HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-09-10 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa'
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Chief Denies
Repair Plans
At.Airport
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A shoulder injury suffered while ho WH being pulled out of
tho surl at Newport Betch ono August 1ftornoon 42 yous ego
·1ltorod tho ~rMr of • young US.C footbon ployor. Tho led wH
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YOl.. fl, NO. tu, I llCTIONS. M rA•b Rmnora that Orange C o u n t y
Airport•, runways must be Mrengthen-
ed because ol stepped up jet aircraft
use ~ brushed aside by officials
today as ''totaliy untoUnded."
novor oblo to 9't back in tho swing of things on tho gridiron. But
he bec1me one of America's best known men -John Wayne.
Woyna rominiscos with DAILY PILOT sports writer Eorl Gustkoy:
on Pages 16-17 of todoy:" poper. Mamie Wants Out Joe Smisek, charged with runway
malntellan<e as head Of 111e county
Building Services Department, said,
"'Ibere'1 been nothing planned or con·
lemp!Me!f on 1lle otrengthening Of tile
runways." -
He said aucb speculallon possibly
~vu started in the wake of recent telta
n tbe runway blacktop to determine
s current condition.
"We did have a minor faihlre, of ~
1bout four bY fiVt!: feet, that needed to
iJe repaired,-and this can ba.pPen on
any asphaltic-concrete runway, so we
Oakland Cops Fire Into
repalre<I that bruiiedlately," Smlsek
re parted.
"We were concerned beceuse of
th.at, and wanted to make' l<Jlne tests
on the .nmway to see if we bed any
condit:l.O!ll!I that might be of concern to
us."
Black Panther 'Of fices '
"We found nothing we didn't already
know -(hat the initial specifications OAKLAND (UPI) - A dozen
had bee<I conu>lie<I .mi,." · -bun.ts were flttd early -Y
Sm.iset ta.Id tb.e j'pfe'Umlnary oral at the headquarters of Black· Panther
report" given tC> him on the outcome founder Huey P. Newton. Two wllite
of the tests disclosed that the runways policemen were formally charged witb
are bold!ng up as they are supposed the &booting. to. The buUeU amuhe<I t!lro1$ tlio
Foes of greater airport expansion, front window md into a large display
upon bearing the nnnora of beefing up p;mer of Newton about 1:30 a.m. No
Ille fadlitJ · fear.ad It would open the one -inside.
4--toiwl.iamr--._ 'S' ~~~·--Robert BrOSiiiihoti, an-.ctot OJ !i(i· • .._.d ... ~-In th'. ~-. 1Jll!a!'f
tioo for tile coWily, '1iO --tile to ·-~ , , ,• ~ of '!11
accouct for tile aPPar'!llly lllllounded Oakln! Po-la!t laJl Be '"" ,......,.. · acqult;tod Of wouc<l!ng anotller ct!Jcer.
r.w;dtd have a defect bere ftve 'Dr Pob . ~hi~ Charles Gelo an·
six weeks ago hr the biict top -a ·nounced a .cl.tiie!> re~ U.. -· 1liib ipOlt -in Uae '-bl.ack top~~l I have were f l•r e.df rpm. a ·poUce 1c8.f. He
never seen ttie r~sults Ot teSts that promptly ordered ·the su.spemion of th'e
were made." two offtcen, Richard V. ~s, '-8,
Concerning PoSSlble beefing up Of nl Rpbert W.W. Fwrell, 26.
the runways , BresoQban said, 1•1 Six hours)ater, Gain announced the
haven't beard miytttlng about it... Of.floers, bodt with ~ee r.ears service, were charged With ' assault Wiftl
No Relief Seen
firearms on an un.lnhabited dwelling."
U convicted, they could face a sen-
tence of up to five yean in prison.
Gain ta.id WilllBml·lllld Farrell were
cm dUty and in uniform at tbe time. He
oaid both hod be<n drinlljng,
The Weapon used t/u ·a carbine rif-
le, standard. equipment in Oakland's
blade end Mttte pet?ol cors.
· 'lbe lllack P-heodquarters IA
looit'ed· in ah i.ged itore front, about
three miles from downtxrwn Oakland.
It was the aecoDd poli<:e attJck, i.D·
volving Black Paoflber1 in the nation
·this month. A groop ol policemen,
·many offduty, .&re accused of 'u-ng a '~up Of Blai:lr: Panthers
in, a Brooklyn c:rimiDe.l courta b11iktin1
.last WOdn~. '
Rookie ·LA Officei:SlaW,
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.2 Qt~rs SJ0tby Riflemo;;n
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LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A rookie
policeman w.a.s 1laln as he began bis
third day on the force and two other
omcers were wounded before re.ln-
foreements killed a rifleman who wore
only a white T-shirt.
Policeman Gary W, Murak.am.1, 23,
who wa1 graduated from the police
academy only last Friday, died or race
and chest wounda two hoirs after the
gbn battle early Monday.
The. gunman; Addison Cu~. 25, a
Negro,.attempted tO bold ofl. a scOre Of
. pbllcell)en tiut he wu kille<I ,by ol·
IJ.cers ftrhig throug!i. the windew ol his
ground floor 1 apartment in t b e
' Crenshaw-Slaus6n district
Detectives .r;aJd he was armed with ·a
410.gauge shotgun a n d a .38-craliber
revolver. They sa(d Ca1b had a record
of arresta: dating back to 1957 and
moved 'itito the apartmetit two day1
pnwieusl7~ ·
Mailman Vernon Sims, 2.8, enterJSI,
the -lnller' COuri · ot the two ttorY
meut building to • deliver ~
teoant.S' boxes and waa accosted by
DAILY PILOT 1t.n l'llfte
•MAMIE KISSES THE BOY GOODBYE
~rrl•e• C•n Be Groo~, But Not This Time
In County Wave
Of Autumn Heat
Bllstering beat inland w Ith cooler H tilnphrey, in Southland,
temperablnls along the coaiu!tie was
tho gunman. '
"A man came out· in a T~."
Sim!! told new'mierl'. "He wu caiTjing
a pistol and a rifle: I aa.ld, 'good morn-
~ ~. a;lted If Sbna hid any mall
for. him .and the. postman answered
"not yet." Sims said the nian did not
forecut for orange C.ounty 'today, as '
Mamie Van Doren Sheds the Southland swelterai 1n it! anm.il · D £ d p Ii £ p •:~::bedtoneiirthelOO e en s 0 cy 0 eace
degree mark in many inland areas of ,
Baseball-playing ·Hubby
the coonty on Monday, with llWe LOS ANGELES (AP) -Hubert H.
llkellbood o( relief for the next two or HW1lJkey. 118)'1 chancet for a
U..ee days, accordlng to toreouter1. negotiiated Vietnam peace have been
Sunny and warm throuOt We<!· helped by his and lli<hlrd M. Nixon's
B1 PAMELA POWELL
Of Tiit Dlllr l'JM ltaff
Newport -·1 blond Hollywood
sex kltteD Mamie Van Doren, 35, will
shed her 2l·ytar~ld hubby No. 2
Wednesday lo a Los Angeles court.·
The two-year marriage to Let
Mey~l a former profe11io:nel
booeDllll pitcher and Orlll&e Coos\
CODege otudeot.(ume<l land def<!oper.
~ been a good ooe," the blond ac· ir.a wd today. . .
''Jt'1 very hai{ to be owrled In 1llls
,._.atl'OP,," lltf lam .. "But I don't
haffJ111yblttor thoul!hti about Lee.'' .\lier tbr" day1 of ~aUon, MiS1 '
Van Dl>ten and •hlr. _,,.,, Jooeph
Agapay, 'Will tile for the dh'orce,o~ the grOunclo ol mental, aruelt)' .Jn Loe
Angeles. I . was,. going to file for
•eparate mallPnance," abe said, "but
I dolll'hlV. lhe i.ne and l ldlow that
Bike Accident
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nesday with patchy fog along the south nomination because the North Vlet-
if I flew to Juarez, the divorce might 1 d in la _......, -~ 1 namese now know they will have little not be legal." cou ur g te .... & .. • ....,. ear Y chaoce ol. winning "unusual con-nwrnlng hours la 1lle Offidal predlc· ce!ISiooa" from the nut prealdeol,
Tbe CUTYaeeOUll It.at will leave Uon, with HU" change in temperature. "Neither ol us gives any more than
Saturday to begin a four-month Near-reCOf'd heat for. this date in the they ere able to get in the Paris
••-gemeat at the Wedgewood Los Angeles basin-up tll l03 degrees negotiations ," Humiiu'ey said Monday ......._ in some spots -b complioatiog a .. 1.--....._d 1..1-Theater in Glen eo.e, N. Y. She .,. fight ~·'-st five pot.en t la 11 y • ...,. ~ •= oampatgn plalle in • ... 6..... news coolereoce. pects an actual court date to be set dangerous fires fanned by parching, It was called Ur clarlfy rem&f'b he
sometime ai:ound the frlt or the year unpredictable winda. made earlier m Philadelphia and
after 1be returns. Additional. ltloriu on the fire fight! Denver oa the po88ibility of U.S. troop may be found tn state news on Page 7. -ithdt and During'tbe last two years, she and A·bundant smog U predicted to com-...,, a•al• on bis stand on the
Meyers have lived in an apartment.at Pound the heat discomfort, es._.,.,,,ally bol'nb1ng of Nortit Vietnam, • • Y"' .. , The Vietnam i&sue -and vocal an-tf?e B~ Bay Clu~ ~ her 12--t•~-Jn the Los Angeles basin , where tiwar demonstrators _ d 0 g g e d
old son Perty AnChooy, a .cblld frozp failure. or a cool marine air layer to Humphrey'• trail in the 15-bour, coae:t-
h.er pre~ous ~ge to bahd1tAder mdve in will create a progreulve-to-cOest tiPfner·-of bb prealdentiiil lleaUng layer. •--' Ray Anthony· , The first smog alert or tbe ~-wa1 c-.. 1--gn. "Marria be gr " 1b In PhU.adelpbia, Denver and Los ge can a oove, e called at the Los Angeles Clv · Ce.nur Angeles, sparse crowds offering li'ght
said today. ''Thle one Jilst hJt a snag, Monday and chances were for another applause were drowned out by
but the age difference dJdn't have alert today. pl 1 card · w av Jn g, c ban t inl
anything to do with il He could ba•e Bigb and Jow temperature. loaed demonstrators. been 50. You mow you're tJOt living at the water's edge by the OraDJe '
alone iD .your married life, there are County Hamor Department I n SIGN PROTESTS .
,. .maey ......,,.., r'i"m friends ' illd Newport Beach Monday were 78 illd "We .... t lie Hurnpbrey ol yester-
tbe pubUc.°1t'i-an uP JilD·and Jile lJ too ' 114. day, not the HHH of today," reed one
lhort to be sc petty." · Inland""""' will get a lorecul ~ ~ltn in Denver and •hcut.!,of "Hell no,
hotel by Police. He made no public
statements during his arrtwl at tile
airport or hoteL
Thrwgb It all, Humplny aweare<I
cheerful.
The ~ president tapes a te;levisioo
Jntervlew aod speaks t.o ael'O!pace
workers in nearby Redondo Beach to-
day betfore beading on to Houston.
TROOP WITHDRAWAL
The news oooffteoce on the pkme
resulted in some elabonKlon Of
Hmnpbrey'1 Aatement !bat "we could
&tart to remove tome ol the Americm
force! from Vietnam lD early 1969 or
late 1968... .
He revi.!ed ~ earlier ttatement thet
he "would ha<\fe bad no trouble in ac-
cepting" a ~liy Vietnam plallll: at
the Democre.tic NaUcnal Con\"elltion
(S.. HUMPHREY, Paee %)
Flier Knocks Out
Viet JA Gun Site ,
·threaten him. .
"As, I left the building I saw two of·
flcers bad arri~,'' ,.&ms 1ald. "A
lady hollered out at the officers,
'ttlere'1 a man in the court holding a
gun'," .
The officers had respond~, to a can
from nel~ comptalnlhg that a
"nude rifleman" was · roamirig the
area. 'Ibey saia Addison bad been ter·
rorlzlng oCl!er roslde!ltl ol the apm.
meot h..,.. by going !rom door to door
and dernanding entry.
-Mu:rataml was felled by a shotgun
blut as be ·awrooched the bulllling.
He was appaioJed a.recruit policeman
last Aprij 21 and WU part ol tho
academy cbu1 wbtcfl was graduated.
last week alter-20; w~ Of tralnlng.
0r ..... '.·. Coen ,
WeatJaer ' '
n '°" llhd tl>o w...iber today, you'll Joye tt) ~trtow 'cause
tttenrb;n't mutll. ctwi1e.~Colst
'tJ '4mP11lllll '.push; toward '80
while Inland J'elf..,. ara ·fobhe<I
at a """'·mopplni 115.
Kills Musician
-Kl.ss van-Doren, -play• the of about 80 c1e,,__tod>y, dnlpping lo ft"""'! go" IDd the Nu! "Sieg Hell"
dumb blond on ICl'ffn and in ctOck about 72 c1egr.., overnigtlt, aecordtng clomlne!e<I tile greeting .. • -
A Newporl Beach Navy Iller Tu ...
day lmocke<I out a troublesome !I'·
Uaircrall gun lite lo Nbrth Vlolnam,a
aollthmf panhandle, the Aslc>clate<I .Preo. ._nod-today. • ' -
IA. (J<l) Poter T. Reed, :le, !lted 'I'
alr·lo-lfOund m 11 I i fl that put IJiO
enemy bunt out or operation.
rNSIBE TODAY --· thlllter, says 1be will remOO')' -but to tile U.S. Wial!ler Bureau. -allemp4ed lo w!>lp up en·
-4ldll't WJ -m11bt be ellliblo. "I tt--.n. • waited eight ,.ean before I nmarried 1LeM tb6D 200 pertons met Bum·
1111,1 ~·· r'l' .not golll( to do that Thumb Fon-Boy, 3, Jb'o1 ln Loi Anfeles. Of '!<m. al>out .
agilln. , . ,., , , IO ,.... del!lonotr-1. M&y ol tile
Meyen, whb playe<I for· 11le' DaIJas. S k • Door Lock youths ftl'O IUl>l>Orte<• Of Sen. Fort Worth Spun, a Teiu League tUC m , Eugono J. Mce.thy; 1 de le a to d
farm dub of the Cblcogo Clubs, met DemocraUc pnoldeallai coodldote iil>d
MISI Van Doren tllrouah Robert "Bo" , Sim 'Cla't, qe S, had a a«o thumb tlloy .......i i!ina nadini "nonombor
Bellnaky, one ,of lmeblll.'1 pro-. to ltl.ct outtodf1. Wc:a.go." · ~ '
le1slonal "bad bo~.'' Newport l.lN<h firemen rMl>Olldld to Humphi'ey 'becan In' -· band•
Tbo ttar had -romonllcally In· a call at 41t M St. Mooda1 'tlliere Iller with iuwot'\er• liut one )"001111....,..i a
volvod with Belblllcy when he -found Som .bad ~ tllumb caug!lt In 1 • feneo u tile vke preo!deDt a.>~
rldlnt blih. u • -p!W!er !Or th• ' ~ ~-Joclt .... bedroom doQt, him. Tho youtll ..... ci*llY bullJe<I then Lot Angeles Angell. Meyers i•• •1r11mm •Dncted the thumb by l aw13 by Seem Service .,..u.
Olll,\' 17. ,. dlsmt!!!Jae the lock. I H~ wa1 tt.i drlwn !o"hll
FJytng an At Slcyhlwt lrOm tho car·
rler USS Bon"Honune Rlctiard, Reed aald he wu aeardllnf !w luooiv
' trucks -85mm opened 111\ •• ; 'hil croup 22 miles northwest of Vinh .•
11w. pulled a.round and lpfPtted uie
...... In • &tool> bl ~ ibout • '""• wet! ol tho hl&l>Way," ~ed 1aid:"!
!trod my alr-to-croucd' ml1atl.. It "'1·
• paaled and, almoilt !Mtantl¥, lllree ol
the sites ~ llrlrit."
T .. t 4!Jpatch d I d not llvo lleed'1 11r411 ...... -
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I DAILY PllOT """-• s.p.-10, lU •
Coast Cities Getting Hard Nosed on Hippies
1J IUCllAID P. N.W. .. ,.. ...... ,.. ..
11 lawa an>, aa -wrtw p.rt t~ "the
c:ryltallled PRJudlces of society,"
~ange cout cities are getting
blrdnoeed about bipples.
011' oflld.it, GI oourse, woul4 not
admit P'Uilll a law ~ed al ..... ,.
m .. I GI f(ICloty. II wou)4 be un-
00111\ftUUonal Qn Ille face.
lltlt tho ~ came, Ille cl\!len
wrath oame tDd the laws came.
1..,.. Beacl> paned a rttOlution
ooodamlllng hlppltt and pw>ctu-tt
latar wit!! aa ur .. ncy anll-loit"1nl
law aimed a! clearing sidewalkl of
any clustering Of tb.e bearded-beaded
set.
~ llt~ llC!OD l•uncl • ~
Newport Plans
To file Charge
In Boat Sinking
Newp<llt aeaoh police today planned
to •elk a complaint a1otrut tho owner
and opentor ot a 32.foot cabkl crWer
who allopdlJ ltnlck and lllnlt an IS.
loot oull>oard, -1ped trcm the
scent u tour perton1 tlciundend in
th•"*'·
A two-count complaint charging bit
MCI rt11t, llOd fallill& to 1S•isl !!!!er M
acddeot, will be sought from the
District Attorney'• office ag~t War~
ren J. Hoke, 53, ot ~17 DeMille Qrtv!!,
~I to Newp«t Det. ~n
'nwmpeoo.
'Ibe charges are misdemeanor of-
fenses under the Harbors and Naviga-
tion Code, Thompson said.
The accidert occurred some 150
yardJ off the Santa Ana Rh,.. Jetty
abolal I p.m. Saturday. The lour oc·
cup&ntl ci tile outboard jumped
overboard second.a before the larger
boat struck.
Filbed safely frqm the water were
Mldlael J. Ea!Dn and hi! wife Dori1,
ol ~ A!Ifele•, and Thomas D.
Mulhortn and his soa, Thomu J, Muliierh!.
"We w~ all in the water waving
and screaming for help," Eaton said
a!terwanl.
"W• could ue two men come out on
tilt -ol the other boo~" •aid Mulben. l"lbwe wu no one at the
wheel. They watched us for a minute
and tilen cme of them weot to the
wheel, iocreased speed .nd headed out to tea." .
A lifeguard boat rescued the fQUI' in
the water, and anodler boai was
dispatched to l!!!er~ept lb• m!i§e<,
The second 1DaJ! •1>!>"'11 !he lll?l•r
craft wa.s JdenWled aa pass~
Hom« N. Davi!, 42, it 39lg E. (lage,
Los Angelec.
Jl'r-Pflfle l
HUMPHREY •••
.
oalliog !or ao unooodibal licimliing
bllU aver North Vietnam. '
The predlotion ct troop--· he said, was based on briet:ing1 from
s-.wy o1 ner .... <la.I< M. Clifford
and Gen. William c. w-.orelmd,
Arm7 d>ief " otalf.
·"I don't koow if ther!! will be large
numbel's," he smd, adding that bofji
predircted "IOIDe modest -I didn't
u.y modest -troop withdrawals."
Hurpplu'ey reaffdrmed his s~nd aeMmt a bcmbtng halt, saying "I can-
DO! llllPP"TI a unilateral bombing
bait."
He l&id he favors "a cessation d.. tbe
~g when there iJ some restraint
IShown," the position taken by Presl-
dmt Johnson .
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DAILY PILOT
....,.., ..... c.. ... ... "-""""IMdi ~ ..... . w ... wt.ter h111te11 v.ii.y
CAUFOINIA
OIAHOE COAST PUILllHtNG COMPAHY
l!:obt/1 N. W114
Jtc:lr: I:, Curlty
Vici P,.1@111 tnd ~11 Mlineftf'
1\011111• KttYll .....
Th1rn11 A. Uwrplr.iM
~l11tU.l1W
''"' ~llltll A~l'll .............
c.fl -II -W..t ... ltrW ...... 1Mdo1 2IM W.t .......... Nof ~IMdl:t2tF..,.A~ , .... 1.t1 ...... : ...........
al 11' ordlaWt dloppod 4-In
m u a I c I p a l collft, l'\llod ...
comtituliooal. Stricken wu the sec·
tlon that made It illegal to 1tand on
sidew,iJ.lu except u near as pbygically
pos•lble to the bulldlng line.
'1'ba ~ ~ • .....,. lltlla1, ~
bl( or IYlllC '"' the ajdewalk coolloue1 uncihallenrid,
J.tl\llla C-Oundbp~ ..... b!l<mced
-lh>ce tht ewrl ru11n1, roplaclng
tho 1bicken leciloo with oee peued
d""" by laaauage from a 11165
Supreme ~ "'1!ng.
Tl oi&lan blocklnl 1 I f t " a lk
pUUle tl!4r belnl dlrtd.ed by a
peace officer to move oo.
Costa Meta oouncilmen shelved a
similar crdinance receqUy to .keep an
•n '"' 411Jna a11-. n..1 ~ to
!aka adlG8 now ..... LIS-'I u:-
~ .. J IM\ldl JllWk.
The receat jau r.1~val tbti lrougbt
multitude• ol yo1.mg ln a pall ol marl·
ju,;uia smoke iJ 1aid to have been
1omethlng ci a colalf•I to Qom Mell'
concern. It wq a 1enH ~··
HunUngton Beed! bu -n HI )llpglt
Infestation conlined !NllOlY to tile
bllfOlted downtowp area wbort aoe
poyd>edeli< shop ldllally set th• 1ta1e
lw tiglJt« coalroll ci ~· u .....
Ing.
The Huntington Qtllf'h coundl bu
assumed the right to refule or revoke
busines1 Ueensea for enterprise•
thougllt not In the beot Interests o!
l!llWio ~-..,.,. u4 -tr•· Two
ptyd1tdallc ...... 11a .. -""'* lie<> ....
Tempered In the ID•Se ci Eutor
Week, Newport Beach bu l<mg be<n
tough on noo-affiuent no m ad •t
LaJY!IP Nllllfl'd ti)@ !APsuage of tu
""" -.,.wt lleepln( In, veblc1'11 laot lljl<big le Ill the ,. ... ciJng
GI a Nowport )leach ardlpanco tllat
..... -OOUfl tailed. • ClaT4atly, Newpoit Beaah bat ID tho
wvrka a hio-pr"Ollled ordinance re-
gulftnl permit. !or .,..,,.bHet on
public property. ll"I lot piradec.
The law would require that ap-
pticaUou f« public assemblies be fil.
ed with the police dtef 4.8 hourJ
beford' the etenl 11le chief COul4 IUJD~
mtdJ ...... permits fer ...... a(
riql, ~. public calamity or -
emerl'DC)'.
Newport alto bu a $10 bell for
overtime parking vlolatlon1 at recrea-
Un9 llrJ!a '!l!li!r•. I H IH 1w.wior1
and .. 1>MD.i tilt !co c:reaJll ""'""
In ~ -.,.... '
SaJI Clamtllt. 1.t lltell embrou.d
O>Jer .._ S-YchedlDc 1Qop1 DOW
clooedl 'lbt Mind Gardea.
~ O>le! Clllford Murr11 ·,'14
th• urs-y ordlnaneo pultd hr San
Clemente oouncllmea tb1I yeu ag:ainlt
sleeping In vehlclte gained the title
"hippie ordinance" because ct the tim-
l!!ii 1" &lmllar ID the ord1llatte Laguna
...
. '••HllH l'•N•'
Beach re1..-.. tho ltrtnith "'
Newp«t Beadl't court v,lalory.
The blpP.e Laws, ol cour1e, aren't
peculiar to the Orange Coast. Loo
Angeles recently aent a law throUg1i
, 11)Jlilpg ii uuJawfuj to ~· Ill. Ut or
•leep on• ll>«Qu&l>fa1"4 In llllll • m'"·
nor 41 to mole1t or anno; o~.
Lagw111 once aecw:ed of beinl toft
on the ~!em, JIM apparenUJ
become 1omethla1 of an authority 1D
tht field.
La&JPl.I City Manll• Jfm• D.
Wheaton 1a1d a a rtc1nt lll•SUI of
citiM le!sioD in Ian FranclJCO the
most frequent questions fired at him
by city managers and city attorney•
were about Laguna techni'iuea in COil·
trolling the hlpplt prQl>lem. •
Mesl\n I.np~ovi~g
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From Bad Burns
A cnsta Mesa mBG turned into ~
bumllll torch Monday when 111ollne
p;:ploded u be tried to atart a
neighbor'• car is in improved con-
dltioa today, with third degree bllriu!
over llO percent ct hil body.
Harold E. Rankin Jr., 113, of IMO
ear.way Drt .. , l"*ibly ..... h1I lUe
to a pill' ol qulck-thlnldng moving
company employe1 who caught b1m
and •mothered the names withp ro-
toctive furniture P•dl.
Police ·said Rankin, manager of •
Shell aenice Nioo on Harbor
Boule\Vd near Date Place, waa prtm-
inl the carburetor of a fleightu11 auto
at 10:20 a.m. Mooda7 when the
mllhop occurred.
kept their cool"
"He was asking for cool water,"
sald Mrt. Golden, ''sQ they lll'ayed
bUn with a iarden h!>H. They ,_an,
on the scene and gave Rankin lirlt
aid, dressing his burns with bande&e•
before hil w11 taken to Cotta Mesa
Memorial Hoopltal !or iuru. lrul·
meht.
The victim wu admitted to tht new
facility in o n 1 y fair condition, but
Nurslng Director Mr1. D o r o t b y
Tbompaoo 1aid today hi.I ooodltlon ba1
improved to good.
Monday waa the 1eoond tim• that
Davld100 found-him..U potentially
holding .a burn vlcUm'• l1Ie in his
han<k.
Davidson 1ald three years a10 he
took rlmiler action ID utln(ullh
flame• enveloping a teena11d boy
whose clothin1 Wu 1et on art u be
Worked OD I motorcydt.
Dj!Ll'.._ ILOT ........... Dllll ....-r
r'll!JT !'LAG SA~UTI; A lllT COH~USING, l\UT HEART'S IN RIGljT Pl,t.C~
The vebicle ~ckfired u the victim
-keel over tho engine, IJJM)'lng him
w!tll liulng fuel and sending him on a
penlclcy dash up Conway Drive
toward • vacant lot.
Husl)and Jailed
After Gun Fight,
Freeway Chase School Resumes
Along Coast
For Thousands
Nixon Trying to Link
Humphrey With Inflation
''He wu yelllnc something fierce
and calling for help," said Beacon
Movin1 and SWnlge Co. workman
O:tarle1 Davldcoa, 25, who was first to act.
"I hollereil Oii him and be nn
toward.I us,'' raid Pavideon, who wa1
IH!ng • cl~ break ' with ..,.
worker Dennll Tuthill, 19, while mov·
Ing a lamlly Ii> the nelnborhood.
Poll<e raced -. tho -Ana Freeway late Monday te captura en
Irate ' Kenlu'*y -who bad
allegedly IO<Cbl a gun boUle -bis
-·• travelliig ~n ...i then commandeered • car to escape. "School days. Sd>ool days. Peer old
Golden Rule days ••• "
It began aS'ilm l<>dl!Y. hll9!!i'1' ~ool
year.
The ilumber routine in ~ of
Or4nge Ooast bome1 avertuni.&!f thi1
morning. Mother we• up early packing
J~c:heB, see;jng junlOI' dreNed in his
t>ac%-~ICl>!>ol be•\ huatllnl a gr!>apll)g
'->ager out of bed.
Tiler• wao excllec! lalk ag<ln in U..
~)' ~ bellWAJ•· Smnmer tales
~ qcllanged, • ,por1 i1"lr C.ls
shown oU, sun tans com~. "Sally
is wearing braces on her teeth."
.4. tearful ch1Jd. didn't want her
molller to go. Bui Ii« ldllderprlon
clal&matt1 alr-eady WtH playing with
the blocks.
New teacher. New clas1tmates. New
books , Nfl!'i" !~-· New vjsll>S. §9!!1e old sbcdcom.lillll. One hundred seven-
ty ei"1! clay• to l"8rn. Or to !all behind
tlle others.
Te~llf wrUJng her ~ on Ill•
b~ "What you c114 1hla SUil\·
mer! Theme. Remembertug bow.
1-nin~ !lo W«il !AA pencil •llllin·
It •• all part of the firtt day of
scbool for IQ!!,000 st•aenf.• lll<mg the
Orange Ooast.
Newport-Mesa Unified e o u n t e d
ebout 27,000. Huntlnaton Beach and
the ·west County A1"88 M,CXXI, Lagung.
Beaoh, 3,000 dai>IW"ano and San J01-
quin lS,000, and C>Ntnge O>ert aid
Golden Weit junior colleges ll,000.
Silence settled for a few hours at
home. Then the brood burl! In ID lell
mcm how it. was at sdloot.
Summer W9i iione. AM the long
school y-had begun.
NEW YORK (UPI) -Nixon cam·
peign str&teglsls today tried ID
assocll!!B Indelibly In the l!llhllc mind
Detnoeratic presidootial n o m i n e e
Hubert H. Hump4f'ey· with the in-
flatkinary e:piral Ot the past four
years. ,
The GOP nominee, Richard M. Nix-
on, tlljl(f ~ early etfernoqn date with a
grpup of premiaent bulineas an4 in-
dustrial uecutives who comprise his
caippaign busineH advisory group.
Thi!!'• m~ are !Join( C<llllM!l<\:•pon by NW.. ~ jrll campalp lelders to
spread the message that CU1Ttnt in-
flationary conditions with high interesf
rates and rising pricee are producti ol
the Joh!lson Adn\lnistr&tlod.
NixO!J.11 national political director
Robert Ellsworth paved the way for
the business advisory group meetinJl
with Che Jlomlnee at New York's Plir-
re Hotel by i111ulng a 1t&iei!lent 1harp-
ly remlnding Humphrey of hf1 associa-
tion with the economic poUcies and
t~.f.!.D1ti~ of tJte ~ y r r @ n J p.d-
1u.u-1.1 a on.
The November elaollonl Elllwortll
said, would proride e ret1rendum 11on
the poi!p91 l!J•I Hl!be>I HµmpJiray
hejped to dnll, that Hiibert H!!lllphrey
applaudt, that Hubel'\ Humphrey pro.
miaerJ: to oontlnue -pollciell that haye
left A!J!erlca with tile hiihe•t lnW"Oll
rat.es since tbe Ovil War, h Io-iYest
farm priCe1 since the dep:'es1lon, the
weekeot dolaho In Chree ~. the
higtie.t price increases ln 20 years .. '
ECONOMIC BLAll'l'
The CWTent economic sliuation w,as
an~ aspect ci the vice preo-1·,
campaign difficulties. From the GOP
standpoint, it lJl&de no difference to
* * * Nixon Ups Lead
Poll AlsQ Shows W ~e Strength
NOW Wl!:t:ll 400 W~00ce 1'.l )U NO. J<.O 118.7
lf•-l'Jl!e1 111.1 llt.i wOOi iii a a., 1.1
NfO!liJ>li>q U.O ~·' ''nit ·~ qqeel!pg "~' ·~ do
you fhink most other people 1'~nl •S
their q•!J ~osi~ll!J(,' Tl)• r<•ul1": . . NO WEE!' Arnt
Walla<• a.I 10 .• Nl•on • tfl. §.I ll~OJ ~8 ~·· !'fp Dt>IJ!iop '5·f 211.i 'l1te ~ q~stjon : • Who do you thlnk will ac!Ually be olect.d 1n
NPvemt>er," prpd)lf~d lh£!& reouffl: NOW WEtK AGO
W41•ct 4.t a.t
Nr..lo fl.I 41.j
Humphref 26.7 83.a
No opinion 19.6 19 .2
Pa campeign that President Johnson,
Humphrey and other admipiatraUon
d..ficiala over a period o( months had
~sk~ ~OQg:r.;;ss fpr l_!ew tools with
which to battle inflation.
Wh~t OOUDted, to tile Jlepublican&,
was that an income.capping inflation
did lake I>h!f:e dµrlng lb• Jg)uisoq ~~·
minie:traUpn 41Xf that lf tbe GOP gains
control of the White House, the cost·
price felfliOOBhiJ:l CIP, be expected to
lmJt'0'11 .. l. -•
"All of these crises descended on
A.meric~ in the ·lut -four: ynrs 'While
Hubert Humphrey had the power and
the respeuil>illty to do 1nmetlllng
.i>out them," l'lisw<lrth sold. "Eury
one of these cri&ea ii wwae now after
four years of ~ medicine of Mr.
Humphrey. So I think the Ainericap
~aple are aoint to aay 14) }Jubert
111!!llll!!r•Y ll!is 1!11! Illa! ll!! •l\l·tlm• P'!ljtl<s ol joy ljnd polilici! iii happlne~s
are hGpe'12s11y oot of tune and out of
touch with this new er• ci crllls and
t:hia new era of revolution."
only ,
Rankin -h11 clothes still blazing -
headed toward the two SBnta Ana men
au:l Davidlon threw hlm onto the lawn
ol the Roger Golden home at 1568
Carawiay Drive, to the flames could be
a mothered.
Welcome Given
To .New Jersey
PEARL llARBOR, llewall (UPI) -
'Ibt work!'• ooly battleship on active
duty, 111< jl~ New J<rsey, made ber
IaSt stop in the United States Monday
before joining th.e Seventh F\eet fcf
duty off the coa1t of Vietnam.
The ship's arrival here was marred
by tragedy wt.en an enlisted man ap-
plijllnUy r.q RY~rd and was los\ ill
i~• 14Rf11Y belore (ii• llllll:fll1!l bot· tlj!waf!"' ~ntered Pearl lfari>or.
'nl.e New Jeney was greeted by
thousands of persons who lined the
banks JJf t.hf ~f J!ntrance to get a
gµll!!!!• rt Ill• 1-i!led WArl<J War II and lCorean Wpr comb&t vef#an.
-• i i i .~ i • ~ '
Eugene Hardin, 36, Louilytlle, Ky.,
was tmn by °""'Ile Cooonty oberttf'•
deputies late Mmlay. 'Ibey r..,..-ted
be exchanged shot. with Eddie Gal·
lord, 22, inslde a house at 1211!
Newport Ave ., TueUn, l1(bart Hardin's
wifie, Cant was presemt.
"Hardin'• wife recenU, came tn
California wi111 Gollord. H a r d l D
lollowed them and got Into tlla -
tonight," ,1hetill'1 Lt. Barney McKown
said.
Both men were woooded in the IUD-
fight, Hardin W.Jll h!H1t the rlgh! leg
and ""ad .ttiJe G<llford WU lnJured In
bol;h ltg1, but ofllcer1 -the lnjrules
did not eppear to be serloUJ.
• peputies reported 1hat fullowing the
gUn battle, Hardin commandeered a
oar driven by Vern D. Wood, 26, ol
14592 Clarissa Lane, Tustin.
When the car w.as stopped in Orange
after a fr~y ohpse, ol~ fo..pl
Har<lin with a l"'!ded ~ .,..:ked .311-
oaliber revolver, Wood ~1 WU
uninjured.
Rardin is in the prlsU!. wwd d.. Che
Orange COMty Medjr:al Center ~
fhariOli o! attempted lllurdF 8lld !lid· nap.
has it!
' !// O[[P S...:::;teic;:::~;:---m_-·
•
• CR/fl'E·T CLER 1nu
T~E ULTIMATE
i~ CARPET CLEANING
Sf< .. ,IOCUJ "it•llfjt1lly 4, .. 1-
Clp•d 1p•ci11fy f•r t~• pr4fe11l•rt1J c~rpet cl1411er. It ii c111mpl•ttly •1f1
f•r 111 c•rf•t flb1rL
•ENlU ACTION "'" •• b'111hu or 1crubbl~t 1ctl011, 10 It do•• ri•t di•·
fort tht pll~ of the carpet.
$OIL I I TA I D I N • ANO !ilOTH
rtOOFIN6 art htclutitlli tt 1to 1dr.1
~ost,
...
UTillATI
-YOU
WANT ntl
PIMIST-e-
C:•LL RUG -& UPMOL$TIRY CLIANIRS
Our ll1I YHr of 511fVlct In Ora"gt C9ilniy ·
2950 R~NDQLPH COST A MISA
PHONE l46.S4i1 4'!=. t:ff\1
'--
•
-
•
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Doni-ngton Your Bometowa
'
• EDITIO N Dally Paper
vet:. ''" NO. 218, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER ·10, 1968 TEN CENTS
Coast Citie·s· Getting Hard Nosed on-Hippies
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of 1"" ~Ir Pli.t ll•ff
If laws are as one writer put lt, "the
crystallzed 'prejudices of 1odety,"
Orange Coast dtie1 are a:etting
hard.nosed about bllppies.
City officials, of course, would not
admlt passing a law aimed at one seg·
ment of society. It would be un-
constitutional on t.he face.
But the hippies came, the citizen
wrath came and the laws came.
Airport Site
Homeowners'
Meeting Topic
The proposed Bol.sa (hioa airport
site is the topic for a meeting of the
Hunting!Dn H.-ir Property Owners
Association Wednesday at
Meadowlark Country Club.
The residents of the marina section
of Huntington Beach are scheduled to
hear a presentation on the airport pro.
posais by the Prestige Wes I
Homeowners Association, leaders.. of
the t:ipp0sition » a county regional
airport in Hunlingtoo Beach.
The meeting begins at 7:30 p.m. and
will also include a repOrt on the
results of a feasibility study authoriz·
ed by the association on t b e
possibilities of de..annexation from
Huntington Beach and formation of a
separate city.
A history of the wrlous actions in
which the association has been in·
volved will be presented 88 ...ell as a
summary of problenu which Jtill face
the area.
In a ~ ae!!t..IR..IJl1!!!uJ!l the
marina sectiOliYfhe tltf, the~·
Oon leaden said that '<tbil battle (on
the airport) is far bun won as there
is a ttrong desire on the part of the ci·
ty fathers and ~ Qwnber of Com·
merce to see .a develOpineitt of this
magnitude take place.
"We must continue to oppose this
scheme to the utmost until the airport
commission realizes that we will fight
to a finish."
Despite the concern of the associa·
tion leaden, nftther the city nor the
chamber has made any stands at all
on the airport possibility on the Bolsa
Chica site. Ai!l><rl' Commissioner Roger Slet.es
has pointed out several timet that the
cotnmisdon iS not seJecUng a slte for
a future airport, but ·onty hearing
·testimony on the Master Plan of Air
Tramporiatioa whieh calla for con·
struction of a new county eirport in
five }'tars.
A public hearing is oet r.. 3:30 p.m.
Sept. 16 in the auditorium of Hun·
tington Beacb High School , 1905 Main
st.
No Relie/ __ ~en
In County W ave
Of Auh1mn H eat
Blistering heat inland w i t h cooler
temperatures along the coastline was
forecast for Orange County today, as
the Southland sweltered in it! annual
autumn heat wave.
The mercury climbed to near the 100
degree mark in many inland areas of
the county on Monday, with little
likelihood of relief for the ne7"t two or
three days, accor~g to foreoasters.
Suru:y and warm through Wed·
nesday ·.rith patchy fog along the south
coast during late nlgbt and early
morning hours is the offldal predic.
Uon. with litle change in temperature.
Near-record beet for·thi1 date in the
Los Angeles basin -up to 103 degrees
In some spots -is complicadng a
fight againrt five potentially
dangerous fires fanned by parching,
unpredictable winds.
Additional slr>ries on the fire ftgbts
may be found in 1tate news on Page 7.
JOHN WAYNE
REMINISCES
A shoulder injury suffered while be
was being pulled out ol tlM! surf at
N•wport e..ch oo• A111ust alt"1100ll
42 years ago altfred the c~ ol a
)'Ollllg USC foolblll p.yer.
The lad wat never •ble to ~ beck
in the rwlnl ol thlJC• Oii Ille grldlron.
But ht btcam• one of America's
belt known men -John Wayne.
Wayne rt:min.i1et1 with DAILY Pllm
sportl writer Earl Gustkey on Paaes
ig.1111 todaJ<'• peper.
~__;'-~~~~~~~-~
Laguna Beach passed a resolution
condemning hippies and punctuated it
later with aa W'fency anti-loitering
law aimed .at clearing sidewalks of
any clustering ci the. bearded·beaded
set.
Lagmia Beach soon found a section
of its ordinance chopped down in
m u n i c i p a 1 ccurt, ruled un·
constitutional. stricken was the sec·
tion tbat made it illegal to stand on
1idewalks except as near as physically
poss!ble to the bulldlng line.
The portion outlawing sitting, kneel·
ing or· lying on t.be sidewalk continues
unchallenged.
Laguna Councilmen have bounced
back since the court ruling, replacing
the stricken section with one pegged
down by language from a 1965
Supreme Court ruling.
It outlaws blocking s i d e w a 1 k
passage after being directed by a
peace olficer to move oo.
DAILY ~ILOT Stiff .....,_
OFF TO ·S<;HOOL -Wendi Zimmerman, 5, started kindergarten at ·
Pleasant View School in Huntington Beach today. Her brother, Phil-
lip, 10 months, will have to wait a few years. Proud mother is Mrs.
Phillip Zimmerman, 16712 Lucia Lane.
Huntington 's First School
Day 'Clockwork Smooth '
By SANDI MAJOR
Of TIW O.JIY l'llet Slllff
The first day or school in Huntington
Beach was summed up by one veteran
educator today Uris way: "as smooth
as I've ever 5ee1l it."
That was Ocean View's Pleasent
View Sctiool principal, W I I I i a m
Leedke, who said that within 10
minutes after the first bell rang
"evety room was working."
"Even one room of tindergacteners
was alreedy reciting the pledge or
allegiance," he sai<I in amazement.
after school starts, and the pound h3d
to be called to pick them up. Principal
Edward Keeley recorded another first
for his school.
The electric bell system at Ocean
View 's Rancho View School refused to
work the first hour or so of school to·
day.
Which pleased its principal, Patrick
Monahan. even though r o u tin g
students woo con!using.
"Things were sure quiet around
here." he laughed. Something to say,
anyway, on the first day of school.
•
Coita MMa councilmen shelved 1
similar ordinance recenUy to keep an
eye on Laguna efforts. 'Ibey expect to
take acUon now using Laguna's U:·
perieoce as a bench m•lt.
The receot jaa festival t.bat lrought
multitudes of young in a pall of piarl·
Juana smoke is said to have been
something ci a catalyst to Costa Mesa
concern. It was a tense time.
Huntington Beach hll!j.-Seen its hippie
infestation coofined largely to the
blighted downtown area where one
paycbedellc shop initially set tile stage
fut tighter cootrqls of business licens-
ing.
The Huntington Beach council has
assumed the right to refuse or revoke
busJness licenses for enterprises
thought not in the best l.oteresta of
public health, safety and welfare. Two
psycl:Jedellc shops have been refused
llcenses.
Tempered in 1be forge of Easter
Week, Newport Beach baa long been
. tough on non-affluent n o m ad s.
Laguna reodJUlted tl>e language of ii/I
own ordinance agal.Dst sleeping in
vehicles last spring to fit the wording
of a Newport Beach crdinance tbol
bad been court teated.
eurn.rtly, Newport Beach has in the
works a two-pronged ordinance re--
quiring permits for assemblies an
·-IS.. HIPPIES, Pace %)
Two Cops Charged
Fired Shots at Newton Headquarters
OAKLAND (UPI) -A dooen
oa?1bille bullets were fired early Wdray
at the headquarters ol Black Panther
founder Huey P . Newton. Two white
policemen were formally charged with
the shooting.
The bul1et.s smashed through the
front window and into a large display
poster or Newton about I :30 a.m. No
one ~ inside.
The shooting occuned a day after
Newton was convicted oi involuntary
manslau~r in the slaying of an
Oaklaod policeman last fall. He was
~
acquittoed of wounding .another ofiicer.
Police Chlef Charles Gain an·
nounced a citizen reported the shots
were f I r e df rom .a police car. He
promptly ordered the suspension or the
two offk'ers, Richard V. Williams, 2.8,
and Robert W, W, Farrell, 26.
Six hours later, G.ain announced the .
officers, both with three ~ears service,
were charged with ' assault wi"1
firearms on an uninhabited dwelling."
ll convicted, Oley could face a sen·
tence of up to five years tn prison.
Gain &aid Williams and Farrell were
on duty and in uniform arthe time. He
said both had been drinking.
The weapon wed was a carbine rlf·
le, standard equipment in Oaltland'1
black and wb.lte patrol cars.
The Black Panther headquarter& b
located in an .aged store tront, about
thrte miles from downtown Oakland. rt was the second police .attack in·
volvlng Black Panthers in the nation
this month. A group of policemen,
many off dirty, are accused o f
assauhing .a group of Black Panthers
in a Brooklyn crimiml. courts building
last Wednesday.
Rookie LA Officer SZa:in, Humphrey
2 0 he Sh b G In Southland t rs . ot y unman 0 · n lst Swing
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A rookie
policeman was slain as he began his
third day on the force and two other
officers wtre wounded before rein·
forcements killed a rifleman who wore
only a wblte T·•hirt.
Policeman Gary W. Mlll'akami, 23,
who was graduated from the police
academy only last Friday, died or face
and chest wounds two hours after the
gun battle early Monday.
The gunman, Addison Cash, 25, a
Negro, attempted. to bold off a score of
policemen but he was killed by of.
ficer1 firing through the window of his
groii.nd floor 'apartment· 1~ t b e·
Crenshaw-Slauson district.
Detectives said he was armed w1~ a
-410-gauge shotgun a n d a .38-calibu
revolver. They said Cash bad .a recMd
of arrests dating back to 1957 and
moved into ·the apartment two days
previously.
Bike Accident
Kills Musician
A retired musician and resident of
Leisure World, Seal Beach, was fat.ally
injured shortly after noon Monday
when the bicycle he was riding was
st:-uck by a car at an intersection
within the retirement community.
Kenneth Whitney, 70, of 1381
Monterey Road was pronounced dead
at the scene, Colden Rain Street and
Alderwood Lane.
Police identified the driver of the
car as Mrs. Mary Smothers, Tl, or
13760 Alderwood Lane. She was not
held .
Mailman Verpon Sims, 2.8, eftered
the inner court of the two story apart·
ment building to deliver mail to
tenants• boXes and was accost~d by
the gunman.
"A man came out in a T-shirt,"
Sims told newsmen. "He was carrying
a pistol and a rifle. I said, 'good morn·
ing'."
The man asked if Sims had any mail
f o r him and the postman answered
"not yet." Sims said the man did not
threaten him:
"As I left the building I saw two of·
ficers had arriyed,'' SilJ!;S: saJd,. ''A
lady hollered out at the officers,
'there's a mau Jn the court holding a
gun'."
The officers bad responded to a call
from neighbors complaining that a
"nude rifleman" was roaming the
area. They said Addison had been ter·
rorizing other residents of the apart.
ment house by going from door to door
and demanding entry.
Murakami was feUed. by a shotgun
blast as he approached the building.
He was appointed a recruit policeman
last April 21 and was part of the
academy class which was graduated
last week after 20 weeks of training.
Airport Chief Talks
To GOP Group
Huntington Valley YOUflg
Republicans have as guest speaker for
the Sept. 18 meeting Robert J.
Bresnahan, director of the Orange
County Airport syli<m.
The meeting is at 8 p.m. at the
Sheraton-Beach IM and is open to the
public. Topic will be the proposed
Bolla Cliica cotmty regional airport
LOS ANGELES (AP) --Hobert H.
Humphrey says chance.t for a
negotiated Vietnam peace have been
helped by h.IJ and RJcbard M. Nixon'1
nominatJon because the North Viet-
namese now know they will have little
chaoce of winning "unusual con·
cetsions" from the next president.
"Netttler ol. us glves any more than
tbey are able to get in the Pari1
~got.latlons," Humpilrey said Monday
rugbt aboard h!s campaign plane in a news conference.
It was called to clarify remarks he
made earU~ in Philadelphia and
Denver on ttie posstblllty' or U.S . .troop
withdrawals and on his stand orf tbe
bombing of Nortll' VJOIJ>am. ·
·The Vietnam issue -and vocal an-
ti War demonstrat.Qrs -d o g g e d Hump~y's trail in the lS.hour coast.
to-coost opener of his presideoti.t
campaign.
In Philadelphia, Denver and Los
Angeles, sparse crowds offering light
applause were drowned out by
p l acard·waving, chant lng
SIGN PR()Tf:STS
"We want the Humphrey of yest.er~
day, not the HHH of today," read one
stgn in Denver and shouts of "Hell no
we woo't go" aod th! Nazi "Sieg Hell''
dominated Ille greeting as a uni<>n
band attempted to wblp up en-
thusiasm.
Less than 200 persons met Hum·
phrey in Los Angeles. Of them, about
50 Wfh demonstrators. Many of t.be
youths were q:iiporters of Sen.
Eugene J, McCarthy, defeated
Democratic{ presidential candidate 3'0d
~y wra'Ytd slgn1 reading "remember
Qdcago."
Humphrey began to shake hands
with supporters but one youth. leaped a
(Se• HUMPHREY, Page%)
OraftfJe Coat
Principals of the city's three
elementary school districts expressed
delight that 10 many parents had If>•
per....iy prepared tt>eir YOWlller
children for the fir rt day, Only a few
ltindetgartenen clung to mother'1
dress when it wu time for her to go,
they said.
Gas Explodes on Man
"We had a UtUe boy in the second
grade go AWOL," Principal Leed to
said. "And that was about aU."
"We uaually f10d kindergarteners
IObblng .all over the p1ace, but not this
year."
The second grad.er should ttave been
used to It all by ttds yesc, but, said bis
prlncipal, "1111 lunch made It to school
but be di4n 't. ..
ms packaied 1uncb was found at tlle
door to bia dNsroom, but be Wl!I
nowhere •ound. Later, bit mother
fo\IDd him bldlnc In the bushes with a
friend ill his front yard, and retur'Ded
her truoot IOD to IChooL
II~ Beldl ctty School
Oillr1cl'I AJll><I L. Smitll School
rec~lved the bright news ttd.ay that It
wu tile firrt school to make a · call to tt.. city dog •heller tllll year.
TWO stray dogs bed follow~
chUdttn to school, .as usually ha.PJ>tt
Mesa Human Torch Better
A Costa Mesa man turned into a
human torch Monday when gasoline
exploded as he tried to start a
neighbor's car is in improved con·
dlt1on today. with third degret burns
over 30 percent of hi! body. •
Harold E. Rankin Jr .. ~. of 1640
Caroway Drive, possibly owes his life
to • pair of qafck·tblnking moving
company emplOytl who caught him
and smothertd the names wtthp ro-
teetlve furniture pado.
Police Raid Rankin, manager of a
Shell oervlce -on Harbor
Boulevard ntar .Date-Place, waa prim·
lng the carburetor or a nctghbot'1 auto
at 10:20 a.m. Moadq when tbe
mJshap occurred.
Tbt vehkle backlb'ed as lbe vlctJm
worked over \be tn&ine, spraying hlJn
with bl.az.l.ng rue! and sending him on 1
panicky dash up C..wa1 Drive
towllf"d a vacant lot.
"He was yelling something iiterce
and calllne for help," sald Beacon
Moving and Storage Co. workman
Cbarlu Davidson , 25, who was first to
act.
"I hollered 4( him aod btt nn
towards u1,'' raid Dllvldeon, who wu
taking a cigarette brellk wtth co-
worker Dtnnl1 Totblll. tt, while mov·
ing a family In tlM! neighborhood.
Ilank!n -hil ctothea stlll blaz1n1 -
headed toward the two Santa Ana men
and Davidson threw him onto the lawn
of the Roger Golden home at 15G8
Caraway Drive, 10 the flames could be
smothered.
"He was asking lot cool water," ~ .Mrs. Goldtn, "so they ip'l)'ed
him wttb a garden bole. They rean,
oo the a<:ene and gave Rankin f1l'lt
ald, drelling bla burns with bandAgu
before hJJ was taken to Costa Mesa
Momortal Hoopltal for further b'eal·
ment.
Tbe vlctlm was 1dmitttd to the new
faclUty in o n 1 y fair cood1Uon, but
Nuraln( Director Mrs. Doro t b y
T!lompoon said today bit condition boo
bnproved to good.
Monday was the second tlme that
Davkilon foll!ld hlmaelt potentially
boldJn& a burn vlcUm't life tn hit
llandl.
Devfdlon •aid three yean .aio be
took similar action to .. 11nculsh
names enveloptng a teen1ged boy
wh~JothJ.ng wu set on Dre as be
wort'\ on 1 motorcycle.
Weatfaer
If you liked the weather today,
you'll love It tomOrTOW 'cause
there Isn't mucb change. Coast·
al tempt Will eusb toWard 80
while ln1and regions are tabbed
at a brow·mopping 95.
INSIDE TODA l'
Work inct'ntluc program dt--
riqncd to rrmot1t unemplo.,,d
fathna frcnn wclfwt rolll fA.
rtttut<d "' 'OrOftg• c .. n41. Pea< 7. -. c......... ... ...... .
<-" =---: -•:r " ............... " P'-" 1•1t .... bit , . .,. ...... ,,
flil\ I Fl H Mil......... ll -'?.' . .,.
-. -" --" ,.. ...... ._ ... --, --.. ........... "'"' ...... ''"'! SfMt ......... ....... -.... " ...... . ...... .... ,. "t-..
-
1
•
I
•• .. ---·----
•
2 OAl~Y PILOT
No Runway
. Expansion
'.At Airport
Ramon that Orange C o u n t y AiriKtrt'• runways must be strengthen·
ed bec&use of stepped up jet aircraft
UH _.. bru1hod aalde by olllcltb
todA,J' .. ''t*lb' unfounded."
Jot SmJ!ek, cbarled with ninway
mainteDence a1 bead of tbe county
Building Services Depertment, saJd,
"There's been nothing planned or con·
temp~otlf'!d on the strengthening ol the
n:mwayl."
He said 1ucb speculation possibQ'
•as 1tarted in the wake or recent tests
On the runway blacktop to determine
Ito CUJTeOt coodltion.
"We dtd bave a minor failure, of
about four by five feet, that needed to
be 1'patfed, and thiJ can happen on
-.n,y aspbaltic-eoocrete runway, so we
repaired 11\at Immediately," Smisek
nporled.
"We were concerned because or
that, and wanted to make some tests
on the runway to see if we bed any
cooditions that might be of concern to
Uf."
"We found nothing we didn't alread.v
know r that the initial specifications
had been complied with."
Smi!ek said the "prellminery oral
~~iven to him on the q_utcome
of ests disclosed that the1runways
are holding up as they are supposed
to.
Foes of greater airport expansion,
upon hearing the rumors or beefing up
the facility, feared it would open the
door to still larger planes.
R~rt Bresnahan, director of avia-
tion for tne county, AlSo wa,, unab1e to
account for the apparently unfounded
reporU.
"We did have a defect here five or
1i% weeks ago in the black top -a
high spot in the black top -but I have
never seen Ule results of tests that
were made."
Concerning possible beefing up of
the runways, Bt'ffn.sihan said, "l
haven't beard anything about it."
From Page J
HIPPIES ..• •
public property and for parades.
The law would require that ap-
plicatlorui for public assemblies be !ii·
ed wtth the police chief 48 hours
before the event. The chief could sum-
marily revoke pei;:mlta for reasons of
riot, disaster, public calamity or other
emergency,
Newport also has a $10 bail for
overtime parking violations at rec.rea·
tion area meters, a $3 fee for surfers
and has banned the ice cream wagon
in the beach area.
San Clemente got Itself embroiled
over one psychedelic shop, now
closed ; The Mind Garden.
Police Chief Clillord Murray said
the urgency ordinance passed by San
Qemente councilmen this year against
sleeping in vehicles gain~d the title
"hippie ordinance" because Of the tiJn.
lng. . -
It is similar to the ordinance Laguna
Beach refashioned on ~ strength ol.
Newport Beach's court victory,
The hippie laws, of course, aren't
peculiar to the Orange CQast. Los
Angeles recently sent a law through
making it unlawful to stand, sit, lie or
sleep on a thoroughfare in such a man-
ner as to molest or annoy others.
Laguna, once accusta of being soft
on the problem, h.&s apparently
become aomething of an authorl1y in
the field .
Laguna City Manager James D.
Wheaton said at a recent league or
cities session in San Francisco the
most frequent questions fired at him
by city managers and city attorneys
were about Laguna techniques in con·
trolling tile hippie problem.
DAILY PtlOT
OltANG! COAIT PVILISHING COMPAHY
Rotlt•rt N. Wttd
l',...lltlnt tnd P11bll>llt't
J1clc R. C11rl1y
Viet f'resl-tnd G-•I M.l ... tet
Th9m11 K11wil
··~ T~1m11 A. Murphint
Mll,..t!llf Edlk>r
Albtrf W. lttt• Willi1m Rttd
AMOC19t. Mu~!111Vton !18'1l
Elillot' Crty Edl!GI'
""" ..... a..c.111 Offkt 109 Ilk S1111t
M•ili~t Acldr••H P.O. lot 790 92Mt
.,_ Offk•
"""""' IM>dl: 2m W•I BtlbNt kl ...... nl COl!t ,,._.: l)lll Wttt kr Sll"MI
L..-. IMdl: m '-•1 A'lttM
•
DAILY l"IL.OT lltft l"Mt9
End ·to Stink • Ill Sight~
,.
Har~our Stridies--Sewage Treatment Plant . ,
A poSAillle brt~ in oolv!ng
the ••!!Oney potu problem !.!! the HUD•
tlngton Hari>our znarina area of Hun-
--hal -alfond by JU.OOard A. Dueermann, execuUve
~ of 111e Santa Ana River Buln
Regional Water Quality comol s-d,
'Ille .problem ~ resldenta of
the marina ll"M 1 11 th9t tbe senge
lrealment Plant 'f the Suoaet Beach
Sa.nttary Dlstrlctf at Warner Avenue
ju1t northeast .,f Coast Highway
mella bad. The ~swer seems to be
modemlzation or abandonment al the
plant.
ll1 a ~ to City Manager Doyle
Miller, Fred H.ut>er, geoeral manager
of Sanitltioo !>i.tt?Jct 11, and to
Rich~ L. Heniaon superintendent of
the Sunaet Beacb district, Bueermeno
bu caDed for 1 meeting of all con-
cerned with the "hooey pot" a.t it is
known by Huntington H a r b o u r
resident.a.
"The flrsi step would be for this
b<>ll'd to can the two diltrict boards
and tile city stall to1ether for a lull
discussion of the mailer to ascertain
the areu ot agreement and dl-.gree.
ment and to 1eet early ecreement on
cooaolidaUon."
He 1a1d "tM · lntfl:uity af the com-
plliDU fl artal
rr.. P .. e J
HUMPHREY. ••
'1We underatand that tbe sanitary
d!Jtrid, tile city ol Huntlngton Beach
Ind Oranp County Sanllallon District
11 have beea Hgotiatb:tg for aeveral
years toward the end of by-passing
al\d. abandonloa: ttie Sunset Beacb
treabntot plant.
"We believe· this-plant should be
~ttber ruodernilld or abandoned.
Mndern!zatlon mar be costly .oo doe•
not seem at first glance to be the best
solution for the long term."
It's'1kely tbat a meetJ.og will be set
soon, according to all involved in the
"honey pot" lasue. I
The ~ of H1111t1naton Hsrbour
residents to obtain . relief from ttie
odon wbJch sometlmes pervade the
area bas led to ha.rd feelings with the
dty aod with leaders of SUntet Beach.
At one time leaders ol. t h e
homeowners asaociatioa threatened to beein a de..annexaUon move bec1U1e
of dly "lack ol aid."
Operators of the treatment plant say
there is DO problem with the plant and
place the blame for the odors on
1everal · other . fact~s including the
swampy area nearby.
The council has been accused of
"playing politie1'1 with the sanitation
problems in order to farce the Sunset
Beach area to annex to the city.
With 1hat suggestion, leaders of
SWlSet Beach have been extremely
cautious in dUcusaiOM of the sewage
problem.
Councilmen have denied making an·
nexation a condition of solvlng tile
sewage problems.
Nixon Linking
HHH to Inflation
weakeet. dolair in three decades, tlle
highest price increases in 20 years ..
ECONOMIC BLAST
MAMIE KISSES THE BOY GOODBYE
MarTl•1• C1n a. Gr,vy, But Not This Time
Mamie Sheds No. 2
fence u tbe vict president approached
him. The YoU1I> ..... quick!, bultlod
awoy by SOcret Sorvlce .... to.
Humphrey w.as then drl,.. lo hfl
bole! by poll~. He made no public
NEW YORK (UPI) -Nixon cam·
palgn stntegi1to today tried to ..,ociale Indelibly ln the public mind
Democratic presldeoUal n o m I n e e
Hubert H. Humphrey with the in-
flationary spiral of the past four
years.
The GOP nominee, Rlcbard M. Nix-
on, had an early efternoon date with a
group of promlnent budness and in-
dU.91.rial e.1.ecutives who comprise his
oampa1gn business advisory group,
These men are being counted upon by
NI.Ion and bis campaign leaders to
spread the message that current in·
nationary conditions with bigb interest
ratefl and rlsinJ!f1rrl.M are products of
The curreot economic situation was
another aspect of the vice prKident's
campaign dUficuIUes. From the GOP
standpoint, it made no difference to
the campaign that President Johnson,
Humphrey and other administration
officiala. over a period of month.s had
asked Congress !or new tools with
which to battle inflation.
·-"' dlll'lol hfl -at 1be airport or hotel
Sex Ki~n Files Divorce Suit 'lbroogh It .U, Humplrey _.d
cbeeriul. Wbat COU11ted, to Ute Republicans,
was that an tncome·sapping inflaUon
did take place du.ri.Dg the Johnson ad·
ministration and tllat Jf the GOP gain&
control of the White Hou.se, the cost·
price relationship can be expected to
improve.
By PAMELA POWELL
Of Tiit Diiiy l"OM ll•ff
Newport Beach's blonde Hollywood
sex kJ{ten Mamie Van Doren, 35, will
shed her 21-year-old hubby No. 2
Wednesday in a Los Angeles court.
The two-year marriage to Lee
Meyers, a COMner prof e 1g1 ona l
buebail pitcher and Orange Coast
College student-turned land developer,
"has been a good one," the blonde ac-
tress said today.
"It's very hard to be married in this
generaUon,11 1he 1a..id. "But I don't
have any bitter thoughts about Lee."
After three days of separation, Miss
Van 'Doren a:nd her attorney, Joseph
Agapay, will file for the divorce on the
grounds of mental cruelty ln Los
Angeles. 1 was going to file for
separate maDenance," she said, "but
I don't have the time and I know that
.if I flew to Juarez, the divorce might
not be legal."
The curvaceous star will leave
Saturday to begin a four-month
engagement at the W e d g e w a o d
Theater in Glen Cove, N. Y. She ex·
peels an actual court date to be set
sometime around the first of the year
after she returns.
During tbe last two years, 1he and
Meyers have lived in an apartment at
the BatboG Bay Club with her 12-year·
old aon Perry An1bony, a child from
her previous marriage to bandleader
Ray Anthooy.
"Marriage can be a groovll,'' she
aald today. "Thia one just hit a snag,
but the age difference didn't have
anything to do with it. He could bAve
been 50. You know you're not living
alone in your married life, there are
so many pressures from friends and
the public. It's all up hill and llfe ls too
short to be so petty."
The vice prelldent la!>eS a teievlllC111
interview and lpeob to IOl'OlpOCe
worken Jn nearby Redondo B6ICh tcr
day beloce heodiJil on to Houston. • TROOP WfiBDRAWAL
The new1 conference on the p8ne:
re.suited in some elllbortitlt.m Of
Humphrey's sllltement that 0 we could
start to remove some ol tl:le Amertcu
forces from Vietnam in early 1989 or
lite 1968."
He revised an earlier statement th1t
hi!: "would have lwtd no trouble tn ac-
cepting" a -ty Vietnom plank at
the Democr&tic NaU<ntl Conwation
calliDg !<Jr an pncoodltlonai -ng
halt O\'V North Vietnam.
'!'be pndiotlon al troop wl--·· be aid, Wll bued Oil briefing1 frcm.
Secretary of Dell<>oe Cllrlc M. C1iff<>nl
and Gen. WUUiim C. Wostmoret.oo,
Army cliial al stea.
0 1 don't know if there will be large
munbers " be Nld, adding that both pr~ '1sorne modest -I didn't
llY modest-troop wlthdnmlls."
the Jolmlon A traUon.
Nb::oc'1 llltional pollUce.J. director
Robert Ell.rwortb paved tile way for
the bustne" advleory croup meeting
with the nominee at New York's Pier·
re Hotel by issuing a statement sharP"
ly remlnding Humtmrey of bis associa-
tion with the economJc poUd.es and
programa of the current ad·
mlnlstration.
The November eleot!on, Ellaworth
51.1.d, would provide a referendum "on
1be pollclea that Hubert Humphrey
helped to draf~ that Hubert Humpbtty
a~lauds, that Hubert Humphrey pro-
m1Je8 to· cOn'tibue -policies that have
left Amertc1 with the bigbest interest
rates since the C1vll War, the lowest
ferm prices since the depl'esslon, the
* * *
"All of thes~ crises descended on
America in the Jut four year1 while
liubert Humphrey had the power and
the responsibility to do something
about them," Ellsworth said. "Every
one of these crises is worse now after
fo11r years of the medicine of Mr.
Humphrey. So I think the American
people are going to say to Hubert
Humphrey this fall that his old-time
politics of jell and politics of ha.Ppine5s are bo~less~ out of tWUlt apd out of
touch with thlS new era or crisis and
this new era of revolution."
* * *
Cong Terrorists Spray
Bullets Through School
Humphrey reallirmod hls stand
againM a bombinc halt, saying .. I can·
not support a unilateral bomb!nl
bait."
He Nid he f.avors "a ceaatlon ol. the
bombinf when there is 1orne rettraint
shown,' the poslUon taken by Presi-
dent Johnson .
Nixon Ups Lead
Poll Al.so Shows W all,ace Strength
NEW'YORK (UPI) -Richard M. NOW WEEK AGO
Nixon appear& to have widened his Wallace 17.4 15.7
lead over Hubert H. Humphrey in the Nixon 34.0 33.7
presidential coo.test during the past Humphrey 26.1 28.5
SAIGON (UPI) -'nire. 'yoong Viet
Cong 01.en'orists today burst into one of
Saigon'a largest schoo!J 8Dd spr-1yed a
hall al bulleta into the faculty dining
room, JdWng ooe teacher and W'OUJI·
ding three othera. They fled while ter-
ror-stricken midents looked on.
The daring nooirtime assault in Den
'!'rung High SdM'.IOl in Saigon'• CJlokKJ
District w.as the first major terrorist
incident since lal.t weekend when Viet
Cong launched. a wave al .attackr that
lett 12 persons dead and anottter 80 in·
jured in the capital.
Two l~year-old students w h o
witnessed the attack told UPI the
youthful terrorists, wearing slacks,
White shirts and sunglasses, vaulted a
schoolyard wall and moved directly to
the dining room, apparently familiar
wit.h the layout.
They said two guartled a rear en-
trance while a third pumped Chinese
K54 pistol bullets with icy c:alm into
the 1eachers bent over their lundltlme
bowls of rice.
In Da Nang, the U. S. 27th Marine
Regiment loaded 104. or ilSi _3,CXXl
troopers aboard a plane to start the
first U. S. unit withdrawal from Viet-
~m since large-scale fighting 1tarted
lfl 1965.
Voters League
To Study Plan
League of Women Voters members
ex .. ·Mnine "P\Gnning for Progresli"
ton\gtlt et the Marino iligll School
cafeteria, Springdale Sttttt a n d
Edinger Avenue, Huntington Beacb.
Speakers fw Wlt 8 p.m. event in·
elude Dr. Thomas A!hley, t'O(Jsultant
with Ecooomics R.e&earch Assn. oi Loa
Angeles, discussing cOOnges in pow-er
1trooture in moving from a n
eaticu.ltural to urban land use.
Ttd Adilt, planning cutsultarit, will
d1scu.u the lluntington Beach mld·
beech plarftng area, Jack Frouan,
Hlllltingtoo Beach Clo., vice presiden~
will dillcws th!' future development
pleu& ol bla c:ompan_y and Councilmen
llemy Kamnan wW d.i1JCU11 thfl city's
muter pl8n of land use.
The meeting Is open to th4' public
end any resident Is invited to 1ttend,
~g to Mn. Sblrief Ptttlolf,
)t!AfUe vk't prcsktent.. .....,
week, Sindllnger'1 Daily Sur v e y None of .3 8.9 9.5
The u. s. command annqwiced, Congress Groups reported Monday. No opinion 13.6 12.6
howeiref, that no geaeral reduction in An.even rharper gain was I'egistered The second question was: "'Who do
troops levels would r<sult from the OK Redwoods Park by the third party candidal<!, former you think most other people want as
move. Gov. George C. Wallace, the survey their next president?" The reiults:
The South Vietnamese govemmeat reported on the basis of telephone in-NOW WEEK AGO
released figures sbowtng Viet Cong WASHINGTON (UPI) -Legislation terviews conducted with 1,877 adults of Wallace 13.8 10.3
terrorists last week killed 12 l to autborize establishment of a 58,000-voting age in the four-day period Sept. Nixon 37.6 SS.2
civilians, wounded 265 and Jddoa:ped acl'1! Redwood National Pck in 5-8. Humphrey 22.8 25.4 three in raids throughout tfte country. Northern California was approved The survey, published by Sindlinger No opinion 25 .8 29.1
The figures showed 375 South Viet-Monday by a House and senate con· & Co.,~ market research organizati~n '.J'he third question: ''Who do you
namesie troops were killed in action fei-ence committee. based In Norwood, Pa., asked this think will actually be elected in
during the weet, l ,<Bl wounded and 60 Sen. 'Ibomaa H. Kuchel (R-CaliL.). question: "Who would you yourself November," produced these results:
missing Jn action. They repotted l ,844 e<>spoo.sor of a Senate meaaure calling want to let elected president 1f the NOW WEEK AGO
Oommunist.s were killed and 109 cap-for a 64,00'.>-acre perk, hailed the com -elecUon were he1d today? Wallace 4.9 3.9
tured in tile same period. promise proposal as "the end of a The results, compared with percen· Nixon 48.4 45.3
Detailing today's terTOrlst raid, the hali~D~ battle to preserve the lages obtained from 1,844 interviews Humphrey 26.7 33.6
Soutlb Vietnamese military spokesmen redwoods.' Aug. 30-Sept. 2, follow: No opinion 19.6 17.2
said the gurimen killed Ky Hung Lam, t~ii;;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;1r-40, a Oll.nese teacher in the l ,000-pupll
school. 1'le wounded were two male
and one female teacher.
In Da Nang, South Vietnamese
security forces killed two communist
oommandos and captured four others
at a beachslde cave only 10 yards
from U. S. Marine beedquarters.
Military spokesmen Hid the incident
raised to 60 the number of Communist
infiltrators found inside Da N·ang in
the past two weeks.
South Vietnamese Lt. Gen. Hoan
Xuan Lam, in charge of the city's
defense. said the Communists were
not in a position to launch a major
assault on Da Nang in spite of tbe ris·
ing infiltrations.
In SMgon Monday night, a U. S.
serviceman was shot and wounded
while walking on a street shortly alter
curfew went into effect Police sald hls
assailants ned and the serviceman
was not immediately identified.
The depating Marine reglmeot, a
landing force commanded by COi.
Adolph G. Schwent of Scandale, N.
Y .. was rushed U!tnporarll.Y to Viet-
nam last February at the helgbt ol tile
Tel Offensive.
Some 1,500 of its orlglnal corn·
pliment o! .abaut 4,500 have alrte.dy
left Vietnam on medical evacuation or
discharge.
Military spokesmen sl..ld about 710
troops would ultimately be returned to
the rtate1 and some 2,000 others will
be d>lori>ed by ott>er units In VieUlom .
Other Marines Monday leunched two
drlves ec:alrut a HPoried buildup of
North Vietna.mete troop. around a kt)'
LeaU'Jerntck artllltry base, "The
Rockpile ," in the northwert corner or
South Vietnam about 12 miles IOUtb .,
the Demilltartzed ione (DMZ), '·
only . ·:11UN11C.., · has it!
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.........
In the Wind
On Sept. 5 Pat Evans, 13, ol
17021 Sims st, Huntington Beach,
was motorboating with his two
sisters and father on Lake Tahoe.
Glancing behind him he saw an
airplane about to dive into the
water directly behind the boat.
The single engine Cessna hit the
water some 200 feet behind· Pat's
boat, nosed over and started to
sink. Pat immediately turned the
boat toward the plane.
DAILY rlLOT Staff PHI•
' DAJLY PILOT 3
No Credit Crunch
Economist Sees .
Inflation Check
, MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) -
Sbme softening of the n a t I o n ' s
. economy is under way, and it remains
to be seen whether "winter's pallor"
will be followed. by a bloom next
Parents Back
')
Valley School
Music Slate
An experimental music program
this summer in the Fountain VaJley
School District apparenUy has woo a
vote of coMdence from parents.
spring, says ......,,Ut W-'W,
Heller .
That siieup was made Monday by
1-Ieller, f o r m e r cltainpan of the.
Preddent's council of Econ om I c
Advisers, in a report to ttie NaUooal
City Bank of MJnneai..illl.
"Just as the big tu cut of 1984 wu
the dominant force -for expansion
and gap-closing -in 1964-65, 110 the
surtax and budget cut enacted in mld·
1968 after long and cosUy delay are
ttie domin.a.nt force -for coqllnc off
the economy and checking inflation -
in 1968-69," Heller wrote.
The pilot, Fred R. Eason of Coos
Bay, Ore., and bis passenger bad
managed to climb out ju~t ~s the
boat arrived and were clmgrng to
the wing.
THAT BLOOMIN' FIELD DELAYING SCHOOL SITE TESTS
Fountain V•ll•y Di1trlcf Must Welt Until Crop i1 Hervested
A survey of parent reaction to the
summer school session of music only
.at one school , showed overwhe.lm.ing
enthusiasm, according to school ol-
!icials.
Heller was referring to the 10 per.
cent hike in federal income taxes and
the 16 billion oot ln federal spending
ordered along with the increUe in
levies, as a means of whlttllng the
federal deficit, which total«l $25.4
billion few fiscal 1968.
"The specter o I another credit
crunch has vanished," said Heller,
who ls an economics professor at the
University of Minnesota. He said that
open market interest rates have c:trop.
ped .and added that"befure long, bellU
will cut their prime rate.
* Pat helped haul the two victims
into the boat while pushing the
tail of the sinking plane from the
boat. Had the tail caught the boat
i-t likely would have capsized.
'Schoolman, Spare That Tomato' About 250 students were enrolled in
the four-week program at Fountain
Valley School in beginning, in-
termediate and advanced instrumental
music and chorus. The plane quickly sank into the
depths of the lake, some 1,600 feet
deep at the impact point. Only Pat
and his family bad noticed the
plane going down.
The pilot was virtually unbann-
ed but his female passenger was
in' shock and suifering from cuts
and abrasions. The engine had
failed at 8,000 feet while the plane
was under control of the Lake Ta-
hoe airfield tower. The plane went
down in about three minutes thus
thwarting an air search for the
downed craft.
As for Pat and bis family, they
rushed the pilot and passenger to
shore and after all was done went
back to boating. The deed was oot-
iced by a reporter for the Lake
Tahoe Daily Tribune and passed
on to this column.
* Mayor Alvin M. Coen has pro-
claimed next S u n d a y "World
Peace Day" in Huntington Beach
"in the fervent hope that this will
motivate Americans exerywhere
to work, each in his own way and
in concert with others for the at-
tainment of those attributes in
himself, his community and his
nation and world will fo ster a hi~h
standard of iustice and eliminate
those prejudices that are rO"ad-
blocks on the hi ghway \eading to
universal peace."
Teen on Beach's
Parks Board?
Should a teen-aiger tie repre!ented
on the Huntington Beach city com-
mission directing the recreation and
park programs for the city?
Recreation and Park Commission
Chairman Thomas Cooper will ask
fellow commissioners for their views
during the 7:30 p.m. meeting of the
Commission Wednesday in council
chambers of Memorial Hall, 5th Street
and Pecan Avenue.
The Placentia Recreation and Parks
Commission recently installed Bill
Zures, 17, as a member. of ttiat group
in the interest of involvmg teen-age._n
in the programs which are aimed at '
young persons.
By SANDI MAJOR
DI lfll DallY l"llel Sl11f
The tomato still rules in Fountain
Valiey, just as it has since the days
the city was known as Talbert,
Repubticall Bend or Gospel Swemp.
Fountain Valley school trustees
have learned that the purcbase of a
site on Garfield Avenue, between
Bu.shard and Brookhurst Streets f<rr
the Motola School will be held up
another montb -until the tomato crop
is harvested.
They have to wait until the land is
clear to take soil tests bo see if the
ground will support a sch o o .1.
Preliminary tests along the road in·
di.cate peat layers go down about 20
feet at that site. School officials say
the problem could mean t!hat ex·
pensive underground pilings will be
needed to support any buildings.
"This would mean money set aside
for the school would have to be used
to put in support pilings," explained
Superintendent Edward Beaubier.
He said the district has never bad to
construct a school supported by pilings
and that several sites have been turn·
Man Slain in Park
Identified by FBI
KLAMATII FALLS, Ore. (UPI)
The Federal Bureau Gf Investigation
said Tuesday ttie body of a man found
stabbed and beaten in Crater Lake Na·
tional Park last Friday was identified.
as George Stephen Mear, 29, who was
born in Buffalo, N.Y.
The body was found wrapped in a
sleeping bag lhler about two miles
south of Annie Springs, which Mi near
the entrance to the scenic park.
School Aides Meet
Personnel Group
Non.Uacbing employe!" of ttie Foun·
tain V·ailey School District are to meet
Thursday with the school system's
personnel Commission.
The meeting will be beki in the
board room Of tbe Curx:iculum
Materials Center. Number 0 n e
Lighthouse Lane, Fountain V~Uey.
1936 GOP Candidate
Alf Landon Says LBJ
Holds Key to Campaign
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) -All M. Lan-
don says President Johnson could
have an ovei;powering impact on the
1968 presidential election.
The 1936 Republican presidential
nominee gave his views on the 1968
campaign oo the occasion of his 8lst
birthday today. Landon said "momen-
tous events" in foreign affairs could
occur before the electioo, making its
outcome unpredictable at this time.
lie said Johnson Is the most un-
popular president since Herbert
Hoover, but he more than anyone else
could inDuence the course of those
events.
Landon, who supported Gov. Nelson
A . Rockefeller for the GOP nom.Jna-
tion, also made his first public
declaration of suppOrt for Richard M.
Nixon.
Landon said twfl emotional issues -
Uie Vietnam war and attitudes cm
questions involving human relations -
will be crucial in the campaign.
He said there were demands within
the DemocraUc party that Vice Preal-
dent Hube.rt H. Humphrey disengage
hlm.self from the policies of the Presi-
dent. But t h I 11 ls difficult for Hum-
phrey to do, he said, because "Johnson
will be captain ol t b e team until
January and the decisions be make1 Jn
the next eight weeks Will have an el·
feet oo the election."
Landon said the Soviet Union's in-
vasion of Czechoslovakia presents an
opportufllty for a firwt step toward
diplomatJc recognlUOl'I of Red China. a
step be 1aid the UD.Jt.ed States should
take. He suggested that the United State1
STILL GOING STRONG
GO~• Lendon
absta.in from the quelllon' of Red
Chine11e admission to the United Na-
tions at the next U.N. session.
Landon said, "Th.e bitter animosity
between Russia and Red China -
coupled with a return to Stalinillm In
MGScow -creatu: a sltuatiot". that
mates this an Opportune time for a
signal step in U"le direction of
el'tabllshlng diplomatic relaUons with
Red China."
"That doesn't mean I'm ready to go
to •Ieep in the same room with Mao
and leave my pocketbook In my pants
on the back ol a chalr," Landon said.
--------·------
ed down in the past because of soil
conditions that are good for tomatoes,
but not for sehools.
He said the 15--acre site might still
be purchased, if soil engineers can
find toor acres of solid ground on it. If
not, the district will have to begin
looking again for more land.
Moiom School is one of 11 planned
£or constructioo under the Fountain
Valley district•s plan to put a school
within waiking distance of nearly
every child.
Under a recently-established priori·
ty schedule, Moiola is to be the next
school built after Cox School1 which is
alz>eady on the architect's drawing
board.
If tbe district's proposed $8 million
bond issue passes Sept. 17, Moiola
School ls to be completed and ready
for classes by September 1970.
'
Elegant Lady
REINFORCEO SILVERPLATE
Classic in design .•. with grace.
ful handle enric hed with tradi·
tional floral and sc roll motif
enhancing the smooth surfaces
of gteaming silverptate.
Parents were queried sbout their
reactions during the experimental pro-
gram's grand finale last July -a con-
cert at Fountain Valley High School.
Generally, questionnsiires returned
by parents praised the program, but
there was one recurring complaint,
school officials admitted.
One parent summed it up. Tilt con·
cert, he said, was too long.
savings institutions also 1'Ill cut
loan charge1 aM. the beneflta from
these factors "will &eep through to
business, consumers, aod mortgage
borrowers.''
HeUer said l\a1. the ~justment In
the nation's fiscal policies b a 1
restored world confidence in U.S. self-
discipllne but ~t "the favorable ef·
feet on our distn6singly weak trade
balance is yet to be felt."
Tradewinds
CAREFREE STAINLESS
Stunning contemporary design
with bold rhythmic lines and
smooth surfaces .•• all beauti·
fully interpreted to create a bal·
anced place setting.
HERE'S HOW YOU GET YOUR FREE GIFT!
Ne• Accounts: Open a $100 account, checking or savings, and
select a FREE five piece place setting in Original Rogers Silver-
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Present Dep0sitor1: Add $100 to your present savings account
and select your FREE five piece place setting in Original Rogers
ReinforcectSitverplate or Stainless by International.
ADD TO THC TABLEWARC OF YOUR CHOICC:
Each_ time you deposit $25 or more to your savings account, you
may purchase a place setting of your choice for only $2.50. Buikl
your tableware service while we build your savings!
Completing units, (extra teaspoons, storage chest, 4-pc. hostess
set and more) are also available with each $25 deposit to your
savings account. Open or add at Newport National Bank today.
SEE OUR BEAUTIFUL DISPLAY OF SILVER!
Select your FREE gift at any of our 7 offices
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1.
-
OAILY P!urr n...dor ...... -10, 1%8
-~ .... ~ P*' ltllfJ
• Poet Phllllp G. 11....,.toln, 6S, of
Boston, 1011 ''The soap companies,
· the plumbing IDduatry and l\ladlson
Avenue have brainwashed the peo-
ple of this country .. Evei:ybody Is
Jumping in and out of their tubs
"114 lhowen. The entire nation Is
obsessed with being clean. One
Saturda,y night bath a week Is
enough for the normal human
being.•• •
. U.S;-Schools
Still Closed
By Strikes
'
DJ UPI
Nearly all ol N ... Yon Ql)'I 900
public 1chools were closed today b7
teachers on strike Jn defiance of a
court order, resultine in an eztended.
IUIIUJ'ler vacation for the dty'a LU.
mlllloo popils for lhe second straight
year.
Teachers' strikes also tesit 49,000
cblldreu out or Michigan scbootl,
24,000 home at East St. LOUil, lll., and
3,000 out 1t Madiaon, Ill
There Are Smiles
Youth Gang
Runs Wild
In Syracuse
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPI) -Roam·
log gangs ol teen-age Negroes broke
car and store wtndow1, set several
fires and looted at least four stores
.latP. Monday night and early today on
the se>utb 1ide of Syracuse.
Pollee ~ five penons were at·
rested on burgt.ary charges in con·
Dt?Ction with tbe «Hsturbances which
began about 8 p.m. Monday and were
brought under control a 3 a.m. today.
Jn what·police described as a "spon-
taneous" outbreak, 160 youths in
groups of about six, wandered around
the predominantly Negro a r e a
creatlng the disturbances. Police 1aid
most of tt)e youtha: were between the
~es of 13-16.
Only 3,<XX> of New York's «1,000
teachers, and ~.000 &ehool children
showed up Monday, the first day of
school A state 1upreme court jUJtice
order<d tile !111,llOO.member United
Federation of Teachers (UFT) to
cease tta &trike, but the union nld it
would continue.
PLAN OPPOSED
Teacben said a plan to break up the
New York system into 30 independent
districU would give I o c a 1 ad-
nUni.ltrators excessive p o w e r ,
threatening lhelr job S<CurU7. The
atrlke was planned after the local
governing board at an experimental
school district in Brooklyn flre<l 10
teacher•.
Julie Nixon and her !lance, David Eisenbowob-.'.
seem to be trying to out.-smlle the pholo of JU!le's
dad behind them during a press conference at
Nixon campaign headquarters in New York Mon--
day. Tue daughter of the Republican presidential
candidate was on hand as young ~senhower,
grandson of the former President, announced
formation of a student coalition to "deal with the
crises of the future" and, presumably, to help elect
Richard M. Nixon.
Several persons were treated fo:r in·
juries, including a policeman who IUf-
fered a cut eye when a rock was
thrown through his cruiser's window
and a woman police said suffered a
fractured leg when she was pulled
from her cr..r and beaten.
About ten television nt.s were taken
after a W·indOW was broken at the J . U.
Shaver Co. Some of the sets were later
recovered. Goldsiein's liquor store
was entered b1 a group of youths wto
threatened the clerk and took bottles
of liquor from tile lhelvea. Two
grocery stores were also looted.
Federal Grand Jury Starting Probe
' Jun whittling ti•• liourr OIOOJI, Dol-
141 Stlll<y, rotlttd Unotyp< op<rator
lWing on a farm 1outh of Na.shtrilU, ru.. IP<ndl 1111 IJJGT• ti,.. ,.htttUng a
aooodf'n chain out of a ioUd piece of
oak. Strange a1 it .seems, Stilley toill
&oh'ffie out a 12·/oot long chain from
a 10-faot Jqng pj<e< of waod.
A bearing examiner exonerated the
IO teachers but the governing board
refused to rehire them.
Of R.esponsibility ii n Chicago Riots California
Leads Auto • Herbert R. Moore, 57, a
BuUervWe, Ind., truck driver, was
stung fatally by a bee on bis left leg
as he and his son worked in their
backyard. Coroner Richard Vence
said death was due to a severe
reaction to the bee's poison. • Rob WhHI, New E n g I an d
philanthropist, has received more
than 50 replies since be offered to
pay $25 to anyone who found him a
suit,eble wife. Wheal says he hasn't
found a mate yet. "They were
either much too old or much too fat
. . . just big dumplings," he s~d. •
A man (who wisMs to remain
anonymous) recenUv purchaaed
a grandfather clock for $45 at
on auction. Although °" auth-
1:11tic ..antique, the clock rold
cheap becaure it tDOUldn't nm.
Upon oetttng it home, he took··
it apart to find the trouble •••
and out tumb~d $6,000 worth
of ;ewelry that 1DCS hiddfn in· -· • At a meeting with newsmen in
New York to announce that he was
going to Montreal to make a draft..
resistance movie, Abbie Hoffmen,
a self.styled Yippie leader, amused
himself by playing with an electric
yo-yo. •• Rockland. Maine, City l\lanager
Richard Cahill was surprised.
residents of Chemrut Street were
happy, and officials of a l!!<oal con-
tracting fmn were very red·faced.
The firm paved the street and
Cahill didn't know about it unW be
drove down Jt. The company was
hired to resurface 11 e v e r a 1
thoroughfares, hit Chestnut Street
wasn't orie of them. Firm officials
admitted the mistake was theirs
and didn't charge the city the $792
that the work cost.
Last year the teacbers 11truclt for
three weeks for bigber pay.
' state Supreme Court Justice HBITy
B. Frank l\londay night otgned a tern·
poNC"y restnYoing order agaimt the
teachers -a similar order was ig·
nored last year -and UFT President
Albert Shanker said the strike would
continue.
Shanker, who served a la.day jail
sentence during the last Chrlstm.i:s
holiday for ignoring a similar order,
slid, "lhe injunction won't pu.t any
children in tbe classrooms."
Z,000 ON STRIKE
T w o thou11and Michigan teachers
were on strike in six school district!.
The strikers were represented in four
dlstricbi by the Michigan Education
Association, in two districts by the
Michigan Federation of Teachers. The
strikes affected 49,000 cbi!dren In all .
At East St. Louis, a strike by
teacben kept 24,000 students out of
classes. The Justice Department also
has filed suit against the school board,
charging racial discrimination. About
58 percent of East St. Louis' 900
teachers are Negro, and the govern·
ment aougtit to correct alleged racial
1mbalance·1,
Teachers at Madison, ru., rejected
.the ICDoo1 board's latest offer -a
two-year contract with a starting
salary of $6,200 for tbe first year and
'8,400 for the second. The oiler in·
eluded plans for a tu referendum.
The teachers ea.:rUer lowered the
minimum wage demand from 1'7,000 lo
18.700.
250 University
Students Jailed
CHAMPAIG!'!, Di. !UPI) -Police
moved into the University of Illinois
&!Odent union after mldnlgbt loday and
arrested more tbran 250 dem.onstretfn&
students, most of them Negroes pro-
testing inferior housing.
Authorities 1ald the "camp.in"
demon!rire.ton smashed cl:landeller1,
overturned furniture, left floor1 ui..
tered 'With glets, and slashed pictures,
including one of. tbe university presi·
dent.
At least 2.52 students were hauled off
to jail in vans. Police &aid tbey oUered
no reslstance. ·
CHICAGO (UPI) -Who was
responsible for the violence during the
Democratic National Convention -
Television? DemooJtnton? Police"?
All of them?
A federal grand jury ha6 been
ordered to make a sweeping study of
the question and indict those it thinks
responsible.
Chief Judge William J. Campbell of
the U. S. Dis111ct Court ordered the in·
vestigat.ion Monday. He gave the order
shortly after Mayor Richard J . Daley,
appearing at his r.irst news conference
at which he answered questions about
the violence, charged the news media
with presenting a ''distorted" picture
of what happened.
"I am amazed at the distorted and
'
* * * Mayor Daley
Denies V sing
Foul Language
CHICAGO (UPI) -Mayor Richard
J. DaJey seems to have over.reacted
when a newsman asked him whether
he swore at Sen. Abraham RlblcoU
during the Democratic National Con·
ventlon.
At the convention, the C<>nnectlcut
Senator took the plaUorm to denounce
police actions against antl.·Vietnam
war demonstrators. The I 111 n o i s
delegaUon gave him lmty boos.
Phot.ograpbs showed Daley with his
band cupped t.o hls mouth.
At Daley's news conference Monday
-the first at whlch he answered ques.
Hons since the convention -a
reporter told Daley: ;
"You used 1ome pretty l!ltrong
lanJUage on t1)e fiOOT of the convention
to Senator Riblcoll' tblt was peorded
on videotape." · ·
"What did I sayf" Daley fiusbed
wlth anger.
"It was a slx·letttlr word beginning
with mother, .. the newsman said.
"You're a liar," Daley said. "Don't
say that. I never used that language In
my life and you say that or anything
else and you Ue. You're a liar. You get
me the tape becaUle I never used that
word."
. Appalachians Inundated
Michigan Tornado Mmhes Cedar Spril).gs City Hall
Callfornla
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T"' ~rv climbed ~ 100 •~<t
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twisted picture the new1 media gave,"
Daley aaid at the jam.packed news •
conference. "The American people
wen amazed. Tbelr letters abow it."•
The mayO!' refused to elaborate on
how the media allegedly .distorted the
news, releITing questioners to the city
report. He conceded there may have
been instances of "over.reaction" by
police, but said these now are under
investigation by the p0Uce department
and 61.outly defended police action dur·
ing the disorders W dealing with "ter·
rorists."
Daley repeated statements coo·
tained in the report that policemen
continually were subjected to obscene
language about themselves and their
families from hippies and antiwar p~
testers and had many things, including
human excrement, thrown at them.
"What about human b'tes -biting:
policemen, taking flesh out or their
legs~" he .a.eked.
"I think all yop newsmen missed the
point," he added. "There were no lives
lost ln Chicago during the convention.
Six were killed In Miami in racial
riotina: during tll'e Republican National
Convention at Miami Beach."
(Daley's reference to "six'' wu an
en-or. Three persons died in the
Miami riots.)
* * * Group Says Daley
Wrong on Deaths
In Chicago Riots
CHrCAGO (UP!) - A Ollcago-based
doctors group says Mayor Richard
Daley's report concerning civilian in·
jurles during the Democratic National
Convention was grosslr in error.
The medical Comrruttee for Human
Rights said Monday )ts estimate of
civilian casualties was more than 1,000
during the convention melees. The
1,000 figure Cilmpares t.o only 60 cited
in the Daley administration report
issued last Friday.
The committee'& report listed 425
persons treated at its stationary
medical facilities.
Gel $100 or more month after monlh after month!
lm1d1M .•• Hnln1 1 flllJlll monlhl1 check lo look fomnl lo!
M1n1 or tllolo who ha" 1 wondarlul MONTHLY SECURITY
ACCOUNT ••• ori1in1l1d ond lon1 tasted bJ N1wport B1lb01
Savlnp ..• st1rted by simpl1 openinr a dividlnd..,mln1 savlnp
l<tOUnt Olhe~ in,..tad 1 lump wm. MAil 11E COlll'Oll FOi
COlll'\.Elt DfTAnll Oii TllE llOllTllLY SUUlll'f ACCOUNT
PIM
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Death Toll
CHICAGO (UPI) -The Na1ional
Safety Couocil says the nation's traffic
death count in July wu less than Ju1y
of 1967, but there was a 5 per<:ent rise
in the death rate for the first seven
months of this year.
The council said 4,770 persons died
in July, 50 fewer than in 1967. But
29,950 persons -1,400 more than in
1967 -were killed on the natioo's
roads for the first seven month11 of
1968, it said .
More than a milllon Americans mf.
fered disabling Injuries in the flrst
seven months of this year, the council
sa'id, and the damage bill was $6
billion.
Based on July deaths per 10,000
registered vehiclee. Houston, Tex.,
was the safest of the1 nation's cities
with mQl"e than one million persons.
Los Angeles was second and Chicago
third.
+
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. Lag~na Bea~h DAILY PILOT Today's Closing
EDITION N.V. Stoeks
voe. 6l, NO. 218, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES [AGUNA BEACH, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1968 TEN CENTS
Coast Citie·s Getting Hard Nosed on
.
Hippies
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of TIM DaDJ Ptllt Slaff
U laws are, as ooe writer put it, "the
crystalized prejudices of society,"
Qrange Coast citiea are getting
hardnosed about hippies.
City offlciah, of course, would not
admit passing a law aimed at one seg-
ment of society, It would be un·
constitutional on tbe face.
But the hippies came, the citizen
wrath eam.e and the laws came.
Hlill Links
Nixon Stand
To .Wallace
By BRUCE BENSON
Of TM DAllY P111r Sl•ff
REDONDO BEACH -Vice Presi-
dent Humphrey today denOOl:lced
George Wallace as a segregationist
and made his first major attempt of
the presidential campaign to link
Richacd Nixon with the ultra-rightist
vote.
"Ibere is one candidate this year
who bases his very campaign on the
idea of apartheid," Humphrey told
California aerospace w o r k e r s
gat:.hettd outside the large TRW plant
here.
"There Is another candidate who
does not do so. But he is openly com·
peting for the same votes as George
\Vallace -for the votes of people who
want at best to slow tirings down when
it comes to programs that offer the
way out oC ten5ion and trouble in
America."
It was the Democratic presidential
nominee's strongest effort of the
young campaJgn to capitalize on Nix-
on's supposed appeal amoog hard core
conservatives and voters of the Deep
South.
It also marked his first outright a~
tack on the Wallace candidacy, which
Hwnphrey denounced as ''third party
extremism."
lie charged that the Republican par-
ty this year offers voters "the old
coalition whclch prefers to remain
silent when it comes lo human rights
and opportunity."
Humphrey arrived in Los Angeles
Monday night and was expected to
leave for Houston sometime later to·
day. He addressed several thousand
standing TRW workers at noon from a
podium put up in an inter-eourtyard of
the space plant.
lie made onJy ppssing Jtference,\ tc;i
the Vie(riam war, and hammered hard
onJ.lie problems or race relations.
The choice of the 1968 elections is
"hetween the America of the Old Era
and the America of the New Day."
1-lumpbrey said.
"Turn away from the Old Era.
Choose the New Day. Turn away from
the· Old Era when an American boy
who fought in an integrated bunker at
Khe Sanh could come home to a
segregated slum in America."
Humphrey pledged that his election
to the presidency would sigrllfy a turn-
ing away from violence in the streets.
"There aren't many extremists in
this country," he said, "and those who
listen to them are a minority."
"But history is filled with the
'A-Teck.age created by extremists and
willful minorities -and they all
thought they had found the true belief
to the exclusion o( all othen.
"IC we let the extremists and the
haters have their way in America," he
&aid referring to the C h i c a g o
disorders, "they can drag all of us
down. But if the rest of us do
something about it, they won't have
their way.
"Dissent. yes," be con c I u de d •
"Disorder, no."
Laguna Beaeh pused a resoluUon
condem.ning hippie& and punctuated it
tater with an urgency anti-loitering
law aimed at clear.log aklewalb or
any clustering ol. the bearded-beaded
set.
Laguna Beach soon found a section
oC its ordinance chopped down in
municipal court, ruled un-
constitutional. Stricken was the sec-
tion that made it illegal to stand on
sidewalks except a.s near aa physically
possible to the building line.
The portion outlawing sitting, kneel·
ing Cl' lying on the sidewalk coatinues
unchallenged.
Laguna Councilmen have boon~
back since the court ruling, replacing
the stricken section with ooe pegged
down by language from a 1965
Supreme Court. ruling.
It outlaws bloc.king s i d e w a I k
passage after being directed by a
peace olticer to move oo.
-, ...
DAA.r P!IL.01' tt91f ......
OFF TO SCHOOL -Mrs. Spencer Sadler, 173 Wave $1.., kisses
daughter, Susie, as five-year-old leaves for first day in kindergarten
at El Morro School. Scene was repeated all along Orange Coast to-
day as thousands of youngsters started fall term.
New School Year Becl{ons
-Thousan~s Along Coast
"School days. School days. Dear otd"
Golden Rule days ... "
It began again today. Anotber sctiool
year.
The slumber routine in thousands of
Orange Coast homes overturned this
morning. Mother was up early pa.cldn.g
lunches, seeing junior dressed 1n _his
back·to-scbool best hustling a groarung
teenager out or bed.
There was excited talk again ln the
LBJ to Speak
At Legion Meet
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Johnson flew to New Orleans today for
a surprise appearance before the
American Legion coovention.
The President's jetliner took off
from nearby Andrews Air Force Ba5e
at 11:05 a.m. for New Orleans.
Earlier, Johnson had declined an in·
vitation to speak before the veterans
convention. Today's address was ex·
pected to be on foreign policy and the
Vietnam war.
recently still hallways. SlmUDer tales
v.·ere exchanged, short hair cuts
abown off, sun tans compared. "Sally
Ls wearing btaces on her teeth."
.<\ tearful child d:ldn't want her
mother to go. But her kindergarten
classmates already were playing with
the bloclm.
New teacher. New classmates. New
books. New lessons. New vistas. Some
old shortcoming!. One hundred seven·
ty eight days to learn. Or to fall behind
the others.
Teadler writing her name on the
blaekboard. "What you did tJ\is sum·
mer? Theme. Remembering how.
Learning to work the pencil agaln.
It was all part of t1le first day of
school for 109,000 students aloog the
Orange Coast.
Newport-Mesa Unified co u n t e d
about 27,000. Huntington Beach and
the West County area 54,000, Laguna
Beach, 3,000 Capistrano and San Joa-
quin 13,000. and Orange Coast and
Golden West junior colleges 12,000.
Silence settled for a few hours at
home. 'Jben the brood burst in to tell
mom haw it was at sdx>ol.
Summer was gone. And tbe long
school yeer bad begun.
Costa MHa councilmen shelved a
similar ordinance recently to keep an
eye on Laguna efforts. They expect to
take act.ion now using Laguna's ex-
perieoce as a bench mark.
The recent jazz festival that brought
multitudes of young in a pall of mari-
juana smoke is said to have been
something of a catalyst to Costa Mesa
concern. It was a tense time.
Huntington Beach bas seen its hippie
infestation confined largely to the
blighted downtown area where one
psychedelic shop initiaJly set the stage
!or tighter controls o! business licens-
ing.
The Huntingt-On Beach council has
assumed the right to refuse or revoke
business licenses for enterprises
thought not in the best interests of
public health, safety and wellare. Two
psychedelic shops have been refused
licenses.
Tempered i.o the forge of Easter
WW. Newport Beach ba.s IMI been
tough on non·affluent n o m a d s.
Laguna readjusted the language of ill
own ordinance against 1leeplng in
vehicles last spring to flt the warding
of a Newport Beach ordinance that
had been court tested.
Currently. Newport Beach has in the
works a two-pronged ordinance re·
quiring permits far assemblies oo
(See HIPPIES, Page !)
Two Cops Charged
Fired Shots at Newton Headquarters
OAKLAND (UPI) - A dozen
cal1bine bullets were fired early today
at the headquarters of Black Pa.mher
founder Huey P. Newton. Two wbite
policemen were formally charged with
the shooting.
The bullets smashed through the
front window and into a large display
poster of Newton about 1:30 a.m. No
one wais inside.
The shooting occurred a day after
Newton woa,, convicted ol. involuntary
manslaughter In the slaying of an
Oakland poli-cmnan last fall. He was
Crash Victim
Was Santa Ana
School T eache1·
EUz~rown1 whose car s;arried
her to dee.th as it plunged into a
Laguna Beach home Saturday, was a
Santa Ana school teacher.
Sile had taught for 12 years in
Phoenix and more recently had taught
at Monte Vista Schoo], Santa Ana, ac-
cording to Blower Brothers Mortuary.
Mrs. Brown, 44, a widow, died at
Soutti Coast Conununity Hospital
Saturday afternoon following tbe unex·
plaioed plunge of her car through the
living room of a frame residence at
ThUl:ia and Catalina streets.
Harold Harris, 1285 Dunning Drive,
said Mrs. Brown, who had done part
time dom.estic work for him during the
summer, was in a "wonderful state of
mind" when she left hls residence
minutes before the ac-cldenl
He said she thanked him for gi&-<if
food and clothing for her nephews.
The cause of the accident, why she
lo9t control of the auto. is yet under in·
vestig~on . Mrs. Brown'1 car nearly
rb"uck two pedestralns and plunged In·
to tbe. living room at 911 Catalina
Street. An occupant dived through a
window to safety.
Mrs. Brown's body is to be returned
to Phoenix Wednesday !or funeral
services.
JOHN WAYNE
REMINISCES
A shoulder injury suffered while he
was being pulled out of the surf at
Newport Beach one August afternoon
42 years ago altered the career of. a
young USC football p1ayer.
The lad was never able 1o get back
tn the swing of things on the gridiron.
But he became one of America's
best known men -John Wayne.
Wayne reminisces with DAILY PTLOT
sports writer Earl Gustkey on Pages
16-17 ol today'1 paper.
aequltt'ed of wounding another officer.
Police Chief Charles Gain an·
no~ed a citizen rePorted the shots
were f i r e df ram a police car. He
promptly ordered the suspension of the
tW"O off~ers, Richard V. Williams, 28,
and Robert W.W. Farrell, 26.
Six hours later. Gain announced the
officers, both with three r.ears service,
were charged with ' assault with
fireanns on an uninhabited dwelling."
U convicted. they could face a sen·
tence of up to five years in prison.
Galo said Williams and Farrell were
on duty and in uniform at the time. He
said both had been drinking.
The weapon used was a carbine rif·
le, standard equipment in Oakland's
black' and white patrol cars.
The Black Panther headquarters Is
located in an aged store front, about
three miles from downtown 06kland.
It was the second police attack in-
volving ~lack Panthers in the nation
this month . A group of policemen,
many offduty, are accused of
assaulting a group of Black Panthers
in a Brooklyn criminral courts building
last Wednesday,
Rookie LA Officer Slain,
2 Others Shot by Gunmnn
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A rookie
Policeman wq lla!li as be began his
third day on the force and two other
officers were wnunded before rein·
forcementa .ldlled a rifleman who wore
only a white T-shirt.
Pollcetnin 'Gary W. MurakamI, 23,
wbo was .B:raduated from the police
Husband Jailed
After Gun Fight,
Freeway Oiase
Police raced down the Santa J\na
Freeway late Mood'ay to capture an
irate Kentucky husband wOO bad
. allegedly fought a gun battie wittl his
wife'l!i traveling companion aod then
commandeered a oar lo escape.
Eugene Hardin, 36, Louisville, Ky.,
wa1 taken by Orange Coounty sheriffs
deputies late Mooday. They reported
he exchanged shot.I with Eddie Gaf.
ford, 22, Inside a house at 12562
Newport Ave., Tustin, where Hardin's
wUe, Cacrol was present.
"J:Lardin's wife recently came to
Californla with Gafford. H a rd i n
followed them and got into the house
tonight," sheriff's U . Barney McKown
Aid.
Both men were wounded in the gun.
fight, Hardin was hit Jn the right leg
and head whlle. Gafford was injured in
both legs, but ol.ficers said the lnjruies
did not appear to be seriow.
Deputies reported that following the
gun battle, Hardi11 commandeered a
car driven by Vero D. Wood, 26, ol
1459'2 Clarissa Lane, Tustin.
academy only last Friday, died Of face
and chest wounds two hour.-after thtl
gun battle early Monday,
Tbe gunman, AddJson Cash, 25, a
Negro, attempted to .hold·oU a score of
policemen but be was ldlled b1 of.
ficers firing througb the Window ot his
ground floor apartment in t h e
Crenshaw-Slauson district.
Detectives said he was armed wlth a
410-gauge shotgun an d a .:JS..callber
revolver. They said Cash had a recOl'd
of arrests dating back to 1957 and
mov~ into the apartment two days
previously.
Mailman Vernon Sims, 28, entered
the inner court of the two story apart.
ment building to deliver mail to
tenants' boxes and was accosted by
Ule gunman.
"A man came out in a T-shirt ''
Sima told newsmen: "He waa carryU:c
a pistol and a rifle. I slid 'good"morn-•
ing'." · '
The man asked I! Sims had any mail
for him and the postman answered
"not yet.•· Sims said the man did not
threaten him.
"As I left the. building I saw two ol·
ficers had arrived," Sims .saJd. "A
lady hollered. out at the of!lcers,
'tflere's a man in the court holding a
gun'."
The officers had responded to a call
from neighbors complaining that a
"nude rifleman" was roaming the
area. They said Addison had been ter•
rorWng other resident. of the apart·
ment house by goi.ng from door to door
and demanding entry.
Murakami was Celled by a shotgun
blast as he approached the building.
He was appointed a recruit policeman
last April 21 and was part ot the
academy class which was graduated
last week alter 20 weeks of trainlng.
Orange Coaaa
Festival of Arts Ends Season in Black
When the car was stopped lo Orange
alter a freeway chase, olficen found
Hardin with a loaded and cocked .38-
caliber revolver. Wood repcrtedly was
uninjured.
Hardin ia in the pri!9'1 ward ol the
Orange County Medical Center faclrlg
Charges of attempted murder and JOO.
nap.
Weather
U you liked the weather todicy,
you'll love it tom0rrow 'cause
there isn't much cban.gt. Coast·
al tem·ps will push toward 80
whllo inland regions are tabbed
at a brow-mopping 95.
"For the flrst time in 35 years we
were able to put on the entirt pro-
duction without borrowing money."
It was a heartening report Crom
Edward Femsten, out·eolna: Festival ·
of Arts board president.
Fernsien and other board mtmber1
Monday rugllt wm giving Ille ll'adi-
tlonal ttate-ot'·the·ftstivaJ summary
during the annual membership
meeting. Jt wtis 11 good one.
Stuart Durkee, treasurer, said
fectival income £run aJJ sources total·
ed $416,000, in Ina-al '8,000 over
the prior year.
1be annual rental paymtnt to the d ·
ly, be aaJd, will be '65.500, an 1ncrea1e
ol about 11,lOIJ. Working capital in-
creased 166.COO co-;npared to its $69,000
ffK7ease the prtM fucal period, he
I
reporttd.
Although noting the festival (iecal
yMr had not yet ended, Durkee ~id It
doea: not appear that co«.s for pro·
duction al the Pageant of the Muter1
will uceed I.a.st year.
Fernst.tn aald tat fe1Uval and
pageant had done as well or probably
a little better than ialt year. 1'be year
saw completJon of new restroom
facilities (costing $28,000).
Plana nGw under way, he llJd. bl·
elude constructJ.on of a permanent
buUdlng io the comJne yewr to houae
Ille puppet tn.at ... ._junlor art gallery
8lJd kidl art !roe-for-all.
Tho poppet thooter, with 1ealing for
about n. would al.lo l6Ve ....... year--
round facillty for f~ona of com-
munity or&anil.atlom, he llid.
eoo.tructlon of Ille bulldini lo con-
solidate grounds functions will provide
more space for Jestival exhibitor
~. he predicted ..
~ Verner Beck reported on
three areas be directs. He u.ld the
dinners on the Festival upper terrace
did unusuany well. Bit he said Otere
was criticism, chlolly about waitlng to
be fed at tbe mack bar. 'Ibere 11
atwan c:r1llclam, be noted.
"Neat yeu we th.ID at:rive UI o-eate
lnst&nt hot lwnburpn," Beck said.
Thfl pageant wai a .sen-oui every
nlglrt, -Mid. Of tile grouncll and
exhibitors which have tile "unupectedi
and ~ problems," Bed: 11id the
vut malorfl;y ol ublbiton underrtoocl
the prDblems and gave aupport. ,
D\reotor Paul Griem 1ald the
•
festival awarded 15 acholarships to
young people of the area to continue
art studies. The cash value totaltd
111.400.
During the years ol granting
1Cbolar1bip1, he said. 84 have been
given to 53 peracn:. Tbe cash total ls
$40,2!0.
Don Wlllliuruon, producer~tor
ol tM pagNIX, paid tribute to the
voluntttr staff. He aakt •Udlel;lOfl com·
me.nt cardl showed sreat response to
-new avenoes t.nd directioca: the
. pl.(eant ba taken 1n fecint year1.
There are no plat&aut Cf. 1uccu1 on
wl>l<h to bok, he aald. "I hope ht tile .
;)'Hr B,000 they'll he saying 'I hope we ,
emt do it better next )'eat,' " .be COD·
eluded.
••
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Burglars Loot
Thurston Kitchen
They took •nrythln~ but u,. .kit-
chen 11.nk at Lq\ma's Thuraton Junior
lllgb School home econ om le 1
clel1rwm.
Police aatd tho bur&lary IMlllod a
•nrine m.achfnt, ... lara:e awnbtr of
cooldnr utelllilo, elolaini Ultllllll,
dllhet and tllvtl'Ware. 1be loa
estimate wai $222. .
The thert OCCUJTed 1 o rn e t I m e
~tween Aur. 2 a.nd Monday at the
new school, 2100 Park Ave. M.caOJ ol
entry w.aa not known.
•
INSIDE TODA l'
Worlc h•cPtit>t program de-
signed Co rtmOVf au~.mp&o~ed
fo.fMr1 from. !ML/are roUt fn-
1Uhlied f." Orano~ Coun'~·
PaQ< 7. ,,_
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Z OAJLY Pll.OT T-, S.p..., ... 10, 1961
, Coast Cools
As hiland
Areas Blister '
Bli/lt.erlna beat IDland w I t b cooler
tempera~ alon1 the coastHne waa
foroCut for Oran&• County today. ••
lhe So1•1>1onc1 1welter8$1 In It> annual
autumn heat wave.
t The merctu"1 climbed to near the 100
degree mark ID many inland areas of
th' '°""IJ oo :,looday, with Utile
llMllllood of rellol l<r the nut two or
,three days, accon!in& ta fonoalton.
Sunny and warm throug'h Wed·
•• nesday with petchy log along the south
coast dutlnr late night and early
mornln& llourl I> the olfidal predlc-
tton. with UUe change in temperature.
Near•ecord heat for tb1I date 1n the
Los Angeles basin -up to 103 degree1
1n some spots -ta compUoadni a
fight atafnst five potentially
dangerous fires !Allned by parching,
unpredictable wlnda.
Additional 11orie1 on the fire fl&)Jtl
maj be found in It.ate newa oo Pace 7.
Abundent smog ii predicted to CODl•
pound the heat discomfort, especially
111 the Los Angeles_ basin.,_ where
failure of a cool marine air layer to
move in wll1 create a progressive-
• heating layer.
:: i The first smtg alert. of the )'ear wa1
ca11ed at·the Loo Angele• Civic Center
Monday and chances were for another
alert todly.
High and low temperatures logged
at the water's edge by the Orange
County Harbor Department i n
Newport Beach Monday were 78 and
64.
Inlend areas will get a f<ll'eCast high
of about 89 degrees today, dropping to
about 72 degrees overnight, according
tCI the U.S. Weather Bureau.
.From Page I
HIPPIES ...
public property and for par•d.,,
Tbe law would require that ap-
plicationa for public assemblies be fli-
ed with the police chief 48 hours
before the event. The chief could swn-
marily revoke permits for reuons of
riot, disaster, public calamity or other
emergency.
Newport also baa a $10 bail for
overtime parking violations at recrea-
tion area metera, a '3 fee for IUI'fera
and baa banned the lee cream wa1on
1n the beach area.
San CJemente got itseU embrolled
over one psychedelic shop, now
closed: The Mind Garden.
Police Chief CUUard MWTay said
the urgency ordinance passed by San
Clemente councilmen Utis year against
1leeping in vebiclet gained the title
"hippie ordinance" because Of.the Um·
Ing.
It is similar to the prdinance Laguna
Beach refashioned on the strength of
Newpcrt Beach's court victory.
The hippie Laws, of courae, aren't
peculiar to t.he Orange Coast. Los
Angeles recently sent a Jaw through
making it unlawful to ltal'ld, sit, lie or
sleep on a thoroughfare ln such a man-
ner as to molest or annoy others.
Laguna, once accua"a of being 1o!t
on the problem, hM apparently
become somethini of an authority in
the field.
Laguna City Manager J.aines D.
Wheaton said at a recent league of
cities session in San Franciaco the
most frequent questions fired at him
by city managers and dty attorney1
were about Laguna techniques b1 con·
trolling· the hippie· problem.
Woman Succfunhs.
ANAHEIM - A 44-year-old Downey
woman collapsed and died while play.
ing a hand of bridge Monday at the
Pacific Southwest regional meeting
af the American Contract Bridge
League here.
A doctor atte.diJli th< meeting tried
unsuccessfully to revive Mrs. Myrta
Greenamyer but she.;vas dead on Br·
rival at the Orange County Medical
Center, apparently of a heart attack.
DAILY PILOT ,,__..._
ORI.MG! COA5T PUILISH1NG COM11'NY
•ob•tf N. w,,4
"""~ .... ~
J•ck It C•rl•y
Vlot ,.,._ ..... -S ~ ,,,_....
Thom11 IC..,.il ....
T11011111 A. Mvrphl11•
,,...Mtl"f Edi~
Rich1r4 P. N11I P1•I Hi11•11
L•tullll ~ ,._.,._,111111
Clry l!d!lllt DlrKllll' ,,_ _°""" 121 f,,.,, A••·
M•llfllf MCr1u1 P.O. I•• 666 f261! ,,__
C..ho M99l a West llf ~ ,...,..,, ltlldl: !ht W..t ..... ..,.,.,..
Mio.iA""9~1 ata..,_.
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• 3 Elec·t:e·d .by Fe·s.tival
Keeley, Martin, Schroeder Top · Field of Six ·
Tiie F..tlvel of Arla membership
bu elected to II> nlne-m«nber board
Wllllam D. Mal'lin, Helen Keeley and
0. E. "Bud" Scft'oeder.
Tbe winner• riD the ~ah-way race
were ann0unced Monday night at the
annual member1h.lp meeting at the
clOH of ballot counting.
1'le festival board today wu to re.
ora:anbe and elect olficera.
Mlrtin, a fatnler mayor of Laguna
Beach, had been serving on the botrd
in an appointive capacity. Mrs. Keeley
is a former vice mayor and Schroeder,
a chamber dlrector, it local manager
of the Automobile Club of Southern
C<lorn14.
The vote tally wu Mr1. Keeley, 474;
Martln, 4119; Schroeder, 330: Robert
TUrner, 316; Joan Short, 211; and
Charles Beauvaist 137.
Board President Edward Fernsten
also announced the award of two life
membershlp.s in the Festival.
''I'll bet If John Wayne wet on the city councll he'd know wh•t to
do about the d1mn hlppltt I''
Honored were Dorothy Broc:kbank,
head of makeup for tbe Pageant of the
Masters, for her con1tancy and
dedicated. 5ervJcu; and Stuart
Durkee, out-golng board member; for
service that included work with the
Pageant for five years and re·
organization of Festival accouating
while serving a1 treasurer. Cong Terrorists Spray
Bullets Through School ~e\f .A.ssist8llt
City Planner
.Assumes Duties
SAIGON (UPI) -Three f"IOI Viet
Cong terrorista todray burat into ooe of
Salgon'1 largut 1choo1J and sprayed a
hall ol bullets into the faculty dinlng
room, killing one teache'r and woun·
ding t.hHe others. They fied while ter·
ror·stricken lt.udenta looked on.
The.-darlng noooUme uaault in Dan
Truog 1Dg1t Sdlool In Salioo'• Cholon
District waa the first major temmst
lncktent aince la:.t weekend when Viet
Cong launched a wave oi attaclur that
left 12 persons dead and another 80 In·
jured in the capital.
Two 16-year-old students w h•o
wiblessed the attack told UPI the
youthful terroriats, wearing 11ects,
white shirts and 1un11lu1es, vauJted a
schoolyard wall and moved direotly to
the dining room, appareotly familiar
with the layout.
They said two guarded a rew en-
triance while a third pmnped Chinese
KM piltol bullell with Icy calm Into
the teachers beDt over their lunchtime
bowls of rice.
In Da Nang, the U. S. 27th Marine
, Regiment looded JOI of ti> 3,000-
t:I oopers .aboard a plane to atart the
!Int U. S. unit wilhdra"i.I from Viet·
nun alnce large-acale figbUng •tarted
in 1965.
1iM U. S. command announced,
however, that no 1en«al reduction in
troops levelJ would re1\llt from the
move.
The Sooth Vietnamese government
released figures showing Viet Cong
terrorists last week ldlled 121
clvilian1, ~ 285 and lddnaped
lhno In raids throughout the country .
The figures allowed 375 South Viet·
namese troops were killed in action
during the week, l,081 wounded and 60
missing in action. They ~ 1,644
Oommunislt were killed ad 109 cap-
tutd 1n the aa.me period.
Detailing today's tetTOriJt raid, the
·South Vletnirma·e ~Wtvy spetesmen
Hid the gunmen killed Ky Kung Lam,
40, a QUnelO toacber In the l,IJOO.pupil
El Morro School
Sign $100 Gift
Tbe new siin idenWy!nC Laguna's
El M01To Elementary School is
someth.lng of a bands·aCTOls-the-sea
goodwW geatur<.
The 1tgn wu purchased witb 1100
donated by Mr. and Mn. Donald B.
Ludbey of Sussex, England.
William Allen, school ¢ncipal, laid
the Ludbeys' dlildren attended El
Morro Last yev. Tbey lited it so well,
he sald, that the tenlor Ludbeys
wanted to make tbe gift. The PTA bad
been trying to get 1 sign for the school
and the problem was toived.
Allen added 0 that the Ludbey
chlldren, now Jn Engllab 1Cbool1, are
-)'Ing ta rettrn ta Loguna Beocl1.
school. The wounded \Vere two male
and one female te1cher.
In Da Nang, South Vietnamese
security forces killed two Communist
oommandoa and captmed four others Laguna Beach has a new assistant
at a buchllde cave only 10 yards dty planner.
from U.S. Marine beedq~rs. Mike Easley, 1•. a badlelor, hu
Military spokesmen said the incident started work at a salary Of Jrol
raised to eo the number of Communist monthly.
tnfiltrator1 found inside Da N'log in City Manager Jame.t D. Wbeato~
the past two weekl. aaid Euley will work lo rAl Autry, ci·
DAil. Y ,.ILOT SI_., ~
WINNER'S CIRCLE -William D. Martin, former Laguna Beach
mayor, congratulates Mrs. Helen Keeley, former vice mayor, after
their election to Festival of Arts Board of Directors. 0. E. '1Bud"
Schroeder, also elected, was not present at meeting.
South Vietnamese Lt. ~n. Hoan ty planner. While atJtending college,
Xuan Lam, ln cbarit of the city's Easley for the past two years ha!'
defense, Mid the Commun.l:stl were worked on an intenn basis for Albam-
not in a position to launch a major bra.
usault on Da Nang in sptte of the ris· He has attended both UCI and the
ing infiltratlon1. Univeralty of California at Santa
In Sai1on Monday night, a U. S. Barbara. 'lbe poskian ms authorized
serviceman was 1hot Md wounded by councilmen to handle increases in
while walklng on a str~ shortly after planning dutiel!I, including a geoeral
curfew went into effect Police said his p)an etudy now under way.
Costa Mesan Improving
After Being Human Torch
aasailant! fled and serviceman Easley holds a B.A. degree in
wu oot immediately identified. political science with a minor in urban A Costa Mesa man turned into a
'lite departing Marine reg1ment, a studies. "Political science?" "Yes," human torch Monday when gasoline
landing force commanded by Col. said Wheaton, "He plans b'.l become a !oded h tr'ed t tart Adolph G. Schwenk of Scarsdale, N. city manager some day." exp as e I o s a
Y., was rusbed temporarily to Viet-neighbor's car is in improved con-
nam la8t February at the height of the dltion today, with third degree burns
Tet Of!enalve. Hilm Alri k over 30 percent of his body.
Some l,ilOO of ti> orlgln.11 com· 8ll C Harold E. Rankin Jr., 33, of 1640
pllment of about •,500 have alree.dy , Iett· Vietnam on medical evacuation or F Caraway Drive, passibly owes his life
discharge. uneral Monday to a pair of quick-thinking moving
.Military spokeanen saJd about 710 company employes who caught him
troops would ultimately be returned-to Private services are to be held in and smothered the flames withp ro·
the state1 and some 2,000 others will Riverside for a 'nlree Arch Bay resi· tective furniture pads.
be d>sorbed by other units ln Vietnam. dent who died et his home Monday. Police said Ranklr,, manager of a
Other Marines Monday Jeunched two Hilman Alrick, 3'2264 Vista de Ja Shell service staion on Harbor
drives against a reported buildup , of Luna, had been a resident of Three Boulevard near Date Place. was prim-
North Vietnamese troops around a key Arch Bay for five years, following his ing the carburetor of a neighbor's auto
Leat.hernetk artillery blse, "The retirement as a partner in a Riverside at 10:20 a.m. Monday when U1c
RoctpUe," in the nortbwett corntr of men'• clothing bu&lness. mishap occurred.
South Vietnam about l2 mUes 1outh of Mr. Alrick is sllrvived by his widow, The vehicle backfired as the victim
the Demilltarbed zooe (DMZ). Majorie of the family home. worked over tlle engine, spl"aying him
Maine spokesmen said the two with blazing fuel and sending him on a
Marine sweeps killed 34: Communists panicky dash up Carav.•ay Drive
Caraway Drive, so the flames could be
smothered.
"He was asking fur cool water,"
said Mrs. Golden, "so they sprayed
him with a garden hose. They really
(ln the scene and gave Rankin first
aid, dressing his burns with bandages
before his was taken to Costa M~a
Men1orial Hospital for further treat·
ment.
The victim was admitted to the new
facility in on 1 y fair condition, but
Nursing Director Mrs. Doro t by
Thompson sald today his condition bas
improved to good.
Monday was the second time that
Davids(ln found himself potentially
holding a burn victim's life in his
hands.
Davidson said three years ago he
took similar action to extinguish
flames enveloping a teenaged boy
whose clothing was set on fire ae: be
worked on a motorcycle.
at a cost or eve u. s. troops killed and Depressed LA Man toward a vacant lot
23 terlou11y wounded. "He was yelling something fierce Republicans Help
. A ttllnl M&riDe tweep 1outilw .. t or Burns Sell to Deatli and calling !or help ," said Beacon thr base uncqyered a ~ C?Ompln J\tovtng and Storage Co.. workm311
packed with ilOO rounds or mortar and Charles Davldson ;25; who was first to V olers \o Reg· istei'
rocket warheads ·about .J.50 rocket LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Oscar act.
grenades, 118 ;;;Ines, :MX> pounds oI Trtoe, 28, who set himself afire "I _hollered dt him .and he ran Laguna's Republican h88!quarterg
TNT end 5,900 rounda of small arms because he was reportedly depreu,ed towards us," said Davidson, who was trailer will be burning the midnight
ammunition, Marine 1pokesmen said. over 1 monetary los'-died Monday taking a cigarette break 'A!iith Co-oil Thursday to handle last minute
U. S. int.eUJ.gence .sources disclosed night at the COunty-USC Medical worker Dennis Tuthill, 19, while mov· voter registration.
U)llt NorUJ Vietnamese forces were Center. ing a family in the neighborhood. Deadline for registering is Thurs·
bulldJ.ng up in the area, a primary in· Trice assertedly doused himseU with Rankin -his clothes still blazing -day. The trailer Is to be manned and
filtration route, with the possible ob· giasollne Sunday and set hlrnseU headed toward the two San.ta Ana men open uniil 9 p.m. tonight and un(ll IO
jeotive of attacking any of several aflame. He suffered second and thlrd and Davidson threw him onto the lawn p.m. Wednesday. It is located at Glen·
Mvl.ne outposts south of the DMZ. degree bums over most of his body. of the Roger Golden home at 1568 neyre and 4guna Avenue.
Johnson Again ~sk~,~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'.:::~~::::::~f1
For Price Restraint only ' DI 11111.. has it!
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Prelldent
Johnson hu renewed hia plea for
business and labor to exercise price
restraints u a guard against inflation.
He made toe latMt request Monday
at 1 White HOUH meeting with his
labor·management policy advilory
committee, calllnt ttie fiacaJ.monetary
rituatioo a "c:ruclal issue."
~/(./ DEEP SteimL 4
ET CLERnlnd
THE ULTIMATE
in CARPET CLEANING
Nixon IJps Lead
ICONOMICAL r•duces the n••cf for
frequent profe11ion•I cltining bo·
c1u1• It remove• the deeply embed·
ded soil end le•Y•• no residue in the
ctrptt fiber• to collect dirt.
CLEA.NS DllP ectuelly removo1 soil
from both the pilo of th• cerpet •nd
the C•tpet b•ckin;.
SAR PROCESS scitntific1ll'f d•vtl·
opod 1poci1ll1 for th• prof•11ion1l
c1rptt clt1ntt. It i• compl•t•ly 11f•
for 111 c1rp•t fib1r1.
GENTLE ACTION u101 no brush•• or
scrubbing 1ction, 10 it do•• not dis-
tort th• pil• of th• c•rpot. Poll Also Shows Wallace Strength
NEW YORK (UPI) -RJcbard M. NOW WEEK AGO
Nixon appean to have widened his Wallaet 17.• 15.7
lead over Hube.rt H. Humphrey in the Nixon 34.0 33.7
presidential contest during the past Rumphrt)' 28.1 21.5
week, Sindllllger'1 Dally Survey None of 3 8.9 Sl.5
reported Monday. No opinion 13.6 12.6
An even e:harper gain was registered The second question w11 : "Who do
by the third party candidate, former you .think most other people want as
Gov. Georre C. Wallace, the 1urvey their next pr11ldent?" The re.suits:
"l'Ori.d on the balll Of lelepbone in· NOW WEEK AGO
tuviewa conducted with 1,877 adulti of Walllct IS.a 10.3
voting age In th< lour-day period S.pt. Nltoo :ru 3U
M . Humphrey 2:1.8 2$.4
The aurvty, publlahed b7 SlndllDfU No optn.lon 25.8 21.1
I: Co., a mart.It reaearc:b organlution 'J1'I tird. qutltlon: ''Who do you
boHd In Norwood, Pa., aaked lhJJ llllnt will -al!J' bo elected In
queltlon: "Who would 1ou younelf Nonmbw," produced thtM reaultl:
want to sae 1laottd prwldent U the NOW WEEI AGO
electloo wen held today! Wllllact 4.t 3.9
Thi nllllla, compared with percen· N-411.4 46.3 Uc•• obeoined !tom l,114 11Mrv1e1>1 Hmnptiror 211.7 M.e
Aus. ll.s.pt. 2, follow: No opinion 11.1 17.2
•
' •
llSTORIS PILI the powerful extr1c·
tion proco11 r1move1 moi1tur• im-
mediately, thus 1voidin9 1hrink1qo,
and lifts m1tted pil1 to 'liko fl•w'
1ppe1r1nce.
WHEN YOU
WANT THI
flNEST-
SOIL I IT A ID IN Ci AND MOTH
PROOFtNG 1rt includtd tt no •ifr•
cost,
FREI
ISTIMATI
CAU RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS
Our 2111 Year of Service in Oran90 County
2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA
PHONE 546-343Z
i I '1
l
.. ..
' "1
ly
st
" •• •I·
•Vf
ut y ••
.at
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lis
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be
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MAMIE KISSES THE BOY GOODBYE
Marriage Can Be Groovy, But Not This Time
Mamie Sheds No.
Sex Kitten Files Divorce Suit ~ \...
By PAMELA PO\VELL
OI The O.Uy ,.Uol SllH
Newport Beach's blonde Hollywood
sex kitten Mamie Van Doren, 35, will
shed her 21-year-<lld hubby No. 2
\V ednesday in a Los Angeles court.
The two-year marriage to Lee
Meyers. a former pr of e s s ion a l
baseball pitcher and Orange Coast
College student~turned land developer,
''has been a good one," the blonde ac-
tress said today.
"It's very hard to be married in t:his
generation," she said. "But I don't
have any bitter thoughts about Lee."
After three days of separation, Mlss
Van Doren and her attorney, Joseph
Agapay, will file for the divorce on the
grounds of mental cruelty in Los
Angeles. I was going to file for
separate maintenance," she said, "but
I don't have the time and I know that
if t flew to Juarez, the divorce might
not be legal."
The curvaceous star will leave
Saturday to begin a four-month
engagement at the W e d g e w o o d
Theater in Glen Cove , N. Y. She ex-
pects an actual court date to be set
sometime around the first of Ule year
after she returns.
During the last two years, she and
Meyers have lived in an· apartment at
the Ba1bo<. Bay Club with her 12-year·
old son Perry Anthony. a child from
her previous marriage to band.leader
Ray Anthony.
"Marriage can be a groovt," she
said today. "This one just hlt a snag,
but the age difference didn't have
anything to do with it. He could have
been 50. You koow yott're not living
alone in your married life, there are
so many pressures from friends and
the public. It's all up hill and life is too
short to be so petty."
Nixon Trying to Link
Humphrey Witl1 Inflation
about them," Ellsworth said. '"Every
one of these crises ia worse now after
T11rsday, Stplrmbtr 10, 1968 .,.. DAILY PlLDT 3
Coast GrQwing Sterile?
Homeowners Say Airport Degrading Properties
By BRUCE BENSON °' .. Dio.lly Nit .ltafl
lrditllfl .......,_ M\'ftWlt. U0o Isle. ~rt-.llo ,, llMI j;llii, M! .. I I# coti... I<*!. SK "'°· C1ll " Oan't happen, you say!
A certain band of Harbor Are.-
homeowners would disagree.
They claim the deterioration of
Costs Mesa and Newport "Beach pro-
perties already begun because of uowtnl aviation services at Orange
Counly Airport, could lee<I to such an
od. They call the deterJoration process
••sterilization."
Led by Daniel W. Emory. the
homeowners have formed the Airport
Noise Abatement Committee. This is
the group that has filed $27 million
wocth of homeowner claims against
the county Board of Supervisors.
SEEK COMPENSATION
Tbe claims seek compensation for
loss of property values in the so-called
"sterilizatioo." brought on by bigger
and more frequent commercial flights
in and out of the airport.
Emory, a 36-ye.ar-old technical
writer who recently bought a home un·
der the flight path, charges that the
deterioration will set in before the end
of 1969. He says it will start at Mesa
Drive.
As airport use increase6, Ute
"sterilization schedule" will proceed
apace, leaving a deadened zone that
extends in a wideoed effect au the way
to tihe coastline of the Balboa
Peninsula by the end of 1975.
Emory worked out the schedule bas·
ed on projected airport services in the
recently completed William Pereira
and Associates master pLan on Orange
Colmty air traf\Sportatlon need1.
Emory st.arts with the wumption
that the absence of big plane noises
and pollutants give the Harbor Area a
100 percent "livability" factor.
DECLINE IN VALUES
"We contend that the decline in pro-
perty values in a high-value &rea such
as Newport Beach, begins when the
livability factor is reduced to 90 per·
cent," be said.
"When the livability factor ls reduc-
ed to 65 percent, steriliz8'tion begins,
and tbtal residential sterilization oc·
curs at 35 percent."
Emory's livability factor i s
determined by the number of big plane
takeoffs and landings daily, by the
noise they produce and by the
poUwrnts poured onto the commun.ity
below .
He said there are 40 landings and 40
takeoffs daily of jet and turboprop
aircraft at Orange C<luoty Alrport at
present.
Uslng what he says is a fonnula
derived by Los Angeles Air Pollution
Control District, these ~ landings and
takeoffs are dwnping 3,Ml pounds of
pollutants daijy over the cities Of
Orarige, Tustin, Santa Ana and
Newport Beach.
PEREIRA PREDICTIONS
Pereira's predictions on airport ooe
-according to Emory -indicate
there will be a total emission of 1,850
tons for U1e year 1973, or about 380
pounds for the year over every pro·
perty parcel in the take-off and Ian·
ding patterns .
These calculations a p pa r e n t I y
assume that tile same type of jet and
turboprop aircraft will-be in service at
that Ume.
Efforts were unsuccessful to get
comment• today from Pereira and
Associates oa Emory's contentions.
A Pereil'a spokesman who helped
develop the air master plan said bis
firm's responsibility "ended when our
contract did" in July.
"Although homes may still be oc ..
cupied at the 35 percent (livability)
level.'' said Emory, "most of the
original inhabitants will have left, a
large number of homes will be leased
or rented to transients and groups of
unmarried young adults, and the en.-
tire character of the c0mmunity will
have changed.
.. This is precisely the condition no"'
existing al Playa de! Rey, adjacent to
Los Angeles Internatioo&I," b e
asserted.
* * * * * * * * * No Airport Repairs Seen
Rumors that Orange Co u n t y
Airport's runways must be strengthen·
ed bees.use of stepped up jet aircraft
use were brushed aside by officials
today as "totally unfounded."
Joe Smisek, charged with runway
maintenance as bead of the county
Building Services Department, said,
"There's been nothing planned or con-
templ&ted on the strengthening of the
runways."
He said such speculation possibly
was started in the wake of recent tests
on the runway blacktop to determine
its current coildition.
"We did have a minor failure, of
reported.
"We were concerned because ol
that. and wanted to make some tests
on the runway to see if we had any
conditions that might be of concern to
us."
about four by five ~feet, that needed to "We fotmd nothing we didn't already
be repaired, and this can happen on know _ that the initial specifications any asphaltic-concrete runway, so we
repaired that immediate.:..::ly.:..'_' ..:S:..ml.....:s_ek __ h_a_d_bee_n_com __ P_li_'e_d_with_·_._ .. ____ _
NEW YORK (UPI) -Nixon cam-
paign strategists today tried to
associate indelibly in the public mind
Democratic presij:leritj~ .J\lO mine e
.l-h.1bert !I. Humphrey with the in-
rt3tion8'y spiro.1., of the past four
years.
four years o[ the medicine of Mr.
Humphrey. So I think the Ameriffll _ · • • ·
people are going to .1ay to Huber.t
J:lliJllphrey this fall that bis old-time
JWttics (){joy and politic's of happiness
The GOP nominee, Richard M. Nix-
on had an early aiternoon date with a
gr0up of promjnent business and in-
dustrial executive!> wtw comprise his
campaign business advisory group.
These men are being counted upon by
Nixon and his can1paign leaders to
spread the message that current in·
flationary conditic;ns with higb interest
rates and rising prices are products of
the Johnson Adn1inistration.
Nixon 's national political director
Robert Ellsworth paved the way for
the buiiiness advisory group meeting
with the nominee at New York's Pier·
re Hotel by issuiwg a statement sharp-
ly reminding Humphrey Of his associa-
tion with the E:conomic policies and
progrwns of lhe c u ;-r e n t ad-
n1inistration.
The November election, Ellsworth
said, would provide a referendum "on
the policies that Hubert Humphrey
helped to draft, that Hubert Humphrey
applauds, that Hubert Humphrey pro-
mises to continue -policies that have
left America with the highest lnterest
rates since the Civil War, the lowest
farm prices since the depression, the
weakest dolalr in three decades, the
highest price lncreases in 20 years
"
ECONOMIC BLAST
'The current economic situation was
another aspect oC the vice preeident's
campaign difficulties. From the GOP
standpoint, it made no diUerence to
the campaign that President Johnson,
Humphrey and other .administration
officials over a period of months bad
asked Congress fOC' new" tools witb
which to battle inflation.
What counted, to ttle Republicans,
was that an income-sapping inIIALion
did take pl.ace during the Johnson ad-
ministration and that if the GOP gains
cootrol of the White House, the cost.-
price relatioosttip can be expected to
improve.
"All of tbeae crises desceQded on
America in the last four years while
11ubert Humphrey had the power and
the responslbUJty \o do something
'·
are hopelessly out of tune and out of
touch with this new era of crisis and
this new era of revolution."
Ellsworth issued his statement lat$
Morl'Jay after Humphrey made a Sun·
day night speech in Washiniton to the
national convention of B'nai B'rith, the
national Jewish service organizatlon.
Ellsworth said the vice president was
"shrill and tasteless" before a non·
partisan audience. Humphrey received
more applause by the s·nai B'rlth
delegates than Nixon, who spoke later,
but the Republican campaign leaders
:said they were quite satisfied with
their nominee's reception.
A friendly welcome awaited Nixon
tonight in the heavy Republican sec·
tion of New York City.
The nominee was scheduled for an
early evening speech to a GOP rally at
Westchester County Center in White
Pl2.~ns.
The White Plains rally also will
mark the campaign debut of Gov.
Nelson A, Rockefeller, "'110 attempted
unsuceessCuUy to win the presidential
nomination for himself at the
Republican convention in M i a m I
Beach,
W elcome Given
To New Jersey
PEARL HARBOR, Hawail (UPI) -
The world's only battleship on active
duty, the USS New Jersey, made her
last stop in the United States Monday
before joining the Seventh Fleet for
duty off the coadl of Vietnam.
Ttie ship's arrival here was marred
by tragedy when an enlisted man ap.
parenUy fell overboard and was lost at
sei 1hortl1 before the 888-foot bat·
Uewagon entered Pearl liarbOt.
The New Jersey was greeted b7
thousa.ndt of peraon1 who lined tbe
banks of the harbor entrance to get a
glimpse of the famed World War 11
and Korean W·ar combat veteran.
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4-DAILY PILOT Twsdar, Stpttmber 10, 1968
cc-w "' ... Deir Pc. .....,
:Poet Phllllp o. 8-•teln, 63, or
Bpston.1 1ays "The soap companies,
the ptumblnC tndultry and Madl!on
A venue have brainwaahed the peo-~le of tbla country. Everybody is
JWDPlnC In and out of their tubs
and sbowen. The entire naUon is
obsessed with being clean. One
Saturd.lly nJsht bath a week is
enoush for the normal human
being." •
u:s. Schools
Still Closed
By Strikes
By UPI .
Nearly all of New York llty'a llOO
pobllc schOola were clQOOd today by
teachers on strike in def1ance of a
court order, re1ultlnt t.n an extended
summer vacation for the city'a 1.12·
mlllloo pupa. far the second stralgl>t
year.
Teecber1' W'lkes also kept 49 ,1'.m
children out of Mldligan JChools,
24,CXX> home at East st. Loui.J, Ill., and
3,1'.m out at Madiaon, nL
There Are Stnlles
•
Youth 'Gang
Runs Wild
In Syracuse
I
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPI) -Roam·
'In« iantl of,toen.qo Ne..,,.. broke
car and store wtndowa, Ht several
fire• and looted at least four 1tore1
lot• Monday nl&hl and ea<ly tocl<7 on
the aouUl side of Syracuae.
Police illid five penoDI *ere ar-. ruled o~ btqlary cllarges In con·
nectloo wttb the dlsturblnces lt'hkh
began about a p.m. Monday and were
brou&!>I under i;o-1 ot 3 a.m. todoy.
In -police deecrtbod • • "'spon-taneou1" outlnlk, 150 . you.tbs in
groupa of about otx, wandered around
tile predomlnantly Negro_ a r e a
creailng the dilturbances. Police aald
most . of the youths were between thf!I
..... ol J.Wf.
Only 3,lXK> or New York'• 60,00l
teachers, and 30,000 scboo1 children
&bowed up Monday, the first day of
school A state supreme court justice
ordered the 55,IXIO-member United
Federation o( Teachers (UFT) to
cease itJ 11trlke, but Ule union said it
would continue.
PLAN OPPOSED
Teachers said a plan to break up tbe
New York aystem into 30 lndepeodent
districts would give I o c a I ad-
rniniatrators excessive power ,
threatening their job security. The
strike wu planned after the local
governing boanl at an experimental
school district in Braoltlyn flr«I 10
teachers.
Julie Nixon and her fiance, David Eisenhower,
seem to be trying to out-smile the photo of Julie's
dad behind them during a press conference at
Nixon campaign headquarters in New York Mon-
day. The daughter of the Republican presidential
candidate was on hand as young Eisenhower,
grandson of the former Presidept, BJUlOUnced.
formation of a student coalition to 11deal with the
crises of the future" and, .presumably, to heip elect
Richard M. Nixon.
Several persons were treated for in·
jurle6, Including a policeman who IU!·
fered a cut eye wbt1t1 a rock was
thrown through his cruiser's window
and a woman police said 1uUered a
~ leg when abo Wal pulled
from "ber car and beaten.
· About ten television aeta were taken
after a window was broken at the J .1>.
Shaver Co. Some of the seta were later
recovered. Goldst.ein's liquor atore
was entered by a group of yootb1 who
threa!elled tile clerk and took bottles
of liquor from tile llh'lvu. Two
grocery stores were .iao loot.ed. J1&1t whittlfno the hown awa11. DaL-
i<u S<ill<u, «llrcd Utlotr!>C op<rator
Living cm a farm 1out1s of NcuhoflU,
Ill., Jp<ndl hi1 1part llmc tohi~ a
wooden chain out of a iOlld piece of
ook. Strange as ft 1etm1, Stilley 1DU1
whittle out a 12-foot long ehain from
• 10.foot laflg pi<« of tDOOd.
A bearing examiner exonerated the
10 teachers but the governing board
refused to rehire them.
Federal Grand Jury Starting Probe
Of Responsibility in Chicago Riots California
Leads Auto • 'Herbert R. Moo,., 57, a
Butlerville, Ind., truck driver, was
stung fatally by a bee on hill left leg
as he and bis IOD worked in their
backyard. Coroner Richard Vance
said death was due to a severe
reaction to the bee's poison. • Rob WhHI, New ED gl a D d
philanthropist, has received more
than 50 replies &ince he offered to
pay $25 to anyone who found him a
suitable wife. Wheal says be hasn't
found a mate yet. 0 Tbey were
either much too old or much too fat
... just big dumplings," he said. •
A man (who wtaM1 to remain
anonvmousJ f't!Cn&tlt1 purchased
a grandfather clock for $4.5 at
an auction. AlthoUQh an auth-
entic antique, the clock aol4
cheap becowc it woUJdn•t nm.
Upon petting it home, M took
it oparl to find th< !Toublf •••
and out tumbled $6,000 100rth
of jewelry that war hfddn in-
oide.
• At a meeting with newunen In
New York to announce that he was
going to Montreal to make a draft-
resistance movie, Abbie Hoffman.
a sell-styled Yippie leader, amused
himseU by playing with an electric
ye>-yo. • Rockland, Maine, City Manager
-Rlcli•nl Cahill was · -surprtsM,
residents of Chestnut Street were
happy, and official.a of a local con-
tracting fitm Vttre,yery red·faced.
The firm f aved uie street and
Cablll dido' know about it until be
drove down it. The company wu
hired to resurface a e v e r a 1
thoroughfares, but Chestnut Street
wasn't one of them. Finn officials
admitted the mistake was theirs
and didn't charge the city the '792
that the work cost.
Last. year the teaobers rtruck for
three weekl fer higher pay.
State SUpreme Court JUltice Harry
B. Fnmk Monday nlgllt signed • tem-
porary nrtraining order against the
teachers -a llmllar Cl'der was ig·
nored last year -and UFT President
Albert Shanker said the strike would
continue.
Shanker, who served a 15-<lay jail
sentence during the last Chrjstmas
holiday for ignoring a similar order.
said, "the injunction won't put any
children in the classrooms."
2,000 ON STRIKE
T w o thousand Michigan teachers
were on strike in six school districts.
Tiie" strikers were represented in four
districts by the Michigan Education
AssociaUon, in two district.! by the
Michigan Federation of Teachers. The
strikes af!ected 49 ,IXXl cbi!ldren in all .
At East St. Louis.. a -strike by
teachers kept 24,00) students out of
classea. Tbe Justice Department also
has filed suit against the school board,
charging racial discrimination. About
58 percent of East St. Louis' 900
teachers are Negro, and the govern·
meut sougbt to correct alleged racial
imbalance&.
Teadl.er1 at Madison, Ill., rejected
the xmoi board's latest offer -a
two-year contract with a stmmg
salary of '6,200 for tlbe first year and
'6,400 f o r the second. The offer in·
duded plans for a tu referendum.
The teachers earlier lowered the
minimum wage demand from $7,IXXl to
16,700.
250 University
Students Jailed
CHAMPAIGN, DI. (UPI) -Police
-moved-Into tho Unlver1lty;>f-Dllno!.
student union ofter mldnil!hl today and
arrest.eel more than 2.50 demOMtrt.ting
students, most of them Negroes-pro-·
testing inferiof housing;"... •
Authorldea n.id the "camp·in"
demonstrators smashed chandeliers,
ov..-tumed furniture, left flaors llt.
tered with glass, and &Lashed pictures,
including one of the university presi-
dent.
At least 252 students were hauled off
to jail In vans. Police said they offered
no reaistance.
CIUCAGO (UPI) -Who wa s
responsible for the violence during the
Democn.tic National Convention -
Television? • Demonstrators? Police?
All of them?
A federal grand jury has been
ordered to make a sweeping study of
the question and indict those it thinks
responsible.
Chlef Judge William J . Campbell o{
the U. S. District Court ordered the in·
vestigation Monday. He gave the order
shortly after Mayor Richard J. Daley,
appearing at his first news conference
at which he answered questions about
the violence, charged the news media
wnh presenting a "distorted" picture
of what happened.
"I am amazed at the distorted and
* * * Mayor Daley
Denies V sing
Foul Languag~
CHICAGO (UPI) -Mayor Rlchtrd
J . Daley seems to have over-reacted
when a newsman asked him whether
he swore at Sen. Abraham RJblcoff
during the Democratic National Con-
vention.
At 'the convention , the Coonectl.cut
Senator took the platform to denounce
police actions aplnst anti-Vietnam
war demonstrators. The I 111 nots
dtlegation gave him lusty boos.
Photographs showed Da?!y with hil
band cupped to his mouui.
At Daley's news conference Monday
-the first at which he answered ques.
lions since the convention - a
reporter told Daley:
"You used some pretty strong
tannage on the floor of the conver\tion
to Senator Ribicou-that wu recorded
on videotape."
''What did I say?'' Ddy flulhed
with anger. ---
"It was a Six·letter word beglnnlng
with mother," the newsman said.
"You're a liar/' Daley said. "Don't
say that. I never used that language in
my life and you say that or anything
else and you lie. You're a liar. You get
me the tape because I never uaed that
word."
Appalachians Inundated
Michigan Torrnulo Mashes Cedar Springs City Hall
C•llfornla
R•ldlttts Of -1 .. ,.,. d Soulhetn
C•.......,la "'""nwd ta WI<• VllCllr • "'°' _, -..,, •• tht curnnt tlftl _.,.. a111!1!1Uld Will! 1-l lUrfl
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twisted picture the news media gaw,"
Daley oald at tile jam._ted news
conference. "The American people
were amazed. Their letters show it."
The mayor refuaed to elaborate on
how the media allegedly distorted the
news, referTing questioners to the city
report. He conceded there may have
been instances of "over-reaction" by
police, but said these now are" under
inve"9tigation by the police department
and stoutly defended police action dur·
ing the disorders ift dealing with "ter-
rorists."
Daley repeated statements een-
tained in the report tnat policemen
continually were subjecteo to obseene
language about themselves and the:ir
families Crom hippies and antiwar pro-
testar1 and had many things, including
human excrement, thrown at them.
"What -about human bites -biting
JX>llcemen, taking flesh out or their
legs"!'' he iasked .
"I think all you newsmen missed the
pod.nt," be added. "There were no lives
lost in O:lloago during the convention.
Six were killed in Miami in racial
rioting during the Republican National
Convention at Miami Be"°/'·"'
(Daley's reference t.o "six" was an
error. Three persons died. in the
Miami riots.)
* * * Death Toll
Group Says Daley cmcAGo <UPll _ Th• National
Safety Council says the nation's traffic Wrong On Toll death count m July W'U less than July
of 1967, but there w.. a & percent ri.e
in the death rate for the first seven
I Chi g Ri ts months or this year. n ca 0 0 The council said 4,7'10 persons died
in July, 50 fewer than in 1967. But
CffiCAGO tUPI) -A Olicago-ba!ed 29.._950 persoos -11400 more than ln
doctors group says May3i' RfcharQ -196f -were killed on the n&tioo's
Daley's report concerning civilia.'1 in· roads for th.i first seven months of
juries during Ul.e Democratic National 1968, it said.
Convention was grossly in error. More than, a milllon American.s IU(.
The medical Committee tor Human fered disabling injuries in the first
RigbM &aid Monday iU estime.te of seven mooths of thiJ yi ar, the council
civilian casualties wa1 more than 1,00> said, alld the damag~ bill was '6
during the convention melees. The billion.
l ,CXX> figure compares to only 60 cited Based on July deaths per 10,IXXl
in the Daley adminigtradon report registered vehicles, Houston, Tex.,
issued l11t Friday. was the safest or the nation's ciUes
The cornm.Jttee's report listed 425 with m~ than one mlllJon persons.
persons tree.ted at jts stationary I.xis Angeles was second and Chicago
medical facillUes. third.
+ Get $100 or more month after month after montlll
lm11i111 ... ""''' a R111l1r monthly med< to lool forwanl tol
Mony ol thosa who hlYe a wond1rtul MONTHLY SECURITY
.ACCOUNT ... origlniled ond 10111 luled by Now port Bolbot
S.Yinp .•• slarte<I by simply openln1 1 dMdend ... mlftt "~""
account Others i11Yt$led 1 lump aum. MAIL 1KE COUPOfll FOi
COMPLETE D£TAILS ON TltE llONTHLY S£CUllllY ICCOUlfT
PUil
..
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•
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J) States... Voting
' '
• ~-·-.. .......... _ Chandler
... ~-· ... ---....
•
Tutscfay, Stpttmbtt 10, 1968' DAILY 1'11.0Y . 9
:-Goldwater Seeks Comeback • Chances
Fading
..
.. ,lff!!;,.. .. ...... •
•
<BJ Al!SOCIATED PRESS
Voters in riln• •tales have
~ el..Ulma °J'ldl.Y to
doe!de pll'ly nocn!Mes for !l'" Novmber ballol
There ere ParV' e<>ntests
lor roveroor Jn ax etstes,
for the U.S. Senate in •ven
1ta1<1 and for U.e U.S.
Houoe ol l\eprea<s>tativeo Jn
all nine 1tlte1.
!n Ar1-a, B a r r y OoJdw.ater, the deflated ~lican presldentlal can·
didate in 1984, runs dnop.
posed for nominaUOD' ln IU<·
ceed retiring Sen. Cati
l?lydm !D·Ar!z.), Roy
ElsOD, Hayden's ad·
mlliistrative &!de, 1a favond
Jn a three-way contest
J..mong Democratic
IM>!>eflll.s.
" Republican Gov. Jack R.
WUliams ii unoPPoted in the
GOP primaty am1 f-Ormer
Gov. sam Goddard is con·
sidered the li.kelj wlmer
·a,mooe thr,ee DemocraUc
1IO!>lranlo.
In otber 11tatea :
New H1mp1blre -
Republican Sen. Norris Cot-
ton is ohallenged f o r
l'i!tiomhwltl<>n by M a y o r
John C. Moogan Of Men·
JF YOU'RE NOT
Registered
YOU CAN'T VOTE
DAYS 1'..Q
:REGISTER
LEAGUE OF WOMEN
chester w~. Gov. JOl!n W. Kins 11 ~ed oo ~ llfmoci-a.t1c'118Bot., . • .
Five , Demociata and
seven RepubU.ans vie lor
tile t w o guberoalO<lal
~tiOJll.. ' ... '.-,...
WlteonM .. ! .. .'i ben\ocr-.iic
S... Geylotd NelllOa ·Ls
Uft<>lll>Offd ln till. p¢7;1 11r\mary wlille State sen.
Jerrla Leonard bu tile
Republlcaa1 p a r t'y en-
dorsement over threa rtvala.
Republican Gov. Warren
P .. Knowlea ls unoppoeed aa
be seeb renomination to a
!bird term. -· c. La Follette, 32, heir to the
1tate'1 famou. po 1 I t i c a 1
name, ii expected to take
the Democratic nomination.
Maryland -Democratic Sen. Daniel B. Brewster bas
-opponents but 1 8 favored to win wlllle U.S.
Rep. Oharlet McMathiu is
expected to domlJlate Jn a
GOP field of three.
Utah '-Sen. Wallace F.
Bermett faces a ehallenge in
tile GOP primary from
Mark Anderson, & former
John Birch Society Official.
The Democratic contest is
between Atty. Gen. Phil
Hansen aOO" State Develop·
meot DJrector Milt Wellen-
mami ••
Democratic Gov. C&lvin
L. Ramplca Is unopposed
for renomination a n d
Republlcail h~fuls a r e
Carl Buehner., a
businessman. and Lamar
Rawling., lormeT Salt Like
Cqunty audilnr.
Mbmeaota -No Senate or
&Ub«na~ conteets and
only two Of eight U.S.
representatives ~ apposed
for renomination.
Rhode l1land-No Senate
term expiring and no con-
test ln either par t,J' • s
gubernatorial primary .
IJlcumbeot Gov. John H.
Chafee and Democrat Frank
I.J.cbt, a former superior
court judge, are the can-
didates.
-Colorado --incumbent
Rep1..1blican Sen. Peter M. ·
Dominick Is UDO!ll"'6ed and
former Gov. Steve
McNichols and State Rep.
Kenneth Moolort vfe for the
Democ:;ratic Senate nomln•·
tic.i.
Veimut -Republican
Sen. ~rge D. Aiken b4S
oppoattlon from a pol!Ucal
unknown , W1111arn It Tulta
of ,!Jethel, No Democratic
candidate.
Gov: ·John J, Dfiley ts
unopposed for the
Dem.ocratic nomlnition to
1ucceed Democratic Gov. PtlUJp H. Hoff. Jam" L.
Oakes anC! ~ine C. DavlJ
s~k the GOP gWel'nalnrlal
nod. { .
H~phrey
Supported
By Kennedy
0)
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SPRINGFIELD. Ma 11 . -------------------11
IAP) -Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, (D·M'ass.), is back
on tbe .Political campaign
tour in support of the
De[?atic party, but he
say , be wfll limit bis ac-
tiyl y.
'Kennedy, returning to tile
poHtical front for the first
Money Now Reason
For Dog Execution
tkne since the assassination ROME (AP) -Last week to 5000 lire -'8 -•year.
ot his brother, Sen. Robert Naples executed m dogs For most mind tlreeds it ts
F. Kennedy of New York, for the sake ol. health. 'Ibis 1 -~ t 1-11r expreosed support Mondey ow, -u ·-'· nigb.t for tbe presidential week Rome is ti:lnlatening to But for some penma who
candidacy Cll Vice President gas tamlreds ol. canines for already devote most ol a
Hubert H. Humpllrey. tile sake ol rnooey. meager lnoome ln boulq
The Mas1achusetts The Ministry 1o1 Health and feeding straye, 11!e In
senator told a $50i>er-hiM &DDOUDCed "tnlt col-collection camea as a bard person reception for U. S. .
Reji. EdwU11 Boland In. lection o1 taxea for dogs in blow. Mrs. Elide Brigade,
nearby allcopee t b at the province of Roc..ie, in· for me, keeps 140 dop. She
HtDllpbrey and Sen. Ed· eluding strays taken in by is said to skimp on food for
mund S, Muskie of Maine, the kin<llearted, will be herself t.o keep #Ml dogs
the vice p r e s I d e n t i a 1 strictly enforced. AU dogs eating.
nominee, are "best equip-for which no tu baa been 1be director of tm local
ped" to . handle problems p.aid in the next 10 _diays will animal protectiolll soctet:y
facing the nation. be gassed. the minlsb'y said. fired off a telegram to
"I firmly believe, as we Taxes vary depending 011 Premier Giovanni Leone
FRANKFORT, Kr. (AP)
-The probability ~t A. B.
"Happy" OWidler would
run for vice president will>
George C. Wallace laded to-
doy amid Mnts t b a t
Cbandl'er'a d-Ql r I g h I 1
record is a ·major obatacle.
Qlandler, a 70-yearo61.d
two.time Kentucky governor
and tonner u. s. senator.
did not board • tr.in Ill••·
day that would have taken
hlm to Weshlilgton In time
for a scheduled Wallace atws conference. '
,~au,ce, meanwhile, bat-
tled a cold -at h ll
Monteomery, ,Ala., home
HARBOR AREA REFORM· TEMIU • announces
1
HIG" ~OLY D~Y ·sE~YICES
•• "" htld ..
St. James Episcopal Cll1rcll ·)
Uot Yltl LIM, Now,., .....
' ' ROSH HASHlNA
Sept. 22·Z3 .
YOM KIPPUI'
. Oct. 1·2
R•bbi l•n Lein ow C.ntor: H•rm•t\. Rut~
1 TICKm .. IN.OaMATION -'42•244t I
and caner.led the aftalr.ll:::::!::=====:====.:=:::=:===~='4 Aides deictned to s a y I ; I I
"1letller Ill hoallh prompted Read The Dai y Pi ot IL
Slloultl You Own
ENTERPRISE FUND?·
Att1nd this provoc1tive lecture ind
hHr an officer from EntorprilW Fund
discuss tho techniques, philosophy end invoslmont
conc•pl of Enterprise Management
'TIMI: Wedn•sday, S1ptemb1r 11, 7:45 p.m.
l'lACI: Irvin• Co••I Country Club 1600 E. Coo1I Hwy. N.I.
Admlnlon ls frH, but r.Hrvatlons are necessary
Plea .. telephone 642-4080 or Kl 9·3079
' SHEARSON, HAMMILL & CO. INC.
Mtmb•rs N1w Yo1k Stock bcft11111/Fo1111ltd lt02
901 DQYIR DR., NIWPOaT llACH, CALIF.
r
come ioto ttU.s election year tte quality of. the dog. For asking him to vDid the
in this our counU'y some1 ~lbc!se~~of~pedlgree~~~n~oan~~nm~~h~efil~t!l~mini!~·~·1ry!:!.~order~~·-..1~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!~~~~~!!!!!!~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~ eight weeks from now, that!·
the Democratic party and
its dlosen leaders, Vice •--------------------------------------------..,
President HumpYey and
Ed_M_µskie, are be_st _tgy!P-
ped to address oUI"llelves
and provide the ~nd of pro-
grams for Our nation and
our people," Kennedy said. Without elaboni.tion, Ken·
nedy said: "I'll have .more
to say about the campaign
as time goes on."
Kennedy made several ap-
pearances on a visit to the
Springfield area in support « Bolall.d, who is seeking a
ninth term as congressman
from ttle Second District.
Kennedy, who returns to
his Wasbington office today
for tbe first time since his
brother wu shot while cam·
pai·gntng for the presidential
nomination in Los Angeles,
said he had not planned to
Jl8rtldpete in the c81llpaign this year.
In dunlilng his mlJld, he
said bis campaigning j'will
be limited."
Saboteurs.
portunft)'. 'rhls same company oper•
ates and malntaliiS e strateg c stant
Early Wtrnlng (DEW) LllM which
stretches from Alaska to Greenland.
ITTTodiy
ITT today Is composed of more
than 200 associated companies around
the world.
By bringlns to bear our total ex·
pertll'!, tl)ese ccimpanlea have sener·
ated Increased competition within
industries and, consequently, have
generated more efficient use of man·
poWer and material resources.
The fields In which we operate
were selected for srowth poten~al ..
well as present ·needs. And last year,
more than 50 percent of our eamlngs
were derived from domestic sources.
Much ol this U.S. srowth can be
traced to our interest In the service
Industries. The friend of the woman l•n 17C People's desire for service keeps
'. • srowlng. So we've put increaslns em•
As the big jetliner approaches the employ more than 241,000 people. phasls on It Our U.S. sales and re-
... Blast -Truck-airportatlondon, the young woman In Telephone and Tetesriphl venues are now split about SQ.SO be-.
-seat 17C.growscnervous.-lrs her-finb ---Bui wnilaliounhe"TeTipHoile -tween ·manufactutlng-and service
flight and as she looks out the window, and Telegraph" I WhaYs a communla-activities.
she sees nothing but fog. . . __ . tl'ons-<Olllllilll\'-®ing in 50 many other In addition to.reo.tinfcars(Avis, to : ---sne reaches out to touch hersleej; areas of businessl --De ixact), eClucatft¥nifTriiMlng ser ..
..
r
vAN NUYS (UPI) -
Saboteun blew up a five-ton
truck in ·tho compOOnd of.Ca
NaUonal Guard armory ear--lrlnday .-Pourotller 1rllck.-
parked nearby were damag-
ed by th> explosion and fire.
ing thru-year-old-daughterrliow-an -0riginallyc we-were· a 1elephonr---=Y.1<-d-airportcand-hotel-parkln11;---l---'t
the pilot possibly see the airportl and telegraph company. Even after we ITT offers consumer loan services,
I ~·
The r.emain8 of ~imer
cord fuses and ''explosi've
devices" were found in the
moln< pool lot wh<re t!le blast OC<Urred abcut 1:40
a.m.
The unguarded parking
area we.s locked and fire
authorities said the bombers
evidently scaled the chain
link fence topped witll barb-
ed wire which endrcled the
compOOnd.
NIGHT ••d DAY SERVICE
9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 PM. -SATURDAY 10 AM. TO 6 P.M.
When the jetliner's wheels touch became one of the largest diversified mutual fund management, and data
doWn gently on the runway, the woman manufacturing and service' organ lza-processing-just to name a few.
smiles and tums to her daughtf!r. But tfon~ In the world, the name stayed. Sheraton, a system of hotels and
her daughter sleeps on. As ITI has grown since those early motor Inns, in the U.S. and abroad, Is
One reason the landing was easy days, It has made history. now part of ~TI. So is Levitt & Sons,
and gentle is because the pilot used an During World War U, for example, world's largest International home and
electronic guidance system called Its-an ITT-developed radio direction finder community builder.
for Instrument landing System. It was was credited with bringing the Nazi We also operate a communica--
developed by International Telephone submarine wolfpacks to a standstill, lions network made up of thousands of
and Telegraph Corporation, or ITI. shorteningthewarbyatleasttwoyears. C41>le, radio and satellite circuits, and
Every 30 seconds somewhere In the In 1963, using earth terminals de.. ,-zin transmit a message to almost any
world an aircraft lands safely utfng ari signed by uS for communicating via !point on the globe.
application of ILS. satellite, we helped open up the first Recently, we entered the field of
In fact, without ILS and other of experimental satellite link between natural-resource conversion with m '
our developments, air travel as It is North and South America. Rayonier Inc. and Pennsylvania Class
known today would be lmpmslble. In 196S, one of our satellite-com· 5and Corporation. These two opera·
The woman in seat 17C didn 't munlcation earth termT"nals, aboard a tlons take raw material from the earth
know it, but the day she boarded her Navy aircraft carrier, helped make It and Its fo,..ts and make them useful
jet, ITT had already played a part in possible for millions in the ·u.s. and to manufacturers of cellophane, tex•
her Ille. Europe to see on TV the recovery ol tile flbers, tire cord, photographic fllm,
How many ITT'1t Gemini astronauts at sea, live, as It 'paper, glass, Chemlcats, and other re-
When she cabled her husband in happened.. fated products.
London to conflrm the date and time Five times moredurlng19661 ttr· m and You
of her arrival, the message was sent mlnalwas Installed aboard a carrier and With all these services-plus thou•
via ITT. five times more m;llllons saw actual sands of consumer, lndustrlal and mill·
The ar she drove to New Yori<'s splashdown and recovery operations., tary product1 and services-ITT 11
Kennedy International Airport from her List year during the Arab-Israeli helping you and people all over tha
parents'homelnNewJer>eywasrented war, the White House used the Wash, world to enjoy a better, safer, more
frum one of our companies. lngton-Moscow Hot Un<Hor ~ flr>t comfortable life:
Yet the woman possibly had never time In a crisis. One of our companies Just as It helped the woman In
even heard of ITT. keeps the Hot line ready. sull7C.
The "lntemational" in our name Another of our companies runs fntemaOonalTelephone arrd Tel,.
Is well deserved. We do business In the Kiimer Job Corps Center In New 1raph Corporation, 320 Park Ave.,
123 countries around the world and Jersey for the Office of Economic Op· New Yorfc, N. Y. 10022.
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t 18 '~AILYJ'JLOT -l~. Se.11tembtt 10, 1968
• WESTaN STA11 UNIVIA51TY
COLLEGE OF LAW
i. Oran9e Covmy
ftOW -.ciept&ng ~ and WonMll ----._, .... J ....... _p, ..........
..-.1 .... . •-ti ............... __ ... ......... ........, ........... .., ...... t..... .., ...ii.
~t.l.L .. ----~·-·------1u...--., ...... -......
APPL T NOW FOa 5EP11iMIEA 16th
DAT OR EVENING Cl.ASSES ......... .._ .... _..__ ... __
• 1717 s. ll'ook......,,
Anaheim
635-3454
Your
The one thing
other Life no • insurance
company can
your family
offer
• ••• IS a Mass Mutual Agent
I • I
Tht Spotlight 11 on
Our Min of tt.. Month for August
GEORGE R. CROSBY
~it le•d1nhip in ""''Y ph•••
of 011r A9'"'Y •ctivity
Donald M. Tippett, C.L.U.
General Agent
4220 Long 88ach B~ulev1rd
Long Beach, California 90807
Toi.: (213) 423.(1917
MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL.
L.lf""I!: INSURANC E COMPA N Y
SHARP
'
•
What we stand for and how
you could profit from it.
We !hink you ought to know more about u~. So we'..-e
Prepared a booklet to intrOduce you to the way we
think.
. "The Client and E. F. Hutton" tells you of our serv-
ices, and rellects our atlitude toward clients. Present
and future.
We'll send you a copy. And another booklet, "Naw
that you've opened an account," which explains basic
procedures of in..-esting.
Have both, On us. With no obligation. Just send the coupon.
Name ______________ _
Ad~ess. ______________ _
C1!y ______ State ___ Zlp Code __
Telephone _____________ _
Business Phone ____________ _
E. F. HUTTON & COMPANY INC.
M[M~Ell. ,_EW YORK ANO PACIFIC COAST STQCl!(· l!'XCHA.HGES
A,"'0 OlHEll LE ADl "'G SECUR!T'r' .-,,.o COMMODITY EXCHANGES
Money
I
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I loll! NO~TM M.AIN STJ:ICET. SA,.TA Af!OIA. W.0101
1lt EAST BROADWAY, LONG 1eACN, w.nn . I
L---------------~----J
ASSETS OVER
1-425,000,000.00
HEAD OFFIC!:
315 E••t Colorado BouleY•~
Paudene. C.l!fomta 91109
I
This Man Doesn't
Dare to Make Error
NEW YORK (AP)-Eight
hours a day, ~ix days a
wee k, Michael J. Rock
doesn't dare make a mis·
take in his job-hundreds or
lives are at stake.
Rock is an air traffic con-
troller. the man who keeps
the big airliners away Crom
each other as they fly the
crowded sky.
"lf you're controlling 30
planes with 100 persons in
each, that's a lot or Uves,"
Rock said in an interview.
"There's no room for a mis-
take. The pressure is fan·
tastic."
Rock, 31, a controller at
New York's La Guardia Air-
port, is a founder and chair·
man or the newly formed
Professional Air Tr a ff i c
Con troUer Organization,
PATCO. Since the organiza-
tion's formation last Jan-
uary, Rock said, some 4,880
•
INGS
• cm<£R BMNCH Ol'FICO
w.t Arcedla .. Oovf,.. "-'"
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Tuesday's ,Closing Prices -
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T11esd.q1 Stoltmbtf' 10, 1968
Complete-Nelv York Stock Exchange List
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D.llLY Pfl~ JJ
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Dt\D.Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
Power Boat Follies
Bo8ting safety a.s a growing problem on the nation's
waterways -and especially tboo:e of bigh-accldent-rate
Southern Galifornia -was again underscored by a hil·
and-run boal collision l!iO yard.a off the Santa Ana River
jetty lasl Saturday.
An outboard motor boat with four persons aboard
wa.c rammed by a cruiser in wbat easily could have
been a major tragody.
Although injuries to two of the small boat's passen·
gen were minor, it could have been as tragic as a col·
lision on Missouri's Lake of the Ozarks. A young man
tawed a water-skier at high speed, watching the skier
instead of.the water ahead. He crashed broadside, at 3Q..
miles-per-hour, into a cabin cruiser, d~pltating him-
•ell.
Boating is prObably the last remaining activity In-
volving potentially deeth-dealing power which has no
licensing and no skill requirements such as automobile
drivers and airplane pilots must meet.
Ti.me magazine reports in its current issue that, at
last count, some 1.6 million Americans were operating
5,400,000 power boats -and the public's interest is
still climbing fast as booming boat sales show.
For some reason, power-boatmen are less prudent
than sailboat skippers. They accounted. tor the great
majority of the "Mayday" distress calls in 1967 and for
875 of the 1,312 deaths on the wat~. Time reports.
Too many of them neglect &\'en the most rudimen-
tary safety precautions. One skipper told a Coast Guard
lnspector he carried no life preservers on his boat be.
cause "they don't match the color of my boat, that's
all."
They fail to get weather reports, lose boats and
lives in storms they could have avoided. They spend
thousands for their boats, then pinch pennies on gaso-
line, running dry and having to be rescued. Too many
boats venturing into the open ocean have no radio.
And the boat owners don't y,•ant it either.
Best of all answers, if it can be given to every boat
.skipper beiore he ever wets a hull, Is education In navt-
gation, seamanship, traffic ntlcs for the waterborne,
radio operation and repairs or alJ kinds at sea.
The U.S. Power Squadron and the Coast Guard
Auxiliary do an excd.Jent job or providing free classes
in seamanship a nd safety. In fact, t.be Balboa Power
Squadron will start another free basic boating class at
7 p.nl. next Monday, Sept. 16 at Newport Harbor Yacht
Club. No advance registration is necessary.
No matter how much all concerned would like to
avoid the cost and bother of a licensing and testing pro-
gram for boat operators, the continuing climb in the
waterway accident rate seems likely to force such leg·
islation.
It's another case of the stupidities of the minority
forcing government to protect them (and the prudenl
majority) from their own folly. J . I
Last Call to Register
Last call for voter registration!
If you're among the 29 million Americans other-
wise eligible to vote in the presidential election but bad
not registered as of mid-August, there's still time. The
deadline is midnight this Thursday night, Sept. 12.
Presidential elections carry an exception to the
nonnal requirements. Persons who have lived in the
state for less than a year may vot~ for President and
Vi.ce President if they can prove they were qualified to
vote in the state of their previous residence.
lf you don't know how to find a deputy registrar,
contact the Registrar of Voters office, 1119 E. Chestnut
Ave., Santa Ana -telephone 634-2244.
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So what's the answer? Neither Congress nor the
Coast Guard wants to take on the multi-million dollar
cost or the red tape of a federal licensing program.
Voting in this Novt!mber election won't be just a
privilege and a duty -it shou1d be a pleasure for every
American who loves bis strife-tom nation.
~Mi' rr ~ODKS PEACEfV~ ANt> SAfE IN THERE ....
'Incompatibility'·
-a Disguise
"Jncompallblllty'' is a long word
that covers a mu>Utude of divorces.
All U. means iB "oot getting-"8.long"
with someone e1'e, but it bas become
our paramount excuse Coe breaking up
maniaS"".
For ·every one case of true il'l-
compatibllity, J am sure there are 20
cases 1n which this wonl is used to
disguise another f<d: the fact that
one or the marriage partners is not
compatible With himself.
Perhaps the harde.M lessOll. to learn
in life, for some people, is that getting
•long with someone else, at close ~
quarters, first imp.Hes the ability to
get ci.ong with oneself.
A PERSONALITY has t10 be com~
·$Ydney Barri~
recognizes that belnf the right person
is more important than finding the
right person.
There are exceptions, of course:
where chronic drunkenness or ex·
treme cruelty or neurotic promiscuity
have made it lntolerabl.e for one mar·
riage partner to Hve decently with the
other. But tbe majority ol cases, l un
COll.vinced, &re caused by an ac·
cumulation of petty annoyanets and
frustrations that occur in every mar·
riage, good or bad.
patible within itself, as much as THE ABU..ITY TO with:sWld tension
humanly possible. A man, or woman, of this S'Ort is the DlU'k of a mature
must genuinely like himself and penonal:ity. Im.mature people either
nspect hi.m3eU and be harmonious fight it or run away from it -and
within himself before he oan make ef-neither tactic works. 1',ighting oo~y
fective or lasting contact with another makes it worse, and running aw.r:..y
'Rafferty Got
To Slime Pit
Bottom--F ast'
To the Editor:
It didn't take lo~ As expected. the
supporters of "Der Blue Max" Raf-
ferty got to the bottom of the slime pit
in record time, surprisingly early in
the campaign, which leads one to won-
der, where next?
Yester<tay ,.a "Cranston!" sticker ori
the back of our car (I'm a
Republic.an) led a lady(?) to band my
wife a leaflet titled, ''Do You Want
This Man Acting for You in the U.S.
Senate?"
Its source. at least the only address
printed on it, is some outfit in Con-
necticut -(Connecticut shoold tell
California how to vote?!) -and its
author, ttiey have the gall to admit, is
none otter than Joseph P . Kamp, ap-
parently newly crawled out <lf the
woodwork. personality. merely postpones the day when
The true tragedy ol so many similar temions have to be met and TIIERE JS NO point in .attempting a
divorces lies not in the divorce itseli mastered. point-by.point refutation of Kamp's
(wtlich is deplorable enough), but .ia The person (and there are re\_ative1y karping kritique; he has a Jong history
the need!ess and cea.seiess quest for few of the6e in our frantic society) of fabricating fiction far faster than
anotfler "rigtt" mate. But nobody can wtio is secure and at ease within fact can ever catch up (for example,
be "right" foe very long if you are himself, who knows his ability and ac-hls ineffable work, "Communism
wrong with yourself. And we have all cepts his limitations, can be "com· behind the lace curtains of the
noticed how much-married persons patibie" with a wide variety of mates. YWCA!") Suffice it to point out ttiat
keep repeating the same mi.stake. And ttlOM: who are in conflict within Kamp's previoos endeavors have
• --.. .. -• ,.... --. <\4 ••• ..... -1.be~vtt" wit\ mver-?nd--. h?sband-~M h1!n th"! 11Jt1que·mst111ct1on of a
-· .1Jll$ IS 1'91: _t.()...!ll'-"1• ''•ConiL_DI'.. .wile -"""-.<:an. ,.cs!;' tlleit..c<>n-place oo.the Attorney Genel'Bl'• List oL
marr1aget: cannot be more successful flicting demands. lt ·is not that too Subversive Organizations. one of the
than the fir.s~, but thty can be so ofily many couples . bec?Ome d i v o r c e d v~ry-£.ew members of tha-extreme v.11~ .tile ffivorced ~on takes a prematurely; 1t ti that too many right ever to be so honored.
realistic stock of himself and become married prematurely. ~ 1 said at the start, if it's this dir·
• ty th.is soon, wow! We're in for a
Prisoners Have Rights
rough <-ampaign from Der Blue Max
an'd his cohorts! Mr. Cranston will
need ail the honetst help he can get.
LA UREN CE DAWSON
On an average day, nearly hall a
million men and women languish be·
hind bars in the nation's jails. All of
them sulfec Crom an obvious legal dis·
ability: they ca Mot leave.
But 'Nhat about legal rights? Do
prisoners have rights, 1 i k e those of
people on the ootside, which can be
enforced in the courtroom 1
By arx1 large, courts have followed
a "hands off' policy with regard to
our prisons. As ooe judge put it:
"ft ia not the function ot ttie court$
to superi.nterld treatmeat and disci-
pline of prison en." ..a
110\VEVER, in recent years there
has been a marked change in this at·
titude. With growing frequency, courts
have struck down prison rule! and
regulatione on ccmstltutiooal grounds.
,..---B11 Georwe ---.
Dear George:
Sometimes 1 que!l'lion the
witcbn of your high-handed a1>
pr1*:h concerning the man rul·
htg the roosl On what 00 you
bMe Y<"1f Mtltude tbat man is a
aalural-l>orn ruler!
SKEPTICAL FEMALE
))oar Femak:
M A profeJtiooal advice tal· umnllt. tJrf deol< ii piled high
with Je&med tomu on love
llldlcr marrlqe.
I dOll'I •cluelly rMd them -
IJJ;f dut ii ju1l pll<d bllf> with
lbom. Tiley clv• me oome place
lo lllde from m1 ..Ue -and, U I
teep IJJ;f bock U> tht wall lllo,
11'• • Jood bole iai .. •tillucle.
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' ' ' Law~ Action
"One committed to prison," com-
mented a federal court "dore5 not
leave his consUtutionaJ rights at the
gates.''
Consider, for example, the writing
and receiving of letters. Courts have
long upheld the power of prisoo offj.
cials to censor the mail. But accord-
ing to a recent decision, this power
may not be used to block a prisoner's
access to the courts.
ln another case. a court ruled t.hat
a prisoner was entitled to reasonable
use of legal book..s and materials.
And in a third oase, a court sus-
tained a prisoner's right to better med·
ical care than he had beeo getting.
IN FACT, federal pris<lners now
have the right to collect dam.ages ii
they su!rer injuries as the result of
official negUgeoce. One recent verdict
came to more than $100,CXXJ.
Neverttieless, while the legal rlg1rts
of prisoners have been expanding.
tiley are .still limited. For if carried
to excess, these rights might sabotage
the ''ery oper;1tion ol die prlsoo sys·
tern.
Thus, wkile courts have upheld the
right of pMsontn lo religious observ-
ance. they hive. drawn the line At the
preachmg ol organlied dlsobediance.
For, after all , this Is a community
not ol ordinary people but o( convicted
criminals doing penance for their
crimes. They do have rights. But
tho:se riJtht11 muitt remain subject to
tile i:ractical necessiUcs of prism life.
An Amtrican Bar Afsociation pub.
Uc ltrVICC Jtaturt bM wui 8trn0rd.
Just Jud9me11u
To t.he Edjtor:
About one year and three months
ago the Arabs and the Israelis agreed
to stop fighting each other. This agree·
ment has been violated by both sides
aod these violations may lead to a
fourth conflict ill that area or the
world. Yet, world diplomats seem to
believe that the problem will be solved
as soon •s the diplomats can get bOth
sides to a peace table.
There is &1n0ther approach that
could ease tensions between the Arabs
and the Israelis. Each cease fire
violation would be investigated as
thoroughly as if it were a murder in·
vest.igation. These investigations could
be done by the U.N. Observers thti.t
are now in the area.
A REPORT WITil conclusions
woold then be issued through the of·
fices or the U.N. All reports would be
made avail1able to the world press.
Then the next time that either the
Arabs or the 1.s:raelis request Che
Security Council to reprimand one of
them for a cease flre violitJoo the
Security Council would have concrete
facts on which to base a judgmenl
SUT(l\y, a few just judgment.II will r11ly
world opinion against the aggressor,
and may even forcti the c0mbi.taots to
see the light of dly.
HARRY B . McllONALD JR.
1 .. ttttrJ from rtodtf.s are tDflcomf.
Normall11 writtr1 should conw~ their
mt1&age.1 fn 300 1DOfd! or lts.1. The
right Co candtmt lttttr1 to fit ipacc
or eliminat« libel ii rtftrotd. AU iti-
Ur1 muit include tigooturt and moa.
in.g Rddrttt, but namet wiU ~ wltlt-
htld on rtqut.tt.
•\
Overpoweri1ag Political Force
Nixon Represents "C}lange
WASHINGTON ·-Leaving aside the
events in Chicago, Richard M. Nixon
begiM his campaign for the
presidency in far be«er circumstances
than in 1960. Most simply stated, Nix·
on represents change, the overpower-
.ing force Of American politics which
asserts itseU from ti m e to t i m e
wh.eri people have "had enough."
This is a fortunate reversal fOr Nix-
on or his position in 1960. He was in·
hibited ttien as much as he was helped
by the record of a previous ad-
ministration ending with a let-down
owing to the Russian success with
··Sputnik I" and the U-2 incident which
brought President Eisenhower-'s at-
tempt· to find an accommodation with
Russia to a snarting cooclusion.
Also. at the outset of the 1960 cam-
paign Nixoo suffered a painful knee in·
jury. His resulting lack of energy was
evident for weeks aDd this carried
over into the disastrous opening or his
television debates with John F. Ken·
nedy
ANOmER IMPROVED factor in
Nixon's strategic position is, to put it
bluntly, that he is not running against
a Catholic. This innovation o! t.he 1960
campaign had two sides to it. Prior to
1960 being catholic was considered to
be an insuperable barrier to election
as president, with the Al Smith defeat
cited in proof. John F. Kennedy of·
fered contrary evidence. He won both
becoose of and in spite of his
Catholicism, which at least proved
tilat religion is a superable barrier to
· election as President.
The ch<ylged condition~ this year
were emphasized right at the begin.
nine by N®n in his ~h:ate, non·
. -' .. , ... ,
Richard W~sb
political discussion," tonowed by
photographs, with Catholic Archbishop
Terence Cooke of New York. This was
a demonstration of Nixon's 1968
political skill of which he would not
have been capable in 1960, and helped
to make it clear that ttiis year Nixon
is merely running against another
Protestant. The nation is thus to be
spared one of ttie more unpleasant if
dramatic, aspects of the 1960 cam-
paign. although there a re plenty of
other unpleasant aspects this year to
compensate for the lack--of a religious
issue.
'·c
fact, that he played down attacks on
Truman in favor Of a unity theme.
Truman was the underdog, a I
Humphrey is now, but the similarity
really ends there. Tb.e American
public was not so moved by the
violence of opinion and action as to-
d.ay.
In 1948 the Henry Wallace calididacy
and the Strom Thunnond candidacy
put together lacked the punch of the
George Wallace candidacy today by at
least half.
FURTil.ERl't10RE, Truman was an
incumbent president which is usu.ally
an 3..!lset. There are enough dillerences
between now and 1948 to warn that
merely because Humphrey is the
underdog gives no guarantee of his
election in a Truman-like comeback.
The overpowering demand f o r
change did not come until Coor years
TIIE DESIRE FOR A change is the ·oe the Truman Ad.ministration had
biggest factor working in Nixon's passed md we were in an unpopular
favor. It is ironic that Hubert H. Hum-war (Korea) W)th inflation and
phrey, tlle great champion of change, discontent on the domestic scene.
should now be hung about with a Nixon's attitude is also quite dif·
continuation of the status quo. When he ferent from Dewey's. Nixon assumes a
says that he will do his best to settle close race, ttie danger of the Wallace
the Vietnam war, the reply can be, candidacy throwing the election into
then why has not the Johnson· the H<luse of Representiartives -all
llumphrey Admini.s.f.ration been able tempered by the cautious wisdom in·
to do so? When he says that law and duced by his past defeats.
order can be maintained, then why has Another facet of the current
the Johnson-Humphrey Administration myttiology deserves a few words. The
been unable to do so? Kennedyltes are supposed to be letting
Those who can recall the at-Humphrey go down the drain .so that
mosphere of 1948 will see certain Nixon will be elected, will surely fail
similarities between then and now. as ·President and Ted Kennedy ca.n
President Harry S Tnunan was at a ' come to the rescue o( the nation after
low ebb of l'l?pular~y .. Thomas-E. NixDn's .,s~e term. This idea 'W'On't
Dewey looked like, felt like, .E..lld acted hurt Nixon in 1968 and he will have
like the suu: winnet, to...the. extent, in -four yea.1 to.prove it-was wrong.
Rock Music and Deafness
People over 30, said to be Wstrusted
by those under 30, don't as a rule care
for loud noise.
It is hard to sell subdivision houses
near a large aicport, wtiere climbing
jets fly every few minutes, and th06e
who bought when planes were quieter
and fewer compl.ai.n bitterly. Jet
engines fairly close generate about 120
decibels of sound.
One of the loudest1manifestations of
human aspiration today, comparable
W a fire siren when yoo put your ear
to it, is rock music. In ttie 1930s yuung
folk , oow grown. enjoyed sentimental
dance bands. Let a kid today stumble
on one of the.re old recordings, and
he's like to throw up. \Wien the kids on
ria.re OCC"asions drag the <lid folks to a
rock session, the old folks are like to
go into a e<>ma .
WllEN THE KIDS with small rock
bands practice at a home. neighbors
tend tt. complain, and to oall ttle cops
to tJiejr reSC\le.
In the New York Times magazine,
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Whatever happened to cheap
polIUcians! The 006 we've gol
DOW IJ'e C06ting \lS plenty.
-T. P.
"" ....... ,...,. _.. -.. ~ ........... _.. .. , ....
_,. "" ,,.,._. .. .......,, ... Ol*r '""'
Prof. Benjamin DeMott, of Amherst,
wrote a piece called "Rock as Salva.
tion ." In it he explored sune rather
precious philosophies of the rock
phenomenon, or cullure.
He found some rock intellectuals in-
sisting lt ts ttle basis of a new religious
experience. particularly in the
sessi<lns where tnoYlng color and
sound in great volume are combined.
Prof. OeMot.t suggested some of t.he
lyrics of rock tong are meaningles!i,
but the Profesl!ior speaks for tbose
over 30. Under 30 finds llie6e lyrics
glowing with meaning and eosmJc.
When amplified, the sound makes
ttiem oae witti the universe, whJoh. itJ
h a rd even for octogenarian cos-
mologists to under-stand.
TIJE Al'tlPLtFJER is the key. When
the human voice is droWned it doe.a
30mething to the listeners. l9vlng
them mostly alooe with themselves, a
mlxtu.re o( angulstJ and ccst.asy. It has
to, gince olcf.fashioned forms or com-
munioaUons are suspeoded.
Some ol the metapl>ysiclsta ol !be
culture are now saying the great rock
herQl!'S -those whose disheveled pie·
tu.res are posted Ufe-slie in the kid's
bedroom -Art: modern geniuses who
arti changlllg ttle world, 11 k e
Sha.kespeare or Homer bringing to
man 1 nn life e.xpetitonce he never
knew In U.. Old Stone Age.
But there is a. UtUe1 depreciation in
thi~ prodig)ous )atter-day happening.
RECENTLY Dr. David M.
I
Ltpscom'b, director of tbe audig..
clinical laboratory ol the Univtmty of
Tennessee, released a report ol a
tihree-morith study <lf guinea pigs sub-
jected to higb decibel sound. Music
pl~yec:l to !tie critters ranged from 120
(lood discotheque) to 138 decibels, just
below the pain threshold.
Ears of tbe animals had 44 hours of
listening, then one ear was plugged for
another 44 hours. Microscopic ex·
aminations were then made of the
unplugged ear, revealing breakdown
ol the cells of the cochlea, the part m
the ear which b"anslates sound weves
to nene impulses.
Further. students who habli1U11ly
Crequented rock sessions were found
to have bearing deterioration.
So it may be that by 1980, tho6e over
30 Will need bearing aids. 'Ibose Ulen
under 30 will cli.strust Uhem.
Tuesday, Sepl<mber 10, 1968
The ..Ulmial """' of the DoUr Pflot ittkl to inform and stfm.
ulatc rtodnt b~ preunling "'" .... IJJCP<T', optnM>N and -
"""""1/ on IOpia Of inl<TW
and lignlff<o11c<, br P1'01>idlJIQ •
forum for thf t%))rtsa1on. of
<lUr rMde'rs' opiMom, and br
prtuntlno the dfvmc ~
potntr of l•l°""'d ob1'1Wtl """ rpo«"""' on IOpia of IM dav.
Robert N. Weed. Publl&h<r
,.
•• I
ly
Ill ,. ..
:y
oy
18
at .. ly
es
at
h•
Us
ir
rs
ad
ar
od
if· ,.
ce
<(O
ill
in·
11!
be
ng
at
ad
"" er
l't
ye
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of
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20
st
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I
-----·----
JEAN COX 494-M66
T ...... 1, ..,......., It• IHI LI .... ti
Guild Mixing
Hearty Treat-
..... Arts, tarts and cookbooks are . three contributions the Queen of
Hearts Guild will make to the second annual CHOC Fair the weekend of
Oct. _18 in the, parking mall of Fashion Square, Santa Ana .
The event is sponsored by all 13 women's 'uilds of Children.'s Hospi ...
tat of Orange County to raise funds for the hospital.
Mrs. Gordon Forbes Is chairman in charge of coordinating Queen or
Hearts participation and is being assisted by Mrs. William H. Beck, c<r
chairman.
Throughout the summer Mrs. Beck, former president of the Laguna
guild, has been taking pictures, assembling and editing the cookbook with
the help of Mrs. C. R. Hulst.
A former professional photographer and gourmet cook, Mrs. Beck
said "The Guild Guide to Good Dining" would contain 10 pictures, taken by
her, of children at play and 86 pages of recipes contributed by members.
Mrs. Charles F. Roberts is chairman of the pastry booth where
tarts will be sold. She is being assisted by Mrs. Neil Nelson.
1"he art booth, chaired by Mrs. James ,Wheaton with the hf!lp of her
co-chairman Mrs. George Gade, will feature paintings donated by Laguna
Beach artists.
'
•
FAIR EFFORTS -Pictures of youngsters at play
will be a special feature of a cookbook to be sold
by the Queen of Hearts Guild at the second annu~l
CHOC Fair. Mrs. William H. Beck (left), who is
taking photographs, compiling and editing "The
Guild Guide to Good Dining " shows some of her
work to Mrs. C. R. Hulst, her assistant.
Members currently are arranging for prizes including a Volkswagen
Campmobile, a color television , Flipper Sail Boat, 100 books of Blue Chip
Slll.mps, a white fox capelet, $200 gift certificate for Noritake China or
stainless steel flatware from the Pottery Shack and a weekend for two in
San Francisco.
Calenda r Cultivated
Days Arranged
By Gardeners
Laguna Beach Garden Club will jump into a fall
season of activities beginning with an annual fall
membership tea amid the gardens surrounding Mrs.
Marjorie Beach's Laguna Beach borne from 2:30
to 4:30 p.m. Friday.
New members will be applauded during the tea,
to be served by a commi~ee chaired by Mrs. J •
Orville Chilton.
Mrs. Leonard Davis, club president will wel-
come members and guests interested in joining the
group with the help of the Mmes. Beach, Glenn
Shermer, Jack Cole, Ernest Cannan and Miss Alice
Ledger. -.
Future plans include a talk on Garden Des1gn
by Mrs. Frederick M. Lang, a landscape architect,
Oct..U. --The Nov. B program will feature Ruth !tern
speaking and demoostrabng Christmas flower Bf·
rangements.
A Christmas luncheon, where Christmas flower
anangements by members will be displayed, is on
the calendar for Dec . 13 when a Boutique Sale will
otter last-minute Christmas shopping oportunities.
Other dates being circled on the club calendar
are Jan. 10, wben Mrs. Joe Li.tUefield shares some
gardening tips and Feb. 14 when Mrs. J. Robert
Kirkpatrick will present a· program on flower ar-
rangements.
Passports to Beauty will be the theme of the
group's annual flower ~how and tea which will take
place during the Winter Festival on the weekend
of Feb. 28.
•
Education
Cont inued
Women graduates of col·
Jeges and universities are
Invited to keep on ll!amlng
with Laguna Beach Branch,
American Association of
University Women.
The group is inviting
members and prospeetive
members to an annual
membership tea in Laguna
Beach A r t Association
Gallery from 2 ta 4 p.m.
Saturday.
During t h e gathering,
women will be asked to sign
up fo'f study groUps,
legislative work and a
fellowship program.
Also offered ~ -will be
·monthly Interest g r o ~ 1
such as .drama readings,
book reviews, bridge,
gourmet dining, arts and
crafts and French con·
wrsation.
The branch stages regular
meetings alternately on the
second Tuesday and second
Saturday of each month .
Prospective or transfer-
ring members should bring
evidence of graduation from
an aceredJted college or
university or a membership
card from their former
branch if they wish to apply
for membership during the
tea, according to Mrt.
George Goodall, mem-
bership chairman.
Conservation will be the topic of the March 14
gath'ering when Tri-County Conservation League
presents the program. During the M8'ch ~athering
Paul Colburn , an authority on birds, also will speak.
Another flower arrangement talk, this one by
Mrs. Eunice Antosik, will take place April !1. and
new officers will be installed at the group 9 final
meelin& in the Irvine Coast Country Club May 9.
MASS COMMUNICATORS -Laguna Beach Branch members,
American Association of University Women Mrs . Loren Sleutz
(left) and Mrs . Ernest Barnard cannot decide which communi-
cation mediwn should dominate their attention. Their group will
be studying the effects of mass media and instant communica-
tions on modern values. These and other study groups will be
opened at the branch's membership tea Saturday.
Additional informatlon
may be obtained by calllnl
Mrs. Goodall, •94-4703 or
Mrs . B. L. Parks, pre&i.den~
491-7456.
Wife Loses Third Time After Slipping Herself a
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please ex.
cuat the looks of thi.s ietter. 1 oan't see
very well\ One of my eyes i.a com-
pletely 1hul The other ll a little
swollen.
ANN LANDERS A ~~ I married Mlcb7 after a whirlwind
courtahlp of NVeD weeks . He seemed
like & perfect genU&man. I could hard·
1J believe it when be knocked out my
ptwt tooth and blackened my eyes
because there . WU DO beer in the
r<lll(erator. (Be drank Ove bottlu
!Mt nlJh1 and I dlclll't reallu we ....,..
GUI.} '
Mickey 1.,., lib -per -UWe
lhlnp lib not beilll able to find, 1111
loclteL Be lnllltl I "bid" II and U.en I
Ill a call from a tavern keeper aaying
lllcke7 left bla Jockel lbera Jul Dight
wtien he ltopptd for a drink on his
way home .
ThiJ ls the thlrd time be has beat
me up and I don 't limow what to do
about it. P)eue don't tell me to leave
him. He'• lean, a ....U guf excei>t !or
thla one fauJt. Also, Ann, I thint I
abouJd tell you be ts my third hu1band
and lhe he1t of lhe kll -BLURRED
VISION
DlilAR BLURRED: So be'1 th< bell
of Ille loll WbeR do 70• lllld oucb
I
~~~-------~---
doD17 You hive already told me DOt to
&ell you to leave bJm, so I'll respect
yoar wt1be1 A.ad ttll you aometbla&
elJe. Stay wt.th blm. UDtU be 1crambiet
your bralna and Docks oat ·all year
tHt.11. Perbapt tbh yoa wW ••t me
rot 10PJe advice ~ cu ue Wtead of
tell1DC me what aot to tell you.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : List moolh
my husband took a fatal overdose of
1leeptng pills. 1 know be was
despondent over a business failure and
that his health wu a worry to him but
I bad no idea he wollld kill himself.
What shall I tell the children? They
are 4 and 5 yean of age. Explaining
natural deall to yowgst.er1 is difficult
enough, ,but bow does one explain
1u!ddel I want to tell them that Did·
dy wu VS"J sick and God toot him to
a home m heaven wbere we will all
JMet one day.
My mother lnllltl that I tiell . lbem
tile truth. She clalml Iller will hear
Iba true 1tory from pla)"l1\lllel when·
they get older and then 111 bave
mlOUf trouble becau1e ll!e1 will llod
out I fied .
I have tl'lou~t about ttLla unUl I am
hall era.it. 1 jUJt can't tell m:y c:blldnn
.. '
their daddy didn't want lo live
any more. Please Ann, I need some of
your wisdom. -ANGUISHED
MOTHER
D~ A-10TBER : Tbta 11 your
dectalon to make, not your motber11.
Tell the children D1ddy look the
wfonc medJdae and t& made him 10
1lck be could DOt cet, wen to God toot
blm to beavea. Jt la belt Ua1t children
believe a part:Dt.'1 1utdde wa · ae-
ddeatal wbea.Ver poull>le. Goo4 lock
... ..Wap, Dur.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Pl .... 1el·
tle ID .arrwneot. When a mm and a
woman meet on the 1cr.et who 1hould
1peak: ftnt? Tbe people in queaUon •re
nol cloM frfoodl, but I.bey havo work·
Mickey
,ed. together and know each oc:her: -
BRANDY
DEAR BRANDY : Wben lrtelldl,
the one wbo recopbea t.be other flnt
1boukl 1pelll< flnl.
''The Bride's Guide," Ann Landera'
booklet, answers 1ome of the most fre.-
que.ntly s.sked questions about wed•
dings . To receive your copy of th.1a
compnbenslve guide, write to AnA
Landers, in care of tb.IJ newspaper,
enclosing a loag, oelf·addreued, 1tam-
ped envelope arid 35 ceatl tn co.lA.
Ann Landers will he glld to help 1""
with your problem•. Send lbl!D to bet
In care of the DAILY PILOT, encl ...
Ing a 1taolped, aeU-eddressed u-
velope.
•
• -.<"
I
I
' '
'
'
(
•· . . .. . . -...
Horoscope •
Aries: Start Project
Birthday
Plans lit
A blrtbda1 J>Orl1 celllllrltlDs tllt u • It • d
S!ata Air FGl'CI llot!Mn Club l'llCbl 11 _ _,.,.,
MRS. DAN JAMES LLOYD
Sixth Generation Crans• Countlan
Vows Recited
During Rites
Carol Lee Vlebeck and
Dan J'81Des L 1 o yd ex-
cbanpd weddinf pledget
and r!Dgg during efternooo
nuptilh: in Garden Grove
CoiruaUnity CllUrcb. '.!be
Rev. 11.arold Leestlm. read
the Oll'em.OQy.
Parenta of the newlyweds
are Mr. and Mrs. George
Vlebeck Jr. of Santa Ana aiid Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Lloyd of . Long Beach and
formerly o f Huntington
Beach.
Given Jn marriage by her
father, the bride aeleded a
white peau de aoie gown of
chantilly lace applique1 and
an elbow length veU with 1
pearl lined headpiece. She
carried a bouquet of orchids
and stephanoti&.
Attend.anti were Mn. Don
Orr of Santa Ana, the
bride's lister, Miss Joy
Norman of Orange and Miss
Donna Kobayubl of Santa
Ana.
They wore mint green
Boor length dreue• of crepe and held Frend> houquell.
Asked to stand u best
man was Tom Lloyd Jr., the
bridegroom•• bro t be r.
Usher duties were u:1umed
by Drake Mua~ Stu Stob-
bings. H a r o I d Fe.rguaon,
George Vlebeck, the bride's
brother, and Orr.
'.!be Saddlebact Inn In
.Santa Ana was the setting
for the reception. M 1 1 1
Sharon Walters of Laguna
Beach circulated the guest
boot among ~ well•
WEDNESDAY
SEPTEMBER 11
By SYDNEY OMARR
I "'.Ibt wile mon cOOlrols
1111 doltiQ)' . . • Astrology
points the way ."
ARIES (Morch 21-Airi!
11): Get tlarted on project
wbidl jDvolves tpeclal col-
~ ....u. E>mphasis iJ
on paying, coftec<ing debts.
You tiniab one phase of ac-
tivity today and b e a: i n
OD041>er.
T!UHUS (April 20-May
:Ill): llut forth bright,
origfna1 proposals. Now it
tkne to break from routine,
tradilloo. Spotllght iJ OD -
speak up and be heerd. Take
initiative, A meeting could
build to meaningful rela-
tionship.
GEMINI (May 21.June
20): Delve behind the
scenes. Don't base
jUdgmentJ on superficial
reportl. Do your own in·
vestigdng. Excellent even· me fer atte!'ldjng U\eate.r.
dlning out. Shake off emo-
tional lettuqy.
CANCER (June 21-July
22): Senee flt" humor
become• )'Our great ally to-
cloy. Realize th11 -avoid
heavybonded metbodl. Help
family member to nve
face. Some argund you are
aupereensitive. A I I fl • I
desires, frieodllhipa. 'lbink.
LEO (July 25-AUjl. 22): A
decision in your flN'or la: on
horlwn. Plan ahead. Know
that those willth auaK!rity do
have confideoce in your
ability. Get busJ on that
special task. It -· routine but ccd.aint a
challenge.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22):
Communicate kleu. Keep
lines o f communicaUon
open. Individual M a
dislaoce may be wcrklng on
your behalf -fine for
writing, creM:ing new
format. P&y heed to hunch.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 • Oct
22): Settle isaue at home.
Involvee expendMUl'tl for
luxury item. Talk rather
than' argue. Wl!e to permit
me close to you to have
final IBY. If yooJ are lltub-
born, you creete ~
favorable clim&te.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21): Accent on how you are
able to cope with opposing
views . li you De )'OUI'
Summer Wedding Set
By Betrothed Pair
A champagne buffet in the
Corona deI Mor home of Dr.
and Mrs. G .William
Mahlman WU the setting
when t.be couple announced
the engagement <:I. their
dau@l!ter, Lynn Mahlman ID
David P. Lenhardt, ton at
the Rev. and Mn. Howwd
Lenhardt of Buena Park.
'.!be bride-to-be IJ •
gniduale of P8Ios Verdes
High School w1llle her liaoco
ill a graduate of Kennedy
ffigh School in Buena Park.
Both .-e juntars at the
UniV!rsity of Call:fornfa,
Santa Barbara, where Miss
Mahlman is majoring in
EngJ!oh ond Lenhmlt in
political odence.
The futme bridegrvom is
the mamger of t b •
Univenity Men's Glee, a
member al the ShubertiaDI
singing group and ts
in the ROTC scholanhlf.pro-
gram. Both are active the
Lutheran campus program.
Am:mg 1be guMts present
were tbe couple'• uncles
Douglas Mlhtman and John
Lenhardt; the bride-elect's
grandmother Mrs. L e o
Augapurger , and her
gnmdf-atber 0. L. Mahlman.
LYNN MAHLMAN
Engopd
other guests travded from
the Los Angeles and Orange
County area1.
The couple will continue
tbeir studies at UCSB Jeter
this month. A summer wed·
ding IJ pbumed.
CM Women
Bake, Sew
Way to Fair
:~~::.:~:,i~~: Walkers Trod Along
before making their borne iD Bea~ W·"••1 of T-n II ... . San Luis Ob!Jpo. ~ --.. , •~ Ooeting marine
Tbe bride, a aiith genera· and Gown will meet each labcnt:ory for Orange c.oun.-
tion Orange C o u n t 1 a n • Tuuday mand.DI [D Cameo ty Sbcoola. The winter u:-
participated In the UN.S. Shores from t :~ a.m. to c8ursion will be to La JoY.a'a
After a ibort respite from Women's Swimming •· noon. nte first Tuesday of c r l PP I Schoo 1 of
l«npoi, )'OU -pmtt1e. Reolm that IOljlO cl-to
you baYI leDdor 1-,1,
Aot~.
SAGl'ITA!llUS (Nov. 22·
Dee. 21): -.. -in work..none1 •eu. You
have aated for added
"'~ -now )'OU 1et what you ""!Um.d. Wlth.Jt
comeo opportuolly to add to
-account. CAPRICORN (Dec. 21-
Jan. II): Good lunar~
today -· with -· romance, creative apart.
Yow: appeal multlpile1. You
are able to convince, Nll.
demonstrate. C9me out ot
lhelI. EllblbH yoor llleDIJI.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): A,_ d,.U at home -
tbat'• a ttroog IDdk:ation
condition1 you bad taken for
granted .. llUbjecl to
definite chsoge. Welc«Do
cbaileDge and c b a n g e •
statui quo due to be lhaken.
Live.
PISCES (Feb. lt-Man:b
:WI: Be quiet within. Mud>
appears to be bappening.
But It le dlfflcult. to pin
down. Me8DI .. fon:es are
10&ttered. People CIOH to
you expreH confusion. Be
concerned, but don't borrow
trooble.
IF TODAY IS YOUH
BIRTHDAY you are
sensitive, • natural
teacber. Your lntuJtive in·
lellect IJ sharply hmed. If
8'Dgle, marriage could be
upcoming. U married, ad-
ded .. _.lblllty IJ in·
dkated -could be becaUJe
of en addition to family.
GENERAL TEN·
DENCIES' Cycle hlgb for
TAURUS, GEMINI,
CANCER. Soeelal ,....d to
IJ -for '.Ibarada7. SI~ ti, at I p.m. la ...
llydl Part Xoblla -a-,SanlaADa. a-ap1ater w111 bl u.
O>l. JobaQJ c. ll>llfnut from Spaca ,,._ ol El
Sell!Ddo.
-..... wlII ln-cl'!dl Nllllonal Pntldont
lllrl. ~y llomllllrd --h111blnd of B 1' n ti 11 ton
Beacll; Mn. E4n1 llarpn .
of Wblttlar, Air JI' ore•
Motber-of-tbe-yur; o th• r
national oUlcen, and the
.... Air Jl'<r<e recrultlnJ
staJf.
Tiie event lo -to all Air FGl'CI per-1, end
member•' bmbanch:, 1oa1 or
daugbten. Furth• r Jn.
formattoo la available b7
cantnc -Mr1. Mel'Y1n
lloenfeldt,S3-UI>.
Kiwis Flock
To Gathering
Mmnben of lie Newport
Beach cboJ>ler of. !be Kiwi
Club will father in lhe home
of Mr1. Leonard Spielman iD
Huntington Beoch for tl>eir
mOllfllly meetinl Thursday,
Sept. 12, at I p.m.
On the agenda are voting
on the by-law1 and the pro-
apecta for Ute club'• fall
project.
SAG I TT A RIUS: -,.=========.i
reJped for lndividua( with
Membership lo limited ID
former American Airl!neo
1tewardet1s11. Anyone ... eligi-
ble ii invited to can Mrs.
Doo Howard, M6-5865.
experience. . BEST
Tit. DAILY PILOT eff.,. '°-
of the Mat f11Nr11, Irr 1riu1I
111,....., M r11J111, 1v11!1itl1 t1
1rry 11ewsi-1p1r In flt. 11ti1.._
To find IOlt wfld1 lud:y for .,.. Ill ""°""' Inf ki¥'I onW SYdrlty Ornarr'1
lloollllt "~r;/. ""'" for M9ri .... :-n;; t:W~"'=I~ Ind •om~ Pl~ lox 32.«I, Gr...i"c::Tr,l"st ..
flon, ..., Yorlt, N.Y.
100~"-iiiiiliiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiimill
~--;;.f~lDRAPERY l,,Otl \JJ..J <; l EA N E 116
a.,.... Wahr Darnaf'I e PLAMI PIOOPIN6
DCLUSIVI •
IOUAIANTllD DIAPUY CLIANINIO
~ CIMnl"'" l'wfKt ,...,,.,_ ., "" ... .,
JMr 4,......,, ., 1M% ,...
ll'lac.....t " ,...,...., e Ne Wllhlll H..U
e N• INlnlutwt
e Pwhct Inn "-e Watw ltain ll...wl
• ,...,.. PINt '-"' .. • ,,.,.....,.., hwtallatt.
OUR IXCLUllVI lllVICI
~!"!II· • ,,.,_...,,., lmtnal . ''""'...., .. -• , .... llttfnahl
• , .... LMfl Dn,..
20% Olffw_&....,
0 540.1366
642·0270
the Orange County Fair, Uonah: and has won aeveral tbe month members bring Oceanogrepby. The spring
three Costa Mesa women awardJandholdsmanySPA !llndlondplcniconthesand trlpwillbeanall-dayouUng 1702 NEWPORT Bl.VD,, (OSJj MESA ~:!~ck on the fair cin:ult na,::W ...,~Lloy.i ~ an ~~de!. Mar ~~~laod~C~a_!~~o~Jldoy~a~.'-boar __ d_tb_•~!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!-!!!_!_!!.!'!'!!'!!!'
Wltll entries ranging from alumn• of Santa Ana lllgb Wee"· tr'-wlll be-t breadl and crocheted School and Santa A n a ~ •i-.... :tt'c1 .. to cookies and an-College. She IJ a aeolor -Oct. L Tile flr1t will be to 1 •·-bool Huntin(tlon Pier and Beach. tiques, Mn. Joe Varva, '1. dying e em.en.-,, IC Bv Jan. 30 the irrnun ..--
Coat.a Mesa; Mn. Loretta education at Ca 11 Io r n la to' ~~t -n the rt;;: !:~': Fujaros, of the H a r b o r Polytechnic College, San .... ...,,_ .-.. -
Area; and Mrs. E J. Young Luis Obl!po. . from Huntioetcn to 5911
ol. Costa Mesa are off to the Her husband ls a graduate Oemente.
Lo. Angele1 County Fair in of Huntington Beach IH!lh Quarterly trips ha"" abo
Pomona. School and Orange Cout been planned. Tile fall trlp
The t.hree womer. will dis· College. He also is a senior will be a half daJ'• Journey
play their wort in the do-at Cal Poly. down the coest abolrd Ftry
me&tic art 1 competitioo :---==='='=======
Sept. Ll througb 29.
Medical Group
Every MCODd Tuesday of
the month members of
OraDle Sboret M e d l c a 1
A 11 {I tanta' }..srodatlon
assemble at 8 p.m. Location
may be obt8ned by calling
Mn. Marjorie Humber, 64+ =
lfl'S BE FRIENDl Y
U 7ou have ~ nel1hbon
or know al anyone movlna
to our are&. pl-.. tell ua
.a that we may extmd a
fritndb' welcome and help
them to ~ acquainted
bl Cbdr new SUJTOUndlnp.
Hulllgloa Beldl
Visitor
5364626
Costa Mts1 Visitor
64UGl4
Se. CtlSI Visitor -.osn
l11fnr Ylslflf ... ,.
PRIVATE COlllGE "".
•
TrW1 Now.,. Swt hylnents 9·Moe..t•·
Aft•• Graduatioft I /
--' !• ' --------
Gold discovered on Ghevron 1slandl
Island Gold
Fine • a
Island Gold Fine China is tnrly fine china. lleautifld
belJ.1onec11 It'1 l1"Dllucai1, with• tuWuJ ..tain1 d. aold.
Wand Gold F"me China ii pafa:t foe )'OU? elepnt dinnen,
yet du.rablt 1Muth for n~ryday we, too.
Cooipanion pieces av~able. At
all Standanl Slations and partici·
pating Chevron Dealtrs.
$1~
4i>i=~
Wilh I pl. purchue
CHEVRON DEALERS • STANDARD STATIONS
'
\
ANNOUNCINll
HEALTH SPAS
ANNIYEtlSARY
CELEIRA TION
"Bevlnnlnv
Our
3rd
Ilg
Year
In
Oranp
County"
Ladies ''Join the Beautiful ·People ..
Holiday Health Spas, ' shed pounds, re-
arrange inches ... have a healthful, sbap-
lier figure, add zest to your fife . . .
• ""'* • ._.. Lldliw, °"'**I•• ..... . ._ ....
• '""""" 0411"-· ----·-
• 1..-... , .. --.. ""'" ·-• MllllY c--,, Clll-. ,,_
CALL OR STOP llY TODAY
POR A FREE TOUR
OPEN 7 DAYS - 3 BIG LOCATIONS
Costa Mesa An.helm Orenge
flt L llldl Mrw& QI L ICIMltlf """....... t~ ....... ....... H.tlef a. 0r-"-FW¥. ,..._ ._. --........ c... ...,,,.. Clnfw ' , .... 1'11ai
126-0311
HIALTH lltA
•
Anne Louise Scott Becomes Bride
MRS. CHARLES EUGENE ORTMAN
Double Ring Ceremony
MR_S. CHRISTOPHER FROGLEY
PomOM Home Selected
Frogl~y-Eennelly~\Lows
Recited in Westwood
St. Paul tbe Apostle
Cllurcb, Westwood was. ttie
setting for the marrlage
ceremony linking Kathleen
Marie Fennelly and
Christopher Smlth Frogley.
The bride is the daughter
or Mr. and Mrs. Vincent
Michael Fennelly of Los
Angeles and Newport
Beach, and her husband is
the son ot Mrs. McGuirk
Frogley and Kenneth
Frogley ol Santa Monica.
Perlonning the rites wen
the Rev. Louis Shine, John
Mitcbell and E d w a r d
Donovan.
Given ln marriage by her
father, the bride wore a full
length silk <rganza ~n
and carried pbalaenopsl.S,
stephanotis and b a b y ' s
breath.
Turquoise silk linen frocks
and nosegays of yellow and
white daisies with bftby's
breath were selected for
Miss Maureen Fennelly, the
assumed by L a w 1 e r ,
Michael Fennelly, th e
bride's bro(her and Tunothy
Berry.
Theresa Newgard, cousin
and godchild of the bride,
wore a white organdy gown
and carried a simllar
nosegay for ber role as
flower girL
A reception followed in
the home of the bride's
parents.
The i.ide is a graduate of
Marymount High School. a t.
tended Dominican College
and Mount St. Mary'11
College. Her husband ill a
graduate of University High
School, atteoded the U.S.
Naval Academy, served
with the U.S. Marines and
curre11Uy is attending
California State Polytechnic
College.
The newlyweds will reside
in Pomona.
On their way to Carmel and Lake Tahoe are Charles Eugene Ortman
and his bride, the former Anne LoWse Scott, after the Rev. Raymocd Sap.
Us performed thetr double nng ceremony.
Services in Our Lady Queen of Angels Church united in marriage
the couple, who are the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Arthur Scott of
Newport and the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Richard Ortman of Berkeley.
The btide's father escorted her through a ch ... rcb bedecked with
white gladioli, chrysanthemwns and pink ruses. The couple exchanged
rings.
For her wedding day the bride chose a lace-accented. ivory peau de
soie gown with bateau neckline and long tapered sleeves, scattered with
seed pearls and crystal. A chapel length watteau train and an elbow length
veil caught to a headpiece of lace and seed pearls completed her ensemble.
Her bridal bouquet was a cascade of white roses. stephanotis and orchids.
Miss Susan Lynn Scott attended her sister as maid of honor. Brides-
maids were the Misses Victoria Ortman, the bridegroom's sister; Suzanne
Ledin or San Gabriel ; Donna Swangren of Beverly Hi::s; Mary EUen Dlu-
gosch of Storm.lake, Iowa, and Jacqueline Casala of Newport Beach.
They were gowned in cranberry organzine over linens, with necklines
trimmed in ivory lace, and wore headpieces of similar fabric accented by
ivory lace bows . They carried nosegays or pink baby roses.
Doreen Curci of Covina, gowned in a replica of the bridemalds'
dresses, carried a basket of rose petals for her role as flower girl.
Richard Conti of Berkeley was best man ; while Richard Ortman, the
bridegroom's brother; Phillip Doran, Timothy Coleman, Daniel Wolke,
Robert Motta, and Paul Kraus were ushers.
A champagne buffet reception in Mesa Verde Country Club honored
the couple, with 2.50 guests offering congratulations. Guests danced to the
music of Tony Rose. Pink and white floral arrangements provided decol"'
atlons, whUe pastel pint-roses topped the wedding cake. ;rbe bridegroOm's
sister, Miss Kristin Ortman passed the guest bvvk.
Special guests were the benedict's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Eu-
gene Stephens and Mr. and Mrs. Russel Rothschild.
The bride, a graduate of NeWport Harbor High School and the Uni-
versity of Santa Clara, is a National diarity League debutante. She will
work for her elementary teaching credential at California State College in
Hayward.
Her husband, an alumnus of St. Mary's High School and University
of Santa Clara, is working fo; his masters degree in English.
The couple will make tb.etr home in Hayward.
Cross-Country Honeymoon
Home Rites Unite Couple
A home ceremony con-
ducted by the Rev. Roger
Betzworth united in mar-
riage Rosalie Marianne Rid·
dell and Michael William
Thomas of Hun till gt on
Beach.
The brlde, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Halliday
Riddell of Huntington
Beach, was given in mar-
riage by her father.
For the arternoon
ceremony she selected a
chantl.lly lace gown styled
with a fitted bodice, sabrina
neckline and long tapered
sleeves. Her bouffant skirt
nowed into a chapel train,
and the seed pearllJ trim.
ming the yoke we re
repeated in the neckline and
the train. Petals of lace and
organza also were edged in
pearls and held her veil of
silk illusion. A cascade of
pink roses and ·carnations
centered with a rose cor-
sage completed her wedding
attire.
Miss Helen Arand was
maid of honor . a n d
brldesmaids were t h e
Misses Leslie Behan of
Burbank, Elizabeth Mace of
Laguna Beach; Judith Hall,
PenticlDn, ·Canada, a n d
Wendy Saunders, the bride's
cousin .
--For--the""dotible -rftlg-rtte"s
the bridal attendents were
Jdentjcally ggwned. in 11.oor· _
length gowns of I i g h t
chartreuse linen designed
with rounded necklines, fit-
ted bodices and cap sleeves.
The bell-shaped skirts nared
to a dip in back. Matching
headpieces of double bows
held iUuslon veiling and they
carried nosegays of pink
carnations.
Debor ah Su 11 ivan,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
James B. Sullivan o( La
Habra, served as nower girl
MRS. MIC HAEL W. THOMAS
Virginia Home
carrying a basket of pink Ronald A. Crowder, William and attended Golden West
roses and carnations. Martin, Leo Martin and College. She plans lo con·
Byron Olcott served the Walter O. Behan. tinue her education in the
bridegroom. son of Mr . and The couple now are en East.
Mrs. Grover L. Thomas, as route to Arlington, Va ., Her husband also was
best man and ushers were where they will make their graduated from Marina and
Craig Thomas, and Bruce home. attended Golden West prior
Riddell, brothers or the ' The bride was graduated to his enlistment in the U.S
newlyweds; Robert Ray and from Marina High School Armed Forces.
David Burdeen. 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 Bright summer Oowers ll
adorned the tables during
the garden reception for 200
guests following the wed·
ding. Assisting were the
Mmes. R. Renard Sandore.
Laguna Beach School of Art and Design
brlde'1 slrter and maid of •--------------------honor and Mrs. Charles
FALL PROGRAM
SEPT. JO • D!C. 7 Lawler, bridesmaid.
Stephen Frogtey attended
hls brother as best man,
while usher duties were
Beech Babes
Ever)' Wednesday at 7
p.m. members of TOPS
.Beach Babes convene at
Huntington Beach H i g h
Scbool. tor programs.
HB TOPS Club
Allen School 11 th e
meeting plaice for member1
of Huntlngloft Boacb TOPS
Pof.n1 Pindter1 at 7 p.m.
ff"'1 Monday.
Peering
EDWARD L Stearns of
Corona del Mar bas been
named to the organWng
committee of tbe Diabetea
Association or s 0 u l b e r n
California'• annual Lantern
Ball
A PATIO RESTA party
doubltd .. a weddins ln-
nlveraary receptfon 1 n d
Jooepb De Franco'• birth·
day party for b• and his
wife at their Cameo SborM
Around
"hacienda." The De FrAJI·
cos have recently returned
from South Bend, Ind.,
where De FtanC{) WU the
vice president of t h e
Studebaker Corp. Some area
people in attendance were
Dr. and Mn. Robert Croo·
ca, Don BUJ"DI, EdwaN
Smith, .ii of cameo Shorea :
Mr. and Mr1. Peter Aren·
drup of the Bluffs and Mr.
and Mn. Granville Lanldell ot Back llaf.
Day I l••11ln1 a...._
IOGll l UNTZ
DAYID SCHNAllL
IOGll AIMITION•
AINOLD ICHIPllN
lunt OS.OOD
JON ITOOSIAIT
IASIC AND ADVANCED COUISlS
DU.WIN•
COLOI & DU IGN
OIL PAINTING
SCULITUU
WATl.COLO•
LIPI DU.WIN•
s.... ···"'··· ... .,,. ................ ,,. ~ c.,.11 M . na-4t4-1121
T11Hday1 Sfpt,trnbel 10, 1968
Marriage Vows Spoken
All Saints Church In
MRS. HAROLD T. WALLACE
Evening Ceremonies
November
Plans Set
Christ Ohurch by the Sea
is the site planned for the
Nov. 30 wedding of Christina
Petersen and Richard Eric
Nichols of Huntington Park.
The future bride, daughter
d. Mr. and Mrs.· David
Petersen of Newport Beach,
~ an alumna of Newport
Harbor High School She
and her fiance are presently
attending Orange Co as t
College.
T h e be n e d 1 cl·to·be,
stepson and son of Mr . .and
Mrs. Merle H. Hamby, is a
graduate of Huntington Park
High School and is studying
Marine technology at OC:C.
~-----
CHRISTINA PETERSEN
Brld•to-be
FREE ESTIMATE
CHARGE IT!
llarokl ,,_ Walloce
claimed b1I bride. ~· formtr Barbara Win 1
CAmeron during an eve g
service tn AU Sain t a
Ep11eopal Chute.,
P11adeD1.
'nle benedlct. w h o t e
parents are Mr .. and Mrs.
Ray Wa ll ace of San
Clemente, aUended. t h e
University of California at
San Diego for two year&. H1J
bride, who a ttended. Pitzer
College in Claremont, 11 the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ~
William Cotdham Cameron
of Puadena. The couple will
continue their stud.lea at the
University of California,
Santa Barbara In the fall
The bride wu escorted to
the altar by her father for
the services performed. by ·
the Rev. Alfred E. Norman.
She were a gown or shanhmg
with a yoke or netting ap-
pUqued with tiny roses, en-
tirely designe d and
b 8"'D'd made b y -til e
bridegroom's moUter . A
bubble ot netting tell from
n ower1 in her hair. Yellow
and white tuberous be&onias
tonned her bouquet.
Gowned 1n yellow and car·
rying yellow and white
chrysanthem ums and Wood-
burn Abbey roses were the
attendanta, th e. bride'• lilt.er
MW Christy Ann Cameron
as maid of honor ; 1be
bridegroom'• &later, Miu
Pamela Gay Wallace, and
th e ,,. Misses Jane A n n
Martin, Patricia D r a p e r
Phillips and Mary Jane
Wallace, brideamaJds.
Rick Wallace stood as
best man, and the bride's
brother J ames Camero~
John Ser encea, J ohn Puma
and Michael Goodman were
ushers.
After a reception at .the
Huntington-Sheraton h o t e 1
the couple Jeft for a weddln&
tour through Hawaii.
Guests arriving from out
of town included· Miss Mary
Jane Roberts, the bride's
former roommate; Mrs.
Edwin Cox of New Me'lico,
the bride's aunt; Mr 1 .
Lawrence L a w s o n of
Kenilworth, Ill., the brlde'1
godmother; Mr. and Mrs.
Ray W. Wallace or Costa
Mesa, the grandparents of
the benedlct; Mrs. Samuel
Bryant of Yorba Llnda, the
grand m other of the
benedJct, and Mrs. Harvey
Bissell of Florida , th e
grandmother of the bride.
QUICK
C•tch up qu fc~ly 011 l•c1I
'"•~h. R11cl your comp1ct,
compr1h1nll,.. hom•town odl-
tlori of tlio DAILY •ILOT.
We'll clean your
draperies for only ...
l oo lso 2so PER WIDTH PER WIDTH PER WIDTH \
unlllMd up le 3' Iona unhned.~ to 5' lont unllnM S' te t' ...
PRICE INCLUDES TAKING DOWN AND REHANGING. 4t HOUR SERVICI.
P•nney• exclu1lvt nt w procttl tlten1 ell typt1 of dr•p•rles b••utifully, ~r•f>Mi"
th1t could nevtr b• cle1n•d b•for• fnen be•ufy pl••fs •f no erltt ch1r9e ).
M•~•• them look and fe•I •lme1t lll k1 new.
PENtlEYS. CLEANING SaYICE
drap1rt. • .,....._.. • blcn.t. • c:lecoroter pmows • occlltt rup. . . •;· .
"
1
I
I
l
j
I 1
'
t •.
' I
'
I
. -. . . . -..........
If DAA.V PllGT •
S11ri Mishap Sent Grid A~e to 1Movies.
B1 ll:All!;" GIJSTKEY
.... o.llr"" .....
Oii •Ill.DOY AUi\lll aflarnooo ln Wle,
lour Ulll""117 Of SOulh<nl caulorn!a r.otllllll plA)'on piled out Of a M<ldel T
and ru fer the IW1 when tbe Balboa
Pl..-~ lode;J.
Jt w11 a 1cene U1n to what you
ml&l>t ,,. on tho boach today, excopt
that IWlm suits Wlftl bagper 1 the hair
WU 1bo.rter and parted ln the mJddle.
Tbe body 1urfm took to the wave.
and yell~ u.dted}y because the swi
• WU up, Tbl1 WU • bold croup and
evt.n the tallest waves were chaUeng·
ed.
Suddenly there waa a cry for help.
Marlon MichMI Moni&on, a lanky
l).year-old tackle, was floundering. Jit.
wu dragged to the beach by fellow
aurfera.
F~·two years tater, Jobn W1yoe
reliv"fd the lncident at his breakfast
tab!( In 81.)'1bare1.
"I didn't wet rlaht when I caulbt
this blg wave and 11-.nded hard oa th9
bottom on my right shouldu," be ez.
plained.
Young Morrllon had torn sever al
1houlder lla:a.mentl ln the mlahap and
tbe injury 1000 curtailed a promillng
football career at USC.
"I bad sprained a knee on lhe
frelhman team the prevloUJ fall and
hadn't played much yet at SC. I played
most of my sophomore 1euon, thougb.
Howard Jones had me at linebacker
oa defense and tackle on offense.
"But th.lit dam aboulder gave me
Ota all durln& that '28 1euon. l've
never known such pain."
Sur&ery to repair injuries like
Wayne's weren't as common 1n 1926 &a
they are now and the future rum actor
wasn 't looking forward to the '27
1e11on and another 10 weeks of wl.n·
cing every time his shoulder wa1
clouted.
'4But I went to pre-season pracUce
anyway," Wayne recalled.
"I went Utrough the conditioning
program and photo day !or the press,
Then I just decided I couldn't take
another year of pain in that shoulder.
"So I went up to Jones and told him
1 wanted to lay out a year and see if
the shoulder would heal.
"He said: 'OK, but I don't want you
to me that shoulder as an excuse for
not coming baclr. next year. I said,
'Ob no -I won't do that' "
Wayne leaned back and laughed as
he recalled the conversation because
at the time Jonea didn't know how weU
Wayne WU Cettin& alon& with Fo.1
Studios.
"I had a:ouen a Job as a property
man at the studio that summer and
was making '40 a week, which ts
&bout li.lte '400 a week now."
"J had been watching ·John Ford
direct films all summer and Was gel·
ting pretty interested in the bu.sines&. I
was tak.inC pre-law at SC but my in··
terests were focusing more and mare
at the studios and I dropped out of
school."
During the 1917 season, Wayne went
to Palo Alto to catch the USC.Stanford
game and remembers s:itUnc in the
stands with a Palo ·Alto Tlmea and
seeing bis: picture on the sports -pege.
"It wu a liWe embarruaing -it
was like seeing my name in the prtr
I .
irtro and I wasQ't ev9n era. the loam."
Meanwhile, back at tbe 1tuaJo~
Wayne w a1 an tb6 rlle. After abovlng
props aroond for Hftl'al month.I, Ford
made him an u&lltant director.
Hil flnt projeot Ill Ill.ti poa!Uoo WU
a ft.Im ca.lied "Salute,1• an epic deallnc
wlth Ule at tho U.S. Naval ~y.
Tb~e were football acene1 ln the
acrlpt and Ford Wed W•)'l'le" about
the pos<iblUty ol laldn& 17 USC foot-
ball players to Allnepolla. The only
hitcb was that the players would have
to leave 1chool two weeks early in
June.
"The studio people asked me who
they should talk. to at SC and I told
them the dean of men, wbo .J knew
pretty well. But they said no, they'd go s.. Sari Pace 17
" . SAVED l'ROM SURF
John W~yne
King Arthur Ashe
Eyes Militant Role
McLain Shoots for 29th
FOREST HlLLS, N. Y. (AP) -
Arthur Albe Jr., the first Negro man
ever to win a major t.emis cham· .
PiomhtP. •dmltted Monday that be is
caught up in the black power struggle.
110nce I De'YU thought about it -I
never looked back," the 25--year~ld
Army lieutenant from Richmond, Va.,
said after beating Holland's Tom Ok·
ker, 14-12, ~7, 8-3, 3~, &-3 for the U.S.
Opea crown.
"Now I know [ have to look back.
Everybody is conscious of black
pawer, white power, purple power,
whatever you say. r am black. I have
to recognize that.
"A man has to study the past il be it
to plan for the future."
Ashe , born the son of a truant of·
ficer Jn Richmond, once was not
permitted to play ever> on the park
courts of Richmond.
Ashe said he hoped to work with
\Vhitney Young's Urban League, a
civil rights; body, when he gets out of
the Army next February.
"I'd like to work with kids -Mr.
Y1>ung was here to watch me play Sun·
day. He talked to me about it," t b e
slender Negro said.
Aihe, ~ming philosophical, 1aid
the country waa in the throes of a
revolution, and that he fell he should
shoulder his part of the burden.
"Among the black people, there are
mJUt:ants, moderates and con-
servatives," Ashe said. "A man must
make his decision."
Asked into which of these categories
he placed himsell, the new tennis king
replied:
"Well, I'm not a conservative. I'm
not a moderate, either. But there are
varying degrees of militants.
"There are those who want to kill
and want to hurt people. 1 don't
necessarily go along with them. But I
must find my place."
Ashe saJd there were places in the
black movement for men such as
HA.W A.IIA.N GOLFER
REMA.INS IN COMA.
HONOLULU (AP) -Golfer Ted
1.iakalena r emained 1n deep coma ear·
ly today after he was found floating
face down in shallow water off !Ghio
Beach in Waikiki.
A spokesman at Kaiser Hospital
s:iid Makalena's vital life sigtis re·
m:iined stable but that U:ie prognosis
"is guarded for the recovery of brain
functions "
It was still undetermined whether
Makalena, 34. who won the Hawaiian
Open Golf Tournament in 1966, hit his
head on hard.packed sand while diving
or suffered some sort of seizure.
When Makalena was admitted Sun·
day, there w& no pulse and no blood
pressure. A nurse said drugs, heart
massage and oxygen restored the life
1nctions.
Stokely Carmlcbael. and H. Rap
Brown.
"You dm't need too many of these
men, but you need two or three just to
keep everybody honest," Arthur ad-
ded.
Albe 1aid be wu dl.Jcrlminated
against f!Very day but could cite no
specific in8tallces.
"I'm hurt wben I aee other black
people hurt," be 'laid.
GLENN WHITE
Sports Editor
Will Work for BBC
Britain's Olympic Pixie
On Sidelii1es for '68
Great Britain's monopoly of Olym-
pic long jump gold medala h ap·
parently at an end with the revelation
that pWe-like Mary Rand will not be
representing the Union Jack in the
1968 Olympic Games at Me;iico City.
Mary wonl9&t distaff leaping com·
petition at Tokyo with an Olympic
record of 22-2¥, while English team·
mate Lynn Davies took the men's long
jump gold pie c e wtth a 26-S'U.
performance.
Davles wlU be back to defend his ti-
t~ next-month and Miss Rand will be
describing bis Jumps to the folks back
flllllllllllll,j
WHITE
WA.SH
.,111111111111,J
•'-•NM WHITI
home via BBC. She was not given a
spot on her country's '68 squad
because injuries side lineJ her from a
majority of England's major meets.
And the . team selection is based on
overall showing for the entire cinder
season.
s~~·ti been hampered by lorn thigh
muscles and Achilles tendon problems.
She was a winner over the BO·meter
hurdles in tlle ·1967 Pre Olympics in
Mexico City and it was during that
meet that she gave a special
shamrock lucky charm to Davies prior
to male long jump hostlllties.
Hoewver, It wasn't quite lucky
enough as Russia's Igor Ter-Ovanslan
equalled the worid record with an 8.35
meters (27-4%) leap. Davies picked up
the silver medal with an 8.13 meters
jump.
Throwlnf the javelin at South Lakt
Tahoe la like compeUns oat of a
closet.
So diacloaea BW Toomey of Laiuna
Beach, wbo came witllln a wb!Uer of
break.log the world decathlon record
as be captured tile U. S. Olympic Leam
trials over tbe weekend a& Tahoe.
''Tbe tree-1 that are all at6tmd to
tract really do somethlag to you men·
tally," Toomey relates. "I'd much
prefer to run and Jump ln Merleo Cl-
ty ,11 be adds.
.. Wblle BUI was throwioi out of
Tahoe's close&, 131 bottles of cbam·
pagne were being consumed Saturday
at Laguna Beach Country Club as
famly and friends celebrated older
brother Dick'& marriage.
Harry Dean Hanson of Huntington
Beach has signed a letter of intent to
enroll at UCLA, where be hopes to
compete in crew .
Would you belleve that only nine
day1 remain till Orange County foot..
ball a la 1968 get1 unde way wltb the
Sept. 19 Mater Del.Santa-Ana duel at
Sant.a Ana Bowl?
The Coast Rangers soccer team of
the Orange Coast area m_ay be ready
ror a comeback after a dismal show·
ing in 1967. They'll have pro Leif
Werneid, on loan from the LA Wolves,
I.he former Ranger whiz J i m
McWilliams in the '68 Uneup.
Addition of those two will make
coach Brian McCaughey's kickers
tough to hand.le -Jlke the Ranger out·
fits that racked up four straight league
titles before the '67 disaster.
Loyalty Deluxe
MIAMI, Okla . -Miami has at least
one loyal high school football fan .
A doctor ran an ad in tbe Miami
News-Record Monday, stating:
"Effective Friday and continuing
through football season, my oUice wW
close at 4 p.rn. on Fridays."
Lindgren, Mills Fail
Tracy Smith Wins 10,000
SOUTII LAKE TAHOE, Cali!. (!JP!)
-Tracy SmJth'1 trt.lnln& program
pa.id oH bett. than Gerry Undgren's
and Billy Milla:' .and th~t is why today
be ba1 an Olympic berth i01 the other
two don't.
Sm.kb beat Lindlr'tll and Mills, plus
Van NN<m and 'rom Laria, in U:ie
10,000 mem nm at .,. U.S. Olympic
traet aocl Dold lrlall MOl1day witn the
bdt -... nccirdod at attitude compuab)e to Echo Swnmlt's 1,m
feet. b 0 ,, .... Jevel -a saudy
30:CIO.t. Van Neloo!I llnlabed oecond and
Larla third IA> alao win Olympie berths 'lbile Milli, a )(.vine Uevtenant Wbo
...., Iba 10,000 at tho Tolcyo OIY111piel
four yean •101 wu tourUt and ~ tbt callopla chollljll .. Iba
paot -7ean, "u llltll. ~ on)J !ht llrll llir .. l!When at
tbt lrlall to °" IA> Ille 0)1mplca, Miiia
~,
and Lindgren are on the outside look·
ing in.
For bllll.s It i1 the end of the road.
For Lindgren, there is a bare chance
he can still make it to Mexico City and
the games next month, but don't bet
he will.
Undgren bu been suffering from an
Acltlll61 tendon injury ror more than a
mcmtb. Lut weet, be appeared to bo
over it and ran ~ good practice
races. That prompted the H, 130
pound bundle Of runnln& eynamlte IA>
try foe Olympic berths in both the
10,000 and l,000.
Linclgrelt fell out of comptt!Uon In
the 10,000 Monday with about a h&U
doun laps lo 10. While Laria, Vin
Nelson and Smlth riced on each •
'
other's heels nearly the rest of the
wa y, Lindgren kept falling farther
back and when he finished he limped
noticeably.
Charlie Greene, Jim Hines and Ron-
nie Ray Smith all clocked 10 seconds
flat to lead the way Into today's
semifinals. All II entries ln the 100 td·
vanced to the semis, wb.lch will be
rollowed later today by the final.
Tom Wyatt and Ge<JU Vanderstock
won heats in the 400 hurdles and Ray
Aninrtoo and Wade Bell toolr: he1ts In
the 800.
D a V e Maggard led a h o t put
quallfteN Monday with 1 heave of 62
feet, 2~ lnchea (18.96 meUtrs).
World record holden Jim Ryun and
Randy Matson were among thoae who
qualified on the 800 and 1bot, mpec-
tlvelr. Ryt.n ran a 1: 50.0 to flnlsh
fOW'th In his heat while Mabon tossed
the shot 61-~ on his only put.
Tonight Against Angels
By EARL GUSTKEY
Of n. D1llY Plllt 11•ff
Denny McLain hopes to stride one
step clo6er le> baseball immortality
tonight at Anaheim Stadium where
he'll be on the firing line after his 29th
victory of the season.
A win against Angel starter Andy
Messersmith will put the organ-
playing Detroit fireballer one win
away from the first 30 win season in 34
)'&ars.
Dizzy Dean was the last to do it -a
30.7 season with the Cardinals. The
last American League pitcher to win
30 wu Lefty Grove, who bagged 31 in
1931.
McLain will have the odds with him
th.is evening. He's been nearly un·
beatable on the road ttrls year, posting
a 16-1 trtvellng mark. At home, he's
12-4.
D•T•OIT CALlfO.MIA ..,,lll'M Urllrlll
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s11ni.r,cf '2 l 1 Fn-1,u l I
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C1Ulofnlll ........ , ...... , IOG llOCI -,, > lOl -Ottroll 2, C1Utornl1 3. 29 -If\ ty,
L.olldl, $1lrt-. Kil - W. HortOl'I (Sl), S!an1•l'
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flme -2:10, Altel'IClll'l(t -I0.29t.
Foster Rips
Rouse, Holds
Ring .Crown
WASHINGTON (AP) -LI g ht
heilvyweight cbamPiOO Bobby Foster
is willing to fight anyone who'll pay to
get into the ring with him. Roger
Rouse has learned tt ls a costly ex-
perience.
Fosler c&Tved rivers of blood on the
fa c e of the well-regarded challenger
and stopped him on a technical
knockout at 2:34 of the fifth round Ln
their nontiUe fight Monday night.
It was the third exhibition victory in
six weeks for the lean and mean
Foster who is collecting as many
paydafs as possible ·.vith his ne"W
crown while waiting for a challenger
willing to give hlm the Sl00,000
guarantee he demands for a title bouL
Rouse's backers had discussed put-
ting up the stake, but gambled on a
good exhibition showing instead. They
saved a great deal of money.
Rouse, once the No. 1 challenger lost
a great deat of blood and prestige.
Foster, making his first ring ap-
pearance as champion in h i s
hometown of Washington, turned
Rouse's face into a red mHk. Riffing
long left jabs and throwing an OC·
castonal hard right cross, be opened
cuts above House's right eye, above
and below his left eye, and bad blood
streamlng from his nose when the
ti&ht was stopped.
"He wouldn't have been around
much longer," shrugged the 29·year·
old Foster.
The 6-foot-3*·inch FOEiter. making
the most of an advantage of nearly
half a foot in his reach, won all four
rounds on 1.11 three judging cards. He
led by margins of 40-34 , 40-32 and 4(1..
31.
Wh•t next ror Foster art.tr the
lopsided victory over a t o p
challenger?
"Fight •iain in another three
wetks," he answered. "I don't know
who. Whoever we can get -u lonr u
the money ls rllhl"
Foster dem&Ddl that any challenpr
match the •too.cm guarantee ht gave
Dick Tiger to buy hls Ions-deserved
1hot at the UUe May 24. Foster made
good his Investment by knodtlng out Tia er. But hi• punJshJng trtumph ove.r
Rouse could d.lscouraac others from
gambling agaJnst him .
But in Messersmith, McLain m.lgbt
be up again.st a formidable foe. The
former Orange County prep-ace near-
ly tossed a no-hitter at Boston Friday
night while posting a 4.0 triumph. lie
wound up with a two-hitter.
Should McLain win X>, he'll be the
first right bander to do so In 48 years.
Jim Bagby was 31-12 with Cleveland in
192Q.
The other American League 30-
game winners were Cy Young (twice),
Walter Johnson {twice), John Chesbro,
Ed Walsh, John Coombs and Joe
Wood. Chesbro was 41-U in 1904.
Mickey Lolleh finld a two.hitter AIJd
Willie Horton, Mickey Stanley ancl,Al
Katine slammed home runs, leatl:ng
the Detroit Tigers to a 6-0 victory over
California Mooday night that booldd
their Ainerlcan League lead to eight
games, ~
'Ibe victory, c o u p 1 e d with
Baltimore's 6-2 l06s to Washington,
reduced the Tigers' pennant clinchillg
magic number to 10. ·
The only hits aU Lolich, 14·9, were a
third inn.ing single by A u r e: l i <l
Rodriguez and an eigtth inning doubJe
by Tom Satriano.
DAZZLING DENNY -Detroit Tiger pitcher Denny McLain takes
the next step in his quest for 30 victories tonight when he faces the
CallfornJa Angels in Anaheim Stadium. The right-hander who
hopes to become the major league's first 30-game winner in 34 Years
will be shooting tor his 29th win against the Angels. '
U.S. Track Trials
I
I
----•
Newpo~t Harbor Today's Closlng
EDITION
voe 'lif, NO. 218, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES NEWPORr GEACH, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1968 1EN CENTS •
Coast Cities Getting Hard Nosed on Hippie ~
By RICHARD P. NAl,L
01 ne o.11r" '"'" 111tt
lC laws are, as one writer put it, "the
crystalized prejudices of society,''
Orange Coast cities are getting
hardnosed about hippies.
City offl.dals, of course, would not
a!mit passing a law aimed at one seg-
ment of society. It would be un-
c:onstitutional on the face.
But the hippies came, the citizen
wrath came and the laws came.
. .
Laguna Beach passed a resolution
condemning hippies and punctuated it
later with an urgency anti-loitering
law aimed at clearing sidewalll of
any clustering of the bearded-beaded
set.
Laguna Beach soon found a section
of its ocdinance chopped down in
m uni c i·p al e<1urt, ruled un-
constLtutional. Stricken was the sec-
tion that made it illegal to stand on
sidewalks except as near as physically
pouible to the bulldlng line.
The rortlon ottlawin& sitting, kneel-
ing or .. lying on the sidewalk continues
unchallenged.
Laghna Councilmen have l>o\!nced
back since the court ruling, replacing
the 1tricten section with one pt:;gged
down ~Y language from a 1965
Supreme Court ruling.
It ouUaws blocking s i d e w a I k
passage after being directed by a
peace officer to move on.
Hear•'• in Right Place
First flag salute this morning was a bit confusitig
for some members of Mrs. Irene Newton's kinder-
garten class ·at Newport-Mesa school dJstrict's
Lindbergh School, but y~uogsters couldn 't be fault-
ed. for any lack of sincerity. School opened today
and these freshly scrubbed. five-year-olds began a
new adventure.
Humphrey Hits Wallace
In Southlafl:d Campaign
By BRUCE BENSON
Of n. DellY Pllift Sl.tf ..,,
REDONDO BEACH -Vice Presi-
dent Humphrey today denOOf)Ced
George Wallace as a segregationist
and made his first major attempt of
the presidential campaign to link
Richard Nixon with ttie ultra-rightist
vote.
"There is ooe candidate this year
who bases his vexy campaign on Utt;
idea of apartheid," Hwnphrey told
California aerospace w o r k e r s
gathered outside the large TRW plant
here.
"There Is another candidate who
does not do so. But.he is openly com-
Newport Beaches
Clear of P eo ple
Along Newport's sun-baked beoches,
today was a carbon copy of Monday -
except for the people.
There were few of them, lifeguards
reported.
It was a sharp contrast to the last
day of the summer vac&<tion. An
estimated 55,000 beacbgoers turned
out Monday, most of them youngsters.
·•tt was a lot bigger crowd than we
had anticipated," said a lifeguard.
"But the surf was very ligbt. so ~
had to make only three rescues. and
they were routine."
A skeleton crew of guards was on
duty in lhe mid-80-degree heat Today
the temperature was about the same.'
but there were even fewt:r guards.
with only a half dozen guard towers
manned.
Thwnh Fun-Boy, 3,
Stuck in Door Lock
Sam Clark, age 3, had a sore thmnb
to Rick out today.
Newport Beach Orem.en remooded to
a e&ll at C9 M SL Mondey wtiere they
found Sam had his thumb caught in a
push button lock on a bedroom door.
FiN?men extracted the thumb by
dlsmantlini the lock.
peting for the same votes as George
Wallace -for the votes of people who
want "at best to slow things down when
it comes to programs that offer the
way out of tension and trouble in
America."
ll was the Democratic presidential
nominee's strongest effort of the
young campaign to capitalize on Nix-
on's 1upposed appeal among bard core
conservatives aod voters of the Deep
Soutll.
It also mar.ked his first outright at~
tack un the Wallace candidacy, which
Humphrey denounced as "third party
extremism.''
He charged that the Republican par-
ty this year offers voter1 "the old
coalition whcicb prefers to remain
silent w'ben it cemes to human rigbts
and opportunity."
Humphrey arrived in Los Angeles
Monday night and was expected to
leave for Houston sometime later to-
day. He addressed several thousand
Jtandlng TRW workers at noon irom a
podium put up in an inter-courtyard of
the spa~ plant.
lie made only passing references to
the Vietnam 1Var, and hammered bard
on the problems or race relations.
The choice of the 1968 elections Is
''between tlle America or the Old Era
and the America of the New Day,"
Humphrey said.
"Turn away from the Old Era.
Choose the New Day. Turn away from
the Old Era when an American boy
who fought in an integrated bunker at
Khe Sam could come home to a
5e~egated slum in America."
JO HN WAYNE
REMI NISCES
A 1hou1der injury 1uffered while h.e
waa being pulled out o( tbe surf at
Newport Beach one August afternoon
42 years ago altered the career OC a
young USC football player.
The lad waa never able to get back
in the 1wlng o( things on t.be gridiron.
But he became one of America'•
but known men -John Wayne.
Waynt r~nilCel with DAILY PILOT
sporll write Earl Gulllto y on P11ea
16-17 of loday'a paper.
I
'
Newport Soldier
Suffers Wounds
In Viet Action
Airmy Spec. 4 L. Scott Markel, 21,
oon ol Mr . and Mrs. Louis Martel,
2078 Bona.ire . Way, Newport. Beach,
has been wounded in bQth thighs and
will be in the Quoog Tri Marine
Hospital, Quong Tri, Vietnam, for the
next ttlree months, according to in-
formation received by his ~ents .
"He wrote that he was in pretty
good Jhape.," Mrs . Markel said today.
"We feel .he is lucky to be ative and
are grateful that be is no worse. So
many were killed ir. the action."
Spec. 4 Market and his company
were on a search-and-destroy mission
in support of a group of airmen when
the young infantryman was wounded
by enemy fire.
He ~ a graduate ci. Mater Dei High
School. and Orange Coast Q>Uege.
The family said friends cen write
him at Company Ci First Battalion,
11th Infantry. Sth Infantry Division,
APO, San Francisco.
* * * Flier Knocks Out
Viet AA Gun Site
A Newport Beach Navy flier Tues·
d.v knocked out a troublesome an·
tiaircraft gun site in North Vietnam's
southern panhandle, the Associated
Press reported today.
Lt. (JG) Peter T. Reed, 26, fired an
air-to-ground m i s 1 i l e that put the
enemy buns out or operation.
Flying an A4 Skybawk from the car-
rier USS Bon Homme Rl.cbard, Reed
said be was searching for supply
trucks when 85mm opened up on hi1
group 22 miles northwest of Vlnh.
"We pulled around and spotted the
guna in a group of trees about • mile wett of tft'G highway.'' Reed aald. •·1
!ired my air-to-ground ml.Idle. It lm ·
pacted and, almost tnst.aDUy, three or
the situ stopped flttn&."
The dilpltdl d l d not give Roed'o
rtretl oddrMI.
NEW YORK (AP) -Tbo ttock
market doepeoed IU do<llne In mod·
erately acti~ tradin& lat.e th.ts After-nooa. !See quolatk>N, P11t1 10.ll ).
'
Costa Mesa councilmen shelved a
similar ordinance recently to keep an
eye on Laguna efforts. They expect to
take action now using Laguna's ex-
perience as a bench mark.
The recent juz festival that brought
multitudes of yoUJIC ln a pall al mari-
juana smoke is said to have been
somet.hiJ>g of a catalyst to Costa Mesa
concern. It was a tense time.
Huntington Beach has seen its hippie
infestation coofined largely to the
bllehted downtown area where one
psychedelic shop initially set tile stage
for tighter controls of business llcera--
ing.
The Huntington Beach couodl ha•
assumed the right to refuse or revoke
business llcensea for enterprises
thought not in the best interests of
public health, sa!ety and welfare. Two
psychedelic shops have been ref used
licenSe6.
Tempered In the forge ol Easter
Week, Newport Beach baa lone been
tough on non-affluent n o m ad 1.
Laguna readjusted the language of itl
own ordinance agalnat 1leeplng in
vehicles last spring to fit the wording
of a Newport Beach onllnance that
had been coµrt tested.
Currently, Newp<rt Beach has in the
works a two-pronged ordinance re. ..
quiring permits for usembllea oo
(See HIPPIES, P11e Z)
Two Cops Charged
Fired Shots at Newton Headquarters
OAKLAND !UPI) - A dozen
oartiirle bullets were fired early tOOay
at the headquarters of Black Panther
founder Huey P . Newton. Two white
policemen were formally charged with
the shooting.
The bullets smashed through the
£ront window and into a large display
poster of Newton· about 1:30 a.m. No
one was inside.
The shooting occurred a day after
Newton was convicted of involuntary
manslaughter in the slaying of an
Oakland policeman last fall. He was
acqu.itted of wounding another officer.
Police Chief Charles Gain an-
nounced a citizeo reported the shots
were f i r e df rom a police car. He
promptly ordered the suspension or tJie
two offi.cers, Richard V. Williams, 28,
and Robert W.W. Farrell, 26.
Six hours later, Gain announced the
officers, both with three r.ears service,
were charged with ' assault with
fireanns on an uninhabited dwelling.''
ll convicted, they could face a sen·
tence of up to five years in prison.
Gain said Williams and Fa"rrell were
on duty and in uniform at the time. He
Look into It, Cit y Urg ed
said both bad been drinking.
The weapon used was a carbine rif-
le, standard equipment in Oakland'•
black and white t>atrol cars.
The Black Panther headquarten ls
located In an aged store front, .about
three miles from downtown Oakland.
It was the1second police attaclc in-
volving BlacK Panthers in the nation
this mooth. A group of pollcemen.
many offduty, are accused of
assautting a group of Black PantMr s
in a Brooklyn cri4Ilillal courta building
last Wednesday.
Old Dump an Oil Field?
By JEROME F. COLLINS
ot TM Cllllf f'lllt Steff
Newport Beach's abandoned city
dump is a m11llon-<lollar property -
ma)"be more, if there's oil there.
In tny case, now isn't the time for
the city to put UM. 40-acre parcel on
the market.
These are among the principal fin-
dings of a $6,000, year-long study on
what the city sbould do about the site
at the end of Costa Mesa's 19th Street
near the Santa Ana River.
•
Wilsey · & Ham, planning and
engineering consultants, submitted a
65..page report to municipal authorities
IOOay. DUMP • ..,..
The Arcadia firm, hired by the City
Council after the city shifted 118
disPQ6al operations to the Coyote Can-
yon county dump, makes three ba!lc
recommendations :
-The city should retain ownetship ot the site for several more years,
during which time emerging patterns
or ~th around the site would assure
a "significant'increase" in value. By
1980, the parcel -now valued between
$720,000 and $880,CMXI -coo.kl be worth
''as much a.s $1.2 million or '30,000 an .acte."
-Short-term development or the
property, througt, l e a s i n g ar-
rangement, should take the form ot
either a traJler park or an 18-hole,
tltree·par golf course or possibly a
combination of the two.
-Nothing sbould be done about any
dev~lopment of the site until the city
''ioqulres into the possibility" Of tap-
ping it for oil.
The hitter recommendation would
call for another study, and not by
Wilsey & Ham.
NEWPORT'S FOftTY ACRES MAY BE GOLD MINE-BLACK GOLD
Consulta nts Say Keys Marine Development an Unlikely Dream
'
"Nearby production operations and
preliminary structural studies," says
the report, "indicate that the site may
contain enough oil to be economically
exploited. Although ttiere a r e
ordinances against drilling in Newport
Be&cb and Costa Mesa, slant drilling
from adjacent county land might be
feasible.
"Investigation or oil production is
Nixon Ups Lead
·Poll Also Shows Wallace Strengtlt
NEW YORK (UPI) -Rlchard M.
Nixon appears to have widened hl11
lead over Hubert H. Humphrey in the
presidential contest during the past
week, Sindllnge.r'a Daily S u r v e y
reported Monday.
An even 11harper gain was registered
by the thlrd party candidate, former
Gov . George C. Wallace, the survey
reported on the bt-111 of telephone In-
terviews conducted with 1,817 .adults or
voting age In lhe four-day ptTlod S.pt.
s.a.
The survey, publilbed by Slndlingcr
& Co .• a market reaearch organbation
bued In Norwood, Pa., aated thlJ
question: "Who would you yourseU
want to 9H e~ Pl'ff)dent if the
election were ~Id todayt
The reaulta. c.."'ltDpared wtth percen·
t•ge1 obtained fr;\."'11 1,844 intttvlew1
Aue. ll·Sept. i, rouo.,:
NOW WEEK AGO
Wallace 17.4 15.7
Nixon 34 .0 33.7
Humphrey 26.l 28..S
None of 3 8.9 9.5
No opinion 13.6 12.6
The 1Jecood question was: "Wl'lo do
you think most other people want as
their next president?" Tbe nsulta:
NOW WEEK AGO
Walt.ce !U 10.3
Nixon 71.e 35.2
Humphroy 22.1 25.4
No opinion 25.8 29.l
The third qUeJtion: "Wbo do you
lhlnk will 1ctually be eleci.d In
November," produced these resu.tta::
Walla~
Nllioo
ltumphrey
No opinion
NOW WEEK AGO
4.9 3.1
48.1 ~.3
26.7 33.1
19.6 1711
clearly beyond the scope of this study;
however, we recommend that Newport
Beach inquire into the possibility
befol'f: WKl.ertaki.ng action toward
(See DUMP, Page Z)
Orange
Weather
If you liked the weather today,
you'll love it tomorrow 'cause
there isn't much change. Coast-
al temps will push toward 80
while inland regioo.1 ani tabbed
at a brow-mopping 95.
INSIDE 'l'ODA l'
Work tnl~uw program dt·
rigntd to remove uncmplo~td
fa.that from totlfar• roUa in-
1Uit.itcd In Orcngt Courat11.
/'QQ• 7. -· -...
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~ ..,_
·-, »ti M9'llel '' • MlltMI """" ,. It ............ .. ,. ..... c-ty ,
1 MN ,.,..,. 1t " .......... ,.,. " ..... , .... M>ll -.ct ,... lf.11 , ~ .. ., ,,.,..... "
N -o ,. ....... " " ..,,. ..... ..
/
•
• ---------
i
I
' •
•
'
• •
---.......... ~ ...... --........... -•.
DAILY PIL.OT T61Hday, Stpltmbtr 10, 1968
Sighting on Center Site
Newport Beach Ctty-Councilman Howard Rogers,
Woman's Civic League officials Mrs. Louise Hough-
ton {left) and Mrs. Allen Gte share a peek at con-
sultants' report on new civfc center stte selection
study. Rogers will dis.cuss the findings at Civic
League meeting Sept. 17 at 9:30 a.m. in Mariners
Library. Rogers is cha.innan of council's civic cent·
er site committee.
Rookie LA Officer Slain, Newport Plans
2 Others Shot b Gunman To File €barge
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A rookie omce! were wounded before rein-In Boat Sinl<lng
policeman wat a1aJn as he bea:an his forcements killed a rifleman wbo wore
third day on the force and two other o'hly a white T-shirt.
From Page I
DUMP ...
other uses."
Th.e wggestton that the refuse area
mey be squatting over an oil pool is
not surprising. It lies just north of the
Banning tract, an oil field located en-
tirely in county territory.
The und~ground pools of oil now
being sucked out by drilling operations
1n the county, wtere city cod.ea do not
apply, al.lo lie partially under city ter·
ritory, according to petroleum ex·
pert•.
Wilsey & Ham makes no further
corrunent on the subject of oil in the
firm's largely technical report, whicb.
JoeJudes more than two dozen charts, m"'' and graphs. The Newport City Coupcil must now
dec)de whether to ignore the recom·
mendation on the durnp's oil ex-
ploitation potential, as B matter of
policy, or whether to turn the subject
over to the city's Technical Oil
Advisory Committee for further 1tudy.
Wilsey & Ham'• recommendations
on short-tenn use of the property are
based on soil tesls, other engineering
dfb. and development trends in the
area.
A 280-space trailer park, says the
report, could produce revenue to the
city rangiAg up to $29,600 yearly. Max-
imum revenue [rom a golf course,
which would be considerably cheaper
to develop, could total about $20.000
annually. Half of this would come
from the sale of alcoholic beverages at
the clubboUJe.
In the long run , say the consultants.
the dump's best potential for develop.
ment is residential U5e. These homes
would be "land-based dwelling units''
~ause, according to Wilsey & Ham,
there Is little likelihood of Costa
Me1a's long-dreamed Keys Marina
project nearby ever achieving reality.
"E1Umated cost• and the number of
owner• and Juri&diction1 Involved pro-
bably p~lude development of
marina-type residential use around the
Newport Beach property," concludes
the report.
DAILY PILOT
,..,..,... ...... C.11 .. flllti
OltANOI! COAIT l"UILllH1NG COMl"AN'I'
Roh••+ N. w,,d
Pf'l'Sidfnl 11111 PulllltMf
J•di: R. Cur11y
Viet Pmldenf •nd Ge<ltoral M1.,."r
llio,.,11 1C11vll
Editor
Th'"''' A. Mwrpliin1 Mlllfflnt Editor
J1ro11t• '· C•IU11t P111I Niu•~ ti-' Jt1C1t ,ld..,.rlltl~
Cltv EOillH" O!rtcJ..,.
._,.. ..... Offlc•
2211 W11t lalSoa l•11l1v1,J
M1llfn9 Addt1111 P.O. t11 1115 t2••J OtW--c:.• IMM 1 .. W..t "' '''""' ~ ..._..: m '"""'""'nu' ~ ...._, .. ltftlir.tl
•
Policeman Gary W. Murakami, 23,
who was graduated from tbe police
academy only last Friday , died or face
and chest wounds two hours after U!e
gun battle early Monday.
The gunman , Addison Cash1 25 , a
Negro, attempted to hold oil a acore of
policemen but he was killed by of·
ficers firing through the window of his
ground floor apartment in t b e
Crenshaw-Slauson district.
Detectives said he was armed with a
<110-gauge shotgun a n d a .38-caUber
revolver. They said Cash had a record
of arrests dating back to 1957 and
moved into the apartment two days
previously.
Mailrrian Vernon Sims, 28, entered
the inner court of the two story apart·
ment building to deliver mail to
tenants' boxes and was accosted by
the gunman.
"A man came out In a T·shirt,"
Sims told newsmen. "He was carrying
a pistol and a rifle. J said, 'good morn-
ing'."
The man asked if Sims had any mail
! or him and the postman answered
··not yet." Sims said the man did not
thre~ten him.
"As I left the building I saw two of·
ficer.s had arrived," Sims sald. "A
lady hollered out 1t the officers,
'there's a man in the court holding a
gun'."
The officers had responded to a call
from ne!ghbors complaining that a
''nude rifleman" was roaming the
area. They said Addison had been ter·
rorizing ·other residents of the apart-
ment house by eoing from door to door
and dema~ding entry.
Muraktm.i was felled by a shotgun
blast a& he approached the building.
He was appointed a recruit policeman
last AprU 21 and wrui part of the
academy class which was graduated
last week atter 20 we1k1 of tra.ini.ng.
Bike Accident
Kills Musician
A retired musician and resident of
Leisure \Vorld, Scai Beach, was fatally
injured shortly alter noon Monday
when the bicycle he was riding was
struck by a car at an lnter1ectlon
within the retirement community.
KeMeth Whitney, 70, of 1381
Monterey Road was pronounced dead
at the scene, Golden Rain Street and
Aldtrwood Lane.
PoUce ldcntlfled the driver of tht
car 11 Mr!. Mary Smothers, '17, of
13760 Alderwood Lane. She was not
htld.
Beach Man Tops
Sheriff Recruits
Daniel Kina: of Huntinaton Beach led
~he tare:est class Of recruits in the
nt~tory ol the Orange COunty Sheriff's
Department.
K.lng, 23, of 8251 Reilly Drive , was
ran.kod first in physical ability and se-
cond In ovsraU class standina.
Cadet King and 54 otfler men nnd
women Y.'9f't graduated from the
e1w'iff's tr&lnlng academy 1l'I Orange.
The new deputy la 1 Oosll Mesa
Hlth School 1T•du1te and former
M1rtne Nrg&ant ind Vletn•m vl!Qran.
He ii manied and has a four-month·
old daughter.
All the sraduates were a1atp1d to
tilt .-Orana• County Jail ID Sonia
Na for sdva.nced tralalnc.
Newport Beach police today planned
to 11eek a complaint against th6 owner
and operator o! a 32-foot cabin cru11er
who allegedly struck and sank an 18-
foot outboard, then sped from the
scene a1 four per10D1 fioUIJdered in
the water.
A two-count complaint charging hit
and run, and falling to a11lst after an
acdd&nt, will be 1011ght from the
Dlsbict Attorney'& office against War-
ren J . Hoke, 53, of 2017 DeMille Drive,
according to Newport Det. Ken
Thompson.
The charges are misdemeanor of·
fenses under the Harbors and Nav1ga.
lion Code, Thompson said.
The accident occurred some 150
yards oU the Santa Ana River Jetty
about 1 p.m. Saturday. The four oc-
cupants ol the outboard jumped
overboard seconds before the larger
boat &truck.
Fished &afely from the water were
Michael J. Eaton and his wife Doris,
·of Loi 1 Angeles, and Thoma1 D.
Mulherin and his ion, Tbomlll J.
Mulh<rln.
"We-were all In the water waving
and screaming for help," Eaton said
afterward.
"We could see two men come out on
the deck of the other boat,'' 1aid
Mulherin. "There wu no one at the
wheel. They watched u1 for a minute
and then one of theDl mnt to the
wheel, 1ncrea.sed apeed and headed out
to sea."
A lifeauard boat reacued the four in
the water, and another boat was
dispatched to intercept the crui&er.
The second man aboard the lara:er
craft-was idenUfl.td 11 passena:er
Homer N. Davi1 , '2, ot 3915 E. Gage,
Loa Angeles.
Buffalo Sailor
Wins First Race
In Dutchmans
By ALMON LOCKABEY o.•i.-, ............. ..
SAN DIEGO -Tom Allen, Buiralo,
N.Y., drove hl1 16-foot Flfinl Dut-
ch.-ian Class sloop thNUil\. choppy
seas off Mission Bay Monday to win
tile first race ot the FD Olympic
trials.
Allen showed no letup in the
superior boat speed that w.at the key
to hl1 victory Wt week In the North
American championship In th• clu1 at
Mission Bay.
Eight to IO knot breezes kicked up
lumpy seas during the early stages of
the race, forcing crew• to take OC·
casionally to the tr1peze to keep the
sporty FDI on thelr feet.
l·lenry Sprague Ill of Newport
llarbor Yacht Club was .econd during
the first lea: of the etetrt-mlle ract, but
faded badly after Chris Chatain of
Wilmotte, Ill ., moved past him on
downwind run.
' SCOtt Allon o1 NHYC placed fourth
in the apeninc race, Oepln1 him
wlthln 1trlkllla: dl:itance of ttle lffder.
It is Allan's and 5Pf'llUl'I llCOnd btd
for an Olympie berth. Allan tried in
the 6.5 meter1 and Spraru~ took hU in-
itiAl shot in tho Finn 0111.
Tho SO aspirarfta will 1ail two r1CC1i
IXJday, -vo • lu-dly Wedn11dey
and re1ume tha seven Net Hriu on
n1und.ay. The Olympic bP,rth toes
to !ho wlnber ol lho bat Ill out ol th•
1ev1n *' 1erl11.
"·1Ii?t ~r.~---~~~11 Nfltlfy ~~ti; l I ;y;j,"'-, ltl~ -t t ~~ -'l' Nit. "'" -,,
I. ,4rtllvr 'Cf!IA ~llttl N.J. -lt
t. ~~'11..l'ir'lrnl =.1T'!. ~I -11 ' I: ft:!,1!.M:"~1m:'-Ane-_11.
tO Cl\fflll ---';'tyn .... M,Y, -1'-
•
------------------
.
Me·sa's 'HuIDan-Torch'
Improves After Bla·st
A Oosta Mesa man turned Into 1
human ton:b Mon<lay wbeo guollne
exploded as be tried to it.art a
neta:bbor'& car is. ln improved COD•
dldon today, wtth third degree burm
over 30 percent of h11 body.
Harold E. Rankin Jr.. 33, of 1640
Caraway Drive, possibly owes his life
to a pair of quick-thlnki.ng moving
compan~· employe1 who caught blm
and 1motbered the namea Wltbp ro--
tectlve furniture pad1.
PoUce said Ranklt., manager ot a
Shell 1ervlce stalon on Harbor
Boulevard near Date Place, wu prim-
ing the carburetor or a neighbor's auto
at 10:20 a.m. Monday when the
mishap occurred.
The vehicle backfired 11 the victim
worked over tbe engine, spNying him
with blazing fuet and seodlng hiin on a
panicky dash up Caraway Drive
toward a vacant lot.
"He was yellln& something fierce
and calling far help," said Beacon
Moving and Storage Co. workman
Charles DavidloD, 2.5, ·who wu first to
act.
"I hollered .It him and he ran
towards u1," nld Davldaon, wbo wa1
taldnl a c11arettt break wtth co-
worker Denni.I Tuthill, 19, while mov-
lnl • family In the nel(hborbood.
Rankin -bll clothe1 otill bluinl -
headed toward the two santa Ana men
and Davidson threw him onto the lawn
of the Roger Golden home at 1S68
Caraway Drive, ao the namea could be
smothered.
Copter Crashes
Hearin,g Slated
A three-day public hurlng ba1 been
1cbeduled to belln Sept, 25, ID Loo
Angel., °" the two Loo Antele1
Airway• cr11he1 wb.ldl took the Uve1
of 44 penot1.1.
The Nallonal Transportation Salety
Bo•d will hold tbe 1t11lon1 be11Mln1
at 9 a.m. 1n the Cryrtal Room of the
Haclend1 InternaUoaa.1 Hotel near Loi
An1elea International Airport.
The fln:t he;Ucopter Cl'alb oceurrtd
last May 22 near Pcam~ tutn123
lives. The second took place Aua. 14 •t
Compton. It toot 21 lives.
A total of 17 witnesses to the two
crashee have ~en called to testily at
the bearings.
Federal authortUe1 already have an·
nounced that metal fatigue in a rotor
hinge led to tht Aug. 14 cruh. No
cause for the May 22 cr~h has ever
been announced.
Driver Arrested
For ·Marijuana
A Santa Ana man was arrested Mon-
day niQ:ht after CostA Mesa police
stopped h11 car near thelr head·
quarter1 and found what eppeared to
be three plutic bag1 of marijuana on
the no0rboarcb.
Eddie R. Reye1, 22, of 1102 S. Carla
Drive, Santa An1, was booked on
su&plclon of po11e11lon of marijuana
and the three b1&1 -1n quantlUes
oalled Udl -wart confllcated as
evidtnce.
Police 1&ld Reyes w11 drlvlnl along
Fair Drive at Vaneuard Way when
pulled ovar by offictrl Gary Shull and
MlchHI Nutt.
"H• wu aaking ror cool water 1"
USd Mr1. Golden, "10 thl7 sprayed
hJm with a gardeq boM. They really
OG tho scene and gave ~ llrot
aid, -olng bll burnt --... before ~· wu takl!l 111 Colla M"a MeinoJ'lal HOO!>ltol for lurthtr lrtat-
men~
The victim -was admitted to the new
!acillty in o n I y fair condlUon, but
Nursing Director Mn. D o r o t h y
...
Tbompoon 1114 1IJdo)' hll ....Udon bu
lnlproved to g~
Mond111 wu the oecood tljDa that
Davidson found bimlell -UallY
lloldlnJ 1 bur D victim'• Ulo ID hll band.I. ...
Davtdoon 11id tllrff yean ago he
took ilmllar actton to utlngulah
names enveloplna: a teenaged boy
whose clothina wU let OD fire u be
WOl'k:ed OD a motoreydt.
I
"I'll bot II John Wayne w11 on th• city council he'd know what to
do 1bout the d1mn hlpple1I''
Thre.e More Days
Left for Voter
Registration
Oranee Cout area re1ldetU eligible
to vote in the Nov. & 1eneral election
have only throe days left to resltter
before the midnight Sept. 12 deadline.
Persons wbo are over 21 year1 o£
aa:e and meet the residence quallflca·
Uom may register durtna: bulin111
hoiro al any local city bill and most
poOOcal party headquarters.
Regiatradon is also available at the
following places:
-In Colla Mesa, South Coast Plau,
Carousel Cowt, 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
-In Newport Beach, RepuWcan
Women's Club, 425 N. Newport Blvd.,
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
-In Huntlnl(oo Beach, U.S. P .. l
Office, rm Wll'Der Ave., 11 1.m. to 2
p.m.; Sea Breeze Mobile Park, .all
day.
-In Fountain V.Uey, Gem co
Department Store. Warner Avenue
and Brookllurll street, noon to 4 p.m.
-In Lacuna Beach, Chamber of
.. Commeru, OJ Park Ave., 9 a.m. to 4
p.m.; Laiun• Savina and Lc>an, 260
Ocemi Ave., 10 a.m. to S p.m.
Reo!d.,tt -fallld lo Voto In the tut ~ a!octlOCl ll>ould ctock to
see ii their name ha1 been acratched
~ lhl restot..•Uon l!.otl. In that
C&M It would be nec1Hary to re-rtl!Jtor,
,.,.._ P .. e l
HIPPIES •••
public pr~ and for -deo.
Tho law would req1*1 thol ap-
plicadono far public 111embli01 be fil-
ed wltb the police chief 48 boW's
bef«e the event. The chief could IUJJl·
marily revoke permits for reuom of
riot, dl11ater, public calamity or other emergency.
Newport also hu • •10 ball foe
overtime parklnl vlolat1ona 1t ncrea·
tion area meter1, a .., fee for 1Urfer1
and bu banned tho lco croam w11on
in the beach 1reL
San Clemento rot llleU embn>lled
over one psychedelic abop, now
closed: The Mind Garden.
Police Chief Clillord Murray aaid
the urgency ordinance passed by San
aemente councilmen U:W: yell qalnst
sleeping In veblclet gained !ho title
''hlpple ordinance" becaUJe Of the tim·
ing.
It is 11m.11ar to the ordinaZJce Lapa
Beach refuhloned on Ibo llrell(th ol
Newp<rl Beach'• court vid.ory.
The hippie laws, of course, aren't
pecullu to the Orange Coast. Los
Angelia recenUy lent a law throue~
making It unlawful to ltaod, sit, lie or
sleep on• tborouPfara.in IUOh..a-aan·
ner q to molee:t or annoy otben.
Ll1UDa, once accused of beinl soft
oa the problem, hio apparently
become 1omethina: of an authority in
the field.
Laguna City Mona(er -'-" D.
Wheaton. said at a recent lealu• of
cltle1 1t19ion in San Frandtco the
most lnqueot queotionl tnd Ill him
by city manacon and c1tJ 1ttani1y1
mra obout 1.a,... tochD!qut1 ID con-
t:olllns the hippie problem.
only, :1111R1C.• has 'ti I .
·. ~~ DEEP Stefaii_ ...
CR/11'£1 ERl11n/1
THE ULTIMATE
In CARPET CLEANING
ICONOMICAL ,,, .. ,. th• ""' for
frequent prtft11iontl clt•l\iitt bt-
<•u•t It r•mtyet tk1 clttply tmb1d-
ded soil and lteYe1 no ra1lth.it ift th1
carpet fiben te collect cllrt,
CLIANI 19 ettu1llr. ramitY" ••11
from btth the P.llt ef th• 1arp•t en4
the eareet '91cklnt•
unoUS PILI th• powerful trl••<·
tion procett r•movt1 lftol1ture Im·
m1dietely, thu1 evoldlnt thrlnk•t••
end Ii~• fflett1d pilt t• 'Ii•• new'
eppeerence.
WHIN YOU
WANT THI
PINIST-
SMI P16cn1 1cl•ntlftcellv dtv•I·
optd •ptcielly ftr tht pro#e111.,,.1
cerpet cl•tn•r, tt 11 c•plettly 1efe
for all carpet ftbtn.
•INTI.I ACTION u111 "' hn11htt er tCN~blnt tcti•n, •• It -'••• nit cU1 • ••rt th• ,11 ••• tht •• ,, ...
son. •• T " • D I N • AND MOTN
PIOOPIM• •r• lnclwdM et "• •dra
ce1t.
, ..
HTIMAR
CAU. RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS
011' 21st y.., of S.rvic• in Or1n9• Covnty
2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA .._, ...... PHONI 14 .. 1411 c.1-Dollll 7.o6N
I
•
••
Club Improves School Bell'-s TOn . e·
The Junior Ebell Club of Newport Beach is more than concerned
about half day sea&ons fO< aecOlld ·gr.den this yeir. They're planning to do
10methlng about it.
Having many quallfled and credenlloled people in their own nnb,
they have met with representatives kom schools, <Dmm!ttees and otber
groupo to' gather necessary support to p<0Vide a supplement to i:reatlve
forms many second graders will be missing this year. ~
The Second Grade Creative Arts and Enrichnlent program, ID!tlated
and coordinated by Mrs. Jay Moseley, education and youth cbalrinaD, fa
scheduled to begin Sept. 23 10 the Community Youth Center in Corona de!
Mar.
With encouragement and support ol. the Newpcrt.M... tfnilled ~ool District, lessons have been planned to include a wide variety of sub-
Ject.s and actiVIties. ~
F\tndamentaJ aspects of the library system and reading and creative.
storytelling sessions have been planned by tbe Friends of the Library. Mrs.
Stewart Clark, credentialed music teacher, will provide music instruction
with opportunities for rhythm and instrumental interpretation. Newport
Beach lib<aries will be <upplying books and other support is being cl.feted
by the Parent·Faculty Organization of Harbor View Schpol.
quaD.fied Junior Ebells and other community members will provid~
instruction in painting, creative writi~, puppet ma'king and play, dancing,
physical fitness, crafts and other activities.
Two classes of 35 6tudents will be "Scheduled for Mondays and Tue&
days each week. The morning class 10 to 11 :45 a.m. and the af~rnoon
class, 1 to 3 p.m. will continue until bee. 16 which will make the end of the
first three-month period. Directing the lesson& wiD be one Junior Ebell mem-
be~1 assisted by two P,•rents ol. cilildren enrolled. One parent of each child
wiu be asked to contribute two hours o! assistance.
Only second graders from Harbor Viewb Corona del Mar, Newport
Heights and Matjners-Elementary-Schools will e registered. Kfea-of ~50
has been set per child to cover expenditures !or materia!s. Parents are ask-
ed to proV'ide their own transportation.
Committee members who will be giving a great deal of time to this
project are the Mmes. Charles Chapman Jr., Edward Whitehouse Jr., Allen
Goody, Vincent Wood , Jeny Shoffner, Rondell Hanson, Warren Fix, Garry
Short, Paul Hadley, Ridlard Acton, Gary Rawlings -and Eugene Kovach.
Mn. Larry Mitchell, c<H:hainnan , 644-1413 or Mrs. Mooe!ey, 644-0919
can be contacted by interested. parents !or further information and registra-
tion. Forty students already have been £"egistered, leaving only 30 vacancies
for the first classes.
BRIGHT ''BACK TO SCHOOL" -Steven Kessler is sending mom,
Mrs. Gordon Kessler {left) and Mrs. Richart Bechtel "back to
school" too. The women will participate in the curriculum enrich-
ment program sponsored by Junior Ebells ot Newport Beach assis-
ted. by H4rbor View Parent-Faculty Organization which will sup--
plement . th,e school program for second grade student& on half
day sessions at four schools.
A sloppy joe cook-out complete with swimming,
cards and a barbecue has been planned for Emblem
Club members and their escorts and Elles Club
members and their wives. The event will take place
Sunday, Sept. 22, at 2 p.m. in the home of Mr. and
Mrs-. Herbert Mateas of Costa Mesa. Reservations
can be made by calling Mrs. Eugene Bergeron at
54~7382 or Mrs. Mateas at 540-5862. Previewing tile
fun are (lei! to rigllt) the Mmes . Hamid C. Hohl·
man. Don Goeller and Louise White with "Saman-
tha."
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
T111,qr, lw191!1W It. 1H41 NI-CM r11t 1J
Funds Are The ir 'Cup of Tea'
Founding their own "exchange program" are wo-
men of St. James Episcopal Church in Newport
Beach who are hoping that customers will i•ex-
cbange" their money for rummage at the sale
scheduled !or Oct. 2, 3 and 4 at the church. The
same theme will be followed at the l!."Xchange Tea
Sept. 2.1 from 2 to 5 p.m. in the borne or Mrs. Robert
L. Johnson in Newport Beach. Tea will ne exchang•
ed. for one "treasure'' which will be the admission
to the event, say (left to right) Mrs. F . W. Spring·
&teen, Mrs. M. L. Keeler, and Mrs. John Asbey.
Wife Loses Third Time After Slipping Herself a Mickey ·
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please ex-
cuse Ule looks pf ttUs leiter. I can't see
vert weU . One of my eyes is com-
pletely &but. The otb,F is a little
1wollen.
I married Mickey after a whirlwind
courtabfp of seven week&. He seemed
llU a perfect rentleman. I could hard·
ly believe it lfben he knocked oot my
Pivot tooth and blackened my eyes
becauae there was no beer in the
refrigerator. (He drank five bottle&
i..t nl.Cht and l didn't realize we were
ouL)
MJckef loees hb temper over little
thing• like not being able to find bi&
Jackel He !nsisU I "hid" it and tllen I
J~ a call from a tavern keeper saying
Mlctq left Ills Jacket there last night
ANN LANDERS ril
when he stopped for a drink on his
way home.
This Is tJ"w; third time he hu heal
me up and I don't blow what to do
about JL Please don't tell me to leave
him. He's really a swell ·guy escept far
thla one fault AIIO, Ann, I th1nt I
should tell tou be is my third husband
and tite best of the lot. -BLURRED
VISION
DEAR BLURRED ' So IH!'o the beot
of the lot? Wltere do you flad 1ucb
doll1'!' Voa have alrtady &old me •ot to
Cell yoa to ~1ve him, IO I'll retped
your wtaMa and &ell you aomethln&
elte. 8tl7 wtl.b him tanUl be 1cramhlel
ynr llralu ud uocb out aD JOUI'
IN4b. PerhaPI lllri :1"11 will tG me
for m:ae adftce 1" eaa ue lnltud of eeruac me .... , not tt &.ell you.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: La.st mooth
my husband toot a fllta1 overdose of
sleeping pills. I know be was
deapoodent over a business failure and
that hla health wae a warry to h.1m but
I bad no idea be would kill himMllf.
What 1hall I tell the children? They
are 4i and 5 years of age. ExplaJning
n.atwal dealb to youngstera la difficult
enou.g!l, but bow d.oea one explain
IUlclde? I want to tell them that Dad·
dy w.a v•y aic:k and God toot hirn to
a borne in beaveD where Wt Will all
meet one cloy.
My molber lnlilll that I lell them
the trutll. She clalms !Mr will bear
tbe true Jlor! from piaymllH ,.,,.0
they get older and then I'll bavt
serious trouble beca111e they will lllld out I lied.
I have lhnugltt about tll!a until I am
hall creoy. I just can't tell my dl!ldreo
their diaddy didn't want to live
any more. Please Ann , J need some of
your wisdom. -AN G U IS HE D
MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER: Tbt1 11 your
ded1lon to mate, not y,oar mo&her11.
Tell tb.e cldld.re• DadclJ took I.be
wr•n& medlclae 1Dd It made bJm 10
alek he eoald llOI fol well oo God IOoll
him to beaven. Jt b ben tl:lat cbUdrea
belJeft a parut'a 1utcldt w11 ac ..
dd..,tal wbeaever polllble. Good hid!
ud ebllo ... pear.
DEAR ANN t,ANDERS: Pleau sei·
Ue an arrument. When a m. and • woman meet on the otreet irho ohOllld
1pea& llrltl '!be -la In queaU0n are
not close trlendl, but tbe7 have work·
------
ed together and know each other: -
BRANDY
DEAR BRANDY: When Crlenda,
llie one wllo recopllea the other firlt
abould 1peat nni ..
"The Bride's GWde," Ann Landen•
booklet, answers some of the most fre.
quently asked questiON about wed·
din&•· To receive your copy of thlt comprehensive cuide, write to Anq
Landers, in care of Ws newspaper,
enclosing a long, seU..adc1reue<I, 1tam·
ped envelope: and 35 cents in coin .
Ann Landers will be glad to help you.
with your probl.au. Send them to bet
In care of the DA.ELY PILOT. enclos·
Ing a stamped, ..U·addresHCI en-
velope .
•
•
I
• Horoscope
Aries: Start Project
Birthday
·Plans Lit
A blrtb4•7 pasty
ellebr•llnt· Ille Un I It 4
sui.1 Alt> Jl'4'<>•1folher• Club Jl'Jlehl It amit_.ary
MRS., DAN JAMES LLOYD
Sixth Gener1tton Or•nee Countl1n
· Vows Recited
D~ring , Rites
Carol Lee Vlebeck and
Dan James Lloyd ex-
changed wedding pied..,
and rinp durine often>oon
rmpfal& ln Gaden Grove
Community Cllln!h, The
Rev. Rtrold Lee.«ma read
the ceremony.
Parents of tbe newlyweds
are Mr. and Mrs. George
Vlebect Jr. of Santa Ana
and Mr. and Mro. Tom
Lloyd of Long Beach and
1 formerl1 a f Huntington
Beach.
Given In marriage by her
father, the brklo oeleded a
white peau de t0ie gown of
chantilly lace appllque1 and
. an elbow length veil with 1
purl lined hudplece, She
carried a bouquet of orchids
and atephanotb.
Attendant! were Mrs. Don
Orr of Santa · Ana, the
bride's sister, Miss Joy
Norman of Orange and Miss
Donna Kobay.ashi ef Santa
Ana. They · wore mint green
floor length dresses of crepe
Mid held Frend! bouquets.
Aaked to 1tand u best
man wu Tom Lloyd Jr., the
bridegroom'• brother.
Usher duile1 were a11umed
by Drake Muat. stu ste~
bings, Harold Ferguson,
George Vlebeck, the bride's
brother, and Orr.
The Saddleback Inn in
Santa Ana wa.1 the setting
for the reception. M 1 1 1
Sharon Walters of Laguna
Beach circulated the guest
book among 300 w e 11 •
WEDNESDAY
SEPTEMBER I I
By SYDNEY ,O,MAJlll
"~ Wt man controls
hi• d-y , .• ~loay
poinU 1tte way:"
Al\IE8 (Mardi %1-Apil
!JI): Gel -... pr:ojed whid! Involve• l\)OCl&l col·
ledion, assets. Emphasis b
on payi.nc, co!lectine· debts.
You finlsb. ooe }:hue Of ec-
Uvily today and berin
another. TA\JR~ (April 20-May
20): Put for111 bright, or1!iiDo1 propoaalt, Now l>
time to break from routine,
kad!Uon. l!po(ligllt Is on -
speak up and be heerd, Take
initiative. A meeting could
build to me8:Jdngful rela-
ttonlhlp.
GEMINI (May 21.JWIO
21'.l}: Delve behind t h e
scenes. Don't baae
!ud41meo!I on superficial
reports. Do your own ln-
-vestigatlng. -E•e&llent even-
ing fer atte..ting theater,
dining out. Shake off emo-
tiooel lethorO'· CANCER (June 21.July
21): Senae ol humor
becomes )'Ollr great ally to-
dey. Reallzo tbil -avoid
beavybanded methodl. Help
tamil.Y member to ••ve
face. Some around you U'e
aupe.ree.ositive. A I I e I I
deetreo, lriendlblp1, Think.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): A
decilion in your fBNor ts on
txrlion. Plan ahead. Know
that tho!e wilth aulhOrity do
have confidence ln your
ability, Get b\lsy on that
apecial task. It appears
routine but c<dains a
challenge.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Communicate kleu. Keep
liDe• o f communication
open. . Individual at a
diltaoce may be working on
your bohall -fine for
writing, creating n e w
format Pay heed to buncll.
LIBRA (Sept 23 • Oct.
22): SetClle issue at home.
Inwlvee expenditure for
luxury ltean.. , Talk rattier
than argue, WIH to permit
me close to' you to heve
fioal 11y, U you are atub-
born, you create un·
favonable climate.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21): Accent <m how you ·are
able to cope with opposing
views. U )'OU 1ou your
Summer Wedding Set
By Betrothed Pair
A champagne buffet in the
Corona de! Mar home ol Dr.
and Mrs. G. William
Mablman WU the letting
when the couple announced
Che engagement ci their
daUl!l>ter, Lynn MAhlman to
David P. Lenhazdt, oon ci
the llieY. and Mn. Howen!
Lenhardt of Buena Park.
The bride-to-be ia a
graduate ol Palol v erdea
lligll Sc™"1 while her liance
b a graduate of Kennedy
High School in Buena Park.
~ •e juniors at the
University _ of California,
Santa Barbara, where Mi!s
Mahl.man is majoring in
English and Lenhardt in
political science.
The future bridegroom ls
tti.e man:aoger <llf t b e
Uniwnity Men'• Glee, a
membes ci the ShlJberUana
1inging group and 11
in the ROTC 1cbolarohlp pro-
gram. Both are active in the
Lutheran campua program,
Ammg ttle gu-present
were the couple's unclel
Douglas Mahhnan and ,john
Lenhardt; the bride-elect'•
gMl)dmather Mn. L e o
Augspurger , and her
grandfatller 0. L. Mahlman.
LYNN MAHLMAN
Ent•tod
Other gueot& traveled from
the,Los Angeles and Orange
County areas.
1be couple will continue
their studies at UQ;B l8ter
this month. A IUlllIDer wed·
dinglsplonned.
CM Women
Bake, Sew
Way to Fair
:~::;:~~~~: Walkers Trod Along
before making their home in San Lult Obiapo. Beodt Wolken of Town II, the floatinc marine
The bride, a sixth genera· and Gown will mflfit each laboratory for <n.nge Coun-
ti.on Orange C o u n t l a n , Tueldaf momln& fn Cameo ty Sheoola. The wlGt.er ex·
participated in the U.S. Shores from 9:45 a.m. to cure:ion will be to La Jolla's
After a short respite from Women'• Swimming Na· noon. The first Tuesday of Scrip p 1 School of
the Oraq;e County Fair, tionals and has won severa1 ttie month membeta bring Oceanography. The spring
three Costa Mesa women awards and holch many SPA 1uncti. Mid PICiifC~on Ole sana--trip wtitbe-a:Irall~-outtng
are back on the fair circuit national recordl. retwning to Corona del Mar to Ca~a aboard the
again. The new Mrs. Lloyd LI an by l :30 p.m. Island Holiday. WI~ entrle1 -·"'•• from alumna of Santa Ana Hi .. " ~ ·--... Wee""• ..._ will be.,• ' yeut lruda and crocheted School and Santa A n a ..., • .-.-•
temper, you loo prestt1e,
Realiie that some cloae to
you have tendar fellinp.
Aot~.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 2ll: Preolure nerted
in WQrt-money areas. You
have aaked for a d d e d
~-nowyoufel
wbat you requeoted. With It come. opportunity to l<ld to
bmlc account.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jan, 18): Good lunar aspect
today cciocld<I with love,
romance, cre1Uve apart.
Your eppeo1 muttlplleo. You
are able to convince, aell,
demoru:nte. Come out of
allell. Exhibit your talentl,
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fe!J.
18): A new deel at bome-
that'1 a 9lrong indicaU.on
conditions you bad taken fw:
granted are subject to
defintte change. Welccme
challenge and c b a n g e •
status quo dUe to be shaken.
Uve.
Is ·~ for '1'111rnday, Stpt 12, ~t I p,m. in tilt
HYda~ Par~ "'oblle -lea
Cl-, !Jania AltL
Gueat 1P1akor will bo IL
CO!. J-, C. aie.tnut
from Speet Syrt.ma of El
SefUDdO.
·Honorad 111etla ~ ln·
elude Natldnal PnlldmJt
Mr1, Ray Re"'11lcd aad her
hutbond of Hu• ti• Jto a
Beach ; Mn, Em. lllor1an
ol Whittler, Air JI' o r c •
Mothtr«·the.year; o t be r
naUonal officers, and the
area Air Force ncrulllnl
ltaff,
TllAo event Is open to all
Air" Force perlCMei, and
members' bu1bandl, IODI or
daughters. F u r t h e r in·
lormadm Is •vallable by
callinf Mr1. Me Iv In
-•ldt,193-WO.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Man:h
20): Be qmet· wilbin. Much
appear• to be happening. Kiwis Flock But It Is dlfllcult to pin
down. Means forces are T G h • ..,.ttered. People c1 ... to o at ering
you express: confusion. Be
concerned, but don't borrow Membert ci tl>e Newport
trouble. Beacb cbo!>ler ol the Kiwi
IF TODAY IS YOUR Club will &alh<r In tile heme
B I R T R D A Y you are of Mrs. Leonard Spielman in
sensitive, a n a t u r a I HUntiniton Beaeh for their
teacher. Your intuitive in· monthly meeting Thursday,
t.llect ia sharply bolled. U Sept. 12, at 8 p.m.
olngle, marriage could bo On the ag<Dda are voting
upcoml\lg, U married, ad· on the by·lawl and the pro-
ded responalbOity ia Jn. opecta for tile club'• fall
di<:aled -ooo!d be becauoe project. of .,. eddlllm to family, Memberailip Is llmlted to
G E N E R A L T E.N· former American Alrl!n.,
DENCIES: Cycle hl&h for it.ward ...... Anyone ellgi·
TAURUS, GEMINI, ble lo Invited to call Mn.
OANCER. Speclal ...rd to Don Howard, -,
SAG ITT A RIUS: show.========::;! reopocl for lndividutl witb BEST experience.
To flftll ciut wllo'1 luc:kY tor V11U 111 "'• DAlt.Y PILOT .ffm ''"'• ef tho hort h1tur11, ~ 1c+.r1I '''"Y M ,..,~,,... 1Yalltbl1 111
•ny 11.,..,,.,., 111 .... 111t1 ...
= "'..\'::! "lll:f. ....... '""7.:l ='=·'°H~"~rld'li~ i:::;,"Gk:""l...n ~~·1,., .~
AMall:ltA'I Ullt•IST
•
/?_..;J.,.fTloAAPERY UJt{, IJL) !;J.EAN EA I
R91M'ff W...,. Damqe e ,LAMI PROOFING
IXCLUSIYI
CiUAIANTDD DRAl'DY CLIANINCi
DApery • c ... nlnf. Pwhct
,...,. ... ., tM .....
'""' •rverY. ., 1to% .-.
... ac: ...... t If Cl•naltht. a N• wttt. HeHa
e N• lhrlnkql
• hrfect '"" ...... e W1tw lhiln a"""91
e ~ Plt1t PeNl1t1
• ,,.,.. ....... htatallath!R
~-.. OUR IXCLUllVI llRVICI ~ ............. IRMtrnl
• Tenna Mliy h Arnn ...
• ,,... lbtlmattl
• ,.... '-• Dn.-
20% OH fw cuh & urry
540-1366
642-0270
1702 NEWPORT BlVD., COSTA 'MfSA-
arttclea to coo'llea and an· College. She ls a aenior 1tu· Oct. 1. The fir1t will be m
Uques, Mn. Joe Varva, of dying elementary school Huntington Pier and Beach.
Costa Meu; Mn. Loretta education at C all! or n 1 a By Jan. 30 the group piaoa
Fujvoe, ol tho H a r b o r Polytechnic College, San to vlolt ..U 1IMi stat. pub
Area: and Mn. E J. Young Lula Oblopo. from Hmlllilrtoe to San
Gold discovered on Glzevron ls/and/
of. Coda Mesa are off to the Her buaband L!i a graduate Clemente.
Loe Angeles County Fair In of HunlJnilon Beacb !Dgh Quarterly trips haw also
Pomona. School and Orange Coast been planned. 'Ibe fall trip
The three women will diJ. College. He also ii a senior v4ll be a half day'1 journey
play their woric In the do-at Cal Poly. down the c:ooJt llboord Fury
mutLc art 1 competidon ----''---------
Sept. IS throuih 29,
Medical Group
Evary aecond Tuesday ol
the month member• of
Ormtge Sln'es M e d i c a I
A 11i I t.aots' Aa;odation
assemble at 8 p.m. Location
may be obtained by oalllng
Mn:. Marjocie Humber, 644-
2273.
lfT'S BE FRIEHDl Y
It you have new nelahbon
« ll:nOW ot anyone movinc
tO OW' area. pleue tell 111
IO that we may extend a
frimlll7 welcome and h~lp _ .. __ ....
m thdr new IUITOUJ1dinp.
Huntington Beach
Visitor
SJ6.9626
Cosfl Mesa Vlsllor
' "'"'°" So. ColSf Vlsffor
4M4579
Har Visitor
'4U014
• . ·
~
ORANGE COUNTY'S
~
~~
PRIVATE COUEGE
for.
Tr;Un N-••• Start P.,...... 9.,'Ao!Mio
Aflef GroduotfonI
•
ISiand Gold
Fine , .
J ~ ~ .na
bland Gold fine China is truly fine china. Beautiful
bell-toned! If• trarulucent, with a tasu:tul edgini of &old.
bland Gold Fine China ii perfect for your ele&ant dinnm,
yet' durable 1nou1h for neryday we, too.
Companion pieces available. At
Ill Standard Stations and partici-
pating Chevron Dealers.
$129
4 piece Idling
With 8 pl purchase
CHEVRON DEALERS • STANDARD STATIONS
·HIA1TH SPAS
ANNIVERSARY
CELE.RATION
"leglnnlnt
Dirr
3rd
Big
Year .in
o .....
County"
LadJH "Join the Beautiful People" at
Holiday Health Spas, shed pounds, re-
, arrange incbes ... have a healthful, shap-
lier figure, add zest to your rue ' ' .
• I'm.,. ,,._, L..Mktr, °"' ...... ·-. ...._ .....
• ""'""" hi~ . ·-'''"" ·-
e ll'Ofk14uat1• .. ,. .. _
e l1111t. ·-a Ml•' c....-Tt C"-,,_
CALL OR STOP IY TODAY
FOR A FREE TOUR
OPEN 7 DAYS -3 BIG LOCATIONS
Costa M-Anaheim Or•ngo "' s. &.di llvd. &ti: J)Of ...._, lh4, tHWV n) E. K•fttt.
Cor.kKtl fl ... W.,...,.,,, H..ta.r e. or..,..•-l<wl. ~111111 ,__. lhHtllf C...... ~ C#\111' SheNI"' c..tw
549·3368 ;;;;;it
HIALTH IPA
Costa Mesa l'oday's Closla'
• YOC. '/if, NO. 218, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ~· COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER I 0, 1968 JEN CENl'S
Coast Citie·s· Getting Hard Nosed on Hippies
By IDCRARD P. NALL OI n....., , .. ,...,
U la~s are, as Olli ~ put it, "the
Cl')'slallied prej\ldloe1 ol society,"
Orange CoaJt clttea ato celtlng
hardnosed about blipple1.
City officials, of cO:Urae, would not
admit passing a law aimed at one !tg·
ment of society. It V(ouJd be un·
constitutional on the face.
But tbe hippies came, tbe citizen
wrath came aod the laws came.
Laguna· Beach pused a rMOlution
condemning hippies and pupctuated it
later with an urgency anti-loitering
law Aimed at clearing sidewalks of
any clustering ~ the bearded-beaded
set.
W.guna Beach soon found a section
of ita ordinance chopped down in
municipal court, ruled un-
constitutional. Stricken was the sec-
tion that made it illegal to stand on
ai~walb e.i.cept u near as physically
Heart'• in Right Place
possible b> the building lino.
The portion outlawing sitting, kneel· inl <r lying on the sidewalk continues
unchallenged.
Laguna Councilmen have bounced
back smce the court ruling, replacing
the stricken section with one pegged
down by language . from a 1965
supreme Court ruling.
It outlaWJ blocking 1 i d e w a l k
passage aft<r being dlrect<d by a
peace alficer to moye oo.
First flag salute this morning 'Was a bit confusing
for some members of Mrs. Irene Newton's kinder-
garten class at Newport.-Mesa school district's
Lindbergh School, but youngsters couldn't be fault-
ed for any lack of sincerity. School opened today
and these freshly scrubbed five-year-olds began a
new ad\Tenture.
Humphrey Hits Wallace
In Southland Campaign
By BRUCE BENSON
Of The DlllY ,llot Slaff
REDONDO BEACH -Vice .Presi-
dent Hwppbrey . today denounced
George Wallace· as a segregationist
and made bis first major attempt of
the presidential campaign to. link
Richard Nixon with t.he ultra-rightist
vote .
"'Olere is Gne candidate this year
who bases bis very campaign on the
Jdea of apartheid," Humphrey told
California aerospace w o r k e r s
gathered outside the large TRW plant
here.
"There is another candidate who
does not do so. But he is openly com-
peting for the same votes as George
Wallace -for the votes ct people who
Husband Jailed
After Gun Fight,
Freeway Chase
Police raced down the Santa Ana
Freeway late Monday to capture an
irate Kentucky husband who had
allegedly fought a gun battle witt bis
wife's traveling companion and then
commandeered a CaT ta escape.
Eugene Hardin, 36, Louisville, Ky ..
was taken by Orange Coounty sheriff's
deputies late Monday. They reported
he er.changed sbota with Eddie Ga!·
ford, 22, inside ll bou.se at 12562
Newport Ave .. Tustin, where Hardin's
wUe. Carol was present.
"Hardin's wife recently came to
California with Gafford. H a r d i n
followed them and got into the house
tonight," cberiU'1 Lt. Barney McKowa
said.
Both men were WOIJDded 1n the g'U,D·
fight, Hardin was hit in the right leg
and head while Gafford was lnjored Jn
both legs, bu:t offi<:ert said the injrules
dld not appear to l>fl serious.
Deputie1 reported that lol\otwing the
gun baUle, Hardin command~ a'
car driven by Vern D. Wood, 26, ~
14592 Clariua IAme. Tustin.
When tilt car ..-11 llopped In Orange
after a Crteway chase, OfDcen fOund.
Hardin wilh I looded and cocked .38-
mllber revolver. Wood rtportedly 1'11
uninjured.
want at best to slow·tlli.ngs down when
it comes to programs that otter the
• W.iJY out of tensioa and trouble in
America." •
Jt was the Democratic presidential
nominee 's strongest effort of the
young campaign to capitalize on Nix-
on's supposed appeal amoog har~ore
conservatives and voters of the Deep
South.
It also marked his first outright at-
tack on tl1e WaUace candidacy. which
Humphrey denounced as "third party
extremism." /
He charged that the Republican par-
ty this year offers voters "the old
coal.IUon whcich prefers to remain
silent when it comes to bunian rights
and opportunity.''
Humphrey arrived in Los Angeles
Monday night and was expected to
leave for Houston sometime later to-
day. He addressed several thousand
standing TRW workers at noon from a
podium put up in an inter-courtyard of
the space plant.
He made only passing reference11 to
the Vietnam war, aod hammered bard
on the problems of race relations.
The choice o( the 1968 electior.s it
"between the America of the Old Era
and the America of the New Day,"
Humphrey said.
''Turn away from the Old Era.
Choose the New Day. Turn away from
the Old Era when an American boy
who fought in an integrated bunker at
Khe Sarti could come borne to a
segregated slum in Amerlca."
JOHN WAYNE
REMINISCES
A 1houlder Injury 1uflered whUe he
was being pulled out of the SlU'f at
Newport Beach one August afternoon
42 years ago al~ the career of a
young USC football player.
The lad was never able to get back
in the swing or fhing1 on the gridiron..
But he became one of America'•
best known men -John Wayne.
Wayne remtnJ1ce1 wltb DAILY PILOT
lportl writer Earl Guslkey •• Pagaa
111-17 ol today'• pepor.
'
School Resumes
Along Coast
For Thousands
"School days. Sdlool days. Dear old
Golden Rule clays ... "
It began ~gain today. Another school
year.
The slumber routi.J:le in tlloUsands Of
Orange Coae:t homes overturned this
morning. MOther was up early packing
lunches, seeing junior dressed in his
back-to-school best bustling a groaning
teenager out of bed.
'rhere was excited talk again ul the
recently still hallways. Summer tales
were exchanged, short hair cuts
shown off, sun tans compared. "Sally
is wearing braces on her teeth." ·
A tearful child didn't want her
mother to go. But her k.indtrgarten
classmates already were playing with
the block&.
New teacher. New classmetf:s. New
books. New lessons. New vista.!I . Some
old shortcomings. One hundred seven-
ty eight clays to learn. Or to fall behind
tlhe ottters.
Teacher writing her name on \he
blackboard. "What you did this 1urn-
mer? Theme. Remembering how.
Learning t<l work the penci1 ap.Jn.
It was all part of the first day of
!Ohool for 109,000 students aloog the
Orange Coast.
Newport-Mesa Unilied co u n t e d
about 27 ,000. Huntington Beach and
the West County area &4,000, Laguna
Bead!, 3,000 Capistrano and San Joa-
quin 13,000, and Orange Coast and
Golden West junior colleges 12,000.
Medical Center
Permits Weighed
Conditional use permits for the 1e-
rond and third phases of a major
Cotta Mesa medical center will be
considered by the city Plannin& Com-
mission tonight.
New applications for the structures
on Newport Boulevard near Victoria
Street -a three story medical center
and a XK>-bed convalescent hospital -
are 1ll&htly different than 1lmm ln
orlglnal plans. ~
The cornmllslon meetJ at 5 o'clock
for staff reporU at 7:JO o'clock for the
bu1lne11 IUlion, because Monday was
AdmlHton Day, 1 lopl holiday.
A complete Planning Oommb1lon
agenda was outlined in Monday's DAI·
LY PILOT.
Colta Mesa councllml!ll shelved a
similar ordinance recenUy to keep an
eye on Laguna eUorts. 'They expect to
take action now using Laguna's U·
perieoce as a bench mark.
'The recent jau !estival that brought
multitudes Of young in a pall of marl·
juana -smoke is sald to have been
something of a catalyst to Costa Mesa
concern. It was a tense time.
Huntington Beach hu setn its hippie
infestation conllned largely to t.be
bllghted downtown area where one
psyohedelic shop initially set the stage
for tighter controls of buliness Ucens·
Ing,
The Huntington Beach council has
assumed the right to refuse or revoke
business licenses for enterprises
thought not in the best interests of
public health, safety and welfare. Two
psychedelic &hops have been re!used
licenses.
Tempered In tile fnra• ol Easter
Week, Newport Beach bas lmg been
tough on non-a!Ouent n o m a d 1.
Laguna readjlllted tbe language of ill
own ordinance against sleeping in
vehiclea last spring to fit the wording
ot a Newport Beach ordinance that
had been court tested.
CUrrently, Newport Beach has in the
works a twO"pronged. ordinance re--..
quiring perm.its for assemblie1 on
(See HIPPIES, P1&0 %)
Two Cops Charged
Fired Slwts at Newton Headquarters
OAKLAND (UPI) . -A dozen
CaI1bine bullets were fired early todey
at the headquarters of Black Panther
founder Huey P. Newton. Two white
Policemen were formally charged with
the shooting.
The bullets smashed thr<lugti the
front window and into a large display
poster of Newton about 1:30 a.m. No
QJ1e was inside.
The shooting occurred a day after
Newton was convicted o( involuntary
manslau~er in the slaying of an
Oakland polieeman last tall. He was
acquitted of wounding another otfJcer.
Police Chief Charles Gain an·
nounced a citizen reported the shots
were f Ire d1 rom a police car. l-Je
promptly ordered the suspension of the
two officers, Riobard V. WIJUams, 28,
and Robert W.W. Farrell, 26.
Six hours later, Gain announced the
officers, both with three r.ears service,
were charged with ' assault w10\
firearms on an uninhabited dwelling."
lf convicted, they coold face a sen-
tence of up to five years in prison.
Gain said Williams and Farrell were
on duty and in uniform at the time. He
said both bad been drinking.
The weapon used was a carbine rtf.
le, standard equipment in Oakland's
black and w'h.ite patrol cars.
'!be Black Paother beadquart.re Is
focated in an aged store front, about
three miles from downtown Oekla.nd.
It was the second police attack L-,.
volving Black Panthers in the nation.
this mooth. A group of policemen,
many off duty are accused of
assaWting a group of Black Pantber1
in a BTooklyn criminal courts buildin&"
last Wednesday.
Rookie Officer Costa Mesa Again Bids
Slain in LA; F c Cl b A
G or ountry u nnex
unman Killed
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A rookie
pollceJiian was slain as be began hi1
third day on the force and two other
officers were wounded before rein·
forcementa: killed a rifleman who wore
only • white T-shirt.
Policeman Gary W. Murakami. 23,
who was graduated from tbe fPOl.iee
aoademy only.Jut Friday, died di.:fa(e
and chest wouod1 two hours after the
gun battle earl)' Monday.
The gunman, AddiJon Cash, 25, a
Negro, attempted to hold off a score of
policemen but he was tilled by of·
ficers firing through the window of his
ground Ooor apartment in t b e
Crenshaw-Slauson district.
Detectives sald he was armed With a
4.10-gauge shotgun and a .36-caliber
· revolver. They aald Cash had a record
of arrests dating back to 1957 and
moved into the apartment two days
previously.
Mailman Vernon Sims, 28, entered
the inner court of the two story apart-
ment build.i1lg to deliver mail to
tenants' boxes and was accosted by
tbe gunman .
"A man cime out in a T-shirt,"
Sims told newsmen. "He was CaJTYing
a pistol and a rifle. I said, 'good morn-
ing'."
The man asked iI Sims had any mail
f o r him and the postman ·answered
"not yet." Sims said the man did not
threaten him.
"As I left the building t saw two of-
ficers had arrived," Slms said. "A
lady hollered out at the officers,
'there'& a man Jn the court holding a
gun'."
The officers had responded to a call
from neighbors eomplalrrlng that a
"nude rifleman" was roaming the
area. They said Addison ha<I. been ter·
roriz.ing other resident.I of the apart-
ment house by going from door to door
and demanding entry.
Copter Crashes
Hearing Slated
A three-day public hearing has been
scheduled to begin Sept. 25, In Los
Angeles on the two Los Angeles
Airways crasbe1 which toot the lives
or 44 persons.
The National TranrpOrtation safely
Board wlll bold tte sessions beginnJng
at 9 a.m. in the Crystal Room of the
Hacienda Internatioaa.I Hotel near Los
Angeles International Airport.
The first helicopter <nosh occurred
tut May 22 near Paramount, taking 23
lives. The second took place Aug. 14 at
Compton. It toot 21 Uve1.
A total ol 17 wilnoao., to the two
craahe.s have been called to teltlfy at
the hearings.
Federal autborltlea alrftd1 have an·
nounced that metal faUiUt 1n a rotor
hinge led to the Aug. 14 era.ab. No
cause tor the Ma)' 22 cr•b bu ever
been mmounced.
Costa Mesa's proposed 34·acre
Country Club annexation gets its third
chance for approval by the Local
Agency Formation Comm J s s lo n
Wednesday.
Mesa clty officials loot for success
thi1 time. When the L-Shaped annex on
Newport Boulevard and Palisades
Road was first brought before the
LAFC in June, a minority of residents
of the area objected as did the Santa
Ana Heights Water Co. The LAFC did
not act but postponed the issue until
July.
At that time Costa Mesa City
Manager Arthur R. McKenzie asked
for the 60-day delay unW Wednesd1y's
meeting.
Mesa officials say they have the ap.
proval of the large majority of the
property owners of the merger area.
Major landowners include the Santa
Ana Country Club, James Ray,
operator of the Paliaadei Tennis Club,
and the ownets of the property hous-
ing Henry's Restaurant.
The annexation's boundaries exten.d
from the country club parking lot on
Newport Boulevard, just north of
Mesa Drive, north to Pali&ades: and
east to Santa Ana Avenue.
The annexation ls a tollow·up on
COtta Mesa's previous merger at-
tempt of property .on bo1ll sides of 58.n·
ta Ana Avenue on Palisades Road.
Newport Beacb bad countered with a
larger annexation covering the same
property am! tile LAFC threw bolh of
them out.
Newport Beach had notified the
I.AFC that It has no objection to lhe
current C.Oata Mesa mOYe.
The Santa Ana Heights Water Co. ls
expected to continue Its protest to the
annent!on. It fears the eventual tak·
lng over of their area by the C.Osta
Mesa County Water District Which
usually follo'!."S city boundaries.
Fewer . than 12 registered voters
..res~ in the annex area. It is thus in
lhe uninhibited cotegory and an an·
nexatlon election ii not required.
0
Three Hessians Scheduled
For Hearings in Beating
Three mem.bers ol the Hessians
motorcycle club are scheduled for
sentencing and probation hearings in
Harbor Di1trlct Judicial Co u r t
Wednesday for their part in the
beating of a Costa Mesa boxer last
month.
Thomas M. Hille, 20, of DJ7 Canyon
Drive, just outside Costa Mesa city
llmJts in county territory; Philip
Cerasco, 20, of 1325 Balboa Blvd.,
Newport Beach, and Robert M.
Harmon, ?JJ, of 1442 S. Raitt St., Santa
Ana, pleaded guilty to assault and bat-
tery Jn the case.
They ~dmltted be.ing among a group or cyclists who raided the home of
Robert L. Glazier. 30, of 2224 Placen-
tia Ave ., on Aug. 7, whipping and
beating the rormer boxing cbamplon.
Glazier was al.so abot during the
melee and the accused gun-wielder,
Frank W. "Wlld Mome" Rundle, 24, of l" Albert Place, Costa Mesa, faces 1
municipal court level hearing Thurs.
day.
Rundle i. expected lo plood not
guilty to eharge1 of assault with intent
to commit murder, a1iautt with a
deadly weapon and buralary, all felony
count.I.
Rundle pl<oded gullty to one <0111!1
of 11saull wttb inteDV to commit
murder In rehan tor a promfled mu-
lmum of one year In county Jail, but
~mpla.inta by Glazier eauted the
Dlltrlct Attorne1's office to reconalder
the deal
The Rundle case was referred back
ftom Superior Court to Municipal
Court, where be wJthdrew his guilty
plea and the process was begun all
over again.
Tbe raid allegedly stemmed from a
fight between GlazJer and Rundle over
a pool game at a Cotta Mesa tavern
several days before.
Orange
Weather
If you liked the weather today,
you'll love it tomorrow 'cause
there isn't much change. Coast·
al temps Will push toward 80
while inland reg:lODJ are tabbed
at a brow·mopplng 95.
INSIDE TODAY
\Vork inornUve program dt-
~d to rtmOUt vnemplo~ed
father• from welfare rollt in-
1titutt-d in Orange CountJI.
Page 7. .
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0ld Newport Dump a Million Dollar Oilfield?
• -..... .,.. -
:lEWPORT'S FORTY ACRES MAY BE GOLO MINE-BLACK GOLD
Con1ultent1 S.y K•y1 M•rlne Development •n Unlikely Dr••m
Cong Terrorists Spray
Bullets Through School
SAIGON (IJPI) -Thrn )'OWll Viet
Cone ttnorlall -y b11r1t Into ... of
Salp'1 larleat ICbooll and IP!'•Yed a
hall of bullell lnio the faculty dlnlng
room, tillina: one teacher aod woun-
ding three others. They fled while ter-
ror-stricken studenU looked on.
The mrinl noontime assault in Dan
'I'nlni lllil> Sdlool In salion's Cbo!on
~ wu the flnt major terrort1t
Two l~year-old student.. w h o
witneased the attack told UPI the
Three More Days
Left for Voter
Registration
Or•ll Cout area re1ldenb ell&fble
to vote lD. tbe Nov. 6 1eneral election ba•• aml7 -day1 left to ncilller
befon 1be mldnlglrt Se!>!. 12 deodllne.
Penont who are over 21 years Of
•I•. mtd meet the ruidence qultifica·
tiOOI may register durina: bultnus
boura at any local city hall and most
political party headquarten.
Registration ii alao available at tbe
followlni placH: '
incident 1lnce Ia:.t weekend when Viet
Cong launched .a wave ol attackl that
left 12 per1on1 dead and another 80 in·
jured In the capital.
youthful terrori1ta, wearing 11eckll,
Mtite 1hirta and 1una:luse1, vauJted a
1choolyard wall .and moved directly to
the dinJng room, apparently familiar
wit.h the layout.
They said two guarded a rear en.
tr.nee while a third pumped Chinese
KM pistol bulleta with tcy calm Jnto
the ~achers bent over their lunciltime
bowls of ric.e.
In Da Nan&, the U. S. 27th Marine
!leaJment looded 104 of Ill 3,000
troopers aboard a plane to start the
first U. S. Wlit withdrawal from Viet-
nam since large-scale fighting started In 1965.
The U. S. command announced,
however, t.hat no general reduction ln
troopa level.I woold result from the m.,,._
Things looking
Much Better
For Mesa Girl
Thlnp an looking bet1« !or llttis
Lani Tbuntoo, Ille Costa Men girl
strlcken with. a critical lllnNs almost
µnlteanl ot among chlldrea.
1J JEllOICE r. cou.urs
otftt'61 ......
~~-Id~ ~-,II I ~ ~:-i:.-: ~': Illa markeL , ,
These OH llllOllJ the prmcli-1 f!n-
dlng1 of • M,000, yee.Non1 Hudy on
v.1>at the cJty !bould do about the 1U.
at the e.od of Coeta Mesa's 19th ~et . near tht S&nta Ana Rtver.
Wiiiey lo Ham, PllDDlU IDd
lllCinleriDI conau!tallll, 111bnilttod a
Mi>lee r<port to mWllclp&l autbor!Uu
today.
Tbe Arcadia llnn, h1red by the City
Council after the city 1hlfted ill
dl;poill opw1U0111 to the Coyote Can·
YOll county dump, maltu thrM lulc
reoammendaUon1: ~Thi dt1 thould reta!n onenhlp
of tbe 1lta f« 1ewral more years, dulloc wlllcb time omerllnl paltornl
Mesa-Heights
Water Hassle
Before Board
The battle between the Santa Ana
Heights Water Co. and the Costa Mesa
County Water District over service
areas in Santa Ana HelgbtJ will be
hashed over by the Local Agency
Formation Comml11lon Wednesday.
The water company directors are
attempting to ferm a new water
dl1trJct to tbwlrt attempta of Costa
Me1a or Newport Beach to 1~rve any
connections In the area.
The new di!tric1: would COYer 1,XIO
aert1 between the Upper Newport B1y
and Orana:e County Airport
At one time it wa11 thou1ht that the
Height.a wit.er company and the water
district ntll:bt be able to nacb an
agreement but recent 1tatementl by
both sides seem to rule out that
posslbWty. ,
Mr1. Eleanor Fuller, 1hareholder1
committee chairman of the company,
said her eroup 11 not intere1ted in
CMCWD's offer to buy the company
for $504,000.
And officials of the water district
have expressed disinterest I n
barJtalnlng farther with the company.
Most recent move was an attempt
by the company to get the dlltrict to
pledge not to annex In lt1 servlct 11ea
without mutual consent.
The directors of the district, at least
for the present time, have turned
down this offer a1 "Not coming from a
majority of the c om pan y ' s
sharebolder1.''
The request for re10JuUon1 oC com-
mitment to a no-annexation pallcy has
been made by Mrs. Fuller to other
1gencle1 that mt~t encroach ht the
field. The city of Newport Beach 11 one
such.
Attorney George Logan of the Santa
Ana law firm of Rimel, Harvey apd
Helsing, represented the company
before the I.AFC in August when ask-
in.'? for a continuance.
The LAFC commi1sioners pointed
out that that was the last po1tpone-
ment that would be granted.
Funeral .Service
41E the slte wouJ.d 811~ • Mtlll" Ja ¥1111 • .,
!!!• ,...i --wluOd bltww r.!!'.llO ...S-',000 -eould be worth
• l!llleh II fl.2 mll!lon or $30,0QO all ... ~ -eort.tenn development of the
~y. througt. I easing ar·
rangement.. should take the form ol
etther a trailer park or an 18-hole,
three~per golf course or possibly a
comblnaUon of the two .
-Noth.in& should be done about any
dtvtlopmettt Of the lite '1fttll ttie city
11laquires into thl poPibllity" of tiP-
plng 1t for olL
The latter recommendation would
call for another. study, and not by
Wilsey lk H11111. •
"Nearby production operetlona and
prellmloory olructurll atucll11," says
the report. "indlclte that tbt lite may
contain enough &U to be econom1c6Hy
exploited. Altboulb there a r e
onlll>lncet 11a1not drDllng In Newport
,lleach IDd Colla M-, ~I drllllll& lncllldM 1111n -two donn cbarll,
lrtM MjJIP'i ..., 11114 11111111 "' ............
teallble, • ,,,. 11...,,..t Cllt7 -191111 low
"lnvestlg-of oil prod..,.. II decide wbfllor to !pore the recom-
clearly beyond the scope of thll lllldy; meodllloft Oii the dump'• oil ex-
however, we recommeod that Newport ploitatloa pottnUal, u a matter of
Bea<h inquire into lbt poMlbllllf ~ poll(1, or 1'1lflher CO '!Uni Ibo IUbject
before un<iertaklne acUon toward over to the city'• TtcbzlJool Oil
other u1e1." Advtaar:y r.ommJttee for turtbw atudy.
Tbe suggestion that the refuse area Wltsey & Ham's 1,'eCO~.Uons
may be squaWng over In oil pool ii on •bQrt·tenn use of the Jll'9Pld1 are
not surprising: It 11t1 j11at north II the based 01 ""1 l.Htl~ otilef on~lng
Blhnlnc tract, ., oil ft•ld located en-dU:a and davelopcn1111 1nl>h In the
ttrely In county territory. area. •
The underground pools of oil now A 280-spa~ trailer park, uy1 the
being sucked out by drilling OJJer&tionl!i report could produce nvenue to the
in th• coWllY, wllere city codes do not city ra..mg up to "28,llllO year!)" Max-
appty, alto Ue Plft1ally under clty ter-imum rtvenuo from a goll course
rttory, accordlnc to petroleum ex-which would be corulderably a~pe;
perll. to develo~, could total about Qi,000
Wilsey &: Hem make• no further annv.al.17. Half of th1J wduld come
comment on the 1ubject of oil in the from tb·e tali of alcoholic bever11e1 at firm'• largely technical report, which the clubhouJO,
l"rolll P .. e J
HIPPIES ...
public property end for paradff.
1\e law would nqulr1 thet •P-
pllc1Uon1 f« pubilc UHmblltl be Iii·
ad wHll tbl police cblel '8 boon
belore tbe event. The ch1ef eould tum· maril.Y revoke permits for noons of
riot, cllluter, pubilc cllamllf or other
emer1ency.
Newport llJo lw a '10 "'11 for
aVertlme parklol '1olalimll 1t recrea-
tion area mM'11 a ta ft1 le surfers
IDd bU btnud the let crta111 wagon
In the belch 11'11.
SID Clemente 1ot 11 .. 11' -iled
aver one pryobedellc 1bop, now
cloled: The Mind Gardm.
Pollet Chief Cllllord Mmr11 said
tbe urflDCJ crd1nance paued b7 San
Clemente councilmen this fear apin11t
lleepln( In vthlcJBt aliDecl the tiUe
"hipplt ordinance" bec11111 of tbe tim-lna.
It 11 llmlllr to tilt ordlolnea Laguna
Jleach relu-on the llrallh of Newport Beach'• court vlcW)',
The hipp(1 laws, ol cour1e, aren't
pecullar to the Orana• eout. Los
Angeles recently teat a law through
makin& it tmlawful to Rand, alt. lie or sleep on• tbcrouahfare in IUCb a man· ner 11 to molest or annoy otben.
Llguna, once 1<:cllled of beln& soil
on th• problem, bail apparently
become aomethill:g ol u authority in
the field.
Llguna Clly Manager James D.
BEAT IN THE HEAT -Jell Seiver a 1..Uor at Costa Mesa's
Estancia High School trles ID cool all following pre-seoson drills In
warm weather. Water polo seems like more appropriate .sport in
current bot spell.
Wheaton 1ald at a recent leaeue of
citie1 1e1llon 1n San Frandlco the
most frequent que1tiona fl.red at him
by city managen And city attorneys
were •bout Laguna techn.lque1 iD COD·
trolling tile hippie problem.
Southland Mercury Soars
As Coast Continued Cool
Bli1tering heat Inland w i t h cooler Additiopal stoties on Ule fire fights
temperatures along the coastline was may be tbund in state news on Page 7.
Corecast for Orange County today, as Abundant smog is predicted to com·
the Southland 1weltered in lta annual pound the heat discomfort, espe<:ially
autumn heat wave. in the Los Angeles basin, where
Bike Accident
Kills Musician
A retired musician and realdent ot
Lel!ure World, Seal Beach, WM fatally
injlnd shortly after noon Monday
when the bicycle he was riding was
struck by a car at an intersection
within the retirement community. -In Colla Men, South Cooat Plaza,
Caroulel Court, 10 a.m. to 8 :30 p.m.
-In Newport Bu.ch, Republican
Women'• Club, 425 N. Newport Blvd.,
10 a.m. to 2_p.m.
-In Hunu.,ton Beach, U.S. Post
Oftlce, 1771 W,tmtr Ave., 11 a.m.'to 2
p.m.; Sea -Mobile Park, oil
day.
e1:i'.':r~d~ct1~~.~1:i.:: .. For Dr. Humbert
71le mercury climbed to near the 100 failure of a cool marine air layer to
. degree mark In many inland areas of move in will create a progres11ive-
the county on Monday, w1th little beating layer.
likelihood of relief for the nex:t two or The first smog alert of the year wa9
Kenneth Whitney, 70, of 1381
Monterey Road was pronounced dead
at the icene, Golden Rain Street and
Alderwood Lane.
Police identified the driver of the
car as Mra. Mary Smothers,. T1, ot
13760 Alderwood Lane. She wao not
held.
-In Fountain Valley, Gem co
Department store, Warner Avenue
and Brookbunt Street, noon to 4 p.m.
-In Lquna Beach, Cbamber of
Commerce, m PRll: Ave., 9 a.m. to 4
p.m.; Laguna Savings and loan, 260
Ocean Ave., 10 a.m. to 3 p.rn.
Relideata who failed to vote in the
last cen«eI electioo should dle<:k to
l!iee tf their name has been scratched
from the registration lists. 1n that
cue lt would be necea.sary to re-
reitater.
DAILY PILOT
OltAHOI COAST "VILIW41NO COMPAHY
koNrt N. W114
.. f'tt ... f Mid l"lllllllMI'
J11d1 R. C111l1y
\llot Presidlftl erl4f "-11 IN<lftH
Thorn•• IC1rf'll
Ectilor
T~'"''' A. M11rphi"1 ~fltl Edltcw"
Pt 11I Nit1111 MllW'lli.kle Dhctor
C.... M._ Olftw
l:JO Witt l1y Str11t
M1tll111 Aiirt111 P.O. In ll60 t26J6 .,_ ........
.....,..... ll«l!: nn wttt 1111oe MltWnll u..-D.dl: m ...,.., ,.,....,.,..
~ IMCJI: ., Mii llnlt
hemonhaao, who ls bellnolnl to eet
up and around Ibo pediatrics wan! at
Hoag Memorial Hoopltal.
"They're taking her off medication
and &he'1 loeln1 that blanl: look now,"
laid Lani'• crandfatber, Jack Curnow,
of 963 Coronado Drive, when contacted
for a progress report.
Lani, d au g ht er of Mrs. Janice
'11n.nton, who wu about to remarry
and establlsh a new home W'hen the
little girl became ill Aug. 21 at the
Curnow home, faces a k>ng cooVales-·
cence.
Her erandCaUler said todly physi-
clanl want her to avoid all streouou&
activities and she may not even be
able to return to third grade at Presi-
dio School for some lime.
"She seems to have improved 100
percent in the ptst few days," 1aid
Curnow, "1M '1 over the critical per.
iod and out of the wood!-Jt'1 juat a
long coovllescenoe oow."
In the meantime, Crlends report that
the Lani Thurston Fund establl!hed to
belp defray Mrs. Thunton'a big ho•"
pltal bills, amountln1 to several thou·
sand doll an already, is growing.
nonatlons by fr1end!--even thoMI
WOO neV't'I' met Lani-may be 1ent to
Callfornla. Federal Savings and Loan
Aa.!JocilUon , 2700 Harbor Blvd., Coata
Mesa.
Due to an ironic twist of timing,
health lnluran<e had i.,,...i only one
day when Lani wu 1tricken, shortly
belore lhe would have been covered
undel her 1teplalher·to-be'1 policy.
Mesa Burglar Gets
$300 Worth of Loot
A Colt.I Mt1a coot toat per10111t
belongings worth nearly f3X> Monday
when • burglar amubed • wtndow to
1atn entry to b1I apartment wbila the vtcum wa1 1wa1 at work.
JUcky F. Slater of -Elden Ave.
llld tllt loot Included I porlablit
televiaion nt, 1tereo out.flt and an
electric shaver, accordln& t.o ID· veatlgaton. '
Set Wednesday three days, according to toreoa1ters. called at the Los Angeles Civic Center
SUM)' and wann through wec1. Monday and cbance1 were for another
nesday wtth pMchy fog along the south alert today.
Rosary will be recited for Dr. James coast during late night and early High and law temperatures logged
Humbert. practlcing phy1klan ln morning hours Is ttie official predlc-at the water'!! edge by the Orange Veterans Get Boost Orange County for the past 1b1: years, tion, with title change in temperature. County Harbor Department l n
at a p.m. today at Cunningham 8lld Near-record heat for this date in t2le Newport Beach Monday were 78 and WASHINGTON' (UPI) -veterans
O'Conners Mortuary ln Hollywood. Los Angeles ba111n -up to 100 degree s 64. traveling to VA bospJ.tall: tor treat4
Masa ww be celebrated a a.m. Wed. 1n 1ome spots -is C()mpltce.t1ng a Inland area1 will get a forecast high ment now will get an allowance of 1ix
esQay at Blieesed Sacrament Catbolic fight against five potent Ya 11 y of about 89 degrees today, dropping to cent11 a mile, rather than five cents.
<Jrurch. dangerous fires fanned by parching, about 72 degrees overnight, according Preside!it Johnson ordE.red the in-
Dr. Humbert died Sunday at Good unp~ctable winds. t<i the U.S. Wea1her Bureau. crease ln an executive order Monday.
Samaritan ff06Pltal alter • llhort ill·r~i[;;;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;;;;;r neu. He w11 16.
RecenUy recognized for fiO year1 cl
service to the medical pro(etsion by
Westminster Hotpital, he served on
the 1tafC ~ and at Hollywood HOft·
J>ltai, Queen of Ancel• and California Luthel'an.
A wteran of WOfld War t and II,
he wu ChJef of Medi.cine at the Naval
HospltaJ, Oakland dW"ing the last war.
Survivor1 include his wife, Margue.
rite, dauebter, Jean Humbert and
ion, James Jr., all ol the home, 1522
Poguu• St., Ooeta Me" and a bcothec,
Vidor, of Indiana.
Intennent will be private at Holy
Cross Cemetery, Hollywood.
Cycle Accident
Hurts 2 Mesans
A Costa Me11a man and his
pusenger wen spilled oft the.tr small
motorcycle late Monday nt1ht wblle
maklna a U-turn oa 1 r11ldtnttal
street, 1uUerln1 m1Qor abruiom and
pavement burm.
Cycll.lt Gtrald E. Jlabt, 311, of 2112
Weelo Drive, and pu1en1tr Karl E.
K•ndall, M, of 675 W. WI.lion Sl, were
treated at Hoos Memorial Hoopllal
and rtleaae4, po~ tald. -
School Picketed
TANNER WILLIAMS , Ala. (UPI) -
A croup of tboul ID wtlHes picketed
tilt formerly &ll·whtte T a n n e r
WDII111111 ICbool Monday In protest
1gal119t Ille aalllrunent ol two Nesro -.....
•
only . -11JJNB:u has . ti I .
.-,,-..r.:.J{/, DEEP <;teimi-.
CRll/IET CLCRn1n11
THE ULTIMATE
in CARPET CLEANING
ICONOMICAL reduc•• th• need for
freqvent profes1ionol cleaning b•-
ceuse it ttmovts the deeply embed-
ded soil end lteves no residue in the
cerpet flben to collect dirt.
CLIANS om ectuelly rtmov•• 1011
from both the pile of th• cttpet end
the c1rpet b1ckint.
IESTOlU PILI the powerful t•tr1c~
tion ptoc•'' r1movts moist11tt lm-
medi1tely, thus 1voidin9 shririk19•,
end lift1 metted pile to 'llke new'
1pp11r1nc1.
WHIN TOU
WANT THE
FINHT-
SIJll PIOCUS scl1ntlflc1lly dtvtl·
oped sp1cl1lly for the professionel
c•rpet cle1n1r. It Is compl1tely safe
for all carpet fibers. '.
GINTU ACTION ut•• no brushes or
acr11bbln9 1ction, so it do•• not dis.
tort the pile ef th• c•rptt.
SOIL I IT A I DIN • AND llOTK
PIOOPIN• tre included at no ••tr•
cost,
FID
ISTillATI
CALL PHOLSTERY CLEANERS
Our 21st Y11r of Strvlc1 in Or•ng• County
2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA
P'HONI 546-3432
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BY
WIUIAM
REED
Reeds •••
In the Wind
On Sept. 5 Pat Evan•, 13, ol
17021 Sima St., Huntington Beach,
was motorboating with his two
listers and father on Lake Tahoe.
Glancing behind him be saw an •
airplane about to dive Into the
water directly behind the boat.
The single engine Cessna hit the
water some 200 feet behind Pat's
boat, n:>sed. over and started to
sink. Pat immediately turned the
boat toward the plane.
.
DAILY rlLOT II•" ....._
"'· ... •• ',L..,, it
No Credit Crunch
Economist Sees
Inflation Check·
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) -
Some softening of the n a t I o n ' s.
economy is under way , and It ~mains
to be •een whether "winter's pallor''
will be followed by a bloom next
Parents Back
Valley School
Music Slate
.
aprlnr, •AY• IC<lCiomilt w-. w.
Heller.
'lbat 1tzeup w11 made Mon<lly b7
Heller, f or m er chairman of the
President'• council of 'E con om 1 e
Advise:rs, in a report to tbe National
Qty Bank of Mlnn-111.
"Just as the big tu cut of 19M W'88
the domlnant force -for expen1ion
and gap-cloalng, -in 1964-65, 10 the
surtax abd budget cut enacted 1n mid·
1968 aft.er long and cosily delay *1"8
tbe dominant force -for cooling off
the economy and checking tnnation -
in 1968-69,'' Heller wrote .
Heller was referring to the 10 per ..
An experimental music program cent hike in fedellal income taxes and
this summer in the Fountain Valley the '6 billion cut in federal spending
School District apparently has won a ordered .along with the tncreue in
vote of confidence from parents. levies, as a means of whlttlint the The pilot, Fred R. Eason of Coos
Bay, Ore., and his pas~enger had
managed to climb out Just as the
boat arrived and were clinging to
the wing.
THAT BLOOMIN' FIELD DELAYING SCHOOL SITE TESTS
Founteln V•ll•y District Must W•lt Untll Crop Is H•rv•sted
A survey of parent reaction to the federal deficit, which totale;d $25.t
summer school session of music only billion for fbcal 1968.
et one sehool, showed overwhelming :•nift specter o J another credit . * enttiustasm, ~ol'dlllg-ta-sctl.ool ot--cnmdt-has-ft:nisbed," a:k!-Heller,--
Pat helped haul the two victims
into the boat while pushing the
tail of the sinking plane from the
boat. Had the tail caught the boat
it likely would have capsized.
'Schoolman, Spare That Tomato' ficials. ,,00 ts an economics pr0fessor at the
About lSO students were enrolled in Universlty of .Minnesota. He sidd that
the four-week program at Fountain open market mterest rates have drop--
Valley School in beginning, in-~.and added that before long, bankJ
termed.late and advanced instrumental will cut their prime rate.
The plane quickly sank into the
depths of the lake, some 1,600 feet
deep at the impact point. OJ!ly Pat
and his family had no¢iced the
plane going down.
The pilot was virtually unharm-
ed but bis female passenger was
in' shock and suffering from cuts
and abrasions. The engine had
failed at 8,000 feet while the plane
was under control of the Lake Ta-
hoe airfield tower. The plane went
down in about three minutes thus
thwarting an air search for the
downed craft.
As for Pat and his family, they
rushed the pilot and passenger. to
shore and after all was done went
back to boating. The deed was not-
iced by a reporter for the Lake
Tahoe Daily Tribune and passed
on to this colwnn.
* M8yor Alvin M. Coen has pro-
claimed next S u n d ay "World
Peace Day" in Huntington Beach
"in the fervent hope that this will
motivate Americans exerywhere
to work, each in his own way and
in concert with others for the at-
tainment of those attributes in
himself his community and his
nation 3nd world will foster a high
standard of justice and eliminate
those prejudices that are road-
blocks on the highway leading to
univenel peace."
Teen on Beach's
Parks Board?
ShoW.d a teen-ager 'be represented
on the Huntington Beach city com-
mission directing the recreation and
park programs for the city?
Recreation and Park Commission
Chairman Thomas Cooper will ask
fellow commissioners fC11' thelr views
during the 7:30 p.m. meeting of the
Commission Wednesday in council
chambers of Memorial Hall, 5th Street
and Pecan Avenue.
The ~tla Recreation and Parks
Commission recently installed Bill
Zures, 17, as a member of that group
in tne Interest of involving teen-agers
in the programs which are aimed at
young persons.
By SANDI MAJOR
Of .... Deity l'ii.1 llllf
The tomato still rules in Fountain
Va:l:ley, just as it has since the days
the city was known as Talbert,
Republican Bend or Gospel Swamp.
Fountain Valley 11cbool trustet's
have learned that the purchase of a
site on Garfield Avenue, between
Bushard and Brookhurst streets for
the Moiola , School will be held up
another month -until the tomato crop
is harvested.
They have to wait Until tbe ~nd is
clear lo take sOil tests to see if the
ground will sllpport a sch o o .l.
Preliminary tests along the road in-
dicate peat layers go down about 20
feet at that site. School oUicials say
the problem could mean that ex-
pensive underground pilings will be
needed to support any buildings.
"ThJs would mean money set a«lde
for the school would have to be used
to put in support pilings," explained
Superintendent Edward Beaubier.
He said the district has never bad to
construct a school supported by pilings
and that several sites have been turn-
Man Slain in Park
Identified by FBI
KLAMATI! FALLS , Ore. (UPI)
The Federal Bureau o.f Investigation
said Tuesday the body of a man found
1tabbed and beaten 1n Crater Lake Na·
tlonal Park last Friday was ide.OOfled
as George Stephen Mear, 29, who wu
born In Buffalo, N.Y.
'nle body was found wrapped in a
sleeping bag liner about two miles
south of Annie Springs, which is near
the eutr31K"e to the scenic park.
School Aides Meet
Personnel Group
Non-teaching employes of the Foun·
taln Valley School District are to meet
Thursday with the sdlool system's
personnel CommiSSiOJl.
The meeting will be held ln the
board room Of the Curriculum
hiaterials Center, Number 0 n e
Lighthouse Lane, Fountain Valley.
1936 GOP Candidate
Alf Landon Says LBJ
Holds Key to Campaign
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) -Ali M. Lan·
don says President J ohnson could
have an overpowering impact on the
1968 presidential election.
The 1936 Republican presidential
nominee gave his views on the 1968
campalgn on the occasion of his 81st
birthday today. Landon said "momen·
tous events" in foreign affairs could
occur before the electloo, making Its
outcome unpredictable at this time.
He said Johnson Is the most un·
popular president since H e r b e rt
Hoover, but be more than anyone else
cOUld lnfluence the coune of those
events.
Leridon, who supported Gov. Nelson
A. Rockefeller for tbe GOP nomlna·
tion, also made biJ first public
declaration ol 1uppOr1 for Richard M.
N!Ion. Landon said two emotional lssuet -
the Vietnam w• and attJtudet on
questions involving human relationa -
will bo criicllll ID the campaign.
He said tbel"e were demands wtthtn
the DemecroUc party that Vice l'nll·
dent Hubert B. Humphrey di1eogag1
h!lnsetl from 111• polld .. of the l'nll·
dent But t b I s Ls dlfflcuJt for Hum·
pbrey to do, be said, because "Johnson
w111 be captain of t b e team until
JaoUl.11 and the decls.ions be makes in
the nut dgbt ween will ha•• .. of·
feet on the electloo."
Landon 1Md tbe Sowt Union'• in.
vuJoo of CzechoalovU::l.a prnenta an
opportunity for a f1rwt step toward
dtplomatic recognition of Red Chine, a
•"1> bo uld the Unlt..i States should
talte.
He sugguted !bot the Unlt..i States
STILL GOING STRONG
GOP't L•ndon
abstain from the queltlon of Reel
ChhteM adm1ssion to the United Na..
t1on1 at the ne:1t U .N. session.
l.aldon said, "The bitter .animosity
between RUlsia and Red Chlna -
coupled witb a return to Stallnilm in
MOK'OW -creates a sltuatior; that
mates th11 an opportune time for a
1tgnal 1t.ep in the direction Of
ettabUshing diplomatic relationt with
Red ChiM.''
''That doem•t mem rm ?'Mdy to go
to 1leep in the same room wlth Mao
and leave my pocketbook ln my pantt
on the back ol a cbalr," Landon said.
'
ed down in the past because or soil
condi'tion:r that an good for tomatoes,
but not for schools.
with.in walking distance of nearly
every child. music and chorus. Savings institutions also will cut
Under a recemty-ert&bllshed priori-
ty 6dledule, M<Jiola is to be the next
school built after Cox School, which is
already on the architect's drawing
boanl.
Parents were queried about their loan charges and the benefits from
He said the 15·acre site might still
be purchased, if soil engineers can
find tour acres ol. solid ground on lt U
not, the distrlot will have to begin
looking again for more land.
reactions during the experimental pro-these factors "will seep through to
gram's grand finale lest July -a con-business, consumers, iaod mortgage
cert at Fountain Valley High School. borrowers."
Generally, questionnm:res returned Heller said that the adjustment In
Moioia School is one of 11 planned
f<r construction under the Fountain
Valley district's plan t.o put a school
If the district's proposed S8 million
bond issue passes Sept. 17, Moiola
School is ro be completed and ready
for classes by September 1970.
by parents praised the program, but the nation's fiscal policies ha I
there was one recurring complaint, restored world confidence In U.S. self•
eehool officials admitted. discipline but that "the favorable ef·
One parent swnmed it up. 'I1le con-feet on our distressingly week trade
cert, he sadd, was too l<Jng. balance is yet to be felt''
For new · accounts and present depositors . of
NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK
vuf Jee c oice
Elegant lady
R£1Nf'ORCED SILVERPlATE
Classic in design .•. with grace.
ful handle enriched with tradi·
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enhancine the .smooth surfaces
of gleaming silverplate.
Tradewinds
CAREFREE STAINLESS
Stunning contemporary design
with bold rhythmic lines and
smooth surfaces .•• all beauti~
fully Interpreted to create a ba~
anced place setting.
HERE'S HOW YOU GET YOUR FREE GIFT!
II• Accocmtr. Open a $100 account, checking or savings, and
select a FREE five piece place setting in Original 'Rogers Silver ..
plate. or in Stainless by International.
ADD TO THE TABLEWARE OF YOUR. CHOICE:
£aeh time you deposit $25 or l)lOre to your savings account,,.,..
may purehasa a place setting of your choice for only $2.50. BuUd
your tablewaro service while we build your U.lnpl
Present Depo1ffors: Add $100 to your present savings account Completing untts, (extra teaspoons, storage chest, 4-pc. hostess
and select your FREE fiva piece place ..ttlng In Original Rogers set and more) are also available with each $25 deposit to yoor
Reinforced Sllverplata or Stainless by International. savings eccount. Open or add at Newport National Bank today.
-l'rlo&llblltl_,, ,.,,..,,. ID,..,...f,ml~fwnow-.l'nlott....,... 0 .. 1 .. ._ .. Ifft ,........,..,.,._,...ltlq20,Jlll.
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Select your FREE gilt at any of our 7 offices
AIRPORT cmcE •••• , ••• ,Cllllpus It Mld.rdllr, "l'#pOl1 hd, •• MOontt
MYSIDt: OfflCl ......... ·-otllol---.. 14t4141 CO.USE P'AllK OFFICE.., ,Nllt'MllM « Co1Mto!M1D, ,...,._ •• 111all
SIJl<llT KILU <fFICl. .............. -11 ..... -... 11).7211
som10• <fFIC6 ........ -.. ~-, ·--... euau llNIYERSITY OfflCE., •• Eat CfNpm• It Stll:t\iOlltll. fllllertoll ••• l1MMI
W£STCUff CfflCL. -· ; •• ··-·-·""""' -·· .llHIU •
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U.S. Schools
Still Closed
By Strikes
flD<li~IQ W&! ~~ h"'la · as young · Eisenhower, :a'tid&bh . 01" th~ 1 fd~er ,President, announced
nnation of a student coalition to "deal with the
eris .. o! e futljl'e" and, pre,umably, IQ hell! ~l
'"~ . miii-. --
F ~fkrgJ Grand Jury Sttlrting Prg~e. . -
. 1111 ~--· pal-8111141/, ' d -~ ~
• tpnn ·-!ii liGllwilk,' /if< IJIGTI liml whllllj!ffl a
</IPla old of § IPll4~., Of
"'11111! "' II "fflf· I r f'lll 11fil::J1 111#.1 . P 11-tm !i>W ~ ~ 1111"'
Of Re~ptJnsibility j ff: Chicqgfl flio.~
a 16100 "11111 PWct of !'Q04. • H~ Jl, Moore, 17, a
Bu~_. IJMI., !ruck driver, was •lwll wau~by ! bee on his left leg as s !Oil worked in their b~::r roner Richard Vance
said daath lias due to a severe
react!DR lo the bee's polaon.
• • • •••
""" Whul, New England
phiJlu!thropist, has received more
thaa 50 replies since he offered to
pay '25 to anyone who found him a
irullllble wife. Wheal says he ha.ui't
fow:µI a mate yet. "They l"ere
either much too old or much toO fat
..• just big dumplill1•," he •114· •
A man (who wisher to remain
anonymous) recentJv purcluu1d
a grandfather i::Iock /O'r 14S' GC
on auction. Alihough an autJa..
.ntic antique, Uic dock 1old
ehtap becau.s1 ft CD01'ldn'f rvn.
Upon Q<tting ti homt, . hf look
U apart to find lht lroublt , , ,
mid out tumbltd ,5,POO """1h
of jewelry that ..., htddln ln-
llde.
. • At a meelini with nowamon Ill
New York lo llDilOUDCI that ho wit
goillg to Montreal lo make a draft..
resistance movt.e Abltlt Hoffmtn,
a self·sf;yled Yi~p\e ioader, amused
hilllsell by pla)'lnf with an electric yo-yo. . .
• Rockland, Maino, City Man11•r
Rlcf!ord Cohill · wll Jllrpriled,
resi4ents of CbesjJjut Strfff 101ro
haJll'f, and offiqiala ol a local cop-
trading !inn w're very rtd·f~o1'·
The firm r•vod the street and
Cahill didn' know about It unW ·bo
drove down it. The compap.y wa1
hired to resurfai:e • e y e f • I thoroughfares, but Eb11lnut Slrttt
wam't one of ~em. Finn officials
admitted Ille mistake wa1 lhiir1
and didn't char1e the city the f'/92
that the work cort.
250 University
Studen~ Jailed
OIWIP41GN, II!. (IJl'I) -l'oil<>f
lll9V<d lolo tho Unlv•ra=t Of !Ut.lllJ
tk>diot Wlioo tltor 11114111 ~~:" lllT•-..i moro lboP 1111 ""°" f • Mud~, ll!Olt ol lll!llll l(egroes Fil' 1t1t!Dg ftriar hQlllll!S.
4utho " !aid .1ht "camG·lo"
drmonstta!oro lmullod i:ll~ '"' o-.4 ""'1!turo, lolt 1....-1 ~I·
tored will! 11M11 1114 11Nhed plcll!r11 .
illcllldlng ODO 11 !be llnlVlfslty protl·
dtnt.
At l'flt aQ •tlldeots w•ro h1ul14 otl
to iall lo y1111. Police oa!d U>11 ollort<I no rtliltoPc,.
Appalachians Inundated
Michigan Tornado Masfl,~~ Cedar Sprtn1a City HulJ
CelUorttl• IU'lllWDIU$.111U11111MIMllllJWTJ!l'll~.t!-lll I •11·11 l'•~lf'''
c
l, I
lwil'"'!~I tllp llOWl ll\fd\B p\'O," Dale . . f 'tilt . " ..... '" If ;;,,-:.;f , . !. . . llll!!:P.@f.~~ Qews
mttllf~~· "Tl\! Am!fi~ people ....,.. amazec!. 'fl!llf 1~\li!ri 1!1ow 11."
The mayor r~ Ill tltl>orate on
how the med!& all•illlllJ ~torted the
news, referring 'qµeit!qg@re fl> the city
report. He cone~ ~@ft may have
~~~ inst.ancea of '10Ver-fCtJ:tion" by
PQli~f!. but said these now Jre under
Investigation by the police d!l""lment
and fJtoutly defended Police ~on dur-
ing ~e disoeders ii' dealing 'l'lth "ter-
rorist!."
~f ~ted. statem~ts coo-tain'lf in -.e report that JtPl.icemen ~ w~' !Nbjed<d Iii obscene age lbmK" themselves pd tbeir
fliijl:lea .frUii"liippies and ant;Jwar pro-
'kftffl and had many things, Jn.eluding b\lllllm pccremeRl, thrown •I them. "Whaf about human bites -biting
lie~, taking flesh oo! ol their ~·· e· .a.• oo. · r . . . u newsmen 1'\Used the
PP!l!\,1. b@ ~. "There wert no lives lQn ~ ~~ O ~uring the CQJ!Vention . ~f-l 'er~ ~ in Miami Jn racial !~ a11T llje Republi=t National
&ti tlllO tlf 111ore month t~er monlll tfllr llltnllll
lmqlnt ••• ~1¥i111 • ""~' mlf!lll~ died 111111 ft!l!IN Ill
llllJ ol tilose who hon 1 •tpde~ul M~flTltiT UGU!ll'f
ACCOUNT ... ori1inaled ond l•!J llsled ., "llltfl lllhl
smnp ... sltrted by simply •Jlltllnr 1 d~Mlll ~nll
i Oth!Jl!~ 1 lump sum. IWI, I *"" 11111 rm emJ1! ptl THE IPTHLT Mf Mlltlllf
MfMI " -.i-., .s.c, II 04 ti ._ s fl!ttllfhl 'tft ...., Midi ........ •1141 .... •-l•l!tii _, Mt l1flllt •
'I' ....... Jlltltt " l•ttort 19 lri.,,., •. ["'J • ' "'Ifft"'"= ~~ .. 11~•1
I
YouthGaug
Runs Wild
In Syra~use
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Czech Premier
Visit,s Moscow
MOSCOW ( UP ll
Promler Oldridl Cemik of
Ciecboslovatira .arrived in
-today to fullill his nation's pledges to bind
Czecboelovakia economic·
ally to the Soviet Union.
He was the first
Czechoslovak leader to visit
Interviewing
Of Pueblo
Crew Slated
-since he ••d oeveral others ....,,.. brouglil
here tw01 de.7t After the
Sovie! Bloc Jnwrlon All(. m.
In tbal meotloC, t h,o
Kremlin set ttrms f o r
C>edlosloval<ll lo Mllll !ar
the wiUtdtawAl o f oc-
cupel;ioo troops.
Soviet Premier A 1 e I • 1
Kosygin met Cer1>llt at lho
aiJ1>ort end !hoy shook
bands \WU'Jilly. 'Ibey review·
ed an honor ·guard, heard a
militory beDd play UH! ...
ti.on.al anthems ol both coun ..
tries and then beaded fOl'
the Kremlin.
CzecbosloVl&k SOUf(es &aid
the d.iscu.ssi<m would be
concerned primttrlly with
trade between the two na-
tions and Czechoslovakia's
progress in complying with
Soviet demands for an
economy tied more tightly
to that of the Soviet Union.
.·
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DAILY rll.DT J
Arabians Warn
Of R etaliation·
87 Ulllt.d !'roll lnlenUI·
Uonal
The United Arab Republic
warned of ''violent
l'etallatory me a.1 u re s ''
against Israel as a tense
mUitary and political situa-
tion prevailed today along
the Suez Canal.
The commanders-in-chief
of both natlon1 toured their
respective battle-lines along
the narrow waterway Mon·
grllJlon, u Gobar 'fl I I
qooi.d 11 telling Bull.
Earlier, an Egyptian
m 111 t a r y cummu.n.lque
described the m o r t ~ r ,
artillery and tank cannon
bombardment C?f I 1 r a e 11
positions a1 "protective
defensive measlU"et" and
reserved the right to take
more.
day only 24 hours after a 2 D rt
deadly artillery battle llt "P ese ers
lsrael's western occupation
front In one of the worst out-Face Tn' al breaks of fighting since the
end of the 1967 six-day war.
Government sources in B S d
Jerusalem said De ~ens e Y We en
Minister Moshe Dayan and
-·
SEOUL (UP!) -The
release of the 82 USS Pueblo
crewmen b'Clfn North Korea
may be delayed due to
disagreement over t h e
wordage of the pl'OpO:Sed
U.S. apology for the spy ship
incident, a Seoul newspaper
~d t~--
The independent Hankook
Ilbo, one of Sooth Korea's
national papers, said in a
front page story the United
States had agreed In prin·
clple to admit the Pueblo's
violation of North Konan
w-aters and apologize for it.
Cernik'i arrival was not
announced ~~anc1 to
western newsmen. He was
accompanied by
Czechoslavak FOl'eign Trade
Minister Vaclav Vales a.nd
Deputy Premier Frantisek
Hamouz.
his generals were convinced GOTEBORG, Swede 11.
Egypt has built up the big-(UPI) _ Two MMnoan
gest concentration of deserten baive been ar-
artillery ever seen in the rested tn Goteborg and
Jnief'e8ted Obsm'l'ft"-· .. ·m·····-·········---··· ... · .. -····----------!~~J~~;;.!!~!i;\..,ne,:.y~1~~·.g!.p,.,;~·~~1,:.·;:;~*~a1~~be?l'11Wioonc1.y~111e11ill,.J."pollce"'!!il.-J..i.~d;--.U
A fearless youngster ventures close to a South Viet· the vill'ege on the outskirts of Saigon. The South believe the artillery front tooey. u convicted they face
nemese soldier who has taken cover during a Vietnamese were searching for Viet Cong suspects fired Sunday according to a certaJn expul&lon fr 0 m
"search and destroy" mission in the tot's village Qlf as other allied units uncovered caches of weapons preconceived plan. Sweden.
Hoc Mon. Intelligence sources disclosed. that North near the DMZ. Al Ahram, the semi-of. The Americana, identlfled
Vietnamese forces were building up in the area of ficlal Cairo newspaper, only as being 18 end 20
qUoted E g y p t i a n un-ye.an old, will 1taod trial
Attributing the story to
sources dose to the United
Nat.ions command, the
papet' said this agreement
came at the 20tti secret
U.S.-North Korean talk at
the truce village of Pan-
munjom on Aug. 29.
The Soviet news agency
Tass said they came "for
talks with tbe Soviet govern-
ment." Prague radio said
they would discuss
"ecc.10m.ic questions." De Gaulle Blasts Soviets
dersecretary for foreign af. lllort.l,y charged w i t h
fairs Salah Gohar as saying assaulUng and robbing three
"'The continuation of Israeli older women of t h e I r
aggression against civilian handbags and stealiJc five
targets will force Cairo to motorcycles. A po 11 c e
take violent retaliatory 1 pokesman said the
measures." deserters had cmiessed to
'The sources expected the
release of the Pueblo crew
would be delayed ari no con-
clusion had been reached on
the wordage and method <>f
the proposed apology, the
paper said.
AJ soon as the United
States makes a decision on
how bo apologize, it would
seek the 21st secret bllateral
talk to discuss detailed pro-
cedur~ for the return of the
Pueblo crew, the paper ad-
ded.
The Japanese Kyoto
News Service reported to-
day from the North Korean
capital ol Pyongyang that
North Korea will allow the
first interview of the cap-
tured crewmen on Thurs-
day.
Kyodo said the interview
would be held at the
crewmen's place of deten-
tion aod that journalists at-
tending will be f o u r
J a panese correspondents
and representatives from
the Soviet news agency
Tass, other Communist bloc
nations and ''various
deve}oping nations."
The Czechoslovak !Jelega-
tioo arrived a m i d in-
creasingly strong attacks
against ttieir nation in the
Soviet press. Pravda today
called for an end to ''the
u n h e a I t h y atmosptieric
Phenomenon of natiooalism"
in Crecho61oYakia.
North Viets
Stand Firm
HONG KONG (AP) -A
speech by Premier Pham
Van Dong Monday night
showed that North Vietnam
has not given .an inch in its
demands for peace in Viet-
nam or progress at the
Paris peace talks.
Pham Sia.id North Viet-
nam's position ls "clear and
unchanging":
"The U.S. must un-
cooditiooally stop lu born·
bing and all other acts of
war against ttie Democratic
Republic of North Vietnam.
Only alter that can other
matters be discussed.
"The U.S. must withdraw
all U.S. and other satellite
troops from Vietnam."
p ARIS (UPI) -A pair or
strange bedfellows, t h e
Soviet Union and the French
capitalist employer, today
felt the sting of the same
message from President
Charles de Gaulle -the
day of old ideologies ls over.
ln one of his rare and
sweeping news conferences
Monday, De Gaulle deplored
the Soviets for their "absurd
an d condemnable" oc·
ocupation of liberal-leaning
Czechoslovakia. He a I so
spelled out in more detail
the three aspects of hls no-
tion or "participation" for
the French working man in
the financial and policy-
making machinery of na·
tional industry.
'•Part i clpation," De
Gaulle's personal 11olution to
the crisis in industry-union
relations that sent some 10
million workers on strike
last spring, has been bitt~ly
assailed by the National
Council of French
Employers (NCFE).
About 1,000 newsmen,
diplomats and government
officla.ls jammed into the
hot, stuffy Elysee palace
THIS WEEK
11IE WEATHER IS
LEATHER
•••
Fo1t-.ion Shows September 12-1 ... Compllmentory Makeups, too ••. AM In
the Carousel Court, starting ot l P.M.
Be 1ure to see the reproductions of 16th centvry tanning mett-.ods, courtHy
of Sierra Pine Tanning Co.
... AND ENJOY SHOPPING AT OVER 80
FINE SHOPS AND SERVICES ..•
• 11 ear•
Alti•rt•a H••Mry
e. H. l•k.,. lho••
8•lttl or Am•rlca
earriclnl ea,,dy
a.,..,,, Tall lh ..
e•bol'•
Caplica e•1ffu,..
Chrl1' l'"11hl1M
Chl•A-..i ..
et1 ... •1 au•_.,,.
OPEN EA.CB NITE "l'IL 9,30 P.M.
Fat .l•ek'• eon .. Hau"
Fl~·· an ...
........ F••hlOfl aoth1i.•
,.,. lowth Co&•t ,.1111:1
Th11t ..
G•fl•'•
Qold•fl NMtfla o~•••·••.-...tt ,.._
H•rrl• 4 ,.,..,,k
H•l'V•ft H•U•• C•f•tarl• Hlekery ,...,..,.,
Houe•h•lld Fln1ft111
Howie " "•brl••
HouM If Nina
HouM If T 1llerlfll
Hou11 If T•"Y
Hubbub
Hllfltlntt-11"'11'1 .. 4 L&lfl '""" .,._ .l•••lti by J&MPft
.IO)'OI lftoe T""
J1tllY'•
K•Pl•fl'• DIH01te•&fl K...,.,,,, .. _ • ._
L1111 af')'11tt
...... stlt•
LN4'1
Liiii.,.'•
JOMjWI fllllfllfl
Marltifl• "•brldu•
May c •.
MIN H•w•ll
MwlMfl 4 ahlatt
000,..1 111111.r ... y Oltta & Sltvot" ,
Oft Th• Ga Tr1vll
.1. "· c ... ,, ... 011tem1tr11t "•c•"tt"' Gift& 4 Chlfl•
Pac:lflo l&Ylflt• ... LOlfl
.. lckwl&k 9Mk1h ..
,., .. , 811 ..
Jt1J If ''"''• '"'--"' Jt1J llltlf'11•tl•111I
Jttvlar• 11\&ft.llWl'l.fll "''.,..' •••wV wa..i•
JtMttlfl'I LWttlll
labrlfl•'• Llfllot'M
aMN
lln1w •-Int C11tt.,.
loutll ee•at Onie
tunllt HOllM
Thom llh;A.11
Tie "'''° Tlftder •••
Tay W.,.. 4
H1llm1rtl lt1t1111.,.
U. l. N~tleft&I •111k
Watll&tM Nw•I& C1ty
Tfte Wat ... I
WllMfl'e Mafl'I ll'I ..
~. w. w .. ,...,.
Y1t1"1 M•t-Ftr
ra111••
Vlllltw•CillJ'bUI
5outh f oast 'Plaza
BRISTOi. AT SAN DIEGO 'RIFEWAY, COSTA MESA
.. •
ballroom for the 77-year-old
genera.l's 17th news con-
ference in 10 ~ears.
They found It most notable
for the complete lack of
comment on U. S. Vietnam
policy and for the most
stinging rebuke of the
Soviet-led invasion yet ut-
tered by a western head of
state.
' ' Czechoslovakia's na-
tional cohesion in tlhe face of
the occupant aod i t s
repugnance at accepting the
return of enslavement, as
O ark Urges
'Immediate'
Gun Control
well a.:s the unanimous
reprobation of ell t h e
peoples of Western Europe
afraid Of a return to the cold
•
war, all proves in our eyes"
that his own polJcy of na·
tional independence ts pro-
per, De Gaulle said.
Sen. Thurmond Pledge~
To Block Abe Fortas
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Committee into c 1 o s e
Sen. Strom T h u r m o n d session at midmorning to
pledged to "~e every legal day -perhaps to COC16'id
means" tc block Senate con-the Fort.as matter, perhap not.
firmation of Abe Fortas to The committee has befor
replace Earl Warren 1lt Jt a long list of relatively
Chief Ju.stlce of tbe United minor bills such as im
States. migration law amendmenjJ,
Senate D e m o c r a t 1 c proposed. tax court revisi
Leader Mike Mamfleld sug-and the U6ual private retie
gested be nllght ttgb.t back measures.
by holding the Senate in Amid d.Ulcusslon of
Gohar's remark was said the robberies and thefts.
to have been made directly The spokesman said the
to Gen. Odd Bull, chief of Americana deserted from
the United Nations truce the U.S. armed forces in
supervisory ocganization. West Germany in the aum•
Bull oand Gohar conferred mer and fled to Sweden
two hours in Cairo Monday after spending 80Dle time in
night Paris. Tbey told Swedish
"Egyptians will not stay authortt.les they deserted
with their arms folded while because they feared they
Israel comm l ts ag-would be ~nt to Vietnam.
High Holy Day Services
TEMPLE SHARON
... ..... . ... ..
The ConseNative Syn•li!09U • for th•
Entire Harbor Area
61 7 WEST HAMILTON, COSTA MESA
646-5552
All Jewlah famJlles are invited to participate in truly meaningful High Holy Dt.y Services at $15 per person•
for the Roth Hashana-Kol Nldre--Yom Kippur-Yl..skor S.rvloea
session the rest of the year this, Sen. Philip A. Hart (D hf lllf"-""1 M'·lllJ " S4M411
unless it acU on President Mich.), wae poised for an ef. 1t1t.W P111I D11bJ11
WASHINGTON (AP) ,_ John90D's controversial ap-fort to put before the panel C111tor M1rvi11 Kohn
pointment. both the Forla! nomination •~ tha T1111pl1 Sho1r111 Choir
Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark Against the backdrop ol and thet of District Judge Ra""' yo11r •••t. tod1.,.......11tln1 11 /lmltad
called today for immediate that and other threats aod Homer W. ThOl'nberry to •Ct111drw11 ..,,... ti FREE
strJct gun-control I aw 1, cajoling, Chairman James replace Fort.as as an ••bY .. 1"1111 '"'"14111 "" 11•rt1 .... _...lcH.
saying those who "quibble 0. Eastland (0-Mi.ss.), call-Associate Supn!me Cour s.. ...... s':~:!. s-vfce _,
about the inconvenience of'J-:ed:..._.:lll;:•:......::Sena=:le:..._.:J.:lldi::::cl:;ery:.:......:J::":stl:::ce:·.....: ______ J::====================='
registration Ind llcensi~g,
knowing lives 1 are at stake,
cannot be mJch concerned
about life or ~ime either.''
In a letter hand-carried
this morning to e a c b
member of the Senate,
(;:lark said if Congress
''really wants to do
something to control crln1e,
It will enact a com-
prehensive gun control bill
now."
Saying there probably are
more than 100 million
privately owned firearms in
the country, the attorney
general wrote, "We should
have acted years ago. Con-
trol will take years to effect.
Uncontrolled, g u n s con-
stitute a clear and present
danger to the safety of the
nation."
Clark said 20,000
Americam will be shot to
death either intentionally or
accidentally this year. Rein·
forcing hh contention that
the gun "I.a the principal and
the most dangerous weapon
of the criminal," Clark
reported 7 ,600 Americans
were murdered with guna
last year.
He said the real •ue1Uon
befwe the Senate ii not
whether gun control legi1la·
tlon can reduce crll'le 11nd
save lives, adding: ''We
know It can.
"The que1tion ls Ytiether
our system of government
will addre11 Itself Ito the
issues that mutt be faced if
we are to survive a1l•a fue
and great people," Ill! con·
tended.
He said tho1e who false
the specter of government
dl.aanning law a b 1111 n e
citizens and the.n subjecting
them to tyranny "halve · no
faith in our 1yste.ln of
government or orrpi.
and fall to reco our
broad experience ef·
fecUve regl1tratlon a n d
licensing of both danitfom
a.nd publk1y I m/ o r 1 • ri t
possesslon1 an b"wac-
tions."
"Those who 1trldent1y can
for law and order, yft op-
poff or Ignore run controls,
fail tc face the ls1ue1, tail to
protect the public and 1taiH
question• as to their own
purposes," Clark aald. '
.~
We noticed other
... banks simplifying
their service charges,
and we were suddenly
struck with
this great idea:
•
Our First-Rate Checking Account
If your minimum Write all the checka
balance is .you want for
0·$299 ___ $2 per month
$300·$499 $1 per month
$500-plus Flee
--
·.
-----------
• . .
• I
I
f
l
I
'
" ' '
I I
I ' D,t.11. ~ PU.OT
LA County Blaze Out of Control
. I ~
BJ ASSOCIATED PllE58
Flrefldller• pined l!ie
--todlly qoJnrt • ~Id bluo in Son
Bemardlno Ntdonal Forest
l'lille anodler -lrolt1 out
MOlld11 in nor1bern Loe
A ...... Count;y otU1 ,_.ed
out ol cootr<>I.
By ~ the San
Bernardino blau hod
blackened B,750 aore1 an4
-rep<rted tlO perceot controlled.
1'll<r other -tlres
Nl!W HEART
Virginia Aache
Woman Gets
New Heart
At Stanford
-... MoodlylaLot Ancelea 0ounty but were
contained by ~.U.
ApproUna1e.ly 400 men
remained on tbe firellne
throughout tho night a{ "1•
blue that sftpt over more
thin 1,400 .cres De8J' the
S. Fernando Valley com-
muNty ot l.Akeview Ter--
race. Tbey were Joined by
lllO othen today.
Pre11minarJ pl.ans were
made Mond:ay everdnc to
e~ eome residents in
Ullle Tujunga c a n 1 o n,
Kqol Canyon, Lopez C..
"100 and In "1e -Woodl community but a
U.S. Forut Service
spoke1mao 11id tbl fire
cb:lmged dlrecti<lm bef«e
anyone was moved.
A S!O,CO> pumper from the
Loa Angelet city lire depart·
ment was loll when & wind
lbJlt turned the flames on
the truck. The crew fled
without Injuey.
Anolller blaze .... "'" GOO acres in Bootlegger Can·
yon, 12 m.llea aouthweat of
. Unruh Supports
Reagan on Taxes
SACIRAMENTO (AP) -and said, "We're In subs!an·
Gov. ~ hid aupport Ual agreement on virtually
from Atsembiy S p e at e r everything."
Jesse M. UtrUh today for But the chainnan of the
hi& '2!'oCJ mllUon tu relief Senate Finance Committee •
~-bullln~ -~th1-u
about tB lllniliea preportd
to evacwate.
A ~ lln burn.,i tlO
acrt1 on 1be welt tide ct the
Ao1leope Vllley Freeway,
,,,. milea -ol Lake Pelmdale. .
A tlT>lll blaze comumed
10 acru near the W1191de
Honor Ranch near Cutaic
and an iltr tinker en route
to Little TuJun&• WU
rerouted to uttncuhll •
fiftb five.ecre ftre llbcwe
Altadeol.
A p pr o & lmatl!ly 1,GOD
llremeo -..i lbe 111111u
la San Beroardlno NoU...i
Jl'ontt. Two awl• -wore in thf '11'1 pea,. A Forut Si:r"ti: 1p(t:esmu.
1ald a llr• line had been
--ll'Olllld I he ne•est ranch and appeared
to be llnldinl u the -rMdlodil l
The porimetor ol the Son
Bernardino blau hid grown
to 21 milea. The cauae wu
atill under h\vettiptfoa,
Newton's
Attorney
To Appeal
OAKLAND (UPI)
Black Panther Huey P .
Newton's conviction of
.am but a IE e y Sen C.eoqe MIHer Jr-(.0,., mansta1.13hter:-in-the-deattt-
6C 1enator canea rt Marthtez), dhagreed sharp· of a white policemen will be
a "gyp." ty · f<iught to "the hJghest court
The Repubbn governor "Al far es I can see, no N O in the land" U necessary, 8 -be """'1d put the ""' agreementa were reached," 0 . uster iten\. on the agenda of the said Miller e.tter the same defense attorney said.
speclal session which open· meeting. He led opposition Chief defen11e c o u n s e J
eel Monday 1f it em broad in thfl Senate to Reagan's For v nruh Charles R. Garry said Mon-
enougb. backin& from the property tax relief plan day he would appeal "every
legillatllre. when it died 1n the upper SACRAMENTO (AP) -inue we raiJed ln the
"There's no ~ in jU8t house during the lengthy Jease M. Unruh bas been re-course of the trial.
putting it on special call and regular session. elected to a job he bas held "We have voluminous
bfrve a repeat of the lut "It would not serve any for seven years -speaker ground.a for appeal," be ad·
seven montm "Mien there good purpose to subs ti bite of the Assembly. d d
wu nch wide dilagree-one tu for another ••. to On a straight party-line e ·
ment and blabllity to get actually gyp the people," vote of 42-35, the Allembly The 26-year-old founder of
together," Reagan t o I d MiBer said. voted Monday to retain the Black Panther party
reporters f o 11 ow in I a The state iales t.n would Unruh, an In g 1 e wood was convi~d late Sunday
full round of meetinga with drop automatically by hall a Democrat, in its No. 1 job. of voluntary manslaughter
legielatxrl Monde7. penny on the doll~" from He defeated A s s em b I y in the fatal shooting of
'lbe governor proposed five percent tc 4~ percent, Republic.an Leader Robert Oak.larid policeman John
g i v t n g $155 miWon in en Oct. "l if the legislature T. Monagan of Trecy. Frey last October·
general pt1)petty m relief; fall.I to approve any pro-Monagan had predict.ed he "It is an inconsistent
U'9T ......
FIRE VIGIL - A Los Angeles fir~gbter stands on the line before a blaze
which burned 1,500 acres of watershed in LitUe Tujunga Canyon.
R""CURRENTANNU~L ~OF 5%
EARNS 5.13% WHEN~O )Jc; NDED
DAILY & HELD 1 YEAR
USE THE HANDY PASSBOOK
ALWAYS MOST CONVENIENT
FOR YOUR SAVINGS ACCOUNT
e INSURANCE TO $15,000 e FEDER.ALLY CHARTERED AND SUllERVJSED e
WE PAY EARNINGS Oil YOUR FUNDS FROM DATE RECEIVED TO DATE OF
WITHDRAWAL e FUNDS R~EIVEO ON OR IEFORE THE IOTH OF ANY
MONTH EARN FROM THE !ST e SAVE-BY-MAIL, WE PAY POSTAGE I OTH
WAYS, A CONVENIENT WAY TO SAVE.
l\t• c•lt'TIF1CATU IUUllD IN MULTIPl.D Ofl' JI ... l'Olt t 'l'Ult Tl:ltlll CONnllACT
SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS ""r , '-. . · • , ~ '. h
HEAD omcl: 3933 WllRlll'e lloui.-md, lol Anpln, OU &.l:Kl TARZANA BAAHCH: 11751 Vtltln 1o11i..
¥1fcl, '4Wli14 HUNTINGTON llEACH lllWICH: 91 Hunlllll[lon cem.r, 8!H·1041
STANFORD (UPI) - A
48-year-<1ld housewife with a
long hlttory ol heart attacks
has become tbe latest heart
transplant recipient at Stan~
to<d V.edlcal Centor.
t.o cut the bumneu Jowntory perty tla.J: relief plan. 'That might colie-ct en o u g h verdict -contrary to
tu: by $tO million; double 1.Jw~ae~a~condi~:U~on:o:f·Re:•:g~an~··~~D;em~ocr~a~U~c~s~u:pport:t:o~o~u:stJe~v~id~en~ce~tand~~I jln~te~nd=to~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~ Ile f20 mlllion tu cut now $1 billioo tu Increase bill of Unruh as speaker during the take it to the highest court
being given to e Ider 1 y 1967. special liession. in the land,'' Garry said.
homeawDel'I; eliminate the Mrs. VlrgiDla Aecbe Moo-
day joined two other heart
petienll at the boepital. She
wu the first woman to
receive a new -heart at Stmn-
ford in five operatka
performed thie yUZ by •
team beaded by Dr. Norman
househo~ propttcy tax on .-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--,.--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---.
items IUCb u televillon
E. Shumway.
A hot!pital spokesman llid
Mrs. Asche WU in ~AC·
tory cooditloo.
Sbe received the hurt of
an unnamed donor who cled
of irTeversible b r a i n
damage. Mrs. Ascbe'1 bus·
band, Clw-les, a finaneiaJ
and real: estate cm.ultaot,
said the aperat\on "gave my
wile a chance to 1fve."
1.U: end grant a '35 mllUoo I
Cl& in ioomDe tues to mid-
dle -dliuns with llreefamilie<. ~ -proposed • IOlutioo to the $144 million
comtructlon deficit faclnf
tho San FroncUco Bay Araa
Bapid 'l'nrnlit lltltrlct He
would ralle motor vehicle
~feet la the three
counties and require them
to me their ablre of tbe '1&6
mllllon property tu relief to ClllJlllie<e the ayllem. unnm emerfed •mlllni
lrom a meeting wilh Reagon I
ml other teflllatlw lead""
Dems Fail in Attempt
To Break Reagan Veto
Ibo!, they were defeol<d Ill
11x11mee.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Democrat. In the A-ly
have been turned bact in
their first 'major attempt
Not -. 1948 hu 1
Celif<l'Dia leji•lature
gathered the required two-
this year to break • 22-year· ll*dl vote In both -1o
old traditi'on. ____ .. Cl!~ a ~.1..nto.
They lined up 11% 1-.S At ,.,. point Maadly, ID
Monday aa ·prime target.. _ ueddtiyman !D-llllCad to . pQler the required M votes for over r 1 d t n g Gov. to <Mriurn Acting Gov.
Reagoo's vetoes, and Hueb BUl'DS' veto of a bill d.,pite me ""8lfy perfect wllich would -on to
Judge Dies
OAKLAND (UPI)
Funeral 1ervtces will be
held Wednesday for Judge
Bernard J. Abrott, 63, a
referee In federal
bankruptcy court since 1949,
who died Monday after a
short illness.
QUEENIE
elderJ;y w.Jme redplenta •
$7.5().a-moullt cost-Of-living
increase in Soct:a1 Security
benefit., voted last year by
Crogreoo.
But before the voi. could
be anoounced, Republican
leaders called a caucus and
four Repubticona chonged
their votes. The final wte
was 50-28 -four abort of
the !INljorily requir<d 1o
overrule the governor.
ly Phll lnterfancll
•
•
Free do-it~yourself
phone book.
. • ----___ ... -
Inside this compact
personal telephone directory
are over 100 spaces for enter·
. ing the names, addresses and
phone numbers you need most
frequently. To get as many
free personal directories as
your family needs, just call
your local Business Office.
We're'here to 0 help.
Pacific Telephone@
•• p -.~ ....--~-------
For the
Meetings
Marriage
License•
LAI 11•0.U. .....,,, -Marr1"1
Relftlll IUlllCI hwt lncto.odt:
MILLl!lt-llUIO -A"'·· ts. John E.
Mii..,, U. of HunllM!oon &Mdl, Ind
1"1trld1 L. •1110o It, el Tonw.r;t.
SMITH-t4llL -A"'. ?!. ltOlllld Smllfl, 15, •rd Glorlt J .. n Hll~ ts. llcl1'h of
NI)..._, Ill.ch..
CLARK·HENDERSOH -AUii. 1!.
0,.Yld Andi..., Ct.rt, 1(, trod
Clllrllnl ~ ». bottl Of H--' kid!.
RAOClll'l'E-QOltlAH -Aul. H,
Merlin D. ll.-.nff8, .. of lrlNI, Ind
Mlh' Mlrt1rtt Dorl"" 47, of
N--' lluch.
CERNY-llOUTHILLll!"lt -AUii. H,
MJchMI l"IUI Cln!Y, 11. Ill ~. •rd J1net twlll!llllr, 11. of Ca1!w
MH•.
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A. All H ... rl, el Wl>ttlltr.
CLAltlC-EMlll!ltTY -A,1,19. :II. J1ck E.
Ct1rt, •1, .,id 1"1tr1ci. Lorr11111
EmbetlY. ~. blllll of Cos!• Mau.
SANAO.t.-TIERNAN -AUii. 2t, 1"1ul Mld\HI S.M4f, tl, of Huntlflotkln
finch, 1nd Kalt!leln Tlll"lll!I, 1t. of T••" Ctt.l.lca-4tn.Elt --'"'· 2t, Mlc!IMI W1YM Cnolt, It, of ()1rdtr1 G"'~e,
'""' Debor1ll Getl9t, '°' of Hvntfnt19!1 8Hch. •ERGEltON-MILLl!lt -A.1,19. 30,
l!rnnt •• ... ""'• '6, of w1rrtn, Mldl,, tnd Slndra INbllt Mtllll', f?,
_, Codi Mui.
Ill.ACK-JANDA -A1,19 ... ~· Clw"!1~r lll1dl, :II. ind JI'""" Lorr1IM J1ncll, H. bllfll ., C.-
cMI Mir.
COGGINS.-ICIOKT -Au9. .. Denni, J.
~I,... 27, 1fld 0-... Mal Kitti!,
SS.. bolt! of H1,1nt111ttan keefl.
,M.l.DtSOH-GOOOltUM -Aut. ll, L.--H. Midi-, SS, _, l"Menlll,
Ar1L. Ind Vlolfl H. Gtodrvm, "'-tJtl
W11tm!nst!-r.
YOUHCJ..TUltHIULL -AUii. Jl, Arcll!U
Elnlf'Y Young, 11, of Mir V11!1, Ind
Vl111!nl1 Turnbull, :M, rA Cotl• Mlsa. ltEICH-OlllSC.01.,L -AUi. J"I, Alhlm R1lo:h, At, Ind li .. 1nor Dr1tmH, M,
llalfl t:A Cost• Mn1. OUltATl!-0'5RIEN-AUI. 21, lumo T.
Ou1rt., '7, of COlll M-, Ind Doti
Ann 0'8rt•n, ... of S.nt1 Ant,
PEltKING-LlfE -Avt. Jl, Fr•nlc
Llmllnl Ptrk!ns, Jr,, n, llid LYlidl
LM, !O, bolt! .t N_.i llndl.
LUMPl(IN·LUMl'KIN -AUii. :n, C1trt-
ton Lumpkin, )6, of SVnMt tlQCll,
r.m1rr1_. M9rrl 111111 Lumpld11, 31,
of w"""'"""'· .MAltCANTEL-l"ALMt:• -Aul. :n, Gtnld ,,.,.~Ille!, 21, t:A Or1M1, 1nd Oo<vtflr L. 1"1lmlr, f1, II N-1 '""'· SMITH-l"Ml!JOY -A1,19. Jl, S.-1
L. Sm!ttl, t.S, •lid V1ler11 L l"OPtJor,
''· bolll of C.h Mita. CltOW'l!LL-OUNCAM -AW. SI'. ~
cr-11. Jr •• !1, flf W..tm1111t.r, •nd Ann Elltn Duftun, it, of LI Mlrldl.
DEATH 'NOTICES
STEARNS
R111!1 t .. bll 9191rrlil. lH If. ltlll It.,
Ca1t1 MeM. Survlwd try llulblnd,
l!•rl, ., ""' ""'"'' ... -· ltlclllnl H. llM""" Tornra, Ind 0.llfcl T.
St.ml, COltl Mn11 1lltw, L ... Ann
L1.,..rd, HunH,.lon 11Hdl1 lflrw
-IMWI 1nd !Iv. 1r1fllk!IJhlnot1. Strv·
~. WldnadlY, W.tic!H'f C~, II
AM, wtlll 111: ..... ltldl<lrd J, D\llllaJt
ofl'ldlttnf. '"*"-"· ......... -M9--IMl'lll 1"1rtf. Vl'llhlJen. fol'llfllt, T-
lllly, ' to ' l"M. W.ldlff Clll ... l.
BALTZ MORTUAllIES
Corona del Mar OR "'51
Co.ta Mesa Ml t.UM
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broodway, Collo Meoa
LI W4SI
DILDAY BR0111ERS
Runthltio• VaDe1
Mortuary
17111 BHcll Bh'd.
R..U.JlnBeoc•
IQ.'1'1'11
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAIU[
Celllellr7 e M-.r,
CMpel
-hdlle \'low Drift Newport lleo ... Colll ... -PER PAlllLT
COLONIAL~
HOllS
7111 lltlot ......
W-'rtr •II
D!ITll'l llOll!Oill
mliWI._ e-=r..r.-
WES'OOUl'I' 110Jm1AJll
Ill E. 17111 Ill., Colla -.. ..
Record
Fire Calh
r 1 w • ¥' • •• ; t• t f + ae 4¢ ep ¥ ¥ 19 ¥up :; 4 up; W ; ; +ti ¥ 0 ¥ ¥ ¥ 13' ""·• 't' f' !P' 1 '\. i >" f i• F Fil,,....,.., •. • ~'+" ~ i" • ... --..-::1;
Pioneer
Coimtian's
Rites Held
~ISTllANO BEACH -
Private funeral 1erv1ce1
were held last wee.t for
pioneer Orange County resi-
dent Barbara C o n r a d
DollPD, 83, who died u the
Beverty M a n o r Con-
valescent Home. bere.
A fO\'mtr resident of
La(UDl .8eech, Mrs. Douaan
WU barn AJri 12, 19 in
Anaheim.
Har parents, Cborlotta
and Fn6'rtc Conrad, were
anons the early ll'OUJI ol
pioneers Who came aoulh
from San Fnmd!co in the
1870'1 to oettle in Al>lhelm.
Mrs. Dougan was presi-
dent ot the F . Conrad
Corpocation. She was the
wtdow of Commander
WDiliiii Allen Dougan ,
U.S.N.
Before her long lllness,
lhe was an actJve member
of the Laguna Beach Art
Association and the Art Af.
flllates; the Laguna ~h
Civic Ballet: the Wonie.n's ~lican Club, -Ille Com·
muntty· Players; and the
Conversations Ill P o e tr y
group.
Stlririvors I n c I u d e a
d·aug.bter, Mrc. R o g e r
Arriiotrong; aod a grend!oo,
Jonathan Swope Pr i.n c e ,
both of ulgi.ina Beach.
Cootributlons may b e
made to the Barbara
Conrad Dougan Memorial
Fund at South Collllt Com·
munlty BOlpltal.
New Stamp
Pays Jlonor
To Disney
MARCELINE, Mo. CAP)
- A commemorative stamp
honorlnti Walt Dlmey will
be Issued Wednesday in tllls
north-central Missouri town
Of some 3,000 persons where
D!mey _spenLpart -oL hU
boyhood.
Honoring the ceff.oonist
and moviemaker will be
Dianey's widow, his brother,
Roy Dleney; Postm<ister
General W. Marvin Watson, GOv. Warren E. Reames,
Sen. Edward V. Long, Rep.
W. R. Bull .Tr., and John S.
Reed, president of the Santa
Fe Railway.
'Ibe governor bas pro-
claimed Wednesday Walt
Dtmey Day.
'nle mulicolored e cent
stamp deplds -.. it appeared 'Oen Disney liv-
ed here from age 5 until he
was 9. •
Disney WM born i n
Qticago in 1901. He died
Dec. 15, 1966.
T-. Stp,,_ 10, 1'168 DAJLY I'll.GT 7.
New ·welfare Program g~t.
Unemployed Fathers Sought for Productive Jobi
By JACK OIAPPELL Sbate IUndl ol $.'1.3 mllUon °' • o.11'W' , .... "'" plua approximately t13.2 in
A tllree-part Work Inc:ep· federal monle1 will Un·
tive Prvgram ( w IN ) 1 derwrlte the WIN program's
designed to r e m o v e costl for tbe rut of the 1968-
unempto)'«I latller1 . lrotn _ 69 llaca! ·ynr.
the wel!are rolls and place Families colle<;:tlng AFDC
them tn productive jobe, has benefits would receive the
been lnolltuted in Orlll1!e first pdorit;y, -to
County after a year ·of Phllllp G@erl, c o u n t y
prepacailon. e m p }Oyment department
The project protides at distritt avpervisors, whose
the county Jowl 1324.629 to office will be bandliD& all
assume trel.ning, empl<rJ· referrala.
ment and aoceptiabkl inccme Althouatl p r i m • r i 11
for a mtnlmum ~ 265 designed to beceflt fathers,
u n e m p I o y e d fathers G<>e.rl Mid. the bulk ol. tile
presently recetving a i d tr.aJnlng will be given to
under the Md to Fmnilles mothers, tbe 1 a r I e s t
with Dependent Children cot.gory ol the ADFC reci·
program. pientl. 'Ibe program may
obo be 1llOd to aid
teen11er1.
Wben a -reotpknt
11 entered m .. lnceDtiv•
prc>eram, bb need• aod
abilities •e given & Jnttial
e1a:ea9rftent. If immediate
placement b posatble, an
employment plan ii
dl!'VelOJ)ed for him.
The first step iD the plan
ls an orientation program
when tile puton's lnteresta
and aptJtudes are determin-
ed prior to bb placement in
a j o b or special training
progiwn.
Once a per10n bu been
placed on a }ttl, biJ name I.I
withdrawn from 1be welfare
Niii -1llo lllary doll
DOI meet Ille -be
recelv6d under w e 1 t • r t •
Goerl Nld. la tbat ..... tDe
peraoft would receive a aup-
plem .. '"1 Wllfln d>oct, be explalneci.
Jn C.Uf<rnla, the S!Me
Department ol EmploymeDt
b Jn d>or&< ol tho WIN pro-
gram. Thu cbparmont
1 I n I I e 1 out tam.Wei for reoomm.-to the Sin·
ta Ano llepoi tmeDt o I
Employment oltlco.
Granville Peopt.,, coanty
welfare director, aid I* ft
bu taken about • 1ear to wort Out the JTMMii•nk:s of
tho prosrom.
* * * * * Red Cross
Eyes Yule
Christmas comes i n
September far Cle Orange
County 0'8.pter of th e
Amerioan Red Crols.
The reason being the
preparation of 2,650
oversees gilt "d!.ttybags"
(Gr service men in Vietnam.
"Sewing groups are 1M-
tlng and stttc!tlng the bags
now. Clubs and churches are
being asked for c1o..-s to
fill them." Mrs .• Vernon
Mathews, di.strict chairman
for the Harbor Area said.
'The contents, valued at $3,
were eagerly received and
appreciated by the service
men last Christmas.
Goodwill Industries
SANTA ANA -Voc<t-
tional rehabilitation on a
scale larger than anywhere
else in the U. S. ii the plan
of Orange County'• Goodwill
Industries, Gaylord Hicks,
executive vice president,
revealed today.
Consulting psychologist
Alexander A. Kaders bas
joined the admlnbtradve
staff and will be ln charge of
Goodwill's psycboioglcal
counseling anJ
psychometric testing. He
will also head the evaluation
and training program which
Goodwill Industries n o w
conducts for its handicapped
•
client-workers. College and Long Beach
Leslie F. Zimmerman, State.
who has been driect.or of Kaden bu been oo the
rehabilitation the past four faculty ol Long BNeh State
y&ars will continue a s and Biola CoBege, Los Angeles. fullUme director of perSOD·1-----------
nel, Hicks aaid. Ah«11Mmeftt
Katler1, a for mer Don't Necilect Sllpplat]
clergyman, held pestorates r•LSE TEETH at the Central Bible Chun:h, lrft
Costa Mesa, and Gra?ld \
A 11enue Evangelical United ...:;;.. '-1 .. ::" ~t..:: ; :.:=;
Brethren Church S a n t a Don't C" IMllred •nci ....i.rrnNll w 1 •Id lllndlcl1111. FAITEliTH, lft 1111:• Ana. 11nt 1non-1c11 ~ to .,..i...1e ..
,..._. l'OUI' Jti.t.. ·-fl... """' ,,... He lett the min ... 1.-L, in nrmir "'· 01"' CDl'lf!Ol!ll fw1'"9 ., 1963 to staJ..h· for his doc WQWlty 11111 Hdld cwrrftrt, Ne __,, u7 · _,, in" or Mflll9-Der:""-tllet flt torete at USC. He already •"' -"-r ,. """"· '" ,._. *"'111 held degrees at Chapman =~· GI'!' l'AsTll!nH it in ...,.
Like to make some
improve~ents around the place?
us.
I
Crocker-Citizens
•• Like to have a better roof over
your heads? We can help here,
Are you a one-bathroom fam-
ily? Why not change things here?
Addition to the family? How
about an addition to the house?
Is the grass greener on the
other side? Our loans are good for
lawns and landscaping, too. '
Like to eat in more often? How
abo~t an all-new kitchen?
To apply for a loan, call at your
nearest Crocker-Citizens office. If
you have a contractor's cost esti-
mate, bring it along, Do-it-yourself
jobs are also eligible.
When your loan's approved,
you'll have up to three years to pay
on jobs under $1,500. Longer on
amounts over that. Easy-to-budget
payments, too,
So if you'd like to start improv-
ing things around the house, you
know where to start. C9
..
Pro~rfy Improvement Loans
at the big bank where little things count
.. ----,-·---·-----------··-----0---· I
'
CORA Miiier ....... ,., .. , Ceu.., ._...., ...
"--
I
• • <r _.,. ... -_ llt • "• I ~ .... . ........... ' -... . . . . . . --
8 DAILY PllDT n..t.J. ~ 10, 1%8
RECRUITING -Roger Mudd, above, follows the
steps of two young men on "The Football Scholars,"
tonight at 10 on Channel 2. The report covers the
recruiting processes of major universities from
scouts' first meetings with high school athletes to
the final iigning of collega-ocholar..Wip--eootl'&et .
TELEVISION VIEWS
'What Gap'
Falls Flat
By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The eternal production
problem of television entertainment is that shows
about fads are often old hat by the time Utey final-
JY get on the air.
THAT WAS the chief hangup of Monday night's
half-hour ABC-TV special, "What Gap?", in which
Wally Cox -in various mod comedy sequences -
portrayed a square 4().year~ld trying to bridge the
generations.
I don't think anyone really expected much of
this half-hour. Yet thel'e was a very clever sequence
near the end: A party emphasizing how times were,
indeed, changing, with men now making a big
thing about their clothes and hair, and women
delving into worldly affairs more than before. With
several quick strokes, the sketch illustrated the new
attitudes of the sexes.
THIS, IN FACT, would be an excelleot topic
for a full-scale specia1. But Monday's show, despite
its occasional nice moments, unfortunately sound-
ed -probably because of the production-to--air-
time delay -like a rehash of shows about the
contemporary scene.
There were all those overworked expressions
like "Where It's At," "What's Happening," "Get
With It" and "Groovy." And there were all those
people who go around saying "Fantastic" and
0 You're Beautiful" until their listeners are driven
to the point of nausea.
SO MUCH of this attitude is so tired by now
that it was hard to work up much enthusiasm up.
on hearing it again. The hippies, for instance, came
in for some attention A1onday night, yet the hippie
movement by now is a weary one, on its way out.
Instead of sticking to solid content -as in the
m~e-fcmale party scene -there was too much
rehance on the mod, mod trick photol!raphy that
generally adds up to nothing but time-filling. A little
of Marshall 1'.1cLuhan goes a very Jopg way. When
it came to visual matters, Mack Sennett's instinc-
tive understanding was a good number of years
ahead.
INDIVIDUAL and special talent was given a
chance to emerge. His female sidekick on the show
-the new-style girl -was Ann Prentiss. And like
her sister, Paula Prentiss, she has a marvelous
speakin~ voice and striking appeal
As for the half-time. there were several lessons.
First there has to be a way to get very contempor-
ary shows on the air more quickly than is possible
now if they are to be protected for timeliness.
Second. there have to be television line executives
who aren't afraid to say. "So what if it appea1s to
the young generation! Is it good? That's all that
counts."
Detatais the Menace
I
•
PEANUTS
DR. KILDARE
-GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
... --
IF weft Sl'OW!t>··W! EXP\Mt
TH! "'n!NT t& M IWUC'l!HC>' """·
By Charin M. Schull
ly Kea Bald
1'415 MU. ICEtP HIM QUET UHTU. we
QT lllPO:' 10 8LAl".O.K, UP FR>t4T!'
By GUSAITiiila
By Harold Le DoUll
15 !iHEIU. HERE, .fEs, lt:-'MPY! SHE'S BACK•
MR. &IKHJ.Nj,N 7 5TA6E! !ti-IE MA~ A WM.JC-oN
PIP SHEil.A 6ff YES •• BUT SHE !>NP fT
A l.'*6-PISTAMCE WASN"1° IM.f'OllTANT •••
tALL Fl:OM HU THAT HEI MOTHER N..WAYS
PAU IN THE THllP ACT! ».oT'HER TONIGHT?' CM.LS WHEN 5HE'5
MOON MULLINS
TUMBlEWEEDS
MUTT AND JIF'
l'M
R(O(NG
T+lE
MAG(C
CARPET!
rrlLNEVER.
GET OFF THE GROll'll\ $1'\JPID
MISS PEACH
<>HYEAH?
'THEY SAID
'THAT ABOIJT THE
WRIGln'
BROTHERS
IEEN PrlNICIN6!
u~,
WAT~ALLIT,
~,OU VEH,
61.ESS YOU .•
ly Ferd Johnson
•
ly Tom K. Ryan
By Al Smitli
By Mal
TUESDAY
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•
11B·1iiiii"'lb
642-4321
2211 WM! Balboa Blvd. Nowport a..ch
--
"
· 0.¢\Y~ fJ'O
RlilGIStfEl}l
LV.l!UE Qf Vj~ME~
. .
NIGHT ~~ DAY SIRVICI
••
_ f!!#lf• Jqlcmi>fJ 10, I~
Chandlfil! .
Chances
Fading
•
i ....
,j, •
•
ffARBOR ARIA REFORM TEMPLE
• •
HIGH HO~ Y PAY $E-YKQ
I• be ~old of
St. Jam.-"'9c9fHll Chllfch
.,Dt ~-IJ4o. ""'"" """'
ROSH HAIHA"A YOH KIPPUl ..,.. n-~· Oct. 1~.
--'
Sboultl -1011-()wn-
INTERPRISE FUND?
#.ttond this proyocotivo lecture ind
h•~r •• offi~I!!' fro111 ~nt•rprlt1 "'"" dl1~µ11 tht tochniquts, philosophy and inv1stmont
cOJlcopt of Enterprise Mon1911111nt
TlllJ1 Wtd~"doy, Soplombtr II, 7;45 p.m.
"-Alli: lf'Ylnt Co11t Country Club 1600 E. C,111 Hwy. N.8.
A~'"lnh111 I• frN, but r1Arvatl1n1 •re necessary
• fll'9ff tfl•phone 641-4!110 or Kl 9°3079
SHiARSON, HAMMILL & CO. INC.
"4•l'lllitr1 New York Stoek hch1119e/fown4•4 lfOJ
IQ1 DC>YER DI., NEWPC!~T ~c;N, Q,ll,IP.
. .
Thf friend ot the WOD1ln ln17C.
, .6' !fl~ ~llJl~I~~' 'pproi~hll lfl•. tm~loy more than 241.000 people. ·
alrpqfhl rfl0~9n, tne 'tll~ngwomln I~ . Telephone ~6 Telegiaphl f~ir111: Jl'll\1'1 nQ~O\ll· Ifs h'[ flf$t But what about~he "Telephone
ft1phl a~~~! l~e r~"' ql!l the window, ond Telegraph"? Whafs a comrnunica-sh~ ~ges nRlh1nl ~~I fpg. tl~n• company doing in so maRY other
. She reaches out to touch her sleep· -.rol$ of blisiness?
ing three'.~~r-q!d dau1M@r. How qn Originally, we were a telephone
!Ii• pile\! R€!~ibr)i f~P l~p ~irilltril •nd telegraph company. Even after we
When the 1eth~e(s w~ee!s touch ~t~me one of the largest diversified
~\"n §"n~I y~n th~ run~~¥' t~e w~ma9 m'nufacturing and service organ In· ~!111!•1 ~II !ljr~I ~. htf qpul~ler-lJ~I t!Qns In the world, the name stayed.
her d~ug1 ter sleeps on. As ITT has grown siRCI U:i9slil ,arl¥
!'.IP@ r~1son lhG l1ndin8 WU! •HV d~ys. It has made history. in~ aen!fli ii bgf•YIC the AilPI ysed an During World W~r 111 fgr il~IT1Rlo1 gjg"rgnif1widif1~q syJt•m cillod 11.i-Pn !TI-developed radlqdlroctl•Afln~•f
k?r ln•lrumcnt ~anding sv-1um. 11 was )VIS credited with briq~lr1 !~• !'la~!
d;vrlRPQd by lntornatlono! lel~phono submarine wolfpack1 Ill a 1tand11ill,
and T~le11r1ph C?ffiE~~!lo~~ gr f'!'T: •hortening the war by at 1~,sttwo years.
EVftfl! JD 1oconfff ilimfuliprc I" !li~ In 1963, using earth termlnels de·
world In t[crafilJnd111f1lrM1 ns·~A siSl'ed by us for communicating via
appli•affori· of llJ. satellite, we helped ope• up 101 fi"t
' )~ ~!lj" wjtf1~u! I~ f~d ~lh•r P.f experimental satelljtJ link b~IW~~n
PNJ ~~~fppm~n~, tlr ~cl '' '' II Ngrth and South America. ~Pll\l'n ~iy w9HI~ ~· i!llP.QHlblt, In 1965, one of our satellite-com·
:rho wom~n in ... , 170 dlcjn!t munlcaflon earth terminef1;1board ~
~now it but thf day lh5 ~ear~cd h•r N1vy aircraft carrier, helped make it , J,~ 1rr·ni~ ~rreedy pfayed a part jq PQ!sible for millions in the y.~. ·~nd , ~~~ 1le. ' . Europe to see on lV tho roc;oyery of . ~!'* INllY 111",J Gemini astronauts '' 111, live, 11 fl
When r• C.bled her hu•b•~d iq happe.ned.. • 1-P.~.e~ l!l fO~~fl!I !hr a.tc ~d tlm~ five times more durins1966 I let· q( ~1 afli¥af, !fll Pl~ll' ~I Mnt O'lnalw~lnstalledab~rllacarrierand
vii . · five tim11 more 111illlon• iaw aotual The P-' •hf drovo 10 New Yorf<'t 1plaihdown and recovery operations. ~cnn,llv1nfoma11iiri'1l'MmilrifiAmh•r ~111v1u11wr1n111h~ llr•b=lir•~ll
puenll'homt in Now JtrHVf"IHlntcd war, tho White Hou it Ulld !ht W~sh,
frpm ene of our companies. lngton·Moscow Hot line-for the ftrst
" \'j! l!lc ff°'"'" pos~ibly had never time In a crisis. One ~our ~ •vtn htJM of IR· kt p1 111• Hff ll•e re~y. · '111• ''lnltmJli•n1i'I in g11r na1111 ,\nother ol 9wr c~mpAnlts run1
I! l\'fll ~JlllVJ!I· W' dR . ~u1!n"!1 In the Kil.., er Job Corps Canter In. New 1aJ, i:ofl!l!r1•• llllN04 1111 Wg~d and Jersey for,the Offlt:l! of Economic Op,
•I ,
~.
portunlty. 'rhl• same company oper·
ates and m~lf\tains the sttjttegic Distant
Early Warning (D~W) line which
itretc!ies l•~m Alaska to Groenl~nd.
ITT Today
lff t~d~y Is •ompgsed of f!10re
than 200 associated companies around
tho world.·
· ~y ~ringlns !~ bear 9ur total ex-
pertise, these ccimpanies hive gener·
ated Increased competition within
indu$tries and, ~onsequently, have
aenerated more efficient u5e of man•
Power and materlaf resourees.
The fields in which we operate
were selected for growth potential as
well as present ·needs. And last year,
more than 58 perce"t of our earning•
were derived frpm ~omestic sources.
Much of thl! l).S. growth can be
fra~e~ tg ow jnterest fn the ier11i~
Industries.
P~ple's desir~ for service keeps
growing. So we've put lnereaslng em•
phasls on IL Our U.S. sales and re-
venues are now spilt about SO-SO ,be-
tween manutactqrfng and service
activities. in 1d9itien 19 ·~•ling cars (Avis, to
be •~l~t!1 e4ucatlonal training ser·
VIC111 and airport and ROtel parking,
ITT offers consumer loan services,
mu!u~I fund man~s~ment, and data
proco11ln11-jull to name a few.
Sheraton, a •v-tem of hotels and
motor jnn~ '" the U,§. and_ abroad, 11
now part of ITT. So 11 Levitt & Sons,
wo•l~'• larg~it lnt~matlonal home and
~ommynf!Y byl!~@r.
We alsp op•r~,,-a communlca·
tlon• neiwoi* made up of thousands of
cable, r~lo and satellite circuits, and
can transmit a n'l~!!Be to almost any
point on the globe.
Ro .. Aliy, we entered the field ol
n111ir1l·rrmurEP ~nvJrslon with ITT
~onier Inc. and P•nnsylvania Glass
Sand Corporation. 'fh~e two opera·
!ions i>k• raw material from the earth
and Ill foresb and make them useful
to m~nufacturers of ~·llophane, lex·
. tile flbors, ur• cord, p~oto,raphlc film,
P•p•r, @!Alfi dlernlllffl, fftd other re-la!@d p(9!1<1~
· mandvou
With all lhese servlce$-plus thou·
,.nd1 of consumer, l(ldu1tri1f and mill•
tary produ~ts arid serv!ces-ITT Is
hclglns ygu 111d lt!99lt 111 9Y!r lb!
world to tn)oy a better, safer, more
comfortable tlf0; ·
Jqn 11 It h•IP'd the wo111an '" 181t11C,
lntemAUo"al 'ftlepltone ~d T•I ..
lrJph CorpO(&lio", 3i0 rark /Wt.,
New Yorlt, N, y, 10022.
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J9 DAll.V ~ILOT T......,, Sop-10, 1961
• • wtsTIRN STAn UNIYIRSrn
COLLEGE OF LAW
Ill Orange County
and womett
n. L\.t, ..__ ·--,_el .... tlM t'-,._,_-.1.._..,..._
APPLY NOW FOR SIP'TIMIER 16th
DAY OR MNING CLASSES ........ ..._ ..... ___ _
•
1717 s. lnlokhurst,
Anah~m
635-3454
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The one thinCJ
no other Life insurance
company can offer
your family
••• is a Mass Mutual A9ent
Tho Spolllght Is on
Our Min of the Month for August '
GEORGE R. CROSBY
for his le1d•rthlp In every ph•1•
of our At•nc:y •o;tl¥ity
Donald M. Tippett, C.L.U.
General Agent
4220 Long Be1ch Boulevard
Long Beach, C1llfomi1 90807
Toi.: (213) 423-0917
MA••ACHUSETTa MUTUA~
L.11"'1!: INSURANCE COMPANY
SHARP
If ,ou'r• • 1h1rp tr1d•r, 011 the DAILY PILOTS f1mou1 01111•·
A-LINE t1111ifl1d 1d1 S1turd1y1. Mt\• 1 bett1r d11I , •• wh•tlo11r
rou're buyi119 Of tollJng.
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You and us.
What we stand for and how
you could profit from it.
We think you ought to know mOl'e about us. So we'Ye
prepared a booldet lo introduce you to the way we
think.
"The Client and E. f. Hutton" tells you of our serv·
Ices. and reflects our attitude toward cllents. Present
and future.
We'll send you a copy. And another booklet, "Now
!hat you've opened an account," which explains basic
procedures of investing.
Have both. On us. With no obligation. Just send the
coupon.
Na""--------------Address ______________ _
City ______ state ____ Zip Code_
Telephone ____________ _
B~lness Phone ___________ _
E. F. HUTTON & COMPANY INC.
MEMeEll N~ YOfUC. ANO PA(IFIC COAST &TOCK EXCH,t,NGl!S ANO OTHER LE-..DING $ECURITY -.NO COMMODITY EXCKANGl!I
IH NORTH MAIN STll:EET, UNTA ANA, W~l01
llt !A.ST lllOAOWAY, LONG IEACN, 4l7·2'1f
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NIU TU
ASSETS OVER
S-425,000,000.00
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INGS
• cmmt BRANCH OfflCEB --·eo.tno G-
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Sfpttmbot 19611 t m r -
rwt.Y "141 J!
Monday's Closing Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange List
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DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Power Boat Folli.es
Boating safety as a 'rowing problem on tile nation's
waterways -and especlally those of high..aicident-rate
Soulhern C.liforn!a -was agaiu underscored by a hlt-
and-run boat collbion 150 yards oil the Santa Ana River
jetty last Saturday. An outboard motor boat with four persons aboard
was rammed by a craiser in what easily could have
been a major tragedy.
Although injuries to two of the small boat's passen-
gers were minor, It could have beeo as tragic as a co\ ..
llsion on Missouri's Lake of the Ozarks. A young man
towed a water-skier at high speed, watching the skier
instead of the water ahead. He crashed broadside, at 30-
mile.s--per-hour, into a cabin cruiser, decapitating him·
self. Boating is probably the last remaining activity in-
volving potentially death-dealing power whicb has no
licensing and no skill requirements such as automobile
drivers and. airplane pilots must meet.
Time magazine reports in its current issue that .. at
last count, some 26 million Americans were operating
5,400,000 power boats -and the public's interest is
still climbing fast as booming boot sales show.
For some reason, power-boatmen are less prudent
than sailboat skippers. They accounted for the great
majority of the "Mayday" distress calls in 1967 and for
875 of the 1)12 dl\lllhs_<ULthe waler, Tim~ i:epor\s. --Too -in-an,YOf them neglect even the most rudimen-
tary safety precautions. One skipper told a Coast Guard
inspector be carried no life preservers on bis boat be-
cause "they don't match the color of my boat, that's
all."
They fall to get weather ..reports, lose boats and
lives in storms they could have avoided. They spend
thousands for their boats, then pinch pennies on gaso--
line, running dry and having to be rescued. Too ~any
boats venturing into the open ocean have no radio.
So what's the answer? Neither Congress nor the
Coast Guard wants to take on the multi-million dollar
cost or the red tape of a federal licensing program.
'Incompatibility~
-a D'isguise
"Incompatibility" ts a long word
that covers a multitude of divorces.
All it means is "not getting along"
with someone ebe, but k bas become
our paramount excuse for breaking up
marriages.
For every one case of true in-
compatibility, I am sure tbere are 20
cases in which this wwd is used to
disguise another fact: the fact that
ooe of the marriage partners is not
compatible wlttl himself.
Perilaps the hardest lesson to learn
in U!e, for some people, i3 that getting
along with someone else, at close
quarters, first hnplies the ability to
get t~ong wi1b oneself.
A PERSONALITY bas to be com-
patible within it.self, as much as
humanly possible . A man, or woman,
mll3t genuinely like himself and
respect himself and be hannonious
within himself before he can make ef-
fective or lasting cont.act with another
personality.
The true tragedy of so mariy
divorces Hes not in ttie divorce itself
(which is deplorable enough), but in
the need.!ess and ceaseiess quest for
another "right" mate. But nobody can
be "right" fer very long if you are
wrong with yourself. And we have all
noticed how much..married persons
keep repeating the same mistake.
THIS IS NOT TO 'say ttiat second
marriages cannot be more successful
than the first, but they can be so only
when ttie divorced penon takes a
realistic stock oC himself a n d
re<:Ognizes th.et being the right person
is more important than flndi og the
right person.
There are exceptions, Of course:
where chronic drunkenness br ex-
treme cruelty m; neurotic promiscuity
bave made it intolerable for ooe mar·
rlage partner to live decently with the
other. But the majority of cases, I a.m
convinced, are caused by an ac-
cwnulation of petty annoyances and
frustrations that occur in every mar·
riaige, good or bad.
THE AB U..ITY TO withstand tension
of this sort is the mark of a mature
personality. Jmmature people either
fight it or nm away from it -and
neither tactic works. Fighting only
makes it worse, aod running away
merely postpones the day when
similar tensions have to be met and
mastered.
The person (and tha-e are relatively rew of these in our frantic society)
who is secure and at eese within
himself, who knows his ability and ac-
cepts his limitations, can be "com-
patible" with a wide variety of mates.
And those who are in conflict within
themselves wilt never find a husband
or wife who can satisfy their con.
flicti!lg demands. lt U! not that too
many couples become d i v o r c e d
prematur~y; it 1.s thet too many
become married prematurely.
Prisoners Have Rights
On an average day, nearly half a
million men and women languish be·
hind bars in the nation's jails. All of
them sufftl' fram an obvious legal dis·
abUity : they cannot leave.
But what about J,egal rights! Do
prisontts have right&, like those of
people on the outside, whlch can be
enforced in the courtroom?
By and large, courts have foUawed
a "hands off' policy with regard to
our prisons. As one judge put it:
"It is not the function of the courb
to superinte:r:id treatment and disci-
pllne of prisoners."
ROWEVERi in recent years there
ba.11 been a marked change in this at-
titude. With growing frequency, courts
have struck down pr1soo rules and
~tlODS on coostltutiooal grounds .
~--Bw Qeorwe --.
D<1r C.qe:
Sometimes I question the
'friodom of your high-banded ap. i"'oodJ coocernlng the man ruJ.
Ing tbe ""'*-On what do you
bne 7001' Mtltude that man ts .a natmal-oom ruler?
SKEPTICAL FEMALE
DelrFemale:
Aa a prolwlonal lldvlce col·
alDllllt, my dell: Is piled high
wttb .JearMd tomu on Jove
"'41111 marrlaP-
1 doo't ~ rod lh<m -~ -., !"" plled high with
111om. '.l'bo1 Jlw 1111 '°"'' piece to lllde frolll m1 wf/e -and , U I
bop my bock to tile Will also,
It'• a eoo.i-rar .. oltltudt.
t I ~-......;
' '.LaW i9 A~ibh •
"One committed to prison," com-
mented a federal court ''does not
leave his constitutional right.'! at the
gates."
Consider, for example, the writing
and receiving oC letters. Courts have
long upheld the power of prison offi·
cials to censor the mail. But accord-
ing to a recent decision, th.is power
may not be used to block a prisoner's
access to the courts.
1n another CtlSi!, a court ruled that
a prisoner was entitled to reasonable
Utt of legal books and mat.erials .
And in a third o.ase, a court SU!·
tained a prisoner's right to better med·
lea! care than he had been getting,
JN FACT, federal prisoners fl<IW
have the right to collect dam.ages lf
they suffer injuries as the result of
olficial negUgeoce. One recent verdict
came to more than $100,000.
Nevertheless, while the legal rigtQ
of prisoners have been exp.anding,
they are still limited. For if carried
to excess, these rights might sabotage
the very operation cl the prison 1ya-
tem. •
Thus, whl~ court.I hive upheld the
right of prtsooe:n to religious 005.-v·
ance, they have dr11wn the llDt at the
preachlng ol organhed dlaobedlanc:e.
For, atttt all. ~a ls a community
not ol or<tlnary peoplo but ol convicted
crlminats doing penance for tbtJr
crimes. They do have rl'1U. But !hon right& mUll rem.in subject to
tbe practical neeesdtle1 ~ !ile. An A m~rican Ber Au UOft ptd>-
lic servic,; /tct~rt b~ W Bmtard.
_.. ___ . ....--
And the boet ownen don't want it either.
Best of all answers, U it can be given to every boat
sk1pper before he ever wets a bull, ls education In navt·
gaUon, 1ee.mansblp, .traffic rules for the waterborne,
ndio operation and repairs of all kind& at aea.
Tb• U.S. Power Squadron and the Coast Guard
Auxiliary do an ucellent job of providing free cwses
In seamanship and aafety. In fact, the Balboa Power
Squadron will atart another !ree baste boating class at
7 p.m. next Monday, Sept. 16 at Newport Harbor Yacbt
Club. No advance regi&tration is necessary.
No matter bow much all concerned would like to
avoid the cost and bother of a llcensin~ and testing pro-
gram for boat operators, the conclnwng climb in the
waterway accident rate seems likely to force such leg·
islation.
It's another case of the stupidJties of the minority
forcing government to protect them (and the prudent
majority) from their own folly.
Last Call to Register
Last C'al.l for voter registration!
If you're among the 29 million Americans other·
wise eligible to vote.in the pruidential election but had •
not registered as of mid·August.., there's still time. The
deadline is midnight this Tbursaay night, Sept. 12.
Presidential elections carry an exception to the
normal requirements. Persons who have lived in the
state for less than a year may vote for President and
Vice President if they can prove they were qualified to
vote in the state of their previous residence.
lf you don't know how to find a deputy registrar,
contact the Registrar of·Voters office, 1119 E. Chestnut
Ave., Santa Ana -telephone 834-2244.
Voting in this November election won't be just a
privilege and a duty - it should be a pleasure for every
American who loves his strife-torn nation.
.~i:l;._~,
.. M'f' rr ~OOKS PEACEFVl-AN!> SAFE JN iHfR£ ...
'Rafferty Got
To Slime Pit
Bottom--Fast'
To the Editor :
It didn't take Jong! As expected, the
supporters of "Der Blue Mu" Raf·
ferty got to the bottom of the slime pit
in record time, surprisingly early in
the campaign, which leads one to won-
der, where next?
Yesterday, a "Cranston!" sticker on
the back Of our car (I'm a
Republican) led a lady (?) to band my
wile a leaflet titled, j'Do You Want
This Man Acting for You in the U.S.
Senate?"
Its .ll<lurce, at least the only address
printed on tt, is some outfit in Con-
necticut -(Connecticut should tell
California: how to vote?!) -and its
author o they have the gall to admit, is
none other than Joseph P. Kamp, ap.
parently newly crawled out of the
woodwork.
TIIERE IS NO point In attempting a
point-by-point relutatdon of Kamp's
karping kritique; he has a long history
of fabricating fiction far faster than
fact can ever catch up (for example,
his ineffable work, "Communism
behind the la<:e curtains Of the
YWCA!") iuffice it to.point out that
Kamp's previous endeevors have
earned him the unique distinction of a
place on the Attorney General's List of
Subversive Organlzations, one of the
very few members of the extreme
right ever to be so honored.
As I said at ihe start. if it's this dir-
ty this sooo, wow! We're in for a
rough C3Jllpaign from Der Blue Max
..ani his cohort.st Mr. Cranston will
need all the honest help he can get.
LAURENCE DAWSON
.Just .Judgments
To the Editor:
, About one year and three months
ago the Arabs and the Israelis agreed
to stop fighting each other. 'This agree-
ment has been violated by bOth sides
and these .violet.Ions may lead to a
fourth conflict in that area of the
world. Yet, world di?omats seem to
believe that the prOblem will be solved
as soon ;.s the diplomats can get both
sides to a peace table.
There is another approach that
could ease tensions between the Arabs
and the Israelis. Each c ease fire
violation would be investigated as
thoroughly as if it were a murder in·
vesti gation. These investigations could
be done by ttie U.N. observers th6t
art now in tbe area.
A REPORT wtnl conclusions
would then be issued through t h e of.
!ices of the U.N. All reports would be
made availab~ to tht world press.
Then the next time th.at either the
Arabs or the Israel.is request the
Security Council to reprimand one of
them for a cease fire violation the
Security Council would have concrete
facu on which to base a judgmenl
Surely, a few just judgments 'Will rally
world a pinion against the aggressor,
and may even foree tbt combataDLI to
see the Ugtrt of day.
HARRY 8. McDONALD JR.
Ltttcn from rccdf:n arc 10tlcomt-.
Norm.aU11 wrltcn should convey ~"
mc11aoe1 ,,_ 300 toonU or lt1.s. The
riahc to condtnse leturs to fit ipact
or eliminate libel U rtttrved. AU let.
kr1 mwr ~ncludt rignoture and mo.a.
Ing addre11, b1o1r name1 wiU be ~
held on f'eCJUC''-
Overpowering Political Force
Nixon Represents Change
WASHINGTON -Leaving aside the
events in Chicago, Richard M. Ni:xan.
begins his campaign for the
presidency ln far better circumstance.a
than in 1960. MO!'l simply stated, Nix·
on represents change, the overpower-
ing force Of American politics which
asserts itself from t i m e to t i m e
whefl people have "had enough."
This Is a fortunate reversal fOr Nix-
on of his positi<m. in 1960. He was in-
hibXed then as much as he was helped
by the record of a previous ad·
ministration ending with a let-down
owing to the Russian success with
"Sputnik l" and the U·2 incident which
brought President Eisenhower's at·
tempt lo find an accommodation with
Rus31e. to a sDarHng conclusion.
Also, at the outset of the 1960 cem· paign Nixon suffered a painful knee in·
Jury. His resulting lack of energy was
evident for weeks and this carried
over into the disastrous opening of his
televis:ion debates with John F. Ken·
nedy
ANOTHER IMPROVED !actor In
Nixon's 11tra.tegic position is, to put it
bluntly, that he Is not running ag'a.inst
a Catholic. This innovation of the 1960
campaign had two sides to it. Prior to
1960 being Catholic was considered to
be an' insuperable barrier to election
as president, with the Al Smith defeat
cited in proof. John F. Kennedy of·
fered contrary evidence. He won both
bec&\lse of and in · spite of his
Catholkism, which at least proved
that religion is a superable barrier to
election as President.
The changed conditions this year
were emphasized rig'ht at the begin-
ning by Nl.xon in his "private, non·
political discussion," fOUowed by
phot<>gr~hs, with Catholic Archbisbop
Terence Cooke of New York. This was
a demonstnltioo of Nixon's 1968
political skill of which he would not
have been capable in 1960, and he1ped
to make it clear th.at this year Nixon
is merely running against anather
Protestant. The nation is thus to be
spared one of the more unpleasant if
dramatic, aspects , of the 1960 cam-
paign, although there a r e plenty of
other unpleasant .aspects this year to
compensate for tbe lack of a religious
issue.
THE DESIRE FOR A change is the
biggest lacto. working In Nixon's
favor, It is Ironic that Hubert H. Hum-
phrey, the great champion or change,
should now be hung about with a
continuation of tbe status quo. ·When be
says that he win do his best to settle
the Vietnam war, the reply can be,
then why has not the Johnson-
Humphrey Administration been able
to do so? When be says that law and
order can be malntalned, then why has
the Johnson-Humphrey Administration
been unable to do so?
Those · who can recall ttie at-
mosphere of 1948 will see certa.tn
similarities between then and now.
President Harry S Tnunan was at a
low ebb of JIOpularity. 'Thomas E .
Dewey looked like, felt like, and acted
like the sure winner, to tbe extent, in
fact, that he played dowu attacks on
Truman in favor of a unity theme.
Truman was the underdog, a 1
lfumph:rey is now, but the similarity
really ends there. The .American
public was not so moved by the
vio~ce Of opinion alld action 81!1 to-
day.
In 1948 the HerQ Wallace candidacy
and the Strom Thunnond candidacy
put together lacked thr.ppnch of the
George Wallaoe candidacy ~Y by at
least half. · ....
FURTHERMORE, Truman was an
incumbent president which is w;uilly
an asset There are enough dlf!erences
between now and 1948 to warn that
merely becsuse Humphrey Js the
underdog gives no guarantee of hls
election in a Truman-like comeback.
'The overpowering demand f o r
change did not come until four yearir
of the Truman Administration bad
passed md we were in an unpopular
war (Korea) with inflation and
discontent on the domestic scene.
Nlxon'1 attliude is also quite dif.
ferent from Dewey's. Nixon assume11 a
close race, the danger of the Wallace
candidacy throwing tlle election into
the Hou.se of Representatives -all
tempered by the cautious wisdom in·
duced by hl.s past defeats.
Another facet of the current
mythology deserves a few words. The
Koonedyites are SJJpposed to be letting
Humphrey go down the drain 10 that
Nixon will be ele-cied, will surely fail
as President and Ted Kennedy cilD
come to the rescue of. the nation after
Nixon's siflgle t.erm. 'Illis idea won't
hurt Nixon in 1968 and. he will have
four years to prove tt was wrong.
Rock Music and Deafness
Pilople over 30, siaJd to be W.strusted
by those under 30, don't as a rule care
for loud noise.
rt is hard to sell subdivision houses
near a large akport, wtiere climbing
jets fly every few minutes, and those
wbo bought when planes were quieter
and fewer complain bitterly. Jet
engines fairly close generate about 120
decibels of sound.
Onoe of the loudest maoifestiations of
human asp&ration taday, comparable
to a fire wen when yoo put yaur ear
to tt~ is rock music. In ~e 1930s young
folk, now grown, enjoyed sentimental
dancl!! bands. Let a kid today stumble
on one of these old recordings, and
he's liJce to 1'lrow up . When the kids on
rare occasions drag the old folks to a
rock aessJoo, the old folks are like to
go into • coma.
WHEN THE KIDS with small rock
bands practice at • home, neighbors
tend to complain, and to oaU 1i>e oops
to their rescue.
In Ult New York Times magazine,
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Whatover happened to d!eep
poUtldans? The OOH we've fot
oo• are costmc us plenty.
-T. P.
""' ....... .......,. -........ _ _., --.. "" ··-· .... .......................... .,..,,.....
'--~~~~~~~~~Jt
Prof. Benjamin DeMott, of Amherst,
wrote a piece cailed "Rock a.11 Salva-
tion." In it he exptared some ret.her
preclou$ philosoph1es of the rock
pheflomenon, or culture.
He found some rock lnteDectuah in·
slsting it ls tile basis of a new religious
erperlence, particubrly in t b e
sessions where moving color and
aou.nd in great volume are comblned.
Prof. De Mott suggested some of tile
lyrics Of rock 800g are me.iingless,
but the Professor epeak5 !or tho6e
over !k>. Under ~ nnda tbt&e lyrics
glowing with meanlng and eosmlc.
When amplified, tbe IOllnd makes
them ooe with the universe, wbkti. is
h a r d even f o r octoge11arlan co~
mologist.tound«stand.
TIIE AMPLIFIER Is the key. When
tl1e humu \>Oice !s drowned It does
aomtthlng to ~e listeners, ke.vinC
them moatly alone with themselves, a
mixture of anguish and eocstasy. It has
to, sl..nce old-fashioned form.a: of com-
munioatJons .are 5U!IJflended.
Some of Ule m~ of the
culture are now ta)'ing' tht great rock
heroes -those whooe dlsh...iod plo-
tm't.11 are posted lJJe-st.ze in the kid'•
bedroom -~ ?DXl.em geniuses wbo
ere dlanglng 1i>e -Id. 11 t e
snattspeare or Homer bringing to
man a new llle expttteoce he never
1rMw In the Old Stone ~-
But there II • liWe deprtclalloci Ill
this prodlg;ou, t..ter-day bappetl!nJ.
RECENn.Y Dr. Dav Id M.
--
~. director of the oudlo-
cll.nioal laboratory rl the Univer9.ty of.
Tennessee, released a report ol. a
three-month study af guinea pigs sub-
ject.<! to blgh decibel sound. Music
played to the c!iitters ranged from 120
(loud discotheque) to 138 decibell, Ju.t
below the pain threshold.
Ears of 1i>e animals hod 44 how's of
llsteo!nig, then one e-ar was plug~ed fOl"'
. anotbtr" 44 hours. Microscopic ex·
am!nations were the n made of the
unplugged ear, revealing breakdown
of the cells ol the cochlea, the port of
the ear whidl translates sound waves
to nerve impulses.
Further. stud en~ wbo habitually
frequented rock sesakn!I were bmd
to._. heamg detttloraUon.
So It moy be that by 19llO, ~ .,..,.
:II will need betuing mdl. Tbooe tllen
under :II win distrust t>em.
---WWW-
TUesday, Sept<mbor 10, llHIB
Thi tdltorlol f>OO• of u.. Dallr Pilot fftlu to inform and .rttm--
"1otc fC'ldnt by pr .... ting lhll
......_., oplnlonl aM COii!'
...,.!My on loJ)icl "1 l!lltr<ll
""" rigftlfi=o<f, bp pt'ODidlng • fonnn for IM •<J>mrioo "1
""" ,..114m• oplnloN, """ bll
l""""IUIQ lhc dlvmt 1'ln>
,,.mu of Informed ob<'"""
and ipokr....,. on topicl of IM
dal/.
l, Robert N. Wffd, Pub1!f.ber
n
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JODEAN HASTINGS, '42-4321
"""''· ............ ,,. Kl , ... .,
Anniversary
Waltz Sounds
Seven Orange County aervlce organizationa will reap the rewards
when Bullock's Fesblon Square celebrate! Us loth anniversary In Orange
ParUeipating from Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley are the LitUe
Mermaid Guild, which helps support Cblldren's Hospital of Orange County1 and Las B r i z a 1 del Mar and Tiara de Ninos, who volunteer funds ana
services for the Children's Home Society.
Invitations to the gala have been mailed to the active, associate and
sustaining members and friends of each of the organizations. Ttcket..s are
$5 each, with $4 being returned to the sponsoring organizations tor the
benefit of their particular phllanthropy .
A valuable fur stole bas been contributed by the store for an auction
w h i c h will take place during the evening, and each of the sponsoring
groups also will make a contribution with all proceeds to be divided equally •
Elegant pa1io wear Including hostess skirts, paiazzo pajamas and
bright ·cullottes might be the women's attire ,while the men may don Nehru
jackets, turtle necks and ascots to accent the air of informality.
. Appearing for the entertainment of vl.!itors will be the Up With
People singing group, and Lynn Willls and bis orchestra will play lot danc-
ing. •
Cocktails and refreshments will be served from 7 to 10 p.m., and
models will display the latest fashions lnfonnally around the fountain in
addition to an exhibition of "still" modeling.
TODAY'S LOOK -Wild and elegant patio wear will color Fash-
ion Square when Bullock's Santa Ana celebrates its 10th anniver-
sary In Orange County. Participating in many party activities
In Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley are (left to right) Mrs.
Robert Kerr, representing Little Mermaid Guild, Children's Hos-
pital of Orange County; and Mrs. James Ackley, Las Brizas del
Mar, and Mrs. Robert Vernon , Tiara de Ninos, both support
groups for the Children's Home Society.
Visitors to the anniversary party also wU1 have an opportunity to
learn of the many philanthropic projects accomplished during the · last
decade and planned for the future in the many booths manned by the spon-
soring organizations .
Additional ticket Information may be obtained by calling Mrs. Robert
Kerr, Litt 1 e Mermaid Guild, 598-2268; Mrs. James Ackley, Las Brizas
842-2396, and Mrs. Robert Vernon, Tiara de Ninos, 847-4498. '
. , ,
New Season Starts
Christmas Sparkle
Glows at Meeting
Visions of Huntington Beach glittering with myriad colored lights
and shimmering tinsel will brighten the season's first meeting of the Wo--
men's Division, Chamber of Commerce, tomorrow.
At a general business meettng beginning at 10:30 a .m. in the new
Chamber .offices, plans to sponsor Uris year's Huntington Beach -Christ-
mas City decorating contest will be discussed.
Serving as general chairman will be Mrs . Robert Wall, and the
group is mU:ing plans to enlarge the number of trophies to be presented. in
each of 10 catagories. "
Instead of. the 13 trophies awarded last year, there will be 25 special
awards, 12 grand awards and a sweepstakes winner. Grand awards will
be presented for best decorated indoor and outdoor trees; religious dis-
playj mobile display; merchant's window, and a commercial category
which will include schools, churches and civic groups.
There will be three awards ,for the best general outside Christmas
theme. •
Offering to sponsor trophies are Signal Oil and Gas Co., who will
present the sweepstakes trophy; Mercury Savings and Loan Association;
First National Bank, Beach Boulevard. and Adams Avenue branch; South-
ern California Edison Co.; Huntington Beach Building Department; Har-
bour Volkswagon; McDonnell-Douglas Aircraft Co.; Huntington Beach Co.
and the Woman's Division.
Launching the contest will be an October sale of Christmas lights
and other decorations by city merchsnts, and entry blanks will be avail·
able about Dec. 1.
Judges will be Mrs. Jake Stewart,[rosldent of the Women's Division;
Bill Woods, Chamber of Corrunen:e, an Jack Cleveland, representing the
city of Huntington Beach.
Hands Aid
The Needy
r A thoµsand miles from home -living In
a new community with no friends or relatives
-and an emergency arae.s. Where do you
turn for help? ·
If you're a member of St. Bonaventure's
Catholic Church In Huntington Beach, help
is as near as the telephone.
Two years ago the Women's Council ot
the church · established The ·Helping Hand
. committee to offer assistance to famllies in
need of lmm~ate aid during a crisis.
The ifotlP ofiers various ·types of. teift; ~ -
porary help through the volunteered efforll
of women in the parish.
Among the services which are offered
are gifts of food In homes where the mother
may be hospitalized, baby sitting fur parents
called. away by an emergency, and house-
work when a family is stricken with seiiOUI
illness.
A complete council activity, all parish
women share in sending cardJ and visitlni
those who are ill.
Serving as chairman of the committee IQ
which each woman donates whatever rervi•
ces she prefers i1 Mrs. Wallace H. DeMera.
Following tomorrow's business meeting and luncheon in the chamber
beadquarten, a representative from the Huntington Beach Police Depart-
ment wlll show a tum aDd discuss the narcotics problem.
FRIENDS IN NEED -Partleipat!ng In The Helping Hand committee of St.
Bonaven'ture's Women's Council are (left to right) Mrs. Robert Pollock, Mrs.
Wallace H. DeMers and Mrs. Ralph Y. Hernandez. The unique committee offers
assistance to parish lamllles caught In emergency 1!tua'ilons.
Others assisting on the committee In-
clude the Mme1. Ralph Y. Hernandez, assla-
tant chairman; Arnold Jorgenson, sunshine
chairman; Robert · Pollock, Ronaid Ha!!el,
Roger L. Colburn and Rubin Alvarez.
Additional Information regarding the Ol'-
ganlzation .may be obtained by calling Mn.
DeMen, MU784.
Wife Loses Third Time After Slipping Herself a
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please es-
cuae the looka of th.ii letter. ·1can't1ee
'!t:r/ well. One of my eyes ls com-
pl8"11 :1bul '!be otb<r ii a little
lwolln.
1 manjod Mlcter an.r a wlllrlwlnd
eourtahlp of seven weeks. He seemed
1!1re a perfect 11at1eman I could bard· 11 believe It when he knocked out my
plYOt tooth IDd blacteoed my ey" becaUM there wQ no beer in the
"1li(eralur. (He draalc Ove bottles
lut llllht IDd I didn't rullu we were
out.)
Mlcl:ey 1-his temper """' UWe Wap lib not belnt able to llDd hll
Joete~ He IDslltl I "bid .. It Ind then I
pt a·<all mm a taveni keopt.r MJ.lni
M!ctq lift hll Jacbt there wt DlCbt
'
ANN LANDERS
when he st.opped for a drink an h1I
W'8y home.
Thll Is the third time he bu beat
mt up and I don't know what to do
about 1L Pleue don't tell me to leave
him. H•'• r•aUJ a rwtD ro escept for
Ulll ont fault. Allo, Ann, I think I
lhould tell 7ou he ii my third husband
IDd the best ol the lot. -BLURRED
VISION
DEAR BLURRED: So he's the bell
tf tbe lot? Wlltn do 700 flDd such.
J,
dolbf Yoa have alrudy told me not to
&ell 7" Co leaTt him, ao I'll respect
1oar whbes and tell you 1ometb1QJ
e.lle. Sta1 wttb him alltll 11.e 1c:ramblN
your braJu aod •now out aU .roar
tHtll. Perllape thea JOU will aat me
for 1tme adriee ,. .. Cll •M ta1tt1d of
telllaJ me -10I to tell 7ff·
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Last month
my htuband took a fatal overdoee of
1leeprn1 pllil. 1 know he was
despoodent over a business failure and
that hll health was a worry to b1m but
I haocl no ldea he would kill himself.
What shall I tell the children 1 They
are 4 and 5 years of age. Eiplainlng
natural death to youngsters ii difficult
enough, but bOw does Ont explain
.Welde? I want to tell them that Dad-
dy w.u very sick. and God toak b!m to
a home lo heaven where we will all
meet one day.
llly motller losisll that I toll them
the truth. She c!alnu U\ey will beer
the true story lrom playmat.1 when
they get older and then l'll have
1eriou1 troubMi beca\lle they will bd
out I Ued.
I have thought about thls until I am
hall crooy. I jlllt can't !all 1111 ~dran
<
thelr daddy didn't want to Uve
any more. Please Ann, I need tome of
your wisdom. -ANG.UISHED
M0'111ER
DEAR MOTHER: TIU la roar
dtdalon to make, not l'01D' moihtr't.
Tell the cldldrea Da~ -Ille
"""' medldH of ft made !lfm ,.
stet h• coal<l llOI Jet ...U " Geil -Jdm to beavea. It ll but tllat ddldre•
believe a pare1t11 ttld'e wu 1e-
dde1tal wlieHyer -™"· GeM lact .... data .,, Deer.
DEAR Al'iN LANDERS: Plo111 oet-
Ut an arcument. Wbu a mm and a
woman meet on tb1 atrtet fto abou1d
ape.it lint! Tb• people In queoUon are
not doH tr!eado, but they have wort.
---------------------~--·--~=-~--------------------
I
Mickey
ed !Dgether IDd tao... eacll other: -
BRANDY
DEAR BRANDY: Wbe• frleff.I,
Ille ene Wh recopilel lh other !Int
1boD14 opiu nm.
''Thi Bride's Guldt," Ann Landen'
booklet, &DIW"WI some rt! tht moit tr ...
quentlJ uktd. qut.rt10DI 1bout 'ftd.
dlap. To recefve your COfJI' ot thJa cominhenalve gutde, write to Ann Landera, 1n care of W• newsp1per,
oDCICJllni • 1on1, Rlf'Oddr<IHd, 1tam-
pod eanlope ...i 3$ cenil Ill co!D.
·Ann Lander• will be .g1ed to heljJ 1"'I
with your problems. Send them to her
lJ1 can of the DAILY Pn4r, 1DCI ...
lag • 1tamptd, self·addrused ...
Vllope.
'
,
..---- -------------........ -• w .... _ .... ----................... i ••• -•••• 4 '4 4 zq c -..... -........ -
•
. '
DAIL y I'll.OT
MRS. DAN JAMES LLOYD
Sixth 0-rotlon Or•nte Countlon
Horoscope
Aries: Sta-rt Proiect
WEDNESOA Y ""1· -thll -avoid '""'-• JOU .,_ preat11e. bu~ metlloda. Help RoliH tllol aomo dOH 1IO SEPTEMBER '11 flmilJ' 1D11Dber ta uve JOU bova toodar f-p.
By SYDNEY OMARR 1-. S-oround 10U oro Act OOCGl'dlnlllJ. ,_.ia... A I I O I I 8AGl'ITAllliJI (NO¥. D-
'"l!le -!Diil ~ deolna, llliandlldpl. -Dec. 21): ......... .._,
hl1 ~ • • • Astro1017 LEO (J114' 23-Aui. S3l : A In wwlc'IDODIJ ..... You ~ Ille war." -ID ,.... fovar 11 on baw aobd far ad d • d
AJUE8 (March 2l·Apr!I borUoD. Ploa obead. --•-:!~-OllJ-=,.qWJ .1t11t 19): Get ituted .on yrojecl w1-i.·....._.._ do ,_ WIUI wllld1 Involve& apecial COio-tbol --__ , -ty to add ID
led!loo, u1.u. Empbaslt II bavt conlldmco ·ID 1:= -acoount •
on paying, collec&g -· llblllty. Get bUIJ on CAPRICORN (Dec, :zt.
You !lnilh..,. pllUO ol..,. = '::' !.r! Jan. lt): Good l.wJor _.i llvK>' _, and b e g l • c11~~ Wdar ....,Idea wltb loYe, --~ --c•. t1 • ~er. -~A (, .. _._. 22) romance, crea ve IPll'•· TAURUS (April 20-May ·~ ADI·......,... : Your~ multlplleo. You ) Put lortb b l b t Communlclle ldeu. Keep ··" :rJ : • r g ' liml o f communlcallon ore ab ID · convlDce, -· orlOnal pro!JOlail. Now II :&:.,.lndlvlduol • • clemonmto. Come oat ol limt IO break from rootlna, lhelL Elhlbll your talentl. tradlllon. Spo6lgttt b on -Ul"1 be working OD AQUAlllUS (Jan. :ZO.Feb.
speak up and be beerd. Take ~ -. :.:_...i __ line D .": II): A ..... do.I •t home -lnltiallve. A meeCIDg could ..._ lhol'• • *"DI lndlcitloa build' ·1<> mellDingful relo· format Pay heed"' huocb. coad!Uona you bad lllen for
tlooshlp. LIBRA (Sept. ll3 • Oct. grattad .. lul>lect ID
GEMINI (May 21-Juna 22): Setlle 11111• at bmne. dlllmta dlooge. we1c-
:rl): Delve bebiDcl th • ID-upeadilure for cballeac• llDll c h an g e.
1 c en e 1i Don't b a • • lUXU?J itm. Talk rather Statul quo due to be lhaken.
judgmeDll on superflci<ll tbaD Ullle·~ Wile !Dtopfmllba I U...
Birthday
Plans lit
A bfrlbda7 party
coloir•Unc Ibo United
Statao Air FCll'Ct Mothen
Clul> FllJ!it lt onnlver1ory
11 tclleduled !or Tbunday,
Sept 12, at I p.m. lft the
llyda Pule Koblle Estatec a-, Sonto Ana.
GUN! opeotar will be Lt.
Col. JG1mo7 C. aiestnut
ir..,.. ~ s,.toma ol El
Se,,_,
Hoaorod CU..U will In-
dude Notimal President
Mr1. 11.1,y Remlllord lllld ber
buaboad olH UD llDllOD Beacb; Mr1. Edna Mor1an
Qf WbitUer, Air Force
Mothtr-ol·tbe~year; o t b • r
national oalCtr•, and the
ore• Air Force recruiting
IW!.
Tba event Is -to oD Air Foree perl\)lllltl, ond
memben' husbands, 1oos or
dolllbten. F u r I b e r ID· formation II oval)able by
collli)g Mr1. . Me Iv l.n
Roellfeldt, ~.
reportl. Do your own In· ..,. cl.,. w you ve PISCEB (Feb. If.Mardi
veflllEMlllg --·"··•eve•· llnol aa•. U -· ore llub-~) u. ··~ ~·-M ell
inC lcr .,.j.';,di';'fh..t.er, born, ;.. ctt•le UD· ;~ '\:"'i.e"~. Kiwis Flock ~dl;;"';"'~out.jjj.i,...ir.•:.· .::o11::-::•m=:o-:..__1a::;-.ileQiiPtc0:11mate~<i·,....M1~\\ ·~~ .. ~-···r··. G h .
-CANCER (june 21.Jull' :Ill: A-"' how 10U ore -. People cloee "' O at ering
22): S-ol b u m or able ID cope wllh oppolllng )'OU ,._. coaluslon. Be
become• JOU< lll'eat oily to-vlewa.. U 10U loH 7our con<emed, but don't bomnr Members ol Ille Newport
trouble. Beach cbl!>tar ol tbtha boKlwt
Summer Wedding Set
By Betrothed Pair
Ill' TODAY IS YOUR Club will calber In • me B I R TH DA Y you ore ol Mr1. Leonard Spielman In
sensitive, a n a t u re l Bmit1ngtoa. BM<:b for their
leed>er. Your lnlulllve ID· monlblr meeting Tbur1day,
lellect II olwpl)' booed. If Sept. 12, ot I p.m.
all>glla, marrloct could be On the agemla ore votln1
upcomlnc. U tnorried, ad· Oil !ha by,law1 ond the pro-
ded retp(lillbjllty II In· opecl& for tile club'• fall
dlcated -coold be becau.. project.Me-.......,.•· ,_ llmlted •• ofoo-tofamlly. ~ ....... g w
:·' Vows 1 Recited
During Rites
A cbampagne bullet ID the
Corona del Mor bmne ol Dr.
and Mr1. G. Wl'lllam
Mablmoa WU the 1ettlnJ
wben the couple announced
the engagement ol their mud>t.er, Lynn M.ablman to
Diwld P. Lenbanl~ IOD ol
~:rs::: :;i•d
Tba bride-lo-be II o
graduale ol Paloo Verda
Hlgb Scbool wtlile her -II • sradualo ol K......,.
lllgb School In Buena Park.
Both .. juniors ot the
University ol Cllllomla,
Sanla Bm>onl, llhert Miu
Mahlman Is majoring In
EngJ!ab and Lenhlnlt In
political tclence.
G E N E R A L T E N· fOrmer Amerlcao Alrl!ne.s DENCIES: Cycle blgb f0< llewordes .... Anyme ellgl-
T AU RU S, GEMINI, bit II Invited"' call Mro.
CANCER. Specla! ~ ID Doc Howard, 646-5865.
SAG I TT A RIUS: obow.========;I
BEST rupect for lnd!vldull wit.b
ezperlence.
'' rw wt ......,. 1ucty tw vw 111 T11• DAILY PILOT eff•"' .. "'' ,~.,._. SV...... °"-""' ef th• kri fe1hlr•1, l:ry •ctll•I ' Hlllb ... Miii\ .... LI I =•· ~~"b,nrtl ... ,.,.., ef ,ttcltn, •YtlflD f I C!.\0~8\'.l'Ji . .r.r.i,~7?"~-i.;r-l); ... iiii • .,ii.i.~i·i·i·-ii10ii .. i0i0i.1i1·i~iil ciro1 Lee VIebeck and
Du Jm>U Lloyd ex-
ehanged wedding pledges
...i nnga clurloi aftemooo
• · ~ In Garden GroYe ~ (brdi. Tb•
· 11ev. Harold Leeotma read
·the Clftmony.
Panintl of the newlywed.I
are Mr. and Mr1. George
Vie beck Jr. of Santa Ana
and Mr. and Mr11 . Tom
Lloyd of Long. Beach and
tormerq o f Huntlngton
Beacb.
Given In maniage by her
.father, the brl<le .. 1ected a white peau de aoie gown of
chontili, lo<:e oppllqueo and
an elbow length veil with a
peorl llDtd headpie<e. Sb•
CMWomer::i
Bake, Sew
.Way to Fair
After • 1h<lrt reoplta lroin
the Orange County Fair,
three Colta Meaa women
ore back on the lair clreull
agalD. .
Wllh anlrlaa ranJIDI from
yeast breads and i:roclteted
articles to cookle1 · end AD·
tlquu, Ml'll. Joe Varva, ot c:oota Meaa; Mrl. Lcr<tto
Fujtc01, of the Harbor
Ana; and Mrl. E J. Y....,
ol Costa Maaa ore off ID tho
Loe Angelea County Fair In
Pomona.
The three women will dis-
play their work 1n tbe do-
me11tlc a r t 1 competition
Sept. 13 111rougb 29.
Medical Group
Every oecond Tue1day ol
tbe month member• Of
Orqe Sbo<eo Medical
A • I { I tmta' Aasociatioa
· ......milo at 8 p.m. Locati«I
may be oblalned by callinC
Mrl. M11)<lrie Humber, 644-
2273.
ID'S BE FRIENDLY
Il' you havt new nt!.Pbon
or know cl. anyone mov1nl
to OUJ' &reL pltue t.til UI
10 that we ml)' extend a
ttlmllr welcome and help
tbem to beccml acquainted
lnthdr--~
Hllldlnaton Be1cll
Visitor
UU626
Cd• Mm Visitor
64UOl4
$1. Coasl Ylsllor
#44579
..... Visitor
604014 •
'
carried a bouquet of orchid!
ond llephanotls.
Attondani.--ttere Mn. Don
Orr of Santa Ana, the
bride'• 1ilter, Mil• Joy
Norman of Orange and Miu
Donno KobaY'8.lhi of Santa
Ana. They wore mint green
floor length dresses of crepe
and held French bouquetl.
Asked to stand as best
man was Tom Lloyd Jr., the
bridegroom's bro t be r.
U1her duties were a11mned
by >Drake Mua~ Stu Stab-
bings, H a r o l d Ferguson,
George Vlebeck, the bride'•
brother, and Orr.
The Saddleback Inn in
Santa Ana was the setUn&
for the reception. M I • •
Sharon Walters of Laguna
Beach cltculated the guelt
book among 300 w e 11 •
The furure bridegroom II
the manager ol t ll e
Un:iventty Men'• Giee, a
member ol the Sbubertlans
1in1ing group and ii
In !ha ROTC 1cbolorlblf.pro-
O'lm. Both are active the
Lutheran CllDPUI progrom.
Among lbe g.-pre1ent
were the couple'• uncles Doualu Mahlman and John
Lenbanlt; the brlde-elect's
grandmother Mr1. L t o
Au11purger, and her ll"8Ddfatber 0. L. M•blmao.
Other gueot. traveled from
11le Los Angele1 and Orange
County areu.
The oouple will contlnu,
their sludles at UCSB later
dlis month. A cummer wed-
ding ls plann<d.
wilber1. w lk d I w::.::;%.:~1;:.i~~: a ers T ro A ong
before making their home in Beach W·••-1 ol ~ II ••· ft-~•-arln San Lull Obl!po. ~ ·~· ' ~ ·~r m •
The bride, a 11ixth genera· and Gown wilJ. meet each laboratilry for Orange Cowl·
ti.on Orange C o u n t 1 a n , Tuesday mora1Dc ia Cameo ty Sbt.'ools. 'Ibe winter ez:.
participated in the 'UN.S. Shore1 from 9:45 a.m. to Scunlonl will beStohLa Jolllaol'•
Women'• Swimming a· noon. 'the firit Tuesday of c r pp 1 c o o
Uonals and bas won teveral the montb members bring Oceanography. 'lbe spring
awards and holds many sPA lunch aod picnic on the sand trip will be an all-day outing
national records. retun)ing to Corona del ·Mar to Catalina aboard tbe
The new Mrs. Lloyd-II an by l:tl p.m. --.1olaod Holiday.
almnna of Santa Ana High Weekly ......., will be"'• School and Santa A n a ... 1"4 .....
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College She II a oenlor 1tu· Oct. 1. The flrot will be to
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education at C a I i f o r n 1 a By Jan. ~ the O'OUP plans
l'olytecbnlc College San to visit all tile 1toto parks
Lull Ob!BPO. ' fr"ll Hunl!oitoo to Soll
Gold discovered on Ghevron 1sland!
Her buaband ls a graduate Cledlente.
of Huntlngton Beach lllgb Quartarq lrlpo bave olJo
School and Orange Coast been plann6d. The fall trip
College. Be olJo Is • senior will be • ball day'1 Journey
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Anne Louise Scott Becomes Bride
MRS. CHARLES EUGENE ORTMAN
Double Ring Ceremony
MRS. CHRISTOPHER FROGLEY
Pomone Hom• Selected
Frogley..fennelly -Vows
Recited •
St. Paul the Apo1tle
Oiurch, Westwood was the
setting for the marriage
ceremony linking Kathleen
Marie Fennelly and
Cl>ri>topher Smith Frogley.
The b!"ide is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent
Michael Fennelly or Los
Angeles and Newport
Beach and her husband is
the .On at Mr1. McGuirJc
Frogley and Kenneth
Frogley of SaOOl Monica.
performing the rites were
the Rev. Louis Shine, John
Mitd>ell and E d w a r d
Donovan.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a full
length illk organza gown
and carried phalaenopsi.s ,
stephanotis and b a b y ' s
breath. Turquoise slllt linen frocks
and nosegays of yellow and
white daisies with baby's
breath were 1elected for
Miss Maureen Fesinelly, the
Westwood
assumed by Lawler ,
Michael Fennelly, t h e
bride's brother and Timothy
Berry.
Theresa Newgard, cousin
and godchild of the l:ride,
wore a white organdy gown
and carried a similar
nosegay for her . role as
flower girl.
A reception followed in
the home of the bride'•
parents.
The bride is a graduate of
Marymount Higti School, at·
tended Dominican College
and Mount SL Mary 's
College. Her husband is a
graduate of Univenity High
School, attended the U.S.
Naval Academy, serv e d
with the U.S. Marines and
currently is at ten d1i n g
California State Polytechnic
CoUege.
The newlyweds will reside
in Pomona.
On their way to Carmel and Lake Tahoe are Charles Eugene Ortman
and his bride1 the funner Anne Louise Scott, alter the Rev. Raymond Sap-
lls perfonnea their double ring ceremony .
Services in Our Lady Queen of Angels Church united In marri•i•
the couple, who are the daughter of 1,lr. and Mrs. Warren Arthur Scott of
·· Newport and the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Richard Ortman of Berkeley.
Th~ bride's father escorted her through a church bedecked with
white gladioli, chrysanthemums and pink roses. The couple exchanged
rings.
For her wed~ day the bride chose a lace-accented ivory peau de
soie gown with bateau neckline and long tapered sleeves, ~cattered with
seed pearls and crystal. A chapel length watteau train and an elbow length
veil caught to a headpiece of lace and seed pearls completed her ensemble.
Her bridal bouquet was a cascade of white roses, stephanotis and orchids.
Miss Susan Lynn Scott attended. her sister as maid of honor. Brides·
maids were the Misses Victoria Ortman, the bridegroom's sister; Suzanne
Ledin of San Gabriel; Donna Swangren of Beverly Hills ; Mary Ellen Dlu·
gosch of Stonnlake, Iowa, and Jacqueline Casale of Newport Beach.
They were gowned in cranberry organzine over linens, with necklines
trimmed in ivory lace, and wore headpieces of similar fabric accented by
ivory lace bows . They carried nosegays of pink baby roses .
Doreen Curci of Covina, gowned in a replica of the bridemaids'
dresses, carried a basket of rose petals for her role as flower girl.
Richard Conti of Berkeley was best man ; while Richard Ortzpan, the
bridegroom's brother; Phillip Doran, Timothy Coleman, Danie( Wolke,
Robert Motta, and Paul Kraus were ushers.
A champagne buffet reception in Mesa Verde Country Club honored
the couple, with 250 guests offering congratulations. Guests danced to the
music of Tony Rose. Pink and white floral arrangements provided decor-
ations, while pastel plnlt roses topped the wedding cake. The bridegroom's
sister, Mi ss Kristin Ortman passed the guest book.
Special guests were the benedlct's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Eu·
gene Stephens and Mr. and Mrs. Russel Rothschild.
The bride, a graduate of Newport_ Harbor High School and the Uni·
versity of Santa Clara, is a National Charity League debutante. She will
work for her elementary teaching credential at Califomla State College in
Hayward.
Her husband, an alumnus of St. Mary's High School and University
of Santa Clara, is working for his masters degree in English.
The couple will mate their home in Hayward.
Cross-Country Honeymoon
Home Rites Unite Couple
A home ceremony con-
ducted by the Rev. Roger
Betzworth united in mar·
riage Rosalie Marianne Rid-
dell and Michael William
Thomas of Hun ting ton
Beach.
The bride. daughter of Mr .
and Mrs . Ernest Halliday
Riddell of Huntington
Beach, was given in mar~
riage by her father.
For the a rt ernoon
ceremony she selected. a
chantilly lace gown styled
with a fitted bodice, sabrlna
neckline and long tapered
sleeves. Her bouffant skirt
flowed into a chapel train,
and the seed pearls trim-
ming the yoke w e r e
repeated in the neckline and
the train. Petals of lace and
organza also were edged in
pearls and held her veil of
silk Wusion. A cascade of
pink roses and carnations
centered with a rose cor-
sage completed her wedding
attire.
Miss Helen Arand was
maid of honor a n d
bridesmaids were t h e
Mis~es Leslie Behan of
Burbank, Elizabeth Mace of
Laguna J):eacb ; Judith Hall,
Penticton, Canada, and
Wendy Saunders, the bride's ()~
couspi. ~ · ... ..
For the double ring rites
the bridal attendents were ~ f
identicalJy gowned in floor· ~ .
length gowns of 11 g h t . S_
chartreuse linen designed ~ \:
with rounded necklines, fit· ,
ted bodices and cap sleeves.
'fhe bell-shaped skirts Oared
to a dip .In back. Matching
headpieces of double bows
held illusion veiling and they
carried nosegays of pink
carJU1tions.
De b or ah S u 11 Ivan ,
·daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
James B. Sullivan of La
Habra, served as Clower girl
MRS. MICHAEL W. THOMAS
Virgin!• Home
carrying a basket of pink Ronald A. Crowder , William and attended Golden West
roses and carnations. Martin, Leo Martin and College. She plans to COD·
Byron Olcott served the Walter O. Behan. tlnue her education in the
bridegroom, son of Mr. and The couple now are en East.
Mrs. Grover L. Thom as , as route to Arlington, Va ., Her husband also was
best man and ushers were where they wiU make their graduated from Marina and
Craig Thomas, and Bruce home . attended Golden West prior
Riddell, brothers or the The bride was graduated to hiJ enlistment in the U.S
newlyweds : Robert Ray and from Marina High -SChooJ Armed Forces. Da~dBurdeen . lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;:;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;i;i;;;;;i;;;;i;;;i;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, Bright summer Clowers
adorned the tables during
the garden reception for 3:IQ
guesU following the wed·
ding. Assisting were the
Mm es. R. Renard Sandore.
Laguna Beach School ol Art and Design
bride's sl.rler and maid of •-------------------honor and Mrs. Charles
FALL PROGRAM
SEl'T. JO · D!C. 7 Lawler, bridesmaid.
Stephen Frogley attended
his brother ais be.rt man,
while usbe.r duties wes-e
Beach Babes
Every w-.y et 7
p.m. members of TOPS
Beach Babes convene at
Huntington Beech H 1 g h
SChool tor p-ograms.
HB TOPS Club
Allen School b t h e
JTM!'eting pl«e for mflmberl
of Huntington Beadl TOPS
Pound ptndler1 at 7 p.m.
•very M'"'411.
Peering
EDWARD It Stearn1 ol
Corona del Mar ha1 been
named to the organWng
committee of the Diabetes
Alaodation of Sou t be r n
Caillornia'1 annual Lantern
Ball.
A PATIO FIESTA party
doubled .. • wedding an·
niversary re«ption a n d
Jooopb n. Franco'• l>rth·
clay party ror he and hiJ
.Ue at t'he:lr Cameo Shores
Around
"hacienda." 'nle De Fran·
cos have recenUy returned
from SOuth Bend, lnd.,
where De Franco wu the
vice president of t b e
Stud~ller Corp. Some area
people in attendance were
Dr. and Mr1. Robert Crec-
ca, Doa Burm, Edward
Smith, all of Cameo Shorel;
Mr. and Mn. Peter Area·
drup of the Bluffs and Mr.
and Mn. Granv!De LanodeU
IO•ll llUNTI
DAY1D ICHNAllL
IOMI AIMmow•
AINOLD ICHIPllN
IUTH OHOOO
JON ITOKISIAlT
IASIC AND ADYANCID COUllSIS
DU.WIN&
COLOI & DllleM
OIL PAINTIN•
.fCUllTUll
WAQICOLOI
UH DU.WIN•
-~ ... -631 i.,.. c.,.. M. ,, ....... ,,It
o1 Back S.,. IL----------------.1·
Tufld~. Sfpttmbfr 10, 1968 DAJL V l'ILar J 5
Marriage Vows Spoken
In All Saints Church
MRS.· HAROLD T. WALLACE
Evening Ceremonies
November
Plans Set
Christ Ohurch by the Sea
is the site planned for the
Nov. 30 wedding of Christina
Petersen and Richard Eric
Nichols of Huntington Park.
The future bride, daughter
"-Mr. and Mrs. David
Petersen or Newport Beach,
Is an alumna of Newport
Harbor lligh School. She
and her flance are presently
attending Orange Coast
College.
Tb e be n e d l ct-1.o-be,
tteptoo and son of Mr. and
Mrt. Merle H. Hamby, is a
gradUate of HunUngton Park
High School and ls studying
Marine technology at OCC.
CHRISTINA PETERSEN
Brid•ti>be
Harold TbolDu Wlllace
clalmed his bride, t h •
former Bubar.-Winters
Cameron during an even!nl
service tn All S a I n t •
EP'ltcopal Cburcb,
Puadena.
The ~ned.lct, w h o t e
parenU: are· Mr. and Mr1.
Ray Wallace of San
Clement., attended t b e
University of California at
San Diego for two yeara. HiJ
bride, who attended Pitier
College in Claremont, la the
daughter of Mr. and Mr1.
William Colc1ham Cameron
of Paaadena. The couple will
continue their 1tudie1 at the
UnlversJty of California,
Santa Barbara in the fall.
The bride was e!JC!orted to
the altar by bu father for
the services performed by
the Rev. Alfred E. Norman.
She wore a gown of shantung
c with a yoke ot netting ap-
pllqued with tiny roses, en·
ti.rely designed and
handmade by the
bridegroom'• mother. A
bubble of netting fell from
flowers ln her hair. Yellow
and white tuberow begonias
formed her bouquet.
Gowned in yellow and car·
rying yellow and white
chry1anthemum1 and Wood·
burn Abbey roses were the
attendantl, tbe bride's .Uter
Mas Christy Ann Comeron
as maid ot honor 1 1be
bridegroom'• slater, Mh1
Pamela Gay Wallace, and
the Misses Jane Ann
Martin, Patricia D r a p • r
Phillipa and Mary Jane
Wallace, brldesmaldl.
Rick Wallace stood a1
best man, and the bride'•
brother James Cameron,
John Serences, John Puma
and Michael Goodman were
ushers.
After a reception at the
HunUngton-Sheraton b o t e t
the couple left for 1 wedding
tour throUih Hawaii.
Guests arriving from out
of town included Miss Mary
Jane Roberts, the bride's
f<II'Dler roommate; Mr1.
Edwin Cox or New Mexico,
the bride's aunt; Mr 1 •
Lawrence L a w s o n of
Kenilworth, Ill., the bride's
godmother; Mr. and Mrs.
Ray W. Wallace of Costa
Mesa. the grandparenta of
the benedJct; Mrs. Samuel
Bryant of Yorba Linda, the
grandmother of the
bened.ict, and Mrs. Harvey
Bissell of Florida, t h e
grandmother of tbe bride.
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JI DAI~ Y Pl\.OT -· -10, 1'168
Surf Mishap Sent Grid A~e to iMories
By &\tu. GllSTJ!EY .. .. °""" ""' , ....
0.. a -1 AQIUll altmlootl IA 11211,
four Ublril'll11 al SouU..... Clllfornla
fl>oll•U 1'1&1«• piled out <ll a Moclel T
and ria tw Iha surf where th< sllboo
Pier -lodaJ.
Forty.two rear• later, John Wayne
relived the incident at bil breatfut
table IA B&J'lhorU.
"I dlc!Jl't luck rl&ht whan I caulbl
thl.J btg wave and I landed bard on. Ibt
bottom on my rlgbt 1.bouldet,11 be u.-
plalned.
Wa:rne'• weren't u common In ta aa
tbey are now and the future fUm actor
w-.n't lookjn& forward to the '71
111100 and another 1t weekl of. w1n .. cln& every time h1I iboulder wu
clouted.
at the tlmo Jone& didn't bow how will
Wayno WU lllllAJ alon& wttil F ..
Stud!OI. ' , .. , had ,_ a Joh u a proP<ril'
man at tba 1tud10 that twmner and
wu making '40 • wfft, wblcb if
about like ta a week now.''
.iram and I wam'l efea on the team.•
Meanwbile, back ' at th• ttudlo,
Wayne was on the rtao. Altar ahovlllg
prop1 around fot tnerll moo~ Ford.
made him an 11attt1nt director.
rt wu a 1ceoe akin to ...ttt you
ml&llt ..... th• beach tpday, ea<epl
that mm aulll ...... ba(llet, the hair
wu tbcrttt and parted in the middle.
Young Morrison had tern several
ahouldor lilamenll Ill the mlahap and
the injury 1oon curtalltd a promltlnt
football carttr at use.
"But I went to pre..euon practice
anyway,'' Wayne recall«I. "! had been waldlln1 John Fonl
direct films all 1ummer and was cei-
ling pretty IAterellad IA the buallleu. I
was tak:ln& pre-law at SC but my lo·
tere1ta were focuaing more and more
at the atudloa aod I dropped out ol
school."
HJ& first project 111 lhat poa!Uoa wu a mm called "Salute," •n epic delllnC
wllh Illa at the U.!1. Naval AaldemJ. "I went through the conditioning
program and photo day for the press.
Then I ju.st decided J couldn't take
another year of pe.ln tn that 1houlder. Tbe bodJ 1tirfer1 took to the w1ve1
ud yelled e•dtedl1 becauae the 1urf
WU up. ThLI WU • bold croup and
even the tallest waves were cballeng·
ed.
Soddenly then wu a ay fer help.
Marloo Michael Morrilon, a lanky
J.t.7ur-old tackle, WU nounderlAg. He
wu dragged to the beach b1 fellow
aurfera.
"I bad 1praln:ed a knee on the
freabm.an team the previous fall and
hadn't played much yet at SC. I played
mOlt ol my 1ophomore 1euon, thouib.
Howard Joou had me at linebacker
cm defenae and tackle on offen1e.
"But that dam lhoulder gave me nu all durlnf thet '211 1ea1on. I've
never known IUCh paln. ''
"So I went up to Jones and told h1m
I wanted to lay out a year and see If
the .shoulder would heal.
"He said: 'OK, but I don't want you
to we that lboulder aJ an es.cuse for
not coming back nut year. I 1a1d,
'Ob no -I woo't do tbal' "
Wayne leaned back and laughed as
he recalled tbe conversadon because
I>urlag the 1927 1euon, Wayne we.nt
to Palo Alto to catch the USC-Stanford
game and remember• altUng in tbe
atandl with a Palo Alto Ttmea and
•eeinf hll pl-• on the aporta page.
There were football tcenel in the
script and Ford wad Wayne about
the po"'ibillty ol takinf 17 USC foot·
ball player• to AnnaJ)Olb. 'Ibe ooly
hitch wu that the player• would have
to leave stjlool two weeb earl1 in
June.
''The studio people aaked me who
they abould talk to ot SC and I told
them. the dean of men, who I kne•
pretty well. But they aa1d no, tbe1'd 10 SAVED FROM SU RF
J ohn Wa yne Surfeq to repair llljur!H like
Kin.g Arthur Ashe
•
Eyes Militant Role
FOREST HILL8, N. Y. (AP) -
Arthur Albe Jr., the first Negro man
ever to win a major temis cbam-
pionahlp, admitted Monday that be i..
cautbt op In the black power atruule.
Stokely Clrmlcltaei and H. Rap
Brown.
"You dcll't need too many of then
men, but you need two or tbrM jUlt to
ftep everybody hanert," Arthur ad·
ded.
Ashe laid be WU ditcrtmJ.n.ated
against f!Very day but Could dte DO
aped.fie 1.uta:nce1.
"I'm hurt when I 1ee other bl.act
people hurt," be 1a}d.
GLENN WHITE
Sports Editor
"Once I nner tboug'bt about Jt -I
otter looked back," the ~year~ld
Army lieutenant from Ric.hmond, Va.,
1Cd alter beating Holland.'1 Tom Ok-
br, 14-12, i-7, &-3, 3-8, 64 for the U. S.
()pea crown.
"Now I know I have• to look back.
Everybody ii conscious of black
power, white power, purple power,
whatever you 111. 1 am black. I have
to ri;cognlze that.
Wi ll Work tor BBC
"A man hP.s to study the past lf be 11
to pli.n tor ttle future."
Ashe, born the son of a truant of-
ficer ID Richmond, once wu not
permitted to play even on the park
courta or Rl:ctunond.
Britain's Olympic Pixie
On Sidelines for '68
Ashe said he hoped to wort with
Whitney Young's Urban League, a
dvil rlghta body, when he geta out of
the Army next February.
"I'd lite to work with ticb: -Mr.
Young was tie!'e to watch me play Sun-
day. He talked to me about It," t b e
slender Negro said.
Ashe, becom,lng phll<>1ophical, said
the country was in the throes of a
revolution, and that he felt he 1bould
aboulder hJ1 part of the burden.
"Among the blact people, there are
mlllt.anta, moderates and con-
servatives,'' Aabe said. "A man must
make his decision."
Asked into which of these categories
he placed himself, the new tennl1 king
replied:
"Well, I'm not a conservative. I'm
not a moderate, either. But there are
varying degrees of militants.
"There are tho1e who want to kill
and want to hurt people. I don't
necessarily go along with them. But I
must find my place."
Ashe said there were place11 in the
black movement for men such as
HAWAIIAN GOLFER
REMAINS IN COMA
HONOLULU (AP) -Goller Ted
Makalena remained in deep coma ea.i:·
ly today after he was found floating
face down in shallow water off Kihio
Beach in Waik.lld.
A spokesman al Kaiser Hospital
sa id Maka\ena's vital life algns re·
mained stable but that the propiosls
"is guarded for the recovery of brain
fun ctioas "
It was still undetermined whether
Makalena . 34, who won the Hawaiian
Open Golf Tournament ln 1966, hi t hia
head on hard-packed aand while diving
or suffered some sort of 1elture.
When Mak:alena was admitted Sun-
day, there was no pulse and no blood
pressure. A nurse aaJd drug1, heart
massage and o:r:ygea restored the life
1unctioru.
Great Britain's monopoly of Olym-
pic long jump gold medala ls ap-
parently at an end with the revelation
that plxte·lii.e Mary Rand will not be
representing the Union Jack ln the
1968 Olympic Games at Mexico City.
Mary won1964 distaff leapl.ng com•
petition at To~ wlth an Olympic
record of 22-2¥, while English team-
mate Lynn Davies took the men's long
jump gold p 1 e c e with a 25-5*4
performance.
Davies will be back to defend his ti-
tle next month and Miss Rand will be
describing .b1.e: jumps to the folks back
WHITE
WASH
>111111111111111
• el•MM WMlft
home via BBC. She was not given a
spot on her country's '68 squad
because injuriefi side lineJ her from a
majority of England's major meets.
And the team selection is based on
overall showing for the entire cinder
season.
She'11 been hampered by torn thigh
mUS(:les and Achilles tendon problems.
She wa1 a winner over the 80-meter
hurdles in the 1967 Pre Olympics in
Mex ico City and it was during that
meet that she gave a 1peelal
shamrock lucky charm to Davies prior
to male long jump bostllities.
Hoewver, it wasn't quite lucky
enough as Russia's Igor Ter-Ovanslan
eqoolled the world record with an 8.35
meters (Z7-4%) leap. Davies picked up
the silver medal with an 8.13 meters
jump.
Throwtni the jive.Ila •t Sout.ll Lake
Tahoe Is U.te compeUnc out of a
closet
Lindg ren, Mills Fail
So dlsdo1e11 BW Toomey of i.1au
Beadl, w11o came wtthla a wb.ia:ker or
breaking tbe world deeatbloa rt<!ord
a1 be eaptared the U. S. Olymplc team
trtala over tbe weekend at Tabot.
.,The tret1 tbat are all uoand to
tract reall:r de tomethln1 to you mea.
tal171" Toomey rel1te1. "I'd mucb
prefer to rua anCI Jump in Mexico Ci-
ty, '' be 1dd1.
.. While BW WIS threwt.n1 oat of
Taboe'• closet, 13'1 bottles ef ebam·
pacne were betn1 connmed Saturday
at Llflma Beach Country Club a1
tamiy and rrtend1 eelebrated. older
brother Dick'• marrla1e. ,
Harry Dean Hanson of Huntlngton
Beach ha1 1lgned a letter cf intent to
enroll at UCLA, where be hopes to
compete 1n crew.
WooJd yoa believe tbat oaly nine ••r• rem ... till Oru1e Cou ty foot-
ball a la 1111 sett ande way wltll tbe
Sept. U Mater Del.Sota Ana dael at
Suta Alta Bowl?
TtuVCoatt ~Jbmgers IJOCCU tea'bl of
the Orange Coast •ea may be ready
for a comeback after a dlamal ahow·
ing 1n 198'1. They'll .have pro Leif
Werneid, on loan from the LA Wolves,
the former Ranger whi1 J 1 m
McWllllam1 1n tbe '68 llneup.
Addition of th05e two will m&ke
coach Brian McCaughey's kickers
tough to handle -lite the Ranger cut.
fits that racked up four atra1ght league
titles before the 'ffl disaster.
Loyalty Delux
MIAMI, Ok.la. -Miami bas at least
one loyal high school football fan.
A doctor ran an ad in the Miami
News-Record Monday, stating:
"Elfective Friday and coutinuing
through football season, my office will
close at 4 p.m. on Fridays."
Tracy Smith Wins 10,000
SOtml LAKE TAHOE, Calif. (UPI) end Lindgren are on the oul.olde look·
-Tracy Smlth'1 tralnln1 PrDP"IDl log In.
paid aH bett. thm Qtn'y Undiren's For Mills It ia the end of the road.
For Lindgren, there Is a bare chance aod BW.,. Milli' and th.at 11 why today he can still make It to MexJco City and
be hU an Olympic bertb 90d the other the games next month, but don't bet
two dDo 'L • be will.
Smith hut Llndlr.., and Milla, plu-;\ Llndlf'n baa been aullerlng lr<WD an
Van NllllaD and 'rom Lari.I, in thft ,. _
l0,000 met.r NI at ll>o U.S. Olympic 1 IEDC& trect and fl.id trial& Mooda.Y willl the
belt lime a•er ..-..i at altltlldo
compm-abla to E c ho SUlnmlt'• 1,111
feetaboY•-llftl -a laudJ
JO:OO.t. Vu l'(eilon llDlsbe4 aecood and
Laris thll'd to al.to win O),y1nflo ber1lla
wllllo Milli, • --who -tho l0,000 al Ula 'l'ot1o OIJmpka f""' Jur& .... .... f-111111 J.lnll-tbe coUtilata ........... tho DUI ·a.. 100l'I WU Mil. • 8liica 11111 die hni .,..,. ftnlahen al
Illa ldala .. 00 to Iha oqntpka, Milli
•
Achlllet tendon injury ror more than a
modi!. Laa\ week, be appeared to be
over Jt and ran tome tood practi~
raca. That prompted the M 130
pound bundle ol runni.DI ~le 1o !rJ lor Olympic berlh1 In both the l0,000 and &,000.
IJltdlrta r.u out o1 compotltloo IA
the lll,000 MocdaJ wllll about a half
dozen .lapJ to 10. While Laris, Van
Ntlaon and Smith raced on each
other's heeh DMrly the rell of tlle
w a y, Lindgren kept lalllll1 farther
back and when be flnlsbed be limped
noticeably.
Oiarlle Gteene, Jim Hlnu and Ron-
nie Ray Smith all clocked 10 seconds nat to lead the w11 into tod17's
Hml6.nah. All 11 entrit1 in the 100 ad-
vanced to the semil, which will be
' followed later today by the final.
Tom Wyatt and Gectf Vandentocl<
won huu Ill th• 400 hurdles and liar ArrtnllnD and Wode Bell tool: beau In
the IOO.
Da•e Maggard led 1bot put
quallfler1 Moaday wttb a heave of a
fee~ 21\ lndles (IB.98 meter1).
WOl"ld rec:<rd holden Jim Ryun and
Randy Mallon were among thote who
quaUll&d on the llOO and abot, reapec-
tiv,ty. R1an ran a 1:$0.0 to tlnJ.ah
fourth in bb heat while Mabon tossed
the abot 61-91\ m hll onJ, puL
•
•
"It was a little emburauin& -it
wu 11.ke 1eein1 my name in the pro.-See Sw1 Pare 17
McLain Shoots for 29th.
Tonight Against Angels
87 EARL GUSTXEY Of ,.. o.lb' ...... ~
Denny McLain hopes to stride one :f cloHr to huehaD Immortality iht at Anaheim Stadium when
he'll be on the llrlJll U.. alt..-hll 29th
vict<ry of the 19son.
A win ai&1111t Anfel starter Andy
Messersmith will put the organ.
playing Detroit ftreballer cne win
a.way from the flnt 30 win season in 34
yean.
Dizzy Dean was the 1ut to do tt -a
30-7 seascn with the Cardinals. The
lut American League pitcher to win
XJ was Letty Grove, who bagged S1 ill
1931.
McLain will have the odds with him
thil evening. He's been nearly un·
beatable on the r oad tb11 year, posting
a 18-1 traveling mart. At home, he'•
12-4.
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C1llfor1118 .... · · · · · • · · · · · · "°1 '"',. .. -$11lllrr t.Dt -o.trolt t. C1llfonlll • -• loOd1. kTrl-. HA -W, HOl10fl CD), St.n'llY
Ill), ICtll!w (t ). I -1111~ a •I •• 10
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fltM -Jrlt. Atttndtnc. -10,:m.
Foster Rips
Rouse, Holds
I.Ung Crown . . -.
WASHINGTON (AP) -LI g b t
beavywel&ht champion Bobby Foster
ts willing to fight anyone who'll pay to
get into the rlng with bim. Roger
Rouse h11 learned it is a eosUy ex·
perlence.
Foster carved rivers of blood on the
face of the well-regarded challengft'
and stopped hlm on a technical
knockout at 2:34 ol the fifth round in
their nontitle flght Monday nlght.
It wa11 the thinl exhibition victory in
slx weeks for the lean and mean
Foster, who is collecting as many
paydays as possible with bis ne•
crown while waiting for a cballe.nger
willlng to give him the $100,000
guarantee be 6emanda for a title bout.
Rou.se's backers had discussed put·
ting up the lbke, but gambled on a
good exhibition showing Wtead. They
1aved • great deal of money.
Rou1e, once the No. 1 cballenger lost
a great deat of blood and prestige.
Fotter, making his first ring ap.
pearance a1 champion in h I 1
hometown of Washington, turned
Rouse's face into a red maet. Rtfllng
long left jabs and throwing an oc-
culonal hard right cross, he opened
cuts above House's right eye, above
and below hls left eye, and had blood
1treaminr from his nose when the
fight was atopped..
"He wouldn't have been around
much longer," 1hrugged the 29--year·
old Foster.
Tbe 8-foot..:l~·inch Foster, making
the most of an advantage of nearly
hall a foot ln his reach, won all four
rounds on au UU'ee judging cards. He
Jed by marginl of l<>-34, ~ and 40-
31.
What nut for Foster after the
lopskled victory over a t o p
chaDengerT
"Fltht apln. ln another three
wetkl," ht answued. "I don't tncw
who. Wboflver we c.n cet -al 1001 u
the m011e7 II rlfhl"
FOl"ter demanCb: that any cballenpr
metcb the $100,000 suarantH bt 11ve
Dlclt Tlt•r to buy his lonc-<1-.ved
ahot at the title May 24. Fortar made
good bll tnv~mnent by lmocting out
'111er. But hta punishing trt\lJnph over
Roule could d.11couraie oUiers from
fambllna agalllat blm .
But in Messersmith, McLain m.lght
be up aialm< a tormldabla foe. The
former Orange County prep a~ near-
ly tosted a no-bitter at Boston Friday
ni&ht while pootlng a <-O triumph. He
wound up with a two-hitter.
Should McLain win XI, he'll be the
flrll rl&ht bander to do ao ln 41 yean:.
Jim Bagby wu 31-12 with Cleveland in
19:!0.
The other American League 3().
game winners were Cy Young (twice),
Walter Johnson (twice), John Che1bro,
Ed Wal&h, John Coomb1 and Joe
Wood Chesbro WU 41-12 in 190t.
Mlck07 Lollcb fir<d a two.bitter aod
Wlllle Horton, Mid:ey Stanley and Al
Kaline slammed home rwis, leading.
the Detroit Tigers to a 6-0 victory over •
c.utornia Monday night that boosted:
their American League lead to eight
games.
1be victory, coupled with
Baltimore's 6-2 loss to Washington,
redllC'ed. the Tiger!r' pennant clinching-.
magic number to 10.
The only bits oU LoUcb , 14-9, were a
third innlng single by A u r e 11 o
Rodriguez and an eighth imliog dooble
by Tom Satriano. '
DAZZLING DENNY -Detroit Tiger pitcher Denny McLain lakes
the next ttep In hJ1 que!t for 30 victortes tonight when he faces the
California Angeli In Anaheim Stadium. The right-hander who
hopes to become the major league's first 30-game winner in 34 Years,
will be shooting for bis 29th win against the Angels.
U.S. Track Trial,s
SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calli. CAP)
-Summaries of the U.S. Olympic
track and field trials Mond13 :
• •
-. '
RECOGNIZE HIM? -It's Marion Michael Mor-
rison, now known as John Wayne. This picture was
taken in August of 1927, at USC's football photo
day. Wayne was still suffering from a shoulder in-
jury incurred in a Newport Beach surfing accident
the previous summer. Shortly after this photo was
taken, Wayne left school to become a Hollywood
film prop man.
l(aney Looks Bae~ Shackleford
Memories Are Made Calls Scrum
In 50-Y ear Career GWC's Best
During the course of Saturday af.
ternoon't Angel press conference at
Anaheim Stadium, Fred Haney was
reminiscing about those e a r I y
December days in 1960 when be, Bob
Reynolds and Gene Autry were putting
together their fr.mohise.
They needed a manager, o£ coUM>e,
and Casey Stengel was interviewed for
tbe post.
"We talked wtth Cati;ey for five
hours," Haney recalled. "And at the
end of that time we didn't know any
more than we did when we started."
As memories go, that was a fairly
EARL
GUSTK.EY
. recenf one lor lfaiiiy. "The~year-old·
general manager stepped aside after
liO years ln baseball Saturday and the
memories seemed to gang up on him.
There were no tears but you knew
he was unhappy and maybe even a lit·
tle bitteT. This is the 111an who did the
scherping and dealing that made the
Angell baseball's best ex.pansion club.
Given a couple of decent relief
pitchers, the Angels WO\lld be in the
first division right now.
But they don't have tbem, tbey're a
mile out of the first division, at·
tendance ls down and Reynolds and
Gene Autry have been pressured into
doing .11omething. Haney, at 70, was too
vulnerable to survive. ,,. ,,. ,,.
FAMILY DEPT. -There'• one
more Ferryman left at Costa Mesa
IDfh School. This one's Dick Fer-
ryman, a 155-poand junior who will
play center and U.nebacker for the
varsity this 1e11on.
Older brothers Pat and Jim are
playing at Saa Jose State now where
Jim ii I.he Spartan•' belt linebacker.
* * * SEA KING DEPT. -Golden West
football coaoh Ray Shackleford h.ys
he's bad pretty good success witll
Corona de! Mar High fOOtball players.
"As a group, the guys we get from
Corona del Mac have been the beat bit·
ters we've bad," be says.
* * * McLAIN DEPT. -There'• • eofn..
dde... to be found Ill the lllrlo'l' of
Jt..pme wbmen. Lefty Grove wa1 the
list A.merlcu Leaper t4 wta JI. Be woa 11 ID •11 and lte wu 11-yeara-.old.
* * * WHAT FOR DEPT. -Not 1adJfled
-• -..,.,..boll'd It In-tends to construct at the Coliseum, tbe.
Colileum Conunltalon bu announced
it will elto tnlld a f<&ncy eeoreboard
In tile Sports Arena, of all p-•·
'lbe tut time '" looked1 the Sports
Arena had a 1ccrtboard. It's a 'little
dusty, but it seemed adequate enough
for the NCAA basketball cham·
pionships last March.
It's one of those big, four-sided jobs.
Why in the world the Spor1' Arena
needs a hew 1COreboai'd i s
unimaginable. Alter you get past USC
and LA stars basketbd., the Sports
Arena'S sports ledger is at groUDd
zero. U the Arena needs a scoreboard,
let USC and the Stars put one up:
Tbe cost of the Col:isum and Arena
scoreboards, by the way, is projected
at ,1.5 million.
* * * GRIPE DEPT. -Golden West foot.
ball coaches are upset over a budc:et
slashing tbat left them without
' numeraled practice Jerseys.
By EARL GUSTKEY
or ._ Dilly f'll.t s't1ff
Golden West football coach Ray
Shackleford, after viewing films of
Saturday nlgbt's' scrimmage at Cer~
ritos, 'used phrases llke "major
breakdowns" and 1'poor techniques"
to describe his club's first showing in
combat.
He also called it "the best scrim-
mage we've had in three years."
Hts critique of the scrimmage was
contradictory. He gave part ot it rave
ootices and part of it be said, was a
flop.
But most of it was good.
"The blocking by our fullbacks was
great," he said.
They 1ay It's a Utt1e hard to tell
who's who In films of 1crlmmage1
with nobody weartag namben. -
"Tom Westcate, Mike Simone and
Mike Rice all did. outstanding jobs
blocking. I'd say our aftense ia ahead ., ·-. * * ~ ._ -·-· ~.of-Uaedefensenowinexecut.ici:
RACING" f>EPT. -Santa Anan "It looks like everyone came to bit
George H~dock deserves watching In at <:.erritoe but we showed some very
November s Ensenada..t.o-LaPaz auto poor technique by some individuals.
race. Haddock wu second in the July "Some of the defensive people show·
Stardwit outing in h1J aluminum-ed IOllle major breakdowns, so they'll
bodied machine . powered by a · be getting some indiVW,ual attenUon
Porsche 912. It b1t 130 mph in the thiJ wtek. The defensive eods, for ex.
Stardust outing and insiders say it's ample, did a great job hitting but they
among the fastest in the sport. had.poor posiUon. .
Czech Gymnast
Forced to Hide
PRAGUE, Czechostoviakia -Vera
Castavska, gold medal winner In
women's gymnastics at Tokyo, said
today that w h e n Russia invaded
Czechoslovakia tast month she bad to
go into biding tor five days 'because
she had signed a paper deoooodng tbe
Soviets. .
"While my routine training wu in·
terrupted, 1 did get a good workout. I
was hidden in the borne of some very
brave friends and I helped tbem ~
coal into the basement ev8f7 day,'
she explained.
KECK BOWLS OVER
NORTHERN RIV AL
LMnar Kock of Retede tmoothly
rolled put Foy Horaburada of Su
Francllco In the weoteod North-South
eerl• of bowllng, boasting a 386-piD
advantage over bll nortllern foe Jn Ille
1econd annual rebeWal of_ ~e,p:ries.
Keck wound up the set MDndO)' n!Sbt
at Koua Lanes ID Costa Meta, putting
togetlltt gari>et of 237, 218, 215, :114 to
S1llNb Heraburada (162, 180, 1'10, 2(11).
The loHr bad.,... oooe In the eight
gamei -the nm game at L a. L C.-
111 ~ In San l!'nnclloo, 200 to IM.
Keck bouncld blict to romp In the
nut outl<Jg, 278-170 lllCI after that II
was bombl away .
"
"And our scrape linebackera dldn't
have good position, eithtt. U we can
eoITeCt those two things tbis week we
1hould be in good atiape."
The Rustlers' final pre. 1 ea 1 on
scrimmage will be with GlendaJe
Saturday, 10 a .m., 'at Otange Coast.
The seasoo opener is Saturday, sept.
21, wltb East LA.
Against Gleodale, Shackleford said
he'd be looking for "a little more con-
slsteocy."
He added: "U we can get the hitting
again Saturday, plus better execution
and consi.tency, then I'll say we'll be
ready for the fint game."
Shackleford stressed the superlative
play of the fullbacks Saturday.
Fullback and quarterback were our
big question markai tbiJ time last yeiar
-now we look pretty solid at both."
Simone doubled at fullback and
defenJ1ve end 1n the tenun and was
outolandlng at both JpO\I, the ooac!>
said.
Although be'• ati1I pained by a year-
old foot injury, Westgate remain• the
-atfu11. Normalcy bu fallM upon GWC'1
practice schedule. School started to-
day so tbe Rustlers will work oca from
I to 5:30 each da,y,
Texas Grid Great
Dead at 77
HOUSTON -~ Grin. 11, ... of a.. oll-dme p-eala of Teu1 foolball,
dlef T1111r .. a7 algllt on11, a f-.r .. oe,. and pro
foothill pla:rer .. -In 1MJ afler II 7ean u u auldut Jood»all eoada at
Rice Ual•enltJ,
DAILY·PJLqJ' Jf.
T aknted Tailbacks
OCC Trio Battle for Spot
BY JOEL SCHWARZ flt .. Oeltf' ,.,.. .,...
When a football team loses an au~
e"'rythlng back, Ill coachinf stall
tends to put on a tona: face and wonder
who In the world II going to 1111 that
big gap in the offenee. .
John McKay of USC had !bat loog
look several years back when be lost
Mike Garrett, but be became all
smiles last faU wbell he turned up O.
J. Simpson.
Lao< WI Diet Tucker, Orange
Coast College's head coach wondered
where be would ftnd anybody to step in
for the graduating Frank Weirath.
Aller all, Weiratll gobbled. up 792
yards on the ground in.nine games and
was named the Eastern Conference's
back of the year.
Now, after a Utt.le more than a week
Sports In Brief
of pres..,on clrlllB, TU<ker sttJI hot lllJ
problem1 at Weiratb's old p0sition.
tailback. But they're the kind of pro-
blems every football coach would like
to have.
The Pl.rates sbou'tdn't have too much
trouble filllng Weiratb's shoes. The on·
1y question ls who will end up in them.
Three talented runners, Wayn•
Tinlin, !'.than OUver and Raymon
Ricardo, all have the.Jr toes ln
Weirath's shoes and their eyet on the
starting tailback slot.
Al! three looked sharp ln last
Saturday's scrimmage against Gros•·
mont and Mira Coata, compounding
Tucker's final seleetlon for a starter
Sept. 21 when Orange Coast opens its
1eason at (.e.rritos.
What makes Tucker's choice so dif·
ficult ia that the three backs all run
Chiefs Win Opener;
]ohn _Vnitas Injured
HOUSTON -Jan Stenerud kicked
four field goals and the Kansas Clty
Chiefs won their. American Football
League opener trom the Oilers Mon-
day nlght, 26-21.
The Chiefs saw Oller quarterback
Pete Beathard cut a 19-point Houston
deficit with two toucfldown passes
while mUi&ing two others in the final
quarter.
BALTIMORE -Stoic John UD1ta1
finally bad to admit the obvious.
After relnjurlng his ehronic right
elbow ln last Saturday's National
Football League e:rhlbtUoa agalnlt
Dallaa, the great Baltlmoni Colta'
quarterback relented a btt from bis
SU~ ACE ....
CoaUnaed from Pa1e 16
straight to Jones.
"Well, they talked to him for four
mon\dis and got nowhere. Finally,
Ford said to me: 'Now it's your job.
Do it any way you want but get 17
football players to Annapolis.'
"I got the OK from the deac 1n 15
minutes."
Wayne's first film as an actor was
"Big Trail," 1n 19'l9.
"One of the producers decided
Marion Morrison wasn't Amer-
can enough so I became John Watne
for that picture."
And that's how it started. He lost
count long ago but says he'• made
over 200 films, counting serials,
''In the old d!ys, we'd turn out one
of those westerns in four days.
Sometimes it'd take Wi as long as.10
d.ays, though."
Before he did "Stagecoach" In 1938,
he had made 13$ films.
He's still going strong. He , starts
work 'IOOD. on "Troe Grit," a film,
surprisingly enough, about the west.
"It's about this 14-year-old girl
wbose dad had been murdered and
she's looking for a bounty hunter -
that'1 me. I play a tough, crusty old
guy ."
He laughed as he &aid this, and
plunged heartily into his breakfast -a
half Of grapefruit.
John Wayne is the picture of af.
flue nee today. He has an oUice at
Paramount Studios, a luxury yacht an·
Chored off Lido bland and hi• bay
front home could not be desCrlbed as
spertan.
And yet he ls not far removed from
the boy who made the long treks to
Newport from Glendale in tbe tweft-
ttes.
"I Marted coptlng down here to 1urt
when I was 10. The surf was great on
Balboa in those daya -the mud flats
were still here th.ea.
"Why, you could ride a wave for a
quarter of a mile ......
..
usual noncommittal attitude.
"I'll have to say it hurts more tba
It ever ba1,11 Unltas 1atd of tbe elbow,
whfch bas beea bothered for years by
teadonttia. 0 All I bow fl that I don't
expect to be doing: any throwing for
awhile."
NEW ORLEANS -Jim Taylor
bangs·up No. 31 for good today.
Taylor made the announcement at a
news conference in officea: of the New
Orleans Saints.
Taylor, boweve.r, la not stepping out
willingly. He insisted to the last that
he's every bit as quick, every bit as
fast as be was in the 1960 through 1965
seasons, each of which saw bim rush
for more than 1,0CM> yards. ...
ANAHEIM -Mlte Scarpace, a
guard from Un.lvenJty of Southen.
California, and Erle Wat'-, a
defensive· back from San Jose State,
today were added to tbe r01t.er of the
Orance County Ramblen.
Scarpace was a 1tarler 011 tut
1ea1on'1 lJSC national ch1mplon1btp
team. He faUed tn a bid to gain t berth
on the roster of tbe New Orluu
Saint• of tbe naMonal football league
this year. ... ... ..
BARRIE, Ont. -The Los Angeles
Kings, second in the National Hockey
League's Western d.iviaon tast seeson,
open their preseaso.n IJ'ainlng camp
tomorrow.
Fifty-eight players are expected to
report for physical examination• on
the openrillg day of camp.
The Kings' 10-game e x h I b i t l o n
schedule gets under way against the
Oakland S..ls here.
.
WS ANGELES -The Lo1 Anfeles
Stars wfil open tbelr pre.eason
traJ.oJng camp at the Ocddeatal
College Gymnadum next week.
Scbedaled to report Monday are
rooktea Larry Miller of North Carolina
and Merv Jackson Of Utah.
NEW DEIJll, India -India may
Bend a t.okeri four-man track team to
the Mexico City Olympics.
Umrao Singh, president of the
Amateur Athletic Federation of India,
told a new.11 cmference Monday, he
has recommended four to the India
Olympic Association and Is awaiting
clearance.
NAtrrWICH, En f I and -Coa
O'Kelly, 11, BrltlJb heavyweight boxer
who became a priest, died Tuesday.
He was a 1emlffnall1t In the 1924
Olympic• and later tuned pro. Re
woo 14 of %3 bouta durtnc varlou
vltiltl to the United State1.
Baseball Standings
NaUonal Leape
W L Pct. GB
St. Louls 90 116 .616
San Francllco 78 67 .538 11 It
CtndnnaU 73 88 .518 14\t
Chicago 75 71 .514 15
AUanta 74 71 .510 15\t
Pittsburgh 70 74 .486 19
Plliladelphla 88 76 .472 21
H....toq 15 '19 .451 24
Los Anfele1 15 80 .•43 Ult
N..,. York 66 81 .446 25 .......... _ ...
Atttnhl ti SM ~rJl'ltllCO 1 LOfi ""'"'19-IQ, SI. l.ovll I ==-=i· ~~"~11~ ,, "'"'""
Only'""" -
American Le-w L ,Pct.
Detroit
Baltimore
Boston
Clevelllnd
New York
Oak1&11d
W-1olla
CaHfornla
Chicago
Washington
91 M .628
83 &2 .572
'II 67 .538
77 71 .611l
73 70 .610
74 n .rm
69 76 .476
q 83 .at
61 84 .421
57 67 .396
Johnson & Son
900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPOllT BEACH
642-ll9tl 545-127•'
I
GB
8
IS
15\t
17
17*
22
Zlllt
30
33\1
will> their .... ...i cllllO!Oll! olyle1. ~
Tln!tn, who ,... hatlo!lcapped by a
pair of summer tnjurlff -a hlTDla ' oper.Uon and a badly tllced llnfer -
In Ibo early clrllb, Jot Ille llartlnf
ealllitg In Sa\Ul'dltY'• -....
From the openlllt play, -b•
bulled Ills way over left tackle fer m
yarda, Tinlin ulliblted. ptenly of
power. At 5·11, 200 poUDd.t. be'1 tbe
biggest and hardest runner ol tM
three tailback candida'lea and be'• got
a yea.r's experience nmnbtg bebin4
Welratb on hls sld,. ,
Oliver, on the olbe:r band, ii the
1mallfft of Ute three, tCandlng 6-10
and weighing In at 170. Tllat's about IS
pounds more than he we14bff last
1euon wben he was a flanker.
'lbe 1hilty Oliver fits 11M the Gar-
reU mold as a runner. lle'd ratber
aUck out a hip and pull It away trom a
would-be-tackler at the last moment ·~
instead of running over people. He's a l
dangerous bl'Oken·fleld :twmer. , j•
Ricardo could be tbe moat expkmve
of the ttree. He's big -6--foot, 180
pounds -and last -10.1 In high
tchool -8Dd wound up u tbe lflading •
rusher 1n the scrimmage · with et t
yards. He rolled up runa of 20, 12, 11 •
and 10 yards and showed be can burlt '
through holes very quickly.
It's urilikely that Tinlin, Oliver or
R Jc a rd o will be able to match
Welratb'1 m yarda, but that's almpl,y
because DOM of the three can be ex-
pected to carry the ball u many Umea
as Welrath did last year.
Being three deep with talentod
tailbaclu, Tucker could ahuttie tn a
fresh taUback oa every serle1.
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Dodgers Out
Of Basement
Mter Victory .
ST. WUJS (UPI) -.The Los
Angeles Dodgera mlgbt not ltnllh the
aeuon in the cellar after all.
The Dodgers, with roojde thO<!ltop
Bill Sudalda collecting a grand slam
home nm, moved out of last place in
I::!: lf 8::::: :: II: t:= l:ll :;=: ~:I !Ill
Ille N atlODal League by tiwnclllll the
league-leadinf St Louis daidlna!i llD<I
Larry Jaster llH Monday nlgbl
·It was the lixitb win in seven start.a
for the Ollddenly recharged Dodgers
anct Sudak!J geu a big tbare, <Ji the
credit. ·
Playing In only lllJ nventh major
league game, the 22-year~ld infteldlr , . ·
homered with t.be bu'' loeded in an '
elg!Uun Los Angela aecond innlDl-
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Boys' Grid Applications
Available From Dealers
Dove Hunts,
Fishing Hot
At Irvine
JUNE
•
• -
---~-~------ir--......
Del Mar
R~ults
Bring out lllo 861g,.,.._7Crwn. And 1_,IDllt ..,.,,.
from your gU-. 1ra probll>ly !heir t.....n. llnrid ol ""111oaf, toe. Ille,,..
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,-, __ ,,, ___________________________ _J~
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Festi-vals lnno-vate ..
,. Summer Tlieaters Breaking Tradition
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By WlUJAM GLOVER
A .. Onl-W~ltw
Theater festivals have
been trying n e w com-
binations of artistry and box
office this summer.
Amon g innovations in-
troduced: the first get-
togetber on this side of the
ocean of avant-garde ex-
perimenters; at the op-
posite end of drp.matic
purpose, a venture into
poetic synthesis :
somewhere between, a n
Establishment bid f o r
freedom from critics.
The three projects are all
ta.king pla~ within a couple
of hundri!d miles of New
York, but they typily grow-
ing theatrical evidence
across the country of eman-
cipation from Broadway
tradition.
At Brandeis University,
Waltham, Mass., 10 youthful
troupes have taken part in
Interact, a · roundup of
unorthodox drama. 0 ff -
Broadway's pioneer Cafe Ia
Mama troupe beaded by
Ellen Stewart took part and
so did visitors from Paris,
Edinburgh and Toronto.
"It's the first time we've
been able to invite instead of
being invited," says Miss
Stewart.
STX MORE
The collegiate ge t -
together which ended Aug.
'Brigadoon'
Auditions
Announced -·
2S began with just four
scheduled companies. When
Miss Stewart disC<lvered
Brandeis had three theaters,
sbt persuaded officials to in·
vite six more troupes.
The university underV1Tote
costs of approximately
$50,000 and the response 'of
both staid citizens and hip-
pie-garb youths a pp ea rs
adequate to insure the
festival again next summer.
Anollier college, th e
Southampton, N.Y., branch
ol Long Island University,
was . the angel behind the
very -;-;;-trasting. A rt is t s
Theater Festival which also
seems to have assured its
future through this summer
of freshman effort.
Far-in rather than far-
out, Artists Theater aims at productions of poetic
drama in settings by
painters of aesthetic repute.
Herbert Machiz , a well-
known direcror, and John
Bernard MYl!rS, who runs
an art gallery, began Artists
Theater 15 1ears ago. It has
functioned intermittently
since, but Machiz felt hope
for e n h a n c e d continuity
Auditions for the popular when he d i s c o v e r e d
musical "Brigadoon" will be Southampton's handsome,
held Saturday, Sept. 14 and air-conditioned theater in
Saturday', Sept. 21 in the San summer idleness.
Bernardi!IQ M u n i c i p a 1 Dean Robert Umphrey ex-
Auditorium at Sixth and E tended hospitality on a pro-
streets. viso that Ma chiz raise
The San Bernardino Civic $40,000 needed for a four-
Light Opera auditions will play schedule.
commence at 10 a.m. for
principal roles, c ho r us RUN ALL SUMMER
singers and dancers. Those Getting the money meant,
auditioning must phone or says Machiz, "we could
contact the Civic Light have run all summer even if
Opera office for an ap--not a single person had
pointment. The nrunber is bought a ticket."
882-2.545. The lushly social far-Long
Thooe auditioning must Island populace, g e are d
bring their own music and more to pools and parties,
be prepared to sing. The has thus f.ar built attendance
associaticm. accompanfst will to only about 35 percent of
be p!"esent. Di re c tor -capacity what impresses
choreographer Jack Bunch the backers more is a
will conduct Che dance audi-steady week by week in-
tions at 2:30 p.m. each crease .
·•" · Saturday. Machiz has succeeded in {.~;· ----'------------------_,, ,,
t~ ' ~·· . .;.
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Crossword P11zzle
ACROSS
l Short
rhythmic
jazz figure
5 Visages
10 Arm of the
sea: Scot.
14 Father:
Arab. 15 Coral reef
16 Ending .
used with ear or head
17 Alimentary
pas le
19 Hfghly
valued
20 Scope
21 Part of
· the face
22 Fruit
23 Memoranda
25 Members
of the human rice
26 Part of
a whip
JO Receipt of
goods: Abbr.
31 ----Antonius
34 Discourage
31> Flower
feature
38 Insect
39 Amedcu.s , Vespuc1us s
n3m es;ike
41 Can.
province
43 Lt-gal prohi bition
44 Exuded
mo isture
46 Gas
47 Ancient
Egyptian
Image
49 Disfigure
51 Geo'Tlelric
solid
52 Newspaper
features
53 Made fun of
55 Small: Com b. form
51 State: Abbr.
58 Thick soup
63 Cancel
&4 Perl, lo
rheWric
6& Proo f-
reader's
wo1d 67 Half-breed
68 Uproa1s
69 Coal
utensils
10 Well trained
71 Extieme
vergt
DOWN
1 Storm
2 Wi Id gtillt
3 Army post
4 Gaseous
emission 5. Hudson's Bay Co.
employee
6 Act upon:
Verb suHiX
7Bodyofa
unlversity
8 Henry
Havelock
9 Kfnd of
landing
place
10 Item of fire-
fighting
equip·
menl
9/10/&8
11 Kind or 40 Crew
freight: membtr·
2 words lnfo1mal
12 Conversation 42 Curved
13 In this sh3lle
location 45 Strive
18 Public to eQual
house 48 "--Delight'
24 Miner11I 50 Assig11 to
used as new station
a gem 53 Pierced 2S lsfand in 54 "Coq --":
the Mediler· 2 words
ranean 55 Breakfast
26 Criticize s dish:
pee vishly Informal
27 Make a 56 Preposition
new chart 57 State of
28 Munificent mental
29 By the sluqgish-
agency o.f ness ·
31 Furr.ish with 59 Ocean's
powers of movl!ment
resistance 60 Laboratory
32 Combination chemical
)3 llel!r used 61 Criminal
in curl!ng group
35 Wild 02 In a differ-animals l'flt manner
37 Tht prtstnt 65 Cause to
lime overturn
)
attracting an impressive
panel of players even though
everyone gets a modest '21))
weU.ly and bas ju.st two
weeks of rehearsal.
Machi% directed all ol tho
plays given from July S
through Aug_ 25 J e a n
Cocteau's "'Ibe Knights of
the Round Table," "Henrik
IbSen's "Llttle E yo It,' '
James Merrill's "the Im·
mortal Husband" and "In
t h e Swnmer House" by
Jean Bowles.
The ventures at
Southampton have both
earned considerable critical
priase. But at Stockbridge,
Mass.. the B e r k s h i r e ill..Jil!IJll.""'-'-'""""""'""'~"'" Th.eater Festival is
dedicated to the proposition
that art sometimes ft ' flourishes best when free of e s on Outcast?
UPI T118~
criticism. Don Muray, stt:ir of the new television serie5 "The
REBELLION Outcasts," warms up to a scene with shapely Rita
Also in contrast to the Rogers. The ABC TV series debuts Sept. 23.
other festivals , Berkshire -"-"---------'"---"-.:C."'-----
represents rebellion from
within.
"We have tried to create
an atmosphere in which
established professionals in
the theater would have the
time and freedom to explore
profitably the possibilities of
their work," is how Arthur
Penn explains the nonreview
policy. Penn, who directs on
both stage and screen, is
festival president.
OCC Symphony Holds
1st Rehearsal Tonight
Other main talents in·
volved aIJ.:P I a ywr i g ht
William Gibson and Lyn
Austin, Broadway producer
and formerly an aide to
Roger L. Stevens who now
heads the National Endow-
ment for the Arts.
In its third year of opera-
tion, but the first deliberate-
ly avoiding critics. the
festival which ran from July
3 through Sept. 1 came up
witli new works by Elaine
May, Terrence McNally,
Jack Gelber and Gibson .
Three are headed for
Broadway, a circumstance
which Gibson insists is pure
coincidence.
"Wha t we don't want to
become is either a stock
company or a tryout house
for Broadway," says the
author.
FREEDOM
The ONmge Ooa.st Com-
munity Symphony
Orchestra will hold its first
rehetirsal tonight for a
season that will include a
performance with the famed
Israeli violinist Sergui Luca.
The orchestra will meet
from 7 to 10 p.m. Tuesdays
in the OOC Music Building,
room 2.
Conductor Joseph
Pearlman of the OCC Music
Deparbnent said that all:
musicians are welcome to
audition fur the orchestra.
Pearlman said that there
are usually openings in the
string section, but ·flhat all
McKuen
Slated for
Melody land
Rod McKuen, poet, singer,
Miss Amtin, production
ch.ief, attributes husky box-
office activity to the com-
bination of experiemental
freedom and an ability to compos.er and arranger, has
pull audiences from a wide •· ~ signed for a two-day
area. stint, Sept. 20 and 21 at
With contributions 0 f Melod~land Theater i n
$120,(1()()..including a $50,000 Anahei.m. .
fnstrumentalists
welcome to audition.
are
Luce, who appeared on
nationwide television last
year with Leonard Berns·
tein during his "Tribute to
Sibelius," will appear Nov.
24 in the OCC Auditorium.
In' his OCC appearance,
Luca will perform t h e
Pagannini. Concerto N-0. 1 in
D Major. The coo.cert will
begin at 4 p.m.
Entering it! sixtti season,
the orchestra this year will
aloo have a new con-
certmaster. Adrianne Hawk
Geiger of Huntmgtoo Beach
will replace Ronald Folsom
or Orange, who now has a
fulltime position with ttie
I.os Angeles Philharmonic
Orchestra.
PeaMnan s a i d the
orchestra will give five con·
certs during the year, in-
cluding thvse wltb ttie OCC
Chora!e Sinfonia • T h e
orchestra has built up a
large following and in recent
years has drawn full houses
to ail of its performances.
* * * Lyric Class
At College
grant from United Artists A titan of the music
for first refusal rights to world, McKuen at 35, has
any scripts-the s e a s o n turned ~ more than 900
budget was fixed at $185,000, songs wbi~ .. have . been cut
Anticipated box -off i c e on 40 million d.Uics and
revenue' of $65 000 turned recorded by almost every A lyric ttieater worksOOp
out to be c o m r' o r t a b I y leading . artist in ~e land, des1gned to a c q u a i n t
modest, fur the first two over 60 m all. In addition, be students with e n s e m b I e
shows alone g a r n e r e d persooally ~ recorded 35 singing will be offered at
$51 ,000 in ticket sales. aibums "'.hiC~ sold over Orang~ Coast College in the
"It is very important for 500,000 copies in l:M>7 alone. evening this Mil
all or us not to be under the Some 520,00) copies of The workshop v.i.11 meet
critical gun," says Gibson. W.cKuen's . poetry, enclosed Thursdays from 7 to 10 p.m.
"So far the New York and in two &Jim volumes, also in. Room 2 of the OOC music
cooperated fully. When new have brought him fame. obuilting. Fee tor. the COW'.Se
things are tried, -4bey . need McKuen is 9Cbedu1ed to do · K ~ """"'-t .. ~' to be protected. wu ee r-• ~,,,. ... ances a w k b d i rector
"Nor is it unfair to audi-Melodyland; at 8:30 p.m. Cbarrr ~ op of ooc aid
ences. They know how Sept. 20 and 7 am 10 p.m. on . es rger . 8
we 're operating and they tile 21st. Sea<.! will go on._ interested ~lo s Inger a
know what they're paying sale at the theater box office shoukl r&g.1ster 6'r the
for." ~i.i5 -k course and prepare a solo
wu ""'" · selection from opera or Ff.~~~==~~:;::;).~:::::::::='11 musical comedy, An eudi-1 tion will be held at the first The Luxurious New Box Office O~n• clBM meeting Sept 12. for
llnited Artists D11Hy-12:45 P.M. choral student.. An ·-
•PERFORMANCES• mpanist will t>e provid<d. 11•s w. ''"' s.... ""
1 .3 .5 .7.9.11 P.M.
UNLIM'ITI D flEE PARKIN•
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
I See by Today's
Want Ads
• A 'S9 Triumph l! goi.na
for the best offer. Mt,ht
make 1 good little HCOOd l lf.<lr...
car , . ,
e A "'T'ali" High~ itrad-
udate {not going to col-
lege) b needed to wort •t
• local Fish Market.
•Here'• IOmel:hi.ng to Pt
dawn and think &bout .••
Spani&b 8 fL toll and 5 ft.
love Jeet, both never uted,
going tor a vecy reuoit-
able: pri~!
• A 8eaU1;y O>Uesre wanta
studena lntettsted in ltal't· .,. rau ...._ 1n nan. ......
e A lood bJf. m • 10 ft Sa-
bo( w1t:h 18 ft. mut, plW;
tilt tra.lkt,
,1
HIT No. 2
11 .... 11....-..._.,_
"GAMES" c .... ,.,.-.,1. •• "Ptyc1t1•
' .. .._"J, ... ,. ............ .J, .. ..,""""
AtKnott's
An all new stap show
and revue will be presented
at the Calleo Saloon in Gh01t
.Town ae the new aealOO
begins Sunday at Knott'a
Berry Farm .
New hours for tt'ae winter
searon will be from 10 a.m.
to 10 p.m. daily. The
And 11 7:" Onl~
Now-l!ndt TUOMloy
. --·~ .. ., "-1 ""!P" " ...... ~.,..
St1 rh Wldnoodoy
Oilckeo Dimer Reo!Jlurrant.1'=========:!'.!::========= and steak House will bet;
open from noon to 9 p.m.
dally. B ullfights now at
Entertai.nment in th e
Cove.red Wagon Camp will
feat~ both professiona1
and local pertormers. Three
different train robberies will
be staged in oa.Ueo Square
as the Ghost Town UKt
Oaiico Railroad pulls into
BULLRING· BY· THE ·SEA
the station.
Admission to the Ghost
Town entertainment area is
$1 for adults and 25 cents
for children. All parking is
free and there is no charge
for access to shopping and
dining areas.
Knott's is located in
Buen.a Park ( B e a c h
Boulevard) just two miles
south of the Santa Ana
Fre<way ..
TWO FAMILY
COMEDIES
DICK VAN DYKE -· -ROBINSOll • PRO'JINE -·-----In. S ... w Sterts 7 p.111.
Co11t. Sat. & S11. fN111 J p.1111,
o DAILY o
1.J.5.7.9.11
9PEHCSITllACY
Slll<EY POITEI
KA-HEPlllll
.;-HOUGHTOO 1§1 ....
Peter
Sellers
--.............................
ROSEMARY'S , BABY
IVUT IVININO
AT •••
7:30PM ---flAlnl ......
~ -~-.._
I
I r~~•i•i•i• :::-1 HZ! ·wr ... _..,_
1:41·1:11•1:• .. .! ... --·-....... _ .. -.... . .. ...... ..
*
WEEKDAYS
Box Offi ce Open 6:4S
EVERY EVENING AT ...
7:30 4nc1 9:30 PM
AT ttf;oWAT at DllYHN
THE
GUDUATE
I
.,._:ric:r''.?· t ~"'l"<t'::f" l''!""t!':t: .. :" -':!/'~rt ft f~ t :f' 'f 'ff" Y :<t 1 T f W '*""'W"•$' ,.....,.,......._....,.....,........_., __ _,.__.....,, --• • --·•·----.--...... ,____.. ... --.__..-~-
' . ' Z9 OAJl.Y Pl\.OT ~. S.,U-10, 1 ...
Evwyone Hu
Something Tt..t
f'BB 81GGBS'I' Siii/GU lllAJUCB'J'PIACB ON 'l'&B 0.llANGB COAS'l'-PBONE DIRECJ' 8ft.St71
You C.n S.I It,
Rnd It, Trodo It
Wilt. • Wont Ad
HOUllS P:OltSALI HOUSIS l'Olt SALi HOUSES POii SALi HOUS!S l'Ott SALi HOUSU POii SALi HMll$!S FOii SALi HOUSES FOii SALi HOUlll l'Olt SALi RfNTALS
-ral 1000 Otnor•l 1000 GoMral 1000 General 1000' Gtnorol 1000 c .. 1. Mn<o 1100
llllllillil' ---------11 OWNER TRANSf'ERRED I' BeeutifUJ ' BR 2 bl.lb home
Cwon1 4tl Mor 1250 ~ llu,lh 1400 HoUNI fuml1htd
COll>CIMlllDI
LIVING AT M'S Q!EAPESr,
Only !20,ISO. ' bedn>oou, din ......... , ...........
ble pt1&19. L a r 1 t sreea
aree. al troet door • Adult•
oo11 • ..-..-........
tu:eml:~ *********** ONLY $21,500
For th1I wttl ~.
"""' ..,...,., ...i -· QJ!'.AN T H REE BED-
ROOM, lll BATH HOME
with dlmtt. and modem
Bllll>ID ,,,_. A lorc<d
air heal OJwnd patio and
dttacbtd dollble p.rage.
'l1lta attl'l.cttw tNR roof
homt • k>cated De!lr 11.rse
lbopp:lq cente and public:
tranlp<rtl.tkm. Immediate
P"ll I :C.1 call IOday,
THE BLUFFS·
IEST IUY
You can't beat tbe low pric9
on tbll beallttf'lll Jl1dt oi
Ollf'nenb\p borne. Fbur ipac-
bil bed.room.a, ! Quffll ..
td batbl, mqnffleeot Brina
room wtth open bet.m cell-
inll and mtlul vtew. Own-
_. tnnaterred out Cit area •
aya lell NOW! Only $36,SOO.
SiJ.bmlt yoor smaller home
Oii. OW' iuarantee tnde plan,
john macnab
Balboa Island
Onice Soutb Balboe. laland
Home with tantisdc B a y
r--1 View, private pier, sundec:k
and lloaL 4 BR, 3 ha, bee.utl·
fully decorated. Move-ln coo-
lldilion. Owner w1ll consider
trade far lmlllleor home.
B/B
CUFFHAYEN
lmmediat. 0oeupr&ncy. MOYe-
ln aondltbl. 3 bedi:001111,
''''"""' call h APllt.
REALTY COMPANY
881 DOVER DR.
NJ:.'"WPORT BElACH
(714) 642-1235
:"' ~ ~ EASTSIDE 3 BR
Dtll&htfW UM for children.
0-lo.U--Sll,190.
-Efto. ~ lay & leach ·
2 baths. Fam.Uy room, fire.
place, FA beat, new carpet.II,
clrarpel, fl"e&b paint " It'•
VIC&Dt. Owner w1U tell VA
or FHA • $29,150.
Rt1lty, Inc. ALSO
t,:•::w:·~Balboo:.!:Bl~vd~.,="~·=B. s BR 2 bath, lamlly room, Eves. 5'Ml985 &eplaee, double pn~.
$19,850. Terms VA, FHA or °""'"'....,_ -GADS! Wellt-McCardle, Rltr'$,
W~ }'OU Wkv• it's e spae-1810 Newport Blvd., C.M.
bw 3 bldroam home en a Sfi&.17'29 Eves. Sof3..M67
put'"-, like lot? Thia home ls
like • br-.tb ot fredl air
with lt'a almo.t tlN' carpet-
ing, new p&int and swmy
br9aldut nook. All th1a few
$18,600 with GI financing. I
• "ring" l9 ... \SPRING ... -.REALTY ~-"an~ttm." 2629 Harbor Blvd., C.M:.
Assume 5%% loan
an thll Collete Park beauty
"""""" ' """ -""'· doUNe fin!place, luth land-
._..piq A: cW..ciH&e meet.
OPEN HOUSE DAILY
2S19 V11S1r Pl.
A CHARMER!
lmmacullte -Early Ameri-can. l Bedrooma, hm1ly
Room, Double Fb'eplace,
Double garaae, Work Shop,
Bolt Yard. Call for appoint·
merit to see OU. IP&Clous
aiatom bulU home. $74,500 .
JE,4N SMITH,
REALTOR
400 E. l'lth St., C,M. fi46.325S
20NALOT
cu.tom 2 BR bomet oo Iarae
lot W'/pivete front &: rear
'"""'· I""' """'°'"""'· Live in one A: rent the other.
Try FHA term1.
$29,500
STOP LOOKING Opportunity
Thil low priced 3 &: ~ NewpirtBeacb,HarborWgb.
room home Meea Verde a Jandl Area, 4 bedrocms 2~
your answer. It's vacant &: batha. Muat be mid this
Wlllting, hu 2 baths, 11111 week. 1600 aq. tt. Oif llvinl
dectnc built-In kitchen, all &ree., large comer kit. Priced
newly painted ln 6: out, w/w at 1963 market value. A low
aupet.s • ~ Only $28,<0J.
Ch1rrnln9 'Duplex
Own«-'1 IUXu:rioWI Frtneb
ProYtncfaJ home with beavy
llbeJie rool, diamond peAed
windows, open beamed ~ll
lngs. Ll&ht, cheerful &: Im-
maculate! S BR . 2 bath + surmy, large lAmil)' room
~ued to pa& .. garden.
Corner tireyllllct', de«int'
tor wall papers, imported
light fixtu!'el &: lush carpets
.\ dnperies. Enormous sun.
ny master bedroom suite
with eome BAY VIEW, 20'
ol wardrobe I deluxe btth.
PLUS appmling 2 BR ~
come unit with US«! brick
fln!.place, bet.med ceiling•
i pa.Uo. Chorelesa LandliC8p.
ed 65' x 110' lot (not lease-
hold.) on Clill Drive In Npt.
Beach. X L N T INCOME
TAX BENEFITS! One-of-ii·
kind , only $51,500. For ape
point. call owner I broker
"8-Ml6
DON'T WAIT
ON THIS ONI
Cameo Shores You ~wt C.n't , N-rt _,, 1200
Lovely cut.om 3 BR, s batlla, Plnd TheH Anymore 3 BR., pr. 2 Bib to btadl.
Oall IJtl# tt won't be hire
if you. hff!tate. LOVll.Y
AREA with ~mt lando
aca.pln1. J LARGE BID-
ROOMS. + 2 ~Ult with
IJIUlrf'b earpetln1 ewer
STURDY HARDWOOD
F1..00RS. N a t u r a l wood
cathedral Cf:ilinp in the llv·
1ns room add1n& the ele-
gance you'll be proud ot
Step saving ldtdu!n w 1th
POPUL.AR ELECTRIC
BU1L T IN RANGE AND
OVEN AND REFRIGERA·
TOR. Block wall reocect yvd
and a :kar gare.ge. $86
PAYMENTS iI you assume
existing loan or FHA OR GI
TERMS. ONLY S20.'li0 80
hwTy!
~rf~ wltb larl• f.amli7 room,
mumift doobW flrtplact,
O"t:l'..u.d muter BR ,
sorpoua acw nylon
«rpellna 4 fully built-in
kitchen. Priced to &eU at
s:ll,iOO • 10'>1> down. CALL
54B-US1 C~ • v e 1)
Huttql Rea.I ~le
3,000 IQ. tt. Pull,~ 28RAdeo,DowntownHunt-$175 mo.
1aw. hrwcdiata pnss,,t..-.., ~ Beldl • • • ... • • su,500 cau ris.cmt
IT< 000. .......,1 """""'" Al.a>. S NEW U'LEXnl T£ACHl:RS • Film 2 fl<. •• ~ It. D. 11 .... 11 .. 11y 0«..-1 ""' ....
' realty Bier .. 6T»f.OO or 6G-eeet MT-3Slt Evec. 962-1369 5600 Sea.ahont Dr.
UJ.4 Vllta Del Oro
N ........ Beach
Reedy by November
HOME ls Income· newt¥ 54i" NEWPORT West. 3 decor 2 Ir l ha., prap BR. 2 bl w/.wrythtnc. Coron• del Mir 2150
..... '"'· 1li'bo, ..;., """·' ="""'"""""""Lo. dbt p.n.&e.
26 MIW ACROSS
1HE SEA
UDO ISLE
BAYFRbNT
Wann Medilem!Jlean Home
with plenty of room
~ Bedrooms, S bathl
connecting 2 Bdrm Apt
3 car garage
Bayside fonnal dining nn
brand new with
landscaping & carpeting
$185,IXXJ
Contact
M111. Pavlovich
Eve.:
l ....... lly. ''
Under oomtructk:n
2 , 3 • 4 Bedrooms
Complete ~tchem
Double sara.aea
Fplco • """°"' ..,....,,.
Spmrlsh desi&:n
Loaded with tile
00&e lo shopping -schools
Oiurches • beach , etc.
Woold you believe
S23.900 to $27,00'.l
"": 644-1133
VA NO DOWN
• l20,500
• 2 8R (can be 3l, tarn nn
• 220 w1rt.n.g, 11tave./refrlg e Cpta/drape1, enclol. )'d. rutt. w.voo r:.'ves. 548-0720 e KENNEDY
NH.t Fuh:lon lrland e 'Kl2 Avocedo, CdN e
OWNER • <l>annintr """°"' bU 2 Br, 2 Ba. den. din rm.
PrlnclpaJtonly.~
Fountain V•l'!l 1410
Nice 3 BR By Owner, 1 l!i
2 BIL 2 BL fun. or unfum.
Pado, Dt!'W' carpeta, Sa. aide
o/.. Hwy. l2«l mo.
m-6360 "'
BA. blllnt. IOlt WO, ....._ lolboo 2300
c!JW. """'· ponelled...... --------1 rm., 9CfteDed patio, J.& fncd l·BIL bunaUJw utdt l bllc.
lot P$,Q w/'2200 down from ocean, w"1l,, wet bar
'",. IO&n. Call tor appt. • 1 BR cum cotta&•· $225. fl62..1678 rttL 4 wlalds: cnl7 301\.§. lril 213: ~
lagun1 leach 1705 YEARLY, 2 BR., $135 Mo.
Util. paid. Guqe. No pets.
Cple. baby OK. 675-4958
WINTER R!mAL
OCEAN FR.ONT-3 BR
' .,..,,.
Santa Catalina is: what
)'OU'll ltt trom this .fu~t
reduced c u 1 t o m built
borne. Extra large lot.
Truly the-home IDt the
family OQ the way up.
Of coune all the extras
llkl!I dining room, faml.ly
room A: the BIGGEST
BEDROOM YOU'VE
EVE.N SEDI, 16x20'. Full
price $51.500. Terms to
silt.
/f5JJa,,., COATS
"1fflll(YJI WAL~Ace
REALTOR.$
-546-4141-
(0pen Evenings)
Coll119e Park
4 Bedroom
$27,750
3 BR. 2 ba Home on Nord BREATfn'AKING View lot,
with l BR Apt. Excdlerit •mall but le.el, $1,000 down,
"singles". Many de I u x e
features including fireplace,
panelled wan., e I e c tr i c
kitchen. Everything IUPPlied
includi.na: all u t 11 I t I e a •
6'13-3217
financing. balane.e $M mo. 497-1210
Walker Realty
3116 Via Via Lido m.5200 L1gune Niguel 2790 Harbor Blvd.
545-9491 Open till 9 PM Trim and neat in the choicest 1707
B/B Architectur1I Beauty area at this fine &eetloo, 2
PLUS an unob.!ltructed view baths, large kitchen, Iota of
create an exciting home wlth lree8 & &ehrubbef'y. Owner
HuntingtOn Be1ch :400
5 Bed E ell A tremendoWI charm. Glw U: leaving aret and will sell rooms xc ent rea w.th O>OClook "" Bay & FHA"' VA, no"°""· BOAT SHEL TfRI
$950 Tatal Cash Fix"-""""'· 2 b<droom, 2 a ""'"'"" porto, ""''""''Y 546-2313 646-7171 with c1 • .,, """""' s BR
Required to move into thii be.du!. Only S31,SOO. planted. You own the land . OPEN EVES. home with ah.l.ke root, 1%
i..-fB a .. horn Cl 673.9'200 Eves. 6fi.8409 only $56,500. be.Uu!:, fireplace with mar--..li" m..., e. ose to ALSO p B b<I '---" llhopplng, schools & church· ete arrett Realty ueuw, new carpetln&:
es. JWit put on the market. For The Best Ir.a; Well'lcHff Dr. 642-5200 &: new paint. Thia fabulous
this 'I I n63 Th buy located within walldng one won ast. per See This Baycrest e Fact is distance of world'• .. _ _.. mootb Includes taxes and in· • • • '""'~• !R11'MCe! Beautlful. 8' band. carved au.r Sa.l.esmen are making =====''-=== beech. Only n9,995-terna.
doors welcome you in. Pool money -we have desks for Newport Beach 1200 Pad.fie Sbores Realty
37'Xl6. average. Mountain 2 more. Inquires con!iden-J mi!~!!!~ii!i!!'!ii!i!!!~ 536-8894 Eves. 5J6.J240
view. 3 bedrooms, 2~ be.th!. tial. CUSTOM SPANISH ~~ 177.500. BURR WHITE, Realtor
673-9'200 Eves. 646.8409 2901 Newport Blvd .. N.B. UPPER BAY $15,995 2043 WESTCLJFF DRIVE Bay & Beach 675-4630 eves: 673•5122 3700 Ft. under mission tile $1400. Move in. Payment.
~nu Open Eves. roof. 5 Li;e. b<lrms., 30' Sl65. mo. incNdes taxes &
Realty, Inc. Jrutr. suite w/frpl. Fonnal ins. 3 BR, 2 ~ bu..IJ.t. tn Small Estate 2025 W. Balboa Blvd .. N.B. din. rm., lovely liv. rm. w/ range/oven, rart>qe dbpo&.
Execu~ CUBtom home forl~~~~~~~~ trp!. Paneled family rm. w/ aJ. Upgraded caJ}>ets, dra~
eritertaining • Mppy lMl'lg LUXURIOUS "'"· w''""ntrpl., wet bar. Span!~ e1 .. Large fenced lot. -Extni. Irr llv rm .t: din e oors, cu.st. carp, • WATER FRONT ""'"'" 58' <»v. P<tio. ,,,... rm -private patio & pool -fess. Jndscpd. 3 c.ar garage.
F,. land. DUPLEX Ev•ry """' 179,500
$66,000 Mrs. Harvey Unobltructed VIEW and you BY OWNER 64&-11146 Eva 546-8103 "!T!!'i..!!!,!!!.~.,!!!roo!!!!!m!!!!!to!!!A!'d~d!'!! .. '. I "'':Ai~·,'"c='"o'"n":d:'lt~io'"n'"ed~
to this substantial Bay Ave. Sal Vista
home clther a Bedroom-or
11/a ge Real Esta te
PAC lSLAND VD.LAGE
2 BR 2 BA condominium
Elec kit, aunroom, ma.ny u:-
tru, · 1500 If, ftp!, garden
patio, pool facility. Ex-
lrftnely nice.
'139,900
Call to 1ee , m.zm
ruvlera fteatty '
30!0I S. Coast Hwy, So Laa
Kt:NTALS
HoUMt fumllhed
Rentela to Shire 2005
Happiness is •••
Having
ARaommate
Att you looking tor • room-
mate! U m, let Roomm1te
Refermee Ullilt )'OU •••
Contact:
Raiommel e Reference
Service
Newport Beach Ph. m.m3
RESPONSIBLE working girl
to lhare 2 BR apt with
aame. Orl1 chlld OK. Oilld
care avt.ll Call 6'5-2285 °"
come by 162 A Tulip Lane,
CM
YOUNG Female teacher
wish to share large ocean
TEACHERS Wiater ttnta.l -
9 mo. Furn 3 IBr. 2 ear gar.
Newly painted inmde il out.
'13-1371 a.ti 4 i:m or ~
f21l) 79&-6482 9 am-4 pm 1
Leguna Beach 2705
l block to Beach ::
l BR. duplex w I i&rage 4
lge beautiful yard;
$llO/mo. Aleo furn. ltudiD
apt. $85/mo. Located in
nice, quiet al'eL CI 11
837--0328
l BEDROOM, Victoria
Beach Frpk:, ]Ee encl yard,
secluded, $150 yrly. 642-1.Zn
2 BR, nlce view, close to
beach. Available Sept to
June. n45 mo. 4~21(5
RfNTALS
Houtes Unfurnltherll
' 3000
OCEANFRONT La g u n L
Spect8cular Villa, Hu i' e_
!'ml, park.like i round a,
P'lvate beach, aea pool. S600
mo. Alll9, Vietoria Beadl,
Oceanfront home S 3 8 5.
lllH653
a complete Unit-or both. 4 BR, 2 be.ths, cptl/drpg,
Older, but llOUnd. 3 BR, 2 ba., patio, landscaped, hardwood
large living rm, fireplace-, floors. <>.vner transfemic:t -
R·2, parking. Prit'ed $47,~. take over this good FHA
BURR WHITE, Realtor Joan.
2901. N~rt Blvd .• N.e. BRASHEAR REAL TY
-home -""°"'"· c .... -3100 $67.mQ.<7""81)6 1-;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
GIRL wllbes girls share 2 I •
BR 2 t». buch .t+'t. 673-0&m
RARE
6754t630 eves: 673-5122 S47.&Sll Evet. 541·2442
or leave meN&ge Didi: 1100 BAYCREST l--~~~~----~1 1...ov!'ly 4 BR among S50,<XXl jl homes for only $35.000. Open FRONT ROW dolly 1-s. 1736 Highland o,.,
3 BR. l~ hi. Ux kit bltm m.oooo ~ 3$7
displ, ds\w. Qpt'g drps i llEACH Apt l girl, aver n
shutters. Lra closeta. On SSO mo. 126~ 40 St. NB. aft
cul-de-sac, Nr Broadway 6
B/I
'°" WESTCLIFF DRIVE IA y VIEW N.B, °"""·""' 640-066.1. Home with 2 BR il Pool + 646. 77ll Open Eves. Brn'I' BA y VIEW BUY
Income Unit in best CdM liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiii•I At the fMhionable Bluffs Custom 3 Br. 2001 .. 2 sty
~;..ww "" GI-"' Colesworlhr & Co. center. Xlnt cood! $24,500. OOLLEGE '""" R. Birkmann 0 w n er. or wor .... '6 man
AVAD.. IMMED. Mea Verde
• BR, 1 ·1 e llvinr rm.
JlHlclous tam I d1nin& rm,
bilt·in kitchen, beauti1ully
landacaped yard. Yearly
leue $325/mo. Incl water
and gardener llel'Vice. •
fin.3663 EveL 543-6966 \fl• _1000<=-,,:;:
2
;::·..;r:;;vd."r,·',,C,,,.M:-.-
U"3 Bok«, c .M. 541>54<0 ROUGH AROUND
3f7-22'13 to share 2 BR apt. Pool, rar. m. ~1® aft 6. atta. $38,500 G I $22 500 S &inns, 2% baths. luxury
CORBIN.MARTIN ' • r ... t.levol l or 2 yn 1,.,. ooodo. on ,., land. $37,500,
BV11llable $3'15 mo. Con.sider tJTade. 645-llll YAC WANTED 1 or 2 roomm•te1
REAL TORS I No Dawn I ... appt lo 1n_. call 11"2 HIGHLAND °'· H'b' ANT 4 IR to ...... nl« 2 1111 .... 117
3036 E. Coaat Hwy, CdM KDl KOU. 3 BR 2 bath cor-644-U33 Bkr. Hlnds 4 Br2ba, fam nn, all Dutch Haven best floor pJan. \':'E". ="=St=CM=====
EASTSIDE l BR
•TRANSFERRED •
MOVED AUgU.lt 16th. Mlllt
aell fi BR, S btth near school
I park. Low down. 646-fi.114
Dtlt• 11 .. 1 £st1t1
R.poue1sion
Cute u a bu.gs ear now that
ii'• freshly pointed inside
A: out • ! BR 2 hllths with
hardwood floors that ju 1 t
cmtde. Only smo down •
i-ymenta leu than ft!r't.
COL.LEGE REAL TY S46.:i8Ml
THE EDGES
But a Utue paint will make
It "Home Swtoet Home." Va·
cant and will sell F1lA and
VA and pay your costs to
allow flJr painting. Modem
3 bedroom, 2 hath. Hard-
wood floors fully carpeted..
SACRIFICE!
675-1 662 Anytime ner home, covered patio & 644.aiffi eves. b!tns, frylc. S32,500 10% dn Good location near Warner C•ta Mele 2100
•--~ tin •-· t ~· .. ~~-~--•-3 right In on VA or FHA 2 BR ....... F~ -·yd
Large. FamUy room, ~c.
bit-Ins, cpOi. S225 on leue.
PERRON REAL TY
642-l?n
I -• yard delight Quality so11i~~~~~~~~ Owner. 548-~7, l-m-2908 &: Beach. Large lot. Move ----'---'~
Sales Opportunity ny....-i •"'" calll't r . """" o-........ .,.,.,., .. n.vi." i .......... nu1ng terms. $23,CO'.J. ....... ... .... """' ·~
Small, well organUed otttce tomorrow may he too Beck Bay FHA/VA BR. 2 Bath h:>use on New, KATELLA REALTY 2283 Pacific, .t+'t 2· Chvnts' AVAil. IMMED. Mera Verde
with established clientele bas late. New term OK on thi s Back port's best beach. Principals 847..oo>t 546-936l6' =64&-=1.104======= \ 4 ~R. lge llvtna: rm,
room for-nddJtionaJ sales-Newport Bay area comer home. Room only. 642-3560 I~ apacioua fam/dtnJna rm,.
man. Proven potential ol at fot boot ol' trailer, 3 BR 2 $31.900 -3 BR., 41Ai Ba., In Immaculate-Vacant Newport Beech 2200 hUt·in kitchen, beautifull~
S12QO to $1400 per month. Victoria bath, ramily room. On I y The Blulfs, Fr a rices ca 9 MOO. Jea.se Sept 15.June IS. landscaped yard. y~·
C8.ll Jim \Vood Mesa Verde $23,500. model. Newly decor. Owner Can assume S% % loen on S200 mo. Completely furn . 2 lease $325/mo. incl wata
Realty, ~5000. 646-1811 O'.X.LEGE REALTY 546-58&'.J IH4-114i this lovely 4 BR home. Br. z Ba. Bltn kitchen, and prdeoer service.
(Open "w"A"'rERrn==ONT=-,,..bd,..dnn,--,-#=62 HAFFDAL REAL TY fireplace. Pktio, clubhouse. 673-3663 Eve•. Sf.8.6966 DAVIDSON Realty E I ) BY Owner·lmm Pos.s. 3 BR 2 n, ... ,, C ~~ WOUid "H •·atod ~1 ~ t '----'" 2 BR u-..,a n-"·· -'-od. ven nga BA Hobby S~-Oun-· ... U..U\JVU oves . .,.,.,,uuy. omestoMatchlncoine" '"' ruu . s--••Vae un101. ,...,,..,. -=-y t-1'"
7682 E DINGER JUST LISTED boe.t\Jtorage. N~ C~t!, prefer acreage in trade. 8470 Wamer ~ Ad.Wt.a. No peots. No. 144 New carpets, drapes. Lqe
842-445.S or 540-5140 Immaculate 2 BR, all new drapes. Lawn spkll11. Auto u.s.m1 GORGEOUS l IR Bayiiide Village; 300 Paci!lc patio&: fenced yard. Adu1ts
East Sid. carpeta & dral)l!s. Good East· JUST LISTED! garage opener. Daylite ceil· CLIFT Dr.. view, comer GLEN MAR Cout Hwy. (213)222-4309 only. Near shopping-309
side loc111dm. $20,250 Inunaculate ~ Unlta, 40th SI. ings. Insulatffl. Nf'w paint. home: sell/trade or ltase _ ...... " with prnfesaional ON The BNcb. Winter rental Bro.dway, C.M. 0 •net
$21 950 Rltr -Ii ~ 5B CM Y.'ith .. ,~.. 0 \V NE R. .,,, . .,,.. ee landscaplng. FHA/ M-· 3 B #-1 67l-4517 • · ~,...., ar....... • OceM!kk-of Balboa Blvd. CdM Hi·Schl. 332 ?ofonle 673-30t5 ..., VA tenns are OK here. uu r . ...,..,c, CJl)Ul, l;;<jMl;o-j;;;;;;o;~:r,;;:;;:;
FHA.or YA 546-5460 Evf's. 545-4941 $40,000! CANT LASI' LONG! Vl&ta. C.M. 548-8127 S2S /'WV\ It'• , ~utyl drapa. Bltnl, SUDdeck, pr 1 rMMED ~ttdDI!., Attrac 2
24 UNITS 8 1•-· 8 BLUFFS-J BR Town.Muse 2 .vw. .,_ A: laundry rm. SI~ mo. 6201 BR, 1% baths, hlt·k!. e1ec C Paro".:'r1;.,•Y t:IEW HOME Rix L Hod••• RNlty Over 109' spendable .nth COit to Westcllif &hopping orona del Mar ,..-be.. decorated. TrieLevel. • • ~ Dr. (It eell (nJ) nrce. carpeted, adulta on-
$30,000 dawn. Adults onl.y. and llChools, 3 bedroomi, OPEN HOUSE 673-7420 Eves: 673e9117 SALE or TRADE $29,750-644-2039 847·2525 '197-4217 ly, na pets, tl40 mo. Call
Novae.Call fordetaW. Full nl~ yard. alll!'Y entran~. \\led. lhni F'ri . 1.5 ! BR, I~ Ba, fenced, 111.nd· VACANT OCEANFRONT 2 BR . m.&495. &42eQ169
prlC9 1196,000. with rvom fur boat or cam~ 316 Marigold LOVELY 8C8.Pf;'d • many other ex· Newport Hgts.. 1210 l BR downtown, truhly duplex;
WALXER • LEE Mr. Levine ~. Nict 2 BR horn 45• 1 t traa. ll07 Valley Circle, WeKt pt1\nted, close to martets, wfnftr ~tal. Nkety tum.
Income A Exchan&• O.pt 646-7171 546-2313 "'°'"So. al H'...,": -~· l'OOL HOME ot Victona, loft m Volley a"' SEE THIS! '"''"lot and room'°'.,... SJO! Mo. m, -.m.1
5"6<HS1 $3.9~ ' F.nclokod front court. Thl1 de-Road. 642-5106 4 BR, ~. 2 bath home. Obie units. A real gobd ~ at MAGNIFICENT \'ft borne,
MiuJon lmpouJble? 11,ght.l.t.I bomt!' bas tinted LEASE OPTION gar. frplc, kitchen Nt·lru:, S.19,500. Call to ~-ID'. 1ehools 6 stom, 2 Not..-IVAN WELLS' MW" 13&'Jju ~·lndowa thruout, 3 IJed.. carpett, dnlpcs, patio. Only Paul Jorw1 RM.JI;)' bdrm&; f're&bly deconted I
bomn ~ evailab4e, all w/ LTY roonu plus large: dm, land• 3 BR: 2 be., to\l.'nhouae, Caft>., $36.~, Just 10% down. 847·1266 Evfll. 53&-7124. ttry nice rumtture. '215.
4 BR. How:e 2 Baths, Nr
tchools A: lhp'J ctnter W
Whlc. C>aks. Ph l 2 13 J -2 BR uni. bouM ill court.
Mar. on prmUses aft. 6 m.o W. 17th St.i C.M •
• 548-2833 • ..._1 of Bay a hilll. 1 door C'aplng night tights covered rehig., wather/dl')'t<, Pim· G-ham R-t.v $49 S Ca.II &ftft' 1 S4S..23H
plul ()'our choica} f, BR l 1111 patio. Locatrd ~ Heinl. mine. tennis. SITO mo. •'"" __.., J • 0 DOWN p.m.
ba. l csr praa:es. ExcepHonal Mtt Ea.st O:>Ast Hwy. K11.IHT school on m..&...e. ~ Nf'ar NB Post Ofc. 646-:1414 To qu.allfied vets. l homff Y&\RLY I.e. $250. Like new "..!.Rs, malll"-B~ ... ~.!arOK., fmc..,'d
Corona del f\lar ~Ci $31 !fi(J C\oi to daoose from, all fUlb car. ClllM 2 BR, ' Be . Pool, ~ ""aq,,... a.,, J. Wud So. """'50 Value 4 BEDR~" POOL ·JEA. N SMITH • Br 2 ..... Bluu E11tbluff 1242 ~~ ~th ~"t'"' d .....,_ a..-Villaae (213) w. !9th. 06-00<. · ••CK BAY CUSTOM ~-, · ~ .• ""'1\v tum il ~-··· ~-• .,.., _. Duplu dole to Oc:Hn, Chao-$23,250 NO DOWN TO wanted. Let Jot, rm. for 8 9Chool~. Call for lnformaUon m.4.JOI. Adutt&, no ~ 2 BR Blt-tn.a. Pttv. )Ot. ao..
l /J ACRI -f26,950 "" and ...... .,.. "'·"° <»mptetely """"""""' 1n-REAL R ~~1 trio', D>cl. potJo. ,:.",:;;.,~, %.;1"~J~~'7': LISTER REAL TY 1 BR. F1un lluPlox. 1 lllk "' to -E. Side $117. 1'111
Qua1Jt1 bailL K'tlll li-1 bfd.. Oc-n "--nt lldit •nd out. Rich C9.r'J:ldlna. 400 E. J71h, C.M. M&-3255 .._. ,,, dnpe11, work.1bop, $37 950 Own 644--0TtO 18612 Bettch Bl.. liB MU633 OC'HI' Winter a-. $100 tnct l=°'=-==St=. =-=-=== ~· 2 tJreplacet. Formal -. nv ~ all buUt.ln ldtehen, DELUXE 122,900. Tema. 646-82.18 ' · er utn, STll w. Bdxla Blvd.
dlalmC rm. AA addr'9 ol Older ~cm prinw most tlfieil!llL Covered patso PENN. PT. home. 3 BR. Fam BY OWNER: Equity ID 3 Dr. Corone del Mar ,250 4 UNJTS U.O. Newport ls.1eh 3200
,..rdlll MN.UI · comer, m.soo adjactnt the attr.etlw An. rm.., frplc. ~val-ram. mi: 1 yr o!d.. ~ A'ttR.lCI1VE i'•tsfrttlt • GREAT WnJl7 Bead! Ille. 4 T.1"9"A· -..._ Geora Wllbama., JUtr. thoQJ' pool No dawn O.L ue. $:i6,000. alter-4 l wt! ends. Beautiful. 3 &. So. ot N!!t.r Otftn &: downlowb mt. lw>mt. boel dock . Br. 1 hM to Ida. w/fl/:f!O
8'f a-.; ....-it 1 llri ID"'3!iO OPEN EVES. H).1130 BALBOA REAL ESTATE Penonallt,y 3 Ba, 2 BA. Jliibqy: By OWDft' onlJ. CORNDC Wtritcr 1-. view Creat for ~
--1 _fr· ...... -TARBELL 'l'I' lhltJor 700 S. Bel,_ Blvd., Balhoa tam nn., woodq yd, $19,000 , l)Je"""""• * .,,._ $31,500 mJI OW. 7-1325 ;..., Jta.IJ. N .. ltf .,,;
oi..46'1111---tar,.__ SOC< 11'1'l 'Elli ffi.-040 N..--HL Act .... 1156 rnARGE-wantod..,,.. Tod W1y Rlty 536.2579 CJilliG1:,_ _ .. _. -··· -1IOJliM
,
-• 't "
-------------------------------------------------
RENTALS rlt!NTALS R£NTALS , RINTALS ,.NTALl
1 Hou-Unfurnished .. ~~~:~nl1htd Af>I<. Fumllhttd Apll. u"'""''''*' I AplL Unfu"''"'"" 1t1Ao.!;.~!;"ATI.
Newport Bo1ch 3200 ~~--~ 4100 l1lboli 4300 Coote Mooe SI L..,,.. IMch 57115 Offl .. Ronti l * * * *
DAIL V I'll.OT· 2
ANNOUNCIM!NTI
end NOTICES
Loot 6401 l .070
BAYS3D& vw.,.. llr.I: s LARGE, quiet 2 BR. 2 Bl"' ON e.-Po......._...,., 1 BR. '50/mo. 21••»N-1 100 CUPP DRIVE
Br. 2 Ba .. •tvltl, ttfri&, betted. .. UUL pa. 2 Br. J J,Sa.. Modtrn. clClll, Blvd. No. 3-C SH tmnmt. 15-UIXURY rtffiNIUNJ'URN ' ROOM dtlce .... o.a.
carpet.. dhpta, Adults on. 1.4\altl, $135. 2US Plaaeatia qultt. Sll5 l'IW>. winter. E, M.~~ Eva. Ytatf¥ Leue. 1 6 2 Bdrm.a., M-Clit1 Rd. ldetl f«
LOST Llltle bioclt ~
""'"" doll. call.. 011_. Vk . Falt Ir Vanguard, CM _ .... -7871 ly. No pet.. Pl:d, 1.llp; e&11 Ave. Of,~ MMJD, ~or !WM112 ,' H~. ~··~~a 2 aw. Y·-..a-I.cut. l bedftKft 9CCOQDtant .-. $80 'CdlL to-(n4) 4874313 After 4 PM ' ..,..,,.. ~-, _.,,. eluded. 60-«i«t
HARBOR High!Uld, 3 BR. 2 1 Bedroom Duplex ~~= .. .;· ,;~· ~:.:~. f~"'.""" fl! c::t.!. ':: : ... ~ omo: S\llTE
lW> ViJllA, abort hair. Am
to "Brand)'"''. Vic. OW. _ .... ~
BA., LOVELY p AT I 0 Nev ahoppln&. Adults only, ~ 310 E. &lboa Blv. 2BR.2BA1255 Bab:r, Cll. •from. S1:AJ IDo up. Jeue l'DS Analldra, Ot.
$200 1 mo. on leaa e. MI SJ.OO/moPtnmRdy,&U-1m 54IMS58 aft 8 PM or wk f94.U49 <):,.. bt. Sl4D. &n-2654
6-06<1 or Ml Hill IMMAC S BR, boautifUll7 .lllboo Ill..... 4355 ..... AdultJ. $1'6. NlCE O.luxc 2 BR 2 BA neu S COIDIERCIAL, 1 llldust.. Pono111le
3
3 B~~2 k~=!!~ turn. New carpet, ~ 1 aa. Wlntn or yeuf¥. $85. 1 bdrm duplex Dr•»"· ocean~~t~ ~=· •lee t.J• eau
1 ~~~ FREEi can Anita 673-6'l!O ...,.,. coilln<' Adull> 81 ll<spoo,lble &dull>. !WI. No SiaYe. Ill' obopplng. .l96l "'°"",,.,;..• -""-'~· c._-:,;:c: ___ , =========I Whlckty1 Wini? Wlllddya Clot?
J onea !!<alty peta. ll!<l 19'1< Wallace unokmKidrlnk'g 673-150! 1 Wallac.. ~ I BR l\i 8& modem, ,,,.., Commorclol 6085 SPECIAL CLASSIFICAflOH FOR .Bisi< a .. tl ng Cl•-
l=========leACH. Apt., f)ll., beam eell, H I h ••~'AVAIL. NG'!; 2 BR. • .,.. ~"· :::· ":;:a Sub ,._-1 -~w-~-----ft.-I NATURAL BORN SWAl'PEU 111::.-~:~: ..... I
Newaort H•l9htl 1:210 carp; prlv. pa.do. l Adult. unt ~ leic --1 c:pts., drapes, bltnl. Adults, ee.se mo. eves ...._., aq. l .Sptclal 111'9 · -. •
3BR."i .... ~.lllt·lnl No pet>lllYey.613-7'29. 2 BDltM. FURN ..... u.--R I ~'.~!·~St.. • H--5 tl--t-5;"',."!!!Mii!:.."'f..:! I 'LSO 2 a•. UNFU.RN. •nfl I Wanted 5990 1un.11 -.. MIJfl IHCLUDI A N ' Carp., drapu~ $.WI Mo. · DELUXE 1 ~Poot $il0. " " ... _ rt IBM h -.1---------._...... _ ...,. ., tr..._ ~ WCI" ..., 111 ll'li& Club m W. Bay ve.. ew· , 646.7434 ()wl)er/Broker Ideal fer bacbdor. lS93 Uttllties 1.ncluded '.-wpo c ., .. vv BUSIN&5:S Woman needa 1 lndudrill lental 6090 ... YOl.Mll •hlllll __ tllfl• ...,._. .... .._ " ~ port Seidl. NO ADVANCE ~-~St C 1-NOTMIMG '°"&All -ffl:ADll OM\.YI ~·-• .M. -HEATED POOL Br unfum Apt C.M N•~ PHONE 642..S67t REGISTRATION NfJCES. ,
Back Boy 3240 1.sa.m. Furn. Apt. lll2 KoaxvUI•, Apt. D, HB I/I 1*t, Corona dd M~·or LI-LACUN~ ~ 22002 i!u!' To ,._ YourTr_.o Porlillll Ad SARY, ENROLL AT a..ISS t
!'-'-'---.!...-----Adulll Only, No pets • 536-2914 • 1 UNFURN1SKED 2 bedroom, suna. To $100 mo. Gar or :;' ~ on 1 ~ar ~ ~or 67$-18:15 tor more DAVIDSON Realty Aft.,. s pm Ll """° BACHELOR Apl. w I full 1 2 bath unit nau Hoai -cuport _,,.,,. • ..,,_ fl!<l. (714) 49!Ml98 ,. '65 MUSTANG Conv. 6 2 BR !Urn =do. on Bcb lni>. FOR LEASE N_,, P&lmo 1.' BR. b&th. c ... ..,, paid. rn pita!. Ava!l&bl• Sept lit. att .. s p.m. (219) -· N .... '"'"" worl<. l!l;il for nr. V'"'"· Itoly In ....... * .;~S-in_g_l_•_A_d_u~lts--*''1
mo. ..,....,, NEED Houae fer -• In ~-· M m1a 11 ) TD or Real Eat.ate equity, Ive ruon atfla. Ttade tor You ••• me<t ,_ 2 to •
Back B•v 4 BR 2 b.., heated Pool $130 to .-iui foWV• ''="' .._\.JQ.&A e&l, \r Ol\D a "'""'' Uvw.> ~ -..... ..,....... 847-5'121 ALSO Cole.a Mt1a, p~e.r Meaa 2 .....,. .. M 1 .-.-548-4240 Eve•. local area Sor 4 Br. bome -
tiltettd pool, Oll-Oe-sac. lTT E. ~nu St 642-3645 3 BEJ)ROOM, 2li' Nth, fact Verde, Sept 1st for ll'TiDe ,:~ 141 A• • , ~"' mtt. Oft • .o ......io ...._._ __ y•-, •t N• or~. lot or OO.,t 141).12TJ 10 ~w people ttUa mooth i
Rltr. 7150 Harbor SB, CM MOBIL Home, acroa trom ~1 ~. Av-"·'-•-Sept. facul"' awnber & f·-'iy of -· 6'f3."52l ~ ,.,,_ ,...., ...., and ev'1')' month fix' the , 54G-M60 Ev 549-llliB MOBIL Home tor tent beach; 2 BR., adults oNy. .,.,...._ _... -~ auu W' .. """ ...... ~'"' For .,,,_ vada tide, paved $12,500 e $4,800 TD e nut 5 years •• , Pre.select.-11 ~ es. with option to buy, $135 Mo. utll. pd. 536-16'1f 15th. Adults only, 4. Price range $200 to $300, 6 ~~""tt tent; ~ clear. Exchange far aome-Trade on 4 or$ BR boll99 ed. to pleaae you, For Jnter-. 1
E
••t Bluff 3242 545-912? After 6 PM Ki: N 1 AL5 Bay & Beath mo& to 1 yr, 213: 8Z-623l or sq fl at 9c • ar leue at bod.Y• beadacbel Unit.. Newport or O:lroua dd Mar eating recorded meaap, 1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1wALK mrkt, 22d & Npt. No Apts. Unfvml1hed Re1lty, Inc. 21.S: CL 7-'l362 $1'5 mo. CliL area. 546-00'1 TD'J, or T Bkr. 615-5726 49t-?riM dial 1136...6200. I/I pet>, adu•~. 1 BR uppe<, 2"lS w. Balboa Blvd .. NB EMPLOYED ,,.,. wbh6 Loto 6100 o... Point Motol,,. unit.I, "'ra"s"&<"'A'"""1<0"'--;N:;;F:W;;;;;-7w"ccl·:;F;.L..;Y;:;;T;;O::C~A~T~A~L~l~N~A
uill's pd. Neat, $90, 646-3750 Gene ral 5000 673-3663 Eves. ~ unall apt tt room-bath tn 200 ft. on Coeat Hwy, !or £NSE Value $2600, trade for DA.ll.Y FLIGHTS FROM
Av1ll. Now $60 _ Bachelor quarteni RENT Pa r t • ti m e work u CHOICE DaM. Point cout home or intome prop. in equily ill bcsne, C.M. or OR.ANGE COUNTY Am. ·
East Bluft, 4 bedroom, large 133 E. 16th Street 4 BR. 2 Ba., partly turn. J bow;ekeeper. Excellent rd. hJihw91 earner lot. Only Hawaii. Florida or North. S,A. area. Assume your VA PORT. caralina. Vqu
uvtnc room, _ dining room, Cnst.a Mesa. 642-l265 3 ltooms fumlture Houses off beactl. Rmec, iD-Beach area pref. 673-1360 $19,900. Write box P 186 Dal· Calif. <n4) f96.1SO!l THA mta. 642-1619 (2-0pm) Airllnea. • 546-66U
family room, built·ln kitch-$25 Month side & out. $295 Mo yrly. MALE Tee.cher wUl maintain ly Pilot Cruiser 40' diese1, approx. lnteresUng red brick bldg. WILL Tutor all levtll, matb
en, beautifull,y land9Caped N-.-rt 8e1ch . 4200 FmL OP"l10N TO BUY Drive by l12 40!.h, NB then your ncant hm in xchange 3 ADJ. iota, 1 w/2 bouaeil; 110 hrs will trade !or Or-thnl oll al br
Yard and view. y ......... 1ease -··r-
1
i~ca~ll<67>-'ie~I700f;orii,;633-<863~;,;'wo/~for=-==· ;"~7"'98J~~==~I rm. tori mon. 333 E. 21at Trade acceaory I-antiques c ge a, grd ICh 'CG.>.., No deposit o a c:. ange or San Diego County tock $2(00 &/or fixtures acl HS pbysioi my Mme or
$425/Mo. incl. water and H F c·' WHY Rent! Take over S12Q St. CM ~.000 Ownr. Ree.!Estate u:rnotnrbome. s ·' . ' . ......... ......,. * Channel Reel * F ,,· .R.R . I I mo. pm~. >'4% lni•re•t Roome for Roni 5995 6l3-8>l1 "<>wner -S48-22QI
11000
'"''"'·trailer,"'? """" -•
673-366.1 Ev~s. 5f8.f.i066 um ure e n I I Immaculate 3 BR. Fortin --------1-,,,...;.;,,;.=--~--1""";::,,....;c::,;:=;:,-.,,=:::: li7J..0Cr98. ATTENTION ARTISTS
Bay & 11--ch APAR---s 517 W.19th, C.M. 548.3481 Co. 642-SIXX) 548-2576 KI'lUlEN PrivilegeJ Man l"-A.CRni loc. onU Spn.iue .>ALM Spp., 'Ai tnt., $160,000 TRADE UP OR DOWN Original oil palntirtga wanted
9aQ A"'"""• A 18 W (ncln Anhm Tlf-2800 ' Riv., Oreloo, Wl take $200 ... , •-bot·" .~-. ~ ' t for "'
R I I
SPECI'ACULAR VIEW · ' 3 BR, Cl'pta, drapea. Ocee.n only. $4.5 mo. 646-6289 Ill equity bat at p)/mo.. · ._.. o:o, ''"'" """· HAVE UNITS -WANT DU-on consignmen new .
el ty, nc. Wtterfront/I.oc -Boat Laree 3 BR.. 2 a. Apt. I View. Call after 5 ; 3 0. Gtwemcr St. C.M. 546-0fl6o i'or l!q. L.A .. San Dieeo vac. Pt.EX open~ art pllery, 642-1398 ~ W. Balboa Blvd., NB Modem apu'tment with bl.It-642-&'.)87 grove or~. yacht. McC!u HAVE TRIPLEX • WANT ALOO Sllpa Available ina Incl dllhwuber Hug EMPLOYED man cnly. Nice TRIPLEX )Ot, 18th & 1200 Riverside, #'362 Burbk HOUCS Anonymous
2 BR -2 Bath Apts. livingroom. Blade:~~ NEW Soundproof 2 Br. 2 Ba. ~rm, semi pri ba. $10 wit. Wallace key lot, $1.0,950. No 2l' Housetra!Jer older mG-HOUSE, Broker 545-Hil Phone 542·Tll5 or write to
LEASE · ar • BUY beach _ Now avllila.ble • $250 Across fm, Coco'a. 16ffi 1189 Crutmont CM. 548-8119 .ub. Owner Bax 94.2, Sedon&. del el brake good tire 8 UNIT deluxe •Pt. Newport P.O. Box 1223 Coru. Mtsa,
NEWER 3 Br. 2 Ba. Frpk, $445 Mo. Ir up. $59,51» up yrly. O>ldwell Banker&: Co. Irvine n?S to $225. 642-Ul39 $30/MO., male rtudellt, !Ull Ariz. 1 new~Tracie ~ pickup ~ Beach. Gron Pl.tm. ~ty Announce1111nta 641 I
Corona clel Mir 3250
dwshr, bltns, crpts, drps. :im Oc..:_~or~~o 675-20X> Walter Haase N port H h 5210 JlrivileCN, washer/dry«S', 2 LOTS an Santlqo, NB speed boat. $900 Vll.l.ue. :Sa'n~M-l V8.C&Z1t « 1Ubrnit.
Avail Oct 1 IM $175. H ..._ H,..."'AYPLAZA ew 8' cleen.tqulet,841-2263 c.ab,Termaortrade Call,642-S741 erman Arott, Mgr. U1..<UJ R. Nattreu Rltr. 00-1485
613-<635 l'.""!"!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.;...;..,,.1 DELUXE Spaciow: 1-brdr 2 Bdnns., carpets, cjrapes Fee Simple. M6-&i6S Ocean View . Nr. Npt pier.
NEW 3 BR, 3 baths, $300 mo. 2 LG. smart 3 Br., 2 Ba. untum apt $110. + util. Patio; garage. Adults 190.1 Mite. Rentals 5999 LCYI', Coll courae view $5000 4 Wllta !um, best rental TRADE-ClA property next
bit-in range, c arpet t n g Beach apts~ Xlnt area. Sun-Htd pool, ample parkin&. Haven Pl. Yrly. St8-6.'tl6 equity. Will tell or trade. area. $58,SOO. take pn bse new Sean Covina $61,0CO
drapes. Ail 673-2222 deck. Gar. All equlp., cpt., No chlltren, no pets STORAGE GAR.AGE 646-1.2815 in trade. Owner lll&Y.. equity price $69,0XI for in-lz ""'=""'=====I cht>s. Winter $179, $1!6. 1965 Pomona, CM 642-5358 Newport Shont 5220 Oose In. 500 sq. It $45. Court Ave. m..ssn come, clear land, be&cfl
B 'boa I I d 3355 54• ~.. '-';iii;iiii;;i;;;iiii;~m;ii;ii~l ----;;~6'73-~~-~;;;,-GfVE.AWAY! 6-SO' Hillside 1 .;c=,c::..:,,,==~-homo, or TT owner ~1900 a I a n .......,....., * OCEANFRONT Laguna apt. • El Modena vac8Ilt lot&. IRVINE TERRACE View
Llfetto Htolth Studio
Hospitality is Our Motto
FREE STEAM wrrB
SWEDISH MAS.SAGE
Open wkdyl 10 atn -11 pm
Sundajla 10 am· I pm
Sl9 !:. Broadway
L<ina: Bffch C213) 43'7·f086
STUDIO y· b -, '., garden ........ ft-<y, -Garage foe rent ., 000 ..,. _ _,_ 114• 5*-6020 Ol' 0 -"-3 ba + lg -tt moo"'n"' with..,. tt -• 3 BR, 2 BA, blt· in appl's, iew, e.a c • '"'6 -,.u .,-, ~ Single • $20 Mcmtb .,.., .r,,mu.i. ·' Home 4 uo.uu., e "" ........ ""' ..,....,.
dshwsttr, tcd. air ht. crpta, Sundeck. 1 ernpl . gu-1 ~ beach & aea pool. 1 br. & ~ 642--364S 213: 663-11.lt A &M-.33C'l pool. $67,500. Ttllde for your in cruiser, mint condJtim, 'Funerals 6412
drps Own 673-243l woman. .$111 mo. mcl utiL den. Part. furn. $225/mo. • property. Coldwell, ~er will trade up or down for T • I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
· er ,c"-;;'",;;"'c"i=-.,--.,...,~-~l :_,=======cl REAL ESTATE ;R•;,;n;•hol~~~~·~6;;1;;50~l !Co~.~w~.~Ha=.,.=-~"":::..:'°"'::: op<" to nogoti&tioo. pbono WESTMINSTIR '" ON TENA~~ ~-I s~·n• "OH-.... "-"··~bua-Huntington Bt•dl 3400 2 BR. furn., neat &: clean . 2 ~ 1 _..:-:.:::n::•:.:r•;;_____ •.r... ~·~J '""" ~'"'
H"""' '" boacb. ms. Coste Melo 5100 1 • 2 BR. Furn & UMun" COUNTRY Ex646-~.,,'~'°"=·~-.~,_ 1MEMORIAL PARK
FREE RENTAL BOOK Drive by 112 40tb, NB. then -~iiii~iiiiiijliiiiiiiiiiii;; Frt>lcs I Pri I Patios I Income Property 6000 'SS Cadillac Cpe deVille. • 3 BR, 2 ba Monticello O!n· Mo
DROP IN call 675-1700 or 633-4863 HARBOR Pools. Tennis -Contnt'l Bk· lnYestnient Opportuntty LIVING =~n~~ru:·:: do. 2 pools, '20.mD. WUI c:..,,a 1:.~ f~="
AND BROWSE LARGE 2 Br., slps 7. For ~t. 9 hole Putt!Gt'ffn. 5 UNITS Lovely 3 Bdrm., 3 bath home plekup about any oonditioo. take 3 or 4 BR home $3>,<KKI rom $245
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Cozy winter or yrly. 1 blk t.o 000 Sea Lane, O:lM 644-2611 Will exchange for Colte. Mesa on 2liL e.cres, 10IJed b' ~ 220 Avocado, Costa Mtu.. to $30,00:t bracket In trade. Cemetery Iota
Fireplace. Double Garage, church/sch!. 646-2636 GREENS (MacArthur nr. Coast Hwy) duplex, ho u 1 e or other es; hu family orchard " la 5 BR 3 b&. 2 ator)' OOme 546-5580 owner/qt. fr.m $130
OJrnpletely Fenced. Lease. WINTER rental 1 Br. Util equity. lnrome tiCheduled at cloae to~· Fnll prlce tn Bade Bay Trade df'8X' Maple Wu r 11 t & er atnel Include.s End~wme.nt Ot.re
$187.50 per month. paid N pets $65 It ..,.. BACHELOR • UNFUJtN. $9XI mo. lnc:lude new duplex $89,500. For f\rtheJ' lntorma· .~--i 1 Perteet Condition Ev-WALKER & l..EE . o . .., .... mo. from $100 Ea1t8luff 5242 andbouse.Priceui,!JXl.Ex-tton plea• <:all G l enn forvacant........,olderor pano. . tn onebet.utUuJ
7682 EDINGER __ 54~>-~=~-~----.,...~ Thompson with smaller borne or trust Exchange clean Volklwa&· plaee meana las cOIL
842-4455 or 540-5140 1 BR Furnished $11J), Over incl. util. PRESTIGE Town Homes cellent rentals. Eckhoff & A1aoc~ Inc. deeds. Owner-bldr &16-16Th ' en Sedan ot equal value. No traffic problmu.
Open Eves. garage
1
nr ocean. -,:.Adultl!I. 1 -2 6: 3 BDRM. For lease, 2 br &: den 4 3 br Owr 24 UNITS 1 wUh 1818 w. Cbapman..Ave. ~Ac. horse n.ncb N. Cali. 548-1883 ltllll Beach. Wt:atmJnater
NR. Huntington S h op P , g Year Y· 128% 41st St. . n.TRN. " lJNFURN. with 2 or 2% baths Gold · lWii spendab e 541-2621, Evea-wlmdl 538-6T'l1 3 hoU8el lOM tt tmelttg, 9M S Acres, 15 ml. from Lu
531
•
1725
893-2421
center; San Diego Frwy. 2 OCEAN Front 2 Br, gar. Pri. Heated Pooll, Qilld Care Medallion all eled:rlc.,POOL $30,900 dwn. Adults only. No -========~ lft bam, 14 atalll. For S. can Vegas, 700 ft. from Hwy. Br. unfum, new crpts, sundeck. Tip top eood. $140 Center, Adj. ID ShoWln&-2-car gar. Rent ltuta a.t va~. ~~ details. Full : ranch . me, home -or ?! want clean fum, one Bdrm Cemetery Loh 6411 ~
1125
1 Adults no ""ts 774 7465 No peta: allowed f.!50 mo pnce · · A.er-6200 S60M equity • $95M owner cottage !or 8 yn. :Jit Dim-32 CHOICE u. ...... ,...._ •-uaa pes. , TI62 G mcoe. ..-~ . . 2700 Peterson WaJ, at Jlar. 837-871.Amigo W•v N B WALKER & LEE, Mr. Le"1ne 64&1909 .,,,,..,.,,. ...,.,. .. ,
Miu Apt 8. 847-94Ei6; or OCEANFRONT -WINTER bor & Adams, Costa M .... I -· , . income & Exchange REAL f\m O:ltt.ege 5 acret. tnick Ave., Venke, CalU. beaut ~ Hil!JI Park;
892-2404. Sat, Sun & eves. 1 BR. dowDstain $140 MG--0370 NEW 2 Bdrm, 2 bath, ~9«il Oole to tpwn, Full price * * * * * * S8n Pedro, C...W. A good 1n-
S260; LOVELY, lge. 4 BR., 3 1512 W. Ocean. Yroat 673-8577 Ba)'Vlew, $ $ $ M k 13 ~ wt.th low down Breck IJ!!!!llJ!!l!!llJ!!l!!!I vestment; value increasing' -~•-pool, odulm, ''"' -•. a er "~ . -~•-· N -Ba., beaut. yard; nr. l>Ul'<>· * OCEANFRONT * .,......, Nott tJ--liu 542-'l555 • ...........,. 0 l"""Y'-""Y tax to
& beach. Avail. n ° w ' Beaut. " bedroom Excellent. perk • like 1\11'-737 Amigos Way, 644-0608 s.,.u"'u"'t!fuJ· ""'0wn"'".,' "". M"'..--...... 20 ~~.s BffUC4ful BUSINESS ind ANNOUNCEMENTS ., .. ,)'. Terma .. or Cub. M&1l84
968--Itn.4 ~. 642-1265 rounding• !or adulta requ1r-.... ... North.en Calif Recrea.tion1 FINANCIAL and NOTICES ernoons 111 •vet.
BR. n--•-n m I Ing peaca & .... 1-0 Corona del Mar 5250 Unit. Property shoWI attrac-· 1 -o...uuuu .......... ; poo; YEARLY ren"-' •L blk. f-m •-•• ti In Min •·--" •A ann. llQ'1 dn SS0 A h II 011 uu n '" Discriminative Tenants ve return on vestment. .......... .,..,..,..., _, ' Bus. "--h1nltl" 6300 Found (Free Ads) 6400 IP a ' I bltns., incl. rebig., washer. ooean & bay. 3 BR 2 BA, MODERN. Near view-point. I i,56,fm mo. ~1. (2U) 487-2133 -,.,..... ...
dryer, 1~ Bush a rd crpts. $155 mo 613-0184 l, 2 .. 3 BDRM. APJ"S. BR Apt. all elect kitchen, THE FOX COMPANY Auto Franchise TORTOlSE fefale e&t wltb DRIVEWAYS " Parking lota
673-1115 .. .,,..,. •--.t 1 ••-POGMARL. NTIO ClilLDREN ftreplaee, patlo, w I w -·. 2883 F.ast Cout Htway, ,... ... Mount. & O...rt 6210 flea eolia.r-found in vtclnitv repaired & seal ooated. Frtt 3 BR, near ocean le ~ ....... ttn ; DU.llU· Nl"'UE South J b n =i"'I''""' ,...... ...,..... A fine, well nm French and f M ·" & r-n• Y est Rea.s. 530-1413 % Bloek to beach. T ..... wy. ,., mo. u,,,.9495 173-4971 PALM DESERT Swedlah import a&et'ICY tor o ~...-.te ......... t Hwy. ===_;,;;,c,;..:c;.. ___ , !C:th~oo ~ret! T= $115. 646-5880 GARDEN Am. 6'13-8617 or 673-lJt)I 12 BEAtmFULLY maJ.n.. NEW CONDOMINIUM sale at a 1teel tn Orangt C.d.Pri •• 673-1.086 QUAUTY upba}t aeal coat
53&-2S79 CUTE 2 BR. oo channel; 18tb A: Santa Atta, C.M. H ti ~ a. h 5400 tained Units. Pool. Lcwely Owner desltts ae11ina: before County. No blue sky -pvti MIN. Blk. male p?Odle, &In !'ep<ililo s ~~A park.
BR
2
* Ba dinin laurxlry facil., carport; $150 Call Mn. Hendersbn 64S-S542 un "•'°" u.ec :rden area, BBQ. Less Oct Beautifully 1'urn 2 BR, s:nd Jnvmtoey cn1y _ for v\clnil;y La Tenua 6 ..,•=,,".,· ,..--====~I '~ " . _;.• M ~ ~ Mmtb, winter. 673-3003 lm Santa Ana, Apt U3, C.M. NEW 80UJ'ld. proof/ private 1 Coan .... ~~.~· F'ortln 2Ba. Sui~ bome, lavilh-quidt Bale. Ask tor Mr. Ter-Slater, Fountam V alle .Y SERVICE DIRECTORY
am. rm.,,....,., on ' . BR bJk to ocean tndivid • _........_ • .....-2576 ly pla.ntedlllaidepatio.MUQ' mer. 542-!95t 9&2-488S 11 -b •~ter & •""'""'· o;M78l Corona dol Mir 4250 AVAIL. 5£PT. 13TH I deck ~ patio. '613-1784,· *DUPLEX $27,500 * Exbu. FOUND lll'roc.I .,.g1._ ~ yilttlng 6550 n--2 BR 7 •••••-LIQ. LIC'S. -$10,000 --------1 2 BR. w/garage, fenced yd. 536-W. See at 14 .t Walnut, -.....ca.u, • yn. Owner Evel. 'll"U"9U• A ""-~ "career -i..1" fr a m ••. BABY Laguna Beach 3705 e COROLIOO APTS. e t.ak 2nd 2244A et Now, Llmlted ._..,ttty! .... srr weekly; mf borne. w/patio. Water paid HB es · st a te, PALM DESERT Orange Oity.-df We {atcn) 531-29.Sa Exp mother, Xlnt cezJ and
;Qi'fARCH BAY ARE A 1~·$1:"~~~·. Jge. 2224-D Plat:entia • $ll0 2 BR., 1% ba., frpj., bit-ha; C.M. 642-747'l ($30Xl. yr tnc.) NEW CONOOMINlUM Winston Collect (n3) m-4249 FOUND · Stqn:;ylboy'1 bike meals. Fooed 1ud. C.M. $6.
LO'IELY OCEAN VIEW. 3 U02 E, Coe.st Hwy. 673-3378 21.tl-D Placettia -$100 dishwasher, wuher, dryer. BASYSrITD"lG Want~ M1 Oner leavtn& COW!_try. BeaQ.. Gl"Ml -~ 5J&..7B12 . ~ .646-4301 ·
BR' & det, 2 BA. cpls, Drp8, Qill BetWffll 2-5 Pool. $150 Mo. A d u Its borne -vkinity Jndl8n8p0lill t1fuJJy Furn 2 BR, 2 Ba ~ Money te l.Mn 6320 tU:r BABYsrrrtNG Wmted -My
frpl, pool. $300 mo. Also FURN. 2 BR.; near beac:ll. • 636-4120 • 499-3464 eve and Malley Dr. 536-J.151 piper home, lavishly pl&Slted SMALL••---,. cat No _. ho-_ • .c~. Indi•··-"·
avail. 2 BR. 2 ha. $250 mo. $16.5 Mo. yearly. LallUXURIOUS, 2 BR, l'Ai ba, -BEAtmruL 2 BR. extras,
8 1
R I
6060
illlldeEvpa.Ho.~Extru A 1 ~,000 laJ', Vic~,.·-. I-M~""""'ik., HtJid':
adults 496-1243 betw 10-5 pm 675-3l53 Alter 5 PM e1ec. crpts, dq>is, GE kit· pool. $130/mo. Avail Oct. 10 us n... enta etl. on.<"'""" val· for•""" LI!« 2nd TD c .M. 646-ln7 53&-3151
5 BRllic~!w~schll VIEW B1lbo1 4300 :· :::.~ ,:e::.s~~: 962-2109 ESTABLISHED Exchang•, R. E. mo :i· l:.ri:. :::· .~ FOUND old nd"bo)I'• Blkeoo M~OTHER=~-W~lllbN--to----,,,-,· 1
, _ .~,1 4 •• -I Bl\. •-.~ 11,0 2 Bl\. 2 20th St. NICE 2 BR apt 1125 -$135 MED"' 11 Off)(( ISO 000 CASH In m••ot or~ Udo Nord Sanclot. 1175<116<. child In my """"' ~-··
I.A. ..,._., mo. ~ uu.u. _... ..... ; mo. 00 minors or peta. ft.AL 4 HOUM• full price $35,500 • ' 1NJ ADORABLE oranp kltten. South Cout P1ua area.
,:(ENTALS Be.. furn. apt $165. Utfi, 2 BR Gar. apt, tpl., cpts, 847-3378 bet 1 & g PM. $14,1.0J equity. Wilmincton. ;~~3;ir 597~1trial MO Paalarblo. CM. 549-41'J38
Apt&. Fumished =· : ~i;, I~: drpli, btt·bul. le pvt pto, 2 BDR lCJ8tain. Stove re1rtc 1(0) aq ft. Huntington Bch. Wut Joe or land. f;42..2%ll • LADIES blqde found, Iden· B""AB=Y~81=I=I=IN-G_m.v ____ e _\i_I
-Balboa. 49<-011!9 ~ ... "° pt" $1<&. Sl2S. AdultJ ooty. Bio "'1m $350 PER MONTH II 0 6300 Rffl E1toto Loons 6340 ilf¥, 673-3193 ml ~ C.t Pl"'L J\iJl tint" 1<Ge~no~••!!,l ___ ~4000~r:~i'iifl~>tki"'A.,..-,,....,,_ T•d Woy Rlty 536-2579 us. pportunllloo ...,.. """'2!.
I· CLEAN Bld\olor Apt.. SPAC. I BR. T-·· HOME LO All utll incl $75 Up Newport Upper Be.y. Pool. 2 ~ Duplex, private yard I: IN BERKSHIRES CANDY AN Led 6'01 BABYSI'ITING my home.
3 Room. Furnllur. 315 E . Balboa Blvd. Rec. tacil Oilldren, pets patto $140 mo. Agt. 847-1266 s-RESTbu"••~~i--1y SUPPLY ROUTE Let us help you buy a home, ~s·••..,. 10 ,.. 8'lg• ...__ Anytime. Relltble. Good
BALBOA 6'13-~ OK $260, Jease. 642-6797 I I h "Thew~· m:;e (Part or Full Time) retlnanceexlJttnrloan.orob-rdJe~ Vie'. Ea.nbl,;tt: eare. -.1m $25 Month T DUPLEX 2 BR. b".i••. S.• Beac 5450 Exeellmt lnoome for few brt. taln a 2tld TD JoM, Child:rco heart b r 0 ke ll . BABYSI'M'ING, 1 or 2 UY OCEANFRON n" GA.RAGE-STORAGE weekly work {Dll)'lorEvel) FREE APPRAISAL 6 --e•--chil"'---""' I I FlJLL OPTION TO B Yearly rental. No pell or carpet encl gar, yard, older OCEAN view 3 BR 2 BA, blt-~ ft lO 'H $4.'li Reward. 644-1,,_ i.u ..__. "'co age .rv. •
No depot!lt c.a .c. children. $100 .l uz mo. 9'l5 adult.s, $1!0. 5 CS-t 5 7 3 , I Ina Ultra mod. $250 mo. sq 673-2654 · • ~~ ~•-ooil ....... ~ ~ PROMPT SERVICE Av. N.B, Moo-Fri. Rel'a. 847-02'70 H f R C "J ........... ._,. "'l"M' .. ......, .,,... Sattler Mmtgl(e Co., lnc. CHlLD . • • • E . Balbo• Blvd. 548-2884 Cl-2226 sroRE Or office "''"· top --in ~--e c.oun... 336 E. l'ftb St .• A-. Mea TOM Cat: Blk wfwht fed· care iDdoon " OUI Furnltu..-Ren tals ,__... ..... .. ,.. y ......,,,... di.est Vic Ward A Marprt preschool a& {prefaTed)
517 W '~" CM 548-348! ·-I .. """ business toe., Balboa Ialand and IRUTOtUldJn& e. r •a.. &e-nn ~. · · · H B ·~ -· • · ....,.,,, • · Gener1I -Gener1 -Gener1I 4000 $110 to nso Mo. 642-9555 (Handles Nabbco Products Ev1111. m.M 642-ll57 Margarita. Rew a _°"·"'·='-~""'~----I ~568~W~.~Lncl~~"·~Anhm~~TI~4:·21M!O~ll..:..;.;;,;;,;,;o;-:T'"----:;.;,.-----"--~-"-'.....:'----~;.:.:_ ta "--~1•n~• CARE and Nation'""" Ad·~·_. · n£Wa11.1 -~·•Oll'I· fOt tnfaDts -1"',
N $
Prime E. 17th St. Store 8XI GOY v"'""-'-'J RE TAL 1q ft, lllowe&&e window 00 candy Ban) fl30 Total Mo , 2 MALE N"inlature my home, Pad& Sanda
Corona del Mar ~ $165 mo. Q.OQ 'O ,.5) ""-.C -, f) 'C ~-Q..• street Alt cond.. 642-S6lO cub required. For~ rfg•ges, T .D. I 6345 Schne.uzerr, O'l'Y, me bl area, Hunt ~ 536-4179
Newport Shcns -SW mo. p~ 1-'QU t"). !f4 J:J(/•,p intervit<W; lefld name,.\. $ti'65 1st TO ~able $55.65 need of medication.Reward.
Newport Beach • $225 mo. Office Rent•I 6070 drell and phone number to: mo. mcl S% interelt 00 49'-llm. or a-1150 BusJnMI 51rrice 6562
ILldo Bayfrml • 13"" mo. Sol .. o SimpleSCNmbled WordPuuleforoC!luckle ----TRANS.WESI'ERN """1l '""' 0o.-... lot. LOST S.pt 1. 4 mo old blk N WALKERALS~~<;;""'5TY ~ ·-LAGUNA llEACH DISTRJBUTlNG ro. 10% d!ocomt. •~1131 cot w/ n.1 oonar. V>: ewport Wrap ~ 0'~~ ··-1oo"'1 of tho Al CondJtl·-·• '9il N. AZUSA AVE. -·-• W & M 'I S ' '""' ""'"""" -bo-, ~ COVINA. CALlF 91722 ANNOUNCEMENTS ~ --• ..iclfff. 01 ervoce
tow to '°'"' '°"" 11~1e wonk. oe: :~'°a~= tn BU~ OPPO~ and NOTICES SpecialUtng ln Cnt1nc • For.
I C U P I EM I ~ LOST> -Cit, wh1'o olgn & Domtatic lifawnr'.
$25 Wk Up """'" office building It MAN OR wOMAN f°""d (freo AdtJ 6400 w/blad<: Vic. Co1f<1!0 and • Gift W-. -
• I I I I r r : loc•tlo" In down-ll<llaliie ....... from tbla p R ESCRIPTION n~---"""'· CM. °"""" pct. • Imured M~. ITIJ' RJv. e Studio ol 8acb ..,CS. _ _ _ _ _ • lAiUna Beach. A.tr C'Ol'llb-arte-to Mrvk'e and collect ...._ M6-Wf erztde Dr. H.B. sa.mgi
e tact 01111 ,. !'tall -"· tlaned, carpeted, bealltlfUI tna 1utomade ~ Oear .l gray hmtt. Vie I=="==· :::::::::;:=::=I
e M&M:Strvb·TY IVllL IDURAG I pt.ntled partitlontna. Tw o &------'~ Wu.on • Can.Jon Dr. 329 SM male 1" Poo.dle. ~---·~ -· • ·"' •• C1roont1ring 6590 e "9w Calf • Ba:r mtnncet; " ...... ._. on ellablllla accounts tor you. Um't'ertlt)' Dr. C.M. Cm.r) Owootl; brow ftbbrrl, --s..:~
2376 N~ 11mt,,..,,. I I I r Forest Ave., rea: lfadil to Car, nfertnoet and. -to roUNi>whJtemelecat VWJ Out ol rn JJc. Vic 2'Jid" REPAmS•ALTDAnONS.
CHAT£AU L1 POINTE · -· -· Munclpol -loU. "° 11.1115 caah --lovablo. Vic ..... Deb !"'1' 1'lst!O. --CABIHETS.,,,,. .... Job.
Lovely rum. 2 BR e.pta. Off· I I :d :-'..! ~r:': my. • to l2 boars wttldy oo Thurs. t~ CaU llfts 5 PARTIAL Mt. Wettakle 25 )TS. tltJer. stUn3
&treet .,.rtlns, carp>rta. 1-D....,f M.--1 .. 0_,......,..-1 sman 5-. fa I hi. Buslat• boun anntthlC Mb ~ tnmlhlJ ID-p.m. S'8-oC53T c.o.ta Mea, wtttdb lla 2
Hl!&ttd pool. $150 per mo. I I I' I _,, lfen ng service available tor $10. come. Full time ~. For TAN ~ ~ 'Wb. ~ Cement, Concnt9 6600
Adultt:.1 no pet&. ..__.._,._. _.__......,0 .. lO :;:u..!: •.. oon't remerrlber All utilltltl plid ~ =~~ wrl.~ ttmelt, fo\md cm SalQ Alll LOSl' Pl1r SC*" tptkJn: sJu. CElill2'll' Wft, all tnea.
lMl POMONA AVE., c.M. I I J. R. Woocl telephone. Bbd., .St. Loult o..a. ,..,_ "'l'wJ, m.w la Pu Rd. es O:lrooa deJ Mar beach. No Job too amall. l'ftt Mt1 • SUS CASITAS LY Z AIL DA!LYPILO'r .. -!16CJ.• ·-.. ~ 837..., ....... ,..,,, .. -. ILSTUJ'LIC<-
....,,,.,,.., Br. & ....,,.... ~;.1=;r-,p..;;;.,.1j-,~1-I 0 ~:::-.. ~o:.."'.i! =i:fu~· GOING h«o .,._, BUt 8*11 -.. U.. WHlTERa-VlcGl""'1& e CUST<*PATIOl e ,
...._ . _ _ _ _ _ ,.. ..._ i-...... i-. · -Colda> ~ '" ,.;.. vk:lnltr "' ""' • wan-1'tltln Cli!d"" ,,,.,..,..,, ....,..,. •wtnr •-·
;JlONewportBml. e '!"!!:..MHf.,J,l!?..tmDS r r r r r r r I SECRETARIAL U.L l>llilUpo II .... .,. C.M. -ldonlllJ • ....,,__ Stoto!!c.•&12-1011
Mocialllon llT Bo<polnt ~ = = _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . S ERVICE -""' -. 1IOl ...._ WlllT,I: -caa. Ii..,, -°""""" no Jab '
ruRN or tbfln. 'l.tt.rp t • Modem of11ctt.. cupets, etr Be..>wkle • Manne Dr., FOUND PaJr t.l perlO'tptkln lontlle. VJc Jmn St. c.M. to tmall. Frte estlmtt&
ea 'OoLlla -· Bit-In&. 8 ~ WT!IS l I I I I I , I cond!Uoa..,, p&rlclnr. ,.,.,,, N..,.,.i 8-11; m Main 6 -atu-ot H......,... 0&11 a11 s. 5661 •-•
-· 1 chlld. No peb. ..,. -• - -• - - . -llllll«"""'th.Or&npO>m> O.... llilotq"" a-i.. "'""'OtJ_w,.... LOST>-. '1c. -&YourAdla~cl•-
""'1311 SCRA .. I ,._ ANSWER. IN CWSIRCAnoN 9000 .. --·,., E. l70i St., °"-Olndt ~ ae.m --N." po r I --will bo -I>~AIL:!::.T!..!:PllDl'~!.,!·:! ..... ~.!ADS!:=·.!.-_:.~;;..;::.:-,;,..;;;:;.;;';....'".;.;.;_:.;__;__ __ ;__ ________ _:..:..; __ i..;;O>lta=;.;"';; .... =--..:-.:;,:1';;;85 n<: m.ruo ru: TI .. lOQ: llOClt rr TO 'llii -. --.. Dtal -
6520
RENT
Costa Mesa 4100
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.Z.Z DAil V PILOT
SERVICE DIRECTORY
Doily Pilot Clouified Child c.,. 6610
• CLASSJFIED INDEX ... LJC. N1 <=*ft AM to 5:30 .
Hot 1u:ndlea, xtnt c a r • ,
Harbor • Baker 5t&-l.S39
Hours-Regulatlons-Oeaciiinss Contractor1 6620
ERAOAS1 Advtirtl11,.. lhOllld ohtio• theotr adt Oally •Ml Nport tmmedl1loly •rrot'I
or mltc/U1lfioltlo11•. THE DAILY PILOT aMum .. 1l11blllty for •rrarw only to
tn• ••tent of pubU1hlng tl'la adwrtlHmant oorreolly one tfnwi.
e ROOM ADDn'IONS e
L. T. Cocu;t.rucUon
1'~•mi4' l'0001I, ldtchal QI'
unlll. Sin&t• .tory or 2;
plan1 custom dul&:ned. For
'lllmat~s a: la)'Ot.lt, phone
DEAD LIN£ FOA COPY AND KILLS: l:SO P.M . lt11 day bafort publio.Uon, 1xoept for
Weelt.end !Edition and Monday MOtlon. wflen oloelng ti~ 11 1:30 P.M. Friday.
YOU MUIT HAVI!. KILL NUMBl!RI Wl'le,. llllUng an ad --ltM of quick ruulta,
be 1ure to mike 1 reoord of U.a klll numlMr 9lvan )'OU ti)' your ad t.11k1r u
verlfic.1tlo" ot y.,ur oall.
• 847-L511 •
Wo<nsed C<mtnc1or
Residential • CornmetcilJ
Maint I Repe.in. Free Est Every effort ft made to kill or correct a new ad Uu1t ha1 been ordered, but ~ can·
not guaranlce lo do 90 untll the ad hll appa11.-.d In th• p.tSM;r. 673-m!I
OIME·A·LIN[ Ad• •re atrlctly ei.•h In &dvario. by m.1U or ft •ny on• of our oftlcea. AdcUUoos * Remodel.ln1
F~ H. Gelwidc, Uc.
m.&H.l * ~217tl NO phon• orders.
The DAILY PILOT reaerves the right to cl .. lfy, edit, oentor or refUh any advor-
tl1emcnt. and to Chang• lt1 rate1 •11d ,..gul1t1on1 Without prior "ot1". C•rptt (INning
Advertiser. may plaoe their 1d1 by tale:ption .. 6625
DIAL DIRECT 6'42-5678 Revolutionary Hott
Dry Cleaning Method
Rugs, Drapes, Upbah:tery
Can be used Immediately
alter work is completed
WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 5'40-1220
Huntington Beach 540..1120 Laguna Beach 494.9466 Sales. Service
and lrutallation Phones Are Open 8:00 a.m. -5:30 p.m. • Master Oiarge
9 lo Noon Soturday-Closod Sundoy • Bankamerlcard
Modern Rug & Carpet
<13.15 Crenshaw, Los Ange.lei!
713 -296-5100 Collect CLASSIFIED COUNTERS 1r. located 11 foltowt:
2211 Watt lolboo loulHatd, Nnp.rt hocti. JJO Wnt loy StrMt, Costs w .... lot I ===========I
Flfftt Sfrftf, Hu11ri11tto1 hock. ZJZ FOl'ftt Aft••, Loti•N leoc.91. l :JG-S:JO hcept. Sot. I S111. _G_a_r_d_o_n_;_n=g ____ c66.c.;:IO~I
M~ll Addrea: 8ol( 187S, Newport Beach, Callr . • 1 DAY service. Home A
apt cleaning. Crpts. walls,
HOUSES FOR
GENEll:Al
COSTA MESA
SALE I NEW,OllT llEACH
NliWPORT HEIOWn ~: Nl!WPORT SHOR.El
... . .. •• •• MESA OEL MAR lll$ Wl!STCLIF,
llll UNIVEllHTT P.AR.X "" •• MESA VEROE
COLLEGE ,All:I(
NEWPORT IE#.CM
l'IEWPOl!T HEIGHTS
BALIOA COVES
IACK IAY
llU l!:AST ILUFP '* ~· ... nu COR:JNA D•L MAit
IALIOA -.,,. NIEWP OAT SHORES
9.t.YCREST
nu IAY ISLANDS
!Ht LIDO ISLE
lm IALIOA UL.AND ''" ... BAYSHORES
OOVER SHORES
WESTCLIFF
tiAl!BOI! HtGHU.NOS
Ul'llVERSITT PARI(
lRVINE
:~2t HUNTIHOTON IEACM
IOI FOUNTAIN \IALl•V
lW II.AL Sl!ACH
LONG •EACN
-. .. •• ..
IACI( 1•T
EASTILVI''
ll!VIHE TEIRAClc
CORONA Dl!L MAR
8.tl.,IOA PINIHSUl.A
IEACON IAT •
!DJ OAAll:GE COUIJTY
11:! OARD•N GAD~ un W•STMINSTIR
Uot!! MIOW•Y CITY
1151 SANTA ANA
-... ... ... •• .... ... ...
OB ...
1• SANTA ANA Hll9HT'S nos TUSTIN
llll COAST.II.. IA'T ISLANDS LIDO ISLI! I
8ALIOA ISLAND
HUNTINGTON IEACM
HUNTINGTON ti-JllOUR
FOUNTAIN VALLl!Y
SE-L IEACH
181 LAGUNA l'l!ACM
llSS Ll.GUJ'iA NIQUl!L
Uot SAN CLl!Ml!MTI!
1-.S DANA l'OINT
Ull TAIPLIX, .tc.. '"' ...
ltH CONOOMJNl\JM -...
SUNSET IEAC'H
GARDEN GROV•
LONG 8EACH
LAKEWOOD
ORANGE COUNT'f
OUT OF COUNTY
OUT oro STATE
STANTO!f
WESTMINSTIR
M!OWAT CITY
SANTA ANA
SANTA .,NA HQTL
ORANGE'
TUSTIN
NORTH TUSTIN
AliAHl!IM
SILVERAOO CANYON
LAGUNA HILLS
LACUN.t, IEACM
LAGUNA NIGU'L
SAl'i CLEMENTI
SUI JUAN CAPISTAANO
CAPlSTl!AHO IEACH
Ot.NA POINT
t .\RLSIAO
OCEAHSIOI!
SAN OtEGO
RIVERSIDE COUNTY
HOUSES TO BE MOVEO
CONOOM!NIUM
OIJPLEX'S ~O~ SALi[
APARTMENTS 1'01! SALE
RENTALS
Houses Furnished
GENEl!AL
RENTALS TO SHARE
COSTA MESA
MESA Oil MAR
MESA VIRDE
COLLEGI! 'All:K
NEW,Oll:T IEACH
NEW,ORT HOTS.
NEWPORT SHOll!"S
Sll'SHORES
OOVER SHORES
WESTCLIFF
UNIVERSITY PARIC
IRVINE
BACK tA'T
EA.ST ILUFI'
lllVINE TElllAClt
CORONI OEL MAI
l.t.LIOA
8AT ISL.tl'IDI
LIOO ISLE
8.1.LBOA ISU.llD
HUNTINGTON •EACM
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
SEAL II.I.CH
LOl'IG IE.I.CH
OAAl'IGE COUNTY
S~llTA ANA
WESTMINSTla
M10WAY CITY
SANTA ANA Hl'IGHn
COASTAL
LAGUtiA l•ACH
U.GUJ'i.-, NIGU•L
SAN CLlMENT•
S•M JU .. N CA,ISHANO
CAPISTllAllO 1.IACM
Cit.NA POINT
AIVE•SID' COUllTT
v.-.~•r10" •!I NT.tu
COtiOOM IN IUM
DUPLEXES rou111H.
RENTALS
, ..
UJJ ...
'"' .... , ... ....
1'11 un uu ...
"" "" ·~ .... .... ....
"" "" '"' '"' >rn
·~ ·~ ,,.
"" •m ...
·~ '"' '"' "" -"" "" ,,.
1111
J1U
"" "'' "" "'' mo
'"' "" mo
"" "" "" "" '* "" JlJ\
"" "" J•ll
"" •• , ... ,,1t
1'lt ... •• ...
"" IJOJ
2111
·~ ...
"* "" -"" ••II
Houses Unfumished
GEM ER•l »II
COST.I. ""[IA JIM
M.IElA OEL MAR )\II
MIESA VIEROE Jiit
COLLEGE '"'•ll J1U NEWPORT IEACM ,,_
NEWPOl!r l!(l lS n it
NEW,Ol!f )MOlllll 171t
IJATJHORES ms
OOVEI! IMO•U ml
WESTCLIF~ 11•
UN1VEl!:SIT'f Pllltl. nn
IRVIME ttJ1 8.1.CI( IAY n ...
1-..ST 11.-UF~ Ut1 IRVINE Tt!lllRACI: tl'5
CORONA OEL -· :l?M BALI OA )lM
IA T ISL.I.HOS 1JSI
L~OO ISLE JUI
I.I.LIO.I. ISU>.ND lUJ
NEWPORT WEST nu
IHJNT!NOTON 11!".l.CH :MM
HUNTll<!CTON MAl!IOUa HU
~O'•NT .. IM Vllli.'T :Mlt
Sl!AL ll!ACH )(M
QAllOl!N GIOVI :M7t
LONG IEACH l "I
ORlllGli COUNTY l40f
SANTA ANA k it
ftSTMINSTll Mil
MIOWAY CITY 3411
SANTA ANA l!EIGHn U.:MI
COAJITAL l Nt
UGUNo\ AEACN l"'J
LAGUNA N IGVEI J1'7
SAN CLEMli"ITE J11t
CAPISTllAllO JnJ
CAPIST1t•1to IUtH n•
DANA POIN'I' n w CONDOMINIUM ,.,.
OUPL&Xll UNl'UltN. "" RENTALS
RENTALS
Apts. UnfurnlsMd
GINlltAl Nit
COSTA MESA 11111
Ml!U VIRDI! Slit
Nl!WPOltT 11!.l..C:H n111
NIWPORT HEIGHTS $211
Nl!W .. ORT SHOR•S 1771
W•STCLIFF S!Jf
UNJV•AS1TT .. ARI: SW
BACK aAT SUI
EAST ILUFI' StU
CORONA DEL MA• S!M
IALIOA Sltl
IAY ISi.ANDi SUI
LIOO ISL• SlSI
HUNTINGTON l•ACM 5'11
FOUNTAIN VALLl!Y "411
l•LaOA ISL.AND tlSJ
S•AL •IACK S4M
LONO ••ACK SSM
OAANOE COUNTY MM
GARDIEN GROVI Mll
WESTMINST•R Mlt
MIOWAY CITT Ml•
SANTA Al'IA MM
SANTA AHA HIEIGHTS .M:ll
TUSTIN ,.._
COASTAL J70f
LAGUNA llACH S765
LAGUNA NIOUliL JJIJ
S•ll CL•Ml!NTE S71t
UN JUAN CA .. IS~AJrlO S7U
OAMA .. OINT D ...
REAL ESTATE,
Gener.11
TltlPL•X. etc.
CONOOMINIUM
Rl!:NTALS WANTf:O
lllOOM$ FOR RENT
ROOM a IOARD
MOTELS, TRAILi!• COUlllTS
GUEST HOMES
MISC. RENTALS
INCOME ,ROPERTY
IUSINISS .. ROPIRTT
TAIJLl!R PARKS
IU$1Hl!SS RENTAL
OFFICI! 1t•NTAL
IHDVSTlllAL PROPl!RTY
COMMERCIAL
!NOU$TAtAL Al!HTAL
LOTS
RANCHES
CITRUS OROVES
ACRl!AGI!
LAKI!' l!'LS1NOll!'
Rl!'SOll.T PROPERTY Oii.ANGii CO. ,ROPERTT
OUT 01' STAT• PROP.
MOUNTAIN & DElellT
SUIDl\llSION LlND
REAL EST•TI! Sl!llVIC•
R.I!. EXCHANGE
II' ••. WANTl!O
BUSINESS and
FINANCIAL
•USINliSS 0"P0RTUNITllS
IUSINESI WANTEO
INVl!STMElfT O~lt\tl
INVESTMENT WANTlD
MOHl!'f TO LO•H
PERSONAL LOANS
JEWl!Ll!Y LOANS
COLLATERAL LOANS
AEAL &STATE LOANS
MOllTGJ6ES, Trud OMlh
MONEY WANTED
ANNOUNCEMENTS
and NOTICES
"" ...
"" "" ...
'"' '"' .... -.... ... .... .... -.... .... ... ...
f17S
"" •m ... ... .. ..
'211 ,,n
'"' ... ...
....
"" ~" 'llS
'"' '"' ~
~ .,.
·~ ...
FOUND (Fr.. .1.'61 6'lfl
LOST .-II
PERSONALS •..S
ANNOUNCEMENTS lOI
llRTM' 1411
l'Ul'il!llALS '411
PAIO OllTUAllT UU
'Vlf•A.AL OIAECTOIS ,,,_
FLOllSTS '411
CAlllD Of< TMANQ '4U
IN M•MORtAM '411
C•METEllY LOTS '41t
C•M•TERT CltTPTJ •11t
CIEMATDRIES '4H
M•MORIAL PAAQ 'Ill
AUCTIONS '411
lllVIATION S•RVICI IMU
TAAVl!L UlJ
AIR fRANSPOIT•TION .....
AUTO T•ANSPORlAtlON lt.(I
L(0Al l'IOTICES t.4$1
GElllMAti A TIJTORIND lfH SERVICE DIRECTORY
•CCOUNTINO "5M
lllllSWEllNO Sl!lllVICI! "5ts
'''Ll•1tr E lllEPAIRS. "'"' o~lt ... ,,A .. ISINO "51J
ASPHALT, 0111 "5Jt
AUfO lllE,.-,IRS "5:11
AUTO, Seil IHlti. T-. •tc. U'I
tlAllTSITllNG '5l4
I O•T MAll'ITE!ol•HCI! "5!!
lllllCK, MASONRY, .. c. "56'
IUSIN(JS SEAVICIS 6561
IUILDIRI 6'511
CA TIRINO •us
CAllMITM.ll(IN• 1J11
CARPENT•RINO ..SM
CllMINf, C~ ·-CHILO C•lll, Uc:.,.. N lf
CONTRACTORS Ult Aph. Furnished
OINllllAL COfl'A MnA ... C•R,llT CLl!ANINCI NU
M91A VIit.Di
OlM (AlltPl!T UYIJ'IO & II.PAUi WJ•
411tDRA,IAllS ~
O•MOLITION 6'lS windows, painting. 642-8520.
OllAFTING s11tv1c1 "" Sterling for briglrtness! ELECTlttCAL 6"4t
•au1PM•NT al!NTALI -GEN 'L OetU1·up, tree ll!n', FENClhUii 6Ut l'LOOas ,,... rototi1, grading, aprinklers,
FURNACE aEPAlllS. .,.. "" lawns, haul'&· Re as .
QA.RDEJUH8 -8EHEllAL S•RVIC•S un 646-5348
illRADING. DISCINO -AMERICAN GARDNER
GLASS ''" GREEN THUM• .,.. Exper. commer. & re!ld .
GUN SHOP 'Jn F E " ~o 9 HEALTH CLUal ,1,. r~ Su{Ilates ......,..1 11
HAULING •1H Euro • --~-HOUSECLIANINO Ull pean L41>UM:&per
1Nn1tt0R Dl!COll:AT IN• •n1 The Finest at Reasonable
lNCOM• TAX '1• Pr' 4~3383 Evenin lltOH, ~ •1~ 'JM Jee • g
11tott1•• uu Japaneae Gardening INSULATING ,,.,.
INSUltANCI! •71' Profe!lllional Mainten&nce
INVE5TUiATLN•. ~ •111 L&nd&capin&; 64&-6553
JANITORIAL '7ft
''WELRT ltl!PAlll. 11c. "°' RES. & Comc'l Gardening
LANDSCAPINO .. ,. Lie. Xlnt work. ·--LOCKSMITH a>1 i.,....,..
M.UONIT, •ltlCI: .. ,. 64&-ti2'l2 or 64&-1434
MOVING a STOUGS ....
PA INTINO, P....,..,.,111, Wt EXPERT 'Japanese garden-
PAINTING, I.... W5 Ing H B F V C M PATIOS .... -.. , . .• • • area.
PHOTOGltAPHT UJI * 847--0132 *
:~~T:i::,"G. Pit~ R-lr = Gl\.RDENER. 30 YTS ex-
POOOLE GltOOMtNO ,,.. perience. Reliable. Com-POOL St:RVICI! ff!I
POWER sw••Ptl'I• •f1S mereial 642-4389
PUMP SERVICE f'21 ~==~=~--~-ROOFING .,,. MOWING, F.dging, vacalawn.
RADIO, R•l'llr&. lie. '"' Gen'I cleanup. Hauling .
REMODELING a RIP.I.Ill -
REMOD'ELINO, IUTCHl!NS •N Odd Jobs. * 548-6955 Sch-• Siii..-'"' ••WING '"" ()rt & Edge Lawn
SEWING MACH INI REPAIRJ ''" Maimenance. Licensed
IEPTtC T•MKS, S.wwt. •tc. OU 540 •ono. alt 4 PM TAILORING ffH o-t0U0
TERMITE CONTROL "H
TILE, C..mlc ''14 "'--I <-I 6682 TILE, Llnll....., & M1rM1 "U ""'n•ra -n' C9li
TRl!E SERVICI 6ttl
T•LIV1s10N, R9H'"-a1c. 'ns PROFESS. Window, wall.s &
UPHOLSnRY ,,,. tlr. cleaning·. b u s i n 's I • W•L.DINO '"S JOBS & EMPLOYMENT resid., & ca:istruclion
JOI WANT•D, MM 1111 Crystal Window Cleaning
JOI WANTED. WM!.. lnt Free Estimate! 54S-a7'.17
JOI W•1tTED,
MEN a WOMEN ltlt Hauling, clean-up, garages
DOMESTIC Hl!LP IOU Et F E"1 t AGENCIES, Mt• 11110 c. . . . . ree ma es.
HEL .. WANTED. Mill 12111 Anytime ... Jlm su.6325
AGENCIES, W-7JIM
HtLP WANT•D, W-, ...
JOl!--Mtll I W-1SM He•lth Clubs 6720
AGENCIES, Min Ii Wl!Tlt'll IS~ I·----------SCHOOLS I INSTRUCTION lff~
JOI ,REPARATION , ...
THEATRICAL 1Mf
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
FURNITURE M0t
OFFICE FURNITVR• 1111
OP'FICE l!QULPM•NT M11
STORE l!QUIPMl!NT M11
C"FE, RESTAURA~T M1t
IAR l!OUIPM•NT MU
HOUSElo!OLO GOODI "2t
GAltAGI! SALi: letl
FURNITUll• AUCTION llf2'
A,,LIANCEI 11M
MT1QUES 1111
SEWING MACHINl!S IUI
MUSICAL INSTRUMENT IUS
PIANOS & ORGANS 11)1
RADIO l'Jtt
TELIVIUOll IMS
'11·1"1 a t TEllO n11
TA,E RECOROl!RS ll'Jt
CAMEIAI .. l'OUt .. h'#tfT pH
HOSIT SU,,Ll•S * ....
SPORTING GOODS Ult
llNOCULAllS, SCOPIS U'1I
MISCELU.HEOUS llOf
MISC, WANTl!O MlO
MACHIN,llY, •le. lfOf
LUMIER llSI
STOii.i.Gi! 111$
IUILDIN• MAT•lllAU r ..
SWAPS Oft
PETS and LIVESTOCK
PETS, Gl!NERAL IMO
CATS mt
DOGS MU
HOii.SES NJf
LIVESTOCK ..
CALIFORNIA LIVING
NURS&RIEI "11
SWIMMING .. OOU "" PATIOS ltlS
AWNING$ "111
V•C.•TIONS ltZS
TRANSPORTATION
IOATS & TACHTI tllt
SAILIOATS 9111
POWER CRUIS•RS "111
SPl!EO-Sk1 IOATS fOlil
IJOAT TRAIL,RS f~
10 •. ":' MAINTl!N•NC• ft3J
IO•T LAUNCHING M:M
MMINE EOUll". fllt
IOAT SLIP. MQOAINe ttU
1011.T 5ERVICl!S 1'011
IOAT ll~NTALS fin
IGAT CNARTlll ttJf
,1$HING I OATI ....
IOAT MOVING ""' IOAT STOR•G• H1I llOJTS W .. NTEO ~
AIRCRAl'T tlM
FLTIHQ LESSOMS f1SI
MOllll! HOMF.• '1N
MOTOR HOMES nu
llCYCLES t~
IELECfRIC CA•S nst
MINI 1111.ES '1'5
MOTORCYCLES f)M
MOTORSCOOTERS HM
AUfO SEll:v1c•s • P.\RTt , ..
AUTO TOCLS & EQUIP. 9411
TRAILER, TRAVEL '41J
TRAILEIS, IJ!llll1 Wt
CANl,ElllS fjtt
TllUCltS fltl
1'.IPS tilt
OUNE. IUGGIES tSlS lMPORlliQ JUTl>S ...
S'Oll:T CARS tofU
ANTIGUl!t, CLA1$1CI 911S
IACI CARI, 111001 HM
AUTO EV•NTJ NH
AUTOS WANT•O f1'1
MEW CAltS ...,
l.IJTO L'ASINe ffll
USED C.Allll ....
CHIROPRACTOR
HF..ALTH CLINIC
Massage, sauna, steam ad·
just.men!, x-ray. 548-99U
Female Technician
132 E. 18th St, C.M .
H1ulin9 6730
O.EAN Lots, garages,
etc. Tree removal, dump,
skip backhoe, fill,
grade. 962-41745
UTE Hauling-Trimmina;
Trull. Gange d.ean14'&
Name i1· Reasonable
BlG JOHN 642-4030
*LITE HAULING*
C'l.etUl up. Free est.
*546-784~·
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
HAVE YOU LOOKED FOR
THE HIDDEN DOLLARS
IN YOUR HOME LATELY?
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
I
·NO MATTER
WHAT
IT IS ....
YOU CAN
SELL IT
WITH Ii.
DAILY·
PILOT
WANT
AD!
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678
CHARGE IT!
I'm The Kind Of
Woman Who Gets
What She Wants
• 0 Because I'm The
Kind Of Woman
Who's Smart Enough To
Use DAILY PILOT
Classified Advertising
Believe me, there's nofhin9 ArounCJ our '1ome anymore
that isn't bein9 used -because the minute I discover
somethin9 is no longer needed, I sell it, while it still
has maximum vafue, throu9h an inexpensive DAILY PILOT
ClossH;ed Ad. Thot woy, insteod of • cluttor of things
we do"'t use, I have the extra cash that lets mt have the
newer things .•. the 11erlr1" things my whole family
enjoys. Here's what I mean.
The cosh I got for the good clothes ond tl'ys the children
hod outgrown bought mo the decorotor lamp I'd been
w~nting. The musical instrument no one played paid for a
big part of our portable stereo unit. The power tools
redecorated our daughter's room. And, just for the fun
1
of ii, the good chair thot just d;dn't motch anything
anymore took my husband lllnd me out for a fabulous
dinner at the fanciest restaurant in town.
Go through your home. Me~o • r.st of an the worthwMo
things you find that are11't being used .. (Y ou'n be surprised
at the number you turn up the first time.) T'Jien, dial
6'42-6678 any time between 8 e.m. and 5 p.m. end
give your rtst to • friendly , •xperienctd Ad Writer. That'\
an there is to it. ft's inerpensivt tool It can cost you •s rtttle
" PENNIES A DA YI
wen, now that you mow my secret -isn't it time you
got started toward better, easier, hippier fiving with
DAILY PILOT Oassifiod Adt? St•rt being tho kind
of l'omen who gm wh•t she w•nls lod•yl
Call Now 642-5678
•
" I ,
,I •
IBIEll LI&
•. •••'•
ms--.11v11.
~h
llAOll Y6Ulli
WOMAN ·--------1 latllmatSoell h'm ... -......................
' '
COOK ..... ,... ..... ... -Ill--_ .. ,..,,.._ ..
iA?Dll•
...... 1:1' .. "'"" ... --......
FIMALI
Ute-
Mllllcol leoy ....
1 atrl -bpe " -----........ ..........
CS.-•11 ... "414
,.,.. .. 11/R IQ, GA. ----
l11l1cr1p1r .....
--limo .... .._. ... , ...• ----
.... Clorb
t2M _ ........ au. .....
Moollal-•
toP71 . ,,.... __ _
-Joli.
°"""''' °""' .. '400 _ .. __ .. _
,,.. -~· <olcul-
...... Good ---
MEN
tt.kClolti
"''hr °"' ,... ---lllL tac...._. erterl, ~-...... w,,,.,
p.llhr
-I
I
_\
I
DAILY PILOT -· s.,t-10, 11161
SOMETHING NEW-SOMETHING DIFFERENT! 1 NOW!!
PI l 'O ·T P·E N Y P ·l-NCHER r==tWANT
'ADS 3· lines ·2 times $200 . DIAL -642-5678
Nortlt COllllly Toi FNe 5411-1220
Mt S.,: "CHARGE n1" S~•I ... ~ Reio In Spocl1I c1...i11 ....... Nolt .. -$lo ··
JOBS i. EMP. LDYMENT JOBS & EMPlOYMENT ME11CHANDISE FOR MERC:HANOISI FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FDR
t · SALE AND TRADE SALE AND" TRAD E <A LE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE
Help Wanted Help Wontld 00 1-F-'-""1-----8000--F-ur_n_ll-u-,.--.-. ...,-,8000-8000
Women
7400
Women
74 I iiiiuiimiiiitiiureiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I jjiiiiiiiiiiiiljijii;;;;;;m;;;iiiii~~·iiiiiiiiiliiiiiii
EXPERIENCE!>
Commtrtlal Ttl1•r
UN ITED CALI FORNIA
BANK
3029 Hsrbor Blvd.
Costa Mt11
5'46-2033
w AlTRES~ Decot,'ator · '.
Exp Over %1. R1celve1 cancell•tlon of $22AOO.OO
AppJy Spanish and Med lt1rren11n furniture
Flying Butler All Nft T•' 9•ef"Y h"4 N•"'" 673-0977 Mr. Zimmer A he.,...,., 0,.... H.-: 11 0 • Qi.,&.,
Items as follows : Gorgeous 8 ft. custom quilted
Jobs-Men, Worn. 7500 sofa ·with separate loose pillows with heavy oak
SHOE SALES
FREE TO YOU
FttEEI
Manufacturen' Beile !looting Cl•~ Offered to PubUC by Clearance! 81lbotl Pow ... Squedron e Wtt s.,W..., SW Startlna; 1 PM Mon. Sept. 16 e .._........,. .. Will"-t.t Nnrport HaJ'bor Yacht
MINIATURE Kitten, eight e ........ tfWllh Club 'l20 W, 81,y Ave., Nno-e c,.,i...., a.lfl port Beach. NO ADVANCE week&, grey :-uh pey e)'eS, • A-!-tf .. a.-.. REGISTRATION NECES-
't'e!l')' &mart and ,Jovtri1. also ..... ""'
'1 "' old Calleo mQlhu, FAC. T,.,.,Y., 2ND. s SARY, ENROLL AT~ 'f"" 6f6.8422 or fS'B.1856 1or lld't long-btired, needs lov!ng s.t.-s.,l. 14tll10.i,t '
...... 545-1818 919 ;lnlo:::;..·~~"=-~=-=:::;;;,! . An equal opportunity
employer
Experiem:~
Ladie1 Shoes
Exoelle:nt eommLu:ion & bene-
fits.
trim d,ecor and roatcWng chair, 3 matcWng oak
occas\onal tables, (2) 58" tall decorator lamps,
banging chain swag 1amps in Wrought iron, an
8-pieee king size master bedroom suite in pecan
paneled Mediterranean style with top quality
15 yr. warranty king size mattress & box springs.
ADORABLE 1 mo old fomslo • 10 A.M. -3 P .M. SCRAM-LETS .
COOKS
Apply In person
10 • ' Mon thru Fri
ROBINSON'S
FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
Spanish ile~or dining set, etc. ,
w..19 lloftefal •• Nt•I• S1l21AIO ~~:~~~;~1.~1~.1
........ --.. -.... --.. $698.00
A"' ""9 c.. a. hrdMIMll 11141,w .. u,
Term• AY•il•bl-N1w1:01t11" t• C1lifornl1
Crfflt ApprO"'.d lmm1cl11t1l7 r / J /] Furniture
Spanlel-Tm"• "'"'' no..i. SEA SUITS :v~= w/~e:r1 J::. 121 w. \8" St~ C.M. ANSWERS
497-1632 9/9 NEW Hoowr rug A: tloot
ORGANIC fertiltter, aged ~r A ICl'Ubber $'1'5; Pwnic:e-Cuard-Idiom -
horse manure comb In e d Bumper,pool w.ble $15; New Lazily -ZIP CODE
wtth wood llhavinp. Good 5x9 ovll Ka.ruUn rust area Small boy, !utenlnl hll
mulch. 833-5332 be-tween 8 Ir rug w/fringe $80; Stauffer snowauil! "I ~;t remeni>er
5 or StS-4931 afttt S 9/30 redudnc Unit:f75; Lge U4 my ZIP CODE.
WE"'oo-°"w"'lab.,.--,tn.,.--:;llhare=,-.... =I aca.Le race ut $20; 410 Shot 18' DORSET. Slpg 2, 40 hp
wealth. Two adorable male Gim.. sgle barrel fl(l; 9'6" Evinrude, ek!c start, bait
Greek surl!>oArd 115. -'°pl .... -· t,. kitten,,, trained, ready to go, Fabe~ ro~ grill whl 'trlr. 842-8713
for cn;'I'A MESA MEM·
ORIAL HOSPITAL. Pre-
fer experience in hospital
cooking. Excellent work-
ing coriditiona. S a I a r '/
commensurate with ex·
perience. Call
Mn. Dunlop 642-2734 ~p-0~1;-,.-0~1,-petc-~he-r-C"'l'"e-.rk-I 1844 Newport Boulev1rd, Coit1 Mesa (only)
. .t H•rlHw 1tY4:.
want l ovtnr: home•. MS-1290 540-4456 9/8 '68 BOSTON \\11.a.ter 13' $700.
~===~~~=~~=~~!:==!13% MO. old fmal•, port SWIMMING POOL .1:=-=======I e R.N. ReUef
Supervbor
• Nurses Aides
All Shifts
Apply in penon
Huntington .B11ch
Conv1l1sc;1nt Hospit11
18792 Delaware, H.B.
GIRi. FRIDAY
Haf'ldle all office functions
including · &C'OCUlting for
rap\dly growing ~
company. Expe!ience with
wide variety of wortc neces-
""'" Lido Castings, Inc.
735 Ohms Way, C.M.
642-8333 An oquol _,,
employer
GIRL FRIDAY
Part time. Scme experl-
en~ required. 60 w.p.m.
electric 1YPl"Wl'iter, 10-
key adder, good wtth fig-
\l!'el, Neo.t appearing $2.
hr. Send letter with ex·
perience to H.M.F., P.O.
Box 2ll5, Newport Beach
SECRETARY
renn.....t ......... Good
typing & shorthand skilll.
Mon-Fri.
612 TermlnaI Way, C.M.
6'2-1163
SAWLADY
Male or female (Open A: In-
temal) $474-$575 per month.
High achool graduate, one
Every night 'til 9 -Wed., Set. &.Sun. 'tll 6. German Shepherd, b a I f 1! Ft Pool Filter Su:Haee
,... clerical •"P''""""· JOBS & EMPLOYMENl type 40 w.p:m. Rotating -
alrlfts, excellent trlnge befle-Jobt--M•n, Wom. 7500
fits, rt•Jdenee not required.
Apply WMtroiruter City Hall NEW Mp:l't B!ue ,Dolphin
8200 Westminster Ave. bl!-Resb'. Needs comp' t
fore Sept. 2.0th. 1968. Phone waitresle8, but00y1, cooks.
8934511; ext. ~. Apply btwn 2-5 pm. Bob
Real Estate Hooter. 3356 Via IJdo, Npt
Beach
Major exparuilon otfera op-WANTED: day or evening
portunily for experienced beauty college students for
118.lesman or woman in new fall claMea. 34<62 La Ptaza,
homes or re.sale•. Business Dan.a. Paint. 1: -496-9436
is tenific! Repiies conflden·
tial. Agencies, Men &
H1I Plnchln & Assoc. Women 7550
39XI E. Coast Hwy. 675.c92
C.Ollie, just beautiful, very · Skimmer Mam~ Klt. S.llbolts 9010 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ~urnlture 1000 1 Pl1no1 & Or9•n1 1130 Jriendly. &44-ll79 919 FREE G~ Pad. 1;:.:;;:.;;:.:.._ _____ I
---------1 4 SIAMESE cau., l gt'ey & $149 II e NEW frbglJI Balboa. 20.
A • 1 u. i. • LOVELY oiled wolnut dln1ng Green Tag Sale -~ kltt ··~-& • -.ctabl• k..t. $3495. gen e1e , -n ""'· "'· =~~•te SECARD POOL e HOB~ r-r ea··-·-· W · 7550 .table w/cus::tom pads, 6 1 _, ~·-·• 215 ----A ~~ --omen Sept brings this amous -..e u-~ £u.:il\.W tt., 323 s. Main, ·er.np boards $1095 chain & match 2 pee brffk. of fine planoa 1 organs. N.B. 642·2931 9/9 53Z-l992 No center esi H ·
Hair St'(list
Following preferred but not
neocessary, quailll.ed to work
tn hlgh grade BeaUty StudJo.
Offers permanent w or k,
pleasant environment. Gopd
cortlPfU1Y bentfits. Apply:
BUFFUMS'
Fashion Island
Newport Be1ch
~ ~ = ~ headd Every Plano & organ marked BEAUT. Yg. adult. female &: , ' Cap'n Eda'. 2200 wy
Bdnn llU!I< ol ~· In .,_, caniH _., molo cat., unumal rolom; * AUCTION * NEW BALBOA 20' 'attrac en-to 30'1{, The best deals are will alter, spay to iood AD:fiberg\us, complete with
taJ furn. &M-1361. always at: homes aJao kittens. 897-548 . U )'OU w1ll. sell or; bU7 ails & trlr. Sleeps 4. Heed
COMPLETE BR· set, heed-WJJU>'S BALDWIN STUDIO A ~7096 sno give W'md)' a try .A extras. ~ b)' app'l
board, 2 commodes, 12 1801 Newport, c .M, 642-8484 Auctions FrkiR.Y 7:30 p.m.. · $3100. 673-'7498
dr 3 LOVABLE gry tiger ''-r. d • A ct'. 8 awer dresser, uh wood striped kitten& & 1 wht kit-,., 1n y s u ion arn 25, F/G Sloop, A-1 (:ond.
$75. 545-~ Hammond Spinet organ ten 7 wk:s old. Mmber, Behind Tony't Bldg. Mat'l Fully equip·~ Must aelL
ALMOST new 16 cu ft. Philco w/percussion, reverb A Siamese 6.'.U-7942 after 5 2075% ,Newwrt, CM 646-8686 Bargain! Low dn. 615-1393
RelH&', kiog li2e bed set, 1 repeat. Save $225. p.m. 9/12 Put yoWae1t tn our PWl.ce 36' YAWL
Ri·•·ria -r •-•-~·1 Used .nlnet piano, $~. _ _, ......
¥><: av a u.:u:., ....., ea, SCHMIDr-PHILlJPS CO, f MO Female, halt-mill. Harbor Blvu 0-1 !ueatre· $7,99S or trade far
lamp&, liv. nn pieces. Collie, half poodle. bas 3700 McFadden, S.A. power boat. MB-3865
Reasona ble, 1314 S. lOO'T~~:mAn: 20th shots, Joves children _SWAP MEET CAL25,2yrs.old;xlntcood.
&yfront, Bal. Isl. 673-6162 646-,2395 9112 M.an,y extrf.I• S't,250
MBI & WOMEN newport . Office Furniture 8010 •WANTEDTOBUYPIANO 5-5WKoldldtt .... G,ey& Starts Aug.17 •49<-6351 • """""'"°"'· .,., Baking. p8fS000Bi --------I In '!Un•. undor $100. <;all whit•, port manx. Tallit o1 Sn-1172 att 1 10' SAllOT ...i .. , IB' mut.
COOK
No smoking on campus Over 11 Used Office Furniture 962-4751, v a-r Io u • 1 en it h s. GOLF clubs Spaulding Exe. 2 cu.shkm. Tilt trailer. $150
See Food Il""'"'' Part & fQll nme ... ag ency DESKS -m Wood . 93 Si.el YAMAHA Cooaolo llal. Prov. 642-4148 9/10 Antiqued dining tabl• & "' olfu. r.48-1639
..., So. Ci lif. C~legeM 5-..lflc Need. s For: 833 Dover Dr., N.B. "L" units walnut. Less than 1 yr old. WANT Good borne for lovely chairs $115. Teak comole 36, YAWL
.w2S Newport BJvu., C. ' ,.--· 642-3870 549-2743 CHAIRS, 200 Ex.ec. or Secty $595. 545-6889 Seal Point Siamese cat, ~ w/AM·FM.. $ l S 5 · i7,995 or trade ~
HELP WANTED Car Wash Help . nLEs. s1anwd "' F',. WURLITZER sp1no1. p<rloct 1.ma1.. "'""•· ..,...,,., "°"'" boat. 54Sm5 REAL ESTA TE School•ln1trvdlon 7600 l'>'oo! rot>dltioo.1395. 6'6-<1211 .,,.. only 9/12 UPHOlSl'ERING -f19.50, 2 NEW Boat""'"""· M"" toll
SALESPEOPLE Drivel'Has Men MeMAHAN DESK, Inc. KNABE °"""'''· good .,... • YARDS eo ...... wuhed pc. (Ew-opoon ... -•• , ... O>allenge' In ldeal lllp. 1930 S. Anaheim Blvd. di $-4 sand. You haul away. 19522 Free est, del, pickup, 215 644-0895 64+-03S2 """'""'""'newly llconaed • h/Defa'I M newport 712-8450 """· 95. 6'6-<1211 Tm>ton Lano. Huntlngtoo M•in. llB "Berny" ~ "'
can Mr. Daly 847-SS Polis I en school of <Nr Katella oft S.A. Frwy.) Television 8205 Bead!. 540-0870 9/12 68 SOLID state stereo COO· Power Cruisers 9020
R..x L Hodges Re1lty DOG& Mo's. female CoJ.. IO!e. Diamond gtylus, 4i ·..:..~-------1
COUPLE, middle ago!, night Cashier & Hostess 'business G~rege Sile 8022 RENT llo/Shop. Hu '"""· Quiet .,....i. 11>: 12 wook!y. "'" 28' TROJAN. 1966, -"··
attendent in Kermel, House . 833 D D N a -·~-SU-PER____ q, Prefer family with home trial. 642-1403 •I• fllJfy" equipped, 18.C
free, also p/time day work Girl Friday over r., • • HOUSEHOLJ> SALE! Color TV yard. 4.94..&684 9/10 KIRBY Vacuum cleaner & $8500. Prl partY MS-79'7&
dressiBg pheuanta at Hun-646.0153 Maple cooch &: chair &: ac-$9 PER MO FR.EE To good home. Blk. attachments. Pymntsof$7.00 25' OWENS CAB CRUISER
ting aw. 8.\7.Q522 Top salaries. growth eom· MIS8 WrlR:bt'a. rite, to type cessories. Stove $35 Hope ' 1% yr dd female, min. poo-~mo or $49.lU cub. Credit Xlnt cond. L<>e.dedl Sac! ARTISTS pany, inultl-locatioo&. write right before school. chest $5 Whitt chest of RENTAL CAN APPLY TO dle. X1Dt with children. Dipt. 535-7289 547_n03, fi75.-60(I eves.
Need good paintinp Metro-Ca1ifomia Instant learnina:. Oillcoat drawers $3 B&I> power band PURCHASE 531-8958 9/12 HAMl!.TON Painting, 1:iest1;::::;::::::;::':::=:::::::;:=,:I
IO-Les.son Typing SChool. &aw 7%." SUNDAY aft ll til ORDER BY PHONE. KITTENS _ Free to loving early pericid $150 Frigidaire Sneed Ski Bolts 9030 ~;" = Bu~nna~h~;:~• L~'"=D~el~M-"_· _CM_r.48-_285~'-everythin1 llOld. 549-0721 548-8511 homt. {4.) 10 wk. old !4l 7 $45 N" stereo tape de;ck S50 :.i:;..:;
WA 1TRE 5 SES, Cook.a, Costa Mesa 546-3191 MUSIC Lead'IS, your home, MOVING to Oregon! Mwt 9=AM=ln~9~P_M-=.....--c'c-llo.Y-._s 1 wk. old. S1lort hair-But M2-5815. CUSTOM BUllT
'"···'--_1 •• .1......1.. by pro(eu. w/degree. All Sell! Hollywd beda .·TV • COLOR TV. RL.A d!.us!J, pretty.S38.J797 9/10 Mi W ~• 8610 ..,...,.,,,, exper . ..,...,. ~ band instrume::its. Phone Lam-• Books -O:le9ta -sc, an,_ derb' d Drapes, giftB & bath 6C'C@I. in between U PM· ARGUS .-old mahogany case. New BEAUTIFUL bee.1th)' pupplesl-~.cc..==----'I lbun IF
sorle Exp pmion ' Mr Walden 536-3fli3 Deek • Game11. Mi9C. Low ahtolutely waiTanted best eed d lo · • W • HO~~~~.~ Kenny's Rest. 305Cl E. Coast Gen'l Office ........ St. $350 • Prices! 20046 Acacia. Back color tube, high brlghtnesl. ~othert:.~ La~~· AHJED ''Formula 233''
Hwy, CdM SecretarY •••••••• ,, St. $450 MERCHANDISE FOR: of Tic-Toe Mkt, car ~ $250. 457_8 Westminster, gm " This 23, all glass tteep.V bull
l.".:'Il'Vln_e_._N_.B_._'42""'2 ____ MEN Or WOMEN for auto Asst Bkkppr •••• J •• St. $346 SALE AND TRADE &: Palisades Rd. 546-4258 Newport Hghts. :l blkl I;-;,=-::;,.,,.-,.,-,.,-=-:: Furnltur--.-Appll1ncH bas America's most tamous
NURS&5 AldH, experlenc::e de ta 11 shop. Experience Receptloo.ist ••••••••••• • $350 below l5th St. _64&-&n5 USED Washer need.I minor Color TVs-Pianos rictng de!ign. It'• rough wa-
preferred. 7-3:30 & 11-7:30. helpful but not necessa.ry Mgmt trainee .......... $400 1F;u:;r;:n:;;lt;u;:r•:;=::;::::;:::;:';:OOO= Appllinces 8100 I:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: I repair. 426 San Bemanilno ETC. ter tested and proven. SAF·
Park L 1d 0 O:mval~ent call M2-4615 Engineer. mech. ..... $1,oo.> l: -HI -Fl & Stereo 8210 Ave, Ne'N'PO('t Bee.ch. 9111 Cash .In. t/2 Hour EST SKI BOAT DESIGN.
center 466 Fiagsrup Rood WANTED: ~ or evening Esµmator •••••• _. • .-.: ••• $700 SPANISH" 8' sofa&: !w,Jove e VACUUMS e ---------IRED D.o?tte .. Terrier 5 ma, . _ 541 ... 531 BERKELEY JET
Ne"l'lpOrt Beach. ~ beauty cclteg students for Sales &tMf ·•••••••••C•• ·.. aeat. ·Mosa gm, ed SiO up. Repairs & par&. Stereo • db: conJOle 1968 female, adores children. Powered by a 450 H.P. A.f!ro
Call !l-5 fall classes ~La Plaza Cook ••••••••••••••• to~.00 velvet. Never ueed. Mfs'• Reasonable. Cout Vacuum IOUd state wtth 4 speed 642-1882 WIDOW needa Br, Fum!ture. Marine. 0taaes at 4S , , .
HOUSEl<EEPrn for work-Dana Potnl 1: 496-9436 ' Dishwa.sher/Waltreu • $1.&5 cost. 644-263'1 333 E l7th, CM, 642-1560 changer. Left en Jay-a-FEMALE Kittens, p 8 r 1 AW> misie., cha.In, ,tables, No more long, alaw boet
ing mother; t school dl!ld; 1 co=UPL=E~.----=35-1~0-,· IForeman trne .......... $1.70 SIMMONS Firm mattrress & R.EFRIG. GE 14. cu, ft. 2 dr., way. Pay bal of $78. or Manx. 1 ihort tall. Balboa etc. Call 847-ms trips to the &hini: groUnds
2 yr, old. 5 Daya wk . 7:30 To janitorial work eves. Mon Welder ren.1 ···•· ••••• it.SO box iprings, complete $50. freezer top, bmrlze, 2 yrs small pymnts. Credit Dept Pt. 61J.896.1 9/10 PF.TS •nd LIVESTOCK -yes, thla beaut}' will make
5. Green Valley, nr. Slater & thru U1ed S tlrnea. 64.2-3462 old, new c«id. $150. 642-3462 • 535-728) • FEMALE curly cuddly 1Ai an id.eel, htgh-apeed sport
Broo khurst. Own tr an 1 . BLUE ~:~B~~~=~ A~~~~L~J~~T •-c~.-,~h~f-or~F-u-rn-.,-.-p-p~ll~. 1625 Irvine Apt S C.M. MUST Sell G. E. Stereo l yr poodle puppy, btack. Loves C•ts U20 fisher or plee.rure boe.t.
968-3642 Cook, 4-l2 pm $30. per ahlft IDl3 Westd.ltt, N.B. 548-17'96 & tools. 642-7015154.2-6974 USED Hotpoint refrigerator, old. Xllit cond, new diamond kid!. Phone 615-4648 9112 TOP Quality BLUEPOINT H•s all the Extras
S e cretary /rece'ptionUt & up Waitress eves, 1624 E. 11th St, S.A. 547-6338 White elepbantl! Dtme·•·linl! excellent condition. $40. needle. Best Ofit'l' 549-25S4 MALE · trlped kkt 3 HIMALAY~ k It tens Includlng SIS radio, 4 gpeek·
Good typing sldlle, filing, 675-()1))4 bet 6 & 8 PM only MARANTZ 18 Dual 1019 Shur mDll. :~er.' au 1 h 0 ~ s . German • Am mean • E~-er atereo system and~ w=
mimeographing, confidence Schools-Instruction 7600Schools-ln1truction 7600Schools-ln1tructlon 7600 V15 Antema S>'$tcm, rotor 962-5039 9/U llsh blood-llne. Ma.In, femaJ-CUBtom ~~-equ~ cl
...l.....-~-""...i 111 Antiq•..., 8110 Ect. 4 mo. old $800. 613-1151 es, pa,.,_.&: shots 494-6459 the surge an&Ae. en os-on.,....,.""'.'""""&-'>'• 0 ce. ·::;=.:c-:.:...·-----1-========== BLACK Male cat, Siamese .,...,, · edcabinsleepe2andi.scom-494-9431 -•
BAYS11TER ..... 1 _ _, ,_ ANTIQUES: Roll • top desk Hobby Supplies 8400 CT), 4-6 mo. old. 842-5858 , Dogs 8825 plete w\th hefld. She'a ready
""'' "" ,..,. with s-.Roll; Gra.nd!athef -~-~----• 9110 . , . AD she nttds ii a ~
mediately. Own trans. my clock; Secttta.r.r'I. b a 11 COIN ~ect:Son b' sale. Liit 2 YR Male Collie-Shepherd. WIRE Fox Terrier. AKC. per.
home 5 days wk. l children trees, bow trmt china cab., al coms by writing P. O. Hu .bots. Peppy • friendly, From chM"tp4.on irtock. ~2-4321 Ext. 240, Days
1 !Chi age altertlQOnl. wal nut d1ninl tbl.e., 6 Box 172, Capi!Jtrano Beach. Nieedsacn!'lge.4M-El6849/10 5-l3-23Sl 644.1742 Eve1.
548-7!!09 chain A buffet. heavily Appt for viewing, "96-t47s. OLD English Sh &g AK VACATION Special'
SEAMSTRESSES carved; lots cl goocHes! Bids a~ til Sept 21 = i!!~~ =~ ~~ 10 mo. old s.250, ~ gd home. 1966 cru Craft 17' ~>ed bolt
Exper, for fruit growing worn-Hlway U$!d Fumlturl!, 7401 8500 646-S971 9110 1'1lll Marken Lrt H.B. 65 vw IUilf'OOf Ask $1,000
en's sportswear mfg. Groovy Wel t m In 1 t er Blvd Sporting Goods Cllev VI inboard to
place to worl< pha good-·. WANT A "BRIGHT FUTURE" CAREER? Wesmwtor ll9l-J6&' -'--=------PART Black Cockapoo A 2 STAND 1'>odle """'''" M"'t . eng. ••-.oll ~ ::======::=: I Four boll Pentan klttem. 1986 "" 1mme<1. l20 • 125. 1nu hn. orlglna.1 -ra~ • 1810 Monrovia, Of. N pl A CM 9/lo Marken La. Hunt. Bch.. 1eath@r int. Ski bar mounted
WAITRESSES. """"·' oll ... Unn.nilJ CGtttputi'I CGmpanfs T1JlAl COllCUT Ctlll1tl Sewing M1chlne1 1120 McGregor ' ' vo., · · • 1n .. g1n, • plus bnnd n•w
ahltts. ApP!y 3 to 6 PM ilt computer procnmrnin( ts llCl'I. affnl lt tlll te'Wll W d 3 MALE mlxed Olibuahua -c.oiemM camping outfit.
Ken's Coffee Shop public for the first time. ft offers: SINGER Slant.0.Matic. the 00 I puppies. 3 wks, old. Small le Horns 1130 0.11 terit _ 3 way coov.
2273 Harbor, C.OSta Mesa Traininc that qua\ifies JOI tOr wort l'ifti mt Glib: 1111 !.>Ht. <I. ~ Singer dgup. For Sa I e. Matched, very cute. ~5894 9/9 LARGE 4 yr Appy-wellh cooltt. 2 gal snow Hte Ju&: -
( HOUSEKEEPER. We need a compvtm but thosa .... '1 UNIVAC, lllr.,..U, COltrll' = ~km~ ~.!.i~~ D3 Sti!f Shaft. Les!N UUSH Settrr pup beaut. mall! mare pon,y. Gentle, Peet 3 burner camp •tove -
i mother 2 •mall ch.ildren. bata.1ftd athen. to anyone willlrv to PftY off than 1 year old. 08. 5 mos. an sbota &. lie. dlspositfon. FiM fur little tantttn 300 watta -2 lie~ ~ Boa.rd & room + 874-5012 7· Traillilll thlt prepwes JOI fir wt a I pnJTIMW II the acct beJ t1 $86. $8 mo 1. 2. 3 and 4. 115 each -549-0513 9/9 cblldntn. $250. 53&-7738 tng b&p -all for $3295.00 i t PM loot one llfOIT1!t\nU'I "II~ Ml 1111 llnl HI O.K. with·--~""'" . Phone 5'48-0157 2 MA'IT!U&ES & oprinp~u n• h 100 'll>fln11nclng O .A.C.
"' _ _. ... ~ _,....,."" _,__ .......i nd. ...... , .,."" v......,uni., Short al red 675-2lf7 (private pvty) Y Disbwa.aher wanted, common,, -"1 -nes& • or will diaeount for cub. SUCBA ~ar; Healtbway9 "'""""• •""" co ~ pofnter pups, AKC. cbarn-1 .:.~~"=-""'~'"'-=,.-I
Tr>iftinr it '"""' will ... itBI -... n "'" -DellV«Y, IMtru<tloo A lung 135; ,..W.tw $30; '21 E. """· Balboa •11• pion ltn.. '121 .1 ....... CdM 17-FT. FIBERGLASS
\oes """'-Nb r o o m ,
-• SIS .;t. l£l.<Ml5 """-.... ... ~'JOOll .,.., "'
-·--~103tl
puter but the Ide If I larrt all -.nr cwipla widl guaranttt tnc. P A J Al~ pre~ pup $'5. Sell/tet J ADORABLE Kittens, b01: A 675-2868 17 • ft. perform.et', l.i.e.nder ~pnlll'I!'" 4olbn 1JIOrth If llOdlrl d.atl pc.... cy, 49t--311'J8. 9 am to 9 pm 64l-6810 -;:1890 Wk:o, S m ~ CiJStOM Made wftltem sad. =et:n ... ~~:
Tr>illi~off"" '"tits -dlwiliao ti I finl SURFBOARD .. r· Jacob&. 3 ==-=,,,.._,,=-=I die. No """"""' w\do U... bl& wheel tr.11« a custom .., Muslul lnrt. 1125 mahoe strtncen. mali>1 tan PART Poodt~ Shef'P dos $400 er belt t:lftt. cau --p .. _ f . _ ft..I~ ......
-.$. ... -.,.m1aoa .... ff Ila wld's bl ock -Sba Xlnt --_ .. """" <~ ·~
lorpst. -""""' .,.,,., .. cilttpulll .-ELECTRIC ""'"'" eon con1 <OM.' 831>19GI • """"'"' " "°"' homes. oey11m, ..,...., quid< '"'' ie;o. ·-.. ..,_
orp niatioo. l<'S; -12$. Bo<h A-1 ======== ~ AKC, lrilh "'""'· ail lhou '9CIO alt" 7o00 p.m. wi.o "' malt,_ lmporbol _ tlomloo, h _,JOI condltloo. 54M355 Ml1«<lleneo111 1600 MALE ,...., .. ,,. dog. Vic tn!ned, 1 YI' old.. l lOO. MUil' SELL!
dtoose U. mt seun:a ti ,,..,.,z. nlli;lll, f• ._. --------Santa Tomu. C.M. 6'2-0'llS 540--033S aU 6 PM '67 Glaspu IT w/Merc crub-
hll-aQ or wrilt: Pl1noo i. Orgeno 8130 BU< Mat. cock .. -poo. >% '!WO male "1>blu w/...., TRANSPORTATION "1'0. Pwer Ult a eovtt a
UNIVERSITY COMPUTING COMPAi'( m ... -... .,.,,. Gnat Al l,c"'Jhou ... -""" zi ..... trail .... """"· SALE pot "" doltlm. ......... "' OOCAR nm. 6 In ....... Mu.t Boats .. Yechh 9000 ~ -rD Aaldemy of Pl•-Orgen1 EXTRA ..... table ...... hi.Ye ·-5'1>1829 919 ••M~-n ... _ on ·-· BNUT!FUL -bo' t . jr llllll c I' c-allr T ....... ol_ D~·ut -~---u.. ~u---· -~ --· ·-""'• ~· ••• 'w""'"".u-~~-'--Bralld new but wnm& """""! 5 YUCCA plaota. You 41a; <>wel'll w Q:btn Oubtr ~mcnt. Men:ury 1000 ~w~~ T-, Ulllorl 8MI ....,... 0.--, C..llt. fHll ,..,_ ~-,_...,... ~ fi&bU 546-5392 .__ 1-.,,.., s-~i-.. n --... $634, Wiatltur orpm, ~ .._.... '"' ..,~ Yadlt. T'Wtn 225 H.P. VI ~·-at -r:nvate ~s;.. .. • /tl =lft.."'181'lt'Wl/J,.,eotg,..'n -!>om in( SEP!1. Wailpapor Sale! 1/3 4 Kl1'l'ENS, s .. t. 1 tabby, on-"'-6, aolJd PutY ~ at -
• --· couw. SAW: m olf, want ... PA!nt n• w. """ tJalnad. -9112 -·-. ,,...ltlnc bet· SKI -~ 1'' 01._. 40 Rtl1st« for ddldrln'I P""'° 16th St. Of. 84'l-511$ OON''T JUST WlSH fm .._. tom I: Ilda. AU ttak deck.. HP EYlnnJde mtr., ifss .
......,.. • 1 WHEEL-· ,,.,.,,.... q . 11111 loo&!d. Only :ril -trotter. -
WAIJ.JalS lllUSIC crrr -· -"""'' UIH, lltlna lo -,..... llDm< hctom. Call "-Mtlllr 16' MAGNO 15 l!P .M ·-•--~~ hltdt, '68 H..,_. 5.l!UO • • • .11114 .......... Ot ... 546-1211Cl ~"---· -V ""-· ----d ........... _.. ~..... ..1UOIA-, t"'. •t1 <blta Meta * G«)..ltfl CBARGE m Q"I ~ A.-Di.al 6C.56"TI for RErul.11 Sood COlld. $1(0). 541)....GU
... Mr ...
I •
----· ---------------~--·---------
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSl'OlTATION TR.ANSPORTATIOll. TRANSPOllTATICIM
Morine E'ulp. fCQS ~·'!?! ._ HG0 ll!lf!Or!M A-MOii ~ Con 9'00 ~ c.,. t tM
HP ,.,.. fj ..... Co*• ... ._ VOU<SWA... CA.DI.LAC UN~OU• w I t "'• k • New baltl We ,., ._. b _, n,.t ....;...:;.;;:.;..;.;.;.;..;..;..;;.;.;...1.-..;;.:;..::;.::;;:;;.;.;;__I _....;;:.;.;.;;.;;.;;-._.I
O.erh&ulc<I. A·l -$150. ...-ti -· -'IT VW wtlla --"6 c..111111. Vlllo * GO cnmMmn'.W
IG.1391 ---""•"""'" rtms..-illb' .... -l'loolllr ftlll • AM.nl ----,.. LARGEc.na..un.1416 ...... 1:1.MOJfl: 4ulo, All/ft!, - --/-. llld - ---"' n. Butier + Ocwo, lib MOI'Olta, .. .a.cb Bhd. pop wt IW" wtlda• •SW. .._ wll .... -., dM' lB ..... ~ -·-w--... --. _ ... _ -Ml~luno7.
WAK'!ll>, bmaJl -MAKE GB;, '11 9W ii .... &bliUC. 4i ..... ----..-""....,."' -l:ATSUN .......... -. ..... __ a. .. -""'_.....,.llC>W_
U ........... .L.n... ·--lordww""-.Goodw-. .. ---a_. preOWMd (ud oesn-1==-=-=·=-==-==·· '65 DATSUN Call ..., ~ ,,., 1'111 -Hi'" • dalodl -1111 • • •
loltSllp-"f 9056 Sportl'tckqp.XllolConcl.S15 ~ WCAD"-1-.000ll ::=:tt::::
PARTY to are ~en c:ub deb or wll .._ ....,, W VW Dehlat. Doll.'t mill CIODd-Zqult w/ wt r •• llSI CXlftlNJ2CTAL •• $1815
weekly tripe.; will tHdl .o,. Pymta $32.86 -. l>l', Ole. om cne. No don1 OAC ncb. s.t ott.•..... ,mmKDft'AL , , UM
.... 6411-1*11 ""'9!'13, -Ill u. =-oal7 Pll ... .... Ill ... lot ... -Blvd.
'C:;:,;!! . 90H MERCEDES llNZ ":;.~ ~: -~ •=~Al.A JOH:.se~.~ON
1-=="---='-' 11111 <le· im. •lip· 11'5. 1115 aa:v. v.a •'SIJPD llll =.. "':._ •• BLUEWA'l'i:Rawm:RS ... , ... mo E¥s. Sl'OR1"' HDTOPCPE.-. o:;:.:;:::;:;..;:;;;;.......;;;;..;;;o.;1
71'411 U-Driw -.... .. vw -radio, wood .. Glide, ""'· ...... , 11111. u.i c... ..
o.,1w11. -,. ... wllooL -...... Xlnt .... ""' ... ....., ---cu1Y PARTY to lhare eqe.., • c:aad. w/ pluh bl.Ide~ ...._
weekty trips: wtll _. *Ilia.em * 8e&t biter. plus ·tnnd MW ~ ,f,\Dr. HT.
-.llillg. ~· Sloq>. &M-m. ._. VW ._ -. BH.u.lifui w/Wlll Urte.Aa&rtJDCIDO' Good W.,ar. p • Mlt
-lllL .... OAC ""1' In the Jot -U.I. -· -Bolh Wonted 9050 ''IT=....,::::::;:::o=,=a== .. ==, =.,= .. • ......,,, ""1 $11""' _ No. 1=11115 ,.:<ii5U1lli Tne ti Pi /
WANl'!D Uood 25 -11 ft. W C Dr. °"" .. ~ llMIU ht -lot "' --. n, MB, CIA -.a-~ ~ o. ea. m. :.!:':',°""TV, ~n;::"::'°10~ JOHNSON Ir SONI~·=•::••=-----•
230 SL MERCE»ES ... l'a1m<nlo mi11141 ptr mo. ~ . MUSTANG '
Mobllo Homos 9200 llMilS Oolta ..._ -• _, ... r.:::===::..-...;.;:::.:: Hr, conv. air, -vw ....__.,.,.. .. e..-""'1....,. DO. Hubar Bhd. 6G-',~ DA1.v" 19~ J: 45 ft. Double WJde 6"-1486 VI Lia-..--...... ,...,.
"""""-,.. ,. 1n adult and ,.... 1ooe. No .... OAC. "' a. Camino a.ooo ml.. no .;... "'4 liolll ,. 8od
pui<. Read> to -ta. MG ,..,_ mil1 l"9 ,.. o.... • -. ·""' ., ""4olt ll'• ,.. "" llu •
lnclud.. Hfillon.tecl • mo. -... ""· J.Wni .......... __ • -
condtticmlna:, dllhwuber '68 Ml!!.. 'A VW, ~ esla••llt • Radl.a! tirftl pr .. pb, tinted allllatmUer~ i
landacaplng, -"'"° ,. --....., _,, -129115 """110 t!OH · awnlop , -· n, w YEAR END coco..-, ..dlo. Xlllt CUld. ·es IMPALA SO>, t dr. l'lel. cu -.a• .... J'Q.
carpet. lined drape&. Serial Cl ra e MS--OnO or 548..(ffl5 air, full pwr., MW UNI • .... u -.. Pl• ... No.8-6113.Nl·trle<"""' ea ftC v vw, """'1t -·now polnt, ... 1 ....S. 11111 moO.A.C.
Call Dual Wide -" AND ................ .,.,,... -..... -. ELMORE ~~~ Mobile Iae . DEMO SALE · ~•!DID"':: ~~··:::,: ~
.,. TRAILER. .,....._ Ja. Dvno ._ lulW... "'"· 11b41S 10YOTA
bath. Some fum. $1,200. Ke1 SEE U! TODAY! 1111 tmdclld-w. s.om mi 13 IMPALA Wp. v~ i Pb. .....
at ol!ice, Onn&• Cout fllfo• L•1,,:1 Cmnplete ~!Itta A --m, PS, PB. Do IDJO -lltfd., ,.._
tniler Lodge, 1684 Whittler WH WllO dlo. Omlder -113><1812 cond. -id * ·~• iitifiANGa Blvd, C.M. 'OI IMP"• ~. -....,,...,,.., -~·· (0._°""""_ .....
HOMES -11 9T\ll\l'1 VOLVO eond·auto·p/~--• 1Netu4dnwmib.-MOTOR ... dlllerenUa1.B>llll11t&,.. .._trad..tno.)
1111 Hartlor, C.ll. .._.. * 'flS "EL CAMINO" • llUITANG V-1 WT, pw MG '68 VOLVO ~~ .. ":'p".t .. ~.liiii·v'.i:·~
S.lot. S.IVIOI, Porto YE.Ail END -por. -· Ml, ,,. ...................... 11'1111
Omlplft -MG -""7 Clearance ....... __ ..... llllftA!fG v ... "G'I"
In& blue. W/--OOllV. -..... -... the -........ Amodoa AHD ltr&lo -11. X1nt eond.-. W llUSl'ANO V.f, /AT.
Hen Now! DEMO SALE .. u "AJMlOND.• ...... 111111 N1wport lmporh Ltd. ONLY 11B951 Ill -lot "' -Bhd.
l-==A=-==M=G=lloal=or= Lfll1W OIOla M .. -IN! -lltfd. IG-'ltltlO
PORSCHE ~ 1911 -"'"" IG-'ltltlO .. CJ;lNV •• V.& J ...i
_::~!.:1111 tt:'"'. ""it·-·· JC>ii~EO'N JO:J_~.;LoN
-------1 OWNER 'Ill 01en11e IOO. C -Xia! cm!. lt/H. Motor!'lclos 9300 !WI PORSCHE 1112 Tup. 5 --. c.M. ""30S ,.., auto, PS. Maire .-. Would -11.4115 "'drlr lot.
1 pd, A II· FM r a d to, VOLVO 'a -f dr. out.tin-IG6lm. Pr1 Jl'V 1 owner. 'l'nn.r.
Tr1ll llb 11,.11n ltereotape,mqwheelt, din&. MW tin out. radio, 10WNDl'85Cbewlle300.f "4. $ll25. MUil ••Ill
• 2. Yamaha 100 -$350 a Polr.lrtd. Immaculate. Bell tlrel $1)15. pm. J*'C7. dr, auto, PS. Xlnt CllDd. .ii&!>-C-::Wl:==.-:=-=-~11
• ~ • Hmda 00 -SDI "'· alfe, over $4,400. "2-1141. 962--281'J Make ofter. IC-6802 .. lfUl'llMfO i+J .._.
All oo1y 2 IDOi old, with lea bid: ---~ . than 400 mi. Look Br&J!d ext 63. Aak fat Mr. Nelton. '61 Qevy Statkm Wl&On . , mfml.
new! Pri ...... -.. 6T3-34QI '68 BLUE .Poncbe 912, .no, Sport (lf'I '610 t cy1 eood a:indibl. ior. 28 VI w/4 bunt cuti. _.. ~ -....1. AM/FM radio 5 sai * S1U'r92 f mp. Ex. cc:iDd. New tlrel. '67 HONDA 450 ~: ... ,~ ' '57 CORVE'ITE 213 auto, ' $1385 ot all.flt. stS-2:128
1oeo, Ioli cl chn>me ........... : lo mi. 96>-&392 dnlted. Maloe oll<r 3221 l9&ll OIEV C....., r.....,. ,;;;::._;:~:::.;==..-I ~P flake ps tank. Uk~ '59 PORSCHE ltlOO Super, Q:ikndo PL c.M. 545-mlT alr, pwr. brakes, auto tn.na. U6T llUSTAN(I, I d)', S IPlf.
new. !Sii! "' take o1 ..,.._ .,,..,.. Immaculate condl--X111t -. OIOO. 15-1312 ~· "mo ""4 color. Tot>
mIM9 don. * ........,_ A-W1-'700 'II bliV -0.,.0. -cq -· l1llG. ====;:;...-=~1 AJC. 11,000 -Pr! -=-;::;;;;;•~~=--1 1967 SUZUKI '60 NORMAL, .... eond., WE PAY II.too. 111-'--.. MlllfANO, JOO ...... Scrambler 250 cc X-6. EX.. wht. ~/ red mt .IDX>/ a&. .....,,, _ ~.., ._ tnm. l:locbt
-.1 u-611 fer. MS-TSIO, rn.-m:i :1 ... -~ •-~ N:;, .. r~;;.... ro· p DOLLAR CONTINENTAL ._, --. """
6<&-4032 RENAULT 1115 , llll. · taL ;"'Kt:"~"';' u.o1y •.
'65 ROYAL :!»ll•ld: 6,000 R»IAUl.T Dqlllll •• • FOR Lea ..... -=:·:.... ·-Rall, -"'"· q . m1e1; Idol ....S. low -radio, tlros, -' · Y-. -ll'lW3GI New":=·::-::... dloo -· Ulo! nw • .,.,.,.,. USED CARS COlYAll I; OLDSMOllLI
awned • -,..... 11'11 ToYoTA c-· omom . . .. Ol.Dtl .. ' dr -· 5'Mllf Bm, d S PM """llfolo 'IZ IDRV--. 4 ...i, -• -jult -=~:a: TOYOTA :a--. ~-..i~~~:.::G·l'lnl.,..
842-16:13 H!:AIJQUARTEllS • ·°"'"'""''""M-=---'14'-_m_ 2391 -Dr. N.B. '113 OUlS ... blue ...... .... ~:zim -· xlnt -.. ELMORE WE PAcY A .. s· H. 1:1-~ ~ ::: = ~~ ....... """
.,._"'8 . , . dldalo lor lboe ...... .><ab ·ac Oi1iiiO Fe>" -.... .. 1~------.-1153IXI Beadl Blvd.,· Wltmnltr .... ,. ---.
,. -l!tadon ...... Plmo --• ---· pl~ Ill, Ml,
(:IHDI ... to -·· lor ... -A lnldlo loll a.EAN 'a ...,_ '°""'' ti-...io. -Good -. -'66 TOYOTA . oo11ai"'1roe _.._ ...., ;a. --• 1llO OLD1 • ... -..,
'88 YAMAHA I), XlDt cm-
dUlon. -...... $1!11. ........
GROTH OIEYIOlfT PM • -l'I Wb ·-~~--":.-DODGI ""im . ....w ~ _ __..:;;:.;;..:;;:_ __
1
oo owe ns cs. Auto, .,..
llmltlllc"" -1114 ~• ~-Xlol eond.1111111 -or ll!OO III Nm ,, • ...,::'°"::.~ ~ IOO .....,, IG.7111
·---.. -aea.tl -WIR Illy Cowie-. k-. PLYMOUTH OrtatDll ...... -1-..;;..=;.;.;.;...;...;;.._ r-v.-....,,. -Allor •Plue-an 4.-IPDD
11lu ... H • "" • dollan. l'lld .., SN LISTS 'Ill BUI.TAO) PUIWllG, ..... • .... CIA Rali* EDSIL CIA -~-11 TtW. -attor. 67)-1190 HIGH PIRl'OAMANCI ~·-Sff after c PM WILi. ,.,.. ,.. tobrd wtllo 11 m. Go» <XIII>. CUSTOM CAU
'5l B.u. -dirt. Ziii 1112 E. lllh st., 0... M-complet<IY ttblt ... ·-e .::. e l..UW~ ~ Df
-1125. fl4l..l5CI ~ 111 t white, -u -Valllo, ll,000. Ill-WI ' S.llcl\ld Allte ,
""""'· lur ...... all -·-ea11 Oii&lid 3U> SUPDUIAWE, ...,....., X eond. 11400. ""'1SC IC-......_ auto trw FALCON C1llter
1 """" ..... "°" llnD. OMh -l30ll --. 1117-....... VOUCSW'"GIN • "1 FALCOll WAGO< liif1.::::=~~;:;.-;~1 .. "'""""" ortr. --'II Pb_,. ........ k __ ........ 9500 UIOd Con t900 baavtr .. ,. - -Oild. Oriti -llOO or r...... . 'W VW i-, -nL, NllD A CAD N4 oa -....... 8"I. ooi. __ , •Mil Ill I.
'W cm:Vlta..rr 11 ... -.....i.11!52or-.. ft•-u: -·~ --•llC u -· wJ--,Jiiii---~·-VI to c:tllftlle. 1AKlnt w t .,_.. & • "'"~' l*kap. .-. r bed. 13-m.1 aft • PM. •llntrwpif •a.. IB ltJI ., Ml. ..... rw window', lte. dbl& TUI ,... PQIWta. -.., autlmltlc, rad.lo, ew Oedltf e DtNrc.n "A....., looll" ... ,.,.. ·
hftt.r, -eab. .,._ 'II GOiJl VW Dllm -•llllllof7 eN ... II _, CM.Y •r W fiJlly • dr ar q -t --Dull -<ar. No dOwD. OAC ..... ~ ""9mlo lit cor 1ot mo --. Riff /elw ........ a'
----... ..,,,,_ oai7 Ill .. -McCARTHY MDTOU JOHNSON Ir SON .,.·c.:n i,;. -v...s.i
8ell -(loll -IKMlll • -... -• 1118ooor 1--MW..,_n
-"' '"' Xln -.... ilii 11 ~ 11. " -> ' OOola \::.;.::. PONTIAC
'II i'ililD PlclNp trudl. M OAC l'Jmlo is - -AM I'll SO-.. IN! --. ..._,..,.,1------.---•I
llU8f ~ II .... D~. -IOY CAlYll
--. ll1IO er mat•,.. 'IS vw, x--,... · IUICK -... PONm''"C ........ . -.. * -. -....._ ... ..--atEV.~.ell p;;tl; ....... H w11tJf111'--'m .U:,~a:~ •. 'SI GALAX! a Vft I * --::-&. c.ta ....
--• palll. l3llO OR VW Bot, --· -=--ftMS'll /Ill ......... -oitlc P/I. • IU 6 4444
-· ---...,._ ~ palll. Ml. - -V97 l'I ~ _.. l:l:•llla .. M•( llf!IO.Oll,._ G llUICS llYlcla --$111 -__ ............ 1£!~!!,._:_ _ _!!"20!!! I 'IT fi 9-y_, i0o4 OiiiL = 1111. all Dao ........ -aft I .. !!'!!Jt --lllw.wn-No.ft. .. ..., ..... _ T-lllD
°"Ills CADILLAC , i\irii6111ca,u1111..... .
'A VW $IOO 111111. -.... ._. -.. -· ""' -c .. c ~ ........ ... -• ••11 • ... 'IO VW $111 or iilli OIJ;. ~· a•~ 'ii rmD -0R.T. AUo•atfc, R/H : --CJll.-'1C:..-°* -·MI,,., .... 11 ... 1=:.;;=;;;_;=::,.::=;;:. PVT. PAJl'!T ... •<Ir.• ---'11 VW w/'tt .... -._____ TJilii)Qw &; '
··--·-----· &Cll' .. ...,-..'t-": ------·-.....,... 11 -AD Ill aA ............. - ------· - -..... nmt--h 111 • M a.Ml_...."'-*-• :•slla01 A •Mt. ...._.,..YL..,..
..... c ... 9100Ntwc1 ..
Tllltdlr, ,.,......, 10, IU .. DAil y l'llOT ..
OD all '68 CARS In stock!
IRVEDERES
lncludlnt S.telltes, 'Ruef Runnen and &T'Xt '"'" ......... .
$2Z72
En9lne Number HEI0174!
BARRACUDAS
Varied Equipm•nt Selection.
Priced from • t 1
$2471
b9lno Numbot 1111l1946
Chryslen and l111p1rlals
Pr1cllC1lly All Model1I
SAVE TO , , ,
. .
$IJ47 ~
""'!'~ ·Numb.f KICJOH26
PONMC
,,
'66 '65 CHmLEl '65 DODGE
8'!0 "'..., 'C:..,.. • .. • ..... .s.i ,..,.. i..... '-'•r• t 4.., i..Ht.,. VI, '• ,.,.er ttffrl119, 'twtl' , ....... , r1Jl1 1114 •11t0 l,.ff. T;io,.ww, Vs, r1\1Ut IMtwt. f11t'l 1W. IASH .,, ,.wtr •htri'ftf. Mtr, N1. _. .... ..,. IAVL417J J71, /JI f., It 1.,., Mow °"" ko.
s2222 $1444 $1599 ••
'68 PLYMOUTH
c. .... S11nr.t11 ., .....
Wit'"· Jll CID VI, AT,
Ill rs. ,.. -· •• .,.,., air. F.tt9f'( w11T111ff, PL41-
61020711),
$3555
•
'63 DODGE 66 CHRYS. 300 •66 PLYMOUTH '68 PLYMOUTH
440, VI, •llfffMlff.. rNI., ...... ,.... ....... ~
T0-1 All COHDntOHIN$.
IK:r OJll
. $999
Dew ~.rtl..,. va. ....,.. ,., .. ~
llf • w ..... ,....,
1114.wa, P.ACTOlT All!:
ITIONIN8 ISVNl771
$2666
..... ""'· Loo'-4. vi. ••t.. tr•• .. UH, n, rt. P.
wlfMI..._ ,_..._,, aW, et.. A
...!~ ..... ..,, !Pl'\'l"I
'9ry Ill 4 Dr, H.T. YI, ••
.... "... UH. "· ....... ,..f, ,...., •It. ... . .f fedwy
wty. Low ....... !V8E 1611
$3444
-btt.1111-°"""' -lo Ml .. hm-ltoT IS~ e'Gu:Dll>e
..... ,---Cd !-~~···~-~Ml~llli~--'= ... =~·~·~·.!!!!!!!..!..:: .. :i_..::::~~~~~~~~~======~::::::::::::::::::::::::::...J _.....,, __ -~) .... ... • ""'*. 1..::====-· • •• • , •
•
I
•
•
1
I
I
I
'
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•
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• ' ·.
t
UJNLY PILOT -,-10,1911 .. •
•
'
''
-~---~~~---------
-02
' . at.
iscouilt
prices!''
saicl Mrs. Ogilvie
(SAVING MA~E ON HER
522.66 PURCHASU)
THIS TESTIMONIAi. IS FROM ONE Of MANY CUSTOMERS WHO MADE THEIR OWN
SHOPPING COMPARISON TEST AT FAD. EACH CUSTOMER DID HER WEffiY SHOP.
PING AT A NEARBY COMPETITOR ANO THEN ON THE VERY SAME DAY SH!
PURCHASED THE IDENTICAL ITEMS AT FAD WITH THIS l _IG SAVINO.
YOU, TOO, CAN SAVE AT LEAST 10" EVERY TIME YOU SllOP AT
FABULOUS PAD ••• THI FAMILY DISCOUNT SAVINO CINTa, .
PROVE IT TO YOURSElfl WEU PAY YOU $1.00 TO MACE YOUR OWN SHOP-
PING COMPARISON, COME IN AND ASK YOUR FAD .MANAGEI FOi A "SHOP·
PING COMPAllSON" CARD.
"
'
• NO ST~MPS • NO G:lMES • NO GIMMICKS
JUSt EVERYDAY LOW PRICES plus 4 STAR SPECIALS!
• ruiii BAGS ~VE 1 oc • VIVATNAPKINS 32c
• LuNcii BAGS ~~E 19c • BAGGl0ES ~SAC~U~ 29c
•. PUREXBLfACH 49c · .• BAGGiES ·,~v~~~NT 49c
••••• C.H.8. SPRIANGNFUIElTD MANHATTAN PRESERVES PE ALL MEAT ., BEEF
2-LI. JAR BUTIER BOLOGNA
TREESWCET PILLSBURY
GRAPEFRUIT 5-LB;
55c 39c .,,c
SAVE 20c • SAVE 10c
. JUICE . FLOUR
66i48 q 52c
PAIMR JOHN• LUU o PAD
II.ICED BACON 1,'\~~
BIG VALUE SAVE 10c SAVE 1 lc
FAD MEATS at LOW EVERYDAY DISCO~NTS
Fepturing "TENDERFUL" Beef, guaranteed tender & flavorful
U.S.D.A. CHOICE or TENDeRFUL
CHUCK ROAST BLADE CUT
79!
LEAN o DEPENDABLE QUALITY
GROUND BEEF
59! U.S.O.A. GRADE A o WHOlE BOOY
nYING CHICKEI .
39~
43c . LL
I
~4~ ~Star )]
Speciatf_,'N,
·-it~
4 STAR
SPKIAJ.S
ar• extra 1av-
ing9 made
po11Jble by
special purchaMS from th• man•
ufacturer ond paned on to you ·
everyday
PRICES EFFECTM
WEDNESDAY thru TUESDAY
SEPTEMiER 11 thru 17
STORE HOURS
DAILY-10 AM to 9 PM
SAT.&SUN. IO.t.Mto7PM
~ 200 COUNT ~ 3-RING
FILLER
PAPER
WIDE OI COi.LEGE RULE
01 TYPING PAPER
REG. 39c 19c IA.
• BO COUNT
COETS
COSMETIC
PADS
~~-31c
fte Amorlcon Heritage
IJ.VOLUMB SET OI'
Presidents
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