
of text books should be used to carry a
variety of viewpoints.
"One of our major objectives is to
teat h the fact that bias does exist in
writing and to make an attempt to
help youngsters identify the bias."
sajj tnlom. 1'A11 text books un·
doubtedly have some bias.''
Hi:S criticism of the book wa11 that it
was designed for a chronologicaJ sur·
vey course tand failed to take into con·
sideratlon basic concepU of history.
Jie said the criticism to some degree
could apply to other texU.
Ullom said there h<is been comment
about the book ln this district but it
has not become an ls.sue. lfe noted
U1at a text book evaluation form exists
for paren(.$ concerned about 1ny text.
He said he did not bell~ve any had
been used lo evaluate "Land of the
Free."
Max Rafferty, as state superin·
(Sc• TEXTBOOK, Pace %)
HIS Q MACHINE -Professor Nathan Rynn sits beside Q Machine
he is building at UC, Irvine. It hol ds lightning magnetic field. Mag-
netic plates making up cylinder are so powerful they will pull a
wrench of!. the floor.
Quiet Ma~hine
UCI P fofessor Harnesses Lightning
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of !ht Dally l'lttl SUH
Na't.han Rynn, UC Irvine professor,
Is building a machine to ,make Hghtn·
ing stand still. He calls it a Q Machine.
Technically, lig!ltning Is plasma, a
highly ionized gas. Other forms of
plasma are arcs, sparks, fluorescent
lights and neon signs.
"Plasma Invariably is turbulent,
noisy and flapping around,'' Rynn
said. "My machine makes it stand
quiet-heT1ce Q, for quiet. Machine."
The Q Machine at UCI won't be his
first. He invented and built the first
on2 w1len he was at Princeton in 1959.
Many others have been built in many
countries since.
Rynn, 44, a Laguna Beach resident,
invented the Q Machine so he could
make pl.asma staJ1d still and ex-
periment with it to better understand
it. Jn the quiet state, he said, you.can
drop pebbles in it, poke it or slap It to
see the effect.
BOON TO l\lANKIND
Better understanding of plasma
could orie day be an almost un·
believable boon to mankind, he sug-
gested. It cou l~ be the key to con·
trolled fusion, the hydrogen bomb
rooction slowed down.
As the hydrogen bomb is more
powerful than the atom bomb, so too
are the peaceful potentialities of
hydrogen fu sion much greater than
heavy element fissloo, the atom bomb
reaction.
The supply of deuterium, heavy
hydrogen, is practically limitless.
Rynn .said a pail ol Stawater conta.IM
deuterium energy equivalent to 300,000
gallons of g-asollne and the C06t of ex·
tracting i.t In quantify Ls on the order
of 10 cenU a bucket.f
But except in uP,controlled
tMrmonuclear re4CU0n, scientists
haven't been able 10 fuse deuterium
a.toms to release the mern.
• "r.J
Jf they ever do, Rynn said, it would
increase the power reserves of the
world at a minium by a factor of
1.000 for at least a billion years.
The implications? There wouldn't be
any more fuss over sources of energy,
like oil. Electricity would be so cheap
we wouldn't even bother to meter it.
But for the most part the implications
are beyond our comprehension, Rynn
said.
To fuse heavy hydrogen it must be
heated to 100 mlllion degrees. "Hotter
than the sun," Rynn said.
As the heat increases the atoms
start moving around faster and
collide together m o r e and more
violently until tbey knock off electrons
and become ionized. Th.it supertieated
gas is the plasma that Rynn works
with.
The problem ls not adding the heat,
but containing the plasma in one spot.
At super t em p e rat U·r es, the
deuterium atoms go zooming off
through tbe magnetic field supposed to
contain them.
SEEK REASON
By researching the properties of
pl>asma, Rynn hopes to discover why
the atoms escape. "This ls my bag,"
he said. "I don't want to touch a reac-
tor until 1 can understand plasma."
Getting Q Machine far Irvine has
been difficult. Rynn's been work!ng on
It for the two years he's been here.
"The hold·up is money," he said, "and
we Just had some that was promised
to us taken back."
tte hopes to have the machine com·
pl&ted in another six months with
federat and state money and Atomic
F..nergy Commisiri-On kNln equipment.
A tochnleian and griaduate student.!
are workJng on building It. "J think It
Will cost about •100,000 by the tJme
we're ell through," be said.
With his new Q Machlnt, Rynn
(See MACHINE, Pa1• %)
three to four weeks, the narcotlcs pr'O-
blem tiun't been as bad."
One reason for the greater amount
of arrests "is the fact that the police
department is more enlightened ll1 tbe
field. Since the force has become morti
knoWledgeable about the signs of druf
u~e. Laguna has had better a-
forcement, according to Babcock.
"We make a trtmendous number ot
arrests in the field, auch as when
(See LIGHTS, Pace %)
Convention
Neatly Split
Over Issue
cmCAGO (UPI) -The Dem-Oeratic
Noa.Uonal Convention launched into a
bitter debate oo the Vietnam war to-
day.
'The convention was sharply divided
between baclters of the policies of
President Jcllnson and Hul:>eR H.
Humphrey and those supporting the
demands cl. Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy
for an immediate halt in U. S. bOm·
binig ol North Vietnam to bring an end
~ the war in Sootheast Asi:a.
It ~ the second meeting of the day
fer red-eyed delcgate1 who left tti.e in-
Ad.ditlonal storl•s, photographs on
1 Democrotic National Convention
on Pagl! 3,
t ernatlonal am.J'.flitlleatre sbcrtly .after
1 a.m. when tlhe COllvetttion was forced
to quit by disorderly demands for ad-
jourmnert.
Supporters of McCarthy ..S Seli.
George McGovern ol. South Dakot.i
st:aiged a demonstration that forced the
delegates to put Off a Vietnam
showdown until most of tlhe nation wu
et least awa:ke if not l¥3tohing. 'The
hall was only partially filled when the
session began.
Rep. Hale Boggs of Louisiana,
chaiiman of the conrentioo 's platform
committee. put the issue be.fore the
delegates by summarizing a pro-ad·
ministration plank on Vietnam wh.i.ch
, included a conditional halt i n
American bombing.
McCarthy-McGovern f o r c e s at-
tempted to win support of a majority
of delegates to rep)ace the original
document with a dove plank calling for
an unconditional halt in the bombing, a
phased, negatiaeed. wl~ by"both
sides and e say for th' Via Cong in
creatioo of a new Saig.oo gcwermnent.
But the long-.aw.a.ited presentation <l
the Vietnam policies came with bun·
dreds of delegate seats empty.
After meet.illg for nearly seven
hours, the weary delegates got to the
proposed party platform, which
recommends settling the Vietnam con·
ruct along lines set by President
Johnson a11d followed by Vice. Presi-
dent Hubert H. Humphicy, the leader
for the Democratic presidential
nomination.
As the issue cam'} up, some
delegates I.aunched a tumult t~C
finally ended when Chicago May .. :
Richard J . Daley's proposal for an ad-
(Sce PLATFORM, Page%)
Orange Cocut
Weather
The weatherman's writing his
forecast on carbon paper this
week, and Thursday will be no
different -sunny with temp-
eratures in the 80's along the
Orange Coast.
I NSIDE TODAY
Orange County's ntw com·
munity theattr $tason Qpf!ns
Chis weekend with a familiar
plcy, "Thi! Odd Couple." Stf!
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'"''"'"'-' ,. ...... .... .. _
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l
0 .a.a 7 ,, h a·= m r ,. n F' am s •' ' ;r>s • = 6 = = =. • = + Zti ii&•
2 DAILY PILDT Wtd11tsd_,, August 28, 1968
Cha1nber Spikes Slap at Tax Initiative
87 IUCIWUl P. NAIL ......... ,.....,.
An 1ttempt to broadside lh• Wet.on
IAltlallve '"' llo Nov. I <loill<rnia
boGlot "'"' opiked at ,....day's
IMOtlng ci IAtiUna Beoch Chamber of
CommArce dlrectors.
Fro• P .. e I
PLATFORM . • •
jounnnent untD I pJll. EDT todlY wu
accepted.
Fueling the fight was a. determined
effort by tome delegate• to stop
Humphrey lrom &alolnl the nomlno·
lion.
A minority report calling !or .., uo·
i:onctitional bombing halt of North
Vietnam is widely supported by
foUowen of Humphrey'• major op-
ponents, Sens. Eugene J. McCarthy
and George S. McGovern, as well ••
backen ol. nonoandidat. Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy.
Supporters of the minority report
were elated by the sudden ad-
journment.
Frank Mankiewicz, press.
spokesman for McGovern, stood on a
chair and shouted, "We have 11 hours
to ret 80 votes." He claimed backers
of· the immediate bombing balt were
short only that number of the 1,312
votes.needed to CaJTY their point.
When Chairman Hale Boggs of th&
PlaUorm Committee began reading
the majority plank he was interrupted
by loud handclapping that began in the
Wisconsin delegation and spread to
muM of the jampacked floor and
galleries.
Albert's SoluUon was to call on
Mayor Daley to move for ad-
journment. He said such a· motion
would be proper because it set a
definite Ume for reruming the seaaion.
The delegates roared approval end
streamed out of the big ball at 2: 17
a.m.
From Page 1
ESTATE ..•
Angeles, representing all but one of
the foundation's trustees, said during
the hearing that the foundation has
distributed $6.S million to charities in
California.
"There ls no evidence whatsoever
..• that there was no deliverance of
the indentures of trust which created
the foundation,'' Privett argued.
Circuit Judges John C. Pickett, War-
ren L. Jones and Austin L. Staley took
the appeal under submission foUowing
the hearing 1n San Francisco.
Mn. Smith, wife of Mortimer W.
Smith, has in the past argued that two
Irvine estate trustees, Robert Gerdes,
board chairman of Pacific G«s &
Electric Co., and N. Loyall McLaren,
a financier, should be dismiased
because they .are also fOUDdation
"directors.
She believes the two posts constitute
a conflict of interest, saying they are
not rep-esenting her own financial
position properly.
Mrs. Smith's personal fortune is
estimated at $4S million.
Barbecue Set
At High School
The third, and last, high school
barbecue of the summer will be held
tonight at the Laguna Beach lligh
School patio.
Flom 8 p.m. to rrUdnight, any stu·
dent of LBHS can barbecue his dinner,
swim and d!nce to a band for the
nominal fee of 50 cents.
Spongored jol.nt.Jy by the city recrea·
tion department and the student coun-
cil, the barbecues were lnJtlated to of.
fer the student& romeUtlng to do in the
evening.
Attendance h&& been disappointing
at the Jast two barbecues.
DAllY PllOI '"""'"_ ..........
Oft.ANOE COAIT PVIL1SMING COMl"ANY
aeMrt H. W114
1'mldllll .,.,. l"lllllltllft'
J1e• a. C11rl1y
Vici Prtsldtnt '"' oe--11 M1111ttr
n'''"' K•••ll Edi!M"
lh11111t A. M11rph ln1
Mll'ttlllt Efllllf"
Ric~1r4 '· Nill ''"1 Nh1111 Lllllf\I lted\ """°'"i.1,,. CUI' fdllor DlrKIOlr
Lo..-. """ Offk•
221 f1r11t A••·
M1ln11, A.44r111: P.O. ''" ,,. •2•IZ --C•tl AWN! )» Wiii 111.r ll'l'Mt ,,._., k1d'I: 7114 wet 1111t11N kull"l1r•
HunfWIM kldl1 M Sfh l'""I
(
Tom Johnolon, !orm<r c:ilember
~ bl.d prepared a re>0lutlon
-•Ina IM "s--ty conceived aoo
!nhertnU1 dari>oClnc Watton om...S·
meal"
The proposed constitutional amend-
ment oould et.µnlnat.e the abWty or
Laguna (and oU>er poUUcal oub-
dlW!Dom) to bood for 1m9rovMnent1.
••c•>r•ll•I to Q1y M111a111r JMllea D,
Wbu1o11.
oou.qQe..., .. ball ...... In·
abuity to acquire the Main Deaoh and
po&sible re-qienlng of the freeway
"11eflf ff TIM C&rtw
Three-Point Score for Hunter
Ken Brumage, off-duty Laguna Beach police officer, hefts horn of
three-point buck he dropped near Irvine Bowl last weekend during
special hunt on Irvine Ranch. Field dressed, deer weighed 128
pounds.
•
Roar of Airplane Engines
Punctuates Airport Probe
By JACK BROBACK
Of lllt D•llY l"Mlt Ili ff
Recorded airplane engines opened
Tuesday nJght's hearing devoted to the
Orange C0tu1ty Airport portion of the
county Master Plan of A 1 r
Tr""portation.
The recording, purportedly made in
his home, w.a.s played by Da.Uel W.
Emory, chairman of the Airport Noise
Abatement Committee to emphasize
his continuing attack against the
airport and its management.
Em0<7 alld his group comprised
moSt o the overflow crowd at the
small county plann.ing commission
hearing room in Santa Ana. It is a
small room holding 100 persons at
most.
Clea red Sus pect
In Jade Theft
Dec lar ed Sa ne
Gary Celli, found innocent last week
!n the $300,000 Laguna Beach jade
burglary. was found sane Monday and
able to aid in his own defense on an
assault. charge.
Celli, 23, ls accused oi firing a pellet
gun into the face of V.al Isaac
Woodland. 34. of La Puente last April
16. The attack allegedly took place at
a Laguna party.
The defend'ant has been in and out of
i;tate hospital and court for the last
several months. Jle was sent to
Atascadero State l-tospltal when it was
determined he could not aid his own
defense in the a ssault charge.
But he was returned to stand trial
on the jade theft which had been pen.
ding since April, 1967. The burglary in·
volved some 50 pieces c'-jade taken
from the home of art appraiser J-ames
J . Brennan of 935 Gaviota DriVW!.
Laguna Beach. Most ol the jade was
recovered.
Celli, of 31fi0 l\.1oontain View Ave ..
Laguna, must appear in Superior
Court again for !letting of a trial date
in the assault case.
Riptide Traps
43 ht Laguna
A strong riptide al the root of
Broadway ln Laguna Beach, along
with slx foot surf, regulted ln 43
rescues ror the t .. aguna lifeguards
Tuesday.
With a northward drlf't. pulling &Wim-
mer• parallel to the be1ch, many were
pulled into the rlp. Swim.mus wtre
tht.n pulled 1eaward. Lt. D e a n
Wtstgaard saJd th&t on the f.taln
Beach alone there wert 25 re&Ctles .
\Ves tgaard said the 11.11 w.u down
lhi• morning 1'1Ut octl3iooal three·
foot wav. fftl.
I
In addition to the noise abatement
crowd, a few new voices were heard
by the airport commissioners.
"The Newport-Costa Mesa area is
the last place I would want to build an
airport," said Joseph F. Pike, Jr., of
1811 Glenwood Lane, Newport Beach.
Pike, a pilot with Trans World
Airlines, said the San Joaquin Hills of·
fered the best regional airpOrt site .
Ed Van Allen, president of the
Orange County Pilots AssodaUon
struck a popular note when he aug-
gested that all airline operations be
moved from the airport immediately.
He sald they could go to El Toro, Los
Alamitos or Long Beach and stay
there until a regional airport could be
constructed somewhere else.
Having disposed of all but private
flying out of the fa cility, Van Allen ad-
mitted he had not talked to the
military or Long Beach officials.
J ohn Davies, .&n official of the Air
Transport A s s o c i a t lo n , which
represents nation-wide airlines told
the commission that he could a-ssure
them that use of the military airports
was out and that Long Beach had pro-
blems. "There are homes noor that
airport too and people complain," he
expla1ned.
Davies quieted fears of larger
planes using the airport. The runways
could not be made long enough to han-
dle large planes and that includes the
proposed Air Bus," Davies sait1.
"Airports cannot be in too remote
an area. They serve the public," R, w.
"Bob" Clifford , vice president for
operation of Air California told the
group.
He said hls firm. the principal user
of the airport was not for longer
runways or any "wild" expansion. He
did say parking should be increaJ~·
The Pereira report, prlncipil b·
ject ol the hearings, was supported b
Jack Mullan, chair.man of the Newport
Beach Alr Traffic Advisory Com·
mittee. "Without any planning the
present airport couldn't remain u the
only airport," Mullan noted.
Paul Elston, Orange County Alrport
tower controller , denied criticism that
noise abatement procedures were not
being followed. He pointed out that air
earriers were only five percent of the
operations from the field which he
said was the third busiest ln the state.
Hearln~s continue today in Santa
Ana wlU1 three military feclllties
being stud.led as possible regional
airport sites.
LONDON BOOKIES
FAVOR NIXON
LONDON (UPI) -Lldbrolte'•
bookmakers: today quoted M odds on
R.l.chard Nixon to win the presidential
elect.loo. Odds remained even on the
thtn-unnamed Democrat1c candJdate,
,
routine questloo _,,. ci dly ln-
•blllty "' -lot ll1eriol Im·
provements aupplementing Aft lftland
tr.ew-.y alignment.
Jobftlton said Dr. William Ullom,
s c h o o 11 1uperlntendent, estimated
pas:Jage of tile initiative could mean
1'agwMI would be uMl>lt to bWid --I !or 11 rean.
Bernard Syfan, eltamber .-.
said lie d1d mt think the. tnltlatlve's
pas&age would heve all those effecta.
He said the chamber should study
the matter and suggested a resolution
might be mere effective in one mon\h.
• • Vernon Spltaleri, chamber director;
IOld, "I ~ Ille W-......,.
mont 'll'llUld b&ve lltll• or DolliiJll to do
with too.ation d a freeway. I ttitnk
Wheaton 1s &etting over exercised.''
'nle question was referred fOf study
and report to a three-man cmlmittee,
Johnston, Syfla.n and Spiteleri.
$500 for Doctorate?
Pay Boost Sought for Laguna PhD Educators
stu*1 an educator witti a doctorlte
degree be padd more then an educator
wt!l a master's degree?
That queatioa was brought up, and
tabled, at Tuedy nltht'1 Laguna
Beach Unified School District meetinc.
Ron ~. president of the Laguna
Beach Teacher•' A1aociet1on, asked
Trustee• that lnlfnlctors 1D the sdlool
district wtlo have earned a doctorate
be paid $500 more than they are
FrOlll Page 1
LIGHTS •..
someone is 1topped for a traffic viola-
tion."
With the strict ooforcement, why
would a pusher be so bold?
Babcock answered, "Why does a car
salesman sell a car to someone he
doesn't even know, and accept his
check? Why would a salesman in a
clothing store sell $100 worth of goods
to a tourist who's only in town for the
weekend, and accept his check? A
pusher will take a r16k for a 50-cent
crack."
Some drug users acquire "the stuff"
for nothing. "A 15-<>r 16-year-old girl
can get marijuana for free very easi·
Iy. An older _boy w4ll give her pot, if
she would sbly with him for a couple
of days, or sleep with him thet nigbt,"
BabC"ock said.
Even though some people get mari-
juana for free, dealing tn marijuana
has proven to be a very big business.
A person can buy a kilo {2.2 pounds)
o! marijuana in Mexico for $35, Bab-
cock laid. He can then turn around
and sell it around here for $85 to $100.
"There's a profit in ithis thing. Dealing
dope is not for fun, but for money," he
s~ated.
Restating that the deparlment relies on citiiens for tips on drug use, Bab-
cock comcluded, "It's the problem of
our society, and we have to fight it"
Louisa Kennedy
Fiineral Held
La.!it rites were to be held today fOr
Sooih Laguna resident L o u i 1 a
Jamieson KeMedy, wbo d.led Tuesday
at the age of 91. Sbe had lived at 31875
8th Ave.
Services were scheduled at 2 p.m. at
the Laguna Beach Funeral Home
Chapel. Interment will be at Bay
Village, OnJo. ·
Mrs . Kennedy is survived by a son,
Paul of Arizona; three daughters,
Louise Thompson, of South Laguna,
}..{rs, Jeannette Charnock, or Arizona
and Mrs. Esabel Ricker of Ohio; and
nine grandchildren.
Fro• Page 1
TEXTBOOK. ••
tendent of public instruction, objected
to t.he book In it.. origi'nal form.
Howtver, the state curriculum com-
mission selected ~ e m I n e n t
historians to work with the author on
revision and Rafferty later in effect
endorsed the text.
already earning.
There wll!n't much doOOt In tht
m1ndt of the truflteee that 1lllOff with a
doctorate should be paid more. But
t!nere was question u to Mly the topic
wa.s brought 'ft.er budget adoption.
Trustee Robert Ttrner sajd the mat-
ter should have been brought up when
the teachers' salary negot.iatiols were
going on earlier this summer.,,. -
Ross said that this point was la1St on
the Ust of priority of matters to be
negotiated, "which was only natural.
'nlere is only one teacher ln tte
district with a doctorate." He said that
by the time tftls point was b~ up
some trustees were on vacation.
Trustee Larry Taylor said since tile
budget has already bee.n set, it would
be too late to renegoUate saleries.
The vote was unanimous that the
topic be tabled "indefinitely."
All-star Casting Awaits
Nixon's Visit to Anaheim
Glittering Ital's ol. stage, screen and
the Republican Party will gather in
Anaheim on Sept. 16 for a $100.a-plate
campalgn dinner and rally for GOP
presidential candidate JUcbard M.
Nixon.
Master c( Ceremonies for the
Anaheim Convention Center event will
be he-man movie star J ohn "Duke "
Wayne,, of Newport Beach, while Gov.
Keeping .Tennis
Courts Dry
To Cost $10,600
Tennis courts on North Campos at
Laguna Beach High School may be
cleaDeT ln the month! to come, but on·
ly after school tru&~ approve a
$10,600 guniting project to st.op erosion
on the nearby earth banks.
Trustees Tuesday night heard a
report from Dick Kemp of the
architectural !\rm CarmJchael-Kemp.
He told them gunlti.D.g only the top poc·
tion ol the surrounding bank. and con-
struction of two brow dttches to carry
off water, would cost more than
'10,000.
Kemp ta.id the whole bank couldn't
be fWrlted, al.nee the tandstone needs
to "bttidhe." Thts allows underground
water to surface. After 1ome time, he
said, the pressure from the un-
dertroun<f water would destroy the
gunite, if It covered the whole bank.
With the right construction, Kemp
said, erosion could be stopped. First, a
brow ditch would be built at the top of
the bank. Then, 1!le portion or wall
that el'Qdled wont would be gwi.ited.
Finally, another brow ditch would be
built at the bottom of the gunited wall.
Along with the High School court
erosion, the problems faced by the
courts at the Thurston Intermediate
School were mentioned. T r u s t e e
Williiam Wilcoxen 98.ld that wind and
sun had edvene effects on the tennis
game played at the Thur9lon school,
due to the topography of the area.
Trustee Robert....Turner said shrubs
six to 12 feet CQu!d be grown along the
sides of the couru. They oould be ef·
fective within a year U plaDted now,
Turner sajd,
The school board will look in.to both
problems before lP'Pl'-Oving any action.
Ronald Reagan will introduce Nixon.
The presidential hopeful will return
to Orange County, "'1here he 1pent hia
boyhood in Yorba Linda, following an
earlier Sept. 5 rally In San Francisco.
"A1 Mr. Nixon has stated repeated-
Jy, California i& a crucial state 1n the
nation and he expects to spend more
ti.me oampalgning htre th.an in any
other state,'' said Lt. Gov. Robert H.
Finch, Nixon's acting state cempaign
maneger.
Finch will also appear on the
Anaheim program, offering a brief
talk before Nixon's main event speech.
Final details of the Anaheim rally
are expected to be announced Thurs-
d·ay at a special press cocktail party
at the Convention Centtt, according to
cam~gn aide Frank Jordan.
The $100.a-plate dinner will begin al
7:30 p.m., following a social hour,
Jordan said, wlttl ttie main addrf:ff
due beginning at 9 p.m., with $1·per·
person g..a.llery seats available.
Johnson May Visit
Moscow for Talks
GENEVA (UPI) -President
Johnson may 9000 go to Moscow to
open talks on reducing missle araenals
in 61'lte of the Soviet invasion of
Cie<."hoslovakia, rank.in& We s tern
diplomats sald t.oday.
The diplomatic sources said the
Soviet Union timed an invitation to
reach Johnson just a few hours before
Soviet and Warsaw Pad forces cross·
ed Czechoslovak borders last week.
From Page 1
MACHINE ...
hopeR to duplicate space eUectt.
''Plasma is the stuff stars are made
of." he said.
He also plans to investigate how one
plasma reaction triggers another,
making the gas so volatile. "I think
I've got a handle on the non-linear pro-
cess," is the way he puts it.
The Q Machine makes an Ionized
gas of an alkali metal by shooting it
against hot tungsten. The gas, which ls
too hot for any container, is held in
place by a magnetic field in a vacuwn
Chamber.
FROM CALIFORNIA ARTISANS , ENGAGEMENT RINGS OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUTY
CONCOllOI! SI• IEVlllE tlTI
..........
J. e. .JJ.umphrie~ Jeweler
'
1111 NEWPORT AVE, COSTA MESA
22 Yttn In Tllt Stm• loutlon
e
e
• k ,_
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It
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n
Wednesday, August 28, 1968 DAILY PILOT 3
Persot1al Call
Unruh Quits
l(ennedy Draft
Ul'J Tl.....,.
COMMUN!CATION PROBLEM -Actress Shirley MacLaine of
California delegation watches small television set during Democra~
tic National Convention. Portable TV sets have popped up in several
spots on convention fl oor as delegates try to follow the action.
UPI T1l1pMte
GO WITH HHH -Elgin Baylor (left) of Los Angeles Lakers and
former Brooklyn Dodger star Jackie Robinson have announced their
support of Vice President Hwnplirey. Earlier, Robinson had backed
GOP's Nelson Rockefeller.
McCarthy Says Hu1npl1rey
Has Nomination Cinched
CHICAGO (AP) -Sen. Eugene J.
McCarthy's own view of his candidacy
for the Democratic pre s id e n ti a l
nomination was left unclear totlay
after he said Vit"e President Hubert
Ii. Humphrey had wrapped U!l ttie
race, but then indkated he wasn't con-
ceding anything.
1-fe "'ent to bed without further com-
m ent Tuesday night as Democrats
wondered \\"het:her he was just being
pessimistic or conceding ~e nomina·
tion to l~umplu-ey when~ said:
"I think it probably was settled
more than 24 hours ago." The print
wai.s hardly cold on the Kni~t
Newspapers' publication or the ln·
terview which contained that state·
m ent when a top McCarthy aide in-
sisted -after talking with his boss -
that McCarthy was ·not conceding
defeat.
Richard N. Goodwin quoted the Min-
nesota Democrat a_, s.<1ying he had had
"a lengthy philos'Ophical discusskln"
wUh the Knight editors, "and he said
Humphrey was obviously the front-
runner."
However, Goodwin added, j<He did
not con<:ede. He's going on, as he bas
been going on since he entered the
New liampshire primary."
But r-.1cearthy's pessimism, which
has been increasingly evident of late,
showed through clearly as he told his
interviewers:
"I don't even think Teddy (Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy) CQuld get enough
votes to win. But tile Kennedy people
haven't come to me, which means
there are probably 200 votes tbat he's
got that I don't have."
Police Arrest Three
In LA Narco Raid
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Police ar-
rested three men after they raided a
home and found $175,000 worth -0(
narcotics and dangerous drugs, offi-
cers said.
P-0llce said !our pounds o f
methedrlne and 150,000 pills and
capsules -0( various kinds of dn1gs
were confiscated Tuesday at the Los
Angel~ home o! Henry E. Cruz, 39.
CHICAGO (UPI) -A s s em b I y
speaker J esse M. Unruh, leader of the
Callfornia delegation to the
DemocraUc National Conventioo, to-
day abandoned his attempt to start a
m ovement to draft Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy for the presidential nomina·
ti on.
Unruh, whose 174 member delega-
tion was almost totally behind Ken·
nedy if the senator had allowed his
name t-0 be put before the delegates,
announced that the Massachusetl!
senator had told him he is not a can-
didate.
"\Vhen I came to the convention I
had hoped we might have another can-
didate in the race -a candidate who I
felt could win the nomination and
more importantly could win Utis fall,"
Unruh said
But he told a morning meeting of the
California delegation Ltiat Kennedy
had both issued a public statement
removing himself from c-0nsideration
and inf-0rmed Unruh of his decision by
a personal telephone call
;:;. ;:;. ;:;.
Confident HHH
Starts Work on
Acceptance Talk
OJUCAGO (UPI) -Vic.e President
Hubert H. Humphrey worked oo a
labor 0( love and faith today. He
drafted a speech of acceptance of. his
party's presidential nomination,
So confident was Humphrey of a
first-Oallot vi.ct-Ory at ~e Democratic
convention that he aliio conferred with
party leaders in his Conrad Hilton
sl!i.t'e about bis coice of a running
mate.
The decision to hold a noon session
of the Democratic conventi-0n to
debate Vietnam forced Humphrey to
cancel final visits to various delega.
tions at loop hotels.
lie had planned appearances at
caucuses of the C onnecticut,
W~n·gton state, Oregon, Alaska,
Hawaii. Kentucky and Nevada delega-
tions. I-le was also expected to cancel
scheduled a ft er noon appearances
before the New York and Vi.pgini.a
delegations.
Police Rout Mobs
In Mexico City
MEXICO CITY ( UP I)
Paratro-0pers and riot police wielding
bayonets and rifle butts charged into
Mexico City's ancient Zocalo central
plaza today and routed a mob of 2,000
student protesters c a m p e d in
makeshift tents at the presidential
palace.
An estimated force of 4,000 troops
and polk:e, backed by armored cars,
sent the disheveled youths howling in-
to narrow side streets -0f the square
they had disrupted y,·ith a 90,000.
person antigovernment rally Tuesday
night.
Train Derailed
In Utah Tunnel
lIELPER, Utah (UPI) -Fifty-five
cars of a 64-car eastbound Denver &
Rio Grande \Vestcrn freight train
derailed early today 10 miles west of
Helper and 15 miles east of Soldier
Summit. There were no injuries.
D&;-RGW -0fficials at Denver said
about 20 cars Were off the track at the
west entrance of Nolan Tunnel, four -0r
!Ive were derailed inside the tunnel.
and 30 or more were off the track east
of the tunnel.
Both the eastbound and westbound
main lines -Of the railroad were block-
ed by the derailment.
'
Welfare 'Fraud'
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A man and
woman who allegedly received $11,046
in weUare funds unlawfully between
1966 a nd 1968 Tuesday were ordered to
stand trial in Superior Court
McGovern: 300 Delt:gates?
Senator Expects Vote to Go Beyond One Ballot
C!UCAGO (AP) -Sen. Georll" S.
McGovern credited hilmsel! with
about 300 delegates early today end
denied anew that hf. Is a stalking h<ne
in the National Convention for Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy.
McGovern spent nearly two hours at
b is he&dquarters.
He said he told delegates who troop.
ped to hb suite that be erpe<."ts the
vote on a. pre5identl.a.l candidate t-0 go
beymd one ballot.
McGovern told a news conference
before returning to ~s hotel that he is
cert:tin a Ken.nedy-for..pre sident drive
Is fruitless because the Massrachusetl.3
senator will not allow it.
"I tllinl< he bas mad< It perfectly
clear," said McGovern, wbose he:ad-
quart@rs has become a rallying point
for tbose who would llke to see Ken-
nedy ln the race.
McGovern said favorite :Kms may
hold the key to o first ballot nomina-
tion for Vice President Hubert IJ.
Humphrey. As fa\l'Orite sons discard
bheir roles and free their delegates, he
said, it meaos a setback for him and tor llumphrey's second challenger,
Sen. Eugene J. 1.fcCartiJy.
McGovern said there is an "in·
formal effort" between his forces and
~e of McCartlhy tc block Humphrey.
"But there is no f-Onnal coalition for
that pW"}X>6e1" be sa1d.
lt was the first time the Californla
delebation leader had publicly ad-
mitted that he was a prime n1over
behind the draft-Kennedy movement
at the convention.
He told the delegation that Kennedy
promised t-0 come to California in the
future "to help us in the causes he
shares with us."
Unruh did not disclo.se whom he
would back and told the delegates:
"Any great rush or stampede
anywhere probably is too late to do
you My political good."
He said the delegation probably
would meet later today during the con·
vent.ion sessions for a ''(I.ill and free
discussion" :>f where it would throw
i~ support.
Unruh was so busy Tuesday night
trying to establish a coalition of peace
candide.tes that he c-0uld not attend the
c-0nvention session.
An aide, who asked not to be iden·
tified, said Unruh met with both Sen.
Eugene J. McCarthy and St:!n. George
McGovern in an effort to convince
them -0nly Kennedy could defeat the
drive of Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey.
The Unruh aide rejected outright
any move to put Kennedy -On a ticket
with Humphrey as the standard
bearer.
"He shouldn't start out wiUt a losing
ticket," the aide told a newsman.
An inform~ poll of the delegation
taken earlier this week indicated all
but abo~t a dozen would be willing to
ca.st a first-b~ot v-0te for Kennedy.
CZECH MARTYRS -Pools o[ blood mark spot where two Czech
citizens were shot by Soviet t roops in Bratislava. A cross formed
\vitl1 bricks has been p laced at the site and covered with money
donated for the victimS' dependents.
Czech Youths Ask 'Truth'
PRAGUE (UPI) An gry
Czechoslovak youths today called -0n
their leaders t-0 tell them the "brutal
truth" about the price the Soviets are
making them pay to keep Alexander
Dubcek's regime in power.
F or the first time since the Soviet-
led \Varsaw P act troops invaded
Czechoslovakia a week ago Tuesday,
there were signs some Czechoslovaks
had lost faith in Dubcek.
In many places, photographs of the
Communist party first secretary, who
had been a symbol of defiance against
the occupation forct s, were ripped
from walls.
\Vhen students marched today on the
National Assembly Building where
deputies were discussing terms of the
aweement reached in Moscow, they
no longer chanted ''Dubcek! Dubcek!"
"They capitulated in 11-0scow." said
a haggard youth in \Venceslas Square
of Dubcek, President Ludvik Svoboda
and t)o her Czechoslovak leaders who
took part in the four d;1ys of talks.
';It is treason to do this and to let
these (Soviet) soldiers l,D.,.stay without
a protest," he said. "\Ve have been
taken to l\1unich again. and led home
with a ring in the nose."
But n1ost middle-aged 1>ersons, when
asked how they felt, n1erely shrugged
their shoulders and said "It is bad, but
what are we to do?"
"1'he l:inks arc here," so.id a young
government lawyer. "It is a fact that
must be recognized, like the president
6ays."
The red, "'hite and blue ribbons that
had decorated U1e lapels and blouses
of virtually everyone in Prague this
week bcg:in to dls:ippear. Fewer than
-0ne in every five persons seen on the
street continued to wear the symbol -0f
defiance and patriotism.
And for tbe first time since they ar·
rived eight days ag-0, Soviet oc-
cupation troops wandered, usually in
pairs, through the rush hour crowds
\\'ithout more than an occasi-0nal
glance from the Czechoslovaks.
The Czechosl-0vak radio compared
the agreement "dictated" in Moscow
to the "abducted" Czechoslovak
leaders while Soviet Bloc forces OC•
cupied the country with the 1938
Muni ch Pact which sold o u t
Czechosloviikia to Nazi Germany. It
ca\l~d on the people to refuse to sub-
mit but to support Communist Party
Secretary Dubcek and President Lud·
vik Svoboda because "there is no
other way out."
The Czechoslovak cabinet and t .. e
National Assembly met to discuss the
terms of the agreement while radios
repeatedly called -0n citizens to av-0id
"more bloodshed."
PRICE REBELLION
WAR ON HIGH PRICES
SPORT 2468
COATS ::::
S DRESSES ~ $128.~ uo
CASUAL 2 F 900 SLACKS ~
•••· SI 0.00 $4.tt Eacll KNIT SPORTSHIRTS
!~~ !::0
•
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SPORTSHIRTS
"1'\: Rt9. SI 0.00 2 900 '-YJffe, 4.tt eo •• , , .••••. , • , , , for
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Macll l11rtl• Nrlon 3"
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JACKETS
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R•t· Te 2'' le,. le 3'' S6.oo . . . . . . . . . . . t.oo .......... .
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53.00 ...... ..
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1.tf ea. , •• , • • for
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GIRLS SWEATERS
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GIRLS PANTY HOSE
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Reg, 2 5'° Ta $5.00 ••··········•••••••••••••••••••••• for
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3321 EAST COAST HIGHWAY, CORONA DEL MAR
111 AVENUE DEL MAR, SAN CLEMENTE
'
Bankamcrica rd-Master Char9e-Hayfhorne Charge Account
J • •
f
• '
-
•
.f DAILY PILOT Wtdlltld17, A1191ut 28, l 968
Harangue at Biiton
National Guard ·
Routs 'Yippies'
ClllCAGO (UPI) -The Nattonal
Guard W8! called into action before
.~ .., .. D9lfY ,. .. a11m dawn t-Oday to control some 2,500 yen.
Alter blowing out the candles on lng yipplea demonstrating in front of
bis blrtb<lay oake, Wllll1m R. Ille Conrad Hilton llot<l, headquarten
Wilch, of Ph!ladelpllla, aang tbe of 11le Democratlc: National Con·
pralaes of bachelorhood. A!ked hi. ~ vention.
form.ult. for longevity at hie: 107th Midligan Avenue one of the world's
birthday t'elelntion in Phlladelp~ famOUJ thoroughf~es, 1epa.rate1 the
General H<11pital. Vf,elcb replied, 1 lBl.ton, one ol. the warld'1 largest
never gol mmi: hotels, from Grant Park along
Tht newest of James Bond girls,
shapLey French cctTes1 Veroniqm
Bauchesne, strikes the pose of a sed-
uctress with a sting in her hand. She'•
appearing in the latest Bond thriller,
"Darltng Heroine," now being filmed
on location in Paril. • Somebody let the cat out of ~he
bag in Cheshire, Conn., and police,
armed with. rifles and handguns,
were patrolling the area trying to
find It. Jasper, a 6-month-old , 50-
pound cheetah belonging to Frank
Boros leaped from a window in its
owner's h<rme and began to prowl.
Several children said they had seen
Jasper during the day. One said he
fed him some bacon, and another
found the cpotted beast playing with
the family cat. • Mrs. Doris l1pierre, of Blooming-
dale N.Y., remembers fondly (if
a little vaguely) a hurried customer
at 11€r diner Aug. 16 ... as he left
h er a $2,000 tip. The 11tip" was in
the form of a winning service sta·
tion card game and Mrs. LapierTe
is going to collect her check from
the company today. The man came
during the noon hour rush, bad
some macaroni salad and a sand·
wich and then left. lt wasn't until
later she opened tlhe card. "It was
a $2,000 instant winner and I
burn,ed everybody's toast the rest
of the day/' she said. •
The Oklahoma City Council ha!
voted to charge political candi·
da?'es or groups $25 for the me
of the city park. The money,
the council said, will be used to
help defray the expense of
cleaning up campaign literature.
• A woman called the city person-
nel director in St. Joseph, l\1o.,
about police and fire department
personnel matters. She told Cl•r·
ence Vetter: "I'm very much inter-
ested in both def>artments and in
police end fire work of all kinds. I
keep a bucket o.f water and a loaded
gun in each r oom of my house so
that ru be prepared for anything." ..
Chicago'• lake front. About 8SO
guardsmen moved into postUon along
either si.de of the avenue after the
demoostrat.ocs had · bec<ime s o
det:enruned. that Chlcago police were
deemed inadequate to handle the
situation.
The police only two hours earlier
had used tear gu for the 1econd con-
leCUtive nigbt to rout 1,000 demoostra-
tcn from Lincoln Park -three miles
to tile north c( Grant Park.
The guard waa called about an bour
aft« the second 1esslon of the
Democratic Natrional Convention had
adjourned until noon Wednesday.
Some penona who said they were con-
ventdon delegates crossed Michigan
A v e n u e to talk wi.111 the
demOD!trators. Leaders of t h e
demomtratian said they would at-
tempt to march on the convention at
the International Amphitheater this
altemoon.
Eight persoru1, three c( them
policemen, were lnjmed at Lincoln
Park. Police reported arresting 2fi
demomtrators. Youths raced from the
park into the Old Town night club area
and Upped over and burned garbage
cans. They opened fire hydrante to
wuh tear gas from their eyes.
The Grant Park demoostrators were
addressed by speakers using a
bullhorn.
One yippie speaker· took t h e
bullhorn, aimed it up at the Hilton and
shouted:
"U you are with us, nash the lights
in your room."
A light blinked. The crowd c.heered.
Grape Workers
Sign Contract
With Winemaker
SAN JOSE (UPI) -Cesar Chavez'
fann workers union has won a three
ye ar contract with Paul Masson wine1
that will raise grape worker pay to
as much as ,2. 75 an hour.
The three year contract, only the
11th agreement put into effect ~ir_ice
the United Farm Workers orgaruzmg
committee began Its drive three years
ago, covers Masson vineyard workers
in Santa Clara and ?\1onterey counties.
A Masson spokesman said there "'as
"never any conflict" with the union
and that the agreement was based on
a desire for good will and "stability"
among its workers .
The agreement provides that the
current $1.80 an hour wage be ralsed
immediately to $1.90 to $2 .55, depend-
ing on the type of work. \Yorkers in
all categories will receive 10 cent
hourly increases next year and in
1970.
Masson will also contribute to a
health care benefit program, provide
paid vacations and three paid holld.ays
a year .
Then about a dozen Ughtl blinked and
the crowd let out another cheer, About
10 delegates and alternates -ap..
patently supporters of Sen. Eugene i.
McCarthy -came into the park ~
1poke with the youths. Both Mccarthy
and Vice President ltubrert Humpbrer
have headquarters at the Hilt.on.
As the ylppies clustered around the
visitors, National Guard vehicles pull·
ed up across the atreet and a line of
guardsmen formed in front of the
Hilton. The police left. The yippies
booed and cheered.
Doctors Now
'Optimistic'
On Eisenhower
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Former
President Eisenhower bu shown
"some further decrease" in heart
spasms and passed a comfortable
night, his doctoro NpOrted today.
A brief medical bulletin issued at
10:30 a.m. at Walter Reed Army
Medical Center appeared to reflect
"cautious optimism" Over t be
general's condition which was first
noted Tuesday.
The 77·year-old Eisenhower's spirits
were "good" and he w a e in·
terntittently enjoying light background
music, the medical report said.
The medical bulletin said :
"General Eisenhower has spent
another comfortable night. There has
been some further decrease in cardiac
irritability since yesterday's bulletins.
"General Eisenhower's spirits re.
main good and he has been enjoying
light background music at intervals
through the last 24 hours. Mrs.
Eisenhower cootinues to visit the
general for short periods frequently."
They cited favorable trends toward
stability in his heart action but also
stressed that Eisenhower's condition
remained critical and he could take a
tW1l for the worse at any time.
The bulletin said: "Despite his long
period of confinement in bed, the
general's spirits remain remarkably
good. IMofar as is possible in the set·
Ung of General Eisenhower's still
critical condition, his physicians have
expressed a note o( cautious op.
timism."
Welfare Groups
Battle Police
NEW YORK (AP) -Organized
welfare cliect groups demonstrating
outside City Hall Tuesday attempted
to push past poUce lines setting off a
rock and bottle trhrowing melee wh ich
lasted an hour.
Thirteen of the demonstrators were
arrested &nd seven persoos, including
three policemen, were treated for 1!1·
juries. About 600 persons took part lD
the demonstration.
They were protesting a n e w
simplified payrnelils eystem which
went into effect Tuesday whereby
most of the city's 875,000 welfare
clientws will receive $1000 annually
for clothing and household needs.
Police used 200 foot patrolmen and
nine mounted patrolmen to disperse
the demonstrators after they at·
tempted to cross thfi barricsdes.
Rai'n Breaks Heat Wave
Natio1i Deluged Fro111 Tallaliassee to Childress, Tex.
Calltonda
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AlbliQUff0\11 " " Anchono• " M
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De111o~ra-ts Bury Uni-t Rule
Majority Voting System Di.es After 92 Years
CH ICAGO (UPI) -The unit rule us-
ed by machine politicians to cootrol
votes at Democratic National. Con-
vent.ions ror 92 yean Is gooe -voted
out by Democrats on the secoad day of
their current conclave.,
By 1,350 to 1,206, the delegates voted
Tuesday to remove tlle rule that
pennitted a state to caat all its oon-
vention votes to the candidate favored
by the majority of its delegation .
The convention voted Monday to
delete tbe unit rule fDr this eession,
but the Tuesday vote erased it forever
-
-or at least Lmill 1t 11 rtinJt&ted, COD·
sidered extremely unlikely.
Tht role bu lonf been a f1vortte of
Southerner• and poV.tloal botse1.
IJberalJ led by supporter& ol. preslden·
tial uplrant Eug,.. J . McCarthy oP-
posed It on grounds Jt w11 un·
democratic and denied delegate& free
expretSlon ol their will.
Tuesday'• vote not only killed the
unit rule at cmventlon level, but ban·
ned it rlgtlt on down to precinct level,
which included lt.s uae in state and
county cooventioos.
Introduced by New JerHy Gov.
Rlcbard Jlugbes, cbalnnan of the con·
vend.on'• credential• committee, the
measure alto requ!res all feuible ef·
fcrts be made to assure that delegates
are selected through "party primary.
convention, or committee p-octdmes
open to public partlo!pation within the
caleodar year of the national coo·
vention."
It a1&0 called for creatioo of a
special itudy committee on the pro--
cess al. seleotlng delegates and to
recommend improvements to assme
0 even broader dtizen participation."
MULLEN & BLUETT
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•
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AUGUST 29, 30, 31
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B&i11
Oi>eo Thursdly & Fr~ay Nil!hts until 9JO. Clllrp ltl ... On MU El/Chirp, BlnlAmeriClfd er Master Cllwr~
BROADWAY-ANAHEIM CENTER, ANAHEIM •SOUTH COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA
' ' ' .
No .Spills ·Barred • ID Beer
PAVILION DINERS.GET HEADON VIEW AS YACHTS COME ABOUT DURING·THIRSTY THURSDAY ANTICS
MARITIME SIGALERT WARRANTED AS SKIPPERS SEEK ALTERNATE ROUTE
Can
Six-pack Skippers Rock
. A
Boat Scene Every ThursdaJJ '
Bolboo Yocht Club colls it the B .. r Con Regotto ~nCl/.or llit
.Thirsty Thursdoy Series. / 1
The shore-bound cocltei~et on Bolbo~ ond Lido Isle;, Boll>od
Peninsule ond Boyshore coll it ver i2il nemes: "Beeutiful, thrilling, or wllcl,
beby, wild."
Merine insurance underw ' ers call it ma'dne ss.
But by whetever no' the Beer Con end Thirsty ThursClay S.rlec
during July and August re Is eech Thursdey in one of the most gigantic
sea-going sigalerts in the annals of sailing. '
This is the classic in which seilboets ronging from 20 to SO feel:
tangle each week in boat-for-boat racing in the narrow confines of New•
port Horbor.
It ell sterted in 1958 when two skippers of Iorgo yochts liercl ~ri
informal race from Newport Harbor Lending to settle a wager. The com.-
petition grew to such proportions thot BYC took it over in .1959 to lenC!
some semblance of order and ~fety to the melee .
. The race is now started in classes bot before the evening is ove~
they usuolly merge in e front ic tock-splitting bottle.
EVEN RACI! COMMITTEE GETS A FEW LAUGHS
RIGHT.OF·WAY PROBLEM DEVELOPS AS TWO FERRIES CROSS AHEAD OF BIER CAN FLEET EAGER YOUNG CREWMEN RAIL IN DURING lll!IR CAN REGATTA
" .. . ' ! '
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WedntsdiJ, l \llJIUt 28, 1966
OPEN· DAILY 10-10· SUN. 10-7 COSTA MESA STORE ONLY
' . Open Labor Day
10 to. PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY • SUNDAY AUG. 29 • 30 • 31 ·SEPT. 1
tastes great
in cans!
CANADA DRY
FLAVORS
Canady Dry Case of 24
Our Re11. J.97
4 DAYS ONLY l67
ChOOlie from Tahitian Punch, Grape, Cola, Orange,
Root Beer, Lemon Lime and others.
SWAG LAMPS
9.88to16.88
Our Re11. 12.88 & 19.88
Style 131 (similar to illustrati on) was
regularly I 9.8 8, now for the next 4 days,
3 dollars off. Other styles I 08, I I 0, and
11 I I not s~own) al so big savings .
CHARGE IT!
Our Re11. 2.94
4 Da111 Only l76 Redwood Picnic Table .
9'x12' ' COTTON RUG,
Wge basket measures 12"x18"x10". Holds enough
for a real old fashioned picnic.
Our Re,,. 19.88
4 DAYS ONLY 13.88
Four foot table with matching benches.
Our Re11. 23.88
4 Da111 Onlt1 18.881
Bar·B-Q Chicken
Tumble Basket
Charge II 9 2 ~
Fits all barbecues and ro-
tisserie spits. Metal tumble
basket for chicken is 12' long
and T' in d1ameter.
SLEEP PILLOW
WIENER
Wllael
97~
•Y.txt'' chrome plated rotary
wieners on kebobs or picnic
wiener wheel cooks 12.
2" COT PAD
.
PLASTIC
SHOE BOX
O•r ht· 41c
4 o..,. 011ly 3~99'
Sturdy boxes may be used for
shoes, nylons even vegetables.
IU.SS UTILITT SHElS
• ... 6.l7
MR. BUBBLE
5.37
Our Re11. 37 r
Shag type cotton pile rug in 75% cotton, 25% rayon.
ALUMINUM FOLDING CHAISE
Our Re11. 3.87
4 Da111 Onlt1 4.88
Follow the sun around in this 6x4x4 web folding
chaise lounge. In green and white, yellow and white.
o ..
.... 2.97 4.88 o ..
.... 4.11 Family size box with Lanolin .
Foam filled pillow for sleeping Solid foam pad in reversible,
washable for easy care. SCOPE 17 .. 1.
199. t7c romiort.
Padded Chaise Lounge
7.88 Our Re11. 10.88
4 Days Ot1lt1
Sturdv aluminum frame for durability, Bright floral
f()\lm filled pad included al th!! low low price.
20 GALLON
TRASH CAN
OUR
llG. 2.f7 1.,97
LlghtweiJcht easy ta carry can
I! tough plastic.
SWIN• TOP WASYI llN 1 96 ...... 47 •
76c
•
SAVE ON
GALLON INSULATED
PICNIC JUG
Our Ref. 1.97
4 Daya Ottlfl l38
I-gal. insulated picn ic jug witli shoulder spouf.
Choice of 2-tone colors.
• 2200 HARBOR BL VD. Corner of Wilson and Harbor COST A MESA
• , I ,
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w.-....,, A'-9f .. INI fll-..cM-LS .... IJ
Friendship Highlighted
Many-Faceted
Season ·Ahead
The lid will be off a jewel box-full of fashions and friendship
when the Thursday Morning Club of Newport Beach unwraps its plans
for the coming season at its annual tea, Friday, Sept. 13, at the Balboa
Bay Club.
Some of the "gems" of the Harbor Area, including Doreen Mar·
shall, mayor of Newport Beach; Joseph Kroll of Orange Coast College,
and presidents and heads of leading civic groups and charities in the
county have been invited to the club's fall affair, set to begin at 1 p.m.
Mrs. James C. Stamper will direct the eight lovely mannequins
who will parade May Co. styles under the bright lights. Two of the
mannequins modeling, Misses Donna Goedhart and Kathi Lee are
daughters of past presidents, Other models will be the Mmes. Carl
Andersen, V4ct:or Caliva, John J. Delaney, Charles Lenahan, Frank
Lowden and Ivan Sturgis.
The club boasts more than 400 members but still plans to honor
new members and Hal"lx>r Area newcomers, under the direction of
President Mrs. Robert Smith and her officers and coriimittee meni.-
bers. Their glimpse of. the year to come sees the beginning of the
club's ninth season, brimful of activities and special events as well as
professional entertainment offered once ·a month at the general lunch·
eon meetings.
.. 0--.. • •
Making arrangements for the tea are the Mmes. Leslie Rey·
nol~s , invitations; Mario Pacini, decorations; Patrick Barkley, reser·
vation-s; sturgis, hospitality, ·and their committee members.
More Wonni!lion Is available by calling Mrs. Reynolds at 675-
1084 or Mrs. Barkley at 54{;-1389.
POURING OUT PLANS -New members and Harbor fil"ea new-
comers who will be welcomed. into the Thursday Mo~· ·ng Club
at it.s annual tea will quickly be caught up in the club's b sy sched·
ule as it plans for the coming year. Fashions will pro 'de enter-
tainment when the club gathers. Keeping their eyes on ~e caJen·
dar are the Mmes. Leslie Reynolds, Ann Glasgow, Robert D.
Smith and Robert C. Miller (left to right) as they join in sampling
the tea to be offered at the Friday, Sept. 13 event, to be held in
the Balboa Bay Club.
-
Best of Everything
Fine Arts Dashed
With French Flavor
A journey down a colorful, sunJit French street with its fine wares of
:silver, glass, flowers and furs on display will no longer be just a work-
weary Southlander's pipe dream when the PaviHon GeJlery of the Newport
Harbor Art Museum brings its one-day sale, Le Bon Marche, to the coast.
. The "best of everything" fine arts sale will feature handicrafts and
art work of all kinds, including paintings, prints, sculpture, antiques, silver,
glass and china to be aired on open tables Thursday, Nov. 21.
Mrs. Harvey T. Somers and Mrs. T. Phillips Morgan, co-chairmen,
alre busy directing volunteers, who are rounding up quality works in their
specialty fields as varied as haute couture and sporting goods .
Other chairmen are collecting items to fill their stalls with holiday
~rations , jewelry, handmade infants' wear and homemade specialty
fOods . as well as staples such as glassware and china.
The proceeds from the sale will help support the exhibitions and s~veral programs selected by the museum throughout the year.
Serving as general chairmen ere John · Buchanan, floor com)nittee:
f\.1rs. Johnston Ballard, Mrs. Henrietta Barnes and Miss Alice Walter, post
party; and the Mmes. Marshall Duffield, Cafe de la Rue ; Edgar Witmer,
etM>rdinating ; William E. Chichester, decorating; Daniel S. Thompson, fin~
a•ce; J . Herbert Brownell, invitations; Lloyd L. Auberl, tax receipts, and
Pl?ter Hill, transportation.
Booth chairmen are Mrs. Robert Ingold and Miss Susan Porter,
Litelier; and the Mmes. John MacNab and John. Wright, La Gelerie;
R hard Winkler and Robert Barnes, Les Grand Surprises; Andrew Dossett a Buchanan, antiques; Bly Lovegren and Lee Rose, La Cuisine; Frank
H~rrington and Martin Scott, La Boutique; John Swigart, La Mascarade,
ancl Henry Mackel and Howard Chastaine .. Noel Boutique.
MOVING PARIS TO NEWPORT BEACH -Getting ready to un-
pack some 11local color" imported from Paris are Rick Brouwers
and the Mmes. Marshall Duffield, T. Phillips Morgan, Peter Hill
and Raymond P. Ramming Jr. (left to right). The Parisian spirit
will eruiven the Newport Harbor Art Mu seum's one day fine arts
sale, Le Bon Marche, set for Thursday, Nov. 21. The tree-shaded
lanes by the gallery will be scattered with artifacts for those who
can't make it to the continE"tlt's art centers this year.
Others are the Mmes. Nancy Rau1 Pour Le Sport; Howard B. Lawson
and Frank Lewis with Bibelots ; Harry March and Wayne Slocum, Chez
Gr~tndmere; Lloyd L. Aubert Jr. and Gerald Madigan, Les Enfants; Louis
Sofie and Donald McHone, the YeYe ; Rue Doan, Haute Couture; George
Yu9 e end Delbert Van Ornum, A le Mode; Thayer Crispin and Richard
Loveland, Oeauville ; Page Parker, SerY'ice des Informations, and William
H. Mead, Sta.lie des Fleurs.
Admission is by ticket only, which is free and may be obtained from
any. member of the Museum group.
Dieting Dotties: What Comes Up May Not Take Scales Down
DEAR ANN (..ANDERS ' I have a
friend who is fat a& 11 cow. She aays
that more than anything in the world,
she loves to eat md she will not give
up this pleasure. ·
She also would like to have a nice
figure. whicti fs very bard to do con-
sidering that she is coostantly stuffing
hersel! with candy, cake , cookies,
caramel com and everyUU.ng fattening
you can think of.
Last week my friend told me ohe bas
bit on a system 4bat wUl allow her to
eat whatever she pleases and not put
on weight. She packs in the rich food
and then she goes to tbe bathroom and
forces henetf to throw up. Sbe claims
i! the food is not in her It will not make
her gaio weight.
Is this true or fallef -THE
ASKE!\
ANN LANDERS
DEAR A"SKER : It Is fal11e , f00ll11h
ud d1nge]1)u1. When yo ur frlend
throwt ap the food 1be a1&o Jo1e1 the
111trlc Julcet lWhlch are e11entl1l to
&ood be1Ttb . Tbe &trl 1ound1 euctoo to
me •nd I hope 1be will see • doctor
and get on a 1eD1lble diet before the
wrecks her he1JUt.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I disagree
with your reply to Galatea, the Jllrl
who wondered about a geatleman who
wore his Phi Beta. Kappa k e y as a
lapel piece.
I am ooe of the many v.110 ha'S earn·
ed. e. Phi Beta Kappa key but I don't
dare wear it because of iall the 1mart
aleck rem·arks. . .
Why is it that U one bu earned
membership in dJis elite 1ociely be is
considered an egomimiac lf he wears
hJ1 key? Is ttiere any other society
whose members have to keep their
ld'"1tity bidden· lilca that?
U a soldier earna a ribbon or a
medal he wears it w;tti pride and peo-
ple repect him for it. But the person
who wears a Phi Beta Kappa key is
accused of showing off. Why? Why?
Why? -KEYED UP
DEAR UP: That column produced
• blizzard of letters. t didn't reaUu l
had so many Phi Beta Kappas in my
reading audiences. Mo1t of the people
1"bo wrote said they'd like to wear
their keys but tlley can't take the rib-.
blnf. I hereby encourage all m.emben
of Pbl Beta K1ppa to take out your
keys and wear tbem. U • n y
wlunhelmer pop1 off tell him you'll
take your key ol( If he'll p~t bit on.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am a
widow in my late 40lr. A few weeks ago
my fat.her-in-law died. He wa1 not •
wealthy man but ~ Jeft me 50 percent
of hia estate. The balance was divided
between his two daughter1.
I received a call from one of his
dlaugtiteni saying 1 should be a lady
end sign over my share of the estate
to her and her sister because the will
was written while my hwiband was
alive and now that he ii dead l am
not enUUed to anything becau&e I am
not legally related. She ~omised me a
court fight i! I ref\lte .and added, "You
would surely lose, my dear, and the
publicity would be dreadful."
My father·in·law was a dear man
and I enjoyed having him in my home.
He did not have a good relationship
with his daughterJ or their husbands
and. epent very little tJme with them.
I am not hard up fer money but I
dM't want too be intimidated, Please
tell me what to do. -SHADES OF
BLUE
DEAR SHADES : See a lawyer and
learn 1"h&t you r rights are. Don 't
dlscu1s thJ1with1nyone and dfln't .tin
anythJnf wtthout legal coun1e1.
Unsure of yourseU on dates? What'a
right! Wbat'1 wrong! Should 10u?
Shouldn't you? Send for Ann Landerst.
booklet "Datiog Do'1 and Don'tl,'t.
enclosing with your request 35 cents in.
coin and a long, sell-addressed, 1tam-
ped envelO]lt.
AM Landers will be glad to help you
With your prob,lems. Send µtern. to her
in car• of the DAIL y PILOT -· • nlf..:lkhened, stamped envelope.
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J 4 'DAILY PILOT
Food Prices Continue Uphill Trek With No End •
In Sight
By JEAN COX
.... o.llr, .........
M mu-houletril• who wbeelJ her
aroc«'f butet around a market can
... "'1. lallldm IJ and bu -.......
ilC"" • -at the -stand. Groc:ory ,_ pri<ol for food, .. of
tiOll of F o o d Chalne Invited memben
o/ 1he pre" lo join a ~I o/ food in·
dustry executives for a recent
diak>Cue in the Centtry Plua Hotel
On the other hand, supplies ol major
farm ptoducts are 1Hghtly lower than
19&7 beoau&e many people are lt •vin&
the farm. With population up about 1.S percent. this means per capita supplies
will ho au.hlly lower.
am advertising, leaving 1.19 cents of
the dollar after taxes for protit.
During a question and answer
period, panelists said the removal ol
trading stamps would oot necessarily
mean a deerease in prices because if a
lack of stampe: ca.uses a decree.se l.n
~sales . prices would have to go higher.
Competition helps the situation and
the a verage Southern Californian has
•lh competing supermarkets widun
one mile of his home.
lalt Alri. -u percent in 10 7ean -an avwace of 1.5 percent a ,......
Wt.-ii men., Americans oan
ttataD tbelr belt., for relief ii nowbel'8
In lll!W. A S.2.5 -n.. in prices for ntaU food IJ anUclpated betwffo
now and the Nowmber elections.
A(l'OtS the ootmtry, 15 IUCb con•
ferences, devoted to m expll.Dltion of
food prices mld other matt.ere 11·
fec1ling the lnduotry, haw t.akon place.
Panel members , led by modlerator,
Clarence G. Adamy, assod•Uontpretl·
dent, answered questions relating to
the composition of food prices and fac·
ton behind their increase.
Due to the law of supply and de·
mand, food price! are going up. There
is e greater demand for food ,dUJ to
prioe and population inoreaseil,; and
while a hike in taxes will likely/reduce
demand f o r 90me coosumen, \W a g e
and salary increases will olhlet thiJ
tu ina'ease.
While famt pices are impu1ant.
the overall effecta of inllat.ion also
play a part in lncreuing a market'•
operaUng costs.
J oseph W. Patterson, president of
Arden.Mayfair, Inc., Los Angeles, said
dwing inflationary periods, market&
usually suffer a profit cut.
ProtilJ in the ....wt food indusby
have been low traditionally and have
been declining in the pogt·W&r period.
Wh ile the increase in food prices i11 a
cause {Dr concern, Earl W. Smith. vice
president of Safeway Stores, Inc.
pointed out that Americans are paying
a smaller portion of their income for
food than in the pasl and less than
people in other countries.
If a houMwUe wants to save, s h e
will have to b&come a more old·
ra.!h.loned cook and not depend on the
ready-made products. "Try short ribll
and round steak instead of T·bone
steaks all the time,'' suggested ooe
panelist.
Other steps towards economy in·
elude planning menll.1 beCore shoppin g,
purchasing producta that are in plen-
tiful supply and if possible. buying btg·
ger sizes.
T'blo ftclre iJ mon moanlngfUI wh<n
odd«! lo Ibo fact ttiat for tile year,
prlcw for f<>od will pnbbly • ..,..g.
1.5 lo f -above.Jut year. BeUeV!nc tllil lo be .. ., .. o/ grut
eoatum• t'ODC:enl• Natknal Alsocia·
Golden Anniversary
Honored by .Chil~ren
Marking the £Olden wed·
din& eooivorsary of Mr. and
Mra . George Ray
Cbristemen ol. Costa Mesa
with a reception in Lake
Park Clubhouse were the
coupie'I IODI and da.Ughterl
and their spouses.
Hosting w«e Mr. and
Mrs. William A. Boyce of
Costa MM&, Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Roy CtuVtensen of
Westmin1ter, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald V. Christensen of
Huntington Bead!, Mr. aod
Mrs. Vincent J. Frazzitta al.
HunUngton Beach and Mn.
Roger Loring , who
journeyed. from Vancouver,
Wash. for dle occasion.
Mr. and Mrs. Christensen
were married in Pocatello,
Idaho. The top of their wed·
ding cake was draped with
an American flag which was
sent to Ch r ist e nsen 's
brother who was stationed
wtth the U.S. Arm y in
France. A duplicate of that
flag wu used as a part of
the decoration on the an·
niv ersary cake.
The original wedding Pie·
tures and other photogr aphs
taken during their married
life were displayed with
their anniversary portrait
on a special picture board.
Friends, neighbors a n d
relatives gifted the honored
couple w'th a money tree.
Attending the reception
were 11 of the C(!Uple's 13
grandchildren.
A very special guest "'as
Mrs. Nora Wil liams of Santa
Ana, who a ttended as the
bridesmakl at the wedding
50 years ago.
Vi.siting from out of town
were George Christensen's
sisters, Mr15 . Jen n i e
Grimaud of Inglewood. Mrs.
Lee Riley of Bakersfield and
her husband; and Mr. a nd
Mrs. R. Welly or Lon1ila,
Mr. and Mrs. J ack Ryan of
Sepulveda. Mrs. Ed Vardy
of San Fernando, Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Elton of San
Bernardino, Mrs. Lawrence
E. Jooeo al Spring Valley,
'
50 YEARS TOGETHER
Mr. and Mr1. G. R. Christensen
l\frs. Wallace West o f
Lakeside, Lawrence J ones
of Barstow, Mr. and ~1rs,
J ames Williams of Sy\mar.
Mr. and Mrs. Rod Orlans of
Sepulveda, and Mr . and
Mrs. Gary f'razzilta of
Norwalk.
Mr. and Mrs. 01ristensen
came to Cali fornia in 19'20.
and have spent 25 year.> of
that time in Costa M~sa .
Christensen is a member
of Plumbers a nd Steam-
fitters Union 582 where he
has been a plumber for 20
years. He a:llio is a lifetime
member of Elks nl N€wporl
Beach.
In 19Z2, when the Ball.toa-
Newport area was still only
dirt roads, he deliviered ice
to many of the original
businesses in the area. A
local · radio celebrity in
Idaho during the years 193:>·
37. he "'as a men1ber of the
comedy te am Ole and Tip·
perary. a regular Sunday
afternoon program.
Mrs. Christensen has been
a ctive in area PTAs and has
served on the electioo board
for many yea.rs.
Half-Century Marriage
Party
Fifty years of marriage
were celebrated by Mr.
and Mr1. Holbrook Mulford
of Costa Mesa at an old·
fuhi.oned ice cream social
staged in their patio garden.
Hosts were their chlldnn
and grandchildren.
'nle f or m e r Jeanette
Cooklin married Holbrook
Mulford Aug. 29, 1918 in the
parloc ol tbe bride'll par-
enta' bome in Cbarlotte1
Mich. The service was con·
ducted by Mrs. Mulford's
father, the Rev. Eugene
Conklin, a Univer1a1ist min·
later. Present at the anni·
versary party wu the ma.id
ofbonor. Mrs. M. A. Miller,
v.·ho is Mrs. Mulford's sister
who drove to California with
her husband and son from
Silver Spring, Md .
Family member s prellent
were: Mr. am Mrs. Rich·
ard S. Mulford of Sherman
Oaks and t.heir daughters
Christine a.nd Arlene, the
bonoree1' IOft and his f1m·
Uy ; Mr. and Mrs. Hobert C.
Mulford of Sacramento end
tbtlr children Randa and
Jeffrey. ~other aoo and his
famllY: and tho Rev. J . ll. Moort ol Pltton and his
dlildron Uoda and Koo~
the booorees• 1on·in·la w
and hia children. The eldest
sranddauglllc, -·· -· tbt <rilJnal wedding .......
Fetes Mulfords
GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY
Mr. ond Mrs. Holbrook Mulford
The Mulford• mowd to
C:O.ta Mesa from Oak Park,
JU. wflen h~ retired from
business in 1957. Since mak·
lng their home on the West
Coast the Mulford• have
been acUve in the Costa
Me«a UnJversalJ!t Chtrch,
the Callfornie Fuchsia ~~
clet)', the Orange Councy
I,
Philharmonic Society. and
the Costa Mesa Senior CiU·
.tens. Mrs. M11lf01"d bas also
been a participata in the ac-
tivities of the doftta MesA
Women's C I u b and the
League of Worn~ Voters.
More th1.11 100 gues~
were present attthe annlVt!r·
sa:ry receptlon. ~
The grocery executive said less than
78 cent. ot the shopper's dollar is
spent t.o purchase new merchandise
from farmers. 1be remaining pennies
go for labor, building and equipment
Currently 17.7 cents is taken from
every after tax dollar earned by the
average American on food. lu 194749
they spent 26 cents. The French spend
31 cents ; Italians, 43 cents ; Japanese.
46 cents ; English 28 centa, and
Ruas ians, SS centa.
Last but not least. they warned, iJ a
housewife wants to cut down bet
marke t budget, she shouldn't allow
her-husband to do the shopetng.
Shoppers
Wanted
Almost everything but the
ki'tcben sink will be Offered
• for oalo by tile Golden
H·arbor Olub from 9 a.m. to
5:30 p.m. Th.ursda.y..Satur-
day, Sept. 5-7.
Sale location Is at 1865
Newport Ave., Costa Mesa,
according tn the cllainnan,
Gilbert Seal. Assisting on
his committee will be the
Mmee. Sea1, Merritt Kevan,
Robert Frtzigerald and other
members.
Elective off ic er1 of
Soo!hern Oalifonia Shrines
will be houoa'ed by the
Golden Harbor Wl9te Shrine
of J~alem during the an·
nual party night at 8 p.m.
Thursday, sept. 12, in the
Newport Beach Masonic
Temple.
Presiding officers will be
Mr. and Mrs. Allyn ~.
and chairmen of the party
are Mr. and ~. Jack
Chapman. assisted by w~s.
Bruno D. Norman.
Dear Nancy; Do you think cert.a.in.
foods have "status?" I was arguing
with a frend of mine about serving a
molded gelatin salad for a dinner
party. and she said it wasn't a "sta-
tus " salad , and it
w a s considered
corny. Have you
heard of anything
more ridiculoua?
How far can this
status business be
carried? HELEN
K.
DEAR HELEN;
Status can be car-
ried to any ez.
treme. I know a
man who wears
his Oadillac key on his watchchain.
Like it or not, some foods have
more status than others. It isn't al·
ways a question of money, but taste.
The most chic shrubbery you can
serve at a dinner party is the French
Mixed Green Salad which scorns the
cliche tomato or pedestrian cucumber
and lowly bell pepper. Maybe you'll
like to try it. It's one way to have
your status and eat it too.
FRENCH MIXED GHEEN SALAD
Any of the following greens m l'ly be
mixed together: Romaine, Escarole,
Boston lettuce, Watercress. Bibb le t·
tuce, Dandelion greens, Endive, Ice-
berg lettuce and Chicory. Wash greens
thoroughly and shake off any excess
moisture. Wrap greens in a towel and
keep them crisp tn the refrigerator.
When you are ready to serve, break
the greens into a salad bowl and toss
with the f'Ollowing French Dressing,
or Vinaigrette Sauce. as it is called in
France:
FRENCH DRESSING
2 Tablespoons wine vinegar
6 tablespoon~ light olive oil
~. teaspoon salt
v. teaspooo dry mustard
~ teaspoon freshly ground pepper
1 Tablespoon chopped parsley.
Stir above ingredients with a fork
until completely blellded.
DE AR NANCY: I'm having e varied
group of pe<iple to a party and l 'm
not sure how I ~uld handJe It .
What do you think ls better -a.n
informal buffet where e:verybod,y can
sit where they please or a sitdown
dinner Whldl ts more comfl)rtable?
And how about food? I've &ot &LJMtl
MRS. JOHN A. CONNOR
Costa Mesi Home Selected
of &I.I ages and backgrounds. BRA VE
HOSl'ESS.
DEAR BRA VE : With a varied
group, buffets are certainly safer than
a si~own dinner where you have to
worry about seating a conservative
next to a liberal, • Democrat next to
a Republican, a hawk next to a dove
-and a beautiful blonde next to any·
body's husband.
Buffets are not on.Jy easier on the
hostess but they're people·mixers. As
for the food , keep it informal and in·
teresting. No cliche turkeys or ham1.
You might want to try Otis unique
PtJtted. Lamb which ia a Turkish de·
light. Thia serves ail:, multiply accord·
ing to yow needs.
TURKISH POTTED LAMB
4 pounds bonele111 shoulder of lamb
lt2 cup flour
:\ tablespoolll olive oil
1 clove garlic, minced
2 bay leaves
1ii teaspoon clove11
"' teaspoon cinnamon
I lfl cups beef bouillon
3 tablespoons lemon juice
I tablespoon salt
.. leospoon pepper
I yellow onion
• medium·siied potatoes, peeled
and cut into I lh:·inch chunks
2 rOflsted peppers or pimentos,
sliced
2 large tomatoes, ctJt in "'edges
I teaspoon oregano
1 teaspoon salt
l teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon dill weed
lf.r: teaspoon paprika
Have butcher cut shoulder of lamb
into l lf.r:-inch square.a. Lightly Oour
meat and brown it in olive oil. Add
garlic. bay leave!, clove s. cinnamon.
beer bouillon, lemon juice. salt and
pepper. Cover and simmer =% hour,
On top of meat, layer Ule yellow
onion, potatoes, roasted peppers a.nd
dill weed. Cover and -place pan in 350
degree oven for l hour oc until done.
Cool and remove 3 tablespoons of sur·
face fat; reheat. and sprinkle paprika
over the top .
What's your cooking predicament?
Send it fn and set if wt can cook it!
While we can't ptrsonall11 nn.rion all
f our letttri . those lt tttrt with t"'
mo1t entertaining or pt!rtinen culin·
Ofll problfml will bt published in thif
column. Stnd ~our le tters to WHAT
COOKS1 c/o THE DMLY PILOT.
•
Mesans Recite
Nuptial Vows
Honeymooning in Nevada
are John A. Connor of Costa
f\.1esa Md his bride, ttie
former Pamela Ann Wicks
who exchanged vows and
rings before the R e v •
Richard J. Dunlap in the
First Methodist C h u f c h ,
Costa Mesa.
Pareo'l6 of tile bridal coo·
-pie are Mr. and Mrs. Andy
Wicks of Costa Mesa. and
Mr. and Mrs. Jack B. Con-
ner oi Paim Springs.
Given in .mG!'riage by her
father, the bride wore an A·
line gown of silk organza
with chantilly lace forming
a full circle train. A band ol
blossoms and seed pearls
held her illusion veil, and
she carried a cascade of
carnations and orchldc,.
Attending her sister a~
maid of honor was Miss
Sally .Jo Wicks, while her
sister-in-law, ·Mrs. Harold
\V icks, was the bridesmaid,
both of Costa. Mesa. They
wore floor Ieng.th turquoi&e
gowns of silk organza and
carried yellow carnations
and roses.
Serving as best man WM
Bill Campbell of Costa
Mesa. and the usher was
Harold Wicks.
Assisting at the reception
in tile home of the bride's
parents were the Mmes.
Nicholas Rossi, D a vi d
Shafer. Bill Herrick and
William Hie~. the brlde'1
aunt and Miss Valli Hicks
and Miss Jean Bryson.
Circutating the guest book to
the 150 well-wishers w.u
BUSTER
BROWN.
~
Miss Denise Shaler of C'.olta
Mesa.
Special guests were Frank
Mitchell of Michigan, the
bride's aran<W-ati!er; Mtss
Dorothy Wicks of Cam,
Mich .. her aunt. and Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Mitchell ol
Detroit, her aunt and uncle.
The bride is a graduate of
Corona del Mar High School,
while her husband is an
'&lumnus of Newport liarbo1·
High School. Both attended
Orange Coast College.
The new Mr. and Mrt.
ConnOI" will esbblish their
firlt home in O:>sta Mesa.
Agenda Stars
Lunch, Cards
A 8tm'lmer luncheon WAI
enjoyed by members of
Laguna Beach Ohaptu 111ll,
Order of the Ea.mm Star in
the M:asonitt T e m p I e
Wedoeoday.
H..-.S at tile lw!dloon.
"'1idi wag follolftd ~cord
pmet:, "Yr'er'e the Mmff.
Ernot sry. Will II m
Lansdell, B. A. Smith and
Orville~-
New memben initiatied et
a recent cDapter meetmc in-
clude Mi11 G~ Andm'·
son, Mrr. B. W. Duncan and
Robert Sourwine. A ,_ Ill·
fi'lt at e, Mi11 Helen
MacLeen, signed Mio by·
law11 and Mr. and Mr11.
J....pi Poma prMidod """'
the ceremony.
'For fall.!':,
girls love
FREE CAMERA
30 Fashion b land
Newport Beach
64 4-2464
.. ---.
with Buk to 5diool ShoM
9 ••11•ity. ll111li•4-Slrt.p . IE•.Jy
AY•ll ~blt .Ch J1dre11'1. le•t.ry. Only
,.
-
,.
' I
• .-. ~ .. . -. ,_ ...... ......-----• .,, • • ... ., • •• •• ol .. , ~ •
~. AIJ9Ust ie. 1968 ... PILOl ·ADVIRTISER-3
-· --~ ~ •••• # .,.. -4.. ... "";";;;:;:;;:1••;;.,o....; • t . .. • .. • .. • ........ ,
Wtd~lJ', A119ust 28, 1%8
l
DAILV PILOT" J•
'°'6News .. of Coast Men in Service on n ·uty Around World _.,,..
• ~4 '.8nee M. SUUvu, Rowe, 1299 Conway, Ave., of Mr. and Ml'tS. llarold E. and is a member of tht ha1 been uligned to the P11trol Squadron ~. based Orange Ave., Costa Meta; rd Clu1 WW.lam E. Geriau, .. blloilud ol Mr1. C&lllerlno Coola Mesa, has been Breier Sr. of 7242 Judson AFROTC wat lj. llniverolty Firll MariM Division In, at Loi Alan>itoo NIYll Air Av I lllioo AnU.SU-ine USM!, IOI! ol Mr. ri Mn.
SuWwa al 211» Ntitibnal u&icned to the 1st Infantry Ave., We 1 t ml n 1 t er , i& of Soutbem California. Vietnam. Statton. Warf&H Technician 2 n d Leon V. Gtnn.at1 ol .15311
-A .. .,.~ Mala, bu been Division near Di An, Viet· particlpating Jn a U.S. Air They are Aviation Elec-Cla1s M1r1hall W r 1 i b t, Shuta Lane, Huntmctoo "'•'IAlliened to the 5 t b nam, u •light weapons in-Force Re s erve Offi'cer1 Marine PFC Jack L. Four Orange Cout area trlcian's Mates 2nd Cl1s1 USNR, son ol Mr. and Mrs. Beach . . »-.c.b an l z t d lnlantry fantrym.an. He ii the son of Training Corps field en-Rowland, 20, ton or Mr. And men """' undereoint two Deu11 B. Raab, USNR, ol Orrin W. Wrilht Jr. or 2:200 l1'>on «mpletim of the
• ... ::9trilion In Quao1 Tri, Viet· Mr. and Mrt. George E. campment J)r'ogram at Mn. Jack W. Rowland and weeks of active tralni.og at J~l5 17th St., Colt• Mesa Vi.st.a Huerto, Newport traWnc, ~ will return to
• ... ._..;: Jeffcoat of Garden Grove. Hamilton AFB, Calif. husband « Mrs . Canela L. Naval Atr ~ton Barber'• aM Stanley L. S.uter, Beach; and f. vi at 1 on Loi Alamltot met attend
Airm• g e • r 1 M. C.det Bre.ie.r ii a eraduate Rowland1.'11 ol 5(1152' Audrey Point, Hawall. They are USNR. son of Mr. and Mrs. Beach ; and Avlatlon Mainte· weekend m~I onct •
, •• -ol Mr. llld Baroid E. Br•ler Jr, son of WeatchestM High School Drive, ttummgtan Beach amon1 ii>• llOO reomilUI of Corl E. Sauter of 2589 nanco AdministraUoom1111 S: monlh.
• 1, 1!uy M. DeV.-of
• , ,.u ~Lant, Hun·
• • i _ a..:1t. bu been
' ID b Air Faroe . --------···
. , . .3Jl:llical TroDnr eentor . "';;.I.!. '(Mollr AFB, Tu. ··• VM!alo ol Marina HJih lldloal, b airmM at-•~ Goldon Welt J.-i:Sfl'lea bef<n enDlriDr ibe .--.
u. 0.1.> ... ,.... 1 .
-
• ll!Nll, 25, IOl1 ol ~-lfn. w. w.
-tf Colt& M-~ bu .. ftllrded h l 1 .. aviator'• "Wiqt of Gold. II ~ Uoder tho llilht tnUtinc
.;., ~ bo reeolv4d blJ .; 11 mootbl der eD· ~ w tho ir•am ml
• :: about •Is mm•• .n.r-• ......, oe1v.-llhMN
:: VlflDI • Beevill, Ttz.
~ Airman Job c. J.-, '.• •on ol Mr. ud Mr1. Bubert
,; E. .-of 11111 I.quna
Place, Seal Beacb, hu com·
• pl-b•ic lrainlnl at
·• J.actland AFB, Tex. He hu 1 -llMl'(llOCI to Ill• Air , ..m Force Technical Training:
:'!i Center at Keesler AJl'B1 Miss.. for tratning u a
eommunicationr • electron-
. ,_: ics rpetjalist
Airmai. Jacobi ts a l
.... ll!'~Ullle of Mlrina llilb
"'~!and attended Golden ~~.J;<>Jlete. '·m l'i::r -RaM, s. It.raft, '! pf ·Mr. aod Yrs. Harald ' ;j _plaft. o1. 15132 ' Beach
•. .:• ~ Midwa1 Qty, com-. let basic trai.-,. at
·• ', ,.. AFB, Te:r.
;. T' Jiu Wen ..Sgned to
'-.[ . ~ . Force Tedmical
· , I Oenler. Sheppard
' , Tu. foc td!oo~ 11 1 '~~-n 1 t ruction tpeCJ.alilt.
1 iJipan Kraft i4 a gradu~t.e
.~, ~ ~aiminlter Hilb School ~· -IQ BA de(ree ·.,'trom'Claremo11t Men.•1 .... ~.
~ -~ . . .., Brta R. wm. aon ~ Mr.
• -and Mr1. Eiben B. Ward,
·, 8IU 1Jydia Drift, HUD·
. .
Comet· lt1y-O-Vac Ajax Dish t Cleaner Batteries Detergent
W/SUPER S•1rt1•11 "I" fer ".Th S1arklt1" ftr fl11kli1lt1 HI Iii !flt 11111111 jiths CllLOlllllOI.-, .. , ... ,1"' ...... p111iklt. 14 OL CAN
3i39c 2i'25c 15 11, 59c
"Swiflieraa" Stationery
•
If Short •n -Mir 1 M11th Hat
Stlades---iilerno«, limt, P\Jmpki11, Rls!J· ....
l~~11r.r .... 4SC
di/I\ ~~~ ......... 4gc ~ JIOl(S 7gc . . ... if 11 (tHftlMI
•
siATii»iERY' .........
... tf i1 Ettelt,.C 119 llll 44Hts.......... •
KUIU.SM
Eyelash Curler
Slid4enly your lashes too~ lonaer, lrtme
your eyes with t reater empllas1s , ••
llKt st1v turled from 1 25 momi~& till "il~l. •
Link Door Mat
Pt.USM·TD'. 11"111" -AttJactivt as
well as smiceable. Salt velvet-like
f11'ish prorides ' WlP· 1 98 it!& l scrapitlg suri1tt. •
3-Rinf
Canas
Notebook
Blue canvas covered
3·R1n& Gaublt booster
blOOer w/ch~. age:
Typing Paper
Simoniz Ultra-Brite
Floor Wax Toothpaste
llttHtfHJI' ltotll· Harl flolsl far •i•Ji 111t1-l 11111 "' flttrs -il<its cltar, CHIHI.
HIJ 111•11111111.
2JoL fl•111 59c lilt
Anacin 'BAND-AID Mal Powtr
Tablets Sheer Strips DtodOronf
For fast, l•llJ·llll· 111 If JI 1111. II· """ ~·hetlltil''
111 1ai1 roliaf. Sins •1siw1 •11i111s ftr lllHlll~ fir
•1r1 CIM,lttt rtlitf str1tc~1r, H111s aH · "" lctfit 1111 Cits. fr1M tu11, 11m11 '
ktalatlll.
IOO's sac 2:1.00 i · I.II (l
411. Sht 9
00
I~" J1t11inatM steer 98t use wJ~eys.
PADLOCK WITH KEY
1~2'' stron1 sti!tl 2 29 cise 111d shac~le w/
~evs. •
COMBINATION LOCK
Nickel Plate--Brass dial, !in·
ish~d i-~IJCk w/
wll1tt ftumeral~. Oou· 1 59 bit aclift& lockin1
it'ler. •
COMBINATION LOCK
Make$ """"""1 'aeK·
sticking, 11ised-lotter, pro·
fessiooal ~osli£ labels in
seconds.
Witll OH
lltll ""' 2 69 Fr11 •
DYMO I/. lllCH TAPE ROLLS
Asst. colors af rinyl stlf-ldhesM 2 '1 00 1~ -eounlless YSH for MfY o
mtmilef ot I.he f1mily. 1 •
Tip Top Curlers·
Hot 'n Cold Vacuum
THE•MOS-CombillitiM Pack SfliJ
11nr. hcllds vacuum bottlt fGr bot -~
& inwlJtell sria\ jar lor 2· 49' cold salads, etc. -lits
work IU11Ch kits. •
' -
11 1.~2 ti•r.to~ !l••cb i.,
•• .; J...ticipatin( m o: U.S . .Air
• :i Resecve Off~• Tra.iling
Wahl Barber Set
3-Rilll
Vi1yl
LE PAGE'S THRIFTAPE
3-Rilf
Vinyl
Notebook
3-S•·DiYi_.
Tllellll
Book
Turtle Neck Shirt
I
I
· ~ Corp1 fl e I d training on-
. . CWiJiJiUenl: at little Rock
.... AP'B, Ark.
• .,. Cadet Word. • 11.e e
~ ....... cf l\tlrtna !Bjjl
:""ll Sdloci, ii a ll)8l1'lber' ot the ~ AFROTC ta1lt Ill Son Diec<>
~state Ool.ege.
... AlrmOll Charles R. Post, '°" of .U-tes N. Post of ·~5351.,:: Y•l• Ave .,
':! WeRaii:ster, has completed
<;; ~ al Loctllllld
... ~HehMbom> .: ._ to the Air Force
-~ Training <:.--
~ · d AFB, Tex.
• : AJnnm Poet • • 1986
... tr-t.LMe of Westmin1ter ·-~~ and attended ! ·-Beach Qty Colle,e
•• ~ .. , oinring tho Air
.,..Farce. ,...
~. WIDlam E. Rowe, •
"
•
of Mn. Unda
1Mw.f4tr.matl••• . ;
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.... f, ...... .. ~·· ........ -., ........................... ............ ...,. ....... -AU ~ows -3 P.M.
AU•.:.11..-T. I • 2
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CRYSTAL COVE __ .. _ ·--... :
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tt· """' 21 & 9211
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... C1Hil( Kit-COl!l1ifts clipjlel',
asst combs, sil!':afl,
netk. c1pe, br1shes, 9 88 boollet & ,..Ide, pa<k·
tel i1 vin~ use. •
Bissell Rug Shampoo
""'11 Amstl C11-
Tllt easy way to shim· 1 39 poa )'11111° ruas & tafJttl.
24N.CM •
Simoniz Auto Wax
"S1,.r 1111" !tr easier .pplicatiOll,
1 lonaer lasting JllCI 1 29 brithltr Ui~ -Pas\!
de111tr WI(. 11 tI. CJI •
JffWI ,_ Al'lll SllOWlllS
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l ltlj '""' F111ra1e1 I• lolju Fill1n1
Ell jo Toilette Spnf Mist
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sst. ,,mt bindefC wffh
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SOLO Plastic Cllps
l~'xY.z" c!ur cel'°91taoe tape w/.ew 3nc
"slljltr stick" lormu!1. \I ~
~ ~~~J!!~l~,B!!_ 4nc ~ ,eris, ptne~s. ttc. \I~
5 12-lllCH M 1111.ER # $4a = Acc1r111 -Ourahle w/Millimeltr fie ~ • t•uae. \J-
"f1l•1.ftl1" -Dbl. ule·
ly locli:, iriple c#omt pJ1t·
od, -· foot mt, J. =~'.~ft 14 88
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Spring 1tlion, •~tr• larae
wlletls, ttmov1ble trav,
padded httd 5 98 rat. Fokls fltt
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Avro Safe-T-Seat
YI" ca,1crty -S~tt
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6SC
PAINTING f PEC!AJI
COLOR-JET SPRAY PAINT
Witlt sptciel Ctn11M1 11• 7gc
IHt Jfl•t1t1tir1 -wrde
cho1te ol brilliant cmors:. -
PAINT 8rUs
A 11M1~t1 H111" tl~-t' ft~
Wiii brush 11111 • 2" • Malt -~ llMh.
PAINT Reller & Cow
llol.age l1imt w/2 tG~m fG< lllllfttl
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WIRE limh
3 rtw 6untblt wire bnlsh w/curvtd wood
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Helo~ to replice nitural oils lost tit
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Steel Book Shelf
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---...... --.... ._----·-·--...---.. ----....--.......... ----------~-----..----.--.......... ---... ' . •
DAH .Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Laguna's Salary Scale
I
Laguna Beech police are among the lowest paid in
Orange County. Firemen and 04lter Laguna municiP!'1
employes are also paid less than their counterparts 1n
most nearby cities.
Low salaries can create job dissatisfaction and
less Ulan total dedication. Laguna Beach should not
take a chance on such feelings developing among its
public servants.
The situation wasn't planned this way. For some
tilDe it has been counc!l policy lo maintain a scale near
the average rate of employe pay for Orange County
cities.
Howevff, ttie pay raises which appear lo be in pros·
pect are oven!ue. It will be 17 . months on Sept. 1
since city employes have been given an increase.
On April 1, 1967, municipal work~rs caught up ~o
tht average of those doing the same Job elsewhere m
Orange County. The wage spiral accompanying infla~
ti on ·bas since left them behind.
City Councilmen will likely have a pretty good gen·
era! Idea tomorrow night at an adjourned meeting what
the financial requirements too: •uch a hike will be.
'!be council is to fix the tax rate for Laguna during
196S-69 at that meeting.
'!be budget already bas $57,000 earmarked for
raises. li that isn't enough to cover the cost, it would
seem reasooable for councilmen either to increase the
expected tax bike of 10.8 cents or seek needed revenue
else<where.
Some revenue might be from adjusting business lie.
ense charges, dog licensing or from the already adopted
hike in garbage-trash collection rates.
Another option, of course, Is belt tightening in other
areas.
'The method Is mechanical -important, but func·
FDR's Creation
Has Dissolved
CIUCAGO -Democrabt moved
toward die nomination f« President
of Hubert H. Hurniilrey with UD·
disguised apad!y and ;n;taeon. 11te
party created by Franklin D .
Roosevelt In 1932 .. a powe< tiou,. of
e<1mbined liberal, 18bor, farmer and
minorit)' interest.s no longer exists,
Thia iJ no longer tile pazty of tile
l<>rgolit<n man, tile depres<1ed farmer,
the exploited worker, no longer the
party that attracts liberal Republicans
and is a &ure haven for discJfected 8lld
ignored Negroes.
The am.alpm has dissolved. Labor
and tile iOO?llectualJ are at each other
throUB. After all Ulese decades of civil
rights battles Negroes still must fight
for equal representetion m the ne-
tiooal c<>DVeDtion. Not ttie slightest at·
tention ii being paid to tile political ln·
teresU oi ttte farming classes.
Organized labor is a oonservM..ive ele-
ment trying to protect itJ favored
po6ition 8!ld with eoough economic
clout of. its own so tb'at it oo longer
needs the Democratic Party.
IN THE ROOSEVELT formulation
of unbeatable p<1litical power yooth
fo.und a n.atural home, but not in the
Democratic Party of 1968, nor in any
other org>anized political party, Youth
can go home so far as the Democrats
are concerned, or follow their leader,
Eugene McCu'thy, into a new political
movement.
The question is not whether Negroes
will vote Democratic but whether they
will vote at all, The question is not
whether the liberal suburban classes
Will vole for Humphrey but M>etller
they will vote for anyone .
There were two overpowering in·
fluences at work' on the Democratic
national convenUoo and both were em·
ba.1Tat'ising1y visible. The stifling
security arrangemeMti and th e
repression of demonstratioos inside
and outside the convention ball were a
constant reminder of the disordered
nature of American life. The Soviet
tan.ks in Czechoslovakia shot down
McCarthy's dove.
IN ADDITION TO tti.at, a significant
portion of tile Democratic Party was
not even represented in Chicago.
These were the Democrats in the
Wallace disaffection w.ho c<1uld con.
ceivably hold the balance of power in
selecting the next presidoot o! the
United StatM. The fragmentation of
B11 George ---1
Dear George:
J Deed help. My doctor MYS I
have to reduce, but my boss says
I'm too light now !or my Job in
heavy equipmeot and my wi!e
&ays she'Jl leave me if I lose my
job. George, I wonder U -
Never m.indi. I just got fired for
being aued for not paying my
doctor bill and the bou ran off
with my wife.
N.H.
Oear N.H.:
see bow things always work out If yoo 're paUem!
Deir a-go:
I have foll<>wed your advice
and never Jet a boy kisl me o.n
tbe ftrit date. J have one pro-
llieln. BCIW ..., I ever get 11 oe-
coad date?
.
(Send your lnnermDll pro-
blenu lo George Cor outermost
treatment.)
/\, -,
the once powerful Demooratic coali-
tion would be made complete by a
walkout of the peace aftd1 youtb
el.iements.
It was no wooder, therefore, that
Vice President Humphrey tried to oc-
cupy a center position from which,
after bis n<1mination, he could reach
out to draw back tbe disaffected
elements. 'Ibis position seemed un-
natural to him and there was no better
illusttation than his attitude tbat he is
as much of a liberal as the country
could take with a:s much da6h and go
as tbe country wants. Therefore he
sought a running mate who would
represent stability and responsibility
rather ttiao £lair.
In d<li.ng tha1. he was meeting the
Nixon. challenge, bot at the same time
he disappointed Democrats who yearn
for something new end fresh, some
sign that t.he party is riding the wave
of the future rather than sliding back
into the trough of 1he past.
HUMPHREY WAS foccoo mw a
kind of "southern strategy" for, like
Nixon, the core of his support in the
nati<1nal convention was in. the states
of. the old South. The history of
Democratic cooventions in recent
years has been the surmounting of the
South rather Ulan giving in to southern
sentiment.
The Dem<>crats moved toward the
inevitable end wntiout their usual
sense of purification by fire and
witboot a feeling of mi.ty and dedica..
tion growing <1ut of the kind of good,
clean, fight Humphrey himself once
carried on in Democratic conventions.
But in 1968 the man who formerly
fought the South with 60 much verve
and enthusiasm tried to avoid a fight
in the interests of pol!lt-convention
hp.rmony. He fuught , instead, with his
old liberal friends over the Vietnam
plank in the platform.
The Democratic coalition was not
exploding, it was falling apart, and
Humphrey's only hope for victory lies
in pulling it back together .again
between now and November.
How to Address
Our Lawmakers
U. l . SIMATO•l
Thom1$ M. K\ldltl (•l. ~u '· Clllld!N St .• AN· Mlm 111cl G9ol'9t! M11rllfly t•l. «17 M. JIOcllo Or.,
h"'r!r HUia. 011rl119 Contf9tllolloal -•kins: Se1111t Olllct> l lclt., Waal't1f'!fTon, o.c. 20301.
U.S. ttlfl•lll:NTATl't'Q
COr"" Ca11"ty Olty)
A:ld\1111 T. HlftM (~Ill Olllrld-0), lffS W,
Crtl«fl! Avt .. 51/llt SlO. Anll'lfllfll J1mtt a. U11
UJth Olllrlet-JU, m E. 41h Slrftl, T'lnlln. °"''"'
COnllrtl&IOMl ffUfoM: HI-. lSl• lotl.-tll
Houw ~ l lcll,1 Utt, 'Ui •1vburll Hou• O!f!OI
llclf,, WatrtlllOlon. O.C, 20.SlS.
STATE SINATO•S ,llOM O•ANCll COUNT't'
JOllft o. S(hm"• Utlrt OtlttJU-11{), no (Ill ~h Strei!!, Twtl11. al'ld .l1m.1 !. W!Mtmonl fU'ffl 01$trlet-tl), ,..0 E1rl OllPn'M>ll. ,\II...._. ~1.
~ te1bl1t1.,. lftllor-.: Sttlt CIPll'O~ ~ """to. C.111. tSI01.
STATI ASlt:Mll YMIJil
ll'tl:OM OlANGI COUNT't'
ltl!Mft L .. dhlm Olli Olt1rld-10, 1'8 Wb'ltHft or,. HtwMl'f Bead! ~ Comr!'ttlMli
0-mment l[ffldtftcy •1111 fCOllalrlY. Pullllc Utll .. tt. 11111 COl'Nl"•llOM, Waltr, encl dllllrmt111o L.ffl~
lttlYI lt•....ntl!IOl'I. .ldlrl II, .... 1"'1111 Ofrtrlct-llll, 1711 N0!1ll H1rtoor llllf,. 5u1"'
A. l'r.tlltrtoll. COl'MlltM .. : Fll'llM!a •nd lrt lo\ll1ll'a, lncllntrl•• llttllloflt. Ioele! Wei,.,.., ltabart
H, l r.trM 170ll'I' 011!rlet-lt)0 111» l..cl'I IMI~
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l'*'°"klnmefll, Mr.t"ICIM! M$ ~ ~11 1111•11,
•1'4 Sl1'9 "'"°""" Inf ._..,.,..flt Afflln. IC~ C0rv l6Hrl Dltlfld-OJ, ll'h W..I l.lfl(Oln. Ill"' Go
A1141Mlm. ~: 'lfttf'ICI W !fttUfllD, It.-.
""' aftcl lualloll, 1flll Ylcli-CMl'TMft EfUUl'loft. Dvr'"' l.elllltlvti .... ,..,., tl•tt Ct•lJol. _,... INlllD. Ctlll. ,,.,..
Uonal. The Important thing here aeems lo be that equit-
able increases are for1bcoming to put the city back in
a competitive position.
Councilmen are expected to take up the matter of
raises sometime in December when they have the job
classification ~ from an agency of tbe State Per·
sonnel Board.
It would be i order to consider making the raise
retroactive to Sept. 1. Some assurance that the next
adjustment Is not another 17 months away migllt also
be in order.
Building of Many Uses
There's _a plan on the drawing boards for an"attrac--
tive new Festival of Arts building that should prove a
real boon to the Festival, its artists and its community.
The second story of the buifCting would be a theater
of about 200 seats, reached by a ramp from the Festival
restaucant. It would serve as a puppet theater and an
intimate theater for other ye:ar-round community func.
tions . 1
No more putting together \be puppet \beater each
year. And, the grounds could be used for additional
afllist exhibltors.
Other consolidated functions -leaving more
grounds space for exhibitors -would be the permanent
junior art exhibit downstairs. This would serve ofi-sea~
son as storage for exhibitor panels 'dismantled after
each show The Children's art free-for-all area would
aloo be on the groynd level as would be an ushers'
dressing room and ensting restroom.
'J1be $50,000 building looks like a real buy at \bat
price.
_&«•'2f1>9
L . "'LET US CON'flNUE ••• ~ . "
••
His Big Ilka: Readers Approve, Decry Editorial on • -•~' .. r
Sex-inhibiting
Pill-'N onsex'
Herewith is another u n w r i t t e n
chapter of history. Its title: H'lbe Pill
That Worked."
The deci&im of the Vatican in the
summer of 1968 to ban contraceptive
pills as immoral and leading to pro·
miscuity was a grave setback for ad-
vocates of 1:Xrth cootrol.
Indeed when The League for Total
Birth Control, an all-out do-good
group, met a month later • motion
was eatertained to disband.
"Wait!" ordered Greenleaf Grom-
met, one of the League's most positive
thinkers. "Actually, the Vatjcan has
pointed the way to the perfect method
of birth contr<1l. The only reason that
sex is fun, they say, is so that people
will have babies."
.,SEX IS FUN?" said Miss Hattie
Pettibone, S<>mewhat surprised.
"Exactly! All we need do, therefore ,
to s ia v e the world," said Greenleaf
Grommet dramatically, "is take the
tun out of sex."
<>Dee the heart of the problem had at
last been grasped, the rest was easy.
A sex-inhibiting pill with the trade
name "Nonsex" was qui c k 1 y
developed and universally acclaimed.
Clerics ol all faittis ooted that
Noosex, far from promoting pro·
miscuity, elimin•d it altGgether. And
Nonsex was preached from evesy
pulpit.
Middle-class parents who had loog
agonized over whether to supply their
teenaged daughters Vrith contraceptive
pills thankfully bought Nonsex by the
gross.
AND WITH YOUNG ladies no longer
.intere\sted, young men m a n f u 11 y
swallowed their Nonsex in order to
avoid a lifetime of frustration.
The disappearance ol sex naturally
had a tremendous i m p a c t on t h e
eronomy. Such pursuits as fly-tying,
lepidopterology and pee-wee golf
boomed as people found themselves
with twice the lei!Jure time on their
hands.
But. movies, advertising and
magaz.ioes were bard hit for subject
matter. (Who will ever forget the list
issue of Playboy showing a naked
rutabaga tying on a bed of radishes?)
Smutty jokes, cocktail parties, and,
of cours-e, marriage, became a thing
of the past. So did babies.
AN ALARMED government ln-
stituted a National Selective Servicing
System , conscripting young people for
com,pulsory parenthood. But 'draft
riots broke out across the land. "Ban
the Mom!" shouted tile young men.
"WalUlO'Wer power !" cried the young
ladies. "Make war, not love!" And the
elfcrt was abandoned .
But oddly MOUgh, the greatest ef.
feet was on strlving. Men no longer
st.rove to be rich or powarful or
fam.Ol.l5. And women oo 1<lnger strove
to be beautiful or chic or good cook1.
Jn fact, no one much move to do
anything at all.
SO THE BUMAN RACE died, not
wltll the bong cl • populaUon ••· plooloo, but out of sh.., b«ed<lm.
And one day, the Lut IDll'l WU }eaf.
Ing Idly 1hrouglt an old cop7 cl the lllell
Papal Eneycllcal. ult says hm," he
told the Last \Voman without much In-
terest, "tllat the only reason 1e1. Ji fun
Is oo that people will have boble1." ''Th•h" said tile Last Woman with a yawn, '-.i•t IOlllld like mU<I> f\Jrl
eltbs.''
Thoughtless Dog Owne ~-
To the Et!i!<>r:
Your decisioo to extend DA.ll.Y
PlWT editorial page and editorial
support (August 19) to the need fur
community infonnation concerning
animal pollution of public and private
thoroughfares will serve m o s t
significantly in alerting citizens to
these health hazards.
According to Investor's Reader,
published monthly by a m a j or
brokerage f.irm, there are 26 million
dogs DO'W living ih the United states
with an average life of six years sup-
plemented by 6 million new dogs sold
every year.
ObWously, every one of ttiese
animals is asserting its territorial
prerogative, daily, (if not twice or
three times) through fecal excreta, on
the sidewalks, roadways, lawns and
other public and private property
other than that of its owner.
IT SEEMS INCONGRUOUS tllat
human fecal pollutiOll of our beaches
and p..tblic and private property is in-
hibited by legal and social restraints
to eMure the sanitation a n d
wholesomeness Df our cammunity, yet
citizens wh<1 wouldn't dream of
persooally violating thE!6e social mores
think nothing of permitting their or
their neighbor 's animals to flout them
with impunity.
An answer to this perplexing and
seriously aggravating It rob 1 em
possibly lies with the following quote
from the above.named f i n a n c i a 1
journal: "The pet industry has doobl·
ed in t.he last five years to $2 billi<>n in
1967, But the real money lies in satis-
fying Fido's ever-more discriminating
appetite. The Pet Food Institute
reports Americans last year spent
$590 million on dog food , more than
double what they paid for baby food ."
It woold be interesting to learn what
a psychiatrist would suggest that
means.
BRUCE S. HOPPING
Wh11 Discriminate?
To the Editor :
Thoughtless dog owners are no
W'(m;le than thou#ltless editorializing
on the subject.
It is indeed tnle that there are
tl>oughiless dog owner. but ..tiy
discriminate? Birds, oa.ts and humans
oarry and leave more diseaBes than
tho9e mentioned by Dr. Humphrey in
y<>ur recent editorial. •
Thoughtless dog owners are the
same kind of people as the dclgleS6
variety whose messes are matters of
greater concern than tbO&e ceused by
the thoughtless breed
1 AM AMONG the majority who love am care for our dogs end 9Yidence
<:On'Jideration towards tile property ol.
others -by cleaning up or "bur)'tng
any messes. (I have always carried a
small scooper with my leash and have
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
It seenu only J11M tllat Ille La·
guna BffCh postman whose re:·
Ugion forbid! bis WOf'king on
Saturdays ohould get hi• job
bact. It wiH be more so if the
Wuhlngtoo postal bureaucracy
grant. him Ille back pey he loaL
-S. D. L. TUI......,._,........,.._
---~ ,._ ......... s.. .......................... _ ......
Letters from readers are welcome.
Normall11 writers should convey their
messages in 300 words or less. The
right to condense letters to fit space
or eUminate libel is reseroed. All let-
ter1 mu.st include signature and mail-
ing ~ress, but names will be with-
held on requeat.
done so long beb'e: any legislation or
irritati<1n was ex.preS'!ied.)
BeSlides, dear editor, most dop
receive better medical care (evidenc-
ed by large number Of vets) than
do other pets iand m<1st hUIDlall5 !
Why don't you pick on somebody
your own size? ·
ANN M. WEISSMAN
Bod Driving
How right PE is! (Gus, Aug. 20).
Hia.U the drivers on the road shouldn't
be dri'{ing anything more dangerous
than those little round-the-loop cars at
the carnival.
Between here and Laguna Beach
there are four speed zones -only
about a mile of 65 m.p.h. and two or
three miles of 50. . .every day I see
them going 45 or 50 in the left larle
where the speed limit is 65, .and 50 in
the 35 m.p.h. zone! It seems not one in
50 pay any attention at all to speed
limits, and le5s atteation to the lanes
they sh<1uld be in.
When t went to Oregoo some time
ago, 101 Freeway was marked "50
m .p.h. right lane -"left lane 70." It
seems to me anyone and everyone
fit to drive should klDow by now the
right lane is for slow cir under speed
Jimit. (except in the city) and left lane
for fast .
• A FEW YEARS AGO we were com-
plaining because the kids ran us down
with their scooters, bicycles and play
autos -they pulA\ed in front of lines
at market, they chased up .and down
aisles, screaming, and we woadered if
there w.as such a thing as a disciplin·
ed, well-behaved dilld. These very
same kids are now driving the
highways as if they owned them -
rude, don't care, go to h-attitude. It
seems every kid gets a car as he or she
turns 16.
I.'ve seen more traffic violaU0116 in
the last year than in ell previous 38
year• ol. driving pu t together -many
were extremely dangerous (left hand
turn from right lane and right hand
turn from left). (Crossing double
or-ange line from .a. wr<lllg way street),
many more becoming every day oc-
currences.
I've read about "cltiien's arrest"
but how cen anyone make ooe for traf·
fie "crimes" endangerJng the liver
and property ot oChers?
What k It ell Coming to as more and
more "w.w babma" grow up to 16 and
get cars? In the meantime the s.tren•
wail thru DMa Pc>int 1evtl'al times a
day and the CM'S zlp througb the 35
m.p.h. iones at 60.
MRS. R. M. M.
A CO!llriblllor I<> Gloom¥ G"' ,.id
Quotes
Percy H. Slee!, Jr., dlreetor ol Ille
BllJ' An!1 Urbu Ltape, SU FtM•
cltco: "Tbere is no wrute man who
cannot get 1 job beoause he ls white. A
lot or Negroes are unemployed
becaUR they are black."
-" he ''hat had it with left ·®'·'"""' pokes." '
Flower Clallcl!;!!
To the Editor: !"::::
A prodigious amount ~ t-
ten and published about the .11 ies"
who frequent Laguna Beachf.JDOilt''Of it
highly sensational and srome 'Of it ei:-
aggerated. -; ~-;. -
Laura Archera Huxley, wi~ olthe
late Aldous HUl.ley, has receDt'ly 'fl'lt-
ten a book named: "This ™eleas
Moment." ~ ·
Any citizen who is unduly .~Dcitiied
with the hippies and their' J;14its1 in·
eluding drug addiction, sho.!!:1-d !e&d tt
IN AN INTRODUCTION W IJtO"maln
text, Mrs. Huxley writes: ~o the
flower children of all times -:-with
their open hearts and om~ds,
with their ageless, timeless klve and
hope -this book is oHere "
Several chapters are devoted to the
use of psychedelic chemicals, i:e. LSD
and other drugs .
The book is published by Farrar,
Straus & Giroux, New York.
EDGAR D. PHELPS
Heart Differences
'l'o tlhe Edi.tor: --•. A word of caution to SY.d!lef .H~
r.is 's presumptjon (August .. 2%) '""~t
"one heart is as good as another,"
Even a natural scientist wWld lcnow
that tile heart hi Only as ~ as it
re\atets to tile rest of tire natural -body
and its organs -and who' . .iS .. ., _,,say
ttiat one b o d y is as good. • Jor the
characteristics of one minll as
aootlher? e~·.•.• . -OBVIOUSLY, much of tlie l'lflltal
ond emotiooal deve~:~e to
the oapacity d the natural·Ml'.tet ·and
functions w bolb sUmulate ...i Im·
plemerit the in d iv id ua.t •, ~n
scioosness. And who ill to say ttlat dif·
ferences in physioal or~. and
dlaracteristics do not p~.a large
part m providing the -¥ A J g u e
pers<1nalities Of individuals !hicb ... are
needed tJo Illa"" a healthy alld;~uate
oociBl e«>nomy and culture!~
' ...
HOW FAR MEDICAL e~ience
should go in pursuing the poalbiltty of
"sameneS$" probably d~.on..,,,,
m'l.ICh .a rigid, insecure ~ re·
quires It of eadl other, endiilft' bow
remote the attainment ol. if~•·
MMy would not ... tile _.... and
fo"i« tho cballenge until ttilNI upon
them. :;.. i-<'
But rey feelings Wt, ~ UI
from tbe day when "one blllrt ii • """1 .. anotiler" for tile pllooaJI boo
to fill enljob 1lo be~. • .
ELYZE~RD
-' -----Wednesday, August a, 1•.
TM tdltorlal pogr ~ Oii-Daflf
Pilot 1Hlu I<> inform onll.o...,_
W.t• rtod<n bJt pt'U ...... WO
"""'1"1Pff"• opinio!u Giid -
menlaf'll on top!ca of -
and .riqnifican.et. bv proCIM..., c
forum for IM ~ ~
"'" nod<n' oplnlom, mocl l>r prt1 .. t1no IM dlom1 okw-
pol.U Of lnf°"""d oo,_,
ond IJ)Oktlmt!I on topicl''1 IM
cf4v. -
Robert N. Weed, ~
--___ L _ :_ ___ .___.:..__ __ - ------------------ --------------- - - - - - - - - - - - --- -A • ------A
. .
-
Newport Harbor - -_ DAllY PILOT Your ,Hometown
•
.
EDITION Dally Paper
VO~. 6f, NO. 207, 7 SECTIONS, 78 PAGES NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA WEONESDA Y, AUGUST 28, 1968 TEN CENTS
EPS Ballot Denial Seerl; Recall tTall{ Fades·
All recent NeWPQrt Beach City
Council decisions involving the "Elec-
tronic Protection Syst.em" (EPS} have
been unp1:edictable.
But times have changed.
Councilmen will meet again on the
issue Thursday at 4:30 p.m. The wt·
come of that meeting is predictable :
The council majority will refuse to
pot the police television surveillance
quesUon on the November general
election ballot. Last week they voted 3-3 on EPS
advocate Paul J. Grul)er's motion to
let the electorate make the final EPS
decision. The tie .vote killed the mo-
tioo. Tbe colll)Cil decided to vote
again this week with a full council.
• '• ~ • ~· • , '\), -, q.t.ILY l'~.l'--ll!rlr-.' len-AAJIKING A 1SPLADf -1llanita ·Batel, '2o. of Coota Mesa ·wades Into
c9.,llection .of boating gear ranging. from dinghies . to life preservets
UJar Newpori Beach police will put on auction at l{l a.m. &aturday
at city yard. Condition oi unclaimed marine items ranges fronf poor
to fair though · the sh3.pe of Miss Bates, as all can see, can be con·
sidered excellent.
Boating ~argain'
Nautical Gear Set for Auction
Salilors will get a rare QP?Ortunity to
pick up boat gear at b~ain prices
Saturday v."ben Newport Beach police
auction off a collection of dinghies,
oars, paddleboards and other marine
gear.
The auction will get under way at 10
a.m. at City Yard, 592 Superior Ave.
Police said purchases must be made
on an ''as is" basis. Payments must
be in cash, with no guarantee on the
condition of the items sold. The marine auction is tbe first ever
to be staged by the police department.
The boating gear -collected and
stowed over the past three or four
years by the Harbor Department -
has never been claimed by owners.
A recent administrative shift puts
the disposition of the equipment under
the jurisdiction of police. U Saturday's
auction is successful auctions of found
marine gear will be held once or twice
a year, officers said.
Iocluded in the list for Saturday are
62 rowboats, dinghies or skiffs, six
paddleboards, two surfboards, three
We jackets and one small outboard
engine.
The condition of the gear ranges
from fair to poor, according to the of-
ficial police list.
County Taxes Cut; Saving
• Of $3.45 Million Claimed
A reduction cf three cent.s in Orange.
County's general tax rate to $1.68 and
an overall reduction in general and
Orottge Coat
We•ther
The weatherman·s writing his
forecast on carbon paper this
week, and Thursday will be no
different - sunny with tem~
eratures in the 80's along the
Orange Coast.
INSIDE TODAY
Orange Coun~'1 ntw com-
munity thtatC!r IC!OIOn.--openi
this weekend with 4 familitJr
: plat/, 4'Tht Odd Couple.• Se1
; Enttrtatnmenti Pagt 18. • ... ,.... , • ... ,"" u • c1111tn1i. .. ,
: Cl111m.cl tf.a
• C-kJ U c....-M 1 DNlll Mflcw t ~ af!"'1tll "'" It I Sl'lltrtllln-' 1' ~ ,lfwlltCt i•n 1 .,.,.. C1th t ••rt 91111111w n ....,__ 11
,J AM L...i1rt lJ
• \
Mfil•ll "
I
Miit hi ""1a It _... . "'"'" ,, Mllhlltl ,...... 11
NtliMll """ .... Orfttt C"ftty t
lfl\lla ......... ,,
$Kiii """ l).1f .,.,.,. 21·2•
Dr. S~rtoll• •
Ttle'lt.IH tf
'""'" " w .. ltllr • o ... 1¥11119 ti Wlrll NtM 4-J
1 .
special district rates of 11.5 cents was
adopted by ·the Board of Silpervisors
this mornJng.
Auditor·Controller Victor A. Heim
told supervisors it would mean a
dollar saving of $3.45 million to the
county's tu payers ..
Supervisor Alton E. Allen pointed
out that last year's general fund rate
or Sl.71 was the third lowest in the
state and this year's reduction should
improve the county's position.
Reductions of 5.S cent.a or Sl.6
million was accomplished in
departments and districts directly
under control of the superviscrs.
District reductions included the
county library down three-fourths of a ceOt and the Harbor District down l.S
cents.
The tax rate reductions were made
despite increases in the budget. The
g<M<al fUnd expenditure will be ap.
proximately 1120 million up Jll mllllOll
over last year.
County Flood Control expenditures
will be $8.2 million, up Crom f7 .6
million In 1967-68.
The Harbor District is $6.l million,
up from $4.6 million.
$2.5 Billion Boncl
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Los
Angeles County Superviscrs Tuesday
approved submission ol a $2.5 billion
rapid transit bond plan to the voter&
on the November ballot.
Robert Shelton, absent last week,
will break the tie Thursday. And he
is opposed to putting the issue on the
ballot.
Shelton's view essentially is that
the council would be ntMing avtay
from its responsibilities by leaving
the matter up to the voting public.
"A board of directors of a major
corporatlcn doesn't ask its 1t0Ckhold-
ers 1.o decide administrative issues,
such as the purcbafle of equipnlent,"
be said.
Moyor Doreen Marshall sald the
4:~ p.m. ttme was set for Thµrsday's
meeting in O<dO!' to wOM'k it in during
the municipal stairs n«m·at dray.
Meanwhile. a.recall move aimed at
the anti·EPS councilmen -Mayor
Doreen Marshall, Vice Mayor Linds-
ley Parsons, Donald A. Mclrulls and
Shelton-apparently has floundered.
A spokesman for the recall promot.
en said it had been learned that no
such 'action can be taken until a
council member has been in office at
least six mootbs. That would leave
out MclnnJs, elected last April.
"We're .real mad at the council for
not putting this on U}e ballot," said the
spokesman, ':but 1· doubt" now t~t
there will be.a recall. It's a dead issue,
like EJ;>SJ ~ suppose."
Backers of the move, it was report·
ed, include leaders of two unnamed
homeowners associations.
Sen.·l(ennedy Says 'No'
'Final' Disavowal Speeds HHH Win
By BARRY SCHWEID
CHICAGO {AP) -Vice President
I-Iubert H. Humphrey appeared certain
Wednesday of winning the Democrati~
nomination for president on the first
ballot.
Humpltrey's expected. vote total
began to climb after Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy of Massachusetts pleaded
with the delegates to give up an idea
or a draft and to choose, instead,
"[rom among the capable and
* * * Bitter Viet
Debate Splits
Convention
CHlCAGO (UPI) -The Democratic
Natiooal Convention launched into a
bitter debate oo the Vietnam war to-
day.
The ccnvenUon was sharply divided
between backers of the policies of
President Johnson and Hubert H.
Humphrey and those supporUng the
demands of Sen. E1.tgene J. McCarthy
tor an immediate halt in U. S. born·
bing cl North Viet.Mm to bring an end
to the war in Southeast Asi:a.
It was the secood meeting ol 1he day
for red-eyed delegat.es who left the in·
Additional stories, photographs on
Democratic National Convention
on Page 3.
ternational amphitheatre shortly after
1 a.m. when tbe convention was forced
to quit by disorderly demands for ad·
journment.
St1pporters of McCarthy and Sen.
George McGovern of South Dakota
staged a demonstration that forced the
delegates tc put o!f a Vietnam
showdown until most of tft1e nation was
at least awake if not w.atcdling. The
hall was only partially filled when ttie
session began.
Rep. Hale Boggs of Louisiana,
chairman of. the convention's platform
committee. put the issue before the
delegates by summarizing a pro-ad·
ministration plank on Vietnam wh.ich
included a conditional halt i n
American bombing.
Lifegua1·ds SeeK
Body of Tustin !
Youth in Newport
Newport Beach Ufeguards today
resumed thetr search for the body of a
Tustin teen.ager who apparenUy
drowned after an eight-foot wave
slammed him to Ule ocean bottom
Tuesday afternoon.
Reported missing from his home
after spending the day at the beach
was Lany Ross Martin, 18. Witnesses
said he was body surfing at 17th Street
wi1h twc or three other swimmers
when be ran into trouble about 4:45
p.m.
A friend Who saw the mishap, Hal
Williams of Newport Beach, reported
that Martin was riding along the big
wave When be "went over the falls ."
Lileguards said the phrase is used
when• body surler lJ pulled up to the
Up cf a wave, then is plummeted
downward with the weight of the wave
slamming dawn onto him.
Abollt a ball dmn lifeguards be&an
a search wittl skin dJvlng equipment in
Tuesday afternoon's surf. High waves
and surf turbulence, however,
hampered U!elr efforts .
Lifeguards S'ld that Martin and the
otbers body surfing ()ff 17th Street
gave the appearance of "knowing
what they were doing." A red fiag was
flying from the nearest liieguard It.a·
lion, indicating dangerous surf.
A totial of l2S rescues were logged
along Newport Beaches Tuesday, and
108 made tor the day before.
dedicated candidates already In con·
tehtion."
In quick succeSsion. Gov. Richard J.
Hug~es of New Jersey endorsed
Humphrey. Govs. John J . McKeithen
of Louisiana and Mills E. Godwin Jr.
or Virginia dropped out as favorite
.sons and Illinois' powerful political
boss, Mayor Richard J . Daley of
Ohlcago, turned a ma.s sive 112 votes
over to the vice president.
Daley had held out for days. Though
he had been expected to go for
1-Jumphrey eventually, the mayor
listened' to pleas in behalf Cf other
Possible nominees, particularly the
last of the Kennedy brothers.
But with Kennedy's don't-draft-me
statement, Daley headed Illinois into
Humphrey's mounting vote colwnn.
Shortly after the Democrats con-
vened their thil:d session, a n
Associated Press poll oif solid first·
(See DEMOCRATS, Page 2)
Surges
Beach Barricades
Sea Past
By JEROME F. COLLINS
Of "'' OlllJ ,Hit 11.,..
Eight-root sud slammed into \Veit
Newport's crumbling beachlront again
Tuesday, carrying away with it huge
chwiki IJ( beach sliell,
A bartlcade oC rocks, piled up by die
U. S .. Anny . Corps of Engineers last
week, worked only partially in lessen-
ing the explosive impact oC the· surging
surf.
The bre8ken; appear.cl to be
subs.idinr· this morning, but several
$20,000 Theft
Jails Salesman
Newport Beach police t o d a y
reported the arrest or a U5ed. car
.salesman who gained the confidence of
a divorcee through a promise of mar·
riage, then allegedly stole '20,000 from '!\OT,
John Bates Gregg, 47, was picked up
Mooday in the Oontra Costa County
community ot Walnut Creek. He was
brought back to Newport Tuesday
where he was anaigned in Newport
Harbor Municipal Court.
Police recovered $500, They're still
looking for the rest or the allegedly
stolen money.
·homes were left perilously perched on
the edge Of a 10-foot high embankment
apa'l\'lled &outherly sWells .
Some homeowners worked past dusk
TueSday emplacing sandbags on the
~ach below their homes and behind
the boulder batrier, stretching from
41st to ~streets. ·
NewpOtt' ·Beach city off i c i a 1.$.,
meanwhile, awaited word Crom the
Corps of Engmeers on its plans to
·salvage the beachfront.
. CONTRACT SLATED
A contract for a $250,000 sandhaul,
"including the insi.all·ation of a· second
25().foot long steel sheet groin, was to
be awarded later today by the Corps.
City Engineer Ben Nolan said it is
possible work on the project would
begin in the next day or so, depending
on the Corps' response t:o the present
"deteriorating" situation. The job was
originally slated to start after Labor
Day.
Municipal aides were reluctant tc
request Orange County emergency
sandbagging crews, even thcugh they
have the authority to do so under the
declaration cf limited peril made by
the City Council early last week.
The possible loss of a few patios,
said one city spokesman, might not
warrant the expenditure of "at least"
$20,001 in county funds for the sand·
bagging.
Alsc, according to City Engineer
(See EROSION, Page %)
•• NO THANKS
Democrat Klnnedy
Beggar Coul.dn't
Afford, Meal;
Only Had $135
The market must be falling to
pieces.
A young New Jersey stOcJ:cbroker
was arrested in Newport Beach Tues·
day momfug on charges of begging.
Police said John Albert c;apalbo, 25,
cf Newark, N.J., was se.en ap·
proaching several adults asking for
money.
.But he also approeched a
plainclothes officer, who hauled him
off to City Jail. .
Capalbo told officers that he
"wanted to get enough for breakfast. I
didn't want to spend w'hat I had."
Police said the young m·an was car·
rying $135 in cash.
Bail was set at $35: 'Ibe ~ockbroker
decfded not to pay it, and remained in
jail pending a court bearing today.
TV, Friencl Missing
A friend to whom Ted Klink.ow sky,
of 1800 Wallace Ave., loaned a $400
television set some ti·me ago is miss·
ing, Kliitkowsky t o I d Costa M~a
police .'I\iesday. So is the set.
OAIL'f' Jiit.OT tMI ...... WAVES CONTINUE TO .POUND W£ST NEWPORT; BEACH SLIDING INTO SEA
Bit Sw,111 Attract Sur!tra, But Somo hachH Closed
i
' I
% llAJLY PILOT 'Ntdotldou, ...... , 28.1968
Joan Irvine
Pushes Suit
;For Esiate
Irvine Ranch heiress Joan Irvine Smith laid her dt.mand fOf' a bigger
share of her late land baron
graqdlather'1 ·estimated $200 'million
' estate betort the Ninth UiS. Court ol .
Appoall In San Francllco ll'uesday.
The attractive blonde mother o(
• three. who h•s homes in Laguna
: Beach's Eme-rald Bay and 1n Mid·
; dleburg, Va .. is challenging a U.~.
• District CoUrt rullnl h111decl dowll m
'·Los Angeles Lut December.
The 36-ytar-old hetress claims 459
Irvine Company aharea currently held
by the Irvine Foundation were never
legally transferred wben the foun·
datioo w•a 1et up.
Judges ruled In Lo& Aogelea lasl
December, bhawever, that the Irvine
Foundation was legally established
and therefore Mr1. Smith bas no claim
to any additional shares.
The shares in question have a par
.value o( '100 each, with a market
value of tl09,000 each.
Her attorney, Lyndo\ Ypung, o! Im .
Angeles, said the trust is &Jmply an
alter~go of Irvine himsell and 1' staf-
fed entirely by bis own agents ..
Attorney Howard J. Privett, of Los
Angeles, representing all but one of
the foundation's trustees, 1a1d during
the hearing that the fOundation bas
dlltrlbuted 'IU mllllon lo chll'ttles In
California.
"There la no evidence wbaUoever
•.• that there was no deliverance of
tbe indeatures of trust which created
the founda.Uon," Privett argued.
Clrcull Judges John C. Pickelt, War·
r en L. Jones and Awtin L. Staley took
tbe appeal under submission following
tbe hearing ln San Francisco.
Mn. Smith, wife of Mortimer W.
Smith, haa in the past argued that two
Irvine estate truatees, Robert Gerdes,
board chairman of Pacific Gas &:
Electric C.O., and N. Loyall McLaren.
a financier, shouJd be d1smissed
because they are also foundation
directors. .
She believes the two posts constitute
a conflict of interest, saying they are
not representing her own financlal
poa!Uon p<operly.
Mra. Smith'• personal fortune Ls
estimated at ~ mllllon.
Textbook Causes
No Controversy
In Laguna Beach
nie bittory text "Land of the Free"
preaent.Jy causing a flap iD the Orange
Cotmty Board of EduoMio.n hasn't
; made any parUcular waves in Laguna
Beacll. The boot la one of. tlve or t1x texts
u.ed In el~ ir•d" of Laguna Beach
; Uoilled School D!Jtrlct lo leacil
• hlotory . I Supe;lntflldenl Wffilam Ullom &.aid
.: he thought the book has limitations but
: tpake from .,, academic standpoint.
I Stat< SeDelOr John Schmitz IR·
1 Tustin), and others recently found
' eympathetjc ean for their criticism of
the hi1tory book at a county board
meettn1.
· °'8rges included assertiODI that the
book was inacc1D"ate and unpatriotic.
; t Jt J1 uaed by most Orange County ! J llChoo! dlstrlcta and WU adO!>led by
• • the State Board of Education after
• revisions.
'' Ullom aaid Ule book really wouldn't
meet t!he needs of yolll'lgsters if it was
the only text ln uae. He said a variety
of text books should be used to carry a
variety of viewpoint.I.
"One of our major oUject.lvea is to
teach the fact that biu. does exJst in
I; writing and to make an attempt to
:: help youngsters identify the bias,"
: laid Ullom. "All text oooU Wl·
doubtedly bavt 10m• blu."
"
• '
OAllV PILOI
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OIWtOI ('OMT PUIL.llHIN9 UJMIAHY
a.Mrt H. W•M
'"''""' tM ,......, J··· .. c.r1.., Yb.,...., ..... o...i ~
n'""'' x •• ,11 .....
"''"''' A. M1m111e Ml.....,. ldlfw
J•r•IM F. C.111111 P•vl t-111"11 ....,.,. .... ...._..'"' CJtr lllltw Cl1'9CIW ...... , .... ~
2111 Wttt l•IM• l.uln.1rtl
M11ll~ M4 .. H1 P,O .... 1171 ,,,,, __
C-hi MINI ...... ...,..,. L...-.--"1·~·HWIJ. •••• lilldll •• '"""
'
HIS Q MAClllNE -Professor Nathan Rynn sits beside Q Machine
he is building at UC, Irvine. It holds lightning magnetic field. Mag·
oettc plates making up cylinder are so powerful they will pull a
wrench off the floor.
Quie~ Ma~hine
VCI Professor Harnesses Lightning
By THOMAS FORTUNE
ot fl .. 0.111 PRll lllff
Nathan Rynn , UC Irvine professor,
is building a ma.chine to make lightn·
ing stand still. lie calls it a Q Machine.
Technically, lightning is plasma, a
highly Ionized gas. Other forms ot
plasma are arcs, sparks, fluorescent
lights and neon signs.
''Plasma Invariably is tUrbulent,
noisy and flapping around," Rynn
1aid. "My machlne makes it stand
quiet -hence Q, for quiet. Machine.''
The Q Machine at UCJ won't be his
first. He invented and built the first
one when he was at Princeton in ~9.
Many others have been built in many
countries since.
Rynn. 44, a Laguna Beach resident,
Invented the Q Machine 50 he· could
make plasma stand still and ex·
perireent with It to bettet understand
1t. In the quJet state, he said, you can
drop pehbleo in ii, poke II er slap II I•
see the effect.
BOON TO MANKIND
Better understanding of plasma
could one day be an almost un·
believable boon to mankind, he 1ug·
gested. It coula be the key 1lo con·
trolled fusion, tile hyd<ogeo bomb
reaction slowed down.
As the hydrogen bomb is more
powerful than the atom bomb, so too
are the peaceful potentialities of
hydrogen fusion much greater than
heavy element fissioo, the atom bomb
reaction. ·
The supply of deuterium. heavy
hydrogen, is practically UmlUess.
Rynn said a pail of seawater contains
deuterium energy equivalent to XI0,000
gallons of gasoline and the COAi of ex·
tracting it J.n quantity is on the order
of 10 cents a bucket.
But except J.n uncontrolled
thermonuclear reaction, scientists
haven't been able to fuse deuterium
atoms to release the energy.
If they ever do, Rynn said, it would
incre86e the J'Kl'!''er reserves of the
world at a minium by a factor or
1.000 tor at least a billion years.
The implications? There wouldn't be
any more fuss over sources of ener,y,
like oil. Electricity would be so cheap
we wouldn't even bother to meter it.
But for the most part the implications
are beyond our comprehension, Rynn
said.
To fuse heavy hydrogen it must be
heated to 100 million degrees. "Hotter
than the sun," Rynn said.
As the heat increases the atoms
&tart moving around faster · and
collide together m o r e and more
Y.:)lenUy until they knock off electrons
and become ionized. This superheated
gas is the plasm.a that Rynn worlu
with.
The problem ls not adding the heat,
but cont.aiuing the plasma in one spot.
At super t e m p e r a t u-r e s, the
deuterium atoms go zoomlng off
through the magnetic field supposed to
cont.am them. '1
By researching the properties of
pluma, Ryno hQPM to d.iacover whr,
the atoin1 escape. "Thla ii my bag, '
._ l&id. "I don't want to touch a reac-llllt until J can understand pla.sma."
Getting. Q Machine tor Irvine has
been difficult. Rynn'• been working on
it for the two yeiars he's been here.
"The hold-up is money," he said, ".and
we ju.st had &ome that was promised
to us taken back.''
He hopes to have the machine com-
pleted in another six montM with
federal and state money and Atomic
Energy Commission loan equipment
A technician and graduate students
are working on building it. "I think it
will cost about •100,000 by the time
we're all through," be said.
With hi! new Q Machine, Rynn
hopes to duplicate space effects.
"Plasma is the stuff stars are made
of." he said.
He al.so plans to investigate how one
plasma reaction trlgger1 another,
making the gaa 80 volatile. "I think
I've got a handle on the non-linear pro-
cess," is the way he puta it.
The Q Machine makes an ioniied
gas of an alkali motal by shooting it
against hot tungsten. The gas. which is
too hot for any container. Js held ln
place by a magnetic field in a vacuum
chamber.
OCC District Growing;
Building Standing Still
The erow1h curve for Orange Coast
Jun!or OoUece District 11 almost a
W-allfll llne wltll fril_, upward
tilt.
The bulldln1 po!Wn la charted by a
l...,l line wlttioot th• Ult .
Plotted m tilt aame chart the Un.,
1et ftrther and fartllor aport .
Thal la til• pr._t faced by the
junior coUege dlstrlct11 Dean of
Research and Plannlnl Frank Hopkin•
u he or... up the lmportar>ee of the
Sept. 17 achoo! bond election.
The '7.2$ ml1Jlon bond !Kue and ao-
coot ovmldo moosure la dea1aecl to
-care ot dlllrict bulld!nt need• for the next four )'tlll'I.
Even ahould the bood J1111e put II
wm take about thret yein to com·
plete bulkl'nga, Hoi*I .. laid. "It takn
il>al lolll from the pllllllinl lllai• lo
equlppioi the bulldlnp. So th• -wl!J be h8m1trun1 fer at leul Ill• 110xt u.... ,..,. ....
So lblt la tile pl""'":
-Thlt fall there wiU bt l ,llllO
lt\ldellU oa Ibo °"""II' Coost Colle11
-dellped for 1.000 lludtnlt.
There wtll be 3,000 lludenla on tile
~ Weot omiput, 'Ollldl •Po ~ -bandlo 2,SOO. -Ill lall IJell o.-.,.. OOUt't enroll·
mOllt -to i',400 ~ G<lld<11 Weat'a
•
lo 3,500, but Goldm Wect pl& relief
because oew buildiD11 i n c r 1 a a e
capadly lo accommodate the 3,500.
-The following fall, lWIO, 0.-ange c ... t lfOW1 to 8, 1110 ttudtnU and
Golden w .. t lo 4,ooo v.i1!1 no Increase
In capacity.
-In fall 19'71, Orange Coast 11 up to
819CX> students and Golden Welt to
4,500. U the bond btue next month
puses new buUdin1s would be ready
by tlt<n.
The dlltrict will be able to get by lhe
next two yean by schedullna ad·
dltlonal eesliON ot clanu: early and
lat< and •xteadinl the cloy from 7 a.m.
unUJ 10 p.m., H~ aald.
It w1l1 bt incOovenient lo atudeolJ
wboH eta.. ar• opoctd holll'I apart,
but ft -ked before, HOl)lr;lna Aid. In
11161, blfort the Golden Will campus
wu bull~ OranCt Co.i houJecl 7,iOO
ttudentl. It'• In 1970 Ulat the r..i trouble
cornea. Between the two, the tchools
wll1 be 3,8!0 sudem. ovv capodly.
'!be only tolutloo Hopl<lllo ou '" la to turn atudell\I away. U tllo bood
--· that sttuatton thould la•I ooJy ..,. )001', OCblrwlle •••
llopt!!w doetn't want lo t3ll< about
IL
--
~ltl%en's Protest Probe Due
Airplane Engines· On Schools
Roar at Hearing ~ Operation
By JACK BROBACK
0t tll• Oallr l'Htt Stiff
Recorded airplane engines opened
Tueaday ni&ht's bearing devoted to Uie
0.-ange County Airport portion of the
county Master Plan of A I r
rr ... por1auoo.
The record1ng, pUJl)Ortedly made in
hll bome, waa played by Daaiel W.
Emory, chairman of the Airport Nolle
Abatement Committee to emphasize
his continuing attack aga.lnst the
airport and Jtl management.
J!mor7 aod b.ia group comprised
most o the overflow crowd at the
small county planning commllsion
hearing room In Santa Ana. II II a
small room holding 100 persons at
most.
In addition to the noise abatement
crowd, a few new voictl were beard
by the airport commissloner1.
"The Newport-Costa Mesa area is
the last place I would want to build an
airport,' 1ald Joseph F. Pike, Jr., of
1811 Glenwood Lane, Newport Beacli.
Pike, a pilot with Trans World
Airlines, saJd the 51¥1 Joaquin Hills of·
fered the best regional airpOrt site.
Ed Van Allen, president of the
Orange County Pilots Association
struck. a popular note when be sug-
gested that au airline operations be
moved !rom the ailport immediately,
He said they could go to El Toro, Los
Alamltol or Long Beach and stay
there unW a regional airport could be
constructed somewhere else.
Having disposed ot all but private
flying out of the facility , Van Allen ad·
mitted. be had not talked to the
military or Long Beach officials.
John Davies, &n official of tte Air
Transport Assoc la t J on , which
represents nation-wide airlines told
the commission that he could a1sure
them that use of the military airports
was out and that Long Beach had pro·
blems. "There are homes near that
airport too and people complain," he
explained.
Davies quieted fears of larger
planes using the airport. The runways
could not be made long enough to ban·
dle large planes and that includes the
proposed Air Bw," Davies saiu.
"Airports cannot be in too remote
an area. They serve the public,'' R W.
"Bob" Clifford, vice president for
operation of Air California told the
group.
He said hll firm, the principal user
of the airport was not for longer
Front Page 1
EROSION •••
Nolan, the Army Col1'I could haw dif.
femit notioa1 on emergency pro·
t.ectlve meaeurt11. "'lbey could come
in with more rockl, 11 ht .Ud. "Tben
the bap wouldn't be needed.''
Marine Solely Direclor Robert
Reed, wlloM own homo ls In the midst
of the imperiled atta, was asked
w~ther he believed any residences
were ln any "immediate danger."
''Let's put it thiJ way," he said. "It's
like having Sonny Liston hold his fist
up Ju.st six Inches from your jaw. The
rist isn't on its way toward you as yet,
but Jt's there.
"That's the kind oI danger we're in.
You decide whether it's: immediate ."
As Reed spoke, anotiler few J.nches
of beach &hell slid lnto the sea.
Johnson May Visit
GENEVA (UPI) -President
Johnson may soon go to Moscow to
open talks on reducing missle arsenals
In spite of the Soviet Invasion of
Czechoslovakia, rankin1 Western
diplomats saJd today.
nu'IWay1 or any .. W1.ld'' •XJ>anslon. He
d1d say parklng 11houh~ be \ncreased.
The Pereira report, principal lub-
Ject of the hearlnp1 wu supported by
Jack Mullan, cllainDan of th• Newport
Beach AJr Traffic Advisory .COm·
mltt.e. "Without any pJanninc the
present .airport couldn't remain u the
Olt!y airport," lllUDan nole!I·
Paul Elston, .Qioange County ~rt
tower controller, den.led criUclllm that
noise abatemint ptocedures wve ~t
being lollowtd. He'J>olnltd out thlt air
carrien ]Ille only ftwi 'percenr ol the
·operation1; from ilt field WbJ,cb be
1ald was the third bualest•ln the atate.
·Hearing• eonUriue todty'. Jn. Santa
Aoa With. three mw:acy facilities
. being 1tudled u po11lble regjonai
airport alto1.
All-star Array
Awaits Nixon
Visit to Co_unty
Guttering star& al llage, screen and
tile Republlc111 Party w1l1 gatller In
Anllbelm on Sept. 18 for a 'IQO.a.pla1"
campaip dinner ll1d rally for GOP
pread•nlial candldato Richard M.
Nl:ron.
Muter of Ceremonte1 for th&
Anaheim Coovenllm Center event will
be he.m111 movie atar John "Duke"
Wayne, of Newport Beacb, wlille Gov,
Ronald Reagan will Introduce Nl:ron.
The presidential hopeful will return
to Orange County, ~re he tpeDt hl1
boyhood In Yori>a Linda, following an
earlier Sept. 5 rally in San FrllJICllCO.
"As Mr. Nixon has stated repeated·
Iy, California ts a crucial 1tate in the
nation and he expect• to 1pend more
tlm• oampaignlng bore than In any
other 1tate," said Lt. Gov. Robert H.
Finch, Ni:r<>n'1 actilJi 1tale compoip
m1n1ger.
F1ndl will al.lo 1ppear on the
Aoaholm prolfllD, offering • brief
talk before Nixon's main event apeecb.
Final detallt al the Aooheim rally
are expected to be annoU:nced nus ..
day at .a 1pecl&l press cocktail party
at the Cooventi011 Centtl", accordin& to
oampaip aide Fraolt Jor<lall.
·The 'lQO.a·plate dinner will begin at
7;30 p,m."-loUowlni a tOcial hour,
Jbt'dac{f llt<l, wilt. 'the main addreaa
001 btginnfnl at 9 p.m ., witb •!·per·
person gallery seats available.
l'roM Page .I
DEMOCRATS ••
ballot strength gave Humphrey 1,416¥'
votes -more than 100 above the 1,312
he will need for nomination Wed·
neS<lay ni&l>t.
His closeist ch&ll.enger, Sen. Eugene
J. McCarthy of Minnffotii , trailed with
491Vf., w~ the third man in the race,
Sen. Ge«1e S. McGovern of South
Dakota, had 60. Another 5451/f. votes
were uncommitted.
'The tally ls baaed on trlmary
results, public pledges and caucuses
and AP dele(ate cbeck1. Jt includes
only firmly committed votes, not those
leaninl toward a candidate.
McCarthy. in a meetir.g Tuesday
night with Stephen Smith, offered to
1wing behind Kennedy, like McCarthy
a critic of the admtnlstration's Viet·
nam war policy. Smith, Kennedy's
broUter-in·law, has been a central
figure in the draft-Kennedy move· mant.
By THOMAS FQRTUN&
Of .. .,... "'"" ...,.
Newport.·lt.esta IC ho o 11 auperfn
1ell-William L. Cunnlnlblm toda
Kid he w1l1 ask the ldlool board lo In·
lttale a <ell ana}ylll ot the achoo!
district. and Ulen bring blisinessmen in
to take a second critical look.
Speaking at a l:reeldast session of'
. the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com·
merce, Dr. Cumiingham announced his
plans to ex.rune tbe operation of the
school district.
He said be 1.s l\U'e there &re things
the &dlool district can oo bolter and
(more eflieiently.
CUnninL'ba.m said at one of. the next
m .. ttng, he wtU aalt tile achciol boord
lo go f<r hla evoluattoo J>nlllOlaia. He
said "Operation ~ Haip, fnleraal In·
troopectton of whal we are 'doing"
•bould beog.lo ..... •
In about a year, ht &aid, he h-
tl board wlll lnvito ~ 1o
evalullte adlool operations. 11N0t the
education part ol tt." be aakl, "that's
our OWll profeeetoaal taat1 but
tranoportatton, . accounting, purcba•·
Ing, perlOllllel pracUcea and other
tb:tnga bnsfn1a11nen eao advise on.
"We're always look1nl fof.. better
ways of _doing tblng1," he Ukl. ''It is
my ~y tllal tile lchoola belong
to the commwjty.''
Cunningham CUltinued to exteml tile
glad baod. AJ lh talkJ lo olh<r com.
mwllty oq:mi.z&Uool, be 1a1d, 11Drop
iD1o my ofllce. I'd be moot lfa\elUI to
' bear trom you and meet 'you
persoaally."
He said be has spent 1 buay ltl'nmer
trying to gel to know u many people
in the communJty aa pcuible. "J've
been a bit agireoJ.ve I think," be COD•
ceded.
HepromJsed.1
11bere i.tnoin·
formation In tbia ochool distrtct, with
the exception of ccaidential peraonael
records, not aVOlllable to everybody at
any Ume. Just give me a call."
Cunninlham a1ao repeated hla other
recurrent themes that be<:.IUlt times
are ebanging so fast atudent.s &hould
be taught how to tbln1t lnoead of
opecili<s, and that Newport·Me ..
Unlfle<j II belier geared lo keep up
wlUl change than any 'llaier ldlool
district. he knows.
* * * Harbor Schools
Study 'Gap' in
Communication
The communication gap between
NewpOrt-Mesa school authorities end
the public will be the topic of a Com-
munity Forum on Schools planned tor
Sept. 11.
A dozen pe1"80nJ who met Tuesday
decided the Forum should be on a
single topic so a conclusion can be
d.Nrwn. James \Vood, organizer ol. Uie
publi'c meeting, said other topics
would require other forums.
It also was decided, Wood said, that
he would be the only person on the
stage and that school boani members
would sit with the audience so cltiuns
do not get a "talked down to feeling."
Each of the do!.en peraoos Mio turn·
ed out Tuesday, including, Wood sNcl.
school critics, promised to bl!og 20
people with them to the Forum.
FROM CALIFORNIA ARTISANS. ENGAGEMENT RINGS OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUTY
........
J. C. fiump~rie~ Jewele r
llll NEWl'OU AVE, COSTA MESA
22 Y tin In The Sime Loc1ti01:
..., .. -
•
... • ....... , .. ... .. Ii ~ .,;:. .. 4 .. •
PILO\·AtiVERTISER-3 WtdM.sdiY, August 28, 1%8 OAILV PILOT ,.
?·ve .c ews ·of Coast Men in Service on ~Duty Around World
_ J~. if Brace M. S..Wvu, Rowe, 1299 Conway Ave., of Mr. &nd Mre. Harold E. and is 1 member o! the has been aaa~ to the Patrol Squadron M, based Orange Ave., Oosta Meta : rd Clal.s WWlam E. ~-,
' '"-DI Mts. ~lll•rlne Cooto Mesa, bu b • • n Breier Sr. ol 7242 Judson AFROTC wtt at Unive,.lty First Marine Divll!on In at Loi AI.mit<ll Naval Air Av I atloa AnU.Submarlne USllR, eoa of Mt. and Mr1. " 1'SUWtlla of 21'» Nettonal au!ped to tbt lJt Infantry Ave .. We 1 t min st er , is ol Southern O.Ufornia. Vietnam. Statlon. Warfare Tech.nicisn 2nd Leoo V. G«'mu ol 15311 ·-:~ ..We.t,'!:C:O.U Mea, bl.I bee.a Division near Di An, Viel· participating in a U.S. Air They are Aviation Elet· Class M1~1ha1l W r 1 t ht, Sha.sf.a. . Lane, HtmtinftOo
uslgned to the 5 t b nam, a.• light weapons in-Force Re 11 r v e Officers Marlne PFC Jack L. Four Ortnge Coast are• trician's Mates 2nd Class USNR, aon ol Mr. and Mr1. Beach. ".,'M~e'h an I 1 • d Infantry fan~n. He Is the son ol Training c...p. field en-Rowlaed, 20..-of Mr. •nd men .. IU>dergohi~ two Dennis B. Haw, USNR, ol Orrin W. Writlbt Jr. ol 2200 Upon -pltti<lo of 'lhl ~~Dftllioa in QullJa Tri, Viet-Mr. and Mn. George E . carnpment proJr'am at Mr&. Jack W. Rowland and ~ekl ol activ. training at 145-15 17th St., Costa Mesa Vi.tta Huerto, Newport tr~tbey will return to '.-~ Meo« of Garden Grove. Hamilton AFB, Oallf. husband ol. Mrs. Canela L. Naval Air Station Barber'• and Stanley L. Sautt.r, , Beach ; and Av l at~ on Loi tot ·MCt adend
• ~<'.'o .. '' K Old.et Brett ia a graduate Rowland, all of 5062 Audrey Point, H1wai.i, They are USNR, son of Mr. and Mr11. Beach; and A!Jiation Mainte·, weeken!L JUltinlt oOC9 a '"Ii..~ an • 1 ' Y M. Baroid E. Br<ltr Jr. ..., cl' w-.i.r High School Drive , Huatinglon Beach omani tile 500 retenioa of Carl E. Sauter of 2589 nance Adnliniltra~qoman 3-m<¢l. . •Mt\'llhtt, Dl ~Mr. -.ld.1--=::.=:....:::....:::..::::....:::.:...::=......=....::.::::=::=-~::....:===-..::::.::::__::=::=:!.:::.....=:..::::_.::::::::!...:::...::::..:::::::..:::::...:::._::::....=-====--=--==--=::::..:.::::::::::::.=::::.::::::..:---::::::::::::~~~~~~ Mis . .Heary M. DcV...., of
• 1''18{~.Glouceetier Lane, Hun· '• '•f.iaPon Beodi, bu been
· '.>Jauipiod to tho Air F""""
· -~II Traiolnt ee..ter
· at Ktt1ler AFB, Tex.
,~.u • 1.1taduMe ol. Marina
-.,J:llll"SChool, lhl aJnnoa at·
, c•"t-Golden Welt Junior
Ooliege btlort •olorinc the -.-. 1"!"!"' -:· ..., .U.,.. (J.1.) lltepbea J .
C"Ujeater, USNR, 25, eon ot
·Mroc -Mri. W, W. " • Q\lftl\Or ol Coota M,.a --~----4ed h[• ~~~~'1 "Winp Of Gold."
,':"'Under tile flllht traiJinc
,,. progNm, he n!l:oived his =:; winga lj monlhl a1IM en· ;• t«ur. the SX"otram anc1 ,.:.,abolE 1lx ~ •r
.;,',bef[IWnc odvanced ph-~ 'hi tralnini ot Beeville, r.x.
~ . M,an John C. Jacobi,
:,; ... -JMt. and Mto. Hubert
~,.; E. J..-of 528 lelWll -a Place, Seal Beach, bu com· §, plotecJ !>Mic tral!llnl at
~.Lackland AFB, Tex. He ba1 '!!iii -..aped to lb• Air ,,,.Force Technical Training
,~Center at Keesler AFB, ~Miss., for training u a , .
;ae.o.~omm~cations • electr~-
. ~-JCS specialist. ~ Airman Jacobo Is a 1966
~graduate of Marina High· ~'jScbool and attended 'Golden -"'~st. College. ~·1 l :: ~ii!~an Rand7 S. Krall,
: ~·Mr. and Mts. Harold ,,_ ...... '
·"'· alt of 15112 Beach · ·:·i!B , \f · · way City, com-
J i[fc~~~. ~!~JC at .~:1 .'Jl~'lh_•• been -gn<d to ~..c··~: ;;(Jr Force Technical \'J:l'~ng Center. Sheppord
·~, Tex. for schooling aa a ~~--~'11 st ruction speclalfst.
.. ::;A:iiman Kraft i6 a graduate .,,"\Qr Westminster High School
' · j~d\~arned his BA degree
..,,::~~!: 1 are m on t Men's
z:couec,~
:it Brlail K. Ward, son ol Mt.
:Sand ]Ill's. Elbert H. Ward,
§:6942 Lydia Drive, Hun-
.::1 in gt on Be a ch i 1 •
~clpating in a U.S. Air
~eserve Officers Traimng
orps field training en-~campment at Little Rock
~AFB, Ark.
~ Cadet Ward. a 1·9 8 8
~1$:graduate m Marine lligt ~'?-School, is a member. ol the ~AFROTC unit at San Diego
,astate College .
. ~ A.inn.an Cbarle1 R. Post, :0:!"" of Cllwlts N. Poot of
;">0 351 Y·alt Ave.,
es1minster, has completed
. 1Niniag at Lad!W!d
, ;:Tu. He bas been
-to the Air 1' orce
Training Ce-:-f'!at, d AFB, Tex.
I an Poet ii a 1966
·, a u3~e of Westminster
· gh School and attended
·· Beach Clty Co~e
~ entering Utt Air • -" -~ Sgt. William E. Rowe, •
';;;r.nusband of Mn:. lJnda
t·,, .. ,,. .................. .. ""'" "" ....... ., ............. ....,. ..
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"Switclleroo" Stationery
•
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Suddenlr your lashes look !on1er, frame
)'®r eyes with 11eater em~Mis •••
ind s!Jy curled from 1 25 morning till ni1hL •
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link Door Mat
nUSM·TEl 11"117" -Attractive as
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liftish priwidei a wip· 1 98 in& & sc1111in1 surface. •
Wahl Barber Set
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neck cape, brushes, 9 88 booklet & pomadt, pat~·
111 iii vinyl etse. •
Bissell Rug Shampoo
Mn 11 AtrNtl Ca1-
lb1 easy way to sham· 1 39 poo your ru1s & tafllt!IS.
241?. C11 I
Simoniz Auto Wax
''S111r 1111" for easier aJISllkation,
I Jon1H l1slin1 and 1 29 bri&~ter shine -Paste
cleaner wax. II er. C11 •
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C::m'on 1B.oudoir
3-Ring
tanas
Notebook
Blue c.rnvas covered
J.R1ng double booster
bi'lder w/chp. age :
Typing Paper
3-Ring
Vinyl
Notebook
A.!st. 111~t billders witti
l!h'' capacity ._ tlle Dew
"mod" look.
1.29
DIXIE Paper Plates
f'.&. of 100 9" paper plates. M!)le r1g1d
-Holds more food.
SOLO Plastic Cups
Cold bevl!faie cups for picnic and home ne.
-1 nz. sire la asst colon.
DIXIE Plastic llle11Sils
Pt&. of 24 fOfks, SPoOllS end knivts for
111 your Min& needs.
DIXIE Paper Cups
111 11 II -9 1z. cold beveraae
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Simoniz Ultra-Brite Anacin BAND-AID · ·M•Power ~t Floor Wax Toothpaste Tablets Sheer Strips
"TH Alltl-;lacttilal" lttra-1trt11tl !toll-... ,, 11 1111. •4·
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CH f11I • scratc~e,, -•r11 11~ 'lllt' Aclill ... HIJ 11ti1 '" net. Cltl.
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Pt. If 11i -J"15'', Cioice of 2~2nc ~lain or ru led. t \I-
DRAFTING SET
Deluxe Baby Stroller
"f1l•1·ltl1'' -Obi. safe·
ty lock, triple chr~me Dil t·
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pos1t1on 14.88 sgc seJI,
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5gc Folding High Chair
~ """"" • you11 & u1;1;1y ch1ir, fo1m p1dded, 1d· .. .. ,, 12 98 1gc tray I
fool rul •
sgc Walker-Jumper
whttls, iemov~ble 1rav,
3-Ring
Vinyl
Notebook
PADLOCK WITH KEY
11h'' 'strong steel 2 29 c1se and shac~le w/
ktyl. •
COMBINATION LOCK
frl lcktl Plite•-Bra5S dial, fin-
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white numerals. ·Oou· 1 59 ble acting locking
lever, 1
COMBINATION LOCK
V1n~I CoJted sh1ekle
s1a1nless stttl over 1 98 heavy wrought steel
inner case. •
3-Sub-Divider
Titetne
Book
YI'' CJ,Jtily -Snlt
co~er 3 r1n& billfier
-colors.
"C1i•1 tt l1t11r lra•1s"
Sp1r~I. ruled book, w:'chfrt
et he lpful hint~ on good
study habits frt' into rin1 ·
binder. gsc
PAINTING !IPEC91'
COLOR-JET SPRAY PAINT
-.
Wit~ 1,1cill C~n11i11 ••• 7gc
list 'r1,t1!1l1•1 -wide
choice o1 brilliant colo1s.
PAINT Bnrsltes
A "H1~t1 ••n1" 11111-4" nylon
w1I! brush llllf 1 2" pure bfistle sash
brush.
PAINT Roller l Cover
Rol-taae frame w/2 eo~tfS for 1namet
! f!at tinisl\es.
Mak!S 1«manent 11~ •. :
sticking, raised~!ttt.er, pro-
fessional pl1stic l1hels ift
seco~;s.
With One
Roll 111111
frH 2.69
DYMO '/• INCH TAPE ROllS
Aul cola.ts of vinyl self·adbesiv• 2 '1 DO tape -counlless uses. for wery o
member of the f1mily. I •
Tip Top Curlers
N11111i~ 1r S11, GI l1lltr~-fast
wi~dma, fast dryill1-safe with any
5tyl1n1 solution, in asst Siles.
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Hot 'n Cold Vacuum
TllE~MOS-Combinatio~ Pac~ Snap
rin& holds VKuum bottle fM hot sou~s
& insul1ted sna~ jar for 2 49 cold salads, etc.-fits
work luM:h kits. •
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Turtle Neck Shirt
''Peanuts" chiir1tll!I' loo& sleeve "'irt
IOl bo~s or &iris-Colorful scretn fl'inls
ol cartoon charactecs on
front. 100% combed
cot1on. Sizes 4-14. Asst
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IHllllllllMlllff I HI II
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Helps to replace "atu11! oils lost ti
weatller or water-Hands 79c sbt beautiful. 9~ or. 111_e
w/dis~···';"=· =====~~~~·~ ""'"""": Steel Book Shelf
Alt steel ccnstruclion. All ed&es tDunded
or turned under. Deeor3tive stops 1t
each side lo ktto books 7 88 r1om slippinc. 36''xi"
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he do l1i11tt1 Spriy Mi1t
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Zee Napkins ,
''Mi• '11 M11t~" Aist. Cal1rs -2 049c
large P~i· ot 150. I
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'iddeO head 5 98 rast. Folds !lat
for sto1aae. •
WIRE Brush
J row durable wire brush w/curved wood
handle for tis1 an9.
!mart durable vfttyl
matchtd pieooe lllr ,..
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Fits blck 01 fro~t seat -
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Pir. of 20 asst. tine brushes for trllts,
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DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE
Confirm the Decision
It ts Um• that Newport Beach stopped kicking llsell
around over the police television surveillance 1ssue.
City councilmen tomorrow will have what should
be !bar final ses91on on the proposed "Electronic Pro-
tection System."
For the third time in as many weeks they will con·
sider laying the matter to rest. ~
On August 12, they rejected EPS In a 4-3 vote,.
On August 19 they rejected a plan to put the ISsue
on the Novembe~ general election ballot in 'I 3-3 tie
·vote.
Tomorrow, 1tliey will vote ~gain on the 'ballot ques-
tion, this Ume with a full council.
It ia hoped that no one ab!tains, or next week we
might be going through the same bus!nes_s ag•!• \rltb
ell of its dangerous potential for rancor and divis1ve-
ness.
And It ts certainly just that.
There are reports, for instance, of some groups
contemplating a recall move against the anti-EPS
councilmen unJess they change their minds. They must,
at the very least agree to a public election on whether
th• police-mooitOred TV cameras shoul~ be permitted
in the streets -either that, or be recalled.
This ii politely known as the blackjack approach to
municipal government. . •
Any council member who responds to it is not rac-
ing up to his responsibilities. Any councilman who con·
doned it would be equally irresponsible.
The threat, of course, illustrates just how emotion-
ally entangling the EPS issue can become. It also
serves as a hint of things to come, should EPS be
placed on the ballot.
Vice Mayor Lindsley Parsons gives this warning
about such an election: ''In my view it would destroy our police depart·
ment. I'd hate to consider the consequences of a two-
mootb elect!on campaign for and against EPS."
• That 11 not an overstatement. The kind of emotional,
polarimi·debate that would develop ln such a campaign
11 bardJy likely to help the morale or the lmage of New·
port's police.
By no measure, by no showing of need or value, ls
the proposed experiment with TV ~Uclng worth the
risk entailed of dividing the commuruty and forcing the
police department and ctty stall into the political meat
grinder that an EPS referendum campaign lnevitably
would create.
The city of Newport Beach, through Its duly elected
governlog body, baa made a decision on EPS. For the
good of the community, that decision should be made
final tomorrow night.
No One Panicked
Newport. Beach's latest erosion crisis drew an en-
tirely different reaction from city officials and West
Newport residents than the crists of months past.
This time, everyone worried, as usual, but no one
panicked. Tb ere are two ~rincipal reasons for ~s :
-First, the response is now down .to a routine. Call
city ball, call the Army Corp• of Engineers, and then,
if needed, call the county. .
-Second, the Army -through its Corps of Engin-
eers -is committed to saving the beach. No huge sums
of city money need be further expended.
This of course, does not mean that beachfront
homeowllers will be reimbursed for ,any damage thejr
properties suffer should the Army's efforts fail . That
remains the homeowners' problem.
But as for the beach itself, the federal government
will be Picking up most of the tab for keeping it in rea-
sonable repair.
And no one, -so far -is grumbling about this kind
of federal intrusion into local affairs.
--
N "LET US CDNTlNUE ••• ~ ..
~ . .
FDR's Creation His Big Idea: Readers Approve, Decry Editorial on •• ·'0.,,
Has Dissolved
CHICAGO -Democrats moved
toward the nomination toe President
of Hubert H. Humphrel \rlt!i UD·
disguised apolhy and irrllaion, 'Ille
party created by Franklin D •
Roosevelt in 1932 .as a power tiouse of
combined liberal, labor, farmer and
mi.Dority interesta no longer exists.
This ii no lqer the party of the
forgotten mu, the depreued farmer,
the exploited warter, no longer the
party that attracts liberal Republicans
and is a sure haven for disaffected and
ignored Negroes.
The aipalpm has dissolved. Labor
and the=~ at eacb other throata. After these decades of civil
rights bataes egroes ltUl must fight
for eq=al septation in the na·
tiooal ·Oil. Not 11le &lightest at·
tention 1i paid to tbe po1itic6l in-
terests of the farming classes.
Organized labor ii a conservative ele·
ment trying to protect ita favored
position and with enough economic
clout of its own so tll8t it no longer
needs the Democrat4e Party.
IN THE ROOSEVELT formulation
of unbeatable political power youth
found a natural home, but not in the
Democratic Party of 1968, nor iD any
other organized political party. Youth
can go borne so far as the Democrats
are concerned, or follow th* leader,
Eugene Mccathy, into a new political
movement.
The question is not whether Negroes
will vote Democratic but whether they
will vote at all. The question is not
whether the liberal suburban classes
will vote for Humphrey but whether
they will vote for anyone.
There were two overpowering in·
fluences at work on the Democratic
national convention and botb were em·
barra6singly visible. The stifling
security arrangements and the
repression of demonstrations inside
and outside the. convent.ion hall were a
ronstant reminder of the disordered
nature of American life. The Soviet
tanks in Czechoslovak.la shot down
McCarthy's dove.
IN ADDITION TO tbat, a significant
portion of the Democratic Party was
not even represented in Chicago,
These were the Democrats in the
\Vallace disaffection wbo could con·
ceivably hold the balance of power in
selecting the ne1.t president of UJe
United S~tes. The fragmentation of
-BH Geor9e ---,
Dear George:
I need help. My doctor say.Ii I
have to reduce, but my boss says
I'm too light now for my job in
heavy equipment and my wife
says she'll leave me I[ I lose my Job. George, t wonder if -
Never mind. 1 just got fired ror
being sued for not paying my
doctor bill and the boss ran off
with my wlfe.
N.H.
Dear N.H.:
See how thb'.lgs al\\"BYS work
out i! you're patient?
Dear Geor1e:
I have followed your ad.vi~
and never let a boy Id&& me on
the ftrat date.. J have one pn>-
blem. How can I ever get a se-
cond date? MAE
Dev Mae :
QWt a:lttln& .round readlnj ad·
vice columolata.
(Send your IMertnOSt pro·
blema to Geor1e for outerm01t
trubnenl)
the once powerful Democratic coali·
tion would be made complete by a
walkout of the peace and youth
elements.
It was no wonder, therefore, that
Vice President Humphrey tried to oc·
cupy a center position from which,
after bis nomination, he could reach
out to draw back the disaffected
elements. This position seemed un·
natural to him and there was no better
illustration than his attitude that he is
as much of a liberal as the country
could take with as much da&h and go
as tile country wants. Therefore he
sought e runrllng mate who would
represent stability and responsibility
rather than flair.
In doing that he was meeting the
Nixon challenge, but at the same time
he disappointed Democrats who yearn
for something new and fresh, some
sign that the party is riding the wave
of ttie future rather than sliding back
into tbe trough Of the past.
HmIPHREY WAS forced into a
kind of "southern strategy" for, like
Nixon, the core ot his support in the
national convention was in the states
of the old South. The history ot
Democratic conventions in recent
years has been the surmounting of the
South ratber than giving in to southern
sentiment.
The Demacrets moved toward the
inevitable end without their usual
sense of purification by fire and
without.a feeling of unity and dedica ..
lion growing out of the kind of good ,
clean, fight Humphrey himself once
carried on in Democratic convent.ions.
But in 1968 t:he man who formerly
fought the South with so much verve
and enthusiasm tried to avoid a fight
in the interests of post-convention
harmony. He fought, Instead. with his
old liberal friends over the Vietnam
plank in the platform.
The Democratic coalition was not
exploding, it was falling apart, and
Humphrey's only hope for victory lies
in pulling it back togeth« again
between now and November.
How to Address
Our Lawmakers
U.S. S•NATOttS
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Sex-inhibiting
Pill-'Nonsex'
Herewith is another u n w r i t t e n
chapter of history . Its title : "The Pill
That Worked."
The decision of the Vatican in the
summer of 1968 to ban contraceptive
pilli a.s immoral and leading to pro-
miscuity WM a grave setback for ad·
vocates of birth control .
Indeed when The League for Total
Birth Control, an all-out do·good
group, met a month later a motion
was entertained to disband.
"Wait!" ordered Greenleaf Grom·
met, one of the League's most positive
thinkers. "Actually, the Vatican has
pointed the way to the perfect method
of birth control. The only reason that
sex 11 fun, they say, is so that people
will have babies."
"SEX IS FUN?" said Miss Hattie
Pettibone, somewhat surprised.
"Exactly ! All we need do, therefore,
to s ,ave the world,'' said Greenleaf
Grommet dramatically, "is take the
fun out of sex."
Once the heart of the problem had at
last been grasped. the rest was easy.
A sex·inhibiting pill with the trade
name "Nonsex" was q u i c k I y
developed and universally acclaimed.
Clerics of all raiths noted that
Nonsex, far from promoting pro-
miscuity, eliminated it altogether. And
Nonsex was preached rrom every
pulpit.
Middle-class parents who had long
agonized over whether to supply their
teenaged daughters with contraceptive
pills thankfully bought Nonsex by the
gross.
AND WITH YOUNG ladies no longer
interested, young men m a n f u I I y
swallowed their Nonsex in order to
avoid a lifetime of frustration.
The disappearance of sex naturally
had a tremendous impacton the
economy. Such pursuits as fly.tying,
lepidopterology and pee-wee golf
boomed as people found themselves
with twice the leisure time oo their
hands.
But movies, advertising and
magazines were bard hit for subject
matter. (Who will ever forget the last
issue of Playboy showing a naked
rutabaga lying on a bed Of radishes?)
Smutty jokes, cocktail parties, and.
of ~. marriage, became a thing
of the past. So did babies.
AN ALARMED government in·
stituted a National Selective Servicing
System. conscripting young people for
compulsory parenthood. But draft
riots broke out acrogs the land. "Ban
the Mom !" shouted the young men.
"Wallflower power!" cried the young
ladies. "Make war, not love !" And the
effort was abandoned.
But oddly enough, the greatest ef·
feet was on striving. Men no longer
strove to be rich or powerful or
famous. And women no longer strove
to be beautiful or clUc or good coo«s.
Jn fact. no one much strove to do
aoythlng at aU.
SO THE BUMAN RACE died, not
with the bang of a populaUon ex·
plosion, but out of sheer boredom.
And one day. the Last man was leaf-
ing Idly tllrougb an old copy of the 1968
Papal Encycllcal. "It 1ay1 here." he
told the Lan Woman without much in·
terest. "that the only reuon 1ex ii fun
is to that people will have babies."
"That," said tbe Last Woman with a
yawn, "doesn't IOllnd Uke much fun
either."
Thoughtless Dog Owne ~
1
tection than EPS. And the ""!'~ tip>e a\
chance arises for technolQIY _ tp, Im
p-ove police efficiency, the p®UC will
To the Editor:
Your decision to extend DAILY
PILOT editorial page 8.nd editorial
support (August 19) to the need for
community information conc-erning
animal pollution of public and private
thoroughfares will serve mos t
significantly in alerting citizens to
these health hazards.
According to Investor's Reader,
published monthly by a m a_j ?'r
brokerage firm, there are 26 rrullion
dogs now living in the United States
with an average life ol six years sup-
plemented by 6 million new dogs sold
every year. ~
Obviously , every one of these
animals is asserting its territorial
prerogative, daily, (if not twice or
three times) ttlrough fecal excreta, on
the sidewalks, roadways , lawns and
other public and private property
other than that of its owner.
IT SEEMS INCONGRUOUS that
human fecal pollution of our beaches
and public and private property is in-
hibited by legal and social restraints
to ensure the sanitation a n d
wholesomeness of our community, yet
citizens who wouldn't d re am of
person.ally violating these social mores
think nothing of permitting their or
their neighbor 's animals to flout them
with impunity.
An answer to this perplexing and
seriously aggravating ii rob I em
possibly lies ""ith the following quote
[rom the above-named f i n a n c i a 1
journal: "The pet industry has doubl·
ed in the last five years to $2 billion in
1967. But the real mooey lies in satis·
fying Fido's ever-more discriminating
appetite. The Pet Food Institute
reports Americans last year spent
$590 million on dog food , more than
double what they paid for baby food ."
It would be interesting to learn what
a psychiatrist would suggest that
means. BRUCE S. HOPPING
Why Dlscrltnlnote?
To the Editor:
Thoughtless dog owners are no
worse than thoughtless editori.alizing
on the subject.
It is indeed true tnat there are
thoughtless dog owners but v.tly
discriminate? BirdS, cats and humans
carry and leave more d?seases ~n
those mentioned by Dr. Humphrey m
yonrrecent editorial.
Thoughtless dog owners are the
sarne kind of people as the dogle56
variety whose messes are matters of
greater concern than those caused by
the thougtitless breed
t AM AMONG the majority who love
and care for oor dogs and evidence
CQ09ideration towards Uie property °'
others -by cleaning up or burying
any messes. (I have always carried a
small scooper wltti my leash and have
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
J dldn 'l mun to ca tat; all that
trouble ln Newport Beadl.
-Georl!. °<"~
"'' --~Iii _.....,, ........... .,_. .... ""'" . ,...,
Letters from readeT.! are welcome.
Normally writer.! should conve11 their
mes.!age.! in 300 word.! or less. The
right to condense letter.! to fit space
or eliminate libel is Teserved. All let-
ters must include tignatu1e and mail·
ing address, but names will be with-
held on Tequest.
••• done so long betore MY legislation or
irritation was expressed.)
Besiides. dear editor, most do~
receive better medical care {evidenc-
ed by large number of vets) than
do other pets and most humanfi !
Why don 't you pick on somebody
your own size?
ANN M. WEISSMAN
CuM'ent of Dbtrust
To the Editor:
Regardless of the final outcome, the
EPS controversy has brought to light
a situation which urgently calls for
remedial action. From the Ie:tters,
general comment, and public hearings
on EPS it bas become obvious that
among our citizens there nows a
strong current of fear and distrust of
the police -perhaps a majority of the
population regards the pol.ice a:; foe
rather than as friend. One young man
assumed we would be horrified by the
possibility that evecy house in the city
might someday be watched by a police
TV. Einderrtly he and many others
would regacd this not as more pro-
tection. but rather as more persecu·
tion. The public is afraid of its own
servants.
TllE FAULT FOR this ridiculous
situation may lie partly with the police
department, but l submjt that ~ost of
the fault is in the courts and m the
laws. ft may well be that those who
urged the City Council to reject EPS
were afraid it would give the police
power to enforce the laws enacted by
the Qty Council!
Newport Beach has been relatively
free from the social erosion and decay
·that are destroying our n.ation's cities,
but surely a widespread distrust of
the police is .1 danger~ symptom,
calling for prompt and energetic ~·
rective measures. The City Councd
should Cfeate aame investigative agen~
cy which will probe deeply enough to
detemlloo the true rea.soois for this at·
ti tu cit.
TRIS AGENCY might be a hired
team of psychologists, it might be a
citizens' committee, it might be a
council committee, or it might be •
task forte rrom the city staff.
After determining I.he reasons for
the attitude, this agency shouJd make
an equally comprehensive effort to
find ways to correct it -reviled
police procedW'fl. repealed law1,
changes ia our municipal courts -md
wort to see the.le reforma adopted.
A public tbot INN 11111 &upporU
!ta poltce for<e will be evm _,pro.
Quotes
PtrC1 B. Steel, Jr., dittctor of tbe:
Ba7 Ar .. Urllan Loa(M, Su F'ru·
dlCO: ''1bere 1.8 no Wtdte man who
cannot g<I a job -;a• be Ir 1!Jlllt. A l~I Of Nti!JlU -i>lo)'od
became tl»1' li't ·"
support progreS! rather than .~Mr it. \
ALLAN BEEK I
To the Editor:
Thanks for printing the good."'Pece
on ttie UCI swimming fer un~
derprivileged kids. It fits in 'tl(itJl your
series on volwiteers for the Volunteer
Bureau. The wagon and I were fa.d to
be needed, and being experienced, I
wore my WSI swim suit to De adap.
table. ..:. ..:
On the way home, we went by" the
airport. an idea from Head9tarl.. Free.
Next time, Prentiss. Park. Yoo get
your reward when you come back,
"Watch me," etc. Try one Spanish
word at Delhi and watch the smile.
•-.'.!., THE NEW VOLUNTEER 1s a two·
way job. You get the saUsfaction
back; it takes a little practice to see
it. Look for your own job. Everybody's
talents are different. You may want to
type. or what you did before maniage,
or maybe you want to try Sainething
new. Take a course at OCC ~d Jet a
little training and counseliltg; you
won't be the only one!
In our area, help an E. H. teach it
you want to work with people. Visit
,the Orange County Medical Center,
where the action is. flave a stOrj bout
for pre·schoolers in Santa Ana. 1'11 ~ee
you tlhere.
EXPECT SOME rejecdon, ~ You
can't win 'em all. You have to_,prove
yourseU -be on time, take orden. H
you don't like one spot, find uatber.
The volunteers that brini~tb;t! Com·
munity Center teens to the ~t\l ~·t
want to quit -busy mo~ all
religious. just believe in younc .. ~e.
It's meaningful. r..::
MARJ £11/'VER
Tax Relief , •
The California Taxpayer~HOCI•·
lion reports that the .cantorni•
Assembly in 1967 prov!~, an ad-
ditional $145 million for staW school
support. "Although it was Jif tnan·
datory that the money be use-crior pro-
perty tax relief, it was ·~st~'
this was to be the only immea.iate
form of relief given the pr_Oh[ty 'tu:·
payer," aceording to "Youi.:.:t¥es,''
published by Oregon Tax Rn<iorch.
"A survey by the State Depei'tment of
Education of the actual uH Of thi1
money bas been released to te.P11:tor1
showing the great bulk of tbo ~ey
went for regular classtdfli\ ' In·
struction, to restore pro~~-,.JUch
bad been eUmlnated earlier; wnd to
give salary tncrepes." ·1;:
'
• -----Wednesday, August 211, ,11168
TM edllOrlal pag< oJ Ulc l>o!!r
Pilol "'"' lo .. ~ -. r<Gdnl bv Gilt
ftCUllllCIPC"• ~ """ ...... ...morv on toplct •I lickrut
cmd dgnlfi<:<mce, llv pnillidlloo • ,.,,.,. /or U.. ..,,,....,.,. of
our ttad<n' apiftlou, a1ld bM
pre1 .. Jing l/lc dfOCTU -
polnlo o/ m/"""'d ol>oerwn
cmd ll>O""""" .. toplct o/ "" dap.
Robert N. WM<!, Pnl¥,llf
I
' I
~
.. . . . . . . ,. .. . ... • '• ' ..
. • Costa Mesa
•
·-
'
•• . . -• --· .... . ' . .. . .. -.
1"0111' Hometown
Dally Paper \ \or. 1 • ._ ...
· COST>: MESA, IZALIFORN IA &T, NO. 207, 7 SECTIONS, 78 P,o\GES WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, ·1968 JEN CENTS
His O·MACHINE -Professor Nathan Rynn sits bes\4e Q Machine
he is· building at UC, Irvine. It holds lightning magnetic field. l,!ag-
netic plates making up cylinder are so powerful they will pull a
:wrench off the floor.
Quiet
. '
Ma~ltine
UCI Profe$sor Harnesses Lightning
By THOMAS FORTUNE r Of ttie Dtllh' 'lllt Jlolff 'S" t' '
like oil. Electricity would be so chcsJJ
we ouldn't even botlier to meter il.
)3.ut or 'the _most'paJ1 the ~tl}Pl_i,~•lions
,,'''" ~ '1 " •>£:,panffrRlirftli.toil) Ylll • '~""-'!'~~ ...._ ' .
Peace Plank Defeated ' .
Bitter Debate Over War Ends in Humphrey Victory
CHICAGO (AP) -~ Democratic
National Convention refused today to
endorse an unconditional end to U1e
bombing of North Vietnam. It was a
victory for Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey.
The rejected plank was backed
largely by opponents of the front·run·
ning vice president's candidacy for the
party's presidential nomination. It
called for the earliest possible de·
escalation and end of the Vietnam
fighting. '
A$ a resulloC the vote. the plaUorm•
will pledge the party to the View of
Humphrey and President Johnson
that a bombing halt· should depend on
protection 'of ·U.S. troops : and aome
sign of reciprocity from the enemy.
The vote followed bours·of emotional
®bate and noisy response from , the
floor. At one point, delegates inter-
rupted with chants ol "Stop That
War." The brief demonstration came
'
when the name of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was mentioned.
It W'86 the s~ meeting ol. the day
(Qr red~yed delegates who left the in·
,Addi«onal .rtorie.r, photographs on
Dtmocratic National Convention
~on Page· 3.
ternational amphitheatre shortly after
1 a.ni. when ttie convention was forced
to quit by discrderly demands for ad-jourame·Dt.
l(ennedy Says No
By BARRY SCHIVEID
CHICAGO (AP) -Vice· President
Hubert H. Hwnphrey appeared certain
Wednesday of winning the Democratic
nomination for president on the first
ballot.
Humphrey's expected vote total
began to climb after Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy of Massachusetts pleaded
with the delegates to give up an idea Or a draft and to choose, instead.
"from among the capable and
* * * Pick Someone
Like Nixon,
LBJ Urges Dems
AUSTIN. Tex. (UPI) -President
Jol\nson hopes the Democrat.I will pick
a candidate whose views on the Viet-
nam war ila.3ically match those of
Republicin. nominee Richard M.' Nix·
on ..
dedicated candidates already In con·
tention."
In quick succession, Gov. Rlchai-d J.
Hughes of New Jersey endorsed
Humphrey, Govs . John J . McKeithen
of Louisiana and Mills E . Godwin Jr.
of Virgini~ dropped 01,1t as favorite
sons and Illinois' powerful political
boss, Mayor Richard J . Daley of ·
Chicago, turned a massive 112 votes
over to the vice president.
Daley had held out for days. Though
-to:
he had been expected to go for
Humphrey eventually, th'e mayor
listened to pleas in behalf Of other
possible nominees, particularly the
last of the Kennedy brothers.
But with Kennedy's don't-draft-me
statement, Daley headed Illinois into
Humptirey's mounting vote colwnn.
Shortly after the Democrats con-
vened their third session, a n
Associated Press poll of solid first·
(See DEMOCRATS, Page Z)
Roar of Airplane Engines
Punctuates Airport Probe
By JACK BROBACK
01 tM DlllJ Plltl Sl"t
Supporters ot ·McCarthy and Sen.
George McGovern ol South Dakota
staged a demonstration that forced the
delegates to . put off a Vietnam
shOW'down unUl most of the nation was
at least awake if not \'AStcbing. :rhe
hall was only partially filled when tl1e
sessiop began. .
Rep. Hale Boggs of Louisiana,
ollairman of the coovention'1 platform
committee, put the issue. before-the
(See PLATFORM, Pate Z)
NO THANKS
Democrat KennRy
Nl!lhpn Rynn, 11~ J.!:~iJ!e p~~fceor,
. ·;, ~g a maciilllJ.~bl·
ing stand stilJ. He calls it a~ ~·ach1ne.
Technically, lightning is pfasma, a hlQlt, ionized au .. Other fofm·s o"f J pllima are arcs; sparks., fluorescent
lights and neon signs.
"Plasma invariably 1.s turbulent,
noisy and flapping · around," Rynn
said. "My machine JJ?akes it .sta?,<1
quiet -,hence Q, fot quiet, Machine.
To fuse h~avy. hydrogen it must be
beatO<I to 100 million df:greM. ''Hotter
than the suii;" ·aynn said:
As the beat increases the atoms
start' inoving ' around faster and
collide together m o r e and mnre
Violently until ttiey .kriock off electrons
and become ionized. This superheated
gas is 'the plasma that Rynn works
with.
Johnson Tuesday reviewed his own
"'at policy in an interview on hlt ll>th
biftbday and implied the po,.tuon of
the American people on VJetnam
would be clear iI the war views of the
Democratic candidate were similar to
bis and Nixon's.
n ecorded airplane engines opened
TuesdlJ.Y nia:bVl hea.r.lng devoted to the
Orange County Airport portion of the
county Matter P1an of A i r
TranspokatiOO.
The recording, purportedly made In
his home, was played by Da.liel W.
Emory, chairman of the Airport Noise
Abatement Committee to ·emphasize
his continuing attack against the
airport and its man·agemcnt.
struck a ropular note when he sug.
gested that all airline operations be
moved from the airport immediately.
I-le said they could go to El Toro. Loi;
Alamitos or Long Beach and stay
there unUI a regional airport could be
constructed iome\¥bere else.
Having dispcsed of all but private
flying out of the facility, Van Allen ad·
mitted he ·had' ncit talked to the
military or Long Beach officials.
County 'l'ax es
Cut; Saving,
Of $3.4 Million ' ' . . ' '
!
I I
I I
'
I
rl
\
/'
The Q MaChine at UCI won't be Ws
fin:t. He invented and built the first
one wten he was at Princeton in 1959.
Many others have been built in many
countries since.
Rynn, 44 , a Laguna ,Beach resident;
InventeJ the Q Machme so he could
make plasma. stand Still and ex-
periment wi~ it to better ~nderstand
it. In the qwet state, he said, you _can
drop pebbles in it, poke it or slap 1t to
aee the effect.
Better understanding of plasma
Could one day be an almost un·
believable boon to mankind, he sug·
gested. ~t ~lcl ·be tbe key to con·
trolled fusion, ttie hydrogen bomb
reaction slowed down.
r A\ the hydrogen bomb is more
~trful than the atom bomb, so too
are ~ the peaceful potentialities of
hyd.togen fusion much greater than
heayy elemeot fission, the atom bomb re~ction.
Tbe supply o£ deuterium, heavy
hydrogen , is pr.actically limitle.ss.
Rylip. said a pail of seawater contains
deuierium energy equivalent to 300,000
gallons of gasoline and the cost of ex·
traoting it in qu~tity is on the order
of 10 cents a butkeJ. ·
But except in u n co n trolled
therlnonuclear reaction, scientists
havi:n't been able to fuse deuterium
atoqis to release the energy.
U they ever do, Rynn said, it would
inciease the power reserves of the
world at a minium by a factor of
l,OOG for at least a billion years.
'hie implications? There wouldn't be
any· more fuss over sources of energy,
The problem is not adding the heat,
but containing the plasma in one spot.
At s1,1per t emperatu.-re_s, the
deuterium atoms go zooll)Jng off
through the magn·etic field supposed to
contain them. ·
lJy . researching the properties of
plasma, Rynn hopes to discover why
the atoms escape. "This is my bag,"
he said. "I don't want to toocb a reac-
tor until l can understand plasma."
Getting Q Machine for Irvine has
been difficult. Rynn's been working on
it for the two years he's be~n here.
"The bold-up is money," he said, ".and
we just had some that was prQtrused
to us taken back."
He hopes to have the machine com-
pleted in another six montM V.'ilh
federal and state money and Atomic
Energy Commission loan equipment.
A technician and graduate students
are working orl building it. "I think it
will cost about $100,000 by the time
we're all through," he said .
With his new Q Machine. Rynn
l:lopes , to duplicate space effects.
1op1asma is the stuff stars are ·made
.of," ~e said.
'He aLsO plans to investigate how one
plasma reaction triggers anothef,
m'aking the gas so volatile. "I thlnk
I've got a handle on the non~ll.near pro.
cess, '' ts the way he puts it.
The 'Q Machine makes an t-0nized
gas-of an alkali metal by shoOting it
againstchOl tungsten. The gas, which is·
too hot 'tor any container, is held in place by a niagnetic field in a.vacuum
chamber.
'
"I am hopeful that the vi~ws of the
nominees of the two major parties will
not be too divergent so the world will
not have to wait until November to
pick the softest spot," Johnson said.
He apparently referred to ad-
ministration supporters' claims i1nnol
would stall the Paris negotiations if
the DemocratS nomiiiate a dovish can-
didate.
Johnson did not mention Nixon by
name.
He conceded little could be ac-
complished in Paris until the con-
ventions ended.
"We are not going to make much
pr_ogress in this field until the con-
ventions get over and until it is
recognized that under this America~
political system parties select eacll
one of the nominees and then the
American people get behind whoever
is the chosen leader."
In effect, the President seemed to
hint the choice of a Democratic can·
didate with tough views on the war to
match those of Nixon could con·
ceivably lead to peace be {ore
November.
LONDON · BOOKIES
FAYOR NIXON
LOND.ON (iJpl) Ladbroke'•
bookmaker• today,quoted 6-4 odds on
Richard Nixon to .win the presidential
election. Odds remained even on the
theD•Wltlamed D·emocratic candidate. ' .
Asks Appeals Co~rt for Bigger Estate Share
Irvine Ranch heirts~ Joan Irvine Foundation was le~ally tll;lbllshed the Jc;iim~::~; r:eg ~~:~ Wu-
Smith laid her delnapd for a bigger and !llerefor~ Mrs. Smith baa no claim L J d A lin.L Stal ' took h of her· "~tt land baron to any atddtt1onal shares. ren . ooef an .us : ey _ 1 =father's estimated $200 million tTbe 1hlres ln question have a par the, awe.al under submiss.100 followmg
gr lat bef the Ninth U:S Court ot value at $100 each witb a market the bearing in San,Franc1sco.
es ~s m°Sean FfpQlaco Tuesday-. value of $109,000 eaCh. Mrs. Smith, wile of Mortimer w.
Ate attractive blonde mother ot Her attorney, Lyndol Young. of Los Sm~th. ha1 in the past R!b:~ ~at ro
three who bas homet in Laguna Angeles, 11ald the trust is simply an lrVllle esta!e trustee1s. p Iii Ger e~
e h·s Emerald Bay and in Mid· alter-ego of Irvine himsell and is st.af. ~d . chatrman o ac c as
B ac Va is challenging a U.S. fed er.tii'ely by hls own agents. };lectr1c ~o., and N. Lob:ll ~cU.-ren , ~·e~'fcf' Co~l ruling handed down in Attorney Howard J . Privett. of Los a finan cier, shouJd 1d1s7sJed ~~Angeles last December. An geles, repr~senting _au b~t one. or because they are also oun a on
Th 3G-ear-old heiress claims 45tl the foundation a trustees, saJd dunng directors. .
1 · e c ~pany shares currently held the hearing that the foundation has She ~lieves the two po_~ts constitute
b"Uie ~ · FoundaUon were never distributed $6.$ million to charttJes in a conflict of interest, saying Uiey ~e
'I all e ;:~(erred when the foun· Califcrnia. , not . ~epresentillg her own financial
leg Y t "There is no evidence what.soever pos1t1on properly.
daf':' wasrt~ed u~~ Los Angeles last ..• that there was no deliverance of Mr5. Smith's personal fortune i5 ~e~t!r. hhowever, that the Irvine the indentures ol trust which created eaUmated at $45 milUon. ,,
i)
Emory and his group comprised
moSt ol the overflow crowd at the
small county planning commission
hearing room in Santa Ana. lt is a
small room holding 100 persons at
most.
In addition to the noise abatement
crowd, a few new voices were heard
by the airport commissioners.
"The Newport-Costa Mesa area is
tile last place I would want to ,build an
airport," said Joseph F. Pike. Jr .. of
1811 Glenwood Lane , Newport Beach.
Pike, a pilot with Trans World
Airlines, said the San Joaquin Hills of·
fered the best regional airpOrt site.
Ed Van Allen, president of the
Orange County Pilots Association
Anaheim Slates
Star-glittering
Nixon Banquet
Glittering stars of stage. screen and
the Republican Party will gather in
Anaheim on Sept. 16 for a $100-a·plate
campaign dinner and rally for GOP
presidential candidate Ri<:hard M.
Nixon. "
Mast.er of Ceremonies for Ute
Anaheim Convention Center event will
be he-man rnOvie star John "Duke"
\Vayne, of NeVlpOrt Beach, while Gov.
Ronald Reagan will introduce Nixon.
The presidential hopeful will return
to Orange County , where he spent his
boyhood in Yorba Linda, following an
earlier Sept 5 rally in San Francisco.
"As Mc. Nixon bas stated repeated·
Jy, CaUfOrni~ is a crucial state 1n the
nation and he eX\:>ects to spend more
titne campaigning here than in any
other a ta ta," oald Lt. Gov, Robert H.
Finch, Nixon's acting si-.te campaign
manager.
Finch wW al.so lppear on the
Anaheim program, offering a brief
talk be"fore Nixon's main event ipeeeb.
Final details of the Anaheim rally
are expected to be· announced Thurs-
day at a 1pecial pre~s cocktail party
at the Conventipn Center. according to
cA.mpalgn atde Frank Jotd~n.
The $100.a·plate dll1ner wUI begin at
7:00 p.m .. foijowlng • soci al hour,
J ordan said, wltti , the miln address
due ~ginning at I p.m., with ll·per·
person gallery seats avaUa:blt.
John Davies, .&.n official of tl;e Air
Transport Association, which
represents nation-wide airlines told
the commission that he could assure
them that use of the military airports
was out and t.hat Long Beach had pro~
blems. "There are homes near that
airport too and people complain," he
explained.
Davies quieted fears of larger
planes using the airport. The runways
could not be made long enough to han-
dle large planes and that includes the
proposed Air Bus," Davies saio.
"Airports cannot be in too remote
an area. They serve the public," R. W.
''Bob" Clifford, vice president for
operation of Air California told the
group.
He said hi s firm. the principal user
of the airport was not for longer
.nmways or any "wild " expansion. He
did say parking should be increased,
The Pereira report, principal sub-
ject of the hearings, was supported by
Jack Mullan , chairman of the Newport
Beach Air Traffic Advisory Com·
mittee. "Without any planning the
present airport couldn't remain as the
only airport,'' Mullan noted.
Pan! Elston, Orange County Airport
tower controller, denied criticism that
noise abatement procedures were not
being followed. He pointed out that air
carriers were only five percent of the
operations from the field which he
said was the third busiest In the state.
Hearings continue today In Santa
Ana with three mili~ary facilities
being studied as possible regional
airport sites.
Thieves Get $700
Snack Bar Loot
In Mesa Burglary
Thieves and blU'glars took more
than f?OO in loot. plus an undetermined
amount of snack bar supplies in three
separate cases reported to Costa Mesa
police Tuesday. ·
Carl W. Lowen. or 1552 Elm Ave .,
lost tooJ.s and eQutpment valued at $425
when someone took the New Vac-
Mutual Electric Co. items from a
pickup truck parked at his home.
Clothing, a rifle, televlslon set and
movie projector worth '280 were taken
from the home of James J. Bear, a~
3215 Washington Ave., by a .burglar
who may have bad a key, police said.
· George Par1on1, cmploye o£ the
Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club.
1701 Golf Course Drive, said &Mneone
broke into a snack bar on the.
J1outhe~ side o! the grounds, but loss,
if any, has not been determined.
A reduction of three ooit3 Ih OrMg~
Couiity's general tu rate to $1.,88 and
an overall reduction · in general and
special district rates of 11.5 cents wa1
adopted by the Board of Supervisors
this morning.
Auditor-Controller Victor A. Hehn
told supervisors it would mean a
dollar savin g of $3.45 million to the
county 's tax payers.
Supervisor Alton E. Allen pointed
out that last year's general fund rate
of $1 .71 was the third low~st in the
state and this year's reduction sbould
improve the county's position.
Reductions of 5.5 cents or $1 .6
million was a cc o mp Ii shed in
departments and districts directly
un<ler control of the supervisors.
District reductions ipcluded the
county library down tliree·fqurths of a
cent and the lJarbor District down 1.5 I cents. ,
The,'tax rate reductions were made
despite increases in the budget. 'f.he
general fund expenditure will be ap-
proximately $120 million up $21 million ' over"last ye.ar.
County Flood Control expenditures
will be $8.2 million, up from Jl .6
million in 1967-68.
The Harbor District Js '6.1 million,
up from $4.6 million.
Orange
We ather
The weatherman's writing his
forecast on carbon paper this
week, and Thursday will be no
different -sunny with tern)>
eratures in tbe 80's alone ttie
Oti.nge Coast.
I NSIDE TODAY
Orange County'• new com-
munity thtattr accuon opena
thil we8'ktM wlth a familiar
pla111 "The Odd Couplt." Stt
E~iertatnment, Poot 18.
"'"" • _ .. _
" tt,IHM .. -' C11!ttM1!1 •• ••lff .. Cltt9'11M .... M•Md ,lll'lfl " c-1c1 u "-!t:I M:; •• c __ ,,. .. or Ctvt • .... ...... ' ,,..,., ,.,.... " ••Mitrlll ..... .. 5Kflll ""' ll>t• •t"'111fl!Mflf .. '""'-. tl·~· ·-1•11 ~. i'9111C,.. .. ,.,. (~II ' '''"'"" " .. ,, ..... .,. tt ........ ~ .. _
" ·-• ... . ..-" .......... " ...... • ........ ... .
• •
'
•
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I
% DA11.Y r!LOT
Cunningham Urges Self Analysis fo,ri 1Scbools
117 ..-u 10llTlllll .............. . ' . Newpmt.1'• IC h o o lo 1uporin-
1'ndeot William L. CUnnlngtwn today
Hid he will uk the edlool board to ln-
lUalt a MU anal)'llJ ol Ille school dlltrld iad then bring bu!lnessmen In
ID tab a lltCoad crJtlcal look. SpeUing at a bteakfaat se5Sion of
tllo NIWJ!Orl Harbo< Chamber o! C.m-
County Girl
'.AssaUlte~;
Man Held
A 17-yoar-o!d ·Fulltrton girl, kid-
·napect and rapod •-Lake Elsinore
late Tuesday night, waa home today
follow1D1 report.a &at a 1u1pect
matchtng the dNCrlpUon •ht aavt ts
In cu111Jdy ol tllo Ontario ·poUce. '
Tho v!Ctlm ·had driven to Ille Lake
Ellinore area with a male companion.
The Couple picked up a hltcb-hii:er
carrying a Boy Scout back-pack at
. about 10 p.m. They drove on for
reportedly 20 miautea when the hitch·
hiker 11ked them to 1top and let him
out. When the car stopped, the auallant
pulled out a bile and held h to the
girl'• throat. He ordered her male
friend out of the car and then made
h11 vtetS'm drive on. The 1UJpect then ordered her to pull
off the roe.d and t.hen took her from
the car approximately 20 yard.I from
the car and u1aulted her. Alter
returning her to the car, he told her to
drive towwd San Juan Capiatrano. He
bea:an walkioa: toward Lake Elainore.
Lifeguards Seek
Body of Tustin
Youth in Newport
Newport Beach Uleguards today
resumed t.hefr search for the body of a
Tustin teen-ager who apparently
drowned after an eight-foot wave
slammed him to the ocean bottom
Tuesday afternoon.
Reported missing Crom his home
after spending the day at the beach
"'as Larry ROSI Martin. 18. Witnes6e1
1aid he waa: body surfin' at 17th Street
with two or three other swiquners
when be ran into trouble about 4:45
p.m.
A friend ~o saw the mla:bap, Hal
Williama .<fl Newport BeJl<h, reported
that MarUn was riding along tllo big
wave when be "went over the falls."
Ufeguarda 1ald the phraie ts used
when a body surfer ia ·puDed up to the
lip of a wave, then is plummeted
downward with the weight of the wave
slamming down onto him:.
About a haU dozen lifeguardJ began
a search with skin diving equipment in
Tuesday afternoon's surr. High waves
and surf turbulence, how e v er,
hampered their efforts.
Weguards &aid that Martin and the
others body surfing off 17th Street
gave the appearance of "knowing
what they were doing." A red flag was
flying from the nearest llieguard st.a·
ticm, lndioating dangerous surf.
A total of 125 resc ue'S were logged
along Newport Beaches Tuesday, and
108 made for the day before.
TV, Friend Missing
A fr iend to whom Ted Klinkowsk y,
o{ 1800 Willace Ave., loaned a $400
television set some time ago Is miss·
ing, Kllnkowsky to 1 d Costa Mesa
police Tuesday. So is the set.
DAILY PILDT
OllANGE CO.UT PUllLl!HINc; COMPANY
Roborl N. Weed
f'f'ftldenl Ind P~b11'1'ol'r
Jeck R. C~rl•y
Via "tiklttll end c;e,,,.,...,, ,,,..,,.fff
Tho"''' k1e .. il
E.dllC•
Th•fl'I•• A. Mwrp\,i111
M011"l111 Editor
P~wl Niu•~
,......,...111111 Ol<fttor
C•1,. M•M Offlte
JJO Weil l•y Str11t
Milling Addrtu; P.O. lor 1560 •1126
Ott.n OfflcM
"""'""'' 11~; 7'11 Wnl Ill~ lot.l!wt ,.
LttuQ' ~: ttl '"-'' ,ti-Hlll'l!iftllllll a..tll: JDt .Mh SIHlt
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--..,Dr.Qi I &Mm-UDCtdlU
plw lo --1111 -illm of Ult ·~dlllrld. Ro ilid llo II ... lillre IN 1111111
tbo IC!lool ..... cu dD belllr and ..... Ollicl..U,. ~ iald '&\ "cini "·111a .next m~• he w1I! ~ 1118 achC!Ol boerd to ·ao ~or h1a evaluaUoo propo&als. He
Hid "Operation Sell .Help, internal In-
=CtlGO of what WO lfl dolq" ....-. • la .... ,_, ... "" -JI. _.. wtJI i...ti. ~ ..
.n1.--....atlGu. ''Nol Ult educaUoo ~ ol l~" be lald, "Ula\'• ..,. ...,, "pr'ofeWloii~ . 'tak,. .bul
tranepartaUon, accountlnJ, purcba1·
inf, ptrlOllllel practlce1 and other
things busineSBm,en can aqvise on.
DAILY PILOT Pltftl W lnlff ,..__
MAKING A SPLASH -Juanita Bale5. 20, of Costa Mesa wades into
collection of boating gear ranging from dinghies to life preservers
that Newport Beach police will put on auction at 10 a.m. Saturday
at city yard. Condition of unclaimed marine items ranges from poor
to fair though the shape of Miss Bates, as all can see, can be con·
sidered excellent.
Boating Bargain
Nautical Gear Set for Auction
Sailors will get a rare opportwllly to
pick up boat gear at bargain prices
Saturday when Newport Beach police
auction off a collection of dinghies,
oars, paddleboards and other marine
1ear.
The auction will &et under way at 10
a.m. at City Yard, b92 Superior Ave.
Police said purchases must be made
on an "as is" blsis. Paymeuts must
be In · cash, with no guarantee on the
condition of the items sold.
The marine auction Is the first ever
to be staged by the police department.
The boating gear -collected and
stowed over the past three or four
From Page J
PLATFORM. ••
delegates by summarWng a pro-ad·
ministration plank on Vietnam which
Included a conditional halt i n
American bombing. McCarthy-McGovern f o r c e s at·
tempted to win support of a m1jority
of delegates to ~la<:e the original
document with a dove plank calling for
an uncood!tional halt In ttle bombing, a
phased negiotiatied withdrawal by both
sides Md a say for the Viet Cong in
creation of .a new Saigon government.
But the long-awaited presentation ol
the Vjetnam policies came with bun·
dreds of delegate &eats empty.
After meeUng: ror nearly seven
hours, the weary delegates got to the
proposed party plaUorm, w h l c h
recommends settling the Vietnam con·
fllct along Unes set by President
Johnson and followed by Vice Prcsl·
denL Hubert H. Humphrey, the leader
for the DemocraUc preside n ti1 I
nomination. '
As the issue cam"' up, some
delegates bunched a tumult that
finally ended when Chlcago Mayor
Richard J. Daley's proposal for an ad·
journment until I p.m. EDT today was
accepted.
Fueling the fi ght was a determined
effort by some dele gates to sto p
Jlumphrey from gaining the nomina·
lion.
A minority re port callin g for an un.
conditional bombing ha.It of North
VletnQ:m Is widely supported by
followers of llumphrey'1 major op-
ponents, Sens. Eugene J. McCarthy
and George S. McGovern, a1 well ;s
backers of noncandidate Sen. Edward
M. K"'nedy. Supporten of Ille minority report
were elated by the sudden ad·
journmenl
Frank 1'1anklewlc i , pre11
spokesman for McGovern, atood on a
chair and shouted, "We h1vt. 11 houra
t.o get 80 vo tes." lie claimed backers
or the immediate bombing halt were
short only that numbtr of the 1,312
votes needed to carry their point.
When Chairman llale Boggs of the
PlaUorm Committee began re.adbi~
the majority plank he was tntmvpted
by loud ha.ndclappln1 that began in the
WJJconsln delegation and spread to
mudl of Ille Jampacked !loor and
Jailed ea.
years by the Harbor Department -
has never been clalmed by owners.
A recent administrative shift puts
the disposition of the equipment under
the jwiJdiction of police. H Saturday's
auction Ls successful auctions of tound
marine gear will be held once or twice
a year, officers said.
Included In Ille llst f0< Saturday are
62 rowboats, dinghies or 1kilf1, Iii::
paddleboards, two surfboards, three
file jackets and one small outboard
engine.
The condition of the gear ranges
from fair to poor, according to the of.
ficial police list.
Trustees Rule
Against Naked
Arti.st Models
Trustees or the Caplstrano Unified
SchOOI District have completed the
drape of the Sabines.
Only clothed models will be allowed
in art clasaes sponsored by the San
Clemente Arts and Crafts Club and
scheduled for a San Clemente 1-ligh
School classroom this fall .
"Their action just smacked Of
prudishness," says Mrs. Mary Sokol,~
principal in the club. "now if we can't
fi nd a private building we'll just forget
the lire cla55es. We'll pa In l
landscapes.''
"I doo't think l "m a prude ,"
declared Dr. Robert Beasley, board
vice president, who voted against the
naked models when the unscheduled
matter came up on the trustees' agen·
da.
The vote fell 4-3 against unclotlled
models, because the club clan i1 not
under auspicn of the adult school pro-
gram and tnmee1 can't regulate wbo
attends, or perha~ observes through
the window.
They fear teenagers might try to
supplement their biology aod anatomy
ln6truction if word got around, but of.
rcred to formally consi~r the nuctity
issue later.
Mrs. Sokol, lfowever, gave tbem a
dfegslng down. :'Thil ta a blot on our escutche<la,"
the 1aid1 ''we retent the l.mplica·
tionl."
Oeared Suspect
Declared Sane
Gary Celli, found inn octnt la st wttk
In th< '300.000 Laguna Buch lad•
burJlary. was found aane Monday aod
able to ai<I in bi.a own defeme on an
assault charge.
Celli. 23, Js accused of firina a pellet tun into the face of V•I l111c
Woodland, 34, of Le Puente lasl /.prll
18. The atucl< all•eedlf took pllce II
• Lallllll party.
•
•1va'n .i-a -·• lvr boUar -1'"1' ol doiq t1111t11," IM aald. :l'lt 1"
Ill)' pllllooop!V th•! !be ICboOls belOllf JI Ibo community. '
, f Cumrogbam continued to exteod the ilid hand. As in talks to other com·
munlty organizations, he aa.ld, "Drop
llllo my office . I'd be most o-atolUl to
hear from you and meet you
personally."
Otlleer Warns
Iii Mid IM llu ..-• btol7 ,..,_ ""I' llllla . .rut atn '¥ a call." ,
tr,oloi lo llt lo ....... u -people ~•..,,...,.Illa llller
ID: the eomr41wlty 11 podle. "l'"e recurrent ttitmH that became Um.es
been a bit ag'"safve l tlllla,".~• '°I'-are cbanlltll ao fut student.a llloUl
ceded. be taugbt bow to tillnk lneead ,
H• pr o-m 1'. d .. "'11*" i1 po=-•. aptcjlic1, Ind th~ Ne~ri--· •
forrnation0in this school dJrtrict, wl t1nlfltd ti better gear9d 'to ~P
th< exc~ oti ol eonOderillaJ perso l 1'1111 cllange Ulan ""I' o111er
record.I, not\ available to everybody at di.strict he knoW1. . '
•
~· •· I •
ijlue Lights: I ' Narpo
' Walch
lighta.
TOM GORMAN Of fM Df'IY Plltt lllfl
out for that bou1e of blue
It could mean the psychedelic 1ect
within Is partlclpaUng in a numbers
aame, a a:ame where the players get
hlfher than the nwnber1.
n tb.11 case, "numben" are marl· Juana c11arettes.
And the warning about the blue
light.I wa1 t11ued by Laa:una Beacb
detective Norman Babcock, at the
monthly meeting of the Exchange Club
of Laguna Beach.
other signs that may lead to suspi·
cion Of drug u1e in a house are heavily
curtained window1, always closed win·
dows, and door1 that are s.hut very
quickly.
Signs that "speed," or methedrine,
Is being wed can be hypodermic
needles, often bent in two . in trash
cans .
"We rely much on the citizens who
phone w, tel.Un& us that they 1wpect
'
som1thln1 11 eotnc on. About eo Jl' · cent of our arreatl tnltlllted w1 a
cltllen'I call/' Babcock told e
bu1lne1mien. •
Then the quesUon of havlne iii•
cltize!il let Involved WU br?~fhl \IP•
"Evaryone f-• that U tlley .call.
. police, their nam~ will be 1prtlrd_.
around. Thia II not our Coal, to Pljt tile
burden on the cttlzen1, 11 Babcock 1alcl.
"N&me1 art kept 1n 1ecreq."
AlOlll wllb tfpc fl'om adulta, olltn
sttidenll hove inlormlcl Ill• polica of
lllefll actlvtttea, he 11ld. 11K1dl know
everythln1 that'• heppenine In Ill•'
streeb. They art reliable. But we
dqn't use juvenllei a1 undarcover
aunt.," ht a11ured the men.
1!abeock estimated that about 71
peretint of the a,rre1ted drug user• and
seller• art convicted. 1
In 1988, then were 38 druJ arrests
in Laguna Beach. ln 1967, 85 people
were arreated on tomt kind ol diug
charge. And throulh July ol lhil year,
OCC District Growing;
Building Standing Still
The irowtlh curve for Orange Coast
Junior College Diltrlct Is almoet a
straight li'ne willh frightening upward
tilt.
The buildine pattern is charted by a
level line without the tilt.
Plotted on the same chart the lines
get fartmr and farther apart.
That Is the prospect faced by the
junior college dlStrict's Dean of
Research and P.lanning Frank Hopkins
as he sizes up lhe importance of the
Sept. 17 5chool bond election .
The fl .2& million bond i-"ll~ and no-
cost override measure is designed to
take care ol district building needs tor
the next four years.
Even should the bond issue pass it
From Page l
DEMOCRATS ••
ballot strength gave Humphrey 1,4.ll\1/4
votes -more than 100 above the 1,312
he will need for nomination Wed·
nesday nlght.
HLs closest challenger, Sen. Eugene
J . McCarthy of Minnesota , trailed with
491 ~ ... while the third man in the race,
Sen. George S. McGovern of South
Dakota, had 60. Another 54S'ft votes
were uncommitted.
The tally is based on primary
results. public pledges and caucuses
and AP delegate checks. It includes
only firmly committed votes, not those
leaning toward a candidate.
McCarthy. in a meetlr.g Tuesday
nlght with Stephen Smlth, offered to
swing behind Kennedy, like McCarthy
a critic of the. administration's Viet·
nam war policy. Smith, Kennedy 's
brother·in·law, has been a central
fiiure in the draft.Kennedy move·
ment.
will take about three years to com·
plete buildftigs , Hopkins said. "lt takes
that long from Ille' planning stage to
equtpptne 111e buildlnp. s. 111o d111r1c1
will be ham1trun1 for at least the next three years."
So this is the picture:
-This fall there will be 6,~
students on the Orangf Coast College
campus desJgaed for 'S,000 students.
There wi11 be 3,000 ~udents on the
Golden West camp1,1s, which a.p-
propriately can handle 2,500. . ' -Jn fall 1969, Orange Cblisfs enroll·
llient gro\l'I to 7,400 and G*len Weat's to 3,IQO, bul Goldecl jl'at feto rellel becauie ·new bui1(ltnis • 1n·crta1 e
capadty to aooommoclalo tlle.3,iSOO.
-Th• followlnf ·1an •. 11110, ·0ran;.
Cout llfOWI lo 1,150 a!wleota and
Golden Wool to 4,000 wllb no !Der ... •
In capacity.
. -In f.U 1971, Orange Co84.t is up to
8,900 students and Golden West to
4,500. If the bond issue next montn
passes new buildings would be ready
by then.
The district wiU be able to get by the
next two years by scheduling ad·
ditional sessions of classes early alld
late and extending the day from 7 a.m.
until 10 p.m .• Hopkinrl said.
It will be lDconvenient to students
whose clusec are spaced hours apart,
but ft worked before, Hapkins Hid. In
1965, before the Golden West campus
was bllilt, Orange Coast housed 7,400
students.
It's in 1970 t.hat Ule real trouble
comes . Between the two, the '!Choola
will be 3,650 sudents over capacity.
The only solution Hopkins can see is
k> turn studenta away. U the bond
issue passes, that !.ituation should last
only one year. Otherwise •••
Hopkim doesn't want to talk about
it.
Ulm bave boon ~ amat.a, Bal>Cocl:
said. • • Throu(h Ille 21!. years nuctllco
have become ·more avallab1t. 'But
lhlnl• ,..m to be ~oil •.. t. ''Tl!• problem In II cooung
off,"' Babcock 111 , "Ill the last
three to lour woekl, tllo nvcouca pro-
blem ·buq'l been• bad.'' ,
One rea10• for Ille lf••ter" amount
of arreat.a II ~ lllCI lbot tbt POile•
deP&rlment 11.more. . .,U,bU!tted ln'tlle
field. Since. lbe fo.c• hu bacomt more
knowledg .. ble 'about 1111 aipr ol drug
un, Lleuna h11· had bett9r ,en.
forcemenl, accordln1 ID Bobcock ..
"We make a tremendous nu~ or
arrests in field, luCh &1 ""1en
someone stopped for 1 traffic viola· Uon."
With tbe ct enforcement, wty
would a pus r be 10 bold?
Ba answered, "Why doe1 a car
1aleaman sell a car' to IODle<mt he
doesn't ewn know, and accept his
checl<I Why would a lale1man In a
clothing -· 1ell '100 worth of loods to a tourllt who'• oDlJ in ton for tile
weekend, and accept bit check? A
puaher will take a ..,.. tor a lkont -•k II ,--. ...
--· I ' some dnJi usen acquire ''Ibo atiifr'
for nothing. '"A 15-or 16-year-old ... girl
can get marijuana for tree very. Mal·
ly. An older boy Will give her pot. if
1ho wqUld n.1 with him for a <Mle
of days. or sleep With him that ntibt "
Babcock said. 1 '
. Even though some people get marl· JU~a for free, dealing in marijliana
has proven to be a very bll bullness.
A pe'son can, buy• kilo (2.J pound!)
of marijuana 1il. Mexleo for $.15, Bab-
cock said. He can then ·turn around
.and sell it around.here for '85 to $100.
''Tbere'a; profit in tbJ.1 thing. Deallng
dope Is not for fun , but for money," he stated.
Restating that the department relies
Qn citizens for tips on drug use, Bab·
cock ~eluded, "It's the Problem of
O\lf roo:t.Y· and we have to flibj it" ..
Mrt; J. . Lesch
; .
Fane al Service ..
S d Friday
services will be held Friday
for Josek\tlne C. Leach, a !!>-year resi-
dent o Costa Mesa who died Monday
at Hoag Memorial Hospital. She was
78.
Mrs. Lesch haa served as treasurer
of the Senior Citizem Club 1n New;port
Beach where she had been acUvt for
several years. ·
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. at Westcllff Chapel under the
direction of Westcliff M: or tu a r y
<J\apel. Interment will foDow. at
Harbor Rett Memorial Park. · :
She is survived by her husband,
'Valter w. Lesch, of the home, 383
Ramona Way; daughter, Mrs . Phillip
E . Rees, Newt>Ort Bead!.; four listers,
Mrs. Anne Mercer, Miss Roea
Riebschlager, Mrs. Mark Sealy and.
Mrs. Jonas Larson, all of IllinoLs, MK1
two grandchildren.
FROM C/\LIFORNIA /\RTIS/\NS, ENGAGEMENT RINGS OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUTY
CONVlNll!NT Tl•MI IAHKAMl•1UIO MMTllt CHAAOI
'
, .• ··-Jl•
-..
J. {!,. fiumpkrie6 Jeweler
1111 NEW~RT /.Vl., COSTA MESA
22 v .. " '" Th• s • .,,. l.Metion
t
\>/
~ .. Vil l i tl11
...... -
/\ '
..
Pll0l.ADVEltTl$Elt-J WtdnHday, AUQllSt 28, 1968 OAILV PILOT J• ..
.. v c. ews of Coast Men -in Service on n ·uty Around Worl~
>b;·
sPK. t Brute M. Slllll~u. Row1 1 1298 Conway Ave.. of Mr. and Mrs. llarold E. and Ls • mem~ of the has Men ullgned to the Patrol Squadron 95, bl.1ed Orange Ave., cost.a Mesa; ref Clu1 Wtwam E. Germ• • .... ..._ ot. Mr1. C.ther.Lne Coit& Mtsa, h&:1: bee u Breier Sr. of 7242 Judsoft AFROTC unlt at Univenity First Maririt Olviaion in at Loi Alamif.ol Naval Air Av i .Uoa Anti.Submar~ USNR,-. of Mr. and Mrt.
&UJ.un ol 2100 Na tional ul1111ect to the 1st Infantry Ave., We• t mi o • t er, i1 ot Southern Oallfornia. Vietnam. Statton, Warfln Techniclln 2 n d !Mn V. German at . USU
.c Awe.;::Clalta Mea , bu been Dlviaion near Di A.n, Viet· particip1tinc in a U.S. Air They are Aviation Elec· C1Ass Man.ball W r I c b t , Shasta Lint, HtmC.ilft09
.UIJCDM to the 5th nlm, It• light weapons in· Force Reserve Officers Marine PFC J1ck L. Four Orange Cout area trlcian's Mates 1nd CIA3s USNR, son ti Mr. and Mr1. Beach, .
""'M6-C'<h an lz ed lnfattU'y flntryma n. He 11 the son of Trainin& Corps field en· Rowlaqd, 20, tOl,l of Mr. &nd men •e undergoinJ two Deanls R. Haab, USNR. of OrTUl w .. Wr\Cht Jr. or~ U~ completion of Ute
..:..'iDl.vtaloo ln Quanc Trt, VJeti. Mr. aild Mn. George E. campment program a t Mn. Jack W. Rowland and weeb of lcilvt. tralnin& al 145-15 17iji st., Cotta Me1a Vista HueJlto, N • w p o r t tratmng, ~will retute tod ~ •· Jtft'~ of GardM Grove. HaruUton AFB, Calif. husband ol MN. Candi L. N1v1l Air Station Barber'• and Stanlty L. S1ater, Beacll: .and Av l a·t 1 on ·Loa-Atamftct . .nict atNn
··' "Ali--iiao R 1 •11 M C.det. Breitr ia a 1radu1te Rowi.nd, all of SOl2 Audrey Point, Hawaii. They are USNR. son o( Mr. and Mrs. Beach : and Avia.tion Mamte~ weekend m.._1 <IOC'9 a · .~rQjatt, ICll o( Mr . .Mi Harold E. Ire.Mr Jr. 100 <J Westchester High School Drive, Huatingtcn Beach lm.Olll ttie 500 resenuts of Ctr1 E. Sauter ol 2589 nance Admlnla:tl'atJonm.1n S. manth.
Mio. li«lrY M. DeV-ol < ·
• 1 •. !eilch, bu been '£· .~Lane, Huo·
•• : . to tbt Air Force • ~ ·----. -"~oal 'l'NUlll>tl Center ance..i .. AFB, ru.
.,.,.& • .srldllat. ol Marina "~OCll. 1llo u._ at-.• ,.lfMlld, Gddon Weot Jua!..-
Col!t .. bofcn •nlloriDc lbe ·~ ..:'j.i;"~' (j.tJ ....... J .
-·'Cirpl!lller, USN!I, :ZS, -ol
Mr .... Mn. w. w. --ol Colla M-...rded hJ 1 ;;j Ava I 'iWinp ot Gold."
:; Under the lllpt tr.uanc
'" procrui. be rectived hi• ·~ wUia:s 18 months after en-
': tfr~ tM sirocram. and
: •bouF m --:.! be&izillnc advanced phaMI
-ol trabtnc llt -. Tu. :·~ Qi;'.,_ Job C. Jaeebt, ~ .anl·Mr. and Mra. Hubirt
' · E. Jacobs of 528 Laauna
'!Place. Seal Beadl, bu com·
..., pleted b..,;c trahlinc at
~l'. Lackland AFB, Tex. He has "'°"-..,;gmc1 to th• Air ··:;:;}Force Tochnical Training
'i:. Center at Keesler Al"B, ~Miss., for training as It ·
-$communication1 • eh!cb'Gft·
:;zies specialist.
""' Airman Jacobo ls a 19116 ~graduate of Marina Hieb
• ,,.•~--1 and att...i.d Golden ._,~OX.'lJUU
2:Jl!'f!!--College.
"\l)Jitli,n.. IWldy s. Krall, i soniW'fftlr. and Mrs . Harold
.:, .. .'tiaft· of ·15132 Beach :::!B .-~·~Midway Oty, com·
• ·;l:P' basic training at ...;;r, klJ"!d AFB, T ...
•, e)has been U6igned to },' ... *~·-Force Technical . \ 1Yi ' .. ii Cont.er, Sheppard
·~ . , Tex. foe schooling u a
· :-~f 1 t ruction 1peclalist.
.·,liim111 Krraft M a rraduate "# w .. ~ lligb School
',eamod bis BA delree
.~· ':.j:l a r em .o n t Men's
"$ .. ' ~ ::~
~ Brlu H. Ward, Ion of Mr.
~ and ,"'l!I. •Elbert H,. Ward,
... 6942 Lydia Drive, Hun· ~~tl ngton :ee..1 ch ·is
;~participating in a U.S. Air
;.,,Reserve Officers Training
O:Corpg I I el d .trainJD1 en· ~campment at • Ltttle
·-..,.AFB, Ark. , .
<'l Cadet Ward, & 191 &
·.graduato ol -Hiab ?.-. ii • -ol Ille '-AFR<n'C unit Ill Sim Dieco ~leOollO(e. .. .
~·~ AJmwi Cbarlet1 K. Pod,
.~.:,&On of. O.le1 N. Post of
:_;:ii 351 Yal e A Y'•·• .. :;:;_w-. 1'11 completed ... ;.-tiiilnlnr at Laddaod .~.su. He hal been
· s to tbe Air Force
Training Conter
, AFB, Ttx. .1;. ~ POflt ii I 1986 :~5 e of Westrnin1ter --~gh School and att.nded ~ ~ •• ch aty ColleJ•
.. ~:: entennc the Air .. . ~ ..... '::JI ...... , .. _
~ Sgt. Wllllam E. Rewe, •
:... uoband of Mra. Linda
~!l• THE·SEA • ..... .
;4.' '! -: --
Ultra-Brite
Toothpaste
Anacin
Tablets
BAND-AID
Sheer Strips
Mn 'o"" ·teodoralt
CO•t·
t Cleaner
f W/SllPER
Clll.OmNOl-
14 OL CAN
S1trts•11 "I" fer
tl11lllpt1 IH all
yu r u .,111 111•1.
Ajax Dish
Detergent
"Th s,.,~llf" fer
th 11111111 ji11t1
Jlllill1.
Simoniz
Floor Wax
Nar j ll alsl hr •i1yl
ll11rs-Crl1s cl11r,
Illy 11tj1 ....... .
Extra-1tr11itl ,.,._.
'"II -A tllll , ..
Cll 1111.
r.. flit, 1111-111t·
111 ,,;, nllat. liH1
••r• ct11•l1t1 r1li1f ·
fr111 t11s1, 1em1s
h1•1ehr.
111 1t 71 w t. d ·
111111 h u 1111 '" 1cr1tc•1.11 ••r•s 111C
lllL
"lllt llti-lacleilal"
DMlillt Fli
Till ktllt ••
3:-39c flM ilJ 59c 1111 100'1 · 88' 2il.OO · ue ·69c 4 11.'Sl11 •
"Swithlroo" Stationery
•
tr llnrt 11111 -Mi1 & M11tl Hol Sitldk ill ltmOll, lime, Pumpkin, Rasp·
. Mr~.
. !~!~1-J/l"d' "" 4gc
dll\ ~~~1-rr .... 4gc ~ NOltS 7gc · 111 '' tr lntl•'"
•
srAn-a;RY' ....... ..
=~:.~~~ ... 1.19
KUILASH
Eyelash Curler
Suddtflly your fnhes loak lon1er, frime
yoor eyes with 11eattt emphasis •••
and rtay curl&d from 1 25 mominr till ni1ht. •
Link Door Mat
'lUSM·TEX 11"1?1" -Atlr1tti~e as
wen IS servicelble. Soft velvtt-llke
fillish pmi6es I wiP· 1 98 i11t: l scrJpmg surf.u.
1
Wahl Barber Set
Ml•• Ctttlq Rit-Cont1iM clipptr,
asst. combs, sltears,
neck caPe, brushes,
booklet & pomade, pack-
ed ill \inyl bst. 9.88
3-Rilll
C.Was
Notebook
Blue canvas covtred
J-R1ng double booster
binder w/clip. 99c:
Typing Paper
soo 1heet Da:b ae. FOJ
study, office 111111 ltomr 1151. 88c
3-Ring
Vinyl
Notebook
' INDEX CARDS .
Pk. 11 108 -3"~5". CMlct tf 2:2gc
pl1in or ruled, · 1
DRAFTING SET
6 pc. st! i11Clulles illform1t1on card 1 98 w/det~1ltd IJble for forF111Jl1s-in Yin/I
case th1t l1ts flllo loose leaf iwt!boo s. 1
::;;;:========:::: .Issi. print -"1~ 117" _,fy -tlo ...
"mod'' look. Bissell Rug Sllampoo
... 11 Jlh11I C..-
llll any Wer to shim-1 39 flDO )'llltr nip & urpit&.
2411.Cn 1
Sirnoniz Auto Wax
"S1,1r l lH" for usitr l)lllliuhOll,
I lan&tr listing 1M 1 29 britltttr shine -Paslt
cleanef WIX. 1111. t11 •
NIWI Fl'tll APRll SHOWERS
cmDn t&udoir
A ltll Y ... Fr11r11ca 11 111111 Fllltro1
In •• T1il1tt1 s,rsy Mist
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0111 111 ,. ... ,.
Your Choice
2.00Ea
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DIXIE Paper Plates
Pllf. ol !00 9'' ~ plates. !i'O(e naid
-Ho~ J'l\Me food.
SOLO Plastic CUps
Cold beveraae cups fDr picnic l1ld home ese.
-7 D!, !ire in nst tt11ors.
DIXIE Plastic Ule11Slls
Pllf. of 24 forlls, apoons llld kllfm fer
111 your Ollting needs.
DIXIE Paper Clps
Ill If II -t er. eeld bev1r11e
""'"
sgc
5gc
lt
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Zee •kins 2,
·•11 •• Mste•" AKt. 1tttn -,4nc l¥1e pk1. of 150. I iJ-
. CLIFFCllAR Bri..U
Fiii' "Come 'n Get It Awor" -fasier
O llpt-10 •· l.11.
ed. adjust.bit fl!Ot rest, J.
:!:'.IOft 14 88
C8flllPY· •
Sprinf action, .tr1 laiat
wheels, removlble tr11,
p1dded head 5 98 mt. folds flit
for storqe. •
AUTO Safe-T-Seat
Fils bid. er front seat -
Pfd6td Mid P«1tector -
cDll\tS witll n 111il llCI
3-Ring
Vinyl
Notebook
'*" lamillitld stetr 98C case •/keys .
PADLOCK WITH KEY
1¥.t'' strong -stee l 2 29 ca~ 1nd shackle w/
keys, 1
COMBINATION LOCK
Micki! Pl1ttd-Brass dial, fin·
ished in black w/
white numerals. Dou· 1 59 ble act1n1 lock1n1
lever. 1
COMBINATION LOCK
Vinyl tolled shackle
stainless steel over 1 98 hta't"t wrou&ht sl&el
i~~er case. 1
3-Sub-Divider
Theme
Book
1h" CJ~Jeity-Sott
cover 3·rinJ binder -tolars.
sgc
PAINTING f PEe!AI§
COLOR-JET SPRAY PAINT
Wit• s,1t11r t1rr11l11 ·-' 7gc l tst ,r1•11lJth1 -wide
thoict of bnlti111t colof'I. .
PAINT Bmils
l "-1Hl1 h HI" •11H-4" ltyloll
w111 bnish l!ld 1 2" ll'Jll brittlt ••h .,,, .. 1.39
PAINT Roller l Cover
Ro!-t.11e frame w/2 eov9!1i for 1111mel 1 69 & fht!. li"iihts. I
WIRE Brush
3 row durable wire llrush w/eur.td wood
hlftdft for easy 1r;. 3gc
2.69
DYMO 1/, INCH TAP£ ROLLS
Am t=lors of Yill'jl S!lf-adl!tsivt 2 'l 00 ta~ -cauntless ~~ for Mf'f o
member of tilt fflll ily. . I • _
Tip Top Curlers
l1h 1nelfc er S11, 11 l1ll1rs-f~
winding, fast drying-safe wi!ll 1111 •
sty!iDI solution, ill asst sizes.
l fGl!t 3il,OO
Hot 'n Cold Vacuum
THEJIMDS-Combir.ation Pack St.ap
ring bolds vacuum bottlt for l!Dt sauos
& insulated snak jar for 2 49 cold salads, etc.-f\ts
wark lol!Ch kits. •
Turtle Neck Shirt
Jergens Lotion
Helps to 11pl1U ubJral oils lost "
we1thtr or wtter-Mlllds 7gc stay beautiful. 91h or. til!
W/dispense£. -
Steel Book Shelf
Al l slttl col!St~. AU .C:11es 1Dunded
or turne4 under. Decorativ1 stops *i
eath sid< ~ keeo boob 7 88 from slipfl!nr. 36"d"
-J6'' h1flr. •
t11 -. , ' ' . -
Smtrt Mallia ft!yl'
lltllthttl -fer ....
lllio• or llltk to IOllOOf,
Choice el •~rs . BRUSH Cleaner
Cle111inc S?lvtnt for ~tiers ' brvs;:; &t l.f'' '
21
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CHARCOAL Lipter Fluid 2gc
F« lntant st.rtlq of eh«toll tr wood
fires-qt. ca11. ... 1.. 10 98 h11ness
m t bell. •
PLAYTEX BABY NURSER
ARTIST BllShes Tnie C.M 7"'"""'98. t
PllJ. of 20 l$Sl. flllt llMhes ~ Cfllts, 4nc 7 • 98 ,
Ind household uus. ";:-~====::;";:::==;::;:;:::::;, 9.98
:A.PERBMA: WaterPiK Mefili SIP.PLY Fiii "TN Jfe1Jttt a,,.•1e• 1• lr•••t f 114i.,.. ••• TOBE SUJUI: l".Gmpltlt kit et prHtenli1td •i~1ble bot· ' ••A~ MY•••"• 11,1'\.lllllCI tits, Mldefs Md caot, 11oandfrs, ~~es. Bally Super Sale! Q.UIB Uftiq11tli tltillS 111111ef Toilet lowl c1..,. fetlls ktter, tltts lllOlt formul1, bec.au!e bottles lake-Up !Ill ' ... , ""'• .......... lit .... aoms, befwetft teelt!, are 1ir frle. "Prlfile" PEN '"'99" Nit Mil ..... lfOUfHI bfidgewoffl, Of." ll"I• t11i1f1ct11t-R111l1r 5.95 '""" •-1o .... 1 bm.'t Ml .w.p -TNEIAIRAN-M thl)donlic 1ppll1nces. In convenient tql!Mte Git11! ink S~P!Jly. ... O•IY COOL·IAY Ctwtifls ...... Wllft ........ NIP Plt1ocy f'lllsali•g 1et1011 swetPS bottle. 4k 1111. 7.15 U1ce1•1t1111ll7 Tittff f11Nltl11 POLAROID S" • 11 ....... Ylta•I• fll'll1 l1 out loose bits of tr1PQN 311 .00 C11r11t1t • G-""'"' ' ALL IHOWJ ~ P.M. Will Ml11rol1 faocl ••• helps freshen Al NICES M AIL1 Alt•sl nt• t•r• $1pt1111hr lit l fC. 1.11 -IOlN!· • t1le btt1tll. llHllSllY llrfll~ SUNDIT ~lllG -!Mt w.u11-11PT. 1 ' 2 :Iv!.% ll"ld 1lt1t rtlltctH l"5.1Jll ...... -CR'($TAL COVE ·-· ... , .-.w. II Dttl c:l11111, .,...._ ...... -=· deodofilts, d!S• .,. ·--lwfects. RetY· -· lar Of Pillt.
~ lie 11 n. . '
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l'MSSID lllWOIR Ii* ·~ 'W• fl w w~Hy-*°' HUNTINGTON IUCH •lff'I•••• c:.:·""'"""' SIYI 21C II TlllTED fWllll. -·..--= ....... -. a "'"'.,. i•ur IKk·IO· TIOll ii ailktwmoottl ,., ....... SO-T AIUTS Fiii why JIOt lfl ... c~ttl Pa,tr· -ojjs jilt a liot 0 I " llcl " Ttm;I .. ... , NIWPORT IUCH 1111 lrylM In ll1l1f1tt11t
W•tcllff '11:11 liate ""' lilt ~ ,,.. """'·· 611!-Wiiii .......... 1 .... ct.,ltt1 II" illf -Killl ltnM 111.11< IMt Clll$4: od«. 6t . IOTII 5. ~· "" lk71L HUNTINGTON IUCH .!:.':,., 'c TIClm 19.88 1,..1 ... u1 3 00 ti n & '2" POI sgc httfw • ....... "' ..
' . ' . ' . --• ,
• I ' \ -• . ' I"' -
I I
f
..f( ~·--DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Symptom, Not Cause
MU.r livlng a lifetime in and around Costa Mesa,
Cooncih1W! William L. SI. Clair feels he has found the
city's bluest problem.
It's ban \hat bother Bill.
Not all bars to be sure, but there's a c.ertai.n kind
that Councilman ' St. Clair feels are driving the city to
wrack and ruin, particularly downtown. "Cheap bars,"
he calla them, addmg, "l don't believe it's pOs~bl~ for the
downtown areas to rebuild themselves and thetr image so
long • we are &ha~ed with \hem."
Lest Councilman St Clair be labeled as a U.mperance
ovangeliot ... at least a teetotaler, it should be pointed out that be ts neither. He's worrled about Costa Mesa's
lma.ge a'bd business climate and thin.ks he's found a
good reason why some areas of the city are less than
they could be.
Appuently ~at St. Clair is aiming at is some kind
of rorung or llcenaing re<iriction by the city that would
force b:a.rl he considers undesirabte into one section -
probably into industrial or manufacturing paru of \he
dby. That way, .th& more boi1.1ieroua elements wouldn't
be bugging nearby residential zooea. .
That.ls all well and good-on the surface. But it's ha:nUy Ul<ely to come ·about ICM' several reasons:
-'Ille sale of beer Ind liquor is a fegaJ business. So
long ea stat,e and federal regul.ationa are met and ibl
patrons behave, no ci~ can legislate such an enterprise
out of operation.
-lt would be impossible for aoyone -even one
wllb tile tnv..Uga1ive willingness of St. Clair -to de-termi.ne wfltat bars or cocktail lounges are udesirable" or
0 nndes'irable."
-lllOlt imJ)Ortant, the kind of bars that bother
€ouncilman Sl Clair are not what lw caused the deU.r>
ioration ot. ·certain areas -they are merely manifest&·
• liona of deey<!r problems.
Hundreds Qf communities the 1113.tion over suffer the
ea.me problem. When a oommerclal area is somewhat un·
FDR's Creation
Has Dissolved
CHICAGO -Democrat.I moved
toward the nomination for President
of Hubert H. Humphrey wiUt un·
disguised apall\Y and !nit.lion, '.!be
party created by Franklin D •
Roosevelt ia 1932 as a power house of
combined liberal, lsbor, farmer and
minority interests no longer exist.6.
This is no longer 1lle Parfy ol tile
forgotten man, the depreHed fermer,
the e2l)lolted w~no )ooget the party 1ha\ attrM!A l\fl>llbllcaos
and is a l!\ll"C baven lor · diected and
ignored Negroez.
The amalgam hU dissolved. Labor
and ttie intl!Uect.uall are at eech otber
throaU. After all these decades of civil
rights battles Negroes still murt fight
for equal representation in the na·
tional convention. Not the slightest af..
te.ntion iJ5 bring paid to the political in·
terests of the farming classes.
Organized labor .iis a CODffrVative ele·
me.it trying to ~ lb!· favored
position and with enough economia
clout ol its own so that: it no longer
needs the Deinocratic Party.
IN THE ROOSEVELT formulation
of unbeatable political power youth
found a natural home, but n<Jt in the
Democratic Party of 1968, nor in any
other organized political party. Youth
can go home so far as the Dem0crats
are concerned, or follow their leader,
Eugene McCinhy, into a new political
movemenl
The question is not whetiler Negroes
will vote Democratic but whether they
will vote at all. 'The question is not
whether the liberal suburban classes
will vote for Humphrey but whether
they will vote for anyone.
There were two overpowering in·
fluences at work on the Democratic
national convention and bottt were ent·
barr&6singly visible. The 5Ufling
secwity arrangement& and t h e
repression o{ demonstrations inside
and outside the c6r:tventlon hall were a
constant remind.er of the disordered
nature of American life. The Soviet
tanks in Czechoslovakia &bot down
McCarthy's dove.
IN ADDITION TO that, a significant
portion of the Democratic Party was
not even represent.ed in Chicago.
These were the Democrats in the
Wallace disaffection who could con.
ceivably hold the balance of power in
selecting the next president of the
United St.ale!. The fragmentation of
By 0-rge ---,
Dear George:
I need help. h-!y doctor says I
have to reduce, but my boss says
I'm too light now for my job in
heavy equipment -and my wife
says she'll leave me if I lose my
job. George, I wonder if -
Never mind. l just got fired for
being sued for not paying my
doctor bUI Md the boss ran oU
with my wift-.
N.H.
Dear N.H.:
See bow 1ttlng1 alway1 work
out ll 100're patiect?
1>eora-re:
I have followed your ~vice
and never lat a boy kiH mt on
the first date. r have one pro-
)>lem. How Cm! 1 ever get a ie-
cond date? MAE
Dear Mae:
Quit titting arouod reading •d·
\!fee columnlJU.
(S.nd '""' ID.ntnnost pro-blemJ to Geo'1• for ootmnort
lrutmlOl)
tfle onct powerful Democratic coali·
ti.on would be made complete by a
walkout of tbe peace and youth
elements.
It was no wonder, ttterefore, that
Vice President Humphrey tried to OC·
cupy a center position from which,
after his nomination, he could reach
out to draw back the disaffected
elements. This position seemed un·
natural to him and there was no better
illud:ration than his .attitude that he is
as much of a liberal as the country
couJd take with Al much da6h and go
as the country wants. Therefore he
sought a running mate who would
represent stability and responsibility
rather Utan flair.
In doing that he was meeting the
Nixon challenge, but at the same time
he disappointed Democrat. who yearn
for something new and fresh, some
sign that the party i! riding the wave
of tbe future rather than !tiding back
into the trough of the past.
HUMPHREY WAS forced into a
kind of "southern strategy'· for . like
Nixon , the core of his support in the
national convention was in the states
of tne old South. The history · or
Democratic conventions in recent
years has been the surrnouhting of th•
South rather Ulan giving in to southern
sentiment. ·
The Democrats moved toward the
inevitable end without their usual
sense of purification by fire and
without a feeling of unity and dedica-.
tion growing out of the kind of good,
clean, fight Humphrey himself once
carried on in Democratic conventions.
But in 1968 ttie man who formerly
fought the South with so much verve
and enthusiasm tried to avoid a fight
in tbe interests of p06t..convention
harmony, He fought, instead, with his
old liberal friends over the Vietnam
plank in the plaUorm.
The Democratic coalition was not
exploding, it was falling apart, and
Humphrey's only hope for victory lies
in pulling it back together agatn
between now and November.
How to Address
Our Lawmakers
U, I . lllllATOltl
Tl'lomtl H. Kuclltl flt), lU 5. Cl1udlM SI., .IUW·
l>!llm '"" Gtor11 M11rlffly (Ill:), 1117 N. ltadeo Dr.,
llenrly Hl!I•. D11r1"1 Con1reu 1Gr1.t1 •••Ions: S.N'-
0111<1 111111,. WttfllnvTon. D.C. 20'°1•
U. I. ltlP.lttiSINTA'rlVH
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ITATI ll:lllATCHtl
•1tOM OllANGI COUNTY
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r1tOM OUJllOI COUlll Y
ltabert I . l1dtllm Phi llt'lct-ltl, lUJ WfJltllft Dr .. NtwllOrt IM1d\ • Cllfllmlttta: Gov••~• Efflci.llCY lltld E .,., P.11bl1C Ulll~
tltt •1111 Cor-•!loM. Wtlfr. IM l•ITllll. L111 .. fh lvr ll:tt1•-"l1tl011, JOllll V. II•.... 12.Slll
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6table, when it is aging and when no one has come up
wilh a cl6ar~ut plan for the future, the we of buildings
in that area tend& to seek lower level!. One of tthe most
common patiterns ts a proliferation of -well, of tbe
kind of things Bill S\. Clair is talking about.
The councilman is earnest and he has indeed found
a problem. But the bars are only signs of a deeper prob-
Jem.
The dty needs to buck up \he downtown area and
the landowners and buslneumen there need to help in
every way. Get the ft'eeway issue resolved, find &ome
bold plan with flair and imagbl'ation, work together in
making it• reality.
H tlhis is done, the sa1oorus will disappear.
Placentia A venue Extension
.. They must have foDowed me to work so they'd
know what to ,tear up Jlf.llt,"
This is the gripe voiced ahnost every time a city
begins en improvement project, but seldom is heard an
encouraging word to th~ opposite effect. Just human na·
ture, petb;aps, but the truth is tbat.zmoolb, efficient co~·
struction jobs really do happen. Like tJbe new Placentia
Avenue extension which will link north and south areaa
of Costa Mesa on ihe west aide. Studenbl attendin~ Estan·
cia High School will have a quick, sale route while fire,
police and city service access to the affected are«s will
be far more efficient. Motorilits wiil find the link a
blessing too.
Contractor John B. Ewles Inc., is about to finish the
half-mile strip of roadway a fUll week ahead of his tight,
40-day comtruction schedule, aDd it may be Ofen by the
end al. next week-certainly in time for &chool s opening.
Close cooperation by the contractor, the city and
cou·nty flood control oMicials is to be comm.~ded for
speeding up a critically needed community improvemenl c
.... .
LET US CONTINUE ••• "'
I -....
_AM:r r""W'
• ll•u r .. . ... -.. ... .
His Big Idea: Oc~asion to Throw BoU'l,uets ·;:;r.:,·_
Sex-inhibiting
Pill-'N onsex'
Herewith is another u n w r i t t e n
chapter of history. Its title: "The Pill
That Worked."
The decision of the VaticaJ\ in. the
summer of 1968 to ban contraCeptive
pills as immoral and leading to pro·
miscuity was a grave setback for ad.
vocates of birth control.
lndeed when The League for Total
Birth Control, an all-out do-good
groap, 111et a month later a motion
was entertained to disband.
"Wait!" ordered Greenleaf Grom·
met. one of the League's most positive
thinkers. "Actually. the Vatican has
pointed the way to the perfect method
of birth control. The only reason that
sex is fun, they say, Js so that people
will have babies."
"SEX IS FUN?"' said Miss Hattie
Pettibone, somewhat surprised.
"Exactly! All we need do , therefore,
to save the world," said Greenleaf
Grommet dramatically, "is take the
fun out O{ sex."
Once the heart of the problem bad at
last been grasped, the rest was easy.
A sex·inhibiting pill with the trade
name "Nonsex" was q u i ck l y
developed and universally acclaimed.
Clerics of all faiths noted that
Noosex, far from promoting pro-
miscuity, ellmlnated it altogether. And
Nonsex was preached from every
pulpit.
Middle.class parents who had long
agonized over whether to supply their
teenaged daughters with contraceptive
pills thankfully bought Nonsex by the
gross .
AND WITH YOUNG ladies no longer
interested, young men m a n f u 11 y
swallowed their Nonse:1 in order to
avoid a lifetime of frustration.
~ disappearance of 1e.1. naturally
had a tremendoUli rm p a c t on t b e
economy. Such pursuits as fly.tying,
lepidapterology and pee·"-"le golf
boomed as people found themselves
with twice the leisure time on their
hands.
But movies, advertising a n d
magazines were hard hit for subject
matter. (Who v.ill ever forget the last
i.ssue of Playboy showing a naked
rut.abaga lying on a bed Of radishes?)
Smutty jokes, cocktail parties, and,
of course, marriage, became a thinl
of tbe past. So did babies.
AN ALARMED government in·
stituted a National Selective Servicing
System, conscripting young people for
compulsory parenthood. But draft
riots broke out across the land. ''Ban
the Mom!" shouted the young men.
''Wallflower power!" cried the young
ladies. "Maki! war, not love!" And the
effort was abandoned.
But oddly enoogh. the greatest el·
feet was on strivtna. Men no longer
strove to bt rich or poworful or
famout. And Wornf!!I no longer strove
to be beautllul or chic or lood cooks.
ln fact, no one much strove to do
anytlllng at all
SO THE RUMAN RACE died, not
with the ban& Of a population ei·
ploslon, but out of abeer boredom.
And one day, the J..ast man was leaf.
Ing idly through an old copy of the 1968
Papal Encyclical "It 1ay1 here," he
told the Last Woman without much in·
t.ereat, ''Ulat tbe onl,y r1uon JU ii fun
ja 10 that people WUl ha\16 btbiel."
"Th'h 11 u.td the Lut Wom&A with a
)'aW1). • doetm1t toUDCl lite mUdi tam
either.''
'
.. , .
Council Deserves Thanks·
To the Editor :
Over the past several years the
Costa Mesa City Council bu; kept a
very careful eye on the deveiopment
of the Newport Freeway as it affects
the entire city. Also, it bas never lost
sight of the fact that the Coastal
Freeway has a great deal to _do with
the future development of the city.
Couple these facts with the work
that they have done in plannin-g for the
future of the "Downtown Complex" in
ttie city, and you very definitely have
occasion for throwing a few bouquets
in tl);etr direction. All of the coun~
cilmen who were in office over the
past four years have done far more
work than the average citizen ever
dreams. They deserve a strong vote or
thanks.
AS CHAIRMAN of the Calilornia
Highway and Freeway Committee, l
would like to go on record as saying
that the city of Costia Mesa is fully
aware o( tbe needs Of the city as far
as the two freeways go, and the
eleoted officials and th e ad·
ministrative staff at city hall are
abreast of all the latest happenings as
fk' as they go.
As a suggestion to some of those who
might feel that their own ideas are
being overlooked, why not address a
letter to Mayor A. L. Pinkley and ask
him to fill you in on some Of the plans
for the future. 1 think you will get the
pleasant surprise of your life!
GEORGE P. KARCHER
St. Clair's Pub-crawl
To the Editor:
As a newcomer to this fair city, t
am constantly being refreshed and
amused by the City Council's valiant
efforts to uphold what it considers the
moral tone of the community. And
now. to my delight. I have read that
Councilman St. Clair haos endured
What must bave been a strenuous pub-
crawl. to bring to our attention that
"dteap bars" have been the cause of
the "downtown deterioration."
Might l suggest that to have a really
good downtown area, it would first be
necessary to uproot. part of Route 55 to
provide pedestrian walking and sitting
areas, witb plentiful parking around
that; then, to rehabilitate most of the
stores as well as the bars?
NATURALLY, the "excellent
restaurants" and "red carpet" (at the
very least, if you please) type taverns
wouldn't be of much use to those
without "business conferences" to
have, or to those who couldn't afford
these taverns would not be • com·
fort.able stopping-off place for those
men who have labored hard all day
and want a brief respite. ''lllAT
ELEMENT" is graciously invited by
Mr. St. Clair to head out to the in·
dustMal area for thelr pleasure, so as
not to oause Jnin to the gentle folk
•
Dear
Gloomy
Gm:
I don 't want to see a school bus
full of football player1, or a
merry a:roup headed for the tide
pools, being driven through
town W s year when children
mun walk two mlles. c:rossing
N•wport Slvd. and Fair Dr. at
peak trofllc, ID &et to hi(b
llChool. Let'• remember 1'llal
bwies ere tor.
-f;, v.
Letters from .readers are welcome.
Normally writers should convey thelf'
messages in 300 words or less. The
right to condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. All let-
ters must inclwW signatUTe and mail-
ing address, but names wiU be wit~
held on f'equest.
who can afford a 50..cent beer.
HARRIET KANE
Why Discriminate?
To the Editor:
Thoughtless dog owners are no
worse than thoughtless editorializing
on the subject.
It is indeed true that ttlere are
thoughtless dog owners but why
discriminate? Blr~. oats and humans
carry and leave more diseases 1han
those mentioned by Dr. HumJilrey in
your recent editorial.
ThoughUess dog owners are the
same kind of people as ttle dogleS6
variety whose messes are matters of
greater concern than those caused by
the thoughtless breed
1 AM AMONG the majority who love
and care fur our doss and evidence
coooideratioo to\val'ds the property ol
others -by cleaning up or burying
any messes. (1 have always carried a
small scooper witih my leash and have
done so loog before uiy legislation or
irritation wes ex.pressed.)
Beiides. dear editor. most ~
receive better medica1 care ( evidenc·
ed by large number of vet!) than
do otn!r pets and most lluma.M !
Why don't you .pick on 801llebody
your cr.vn me'?.-.
ANN M. WEISSMAN
'Phoney Editorlcl'
As a long time resident of Santa Ana
Heights, I am inftm.tely weary of the
many attempted annexations of our
land and/or water company by the
various land griabbers SU1Tounding our
area.
That phony DAILY PILOT editorial
ol. August 21 was the last straw. Noth·
jog annoy• me more than some adja·
cent resident pretending deep concern
foe me and my neighbor• over the
quality and quantity of our present and
future water supply. Phrue it any
way you will, your editor's altruistic
modvet1 fall more than just a little
short. l get a strong feeling he hasn't
really Jo5t too many night.!' sleep wor-
rying about my water supply. (And
satlsfied Santa Ana Hellbts Water
Company user and shareholder that I
am, frankly, neither have I.) Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach both have
plenty of. problem! o! their oWn that
need llOMnt. •• why doesn't be just
mind hls ·own business?
THE MAJOIUTY of UI bert in tllo
Hei&l>U are sal!lfied -the llatus
quo, particut.rly the older ruldtnta
who know the tcOre, albeit • few
Quotes
Perey B. Stffl, Jr., director of Ute
Bay Atta Vrba• Lta&:ae, S.a Fran·
cftc:0: "There J1 no white man who
cannoi pt a job bemuse bo ls white. A
lot of Ne(r'Oel aro unemployed
tieuUM they art bllclr."
. .,,,
...... 1"' ~
misguided newcomers ere ~still·a-tittle
lacking in eompreh-on. ... '"' / i
So please, sir, tell your e!IW!'lal
writer not to grieve so over our J¥>t
joining the Costa Mesa Wamr·n1str:1:ct.
We're intelligent folks, bri&M enough
and endowed wit.h enough ~·t to
buy and settle here year•\~lf a
land ·or water ~s ~-....th.e
future over here, please aasq him
we'll rise to the o ,,. c & 1'-l o n
magnanimously.
It bothers me to know 10.~ .lllf'o
rounding cities are lying awab i:iabt•
worrying about poor little 'ol' lUI'!
AUGUSTA V. STUART
Courteous, Recuimable
To the Editor:
I feel I must take exceptidn to your
editorial of Aug. 21, 1968 concerning
the Cost.a Mesa County Wall:r Diatrict
as opposed to the Santa Ana ·HeigblJ
W•ater Co. l would like to poltlt out ttiat
a fairly large portion of thOM 1ei:ved
by the Santa Ana Heights water Co. is
already in the City of Costa .Mesa, so
annexation is not our fear. In the time
we have hOO their service (18 years)
we have found it excelleflt and the
water rates not higll. On Checldng,
mine seem to run much loWer" than
others in the C.M.C.W.D. who use ap-
prox..imately the sa·me ambunt of
water that I do.
ANY PROBLE!\1S have ~lSeff. df:~t
with immediately. A friend·bas .been
trying to get C.M.C. W.D. tu . .check a
possible leak at her me~ ~'quite
some time and to no avail."'n'le brown
tinge is for the most part a ~of the
past. Courteous and r e & 1~ ~ a a b I e
service are our m·ain reasOM tor wan~
ting .to keep Sant.a Ana HelgMI Water
service. I don't knoo.t; · Of any
S'ha-reholders in this water~ who
wt.tit out but I know 4':t few in
C.M.C.W.D. -would like·tn. •
ELAJNE 'WAISKER •.
Tax Reliei
The Califonda Taxpaym .. :'AllOtla-
tlon reports that th• ·C"a1ifornia
Assembly ln 1967 prov14e4 an • ed·
ditional $1.S million for ltatt .school
support "Although it wa1~~ Dian·
datory that the money be ~~ p~
perty tax reUef, it was stood'
this was to be the only ·:fi!ui)tdiate
fonn ot relief given the JC'9*t1 ta:1·
payer," according to "Your, ":1tu.es,"
published by <lregon TU;"Jliiiurch.
"'A surv.7 by tile StateOeJlllilinotll Of
Education of tht actual ... t:tf this
money bu been released--~
showing the great bulk oAht'-
weot for regular cla•~ in·
struction, to restore PfOPlll!Dl1 which
had been eliminated earli«, !ft to
give Nlary increases.'', • ...
..... llQiiWlll...
Wednndo,y, AulQSt ~·· n. 1dltorlal -of Iii _,
Pilot ""' lo llltorm ..... lliooo\ olatf rcoct.n bv prutftllii; V
...,.._,... oplnionl 41'1! .....
menfa1)/ on lOplts of ftolM<n
and ,;gn!Jiam«, bJt proolc!lng a
forum fOf' the expreufma o/
our noders' opinioN» ond b"
smisnting tM ditl'ns• W!10o
polnU of Inf"""" ~
and opok11n..,. on topiQ of the
dar/.
Hobert N. Weecl, -• .. :..:
-------------------------------.....-----------
Wtd111~y. ALli\ISl 28, 1968 DAILY Pl~DT $ ·vik· d' IDe Be~o1nes Oiler
BY
WILLIAM
REED
Norwegian Youth Huritin.gton Exchange Student
.........
In the Wind
Fowilain Valley City H a 11
athletes have bad a tough time of it
lately, according to a reliable
source within City Hall. It seems
our near All-American, clean cut
baseballers were edged by the
slight margin of 10 I<> 0 recenUy by
Team 5, an aggregation of near-
professlonals from Costa Mesa.
The Valley Golden Boys made it
all the Way to the championships
after a fairly good season orl the
diamond, but lost in the final round
to the Costa Mesa crew.
The source (believed to be a
janitor despite his not ha\ting mov-
ed from the water cooler in several
days) said the locals would have
won except that one of the "Dirty
Nine" of Costa Mesa spiked the
state Valley third baseman Marv
Haglund.
* It's been a bad season all a round
for the Valley crew from the stand-
point of injury. Pitcher "Saleh"
Lawson ,vbo sometimes doubles as
the fire' chief, required 21 stitches
about the eye when clobbered by
an errant baseball at the beginning
'f the season.
Planning directo! Stan Man~field
foamed around City Hall with a
stiff neck for quite a while as a
result o( his baseball prowess and
}lenry Agonia was put out o( com-
mission (not his park commission}
with a sprained ankle early in the
season. ~ There's been a lot of moaning
~nd g-n>anintt coming (rom the City
Hall baseball players, but the fans
(who ever heard of City Hall
fans?) have been happy. The
season results show nine wins, and
only one loss.
* The grouo which used to be
known as the Huntington Beach
Pop Warner Football League and
now known as the H B Youth
Athletjc Association, tackle football
division is hblding a benefit dance
on Sept.' 7 at the Huntington Beach
Cowitry Club. .
-Reservations may be obtained by
calling Inez Whitehead at 962-7930.
Tickets for the event are $2.50 per
person with the bulk of the pro-
ceeds going, to finance a fine foot·
ball program.
_ The program this year involves
Tnore than 300 boys learning not on·
ly football, but the principles of
sportsmanship.
Beach Rules Out
Copter Patrol
There'll be no city-owned helicopter
flying patrol over Huntington Beach
this year.
So said Assistant City Administr..ator
Brander Castle Monday night in poin·
ting out that it would cost more than
$105,CKXJ a year to fly a city-owned
chopper.
The possibility has been under
discussion since the city tried out a
helicopter on July 4 to oversee the
parade and beach activities.
Councilman Jack Green brought the
subject up again Monday and was told
that operation of one helicopter would
cost more than operation of the entire
black and white patrol fleet.
"We can't have all Uie things we
WBflt," Castle said, ''but neither can
the taxpayers."
Br JAMES McNABB JR.
Of .. O.Mr PllM lllft
' •·Most Norwegtaru: like Americans,"
Sl.)'8 Audun Emil Tvedten, newly ar--
rlved American Field Service (AFS)
student ~se American family Ls the
Bernard O'Lougbllno of Huntington
Beacll.
Certaillly most Americana will like
Audun, whooe broad grin and laughing
eyes aeem to-reflect· the sunshj.ne
which, while rare in his northern
bomelmt, seeDllS .iobred in 20th ceo·
tury Vikings.
Next month Viking Audl.Dl becomes
an "Oiler," tbe Huntington Beach
High School variety. "Marina (which
bas a Viking as a mascot) would just
be too muck Viking," joked the 17-
year-old, whose command ol English is
reilected from sis: years of study in his
school in tile town or Larvik.
"Basically, I'm a farm bOy ," he
adds.
The Tvedten family -owns a farm
outside Larvik, -about 80 miles from
the capital city, Oslo, at the southern
tip of the country.
Public ' service is an interest Audun
shares wllh both bia own ond bia
American family.
His N~egian father, rnsently a
membe.r of the. Larvik City COuncil,
has served as an alternate deputy to
tile Starting, the Norwegian equivalent
to Congress, and his mother is active
in local weUare organizations. ·
Audoo attests to his own enjoyment
of active living. A political idealist, he
oppo6es American intervenU011 in
Ocean View Teachers
Welcomed to District
More than 100 teachers new this
year tl'.I the Ocean View ·School District
will be officially inducted into the
s-ystem Sept. 3 to 5 with a series of
education coofereDCN.
The new teachers will be welcomed
at a special session Sept. 3 at 8:XI
a.m. at Spring View School, followed
by a general session ol all district
personnel at Huntington Edwards
Cinema Theater, Beach Boulevard at
Main Street.
All teachers will spend the next two
Valley Titlists
Wiri in Ward's
Top Girl Contest
Montgomery Ward of Huntington
Center has, apparently, a penchant for
titled Fountain V<alley girls.
Three Valley 16-year-olds who are
mutuar friends at Fountain Valley
High School were picked Girl-of-the-
Year and first and second rWlDers-up
at the store's annual contest last
Siiturday.
Two of the winners · already have
titles.
Topping the list of 10 Ward finalists
was Ellen Evans, 1968-69 Miss Foun·
lain Valley.
In addition to Miss Evans' being
named Girl-of-the-Year, she won $50-
wofth of clothing and a tiara.
Vicky Nelson, a Fountain Valley
princess, was picked first runner-up
and Debbie Diff1e, second runner-up.
Ballot Argument
Deadline Sept. 5
Tbe last day to file arguments for or
against any of the three Nov. 5 ballot
propo&itions by the Huntington Beach
City Council is Sept. 5, City Clerk Paul
J ones announced Monday night.
Councilmen have proposed a $6
million bond issue to finance parks, a
$3.16 issue for a new library and a
change in the method or selecting the
city attorney.
Groups have first priority in writing
of ballot arguments and individuals se-
cond. The council ha.s appointed a
committee to write the arguments for
the propositions.
days .at their assigned schools. then
have a holiday before tbe opening of
school Sept. 10. ~
Ocean View will open with 475
te.acheni this year, 38 of them being
completely new positions .. New at&ll
members are filling jobs created by
-of tbe di.strict and beginning of
new progr.am.s.
Police Reserves
Sought in Beach
Huntington Beach Police Depart·
ment is looking for men 21 to 35 years
of age to se-ve as police reserve of-
ficers.
Reserves work with regular officers
on all major police operations, Clllef
John H. Seltzer said.
Written and oral examinetions for
applioants will be given soon, be ad·
ded, fo...L ipen.. who meet t h e
de pa nm.ent•s requirements. Ap-
plicant& must be 5'9" and 6'6", 150 to
250 pounds and have normal color
vision oC 20-40 correct.able to 20-20.
They must also be high school
graduat.es and. bold a valid state
drivers license and have no arrest
record.
Applications can be obtained at the
police department.
NHYC Draws
Bye in Race
Def'ending champion Newport
Harbor Yacht Club Monday drew a
bye in the opening round of the Prince
of Wales Bowl competition for the
North A·merican match racing cham-
pionship. . r
Winners in the quarter-finals were
William Ide Jr. of New Orlemis Yacht
Club over James-Canon, Metedeeonk
YC, Philadelphia; Jim Angell of
Vineyard H-aven YC, Mass. over
Joseph Blythe, Jackson, Mi5slsslppi
YC; William Jayson, Rocky Point,
Conn. YC over Mrs. J ane Pegel, U:.te
Geneva, Wisc. YC.
Semi-finals will be held today with
.act.ion between New 0 r l e a n s ,
Vineyard Haven, Rocky Point and
Newport Harbor,
The series is being sailed at Los
Angeles Yacht Club. Final matches for
the cbamplonship are expected to be
sailed Wednesday.
Siamese Cats Saved
.Joe Mesa of Tampa, Fla., weeps for joy (left) afler
his prize Siamese cats are rescued from a tire 1n
his home. Mesa rushed h\I<> the burning house to
(
find t.he cats overcome by smoke. Re lrantlca.lly
gave them mouth-to-mouth resuscitation belore fire-
men arrived to administer oxygen and revive them.
f ,.,
..
Vietnom_ (In bia high ochool h~.
served as president of sevtnl d!Jcus.~
llon clubo.)
His browned legs bulging wttb mus·
cle 1pe~ to bil life-long interest. in
speed sloating ill particular and all
1port.s in general.
"My American brothers b a v e
already traken me 61JJ'fing .•. I do okay
aa long as I'm lying down,, on tbe
board," he laughed.
Apparently HuntJngtoo Beech !Dgh
School won't pose any real P"oblems.
Audun sa,ys that be likes all subjects.
Rounding off an already well-round·
ed. career, the youth admitted
model!ltly that be plays the piano,
Grier{ being his 'favorite composer. "l
only wish tbat I had more time to
practice," be commented.
Audlln'1 AFS brolhet Ls 17-year-old
Kevin O'Loug'hlin, who will serve as
1968-69 Key. CJuL president _a-t Hun·
tington. Other brothers end a sister
who live at home· are Rory, ~Brian,
13; and Brigid, 12.
Dr. O'Loughlin is Chairman o( the
Depar\[Qent ol Radiology at UC,
Irvine's College of Medicine.
'
Registration
Nears Deadline
At Golden West
Fall regi'tt'"lition at Golden West Col·
lege in Huntington Beach today moved
into the final p«iod with five days re·
mainlng for day cla6ses and nine left
in the e""ning college ngistration
schedule.
AUOUN AT HOME -'-1963-69 foreign exchange student Audun Tved· :
ten nurolls the Norwegian colors while relaxing at his American fam·
Uy, the Bernard O'Loughlins' home in Huntington Beach. Audun will
be a senior at Huntington Beach High School.
John Buller, .associate dean of ad-
missions and records, advised pro·
spect:ive student! to make immediate
contact with the college to take ad·
vantage of open classes still available.
Day students will continue tu
register this week and on Sept. 11 and
Sept. 13,. with appointments with the
Admissions office.
Evening students will register 6 tD 9
p.m. in the College Center Wednesday,
on Sept. 3 .and, vacancies permitting,
Sept. 10-12, l&-19 and 23.
"It's still possible to take a full load
of transfer classes in the day, but the
opportunity is slipping away rapidly,"
Buller said.
Typewriter at Library
Alo electric typewriter is now
avt\ilable to patrcw; ol the Huntingf.on
Bea'.ch Public Library at a cost of 10
cents for each ID minutes. It is located
in the browsing room of the library at
525 Main St.
Don't Razz Veep
Judge Quells Teacher's Tirade
BOSTON (AP) -"The right to razz
the vice president is reserved. for the
President' of the United States."
With that comment, Judge Elijah
Adlow cut off a witness in Municipal
Court Monday when she began ex·
pressing her opinion or Vice President
Hubert H-1-Iwnphrey.
The witness, Ellen L. Miller, 2.1 , of
Cambridge, a former Boston school
teacher, was testifying for the defense
in cases iagainst six persons arrested
Sunday night outside a downtown hotel
while demonstrating against Hum-
phrey who was speaking inside .
When the 72-year-old judge told her
his view on razzing a vice president,
Miss Miller asked, "Do you mean I
have no right to express my political
opinions that Vice President Hum-
phrey isn't fit to be the president?"
"Your Ofin_ion can be expressed in
the secrecy of the ballot box," Adlow
.answered. ' ' T h e s e demonstrations
avail us nothing."
''Are you saying I have no right to
express my political opinions?" Miss
Miller repeated.
"Look, little girl,'' Adlow replied,
"I'll debate you somewhere, but th.ls
courtroom is my show. I don't want to
hear any more from you."
Adlow then f o u n d one defendant
guilty of assault and battery for biting
a policeman, and four guilty of
obstructing .a foot path.
B~ke Plans Speech
To Methodist ~roup
First Methodist Church mens club
will bear Assemblyman Robert ll
Burke {R-Huntington Beach) ,during a
dinner meeting beginning. at 7 p.m.
Friday,~ .
The dinner is at the church, 2721
17th St., and will be open to tbe public,,
Reservations at $1.50 each for dinoer
must be made by Wednes~y night.
PRICE REBELLION
WAR ON HIGH PRICES
SPORT 2468 COATS ::::
s
A v
E
DRESSES
~2~~ ... CASUAL 2 1 900 SUCKS :
.... $10.00 $4.tt ....
KNIT SPORTSHIRTS .... ..... 2 7°0
J.tt "· ..........• ,. . for
SPORTSHIRTS .... ...... 2 900
4.tt "· ......••. , , .. . for
DRESS SHIRTS
:~ !:.0••0~ •••••• ,., ••• 2 for 9°0
NICKWEAR
~:';,_., ........... 1/2 OFF
-KNIT SHIRTS
Meet T•rtte N'1•• 3'' .... St.DO •••••••••• NOW
JACK!TS
O.U.•/Cette• 9" .... Te $11.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••
SWIMWEAR
~0o1~ ......••.• 2'' ~O~ ~~. ........ 3''
PAJAMAS
h•n NaMe ........ ,, .......................... .
2 PC. SITS
COAT COSTUMES
10A $23oo1Ug. s3s ,,
0
SHllTS .......... 2 11 00
s.tt ... . .. . for
IL OU SIS .... ...... 2 '·'' ...... . 1300
SHOlTS ......... 2 3" 1.tt ... • • • . • • tor
!!NIT SUITS ....
$45.00 ••••••••••
PAHTY HOSI
1900
.... 2 300
SJ.00 ••••••••
1/, SLlrl .... ..... 2 300
1.tt "· •..••• for
PULLOVER
SWEATERS
.... s11.oo ···" ... ·····-··· 2 '" 9"
G .... 512.H 2 CARDI ANSs.tt 00 ••••• , ....... 11"
BOYS & GIRLS BACK-TO-S CHOOL GREAT VALUES
GIRLS SWEATIRS
.... "·" 2 700
J.tt •· •..... , , , ••.. , , .. , ...• , , • , , ..• , ... _. ror
IOTS SWEATERS ..,_ ' 5" r. 110.00 ..•••..••.•.••.••••••••..•.••••••• • ·• •
GI l LS ,ANTY HOSI
ht· SJ.II ................................ 2 .... 300
IOTS SOCKS
IOTS KNIT SPORT SHIRTS
·~ '• ''·" ·······················-·····-···· GIRLS DRESSES
1.,, SI re St •••••••.•••••.•••••••••••••.••••••
GIRLS SLEEPWIAR
2 ••• 500
... _ .... _.. 2 7"
SJ.ft ... ·······-·····-···················· fer
GIRLS PANTllS
.... ·" 4 100 5 . 2" n c .._ ·······-····················-····· for 1.,. ,., .................................. for
3321 EAST COAST HIGHWAY, CORONA DEL MAR
111 AVENUE DEL MAR, SAN CLEMENTE
B•nlameric•rd-M .. ler Chorgo-H•ythorn e Cherge Account
l
l
•
..
• I
>
•
•
DALY -
___ .. ..., ... -
MSlllow ... tlllllti.••fe• ... 111111*/t..... • 7 .. c;•·;.:..rr*:.·~.::. =
-I a •ltY at ... 10'l9i :;::7 !;[;1111,:&;:::;~
W ' '3,,...a,lM
National Guard
Routs 'Yippies'
CIDC'GO (UPI) -n. I'-' ---i..---~---s.-Jd. ... ,...... ......... ~~·
• a.nis HDSm 8ilel. t ';wtlti •
tit 'Cbt 0-•A 4 NdWP.t C.-
4 fie xi ...... ._.-.ia....w·s
l ap • .. ...,.U.,. *I* 2 tbt
,__. ____ , ....
• 0-... llt ... ,... dllllr Alalm. ............... -· pmid!) ......... S& T JP L
lilcClt!illJ' ---.. --... a..,...._~
m vn Pr cc s 11111rrt n n . . I EJ'
Uwt b l t: ..... Hilla.
I ' ....... ;M• • i-. -Ii a. -· --lloi*, lrwa Clmlt hd aloo&
Al 111i Jlffilo <' I .. -Ille
rill&tft. J'rj Ed a-if I f1-1es Jld-
ed ... -t. -lltd a Jioo fli cur' ......, t. fnllt II Cllie
-no ,..,. lell. n. ,.,...
•
•
7'llc 01-Johomc City C"""°1 has
-..! .. ~ polmo.l ..-
da:tel CIT groKpS U5 fl1f' iM ut
at "" a:, ,,.,... ,... ........
~ Cl7ltllCil said. 1l7i!J be' 1lKcf '°
hdp d<f"'1/ w ,,,,...., of
clecmingi sp mmpaign lil.aatRre.
• '
A wom.lD ailed the ~ per>OD-
nel din!ctar in St. Joseph. Mo_,
•boat police and fire department
penannel m1llWs. !ile told Clor-
erK:e V~ "Tm verv mu.cb inter·
estl!d in both clepartinem. and in
police and firt work o! all kind>. I
bep 1 bacte.t of 11•ater and a loaded
gun in each room of my house so
Iha! rn bt prepared for anything.•
CJ*:ap'1 lib ~ AW Ill s-Umm IDO'WI ... ,. ....... ,
--fllb.-lllla tbe
4m ;;zar.1 mil l+•rw ••
f 1 I 4*11 tb& ,.,.... pdim weft
'-~to-the ··--Tbo llOlioe Cllll1 --. oorlier
hod - -"" fir a.. -COD-Wldi+e zdi&bl to real 1,GCIO Mioati a.
tan flml. • ,_,. PID -tmet mile!
JD Ibo -Ii Clmlt PU. _ _.. ____ hour
-C>e--d the
J)t+ntCJ atilt' J\mmal ~ half
.odjommd ~ -·-· Same per -.. aid f:bry W'l'?"f CCID-"
---ens>ed Mid>ipn
. .\ v r 11 ii r to tall 1riSh tbr
~ Leaden al t h e
6rn••i6b :dial wd tbrJ 'W'oald a1-
11emPt 1G mard1 OD thr. CW Ml1ian at
tbt ~ ,.\•uid1itl w11er tha -........
Eie< --" them polirsnm. ~ illjwed .i t mmln
hr'-~ ttjXikel ~ 2'
dern•11*6rs. Ymlttil raced from !be
port !tao !he Old Ton Di&l>l dllb ma
am! tipped ....,. am! -prbog<
...... 'lboJ OJ><md !in ~ ..
--,..,. ps tram -..,... Tbo Gram hi'& clom ..................
--by ~mill&. "dJlbcra
(a yippK ~peaka' toot 1 )I e
lmllbs1l, -ii up "' tho Bil!ml and ••M; "'I! _,.. ~ wilb w;,, nuti the upu m,_..nam."
A op. b!jrAcl 1be .,,._ d>eered.
GrapeW~r~
Sign wntrilct
With Winemaker
SA..'1 JOSE (IJPll -Oesar Cba•"2'
farm wwW• union bu wori. a thtw
yea watz llCl w1th Pail J4auon YiDel
-will .---kl pay lo u much • Sl.75 .. bam".
1be -,..... Olllbod, VIII.• tao
Ulh ._,..,.,, put --.mo. Ult thmed Yarm Wcdr.n a-p:a:idDC
rwnminer beg.an tts d!he. une ye.-.
ago. mveri Mwem flaeyaad -~
ill Santa Clan ..S l&aatt:i ey COIMH'
_.\ Masson sp:.ta••J.U. Slid thrft 1ra1
.. ~ an1 conDid" wifb U. mDcm
m1 that thr agniiemml QI lmed en
a lleslrt for good Tiii ... "Nllili!y"
amoq: itli work!n .
Tbo agreemeot proridcs tho! the
...,,_ n ... an hour -1>o nlld ~ to Sl.90 ID 111.55. 4kp<Jltl-
ing Ol1 w ~'P" of wcrk.. warms ill an categories will receive. w C2ld
hParly ~ next )'Ur" -in mtl.
Masson will also oomribut2 to •
health care benefit ~ JX'Olltdie
paid ,·ac:atiODli &Dd three paid" bolidayl
a year.
----
Doctors Now •
'Optimistic'
On Eisenhower
• ASHING1'QI< (UPI) -P'trmer
Plt:sidtm 'llleaboM:r hu .....
"'lclmt fm1ber deaew:" ia beet
_.,, am! ~ • amWnal>Je
m,!a. llil-~ -· A brief ....fim1 leDetia i-.l at
lD:JD a..m... at Walm' Beed Army
llediraJ cm..--"'5 .. -•·eatJtionc qGmimi" aw:r t be
general's nmmc. rilidl was f.ln;I.
-Ttleiday. The 77-yur-old E~er·1 spirits
Tm "'ed.. and m w a 1 in--
"""""""' eoJo!ini lillbt ~ -the_, rtpmi uid. 1be mrdjeal bulletin smd.:
~ --spent -c:mnlarublo DlllJl. Tbert ....
-..... -dec:Tt9st hi canliac: irribbllil}' sita yaterdzy'I bnlletin1
•'GmenJ. ~·, si:*rtta re-
-pod -be ... -'"1jOJ'lng li"1I bod<ground ~ • -..u
1hrollth 1ht laoi 24 boon. Mn.
~ rjiMCia!Wi lD ,iJtt the
JODS"1 fir &Id\ poriodJ boq...aly."
,.,,..,, -~ --~ m hU hurt actkm bat mo 54nssed that ~·, condition
remaitwd crrtical and be could ta.kt a
Wl'1ll fw the ..... DJ time.
Tho bulletin sEdo ''llespilo hil labg
~ q ow16 1en.ent in bed.. the ..,...rs .pm. nmoln .......,.bbly
llDd.. lalcUr u ii pcuible in the Rt·
..., "' GeDoral Ei..,,._..... rfill
aiSica1 ••••li;lic m hil JJio'Uciam have
C1tll C led a. DOte of catttiont; ~
timjgr>"
Welfare Groups
Battle Police
Rain Breaks Heat Wave
Nation Deluged From Tallaluusee to Childreu, Tex.
C.UI•• 1'• ......,._ ....... ._.._ _______ ...,.
~..__.
""' L.-,,._.. ·-----..... •llfl • ,, .... .........rsl-
-'I. -111 T_.,,, It. l~'I --•"' ~ "-n. "" "'-11110 .. , ~ EMillrld _...~ .. ..__. __
.... .. "'" l..m ,,,__ ---~ °""' --..... -"'"" ""' .. -ti.. ...... _._ .... ~ ........ _..., ........ _ .._ ............. __ . ....., __ , . ------.... -.................... --·· ........... ___ ,_. ........... , ..... ~ -.. .......... __...._..,_..,
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re-_.,..~,._ wi•
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v.s, S••• rw H--..-----,.,. __ , .... ~-.---... ~"'"" ........ .,,.. ,.. __ .....,_,_ ___ __ _______ ...
_..., ... __ ............ ---·----..,. __ "'°' ...... .... -....... _.... ....... ..,.
-, St T; FL ._ .... ...._ -°'"*-1a.. -.. --....... ...,. ...... i..--.--• -......,., _... . ....,_ --,.. ..... ... .... ,.... '*"""""
-.. PKtfllr; ........... ....
~-'"""'" ............. -~ 111 .. 111 .-... ...,, .. ""' ........ _.. ......... .., _,....._Ill ___ _ -.................... _,... • ... °""' c... .......
rwpeawtwn ·--·--· ......... --._ , ... _ --.. _ ...... ·-·~-----"'-"• .... _ .... _ --., .
Mkw OIL ------·--.... F I e• -•11 ... t .. ..,._ -"" ...... -............
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D a ... ... ... • • .. " " M !Y . " ...
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M M ... .. " . .. . " • • .. " ~ . .. . . .... . " . .. • • . .. • • .. .
M • " . .. . . " " " . .. " .u ,. " " .
De1110«rats Bury U11it Buie
Majority l' oting Sy•~ m Dia After ?2 Year•
cwrAQOITIOft-l"M•l"lll• -••lllM:.ml ilil,...a•act, oon· 111t rnduu11d Ii)' ~'!-.!!'!" <kw. ''"'., IU1•IUU'il I lu,il1u•, G111SH•n .. Of. UM: con.-... lllJ' r '! a ftH • • ~ liclillid e4 'IJ ..m.17. v111111i;;n'i 1i1•ade11tl1l1 commUtiee, tbe
we. • D •• xr a c.. Titendalm _,-.a tav«U. of 11~"'"\u·• fihi .. r11n1lr•• .u ftlllble ft. a tm••JllW'.9 •ome-w s 'le-• ad. polHScel bolN1. ton• N1 n11ul11 1o a1 turf ttwfdf&eaatn
•U•JD •··--· lilllnloW.,._,....dl"'flldon• •ro "ltC>!Od ttlfDUllt "1*11 Pt1ntarJ, .... -·-a 1
L ............ ,....... '· McCutb)' op. C.'OllVtlnlh,IJI Of C«>mm1a.. Procedure. .,l-9•1.91.• •• P.•-,.... It • "-ii wu un· ·opon 10 J111bllo port l<.1!> .... wllltlit ihe T • ; ti 1 rs 6e 1'Vllt .. .,_.,. Md dnUd dtkP* fr•• c11-nd1U' )'tit ot tbl uaon.l a>o·
pa W la .... •C81(.U .. -. n;Lt1..-.m. vtnl fnn,'1
,
1 t s...-a .. cntc ,,,.... ~ ftlteo JIClt'oaly tuJed th e Jl 1lt0 111lltd tor creatloa ol a
llr61..,_'b ., .. Ort I Ca tmll ndie • •• cn-Jrn:J. bUt bin· •J>Ocl11I •tudy commit~ 'oa tbp pro.
1'a -Y S; to md it rtil>l •don"' ....,.mct lovol, Cll• 11 11lootlnf do~.-ml to
• ......... -"19 Is 11111 .tid. kw , s d 11a w m ftlte 11)(1 rtcomn\fnd lmprO¥tmtDtl to asure
... T S s -.-afliiciu --"ovon broldor c!U... pc11tlpoam."
•
MULLEN & BLUETT . ' . Fabulous August ..
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY ·
AUGUST 29, 30, 31 .
MEN'S SUITS
1/3 & 1/2 Of Fl ,
Reg. 79.95 tO 125.
39.98 to 83.34_ .
Out they go! Suits for every man 's taste
and budget. Forward fashion styles.
Natural shoulder models. I, 2 & 3 buttons.
Side vents. Center vents. Light·
weight$ and year-round weight$. Shop
ear1y tor greatest ~lectlOn~!
SPQRl MEN'S _. . .,
COATS SL.AC'KS
1/3 & 1/2 off!
1/2 off!
fleC!Wly SO.OOto 69.95
l.411tweights, tweeds,
plaids, solids, forward
fashion and natural
shoulder models.
Reg. 17.95 now .I.•
Reg. 23.95 now 11.91
Reg. 25 .00 now 12.50
Reg. 35.00 now 11.51
The fabrics yW want.·
The s1y1es you
want-belt loop and
tab-waist models.
Big! Big·! Savings on
Men's Sportswear and Furnishings
1/3to1/2 off-and More!
FAMOUS MAKER KNIT SHIRTS Reg.s.~1.00 .... 2.99
SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS Reg. tu 1zoo ..... 3.99 & 4.99
CARDIGAN & PW.OYER SWEATERSReg.tu23.00 ..... 5.S9·14.99 .
Save On Women's Fashions, Too!
DRESSES, COATS, SPORTSWEAR
1/3 to 1/2 off
and even more!
Opoo Thundir l Fridor lf!lbls Ulll UL a.is ft! ••• • Ill! CZICM111, Blnlhntriard or ll11tw Clllll'
BROADWAY-ANAHEJM CEJITTR, ANAH£1M ·SOUTH COAST PLAZA. COSTA MESA .
l
"
•
U.S. Tells ·N. Viets
'Stop Interfering'
PARIS (AP) -Th. North Vietnam'• mall! d ...
United Stat.ea accused North mand -the endin1 of all
Vietnam today of meddling U.S. mtUtary acUoo arainsl
in American politics, and ita territory. Both stood fut
demanded, that it quit. on theR old posJUOm.
Spumlnc the de m a n d , Before going into the
Hanoi's Ambassador Xuan meeting, Harriman aid he
Thuy a c t .u a e d Presidept would call on North Vietnam
Johnson's administration of uto atop the carnage, 1top
f o r c t b I y tuppre11lng op-the fighting, and get on wltb
paslUon to the Vietnam war. the making of peace."
Thuy'• statement w a s H:arriman's statements to
made ln the· 19th session of newsmen were made as
• the Paris peace talks. U.S. delegates to the Democratic
Ambassador W. Aver e 11 convention in Chicago were
Harriman called for a start preparing to adopt thdr
in serious peacemaking with platform, including a con.-
an end to what he described troversiat Vietnam peace
as North Vietnamese in-plank.
• tuferenCe tn American , North Vietnamese
• internal affairs. diplomats at the Pari11 con-
'l'he; thrff·hour ,session . ference for weeks have been
focused. on the illsue of aiming their declarations at
American bombing policy. American public opinJon,
No 1ign of progress was clearly trying te rally it
· detected by Hattiman. bebind'their demands for an
Hamman acting on in-unconditional halt ·in the
strucUons kom Washington,_,, bombing ~f North Vietnam.
called on Thuy to quit-· Harr 1 man s aid
"tryin' to interfe_re in in-\J.'.ashington had instructed
temal American affairs" hun to call on North Viet-
with cOnstant comments on narnese Ambassador Xuan
the presidential e I e c ti o n Thuy to stop interfering in
contest. America's internal affairs.
Thuy displayed his
' UPI .,_.., .... BOMB DAMAGE -This is tfle interior of the c.ar in which big-time Lake Ta·
hoe gambler Richard Chartrand was killed Tuesday when a bomb, planted be-
neath the seat, exploded.
Bomb Wired to -Auto Kills
Lake Talwe Casino Owner
South Vietnam
Fighting Tapers Off
SAIGON (AP) -The
heavy fighting that broke
out lo South Vietnam 10
days ago appe&red today to
be tapering oll. The U. S.
Command reported o n I y
scattered ground clashes
and shelling Tuesday, with
-52 enemy killed.
Saigon was a target for
the third ume since mid·
June. Viet Cong gunners
fired four llJhnm rockets in-to a slum distrtct during the
night, killing three civilians
mile1 southwest of Hue. miles be.low the DMZ 'ft'!th
.Eleven Americana w 11 r t ' 30 rOundl o{ 13 O m m
wounded. artUlery. A government
North Vietnamese spokelman aald tbr••
artWerymen , sprayed the ctvillana were killed and
cua Viet supply point eight lour wounded.
Incumbents Winning
' In Senate Primaries
and wounding four others. Br. THE ASSOCIATED Senate no m 1n•t1 on, The heaviest action was
rfported below Saigon in PRF.SS AnC'hor8ge banker Elmer
ferWe Long An Province, Alaska Sen. Erne 1 t Ra1musm ·led lltate HOUie
where soldJers. of the U. s. Gruening, a n outspoken GOP Leader Ttd Stev1n1.
9th Infantry Division ,ran in· Vietnam war critic, trailed Mcloroney,' •eekins a
to a 1Ub1tanUat enemy force in his bid for renomination fourth Senate term, eully
in an . area of paddy flel<b .... ..L.y ~ Sen A s ""·• ou~"~ 1--~--ocr~•and bamboo Tuesday. U. S. WUlll .. ""' • • • J•UA ......-.u-"""" ~11 ~
jets and helicopter gunships Morroney. a Vietf!am policy chaH.eniers fn the Oklahoma
attacked .and the 9th backer, has won re.nomii:la-primary. Monroaey now
Division troops reported 21 tioo. easily. faces tOrmer RepubU.CMI
Viet Cong killed and only In a 'trurd Tue 1 day Gov. Herry Selmon ·who two Americans wounded. ·The bulk of the ground ac· primary, New Mexico wu w~ in t be
tion was reported in the five Republican Gov. David primary.
provinces of the 1st Military Cargo fought olf a challenge All four 0 k I a h o m •
Corps area below t b e to his renomination and now Democratic cooarenmen,
demilitarized zone. facee former state senate led by HOUISe Democratic
Armored cavalrymen ot I.eader Carl Albert, won.
the u . s. America! division OemocraCic Leader Fabian renomination and both in•
reported killing 19 of the Chevez in November. cumbent G 0 P repr-..
enemy tn a battle near Tam Democrat Gruening, seek· tati'Ve& weH tmoppOll:d.
Ky, some 40 miles south of ing a third Senate term, In New Mexico, Gov .. disinterest in the protest by
tallinf · once more into a
freewheeling assault on the
Joluuon administration.
Bees Help Da Nang. One American trailed former Alaska House Cargo defeated C 1 i f ford .so um ·LAKE TAHOE, ploded as he siat behind the ''We have no evidence was killed and eight were Speaker Mike Gravel for the Hawley of Albuquerque,
Calif. (A p) An ~1 Of .his l'uxi.qr car in that thi! wu a gangland-wounded. nomination as the count edof ~Ir!'! ~tmhad beCbaten iD "Among the ' American
people the voice against the
U.S. war of aggression in
Vietnam la: every day grow. inc louder," Thuy told Har-riman.
Medicine bartend Farther north, troops of Tue6day'1 wtec continu Pt: ~ pr ary, aves u~employ.ed . er was front of his bouse in Zilphyr type assaasination," said the u. s. lOlst Air Cavalry today. defeated fiw. Democratl for
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
-Honey bees mey some
day help out hooplUI.! beaet
by an outbreak of a
penicillin-resistant form of
staph infection.
arrested todray in the death Cove, ~ev ., across the lake Deputy Dist. Atty. Ted Division killed 12 enemy In an even tighter race for the November ballot 1pGC
ol a Lake Tahoe gambling from here. Stokes. soldiers in a 1weep nine tfle AlMka R e p u b 1 i c a n a&aimt Cargo. casino owner killed Tuesday ni.e exp}ogion litbered the.-----------------...:.. _______ ...:,. _____ ;;... __ ..;;.. ____ _
"This is why in the
present election campaign,
in order to cope with the in-
dignation of the people, the
U.S. authorities have had to
use barbed wire and tens of
thoua;ands of troops and
police agents."
In the conference and
outaide=it both men dwelt on
Scientists at the U.S.
Naval Radiological Defense
demonstrated three strains
of staph infections are af-
fected by a protein-like
subctrance extracted from
bee venom .
when ia bomb demolisqed bias lawns of. Chartrand'a ex-
aut.omobile, piOlice said. pensive home and others set
Sgt. Don Johnson Mid of. among tall pine mies along
ficers served a Wan"aftt on the sootti shore of the Sierra
Donn Lee Ca·vnar, 24, of lake. A hole was torn in the
South Lake Tahoe. charging -t.
first-degree murder in the No·ooe else was injured.
death of · Richani· L • Sherfff George Byers ol
<Jhortrand, 42. Douglas County said Ibo
Cllartrand was tom to bomb wa1 tmder t h e
pieces when the bomb ex-floorbom'd.
FINE 17 JEWEL ·WATCH SPECTACULAR!
TIM~PIECES WITH FASHION IN MIND
MulalJI fulAont"" the tpirit of the tlmnl >Mn wilt find
..,. ef thtdc abtorbant, water rtptllent wakhes with
.,,.., eecond hancl... Som• with ca19ftdara, and tither
ltather • expomton bands, P:or wom1n1 cfrtt1 watches
In per.dantl, b,...fets, ta,.11, and rings. Sports woteh11,
too. Ev.n tom9 ln l'"K golcl. Each ene has a 1uperb, 17
jlwel mowment dMlgnecl to give you hours upon hour•
.t el1g.,., H you want a watch with fa1hlon in
,.,,..,, you'll hew• • ~ thn• In our Pine Jewelry
Daparlrnent.
YOUR CHOICE!
95
atAROE IT AT YOUR PENNEY'S FINE JEWELRY DEPARTMENT
FULLERTON
Ora11t•f1lr c.11 .. r
H1rl,•r 1t Or1n1eth•'I''
., 1« ..... ,._ ... , 0 , ................... w....., .. ..,. .........
HUNTINGTON BEACH
H111th11te11 C111t.r
Edl11t•t et S111 0111• fwy,
NEWPORT BEACH
F11hie11 l1f11ul
Me cArtlit11r et '•c. Cit. Hwy.
...,...-----' All Penney $lores Open Every Nl9hl Monday Through Satvnlllf
• UWYmM 'i..NA'fcle ACCOUNT
TODAYI '
On campus or off
••• smart iuniors get,
In terms with fashion
....... "the lmhloo ... In Mok --"""'' """'-""' -....... " ----"""" """' ... lfclyint poww • lut tlrl ....... ~.,.,. I I _, ....
........... -.. .... i.war. ........ .,.. -· .. _..._,. .. .,,.-.., $11 o.i.....,t.-fojf, A-lo
NNf, * • ..-:i-Jr. l"fit9 5 tit 11, ~·•·• •• • • • ........... ,_ '°" ""'""'· $12 motchlng plllid _t,, -.hite !ant .-.
hlou.• with OICIOt till. Jr. 7 lo 15. • • • • • • • • • • • •
c. ._ ..... '"'""' .... low..... $11 ~ iM Mint plullld lldrt • ...,...
.... lmt ... plalilJr.plltlal............... '
•
COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
,(Htrbor Shopping Ctnftrl' IHUntintf•n Centtrt lft1hion laltndl
•
I
' l
r
• • •
New Trial Ordered ·Newton Timber Fire\ 90% Conmined i
For SF Banker
SAN FftANCl!iCO (UPI)
-Tllo U.1. C4Nrt vi Appeals
TUudAJ -od ..... trial
fbr' Donakl C. SilwtltOroe,
former bank prelldent "'10
WU ltlllenced to 60 years in
prisO!l onl llJM:d '60,GOO oe • 11 e I erablAJ.ement con·
vlctloe. n.e appellat4 court ruled
that the 11-Y•-<>ld °""1·
cier -Who admi11ed to hllh ·
living ml to keeping funds
of the .-.<fefunci s.,,
'P'l'IUidlCO Mii!Ona! Boni: ill ' hll~aceountto
&¥Old ' ... ttrflent." covtrn·
mtlll .,1\111&11• -. co'!ld
not 11a ... ~"" • fair .
trial ~-· o!, ~ sambiing .divi\ies." publldty. ' . TM three'll>lfCe'll*ftll a!Jo . At ·one point durini the
d!jded ...,..al prind!*ll ill trial; Sllvertborne'1 Las
the cMe, includlnt trial Vecu loase1 w.-e put .al
jud&• Q>artes L. ·Powell of nearly '500,CKX>._ Spolrane~ W~.: u,.s. Atty· The a:ovmllnent h a d
COcll F<iolt; -U.S. ~-S oc:c•ll• of. the currency .... _ ged that ilverthorne
JamH SUon *>cl reponal looted Sall Frarlclaco Na·
comptroller ,vooia 1Ar1en. tiooal of some $400,000 J>y
'!'be • d v 1 r 1 e publicity taking high risk loads,
cited bJ tlli court lnchxled charging extremely high ln-
nol oalY tbeturmoll ewer the tere1t rates, ond pocketipg
failur. of , the bat, but the difference between his
"Sll~'•J ftanboyant rates and the bank '1
Ind tuerre , ~ fn· regular, Jow" in t ere i t cllldinC b11 111ar1ta1 mid · premium•. .
M@Ell
Defense
Rests Case
O!JCLAND (UPI) -The
often emotion-charged trial
ol Black 1"'nther party
foµndtt lluey P. Newton
taUed oil into minor legal
argument. today after the
defense rested 1t6 oase.
Only a few Witnesses were
scheduled to take 1lle """1d
a1 principals on both sides
planned prepar.atioM for
final P"guments nexit. week.
Superior OMirt J u d I e
MolUOft Friedm•n an-
nounced Tuesday f i n • l
ergwnentll would begin neKt
'('uellday, Sept. S. They were
expected to laot two dayt.
after which the jury of
seven women and five men 1~:::;:=;:=:~~:.;:~~:;:=5~=~~.J would receive tbe case.
Newt.on, 26, is charged ~Great Scott!· l(y div?",,
with the Nta! shooting of
Oakl.oo patrolmon John~----------------
Frey, 23, and the wounding
of ofilcr Herbert Heanea, 25,
1Ht Oct. 28 on a West
Oakland street.
Newton ended ffVen hours
on the witness stand Mon-
day with a firm denial of
any knowledge about how
tbe two officers were &hot.
Two fl.Dal defense wit·
nesses in 1!le 1even week
trial testified before the p-o-secutloo commenced 1 t s
rebuttal
Friars Gaming Losses
Given as $120,919
TED ELLIS
WELCOMES HIS MANY
FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS.
HE JS NOW ASSO!j:J,'ITED
WITH U$ AT 1H.E
Plaza Barbers
646-9941
NOW ACCiPTING APPUCATIDllS
FOR .THE FAU SUUSTll
lnolot .....
COMMENCING SEn. 9llt, 1HI . """"" .... ,,,.. ....
COLLEGE oF LAW
Vin .. nt S. Dalsimar, Doan ...... Q.,... .... ~ .... tm. .................. c......,
... 1-S.."""' ~ Si.Mii •uiM k ... • .U..... ~ ........
........ oNt. .......... r,,. .. c.ui....u. Illa• ...
f ev T-haC'M' .. ,_
~ ... 1~ (l .... ri.-)..... .
• c.n ., Yisk "" _, .. u141 n1a1
· 12345 WUTMINSTll AVllllll, WITA MA
I
I ' ! • • I • I
' I
• • •
l
n..ACTION'
MAN
6lacka
A·I TAHRll t./lond
trim -tntdH/oMI
In llprln• -'I/ht
·011re /¥Y with Ellfr•
&HIP-Ion.
Nnw tlffd1 Ironing.
TM new colors to
.,,_ '"""· 11.60
Prof. J. Herman Blake, a
UniversLty of oautornia
tocioloeist, defined words
.and expressions used in
black neigbborhoods. He
also interpreted a 'pOem en·
titled, "Guns, Baby, Guns ,"
writ·ten by Newton for the
Black Panther new-spaper
last summer.
Blake said the poem's
symbolism referred to goals
of the black community o(
West Oakland rMher than td
the use of weepons.
ll . All Penney St-Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday l
AL!.~!!~lfl I
cm Tapers.
be~~]
111' NEWPORT BLVD.
l'ark Connnlonlly
et eur ,.., (Nit) entrance
Dr. Bernard lliomood, •
University of California
psychlatrist, said a witness'
memory Wat elmo!t always
better tmmedi.Mely «ft.er an
event than at a later ~te.
Diamond's testJmony had
been sought by defense at·
torney Charles R. Garry in
reference to statements by
bus driver H-enry Grier, 40,
who g.ave dirferelng ac-
count. of \ht West Oalcland
1hooll111 Incident. He lall:ed
to police 1* hours after the
•bootinl' 4!nd -In qi. trial earlier thi1 montb.
Kids Like to
'Ask Andy'
OUTDOOR
LIVING IS A WAY
.... , AnlAUllCI
TOP CIUAUTY
OF LIFE ••• IN ORANGE COUNTYI
••• anCI Santa Ana Tent and Awning lias tlie New Loall
for '68 ••• everything lo ma~t outdoor relaxation a
family pastime.
ALUMINUM PATIO COVER
Planned for either large or small homes , •• mobile
homes tool Durable, long lasting all aluminum construction.
Screened endowres -larg e doors .• , completely bug proof.
---
OUR ALUMINUM WINDOW
AND DOOR AWNINGS
llATWIMG 11 STUNNING DICOUTOll COLORS FOR YOUll SILKTION.
IRIGHT, VIBRANT, MODERN, llAUTfUL ••• AND so M~ smn
IOI SO MANY NllDS,
C..• •lilt -.,649"1 focloty wh-I• 45 )'.-s -kn k9fl 11.-i111'-clvrin9 ll)'IH
.. m1t1,.ie111•1lt ony tty!• .i onhlted1,,.. C.111,l•t. wwfh• ,..tMKM .. ~'"'
¥91••41.41'11,Wiet ontil twnitltl1191. hit ot on ••• 1t ...... AM f.,.t Miii A,...,,1"9 yw
.tways -•M ..... ny •~lrft ••• c°"..._,• ,_111~• «1lotl n4 cot11,i.11 ,.,...,..-lllfJ'
• • • ..... -$ ps 9uen111lffl
'Ill D I.OK JOI '611 CAPAS AWllMIS • Yll.AllCIS e CUITAmS
Nothing Otcorat.. like Canvas. leoutiful New C°"'1
& N.-Pd~rks. for homn .•• for businetsl
MANllfACTUUD • llUTAWD
SANTA ANA TENT
•AWNING co.
PACTOIY SHOWROOM
2202 S. MAIN ST,, SANTA ANA •••·0•91 ' ··--. lllAl'tll ...,.,, AWMH CO •
....... --.. c-ry ,._ 1n..1a1 ,.., • aa .. 114
... _ --I I ........ ,_,,_
School time separates
for smart yaung la~ies
l•IMntlc .,,... ..... cl ,. ........ ,,.
pol-IA""' ._ """" --
._ --A-lod. -M)' 71116. *3 -Ion-.... """ " --kMH •crylie ft ....ehfM wufMl•t.. a.o..----· ...... ''""· •5
lu-., kMt card..,_ "'1th •111 .. ,,.
bit front ,..i .. Con • wn • •...,. ............ _ ... __
s.M-L. •5
"first bras'' designed
ta give proper support
Lyart; ....................... .
ohle fw Wlfart, Cczc•l:tl) ... °""
..... ---30-af.,.,.. -Y.•un1 ~••nM ._ of soft, flplble
.,...,. JlllfJ•*: '''"l.'°:~" ...... ~---... -.... 1 ....... -
I
.,
• A world of fashion
awaits her at Penneys! -tollor-.... "'-""" ..,._,, 11--...... low ...... .,.,. ..i ..... 1hi Kodol> ...._,_ .............. A -"""'-loi--.-....................... -... 14 . $7
'-!Iii .. ""-..... ""'-"""°' oty1; .. k "" i.r-.." ,..... ~I ,....... bolled ... hoo '°"•od ..i.w Ir ; -.... ti n.c.. pobstlw/-. ... ......, ..... Mldt.'Wrt ,, .._
'""" $8
'COSTA MESA --
NEWPORT BEACH HUNTINGTON , BEACH
Harbor Shoppin9· Cantor Huntington C.ntor Fashion Island
l • ' • • • ' I • I
I .
!
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...... _, ..
'
D~V "I.GT f :
-. THANK YOU
ORANGE COAST Pl LOT READERS
REPEAT .E·D
. BY POPULAR DEMAND!
o·PPS. WE GOOFED! .
\ IMAGINE!! We Show A Profit 111 1961
to Date Our Tax Consultant Says:
"Give Some Bcic:k This Week" -
FOR FIVE DAYS ONLY so ••• •
We Make The Followiflg Offer:
1~
I
' HUGI 200 SQ. Fr.
ROOM ADDmON
lul1ull119: Pl-e '-""" • •• ....... C.inpletely Weatller Proef Walls e CetMllf ...
Plus: + ln1ul1tod Roof +
REG. $1850 •120000 ~~~LE NOW ONLY •
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CALIFORNIA PATIO ' SUPPLY
1341 SO. BRISTOL, SANTA ANA
l1i1y Th• W•y , • •
PAY NOT-HING TILL 1969!
,...,,... .... ltM•••ll '""" .. "1•1N .
DIMES TO DOLLARS
Sp•nd dhfl••· ""'''' .r.iJ,,., Call '42-1671 for ~.1, with 111 f11111p1111iv1, 1ur1·firt DAILY
PILOT Dlm•·•·Lf111 1d. ·
'
. .
What's Unruh Up To? He's
Eying Race for G,OO,erno~
10% Tax Hike in Cards
LOS ANGELES (UPU -.,... )8ot year.
Los Angele• Prop• r I y MeonWhile, CI t 1 Colt-owners lodly !tclld 1lle pro-lroller Cbar1es Nowrro 911·
spect ol • rbo ol -10 med the Los Angelu 011 percent in their ·prqperty Oouncll that an ilicruH o(
llax11, in the waloe o( acllons 33.75 ceoli per f!OO will bl ~ by Ille clty ood needed to eover m illl•
By BILL BOYAllSKY nomlllatloir. . when . K e·n ". d y -county ,.wmm,.m. pending dellelt.
CHICAGO (AP) ~ JesM Hil ""1lHl . to1 °1*ane -tod in Los Angeles Tile county lupOnllors Thi Loo Ane11es tJalW
M. Unnm ol oall!ornia is an pubUoly committed and bis Oji Ille mght ol hll c.Jilorllia voted to fix the county tax School J)lstflct alrMdY hoe
old !ashlon•d I>Ollticlan b ehlnd·t 'l.e·•f•n·es prim~ victory. rat<> ol fUi}O per ''oo olol,yecl en~ of l'(.I
drtnlld in a '""""1i con, llWl«Mrlnc bevo beljled Unruh .i.o reveres the -~ valuatiOn -"II !"'. cents per f!OO -ti>elllal-<Ut suit -bound b~ Ile conYODl!on. ftef*aledly, . memory ol aootller 1Cemedy ....-.. of ,_.:I :12 cerit• .. val-. · .
1lle legacy ol the Kemeclys, ~ llH H k e d : -Jot.i F. Kemedy whom · • •
butkeenlyft'IH-clNlown •1'o'l'MtfaJeueuptoT.0 -~served ae SOuihern .1
tuture. • He 11 a ~ man, !Calllornta oompalgn jSEC' A , D'S ••• ~,1'..'l-. Today, the '6-yHr-ol_4 •born ol poor penntl, a fan· m-in Uie 1960 ~-
apealo!r of the Callforniii cler ol phllosoplllOll books pnoidenllll CA1Dl'alin· . ,
State Assembly and the bulk and COW'boy mwi.c. He rose : ''We ;ire committed to the . ...IANm•
of bis 174-vou deleptlo' · to. -tllroogb th• programs and ideals ol Bob
.... WICUIUllit11ed ~1es JunOe ol stale ca PI to I Kennedy," said Unruh as he
to a first-ballot presidelltlal polltlas lllld now 11 the m-01t • brouglll the C a I i I or n i a
nomina-victory by Vice in!luentHI Ilel!lOCNlt In dO!eg.-to C h I c • I o
Prllldont H·u her t· It Oatilornla. determllled, to ·fight for ~
Humphrey. Stocky, with the build ol npresentod K...,.ey'a com·
Uke Mayor Richard J. a football gu&<d, Unruh · pllllonn be be I I 1 v , d
Daiey oi Chi'cago, Utll'Uh has wears aim cut clothes, now ~eeented Kemltdy'1 cun-
p!ayecl a waitlna eame. ll>at he bu dlded bl• weight pOIJll ·10111 o1 an end to the
lloley, too, delayed laJdnC a down to 196 lrom almoet 300 V--and o1 pro-
lltlnd. J>Olllldl. • srmn.s•tollelptbepoor •
And, for tllree turl>ulent U-, -ol al, Is deep-But !hero'• another side ol
dayl, Unnmbubeenattlio lycommlttldtolblmemory\the coill1 Ullfllll'• own
ceoler ol the a!mmerlnc ol 1be lalAI Sen. l\OOftt F. 'Political .career.
mowment to draft sen. Keaaedy. He welcom·ed He wantl to nm for
Edward M. Keimody o! Kemiedy Hlli> Ibo prwlde1!· -lit 1970, and to do
M.-mte for th• t!al ,_ llDd -al b1o lido It Ile must unite pre<lllt!Y
fou<llllc elem-ol tho pot·
ty to win the nom!natloll in Judge's Custody Ruling t11e~:..:i;1:n~ •• r.
~. Unruh told the
. deleptee1 •11•m. proud of the _ Due on Crash Orphans =Jf~.atbeih: .=,,~
He •JPJ:-tho wish lbat
I~~ DOllOHIOY ICIT
c...• ..i, s599 ,... ...... °"'· .· .
20
MADERA (UPI) -A now The children's parenlo they· would rotum to
custody ho a r In I was wore R«>ert oucl Joyce Mor· ~ ':'.ediiiey would 11~ S. MAIN · ORANeE .-Sii, MIM ~~°"'~~=Yi: rio, Moma, 39, was a shoo form an ln!luential base for -· IMO 10 7•IO 7 DAYI A -• ....,
mooth wh<n their porents ~-~~~-~~g~er:__..,..._:·~hil>~campal&!l~~· ~in_!lwo~y~oart~·l..~!!!!~~~!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!. were killed ·m a bead'illl .-•
inewaf accident. A All Penney Stores. Open Every Night Monday Through Satut'll.,' Superior Oourl JudlO Jae~
Hammorbeog wu expectlld
to make. ru11nc today -enne~J a 12-day poeq,onemonl : lo
allow adult relatives of the 10 dllldren to toUt 0.,... the ALWAY8 FIRST QUALITY
maU,. ol guard!•ntbip
Thoc:hlldren, -l'llllge
in age from 3 to 17, made a
vow fol:lowiol the accident
tio sti'ck tocether no matter
what happelled.
A tzuat fUlld for the
orpbanl --to more tben fl7,llOO. The
Madera Bank ol America
said comrtbutlons have been
received from u far away
asWeet~andSoutb Vietnam.
· Pel!tloaa for ~ beve
1-ftllld by ID aunt, of
concon1,· anc1 by t h o
youogtten' m a t tJ.r n a 1
grllldpatellli, ""' llve In neu1if-.
: . -' ' Slncl tbe accident th• dllldn!I have bem cared for
by 'their ma.ternaJ
grandmother, -h• been ¥Tinc II Ille Madera home •
'-...__
a
\
•
The hot new look for
school ••• Fireho1e jeans
and sporty knit shirtst ·
• • .. ...,. ... Wt ............ '""""'""" __ _
I" -t9cl ctl-.S-M-Wa..
I, hNhftft•tMr111!f~11'/4CS1 --ln•l'lfil'Wi'-',...,,..llW
.. ~ dtd ·eotton.'hnMi*"
--~ .......... .,__,, "'-'•ti ...
C. le}'I' ,... "''"'of~, ..
ton ~ knit. Sporty ~ "'°" ....... A-ttd col-. .. , ..
D. i..-C9t!Y.,..,.lOW ... ...
IW ...,...,.hy,'ft ,,.j ... .... -••..i ... .;... ..... MOid, ...... •1• ... ,, ...,....
10.16~
5.9.8
4.98
·2A9
'
3.98, ,.
Back-to·s~bool ~clothing shortage?
Use your Bnkhwieud. • It'c1 all you need to
outAt :JlllU'Cblldten forlCbooL Youcan U1e itfor.
•hoes, 11acb, aldra, uan.. hoalm, pem, '
.' pencill ... ~yourcblldten weerand u.i
··: Forcoll01eltadenll,itcanevenpeyfMtheir .
mlllpUltetlontocamp11LWlthaBankAmeric:ard.
there'• llO ~? cbat1a.ltyou~ your bill
within 25 C.ys.For aamall fee, you can~
yourpeymentlowteeveralmonlhl. Soif:JOU're
fl!Ced with beick·to-IChool ezpenaeo this fall,
don'tforiet your BankAmericaqi. It can help
BAN KAM ERi .CARD
C A~Ul GRAHAM
0 0 I 0 0 • 8 A'·
019 123 '+Sb 189
. 'IO!ftt11eantluilaticprobI-. , ':!~!!!~e!:~!!:!~==:i:~ .............. ,..._.. ___ •~t.--~ _,.._.._., .. ,I .........
• •
•
• .(OSTA MESA
i ............. ~,,
•
' ..
.. ". . 111111161~ ~-1
~ • • • + • ; ' ,,, .... .,.. .. ......i
'
. . '"1 .. ~(11 l I···-·-1. • , , I
••
~· -
• •
•
I.
I I !
l
• • • • • •
. .. • . • • • • • • '
•
• • •
f
••
• DAil Y "lOr ..,._, -2ll.1968
'
Douglas Alreraft Stoek
M errill-Lync hF aces.Frt;iud
WASHJNGTON I AP) -
The Securiti.ea and E1:·
c:haJlge Cormmi.'ision h a s
leveled ~aud c h a r g e s
against Wall Street's biggest
securities firm on grounds
that it leaked ~ big-money
secret only to certain major
investors.
The regulatory agency set
no date Tuesday when Jt an-
nounced hearings would be
held on dlarges by fts staff
aaalrut the nation 's biggest
and best known broker-
dealer, Merrill Lynch •
Pierce, Fenner & Smith.
Nine officers and five
161Mmen of the firm, as
well as 15 .hutitutional in-
vestor• -the alleged
re«lvers of the bot tip from
MeTrill Lynch -also were
called on h carpet.
The invest.on included tile
Madison Fund and Dreyfus
O>rp., top mutual funds.
"We art convinced that
none of our people acted
wrongfully and you can be
sure we will defend our
~it.on vigorously," Merrill
Lynch said in a statement
156\led in New York.
John Haire, chairman of
Anchor C!1rl>.. into which
lnvestorl Management Co.,
one of the cited firms, was
consol.dated recently, said:
"To tile best of our
knowledge, we did n o t
receive ,i.ny nonpublic in·
klrmatioo regarding
Douglas Aircraft from Mer·
rill Lynch which was not
available to us from other
sources."
According to the SEC,
Merrill Lynch was helping
Douglas Aircraft Co.
prepare a bond ilsue when it
learned the big planebuild·
er's earnings, contrat)' to
earlier optimistic ·reports,
were in bad sha~. The SEC version Of vthat
followed is that this word
passed through the Merrill'
Lynch personnel to a chOlt!tl'
few investors 'and that im-
mediately thereafter these
began to sell oil their
holdings in Douglas in tbe'
expectation that its value
was about to drop.
Meanwhile, the regulatory
agency said, other Douglas
shareowners were left in the
dark -indeed, M:eni ll
Lynch continued to sell
Douglas to anyone who
wanted to buy, the SEC
said.
The dumping lasted half a
week -until June 24, when
Douglu publicly announcod
it might be faced with a no-
profit Y""'·
0ur1na ~ unloadiJli, the
SEC . said, the l>rge Jn.
vestdri it hais ctted cleared
their p<rilolJoe bi 190,000
shares of the unwanted
stock. All informed 1ooree
said these shares 1old for
some $4..5 mllli"on more than
they would h~ brou&bt if
traded at the prict tbat
prevailed June 29.
To reward Merrill Lynch
for sharing the secret witti
them, the SEC said, the
favored cU8tomers, when
making 1Ubseque.nt large
tr.ansactioos with o t h e r firm•. ""'11d ditt<t !hot th•
eomrpisSione be split, part
going to Merrill Lynch.
In Wall Street parlance,
~s is a "give Up." a prac·
tice the SEC has already
dnwn a bead on in hearings
It opened in July. Th< New
York StoCk Exchan.g e ,
formerly a defender of give
ups, announced recently it
was prepared to see them
banned.
Merrill Lynch personnel
cited were Winthrop Lenz,
chairman of the executive
committee; Gillette K .
Martin, senior vice presi-
dent; seven vice presidents
and five salesmen.
. --
AU Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Throvgh Sotvrdoy
AL!t~!!~TYlf J
THRU SATURDAY ONLY •••
REDUCED!
' Extra big savings on Kodak
color film with processing!
Ulla YOUR
EN NEY
CHARGE
ACCOUN'I:
TOC>j>VI
Low price includes developing
ICOIW:• CBI '115-20 ... leg. 3.l9 2.89 .......... NOW
llOl>*al : 1 DM .. lf ._ .... 3.tt 3.19 --·· 51) ft. NOW
ICICXlo\01 OM! lfolDOOI .... .... 3.49 3.19 --•-S>fl. NOW
llXll'O•Ofil lnltanalil \'26-a.,. 3.19 2.89 ~--NQW
KCllACIEC .. UR I .... .... 3.'9 3.59 •-S>fl. NOW
£DQllrCQlCll no -l2 big ooiot a.,. l.99 3.59 ,,_ NOW
~ )27 -J2 big ...... RflJ. 3.99 3.59 ,.... NOW
~ ............ ~-.... 3.99 3.59 '2bigeolor.,... NOW
IODACOLCI ._~ 'f26-llecJ. 6.29 5.5~· 2) big oolot prints NOW
·----
--
All Penney Stores Open Eve~ Night Monday Through Saturday
p "·
'
• TH .RU SAT. ONLY!
•
I
Penneys one coat latex paint
has the second coat built-in! • I
PENNCRAFT0 ONE
COAT GUARANTEE
If on• 901lon ef ready
Mixed PteMium QvalityOM
coat lnlericw er btedor le-
tex 1aHs to cover up to 450
one coat wh•n u1ed 01 di·
~eel, we will fulnish frff
er If you prefer, reful'ld
complete ,...encnie price.
Save! Penncraf~
Premium exterior
latex house paint
GuarantMd lo C<Wtr all surfaces in one coat. He ""'"'
ping or streaking, dries In only 30 minutes lo a honl
mat fin ish. Easy clean·upl Tooh and honcfs _.ii cleoa
In soap and water. c...,. wood, stucco, mcuanry, ..._,
too and alumlnllm. Choose from 11 pre-mlxocl ealan •
32 addltlonal shades mlxocl from tho latu tint ba&
Reg. 8.49 gallon
NowS.88
U8£YDUR
EN NEV
CHARGE
ACCOUNT
TDDAYI
p__,.-Pr-ium interior lat.x point gi-I -
proleulonal r.ultd Produces .a llllOOlh finish In only
20 ml-, leaves-no pointy odor. Docorator eolors.
Reg. 6.98 gallon
NOW4.77
Premium M111j.glou latex enamel provides I '""' ....
erao• ... retains a soft satin finish that won't dull even
after repeated washings. Decorator colors.
Reg. 2.79 quart
NOWl.99
Big savings on paint sprayers!
Poy 11 llltle 11 $5 I* ....ti
Portable diaphragm tprayer 11 tho
perftct light duty sprayer fer home
or hobby. Use for pointing, -iii-
proofing, spraying garden.
Reg. 34.98
NOW 29.99
~p tank point sprayer has 12
gal. capacity, 15 It. air ti-, nre
chuck and spray gun. Can alio
be used for inflating, greasing,
air cleaning .
Reg. 129.98
NOW '109
NO DOWN PAT#lllllT ... USI PINNM TIMI PATMINT PlANI
Poy 11 lllllo 11 $7 ,_ -
NEWPORT BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH NE WPORT BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH
asltion lsl.nd ]\ Hun tingto e.nter . I Fashion Isl end I • (Huntington Con ter ) 6--~~~~~~--l~~~-l"'--~~~~~'~~~~~~~~~_:__~~~-:-~~~~~·I~~~~....!'~'
' -
I •
.... -
For.The
Record
' , •
Meeting~
Births
Wfftl'lllMM ,
Tue1d1y, .A119. 21, 11 :ft J.m~ tr••~
lire, Tr6•k Avt1n1111 tncl IHdt Bov-
1eYtnl
HunlltlffW!I IQCll
TllWlt'I" "'"'· t7, $:21 J,M,, IT!eodlctl
t ld, Wl lolM AW.
1:46 p.m., t!rvcturt llrt, IDl22 HtlDWt
UM
11:'3 P.m,, Wflh d_,,, Silfl!nfdt'-
Slrnt 111d aoi .. Awn"' .........
T11Hd1,, Aut. ''· •:10 '·"'·• nre 1 ... vnlltlllon. Driftwood tnd COtlltlM ·--Cost• MIMI
Tufld,..,, Aug, '7, f :.'.n '·'"·• ftlte tltrm, 2lllO Htrbof l !Vll.
WfdMMtYr.Aut:.::n. l :U •~ .• ·reltM
ll~e, J701. tu~r ~l'(d,
DEATH NOTICES
BURNE1'!'
Mr1. IHsr. A. Burne.II. All9 N , GI 2060 NewPOrt l lVd., Cmi. Mnt.
O.te Df Jlulfl, AUIUlt ''· ivrvlvtd by IJOl'I,, 0 • • t Id Wltlltm •ncl 1t11 ..
sen ;t., Bumett1 two trwld1on1.
ltld!tnl I". •ncl 0.Ykl N-11 l11r-
Mll. OWlllel wrwlu tnd lntwnftffll,
l'rldty, t :JO PM. Wtrtf!llntfotr M ..
mori.1 P•rlc Mor11.>1rv •IMll CMpel. WJTIIEE
Jet11lilll M. Withee. Afl a. al :IG"6 Ceyklfl ltlifd, Cc.It Meq. Survived
by 11\IHltnd, Mr. WHUem w1me.. Serv-
ice•, ThurM11y, 12 Noon, W1v•rlel'
Cllurtll, wllll 1t111. Al!d,..w Andenon
olllclellnt. Interment, F1!rll1...., M•
mor1tl Ptrlc. Dl~ltd by Bdl ar ....
WIY Mortlltrv, Ill Brotd'Wt,, COlll ......
BALTL MORTUARIES
Corona de! Mar OR J.IM50
Colla Mesa llD f.W4
BELL BROADWA y
MORTUARY
111 Broadway, Co1ta Mua
u 8-3433
PILDA. Y BROTllEllS
Bootioflo• Valle1
Mortu1r1
179U Beacb 81\'11.
Huntington Beacll
w-m1
PACIFIC VIEW
l\IEMO!llAL POI
Cemelef1 • Momiarr
Cllapel
1111 Pae\flq V!t• llrhe
Ne..,..t _.., cal!fonla -PEEK Fi\MIL Y
COLONIAL FUNERAL
'ROME -·
t1111 ·11otA "'"·
We•lm-.• iftS
SMITH'S MORTUARY
~117MalaSI.
Butioflo• Bud!
LE MAI
M 11'Zi!TCIJJl'P MOllTtlARY
UI E. 17111 SI., Colla MUI ..... .
I • •
Laguna Biiis
·County Rejects
Center H~Q,ring
' ' ' . .
»1' JA.cK BROllACK
CM "" Dlltr '"" .....
&\NT.\ ANA.-,~~
"' rtCJP<l).11\'·h-.SO(Gll tlie
Jl!"POlld 1b0ppln1 center In ~•ni 0 &rMn'. btlt't IOD8 of Laiunf Hllll ·IAlll\lw°W,.ij
'WU r<}ec:t..d by ~
supervison Tutaday ••
After $1 l\Our'1 dileuuioa
supervisors apprpwd a 100-
liOll by -BuperVllor WDl1aJil
J. Ph11lips lbal Ille • .,..
change be 1ef~ed lo .U>t
county ll.•hl Deporji
ment to be studied In cori-
·nect.i<ll'I with tile ab:-year
cliear zooe agreement
between Ross Cortese and
· lbe U.S. Marli>es. foot wide &rffll belt and tl1'!
Just two wetkt a&o the two 506-foot slz'~ oo each
supervls<n turned down tho lllde.
pr.po,.d' -· I<> .Uow a '!be . Agr<,..<ai· Oil ale •h!>Pl>in«· C9D1llf •I, 1!1e ,Ip-11r1PI ,.... lor.1.tlx year1 and
tl!raection of !;;I Toro Ro.id •l!Pim next nbruvy. '!be
and . M:oultod Pirkway. M¢oes served notlce Aug.
'lbe . cotnmerclal ·cp1lz'lct 14 that they, wanted. tbe
would exteqd into ooe of tht · agreement renewed.
lwo 500-fool wide 11rip1 '!be supervilora ncosni>-
eetabU.hed oo ellber &Ide ol ed -if eon. .. and the
the creen belt. 'lbe Marines Marlnee cQl\ld not reocb ..,
mounted a fU11 ICU! attack acreement on the extendon
agaat the rezone on Aug. a decision would be up to
H. 1hem lhrouat> lheir .-.OI
Attorney Dennis of!:t'.>Dng.
'C a r p e n t er repreaented 'Iberefore, they Mid, the
Cortese fn the r~earlne at-two subject! 1bould be
tempt claJming' the backln& · studied u one.
of all restdenta of Laguna Planes llll"'Olchlnl Ibo El mu., service clube and Toro Manne alr 11r!p are
other groops. only 870 to 730 feet above
After long negotiations 1n ground u they pa11 over
1963, Oonese and t be Leilure World. 'The clear
Marinea re&c.iied an agree. r.one cuts throu&h the mid·
meat setting aside the 2,000-dle of the development.
MWD Joins Efforts
~e~~=.~~ ~~~~~.~~!lm
ing .agency has joined the Novmeber.
battle against the con. The Metropolitan W·ater
tfiversial 'Vata:«i Amend-District bu forwarded to
ment appearing on the other govermnentlll agen·
$1 Million . . . .
Suit Faces ._,._.,.
Hospital
SANTA. . ANA i-A. $1
million claim:. has been filed
against Orange l:ounly and
lbe Orange Cowll)I Medical
Center by a· man who claims
he is partially paralyud
after treatment at t h e
center.
H Uber! R. Hinds, of 224 N.
Holly St., Orange, states he
was brought to the medical
center after a Gardert Grove
Freeway accident Sept. 16.
1967.
DEATH NOTICES
HERRING
Ct cn Hl!t'l"lnt. 211 E. lflll SI., 'Cos ..
Mite. s.trvlces Pftldl..,. Btll BrOMJ.
... , Morlll1rv, no &rotdw1v, c111111 ...M.
WALU
Olllrtn I!, Wtlh . .51M1 lie Anll Ori,..,
c~ 0e1 Mir. Suf\ltft'll "' wti.,
Alln ; hu~ltn, Mr1. \ Jdllt Mlliir,
Tucsan, 1nc1 Mn. Mvror1 Hlwi.v,
Mlnneict1; 1lslff, Ellltl Qufrwl. Mlcfl.
l91n1 11 1r1noklllldrffl 11111 • lll!lf.
ortnck1111drtn. Senk.ti .w111 bl Mid
Fr1d1y, ""U.Ull JO, 11 AM, ,ttllk
Vltw Cht11tl, Wflh Dr.,PtiUl!p G, Mur-c
rtY 11"1d1tl1>11. Entombment, '•tlf'k
Vltw Mtmor!1I Ptrlc. l"tn'lllY IV9ttslw
"'-wlslllnt 11 "''k' rnemorl1I c-.. tttb\ltlons, PltlH (lltllrlbult ti It.
Amerlct!I Cinar Sod1ty,
POULSON Brvu wm1am Pavl11111. m Ftmlttf,
c~ '"' Mtor. ''""" •••'I ""'· II In Vle1Nfn. Slltvlv.cl "' ~r,
Audl1!Y "-•• Ctrdwi Oel Mlri tleop.
t1111tt", Jl""9 Mcrcn, C-Ml Mtri
lllllol•, Gloor" w. ~1-. Httr v ... 1.,
tlstel'I. Cltudl• tlMll JuU1n1111 tint~, Er1c:1 ,,.. .. ,..., 1r....,rtn11i, Mr.
1nd Mn, Clllrlft H. Ktrr, COl'OIM
de! Mir. Grt,..tklt 1erv1cn win bl
Pleld TloUrtdl'f', J PM, Pec:lflc View Mtmorltl• Ptr\:, w1t11 Dr\ Pllllllp Q, MurrtY Dfllc1tlfnt. DIActed l" ,._
cllk VJorw Mortutrv.
RENNER
...... rloril EllHI 11;...,.,,-1117 F.-.nkfo!1,
Huntt"'tcrn Bffd'I. SunlvM lor -tnll. Mr. tncl Mn.. Gt«ft 0. It..,_
Mr/ two """""-'"-" ·It. , ... E•
-It.. ·-· S«Ykn. ""'""'· 11 AM. Smi.tlt a...-1. ln9-""'11t, w .. ""'1n1"' Mttnor .. , ,,..._ Dtr'ldlll
bV Smlltls Morllltrv. '•" tNnof Q-Df Jeb'1 ~ten.
SANCHEZ
leltoflof lif. Slnclwl, 21• f . 21M11 St,.
kn.ti A... Su"""" lor .... J°"" o~ O•n. r...,. Incl fo*l'Plll dtllllfl.
ltn, ""'"' I . YMrrt. , tt-i. Or-1111ff1 ,,,,_, ·Otr. lt.tinllru. It•
•rv. TI!ut'Mlv. ' '""' 'Mii ''"'"" tateni.t 11-.t "'91MI ltMUIMI
Mau. l'rlN'I', ' AM. ow Uh .. fflt PllW Ctllellc Olwch. ltnll -· '11NGLEY
OMJll C n.IW. Atl 74. flt llllM
cies a re:;olution bitterly at·
tack.ins the initiative, which
would amend California'•
constltution to limit some
-.. and moot h<r·
rowiD& polfers. ·
Specifically, pa-p of.
the Wat.rtoo Am<ndmfllt
would pr!vent ale ol ritoat
of 111• rema!nlni ' 11 5
million in MWD b o n d 1
recently approved by a 1-1
voter majority.
Sale of Ule remantng
bonds is .estenUal 1o build
the more than 300 miles of
new tunnels and pipellDes tc
bring wra.ter aouth ht the
next few ye~. says the
MWD.
"The ambiguily of tile
language of. the amendment
might even Impair the abill· tr of the slate to finance
timely compleUon of the
facilities to bring water
from 11le SacrarntJDtoo.San
Joaquin Delta to poiDll
wbere the dlatrict will take
dellve.ry,,, MWD official!
said.
Virtually every dty and
laxing ageocy m tbe slate
has urged defeat of the
Watson Amendment on
grounds lt ""1 bring flnao-
cial chaos to tbe ! 1tate an4:I
faovorltism-to large ccr·
Pot"atloo• and -ldera.
'!be amendment, ·_.;!
for Loe Aogoles CounlY
Assessor PlaUp W at 1 o it.,.'
would eslabllsh -llmila· UOns on property tue1,
wbicb sounds attractive to
the average peraon.
Many :servicts in the ana
ol educatioo and wet!are
would be phased out over a
!lve·yeor period under IUCb
a · plan and funds !or Ibo
vtlally needed help -id
have to come from
ellev.ben.
Soldier Killed
ANAHEIM -'!be U.S.
Defense Departmenl loday
announced lbat U.S. Arm7 ~I. Scott P. HW}', ... of
Mrs . Myra B. Henry, of Z1S7
Vk:t«l.a Ave., Anaheim, hll
been t111ec1 In VI-com·
bal w. .. .... ~ a.ldl, Dtlt. ..
.. ftri; ...... _ "· lin"o'lWd .., -·----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;----IC9'1t R. Tlrllln', ~ Sffdll ~ ...... .,,...n•• ..,.....,, Albert J. TNJ.y, MIN11Ml•1
111~. 1111 Glentt. •-. llM Mlnftll ~. llllnoh. Strwkll, n.r.
t11y, ' l'M. Stitt Chl!Ml. ll21 •• Cotti H1111w..,, C.-•• Mtr, wllfl
All'lll'lc:tll l.ttllll'I '•' Im .mt .... Ms. I~, H.,.._ ll•I IMIMfltl
''"' a.ttr Mlrtvl ...... otrKtWa. LESCH ........... c. Lttdl. ..... lit .. ., It•-...... t-. ~ ~ W ~ Wlfttr W, l.ftdl1 .._. "'· ...,, "''m• •· •-......,..., Btldl1 fflllt' tit""' Mn. Mitt lftl'Y,
el L.IHll, lllll'IMI Mre. J-U-
el '"9c1n. '"'""' """" "'""" Mlf'ftf lflll 11\IM ll:w 1l1•ttt•111r ........
l'tof'ft, llUMlt. W rw l refllkftll«t!!. ,.,_... .,,._ .... bl ...... ,rw..,,
J ,."" WMl&lllf' Oii..... ~ . H111Mr lt"I Ml!Mrlll ,,,., O.,_
W WltkUtf 0..-MwtutM .....
TEETHING
PAIN?
F-?r.:! -w.:..~·: ••. "'• r."" ••
"
""''· 4n •• tiN nl JfO .. Q ~ rt.1f • •lsttw ---ar•·J•r
' . . .,, . ' " e . ' : : ~"'
FOR: THf .SCHOOL CROWD
,
a
a
Calling All Jr. Hi· Girli
{?-to the ~
TEEN-DIVIDUALIST' •
SHOW '-/rj
THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 2:00 P.M.
The ll'041dway Huntington Beoch
end Newport
• See your lri1na1 model!
• L..orn the loll f11hion foctsl
,.. ...
' . " .. " . ' . _.,
'
"
. ..
.... ' . '
' . '
, •
•
-, . '
'., .
WtdM...,, Aligloll 28, 1968 DAILY Pilar •
\
TIME JO '
CHOOSE
HAPPY, SNAPPY •
SCHOOL-BOUND
SHOES
r
Perky styles all th~ young
crowd love .•. made to
take plenty of hard wear
and come up smiling.
We'// fit them ex'pertly,
with the care growing
feet need.
BY STRIDE RITE®
•· Lori for girls in bl•ck •nCI f•ll colors;
12\/2·3'/i 12.50; ~-9 , 13.50
b. Gretchen, bluo end white oxford;
6-8, 10.50; B\/i-12, 12.00
c. Katrine for gi~s in blatk ·velv1t:
.12'f2.J1fi 13.00; '4-9, 14.00
BV: LAZY BONES®
' •
d. Hi ho, honey brown, and loll colo";
10-12, 10.00; 12'/i·4, 11.00; ~'h·B,
12.00
e. Trail f,bout, black ond whito or ell
while oxford; I 2'h·3, 11.50; '4-8, ' . 12.50
..,,,
BY YOUN'G CROWD •
.f. Poor Boy, in foll cOlors; S(ti.fZ,,1.00;
12\/2-4, 9.00.
Chlldran'1 Shoeo, 58
lfall and phone orden ucepl&
E
..
-~~~;f ~~~v _____________ ...,"'!"" ________________ '!l"'"..,.., __________ _,, ________ ,....,,......a
'
f!
.t• DAILV PnOT
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
N1111 IH6J
ClltTil'KAT'I OP .Vlltllll )H)'UC• 1'0 U•DrTOlt\
,l('TfTIOfll il&AMI. Of' •UUC 'nAtll,rll
'TM ""*' t11•>M -ctffllY '-.. OM-C9'c. 11•1 -1111t U.C.c.J
,INJ.MI • Ml-Ml .. N. Ca'll HW'll.. Notlct " """' ··-,.. ... cmrw. AaotllM tfKll. (•Iii.ma.. ........ tht fte-_, JElllltY •ELL.SMITH, Trv.ltr«,
.tltlwt flll" -of TIU! it:COND TIME ~ ....,. ....... ., .... 11 11(11 W. l.ittt, AllOUND, NO. J, $TOlll !'Oil MfN ...0 COl'9 Mtu, ~,., Ill Or•nt•• Stel1 of
""'' Mi. """ i. ~ "' "" 1o1io-c.aflltni.. ""' • 11111111: "•~i.r ~ .-..it 19
Your Money'• Worth
IIllH's Education OVER THE COUNTER
NASO Lltllnts r.t Tuosdoy, Aututl 21, IHI
,,.. "'-......... ,.... Ill fllll .... i.u .. ..,.0. '° IEVl?llfTT L BOTTS. Pl D tail d col l'flldefon Ii 11 !el ..... ; T,.....,.... ~ 111.1'1-.odtKt M •
lllcNrlll L. Swlftl, Jt .. ltl G...,..,..,llW, Utl W, lelw. C:O. .. MIM, c-IY 9' ans e e ---'-"-a..dl. C.llf. DrMtt, Slllt col Ollfornll, ....... 9lt SN A1b111 lkl IW AsllM llW Deiter Aut'U'f L IHI. Ttle ~ 19 bt frlMMrM b 10t.1ltd INDIJSTll1ALf ;!: 4i.. fl "r111kUn Lli. .... 33: • '214 _. ltldW1'11 I.. SWIM 11 IXll W. l•l<.w, Ccalt Mffl. ~ty ol ttLC:'i"•&•k U ~ '""",Amtrl<,•-•:i.l.5 ,l\ ~'-~IV. $1119 o1 C1ll1ot1111, Dr•tie• CllUfl"': Orllllff, SltN of ttlltor"lt, I •• e..nw11 11..-''" •• •• 0 , Ori Aut. I, IHI. .....,. mt, • Nol•'1' llk1 _,,. II <MtUlbtd 111 ,_,..I ~f:"!.1 lf(tr .I• Ji.i, mi:tl l'J,. I. ~ .__
Puflllr 111 •ncl ... Mkl S1•Jia, .. .._.,,, •.i AJI 1hdl • ,,.._, lbtw-_.,_ By SYLVIA PORTER otbef Alrtir,;"' r.••llhl i!li f• °1'~~,.l.J. IA ·~"' f,..,
.-... 11ucNin1 L swr,., Jr.~ 1o _. Miii .... ..,.., .... .,.11 s.tvl(.jl or reasons: Air fl(luta 1 I!" 1~ ~"'•'••'''•• ~· ~·~· r,',~ -19 e. ,... _._ w11oM. -11 si.r1oo1 a.u1ir.u ... _ .. Je1111:Y·s Full tducatlo11 from CASE-~V-CA.SE effort.! to ~.;,:h ..c ·"' 1~ .n. ~ .. :='::a:: .!'9.~=i:r I:~' t11111 ~L~:, =:: :/ o!.~.!..~·,,:~k';; kindergarten through coJ. see that potential dropouts ~111:1 ~iw llf , • t 111 t ::f'i:' tr~Pll.t ¥' i ~S:~'l 1111'\.'li,. (OFFICIAL SEAL) •llf!lflll9 .-.11y11 ~··c.'I A 2' ,,, ,. i, s tM 1~1\ Mii fY:, nr'\.!.-:• ,, ff~ ~
· ~~~;,H;:;::i : n:, ":~.":;1"""" wi!!" -~~= lege on the basis or "ability remain in ldlool: ~· E=:•.i l:111 ~ ,.:: , nrl!J'-= ;m f': ~lfrr;;!'T,.. 'f,m••. ~ U,i,~
Sl•lt qi C.llfornl• INI, ,1 IO:°' AJA.,, e. c. HAMPTON lo learn, not ability to pay": New Curricula (or ~r!!,1'& ~O.M n ~ 11r~ ft... t Vi N:rlonw~ 1'm jflt .. PubH•~~=~~:.:11 ~.1" ..,,1111, ~~~1tt.,N. ~1"":::,i:~'·s~.u:'"!i this is one startlingly cran-tec~cal Institutes and 5;~~~~~~1 1m 111 11 :.:ir,i. 1
1[ ~, '~~·1k1~~ ·" 'l: ~l ~!
' .. "1111 .... 11. 21 '"' Se••·~~ i~=:.. ~. ::1,:.:, !'.":': ,:, :_ dlose program which 1-iubert vocaUonal sebools to elve ~., c:f. '-~ ~ ~ ~ T::=i l':t..i': iW , ~:;:·~Iv•: •1\.1i. • ll,• ~, Ii,"'," 1 dttt ... 11Hc1 bv Tr•Mferor '°' ""' thr.. H. Humphrey will propose young poople "the skills A,n111u'''•!.~-" ,IO ~\Ii ~ JIKVI,' nMll ,.roc11 tAO ''" J• ,•~'M.1 Lift .u ~ ~ 4 LEGAL NOTICE ""'" 1t1t ""· .,., '-'"'· ~ """ tt ll l t'°" ·~. ~y c.11!1 s1
------::-:::::-----1 Oiied ... "'EU.:~~i~·L MITTS for the U.S. they need for the JObs of ...,~m:1~ (If,. ~~ "Vt " t:: ~al m... I"' !r.! ll. ~~.::,,,.coFl l.61 j},.. Zl,.. SW. Store Supe,..,uor
... Jt1tt Trtnlfltfft A call for a national policy t th th th "'l~"Airtl TN! """ t ft I Jlllf"IMI ..._,. ... ~ ;m M ,_Co M.. '} rR? 2~04
ca11TIJlltATli 01" •UllNl.SS. If. c. HAMPTON declaring al J. 0 u t war omorrow, ra er an e ::-.:i.:~r:'1J:"'W-1· '°Vt H::t£!i.... nti ff"' '1'4 =r:., t~ 1111 't... ·~ 'f~ Ted K1ovanick or Mls-P'ICTITIOUS NAMa P. 0 .... 1116 , li f S:kJllS Of yesterday"; :: .. re, ~~Ill I. !i f'~ Ill OfQ r iM !l1l"'1m"' fl 1f:llj~ftr:i '.• .m '4'4 ,,,,., V j b b Tiit 11..,tf"lltlled doll, etl111~ 1111 l1c''""s' ...... ,"'-lorotl .. TIMS against "the 3 eti force 0 _ Remedial education In• Audfil r om: I _, l I T= Coo:lo ~ "'~" 1,_ U t1 mt, & Si On ie 0 RS CCh &p. •.. -,. 1 tlull~ it IU l~v. :>t -•· • t'gnorance" j St 0 •• A • '"' 10 1-...... I ~ """ ~tr.: I• •• • ~ ' led . f ;.:;;, ,111tor111,, uMw 1111 11ct111oo1 1orm Mntl!td °"''* cot11 r111w P11111. u 11 ur .,_... stitutes to prepare ..;'ted but .~ l!r.<,.:~ 21· ;r,;cq... 1,_r,..1 111fwj .... .... J>O!.R supervisor o
,,_ o1 POOOl.E ,.UFf 11111 11111 Mid Autual 2f, Ifft • 14UI. tionaJ policy declares all·OUt d ti aJ1 di db"' ed llr1'1H HIM Pri.,,n ff~ 3'\li Tri~~.» ii.. lltt "~:.::: T".h LI: • 15~ rJS ! Alpha Beta's neW SUp-llrrn 11 CGmPOMd o1 ""tc11ow1"'""""' war agtinst the alien forct e uca on Y sa vantag 111v11" M1rkt1• .• 1~ l"' V.ldti r.~ 32t ~~-::' ffl'":~,1M '!'.II 1,,, 1\, k . U . .1
c;e1<11t N&"-. "'° c·-AW:.,'" Tum. of any would-ht foreign in-11~~1'."1':.i:.,;,:.,~~ ~~ ~t" '4 u':r::' Gii,j 1oll 11~ 1fv. 11 hi; \.,..E~STL!illN aANKS Park, Irvine. Klova-:"'!:-""T.:~:'" 11111 •rid •t•<;t o1 r11t1c1ent1, ___ LE __ G_A_L __ N_O_TI_CE ___ -1 students for college; :::i;v 12"ouns .• ~11' ~ ~ !~1n1,.; \~!?'lo ~1y, 1f Vi w••,•,•, m,,~!~v,,1,.1 ,3~ F' ~ ennar et in ru vers1 Y
•0•,; .. ~e1:,·,',::11., iH• •• ~•,','~·. ',•ou",,'•.•T,••,•,, vader; this Is the caU t:DUCATJONAL centers !fifir;'1'?1 Proc:11<1urn nt: ~ l.~ &glf "i."'.:'' ·• i.m ~ '13~ 2~~t'r~~·'c121~ ~Ht ~'.lo ~~ nick , 24, began as a box .. "' Humphrey would issue if he 1·n each ol our ~ sl"les to eon....., ,.,rr;r.,. unn. 211 210'" U1111 2:"-11M111 lA ·~ ,•,.,,... •'h thtnl a..nk H j• •~ 6''4 .. bo 1· th s ta An Goldie NI~ STATa OP' CALIFORNIA "Oil .N .. &ollOll C'°llil m ~ i.t '!: Ultrt Jll•lt L•l'llll m "" !E' 111 N8 Chi .'M "° .1(1~) .-1,1, Y 3 e 8Il a STATE OF (llLIFOllN1.... TNE COUNTY 01' 01t.-.NGlf were in tht White House. d l d . d aow. Pl l U • ~ ...Wit \lid c...... 1t 20 1'1'1 ' H I ti~ Cft ) st SIVi SI store i'n 1962. Sm' ce then ORANGE COUNTY : NI. ""'"'' eve op a~ pr 0 v ! e 1rlo':Lrv 'r!':d.-... VK~ olnou1 s 114 S\li f :::, N:I Clly 1... ,,"' l!S" 1~\t
l'ubllc In Ind !or Mid Sl•lt. pers-11'1 SAOl.Eill, 0110t1ltd. JT IS with good reason ' Bllff~I Inc .N il "' tilt'/' ••. 71 lll'o 1l"' lll'o Mftl H•llO~tr TIU' 2.20 '3\lo '4\~ °"' Auv1111 1. 1,.., Mio~ me. • JW••..., rsi.19 t1 MA11G111tET POWELL creative, Jn nova t 1 v t trvn1Wl'11 or1111 11 ~ ' ~· vv1c.v oG .... co ' <M ' Fr1M;1!n NII 8~ T '·10 w.. 35 he has worked at stores
.i•Pf•red Go1<1le Nenn11 kNIWn to M• to NOTIC:E is HE•Eav GIVEN ,., TM teaching tools and methods; C•11;-;'!."l. f 1.,., ~ 14 v11r~ c JI 1~ 11 i•Yt :ze•~ Gutr '·• 1211 l~'r't ''°"" in Fourrtain Valley,
'° "" wltftln IMfrU<fltnl •rid •d<nowlt<lll· 11>111 •" ""o"' h•Vin9 ci.1m1 ... 1"sl ""' one Of the • ' F 0 u n di D g " w ~ c;~·lc 1 JG """' Vlv1 .... vrc~ 27 Afl-llaril! I 251~ 2~\~ Westminster an u "' ,,,. ",_ """'°'' n1m1 11 &UtlKtlbed crt<11tors of IM i11ov1 Nmed dtceden! that Humphrey ls known a• -A minimum of 251:1 l P:itil' i:,.i.,111 .,., Y.!W. c .. ' :' ~· ft'~ J N• a of ,:~STEltN aAN\i!'~ v d So th
"' 111e txKut.<1 ,... """· Mid deOICl9"' .,. rt<1111rte1 '° 1111 "*"· Fathers of Federal •'d to Federally subsidized centers :rn ..... ' 1r ,;!; IA · "" "" i" w-11 ., 1.JO fr' I:: ~ ~"rlY ,1: *~ :; ~ •• ~ Laguna.
IOlf!chl su~ E. D•vlt C:llj'11e"'::i~ ":i::'~n:~i:e e=~ ... of advanced study in high ::'T~ /:,i"° fk f: l"" ::~:;4fft..!. .u ia ~ 22 ~ ol Tak ol ciil Jl\11 lJ •• --~----------Notrrv Public. C1Ulomlto Of IO 11r•1111t !hem wl111 lllt l'IK'tntrv education." During bi 8 school and college educ.a-:~ "'tl:r'Q: ~f. j~ jfi! ~ ~:~ HJl~.U M ll'Ai lW. tnll11tlt \r.11...., 1: .20 11 11" r ~~~':.";:-'~2,'~~· In voue1>tr1.,10 "" 11n0trsltned 11 ir.1 ottri tenure in the Senate, he Uon; ~~~rv l:V~'Jrn, ~ :... v. =~:iMi~~Jw:C1_. 31 ll11o ~?? ?%~~~~;~~ 1 61 ~.',~ ~'" mt Mv eommiu1.,., E••tres of 1rvt:1o , Gr1v, WhYt• "' H1rr1son, · sponsored m ore than 20 1 ed 't ~ , 1 1 "'" vi.. Vi w.1111 11111u~r.s t Mo t ldtlltv ll•nk .79 1ll" " H F • J e Tl ltXI lorlltV1', 301 E••I Color.00 lllud.. pt' e f . l . I u -mprov commun1 y ~~~"1!'<11 llltfll u u 3 West 811'. " Corp ,"' 2111 I'll Finl lllflCOl'ocit1llon. •lt"' 1 l\ 11111 ome ·~s , ,,, ........ O •-'• total 0 ,1,, Piiot. P•Mdnwo. c.111om11. t11o1. ....,lcti 11 n.. cc s o ma]or eg1s a on . colleges which "meet the 'ifu"-1 A• 2't\& 2714 ~" w.,.,. p 11~ne .ll 21 " n11i Fini Se<urtl'I' cl '·'° :u » .a.i. .1..1.J u .,_ ' .... NI IJ0.41 pl&c1 Ill MIMn ol IM undlll'ti9M<I In 111 to 'd A I • ed tl al s;1r1rtr1J tit 1 ·'' Miii ~ Wnflll 11 A U .t.m 12\lo Gtltw•r Naf II • u M~ ~
A1111uil ,, 1.f. 21, "· 1 ::=1."=-7'~\~'':x '!o!,';' ... ~::~: i: :1~~ sy~em.mH~ c:r~udl~c~e~~lls legitimate needs" Of those ~0·:1·~3"'n•m~~.. io~ J~ $ :::r.-.rt. ~rm•M n .... ~ Rt; tTt:',J,llN~fllke-.24 21\t ·1:: ·;~
LEGAL NOTICE p11bllatfon ol lhll noll<;t. that "my first Sentate vote not ready for a four-year s~rJr.:Lf'111 J~ 71~ 261'1 "l'Y.t'l:"'l~r Fr1lght :1\.\ :1~ l!l'J t~~'~!~"e~'*.Sl ~i.,. 11'/Z H\4 To Me1·ge ---'----,-c-o=-------1 Dtled Au11u1f 2, 1961 college; ~ornPVter Equl""'t l~ 11~ BVt Y'ut11o 111111111 n'Ao 14Vo 2...,. ~Pie N•t LA 1.781 '1V. O'N '11/o
C••T'"'t";:1:: i u,.N&.ss, ~~:rn"o.=~r~*'s':~:rrid in 1949 was on Federal aid ~= :~ ... ~~ .m 2j 21™ , r;~ ·~~;Is " .JO ,n: lnt 1~11l S::~i1~~s~~~tl'~1t l1'11t ~1"" riv. l'IC?tTIOUI NAME Co-ex~lotl ol fM Wiii ti to education." As Viet presi· "T\IAGl\'ET CEl\'TERS ~r-• Ttcll 4\lt '"' ZJont Ulll'I •nrN" 10..,, 11\11 101'1 Slltt!'f N•T 15-. 7 ~'\lo 1 An exchange of stock will Tl>e undersl1Md dctl ctrllf¥ I'll II con· Ille •bcwt MIMCI dtCMlll dent. he has tied his name -ASA Cot11 l\Y, lit 'm SA~bJ;11t1\.~"N 8~1°'N rti'r'fo1·'l°" -if~ ~tz ~~ give National Environment ~vtllnt 1 blr..lnets 11 lll1 l!•th Slr"9!, llltYDOLP, OllAY, Of educational fXCellence" m'l: ~~...!:·~ l\.,~ 1'111 lsy, Alfllf S&l Ulll'I .U 15 U 1"" V•ll..,.1NB Pi-n1.".IV5 22 221'1 22 Corp, possession of Republic NN-•••"' Be•cl'I c111twnl•, "'"""' "" 11c-wHVTt: & HA11111soN wit h unmistak<.ble en· to attract economic and 1n1~11 ·'° 21 21>A It 11111'1\0ftt s1v ., Ln 21 21 2'11.1'1 weu1 F•reo 111nk001.•,,, ~ ~ 5C\'< 11110u1 11•m n•rnt ot CERTIFIED Hl e111 c • ..,. ... ••M. thusiasm l 0 educational u-cl'lldc. Print .IO Ja~ ,.u Jolumbt• U.L ' 1-lomes Corp., builders ol a
'.,,RPR•sEs 1ncr lh•I Mid 111m 11 ,. ... ...., C1Nfo•nl9, t1111 popu!-atlon growth to areaa • Fl11e1Kt ·'° ,.,,.. 1rv. ' '"'i'•'>I• .s.&L,L'l_~ • >,•~ .J... .-.cF-w•1a sw cv••.1111 ,~ '' · est Co M .. -, , , , n• •••• causes 1(1111 E1ectron1a 21~ n 1v. t¥J '•bit -1. on... u -... '1S\ll Am 111t Rub"'·~ -1:it 130 tract m w st.a esa, ~ o1 !ht 1o11ow1n. ""on, ..,..,.e ' : 1 ' ..--· where it jg desired. D "" 11"° 1~ 111\iii 1r11 fin o1 west , 151'1 16\'i 1' 11r.,.,..Mll~f1lr " 211u 112 16 n Mme In lwll 1nd pi.« Ill reslder>tt II •• An-~, ,., C.IEXKll!Ors Now he w ts t g f I Olv ... M lllC ~ ru. "" First ~-n flMft I~ 171(o 1~ Arlin's o.t CY•~ '6 1'5 11'2 spokesmen ror the two firms follow" Pllbllolltd OrutVt c.,.., 011tv 1111ot. an O O ar, -The 12-month u1e of our ~, ... Inc p1 1.ts 1SVt ,,.,.. 1sv. Flrsl vmv Coro • 121'1 nli 2ll 8"L OoUcel cvO'>sn nt m -·--..1 l w1L1.1AM 11u1trc:I!, 7J64 L1"«11n. A111111111. 1.f. 21. 21, !NI 1:i.1~ (ar beyond anything we've ~c bill! . nd 1"1lu•1 w1r .1111 11\li 12'\lo 111' Firs '"'""I" 4¥1. fi: s e-nu A1rt1,,., S'4•" 1.ii l~ annvw.a.~ y. ~ ... ""im. C•llloml•. d ......, on pnmary a 11 °',. • 2' ~ 1"' H~nt Fin .10 2J n y111 21111i;m1 CY 5\'I 1 7• no Republic h 0 m e s con-
011td .1.utu11 ,., lHI LEGAL NOTICE ever one - and he ii not secondary school (acllitit1 IU::;!~'r: t -A"" n3Yt 514 fiv ... \t!'wFfn Le..;: 31 31~ ~,., E~~!n °~T..ir~'f1 1}~ 1}i centrates 0 r ilcling single
s1ttt Qf c.fi~l~°"~~!rc:~.,..""tv : Pa-niy,. daunted by the cost. to end Ul unconscionable ~~1~ 1..-~ ~~ :PY. ri"' c.,,,U1J'RA~cl!!: st~~ 1 ._ ~~~'~,:~-.:., 1f. • 1~ family residences such as o..·,..11111111 20, lHI. Olfc<'• rne,, NOt•rv "''''' ,, ,,,0,,0., This year, the Federal waste ~tries 1714 11 1~ Ae!M Lii• .w. .12, \'I •• wn1 F -)•1o11t '° ,~.
' ' • '. . • • ttc 1,. w. ~ 1111i Arn Gt11 Ins .«1 20 20'.I! flA Ftd M•rt CY •• n 130 t•--e coostructed locally on Pvbnc 1n '"" tor "'d 11 • ""0"' su .. 5111011 cou1t' 011 THI! government ls 1.nvesting Humphrey has an even "'e 1 :JOYo. 31v. :aol'I Arner Gelll!r111.m"' l'* "" i1v. FMC corp cvl"'"' ,'° •ss •llR> ' .,.,...,ed WILLIAM IUll:KE k!'IOWn 19 ,,,. STIT5 0, CALlfOllN1A fOll: al t '13 billi" ltcll'tll Ctp l6\la 27 ~ "m Hirt Lift IM -~ ~ 11~ °"' Fruetwoul Tr cvq16 135 lJS a state-wide basis, while the lo be !hi ~ ...no.. "'"" Is •tltlK•lb-THIE COUNTY 01" Oii.ANGE mos • on in all longer list of proposals (It iJ Itel,,., c. Mlmll,11$ ~1 n • Am Hirt l.lfe '"' .10 111/o 11~ 11 Gib Ffo Cal CY~""''' 116 If.I 120 Id 111 the within 1n11rvrnen1 111C1 N• . .-. .. osu forms of educati'on more irmtr 11"" 2._ 1J"' 14'11 uv. Arll<>fl•~• 1111 co 1.20 3JV. 3' 3''1o Holl'I' su('•r cv-AMIJ 161 161 ohter firm is more diverse •
0 ~ v u11 ' .. ~ " than triple the le el of onl . F..:t Mart .50 1 iiv. 14'1.o v. BDl>~Vljlt sv1v•n L • '' ,.,. .. P•t wldr Au ~w "" • •• .. N at i onal Environment • e11;,,.,.1tdttd he tie• txl!Cllled 1111 Mme. ••••• • •••ttUR '· 0, •CK, ,, • also with good reason that 1rr11111ton co•P llV. :wv. I"' aenetlci.I Sid Co"'•• ",',v, I!,, 1,••~ M•u•J..~oe Cle• cv,:\01sll f! 79 tt
·-,: .• ,, , ,,~--·• Dec""'"'· · v Y he calls h•mseU a "refugee "'!'•n .. S!F,11AG1 u 11 v.11111 ·1; '• 1"! C• ,,.,.. 21'.1\'.' ""' Pautt~ Pet ~16 1u ,'~!! 116 C . . 1 ed . 1 Not•..., ""'e-• """' NOTICE 1s HER£8Y GIVEN "" lhl four years ago, Yet, says fro "' l£:" s "'"!\ 20 " s2 1111-w .... rern 111~ .IO 13 moo nv. SMn Ml!1ubtlh1 cv6.,...17 95 .... 95 orp., lS 1nvo v in rea Pr1nc11111 OlllCll. '" cl'fdllwl o1 lhl abol<e 111mtd dectdlnt m the the classroom") Flr11 ton orp, · ., 61 1111 hiM cor11 1..51:1 45111 ~ :JV' 'tnrllfv Mart CY .s. .:i 1n• " d 1 , h ~:~~°r:.'r!., Eulra. ,,..1 .11 "''°"' Nvtnt ei.1,.,. ~•1ns1""' llumphrey, "we still have a but the above is enough to ~~k..,~~.~.r.,f 1:~ ~~v. ~~· 1=~ ~li::i:1i:11 pf ~ ff"' »'r'I f!{~!1'~'u1: ~~11 ts " ,~t estate eve opmen.., ome Mid ~• ••t rtC1111r1c1 to 1111 them, long way to go." . 1 he . . . ,..,~., ""' 17•11 11\'o 1111o omblned 1n1 .40s 79 71 6"11 Trtn~ we11 PL 5169 7t n building. multiple residen• M•rch ~7• Hn wllh Ille llKllMIY 'IOUChers, '" N offlt11 s1gna t directions 1n .a Pr«rvcllvLtu ..40 7'A '"' 1 °"n Gtntr•I 1.:n ff 10 at'\lo W1al111 Mto •:W.d1 120 1!! l•H Pub!lllltd Ort"" Coesl 0•111 P11M,,, • -· <'·••. -· ,.,,_ -tll'""' -•rt, -' •> ,,. l !" 'o••lorJ 1-Coo 1.-.rn 15 16 15 Wt 11 l'•rJIO ~l/os 111 a •• ti.al hotJ..ln,,,. units, COn-.1.~ull 21, n •nd "-'!ember ~ 10 ";,6';.,1 th~;;;, wiih ... th•_,,;;;...;; whlch ht would move .as "':~ f.,...i ca 7v."" 1 mPlre G~,;,;r'k 7\'o ni. 7'Ai Wh •k ... co ~-11 11s IH 1e »..us
,,,.. VOUChlu. to !tie undtrsluitd 11 "" etflct WHAT'S MORE, to tht in-President. ••~~~Iner ':t; ~~ 1~ ,.:=: u=...iri~~ ·* !\'\lo fl"" ll" l'lrst P•rtlcl~.~~AL FUNDS valescent homes, as well as
GAL NOTICE ot ""' •llor.,..... Jtromc J. MtVO •l'ld calculable expense of tduca· ,1 Res .. rc11 C• 22..., 2'Vi l! F10.mv Cft? 2JV. 23'4 23 P•r•mount Mui Fd ·•:61 io.sa ·,:u insurance and finance con-
___ LE __ ~-.,,,------1~;:1~u~~:-L:!',.:::.~.1i.!:1~:!'~ tion on the basis Of "ability e:;ia~111~1'~1 ,. fil'J i'~ H"' ~l~1uA':'tl'i'1~~~~20 ~ ~,... ~ ~~:.~111 Mui Fd ~.~ \ij.¥& 1~.~ sulting. P_..., 9'0014, lll'hkl'I 1, ""' •!•ct of M1-of to learn" through college, HOW J\DGRT we pay for Tei 5 Pl 1 • 15'11 ,, 1E F11 th1 Lii• A11 JV! 3" :iv. c ... ,.1,.ICATIE OP' IUSIN~SS. !hi llndlrtltt'lfd In 111 matttrs oert•f"I"' H it'? How could just the COi· lbrcs In! m I~ -.im 11•m• ........ ~
,.1ctiTious MAM£ to 1n1 '''~'• o1 tald d1eec1'"'· w11111" 11~ Umphrey would £dd these 1 ..... e cost part o! It be met? G~~.coKf'~~ti'ii:tnt• ~ ~ .-:.., ~ct'rn:';·~~M!.~:, :;-'~~ ~ M~ :":~:.• •lier !ht 11rs1 P11bllc1lloo o1 1111• other massive costs: ... One area which Hum-&:,\~~. cT~ 1 • 11~ 111,, ,°t""
1111411on a..a., c.ll1orn11, vllde• "" fie-o.1ec1 """'1 2, 19111 -Teachel' s a I a r le s hr · b' Gv~,....~ Tech cv llf """ :zri. 21v. t1ilou• 11,m ... me o1 c .. H EOUIPMENT Au111 M. e1ack geared to ••e fact that thei.. P ey 1s pro mg would H_... Er>11ln co 1v. 7'1o 7'Ai co .. •nd 11111 Mid 11rm 11 torn-"' o1 E•tc111ti• "' 1t>1 wn1 of ui .. vastly liberalize s tu d en t ~r·~~~ ·'° ~I'> ~ ~l'o
_ toii-IM perlOM """'-' 111rne1 .,, tun TM '"°~' "'med deteot~t service "affects the future loans and gear the r•pay-t:l~',' "•'• '• ,,n :n l', •rid PllCH of r~ldellCI '" ., ll!lllOwl: JEllOMI! J. MA.VO..... more di cti th th k ""'"' Mo .... .. "' w Holfllouse, )O'l "" st .• Huit-MA11v1N M. cHe:s1110. re Y an e wor ment terms to the student's 1-1ou,,.•!!",F .. r11si l0., J,.;~ .l~ !Iner;.,., 911et1. c.11,, su w111 st.1h s""'· of any other profession"; ~ .,.. ,1,. 64,..
.1.. L Cl'lltdtn, 1.,.., s."'' ci.r• or-Sllltl "-blr nL A u . al 1 JM',St-collegt earnings. 1~=~~11_.. 1_,. ~" ! J7\~
de Aw., FO<Jft11ln 11111rv, Cllll. '-A1191ln, C•IMAI• 9"11 -1l3U'tln pre-schoo TraMlatlng th! inl ' ' llclll I Cht<TI 1(1 .. 13 o.1ec1 A11111t11 '· 1t111 Tti: nui 6174" program available to all s 0 your 1~tfn't11 :.~ p1 ,~. 11 TI R w Hom-M ""-"" '"' •~· hi!dr language and mine, wh<:t j•111-. .1.N1 ..... ·'° 31 " ll ... · 1. · c~ikllra Pub!llllld o''"°' Cot1t 01111 P11o1. c en from age 4 aod H 1rro1c1 Caro • 3lVi )2"" STATE OF c'111.iFoRNt,t,, A111u11 J, u, 21. 11. 1961 lllf-61 f ~• 1 umphrey is touching is the Jur~'""" Groc .2s ? .~ 1 ORAN GE couNTY! pre erc;irua treatment for jdea for a so-called Federal ~'.'1~t f;:j~' :i:_; "" :.Ji,. P!lic"~on,'.,J· :;-'-..~:.1:,e·.,:r:~, ____ LE __ G_A..,.L,,,N,.,.O_TI_C_E ____ 1 ~~~~~'!v ~~~~~er gecoott110entruol0f • • educational opportunity :::..i~ t~"' 1·,.. fl:Z ~= f!a Hn:"~o:rc: IAPJ :~: f~~ l!:n lt!t .-•'" 11. w. Holll'lou1t ~ .1.. L ,.,1.. wui. bank" Under this any stu-1C1nu1 El .. ..,, 2.2S 19'4 lMll l, -Tiie foli-lni .... lll"ff.1 Bo• 10.i11, . .i (hlldera k1'10W" "' -'° bt Ille ""°"' Cl •Tll'ICATE OP' IUllNass . • ~t= )!, I.DI ff ~ll:.... ttlrl -lled b'f 1 ...... , •• Group· """°'' Mmll 1r1 9Ubtcrtllld 111 !hi wlll'lfn ,.lcflll-flrm N•rnt LEGAL NOTICE dent at any family income I(:,..~ eJ!fdF~h1;i: n ~, .... lht O:i11on1r ll•tod-lM~k Ji::~l~ lnilrumeot •l'ld teknowltd&N llllV u-T'l'lt undlrslened c1ot1 htr•bv ctrlltvl------:-:c:=------level could borrow tht full K<I"' lrtilllt?_, .~. l! ~:I., of 1~~url~;": elect t:u 1g:n ocultlf 1111 Mm•, 11111 llt 11 tondll<llfl9 1 Nururw bu1!11ti1 l".)1"1 11<1 ftnwr~ • "" ttM ~ 1' hlth V•• Ptr t ot t 11 Cotlld•I s .. 11 ,, ~1" 1.em111, or•ner~. c.111<1rn11, ca11TIPICAT• o" 1usiHass. costs Of his college educa-~1111.._ cor11. 1·"° ~ .a ft "".:' ~'111111 Inv "'"" 1:21 ,:as IC•lhlfftl Grttll l/fld'r !hi flcttll11111 111"' MIM ol PICTI TIOU1 H.l.MI tion and rep hi d bt "Of·~, cvon 1S "' ~~ "' COU'ld 1'11'1 -n htel , .. n 27·'6 ~~.•,irv I Pvblle-Or•"" C•.. PORTEll'S TllOPICAl.S WHOLESALE l'l'le 11ndlral1ned don eerUty he Is °""' -ay S e t_,'~1,,..1ys . Sllo •'Ii S'li r.:d (bid~ or bouDlll lvtll 16·69 11·2• M ~ lnltlrl E~Plrll NURSERY •nO lhll Mid rrrm 11 COl't-ducU,,.•bull-•t1nns.it1B1r1>1r1, over a 40-year period after L.-.0 0~ co... :UV! n~ 1sll.cll w,-r:r~""~~n1tn ~t·~~-~ ~ lC. ~10 posed o1 lilt totlowln1 1>1rson, whole Founl•ln V11r.v, C1UfornJ1, Ullllfr lht nc-graduation, Ht WOUid do this lL!~1 1=, .1, M"" lWi h AWrdtetl 3.70 ,•.~. Ky~:Ti Ff1,;~~2·7, Publltl'ltdJ~.A!ll Ce.11 0111'1 Pllnl, name In full ll'ld pt•c• ol rtJ)deJ'l(t It ~~~:~,',".~ ... ~,·o· •• 'DESIGN AND b tr'b . . •YM .. Bowler . .a 11 ,~ 12 .-.dvl1~n 1.11 . ' .
• '' '. ''
... l9'1 llSHll 11 follows to-wll· " M AN Ind 11111 11ld Y con I Uting a fixed l.••~ J1I 2J :to! 24\'i Af!lll1!ed t.21 ',·!~ ~~~ ~~ ~·:i n·~
\lllltl • • '~.. l.!O w'. Port.,:, 1'lSl Lomllt, Or•nt•• l!rrn 11 CDrnllOt~ of Ifie l!lllowl"ll person, t f hi . l.el1uri1Grovjl -" C a 1111 Amil' l.U ,.., ' · LEGAL NOTICE C•lllo<nl•. WllDH ,..m. ln lull •nd PllCll of Fl!'SldtrKt :~:natge 0 "th' hia_nnual lfil· ~~·."ti~~ f~,~~" 1~1'. 1ff 111'1 !~(;~, lit t~ z~: ~~ ~:~ 1t~
wr""u my ri.nd 1hl• 9th div of AUii· l• ·~.·.'o""'v '"ENDER•NOT, •n'' ""'' ong WI s annua L s Sl"I 11 11 ""' Divin 11.s, 12.61 CUI Sl 23.!.115,46"
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• -. tax th MlcroO'r'ne • 2t 301'1 :t1\'t ·-Gtll'I In 1.13 CUI 52 12.62 13. T ""' 11'· · l••bt••· income to e govern-MaQMsvnc·MOvlol• i2 12"" 11'ii ~,;.; inv 10.:0210.01 tuaSl 10.1211.M NOTICI TO Clll!DITDllS lf'll W. "0'1'' Dtltd A1111u1t lt 1'68 ment MGT An!st•n« 9 ... 10 N Arn Miii \0." 11.45 Cui M 6.IU 7,.q SUPlllllOll: COUllT OP TM• STATE OF CAL1FOll N1A, LERo-f HE,NOERSHOT · Milllnkrodl Cl'llrn 1 '5"' 61\.'I 4S Am NGw Un•v•ll l(nlckb l ,IM 1.11 STATE OI' CALlfOllHIA l'Oll COUNTY O'F l.DS ANGEL.ES, U. Sla!t of C•llfornlt, l.OI Anttltl Co.mly: M•rall'lon ~urllltt 7l' 21111 21 Arn Pi< 7.13 1JO Knlct Gll'I ll.t214.U
'". C' •• 'T 0, ••••• I Oft thl1 "h dtv of llugu1t. A.O. lHI, ..._ ··-. >•. ,, .. ~--, , ,,,,.. S MtLttn I ' 31~ D :ln'I Mw:hor Gm!P" l.t•lntt 10.'6 11." ""'-'"' 1111 uoc1.,.1,Md N , "'" "" -....,.,.. ,,_ ·• A A prot.u>tl,_ for those Merc111n11 M LI"' 1 2!I '™ 1~ ''' t.t110.tl Lt• R.m 16." 11.112 ... ""'"6e ' ' 1 c lf"I' P11bllC In Ind fllr Nld S111t PtrlOlllflV "''" "" Mldllfl!f Ctotltl .20 1'U) 171" 1·-Grwll'I 14.'1 1•.JO Llblrtv 1,71 I.SCI E1l•I• ti EVELYN ELIIABETI4 PubliC "' tnd for Mid Covnrw •nd 51·~· •-red LEROY NENDElliHoT known who move into high income Mhl Pt! .311 IV, 7YI: '"" Inv 10-lf 11.17 L,,··. •, n. 4.•1 s.,. llEYNOLDS, OtcteMd. rulcllner lllertln. °""" tDll'lmls•IOM<t ltlll ID'"" 111 bt "",.,.Oii ""'°"'"'""'I• b k ts th MONrdl Me.-Sn"" .tll\(o ~ Fd l"v 11.5711.66 nv 1.33 •. 1 NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN 19 the fwet'fl. PtrtCll\lll'I' IPPl•red l.to W. iubs.crll>td to tilt within liulrumenl ll'ld raC e , ere WOuld be an M0trl1 Pr.on I 2~'11 ?WI ,.,,. .1.1socl•l<I 1.6' 1.11 Loomlt SIVIK Fdl: -·-· ·-·· ·--~ •• I •• ,. t' ll Mon'I"°" ICnlfdtlfl 1 2• 1'111 14'/t ••• H-·ohlon· C•"•d 1'.13 49.7] cttditc•1 ol lht tbcwt nuntd dee""""' "'' '~"" '" o ne 11'"50" IC-llOWled1t<I he t•tculed Ille llm•. Op !On ,a OWlng full repay-Mun:>hV P8C Mtr _50 23"6 24\o U'4 Fu.,,j'"11 a.ii.I •.3' CePll U,1013."'3 ttlat a\I PtflOn' havl~~ el1lm1 ID•ln1l ll!e "Nhost neme II &UbKrlbt<I lo !he wl!hl" (OFFICIAL SEAL) m.ent Of the debt, with m' ... ·~"·'""··' ." .• '!!!!", ,-~~ ~., li~ ,'.~'!:! • 1,"',l ','·.ll .. M.·.·.. ',',-!! •,•,.,H, utd dKtd•nl ,,.. re<>ulrtd lo Ille lllem, lnslrurnt11t, tnd 1dtnowt1<1ged lo mt .Mlr1•rtl C. Curll I '" ... -~··• ..., ,.., ....,. ... ,.,. w1111 tht n.cn..,.., vovc:i.er1, 1" tl'<I! o111ce 11111 "" e•tcultd 111<e Mme. Ncl•rv Pub1lc-C111tor"r' terest in I N -k• Eltc P 11'11o 111~ 1 !Kl CP 1:so 1'15 M•t Fllll 11.11 U.l., ol Int clerk ol Int •llaYe tnt!lltd C(!llr1, ot In Wllnt11 WN!teof, I h•Vt l'leteunta ltl Prlll(l"'"I Of11ct In ' a Ump SUM. N"°" Ellll r.a.E 1.10 24\, 25 l• Btbscn t'.39 1:3' Min Giii l,,4S ll.61
l1!l PftH'fll 1hern, ... 111i TM riece11•'1' "" """" •NI tffl•fd "" ofl!cl•I ... 1 l.OI llnttltl Counl'I' In effect all of ... would Nldlalion Fii• 1.60 .. 41\'o :It 151tH1 Rid 13.11 u.M Ml!I Tr 1•.ts 11.5) --> t ..., Nletson II( . .ii lJ l• 11 O "'lk 1..lO I 21'.1 IM~t U.O!l ll.O~ "°"cMrs, lo !hi U""etilvntod at mft "''ct Int d•v ind Yttr In 11111 ctrllllctlt 11rll Mv Cornmls.IOll E•PlrH become "StOCkhO)ders" t'n No Ctn! .-.lr11ntJ S JI.lo 5 8:_10',, t.12 t'.'7 Mathers :).11 2),11
ol R1>111n " lla<ldlnt. AHorMVI. 301 E11l lbol'e written, .Mire~ t, ttn ~o Cenl Alr Unit• 6\'o !: Broad S1 ls.:11661 McOoo 1?.~1 13.4~ OIT~e llVl"lle· llurb•nk, C•lllornlt, tl502. (OFFICIAL SEAL) Publl!lled Or•f!t• Co••I D•ll'f Pl,,,., the future financial potential Northwtll G•1 ,50 u 1m 1 &ullotl<. ,:)l 11:t1 Mid.I. Miii ;.56 l.H which 11 lhe plac• al tou1!neJ1 ti lh1 Lte !Mck Jr llutust 21, 21 •nd StPtombtt A, 11, f th 8fi•na(lum lllC .61)1; H 17 I g Fd 10.u 10." MooOV C• 1 ·'4 lt.61 unde<1t1n11<1 ln 111 m11,_,.. 1H1rl1lnl1141 fo Not•rv ,.~bile' _ Cllltornlt lNI l""""-0 our YOU • o~':on o Mt'l•I ,01SS ff~ ~ ff111 1n Gtn t.U lG.IO =ic:;;: r:u\~ ll.Of
"" l!llllt of Mid llKfdlfll, W!lhln llK Ptlll('J~·I otllet In !~;::========================:-Ormco c~ 1''" 1.·~ ~~ n,ri11~ 'tn ?Z:lf Grw111 1'.2fi IS.6! mor111'11 tller !lit lint 11ubllalion ol lhl1 l.et A""lei Cou"IJ' P1bll lrtw 2! :r •• •-7 7, 1,n ll'ICOfll 'ts ~l fll!llct •••c• "''' ' •••• ,..... P•c 111111!1 r,No i l\6 l 1•Plf Shr , .•• 12 G ln&Ur 1:t11 t.76 D "-' '' 1NI ..,.. • ' "'"'" Pie Eltctrcard I 12 1 tnl Shr 1 ,.,. ' Ml' Fd '°~27ft~ ••no 111!111 • :11.Jt Wnt Sid~ StrMI PtC ftr E•ll LI"" 2,CI .:Jl,lo "\4 ik "","!"I F,•1"'0,•·,··. M" o•• <.·" •'.tt llatblrl P•frlcl• Wl'lll9 l.• M .. 11 .. C11lf. tolG:S p GI ble Rob 13 \5V. " 1 Ill 1n " ., E•ecuttl• ol 1111 Wiii of .... ,-h Ptc ~~A~ '.ll'i' r.~ com Slk <'u 2'll Mui \hr1 21.2111.11
!lit abo~e ""'""' oectdtl\I ,--th ·nv K 1 OI C ·• • loll. ~ Grwll'I 1"n f76 Mui •ust 21~ 1. 'oc' ••• ' •• '..
Pub1sntd Ot•,,.,t C<>1tl DlllV PHol, ow r1 Ptc VtP 11 OfO llf,411, .J I I fDO if.I NEii MUI 1(n 11,71
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_ ' bo Pt G1~W1N<' 't ,.,v. ncarn '>< ,·-Nal WllC 11 5112 SJ Jiil E11.I 011'1 11...-llU'IUtl "' 1 ... -totem r ~. PllDll'IJ~ Mvr19•ot .. I~ S.~1•1 l. •""' Ntl Ind ll.33 ,,·,1 ... 19611 Ull)-61 P•rkvllw Gtm J:)6 3oWo )lU. tl'la"' GfiM.IP~ ' > 14 ••• , eurtltnk, C•llU ... 11." '---~~~~~===c---0 P•ultV Petn1ltllfl'I ~ 2•1'> nv; F11NI US6l},t\ N•I ..... ,., ,' Toi : 111 1 1q.110 1· pr,1t1on1 Mulllkllfl .60 :t.i 2+'16 B\11 Front 10:..5109.f.l NII Ste .S.r. A~u=:!e::W o~::~"~Glll Dilly Pllcl, N6T~~~!~R~S~~.?~AL5 ~ll~rP~rc?~m·j r~ ~ 1m ~~~~!1 1::liif:tt Bt~~ 1f:Il 1i:H
jl,vgu•t 1. u, 21, 21, ltl.I 1:J60.ll On !oeetemM• N~.2·~ •• 1e a'tlnd: e YOU ~~,v~,;,~PNM . ~~ ~~ ~ ~~ 1tH 1~! r~ ::~ ::~~
LEGAL NOTICE .... M., •I lhe IOVth (l•orlll '"''•~ct ol.... ar Rlch•ru-.13 """ ~ %1111 Grwlh 1.11 1.t4 5hx!I: t .ol.S lO.l'I Or1-e C-IY Cou11Must !" tti.t City ti Ro11Cr1tt Mia, .1S 1• 16'16 it\11 =I tld S.7l • .G~ 1,L•11 ",·" .... Rabtr11 CCMol ·'° 16'~ 1'4 llm riwlltl Fdt" ., ... ., . .n J1i1m '-nl1 AM, C1t1fornl•. ' Rabtr!IO!\. H M 1.20 ttv. l!l'A 14 tlP F• f.l.H 21.31 '*"""''"" 21.ll 1t.ll Clll~/:il,~!~· ,::.:, ·N~!:l!SI LOS11es~:2~iE~o11::J~~~ION ... HD =~~1~9l..er:cri.. !~= ~::? "" l~r.1 l': 1 lt:U ~= ~~ ~~i~ ~:lt ~~t:;~:E~:!:~t~~l~:~·,1: ~E:~ffi!~L'£:1(d~E~~~'.::3 when y I u borrow ia~~y'm4:~ 5: !: B: e~tfo~~;~iF1~~; fil~I 1lH !l* fi~·;~ ~11:8~:c~:~~~~w1= E~.77 ~r:E:~: :::: o'~~~~tcE~:?. i~~~~~~r.""~~ ~~ ;r~ ?~ ~Eri: ~:.:1 ltil ~01~,r ~.·ms :,,/;~ ,ii,:H 1~81 ~Ill nrm 11 comllOStd or 11'1~ lollCW· Ctri!Q•n!• bv rN""" of br•~cll ol dfrt•I~ ~e~ W"'ltl 2•V. 15'A 2•\.lo Concord 1.1 3t t'! " e ·"' · '' 1.,,, l>f•""'1•· WllOll fllfl'lll I" lull ,,,0 ob!ltalloo1 Hcured lftt~bv, Ml~ ot Stel 1•nll~V ShcPI I ?6\"1 11\~ ~Ill 1E Inv 1]:50 13:17 OPl>tMFll 1.4' ,,JI Pllcn cl rnldtof:I ~·• '' !Ollovts, fo.wll~ wh!dl w11 r~~~ Mtv U, !NI, •I Smttc COPt 20 Jl on1m '"V f.55 ,,117 ~to;:.,~ ~·lt ~·~~ ~~==:~.~J~'N%,, i wei:: ~·~';:."r~~ amo~~~.~°",T~T7~ P•:• ~: 0100 I y ~~& ~r 'II~;~!!:: Ei1: li~ lJ:?. SAOOLEI ACI( $0UfH, lNt. • °"" AllST A c 11.-v A 10N, ., Tl'UllN Air c,_.. YI n I 73 1 I -•llOfl, Ut Soul~ .. .,..,,, Orlw, "'111 M-11 •I Pvbllc WCIM lo ll'le ~"""' • West dtV"" M i':!! '1f: ~1:..~ l~.;~ ll n "'wtrl'f H1lll. C.lllM'fll• b!ddtr "' c11h. 111vlft1e In 1 • .,...111 mo111• o.c.,1:!,'r:· ::n t.00 Pl•n 1"" 1,.03 15.2' Dtl9cl """'~" t. 19111 ti "" U"''" St•ttl II 1111 11rne OI .. 1t. 01 Id SIW .l..M 'G ,ol•rf' s.•1 4.:M THE MCMICNAl!L CO., INC.. WI"'-! W1'11nl'I' 11 lo""'· -•• .. 10ll Ill' 0::W T~ tn ,_.. tlS P•kt Tit 2i.1211J1 • COl'"Potlllool ~·-· 1111 lnl9r11t conv.ved M 1 1 'f,.119~ '•ovld'fll 6.11 '-"'
Ir J. w. McMl<f\H\, '""l(lt" •nd -httd tl'r Mid """'" vfldt~ Mid Opemn· g g~~ 14,::i \6.2' ~:~ "~ 11.12 SAOOLElj1,CI( SOUTM. tNC,. ci.«I ol ltvtt, to. ffld lo 1IM lollowlnt E~ .. ~,t.HlrWl.,:.v,n Eovlt 1•.Mllll • CCN'llOf"tllon fs<rlbecl •-""'· lixllled In ttle Countv '" "'"' ~· 61411'" lly EnlQl 11. "1111, Pmldent ol Ot ..... S!~1t ol C111tom11, fO-w!I: G•~ I~ 1~ 1lj! rlll U'.SI 11:-0 STt.10: OF CALIFOR NIA 1 Lot lJ, In 8lodl n, °' '"-Flrtl "'d· N R ~ ~111 1,11 16 ,. MDIII l.t)1ft,j' COUlllY OF 011,ANGI!' ) II d!llofl lo N....--i Ntl;hll, It Mt '"IP t s '>eC "'6 t':ia 1~~ ... 1 ~.~ t I .,., A!Mu~I ,, 19'1 bt'lol't mf, ""' ~. '" -,·· Pftt 14 OI ew OU e E:;~ 1•.6-1 1 :Ol 11:'~~ 1:~1:.,; Utioft•1!1""(1 t NOl1tw Publlc In •nd !or ... i.cot It-M .... teOr1" Ill Ort1111 fmp1 Gr lS 4' 1, .. ~ llf"ltl 17 .. lt.)D ' c-tv, C1Ufonil1.. 1!111rn lt.to ~""' 5cl,llldH Fiii'!&!· Mid s•a~ Pf•IOfllll'I ~-••11<1 J, w. For ""' --of .. ,1,,. otiHt1t1-1t Am-• the new nights !""'~" '·'!;"·~·.•,, \n' r'" 1s.12 11n Mc.MICHAEL, tno..,. le l'M '° bl lt'lt U'<Vl'ld br MMI OeMI ol Tr1111t lnckldll!I ..,.,'6 •l.hn '° °' I '' 4'"" .,..,,~,, °' '"' <,_•llool '"-' ••t(~t-'""' CMr•es iiwt l'lllMllH:I ol..;. Tnnlft, hi h 'U b •--....,11 Glfl lt t5 ,,1c ii:i. ,l· ell 1111 Wlll'lln lt11lru"""I' l<.FIOllllft 111 me to ~dYa-. H Ml¥. """"1• 11\t tttfnl ef .. Id W C W1 e UllOUgurated F..v:i:1t In u·~'n'1; COii'! 51 1T:ll1 :11
bt 1i.. """"'" ....,o •Xtc11tff lllt wl!liln Dftlt of Tn11!, 1.,i.r,,1 ..... ,_ •nd b Al W t •-, will be ~:fr 01' lin I 'tt ~ Olv IS S4 I•. lftllr""""I Oii ~tit of !tie COl'JIQ•llloll M.JJJ.tt hi ....... i. •1111(.1 .. t crf lf'll 10Dtf Y r fl ~ , ~::dlMll lj.•1 :!1 r.t fn~uh It~~ .,.1
tl'llrt111 l'll!Nd. ""' lld!"""'1etttt11 '°,.... *"rter i.., ••Id Dlllll t1 Tn111, w1........ daily jet service beN·een ","~ 9!!!' l4:ftll:n s~ .1.m 11:,,\1:11 ht well corwtltlOll •~eowtlll ll'le w11111n ttmt 11\<e.._ '"'"" Mtl'Cfl 1, ltoll, •I '°"' ' '•°"• Y-" ti" PKS U '4 U ~
l11t"'-*'f-.Ulftll9ll9""'·ltW1or 1 ""'•""""'•1lns1M"'°'-ll1'r.•........i. • ,.,_Ve-~ and Orange o""'" •li111~• \ll1123' ttiD!ulleto ol lf'I """ ... Ill dlf'tcton., dell • ._ Iii.... "'d T•r.1 • : w ,,.,......, ,.., 11:1~
WIT'HESS rnr l'ltnd •1111 of!IC(1I 111L ~ltd: Alltlv.I 1', 1'6t. ,,· County airports. l'l~1t1i::;.,• P!'Oll!'l'" m1'19 vm.. l&t~ 'tr, l~-~' Clir, M, NltlsOI\ l.OS ANGELl!'S ?ITl.E AND nclull ·'' 20 it•ll S' M.05 S4 25
Ho!•"" 1'ublle • C•lllornl• .... ,,.ACT COllPOllATIOH The major expansion will , .• -, • II~ f·:: ''""-11 r·ru· Prlnt!HI Ol'flet 1" Trul"" " !IG ·~ 1.... ,I"! 11'111 l•,20 11 ' o.-.,,.. C-"' l· .. •lude ., ... _ between '..._ "'' ir.s11r. n. F111..c i.n . M~ Cln!rnlnllll E• .. r.. ~ L Ml•l!IOH '"-..,,.,..,._ ......., Flt! c.. t· .. k"" ~ l
JI/,, ,., ",. ,. ... lftfll A g 1 and •• ~ , -k c ·t ""' Fd : ... n 1191~ It"' ,, . . -.,. _ '"l"O'"'' > ,.ubl!lh" P+tw11cort M•rllor" N•w1""" h n e es ~ ... e l y ; !' .. ' 0•1 t" l·. I '•'\ , 1 ~.2'1 •• "'" ...,. 1t10'ltd ""'"' 0111'1 •11ot N " • Cfl Sout ern California Tl':rift & loan l .. 11 1111 ~NTT Of" LOS ANGELES l '' Ce!llOl'n!• A11111111 n .M s.~'7:..111. :.' 11: San Diego, .Las Vegas and ,::r,r,.. 1 ·~ 1l~ !_.tock_ ,:u 1,.,:H .:=n::'. ';..i~~ P=~111m~: 1* ''""" specializes in personal. business and Salt Lake City; Sacramento Fren111hi,:"'f'i ., f!;r•1~'il'I ,:n ,::;
u1t1 stite. .,....oMlf'I' -'"ELLIOT mN Trust Deed loans •.• Stop in today and Las Vegas: Sacramento c:!'; u.'if'\t:U f'~~ •:·"l:·U •. FINE, _,.... 1a-. i. 1t1t"' ,., ..... 1;::==========::;IJ and see how we can solve your lmme. nd E g M·•• d d c111 '-ff 101 l;n;Ot lt~fi·" ~ •,.... ~•ti°" ""' utotllltll ""' a u ene, ~or an •..:;°"' ' 1·r. y1,,., "" i.11 -'llhlll ·~· --1a"",...,."" The diate money problems from depend· Portland, Ore. and Seattle, ~~s::" li': \ 'l'f l~"l""10 0: fN ~ .tio •ncvttc11 1111 wir11lft '"",,,.. O C 1• able funds available right now. The \Vash. -. and 1 33 ~•cent in· Glb••"~r _ 1 ,., .11 t;;;;c l'nc l:U ,n
_,"" """'""'"" C9tM'lflot! """''" renge oas 1 f r -. o""""' s.~ ,,,.11.n un11d 10.1211,li === ~...,_.,: ":.::': 'U: Thri ty way can save you money. creue ln serv1ce to Mexico ~ii' 11 . .u 'r.tt 1111~~,lll'Ml!·~· 'I'
1"--1 ...,,_.,, .. r11 .,. ... WI ., 1 Most Complete from Phoenix Tucson Reno ""' M ':i h·~ _,, 1 11
,....., ... 9f lh llMIW ti If~ 1 t Drlfl \NI ft: · ~l'°" l' I WITHll!"!I """"-"" •1111 IMdl'I weL PRINTING SOUTHERN and LM Vegas. arvl>fltll j:ll~:ll Un d ~ : 1
.... ". Miii• I FOR The new tan schedule wtn 115:.. ·!! r:1, vt,·:.ia:-•. m,·.i:.· :;•("'.,.,=.~· e':i':"'-SERV CAL NIA repre-sent a 46 ptrcent in· u.~~ 1.'.!lI·fJ ~' 1:~1e n ~ !,. 1t71 ICE crease In avanable re,.·enue mflll \i.t!l lt:ti ~~"':'nm :r: .,,\ -'· _-:;oc_ THRIFT & LOAN seat miles over th• amounl '" .~ "J:M, ~~."s1'"1~·~: .. 'fil 111 """' .._.,, or'"-available prior to U1e In-I:: ~J! 'l:H 'i:h :;Y' ""' 1 ·ff 11 --;::.,:..,::;:-~flnfo."' I'll-'· 170 Ent 17tll st. co.ia M111 .•..• &4,-5045 augural schedule before the. !~ ::~· 1~1o 1~-r; ~~· 1i! If 1 ,.u,..., tto 1t ..,. """""* .t. u, 6J51 Wll1hl11 81.,d .. Loi An1!1ts ..• 653-1210 merger of the three a'rl' e 1~~"6 ''·i' u 1' wr,,...... J:-, 12 • ,,.. 1'4411 . f In S I"" T..,. I• H l\,~ltlflll<I IC."' 1• ~
lo lor1n Air Wen 1n April 1::'8~"'sn. 1~~!:in,.!W" I:t; :.S
Mutual
Funds
I
Can Business Mix
With Politics?
By JOHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK (AP) -Can
a corporate employe be a
good worker and an elected
politician at the same time?
In many instances he ap.
puently cannot, judging
from oplltions expressed in
a recent survey ol 1,033
companies.
The answers have special
significance in an election
year. But they serve also as
a contra.st to some widely
held corporate v i e w s ,
typic&i among them:
-"Business must involve
itsell in the social problems
or the community. It must
participate. It must fulfill its
obligation as a corporate
citizen."
-"No matter what we
businessmen do we'll never
be able to make politicians
understand the re-
quirements of business,
They'll always suspect our
motives."
'nle opposltion to political
involvement by employes
would seem. therefore. to
contradict the first attitude
and make the second at-
titude seem fatuous.
SUPPORT
The study. by ilie non-
partisan National Industrial
Conference Board. shewed
th<!.t 80 percent of the com·
panies studied encouraged
workers to register and
vot._
Howevtr, the percentage
of support dropped ofr
sharply as the degree of
potl.tical activity increased.
Only 41 percent said they
encouraged contributions to
political parties and only 30
percent encouraged running
(or office.
The reasons gi\len varied.
Many c<>mpanies S'aid they
felt politics was none. of
their business. Some pubUc
Although only one com-
pany in three encouraged
political activity, the cor·
p o r a t e political activists
stated their case firmly
Said the president or a large
oil comp&rJy:
"Whenever a community
or nation finds itself in dif-
ficulty, there may be, .and
probably are, dozens of
surface reasons. A much
more fundamental cause
may be discovered,
however , in the indifference
of its citizens."
The view is one typic<J.ly
heard today in business
circles, often being ex·
pressed by executives who
increasingly are learning
that in the long run their
business cannot succeed i!
the community around it
erodes.
Other executives were
more pargmati'c in their en·
couragement or political ac-
tivity.
Some said they felt it im·
proved the stature of the in·
dividual and the comw.ny.
Others stated frankly that
hey felt political activity by
employe6 would a)d he
economfc weU:art of the
company.
Despite the opposition tn
political activity. another
survey, by Effectiv e
Citizens Organizations Inc.,
a n on pr o lit Washington
organization, indicates that
the number of )>OliUcal ac·
tivists is growing.
nus year, however,
business still seems to favor
leaving the business of
government to the poliU·
cians.
Autonetics
Given Task
utilities noted thtt govern-AutoneUc1 Division o f
men(. regulations dlscourag-North American Rockwell,
ed their pe,rticlpation. A few AnaheJm, has received a
retail stores re a r e d subcontract worth over $1
customer reactions. Some million from instrument
cited labor union opposition. Systems Corp. ln New York
Few top exec:uUvf!!, of to manufacture the tiny
course. can forget the f'..'f· devices for use in the en·
perle.nce of New Jersey Bell tertamment and passenger
Telephone Co. last year. The servll'I! equipment of tbe com~any was proud of Its Boeing 747.
pollhcAI I n v o I v e m t-n t The equipment. designed
reporting ln it5 1006 annual by ISC, provides mus1c,
report that It tmployed 15 movie sotind and passenger
mayors, 5e cOtJncUmen , 68 service, and reduces the
'School beard membtrs. 11 amount of \\iring required
tax usessors and a state from the central transmit·
as5emblymr.n. Ung point.
Within months . one ol Autoneucs is supplyin&:
these employes "'a! eccustd thrH separate devices call-
of m a k I n g anti-Semitic ed metal oxlde remlcon·
remarks ind New J~r~r ductors whic-h contain from
Bell was In hot "':it~ over a 350 to 500 active clecf"onic mnt:~r that h:id nothin,L": to _ elf'mf!Ills on 1 tiny chh> flio
do with rorporz.tc attiudtS. 411·-of a " • Wl: 11ttJ1!.!"?r~: ••
DAll.Y ,llOT •
• Tuesday's Closing Prices -Complete New· York Stock Exchange List
......... _ .. , ....... _dlt/ =·-... -&, i=:,_ ....... .i:
::rrew 'li .P .C ,r; UIR ii •ll t: r/11 ?l!R L' 3 I I E ::,!IM'OlJ H t ii.. ii:!! •
Ameriean Stock Exchange Closing
I ' ~ LOCAL __ +i ... ....,~ ..... .,..
i ~ ....,, 4ty, ........... .
-¥ ... &. .. "' ...... -~ c...t .... ikDAILY '
t~--·----· •
-
J 2 DAI~ V PJ\.OT .. ---·---
OPEN DAILY 10-10· SUN. f 0-7
\
ope..1:::-; Day PRICE$ EFFECTIVE THURSDAY .· SUNDAY AUG. 29 • 30 • 31 ·SEPT. 1
'
tastes great
in cans!
CANADA DRY
FLAVORS
Canady Dry Case of 24
Our Reg.1.97
4 DAYS ONLY 1.67
Choose from Tahitian Punch. Grape, Cola, Orange,
Root Beer, Lemon Lime and others.
SWAG LAMPS
, 9.88to16.88
Our Reg. 12.88 & 18.88
Style 131 ( 1imilar to illu.tration) wa1
regularly 19.88, now for the next '4 da)'I,
3 dollar1 off. Other 1tyle1 I 08, I I 0, and
111 [ nof 1hown) al10 big 1avin9s.
CHARGE IT!
•
Our Reg. 2.94
4 Dav• Onl11 1.76 Redwood Picnic TQble 9'xl2' ' COTTON RUG;
La11ge basket measures 12"x18"x10". Holds enough
for a real old fashioned picnic.
Our Reg. 19.88
4 DAYS ONLY 13.88
Four foot table with matching benches.
Our Reg. 23.88
4 Dav• Onlt1 18.881'
o ..
Fits all barbecues and ~
tiss«ie spltl!I. Metal tumble
basket fer chicken i& lZ' km&
Ind r· in dla.m.ettr.
SLEEP PILLOW
.... 2.t7
Foam filled pillow for sleeping
comfort.
WEIER ....,
97~
.
•~19'' chrome plated retarr
wieners on ktboba er picnic
wiener wheel cooks a
2" COT PAD
~~. 4.11 4~88 Solid foam pad in reversible,
washable for easy care. ·-----
PLAS IC
SHOE BOX
Ow a.,. 41c
4 hJsc Oily 3i99'
Sturdy boxes may be used for
shoes, nylons even vegetables. ·
llASS UTILITY SHILF 5 37 .... '·" .
MR. BUBBLE
Our Reg. 37c
Famil:v size box with Lanolin .
SCOPE ,, ....
1.,, tJc 76c
Shag ·type cotton pile rug in 75% cotton, 25 % rayon.
ALUMINUM FOLDING CHAISE ,
Our Reg. 3.87
4 Dav• Onlt1 4.88
j
· Follow the sun around in this 6x4x4 web folding :
chaise lounge. In ~een and white, yellow and white. ii . ~
~ ·.-;. I
I. ~'--•I I :!2i>'il SAVE ON
Padded Chaise Lounge
20 GALLON
TRASH CAN GALLON INSULATED
PICNIC JUG Our Reg. J0.88
4 Dav• Onlt1
•
7.88
Stunly aluminum frame for durability. Bright flonl
foam filled pad Included at Ibis low low price.
OUl
.... J.tl 1.,97
Lightweight easy to carry can
i.! tough plastic.
SWIN• TOP WAITI l lN 1 96 ........ . Our ReW. l.97
4 Dav• Onl11
-
l38
I ·gal. in1ulated picnic jug witli 1houlder 1pouf.
Choice of 2-tone colon.
I
AFS Starts .· Wi .th·\ a .S.plash ·
' ' American Field Service iS'hldeq._ts, parents and leaders got into the
&WiJjl of tilings at a patio party in 1lle Seal Beach home of Mrs,
M. B. ('Pete) Greene: Enjoy\!Jg a morning of suns!rin,e, bruncb end
$Wilnming are new presidents {oe-. left to right) Mrs. James
Facer, Marina High School; Mrs. Lorin Lammers, FoWltain v8.I ..
ley, ,BDd Mrs. Warren Bums, Huntington Beach. Also on tµind to
welcome tlie new sttidents·ai;e (.standig, left to right) Mrs. !loner
Sinclair, and Mrs. J ames Stoddard, district representatives,
Rory O'Loughlin and his ·foster brod!er, Adun Tvedten from Norwai(
are offered aeconds by Miss'Esther Funk, past president, and Mrs;.
Beman! O'l.ooghlin (!ell to rigbt) during 1lle informal party. Adun·wll1
attend Huntington Beach High School.
W......-,, ,._..,llft 1NI HI P-.U
JODEAN • HAIT INCH, 142-4321
. .
•
. .
Cy ndee Crozier tries a grape offered by her foster sister Tammy Bonell
of South Africa while Caroline Lammers waits her tum (left to right).
Tammy will be living with Mr. and Mrs. Keith Crozier and their fi-ve
children while attending Fountain Valley High School.
Kerry Greene tries the pool with an as-
sist from Pablo Navarro from Chile and
his foster brother, Matt Peasley. Pablo's
foster parents are Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Peasley and he will attend Manna High
School.
Greeting old friends and making new ones ·is Marietta Maitila, from
Finland (left), who was an AFS student at Marina in.1965. Chatting
With Marketta are (·left to right) Jan Royer, her foster sister; stephanie
Hubbell, Rory O'Loughlin and Adun Tvedten.
Dieting D0tties : What Comes Up May Not Take Sca ·les Down:
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have a
frieol who ii fat as a cow. She says
that more than anytb.lng .in the world.
&be loves to em and lbe will not give
up thil pleasure.
She alJo would like to have a nice
figure, whldl ts very hard to do Con·
sidering that she is constantly stuffing
berseU Willi candy, cake , cookies,
caramel com and everydtlng tattening
yoo can think of.
La<! week my lrl!lld told me ahe hat
hit on a system that will allow her to
eat v.tlatever she pleases and not put
on weight. She packs In the rich food
and then she goes to the bathroom. and torcd'ttWlf to throw up. She claims
ii theJood II not Ill Mr ti wfilnot mile
her g'ain weight.
11 tbia' true ar filsaf .-THE
ASKER
'
ANN LANDERS
DEAR ASKER: It Is fa lse, rooll1b
ud daageroat. When your frteod
throwt ap tbt food 1be abo loses the
gastrte jalces wltldl are e11entlal to
food health. The &firl 1ou'nd1 cuckoo ta
me and I hope she will see a doctor
and (et oa • 1enllble diet before she
-~ be•ltll, •
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I d!Hgree with your repf.il to · Gal.Otea, the gjrl
wbo wouilered•ahout a 101111emon w'
hi
ware hi.5 Phi Beta Kappa .k; e y as a
lapel piece.
[ am ooe of the many wtio has earn-
ed a Phi Beta Kappa key but 1 don't
dare. wear it because of all the 1mart
alect remarks. , .
Why is it that u' one has earned.
memhenhlp In 11hi• ellln 10clel)' he is
cho&Jdered 'an egomlmiac if be weari
his key? la there any other socletJi
wbooe members )Jave to ' keep theh;
·~· hl<1den, ill<• that!
U a snlditr -a .. 1bbon or a\
medal he wears it with pride and peer
pie repect bJm fCK it. But the person
who wears a Phi Beta Kappa key is
accused of showing oil. Why? Why?
Why? -KEYED UP
DEAR UP: That column produttd
· a bllzzanl of letters. 1 didn't realiu I
had IO many Phl Beta Ka ppa1 lg my
te1cU121 au.dtenct1, Most of the people
who wrote 11ld they'd Ute to •ear
tbelr ke11 bu& they can't take the rlbo
bhlf. I berehy encourage all member1
of Phi Beta Kappa to take oat yoar
keys and wear them. If a n. y
lffunbetmer pops off tell hhn you'll
take your key off H he'll pot bl1. ••· • .. • • • i
' ' DEAR ANN LANDERS : I .,u' ·•
widow in my late .a.\ A few weeks ago
my father-in-law died. He wu not .a
woaltll)>.msn.but he left mt ilO perctDI
'
ot his estate. The balance was divided
between his two daughter1.
t received a call trom one of hls
daoghtera saying I 1hollld be a tady
and sign over my share. of the estate
to her and her sister because the will
was written while my husband was
a1ive and now that he ls dead I am
Mt entltied to anything because I am
not legally related. She i:romJsed me a
court flibt 1f I retuse .and added, "You
would 1w-ely loae, my dear, and t b e
publicity would be, dread!Ul."
My father·iD·law wa1 a dear man
IJld I enjoyed,havin1 hlm,IJI my home.
, He did not have a. good relaUonship·
with hi• daughters or their hu1hond1
ond spent very Utile time with them.
l am not bard up fer money hut I
<f
don't want too be lnllniida¥!1. P..U.
tell me wbat to · do. -SHADES o):'
BLUE
DEAR SHADES: See a lawyer ...
learn wba& your rtlbtt ue. .,.'t
ct!JCUH thtl wlCll ali)'Off and doa~ ....
anything wllh .. c le(li ........ 1. ; .
Unsure of yourseU on datel? WbaJ11
right? Wh:it'• wrong! Sllould yeuT
Shouldl\'t you? Send far Ann Linden'
booklet "Dating 0011 and Don'ts, ..
enclosing with your roqutst :Iii cmll' ill
coin aod a long, seU*drelled, ataJii ..
ped envelope. .
, Anh Landers will bt U tO help )'Oii
with;yO\lr prob!Onis. S.nd them to Hr
In care of the DAILY PILCY!' ODcloalOC
a sell...idnlssed; llon\uod envol-Ope.
......---------·-~ ---
• .
• • •• . . • • ' .. . . . . • •
_14 OAILY PllOT WtdlltSday, August 28, 1968
Food Prices Cont·inue Uphill Trek With No · End in Sight
• • ... . . . . ' . • • . ' . ' . '
BJ JEAN COX
Of ... °"" , .. lteft'
tion cl. F o o d Cbalnl lovtted members
of Ille presa In jolo • -1 of ll)Od In·
dustry executives for a recent
dlaloeu< In lite Century Plaza Hotel.
On the oehfr band. 1uppllt1 ot major
farm p<oduc:U are •Hlht\Y lower than
1987 because many people are leavin1
the farm. With population up about 1.5
percent , thla mean.s per eeplta 1uppllea
will be 1lijhUy 1._.
and ..ivert111n1, le•vtn1 1.19 cenll ol
Ille dOllar altl.r tuH for profit.
Competkion btli>i the situation and
the av~ge Southern Californian has
4V. competing supermartell within
one mile of his home. I • .
.
i : ; I
~ A1 houlewlie who wbeell her
lf'OCll'Y buket anitlnd. a market can
testify, !nflld<in II and bal be<n ..ar-
lni Ill UC11 bNd at the check -.!. GrocerJ store prleet for food, as of
-April, in<r••ed 15 1""C"lll In 10 years -an awir• of 1.5 percent a
)'W' .
Acron the country, !5 such COD•
ferencm, devoted to an explanation of
food pri<es alld _, matlenl al·
fecti.ng the industry, have taken place.
While fann prices are lmp«tant..
the overall effecta of 1nflltion also
play a part lo increa.sing a market'•·
operating coeta .
Ouring a que1Uon and answer
period, paneUJta 1aid the removal ol
trading stamps would not nece11arUy
mean a decn!ue In prices beca111e if a
lack of stamps cau1e1 a decrea8e iA
1ale., prices would have to a:o higher.
While the increase in food prkes is a
cause fer concern, Earl W. SmJfb , vice
president Df Safeway Stores, Inc.
palnt>d out that Americans are paying
a &mailer pc:rtlon Of their income fOr
food than in the p11t and ten than
people in other countries.
IJ 1 housewife wanta to save, s b e
will have to become a more old·
fashioned cook and not depend cm the
ready-made producU. "Try short ribs
and round steak instead of T ·bone
steaks all the time.," 1ugge1ted one
panelist.
. ' • • ' ' ! j '
: : I .... , ~ •
Panel members, led by moderator.
Clarence G. A&.my, association presi-
dent, answered questions relating to
the composition oi food prices and fac.
tors behind their increase.
J01eph W. P.atteraon , presi._nt of
Arden-Mayfair, Inc., Los Angeles, sald
durlng lnflatlonuy periodl, mal!tot.
usually suffer a profit cut.
' • • ' • • • . '
What II mort,1 Americans can
tl&hlM their belts, for relief la nowhere
In llitbt. A 2-2.$ per«<& rise In prices
for retail food la anUclpated between
now and the November elections.
'l'hll ltgure ii m<n meanlngful wben
added to tile fact 11>at for Ille year.
prlcee for food will probably ave.age
3.51(1 4 percmt above last year.
Believing tllll In be 1111 area cl. gru\
c:oarmner concern, Nati<Dal Aasocia·
. I>ue In \he law of supply and de·
mand, food prices •e a:oing up. There
ia a greater demand for food due' to
price a11d population increases, and
while a tuke in taxes will likely reduce
demand f o r some comumen, w a g e
and salary ill<ftal<!S will oll<et this
\ax"""-e. •
Prol!ll In the retail food Industry
have been low traditionally and bave
been declintng in the pc>1t-war period.
The grocery executive said less than
78 centl Of the shopper's dollar is
spent to purcbue new merchandise
from farmers. The remai:Ding pebni.es
go for labor. building and equipment
Currently 17.7 cents la taken from
ev~ry after tax ·dollar earned by the
average Amerloan on food. In 194.7~9
tltey opeat 211 cenll. The French 1p<nd
31 cent.a ; Italim.s, 4.1 cent.I ; Japanese.
48 cents:; EngllsD 28 centlii, and
RUlliaM, 53 cent&.
Ot.ber 1tepc; towards economy in·
elude planning menus before 1boppina:,
purchasing products that are in plen·
tiful supply and if possible, buying big·
ger sites.
Last but ll<ll least, they warned, U •
housewik want.s to cut doo.m her
market budget. she shouldn't allow
Mr hu:sbal'ld to do the shopping.
: l"
. \"~Golden Anniversary
• ~: t Honored by Children
Marking the golden wed·
ding anniversary of Mr. and
:::::Mr.a. George Ray lei~~~ .. :._ .. ;.t'hr11tensen oi 'Coita. Mesa ri :::::,tth ..a rete}>tion J.D .Lake .
:•:•IPatk Clubhouse were tbEt
:::::couple's soris aM. daughters • • d th . : .. ; ·~an err spouses.
;.:;.~:: Hosting wete Mr. and
~-..-:-Mrs. William A. Boyti! of ~.: ~: 'Costa. Mesa, Mr. and Mrs.
ii!• . • Lee Roy Christensen of
:;..: ··Westminster, Mr. and Mrs.
:-: . Ronald V. Christensen of ~:: :'"Huntington Beacti, Mr. and
::: .:Mrs. Vincent J. Frazzitta of
~:· ... Huntington Beach and Mrs.
:: 'Roger Lorin g who
; .... journeyed from v11.dcouver, :~~ • ·wash . for the Occasion. ..... ~ MT ... • • Mr. and s. Christepsen
:. were martjed in Pocatello, .
.. Idaho. The t.op of their wee!·
. .. • ding cake was draped with
;:• .an AmerlcaQ fiagwh.ichwat
•: sent to Chr is-te n se n 's
;:-:. brattier who waa stationed F...•:. with the U .s . Army in
::"' ~ France. A duplic.ate of that:.
:; ·flag was used as a Part Qf
• ·the decoration on the an·
• niversary cake. ;i; Tiie original wedding pie·
.... tures and other photographs
.. : taken during their married
::_. life were
1
displayed wi~
their ann versary portrait
: : on a apeclal picture board.
:: Friend.t, nei'1bors and
•.-relatives gifted the hooored
:.!;-couple with a money tree.
.: .. : Attending the reception
:::_ were 11 of the couple's 13 50 YEARS TOGETHER
~:.: grandchildren .
::_:.. A very special guest' was
::::,Mrs. Nora Williams of Santa
:•..: Ana, who attended as the
:: : ·bridesmaid at the wedding
::• •SO years ago.
"" • Visiting from out of town
::.. were George Christensen's
-."" sisters, Mn. Jenni e
·: • .Grimaud of Inglewood. Mrs. :· ;: hLee Rhileby ofdBakersfMield andd er us an ; and r. an
:· Mrs. R. Welly of J..on1ila,
Mr. and Mr1. Jack Ryan of
·~· Sepulveda, Mrs . Ed Vardy
. ::· of San Fernando, Mr. and
! : .: .. Mrs. Oscar Elton of San e:: .. : Bernardino, Mrs . Lawrence
:;:: · E. Jones of Spring Valley,
:::
Mr. •nd Mrs. G. R. Christensen
Mrs. Wallace West o r
Lakeside, Lawrence Jones
of Barstow, Mr. and Mrs.
.James Williams of Sylmar,
Mr. and Mrs. Rod OrlanJ of
Sepulveda, and Mr. and
Mn. Gary Frazzitta of
Norwalk.
Mr. and Mrs. Olristensen
came to California m 1920.
and have spent 2s years of
that time in Costa M.?sa .
Christensen is a member
of Plumbers and Steam-
fitters Union 582 whtte he
has been a plumber for 20
yean:. He ahio ii a lifetime
member of Elks of Newport
Beach.
In 19'l2, when the Balboa-
Newport area was still only
dirt roads, he delivered ice
tD many of the original
businesses in the area. A
local radio celebrity in
Idaho during the years 1935-
37, hew.as a member of the
comedy team Ole and Tip-
perary. a regular Sunday
afternoon program.
Mrs. Olristensen has been
active in area PI'As and has
served on the election board
for many years. '
.. . · .· Half-Century Ma rriage
Party
Fifty years of marriage
were celebrated by Mr.
and Mrs. Holbrook Mulf<rd
of Costa Mesa at an old·
fashiooed ice cream sod.al
staged in their patio garden.
Hosts were their children
and grandchildren.
The f o r m e r Jeanette
Conklin married Holbrook
Mulford Aug. 29. 1918 in the
parlor of the bride's par·
ents' home in Charlotte,
Mich. 'Ibe servi~ was con-
ducted by Mrs. Mulford'1
father, the Rev. Eugene
Conklin, a Un.iversalist min·
ister. Present at the anni·
versary party was die ma1d
of hon<r, Mrs. M.A. Miller.
who is Mrs. MuJJord's tister
who drove to California with
her husband and son from
.:: , Silver Spring, Md.
Fetes Mulfords
GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY
Mr. •nd Mrs. Holbrook Mulford
Shoppers
Wanted
Almost everything but the
kitclle! sink will be Off ... ed
for sale by tile Golden
Hai>or Club from SI a.m. to
5 :~ p.m. Thurada,.S..tur·
day, Se\>!. 5-7.
Sale location la at 186S
Newport Ave., o.t.a Mesa,
accc:rding to tne chairman,
Gilbert Seal. Aui!line ...
bis committee will be the
Mmes. Seal, Merritt Kevan,
Robert .Fil>geraM and otller
members.
Elective o ffi c ert of
Souaiern OalttonJia Sl!rinel
will be -by the Golden. Harbor Wli.te Shrine
of Jerusalem during the an·
nual party night at 8 p.m.
Thursday, sept. 12, in the
Newport Beach Mao<nc
Temple.
Presiding officers will be
Mr. and Mn. Allyn Larle,
and chairmen of the party
are Mr. and -Mrs. Jack
Chapman, assi~d by w~.
Bnmo D. Norman.
Dear NanCy: Do you think certain
foods have 41status?" I wu arguin(
with a frend of mine about serving a
molded gelatin salad for a dinner
party, an d she said it wasn't a "sta·
tus" salad, and Jt
w a s considered
corny. Have you
beard ol anytliin&
more ridiculous?
How fv can this
status business be
carried? HELEN
K.
DEAR HELEN:
statu3 can be car-
ried to any ex-
treme. I know a
man who wean
his Cadillac k e y on his watcbchain.
Like it or not. some foods have
more status than others. It isn't al·
ways a question of money, but taste.
The most chic shrubbery you can
serve at a diMer party is the French
Mixed Green Salad which scorns the
cliche tomato or pedestrian cucumbtt
and lowly bell pepper. Maybe you'll
like to try it. It's one way to have
your status and eat it too.
FRENCH MIXED GREEN SALAD
Any of the fOUowing greens may be
mixed together: Romaine, Escarole,
Boston lettuee, Watercress, Bibb let·
tuce. Dandelion greens. Endive . Ice·
berg lettuce and Chicory. Wash greens
thoroughly and shake orr any excess
moisture. Wrap greens in a towel and
keep them crisp in the refrigerat'Or.
When you are ready to serve, break
the greens into a salad bowl and toss
with the following French Dressing,
or Vinaigrette Sauce. u it is called in
France :
FRENCH DRESSING
2 TablesPQOns wine vinegar
6 tablespoons light oUve oil
1/, teaspoon salt v, teaspoon dry mustard
V. teaspoon frt!hly ground pepper
1 Tablespoon chopped parsley.
Stir above ingredients with a fort
until completely blended .
MRS. JOHN A. CONNOR
Cost• Mes• Home Selected
I
AllSeft l'Hte.
ol all ages and backgrounds. BRA VE
HOSTESS.
DEAR BRAVE: With a varied
group, buffets are certainly safer than
a sitdown dinner where you have t.o
WOITy about seating a conservative
next to a liberal, a Democrat nezt to
a Republican, a hawk next t.o a dove
-and a beautiful blonde next to any·
body's husband.
Buffets are not only easier on Ute
hostess but they're people-mixers. As
for the food, keep it informal and in-
teresting. No clicbe turkeys_or hams .
You might want to try this unique
Potted Lamb which is a Turkish de-
light. This serves lix, multiply accord·
ing to your needs.
TURKISH POTTED LAMB
4 pounds boneless aboulder of lamb
Y.z cup flour
5 tablespoons ollve oil
1 clove garlic, minced
2 bay leaves
"I: teaspoon cloves
14 teaspoon cinnamon
1 * cups beef bouillon
3 tablespoons lemon juice
1 tablespoon salt
~ teaspoon pepper
1 yellow onion
4 medium-sized potatoes. peeled
and cut into l Y.z·inch chunks
2 roasted peppers or pimentos,
sliced
2 large tomatoes, cut in wedges
1 teaspoon oregano
I teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon dill weed
Y.z teaspoon paprika
Have butcher cut shoulder of lamb
into 11i!·inch squares. Lightly flour
meat and brown it in olive oil. Add
garlic. bay leaves, cloves . cinnamon,
beef bouillon, lemon juJce. salt and
pepper. Cover and simmer % hour.
On toP of meal, layer the yellow
onion. potatoes, roasted peppers and
dill weed. Cover and place pan in 350
degree oven for I bolU' or until done.
Cool and remove 3 tablespoons of sur·
face fat; reheat and sprinkle paprika
over the top.
Phllharm~nic Society. and DEAR NANCY : I'm having a varied What's 11our coOking predicament?
the Coat.a Mesa Senior CiU-group of. people to a party and I'm Send it in a.nd sec if tee con cook It!
z:ens. Mra. Mulford bu also not sure how I 8hould handle It. While tot am 't Pf!r1onaU~ a.mtDer aU
Mesans Recite
Nuptial . Vows
Honeymooning in Nevada
ere John A. Connor of Costa
Mesa and his bride, the
former Pamela Ano Wicks
who exchanged vows and
ringa before the R e v •
Richard J . Dunlap in the
Fint Methodist Ch u r c b ,
Coata Mesa.
Pee~ Of the bridal COU·
pie are Mr. and Mrs. Andy
Wicb Of Collta Meoa and
Mr. and Mrs. Jack B. Con·
ner ol P8lm Springs.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore an A·
line gown of silk organza
with cl:rantilly late forming
a full circle train. A band of
blossoms and seed pearls
held · her illusion veil, and
she carried a cascade of
carnations and orchids.
Atltending her eist.er as
maid of hoDO!' was Miss
Sally Jo Wicks, while her
siater-in·law, Mn. Harold
Wick.!. was the bridesmaid,
both of Costa Mesa. They
wore floor lengtil tyrquoise
gowns of silk organza and
carried yellow carnations
and roses.
Serving as best man was
Bill Camplleli ol Costa
Mesa , iand the usher wa1
Harold Wicks.
Assisting at the reception.
in the home of the bride's
parents were the Mmes.
Nidlolas Rossi, D a vi d
Shafer, Bill Herrick and
William Hicks, the bride's
aunt and Mis! Valli Hicks
and Miss Jean Bryson.
Circulating the guest book to
the 150 well-wishers wa&
BUSTER
BROWN.
~
Miss Denise Shat er of O:>sta
Mesa.
Special guests were Frank
Mitchell of Michigan, the
bride'• griandtather; Miss
Dorothy Wicks of Caro,
Mich., her ~unt , and Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Mitchell of
Detroit. her aunt and uncle.
'n>e bride ill a graduate of
CoI'Olla del Mar H.igh School,
while her husband is an
-aiumnus ol Newport Harbor
IDgh School. Both attended
Orange Coast College.
The new Mr. and Mrs.
ConnOf' will establish their
first home in O>sta Mesa.
Agenda Stars
Lunch, Cards
A 1UmtDer luncheon wa6
enjoyed by members o(
Laguna Beach Ohapter 521,
Order of the Ea.stem. Star in
tile M'asanic T e m p 1 e
Wedneoday.
Hostesus at the klncheon,
Which was followed by card
games, 'We!'e the Mmes.
Eraot Bacon, W 1111 a m
Lamdell, B. A. Smith and
Orville~.
New member& initiated et
a rec«rt chapter meeting in·
elude Miss Grete.hen Ander·
son, Mn. B. W. Duncan and
Robert Sourwine. A DOW al·
fi'llate, Miss Helen
M11cl.ean, Bi[i!led tm. by·
lawe and Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Penna presided over
the ceremony.
'For fall.~,
g irls love
FREE CAMERA
with a.ck to Sdtool ShoM
Ou•nlity. limit•d-Sh•,, f:•rfy
A .... a.w •. Qll.ft•n'1, loet.ry.011ly
.,: .. • FamUy members present
;~:;·Jiere : Mr. and Mrs. Rich·
:-:·:1rd s. Mulford of Sherman ~i;!~Oaks. and the.ir daughters
:.-: , .;,ChrUtine and Ar Lene, tbe
.. ;.: .. bonoreet' ion and his fam· :::::U,y: Mr. and Mn:. Robert C.
•·:·JlluHord ol SacramenU> and :_:!".;'Ji>eif 'clllJdttn Randa and
:;; .. ;~, uotber '°" and hiJ :r.::-;E· ; , 111111 °"' Rev. J. E . .::•;~ al .Potion and his :.:: .. Linda and Kent. ·:;..!!Jbe b(mones• aoa.Jn-la•
•. •: ,.d ~Is children. 'Ilte eldts\ ;::::~~-Ohrildne, • • ·• If~· '1119 -cnlu>ll wedding . ,._
The Mullord• mwed In
Costa Mesa from Oak Park.
DI. 'When be retired ftom
business in t967. Since mak·
log tl>elr hoine on the Weit
Coast tbe Mulfords have
been. active· .in the Costa
Meu Univer&allst Chll'ch,
the California Fuchsia Soo cleli, the Orange CoWlly
What do you think Is better -an JIOU1' lc«er1, those letter• with the
been • participant in the •c· informal buffet where everybody cl.o most tnttrtalnlno or ptrtinen culift. · ~
tivitJes of the Costa Mesa sit where they please or a sitdown arr problem.I will be pubZf.lh.ed in th# 30 Fashion Island r6 ,J..-
Women '• Club and the dinner which ii more C"OmfortlibleT column. Send 11our Z~ttfT'I to WH.4T Newport Beaeb e""""'n
League or Women Voter&. And how about food? I've rot 1UMt1 COOKS1 c/o THE DAILY PILOT. ,~ -More than 100 guests ~-2464
were present at tba ·annit-er:
sary ret:epUon. , .• .,_.,_,. __ .,_,. _ _.._.,_.,.,.._.,_,. __ .,_., ___ .,_.,_,. __ .,_,. _ _.. • .,_.,-,..,_.,_,. ___ ., ___ ,..,_.,_,. __ .,_., __ .,..,_.,.,.~ ... -.. _ _.._., ___ .. ..,_.,,11..-------------------'
I· l • ' '
••
•••
..
Harborites Wed
In St. Andrew's
Following a Lake Tahoe
and San FnmciJco hooey·
moon, Dav.id Alan Hurlburt
of B"1boa Islond and bis
bride, Ute Conner Joaooe
Mai'garet Flagg will reside
on Balboa Island.
The c o u p 1 e excbanged
"""" and rings -1!le Rev. Dr, Cllarles H. Dieren·
field in St. Andrew 's
Presbyterian Qiurch,
Newport Beac!l.
The bride, <laugtite, ol Mr.
and Mrs'. Janes Allen Flagg
cL Newport Beach was given
in marriage by her father.
' For ber ceremony 6i:le wore
an A·lioe gown o( antique
satin appliqued witti venise
lace and featuring a chapel
train. An organza bow
caught her illusion veil , also
trimmed · ~ venise lace,
and she carried a cascade Of
ganrem.as and stephanotis.
Rose pink chilfm gowns
and pink camatioos were
selected for her ent-Ourage.
Atteoding as maid of. honor
wtl> her sister, Katnleen
Flagg, while brides·maids
were Dianne Lockemy, ADn
Palaferri lllld Linda
Brownie. Karen Adams was
the flower girl.
The bridegroom, eon o(
Mrs. Alonzo Mabm o f
Orange and Homer Hurlburt
of Burlington, Vt., asked
Bruce. Hauger to be hi& be'st
man. Guests were ushered
to their seats by the bride's
brolher, Allen Flagg, and
Jerry White, Peter Sn~·
inger, Glem Thomas and
Roger Robbins.
Cirelllating tile guest book
at the receptioo in Irvine
Coast Country Club was
Oassie Tooley, and music
W-85 provided by Harry
Puki.nson of San Diego, the
bride's uncle.
The bride is a graduate of
Newport Harbo:r H i g h
School and attended Orange
Coast College and California
State College at L o n g
Beach._
HeT husbald, a t.eacher at
Loara High School,
Anaheim, is an alumnus of
San Jose State College.
MRS. DAVID ALAN HURLBURT
Balboa l1l1nd Homt
Canada Honeymoon
Karyl
Karyl Jean Karpen ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Franklin D. Karpen of Santa
Ana, became the bride of
Richard David Frost of
Laguna Beach.
The candlelight nuptials
were performed in Waverly
Churoh, santa .'\na by the
Rev . J . Michael
Montgomery of L a g u n a
Beach CalV'3l'Y Evangelical
Free Church.
The bride was given in
marriage by her f<tlher dur-
ing the double ri n g
ceremony. She donned an
old-fashioned white satin
gown trimmed in alencon
lace a nd wore a n illusion
veil attached to a jeweled
satin bow. The new Mrs.
Frost carried her mother's
white Bible and a bouquet of
white butterfly orchids,
chrysanthemums and baby's
breath.
Serving the bride as maid
of honor was her sister,
Miss Kay Kar pen.
Bridesmaids were M i s s
Denise Gut.sch and Miss
Diann Kinney of Santa Ana.
The attendants wore floor
kngth pale green organza
dresses frosted with white
I.ace at the shou1ders and
he ·ml i nes . They held
nosegays of paJe green and
Peering Around
Karpen Becomes
--MRS. RICHARD DAVID FROST
Candlelight Nuptials
white chry9anthemums ac-
cented with tiny pink roses
and baby'6 breath.·
Flower -girls were tile
benediot's nieces, Beth and
Cindy Frost of Torrance.
They were attired in long
dres ses of pale pink.
Bride
'nle benedict, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph H. Frost of
Laguoa -· asked Roy Seeman Jr. of Laguna
Beach to stand e.s his best
man. Ushering guests to
their seats were Robert
Frost, the bridegroom's
brother, Paul Bergstrom of
Laguna Beach and George
Dunton I'll of Santa Ana.
Organist Mrs. George
Rodda accompanied t h e
Rev. Montgomery who sang
prior to the rites.
The newlywed3 greeted
150 guests at a reception in
the church. Mrs. Steven Dit-
mar of. Santa Ana circulated
the guest book while Miss
Melinda May of Tustin serv-
ed the groom's cake.~
The f-cnner Miss Karpen
was gradua1ed from Santa
Ana High School and studied
art at UCL She will continue
for a teaching credential
and masters degree at
Humboldt S t a t e College,
~rcata where .her hWiband
is studying for his masten:
'degree in wildlife con·
servation.
The benedict is an aJum-
nus of Laguna Beach High
School and attended UCI.
The couple will honey-
moon in Oanada before
making their home i n
Areota.
Arrivals, Departures Posted
THEIR FIRST visit to
Europe proved enjoyable for
the Allen Rosenbergs, who
toured L<lndon, Rome, Cann,
Nice, San Remo and
Barcelona on their two week
vacation.
The couple, who traveled
with Rosenberg's sister and
brother-Ut-law Mr . and Mrs.
Marvin Waronoff, viewed
highlights of ttle six cities.
including Tivoli Gardens in
Rome, W'hose fount:ains flow
without the aid of pumps,
the Vatican and St. Peters,
and Windsor Castle with its
1,800 permanent servants.
The Rosenbe!'gs w e r e
present a t Buckingham
paltace during a rehearsal of
the parade honoring the
queen's birthday a~d
witnessed the ambulances m
3'tendance for the palace
guards, many of whom col-
lapsed after standing at ~\.
tentioo for hours in their
CAREY McGOWEN
Future lrid•
IW'·lined jacl<ets on tile hot
<lay.
VACATIONING in the
Bluffs, Newport Beach, are
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth P .
Timmons and their two
daughters Jan and Bonnie,
from Denver , Colo. Tim-
moos is director for the
Martin-Marietta Apollo Ap-
plicatioo Program w i t h
NASA. His wile is the sister
of Mrs. Phyllis SQUflders,
social director of the Bluffs.
year at the University of
Bordeau:x, France on a
scholarship will be Miss
Jolaine Munck, daughter of
Mrs. M. J . Munck of
Atasoadero and formerly of
the Harbor Area.
Miss Munck is a graduate
of Costa Mesa High School
and has attended the
University of California ,
Berkeley for the past two
years.
F1eet White of Long Beach.
Yellow dabliaa decorated
the White home, where
reframment.s were served
to guests who included four
generaitiions of the White
family. The honored
couple's other son, Dr.
Ronald White traveled from
PhH.e.delphta to attend tile
celebration. Also present
were the three
grandchildren, Fleet White
Jr., La.ni Wbite acd Mrs.
MORE THAN 150 friends Davfd Cb:e.
and relatives ~ered in The elder White came to
MR. AND MRS. CLARK the Santa Ana Heights home Santa Ana when he was two
Stewart and their two-of Mr. and Mrs. Fleet White years old and married Ethel
month-old daughter, Jessica to celebrate the 60th wed· Townsend in 1908. Many
are visiting his parents, Dr. ding anniversary of White's guests at the party attended
and Mrs. Fletcher C 1 a r k parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. the wedding 60 years ago.
Stewart of Costia Mesa, --,-.-~---~---
before returning to work at
the University of Tennessee
where he is assistant pro-
fessor of alt.
STUDYING her junior
Troth Told
By Parents
1\1'.r. aoo Mrs. Roneld I.
1 M-ol Miuion Viejo
have moounced the engage.
meat oC ttielr daughter,
Clarey Lynne Mc:Gowen to
Frederick Allen Feetham,
son of Mr. and Mrs. John
Feetham of Tidewater, Ore.
No wedding date bas been
let by the <:<Jtlllle,
Botti are graduates of
Loera High School ; n
Anaheim. Misti McGowen
-.i Fullen.. Jumor
College where she studied
art and elementary educat-
ton. Her fiaoce was a stu-
dent at tile UDiversit>y o!
Iowa \\here he majored in
physicll. educatioo.
Both are college jud.ors
"" w1l1 coali'oue -ed-till• fill. '
shop at home for
custom . reupholsterinq
1C1Ve 20% on fabrics
• ••
3.99 lo 6.99 yard nq, ....... "
our ...,. l<mdoll N-Ccutlo pdnll of
SS% cotton and 45 % linen. Heavy, treated
with Scotchqard® brand fabric protector.
8 patterns, 31 coloni to choon from.
reqularly 6.(Xl yd. .............. 4.79 yd.
tho DobliD mattlalN collodlon. the rich·
looldnq rayon cmd cotton weave 1n nln•
wonderful patterns and thirty-etg-ht fashion
colors. reqo!arly 4.!J9.8.99 yd. 3.99-e.19 yd.
CGJI J'OUf n.anllt May Co and a decora·
lor consultcmt will brlnq you samples of
these sale fabrics, There's no charqe.
may co custom fabrica 11
00 -..
"'•Y co 1outlt c:o•lf pl•t•, 1011 cll•t• fr1•woy ot il..t1tol,
co1to "'01•: 146.9)21, 67S·l411-
tltop "'•"'· th'tu 11t, 10 o.m. to 9:JO p.m.
Ho"ori119 th• ni.mory of Mr. Tom Moy, •II 11rt .. 11 Moyc:o Coll.
fott1lo 1tor.1 wllt a. c:lo1•tl Th•r1tloy, Au1u1t 2tth, 1111tU 12 110011.
' -
Wrdnesday, August 28, 1%8 DAILY PILOT JS
TOMORROW AND FRIDAY, YOU ARE INVITED TO SEE J
TRAVILLA'S FASHIONS FOR TODAY ...
INFORMALLY MODELED, 11:00 AM . TO 4:00 P.M.
IN OUR. DESIGNER SALON. ·
SHOWN, FROM THE COLLECTION, A PEASANT SHAPE
STUDDED WITH A RANSOM OF TOPAZ -COLORED STONES
ON GLOWING LILAC. MISSES SIZES. 395.00.
'
ih~&n's
NEWPORT CENTER
i.~ I
I . :,, :
,...;,..; ' -
Robimons Ne111port -• -Ft1Sbio11 Isla11d
' • Pbont 641-2800 '· . ~
I
I
I
I
j
!f DAILY ~ILOT Wtdntsday, .,,.,, 23, 1968 .~· --------------.----------------~·~P;IL;O;l·;A~D;VE~R~T~l5~E;Niliijiliij;W~td~llHd~<1;' 4
;"";;' 2;8,;1;968~-....
.:S:.:ta.=d.:.:e:.:n:.:U=-t.o~+e..:..b_:.:al:c..l....;..d. ' • leach & Edinger llvd., Hllltlntton • 2300 Hartior llvd. at WU... St.-• 233 E. 17th St.-Costa Mna Scroung r Builds leach Ha1tlor Shopplnt Centw, Costa Mna Shopping C9tltW, Costa Mna
.... , ..
OCC Air Program C.v••1••ce Ope11 Ill
Wiien George Bingo ~
pllod for tile job al beading
-ON:n&e Coul College's new
Mrframe and power pro·
lf&m ·be WU aked bow good
a scrounge be is.
He bas found out ability to
-· ii Ill lmpol'tant >!-tribute In bis job. "'lbal'•
what I've been doing since 1
1ot b ..... Scrotmglng pU!c<•
of -airplane," be said.
stneo. hired a month ago
from Los Angeles Airways.
already bas Ibo floor o! th•
airframe a b o p soottered
with pats of II 1 9 4 6
Tayloreraft fOr students to
put together.
In addition to l h e
Taylorcraft, •imilar U. the
Piper CUb, Bingo has ac-
quired various pieces of
llldders which apparently
came to bad ends some time
•co, iudglna from th e
assortied wririkles they bear.
The coune ii designed l<l
train techn·icians for
GRAFffTI
aircraft ma.int.enance. "The first year of the pro-
gram will deal with
airframe only," Bingo sa~.
"We'll re-cover the
Taylorcraft and do work on
the wooden span. Wood
isn't used any more in
airplane frames , but it ls an
FAA requirement that you
have to know how to do it."
Th.e gliders are aluminum
covered and will g i v e
studeub a chance to work
on something other than
fabric.
"I'll punch holes in that
aluminum skin and the
.tudenil; will patx:h it,"
Bingo said. "They'll learn a
lot more wcriing on .atl ac·
tu~ aircraft than something
fake ."
Bingo aa)ls hi11 Mud~
will not only recover the
Taylorcraft, but will even-
tually re-assemble it and
make !t airworl!by.
"We'll be able Ibo makt it
fly eventually," he says.
Next yo.ar the college will
offer U»ie ·teeond half of the
program which will include
aircraft engine work. 'lb.e
college will !have both <:OD·
-'""1 jet engine• for the atudtnts to work on -
depending on haw ....U
Bingo ocraunila.
'"lbe «KrSe eveatudy
will be approved by the
FAA," ht ea.)'8. "But to get
the:ir approYal, you mun
hwe • aircraft with
rMraatlabla landing gear to
woK on, ao:l eo tar I
haven't been able to find
one. I wiab I could."
So, U you blppen to have
a tirod old ehvlane wilh a
retradlablo landing geor and
you'd llk8 to 1get rid of it,
there'• um guy at Orance
~Oolloge ...
Molol ot -~ _.,
COSTA MISA
C..lb• ,_,_, ..... .,,, ...
1~PIRTS CASUALS
~O&Cllp --Lisht .
""" .in IDlidoi plaids. a.a.-·. -4 .. 12,
illfl UI to a, -· 4toJO,,.....'rltlol
-' """' -Ill lo e._
.
99 ,,.,,.
AJ«. AIOOT LAY-AWAY, 10% clown Midi "'"'
,_.+Sn •t Woolworth11, no C'UTYinl char,., lff!'.
-
,...120•--• Vi'ODUIDDZalH'8 ...,._, . .....,. ,...,thru ,.....,
Unttl f :30 , M..-
S1turday 'Tll 9 P.M.
•
Day
....... y,
Labor Day
$1.59 Scissors
•d Shears
PRECISION MADI IMPOm
WITH ADJUSTABLE flT SCRIWI
~f~:~ •12• ~-~ ----· Al wi6 .df.ml»e ttt ......
AH JOW fMoritt
fla\IOll ia 12 a1.
C1M.. For JfeA11r
l&Ti8JI, 1*7
tbrm hr lbr
wol
a.,::=-
ii M!:l' .....
Movie Flllll
"••••••21
lads .. •.
!:i:" .:Ii! "
6 VARllTill
POUND
BOX
I« box trpc
cooliies •ith 1rue c J d • fuhiooed
flavor! 6 vtric·
~m bor!
IHllAI. OCCAllll
Half Gall•
ii-~ffi-.t, Ice Cr•••
Y-et.oiM ._, K O.Hciovr ""-
• C....1111t ,.......,.., """' W•i..t ·cw..... ...... ..
• " ... ~ 0 11..,._.; w ...
• ·~ 11.-• a..c....w oi, ' c-...,.. • l111t~ TMfff 11 ..................... ,..'".
' tlllfnt•V .. llle • V11llle .,. ........ c... ......... w •••
Free": Fll111
11111111111 1(141acolor
• Thrifty llack & White
12~120-,'1· 2t
Wlttl Heh reH •f .. ,.., left fw 4•~1fte •'"' '""""t-WHTN YOU
l'tCK Ill' YOlll ...... _ .
•2.59 Viscose Rayon Loop
6-Foot Runners
7t4 Cannon
FlllT QUAUTY
Bath Towels
printl Ja dJI 1a-.1 5oli" "'" .. ""' 6 3 c homr lubioe mlOll.
221+4" •i.t. lll (bt.
.too tenr. Draa ~
J 0 II f bltfuooa fOr
Pall!
w.i. ........
•1.49 Yala1I
Air Mattress
'2.91 Llldles
S. lla11e1
l.....,.,;,,l lo
hrJallt •Jon. t 10 , rf'dr• ...
fldld fw pool and
11111 fa! 69 c ~~'l $194
.......... fllilt. ...
•1.Jt Y1l11I
Cal••• htl
laM11 ....... _ Aa.i
1 ..... •hiit-ff' ....
. St1illlu Sftel
. C.122pln1 Kit
, ... ...., ;,;i,, 59• folk and iplOft ,.
·• ia hutd, etrrr· illl ftK,
121AhMlll•ll• ....
hllle ...... ..
MIMlll11a•M1 ... ..... , .....
•1"
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"" ... Gt11t ( 73c
.,., ..... ...
11111212 .... ..
...... ....... , .•.
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55.99 Ilg D
~~~'3"
'
. .
PNtfft Heavy TraMI L\nlll!I
Colon hy lrlght ....i l'Nolil
Dloooolll'I .. , .......
•5,95 Military Styl TffNAGEllS' ·14 INCH
Tote Luggage
1Jw-U O'iWIU M '-dhq ! , °"'"' " hriaht ..... .. $399· .. ~~· ~~· .
U.tt V.a. 11" ••• . M · ~ -· sa.tt v.t. ,,.. . . . . ·" ·
'4.95 Yaluel Yl11yl
l •
22" Floor C111hlon1 · · f 1
'2''
., ...... £ ...
12x70" Ta•I• C."'
ttc·
'"""-";i ... f~i: .. .........
AH11•1C111
. .
6Y .. Oltl ··· [
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lo11clH _. '
•nL1112 ... :·
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w~>ll9Uil 28, 1968 PILOT.AOVERTISER-7 Wfd11tsd11, August 28, 1968 DAILY PILDT J 7
Q • 6127 Westminster at Goldesi West,
.::!<,§f: Westminster • 1406 W. Edinger and lrl1tol St-
Edinger Center, Santa Ana • 17904
1
M119y nolla St. at Talbert.. · I
Foussta n alley
•
--29c ea. Run-Resistant
Acetate Briefs
WOMIN'S llZES IN 'COl.0"5 & . WHITI
illiilonally Advertised 5,,.99c ;17·Jewel
Gst Watches
.., •.•• In• 461
-lea bilofs lo ..,. a. Dtala tricot tblt
•• , ......... ....., • 411 wftll atetdtlltf
. -: ....... ......, INwclMt .,.11a1.
~~~ ·1-9·-"99 -. •'!···· .. .. "' ... _
-··--... tlOidr!JI !me -IP la0w;1Uhlte, · p_ol_lr
·lliMl llld~t ~
----
59:· Alka Seltz•. e e e 47•
DD11W. U,. Peck· ef I IW.
79c Gillette :: ............... 54 •
49' Yal1t each . . .
IJ..00.... bf. • ffenl .. 11.w -
69c Lanolin Plus :1 .... 49c
I Y40....
69' Plus White.: ..... 47c
· 111 Quality
$)'' Panty
H:ose
Pint TllM
at Super
laVlftllol
IS•• Pair!
$.
Don't Confute ,., ••
•w"'flhl: lkfmpy Paldy Ha••
Y..n. Seen ...............
Ancl Here'1Whyl
............. S.S • .,., .. """"' ...................... . ...... Allllllo._ ...... _... ... w ...
................. ·•...w..i-w!lhillool
................. -•• -111ndl ·---................... _ ... ""llcaf&it! a..., Wwl
......... ,.... I h"""1,6o-&tl0d""'°rt Of CIQl' .. art Jiatr t.itl ~fork llll!*h. w:ltMatd u.1x.. ............. :!! ...,..,cm.., -···••11 ,._...., 5
.............
Stretch J11111 :..r.e. .:i:;.o:ti:: s3•• "°"' __ ,,_
W'llltr, N"1, C.Olo& ClO tC. , _
Wo111tn'1 lo1d1•
Orlon• P•ll
si"'oo .... G ... 11 H •••HT 58, ffi.'.f€,;~ . I e e GUIRD ........... n '3"
j •4.91Mllllature
·" Follin! Travel Alarm
~ : -·=$387
2
·. . ...
......
•3.00$199 Value
fad., Seconds of ••• • tu Long Cool Cigar
-·~ .............. ... ·,:;:.::!US, ..
·~·5:-2•9
lex tf 50
ii~ White's A & D e. e. 53'·
14-0s. hr
Mr. Paul Hair ~ ....... 84c
lwbr. Gt,etri'ne A .. lt lotflt of 11 ·
57' Suppositories 2 i 5 7c
MHiu"'• Htrcl °' btN He,.
89' Lactona ::: ............ 59c
•1.2s Y•l••I HRIRKl'OI"
Upstlck
!.Hf. i1f.:· 59 o ..... " c Blazed Pink
... ...i ,... .
Glue.
BrlRC AD Yeur Pm&rlptl•• ti "'"-,......, ................. .. t.n, , •• ,......,. fw ••••er,,., .. tty ..... ,....., ••• ....., llfkatl,
tool
....... c .... ...,.
3tc
Men's & Women's
Fisherman Knii
Sweaters
Your
Choic:e
'.fEN'S PULLOVERS f1•h io11ed $
of 61 'I. weal A JS% Kodel
wftfl f'll•ck turtle11eck. Their hold
'11 ~r1w11 look 11 e1po11tiv1 , .
tho jttico oj[fr1 low. Grttf
colon -N1turol, lluo, Gold,
&ro111, S.M.L.Xll
WOMIN'S WOOL •ULLOVERS
horid loefl'llHI 111 ltofy with fib.
1,1lo1u ollo\'or dod9111, All tl!o
flllllriOll Wt ,,nfh •fllri n1tt1ry
reu wl11tl leld 111d botutlful In
111tty N1fur1f, S.M·l.
•1 Pierced & Pierced . . .
Look Eanlngs
~=o4~\':..~ . 31c ..... _ .... ,.,. ... _." .. ... -........ .......
• , .. , •••• ...., •1 ... , .. Rllh: .... 11
P11•a111 & Earrings lrooche1 & Earrings
97c ~'" ;-6~ = t ·':& . ;. ~ft" itt~'t.:r:': ;.,... . •---._........ ,,. ......... -.,
' . I
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I
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-~---·--·-.
J8 DAJlY PILOf
.... _
•
Horoscope
Libra : Gain Shown
Thursday, Aug . 29
By SYDNEY O~IARR
ARJES (!<.arch 21-Aprll
19): Confront ri nan c i a I
fact1. Knowledge can make
you sure, strong. Avoid seU-
deception. See p e r so n s ,
situatiom in realistic light.
lnte:relf. in unusual subjects
1s accented.
TAURUS: (April 20-May
20): Cement relationship
with mate, partner. Budget
matters, touchy subjects
need airing. Obtain hint
from ARIES message. Doo 't
hide from issues. Listen and
observe and decide.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20): Check resources. You
may be hanging on to out-
moded method6 . Ba! to
s tr e a m1iJ)e pr~es .
Sepai:ate a ct u a I re-
quirements from m e r e
desires. Put sentiment in
proper place.
CANCER (June 21-July
22): Good for new contacts.
Express ideas. Find out
where roadblock exists. Be
daring -take initiative.
Day to attract allies. Sell
your product -act with
verve. Be a &bowman.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Numerous details co u l d
m u 1 t I p 1 y . Be tborougn.
Finish one task at a time.
Accent on home, family
agreements w h 1 c h a1fect
future securUy. 0 Id er
person talb sense. Listen.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Yoo are provided wtt.h in·
formation which leads to op-
timism. Enlarge viewpoint.
Avoid being naITOw. You
have much to offer. Let
others know You are cos-
mopoUtan, open-minded.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
If observ.ant, you could find
way of getting what you
need. Accent continues on
money sector . Gain shown iJ
you repay kindness. Study
LEO message.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21 ): Changes work in your
fa vor. Be conected, poised.
Show that you are not
without allies. Display of
strength i6 called for today.
Others will think. twice
before opposing you.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Much occurs
behind Ule 1ceoea. Avoid at-
titude of impatience. Obtahi
hint from SCORPlO
message. Patch up any dJ-
ferencet!i between family
members. Quiet progress is
indicated.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-
Jan. 19): Friend may reveal
facts which fit Puzzle pieces
together. New knowledge
could come as surprise.
Utilize facts. Win w a y
through dip Io ma tic ap-
proach.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Now is time to see peo·
pie in charge. Throw off red
tape. Get to heart or mat·
ters. Many are willing to
listen and buy. Realize this
and act accordingly.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Jv.:arch
20J : Personal philosophy
could be put to significant
test. Stand tall. Your own
principles are your greatest
ally. Day to finish rather
than <o begiJi projecla.
Day Picked
For Rites
MRS. GHAD JAMES WOZNIAK
Hawaiian Honeymoon
Engagement
Announeed
St. Andrew'& .Presbyterian
Cburch, Newport Beach will
be 1be oetting for the Oct. 19
wedding Linking Cheryl Lyn-Goleta Home During a c b amp a g n e ne Alden!m and John
toast, close relative& of Bon-Dooe1d Arp Jr.
nie Holrne6 and William Miss A:lderson. daughter
Jame5 Deane learned of of Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Alderson of Newport BeaC'h,
thefr engagement arid plans is a graduate of Newport
for Uieir wedding which will Harbor High School and at-
take place Oct. 26 in st. An-tended Orange C o a s t
drew's Presb y ter i en College. She is a member of
Of Newlyweds
Sl M a r y ' s Episcopal
Jburch, Laguna Beach, was
the setting for the double
ring ceremony 1 i n k i n g
Claire Ann White and Chad
James Wozniak.
lace over ta1feta with a wa· Church, Newport Bead!. Job's Daughters, Bethel 313
teau train. Her tiered il· The bride-to-be, daughter and Beta Sigma Phi.
lusioo veil. was capped by a of Mrs. Arthur M'anuel and Her fiance, son of Mrs.
flower sunburst headpiece David H. Holmes of Fred Strafford of Laguna
of lace and seed pearls, and Ne-wpori Beach, is 8 Beach 8.Dd John D. Arp ol
she c 8 r r i e d 9lephanotis graduate of Corona de! Mar .. ,. Ktc11 ~llet9 LakeWood, is a graduate of
centered with a w hi t e High School and now is a Newport Harbor High
JEANETTE FERREE
Will Morry
Party Marks
Nuptial Da te
In October
During the 18th birthday
celebrati'on of Jeanette Fer-
ree, her parents Mr. and
Mrs. J . Lewis Ferree of
Fountain Valley announced
her betrothal to Daniel T.
Hardy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
o. M. Hardy 0( Fountain
Valley.
The b e n e d ict-elect's
parents home was the set-
lling for ~ fuunily party.
Miss Ferree and her
fiance are graduates of
Fountain Valle!' Hi g b
School, 'th e future
bridegroom now i6 a student
at Golden West College.
The couple have selected
Oct. 26 for their wedding in
King of Glory Lutheran
Church, Huntington Beach.
WAREHOUSE OUTLn
Fumlture ancl Carpet
Spanish Oak & Wrought Iron
Dining Set 48" table 4 ehaira
$195.00 s.t Ro9 . $245.00
HEAVY NYLON SHAG $6.t5
installed over foam pad The Rev. Baird Coffin
performed the ceremony for
the daughter of Mr. and
W'.rs. Mi'nor White of Laguna
.Beach aOO the son of Mr.
and Mrs. James Stanley of
Santa Barbar.a. The altar
was adorned w it h ar-
rangement.s or white gladioli
and !Jtock, interspersed with
yellow gladioH.
orchid. 9tudent at t>range Coast BONNIE HOLMES School. Presently he is st.a.-
Aqua chiffon A-line gowns College. To Marry tioned in Mobile, Ala. where J. J. KNICKERIOCKEI
and bouquets of white Her fiance. son o( Mr. Md 1 he is serving with a
dafsies were selected for the Mrs . James F. Deane of helfcopter air and sea !bl= :11~ fT~!urJ
maid of honor, Miss Lynn Newport Beach, is a High School and attended rescue team with the U.S. 545~8409
Williams : the bridesmaid, ~gr~a~d~u=a~te~ol~N=e~wpo~r=t=H=ar~bor~~OC~C=·========~eoo.t~~G~uar~~d:. ====~~=======~~1 M i s s Susan Thomas, and ,
Given in marriage by her
fa1tier, the bride wore a
gown of rosepoint chantilly
Bequests
Discussed
By Lawyer
Wills and TrUS'ts will be
the toJ»c of Peter C. Tomey
wh<I will address a Law for
Laymen seminar sp<msored
by Alpha Theta Chapter of
Iota Tau Tau, international
. legal sorority tomorrow.
The lecture will begin at 8
p.m. at Orange University
College of Law in Santa
-Ana. It is open to the public
without charge.
The speaker is a professor
of law at Orange University
where he teaches about
wills and also is in private
practice in Costa Mesa. A
graduate of University of
Southem caUiornia Law
School, he also teaches real
estate law at Santa Ana Col-
lege and is a director of the
Orange County Community
Action Council.
Members of the s()("Ority
will s e r v e refreshments
after the lectw'e.
junior brtdesmaid, M is s
Katherine Spaniac, t h e
bride's niece.
Attending as best man
was Robert Denno, while
usher duties were assumed
by Kendall White and Dr.
Joseph Spaniac, the bride's
brother -in -law. Frederick
Barnes was the organist.
Mi ss I.Arraine Crook and
Miss Anne Crook circul ated
the guest book during the
reception in Hotel Laguna,
and serving as hostesses
were W.rs. Spaniac and Mrs.
Joseph Thesing.
FollOWiing a Hawaiian
honeymoon, the newlyweds
will reside in Goleta, where
both will continue their
educati'on.
Ttle bride is a graduate of
Laguna Beach High School
and ·the University o f
California, Santa Barbara
and plans to work toward a
teaching credential. Her
husband, a graduate of San-
ta Barbara High School,
earned his masters degree
at UCSB and now is working
toward a PhD in hi'story.
Auxiliary
American Legion Hall in
Costa •Mesa is the setting fur
meetings of the Aux~Hary to
Barracks 1249, Vet.erians of
World \Var I. The first Tues-
day of each mon1lh members
gallher fore business
session at 7:30 p.m . and .the
third Tuesday for a social
and potluck ot 6 p.m.
FINAL DAYS
SAVINtSS UP TO
1
20FF
SWIM SUITS
SHIFTS
PANT TOPS
CAPRIS
DRESSES
' ~IM ;r::adtou
3'42'4 Via Lido , Newport Beach
~ Dl&neyland ~otel, An•helm
Maketbe
Back-to-School Scene
witb~in;er
Portable stereo phono
by SINGER
• Automatic4-siieed'reoord
changer • Battery or optional
AC operation • Separate tone
control• Fully transistorized
lorlonglile. Onw IJ9JS
Lightweight
portable TV by SINGER
•Big 11" picture, measured
1iagonally • Out-front speaker
• Auto-lock tuning • Built-in
UHFNHF enlenna .
Onffl ·l88
Featherweiaht' portable
l<Wing machine by $1NGER
• l.ighlweight, on1y 111!! poorda
easy to carry • Heavy duty, sews on
all types of fabrics-sheers lo
heavy woolens.
$99.9$ i<.,.1,.i,IJ2~M
Come see and 11)1 the ,,.....st Golden TOUCH & SEW°delu>e
zig-zag SE!'Ning machines by SINGER. TherearufiWt newest
TOUCH"&SEWsew;ngmachineslrom '149.fJS
FOR FAILSEWJNG,1VNB UP lOVR
SBW11VG MACHJNE.ONIY 14.n
Cal1 SINGER lod&'f. We'lloome toyoorhome and
tune-up any make or mcrlel sewing machine.
,..,._;_.}JI',~ It ot 11 NG• R todq/·•
ASK AIOUT OUR Cf'lf.DfT f'UN-
DEltOHEO TO mYOUA BUOG£1',
·~ T1.atmaitiol Tkl SING(R COMP'
IUENA PARK
ll30 On Th "4111
TA 1-7540
luen• P•rk Center
COSTA MHA
2100 H•rbor 81vci.
Kl 9.1195
Herbor C•nt•r
GARDIN IOROVI
t9l I Ch•pm•n
530-40 I 0
Or•n;• County Pl•:r:•
HUNTINGTON IEACH
Eding•r at l•tth
197-104 1
Huntin;ton l•ach Center
SINGER
ANAHEIM
615 N. lo•t•
535 1126
An•h•im Cent•r
SANTA ANA
Downtown
lOS W . 4th SI.
Kl 2-3945
LA MIRADA
I 5024 l• Mir•dt llvci.
lA 1-l5l2
l• Mir•d• Center
COSTA MISA
Bri1tol a Sunflower
540-26ll
South Coast Plau •
I See by Today 's
Want Ad~
e -"Maq, ~I",
will itve IOV~l ~ to
Teachers' infant. C¥ pre-
ecbooler. ~
'<C::;a:.:J_,.,',;,.0::.--:f;, e J1.11t wblt fQu·.v. · betn . iooklne "" ID ... ,_
Wint« Clothta ~· , -
SUlts, drHI, alteration.a.
mend.in&: eb::. Work l'l8f"
anteed from I. ! IMiy 1n
HW'ttinrton Bcb. ,
e Giddy Up!! Appj·Welch
matt pony fur .. ~· e.t •
retl.SOMble priCL GSltle: &:
sweet, fine for~;O:illd-...,_ . '
• "l do 18,)' this ii Yatber •
good ""'·" A llllll-Ford (Zephyr~ ~·well;
iood brakes. ~:'..,ri e Need a hoflpital • bed?
Here'• one with patient-
lifter, exerdae bar &: com-mode. _,. . ._'
~epatites;._
rrialie the scene
Jof'Fill
• Sew vests, skirts, culottes-for Fall sep1ra1e116
• F1bric1 from SINGER boast great coordinatear
•Sew them up on a new SINGER• sewing machin P '
SINGE~• Fancy Fllng. Colorft.tl s3· 98---plaidl(farsie and small checks, co-
ordinated to eotids. Bonded to 100'/e --=
ac'!tate backing -they keep their ~
ahape, are easy to sew. 92•/, te•· • :
tt.tred .acetate, &-/, nylon, 64" wida. ~-! ...
SINGER' Wool CoordinotH. $398 large-acaled plaids ahd matching ~annel1In1hades of gray, brown. Just yd,
nght to aew up bold new Fall aepa·
rata1. 75'/• wool, 25•4 nylon, Sotu wide.
Tha new•1t ~ttam11 color-coordinated lippera, tbrad,
buttons, tape are at your nearest SINGER CEtn'ER.
Plu1 &II the •-pert sewing help you m1y naadl
Jt11atf 11n. for tMtcwoe ff at 51 NC E R 1oda1 t•
SINGER
For llldrtu of slort newest )OU, see white Pllh -.
of phorle boot; under SINGER COMPMY
.GARDEN GROVE
8831 Chapman
Orange Caunty Plaza 530-4ClJ,Q.
ANAHEIM-515 N. Laarg
Anaheim Center 535· 1126 '
HUNTINGTON BEACH :
Eding., at Beach
Huntington Cent., 897·1041
COSTA MESA-2300 Harbor
Harbor Center 549· 1105;
COSTA MESA
Bristol & Sunflow.,
South c-t Plaza 540·2633
~--. -. -·~------------------------------...--......-..-.....--
• • • • i • • • • • • • I • I
= • I • • ~ • I • • • • •
= • • ~ • • • 5 • = -
Wtdntsday, 4ugust 28, 1%8 PILOl ·AOVERTISER-3 Wtt1n~sday, August 28, 1968 DAILY PILOT J9
zbA
ews of Coast Men in Service on n ·uty Around W orltl
&Pee. 4 Brace M. Sullivan,
·ht!ibahd of Mrs. Catherine
,,SUllfW:n ci 2100 N11tional
X've~~Cogta Mesa. has been
assigned to the 5 t b
· Me·Cbanited Infantry
· OMsfon in Quang Tri, Viet· Jlllll, ..
;-,');:~
RQwe, 1299 Coo.way Ave., or Mr. and Mris . lla.rold E. and h1 a membtr of the bas been assigned to tht Pitr'Ol SQuadron &6. bf.sed . Orange Avt .. Costa Mesa: rd Cl.us Wlllla.m E. German,
Costa Mesa, bu been Breier Sr. of 7242 Judson AFROTC unit at Univtrsity F'lrst Marine Division in at Los ..Alamit~ Naval Air Av J atioo Anti·Submarlne USNR, son of Mr. anct ·Mr1.
assJa:ned to the 1st Infantry Ave .. Westminster, is ol Southern oallfornia. Vlct11am. StaUon. Warfare Techniciut 2nd Leon V. German ol 15311
Di.vi.sloo near Di An, Viet· participating in a U.S. Air . They are Aviation Elec. Class Mar1hall W r I c b t , Shasta Lane, Huntlogton
nam, as • light weapons in· Jo'orce Res er v e Ol!i'cers Marine PFC Jack L. . Four Orange Coast area trlcian's Mates 2nd Class USNR. soo ,o( lt1r. and Mrs. ~acti
faotryman. He is the son of Training Ciofl>S field en· RowlaGd, 20, son of Mt. aod men ore undergoing two Deanl1 II. llankl. USN'R, of Orrin W. Wrilbt Jr, of 2200 · U'~ completion of the
Mr. a.od Mta. George E. campment program at Mrs. Jack W. Rowland and weeks of a~ve tra.lning at 145-15 17th St .. Co51a Mesa Vista Huel'to, New po r·l tra.lning, tbey will return lo
Jeffcoat of Garden Grove. HarniltonAFB.Oalif. husband ol Mrf. Canda L. Naval Mr statlon Barber's and Stanley L. Sauter, Beach; and Avia·tion Los Alamitos and attend
Cadet Breier i4 a graduate Rowland, all af 5062 Audrey Point, Hawaii. They are USNR. son of Mr, and Mrs. Beach! M>d Aviation Ma.We~ .wee-kend meetings once • :, ~man Henr y M. ff Id E B I J>tVuae~ 90n m Mr. and r---••_• __ ·:.....:"':.....:'':.....:J=":.....:'°"=-=°'=-W=e=•=tclle::::•=tor=-=H=ig=h=::.Sc=·hoo::::l:.....:Dr:.:.:iv=e=·:.....:H=untin==·=glM::.::::_Be:..::•=c=b:.....:am:::::oo::!g=tll=•:...:500;:..:":;::''=rviMll='===of::._=Car::::.l:_E=·:.....:Sa::::•=''=r:.....:ol:....=2689:::.:.....:•=1111=c=•=A=dm::::m=1='1tr::..::•tlorun::::::::"':_~ __ m~ontlJ:.;;,..~·~-----~ Mrs. "Heney M. DeVu..., of
l~·Glouceorer Lane, Hun· -tlnctm Beodi, bu been
,..,.;.,..i to tile Air Force
· Tedlllical TNilling Center
at Keesler AFB. Tex.
".-A'-· graduate o! Marina
tliglt' ~ool, tile -••• tended Golden West Jllllior
College be!cn entoriilg the
1ervide.
~" ... ,. ,14> CJ .g.) Stephen J .
Carpenter, USNR, 25, son of
AU. "'1d Mrs. W. W. • ,. • ...,..._ ol Coota Mesa ·-~~ ....,ded b i's
aviator'• "Wings oi Gold."
Under tile fiiglJ! tr.mug
program. be received. his
win·@_ 18 months after en-
te<ijf; the prQ81'am and
abotl('.. six m<llllbs after
begiJl!lng advanced ph.,..
of training at Beevilh, Ttx. --~-John C. Jacobs, ~TirMr. and Mrs. Hubert
E. J1l<Obo o! ~ Laguna
Place, Seal Beadl, has com·
pleted basic training at
Lackland AFB, Tex. He has
been assi'gned to the Air
Force Technical Training
Center at Keesler AFB1 Miss., for training as a
communications • electron-
ics specialist.
Airman Jacobs is a 1966
graduate oi' Marina High
School and attended Gold~
"\\/~ Coll<j!e.
"·~an Randy S. Kraft,
;o4·pf·')lr. and Mrs. Harold
H, '-Kraft of 15132 Beach Slvd., Midway City, com·
p)eted basic· trai.ni.ng at
tac~ AFB, Tex. . !~~~·· been assigned .. ihu ' Afr Force Technical ti>iining OenU!r. Shepperd
AF.g, Tex. for schooling as a
~ o: n s t ruction speeiali'st.
AL-man Knlft is a graduate
o! -,West.minster High School
~nd-, earned his BA degree
'(fNT\..,C I are mo n t Men's
Colle{!. . . . ' . BriiJ,o H. Ward, SQri o( Mr,
and-:·.Mf'S. Elbert .H. Ward,
6942 Lydia Drive. Hl,ID·
t ing t on Beach is
• participating in a U.S. Ah'
·. Resecve Officers · Training
:· Corps f i e 1 d training en-
, campment at Li.We ·Roell
I
AFB, Ark. ~
Cadet Ward', a 19 & 6
graduate of Marine High
School, is a member cJ. the
AFROTC writ at San Diego
state College.
Airman Cbarle1 R. Poat,
son of Olt.v"les N. Post of
5351 . Yale Ave .,
Westrrijnster, has cl)lJlpleoted
basic §aining at Lack.land
AFBEfex. He has been ass~ to the Afr Force
Tieoliiiiel Training Center at.illl!flpard AFB, Tex.
-~ Post is a 1966 graduate orf Westminster
High School and attended
~ ... Jieach Oiity College
b~~ '" eMering ttie Air ~.ci.~
Sgt. WllUam E. Rowe, -
husband of Mrs. Linda
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a longer lasting a~ 1 29 brigh!P.r shine -Paste
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SOLO Plastic Cups
Cold beY'trage cups for picnic and liome US!.
• -7 or. si1e in asst. colors.
DIXIE Plastic UllftSilS
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DIXIE P~er ei.s
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Tablets
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Marj fl1i1k for 11111
fle1rs -•ri1s cl11r,
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For fast. lon1·l1St·
inc pain relief. Gives
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Bu ti 19 111!. •I· "The Ant~Bact11i1I"
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plain or ruled. 2:2gc
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e4, adjustable foot ~t. J. ::'.'" 14 88 caoop~. •
Folding High Chair
Convtrts to youth & lllil1l1
chair. fo1m padded. ad-
t::~• 12 98 foci rest. •
Walker-Jumper
from t111se, nervous CUii.
h11l1chu .
100't sac 2:1.00 uo 69c 4 11. Si11 .
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I~''' strong steel 2· 29 ca1e and shackle w/
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Hic-tl PJattd -Brass dial, fin·
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while nomtrals. O~u· 1 59· ble acting locking
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seconds. . . :
With -One •
Roll Tepe 2· 69
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Asst colors of vinyl self-adhesive 2 '1 00 !ape -counlfess uses for every o
member of the family. • •
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1 Tip Top Curlers I M1rnelit 1r S••• 01 J1Uers-f;st
• wiPding, last drying-safe with tn1
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Hot 'n Cold Vacuum
THERMOS -Combinatinn Pack Snip
ring holds VilCllUm bottle for l\ot souos
& insulated snak ia1 for 2 49 cold salad~ •. etc. -!its
work lunch kits. • \
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stainless steel over 1 98 ~eav·r wrou2ht steel
inner r.~se. , • "'-----w..w.--WM .... ~ . lllWIUllllllllllllllHWlllnH11111t1MlllllMllUlllllllllll\lllllllltlllllllnHHMMltl ----3-Ring
Vinyl
Notebook
3-Sllb:llivider
Theme ''Peanuts' cha1acter long sleeve shirt i111T1~1rt1;111N~~k"~Sh"irt•11Mmm ~ ~~ 01~•
Book for b-Ovs or 21r\s-Colorful sc1een ~nnts
1h" cap1clty-So!I
cover J.r1"I bi/Ider
-colMs.
I ot c_artoon characters on •. "G~!dt lo 8etltr Gra~es'' tf{)n!. 100% combe~ 2 29 Soiral. ruled boo~. w. en art cotton. Siles 4·14. Asst. ~~Iii-~
cf ~elplul bin.ts .on good 1 colors. • 1 s~udy habits fits into ring· ilnMHMmHrnuu11mUHl~Hmn111111111m111~1rnmm1m111111111111111in1 b·~"-98& f "~·;;;;,~;"'"i~~:-. 6t
Help> ta replace natu1al oils lost It . ____________ _, 1 weatner or water-Hand~ 7·9c
slay beautiful. 91h cz. size
PAINTING {IPEC:l4J5 11:~1::1::::::~~'1!1'~"""~111"""~
COLOR-JET SPRAY PAINT f'"s;~;l''"&;;k""sh;;f" .. """"'-~
Wit• s••ci1I C1rrt1lt~ IR4 79c All st~el construction. All edges rounded ~
Ruit prt¥fftlali¥t -wide I or turned un~r. O~orattve stap.s 1t . cl\o1cc ol brl111ant colors. ~ach sidf. lo keep books 1 88 ~ from slipping. J6"~9·• ·
PAINT Brushes -JG ' "'1"· •
1 "•o•~I• ••••s" ltl1t-4" nylon 1 39 111111111m11m11n111ff11m11111"11111:"":':'"11:•:::;:;;;::
wall brush ind • 2" pure bristle wb
bosh. • 1mi,•£111£ PAINT Roller l Cover -__ V
Roi.cage trtme w/2 C9vers for !namer 1 69
& !lat l1n1sl\es, •
171~
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A Biid YHnt Fratrlftce in l1ld11 filllltt
111 je T1ll1tt1 Spray Mist
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Zee Napkins ,
"Mi• '11 Mite•" Asst. E1!1rs -2•49C Urge ~kg. of 150. t
S~ring ICtiOfl, fllra l1r1e
wtieels. rtmovilble !ray,
padded h~1d 5 98 rest. Folds l!1t
for itorage. •
WIRE Brush
3 row dur~ble wire brush w/cUl'led wood
handle for easy grip. 39c Smart durable vioyl
malched pietes for ,,.
ca lion or back to !Choo I.
£1Klice of "lors.
JO.DAY
SUPPLY FIH
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CLIFFCHAR Briquets
for ''Comt 'n Get It Fl&~or'' -E~ier
to light-JO lb. bag.
CHARCOAL lighter Fluid
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Fits back or front teal ~
))ldded ht1d orotectnr -
comes with •m rail Jlld
BRUSH Cleaner
Cl!aning solvent {or ro!1ers & bnlslies. 6nc ~ {\• \J-
ARTIST Brushes
11"
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21" 1her1l1~t
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For instant st1rting or charcoal or l¥OOd
tires-~!. c,n. lloohl• 1 0 98 hafllt5S
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f\g. of 20 tS st. line brushes !or eiafts, 40c
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DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Ten Strong Guardi-an·s
• On the aeashore, as In the jungle, survival ol the
fitteet i.s the creed.
The fittest Ibis year were 10 b""1Ud Southern Call·
fomla youths -three from Orange County -who out•
lasted 108 others who wanted to become Huntington
Beach city lifegwuds.
Their pay was good -$3.19 U> start -but Ibey
earned it. Miles ol rwmlng U> stay In shape and grueling
swim competitions to keep tbeir form were part of
tbelr da!IY routineo, In addition to tbe expected rescues,
~-<rid calls and care of live U> eight lost children each
weekend.
'!'Ile 10 high school and college students, easily
recognized In the summer beach crowd by their red
trunks with a shouldered fluorescent orange floal, will
be honored Thursday with a recognition dinner at Life-
guard Headquarters near tbe Huntington Beach pier.
The boys dedicated their summer vacations and
gave up their Easter holidays to compete in endless
pbyiical fitness tests to watch over the estimated six
mi.Ilion sun and surf worabipers who made the beach scene this 1ummer.
The successtul 10 are pert of a group of 71 life-
guards called ''summer recwTent.6° and 11 perm.a·
nent, year around lifeguards who make up the swnmer
force of. 82 btisky stalwarts. 6n any given Sunday Ibey
can expect to rescue some 30 swimmers caught in a
riptide or oyerwbelmed by the breakers. ,
But to maJ\e sure a steady supply of. youngsters in·
terested In lifeguatd work continues to grow up,,Jhe
beach department this summer concluded. another ·jlln·
ior lifeguard program. Some 160 boys aged 9 I<> 15 took
the IO.wee~ _Program ,of. classroom Instruction and run·
Ding and swunming teets to learn beach safety and im·
prove their aquatic abilities.
Juniors Monday were presented certificates show-
ing they bad completed the course, Wbile this doesn't
guarantee a •pol on the lilegllltd roster when they
reach age 16, it does give the city another qualJfied
person who can -and does -use his training when
help is needed.
Juniors and senior lifeguards usually get little pub-
licity, escept when Ibey drag a drowning person from
the surf. This year, on the night set aside to honor
them, beach-goers should remember their lifeguards.
Park, School Bonds Differ
In the midst of. all the bond issue proposals being
tallr.ed about in West Orange County is the proposition
for providlng Fountain Valley'& parks program. It is
vi1ally needed by the growing community.
The bond issue amount ts $2 million. It would buy
a comprehensive system of 10 neighborhood parks, two
five-acre parks, a teen center, and a Southern California
Edison Co. powerline easement park running from
Warner Avenue to Garfield Avenue.
The cost for the owner of a $26,000 home would be
$29 more in property tues the first year, less in suir
sequent years. The present city rate of $1.15 per $100
assessed. valuation 'would have to increase to about
$\.60 tn order to repay tbe bond debt, says Finance Di-
rector Howard stephens.
The proposition bas strong backing from the city
officials and from many organizations in the commu·
nity.
Taxpayers in Fountain Valley a~e. also facing
an '8 million elementary school proposition and a $12
million high 6cbool bond proposition in the same elec·
lion. The school propositions do not call for a higher tax
rll!te as does the park pr<lJlOOtion.
Each of the propositions should stand on its own
meri:ts without the confusion that could spell doom for
all three causes. H
.;
' "LET US CONTINUE .•• " •
All Arguments Presented Are Ago inst Locating Airport at State Park
Huntington Beach Residents Oppose Bolsa Chica Site
BiP:cause of the heavy volume
of letter1 prote1ting the Bolsa
Chica State Park a.s a potential
rite for a new regional airport,
virttuilty the ntire editorial
page biP:Zoto the line todat1 i$
Mvoted to a1 man11 of the let·
t(rs aa space pennfts. .
Any jutur1 letters on th.u
sub;ect 1hou.ld 9t'Oid f'epeating
••flU"""U J!1'1Slilled In lhf 16 1<tter1 puotlihfd Augwt 21 ond
today.
-Edito!'
To the Editor:
I should like to express my deep
concern over tbe consideration being
given Bolla Chica State Park as a
possible site for a major Orange Coun·
ty airport. We are ne~ residents ~
Huntington Beach, havm~ ch_osen this
area -despite a daily drive 10 excess
of eighty miles to and from work -
precisely because of the advantages
which are now threatened by the
establishment of this proposed airport.
THE HUNTINGTON Beach area ad-
jacent to Bolsa Chica state Park,
where we reside, is presenUy a quiet
residential and recreational com·
munity free from noise, air pollution,
traffic congestion and the other at·
tendant harassments of industrial·
commercial areas. We have fine
school& in the areas which might
possibly have to be relocated if this
airport is built. Loss of the use of
Bolsa Chica beach could deprive many
Orange County residents and their
guests of countless enjoy.able outings.
Places affording this type of recrea·
tion are rapidly disappearing from the
California coastline.
LOCATION OF an aili>ort at Bolsa
Chica State Park would undoubtedly
cause severe economic loss to the pro-
perty owners in the area. From
recently reported court decisions it
appears that Orange County could
very likely be the defendant in
numerous actions broiight by the af ..
fected property owners. The property
owners in similar suit! in other parts
of the country apparently are being
upheld to the financial detrqnent of
the governmental bodies involved.
FURTHERMORE, ft would seem
that this location could be a foolish one
beeause of the dangers of
overcrowding the flight p a th s
presenUy servicing Long B e a c h
Alrpor~ Orange County Airport, and
Los Alamitos N .A.S. Additionally, the
heavy fog wbJcb affects trus area
many days of the year would add im-
me.nsely to this danger end cause un·
told Inconvenience to a great number
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
It's too1alA> picking time In
RllDllD#GD-Beo.ch -oc maybe '~ rottm' time" ls c10ttr
to a.. truth. ir1 too bod catsup
1.m't made oot at green tom•· 1oo1. nut wmderlul ....,. ID
,,.wlndil •••
" -P. U. ~ ........................ ... !I r'.IY .... ., 1111 WU lflf, SIM
.... ,,,. "'"' .......... Dlllt' ...
of travelers.
Your serious consideration of these
statements will be sincerely ap..
preciated, as will your aid in working
for a dHferent location for the possible
new airporl
I, for one, feel that we are now ade-
quately served by Long Be:acb Airport, the present Orange County Airport,
and Los Angeles International Airport.
We can reach any part of the world
from these existing facilities, and none
of these ls over · 45 minutes from our
front doors.
B. L. SCHWARZBACH
TlllO Main Cont!erns
To the Editor:
There are many reasons for op-
posing the Bolsa Chica proposed
airport site such as noise, air poilu·
ti.on, cost of building runways in the
ocean, limited accessibility and in·
terference with traffic from existing
airports; however, noise and air pollu-
tion are of greatest concern to me.
The airport sketch that I saw shows
that the Prestige Tract in which I live
is in direct alignment with the
runways. I would estimate the altitude
of incoming jet airliners iat this point
to be approximately 300 to 400 feet. At
this altitude the screeching noise from
a landing jet airliner is loud enough to
hurt a person's ears and cause
permanent impairment of hearing.
I KNOW THIS from experience as I
work near the International Airport,
and sometimes while walking, I pass
under the flight path of incoming jets
that are at the above quoted altitude.
The frequency o! landings is every two
to three minutes so there is almost a
continuous noise which is terrific.
Also, the air is terribly polluted with
kerosene that is spewed from jet
airliners during landing and take off.
We Jived near the International
Airport. for eight years so I know the
problem of noise and air pollution.
IN MOVING to Huntington Beach I
thought we were in a quiet, pleasant,
residential neighborhood. However, if
the propose<l Wrport is built at the Bol-
sa Ch.ica site, this area will be ruined
as a residential area . My family and I
would be forced to move as I will not
expose them to such an environment
again even though we suffer a
subsbantiaJ financial loss . Therefore, t
hope that you or anyone who can in-
nuence the outcome of the airport site
selection wiU oppose the Bolsa Chica site. ·
G. L. HAFFENER
San .Joaq11ln Better
To 1he Editor:
There ere many definite reasons ~ M airport located at the proposed
Bolsa Ohi()a site woold present more
problems than lt couid possibly solve
and at more C06t then could be con·
templated. Here are some d. tflem:
1. An ·.uport should be sootewbat
centrally located Md mll6t be served
by major artenes to accommooiate ttie
heavy traffic. There ic barely the
allotted. acreage for the airport itself
at Ole-Bolta O\jca site without con·
sldering needed freeways .snd aecess
routes. At the San Joaquin site. access
from existing· freeways would be e
relatively simple matter.
I. ALL OF SOUTHERN caiif..-nie ill
a:ware thot Ot.a' natural retoun:.'8 ere
being deplel<d ••ch yoar by th• Influx at poop!• drawn by the climate &lid
ako by the nat""'I grow1ll at•• aoC;ve
community. The loss ol Imp1-
bo&ctl orea would be oatastrqiblc. n..
population ""' • Pl'O$linll need !or
. ,
Letter.s from readm ore welcome.
Normotly writers should conveu their
messages in 300 words OT less. The
right to condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. Alt Let-
ters mUS"t include signature and mail-
ing address, but Mm.ti will be with.-
held on request.
breathing room - a temporary escape
from the concrete, the traffic, the noise
-ever present in· our lives without tbe
addition of an airport. No such loss of
an invaluable recreeit:ional Mea would
oocur if tbe San Joaquin site were
se-lected.
3. INSTEAD OF realizing tile poten-
tial of tile Master Plan ol. Huntington
Beach -that of an ever-improving
community -the entire city would
become completely undesirable for
.anytfling but indu6try. No one would
choose to live in sud\ an area or to
send their children to schools under
existiing flight patterns. In an un-
developed area sudl as San Joaquin
Hills, the airport and its attendant in-
dustries would be the first considera·
ti.on with housing planned at reason-
able distances from the facility, its
flight patterns and accompanying haz-
ards. ·-MRS. M. M. CHAFFIN
Plans ln .Jeopord11
To the Eclitor:
It hoas been brought to our attention
that the area between Warner Avenue
and Beach Boulevard, along Pacific
Coast Highway, bas be ea proposed as
8' 6i.te for a major airport. As
tiomeowners, located within the direct
flight pattern, we find this proposal of
grave concern and completely lm8C·
ceptable.
We purchased our home with the ex-
pectation of raising our young family
in an envlronmet1t conducive to
healthy emotional and p h y s i c a I
growUJ . We find now that these plans
are in immediate jeopardy.
OUR CHILDREN will be educated
in schools also in the direct flight pat-
tern. As a teacher, I know what a
delrime.nt noise is to the learning pro-
cess. At the point where the schools
are located, the aircJ1aft will be within
approximately 300 feet of the ground.
At this altitude, tile noise would be
such that repeated. landlngs would
cause, in mooy instances, serious
emotionaJ ond physical ·problems. such
as permanent hearing loss and ex-
treme irritability.
Another item of prime concern is
property wilue. The area i:n question is
surrounded by new hmnes, rang:IJlg ln
value from $22,000 to well over
$100,000. The devaluation of the pro-
perty involved could easily 'cause thla
now prosperous, rapidly growing com·
munity to become a blighted area such
es the one surrounmng the r..os
Angeles International Airport.
THIS AREA , in Which we live, ls
presently served by the Orange coun-
ty Airport. Long !Jcach Airport, and
the Los Angeles International Airport.
We are in the flight patterne of tbe
Long lloach Airport and Los Alamitos
Nawtl Air Station. In th.la immediate
aret Is M..towlark Airport whldl
serves sm:alJ aircrafL OUr home la in
the <lrect landing patterns Ol this
airport also. We already have our
ahlR of e.irc:Nlt DOlles Mld huards.
Not to be forgotten 11 Ille w•sto ol
recreatioMI area, lt is a well-known
•
fact that retteational f.acilibies in the
United States will soon be inadequate
t.o accommodate those wishing to use
them. Why then eliminate one of these
much-needed n at u r a 1 recreational
facilities by building an airport upon
it?
In cooclu&ion, we would like to state
specifically that we, and many others
in this area, are defini·tely and une-
quivocably opposed' to the proposed
Bolsa Ohica site.
RALPH G. NELSON
MARY H. NELSON
Consequenre.<
To the Editor:
As a re&ident of North Hur.tington
Beach, I took upon the proposed Bolsa
Chica airport site with '8.larm. It would
most certainly turn this city into a
residential wasteland, and I know of at
least three families who are sufficient-
ly convinced o! this to already be look·
ing for a new place to live. Undoubt·
edly, there ar~ , several thousands
more who feel the same way and only
bad fortune will keep them from avoid-
ing living in the final approach pat-
tern of a large jet airport if it comes
to pass.
THE CONSEQUENCES Of at lea•t
an attempted mass exodus would
demolish property values even before
ttie airport could come along to finish
the job. Huntington Beach. one of the
fastest grOWing cities in the country,
would become a monument to political
short-sightedness and from wb.at we
c.an see, high-handedness on the part
of tile county supervisors.
With all of the land that is more
suitnble for an airport than the Bolsa
Chica site, the thought of ruining Hun·
tington Beach for the sake of jet
transpartation is absurd.
ROBERT N. OSLAN
Brought Resulu
To the Editor:
Just a note to thank you for the
splendid coverage you have been giv-
ing the matter of the proposed Bolsa
Chica airport.
Believe you have really awakened
the people of this area to the !act that
now is the time to give thought and ac·
tion to this matter, and your articles
have brought resu1ts.
The community deeply appreciates
a service such as this.
GENE GRIZZARD
Fnture Threatened
To the Editor:
We are writing Utis letter as eon·
cerned parents :and homeowners op-
posing the proposed Huntington Beach
site tof\-the new airport.
As a young married couple. we plan·
ned for a tong time where we would
Uke to raise our fu~ family. We
cbose Huntington Beach because it is
the kind « city we felt our children
will enjoy growing up in with its quiet
rMidMtial areas and its recreational
facilities. We purchased our first
r---B11 Geerire
0...-Goo<ge:
My buSband is a baseball·
watching nut. The ottier Sunday
when I tried to turn ot! the set be
actually threw a beer can at roe
and almost hit me. What should I
do?
MRS. E.
Dear Mrs . E.:
Tell him don't feel bad -the
teaBOn't only half over and his
contn>I sbould Improve •
•
home and chose one with four
bedrooms so we could grow into it in·
stead of out of it.
Two years have passed and our
family has grown by one. We have en-
joyed living in ttis city and using the
nearby Bolsa Chioa S~te Beach. This
beach is enjoyed by thousands of peo-
ple. With t!De shortage of natural
be:acbes in Southern California, we
certainly cannot afford to sacrifice
this wide beach.
SUDDENLY OUR whtW.e future is
tbreatened by this new airport. We
know that an airpart adjacent to our
tract would cause many undesirable
changes in our tract, community, and
city. We previously lived in Inglewood,
approximately 10 miles from the Los
An-geles International Airport. Eyen at
this distance, extremely loud aircraft
noise could be heard from the jets ap.
proaching the airpOrt. ~People that
were living closer, were subjected to
noise levels which could be considered
dangerous.
In addition to the noise, which is bad
ecough, the steady stream o f
pollutants escaping from jet aircraft
during take..off contaminated the .air
for miles. In a city the size of Hunt-
ington Beach there wouldn't be an
area unaffected by the noise and smog
produced by the aircraft.
IN FOUR SHORT ye..-. our baby
will be starting school. Her education
will be impaired because her school
and home· will be so close to the pro·
posed airport. The constant roar of
jets not only will make it impossible to
concentrate, but may even injure her
hearing.
Airports should be planned in loca-
tions that are not populated with
young mnilies. A site should be
chosen where there is a bufier Of low
density industrial areas directly sur-
rounding the airstrip. We are sure
witlh further study llhose officials in
charge will find that an airport the
size of International will turn Hunt-
ington Beach into an industrial city
governed in large part by the FAA.
We pray these Officials will not
betray us but will fight to keep our ci·
ty one of the few places left where
children and adults can live a clean,
wholesome life enjoying our beautiful
natural beaches and smog free air.
MR . AND MRS. BMtRY SPIEGEL
lrreplareable Lo11
To the Editor:
As a resident and homeowner in
Huntington Beach. I am, very much
opposed to the Bolsa Chica s;te as a
location for the regional airport.
The Bolsa Ohica site would ruult in
an irreplaceable loss of. the last ex-
isting natural beach areas ol the
southttn coast.
There would be an overlap of
service areas with ex.isting airpOrts:
Long s .. ch, Orange ~y end L. A.
Int<rnatlooal airport3.
wtm THIS AREA already
estQblished as a weH-dtveloped
residentW area, it 1eems a better
location can be found ill an un·
developed area and still close enough
to serve the county's needs.
The Bolsa Chica dte b also a
natural rog area part or the year,
With these dia:advant'a ges and maay
more I have not Usted, I ~ you will
express your opposition to this 1ite to
the Orqe Counll' Airport COm·
miss; on.
MRS. JACK EV ANS
Lack •f Foresltrht
To the Editor:
I -U> )'1)11 will> hope that yoo wlll
strongly supp0rt your ccemunity
reeders in our drive to disiOlft" the
plans f<>r the proposed B91Sf, Chica
Airport.
I'm agh..t at tile lack of..1Pt1!$1tht
shown by tile Airport Commisslm and
cify planners. Surely, ii ~port
site is so desirable, why warJt not
developed three years agQ,illiilfpre tile
residential development?
CERTAINLY, WE realize U.. Im·
portaoce of an airport to die oounty
and residents but ttle finanetal Joues
and mass public disconteDllnemt must
outweigh the benefits.
I urge the airport rorD·misSioner. to
delve into the problem end Mtect an
area which may serve their purposes
Cllld yet preserve the residential and
recreational beauty of our city.
JANET H. 'HAGUE
'We Do NOT Want Jt'
To the Editor:
Please consider this letter as • pro-
test against the plan and planning of
am Orange County regional airport
located in Bolsa Chica State Park.
My family and I live very close to
this proposed si-te and believe that if
the Pereira pklp were implemented, it
would mean t:be Huntington Beach
that we know and live in Woqtd soon
dimppear.
MOST IMPORTANT, we will be los·
ing forever a virgin beach area that is
only beginning to be shaped inw a
state park.
This letter could continue for pages,
but the most important point I wact to
make is that you, as a molder of
public opinioo, know our feelings. We
do NOT want this airpart ta Hunt·
ington Beach. · •
MRS. RONALD J: OOYNE
Jneontrovertiitle
To the Editor:
As a subscriber we tiave found your
publication to be indispensablt in com·
municating community nee4s,.and in·
formation. Along with nearty·e-veryone
else in the city we are t.qlalterably op·
posed to the Bolsa Chica site for the
proposed airport. :
The arguments for OPPo,sition are
manifest and incontrovertlbl«kand we
are sure that your editorial',afeff ls so
apprised. We must co~e,rid 'your
past positions concerning community
matters, especially since yo,a have
constantly adopted the 1~ of
commonweal. • -
In respect to the airport niitter, we
are certain that you will obieive your
ineluctable duty to tile ~lie and
vigorously oppose the Bolai ~a 1ite
and remain inductile to a1ilricious
.special interests. •
JOHN J, GJI40ESPIE
" •;. . "
----tW-
Wednesday, August 78, I96a
Thi editoriol J'Oll• bf Ille Dailf
Pilot •«kl .. "''""" Cl!\\ n;.,; ulatt rtadtr1 bJI pruen6ft(7..._thil
MWIJ)Clper'1 ophUott.t and ~
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and rigni/icanc•, ~ ,,,-~ p f<>nnn few Ille ..,,,._ of
our re~ opiniom, _, b•
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Points of in/°"""d obi_,.
ond spoke.,... on topiC, ".[ Ille
cloy. -.,
Robert N. Weed. •
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Even Tijuana Brass May B9ycott Olympi~
MEXICO CITY (AP) -World and
local controverslu swirled in tbe air
of the Olympic headquarters Tuesday
while planners of the 1968 games
waited with quiet desperation ind no colnment.
"We're hoplng everyUtlng will calm
down before Oct. 12," said one Olym.
p,ic oUJcial privately and bravely·.
'There ·11 no place for politics in the
Olympics."
He referred to a running feud
between Mexico City's students and
the administration of P r e s i d e n t
Gustavo Diaz Ordaz plus lbe Soviet in·
vasion of Ciechoslovak.ia.
There is also a lingering worry
about a U.S. Negro athlete demonstra·
tion and a possible struggle involving
Rhodesia. and Negro African coun.
tries.
One repc.1 hinted Herb Alpert's TI·
juana Bre.ss Band had canceled a
scheduled appearance in a bullring
here on opening day.
He was to appear as part or the so-
called cultilral Olympics but one
source said Alpert wanted to avoid
controversy between the students and
the government.
Thousands o! students have schedul.
ed demonstrations and picketing to de·
mand a dialogue with the ad-
ministration.
They had a five.point program
wbidl includes the dissotutlon 0( the
riot pollco corp1, rtatanouon ol the
l><'lice chief and release or students
Jailed sinefl ttle July 28 riot•.
Student l&aders bave hinttd broadly
they have put out a feeler ror col·
taboratlon wltb U.S. Negroes who mey
also protest, although their causes lfil •
not connected.
However, the roverMlent has ob-
viously worked out a program to
placate the student. before th• Games
and it trying to avoJd &.ny hp1her con-
fronUJtion. There will be-no classes of
any kind during the Otymplca.
The Czech eris.ii could h1~ lll()f'e
severe comequences.
Norway's Olymptc c o m m I t t e e
already bas voted to break l(lOl't! rela·
Angles Split With Yankees
Nervous Tigers Throw Ace
At Halos lf.S Loop Lead Melts
DETROIT CAP) -Denny McLain
ha.a had two shots at winning his 26th
~ame and has failed twice. He gets his
third mance tonight v.tien t h e
California Angels invade the Tigers'
den.
The fireballing DetrOit right-hander.
2.S-5, will be opposed by Sammy Ellis,
9·9, but if Angels Manager Bill Rigney
ceuld send rookies Bill Harrelson and
Arldy Messersmith to the mound, he
undoubtedly would.
·-He sent them to the Yankee Stadium
mound Tuesday and they combinM for
a one-hit, 2-0 victory over New York to
Olympic Veteran
give thhe Atigels a split of a double·
header, 2--0. 0-2.
With their American League lead
dwindling and their confidence stag-
gering. the Tigers are bankillg on
On TV T01ti9ht
Channel 5, 5 p.m.
McLain and Dick MeAulif!e to pull
them out of their current rut.
The Tigers blew a 2-1 decision lo the
Chicago White Sox Tuesday night
while the hot· handed Ba 1 ti more
Orioles won a doubleheader from
Oakland, 5-3 and 7-2. to creep within
four games of Detroit.
How important are Mcl.e.in and
McAuliffe to the Tiger cause?
Since their current tailspin, McLaJn
has lost his last two starts and missed
his tum Tuesday night bec.:ause of a
sore shoulder.
McAuliffe was suspended five days
by American League President Joe
Cronin for his run-in with Chicago
pitcher Tammy J<iln last week and
dUiing that span the Tigers have k>st
five of six games, all by one run.
"We have no complaints," s a I d
Manager Mayo Smith after Detroit's
loss to ttie Sox Tuesday nigh~ on a
ninth·inning error by second baseman
Tom Matchick, McAuliffe's replace·
ment.
Jewell Shoots for Spot "We had the bases loaded with none
out in the top of ttie ninth and should
have busted it wide open but we
couldn't score," said Smith .
On U.S. J(ayak Squad .
"The kid (Matchick) made a good
play on Aparicio's (Luis) ball but
couldn't get an)"d1ing on ttie throw.
Don't worry, we 'll get straightened
out." '
Kayak canoeing is no longer ex-
clusively identified with the people of our 49th state vr"ho live in igloos and
eat such dishes ai whale blubber,
walrus steaks and seal chops.
It has been an extremely popular
sport in Europe for a number of years
and may be a free ticket to Mexic<l Ci·
ty Bfld the 1968 Olympic Games fOf'
one or more residents af Newport
Beach.
Thanks to transplants P e t e r
Wiegand and Jahn Glair fro m
Washington D.C.. and Les Cutier.
the Orange Coast area will have four
chaps in competition f()r berths on the
U.S. Olympic team when trials get
'111111111111111
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WA.SH
1111111111111111
QLEMM WMITI
under way Friday aftemoon at Long
Beach Marina.
Bill Jewell, veteran of the 1964
Olympics in Tokyo is the strongest
..area hopeful and appears to have a
fine shot at making ttie grade in
singles competition (Friday. Saturday
and Monday).
Of 31 entrants, seven will be on the
team -two in singles. four to make
up the four-man outfit. and an
alternate.
Jewell Is semi-conserYative when it
comes to his chances. ''I'm an old man
now-27. In fact, I'd like to think that
next year I'll be over the hill. I haven 't
paddles ' against any of the top
Americ.ans since May so they're sort
of an unknown quantity," be relates.
.. I will-.y that it will be much more
difficult hi mClke the '68 Olympic team
.,,,.._ Poli~e
EMIL ZATOPt;IC ..
•'
than it. was to make our 1964 squad.
But I feel I'm better prepared for the
trials now than I was then."
Jewell, a Newport Harbor High
grad now serving In the Navy, just
retuned from two months of Workouts
in Sweden.
And just the exposure to Swedish
action may be enough to carry him
through the trials 1ucce1sfWly.
Sweden's Gert Fredrik11on bolds
the record for the most Olympic gold
medals won by·an Jndtvtdual. He took
seven In various kayak events and Uv-
ed in the 1ame town where Jewell
spent his stay in the-Scandanavtan
country;
However, be did not personally
assist Jewell with technique.
"The cuy1 from the s .. edl1b club
team were of great a1slstance. In fact,
just bavtng: someone to work out wUb
gave me inceutatlve," 1ay1 Jewell.
"Paddling with Europeans is really
an eye-opener." he continues. "You
just can't believe how fast they are."
One of Bill's greates sources of en,
rouragement is his wife, the former
rol Mauser of Newport Beadl.
"She keeps me going," he say,.,
''Everyune has days when he'~ daw-n.
But she perks me up and ha~ really
been a big help ."
Bruce Chapman. basketball ace
while attending Costa Me11 Hlgb and
Orange Coast College, n1rrowed bla
chotci: of colleges to Seattle University
and Nevada Southern, then Hnally
selected the latter 11 the ln1tltutton of
hla choice and wm enroll there next
week.
Mike Caro and Lawrie Cunningham
-1lar1 on Newport Harbor Hlgh"s
great tennis team1 of lite -will con·
tlnue their education al Seattle Padfic
Unlvertlty.
White Sox Manager Al Lopez said,
"I was surprised. Matchick even came
up with Aparicio's ball. It !lhould have
,e:one t'hrough for a hit. It's a tough
game for Detroit to lose but it was a
good game."
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IN GYMNASTICS
LONG BEACH -Joyce Tanak of
Seattle Tuesday night captured the
lead after compulsory rootines in the
United States Olympics women's gym-
nastics trials at the Long Beach
Arena.
Miss Tanak scored 36.95 point.ii out
of a maxi.mum 4(1 to h;ad Kathy
Gleason of Buffalo. N.Y., who had
35.40 .
Before the start of. the competitioo.
Llnda Metheney, the national AAU all·
around champion. announced her
withdraVr'al from the trials because of
a recurrent right shoulder injury.
However, Miss Metheney will be
allowed to join the U.S. team that will
go to high .altitude training in Colorado
SJX'ings, Colo. next month.
Placing third in the compulsory
competition was Coleen Mulvihill of
Champaign, lll. with 35.15 points
followed by Doris Brause of New
Haven. CoM. with 35.05 and IS-year·
old Cathy Rigby ol Los Alamitos with
35.00.
Dunt Zatopek
Czech Ex-Olympian
LONDON (AP) -Bri1:i1h atttlete1 are planning a demonstra·
lion in support o! Emil Zatopek, Czechoslovakia's long-<listance run·
ner who ls being sought by Russian secret police in Prague.
Track and lietd Judge Don Brown said Tuesday the athletes
will raise a petition on Zatopek's behalf at the British games at
London's White City stadi um next Saturday and Monday.
"Then they w1.ll march from White Cily to the Rusatan em·
b•"Y and present Ille petition," Brown said.
Brown said the Czech cmbas1y in London had confirmed that
the Russians now are hunting Zatopek.
ni. Czech me radio ba1 broadcast warning• telling him nol
l<I ..turn home.
The great runner, now 1 major in the Czech army, won three
gold medals In Ille 111152 Olympics at Helsinld -the 5,000 and 10,000
meters and tile marathon.
llom with the Soviets and Ulelr
talelliteo bl protea! lo the illYNlon.
"The Dutch refused to come to
Melbourne In 19M In protest to the
Soviet invulon of HunlfJY but we m1noa
th1nk ttley regr'et it now:" says one
Olymp(c ,source.
"We are In constant contact with t.be
EuropeM diplomata • and we are oi>·
timistic." ,
Soviet officials may well b e
welgbing ttieir Olympic attendance
since MexJcan demonstraton attacked.
offices of the Mexican Communist par.
ty. smasbin.J some windowc.
They may also recall th1t blood
flowed jn Melbourne during a water
polo match between Russians and
Hungarians.
Although U.S. Negro athletes ap-
parently have eased up on their plan
to boyoott the Games -a threat
which troubled the Mexicans for
aeveral months -some form of
demonW:ation has been threatened.
· An encouraging sigD is that South
African singer Miri1m Makeba ha&
been signed to perform at a leading
hotel during the Games.
She's the wife of Stokely
C~chael, • Negro militant. Tbere
has been no report w b e th e.r
Cannichael hlm!!tll will come. r
Still in debato Is ~tiler !Iii
breakaway government of Rhodeda
will be allowed to attend. Mextco t4-
tj)e position that the UnltOjl N,U•
has asked member nations to rei,:t
Rhodesian pa_saport.s. meaning ~
athletos cooldn't get tbrou&1> Ill"
airport.
The International Olympic COin•
mittee has been relatively silent on lite
Rhodesian question altnoiuth OOI
r;nember says the IOC aJready has &
vited that country and c a n a o t
vt'ithdraw ~ invitation. ' .,
..... ,.,
Bride and Battery Mate
BATS ARE RINGING -Tom Robson of the Visalia
Mets, the California League's leading home run
hitter, and his new bride, the fonner Jeanette
Ivie, leave home plate under an archway of. bats
following ballpark wed<linf. Mell! went on .to: l!)p
visiting Modesto Reds, 7. , as Robson celebrated.
by dri\ing in t-w runs.
Resigned to Destiny
I Want to Go to Jail
Says Ex-Champ Clny
NEW YORK (UPI) -Cassius Clay
is resigned.
If he's gotta go. he's goUa go, he
says.
It'll be a UWe strange taking a fall
because he has never taken one like
this before but he 's confident he can
handle it and from the way he talks
he's even looking forward to it.
"I really wanoa go to jail to tell you
the truth." he srays. "I just think It'll
be a good thing when I go to jail. We 'll
see a lotta things happen."
Clay made the statement during a
stopover here the other day. He didn 't
Kathy Harter •
Glamor Gal
Of Net World
NEW YORK CA:Pl -Kathy Harter
can't remember tile last tournament
she won and !lbe d0e&n 't. figure to win
the first U.S. Open Tennls Olam·
piomhip starting •t Fore«! Hills
Thursday.
But the wiUO'Ny Mariml High
graduate from Seal Beach, shapes up
a1 one of idle new glamor girls ot the
tennis circuit.
Kathy draws the whistles off tha
court with her street attire mini minis.
On this attractive 21·year~ld, S.foot·9
Cllifornian, the mini minis look
perfect.
elaborate on what he expects to hap-
pen if the Supreme Court turns down
his appeal and he goes to jail for
refusing to 9er'Ve in the Army but he
did say his image will grow tremen·
dously if he must go behind bars.
Cassius Clay ought not count on
that. People have a way of forgettinl{
a man who goes off to jail. No matter
how much a martyr he fancie"
himself.
'l'here wa5 one other thing Clay
didn't say. He didn't say he coold beat
any heavyweighl around today. Maybt-
in six moolhs from now but not today
beoause he hasn't been in a ring for a
year and a haU and he's 20 pounds
overweight despite the fact he does
some running to try to stay hallway in
shape .
"Right now ," 11-ays Clay. "the
heavyweight division Is at a standstill.
The only way It could be straightened
out would be for me to fight again.
Boxing fans are really beiog cheated
because regardless of my religious
beliefs they know that I'm the best."
From time to time. different in·
terests taJk of staging a championship
fight. between Joe Frazier and Clay
but Clay doesn't get particularly ex-
cited about suet! talk.
"Frau.er wants to fight me," says
Clay, "but what has happened is that
vari()US groups in Philadelphia have
asked to get permission for me to
fight. I told them yes. I'd flgillt him. if
they can get the permission and the
licenses. I'm not goin' in beggin'.
crawlin' Of' pleadin' just to fight. tf
they can get it and I can be a~ed.
good. And If they don't, atlll good.'
...
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Dodgers Smk . ,
LOS ANGELES CUP!) -The Iott.
place Los Angeles Dodgen pi., a
doubleheader will the Chicaio Caba
tonight and then hi.t the rOld ~ -
perhapg a good thing for all c~.
There war; a record turnout of. 8tos
Tuesday night at Dodger Sticliiilll I'°
Dod9er Slate .,.
4ut. ti Ood••n YI ttk•, Ul f,•H •·75• K; J !~~~·· lll Dodflerl II '" flf\C KO 7: t ,11\c::
c~'\9· JI Ofldter1 11 s.n ''•nellCG 11:15 •.m1 .:JJI
watch the Dodgers lose, 4-2, to f1iie
Houston Astros. · ,t.
Paid attendance was 8,9l8, an all·
time low since the Dodgers s~
playing in their new stadium here in
1962. "-
The previQus low was 9,2b3 1gailtit
the New York Mets on Sept. 28, ·1err.
The Cubs come in for ~a one·~t
stand in ·the twin bill, starting ·at 8
p.m. the Electric Prunes and 1 Jlle
Spooky Tooth, said to be mullcal
groups. were scheduled on the ·JlrO·
grem in !he hopes of luring teen-afed
fans to the ballpark.
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Tor~ e '·'•I IC•ldl 11 I I • I Gtll'lll l•'to
ih"ll•ltll •••• lltlllltl~MI 11 I 0 • 8
Tou l u • 11 ,; TOl•I » ' ' t l-4ou•IOI! ~e• eae et~
las AnftM'I II II 0 7 t ~ 0 • ...., Dir-Lm ..i..,..111 t. LO.,._..,.tool I, \.ti A,..
tllH '· J&-W, CllY ... HR-N, MlllW • ,.... ''-Mell••·
Has she anytiing rpecial in mind
for tho ooenine at Foret! HW.7
"l dorl't -kn9W exactly yet," 1he aaid
loday, "but I'll try and get some!hing
attractive. You know We're limited at
what we oan fiear at Forert. Hills. But
I'm Interested ln ditsign for tennis
otottiea and I'll try for 10metbJng dlf·
lerent. ..
Rose in Forum Debut
How about bee terutla game 1
"You know, I feel I'm ready for a
big effort," she replied. "J honestly
feel l"m p...aing my whole game
>ogether for the first llmt. I'd HU to
win a tournament fot a cbanae."
The record book shows 1be won
ttree In 1967, Cannes, Wm or ScoUllld
Ind the C.Z.adlan uue.
She allo played In 'll tournaments,
moat let an Am«ican woman, last
year end had 1 :rm average oo 5(1]'wtu
IOd 24 l01sea.
' 3 Bantam Fights Slated .
LOS ANGELES CAP) -World ban-
lamw.1&1>< ctwnpioe Uonel ROM ol
Auatr•lta 11l'ltke1 N1 American debut
toni&ht • 1 2-1 favorite to doleat Mex-
Jco'a J09e Medel kl a 10.rolmd noatille
fill>!, the featme bout ol a triple ban·
tamweilht ~ CO<d at the
Forum .
A crOw-d of 12,000 or more ls ex-
pect<d lo pay more thln 1100.000 lo
see the three 10.rounders promoted by
vet.in· boxing min G 1., r I e
Parllu "" In IDitowood.
I
Suwortilli baWes on. h .,.
lematlonal card include. M°*''•
O\ucbo Collillo matclled qllinlt~ Armstrong of Scotland and
another Meltican star, R u a
Olivari ... lesting Bernabe F
ol Manila.
While no titles are involved. k
hos olin!fiaan••· Jack Rennl11 manager ot the •
Honal 20-)"e&r-otd Rose. bas lodJca&ld
• title fight may well be ~I
will! ei1ber ol tonllhl'• w!MUI~~
~ l
•
•
. I
'
•
f
Zt DAll.Y Pll.OT
~ports a. Jlrlef
Debbie Meyer S~ots
:,For 3rd Mark Today
• LOS ANGELES -Debbie Meyer, a
16--1,ar-old swimming sensation from
Sad'amento', today goes after her
t.biia world 'record at the United States
Olympic Games women's swimming
trials.-
TJj)e .brown..aaired, blue-eyed Jass
may topple ber own pend.log world
record of 9:17.8 in the 800-meter
treeltyle, ·lbe concluding event of the
trit)s today. Debbie set world records
of 2:06.8 ln the 200·meter fr eestyle
Saturda:;t. the opening day of the
triilJ, and Of 4:24.S in the 400-metec
treostyle Sunday.
Min Meyer also entered the 1()()..
meter freestfle Tuesday but failed to
malt;~ the .(i.n.iW, whidJ was the fastest
ovwall race in the event in history.
nt, firs1 'four finishers ell clocked
under one minute and under the listed
Ai:p,,erican record of 59.8 seconds.
Pmiouslj ·llnly four women had ever
sWiftn the race under one minute.
!Upped over, lolthll Bill lo lbe
p-ound.
* .. * * GENOA, Italy -The 0l7mPe
Torch, tnaveliog ll>oard tbe Grtelt
military ship Nayaribon, arrived Tues·
day and received a rousina welcome in
the native city ol Cbrilto¢er COlum·
bw.
* * * BARCELONA, Spain -One of the
most heavily Insured •thlete1 '&o ge to
tbe Olympic Games 1D Mexico 1ftll 1NI
the Cosmic Athlete, painted .hy
Salvador Dall.
Dnll, eomml&sk!M:d by tbe Spanl1h
Olympic Committee, !lao por1nyMI ~ ~
dlscuu Uarower who ls h91dlag Ute
world instead of a plate.
The painting has been insund fot m.m. It will be .. dllplay .. Ille
games Oct. 1U1'.
* * *
--
Vessels Rode o ·nf --
Storm to Fortune·
B7 EARL GUSTKEY
Of ... Dfl6lt' ,. .......
It \'"• r8'ning in Orange County on
December 4, 1961, .and the most
wt.ppy man in Loi A1amttoa was
Fr.ant Ve&aels.
This was the ~be wu to open bil
tiny race track. lt I easy f« Yeasels to
look back now and chuckle but it
wasn't so fumy then.
"Our flllit meeting lasted 11 days
and it rained for 10 of them," he
recalled.
"We dropped $24,CKX> on that flrst
meeting,"
Uodeunted,, be tried it again in '52
a.od logged a 110,000 profit Clearly,
Vessela and Loa Alamitos were here to
stay.
The track has experienced a
maturation in UKlse years beyond
an yU:tlng Vessels imagined that first
rainy aftemoon. He 61larted with a
3,000..seat grandstand that looked like
a high school football stadium, e1:cept
that it had a canvas roof.. .
"1\lch is about how I fi(Ul'ed it w..lil
co. H.H ..
"One night recently they bad 30jQ
at Dodger Stadium, :.>,000 at Anlhe.lm·
Stadium and we bad 14,000 bel:f If•
we're pretty happy over bow ~ ·
racing bas eome oU." :..:.-.
The opening !light cro..U -al~Lol
Alamitos was 16,414.
"We're aveNging around U,500 a
night That's up from the 10,500 to
11,000 we were shooting fr before the
seuoa etarted. And we have 23 more
rat;Ing dates than we had last year.":.
Vessels' new clubhouse restaurant
seats 500 and has been filled every
racing evening. Diners can watch ttle
races over 30 closed-circuit TV sets.
Los Alamitos takes a two-weer
break from Se~t.ember 9 to OCtoberi:
to avoid conflicting with the r~t·
program at the Los Ang<lea Couob'
Fair at Pomona. ... .•
Both Vessels and the Angels feel the.
advent of night racing has wrought no
adverse effect upon the other. 1'fle wioner was Sue Pedersen, a 14-
ye'i!Nlld bigb school sophomore from
Sal!ramento. She was timed at 59
sei!Obi:ls, Only one-teotb of a second
slo!er than the world record of 58.9
seconds set by Dawn Fnmer of
Atfflre.lla Feb. 29, 1964.
Summ.tlr1u ~of Tuetd•V'• flnal ~ 111 fM w-·1 Ol't'm91c: IWlmmlrtt tri.1t: l~!'ff" · tteatvle -I SIJM11 ,..,..,_
590'8mlt!llQ,. •.• (119ttert AIM!'k..11 -.I of ,. ....... J-..,__ P1111.....,.11, 1tm. t. J811 ....._.
Sffll• Claf;:. '! .. !~__!._ Lln41 Ge.It'--*'ti•••• 5'.A.. -......~ Pl'll ... lllt!Ja, "'3. •""" c....,.. ~•t• ... tt.. J., 1:W ,.. Mi.
SEA 'I'TLE -Ken Sbamon, 31, WU
named head tradl: coad! et the
University Of Washington Tuelday,
succeeding Stan Hilermu who will
become a full·tlme student coumelor.
Shmnon bas be«t easl.stsnt trecll:
coacil for the past live years at UCLA,
and was asslliaot for three yells
before that It Occidental CoUep.
WINNING NlnlllS -Sieve Mallolt (lolt) and Dick Mille< right
of Newport 8-h Tlllllia Club accept congratulations from club
t.mU director Glen Turnbull for fishing one-two in the boys' 14
and under di-<l tile Buena P~ Tennis Tournament. Bob Ogle
of Colla M-ancl the Mua Verde Country Club captured the boys'
18 ancl under ""'1• erwn.
Now be bas 23,CKXI seats and the
horse players come in the nighl
V esseh hoisted $1.6 million worth of
lights atop bis gralldstand roof in
prepar.atioa for the ~ent meeting
and the results bave been a little
overwhelming.
"Out attendance is up 1.5 percent
and the mutuebl are up 3.5 perc:...t -
"I don't Jbink al.ght racing burta Ui~
much," 'aid Harold Parrott, tlie''
Angels' promotion -• ·
"The night racing crowd ti.
somewhat of a different clientele."
Says Vessel&: "Baseball i.an't muCb
of a factor with us. I don't expect~ atteodan~ to jUJ!UI when the batebiJr"
seraBon ends." -·-·
We1%4tl, I , Iii :1111..>1 • ._r... 1t.tl1 __ ,1 ,.,...,. w.boll. s.nt•
Cltr .. 1:24.l ~ ,.,.__n~ cl11b-~ of ''U A " C-,..,._ ...... 1 ... 1. L ... ... i'wlllod. Uk ....... 'l::ZS.t1. i. .,. Hlllf< ,._.. .. Wmft., .t~. 4 1(91ldlt Moore, "-'Ill. 2:2671.
J, Cldll9 -~. l'tlU..i.wtl., 2:27.17, "
LYN1 -a:rlltift. lllnll llHdl, 2:Jl.lt.
It's Back to T-formation
;.··* * * ~s-ANGELES -The Loo An(eles
DOl!rer1 leam pbylllclan aald Taeoday
pltclle ~ llryodaJe coald be oat of
actlon"'3'fdl a sboalder litjary the n·
mainderT·of the National Leape
baseball teason.
For Napoleon in Shorts
"Tbe Dodgen seem to feel that even
hls return would aot help ibe team at
this late date," Dr. Robert Wood.1 told
newsmeq.
-;:'* * * oAKO!ND -Elija Mitic's tl>ree·
goal lliCJtlcl< paced Oakla to its
nin-g!lt North American Soccer
Leap;;=:iictory Tue6day night.. 3-0,
ovei31iti:...LA>a Angeles Wolves before 3,IDC" -..,..
f -'* * * DEL.].1AR -Jockey Dean Ban suf·
fered.::a= broken rlgbt arm ta tbe
starttic gate prlor to the fifth race
Tuesd§f4& Del l't!ar race track.
His mount, Easy Profit, bolted and
Or~nge Coast
P~ica1s
--· S~~Tonight
Ficing Orie of the toughest schedules
in ili.:...fiistory, Oroange Coast College
will opet'f its 1968 Football season
tonight by giving p hys i ca J ex·
antinatiom ard issuing uniforms.
Physicall and suits will be given
from 7.9 p.m. tonight and 'Thursday
night in the OCC Fieldhouse adjacent
to LeBan:I Field.
Tucker plans to start practice ap.
propriately enough on Mooday, Labor
Dafi ~With two-a-day sees.ions running
ugh S.pt. 9.
or to cipening their nine-game
edule at Cerrit05 Sept. 21, the
rs \Vill scrimmage Mira Costa and
Grossmont at home Sept. 7 and
workout at \Vhittier Sept. 14.
Among the key players Tucker plaDs
to welcome back are quarterback Paul
Lemoine, who owns all OCC passing
records, fullback Mike Ba i 1 e y ,
h a:llback \Vayne Tinlin, tackles Kevin
Grady and Paul \Varren, center Randy
Bass, linebackers Dan Douroux and
Jim Barsuk, guard Dan Hilliard.
defensive end Jeff Stevens and
defensive back Bill J enkin6.
Top ne\\'Comers expected to show up
in the Tiger camp in<!lude ends Bruce
Hicks and Robert Castillo. running
back Ray Ricardo and lineman Ray
Hunt.
Quick DOW, who's the <riy ont«m•
ed big!> -loott>tll coach to tbe
area?
"It hllppned wllile I ,. .. gettJnc olf
a boot In ... Newport bay 1aat weet,"
says Wade Walla al Newport Harbor.
"I !<II down agaimt the -ol the
dock mid diJlocated the olloulder."
Watt.a' explanatioa wu in response
tn oor asldog why be ,.., boldilng bil
rig!it ann acrou bis otomac:h. The In-
jury ....reiy hampen Wa!U d..u.g
this week's conditioning worlr.oubl.
••U'lil''tt''P'''t'''M
EARL
USTK.EY
Normally rigtlthanded, Walts now bas
to blow his whistle witli the Jell hand.
He perambulates about the Newport
practice fJeld like Napoleon, except
Napoleon didn't run around in shorts.
But the Newport ooacb struggles oo.
The tender sboWder is rendered leaa
painful by a not-too-bad C%'op oC foot·
ball talent -an unusual situation at
Newport.
'jUsu:ally we have eight or Dine good
football playeirs but this year I 1ee
about 20 who will really help UI," be
reports.
Watts junl«d the T-fonnation In
fa var of the single wing 1ut year,
main1y because of the multiple talents
of Ed Washko. But Washko was hurt
early in the seaaoo, leaving Watts with
a sin gle wing and nobody to run it.
This year it's back to the T. The
quarterback: candidates .are, in order.
Bill Shedd, Ron Troyano and Bill
Hendershot.
11\e line liMlllS adequate, anchored
Dy 220-pound Stu Aldrich, 50D oI the
UC Irvine c hancellor. The
quarterbecks seem capable but Watts
is worried about baokfield speed.
"~ far as I know the fastest back
we have is 10.7 -that's not Soi.DI t.o
break up many games."
The one asset Watts' athletes must
own this year js dun.bility. The
Sailors, during one three-week stretch.
Baseball Standings
American Leape
W L Pd. GB
Detroit 82 50 .621
Baltimore 78 54 .591 4
Boston 71 62 .534 11 ~
Cleveland 71 64 .526 121i1
Oakland 67 66 .504 1511.t
New York 1\5 65 .soo 16
1'-linnesota 63 70 .474 191h
Ca1ifornia r;o 74 .448 23
Chicago 55 n .412 Tl
Washington 50 80 .385 31 T.....,... tttwfh '°''°'" 1, Cir.ti!-1
-Y""' Ml, C•!l!Omlot •1
llt!!llN>rf S.7, Otti.r>G ).1 Ch1(tf0 ), Oetrll!! 1 W•1hll'l9fOtl t-1 , Mlnnno!t &.?
T ........ ._
'I-Y.,..\ ISl'!ll•IMo,... 11·1'1 .t Chi<.-IH!rrtlft f.
Of N ..... 111 M l. "'tftt c111w .. i. tElftt 10-tl •! OetrDlt lMtl.•111 fS.d~
fll91'>1
llftslllfll""1 !~•" 74) M ''l""""t O+lflllll 11-
1\, "'"'' Ml""fl'llf !Kttl 1•1f ft •OfWtll "'101 ti C'-ltM (,1..,1 1M fllth! o.t•lfflf {a-.. 1-t) •• ao.11111 4 l'lll lft .... ,, flf9hl
Johnson & Son
900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT BEACH
642.oJll Ms..271
dmv Anaheim, Weotmlnltor and Son·
ta Ana.
* * * • ART DEPT.~ Bl&li fool!>oll
"'*"Hal Akim may aocm lip a --Inlet lo ouppty tootblll artwork ..
Sparta m--.
An uecutivo fmn tbe oational
.... tty oporta mq pomd bJ Akins'
-Ill tile La.-Art Foolival, llk·
eel -be ..... and ubd -to s~ b!m 1'ltlt mon aamp!Oo.
A pohtler <l -,._. In Southland art circles, Akins is a
veter1111 Qf the Art Festival and said he
a9id a r~ nwniler al Peiotioes thia 1U1DD1er.
* * * GOLP' DEPT.-Guon Who DiZI}'
Deon '1 parlDer wi11 be ID tho Allrojet
Goll Clauic at L& Coola Bat
February? Denny McLain, that'• wbo.
In addition to, possibly, the laij two
»1mne wionoH tn ·111e maJorJtosues,
the -of the llold lacl-ouch ... mea a.a Joe DiMaggl.a, Mickey Mantie
Otto Graham, Merlin OiHn, John Bro--·
die , Willia Ma,ya, Carl Yartnemskl,
Bob Feller, Lou Groza, Frank BO'Nal'd
and Many c:ithers.
* * * TITAN DEPT.-lm't It about time
speculation began on -tho· coach will be when Cal State (Fullerton)
.-t.arts playing two years from now!
We'll -oot the lint-: H..-b Hill from Loara High Jn AnobebD and
Hal SbertJect !rom Fullerton JC.
Hill is on the rile. Everyone con·
tinuea to be bnpnaed with the
dlsdplined ouUlta be ""'' out.
Sberbect, ol coune,, baa wm "° in a
row at Fullerton.
* * * KEMP DEPT.-Joel Collier. coa<h
ol the AFL' 1 Buffalo Blllt, iJ a man on
the hot .... tocla,y.
Angeced by blo INm'a ~-7 io. to
Houatan Fridoy, be llaed ev«yoat on
the team-ln<:Judlng th... with In-
juries -and ordered a closed-door
scrimmaie Monday.
It WU 4l1e flnt 1nrkout ciooed to the
pre1s by the Bllls since 1981.
What haJ>l*l!? Jack Kemp, the
team's quarterback and a sometime
Balboa Uland resident, (eta blo knH
banged up and is lolt &r the Malm.
The Bills now are OOwn to their last
two quarterblicks -1ore-1bouldered I
Tom Fl.,.... and rootle Dao Dlrra&b.
------.•
WHY IS THIS YW I
ANY DlfffREflll I
Traditionally ..... ,.tt •"' s.,. •• "'"' .,. "'• ll'IMffi• th1t yo• ,,. i..~N-4 with ,,,,..,.
.. ,.,, •• IHI el••''"'' ..... i. •4nrtlll9f. 't'•• t.+ It fr.1111 .... ..., 41N1fl9111 -,..,.n, ,tuili• 1MI TV, Y11r hi att4
.,. •• , 111t it't tt.. ,._ .. , 1t.ry.
But Th1I Year la
Different At Jobn.on's
........ thk ,, .... ~ •• -,,....
MO'll. Att.r ffft.-Y••" at fti1 .. _
IM1ff•11 -wlll k -""' •-.. I ... ,111lfitHt "-ffff'tlf'p • H11\w
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Natunlly .
IM .. lb,.,, ~ ••r INTIRI 1 ..
ef '' '"41•1 •• ,. hf.,, -M thet .., ,._ f•clllfy c•11
wf ............ ,,,,
NoturoUy
h 4• th11 wt1 Mnt M ......,_,., ,.,. ... -
Natunll1
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ffth • ..-..1 ...... .....
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, 'raxpayers Still Hold l(ey
.,,,
To Three Athletic Programs
Athletics in the Tustin Unified School
District will continue on the same red~d
1'vel u la9t year accordlg to assistant
Sliperint.endant John Duncan.
u the "Red team'' and 1'52-yard Une''
made one shudder.
The celelxated clash between Eric Pat-
ton of Mater Oei fame and Torn Fit.zpat·
rick of Anaheim never came into focus.,
Too much in the way of North aerials kept
Fitzpatrtck from doing much in the wa:f
ol running (U yards In ll carries) while
Patton'1 movements beeame blurred with
the double-W's running and passing at will
/or the North.
.Le.st year, you'll recall, the District wa11
1n serious financial ditfit'U.lties due to the
defeat ol a coupi. ol tu ovenlde issues.
Sports at the three District sch'oola.
Mission Viejo, Tustin and Foothill, were
....-in··e···r···nn·nnnn
ROGER
CARLSON
The best thing the South accompUshed
was when Tim Butler of San Clemente
managed to bold on to a completed pass
in the first quarter despite having the
wind knocked out o( him while catching
the ball and being hit. ........... , "'''""""'
becinning to reach the stage of no return
until school boo5ters cttipped. in to insur•
~ school& of a representative season.
South runnen, later in the game, tum·
bled frequently, while undergoing consid·
erably less pressufe than Butler.
With the ex~ptioo of Winn . Servite's
Brad Wekall is probably the best quarter•
back to ever perfGnn in the nine-year
classic.
Duncan says that this year the schools
81'1 scheduled to compete at about the
aame speed as last with a 52 cents over·
ride over the current schedule in Novem·
ber up for voters' approval to beef up the
pti>gram.
Between the two, along with their ends.
was a mismatch head coach Jim Coon of
the South didn't deserve.
"The override, if passed, would set the
taxes in the Tustin area at $1 .72 per $100
ol assessed evaluation.
A lot of hard hours for the South coach·
ing staff throughout the summer in prep·
eration for the contest went down the
drain in the fiasco.
As for what has been reduced in the
s~ system, Duncan said, "It's pretty
hard to cut in athletics . , . but we've
tried to reduce it ecr~~ the board in re·
ganU to ~uipment. It ha11 elav limited us
in.regards to travel."
The end of summer league action ill
here. with basketball, baseball, track and
water polo finished.
:.Random thought~ about tht disaster at
<Wege Coast College where the North,
led by Harvey Winn, creamed the South
to the tune of 49-3 in the North·South All· Sar prep tootba11 game:
Last to report Ml is the summer league
version at Laguna Beach in basketball
where Mater Del went undefeated in rack·
ing up the title.
Mis sioo Viejo finished second with 1 4-4
record while San Clemente and Tustin
ended up in a 3-6 deadlock while host La·
guni trailed with a Z-6 record.
:The crowd started filing nut with exactly
1D:35 left in the third quart.er. That in it·
Alf, must be some sort of record.
'The game announcing was rrim. Terms
Leading the aJPleague selection11 were
Ralph Christensen of San Clemente. Steve
Mant.or of Tustin and Steve Wiezbowski
of Laguna Beach rounded it out.
~Estancia Looking for Kicker,
~Breakaway Threat for 1968
By EARL GUSTKEY
Of 11M D•lfJ l"llM ltafl
'The way John Lowry
figures it, it'll take just a lit·
tie bit of luck to improve
upon the 3-5-1 11eason Estan·
eta High School log-ged in
-1967.
"We lost four games by a
: t.ot.ai of 11 points," he u.ys.
"H we ~ get a good
: placement kicker this time
• .£nd come up with a
:: breakaw.ay threat w e ' r e
: goirrg to win more than
:: three games."
-Lowry Mi a tit!Ue closer to
that goal than he MMd like
you to believe.
The ~ have the mak·
~ tngsofanoutstaond i ng
game-breaker type tootball
player in George Barnett. 1
flanker who bas adequate
0 apeed (10.3 in Ill• 100), good
hands and great spring -
: he's• 6·1 hilb jumper.
Barnett might be A more
•. familiar name in tN Orange
:-Coast area prep football pie·
-ture today had he not met
• misfortune last season.
In the league apener with
Loara, Barnett magged 1
:: pass from CJluci: Perry (sin·
ce graduated) and scored on
a 60-yard play. But
momeflts later he took 1
8tiff j<llt on the thigh and
had to play on a 11tiff leg the
rest of the season.
The on,y problem Lowry
f.aces now is finding 110·
meonw who can throw t:he
ball to Barnett. He was
counting on Dennis Doore to
be his quarterhiX:'k but he
moved to Ventura during
the summer.
1'le leave11 t h e in-
experienced twosome o I
Pau1 Joyce, a jun4or, and
sophomore Cll!"i 'Jlloma1.
''It's going to bake Ume
for these boys to get
ready-oe.ittler oi tbem has
ever played in a varsity
game.'' Lowry reports.
"We'll have to gi ve 'em
six montru experiel'IC« in
three weeks."
While Lowry loses sleep
OYt!I' his quarterback sitiJa-
tion, he gets to sleep think·
ing of his tackles.
He's strong here. with Bob
Raymond (215), .Jeff Seiver
t 18.5) and Rod Felt::!! {175) aU
back.
Two of his 16 returning
-Bravo Returns to Bullring
_ Matador Jaime Bravo,
: who was ieverely gored just -= three wtekts aeo. returns to = P J a i: a Monumental, Ti·
-: juana's bollring by the sea.
• this Sunday.
Abo on h ~ard are
Guillermo Carvajal, who
will be making his farewell
appearance in Tijuana prior
to retiring later this season,
and Joselito Huerta.
Bravo was gored three
weeks ago \\flflfl he at·
tempted I paM with botb
kneel planted in the sand.
Deep Sea Fish Report
s•AL •..CM (1'1 •"""" Oii WlrM "°""' -.cs -.ino. 1 .. ,. .... , IMllWI (111 ......... Oii be ... 11 -Ut
lltWlll9. Tt t11lfbllt, ltt Mu. -di. ~-· 11111'"1~ ••ACM (111 •Mlln
... ..,, ......., .-" berTKVdli, t:M ........ -46 t•• ... JI Miiii Mu. » lllKllut. -ART'I L.AMDIH 11'2 • .._..,. .i oil
-bollh) -11 ....... '" ""~·
:i.:i 11on1to, in 11e11. -w111tt '" 11e11,
11 KUlpln, -IWlllllut, l'WOD ~IAlll CLNllllT• C\:M •Mle<'• Oii
"''" bollhl -m 11err11~. 1:u bont'8, 121 Mn. l'WOD wlllfl: -bin, fi91!t Kl<ll>ln, DAV•Y'1 LOC:X«a U1S ........ .i>
-bollh) -111 • .._., ,. ---r.wda, l l7 eotllto, .., ..... 2M ""IC.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.
•
DUNE BUGGY ENTERPR,ISES
DUNE BUGGY-• COMPLETE ACCESSORIES
v.w.si-inr Steer. Wheel. . $ J.,5
8'' Wide Rimi
(Chev) ....... S 4.,5
Plated Ron Bara $16.SO
V.W. Bell Guard .$12.95
Rear View
Mirror ... , .. s 3.25
Slrid Plate ...... $14.SO
Lera! Lites .... $ 16.00
Dune Buggy Body
(Trade-In) ... $149.00
Twin Header
Kits, ea. side . $
Twin Header
Kill (unasa.)
(ea. side) .... $ 1.00
Windshields ... S 36.00
WIS Frames ... S 14.00 * DEALERS WELCOME *
141115-7-9·11
CHESTNUT ST,
WESTMINSTER
H4·1333
LOCA~ ! &
u 90llA ..
lettel"men are q u e s t I o n
marks rigllt now. Mike
Willy , a starting guard last
year. recently underwent an
appendectomy and versatile
Bob C«nuke, a wingback
most of 1967. has a bcand
new shoulder.
Cornuke had hitt llgamenbl
re-arranged in surgery last
gpring to prevent the joint
from slipping o u t con·
tinually as it did last season.
"The doctor will give us
the verdict fOOll on wbetber
or not he can have coctact,"
Lowry u.ys. "We need
him -he could start at two
or three positions for us."
Probably Lowry's most
experienced perfonner is
Nick Quiroz , who has played
fullback for tbe past two
seaaons. Quiroz Is faster and
bigger than be was last
year. He clocked .a 5.SI in the
50-yard dcasb the other day.
Barnett and Steve Gril-
fitts are the fastest, at 5.6.
Lowry likes bis fullbacks,
Griffitts (175) and Dick
Durante ( 185}. ' ' 0 u r
fullbacks are better runners
this year but we 'll need
more blocking out of them."
ttte coach said.
"If we stay healthy, we'll
be solid at every poeitioo ex-
cept quarterback where we
need a guy to come through
far UJ."
£""'7 _... MMCO ~ -...... 10,000 tr-....i1n ,,....,,..
, Y..i r.t fr.._ towii!f. 1 ,_ ~
eMcl.; r..t, -"lci9"' .... iu--t
''""" "' ii* .,.,. tlwt •..... ,.;.ii MWCO, yew tr-..nl ...... -N ~---MMOOC-1-co..t .. ~. E-, ...... _, • ...,,_ _,....,.. .. .
COSTA MESA
1741 ....,.. .. ~1"6
O•Nen o,... ... --.,_.,.... ... --
S•nt• Ana
.. I. PW It, ...
ALBACORE BONANZA -Relaxing liller a bl!•Y
and productive day of fishing on the 43 Fathom Bank
are (from left) slripper Bob Hodgden, Mike Melle-
Wedntldrt, A-28, 1968
thin, Rolly Pulaski, Rob Hixson , DoU KoU and deck-
haild Craig Maurer. Group landed 60 albacore
weighing .)268 pounds.
DAIL V PILOT f3
70-Pound .. !
Yellowfin
Landed
Gi..wizod ytllowlin tuna
are the talk Of t h •
aportfWl!nf crowd t h l 1
w-.eek.
Robel1 Honeyman, a Dari~
Point ~, was .tUH.nc
aboard one ot ~·s Lan~
dingi!1 albacore boats Sun· ' day and hooked up a 7o.:
pound yellowflD.
He &truggied !or an boor
with the Ii.th, Melly landiitc·
him oo. 40-poood mono line.
Art's boats a r • Mo
counterine yellowfin tuni ~
comparable size on ttle.lr
albacore triJM.
"Some of them ore sp(i(i ••
i.ng the inet wbeo they're
hooked," says •kipper Lou
Bellinger.
Hambletonian Winner to Del Mar
"We've heard reporta. that
some of the boa1I-out of San
Diego have brought in tome
100..poundeN. We've .een
some that look like 300.poun.
ders but we've left them
alcme ."
At. for the albacore, Bell·
inger r e p o r t • continuing
luck 20 milel north end west
of North Island neer tbt
Coronado!.
Nevele Pride , winner of old eve-to he named Nevel• Pride "the greatest Hambletooian victor y tti11t
the H-aml:\l_etonian last Su n-"Harness Hor~ O{ the hone I've ever drfve11" brought his lifetime earn-
da.y i11 s~uled to mak.e Year." ~1o11 ow I n lit: the colt's ings to $Sll.400.
two starL~ at Hollywood Stanley Oancer. trainer 0 ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Park during the 73-day ttie swift trotter, ce1led l1
Western l+al'l'lfl6f Racing
meeting. LOCAL Wirl.ner of 39·, ot 43 start&,
Newle Pride 'Nill be aimiilg
for the American Trotting N. •*"•' 11•w1p•p•r kll1 ~e11
Classic Dec. 7 against aJI-m•••, •••rv d•y. •b•Ut wh•t'•
age competition at a mile tol11' en i11 th• 6•••t•r O••nt•
and one~ghth. Ne ve I e c •• st th111 th• DAILY PILOT.
Pride is the only two-year·
CARATS BACK TO
SCHOOL SCENE
..
./
HOLBROOK
BUTTONS
DOWN YOUR
WARDROBE
'°' the tr1dition1list who setks th• ·
casual look ... with
th• deft fl•ir of
th• bvtton-down tDll•r.
Polyt&t1r/collon
ptrm11"1ent preu. A widt l'tf'IOI of &olids, stripes ind checks.
from $7.00
.--tiEGISTER NOW FOR'---.
FREE ZUNDAPP
10Ck<
SCIAMILEI
ftll "11£ DRAWING-No Purchau NectS.liry ind
you don't h1v1 ID bt prllltrlt to wfn. SH this motor-
cycle It Nonn Rte'Vel irl An1htiM Pd tht Hou11 of
Suru«i, Fount1in V1lley.
11ta' .1 tai~ion clotf}fa1 ·-··--........... I...... .._"-fF .... ..... '-... ,.,,.,,,...,. .,... ....... 1"4J-...... * COITA MISA .. HUNnl18TON 11ACM .... e...... ....... ...... _ ........ ,,.,., ...... ,. ntt ........ (1 ... , .. , .....
.. ............ ........_ .... -...c-9-p .... .. _ ......... ~ .... ..,ca....
IENEIAL
TllE
REPEATED BY POPULAR DEMAND!
The same tires that come
on brand new '68 cars!
GENERAL
JET·AIRJis
Here's your second chance to buy high quality
General Jet·A ir ll's at low sale prices. AU are
brand new, factory fresh tubeless whitewalls. (No
seconds or ble mished stock.) All are built with
a Duragen• rubber, dual tread design for long,
dependable mileage. And Jet·Air !I'S, like all
General tires, are built to exceed the new U.S.
Government safety standclrds. Dr ive in today!
Don't miss this great money-sav ing offer !
Blackwalls sale priced '2 less
per tire than whitewalls
llllroductort Offer I
JATO
IUPB-IDD
IDlf IAW
n---·---
BIG VALUE\s! .
lllllllAL'l 111111 .
llAll HutllH . ~ ........... -::::.·.: $1296 .......... -.....--•.W_,.M .. ._L _
AMERICAN
FLAG SET
• 811u1iful l' • 5' f11g,
1einlorcld cotton buntin1
• Wt1lher, fide 1fli1t111t
• Alumr""'1! JJ1ff, gilded
•••'• 1()9, h1ly1td ~
PLUS '
fDll' 1· 1 12'
'""''"flop widt WrlhwoM _ ,
ONLV •32e
per Mt
,.~ ,.ubbwlnlrid
ALL·VlllYL CAR MAT .... _
~·too .... --
........ _ ....,. .-...... •211
COAST GENERAL
TIRE
AVER·Y GENERAL
TIRE SERVICE
COSTA MESA
Ph. 646•5033 540·5710
16941 BEACH BLVD.
HUN11NGTON BEACH
Phone 847,5850
' .
-----------------·
!
'
• '·
Jf OAll. Y Pll.OT
~ ~ ..... tt, ,,. a.if ... ,...,, "Int ...... ~ , ...
9elff; O' P'a f'lrlf H11 .._, ·-
tltl::IT •IACL ' NntnM, Tilt'tol .,_, • flll .... O.lmlN Met M.OIO. --. r.er!"'lf 'Ill ---ltf,J Jltt lwt A .... (A L Dll1l •llf
Moeul'• G,lft IM V11tftzwS.) 114
._..H ... fW~l IU
A4fettM OVc"-(W KerlKll \14
,t..lm .... Md IW fffortldr.) !U
'"'" ... i.e. u•· C.ruoJ Jlot ltll!. fW H1""'9hl IJ( 0-... 0.. ._.... (M V_.) IU
..... ID "1tra) 114
btflOw I• '-'-"l 1U A-It McM1ty.tr11nM Mir,.
SaCOMO llACS. I tur._..1. Two ,,_. .M "'9W.. HMlel. C.llN'Ms. C&Mrlt. ~ ...... l"wM st.JI». La lll9t"1 (J Sitnen) 11'
C1mlfltto (W Hl[fMlll 11•
fttot A C'laUd !1 A PlrlecYl 11'
Al Ttll --IM Y1..,_le) 11• J9111tc 10 Yflf..,..ll 116 Llttlil c111lciit fl. Gl11tt1nl 11•
... ,_ ft ' l"llor!l!Nl '" .lo¥t\ll Hcllte11 (M Y111ul 11'
Ludl."'11141 IS Trwvl1111)' ti•
.._.... • CMrfltl (J I Yto1tl 11' lcl91 c..mrn.nt IW ~J) llf Oii TJle Mtftlll If MMN) i 1' -·-........ lrMlol lA L 0111) 1111
Ott I'-" CG Y-IJI 11• ......, lMto It A ,.IMM) 111
P....cls n J '•lomlMJ 11• ~,,. c.vstlll {J s.111 .. 1 116
Sfllrl!W t.111i. C1 II YortJ 11'
TMlllD llACa. ' fW'toMI,, I Ind 4 .,.,. .... _..,.,.,.. f'ur• .., ....
•-I ~tlemen (D Plerul 11f ...... 9oM9 (M Y1'9Mw .. ) 116
S.tan'1 Dlvlt Cf Medlflt) 11'
Arl0r1 1E11i. (J 1'1lomlnol ltl
Wllllf W"t Wlnd ti A Plntlll) 1tt
llM ~ (A L Ditti •111
Ml.di ..,_ (It CabeMenl Ill
ll>Mille Wl'letlllr IJ Selllnl llf W""'* StrMt (It 1t .. 1a1 •111
SOlllillrl Peu CL GM ...... I 111
....... CW M9henWYI llf
Dntll ... fJ Glllrioflll llf -·-,._ ._ II , Ganll •Ill
IUMlil AIWWlll (G ~I !If ,.,. T\llt ... (J ....,._,,, 11'
......... ..., Cl A ll>JNq) 116
Del Mar
En tries
MINT" ltAC•. 1 1/16 mllft et! l\lrf.
••
Del Mar
Resul ts
llXT" ltACE -' fl1rloftft. j .,.., 111d1 111d _up rJltln tlld mi res. Cl1lmlt11 ~rp ll.IOO.
!<.:1fJ::l IA D .. 1! 7·• ~= l:J hJMN {D P ltrcl} i= TIME -J;°'" S '
P'I• lln, W ltAN -P&llY l'lt, Git N'Wln,
SCRATCHES.
J YHr old• 1tMI UI. c11rm1nt1 l'rk• l lVINTN ltACI -About '"" '6,UO-•s.m . Punt 13,000, "'rleNa ., turf. l v .. r &1d1 '""' up
f'CMHlTll •AC.. , fllr--.. -r-Evff'I' Clltnce ti' Glrul wni llllln •tMI m1rn. 13111 rvnnl,.. of "'' ,_, ..... CS.lmlflt lll'b lfOAGO. ,.,_ Ill RIY) 1rlOJ ml~li::.~ S!ak11. PurH &f'.OCIO, lit
""'99 ...... CtlldY TOii CG l11111W•Yl ',',', IH"'l..,IM0 Y•~1J , .l!.111 f•.DO j·M
N1tJletl DllTlll IJ Saller.I 112 Clllll'lt CMrtll CD Pltrct) "'"" rum .....,.ti.rt) t• to
A-Hlft'9 Girt lA L D111J •107 So SWMt 11111 IA M"t1) lot Lb ~~M~ .. rtll\ 2M/I . 4:20
P'lnellflit (W Hlr1itdl) lit PHtl1n llU'f fW Mlllomn'l 111 ALSO UN' L
•td'.lnl GMlllW ID l"ltf'al 12t Piiar• ... (A l'trltdl) HJ StlNfl, Amtr\iD i~."~~·v:11• ~ (L GltllNlll 1" 5111 .. •1 SWlt!ffl' fM Y11111) 111 Sword Flll'I, bt,
l lr ~ (W "'""""' 112 "" l'lmlt cw Htmllh) 114 c!gATCHEO -FrtndM M •• Paclllc ------------------
Los Alamitos
Entries
~~u:."c ... ~i.,; °"' m11t. t ••••
Wind-HaMy ~r1~1' a.a. lllliilili•••••••iloll!!!'!'!"'••••m•••-•• Joi~ Cabtll 1 J.•~ 1·• J.2'0
P1tl'r 11119 .. ti {W Slr•u*'l • 111 Cr'itt11 11 ID ~rgi) 1"'° f:23
fl lf'TN uc•. ue .,..... t ..... , TIM -l.lS-J/$
;t!!J Ill.CL--.;-••nh. ! n•r
........ • '" GrMti II Pllll. Purp 11JOO. ~
,,,...... l •r IJ llr-tltlCll 111
ll•whldll TMv (II .-...1r1 11'
O.ndr lllc:t CT LlloMn!J 11•
Tfny J.llM CW Mll"""*"I lZJ l"ei'-" °""" (W S ..... J 11' J1y H •.. r 11& O.fidv'9 ...,.,. flt ,,.,_..., "'
~ IL Wl'llM> lit
......... fN l"•ttlol 115 W"..A ~ 11" o-llt'I 111 . ... ........... ~ 0..-fl l rl'*lrl'I Ill
"""' •....,. Ut SIT'oUllJ 11f t:lllllfi 1'.i .. , f0 C..nloul 111 ,_.. 1'°"t (0 Motrlil lU
••CottD llACE. :ue Y••d•. l ve•r
Gld• -.... U11 In Gr.O. A Mln111. Pul'M llM ·
..... Ml °" (0 Mwrlll '" Gell9tlf °'91 CJ ICMll) 11S
W1r l\sa CW S ... •UQ} "' Mr. ~ kr fJ lltollc"91dl llJ !l:ldt!W (J .. _,., HS
C111• 1.-, CJ WelN!ll IU L•no Mitt (I ari'*ll'Y) llS ,......,.,11 Ill A.Nlrl 111
llov1I T..,_ Ill ..... , 111
Olo Lvcb IC Sllllffll 11• ............. ,...... ..... (0 c.....,., 111
t1*it TlrM fl I" C,..,J 116
TMr Ofw Kid (J Drrtwl lU Wwltllt ti! ~ (I I" C...,..,l HJ
Ti111to llAC•. m y1n11. IMlclen 2 -.... Cl.I""'"'· ""'-11.l'Oll. C .. lrl'lllll ,,,q SLM.
Lri ,,,,,,_., t1r 111
Ye Ou .. ro (W S1r111ul 12'0
Plec:lle CW ...... 1Mftb9dl) 111
81111 1"'9 IC Smtflll 170
T ..... Alemtt CJ tAlllltltldl 11111
C ........ 919"' Liz IP Crmll'v\ 111
MU WI......,. !D C.rtlot,t) HI
S4Ulf G"'"• u Dr...,.) no
Or. Miiier Cit ltr*tl IJfl
\'tf!l\lr-""' t~ A1'1lll} "' ,,,... • ....,.k
Glorr h I CJ W•lsml UO
Lim. lroell; (l ColllM) 1211
POUllTN uca. -Yll"lll. , ......
llldf;l<'lllV11ltlGradlAl"lu$.~f'lt 11.-.
S'9P T1M Mwk fl" C......,.I IU
Stw!I Sfr1_,. tT L"'*"l 11•
llt Gr1t!deddY IJ llli.t"J 11' 110.i•s i<.h'I' to Ctnlctul 11!
LIM Dur (A Ar1lu1 111
Ok V111 fl lrll'llllrvl 1'1
s..ed A L" f( Sml""l 111 W.. l"llY Ill AdllrJ 111
T'-• ~ (W II-) 111
SOFT SEU SAM
olds 1<'111 .. lit Gr1H A l"tvt. Punt ouA,..1~!f.,.aikw.:~~lnl 1'llolltftt. Ile.
11,tOI. -ltATCHES.
fltrul ... fH Crolby) 120
Link Tonlt (T L~ll•m) 111
8•rco 0.1llrN Ill 81nktl 111
8•r 'TlllCll IJ l'l:obrn,.,,J 1U
OkklY OM CJ Wllllll'll llJ
Sat!d Rlnr Win (J Drt'l'tl') 116
Frosl'r Htlr'll (l ColllM) 117
Air Strlo (It Adllrl 111
Ledy Mfv~fv Sl!ot 10 Mllrr1t) 111
Llttle Emmr IJ w ...... , llJ
sun" u ca. Ut nnll.
l>ldt 1t!d U11 hi Gr• AA
Purw sttoO.
Lllce A llodc1t CC Smlllll
MOOll 0.0111 CJ llobll'llOlll
ltobln 09bln (l Collll'l1l
01NIY Moallfl ID Morrll!
J1ct" A Mllfflfl IJ Mltavd•)
He11111r .._., lit M 1lrl
Mr, Pll J1 !W Si.11'1 1
Moort Or LIU {I" (l'Olby}
Lltf'1 Go S•m (J 11Cnl1J
M<L" ltr (t It 11 ... I
AIM •tlt*I
' -· Mimis.
"' "' '" "' "' '" •n
"' "' ·~
Cllbber•1 l'l:OCk_. (J Orlnrl llJ
Tiii ...... rcll Wind (0 Cltdotll 1U
Prll>C'IH Diii (J Wll'Mtl) 111
Oolklrum1 Cl It l1M1) Ill
Sl\'INTN llACI . 350 •1rd1, 1 w11
olds. ClllmlM. l"\lnll tl,too. Cllltit-
lf>o prlct M.oot.
Mldw'' Mlllll (It '"'*•I Mf.lna!ll E11k ID Morris)
Clllrttf' Too 19 lrl'*lt-r)
RIPld INorll (( Stnfltl)
Swet't Clllrlal (J Dr..,.,)
TloM S-tt {II: Ad1lr)
Etll lt!dk11 (It P'lllllrM)
Saom NleM Out IH Cr..irrJ
"' "' m
'" "' "' "' •»
l!IOHTN llACI. 4111 ••rd1. l y11r
ol!ll .... 1111 Ill Gr ... AA l"IUI. l"ul"K
11.lOD.
PIM. Pt,.,,,,IM IJ M•ltlldl) lU a...,,,.,.., hit flt Adllrl ,,.
H, R-1 IJ Df'9.,..I llS
ll1r1 l'IM' Lud! fJ K111lt) 111
M&tlv"IM' Ht Stroud) HJ
MYI M1rl1 111
t•ll It Mlrry Ill l•'*•l llJ
Ol1manc1 ...,..,,... 10 Morrkl l!ll
NINTH ltACI. S4t Y•rd,, l Wlf
e>I01 111!1 UP. All-1nct1. Pur ... Ii.~
ltlJll JIM 10 Clt'tloll ) \11
lttd Ettlli ll1r 10 Morfl1) 11'
Oh Go Go flt 111\bl tit
TM Poltroon fL Wr""tl n•
Gtnle'I lleqtitll iw SlrlUU l '"
Golden l"uelllo IN Pt tllo) 11•
G•ll t"' \'t lor CJ Ktnlt) 120
Frisky l'r1ultln fJ ltobt~ICll'I) 111
l'1-'.er'1 lrn11N 111 Ad1!r) 170
llOll Sldtlt IJ MtllUcl•I lit
~ Marvin Myers
' .
• .· .' .
,.
Los Alamitos
Re,sults
TU•IO.T, AUe . )7, IHI c .... , .... ,. .. ,
l'llUT ltAC•. 350 y1rds. M11(1en 2
.,.., olds. c 111m1..,. PurH l lJllCI.
P1M11m Sharon 1w11....,1 u . .io ,,,. 1.20
T-d11 lrttZt fMllr! 11.lill 1.61 ~r Mor91n fStr1uuJ 7l.2t Tl-1• 7/lf.
knitdlld-n.,.. AltnM. Hklllll
ll1r, Gooo.'1 rwi., Y& Qulen,
IECONO llACI. • nrd1. 3 Yt•r
a1c1s •tMI 1111 In G...., 9 Ptu1. Purw ......
S-'H Et.. (WlllOll) 14.20 J . .O I.lilt
ltodctt \'tea1 fl...akfllll!I) l.to l.ID
GlbbY• 119"' (Wrllhl) 1.:!0
Tlm-2) :1/10.
kr1tcMd -DlollfV Ille*.. My l'•lr
S11i.,, l1~t"9do, llllY Gn>IY.
DAILT DOUI Ll-1·1"--1111,_
& ~s."" "" .... 1"•14 .., ....
THlltO ltACE. U! y1rd1. Milden !
...r aldl. ci.1m1111. Pu1'14: 11100.
KtWMfl WMbnt11t
IAdltrJ U11.611 2,1(1
Fl1ml119 Rodctt ICtnloU) l .to 2.IO
Eltllll ll«kl (CallhHI J.ID
Tlm+-11 7/10,
Atoe lt1n -l"aclflc lr1t11. 01rt; ll~L ll&Ilnt lllitlbY, Svf'9 'N a.-
tDtT•, Mlu C1l1lr Iler, Wfllr11w1y L Oetll Turn.
Stnitdltd -CJrcumt1tvlt1fDr. Or.
Miiier, Lrl Mallely ltr, Ciovi1• 819"' "·
POUllTM llACI. U1 y1rdl. J ''''
0101 lt!d UP In Grtdl A Mlnul. Punt
11700.
P1llto'1 Chtrry
fl.-tttkl)
C11t11 Otdl: (Ll.n.ml
f.00 J.00 l.IC
n.~1 1.1t1
Mt. S.., a.r IP Crolby)
Tlme.-11 4110.
Scr1tU.W-Plltne1le. "'
"'"" It.I.Cl. «ta vtrds. l vur old• •!Id UIP l!'t Gnide A PIUI. Pvr•
11'00.
OU l"rlnceJ (Mitri
Htntlowrl II" Crllllrt)
SIMd 'Em lllM.t)
Tl.,.._11 fltt.
'·• •.20 J.IO ,,,till'·'° .. ~
AIM 11--.~Ftlkltp. VtMy Ellettl,
T• Side, llOld Helf, ·-l'l:Ulltlllr,
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SIXT" ltACa. UI y1t'lfl. 1 l"N'
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A116 lt111 -Andlt ltw1I, Gtmlr J-, 1111'"9 llKk. illltr't o. ... ........ _,, Dlodl Jlldl.
kr•tched -Tr•1t 0 5-.
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AIM --..nn. OMtlJt. GI Al Ck. W1r ,,....._ ..,,...,.. 0\1111, Mwt;
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in1 tl!t 1111r1nlff perioil. fthlfll it wltlt
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1th1 IM Ire• ••Pl•ctment period, yau ~Y
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7. All·weather
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I •
•
'NI""' 1U1Ci,"'";.it'-,.r111 .. ~ ~1r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--,
SHARP
ff ,...,. • ........ tN4-t, ..... DAIL T PILOT'S f.,..., Di,_
A.UNI ........... ~. , ... ,.., • .,._ lri41b • M+tM 4••1 , ............ ,_,,. ~ • .. u.... A •
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A ...... _ ... .....,..·-· J-. ,,.,,,,,,,, ... OWi .,,.,.. DK.
":!'~
N EWPORT · BEA CH
(F a sh i o n I sl an d )
••
H UNTI NG TON BEACH
(Huntin g t o n Center)
'1
Mallory
Cup Led
By Rose •
RICHMOND, Calif. (AP)
-Richard Rose of Seattle
won both races Tuesday and
took the lead ln the Mallory
Cup North American Salling
Championships with 331,1
points klr five races.
James Hunt of New Bed-
ford, Mass., advanced from
seventh to fifth on a protest
In the day'a first event He
• placed third In the other for
29% total points and second
in the standings. Hunt led
after Monday's thrt!e races.
Warner Wilcox of Miami,
Fla., was third with 251/t
points and Talbot Ingram of
the New Jersey FJeet fourth
with 23.
Protests d e l a y e d an-
nouncement of the official
sfland.ings.
•
Van Dyne Lea.ds in Finns
Ex-Princeton Ace Tops 41 in Olympic TriaU
Still OP lll!bt from w!nnin1 Sprague m, N. w p 0 rt from B-Yecht Cllji; 1. Corl -o,ae, ,.. ..
the North Amerlaul diam· -Y""'1t Club\ Peter -"*-""· Collbm ~ YC, 8bort llilll,
plonoll!p In !he Finn a ... Barrett, Alamitot Bay YC, llld Dlclt L.otWJ, N.J. -0
last week, Carl Van Dyne YO<ht Club tmd Fred Mlller Oalllome YC. 2 . Rob t rt Doyle,
from Sborl Hills, N.J . won J<. -Shore 5ai1inC Clul>, One Nee -oallod Tut>-~-. -· YC, 1.7
1he ~ round o1 the Newport Beacl). cloy am two more """ S. lleDf1 5\lAIU• W,
Finn o~ \rials at Spraeue ftnUlled tl1ird, -.iect ~-'l'l1<lr"""1 NHYC, l.T
Bamott waa filth an<I Miller will be a llry-de:Y 11111 the 4. Slwe --, CYC, I !IUS6illl1 Bay Tu-y. was deep in lhe Wik with a aert .. "'11 relW!le Frldo,y. L ·Pelc Blmll, ABYC,
The farmer Prin-• In· 30th. '!be O!rmplc Npre1t-• 10
DAILY l'll01"
ta-coll!glllte oilllng ace led Ptt>er Soulhern Callf<>rnla In 'l:. =. wlf.:: ~~ ~_! • Y WJac ~·· Caal., U
lhe·'llW)'lor•lentrteatnthe ~orfir•-1 10!1ni!h<d~1g °"a1· __ • 7 ~"f:·c · P t 1•11 t.DlckLoewJ,CYC,11 OJ;Jmpk trialr, ~ eucb an;i 1 were ,_.., e llV'flll ·-"''· • ,. am D , Sou1hlond ece rlnilefuded Campbell, en All-Amerloan Here .. the 8nl 10 tn B-C, U 10. Torey C r o • b • r I ,
sailing lllol.....U .. ll«r)' ....:::oOil:::!ee!a~te::.....:'"'=":::•c~lkl::::!jll>Ol":!:::.....;Tues:=::d"'7~'1:;n:;:""::'::.' ____ _:l.:._1111::::.l&~•::CJ~B::aD.:::..O.W==•:_W:;:-==.:'"::.r:;, •::"::.'::.'::.• .:;;II:.__
East Coast
Sailor Tops
Sears Race
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday ·Through Saturday
AL~s~!!~n• SPECIALS
Wilcox was involved in
one protest, but It was not
allowed and his standing
was not affected.
Rose, who moved into the
lead from fourth place Mon-
day, was not involved in any
protest.
The 22--foot Tempest sloops
are competing over San
Francisco Bay off Rich·
m<>nd .
TRAILER SAILER -The 21-foot Venture sloop
designed and built by Roger MacGregor of Costa
Mesa has retractable keel and easily unstepped
mast making it convenient for trailering and ramp--
launching. The Venture is popular among Midget
Ocean Racing Fleet sailors and is also comfortable
for family cruising.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Walter Green e of
Chesapeake Bay, Md., was
fint and Ulird In Tuoeday'a
two racs b:r the Sean Cup
N o r t h American JunJor
oailtng O>ampionship.
He bas 211/4 points for the
firlll three <Ji tile eight cup
races whi<h will be sailed
tbroogh Thunday an<I poosi·
bly Frid!!)' morning.
OF THE WEEK!
Two more races in the
eig'!lt-event m e e t are
scheduled Wednesday.
Mesa-built Y acht
Attracts Attention
John.Kiley ol the South
Bay Maosech.-, Ya<ht
Racing Union wa.a lleCOnd
and -to total 18 points.
Gary Wiseman of Santa
Bal1>ara, Calif., who won
Mon<lay~• race, WM dis-
qualified In tl>o tint ewnt Cana dians Billed as a competent
In Barthel Midget Orean Racing fleet
yacht and a comfQrta<ble
family cruiser, the new 21-
T h W• fOOt Venture, designed Md 1"0 p y ffi built by Roger MacGregor
of Costia Mesa ls beginning
TORONTO (AP) -The to aUr,act attention among
eight-meter yacht Iroquois, California sailors.
skippered by Tim Nelson Main feature oi the Ven-
and ·hls five-man crew from ture is its adaptability as a
Toronto't Lake Yacht Rae-trailer boat. Its I ea d ·
ing Association, sailed ballasted keel raises and
across the finish I i n e lowers witlh a small winch
\Vednesday in 3:07:26 to located in the cockpit.
take the first race in the With the keel locked in the
Barthel Trophy series. down position the boat is
Cheeta, skippered by Tom stable and completely self.
Fisher of the Detroit River righting. In the up position,
Yachting Association. was the shallow draft permits
second in 3:14:23, follo,1;ed the boat to be launched and
by Venture ll, handled by J . recovered from a trailer.
Sullivan from Cleveland's The Venture is fiberglass
inter lake Y a c ht in g witb interior and exterior
A s soc i a tion in 3: 15:36. mahogany trim. Positive
-~~~~~~~~~~~
~-
•
CHRIS CRAFT TRIBE -The 42-foot Commanche
is the latest sailing vessel of the Chris Craft line.
all named after" Indian tribes. The yachts are win·
ning races on both coasts and the Great Lakes.
New Chris Craft .
' S parks Boat Scene
A new 42-foot sloop by
Chris Craft i. sparking In·
terest among ttle yechting
fraterpio/ on both the ·east
and ... 111 .coasta.
Chris Craft'• new Com·
mancbe 42 sailed by 0...0 ~ af San Diego won
first in cM and IE!J('ODd,
over.all in the recent YRU
Cruise -a serte1 of. races
omtend et OMBBna llland.
AU al the Qirts Chit a:Uboatl bear I n d I 1 n
nam ... Prior to the edv«JI
al the Commanche, tile '11·
1oo1 AJ*l>e -Oil tile -pelb Oii .. Ealll Cols!
111c1 co11eet«1 • metr a1 ooolpo, tneludtnc the
ruv<nddo Stradonl Shoo! n-, Branfml lnvl!Alllonal
and ~ .... 'l'lqllly .....
(Ill Long Island Sound.
state Maritime Academy
Cadet.-...i.
Her most impressive win
was in the world'• leading
long dt&tince clusi<s. In
one ol tile wtldelt races in
years -in which six boat.I
w~ dismllted in winds up
to ftO l<nota, Bill and Tom
Sctioend«f of Chicago won
first overall In a Deel ol 185
in the 330-mile event. ..
The lm8llest of the ctui.1
Craft line ii the 32-foot
QJerokee. It baa won no mil·
jor racet but bas collected
sev..-al llOCOllds and thirds
In East Cols! and Gulf ol
Mexico events.
foam flotation and nort•kid ~eek surfaces are standard.
The alwnioum mast stepS
on deck and can be raised or
lowered by one person. She
can be launched and rigged
ror sailing in about five
minutes.
The cabin bas Coor full·siz·
ed berths. Head and plley
are optiooa.l. ~ cockpit is
self-ballirig and &Eats six
Peoi>le <Xmfortably.
Standard sail plan ls a
main .-i jib whkll provides
sufficient sail area for oom·
furtabl.e cru.i.sing. The main
bas 110 square f~t and the
jib 65.
For raclng the boat can be
rigged for a masthead genoa
and spinnaker. The "germy"
is 140 square feet and die
clmte ls 220 .•
More than 300 of tile craft
have been sold Jn California,
.according· to MacGregor
who builds the emit in a
plant Jooated at 1665 Bab·
cock Slreet, Costa M ....
Mesa Firm,
Peru Sign
Dynamacc eo.,, of C..la
Mesa bu completed
negotiations with
Maestranza and Asillero
Delta S.A. al ~. Peru to
engineer and supervise con·
struct.ioo of 93-foot purse
-.... di!pjacing 500 tom -the world's largest fiber
glass reinforced p I a s t I c
boats.
Tuesday in a brushing con·
test involving four of. the
Rhodes 19-foot stoops.
Wiseman wui the other
race and is third with 16'h
points~
The day's first race was
delayed more than an hour
urtil sufficient wind replac·
ed the near-calm on the lee
side of Treaiure Island in
San Fnmcboo Bay.
'fwenty -kno.t . winds
prevailed for the afternoon
r11ce.
Clubs Meet
In Wales
Bowl Race
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club and New Orleana
Yacht Club WIJ\ tangle today
in the first race ot a four out
of seven series for the
PTinoe al Wal<s Blow, sym·
bolic rJ the North American
match race sailing cham·
pbonhsip.
The race9 will be sailed
inside the breakwater at Los
Angeles Harbor with LO&
Angeles Yiacht Club • boot.
The NHYC crew ii cun-
. posed ol. Burke Sawyer,
skipper; Rick Hambleton am. Peter Parker.
''lbe New Orieam crew Ml
silppered by WllJlam lbs Jr.
with Jobn Dane W and Jobn
Ruppel Jr. as crew.
In 'I'oo80a.y11 semi-finals
NHYC beat !he Rocky
Point, Conn. entry w it h
William Jayton at the helm
~~ ud New O rleant
eliminated the V 1 n e y a r d
Haveri, Ma:M. Yadrt Club,
Hanging baskets
add atmosphere
Top selcetion of plenls ideel fo r
hanging baskets. Choose coleus,
tradescatia, artillery, asparagus
fem. 7" size.
/
1.49
Nylon/vinyl
garden hose-
li9htweight hose h•s 8 yr. CJu•ren+••·
f1"x SO'.
II" X 75' ·······-··········· 7.H
12 TIAR IOUARANTD
3.88 Witll the first ol tllese
large fishing v e s s e J a
scheduled for launching at
the ecid of this year, a new
milesbone in the applfcatioo
of fibergl&S6 within the
marine industry will have
been achieved, according to
company officials.
skippered by Jim Angell. r---=~~;;i~ The series is being sailed '"'Ir--
In Shields Cw• lloopo.
Winds in Tuesday'• race•
ranged from 15-18 knots.
The Dynamarc c·o r p .
~iallzes in the design of
large fiberg\BMI structures
and I! presently negotiating
other contracts 1n th e
NHYC jg the dJ!fender 0(
the trophy as the refiult al
winning it last year at
Vineyard Haven with Scott
Allan at the helm. =:,Ii'.':' :vi:~ _T_h_e_D_A-IL_Y_P_IL_O_T
use of fiber glass In fishing Covers Boating vessels. ... ------------·· --
CLOSE OUT
PRICES ..
Oii
• '68 BUICKS • '68 OPELS
DARY RBITllS & lWING
POOLE BUICK
CF.nMtly St••.Mtr l1kkl
SOYINfi H~ AHA
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COSTA MESA
Of'IN M-, .... l'rWoy 'ti f ......
OP1N 'tll 6 p.m. s.t••f -CllMll I• •r;
'•
Wall mount
hose reel
Ho~s up to 1101 of hose. C.n It• u1N
ptrellel or ~1tht li n9le.
Garden hose
hanrer
7.99
Curvec:I pl•+• of heavy v•uQ• •+••' h••
•n1mel finish.
79c
A border of portulaca adds
bright color to your garden
Deinty portulece blooms profusely
Brighi, jewel-toned colors.
in sunny spots!
.. -..,,,. -
• ..
Gracef1I He11enly Bamboo
• for a dtcorative back1ro1nd -
j•
Derl< green leeves tum bright r.d under autumn 11111.
Grows to 3 ft.
, .... 2.98
Tile eommanche'• first
major vldorl -in Long Island's Emu Trophy T'ICfl wtlb 1 .,..,. ol New Y~~
All al tbe Cbril er.fl
booQ are dtotgned b 1
Sporbnan & stopb4lll and
tank..t.ei9tod b e f o r e con·
st.ruction. Features include
fin Jr,.ls, akep and blade
rudders. The decka are of
11mulated t.Nk and
hanlnrt includ<t Barlent
winch ...
A11fheri11cf l11l&k, O,.f I Ja111•~ O.afw
S1Mnt 1111 H•rlter Afe• 141·1761 NEWPORT BEACH, -FASHION ISLAND :-_ .
. ----~----
)
f J• DAILY PILOT •
Strasberg o,-ens LA Class _, -
Method Acting Now for the Masses
~
;CHARITY' CHARACTERS -Among the large cast of the Laguna Playhouse
musicaJ "Sweet Charity," which closes this weekend 1are seferal performers
in multiple roles. Five of these are. from left, Jennifer Onsta'tt, Nanette Deets,
. Jim Raitt, Pat Warner and Vicki Frederick.
•
Theater Notes
Santa Ana Opens County's
Season With 'Odd Couple'
By TOM TITUS
Of ""' o.llY ...... l llff
Orange County's 1968""-4$
cainmunity theater season
geb under way t h i s
wi:ekend. inaugurated by
the Santa Ana C<immuntty
Pl8yera' production of "Thi!
Odd Couple."
The early riMting date i11
ne'Cessitated by the fact that
the~players ah.are the park·
ing·.1ot with the Santa Ane
Municipaj Stadium n e :z t
door, and must haw their
first show ol each see6M off
the: board! before footba.il
traffic begins in mid-Sep·
tem.ber.
Players Theater, 1020 W.
8th St., Sarita Ana. Ticketa
and informatian are
available at 541-2188.
• • •
South Coast Repertory
closes what ibs directar5
have termed ttie J1) o s t
popular ancl coo.troversi&\
production of the year.
"America. Hurrah." this
weeUml at ille Third !!tep
Theater in· Costa Mes.a.
Directed by Math i a s
Reitz, the offbeat satire wlll
N!flervationl avai:ta.blt at
494-8061. • • •
The Newporl M ind
1'roupe. currently perform·
ing al the Third Step
'I'heater i.n Newport Beach.
windi; up its production <lf
"The Flying Islands of tile
Night" Friday through Sun·
day ..
lnform·ation anc:I reserva·
tioru may be acquired at the
Uieater. 2815 Via.le Wey, or
by calling South Coast
RepertOl'y at· 646-1363.
be staged for ttie final four 1;:::=========-.11
perfcrmances T h u r 1 d a y
through Sunday at t h e
theater, 1827 Newport Blvd.
Reservations m~ be made
by <Alline 646-1363.
• • •
LOS ANGELES ( A P )
After 20 yem-1 behind Actors
Studio's clased doora, Lee
Str'6berg hes e· mer .c e d
from the cloiater to spread
his Method to the-muaes.
H~ edict for .ctor1: "Yow
have the emoti.On. J>oo't try
to ad."
Strasbert;. 67, tutor of
such a.s Matlon Brando,
Shelley WUUrs. P a u 1
Newman and J o a ft n e
Woodwor~, ~ tl>e talk ol Los
Angek:i' cuJtutati tbi1 s,um-
mer with his ma1ter cJes1 Jn.
acting at the University of
California Extension.
Everyone w.anta to attend.
Errroilment soared 90 high
that classes were moved to
.a movie theater. and at tut
count 550 were enrolled.
Among ~ them is M i ' 1
Wint.en who returned for .a
r~fresher coune.
.. We did the •ftrst·aeminar
in Paris: lalt year," 1ay1
strasb~," and it allowed
us that people were in·
t.erest.ed." H-e refers to the
studio, those involved. in the
Mettlod and "himself in 1he
plUNI "we ."
Y «.k sn.!.io. .f4ytbs a:nd a
mystique grew around him
and tbe Method. Brando's
mumble became .a symbol.
''Thie is h fir!l time we
are explaining, demonstra·
ting and exp<>undirtg the
Method," .saya.Struberg .
It appeani 1he mumbl~
has nottiing to do with the
Method,
Recen'liy d u r i n g a
Strasberg seminar, a young
actor was· asked to perform
a eoliloquy from ''Hamlet."
The odor, In the ~
of Actors Studio style,
CONFUSION playe4 ·.the tcene ca1ually,
"We re a I ii ~ c:I tnat rriumbled . made }famle( a
everymt has apoken about contemporary cttar.aeter.
the work except ourselves.
1bef'I! hM been confuBioo. Cl.ICHE
We mu6ll get to a state Str.asber1 was appalled.
where 'at )east we'll be "Wheri casualneSJ is fore·
working from the same ed." he tokl b 9Ctu', "it
I.acts. · becomes a cboce, a clicbe,
" ... , We .are trying to and in my opiniOn a· w<.-ae
9how that the Method is not cliche than any : .•. )'ou are
just. something far today. making Hamlet an ordinary
It '~ a sumrnaboo ol what person. Even if he was coo·
actors bhrougti the ages tempora:y, he would ha.ve
hc.'Ve found." · been a radical. He would
For 20 year~ strasberg have gone off to a school in
has ttaugtit his tiasicatly ·MO.COW,-and he'd be casual
Stianislavskian acting 1e(hni·, i!I a different. way."'
que t.hrougb workshops •nd · The three·hour seminars
priwrte lessons at the l(lew begin with a lecture follow-
UNL.IMITID fll.U PAlltN•
l~ ·,, ... ~"··~.~~~~~.
lox Office Open•
United Artists ~ly-12:45 P.M.
1561 w. tTtti. s.... ..... •PElFORMANCESe H•-Pl-.14J·t217 1-3·5·7 ·9•11 P.M.
' ' Directing tile N!il Sim"' coiuedy -which i5 fa~t
~ .a fad in Orange
county -wiH be Ross
Carl>ln. Allen Baker and
RtiSsell Martm portray the
miMnatched title pair.
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
Also winding up a month'1 ''The ~
engagement at tt>e Laguna ~ 1. ~IWll / '• ~•••c•• __ ,..._.
Others in the Santa Ana
cut. are Rey MaclnoU,
Gacy Wallbridge. Sandra
Clark. Peggy Gehler, Frank
Ballotta and R i c h .a r d
Fa"uske. Lee Howington is
halidlin{ tile tecl>nit:ol dir•c·
tot's chore6.
Playboule is the Neil Simon Odd Couple'' ~~..:IQ.. ;-·'· \
musical "Sweet Olarity" Odd Coupl.--7-t-10:11 !:!!'!,'ct'Mllll'• / .
under tht direction of Joiln Sot.-S••.-M••· ~ , \
Fen.acct., w;tti m u Ii ca J Con+inuout 1 :JO P.M. ;' ,,
directi.oo. by Doris Shield111. J'.:::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:==:'JI ' ··..... ·\
Heat!;ter Hay~ stars in ~C°'911 IPIC CCh\IT lllllMM'. irnl IT, Tll ··w· ·... =-Btti~u.. Trooml~, Sbwe1~~. arGlaees &•Allll•JE \ ~--~.
a•iuu -~ MMQIM •tl'lil ......... ' -'
McEih1ny and Ruan Niles j ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~-~~~~~··~~ Six per.fomlance11 of "Odd
Couple" wil btl JITSent.ed,
Fridays and Saturday 1
thl'ough Sept. 14 at t.he
featured in the supporting , ~ cast. Final perfurme.ncec ftOW. UNCUT! POP'ULAJt PRICES
are IChedu:led T h u r 1 d a y tlWieM.d.NWS :iLur ttrouth Sunday, wit h
Crossword Puzzle
'ACROSS J2 Ont ll1vtnf
tert1in 1 w,r!ht unit loot
s ·G o rom platt 54 WW][group
ID plilt l Sii Most
9 Perlum r chtrish lHI
obtil ined 5~ Deiseit
l1om flow11~ &2 lnlorm11 fo r,,i
14 Unsoph isll· or address
cat'd pers on 114 Abstemious
15 ···· domlni 115 Anolhtr Um '
1& Sawlike p11t 117 L1y waslt
17 Correction 70 Insect stao•
of a fault 71 Chinese
19 Ha vino diii lect a glossy 72 .•.• bl11 1
surfat r 73 Go very 1128 /61
20 De1iv~ fro~ s!ow!y 13 Do 1 va•d tn· 43 Manitob1
Jl:le sun 74 Music al in9 chort Indian
21 Expose symbol 11 Drabs ' 4& Scirnv ol
to view 75 Mike Jn i111· com p1nions poisons:
23 Shake off press ion l)rt ?Z Uphols1 ,1y Abbi.
24 Setting ltr..,s hbrit 48 Canct l
l)f salt DOWN ?5 "I dClfl 'I 51 Sm1ll pointrd
Z1 ColltlQt(HJS bt lirvr ii!": part
11red 1 Cl11 lc h •t lnlo11111l ~3 Worn 1w1,.
29 Cloud l1kt l Unsubstan· Z' Pa1l i1I 55 Pait of
miss tl atrd nrw1 d1rkn 111 Afric a
ll Kind or ~int i\1111 II High 57 Surgical 35 Pl)uth ) U.S. prts i· 1t1ounta in lhr r1d
37 Bird dtnt Z Wl)rds JO llan•1dt 58 Rivtr ol
39 J rt 4 Threaten fiber Eng11nd
40 Grrrt ood S Ma lt 1ni111 1I lZ Kind of rt · 5' Min tr1I
42 Re lating to ""··· Fint fund: 2 WOids &O Japanrst
spttd of D;iiy" 33 Heraldi t gtl1tin
sound 7 Na r9;ii1r l bearing •t Widrly
44 Th is : Sp. Lindon 14 St1tionr1'1 stparJ\td
45 Orn1mr ntal ch1r1c111 unit in spat '
tag I Do111inant id11 35 ClosUtt ., Prople·
47 length un it 'Qu1drup'd l• Cl)n1tt ll l · (1)111b. fo1m
49 Throat c1tll· 10 Informing li on ''Downy
•ing sound 11 Sm1ll 9roup ll lnfl1ttd in sul'f1ct
50:Cily In 12 Follows tu1v· amount Ill Cl)nta in tr
:Ontaril) ing courst 41 kind of drug '~ Gr1in
·-~ r to 'rJ1oro1111J11" 11£ · DE:uu 1.111
r.r -, I -1·r -·
7" I . l1lit.I
lalit.I it.nln111l1
-N•w-l111ls Twetd..,-
Oorl1 D•y e Robert ~or1•
T•,.y·Thom•1
-Where Were YOU
WhcnThc-
Lighcs Wcnl Ou!'!--·
• 1M l'W,..l'Mlff l'q!vNO •
U 1•11 P'lc!WW .... ,,._,
• C•111ln11 Well •• S.jtt. 4 e
"•Ill lrltwm•~ • ·•Mt.••Y l'•IGG"
& "The Endle11 Summer"
tt[Wt>Oltl IEACH • 011:.3·1)50
'"· S..w Stetts 6;4i C.t. S•11. •r.• J P.lil.
TWO BIG
SHOWS
10 ACADEMY NOMINATIONS
THE
PICTURE
EVERYBODY'.<
BEEN
WANTING
TO SEE!
~:!f .. "'\ "';.'~ .,, " ..
SPENCER I SIDNEY I KATHARINE
TRACY POITIER HEPBURN I
_ ~-...KATHARINE HOUG~9!:J-e& ~
ALSO ,PETER SELLERS AT HIS BEST
e ,.Mmoncek ...... e
MONDAY 1.J.1.7., P.~.
WED.-THUl':S.-TUES.
7:00 l •:OO ,.M,
fll.IDAY 1·•·11 P.M.
SAT. l SUN. 1.J.1.1.•.11
ed by 1 few 1 tu de rt t companied by hi• beeutlful Paula died two years llO·
performances .and t b e n young wilt., Anna. Hi• wile He mafrled the Vieona-born
Stra1berg'1 crilidam. He of more tbao 30 ~a:rs, actr'ess &ix months q:o. warns them again1t &iming ll~~~~~~;;~~~~~~;;;;~~~, lot "mental knowledge" of a
character ·ratner than ex· NATIONALGENEll'ALC°""'°"ATiON w ..... -.., .. Fri.
perience. F·-.. ·:=-........... Olll_ .. Opeo ..• 11.,....
"Remember the r ea 1 ox-··-· things that have occurred," ~.,,....,_. S•h•rd;y.Suncl•y-M•ncl•y h.e instruct.I, "and then s.noi.r ..... ,_ ............ ,,., C..nti11u••• o,." 12:]0
create real things when they
are not 'lbere. This i1 the
reat wort al ari actor ."
Essential to the MetboCi Is
Me phrase: "Create yout
own realijy. for yourge.lf, not
(or the aUdience."
"DOQ't worry about the ef-
fect ot what you'rt doing,"
says the teacber. "Feel
what you're. doing. Think
what you're doing. Know
what you're doing. Do Jt for
yotrself &Qd not for Uie bn·
pression you might be mak· iog.••
UNLIMITED
Plu1 Co-Hit-A Suttinq· itiCtur•
''THE SWEET · RIDE"
Both Pictures Are IA Color StN&t>erg 1 a y 1 the
Method's value ia no t i'::===============~~===~ lilrUledtoaclcrs. I~
Seminiar student.I now in-
clude produeers, direct.ors,
housewives, social WOl'kers
a psydli:altriilt, a real estate
11alesman, two t o p I e 1 1
dancen and a welder. .
"I would rather think of it
.111 training fq-h crutive
i m a g i n .at i an , ' ' says
Strasberg, 02 Skght. vigornu•. white-HARBOR at ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 5>46-31
hairedandmus t a c bed ,
St;ruber_g . i1 constantly aC-
HIT l
"THE Tl"ER
MAKES OllT"
Eli. w.11,cli:_ AnN •ck1on
................ ..,..,...
It _ _,.. ,., Atlirttll
Tom STEll:H e COi.Oii: e
"AN&ILS •ROM HILL"
A-.. i.cmt e C«.Olt •
"'THI •IAtUATr
EXCLUSIVE AREA RUN
ACADEMY
AWARD
BWINNER
BEST DIRECTOR-MIKE NICHOLS
e Perform1nc•• •
1.3.5.7.9.11 p.m,
01ily
t\1e-rnesa Tt,.-:i.+-r.: ,~f F rlC r•J .·\-~' Apr:.<:.1r1;"l nts
Nf\'J PORT AN D t-l/\RBO R IN CO lTA ,'J\ESA
l!UPHONE 541-1552 FOR INFOIMATION
Does this look like
a movie, that could
give you bad ~reams?
"::l: "':It~ -
·~
J
Doris ·o.r and Bri~ Keith
"With Six 'bi Get Eggroll"
ALSO ANOTHER GREAT COMEDY
IT'S THE FUNNIEST ROI· Ill OF THEM ALL! j
·*" ~ Dl&N&n
Conlinuou• Dilly From .2 ,,M,
' ' .
-
. • ' ~
•
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. . .
. -~ .....
WED~[~OAY -· ..
"" a ""' ._ -tc1 CIOl
u1i...•--tc1
·--Piil .-. ... (30) ·---.. .... ~-.-........ .......................
trll9ll ~ .. llllOfn1 ---...... -. ·-Mtcl
7• IJ' ,.., (30)
• I lM ""' (JO) •.. ....,_Piil
en(I) ................. , -a a: (Q (ID) A :tq':S ............... , .. . • .....,.IMW..._ .... n ... .. .,, ............... .. ......... __ .. .............. ,, .......
... ,.. ........ .,.... It "'""":':i.. __ _
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iii\ •dl1n11 tlldlll' Qiff --
.,a.1111 -.. bldMI ......... _ ....... - -""'"" ~ '"' ""' -"' -,_
""'-· -... -·--(1111 ....... -
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..... .--.. (1111
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9ho ... -... _ .. -·-111(911)111_ ...... __ .. ..
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• "' 11• ... -Ill (319, r. ......
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...... 1 • -.... \..J!-..,._ ..... _.
•• •
!!AY!lll llOVIES
1:118111 .. -" -"~-,..,_
····?i!>~.-~ ....,. . Qt ,,,,_ .
»••--.... --·---·11111: ..... ·-(....., .. _ .. -___ . .,. .... ...................... ...... ...,, .. ~· -
1•8--f 4 I• -----......... -~ ... . _ ,.._,..,.. .... . .. __ ·---~ '41 .. ii """"' .. 1
7
' .
• JOI PRINTING · • l'UIUCATIONS ,
• HIWSPAPBS
mt--•• r •
. '.I.' 'GOluO
JUDGE P.Allll
MOON MUUJNS
y{MIUWEEDS
. . Ml ' SW!ETIEJ · is.ti' ITA LMLY .. 1'.V1/ •• t.m GET
MMRIE!ll
'f 'Cl!#C s u•,.,.;.:;w+JUC
'
•
'
• •
'
.,
••
--------~--------~. _____ ;,! ___ ----~-
.. , ..... + -+ -'W" *" F f = w + + ' + P: o au; a W 4
ly ... Anfola
ly Harold Le Doux
I\L IE Rl6UT POWM, ALAN! 1¥'THE WA'l, ISUNP ME TD
1'&I. SH&IU.. THAT ~E'S TO CM.L HER WJTMEI IN THE
MOrtllN&!
ly Ferd Johnson
-Not }.$ LON4 }.$ JIM VOTIN<&, ,.,,,, WllAT?1---v-
ly Tom K. Ryu
., Al Smith
• •
lyMel , .
• "'' . . t~•·1 i;
-' ·--.. "' •• ·~
CONVERSATION -Jeck Benny, above, dbcu-
hll career dn "Conversation 11168" tonight at 7:•c
on Channel 28. In a discussion with Interviewer;'
James Day, he recalls his boyhood violin letlOILI,·
vaudeville tours and other hlibligbb of hll Joni
caner. · -;i:--
TELEVISION VIEWS
Cameras View
Convention
•
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -'lile resUess conventioo-
watcher moving from network to network 1....w;;;;i. ' .'fu:i3, for the most action, may have had 1ome co~~ ..
moments Tuesday nigbl. . ; : ;
At the moment when ABC's top politicol ~"'
William Lawrence was predicting with firm a~.,
ority the nomlnallon of Vice Presldent Hubert !(;;.: .
Humphrey on a flnl ballot tonight, CBS' W~
Cronkite and company were excitedly tracJd'JI~ . .,
down reports that olher candldata """' in ~ ..
ference with stepbeli Smllh, brolller-in-law of s.q,,,.
Edward M. Kennedy. .;ul!
What the CBS team at first interpreted as an "!m<o
portant break" in a Kennedy dralt, u!Umatoly """"
peared to be a strategy session on lhe controvera~'.'.:
party plank on Vietnam. · · · ;::;; :
But this flurry wu. Icing on a rich viewJi1,11 --
cake. From the opening gavel early Tuesday e!l'c~
ning until the "indup 1n the amalf boura this mo'll',: '
ing, there was plenty of drama, excitement, ~
pense and action. -~~i
Occasionally, however, it seemed to the view~:;
that some delegates might be doing a lltUe atunt!DC, ..
for the benefit of the cameras. A few stormed Out DI
the hall in full sight of the nationwide audh•-' :·
and, not quite as furious as they seemed• ~~
quietly and unobseried later. :.' •. :
The camera caught a heated exchange when '.(.'~
couple of prospective speakers were barred ~.~
"security men" -they refuled to identify tb.=~:
aelves to a network floor reporter -on the fro .
that they were carrying newspapen. :.'tl.:·
Newspapers, we were later informed, were bg.;o;:-
ned from the hall Jest bored delegates be cauSIJI''
by the cameras in I.lie act of reading, not lllleninr-
to speeches. In spite of all this forelhougbt, oomo
people inside the ball forgot the cameras so com-
pletely that they roughed up CBS' Dan Rather
when he tried to find out the aame. of a· Geor&ia
delegate who, hei said, was beinl "hauled out."
'!be incident in which Ratller was 1truclt and
thrown to the floor, took place in full view of tho
national audience.
In spite of long str:etche1 when de!egajlona &re>
polled and long-winded orators decWm, COllV"'!".
tion·watching experts a special faldnation. , '
This viewer, finding Ute going slow, tuned ID
ABC'• "Garrilon'• Gorillal," an ABC renm.earlyJ:
in the evening. It was· a pretty uc!6nf ~on story ,
in which the.heroes were dell.,,rately captured JiY.,,
the Nazis. But after a few minutes, there wa1 ·a ~:
gnawing feeling that something was 1oing !"' lJ1 ,
Chicago -live -that shouldn't be ml11ed. So II
was back to the convention hall. .
"n1e Democrat., with all the dlsputn to ,. ·' ·
solve ,were running houn behind schedule. It ·.,.~ ..
after nidnlght before the convention m1nagod Ill ..
got around to the most Important dl1puta on ti!,;;
day's agenda -the Vietnam plank.· •
One intere$ting speaker was Betty Furness, th•·,·
President's advisor on consumer affairs. It Wiii •
during Chicago pol!tlcal convenU""" only· a fe:tt "
yean back that Miss Furness became a bouaehill4 '1
face and l!gure in the live refr!1erator commerc!~"
that interrupted the proc~gs from time to timf. ;;
Then she woi'ked in a studio 11way from the balll r 1
Tuesday night she was a VIP on the ploUonn. ·' ; ·
Dennis tlae JtJetUIC!e
-
• ..: l •
• ..
r
· Wll.SON FORD· SALES
1•255 BEACH aou1EVARD (Hiw~; ~9>. , · H:ut11•N.GTON BEACH
Brand New . 1'968 THUN 'DERBIRD
!A¥1$1200 'g"i'f ~ iP
Brand New . .
1968 COUNTRY SQUIRE
Brand
New SAVI $1··00·0 Brand
New :1968 Galaxie
500
.
•102t.. 390 C.l.D. VI. Crvl-•tk. -,._,,"', -dlk Wtbl, SelKt•I .. COlldltlrlrMr • .lM-'M .._,_ radio, tilldl l•ftlllU ,.,.,, vlllblllty .,._, ~ PMUldl!t91t
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Over 40 Brand New Station
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1968
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l ie<:* l1nclau 1'111, WICI• OYl l WSW tlrt1, 51"1 •IJll9CI W'heell. GT/CS fQUiplM~I PU.
or .
or · $2188FULL · PRIC&;
Brand ~w Ford Custom
Brand New ' ~~nd New
1968 CORTINA : ,~968 F-250 $2188 FULL
PRICE
DELUXE STYL£SIDE
•lt!OS. lluh'/ 1~111. 1 111eed 1r111tmlttllw!. •IH br1~11. llllerler a. 1"11rlor --
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HAROTO!t. f t11li 1ir h11t1r l ll1fr1.t.r, ba c~·
up, de'"' I 1ourt11y li9hh, bucket 111b, 111
viftyl blfll, nylon c•~p•t1, rock•r p•n•J mold int
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~c ~; ).
$178.8 ::.~~
·. Over 35 Brand New Phase II Cortinas Over 30 lrand Niile 196$ Trucks In Stock for
'Cortinas and Even Station Wagons Available Immediate Defivery. A,n M eel for ciearance Savings.
1ho11ld•r b•lh, p1dd1d d•1h I
l •ir ,,_, •rn•m•nt, •••t I
vi1orJ. Wind1hi•ld w•rli•tt I 2
•P••d ..;,.,., N•. 1111
' . ·-.....
New Car Payments lnchrde Tax-License & Finance Charges for 48 Mo. on Approved Credit e White Side Wall Tlr .. and Wheel Coven Optional
__ s_u_P_ER_sP_E_c_1A_L_s_! _, ___ l_M_P~O_R_T_D_E_PA_RT_M~E_N_T ___ , . Lll(E! NEW! SPECIALS!
'65 VOLKSWAGBI '67 TOYOTA '67 DATSUN '62 ChJvrolet
lmp•I• •p•rl 1011 p1, YI, 1111•·
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h11!1r. ltOZtOt )
ILUI 1001 11121
•
'64 . Ford '500'
Tow11 11d•11. YI, 111to ... 1ti1, rt·
die 1nll h11t1•. IOOTlllJ
ILUI 1001 Sl Il l
$23 .,_
$23 =
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$26 ··-$26 ::':
IA.YI 1147
R•dio •nd h••f•t. N1w p•inl,
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ILUI IOOK S1J'I
.
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ITQH662 )
ILUI 1001 SI t1 I
51588
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Dew11 r.r w ..
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51288
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'+6 M_ustang
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wh11I cov•rs, r1dio, lt1•tir.
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1 pew•• 1l11rin9, r•8'•, 11•1+~
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ILUI 1001 11•41
'62 T·bird • ~.:~,:::;,.::".::·;:,.:~· ,,. $788 s:;9 ·;:: 1 __ T_r_a_ns ... p_ort_at_io_n_Sp,_e_c_ia_ls_W_h_il_e_T_h_e_y_L_a_st_! __ 1 :6,5 .. ~'i!':':.o~t~ •••.
CJRJllJ I -· tic, pew•r 1t. .. i119, Rl:H, vi11yl
$47 ....
$47 =
I.A.YI S142
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I.A.YI 12'2
ILUI IOOI Sl1'I SAYI SJIJ '60 COMET SEDAN $148 '51 FORD f.lOQ $248 '""" IRUNOSOl
•--------------A1o1te1n1tic, t1di., h•1t••· '1ck1o1,. ILUI 1001 11711
••'-"-"-"-' --------flG455t01 --------------
533 •·-~ • .:tt~~~~L~: ..... ,... $188 :~ ~?o?,~,~.4!~"'' $248 '66 Cntry Sed T1w11 S~111. Sil' eyli11il•r, l ijlo.
ll'lt+it. +.1111..,iuien, n•l"' p1 i11I,
l'IX2•ll
ILUI 1001 $1071
$33 !: 1•1-CC_D•-"-' -----· ---t .;.'9-IHS-"-' -----....;;~""'l-:ie~'~o~e;: .~.·.~f1111i. ~!;i;:~+h;:;:
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--------------W~'""· R1di• 1..J h••l•r. (fLNOD5 J $248 '61 FALCON $ "· IUH0271
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'64 Cntry. Sed.
4 Deer Foul Witon. ' , ....
VI, •11t.m1tic, ,.S, r1die •"ii
h11t•r. IHIYSl6)
ILUI IC>OK S14'1
'65 Galaxie
'100'. T ew11 h1rtltep. YI, 111le-
M1ti1. l'•-t , .. ,,;II,, rt dit
•ltd h••l•r. fR.DUl••l
ILUI IOOI 11,11
$39 •·-,._.,._.., _ _.._..,. ____ .,._.,._,.._.,._,.. _ _._..,_,.._.,._,.. _ _._..,_,..-._.,.-... _ ... _..,. ___ .,._..,_,,_.,. ___ .,._..,_,.._.,._,.. _ _._..,_,..-._.,.4 •1 '67 Galaxie
$39:: TRUCK DEPARTMENT SPECIALS ;~::;1,~·;~:·:.,',::t·; .. ~~":;;
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$44 : ~~. ~'~~:.~~?.... $58 ~!!~~:=~~:~•' '"""" . ., $588 ISLL2111 ' , Cempl1t1fy etiwip,N wittl r1bvilt 1119i11•.
U.YI SJ &7 IKE04101·
H1'4to' t "••r. f111ll pow•r
tttd 1N-to itillflint t I 9:170~ I
ILUL IOOI SJHI, '
$1888
ALL PAYMENTS ON USED CARS INCLUDE TAX & LICENSE Ir FINANCING CHARGES FO.R 36 MONTHS Ofil ..
0
PPROVE CREDIT '
$67 ··-$67::
\,.., S40I
$72 ....
sn::
$105 _
$105::
SAYI $617
·'
i
,i•
I
' .
. -.
SOUTl;ffRN ' C-AUIO!fNIA'S
fACTORY DIRE(T DIALER . . t. ' I • ......,_.,_,, __ ... __
IS NOW . .
ORANGE COUNTY'S
'I ,,. • All ....,., ................. .
.. 'BRAND NEW ' . ; .
1968 CHARGER 'N0 •. 1 ~Siiiiii..~ IMMIDIAn DILIVIRY . . I . . . .
' l I
LARGEST. V'OLUME
·DEALER
•Bucket Seils • Hid~)Yay Headlights • Full vinyllnterior • Nylori Carpeting-• Rear Deck Spoiler
•Full racing instrumentation o· Bumper Guards• Ash Tray,Light • H. D. Springl • H. D'. Torsion
Sway.Bir.!. Ask.for.Stock ·No. 945, No. 137, No.'136. · ·
' . • ' I , '. ' ~ , ~?l ~?~ '256 '9!:~~
.Pl)'nienfl lneludt tu: _&illcenst.l fin•nce ehlrges on 4 monthl on epprowd btnkptdlt
: ' ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST
TRUCK, CAMPER & V:AN '68 .·DART . BRAND NEW
HEADQUARTERS -. ·-
'fully equipped with radio, heater, wsw tir~s, pad-
ded dash; defroster. etc. '89· . . 101AL DO'WN
PAY MINT
'89
TOTAL MONllllY
PAYMINT Used, ·low milt19'.1VCT840I
'67 DODGE D· 100 PICK UP 549 ~4·9 '68 CORONET
TOTAL DOWN ,JOT,\~ MONTHLY
PAYMENT "PAYMINT
I ft. bed. {¥27605)
!.~1 ... $1566 10TAL DELUXE MODEL . ,.,a
·PATMINf --t T1•&lk. . .
. '62 FOR~ 2.4 TON PICK UP
VS, radio, ht1ter, 8 ft. ub. & c11Tiptr, dinttt••t~267~ 6 $4·~ $g,_ TOTAL · HJCI
51689 •Dual Hom System• Tinted Windshield
• Deluxe Wheel Covers • Delu~e Trim .•
Foa)!l front seats • White sidewall tires. ·
Ask for Stock No. 536.
'69
TOTAL TO'IAL T PATMfNT PATMIM' , z I ±Tll &lk. ' + TAX TOTAL PRICE • """" '69 '63 FORD V2 TON PICK UP
I ft. 'bed. (M13S75) '766::~L IMMEDIATE DILIYIRY 101AL DOWN
PAYMINT
TOT.CL MONTHLY
PAYMINT !itWM t T11&Ut.
'Yfnts. lncl:.rde T&l &·fln•f'ICt dllrgtt on "8 mot. on
tpproved bank credit
PATMIM'.
'66 FOID FAIRLANI COUNTRY IQR. , '64 PONTIAC GRAND l'ltlX '67 CHIYROLIT IMPALA
2 .., .....,. 127 ..... ~ ,.., ...,., .............. """' ... ·mt 7IDI
$1866 = •63 = $63 .:Ill\. + ~ & ut. . nMT. . nn
Pkt. 111. ""'· tlllllly "'°'~VI,,.... Ill'~ ·.&M...,,.., fllll r~ ITIEQ :a't.Gi·i f""'!"llr. rHt., llH!er, 9'11.., ,..., rlWirtt, llllctd ... ti, WtW, "'*-..,.
11666 ::~ $57 = $57.:fltl. '$1966 TOTAL $67 tom $67 "'" "°TAX, LIC. nMT. "MT. , . . ~ IWll . MYlll.Y. · + TAI & .UC. t'nll. "Ill.
. 1W1 IOOlt ~ $i420 _ IWI toOI: NICI tsNI , ...... IOOk Pita $1171
'65 CHIYILLI MAUIU en.
V4, "°"" ,,_,; l!Mtlr, ....., W _.., ""'· .,,.. -. "'"'"' ~ s1 266 ::~ '43 = s43 .:fl~'. ±TAX &LIC. ".m. =-::.
'65 OLDSMOBILI CUTI.All '66 PLYMOUTH FURY II
IKt. Afr, V.f, ,wr. lltr,.' rHlt. hffttr, 1111-ik. !1Vft1111
s1166 .. ,:'~~ $40 i:i s40~
4a t11t. hill• & i..ter, ,_,."'""" ul'Jlll1, Mtiet -i1. IStr. 11e. 01on , $1266 ::~ s43 =~ s4" ~~'I. + TAX & l it. "MT. ~ nMT.
JWf IOOIC ,.ICl $2001 ILUI 100K. l'RICI •lt11
'65 PLYMOUTH SARWTI
>1.a, llll, CGMOI• ¥ffl'(I lrl'9rillr, llud11 tHtt. u""1. (WIA ftlJ
s966 :::: s33 = s33 ''"1· +TAX & llC. "Mt ~.
'66 CHIYROLIT
PKt. llt. v.t, N&t, llNtw, 1"'9Mtlc, _,...MG '°11
s96·6 TOT~ s33 "'" s33 "'" ' + T~K. = 'WJl·
... IOO« llalCI f1179
'65 FORD GAi.AXii SOO
1.ettl)' tlr, 1&11,, ....... ,_ tt .. r .. WSW, IAlllifv T., lltlun!
511·66 . TOTAL s40 "'" s40 ..... · · + T':~1uc. =': · -=-l·
ILUI IOoK NICI $ t •• ILUI IOOK ~ ftnl
'65' DODOI . DART
'*'"· -· ()IPI: '20) 576'6' TOTAL $26 m1< $26 m1<
t =~UC. R=. =·
ILUI IOOIC lllta: $1160
'65 PLYMOUTH FURY II '65 CHIYILLI llD~ ..................... ~ '*'•· ........... Cl,,.... etc. "'IC'M Sft66 TOTAL s33 "'" s33 "'" -~ ... ~IC. = =·
MW IOOC lllKI t1i11
'65 RAM!IUR. STAnON WAGON ;:,... c-i,.,.... ,..-...,, UN......._ v.a, WSW, .....i-(l'(PU)J
s71,;,6 = s26 = s26 ::..'I. u +TAX&LIC. PTllT. "MT.
RUI IOOlt NICI $1111 ,
s9-66 T••... s33 "'" s33 .m." ' +~LIC. :=. , n.l.'
, . IWI IOOK Plltcl $1150
'H MUSTANG COUPI
lHle. llMW, hlcklt -11,. u.,.U. (SGU34j
'966 ·:::~ s33 "'",s33 =.. +TAX&LIC. = ntn',
. '64 DODOI D~RT 270 ve. redle, i..t.r, •llM.. ,..., tt--rmr 9S'l $766 :::: •26 ::w $26 .:ll.'I. • + TAX & UC. . ".U· PTMT.
ILUI IOOlt '°2' 81270 IWI IOOI. ~ fl7H
'66 ·~ FALCON HM!.,, Avlt. T-. llff, "" tl02I
$76'6 = •26 = $26 .:ll.'I. + t.U & llC. n111. mn.
'64 FALCON FUTURA '66 FORD
Allft., """'· MIT~ · s666 :'.:: s23 = s23 .:;,.,. +TAX & UC. , "lft', . ".U.
ILUI ~ p..C. f127G
'Q FORD· COUNTRY WAGON
. ittl!lt. '-1.ri ...... VI, IJM' .... °"! .
s466 = s16 "'" s16 =· + W: l ·Llt. = mn,
2 ...,r lit~.,. vt, r1dlt, t.Nt11, 1vt1., pow1r it...t.,.; t..dll IH!i. (HG'120)
•766 .:~~ s26 !tis26~
ILUI IOOK PllCI f1JM Kiii ltOOI. '9tlCI $1210
'63 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX.
t: • hb-\1-1. • mn.~ fKtwJ .u--.. UM. JN'f· st11 .. ..-... ...., Mil. !OC1511J •666 """ s23 "''" s23 .....
if-=~lit. =' =·
'U CHIYllOllT IMPALA
,.,.,,. ..,.. ,...., .....,, ,...., II .... IOIL Pl).
s566 :'.:: •1 1111 '"'" s19 "''" +w:.1uc. 7 -= '· "=l·
l&UI IOOlt "'"••4:11 ... -""'-...,•',..'·"---.' -----' '61 BUICK SlfECIAL -san· V .. t'O'iA~'"'·S2-·9-'t0t11'.Ms.f20"9°'' TOTAL NICI DOWN. MTHLY.
+'TAX & LIC. . nlllt. • PYl::IT.
. 11~ 1001.~e1·s1,a1~ 1 ·,
MUI IOOK l'IUCI tfll
'65 MONZA
Aft m-., ..... lllltw, M bt tlllt, a,,.,.. 9hltt 11 ... lk. OUMQ!ll
'666 :::: s23 = s23. =· · +TAX & UC. ~ ,.,._
... IOOI: NCI fllll .
• •
~----------""""'"""-......... __ .... ____ ~ ___________ .......__ ______ --~-----------------------·
' Now Avalljlblo On
All Now Cars & Now Trucl<s
. In Stock
On Approvocl lank Crodlt
· '68 POLARA.
• Nylon upholstery• Wall to wall cerpets
• Automatk trans.• • Power steering '•
Heater & ~!roster.system• llual brake
system • Back-up hghls • ·3 SJ!d. wipers
& washers • Dix. seat belts. Ask for ·
Stock No. 125.
52979· ' .
TOTAL PlllCI i'H:J:!,'
IMMIDIA ti DUIVIRY
' BRAND NEW
TOTAL PRICi i.tcl~e'
IMMEDIA n · DILIVERY
0 POii YouR: PROnntON
ALL ''IA~a DODOI UllD CAU
with a GOLD .STAR
100% UHCONDfTtoNAl IUAUNTR-THtl ITAl •STAm IN WllTIHI THAT HAn.DI .OOOG1 tuWNTIU 'hi:
W 1•% AfAINST MKllAlllCAl DUICTS POI 100
DAYS OI 4.000 Mn.a WMIOl IVB CDMU flUT ArTll
PUAOWl THIS INCLUOQ AU MIOIAMCA~ ,A.ITS. ILKTllCAL · ICIUWMlfCT IA"TIIW, ' "DDOMITll. UDtD, lllATP .. All fus.'lllO IU.IWllD tovaS
AU 'AITI AND ,~ Piii TO YOU!
UIMLew ...... ,W .. t7'ttfnWt
.. ., 1• CheM ,,..
'66 VOLKSWAGEN
$i366-~'"' $4.6·= $46' .::::. +'luau. ,.._ ,.,. . -
'64 VOLKSWAGEN
: -~ ...... -.IMCC "7l ' s7 66 w: $26 =:. $26J.."" +Tu & U.. ,..,.., =
'62 VOLKSWAGEN •
\""' 4 .... """'· CfNI oe:ai -566 .7lli ... 519.5.519.5
'60 VOLKSWAGEN PICIC.UP
"th .• ~ .. 5i6.5516.5
OPEN 9.~ TO 11 P.M.
o...., AH Day Slllldai
s. "•""' fipo,,.,
:·
•
! \
I I
I
-··----~-... . . -....
•
S9 IWl.Y Pll01' • '
Everyone H11
Somothlng That
SOmeono Elie Wanit-
Y ;. Can SoU It,
Find It; Tr1d1 It
With a Wint Ad
.
i4!1us1S FORSALE HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE Hous11 FOii SALi HOUSIS..Pott SALi ~IS l'OR SALi, IHOUllll'ORIALI ,' HOUSISFOR·SALE ."?u~E~.FOR SALi ,,
....,al . 1000 0.-al 10oo Goer•I • 1000 Gonorol !OQCI -al 1000 -·• . . . 1000 o.·-01 " 1000 ~ta ,,.... . 1100 Newport Hgtt. 1210
• ~OUIORY CUI , B/I TRIPUI . JJ!1u!J Plus 1 Dover Shorn ·, • h ab u .. !, !."!°! .!. '" t~j~~~~~ . UVllG Picture Pretty AU two ·bedroom, 11! BATH Counir)' -·driv. lo M•u .&s §.{'" 'Waterfront IO n· macn . tl1it •scill!>i!Y ·<;tt•ted 3 ........ -Jot plug other and a..lv ·$26,950 UNTJ'S~~ Bull~KI~ V-bu a be&otlful homo f · CUOl<>m ·S-deolpell. 11' Balboa hlancl BR. 2 Ba. M-Del Mar l«ture•. A, good buy at -r ens. ....-v<>---:·-r" -flr ate. It bu an unusual , homt'. TtopiclJ p.rdeo IW'· $23,900. shodlli be seen bei-
ll ,... ... bem ""tloe Newport St.ores _.ate . ~ .. -Ito« p1an with • ""'' m.. roa ty ~ -~-"~ ,2:',;, ':i Choice South Belboa 111...i roundl ooedal patio cl<cJ> tore iou """·
.., .. .,.,..,.,,.ll••ne ,... tl>t ,,,_·minded. An °"""""""' located In t.rlUl1<ondatrlumpnien ·' ;;;;--~;~;,;;:p;, ,.. llOme wlih ""''''"° -""'·" ___ ,.; G ham R~
muldl""\; the one for bath home. Short di.stance RiNI'S • k7w Vacaoey Fae. lnelde t and ft.cty for Newport Bcacb "°" · ·· · ··'"' · ··' .._...,, ' ' ' Wu; frpl.. W-14: to aH """" ID M... Vmtf: ,this Jmmrulate 3 bedroom, 2 .~Ing. EXCJ!l.J.Dtt a.II to=Newll painted 2414 Vista Dd Oro .. 't .... ..., cm V.lew privi.te 'i>te'r jtundeCk I: ln' CU"Petinll:: ' kitchen N .. r rNqB P"'t 0<' .. ·' ....... 4
~~--•-~·II ~-••··~tod .... --Koo Down· Sec· "' ,....._ Uni-Mn. Raohum andfioal•BR.3 ba.be&uti-~-~ o.cc 1~900 * p•N••~ CUii H•vee 3 -JOU,'o;owui.........,., ........ tooeetn..;:.u .... ~uco."'• · _,i,.._,., ___ ,,i ... no·-U•hi•· )'()Ur .Ct.U.bOWto ·n•W lllTD . •·• · fullydecorated.Move-incu.-~. _. • · ...,, · ~~· 1 tenrua are all wtthln Modti built•i.n kitchen. i pa.· --~ m1111s........ ~· ·• .-......-dition. Owner will finaoOt. A"8t 6U.-· er,' 2 ba + 2 Br Ocean Vu MllidD& diftartt. PO-tiol. caJl Today 11 ! ~ 1:ht luxury fNUirel, Full 2 • S • f BedroOOu i.ncor!lt AJ>!.· $49,500 548-~
!w.te Court )llll'd entry, 613-9'.llO .... ~ 54M629 • * * * JJMOt 2 • ! full Bathl. $125,~Eff ISAJL Y ~.;.f'1~1:
• BR'a, -.,. ~ Also WID.p~ $.42,500 · :.,;. ~ '''dw-11 Binker & (e. 140 South Bayfronf. ""°"'Ing.,,,,,.. 3 BR 2 BA NO'!fporl ShoNs l220 _....,, f·amlJ·y room. IVV9' ...._£,~-~ Miii ..., ___;,._,L • --I -Fam"ly,. maint.enance -'1laieU 2200 E. co..i, H!thW•I',_,. ' WIQI all the Pttaa. ~ N EAR B e a c h • 2 -• t y . ~.UV~ -~· t I A '&\RCA.IN AT ONLY betut1tul pOOWdei.I ~...:.ctloa~="~ cau far Appt. inuned.Jl(N.,t!llO'WV8CMt. A-Frame. 3 BR.,2 Batha. l'ullsrloe~-Jm. Ai.:_~~~: =.= ... ~=. No::°" ='.,";'l:'; OPPORTUNITY ~'!,!,.~~!k :!°J>o':.;&':,."°;,V::: =71ot. m ,900. <>weer
medillte p:;we.XCJ. FOi" time after 9ChO<i p.th-Nev shopping A tnnlpOt't:ao ' • 1·n-1..-_rla «me ~· ' 881 Dowr Drive 540-'llsl. -(open ·eve•) I ~~=====:::=::I erqs' the large temlly . $8)00 ~ Mo ..--. still vallabl luflicenaed reai estate ae.let-w .. tcliff 1230
room edjo!M tho be&utilW ::.,,. ..i!h tho -••• ,;: Mua11 Ph: '4...ua3 ....... lo ,woll -""""'" N--• HeriNEtapW.""'1H·EotaOM ... E
bullt<n kltchm. Formal llv· ..;.;nent. ACT NOW!!( ol!ice, no experieece ...,... A CHARMER' . FOR SALE .OR LEASE
l.ngroom bl excellent decor lat)', Training · program. I BR i v ba crpts ,._ 4 BR., 3 St\. ~-61Tl
for .,...,.,... u.ing. WV• 11--L to Sc'--11 Good walk·ln tra!fk. You lrnmo""1•te -Early A:mlJri. · dilb.;.,,:' ' ' ~~.
llKlf SAM
SAYS "OK" Loll al !door $158 PER MONTH ...,.. ,_ ho yoorowndulcAphone eon . I -· . ....., · · .,-~. ·"""'"· oven, E11tbluff 1242
-· OU . QnooDel"8rl!Jih·"""• ve . • ft .:.., ~~•, ,;.-•••-, ~-=·J!,~l§"""'~asped~. '.:.....-l iii~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml Bla' FHA. VA -)'CQ llJll.C9 for the children and n...---transferred·--llD. ~ .. ~....-....In ---·G9od liltin&l 111>-lcll.. :n~ nu.i ........_ r~,._.., &122821 Builder
mine U. Unole-Sam pretl. llorm is in ready-to-vNQ;!I Three bedrooms, J ~.~Se=le· ,_: ~'; time. Top rom,mtuiop. Plen-Double eara&e, Wort $)op, -· ' .
11eyS, ''':"llue'a ~. lIIO\.T-hl conditioo. Priced bull uun ,_.. .. • ., Q> ol ~to ftnance ~ Boet Yard. Calf tor' aPPoillt-Penonallty'3 BR.! 2 BA. ~-,. ri~l" ~-. --"""''· 1ug•tiro\>I•""· t .... ,mt--Oe11l36,>00 ..w. can 1or int""'"'" meet to ....... ,..~--Fue nu.,"""""""' $31,ooo 4 S'l'ARS ....,. ... .., isu mm ._,,....,. -i: ,.,... .u1 -in kitchen, 13' X 20' CO'rered with eicmn-termt. --. ~ Near Had>c:il' Hi ...... &46-1Ci6 · Mftlll Verde area wfth..S Bay & leach -~ .t.1ui .,...... and enclosed patio, tnnd ..,.~ V/. E. l:.&r:benmyer Real.hr cu.st.om built home. i'74,50D. · ~· Lovely Spanish mutts home
BRs, • ...._larpfamll1 I EvenlhpCail548-3715 ...,...n1n. wall-· u.~ u~. •.-.ft-IBOONewp0rtmVd., cM JEAN'·SMITH, 1200. 4BR,l ba,V.l•wtrom"""".
--·""" • ~ RH ly, Inc. THE BLUFFS ~-·--• -. ·--Ev• .. -""71 Newport llooch '""·g rm Pri•~ ··-•er ---~.~ ~· m; w. Bal"" mvd., N.B. • Exoe!Nol Ji>oati .... n"' el· .... ..,. ... dooe ln -... -............ • .. ·~...... REALTOR . ~·-. -= -wt t b boat or trailer ___ .... _ ... i.-.1. ...... ~., ~-0 1 $40,tro.
mwl Eves. MM629 BEST BUY · ~-, -·~ -~ '" -=--1 "'°' ·• 1 W 1 ·1111 Bl I I Gl E -· Plctun ,..... "l::z=z==::z=z=z=z I ""' '"""'"'•· Low Joternt 33,700 wllh """' 10% -. .. c rga n ... . 17Jh SL, C.M.·6'W255·. • Waterfront -tm<ler tbe .,.,,..,.. • ¥00..,.,,'t but tbe Jaw price "'* % FHA -may be· .. let'• IO! Spuldle& • 1"•b • ,_.. GOLF O>une Jlome Glow. $34,500 CORBIN.MARTIN ..... -..... • A u111: BUY. 00 ... be'"tilul pride nl oumodand·1158permoetb Col rfh &C =·::tlh~..:. :..!'': ""'-t11e1Jnb.eo1!7, '"""'""'""'"~.float,,but REALTORS
mer BBQ. l\tl1 pricai g; ownenhip home. Four spec-would include taxes! Try ISWO f 0, separate l&ra:e gla.ss en-pllery, din na .A ld.t. Ex.. this newly «lrlStructed lltudio ·3036 E. Coast Hwy, CdM :::·e,.~ Lovt1y larJ:• Ir: clean 2 BR, iOUI bedrooms, 3 ~en siz. · $1500. Down. . cioaed p~ room overlook· ~ be;m•· 2 gorgeous· b:11ne-ls ttill N~rt's belt 675-1662 . ANYTIME
_ . bdwd Ori, on• 75, beautiful «I baths, zmgnlficent living 642-77n ~ 18x30' pool & aunny ... .,._.., eaert •to n,e. buy. Feat\res lndudt Cul de
•
• COATS landlcaped rear yard. This rocm wttti open beam ctll-llKM Hartxr Blvd., c.M. patio! -Undeqriced. tor this Spaci?W' tam nn. Brkfst Sac locatioo, bl.t-ins, tree·
& 1 PfOPe!'b' II IOlled tor several Jnp and rtstful view. Own-Open Eves. aree,! Only $42,'lSO. rm, library. ~ ~ ft built ·~ ~. and the
WALLACI talltl tn rear yard & KiVes er lnnsferred out ot area· 16 UNITS Ruth Pardoll Realtor a1'CQld beautiful open court. !and 1t not lease bold.
A 'Steal
In Eastbluff
..,...,.,. fl,000' REALTORS amiQ privacy. Vacant. Thia ...,. 8ell NOW! Only J36.500. :rM3 WESTCLIFF DRIVE BALBO 16C6 Wfftclitt Dr. 642-5200 SQ,900, M&-440'!· LAD .
546-4141-la en e,xoellent bmne cioee SUhmtt your tmaller home· A SPOTLESS "JEWEL'' REAL ESTATE (Open-· 1D-..eevl!tl>AO.. onourguannteetndeplan. 646-7111 OpenEvee. llEAI! BAY AND BEACH· $15,ttS -$18.300 S'.llW. C...tHwy., NB
ange. Try $500l down with ·Monez· Maker ~ ~ CC:p1:a~ ~ Slm Move in. Pa1menta 1 balroom, 2 batli. wall to 642-0344
4 BR, family rm, beef2d
pool, """""""' • -$1.1,9'0
EASTSIDE 3 BR
J baths. Family room, fir.
place, FA beat. n.w carpeb:,
drapes. trub pahrt Ir: it'•
vacant. OwD6 wDl .U VA
or FHA • $29,150..
ALSO
l 'BR 2 beth, fomib' """'· ·fireplace, dcd>le prt,p.
$39,850. Tener VA, P1L\ °"
'tonvaitiooal.
W•lls-McCardle, Rltrs.
. ''.1810 Newport Blvd., C.M.
~7129 Evu. -.
"l>avidson Realty
Docoratot'a Dollght
2Stery3 8R+flueily .+
dJn. Tile "'""· $31,:;llJ Rltr. 1750 Hutu ss. ex
-Evu.56&'2
excellent financing. Thl.s ,HOME INCOME vac;aneyJaC:,r 0n1yniE<XX> $166. mo. includes tltiXel A wall carpeting, Pl'ettY I""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"""" property will not Jut, Call Money maker hmle It. In-• Try $lOOXI dn. ' ilu. :s· BR., 2 BA. bJ.ilt·in drapes. Wile· ai.ver ·wut-tn Delancy RHI E1t1t•
DOw! Full price $22,499. ccme. Two ~rate bousel! ,',. · ·, rugelovan, prbage disl>9s-kitchen. Entay hall. N£etJ,y CUSTOM SPANISH
Lockhart RHlly 200WESl'CL!FFDRIVE WelllooaW -cloMto-all Upgradodcupet>,drap. landocaped wl!b -orr. UPPER BAY
· 2828 E. Coast Hwy., 01M
673-3770
646-2301 Eves, 642-0267 646-77U Open Eves. ping-SPQiClous tree lh8ded ff •. Larre. fenced lot. 846-0604 -3700 Ft. under mission tile '""!!!!!!", '""'""""""'""'"'I
,...iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-"Oi;i""';i;l lot OYt'I' D' deep. Let )'our ORANGE COUN'T'Y;S TARBELL 582C Ed.infer roof. 5 lp. bdrms., 30' 1:;UFF·;i ~spl~:.!::
ROUGH AROUND
THE EDGES
But .a little pa.int will make
It '11cme Sa>eet Hom.e." Va-
amt 1lnd will irell FHA and
VA and pay yoor costs to
allow fol' painting. Modem
S bedroom, 2 bath. Hard-
wood floors fully carpeted.
SACRlfTCE!
ll!Clft HARBOR HI """'t help"""' ·ymr "°" LARGEST · · •TRANSFERRED• mstr. suite w/~L Fonnni $3~. O:,,,.,~.,
ll'UIK :""· $24,9'0 8D\y "'l!l'i<> 293 E. 17th St.,6'16-44;,4 Loavlng Augu,t .ll;th. Mbat din. rm., ""* liv. rm. w/ I "'='===='====:I
Olo6ce 4 B'R+ den, loads of 546-2313 646-7171 96'J.44n 546-8103 aell 4 BR, 3bath near ICbool. -~ ~ded fmUJ:y nu. w/ Corona del Mar 1250
I 0 tr • f ·-..1 . 'fl .......... ~_,,, . -J-M5<=u.,_.,wetlbe.r.Spanish l-----'----I extru, new ·w w carpets ~EN EVES Wner GM'MWU . ncf of Crackei'·Box ...,.. ........... w doq. 646-4414 tile •00--~ & "I I 5 "'-·-. . u ''" .......... carp. Onan Oat y lo .... _bout, expen•ive Modem ~. $49,500 Construction?, drapes. 5S' Ow. patio. Pro. 219"JASMINE, CdM
Fnmch abutters, nl!'W dfsll-Thelt this is ... e borne tor you. J) 1 JI 1 It -•~ 3 Car WIUber, built • ln kitchen, O F t Qu·"ty 3 ,"'._·m 2 ,__ .. __ t ta ti J;5tatt Ev_,:'""::!:'; ....,, u.r. garage. View home, steps to beach. 3
spacious IJving room, beam· cean ron ~ !'00Jl1~esi 1oc':tiC:: BY ~~·&;1846 BR, 2 Baths, living.room +
ed celling A cu.torn drapea. Cider borne on pdme OPEN HOUSE * VE1S . * family, fireplace, .bit-ins . F~ .)lflrd & covered pa-comer, $47,500 2020 Alita Costa Meu 4 & 5 BORMS. B~T BUY BAYCREST Sep. dining are a, aervice
lio. Only f.!fi,750 · 10% down. 3 EASJSIDE Geor,re Williamstl;J, Rttr. Thursday, Friday, Saturday NO DOWN PA~. at .all _ Quick P.oasesion porch carpets It. drapes. 3
673-435o oPEN EVEi;. , 1 • 6 P.M. ·· but :rnmth!y pay D) en t • Spacious S250 aq. ft. cu1t.; car g~ge on alley. l.Arge
.Proless. dicor. It lhdscpd., 5 . lot. V:8Qln110% down .
. ·. 4 'Bodrin-ll.-·. B..... : JEAN SUnH \UU8Jly ,.,. -,..., Hur-,Jg. BR. Xlnt !"Od .. "'"°e boY, Rltr. "'"""" Evos 546-911>2 ·· DIJPWfS ,..,, ;: .~ "" •· · 1')' 00 these! at $69 500 · 5~ L ~ · ·
'1682 EDINGER NP DOWN -MOVE IN! . REALTOR ;• Ued• $25,000 . tranl.,.;abl~; Nol .;, 1~ *LA ... HENMYER
I' \I I • \\ 111 : I
~I.I ll\ Ill\\ :;:m ; ·' ~40 um Baker,-c.?tf. 546-5440 ~cu.I-de-':: ea~: ~r!:~~c:. 41lfE. lm~·c:M. · ~ -COCLEX;E Jt:F.ALTY 546:5880 land .• 64().,2828Ev~. Cameo Shore~.
... voty lat ureh. "'' ren -.. ........,,. bulll In 4 BEQRM-POOL..:... BAYCRES :noo WINDWARD'LA!'E
h I ,\ J I \ o "
IUVfot busfneaaea ••• tb:f PLACE yoar want ad .taere l'eCC'd. call now tor appoint-kttchl!rl Covm!d . ~ . . $23,500 , T BEAUTIFUL BAY VIEW· Spect1cular View
White Elepb.antJT aa.tfted Ads. Dta:I 00·' .. 8 they are k>oJane: _ 0.W..Y ment to see. · lo:i:dOO Comer fee aim.pie Lovel.Y custom 3 BR, 3 baths,
Dim• .. a .. Lint to ottt:r fOW' aenic. NOW. Pll.OT clusifted &e·567a $57 500 P8t:J:o • fun all ~ round. NO DOWN' $29,500. Will exchange' 1or N. Shore Blulf's 2 story poo!,/immaculate. Immedi· '-=============.:=======· ===========... t Spnnk1en -artlltic land&-Completeb' refurbjabed Inside ti....,..,.,rt Beach prope-. 3 Br. 2 Ba, Z,000' condo . I" . S b It . ~-G ' 2 ~ ~,..... • ~ • Like new, ·-·'-L F-' ~ .. , ate possession, 1000 General 1000 r; capmg. u m no ....,..11 .I. "OUL baths, Quality pi.r-Walker Realty ........... .. .. .,... THE FOX CO.
'a r $21,000. 842..fJ691 JJetlni. Built-in range and 3336 Via Lido 675-5200 toclproposed Marina. Quiet, 673-949? 642-6969 ! -·l"'l•li.:JI TARBEU. 16111 Bftch Bl. oven. Owered patio w:ltbl:!"!~!!!!!!!!!!"'!"~~"l"'~I ex UBive, carefree. Under
-
___________ '.-"______ " mkt w~ ,, .. AO)U' HOME & Income; newly
• • IPOOL--Paoesetter; fabulous BBQ •d'jacent pmty ~ 3 BR home m. 66 :r 110 bl, --·-="''~=·=~=~,C..-d trJ-O j\. "\. ,( -1)_-C ~Q.8 EALT'.'f COMPANY home-this one'• llimpl.y im· thmy pool. No dOWD G.I. plut:er walls, w/w crptg. SACRIFICEI de;cor. 2 BR. 2 BA., l% \:)~ 1-'QU ~).. ~ P(/" ;:J * 642-lnl Anytime* mac. With Jau ot _new pa.int 540-1720 $18,500. F«rtin Co. 642-5000 In Bluffs; Dolores Model ~~~e. garb. disp.; dlb.
1000 General
Soloc •Simple SCTambr.d Word Pw:zlc for a Chuck!<
0 ... .._. letteri ., ""' four aaamblad words b.-i Jow to fomt four lill'IPI• ~ ' ,41'; 1 1~UQSIN I .
•
1 I I I r I .
llXOMA I , .__ ..... I ...... 1 ...... l'_.1-l.
TE WET
The way to mob your ~~_._._...._~ ta homa look more ottroctlve Is ~IMINUM.E . ,loprice --.
I I I I' I' O eo •• ~,. · ~. 'h""·' ., .. .i by frlling 111 the m1ang words
you develop from nep No. 3 below.
I & ~i1~E~~M~~~E~~ERS 11 11
, r r 1s I' I' I
_&_.~ ... o .... "'."'':f"""sw""~Ei.._u_m_ts.1.j-1..l -1...I ..1. I I I I
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIRCATION 9000
General 1000 0-rol 1000
HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE 842-4455
7611 Edl.t• 0,,0llTa ----•""o.'•"';;;;."';.;°';;.;<o.•";;.;";;,...----Opett IYenl19
$500 DREAM COTTAGE
3 btdrooma, 2 baths, llvtni room with romantic firepla~. BeautlfuJ ldtcberl,
forctd a.lr beaUn&. 2 car ~. huge enclosed yard, great for children. Owners movin& very aoon. Try $500 Down, payment less than rent.
FOUCLOSUU REPOSSUSION111
'l'bU: ranch •ty.le ' bedroom bu: 2 •PAdoua baths, •hak~ root lush tropk:tl land-
acaplng. built-ln &n4 a country t ype fireplace. VACANT. m .oo Total Move-.tn c.o.ta to VETS ••• Low Down FHA.
HOW'S THI TIMI OF THI VIAR TO IUY THAT HEA T1D POOL
4 MDlOOMS + DIN + DINING ROOM + 2 luxurioua baths, muter bedroom b huge with prlvgW helh with door It! ~COVERED PATIO to romantic warm water SWIMMING POOL. HAPl'Y
l>A.Ylt Your family destrvts It. Full Price only $24,700.
COJY Z llDlOOM COTTAGE
on Jarz:• R4 tot. Just 3 blocks ftom O<X"an and nur downtown Huntmcton
lleecb. ~ tor QuJcit ale at sts,IXX>. Bette }furey ! !
WIWN• TO DO IOMI HOMIWORK1
'J'hlt 3 bedro:m, 2 lath home 11 ln nted of pa.Int and a ftw llnllJ t"fpa!n but wtU
wwtlt tbo pico cl .SJa,'l!IO. Llrp ld.td1'n, double ....... lo< n.d. Feeced 7an1
lo<Kl<IL
A NEW RICORD • •
--..
l""!!!!!!'!'!'~~~~~!!I &: carpeting ' in Mesa TARBEll. 2956 Harbor .m. $34,00J. Francesca Model Near Fa6hlon Island
BIG 5 BEDRooiA Verde's finest area. Ideal Ivan Wells1 Costa Me.a ' . . ·1100 $32,500. Owner 644-U49 e 1~ .. do OIM e
Luge family l'OOOI wttb t1rt-for tge. family, rn:tered at NEWEST MODEL '685 Vim. Bonita, N.B. "".-..voca '
place . ...i ""1>al dining $44,000 COUE>; REALTY 4 BR 4 be, fonnal dJn rm, BY OWN.a, 29:1 Bowlleg BAYcit=-Oweor. 3 Br, 2 ABOVE THE BEACHES '·-lot ni~ .. land """ "_., ,,. __ ...._ r .. ..:n-' B f Milllori $ View fro~ 1780 aq. room. ...... ~"' ~ -~ . Jam rm w/wet be:r, s rsr ~ ur., ~'"' PVk. 3 a., amily nn.: beautifully ft of roof deck. Custom ce-
aoaped. C>.vner must sell 4 Bedrm-Fimily Rm pr. Contract .now for Aug. B?. 1Z be.. fam. "11., trplc, carp. Ir draped.1806 bl k -2 B 2.bl: .B
quiddy. Priced S200J under $24 500 _ "»'.!" DOWN coinpll!tion It. choose your Lrge kitchen elec Ntns. Leeward Lane. Open week· ment oc -.r. · Y
ma:rket at $32,$0. ., .__.: H ·~·-indo own col.on & ,.,.""'t-l ..... · Walk to .all schOols. Veey ends 1-5, 548-0875, 54S-0970 Ow n e*r ~~· *5!6>693 . ,., 7171 . ·•"2313'".uauis. ugep1.,,,....,.w w ~-....-... ..,. .. ,.,...,......,
-~ 1n living room with fireplace Roy J. Ward Co. · 646-1550 neat"-clean! $24,500, 4 BR. Home 40' Waterfront~
TH E ~EAL '
E .STATER S
overk>ob a lovely garden. Ch1rm 111 Only $25,600 * 54&~ *. New ¢er, Coat. Storage
Cover pt.t:io. Showt llkt: a e lrnma, 3 BR 1%. bath * FAMn.Y HOME -TOP apace & extra.Ill inside & oot!
model. 540-1720. • 'IWO double gal'flgei. LOCATION 3 4Je Br & den. Fee aimple -By Owner.
Duplex-by owner. 3 B3 2 ba ~ + 1 BR garage 11.pt. CpW
drp!I In both. Good cond. &
location. 673-5800 TAR.BEIL 29'15 Harbor Bl. • Cov patio, new drapea, 2 BA, liv. nn, din rm, hwd Evea. 968-3623
Special. DELUXE ._,,ER ANXIOUS . !In., ......... bit • ""'· =·=•m=GHLAN"'=n'"""nr"'.-Hrl>r"""'"" 'HOME • In''''"' 2 bdrm Rltrs 842-9730 Eves a..•,.....,.. breeziewe7 Co dbl dt'd pr, Hlnds borne with garage Apt. Near . • PDJN. PT. home. 3 BR. J'am · · ......,,~ Jn 4 Br 2 be., lam rm, all Fuhion Island, Newport
lmma""1ai. 3 -i..ne nu., b-plo. -.,,tionol val-• KENNEDY -· lge .,.. lot. BY blJm. '""•· 132,000 10% de c..ier. 700 Awcados~ Cl<IM ~ tn •. ~lib yard. ti&. $56;000. ""'c'A""R"'E"'L"E"'ss"'"===-1 OWNER $28,150, '4trll45 Owner. ~2847, l-729-2908
Fresh paint and fresh ca:r-BALBOAREALISJ'ATE • . HAVEN OWNER $18,500 Newly MOVE rn! Near new 4 BR.,
pets. All thia for $18,.500. 700.E. Balboa Btvd., Balboa 3 BR l1Ai Ba Townhouse from painted, 3 BR w/gar, 1tove, trpl., ON' cpts. nr. beach .
• •!-..sp.,,R .• Ig'N'G BEAC~3-4~:LACE ':'".;..~t~":~~ ~-::·~~ .. ~ :~.~:::r 351 5 Bedrooms _, .,.. cated,. mainWned. $18,450. St. C.M. 545--0087 Oceanfront older Home COiie .~.REALTY Mod 4 BR. 2~ b&. steps to Flexible terms, Iesa than ====,,.,---.,.-.,.-1NEWPORT Shore1 2 BR. & · ,. · 411.~ ~n. Sll.900. · rmt. '48-0087 . Sl.900 Ori, $190 mo, priced conv. den; comer. $23,500 ::~; SttJ.Ubrvy and · •• "anvn~·· Caywood R_ulty f!OOJ wider appralaal 3 BR, unturn, .$24,500 furn 633-fQl • ~· .
262!1 Ha-mvd., C.M. m; w. Co8'1 Hwy, NB DO You -.. "" -19 x"' lam room. Oweer, Burr Whi.. Realtor 548-1.290 bOllw airlvateb'! Wt!! will SlC6 Roosevelt Way 5'·3430 'General tooO 1~• ,
Gener1I 1000 ========= fD.nce your buyer G.I. or LGE 4 B F .H.A. One ot Amerlcu , r, 3 Ba. Carp., 2001 Newport Blvd., NB
BUSIF.Sr marketiUace fll Gwier1I 1000 LMgest mor4gage Jiemen. drps., many utru; 1 )T. BUStur marbtplace tn 6'75-4630 Eves: 642-0:2&
town. The DAILY PILOr nu: SUN NEVER SETS an m-a;c ~ G.I. Loan. Owner town. TlMi DAILY Pll.oT .
Claalllad 1tCUon.. S • •• Cuaffied'1 action poW'e'. ===========1.;;,,;;;;;,======-I Oa•pnec! leci:ion. s. ..
IDODt1 tim• la etrort. La Fer an ad to aell around General 1000 Gener.al 1000 mane;y, &Im• 6 .um.. U:iol
bOW!!I tbe ~~k. d!.al 642,.5678. now!!!
81lboa Peninsul1 1300
-----·-----
1000
Now ·1s THE TIME TO BUY' . '
NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 646 7711 COSTA ·MESA OFFICE 545-9491
' •
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-.
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~ . -... -------~ ---... ---. ---.,...~-----~--.----~-------~~~---------------..-~ ....---------..... ---~----.......--~~-
Wednesdq, Ai19Usl 28, 1%8 DAILY PU.OT
1----------------------•HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi RENTALS RINTALS RliNlALS RENTALS
Daily Pilot Claulfied lido 11i. 1151 L11un1 ... ch'· 170.S lfo<IHI ~unlhlMd ~ Un!Vm.-Aptt. Fvmllllod _Aplo. Fumllhod
C 1tH1 0ppomin11y ,, . DIRTY .N~, ~ ~ c:..t1 Miii lloO 0.-.) <!000 B1lbot LASS~FIED INDIX ==:-~. , f~,CE ·Wlllhtr R111tals • B/B · ~!1:..~~~N:. ~m=.:,,..·
Hour-RtCJUl1t\ion-Dead11"•• --a 11, ~hi..,.., 11ettei 'q\alll!' Ntw EacJ•nd .!;URNISHED Av All. non:o, )!OD v ..... -• l>"tldor. carfOl1L m E. Balboa Bl~
. , • ;· llftlll -.14T.-, Ca;iio lt!'ltd .bome, ~T· #~ · wA~ C BR, C BR. ;J I! ..,... f!'I "-<led ,J>OOI. llSO »"' mo. BW!OA=F=="'i"=T<:;;;j
IRROR&1 AdftrtlMrt dlOukl dltok tflttr .•• ftll) •nd ~ lm~dely .,.. R. C. Qlll2lt. a.let El> ON SP AC J 0 0 S 2 bl; patJo. IPldout tani I d1mnc nil, ~ """Ptta. • 4'J
or mleiol .... floltJ0na. THE DAIL V PILOT a..u,,.. .. 1a.Mnty W ,..,.,. •IY SOI VJI, Udo ~ lfUXO GMUNDS W/i~ rr. 'O)" #J • VIEW,,S 8ll, 1 ba, tam bdt'-ld '1~ bt1utlMl)i 19Q PClllfONA ).vm,:. C.M. ~ f~tt;.:nd;::.._..;.;. __ ............ ,..,...,i~..,.,..,~ .. _,,_,-u.,.. Huntt....,...,.. 11100 W"~?:..~'w!: ts-~ATEBiod.,sBR ·=:;:,.,:;.:::.a r.=c.,..;i...,.' . '\11~ ~ T1I" ..,,..i
Dl.ADLIN&POltCO"ANDKILLl1l110P.M.thed17..._,.,_.,1e..ut.._.-.,tftr ~exterior ot, ~ patio. and1~ 1UYke. .,,.,,(lncaaa1,!br~uJ
w ................. M•-· ---· •'°''"" .... lo, .. P.M. ~-. • •• * USTING -. -pluk, godlr --m3ll83 ' ·--$25 Wk. Up ::·:,:.~: .
VOU MUIT HAYa KILL NUMl&RI Wheft kllll1t1 litt od '*''* .t 111utok ,,_.ttl, Owntr tried ot drlviDC DI lhak, rootµnes w/pbled ~ e Studio• Bien Q"8.
._ ..,,. te moko a reoord .t U.. klll 1u•mber 1lwn ,... W ,..ur•1d 11.k.,. • m11et a dQ a must .ell al-=-WIJNG; 4 BDRM.: 6 A4V~ om:·= Verde •tad UWI A PboM _,., •Huntlftiten leKh 4400 .. ,.,...u...,,.,..,..,L , , niOlt ....,,,, BR home. DENn.ooRPt.AN n-1. _u , ~ ~cllUtc rm.exus~i.TV.,aval. 1 • ous•
Ivel')' effort .. ma•• .. ltlll ............. MW .. that ........ " ..... ,.., Ht .. ....... ~ elWpp :-1 llvinc 'l'llRU LARGE uV ... ~: c.ww,.., .... I -Co. bUt-in ldtthfn.. ~ :;-; cau ~ 5tf.9'1!i5 • ~R~
Mttu•r.nte. t. de •,until the a111 a. .. •Pl*relll lit the,.,.,. 1 w.p =-ki~en~ WITH VAUL~ CEILINGS .:'..} .C.: t"..:,'!.., ledlcapeit )'Int.. Yevb' i'BDRM rwportNEW ~ET 4 NATIVE GARDENS
DIMl·A·LINI Adi •rt 1trictl1 ~In Uvanoe ,, mall., •t ... , ..... , ... , .tnor.'. .•YOCado.bQUf .inl;, drnslna' :U'Jtr:r~)~ IU...... ·oa.... ~-~mo.~"*; PARTIAi.i.Y f'URNISHEI); 6 P001..S-$A.UNAS.JACUZZI
No .. _.,.,,. ~ ,..... In......,. ............ out.J\Mrd0nba1MASSIVE 9MO.j<uel/<Pt.l510J'""m.663 Evt1. GAR., AVA~ ,,p. HUNTINGTON
Tht DAILY PILOT ,....,......._ tht rltht te iol .. lfJ', edtt. °'" .. ' er refutt an1 arieN Carpetld. A driped. $21,950. USED JpUCK FIREPLACE 1S compl. tum. Belpt. 2 Br. 4 lK S ):I.~ PR.OX. SEPT. 16. )flUTE,I.
U..mtnt. •ltd tO ........ , ........ •ml ,...iatl•n• without prl•r .,.uo.. . 1't.nd I L-s from tropr to ttW.ne m lUCt •.PlriK ~· cbU4s t)'pe .. ··eoe:. t9 l!diJ: OUiON', 3182 ,-OOUNTR~ GARDENS
Advertlatt maf ,,..,. their ad• la)' hl•Ph•ne. • n t.,. un BAll.. ETC. Kopper ' Kettht bunk bdrin. I~. ba larat' Uv. Weatcilt~'Sbop Oi · I a.trB, COS"l'A)&E.!A •
I L ECT • Outdoor llvtnic lodocr in lbls 'ldti&•<'wllh,REO 'O:lllBLE rm plUI din. rm large Jdl<b, b ' · lr. 646-1~ SllARP• """ .. « 1 Bii. Tn<NJ~TAOOIENT DA ·DIR 6 .. 2.5678 1ove17.s • • .._ _,.,. n.ooas, BILT.JN RANGE lllklen<ed,...i,,...,cm1 .• 1'...:wt. """· Rd. ..... ••<L ;,,,;;:-l;i.,.. -·~· BOLSA.CHICA a HEIL Uy room wttb PaJoi ,ycrde p&tio barbecue do.k encl _,lDl>. J.at 4 kit iA advs • .;.."',.una f I WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540-1220 ·-.. -... ...,. Al ovn<: D1$11WASHER., ~ ~ ' i 1nc1..w•te••>"...._;., .. bldr. Adulta°""': ,...M~ ADULTS 147-14 4 tea:ICnally luldleaped IUr GARB. DISP. l:l'C., all blk. ! ~ : 1115, 546-4974 Aft. S PM er 1-BR. fUm. apt. auiL for eple.
Hunlln"°" ... ch 540.1220 l19uil1 l11<h 494-9466 >OnL '""'"" -,...,;, ::W ....=--Iii M•ple. w~ for ~ wi~ I BR. '.,.,..;t. !I-pd., wkends. · 1 W•ter A 1u tum. l*J. ma
Pho a-0 . 1•00 5•30 • ml ~.,-i.e.•1, who nsi. bolter b.m. iiu·llrnl Kldo. ~157< c.il Oefore 9 r<\>-_,__tl~-. !1J., ~l!>le<I. Lovely, pdvolo, i Bdrm, '~. lm S!., H.B. t.36-619
W 1VW . pell • a.m.-,• p.ln. .~ ni-.ny1extru. BADLY ,.,_..,...,_.... AM,AftftSPK . • .• f'tl~hf il'.dwt.<>Peli·d!U-1arapt.Qver~loU ~·,, wm tell at FHA .aJIPl'alul. .. ~ .. 1 ·~~'Co'-'· J.y ""T.PJI. Redtcqn,ttd 288 ccune. Prd~'"lJ'l:ani(d LISTER REALTY NEEDS -,PAIN'i', YARD WINTER~,2bc,il>I, E. lltb St. CM. -couplo.$135.816->;S> i.'•9un18ffch
1'612 Beach IQ:, 111', -WORK ~ ~ GENER.(). wUh . Ip I-,...S Oii lrool. '"5. utll pd., adulU. °'" 00.
llNIMftJ. .'.ur.n ~UP. lt •a na1 buy ~ '1th dl)v. ~ Doa.'t.,.k"1llll0 4owa·tla:J1 S45. cm.I. trailer 5'5-1551 aft NXW FurniJhed 2 BR 2 Ba IHftrw ltUI n>CWlll&mbltious.l:wrrH Finle)'Cn4>61'3-8249 thilJBRbomtprlced$1000 8p.m. .'.ll tiec bu ilt. 1n•.
Ul1 WW ..... la•la1• .. ·-...._ JJO W• ... lttwet, C.... W... JM A J..ITTLE ELBOW ·-·t== •• -p-----1cvtewoTerlooldD&: CREAsE •.KNOW llOW .11.••AA'-'J'"J:!O "• t 4 under.apprailal. $190 Month, ro.so kid up. Very nt~·I • .~&;cb. Matur• adults --.11•1 .... ,.hM.Ull·-·----l.SO.l.SO_....... 2 STORY YOUWlLL'1AVEAb.vu' BR. homo, boot dock .19z.25llJllJ)y....0.0wner. 2BR.Trailon.133~.16lb, ~ oO cblldr.._ $18S.
Mall Acllll,..: lox tf!I, Naw,ort leaoh, Callt. 3 BR 2" baths, Dx1I" tam,. SHO~ci , ~ Wint~·~· «JO.' 38th St., 3105 ROOlevelt Way 546-M30 Costa Mesa. 642-1265 $-375S
' Dy room, w llh ~. $29,950 FULL, PIUC& ~ ' llhoree ! Blf rm. 2 bolh, Blt-tno DELUXE I bdnn. Pool. $110. 3 Bl\ 211· BA, ail elec
HOUSES FOR SALE ====~ ~:::n :: =~:':iavlCI = tormtl dining ·room, cod; MISSION REAL TY .2 RT • channing fenced, cul de ac, vacant Ideal fct ·bachelor. 199.1 bullt..fnl. Panoramic \liew :~~u~ :: ==:~IMNIU :: =~~.:::-•PTAU = ple:ttJ.y cupettd. Sell GI Cit • So. a.at Hwy, Lacuna u:t~~t 2 ~ ~ carpett, drps. !at A last mo. Church St., C.M. 543""9633 overlookfni AlilO Bt&ch.
Mll.l OIL MAa n• UMIYllllrT'Y PAU: .., "IHClflle ..._ nIA. Phone (714) 494-0Tlt. pets m.:aa · • $185. 540-1251 N Mature' adullt criy, llO ~:t.::•: ... •a1e ~;:: = :tJ,, .., ~ •• , ... -. ..., = IRASHIAR ·REAL TY EXTRAORJ>INAAY S&cr1flce no · • SLSiJ. 2 BR hmlM in C<IUrt ewport Beech 4200 c;blldttn. sm. 499-3156 ::::::i ~=-NT'I ~= CORONA DIL MAI: = Ma.DIHIM• • 847-8531 541-lMl 968-1118 at l40D!2. HOMZ f'ULLY WINTER Rmtal .... Sept. lO trl carpetinc tn liv. m .• hall. AnRACTIVE Lee 1 BR. :i~ir:.. 15 ~~DI ! !~:.::: =~=· 5 ~~-~R:o:.n:i'~ i=.!!o.~~~:"~ ~;:1:1~f:;:!: *Channel Reef* ti:-pd~J:::..~ '"'"°'" '"' ~~.,4:;:-~:_.CH = ::-:~-:::: '"' -.......,, .,, wllh -. -l!Ved in ~ 3 Bii. 2>Botls. IJdo Sandi. 9 %12A, Cecil Pl , liPART?i!ENTs 2 Bit, 'llew ,.. deck, or
::VJ:L:::au ;: "ou..,.A111 VALUY ..,...,. MIALTM a.u11 mt immaculate ' bclrnl with aJd ta finaactnc,. p,31500 mo leue. SIJ>t.10. $250 mo. I.GE. 3 ·BR. 2 Ba., ;carp.. SPECTACULAR V1EW ' ~ v,;, met! $115.
llAUO. NteMUMDI ~= ~~ :=~= _. =~~~tuHIHe = = ::!.it'::'::! , l.(l8 PADRES RL'IY tc-2986 aft T pm dlpl:; bltnl. Ltue. !Qci_...D. Waterlroat/Loc • Boat ~or &C-8260 ~.~r..-.UITT' PAIK ::: :::::: ~:.~ :: :ro::"'T,::COUTUle :: )oaited bi 11vt Potnia area. 195 Glenne1't'~L.8. 4M'833 laysho.. • 2225 ~or peta·,MS-8834 Slips Avallable 4950 :::.~:.. ,,., WllTMINITI• .. It lllON, on...... .... -Pae:ltlc Sbcrtt 'lteaity ll'HE BIG ONE ' OlDER House, Id oood. •2 : BR. 2 Bath Apts. Condominium
11v1H1 1T1•UC11 lMI Mtow,Y cm ""' ,lhfll•• :J: 5.l6-88M · Evea &97..(191 Spn.wUnc 5 BR • den Del ' BR.· I &\.. Private ,com· BR -den, adolfl, no. pell. LEASE· or· BUY NEw 2 BR ~ 2 Ba.
COAOMA OIL MAit ~= :::~: ::: Mll•tm = :::t~~·= "" ~....,...,...,, Piao tile floora. ca~ ' munlty • \*cb. Sejlt..JWM Weatclur area. SJ&.9'85' $445 Mo. It Up • $.59,500 Qp Ir pool ::= :::~'*vu •• ~='1,. = ::~~~'"• DllMll¥9 = Netd A La,.... Home? beam '· celllnp. Uv rm, $28>. MU2ll 2 BR, water l'8id 252 FAther 2525 Ocean Blvd., .OiM blt-inl, ellf:> Mtite ' ~~ 1.~" 1• u•UNA aucN w ''"L•T· •••Al .. m.. • Use your tQ\dty in YoUt pt.e. Spanhh Fplc, w/w tTPtl. St. $135. Howey Investment 673-l?88 -for fa:rtl:(er info ~ crpta. endoeed pr
U.LtoA tlUJf9 :: LA•VNA Nl•V•L = ~==If• = 1entb6meudown'~t. blt·lnnnae•oven. $31,950. Coron .... , Mar 2250 O>,. 5f0,..3200 Henne Trt>tt, ?qr.. =SUS=-~540-<l:::,.:;;.:78:....----1
"•"•"•T".,••OTOTOH" ~~•"••• 1~ ~~:'°~::Tl ..,. lllr'JOM•T. tllftlf ,.. We hive -..· • .i.o 5utt ·olfer )'(IUr..o.rot pmL'Millioa .<cN f ALS ........ -n1r1.1x. "' .,. MOYIM• a ITOUH ,.. ·~l""I"' )II,"' Rtty 49f.(J73l. 1 ~. from Oetan:· ehann-. 2 BR. All dee. Jcitch., prb. A...,. u tumltMcl ::!'".A~c:ALJ.IY ~= CONDOMINIUM -l'AINTINe. ........... -loe.ftsCall. -lbi> VA, DO down.· . . ~ ~-1 apt. w/2 BR. 41 apt. MMai Verde 3110 &p., F. A. h~, patio; only _::i:•::.:.·-...;;.";;;.;"-'-..;_-,~I
, .. ,.T aucN ,., .... NTALS "AINTINfl. .... • today. BREA'l'HTAKINll View lot 11 BR. •wet~-m ' a•-lo ft·--11 5000 ~~ ,,..,TIOI "" HAFFDAL _!_•-.~ "' .....r. ' w • u.u-; •cu 3 'BR., tat Ba., 'la!eed .~.·. ..,.,. ~ or ba,J. -·--....... •••,• .. •,.•ov• 11,."' A_.. Unfumlohod "ttOTMu..iy ..,. REAL TY .llllW.I but 1ew1;·n ,w.i Down, boule .... v ... _ l d " ~.. Adults u G A "''-"LAST11t1Me......, ._.., '* "Ho "-•----.-.~ • --... uo:1 r~n e 3148SIMlv Atter•PM call ,.no pe· u wa~r LAKIWOOD I• ••HllAL -PLVAW•H• _. .;_ me to M•lcb'Income" ~_,mo. 497-1210 w/titbtr apL AU unltl eui-_ ~~: . "'---~ paid. Sept. l5tb thru June·, RENT OllAH•• COVMTY I• COSTA MIU '1• •OOOL.• e•OOM11te "" O'lfU Warner 84244(1 1.. bined home ~•::i $165 ~ :: :f.f:Y :: ::~~·T·~:~.. :: l'OOL •1•v1c1 •1• CUSTOM HOME L.,,Unl Niguel 1707 ¥n. C:,:; 2l3: ~ · ; month. 673-7452 3 Room• Furntture
nAHTOM 1•11 111w.oaT "''•"" m• "*'1• 1W11•"111• "'1 · · 2 BEDROOM, l Ba t b • 3 BR 2 baths, built-in•, $25 Month ,UM, IJl•VICa ffM =~£~~""Vt',.: ~~:: ;~~::~~ ... HOllll = •oo,1Ne .,. VQ 1p1.do111 3 BR 2 tJ.th PAC ISLAND VILLAGE lalbN 2300 carpetl JiDd d:tapea. Pati> carpets throuahout. Stepe to J'ULL OPI'ION TO BU'f
U.MTA AltA 1'11 u11rv1a11TY PAaa an :::.O'°Di~~:'a '::,All = with. hup ~te . famil¥ 2 BR 2 BA condomlnfwn and fenced )"&I'd-. Adutt:I <& ocean. flOO/mo yr I)'. No deposit o.a.c.
UJITA ANA Men. ,.,. •ACK 1.t.Y ..,.,.. a1MODILI .... ICJTCMPI .. room, wet .,... • 2 fire"'"'~ Elec kit. cunroom, many a-(BR, 3 ..... on PmhlMlJa near ly. Near llhopl. OWntt 60-3812 ,. H •RC OIAllH 1UI IAfT ILUPll ·~ ....,,... -'D .. l'I _.,.---• ...,. _. '-!. · -. · .r, • • yun1N 1Mt co•OMA DIL MA• ... ts. """""t on 2 tttt-.haded .. _ -4N • .. , ~ .u.i-. tudeD . &,y • Ocean. ~t 8th to 6'73--4517 can evtnmp. S'nJDIO For one flnpioy.d '• 'umitu,. Rentilt
HOltM TVIT111 1'41 IAUOA -:::::: .UCM!NI •••A••• = Iota. A lot of bouJe I« oney PltlO; pool fadllty. !:»-July lat, $300 mo. 6'J3..5919 peraon Private enclosed. ' AHAllllM 14St SAY ISU.llM '*..., IJl"1C TMQ.-.....,. .... 4ffS $28,500. tflmeb' nJce, 51'1 W.19tb, C.M. 548-3fl1 llLY•UDO CAlllYOft '"' LIDO tlLI TAIL0•1tt• ,,,. P I J •-N rt lot-a. _ ..... patio, Utll. pd. $85, per mo. 1561 w. Lncln, Anhm Tf4--21!ll U.VMA MllU 11'1 lfUNTIMTON ••ACM .... TllMtTI COMTHL •n au ..... Re11tv ....,,900 a.Ibo•' laf1ncl 2355 IWpO gil •4UU 1l1T. 40tb St. ~=~=: :~::L ~= ::~=·~~A"~T :: ::t:; ~ 1 _... :l: ~1-12168 · Eves. 847-6918, 1 Call to 'e:e -49&-m:I BAYSIDE Wlqe, \1'15; , 2 GRACIOUS I.Mn ' 2 .... ~ ~~~;,111pn~·· dr!Cltlgar. A:it 1A11 CL•MPTI ln• 11A1 tlfACK ,,... T••• s••v1<:• .,. SUNKEN lJV RM b.,_. · Riviera llMJ.ty , BA'O'l\ON't 4. Br. S bl.., Br. 2 •Ba. lto'ft nfrlc. Mobil H c 1· ..:..·-.::!· _,..,........ '
w.i JUAN "'"''"A"o ,,. 1.0H• ••AcM .. TILIYllJION • ......, ..., .,. fin · ... uwu, . ams. Cllut Hwy So Lac 4ock-Winter Jse • .Avt:il Sept ca.rPeta m-°apea Mwu on-a~ ompoo1" 1o125mp. ~ ... 300"". ·si.40. Afttt 6 PM 541).8616 ' ~!:~"::~ llACM ~;: ::::: ~~~ :,: u"MOUffaY ·• Jee. ~: owner • t Call l: 5125-4444 , • It, mo,
CLAlllPllD'coUNTEltl ... located .. tellowar
9 to Noon S.turd•y-Closod Sund1y 4705
u•U•Ao ,,. w1nM1KIT1a u1t w•LD1n tranc. needs quick actkin on D . I F Sil , -"1· No petl. Pool, lllp; call E. Coast Hwy, Sp. 227, NB ' Cotta MIM 5100 :.u:.~:: :: : ... A~:f" :: ~':A!•~OYME'!! thla: lowly 3 BR. Sol VI.It& , '! _0 • .. 0~-e 1975 'L .. un1 &.•ch 2705 .. 67$,-1054.MlP-~tPM_... MOBD..E Home with cabana, 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:1
•rvt:RIQ)lf COUNTY , .. IAMTA MIA NlfleMTS -'"'WANTID, --,.. Home-. No downi trl Vets. Fen Salt B7 O..'ntr • ' ' GREAT Family BE Ac H near bay. Lido, Newport ' :..~r:.~: MOYID ,,. TVITlll = '°' WMTaD, $27,950. c. J. Re.wt I; T)fluxc 2 Br. Do.I,,), 'Xta C.M OCEANFRONT DUPLEX HOUSE 4 Br. 1 bee to bch Beach.~ EY~
DU,LlfXIS .. o. U.Llf = t.o:l .. ~ ••ACM "" =·~~°':.~~ = Atloc., ~ Main, KB. 1% ba. Man7 extru. Good C'ryttal Qwe, 2 • den, $115 W/ocati 'flew. Gnat for OCEANrnONT Delwct 3 Br:'
A"AltTMlfNT'I "Oil IAUI '"9 U.•UllA H1elllfL Im AeaNCllfL *-nM 538-888T; Fires. 962--' • "inoome .l tine. Priced lietow Sept. 15 tbru, June 15 •. children. $330 mo, ;year),y, """ ,._ "~""'Pl -y • RENTALS '"" cLIM•MT• mt MIU' WANTID, ._ ,.. .,..VE recent apprais.iJ' 1or ""'ck 4M-64ll _ 60-3523 IG-1.554 .,...,,, •.,.... ui "'t"" ear-~ SAN JUAN Uf"llT1UllO ml AHNClll, .,._ nll . .,,.., ·~ · fifio-W'oqld ·dT ,,. ... , · • • • · ' J,y. 6'lS-3C28 ( 01!!~ Fumlshed -RAEALESTATE, .,. r:s': =~llT .. •Ow::-= Wallt ~beach, Nriiport Weat t.,.df' tor-dear ~Wdi. t'j;t t'q. ' 2 BR,' 3 biOCa to btacb, l!EAf11 apt. tor 11 lie studi~ D&.UXE 2 Br UdG Sends
a•NTAU TO IMAlll -Generl) AHNCIU. MM aw-. = ~ 5~~ Gl,,$174 PQ"I ID. i~d 'JD'i. Dal' .. e7~ lalp ,an; Lrue $160 mo. type, 2 br., tr P 1 C. area, Util, pd. ~§..'$155 c:::: D~~IAMU ~= Tlt,LlfJ(,.. ... ::c:-: .. :.:::.vCTIOfll ,.. 3 BR,·2 BAr ,tam r;m, tock eve1 ' Sun ~.r.t'f * a .um * ~drpl. SllS/mo. Ste to July 1 LI &-41.55
CONDOMINIUM ... THIATIUCAL ,,.. trplc, aD GE Jdt,'·fenced, . . ' ~ ~Vet Apl B. Otl;;;;==.,· -~-~~= ~tt.:•::.. ~: ••MTAu wAH'Jl'D "" MERCHANDISE FOR patio, crpta, drpi, $27,bt K~NTALS Summer R1ntal1 2910 ~ WINTER leue Sept 14, !2 BR
I
$9'1.50 ... Mo,
Central location
clooelo-
2 BedrcOm, 1 bath
single ltcr)' -yard·--Harbor Management
Company, Inc. :.:
673MOO ;1 ::=::; ::.::." :: ::::.:::' = SALE AND TRADE 22022 C&pfltr&I» La., H.B. HOUlll Fvr11lthecf Bet.ch. 2-Sty. dplx. Compl fum. Steps to
HswPOllT •NO••• mt MOTaU. TlfAILI• couan ""' ru1111tuae --54Q-H or 962-3839 _ R·~ilo. to Shore 2005 LAGUNA-Octenfnmt. •pee. A-Frame 3 BR. 2 B&thc. bcb. $135-$150. 213:33&-3211 ''THE GABLES" SAYINOlf•I 1U1 •U•IT NDMIS ,_ °""ICI PUl•nv1tl lltf I! _,., taeular Villa p:iv, beach MHI lh le (~-) DOnlt INOIU mr M1tc.·a•MTAU "" o"r1c1 1C1ut,.M•HT •n 4 Ill ROOM h . ' k Uk ' •--Mon ue .,.. ...... · WINTER lWatal,-'~ 2 Bl:ov1n& sfpt, bt; 2 BR. w/ :=~~~~:., ,..... = ~'t~':::,,"::"o::;;., = ::~~ :,~~:~ . :: Flreplace, blUna, ~2 .BA'1 • R!SPONSIBLE ww~ prl U::. ~':~~ ~· M2-1S4T · BR~-~-'1ew A ·phle $135. AdultJI ooly.
lltYINI m1 ·TaNua "AltKI -1A1t 1ou1,.M1NT ltlJ 2 ~ IU'lll'· Call 847-4245 to ahue 2 BR. apt with Wffkl Sl400 Also Victoria E t Bluff 3242 patio. 673-3C63 Carp., drp1, bltns, patio. ~ :t: .. ,. :: =~=:~:~.~~AL = ::~~oi: ... MODI = or.213: 4ll-3flb ·, Ame. One child OK. t1ti1d Beach'~, 3' BR, 3 BA. " ' 1 BR .. furn .• unfum Pool; 2437-G Oranle Aw.
llfYIJill Ti:aUCI IMS IHDUfTlllAL ... o ... .,., -"U•lllTVl:l ·AUCTION -ne.-150. ' BR 2 B·A 91'9 avl)l Clll 6'5-%1&5 or Q~ .-icm Owner ~ft.l.HI:'> ' no children or pe'tJI .. -., Call Between 2 •• coaoNA D•L. MAa nst coMMllCIAL ... A"•L•AHCll s1• eome by 162 A ""J'-Lane """'"''.,. · · ~. B/B · ~ e 6J6.(l2) • &AUOA -tHo\tlTalAl.ltllnAL ... MTICfUll .,,. Towr,hoult,. blt·in R&O, ........ • .~7or1'9f.:651! 16th St.v.N.B.~ ' ~r~ '::t:" = ~:~cMll :: ~'u':l~L ~~~'i'.:aNT ~= ~ $750. dn. ;us mo., Of 2 BR apt, private ·beach, s. Avall. Sept. 1st OC&ANfRONT ~~R. dupltx, stew~ IG rdrii:·.
llALtOA llUMD .. CtTIUI HOVIU •n'IJ PIANOS • Olt9ANS 11• ~~~ :..nt: taxes. IRA YOUNG woman w/cbild, Lquna, 9/1 .trl 0/8, $]JO. Eut Bluff. 4 bedroom, la!Je l tii!rm ' Winter ;lat.. f~nced, p-tlJ) Newly :~..,..J.~1:0:A~;• :;: t::A:~.t~o•• : ~:V .. ..,. = · desilw to have lady llhart 496--1075 after 6 Uvtn1 room, • dinin& ~· 1512 W. Q\ltan Front 67U57T Redee. Adults. No peotl. MIY llAL IUCM , .. •••DD ,. ..... .,.., ._ .. ..,.1 1 ne••o '"' 4 BR. 2% ba, wood floor, Ja:e llvinc txpen1n '1n a 2 Br. r.muy room, built.in kit.Cb-itrade p/reai.tor yd care b°
t.ON•·auc:N tS11 oaAN•• co. "•°"••TY ..,. TAP• 111edaDSll • kit., fam. rm., auume 5% aP,t. 549;3964 a;t5:30daiJJ. ICENTALS en beaut1fully landlc&ped Corona d•I Mar 4250 6 aptc., awn equip. 222S .l. ::;:::~~:uim ~': ~~1r:~.:::;· :: ~=~:u: .. ~:'"1111'" : Joan P11ce below marlcet at LADY Wlibtt to lbare YoUl' Hout11 Unfurnlthecl ~ and view. Yearb' leue Pomona s:n..os.;i Wk day1
innMt>1n1a 11n 1uao1v1110N UHD 4'11 U'01tT1H• 900Dt -$29,500 call OW1'ft" f161...153T home: ·or apt/with same. ~----1 4Aftft $425'./Mo. incl. wattt and 2 BR, Fitepl., adultl, no pet.. RESP. Adults: 1 bdrm, MrDWAY CfTf' S'1• llf.ll. IUTATa .. avtc• '111J llNOCUUIS. KO•P -,,. _. V9n'ftl .-VVV __ --,_..,_,;,.;: _::...11--'.., .. '°'"' $150 ~ AJm 2 BR un-U.NTA ...,.. Hll91f'B .-1.1. n:cMAN•• •111 M11c1L.LANjtOU1 ... F nt 1 V Ir. 1410 ..,.e 45. rmm~. cout area. , •:iu"'"""n::r ~-vlCI:'. turni.bed 675-439'J eeparate unit drJ'll. lltow,
=:AL UACN t1'lll It. .. WANTID -~·==~~ = OU • n • '· 540-a700 ' 'BR 2%. Ba,.neat ... pin, ~ Eve•. ~ . tcarpet Uv. rm. p1v. patto ..
u.•UHA NleUll. = aut.~:~~.11• LUM••• '"' Nke 3 BR By Owner, 1% SHARE My .2 BR apt. indudel pool •• ~s. and •ar & leach lalbo• '" 4300 f tlttpl no pett Nr., Harber
::: ~~:.·~llTllAlfO :;: aV..1101 OPl'OlfTU•mn ... ru~~~ MAT11•1ALI = BA, bldlll, IOlt ,ICIO, crptc, teacher, quiet chi er wotk-~ fad1tt1es. $2:251 -Reilty, Inc:. Blvd. $95. (213) 2ff.20l1
CA.•lmtAMO auc:11 = ~~:~::'::'::........ = IWA!"IJ ~ drps, tr-pie, puie11ed tam. in&: woman. Reu. l>m. mo.. Bier. &e.rm D5 w .. Balboa Blvd., NB 1 BR. tum. apt. $140; 2 BR. 2 FRONT APr r..::.:,;~ouwrr ... u.v•nMlfMT WAJITID AU PETS and LIVESTOCK rm .. 9Cl'ttntd patio,, I& fnccl 56-2966 • ' . Ba. .tum. apt. $1S5. Ufil. 2 Br., crptl, drps, patio, pr.
YACATIOfl 1t1HTALI ""' MON•• TO LOM '* ~":-••NIUL : let. $25,tlllO, w/$2200 down ~ Coste Mesa 1100 paid. 'ii Blk. from beach. '140/mo. Also s br. at ~=~:•u,~..._ :;: ::::.~'°~';' = ooes -&~~loan.Callforappt. ~· MM8 2100 _ Newport Shom: 3220 12"J ~~ fl•d., ~M/mo.MJ..46M CDLU.Tl•AL LOAMI ... No•••• -962-1678 ens. & wkDda onl~ . Ceui, ~ 1 Bedroom Balboa. :\ RENTALS RIAL an.t.T• LIWIS a. Lrvutocll' -· l BR hoult $130. 2 lddc OK houae cm 'ii acrt. Ide.al tor NEWPORT SHOR!:S BtlSlEST ~ m SIS NEARLY new 1 Bil.
HoVllt Unfum11hed :w::~T:;-'°"" ..,. CALIFORNIA LIVING Out f C ty 1605 tln,y yard, pr .• Ealtlide. aldercoa.plt.2Bloc1Clfrom 2BRA:Dtnon)'tu'l leaat town. ,,.m;:.=c-Pir..df l>itOvi, drapes, 1ar :~~u,_L..,. = ANNOUNCEMENTS '* ==~=POOL.I :'.: o oun · Mw.583 .ct.,..pvk. Kew·wd to wall '190' mo. to-3430 OUIUled aecdon. s... Employed lady. SM W. 11'h
MlllA D'IL MAa 11• ind NOTICES "ATIOI "'" SALE Or trade 2 Br. mod. carpeU, b11'd floon, lbower. money time Ir ettcn. Look St. 548-1942 ~~.::~::.. :1: '°u"• "'"" M1J .... ~=-~~:.., :: hM Yucca Valley Ptbd Newport hach 2200 $100 mo. 869 w.18tb, Cotti' C....,. dlfMU' ·1'"3250 nown 1' =""'~O!ARG!::,,=~m=---I ::::::; :=." :: ~IOfb\LI :: TRANSPORTATION SlO,SOO eq. "300, 49Ml71 I MO. leue Sept. 15-Jwie 15 Mna. 6f6:-1711.afttt 6 PM NEAR Beach CdM S BR.. 2
NIWHIT ..... ., ,_ r..~MCIMIMn = :..°it~ .. "n'ACNT'I :: evt1. Compl. tum. Bee.ut. 2 Pr; 2 LEASE 3 BR., 2·BA, frp\, bathl, $315• mo.' G, H.
sAYIMOW.•• ft2I ~N• .... u .. n rowa• c•u11n1 ,.. 1705 ba, trplc blt1D k!.t, Imp fenc'd yd. new crpts, drpl, Robertson R1ty 6'l5-44tO ·
oova• •MCMt• = "AID oaiTUAllY '411 •"11•....,•1 •OATI = L•gvna a..ch ... : clubhouN ....... Mtaa•Verda sm ~ -~=~·~~~~-~" ::::~~ PA•• .., "UNlfltAL DIRICTOIU "14 •OAT TIAILl•s piv. ,......, • ,,....... ' . • ' LARGE '2 Bil, 2 ba •Vall
llY1MI • no•1nt ..,~ :::: ~J:r.::c• = SP!rl'ACULAR Vkw, 2 sty bl!adt., hta~ -l)OOL Adults. 4 ~· 2 bra, elect. ldtchen, 9/15, year around, slls rho.
u.tK a.t.T .,. f:.'::.:="' :;, MAatN• ••UIP. ..., 3 BR 2 BA. tam, trpl, deck. No pets. S:llO mo. 10• .fli!IC. 'dpta A drpt, fenced Sf0..3862 Aat~ ·
:r.;.:L:r.'uc1 :: ~::w.:~ ~""' ::: =~ :~:vic~•1"G : $35,"°. •M 1't. 494-5JB7 ~de Vlllqe • »> E. pttio ~/me. 54&--'rJliO I "'=======*=•II
COl:OMA Diii. MM .. ca•M.roto119• .-'°"' ••'"AU ,.._ THE QUICKER YOU ~ Cout Hlny DAU.Y PJLOl' WANT~ Huntlnetan Buch 3400 U.LIOA .. MIMOltlAL "AllCI _, aoAT CMAltl'llt .,..., -.. . ' ~ .... ,. llUNDI = AUCTIOla -PISNIH tOATt .. _ TIIE QUUXER 'Yvv ~ OIARGE )'OUl' want ad now. .vRmG USULTSI "' BR • ... -•... _:_ LtoO llU -AVlAYIOM UltVICI '411 IOolT MOVINe • " •ftfW .. .....,., ~ :~=.~i.:r ms TU~TAftoN = =~'t,~ = !_l1q,Leue 2 CJild. Q.K. Nr. lfUHTlllnotl ••ACll -::. Tlt:dll'OITATIOtl ... AllCUn '-"' Death Blv'd, • Slattt t • .• •.")?'.~. vJt:r'4·· = LllMI; NOTICll ... "LTIMe l.lfllOlll "" 'ni56 Van Burean IU-1123 "' HllMAN a TUTOllff ... ~ ltOMlt '* ~'o::"::W. = SIRVICI DIRECTORY e1CYC1.Jf""a = . 2 ~ houff, Sl'5 mo. I LON• atACH -A«Ol.itrTINe -ILICT•te CAU ma AduJtl. Walk trl t°"1t ottMff COUlf'rT Mii AlllWllltl ... 111\0ICI: ... Ml•t a!Kh fl1I • beach. ~221() SAHTA NIA •• """l!MCI .......... ,,_ ..,. MOfolC1'CLU --· • Wl:ITMINtTft .... APN.\tll.. I .. MOTMICOOT•RI -PARTLY furn.' BR.. bit-Ins; ~:;i.tv.l.rr:.."'"' : :'~~=· : ~= =nc~· .-...,~~ ,. tencd.. trplc., dtpl, e9·
»MTAl. .. AUTO. ,_. ..... T-. .... -TU11.1 .. TUftL ... $220 Montft, &ta-7985 ;· .AeUJIA •uc• "" u.aTllTTIN• . ... TUILIU. .,,.., ... .AeUNA MteUI& _, NAT MAflfTl'.'IWICI -CAM,... -
;,t.H CLIMlllTll lflS allCIC. MAIOtlaY, .... -Tauatt -:.t.PllTIWtO .,. •u•1•us qaVICQ -,...... , ,... '.A"IST1tNIO lu.al -IUll.DIU • D DVNI IU9efft ->AllA """ IPM ~Tait• a ~TIO "·""°' IM COllDOMINNM ... CAtlftTMAIU.. ... .,_.,. ~· Mt OUPLSXll .......... .. CAUPTWa.. tM MTMl!lf CLUllCI N11
RINTALS CIMlllTo --.... CAU. -=
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'
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HAVE YOU LOOKED 'FOR
THE HIDDEN DOL&:AR'S -. -
IN YOUR HOME P\TELY7
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Lityni lotch 3705
MONARcH llAY Alt J; A
LOVELY OCEAN VIEW. 3
Bl\. don,' BA. <pis, -~ pOot, ISOO• mo. Alm
aftll. :a: BL 11'9 ba. $225 mo.
adulll -.,... _IN;pns
FOR i.a· -C BR. MYSl'IC PARK. ~
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~··~"""'""' '950 BR.-..... •., I~
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5.11-GC, I
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N ,• J+illpr JWhat It Is r ., .fJ
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SELL IT
WITH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
"for Fad Sorvico &
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Exp.rt Assidan ..
,DIAi:
642-5678
,PIRECT
JUST SA y I CHARGE IT!
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WH·AT
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D'IAL: DlllCT
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UAL llTATI ... ,..
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llRYICI DIUCTOIY lllVICI DIRECTORY
* ~ ci..n1., uu C•!JM! cr .. 01111 uu
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.. w-.i. -t za. 1961
DllKTOllY MIU & IMPLOYMINT IClll & IMPLOYMIN1 IOU & ~OYMINT 11111 & Wl.OYMllCT 11111 & llMl'tOYMINt .IOU & -LO~ ~ a
• •
• • • '•
• -•I ..... I• 6612 Job Win!W, -7llOO rte111 w-. -7200 Help W......._ -7200 Hllp winlell, Miii UGO ~lel, w-7IOO Hllp W1n"4 Hllp W•-
CARPlllTltY MAINTENANCE plumb-w.-Women 7a W-,. !
' lmlOR Rll'AlRS: No ,.., -• Electrlc • NI , ........... .....,.,... Strlie -C:..4111•• -t MISS WC l&BKY
too -~to -"'put 11mo. -=.,: with ....._ , YOUNC9 MIN
1~-~-~---11 ,
-
• th ... 0. bl ifTRY ._-W...t .. ' ••
.. • . • " lif5.ll; ~ :! !.. .:::: .i.i. w111i..i. • .-. mo wWtclnt NllDIO. , •a If "-• rm PAD> _,. ~, -r coMll ....... frl-IMMID•AHL Y I V'1ll ...... , .............. _,
H. o. Andenan. IOOAL llCRDAJ\1'. Haw --11111t .. ,. hrnelf.. ~·~ liw•1 •·•••••••••••• MDO \'mn..,..., .........._ ..._ t ft bt md1Mtd. tlll' a a-. •;;:·cl-w-. Wallo • ••••Ii.at -•-1 ... for: •'IOOL 6 DIE!Wa:R -;oo111oo i..-" ~··•••••••• .......... ::::: PROOP COMMlltCIAL Women! Li.ht typlhf, _,. , !
with flt•-C.TI or •
·""''W: bualn•t1, bacQmmd. hD or pQ1. *GENERAL INSPECTOR. lUM&emart la the Cb1>-"'"' ••••••••••••••••••• _, TILLIR
""""6 --time.~ • '1riub" •MAINTDIANCE ~-A-..I>eport-_ PBX~~'ll/IJ W1 Won't Promise ety,tat Wladow Cleanln1 TYPING IN MY HOME. MECHANlC • ,...t ol Gllr Oranie Oow>l1 UNITED CALIPOltNIA Id Cll•Yll co, n..Eollm&,,. !AU737 -ble.Fut6-.. •MAINTENANCE -EX......,.Sedy ........ lOCI> • IANK y.., tho Wor
lllUGllTER.&de , ... s.rv -lulomllic Screw £LECnUCJAN _,.....,, ........... "°' Evm "'° ... hive 11th a ,._o ~ c:lnr, !In, -Ind. WAITRE$, 25 ,..,. ea· * srocKMAN-SrORE 6 ,125 WK. IALAllY -or 'Traoica .... IOCll 4525 MacArthur 11¥4. -.. m I Ca>-0. C..t1 -:'.:'.:.~ 54Mlll. -· -6 -M1tb. """" LINE ' =~ ;.;p·:::: = N-rt ~h lut • • • m-2201
·-·-·-dable.-......... *""'AL •SSD!Bll!R Our --OodlTnloVlBl'-·flOO J40.44.. All-llo loNi, Ele. •• ' ,,_ ......... 2 ---···-·-* RIVETER will -• ~-~~--w Girt U ' --· _...._ -· · · , .. -Job W1ntocl ·::.:.::;;;;-* METAi.11 "'"ll"iA" • --_,, ;::::z-...:._": .. , ... ::;;: An ,.uat -11 .. ,.,.. ' "~;;:,.;;:;-
apply • • • ..
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-~· •POWERBft'~ ~th~-.. -__ ,,_ ...... _ ..,......._ •• ----.. '
6720 U--" w-• 7030 • -WO -Girl -··--,_,_ ~· ,. HHlth Clubl ~ -·-• OPERATOR .-_ .. ..., ............ -wft. EXcltllll, cWD...,ow 1--------1
CHIROPRAC EXPERIENCEI> AYr MGR • Liiie Oper1tors *PUNCH PRESS • ""GI'• ~~.:.;:;· .. ;;·.,!!00 ... -----. --1 loCll --!obi.~ lllMll:rn:r ;
TOR Coop1e -....,. ,..... 0 • OPERATOR • Oo!lc< -uot ,.. · '~ ~•·• •• .,,, put 111 In """ pocketo! .-u;.JAI HEALTH a.ooc ~--0o ~"-~ * ~·G~ • ''THE "° w. 0out Hwy. • • T!UPHONE · 1
• ' ' ~ in ............ • ~~·-~ ~, u, ... a.-tum1lll to ldloal ... iww-, a.di. ...._ I '~-!~:· I · -~ _..,.., """" wuu _...,,,to 1w1c1Jo OPERATOR ..,.,...,, ~ . SOUCITOU . -· ~ -Over 21
-........ -,..., -· 6'13-4.... Drill Press * TURREI' LATHE • ""' " ..... ---t =~-NI !I< port-.• ...,.. COMI IN fOOAY f"'I or ''" Ti-m E. 18th St., CM. e OPERATOR -In-In •-~~ woddna condillMI. -~~~=cz.==-DolMcHIElpSTl7COU Operllors :=~ =~~"' ~,:~;. := ..... -~ .. iuu· .. ·~~ App~~·,~:..'""
bon4 Md/<r ..u.. 811-1517 _..,.,.. * HELIUM ARC WuJJER Olll --t AM 6 2 PM -.,... 1<(11. Holld1y HHlth ~ rJfl!!! -19£11 L W * MAOUNE WELDER 55-1183 Clolit Qerk. JndllltriU "'P· '300 HARBOR BL • -Anaheim, 1'18t W. L1ncoln llUIKn
H1ulll 6730 APPLY AT * EXPERIMENTAL ..... d. -cosrA MESA -.......... Ph. 5«>4325 HELP MECHANIC ...._.... Ooo1c " run, • _______ 1_ a.... Mna, 2'l!tO -151 I. C-Hlghw1y ~-=..~::-,. STA.flST, llC. * =~~ Mill Dlstrlllutloa :=. =:: :;,•·,. MA1Ds NEEDED ... ":.="""" ,....,." 1o1ch '.,
Name tu Reucu.hle ll out •-I llECHANIC ---... ~. Rem-~ed or wW tnJn , ________ ,1--------l•j BIG JOHN 6'2-403) Live in or ve 640 S. l•ntl ni t. ._,,.__.. for steady work , . l
HouookMp1rs S An1 C.llf * TllBJ:, BENDER Cleit -Rm! $300. EXTitA . e food Chlcbr
Ln'E HAULINUPG 6 CLEAN ""°""" Apncy inti ' • * ~CAL --• --O!· r_. -GOOD ~.!!_S J.C. P...., Oo. e Cocktlll W1lt.-«I So. Brolldway, LA. 9001! 4'1-.. :AU.ER Acr. ln&.tirance exp. ¥"""" Fuhk:m llland APPLY IN PERSON ~='*ml. (ll3) -7 (%13) C>-1735 * -a1a INC * * AIRQWT PAINTER.I ~v: ~ .='~11c1 _ .... , ~ ~.,.: = Nowpot'l l!ffch A!TiA 5 P.M. I'==='-===== LIVE INS Ro;A>O ' • ....... Olllco Cloe lllivln& U..... llEBERGm PERSONND. bet t 1m 6 S pm. Nftds KA.RAM'S
-clNnlnt 6735 __ ,_ NOW HlltlNO hmlol:IOr;tm·T-AGENCY Laauna°""'b'yOubVlllqe PART TIMI SOI -SINtt
c.orp BJlud -42 MIN ._,, Pit Pllttm IOI w. lTlh c.m. ,.._ 11108 s. OolJt ">· at Albo SALESLADIES Now port ltlch
* U'r. <Lm\NING * 108 B E. 15th, S.A. 811--0!96 • &....... ~. ut. ,m, . l!Mch, South Lquna Houaewiwo and Molhm '
Put A than:qb. We knllb ""'::;.:::..:;,;=:..;~:;;a-llli;:':':=-WI: NIU) • KEN WHO ..._ n I' 1.,_..,.!l!l!!!!!l!l! ... !!1!!!\ Can )'OU 1Part a few boun i -· ..._ aw-li....... .&1111 NO? Al'IWI> or PLITCHll ~lllJllS • .,..,.. ........ Ii> ll!OO,. •ch <1BY and odd to ... TEWR 'I t=======:a ~..=-so:... IWU) 1ltlllX .AMI) AU ID1 ---I.: I -.......... ., ll!CXI Alllot1nt 11Dll11111eome at tbe...,. -· tor -l-rO-r1tlnt'7U.. .uu:mtrr.urrwvm. i..-.,Clltl. llllV ................ tol"'ltl Tolotype()porohlr Ume? Scboduai.....,..,;. ---
• blklenee • Comm'I • Help W1ntod, Min 7200 U.TIU', NO l:XPDtJ. Tl~ Ill •t • UDI (0. 0.1 .,._, ••••••••••·· '° ~ duties. ~ mt tor )'OU, morn1np, aft· m tt. ..., Good workbc e Patnttna, tnt. • at. DfCI JmS•u,;r AA 'ldr9' .. , ......... NO .,. expertmce ,...,'ill tll"DOCD. ewnln&r or ccnM-eondltlolll ad beneffta. w.
IUll'Allr WILL 'DWN. 1.__:.b~4~.i~11~1~1= .... ~~ 1'7llO ~ .... ~--....... , • ~ -.lllory-. •tlom cl Ill Work In a ..., -to -: = ':,..,"':'..., Strike CClllditlHI -Newport lleHh a.a~ ........... ::.;: OtM...,., & c.m,.ny tun .-"""" .,. 11nnt ...... Olll I FREE ESTIMATE GOOD ,AYl?JIM!.li ··•••••••••• ...... LAGukA. BEAOI ol cond:1Honl and top llJPel°" MR. BROWN' Ht-1lll •
1.1""""' • """"" Exist IUSIOn ... '"°"'--.,.,,,. -~ ......... flfl Olll ... -..t """"· N•"'"" N111ona1 ..... 1 MODERN NEEDED LOTI °' OYl:R'l'llO: • lild wttll IO lllu ti> P11X .................... 13SO 11111. KlllNltll .._ Applyln"'"°"
IMMEDIATELY D N AND -8-~ O...S .,.,,,. -........ "$119 P--'1 J'-·~-~ DECORATORS UJtl G NSXT • I ' • Tl9.trJllt ............. -.--1 -WORU>'S LARGEBT (X]S. ..._ ..... llON'ID. • ..._ ---.-• Mldlul Offlco :1:1 a.m. to 1:90 P.m. ~c -..... ....... -a-.-
1 .... 1 ..
-AIRCRAFT DISHW ·-,--... .......... -~J ~~-· ··--.. -~-~~· -.1rumr -------...,.._ _ _ .. .._, ._, __ .,._~-
FACTORY C!AILPl:llllONNl!LDJPI'. ~ Al.Ulm AG111Cf ...... or N.,.. ..-bJ All --lilied -. "'---6755
IRCMNGS Dcu In m.y
borne. ExetDent work. $1
..-hr. Newport. Oolll
M.a area. M2-8581
EtmOPEAN Lall> ...........
ble, dolnc -"' ... home. 646-2984, 8 • 12 AM
L1nd1C1pln9 6110
GAYN'OR'S LANDSCAPING
6 GARDENING SERVICE
.State licensed eoattttr,
Residential -Commercial
Y arc1 cleanup. Free nt.
.No :lob mo bla: 893-3511
CORRAL'S lndlCp • rototill
aerv. Free eat, havt own
. equipment 962-11'64 ·1=-=======
HELP Pull or Port Tin. c•..a.. fl! W. Dtll. C.M. -~,.,,._In N.B. -_...,11 _.. 1" -We train,... e SHEEl' METAL 774-1211 • 9WI ;;.;...;;.;..:=..;;;;;;;_=;;;;:I 6 H.B. 'l')pliw. lltl. bllllor1'ii'flii0i;a;ii:libiifth;;\ NJ.70ll -
MEQ!IANICS * * .\allr Ill -il~·-n, ap _ .. ,, ... X...,, hal>!All'r _,,. -... • l'OWER. BRAKE 6 • ·-.. ys "'"" lllL ... .-... Good ... -... 6 tu -iil;u:;n;;;;;;;;is;;;;:::;:;;:::ro-I SHEAROPER8. IXPlltllNCID ti p.m. 9U for~"'""'· 8'nd -.wodtat-.AD IWiilllh· ... -hol.A
•EXPElllMINl"AL WATlltCONDITIONllt ···D~...i.... ....wic.-to Y.P. 1111 ·-""' • Mod. Wo Ill. ldll._*'< ._, T, ot.
MroW001 W.UMAN IBllllLI& ••-lglllCy Blltro~-~w-. -...~-... :~-=-==
•SHE&TM!lrAL hr......-pool-__,,.. --·-ldll."1W.N--LAY01JT MDI M'ml wade door to door. ISi I.~ HllhwlJ All Shifts IU -·Dr. N.L llocol•alola Citric BOOKKEEP·ER, Anet' ,_,,....,_,..hi,.
•MIG 6TIG ,__ -wttll N1wport llNCh 642-1170 Mf.274' ----... ,..._ 6 ...,...u. J:xp, --24-lllllDi
\JlEl.DERS m.tkinal MYke O'l11i4 ro'• Apply hi '9rM11 :m ~ Penunellt. JI& ''1• Apptr: W. D ..... m..J&13 • ~~ :::=u.i.-..._. J.c. ,.,,"" ce. Wu len'a HI:.:...-uoo -• ._Aft!I' !" =: eo.. -~ llJ:DICAL~. Ri>ne W1t...~-J'aoldoa lil&nd 1 -~------IRVINE COASr lllt-ml It., a..ra Ana :::-1-.--
l'enoollllOl!leo()pm 'ltl'lllhdlA_,., N~-' CX>UNTllY<LUB -·Incl. oee,
.... toS:IOpm·T--er..., Callt. P1rt or "ttl'i"H.: m liyohla om. .S1111'· Yo111 ·-HOOE. OoutHWJ .. H.8. 11'.lTD.. M-Y-·---· m&rlhl
SARGENT·
FLITCHD
"-lrl·llll! IA~l-IMJN . Noopod.... .. -"".A"'S;o.S;o.B:;M"'=11;;,u::1~· -l==...*'11 ....:i ~ ~--=~
.us .oys OAltDIN ,,...... . Womill' -....... -blfi~f\111 -._. -A.---:
nvr -· °"IY -_,. -*mt ESTATE BALD* llll Harber Blvd. Pull er pert time :::X ~ ~· (OOI' . Jnttrulianal J'lrm StOW ao-lt-«7 Med Qpfy, ....., SABYSll liiR nDted lmmed U ,_. are new to ti» RE JIO-
P1p1rhlntlnt Lo,_.., Callt. 0... Jl Xlot -.r r ' ' -..-__ .,...,. "'°' -«t ... :rrm • *'<J"'71-I 610. - -IUld .,. ~ lo
P•lntlnt MIO TJUl1-0ll2 :nuM-Dll Allrl:t In -., dtlft -. -full Tl----1o -• 711 a-2:IO Ill I -loam u,.....,. "" -1.;...==----.;...,; I ~~ ClllESI ~-°"' u put!-"' --ACOOUN'tl re. 11 Y.I .1. Rell. Own -eau.., --"' .... 0.-0. '* PAINTING 6 Ao eqllll -·-•.-• H1rlotr -.,.·, l'llllloo -W111to4 M -Im ... Jiet. """ .. *P-,-. ..,_ti Pldl-. --Juot .. Ille .......
• DEXX>RATING * -Ylcht Clo D:ao Lm. .. 1:11 ,... n. Steniwtie•l•r _ _....~ .,..........._H•41111 OUTSrDI WOIK ror -1n1...-'
' Jnterkr,.,.erlr>r 11DW.111>A-llcmda)'-J'rldl1 ·~to--.~~~-Ille,..._ --•• ....-:., .,...., Sharl Koppei Llc'd. lnl'd. GUlrll1'"4. 1--------· l-11·12 6 1-T -~--J -~~ ~ ......., --w Gld *'< bolt ....... Qm. -·--.,._ -~ .._ f· I p.m. -AIR~ Xlot ""'"""""' -• ~~:%.-•Engl-,_...._ -••11 L w 'fi'J:-::1111" ::i?s:91r1ap-... :'~..i":.~ R.N.-L.v.N. £11, 11.1 ... ...... -·I w........... CARllR --br!ol --.. M.Ja>Dall>Pllot. ' . Hoopltll -..... -PAlNTING, inW. I: aterlor MMhlne W-..J--I , 11.\'IURE woman 1l'lia • EXPER. W..._ no"' Contact Director oi NUl'llblil,
,, Yn ....... ,,,,.. Mlchlnlsls WOid P1r1a ":.:l; OPl'OllTUNrrYI 111 .. CMot HfthwlJ :::~:.a"i~c:oll llpe-C•l!I'• .... -·-·-· Coot1 -~: ~ Clll llM1U5 Artlflc11I LI"'~ folo. JdD _,. -..-.. Newport ltlch lupot ,,.,,.,,..: MUii bl,. :... w:.::.:: :i n;f Mtrnort1I Hoopff1I
Drill PMH -· -In -l'alld--flrln, Lib to wade (lout -N.8 ', !Ill VlctorlaSt., OolllM-PAINTING. Elt. Int Ext. e IW woorhac-Good. .... No..,.._ 11« '7" wldl JdlUe. ~ lbft Jiii' .... ,., • IG-2734
Hoe Tnll<r. 17,,... exp. llllcll-°"""-W1tnto -*'llorP1r1-.,_. lwli Waltna .i.,,211&1'1pormo.111art1ncBABYllTTJ:R, SonorawANTfD ,.,,, "He
rr.e .... A...... ..u Operllors ..,. -· · Mutuo1 ....... , A.i.tto.., --..., , ....._ """" sm .... ClJI ... ., -dlot..• Yr. old "°"· .._ ,,; ..,. ....., ,.
-Kl-'-U... C no. H...._··• y•----6 111.ochl.~ prox.Stol..._Mcn·-, · u (Night lhlft) ..,....y '"''I' e, 11»1 B. ll08 W--,.,.,.,le .,._ •-21 .., ovw, ~-11 or ITINO Alt. I PM Fri. ~ 2" -... ~ -PAINTING And Papermg. ClJI llUUI for ·-I • •~• N .~ ••.N.lon11~ .....&..rrM. _.... -· •~ ~ ,. -••• -you call me wt both benefit. __.... -w.. •WWII -r-1"••• • ~ ......,_ Uald: lbcrthlild, 11P1n1, BABY I ITT ER A: lt. wk. Trwi.1. ~ r:'f.
Exclmi:t'ebutnotexpens:lve ~hrminworkweek NT.C ftl yii CO lllL AISll1 ta,._. dtlr PGldnl, Mtnhnum.,. I), ~:ll!sllJll', 1 baby, area B-l619
Try me and 1ee. Sil-.!1.57 Proftt lbarin& l•boys & PART 'nm. enw _., UA• tu. , I p.m. Wede fer two top -...w. W~; liw out. Rd req, 1--=w"OMAN="'°"w"ANl'm==-.· I
IINTE!UoR A EXTE!llOR J ( WTER CO Dlsltwas•m --. I or • -. 17111 a ,._ PIVI CROWNS flOO. Olll -· MT..,. Mn. Levitt, °"" To ..,. .,. .,,,,,,_, ' Pain ..... -est. .,~ _.,._ -~ -lllmmlll 6 Clo. IWn'Sl'l'l'm, Live In "' &male --6 ~ Lie. I: Ins. Oluclc 548-53lf • ' • Full time, fNwr 11 Jl;:+.~;:111 Q; Celt1 Mm UITAUIANT 11)1 Dcww Dr., N.B. cut. Wary open. Fer )'QWll ll&ht bouMwodr. U.. -
'71 w. 17th St. Apply .. p......, -.... -1412201 -E. Oout llWJ JfA'ru!llE -... -,..,_ couple • 1 .. a..-. Olll -• C~1 u--1 Bob'• 111 Boy -·" --.~ Col-. dol -u~ to •--fl 11 mo old chlld 51MJ.61 Alter 1 fJNLV -· ~ lM E 17th SI CM ~ -•• -8* tr ... --•-"~ No--"----vt ·~· ' . p.m. ,. ' S4"3421 . ., , . Bob ---~ ~ br durioo ......... lllpld BAllYSITI'ING For -ORDER Talmo, -•
PAINTING Aver. room -.o.=..--,,-=<""O=~ SER.VICE lltl.tiall atNDdlat. _,qwr OlltLI llCMnc-i•il for ~ I days • week rd'1. ~ airll orer 19. DQs ar ..-. compl. $25. & up. Neat AnequalopportunU;v COOKS, LEAD FIY Exper only Some llPPiScmt.XJntwc:cldlcecn-Lldoial:e.OllPDtramp. 1ncL P'm.11.nt won: fftllll
"Paper Buuy'' 847-1659
Mobil star• • home calll
We advile -tell • install
-' 817 ~...,o 911..i.-.er EJrcellmt P8i)' .cl woridnc • . l:wpM:llmtwt Cll' Int 1• *tlcal. M W lTlt It. CJI. .aMi-
work. Locu --= ~· """"'...._ MUI! hi lut, """"""'"1 bee-req. NY COOK °""""""' " ...... 1111 • N--tltr ""' -~. No 8Xp -Painting Exterior/Interior 1--===""='=,-nat Uld pkaant Mnkan 14972 Sp1lietWe H.B. Union ~ af alrmdt board fa)). ~ a.ee d • d wttb own trampcrtatkm· Salu7 $1.15 per hr. Oii! JQ
Fre• Eattma""' POLICEMAN lood..,,......,..helptul. 76 .,_ieoc<d,...,,NlflM& - -,..,,..,.,. Hmo-B••••· • Hunt.Bch.attL817-&m ' 7-1323 · * ~ * 548-8712 * 1619 to $752 mo. lo be Id-AMIGO'S RmrAUJW<r SERV. Sia. llaleonwo, .,.,,.,.. llala!Y open. No --~ I " t PM. S SECl"Y..-.,,L 1<r ~ DENTAL AIWllTANT
, rnT ·ext. Avuqe 1 BR apt, justed. Age. 21 to 31, up to GS E. 11th St., C.M. lenced, CMI' 21 , matlied. callL Apply after 1 p.a. CHIMPLIX. ;:;;...,:' ~·:;;;.; ottlce; buaineu uper. req. ~&me front dull: .U: ~ ~m:.=$'1 4 .io . .!~,~~~ Prototype ::;.~o;ta~a: P:IVI CROWNS l191Jlbda.~M-'lll0 tpeD.Oillllf-nTJutTPM. eMJ..t'*le bavemore~;..arm ,,j, =<:==:o===:===='l...i.t>t In,,,.,,.._ "' AooomblerWlrom1n bOl'66anlllel'>.....,,,C.M. RESTAURANT Equa!SIC~A ~ J'ULLTlmorfrJ~wer*WAITRE'ISandH<lll'l'm '"1,...lndclllol!lce. I
6l90 Six """'"" mlnlmwn .,. EXPEll. --•t· 3101 i:. 0out -· .... T .ltY ITINO ~ •oaallliphoola. Ooo Mr. Stw, ....,_ 6 -= 11tr ,,,, ,, J'P'-'l°"um=bl;;..nt=------=~ :~ r::: per, requind. LI b e r a I Corm.a del Mar E:rp ~t 1tC1"•t1!1 to Pt Glib a Wflllt:mimttt Willon C.M. IC-0732 WANTED E:apethixff miii
I Pl~-~o~~VI:!!k1 ate, v.lid calUornla Drivtr1 = benefits. AJIPJy in =· = ~.+ ~: =multiple~~ .... WUJ oplft. Write 1ul1 TEACHER •11ret ~ wftb nf«mOM. Send •
--·~ u.:.n..,u.s.cu1 .... w"""' P'ft"~·-OoutHwy.,O!M . ......,tn ... ,.. ~ ..-1oP.O.Box20U, hllida>tormelDlllld>lld. plkolloobel<nllept.$"
Guannteed * MS-l40'i' enm &opt. 28, l9Sll At • ~.1.n.L'-o> ....... • hit Auetnblert raJ11Ja Mat alll Pelphieial &Ill. Statka w.tmltr Bl1bo& 6'?$-2339 MN. N. nm. P.O. Boll sa;
Ma:v'• P?umblna ServiCI W--'rstw Qt:v Hall GO!) B&ktt St, a.ta .Jlta ·= Sa · • Cerpenten Data ~ Inc.· 3122 MARRIED WOMEN PBX-Front otrke sfrl. ei11 « Carana d!I Mir, ~ ml _., · """°"" W-Aft .,_ MIN ....... e Pllnt1n ~Attn ~-Dr.:...":!~ 133-:mt; l'\lll or p/llme ..n, ..,. pl1'I -15. -In HO!JBEKEEPER. rd. ·C;;;i e64&-911J'fe he c-. 1J 1W: :..__ Good worbn.. Start wtdr Im-WJtb e of pub Md/ au-, -~ amak:a u ... ~1
-· , ·-or TV ......,. ,_ APOIY In penon An l!lQul1 0pp'l1 Employer ~-per """ or more. Car """"'J nm~· tor --· Ult! 'Plwnbq " hr. MrV. WOl!t IOM511, EX!. Olli. :::':..,., "°":, ::;, ': H. W. Wright C.. ...._ Morino Corp. WIDOWER -M<. No coll-. No OONV. Hoop. -: a11o -dull& Good 111117\
, ,uar. Uc., lnlur.: mnadtl, ftBIE'NUlll No 4IXJllflmc• ttec:ew 11'0 Newpoit 8hd.' Oii m Fllcba, a.ta M9a bakpr U m matun delivery and no eanvllllna. ldtmen btlJ>tl'-tn,yl, etc. Pb.17J..35.21 ,
....... -.. ,..., Al·'ltlll -1.r!M Call I · ii\iOUNO MEN ~ I":° 9' care 2 Call Mn. "°"""' 1111-'70 MUOM Call N •OMEN Pfr "I••·~
Romodol. Rlpllr, -M-IJet.a1lor Mr. lttW 774-7251 wan., 1o -• ,...,, 1 TY Repafrma11 M-.,.., ,,,,,_,,f:· ';""' HOUSEKEEPER • LI"' out. PR£.School ,.....,, ..,,,. Fllllentt. HB. 12 hr ~.
Brinr NDlnt •""*9 ol OOUEGE w...a-.. -tnid-e! .J'ull dml empt Good ~ with -BABYsrrn:R breded -5 d4ys wk far worldnc MeaAra. Write BaxM-ia2, l4'nDI Brown I •0-1112 Ir YOU Mtd ~ 1 ... ..._ ~-__... ,__ ..,.. . u1 l*f'ftlb ol 2 elem 8Cbl llaD¥ PUot, ltlte quaJJf 80-'Jm
r RIPAlllS · ~ p:llltka. fd llnt miiMH«, e.it...., ter.cbtr; l•thlld ; Jt. dlldm. FV ~call ttt • daol
PAINTING ·•• PAR.AM'.ETRIO p/t Artns 1ellool et SERV. lea Attia •/medl .._.._TY -......... Mlllt It.a•• lpm•k~.s..tem NURSE LVN W Hm.am.D are;2_ ~ c;,w. DICK· · , fC.1"1 Ill,,_ IL,°""" -°"""" -•lido In -111rt·• -A""'1 __ ,....,_ own -HMm ---ClJI "1 -· ~ trw. "' 6HO SkEET MITAL 1aauD1. No -.., ions l0-3 111! l'IOcontlo CM ... 1117 1:f:1Bh<I. u OUBEllDlPER, -MAlUUEll Womm -run "' 817....,, .. ,_ M -... 6 .......... 8" , hwi'!I MECHANIC balr. -.. II. ....., A -' • ~ ts 1111-u... 1n. Pri put time. Eun~"-Car BAB'r Needed, -•
_ .--. -........ ., toy. ............... , .... _ IAlTENDEl PLATE• T1A1N1i ,.,,;. -No -. a o -":'u': ....,,~ .. ,,:HOUSEWIFE • •••••
.,.-.. wort a-Ill<!. out In Ill ....... o< Service Stlllon HIP --......,.. * -..mJ * dollwry, • 0
............ 135. --wlbudl to -la °'"'4 ~ • o4 ..,.._ -m"'1111b SALE•u• Sond,_.,,.toP.O.Boxltl. ed. Tnln *'<to,._ 51&-W ' .-. Hn ~ . ~· . ..,.,..N HuntirlstanBelch. padn& pcllltke with,_. SPANISH .,.aklnr bt.tJ)'att. BABYSITTING,4111: LIVEinHoutet.eper, W..telltfP-._. 1 lhf'iltMM MiJIU P.uwa:ntrCI Full time. Good may + BELLY BO.ARO p_.vt ftrln. ter.U...ta,¥tbo1111"«k f{ewpart BeedJ ar•L Newport Bcb. ...... Call 'I-~ N•~ ..caniO. 20 "°' -DI Babr St., Oolll M---· ONLY IP-LAMINATOR ~-·A> CHllMl'LIX 6 ..... r dllltlML ..... trl5-<lll06 Oii l'1M1ll llUr I lllw I PM l!WD fa, 1 ...... H ' ;;:"' :2J ::::l:====·===== amvra: s-.-., ~-me nCll mEVRa< .., El hlJo m•-. mT lllrdl. NB 511-TlllO ..., w 111-3013 "'• PM wAh'Riiii w.w. --· 11oar4. 6 TILi, Ctranole ff74 :'.'°'~ ~ ZltO .... llh<I., C.M. Ave. CM. -Equal -.,....,.. BABYllltlER, °"' bomo, 1 BABYmTiA .-for T ~ 1-Qia1et fH N. -
•V-.IMTllolllla* l!m -JllYd., O>t111 rASl'_I>o._dtolor -rlQUOll CLliK !'""!'·• l ~.......-. yr old ""1. Nr. -NIWpOlt-.• te WA1'l'llDll. a
o.t. -'. Jnot111 A---. M 11111 -I 1 • ra a a oat W rut -· Tap ""'7· fltY COOK :., To 2 4l>s wll .. "'· l2lll 6 llchool, -Idol -MOTEL Ma1cl, --.-_ .\allr 111-. Jtt job too aaD...... WllR ' ........ ,.., WrlteBosMt'no.lb'PDot. DiNi\IDoed _...,u,,F.V.ID.fN& -..mtlft5 lftf., at ,,..U.. Appl:J ~ Qlfllit .. i """"' ._ .~ .... ~~;:·.::.., :'C::--...,c:""-.. • -romc TH:~.;11 8:'1'=:;.-0 .~ LEGAI..,, .. ,.LiiiOI .... "'-•-,c.x. 112 w. ua. 11. c.x. l~-;;;·;tl'l;·~00~/111::'.J-~ at•W. ~...,. _ IHfiiVifrili • l'a'I f1ii11 2 ,.... .-IOI No. If J'uldoa llllbC -Ooola M--"""'"" Muoi .. -O<> Dtnfll Offico -lllr .... In ,~
..,. G. *Ilda. -I -. WoM 0ottoee Q6o -Nnport °""'" N.L aft I PM. ...,,..,., -6 -l/H. ....... Ellp. :IML Piii 'fie. --Upt:u~!!'' bmt M.MBid.. ...... ,__ .... 11 .. ..-'i ea w. ~ ... CM. RiOjiiii&riST m:NO 53l-C1I * ...,, • ....,a.a.an.err
HIU•. llDPI BJ:LPt --••••1111--• w ·1 -"" STOCK 6 _...,. .. o. sERV1cs 1f.lt16N --llOIJ8EWlVD.J:ARN HEALTiif-.._ ..... ~ • ~ ........... -.. Jflll.8-c:.JI. --Clll-M '1Alltol'lnl21112-MLESllAN -Cldor •eo.3l30* -"'---..... -..... --.,_ .... doll; , :"'""°·=-== •-• BOYi !Mwwww lO.., 11 tia.Oolll-. --Tot,._ 6 1oi-.wto-c11.._, H.B.-. 540-113:1 El1ll tnto.Clll510.1111 Clll-.n.-. ..i":''toiiitor wttll -· -~ D!SllWASH!Jt e .,_. ol ... tr .... Opportunlty.XRMkl .... -. ~tlo" Pl.ACS--.. -.. ~ Jn ow -EXPDUENaD ~~ * M-IW'• -• -~ A1to1JN""1"1'i_Y_ -'. Good -I I• "'°"""1 -llrtwr -Adlnll A llopdla, Nun> e., -loolitor-DAILY lor 11111111 Pt w11lol1111-ll·T:IJ.Uf--nfil--.... 01*,T:IOW.811,llalboa Cllllloltll11M111 IUI---....... -. P)LOl'dllllll!od-l!Alo.llbWl8--t•M CS.~Hr.1-11<11
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·YOU'RE NOBQDY~S ·PIGEO
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If you'vt al1c·~•r•CI tlie DAILY PICOT, you'rt .111 worldly wl111 t1 tli11
ltlrd1 en St. Merk'• Square In Venice ; They know where to find ,food for .
the Hcly. And you have found the place to find food for the rrilnd. Thw
DAILY.· PILOT doe1n't 1poon feed you with pap, either. The brightest
lcernel1 of national end local new1 ere mixed with the meatiest edi·
torlal p•9•1 and topped by an exciting mixture of features, funnie1 and
ihoto1 for deuert, Seark up your. reading diet with the best.
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On The Square
Just like the pigeons enjoying • summer lioliday with tli11
•ttr•ctlve tourlri who brought the DAILY PILOT to Venice,
¥ou'll find you're fn good eompany If you take Into your homt
alld on your own vacation "the 1111w1p11per nearly everyon«
ned1 elon9 the Oren9• Coast."
DAILY PILOT
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~~W~1a~1~...,~·~All~ ... ~2l,~l!'61!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~ .IOIS " llMl'LDYMINT MlltCIWIDISI l'OI MlllCHANDISI l'Olt MlllCHANDISI l'Olt I MlltCHANDlll l'Olt MlllCHANDISI POI TllAHSl'OllTAT
It.Ip w-•4LI AND ITIW>I SAi.i AND TllADI SALi AND TltADI IAl.I AND TllADI IAl.I AND ~· 9011 -y-~liror"!~ ~ "-----,-. "":"!~ ..::_ ..... !!"~•• ..!. •• -8000 Plow & 0rtw' ·a11t MIMwl'-REE TO YOU 1-111-,...------1 a..toi-t '°"
1 1SLANDD J6 w / c lle l c • --------1 ~ EXl'llUl2ICm m,... -= = = * AUC1llll * .....,; =-......... ~ ::::'!.,'"':;!!";: IT'S SMArr:HAllTlll ~ CwlolTollor •m-_..,_,of "1..,. * -· 'rl..Ailll--_,7il0, _Jl_.11....._0IW =-llltr. flV. Cal•·-JO·All>al ~ 1,.-.... MMltorr-,..,,,._ lllo8Y -Plw, I"" -1 Uooil ......itw. -lll01.-1ij[ii;;;;-iiii0iii1iiiil;;;;,;;: 31 . -., . N-~ UNITID CALIPOlllftA All_,____ ..._ __ , C--1we -••114uo •h•u .1uu-•=-· k•itb • -* .
• 1 • IANK A l••••a"t ...... ..._"........ e ........ ......_ ndlaS. •s&1 • ••' ant -ail. •/&Jl ..,_ ldlaDDm"1·21"1UllW ·•
• lte1n1 • followa: aor..-111. -qulltod ... -- -... -::.:.!' ,_ ....
• J02t HarW _,._, IOfa willl ...... 1oOM plllcm wllh Mavy oak T•rW., 1211 -lo4I, -c II .... • ·J.--· 1 -a• YAWL : COiia u....... lriln decor aJid m&tcllln& chair, s matdWlc oak • -...,,,., TY'•, -• "':"' -l'l,llO• -lc>r CALll'OllNIA CllUISll ~ .._ occuMnM llillel, (2) H" till ~tor latDJll, 111111' ..._ '"'loot•tan. ••1 ·--wU. -boat. -'°,..,.In N"'port
; 5*20h hanclnc dlaln ~1 1ami:: ::':ft:t Iron, 111 = =:"' -• :J:.:0
_• • • •••:;: u· <XWMBIA ~·· lnilo Ml"""Y S4Mltl
; .u ...:.::-~~~n= at;Jt'.'°;1111 :!i, In~ Celor TY WllllY'S AUOIOll == n ":~'::! =~~ -• ~~ ~~
:· 1--------Jr. WllTllllJ tint mo mattreu •bell iplinp. $9 PER MO. -u N--•: .. -.. • -HOUllLY llDft'AU ~t • m.uoo
: Spllllah d-dlnlnf Ml, etc. -··~ -~·...,. -. n * IUooclnll'• * MoWlo -'2llCI
: HOsms -- - -.,,... ...,.., -""""i. ~ "':::, ~t'lt ClOO().PO(), ,,_ -""'""" -•"'·a.-=-~~IPICl-·-·--·-·---------... '691.00 (Ill):~-a>l>I DAILY I .. ' ~ "!'!'!--~ !.!:t l'owor c..-,. 9020
. $ SAYE $ l Ap_21, __
pnlonwd, .... 12 • -"""' -. -.... ; <J<DYKE
Mo -c-.... I "' WA•n•r •• 1 i>iilCiU:TOlt --. - --•-.... 11o•1---.. C.llfon,I• .. I-II 1 u.q .,. • 111 -11 _,, .. ,,_ OllJ2IS CAii CllUISEI\ lit L1,_ Dey 'Cl HONDO~ llrud -·
~ flVI CROWNS
lllST AUllANT
38lll E. Oout 1lw>
Conna 411. lier
..-.. Cn41t .......... 1-.toly I .AK .. I PK T l>Qo cleolol ...... lod -KA~ ~. ilc lied Xlnt -. LooOlldl 11<1 On •• •..,.ook'!'!"_~lo ~-oolJ '10 ml. ,_ m ~ -• ·~--0 • -__ .... :loo &rt ...... ----,,.., __ -..... ----...-tot .... -.... '
1,......., __ ._...,.. ____ 12_1_1 .. ..a..t ..., .,;,. ., wttMut ...a o'-llfr •a. bomea. ,. , / add K"Ct9Diet. .m '!
l'l'EllJ:O UIS -..... ... ... -.. ,_ --I ••. I/JO !f!d Sid --Bl&USH JOHii .... '"' $3(11, """"' ., _ -1
.....i. """1tl wta Ai11n1 po4, 1 ----""'· -· -...,. 111 WI~-..,, woclc wbo w"' .,_. '
Ftll'lllt•re
1144 Newpwt -lo¥1r4, Coote -(oftly) ndlo, ' opcl -· 1'h -2 JC-: 11 eo yr, .......... _., sd. CUll'OAMT""•·-~ ~~ MOllLI HOMES ed. M•> bo .,.. ot -l • ...._.... flf«lmlll~tir ftl'r tt re•tP•rtone wta •ti a ~e• lltreh u.u .. u .. ~er-A Gormm Dr. Onn• dll ~ PAllTTIMi '-Ynltht'lllt-w-.lol.lluft.'1116 ·111.JO-O.a..lllJ>ott. -...,... \aoy •ltf81 I/JO WNJ'annula21S.,,..2J' lll<N.n'!".':..:;'···•·· Mu.<ComeoSllM<ol ,
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lllST•u••-WOllK a-..._ -i..r -· •· 111-v.-...... * '61 y•u•u• * , • ~ ~' ·-lmt 111,' -· ~ lllO\ITNG l'IMaf -•"" II' 11u ...._ .. -11· 19\i x '5 ft. Doablo Wldo "'"""" t : c......1,,,,_ -lo -1 ••••••••••••••••• S ..... nt ._ l500 ...,_1. • I 1-two-. I -olll w ndDa -l.U'· RoadJmtt °" ._, ., """11 100 lwln, wffk""" -o
::.... cm11 • ..=,.:: ~ Sp..W. &: M•dlten=••• = ;;:;:;;; .,,,,, -• .. ......... -•• . •. -IKI llOAT lllllLT. ll'• puir. -to ..... ... Ht.. ,::LANI>t. ~ ~ AdatDI .4w. at llnxMmntt IOuthf Mlnuf•cturer'a ,.............. 1a...,1. Few 11111 fED fAlllCS ~':,.oW .-. 0.:: ::..C "'.:. ~ :-::::m~~u= Pb. .. 53'1·Tm ~
,. H.B. At Tm1flc Snlnpl McGrw1or ---· Goo4 ltt .•• ,..._ i.,. «Ill bp --· ...,..., .. tlo -Gude G ...... -. ~· •• • ~ 8' Wood carved arm divan, Ji. man'1 dlalr; W... ,. ,Dtt SALi wUob q ud louo A.,. -~ a1 e . •WlllDp , -· n • w 'M MONIU4 s corp la a.
:; M~let .. rk TYDlst . beaut fabrlca. 5 Pc hall<>• dark oak din. -....,... 6 ..,. -IJ0.1ll5 II» All ce 1111 ...,.. tocJ. II• cupe1, lined -. Serial ,._,,. 1cr -• -... " ., -· ""*"-" nt. w/black or avocado framed chlln; I ror Sale. Katched, -w. °"" 1 LIL lo 2 5 anw 111_,. -. c -._ •" No. UllJ. NI""' llSOO. l&IO. ~'
:: 'l)pe -.. Pc :BR sel 1-dr Mr. "Mn.-. I( mirror, D8 suu Shafi. 1-....... -· .:-. .. _ -lo ittt.r \ox. n5 -..--· ""' Clll Dull Wldo S&IH .. • -• :: Applyin~·P·m 2 commodes, decor&U\'t headboard m Span-than 1 year old. NOL J\EVD.Llkune Tutti• .Av• N B JN• $12,IXIO. Owner 81,)'1 Oaapnwii Mobile Inc. 'tllBSA.MukD.u.et~
•, PAIWfETIUC8 bh oak cir l'fOCado deolp. 1, 2. S llJld 4. 115 eadl -.. -'"':::" u:'.; liS-2911. " i,,; ..., ..,,. ,..., • tt'• """" m-asn. Extra -·· CID: ,;
t 121
Bak"' st, c-. -Shop l:::sSo~f~;:~ysee US! GiH ":.~. 1 :i =~=t--HTS_, LIViiTOCK ::'.i=-===· ~~ ~~ ·-=---:::-~
:: LV « RN _.._. • 2 VALUE .... -,ULL PlllCl $4~.ts ..,.... --' --:!._ I=' I nl --. · al oltlce, OnlW> Oout .. "'1mll a --~ ~ -SJl:JO PM, 2 llMllo or -M low M $UO wok -~ -. I& 12. NMilo ..--lllOV V.iCA'nCllf _,, 1rlll<r Lodp, HM Wldlt1'r 518-155 -r :: ll-!;:30AM,an., ... _ Nol>own-UMOUrstoreCblrt•Plu -210 . VICE--·--atoia.a1r-11ao1 -C.M. '
:: _,, 1'11 tlml oB I -No l'lllCY Front-BUT Quollly VW. -SiliiJilOAlQ) rr l-I ~-"""" ..... , ------• Vlr-'* '1.D 10 x •I 811.1.lb -· -Trvcb fllll ' ~ ~~'!1~=:~:e: APPllOVID~llN. 215'HAltl011.CM __ ._.,_loll -tc>r .. 11
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...... Cllll "°"'"-·-·., ...._ .. _.-....... , ~ MS-TNS u Years wne locatlon-aml OWDeJI Moct.dm'1111ID11-Zllll Ill ~ .. n.. ' In. ~ -rdo -an Set \1p • aicrt Malt Pk. '64 DATSUN '-:
;•EXPERIENCED A·-~-Dolly f.f, 10..S ........, e 541---. IJ0.1914 -• ••a •r • Ciiio ll20 -lot at bv....... COiia ,._, $3IOO. 5IMlll ~ .., i
' ·-·· ••••••••••••••• • ·-tn --.... -.... -plcbp, dlr, ......... ~"""""' -ud -• . •• rr i..-....-., I Pila --·'!'IP -llLllEl'OlllT °"""'' --t MOTOllHOMU '21S --'"""17 .. ' ~: PBX. Contact Mn. Bel I M!X>rt'DtRAHl;.AN ltJ'l• 1-ana model. $1). coudt. ... eoM I& 1.1.-, HlllAL\~Alf kt tten•, 011i1 tmt -s "1' caw. io.r ,.mt, wttb b111c1i • '
:: IC-fi6ll. Wlllcll Ford W.. -.., I' 6 ma ..... I' ..,. lal'llfi Sale I022 e 14+-U e 1U Clll SZ.. S l)Mpie.. Gennu. • Amllt1cu • EIW-cooler -J pl mow lite Jue -ltrlped. Ueed fer l'la· ; '
:: 11255 Beach BITd., 8-Jllrril .. Ollif. I IDOS eld. a.aA CUlf le ' nl • A fl. -IWa tiloocWIDt-..... ~ I MrDlr el1Dp nw. _ Gab' II& c.lt, dill GI' tn*, ~
;: tlngtm ... ch. Xlra--·-TV,-tot,blb,.,_, _.,._ -v .. -4 ... ,c». •-·---•--•-.,.._,._..__; ~ NCR Prool operator APPb In ll'lde ..... Wlrtc .,,,.,,,. w. doitb9, *· s 1 T.. . IOJ"A Bed $25. Xlat ealld Jim -ldttam I ..... *· tic ball -an for 13215.00 11, arm or ......,. ·:
•: ......,. Securlty Btnk 116 E. by~ Olot lllt, lllronucla OIHa V-l CM SWIMMING l'OOL lbldlo -$11. ..... -· llD. 100 "-.... O. A, c.
C' 1'1tll .st CM. .Equl1 op. -~ ltallt, MA.XE OF· BOOKS, G--, houewutl. u n Pool, l'Uter, llll'f:liee Pool vaamm, .., i... siO . * •• tt 1154141 (prtvate put;)!)
,: portunlty empio,.r 1'D<. 56-0l22 AD doy'l'bart; 1'11..., -m«, -U. '51 E. 2lll It, N.8. -1 . SACIUl'ICE SALE ~ BABYsnTER, "" ...... r •n $ $ I . Wlll'tnllllt OlM J'lllZ --N. EX..,,.. jo9q 11 ll lo I Def! HU 1115 a It Gluo lld -t ~ g,«S AM • 5,a PK. Lite .Hl $14'.ll -,_.. -· lRL9K -I' JllO tld lll\lt -1 llib llDWi,
Ha'p. Call VI...._ 1-12 WAUHOUSE SALi ,.,.. .. _ llllCI SICARD POOL .n iy. 6 -$1. si, !MM) NIP-. All -Wld• -•·--a~ PM 1111. Mila, Oroqo m.zm Lupr -av -1!25. _ ... ltlO HP .._ ... H.FAC. Mnlll Co. Ntw 1: Repg111 1111 --KIRBY .... A .... Tall ~*I rope, two pair1 ·1~J!!obs~::::M'.!!10!!n!:,~W!-.!!!!::_7~500!!!! Ill W. Ulll, Cotta M-...,,.,....... . 'f"""'9..._c. oldt, .... tub, IUil -· t i IPAHllH. CUft4 same 1t.epc•1s114 and new INt snam Ormde; n.ctt ~ ,..,. •••r MALE. 1't4t""4 German. o.tinllllal ~ wheel
tablemdfehalnPaid.$100. lltahtb'ICl'ltchdeordtnhd Prov. •t7le, Pacbrd .... Jiit mt ·•., .. ' 1'rrd.J119S.1'1'11a.dit na.r. EL eond. MUST!::===::;::::;:=""==:;:
COOL• 1.lb ..... Jlab-.Wblta Admlnl1d>_ .. ,_ MlwillGmvd-. -·Olodll-D .... -lilloillllm ..... 11'11 m.L-Ml-• Da>O
• W•lfr-••s Oll>ermllcoll.---IOI II ....... -I' r ', p(o WI, -a SAVEii AKC--"-F-1 .. -w/IWll lll:S'AMIHlllll<D'SJllvj . 111 ...,. NEAR..., - -.-i -.. -*' .... ..._fold ••CORD.-1-kltld.uftrA-11.\X-. 1Jpbo1 oldtml 8'1H,eJ>utJ,e .~ .... ! e U -llod a -IJO. "' ..n ......... "". All Coot -Sell tc>r $115. BUYYOURrntEllOOD Oill!llWll2 51lM12'Nl&iiu J:.:;=.=::;=---'..;,;.-J
dllbo, I """-nwiclDs avllllllil. -U.C. --· I&* -trlr 1nc1. iieo --:mt-· c.M. I 5al007 ' • Hostesses ":.ii"'!'/;_-.. .:; am,,. -"""..,..,..... ..... • -.... u -w-1110 llllN. ----H' ~YU. • ""' -93001..::.::::;;f;;:;::;:;:;;;,;;===11 ~ ..,~ --tc>r $400. -1\Jmilln .. lllT . • w IJI J E D AI<C "'· J:on aowed. .II Sl2IO: .,.. $1T25 :'vi...; Molor~c~ , • ' ---. • ' -, . -.·'JU'!..?"!:~ Mutt lio ovor 21 ~ 2530 W 1'1111 s.n .. Am l'Ut .-.-it ID '"" "'""" . • . • . ••~ • -NB. Ml-11'9 -'.lJlnl o..-_
Appb'll\pman S PCZ Mtt'l ·---·2 upio1 s.u..ooG H&tbol'mftn:f~tn WE .... ~<• ,_.WJiiiAMNER Puppleau•JllBD.al:t.boatw/tran. ' ·, ~orM1-3112. :!
{ --s a I pm. li""I' -!05-... llnd. e VACUUMS e swmo Mcl'addtn, ll -l • ..._ colcr AKI:. WID bo I wb t/5. I w a...,,. -· -11250· )I • .'i4..: IUll'-fS25 ,:: l Mond ... lhroulhFrldt> -... -1:15. ........ llO ... -• -AP MEET TY'•, ......... u..--.•mai..llUllT llJ.3'lll ~ ... • , AllEY wm -. _b, .. Oout v"""""' . """'·--WllU: --,.... nlftURO·s ... Ml:n:Ra a1-. harlllop. 1·~ i rr.ll.IAN Ptooluclol -SSS E 1Tlh, CM, . ..,._ -A111 lT -CUii IN JO lltnu... AKC -· --Morine !f!lp. fOH UUI . llid• .............. -l ~ 2106W.Dcoon ''°"' IOI: S -bab7 EL!JCl'RIC IWIGE dblo 531.1212allT 5Sl·l212 * -Tl:IUU. -CllllYllLl:lt ·v .. -. 5· 3'7.-77 --$1.llO. ... •,: ; Newporl looch w.-. 1112 v ... D'1 Sol ' a.os!NG OUT SALi!: 11'~ To ...,. -m IUO -6 ............... 11 WANTED ..... tc>r i.-~ Dr., JIB ftilkiaitt, ~N4,_y '9). hrnltare, ........,., tld....,. patio cover AT LEAST Ix ..._ ~. CID m-1DO Pu nee wltb . ':a.. :
~NEW Motel now tnter"'ilwkta MOO. OU: 5 dr c:bnt ~ dlr 7 PM, IQ..llll W..-. ,,.... wbtU. J6c. 12. MUlt bt in IOOd. can-BLUE E)'ld AB:1ino Gt11Hn1. 1-5:30 * IG-0350 * ~
:• m&idl; delk da1i: 6: mMl Aait1qu9cl .U.. ommi 5 dr. HO TPO I NT Coppd1IQDe turn, and a iot al tbk ud ditlcm and. rea Ion a o le . I )Tl, 15.2 hlndl. Great for 4 Hp 9lllC1&l1 wt.di DIW KYllUI Mm fO bp. llq ;: i cln, ................... ~-131.00 XIDt """'· a-.$!0-.er-lc>r ........... lt.-P'Gll.!°m!PtODD -_ ... ulltlll..am.Llllll •wdllar>----SIJIS. .
•' ~.men llftfernd. Mea ... ..._ $50. Ml..am .. .D. VERTICAL .......... ,,-l~r-T~Ai.;;;;iiJ==~*~·~··~ ... ~I'~=~ n.,ys m-.• . ; fw Laundry I: cromm HO\JSD'UL el Fmniture A IHCI', 2211 Newpart Bhtd., nfrts. lw -Alie llttll' li.Aftoz , Af11b .W f ma1nt. Writ•,.,..,....,_. --. T va ,...a H=:,.C•:.:•= !;!"_;.~ lO:JO., 5 PK. --.. -. ..,-. -. ..,.-"'Getlo ::....; INtSllp-nt NU ,. . lmporl.,. Autoo HllO .•
: number tn P.O. ;eo.: 2129, mower. Mast leD! 5ll-OO'JI ' ............_ MMJa. ZV.. dispolltiaa.. n. iat little 5'N•• with 'tt.. H-~hytc:•---::: "
: 1-• Hllb, .,. call n<: ott, .,;o . .....m CM CllLClt TV, Padl...i 11t11, ---53&-'1'131 P"'1t • •oot a ............. .,n.. "1""' or.1 i... '66 DATSUN
' l3l)..2$GO Mn Harden 1961 MODEL ~ walnut ~ remote -Machlnerv etc. '100 nual rental, w 1) I ac. '"H'era., liib;.• 5 • r ii • 11 '
• ' . OMH .. cub fllr f\lrn., eppl., Gatten • Sattler ... o:md. -On.tnu ·~ A' UltGE ' yr Awr wMJ commodate Up to S$' boat ........... 1-"'tlft9 Y•-h• 1IOO $port9I ~ .... ).: : * ACCORDIAN * TY't, .-. ~· -•oo •-"• < ·-> 1x12 OludMr a Prk< ....,. p<my. -· ""' lf3.,1(E3 o..i... . o ..... •-· _,... ', l~ """'1 orpnl playtr lc>r -~-. -•-~ er one .... ~-':"::1 !~i-~ Hand ........ --.&..ti.... .....u. Hmxtu:ru or an I e, -·
"-"" UNY WIKoo ...... ""'"' .. -. ...,.,...., -·-r'""""• Pnu. dllpolltkln. nae tor ...... H:Dll .sp.ca netded fw 11' 2 MO. ol4 175 a: K&1'&Nli •
; trio. Do ~er": ttem.-.1519 Antlqut1 1110 new, n to $5., au. 1 .. I. ~ eondUian s:ns. cb0dr&'25Q.519-ml Bulh1'M!IM Perttct -black mtertar. N.., -· ~
-~ :-....... ~ ROUND,_ ti, ...,,_ .. 10. M.,. Vmle. 5'Mlll · ISMCll. -"""" T™POltT'TION boJ l>ool. -.,,. Jlo7, Bo! 55-n!I 1'15. Cub ...... or -: male •.... ..-dlir Pks' Tl§lEE 1>.U au.. :xmu """'"' ~ Ill. .8Qlide: Dr. a r •a• ,.... low ,,_.., -..ni '~
m.,·.,.2llll ::"'...""°S:.-...-· opedal.: °""''Ill I PM. C::oo~ ... -~ 1~-==" -IYechlo 9000 -=.i::.tlll:. ·-i : OP1N1NGS tw )'OUllC, deu w.wwr dlnln& tal:lk, Ills TtffUQ' llouM, 2131Ntwp:11t ni.b:m. kill& b7 2' ~ MT.KSSZ..._. BOAT illp • av atl,. e M-:m9 e · e Spot Cub tar illiilSti ] ~ h~~ ~i cbain. S leaves + CU1tom Blvd., C.M. · wide, allL Tallie model TV KADIAL AlW IAW 1JJ5. SCRAM-LETS 11t1cti· .,1o'36,N~rt ••HONDA n Super Hawk. W~ot*',=:-: 3
t folJDWi%11'. ~Hunt er• pada#75.IG-ca S.Wlnt MlcMw 1120 =·~.:"° ....... ~cmtsm. u•·-··· ANSWERS ~A ~ ~ '11 bcrl.l Xnlt cond. 5,000 ml, fut. • mrwfttlosL TrJ ........ :
N.B. Mf.-148' llM Mon.·l'ri. M~=--~:19 196'1' stnpr, eomplete Tilth TYPSWArl'D.·-I .. Mio 1111 to 1/15 • .AmPe JU'k· fm. M&-02.46 J'OU .n. l:LMOas ~
• MEN Or WOMEN ,.,. .... llTW2lt walmll _., ~... ... !lie -· .. FREE TO YOU ----........ -· tfl $OIT3. 116'1 SUSUKI, %lO a:. • -• llal'Olla, llllOD--: i d e t a I I Mop. Experience don forced .acrltlct. Auto, d•uahter Ultd Jn htr ~ N1 lldlst ~ Ui!B ewllent condttim '415. 611 Walbllbts. tH.ftl' : i helpful bu.t not ntet•?"J' IOI I ...... e.uab-0-madc, but· )'Ml' ti 1J'Jlal, A..i nli» TDUUEK miud Ind pup-r;:n-..,. ~;" tn.lke J'Ol.ll' leat·Ytcht Kinp Pl., Ntwp:wt HelsbU 'IT AU'A D1Mtt1o, T ._ tllif : ~colllJG.4615 Offleol~ul..,..... ... -..--.. ..,. --AUOl0""1'"" p1nc ..... tld.J""dar<--.,.'-•-" Che...,. fOJtlllT TR1IJMPll eo""" nd, blllck -· •: f ADULT Couple, wiltant MULTJLml No. '150:. Xlat cuts without attldnmta. c111W mac:blnt. f0..51'3 kw! MtM111 112' to l:dce NEW <IQ:a. BLUEWATER. QW\TER8 nnlll• 2,0» ml, Best otrer ICftllcbel or Didi:. PWllCt. ~ ~ mmqen; all'etodomdnt. fer amc. ~ ~ o.t AIN'M $!.IT ... « PT• SLOT Car track Atlu IO ft I Kll'l'J:N& -7 ..... Gld...,_ 8alw9 ~ 21'.tO' U·Dl'tvti Dip •. Av.0 tUH.115.an.vn:m.-Jtn $3liCDftrm...,..... J
i I: cleank8. 2 BR. 2 bL ApL SUI», .US*. cull. Call IX.ebll h:hdiM poftl' packs, cm-Jl •a I Orte _ I r I 1k 1 t <>nm SI C.bin ~ DQ'/Wlt. ......., 24 ln. SOCK rr 'n) 'DI! awtGE m ~
• I« Hnlc:n. '*-12Sl WANTED: 1'o« *"-m. I •• -• can, 1911 -MMITl I/It y-. 'l'wtll 111 11.P VI ~If ! ~R>lo,LV,AIDS,-. ........ ---Muolcallnot. 1 .. -wlll_ntra_ REALOl•-qtw, -I, ',;,lld Au19T..i.1 ... ul!f410AutoTooltlEqvlp9410AutoT..i.ll.,i,~ .:
' mnval9cent boQ. aper. • ..ml • n..umtro Gdv. A ew ....,.._ Well wcrth '15• Ml-Im ""~ daMllrle planldnc bol. ,
: snf'.5n..f1'1 I022 CcrdoYa from~ --l'.'IO ._ • ..._Al.tllt...S. :
. !!._roee Salo -. --. POD· .. 11..'-m -· 1cr ADOlWILE. Ilk. • ...,. ..._ -w llOlr • ~ : ......... M. W. 7SSO **GARAGE uu: ** -..,., 111; eo.1rar1 ICI: <-> --sd =-CID -...... ~
ARGUS Mlldl ... tolllo --EL!lCl'lUC .......... cord -""""' -• --· -1•• 1/11 JAMES LTD. .. . W"1< Noor -... lllap; 2 -1Aor $11; -l'l5. Bolll A-1 I'll·_, IS' l'IBJ:ll -• 11P ~
1o--........ , ....., -·-SACllll'ICE!Brwl--I Ktltffill 5\i ..... bm 1t n<'•l,Ul!Lllll·ln c-C• r ...... , e : P'.C. Blqlpl' ••• ·····•• -°'*' klteMn .,.,..,....; tllllr wlboolir. le* Pro 'tta.lntd. Gr • .,.., lftlf,.., tDt. llttlts. elect. etarter, .,.... •• 511 -·--i'
a...1 om.. .......... $lllO --<• 10 ... cC ,.._ & ClrpN llJO ....,-, -4 1 x. !a -. .,,._ I/JO NI ..... , trlr, CG. -~ C:• p_Le j ~Wal-........ .,_. hr l\i); ..... , ----YOUNG CAN!'S, ........... _, --· -..U. lnlp011ew -' • wartbouRmu •• to $2.15 1r r.... r .. 1a1 .--.... ,j_ __ -••• -L.J ..-"' I~ c •r aml• o; -· .MllWI UPllOiiiilliiiG • 1'11.10. 2 -· ~·~ -· ' --alll... H•o ft --I ~ ; AllGUS EMl'LOYMINT _,,.,, • .-ml ....., _ lEm '" .,.-PM. I/It &UOUIT IPllCIALI Haul •-•
: OONSULTANTAGll:NCY __ .,,__.,.,Fall --ct llaldw!n ~ .:;:"'11e1, pckQp 2t11 CllT!: I -old ----·--0..,0C1-'(1eoly-,iot. ~
: 200 W.tdltf. N.B. ..,,. dl1 or ....... _. llllll Bcllh.• Pt&aol • Orran. on h Main HI ''BtmJ"'..... C&Ueo imothtt. Aftanoom. • tbe •AW fnnt. .. _....... --.a. ,.__ ~ •... --.aa rin& ~. Hun -v. Our l1oGr I: dllCCll ' , . I0-1S23 EYe1. ~T'Jll M£WJIOJtt DJlY J>OaCS r-•--"'"•lfY --l :,i:J.&:U==E=, l='llll=lll=··=-==n=·= I --._ -'Cll .... nu -· ==~~~-~=· -.,. MINING SPICIAL mod.It awot "' Prltn .. -~ PUPl'ID, 1' Delly. 1111 a <tie..,• IDlk :1
: SdMoi.tnotructioft 7toll $35 l'lllMANINT llluWI Dootll't • -... Liit -llL .. -Dr. No. .. -• ta.111111 • ACCESSORIES l
: SOIOOL CIDdra'• .-.tkm ~ PIK'! ::;"to*" • beb'I J'Cl'I .-:::: ::"...: ':.. ..._ ._. Ill! _... ~ • lo ftM tblt thlY are fttttd u standard ~ten mu7 ~ thl
! nta QdkMt 1D ·~ • WAJU)'IMLDWIKmJJ>lO so\t. Dis :1• 11tr1m. ' •KltlihiJJ ....... t..: .... _,, lllGO, .. ltMl ::•~ 1P111a .,._a.tom -6t ....... to:ir1q.,,,..,
; Typins lcllocl. 1• • 1TI $17.IO lllll "-'-CM., -...... $11 •• -· ,,_ I -· V~ --nit • - -6 -~ -umt -floor ---• 0'1 M&r, c.x. ·~ u•TIONS ...,,. 11111. ---119 ._ ....... S' on old - - --wwwotocn. llltft 1Dio1i1. -.==~:::;;:.-,-....,;-::,.-,.~I -·--~ Co'1 ........ l.ovtNG -1cr • ._ .. a.It --· --,. ....,. -...i .. ...,_, , LHm Te le A"""" CO.,~lllS 0..111o,Muo1cJt.9 IN VALUX ...,,...._, 111 ,. ,.._,_._ -·-
: e -e -....,._ -a ........ ~.... .. ... , ---l:IOP.1412telt'1PAHDl\--
Mlllcu•uDdl l'Oll DW.O..Hwy. N.B. J'1scb9', Kanebtpiaa.01, CIOliW 111 ..... -.1111 _ --_....,..Cllftl'
nftn , WAllllNG IMrth 7 ,... -· -I TIADI llJP1ER. -----iii Ola, 1-1 """-:di 1>tl .. A ' -All .. -· $l'llO. : SALi AND llOUSDIOlDllALEI ~IWINlllG'I -,aocd"""1,Sll a.ta-n, •••
• 'umllv,. IOOO --6 cMlr • * lllUllC aT'l ll3Wl2J iiiO -niiMll w/ ~ -lc>r Jl<IMlt; n swtH. n:w. • ffD94i ,. .. .._. aor•smcra.z •ltc ... ....,•=-wa11.a,ew11ere.
N ... -.-.... ----Iii --....:: a.ta-* -QoodCor-"' -~-· ... -I , ....... -hw. ama•MD-·-· owv"""!'!;_ ·-111 i>l-* -* -T'A" SONDAY all ~· • ..... _, • ., w•• IJ"ILUJ:-·""·· .... ,,.--~--.. -iilicu:liiiii•Twi .... -·-1 ... _ llCUG .. Tt ........ tlill a l1Ta -•-1111111',llli ~·., ,. •fl.JO,./W."911
___ l .... a..tlalt·oB-• ·--.... -.. 1.... ----.,. _ ..... ----.... ,._.,.., ___ .. _.,.. iiiEfiJMb...,,,,LO'f-.a--·•w " . ~ll'C.TwtllW-" ~ .::~ . ....:..~ ---~-"°' --.111 ,..,; P'u••• lflO _. ____ II--. """""-·•··~ ---••-~..! ......... .,..,"' • (ll)ii1iilP& .. sc:1a ........ :::::=:·., ..:;; -i&liiii iAif --_ _....,,... •• ..... .,. .-z.-;: .. :::.~;-;;1r.r;;•=. ~-.--.-tDIS°'OCCDll ==-. ..... · •111U.•11• liiiT-tii;;nl ,_. --•~,.., ... ~-•-~u1• ·-,.-.--, .. DID -.. -I/ID o-~-!~.!Sl!B!!l!~n~!:l~·~-!!~~1.------------------------
GUARANTEE
at JAMIS LTD.
.....,., .... .,1watcc-t_.. ..... zsctmll lwwfs••
JAMU LTD.
1114 Ncapill ..... t:1t1,t II Ml Mtt
• ••
• •
• •
·~ ' • • • " "" '!,!·~ llT--.~ --.
-··----~ __ ... 1 --
---------------a-·--------~--
l
--~ -.....-...-----.. -----------~------~------~--... -..... -........ ._........ •• .. ---~~ ......, __ .""'_ ·---..... -·-a. ... -~-~-..... ,. ' . -... _..._ . " . ...._ -,. -....
38 DAll.V PILOT Wl<IMl<f'1, Au .... 28, 1968
•
47 TRUCK
LOADS OF
BRAND NEW 1968's
DIRECT FIOM THE FACTORY
AND
THE FACTORY SAYS
SELL THEM!
WE HAVE OVER $1,000,000 WORTH
OF NEW '68'1 HERE NOW! AND THEY
WILL BE SOLD REGARDLESS OF
PROFIT!
USED CAR SUPERMARKET
'61 YOLKSWA~IN PIC:K UP $595 PNZ 247. 21% Dewa er
Tntde, $26 per IM. 24 ...
'6' MERC:. WAGON. $2395 10 P-. fooctory Air. YI, Allte. Trt1-., P.S.
SJF llt. 20% Down°',,_., $66 ,...~.,.~· ''='="'°=·=~~-• TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS e
N-A.,.,..1 .. 11 c ... ,., Wffk • How C:.11 .. lmilletl At w ... Je.
.... To The hbllc. Int lite DMlen 01 n.. 014er C:...
SAVE!!
'6' 100 XL CONY.
hnl VI. A11t.. Trau.. P.S .. llH. SZF 770,
JQ'1. Do-or Tr ... 554 ,., l'IO· JO-·
'M FOU CUSTOM 4 DI.
YI, Atte. TnML NOY 704.
20% Do-°' T,.._, $25 per M . 24 -·
•it COUNTRY SIDAN WAGON
YI, Am. Trans., R•H. F1dl ,_..,, '7916.
20% Dow. °' Tftlllle. $46 pet' '"· JO -·
'61 FORD LTD. H.T.
A..._,,_.,_ llH, hll Pe...,. IPOY 241),
10% D•-°' T..-. S4t ,_..-·JO ...
'M lAMIUR WAGON
UO Serles. hll., eci•I"'"'. IVJI 9741 .
20% Doft er Troff. SJf ,., Me. 24 -·
$1495
$495
$1295'
$1395
$895
... ,..... $1595 H.T .. Air C. .. ., hll P-, Wtitdews • S....tq,
fMPY fJJJ. 20% Dew11., Trffe. $57 per-· JO ....
'6S POlD PICK UP $995 NOO Vt T" Le .. W Fl....U.. (PJ5161 J,
20,_, Den .., T ..... $JS ,_ ••· JO '"·
"
' 4 DAYS ONLY
WED. -THURS. -FRI. -SAT.
AUGUST 28 • 29 • 30 • 31
TRUCKS
•
• Just as they came off the trucks! Take your
pick • • • We wUl have It ready for dellv·
ery in two hours or less!
If you've flloutltt you coul•'t effonl • 11ew cm*' year,
cllodctlle
Easy Flnancln1
We're Offerl119
DURIN$ THIS 4·DAY
SELL-OFF
IASllST TIRMS OP 1Hll
L1IN4 W.w _.. ... ef ... ftMIMe ~ "ft .... .,.,....I
Uoltocl Coll'°"'le -. ... k of Alllorlco, Socwrlty l'll'lt
--· Nowport Natloool, C°'"'"orckil Natl-.
81/z ACRES OF THE MQST MODERN
" FORD SAW AND SERVICE
FACILmES ON THE WEST COAST
SERVING SINCE 1921
THEODORE
ROBINS
FQ·RD 2060 HARB-OR BOULEVARD
COSTA MESA 64i.CJ0.10
---~------
HEADQUARTERS .
ELMORE
'65 vw, Runs good. new
..... im. 642-<510 mp
"'"""· 15.100 Bead,, Blvd., Wll:mnltr '61 VW Van. R/H, tuned
Phone 89«-3322 Exbet.. Good cond. Can help """· .,,__ IS67\; Toyota Crown, """"' =:..,,:c~;:;_ __ _
Jedan. Air cmd., etc. '61 VW. Clean. A·l Cond.
Otter! 968-4364 RAH. Pvt party. Below
-· $695. 67$-1827 ' TRIUMPH rlNW DeLux Sedan R/H ------~-1 SeMand w/bilc interior Ex:· '61 TRIUMPH oen.nt coad 11400 m-1609
TR 3, dlr, o.a.c., t speed. '6' VW Sharp!
Wire w~. OcNn blue CASH needed--lst reu. otter.
paint. ·-· CQllditlon. .:c"*-=-=-=----""--• CUb:'5e!s or trade. Take '60 VW, new enlfne, mun red,
Pl)'ments, $34.86 mo. After $550. 642--6530 call bef 10 am
11, f94..9Tl3 or 545-0634 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS
BRING RESULTS!
9100 New C1rs 9IOO
CLOSE OUT
PRICES
ON
'68 BUICKS
'68 OPELS
DAILY RENTALS & LEASING
POOLE BUICK
lforf!lerly St•11•l111ry 1111(.k)
SERVING HARBOR AREA
234 E. 17th STREET,
COSTA MESA
OPEN Mondoy thru Frfdoy 'HI 9 p.m.
OPEN 'tll 6 p.m. Soturdoy -CIOHd Sundoy
A11thorlrff l11lck1 Opel I Jo111•r D••l•r
S•r.1119 tll• H1rkr Ar•• 141°7761
W.,,, Buy * U.S. NO. 1 • "SPACE" VEHICLE·:'
Your Volkswapn ar Ponche '66 CHEVELLE V-8 "Malibi(•
6 pay top dollan. Pald for STATlaf WAGON w I~
or not Call Ralph "AIR COND." P/G, pwf:
673·1190 ....,.., R/ll, Olrome 1"' ==-=,....,.....,;;...;..;:....,.~.! tap luaage rack. etc. ~ WILL Trade 20' Jnbrd with WUna:: Siem. P,d w/~
completely reblt ena: & ether inter. "For that dre&m vt:"
equjp. Value, $1,000. 54&--llll oetlon!" • NOW $21951 '!
U~::;Md::_C::;•:.:.":o_ __ ;:.;9900:,::llst car lot en Harbor BJ9t. -JOHNSON&: SON NEED A CAR?
CAN'T BE FINANCED? Lincoln-Mercury ~
eBankrupt? eRepcmeslonT ColtA Mesa Branch -
eBad Credit? e Dl.vorced.T l9il Harber Blvd. W.'rt$1
•MDJ1ary •New Iii .,..., '60 El Camino .
Make Payday Payments
McCARTHY MOTORS
IQ) Sc. Main I: EdJnpr
12 blocb N. ol S.V.l
Santa Ana Ph 5G-350'7
BUICK
'60 BUICK LA SABRE 4 dr .
ledan, excellent eood. 47,000
Mll!I. $500. 646-'37(1
Popular, hard to find motld.
Dartt blue-. Stick. Only ';
$795 ...
can finance all or part pa.f.
ments U }CY/ U $22 per IDq·
o.a.c.
ELMORE
MOTORS
TOYOTA
'M RIVERIA, fUll pcwer, Ph. flM..3320
amall dn. take over pyma, 15300 Beach BlTd., Wstmnstr
546-8l13 4 SPEED
'6! BUICK -225' 'dr. SPECIALISTS .....,.,,,, .......... -· $650. 54<>6216 HIGH PERFORMANCE
'59 2. Dr. Hardtop ""':i~c~ IN
Xb>t. Fine Cir 1775. 675-1319 CUSTOM CARS
96001mportocl A-"96001mportocl A-9600 Selected Auto
IMPORTED .CAR SERVICE
IN THE HARBOR 'AREA
COMPLETE SERVICE & PARTS
VW e TRllllPH • PORSCHE e
JAGUAR e TOYOTA e t&EDES
SPECIAUZll& IN BKTROllC Tllll.IJP
AUTHORIZED MG DEALER
Immediate Delivery on the fabulouo AUll!n America, H1119 Selection
NEWPORT IMPORTS LTD.
3100 W. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT BEACH
642-9405 . 540.1764
CenNr
1"32 llarbor Blvd. 5.!T-4648
1966 CHEVY Caprice w/air,
pwr, bucket 1eat1, deluxe to.
tericr. Muat Rll -aa.crl1k _.,,,
1987 EL CAMINO 6 -· &.e brakes, bucket•.
AM/f"M. 251' """" l'l CM.14&.'1335
'SI OIEVY ~ dr banttop. v.,., a...i conil.13110 ........
-· 8'!.1550 llt f PM
'II °""" Station w,,... '""·--IG). * 6"B"'2
'61 OIE'I. lmpolo. PS • PB
Auto. tnna. Gd co11d -.
'57 CHEVY .. _.
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. -.. ' . ~ fllANSP OlltTATIOlt · TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSl'ORTATION "
~. Alloart 211, 1'1611 ' --· D.lll.Y Plltll' #i
TllANSl'OlltTATION TRANSPORTATION fltANSfiORTATION TRANSPORTATION
.
........._coME IN FOR -A -----------; ' . .
TRE ·MEN·DOUS YEA ' -.} ,, ., . . . ' ND SAVINGS . . .
'· ON A NEW OR PREVI OUSLY Ow.NED CADI LLA C -. . .
1968 CADILLAC
SEDAN DE VILLE
A stunning San MateG Red exterior. This beautiful 1968 Ce.dlllac hu
all .Cadlllac power equipment including brak ... teertn1-windows-6 way
seat-door locks, tllt •~rina wf"Jeel, CI'l,llse con~ guide-matte, level control and ot course factory air' condltlonlnr. Number l.8148224
$
--\ -" -......: ;OVER 80 QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO SELECT FROM.---
'66 CA.DILLAC
Cout>e de VWe. Solid grttD flniab with sreen
leather and nylon lnttrl,or. 1'Ull Cad!JJ•c power
e(iulpment plu. factory a1r condlU~. tllt·
1tftrin&' wheel, power door lock&, 6 way teat
and many other of the ext:ru offered by owniac ·
, SAU $3888 PllCI
'65 BUICK
Wildcat hardtop. Fully equipped wl,th radio,
heater, power 1teerlng, power br1Jtea. white wi.U tire• and tinted alul. 11nlabed 1n beauti·
ful Arctic white with full red viny) int.mar.
Top condition both Inside and oul
5AU $1666 PllCI .
166 CADILLAC
Sedan de Vllle. Fini.shed tn luab Sudan beige
with Sandlewood vinyl roof and Sandlewood
leather and nylon Interior. Full Cadillac power ~ulpmeot lncli.ides factory air condltion).ng,
power vent window1, Cruise-<:ontrol, twilight
sentinel, tilt and telescopic 1t.eerlnr wheel arid
other accessories.
. '64 IMPERIAL
Crown 4 door hardtop. Leather and tape1b'y
Ulterior. Fully equipped with power stefl'ing,
power brakes, power windows. icwer 6 way
seat. automatlc ~~. AM/ft{ radio _.od
factory air C011dittontn1.
SAU $1777 PllCI
'
·~66 CADILLAC
Btouaham. Beautiful Topaz Gold with Sandl~
wood landau roof with leather interior. Full
Cldillac power equipment plu. factory air
conditioning, power vent windows, door lock!,
AM·FM radio and twilight sentinel No finer
auto on the rOad than Cadillac'• Brougham.
Tbla II a MUST SEE.
SALi $3999 PRICE
'67 CADILLAC
Coupe de Ville. Beautitul Monterey Green fin.
lib with Black vinyl roof and full leather in·
terior. Full Cadillac power including power
vent windows and of course, factory a1r con-
ditionbtf.
. SALi $4777 PRICE
'63 CADILLAC
Sedan DeVille. 4 door hardtop~ Lime rreen
with leather ·and· nylon interior. HQ power
6 way seat, pewer windows, power vent win-
dows, power steering, power brakes, factory
a1r co~tl.onin.g.
., 'uLl $1444 PilCI
'65 MUSTANG
Economical 6 cylinder engine with the 'tand-
aM transmlssion, radio and heater, white ,;ide
waJJ tires. Snow white exterior with harmoni·
lini blue interior.
SALi $999 PRICI
0111£R SPE<IAL VALUES
'62 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e
'64 FORD CONVERTIBLE • '64 FORD CONVERTIBLE • •
:64 PONTIAC STA. WGN • • '66 BUICK LE SABRE • '68 BUICK STA. WAGON • '6 7 CHEV MALIBU COUPE • .
'66 RAMBLER STA. WGN . • '61 MERCEDES SEDAN • '6 7 FORD RANCHERO • '64 RAMBLER.STA. WAGON e • '63 CHEV HARDTOP CPE • '66 l01tK ·H.t sEDAN • ' '67 BUICK ElfCTRA • '65 THUNDERBIRD H.T. •• '67 FORD RANCHERO • '63 CHEV H.T. COUPE •
'65 CADILLAC
Sedan du Vllle. Cadlllae'• finest and fully
,,._, ,.u1ppe<1 for lUSU?Y driving. Of cow.e
tllil includes factory air conditioninJ, power windowl, 6 way power 1eat, tilt •teerl.ni wheel. and finiahed in gleaming Turquoiae
with harmonizln& leather and doth interior.
SALi $2666 PllCI
;63 OLDSMOBILE
'l'b1I popular Super 88. Ful.Jy equipped with
automatic tranamWion, radio and heater,
power brakes, white side wall tires. Finiahtd
Jn a ll&:ht II'ffn e-xterlor With harmonizing
interior. Thia car 1i sale priced juaf right for
you .
SALi $888 PRICI
'65 PONTIAC
Grand Prix. Automatic tranamlsslon. power
1t.eerinr. power bi-a.kn, radio and heater, buc-
ket seats, center eonsole, tachometer. whit.e
llde wall tires .
5ALI $1444 PllCI
'64 FORD
Galaxie 500 convertible. Finished 1n Arctic
white with a matching white top and tulJ
vinyl interior. V8 engine, automatic trantlmll·
1lon, power steering, radio and heater, tint.ltd
glaM and white aide wall tire1. A. very nlet
automobile.
5ALI $1222 PllCI
'64 CADILLAC
Hardtop 1edan. Beautiful Topaz Gold tlnllll
with mat.chlnx gold leather and nylo.Q int.r.
lor. Full Cadillac power equipment plUI fal>
tory a!'r conditioning, power windowao e .,,.,.
power seat. This one la a dream and ablbtta the care only one owller ·can offer.
SAU $1777 PRICI
'62 CADILLAC
Equipment Includes power 1teerin1, )CnNI'
windows, power brakes, power seat am fao.
tory air conditioning. Other Cadillac estru are power vent windows, 6 way 1et.t and
autronic eye. Beautiful Nonnandy Blue fin.
lab with white top and white full leathmr ID-
Wio"
5AU $888 PRICI
'64 CADILLAC
Convertible. A cool coral finllh with bJaclr:
top and full leather interior . This ll one of
those hard to find models with full c.dUlac
power accessories Including brakes, ateerina;.
windows, seat, and for those very warm~
factory air conditioning. ThiJ is priced far a
quick aale UUs week.
SAU $1777 l'RICI
'63 PONTIAC
Bonneville Coupe. Gold with hannonJzlq ln-o
t.ertor (full vinyl). Automatic ~
powu 1teering, power brakes, radio and belt·
er, white 1lde wall tires, tirlted s1-IDd:
much more.
SALi $999 PllCI
-------SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN-------
8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY
YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEA LER SERVING THE ORANGE COAST HARBOR AREA
NAB ·ERS
2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-9100
" 9900 u--· ~-9900 U--' c 9900 U--' c -9900 UMd Can :. UMd C1n 9900 UMd Caro ,_ ~" -•n -1" ""'" --~~~---1 ·==:-:::::::::-::::""-'I.::::..::::... __ _;_.:.; l----------.,....1 ! ;, CHEVROLET CONTINENTAL COUGAR CORVEI IE FORD '83.....,' Dr.' ey1. Stud· __ M_U_ST_A_N_G __ 1 OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC
• . art ........ 1'!00. ....::::::::.:::.:.==-·!--;-;;;;;;;--1 : '61 Impala '68 CXlNr!NmrAL. Mua 11 ro<JGAR (G.T.J Air'°""· '63 CORVEl'IE 2 TOPS. .,. '62 FORD * &f4.-0'IOI * '65 Mustant '"OLDS. r.ss, """"" .,... 4 SPEID
: eonwrtible. mtdium bhw, ••11 or lease my Poow atett I: bra.kea. TJlt Must .ell. Belt o ffer . f1lcon Deluxe Jn Pd'fmn:'latce "28&" _. aufo.1ram., Pl•, air, R/H, SPECIAIJSTS
; "'1ttl -1'>P· A-tic --or. -· 1« away 11..nne and olbu eng. ~ 1>o4>. M..,. Xtra11 2 doer, white witb blue Int,.. MERCURY am.. ' ....,,, cxmole, mid· ncl<. ..,._ HIGH PIRPOllMANCll
•r tnnlm'..., power 'ilteel'-IJ! «alMear. G.e or re xnu, One O'Wl'ler. StllJ 774-4110 "' 675--1307 uk lor IDI', automatic tnnFD'.""""· * '66 CYCLON& "GT" ~blue. It turt wm. mow. CUSTOM CARI :. inl or \nn._ BEAU· a.,.,,.. ,_ ' Son, undor original factory war· O>n<k. . ndlo, heat.r, a""' miloq• .. ~~my•s .. _ .. V • ~·-•J695 PLYMOUTH LARGEBI' Sl:UlCl'l(lf DI' . •pow ~· Cc:lanti9 . oli~•t niit;y, CalldaYJ IU-0081 « <DRv:tTl'E '57 Cl&ilkl 301 Only ~vn. _, .., ......,.. • ORANGE CCJUNn
: TIFUL.~5 o1tahtl1h1d ~·Lin· .... 5"!-1751 Nod ...... •lkk. ·°"""· """ 1<11 -· $695 • --w/AIT, Conllnonotall,..putpay-4 SPEED .. s.·-~.a &~ ~ Can ftnance All at part Pay-coin • M.ercury • Cougar please. Dir. belt otter. Ctn finance all or l*rl Pay-~~~.z:;·:,,~ m«!tl u law u $24 Pl'!' mo. rwti>IW8 llllll1il'
:, ·_~.J11 ....... ot1 ... uctow •• ~.00 per ~1:!: ~"c:: ·~e lc;iu;~ 1 ~"':;7~ m:;. • ·548-ml • ment.1 u tow u $17.00 per 'fttirtrlpn. w/wall1, chrome o.a.eE. LMORE HIGHSP~~,!:OL~CE ·-H-E_~ Ill-
: :-ELMORE ·~AL· • dr. ~ ,';T'.:!,.,""': · DODGE mo ELMORE =~~L !, ~,1!~ 81.., MaroRS LA!l~~~~N IN l OY CARvk
•· oedu> T""'1 eou!A><d· Son •a OOOGE Polan 383, '2 dr, TOYOTA ' ORANGE COUNTY PONTIAC ,
MaroRS Ori..,..., %lllll '"""· •11 COUGAR, a.,..,,., hllcke11 .. 1s.•mlheaoo,. T~~l JOHNSON&SON Pb. 89W.l2I Selected All.to nllarblr&,Cllla-
:., TOYOTA Still um. -....,_ ,.llow/blad< lnterfu, Topcond.Must ,..toop. Lln<oln-Merewy 1"100BeachBITd.,W-C nt Kl64444 . ' .._~~ m~w-nnty. Must ML But no 1T,COJ tnt. Full 5 yr, tact. predate. 545-6954 Ph. ~ ea.ta Mesa Bmda '65 MUSTANG e er '
; · ~ch Y\I•• d~ pie&te. ~ ~. 642-7423 eves. ,66 DOOOE Mon!cc> I pw. lSXO Beach Blvd., Wltmnltr lJl1 ff.arbor Blvd. 6f2.7CrJO Spt Cpe ltlc* ax Golden rod 13Cm Hub" ffivd. 5S'1-4646 0ranp ClmllJ'a • , .u;
; llm <m:vY. --· 54Mm _,.i 5"!-7151 In "'"""' full pwr l ..ir. wood * '61 FALCON ·a O'.lLOOY !'wk -1t11ow with G.T . .,_ II>-ONE°"""" 1966 Valltnt V-.'i o.a1 .. tor -• ._ _.
!l!!"I -• --.... mr. _ · CORVAIR 995.-StATION WAGON ......,. ,.,.. tell .. ,._ ....... Ahtollltfl1 ••w ~. -.,~ -~===~=,_...,.1 '. ·De.di """" '6. Ill Klap '8S LllllXJl1' Od•-...., "' 8"1. lhlft. IVIL -D1J ---..... fmb. Aft ~ ..... W h It• '66 PONTIAC l7l'O, -' '.!tl.'J!~ R•trb·h, -...i-..-.,,., .. 1o CORSA 140 HP.'... ·FORD. ~--·'-Ca11Ho1-...e11-$1 495 -.n..v.,,o .... $1395 --· .-. -• g...cm . Air ~ tG--<111 ~. AM-FM radio, ne.ta red All \rfrl1l lnt.r. • !on ,.._,_ finance all or _ .. --... MWl5l . lnkel, .,, .... tzllt, · "A. runntna tool!" .....,, .,..., ..,...,. 5*--8354 ·: 1]· . ai>:vD.LE SS • • IP 56-1111 Dr!. . .$1,000. Pri""• Par t 1 4 SPEED , ONL y $.5'51 '11 MDtC ,,,_,.., ' dr menu ., '°" ., p:t.11) ,. 16 2 -BelV-.. , -
• ~ DiL ~-..... AJI.. (Dn". 'It My t ti Ip. ftt«l7 • lRt tar· lot Oft ~ Blvd, ltd.. pa, pb, llr, _ftereo. mo 0,A,C. Tab vm' pe.ynwnts. 55 PON'n&C ... ....
' ..._ ....... IZIOO -·-...,"'-"" "GCQRVAIR!tl"""'·'"""· SPECIALISTS ·JOHNSON &SON Unier''"2"ooom1....... ELMORE • ... ,.,. • ....,_.._ .... ... · IM~~ . · . -fer, wr .Wlw". ~· UH; Mw dutt:h. ·Dual ex. HIGH PERFORMANCE ~ •13 PJ.JmoUt' sta Wq, l:x. ~ KlnlJt PL, N..,..-1
' CON11NENT&L u ..... R . ~~· ""-·~· Verr ad CUSTOM CARS °"'"""':"'~ 'G NERCUllY, 1 ....... !IOTORS Omcl. °"' ...... l900 •1=====---1 ' " ' CO ""'" """'· 15SI. ~ &ft 5 PM LARGES!' SELECTION IN lotl Hu~ :.... W.1l1itl ""f dean, x!nt tlrel, hit· ' -TOYOTA bet! offert &2481 &ft 5. •
... <XllCTIND<TAL • Dr '61 COftVAIR M ...... ""' ORANGE COUNTY terr. ft, "8-mT Pb. -T-•D : . . . ....,,: .. OoUa>r IXl!-7) .... """ body, N .......... A otoal! Selected Auta •s; GALAXlE LTD F...., • Wiii Belch Bl'fd., w-PONTIAC T-1111111 • ,=._~,_ ;:,~;::~,: Oall54!hZ1'2 Center ::i.~·,:,"=·:.,!: MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE ·ittoNrucT.,..,..,,.Xll>t.!.'a ""' ~8oa.Gf)lowpmtlloleb,to0 -.... 21. c.n Wayne '66 CORVAIR CORSA 0012 lluhor Blvd. 1131-T ... tnde or $2llO -. W llllll'.ANG 1 -, Jm. "' ""11< wttll blue-· e llt.llM e ·°"""-Hwr ...... , l<Pt't ot' -6 f!ao, • 54&>11!8 e ·---~· ~ .. , -·-rmc. bal. ~ ..... ,.~ y.• alt """ '!II OLDS Aul<>. Goal. --oell -'"'11525· IC T.JllllD 1'1111-. Fao-fe:n .: ·.;! ( ar-. c.t•·olielt... -.evn.u -.... __... ........ w ,, Air ••• tnim ..... <Xllf"'.u'".rmatt'":""'"'1e,""''ll."-"M~;::,::!:·::0;;1 '.!"~~"= CORVEiii ~'!di,..~'"""·~~~-~:: ::"'°'' Pow/& -~-· IJS. can ,:--'PONTIAc G.P. run :':'°""'·-..-.......:.m tradt--ler . port~ Mffa.-IOO W. "51 Corvett.e 283. auto, '56 FORD V/8 auto. R/H white bottom. ·mo cash '67 'MUSTANG, perfect. 3 IP '63 OlDS 88. By owner: Xlnt power, 1lr. N lab t I h l d t '64 T-BIRD, blk;;tittnt. ~
--"~ of value Coast ll"Y Newport Beach reblt ea,g, Very clean! ~ new tires A paint. $250 Vf!rY deli, tine $1500 bal;oac. dlr. atick, pwr steer.. RIH, cond. Sacrifice! rreen. \ .,wr, atr-cood. WClbt «md. ~I." ...,. ' -~· _, · • 54!Hlil! • ad cood. 546-«l14 49<-m3 LMdau .... sm;. -Ju-mo M<-16911 ~11695 __ or_tn_ado_ • ...._ ___ ..
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YOU CAN'T •• .. . '
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AFFORD .. ·---. -'
TO MISS! • •
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THERE'S NO DOUBT
ABOUT IT ••• NO·W
IS THE TIME TO
BUY. LOTS OF
REASONS WHY:.
LOWEST PRICES
POSSIBLE •••
BY FAR THE
. EASIEST TERMS
AT ROY CARVER
.PO.NJJAC •.•.•. AND .
STILL AN OUT·
·STANDING . 07
SELECTION! . ' .
·r
DEMOS.
~~!i~~~-VH~~~~lide, PS, R&H, $1977
wtdte walls, factory air, padded roof. . ·
'66 CHEVROLET $1977
Impala Super Sport. V8, power 1turlng, ,
radio and heater, white side waH tlrn. ·
'64 PONTIAC GTO , $1677
Z door hardtop. V-8, Hydramatlc, power
steerlnCJ, radio, heater, white wall tires. · · . .
~~~po~~~-~!~_Ey~ auto., PS, radio, $117.7
heater, white side woll tires. 39,790 mlles.
~~?.!~~r?4 ~ !.~~~ultomatlc. 51977
PS, R&H, white walls, factory air cond.
~~?. ~~!~~~~~o .. PS, Pl, R&H,$327,7 w /w tires & fac air ~ond. 16587 octual mi. ,
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9900Now· Cars
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We've got A~ the Birds! 400s, lfOs, 350s, Sprillft • ;--;
·: -· ·convertibles ·and hardtops , '.-.•you -name. lt,.~e'.v,e· .. got I~"'
'67 FIREBIRD
Y .a, 4 speed, radio, htattr,
wldte wall tires. Rtcl. 11.11 ·
AT YOUR PR~ICE! • ·•
' .
:TEMPEST .SP~RT CPE.
HIGH "StfLE • ~· GREAT P.EiF.Oil.MANCE
. ' •••. ~IGHT PRICE
NO. 1·683 . -' . .
PL.US LICENSE AND TAX
·------------------/
WE ARE BEGINNING TO RELEASE FOR SALE
OUR LARGE NUMB~R OF DEMOS AND EX-
. ECUTIVE CARS. THESE AUTO~OBILES HAVE
RECEIVED THE BEST OF CARE. Al)ID THE ' ' SAVINGS YOU
ENJOY .ARE
OUTSTANJ:iiN.G!
'67 MERC. COUGAR • • • • • • ' ' •• 1 , •
Hardtop. Y-8, power steerlnCJ, standard
trans., radio, heater, white waU tires.
166 PONTIAC GTO .
z door H.T. v.a, 4 lfl•od, power 11...t"',
radio, h~er, White wall tires.
$2577.
1577;
'67 PONTIAC GTO $287. 7 · ·
Z door H.T. V-1, Hydramatlc. power If-·
l1t9, radio, heater, w•lte wall tires.
'66 PONTIA~· -<ff()~-· ·· -$2·57.,
Z Dr. H.T. Y8, -.. pwr. ,,_., ...00,' .. al· I i
... red llne llres.·factory air. 29,64% mn... .
'65 RAM8LER
Classic 770 Convertible. V-8, automatic.
rodlo, hlClter, white waU tires.
'65 VOLKSWAGEN
4 speed, rocllo, heater,
white wan tires.
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$1377.
$1377
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•. ; f • .
'67 CHEfROLE1" ·• . . ' . $1i·11
4 Dr. 9 pau. wvn. VI, aufo .. pwr. stur., < ,
radio, ._.,, wlll"' walh, f<ldwy elr. . , · · ! ••
'64 CHEVROLET'. . : · .$4 5"7" 7 Jmpol(J .Gon'T, ¥:8, rw.,g~d•.;pwr. ,,_., I ; j
rocllo,,heater, Wltlte side wall tires. ·
'67 CHEVROLET lmpola Z door H. T:YB, .. 1""'°'lc""1'°'
11-l•g, "'dla. -... Wltl•e liilt •s.
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DAILY r!LOT n,
M~yor Praises· 'Fort Chicago '1-;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii"
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Angels On Wheels-.. '
Mrs. \Vesley Dierberger (left), volunteer . transportation 'chai_tinap of the•
American Cancer Society points out route to Angels ori Wbee~tdrlvers. Mrs.
: Lawrence Thielemeir of Corona del Mar ap.d John ' L. LlndsaY~.Of :santa Ana.
· Persons willing to help cancer patients by l providing transpod:ation Jor a feW
hours a week are .asked to contact Orana:e County branch·. of .:,.the ·Amerjcan
': Cancer Society, 838-0510. I ,.
Czech Couple Refurns ·lJ9~e
*CHI~O ( U~P I) . -secute for all jts atrlving {or in the .street~' and to i:csert
Mayor Rilchard J. Daley set ·securlty, but to "one of the th~ Chicago has "the fmest
. every~ straight about greatest clUes in the world." police department and the
Chicago. "'lltls city,'' he said, "is fJnest fire department Of
There lare thOse among Ute best pllee po5'!ib1e tor a any city ln the United \ll.tl~ '
the delegates here who wish great political convention to Slates," fl 11\V'~
the paty bad pt ck e d be held In our '\j.me." The delegate• cheered fs-~·n'
another city for the S&lh HonesUy? You have tO him for that. Diley went on ~ Democr~c National Con-believe Rlcbard J. Daley to 1ay the Democrat. wB:llt
vention. ·believes what be says about more than just .. law and
Chicago ls harassed by Chicago, m. He loves the order," a theme often ut· •
corn mun i ca Uons and place. He was born· in its tered.. by Republicans. ThiJ Interest fr0m the lat of any rrioht
tranSP91'qition strikes, South Side 86 years ago, not convention, he saJd, will · on funds rec!lved by the ·loth.
needled ~Y hordes of yip-far from· wh~e burning and nominate a "chief executive
pies, arid menaced b Y looting took pflCi"JastApril. -not a chief of police." The e Interest from d1te of rece;ipt after manUold thred.s, real or im-stllfll . delJ!gates cheered that, too.
agined, ranging from the He ves m the South They say Daley may fan-the loth.
TVOiCsfbW+.... of mass assault Side. and he 'never spote hi u De oer u Oi~ the ·~vention hall to more proudly than be did ~:~eer.as a m 1 c @):Interest to date of withdrtwal on•
sniper attempts on the lives when he welcomed . ~e Nobody be 1ieve 1 , of funds left 3 months or longw if accoun
1 of prominent Democrats. delegates atihe ~~th Sides th t D 1 harbo ,.m11'ns open· unt1'l quarter's end. How Mayor Daley and the Inte~pational Amphitheatre course, a a ey rs •
fed er a 1 8 n d 1 tat e to one 'Of ·the ·~~atest any notion that he mig ht get
government.. are c 0 p 1 n g neig~hood~ in 9,h.k:ago -the J>'!:'tsidential nomination
with all tllls has been told my neighborhood . at UUs convention. Oh-
m a n y t 1 me 5 . Daley may be the l;.st of viously, he does want to do
' Am · • bl It uu al what he cw to swing the
5% per annum compounded daily currtnt
rate on passbook savinp~
So, n a t u r a 11 Y , the ' ~rtca 5 g c. Y po c nomination to the man of hia
Republicans have been cs.ll-bosses. He ls a chunky, 200-choice, whoever that may ing the Democrats' con-pound Irishtnan. His ·father
ventlon cUy "Fort Chicago." was a shett meta} worker. be.
It is a "city under siege" He goes to Mass every day. But what is Daley's true
and the convention is the fist He doesn't drink, , at least passion? Why has he gone to
ever that bad to be pro-not much. He is, tccording all that trouble to mate sure
tected by tropps. • even to those Chl~goans Chicago bebavet in an
All these troubles might, who oppose him politically, orderly way while the
you might tbink, be ex-an honest man. Democrats are in town?
5.25% per annum on bonus •<;counts.
I! you're not receiving these bcnefU. ........
call or come in TODAY! ' ' MUTUAL SAVIN'(iS ,.,. .... ,.., ••.••c••~•••
pected to •et a mayor down. He believes' he'has done-a An off~uty firem-an put It
PILSEN, Czeclloslovakia coffee, fat, oil, buttet, flour ' It Was ·a , }\arid-wtit.ten .Card Poor unbH>t>y, p la gued lot for the J>OQt of'.Chlcago. this way to a reporter:
(J.JPI) -Vladimir and Lud-and cheese." · Maring ,two words' :"Rus-Qticago. Get Mayor Daley He was hurt by last April's "This really is," he said,
2867 East Coast Highway • Corona Del Mar, C.lif. 92~25
Telephone 675-5010
~ lftAI onter. rUADEM
• Jll (, cot.ORADO llVD. • ,AS4DfHA, CAI.It. f llot•
)
I
mJlla Drzala tasted the In the middle or · the ' ·sian pr.od~.". • i down? 1'his week he riots. In his welcoming "a great city. Daley's not ....... ---------••••Ill . delights of the world outside counter was .a tray full :or "Wt!· haven't 'Sold · any of welcomed the Democrats speech he departed from going io let anything happen ".t'J
andthentheycamebometo ~s~m~o~ke~d~fish~·~·P~er~ch~ed~~·t~p~p~·th~a~t~t~oda~y~.'~'s~he~s~&~.d~._·:__~~·~·~t~to~a_fenif~~·~ied~oo~wn~,~m~·_:t~ert~t~o~d~e~no~UD<~~·~·~·v~io~l~eo~c~e_:t~o~il~':'~~~~~~~!.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::;-~· .drink the bitter b re wl · , ,
· prescribed by the Kremlin .
. A glass of the golden.beer
.for which Pilsen is fwious
made it go down a little
easier.
A week ago, Vladimir and
I Ludmilla had realized their
dream of a visit to Scan·
· dinavia. They; saw the land
of the midnight sun and
walked hand-in -h ·a n d
through the Tivoli Gardens
in Copenhagen.
They came home today
riding with me ·on the last
leg of their trip,. from the
West Germar~ ·border along
,. .50 miles of twisting, .bumpy
road to their home in Pilsen.
Ludmilla, 32, giggled once
when she saw a road !lgn.
Until last week it had listed
the number of kilometers
remaining to Pilsen. Now, it
was neatly painted to read:
''Moscow: 2,000 kilomet-
ers." She got the point.
1 other signs appeared on . the road; "We want Dub-
cek." Another rel:d, ".Ivan
go home; your mother "is
cfllling )!OU." One read,
"heave us alon.e, we. don't ,.,.... ~ an)""heJiP; :.;v:.·· ·,·-~..,;.
,.("· :"' Vladimir, a 34-year-old
schoolteacher, gestured at a
'grove of ' trees ·ao'~ew 'htut-
dred yards •bi-ck from the
low outlines of Soviet tanks.
Ludmilla stopped giggling.
Then we had arrived,· and
in the sitting room of their
gaunt, s i m p I y furnished
house on Pilsen's ~a
Roudne Street the Drzalas
served me a glass of light,
Pllsener beer.
"\Ve will have s e 1 f -1
determinztion some day,.:.'_·
Vladimir· said.
"The Russians have
proved nothing except that
they arc not our friends. Our
€oeialism -Dubcek ' s
Socialism -is the way to
the future.
"\Ve know now it will take
far longer than we thought."
Vladimir brightened.
"But enough. \Ve will •
drink a toast with our · t.1
• a\.lthentic Pilsener be~r -a
toast to a better future."
Later, in Pilsen's vast,
desolate main square. I
stopped a woman who seem·
ed less in a hurry than most.
· "\Vhere are the Russian
soldiers?" I asked, struck
by tl'le total absence of
Soviet uniforms.
"Soldiers?" she paused. ·
''Oh you mean the stars."
••Stars?''
''Yes, That's what we call
Lhem. They only eome out at
· rlight. During the day they
· stay outside or town.
"'\Vhen they come, we go
hbme and lock our doors.
They r o&m the 6treets,
doing what they 1 i k e .
They've even shot people -
for. no good reason."
She hWTied oU. A short,
. unshaved man of about 50
appeared. Witllout a word
he pressed Jnto my hand a
letter addressed to a friend
-or relation -in West
· Germany.
"Bitte schoen ... please :
... ."' he said and was gone.
I entered a grocery. ·
"I'm sorry, but we're out '
: of nearly everything," said 11\e young girl behind tile
counter. "We have no mart!
· salt, no more milk or jams.
We're fresh out. Of -·
BOAT BUFFS
Al19•n leck•itey h tke 011ff
fell . tlrtit l.e•tlnt edl._,.
WOf'khlt 011 •fl'Y fl_I,.,.,
I• Or•nt• C••nty, Hl1 -
elll\1_.. eo"'"•t• •' M•t-
litt '"' y\eltti~ 11•.,,,. I• • -'•ily f••hr• el ih• 0,41LY
PILOT. • •
,
It's a ho~ier.y ~appening! .Put y<;>ur most fashionable .foot forward in our own
' '
9olo~u1 . · (?:aym0de®. pantyhose
~ave a hosi~ry hrppenipg, ~1ore going, tiack k>'schooll Buy a ward-PA.NTY .HoSE Stretch sheets ~Uh nud•.h"8l, tashlo~.~des ...••• 1.11. ·
Jobe.of leg lashl0(1• to 10Cent yourlunfim~ and<lress-up mini•, maxis Point o esprlt ... : .. 2.50 .Smooth opaques ...... $2 . . ·: , -;
, and pa~t oulflts}o!i• and .match, contrast and clash ~olo'." ... wear STOCKINOSShftrmeahstretchhose,nudehesl. F111tilcin1hadn ..• s1
. point D esprit orisheera ·o.Yllr opaqun for original effectil Penneya Point D'eaprll: ..... $1 "Wet look" ahlny Antron• nylon with nude heel ••• 1 hai all your lavo~te atylila ;jn-all th9" lateat CC!loisl · a1 Smooth opaquea, colora galorel ....•. $1 ThrH knee hl~ha: turned-
over cuff, baakttweave, waffle 'p8ttem .••... a1 ·
• •
I
\ . . ' HUNTINGTON BEACH -COSTA ME A '· ' . ; • I I Ha'rbor Sht>pping .. • •
' ; · (Huntington Center!
..
NEWPORT BEACH
I F111hion ltland)
•
----
# Didi. 'f ""'" '" .. W.Jc tf115, Allllll • 1M DAIL v PILOT F· l
Convenient Canned Sauces Off er Shortcuts
' ..
'°'
DAILY PILOT
'OOD
SICTION
;·Go Scurry for Curry
:.)"
When. Tossing Salads -I to..,.. lemon Julee
U =. curry powder
Hit
pepper
I ea~I ,1..-, .-'· drained I ~i pple, pr.,.,._ ~· diced, ....
~F~····
•
lea ... --ut, _..... ..... "*-... .., p' Ndtl: Ga.ed •• ,.~ ......... ,..,,ull, 1 ll 1 e • .. ..... la a large -I stir. to-lttl* t b • maycmnwe, ...., cream, lemon juice,
C1llf1 powder, oalt and pep-
"'· Add the peas, apple, ~ and ooion. Ml:I: gent-ii but thorougbly. Cover
tightly and refrigerate for
ooe or two hours before
tuving.
Line a "1ad bowl with
lettuce leaves; add the W-
ad mixture. Garnish with 1
center mound of flaked co-
c o n u t surrounded with
dates.
Serve with help.yourself
bowl of salad accompani-
ments: flaked coconut, salt-
ed peanuts, and sliced ba-
nanu. Makes &i.I: to eight
servinp.
Home News and Views
IT'S NO RIB, APPLES ENRICH STUFFING
C.w?I eM/'d 'Stt a-
,_ -• MlallJ' -, .... , ......... .
~ fMlt 142' ...... . --..... -Iii
-· Y• jlll aM -· -... -· 1'ara'• * 11r..-..... It la CJ fd~ ..... twt #r ttMtf, a tn1iaac. ol Nut _.. e It it II •a , lNf e:ttem, m~ldonu, 1»MI
tlnjJF 'fr,_hiu Jt•allt Md ctitWa Jt6tkJ,
...-dlifO .. -ldtl. ..-.. alld lllanr -· Y•'ll•lld--Htw .tw!Ot. • .Md a 1111 Ill
-¢H"'ll -.. ""'"'· -&114 .. _ ,,... -.. ... .... .. ... f(Jt .. 110...,i. Italy "'"" ....,... _., mall .uii.
,,,. -..., ..;leto
., 1.,,. - -J:li., lf1CT ITIOOANOPP -.. * po6t -·· 1 -...... -<at Cbat<oubriand (the French In thin strips
platter of 1ltced g t e a k 2 tablespoc;IOI iborteninJ'
garnished with vegetables). 1 can (U ounces) be•f
8bob lme ii a IUCC~ strogaoo(f sauce
::!i lool.ri~ ~ ~ :;..i anton vefeloblot I tablo1j>6ol!I b r 6 w n ......
llM'r U)AJ' AllD i. '*""'°"" Ir• u n 4
VEGETABl.F.'; ginger
1 V.S pounds ground beef 1n .s)!ilkt, brown meat in
1 can (13 ounces) meat llbortedin&. Pour oU fat.
toal -Add remiinlng tnCredlenta.
211 eup -Cl'lllllh c .. er; ¢OOk over !Ow bell 1
2 u!ilo._. <llappod M11r or Wltil ttftdor. ~tlr
sweet pickle now and then. Mak~s •
1 .... (1 l><IJDd) tlul ' lltvlDCJ.
wllOleWToU,droinoel
""'*' """ -· lllMe
__ ,,_,....ol
-. ...... -.... ---~ .. -tin . ._ In -...... ,_ fll ltt.
Add-· Com; -.... --1-·111111 -· -----"'*'* • -... Pott< ....,. e o M p le le
-· ...... * -y "'11 ........... tlllllllft• tMtlt illlO a llUudfUI dUh
wtti •Mf --ol ollced
-Mil llUftdlrfa -·· ~-
llAHOARI!( POU CllOPs
d pork chopa ( 1 I> """""') I ctn (U 6Ulleet) pork
cbopa; sauce \! cup tlllnly tllced -\! C"l' Mlndatlll ...... -In 1twtt. btOWt er.ope:.
Pour oil NI. Add -and onion. Cover ; cook over low
beat 45 minutes or until
tender. SClr DOW and then.
Add or ..... ; hoal Malleti I
ID g setVl!!gt.
'Mtt tmObth, o r • a m y · sllilltt d!ICllO!I ,._ 1'ith
1 can (1 pouilcl) -le
-~.·'!4' cup --"' M1tg-
Vt.Ty lb o -eftlional slidfl IJf m-OO!li• UDt a
-tt•ll< r«lpt 111 jMng -fl IWIM 'l'fett In
.......i·Nad. 1114-lllllng 11111 -·
l/o1 cup ahredded mild
Jroe<SI -
·-· 1 .. rri ~ ....
A ..,i_I . , •• 1~'f.'L !..!J!l!!M~-: •• i,,. .-..::;;. ' . '1: w
lJl tle6 l<>iied wlUi p&H1'y l"lLLvT CRIC11:£N and mUltard. 'lben cook tti• • J:lil
roll·:g in tile I • D ' y OllllGAllO ........ .._ _. 2 p0Ulldl cbltkff parts
-
1 ftnlll cl6VI garlic,
<!ni$lled .ra. I>.....=-... , .. 0,
Ill ~-111.i 2 tab~ buUor or r..m martarint
I cup · ,.. . 1 can (13 OU!lCd) Uillet I i*'Q •t •••4 d'dcten Uute """1 -~ 1 mec!lum tomat<>, cut ~ 1n-· Into tldll ........ ' In umee. -cl!l<ken 1 .. ( ...... -flltic ..i or•-In "'* ·~ butter. Add Nuce. °"'r: Cut 11U1 . Iii . I took """' IOIO b o a t Ee: ..... . Ill 41 llllnutot. lltlt .... Ind ~, ••• fl' ol -· Add -· Mot. ..... !'Me, -4 """"""·
Fire Season
•
:Never Ending
Nutrition Flowers From Neglected Member of Cabbage Family
a, llOllO'l'HY Wli:NCll: -----°"' -fllmlly lilr• br'111lli?-Yw'rt lucky if
they d& because it'• one of
our most nutritious
vegetables.
A ball-oop of cooked brio-
coli baa ali.gbtlJ m o r e
'ritamin C than a 4-ounce
g1MI of orange juice, lots
of vitamin A, plia goodlJ'
amounts of Iron, calcium.
and B vitmJ.ins.
-All this for a mea1 ly 25
l,:; ... oaJorieJ I Of coune Juot _,
Ille! broceoll II Jood kw you
doesn't mob ,... lib ll I.I
fact the typlcel child'• reac-
tion to, "ellt It -lt'• pod
for you," II lo a&rtotllllllc.lll.f
not like it (usually without
tasting It).
Broccoli 11, like
cauliflower, a member of
the -age family, and
when lt'r cooked it develops
the strong, .. cabbagey'' odor
and flavcr that m a n y
children (and adultJ) doo't
like.
And many peoplo 6oo't
like the texture of the cook·
ed broccoli lop wblcb Is ...
tually a cluster of small,
unopened Oower bulb,
1be odor, Oavor and lex·
ture bceome less desinble
if troccoli ls overcooked.
1be attractive green color
also changes to olive drab
when you cook broccoli too loo&. Tbe reason w t
overcook It is that we're
trying to get the stem!
tender.
So in order to 1et ow
family to like broccoli, we
need to INrn how to cook it
COrrectlf IO that ii loolu,
tastes and smells &oOd.
One method I.a to stand the
broccoli stalk& upright in a
rather deep, n a r r o w ,
covered Nucepan (an old
coif~ pot WOTk.s well ), with
water covering the st.alb
but not the tops. The lopt
will cook more slowly In the
Meam whUe the ltalka l•l
tender in the boUh1C water.
Anod><r method to spetd
up the coating of the stalkJ,
is to rpllt them in ball or
quarters. Of )'OU can •lice
'
the swu aod partWly cook
them tn bolling water before
you add the tops durtn1 ttle
last f1w mtnuta.
All vegetables of the cab-
bage family, wbic!l develop
the 1tron1 flavor when coot,
ed. wW btvt a milder navor
1f you cook them ln a rather
large amount of water and if
me an uncovered sauce pan
which allows the sulfurouJ
gas to e1Cape.
Cooking broccoli ln a
large amount ol water will
aJso help retain the brig.bl
,...., color.
And most bnpirtant -
don't OVllnlOOk broccoli to
the mushy stage. It t111te:1 so
much bttts II coolted oal,f
until it's crilp-tendu.
My hulband never lited
broccoli -In spit. of my ef.
forll to cook II correcUy -
unSU.. one day I served It
riw. sliced m a sour cream·
lemon juice dressing, It was
a tremendou! success!
Even the children liked it.
So I don't bother cook'inl M
anymore, end by eating It
raw, we don't IOH any food
value.
Raw broccoli -cut into
bite-siu flowettts -is
great with dip too along with
other vegetables auch as
caullOower, carrotJ, eeJery,
and cucumber slice!. Tbint
of the calorie• you save
when you use veeetables for
dipplnJ lnataod ol potato
cblpt (10 cblpt -100
calories)!
Of course the dip 1bould
be low caJorie too, Have JOU
tried wbfpped c o t t a C i!
clleete, which you can bu1
olrudy whipped or which
you can whip in your
blender, seasoned with your
favorite dip mix?
QUESTIONS WE A R E ASKED:
Q. Is the.re any easy
method for removing ball·
point int sLains? My hus·
band keeps getting them in
bl• shirt poekets.
A. Some kinds of ballpoint
ink an more difficult to
remove from f1bric1 than
otbflr1. One met.bod 7ou
mJibt try ii to piece • ped
'\
of ablocbent tissue under
the Ital.a and drip rubbin&
alcOhol -gh tho &po<.
Ketp mqylaf the ti11ue until
no mere ink appears on il
Nut, IOU the 1pot In a
solution of del.er~ent and
waM then scrub 1t with a
soft brush. Do all these
things beic:n you wash the
shirt. If the.rt is rtlll a stain,
toa1t the •pot In a mild
bleach.
Q, I've been told that
dried lima beans are gOOd
kr )'OU becauH they have
loU of protein end lrOll .
would lruh Uma betllll be
ju1t as good. for you?
A. It It true that cooked
dried l1ma -.... (ood
50\rte of protein and J.nm.
One cup, cooked, .,... you
u milUgramt of --ball the amount needed in 1 dday
by an adult man,
Frub ltma beu.1 are
usuall1 quit. a bit more bn·
mature Ibo the drlotl -.
end baVI oal,f about ball U
much pmeiJI end lrOll.
Q. Wbet'• the dlllerence
between corn (riU eod
bomin, srtts !
A. C.rn grits end hominy
grtta art two nante1 fw th•
same thing. They are mad•
by crtndfnr and 1UU., wblt•
or 7ellow ccrn trom "'11ch
the bran Ind term bav• been tomoVld. Qrlil are
more c!oumly ground then
corn muL
•
BB·Z DAIL y "LOT Wtdnfsd.ty, Au9ust 28, 1%13 DAILY PILOT 38
{Gt t\\e ,
LABOR .DA'(:
WEEK·END ·
•
Alt STATER BROS. MARKETS WILL BE OPEN MONDAY-LABOR, DAY, SEPT. 2ND. FROM 10-A.M. TO 7 P.M.
. • 1,
APPLES
UIALLF~NC~~lllW CllOI' DI~-
LBI.
P EARS
LAllGI X.JAllCY •A.,.,.n'
GRAPE JELLY IMUCKIRI .................. 20·0Z. 4Jt
PLUM PRESERVES SMUCKER ! .... 20.oz. 45c
.
I
SAVE 7' COUPON
LADY SCOTT
FACIAL TI SSUE
200-COUNT PKG.
SA YI 7 c Ol'I' llGUU.R PRICE
CIOUPON GOOO OHL Y AT IT ATiit HOS.
MAI km, VOID AFTR AUGUST Jlth. •
' ""
' U.S.0.A. CHOICE OR STATER BROS. CERTIFIED BEEF• BONE·IN RUMP 1 . . CHUCK
ROAST
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
ORSTATERIROS.
aRTIFIED IEEF
•!.Al';·
•
c
LB.
GROUND
BEEF
OR ST A TEI IROS.
aRTIFIED IEEF c
LB.
BEEF
ROAST FRESH•LEAN•DELICIOUS
GROUND DAl~Y IN
OUR OWN STORES
ROUND BONE
U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR ST A TEIS
LB. c
FISHIRS
0
• . 3 9 C BISKI T MIX ......... 40.QZ.PKG ....... * PIUSIURYl
0
ATTEllASST.FLAVOIS , 29C CAKE MI X ..................... REG.PKG ..... .
. Hl-CASSOIT~DPl,AVOIS · 4 ., FRUIT DRINK S ........... 4e-oz.
'
DEAL PACKAGI · 6 9 GIAN T RINS O .......... PKG.. c
GREEN GIANT PEAS ....... . .... ,,.oz. W
HYDROX cooK 1Es SUNSHINE ..... 23-0Z sgc
GREEN BEANS ~~f~~H6~~[( ....... 1e.oz. 2Jt
RODS GARLIC SPREAD ,., _____ ,, e.oz. 35c
BAGGIES •a::::'"
33' 55c
10.coUNT 1JO.COUNT
kUllONfi:'lT
MARGARINE HT·TOMI PIPSODIMT SWORD
llK.1-ll. 29' PAPll TDOTHPASR llADIS
OIALNG. WIOIOI COL JA.MllY llh WILkMON
iOfT I-LI, 35' , .. ' 46' 77' 1 .. 651 i&.'1" OIA.lllltG. "'"'" .. •. • KALKAN SIT DOG FOOD l'Oll MOUTH
'"' WASH MAGIC
OtlCKIN PAITS 1 43c ..,_ KOH KA•,,.AY
'STIW 1t1 I, 39'SM. 65:. U 00L 98' 9c • OIOC•'°""" ~ ll0 0L11t 1).0J'
ULE PRICES EFFECTIVE 1 LL DAYS. THURS. lhru WED. AUG. 21-SEPT.4 ' ,,.. •• UM:OUll, AMAM•IM -'#UTMlflltnl M.VO.. WlnMtfllltle
*4 '#. •aoAOWAT, AMAMllM 14nt MIMD AV.., WIUT'91l
11• MIWNRT M.¥D., COSTA MIU 1• I , COl.Llfllt. .UNe9
M' W. IM IT., ClllTA MUA -IDtM•I• n,. IANTA AU
-CM.\PM4ft A'llJrlUf, IA•Dlfll elOVI
•
I I
I
I
I ~
40 '1lAll.rmor w-.,, -is. 1968 ---
-
•
Soviet Czech Action
Part of GWC Class
Bacqrouad on tbe Soviet
Unioa.'1 mili tary in·
t&-velllonlaCzeclloolovakia
will bo • part ol • ~-k
evening c.otr.Je tlU fall at
Golden West College in Hun-
tinctoo Beach.
''The Crisll of UOO..stan-
ding the Sov1et Union" will
be taught bY, Dr. J .... L.
Calanyerv, dWrm.an ol the
social ociel!cet clvilioo.
He aid the cour11 aeeks
an -...inc vieW <Ii tile
-Ill tenDll oI in-
---ond strateP: power, • well •
from p biloe ophiea l,
r•ligi ou1 , po ltioal,
economic, aoe ial and
hiJt«ical vmtage poinlll.
Wbllo h eouno was .et
up last ~ king before
the --. ooDoge of.
fioials reoommeOOod the
course u ''hithly il·
Iuminating" and ' ' m o s t
timely'' in th• llelll of
events of the la9t week.
"It will .give Che laJman
ttia deptll peropeot!ve need·
ed to rilore a oouratel y
--'ibey ... ond reld,1-t Yid Th o.m -a 1
Osborne, dean !A h evt!ID-
ing e<>llep.
Th• course beP>• Oct. 1
and ooollinueo .... Die.
3, from 7:30 to 1:30 p.m. In
t he col!ege etnt tr.
ParticipanU may tign up
DOW GD m ~-ertdft-no C.-llesll.
No test.< will be given, but
thoee taking the cl.au foc
-mts Will bl req-to conduct. britl -ch
projeoj.
R • C illration OClllinuee
from I to I p.m. Aup. 28,
Sept. s. Sept. ~12, 111-19,
ml Septanber 28 In the
Oollep Cell!«.
Topia! Will cover Marx·
illn. .u a to t a l itar ia n tdeoloo and counter·
rlll!Pon Io a.riliioaltJ,
-views of !bi .... lince 1918, an aoa1ys:iJ of ·the
R11111.Ml Rew1ution, ethic
-end ...... OOlllm<lll be1i ... and a&i*olioJIO and
possible -ts « un-
dmSlmdmg.
Dr. ~ will have
-l!im m '°'11" -OOI -·-·"'-li•ldl -to ... l(llleral
topln of 4bl ..... ...
' . W.aJt •d See
Uninvited Guests
Enjo ys the Country
By VIVIAN BROWN
When lush greenne s s
carpets the a re a sur-
rounding your c o u n tr y
home, can uninvited guests
be far away?
Absolutely not. IC they
haven't called on you to
date . don't give up. They
may be tied up in a traffic
j am.
Fifteen unexpected guest
calls from a nearby phone
booth are about par far the
average country dweller.
Some seashore people aren't
th.at lucky-they may be ap-
proached via boat. sand or
land Ytithout any warning at
all.
One "''•Y to shorten visits
of unexpected guests ia to
mention the word "work,"
agree housewives mulllng
over the aituatioo..
"Mot;t urban peop~ go lo
the country to get away
from the hot city rather
than to !Oak up the joyi o[
outdoor living," says one
housewife, clearing her con-
science. "They have visiona
of a to0l. tree-shaded living
room in which to seek
re.luge between dips.
.. When such lounge llz.ard.5
aMounce a prospective
visit. say with a great sigh
of yearing. 'Oh, marveklus,
our swimming pool needs
draining and cl&&ning and
we sure can tUe an extra
band with the la"-'11 mo'>''er. ••
lt work.& every time, sht
aays. They go els ewhere.
Then thert are t b 1
11eaters."
Their viiion ol. bucolic
&eenet ls beef on the spit
rather lhan steer on the
hoof. They also dream of
chicken. and du.mplin&• and
gardell·to-oven deep • dish
rtiublro p!e.
The carefully d r op p e d
pbr.la. "'You'll be Just in
llma to spray our aarden,"
wlB work wonders, 1ay1 ont
wbo ba tried iL U there ts
an)'lhllll an eat« fe1n, It ts
sprav. Ht tllo loan a lam ·
Uy Oi"on I diet. 0
Futidl6ul 1Jpe1 OM! be
run off by 1--1111 that your
animals use the JWlmmln&
pool. And.n/1'actically any
urbanite .,-thi~ at th~
mention ol. a "big wasp or
mosquito year."
Insects are very helpful in
thia reaipec:t. U you haven't
seen one for days, they will
oblige you by showing up
when your guests appear,
Some vacation h o u I e
owners get into the unin-
vited ruest NI by fall!ng for
their own pl'Opaganda-"l'm
so glad they called. The
place looks so beautiful
right DOW, Somtont lbouJd
enjoy It"
The cbanou ... • gUftt
will flnd it too sunny, too
loggy, loo misty er too bug-
gy to observe yom-roses.
You are lucky if he strays
beyond the sound of the din·
ner bell.
One woman aolves tbt
guest problem by posting a
family summer work chart
in a con.spicuoUs plaoe. Nert
to the namt of each family
member ta Usted a chore for
tacb day of the week.
A tpeCial ''g ue s t''
category dele11te1 certa.ln
ch<res to visitors.
"Some take tbe hint. Some
think It ls a joke. Th.is ii the
greatest guide you can havt
for a guest list in tht future.
You invite those who fit into
the family ond do their
share of work," she uys.
Of course there are g\Mtl
who do not give JOU the feel·
ing that you have tm'ned
your v&C!lltioo bouJe into a
guest bOUll. They are tile
people "-"ho entertain you in
an unseUisb w111. &Dd you
will want to do tbt 1ame for
them, say tbt o o un t r y
ladies.
Cupid Given
Official Asaiat
TIPTON, Englud (UPI)
-A monlcipal "lorw't
Lane"' would be lat qp
uader a 'OfOPOlll b 1
Member o ( ~artlamtnt
P-Ardle<.
Arehe< llid .. lllJOl!klal
....... beilll -by courting couples Is near a
&Choo) and 1acU privacy-.
One set up by tile cltf In
more teclUllion. ht gald,
"would IOJve the )W'Oblem of
pa .. erlby being shocked.•
W1111 A POCIDtwml-
Of ttAllCll-
llO..W.
ONICIOUICIM
PBCVM'C'•
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llBllY sava FIRM
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Watnllt Swirl 4na 1
CollH Cakn .... • .,-
Chonlltl ~IJ _,ftc
Cookln ...... ~ 11 1 a ·
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SERVICE
amca a.a -AmcaN mas aroaas scu•
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LONDON BROIL
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OOIDIN CUMI
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HMISCO WOM HOHlf
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VODKA
29
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WITH suP!ii DISCOUNft Oii .
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CORNISH
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5 '!:'l
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WITH • I.ff PV•CNAll OP
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AllD TNll'COUPON
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V.i..llOTHUIS ·SUN., AUG. 79-Sfl'l. 1, 1961
P•llH P•OZIN MIDIUllll
PORK
SPARERIBS
... ,,_.,..
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79.L.
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2 .• 16.0Z,99
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NO Dl!POSIT
I URGEI OW HOT DOG
BUNIO•
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GO.DfN CllEMf
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IALADI • COLI $LAW ....
HOMADl-fAIM fllSH 41.01, 79c
OIHIR PICKUI bo,,.1 •
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20< OFF REG. LOW PRICE
OF 6 FOR 69'
•tnll••llCOOLHINK
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IONl·IN
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ROAST
BONILlll HAM
fAllFMRJe•t
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FILLED
BINDERS
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looi,~nary,
lnct., r ifler Poper.
$1.89 Vo4ve.
09
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P•llH NOU•L Y' LIAN
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SKINLISI COD l·lb. pkg. 63.
8M'/l-l'li5" $
•••ADID .... M .. 1'hlb ...... I''
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Wide ltul• ..... .,, f .....
PIE CHIE
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19!
10~
10~
Wed11tsday, August 29, 1968 DAILY PILOT 4 1
Saddleback Renames
Advisory Committee
Saddleback Junior College
haa reappointed members of
ita general advisory com·
mJttee to serve again during
ttie next school year.
1be 110 member group or
citizens was oreanized i.t
March. Each committee
member serve. on one of 11
aubcommittees.
Reappointments to June
30, 1969, W'el'e -approved by
the board of trustees. All
communities within the 376-
equatt milt dfstrkt are
represented.
The role of the general ad·
'Y' Offers
Sweat Plan
To combat the 1leeping,
working, e a t i n I and
television habit, the Orange
Coast YMCA is offering an
adult pbysiC&l program in
the !all.
The SWEAT program,
open to all men and women,
will offer ru n nl n g ,
c a I e sthenics. volleyball,
swimming and steam. All
classel'i will be held at the
YMCA, 2 3 0 O University
Drive, Newport Beach.
Classes for wome.i will
meet Tueii d ays and
Thur:Mlayw from 9:30 a.m. to
10:30 a.m. and from 7 p.m.
tc 8 pm .. Men's classes will
be held on Tuesdays and
Thuradaye from nooo to 1
p.m. and 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Fur.tJter information m ay
be obtai'ned by contactin~
tbe YMCA. at 642-9990.
He Gainll BA
Paul Barker Of 602 S.
Bayfr ont st.. Balboa. hes
bten awarded a bachelor of
arts degree from t h e
Uni.versity of Denver.
86.!'ker was one o( 508
student& rece!ving degrees
at 1umrner commencement.
exercises .
visory committee Is to
evaluate the colle&e pro-
gram and provide creative
ideas and tUgfeltlml, II·
plained Supt, Jl'Hd H •
Bremer.
Subcommittees are
building, library. ,..,.ra1
educaUo.n, adult education,
v ocational· tecbnica1
athletic, couoseling • n d
guidance, comm u n I t y
servil!•t , f'l n•n ce,
humanitin and coordimting
Uai9or!.
Sugge6tli.ons and evaiua·
tiona ere to be 1ubmitted
from the 1ubcommiUee1 to
the general advilory com ·
mitt.ee. Proposals approved
by the general advisory
committee are submitted to
the board ot trustees for
coosiderat:ion .
"Not ~arily unique in
neme, but unique lit KOpe.
leadership in tbia committee
can make the college's role
realistic in serving the com -
munity and ttie 111tudlentl by
meeting their needs and
desire," Dr. Bremer said.
Policemen
Want Style
PITI'SBURGH (UPll -
Allegheny County official~
are goi ng tc call in• fa1hia1
designer to get more 1tylr
into the uniforms thei
policemen wear .
"It's about time we qu
putting ttiose guys into .
cavalry uniform." 1 a J r
Commissioner William F
Hunt. "They are ridir
around in cars the1e day
not on horses."
County policemen co1
plain that present coats <!
so heavy they can hard
get them on and they s
their gray felt fedora !or
"as though it was inheri'
from a World War
dough bay."
Hey Kiddies ...
WIN A FREE
RIDE .. A-ROO
Bouncing Riding Ba.II
Fiii In the frH coupon at the bottom of this Id ani'
hive mom or dad deposit It In the big blue box et
the center of the mill In Fashion lsl1nd. Or pick up
fr•• drawing tickets in 1ny of the 56 Feshion Island
1tor", Newport Cent•r. Contest ends August 31 for
th ... ucltlng big bouncing balls.
FASHIOll ISlAll> in llWPORT CBfTBI
IH0"9Ne HOUU: _.., -4 'rW.r ........ te .......... .,.. .......... ,., .,.. ......
Clip eoupo ng te ,. ............ ..... ----------Win Free Ride·A·Roo Ball*
'Name
Address ____ _
Phone
, •• ~1111 l1l111d , •• , ..... ,, ........ fft•lt '•"'"'''· ., '"'"'"'''' •f Hiit l'•hllc•ti•~ ~•• .11,1hl1, --------·--
I ri
I
'
Is There a Difference Between Each Company's Drugs?
WASHINGTON CAP) -A ropldly and complejely Ulan Dr. Ley nld tho FDA COii· ".....Utute preownpl!vo, Notii>( t b a I dllfertncts Wm! out -lbere Is more sidmlb!e deWl." Tb e· Job n •on • d·
team ol university scienU.u the brand name drug. aiders tile dilft!rencet to be suggeetlw evidence o I -eel .,P in Ille fil'lt tine bere -m-the eye.• The Georgemwn ltudle< rn!mCratioo bu Aid lie
HY U..y baYe found dll· Dr. Martin said in tlle in· clinically lllOdficllll in only undesirable de""8 ol • . • out ol 10 drup the unlwnl· Dr. Martin said tllat on are part o1 • r-pro-•tudlel muot be completed !....,,.. 'In• the way brand· l<rview tllat more study of ed Wldtractl¥1t7 or overeo-ty b 1tudying, be said tile Geor-geo,.. lludlll w Joel tlle FDA Is conducting befon lt ... lake •position
name and . 1enerlc dru&• dlpbeeylbydanloin b needed one ol tlle dru&• 1<tt • tivity ol eertajn drug pro-00thet'1 •pretty blgb belUntl o4ber -fitv!!np,, "We lo 1ettle the cootrovertial
behaYI lllD the J?od¥. but the results "preunt chlorampheni&l. ductl" when given in lt&D· averaee.'' think il reasonable to illue of whether generic and on prOpofed legillatioo to "bur fi'~nlf r a i 1 e another kind of. dilemnia.fOr He termed the George-dard doEt.get. Dr. )fartin said, "J tink: a Mlume that o t be r dif. brm:l-iwne drugs a f e add some °' the eoste of
serious doubtls about the 1be FDA ;" the poHlbiUty town studies useful but es:· In h .ktten!ew Dr. great manr doctlOra ba.ve faeot:e1 probably exist'' equivaled. Mure tt*1 • preecr,~ druia to
equality of different prO· that a generic venion of a ploratory and Dr. Martin Martin Nici, 0 We ftl'e juet ~ uaumed that and that it would. be dozen drul' are b•in& benefits ot 1be medicare
duetf" ot the wne druC in drug rs rDore active than it agree. But he aald in artootttltd by the numb« of there wu no i.ue here, and worthwblle . to c o m p are ltudied. ReBultls are due tbi.I progtwn ol healtb eare for
tlte ~ ol dl .. ase,'' ~should~!'.'...!be=:... _____ _:lll~e ..!!pa~per~.!tlt~a~t..ctl>e~!lindin~·!!!g~s...!dllf~-~ocec~.!lba~t.!lumed~~!lllP!;·_" ....!.l.!w!!u~oo!!!.e !ol~tbem~::,.· .!B~ut~ll:_:odJ~er:!......!!prod~:!:-::!.....;"in=:....!"°"~·...1.Y:::eer::..:.· --------111=•-=el=der=ly:..: . .J.•----
'-nid Dr. Ctitl6topher M.
Martin, hl>acfof tile !! ... me
research team t Ge<r~ Univerai1;y.
But Dr. Herbert L. wy
Jr., conunisAoner of the
A d m. i a i st:ratioa, wt» ch
Food and Drug
A d m I n 1 &tration, which
authorized the university to
do the ruearch, blued •
statement oa the findlnls
cauUooloC tl>at:
"Tbe Food and Drug
Admlnisirlrllon bu in no
aense coocluded th a t
ipneric• dru&• are less ef·
fective u a clue tban
'bnnd-nem~· iroctuctt." or. 1'"' said, "In m7 op· nicm., there ,.,, f9wer than
two dor.en drugs where
t b • r a pewlic differences
among competing products
may be a problem."
A brand-name d r u g
generally ia dtafined as one
put out by ttie company that or<....... It. A geer!c is
ano4her-· boffipamy's vttdon
of the HJM ·cbemical com·
pow>!.
GenKic• can !>. made
when .. ori&t•-·· 17·
yMr poMul rib out or
when the or i &inato r
"ticemes out" the drug tc
otlter~-
Geoerlc drup Often sell
for leis tb.an 1he brand
venjon..-eOmetimec far a
iractWA as much. It has
been cmtended in some
quar~ that there was no
slgOilicant dfffereoce fn the
pertormances of generic
and brand-name drugs
Dr. Martin Hid in a paper
that bis team fOund that
some geo«ic drugs were
ab6orbed in the b 1 o o d
stretm1 of well volunteer•
more slowly than brand·
name versions. And he said
at least one generic product
was absorbed much faster
than the brand-name drug.
Ht emphasized. however,
that the findings do not
answer the final question of
how drugs pt! fOrFl wt:t.D.
glven to sick petleDts.
Dr. Ley told a reporter
that such blood-level tests
are the best mean. the FDA
now employs in maklng
judgments on how well
drugs perform when used oo
patimts.
The Geol"getown t e s t 1
were conducted w l t h
chlorampherticol, a pawerful
ant.ibi.oti.c used for com-
bating serious inf~ons ;
with sulfisoxazole. e drug
used fOf urinary infections.
and with diphenylhydantoin.
a drug used for treatment ol
epilepsy.
· Or. fo.1artin presented the
findings in a paper preplttd
for a meeting in Minneepolli
of the American Society fm
Pharmacology and Ex·
p e rime ntal Therapeutics.
The paper also was released
here. and Dr. Martin
elaborated an the findingg in
.an Interview.
Dr. Martin Is prof~sor of
medicine and pharmacology
at G«irgetawn'1 medical
school.
\Vith chloramphenicOl. Dr.
W.artin said. two generic
versions w~e found to enter
the bloodstream more slow·
ly and unreliably than an
identical amount of • brand
drug.
He said It wl6 partly on
the ~is of the Georgetown
studies that the F D A
ordered generic version& of
chloramphenicol off the
market. The FDA took the
action in January, '8)'ing
there was substantial doubt
about the safety and ef·
ficacy of the generic
chloramphenicols.
\Vilh sull\IOxuole, the
studies found "limilar but
less ltrlldnC difference&"
than With the chloram·
phenicol tests. Dr.>. Marlin
said certain evidence from
the testl made It doOOlful.
however, whether 12\e dif ·
ferences were d&Mlicant
medioolly.
He Bd ln tbe inte-vie'w
lb.at the findings indicated
further teiti with llJltiJOJ:·
uolee: mi&bt Urn u p medlcall7 cdgrilleaol dU·
ferencel-
W It b dlpblll)'ll>ydantoin.
the tMI lndk:J.ted that a '""°"c produCI ••• absorb-
ed In Ibo -mudl more
FAVORITES
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THERMOS 'l'OUNQ. 10.14 LI. AVO. WT, Ham Slices ::::. ... '111!. FRESH TURKEYS VON$ TAil! DIG 49' 'l'o.INO. 10.14 lt. AYO. WT, • ..... .._ Brit Ptr!ion ~ .. "'... 55' Lunch Kits -·~-59o Boneless Hams=~*I'! ~=-.,.:'i: '2'7 TYSON IAME HENS IOQ[ COIHfllol 69' Hlllf OlJMITY
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rtvteT CIN THl ~Ill 35L Woltr Tio!" Ml.-. ..... ~
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WEST -PAC VEGETABLES WHITE PAPER PLATES
20 3 .89 ' . 100 69'
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flO-l'ILOT-ADVEliTISER Wtdnesday, Avgust 28, 1968 Wedne•r. A\lgtlst 28, 1%8 DAILY PILOT 43
THURS., FRI., SAT., SUN., AUG. '29, 30, 31, SEPT. I; YOU Gn DOUBLE BLUE CHIP STAMPS
•••
•
ON ALL YOU·R M:EAT DEPAR·TMENT PURCli·ASES
-• • • -' t • -· • • : ' ;
Y.S.2'.A. .9raJe "_A'' US..;})._)/. QraJe ''_A."
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. ,fRESH HEN
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10-12 LIS.
AVG. WT.
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FR.ESH St.4All OVEN II.EADY 4 • I llS. 43 C. TURKEYS ............... . 1b
SEAFOOD
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Fre1111. N1rth1r11 Wh ite 69'
NALllUT1 STIAkS ., , , , , • .: a
fre•h• Fillet 99•
tOYll SOLi , ,, ,,,,,,,, a
Fr11h-Fill1t 59•
OCUN PllCH •••••••• a
FkESH FR.YIN•
RABBITS.
8BEAUAIT
8PECIALI
... 69~
20•0Z. MIN. WGTS.
TYSON'S PRIPE . . .
GAMEHINS
EXCELLENT
FOR. THE
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COOK-OUT
c
-----'2.re!Jh 5rozen new Zealand----REAL Md:OY SPECIALS MEAT DEPT. FROZEN FOODS ,
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. GENUIN~ SPRING HALllUT PILLITS , •• , ••••••• , , , , ........ , , , , , , , , • , , , • • M
LEG ·Of LAMB ~w · 49' COINID lllP HASH •• , , •• , •• , , , , , , • •, , , , , , , , • • • · • • • •
Lb. loll 59' SLOPPY .101 ••• , ,_,,.,,, ,, ,, , ••• ,',,,,,,., ,, , ,, , , ,, , , "
Lb. •·11 • 69' CHILI lOLL •• ,, ,., , , , • , ••• , ,, • , , • , • • • • • • • • •• • • • • ••• • 11
GORTON'S -7•ounca Packo90 79' SCALLOP CllSPS •••••.••••••••• , ••• , , , , , , , •••• , , , , , M
~~R 1~~~~1.~.E~ .-:. .'·.4.°~~:~~ .~•.c.k:~.'.,: ,',,,,.,,. • •' •, 59~
Mll:S. FRIDAY'S -I 'h -lb. Pk9, $191
lllADID SHllMP , ••. , .• , , , , • , • , , , • , , , ••••• , , , , 11ch
Lb. Roll 59' lllP SA.USA.II , , , , , , , •• , , , , , , , , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • A
•·•< "•· 39' lllP LINIC SAUUll ,, , , • , • , , • , ••• , ::·,::;,,,,, ,, , , , , , M
'':J,nJ.,....f.. !':Ju.. Qua6t'I
SMOKED
PICNICS . . ~ -
,SHA"NK
1·7 LIS.
CARNATION -2·11t. Pkg. ·. · 98'
l~IADID FolSH STIAll,S •••••••• , , , , • , , , , ,., , • , , , , , , , , , q
CARNATION -Po11nll P'1 eli:191 59'
PllCH 01 COD PILLm • , , . , • , • , , ••• , • , ••• , • , , , , • , , ..
AtL GRINDS COFF~E
FOLGER'S
b;~ 65c LB. ..
SHOULDER. 39c LAMB ROAST • • • rb
• • .... :'J, '
SHORT ' 37~b
LAlSI-LOIN , at• : lOUND IOMI 69' f j SHOULDll 59' LAMI CHOPS ..... , . a! LAMI CHOPS ...... a! LAMI CHOPS ...... a 2·LL $129 ! 3-LI.. $193
CAN ••• !CAN ••• Pre~Sllcecl .......... 45~
. . . fiunf; 'ljellow CAng
SLICED OR HALVES
PEACHES $ . 00
LARGE
2 y, TINS
• • • •
' ... .
PLNEAP.tE-ClAPl~lUlt, PINlAP•tE.OUN&I, CHlll"f·A•Pll,
10YSl.NIEll1 , •U•I, OUNIOI, tlOPICAt •UNCH, l£10ULAI 01 PINK llMOMAOI • PEAR
SHAPE
IUMSH1NI -LAlSi 11-0%. "'•· 35' YANIL._,. WAFIRS .................... .. TINS
, SU&Al I 5,ICI -ti...,, Jt r . 49'
·"AM GLAZI .............................. .
LAN5ENDORF'"KREAM KR.UST" WHITI or WHEAT-ll0 e1. L•of 22c
SLICID BREAD ................................. .
QUAIL-LAll6E2 'h TIN 19c
PORK & BEANS ............................. ..
"MIX 'N
MATCH"
FoRe'NdH:'S-•-~1. J ar I SC
MUSTARD : ........................................... . . '
ROD 'S ONION, •ARLIC. CLAM OR ILEU CHEESE-1.n . j:t~. 39c
CHIP DIPS .......... : ............................. ..
HEINZ-20.0Z. 1onLE ~ 29c ·: . JjU~TMAID CATER.IN& -·'h-&AL CTN. ALL ·DELICJOUS 69' OL"VIR&INIA ALL MEA·T-tt.11. Pk,. •'· 10 39c
TOMATO KnCHUP ......................... ; ICE · CREAM .......... ~'.A.~0.~'. .. WIENERS ........................................... .
----Suruhine 'State '2.rozen--. --.. _,.., LABOR DAY ":J.ie!Jfa o/ :J.re!Jh "P roJuce ___ _
. . . . LlqlJOB SPECLUS ·
OR
REAL
FLORIDA
.OH1 IOY-4-0L CU'l
FRUIT ICES • . 3 '-CT• •100 n:•s.
JU. ·i ·c 1 SCOTCH ...... .. . · . iouitaoN ... •4 •9 · · c
I
I •
6-0Z,
nNI
SUND!RLANO-''LONDON DkT" •3 99
GIN .......... ~".~'.'~
OLD YllNNA .
' . B E E R . THOMP$0N SllOUSS ; LAKE, COUNTY IAULETT
. 'P+cK-12.oz. CANS • GRAPES i . PEARS
WES"Pii1ioii ~RllD 6 69c 15~. ' ! 2 LI'· 29C
... ~;.0,, •• 25c · PACK • Pit~ITIADaiitKi '.'.~.~.~~~~ ....................... 3 ':tf.~' '1 00
PR.ICES EFFECTIVE THURS. th iu .SUN., AUG. 29, 30, 31, SEPT. I
2701 HARBOR BLVD., COST A MESA • 1l922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE
• • 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA
' •.> • '
•
I
1,
I
I
)
·i
I
~--------------------------------------------------------•
ff IWLV PILOT T-. A"""I 27, 1968 Wld"ldlY' _,I 21, ~968 F"-PIJ,OT·ADVIRTISER . .
Va ried Ancestry ••• ..:•..;•;..;•;..;C=o.;.;m"°'m""""o.;.;n..;.P..;.r.;;a_;ise;;;,
'Homestyle' Potato Salad Spiced _ With ·Regional ··Flavor . ~
AlllloQlll poloto -ii OOllAllfOd as American as
. oppla ~ .. Ulon ls hardly
ariotblr ma with so many
SnternaUODll avert.ones and II· 1111111 regional a n d
ponOlia1 dlllerences.
/l'bo IYPi' oC_potato 1alad molt Of u. --Ilk, uaually
dlptndt OJI where we pew
up, hoW our mothers in.a4•
potato aalld, and where we
live &1 adulta. In the areas
_.,.i . the . Great Laker.
where .the population is
heavily · SCandlnavlan, a
SwedU~ pOtato salad is
• favored. ·
Iii ti)~ Pennsylvania Dutch
,: ar,a and in other parts of
. the country Where Germam
oelUed and In motr.polltan
. areu where delicatessens
reign, 'German potato salad . ii 'J>OPU!ar. .
Out of the m!dweet, comt1
-. Uttle-~wn mash.ed
Potao lllld that -to he p tntni ln popularity due,
perhapi, to the convenience
ol inltant polatoet.
For tho vut majarity of
Americans, pcitato Hlad ls
pretty basic. It is made with
diced, or 1llced, potatoes
mlr:ed with celery, aeuoned
with salt and pepper and
to5sed with mayonnai•~-It
may include hard cooked
egg, pickle and a little
-0,oion, but it may atao in-
clude any of a half dozen
other ln~ent.I. .
:--J~t as 'there are vatia·
tton.1 on the bl.sic ieclpe
itself, there are v8Hattons
on serving it. The traditional
American way to serve
pot.aot salad is in crisp
iceberg lettuce cups. A
newer way ls ...on a thin slice
of lettuce, called a raft, cut
from a crisped bead of let-
tuce. . .
Increasingly p o p u 1 a r
within the last few years is
Ille tiered pototo u lad cake
that makei iuch .an im·
prealve show on a buffet
table. The potato aalad for
tbe cake is made tbe French
way, by martnalfll,g the
warm Potatoe1 In an Qil and
vtneiar drH1lng b e f o t e
tolslng t h e m with the
mayonnaise. FOi' the potato
•alad cake, an inexperuive
set of tiered cake pans la us-
ed. It makes enough (cir 18
( ¥' cup) servlngs.
MASHED POTATO SALAD
114'4 to 7-ounce) package
Instant malhod polato
%: cup real mayonnabe
2 table~poons mustard
with horseradish
%: teaspoon celery seed
Oasb pepper
Prepare mashed potato
according to package direc·
tions, omitting butter. Stir in
real mayonnaise, mustard
with horseradish, c e I e r y
seed and pepper. Serve
warm. Makes about 4.YA
cups. To vary flavor and
~nu... mlx in 113 cup chap.
ped radiab or 113 cup ~ with wued paper. OOmblne
per ' u-pep\W qr 3 ·marlnat.d potatoes, celfty.
tablespoom chopped . Won. onion and enough re a I
·or scallions or 1,) cup. cbOp-· may~J);n,aise to coat. Pack
ped celery. • into tier pans firmly bi.it
,TlERED ~OTATO lithtly. Chill several hour •.
SALAD CAKE , Run knife or spatula
$ pOuods potatoes (about around edges of pans. Invert
15 medium ) 9-inch layer on serving Y• cup corn-"011 p}ate. Tap bottom ot pan to
2 tablesP90n11 vinegar loosen salad; remove pan
l tablespoon salt and paper. Repe~t' with each
in teaspoon pepper layer, being certain borders
3 ,!!Ill>• ehopped ·Clerf ol each kre even all around.
(medium fine) Gatn!Sh as directed below,
· 113 cup. chopped oniOn ·or as deslrtd. Make1' 18 (o/,
lo/.r. to 2 cups real mayon-cup) servings.
naise Garnish base of salad with
Cook potatoes in bolling thin cucumber slices. Circle
water until ten cf er'. baae· of second layer with
Meanwhile,-< combine corn green pepper rings and stuf·
oil, vinegar, salt and ~r. fed olive slices. Garnish
Pare cook~, potatoeJ · ·and ... third lay:er with sliced small
cut into lh·lnCh cubes i Toss tomatoes; fourth layer with
with oil mix.ture ·while still pickles.. Top potato salad
war,m . Mari Date in cake with a radish rote.
relrlgONlo< about 1 hour. GERMAN STYLE POTATO
Llne bottomi of 4-tire pan • S4LAD
(II-. 7\h 5'4· and 31\·lnch) 2 tablHpoonJ corn oil
1 medium onion, choPP8<1 1llco or dice co o.t ~d. I> te"'P!IOll city mustor!
V3 cup vlnept •· potatoes. Sprlnkla wl!h·... Dolb -
¥•cup light com 1yrup and pepper, toa1 w I (h 1 Ill
I teaapooo tall' celery. Add mayDDD-1oe v~.., CCIPI oil
Duh _., ' -while ~WI warm : mix li&f>t-~ ~!c liallt cream
Dub paprika .. Jy Chill. Makela •ervlnP. 2 .r<r~.:.:;:::..0..., ·--4 cuPI hot, diced, bolled it delired add ono ·or ....,_~ "'61-'" ... ~
polatoe1 more ol the iou..>lnC: ·' · · ir,iY--mill<
2, ta~l11poons c b o p p e d I'< cup lndio re!iJb drain, 2 C!ll'f ed WH!•rn panley . 'bcippec! lcobor.I· co !Jeat corn oU In •kille!. aild eel 'OR y, CU\' c I •llll!l'i> thuil)<lsijced
n1 ~· k lo .p.ckle ' ~d r-mh'me. ,_. ... __ , o on .ilN coo over w 2 hat'd cooked eggs, slice · -~--·-::;.. 1 . b.,,...l·~ heat unW tender but not or cut into wedres , _ , ~ . ..-~ Jn ze . ow , &et
brown .. Ai!d corn •)'tuP. 11 cup shredded carrot all~, M\X•sal, -IUC~, <!!Y
vinegar, ult, and paptika. ~·cup sliced racli$tl ~ .ip~ al)d Pr>e;· .~m
Bring mlxfure to boil. Pour · l/, to ¥.t cup slivered green : .srn:all(jr bowl. A !~t
over . hot potatoes ; add pepper · . well . with rotary ~
parsley 800 toss lightly. y, teaspoon paprika -Beali~g constanyY, ~~y
Serve hQt or cold. Makes ·~ 2 tablespoons ~1.n,p'ed· add inM ,crder~ _corn\.::~ '~t~ POTATO SAbAD oniQll : , : ' :m1:r..::. ~"J;;~;
2'4 poonds potatoes (~to g SWEDIS!J POTATO SAUD'' """'"'potatoes and beets, :'4d -· ' --~··--ii'· , 1 cup.real mayonnal11 . , ' 1-~toe1 • ·(about 1 ~ least), how:. , mh. tn
2 t•"'PO••• salt pqundl) · • lottuce ,and:O!)t~ . .Jl$t
¥• ~aspoon pepper . 1 . (......,..) .C"1 1liced.. Jlelon . .....tft<" :.t• 1 ~up diced celery • ~; drajl!e<l . _1>jll',.;.;.;,,.-. · . ·
Cook potatoe1 In bolling 11> toupocma 1ilt·, • · rlnill .ft-. '· · 7
wlter until tender. Paro ad 1 t-sugar osvlnp.
BAIG,AINS .IN / QUALIT·Y ··FO·ID _____ ...;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;~~;;;;.· __ ___..... . . . . .
OPfN 9 A.M.·7 p.i;..'
M ~100 .. lboa,-Nowpon ~<h
U.SD .A. GRADE A WHOLE BODY
F.RYlllG CHIC.KE·N
*
LB.
IONUS DISCOUNt Sl'ICIAL
Tenderay Takes The Guesswork
Out Of Buying Beef • • • • .
On!y,U.S.D.A. Choice bfff 11 chosen for Tenderay. This fine beef
Is placed '" special rooms where controlled climate 1peed1 up
natural tonderlng nction -pro1,c11 natural lulces nnd
·fla vor. No other beef 10 fre1h con be ao naturally tender.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE TENDERAY BRAND
£ASY CARVE -LARGE MEATY END
RIB ROAST LB.
IVllfDA'f'0 DIKOUMT PllCI
* STEAK·S .••••• LB.
IONUS
DISCOUNT
SPICIAL
J.,. tp
llOUNDotSllLOINTIPIOASTot SKIN TOIN ( "U.S.0.A. CHOICE TENOERA Y BRAND TOP9 8 c J-'N!T DAVIS ECONOMY QUALITY 3 9 •
Boiltleu Steaks •• "'· . Roasting ChickeM La.
U.S.0.A.CHOIC!TENDEMY81ANO $149 U.S.0.A.Gt>.DiA!tVINGCH ICl<fN S ·3 5 C
Top Sirloin ·steaks Ll Cut Up Fryers •• o ll
~•••a• 79c COUNTIVCLUl 'WASTffllE" $139 ... -~GIOUNO ION!USS ' •
Beef Patties " ••• ta. . Half Hams ••••• Lo.
NO OTHER BEEF SO FRESH COULD
BE SO NATURALLY TENDER!
I
u.~.o...t.. o.i •• T......., 1 .. ..i St.•• $J 29.
Porterhouse ... ...
11r1'f~k;: :·: .... 9e·
u.a.u.c:w.. r...-..v...., $)It Spencer Steak •• ,. .
u.a,u Cholcil l.,..,.y """' $) l t < cl• Stelk .... "" . ·, . . .
u.LO"; a-.q T'°"otOY h-<i $)ff Cuk Steaks ••• ,. ·
tl-1.DAd.iltT~.... '
7-lone Steak • "'· 59• ' GfllMllj ,,. Hovt4v
G~nd Chuck .... 65<
Gt.....i1 ....... ~v
Ground Round .... 79•
'\1.1.0A GM-A Fryi"I Chi<b<t
............... ..,Gil>IM '
Pick O' Chi.ck ...... 4~•
MrllrUI ... ,.. o-.
'!"nterey Jack .... 79•·,
t •orh s~,...., °'"""'a.-., Mcinarella •• :~37 "
""" .... lf'!Uil "" ""'""'" Party Dips ••• :;: 33•
Mio ..... .._ .. ,__ '
Cheese Spreacl ••;:. 49c . ..... ~ ...._,_O,..o.l10t•-
CG_l_tl -......... ll-O'-39 c. • a n ••••• CTN ••
K"""k Knop
Sliced Bacon •• :;-~ 5 9,~
Gr<llA f..i Fr.Ji 'ork luttfno. ., '
Shank Half ~ •• ,. ~9·
Gr911PNF•.P
Pork leg Slices •• .;. 9 8« ·
C.ftW li9 .. ti\ lOll Che,.
o.i .....
Jorlt loins , , , ... 69•
Gr.~ Fff ta,,.,. c-
Porlt Rib Chops .... SJ•
G,.;~ hd '-• ~oft $
Wafer Chops • • ·~ 109
GrWt,.,..., '9ct . ~
l.Oin POI\ Chops • i'.79• ·
...... ,...~,,..."1"(11, o.. .... .,~.
Thirst Ades 10 .. 99•
'lt>dO....~~"""
Bananas ....... 11 ~
e COSTA MESA-rm-.
~
• NEWPORT BEACH _,,..................... e HUNTINGTON BEAC'.W-"•2 ,....., ,J • 1110 lrwW A .. ., IWllllffdlf'f ~I "• WWef ..... .,.,._
---------
.
'""1UI ....., , Verieif1-! " lo11c~ Meat ; , ·~
llA.rk.i...-
Cooked Ham • 1 ~~
r...-.Cl1~ .. ~ ........... , ...... Wafir Beef , , , ~
Vlenno Mold, hgul~•"' c.-.it ,,. .... Yito. ...
K k "-0£ nae wurst , , ..... ,
.o.JID ••
Salami Chu~ i i ~ t).oi~tlAS ' • , . .
I 00,. o.lft """'"'~ Co111KkVoilka ~
....... lllfrlllMr•OUMt
lonr ot lentucij .•
""....-11 '-" ..,,.,,,..,_,.™ $ ,w of Kllkam11 •
.... "~··~ \\-Gtl. 0..-111.
lf(alllla Bros. Wine:
Sffl~;:.~ieer 6"' . " -'
• FOUNTAIN VALLEY-:•·.
. I
!•4 ~
Ii~ SllllCks ~ 37< -' ·-. I' • • • • • Pl:G. ·43 t f>t • """" ............ ..... s.oz. 95• ' !"'f"1I • • • • • • • J,\I
·~,...j.. .... ,' W'". . ""'°'·22· • • • CAN 'l •$. ~:_ .. Siu,• filNr $ 94 ~tt,es •.• _. .,,,_. 2
TRY THIS-JUST FOR THE HALIBUT
AJAX
CLEANSER .
;~17c
fVERYOAY DISCOUNT "'11C! . . .
,.._hi!.-,. (!..! . .tc OH lolt.IJ 2 4 •
Margarine IU C
••• C1N.
Ktofl Mitodo. •
Margarine ••• ~ 32•
.... c.. ....
Coffeemate •• ·~ $1 09
...~.
Tomato Sauce .'~ 11 •
~CAN.·Mc -·-Cat , '"°" 22· sup • • • • • Ill. r
•
·~. Tomato Paste • ~~ 16•
M;h;;;;:-. ~ 37' ...,.,._,,,,
Gelatin ...... ~ 9• ........... .
P.uddi .. s •••• ~ 1 o· .
w~• u..04 65•· Walnuts ••••• n::G. ·
--PllS •••••• 'o:! 2oc .......,,_PNMll
Cut Beam ••• ·~ 23•
OtOPftO NOCCOU. 1 tc .....,_.,f111 ... Al'V"""'-. '
Ftvlt Pies ••• ""' 73' , . , .. _o.ic.-.
P1111eh ••••• :~ 20~
.......s-...wi... ~ . ls
Plckles ••••• ~ 49 ' --Sliced Diiis •• "~ 39• · . .
R'riid7 ••••• "~ 49c
s;.n,..., .. ·~ 35•
vueo..,
Kidney IHllS .''<'! 17~
ci-1rod.lkOllt,,.,WJ
0 '53· Top Jolt •••• ·~ •
W-~U,Oniiiio
Liquid Plumr • ·~ 79 1
~(lod. lk Oii l..w) •
Ivory li1f11ld • "~. 45•
~(bd.12cOll~ 67 ' Cascade .. O< C
• • • • tKG. '
........ w ..... ·79• . ''°" SROW • • ....
'-"'"-Miracle White ·~~ $1''
S(olt (hid. Jc Oii Lab.II i
Toilet Tissue :~ 35 -... •. . .... 31• aaa1es •••• '°'" ..
f'l(Q, &T 5Cl. ll •
DIAL SOAP
t!GUl.AR l 4c
llAk '
IATH IA~ 2Gc
..
Tuc'4u'. Auvust 27, 1968 DAILY PILOT ff
In Cheesy Coat
Halibut Goes Partyin·g
A I I dllcrJmln1tin1,
tllougbtlul bomemall:er, you
want the best for your fami·
ly.
Wbeu lhoopinc for I
partfcularly pleasing and
DOOri.tlln1 eotree -why not
mooae hliilbut atelka? Make
sure that lt 11 'Ncrtll Pacllie
ballbut, the proud name tor
the only true halibu~ kin( of
the llatllshes.
Known and appreciated
the country over, North
1'11clfic halibut, a prize top.
of~atdt aeafood, i' a
tu.en from the colji water1
of the Pacific adjacent to
Alaska.. Brid.1b Columbia in
Canada, and off the shores
of Washlnl!OO<> State.
Just rJ~ for every
member of the family,
North Pacific halibut is an
excellet& IOUl'ce of high
quality protein and
mlnerall. Dieters Hke Ill
low oodlum. low lat and low
.-1e content. Ill llrm,
tender !ltsh II mild ln Davor
and W<lllderfUI f o r ln·
troducln( --to "'""' people: lt 11 readily a<·
copied by older people as
well.
crun-Cbeese Halibut II on
fMI'I anawer for t h 1
"sometbinc different'' that n Juot ri&ht for any oc·
eMion, bec9lJll thil r6Clpe
can add dMb to weekday
dil\Der• er be a INfood
IO!lhloUcole that IJ elegll!I
enough for a party.
North Pacific b a I i b u t
ateaka are marinated in a
tangy French d r e 1 1 I n I ·
lemon julco mlxture, then
baked to succuie'1t jusl·ri&ht
perfection under a blanket
of French fried o n i o n
crunched with Parmesan -· Crun-Oieese Halibut bu
oo much llJPOlila appeal,
you'll -to llll'Ve It oltan.
CRUN.CUEl';SE llAUllU'l
2 pound. N o r I h Paclllc
halibut -·· -h ... lroun
IS cu= drwln& 2 tab len!m J-"'• ....,pon wt I can (3 ..-IS) l'rencb
lrlod·onlom
'4 cup gratad Parmollll
cheeN
Thaw lrooen lleab. CUI
lnlo -.-par11 ....
Place fllh in I sballow hU·
tn1 clllh. Combine drOllln(,
lemon juice and 1111. Pour
-'1Vft lllh and let -for SJ mtnute11 turnlnc once.
Remove fUlh from aauce
and place ln a well·&r•&Nd
baldntl dish, 12 • 8 • 2 ln·
clles. Cruoh onlona. Add
.,.,_ and mix thorou&hJy.
Sprtnlde °'"°" mixture over fish. Bate in a moderate
oven, 350 degrees F., for 25
"' 30 -... unlil ft>b flak.. .-Jy -teoted with I fork. Servos I.
Market Basket Discounts Prices On
Quality Products -No Games, No Stamps,
No Costly ''Extras'' • • • •
Most 1tore1 claim to hove low prices. But en
what-on a handful of Items, or Inferior pro-
ducts? Not Market Basket. We discount prices
oll through the store•. And Guarantn latis-
•e.,e fW.t1.W., ... , ... olW ~
ARR0W
BRIQUETS
1:;~·51•
20.ll. IACJ, $I .Of
IOIUS DISCOUNT SPICllL
Mustard • • • • .. ~ 33• ,...,,., ... ..,
Paper Plates • ::i 69 1
11\AYOll •
1..1\.1. Hawaiian Punch 3:$1
HIJHT'I
Pork & Beans • ~ 251
faction or your money bock Oft flMt'IJ purdtma. t
True, you glvo up gamos and llampo to ohap
al' Markel llaakel. Bui you get bargai• and 1
quolity alwayl. -.yday. Seo t..r '°""""' '
MARKET BASKN HAMBURGfR 01
HOT DOG BUNS i:! PKG.11· ti
OFB "' ~
IONUSDKCOUNTIPECllL
P!N I Qt.Jill IMITATION
Sour Cream •• ~ 271 .~ ....
fUITIC f<ioD WIAP-(20 "· -Handi Wrap •• "~ 31 1
WYLH
Drink Mix •••• 'I: 1oc
f AMOUS FOR DEEP-
C UT DISCOUN·T PRICESI
•10NUS DISCOUNT SPICIAU -
,,._ -........ -"-'Dti TIMllly, a.,,. I, INI,
COllYINllllT, SAFI,
INIXPlllllVI
REPUBLIC
MONEY
OlDERS
' IOUI AT MAim IASICIT ........
w·,~·!:.L,a::•D U.S.D.A. FOOD STAMP COUPONS
tN LOI AN•ILll COUNTY llORll
e COSTA M SA-m•,-e NEWPORT BEACH-:,1::,~!:"1:.::.;, .. ,,_, I HUNTINGTON BEACH-~:!=.-e FOUNTAIN VALLEY-!':.=:""
-----------------------------
)
-----------. ------_..,
M DAILY 1'11.n w ...... Autu•t 21, ltlf H DAILY PILOT
•
You 're undoubtedly planning a big week'-end of fun !~·.,~
in your own patio! El Rancho has everything to :
• • • • • •
'
SPLIT
Freeh fryera! •.. California'• finest ..• broad
breuted, chunky legged, expertly 1plit into
halvu for perfect broiling! Barbecue th-
beauti11 , • , and Uaton to tht clomor for ....
ondal And at a barpin prloo!
HALVES OF FRESH
CALIFORNIA
GOLDEN FRYERS!
c
111
LUER'S
5 Ll CAN
v Sci much lean ·goodneM ••• fully cooked
with delicate amoky flavor ••• boneless,
for more good eatinr ••• and then canned
for you to take along I " . or to serve it at
home, oollecting oomp lments !
Fryer Legs & Thighs ...... 49! Oscar Mayer f,anks1 .~!59~
· llW., Jule,. dirt -I! Ott enough to permit everyone to hlvt hil •-J!l'iYMt 4'!1........,1 :All mtM • , , oook.11>e °'"' 11allna' coalo, and wai* !M\~dl maU IVlll 9U d!u-.1 ,_
Fryer Breasts .59! NaHey' s Salad 1
........... ~:3i$1 00
Sweet, tender meat! ... At this prlce you an afford to let each person have plentr. of \\'hit. meat! Your choice of varieties .•. 15 ounces of de1eCtablt delight, r df: to take aloni and serve with prldef \
'
Chicken Livers ........................ 59! Pen & Quill . Di ........... 3:$1 00
Frttbl ... for & lll"'At omelette ... or with fried noodle1 ... for tempting tuty appetl.1tn! Oourmet'e·treat! All varllit1 •• , res. S9c each .,. pick up four favorite Nabieco ack Crackers at Silo per pkf., tool 1
f !!~.-~!!1~~~!.I!!;;;;;;~.?! Green Goddess Dr ssing 391
,
Albacore 51~
Excellent eating! The member of the tuna family that'11 kn own a.s the fi nest
quality ••• whi te meat, with that deli cate flavor that m&kee it a real favorite :
Frc• rccip_c1! ••• wc»t.dtr
how to coo} itt •.. we Mvc
. 80Mt IUl10tlti07tl 1f0U •••
and votitr fsmilv • • • a re
1ttrc to a,pprtcio.tt!
Fiaherm1n'1 Wharf ••• 8-os. bottle •.• tht dreatillll that will do justice 7our finest aalad creation!
For that week-end Holiday enter ining!
El Rancho's Gin .................... ~'.·.~.~ .............. ~3.99
Ninety proof ... smooth mixer' ... buy El Rancho liquor by the case and e 10% I
El Rancho's Vodka ............ ~~ .. ~:~ ........... ~~-.. 3 .89
Eighty proof .• blendl perfectly •• chooat &n1 S El Rancho label Uquo" and sa '1 more!
El Ran~ho's Tequila ......... ~:.~ ........... ~ .. s ,89
White .•. light .•• from Mexico ... enj oy the finest ~{arguaritll.1 ••• and aavi , too !
El Rancho's Blended Whiskey.~ .. ~~~~~.~ 19
Elihlf...U: P.roo! ! ••. anolbtt la Ibo femiii of El R&naho'a t.1y1 gUllltY, Uguora I
f
I
I
I
I
l
t
(
1
c
~ ..
E
F
T
. .
041Ll ru.01 1'4 OAJLV JILOT , 11,
:., )oating· -.·.camping , .. picnicking .. at the beach ·~,. or
~o : ~ma·ke it a delicious holiday! Come on in and see!
<ed ,...,
ied
al
' •
lo llDOOth. •• '° crumy ••• 10 many temptmr flavors! ••• . . .
Tho pnmhun )>Mk prefernd ~ poriiolllar people I Get
,,....al ldudl -acid lrulf, loppinp, null • , , end Jet the
urp lo 1re1ta have !ta own way I
ROYAL HOST
HAlf &AllON
FIB.D
FllSll!
•
Tender brneJt, bllntlng with 1Weet
~ ~ ... , .11-i th• ••• J!Oll1'
the 1111 and be ,_. .. will\ ·the butftr •••
and lmow tb1 pltuon of really fine 11tfnsl
! Fresca 6 Pack .. Oh. ...................... ~.49' Tomatoes ............ -.-....................... ;; .. 19~
.. lo nlNlhlna ••,at a J>rlee lo shoal 1boutl, ,, 10-ouMO l!<>'ll• oHor • lll'Plafl o! IOI for Ml • Jttd llpe, r.et oolld,, , for P.loWt l"llf. l!lllill,, 1 11114 dtlthllul -4wWi ~I
Fritos Corn 1Chips .................... 59' Romaine .... ~ .................................... ~ .. 9!
l av1:1oc on the ?eiUl•r 69c size ... and be aure to take them alODJ for a happier holiday! Crlap Joavea.,. aolorful, tandt? ••• enjoy the fralhn-o! II! ll&ncho'I finll" lalld Jl?MDll
Buns and Rolls .................... 3 i $1 00 Cranshaw Melons ............ 10f
Sava on Webera hamburier buna and wieher rolla ••• and be prepend for bii appetite.!••• pkgs. of 8 Chill lhom,,, and taka 'om a1..,1 Sweet juicy m1l0111..,, be enjoyed lllJ.llml, &llf."lianl
H, . K h 29' I fl RANCHO MARKETS WIJ. BE a.OSED IJIOR DAY! e·1nz etc u• Pri<uituf!ectotalhtoru r · .. ,. ............. ,........... . Thurr. through SIUI., Aug. 1g, 10, 11; lept f,
Big 20 ounce bottle .• , the 1low one,,, l&UC)' 1picea with rich nd ripe tomato 1oodneu l Bi. value I
I
Barbecue Sauce ........................... 39c Morehouse Mustard ........... : . .:: .... 25c
1fei 111 . 16 oz .•• , Rf!gular, Hickory, Mushroom. Economy 1i1e ••• aavc lOc in the 24 oz. jar.
Pound, Cake ............. . . ............... 69c
F avori~ from Sara Lee , •. serve with freab fruit!
Orange Juice ................... 5 ~~ $1.00
Treeaweet ••• healthful, deliclou1 ••• 12 oz. can ••• S9c
Mr. Clilps Cookies ............. 3 FOii $1.00
ChocQl&!,o or Oabneal , , , reg. 39c ••• fun 1nytime I
Kraft Marshmallows ......... 4 FOi $1.00
Jet puffed ••• 1 lb. pkr.,,. have tun toutln1 'eml
Troplc Tone Napkin~ ................... 10c
Colorful,:. from Zee .,. pacl<age of 601
Sandwich Bags .. . ... . .. ................ 43c
Baggies.:. 160 ct. pkg .. , 1 preserve fresh flavor!
Folgef's Coffee ........................... 67L
Two pound ean ••• 1.SI • , , .Three pound tlD , • • 1.91
Charcoal Briquets ............. 10 ::C 79c
K1n11rord. ··even burning. · · 20 lb. bag 1·49· ARCADIA: Sunset & Huntington Dr. (8 Rancho Center)
Paper Plates ................................ 69c PASADENA: 320 West Colorado Blvd. • SOUTH PASADENA: Fremont & Huntington Dr.
Bonctwar• ••• white ••• 9 inch size ... pkr. of soi HUNTINGTON BEACH: Warner and Algonquin (Just East of Huntington Harbour)
Scott Tow els : .. . .. . .. . .. . . .. .. . . . . . .. .. .. . .. 29c NEWPORT BEAClt 2727 N.........+ Blvd. • 2555 Ealtbluff Dr. (Eastbluff YR•·-C8ntlr) Jimbl> IOI!'! I o I ,iii\a, 4Qlon, Of ~-todJ . --·-•njlVU .....
I
.. --.. "---.....____ ---
\
tl4s DAILY PILOT WtdneSday, AUgUst 28, 1968
INNOVATION: REUBEN'S !SANDWICH) 'COUSIN RACHEL
New Sandwich: ·Love at First Bite
Some1hing new in the way
of hot sandwiches for 1um·
mer ls Rachel Sandwich -
cousin, you might say, to the
popular Reuben.
"Rachel" combinea cor-
ned beef, r.ruerkraut and
Swi!l iCbeesie on toMted bot
dog br.ie spread w .1 th
tartare sauce. lter crowning
glory ii a frelh Bartlett
pear hall flJ1ed with tartare
sauce to whlcli olives, onion
and mustard have been ad-
ded. Thus arranged,
"Ra-chel" goes to the oven
for 15 minutes so the cheese
can partially melt.
We think this will be a
popular sandwich .
Un fortunately , it's a
seasonal one because of the
e~se.ntial contribution of the
. juicy fresh pears. (The
heating brings out their
fiavor, incidentally.)
Enjoy "Rachel" n ow
. .Beware of Good Taste
while our stores have plenty
of this year's beautiful
Barlett.'! from Callfomia. It
will be love at first bite.
RACHEL SANDWICH
2 fresh California
Bartlett pears
Lemon juice v .. cup pitted ripe olives
Homemade or bottled
tartare gauce
I tablespoon chopped
onion
2 tablespoons prepared
mustard
4 hot dog buns, toast.ed
4 slices, bolled corned
beef or pastrami
l can (8 ounces)
sauerkraut, drained
4 slices natural Swiss
cheese
Pare, halve and core
pears; coat with lemon
juice. Coargely cut up all
but 4 olives. Mix l/• cup
tartare sauce, the cut up
.·Greeks Bear Culinary Gifts
Tile· ·art m dining and
mjny oI ~ basic principlei
of cookiDg are amoog the
gilt& bequeathed to the
world by tlllclent Greece.
'Ibe Jcttmen sage, Orion,
·was the inventor (If the
ha.sic white sauce. Let oo
RU66ian diSpute it.
It was Agre.s of Rhodes
who taught 115 how to fiHel
fish. It i5 to the Greeks that
we owe the discovery of the
oyster as an edible mollusk,
tile creation of the first
pastxy and the popularity of
the cabbage.
Today American travelers
1 OllllKS "tVE A NAME FOR IT: SKEWER• LAMB
have discovered Greece,
and have returned from the
sun baked islands with a
desire to duplicate some (If
the savory meals tasted on
their journeys.
Skewered lamb is as
pleasing to the eye as it is to
the palate -and an electric
open hearth broiler makes it
easy to prepare.
There are .any number (If
ways of skewering lamb, the
patterns vary according to
each hostess. 1bis recipe is
one of the m06t popular, and
tile macinade ,e m b o d i e s
characteristic Greek
seasoNn~.
SKEWERED LAMB
l II pounds boned I e ~ of
lamb cut in 1 ¥.. inch
squares
6 lamb kidneys split in
half lengttrwise
2 cups cold water
2 table1Spoons vinegar
12 slices bacon
12 medium size
mustvooms -serubbed
but oot peeled
6 small ~ed white onions
12 chunks g r e e n pepper
-washed and seeded
2 tomatoes -quartered
. f\tartnade
1 cup elive oil
113 cup fresh lemon juice
1f.i: cup dry white wine
1 tablespoon chopped pars·
fey
1f.i: tablespoon salt
1 teaspoon oregano
Y.i teaspoon pepper
2 iarlic cloves finely
diopped
3 bay .......
1 small onion . quartered
Place lamb cubes in bowl.
Combine an Ingredient. of
marinade and Pour
over meat Refri~ate for 2.
to 3 hour11 stirring OC·
caslonally. Meanwhile, sGak
kidneys in two cups of cold
water to which 2 table·
spoons vinegar bas been 1d·
ded.
To Broil: Drain lamb
cube• and reserve
marinade. DrliB> kidney•
and di8card water eod Wiegar. AIT8llp meat ....
vegetable. on 1 k e w e r 1
·starting with cubed meat, II
•kidney wrswed in bacon,
and alternatt"i with tomato,
pepper, mushroon. • n 4
onion. Place skewers on
broiler and cool< on eoeh
side 'for . appi'oklmately 10
minutes. baellng olton with
marinade.
olives, onion and mustard.
Spread buns open flat; top
with additional t a r t a r e
sauce. Layer with e<>rned
beef, sauerkraut .and cheese
in that order. Place a pear
half on each, cavity-side up
and spoon tartare-olive mil':·
ture into cavity. Top each
with an olive and bake at
375 degrees 15 minutes or
until cheese is melty. Makes
4 sandwiches.
·Cape It
7137
Wear a Oashing short or
long oape made of jiffy wool
-great for sport or town.
Jumbo-knit (:ape sweater
-use contrast for weaving
through cables, f r i n g e .
Make short version one col·
or. Patitiem 7137 : directions.
FIITY CENTS (coins)
for eacb pattern -add 15
cen'ts for each pattern for
flrst<larss mailing a n d
special handMng: othenWse
llhird-cbsd delivery will take
three wee'ks or mo.re. SeOd
to Alice Brooks, the DAILY .
P 1 L 0 T. l~ Needlect'alt
Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea
Stetiol>, New Yod<, N.Y.
10011. Print Name, AddreH,
Zip, Pa~a ·Hambtt;·
NEW 1969 NEEDLE-
CRAIT CATALOG -"best
fashions!" ''Most new
desips to knit. crocilet,
sew, weeve, embrokter!"
say editors. 3 free patterns 1
inside. 50 cents.
-•• 11 Jilfy Rui• -
cornJ.>lete patterns -inex·
pen11ve, easy to mate. 50
centa. · Book no. I -Deloe Quill&
-16 complete patt.ms.
Send 50 ceotl. ·
Book no. 2 -Malf!am Qalltt -patterns l<r 12 quil(I. 50 ......
Book no. 3 -Qalhl for
Tod1y'1 Uvhlg. New ex·
d.Ung collectioo -15 com-
plete patterm. 50 certs.
Book of Prlr.e Aftl1aDI -
Kn!~ c:rochet 12 afghans. 60
centr.
Wfdlltsdly, AOgust 28, 1968 F2_;_PILOT-ADVERTlsO
Ettectri.. Thu11..&1n., Aur. 29 lhru S.pt I in licensed S.fm)I
... 1• -111111 CAKE-Of·THE·WEEK
:': Cherry Delite Cake
-We Specialize In Cakes fo~.:!~
Ill flil Occasions -Decorated to . • • --········· 511!1!1!1!1!1!1!·•
th Septemblf 1 in licensed Sof....,. EltectiVI Thurs . .Sun., August 29 ru
~!~o~!~~D~~~ rt '3 79
80 Proof Qua
lacMair's Scotch $499
Imported Scotch Whisky F'fth
86 Proof 1
~~i~~da~! !~kaQurt s31s
80 Proof
!~~ck~t~:~:ournon Q rt$ 4 99
86 Proof 11
'
R ID $369 St. E mo um Proo! flttl
., '5'' Arandas l equ1 a rr001 fll"
eJ~ It. Castle Wine
~~~· Dom Brau Beer
1•11••
6 ll•llo
l1ttlH
'1"
'151
1000 Bayside Dr.-Newport Beach
24 Monarch Bay Plaza-South Laguna
~
f ,
'
.
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J!J~pT-ADVERTISl!R-P3 Wtd!WJa,y, August 28, 1961
• •
I i I
Ir.' ::..~.:e .. t:i: ,.,..,.-. .... -..... --------.M-...... .................
Coffoo Cup
-. '
-
Yec111m.Pack
Edwards
Coffee •
Save '100 -KODACOLOR .
FllM •
· Canned ....... ................ """ : 1:•5•
"" ...... " C ops .
Fl'llll Pt rt lt11k "'. 69C r..tarii ~td Pd.
lp•llills =.:: ., W .
, ... a..,. ='·Yo.~ .. ... , ......... =:...'" .... . , ....... i=.&. ... ,.
Sliced Bacon ......... ,..... . 5.,. .. • ···~· '''" ••• l:::..• ...... •l.WtltnF1 .... ::__ ...... "'-" -..... • .._.. rtt •""1 cw, ,.., 6ftc :""""''tfl r-,.. 7
r I ••
llo Coat ......
. ..... :.:::: .... ~ •. '* -1;
,_., .........
r..:r_s: :,!:ft ................... --
.... ..,_ ....... 29 .......... ,.,.... .,., c ................
Wtdntsdly, Au;ust 28, 1968 -
Parfy'Prlde
Potato
.!~~
-~ .....
'Z-49c~
Sterling Brand
=-"'~~
DAILY PILOT jll
lllced ........ , All I••• ... . ••
·--... -45• ..... _ ... . ..... _ ----"'7'
.~ . BACK-TO~SCHQOl ~.
·f:~. ~ Features at. ¥P.~~. · •
' '·~Vanity Note· BOOlt · ·.
. n •• , _. .. , Bl .. I p ..
:0.~11 d91 ~= •·4t .. -... • ~ oCO!lll illllll. :11·•:., ' .
Lindy laD· Pof nt ,,.. t."z.•J-.#;;.; 3f':
Thermos Bottle ~-..... , · :::: T'·
' P•llee Folders ::: ·491 Hai~ Spray er:;,. •:: 511
S.Otc~ ~lfl:,',,,, ... W Paty ~.:.--IJ•
fllJfl .. :-•1 T ...... llB·;•.:47' I
211l1Jlll SI., Cosl1 Mesi 1000 lllysllll Dr.,.llewport luQ 24 Mourdl lly Pim, So. IJpu 63611. Cod Hwy., llglu ltlcll IMcll lollev1rd ~MCF.~i{{ttllsftl .
' ...
• .. _ --------~'-.-....... ................. ............_.. ....,, ............ ~_...--..._...._._._ -
. .
' I
I .,
I
ff DAILY PR.OT
Jewelry
Vital to
Society
BEVERLY lllLU, Colll.
(VPI) -Marv!A Hime, -
has -..iuni jewelry to
IOdely -and tllm llars fOr 22 )'ell'l1 lla:ts
jewel& u one of the upper
class nece1sltiel.
"There ar• tower dlll .....Ual&---· p1a<e to ale<P, and Ulen
there •e upper clap _....
U&Ls," the wiry, tMWlini
jeweler explains.
"When a man acquires
tffakh, his family ceta a
fOurttt car and a color
televiaioo tet. Aa soon • hii
wife bu the fur coat, she
starts tllinkint -.1 jewe!I.
Of oourae, t:Mt'a wh• she
should have got!ftl in U1e
first place. because jeweb
don t we.air out or
depreci&U."
It took most of ·tile $2,<m
HUne bed ••ved during his
bro years in the Air Force
to set up his llr&t lbop.
TRADITION
''Most people go into the'
jewelry buainess because it
ii a family tradition," Hime
11ys. "I went at it another
way and I bad to learn,it all
by myaell. I went to the
library and real all 1
p>e1i!Jb' could. I had to
learn evecythin& from the
bottom up."
Jllme has built his $2,000
otake into one of 4M 1"ggeot
independent w h o I e s a 1 e
jewelry houaes in the West.
For the put 10 years he has
been among the 3/lotlt of
one percent of the nation'•
jewelers wm do more than
Sl million annual business.
Thia y-h• •xpeclo to dou-
bel that figure.
Hime'• wtndowle1s
lhowroom is filled with
cases of rems -row on row
of brooches, rings, bracelet&
ofemerllad,d iamonds ,
rubies, sapphina, jade,
opals, and cor.i, ranginc in
price from $100,000 to $5 fur
a gold charm. He sen. bis
jewels at wholesale priees to ".any-one with green money"
making no differentiation
between bis 400 retailer
customers and cmtomers
offU!eotree!.
CUFFLINKS
At one time or another
Hime bas aupplied jew-els
for filnu by every major
movie studio, sometimes
lending pieces of his own or
his wife's. In ' ''lb e
Graduate," Dustin Hoffman
~ssed Mrs. lfime's gold
evening bag to Anne Ban-
croft, Rime's personal cuf-
fiinks were worn by Steve
McQueen in "The Crown Af..
fair," and the actor liked
them 90 much be wanted to
buy them.
He made the Maltese
cross Frank Sinatra wore on
title recent Emmy show, a
gift from his claught.r Nan-
cy, and eold Peter Sellers
' the good luck medallions he I cave member'! of the cast of
"1 Love You AliCe B.
Toklas."
One of Rime's own
favorite possessions is a
gold money clip given him
by Bob Hope. The comedian
bought the clips from Hime
to pruent to entertainen on
me of hie overseas
au-btm-11 tours, and
crderld an extra one made
f.., U1e jewei..:.
Ivy League
Losing Out
To Coast
UC lrvint, wbictl earlier
NCIVited a professor from
iw--d, also has lured •
pro{alOf away from Y-ale.
He lo Dr. Jay Martin,
director Of American
~-at Yale University,
Who comes to lrWM to in·
1tuit. a timilw progNITI this
foll. He will be prof.,soor of
EncUob In addition ;o direc· dnl Mnerioln. «ucles.
The -am lo for
eelectod -d<airlni to major in particular lacelo of
the American experience.
They will take COU< ... in U1e
d•l* ltn-of Et11lioh and
bi.rlor)' and in Ille ldlool
1ocial ..i-. Dr.Monla,•Gun-
fellow, hat -on Ule faculty al y.. ...,.,. lllllO.
Ho -Include works on Conrad Alken and
No-1 Wnt, tilt laUU
-to be publlobed.
NO. I
O.• •• .... 111..t ,.,.,., ..... ,., •••hit•• (ft tk _.... U11itMI St1 ... t. tt..
AM lAM1n ••hiJM. Wt • 4.-, h•hr1 ef tt.. DAILY
rtlO! == "' ,.e41.,. hlf
n W• l N .. I •.t••· ' -·-.
'
WedtleNflJ', Augu5t' 28, 1968
--
an as i .. ~ . *w
All Alpha Beta Stores Open La _:~:-·
HOUSEWARES &
BEAUTY AIDS
SOME ALPHA BETA
STORES DISCOUNT CHARGE PRICE
SECRETSPDEODORANT • 111 '1 ZT
FAMILY SIZE• LIQUID PRELL SHAMPOO '1" •117
'1" 88 11
SUAVE "iiilii"s1PRAY1
' Bi 53;
69 11
591 42;
~ «>Z. A[ROSOL DEODORANT ~MAllPOWER '!!l-'1" '" ~ 4~-0Z. BOTTLE MOUTHWASH ~PURIFY IN~i"
R£WR SIZE BAR
DIAL BAR
SOAP
IATM Silt
'TOTAL SAVINGS FIGURE IS COMPUTEO ON SINGL~ UNIT PURCHASES. THE FIGURE WOULD B~"fllOOH·HIG 11
. . . ,,,
Better Produce at DISCOUNT PRICES7
sw111
JUIC.'f
f\A'IOlfU\
MIX 'EM or MATCH 'EM .-:: ..
•THOMPSON
SEEDLESS
. •ITALIA a& MUSCATS
A,.. W •BLACK
.. RIBIER
• FLAME TOKAYS
sw1n • RED RIPE • WHOLE
WATERMELON
3 .. FOR CUCUMBERS GARDEN FRESH
CRISP
' CELERY CRISP & CRUNCHY 2 FOR LARGE STALKS
c
LI.
29c ..
29c
PE ~.
L
B s
FLORIST
QUAL/7'~· ' nowtl!S
' ot• '··
DISCOUNT ..
PRICES .
-;~ (!.e'" "
CARNATIONS~' " VA~ETY 98(~
COtORS BUNCH
THESE PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY through WEDNESDAY AUGUST 29, 30, 31 SEPTEMBER I, 2, 3 & 4 " . '.
About Our
DUBLE DISCOUNTS
HOLLYWOOD BOWL "SYMPHONIES UNDER THE STARS"
DISCOUNT TICKETS •
AVAILABLE atAll ALPHABETAMARKtTS ~·!·'... ,.
for the FOU.OWIN(; PERFORMANCES They mean 1xtr1 savings for you. Al.ut
Made possible by special purchases with lESfJl.VIDllATl•••''"0_v_L n:o~~'f..t"J,~ 1~~t1~''iu~n .. JESS lliOW.S, Tenor '~ru~~
the COSt reductions passed OR to you. '8.,,./1 ,, soe ~ lOllJI l~OWNtNG, 'i•"hl HAHNE-lORt KUHS£, So!Jr1"0 J1J.01 . I'!* r--L_oo_k_ro_r_the_m_l_h~-'g-ho_ut_t_h•_•_tor_•·~__. Lw~~!!!~:!!!.~"'~A~l>llC0~~1J11t~n~cur::::;•-..~~~='="="'='"=''=~·='='·='='"='~=·=·'='"='•='™==..,,.~~ ..... -.··.··· 1
MISCELLANEOUS SOMt ALPHABETA MISCELLANEOUS SOME ALPHABETA ~·
DISCOUNTS STOR!I DISCOUNT DISCOUNTS STOR!S DISCOUNT . MISCELLArlEOUS
ITEMS CHARGI< PRICE CHARGE PRICE ·.fl
HtJNrs • 300 CAN TOMATO SAUCE
HUNT'S• 12' OUNCE CAN
TOMATO PASTE
HEAR THI CALIFORNIA
.AllGILS
111 .,tie11
ON KMPC • 710
HOME GAMES THIS WEIK:
FRI., SAT. & SUN. AUG. 30, 31 SEPT. 1--0AK!ANO
MON. TUES. & WED. SEPT. 2, 3, 4 -CLmLANO
@iiiEEN PEAS CAN 23'
BRWf GIANT • 16.ol. WI l".'.M\~ITCHEH SUCID Ot! fll!llCll IM£ ~GREEN BEANS 29'
12 OZ. • FROZEN • N.l VARIETIES
ROSARITA DINNERS 49'
ROSARITA • FROZEN • 7 OUNCE
BEAN BURRITO w
RbURJTA CHRI BURRITO • 1 OZ.
YAN OE KAMP'S • FllOZEN • lOij.Ot CHICKEN PIE
•' 26-0UNCE eomE. M!LY Sil[ ~HUNrs CITSUP 31 1
26-0l. m,t Sill "'
BANQUET • FWOZEN • All VARIETIES
COOllN' BAGS $0!. 29'
tllNrs •• OUNCE CAH
WITit TOMATO 811$ • MtlSHIOOllS Of Cltrut
TOMATO SAUCE 16'
43'
36~ . ..
27¢
"'
21-
14-
~ J(.oz. • t.111D11 • ~~ .. ~ J1bn11n'1 Plodp:"""' i,.::r
@1v°s'ui:~~A'N"'...,.*'W t::i:iit"\ 28.0i. • INCL, 14' Oi'f , .. ,1~'a.t. ~AJAX LIQUID ·73f»IM!
iArMffi'.ivtu4iJiD""-1•
Giant S!E• D•~ • ~ft. 1 COi.ii POWEii -. ·
v ""· • KING Sl'ZE • INCL.Jae QW \,It
BOLD D£TERGENT ' ·
QUA.Rf SI?& • D!Wlt· ~,t.
LIQUID PLUMR . . . ','t!f!.I
ecm CROCKER• 15-01, ficj;.~· FUDGE BROWNIE MIX ..... ,_
@ Jll,Hll IETll •3-U!. IAR•ll.JgVit CREAMY OR CRUNCH? It I PEANUT BUTTEJI -----.
UN'CLE BEN'S • S.CC. P~ .• , ... CURRIED RICE ""°llJllllll'
lltlm!INUT • 1-t!, QUI ~· «'" COFFEE ft-a. or m... Jft .
:Z.l.8. CAN MG.~iM"
REG. • HUGGINS YOUNQ •I~ .......
MllCKA JAVA COFFEE 751 .1••
APRICOT-P!Nt:APPU:~ £_ ~L
2-LB. CHI JAMS .l!t ....
• STJIAWIElllJ 75c Ht
• S££DL(U -
. llACKIElllY '!§it • •,Ill : . •"1 "' l LOMA LINDA • FOIL t!NtLOl't 1 .. 1· GRAVY QUIK DARK Zit a•
:_Cili,,,ijj; 12-0UNCt CAN : ·~ • ·1 ~GRUN GIANT ·!tJ#.
..... NIBLETS CORN 250. ,,'(It}
SAllSflCllOlt """'"TUD OR \'M MOlt!Y !UUNGID • "" ll3llM Tiit """TO R!IUSI SAW TO COMMIRCIAL DEAi.EU • wa Ill( COUECllD Of( AIL TAJAll!
, I
• .. .. .. ·---
•' • ,
·' ....
"
•
I
~!.'
~
~ .. • t
I'
lit ,
t ..
" ISi
Ill :
I
----·----,....--------...... -----------------~--.
•
I : I. ••
' ' .
. ---
-Mf!t you can trust and at DISCOUNT PRICES, too!
DU .UGUE
l.IMD . ~D~tttss 5 LI. F .t,Y. COOKED ~W.10 CARVE CAN
SOME STORIS CHARGE $5.17
EA.
Holiday
week-end
Barbec ue
Favorites!
.. -. . '
I ALPHA ·~TR WESTERN '?te'"-~'r'·~EEF . i I
BONELESS FlAYOR·AGED • · 98 , EASY to· CARVE· • · • C
Rotisserie ROASTS : · · . lb.
IAUl:CUE fAVOllTE $1 ff BLIDE CUT 5 3' T·IONE STEAK •· CHUCK STEAK •
io:ND 'STEAK •• ~ FAWLY snal( 95~
USDA WDE A • fltsH FROZEN
co11•11H 69 GAME C
HENS L~i .. ,. . .
IRISH BRAND • FLAVORFUL CUAE
!ASIUH QIJAllTY • t.L!. PACKAGE
IOWA MAID 52' IACON
SWlll IMGUO • flOM fllCIWKA l!lf,, Ill' n11t:1t M.lCfD
-ll(Jll IACON 58~
HORMEL 'RED LABEL' or
WILSON 'CORN KINO' .
IACON HI. PACKAGE 581
. .
AlrHA IETR
DEPEHDABlE
QIJAl.ITY
SWIFT • FROZEN • 1-0t PKG. • LINKS
BROWN N' SERVE SA
Cf«T1FIUSl1 ~ FROZEN
SOLE FILETS '. CORNID 69C . IEEF . · BRISKET ·I~-fAAMf~ JOttN • fUllY COOKED ... r \l
lonetess HAMS ,· •119
ll.
c·•--,.,, • iWirf PREMIUM I
IACON HI, PACKAC£ 6 9
'1.tl. PAtK.1111
U.t covr. IHsr!CllD . All WHllEMfAT
SWORDFISH STEAKs ~m:0
: ~::·.'
' l
THESE PR ICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY th rough WEDNESDAY AUGUST 29, 30, 31 ~EPTEMBER I, 2, 3 & 4 . '
O~ll:l"':f. PICNIC SOME ALPHA BETA .-.-' STORES DISCOUNT 15£.Ql!t)l_TS CHAOGE P•ICE
' ·~• 1n1 • FROlEN • Mil. CAN 11 • EMONADE l~GU.~~f' PINK •
MIJEN:S TL!VOIS ~iftlttd Shake 221 18¢ ·
_ .ii&i4juioE ar &3¢
11• 1r
lie "'
•1lllCl1 1,llAIF GALLON t.ll!TDH
IT 'la!iCl!NW£ OA O!A!IGE . zto
APP,l,DAY DRINKS VAlU[
t I :JI.
•
HOLIDAY PICNIC SOME A.l •HAIETA
DISCOUNTS STORES 015COUNT
CHARGE PR.ICE
t:Jj;i;\ ZEE • i!OPIC TONE 11 • ~NAPKINS "'lo., 14j '
~ viva'PAPERECORATDI 38'
'j;CTOWELS 41'
iiiaiiE'FiurrZfJu10E •• 39¢
111 12-26-0l. CARTON • PUlfl or IOOlztO
MORTOl'S ULT
1111111111 • l.U. tW. ID. lllT W!llllT.
COOKED II Rs ,12,
OHIOIEJ( MfvJruifl.IVDI
C~lS & '1TT$ • 2J.OZ. toTT\.E • Hl 53 ¢ BAR·B·Q SAUOE II'
' '
HOLIDAY PICNIC s~o':fs A~is~J~A DISCOUNTS C~ARGE PRICE
KING OSCAR • NO. JM CA1f" 1 UC, or ~$$PACK 30¢ · IRISLINI SARDINES 3'1 . wil.m'FUNiSur.1r at1 59¢
.• IUIRllETll "'VAlll!
10-PAWGl YQIJ! CH~C!
~!!I~r.!£ OHIPISAc
•DIP CHIPS . • :
11.1111 lrtl • a!CrD • ~·YALU£ 10PAOKHOTD08 IUllS
11.M.IOI • 4tC'YAUJE
12 PAOI • SLICED
HAMBURGER BUNS
ll,.1WI•154?. CUP • !lo VAlU[' 37¢ POTATO SAUD WITH !Gt
ZU. CU• lie VAll/[ lie
l •Ol. CU"-'<M.E II.AW• ll-4L -I 37¢ 111111 IETR SAUDI .m,
toll. CU, • C0U II.AW lk Yll.UE ISc
HOLIDAY PICNIC SOM( ALPHA llTA ST~ES DISCOUNT DISCOUNTS CHAOGE ,.ICE
COllll~ 1 10.ll . IAG 79; Oh1rco1I BRIOUETS W
IOU. IAI llJI llM
llrWA llTI • 10U, MG
OHAROOAL IRIOUETlvll:l1 mt. 1A1 VAUll llM If!
46.QUNC[ CAN.• 6 nAVORS
Hl·O l>RINIS ~ 29¢
llnll lf:ll • lt[G. OR LO CAL I 12 OUNCE' CAKS 9¢ BAU CLUB POP 10. VAll/[
1.-65¢
ll,_I Nll • l~.OUJrtCE P~KAO( . TCRTIW OHIPI ,,. VALii[
@IEi1L 0RATION 111
1-l!. CAN ' R(G., VARrOY~ CMltkEN YErS ·DOI FOOD 10'
ITOft~ HCUftS
MOii, ltwu ll!, JI A.II. let P.hl SAT. tN IUfll, 10 .ut le 7 P.M.
, ,C~TA "!~* ~'1 ',I · 111fi ft.
HUNTINGTON IUCH-9045 Mo .. • '
'
'
DAILY 'ILOT 5j
Extension
: Classes
I
:Offered
UC Extenlloa, trVino, Will
ol(rr • -lod arrey al~
-"""'""' duriDt !be .fall querier jl<Ob!lll
some of ·today's major
i.ssue1 and problema. •
CIUll!I bqin Mon1day Se11t-l 7 on 1he UCI Campus;
al 1!41ena Part llfl!i School
IDd • other loootloiu lo !be
Onmge County ar'el:, ec-
CU'dlng to Dr. Richard .N.
Baisden, dlrecloi:.
~ major problem. today is
'"11:ie Generation Gap", end
II will be the wbje<t al a
1er1e1 of publJc Jecturu ti·
•mining the cultur, an4 rites ~ of b:lay'1 yootba M
well u tbe communtcatioQ
pp ·~"' them from poreno., l••cben Ind oClefi
ot "the ettabliahn\enl"
Another iecutre sez'.1e1 -"Ren,ton Todoy" -will
view t b e contemporary
religious acene and how
organized reHrion ti· teac.
ting to the nlountin1 cri1e1
in publJc life. "Education f«
Re·Marrla1e" focu1e1 on
the problems ot tht divorced
men and women seetiq: a new lt:art. ,
. Jn h profelliooal eduCa.
tion aOO. 1elf.Jmprov1meni categories lrill be 45 course.
rand 4emioacs in bulinen •
Stlbject, include 1 m a 11
business management, ac,.
COUJltlni, pei-.el rela· tlon1, computers and
to:vermnent codract ad· minlotratf911. There • ..0 27
prog:Atms In educatiOn and
18 engineering courses.
Psychology Your interest?
The seven oour111 in thia
field include Problems in
HUman Relations, acttvat.1.nc
The Potentili'in Women, ab-
ll0!'11\IL P1ycf)olo1Y and Jl
Self<ICtoaU..UO. Worllhop.
OOier lntriculllJ 1ubjecu Include an oceonoer~y
CO\ll'le for laymen, I IUl'Ve)'
Of """hoolCJIY, and .I 1\ujly·
of ej>idemlc1 and their ellicl
on d~. A course in
e.-.i and arl films
will be. Jl'!eri Satlµ'4iys .
. For thoH Mio enjoy lively
dilcourae en subji!ct.s of
apecial Int«•, there are
five inlorm:al J e c t u r e •
diacuaslon cro\!PI pn sub. Jecta •i.icb as· ·:Pre4ldential
Polldcs 11168 and perceptive
listeninf to claNicaJ muslc
(from Bach to Bartok).
OCC Nig.l;It
Classes
Set Record
l!lnrollmont lo 1he OrOll(e
Clout Jumor Coll•r•
DUlrict tvtnlllJ collofe II
nllllins ,_. -1,600 ahoo!d of la1t y11r at ll1lt
time.
Throulh this w ·• • k ' 0Nnl'O C...t College had
regU;erod 6,811) IDd ·Gold'"
Weot 2,IOS for a total of
7,893 1111denu. Lut 100r at
t!U time, • total ol 8,211
-hod olpod up for ............. dasl ...
Tultlm for 1he 1vtningcot •
lop la • per cloa1. Opoo
r,.atration "1ll be held
from ·e.9· p.nr. ·lodoy and
Tuuday Sept 3. Students
-., lo 111111 up for OCC
ct.... iitoutii come to Ult
0CC l)'lllllUlum. 'G WC
·-wUI "" lo Ill• Coll~ Oorar. Rellotratlon will
tlll!i coaUnuo ot eocb com.
pur, v<canctea permittinS.
from M oa Sept. 10.12, 16-li
and· za.
llUtrlct Dlffi:tor D r •
Tbomaa A. Blakely IOid 11>-
<loy tllat lllthoup a f.., -claHe. are · cloMd at e1ch
campw, moet of the clas1t1
aro tWJ -· Thert lte .still va<:andes lo moot · of Ill•
follOwl1I( ,.nen1 areas :
lillh ICbool dlplom•
clusos, a1rlcultute.
tlortiNttae, art, aviation,'
ICCO\IDdllc, doto proceatinC,
escm, (enotll bull .... ,
imurenc., !Mnlftmtlt am
IUIJfl'YWon, markeUrif and
-ln(, purchOllnJ,
real -.. -•llrlal arid'
olerical, Ina"') I ( t ~ C 1 -don.
0otm11olo(r· d , • t • 1 •
driver tr• orn1, foOd
1ervlct ·botel ad\
mll1iltratloo, bMltll educ•
!ion, homt and 0fami17 liV•
in(, l'"l'lnl and _,
1Chool ldUOllJOft, l&nJ\I.' ''" matbtmatlcl. mut!c, nur• U.1, pollce sc1,..1, ...._
oodolocltnco.
Supervl1lon: lndutl:lal·
Buaher.s\ tht•ter artl. air
c on d l 1 lo Nnt«atloaol1-
1n1 I llMl'ln(, appronUct
claales, automotivt, dral·
Un(, oloclronice, IQ41111ti&l
doll(!>. mtla1 . I r I d e o.,
me,rol•11, quallt1
1$1W'tDCt.
I •
-----------tt:···-~-------~---~--------------------------~------""""-
l
I
I
I
. . . .. . . -. . -. . . . . .. . . ' . ..
1:' 5% DAil Y PILOT
Kremlin Rings Death · Knell on Liberalization
t VIENNA (UPI) -ni.
Knrnb has rung the death
l
knell !or libenlization In the
Communilt bloc for some
time to come, diplomats
•aid toclai'.
world Communist move-
ment.
foreign policy liberalization
by bloc allies and generally
try to brine the Red llll••
into line with Moecow -at
tremendous determ9nation
ill tilt paot crucill days of
the soviet Jnvuion.
lnter-Oommunist affairs a.ad
relationa. 'lbia provision es·
potel a wide. rlehl to
bardline reprewon.
the future. provided they
are allowed to stay in
power.
repre•lon h eipected only
to delay llberaliutlnn, not to
preveM it forever.
. . '
'lbe Czedloslovak venture
spell& a 5barp tightening of
the screw in all East Euro-.
pean countries and In the
Soviet Union itseH.
'lbe agreement emercina:
from the tortuous negotia·
Uons in Moacow between the
Czech leaders and t h e
Kremlin's ruling trio leave1
unanswered. It left, seem-
unall6Wered. It left, seem·
ingly deliberately 1 many
loopholes.
NEWI ANAL YSIS
The re1ulta• Czechoslovak
COmmuNat le ad e r Alex-
ander Dubcek brought back .
to Prague from the Moscow
ta.lb leave Czecbo11ovak.ia,
in principle. a SovJet-oc~
cupled country, according to
tilt diplomaU. The Red
Army Is likely to .i.y for a
PnJionP,d ~. even if it.
numbers may· be redu<:e4
l!'adUail)'.
According to the
diplomats on the credit side
atanda the recognition of tbe
Dubcek regime which IU
lea,ders have wrung from
the Kremlin against
overwbelmlni odda.
Moicow'1 readiness to use
brute toru 1n 1968 la cer·
t:ain, on the other hand to in·
tlmldate those forces which
have been moving toward
more freedom and greater
independence in the bloc and
within the SOviet Union.
While Moscow ta' expected
to tighten it. srip on bl<>c
memben., the vast group of
pati.ea in Ute worki sbowal tF:::~~ every sign of turning away I J
from Moscow, vr'bose claim ) t;;;=:
But what Mosco\t' may
hope to gain in its shaky
East European empire, it ill ·
':' certain to lose in the world
oe Communilt movement.
Same qua.lilied diplomats ~ sald Moscow may have
• commltud Harl Klrl In the •
• ' • • • • • .. • • .. ~
' • ' . • .
, •
' , .
• •
• • •
~ .. : ~
' '-.
' } ;: , • • ,
f •• > • t ;·
~ ~ ( • ~ , ,• •
But there .i& little doubt
the Kremlin .I.a aet for a
period of bil'dline p0liciea
that will freeu liberalir.a·
ti.on in domestic. economic,
11ocia1 and intellectual lile
behind ttie Iron Curtain. It
also will put some brake s on
least for 'llitlle. Pes!im.ilts
predict it may be for years.
Much will depend on
whether mKi to what extent
Moscow will be able to
repress the awakened
freedom drive of Ult Czech
people. 'Who hoave shown
'Ibey a)Jo said there· are
to b e Soviet-controlled
brakes on the Mtion'1 pre_s1
and radio in the stmeres ol
This "concession" marks ont ol Moscow's w_orst
defeats.in rectht years.
'Jb.e Kremlin b.&s had to
9CC'ept the men 1t branded
as traitor• a n d coun·
teITevolutionaries and wiU
have to deal with6 them in
;; Its the Game for Born Losers! • air
TENC>ER
SUPER.SURE
. OVER 20,674,115 STAMPS HAVE BEEN .
'NON BY OVER 396,119 WINNERS
sweet corn
c
. . .
icnic buns
FOR HOT DOGS or $
HAMIURGElS 4 1 MAYfltESH
. 8 l'ACIC .. ~. for
COLLIER'S CHARCOAL
, SWEET HUSK ON '°" BARBfCUE EA.
'1 sweet
.·grapes
briquets
101.!.BAG
1'.S. MO. 1 REDlESS
nM.IAS, ltl l!Elt
~:;;; __ .,_SS' 69 (
ru,1.·---······--111•
!,~~~~;,~A~ .... ~55<
IMPERIAL OUO
l ll . CAITOH •••• -• ••••• ••. ... 39c
The Soviet iava&icn ap-
pears to have even frilhten·
ed llomanla'• d.etennlned
leader. Nicolle eeausescu,
and alarmed President Tito
of Yugoslava, who braved
stalin himletf 20 years ago.
Nevertheless the n e w
to leadership tt has refuted
with i.nc:reUing detm'nina-
tion for some time past.
The bardlinen in the
Kremlin may· bave won a
breatner. But they atand to
l05e ftr in excess of what
they believed they have
gained in returning to a
policy of Stalin-typo foree.
UUlllED BIVERAGE "" "" ~"" 12 $) IAAYN!oli MG. Oii tOW CAt.Olll. IOC»t !2 Ol, CA.NS r.
"" Ma)'falr Jl'rcn.illa FOGds
lemonade .
~: .. 12 .. $1
!..'!'1!.l~.!.~ .. ·"""'· 59c &OY5tNlt•l'I", STUWltlll1, Af'tlCOT •.•..
~~~~!!.~v~~~o~ ~!ES _ 6 ~ $1
, , MAYFRESH
POTATO CHIPS 4 9c ALUMINUM C
FOIL 23 ...... ,.,,,~
~!~~1~0~~1~-~·························· 69'
SDllKIST ORAlllE JUICE ,,.,,_,,5 "''I
JOHN'S PIUA--~ w · ... ""' .. 1t" • • • ,
•
" '•
• .
• . ..
• • •
• .. • • • •
• ' ' • • '
I. )
~ t..
~ ..
•
~ r: CAMA y JUST WOllDllFUt
IAR SOAP HAIR SPRAY
~: 29' ~';., 63'
l)NI t.c4 ~~' .•
' •
fresh chicken
' HOFFMAN SHANK ~AL> . .... 49 • ' c.ou.I c
:-~ .. ,,. •.
~~~~~l.~~~~~·-············· 55'
POLISH SAUSAll •· 69<
••lllilll JOl*.j .•• : .......... ' ............... "'· ~f~I~~~ •. ~.·.~~ .. ~!~~.~~ .. •-"••• .. 89(
HALIBUT FILLn 59'
Gl fl"'lJ.t<fO ••••••••••••••• .,,,..,,,, ••••• llo •
("_ ~ IMI~ ,._,IUU! "\
a~den ·59c ice ·
cream
..
\. __ ...
'70PS i1 IEEF ILAVOR" • •: SIJS tlte lllfflf erperts/
MAYIA/R'S ILUE RlllON STEER IEEI
U.S.O.A. GRADED Cl--tOICE
------------BONELESS
CHUCK ROAST
toNflfSS lEAN 7 9 c TENOElt ROAST
U.S.0.A. CHOICE •••·-···· lb.
. " Jlo)fdl' .IJidlmtaMll ---~4~ .. , .. ~·~·1 -
HOFFMAN BEnEltM.AID II f k --~ ~-.;~;;d ham !~:a; ~::1c: 49c i
• l-LI. s39s . "'"k"''""hUOL ................ .
. 1ac c eese ... :... ... 6ftc:
,.;..;:.;;-., CAN C•fAMY ~!HY, If lHf l'lfCf •• • • • .. . 7 111
LEO'S SUCED llUS .~,., ... ,... . JS•
LED'S W1111t ClllC. w TmEY ...,_45• . •Eot-SPUO HSN BRDWllS ""'""---· 25 '
CHEESE SPREAD ,:..=.:.....~.w•w .... 45 '
llACK fLAt
AlfT I •OA<I. lJ Ol,
lllSKT tOMI, I~ Ol.
""'""
ADVERTISED PRICES EFFECTIVE 1 FULL DAYt
THURS .. AUG. 29th thru WED., SEPT. 4th • Bir ....... ,.
l ffl Ol. ' ...
. .
MAYFAIR MA1m-11s EAST 17TH ST., COSTA MESA-
1021 W. 1• IT .. SANTA ANA tm WDfMINITU. 6.uDIN 61tOft
SUPERMARK~TS
I
l DAY~ ~~Dll ~
t MEALS TO SE G* Why not 1tart out 1ood
fair by rollin& Olli • d.
sweet Italian red (11!°'1 and
a buck@! ol cool cri9p ~
beta for the bi*d toieth'll!me&& blast , • •
Richard'• with the .
Produce beautiful and ti•
fUJ • • , Where you S&1
a l&dc ol onians , . :];
You e:rU.v&e • n d btiiadien
yoor onion horhool ~ I b e
aurroundini stalls •• TiU in
the-white ooionl ant the
mown orUons and the~ weency bit a 1 i e
Ol1im.I . • • l.ovab "ttte
huh rnuncb:ini" lftftl~
•.• Did yoo ever try ~
them wbol.e like you~d
&9Pllf&IUI ••• And ~ ...
who looka llke t h e
<mkln'• big brother. H ooti.
good too and maktt
drous eoup1 that have
with t:i0tat<N!ll or
chlckm hquillon. He'
the natima1 emblfln rl
where ~ Wmh
days of old wor e t
their betmetl.
Mll.DN WsctOUS ~
AND LOVELY
Mr. Balinia' • w et,
wonderful. little honey ~
are rol.lille in trom out forco
w.,-• • He crew ; 'en
~ 1or a.l.l. ~Jli.C9
folkl 1.0 enjoy (ft }'(KU' 1• hi&
blow ot_ suinmer , , JJ )'OlJ
nibble in to th!ir iiheertliect.ar
flavor, y(,u ·u dream!# an
~ where the sun ... all ~e~C:~ -~~;~Miel
juicy meat in.side ·1·1< on ~ ootside too •• : or11
mounta.ina of mekns limb
lOr tl&wr • • • P WB,
honeydew, cuaba. can-
taloup • • • Cr~ the
flavor quem , • foujif me
that ~ed 15 pouitls ••
For tho&e who -li~tbeir
Cranshaws in llT1all ~·
a"""' of baby ~w about the size of 11. ta·
loup •.• No fuss. ,
:d::~~ ::euee]u ~~ ~
are l1W"ked ripe.
FRUITS IN
LARGE SIZES
Santa Ro&a plum. red,
Queen Anne plums -I pur.
pie, Elephant p:lumf' ue
brown, but what a ~
when you bite inside if find
brlai>l ....i jlti<y p!<mU\llg •••
And the fre!h ~. were
never mere del.iah .•• ~ Scirne
al those Queen Ame )'1Ur1UI
a.re 3 inches 11.crou , .,, Here
we do f'Ye~ up ~ t.nd
bountiful in cream " the
crop mee . . . lf ~ are
any beef lrteek ~toes
available, th@y an! ~'fed for "',,,And_nowF.con
have them •.• What a joy to
s:lice and cover a wide piece
of httad .•• If the bNfateak
tomato is too tarp, w. have
tomatoes in 3 othtt lilts ...
SALAD. FRUIT ~i
AND MELON CALL :~
FOR CHICKEN \
OH to the troun food e~
to find a new laid of ~cken
lowly flavor from deep in th•
bNl1. of Georzie.. To. OW.
m for aora:eous ~
.....,, .... Two -of
perfectly diced r: ~, k • d
chidl:m, each p t e-e:• in·
diYidually frozen lkl )"Mt CIUl
lll'lllP oil as many ~en
chunks l1S YoU wl.lti ~. • •
Think of it • • • ,jnstutt
chJekeri 51.lada, tettrOi.ni.1, a
la '""'1. and ~ •
Family 1tyle chlc~e~'n
dumplinp or ~ and
noodles come tn hie .t ~
pecka19 CDn.ta.ini:nc:'2 me
pound cello aaeka •. ~~
in boiling wa.ter aodiner'elY
heat throoah or il .. ..J'OU.,..
cooking fM a c"""-~knply
put the C'!llo u cks al). ))d.
i11E" shttt in the o<f~ and
heat thru ... How ~Y can
gourmet cook'1")' get~ Yo.;.'ll
lovf'. tile big tt'flder ~ ot
white meat and !lit en
noodl8, the fluffy d~
• , • What every well Huxi@d
wt hft"' need>ba:1'7"d-ed chlcla."n fille a It
precoobd and and
cJ.liciouJ!y ""''""" .... t deliartely seasoned tietter ••
• Do Ol'I. cookie ~kif' 15
m.inut'I , . for )'OW' nunnet
moods • chicken l"Oiia!· ltUI·
fed with 11 mixtur.. (i wild
And white r I r. • • ind
=~~~-=
lndnNnd ... rice~ lide • • And in tta ' foil -.......
lood "' 2\1 -
Jf!'ftll'a ii tlttht:;=ri= thia new ct ' and
after )'OO"te tried wtrf
cmcoctiortl, 100111 ... -
why he waited JO
Rk:lwd'• ' . the
lf'of'e •• where we'll
tid next Mmday,
11'1 ~for Ol'lf!
and Ila)' hippy
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Wodn<ldly, ~"''"' 28, 1%11 DAIL V PILOT 1J3
PRICES EFfECTIVE AUGUST 29, 30, 31 * CLOSED LABOR DAY SEPT. 2 *
Or<Jan S.renades
For Your
Pht•1ure
LIDO MARKET CENTER •
NEWPORT BLVO. AT THE ENTRANCE io.uoo ISLE •
by
Bernice Fay
BAR -M, Bonel ess, Fully Cooked
TAVERN HAMS
~OR !4 HAMS
BAR-M, Reg . or Th ic k Sliced
BACON ,SwHt Smoko Fl.,or
WHOLE
ZACKY FARMS POULTRY
1e19 LB.
1.29 u.
69'
Calilomia Grown, No Preservatives Added
FRESH HEN TURKEYS
WHOLE BODY FRYERS
SPLIT BROILERS
49c LL
39cu.
49c LI.
Broil, and ,pour melted butter with lots of chopped parsley
over them just before 11rvin9.
fry 6. ~Ii~• r acon. RMno~• from pan. Brown chicken in
.. bacon fat. Silt & pepper. Add I sliced onion. Cover ond
·. ~at1te over low heat. When chicken is d~ne, r~move. Add
'1/2 C. crHm to pan. Pour over chicken, top with crumbi.d
hacon. ~
THE FOOD IS RICHARD'S IN BOUNTIFUL VARIETY!
Whether you're having a feitiv• patio buffet, or a leisurely pie·
nic, we have all the special things you w•nt ~ere. Sal•d• •nd
hot foods to go from our Deli., p•rty supplies, flower.a , picnic
cookies· or f~bulous de sserts from our b•kery, me•h cut to or•
der. And our service. makes shopping EASYI •
MINUTE.MAID
Lemonade , ... 10-lor 51
MINUTE MAID
LEMONADE 11 "' 5 "'•1
ALL FLAVORS
ITALIAN ICE • ,.... 4 ... 11
LARRY'S I ·LI. "POOR BOY"
Sandwiches 2 ~k. 69'
SEABROOK with holl1ndal11 1auc1
ASPARAGUS , ... 39•
SEABROOK <hoppod
Broccoli au Gratin , ... 3 ,,. 51
SEABROOK
Parsley Potatoes ' .. 3 ... •1
GORTON'S
FISHSTICKS • .. 3 for 51
EXTRA FANCY, RIPE , JUICY
LE GRANDE VARlETY
NECTARINES
1~B.
FRESH, SWEET, JUMBO-SIZE,
ROY AL HAW AllAN
PINEAPPLE
49'EACH
!
SALAD-MATES
FRESH, LON&.aREEN
CUCUMBERS~
3 FOR ' 25'
The Sweet..t, 6enulne lteh1n
RED ONIONS 3 LIS. 25'
Combine ll9h17 wlto4 ...... b.,
slices with re onion rln9s. Add
Jre11lnt of JT. oRw• •II 11\d 4'T.
vinegar, 111 tip. blac k/app9r. Gar-
ni1h with IT. choppa P.•t1!1y.
OSCAR MAYER ALL MEAT OR ALL BEEF
WIENERS ~.·~r .. , r ... ,.dl
PILLSBURY "\:_,,-
I lb. 59'
• ·• ~ tt. %ACKY FARMS GORTON 'S CRESCENT ROLLS .... 3 ... •1
HORMEL 5 LB.
CANNED HAMS 4.49 ::. . .. ~UCKLINGS nr ouc• WITH "" ... '"' 59c u. SOLE wn• Llwo• ••n•• , ... 59c
. ' .
: ·' :
., ' .. (•
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'
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RICHARD'S OWN FROZEN •.. s por po""d
HAMBURGER PATTIES
RICHAR D'S PURE ! Spice laland Se11on ln9 I
PORK SAUSAGE
.
'Whonevor you're looking fol something unusual
or foncy to 1trve -try our <;andleui9ht Meats
or U.S.D.A. Prime MHts!
Having A Party?
CALL
VIRGINIA FOUTS
FOR
Entertainment, Beverages
Food, Service, Flowers,
c.w. 644-1798
SUMMER FINALE
25 Red Roses
.
Fresh and Fragrant
1.90
I LL IOX 98c1.1..
NANCY'S COCKTAIL SNACKS
ART SHOW T oastettes or Snacks Mix pint 49'
59c u. In Our Patio QUARTS .......... -·--·-·····-···-········-···-············-····79c
GALLO SLICED THURSDAY
AUGUST 29th ITALIAN DRY SALAME , ~ 69'
YU BAN
COFFEE I lb. 73c
YUBAN COFFEE 2 Lb. 1.45
MISSOURI HICKORY 8.B.Q. SAUCE • 01. 2 for 49c
CAMPFIRE
Marshmallows , ... 2 ,,.39-
SPRINGFIELD CANNED
Soft Drinks 12 1or99c
KERN'S PRESERVES
STRAWBERRY ,, ... 3 ,,. 51
KERN'S PRESERVES
BOYSENBERRY ., ... 3 ,., 51
KERN'S PRES~RVES
Apricot-Pineapple !!. 3 ,,. '1
~LIFF CHAR CHARCOAL
BRIQ ETS 10 lb. 89'
STAR KIST
LIGHT. CHUNK STYLE
TUNA /No. 'h 3 for 89'
KNU DSEN LA ION
BUTTER 1 LI. 79¢
RICHARD 'S LARGE
AA EGGS 39'
NABISCO
Sociables Crackers , ... 39c
NABISCO
WHEAT THINS .....
NABISCO POTATO CRACKERS
CHIPPERS '"' ... 39c
CHIFFON 1Tr;ple·'1y l DELUXE
Dinner Napkins .. ci. 3 ,,. s1
S&W PITIED JUMBO
Ripe Olives No. I 49'
> &£
ROGER'S
THE BEST THERE IS , ••
SALT WATER TAFFY
a11or+ed f11vors-. , . re9. 79c lb. '
69c ...
EDY'S
RICH N' DELICIOUS
ALMOND BARK
rog . 2.10 lb.
....,., t95 u.
'A PATIO BUFFET FAVORITE
POT A TO ROLLS . 6 ,., 33c
HEARTY, FIRM TEXTURED
POTATO BREAD &
' FRUIT FILLED
TROLLY BUNS 6 ,,. 43'
FOR CHOCOLATE LOVERS
FUDGE LOAF 79-
. ~::--· ~ ~ .......................... , .................... .
:~~ ~'fK&.,.r....-MAR~T HOME & GIFT SHOP FLOWER SHOP ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR CLEANERS YACHT SHOP
., " OPEN DAILY t .7, SUN. 9-6 OPEN DAILY 9-6 OPEN DAILY 9-6, SUN. I (.4 OPEN DAILY 9-6 DAILY 9-5:10, SAT. 9.5 DAILY l :l 0-6, SAT. 1:)0.1
r ' ,,
•
------~~-~ -----------~----~---------~---_;, _____ o..j
i
I
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I
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BORROW FROM THE ENGLISH
Muffins Move
All Over Menu
What's the perfect way to
serve an English muffin?
Toasted golden-brown and
generously spread with but-
ter and jam as a breakfast
bread, JO.LI S"ay.
Well, perhaps ... but we
have a suggest.ion that we
Knit Two
73SO
t,qA6.. 13-"4
For school, Saturday trips
and holidays, she'll lov•
the 1 t happ y-go-lucky
partners.
Jumping ahead ol the
class, a cleverly cabled
jumper and gtriped
turtleneck top. Knit ouUit of
sport yam. Pattern 7350 :
Sizes 2-12 included.
F IFTY CENTS lcoim) for
each pattern -add 15 cent$
for each pattern for first·
class mailing and special
handling: otherwiS(I third·
claBI delivery will take
tnree weeks or more. Send
to Alice Brooks, the DAILY
PILOT, 105 Needlecraft
Dept., Box 16.1, Old Chelsea
Station, New York, N.Y.
10011. Print Name, Address,
Zip, P1tkra Num ber.
NEW 1969 NEEDLE-
CRAFT CATALOG -"best
fashions !" "Most new
deligns to knit, crochet,
sew, weave. embroider!"
NY edJton. 3 ftM patterns
insidt. SQ: cent.a. ,
think tops that. And it lifts
the English muffin out of the
breakfast realm at tlhe same
time!
Why not introduce the
delightfully crunchy texture
of those toasted muffins into
your lunch or supper
menus? Sporting a luscious
broiled-on chicken topping,
perky romato slices and a
rich canned giblet gvavy.
sliced cucumber sauce, the
muffins provide change.of.
pace b e gi nn ings to
superlative sandwich eating.
Try these Broiled Chicken
Specials soon. They are so
easy to make. Main in·
gredient in the filing is diced
cooked chicken, either left·
over or the convenient can·
ned boned version. Team
the poultry with seasonings
and crispy almonds: then
bind all together with a por·
ti on of a can of flavorful
giblet gravy.
The remaining g r av y .
sparked with p o u 1 t r y
seasoning and cucumber
slices, accompanies the
broiled sandwiches as a
tempting serve·with sauce.
See just how good simplified
saucery can be with canned
giblet gravy -creamy
gravy with lots of diced
chicken giblets, a 1 w a y s
ready when you want to use
ll. always velvet-smooth and
savory .
8 R 0 I L E D CHICKEN
SPECIALS
J 1,1 cups diced cooked
chicken
1/3 Cup finely chopped
onion
1 Egg, slightly beaten
1 Can f10¥1 ounces)
gib1"' gravy
1/4 cup chopped slivered
almonds
1iW teaspoon p oultry
seasoning
1,11 teaspoon salt
2 English muffins. split
and toasted
I/, cup thin s 1 i c e s
cucumber cut in half
Generou~ da sh poultry
sc asonini;t:
4 thin tomato slices
ln bowl. combine chicken,
onion, egg, 1/3 cup gravy.
almonds. 11'1 t e a ~ po o n
poultry seasoning and salt.
Spread mixture on muffins.
covering edges completely.
Place on cookie 1heet; broil
4 to 6 inchet from heat for 8
minutes or until hot.
Meanwhile, in saucepan,
combine remaining gravy
with c u c u m be r and
generous dash po u It r y
seasoning. Heat: stir now
and then. Top e a c h
sandwich wilh tomato slice:
1erve with gravy. Makes 4
open-fa ce 11andwiches.
-----------------------.. ,., .• ___ ...., __ .... ..... .. .... ' " . -. ....... • .. • .. ~ t •• ~ 1
Wednesday, August 28, 1%8 fl-PILOT-ADVERTIS~7.·1_
~"Ql\
1001
I ... Gtl~D\ "
CHIQUITA
Garlic Salt •• , , ••• , , 29c
Garlic Powtler ,,,,,, 3Sc
Tenderizer ••• , , •••• 4Sc
Minced Onion ,,,.,., Slc
Seo1on·All ••• , .••••• 27c
Golden Ripe
Top Quality
Full Hands
1
lb.
'
"·-'l Fryers GRlnE I '' -35c -PIN REIDY .. ,, ,, .. , ... II.
Fryers HE"ED OR DOUILI ·3fk !IEISTEO ............. II. iJ-
F ryer Breasts :,'~ .. 11. SSC
Fryer Legs DRUMS I THIG HS 4na
. . JOINEO ..... ;~:; , .. -
Pork Chops i~~~~.~'.~~~~gc
Rib Roast ::i:c:~~~ ..... ~. 7gc
Ground Chuck :it/,,,\jQ~
CANTALOUPE
HEINZ
KETCHUf~
THICK 7 $10-0 SWEET _
MEAT............ for
HONEYDEW MELONS u 6c
U.S. NO. 1-NEW RUSSETS
LB.
BAG
DIP IN YOUR FAVORITE DRESSING
ARTICHOKES
FRESH CRISP -BRIGHT RED
CARROTS .................. POUND
c
FRANKFURTERS :~:~~c~~ ..... LB. 49c ~~T~ .. 1i:~~k49c LUNCH MEATS ~.~'.r .. 29' DRESSING '""'"' 79' ~·••t!trt . '''. 1111.
NYLONS~~.~".'.~ .......... 3/$1. SHAKES ~.~'.~'.'. ............. 6/$1. FRANKS ....... , ............. 69 '
FILM '''''""'"h>· 99c 121, 121,IH ... , •••• ,,,,,,. .. N, LEO'S 111
'"'""""·
1
'
1
''
1
"'· 3/$1 C.t1•• l1t!. lltfl '"'"'.... • LINKS '"" •••• 69 • S•t-111 .. , ....... , .... I! u.
LEO'S1~,:~~.~ ........... 2/89• ' HAMS ~,~~J:.~~-·.·.~ ................ 44' FLASH CUBES ri::t .... 14'
TOOTHPASTE~:'.~~-· 6 7c DRESSINGS ~~.!.~/!~~::' .. 49c CHEESE l ..... UIHI, 89 < Miit, 1.Hthrt ,., •••••. Ill Kern~st S1i1 ·
NABISCO HYDROX
!NICI 45 C NIN[ CRACKERS . lllMIS COOlllS
11 DI. Piii. Cold Power COLD WATER
DETERGENT .••••• GT.
'
----·--------------·-··-·--·----·. ·--· -----·----------·-·-·-------~--------------
,_
...... ---..... -,---~.,_....----------·-----._.,----,,---~ ---------~--=----,...,.,~-~---
PILOTlJQ>VERTISIR-Ff Wodnftdu, Aug,.t 18, 19611
~BERTSON'S .
''TASTY-TENDER®''
.
'
~ .
'EAK
SALE
BONE USS
TOP ROUND-CUBE-
SIRLOIN TIP OR
. I SHORT CUT RIB
1 O lbs. Kingsf onl
:111guns
CHEESE
ONION
BREAD
getables ~~.~.~ H ..... 3/$1.
~~Mcks ~~·~~ ........... 6/69'
il;j..ni • .,,., &&c '!f'p•• 1' ''"" n.t ................... .
. ,.DI' 5 $1 IOQ'. •1, ngs .,,,.1, .......... ,... I .
~ ... ~. akt~-:.~~'..~~-........... , .... 3/$1,
Steawberries 11 oi4/$1.
r
BONELESS
ALL MEAT
TURKEYS =~~~.~33'
SAUSAGE=:.~_ ...... 2&=
·BACON=.~ .............. ~ 79'
HALIBUT~-~ . .1149'
PERCH:::.:.~.--
1-12-01. SIZE
·DIET-RITE
COLA
SAVE200 Bell Brand CHIPS lUClf ucn11an
TORTILLA . POTATO 1}#1~
3.9c·· 4·3c -~ . -SIXAACK
•l!L 711 I~ Ol'.CANS
SALAD Oil r:=,___ _,,35c Ra~ 11111
__ ,1111 411
BUNS •Lfl" . ,,.. 33c w lllt "' ..................................... ,. n Alllertllll flltwtf
SOUR CREAM 25 Vodka ............. -.rt 311
~~ ......... ,, ...... ;.II t<. C -l1 l1dln1-R1•1·
FINISH:~~·--·--................... 36c Lager Beer ~~~;.1 15
. All Allwlcn CHLORINE t".:: ........ --....... ___ ,45c Pink Chablis:.. .. 95°
POOL ACID --69C IMIYllul lln1e11 Sl11 .
Ii ..... -... -................ Vino Primo ::. ... 25'
REDWOOD -.1o1 ......................... 169 ... k ..... ill'H.
COFFEE ...... -........................... , ... 73c Beer ~ ...... l/$l.
COFFEE-................................... , ... 69c
TUNA ...... - ............. -.... _ .... 51 $1; meet our tter i
MARGARINE:ruw ................. _ .. 25 half ·
DOG FOOD-............................ 11 .. 129 HALF $1149
EA. KEEFERS =:-i:, .................. w111. 99c L-_.G_AL_~c_i
CllCI YOll LOUL ST• FOi LAIOI DAY SIOll llOUIS
con .._ -535 w. 19tli
Ft.ualoln V•y -'16042 M9gMh
Htmtlllf'Otl _leach -8911 Ada1111
Leg1uc IHtli -700 So. c-t Hwy.
Cerw del Mar -3049 Coast Hwy.
Hlllltln1ton IMcla -15511 So. Edwards
·, ,. •
~ ---------~---------~---------------
CARllll!AN 'ltUITl·COMllNID
Cranberry Flavor
Fans Appla.ud
.
Colorful Salad
Each man has hill own
favorite• when it comes to
1alads. "
Th• French consider a
bowl of crllp --leaves a delightful "palate
refresher", wblle o th e r s
look on thh particular salad
a1 rabbtt food. Then there
are those who prefer wild
and fn'ventiv'I combinations
of vegetables, m e at s ,
croutona and raw egg.
Howe~. no matter what
"school" of salad making
you adhere to, you're bound
to observe the cardinal rule•
for a successful salad. It
must be fresh ... it must be
crisp ... it must be cold ...
and to make lt the piece de
resistance . . . it must be
colorful.
Then, too, you w a n t
orJginaUty in your salads. So
take a tip: take up cran.
berries oi.nd you'll make
your salad eaten happy.
Cranberry"'°range Telish Js
excellent fn molded salads,
and it mixes happily with
mayonnaise for a pretty
pink and tart salad dressing.
Try 1ubstituttng cranberry
juice for part of the vinegar
fn an oil and vinegar dress-
ing. Brand new and exciUng
flavor.
CRANBERRY
MARINATED
CAlUBBEAN FRUITS
( Mal<e1 I iervln11)
1 bon~ydew melon
Cranberr)' juice cocktail
Ume juice
3 bananu, peeled and c·ut
into cro11Wise 1lictl1 a navel crange1, peeled
and cut Into teetiorui.
Cut honeydew melon lnt.o 6
wedges and remove seed11.
Thinly •lice off outer rl.nd.
Put wedge1 into a shallow
pan. Add enough cranbe·rry
juice to just cover the
melon. For every cup of
cranberry juice added, add
I t.bleopoon limo juice. V.t
1tand for 1 bour. Drain .and
reserve Juice.
Put wedge1 ol melon b1ck
Into outer rlnck. S ll·c e
bananas and dJp 1 n t o
cranberry marlnade to 11re·
vent darkening. P ut banana·
slices and oran ge aectlunS
on melon wedges. Spoon
marinade over each serving ,
Chill until ready to serve.
History of Halibut
like Big Fish •Story
Halibut ha.a been a
PoPular lood !or people ol
OOttiJetn couotri'es since an·
clent times. Eo<ly exploren
along llhe P aclfic Coaat of
America found it to be one
ol llhe most tm!><'1Ut f.00.
of coastal Indian8.
Halibut was once taken
from the cold weters of the
Atlant.ic m well as the
Pad1lc but, due to poor con·
servatlon method$ in ttte
past, Atlantic halibut has
become scarce.
N{)I"th Pacific halibut, the
proud name of the king of
the Cl&t:flshes, ls tlO'oi the
main commercial soorce cf
true halibut. It 11 taken
along the continental ollell
and •lope of tho NOr1ll
Padtic adjacent to Alaska,
BrtUlh Columbia In canac1a,
and off tile shores of
Waehlngloll St ate. Com·
IDArclally, halibut ii farled
accordlng lo size: • chick-
en" -5 lo 10 pounds :
"medium" -10 to 60
pounds: "large"· -flO to 80
pounds, and "whales'' -80
pounds and over.
NCl'Ul Pacific halibut ls
broo&f>I aboard the fisblni
veNel eli'w, dressed at 161
and· 11"1'ed lmmediatel7 In
lee. At 1oon as the fishing
ve111ll reaches port, the
boilbut lo rushed to pro-
ceulng plmrul where it is
beaded, graded for quality
and size, and washed. Some
of the halibut ii packed in
Ice for lreeb lhlpment too
di1tant m•ke.t.s. Ap--
prwlma1'ty 20 perceat or
mon of. the ballbut ta IOld -Tbt bulk of th catch Jo
trOMa ID -40 degreto II'.
treeun. Alter 1reez1nc, ttie
11th ta glued b7 beinl dip-
ped 1ev1Nl Umes in water « tlle freezing point. Thll bulldt up a Jacket of ice
over the elC'e fish lftd
prevents Mbydration or ox·
idatton Jn l'torage. Thls pro
cen Wuret tbl consumei-
of • lop-<juallty product.
A curtowi 1ac:t aboul
halibut, tnd· other llatllsh.,,
is tht position of the eyes.
They, llko moot filh, ·otan
Ille n!mming upright and
w!lh e)'Oll oet wide •port. .
However, before tiley are
an inch long, one eye,
usually Ille left, begins
mlgratfnc to the other &lde
ol the head and the filh
beginl to lean tnstead of
1wlmmJng upright. Within a
few days the mlgratinc eye
has moved nearly 1 2 o
degree& to ,Join the rtght
eye, and the· fish 1Wim1 wi'th
Its eyeleH side parallel to
the bottom.
The dark, top llde of ,the
llatlilh allows it lo hide In
the •and or ro<:U and not be
een eully. The white belly
&lde blends wilh -Ille 11iht
filterfnC down through Ule
water, tt11Jt11 irotecti.ng It
from enemies l'Wimming
below. The mouth, Cli.storted
tn the proce11 of becomJn1 a
fla:tfiih, wean a crooked,
painted look.
True North Pacific halibut
ls dfstlnguislled by !ta white,
flavorful, firm, tender flesh
which takes on 1 flak;y tex-
1'se alter cooldllg. It· is
noted fur !ta excellent high
proletn and mineral food
value, and ta Jow c.alotle,
low aodium and low fit con-
blnt. 'Ibo fat preseat !1 of
tile po!yunsoturaled typo
believed to be effective Iii
lowering blood cholesterol
levell .
The mild n.vw of. North
Padllc halibut -It ont
of tile ,..... -· l!Jb, .-ty adap!lblt lo a Wide
variety of cooldnl Dlflliod•
and recipes. It CfD be
purchalOd ltolh fa many
m«rke!I and ll'Olen In most
alt marketl. It is usually
told as steaks or dresaed
JMat and ooe lJOUlld will
malt two <r tbr .. Krvings .
'" ..r
,
' l • ' ' '
•
I
I
-'\ . ....-... ~ . .-, ......... .... • -'C: .-: ~,. __ I~•• ----•• --_-_-,-.~---,,-,.-•• -, ,-,-,,-, -r-~---._,-.... -_-_-,_.-,.---~----------,-..... -.... -.-,~-.. -.. -.. -.-.-,,-,,-,-.,~ ••
$8 DAILY PllOT
•
Your Choice
Of All
RecJular 39c
varieties
.· ·. StLK · .
TOILET TISSUE
.
C(_,;,, (onf·
Uryt::i""" • CJ)UltU._ .
SPRINGFIELD
EE TROPIC.TO•• z , ... ,,.
TOWELS
BIG
ROLLS
FRUIT
COCKTAIL
-~
·: i
BABO .CLEANSER
PACIFIC
FRIENDLY COURTEOUS
BUTCHERS TO SERVE .
YOU · OVER THE COUNTER
)
USDA CHOICE
Boneless Sirloin Tip
STEAKS
TENDERIZED
~~E:E STEAKS . ........... ' ..... ' .. .
OUR OWN GRIND GROUND SHOULDER PATTIES ........................ 5i~~·
CRANDALL FRYER·ROASTER TURKEYS ...................... 7
4
L:.
MORRELL PRIDE ALL MEAT 12 OZ.
WIENERS ......... ' ........ ' .............. .
HALLEY'S BULK STYLE SALADS .......................... .. ...
POTATO-MACARONI-COLE SLAW-BEAN
~ '
$109
lb
$298
45~
45~.
29~
•
FRESH PRODUCE
TREE RIPEN
STANDARD
CANTALOPE PRUNES
~$
R
c
lb
VALUABLE COUPON
Mi~~ , ::~~:: 3~'
Wh'f FULL 9UART 'J~
WITH THIS' COUPON · ~ND $5.00 MINIMUll! PUlCHASI~··
Limit W fl&Nrt ,., c.u,_,. ' OM CMIJllM ,... CW • Akehtllc 8"tr.,e& anti ,,..,. ' PluW n.lrJ .ti
lxcludt4 from Minimum Put-chaM lly Law-V.W ,
Sunday, Sept. I
PORTERHOUSE
STEAKS
BAR M WESTERN STYLE
HICKORY SMOKEO
TAVERN
HAMS
BAR M WESTERN STYLE
BULK
SLICED
BACON
c
lb
VALUABLE COUPON
LEAN
•
LB • •• .. : ... ..... ·!? .•. ••• "' .~ ,,.. •• •
BAR M WESTERN ST~ :'.':;f
BULK ·t' .. SLICE~
BO LOG-A ·~ ,, .. e• ~
:,. .... ~~1l""i ... ;t""• .. i"'A""# .. : ., .. : .. ··x~. l'"·l:·~ ..
CERTl·FRESH-4 OZ. PKGS.
ONION RINGS ....... .
BANQUET-8 INCH SIZE
BUTTERNUT
COFFEE
GRAHAM
CRACKERS
CREME PIES ......... .
SPRINGFIELO..-.. OZ. PKG. . .~!
FISH STICKS . . . . . . . . ~)
SWEE)' FRESH DAILY
GRAPES 2; 29c MUSHR~~~b. 29c
3 LB. CAN
•
l LB. CAN .......... 69c
i ~
A ., l s
~~~-......... 29¢
REGULAR 49c
CHEEZ·IT
CRACKERS
KRAFT'S MIRACLE-I LB.
WHIPPED MARGARNIE
29¢ PLUS WHITE-Economy Size 4 9¢
TOOTH PAS'i'E . . .. .. . . . . . ··
BIG 36 OZ. BOTTLE 79¢
LOG CABIN SYRUP ..... .
BUBBLE LOVE-1 LB. BOX 3 F $1
BUBBLE BATH .......... ~
ISLAND INN MIXES .:~i
CO{KTAIL MIXES~
: ~~J;~: 6 oz. $51::?
• l ime Juice
• Whiskey Sour CAN '
• Margarit1 . , .~.,
125 FT. ROLL
HANDl-V..'RAP 29¢ CHRIS AND PITS -14 OZ. BOTTLES 3 F $1 r----------:·"';e;,· -.
. . . . . . .. . .. .. . BBQ SAUCE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ Prices Effedives :~
CHIFFON FRESCA
Soda·Pop
REGULAR l9c ,. Ch • ..,,..,
Ptck19 ...
of
Nt:ins' Eich
~ I \ I , ....... ............ -·········· " . .
. """ :···-·~ .~----•!~ .... ~ • . .:::::·· .;. --•:::;; '"" ...... -,-~ ... ·~· ~··~ . ~ •• ,.\ .' .. -...·'"#; I' • ' , : '· -i
'111 lb.
CAN
DINTY
MOORE
Meat baa
STEW
Thurs., Fri., Sat. & Sun.
AUG. 29, 30, 31, •nd Sept. 1
Prices wbjtct to 1tocll: " IMnHI.
... •• -,.: -,:-;. ~ ._ ____ _
WE GIVE
BLUE CHIP
STAMPS
COSTA MESA
WI GIVI
, ILUE CH1'
STAMPS..
'-----------' ~--------' .__ ______ __. ,___ __ __... ____ . PLACOOIA
19th Ind PIKenfll
710 W. Chlpmln
-----________ " ____ ~ -~ --------~-------------------.... ~ -.. -
I
'
-
I • ~
,.
I
I
I
-
~
IVI :HIP ....
nt11
MD
·WHITE
FRONT
_w _ __;,''--.... .;._11_2''--, 1'161.;._ ___ DAl_LY PILff 17
' ' . U.S .P.A. GR.ADED CHOICE BEEF EXCLUSIVELY AT WHITE FR 'ONT
~ .... •• If... t
.
U.$.D.A. CMOICI · YOUNG TINDIR FIESH FRYING
llMl-IONIUU ~ WHOl! IOOY CHICKEN l'AllTS
RUMP .. FRESH . LEGS &
ROAST. FRYERS THIGHS , . ·( ( c
SLICED c::: 59· c LUER LINK . 2-7c ROCK CORNISH69c FRYER 59c
BACON Lll~ciiiAUrY . .lb. SAUSAGE · •• IOI. . GAME HENS21~ BREASTS ...... ' Ill.'
. SICl-""-of11-0I;· 75c IUTTEREDiEIForVIALPATTltS 43c CllTIPlllH l'~lo.Pkg. s119 SUlllllOIPIOllN A!. s1 SANDWICH STEAKS..... FROSTEE KING "'t~t BREADED SHRIMP FISHSTICKS· aoz. ~· .
WHITE FRONT 'S LOW EVERY-DAY DISCOUNT PRICES PLUS VALUABLE COUPONS
· BRIQUETS
=~:.:":. 39' THIUllPT.4
SODA POP
CAL FRESH ll OZ., LIMIT 16
UMWICCMONPll 16' $1 ADIA.TCUSTOMll . 0 .
·OffmlOOOAUG.2f R
nttuS8'T.4 . .. .
POPSICLES PAPER PLATES ·
OR ICE MILK FUDGSICLES, 6 Pk, FoNDA 80 Ct., 9", LIMIT 2
19' LIMIT 1 COUPON HI 57c UMlr t COUPON HI
ADULTCUSTOMR ADULTCUSTOMll
Ofllll GOOD AUG. 29 OfAI GOOD AUG. 2f
11MIS•T.4 THIU59'T.4
'
AU GRINDS I lo. Con 5gc GRADE AA 4~ · CAL FRISH FULL Qt. 3gc S & W COFFEE _ .... LARGE EGGS _.... -.J MAYONNAISE-....... -
CARNATIONNO.'A CAN · 2cc -YUIAN s138 &gc 60CLPKG. 1nc ·CHUNKTUNA ii COFFEE i~· -....... ~~· GALANAPKINS ~-u-
SHORT'NING
WILSON'S BAKE-RITE, 3 lb.
49' LIMIT 1 COUPON 1111. _,Clll,_
Oflfll GOOD AUG. lf .,_Ill>\',,.'
• CAL.fRUH PORK& BEANS ··-·--a e. 51S1 ARDEii COTIAGE CHEESE, PINTS ................ _ Sh ARDEii GRADE AA IUTIER -...... _ 1•.7h
. DOU MAK MAllSHMALLOWI -·-··-1 •. 5111 ARDEil IMIT. SOUR CREAM-·------"''· '71 NIC SllAK THllll,AUTD. ---
' •,
i
··Ir.~.&!
r.rpqlll!
LIBBY'S PlllEAP.PLE,UICE .... ~4•11 ARDEii YOGURT, 'h PINT 11• 'ENO'I PIZZA ROLL1---
•
SWEET R~D RIPE
~e
. ,
· CRISP· GREEN ~!~
CUCUMBERS . ~~~EN
lb.
'(1
.POTATOES
U.S. NO. 1 RUSSETS
•
lb. e C.llo
lag
e. !!•NE LEnucE 10c ...
EACH RED ONIONS •••••••• 1 & ...
• •\
\
' •
.
iCEEREl'M ~&gc :
POPSiciiSOll .!~~1K4iS1 \
TlllSWWT 6 01. 1 O& s 1 LEMONADE _ ........ --I
CiEitAPiisSTD. 4is1
mmwai• oz. At M ORANGEJUICE --'11 ·.1
EGGOWlfFW,ICOUIT 41'1
HmllKDllPTPID ... IOZ. Ill
111101 OHEDI PIZZA ... 11 OZ. ·• Ill
1111101 PEPPDOll PIZZA ... 11 OZ. lit.
811101CHEESEISAUSA8EPIZU, ttOZ.-111
• ,_ •
•
'
'
.----~-------------~ -----------.....,_"
,
S. DAILY '11.IJf DAILY PILOT HB·l
ffe:iac he-Ask Hu~phrey: There's a Future in-Pharmacy
Anything
Bette r?
drift.into a condi:tiOn we call
bromictism or poisoning with
an oveniooage of b-1des. ' ' . In ilddition to pimples and
othet forms of skin eruption,
it may cause severe toxicity
of the nervoq1 · system with
d elfriu·m,cbang e of
personality aod convulsions.
Taking large quantities of
ordinary table salt often
aci:3 as an antidote, but, uh·
fortunetely, tbe real cause
ot these symptoms often
g..., umocoghlud.
Perb~ you-have cor-
rectly put yo~ Anger on
y o u r underlylnf trouble.
Perhaps you don't need any
mediclne at all; only
change bf work or bosses.
Allliougb !enslon a n d
migraine headacbts a r e
recognized as most eonrt
moo, there ls a type called
payc~genic headache whie_h
iJ otteo overlooked. It is
cauMd by an unconscious
em ot iona l conflict,
sometimes by a recognized
and apparent one, as in your
case.
U you continue ln your
pre-umappy working
otate, .n Ille tranquillurs
and druges in China won't
belp. You will have to cet
rid of the cause, which, ill
your 'Cale, seems to be your
relatiooablp with your bo5'.
TALK IT OVER
I have seen similar in·
stances of incompatability
between peop~ in an ofiice
or &bop. Sometimes the pro-
blem has been completel)!
resolved by a beart-to-hetit
talk with the boss, who was
unaware be was overbear-
ing martinet. Sometimes
such frankness i 1 in·
effective. The patient must
make Ule supreme move: a
change o f employment.
Eittier that, or aCceptance
of continuing discomfort.
To sum up: First, it's im·
portant that you stop taking
the bromides; seeond, come
face to face with your job
problem, take it out with
you boss and make your
deciaion to stay or leave.
Meanwhile, tranquijzers or
pain ldllt:rs prescribed by
your doctor will bring you
temporaey comfort until
you overcome the bit pro-
blem.
Thou1imd1 of people 1ul·
fer dally from p1ycbogenlc
headaches who a r e· eom·
ptetely unaware of the
caute. You can be thankfu1
that )'OU recognize it and
can do aomething to rtlleve
your .he8daches; msuming,
of course, that your boss is
the real reason for your 1ut-
leriJ>C.
SURGERY OR NOT!
Dell' D r • Steincrohn :
Recently, I wa.s informed by
my 4octor that I have a
~ nodule. Otherwise,
my th1rold is normal.
He advil" removal of the
Jump within a1x months aa
a~ measure. I
ha\'e bMrd tbat u Jong as
ttt. nodule doesn't gaw, no
1U<111'!7 ii -.sary. I
WOlilll -edolo your opi·
nioL.-Jlra. pf
Ctw6 ..,+: Eva thoueh
tile poodhllltJ ot mallsnan·
q 11.-. I co alone wltb
your dodor° that a nodule
(-.) ii better out
tbaD lft, I
-(A Btll·llleawe Syodicatt
P'utun).
'Df'. IMJillcteM., " _,., tie etllftlt '"° -,_,.,.. ~. ~-·· ... ....... .... __.... • .,.,. ceMll'MI.
get a pharm:ic:ist now is to
pay more than somebody
else, and' some stores wUI
even ~ell pharmacists a
third or fourth of the store
and let tbern pay it out• of
their salary to get them to
stay. And more phrama-
cists are dying off or retir·
ing than the schools are
graduating."
CAREER CO"NER -.,.,:;-i.;.. ·--..,_... ___ __
Good J<'ield for Women '
A. -What you sa,y is true,
and MANY more women
are now studying pharmacy.
However, not all community
pbarmaclsts think t h e y
"have it made in the
~"" ......... tMM':'::~ .. .=:h-L .!'J!!ll!. ___ .
IAIY FOOO ~.-.~.~·······-······JO•
JUNIOR BABY FOOD r~ ... _.14•
MEAT DINNERS :::-.-.: ..........•. -... 18'
FOIGER'S COFFEE ~~--69'
FOLGER'S COFFEE ~':: ... 1.37
FOL GER'S COFFEE ~-J . 99
INSTANT COFFEE :.::-:;: .. 90'
UPTON'S INSTANT ru ...... as·
SJ ... kif 'fkt!·--
!.bade." Here are two recur-
rent criticisms - a n d
replies by L. K. Kaufman.
dean of Butler Universlty's
College of Pharmacy:
(I) LONG-TERM EARN·
INGS FALL SHORT OF
THOSE iN OTHER
H EA LT H·FIELD PRO·
FESSIONS, Dean Kaul man :
"Long4:erm earnings of the
HARVEST DAY
STEWED TOMATOES
SANDWICH i::a\'':.~~ ......................... 1sc
BEEF STEW ~!:1.1~:. ................................. 46c .
303 Con BEAN BURRITOS ~!:".: ........•.......... 36'
pharmacist are superior to·
those of the nur~. health.
t e a c b e r , technologist,
hygienist, sanitarian and
many others, including the
optomet-rist. Their
(pbasmacists') ayer age
compares favorably: with
dentists and veterinarian'<,
and when compared with
AIL physicians in practice.
:I.Sc ~. •·· ·Klf'fkt!--.
GREIN GIANT-CUT ~'"'1;
GREEN BEANS ~_·,. .,.·~~'I SAUERKRAUT : .............................. 19'
GOLDEN CORN ~~-~ ... ~······--.. M•··23c
PRINCELLA YAMS "'"····-··-········31 '
303 Can ,.::-,-~
. .2.2°~
thty would look all rlg~t
thtre, •too. (llowever, in tbe
last mentioned case, we
woWd -be Including a
nwnber ol young staff
physicians who Q'e pald a
low saluy.) Comparisons
are jrequenlly made with
exceptional examples rather
than averages."
(2) HOURS ARE TOO
LONG -most work 48 a
week or more. Dean K.cUf.
man : "Our students almost
never take a job in which
the regular routine is over
44 hours, many insist on a
4o-bour week. Contrast this
to surveys indicating that
the ph.yslcifut a v e r a g e s
~bout 60 hours per week." ·
start out at better than
$10,000 on Uteir flrol Job.
The top pay for non-owners il about $1,200 moolhly,
ailhough managers of Jorge
pharmacies usually earn
big'her ~alaries. Owners or
p8rt-O'Nner1 maY. makt up to ~,000 annually witb the
a~age around '16-
20,000.'')
EARNINGS. The U • S .
Department of Labor 1ay1
1967 annual salaries of ex·
p e r I e n c e d pharmacists
working I o r community
pharmacies were in the $8--
$11,500 range. (Dean Kaul•
moo : "With some few ex·
ceptiOM, I don't kno!' where
the Labor Department gets
an $8,000 minimum for com·
munity pharmacy salaries.
The bulk of our 2faduates
EDUCATION. The
minimum is five, .a n d
sometimes six years of col·
lege for a D.S. in pharmacy
degre.e plus (in most 1lattt1
one year of intern&bip,
49:
FRESH CUT-UP
FRYERS
U.S.D.A.
GI ADl 'A'
CHICKINS 35:
I
CHUCK SHAii ·--~ 11
FILLET OF SOl.E --B9.i.
CHUCK ROAST ~---..A7.:.
PORTERHOUSE STlAK IJ"
,...... .. • I ~· ' -.
HEN TURKEYS
lllUU.. 'WMP -llIIDll . l '-U.S.D.A. GIADI 'A' • (
DWCIOUS IAl·l-IUID 9 "'· ' SIRlOIN TIP :"..!\'..~.-· _98.L
BONB.lsS HAM ::;~~-'1 ~
STANDING RIB ROAST =" . 89.i.
TURKEY ROASTS
AIMOlll HUD-• PMS
"::' $329 = $319 ..... . ..........
2.u1., Ms.
. ~ ..
• •
. .. :::J:~~~;~g~.~.~~.~~~.~~~! $197~ . .,,
~~~.!~. ~~~. !!.~~~... ... . ... $j 78 ~~!,~.~.~~!~~!~ "'"' ·-63 c
HIA VY DUTY MET Al
9Y2x9Yl HIBACHI ~~!_HJ'-~~!~~~~~~M~~.~0~ 64C 1 jl
foremC)lt -6 Pock Package &SCJ
PINEAPPLE°Ju1a ::l'~~~'. ............ 24'
PRUNE JUIQ ::..."':'~ .. . ....... 57'
CRAN .. APPLE JUIQ :~::,~r.. .. _ ... 45 c
PRIM LUNCH MEATun ............... 49'
CRACKERS~~r.~R-· .... -.............. 27 c
SNACK CRACKERS :~'.'I:. ............ _ 41 '
IURRY COOKIES :".:.;:.~.~~'. ......... 35'
FRE"°9 IRIAD :"~i.~ ..................... .36c
BUNS :=:,~~-.......................... 33c
~. •···Klf'fkt!
FAOAL TISSUE
LADY scon
200-Co1i1nt &ox
15 V2·0unce Con
POMPEIAN OLIVE Oil ::fu ••. _ 4i
ALPO DOG FOOD ~~~~~ ............... 2~
LIPTON'S DINNERS :~t·~.~~-··· 7 ~
BEEF RAVIOLI :-:,~::.~~ ................... 75(
CHARCOAL BRIQUITTES ::'.\'.'::, 79'
JIFFY POP POPCORN m.~ .......... 27'
DU PONT SPONGES '""'· -·-·· 2S'
I M!fD
ORCHID'S NAPKINS ::.'.'.:__53•
'LUNCH PlAm~.._ 73•
A'.UU.lll 111-T t!OIU --··-~-"' . ·~· ~.t.lll!M~~.;
·SCOTT TISSUE:J---··-··--37'
NAPKINS::'ll."~~~·-···-·----9"
TIDE DMRG00.~-----·'··--.79'
GAIN DETERGENT~n••····-~·79'
DUZ DETlRGENT!:m'::.'?.. .. _._]9'
OXYDOI. DfTERGEMT...,-. ___ 79•
JOY DMRGEMT\'l:'--·-·--sa·
LIQUID CUANER~~.""-·····-·66'
LAVA HAND SOAP--··-·······-13'
DIAL HAND SOAP ... u ••............... ..14'
OUrLOW~Pricc!
PREMIUM
ICE CREAM
foremo,t-1/2 Gallon Carton
~e~
OSCAR MA YER OR SWIFT'S 69• 1
PllMlllM $ll(l0 •ACOll-1.U. ,.,. _,,M_ ~ I ?!l,N•~~~~~~ !~~~~--79' ~
I
•• , fRISH, TASTY PICNIC&. C.utJK..QUT SUGGESTIONS AT DISCOUNT PRI CES
ALL MEAT FRANKS
112...0UNCI PKG. 41c) ..-53 (
LUCKT-1-LI . PXG ................ ..
GALlO ITALtAN SALAMI 73c
lJ.01. hllt S.1-1 U t) llicMl-M i. Pkt. "'M
~\!!~!s.~~~°. .. ~~~~! ... 69'
All MEAT FRANKS 57' "-ti, wa, .. .,. ,,,.., Jeh ... -1 u. Pkt.
FRESH SALADS -·-37c .._.,.,., XUIJ.--.. ._ .lJ.ch, ....
e.~~r~A!~~~~! .~~.12.01. '"· 59c
. ~
•.. J:;q 'Bu/t.--
CHOW MEIN . NOODLES
Jan·U-Win•-No. 21/2 Con
,__.,
·-· ••lllf--· ... . .-... ..........
~., ......
OUrLOW ~Price!
LUCKY-SLICED
LUNCH MEATS
IOOll FOR KEY BUYS
' "KP Ms• art ntp.11Yl1P llde .... 141 b ... fMt1trl'1 ,,.,.,., ,,...u.u1111 .... n .. :ne
"ID If(" lttas Ustlll .,. Jnt I "" •I tM ...,
utr• t11111 11 itm ter "'"'" ....... ,.. Jtlck·lf ....... "IP
llr Int ,.. .,..llJ at 1W ~
IHATtl l'ltl!Dll IA~NCI! ~·
·~1 c..tr6d Giid fllir T .... It.Im~ J.29.t.l
POTATOES
U.S. NO. 1
RUSSET
10'~39'
STOii HOUIS
-
·'